HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-15 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa MesaI
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Sl.2 \ M lljon Blaze Jetliner Splits Open
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Fullerton ·Rages
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DAILY PILOT
* * * 1oc * * * Arabs Lay Dowl! Tough
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER f 5, .1 970
VOL. U. NO. ttl. t I ECTlONS. • P'Act•I mands for Hostages
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A KISS FOR LUCK AND WE 'RE ON OUR WAY
Cup O.ftnder Ficker. ind Wife, B1rb1ra
Ficker's Intrepid Gets
Jump on Aussie Rival
By ALMON LOCKABEY
0111'/' l"li.t •ul1111 IE"I•• Jnlrepid, defending y acht Ing' s
America's Cup for the U.S., got across
tbe starting line one second ahead of
Gretel II of Australia in the opening race
of this year 's classic.
New Isla Vista
Bank Is Opened
SANTA BARBARA (AP ) -A new
Bank of America branch Is open in lhe
campus community of lsla Vista to
replace one burned by yoong rioters.
In place of a prefabricated building
that replaced the building destroyed last
1pring st.ands a windowless, $4~,000 con·
cret.e and st.eel building ln Spanish baro-
que style.
The red tile roor. which cost $16,000, ts
slanted 80 that fiN!bombs would roll back
on the throwers. officials say.
And they say Lhe. glass In Lhe front door
"'ill repel anything thrown at ii.
Embedded In Ult concrete at the tn~
trance: "Fof aocl•l ch11:nge, fair play and
peace, Kevin P. Moran, April 18, 1970."
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But Gretel II caught up In the first few
hundred yards. About five minutes after
the start. the two 12-meler yachts were
even and then tnlrej>id, seveial boat
lengths to windward, asswned a narrow
lead. · · ·
Bill Fickel-, fikipper or the Intrepid. and
Jim Hardy, at the helm of Gretel II,
dueled brillianlly as they jockeyed for the
favorable starting posilion before the
opening gun 'at 9:10 a.m. (PDT) in Rhode .
Island Sound. '
It was raining and I 17-knOt wind was
blowing as the two sleek · craft went
across the starlbj.g lln,e In one of the best
starts in cup history.. .
The wind prediction -15 to 29 knots -
Is considered ideal for the 12-meter
yachts scheduled to race the 24.3 nautical
mile course in a best-Of-seven ser ies.
Intrepid, skippered by Newport Beach
11rchilect Bill Ficker, is the favorile in
the race. The Australian challenger 1 however, with Jim Hardy at the helm,
represents knowledge. gained by two prior
Aussie efforts at the Cup. ,They are no
strangers to the . cour.se ov.er Rhode
Island sound. a oombinitlon of two tidal
currents plus the prevailing ocein swells.
Grelel ll, des igned by Alan Payne. han·
dily defeated France 4 to O in tllminaUon
(St< CUP llACE, Pqe II
Shof in SF
Hijack Try
SA~ FRANCISCO (AP) -A hijacker
who tried to force a Trans World Airliner
to Oy to North Korea was critically woun-
ded in the abdomen today by another
passe nger, a private guard for a
securities shipment.
The 707 jet liner. from New York via
Chicago and Lo~ Angeles , was held on a
San Francisco International Airport
runway for an hour by the gunman before
he wa!I shot and overpowered. No one
else was in jured.
Armed with a .22 caliber pistol. tht:
man boarded the early morning flight in
Lo!! Angeles. He was identified by police
as Donald trwi n, 28, of Reseda.
Robert E. De Nisco, 34, of Brooklyn,
N.Y., a guard for Brinks, Inc., shot the
hijacker after 35 of the 55 pauengers
were allowed to debark. The plane was
being held on a runway a mile from the
terminal at the time.
The" plane had a crew of seven, all from
Kansas City.
Shortly after taking off Ir om Los
Angeles for San Francisco, the pilot,
CapL J. K. Gilman, radioed the Los
Angeles control tower that a white male
passenger had told him, "This plane is
being hijacked. lt will be going rart~er."
San Francisco was alerted and peace
orficers were slanding by when the plane
landed at 6:03 a.m .. Gilman having con-
(See lllJACK, Page %)
* * * Hijacker Given
50-year Term
PECOS, Tex. (UPI) -J°"ph C.
Crawford pleaded guilty to hJjadc.ing a jet
· airliner at knife point and was sentenced
Monday to 50 years in prison.
"This is a terrible crime of an ex·
tremely serious nature which I thought
you should be made aware of." U. S.
Distri ct Judge Ernest Guinn said as he
pronounced sentence.
Crawford hijacked the plane July 27.
1969, from the Mid1and-Odessa, Tex.,
Regional Airport. He 'permitted the pilot
to return to M1dlaod where the
passengers dlsembtrked. He th e n
ordered the plane Oown to CUba.
Ctawford was one of six accused hi·
Jackers who returned to the United Slltt!s
in November to face charges. Under
federal law, CrawfOrd cquld have been
aentenctd to anyVlbere from 20 years in
prison to death.
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Still Smoking Pris-oners
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$1.2 Million Eire R·uins Regarded
2 Fullerton Warehouses As · Enemies
A spectacular fire of undetermined
origin did an estimated $1.2 million
damage to two warehouse buildings in
Fullerton early this morning.
Fire officials reported the blaze at 116
and lfi W. Walnut Ave., is under control
Yacht Worker
'Dry Docked'
In County Jail
lt was one by land and two by sea for
·Reiner Horst Jahr.
One Costa Mesa police oUicer arre!lted
the German-born yacht carpenter last
Feb. 25 on charges of drunken driving.
Two detectives sailed up to the boat on
which he was working in Newport Harbor
last Friday, ~arded the vessel from
their borrowed Harbor Department
launch and arrested him agaln.
Officers Dick Bersch and Harry Bowen
carried two warrants, the old one cbarg.
Jng Jahr with failure to appear in court
on the drunken driving charg'e and a new
one charging hit-and-run. ·
Bersch said Jahr had been identified by
a witness as the motorist who crashed in-
to a parked car last July 25 at high speed
and kept going, only to abandon the vehi·
cle nearby; ·
Jahr, 26, of 2257 Maple Ave., Costa
Mesa, was arraigned in Harbor Judicial
District Court,' but failed to raise $900
bail. ·
He was dry-docked in Orange County
Jail.
Falling Gyrq Roof
Nearly Hits Girls
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -The girls'
basketball team al John Randolph Tucker
High School Jen the gy1J101Jium dres&ing
room when they heard • rumble Monday
five minutes afttr·tbt echool had ftC:e!SS.o:
ed fer the cloy,
i Within aeconds after they vacated the
'!'dion of the 3-ye&Mld school, the gym-
nasium roof collapsed. School officials
and an architect, who saJd the roof "is
ilke a flat Ure," haven 't figured out why.
Flying debris hit· eight girls walking near
the achoo!, caUJJna mJnot Injuries.
early this morning but still pouring forth
bilklws of smoke from smoldering com-
bustibles.
The fire was reported at 11 :14 p.m.
Monday by a. man working a.cross the
Sant.a Fe Reilroad tracks from the ad·
joining buildings.
Totally involved in flames were the
Murray Ohio Manufacturing Company at
116 W. Walnut and the next door struc·
lure housl11g lhe Fullerton Elementary
District warehouse, the Kelly Springfield
Tirt: Company and a General Foods
Corporalion storage area in the base·
ment.
Ten fire fighling units Crom Fullerton,
Buena Park, La Habra and Brea fought
the blaze Ior more than . three hours
under the direction or Fullerton Fire
Chier Ray Eller. About SO firemen were
involved in controlling tbe conflag ratiOn.
Fire Marshal Preston Pyeatte Said the
blaze was extremely difficult to control
because of the highly . combustible
material in the two buildings.
In the Kelly Springfield area 10,000
tires were stored and in the schoot
district warehouse thousands o! books
and paper tablets. The · Gtneral Foods
basement area was filled · with dry
cereals and other hlghly combustible
foods.
The Murray Ohio Manufacturing Com-
tian;> building was filled with bicycles and
lawn mowers.
Jet Splits Open
l1i Run.way Skid
NEW YORK (UPI) -An ~lilalla oci
jeillner skid~ off a K~y, Airport
runway on landing ·Tuesday and split
open. ipparenlly' as the result of a col·
lapsed landing gear. .
There were no Immediate reports or.
casualU~s or of fire, although an alarm
signal from the Kennedy control tower
brought more than a doien pi~ of city,
fire ai>paratus aod a superpumper to the
scene.
A spokesman ~a_ld lhe landing gear ap-·
parenUy eollapftd " the J>l•ne touched,
down on runway 4-R and the plane "skid·
ded off and brokt open." The •ccldent oc-
curred at 1:2! p.m. (EDT).
There were 146 passengers and tO
crewmen Ofl the flight from Rome, an
AUtalJa 1pokesl1lln said,
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From Wire Se"lcet
Specific demand!! were Jafd down blay
111 tough_ud. threatening terms by Arab
terrorists bargaining for the fate of 14
hOstages, mostly American, in eichan1e
for hundreds of their own imprisoned.
Negotiations were hampered b 'J
withdrawal of ~ Interna.Uonal Red,
Cross and stubborn dealings by the
Popular Front for the Liberation of
PalesUne through a mysterious mediator.
The PLFP ahnolinced uY intervention
militarily will doom the hostages \akeu in
three jetliner hijackings la!t week, most
of them American, pltl3 1 om 1 llrlelll
and Europeans, ,
A spokesman said both are Considered·
PLFP enemies and will be coi:mJdered1
prisoners of ,war. '
Officials in Washin·gton sie'mly ,wi.med'
the holdi11g or America• h011ta1es 1•
totally unacceptatile.
The guerrilla f r o n t organluUon Is
unrecognlz.ed by Israel, whose Parlla-
ment met in emergency session Monday
to discus,, Ule latest ransom demands.
America and Israel are Jgnored In
return by the PFLP, which II currently
bargaining through ambassadors of Br1-
tai11, Switzerland and West Germany.
Now, 13 zpecific prismen are being
demanded by the PFLP, plUJ llJ1Wl>ere
(llee'MIDEAST, P"l•·ll
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Weadler
Only a few patchy cl~ will
rriar Wednesday's IUMhifly atdb
with temperatures holding at 170
dertee.s on the coast And up to 15
further Inland. ·
INSmE TODAY
The· new thtattr ata&ort b f11
JuU 1win11 o-rt th'-OTangt Coast.
4' wtU as "uptown." Revitw1 of
three oJ the latest productions
are on Ent ertainment PoQCI JS
and l 7 todou.
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J DAILV PILOT s TutMt11, S.,ltmbtf 15, 1'70
Jordan Crisis Worsens
Hussein's Offer to Resign Told
By Volled Pm1 Jat<ruU-1
Jordllllan U111Y rwmen I b 1 I I e d
PaletllDllD llJ«TilJa bua Jn nortb
J...i.. todly, lbe S)'Tlan Arab News
Acen<Y reported. The Ellllliab language
Jerusalem Post said the ct1&ia the.re was
ao serious King HUS9ein tried to abdicate
but WU dlJsuaded by UAR President
Gama! Abdel N._,
'l1le cea...ilre aloag tilt Suez canal
abo was reported shaky, c\d official
l!JOW'Ces in Cairo said Monday nighl
Ecfpt believes Iha Vniled Slates bas
suspended ti! peace ln!UaUve which leCI
to the cease-lire. They said the big four
powers should try again to restore peace.
Diplomatic source.s in J~salem said
hraeli Premier Gok!a Meir, who meell
President Nixon Jn Wuhlngton DD Fri-
day, will alt him to revllt America'• of.
llclal policy on larlel'a bordars, She will
cont.eDd that Israel mult retain IOmt
captured territory to auure its security,
the sourcu said.
Maj. Abdel Salam Jllloud, a member
of the Libyan Rovolulloa Command Coun-
cil, in a statement rep>rted by the Egypo
tian Middle East N~ws Agency, said the
situation has now reached a stage where
a political solution can no longer be found
aod the situation must be resolved
throu&h war.
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READY FOR FOUL WEATHER
Cup Ch1lleng1r Hudy
f'roM Paffe l
CUP RACE •••
aeries Jn Augual 1galnat lhe French
challenger.
But many think Intrepid, onJy the se-
cond boat picked twice to defend the cup.
will win the series In four 11l'aigbt over
the Australian dJallellller.
Match racing for the cup ii a batUe of
bllHolds, design, apace age technology,
crew selection and o r g a.n I z a t I o n 1 belmamanahlp, Bailing tactics and luck.
Intrepid ahowed herself a winn1ng com-·
bination of all of these in her somewhat
surprising victory • over Valiant in the
elimination trials. Valiant waa the 1970
product of genius of designer Olln
Siephena who alao designed Intrepid. In
1967, Intrepid aoundly d e f e a t e d
Australia'• Dame Pattie for the cup.
In boat-for-boat racing, u in the
America'• Cup, past performance ts
sometimes lost to present sailing skill.
tactics and good fortune, which makes
this year's aeries a contest between a
proven winner and a quesUon mark.
That Is perhaps why 3,000 boata will go
to sea to set whether, u hls crew pro-
f eues, "Ficker 11 Quicker."
DAILY PILOT
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The report of fighting in the Irbid area
45 mnu northeast of Amman followed
similar reports Mooclay by the guerrilla
organluUon Al·Falah.·And In Beirut, the
rlibl·wlng newspaper Ibo Daily Star
quoted guerrilla sources in ,..Amman as
saying the Jordanian Army has cleared
guerrillas out of SOUtb Jordan.
The Daily Star said King Hussein hoped
Alleged Theft
Ring Smashed
In _Huntington
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of 1M Dllllr Plitt ... ,,
A team of 12 Huntington Beach detec·
tives smashed an alleged robbery ring
Monday night, arresting five persons in
connect.ion with two heists that cost
local businessmen close to $8,000.
The raid was held around 10:30 p.m. at
15812 Quartz SL, Westminster as the of·
ficers, armed with search warrants, nab-
bed the suspecta just as they were
returning home.
Police accuse three of the arrestees
with tbe robbery of Albertson's Market,
15511 Edwards st., where $2,737 were lost
Aug. a. ~t same day, Francois Restaurant, 15851 Beach Boulevard, was
robbed of $5,23(1 in cash and jewelry.
Arrested at the Quartz Street address
on charges of robbery are:
Donald J , Maness, 26, 15812 Quartz St.,
a fireman.
Mtcbael W. Perkhu, 25, an unemployed
truck driver from Lexington, Ky,
Matbls Coeterler, 39, 1581? Quartz St,,
employed as a free lance actor. He was
also charged with suspicion of possessing
stolen property.
Also taken into CUltody was (.oeterier's
wife, Helen, 34, who wu charged with
possessing stolen property arid possession
of drugs.
Another woman, Cheryl L. White, 21, of
Orangti, was charged with possession of a
switchblade knHe that was allegedly
found during her arrest.
Detective Sergeant Monty McKennon
aald bis men found the house unoccupied
at Ute time of their arrival and were able to conduct an uninterrupted search which
yielded two .38 cal. 'revolvers, a .22 cal.
automatic pistol, a switchblade knife. $95
in rolled coin, several credit and Jden·
tification cards, and some money seals
police allege came from cash taken in the
robberies.
Later that evening, a car contatnlng the
tl.ccused robbers pulled into the driveway,
allowing McKennon and his men to make
the arrests without resistance, according
to police report&.
Tustin Woman
Killed · in Crash
A youn1 Tustin woman died early this
morning from injuries suffered when the
car in which she was a passenger went
out of control, struck a parked car and a tree,
Police said Donna Jean Abroslni, 22, of
14300 Newport Ave., Apt. ~. was riding
in a car driven by Henry M. Bell, 23, of
the same address, Apt. 24.
Officers said the vehicle slid broadside
for 90 feet into the car and tree in the
1400 block of Nlsson Road, Tustin.
Be~ was treated. at Tustin Community
Hospital and released. Pollce said the ac-
cident 1s under investigation.
Huks Te~ Slaying
Of 15 Americans
MANILA (UPI) -Huie guerrillas
claimed. to have killed 15 American
military personnel and at least 200
Filipino soldiers 1n central Luzon during
the past yrar, a publication of the Com·
rnunist Prty of the Philippines said today.
The latest issue of Ang Bayan (Our Na·
tion) laid the guerrilla new people's
army scored "a rich harvett of victories"
while conducting.more than 80 operations
against the regime of P r e s J d e n t
Ferdinand Marcos.
to liquidate the whole m o v e m en t
gradually. It said the campaign was lawr
ched, after leadera of the Bedoull'l, the
fanaUcal supporters of King Hussein, met.
In special session and pledged to support
the gove(nment.
Hussein has been faced with near civil
war for months and has survived nine
assassination attempts. The Jerusalem
Post, quoting "aources cloee to the Jorda·
nian royal court," said in a front page
banner story he was for the first time
considering abdicating.
"Hussein .•. expressed bis intention of
quitting after last week's fierce clashes
between his armed forces and the ter·
rorists, and after the open split in his
army over the issue of the presence of
terrorists and Iraqi troops in areas of
Amman and other major towns, it said,
It said Hussein held up his decision at
the insistence of Nuaer "who fears total
civil war in Jordan would follow hla ab-
dication.,.
Hussein, 1n an interview today with the
newspaper Le Figaro in Paris, admitted
the split in his army. He laid he had been
having problems r~trainlng some of hls
younger officers from trying to wipe out
the guerrillas.
He gave one instance -a baUery of
heavy artillery was headed into Amman
to get the Palestinian guerrillas and a•
first refused 'to atop when he personally
pursued them.
'"n1e trucks kept pushing me of£ the
road at the risk of overturning my car in
a ravine," he said. "I finally managed to
overtake them and the Land Rovers of
my personal guard blocked their advance.
It was very difficult to convince them to
return to their base."
Official sources in Cairo said Egyptian
embassies and legations throughout the
world would be instructed to notify their
host governments of Egypt's view that
"America has frozen its peace ful in·
itiative."
Fro• Page 1
MIDEAST ...
from 600 to 3,000 Palestinian captives in
return for release of the M hijacked
passengers.
"We will not back down from these
demands whatever happens," emphasiied
PFLP spokesman Hassan Kanafani.
Israel must agree first to release two
Algerians, a Swiss national and 10
Leba11ese soldiers, the latter c~ptured
New Year's Day in an Israeli foray the
PFLP insists. '
Kanafani said in Amman, Jordan that a
list of additional prlaonen the PFLP
wants will be turned In after this.
"Whe• these demands are met, the
PFLP will releue the American and
Israeli hostages," he added.
He also repeated demands that Britain,
West Germany and Switterland release
Arab hostages.
Kanafani denied any mistreatment of
the 54 persons remanilng among nearly
300 captured in the three separate airlin·
ner hijackings.
He said their personal needs were
being adequately mel
'The Americans are being treated on
the same bas!! as the Israelis because
the U.S. is an enemy," Kanafani added.
The Jewish state bas refused to con·
sider demands for a prisoner exchange
until they were processed through t h e
Red Cross, nor will it deal with any agen·
cy but that and the four governments in·
volved.
Other PFLP demands inelude release
of ·girl guerrilla Leila Khaled, a com·
mando captured in an unsuccessful at·
tempt to hijack an Amsterdam·tcrLondon
El Al jeUiner flight.
They also want the body of U.S. citizen
Patrick J . Arguello, who was shot by
Jsraeli agents during the fruiUess venture
accompanying Miss Khaled.
Authorities believe the 54 hostages are
being held in heavily fortified houses 1n
Amman , but some were allowed Mo11day
to appeal to their embassies to hasten ef·
forts to secure release.
One radio broadcast morUtored in Lon·
don said two of the captives have been
shot to death, bringing a prompt PFLP
denial.
"These reports are without any foun-
dation," said one spokesma•.
"Direct responsibility now falls on the
governments coRcemed to announce their
acceptance of the Front co11dttions." he
added.
Vessel· Found
3 in Crew Alive After 2 Months
HONOLULU (UPI) -The sailing
veuel Galllte, missing 1n the Pacific two
montha wJth a woman and two men
aboard, was found Monday hundreds of mllu off courae by a U. S. Navy supply
ship.
The three occupant& of the boat were
reported to be sufJerlng from eitreme
orpqoure Ind debydraUon.
Tbe llllboat, a !S-!ool gall-rigged sloop
named Galilee., was found 600 miles
norlhwest or Honolulu by the USS
Niagara Falla.
"It WAS an unllkely 11pot," a Coast
Guard olllcer said.
''11le Galllee h11d been on a trl,p from
Tahiti to Honolulu -she obviously
overshot the mark and was hopelesaly
lost."
Tah!U is 2,500 miles southwest of
H11wail.
Tbe CO.st Guard1 h1 radio contact with
the Niagara Falls, identified the three
survivors as Julian Ritter, the skipper, in
his' SOS, and Miss Loren Louise Knox, 21,
both U.S. citizens, and Wtn Heiringhoff of
West Germany.
"They are suffering from extreme tx·
posure and dehydration," the COast
Guard said. "They were taken aboanfthe
Niagara Falls and are under the care ol a
doctor on the ablp."
The Galilee was described as battered
and taking on water. "She was in very
poor condJtlon," the Coast Guard said.
The Niagara Falls put a team of sailors
aboard the sailboat with water pumps.
Tbe Coast Guard cutter Ce.pe Corwin was
en route from Honolulu to take the
Galilee In tow.
The Cape Corwin and Niagara Falls
•re ocheduied to return Thursday to
Honolulu.
DAILY PILOT Stiff Pllole
Help for a Borgman
• Kim Galamis o! Garden Grove (foreground) helps push "Mallard"
of Newport Beach's dory fleet ashore. Owner spent foggy morning
alone on the sea last Friday .. Friendly group of greeters on shore
provided marked contrast to bis lonely labors.
Newport Vice Mayor Calls
Hirth 'Patsy' on Freeway
Newport Bea'ch Vice Mayor Howard
Rogers Monday night charged that
Mayor Ed Hirth has "fallen victim" to a
plot by the State Divisioo 0£ Highways
"to lull the people to sleep" about the
issue of the Pacific Coast Freeway.
And Rogers released copies of a "con-
fidential" memorandum written by Hirth
to the City Council which Rogers asserted .
would back up his allegation.
Rogers asserted the memorandum and
other recent actions by Hirth indicate he
has become a patsy to the propaganda of
state officials, '
Among other things, Rogers based his
accwation on remark.! by Hirth, later
recanted: that the state would not pro-
ceed with plans to build the controversial
freeway if the Newport Beach City Coun·
cil would write a letter asking work be
stopped.
Rogers said the men who made the
statements. Haig Ayanian, director of
Highway Division District 7, and his top
aide, William Hashimoto, "do not have
the authority to take such action ."
Hirth, i n council session Monday,
agreed that a "sim ple letter" would not
force an official halt to state planning for
the route.
Rogers plugged the efforts of the
Citizens Coordinating Committee, a
Freeway Fighters adjunct, to circulate
pelith;ins that would require a referendum
on the issue of whether the city's formal
freeway route agreement should be
rescinded (see separate story).
Prior to the vice mayor's remarks, In a
statement , which apparently prompted
them, Hirth had detailed to the council
his efforts the past several weeks in bis
one·man study of how the city should ap-
proach Its traffic problem.
Hirth disclosed that at his meeting with
the.two state highway officials last week,
Al Koch, Orange County road com·
missioner, wu preaent.
Rogera Immediately -1led thla, poin-
ting out that Koch hu long been a sup.
porter of the coutal freeway. ••Jt was at
least a to 1 at thia meeting," Rogers said.
He demanded to know why Hirth had
brought him along.
The mayor replied that his participa·
lion c~me at the suggestion of William
Jennings, chairman of the Slate Highway
commission, a resident of Balboa Island.
The confidential memo criUclzed by
Rogers contained statements critical of
the efforts of the CCC in their petition
drive, charging " a crippling procedure"
would result.
Hirth, In the memo, had said it would
be wrong for the council, Jtself, to m.
terfere with the citizens' move, but said,
"We could remove the need and desire by
a strong acceptable action toward a solU·
lion."
Hirth then suggested 4'instructing" the
state to stop the planning of the Newport
section of the freeway.
Secondly, Hirth suggested the steps he
has been following recenUy, a study of
the transportation needs of the county.
Rogers maintains that the agreement
must he rescinded "to wipe the slate
clean" before any study is initiated.
Jumps to Death
BENICIA (UPI) -A Concord woman
Monday jumped to her death ftom the
Benicia·Martinez bridge spanning the
Sacramento River. She was Mrs. Virginia
McDonald, 48.
Police said she was the seventh known
suicide on the bridge since it opened eight
years ago.
Both Sides ~
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lT Tell Salazar
Accountings
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Witnesse1
Monday gave conflicting accounts of the.
events leading up to the dea th last month
of newsman Ruben Salazar during rloll
in. East Los Angeles.
The main question at a coroner's in·
quest was whether sheriff's depuUes gave
adequate warnings before firing tear cu
projectiles into a bar. One can i s t.-c r
1truck and killed Salazar, 42, a colwnnilt
for the Los Angeles Times and neWs
director of the Spanish 1 a~ g u a g e
television station KMEX.
A barmaid who was inside the Su'vtr
Dollaf Cafe at the time testified lhe
beard no warning before depuUes lirlJI-:..
Mrs. Mart.ha Llanos's story confih:ted
with the accounts of persons on the mt.
tom streets outside who said officva
gave bUllhorn warnings to clear the bu
and that Lhe occupants had ample time-to
get out before the tear gas was fited. •
Mrs. Llanos said that three or four men
entered the bar from the street and stood
near the curtained doorway shortly
before the deputies fired the gas. She
said an older man, appa'I'ently Salazar,
was seated at the bar.
Mrs. Llanos insisted she heard no
warnings whatsoever, and, in fact, was
not even aware that anything unulual
was under way on the street outside.
A previous witness, William R. ,Burns,
proprietor of a small store near the bar,
said the rioters were breaking in stores,
tossing Molotov cocktails, looting and
milling in the street. He said they seemed
to feel it wa s a "festive occasion."
The owner of a nearby discount record
store agreed there had been warnings fol".
those in the bar to emerge.
Loo1s Nevada, owner ol the record
ebop, refused to teJWy on Ibo It an d because he said he ha·d received threats
against bJs life all(I the lives of eight
members of liis family; Howe!ver, a tape.
recorded statement that he g al'V e
authorities three days after the Aug: 29
diaturbance and alaylng of Saluar was
read to the jury and he confirmed that it
was true.
Daniel Riviera, a welder whose wife
hu a bridal shop two doors from the
Silver Dollar, said he was in the shop and
hesrd no warnings by the officers.
He said, however, that the doors of the
store were closed so he could not hear
clearly although he did hear the firing ol
the tear gas guns,
From Page 1
HIJACK ...
vfnced the gunman that refueling wu
necessary. .
One of the four stewardesses said the
drama began when the man arose and
handed her a note reading, "1 have a gun.
I want to go to Korea."
She said she had seen him on previous
Oigbts.
Passenger Sally Rush, 24, of San Fran·
,cisco said none of the passengers knew
what was going on until the pl ane was on the ground.
She said the captain aMounced on the
public address system, "There is a
genUeman on board who wishes to land
at another airport. Be calm."
He then announced that military men
and families with children would be
allowed to debark.
Miss Ru.sh .said she and the others left
aboard were asked to move to front seats
in the coach section.
The gunman was seated two rows
behind them.
After an interval of suspense, she said,
"A man in a brown outfit walked from
the front of the plane, quickly said,
'Police,' and fired one shot over eight to
ID rows of seats."
It's Your Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
:rHAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY AND THICK THE
CARPET IS NECESSARILY QUALITY.
NOT TRUE! MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE FIBER, AND NOT THE QUANTITY, IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE .
IT'S YOUR MONEY -SO, WHEN BUYING
YOUR CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE DEALING
WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL, AND EQUALLY AS
IMPORTANT, A REPUTABLE DEALER.
ALDEN'S
I
1.ANTA ANA. OMNal
TUSTIN e.14 , , ,
ALDIN:S
RID HILL CA•rm
& DlAPDlll
1U7• lr\'f•, Tmi11t c.tlf.
IJl4J44
CARPETS e DRAPES
.1663 Placentla Ave.
r
COSTA MUA
646-4838
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.Huntington Beaeh
EOl!ION N.Y. Stoeks
* -VOC 63, Nd;>. 221, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES :TEN CENTS
"
Huntington Workers Win 8.250/0 Pay Boost
1£ you work for the city of Huntington
Beach, you have just been given a raise
ol 8.25 percent.
The across-the-board increase from
typist to chief administrator won
unanimous approval from city coun-
cilmen Monday night.
The 660 emp\oyes on the city payroll
will get the hike jn their Sept. 25
paychecks. It will be effective from Sept.
I.I
The vote was taken at midnight and en-
ded hours of closed-door bargaining
between the Ct:1uncilmen, representatives
of employe associations and C i t y
Administrator Doyle Miller.
In going for an equal percentage raise
for all employes, the council rejected
Miller's recommendations.
Under provisions of a new state law -
the Myers.Milias-Brown Act -the city
administrator had held "meet and confer
ses.sions in good faith'' with the employe
associations and signed what were term-
ed memoranda of agreement on in-
crl!ases.
'Jllese agreemenls reportedly contained
varied increases from 5.S to 10.5 percent.
Questioned by the press when the coun·
cil reconvened after the executive
session, City Attorney Don Bonfa said it
was his opinion that the.agreements were
not public infonnaiion.
er
Won't Bacl{ Down
Arabs Issue Tough New Demands
From Wlre ~Servlces
Specific demands were laid down today
ht tough and threatening terms by Arab
terrorists bargaining for the fate of 54
hostages, mostly American, in exchange
for hundreds of their own imprisoned.
Negotiations were hampered b y
withdrawal of tbe International Red
Cross · and stubborn dealings by the
Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine through a mysterious mediator.
The PLFP ann9UJ1ced a1y intervention
militarily will doom the hostages taken in
three· jetliner hijackings last week, most
of them American, plus 1 o m e Israelis
and Europeans.
A spokesman said both are considered
PLFP enemies and will be: considered
Condemnation
prisoners of war.
Officials in Washington sternly warned
the holdi.Jlg of America• hostages is
totally unacceptable.
The guerrilla f _r on t organization is
unrecognized by Israel, whose ParJia.
ment met in emergency session Monday
to discuss the latest ransom demands.
America and Israel are ignored 1n
return by the PFLP, which is currently
bargaining Utrough ambassadors of Bri·
tai1, Switzerland and West Germany.
Now, 13 specific prisonersM-.re )>ting
demanded by the PF'LP. plus anywhere
from 600 to 3,000 Palestinian captives in
return for release of the M hijacked
passengers.
"We will not back dovm from these
demands whatever happens ," emphasi:i:ro
PFLP spokesman Hassan Kanafani.
Israel must agree first to release two
Algerians, a Swiss national and 10
Lebanese soldiers, the latter c~ptured
New Year's Day in an Israeli foray, the
PFLP insists.
Kanafani said in Amman, Jordan that a
list of additional prisoners ihe Pl"LP
wants will be turned in after this.
"Whea these demand! are imt, the
PFLP will release the American and
Israeli hoetices;" he mlded. "'
He a1so repeated demands that Brllairl,
West Germany and Switzerland release
Arab hostages.
Kanafani denied any mistreatment of
(See MIDEAST, Pa1e I)
Huntington Pier Plan
Action Gets Approval
Judge, Will Hear
Dance Hall Case
On Wednesday
Superior Court Judge Hannon Scoville
will hear arguments on a request to halt
the business Jicen.!ie proceedings against
the controversial Marina Palace dance
hall at 2 p.m. Wednesday. The Huntington Beach city council sail·
ed ahead with the Top of the Pier Plan
Monday night.
City Attorney Don Bonfa soon will file
condemnation proceedings to acquire 14
acres of downtown property and turn it
into a l.87S..space parking lot.
He was authorized to act in a
unanimous council vote taken after a
I thy executive session.
1 council accepted the recom·
mendation of Monte Nitzkowski, head of
the Urban Land Institute Citizens Steer-
I'
ing Committee, to proceed with the ex-
l~ Beach Lawmen
Capture Five
In Robbery, Ring
By RUDI NIEDZIEU!KI
01 !Pit Deity Pllel $!elf
A team of 12 Huntington Beach detec-
tives smashed an alleged robbery ring ' I Monday night. arresting five persons in
conne<:tion with two heists that cost
local businessmen close to $8,000.
The raid was held around 10:30 p.m. at
15812 Quartz St .. Westminster as the of·
ficers, armed with search warrants. nab-
bed the suspects just as they were
returning home.
Police accuse three of the arrestees
with the robbery of Albertson's Market.
15511 Edwards St., where $2,737 were lost
Aug. &. That same day, Francois
Restaurant. 15851 Beach Boulevard, was
robbed of $5,2.10 in cash and jewelry.
Arrested at the Quartz Street address
on charges of robbery are:
Donald J. Maness. 26, 15812 Quartz St.,
a fireman.
l\flcbael W. Perkins, 25, an unemployed
truck driver from Lexington, Ky.
Mathis Coeterler, 39, 15812 Quartz St..
employed as • free lance actor. He was
aleo charged with suspicion of possessing
stolen property.
Also taken into custody was Coeterier's
wile. Helen. 34. who was charged with
pos!!essing stolen property and possession
of drugs.
Another woman. Cheryl L. White, 21 , of
Oran3e. was charged with possession or a
1wltcbblade knife that was alle&edly
(See RAID, Paft I)
pansion of the Parking Authority.
"Frankly. we doubt that continued
studies will present any startling new
facts," he said.
The citizens c o m m i t t e e ' 11 recom·
mendation also was for the council :.0
proceed with the .. total configuration'' of
the plan, namely the one-block deep
stretch along Coast Highway from Sixth.
to First Street plus five acres of land
o .... ·ned by the Huntington Beach Company
east of Lake Street.
The Huntington Beach Company has
formally requested the council to exclude
its land from the project.
Before the council decided to cr.>ndemn
the whole area, Councilman George
McCracken proposed that the Huntington
Beach Company land plus a block from
Fifth to Sixth Street be excluded. He was
backed in this motion by Councllman Ted
Bartlett but all other councilmen were
opposed. .
Bartlett and McCracken then voted
with the others on the original plan.
althQugb McCracken stated, "I feel it's a
loser. but to have a unanimous vote J will
vote on it."
The formal go-ahead was reached after
months of discussion since the council
adopted Ute Top of the Pier plan to
Tedeve\op the downtown area last
November. The purJXlse of the parking lot
(See PIER, Page 2)
The request was filed by Seal Beach
resi dent Albert Del Guercio, 4417
Birchwood Ave., on grounds that the
hearings are illegal .
Expected to argue their positions
before lhe judge are Seal Beach City At-
torney Jim Bentson: Kenneth Lindsey,
tht attorney for Del Guercio. and Russell
Bledsoe, attorney for William Robertson,
operator of the dance hall.
Del Guercio filed the action last week.
Testimony in the controversial matter
contiri.ued Monday with Officer James
Swenson of the Seal Beach Police Depart-
ment on the witness stand.
Swenson told the city council which Is
sitting in a quasi-judiciary capacity dur·
ing the hearings -of repeated instances
during which he observed the use of
drugs by dant:e hall patrOTls.
One of these Involved a 14-year-old. boy
who had to be taken tn St. Mary's
Hospital after ingesting an overdose of
drugs, according to Swenson.
Another visit to the Marina Palace
motivated Swenson's arrest of a ynung
girl allegedly under the influence of
drugs. Swenson said he was restrained by
her companion who shrieked obscenities
at him.
The hearing continued today.
Very Light Turnout Seen _
In 2 '.Area School Issues
Only a few voters went to the polls this
morning as officials of two local school
districts anxiously await the outcome of
their finance measures.
"The voting has been very light, but
that was as expected," said Charles
Palmer, deputy 11uperintendent for the
lluntington Beach School District, which
Is trying for the third tlrM to raise the
intert.11t colling on $4.75 million worth of
unsold school bonds.
1f approved, the measure would allow
the district to raise 113 mulmum
allow1ble interest on the boDds from fivt
perctnt to seven percent. '
At the Fountain Valley School District,
where voters are asked to approve an In·
definite operetll'Jg tax rate of $2.99 per
$100 of assessed valuation, the turnout
also was light. .
This morning only 2.65 percent of the
district's 11.1111 ..W. had 1one to the
polls.
Oistrlet ofrlclals who expect the voUng to pick up in the afternoon and evening
hours said howevtr the turnoul at the In·
dlvldual prcclncts so far has ranged from
one percent to four percent
The polls will be open tO 8 p.m. at alt
IChoolJ in both dlstrlcll.
-------
"The memoranda were part of the
negotiating process and were not part of
the documents subject \0 public view," he
commented. .
Bon!a also stated that the four-hour ex·
ecutive session on salaries and litigation
issues on the Top of the Pier development
plan properly con!onned with the govern·
ment code on meetings of legislative
agencies:
He cited the Myers·Miliaa-Brown Act
passed by the Legislature in 1968 and tf.
fective Jan. 1, 1989, which calls for the
meet·and-<:onler sessions and a new pro-
vision in the Brown Act which allows
councils to hold executive sessions wltll
representatives of employe aMOCiations
on salary schedules. ,
Miller revealed afterward that wllile
the bargaining was extended in the
closed-door meetl(lg there v,:as no bit·
terness. "No oDe lost their temper,'' he
•
added.
In city terminology the raise the coun-
cilmen voled was an increase of three
salary ranges !or·all employes.
Prior to Sept. 1, the salary range for
firemen and lifeguards was $8,3$2 te
$10,380. A policeman's pay ranged from
18.580 to 110,668'.
Now these salaries and:those of all eity
employes, including department beat.di,
will be lilted by 8.26 percent
0 uar
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A KISS FOR LUCK AND WE'RE ON OUR WAY
Cup Defender Ficker end Wit., B•rb•r•
Gretel Blows Chances
For Cup Race Victory
Ul"l'I' .......
READY FOR FOUL WEATHER
Cup Ch•ll•ng•r H•rdy
Jet Splits Open
In Runway Skid
NEW YORK (UPI) -An Alltalia DC8
JeUiner •kidded of! a Kennedy Airport
runway on landing Tuesday and split
open, ~pparently as the result of a col· 1Ulid landin& gear. 'ft.ere were no Immediate reports ot
casualties or of fire, although an alarm
signal from the Kennedy control tower
brolight 'more than a dozen piece! of city
fire apparatus aJfd a superpumper to the
•cene
A spokesman said the landing gear a~
parenUy collapsed as the plane touched
down on runway 4-R and the plane "i;kld·
ded oft and broke open." The accident oc-
curred at 1:21 p.m., (EDT).
'
By ALMON LOCKABEY
'Dllfy l"llet Miit"' •dlter
NEWPORT, R.I. -Australia's Gretel
J[ virtually b I e w all · chances for an
America's Cup victory today when she
lost a crewman overboard, fouled her
spinnaker and fell 4 minutes and 40
seconds behind Intrepid at the halfway
mark. ·
Gretel's crew immediately hoisted the
protest nag. claiming a spectator boat in·
terfered with her rescue of the overboard
crewman.
It was a disastrous day for the Au ssie
challenger.
Her two most serious mishaps occurred
before today's race was ha1£ over.
Shortly after jibing the second mark
one or her foredeck crew went overboard
in the choppy seas of Rhode Island
Sound. The man overboard was picked up
by Gretel II but she hoisted a prOtest nag
after a spectator boat interfered with the
rescue.
Gretel II was already hopelessly
behind. ,
She rounded the first wil'Jdward mark
one minute, eight seconds astern and
hnisted her spinnaker in a hopeless way
around the beadstay.
It took the crew a full slx minutes to
get a chute flyiilg and the fouled one
..1own.
The race started under threatening
skies and a 17 knot easterly wind that
kicked up fine chop on the sound.
Grete! II was first across the 1tartlng
line but lost her advantage by having to
bear away aharply to keep from being
early, thus giving Intrepid a clear
weather berth. At the end of the triangle
halfway mark of the 24-mile course
Gretel II was 4 minutes, 40 seconds
behind.
Gretel U. designed by Alan Payne, ban·
dily defeated France 4 to o in elimination
teriea in August against the French
challenger.
But many think Intrepid. only the se-
concl boat picked twlct to defencl the cup.
will win the seri~ in four straight o~cr
the Australian challenger.
Match racing for the cup ls a battle or
billfolds. design, space age technology,
crew selection and organ.izatton,
helmsman&hip, aalllng tactics and luck.
Intrepid showed herself a wlnnlng com·
blnaUon of all of these In her somewhat
(See CUP RACE; Pit• I)
·~ '
Plane Held
One Hom
OnRunwa~.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A h!Jaclitr
who tried to rorce a Trans World Airliner
to. fly to North Korea was critically woun-
ded in the abdomen today by another
passenger, a private auard fer •
securities shipment.
Tb,e 70'1 jet liner, from New York via
Chicago and Loa Angeles, was held on a
San Francisco Int.ernational Airport
runway for an llour Jly the ~belPr•
be wu shot and 'lVerPOwtM. No oGe
else was injured.
Armed witll a .22 caliber pistol, tllO
man .bOerdecl the early 1"0mllllc mpt In
Loll 'Angeles. lle'was ldentilled.by police
ts DonaJd Irwi1t, 28, of Re:seaa.
Robert E. De Nisco, 34, ol Brooklyn ••
N.Y., a guard for Brinks, Inc., shot the
hijS:cker after 35 of the 55 passenaen
were aJJowed to debark. The plane wu
being held on a runway • mile from tbt
terminal at the time.
The plane had a aew of seven, all from
Kansa.s Cit-/.
· Shortly after taking off Ir o m Los
Angeles for San Francisco, Ille. pilo~
Capt. J. K. Gilman, radioed the Los
Angeles control tower that a white male
passenger had told him. ''This plane ii
being hijacked. It will be golng farther."
San ~rancisco was . alerted and peaee
officers were standing by when the plane
landed at 6:03 a.m .• Gilman having: eon-.
vinped the gunman th4t refueling . wu
necessary.
One of the . four stewardessu u1d the
drama began when the man arose and
handed her 11 note reading, "I have A iUJl.
I want lo go to Korea ."
She said she had seen him on previous
flights.
Passenger Sally Rush. 24, of san Fran·
cisco said none of the passengers: knew
what was going on until the plane was on
the ground.
She said the captain announced on the
public address system, "There i! a
gentleman on board whn wishea to land
at another airport. Be calm."
He then announced that military men
and families with children would be
allowed to debark. ·
Miss Rush said she And the others left
aboard were asked to move to front seats
1n the coach section.
The gunman was seated two rows
behind them.
After an interval of suspense, she said,
''A man in a brown ouUit wa1ked from
the front of ~the plane, quickly said,
'Police,' and fired one shot over eigbt lo
JO rows of seats."
We•tller
Only a few patchy clouds will
lnar Wednesday's sunshiny skies
with temperatures holding' •t 701
degrees on the coast 1nd" up to U
further inland.
INSmE TODAY
Tht new theater tea.son is Ill
f-ull swing on tM Orong1 C~t.
as well as ''uptown." Reviews of
' three oJ the !Gitst production&
art on Entertainmlnt Poot• 'J6
and l 1 today.
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2 DAILY PILOT " Tutldol, -15. 1910
Beach Officials Veto 'Junket'
Bl::-:!!~
HllllllJIPa Bach eouncll-acted
Monday night to prevent ~ four-day
Caliloml.l Lea1U• ol CIUes cbmer~ Is
San Dleao ftom turnlng tnto a "J~et"
I« city employes.
Lut year's conrerence In San Fran-
cisco cost the city 1$.275 Is loll! eJPt!1Je1
{or 25 persons.
Monday night the couocllmen authoriz·
ed apenses -not to exceed $200 per
person -for thtmltlves and City Ad-
--Doyle Miller for lhe Oct. 25-28 parley.
Any city department head who wanu to
attend semiDars will have to commute
and not slay overnight. explained Coun-
cllman Jaci. Green.
Fro• P .. e l
PIER : ••
under the pbn Is lo provide 1n Incentive
for prlVlle enlerprbe to develop lhe wr-
rounding area.
~ aelion was taken after the council
wu lold the DowntDwn Property Ownen
AssoclatJon had failed to establish a
limli.d partnership which would brbig in
private development.
The lighting II unlikely to 1lop,
however. The property owners' attorney,
Arthur Guy of Newport Qeach, hu in-
dicated that his clients would go to Ctiurt
if the council proceeded with con-
demnation.
La.It week the city's P I an n 1 n g
Department provided .. analya!J .. the
feasibility of the projecl wltb or wllhout
the Huntlngtoo 11 .. ch Company property.
'l1le report showed lhat lhe aoquiaition
costs would be Jeq -down from Sf.2
million to $3.5 million -but the avenge
square foot coat would Jump !nm $7.0I lo
19.51.
Instead of 1,878 parking spaces there
would be only 1,304 aM tbe average cost
pei" apace would be up from $2, 782 to
$3,!1111.
1be surplus tn each case would be
about $22,000, the report showed. 'This,
planners claimed, was becauae early
revenue of $230,000 a year would be con·
1tanL
Robert Manoske
Succumbs at 41;
Services Planned
Roary will be ioclled toolibt. 7,30
o'clock It SI. John lhe illpllll CalholJe
Church I« Robert 'I'. M-, an
englneer empJoYed-~ DousJu ,\lrcrlll,
Huntington Beach. ~ ·
Mr. Manoske, a Costa Mesa resident
for seven years, died Suoday at the age
of 4L
He was the achievement cltalrman of
the Orange C.Ounty Astronomical Society
and worked with Costa Mesa'• Boy Scout
Troop 499.
Mr. Manoske leaves his wife Shella; two sons, Mike and Bobby, and a
datlfhter, Laura, all ot the family home,
Jls&-Limerick Lane.
Also surviving are three brothers,
Leonard, G!orge, and Elmer, all of
Washington; a 11.ster, Mrs. Herbert
Graham of Marini, Calif., and parents,
Mr. and Mn:. Andrew Maooske, of
Washington.
Requiem Mass will be ctlebrated at 10
a.m. Wednesday at Sl John the Baptist
Church.
The family suggests that tll09e wlshlng
to do go make memorial contribuUons to
the City of Hope.
Typhoon Claims 300
MANILA (UPI) -'l1le PhlUppine Na·
tlonal Police said today more than 300
persons may have been killed when
Typhoon Georgia slammed into the
main island of Luzon and virtually level·
ed a town of 15,000.
DAILY PILOT
OAANGI COAST PU9L1'HINO c.oMPANT
l•Mi1 N. W,,,4
,.,~, 91111 ""'°''*'*"
J eck l. C11rl1y
Viet Prnlcl .... Mid Golftolr•I M-1•r
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Eol"""
Tho1t11• A. Mvrphl111
"'--'"' l!•ftr Al111 Dir\i11
W•I OI.,._ etunty l!dl!OI'
Alll1rt W. 11111
AllkltM l!•llW
H'llltl ...... 9"dl Offk•
1717& l11ch l1111l1¥1rd
M1llillfl ;.ddr1,n P.O. lo• 7f0, t 26<41 --""""' l11d11 m F-1 A-, C.11 MirM: $»War tty Strwt
N..,wt lttt/ll :oll W.t ltlbe» .... """,. 1t11 C*'*"1e: XII N0ttPI fl C-N ltMI
''It'• not dlfficult lo &et down there lD
an bout and 15 mlnulel, attend a seminar
and nturn to tbe city the wne day 1" bt ldded: .
But lhe ralricUON drew 1 bllsterlilJ
attack on the cooncllmen fJ'Qm Cltf At.
torney Dm Bonfaj
"To me thls ls extremely silly saying
you should not attend the one meeting
you · should attend," Bonfa aaid. "It's more important for city attorneys to at-
tend than councilmeTl."
Bonfa explained that seminars at the
conference woukl eiplaln the latest
developments in California municipal
law. ,
Referring to seminars he attended last
year, he commented, ''I found them ex-
tremely valuable and well worth while. l
Resolut ion
feel that to commute to San Dieso Is an
uort110111ble burden. '
.. , do -11111 ".lhoul!I no! lie •
vacaUon or a junket and J\ would not
mind keepinl • ,........ ol !ny t1penae1.
It's very bad economy not to permit
department heads to attend and attend
overnight."
Councilman G@rge MCracken, refer-
ring to last year's conference In San
Francisco, said, "We were clowns."
"We were two or three deep and had
people up there who didn't even have a
seminar," he added.
Green and Councilman Al Coen ex·
plained that the intention was not to pre-
vent department heads from attending
seminars.
Coee 11id he did not f .. l It was
\unrwouble to upecl department beldl ~_Ill up wly ...up to 1ttond tem1n1n
U11t do not start until 9,30 a.m.
City Cl«lc P1ul Joees lent Bon!a moral
.Upport when be said lhat •• 1'e•d or lhe
Southern Calttornll City Clerki Auocia-
lion he felt bound to attend oo two days
and would pay his own overnight ex·
penses. ·
City expense records show $2so was
advanced to those attending the cpn-
ference in San Franciaco last year plus
$20 reglstraUon fee per pereon.
Members of the city council, planning
commission and department beads !Jew
up with their apense claims ranging
from 1110 to 129tl.
From Page I
OAIL Y I'll.OT Stiff .....
Newport Delays
F.reeway A ~tion
CUP RACE .••
lllll'prlsing victory over V a!Wtt In lhe
ellmlnltlon trlale. Va!Wtt WU lhe 1970
product of genius of designer Olin
Stepbena who also designed Intrepid. In
1967, Intrepid soundly defea t ed
Australia's Dame Pattie for the cup.
In boat-for-boat racing, as in the
America 's Cup, past performance is
aometlmes }Q!:t to present sailing skill.
tactle! and good fortune, which makes
this year's series. a contest between a
proven wirtner and a question mark.
Cats and Dogs
Mrs Sheila Landry 9331 Litchfield Drive, Huntington Beach, says
her ·toy poodle, 11YVette ," has been nursing her kitten, "C~eo," for
the past few days and is treating it as her own. Dog and kitten are
doing nicely, thanks.
Newport Vice Mayor Calle
Hirth Patsy 0 11 Free way
A resolution asking Assemblyman
Robert E. Badham (R-Newport Beach) to
ask Governor Reagan to intervene in the
Pacific COast Freeway controversy was
tabled Monday night by the Newport
Beach City CoWJCil.
The council did, however, vote to direct
Its traffic department to prepare specifi.
cations of a study the city should carry
out on jtJ overall traffic needs.
~ who earlier had vowed to take
the freeway up with the governor on his
own, reporledly had 111ibaequenUy in-
formed lhe city be would do oo only upon
fcrmal request. ·
Vice Mayor Boward Rogers told the
council that Badham said he would ask
Governor Reagan to get his special
ftteway task force to look into the matter
following council action.
Murder Trial
Court Mov ed
.To Hospital
'11ie vote was tabled for two weeks at
the request of Councilman Carl Kymla
who viewed that the importance or the
action deserved additional time ror con·
sideration.
That is perhaps why 3,000 boats will go
to sea to see whether. as his crew pro-
fesses, "Ficker is Quicker."
Rogers, conceding that he had not .Frona PGfle J Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard
briefed fellow council members on the Rogers Mond:i.y night charged that
development prior to the meeting, agreed MIDEAST Mayor Ed Hirth has "fallen victim" to a
to the delay. • • • plot by the State Division of Highways
Mayor Ed Hirth pro-... lhe staff ••to lull lhe people to 1ieep" about lhe .,._... the M persons remanilng among nearly · of ••-p cifi r •• ~ ~ study of a design fer an official study the three Un.. issue ~ a c '""'"''u rieeway.
after 1 · al -·A-'-~ f 300 i':ptured In .separate air And Rogers released copies of a "con-comp eting .sever "~ 0 a ner jackings. fidential" memorandum written by Hirth
.lmllar Study on his Own. He said their personal needs were ~ to the City Council which Rogers asserted 'l1le staff design d uld in 1 d being adequately met. atu y wo c u e.. 'The Americans are bein·g treated on would back up his allegation.
the agenda for a study, who should the same basis as the Israelis because Rogers asserted the memorandum and
participate, the approachea to be taken the u~. is an enemy," Kanafani added. other recent act.ions by Hirth indicate he
and the limitations to be imposed, Hirth The Jewish state has refused to con· has become a patsy to the propaganda of
aaid. sider demands for 8 prisoner exchange state officials.
Council members stressed the 1tudy until they were processed through t h e Among other things, Rogers based his
should be made with as litUe e1:penditure Red Cross, nor will It deal with any age°" accusation on remarks by Hirth, later
of funds as possible an~ directed that no cy but that and the four governments in· recanted, that the state would not pro-
addiUonal funds on an Upper Bay study volved. ceed with plans to build the cootroversial
be spent pending the outcome of the Other pf'LP' demands include release freeway if the Newport Beach City Coun·
overall study. of girl guerrilla Leila Khaled, a com· cil would write a letter &!king work be
There currently is $18,000 budgeted for mando captured in an unsuccesdul at-!lopped.
the Upper Bay study. tempt to hijack an Amsterdam·t&Loodon Rogers said the men who made the
The design is expected to, be ready for El Al jeUiner Oighl statements, Haig Ayanian, director of
least 3 to 1 al this meeting," Rogers ski.
He demand ed to know why Hirth bad
brought him along.
The mayor replied that his partidpe.·
tion came at the suggestion of WilliaD'l
Jennings, chairman of the State HlgbwaY, .
commission, a resident of Balboa Island.
The confidential memo criticized by
Rogers contained statements critical of
the efforts of the CCC in their petition
drive, charging " a crippling procedure''
would result.
Hirth, in the memo, had said it would
be wrong for the council, itself, to in·
terfere with the citizens' move, but said,
"We could remove the need and deslre ·by
a stro ng acceptable action toward a solu-
tion."
Hirth then suggested ''instructing" the
state to stop the planning of the Newport
section of the freeway.
the council at its Sept 28 meeting. They also want the body of U.S. citiz.en Highway Division District 7, and his top
A Superior c:ourt Judga took his • Assemblyman Badham has ~de his Patrick J. Arguello, who W33 shot by aide, William Hashimoto, "do not have
cOurtroom pmoanel ud two opposing Initial vow to take the freew1y ~ to Israeli agents du:rinc the fruiUess venture the authority to take such action."
Secondly, Hirth suggested the steps he
has been following recenUy, a study of
the transportation needs of the county.
8tk.mey. to Costa Me.91. ud the bedside the governor after & bill be ~ed in accompanying Mils Khaled. Hirth, Jn council ae.sslon Monday,
the state leg1slature to kill the coastal Authorities believe the M hostages are agreed that a "simple Jetter" would not
of a ter1oueJ,y W woman Mooday for the frt!eway ~ Newport died lo Senate belog held In heavily fortified houses in force an official halt to state planning for takfna of what could be vital tutimony in committee.. j Amman, but 90me were allowed Moaday the route.
Rogers maintains that the ~t
must be rescinded "to wipe ~
clean" befOre any study i.1: initiated.
tbe murder trial of W1llla Dean Hunt of It bu passed the Assembly by a wide to appeal to their embassies to hasten ef. Rogers plugged the efforts of the S
Newpcrt Beach. \ margin. forb to secure release. Citizens Coordinating Committee, a Tur tle a ta, r,
Judge Jame. F. Judge moved his court Badham expr~ Intense di!ap-One radio broadcast monitored in Loo-Freeway Fighters adjunct, to circulate
from the Sao ta Ana county courthouse to pointment . followmg the Se .n a t e don said two or the capti ves have been petitions that would require a referendum W ~ • • k d
the Bay View Convalescent Hospital to T;a~p«>rtahon . Committee rejection of shot to death, bringing a prompt PFLP on the issue of whether the city's formal US J.}UC C
allow defense witneu Roberta HUit to h!s bill and indi~anUy vowed to march denial freeway route agreement should be
answer questions relaU11g to her lifEi with right into Reagans office. '!Tht!e reports are without any fotJD-o rescinded (see separate story). TORQUAY, England (UPI) -Ted the
Willis Hunt as the slain yacht broker's dation," said one 11poke.sman. Prior to the vice mayor's remarks, in a hijacked turtle has parted company with first wife. "Direct responsibility now falls on the statement which apparently prompted his schoolboy owners and become the F,.om Page l governments co11cemed to announce their them, Hirth had detailed to the council sta 1· t T ~ t Mrs. Hunt is recovering at the Costa r attrac ion a a orquay seau on Mesa facility from an acute lung in· RAID acceptance of the Front conditions," he his efforts the past several wttks in his aquarium.
fection that put her on the critical list for • • • added. <1ne.man study of how the city should ap. The turtle, named after Prime Minister
&everal weeks, proach its traffic problem. Edward Heath, survived the hijacking
Judge Judge, accompanied by his clerk, found during her arrest. Hirth disclosed that at his meeting with <1rdeal last week aboard the British
bailiff and court reporter, presided over a Huks Tell Slaying the two state highway officials last week, Overseas Airways Corp. (BOAC) jek in Detective Sergeant Monty McKennon Al Koch Orange County road com h session in which defense attorney Sidney • • t e Jordanian desert.
Irrnas ud Deputy District Attorney Joe said his men found the house unoccupied 0£ 15 Americans missioner, was present. His owners, Nigel Hatcher, 15, and his
Dickerson asked the first ~1rs. Hunt at the time of their arrival and were able , Rogers immediately assailed this. poin· brothers, Bruce, 13, and Michael, 11, kept
about her lile with the man who was to conduct an unintemipted search which MANILA (UPI) -Huk guerrillas ting out that Koch has long been a sup. the turt.ie alive during their capUvlty by
6tabbed to death last Dec. 14. yielded two .38 cal. revolvers, a .21 cal. claimed to have killed 15 American porter of the COBl!ltal freeway. "lt was at feeding him scraps from the 1 r
Accused of the killing and scheduled to automatic pistol, a switchblade knife, $9S military persoMel and at least 200 sandwiches.
go on trial Oct. 5 is Willia Hunt, 44, the Filipino soldiers in central Luzon during R } , T lk SI d Monday the boys, who returned to
mtb. wife of the slain man. It Is alleged in rolled coin, several credit and Iden· the past year, a publication of the Com-ea tor 8 a a te school at Rochester fr om Bahrein where
that she plunged a foot.l ong butcher knife tification cards, and some money seals munist Prty of the Philippines said today. • their father is an oil company executtve,
into her husband in the climax of a quar· police allege came from cash taken in the The latest issue of Ang Bayan (OUr Na· San Fernando Valley Realtor Steve received a ca 11 from a Tor q u a•y
rel that was witnessed by her 13-year-old robberies. tion) said the guerrilla new people's Levin will address tb'e Huntington Beach. Aquarium owner offering them $60" for
daughter. Later that evening, a car containing the army scored "a rich harvest of victories" Fountain Valley Board of Realtors on the turtle. 'Mley accepted.
Mrs. Willia Hunt's daughter, Dru, has accused robbers pulled into the driveway, while conducting more than 80 operations how to secure listings at 8 a.m. Wed. The aqu arium oflicial said the turtle
been committed by the court to the allowing McKennon and his men to make against the regime <lf P r e s i d e n t nesday at the Mile Square Goll Club, would be renamed Hijack and become
custody of relatives since the death of her the arrests without resistance, according: _1Fje~rdln.aniiiiiiiiiid ~M~a~rco~s·~~~~~~~iiiiiF~o~u~nt~ai~n~V~a~iie~y~. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~lh~e~s~t~ariiiiiatiiilriiiaciiitiiiioiiin.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ 56-year-old stepfather. to police reports. -'~~-'-----------'-~-''------~-
DAILY I'll.OT St•ff 'Mlt
A r t Show Co11ti11ues
Lexine Toleyi 17, ponders entry In Prospectus/Ari 70 show currently
under way a Huntington Center. Exhibit includes 725 works by art·
isu from all over California. It continues through Sept. 25.
It's
I
Your Dollar!
QU ITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
:THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY AND THICK TH E
CARPET IS NECESSARILY QU ALITY.
NOT TRUE ! MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE FIBER, AN D NOT THE QU ANTITY, IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE.
IT'S YOUR MONEY -SO, WHEN BUYING
YOUR CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE DEALING
WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL, AN D EQUALLY AS
IMl'ORTANT, A REPUTABLE DEALER.
ALDEN 'S
SANTA ANA, OU.N•l
TUSTIN c.11 , , •
ALDIN'S
llD HILL CAIP'm
A DIAPlllD
I U7• lf'll-. Tllltte, ttflf. ., .... , ..
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Av1.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
•
•. I
J
I
I
TU<sd>Y. Sf-b<r 15, 1970 H DA!lY PILOT j1
Uordan Under Fire; King Wants Out
. '
Both Sides
•
; ..
·~ .. ••
Police Continue
Search for Clues ~
Tell Salazar
Accountings
By TOM BARLEY
Of t1M O.f~ r1M1 Sltlf
0r..,ge County Sheriff's investigators
today continued their hunt for clues in
the tilling of a 13-year-old Long Beach
·girl whose roUing body was found three
days ago in the Laguna Niguel area.
Backing them in their efforts is a team
ot RiverSide County lawmen who are.
similarly investigating the death of the
girl's 16-year-old boy frien~ and awaitine
Fullerton
Fires Claim
2 ,W_arehouses
A 1pectacular lire of undttennined
origin did an estimated $1.2 million
. damage to two warehouse buiJdinp in
l'ullerton early this morning.
Fire officials reported the bJaze at 115
and 144 W. WaJnut Ave., is under control
early this morning but st.Ill pouring forth
billows of smoke from amolderiog com-
bustibles.
The fire was reported at 11:14 p.m.
Monday by a man WGrking across the
Santa Fe Railroad tracks from the ad·
·joining buildings.
Totally involved in flames were the
ri.turray Ohio Manufacturing Company at
116 W. Walnut and the next door struc-
ture housing the Fullerton Elementary
District warehouse, the Kelly Springfield
·Tire Compar1y and a General Foods
Corporation storage area in the base-
menl
1 • Ten fire fighting units from Fullerton.
1 Buena Park, La Habra and Brea fought
I the bl&Je for more than three hours
uniJer the direction of Fullerton Fire
.chief Ray Eiler. About SO fimnen ...,.
involved in cootrolling the conflagration.
Fire Marshal Preston Pyeatte said the
blaze was extremely difficult to control
because of the highly combustible
material in the two buildings.
In the Kelly Springfield area J0,000
tires were ·Stored and h1 the school
district warehouse thousands of books
and paper tablets. Ttie General Foods
·,basement area was filled with dry
cereals and other higilly combustible
food~
The Murray Ohio Manufacturing Com~
pany building was filled with bkyclea and
lawn mowers.
Pope to Visit
Philippines
And Australia
VATICAN CITY (AP) -P.,,. Paul VI
will fly to the Pbilippines and Australia in
late November and early ~mber on
llis ninth and longest trip so far, the
Vatican announced today.
It said the Pope woold arrive in itanila
Nov. 27 and fly to Sydney three days
later.
petails of the visits were still bting
worked out, the Vatican said.
Jn Manila, he is to call on government
! leaders, attend a conrerence of Roman
I Catholic bishops from Asia, celebrate
Mass and broadcut a message to Alla.
Jn Australia. the only continent the I pontlft has not vls(t.d, he will me« with
,ovemment figures, attend a conference
of bishops. and take pm In a Mus com-
memorating the bicentennial d the
dbcOV<r}' of Auslnll• by Capt. James
Cook.
25 Italian Police
Injured in Rioting
REGGIO CALABRIA, Jtoly (UPI) -quzens protesUng the choice ot' rival
Cantanzara as capital of the newly
atabllshed re1ion of Calabria tnjur«l 25
piilicemen and offlclll1 Mondly In
doylonJI rioting.
The Reggio Calabria Action Commlltee
atlrted a four-day strike that cloled all
oaic<t and blnu. and moot otorea In tho
part ctty ol 1531S80 population.
bemomtraton thre" rocb 11 Pollet,
wlio rtlpOllded with tMriU. Tbm '""'
20 mm..
BIWT PRESENTS
' 'PL,4.Y PICKEROO'
Jt'a plpkln plctlna lime 11atn In the
DAILY PllOT. 'You can be a
Plg1kl1 P1ckeroo and wia cash and Vott
footballs . r
'"1e player's entry forin for the big
tt.000 conteat 11ppear1 today on Page _
the out<ome of the tolicologlcal tesb bo-
;ng performed by the county coroner.
The body of Jenise Marie JU!pin WU
found by hlke:n early Saturday In the
Camino C4pistrano area about four miles
north of San Juan Capistrano.
flnvtstigator1 believe she wu stranguled
to death on or about Aug. 29, the day
before ahe wu repo<ted u mlaalng by
her parents.
Her boyfriend, F.dwln E. Miller, II, of
Elsinore, was, investigators believe, kill-
ed within 2f hours of the girl's murder.
His body was found Aug. 30 in a shallow
grave off the Ortega Highway in
Riverside County.
Investigators said Miller's parents told
them that the young couple left the Mllltr
home on Riverside Drive to visit a ao-
cart tract last Aug. 29 and promised to
return home about 11 p.m.
Th.at was the last time MiS! Rispin .tnd
tier boyfriend wm. lteD alive.
Counterfeiter
'Comes Clean'
PHILADELPHIA (UPl)-Albert
Langanella. 35, began the day with
a stop at the laundromat He ended
it in jall after authorities took a
look at his i•wash."
Langanella left a b u 1 g i n g
pillowcase in a coin-operated
drying machine early Monday and
headed for a nearby tavern. The
landromat owners removed the
pillowcase when the dryer rmlshed.
Tied shut with a black thread, the
pillowcase contained $100,000 in
counterfeit $10 bills police uid.
Authorities explained a time-
honored counterfeit trick is to laun..
der newly printed money to make it
loot older. 1.a,...na, .,.,.s1e4 wllen he
returned from tht tavern, told
police he lowtd the pillowcaa on
the otreet.
New Isla Vista
Bank Opened
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -A new
Bink of America branch ts open In the
campus rommunity of Jsla Vitti to
replace one burned by young rioters.
In place o( a prefabricated building
that "'placed the.building destroyed laat
!prlng standa a windowless, $05,000 con-
crete and steel building in Spanlah baro-
q-yle.
The red tile roof, which cost $15,000, is
1Janted so that firebombs would roll back
on the tbrowen:, officials aay.
And they say the glus in the front door
will repel anything thrown at IL
Embedded in the concrete at the en-
trance: "For social d!ange, fair play and
peace, Kevin P. Moran, April 18, 1970."
Indian Ambassador
Sets Newport Talk
L. K. Jha, the newly appofntod am·
bamdor of India to the u. s., 11111 •0.
drea the 'lburlday meeUn1 of the World
Alfalri Council oCOranp County at 7:30
p.m. at the Newporter Inn In Newport
Beach.
Jha, on his first visit to Southern
CAJUornla, sin"' hlJ -.rt aoooli>tznenL
will speak on "Options tn Aila." Prior
posts Jha has held include tey Indian
aovmunent positions 11 secretary of
commerce and Industry and rovunor of
the Raerve Bank ol India.
'J'll lfl)(Jp YQU tUlo
DC.Si for a VC.10 ... '
Missing Boat
Discovered
In Pacific
HONOLULU (UPI) -The sailing
vessel Galilee, missing in the Pacific two
months with a woman and two men
aboard, wn found Monday hundreds or
miles olf course by a U. S. Navy supply
lblp •
The three occapanlt of ·the boat were
reported to be suffering from enttme
exposure and dehydration.
The aallboa~ a .S.foot gaff.rigged sloop
named Galilee, was found 600 miles
northwest of Honolulu by the USS
Niagara Falls.
"It was an unlikely spot," a Coast
Guard officer said. .
"The Galilee had been on a trip from
Tahiti to Honolulu -she obviously
overshot the mark and was hopelessly
lost."
Tahiti is 1,500 miles southwest <>f
Hawaii.
The Qwl Guan!, In radio contact with
th• Niagara Falls, identified the thrte
survivors as Julian Ritter, the skipper, In
bis 50s, and Miss L«<n Louise Kim. II.
both U.S. cililens, and Win lleirlnlbofl of
W~tGermany. '
"They are lllffering from utreme o·
pooure and dehydration," lhe Coaat
Guard said. "'Ibey were taken aboard the
Niagara Falls and are under the care of a
doctor on the ahip."
The Galilee wu .i-ibod u battered
and taking on water. "She was in very poor condition,,, the Coast Guard Ald.
The Niapra Falls put a team of Allors
aboard the sailboat with water pumpe:.
The Coast Guard cutter cape Corwin WIS
~n route from Honolulu to take the
Galilee in tow.
The Cape Corwin and Nilpra Falls
are ICbeduled to mn 'lburldly to
Honolulu.
Daughter Dead;
Ads 'Agonizing'
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UPI) -
Mr. and Mrs:. Gordon Eden filed a
$150,000 suit Monday against the
Cclumbia Record Club in which
they said advertisements sent by
the club were a source of "agony,
mental suffering, ·outrage and
disturbance of peace of mind."
The couple's daughter. Sherry,
16, died Feb. Tl, lllfT, of leukemia.
Six months before sh! died the can·
celed her membership in the record
club.
The 1111t llld the reconl club 1t11l
sollctlaltonl addmled to Sherry In
envelopes marked: ••Sherry Eden
come back. Wt mlu you ."
An attorney for the record club
Sl!d ••every effort" WU beln&
mtdt to remove the 1lrl'1 name
from the club's malling lilt. The 11·
tomey e-condolenct1 to the
&Jrl'1 famOy.
LOS A)/GELES (UPI) -Witnesses
Monday gave conflicting accoonts ol the
eveuts leading up to the death last month
ol newsman Ruben Salazar during riots
in East Los Angeles.
The main quesUon at a coronu's in-
quest was whether sherifr1 deputies gave
adequate warnings before firing tear gas
projectiles into a bar. One can is t et
struck and killed Salazar, f2, a columnist
for the Los Angeles Times and news
director of the Spanish 1 an g u a g e
television staUon KMEX.
A barmaid who was inside the Silver
Dollar Cafe at the time testified she
heard no warning before deputie s fired.
~1rs. Martha Llanos's story conflicted
with the •CC01..1nts of persons on the riot·
torn streets Olllside who said officers
gave bullhorn warnings to clear the bar
and that the occupants bad ample lime to
get out be.fore the tear gas was fired.
Mrs. Llanos said that three or four men
entered the bar from the street and stood
near the curtained doorway shortly
before the deputiu fired the gas. She
said an older man, apparenUy Saluar.
was seated at the bar,
Mrs. Llanos insisted she heard no
warnings whatsoever, and, in fact. was
not even aware that anything unusual
was under way on the street outside.
A previous witness, William R. Burns,
proprietor ol a small store near the bar,
said the rioters were breaking in storts.
tossing Molotov cocktails, looting and
milling in the street. He said they seemed
to feel it was a "festive occasion."
The owner or a nearby discount record
store agreed there had been warnings for
those in the bar to emerge.
Louis Nevada, cwner or the record
shcp, refused to testify on the s tan d
becaUSe he said he bad received threats
agahlst bis 1i£e and the lives of eight
members of hi..s family. However, a tape·
recorded statement that he g a v e
authorltles three days after the Aug. 29
disturbance and slaying of Salazar, was
read to the Jury and he confirmed that it
was true.
Daniel Riviera, a welder whose wife
has a bridal shop two doors from the
Silver Dollar, said he was in the shop and
heard no warnings by the officers.
He 1aid, however, that the doors of the
store were closed so .he could not hear
clearly although be did bear the firfng of
the tear gas guns.
Hijacker Given
50-year Term
PECOS, TeL (UPI) -Jooeph C.
Crawford pleaded guilty to hijacking a jet
airliner at knife point and was sentenced
Monday to 50 years in prison.
"This is a terrible aime of an ex·
tremely serious nature which I thought
you should be made aware of," U. S.
District Judge Ernest GUinn said as he
pronounced senten..e.
Crawford hijacked the plane July 27,
1969, from the Midland-Odessa. Tex ..
Regional Airport. He permitted the pilot
to return to Midland where the
passengers disembarked. He t ti e n
ordered the plane flown to Cuba.
Crawford was one or tix accused hi·
jackers wtio returned to the United States
In November to face charges. Under
federal law, Crawford could have been
sentenced to anywhere from 20 years in
prison to death.
Hog Pen Pollution
CHARL01TE. N. C. (AP) -The
Health Department released Monday a
list of S27 sources of stream pollution in
the county. Almost all named on the 1i1t
were industries, but one scurce waa "hog
pen in aeek."
Nixon Facing Subpoena
He May Be Called as War Witiiess
rr. HOOD, -(UPI) -A ctvtllan
laW)'fl' said Moodly be will 11t a
mllltory court to 111bpoena Preoldenl Nia·
oo 11 • defenae wllneu for Sit-Dlvld
Mllcl>ell, charged In C<ll1llfCllon with the
My Lal mwacrt.
1be lnytr, Ollie Brown, 11id he
OU.I of Stoff Gen.
• Secretary of
and 5ecrttory ol De,_ Melvin Lalrd be tubpoenaed to
appear at MltchelP1 pretrial helrinl
iih!cb begins Tuetday.
Cllarges ""' flied aplnat Mltcbell, It, of SI. Francbvllle, Lo, laa\ December In
connection with the Incident at the Vie~
namese village, where American troopS
are ICCUMd of abooUn1 mora than too
clvUlans.
Mll<:hel1 "" cbar,ed with aaault with
lnt.nl to mun!er IO VletnalMM clvlllana
oo Matdl 11, 1911. Another char1e that
Mltditll attempted to lhoot an 1-year-<>ld
Vietnamele boy with an Mtt rifle was
dn>pped by Ibo Army laat -Mltcbell
bu dented -., any dvlllans.
In Ill, Brown llld he """kl make to
mollona be! ... the court todoy. Ha 11Id
he will Ilk the court be seot to Vietnam
wher> the malllCl'I happoaed. rather
than rtfer to "two year old memories."
He allo plans to ut for a btll of
l>lrticulm for delalls of charges 11alnst
Mttdltll, •nd contend prtltlal publldty
and mllltary command Influence mate It
lmpoAlbte for Mi1cllell to receive • lair
trial.
1be hearma was ordered to begjn afler
U.S. lllslrlct Judi• Jack Roberts ruled In
Austin, Tu., la:i:t week Mitchell's trlal
could not be moYed from a military to a
civtlian CQllrt.
Mitchell has been ordered court-
martialtd before a five.member pant!,
headed by Col. Geottt R. Robinloo,
jL.Jdge advocate at Ft. Hood.
Brown ,aid one of the principll motions
would file at the hearing was one at.
t n Artie!< 134 of the Unllonn Code
of M tary Justice under which Mitdltll
is c aed. Brown 11.!d the article ii ''too
VI :"f
Army prooecutor Is Capt. Michael
• Swan, who rtqUe1ted the u1ault
charce concerning lhe Vietnamese boy bt
dropped. Swan would not comment on
why the action Willi taken.
The pretrial hearing ls Umited to ml>"
lions from the defense and prosec:uUon.
l.l'IT ... llt
LIH'h Ness Co_,.•
Scotland's shy Loeb Ness Moo-
ster may be captured on film
ttirougti this infra-red camera
bein2 cheeked out by filmmak·
er Peter Suarez, New expedi·
tion of British scientists will
watch for monster starting
Wednesday.
Pornography
Report Nixed
By Commission
WASHINGTON (AP) -A 11111 uklng
for a court ofder aialnlt lnulng a con-
troversial O:>mmlssion o" Pornography
report was dismissed Monday, the com-
mission aMounced.
The suit was brought by President Nix·
on's only rnember of the commission,
Oiarles H. Keating Jr.
Keating sued to prohibit the com·
mJuion from recommending repeal of aJI
U.S. pornography laws for adults. He also
asked a court order against publication of
t: ie report until he had more time and
help in preparb1g a minority report.
Dr. W. Cody Wllso11, the commiakm'!I
execulive director, said the suit was set·
tled out of courL KeaUng couJd not be
immediately reached for commenL
Wilsen said the suit was: dismlued on
the understanding the report will be
Issued Sept,. ~ -just before the com-
mission's We expiro-and Keating will
have until then to ia!ue hls minority
report for inclusion. . .
h1 asking a court order against I"·
clusion of the controversial recommen·
dation for repeal of all laws against
showing or se llinR pornography to adults.
Keating had argued Congreas' mandate
on the contrary was for the commission
to find ways to control pornography.
His suit called the 18·member com·
mission's report a 'sham ot the
Coogress' national concern involving traf•
fie in obscenity and pornography.·•
Keating became Niion'11 only member
on the commb:!ion wben be was ap-
pointed to fill a vacancy. The commWlon
was created by Congress three years ago
and il'I: members ''ere appointed by then
President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Keating, a Cincinnati lawyer and
founder of Citizens for Decent Literature
Inc alao said h!1 report was llm.lted i5o pages wJ,lle he said the majority
report Including ten volumes of technical
pa~s would ru" to 10.000 pa(les.
ti.1eanwh ile, anothtr commissioner-the
Rev. Morton J. H1U of New York de--
manded a commlslon accountin1 of han-
dling or its finances.
llill said he wanls to know how much
the commiSJlon spent to send Wilson to a
recent conve11tlon In Miami to publicly
(.'Omment on technical papers pre~re~
for the commission that the commiu1-
oners until then had not known about.
Hiit in a leuer to Commission
Chatrinan Wllllam B. Lockhart, lloo said
$100,000 has been 1pent on the technicll
,..ports whllAI 111,000 11 alloeat.d for the
commluloa repcrt. He 11ld tbl1 would
limit the number ol coplOI ol lhe llnaf
report that cu be laaued.
Tustin W omari
Killed in Crash
A young Tuttln .....,. d!..t wly this
morning from ln]u11u 111ffmd when the
car in which she ..., a paaenaer went
out of control, struck a parked car and a
tree.
Police said Donna J ... Abroolnl, 22. ol
14300 Newport Ave. Apt. 6<, was rldin&
In 1 car driven by Henry M. Btll, ts, of
the ame address. Apt. 24.
Army Shells
Guerrillas'
Base Camps
By u.u.cr Pm• hlteru-l
Jordanltn anny gunners ah e 11 e d
Palestinian guerrilla bases in north
Jordan today, the Syrian Arab News
Agency repcrted. The English language
Jerusalem Post said the crisis there wu
so serioua King Hussein tried to abdicate
but was dissuaded by UAR President
Carnal Abdel Nasaer.
'Ibe cease-fire along lhe Suei Canal
also wis reported shaky, and otflclal
sources in Cairo said Monday night
Egypt believes the United States has:
suspended its peace initiative which led
to the cease-fire. They said the big four
pov.·ers should try again to restore pe~.
Diplomatic sources in Jerusalem aald
Israeli Premier Golda Meir, wbo meet&
President Nixon in Washington on Frt4
day, will ask llim to'reviat America'• of.
ficial policy on lsrae1'1 borders. She will
contend that Israel must retain aome
captur<d territory to assure Its IOCUrity,
the sources said.
Maj. Abdel Salam Jalloud, a mrmber
af the Libyan Revolution Command eoun.-
cil, in a statement reported by the Egyp-
tian Mlddle East Nen Acenc:v. Aid the
situation bas now reached a lla«e where
a political aoluUon can no longer be found
and the situation must be rMOlvtd
through war.
The report of fighUng ln the Irbld area
45 miles northeast of Amman followed
similar reports Monday by the guen'llla
organization Al Falah. And In Beirut, the
right-wing newspaper the Dally Star
quoted guerrilla sourcea in Amman as
saying the Jordanian Army has cleared
guerrillas out of South Jordan.
'!be Daily Star said King llulotln hoped
to liquidate the whole mo v em en t
gradually. It said the campaign was laun-
ched after leaders of the Bedouin. the
lanotlcal supporlen of Kini Hualeln, -
In special aeaston and pledged to -1
the govemmenL
H-111 bu been laced with near dvtl
war for months and bu survived trln•
assassination attempta:. 1be Jerusalem
Post, quoting "aourcea: cl()&e to the Jorda-
nian royll court," sald In • front pqe
banner story he was for the first Ume
conaidering abdicating.
"HUIRin. , .expreued h11 Intention <>f.
quitting after last week'• fierce cluhes
between his anned Corces and the ter·
rortsta, and after the open IJ)llt Jn his
anny over the issue of the prueooe of
tem>rlats and Iraqi troops In oreu of
Amman and other major towlll, it Aid.
It said Hussein held up his deciliOn al
the insistence ol NUler "who fears total
civil war in Jordan would follow hla a~
dication."
Huasein, In an Interview today with the
newspaper Le Figaro in Part., admitted
the split in his army. He said he had been
having problems restraining some of his
younger offlceri from trying to wipe out
the guerrillas.
He gave one instance -a battery of
heavy artillery was headed Into Amman
to get the Palestinian guerrillas and at
first refused to stop when be peraonally
pursued them.
"The trucks kept pushing me off the
road at the risk of overturning my car ln
a ravine," he said. "I flnaJly managed to
overtake them and the Land Roven ot
my personal guard blocked theJr advanct.
It was very difficult to convince them to
return to their base."
Official sources in Cairo ai!d Egyptian
embassies and legaUons throughout the
world would be instructed to noUfy their
host governments of Egypt's View that
"America bu frozen its peaceruJ in·
iUativt."
Smokey's Gone -Up in Smoke
INTERNATIONAL FAW,
Minn. (AP) -Smokey the Bear1 that friendly symbol of f~e proven.
tlon, has tone up in smoke blmaell,
and the apparent vandall!llD hid
local citizens smoukter1ng.
The 26-foot-hlgh, 82-ton Smokey, a
statue of tteel frame and Hbersl,.
covering, wu burned t a r I y
Satw'day.
Police llld the blaze apparenlly
was sot deUberately. omc.r.
reported findln1 a flv .. 1allon .. P'
ty gat0Une can nearby.
An anonymous penon o r
organinUon otferd a NO reward
for information leadlnl to ap.
~enslon of thole who Mt tbl
OfOctrt 11\d the vthlcle •lid broadside •
for to feet into the car and tNle in tht
1100 block ol NllSOD Rold, 'l'll!lln.
Smokey and his cube, erected
here In 1954 at a ooat of P,IOO rel>
td by clvie donatloru:, w11 a toor1lt
attrllction at a municipal park nur
downtown JntemaUooal Falls. The
cubs allo were dtltroyed by 1111
bl ....
,I
Tottday, September IS. 1970
After a slight delay, a leUer to a
toy shop has been delivered. The
addrelis read: "The toyshop that
is on the left of the road towards
the railway bridge where one turns
Jeft to the Al, very close to the
British Railways Car P ark, Peter·
borough, England . • Paddy, a n ~year-old mongrel,
has been left $3.60 a \veek for life in
the $103, 200 will of E rnast Goocl-
man, in Outwell, England. • The national record for nonstop
bagptpe playing has been broke,
Stevenage. England pipe band of·
ficials said Sunday. They said the
Stevenage's 10-hour, l\vo-minute
nonstop playing beats the 91h hour
record set in A1ay in London. • Police had to rescue a man who
became stuck in a garbage chute
of an apartment house. Detectives
said the man. who \vas not identi·
bed, was unable to get to his girl·
friend on the third floo r by ordin·
ary means because he had no key
-so he tried the garbage chute.
J~e was (reed after fou r hours in
Hudiksvall, Sweden. • Because of Hell's Bells. the popu-
lation of Hell declined in the 1970
census. The census showed that
the southeastern Mi chigan commu-
nity's population dipped from 52
to 48. The Hell Chamber of Com-
merce said jt was due largely to
the drafting of brothers George and
Charles Bell into military service.
The chamber said the two \vere not
counted in the census, and added
the village "is proud of its contri·
bution to the armed forces, but like
most everyone. we will be happy
when Hell's Bells are back in Hell,
r..licb." •
Clyde Olson and l!is dog Rocky, a
J 5.year old wire haired terrier, take
11 stroll in a Ch icago park. \Vhen
Rocky's hind lf'OS become paralyzed
Olson had Jrim fitted with rubber·
wheeled substitute legs. • Honesty proved to be a good pol·
icy for Mari• Cclm•r of Los Ange-
les. The 64-year-old \vi do\v found a
paid of man's pants on the front
lawn of her home three months
ago. In the pockets she found a r oll
of biU s totaling $3.300. The honest
woman took the money to the sher·
iff's department Friday deputies
brought the mon{!y back to ~!rs.
Colmer since it had not been claim·
ed. "She \Vas a11 smiles." Det•c·
tive J •ffr•y Plcugh said . "She told
me that she plans to use the cash
to pay off some old bills which
have accumulated."
New Pullouts
Red Units Halt
Cambodia Drive
SAIGON (AP ) -Enemy troops again
halted a government attempt to reca~
ture an important part of Cambodia's
heartland today , and in South Vietnam's
northern quarter fighting broke out at
five places.
As the new fighti ng was reported . the
U.S. Command announced more troop
withdrawals from Vietnam that will cut
American strength by more than 3,000,
and the South Vietnamese announced the
withdrawal of 1,500 cf their troops from
Cambodian operations.
In Cambodia, a force of North Viet-
namese and Viet Cong troops entrenched
45 miles north cf Phnom Penh and a
bridge destroyed by enemy commandos
1tal\ed the Cambodian drive.
A spokesman for the Cambodian
military command said it was up to the
commander on the scene whether his
forces would again advance toward the
village of Taing Kauk.
A regiment of North Vietnamese and
Viet Cang turned back the spearhead of
the biggest Cambodian offensive of the
war at Ta ing Kauk Sunday and Monday,
killing 26 Cambodian troops and woun·
ding nearly 100.
The Cambodians sent reinforcements
•
Castro's Sister
Asks H~lp to
Oust tlie Reds
KYOTO , Japan (AP) -Fidel Castro's
sister called on Japan and other countries
today for help and cooperation to rid her
fatherland of communism.
Miss Juanita Castro said she hoped she
could return to Cuba some da y to carry
out anti·Communist movements and free
many of her compatriots from com·
munism. "I have Jong been considering
how to get back to my homeland." she
sa id.
Miss Castro. who sought politica l
asylum in the United States in 1964 and
now lives in Miami, Fla., was addressing
the opening session of a joint meeting of
the World Anti-Communist League and
the Asian People's Anti-Communist
League. ( .
She told a news conference thal her
brother, the Cuban Prime Minister. y,·as
going in the wrong direclion, ruling Cuba
under communislic influences.
Other speakers included Gen. Praphan
Kulapichitr of Thailand, "''ho is also
chairm~n of the v.•orld group. Dr. Ku
Cheng·kang of Nationalist Chirla . and
Okinori Kaya, fonner finance ministe r ot
.Japan and a membe r of wartime dictator
Hideki Tojo's Cabinet.
Kaya, a right,.winger In Prime Minister
Ei saku Sato's Llberal·Democrat party,
said all Asian people shou.ld closely
cooperate to stop "Communis t ag·
gression" in the region. A military
alliance between Communist China and
North Korea and the Soviet Union's
stronger approach to J apanese Cam-
munists are the •·main threats in Asia ,·•
he said.
A total of 2.500 people including 146 na·
lional delegates cf 57 foreign countries
and some 500 representatives of Japan
attended the session. Sen. Strom Thur-
mond (R·S.C.), is due Friday.
329 Persons Dead
In Wake "Of Floods
BOMBAY (UPI) -Floods that swept
through two villa ges of Broach in Gujarat
State two weeks ago left 329 persons
dead, State Chief Minister Hitendra Desai
said today.
Desai said lhe death toll y,·as compiled
from reports furnished by heads of the
tv.•o villages. Most cf the victims ·were
reported to have drowned as the Holy
River Normada flooded .
~
into the area. but the communist com·
mand was also reported reinforcing and
resupplying its troops in Taing Kauk .
The spokesman said there had beftl no
action on the battle front overnight.
Associated Press correspondent John
T. Wheeler reported from Phnom Penh
that 600 re[Mg~ hacl been flown to the
capital from the besieged provincial
capital of Kompong Thom, 80 miles to the
north. Kompoog Thom is the object of the
current Cambodian drive. but one com·
mander said, "I don't think we'U ever get
to Korn pone: 'Ibom."
The spokesman reported that only a
small nuinber of civilians remained in
Kompong Thom.
South Vietnamese headquarters
reported that its forces had closed cut a
24-<lay Cambodian cperation near Neak
Luong~ 40 miles southeast of Phnom
Penh . A spokesman said 35 North Viet·
namese and Viet Cong troops were· killed
in the operation and that two South Viet·
namese were killed. He said the end of
the operation reduced South Viet namese
strength in Cambodia from 15,000 to
13.500 troops .
In the northern part or South Vietnam,
North Vietnamese troops kept up their
siege of Fire Base O'Reilly and cl~shed
with government forces near artillery
base Barnett, IO miles to the northwest.
Backed by artillery, South Vietnamese
troops reported killing 25 North Viet·
namese arqund Fire Base Barnett. Field
reports said five South Vietnamese
soldiers were killed and seven wounded.
American bombers kept up their heavy
raids against North Vietnamese gun posi·
lions around O'Reilly and Barnett in er·
forts to prevent a massive North Viet·
namese assault on the bases.
The U. S. Command said that eight
Army units were take n oot cf action to..
day in South Vietnam and either wi!J be
seiit back to the United States or in-
activated in South Vietnam . The moves
are part of President NixOn's troop
reduction program that will cut U. S.
strength in Vietnam to 384,000 by Oct. 15.
It now is 396,300.
Tropical Storm
Seen Gaining
HtuTicane Force
NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -Tropical
Storm Felice split in two thi.!i morning as
it neared the Lauisiana coast. There were
indications the storm would intensify to
hurricane force as it develops its new
center.
The \Veather Bureau s a Id the n ew
center was located by radar and "lhe
new circulation will become the main
ce nter and the other cne should
di ssipate.''
The Weather Bureau said that nea r
dawn, the tropical storm's developing
center was about 130 miles south of New
Orlean.!i and carrying winds cf gale force.
The new center, said the bureau, was
mov ing \\'t':Sl·northwest about 15 miies
per hour.
"Highest sustained winds are estimated
at 60 miles per hou r, but wi nds may be
near hurricane force for brief periods in
heavier squalls just north of the center.''
Tides of tll'O to five feet were prcjected
along the Louisiana coast west to the
mouth of the Mississippi R I v e r .
Forecasters also predicted heavy rains
with local accumulations of 5 to 8 inches
h1 the path of Felice.
There were no immediate preparations
to evacuate any of the coastal areas, but
a close watch wa s being . kept on the
storm for further intensification that
might make some evacuations necessary.
A hurr\cane watch was in effect from
?-.1organ City. La .. to Port O'Connor, Tex.
and gale warnings were posted from the
mouth of the Mississippi to the Sabine
River.
Cold Front Hits Midwest "'
Felice Rips Gulf; Rains Soak Nation's Bread Basket
Calltornla
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I._ \
GUNS AT THE RE ADY, CAMBODIANS PATROL
Near Siem Rup, Troops SHk to Dislodge Enemy
350,000 Walk Out
Aitto Union Strikes GM;
Economic Impact .Seen
DETROIT (UPI! -About 350.000
United Auto Workers Union members in
16 slates and Canada struck General
Motors Corp., the world 's largest
manufacturing firm. early today. A pre>-
longed strike could damage the nation's
uneasy eeonomy.
UAW President Leonard Woodcock left
1 listless nego tiating session with GM
just before midnight and announced,
"The company held out no other choice"
but to strike after 60 days of fruitless
negotiations.
Woodcock said union officials will con-
fer later today. "It is our fervent hope
that for the economic and social good for
all concerned and affected this can be
reS-Olved in a mi ni{Jlum of time," he said.
As thousands of auto workers picked up
picket signs to join about 35,000 others
who jumped the gun. chief GM negotiator
Earl Bramblett called the walkout "a
stri~e agair)st reason."
"Nobody reall y wante~ a strike. \Ve
tried hard, but the demands are just .too
many and too high," Bramblett said. He
added negotiations may r e s u m e
"probably \Vednesday" on unresolved
issues of money. early retirement and
cost-of-living allowances.
In Washington. D. C., Harold C. Passer,
assistant commerce secretary f o r
economic affairs. warned the strike could
"put a crim p in the rising trend of
economic aclivity. It would not . in my
view. jeopardize the upturn that is now
developing but it certainly would lower
the rate of increase."
At GM"s Cadillac assembly plant on
Detroit's lower west side. the co'nsensus
viewpoint was a strike ''of at least three
v.'ecks."
"We're 100 percent behind him (Wood·
cock).'' said Bob Williams , a shop
stewiird who was picketing in a cold
drizzle in his blue work shirt. The sign
sa'id "UAW On Strike For Justice." Most
of the night shift stayed home and \he
few workers who showed up at midnight
were told, "it's cfficial. This is not a
v.·ildcat.''
Woodcock said the union has a record
$120 million strike fund , enough for six to
eight v.·eeks of benefits. It will take about
that Jong for GM to run out of unsold new
cars. If it went beyond that. Woodcock
said, "then we'll conduct a strike on the
old-fa.shined basis," without the $30 to $40
weekly benefits. Other unions have of·
fered to loan the UAW money ."
Besides the immediate impact of stop-
ping production of 1971 models. including
the new subcompact Vega to combat
foreign imports, effects of the strike soon
would spread to supplier steel, rubber
and glass industries.
It was th e third national strike ttie
UAW has called against GM. The UAW
struck GM for 119 days in 194a.46 and JO
days in 1964. Even before the death of
Walter Reuther last spring, it was being
speculated GM would be the target.
The union's ruling International Ex·
eculive Board picked twin strike targets,
GM and smaller Chrysler Corp., on Sept.
2.
Ford, struck for seven weeks during the
last big three contract negotiations in
1967. was exempted. On Sunday, Chrysler
was exempted.
Although contracts expired at both
Chrysler and Ford Monday nidnight. both
continued operations. Checkoff of union
dues, however. ceased. The strike did not
intlude 26 GM plants in the United States
and-Canada which make parts for other
automakers.
Both sides were far apart on ma jor
issues and bargaining Mond ay was
listless. Neither invoked the traditional
ne\\'S "blackout'' that ind icates serious
bargaining.
·'No real bargaining on either side look
place in the 14 hours preceding the
strike," Woodcock said.
Thant Asks·
Trihr~a1
Fo1· Hijacks
FROM WIRE SERVICES
With some SS hostages from airline hi·
jackings still in the hands of Arab guer·
rillas, U.N. Seeretary-General U Thant
bas proposed that hijackers "be pro-
secuted in the name of lhe peoples or the
world" by a special international
tribunal.
A U.N. spokesman said Thant was sug·
gesting establishment of a court separate
rroffi the present Worl d Court at The
Hague.
Hijacking and abduction cf forei gn
diplomats by extremist groups "sow the
seeds of international anarchy," the
5ecreiary-general tcld about 2,000 persons
at a $150-a-plate dinner en the eve of
today's opening of the 25th General
Assembly.
He said hijacking is a crime against an
international service affecting many na·
lions and individual citizens. and added :
"This crime must be brought before an
international tribunal defending the in·
terests or all peoples and nations and not
of any particular people or nation."
Hijacker J\'a111ed
The man slain while attempting to hi-
jack an El Al airliner has been identified
by the British government as Patrick
Joseph Arguello, 28, a California-born
American citizen who had been livin& in
l\lanagua, Nicaragua.
The }lome Office said Monday that
ide nlily was made through fingerprint
file s of the Federal Bureau of
lnvestigation.
Jn Managua, Oscar Arguello denied
that the slain hija cker was his son,
Patrick Jose Arguello Ryan, a graduate
of an American university.
Red Cross Delay•
The International Red Cross today held
off sending a team to negotiate with Arab
guerrillas for the release o.r about 50
airline hijack hostages, with no ln·
dications when the discussions would
resume .
The Popular Front for the Libe ration of
Palestine {PFLP), the gue rrilla gr o u P
which carried out the hijackings, said it
had not broken off negotiations with the
United States. \Vest Ge r m a n Y ,
Switzerland and Britain. It said "in-
direct" negotiations were continuing with
the three European na tions, but did not
elaborate.
Applica11t Flood
The government is being flooded with
requests from people who want its newest
glamor .job -airline security guard.
The Federal A via.lion Administration
said it has reteived innume rable requesLs
from applicants. But none will be hired
until C-Ongress approves President Nix·
on's request for funds to train and
finance the Se<'Urity program.
Nixon asked Congress ri.fonday for S28
million to train 2,500 security guards.
Most of the recruits will come from other
government agencies. but the FAA said
"there are plans to hire other qualif ied
personne l."
Lloyd'• Pay< Off
Lloyd's, the London underwriters, said
?-.toriday British Overseas Airways Corp.
will receive SB.4 milion as an insurance
setl\e.ment for the VCIO a i r l in er
destroyed by Arab guerrillas in Jor~an.
"The sit uation affecting the other hi·
jacked aircraft has yet to be clarified. as
each one of the policy wordings i5 dil·
ferent." Lloyd 's said.
GENERAL MOTORS WORKERS IN DETROIT WAVE PICKET
Un ion and M1n191mt nl Ag rff on Only Ont Th ing -They
SIGNS AS WALKOU T BEGINS
Ar• Still Fer F rom Solutlcn
I '
1/
"
Fo1111iai11 Valley Today's Final
'
N.Y. Stoeks
.
:.'Ot:. 63, NO. 221, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTE~BER 15, "1970 TEN CENTS
lluntington Workers Win 8.25<>Jo Pay Boost
If you work for the city or Hunlington
B~ach, you have just been given a raise or 8.2$ percent.
The across·lhe-board increase from
typist to chief administrator won
unanimous approval from . cily coun-
cilmen Monday night
The 660 employes on lhe city payroll
will get the hike Jn their Sepl. 25
paychecks. ·It will be effective from Sept.
I.
The vole was liken at midnight and en-
ded hours of closed-Ooor bargaining
between the councilmen, representatives
of employe associations and C i t y
Administrator Doyle Miller.
In going for an equal per<:i!ntage raise
for all employes, the council rejected
Miller's recommendations.
.Under provisions of a new stale law -tl\r-Myers-Milia5-8rown Act -the city
administrator had held "meet and confer
sessions in good faith'' with the employe
associations and signed whal were ternr
ed memoranda of agreement on in·
creases.
The!le agreements reportedly contained
varied increases from S.S to 10.S percent.
Questioned by the press when the coun..
cil reconvened after the executive
session, City Attorney Don Bonfa said il
was his opinion that the agreements were
not public lnformation.
er
-
Won't Bacl{ Down
Arabs Issue Tough New Demands
From Wire Services
.Specific demands were laid down today
bi tough 311d threatening term~ by Arab
terrorists bargaining for the fate of M
hostages. mostly Amerir:i n, in exchange
for hundreds of their o~n imprisoned.
Negotiations were hampered b y
wlthdrawal of the International Red
Cross and stubborn dealings by the
Popular Front for the Liberation of
Pales tine through a mysterious mediator -:-
The PLFP annouaced a11y intervention
militarily will doom the hostage! taken in
three jetliner hijackings last week, mnst
of them American, plus 1 om e Israelis
and Europeans.
A spokesman a.aid both are considered
PLFP enemies and will bt considered
Condemnation
prisoners o( wRr.
Officials in Washington sternly warned
the holdh1g of America• host.ages is
totally unacceptable.
The guerrilla fro n t organization is
unrecognized by Israel, whose Parlia·
ment met in emergency session Monday
to discuss the latest ransom demands.
Amer ica and Israel are ignored In
return by the PFLP, which is cu rrently
bargaining through ambassadors of Bri·
taia, Switzerland and 1.\lest Germany.
Now, 13 specific prisone rs are being
demanded by the PFLP, plus anywhere
from 600 to 3,000 Palestinian captives in
return for release C'lf the M hijacked
passengers.
"We will not back down from these
demands whal.ever happens ," emphasizl'ld
PFLP spokesman Hassan Kanafani.
lsratl must agree first te'I release l\111>.
Algerians, a Swiss national and 10
Lebaaese soldiers, the latter criptured
New Year's Day irr an Israeli foray, the
PFL,, insists.
Kanafanl said in Amman . Jorrian that a
list of additional prisoners the Pe'LP
wants will be turned in after tbi.i.
''Whea these demands Are met, the
PFLP will release the American and
Jsraeli hostages," he added.
He also repeated demands thAl Britain,
West Germany and Switzerland release
Ar11b hostages. ·
· Kanafa ni denied any inlstrealment of
(See ll!IPEAST, Pqe Z). J
Huntington Pier Plan
Action Gets Approval
Jud ge. Will· Hear
Dance Hall Case
On Wednesday
Superior Court J udge Hannon Scoville
will hear arguments C'ln a request to halt
the business license .proceedings against
the controversial Marina Palace dance
hall at 2 p.m. Wednesday. The Huntington Beach city council sail·
~ ahead with the Top of the Pier Plan
Monday nigh!.
City Attorney Don Bonfa soon will file
condemnation proceedings to actiuire 14
acres of downtown properly and turn it
Into a 1,878-spaCf: parking lot.
He was authorized to .act in .B
unanimous council vote taken after a
lengthy executive session.
The council accepted the recom·
mendation of Monte Nitzkowski, he.ad of
the Urban Land Institute Citizens Steer·
lng Committee, to proceed with the ex·
12 Bea ch Lawmen
Capture Five
In Robbery Ring
By RUOT NIEDZ IELSKI
01 IM D1llJ '1111 Sl1tf
A team of 12 Huntington Beach detec·
tives smashed an alleged robbery ring
Monday night. arresting five persons in
connection with two heists l~.at cost
local businessmen close to $8.000.
The raid was held around 10 :30 p.m . .at
15812 Quartz St.. Westminster as the nf·
ficers. armed with search warrants, nab-
bed the suspects just as they were
returning home.
Police accuse three C'lf the 11rreslees
with the robbery or Albertson 's MarkP.t,
1Mll Edwards SL. where $2.737 were lost
Aug. 6. Thal same day, Franef'li-'
RestAuran t. 15851 Beach Boulevard, v.•as
robbed of $5.230 :n cash and jewelry.
Arrested at the Quartz Street address
on charges or robbery are :
Donald J. Maness, 26, 15812 Quartz St.,
t11 fireman.
Mk:h&el W. Ptrklnfi, 25, an unemployed
truck driver from Lexington, Ky.
Mathis C-oeterler. 39, 15812 Quartz SI..
~ployed aJ! 11 rree 111nce actor. He was
t11!9f'I charged with suspicion of J>OSSeSSing
1tolen property.
Also taken into custody was Coelerier's
wife. Helen, J4, who was charged with
possessing stolen property and possession
of drugs.
Aoother woman. Cheryl L. White, 21 . or
Orange, was charged with possesaion nf 11
svrttchblade knife that was 4llegedly
tSet RAJD, Pace !)
pansion of the Parking Authority.
.. Frankly. v.·e doubt that rontinued
studieir; will present any startling new
fact.'i," he said.
The citizen.o; committee's recom·
mendation also was for the council :.0
proceed with the "total configuration" of
the plan, namely the one-block deep
stretch along Coast Highway from Sixth
to First Street plus five acres of land
owned by the Huntington Beach Company
east of Lake Street.
The Huntington Beach Company has
formally requested the council to exclude
its land from the project.
Before the council decided to condemn
the whole area. Councilman George
1'1cCracken proposed that the Huntington
Beach Company land plus a block from
Fifth to Sixth Street be excluded. He was
hacked in this motion by Councilman Ted
Bartlett but all other councilmen were
opposed.
Barllett and McCracken then voted
with the others on the original plan.
although McCracken stated, "I feel it's A
loser , but to have a unanimous vote I will
vote on it."
The formal go-ahead was re.ached after
months or discussion since the council
adopteri the Top C'lf the Pitr plan to
rede velop the downtown areR last
November. The purpose of the parking lot
(See PIER, Page II
The request was filed by Seal Beach
resident Albert Del Guercio, 4-4J7
Birchwood Ave ., on grounds that the
hearings are illegal.
Expected to argue their-positions
before the judge are Seal Beach City At·
torney Jim Bentson: Kenneth Lindsey,
tht attorney for Del Guercio, and Russell
Bledsoe, attorney for William Robertson,
operator of the dance hall .
Del Guercio filed the action last week.
Testimony in the controversial matter
continued Monday with Officer James
Swenson of the Sea l Beach Police Depart·
ment on the witness stand.
Swenson told the city council which is
sitting in 8 quasi-judiciary capacity dur·
ing the hearings -of repealed Instances:
during whic h he observed the use of
drugs by dance hall patrOTls.
One of these involved a 14-year-old boy
whl! had to be taken to SL Mary's
Hospital after ingesting an overdose C'lf
drugs. according to Swenson.
Another visit to the Marina Palace
motivated Swenson's arrest C'lf a young
girl allegedly under the influence of
drugs . Swenson said he wa5 restrained by
her companion who shrieked obscenities
at. him.
The bearing continued today.
Ve1·y Light Turnout Seen
In 2 Area School Iss ue s
Only a few volers went to lhc polls this
morning as officials or two local 11chool
districts Anxiously aw;iit the outcome of
their finance measures.
"The voting ha~ been very light. but
that wa11 11~ expected," said Charles
Palmf!r. deputy superintendent for the
Huntington Beach School District, which
Js trying for the third time to raise the
interest celling C'ln H.75 million worth or
unsold school bonds.
I( approved, the measure would allow
the di.111trld to raist It! maximum
allowable lntemt on the bond! from tlvt
percent to 1eveo percent.
Al the Fountain Valley School District,
where voters are asked to approve an in-
definite operating tax rate or $2.99 per
$100 of assessed valuation, the turnout
also w113 light.
Thi5 morning only 2.6.l percent of the
dfa1trlct's 14.298 voters had gone to the
polls. ,
Dlstrrct officials who expect the voting
to pick up In the afternoon and evening
hours uld however the turnout At the In~
divldual prt:clncta so fflr ha1 ranged from
one perctnt to fCJU1' percent.
The polls will be open to a p.m. at all
•chools In both districts.
'
''The memoranda were part ot the
negotiating p~ss and were not part of
the documents subject to public View/' he
commented,
Bonfa also staled that the four-hour f'X·
ecutive session on salaries and litigation
issues on the Top of the Pier development
plan properly conformed with the govern-
ment code on meetings of legislative
agencies.
He cited the Myers·Milias·Brown Act
passed by the Legislature In 19$8 and e{.
fective Jan. J, 1969. which calls for the
meet-and~nfer sessions and a new pro-
vision in the Brown Act which allows
councils lo hold executive sessions with
representatives of employe associations
on sa lary schedules.
Miller revealed afterward that while
the bargaining was extended in the
closed-door meeting there was no bll4
terness. "No one lost their temper," be
added.
In city terminology the raise the coun·
cilmen VC'lted was an increase of three
salary ranges for all employes.
Prior to Sept. I, the salary range for
firemen and lifeguards was $8,352 to
$10.380. A policeman 's pay ranged h'tm
fll,580 to SIO,ti68.
Now these salaries and those C'lf all city
employes, including department beads,
will be lifted by 8.25 perce~t.
0 uar
, ·-• . . I
• •
•. . . .,.
Ui'I T .......
A KISS FOR LUCK AND WE'RE DN DUR WAY
Cup DefenCfer Ficker ·•nd Wife, B•rli•r•
GretRl Blows Chances
For Cup Race Victory
U'IT .......... READY FOR FOUL WEATHER
Cup Ch•llongor H•rdY
Jet Splits Open
l1i Run~ Skid
NEW YORK (UPI) -An Alltalla oca
Jetliner skidded off a Kennedy Airport
runway on landing TueMfay and split
open, apparently a~ the mult or a col·
lapsed land ing gear.
There were no immediate reports or
ce.sualtieii or of fire, although an 1larm
signal from the Kennedy control tower
brought more than a dozen pieces of city
lire apparatus and a superpumper to lhe
aoene.
A spokesman said the landing g'ar ap-
parenUy collapsed as the plane touched
down on runway 4-R and the plane "skid·
ded off and broke open." The accident oc·
curred at 1:21 p.m. (El1J:J.
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Dt!IY f'llllt .... IM llllttr
NEWPORT, R.J. -Australia's Gretel
JI virtually b I e w all chances for an
America's Cup victory today whefi she
lost a crewman overboard, fouled , her
i;pinnaker and fell .f minutes and 40
seconds' behind Intrepid at the halfway
ma rk.
Gretel'll crew immediately hoisted the
protest flag. claiming a spectator boat in4
terfered with her rescue of the overboard
crewman.
Tt was a disastrous day for the Aussie
challenger.
Her two most serious mishaps occurred
before today's race was half over.
Shortly after jibing the seeond mark
one of her foredeck crew went overboard
in the choppy aeas of Rhode hland
Sound. The man overboard was picked up
by Gretel JI but she hoisted a proteit fiag
after a spectator boat interfered with the
rescue.
Gretel 11 was already hopelealy
behind,
She rounded the first windward mark
one minute, eight 1econds astern and
hoillted her spinnaker In a hopeless way
around the neadlltay.
It took the crew 1 full six minutes to
get a chute Dying and the fouled one
.:k>wn.
1'he race started under threatening
skies and a 17 knot easterly wind that
kicked up fine chop on the sound.
(iretel II was first across the starting
llne but lost her advantage by having tr.
bear away abarply to keep from being
early, thus giving Intrepid .B clear
weather berth. At the end of the triangle
halfway mark of the 24-mile course
Gretel ll WU f minutes, 40 aeconda
behind.
Gretel II. de&lgned by Alan Payne. lum-
dily defeated France 4 to O in elimination
series In AugusL against the French
challenger.
But many think Intrepid , only the 11e-
cond boat picked twice to defend the cup,
will win the serin in four straight over
·the Australian challenger.
Match ra;clng for the cup ta a battle of
billfolds, design, space agt technology,
crew selection and org1ntzatlon 1 belmlmanship, sailing tactics and luck.
Intrepid showed herself a winning com-
binlUon of all of these in her somewhat
!See CVP RACE, Pare I)
Plane Held
One Hour.
OnRunwa~
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A hijacker
who tried to force a Trans World Airliner
to fly to North Korea wa11 critically woun-
ded in the abdomen today by another
passenger, a private guard for a
securities shipment.
The 707 jet liner, from New York via
Chicago Ind Los Angeles, wall held on a
San Francisco International Airport
runway for an hour by the gunman before
he was shot and overpowered. No oDe
else was injured.
Afmed with a .22 caliber pistol. the
man boarded the early morning flight in
Los Angeles. He was identified. by police
u Donald Irwin, 28, of Reseda.
Robert E. De Nisco, 34, of Broolclrn.
N.y,, a ~rd for Brink!:, Inc:., abqt the
h!jockor after 35 o! the 55 pasaenam
were illowed to debark. The · plane was
being ~d on a runwa:y a m.Ue from the
temtinaJ at the time.
The plane had a crew of seven, all from
Kansas City.
Shortly after taking off fr o m Loi
~eles for San Francisco, the ·pilot,
Capt. J. K. Gilman, radioed the Los
Angeles mntrol tower that a wbit.e male
passenger had told him, "This plane ii
being hijacked. It will be going farther."
San Francisco was alerted and peace
officers were standing by when the plane
landed at 6:03 a.m .• Gilman having con-
vinc_ed the gunman that refueling wu
necessary.
One of the four stewardesses aald the
drama began when the man arose and
handed her a note reading, "l have a gun..
I want to go to Korea."
She said she had seen him on previous
flight-JI.
Passenger Sally Rullh, 24, of San Fran.
clsco said none of the passengers knew
what was going on until the plane wu on
the ground.
She said the c.aptain announced on the
public address system, "'lbere is a
gentleman on board who wishes to land
at another airport. Be calm."
He then announced that military men
and families with children would be
all owed to debark.
M"m Rush said she and the others left
.aboard were asked to move to front seats
in the coach section.
The gunman was sated lwv rows
behind the m.
After an Interval of suspense, she said.
"A man in a brown ootfit walked from
the front or the pla;ne, quickly aald.
'PC'llice,' and fired one 1bot over eight to
10 rows of seats."
Weatlter
Only a few patchy clouds will
mu Wednesday's aunshlny •kl~
with temperatures holding at 70
degrees on the coast and up to• as
further inland.
INSWE TODAY
Tht new thtottr seoscm b in
fuU awing on &ht Ora:ngt CCKUt,
as welt atJ 41Uptown.'" Rttritws of
th'rtt of tht l4ttst production.3
art on Enlertcinment Page! J6
and 17 todav.
... ,lflt t
Cl tllltlll ,
Cll«-lllll u,, '
Cllt1lfltll t1•1t
C-k• 11
Crt1-• II
OMlll Htfk" I
a•llltl•I ''" I •11t>el'ltl"'"llll , .. ,, ~Jlfl 1•11 -.. Alll UllMrt 1 I --.
------------.. ~------·-·---
• .,...,..,-~-· -..i.!..""..,..,._,.,...,...,. .... ..,._""~""'""'""'""'~'~-.. 0 4 a ....,....., u. :;r;~-~---------------------,,-"l""--------~---~-=-~-..,,.,-~ ~ . (
.J DAil. Y PILOT "
Beach Officials Veto 'Junket'
BJ ALAN DIUIH ...............
Huntlnf!On Beach councilmen ICltd
MondJy night to prevtnt the IOW'doy
California League of CJUu Conference in
Son Dlqo from hlrnl"l Into a "junket"
for dty empklyes.
LNt JOi'• conference ln San Frm-
ci.oo """ the ci.!lJ'.211 la total ·-for 25 persons.
Monday night the councilmen autboriz..
ed upenses -not to exceed • per
pe,_ -for themoelvea llld City Ad-
minlJtrator Doyle MWtt for the Oct. 2$.
21 parlay.
Any city department bead who wants to
a1teod seminars will have to commute
and not stay overnight, explained c.oun-
cilman Jack Green.
Fro• Pqe J
PIER .•.
under the plan la to provide an Incentive
for prlvat. enterprise to develop the .,...
rounding area.
~ action wu taken after the council
wu told the Downtown Property Owners
"-l•Uoo bad failed to establish a
limlled partnenhlp which woold bring in
private devtlopment.
1be lighting II unllbly to atop,
however. 'Ibe property ownen' attc:wney,
Arthur Guy ol Newport B.udl, baa in-
dicated that his clients would go to court
if the council proceeded with con·
demnaUpn.
Last week the city's P I a n n 1 n &
Department provided an analys~ cxi the
feasibility ol the project with or without
the Huntington Beach Company property.
The report showed that the acquislUon
cost.. would be less -down from $4.2
million to $3.5 million -but the av«ap
square loot coot would jump from 17,03 to
$9.51.
Instead of 1,878 parking spaces there
would be only 1,304 and the average colt
per space would be up from $2, 7a to
13,3111.
1be surplus in each case would be
about $22,000, the report showed. This,
planners claimed, was beca11.1e early
revenue of $230,000 a year would be con-
atanl
Robert Manoske
Succumbs at 41;
Services Planned
lloeary wW be recited tonl&h~ 7,30
o'cloci; at SL Jolin the Baptist Catholic
Church for Robert F. M..,.., an
engU-employed at Douglu Aircraft,
Huntington Beach.
Mr. Manoake. a Costa Meu rtaldent
for seven years, died· Sunday at the 111
of 41.
He was the achievement cbairmln ot
the Orange County Astronomical Society
and worked with Coata Mesa'1 Boy Scout
Troop 499.
Mr. Manoske leaves hil wile Sheila;
two tons, Mike and Bobby, and a
daughter, Laura, all ol the family home,
3150 Limerick Lane,
Also 111lrVlvlng .... three brothers,
Leonard, George, and Elmer, all of
Wuhington; a sbtu, Mn. Herbert
Graham of Marina, Call!., and parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Manoske, ot
Washington.
Requiem Mass will be: celebrated at 10
a.m. Wednesday at SL John the Baptist
Church.
The family suggests that those wllhing
to do so make memorial contribuUons to
the City of Hope.
Typhoon Claims 300
MANILA (UPI) -'lllo Philippine Na·
Uonal Police said today more than soo
persons may have been killed when
Typhoon Georgia slammed into the
main island of Luzon and vlrtually level·
eel a town of 15,000.
DAILY PILOT
OltANCJll CDAIT ,.U.ll'"IMG CCIM"AM't
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"!1'1 DOI dllllcult to (let don 1bere in
an bour llld II mlautto, attend a aeminar
llld "turf to the dtJ the ..... day'" be uclad.. I
But ~ ...irlcUON drew a blistering
alt.act ~l the councilmen from City At-
torney Don Donia.
"To me thb is eltremely ailly saying
you abould not attend the one meeting
you should attend," Bonfa said. "It's
more important for city attorneys to at·
tend than councilmen."
Boni• explained that seminars 1t the
conference would explain the J1test
developments in California municipal
law.
Referrh\g to semii'lars he attended last
year, he commented, "I found them ex· lremefl' nluahle and well worth while, I
Re•olution
l<el !hat to commu1e to Sall Dte10 11 an
unnuonablo burden.
"l do ..,.. that It lbould not be a
vwtlon or a 'junket •Pd 1 would not
mind keeping a ncord ol my expenae<.
lt's very bad economy not to permit
department heads to attend and attend
ovemlght."
Councilman Geoi-ge MCracken, refer ..
ring to last year's conference In San
Francisco, aald, •1we were clowns."
"We were two or three deep and hid
people up there who didn't even have a semUtar," he added. '
Green and Councilman Al Coen ex· .
plained that the intention was not to pre-
vent department beads from attending
seminars.
Newport Delays .
Freeway Action
A resolution asking Assemblyman
Robert E. Badham (it.Newport Beach) to
ask Governor Reagan to intervene in the
Pacific Coast Freeway controversy was
tabled Monday night by the Ne~rt
Beach City Council.
The council did, bowever, vote to direct
Jts traffic department to prepare specifi.
caUons of a study the city should carry
out on ita overall traffic needs.
Badham, who earlier had vowed to take
the freeway up with the governor on his
own, reportedly had subsequently in-
formed the city be would do so only upon
formal request.
Vice Mayor Howard Roger• told the
council that Badham said he would ask
Governor Reagan to get his special
freeway task force to look into the matter
following council acilon.
Murder Trial
Court Moved
To Hospitnl
A Superior Court judge took his
courtroom ~rsonnel aad two opposing
att«neya to Costa Mm ud the bedside
of a mlously W woman Mooday for the
ta1dng of what eould be vital leslimony in
the munler bitl ol WUlla Dean Hunt of
Newport Beach.
Judge James JI'. Judge moved his court
from the Santa Ana county courthouse to
the Bay View Convalescent Hospital to
allow defense witness Roberta Hu.at to
answer questions rel1tiftg to her llle with
\Villls Hunt as the slain yacht broker's
first wife.
Mrs. Hunt. is recovering at the Costa
Mesa facility from an acute lung in·
fectlon that put her on the critical list for
several weeks.
The vote wu tabled for two weeks at
the reque1t of Councilman Carl Kymla
who viewed that the importance of the
action deserved additional time for con·
sideration.
Rogers, conceding that he had not
briefed fellow council members on the
development prior to the meeting, agreed
to the delay.
Mayor Ed Hirth proposed the. staff
study of a des.ign for an oUicial study
after completing several weeks of a
similar study on his own.
The staff design study would include
the agenda for a study, who should
parUclpate, the approaches to be taken
and the llmllationa to be imposed, Hirth
said.
C.Ouncil memben ·stressed the study
should be made with as litUe expenditure
of funds as possible and directed that no
addiUonal funds on an Up~ Bay study
be spent pending the outcome of the
overall study.
There currenUy ts $18,000 budgeted for
the Upper Bay study.
The design is expected to be ready ror
the council •t its Sept. 28 meeting.
As,,emblyman Badham has made his
initial vow to take the freeway issue to
the governor after a bill be sponsored in
the state legislature to kill the coastal
freeway through Newport died in Senate
committee.
It haJ pas,,ed the Assembly by a wide
margin.
Badham expressed Intense disa~
pointment following the S e n a t e
Transportation Committee rejection of
his bill and indignanUy vowed to march
right Into Reagan's office.
From Page I
RAID ..•
Judge Judge, accompanied by his clerk, found during her arrest.
bailiff and court reporter, pre.sided over a Detective Sergeant Monty McKennon
session in whicb detense attorney Sidney &aid his men found the house unoccupied lrmas ud Deputy District Attorney Joe
Dickerson asked the first Mrs. Hu1tt at the time of their arrival and were able
Coen llid he did not feel II WU
umeUCX1able to eapect departmeot heads
to gel up early enou&h to allend 1emlnara
that do not start witU 9:30 a.m.
Clty Clerk Paul Jones lent Bonfa moral
support when he said that as bead of the
~~~eftai:n~atOci~rte~~ t~~
and would pay his own overnight e1·
penses.
Clty expense records show $250 was
advanced lO thole attending the con·
ference in San Francisco last year plus
$20 registration fee per person.
Members of the city council, planning
commission and department beads new
up with their _expense claims ranging
from $180 to $298.
From Page J
CUP RACE ...
surprising victory over Valiant In the
elimination trials. Valiant was the 1970
product of genill.! of designer Olin
Stephens who also designed Intrepid. In
1967, Intrepid soundly defeated
Australia's Dame Pattie for the cup.
In boat.for-boat racing, as in the
America's Cup, past performance is
gomeUmes lost to present sailing skill,
tact.lcs and good fortune, which makes
this year's series a contest between a
proven winner and a question mark.
That is perhaps why 3,000 boat! wlll go
to sea to see whether, as his crew pr~
fesses, ''Ficker is Quicker."
From Page I
MIDEAST ...
the 54: persons remanilng among nearly
300 captured in the three separate airlin-
ner hijackings.
He said their personal needs were
being adequately met.
'The Americans are being treated on
the same basis as the Israelis because
the U.S. is an enemy," Kanafani added.
The Jewish state has refused to con.
sider demands for a prisoner exchange
until they were processed through t h e
Red Cross, nor will it deal with any agen·
cy but that and the four goverrunents in-
volved.
other PFLP demands include releue
_of girl guerrilla Leila Khaled, a com·
mando captured in an unsuccessful at·
tempt to hijack an Amsterdam-U>.London
El A1 jetliner flight.
They also want the body of U.S. citizen
Patrick J. Arguello, who was shot by
Israell agent! during the fruitless venture
accompanying Miss Khaled.
Authorities believe the 54 hostages are
being held in heavlly fortified houses in
Amman, but some were allowed Mo11day
to appeal to their embassies to hasten tf·
fort! to secure release.
One radio broadcast monitored in Lon·
don said two of the captives have been
shot to death, bringing a prompt PFLP
denial.
"'Mlese reports are without any foun.
dation," said one spokesman.
"Direct responsibility now falls on the
governments coRCerned to announce their
acceptance of the Front conditions," he added.
Huks Tell Slaying
0£ 15 Americans
Cats and Dog•
Mrs Sheila Landry 9331 Litchfield Drive, Huntington Beach, says
her "toy poodle, "Y~ette," has been nursing her kitten, "qeo," for
the past few days and is treating it as her \own. Dog and kitten are
doing nicely, thanks.
Newport Vice Mayor Calls
Hirth Patsy on Freeway
Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard
Rogers Mond2y night charged that
Mayor Ed Hirth has "fallen victim" to a
plot by the State Division of Highways
"to lull the people to sleep" about the
issue of the Pacific Coast Freeway.
And Rogers released copies of a "con-
fidential" memorandum written by Hirth
to the City Council which Rogers asserted
would bilCk up his allegation.
Rogers asserted the memorandum and
other recent actions by Hirth indlcate he
has become a patsy to the propaganda of
state officials.
Among other things, Rogers based his
accusation on remarks by Hirth, later
recanted, U.at the state would not pro-
ceed with plans to build the controversial
freeway if the Newport Beach City Coun·
cil would write a letter asking work be
stopped.
Rogers said the men who made the
statements, Haig Ayanian, director o(
Highway Division District 7, and his top
aide, Wlllia.m Hashimoto, "do not have
the authority to take such action ."
Hirth, in council session Monday~
agreed that a "simple letter" would not
force an official halt to state planning for
the route .
Rogers plugged the efforts of the
Citizens Coordinating Committee, a
Freeway Fighters adjunct, to circulate
petitions that would require a referendum
or: the issue of whether the city's formal
freeway route agreement should be
rescinded (see separate story).
Prior to the vice mayor's remarks, in a
statement which apparently prompted
them, Hirth had detailed to the council
his efforts the past several weeks in bis
one·man study of how the city should a~
proach its traffic problem.
Hirth ~closed that at his meeting with
the two state highway officials last week,
Al Koch, Orange County road com·
missioner , was present.
least 3 to 1 at this meeting," Rogers said.
He demanded to know why Hirth had
brought him along.
The mayor replied that his partidpa·
tion came at the suggestion or Wllllam
Jennings , chairman of the State Higbw1Y,
commission, a resident of Balboa Island.
The confidential memo criticized by
Rogers contained statements critical of
the efforts of the CCC in their petition
drive, charging " a crippling procedure"
would result.
Hirth, In the memo, had said It would
be wrong for the council, il!elf, to ~·
terfere with the citizens' move, but said.
"We could remove the need and desire by
a strong acceptable action toward a solu·
tion."
Hirth then suggested "lnstructing" lhe
state to stop the planning of the Newport
section of the freeway.
Secondly, Hirth suggested the steps he
has been following recently, a study of
the transportation needs of the county.
Rogers maintains that the agreement
must be rescinded "to wipe the slate
clean" before any study is Initiated.
Turtle a Star,
Was Hijacked
TORQUAY, England (UPI) -Ted the
hijacked turtle has parted company with
his schoolboy owners and become the
star attraction at a Torquay seafront
aquarium.
The turtle, named after Prime Minister
Edward Heath, survived the bijacking
ordeal last week aboard the British
Overseas Airways Corp. (BOAC) jet in
the Jordanian desert.
about her life with the man who was to conduct an uninterrupted search which MANILA (UPI) -Huk guerrillas
Rogen immediately assailed this, poin·
ting out that Koch has long been a su~
porter of the coastal freeway. "It was at
His owners, Nigel Hatcher, 15, and his
brothers, Bruce, 13, and Michael, 11, kept
the turtle alive during their captivity by
feeding him scraps from tb e it
sandwiches.
stabbed to death last Dec. 14. yielded two .38 cal. revolvers, a .22 cal. claimed to have killed 15 American
Accused of the killing and scheduled to automatic pistol, a switchblade knife, $95 military Personnel and at least 200
go on trial Oct. 5 Is Willia Hunt, «. the 1 Filipino soldiers in central Luzon during
sixth wife of the slain man. It is alleged in rolled coln, severa credit and iden· the past year, a publication of !he Com· Realtor's Talk Slated Monday the boys, who returned to
school at Rochester from Bahreln where
their father is an oil company e:iecutlve,
re'ceived a call from a Torquay
Aquarium owner offering them $60 for
the turtle. They accepted.
that she plunged a foot·long butcher knife tification cards, and aome money seals munist Prty of the Philippines said today.
into her husband In the climax of a quar· police allege came from cash taken in the The latest issue of Ang Bayan (Our Na· San Fernando VaJley Realtor Steve
rel that waa witnessed by her 13-year-old robberies. lion) said the guerrilla new people's Levin will address the Huntington Beach·
daughter. Later that evening, a car containing the army scored "a rich harvest of victories'' Fountain Valley Board bf Realtors on
Mrs. Willia Hunt's daughter, Dru, has aceused robbers pulled into the driveway, while conducting more than 80 operations how to secure listings at 8 a.m. Wed·
beerl committed by the court to the allowing McKeMOn and his men to make against the regime or P r e s i d e n t nesday at the Mile Square Golf Club,
The aquarium ofUcial said the turtle
would be renamed Hijack and become
the star attraction. custody of relatives sl.nct the death of her the arrests without resistance, according Ferdinand Marcos. Fountain Valley.
lill_·ye~ar-~_M~•~_P_l_•the~r-·~-~~~~-~~po_l_Ice~re-po~rts-·~~~-~~~l'~iiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iii;iii;iii;iiiiiiiio;
Art Show Continues
Lexine Toley, 17. ponders entry in Prosee<:lus/Art 70 show currently
under way et Huntington Center. Exhibit Includes 725 works by art•
isls from all over California. It continues through Sept. 25.
It's Your Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY AND THICK THE
CARPET IS NECESSARILY QUALITY • '
NOT TRUE! MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE FIBER, AND NOT THE 0 U ANT IT Y, IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE. '
IT'S YOUR MONEY -SO, WHEN BUYING
YOUR CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE DEALING
WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL, AND EQUALLY AS
IMPORTANT, A REPUTABLE DEALER.
SANTA ANA, OU.N•I
TUSTIN C.-, •.
ALDIN'S
llD HILL CAll"ft'S
A DIA,lllU
1 IJ74 ....... , ...... c.tlf.
IJf.1144
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
• r
•
Newport Be~eh
EDIIION
Your Hometown
Dally Paper
•
YOr. 63, NO. 22 1, 2 SECTIONS , 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEliitBER ·1s, J 970 JEN CENTS
1
Newport Edges Closer to Collins Annexation
i Newport Beach moved a step closer to cil or Communities for filing~ .for in-
(
formal annei:alion of the controversial corporation Friday.
Collins Radio Company property Monday The Incorporation papers had included
night following disclosure that Irvine the lucrative industrial property within the proposed city boundaries. Interests had violated a secre t pact that Newport's unanimous council action
would have delayed the final anne1ation came despite a claim ·by a lawyer for the
process by at least two months. Jrvine cooncll that the city cou1d take no
The city scheduled a public hearing on further steps because of an automatic go..
the annexation of the !Tl-acre tract Nov. day moratorium automallcaUy created
9 after Councilman Carl Kymla blasted by its incorporation move.
~ Irvine C.Ompany and the lrvine C.Oun· Legal aides for Orange County had rul·
I Gretel Out
For First I
I Cu_P.Race
By ALMON LOCKABEY
O•fllt l'f.., 1Nn111 ... ,.,
NEWPORT, R.T. -Australia's Gretel
II virtually b l e w all chances for an
America's Cup victory today when she
IOl!it a crewman overboard, fouled her
spinnaker and fell 4 minutes and 40
5econds behind Intrepid at the halfway
mark.
Gretel's crew immediately hoisted the
protest flag, claiming a spectator boat in·
terfered with her rescue of the overboard
crewman.
It was a disastrous day for the Aussie
challenger.
Her two most serious mishaps occurred
before today's race was half over.
ed to the contrary. however. giving the
city the green light to proceed .
Kymla Monday night disclosed the city
had agreed in private not to take further
action on annexation pending public hear-
ings on the City of Irvine master plan to
be filed with county planning official.! in
November.
"The ball game changed Friday,"
however, Kymla said, referring to the
move by the citizens cowteil to in-
corporate.
Shortly after jibing the second mark
one or her foredeck crew went overboard
fn the choppy seas of Rhode Island
Sound. The man overboard was picked up
by Gretel II but she hoisted a prate.st nag
after a 1peclator boat interfered with tb41
rescue.
A KISS FOR LUCK AND WE'RE ON OUR WAY
Cup Defender Ficker and Wife, B•rb•r•
Gretel II was alreedy hopelesslJ.
behind. I
She rounded the first windward mark
one minute, eight aeconds astern and
hoisted her spinnaker in a hopeless way
around the head.stay.
It took the crew a full .six mlnute.s lo
get a chute flying and lhe fouled one
down.
The race .started under threatening
skies and a 17 knot easterly wind that
kicked up Une chop on the sound.
Gretel II was first across the starting
line but lost her advantage by having to
bear away sharply to keep from being
early, thu.s giving Intrep id a clear
weather be.rth. At the end of the triangle
halfway mark of the 24-mile course
Gretel II was 4. minute.s, 40 .seconds
behind.
Gretel II, designed by .Alan Payne, han-
dily defeated France 4 to 0 in elimination
series in August against the French
challenger.
But many think Intrepid. only the se-
cond boat picked twice lo defend the cup,
will win the series in four straight over
the Australia n challenger.
Match racing for the cup i.s a batlle of
blll!olds, design, space age technology.
crew selection and organization,
helmsmanship, sailing taclics and luck.
Intrepid showed herself a winning com·
bination of all of these in her somewhat
(Set CUP RACE, P•i• %)
READY FOR FOUL WEATHER
Cup Challenger Hardy
Arab Terrorists Issue
•
Tough Bargain Te.rms
From Wire Setvl(es return for release of I.he 54 hijacked
passengers.
Holiday Airlines
Asks for County
Route Extension
Holiday Airlines has petitioned the
state Public Utilities Commission to
allow it to extend its routes to Orange
County and San Diego.
The airline, which currently service1
Los Angeles, San FranciSC(I, Oakland and
Lake Tahoe, is seeking two flights a day
into and out of Orange Coonty Airport.
The airline proposes an expan.sion nf
its route providing direct service from
Orange County to Lake Tahoe and San
Diego.
Now headqua rtered Jn the Bay Area,
the airline is moving its offices lo Los
Angeles International Airport Oct. 5.
In its petition, Holiday cites the gro·Nth
of Southern California and its subsequent
need f(lr more air transportation, as the
basis for its request.
The proposed initial flight3 would be
dur ing the day.
Curr ently, three commercial airlines,
Golden West, Air West and Air
California, are authorized to fly out of the
county airport.
Upon learning of the petition f\.1onday
night, the Newport Beach City Council
directed its staff to prepare a resolution
opposing the request to be adopted at the
next council meeting, Sept. 28.
The application by lloUday had been
filed wilh the PUC Sept. 4.
The airline said its: recent extension to
LA produced rar more numbers of
passengers tha n had been expected and
said "this tremendous response" from
Southern California lndicated the need for
additional serv ice to both Orange County
and San Diego.
"The council left us no chblet: but to
move ahead now rather than cooperate
as had been plaMed."
Kymla said the Irvine Company had
asked the city to hold oU on action
following Local Agency Formation Com·
m.Wion (LAFC) approval (If the move
two weeks ago.
"After that," Kymla said, "we discuss-
ed with the Irvine Company the possible
delay of annexatkm to give lhem ade-
quate Ume to discuss their general plan
with county planners and the board of
supervl.sors.
"As of last 11iursday," he said, "the
Newport Beach City Council wu tG bold
the matter in abeyance unUl the
November hearings.
"The ball game changed Friday," he
&aid.
RepresentaUves or the l{.Vine clllzens•
group denied knowledge of the agree-
ment, but Newport Mayor Ed Hirth
replied, ''The Irvine Company knew
about it."
Formally, Newport adopted a resolu·
tiati "giving notice of intent to annez" ~
Collins property.
The Irvine Company, which owns the
Collins property, hu coll.!istenUy opposed
the annexation, claiming the land
rightfully belongs within Irvine city boun-
daries.
Through LAFC hearings the Irvine
Company maintained that Collins' IS-year
(Ste COUJNS, P•p I)
Route Fight Vowed
Group Still Seeks Freeway Pact End
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 rM Dttllr Pll•I Sl•ff
Ignoring a State Highway Division
warning, the Newport Beach Citizens'
Coordinating Committee Monday night
vowed to continue its errerts to force the
City Council to rescind its agreement on
a route for the future Pacific Coast
Freeway.
The newly-fonned CCC, an offspring of
Newport's Freeway Fighters, got the City
Council to lend official recognition to its
declaration by agreeing to forward it to
Pilate officials on behalf of the organiza-
tion.
The action came unanimously on a mo.
tion by Vice Mayor Howard Rogera.
Jn ii! letter, the CCC said ~t will not
be lulled to sleep by 'studies' or promises
that a letter asking them tq stop work on
the Newport section of the freeway will
effect such action."
Th~letter said the freeway would then
be re!hmed to the people "like a bolt of
lightning" after the peop]e have been
tranquilized.
Friday the state had cautioned the city
not to proceed with recinding lhe formal
agreement under the threat of possible
legal action to recover costs expended
Korea-bound Hijacker
'
Slwt Bri 1TW A Passenger
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A hijacker
who tried to force a Trans World Airliner
to fly to North Korea was: critically woun·
ded in the abdomen today by another
passenger, a private guard for a
1ecuritie5 shipment
The 707 jet liner, from New York Via
Ch icago and Los Angele!, was held on a
San Francisco International Airport
runway for an hour by the gunman before
he was shot and overpowered. No one
else was injured.
Armed with a .22 caliber pistol, the
man boarded the early morning flight in
Los Angeles. He was idenWied by police
as Donald Irwin, 28, of Reseda.
Robert E. De Nlsai, 34, of Brooklyn,
N.Y., a guard for Brink!, Inc., 1bot the
hijacker after 35 of the 55 passenger11
were allowed to debark. The plane was
being held on a runway a mile from the
terminal at the time.
The plane had a crew or leVtD, an from
ltanw City.
Shortly alt.< taking off f r o m Los
Ange.Jes for San Francisco, the pilot,
Capt. J . K. Gilmaii. radioed the I.ps
Angeles control tower that a white male
passenger had told him, "Thls plane · is
being hijacked. It will be going farther."
San Francisco was alerted and Peace
officers were standing by when the plane
landed at 6:03 a.m .. Gilman having con-
vinced tbe gunman that refueling was
llece388.ry.
One (If the four stewardesses aid the
drama began when the man arose and
handed her n note reading, "I have a JU.D.
I want to go to Korea."
She said !he had seen him on previous
fiight.s.
Passenger Sally Rush, 24. of San Fran-
cisco said none of the passengers kne'tf
what was going on until the plane was on
the ground.
Newport Vice Mayor Calls
Hirth Patsy on Freeway
Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard
Rogers Mond11y night charged that
Mayor Ed Hirth hu "fallen victim" to a
plot by the Slate Division of ffilhways
"lo lull the people to sleep" about the
issue of the Pacific Coast Freeway.
And Rogers released copies of a "con-
fiden tial" memorandum written by Hirth
to the City Council which Rogers asserted
would back up his allegation.
Rogrrs asserted the memorandum and
other recent actions by Hirth indicate he
bu become a pal.Jy to the propaganda of
state officials.
Among other things, Rogers ba.sed his
aceusatlon on remarks by Hirth. later
recanted, that the slate would not pro-
ceed with plam to build the controversial
freeway If the Newport Beach City Coun·
ell would write a letter asking work be
•topped.
Rogers said the men who made the
statements,· Haig Ayanian, director of
Highway Division District 7, and his top
aide, William Hashimoto, "do not have
CS.. ROGERS, P•p I)
since the agreement was signed.
It was estimated these costs a:ceed
1100,000.
Stating tht = position Rogm ald
the city should move "to Wipe the slate
clean," by rescinding the agreement.
"On any issue so important," be said.
••nke a freeway going through the heart
or our city, deserves the attention of the
people u much as a Balboa Bay Club
lease."
Rogers wa.~ plugging the CCC move to
circulate petitions forcing a referendum
on whether or not the freeway agreement
(See FREEWAY, Pase Z)
Supervisors
Pick. Newport
For Court Site
Tl>t Orang• C.Unly Boord of lupor·
viSOl'!I !•ta today 1tlected. tbe NtwpOrl
Beach site in Newport Center for the new
Harbor Judicial District Court in a 3 to
2 vote.
The old courts are presently Joc:ated
in Costa Mesa. Bc>th Coata Me.sa and
Newport had been in a heated competi·
tion to win location of the new court fa-
cilities.
Voting for the Newport location were
Supervisors Alton E. Allen of Laguna
Beach; William Hirstein of Tustin and
William Phillips of Fullerton. D a vi d
Baker or Garden Grove ar.:I Robert Bat~
tin of Santa Ana OPPoled the Newport
location.
Jet Splits Open .
In Runway Skid
•
NEW YORK (UPI) -All Alilalia DCa
jetliner akidded off a Kennedy Airport
runway on landing Tuesday and spilt
open, apparently as the result of a col4
lapsed landing gear.
There were no immediate reports of
casualties or of fire, although an alarm
signal from the .Kennedy control tower
brought more than a dozen piect.3 .of city
fire apparatus and a superpumper to the
scen'e.
A spokesman said the landing gear ap-
parently collapsed as the plane touched
down on runway 4-R and the plane "skid·
ded o!flBlld broke open." The accident OC·
curred at 1:21 p.m. (EDT).
There were 146 passengers and 1~
crewmen bn the flight from Rome, an
Alitalia spokesman said. ,
Specific demands were laid down today
11 loug h alld threatening tenns by Arab
terrorists bargaining for the fate of 54
hostages, mosUy American, in exchange
for hundreds of their own imprisoned.
Negotiations "'ere hampered b y
withdrawa l of the International Red
Cross and stubborn dealing.s by the
Popular Fronl for the Liberalion ol
Palesline through a mysterious mediator.
"We will not back down from lhese
demands whatever happens.'' emphasiz!'d
Pf'LP spokesman Hassan Kanafani.
Israel must agree first to release twC)
Algerians, a Swiss national and 10
Leba11ese soldiers, the latter ci:iptured
New Year's Day in an Israeli foray, the
PFLP insists.
Freeway Action Delayed
Orufe Cout
Weatlter
The PLFP annoullced 11J11y intervention
militarily will doom the hostages taken in
three jetliner hijackings last week, most
of them American, plus 1 o m e Israelis
and Europeans.
A spokesman said both are considered
PLFP enemies and wUJ be considered
prisoners of war.
Officials in Washington sternly warned
the holdi11g of America• hostages ls
tota lly unacctptab\e.
The guerrilla f ro nt organization it
unrecognired by Israel, who.!e Parlia·
ment met In «:mergency session Monday
to discuu the latest raMOm demands.
Aml!:rlca and Israel are Ignored In
rt:turn by the PFLP, which 111 currently
bargaining through ambassadors o( Bri·
tal11. Swlt.ierland and 1.Vest Germ~ny.
Now, 13 i;pecific prisoners ere being
demanded by the PFLP, plu1 anywhere
from 600 to 3,000 Palestinian capUves ln
--•-
Kanafani said in Amman , Jordan that A
list of additional prisoners the PFLP
wants will be turned in after this.
''Whell these demands are met. the
PFLP will re.lease the Americ.1.n and
Israeli hostages," he added.
He also repeated dtm111nds that Britain,
West Germany and Switzerland re.lease
Arab hostages.
Kanafani denied any mistreatment (If
the. S4 persons remanilng among nearly
300 captured In lhe three separate airlin·
ner hijackings.
He said their personal nee& were
being adequately met.
'The Americans are M:lng treated on
the 111me basis a3 the Jsreells because
the U.S. Is an enemy," Kanafani added .
The Jewish state has rcfll!Cd to eon-
,;ider demand.• for a prisoner exchange
until they were processed through th e
Red Cros.1, nor wlll It deal with any 111gen·
cy b~t that and the four a:ovenunenta in-
volved.
Newport Tables Resolution for Badham
A resolution asking Assem blyman
Robert E. Badham CR·Newport Beach) to
uk Governor Reagan to intervene 1n the
Pacific Coast Freeway controversy 'fllP
tabled Monday night by tht Newport
Beach City Council.
The C0W1cil did, however, vote to direct
IUI traffic departmen t to prepare s~lfi.
cations of 8 study the city should carry
out Ofl Its overall tralllc necd.s.
Badh1m, Who earlier had vowed to take
the fr~way up with the governor on his
own. reporttdly had subsequently ln-
for9d the city he would do 50 only upon
fortfal request.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers told the
council that Badham said he would 1sk
Governor Reagan to get his •peclal
freeway Ui~k rorce to look into the matter
lollowlng council action.
The vote was tabled for lwl) weeks 11t
the request of C:OUncilman Carl Kym)a
wM Viewed that the importance ot the
action deserved eddlUona.I time for con·
aideration.
Rogers, conceding that he had not
briefed fellow council members .on the
development prJor to lhe meeting, agreed
to the delay.
Mayor Ed Hirth proJJORd the otalf
study ol 1 design for lln ofnclal study
lifter completing averal weeks of a
similar lltudy on his own.
Th• otalf dellgn study woold Include
the agenda ror 1 1tudy. who ihould
partJcipate, the approache11 to be taken
ond the llmltatlons to be lmpootd, Hirth
Aid.
C.ounciJ members stressed the study
should be m1de with as llttle e1pendlture
of fund1 11 possible and directed t.bal no
additional funds on an Upper Bay study
be spent pending the outcome of the
overall study.
There currently C.. 111,000 budiet.d far
the Upper Bay atudy.
The design C.. e'Jl<dt<f to be rudy for
the oouncil at !ta Sept. 28 meetln(.
AMtlllblyman Badha"l has made hl1
lnlUal vow to take the freeway 1MtM ito
the governor after a bill be eponsortd In
the state legi1laturt to kill the eo11otal
f"'w'y through Ntwporl died tn Senate committee,
It has passed the Assembly by a wide
margin.
Badham aprmed Intense dbaP,
polnlmen\ following the S e n a t e
Transportation Committee rejection of
hC.. blll •nd Indignantly vo....i to march
rl1bl Into Reafan'1 oUice.
'" '
Only a few patchy clouds will
mar Wednesday's sunshlny skies
with temperatures holding at 70
degrees on the cout .and up to 15
further inland.
INSIDE TODAY
The neao theater !ta.ton U i1'
fcill .swi.ng on. the Orange Cqa&t.
as wtU as "uptown." Rtvltw1 of
thret of the latest productfoni
art on Entertainment PoQe& 16
olld l7 todoy.
>
I DAILY PILOT
Injunction for City? Bar.Denied
.
Live Music p
Irvine Council W ant.s Annexation Halt
'!be Councll ol CommunlU.. of Irvine ls
c:cnWerinc 1n injunction to bar Newport
Beach from proceeding further on Its an-
neuUOn of the Collins Radio Company
property.
John Burton, president of the Irvine
group, said this morning he wu meeUna:
with lawyers for the council.
In hil ltatement, Burton also 1trtssed
hll group's lndependenoa of tl1e lrvtne
Company, saylnc lta tncorporaUoa move
Friday was decided unilaterally.
Monday night the City of Newport
Beach, illegally according to the Irvine
council, adopted a resolution declaring
the city's lnteT!t to anne1 tht 177-ecre
tract and set a pubUc hearing on the mat-
t.er Nov. 9 (See sepuate stor)').
Burton said the altemaUve of a court
Injunction Is me of several In be dbcuaa-
ed with lawyers today.
"Inasmuch u wt are committed to a
coune of acUon 19gical In the best In·
tm1ta of aU c:aoceruod," Burton said,
.... loJWICl!oo In llnp lllla Ulepl -Is
certahey PQSSl~!f."
Burton cited remarks by Robert A.
Smith, attorney for Ibo Irvine citizens'
group, at Monday night's Newport council
session.
Smith saJd tbJt state law requires a 9IJ..
day moritortum be esta bltahe d
automatically when one city moves to In-
corporate an aru. that another la seWng
to annex.
1'le Collins Radio property has been
the subject ol eootroversy since manage.
menl ol the firm first disclosed lnttresl
in annexing to Newport.
Irvine Company officials have long
maintained the property, which It owns,
should be within the bOundaries of its new
city. ll llso maintains that despite Col·
lins' 15-year lease on the ~y, CoWM
has M say aa to wbicb community it will
be Included.
Newport Council Adopts
Stiff Parlor Ordinance
An emergency ordinance establishing
stiff controls over massage parlors in
Newport Beach was adopted ~ the city
council Mooday nlghL
Excepting owners and m a 11 a g e
1'techn!cians" with one-year local prac-
Uce or outakSen with five years• U·
perieoce, the ordinance allpulalaa lhlt aU
other current operators and new ap-
plicant& have at least 200 bowt 'of formal
education before they !DI)' operala within
the city.
ThoH ucluded lrom tl1e schooling re-
quiretnent will have to pua an ez.
amlnatlon In be admfnlatered by the city.
Parlor owners and technicians who do
not qualify for exclusions have 120 days
to complete a 20().bour course.
'lbe ordinance was adopted at the urg·
lng of Police Chlef B. James Glavas who
cited departmental problems witb such
establishments wilhin the city.
Two of the massage parlors in the city
have been raided la recent months with
charges of prmilution qaf!llt employ ..
From P.,,,e I
FREEWAY. ••
should be rescinded.
A nferendum had been conducted
earlier this year on a Bay Club requaat In
elland Ila leue of city-owned property.
The BBC !oat Ila bid.
In a second peUUon, the cltil.em' com.
mittee is also seeking a charter amend·
ment that would require future referenda
prior to the city's adoption of any
freeway route.
Rogers a.ti-CCC will begin Ha of.
flcial petition drive Sept. 29 at 7:30 a.m.
The group needs signatures of 15 percent
of the reglstered votera who cut ballots
in the Jut city election.
Upon r<ceipt of the pelllion In "8cind
the freeway agreement, the council can
either follow ill dictates or K:hedule a
city-wide vote on the question.
The existing agreement establishes a
route ror the freeway through the eastern
half of the city, from Bayside Drive to lhe
Corona del Mar city limiL
No formal agreement etists in the
western sector of the city.
Opponents of the superhighway contend
that lta routing, following the present
Pacific Coast Highway along th e
couWne, "will cut tbe city in half."
'Ibey contend that if any freeway is to
be built at all, lt should be routed mtU
further inland.
The freeway runs inland from the coast
throughout almost all of the Orange
Coast, but dips down near the bay
through Newport only.
DAILY PILOT
OllAMO! COAST l"U•LllMtMO COMltAMY
leHtt H. Wt-4
1tn.1111Mt Mii Ml ....
J1cli l . C41tlfY
V'" ltrtalltlnl Mill Gtnet1I ..,..,......,.
Ttl•M•t ti:ttYil
lt:dl!W
Thorn•• A. Mwt>hl11•
M-.lnt Efllft
N...,.t ..... OfflM
2211 )ti•tt lel~• lowl1 .. eul
Mtllll1t Mifr•u: r.o. ••• 11 11, 'l"J ............
C... M .. ! UI W.t h i' S'"""' WIN lted'l1 DI '""'A...,.. H1111tlnCI~ -..U.: 1117J kKtl lllllrlf"
SM cllMNftflli JU N-1~ ~ ~ a..
and resulting court caaes are still pend·
iag. One of the parlors, the Le Salon de
Traltment, bu since reopened under new
management.
Miss Karen Anderson, a massage
technicl•n from that parlor, spoke to the
councfJ Monday night lnaistln( that tl1e
salon ls Operated on a comp1etely
legitimate basis.
She dlaagreed with the !llJO.hour stan-
dard of schooling and pointed out that the state requires only 85 hours of classroom
instruction before granting a license.
other restrictive clauses of the new
ordinance require extensive background
cheeks and statements from five 1ocal
residents on the applicant's character.
It also sets fees at $100 for an operator
and $10 for each technician.
It also authorizes the city manager to
make the determination whether the ap-
plicant for a permit has mel the re-
quirements of t.be ordinance.
An application for a new musege
parlor, "Athena's of Hollywood," was
withdrawn last week after meeUng con-
siderable opposition from co u n c i I
members at the council session two ..-....
Embezzling Case
Of Newport Man
Is Given Delay
A Newport Beach man accused of
embeuling 111,000 from a Costa Mesa
aerospace components firm w h i l e
employed as Its contro1ler has won a
delay in hil case.
Preliminary hearing for Carl M.
Koster, 40, of 2921 Catalpa St., was eon-
tinued until Oct. 22 in Harbor J ud.icial
DI.strict Court.
He had left Master Specialties Com·
pany, lMO Monrovia Ave., for 'a new job
in Loa Angeles when periodic losses in
the firm's funds were audited.
Investigation led to suspicion of Koster
and a woman employe who was arrested
by detectives on her last day of work:
several months ago.
The woman, a dls:bursement supervisor
who lives in Huntington Beach, was
cleared and freed at her own preliminary
hearing last month.
From P119e I
ROGERS ...
the authority to take such action."
Hlrth, 1 n council session Monday,
agreed thtt a "simple letter" would not lorce an official halt In atala planning for
the route.
Rogers plugged the efforts of the
CitiJens Coordillating Committee, a
Freeway Fi&hlerl adjunct, to circulate
petitions that '1ould rtquJre a referendum
on the is.su.e of whether the city's fonnal
freeway route agreement should be
rescinded (see separate story).
Prior to the vice mayor's remarks, In 11
statement which apparently prompted
them, Hirth bad detailed to the council
his effortt the past several weelca: In his
one.man study or bow the city should ap-
proach ils traffic problem.
Hirth disclosed that at his meeting with
the two state highway officials Jut week,
Al Koch, Orange County road com·
missioner, was present. Ro&era immedlalaly ....Ued Ibis, poin-
ting out that K<ICb fW lOlll been a sup-
porter of the coutal freeway. "It was at
least S to 1 at this meeting," Rogers said.
He demanded In kno• why HJrth bad
brought him along.
'!be ... ,.,. replied that h~ partkipe·
tion came at the tuUesUon of Wllllun
Jermlnp, cbainnan of the Slala Hlghway
-• resident of Balbol laland. '!be conlidenllal memo crtlirued by
llo(ers con1alned atalementa critical or
the •llorll o1 the CCC In their petition
drive, charainl " a crlppllng procedure''
would r.u!L
Hlrth, In the meJll<l. h•d said It would
be wrooc f0< the c:ouncU, ifaflf, In In-
terfere with the clUien&' move, but said,
•1we couJd remove the need and des:J.re by
a atronc ICC'eP(able act.ion toward a 10IU·
tion."
In add!U.., iun.o -lbat the In. c:orporallon move made Friday ~ hll
citizens' gf(')up was ttken tndependenUy
of the Irvine Company.
He said, "We (the Council of the Com·
mun!Ues o1 Irvine) are not either con-
trolled by the Irvine Company, organized
by the Irvine Company or directed by the
Irvine Company,
"We are very happy the Irvine Com·
pany supports our attempt to determine
our own fate," he said, "but It ls our at-
tempt, not the Irvine Company's."
Burton also criticized officials of all
surrounding communities for refusing to
recognlz.e the Irvine councU and said lit·
tie can be accomplished on any dU·
ferences, like bclundarle., unUJ such
recognJUon is granted.
.. I, personally, and speaking for the
council, am really amazed that the
Newport Beach City C.uncii would take ii
upon themselves to pa&1 the anne.zation
resolution," he said.
From P119e I
COLLINS ...
lease does not give It the right to annex
to any city. Irvine claims only the lan-
downer can make that decision.
~ The LAFC disagreed, voting 4·1 to ap-
prove the Newport annexation.
Robert A. Smith, lawyer for the Irvine
citizens, spoke Monday against adoption
of the reaolulion, arguing that "the
Newport Beach City Council has not ac·
quired exclusive jurisdiction in the mat.
ter by any effective legal act, and that,
by virtue Of the filing of the notice of in·
leT!tion last Friday, there is now In effect
a llCkfay moratorium on any further an-
DHaUon proceedings."
The city, however, bad been informed
by William J . McCourt, assistant coonty
counsel, that the ICC's filing with the
county supervisors "had been premature
for the reason that (It) had not previously
obtained the approval of the Local Agen-
cy Formation Commission."
Smith reiterated a threat made last
month by Irvine Company officials that if
the city did proceed with the annexation,
a court suit would be filed.
"I hope we all can work togelher to
resolve this amicably without legal dif·
ficulty," Smith said prior to the vote.
However, he said, "We will move by legal
means to preserve the legal options of the
people of the City of lrville if necessary."
Ahhoogh an Irvine Company re~
resentative spoke Monday night
during the council session, William
Mason, lrvine Company president, Mon-
day morning defended the citizens' com·
mittee action, saying it was necessary to
stop "the nibbling away of prime in·
dustrial tu base by surrounding ccm·
munities."
Mason said, "We support (the tll.lng )
for no reason other than it was designed
to provide the council's many citizen
committees with the opportunity to coo·
sider all aspects of cityhood."
* * * Newport Seeks
Meetings Over
City of Irvine
OAILY ,llOT Iliff P'lltl9
Help for a Doryman
Kim Galamis of Garden Grove (foreground) helps push "Mallard"
of Newport Beach's dory fleet ashore. Owner spent foggy morning
alone on the sea last Friday. Friendly group of greeters on shore
provided marked contrast to his lonely labors.
Trustees To Discuss Staff
Report on Sex Education
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of "" 01111 lti11t SllM
Newport·Mesa Unified School District
trustees tonight will discu ss a IS.page
staff report comparing district sex educa.
tfo:n programs with the recommendations
on the district's Family Life Education
drawn by a Chamber of Commerce com·
mittee.
Dr. Norman R. Loats, associate super.
intendcnt 5aid the staff study weighs
specific recommendations of the Newport
Chamber of Commerce Sludy Commillee
with present and proposed district family
life programs.
The chamber report was presenled to
lhe district last March, after more than
a year of study by a chamber-appointed
commiltee. The committee's work in·
eluded intervlewsFamUy Life specialists
and a review of more than 2,000 parent
questionnaire s.
Based on the staff study, Dr. Loats
From P119e I
CUP RACE ...
concludes, "We have not violated any of
the 'do nots' identified by the (chamber)
committee, but we do have some voids
in our instructional program in Family
Life Education, if we should follow the
recommendations and suggestions of the
study committee."
Loats noted that Newport-Mesa district:
-Has a more detailed drug abuse pro-
gram ror grades K-8 than reconunended.
-Iloes not meet committee's recom·
mendation on basic facts of maturation
for the fifth and sixth grades, especially
for boys.
-Doesn't emphasize male and female
sex anatomy in grade S even though sug.
gested by the committee.
-Has given more attention to Je1al and
community responsibiliUes on narcotics,
smoking and drinking at grades 5 and 6
in special unit "Drug Abuse and Law and
Order" than reconunended, and diatrll:t
provides it to grades K to 6.
-Does not meet recommended teach-
ing of venereal disease facts at middle
school level.
-Lacks any course on "Facts of Life"
as suggested by the committee,
-Lacks elective, grade 12 course in
marriage preparaUon as suggested by the
committee. surpriaing victory over Valiant in the While no action on the sex education
elimination triaJs. Valiant was the 1970 study is listed on the board agenda, the
product of genius of designer Olin board may consider appointing another
Stephens who also designed Intrepid. In citiz.ens committee to further study the
Permission
• The Gallery, • B•lboo Boule•a!'d bor,
Monday night wu denied an extenalon
of its use permit for Uve music by the
Newport Beach City Council.
The act.ion on a $ to 2 vote., was taken
e v e n thouib oWners of the nlahlspot
claimed they had not received a sin~le
complaint about their operation during
a 9C).day tri•l geriod.
A public hearing on the exLens~n re-
quest incluCied some volatile t.esUmony
about a city official and tactics allegedly
used by a city department. Marsha 'lbomp!On, rtpresentlng ,T ~ e
Gallery, told the council ol a conversation
In another bar near City Hall with WU·
Uam n. Foley, assistant city planner.
"We didn't want to bring him into this
be!ore " Miss Thompson said, noting that
nothinf of the meeting wu menUGned
when the bar's permit was discusaed by.
the council two weeks ago.
"But we spent two hours with Mr. Foley
and he told us iliat the City Council in
no way was going to renew our permit"
She said Foley "offered to testify to
this before the ccuncil."
She said Foley was "not available to
attend Monday night's meeting."
A check with the Planning Department
this morning disclosed that he is on va-
catior . .' f..liss Thompson also accused the city
altonley's office of sending out 1etters
to property owners adjacent to 11le Gal-
lery. informing them of Monday's be•r· in~ but also including untrue statementl'. she said a letter to a man identified
as Donald Snyder, had menUoned that
"he had e-0ntacted the Police department
complaining about the bar."
She said Snyder denied ever complain·
inJ! to police.
Two persons did testily they were· .t!n-
ll appy with the presence of the establilh·
ment, located at 610 E. Balboa Boulevard,
complaining of noise emanating from In-
side.
Miss Thompson maintained that most
of the noise in the area ccmes from three
teenage boys living nearby who practice
their instruments at all hours.
Councilman Milan M. Dosta1 tried to
get the council to agree to a 5econd two-
week continuance on the hearing pending
submissioo by owners of detailed plans
to hold down the noise, and, in general,
''be a good neighbor."
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers, who
strongly opposed any extension, argued
that llle bar had been given plenty of
time to prove itself.
Do!ta! fU'St tried to pass a motJon
granting another 91)..day extension b u t
substituted the two-week continuance mo-
tion when this met with strong cpposi·
tion by other coancilmen.
His move for the continuance faUed
on a 3 to 4 vote.
James Crowley
·Services Slated
Services will be held al 10 a.m.
Wednesday in St. Gregory's Catholic
Church, Les Angeles, for James Gregory
Crowley, 15, of 4M Gavlota, Corona
de! Mar, who drowned Saturday while
scuba diving c!f LitUe Corona Beach.
Crowley's body, in full scuba gear was
found in the surfllne at 11:30 a.m. Satur.
day after a 45-mlnute search by Newport
Beach lifeguards.
1967, Intrepid soundly defeated chamber recommendations.
Newport Beach wants to get together Australia's Dame Pattie for lhe cup. In May, Supt. William Cunningham
with other cities bounding the proposed In boat-for-boat racing, as in the said the chamber report would be sub-
The Orange County Droner's officer
1isted drowning as the cause of the
youth's death, but said hi! diving equip-
ment is being checked out. city of Irvine to talk abou t the unex-America's Cup, past perfonnance is jected to staff study and a citizens com-&ometimes lost to present sailing skill, mittee would advise the board on inl· Lifeguards said the equipment ap-
peared to be in order and said young
Crowley and his diving ccmpanion, Jef·
frey Chamley, 15, of 604. Jasmine St.,
Corona del Mar, both were graduates of a
Los Angeles County certmed diving
course .
pected move Friday by a citizens' com· tactics and good fortune, which makes plementation.
mittee to start Irvine's incorporation pro-this year's series a contest between a Dr. Nolan Frillelle, a Newport Beach
cess. proven winner and a question mark. optometrlst~headed the chamber study
The Newport Beach City Council Mon· That is perhaps why 3,1'.m boats will go group whi began examining family
day night voted to seek meetings with to sea to see whether, as his crew pro-lite program in the Newport-Mesa di s--
Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and Tustin "to fesses, "Ficker is Quicker." trict in April, 1169,
discuss the effects of the proposed boun-\~iii;iii;~~~;;,:;::~~iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iii;~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii~ daries of the city of Irvine." I
Newport Mayor Ed Hirth suggested the
meeting, cf both elected and ad·
mlnlstrative officials, saying the sur·
rounding cities should "analyze the in·
corporation of Irvine."
The Council of the Communities of
Irvine Friday filed formal lncorporaUon
papen with the County Board of
Supervisors that proposed boundaries dif·
ferent from those which had been ex·
pected.
Included within the boundaries are the
Orange County Airport, the Santa Ana
Marine Corps Air Station and, among
other things, the controversial Collins
Radio Company property (See separate
slory). •
The council snubbed the newly formed
Council of the Communities of Irvine,
deliberately excluding lt from an In·
vitatlon to the meeting.
Raymond Quigle;, a member of the
Irvine council, protested the eitcluslon
and asked that his group be allowed to
participate.
'nle Newport ccuncil Ignored his re-
quest in its subsequent vole.
Quigley had tolt the council, "I resent
lhe fact that only adjacent commnuiUes
are being invited to discuss what our
future i.s going to be."
He urged the councU t.o ~'Include those
residents who will be IO drastically af-
fected ."
lllrth was authorized to appoint
Newport's representatives to the joint
....1on.
Typhoon Claims 300
MANILA (UPI) -The Philippine N•·
tlonal Police said today more than 300
persons may have been killed when
TyphooD Gtorgla slammed Into the
main island of Luzon pd virtually level·
td a town of 15,000.
It's Your Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
:THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY AND THICK THE
CARPET IS NECESSARILY QUALITY.
NOT TRUE! MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE FIBER, AND NOT THE Q U A NT IT Y, IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE.
IT'S YOUR MONEY -SO, WHEN BUYING
YOUR CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE DEALING
WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL. AND EQUALLY AS
IMPORTANT, A REPUTABLE DEALER.
•
ALDEN'S
SANTA ANA. OUN•I
TUSTIN Ctl,,.
ALDIN'S
ID HILL CA•ms a Dum1n
1U74 lrwfM, T_.., Clllff.
lll.JJ44
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lacllltla Ave.
COSTA MISA
646-4831
I
\
.. }•
Cos1a Mesa Today's Final
N.Y. Steeb
:vor. 63, NO. 22 r, 2 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER JS, ·1970 TEN CENTS
•
Newport Beach Site Chosen for New Court
The Orange . County Board or Super-
visor! late today &elected the Newport
Beach site in Newport Center for the new
Harbor Judicial District Court in a 3 to
2 vote.
The old cour~ are presently JOcated
hi Cosla Mesa. Both c.osta Mesa and
Newport had been in a heated competi-
tion to win location of the new court fa-
cilities.
Voting for the Newport location were
&upervilors Alton E. Allen of Laguna
Hostage• Periled
Beach: William Hirstein of Tustin and
William Phillips of Fullerton. D a v i d
Baker of Garden Grove and Robert Bat-
tin of Santa Ana opposed the Newport
location.
Presiding Judge Donald Dungan of the
Harbor Judicial District said the judges
of his court favortd the Newport site
because of the adjoining detention
faciliUes.
Supervisor Allen stressed the beauutul
location overlookiD& Newport Harbor. All
•• 1 ac
supervisors agreed that cost factors were
almost equal in the long run.
Supervisor Baker, in favoring the Costa
Mesa site pointed to its more central
location and accessibility to all the people
of the judicial district.
In his losing battle, Costa Meso Mayor
Robert Wilson also stressed the ac-
cess.ibility of the qosta Mesa site. He
noted that.the judicial district boundaries
might be enlarged some day.
Wilsoo pointed to the 1112,000 financial
er
Trustees
Arabs Lay Down
Tough Demands
To Discuss
Sex Report
From Wire Service•
Specific demands were laid down today
la tough a111d threatening terms by Arab
terrorists bargaining for the fate of 54
hostages, mostly American, in exchange
for hundreds of their· own imprisoned.
Negotiations were hampered by
Vice Mayor
•
Blasts Hirth
On Freeway
Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard
Rogers MondP.y night charged • that
Mayor Ed Hirth has "fallen victim" to a
plot by the State Division of Highways
"to lull the people to sleep" about the
issue of the Pacific Coast Freeway.
And Rogers released copies of a "con-
fidential" memorandum written by Hirth
t.o the City Council which Rogers asserted
would back up his allegation.
Rogers asserted the memorandum and
other recent actions by Hirtb indicate he
has become a patsy to the propaganda o(
state officials.
Among other things. Rogers based his
accusation on remarks by Hirth , later
recanted, that the state would not pre>-
ceed with plans to build the controversial
freeway if the Newport Beach City Coun-
cil would write a letter asking work be
1topped.
Rogers said the men who made the
statements. Haig Ayanian, director o{
Highway Division District 7, and his top
aide , William Hashimoto, "do not have
the aulhority to take such action."
Hirth in council session Monday,
agreed 'that a "simple letter" would no•
force an official halt to state planning for
the route.
Rogers plugged the efforts of the
Citizens CoordinaUng Committee, a
Freeway Fighters adjunct, to circulate
petitions that would require a referendum
on the issue of whether the city's formal
freeway route agreement should be
(See ROGERS, Pa1e 2)
'
Nixon Announces
European Trip
WASHINGTON (AP) -The White
House announced today President. Nixon
will leave Washington Sept. 27 for a
European tour that will take him to Italy,
Sp11:in and Brita in -and quite possibly
Yugoslavia and France.
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler
would neither confinn nor deny strong
speculation that stopovers in Yugoslavia
and France were planned. However he
did rule out a stay in West Germany.
Ziegler, declaring. "I'm not in a posi-
tion to add to the information rve give n
you," said any additions to the itinerary
for the Ni%0n tour would be made public
as available.
Pointedly, he told newsmen he would
make an announcement -subject matter
not disclosed -Wednesday at 11n air base
ln suburban Maryland from whJch Nixon
wi'.l ny on a two-day trip to Kansas and
. Illinois.
Flr!l .!itop on the presidtntlaJ tour. In
which Mrs. Nixon will participate, will be
Rome. where Nixon will ~ the auest of
President Giuseppe Saragat.
withdrawal of the International Red
Cross and stubborn dealings by the
Popular Front for the Liberation of
Pale.!itine through a mysterious mediator,
The PLFP annou•ced aay intervention
militarily will doom the hostages taken in
three jetliner hijackings last week, most
of them American, plus •om e Israelis
and Europeans.
A spokesman said both are considered
PLFP enemies and will be considered
prisoners of war.
Officials in Washington 1lemly warned
the holdj11g of Amerlcu hostages is
totally unacceptable.
The guerrilla f r c n t orga1dzation is
unrecognized by Israel, whose Parlia·
ment met in emergency session Monday
to discuss the latest ranaom demands:.
America and Israel are ignored in
(See MIDEAST, Page Z)
Jet Splits Open
In Runway Skid
NEW YORK (UPI) -An Alitalia DCB
jetliner skidded off a Kennedy Airport
runway on landing Tuesday and split
open, apparently as the result of a col-
lapsed landing ,gear.
There were no immediale reports of
casualties or of fire , although an alarm
signal from the Kennedy control tower
brought more than a dozen pieces of city
fire apparatus and a superpumper to the
scene.
A spokesman said the landing gear aP.
parently collapsed as the plane touched
down on runway +R 11nd the plane "skid·
ded off and broke open." The accident oc-
curred at J :21 p.m. (EDT).
The.re were 14& passengers and 10
crewmen on the flight from Rome, an
Alltalia spokesman said.
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Ot tll• Oellr ,lit! st•tt
Newport·Mesa Unified School District
trustees ton.ight will discuss a JS-page
staff report e-0mparing district sex educa-
tion programs with the recommendations
on the district's Family Life Education
dra-..,·n by a Chamber of Commerce com-
mittee.
Dr. Norman R. Loau, associate 1Uptr-
1ntendent said pie staff study weichs
specific reeommendations of the Newport
Chamber of Commerce Study Committee
with present and proposed district family
Ille programs.
The chamber repon was presented to
lhe district last March. after more lhan
a year of study by a chamber-appointed
committee. The committee's work in-
cluded int.erviewsFamily Life -specialists
and a review of more than 2,000 parent
questionnaires.
Based on the staff study, Dr. Loats
concludes, "We have not violated any of
the 'do nots' identified by the (chamber)
committee, but we do have some voids
in our instructional program in Family
Life Education. if we should follow the
recommendations and suggestions of the
study committee."
Loats nc.ted that Newport-Mesa district:'
-Has a more detailed drug abuse pro--
gram £or grades K-8 than recommended.
-Does not meet committee's recom-
mendation on basic facts of maturation
for the fifth aod sixth grades, especially
for boys.
-Doesn't emphasize male and female
llliex anatomy in grade 6 even though sug-
gested by the committee.
-Has given more attention to legal and
commu nity responsibilities on narcotics.
smoking and drinking at grades S and 6
in special unit ''Drug Abuse and Law and
Order" than recommended , and district
provides it to grades K to 6.
-Does not meet reco mmended , leach-
ing of venerea l disease facts at middle
school level.
-Lacks any course oo "Facts of Life"
(See LIFE, Page %)
Cosffi: Mesa Officials Eye
Chinchillas, Watermelons
Chinchillas, church finances and open
display and sale of watermelons on a
downtown street corner destined for
urban redevelopment, were discussed by
the Costa Mesa Planning CommiS!ion
Monday.
A third of the items on the dozen.point
agenda were held over to allow further
consideration. including the watennelon
stand and the chinchilla-raising opera-
tion.
Some of the applica.nls didn't show up
to be quizzed about their project!.
Commlaioners discusaed at length a
tentative tract map aubmitted by
HE DIAGNOSED
OWN TROUBLES
Howie opened up Howie's Diagnostic
Center Mond1y and hnmediately dl1gnos-
ed that something was wrong.
Police said the garage .at 449 W. Bay
St., Costa Mesa , had been burglarized of
nearly SfiOO in tlres ind various other
automotlve parts.
No •i&n of for<td entry <OU!d be found.
Johnson and Mape Construction Com-
pany, Anaheim. for permission to divide.
one large property into six lots.
They voted 3 to 2 to recommend city
council approval of lhe map for the
development , which is between Hyl11ind
Avenue and the Santa Ana River, north of
the San Diego Freeway.
Jn other action, commissioners recom·
mended :
-Denial or an appeal by Dwight W.
Grabill against earlier denial of big re-
quest to split a lot at 2MS Maui Place lnto
two parcels.
-Denial of a request by Alan t . Pierce
to sell retail office equipment at 1012 W.
19th St., in an Rl transitional zone.
-Approval of changing the name of
Frawley Drive, serving the Technicolor
Corporation plant, to Kalmus Drlvt, in
honor of the Inventor of color film.
1 -Approval of an appeal ht the First
Chr11tian Church, 712 .Yk:toria St.,
agalrist being forctd to provide C\lrbs and
1ldewalk durlng an enlaraement project.
before Victoria Strtet la widened .
.... Approval of a zone uception pennit
for Forrest Almquist, Santa Ana bulldtr
plaMing 1 commercial 1tructure at 3042
Bristol St., !or medical and retail use.
advantaae to I.he county if the Costa
Mesa alte waa selected. He offered the
use of the Costa Mesa detention facilitiea
across Fair Otlve from the Fairgrounda
and suggested that trams could bt used
to transport prisonez:s from the Costa
Mesa City Jail to the courts.
Supervisor Battin agreed that central
location was imporlallt, pointed to the
lower initial cost of the Fairgrounds site
and the fact that the Newport Stach pre>-
perty ii being taken off the I.al: rolls
when!as the Fairgrounds property
already is publicly owned.
City Manager Harvey Hurlburt of
Newport Beach countered that the
Newport property Is already off the tax
rolls and that if the courts are .not con·
structed there, the city would plan other
public facilities for lhe property.
Hurlburt aJso stressed that the county,
in selecUJ1g the Newport Beach 1ite,
would be dealing with only one 1overn-
me11t entity, the City of Newport Beach'.
In Costa Mesa, he said, the county would
be dealing with the Fair Board and t.be
city.
Robert Thomas, county admlnlstrative
ofClcer, favored the Newport Beach aite.
The motion approved by Superviaon
instructs the various county departmentl
involved to take action within 90 day1 to
consummate the purchase or leue of the
Newport Civic Cuter property.
0 uar
..,,,, ......
A KISS FOR LUCK AND WE'RE ON OUR WAY
Cup Defender Ficker •nd Wife, Barbara
Gretel Blows Chances
For Cup Race Victory
READY FOR FOUL WEATHER
Cup Challenger Herdy
Fair Board Picks
General Manager
Dlrecton of the 32nd D J 1 t r I c t
Agricultur1l Association, raced with a
field of 12 applicants. met In executive
aesslon Monday alld picked a new general
manager for the Orange C o u n t y
Fairgrounds.
He ls James E. Porterfield, 3fl,
manager of the Napa Town and Country
Falr and fonncr assistant m11nager of lhe
San Joaquht County Fair at Stockton.
Portc!rfield will take over h1s new job
effective Nov. I , after an orientation
period with his predecessor, Alfred Lut-
jea11.
.. l
By ALMON LOCKABEY
01llr 'II" INll"' l:'*ler
NEWPORT, R.J. -Australia's Gretel
TI virtually b I e w all chances for an
America's Cup victory today whE:n she
lost a crewman overboard,. fouled her
spinnaker and fell 4 minutes and 40
seconds behind Intrepid at the halfway
mark.
Gretel's crew immediately hoisted the
protest flag. claiming a spectator boat in·
terfered with her rescue of the overboard
crewman.
It was a disastrous day for the AUMie
challenger.
Her two most serious mishaps occurred
before today's race was half over.
ShorUy after jibing the serond mark
one of her foredeck crew went overboard
in the choppy seas of Rhode Island
Sound. The man overboard was picked up
by Gretel ll but she hoisted a protest flag
alter a spectator boat interfered with the
rescue.
Gretel II was already hopelessly
behind.
She rounded the first windward mark
one minute, eight seconds astern and
hoisted her spinnaker in a hopeless way
around the neadstay.
' It took the crew a full six minutes to
get a chute flying and the fouled one <town.
The race started under threatening
skies and a 17 knot easterly•wind that
kicked up fine chop on the sound.
Gretel II was first across the •tarting
line but Jost her advantage by having to
bear away sharply to keep from .being
early, thus giving Intrepid a clear
weather berth. At I.he end of the triangle
halfway mark of the 24-mlle COW'ae
Gretel n was ' minutes. 40 seconds
behind.
Gretel II, designed by Afan Plj'Jle, han-
dily defeated France 4 to 0 in elimination
serie3 Jn August againat the French
challenger.
But many think Intrepid. only the se-
cond boat picked twice to defend the cup.
will win the series in four straight over
the Australian challenge:r.
Match racing for the cup is a baUle of
blllfolda. design. apace age technology,
crew St:lectlon and organization,
belmsman&hlp, &ailing llctlcs ond luck.
Intrepid ahowed herae.lf a wlMing com·
bination of all of these In her some,,.,bat
CSee CUP RACE, PIP I)
• •
Plane Held ..
One Hour.
OnRunwaYi
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A blj&cka
who tried to fofce a Trans World Airliner
to ny to North Korta was critically woun-
ded in the abdomen today by anotbet
passenger, a private guard for ' a
securities shipment.
The '1f11 jet liner, from New York via
Chicago and Los Angeles, was held on a
San Francisco International AtrPort
nmway for an hour by the gunman before
he was shot and overpowered. No one
else was injured.
Armed with a .2% caliber pistol, the
man boarded the early morning fU&ht in
U:is Angeles. H~ was identified, by police
u Ilooald Irwin, 28, of Reseda •
Robert E. De N!&co, 34, of -,,,,
N. Y., a guard for Brinkl, Inc •• abot the
hijacker after 35 of the 55 puaenprs
were allowed to debarlc. The platl6 wu
being held on a runway a mile from the
terminal at the time.
The plane had a crew of seven, all from
Kansas City.
SbortJy after takiri:g off from tot
Angeles for San Francbco, the pilot,
C.pt. J. K. Gilman, radioed the lilo
Angeles control tower that a white male
pauenger had told him, "Tbi.!I pla.PI ii
being hijacked. It will be going farihlt."'
San Francisco was alerted and peiee
officers were standing by when the plane
landed at 6:03 a.m., Gilman having eon-/
vinced the gunman that refueling wu
necesury.
One of the four stewardesses ufd the
drama began when the man aroie and
handed her a note reading, "I have a IWI·
l want to go to Korea."
She said she had seen him on prevlOUI
nights.
Passenger Sally Rush, 24, 0£ San Fran-
cisco said none 0£ the passengen knew
what was going on until the plane wu on
Lhe ground.
She said the captain announced on the
public address system, "There is a
1enUeman on board who wishu to land
at another airport. Be calm."
He then announced that military men
and families with children would be
allowed to debark.
Miss Rush said she and the others left
aboard were asked to move to front RB.ta
in the coach section.
The gunman was seated two rows
behind them.
Alter an interval of suspense, lhe said,
"A man in a broWJI outfit walked from
the front of the plane, quickly aaid,
'Police,' and fired ooe shot over eigh' to
10 rowa of sea bl."
C.ut
We•tlter
Only a few patchy clouds will
mar Wednesday'1 sunshiny skies
With tf:mptrlturel holding It 70
degrees on the coa.st and up to 15
further lnland.
INSmE TODA.Y
TM ntw thtoter rec.ron '8 in
full $wing on the OTange Coaat,
01 t.etU aa "uptown." Reviews of
three o/ the latest production.r
are on EnUtrtatnmtnt Poge1 18
and 11 todau.
,,
...
t DAILY PILOT c
Injunction for City?
Irvine Council W ant.s Annexation Halt
The Council of Communities o( Irvine ls
conskierlna: an 1njuncUon to bar Newport
Beach from proceeding furt.htt on its an-
neutJon of \he Collins Radio Company
property.
John Burton, president of the Irvine
group, said this morning he was meeUng
with lawyers for the council.
Jn his statement, Burton alto stressed
Ills l'OUP'• lndeJ1«1den<e of the Irvine Company, uylna: lta incorporation move
Frtdoy wu decided unilaterally.
Monday nilht the Ctty ol llo•POil
-· llle1ally ICtUdlll to the -council, adopted a resolutlon declaring
the city's intent to annex the 177..cre
tract and aet ·a public bearing oo the mat-
ter Nov. I (See lf:parate story).
Burton said the altemallve or a court
fnjuncUon ii one of aeveral to be diacws.
ed with lawyers today.
"Inasmuch &I we are commltted to a
COUf¥ d actlon logical lo the best In·
terest.a of all conouned," Burton said,
Collins Land Annexation
Seen Doser for Newport
Newport Be.ch moved a step closer to
formal aMeutlon of the controvers.ial
Collins Radio Company property Monday
night following disclosure that Irvine
interests had violated a secret paot that
would have delayed the final anneuUon
process by at least two months. •
The city acheduled a public hearing on
the annexalion of the 1T1-acre tract Nov.
9 after Councilman Carl Kymla blasted
the Irvine Company and the Irvine Coun·
ell of Communities for riling ror in-
corporation Fridly.
The Incorporation papen had included
the lucrative Industrial property within
the: proposed city boundaries.
Newport's unanimou.s council action
ca.me despite a clalm by a lawyer for the
Irvine com:il that the city could take no
further stepa because of an automaUc to-
day moratorium automatically created
by its incorporaUon move.
Legal aides for Orange County hid ruJ.
ed to the contrary, however, giving tbe
city the gr<en light lo proceed.
KymJa Monday night disclosed the city
had agreed In private not to take further
action on annexation pending public hear~
lngs on the City of In-ine muter plan to
be filed with county planning ofriciala In
November.
"The ball game chang~ Friday,"
however, Kymla said, refetting to the
move by the citizens council to in-
corporate.
"The council left us no choice but to
move ahead now rather than cooperate
u had been plamled.''·
Kym.Ia said the: Irvine Company had
ubd the city lo bold oU oo action
Bankrupt Firm
May Get Help
From Hughes
A bankrupt electronics part.a firm ia
Irvine may be revived by the chief of
wealthy industrialist Howard Hughes'
Nevada empire, foUowing a court action
ln Santa Ana today.
Robert A. Maheu was given approval of
a'"plan to reorganize the company, which
flied bankruptcy papers la January.
Hughe1, the enigmatic tycoon, has no
interest in either Elpac !AC., lae51 Von
Karman Ave., nor in a second company
involved.
Maheu's plan would shift ownership of
Xenotech Inc., of Monterey, to the Irvine
!inn.
More than 75 percent of the Elpac
creditors agreed to the plan in Superior
Court.
Maheu's proposal would be for a group
of investors he heads to loan $300,000 and
put up $300,000 ill cash besides combining
ownership with the second planl
A hearing is scheduled Sept. 2S on final
approval, which would give Maheu
893,000 &hares and his. son Peter 200,000
shares of an outstand.ing 2.2 million
shares hi the flrm.
DAILY PILOT
otl.-Hor COAIT PUILIPflHG COMP ... H"I"
91olit•rt N. w • ..1
l"ralRl!I .,. ll'yblW!tt
J1c• •· Cti~.,
Vi«o ~IM!ll ..,, ~I MtMMI'
n ...... w:,,.11 ... ~
Titelft tt A. M11rph l11e
~'"' lllllter
c.... .... OHk9
lJO We1f l1y Street
M•tll11t A""'"" r.0 .1011 1160, '2626 ---........ hedll ,,,. W.1 ..... ~111
~ 9-cfl: m ir-1 A.,...
thfllll'le!WI ludlt 11111 IMdl 1-.WN
1M C*""'l91 m Hwtlt II Clmlllt ._.
following Local Agency Form1Uon C.m·
mission (LAFC) approval of the move
two weeks ago.
"After that," Kymla said, "we discuss-
ed with the Irvine Company the posslble
delay of annexation to give them ade-
quate Ume to discuss thefr general plan
wiUl county planners and the board of
supervisors.
"Al. of last Thursday," he said, "the
Newport Beach City Council was to hold
the matter in abeyance uotU the
November hearings.
"The ball game changed Friday," he
aaid.
Representatives ol ~ Irvine citizens'
group denied knowledge of the agree-
m<n~ but Newport Mayor Ed Hirth
replied, "11ie Irvine Company knew
about tt.tt
Formally, Newport adopted a re!OIU·
lion "giving notice of. intent to annex" the
COlllos property.
1be Irvine Company, which owns the
Colllna: property, bu consistently opposed
the anneuUon, claiming the land
rightfully belollil within Irvine city boun·
daries.
* * * Newport Seeks
Meetings Over
City of Irvine
Newport llMcb wonts to 1e1 together
with other -bounding the propooed
city d lrvloe to tall; ·-the .....
poelW '"°" Fl'id'1 by I ciU-' ciom-
mllll!e to atart Irvine's incorpor1tloll pro--.
The Newport Beach City Council Mon-
day night voted to seek meetlngs with
Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and Tustin "to
discu!s the effects of the propelled boun-
daries of the city of Irvine."
Newport Mayor Ed Hirth suggested the
meeting, of both elected and ad·
mlnistraUve officials, saying the sur·
rounding cities ahou1d "analyze the In·
corporation of Irvine."
The Council of the Communities of
Irvine Friday filed formal incorporation
papers with the County Board of
Supervisors that proposed boundaries dif·
ferent from those which had been e1·
peeled.
Included within the boundaries are the
Orange County Airport •. the Santi Ana
Marine Corps Air Station and, among
other things, the rontroversial Collins
Radio Company property (See separate
story).
The council snubbed the newly formed
Council of the Communities of Irvine,
delibel'fltely excluding it from an in·
vitatlon to the meeting.
Raymond Quigle;, a member of the
Irvine council, protested the exclusion
and asked that his group be allowed to
participate.
The Newport councl1 Ignored his re-
quest in lta: aubsequent vote.
Quigley had lol~ the council. "! menl
the fad that only adjacent commnuiUes
are being invited to dllcuu what our
fUture II going lo be."
He urged the CX1uncil to "include those
residents who will be IO drastically af·
fected."
Hirth wu authorized to appoint
Newport's representatives to the joint
aesslon.
From Page l
CUP RACE ...
surprising victory over Valiant 1n the
eliminaUon trials. VaUant wu the 1970
product of geniua of designer Olin
St.pbeno wbo alJo designed lntr.pld. In
1M7, Intrepid soundly d e f ea t e d
Australia'• Dame Pattie for the cup.
In bol~for-bolt raclnl, aa in th•
America '1 Olp, put performance II aomeumes Joct to present sailing skill,
tactics and 1ood fortune, which makes
this year'• eertea a contest between a
proven wtnner and a question mart.
Thal II perbopo why l ,000 bolts will go
to sea to ~ whtth@r, as his atw ~
fmes, "Ficker ls Quicker."
Typhoon Claims 300
MANILA (UP!) -The PhillP!'ln• Na·
tJonal Police nld today mon than ·300
penons may have been ldlled when
Typhoon Georgia slammed Into the
me.in tJ:land of Luzon and virtually level·
td a town of 15,000.
"ln lolUnetieo to lie; l!ili \llo11I lclloo II
cerlalnly pouible.''
Burton cited remarks by Robert A.
Smitb, attorney for the Irvine citizens'
group, at Monday night's Newport councU
session.
Smith sald tbat state law requires a 9(1..
day moratorium be established
automatically when one city moves to in-
corporate an area that anot.ber i& seeking
to aMe:r.
nae Collini Radio property has been
the subject of controversy since manage-
ment of the firTn first disclosed interest
in annexing to Newport.
Irvine Company officials have Jong
maintained the property, which it owns,
should be within the boundaries of its new
city. It also maintains that despite Col·
lins' SS.year lease on the property, Collin.s
has no say as to which community it will
be Included.
In addition, Burton stressed that the In-
corporation move made ..Friday by hia
citizens' group was taken independently
Of the Irvine C0mpany.
He said, "We (the Council of the Com·
munllies or Irvine) are not either con·
trolled by the Irvine Company, organized
by the Jrvine Company or directed by the
Irvine Company.
"We are very happy the Irvine Com·
pany supports our attempt to detennine
our own fate," he said, "but it is our at-
tempt, not the Irvine Company's."
Burton also criticized officials of all
surrounding communities for refusing to
recognize the Irvine council and &aid lit·
tie can be accomplished on any dif·
ferences, like boundaries, until such
recognition is granted.
"I, personally, and !peaking for the
council, am really amated that the
Newport Beach City Council would take it
upon themselves to pass the anneu.tion
resolution." be said.
Embezzling Case
Of Newport Man
Given Delay
A Newport Beach man accused or
embezzling $11,000 from a Costa Mesa
aeroapace components firm w h 11 e
~mployed as its controller has won a
delay in bis case.
Preliminary hearing for Carl M.
Koster, 40, of 2921 Catalpa St., was con-
tinued until Oct. 22 in Harbor Judicial
District Court.
. He had left Master Specialties Com-
pany, 1640 Mo!i*fvit Ave., for a new job
Jn Los Angel~ ~en periodic losses in
lbe finn'1 fundS wtre audited. Investigationil~··to luspicion of Koster
and a woman epi1*Je who was atteSted
by detecUves,.O?J, .)!er last day of work.
several months ago.
The woman, a disbursement supervisor
who Jives in Huntington Beach, was
cleared and freed at her own preliminary
hearing last month.
From Page l
MIDEAST ..•
return by the PFLP. which is cuttently
bargaining through ambassadors of Bri·
tain, Switzerland and ~Vest Germany.
Now, 13 specific prisoners are being
demanded by the PFLP, plua anywhere
from 600 to 3,000 Palestinian captives In
return for release of the M hijacked
passengers.
"We will not back down from these
demands whatever happens," emphasizOO
PFLP spokesman Hassan Kanafani.
Israel must agree first to relea.!ie two
Algerians, a Swiss national and 10
LebaJ1ese soldiers, the latter CRptured
New Year's Day in an Israeli foray, the
PFLP insists.
Kanafani said In Amman, Jordan that a
list of addlUonal prisoners the PF'LP
wants will be turned in after this ..
"Whea these demands are met, the
PFLP will release the American and
Israeli hostages," he added.
He also repeated demands that Britain,
West Germany and Switzerland release
Arab hostages.
Kanafani denied any mistreatment of
the 5t penons rem.aniing among nearly
300 captured in the three separate alrlin·
ner hijackings.
He said their personal needs were
being adequately met.
'The Americana are being treated on
the same basis as the Israelis because
the U.S. is an enemy," Kanafani added .
The Jewish state has refused to con-
sider demands for a prisoner exchange
until they were processed through t h e
Red Cross, nor will it deal wlth any ag~n
cy but that and the four governments ln·
volved.
Other PFLP demands include release
of girl guerrilla LeUa Khaled, a com·
mando captured in an unsuccessful at-
tempt to hijack an Amsterdam·to-London
El Al jetliner flight.
They also want I.be body of U.S. clUun
Patrick J. Arguello, who was shot by
Israeli agents during the fru!Uess venture
accompanying Miss Khaled:
Authorities believe the 54 hostages are
being held in heavily fortified hou,.. In
Am.man, but some were ~Uowed Mo,.day
to appeal to U>tlr embassies to hasten tf·
forta to seeure release.
One radio broadcast monitored in Lon·
don said two of the captives have been
shot to death, bringing a prompt PFLP
denial.
"'Mlese tePorta are without any loun·
daUon," said one SPoktsmaR.
"Direct responsibili ty now falls on lhe
governments concerned to announce their
acceptance of the Front conditions," he
added.
I I
Help for a Doryman
Kim Galamis of Garden Grove (foreground) helps push "Mallard''
of Newport Beach's dory fleet ashore. Owner spent foggy morning
a!one on lhe sea last Friday. Friendly group of greeters on shore
provided marked contrast to bis lonely labors.
Group Asks Agreement
On Freeway he Rescinded
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 1"-01llY l'lkll Sltff
•
Ignoring a State Highway Division
warning, the Newport Beach Citizens'
Coordinating Committee Monday night
vowed to continue its efforts to force the
City CoUJ)cil to rescind its agreement on
a route for the future Pacific Coast
Freeway.
The newJy.fonned CCC, an offspring of
Newport's Freeway Fighters, got the City
.Council to lend official recognition to its
declaration by agreeing to forward it to
gt.ate officials on behalf of the organiz.a·
tion.
11ie action came unanimously on a mo.
tlon by Vice Mayor Howard Rogers.
I In Its le«,er, t~"it will not
' 6e~p by 'studies' o)\promises
that a letter asking them to stop work on
the Newport section of the freeway will
effect such action."
The letter 8aid the freeway would then
be returned to the people 'tffke a bolt af
lightning" after the people have been
tranqulliz.ed.
Friday the state had cautioned the city
not to proceed with recinding the fonnal
agreement under the threat of possible
legal action to recover costs eipended
since the agreement was signed.
Jt was estimated these costs exceed
1100,000.
Stating the CCC position. Rogers said
the city should move "to wipe the slate
clean," by rescinding the agreement.
"On any issue so important," he said,
"like a freeway going through the heart
of our city, deserves the attention of the
people as much as a Balboa Bay Club
lease."
Rogers was plugging the CCC move to
~lrculate petitions forcing a referendum
on whether or not the freeway agreement
should be rescinded.
A 'referendum had been conducted
earlier this year on a Bay Club request to
extend its lease of\lty-0wned property.
The BBC lost its bid~"'\..
ln a sa"Xlnd petition, the citiz.ens' com-
mittee Is also seeking a charter amend~
ment that wou1d require future: referenda
prior to the city's adoption of any
freeway route .
Rogers said the CCC will begin Us of.
ficial petition drive Sept. 29 at 7:30 a.m.
, The group needs signatures of 15 percent
of the registered voters who cast ballots
in the last tjty election.
Upon receipt of the petition to rescind
the freeway agreement, the council can
either follow its dictates or a:bedu1e a
city-wide vote on the question.
The e.xisting agreement establishes a
route for the freeway through the eastern
hall of the city, from Bayside Drive to the
Corona del Mar city llmlt.
From Page l
LIFE ..•
as suggested by the committet.
-Lacks elective, grade 12 course in
marriage preparation as suggested by the
comm ittee.
While no action on the se1 education
study is li.!ited on the board agenda, the
board may consider appointing another
citizens committee to further study the
chamber recommendations.
In May, Supt. William Cunningham
said the chamber report would be sub-
jected to staff study and a citizens com·
mlttee would advise the board on im·
plementation.
Dr. Nolan Friuelle, a Newport Beach
optometrist. headed the chamber study
group which began examining family
life programs in the Newport·Mesa dis·
trict in April, 1969.
Route Move
Gets Tabled
By, Newport
A reaolutlon uldng Asaemblyman
Robert E. Badham (JI.Newport Beach) lo
ask Governor Reagan to tntervene in the
Pacific Coast Freeway controveny was
tabled Monday nifl)tt by the Newport
l!eoch City Council.
The council did, however, vote to direct
its traffic department to prepare speclfi.
cations of a study the city .!ihould carry
out on its overall traffic netds.
Badham, who earlier bad vowed to take
the freeway up with the governor on his
own, reportedly had subsequenUy in-
formed the city he would do so only upon
formal request
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers told the
council that Badham said be wou1d ask
Governor Reagan to aet his special ~
freeway task force to look lnto the matter
following council acUon. 1
The vote was tabled for two weeks at
the request of Councilman Carl Kymla
who viewed that the importance of the J
action deserved additional lime for con-l sideration.
Rogers, conceding that he had not
briefed fell ow cowicil members on the ·
development prior to the meeting, agreed
to the delay. I
Mayor Ed Hirth proposed the staff
study of a design for an official study
after completing several weeks of a
similar study on his own.
The staff design study wou1d include
the agenda for a study, who should
participate, the approaches to be ~n
and the limitations to be imposed, Hirth
said.
Council members stressed the study
shou1d be made with as little expenditure
of f\Dlds as possible and directed that no
additional fund.s on an Upper Bay study
be spent pending the outcome of the
overall study.
There cuttently Is $18,000 budgeted for
the Upper Bay study.
· The design is expect.ed to be ready for
the council at its Sept. 28 meeting.
Assemblyman Badham bas made his
Initial vow to take the freeway Wue to
the governor after a bill be sponsor~ in
the state Jegislaturt to kill the coastal
freeway through Newport died in Senate
committee.
From Pagel
ROGERS ...
rescind.eel (see separate story).
Prior to the vice mayor's remarks, In a
statement which apparently prompted
them, firth had detailed to the council
his efforts the past several 'weeks in his
one·man study of how the: city should ap.
proach its traffic problem.
Hirth disclosed that at his meeting with
the two state highway officials last week,
Al Koch, Orange County road com·
missioner, was present.
Rogers immediately assailed this, poln·
ling out that Koch has long been a sup-
porter of the coastal freeway. "It was at
least 3 to 1 at this meeting," Rogers said.
He demanded to know why Hirth bad
brought him along.
The mayor replied that~ls participa-
tion came at the suggestion of William
Jennings, chairman of the State Highway;
commission, a resident of Balboa Island.
The ' confidential memo criticized by
Rogers contained statements critical of
the effort.s of the CCC in their petition
drive, charging " a crippling procedure."
would resu1t.
Hirth, in the memo, had said Jt wou1d
be wrong for the council, itself, to ID-
terfere with the citizens' move, but said.
"We could remove the need and desire bY.
a strong acceptable action toward a solu·
tion.'"
It's Your Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
:rHAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY AND THICK THE
CARPET IS NECESSARILY QUALITY.
NOT TRUE! 0MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE FIBER, AND NOT THE Q U ANT IT Y, IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE.
IT'S YOUR MONEY -SO, WHEN BUYING
YOUR CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE DEALING
WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL, AND EQUAU. Y AS
IMP.ORTANT, A REPUJABLE DEALER.
SANTA ANA. OU.N•I
tumN Cllll •••
ALOIN'S
IU Hill CAlNTI
&·DIAHllD
11J74 '""-·'"""'UH. Ul..JJ44
•
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Plac•lltla Avt.
COSTA f!llSA
646-4131
I
I
I
'·
Saddlehaek .
N.Y. Stoelu
VOL 63, NO. 22 1, 2 SECT.IONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTE~BER ·15, ·1970 ~CENTS
Hostages Periled .
Arabs Lay Down
Tough Demands
From Wire Services
Specific demands were laid down today
hi tough and threatening terms by Arab
terrorists bargaining for the fate of 54
hostages, mostly American, in exchange
for hundreds o{ their own imprisoned.
Negotiations were hampered b y
withdrawal of the International Red
Cross and stubborn dealings by the
Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine through a mysterious mediator.
The PLFP annowtced any intervention
militarily will doom the hostages taken in
three jetliner hijackings last week, most
af them Americ an, plus & om e Israelis
and Europeans.
A spokes man said both are C<Jnsldered
PLFP enemies and will be considered
prisoners of war.
Officials in Washington sternly warned
Parking Site
Under Study
By Planners
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 ni. DlllY l"llet Stiff
A four-level structure on Laguna's
Glenneyre Street parking tot seemed the
m0&t likely city entree into the parking
structure business Monday night but one
still a good way off.
City planning commissioners studied
two preliminary parking structure con-
cepts. the Glenneyre site and another
four-level structure proposal that would
close Mermaid Street and require pro-
perty acquisition at Second Street
Commissioner Robert Hastings asked
to ta ke the schematic plans to friends in
the building business oto get cost ap-
proximations.
''Jn the south coast parking district (to
be considered by the council Wednesday)
we are going to pa yfor our own if we
ever get il." said realtor Georgia Gill.
"Who is gonng to pay for parking in the
downtown area'?"
Commission Chairman William Lam·
bourne Said, "We ha ve asked the
Chamber of Commerce and DBA
(Downtown Business Association) to help
formulate a parking district for the
downtown are;..''
He said it would be necessary to settle
on a location for the parking structure
and the boundaries of a parking district
before things could proceed.
''Before we can accomplish our part,"
said Lambourne. "we have got to get
50me kind or dollar figure."
Al Autry, city planning director, ex-
plained the structures.
The Glenneyre structure would provide
352 parking spaces. The lot now provides
(See PARKING, P•1e %)
the holdiag of America• hostages is
totally unacce ptable.
The guerrilla f r o n t organization is
unrecognized by Israel, whose Parlia-
ment met in emergency session. Monday
to discuss the lat.est ransom demands.
America and Israel are ignored in
return by the PFLP, which is currently
bargaining through ambassadors of Bri-
tain, Switzerland and \Vest Germany.
Now, 13 specific pr isoners are being
demanded by lhe PFLP, plus anywhere
from 600 to 3,000 Palestinian captives in
return for release of lhe 54 hijacked
passengers.
"We wil l not back down from these
demands whatever happens,'' emphasiz~
PFLP spokesman Hassan Kanafani .
Israel must agree first to release two
Algerians, a Swiss national and IO
Leba11ese soldiers, the . latter c11.pW.red
New Year's Day in an Israeli foray, the
PFLP insists.
Kanafani said In Amman, Jordan that a
list of additional prisoners lhe PF'LP
wanls will be turned in after this.
"Whe1, these dema~ are mtt, the
PFLP win · release the American and
Israeli hostages," he added.
He also repeated demands thal Britain,
West Germany and Sillturland release
Arab hostages.
Kanalani denJed any mistreatment of
the 54 persons remanting among nearly
300 captured in the three separate airlin·
ner hijackings.
He said their personal needs were
being adequately met.
'The Americans are being treated on
the same basis as the Israelis because
the U.S. is an enemy," Kanalani added.
The Jewish stale has refused to con-
sider demands for a prisoner exchange
until they were prOCf'ssed through t h e
Red Cross. nor will it deal with any agen-
cy but that and the four governments in-
volved.
Other PFLP demands include release
of girl guerrilla Leila Khaled, a com·
mando captured in an unsuccessful at-
tempt to hijack an Amsterdam-~London
El Al jetliner flight.
They also want the body of U.S. citizen
Patrick J. Arguello, who was shot by
Israeli agents during the fruiUess venture
accompanying tl1iss Khaled.
Authorities believe the 54"flostages are
being held in heavily for tified houses in
Amman, but some were allowed Monda y
to .appeal to their embassies to hasten e!-
forts to secure release.
One radio broadcast monitored In Lon·
don said two of the captives have been
shot to de ath, bringing a prompt PFLP
denial.
''l'hese reports are without any foun-
dation," said one spokesma•.
"Direct responsibility now falls on the
governments coacerned to announce their
acceptance of the Front conditions," be
adde<l.
er
Clubhouse
In Clemente
Gets Study
When San Clemente ci!Y councilmen
conside r .adoption of preliminary plans
for the community clubhouse Wednesday
their months ot work turni11g the draw·
ings to reality will have only begun.
Despite the apparent satisfaction In the
community and the council over the
plans, matters or financing for a facility
costing at least $300,000 and relocation or
several r.ecreation struCtures will have to
be tack led J1ext, City Manager Ken Carr
said today.
The c i t y w i d e satisfaction with the
preliminary drawings of the new meeting
facility was sampled Monday night when
reco mmendations by c i t y commissions
and club officers were complied in a
cnuncil study session.
"It seems apparent that the council
will authorize the start of precise plans
for the clubhouse Wednesday night after
reaching agreement on the suggested
changes.
"But after that will come months of
work," CalT said.
lt will take an estimated three months
for designers Boucher a n d Drielisma
Associates to draft the complete working
drawings for the clubhouse.
"During that time," Carr explalned,
"the matters ()f financing and ecn-
structlon could be....,.wari:ed out."
At the end of three montlis, council.mer\
then would have to arrange for lhe bid
procedure.
The total sum of the bids for the
clubhouse coo.Jd exceed $300,000 even
though the drawings show a buiJding cos-
ting $200,000.
Site preparation, including the raring of
the unusab le portion of the charred
landmark, will prove costly.
Other items would include site grading
and preparation and relocation of the ten-
nis and shuffleboard courts -possibly at
Bonita Canyon Park near the Municipal
Golf Course.
Jet Splits Open
In Runway Skid
NEW YORK (U PI ) -An Alltalia DC8
jetliner skidded of! a Kennedy Airport
runway on landing Tuesday and split
<lpen, apparently as the result of a col-
lapsed landing gear.
There were no immediate report! of
casuallies or of fire, although an alarm
signal from the Kennedy control tower
brought more than a dozen pieces o( city
fire apparatus and a superpumper to the
scene.
A spokesman said the landing gear ap-
parently collapsed as the plane touched
down on runway 4-R and the plane "skid·
ded off and broke open ." The accident oc-
curred at 1:21 p.m. (EDT).
There were lf6 passengers and 11)
crewmen on the flight from IUlme, an
Alitalla spokesman said,
New School Opening Set
Vniversity High w Be Ready by November 15th
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 !ft• DlllJ Plltl S111t
University High School in the Universi-
ly Park area will probably be ready for
occupation Nov. I 5, 'Superintendent
\V\IUam IJ. Zogg to!~ Tustin Union High
School District trustees Monday night.
"We anticipate a Nov. JS move-in dale
for the classrooms and rest room
facilities," Zogg said . "The industrial
arts and homemaking areas should be
completed about a week or two later." ..
University High School was originally
planned to be completed for the opening
of school Monday, but strikes hampered
const.ruction and the school was not
finished on time.
The 813 University iligh School
1tudents are 11.ttcnding Mlssion Viejo Hlgtl
School on a double session basis with the
1,932 P.iisslon Viejo H~ School. 1tudcnt.s.
The board was presented 1 status
repart from construction inspector Jack
Pederson of the architectural nnn of
Wlllls Hutchason and Auociates.
In the report, Pederson stated that the
masonry work on the classrooms was
complete, but that lhe eleclrlca.I, plum~
•
Ing an d heating equipment ·was only
partially installed .
The construction delay caused concern
11mong many parents of University High
School students after the board voted
Aug. 24 to bus the students lo Mission
Viejo High School.
ln a letter that was read to the board
f.fonday, Louis Fridhandler, .f S $ l
Sandburg Way, Irv ine, attacked lbe bus·
Ing plan as "irresponsible" and said he
strongly disapproved of the "$5,000 bus-
ing plan."
Board member Mrs. June Smith said
the board had voted that the busing "was
not to exceed $5,000 and that the board
WtlS hopeful that it would be far less than
that amount."
In bis letter, Frldhandler also clttd
what he called "the inadtquate library
facilltlM" at University fll&b SCbool.
Suptrlnltndent Zogg said the library
was being funded the same 11 lhe library
at Mmlon Viejo HJ&h School was during
Jts first year.
However, Mrt. Virginia Kirkland,
librarian for UnJveraity High School, old
that the district "spent from $32,000 to
$35.000 to start the library at Mission Vie-
jo High School. We have only $20,000 for
the University High School and t have
found that not all of the materials have
even been ordered yet."
Mrs. Kirkland said that she had made
•rrangem.ents with the librarian at UC
Jrvlne to use UCJ's library facilities. She
also said thal a1 bookmobile wlll ho pro-
vlded for the students and that the boob
that are available will circulate for one
week instead or two to give mo~
1tudents an opportunity to use them.
Superintendent ?.ogg said he thought
that more money had been provjded for
the University High SChool library, but
said that he did not have the spe<:Uic
fJgures at his Immediate disposal.
Jn other JcUon c:oncttning University
High SChool, tho board a«tpltd bids
totaling $8$,146.lt from various com-
panie11 for equipment for lhe new high
tchool. TM equipment I n c I u de d
classroom furniture. lndustriil an.,: and
automotive &hip equipment ud librlJ')'
lltrnllure.
' ..
ot uar
' A KISS fOR LUCK AND WE'RE ON OUR WAY
Cup Defender Ficker •nd Wife, B•rb•r•
Gretel Blows Chances
Eor CqP,.RQCe _ V~tory
,
u,1 r ... ,.... ..
READY FOR FOUL WEATHER
Cup Ch•ll•ne•r H1rdy
Anti-dog, Rule
Petition . Ready
1 o Be Presented
Pet.itions bearing the signatures of 3,000
per!Ons who seek to overturn Laguna's
restrictive new dog ordinance will ba
presented to the city council Wednesday
night in an effort to persuade councilmen
to voluntarlly rescind lhe law.
Adopted by a 3 to 2 vote Aug. 19, it
~omes effective Saturday, baniting all
dogs from three city parks and from city
beaches betietn the hours of 9 a.m. and
I p.m.
Gallery owner ruqiard Challa'. who
@tarheaded the peUUon drive with •
"dog-in" on Maln BelCh Aue. 22 .. said ~
day, "We are wlthJn 100 signatures of the
3,000 mark, b1vifti 1lmed for aomethln1
over 2,000."
'Ibe petiliONJ:he said, hive no legal et-'
feet, but are directed at "the conscience
of the council."
"We hope," said Challis, "that those
who voted for the ordinance will see that
the way In which It was presented was
wholly diJhonf.lt In view of the. fact that
at the lludy session. the night ~ore; no
mention was made of the ordinance.
Indeed , the peoJNt1 were ltd to believe at
that 1es.slon that 1trlcter en(orcement of
the leash law was all ·that wu to be
undertaken.
By ALMON LOCIWIEY
n.1i, 1"11111 INtlq 11•1ter
NEWPORT, R.I. -Australia's Gretel
JI virtllally b l e w all chances foe an
America's Cup victory today when she
lost a crewman overboard, fouled her
spinnaker and fell 4 minutes •nd 40
seconds behind Intrepid at the halfway
mark.
Gretel's crew immediately hoisted the
protest flag, claiming 1 spectator boat in·
lerfered with her rescue of the overboard
crewmlln,
It was a disastrous day for the Aussie
challenger.
Her two most serious mishaps occurred
before today's race was half over.
Shortly after jibing the second mark
one o! her foredeck crew went overboard
in the choppy seas of Rhode Island
Sound. The man overboard wyas picked up
by Gret.el ll but she hoisted a protest flag
after a spectator boat interfered with the
rescue.
Gretel 11 was already hopelessly
behind.
She rounded the first windwatd mark
one minute, eight seconds astern and
hois ted her spinnaker in a hoeples,, way
around the headstay.
It look the crew a full six minutes lo
get a chute flying and the fouled one
.:!own.
The race started under threatening
skies and a 17 knot easterly· wlnd that
kicked up fine chop on the sound.
Gretel 11 wa11 first across the starting
line but l<>.!lt her advantage by having to
bear away sharply to keep from being
early, thus giving lntrepi~ a clear
weather berth. At the end of the triangle
halfway mark of the 24-mile course
Gretel ll was 4 minutes, 40 seconds
behind.
, Gretel IJ, designed by AJan Payne, han-
dily defeated France 4 to O in elimination
series in August against the French
challenger. ·
But many think Intrepid, only the se-
cond boat picked twice to defend the cup,
will win the series in four 1tr1ight over
the Australian challenger.
Match racing for the cup ls a battle of
billfolds, design, space •ge technology,
aew seJecUon and organiza tion.
hehnunanship, sailing tacUcs and luck.
·Intrepid showed herself a winning com·
blnatJon of ill of these In her aomewhat
.Urprlsing victory over Valiant In the
elimination trtals. Valiant wa~ the 1970
product or a:enius of designer Olin
Stephens who also desigiied Intrepid; In
Jwt, Intrepid soundly d·e feat e d
Australia'• Dime Pattie for the cup.
In boat.for-boat racing, Is in the
Amerlca'1 CUp, past performance b
IOITleUmts loot to ptt>tnt sailing skill,
tactics and good rortune·, which makes
thl1 year's Hrlcs a contest between a
proven winner and a question mark.
T!iat Is porhaps 'Why 3,000 boils wUI go
to sea to ace whether, as h1s ertw pro-
fesses, •ifJcker la Quicker,"
,
Plane Held
One Hour.
On ·Runwa~
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A hijacker
who tried to force a Trans World Airliner
to fly to North Korea was critically woun-
ded in the abdomen today by another
passenger, a private guard for a
securities shipment.
The 707 jet liner, from New York via
Chicago and lAs Angeles, w1s held on a
San Francisco lnlematiooal AJrwt
runway for an hour by ~· curunan 'Wore
he was shot and overpowered. No one
else was injured..
Anned with.. a .22 caliber pistol, the
man boarded the early morning flight ia
Los Angeles. He was identified by police
as Donald Irwin, 28, of Reseda.
Robert E. De Nisco. 34, of Brooklyn.
N.Y., a guard for Brink.s, Inc .• ahot the
hijacker after 35 of the 56 passengers
were allowed to debark. The plane was
being held on • runway 1 mtle from the
terminal at the lime.
The plane bad a crew of &even, all from
Kansas City.
Shortly alter taking off Ir om la
Angeles for San Francisco, the pilot,.
Capt. J. K. 'Gilman, radioed tht Loe:
Angeles CQntrol tower that a white male pa-had told him, "Thia plani la
~Ing l>iiaclted. U wW ~going larthtr."
San P'i'ancisco was alerted •nif peae1
officera were standing by when the plane
landed at G:03 a.m., Gilman having CXIQ.
vinced .the)unman that refuelini wu
necessary.
One of the four atewardeaes said the
drama began when the man arose and
handed her o. note reading, "I have • gun.
I want lo go to Korea."
She aald she had seen him on previoua
filghts. .
Passenger Sally Rush, 2.f, of San Fro.
clsco said none of the pusengers knew
what was going on tmtU the plane waa on
the ground.
She said the captain anoounced on the
public address system, ''There is a
gentleman on board who wiabes to land
at another airport. Be calm."
He then announced that military men
and families with children would be
allowed to debark.
Miss Rush said she and the others left
aboard were asked to move to front teal.I
in the coach seeUon.
The gunman was seated two rowa
behind them.
After an interval of suspense, ahe Aid,
"A marl in a brown oulfi• walked from
the front of ttte plane, quickly said,
'Police,' and fired one shot over tight to
10 rows of seats."
Hit in the lower right abdomen with a
.38 caliber slug, the hlajcker crumpled
and was seized.
At nearby Peninsula Hospital, hJs con-
dition was described u critical after an
hour of surge;y.
Hog Pen Pollution
CHARUl'ITE. N. C. (AP) -The
Health ' Department released Monday a
list of 327 sources ol stream pollution In
the county. Almost all named on the U1•
were industries, but one source was "boa
pen in creek."
Weatller
OnJy a few patchy cloud1 will
mar Wednesday's sunshiny sties
with temperatures holding at 70
degrees on the coast and up to IS
further inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Tht 'new theater 110101i h In
full swing on the Orange Cat11t.,
as wtll as "uptown." Rtvitws o/
three oJ tht latest productioa1
are on Entertain ment Pdget JS
end 11 today.
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• J DAl\.Y PILOT SC r.....,, s.o,_ 15, 1910
Jordan Crisis Worsens
Hussein's Offer to Resign Told
By Uoltod l'ml lo-tloDal
Jordanian army gunners • h e 11 e d
PoleltlDlan IU'l"llla b..,.1 In north
Jardin today, the Syrian Arab News
,._, ...,oried. Tbe Encllab longuag• JtruSaJem Poot sold the crilll there WU
eo urtous King Hll.S$eln tried to 1bdic1te
but wu cllNulded by UAR President
Glllllll Abdel Nauer.
Tbe ce-.lln aloo( the SUH Canal
allo wu reported oluiky, and ofllclal
-lll...Ciiro JIM _Monday night Egypt bell..., tht United StatQ bas
wsptnd<d ltli peace lnlUaUve which !ell
to the cease-fire. '1'11ey said the big four
powers should try again to restore peace.
DiplamaUc sources in Jerusalem said
Israeli Premier Golda Meir, wbo meeta
Pruldenl Nim> In W uhington on Fri·
d1y, will Ult blm LO revile America's ot-
flcia) policy on Israel's borders. She will
contend that Israel must retain &0me
captured territory to auure Jt.s 1ecurity1
the IOUl'Cel Aid.
Maj. Abdel saJam J,Doud, a member
al the Libyan llevoluUon CoDll!llllld Couo-
ell, In a atawnent rogorted by the !IYP-
tlan Middle Eul Newa Agency, aald the
situaUon bas now reached a stage where
a poUUcal aoluUon can no longer be found
and the aituaUon muat be resolved
lhrough war. 1be report of flghUng In the Irbld area
U mllea northeast of Amman followed
similar reports Monday by the guerrilla
organiuUon Al Fat.ah. And ln Beirut, the
righ~wing newspaper the Daily Star
quoted euerrtlla sources in Amman as
.saying the Jordanian Army bu clwed
guerrillas out of South Jordan.
'!be Dally Star said King Hu""ln hoped
to liquidate the whole m o v e m e n t
gradually. It said the campaign was laun-
ched after leaders of the Bedouin, the
ranatical supporters of King Hussein, met
in special session and pledged to ·support
the government.
HUS9ein bas been faced with near civil
war for montM and has .urvived nine
assassinallon attempts. 'Ibe Jerusalerd
Post. quoting "soun:es close to the Jorda-
nian royal court." aaid in a front page
blllllU 1tory he waa for the first time
Newport Vice Mayor Calls
Hirth 'Patsy' on Freeway
Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard
Rogen Monday Dlgbt charged that
Ma,or Ed Hlrtb bu "fallen vtctlm" to a
plot by the Stall Dlvlllon ol mgllwaya
''I<> lull Ibo people to aleep" about lht
Issue al the Pacific Cout Freeway.
And Rogers re1eued copies of a "con-
fidenUal" memorandum written by H1rtb
to the City CouncU which Rogers userted
-id back up hfl allegation.
Rogers asserted the memorandum and
otber recent actiona by Hirth lndkate be
baa become a pally to the propaganda of
atate olficlalJ.
Amons other things , Rogers based his
accusaUon on remark.a by Hirth, later
recanted, that the state would DOI pro-
ceed with plans to build the c:ontrovenW
fretway ll the Newport Beach City Coun-
cil woold writo a letter asking work bt
atopped.
Bogen Aid the men who made the
alalements, Hal& AylJ\laD, director al
HlihnY Dlvlaion llistrlcl 7, 111d his top
alde, WUllam Hasbtmoto ... do not bave
the autborllf to tW! auch actl<n."
Htrth, t n council 1esslon Monday,
qreed thlt • ••IJmpl• letter" would not
fOCCfl an offlclaJ ball to atate pla:mhJi for
the roate.
Rogera plugged the eflorta ol the
Citizens CoordinaUng Committee, a
Freeway Fighters adjunc~ to circulate
peUti,.. that would require a referendum
oo the Issue of whether the dty'1 formal
freeway route agreement abould be
r;esclnded (,.. separate story).
Prior to the vice mayor's remarks, In a
statement which apparently prompted
them, Hirth had detailed to the cooncll
bis efforts the past several weeks in his
Tustin Woman
Killed in Crash
A JOU111 Tustin woman died early this
morning Jrom injuries suffered when the
car in which she •a• a passenger went
out of control, struck a parked car and a
tree. Police aid llom>a Jean Abroslnl. D. ol
1'300 Newport Ave., Apt. 5<, was riding
Jn a car driven by Henry M. Be.111 23, of
the same address, Apl 24.
Officen uid the vehicle slid broad.side
for to feet Into the car and tree ID the
1400 block of Nlsson Road, Tu.Un.
Bell WIS treated at Tustin Community
HOl!lpital Ind released . Police said the ac-
cident is under investigation.
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.... man study of how the cp should ap.
proaclt its traffic problem.
Hirth dlsdooed that at his meeting with
the two state blghway officials last week,
Al Koch, Orange County road com-
mlsskmer, WU pn?RDL
Hogen lmmedialely usalled th!I, poln-
Ung ool thol Koch bas long been a sup.
porter of the coutal freeway. "It was at
least 3 to I at thll meeting.'' Rogers said.
He demanded to lmOw why Hirth bad
brought him along.
1be mayor repUed that hJs partlcipe·
tion came at the suggestion ol William
Jennings, chairman of the State Highway
commission, a resident of Balboa Island.
The confidential memo criticized by
Rogers contained statements critical of
the efiorts of the CCC in their petition
drive, charging" a crippling procedure''
would resulL
Hirth, in the memo, bad said it would
he wrong for the COUlldl, Ii.elf, to In-
terfere with the cltl:r.ens' move, but said,
''We cooJd remove the need and desire by
a strong acceptable action toward a solu·
tlon."
Hirth then suggested "lmtrucUng" the
state to stop the planning of the Newport
section of the freeway.
Seeoadly, Birth auggested the ateps he
has been following recenily, a study of
the transportation needs: of the county.
Rogers maintains that the agreement
must be rescinded "to wipe the slate
clean" before any study ls inltlat<d.
Police Arrest
Second Auto
Burglar Suspect
A second San Clemente man has been
arrested this week In an auto burglary
earlier this summer which yielded more
than $3,000 in receipt& from a San
Clemente service station.
But despite this week's arrest of a pair
of suspects, the cash has disappeared,
police said.
Robert Giffen Robeson.· 19, or 2609 Via
Cascadita, was arrested Monday af·
temoon. and booked on charges of
burglary.
Over the weekend, police arrested ~
year~td Paul Arthur Baker of 160 C Calle
Redondel, San Clemente, In coMec:tlon
with the same theft..
The alleged offense occurred earlier
Utls summer after a San Clemente
wOman parked her car near the North
Beach area.
After leaving the cash in the glove
compartment ol. the auto, Mrs. Ralph
Mathes went to the beach to pick up a
group of youngsters who had gon" gru·
nlon hunUng.
When the group returned to the unlock·
ed ear, the money -in bank bags -had
disappeared.
Detectives said a source's tip led to the
arrest of the two men.
111e pair are being held on $3,150 ball
apiece.
Frank 0. Carr
Fup.eral Slated
Funeral servlcts will bt held Wed·
riesday for Frank 0. Carr, IS.year
J:.aauna Beach rtsldenl who died Sunday
at bia botne, 16Zt Hillcrest Drive. He was
86.
Dr. Dallu R. Turner will officiate at
the 11 a.m. rltts in the Community
Presbyterian Cllurch.
Mr. Carr is survtved by bis widaw,
Carol: a daughter. Mrs. Ellt.abtlh l\fayer
ol Wichita, Kon. ud by four grandsons.
A banker for 5S years, Mt. Carr
fonnerJy wu affiliated w1th the First
National Bank of Wichita. lte was a
member of Amerlcan Legion Post 222,
Laguna Beach and of Masonic Lodge No.
99 of Wi<hila. Shdfcr Loguna Beach
Mortuary are d!ttcton.
coasiderlni abdlcatlnc.
0 Huwln •.. upreased hil Intention of
quitting after last week's fierce clashes
between his .. ermed forces and the tu. ror\sts, and alter the open split in his
army over the lssue of the presence of
terrorists and Iraqi troops in areas of
Amman and other major towns, It said.
It said Hussejn held up his decision at
the Insistence ct Nasser "who fears total
civil war in Jordan would follow hil ab-
dicaUon."
Hussein, in-an Interview today with the
newspaper Le Figaro in Paris, admitted
the split in his army. He said he had been
having problems restraining some or his
younger ofUcers from trying to wipe out
the guerrillas.
He gave one instance - a battery of
heavy artillery was headed into Amman
to get the Palestinian guerrillas and a•
first refused to stop when he personally
Jllll"Slled them.
''The truclcs kept pusblng me off the
road at the risk Of overturning my car in
a r.avlne," he said. "I finally managed to
overtake them and the Land Rovers of
my personal guard blocked their advance.
It was very difficult to convince them to
return to their base."
Offlclal so~ ln Cairo said Egyptian
embassies and legations throughout the
world would be instructed to notify their
host governments of Egypt's view that
"America has frozen its peaceful in·
ltiative."
Capo Council
Studi.es Police
Department Pl.an
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of n.t Dallr Jlli.t St•H
A report on the feasibility of having a
city pcllce department has been ordered
by the San Juan Capistrano City Council.
The city fathers voted Monday to hire
Richard Grace,, a professor of police
science at Cal ·St.ate, Los Angeles, to
prepare the study.
Jn a closed door session, the council in·
terviewed two candidates for the
prepartion of the study. Mayor Tony
Forster justified the c Io g e d door by
saying that the candidate woLlid be a con-
tract employe.
The only person opposing Uie polii:e
Btudy was Cowteilman Josh Gammell
who said he didn't feel a study is
necessary at this time. He said any study
would Jose Jts value by the Ume a police
department became necessary.
"U the study doesn't bear out a need
for a police department at this time,
fine," argued Councilman Jim Thorpe.
"Bu t we still need to have the pro.
fessiotal study, rather than figures and
facts individuals throw out second band."
Thorpe, who has Jong advocated p1an·
nillg for a police deparbnent, made the
motion to hire Grace. It was seconded by
Councilman Ed Chemak, who also has
favored the city having Its own force,
rather than contracting with the Orance
County Sheriff's Deparlmenl
Councilman Bill Bathgate aupporled
the motion with Gammell and Forster
vGting no. Forster said be favored the
other candidate.
Grace's proposal Is for $75 a day for a
._minimum of 21 days. The details of the
fiaanclal arrangement and the direction
of the report will be worked out by Coun.
cibnan Bathgate and City Admlni.strator
Ernest Thompson.
Laguna Water
Supply Building
Begins Again
Departure of Laguna's summer visitors
has brought a return of the men and
machines to complete major water sup-
ply installations to serve Laguna Beach
and South Laguna.
Work was halted at the beginning of
summer to avoid interference with heavy
traffic during the beach and Festival
season.
Excavation already has resumed on
Forest Avenue outside City Hall. It will
extend along Forest, Thlrtl , Mennaid and
Bent Streets to coMect with the South
Laguna line already installed back up to
Park Avenue at Bent Street.
Jn the opposite direction, the work will
go back to a point opposite the tennis
courts on the Festiva1 grounds to connect
with the 36-inch transmission line in·
stalled down Laguna canyon.
Laguna Beach County Water District
Manager William Moorehead &aid t b a t
weather permitting, this pb.a.se of the pro-
ject should be completed by Christmas.
In a further phase of the wat~r supply
project, the City Council will be. asked
Wednesday night to grant an euement
for a 20-lnch water pipeline that will ex·
tend from the Canyon line in front of the
Festival grounds and up through the
Playhouse parking lot to the reservoir on
the hUI above Irvine Bowl.
The uistlng 100,0()0..ga.llon reservoir Is
to be replaced with a 31h-million-gallon
reservoir to receive and store water com·
ing down the new canyon plpeUne from a
point of origin in the Yorba Linda area.
1be: new reservoir, Moorehead said,
will be built underground and lanM:aped
and beautified on top. Plans for the In-
stallation m expected to be completed In
a .month, at which time bids will be
60Ugl\l
The e.ntlre project could be ready for
fn itia.l lesting In spring or 1971, lhe Water
District manager said.
Resoltdloa
Newport Delays
Freeway Action
A reooluUon asking A>oemblyman
Robert E. Badham !R·Newport Beach) to
ask Governor Reagan to intervene in the
Pacific. Coast Freeway controversy wu
tabled Monday night by tht Newport
Beach City Council.
the state legislature to kill the eoutal
freeway through Newport died in Senate
committee. -
It bas paS3ed the Asseiftbly hy a wide
margin.
'l'be coomdl did, however, vote to direct
fb tra!Ji< departmeot to prepare apeclll.
caUoas of a atudy the cllf should CUTl' -CJUt on -1t1 overall tramc "l>eed!:.
Badham expressed intense dJA~
pointment following the sen a t e
Tr1n1portatioo Committee rejection of
his bill_ and -~antly vowed to m~
rigb:tlfito Reagan's ~fflce.
Uri Telfftltte
Loclt Ne11 Camera
ScoUand's shy Loch Ness Mon·
ster may be captured on film
through this inira~red camera
being checked out by lilmmak·
er Peter Suarez, New expedi·
tion of British scientists will
watch for monster starting
Wednesday.
Sherif£ s Hunt
For More Ones
In Girl's Death
By TOM BAllLEY
01 n.e DallY f'lllt staff
Orange County Sheriff's investigator•
today cootinued their hunt for clues in
the killing of a 13-year-old Long Beach
girl whose rotting body was found three
days ago ID the LoguJUl Niguel area.
Backing them In their ef!orls ia a team
of Rlvenid• Cotmty lawmen who are
similarly lnvestigaUng the death ol the
girl's l&-year-01d boy friend and awaitin&
the oUtcome of the tozlcological i.sta be-
ing performed by tho county coroner.
'!be body of Jeolae Marie R!lpln WU
found by hikers early Saturday in the:
Camino Capistrano area about four miles
north of San Juan Capistrano.
lnvestlgators believe she was stranguled
to death on ot about Aug. 29, the day·
before she was reported aa: missing by
hi:r parents.
Her boyfriend, Fdwtn E. Miller, 18, of
El!Inore, was, investigators believe, kill·
ed within 24 hours of the girl's murder.
His body was found Aug. 30 in a shallow
grave off the Ortega Highway in
Riverside County.
Investigators said Miller's pannts told
them that the young couple left the Miller
home on Riverside Drive to visit a go--
cart track last Aug. 29 and promi.led to
return home about 11 p.m.
That was the last time Miss Rispin and
ber boyfriend. were seen alive.
Typhoon• Claims 300
111ANILA (UPI) -'!be Philippine Na-
tional Police said today more than 300
persons may have been killed when
Typhoon Georgia slammed intG the
maln island of Luzon and v1rtually level·
ed a town of 15,000.
Badham, who earlier bad vowed to take
the freeway up with the governor on bis
own, reportedly had subsequently in·
formed the city be would do IO only upon
formal requ..t.
Vice Mayor -ard Rogers told the
council that Badham said be would ask
Governor Reagan to get his special
freeway task force: to look into the matter
following council action.
The vote wu tabled f« two weeks at
the. requeat of Councilman Carl Kymla
who viewed that the lmj>ortance of the
action delerved additional time for COJ\"'
&ideraUon. Rogers, conceding that he had not
briefed fellow council members on the
development prl9f to the meeting, agreed
to the delay.
Mayor Ed Hirth propoaed the sta!f
study of a design for an official study
after completing several weeks of a
similar atudy on his own.
The staff design study would lnclude
the agenda for a study, who should
particlpete, the approaches to bt taken
and the l!mltatiooa to bt Imposed. Hirth
said.
CouDcU memben atrta>ed the atudy
1bould bt made with u Utile ezpendlture
of funds u poeslble and directed that no
addltfollal funda co en Upper Bay aludy
bt 11pe11t pending the outcoma of the
overall study.
There currenUy Is 118,000 budgeted for
the Upper Bay study.
The design Is upeded to he ready for
the =U at Its Sept. 21 meeUng.
Asaemblyman Badham bas made his
initial vow to take: the freeway issue to
the governor after a bill be 1ponsored in
From Page I
PARK.ING •••
78. It would abut the Peacock build.Ing
and be bteween Glenneyre and Ramona
Avenue.
The 138,064--squa.re-foot structure, tt
wu estimated very rouahUy, would cost
$1,058,000. 1bss was on the basis of '3,000
per parking apace.
'11le Mermaid street .trocture, if ever
a reality, would close off Mermaid and
would cover two Iota fronting on
Mermaid on each side of Second Slreet.
It would require acquisition of the den-
tal ol.fice of Dr. Robert French, fonner
planning commissioner: the first lot of
the Presbyterian Church parking and the
Laguna Beach Board of Realtors office.
It would reach the alley next to the new
G<oeral Telephone Co. building.
Autry a.aid the 154,741).square-feet
structure would provide Gt spaces. 'Ibe
rough cost estlmate was tl,302,000 but
this did not include land acquisition or
major utility rerouUng coots.
Work would include rerouting of the
Mermaid St. aewer. It would also enta.il
considerable hill.side exeavaUon and
would cause traffic circulation changes,
it was said.
Realtor John Gilbert, with offices: on
Broadway, pointed out that a Menn.aid
structure would not serve a great deal of
the downtown business dlltrict as it is
presently developed.
0 Wouldn't It be more logical to build on
the inland side of Third Street?" he ask·
ed. "You wouldn't have the excavatlon
problem and I don't thlnt the site cQ5t.s
would be as much.••
Building Fee ·
Increase Set
For StudY,
A resolution that would Increase
building permit fees in the city of Laguna
Beach by approximately 62'11 percent will
be considered by the city council on its
Wednesday night •gend•.
Contractors, subcontractors, architects
and others likely to be affected by the
new fee schedule have been notified of
the proposed council action by Building
and Plannin(Director Clyde Z. Springe.
The item was deferred from an earlie r
council session to permit public notice of
the proposed new fees, although It was
revealed at that time that the anticipated
revenue increase bad been calculated in
the new city budgeL
At that time, Springe e.Umated llie
fees would resuJt in a revenue increue of
approximately $13,000 for the first nine
months, assuming they would not become
effective until after the first quarter of
the current fiscal year. Purpose, he told
the council, would be to C{)ver more of
the cost of operating the building depart·
menL
As an example, he said that total per~
mil fees for a $25,000 house, which now
amount to $216, would bring in revenue of
$315 under the new schedule, an increase
ol $99.
In some areas, notably at 1ower valua·
tion levels, fees would be doubled~
Building permit fee for jobs valued up to
$500 would go from $5 to $10. In the $501
to $2,000 range, fee for the first $500
would go from $5 to $10, plus lhe present
additional fee of $1 for each additional
$100 of valuation.
Basic permit fee for a $25,000 structure
would go up from $89 to $94 and for a
$SO,OOO building from $151.50 to 11511.50.
Perm.it fees for a plastering job of 3,200
square yards would add up to $41 under
the new schedule, compared wllh the
present $20.50.
Under the mechanical code fee
schedule, is.suance of each permit would
increase from $3 to $10, with pennit for
inst.allil.tion of a forced air furnace up to
100,000 BTUs costing $10, as compared
with the present $4. and fee for larger
furn.!!,ces up from $.5 to $15.
Residential e I e c tr i c a I installation
perm.its now cost 11/, cents per square
foot of building area, plus $1 .25 for each
service meter, plus $2 for permit
issuance. Under the new schedule, cost
would be two cents per square foot, pl111
$2 for each service meter plus $10 for
permit issuance.
For aJterations, repairs or improve-
ments, permit fees for inclividuaJ item!
remain the same, except that the
minimum permit issuance fee goes up
from $2 to $10.
The same permit issuance increase
would apply to plumbing work, with fee.s
for most installations remaining the
same except that permit.s for building
sewers and cesspools would go up from
$5 to $10 and for private sewage disposal
systems from $10 to $25.
It's Your Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN 'A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
iTHAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY AND THICK THE
CARPET IS NECESSARILY QUALITY.
NOT TRUE! MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE FIBER, AND NOT THE QUANTITY, IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE.
IT'S YOUR MONEY -SO, WHEN BUYING
YOUR CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE DEALING
WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL, AND EQUALLY AS
IMl'ORTANT1 A REPUTABLE DEALER.
SANTA ANA. OUMel
1'VST1N C. • • • ALDIN'S
UIMIUCA•NTI
IOUPlllD
11J14 .,..., ,....., C41r. -
ALDEN'S
CARPETS _e DRAPES
,1663 Placentia Av•.
COSTA MISA
646-4838
I
11
I
I
I
Lagu11a--Beaeh-
. EDI I ION
Today's Flaal
N.Y. Steeb
Yor. 63, NO. 221, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDA Y, SEPTEMBER ·1s, '1970 TEN CENTS
•• 1 ac
Hostages Periled
Arabs Lay Down
Tough Demands
From Wire Services
Specific demands were laid down today
la tough aRd threatening terms by Arab
terrorists bargaining for the fat e of M
hostages, mostly America n, in exchange
for hundreds of their own imprisoned.
Negotiations were hampered b y
withdrawal of the Jnternalional Red
Cross and stubborn dealings by the
Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine lhrough a mysterious mediator.
_.The PLFP annou1ced a•y intervention
militaril y will doom the hostages taken in
three jetliner hijackings last week, most·
of them American, plus 11 o m e hraelis
and Euro~ans.
A spokesman said both are considered
PLFP enemies and will be considered
prisoners of war.
Officials in Washington sternly warned
Parking Site
Under StudY,
By_ Planners ,
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of .... 01Jlr 'lltl lltH
·A four-level structure on Laguna's
Glenneyre Street parking lot seemed the
most likely city entree into the parking
structure business Monday night but one
&till a good way off.
City planning commissioners studied
two preliminary parking structure con·
cepts, the Glenneyre site and another
four-level structure proposal that would
close Mermaid Street and require pr~
perty acquisition at Second Street.
Commissioner Robert Hastings asked
lo take the schematic plans to friend! in
the building business lo get cost ap-
proximations.
"In the south coast parking district (to
be considered by the council Wednesday)
we are going to pa yfor our own if we
ever get it," said realtor Georgia Gill.
"Who is gonng to pay for parking in the
downtown area?"
Commission Chairman William Lam·
bourne said, "We have asked the
Chamber of Commerce and OBA
(Downtown Business Association) to help
formulate a parking district for the
downtown are ... "
He said it would be necessary to setlle
on a location for the parking structure
and the boundaries of a parking district
before things could proceed.
"Before we can accomplish our part."
gald Lambourne. "we have got to get
some kind of dallar figure."
Al Autry, city planning director, ex-
plained the structures.
The Glenneyre structure would provide
3S2 parking sPaces. The lot now provides
(Ste PARKING, P1ge Zl
the holdiag of Americu. hostages Is
totally unacceptable.
The guerrilla f r o n t organization Is
unrecognized by Israel, whose Parlia-
ment met in emergency session Monday
to discuss the latest ransom demands.
America and Israel are ignored in
return by the PFLP, which is currently
bargaining through ambassadors of Bri-
tain, Switzerland and 'Vest Germany.
Now, 13 specific prisoners are being
demanded by the PFLP, plus anywhere
from 600 to 3,000 Palestinlan captiv~ in
rf!lurn for release of the 54 hijacked
passengers.
"We will not back down from these
demands whatever happens,'' emphasiz~
PF'LP spokesman Ha ssan Kanafanl.
Israel must agree first to release two
Algerians, a Swiss national and 10
Leba J1ese soldiers, the latter c11;ptured
New Year 's Day in an Israeli foray, the
PFLP insists.
Kanafani said In Amman, Jordan that a
list of additiona l prisoners the Pl''LP.
wants will be turned 1n ·after this.
••WlJea these demands are met, the
PFLP wUI releue the Amedcan and
Israeli hostages,'' be added.
He aJso repeatM demand! that Britain,
West.Germany and Switurland release
Arab hostages.
Kanafani denied any mistreatment of
the S4 persons remaniing among nearly
300 captured in the three separate airlin·
ner hijackings.
He said their personal needs were
being adequately met
'The Americans are being treated on
the same basis as the Israelis because
the U.S. is an enemy," Kanafani added.
The Jewish state has refused to CO!lo
sider demands far a prisoner exchange
until they were processed through t h e
Red Cross. nor will it deal with any agen-
cy but that and the four governments in·
volved.
Other PFLP demands Include release
of girl guerrilla Leila Khaled, a com-
mando captured in an unsucceS.!lful at-
tempt to hijack an Amsterdam-to.London
El Al jetliner flight.
They also want the body of U.S. citizen
Patrick J_ Arguello, who wa s shot by
Israeli agents during the fruiUess venture
accompanying Miss Khaled .
Authorities believe the 54 hostages are
being held in heavily fortified houses in
Amman. but some were allowed MoRday
lo appeal to their embassies to hasten ef·
forts to secure release.
One radio broadcast monitored In Lon·
don sai d two of the captives have been
shot to death, bringing a prompt PFLP
deni al.
"These reports are without any foun-
dation," saKI one spokesmaR.
''Direct responsibility now fills on the
governments co1cemed to announce their
acceptance of the Froot C1>ndiUons/' he
added.
er
In Clemente
Gets Study
When San Clemente city councilmen
consider adoption of preliminary plans
for the community clubhouse Wednesday
their months of work turniJtg the Qraw·
ings to reality will have only begun.
Despite the apparent satisfaction In the
community and the council over the
plans, matters of financing for a facility
costing at least $300,000 and relocation of
s'!veral recreation structures will have to
be tackled 1ext, City Manager Ken Carr
said today.
The c i t y w I d e satisfaction with the
preliminary drawings d. the new meeting
fa cility was sampled Monday night whe n
recommendations by e i t y commissions
and club officers were complied in a
council study session.
''It seems apparent that the council
will authorize the start of precise plans
for the clubhouse Wednesday night after
reaching agreement on the .!iuggested
changes.
•·But a fl er that will C1>me months of
work," Carr said.
It will take an estimated three months
for designers Boucher a n d Drielisma
Associates to draft the romplete working
drawings for the clubhouse.
"During that time," Carr explained,
•·the matters of financing an4 con·
1truction could be worked out."
At the end of three months, couru:llmen
then would bave to arrange for the bid
procedure.
The total sum or the' bids for the
clubhouse could exceed SJ00.000 even
though the drawings show a building ros--
ting $200,000.
Site preparation, including the razing ol
the unusable portion of the charred
landmark, will prove costly.
Other items would include site grading
and preparation and relocation of the ten·
nis and shuffleboard courts -possibly at
Bonita Canyon Park near the Municipal
Golf Course.
Jet Splits Open.
In Runivay ·Skid
NEW, YORK <UPI) -An Alitalia DC8
jetliner skidded off a Kennedy Airport
runway on landing Tuesday and split
open, apparently as the result of a col·
lapsed landing ge.ar.
There were no immediate reports of
casualties or or fire, although an alarm
signal from the Kennedy control tower
brought more than a dozen pieces of city
fire apparatus and a superpumper to the
scene.
A spokesma n said the landing gear ap-
parenlly collapsed as the plane touched
down on runway 4-R and the plane "skid·
ded of{ and broke open." The accident oc·
curred at 1 :21 p.m. (EDT).
There were 146 passengers and 10
crewmen on the flight from Rome, an
Alitalia spokesman said.
New School Opening Set
University Hig1i to Be Ready by November 15th
By PATRICK BOYLE
Ot lhl Dt !IY ,011 Sti ll
University High School in the Universi-
ty Park area will probably be ~eady for
occ:upatian Nov. 1 5. Superintendent
\l/llliam B. Zosg tolll Tustin Union High
School District lrustee s ~1onday night.
•·we anti cipate a Nov. 15 move-in date
for the classrooms and rest room
facilities," Zogg said. "The industrial
arts and homl!l'Tlaking areas should be
completed abQut 1 week or two later.''
University High School wall originally
planned to be completed for I.he openl9g
of school 1.1onday, bul strikes hampered
con'!ll.ruction and the school was not
fini shed on time.
The 813 University High School
slJJdentJ are attending Mission Viejo High
School on a double aeSslon basis with the
J,"'12 Minion Viejo High SChool studtnb..
'rhe board was preSt:nltd a status
report from conslrUctlon Inspector Jack
Pederson or the architectural firm o(
Willls Hutchason ind Associ1tes.
Jn the report, Pederson !lated that the
mai;onry work an I.he classrooms was
comple.tt, but Lhat the elecLtJcaJ, plumb-
ing and heating equij)meat was only
partially installed.
The construction delay caused conc~m
among many parents (If Univeraity High
School students after the board voted
Aug. 24 to bus the students to Mission
Vieja High School.
Jn a letter that was read tn the board
_ Monday, Louis Fridhandler, 4 S 5 1
S11ndburg Way, Irvine , attacked the. bu.s·
ing plan as "irrei;ponslble" and said he
strongly disapproved of the "$5,000 bus-
ing plan."
Boar..d..Jnernber-Mrs. JUne Smith said
the board had voted that the busing "was
not to exceed $5,000 and that the board
was hopeful that it would be far less than
that amount."
Jn his Jetter, Fridhandle.r also cited
what he callod "the inadequate library
facilities" at University High School.
Superintendent Zogg 11ald the library
was t>tlng fundtd the same 11s the library
at Mission Viejo High School w1s durin1
its first year.
However. Mrs. Virginia Kirkland,
librarian for Unlvenlty High SChool, uJd
that the district "spent from $32,000 to
$35,000 to start the library at Mission Vie-
jo High School. We have only $20,000 for
the University High School and I have
found that not all of lhe materials have
even been ordered yet."
Mrs. Kirkland said that she had made
arrangements with the librarian at UC
Jrvlne to use UCJ's library fa cilities. She
also said that a bookmobile will be p~
vlded for the students and that the books
that are available will circulate for one
week instead of two to give more
students an opportunity to use them.
Superintendent Zogg said he thought
that mort money had bttn provided for
'the University High School libr1ry, but
SAkl tll•t he did not hove tho -Kie
figures at his immediate disposal:
tn other action concerning University
High School. tho boanl accepted bida
totalinl '85,146.19 from various com-
psnies for equJpm~nt for the new h}gh
school. The equ1pmtmL I n e I u d e d
claMN>Om fumiture, industrial arlll and
11utomotlve s!Up equipment and library
furniture.
"
ot uar
• ,
A KISS FOR LUCK AND WE 'RE ON OUR WAY
Cup Defender Ficker and Wif1, Barbara
Gretel Blows Chances
For ·CupRace Victory:·
READY FOR FOUL WEATHER
Cup Challenger H1 rdy
Anti-dog, Rule
Petition Read y
To Be Presented
Petitions bearing the signatures of 3,000
person• who aeek to overturn Laguna's
restrictive new dog ordinance will be
presented to the city council Wednesday
night in an effort to persuade councilmen
to voluntarily rescind the law.
Adopted by a 3 to i vote Aug. 19, it
btcomes effective Saturday, banning all
dogs from three city parks and from city
beaches between the hours of 9 a..m. and
6 p.m.
Gallery owner Richard Challis, who
spearheaded the petition drive with •
"dog-in' .. (In Main Beach Aug. 22, said to-
day. "we are within 100 signatures of the
3,000 mark, havlng aimed for something
over Z,000."
The pelttion.. he ,.kl, hav. no legal ef-
fect. but are di~ at "the conscience
oT the 'couocn ...
•rwe hope.1' s1icf Ota.ills, "that those
who ~ ror the ordinance will see that
the way in which It was presented was
wholly dishonest ln view or the fact that
at the ttudy session the night before, no
mention was made of the ordinance.
Indeed, the people wtre. led to believe at
that tesslon that strJcter enforcement or
the leash law was all that was to be
• undertaken.'
.,
l y ALMON LOCKABEY
Dtllr , •• , ... 11 .......
NEWPORT, R.J. -Australia's Gretel
JI virtually b I e w all chances for an
America's Cup victory today when 1he
lost a crewman overboard, fouled her
spinnaker and fell 4 minutes and 40
r;econds behind lntrepid at the halfway
mark.
Gretel's crew Immediately hoisted the
protest flag. claiming a spectator boat in·
terfered with her rescue of the overboard
crewman.
It was a disastrous day for I.he Aus~ie
challengtr.
Her two most serious mishaps occurred
before today's race w'as half over. ·
Shortly after jibing the second mark
one of her foi-edeck crew went overboard
in the choppy seas of Rhode Island
Sound. The man overboard was picked up
by Gretel II but she hoisted a protest flag
after a spectator boat interfered witb the
rescue.
Gretel TI was already hopelessly
behind.
She rounded the first windward mark
one minute , eight seconds .astern and
hoisted her spinnaker in a hoepli!s!l, way
around the headsl.ay.
It took the crew a full six minutes to
get a chute flying and the fouled one
down.
The race started under threatenin1
skies and a 17 knot easterly wind lhat
kicked up fine chop on the sound.
Gretel lI was first acrw the starting
line but lost her advantage by having to
bear away sharply to keep from being
early, thus giving Intrepid a clear
weather berth. At the end (If the triangle
halfway mark of the 24-mile course
Gretel ll was 4 minutes, 40 seconds
behind.
. Gretel 11, designed by Alan Payne, han·
dily defeated France 4 to O in elimin1Uon
series in August against the French
challenger.
But many think Intrepid, only the se-
cond boat picked twice to defend the cup,
will win the series Jn four straight over
the Australian challenger.
Maleh racing for the cup Is a battle of
billfolds, design, space age technology,
crew .!ielcction and organization,
helmsman.ship, tailing tacll~ and luck.
Intrepid showed herself a winning com-
bination of all or these in her aomewhat
surprising victory over Valiant in the
eUmlnation trt1Is. Valiant was the 1979
product of aeniu.s of · designer Olin
Stephens wbo 11$<> ~ lntropld. In
JGi87, Intrepid soundly d e f e a t e d
,.\us:traU1'1 Dame Pattie for lht: cup •.
In boat-for-boat racing , Ill in the
Am.erlca's CUp, past performance is
5001etlmes lost to present u.lllng skill.
tactic. and good fortune , which makts
this year's series • contest between a
proven winner and a question mark.
That Is p<rhaps why 3,000 boats wUI go
to aea to see wht:ther, 11 his crew Pro-
fesses, "FlckCr is ~cker."
Plane Held .
One Hour
On Runwari
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A hijacker.
who tried to force a Trans World Airliner.
lo Oy to North Kore.a was critically woun-
ded in the abdomen today ~ another
passenger, a private guard for a
securities shipment.
The 7ff1 jet liner, from New York v:la
Chicago and Loi Angeles, was held on a
San Francisco International Airport
runway for an hour by the gunman before
he was shot and overpowered. No one
else was injured.
Armed wilb a .22 caliber pistol, the
man boarded the early morning flight in
Los Angeles..· He wu ldenUfled by poUce
as Donald Irwin, "8, of Reseda.
Robert E. De Nisco, 34, of Brooklyn,
N.Y .. a guard for Brinks, Inc., 1bot the
hijacker alter 35 of the 55 passengers
were allowed to debark. The plane Waa
being held on a runway a mile from the
terminal at the time.
The plane had a ertw of seven, all from
Kansas City.
Slk>rUy after laklog off I r o m Loi
Angel.. for San Franc!,.,., tho "'1ol.
Capt. J. K. Gilman, radloed the Loi
Angeles control ,tow<r lhal a while mai.
paqonger had told him, "Tlda plaa II
bebla hijacked. It wm be going lartber."
San Francisco was alerted Md ~
olficers were 5tandln.g by when the plane
Janded at l :fl.1 a.m., Gilman havinc eon.
Vinced the JUlll1WI !bat ftludlng WU
necessary.
One of the four stewardesses said the
drama. began when the man arose and
handed her a note reading, "I have a sun.
I want to go to Korea."
She" said_ she had &een him on previous
fl ight...
Passenger Sally Rush, 24, of San Fran-
cisco said .none of the passengers knew
what was going on until tbt plar>e wu on
the ground.
She said the captain announctd on the
public address system, "There is a
gentleman on board who wilhes to land
at another airport. Be calm."
He then announced that mllltary men
and families with children would be
allowed to debark.
Mis! Rush aaid abe and the others le~
aboard were asked to move to front 1eata:
in the coach section.
The gunman was: seated two rows
behind them.
After an interval of suspense, 1be uld.
"A man in a brown outfit walked from
the front of the plane, quickly said.
'Police,' and fired one shot over eight to
10 rows of seats."
Hit in the lower right abdomen with a
.38 caliber slug, the hiajcker crumpled
and was seized.
At nearby Peninsula Hospital his con·
dition was described as criticaf after an
hour of surgery.
Hog Pen Pollution •
CHARLOTl'E, N. C. (AP) -Tiit
Health Department released Monday a
list of 371 sources of .!itream pollution tn
the county. Almost all named on the Ii.st
were industries, but one souree wu "bo&
pen in creek."
We•illR
Only a few pat.thy eloudt Will
mar Wednesday'• sunshiny 1kies
with temperatul'f!s holding at 70
degrees on the coast and up to BS
further inland.
INSmE TODAY
Tilt ntw theater ataion ii b&
fttU llD'ing on the Oro:nge Coast,
a& wttl iu "uptown." Rtviewi of
three oj the l.attst productionl
o.re on Enc.ert.ainment Paga 15
and 11 today.
•
i DAILY PILOT SC
Jordan Crisis Worsens
Hussein's. Offer to Resign 'fol.d
By Valled Preu llllenulUoaal
Jordanian army gunners sh e 11 e d
Paleat.lnlan guerrilla bases in north
Jcrdln tocloy, the S)'Thln Arab News
Aceney reported. Th< English language
Jerusalem Post sa1d the crl.sb Ulere was
ao serious King Hussein tried to abdicate
but wu dissuaded by VAR Pruident
Gama! Abdel Na5Str.
'l"be cuse-fire alooe the Suez: Cane.I
alao wu reporled ahak3, and official
aourm in Cairo aald Monday nllhl
Egypt beUev_es the United Stat~ has
l._.ied JU pe-lnltiaUve which led
to the cease-fire. 11tey said the big four
powers should try again to restore peace.
Diplomatic 50W'ces In Jerusalem said
hraell Premier Golda Meir, wbo meets
President Niml in Washington on Fri·
day, will u1r: him to revl9e America's of.
ficial policy on Israel's borders. Sbe will
contend that Israel must retain some
captured territory to assure its security,
the IOlll'COI aaid.
Maj. Abdel Sai..n Jalloud, a member
of the LibyaD Revo)ution Command Coun-
cu, In a stalemenl ~ by U. ..,,.
llQ Middle Eut Newa A41ency, aald tho
situation has now re11ched a stage where
a poliUcal aoluUon can no longer be found
and the aitU1tlon must be re10lved
lbrough war.
'Ille report of fighting ln the Irbid area
'5 miles northeast of Amman followed
similar reporta Monday by the guerrilla
organization Al Fatah. And in Beirut, the
right-wing be'Wspaper lhe Daily Star
quoted guerrilla aource1 1n Amman a.a
aaytng tbe Jordanian Army bu cleared
guerrillas out_oLSouth Jordan.
'111e Daily Star said King Hussein hoped
to liquidate the whole m o v e m e n t
gradually. It said the campaign was laun-
ched after leaders of the Bedouin, the
fanatical supporters of King Hussein, met
in special session and pledged to support
the government.
Hus.sein has been faced with near clvil
war for months and has survived nine
assassination attempts. 'The Jerusalem
Post, quoting 4'sources close to the Jorda·
nian royal court," aald in a front page
banner 1tory lje waa for the first time
Newport Vice Mayor Calls
Hll_1h 'Patsy' on Freewa y
Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard
Rogera Monday nlgbl <barfed tbot
Mayor Ed Hirth bu 11f1llen victim" to a
plol by the Slate Dlvilion ol Highways
"to lull the people to 1leep'' about the
Wue of the Paellic Coast Freeway.
And Rogen released cople1 of a "~
fidenUal" memorandum written by Hirth
to the CltY 'c.uncU which Ropra uaerted
would back up hll .Ueptloo.
Roa:ers asserted the memorandum and
other recent 1ctlon1 by IDrth indicate he
hu become a patay to the propaganda of
1tlte officials.
Among other things, Rogers based his
accusation on remarks by Hirt.b, later
recanted, that the state would not pro-
tted with plans to build the controversial
freeway U the Newport Beach Cjty Coun-
cil would write a letter asking work be
stopped.
:\Ogen Aid the men who made the
......... t.s, HIJ& Ayanlan, director ol
Highway Division District 7, md his top
aide, WUUam Ha!himoto, 11do not have
the autbortty to take such actlon."
Hlrlb, I n councU oeaalon Monday, aareecJ tbol • "•lmpla letter" """1d not
force an olllclal hill to alate p~ !or
tbt route.
Rogers plugged the efforts ol the
Citizens Coordmating Committee, a
Freeway Fighters adjunct. to circulate
petitiona that would require a referendum
oo the !slue of whether the city's formal
freeway route agreement should be
re.sclnded (see separate story}.
Plior to the vi~ mayor's remark!, In a
statement which apparently prompted
them, Hirth had detailed to the councll
hiJ efforta the past several weeks 1n hls
Tustin Woman
Killed in Crash
A young Tustin woman dled early thls
morninc from injuries IUffe.red when the
car 1n which she. wu a passenger went
oot of control, atruc.k a parked car and a
tree.'
Pollet said Donna Jean Abroslnl, 22, of
1'300 Newport Ave ., Apt. M, was riding
in a car driven by Henry M. Bell, 2S, of
the same address, Apt. 24.
Officers uid the vehicle slid broadside
for 90 feet into lhe car and tree in the
1400 block of Nlsson Road, Tustin.
Bell wa1 treated at TusUn Community
Hospital and released. Police said the ac--
cldent ls under investigation.
DAILY PILOT
...,_ ... lb:l611z ..... ----c-. .... 1119 Ck ••••
01U.NH COAIT l'UIUIMINO CCIMJtAMY
Jl•Mrt N. w • .1
P'rulN!lt ... P'\lllll&W
J•c\ I. C.rf..,
Vitti ,....:.W "'1lf 0..Wr•I Mllllf9I'
,.,,,. •• 1: • ..:1 .....
Ti.111•• A. M...,hr,..
M ............
Jlleh•" '· Nin 1-.11'0r...-C....,MllW -C."' MIMI m WW.., lfrwl ............ ;.llWllt ..... ~ ~._...,=-,_, ... _
.......... , ..0.t I 9..cll ......... .. s..c......•--~~ •.
one-man study of how the city should ap-
proach its traffic problem.
Hirth disclosed that at his meeting wllh
Ute two state highway officials last week,
Al Koch, Orange County road com·
missioner, was present.
Hogen Immediately ....Ued this, poin-
ting out thel Koch bu long been a sup.
porter of tbe cout.a1 freeway. "Jt wu at
least! to 1 at this meeting," Rogers said.
He demanded to know why ijJrtb bad
brougJJI him along.
Tbe mayor r.plled lh>I ht.I partldpe-
tlon ca.me at the suggestion of William
Jennings, chairman of the State Highway
commission, .a resident or Balboa Island.
The confidential memo criticized by
Rogers contained statements criUcal or
the efforts or the CCC In their petition'
drive, charging " a crippling procedure''
would result.
Hirth. In the memo, had said It would
be wrong for the council, ltsetr, to in·
terfere with the citizens' move, but 1ald,
1'We could remove the need and desire by
a strong acceptable action toward a solu·
tion."
Hirth then tuggested 11lnstrucling" the
state to stop the planning ct the Newporl
section of the freeway.
Secondly, Hirth suggested the stepS he
has been following recenUy, a study of
lhe transportation needs of the county.
Rogers maintains that the agreement
must be rescinded "to wipe the Jiate
clean" before any study ls initiated.
Police Arrest
Second Auto
Burglar Suspect
A second San Clemente man has been
arrested this week in an auto burglary
earlier this summer which yielded more
than $3,000 1n rece1pts from a San
Clemente service station.
But despite this week's arrest of a pair
of suspects, the cash has disappeared,
police said.
Robert Giffen Robeson , 19, ol 2609 Via
Cascadita, was arrested Monday af·
ternoon and booked on charges of
burglary.
Over the weekend, police arrested 20-
year-old Paul Arthur Baker of 160 C Calle
Rtdondel, San Clemente, in connection
with the same theft..
Tbe alleged offense occurred earlier
this summer after a San Clemente
woman parked her car near the North
Beach area.
After leaving the cash In the glove
compartment of lhe auto, Mrs. Ralph
Mathes went to the beach to pick up a
group of youngsters who had gone a:ru·
nion hunting.
When the group returned to the unlock~
ed car, the money -in bank bags -had
disappeared.
Detectives said a source's tip led to the
arrest of tbe two men.
'!lie pair ere being held on $3,150 ball
apiece.
Frank 0. Csrr
Funeral Slated
Funeral terVl<es \rill be held Wed·
Jlesday for Frank 0. Carr, 15-year-
Llaun• Beadl resident who died Sunday
at bis home. 1129 Hillcrest Drive. He wu
86.
Dr. Da11u R. Turrier will ofnclate at
the 11 a.m. ritt1 in the CommWlity
Presbyterian Cbun:b.
Mr. Carr is survived by bis widow,
Carol; a daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Mayu
Of Wichita, Kan. and by rour srandsons.
A bank.er for 53 years, Mr. Carr
formerly wu affiliated with the First
National Bank of \Vlchlta. IJe was a
mtmber of American Legion Post 222.
Lagun1 Beach and or Masonic Lodge No.
99 of Wichita. Sherrer Laguna Beach
Mor!IWY are dlrecton.
.....-. •Wk:tlllll·
"H..in .• ,expt<IMd his Jnltntlon o1
quitting after last week's fierce cluhea
between his armed forces and lhe tel'o
rorlsts, and after the open split in his
anny over the luue of the presence of
terrorists and Iraqi troops in areas of
Amman and other major towns, it said.
It said Hussein held up his decision at
the insistence of Nasser "who fears total
civil war in Jordan would follow his ab-
dication."
Hussein, in an interview today with the
newspaper Le Figaro in Parla, admitted
the split in bis army. He sald be bad been
having problems restraining some of his
younger officers from trying to wipe out
the guerrillas.
He gave (lne instance -a baUery of
heavy artillery was headed into Amman
to get the Palestinian guerrlllas and at
first refused to stop when be personally
Jllll'$Ued them.
••n:ie trucks kept pushing me off the
road at the risk of overturnina: my ear in
a ravine," be said. ''I finally managed to
overtake them and the Land Rovers of
my personal guard blocked their advance.
lt was very difficult to convince them to return to their base."
Official sources ln Cairo sald Egyptian
embassies and legations throughout the
world would be instructed to notify Uieir
host governments of Egypt's view that
"America has frozen lta peaceful in-
ltlaUve."
Capo Cou nc il
Studi.es Pol ice
Department Plan
By PAMELA llAWAN
Of ftMI 0111' l'Htt Stiff
A report on the feasibility of having a
dty police depertment bu been ordered
by the San Juan Capistrano City Council.
The city fathers voted Monday to hire
Richard Grace, a professor of police
science at Cal State, Los Angeles, to
prepare the study.
ln a closed door session, the council In-
terviewed two candidates for the
prepartion of the study. Mayor To n y
Forster jusUfied the c I o s e d door by
saying that the candidate would be a con-
tract employe.
The only person opposing the poll~e
study was Couftciiman Josh Gammell
who said he didn't feel a study is
necessary at this time. He said any atudy
would loae its va1ue by tbe time a poUc:t
department became necessary.
"If tbe study doesn't bear out a need
for a police department at this time,
fine," argued Councilman Jim Thorpe.
0 But we still need to have the pro·
fessioul study, rather than figures and
facta: lndiyjduals throw out second hand."
Thorpe, who has long advocated plan·
n!Jlg for a police department. made the
moUon to hire Grace. It was seconded by
Councilman Ed Chernak, wbo also bas
favored the 1=ity having Its own force,
rather than contracUng with the Orange
County Sheriff's Department.
Councilman Bill Bathgate aupporled
the motion with Gammell and Forster
voting no. Forster said he favored the
other candidate.
Grace's proposal Is for $75 a day for a
minimum of 21 days. The details of the
f~ancial arrangement and the direcUon
of the report will be worked out by ColB'l·
cilman Bathgate and City Administrator
Ernest Thompson.
Laguna Water
Supply Buil.ding
Begins Agai1i
Departure of Laguna's summer visitors
has brought a return of the men and
machines to complete major water sup-
ply installations to se!"Ve Laguna Beach
and South Laguna.
Work was ha1ted at the beginning of
summe r to avoid in.terferencti with heavy
traffic during the beach and Festival
season.
Excavation already has resumed on
Forest Avenue outside City Hall. It will
extend aJong Forest, Third, Mermaid and
Bent Streets to connect with the South
Laguna line already installed back up to
Park Avenue at Bent Street.
In the opposite direction, the work will
go back to a point opposite the tennis
courts on the Festival grounds to connect
with the 36-inch transmission line In-
stalled down Laguna Canyon.
Laguna Beach County Water District
Manager Wllllam Moorellead 1atd th a t
weather permitting, this phase of the p~
ject should be completed by Chrl!tmas.
I.n a further phase of the water supply
project, the City Council will be asked
Wednesday night to grMt an easement
for a 20-inch water Pipeline that will e1·
tend from the Canyon line In front of the
F..,tlvol ground5 and up througJJ tho
Playhouse parkl.ng lot to the reserwlr on
the hill above Irvine Bowl.
The existing 100,000-gaUon mervoir Is
to be replaced with a S'4-mlllioa-gaUon
reservoir to receive and store water com-
ing down the new Canyon pipeline from a
point of origin in the Yorba Linda area.
The new ttset'V(lir, Moorehead aid,
wlll be built underground and land9Caped
.and beautilied on top. Plans for the in-
stallation are expected to be comp1etl!:d In
a month, at which lime bids wUI be
sought..
The entlre project could be rendy for
lnltlnl testing In spring of 1971, the Water
District manager said.
\
L och Ne11 Camera
Scotland's shy Loth Ness Mon-
ster may be captured on film
through this infra-red camera
being checked oul by filmmak·
er Peter Suarez. New exped.i·
tion of ~British scientists will
watch for monster starting
Wednesday.
Sherif£ s Hunt
For More Ones
In Girl's Death
By TOM BARLEY
Of tM .,.,,, ...... ll•ff
Orange County Sheriff's in.vestigators
today continued their hunt for clues in
the killing of a t3-year-0ld Long Beach
girl whose rotting body was found three
days ago In the Laguna Niguel area.
Backing them in. their efforts U a team
of Riverside County lawmen who are
similarly invest!gaUng the death o1 the
girl's II-year-old boy friend and awailing
lhe oulcomo of the toilcnlog!cal t.sb be-
ing -performed by the county coroner.
'!lie body of Jenise Marte Rlspln wu
found by hiken e1rly Saturday in the
Camino Caph:trano area about four m.Ues
north of San Juan Capistrano.
Jnvestlgators believe she was ttranguled
to death on or about Aug. 29, the day
before she was reported as missing l:ly
her parents.
Her boyfriend, Edwin E . Miller, 16, of
Elsinore, was, investigators believe, kill·
ed within 24 hours of the girl's murder.
His body was found Aug. 30 in a shallow
grave off the Ortega Highway in
Riverside County.
Investigators said Mlller's pannts told
them that the young couple left the Miller
home on Riverside Drive to visit a go--
cart track last Aug. 29 and promised to
return home about 11 p.m.
That was the last time Miss Rispin and
her boyfriend were aeen alive.
T yphoon Claims 300
MANILA (UPI) -'!lie Philippine Na•
tlonal Police said today more than SOO
persons may have been killed when
Typhoon Georgia slammed into the
main island of Luzon and virtually levei.
ed 1 town of 15,000.
Re•oltailon
Newport Delays·
Freeway Action
A resolutJon asking Aaemblyman
Robert E. Badham (R-Newport Beach) to
ask Governor Reagan to lnter-vene in tbe
PacUJc Coast Freeway controversy was
tabled Monday night by the Newport
Beach City Council.
The council dld, however, vote to direct
It.I tralfl< deparlment to prepare 1pecllJ.
cations of a study the clfy should carry
oot on ltl overall traffic needs.
Badbam, who earlier had vowed to take
the freeway ap with the governor on bis
own, reportedly had subsequently in·
formed the city he would do so only upon
formal request.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers told the
council that Badham said he would ask
Governor Reagan to get his special
freeway task force to look into the matter
following council action.
The vote was tabled for two weeks at
the request of Councilman Carl Kymla
who viewed that the 1mportan~ of the
acUon deserved addiUoDal time for con-
sideraUon.
Rogers, conceding th.ft he had not
briefed fellow council members on the
development prior to the meeting, agreed
to the delay.
Mayor Ed Hirth pro_.i the staff
study of a design for an official study
after completing several weeks of a
similar study on his own.
Tbe rtaff design study would tnclude
iht agenda for a study, who should
-perllcipate, the approad1ea to be taken
and the limitations to be 1m_.i, Hirth
said.
Q)uncll members stressed the study
&hould be made with u little expenditure
of funds u possible and directed that no
additional funds on an Upper Bay study
be spent pendinl: the outcome of the
overall study.
There cumnUy ls 118,0IJll budgeted for
the Vpper Bey lludy.
The detlgn t.s eapecled to be ready for
the council al It.I Sepl. 28 meeting.
Assemblyman Badham has made his
Initial vow to take the freeway is!ue t()
the governor after a bill be 1pon1ored ln
From Page I
PARKING •.•
78. It would abut the.Peacock building
and be bteween Glenneyre and Ramona
Avenue.
The 131,064-llCIUAtt'foot atructur., it
was estlma.ted very roughily, would cost
Sl,056,000. ThSI WU OD the basla: or '3,000
per parking space.
1be Mermaid Street structure, U ever
• reality, would close off Mermaid and
would cover two Iota fronting on
Mmnald on each side of Second Street.
It would require acquisition of tbe den-
tal office of Dr. Robert French, fonner
plannjng commissioner: the first lot of
the Pre!byterian Church parking and the
Laguna Beach Board of Realtors office.
It would reach the alley next to the new
Gene!'al Telephone Co. building.
Autry said the 154,740-&quare-feet
structure would provide 434 spa~s. The
rough cost estimate was $1,302,000 but
lhis did nol Include land acqulaition or:
major uUlity rerouting coats.
Work would include rerouting of the
Mennaid St. sewer. It would also entail
considerable hillside excavation and
would cause traffic circulaUon change!:,
it was 1akl.
Realtot John Gilbert, with offices on
Broadway, pointed out that a Mermaid
structure would not se!"Ve a great deal of
the downtown bu!lness district as it is
presently developed.
"Wouldn't it be more logical to build on
the inland side of Third Street1" be ask~
ed. "You wouldn't have the excavation
problem and I don't think the site costs
would be as much."
the slate legislature to kill the coastal
freeway lhrough Newport died in Senate
committee.
It has passed the Assembly by a wide
margin.
&dham expressed Intense disap-
pointment following the S e n a t e
Transportation Committee rejection o!
his blll and indignantly vowed to march
right into Reagan's ollice.
Build ing Fe e
Increase Set
For StudY,
A resolution that would tnc'rease
building permit fees in the city of Laguna
Beach by approximately 62\i per~nt will
be considered by the city council on its
Wednesday night ogend~.
Contracton,-rubcontractors, architects
and others Ukely to be affected by the
new fee schedule have been notified of
the proposed council action by BWlding
and Planning Director Clyde Z. Springe.
The Item was deferred froJD an earlier
council session to pennit public notict! of
the proposed new fees, although It was
revealed at that time that the anticipated
revenue in.crease had been ea1culated in
the new city budget.
At that time, Springe estimated the
fees would result in a revenue increase of
approximately $13,000 for the first nine
months, assuming they would not become
effective until after the first quarter of ..
the current fiscal year. Purpose, be told
the council, would be to cover more of
the cost of operating the building depart.
ment.
As an example, he said that total per.
mit fees for a $25,000 house, whi ch now
amount to $216, would bring in reveaue ot
$315 under the new schedule, an increase
of 199.
In some areas, notably at lower val1.1a-
tion levels, fees would be doubled.
Building permit fee for jobs valued up to
$500 would go from $5 to $10. In the $501
to $2,000 range, fee for the first $500
would go from $5 to $10, plus the present
additional fee of $1 for each additional
$100 of va1uation.
Basic pennit fee for a $25,000 slructure
would go up from $89 to $94 and for a
$50,000 building from $151.50 to $156.50.
PeraUt fees for a plastering job of 3,200
square yards would add up to $41 under
the new schedule, compared with the
present $20.50.
Under the mechanical code fee
schedule, issuance of each permit wou1d
increase from $3 to $10, with permit for
installation of a forced air furnace up to
100,000 BTUs costing $Itl, u compared
with the present M and ree for larger
furnaces up from $5 to $15.
Residential e I e c tr i c a 1 installation
permits now cost 11/, cents per square
foot of building area, plus $1.25 for each
se!"Vice meter, plus $2 for permit
issuance. Under the new schedule, cost
woU!d be two cents per square foot, plus
$2 for each service meter plus $10 for
permit issuance.
For alteraUons, repairs or improve.
ments, permit fees for individual items
remain the same, except that the
minimum permit issuan~ ree goes up
from 12 to $10.
The same permlt issuance increase
would apply to plumbing work, with fees
for most ins!allalion.s remaining the
same except that permits for building
sewers and cesspools would go up from
$5 to $10 and for private sewage disposal
systems from $10 to $25.
It's Your Dollar!
•
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
;THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY AND THICK THE
CARPET IS NECESSARILY QUALITY.
NOT !RU Ei MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
:THE FIBER, AND NOT THE QU A NTITY, IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE.
IT'S YOUR MONEY -SO, WHEN . BUYING
YOU R CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE DEALING
WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL, AND EQUAUY AS
IMeoRTANT, A REPUJABLE DEALER.
U.MTA AIU.. OUMM
TVmM 4:41., •
ALHN'I
UI MIU CA•P'IT1 a , .. ,..,a
11t14 I~, ...... C.rlf.
11a.1J44
ALDEN 'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
.1663 l'lacentla Av•.
COSTA MESA
646-4831
-~--·-· ~-~..------
T11tsd1Y, Stpltmbtr 15, 1970 l DAlt Y PILOT ;
Coast Group to Oiscuss Scenic Highway Plan
By RICHARD P. NAIL
01 tt.t OlllY 'IJ.tt 11111
The Orange County Coast Association
will meet in Laguna Beach Thursday
morning to discuss both a 42-mile scenic
hi ghway project and sewage discharge
standards a!f~ting much of lhe local
coasUine.
The meeting is to begin al the llotel
Laguna at 3 p.m.
Jim Killingsworth or the associatJon's
environment.I and ecology comm!Uee
wilt dbcu!I Uie adequacy ol an ooUoU
tine under design lllat would dlacharge
the industrial waste or three coun.
ties--San Bernardino, Riverside and
Orange-into the ocean off Newport
Beach.
There is to be discuulon of difterence
betw~n primary and secondary treat·
ment of sewage apd the differences in tt--
qulrements of reglooal water quality con-
1">1 boards.
'l11e uaoclatloo will Ibo boor a report
from H. L. "Lt~· Re.mmen, dlalnnaa of
the Coast l!eauUllcatloo Commlllff.
Remmers and Warren Mor11n, com-
mittee coordlnator, wW •talk of the pro-
gress in a IG-year program to tum 42
miles of coast hi1hway into a acenlc cor-
ridor with control of billboards and other
signing, undergrounded utilities and
roadside beauuticaUon with trees and
shrubs.
Thtte will also be a slide presentation.
FOR PERSONAL REASONS, LAGUNA SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT TAYLOR VISITS BUS STOP
Mom. Brother Matt, 10 Months, and GrandR S.1 Skip Crowl Off fo His Firsf Day of Kindergarten
School Opening
Enrollment Up
By 65 Pupils
Laguna Beach school trustees ~ill find
a slight increase in enrollment when they
review first-day attendance figures at
their regular board meeling ·tonight in
district offices, 55tl Blumont St.
Enrollment at the high school, in·
termediate school and three elementary
schools in the Laguna Beach Unified
School District totalled 2,867 Monday, an
increase (If 65 ()Ver last year's initial
enrollment (If 2,802.
The high school regtstered 1.04~
students. an increase of 50 (Iver last year.
while Thurston Intermediate School
enrolled 456, Aliso Elementary, 411, El
Morro Elementary, 468 and Top (If the
World Elementary, 487.
AJS() on the 7:30 p.m. agenda are
reports from Dr. Robert Reeves on plans
for the adult education program and the
released time religious education pro-
gram.
The board will be asked to permit con·
tinued use of Thurston School by Calvary
Church for its Sunday services. along:
with other requests from churches for
use of school facilities. The state Educa·
tlon Code permits use of schools for
church services on an emergency basls,
Superintendent William Ullom has ad·
vised trustees.
Extension of an agreement with Chap.
man College lo accept student teachers
for practice teaching assignments also
will be up for board consideration.
Funds Sought
For Draftsman
Big Sendoff
Board Chief's Kin Starts School
Laguna Beach School Board Presidenl
Larry Taylor was down at the school bus
stop bright and early Monday, for a
speci~l personal reason.
Assisted by his daughter. Susan Taylor
Crowl, Taylor was seeing his fir s t
grandson, Skip Crowl, off to kindergarten
at Aliso School. Also on hand for the
farewell was Skip·s small brother, Matt.
now 10 months ()]d.
Skip's enrollment at Aliso, makes him
a third generation member of the Taylor
clan to enter the Laguna Beach school
system. His mot.her was a 1963 graduate
o{ Laguna Beach High School and his
grandmother, itrs. Larry (Margaret)
Taylor, was graduated from Laguna High
in 1939.
His two uncles, OOard president
Taylor's sons Jdf and Kent, also are
LBHS grads and another Taylor ron,
Lynn, 13, attends Thurston Intermediate
School.
That makes Taylor the only member or
the family who did not go to school in
Laguna, but since moving to the Art
Colony in 1935 he has served on the
school board for a total of JO years and,
so far as can be determined, is the only
school board president to send his own
grandchild, as well as his sons .and
daughter, off to school here.
Expanded Adult Schooling
Program Begins in Laguna
An expanded program of adult educa·
fion in Laguna Beach will offer 21 sub-
jects in evening classes beginning next
week in Laguna Beach High School.
Regular faculty mP.mbers will be joi~
ed by experts illll variety o( Uelds in con·
ducting the classes which run from 7
p.m. to 10 p.m. Students may register at
the first scheduled meeling of the classes
they select.
A minimum of 15 sludenls will be re-
quired to maintain a class, according to
Dr. JWbert Reeves, director (If in·
struction and principal ror the evening
classes. ·
The program, listed by day, subject., in-
structor and room number is as folio~:
.. ritnnday; art, Nelly Allan, room 52;
Woodshop, Ray Briggs, room 45 ; algebra,
Mike Fickel, room 23.
Tuesday; photography, Jack Lythgoe,
room 71A: beginning French, Dr. E.
Calamaro, room $5; crafts, Nelly Allan,
room 52; driver education, Norman
Borucki. room 31; creative tapestry,
Ruby Hufford, room 53; fender benders
(auto body repair), Dave Lang, room 42;
stocks, bonds and mutual funds, Louis
Zil.nik, room 23; weight training and con·
ditioning, boys' gym (also Thursdays).
Wedouday: humanities, Dr. E,
Calamaro, room $5; creative stitchery,
Ruby Hufford, room $.1; welding, Roy
Bradshaw, room 44.
Remmers sald when the Ora.nae County
Coast ASS()Clation was formed 80 years
ago the entire county had only 721 milea
of road or highway and these Include 510
miles or dirt road, 168 miles of paved
surface and 43 miles or state hi1hway.
Remmers said there also will be an alJ...
day tour of the project area on OCt 22 for
civic officials.
It wlll begin at Fashion Island in
Newport Beach wilh a discussion by
Irvine C<lmpany officials of their pn>ject..
and move: to Stal Beach, HunUngton
Beach and down to La.gun• Beach for
luncheon at Vk:tor Huso Inn.
Dunring luncheon, county pllnnen wUI
speak on pendtnf projecta a n d
possibilities. The group will hear .1ISO
from Avco CDmmunity Developers, Inc.
which took over the Laguna Niguel
CorporaUon.
The tour will move on to the Arnold
Hasken Foundation at Dana Polnt wbrt
upertmentalloo II curled out on 1111
resiltlllt pllnll and ohrubs.
Kenneth Samp!IOn, dlttctor of the
Orange County Harbor Dbtrld, wtll
speak on Dana Point H 1 r b or
Development.
'Ibe tour will move on to San Clemente
and back up the Santa Ana Freeway to
Lion Country Safari and Lquna Hilts
Leisure World and then return to Fashion
Island.
Route Fight Vowed
Group Still Seeks Freeway Pact End
By L. PETER KRIEG
• Of SM O.ltr 'lltt httt
lgooring a State Highway Division
warning, the Newport Beach Citizens'
CoordlnaUng C()mmittee Monday night
vowed W continue its eff()rts to force the
City Council to rescind its agreement on
a route for the future Pacific: Coast
Freeway.
The newly.formed CCC, an offspring of
Newport's Freeway Fighters, got the City
c:ounctJ to lend official recognition to its
declaration by agreeing to forward it to
Pornography
Report Nixed
By Commission
WASHINGTON (AP) -A suit asking
for a court ofder against issuing a con-
troversial Commission 011 Pornography
report was dlsmis,,ed Monday, the com-
mission aMounced.
The suit was' brought by President Nix·
on 's only member or the commission,
Charles H. Keating Jr.
Keating sued to prohibiL the com-
misskln from recommending repeal of all
U.S. pornography laws for adults. He also
asked a court order a1aiost publication oC
(,e report until be had more time and
help in preparit1g a minority report.
Dr. W. Cody Wilsot1, the commission's
executive director, said the suit was 11tt-
tled out of court. Keating mWd not be
immediately reached for comment.
Wilson said the suit was dismissed on
Ille understanding the report will be
issued Sept. 30 -just before the com-
mission's Ille expire~nd Keating will
have until then to issue his minorlty •
report for inclusion.
I• asking a court order against i11-
clusion o( the controversial recommen-
dation for n!peal of all laws against
showing or selJing p<1rnography to adults,
Keating had argued Congress' mandate
on the contrary was for the commission
lo rind ways to control pornography.
His suit called the HJ-member com-
mission's report a 'sham of lhe
Congress' national concern involving traf·
fjc lri obscenity and pornography."
Keating became Nixon·~ only member
on the commission when he was aJ>'
pointed to fill a vacancy. The commission
was created by Co11gress three years ago
and Its members werfl aPJX>inted by then
President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Keating, a Cincinnati lawyer and
founder of Citizens for Decent Literature
Inc., also said his report was limited
·· ISO pages wl.lle he said the majority
report including ten volumes of technical
papers would rua to 10,000 pages.
Meanwhile, another commissioner-the
Rev. Morton J. HiU of New York de-
manded a commision accounting of han-
dling or Its finances.
Hill said he wants to know how much
the commission spent to send Wilson to a
recent convention in Miami lo publicly
comment on technical papers prepared
for the commission that the commissi-
oners until then had not known about.
Ifill, in a letter to Commission
Chairman William B. Lockhart, also said
$100,000 has been spent on the technical
reports while •12.000 is allocated for the
commlsslo11 report. He said this: would
limit the number of copfes of the final
report that ca• be issued.
state o(ficlals on behalf of the orgaruza.
lion.
The action came unanimously on a mo.
lion by Vice Mayor Howard Rogers.
In Its Jetter, the CCX: said "It will not
be lulled lo sleep by •studies' or promises
that a letter asking them to stop work on
the Newport section of the freeway will
effect such acUon."
The letter said the freeway would then
he returned to the people "like a bolt of
lightning" after the people have been
tranquilized.
'I'll awap ,:you two
DC-81 for a VC-10 ... •
Laguna Studies
New Pact for
Animal Control
A new contract for expanded anima1
contn?I services wlthJn the city will be up
for approval by the Laguna Beach City
Council at its 7:30 p.m. meeting Wed·
nesday.
Under the agreement, the city will in·
crease Its m()nthJy payment to the Socie-
ty for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals (SPCA) from $480 a month to
$953.50 Jn return for ''the furnishing of a
public pound and performing the duties of
poundmaster."
Major added services will be the pro-
vision of one vehicle assigned to o~ate
exclusively within the city limits on 'a U-
hour basis to pick up (If rescue injured
animals, stray animals or dead animals
on public property, and to hive a second
vehicle available on an "on call" basis.
Also new will be special Sunday patrols
during the summer and in the early
morning and late evening hours. The
SPCA has agreed to equip its vehicles
with radios which will be tied in to the
city's public service network.
The SPCA agrees lo collect license
fees, which will be turned over to the ci-
ty, and to provide necessary tags and
receipts to ()wners.
"Regular and frequent d a y ti m e
patrols" will be provided f()r the purpose
of captu ring and impounding stray and
unlicensed dogs. Impound and boarding
fees are to be retained by the SPCA.
The SPCA, under the contract. agrees
to enforce all provisi<>ns an d require-
ments pertaining to animal control as
set forttf in the ~1unicipal Code as it now
exists or may be amended in future.
Fridoy the state hsd cautioned tho city
not to proceed with reclndlng the fonnal
agreement under the threat or possible
lega l action to recover costs expended
since the agreement was signed.
It was estimated these costa eu:eed
1100,000.
Staling the CX::C posiUon. Rogers said
the city should move "to wipe the slate
clean," by rescinding the agreemtnL
"On any issue so important," he Wei,
"like a freeway ge>ing through the heart
(If our city, deservea the attention of the
people as much as a Balboa Bay Club
lease."
Rogers was plugging the CCC move to
circulate petition.! forcing a rtferendum
on whether or not the treew_, agreement
ahould be rescinded.
A referendum bad been conducted
earlier this year on a Bay Club request to
ext.end its lease of city-owned property.
Tbe BBC lost its bid.
In a second petition, the citizens• com-
mittee is also seeking a charter amend·
ment that would require Mure referenda
prior to the city's adoption of any
freeway route.
Ro1ers said the CCC will begin lb of.
ficiaI petition drive Sept. 29 at 7:30 a.m.
The group needs signatures of 15 percent
' of the registered voters who cut ballots
in the last city election.
Upon receipt of the petition lo rescind
the freeway agreement, the councl1 can
tither follow its dictates (If K.hedule a
clty·wide vote on the question. ·
The existing agreement establishes a
route for the freeway through the eastern
hall of the city, from Bayside Drive to the
Corona del Mar city limit.
No formal agreement uists tn the
weaterp__,, of the dty.
OppOnenls of the superhJlhway contend
lhal Ill routing, fono..!ng lhe present
Padllc Coast ffighw1y along t b •
coasUine, "will cut the city Jn half."
They contend that if any freeway ts lo
be built at all, it should be routed much
further inland.
The freeway runs Jnland from the coast
througlx>ut almost all (If the Orange
Coast, but dips down near the bay
through Newport only.
Lecture Slated
On Beethoven
At Lagµna Club
ls Beethoven still at work somewhere?
Lagunans can mate their own evalua·
Uon Friday at 8 p.m. during a lecture at
the Women's Club, 286 St. Ann's Drive.
Spiritual Res:ean:h Associate,, o f
Laguna Beach will present Stuart Robb,
lecturer and author.
Robb recently returned from l.oodoft.
He bad been sent by the Parapsychology
Foundation on a grant to resean:h the
phenomenon of Rosemary B r o w n ,
psychic.
She has repc>rted receiving over 400
musical a>mpositions dictated by Llszt,
Beethoven, Chopin, Bach, B r a h m 1 ,
Rachmaninoff and other composers.
She is currently said to be "bringing
through" the Tenth Symphony of
Beethoven.
To illustrate his lecture, Robb will play
tapes he brought from England COV<rlng
interviews with eminent musicians who
are convinced the music Is authentic and
an interview with Rosemary Brown along
with sounds of her (their?) music.
Laguna Beach planning commissioners
- f a c e d with an ()verdraft on t h e
budgeted time for a draftsman -will
probably ask the council for an additklnal
ft36 Monday to handle the workload.
City Planning Director Al Autry, said
$!,744 was alloated in the present budget
ar.d the draftsman had been working 20
bOurs a week and receiving $.1 per hour.
Smokey's Gone
Up in Smoke
INTERNATIONAL FALLS,
Minn. (AP) -Smokey the Bear,
that friendly symbol of fire preven-
tion, has gone up in smoke himself,
and the apparent vandalism had
Jocal citizens smouldering.
Marine Beach Opening Gets Support1
"With the additional studies, we've
been using him 40 hours.'' said Autry. '1lf
additional funds arc not allocated we
Will run out."
After questioning Autry about his staff
and workload, commlssionel'l asked him
t1> prepare a letter ll\at coold be ected on
tL the. 1t1onday meeting.
PILOT PRESENTS
'PLAY PICKEROO'
Jt's pigskin l)lckfn~ time again In lhe
DAILY PILOT. You can be 1
Pi&sktn Plckcroo and win cash ind Voit
footballs.
The player's entry form for the big
$11000 contest appears today (In Pase
The 26-foot·high, 82.-ton Smokey, a
statue of steel frame and flberglaS!
covering. was burned e a r l y
Saturday.
Police said the blaze apparently
was set deliberately. Officers
reported finding a five-gallon emJ>'
ty gasoline can nearby.
An anonym&is peraon o r
organization offerd a $50 reward
for information leading to ap-
prehension of UQe who set the
fire.
Smokey and his cubs, erected
here In 1954 at a cost of $3,D ral1-
td by civic donaUon1, w1s a tourist
attraction at a municipal park near
downtown Intemallonal Falls. 'nle
cub.<1 also were destroyed by the
blaze.
By JORN VALTEllZA
Of ,,.. O.llY ''"" Stiff
BiparUsan congressional support grew
today in California's fight to open 3.5
miles ol Camp Pendleto• Beach for the
public with an announcement that a Los
Angeles congressman is "seriously COii·
sidertng•• the initlating of Congres.!k>nal
hearings on the issue.
ReactJng lo a weekend letter from his
Republican c;ountttpart Los Angeles,
Rep. Chet floUUeld, a Dtmocrat, said the
letter made a "very good point" ii ask-
ing that hearings be scheduled.
Rep. Holifield is chairman of the House
Subcommittee on MU!tary IJ?er•tkm>-a
body underneath the House Committee on
Government Operations.
Last Friday Los Angeles RepubllcaR
Rep. Alfoozo Bell -long a supporter of
the stat.e's beach request-uked
Holifield to use his infiuence in galnklg -
thc hearings.
At issue is 3.5 miles of beach and bJurf-
top downcoast of Sin Onofre which has
been the subject of a lease dispute
between the st.ate and the Marine Corps
for years.
The Corps, balking at rftluests that its
training beaches be opened to the public,
has offered l .5 miles of the beach as a
•: .1 state park.
But state ()[ricials, claiming that so
l!mall a section would be impossible to
develop economically, have pressed for
evelop economically, hive pressed for
the larger acreage.
And slilte recrc.::tion officials and Rep.
Bell have claimed that the Marines are
stalling on an answer to the State's latest
requesL
To end the as.<erted otalllng, Bell coiled
for Hollflcld'a influence to schedule the
hcarlng1.
"Only a public hearing on the siX·Year-
old negotiations can put enough public
lows on the Marines, posiUon to bring
aOOut a soluUon acctptible lo the 1tate
and people uf Callfomli, "Bell said.
lie termed the state's latest request -
trimmed down lrom more thin lout
innes earlier thls year-as "modest".
Holifield thla mon:Ung said Bell "bu 1
fOOd point."
The entire squabble over the beach
opening ga.thered at.um early lhl.s ye:ar
\,jth anhouncementa that already con.-
summated •egoUatlons had been scrap-
ped for the conversion of the Trtltles
Beach Into a public aurflng area.
Security officials for President Nixon
caused the end to those plans because the
throngs of beachgoers wouJd have caused
t.."Cutlty problems al the Rearby Western
White llouse.
Alter that, 1ttenlion skipped downcoast
to an expanse Of blutti with 1111d,y
beaches below.
The tallcs between the otate officials
and Marine b<aas bogged down quickly
With a dispute o• be..:11 m. and tenns of
the tease.
The Corps, ,.luctant to lei go of the
beach they 11y ls valuable for training,
held that a short-term lease. for a small
area would be adequate.
But state officbd1 said the projected
millions ol dollars Deeded for develop.
mllll of the beoch lllWlt that at least 2S
yoars should be the limit for a leale of a
beach four mlln long.
Tbe lll5t concessloll of Jorta came from
the Marines, who lil'eed to u 1t 25
years.
The otate then trimmed Its holdout to
3.5 miles.
Since then the Corpo hss not rucled.
Marine Commandant Gen. Leonard
Chapman last week mahttalned oWc:lal
silence on the negotiaUons.
His only respome to q•leltJon& about
the beach 1.vue WU that there was OWL
President NixOD-in aome accoun~
has been deocrlbed u followlnr !he sit111·
tioo ck>&ely, but thus far no official
statements about his interest have com
from the White House.
Rtp. Bell appar ontly has no iJlllde b>
formation about the President'• lnteresi,
either.
He ssid !Mt unless the helr!np befon
the subcommittee are ICheduled, the
public has ••very IJttle hope" of ever
walling the unds ol the bt1cb below the
J.~ milts of bluffs.
•
'
Tw_~ay, Stp!Ambtt' 15, 1970
Aller a slight delay. a letter to a
toy, shop has been delivered. The
address read : "The toyshop that
js on the left of the road towards
the r8ilway bridge where oile turns
left to the A I, very close to the
British Rail"•ays Car Park, Peter-
borough, England. • P1ddy, an 8-year-old mongrel,
has been left $3.00 a \veek for life in
the $103,20I will of Ernest Good·
man, in Outwell. England. • The national record for nonstop
bagpipe playing has been broke,
Stevenage, England pipe band of-
ficials .said Sunday. They said the
Stevenage's JO-hour, two-minute
nonstop playing beats the 91h hour
record set in May in London. • Police had to rescue a man who
N ew Ptillouts
Red Units Halt
Cambodia Drive
SAIGON (AP) -Enemy troops again
halted a government attempt fQ recap-
ture an important part of Cambodia's
heartland today, and in South Vietnam 1s
northern quarter lighting broke out at
five places.
As the new fighting ,was reported, the
U.S. Command announced more troop
withdrawals from· Vietnam that wUI cut
American strength by more than 3,000,
and the South rietnamese announced the
withdrawal o[ ,500 of their troops from
Cambodian operations.
In Cambodia. a force of North Viet-
namese and Viet Cong troops entrenched
45 miles north of Phnom Penh and a
bridge destroyed by enemy commandos
stalled the Cambodian drive.
A spokesman for the Cambodian
military command said it was up to the
commander on the scene whether his
forces would again advance toward the
village of Taing Kauk.
A regiment of North Vietna1nese and
Viet Cong turned back the spearhead of
the biggest Cambodian offensive of the
war at Ta ing Kauk Sunday and ~1.onday,
killing 26 Cambodian troops and woun·
ding nearly 100.
The Cambodians sent reinforcement,,
...,
Into the area, but the communist com-
mand was al.so reported reinforcing and
resupplying its troops in Taing Kauk.
The spokesman said there had been no
action on the battle front overnight.
Associated Press correspondent John
T. Wheeler reported from Phnom Penh
that 600 refugees had been Down to the
capital from-the-besieged provincial
capital or Kompong Thom. 80 miles to the
north. Kompong Thom is the object of the
current Cambodian drive, but one com·
mander said, "I don't think we 'll ever get
to Kompona Thom.''
The spokesman reported that only a
small number of civilians remained in
Kompong Thom.
South Vietnamese headquarters
reported that its forces had closed out a
24-day Cambodian operation near Neak
Luong, 40 miles southeast of Phnom
Penh. A spokesman said 35 North Viet·
namese and Viet Cong troops were killed
in the operation and that two South Viet-
namese were killed. He said the end of
the operation reduced South Vietnamese
strength in Cambodia from 15,000 to
13.500 troops .
•
became stuck in a garbage chute
of an apartment house. Detectives
said the man, who was not identi·
fied, was unable to get to his girl·
friend on the third floor by ordin·
ary means because he had no key
-so he tried the garbage chute.
He was !reed after four hours in
Hudik:svall, Sweden.
Castro's Sister
In the northern part of South Vietnam,
North Vietnamese troops kept up their
siege of Fire Base O'Reilly and cl~shed
with government forces near arltllery
base Barnett, JO miles to the northwest.
Backed by artillery. South Vietnamese
troops reported killing 25 North Viel·
namese arqund Fire Base Barnett. Field
reports said live South Vietnamese
soldiers were killed and seven wounded.
GUNS AT· THE READY; CAMBODIANS PATROL
Ne1r Siem Rup, Troops SHk te Dislodge Enemy
Asks Help w
Oust the R eds Amerieart bombers kept up their heavy
raids against North Vietnamese gun posi·
lions around O'Reilly and Barnett in ef·
forts to prevent a massive North Viel·
namese assault on the bases.
3:50,000 Walk Out • Because of Hell 's BeUs, the popu-KYOTO. Japan (AP) -Fid el Castro 's
Jation of Hell declined in the 1970 sister called on Japan and other countries
census. The census showed that today ror help and cooperation to rid her The U. S. Command said that eight
Army units were taken out of action to-
day in South. Vietnam and either will be
sent back to the United States or in-
activated in South Vietnam. The moves
are part of President Nixon's troop
reduction program that will cut U. S.
strength in Vietnam fQ 384,000 by Oct. 15.
It now is 396,300.
Auto Union Strikes GM;
tQe southeastern Michigan commu-fatherland of communism.
nity's population dipped from 52 Miss Juanita Castro said she hoped she
to 48. The Hell Chamber of Com-could return to Cuba some day to carry
m erce said it was dUe largely to ~ut anli-Communist movements and tree
the drafting of brothers George and many or he r compatriots from com-Economic Impact Seen
Charles Bell into miJitary service. munism. "I have long been considering
The chamber said the two were not how to get back to my homeland," she
counted in the census, and added said_. ..
the village "is proud of its contri· Miss .Castro. _who sough.t political
bution to the armed forces. but like asylu~ in. the _U ni.led States 1n 1964 ~nd
most everyone we will be happy now live~ m M1a~1, Fla ... v.:as addr~ss1ng , • . the operung session of a Joint meeting of \v~en ,~ell s Bells are back tn Hell, the World Anti·Communist League and
l\ilich. the Asian People 's Anli·Communist
• League.
Cl yde Olson 011d /tis doa Rocky, a
15-year old wireha ired terrier, take
a stroll in a Chicago park. \Vhen
Rocky's hind leas became paralyzed
Ol3on hod him fitted with rubber·
u;heeled substitute legs. • Honesty proved to be a good pol-
She told a news conferen~ that her
brother. the Cuban Prime lt1inister, was
•going in the wrong direction, ruling Cuba
under 'ifTlmunistic influences.
Other speakers included Gen. Praphan
Kulapichitr of Thailand, who is also
chairman of the world group, Dr. Ku
Cheng-kang of Nationalist China. and
Okinori Kaya. former finance mlnisler of
Japan and a member of wartime dictator
Hidek.i Tojo's Cabinet.
Kaya , a right-winger in Prime Minister
Eisaku Sato's Liberal·Democrat party,
said alt Asian people should closely
cooperate to stop "Communist ag-
gression" in the region. A military
alliance between Communist China and
North Korea and the Soviet Union's
stronger approach to Japanese Com-
munists are the "main threats in Asia,"
he said.
A total of 2,500 people including 146 na-
tional delegates of 57 foreign countries
and some 500 reprtse ntatives of Japan
attended the session. Sen. Strom Thur-
mond (R-S.C. ). is due Friday.
329 Pe1·sons Dead
In Wake of F loods
Tropical Storm
Seen Gaining
HUITicane Force
NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -Tropical
Storm Felice split in two this morning as
it rleared the Louisiana coast. There were
indicatian.s the storm would intensify lo
hurricane force as it develops it.s new
center.
The Weather Bureau said the new
center wa.~ located by radar and "the
new ci rculation will become the main
center and the other one should
dissi pate ."
The Weather Bureau said that near
dawn, the tropic~\ storm's developing
center was about 130 miles south of New
Orleans and carrying winds of gale force.
The new «nler. said the bureau. was
1novhlg west-northwest about 15 'miles
per hour.
"Highest sustained winds are estimatE;d
at 60 miles per hour, but winds may be
near hurricane force for brief periods in
heavier squalls just north of the center.''
Tides of two to five feet "·ere projected
along the Louisiana coast we!1-t to the
mouth of the Mississippi River.
Forecasters also predicted heavy rains
with local accumulations of S to 8 inches
i't1 the path of Felice.
QETROIT (UPI) ~ Aooul 350.000
United Auto Workers Union members in
16 states and Ca nada struck General
Motors Cor~.. the v.·orld's largest
manufacturing firm , early today. A pro-
longed strike could damage the nation's
uneasy economy.
UA \V Preside nt Leonard \Voodcock left
a listles.'i negotiating session with GM
just before midnight and announced,
"The company held out no other choit't"
but to strike after 60 days of fruitless
negotiations. , ·
Woodcock said union officials will con·
fer iater 'today. "It, is Our fervent hope
that for the economic and social gOod ror
all concerned and affected this can be
resolved in a minimum of time." he said .
. \s thousands of auto workers picked up
picket signs to join about 35.000 others
who jumped the gun. chief GM negotiator
Earl Bramblett called the walkout "a
strike against reason."
"Nobody really wanted a stri ke . \\'e
tried hard, but the demands are just too
many and too high," Bramblett said. He:
added negotiations may res u me
•·probably Wednesday'' on unresolved
issues of money. early retirement and
cost-0f.Jiving allowances.
In Washington. D. C., Harold C. Passer,
assistant commerce secretary f o r
economic affairs. warned the strike could
"put a crimp in the rising trer.d of
economic activity. It would not, in my
view, jeopardize the upturn that is now
developing but it certainly 1,1·ould lower
!he rate of increase.''
At GM's Cadillac assembly plant on
Detroit's lower west side. the consensus
viewpoint was a strike "of at least three
v.·eeks."
icy for Ma rie Colmt r of Los Ange-.
Jes. The 64-year-old widow found a
paid of man's pants on the lront
lawn of her home three 1nonlhs
ago. In the pockets she found a roll
of bills totaling $3,300. The honest
woman took the money to the sher-
iff's d epartment. Friday deputies
brought the money back to Mrs.
Colmer since it had not been claim-
ed. "She \vas all smiles." Oetec~
tive Jeffrey Plough said. 0 She told
me that she plans to use the cash
to pay off some old bills which
have accumulated.''
BOMBAY (UPI) -Floods that swept
through two villages of Broach in Gujara t
State two weeks ago \efl 329 perj(lns
dead, State Chief Minister Hitendra Oesai
said today.
Desai said the death toll was compiled
from reports furnished by hcadi; of the
tv.'o villages. Most or the victims Y."ere
reported to have drowned as the Holy
River Narmada flooded.
There were no immediate preparation!i
to evacuate any of the coa11lal areas, but
a close watch was being kept on the
storm for further intensification that
migl\I make some evacuations necessary.
A Aurricane watch was in effect from
}.torgan City, La., to Port O'Cannor. Tex .
and gale warnings were posted from the
mouth of the Mississippi to the Sabine
River.
"We 're 100 percent behind him (\Vood-
cock). ·• said Bob Williams. a shop
steward who was picketing in a cold
-drizzle in his blue work shirt . The sign
said "UA\V On Strike For Justice." Most
of the night shift stayed home and the
Cold Front Hits Midwest
\
Felice Rips Gulf; Rains Soak Nation's Bread Basket
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few workers who showed up at midnight
\\'ere told, "it's official. This is not a
wildcat."
Woodcock said the union has a record
$120 million strike fund, enough for six fQ
eight \\"eeks of benefits. It will take about
that long for GM fQ run out of unsold new
c;ars. If it went beyond that, Woodcock
said. "then we'll l'Onduct a strike on the
old-fashined basis," without the $30 to $40
weekly benefits. Other unions have o_f·
fered to loa n the UAW m'oney.".
Besides the i~mediate i
0
mpact ot 'stop-
ping production "or 1971 model.s, includ.ing
the new subcompact Vega to combat
foreign imports. effects of the strike soon
"''ould spread to supplier steel, rubber
and glass industries.
It was the third nalional strike the
UA\V has called against GM. The UAW
struck GM for 119 days in 1945-46 and Ht
days in 1964. Even before the death of
Walter Reuther last spring, it was being
speculated GM would be the target.
The union's ruling International Ex-
ecutive Board picked twin strike targets,
GM and smaller Chrysler Corp., on Sept.
2. Ford, struck for seven weeks during the
last big three contract negotiations in
1967. was exempted. On Sunday. Chrysler
\•1as exempted.
Although contracts expired at 1 both
Chrysler and Ford Monday nidnight. both
conlinued operations. Checkoff of union
dues. however, ceased. The strike did not
include 26 GM plants in the United States
and Cana da v.·hich make parts for other
automakers.
Both sides were far apart on majQr
issues and bargaining Mond1"-was
listless. Neither invoked the traditional
news "blackout" that Indicates serious
bargaining.
''No real bargaining on eit her side took
place in the 14 hours preceding the
strike," Woodcock said.
·Thant Asks
Tribunal
For Hijacks
FROM WIRE SERVICES
With some M hostages from airline hi·
jackings still in the hands of Arab guer-
rillas, U.N. Secretary.General U Thant
has pro(KISCd that hijackers "be pro-
secuted in the name of the peoples of the
world" by a special international
tribunal.----
A U.N. spokesman said 'Ml.ant was sug-
gesting establishment of a court separate
from the present World Court at The
Hague •
Hijacking and abduction of foreign
diplomats by extremist groups "sow the
seeds of international anarchy," the
secretary-general told about 2,000 persons
at a $100-a·plalt dinner on lhe eve of
today's opening of the 25th General
Assembly.
He said hijacking is a crime against an
Jnternational service affecting many na·
tions and individual citizens, and addfd :
"This crime must be brought be!ore an
international tribuna l defending the in-
terests of all peoples and qations and not
o( any particular people or nation."
Hijacker Named
The man slain while attempting to hi-
jack an El Al airliner has been identified
by the British government as Patrick
Joseph Arguello, 28, a California-born
American citiien who had been livini r
Managua, Nicaragua. ·
The Home Office said Monday that
identity was made through fingerprint
files of the Federal Bureau o C
Investigation.
Jn Managua, Oscar Arguello denied
that the slain hijacker was his son,
Patrick Jose Arguello Ryan, a graduate
of aq_American university.
Red Cross Delays
The International Red Cross today "held
off sending a team to negotiate with Arab
guerrillas for the release of about 50
airline hijack hostage s. with no ln-
dications when the discussions would
resume.
The Popular Front for the Liberation ~f
Palestine (PFLP ), the guerrilla gr o u P
1,11\ich carried out the hijackings~ said ·it
had not broken off negotiations with the.
United States. West German y,
·switzerland and Britain. It said "in-
direct" negotiations were continuing with
the three Europea n nations, but did not
elaborate.
Appllen11t Flood
The government is being flooded wilh
requests from people who want its newest
glamor job -airline security guard.
The Federal Aviation Administration
said it has reCfived innumerable requests
from applicants. But none will be hired
until Congress approves President Nix-
on's request for funds to train and
finance the security program.
Nixon asked Congress Monday for $28
million to train 2,500 security guards.
J\fost of the recruits will come from other
government agencies. but the FAA said
.. there are plans to hire other qualified
personnel."
Lloyd's J>ny• Ort
Lloyd 's. the London underwriten. said
Monday British Overseas Airways Corp.
will receive $8.4 milion as an insurance
settlement for the VC!O a i r I in e r
destroyed by Arab guerrillas in Jordan.
"The situation affecting the other hi·
jacked aircraft bas yet to be clarified, as
each one of the policy wordings is di!·
ferent," Lloyd's said.
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GE NERAL MOTORS WO RKE RS IN DETRO IT WAV E P ICKET SIGNS AS WALKOUT BEGINS ·
Union and M1n1g1ment Ag ree on Only On• Thing -They Ar• Sti ll Far From Solution
•
San · Clemenie
Capisirano EDITION
Today's Fina)
N.Y. St.oelul
VOL 63, NO. 221, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEi;iaeR ·1s, )970 JEN CENTS
Hostages Periled
Arabs Lay Down
Tough . Demands
From Wlre Service•
Specific demands were laid down today
111 tough a11d threatening t_-ms by Arab
terrorists bargaining for the fate of 54
hostages, mostly American, in exchange
for hundreds of their own imprisoned.
Negotiations were hampered b y
withdrawal of the Inlernational Red
Cross and stubborn dealings by the
Popular Front for the Liberation , of
Palestine through a mysterious mediator.
The PLFP annou11ced a11y intervention
militarily will doom the hostages taken in
three jetliner hijackings last wttk, most
of them American, plus some Israelis
and Europeans.
A spokesman sa id both are considered
PLFP enemies and will be co nsidered
prisoners of war.
Officials in Washington sternly warned
Parking Site
Under Study
By Planners
' Bj RICHAR& I'. NALL
01 ltlt o.itr ,1 .. 1 lllff
A four-level structur~n Laguna's
Glenneyre Street parkin seemed the
most likely city entree into the parking
structure business Monday night but one
1till a good way off.
City planning commissioners studied
two preliminary parking structure con-
ctpts, the Glenneyre site and another
four-level structure proposal that would
close Mermaid Street and require pro-
perty acquisition at Second Sb'eeL
Commissioner Robert Hastings asked
to take the schematic plans to friends in
the building business to get coSt ap-
proximations.
"In the south coast parking district (to
be considered by the couhcil Wednesday)
we are going to pa yfo r our own if we
ever get it," said realtor Georgia Gill.
"Who is gonng to pay for parking in the
do,\'nlown area'?''
Commission Chairman William Lam·
bourne said, "We have asked the
Chamber of Commerce and DBA
!Downtown Business ¥sociationl to help
formulate a parking district for the
downtown are .... " He said il would be necessary to settle
on a location for the parking structure
and the boundaries of a parking district
before things could proceed.
•·Before we can accomplish our part."
said Lambourne. "we have got lo get
tiOme kind of dollar !igure."
Al. Autry, city planning director, ex-
plained the structures.
The Glenneyre structure would provldf!.
352 parking spaces. The lot now provides
tSee PARKING, Pa1e 2)
the holding of America1 hostages is
totally unacceptable,
The guerrilla f r o n t organization is
unrecognized by Israel, whose Parlia·
ment met in emergency session Monday
to discuss the lalest ransom demands.
America and Israel are ignored in
return by the PFLP, which is currently
bargaining through ambassadors of Bri-
tain, Switrerland and \Vest Germany.
Now, 13 specific prisoners are being
demanded by the PFLP, plus anywhere
from 600 to 3,000 Palestinian captive1 in
return for release of the 54 hijacked
passengers.
"We will not back down from these
demands whatever happens.'' emphasiz td
PF'LP spokesman Hassan Kanafani..
lsrael mw;t agree first to release two
Algerians, a Swiss national and IO
Leba11ese soldiers, the latter c~ptured
New Year's Day in an Israeli foray, the
PFLP insisls.
Kana!ani said in Amman, Jordan that a
list of additional prisoners :he PJo'LP
wants will be turned in after this.
''Whe1 these demands are met, the
PFLP will release the. American and
Israeli h06tages," he added.
He alM repeaUd dema,nds that Britain.-
West Germany and Switl.erland rt.lease
A'rab·hostages.
Ka.nafani denied any mistreatment of
the 54 persons remanilng among nearly
300 captured in the three separate airlin-
ner hijackings.
He said their personal needs were
being adequately mel.
'The Americans are being treated on
the same basis as the Israelis because
the U.S. is·an enemy ," Kanafani added.
The Jewish state has refused to con-
sider demands for a prisoner exchange
until they were processed through· t h e
Red Cross. nor will it deal with any agen·
cy but that and the four governments in·
volved.
Other PFLP demaods include release
of girl guerrilla Leila Khaled, a com-
mando captured in an unsuccessful at-
tempt to hijack an Amsterdam-t1rLondon
El A1 jetliner flight.
They al.so want the body of U.S. citizen
Patrick J. Arguello, who was shot by
Israeli agents during the fruiUess venturs
accompanying Miss Khaled.
Authorities believe the 54 hostages are
being held in heavily fortified houses in
Amman , but some were allowed Moaday
to appeal to their embassies to hasten ef-
forts to secure release.
One radio broadcast monilored in Lon·
don said two of the captives have been
shot to dea th, bringing a prompt PFLP
denial.
"These reports are without any foun·
dation ." said one spokesma11.
•·Direct responsibility now fall! on the
g,overnments co11eemed to announce their
acceptance of the Front conditions," he
added.
er
Clubhouse
In Clemente
Gets Study
When San Clemente city councilmen
consider adoption of prelimina ry plans
for the community clubhouse Wednesday
their months of work turni11g the draw-
ings to reality will have only begun.
Despite the apparent sa\isfaction in the
community and the council ove r the
plans, matters of financing for a facility
costing al least $300,000 and relocation of
several recreation structures will have to
be tackled aext, City Manager Ken Carr
said today.
The c i t y wt d e satisfaction with the
prelimJn ary drawings of the new meeting
facility was sampled Monday night when
recom mendations by c i t y commissions
and club officers were complied in a
council study session.
''It seems apparent that the council
will authorize the start or precise plans
for the clubhouse Wednesday night after
reaching agreement on the 1uggested
changes.
"But afte r that will come months o(
work," Carr said.
It will take an estimated three months
for designe rs Boucher a n d Dri~lisma
Associates to draft the complete working
drawings for the clubhouse.
"During that time," Carr eqilained,
.. the matters of financi.ng and con-
struction could be worli.ed out."
At the tnd"of thret montm. councilme~
then would have to· aRaalt-1 for the bid
pr~---~--
The tot.a) 1um of the bids for the
clubhouse could exceed $300.000 e.en
though the drawing$ 1how a building cos-
ting $200,000. .
Site preparation, including the razing of
the unusable portion of the charred
landmark, will prove costly.
Other items would include 1ite.grading
and preparation and relocation of the ten-
ni s and shuffleboard courts -possibly at
Bonita Canyan Park near the Municipal
Golf Course.
Jet Splits Open
In Runway Skid
NEW YORK (UPI) -An Alilalia Da
jetliner likidded off a Kennedy Airport
runway on landing Tuesday and split
()pen, apparently as the result of a col·
lapsed landing gear.
There were no immediate report! of
casualties or or fire. although an alarm
signal from the Kennedy control tower
brought more than a dozen pieces of city
lire apparatus and a superpumper to tbe
scene.
A spokesman said the landing gear ap-
parently collapsed as the plane touched
down on runway 4-R and the plane "skid-
ded off and broke open." The accident oc-
curred at l :21 p.m. (EDT).
There were 146 passengers and lO
crewmen on the flight from Rome, an
Alitalia sp<>kesman said.
N.ew School Opening Set
University High to Be Ready by November 15th
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 ,.,. Plll'f' l'illl 51111
Universily High School in the Universi·
t.y Park area will probably be ~eady for
occupation Nov . I 5 , Superintendent
'VHllam 8. Zogg tol:j Tustin Union High
Schonl Dist rict trustee:s Monday night.
··we anticipate a Nov. 15 move-in dale
for the classrooms and rest room
facillties," Zogg said. "The industrial
arts and homemakinR areas should be
l'Ompleted about a week or two later."
University High School was originally
ph1nned to be completed for the opening
of ~hool Monday, but strikes hampered
camtruclion and the lchool w11s not
flnl~hcd on time .
Tht 813 University High School
:i;.tudents are attending Mission Viejo 11\gh
School on a double session b11sis with lhe
t.932 Mlss:lon Viejo !Ugh School students.
The board wa!'I presented a status
repnrt from construction inspector Jack
PedtrSCln of I.he archit~tural finn of
"ruus Hutchason and Associates.
In the reporl, Pederson sUlted lhal lhe
masonry work on lhe classrooms wa!
L'Omplete, but that the electriCl.11 plumb-
..
I
Ing and heating equipment was only
partially installed.
The con!'ltruclion delay cau!lf!d c.oncem
among many parents o( Univeralty High
School ~tudenl!'I after the boarrt voled
Aug. 24 lo tbu.t-the students to Ml!sion
Viejo High School.
In a lelte:r that waio read to the board
Monday, Louis 1'~ridhandler, 4 5 5 l
Sandburg Way, Irvine, attacked the bus-
ing plan as "lrre.sponsible'' and said he
strongly disapproved or the "$5,000 bu~
Ing plan ."
Board member ~1rs. June Smith said
the board had voted that the busing "was
not to exceed $5.000 and that the board
was hopeful that it would be rar Jess lhan
that amount."
In his Jetter, Fridhandler also cited
wha t he called "the Inadequate library
focltitles" at University High SchQol.
Superint.endehl ·.zogg said the library
W85 being funded the same as the library
&t MiMion Viejo Hl&h School WIS durlng
Its first year.
However. Mrt. Vlrglnla Kirkland,
librarian for University Hfa:~ School, said
that the district "spent from $32,000 to
$35,000 to start the library at Ml"ion Vie-
jo High School. We have only $20,000 for
the University High SchQnl and t have
found that not all of the materials have
even been ordered yet.''
Mrs. Kirkland said that she had made
arrangements with the librarian at UC
Irvine t.o use UCl 's library (acllltics. She
al.so said that a bookmobile wilt be p~
vlded for the students and th11t the books
that are available will circulate for one
week in.'ltead of two to give more
studenl:.s an opportunity to use them.
Superintendent 7.ogg said he thought
that more money had been provided for
the University High School library, but
said that he did not have t.he specific
figures at his Immediate disposal.
Jn other action concerning University
Hil!h School, the boml l<Ctpled bids
totaling 115,148.ll from var)ous com-
panies for tquJpment for the new high
school. Tht. equJpmtnl I n c 1 u de d
classroom fumit.ure, lndustrlal •rta and
automotive 1hfp equipment and library
furniture.
0 uar l
•
A KlSS FOR LUCK AND WE'RE ON OUR WAY
·Cup Defencltr Ficker ind Wife, Barbera
Gretel Blows Chances
Fo~ C"ff EJi1 Ra~~ Vit;tory.
-· ' ' !
. ' .
READY FOR FOUL WEATHER
Cup Challenger Hardy
Anti-dog, ~ule
Petition Ready
To Be Presented
Petitions bearing the sirnatures of 3,000
persons who seek to overturn Laguna's
re!lrictivt new dog ordinance will be
presented to the city council Wednesday
night in an effort lo persuade council.men
to voluntarily rescind the law.
Adopted by a 3 to 1 vote Aug. 19, lt
becomes effective Saturday, banning all
dogs from three city park! ,and from city
beaches between the houri Qf 9 a.m. and
6 p.m.
Gallery owntr Richard Challis, who
spearheaded lhe petition drJve with a
"dog-In" on Main Beach Aug. 2Z, said to-
day, "we are within 100 4ignatures of the
3.000 mark, having aimed for something
over 2,000." .
'n1e petition!. he said , have no legal ef~
feet, bot are directed at "the conscience
or the council."
"We hOpe, '' said Challi!!', "that those
w~o vol;ed for the ordlhance will see that
the Way in wh1ch Jt' was presented was
wholly dl9honelt in view or the fact that
at the ltildy H6Sion the night before, no
mention was made of the ordinance.
I~, t.ht people were led to believe 11t
that ae111lon that stricter enforcemtnl of
the lea!!h law 'was a.JI that w1s to be
undertaken.
'
By ALMON LOCKABEY.
DtlllY l'UM Rltllll 1 .. 111'
NEWPORT, R.I. -Australia's Gretel
JI virtually b I e w all chances for an
America's Cup victory today when she
lost a crewman overboard. fouled her
spinnaker and fell • minutes and 40
seconds behind In trepid, at the halfway
mark.
Gretel's crew immediately hoist.eel lhe
protest flig, claiming a spectator boat in-
terfered with her rescue ot the overboard
crewman,
It was a disastrous day for the Aussie
challenger.
Her two most serious mishaps occurred
before today 's race was half over. ·
Shortly after jibing the second mark
one of her foredeck crew wen~ overboard
in the choppy seas or Rhode Island
Sound. The man overlx>ard was picked up
by Gretel 11 but she hoisted a protest flag
aft.er a spectator boat interfered with the
rescue.
Gretel II was already hopelessly
behind.
She rounded the first windward mark
one minute, eight seconds astern and
hoisted her spinnaker in a hoeplw way
around the headstay.
Jt took the crew a full six minutes to
get a chute flying and the fouled one
down. -
The race starl.ed under threatening
skies and a 17 knot easterly· wlnd 'that
kicked up fine:> chop on the sound.
Gretel II was first across the starting
line but lost her advantage by having to
bear away sharply to keep from being
early, thus giving Intrepid a clear
weather berth. At the end of the triangle
halfway mark of the 24-mile course
Gretel It was 4 minutes, 40 uconds
behind.
Gretel lI, designed by Alan Payne, han·
dlly defeated France. 4 to o· in eliminatJon
aieries Jn August against the French
challenger.
But many think Intrepid, only the se-
cond boat picked twice to defend the cup,
will win the series In four straight over
the Australian challenger,
A-latch raci ng for the cup Is a battle of
billfolds, design, space age technology.
crew selection and o r ganization,
helmsmanship, sailing tactics and luck.
Intrepid showed herself a winning com·
blnation of all of these in her somewhat
gurpris1ng victory over Valiant in the
ellmlnaUon trials. Valiant was the 1970
product of genius of designe:r O\ln
Stephens who also designed lntre:pid'. ln
1967, Intrepid soundly d'e feat e d
Australia's Dame Pattie for the cup:
ln boat.for-boat racing, as , in .' the
America's Cup, past performance Ia
.someUmes l~t lo present sa_iling skill. '
tactics and good fortune, which ma~
this year's attics 1 contest hetWeen 1
proven winner and a qut1Uon mark.
Tha~ Is perhaps why 3,000 boat.! will go
to aea to Ste whcthf?r, •~ his crew pro-
fesst1, "Fic.ker Is Quicker.''
·'
Plane.Held
One Hour
OnRunwa~
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A hijacliu
who tried to !orce a Trans World Airliner
to ny to North Korea WU critically WOUfto
ded in the abdomen today by an other
passenger, a private guard for a
RCUrities shipment.
The 7fY1 jet liner, from New York via
Chicago and Los Angeles, was held on a
San Francisco International Airport
runway for an hour by the gunman before
he wa~ shot and overpowered. No one
else was injured.
Armed with \ a .22 caliber pilltol, the
man boarded the early morning flight in
Los Angeles. He wa1 identified by police
aa Donald Irwin, 28, of Reseda.
Robert E. De Nisco, 34, of Brooklyn,
N.Y., a guard for Brinks, lnc., 1hot the
hijacker after 35 of the 55 passengen
were allowed to debark. The plane was
being held on a runway a mile [rom tbt
terminal at the time.
The plane had a crew of seven, all from
Kansas City.
Shortly after taking off, Crom Lot
Angeles for San Francisco, tbe pilot.
Capt. J. K. Gilman, radioed the Loa
Angeles control 'tower that a white male
passenger had told him, "1'1lis plane is
bein& hijacked. It will be golng farther.'"
'San Franclsoo wu alu1<~ 'and ~
o!fittrS were standing by'wben f:he pllnl
landed at •:03 a.m., Gilman havitJ& coo-
·~ the fWlllWI lbal refueling ..., necessa'ry. ,
One of the four sfewardessts ~Id the
drama began when the man arose and
handed hero. note reading, "I have• run.
I want to go to Korea.''
She said she had seen him on pi-evlOUJ
flig~ls.
Passenger Sally Rush, 2(, of San Fran-
cisco said none of the passengers toew
what was goina: on until the plane was on
the ground.
She said the captain announced on the
public addre" system. "There is a
gentleman on board who wishes to land
at another airport. Be calm."
He then announced that military men
and families with children would be
allowed to debark.
Miss Rush 1aid she and the others left
aboard were asked to move to front aeata
in the coach section.
The gunman was seated two rows
behind them.
After an interval of suspense, she said.
"A man in a brown outfit walked. from
the front of the plane, quickly uld.
'Police,' and fired one 1hot over elg'ht'to
10 rows of sea ta."
Hit in the lower right abdomen with a
.38 caliber 1lug, the hiajcker crumpled
and was seized.
At nearby Peninsula Hospital, his con--
dition was described as critical after an
hour of surgery. ·
Hog Pen Pollution
CHARLO'M'E, N. C. (APl -The
Health Department released Mondly a
list of 3Z1 aources of stream pollution In
the county. Almost all named on tbe list
were industries, but one &OW'ce wu "hoe
pen in creek."
Orul(e Cout
"'eatlaer
.Only a few patchy clouds will
m~r Wednesday'• 1unshlny skies
with temperatures holding at 70
degrees on the coast and up to as
further inland.
INSIDE TODAY
The new theater season i1 in
full .JWing on the Ortinae Coait,
ni wet! QI "uptown." Reviews of
three o} tht late.ft productions
are on En.tercainmenc Poaes 16
and 11 1oc1av.
L
J DAILY l'ILm SC
Jordan Crisis Worsens
Hmsein's Offer to Resign Told
B7 Ullted Pna llleru-
JonlonluJ army gum>m I ht 11 t d
PaJWINan pen-Ula bwJ in north
Jcrdla today, tbe Syrian Ar1b News
A_., repomd. '!be E!lcllsb llnlll"g•
JeruaaJem Post SJld the cr1Jia there was
to wlous Kine Huuein tried to abdicate
hut ..., dwuadtd by UAR Pr<!ldent
Glll!lal Abdel Nwer.
The -aJooc lhe SueJ Cina! o1Jo WU npoiitd WQ, and olllclal
""""'"' In Cairo uid Monday nlCht Egypt believes tho United Staltl bu
IUlp<lldill Ill 'peace lnltlaUve Which leCI
to the ctue-fire. They said the big four
powm,should try again to restore peace.
Diplomatic IOW'Cel tn Jerusalem said
Israeli Premier Golda Meir, who mettl
Pr<sldtnl Nlml In Wuhlngtoa on Fri·
day, will Ilk him to revile America's of.
ficial policy on l!rael's borders. Sbe will
contend that Israel must retain some
captured territory to assure its security,
the sources llld.
Maj. Abdel Salam Jalloud, a m<mbtt
ol lhe Libyan R<YOllltloo Command Cow>
.
ell, ID a -rtplried by the F.gyp-Uan l\llddle EUt News Agency, aid the
aitualioa hu now reached a stage where
• polltlcal IOlUUOD can no ~be found
and the situation must be resolved
through war.
1be report of fighting in the Irbld area
45 mile• northeast of Amman folloWed
1imilar report, Monday by the guerrilla
organiialion AJ Falah. And 1n Beirut, the
light-wing newspaper the Dally Star
quoted 1Uerrilll sources in Amman as
1Aylnf the Jordanian Army bu cleared
guen11ltl out o1 South Jordan.
"nle Dally Star said King Hussein hoped
to liquidate the whole m o v e m e n t
gradually. It said the campaign was laun·
ched (after leaders of the Bedouin, the
fanaUcal supporters of King Hussein, met
in special session 1nd pledged to support
the government.
Hussein hu betn faced with near civil
war for months and has survived nine
assassination attempts. 1'ie Jerusalem
Post, quoting 0 10U1Ces cloee to the Jorda·
nlan royal court," said In a front page
banner atoey be wu for the first time
Newport Vice Mayor Calls
Hirth 'Patsy' on Freeway
Newport Beach Vice Ma)<lr Howard
Roaera Monday night charged that
M~ Ed Hlrlh bu "fallen vletbn" to a
l>loA by the St.le Division of Hlghwa)'I
''to lull the people to 1Jeep" about the
bsut ol lho Pacific Cout F,reeway.
And Ropn releued copies of a "con--
'fidentlal" m<morandum wlitten by Hirth
to tho City Council wlilch Rogers auerted
· would bad< up hla atteptlon.
Rogers auerted the memorandum and
oll>er ncent acllonl by Hirth lndicata ht
bu htcom• a patay to lhe propqanda of
11111 olOclala.
Amonl other tblnp, R"tl"n hued h11
accuu.Uon oa remark& by Hlr1h. later
recanted, that the state would not pro-
ceed with planl to build the conlrnvenlal
ltoeway If the Newport Beach City Coun-
cil would write a letter allina work be
lfopped.
Rogers aid the men who made tbe
atatementa, Hali Ayanlan, director ol
Highway Division lltltrlcl 7, and his top
aide, Wllllam Hashimoto, "do not have
the 1utbortty &o late such actloa."
llirtll, Io <OU11Cll. aelllon Monday,
~ tllat a "llmpla letl<r" would nol
force an ollldaJ ball to stale plannlq for !he""'"" . Ro(era plugpcl the ellor11 ol tho
Cltlaena Coordinating Committee, •
Freeway Flgl>tera adjunc~ to circulate
petiti-lhat would requlra a menodum
on the is!Ue of whether the clty'1 formal
freeway route agreement lhould be
,.sclndecl (,.. separate atory).
Prior to th• vice mayor's remarks, tn a
statement which apparenUy prompted
them, Hirth had detailed to Iha c:ouncl1
bis ellcrll the past several weeb In hll
Tustin Woman
Killed in Crash
A youn1 Tustin woman died early this
morning from lnjuriea suffered when the
car In which lbe wu a pauqer went
out of control, struck a parked cu and a
tree.
Police aid Doona Jean Abrollnl, :II, ol
JOJO Nqport Ave., Apl M, WU rldinc
ln a car driven bJ Henry M. Bell, 23, of
the same address, Apt. 24.
,Offlcen said the vehicle 1Ud broadJlde
for IO feet into the car and tree ln tbt
1400 block of Nisson Road, Tustin.
Bell waa treated at Tustin Community
Hospital ll!ld re!wed. Police aa1d the ac-
cident ls under investigation.
DAILY PILOT ...,... .... " .......... ---y-e... .... .. Cls::••
OIWfG8 COAIT l'UIUSMINCI CC»IU'.tMT
aeHrt N. Wt.4 Pn&llMlll ..... ,......,
Jeck R. C11rle.,
\IQ,,. ........ 0....1 .........
Tiie••• Kt..,il -'T1to111tt A. .. ..,.1 .. --lfc•M4 P, Ntft
--~c..ty .... ....... c. .... 1 .. .,..., ......
,..,.,.,. Midi! ... w.t .. .., .......
t....-~m~•-.._..,.. "'°' t11n 9Mdl ....._... IM~•,..,.lfC....lt_,
one-man study ol bow the city thould ap-
proeclt Ill traffic problem.
Hirth disclosed that at his meeting with
the two state highway offlclal! lut week,
Al Koch, Orange C.Ounty road com-
missioner, wu present
Rogers lmmedlalely aaalled W., poin-
ting out lhal Kach bu Jong been a sup-
porter ol the coutaJ. freeway. "It WU at
leasts to lat tJl1I: meeting," Rogers said.
He demanded to know why Hirth had
brougl>t him aloni-1-
'nle maynr replied that hla pertldPI·
lion ci.me at the suggestion of WiUiam
Jennings, chairman of the State Highway
commission, a resident or Balboa Island.
The confidential memo criticized by
Rogers COPtalned statements critical of
the efforts of the CCC in their petition
drive, charging " a crippling procedure"
"'ould result.
Hirth, in the memo, bad sald it would
be wrong for the council, itself, to in-
terfere with the cltluns' move, but said,
"We could remove the need and desire by
a strong acceptable action toward a solU·
tion."
Hlrlh then auaeoled "lnatructtng" the
slate to stop Iha planning of the Newport
section of tbe freeway. ·
-,, llir1b 1111ggest.d the steps he
hu been foltowlq recently, a study of
the trallJportatloo needs of lht county.
Rogers maintains that the agreement
mutt be rescinded .. to wipe the slate
clean" htlo,. any study Is lnitialed.
Police Arrest
Second Auto
Burglar Suspect
A second San Clemente man bas been
amsted thls week in an auto burglary
earlier this summer which yielded more
thJe_ $3,000 In receipts from a San
cterllente service station.
But despite this week's arrest or a pair
of suspects, the cash bas disappeared,
police Aid.
Robert Giffen Robeson, 19, of 2609 Via
Cascadita, was arrested Monday ar.
temoon and booked on charges of
burglary.
Over-the weekend, police arrested 20-
year-old Paul Arthur Baker of 160 C Calle
RedondeJ, San Clemente, in connection
with the same theft
The ·alleged offense occurred earlier
this summer after a San Clemente
woman parked bu c:ar near the North
Beach area.
Alt.er leaving the cash in the glove
compartment of the auto, Mrs. Ralph
Mathes went to the beach to pick up a
group of youngsters who had gone gru·
nJon hunUng.
When the group returned to the unlock-
ed car, the money -ln bank bags -had
diaappeared.
Detectives said a source's tlp led to the
arrest ol the two men.
ne pelr ara being held on 13,150 ball
apiece.
Frank 0. Carr
Funeral Slated
P'Uneral aarvlc" will ht held Wed·
..... ., ror Frank 0. Carr, 15-year
IA-guna Belch resident who died Simday
at Ida home, 1129 Hillcrest Drive. He was
118.
Dr. Dall•• R. Turner will officiate 11t
the 11 a.m. rites ln the Community
Pr<sbyte<lln Oiurch.
Mr. Carr k IUfVlved by his widow,
Can>!; a dauabter, Mrs. Elizabeth Mayu
«Wichita, Kan. aod by four grandsons.
A banker for 53 years, Mr. Carr
(ormerb' wu l.f!illattd with the First
NaUonal Bank or Wichi ta. He was a
member ot Amerlcan Lt~on Post 222,
t.quna Beach and of Masonic Lodge No.
99 or Wlcblta. Sheffer Laguna Beach
Mortuary art dlrec:ton.
CGllldtrlq ahdlcatmc.
"HUSseln. •• expressed his lntenllon ol
quitting after last week's fier ce clashes
between his armed forces and the ter-
rorists, and after the open split in hls
army over the Issue of the presence of
terrorist.! and Iraqi troops in areas of
Amman and other major towns, it said.
lt said Hussein held up his decisiOn at
the Insistence « Nasser "who fears tot.al
civil war in Jordan would follow bla abo
dicatlon."
Hussein, Jn an interview today with the
newspaper Le Figaro in Paris, admitted.
the split in hill army. He said he had been
having problems restraining some of his
younger officers from trying to wipe out
the guerrillas.
He gave one instance -a battery of
beavy artillery was headed into Amman
to get the Palestinian guerrillas and a•
first refused to stop when be personally
pursued them.
'"11le trucks kept p.tshlng me orr the
road at the rid of. overturning my car in
a ravine," be Aid. ''I finally managed to
overtake them and the Land Rovers of
my persona.I guard blocked their advance.
It was very dUflcult to convince them to
return to thelr base."
Official aources in Cairo Aid Egyptian
embassies and legaUons throughout the
world would be instructed to noUfy their
host governments of Egypt.'1 view that
"America bu frozen ill peaceful ln·
IUatlve."
Capo Council
Studies Police
lJepartment Plan
8y PAMELA HAILAN
ot ... Dellr Plllll .,.,,
A report on the feasibility of bavtng a
clty police department has been ordered
by the Su Juan Capistrano City Cowidl.
The city fathers voted Monday to hire
Richard Grace, a professor of police
science at Cal State, Los Angeles, to
prepare the study.
In a closed door lff!ion, the council in-
terviewed two candidates for the
prepartion of the study, Mayor Tony
Forster jusUfied the c Io s e d door by
saying that the candidate would be a con-
tract employe.
The only person opposing Uie polir:e
study was Coo•cilman Josh Gammell
who said he didn't feel a study is
necessary at this time. He said any atudy
would lose Its value by the time a ~Uce
department became necessary.
"I! the study doesn't bear out • need
for a police department at this time,
line," argued Councilman Jim Thorpe.
"But we still need to have the pro-
fessl011aJ study. rather than figures and
facts individuals throw out eecond band."
Thorpe, who has long advocated plan·
nhlg for a police department, made the
motion to hire Grace. It was seconded by
Councilman Ed Chernak, who 1190 has
favored the city having Jts own force,
rat.her than contracting with the Orange
Coonty Sherill's Departmenl
Councilman BUI Bathgate 111PPorted
the motion with Gammell and Forater
voting no. Forster said be favored the
other candidate.
Grace's ptOPosal ls for f75 a day for a
minimum of 21 days. The details of the
fiaancial arrangement and the dlreeUon
of the report will be worked out by Coun·
cllman Bathgate and City Admlnlstrator
Ernest 'Thompson.
Laguna Water
Supply Building.
Begins Again,
Departure of Laguna's summer visitors
has brought a return of the men and
machines to complete major water 11up-
ply installations to serve Laguna Beach
and South Laguna.
Work wu halted at the beginning of
summer to avoid interferenct with heavy
traffic during the beach and Festival
season.
Excavation alrtady has resumtd on
Forest Avenue outside City Hall. It will
extend along Forest, 'I'hlrd, Mennaid and
Bent Streets to connect with the South
Laguna line alrtady installed back up to
Park Avenue at Bent Street.
In the opposite direcUon, the work will
go back to a point opposite the t.ennis
courts on the Festival grounds to connect
wlth the 36-inch transmission line in-
stalled down Laguna Canyon.
Laguna Beach County Water District
Manager William Moorehead 11lld th a t
weather permitting, this phase of the pro-
ject should be completed by Christmas.
In a further phase of the wt1.ter supply
proj e<:t, the City Council will be asked
Wednesday night to grant an euement
for a 20-lnch water pipeline that wiTI ex·
tend from tht Canyon line in front of the
Festival grounds and up through the
Playhouse parting lot to the ruervolr on
the hill above Irvine Bowl.
The existing 100,~gallon rttervolr Js
to be replaced with a S"->mllllon-gallon
reservoir to receive and store water com-
ing down the new Canyon pipeline from a
point of origin in the Yorba Linda area.
The new reservoir, Moorehead sald,
will bo bulll underground and landscaped
and beautified on top. Plans for the In-
stallation are expected to be completed In
a month, at which Ume bids will be
sought.
The enlirt project could be ready for
Initial testing in spring of 1971, the Wat.er
District manager said.
. J,oelt Ne•• C•-r•
ScoUand's shy Loch Ness Mon·
ster may be captured on film
through this infra-red camera
being checked out by filmmak·
er Peter Suarez, New expedi·
tion of British scientists will
watch for monster starting
Wednesday.
Sheriffs Hunt
For More Clues
In Girl's Death
By TOM BARLEY
Of tlM o.111 Plllt ., • .,
Orange County 5herlf1'1 inveoligatora
today continued their hunt for clues in
the tilling of a 13-year-old Long Belch
girl whose rotting body wu found lhrte
days ago in the Laguna Niguel area.
Backing them in thtir efforts is 1 team
of Riverside County lawmen who are
similarly investigating the death of the
girl's 16--year-old boy friend and awaiting
the outcome of the toxicological tests be-
ing performed by tbe oounty ccroner. '
'!be body of Jenise Marie !Wpln' WU
found by hikers early Saturday Jn the
Camino Caplatrano aru about four m.lle1
north of San Juan C1 plstr1no.
Investigators believe she wu stranguied
to death on or about Aug. 29, the day
before she was reported as missing by
her parents.
Her boyfriend, Edwin E. Miller, 16, of
Ebinore, wu, investigators believe, ldll·
ed wlthln 24 houri of the girl 's murder.
His body was found Aug. SO in a shallow
grave ofi the Ortega Highway in
Riverside County.
Investigators said Mlller's parents told
th& that the y0W1g couple left the Miller
tiome on Riverside Drive to visit a go-
cart tract last Aug. 29 and promised to
return home about 11 p.m.
'lbat was the last time Miss Rlspin and
her boyfriend were seen alive.
Typhoon Claims 300
MANILA (UPI) -The Philippine N1-
tional Police aaid today more than 300
persons may have betn killed when
Typhoon Georgia slsmmed into the
main bland of Luzon 111d vtrtually level·
ed a town of 15,000.
'
Resolatlon
Newport
1
Delays
l .
Freeway \Action
A moluuon asking Allemblyman
Robtli E. Badhom (It-Newport Beach) to
ask Governor Reagan to intervene in the
Peclflc Coast Freeway oootrover1y wu
t.bled Menday night by' the Newporl
l!each City Council.
The cooncll did, however, vole lo d~eot
Ill tralllc department lo prepare speclfl.
<aUOl\I ol a study the city lbould carry
aut oa Its overall traffic needs.
Badham, who earlier had vowed to lake
the freeway up with the governor on his
own, reportedly bad sub&equenUy in·
formed the city ht would do so only upon
formal request.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers told the
council that Badham said he would ask
Governor Reagan to get his special
freeway task force to look into the matter
following council action.
The vote was tabled for two weeks at
the roquest ol Councilman Carl Kymla
who viewed that the importance of the
action delerved additional tlme for con-
sideration.
Roger1, conceding that he bad not
briefed fellow council members on the
developm<nt prior to the meeting, agreed
to the delay.
Mayoo-Ed Hirth propoeed the staff
study of a design for an official study
after completing several weeks of a
similar study on his own.
The staff design study would include
the agenda for a study, who should
parUclpate, the approaches to be taken
and the llmllatlona to ht imposed, Hirth
old. C.ouncll members stressed the study
should be made with aa Utile uPenditure
of fundl u 'J>05Sible and directed that no
additional lunda on on Upper Bay study
be spent pending the oul<ome ol the
overall study.
Tbere currenUy ll llMOO budgeted lot
the Upper Bay study.
The design Is espeded lo bt ready for
the council at Ill Sepl 28 meeUng.
Assemblyman Badham hu made his
lniUal vow to take the freeway 1lsue to
the 1overnor after a bW be sponsored in
From Page 1
PARKING •.•
11. It would abut the Peacoet bullding
and be bteween Glenneyre and Ramona
Av enue.
The 138,064-square-foot structure, It
was estimated very roughUy, would cost
$1,~,000. Thu was on the baala: of $3,000
per parking lp&Ce.
1be Mermaid Street 1trucb.ltt, If ever
a rtallty, would close off Mermaid .m
would cover two lots fronting OD
Mermaid on each side of Second street
lt would require 1cquisltion of the den-
tal office of Dr. Robert French, former
planning commissioner: the first lot of
the Presbyterian Church parking and the
Laguna Beach Board of Realtors office.
It would reach the alley next to the new
General Telephone Co. building.
Autry said the 154,740-tquare-feet
structure would provide 434 spacea. The
rough cost estimate was Sl,302,000 but
this did not include land acquisition or
major uUUty l'tl'outing costs.
Work would include rerouting of the
Mennald St. 1ewer. It would also entail
considerable hillside eicavaUon and
would cause traffic clrculatton changes,
it was said.
Realtor John Gilbert, with offices on
Broadway, pointed out that a Mermaid
atructure would not aerve a great deal of
the downtown business district as It Is
presenUy developed.
"Wouldn't It be more logical to build on
the inland side of Third Street?" he ask-
ed. "You wouldn't have the excavation
problem 1nd 1 don't think the site costs
would be as much."
the slate Jeg~laturt lo kill the coutal
freeway through Newport died in Senate
committee.
It has passed the Assembly by 1 wide
margin.
Badham expressed intense disap-
pointment following the Se n a t e
Trauportation Committee rejection of
hi.s bW and indignantly vowed to mardl
rl&ht Into Reagan's oWce.
Building Fee
Increase Set
For Study
A re30Julion that would Increase
building permit fees in the city of Laguna
Beach by approi:imately 62'2 percent will
be considered by the city councll on its
Wednesday night :i.gend<1 .
Contractors, subcontractors, 1rchitects
and others likely to be affected by the
new fee schedule have been notified of
the proposed council action by Building
and Plarming Director Clyde Z. Springe.
The item was defe1Ted from an earlier:
council session to permit public notice or
the proposed new fees, although it was
revealed at that lime that the anticipated
revenue increase had been calculated in
the new city budget.
At that time, Springe estimated the
fees would result in a revenue increase of
approximately $13,000 for the first nine
months, assuming they would not become
effective until after the first quarter of
the current fiscal year. Purpose, he told
the council, would be to cover more of
the cost of operating the building depart..
ment.
As an example, he aaid that total per.
mit fees for a $25,000 house, which now
amount to $216, would bring in revenue of
$315 under the new schedule, an increase
of 199.
In some areas, notably at lower valua·
tion levels, fees woul~ be doubled.
Building permit fee for jobs valued up to
SSOO would go from $5 to $10. In the $501
to $2,000 range, fee for the first $500
would go from $6 to SIO, plus the present
additional fee of $1 for each additional
$100 of valuation.
Basic pennlt fee for a $25,000 structure
would go up from $89 to $94 and for a
$0<1,000 bullding from l!St.50 lo lt56.50.
Permit fees for a plastering job of 3,200
square yards would 1dd up to f41 under
the new schedule, compared with the
present $20.50.
Under the mechanical code fee
schedule, issuance of each permit would
increase from $3 to SID, with permit for
installation of a forced air furnace up to
100,000 BTUs costing $10, as compared
with the present M and fee for larger
"furnaces up from $5 to $15.
Residential e J e c tr l c a 1 installation
pennlts now cost 11/• cents per square
foot of building area, plus $1.25 for each
service meter, plus S2 for permit
Issuance. Under the new schedule, cost
would be two cents per square foot, pllll
$2 for each service meter plus $10 for
permit issuance.
For alterations, repairs or Improve-
ments, permit fees for Individual items
remain the same, except that the
minimum permit issuance fee goes up
from S2 to SlO.
The same permit issuance Increase
would apply to plumbing work. with feea
for most installations remaining the
same except that permits for building
sewers and cesspools would go up from
SS to $10 and for private sewage dispolaJ
systems from $10 to $25.
It's Your Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUt.AES
1HAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY AND THICK THE
CARPET IS NECESSARILY QUALITY.
NOT TRUEJ MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
.THE FIBER, AND NOT THE QUANTITY, IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE.
1rs YOUR MONEY -so. WHEN BUYING
YOUR CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE DEALING
WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL, ANQ EQUAU Y AS
IMP.ORTANT, A REPUJABLE DEALER.
• ALDEN'S
t.AMTA AMA. OU ... I
TUmN C.-,,,
ALMM'I m Hill CAll'lft
I DIAPlllD , .. , ...... , ..... c..
alt.JI ..
•
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
'
·-------------·---~ ··-----.. DAILY PILOT f
lltOTICI °'" MA•ltlAL.'S SALi
!Jig Race Begins LEGAL NOO'ICE LEGAL NOO'ICE LEGAL NOO'ICE LEGAL NOO'ICE
Cup Wa ~hers Crain Street
.... 118 , .. nn MOTKI 0 , Tiii 1'1MI ..... o ,Ui(I O" w. MOltEJiU STltA'f'"°ltN ..... koule fllOTICI TO ClllOITO•I HOTICI TO Ct l OITOlll MIA.IN• OP THI LOCAL AetNC:T Slr•"'*11 /r6llo IJ .... I Y vlrNt ti Ill fl"
I Uf'lltMllt COUit ., TMI IUl'l lUOlt COUltT 01' Tiii 'OltMAT IO H C OM M t S 1 1 ON O' K\lllM lllUlllll Oii ... ,,....,., It, lt1' k ltl9
l1'ATI 011' CALl,OltlillA ,Olt STATI Ofl CAU l'OllHIA otlA ... I C I U N TT, CAU f'OltNIA, $v9f<ltr c-1. C-1\1 af I.el "'-hit•
THI COUNTY 0 ' OllMll l '011 THI COl,INT'I' Ofl Oll:AHO I WMIN ,.OPOl lO OISKH.UTION 0, Sr.It ti C11lfor11l1, -t ~t .... A...... Nt . ._..JIU THI TAUllT CllAIMAH ClllTl lCf etllll' .. Ill I•-9f ltt•141 ltr•.,.• 11
ft11tt ol ltUTH M. $UHJllNG, •I• !.illl9 of D .. NllEL JIUOY ..... OAH O' OJIANOI COVMTY. AN O 1~1)"1 .... 1 uecllltr t:tol ttlllltl W. M«Mu
--11 II ltU fH $, $UHlllUNG, 0.CNUol, ltUOY, 0.CMMlll, o"IJICTIOMI Oft ,. It 0 T I I T l llnlY/lorll ff fllCtt!ftffll Mbl'llo", ""°wlllt •
NOTIC';IE IS MEIEIY OIV!N M IN NOTICE IS NEllEIY GIVEN 19 t11f TKl l l O, W1LI. I I 'llflNTIO JOll t>tl INl...U .. U1ttf.Ge Klvlll'I' ll\lt ...
rrtldllon ., !Ill IDOYt l'lllMd dteoo.nt ~Miion of !lot ,....,, .....,.,. dl<MtM HI All lN• ~ .. Id I~ .., IM MM • llw
B y ALMON LOCKABEY ... "tit •~Hor
NE\VPORT, R.I. -Narrow,
one-way, cobble11toned Tbames
Street in thl! ancient yac hting
capital will ,be even more
crowded s ta rting Tuesday a !
yachtsmen frorn all parts or
t he nation mlngle with goggle-
eyed tourists -all hoping to
see one or more races or the.
21st defense of the America's
Cup.
T hames Street {pronounced
T ims in England, but like it's
s pelled in Newport) i:i the
v.·a terfront street in this toWt1.
On its shore 3ide. it houses the
Newport Shipyard where both
the U.S. defender Intrepid and
t h e Australian c hallenger
'Gretel II are berlhed a few
yards apart.
Thames Street is also chock·
o-block with small boa t
marinas, marine supply s tores
a nd other marine related
business -to say nothMg o(
h onkytonk beer joints, s hort·
o rde r r estaurants and other
s mall businesse!.
MOsr Popular eateries are
Chryslie's,' hard by the
Newport Stiipyard. Also at W
& M is Ma.e's Clam Shack. 1
popular to u r is t attractiOn
which offers every kind of
delectable s eafood -to be
eaten either on the premises
or to take out.
There are other g o o d
restaurants in other par ts of
to\\·n :._ but hardly any with
the plush inside or outside ap-
pea rances of such Newport
Beach Restaurants as the
Stuft Shirt, R euben's, t he
Reuben £. Let," An c ient
Mariner , Five Crowns or any
oner of a dO'ten others .
Up the HUI from Thames
Street is Bellev ue S treet, two.
way and only slightly more
moder.,, where one Unds the
shopp ing centers, other good
r estaurants. art galleries and
numerous other e nterprises.
A! you travel seaward out
Bellevue you find the palatial
old mansions -once called
''summer cottages" by the ex·
tremely wealthy New Yorkers ,
Philadelphians and '0down-
·easter1" who came-Lo
Newport lo get away from the
c ities.
The old mansioos are well·
preser ved. des pite the fac t
that a few of them hav e bttn
turned over to girls schools
and other such enterprises.
Very few, i( any of the
multimillionaires who built
the wide-sweeping ··cottages."
or e ven their heir s, occupy
them any more. Where would
one get the ser vants?
Newport, R.I. started out as
a s ailing town and is stilt a
sailing town.
Early in the century it don-
Boat Manufacturers Praise
Nixon Environment Agency
ed ••· rb of · t ti !NI IH _._ "'"°'"" C1411rnl ... 11\tt Ille ltlt! 111 --!Uo\llflt t1111'116 ....,11111 ltll J+()Tt(I IS HfltlEIY GIVEN tlwl 1111 lullMICI 11 Nkl tk~lo!I. t IUoYt leYln fl "'~ aa lfLS otri C lilld '"''°"" trt -1•9111 19 filt lllitft\. Mid Mc:'""t t rt r1tulrtiet tt !Ht ~ Nlllclllo!I tu.1 lottft ni., wllh !lot ~I -1)1 .... f'ltll.1, IHl<I 11141 lnltfftl of
I h t boat d ~th If!• '*"'N"' _...,., 111 1ht llflcl wlltl 1M '*_..., .,_....,,, ;,, 1M ottlc<t A~ FortNtlOll ~11lo!I Of lht ukl ludot~nl MOlw 1n llw ""'""" In
e egance w en s e1m ! In ot "'-t..,.. o1 "" t~·.,.11t1td cowl. « ., 111e cltrlt o1 1,,. ·-M1111..i -.wt • ., Count'I' ., on,_, 511i. "' c11110,.,1,, 1t11 cwMY of 0r1-. si.11 o1 c;.111snl1,
luxury Yach'· from New York to -1 ,,,."', w1111. 1,,. '*'' ... "' .. pr-1 lhfm, w1111 ,,,. nten .. .., r-11,.. 111111 Nici c°"""'1"1o11 t"'°"" cttKrllltf •• ff!~: • .J , "' vouc: ... r1, lo IN lltldtnlf\\eol ti tllt olfltt wM"'"-10 ,,,_ 11Nhr1IWlld ti tti. oltl(t Tiit -H dlli.Olvllofl ot 1114; Ttl'"1"1 Loi ti, Ill blocll ~ ol I.a-.• Ttt~ l_t
and ncig'iboring New EnaJand ....... ·"-"'" ttUGH A, MOIAN 111, .. Ilk ttlotllff'-llOIEkT L. TOMS tlld Ortlflltt Olt1flct ., o. ...... '°"""'' tJ\0""'1 In Mtl> !l(Ol'Otd ln.llllOk 4, .... • • llO IE. Colorlff ......... Sult• !02. NICHOL/\$. 1(0Ll1Nfk, My I!.$. (llllOl'f'l!I. TM ..._..., encom•·-· IN IJ ol Mhct!llMOUI ""°'"' .. th•
c:IUes car r;'!d the cream of lltNdt!la. C1IUwnl1 11101, Wllldl 11 l>'A,NG!LO .. Gl\l!NS. SeOO Wlalllr• lolll'Wlnt ....... n, dtKfibecl ., .. Wllkll CWlll1 ltl(O(f.11' of Or•-(Olllll'r •NI '" ltll l>IKI ft/ blltlntH ., lht unCltf'•l•lllCI 80111t,1rd. lOI An111u. CtHl1lrnl1 tOOP. l1 -· 1'1rllculttl1 ""''!Md .., • ltotl loullfCI t h ., • 3'/111 SI., Ntw-•
American and international 111 tll "''u'" .. r111nlf!I ~ 1111 .. , ... 01 wllldl •• ,,,. "'''t or 111111"'"' o1 1110 41e.cr~non.,. Ult"""""" cornml•1k>f'I: 1111c11. c1111orn11. • . ... Id lltC.cMnt, Wllllln fl)Ut "*"'"' .n ... llNltflltMO Ill •II m11lll'I !*'l•lftl"f 10 Tiit m1lw IMlfllon ot 1111 T1llltf'I NOTICI! 1$ Hl!lllllY Gt\l!.N tftel on ~oc1ety IO llS p a I all a 1 1111 f1r1t 1111bllut1on ot 11111 notlct. '"' ••••t ot Hid ct«tiettnt. w11111" rour 0r1i .... ,. Olit•lci 11 "9M'•HY toc:Jitt41 ,.,IN,, Oc:~ t , 11111 .. 11 t•06 o'ctoc:k
man.>ions Jnd beac hes Even 011tct A1111111t n . 1110 montn. t11., t~• 11"1 1>Ubl~1t1on o1 1111• ,.,.,, o1 '"' s1n111 A"' Rl,1r, 1n !lit ""' 11.M. •' front 01 courthtll11. w w. _ , ' GltACE ltDSE SCHIElllLl !Wlitt. Hllllllfltlllll ltlC.ll •ru •nd 111 ll>e CllV \Ith St .. (jty of C.0.1• Min, C..lltor11l1 .•
the most widely known beach E•tcYt•I• ot 1h1 wrn o1 Dlltd A"'""' 21. u n of f'-l•ln v111ey, •lone wlll'I virldW c-1'1' of or1,..t, s11i. of C1llfot11l1, I
h B ·11 • Be ch 1 "" •tiovt JWINC dKICl9111 1ow•11:0 w. o EttEH•A 111rt11• •IM .,.1.,. 1«t1w 111 '"' "'' ... 111 "n ,, 11!,ll)Ht; 11Ktlon io 1111 llle"lllt ere -31 ey I a -S HUOH A. MOlllAN Ill E•to:Ylu• ol lht Wiii Wt$lml1Uit1r 1111 1111 lOlllll G1rd111 bldclt:r, tor ~ffl In lt wf\11 lnOIMIY ol I~
a·n exclusive stretch of sand ... 1 . c111r .. 11,,.., s.1 .. tn 01 '"' 1bov1 ... rl'll<I dto:ed111t or"" t111. t11t ;,., s'"'" A111 ••••· Vnlltct s11111. 1n 1111 rltlllt, 111 .. •lllf 111. • ' ,., ....... , Ct llf. tlltl ltOflltT L, TOMI 1111 ....... CG"• MHt .... •1141 11\f Wtsl .. ....,1 of 11111 1w, ...... 111 0.b!Gf' In ""
which can be use.d only by lhe Till ltlJ) ...,""4nl. u.wm NICHOLAS, ICOLLIN l lt, MVl lllS, Htw-' l!Ntll ..... •boll' tMcrlbtd ·-rly, or M "'"°'
wealthy fe w who can afford a A1-"" "' ••to:•"''• O'ANOl!LO' Ot\llNl At "" 11m1 o1 1111 1111r111e llOlk..i i.er1tn 1111•.of 11 m•1 i.. rwct1N,., 1o Nll11y . f'lltllll.lltd Ot'Ultt (Giii o.nv ,Ila!, .... Wlllllk• l •lrltf<I Mid boundtrleJ .... , IN moclllltd '" IM 1•kl Ut(~llon. wttll KCl'Utd lllllttll '"' membership -or wangle a SHttmlW '· • u , n. 1119 1.i1.10 Lii A1111i... c11111m11 "'" td411tlon o1 ,,...,. t1rrl!ory 111 1,,. v1c:1n11, c111t1. •
t d Tel· fliJI ~Ul ot tllt ..,_.11 O.IM ti C1tll MtN, C1Htrornl1,
gues car • LEGAL NOTICE An~llt'I• ftr l!•ttYlt• NOTICE t~ ·FultTHE• OtVEN. 11w1 St11ttm0tr 1. t•10,
Since-before-the Civil War. f'!llllW!ed °"'"'" cot11 0 111'1' ,.lkrl, 11td cornrn1n1M "'' n~et WtGMfffv ,,.. "••t>th t.. 0111et""-
N -t h bee he • ,.,..lt .t.u""'t H •nt ~ltmbllr I. 1. U, 1t10 llrd t•V of ~t""°", 1t10 t t 1111 ~rot Me,J.l\tl ewpo.; as n t site o f uu.10 t:oo o'ctock 11.M. ot 1.1iCI 111, °" .. -M1H1lc!Nl Cou•t I C•I Tl,.ICATI 01' •USOtl!SS O C 1¥ one o America 's key Naval 111cT1T1ous NAM• ••Nici"""'' ctn tit ....,din"°'"\~ H~~= J:.:C1,1 o ht•lt• b Thi lltlllt(li9111d -ttMllY lie Is In tilt Otl-C_t, AOmlnl1lrt ""' • IV E J ,..,., .. ases. • conclurllnt • DU1lnes1 ti ,,,, NIWJIOl'I LEGAL N OTICE lulklLf!I. su Hor111 S"rea,,_. S!rH•, Sefte•111 In l!J3.I it became the head· •11oct .. CMll Miit. C1Utor111t. """"' !lie Stftlt Al\I, Ctlllornlt , •• lt'>e lime •NI AUO UST .... Att tlY. , ••
rt f h Am I . licllt;wa ti~m n1mt ot COAST AUCTION tllcl fol' Ille llltrl'lt ti' llld ..,_,.I ... Ntrtll Gt rtltllll Awl
qua ers "r t e er ca s HOUSE 11111 •11a• ... 1c1 firm•• t -MO o1 T-'lJW 10ttt11tr w1111 1tt ,..otts" '"" e1>1ec11ens Mtflttt ,..,k cet11«~1t tUM
Cup races a nd still is a "" lot-! ... ...,,...,, .,..,_. Nlmt In NII MOTIC E TO Cltl!OITOll • ttitrtlo wllkh ""'' tit lllld •1141 t i wllkh , .. 11111~. A,..,;,..,
. , tnt olttt o1 rtlkltnel 11 11 f11tlow1; IUl'EllOI COUIT 01' TME 1111'11 Ind l lKI t ll --lnltrtllM llubllllltell O'll/ICll Cot!! Ot il'I' 111111, premier stttlng for the world s s1'""'•"' J. Mc:N1111. sm 11v1r STATI 0 11 CAL1,.0•101. 110111 111..-11n tN'I' 1Pot• ane1 .,. 11Hr•. Sfftlrf'ltltr 11 11 ,. 1,,. 1611•10
Premier sailing s,_..tacular A¥tllllt, N-1 Bffdl. C111t, TME COUNTY 01' OIANGE Oiied: Alltlllfl II, 1•10 • ' • • • . I'~~ • Otttld Alllllfl JI. 1t10 ~. A .... 1, l'I' OROfl 01' THE LOCAL AGENCY
B es I de s Jts ! a i I i n g s. J, M<Natll 1E1111r of 11.011e1T 'AUL GOlllDON, FOlllMATIDft COMM1S&10N OF DIANGE LEGAL NOTICE ·
bac kground Newport is also ITATIE OF CALIFOIHIA, l llG ~r.ow .. I S PAUL GOIOON •NI •• COUMTY, CALIFORNIA
• ORANGE COUNTY; ROl!IE ltT P. GORDON, Dlcf1Md. llCHllO T, TUllNElt UNITl O STATll OllfltlCT COUIT
widely knowvi on the in· On •null JI, lt10, btlOll me. I HOlll~ NOTICE IS HEREIY Gii/EN to ttle E•1<.u!lw1 Ottlctr . ceHTIAL OllTlt lCT 01' CALl,OINIA · t . . . 11!,lbllc 111 tnd tor .,.kl Sttlt, H"IOl'llllY rredltort ot ,,.. tbOYt ,.trltcl dKldlnt l 11t1I A1enc1 l'ormthon
ternahona tennlS ClrCUJlS, •PHfred Sle&>hen J. Mc:Ntlh kMwn to mt tl>ll t ll '""'°"'' htYllll cl1lm1 •1tl11ll 1111 GqmmlHloll ti Ortn" COlllllV• f'lfTITIOH ~~ ':~4.!0LUNTA•'t
some of the top professionals 10 0t 1,,. Hnon wllON namt 1, ... rd declCI"'' t •• '""!"'" M Utt tllfl!I, c11lto•nl1 1 IANkltUllTC'I' . •ubt<rllll<I to I ... wllllln Lnstrumtnt fnt wl!h lht nec1HarY "Dut:lllU . 111 lllt alllc:t l'~ltlltd Otflllll COf>I 0111¥ II IOI, I T E TTER OF FllllllE TEIC
playing o~ the lawn courts. 1e11.-11e1ttd"" 111<.Yled 1111 nmt. ol 111t cl"k GI tht tbOYt tnllUed court, a• SIPt...,Hr • t nd ts. 1110 l.U.7G co=PO,rATI:,:. Alltted l•nkn.t11I, ·
The town IS alSO known ror its !OFFICIAL SEAL) la orti.tt1I '"""' with I"' ntctUllrY Tll~ H llllon Of 8'111 (lll!Om Moi.lttt
• . JttnM L. NtlMWI vau<:hu" lo 11111 Y"""tltntd II Ille 0Uk1 LEGAL N OTICE tr>< Gold Plistlc StNlte lllC 'l•lllcs • pop music festivals and more No.tt•Y f'11b!lc • c1m.,,.n11 01 "'' .ono'~'· J. JASON GAll, 1.s.i1 Cll~k•I• WHt..•n l11t ... ~ wall...,,
seriOUS operatic la I P"ncl~I Oftkt In P1lo1 \ltrO.o 0r1Yt Wt JI, l'tlOI Vtr0.1 Wtlntr ltatoff • Lipln C II A. f
SpeC CU 8rS. OrlnH County E>lltes, Ctlltorntl, whkll I• Int &>ltct l'I CAllf NO ll·h'11: 1es1>e<Jiylly ''Pl'lltnts tl\d 1"-: '
Ther e have been some wide-MY commi.11on E1•l•1• tl\l•lntn 01 '"" 11nd..-1111ntd *"' 111 mttt111 tAlt MM 1 . h • AYll. 11, 1'7' Pfrltlnl,.. lo Ille ••Ill• GI ll ld ltac:tderl1. ,0111 FIO....ftk CorJ>Orit!ort 11 t m-ye<I
sweeping c: anges in the area 1'11111111\ed °''"" '°''' 0 111y Piiot, ... uhln l()llr monr111 1lttr th• ll •tt c:•T•:~'c~~~N o;,. c~s'::~~~1Z~o•• Olnlntu 0,. eomm•"''r "'""''"" ,,.d
since the America's Cup races ~011m11er I.•· IS, n . •t10 lllJ.70 PYDllc1t1on o111111 Mllce. lllAH '1cT1T1ou1 NAMI "'' 11U'111 ••l11tl1111 •l•t1 ot bu-111111 •t
f 96 Th L E GAL NOTICE Ot!ecl Alltl~ll H. HIO S G EO CORP It TION 1111 A,..lltl(".' Aw1n111 COltt MIN, o I 7. e Newport Bridge Aile, v1r111111 Go11ion THl UNOE• 1 N 1 ° j 1 c.u1otnlt ... 11111n t11e ' tbevt hldltlt l
-the longest in New England l'·JDM :;:!,"'~:!;·~~!..!! ~":c=~:e 0' ::ine":;1t11i:.:~,,:;1' ,
1
,
111
W1 It. s~:':""s1~~ db 1r1c1. 1~. • 1-..-POrtlof'I GI tM 11~ "'
N clf 1 Tu•1c .t.TI! OF tusu~ess, Sour11 Gett c1n111r1111 '"" •' 111 Horii\ monlll •erlod •f"Kffdf,.. ""' 1mnw o1 1111, -spans a~ragansell Bay "'CTITIOUS NAME J. JASON GA\.I ' • lr0tttw11 's..1111 An1' C1Ulotnla llf'ICler pel1tlon,lll.a" In • ...,. oflltr l\Hlkl•I dlllrlc1,
nd . th . h ' h . 1,... ,,Its Vtnln Ol'YI HI • • • Incl own dtbh In lllt ll'l'IOll~I ol 11.00000 a JS e ma)Of 1g way tn· '"• -.. 1,...., doll c.rtl!Y lie I~ con. 11•19' 'llf'Mt lllt lM C•Httr11l1 tt>t tktltlolls tlrm ........ "' ANAHEIM "" l ' lll,llldl NI '°"'
"ress into the ii f dut:tln1 • bll1l11Mt 11 2121 c 11n Orlv1, Toi: n u i ..,.11o1 ,..; u wn1 sECu1t1TY llATl¥_.L •1141 11111 1o1kl firm It. :=~~· ..: ': !,.,11klo~ '••ltrotd,
P. C Y rom Say, N""'llOt'I It.ell, Ctll!orlllt, llf'ICle<" Ille UC• Allor...., for A'mlnl11ratrl• totnPOltld of lllt .._"'llowlntt c.orPOrttlcLn, l"'""tllCt er lllnll ... C01'1"11rtl1on IM/I 1,
Providence or o ther Rhode lllio\11 fl•m ........ GI PLU~NE EN· PW!i1t.eo °'''* C1t1I o.u, ,.llot, wllot:t H lnclHI .it<• " bll1lf'llU It. I I -••eel '1n Ille bllllNll ., 1l1tilc ,iot
I I d . . TEAPllllSES &ncl tlltl llkl firm I• (.,..,... Sft>l""'Otr 1 I U 22 lt10 1124·111 lol-1; Ir I nd I brl 1111'1 s an c1Ues . OOled of Ille tOllowlnt .... -. ~ ' • ' ' PACIFIC DIETIECTIYE BUREAU ""D " !It.,, • • ~~ .
And speaking or Rhode ....... 111 !vii tnd ...... GI ftlklenc.t It. t i LEGAL NOTICE llATIOL IMC .. Ul7 Slllt s1r .. 1. Soulll lle!llloller) ••• crtdllors ,, "" t!leott!t
d . !Ollow1: , Gitt, Ctlllornla, . Hnll'ruPt Incl llt¥t Prtll<lbll r1tlm1 ""' l slan , remember 1t Is the Mklltel Mult.r. JtH cu11 Or1¥t, WITNESS n. lltnt t1111 11111 Hr o1 cOnllniltnt 11 1e Ntlllllt'I' "''°""'1'" 1n""'
GREENWICH, CoM. -The of the EPA as essential," said Fisheries within the Depart· s mallest state with the longes t ~!';":"~U:~'::~.cr~n UNITEo sTaTis o isT1tlCT c o u•T tc:"J~:'~o~:7:£ ~EALt :::t~i::.':dootnoorn::,• 1n u"" ot
Nall·onal Assoc•·a1•·-, ol Eng•·ne R ichard D. Snyder, NAEB!\f menl of Commerce, under the name. The proper name is Mktuot1 M<111<1r cEHTIAL 01sT1 1cT o' c.t.L11101N1A PACtf'IC oETECTIVE a uk.EAU , 111 "' NOAA plcrn, could lead to Rhod I I Stt1• of Ci lltornl•, Ot•llff '°"~'1: 111 11111trllPI" "'· ru4J AHO PATIOL, IHC. · TIW ctilm• al •tHtlolltri ••• ,., toodi. and B oat Y..1anufacturers has Secretary in (.'(lmmentMg on e s ?"'Id and l he 0n A1111u11 10. 1t111. betor• ""'· 1 r+o11..., o•oE• 011ECTINO 11111.v1c1 OF 11:. E1r1 S11ttt1111 .,,.,, ...,, mtrcllindl1t 1a1c1 0, MllYtred
t he reorganization plan. ••Jt over-emphasis on exploitation Providence Plantations _and Pvb11c: 11'1 •nd ,.,.. wk! s111t, peroon1111 1HVOL UNTAIY P a ' 1' 1 o H tN 11rt1kl1tn1 ,. ttit aue.ec1 blnkruit ,.1111111 two 0 1 j oined with major con-should serve to -rdt'nate and or our important fish resourc e h • •011t••ed Mkllffl M11Htr 11.-n 10"" 10 1AH1t:1tu11Tc v •T 11u 1L1cATIOM STATE oF cALll'01tN1ot. vt•rs 1111 P••'· t i tnnows: '-""' no one eareabouts IS about to be Ille .... IClfl -P'llmt •• IUOK!lb<KI IN THIE MATTEI OF FlllRE·TEI< COUNTY OF Oll:AHGE, u eru CU510m Molllt " Inc t 1'11.59
servalion g roups in support or expedite measures to protect and the e ventual denial or this let you forget •t '" '11e "'11h111 IMtni.....,1 tnd ,.~ ...... 1tcta· co1PORAT1~ • .t.tltftct ll•nkrupl. °" 1h1111111 '011 01"""'''·1t10, ~o•t Gokl ,,11ne Service t~. ' 1,,,..,11
the r.cre'tlona t l · td llt l•Klllecl the .-m-. AT SANTA ANA,, IN THIS OISTll(T, tM Mir¥ I<. G11Ulll t Hottrv f'ublk 111 Pltlll(I 1. C ...... ltt ll President's Nixon's plan to our vital natural resources. resource to tOFFICl-"l SEALI ON THE 4TH DAY OF $EPT .. 11~. •nd '°' 111c1 CCM1nh •!'Id s111,, ,111c11.,. Wt1ttt"n 111,. ,.Ml.d 'nc l di g our abundant water fisherman.'' LEGAL trilOTICE LOIS A. NlLSOH Upon""' •••Uc1t1on GI e11EA tUSTDM ,...,.e;.,, du1v co.mm1111onec1 •NI sworn. woioqn we1_. 11,..11 1. e s tablis h a single agency for I u n • Nol••¥ Public • C•li!Olnlt MOLOE kS INC., GOLD f' l A s T I c Plrlo<ll11Y ·-•rid II.. EA!tL SHEEHAN L•ol ... (Pt.'1 '
ways . u n de r t he p I an ' CeltT!,ICATI!. 01' •OSrN~ lli!nclNI Olllct In SERVICE. INC.. II L ... 'T' c $ .. kMWll lo -10 De 011 P•uldtf'lt ol '"' IV 11,111.t.4
environment.al protection. F ICTITIOUS HAME Ortn'e Count1 CHEMICALS WESTERN INC.. llld COl'POrlllon I~·· •Xffuled IM . wl!llln Wllhlll '"' lour co month t>trlod
Al th. Samc·t•'me, NAEBM
0
'However1 we join with Reorganization P lan No. 4, the Th, una.,1lgnl'(I .,0,,, <t•tllY '"•• ,,, Mv comm1uion E•olre• woL,FSON, WEINER. 1tAlOFF ~ LAP•N, 11111,11mtnt "" bfllill ot "" eott>0i1t1on •'rK~edlnt i11e un.,, 01 tllls .,11111°"' •fld
th ·n aski"ng for further R ganizalian P lan No 4 the eonouc!lnit • boslMSs 11 l'Ol5 lll•Ci'ntla A11t111•1 2~' ltn CPA•· 111• lletlUoning C•ldltor1 herein, llltr1l11 111rne<1, tl\d atkr>O'Wledoed to 111" while ff!$0luint t~t 111"1<1 btnt•u•I · bo 0 erS I eor • ' Cot!I Mts.o. CiU•ornll, un6er tht iJc.'. ~llblllhed O•tnt• Coeot O~llr Pllot, !or •ulhoth&t!on lo ""'' ,ln~olunttrr 11111 111¢h cori>ortllon IXKllltO !ht ll rnt. midi orll'°'enll~I flt nlftrl t i Hflntd 1n expressed reservations a u l s tu d y of Mr. Nixon ·s s econd Bureau o( Com me r c i .al 111""" 11rm 111..,e 01 COAST GLASS no Aueu•t 25 Jnd 5••••mblr 1, 1· l5, 1111111°" '" 1>a11t•1101rr bw D11bllc1tlon1 •NI In wn11111 Whe•tol. 1 111v1 11tr111nto ,,., s..,.. of"'' llef'llcruo•cw Ad In th•! 11 ••Id
the placing or ocean develo.... plan, establishing the National Fisheries would be one of the Illa! w lcl llrm Is (QmPOltO or ttlt 101i!w. 1''° Ul•1Q "'°" tAllM! ·-11 ... 111~1110•· It 11 my htNI •NI tlfl•td mY ollkl•I •tll , ... If!« btloW·11'141!ctled IPOrOlllm111 1111'111 It Y ;,._ Pt•IOl'IS. ""'°'t ntmtt In full Ind OkOEREO. lhtl 5tr¥1ct of tht d•Y 1nd YH r Ill 111!1 c1rtlllc1lt llf$1 tllOYt 111t bllow·lndktted rredltorJ of !ht
m e nt and research under a Oceanic an d Atmospheric agencies transfered to the new oiaces 01 res!Otf'IC• ••t •• 1011ow1. LEGAL NOTICE 1n'o1""t••¥ "'1111011 In 1>1n11.r11ottY 111111.,. wrnttn. 111ooecr 1111111,....01 on ecc<Nnt o1 •ntt(Hent
Adm,·01·stratK>. n w•'th•'n the NO,\A wlth•'n the Commerce G•..., G. Jora1n, :tll 9aker s1 " Cos!• DY •11llllc1Uon or 1h1 111w1un11ry Miiiion (OFFICIAL SEALI !Mebttl<!11tn. 11 fellow•~ 'lh. th De t Mat. Ctlll, I AI Hff In btnlcruplcr •nd el 11111 order. ll/CJI Mirv It:. GYllltl Trldt l'•HI' ComPtllY
new agency Wl In e par · Department of Commerce," Department. Frtnk L. Mc:G•v••"'· "' c0511 Mew NOT1c• TO Cltl!OITO•s 1111bllc11lon 10 lie rn10t one tlmt only 011 Not•..., 11u11!1c.Ct1i1or11•• Cos!• M.u • 15&.ot
mcnl of Commerce. St .• Cosrt Me11, Ctllf. 1Ull l l lOI COUI T ll'F TH• Stol~btf' u. 1t10. In the Ortf'lll '"" Ot•l'lllf Count• Count'!' Wt19• ComOlnY ,._.
Under the President's pro-Snyder continued, "Our con-Both reorganization plans 011"' Sfllt..mbo!• 11. 1t111 STATE OF CALll'OINIA ~0111 0111y Pilot •nd 11 h f\lr111er Mv c:ommlulof'I E••l•n • Tr•nsoo•t ,1,,,1,.. l!G.ltt
· OO behalf Of th scheduled tO gO •ntQ effect G1rv G. Jord.o" flllf COUttT'I' 0 11 OIANOI OIOEltEO. Illa! ""' return Nit thtll Alll'H n. lt'1 Mtclln Co l.000.00 J th · f d I II cern is e are . I F••nk L. McG1Yrt11 Nt. A-11 bt ..., .. en in t •w• ''"' '"'" 11\lb11ca11on w1TTMAN A.No KMMIOT WHtREF01 E, 11e11t1onert •••w '"'' posa ' e major e era po U· millions of boatmen who rely about the first week In STATE OF CALIFORNIA, Est.it ol HAkOLO JOH N 51Sk. Ind ,.,. •.11-blnk•llPI ina!I lllYt to \Ml WHldlff Orlft. lwfl• HI "'"let ti 1111• ptflllon, "'"" •. 11111Mtn1,
tion control programs now .L-I C ORAN GE COUNTY· 0tc:11110. •nd 1nc1uc11no Seo•. n. tt10 to '"""''int ..__, 1~ C•Mf«lllt n... miv •!It m-_ ttlf-•llHHI Hnkl'WI
spread out over (oor agencies on sport fishing a s a source of Dctuuo::r un ess on gr e s s °" s.o1embtr 11·. 1,11• be!or+ me. , ~o,', ICE 1s0~E•.!_~Y G~"'._~N-..'...°-~, •,•~, o0o "".!~ 1nwt..1,",'",', ... •11,11on 111 Ttt' .,.._n n u 'orovlcled 111 tni 1....,,1111,cr "'' •NI
recreation and thal placing ado pUi resolutioos r e jecting Nori..., Pubrrc 1n '"" tor "'" s111oo. c• .... 00 0' ·-•-·• ":'"'cu -~~· 111 •llP cw''"' -• • .... , 0 '° ".t.1ttn1tr1 111e1·11 mh bf 1dlu6eecl 1w""' court 10 and one interagency council ' • ...,,...,.,.11w '"""''.,, G•,..,. G. Jor11111 1nd 11111 •II "r"°"' 1>1w1,.. ellom1 ••.•1<n1 1"' w11111n "'" 11.... 1H<ltlet1, Lt •h•ll be PllllH111tc1 °''"" c .. 11 a11•v Pilol, M 1 btl'lktu1J wll~ln ,,,. •Ill'.,...,. o1 ""' the Bureau of Comm'ercial either one . Fri nk L. McG1v•1n kMw11 1o mi 1o tio. wld 'llKtd•nl ••e ,,....1rec1 io 111e lllem, ..iruc11c11w • 1>1n1 .. u11t. MPtembtr 1. •· 1~ n , 1t7t 16:ZS.10 linkro•ICY Act
would be broughl under the ------------~~~-~-----------j lllt Hrwll wllose "'""" ••t IUO>e•lbecl lo wltll 1111 lllC'"51rT ¥outlltn, In Ille ortk" A. IC. PHELPS OATEO· J..M 11 1t1t
w ing of the Environment.al A"''"'""""' "" w1t11111 lnstnimtnt •net .c:know1tc1ttc1 o1 111e <lf•k o1 1,,. t DO"' llfltltltO court, or REFEREE IN IANKltUPTCY •""GAL NOTICE iREA cusToM -. l----------------------------ltt>tY e•IPC~ll<t tho wmt. la ttrlHlll t""", "'Ith ""' n«ts ... •T lttlltrt A. 0......,lt141, A.a:. MO(O!!lt~ INC ..,.
Protection Agency. The intent IOllkltl Sttll ¥0U(lllfl. to 11111 ....... r•llned ., ""olllct I --.. OUITTN•lll, ITUTMAH, •aw· l'fltr •11tic1k
is lo organit.e the fight against • M.lry I(, Hen,., ol ..... '"°'"""' MITCHELL HAkT .. T1t•1STIEI. • OU.TT ..... 1 vk. Pre1llltfll • D t I t Nata..., 111111!\(, Ct hlo•nlt lllKO, 6U Clvk Cenlllf Drive Wttl, ,....,..11Mll c .... rtlltfr CllTltrlCAn OF IUt1NlfS1 O ... T'EO· J\1111! 1' 1t7t
environmental pollution on an en u re nven ion ll•lnc:ietl Olllct In 5Ylll ni. Stntt A,.., C1til, t?7CH, wlllc:ll 11 Atter-.1.11 L.lw trlCTITIOVS ttAMI. • G0t..O ,.LAiTIC
integrated basis, solidifying ~:'1~"\':0?.,, E•.trtt ~~ ::r-.!.~ !'~=-I'll 0:,t';e"'y:'i:t~lf!::_~ t.'!. s::,:.::,r~:11~:;,.'r~ •1• t~~::-;1':.i":i"nti'!" ttnrC:.~~~·.~~ ~~~~;.E ~~;
the a ctivities o f m any p I • h "U " d "L n Nov. 14• ltn o1<...,,..,t, wltll!" IOl,lr monin, •ftllf 1111 ,_ !2IJI 117"'" Ct lllorf'ILI, Ulld• 1111 tklllloul 11rm n•l'IMI Vitt l're11c1ent For eop. Wit pp•n an ow•n P~btl~ Or•-Cot1t Otll~ l>llot. 11'11 P\IOlkttl ... of llllt. nolk•. All«IMI~• ftt ~Hltiollllllt C•Hllltrl I CAlllCATUklE "iATCH co no , ... t O•TEO: Jurtt ... lt10
departme'nts and agencies. ~ St1>""111bl:r U, ll, H Ind Oclollt• J. O.ted A11tutt 28. '''° P11bll!Jled OrtflClt COf1! 01l1Y ,llot, 0 Id II " " ., t~ !o11ow11tt PLASTICS & c;Hf.MICALS
A the t • T ht. nearest lhing to havina: y our helps protect 1um1 from bruiain11. lflO l6fll.10 VERNA ILA SISK Se~t~ti..· 15, lt10 1611·10 II rm haf,tc-In I II ncl Pit t WIEST EI N INC.
mong presen agencies own teeth is po8Sible now with a You m1y bile harder, chew bet· Adml11l11r11r11 ot ti>!! E>1tt1 :r,:;~ei:;t 1,. ':',m1~1-s,11 ' " 11w: wi11t1m £. O'G•Nof1,
lbat would fall under t he EPA p lastic cream d i!KX>Very that AC· ttr, cat mort naturally. L EGAL NOTICE MITCHELL 0'"l':T ·~e•;;'c'O" de«den• L EGAL NOTICE J11 Gr"°'~ Sc11rl!dettr, 1t011 1111,., DATE~~MJ=' 11, "'°
are the Federal W ater Quality t ually hold• both "upper•" ind Fui:ODE~T may help you speak ... ,..,,, .. 1 Cl•IC Clftlllf Orl¥t WtH Awi .. N .... ioort ~•<h. WOLFSON, W!INElt. lt.AT9f'F
Ad • · t ti th N t' I ••tow"•" as never before nM..ible. mDtt clearly .• be more. a<"· "·. c S111t1 tn ""''¥ John Ft •nt ndti. '"' N, a l.AlllN C'A'J
m1n1s r a o n, e a Iona lt•o • revolutKlnary cfi~~er) T he S""'Clal p<nc1\.~1 nt dis· llllT~:"J~~T~~u~" N~'f:~Ha11 s11111 A111, c.1111rn11 n 1fl "·lflfl F':rc~~.,$•1t:mo~ ••bet Ito Sin Joa· lllv: P111ui11 J , Wollson. Air Pollution Control Agency ,-, Ttl: •u.mt c r1TtFICAT11 Of' 1 us11t1s1 u • 0 _,.1 P•rt""r
• called FIXOOEN..,., for daily home ptO!el' lelt you spot IXOOE?o<T duc':t... u~:::I~":: .r"ui:~'.' ll~l~t~r. ~j Anorn.~· .., Adml11l1lr1lrl1 l'tCTITIOUI NAMlf ~~l~S'•u~::ri;~, ~~h 0-"fSO: Juiw ''· 1f10
part or t he Environmenta l u•. (U.S. ·Pal.)3,003,988) Wil.h with pre:cia.ion ,,, where J)ttdedl 151. ,,,.,,Mes.. C•lllornli. "n"' '"' ,,,_ Publlthtd Ortnot Ce••t 0111r 1"1101, T,,. vflClertltntd do c..-1111 fhlly '" Jo' sc~•tdd~• I Mlrt A, orotllfi.11. 1 -• ,,
C. n I r. I Ad mm. •st ti' F NT d t Ono ··~··,,,, .•• m•y ,,,, lor • 511>!tm~· J I 1J n lt10 1'21·10 COndVCllnt 1' f/lllltltU ti lll N. Hl rbOt OU ITTHlflt Sl,'.UTMAH l r a On, IXCIDli: many en UU•'llferl t!tl11111,11rm ,"•m,' ol -"kT ALA CA RTE ' ' ' ' lllvd., Stll!t Ant, Ci lllarnlt, llnd!!r l~r HlnrY FlrMtldl l Tltlfllll1t'a•LATT
pesticides research a nd con-now eat 1peak lau11h, with little hou r i . nture1 that fit are •nc:I t '' •• d I rm 11 como0$ed Of 1111 11e1111ou, firm n~m• Of GEMINI t lld 1n11 1 1ch1•d B11>er ,101115110111AL COlllOIATIOH
tr.I. and r'd'.at·ion control. The ••otTY o'r cknt~m comin11 looae. e11en t i1 \ to health. Sec your 1o11ow1n1 ":<™"''' 1¥1101• n1me1 In 11>11 LEGAL NOTICE »Id urm 11 cornpalld °' lh• 1011ow1n1 St•t• 11 C11l'ornt1, a Y: ltobfrt A. GrHnlltld,
F1 XODENT form• a n ela1tic dent ist re.11ularly. Gtt ea&y·t~ 11111 ot•cti rtsl6ef'let 1' •• lol1ow,: Hl'IOll9. who1t "'mes 111 lull t11d 11l1<tt Of•,..• Coun••: At1or11111 ror
EPA would have an estimated ...... m•--t•·t ··t-.~b the .. ~ F1XODENT Denture Adhesi\'e Gtllkl Lltdlt•d., 111 Vlt Oulto, NOTICI! TO CllOITOIS ol r••ldenct .,. II lollowl; On A1111111 '"' 1t10, bllort me,. NOllfV ""ltlonlltll ''"''"'" ""' ura, .... lli:t 111:..., """' """" NtWllO"! llttth, CtMo•nlt ... SU,.1 1 101 COUI T 01' THE 11•1111 L. Moo<t. 1U3 llloclts O•l¥<t, llul!Uc In Ind for U lof S!1te, --1!~ STATI! OF CALll'OltHl.t.
budget of $1.4 billion in fiscal thock of bitil'll ind cbcwin1-Cream 1t all dru11 counlttl. """ t·~~oon, l'OJ \Ill Oua<I. NewPOl'I $TATI D" CALll'OINIA 1'01 Coit• M-. C1lll«11l1. • ..... red Jti G•ttot¥ Scll•l<tdl!, Hf<\l'V COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES I S1.
)·ear t971. lltac~ •• larnl• TM• COUNTY 011 0 111.ANOE J•-T M4¥t llll ·-Ot1¥1 JOM Fern1N1e1 tnd l lc:lltrd Armour f'thl Ill k dOtl lltl'ttl 11111< Otttd SISl'lfl!lbtr 14, 1'10. Nt. A"'"' cc.i Mt .. Ctlll.,;.nlt ' llbtf' trwwn lo mt lo H 1111 ..,...,., ' •Uc• Y 1
"We view the establi'shment 1111' J•t~Jofl E$lllt ol JOHN c. O'LAUGMLIN. olf:i Ayg..:11 21. 19111 . """°" ........ •r• wb.icrlbtd to Ille wit"'" IOI-°''" !IMI lie 1• \llct ,rttldtlll " Gertld Ll<k''1rd O L lnatr-t t rtel Ktnowlt<lfed llley ·~· ••ti C1t1IO<T> Molcltr1 lilt. I tO<"Wlllon.
Hair Style
Course Set
At College
Creating coiffures r r om
llnruly lock!i i5 a specialty o f
.studentJ; enrolled in !lie ros·
n1etology department a t
Golclen West College.
And since the vocational
program w ill move to an
eight-hour day this r a I I ,
day, 5ept11111ber 20th.
Don'I 111111 A111erie.•'1
111 lim• f1vorile m uli·
~tudents will hav e an evenlJ!~~~~~::::~;:::::~~~~
longer time to prac tice their
arl.
The change. according to
Cosmetology Direc:tor Y..fary
Callahan, will not only benefit
the studen~ but members of
local communities who can
take advantage of the ionger
hours.
Students. \\'hn do all of the
salon work. wlll be a ble to
turn out halr styles for
patrQnS from 9 a.m . to 2:30
p.m . weekday!.
In case some people might
reel apprehensive about serv.
ing a s a "guinea pig," Mrs.
Callahan assures that the
students have had pelnty or
practice befl>t'e being h1med
loose on cu s tomers' heads.
Interested s tude nts m a y
enroll in the program through
next Tue!lday . No registration
fee is charg<'d, but students
must purchase ..-rtyllng k it.
Since It's a vocational pro-
gram. studtnls art. not re-
quired to t:nroll In any othtr
~lasses. A f t e r sue<:ellsfully
i'bmpleUng lt, they art award-
ed ll certificate of achieve-
mtnt and art el\glble to take
lM stale board ll~ensing U ·
amlnation.
STARS
S.,.l~•v Om1rr It •~• of •t.1
worloil'1 tr11t 11trolc91r1. H l1
celu111~ i1 Oft• el tho DAILY
PILOT'S 911tl f1tl11111. ,
SOO " C lllo I 0 Oec111ed. ellll · M-t -ofo ~ ll@ltll«MrrJ o1Nrw 1191Md, tnd 11 1 t I rn 1· •tMt COCJl'll'I'! NOTICE IS HE l lEll'I' GIVEN to ti>!! Ja""" T Moort Kiiied lllll .. ,,,., •ullo t lllllorlrtd 10 rnakl Hild Hflllon tnd
• 0<i s.ert. ll, :tlll, tlo;fott mt, I NoltrY credllor1 OI lht tbowt nt mtc:I 11«.e<l..-1 Sllte ti C1lllor111t. COFf'ICIAL SEAL) ll'l!t t f'fldtvll In Ifs lltlltll, 1nd 11111 11\f
ubllt e.i" ""', 1°' llld 511!1. H •oor11Uv 11111 tit ""'""'' lllwlnt cltlrnt ''alns• ,,,. Coun11 ot Los All9fl•• " J°"""' E. D•YIJ . 1taltmtnls a1rtltllllCI In lht hlretalnt •Poe'' Ge 1 d Llcldli •d •fld ltlley ... 1c1 decedent t rt rtc1Yktd 10 111r 11\tm, o.. Al.lllull 21, 1110, Ot1or1 f114!, 1 Nct1•Y Nolt•Y P11btk, CalilOl'nl• H lltlofl wbwltio.' 1w .,.i, ttr-•11911, JidtlOIO know/I to me IO OI 11'11! l>trMlnt ,..(111 tht 11tcta ... ry ¥0\lt:,,.,S 111 t~ Offl<t f'Wllt: 11'1 1,,,, Jot .t.lkl Stlll Hl'IOt\1111~ llrlnclott Ollk l I" I
whoit namet 1'1 tUbKrlbff 11 !ht ... 11111" o1 11111 cltr~ of Ille t ll0¥1 llfll!!led c,;.,...t or •-••Id ltttit L Motrt t rrd J1mts T Ort111t CllU'llt' irt ""'PETEI f LAStCAk
lnslnimt nl •lld •c.k"""'led9ed llley e•· to OllHl!'ll tlltm wllll tllt ne<:11o;.r, Mo/:Jlt k-10 fll4! 10 lie IN HflOl\1 My Comml11loll Ex11lrts •omc••L SE•LO tt11IO!'CI lht ''"""· ' June ti 1t10 ,... (OFFIC.IA L 5EALI -.it:llfl'I, le Ille llllCle<1I-11 C/O -· n1mes Ire wbterl-IO Ille ,..nnln , II !led O' C I 0.ll '!kt, Sub9c:rlbtd lf'ld tworn tt bt!o.-. rnl lllfS
Mt rv I( Htll•Y WALSWOI TH, SEIDEL ' Cll A!L, 1611 IMllUl\'lfl'll •nc:I t d!-ledtea llllY t i · A Ub 1
1 ll ~!11~1 ot~ 1 y I U 11111 lll Y of Junt, 1110
Nctirv Public Ci !llo•nli Wnlcllll Ori¥<!', SI/lit 209, N~POI'' 811e". Kuled Ille ... mt. 1:~VI 1 em ' 1's.J..,O ltOULIE M. GtNfHflt Pr!nclPll Otll(~-1~ Cttllor11lt '1'60, wll kh b Ii•• Pl~t ti IOFFl(IAL SEAL ! NoltrY ,.ubllt:. Ct tlMrn!t
Ortl'fllt C011nt' 11Y1mn1 of ttle unt1t118""' in 111 m1tttr1 lleverlty Gtlll11 011ntt Counl'I'
MY c .... mlnlon e ... 1... Pfl'tllnlf!I 10 lllf flttlt ot 'Miki dec:-111, NO!lry f'~bll<<•lllor11lt LEGAL NOTICE Mv Comml11lo" E:t•l .. 1
N<w 14 1•72 wllllln lour montl•1 111" Int lirtl Lo1 -"nllflet Countr M1rdl 1, 1t11
II 1111 lled. o ' c t 0 II Piiot l>UbllCtllon of tnls nolitt. Mv Commhtlon Ex•l•n •OS.ALIE M, GINTHtt r 1 , I rt"9t °'' 1 y ' Otltld A111u1I U. lt10 A111111t t, lt1J CeltTl,!CA,T• 01' IUSIM'Ell, STATE OF CALIFOlll.NIA I ~:; embo! J, lJ, )t a>!CI (kt~;..~ Htltl A. O'U Y,nlin Pubtltlltd Ora ... t CHll 01Hy llllol, "ICTITtOUI NAMI COttHT't• Of' LOS I NGl!LIEI l SS. EKKlll•I~ ot '"~Will QI Au1111t K t'ICI kolemlltr" I, I. 15. Tltl u~e•1l1tled clo c1rtily 11>1!¥ tre M.-.• GoJd -· ""'b' .m•k• Mllemn tlle 1b0Yt ntmf(t GKedenl 1970 ISJt.to cOl'ldud!nt • bll1IJW~• t i 'IOI W. Octtn lll'tll 11111 hi 11 Viet fl'1tlldt~f of Gold WALSWOltTM, SllOI L I. CI AIL Fron!, New11ort llt1ch, C1lllOl'nlt, llf'l(ler Pltitlc St rYltt 111C .. a c;0,....rtllOll, -ti 1 ---~--'0:::;;------!11'1 Wtlltllff Or1¥t LEGAL "OTIC E tllt llc:!ltl0111 llrm n • m t al !hi ot1ltl-rs i l>ovt n•mff, tNI 11 duly
T-'1'11 HIWPO•I lttch. t t ll lll'ftil .,... ... "~nc1P1Hr" of NtWP<lrl •nd t n t 1 t11lllorl1ed to m1t1 ••ld Hllllon '"" "''' NOTtCI! TO Cll!OtTOIS T•I: 171') 14l·fffl 11111 llrm IJ tomPO!ed of tt>e lollowlng t lll!lt vlt In lfl l>fhill, Jnd 11111 111•
SUlll!ltlOI COUllT o" TMlf •"""'' ... ·~l(utrhr NOTICl 01' INTENTI ON TO •HGAOlf PlrM1<11, WllOst lltmes In run I nd .. ,.,,, 1t1tt mtnls CO<lltl"" In lhl forlOClll'll
STATa C., CALl,.OINIA "01t P11bll1ll.O Ortn•t (1>11! 01111 PilGI, IN Tttl SAL• 0, ALCOHOLIC Of r11ld1nc1 Ire I I fOllO\Oll< Mlhlon 111bscrlbecl b1 H id coroor1llon.
TH I COUNTY o " OIANO~ Seot1mbt1 '· •• u, n. 1t10 UU·10 •IYE IAOl!S Nell It. ,,,.,.m, lllG w. Merlll•v lfl lrUf. N1. l ·"'tJI ~ptemhtr II. ltlG LtM, Sllllt Anl, Ct . MAX GOLD
f •l•le ol LtltO'I' MA,HEW SMITH, L E GAL NOTICE TO WHOM IT MAV CONCERN: Htnrv P. Olf'llto. 1110 1'1h SI.. ••t, Sub1c11~ •l'Mll 1worn to btfort m1 lhl1
D•C••ud. 511b!ee! Ml IUUlf'l(f ol lh• UcenH IP· N·IOI, N""'"°" l t•ch. c.. "'" ell¥ ol J11n1. !t111. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to lhe •lltd lo•, nollct J1 lltrtbv 01,..., !1111 lhe Sa<I..,. J, Oltloll, 5'41 Arrowlletd Awl .• (OFFICIAL SEAL I
LEGAL N OTICE
credilOl'I ol "'' lboYt "'""" OKedent 1uPa 11110 1 COUIT o" TME -rll9netl' orOPOtel lo Hll alrol'>cllr l!Utf'lf ,., •• c •. ,,.,. VEI N E. Slt:ETO :._:::;"'·I tlltt •It oertonl ll1Ylll4 cl1lrn1 tQtlnst lhe STATI 0 , (ALll'OltNIA FOi bl:v.,ltel •t ll1t llrtmlttl. descrlbttl 11 0.ltd SePI. U, ltlt NOllry llublk:
Hiid dKeite<'ll ••• •Mlllretl lo Ille llltm. THlf COUNTY OF OIANGI tollo"'l: Ntll •. lltllrtm Sttte of c1Mto,f'll•
/
with lllt llKIHlr, YOUCllll1. 111 !ht oltkt Nt, Al»1M1 CIT~TION tJ?S Ets! c ... 1t 111,hwty, (or ..... dtl Hent¥ '°· O!Plt!o Count¥ o1 Lot AMl1tJ
of the '"rk ol tllt •bow tnlltl~ (Ol/•t, o• 1" 11111 Mitt .. or Ill• P1Hllon lot Mir, N .... PQrt ltldl Sonn1 J. OtllO<t STATE OF CALIJ'OI NIA I to ••eM!nl 11\em, w!tll tM llKHSI,., AlloaHon bJ ll;ILE'I" l.YNN SANOERS, llur1111"t la wc:h lnttllllon, 1111 1111· 'Sltlf ot C1tllorn!1, Orl fltf C<Nntr~ CO\INT'I' Of' LOS -"NGIELES t SS.
'IOl.lehtrJ, lo tt.t ul'l5ertlt~ •I Ille office Ac1oon11, st-rent. dertl•ntcl k 11>pt11,.. to 111~ OtNrlm1nt On 5'PI. I~, 1'10. btlort ""• • Notti"/ W{ltltm E. O'G'1oct'I' "°"' hetet11 mtk<i
ol her tllori tv. CLAYTON I . THOMAS, Too MARVIN 111.AY SANDERSON. ol Alc(lllollc leYtrt<H c11111rot tor hlUll'ICt PWtlt In '"° '°' tt141 $!tie, flof•$o<ltllv $Glttl'in otlll 11111 "' .. President of
Ull!Cl<I lltnk Pit!&, 5ul!t Ill, 1!7U Ven. 1¥ orlltr of 11111 Cll'll!'l, l'Oll ••• t>trtb¥ bY lr1111!er ol '" al~lt bo!~t1r1tt t-•ed Ntll It. lntt1m, H.,,.., f', 'l••llU a Clltmiclt' Wnlern tnc .. • l~tt l ou!1v1rd. St>trm111 Ooks, C1lllor11l1 cltlfCI to IP~t•• bttore IM Judve tkens• ~· tllnt oreml111 1s IO!Jowt; 0 1..ilkt, tllld Sonnr J, O.Kor! kncrwtl lo me COf'llOl'lllOll, -of "'' Hllll-i t tlclvl tllOl, W!Okh k Ille Pitel Of blltl11tq o1 llrnldl ... 111 0.0.rtmtnl I ol lllt 1-. ON SALE GENEIAl , 80NA P:tDI! M tit Ille otflOl'll · whost Mmtl art n1mtt1, 11NI 11 lfo.llY 1111110fhlfCI 1f! mtkl
lt>t llllllersllfltd In t tl man .. , Pf•l1l11I ... lf'llflled Cour• on Otc:emOtr 11, lf10, ti PUllLIC EATING PLACE 11111KrlblG i. Ille wtlllln ~h'Vmen' •NI Hid Pttlllon Incl 11111 tf'fldt 'l'll Ill lh '° ""' fllllt "' llkl dl'Ctdt ftt, Wlllllll '°"' ,, IJ o'clDt-'·'"· ot 11111 .,.,, lllff'I lf'ld A11v-dn;ll'lllO lo '""'"' Ille biutnt:t 1c.k.-ltd1M !Illy t XKUled "" ll mt. 111'11111, Ind 11111 '"' 1111-1111 COlll•I""'
rnonllls ''"' fflt 11 .. 1 DUbllc.ttlOll "' llllt there 10 tl'IOW (II/HI, If lnY l'Oll lllYI, WllY ol Sllt:ll llt:tNt ""''lilt. wilfltd 1rel11t tOFFICtAL SEAL) Ill the lo•tfllllll Hllllon tubttrlt.td ~'I' Mllcf. 1111 "'Ilion ot ltlLEY LYNN SANDE lllS •I • .,.,. tlllrt of 1111' 0..trtmMI ol IEllA M, CAHEnl ••kl w.oralloft. t l't lrllt.
Ollt<t Seotemller II, 11111 tor ""' tdOPlltn ol CLINTON DWHITE Alt:Ollolk llntrttt COlltror. Ill' !rt mill to Noll'1 Plllllk. C•lltor11I• WI LLIAM E. O'GllEAOV
ELSIE A. S"llTM SANOfl SON • .., TEllf~A lllAYLENE '"' ~1,lrl>MI ol Ale-II( B ..... ,... f'rlrKIHI Olllt:I Ill SUblcr!b<KI tnd ,_ft te """' mt ll)le f •KulrlJ al tt>e Will ot SA.NOERSON, l'Oll! minor son tfld Cont•ol, nu o Sl•ttt, sac:rtmtnto. Orlt>tt Couf'll'r )Ith &ti¥ el Jut>t, 1'111.
"" Ibo""' lltlllld dlCtdl!f'll. CltUtl\ltr. >l!Ollld f'ICll -t rtnl..:11. C•li!Onlll •.wu. •1111 ......... NI.,., Otftltl My Cotnlllllllon EJl,ir.. CHAlllLEEN H. I UNOA
Cl.A'l'TON I. TMOMAS Oottd: A,u1. H, 1910, If "'0VloMd b¥ llw, T .... 11ttmlt• t•t -5'•1. 14, ltr.I !OFFICIA,L SEALI
IS1U ""''°'' 11¥41 .• S~lll! 111 w, E. Sf JOHN Lltl!llHd tor ttle lllt ol •lcollollt '"~lllfltot °''""' C0t11 Ot ll'I' l'llol, (MARLEEN H. BUNDA
SMl'fll.lll Oollt, C•lllwftlt 11411 Cllrl blllertt H Tiii form of ..,.rllktllon m1v $fll1tmbllr U, ». 11 '"" Ortobt• '' NOf1,., llutllk • C..lltorf'lll Ttl: UU) n>-8y JANET L. SCllllE INElt bf obfll;..,,, from tny of/let .,t "" ltlO 11111•10 PrlnclPal OHie• In
Publlillftl O•tnt• Cot'1 0•11' l'llQI, C»t111t¥ Cl1'1( Ot1>1rlmt11I, Lii At1ellll Counl'r *'""lie• n "· 2'I •nd <klobtr '· WALLACI. llllOWlf • CIAIN Gl.H IESlAUltANT5, INC LEGAL NOTICE Mw CcmmlulOll £•01'11• lt10 16').IO AtltrntJI t i U w P11btllolled O•tllOt CooSI 1)1llr f'llof. J1n111,Y 11. 1tN 1-------------'-'!lvllt U Otvtr l 11lldl1t11 Stllttmller 15, 1'1'1 Utf.111 STATE OF CALtFOlllNIA 1
L EGAL N OTICE IU IMYOI' OflVt '-'"21 COUNTY OF LOS ANG&L!S I IS. 1 -----=-co-=~----· !Ntw-" •Mca. c1111tt1111 LE GAL NOTICE MOTICI TO CltlfOITO•s 1111111111 J, WolrlOfl don 11tr1b1 m1k• Tiii C1HI .....nn . -JIU 011 IUl.lt TIANS,.11 IOiltll'ln otlh tht l "' 11 ........ 1 •••11'1•• IAI JJIJ A,ttorMY• tor llllJlltMr Nol!tt 11 hfttbt t l•fl' lo lllo tredllo~ el WolllOl'i, WPl/lfl', lttlOff a L1oln,
NOTICI TO CltlOITOltl PublltlllHI Ori"" CNt l Otl!V PllOI, IAlll UM 01 GlAOYS J. MAY, Tr•nthrrOI', ""'°" CllA't, t •tflntrslllo, 0111 o1 1111 SUlll:llllOlt COU it 01' TM• SeollmOtr 1, 1, 1$, II, Ith! 11»·10 NOTICI! TO Cll!OITOIS lklllne11 lddru1 11 1'1t W. l"" 51~1. •tllll-rt t l>oYt ntmetl. 1nf ft '"IY STAt • Oii CALl,Cll Hl .t. ,01 IUllEllOI COUIT OJ' Ttl'• CO$ll Mt1t, (Ol/l'llV ol O~tflel, Sl•lt ol tulllorlred lo m1•t o•fd Hlltlon •NI 1111•
TMI COUNTY 01' OltAHOI. I TITI. 0 1' CALl,OINIA ,Oft C1ll10rni1, 1t1at t l>Ylk trlntl~r It tboUI lo l fffd•Yll Ill Iii 04!11-11, Ind lhl l 111•
Mt. A"'7tt LEGAL NO'nCE Ttt• COUNTY 011 OIAHO• tit mtdt r~ MAOELIHf SA\IAGE, U•tom•n!I tolllalntcl tn "" h)r_r,.. 1!.s•111 ot AUGUSTA I(. WEDGE. HI. A..i'9t Trt~llt•et. WllOff llutlneu •41drtu ,, 121 •ttlllon 111bttrllltld l)y wkl cor11t1,.tlo<t,
IMco.iltd. IAI 111• £1111• ,, THOMAS •• 1 une1 1!10 CIHrbl"OOk. CO.I• Mitt. Counh al .... "'''' NOTICE IS llEIEBY GIVl!N lo Ille SU'Elt!Olt COUIT 01' TMI •nown 11 THOMAS lllENAUO ltUTTElt, Or1ne1, Sttlt o1 C1lllOl'nl1. f'HILLI" J. WOL,.SOH
trldltDfl of I,,_ *"' n•m.U dlCtofltnl ST'ATI 01' CALl,.Oltfill '0111. Otc .. Md. , ... or-IV IO tit t.tntf•rrt41 It SubM:rllled 111<1 1-ft 111 l>olort mt 11'11' 11111 111 Pfl'JOr,1 lllYlnt cltl-101ln•t Ille TMI COIHfTY Of" OIANOI HOTIC£ IS HEltflY GIVfN to tllt IOCtlt<I ti 71t W, lttll Stttff, Ca1t1 MKt, 11111 ff'!' of i-, 111'
Hid dtrlOlf'll ••• '""It" lo 11 .. tl\ftll, A-'"4S (teditort ot lllf •llOv• ntmed d«.tdent Cou111¥ ol OfaMt, 511!1 ti C1llhlrnl1. Eiieen o. OtWllll •
with 1114 ~,., YOllC ..... 1. ln lht tltk1 NOTICa O" MlfAltlNC ON lllfTIT'tON 11111 '" "'IOM 1>1¥1f'le d •llftt -lfttf lllt Stld lnPllWl'lr 11 dttc:,w.d In '9Mfll ..OFFICIAi. Sf.Al.I
ol 1111 t llrk ol llw '"""' tnlllled (MWI, (II" 110 111 lllOIATI Of' WILi. ANO FOlll. ttkl clleldtnl ••• !'9alllred to HI• llllm, Ii i AH llK~ lol ll'Mt, llltwM, -·-"' EllEfH G. OAW!OH to II'"""' '"""'' Wlltl ttw l\fCltJlry &.•nEIS TISTAMINTAltY w(lll "" ""'""''Y YlllClll•l. In, ... ollkt "" ..... Wiii .. !Mt l>ftYl'I' 111011 Nal1ry ,.ybllc. CtllP-1"1'
YWtlttn. le !tit llf'IOtr~lt"""' •! 1111 olllc:o rt I 11 1 , 1 L u L U II A C H f I. o1 1111 c!ol'k et tht '""'° lt'llltltd CMWI. or blll1Mu --•t Modtm Ml lf FWlltll>I "•h'lei..I Olffct In llltlr 11!orllt'l1: C 0 0 I( SEY, SHOEMAl(l!lt Ott"""' lo ttrl'Nflf lhttll, wilt! 1111 _,.,, tllld lolo:lttcf 11 111 W. ltlll StrHt, COiii Lt1 AnttlH Coul!IY
SC:HUMA(Hll. COLEMAN, MINYAIO NOTICE 1s' H1!11£tY GIVEN 11111 """"""''' to !lit lll!Otnltntd ti tllfo ollkl Mell. C-1'1' ti' Or111et. Sltlt o1 MJ Coml'l'llMltif'I l•lll""
tlld ...OWA•I') lU Ttwn 1f'ld Clllllllf'I' H-"nll HOGUE llt• tlled 11trtlln a ol lllt tllor,,.,1; OUlt'fEA, CAR,lfNT flll. C1ntornLI, J-1, 1111
lllotd, Ottf!ll, Ct lllofi'll1 '16M, wlllt:ll Is "'tlltOll lo• f'rotltlf o1 Wiii -tor • IAlll.NES, lllY !INEST J, SCHAi:,, Jll,, Tiit 1111111. '1'1n1ftt Wiii W ~IM t lltrtfr<o l"tll 1nd c..-111• t111 .._ lt,
!tit Oita ol IMlllntH o1fflt""""''ltntd111 tuuollCI ol L1n111"1 Tntlfl'ttlllt,., 19 W MKArltKlr llYd~ II. D. l o• 1116 111 ., .Iller lllt ""' dtr fll Stt>temller, ltlll ltltt 11w ~"" __ ,It ' fUlr.
•II""""' Oll'ltlnl ... It ttle ftttlt Ill ... i. "''"""" r .. lffllt. to wflklt Is mtdt "" H..,.._, klc:ll, C•UI. """" wllkll i. "" 111'. ,, 11:1111 •• ,.,, ti ..... ol Amt •ltt '""' -Cllr'1d -" lfll lr'itlMI 1111 ~. wllllin fWI f!IOllltn •l lltr It. lurt ..... .trttt:Yl11.,_ t/111 ttwt '"' time -iMlct ti M l11111 of ll'lt lllllltrVfhN In •II NTl.SA, >It If. CllemN" A-. Cll'I' If "I• 1fl my o!fkl, t NI In mv 1et1t ~. 11,,1 IDO!llllk.ttlon ti' llllr nolkt.. MICI o1 llftrlltll 1111 "'""' ht1 Ileen Ml -lltn .... ltlnlnt fo 1111 nllll o1 .,.i, Of1nn. tllU'lll TOI Ot.,,.., 5!1tt 91 Ci llo CLl!llll(, U.S. DISTllC'T COV•T
0.led Autlllt H. lt7t tor 5111111111111' n. ""· ti t ;)f 1,m .. In"'""""· Wif'llln telll' tnO!llht lllW "" Pll'llll , Cl!ffTIAL DISTllllC:\' 011' cAl.I· ,. .. ll Nlll(lllt l lttllr. " n. <Pll!lteom ot Dffl•to'tlt<ll Nt. J ... 111-11 Plltlllc:t tlM of 11111 notlet.. It l1r t i kllOWO lo ,... Trt Mlf r ... •" ll'OltNtA
Or ..... COllC'ltf ... Id t:elll'I, t i 1llO CIYk Ctn.... Ori" Otlf!f A111111t ft, lt1t l>Ullf'llSI ~ llld tcld•-· Wiit IW •11 •t• l.IW)(ltl 1111 Mlcll.ttl f', OtkLt'IOll, w...-, 111 tt>e Cll't Ill &J11>1t "111, C1lllot11!t, J. IEOMr TllomMltl ttutt" Trtntl-Mt li'lf 111rtt nt~ .. II ,..,1, Owlllit'I
As'llltlll T!Vll Oftkll' Dtltd s..tfmbtr 4. 1t1t IE llCltlOt' Of !Ill WU! o1 1rt: ........ A. ..,.... .. t --et f•eo:;utor et 1111 Wiii of W. IE. W' JOHN, 1111 tli>llW ftl1'1tof Oee;tcltftl Jt mf OUl'l"l'Nllll, ITUTMAll,
'"' ·-· 'Mll'lllll dttlttltnl Countr Cit•~ OUl'l'IA. CAil,, ... , ••• IAINll Ot!IHI 5-IMibtr ''· 1'11 T1ta1ST•1t. •&.An COOl<Slf't, KMUMJ.CH•lt, COL.MAN, COOICSl,Y, SCMUM,llCMllt, (OLtMAl'I, •'f: lflN•ST J . tc;N,_., J I.. Mttltlll"I "''" ,~ C"""''*°
MlNYAlt.0 t llll ltOWAllD Mllf't,1110 1M MOW AI O UU Mlc>.tlltw I MI, Tr111lltt"1 .,,.,..,,At &.IW
Ill Tl'W• 11111 CMft'" lttff ISi. T-• CMftl,Y It.. "· O ..... H'M 111111 ti Allll!'kt lfTlU Ot ,_,. SWl'llf llrwl °"!tit:• Ct llt«lllt n'41 or. ... , Ctll*"lltt ttMI lfl'WHrt ... ,11. Ctlll. nMl Jtl I . Clll"'°t• A.,., I.el Allfl'"-Cell"""" •tt
Tlt1 Joll4111 Tth Solt.Jiii Ttl: ft).... 0.-llllt'• C1ltt • ..,.., ""'"" 1111' llt.at
ArtorN'f'$ MiL.aJ1<llltr A"-YI Mt l'•llll<IMr A'""'"• fW lattllltl' I K-.... *' A,,._. 1W 1'9'IHlllMI Crtlllt9n
l"vblh.PM Or111tt ce111 0.1111 'llot, llu8!1t!IH o •• ,.., C0t11 0.11, ,.!lot, ,uMlttltd 0.11111 (11tt C11il'I' ,.!let, f'lltlll"9d °''"" C:.111 O•Jlv "llet, '""°n.ii• on"" CNtt Oellv ~111rf. lfftellbtr I, L lS. ~. lt10 1'Jf·IO "1tf'tt'l'ltltr •• 10, 15, IJl'O 1•)1.lll s..llln'lllttr 1, &, 11 tt, lt111 1'Ho/O ~ lti 11'9 tJ00..10 ... "°"""' lf. lt7' 1....,.
SC T11ndl1, Stpttnlbfr lS, 197U JO DAILY PILOT
Your Money's Worth
OVEIJ. lllE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List
Beware of Home Fix Gyp s NASD Ll•tlnt• for Monday, s.ptomber 14, 1970
By SILVIA PORTER
Now as early fall 1p-
pr01ches, one or the most.
Vicious l)'ptl O( home im-
provemtnt gypsters wltl be
.appearini at your door : the
phon y ••rurnac e ill-'
specto~repalrman."
There are no statistics on the
amounts guJlible Americans
throw away to these
racketetrs each year, but the
files of the Better Businu.
Bureaus and other consumer
protection agencies the na tiOn
('Iver continue to bulge with the
lragic details ol swindlers who
h:ive talked the elderly, the
1~·idowed and others out of
hundreds and even thousands
or dollars for extensive but
seedless repairs on their
furnaces-or even replace..
ment of thi.! very costly ap-
paratus.
Almost all of us have some
degree of hiddel'I fear that our
heating plant may b e
somehow defective and
mechanism '° that the oil or
aa.t doesn 't flow properly -
again claiming lbat your
furnace ls dll'llS'OUS.
All lhest swindlers have one
key goal:. to scare you into
buying • new furnace or ex·
p!'nsive parts friim them -
whether or not you netd the
equipment - at price far
above the amounts which 1
reliable local heating con-
tracttn' wouij: charge.
Cl.,..ly t<lated to the crook-
ed .fumace. inspectors are
fraud ulent plumbing .and elec-
trical wiring "repairmtn" -
who also deal In scare tactics
and exploit the a v erage
homeowner's near-total in·
nocence on such matters as
water pressure, fuse boxes
and electric wire capacity.
Whal sbould you do to aVoid
any furnace rtpair racket or
similar gyp?
Beware of ANYBODY who
comes to your door uninvited
and offer to "inspect" your
heating plant or electrical wlr-
a.. ............................. _..,... t Mii. .._ .. AID. •-I b. , __ ...... t. Pfillt • .. ....,,.,.... •...,..., www..,1a., heir A.btcu ..,,
.... OI" p W'D P1C SYS~n. ~U. J.llblL:lt I.It
tile advice fi established loeaJ ACF Ind t.<IO
I f --..... ,,..., Acmtei.~ • dealers on the condlt on o .... ,,.... 11119 .., ......,. ... =.r:.i: your furnace -or see lf the ,.,. MliHt .n
d •• 1." On the Condluon ol NEW YOllll' CAP) ~u 1\1. • ~~·· ~ll, 1• Ua ....,.,. ~ 21!';1 Addr.u J,C,. -Tiit IOllOWlfll bid ~· .. c I m . w \It ~ u1111 Sui ,... ""' Mtnlt.i
-•• •·-··c or see II ••· ~ a1~ 4UOf•· r1P11 '" , •• 1., • 1 h • u1u 1na 'JI-> as .r.e•~, Lll 1 . .0 JV-'"" "'"" -.... "' ' lUlllllfd ~ •.• pl\ Sc 1-1: 1Y. 1"" VII LO 11'1 Aau ,,, Co
local fir. depart-·nt will ••nd Ne t1on11 Anoe:!-'" "'Mi "' ia ""'-"' o~ 111« v~nc:· Sa 1114 ls;lli ATIMn UIC ,,_ -• • 1 ™I 1 ' ''"~" 014 11"'6 v1a1rvn S'I' • Air PrOd ·* f ~ ewr !!IS rnl ll 11 I l~Ql AS l m Wad• 1111 lfio 211~ A!r P<I 1:111.,I) somebody to check the sa ety "°' la~~1111Mjr'ar11~ ~ P,,' Jv, .,,. nr.:111 A. ,. wa111w ,. 1•1i1t 14 ...,.,. Rtd .tot
aspects ~ your furnace for ~~1;tt_!. ere ,::. iii"r: '" t.J.: ~t: tUfri: ~~ m ;t! :•1a.::. Uj\1 1~v. ~1 1~f1{~:
you. Call m your regular elec-clNlll' ..,.ie.t, .. « :',W"' 1\'J I~ J~':: cGl• fl: ~1? ~:~~'1.G 14~ ,~ •1:_.i11 Jn•••
I I 'f "" t •IHlflllllm•1th' 3 a: I 11 :tO 1-· , .. ,~ W•;ji RE ;1.:o !.~ ~\111~1 ·.~ Ir can I you uave reason o 11.m"1~1 lf'flk:f\ t11et: :=•in • .,.. ni r11<nt "' "w•• Tr ~ A~ft.fJu 1 :ro suspect wiring problems ~~· I «beotfl c:,,. ~-: , ...... ,. Tr~ H ii ,f~ :::!f!L..A• 'S~ 111% AICOSl1nd :i.
your regular plumber if your ~c:-lb!:tMJ111::. a=ll~nl Ia ~ f ~: 1"11 Ni • w~'it" M 11.~ 4\li :tr~~ :?:
Pi pes aren't wori.1 .... properly. ~.·~ m"=• ..... •0 Holm EP :a. Jt Tv~ F11. ":~ ,..., :::;• ,..: :a: jl'I AJi.eLwc1 1.40 ..,.'6 HolobM ,.._ II\ UnllK :51.'i I Wlln Mlt 4l'lo * AJl.911llld pl J 1r vou do decide to pursue :' '~..;••· i:liw~ Hoover, , s.i'• ~ Un 1111;m 2~ im w,111 ,.,,,., ' ,,,.. ••~ Pw l.:t:I ~ Oiittet With I cJoor·l.o-OOOt rtl•ll "'9rtlvll, =:1111G1 m , .... 8"1 ~ :=-~ =i~ ~ 1r 1~ !Jl~t ~~: ,.,.,._ II or <om-Ho-i fn l1'4 11'11 U En"'I :JO 7' W!!?.dtw E 11.11 :r:1i1 AlldMUl .150 salesman demand his c rtden· mr11'°"· HllCIC Mt •'-' ,.,.. u! sv1•• '1~ o wr w 211o1t tt A•lltd 1111 ... • AM Ent 1~ ' E""' PJI' 27'Ai 11\lo u Trk.L :u ~ y "" E • ~ AllledS!r J .~ tials. Then, In his presence, :~~p~°"ps 31,,,./n 1111 ,01• n ,, Arne1S1.111 .uo ID UH ... I"' 1'4 A.Uh Chelm call the local banks and /or :iTs ''rric 1:t: in: H~•tt c 11 1 14 IN AIP111Pc .:JJe.
Better Business Bu teau to A CiSlnd 2\io. ':? ~~:~ i~~ ~\.'i m =A~ ':°50
chec k out his reputation. t~~:Cr11 ;: !!'.: JS''2:: i~ ~= MUTUAL :W~:~~j~ By all means. take very :~,''" ~E• ~~ :I'll •""Kea o '"' AmeH I'll.so
ibl U • .,.. Air ~1'111111 '"' 3 lnlr•rd 2,~ •"' ~!!'f/,",', ".-poss e preo1u on again". Al{b•ll f 10..,. 1014 I'' c'1' .. .. .•• ,.. 1, _ h f Bl Albot H 1\/o2tllm'I 11 ~•l'l Ams....,. ome ires,~ d:!{ou~ ~~ ..,111t-., .~ , l~I A!':'D ,1 ,f\.o A"'•"'" i.10
mon. sense. . I . · ~lf1'tnd ,~,,.. 1r.! l~I l;• or if~ 11~ FUNDS . ~:'ri~ ~J: ed Ulto buytng an eXptnSIVe Al Btv '-"' '"° lnte•I ·~ 114 AC1n pl 1.75 • hou ._ __ 1.1-A.Ill llECI 5"" ·~ IOllkl 1• IJ Am C.etr\ .•}lo new furnace Wlt t C1~fl.ll,lg AiPn Gta 5 5'°' j.a oUlll 21 21V. A Cl\tlln I.to
l" ~--k· A!'ll~ 1~ li.li J~lllil. F ..... lh ACrtiUI I .e your need, doub ~""' mg Am 11um t \'JI 0111 j "uln c ,..,,. '4 Obbl• ert.c• comnany prices, and triple· ... ~EIE~b, .~ ,l"' .•.~ W•,1 ,.,. 'IJ Amtv1n I u ,.-A F 7'' 71'1 ~ .,,... 3Z\.:o l3 INV•STINO lncHIPf\CI S,j6 $.1' AOlslTtl ·-checking the future servicing . ..,mc;,~11 50'ili 51,,.. ~f.'l:bl,ts '"" 10 cOM,.AM11s llld1u, J. J •.Oii Am Ou11v,.1
A M\ ~ao>I 1' 1'\li J~llil'I Pel J(? ,~'"" NI!~ YOAK (AP) .~Tct..... ,'·~ 111.;: :~r.~:·~ ~~111t19 :: lJ:Z ~:l:r. ~ •1 •• 1•li~1 lo~owl~ "':; In~ t;ulel 1:to :ao Am Enka 11
that, as a result, we might be
running the danger of 1
devastating borne fire. Thus, a
very large number of us are
probably more vulnerable than
we realize to the-persuasive
patter or the furnace gypsters.
Next Economic Hike
Anli;~ I 11 •~ '"" ~•lvir ~~ llv. 111 Ni11o:::t' ""°"J. Inv lndlc 1.n f.12 ~E e,,~P 11111 .t.rc1 In ti 5 S\li I ll c rn ~~ 404 1tlon ol s.c:urllla l"va B" 10.51 1 .'9 "Gw lld 111'"' Arden M 1~ I •~Im l J\li De•l•fl· In< •r• n~ator1 GrOllJI: A fl'llnl .5G Arlltn pf 21\li 30 ll:tt:r T , f lit 1n1 prl(n 11" wl>lch IDS ndl J .'2 J,96 AGn•n Pl1.IO A•k Ml>I' UV. 134\ 1(1llell J ~ tlwM HtUrllin MUI •.• , ,_,, AmHol11 .~ Art.,.. Ii 27'i\ 11 ktUwd ~ 2\-.;. could lllvt _.. Prot l..f!' l.7t A Home-1.60
Here. there£ott, are the
baste earmarks by which
you'll r e.co gn i z e this
crook-and rules for keeping
out of his way:
To Boost Inflation?
A"'ldl ' '\IJ itwtf E 1: m -""j,.;.,brwllll Stock 11..11 11.5G A Home Pl 2 .AJCC llOf '6"· .....,,_ -• ''' >> > · >•••-> ,, Stllcf 1.62 f.U Am Hosp .'U Aulo C!l 4"" '.j\i; ff, C~ 13\lr l•\lr ,... 1111 •AM V1r PY I .Of 6.'2 Amlnvnl .50 B1lrll Al J"°I l l,r, l!ifY" PC 7'VI ..... Abtnlll 1.71 J.t• Inv Anh 4.o.J· 4.40 AMelCI• 1 • .0
::11.'PZ1n t 1~t: 1~: R'1r:. 1i'1 1~ f"" "°G"~t.:'w FsTi'l.o. l!~el 1!! 11:: ~·~,c!s ' ~•rWd< '"" lO'A I( rll: Ca l l'J ' IN:om l.56 '·'° 1 .... ~ric,,~• ,',·ll ,,'·00li AN11C1s 2.10
An unknown individual ap·
pears at your door and asks to
inspect your furnace. He ma y
drop the name of your local
gas and electric company, or a
n a t ionally-known manufac-
lurer. lf yours is an older
furnace he may poke around
the mortar holding the fire
dismantling your h e a t i n g
bricks together, discover lhal
it's powdery and declare that
the fu mace is "dangerous."
What yoo may not know is
that in th.is type or installation.
it's perfectly normal for the
mortar to be powdery.
Or he may offer you
bargain-priced furnace clean-
ing services -and after
dismanUing your h e a t i n Y
plant. tell you that it's a
wonder you 'haven't already
been asphyxiated by carbon
monoxide or lhat your house
has not burned down around
you.· He refuses even to put
the furnace back together.
Or the furnace r e p a i r
rac keteer may loosen a spark
plug without your knowing it
_ then show you that your
furnace doem't fire properly.
Or he may adjust the feeder
NEW YORK (AP) -Evon
belore it begins. economillt.s
fear that the next economic
upturn will be accompanied by
serious inflation, that old
menace of prosperity.
One reason for the concern
is that the present spete of in-
rlation has proved to be
unusually resistant to eon-
venlional remedies and is
unlikely to be contained belore
a renewal of buying pressure
from consumers and others.
Assuming that a recovery
from the 1970 economic slump
begins by the end of the year,
it very li kely will be ae-
companied by between 4 and 5
percent inflation-lert over
from the previous boom.
The Tntematiooal Monetary
Fund showed unusual concern
about the problem in its an-
11ual report, suggesting that
the United States must use ad-
ditional measures to bring
pr ices under control.
··The domestic stabiliz.atlon
pla n developed by lb e
authorities urly tn 19n \111
clearly behind ICbedule in
slowlng the pace of prie. ind
cost increases," it said.
One of the chief probltm! en·
countered b y government
economists is the changing
nature of the malady. While
common through the eeonomy.
innated prices have bee n
especially prevalent in the
service sector.
That makes a big dif·
J e r e n e e Industrial inflation
can be le!Sened by the use of
labor·saving machinery and
methods. Output can b e
boosted or, to put it another
way, the cost or manufacture
ca n be lowered by tht use or
machinery.
But how ean a doctor's out~
S-4 c • .., .. '°' l•fo Oo c.,,.. put be increased? Or that of a
p11terlro4 11..-1 A. ... 1.,.1. "' ttte Iii ;;;o;;;;;:~--;t;iiiiiiiiiiiiiRf11 i'orli t.lly, lllfff olMI Soy.,_.
Morileb.
COMMODITY
FUTURES
TRADERS
·-............. ' ..... . ·"-..........•........ .......................... ....................
R. J. O'BRIEN
1,DOO'S OF OIL PAINTINliS
WHOLIULI WA.llHOUll
onN 10 THI PUlllC
$5 and up
16lt t . t DINClll. SANT.A ANA PMONf US-M411 ~ OKALlllS vi'.-.NTIT ~
painter or au 1o mob l le
serviceman or any other oc-
cupation in which human
rather than machines skills
1'111!11 P 4\lo •I') 1(111r. 'ollt 26 21 l"*u' 6.6' .JO "'m• ·"" · Am P llOIO .11 l'l1u""' 21\lr n i,o, K••l1lt 2•4 Tl' Advi1., .._,, s.o. 11:7::,tl: F~":,"•.56 .t.llnDv .l~ lllYIU& l:W. 16~ LMC 011 ''" 1"4 AllUl,litd •.51 1.n fUI 81 , .• ,, .. , AmS..·U~ I ffHChm 23 2llill L..rlCI In 2:Mli 24\/o Af\ltrt ,,U •.15 '' OI lo'>•,,.,, Am St>ip .60 lltlll lllt' 1114 lt'llo Lind Rn 3 lV. All Am F ,60 .M • • A Smell 1 tO Bf mllnd J ~ !:::,.. Wd ~ iv. Ajl•l•!t t .22 t .91 ~UI 114 '·" ..... Am~lr to ::rt r:b ~ ~ t:'~ M 11v. ,Jito !~p Fd !::J 1g:s, ~~; ~1~ ,i:n 1~:~ :~ ~:~ •t··10
eu~in W 1141 ~ ~v ld 1~1,;, t Am Bus 1.'IO l . ~"' SJ ten ta. AmS1el i:ou .is 11~t"'i"" »5,. ~ •• t:' ':l:'C~GI ,,• .~ Am Ov,111 t.16 10,01 VI 5J •» i t• Am Sttrll .•I .,. VI 6n Arn¥ llPren : "' ~~ 1·u 3·91 A S1.1111r 1.60 .r. demanded., llttc HI 21 2' ..... BF l J 14 CIPll J,14 1.to '''"' ,·,, ,·..., .t.Sll!I 0,.1.U • ~opue E I 2,.. 2fl Linc Ml• 7'1t lti 1ricm1 •.2' t .ae I( I k • _,., AmSug Ill "
The problem is made all the l:!tt!'C ,~~ 1fit i::1.o11'1'C.... t\O. 11~ i'"r::v•r Y!~ 1·" 11:~~11bG1 /:Jf '1:~ ~&.[,f1 1 . .o llOD lAH >•-,,,.. Elrn ll''-1 " -'" I.OS i'Ji Lt• Gr!!i 7.1' .ti •mw"-o '•• more critical because or the e. c.. 1\; i\i Ll'!ldl ~ ul°; 1, .... Am -E"'inv •. 11 "-ll L•• Rsc:h lJ.116 14.2 Awwi;.i 1 ·;r
llrlt1k1 I 11 l jV. :n M.o G I 13 .... ll~ Am GUii J.2' 5.11 tll':"lik ~·= i·M AW prlf I 2S changing nature of t h e e r U-Se:• l 11'11! IMI Al 1u 111o Am Inv A.M ._ .. l'" >nv ''' ,· •• Am Zlric erwri Ar 1:11; ·~ Me lllrt """ .. ~ Am Mvt 1.11 t .60 . · .... "'""'°" .60
Amer'·can e-~~y whi'ch ,·n e rsvh 111 lTY> 11 Mtm1 Al n~ 2 AmN GU• J.'4 2.61 one: N11 •·" f_jS Ametel'i ..,. ...,.,...., , ..... ~-........... ,.. .. I" , .. •--G•--· LI"' l .1 l .60 •••r. · .......... ...... ......... '" ... ~~ 1;z "'(ip;, ,,, 7.» 1.oom1s ~·vie" Am •nc ·" good limes and bad, is becom· IBl! ~!"~ ~!: ~~ ~ Mfi. 11w 12" Grwll'I , ·36 10 1, c...... JJ.lJ JJ.s1 AMP~, .11G .se ing servic~iented •! W v 1JW mlo M.erm Gr ' ~ Inc.mt 1:11 1:11 ~'.Jf11 1;:n ,;·';Amoe~ '1:0.:a • lmco IS 16 NI ISt-r 2• 21 . Fd Inv S1 liJ L~lll Bro IO" 11j 7 Almted 1.-0
But, when the economy ex-:::::MMe '~ '1,1 MH~i '~ 1~ ,r~ ..,:JC: Fd '~:n ~:..,..,....,. '" 1:" 1.n ::1~.321 90
nd th de • nd I 0 r •111rel 2'/0; 314 ~~ 21.,.. AHOd l 1,15 1.76 Ml nl'lll' 4.Jl 4.11 Af\Cll Hoc.ti I pa 5, e ma •a Ml t •II~ 16f't M.ci < H 4\\ •V. A1tron l.tt 4,U IMll t it '·ff 10.lO Ancor11NSv 1 suvices rises even more •11 S(IW 1v. • M~ ""'• 1•~• ~ ••• HOUthlon: M••1 10·' 11·°' And c1" 1 20 •P lntA 2U l\\ ...... ,,11 3414 ~ Fund A ,,, 511 ~·r· Tr l}'Dt l•.lO ....... ,r.ec"p '7} sharply. People have money to f •aTt, 1~ 1v. =-i: ~: n'I' 1•'4 Fund B ,:10 1:21 M:1:,., ,;a ~1' A11<ao11 i.111
spend on luxuries, and quite ::re 11~ '~ 1' M.~.!•oT ~~ ~ tr~.. ~'.fa ::U ~:l? !~ 'l:~ 'i:!~ ::i sC:-01.ot.
1 th 1 I ,_ II< NG '"" ·~ ..... ,, 1~· 1·-'·°' 1.oe Moody (p 11"ot12'u .t.rctllN .10e fr equent y ese u:1ur es u,.. 1111 c. 1\9 2 Mr,t• G•i ~ 31v. eK11t1 11.u1 .SJ Moodr'• 11·1112·90 Arc111N pf 2
I h ch f h •nlr• nll. 26:iii MIS VIG l •>.,, 15"• Ber• ICnl 1.1' 7.M MIF Fel 7'6' 1·71 Arch OM l VO ve t e pur ase 0 uman '" VPS 16'111 tl'lli Mo ASCII ,,.. 2'111 B .. k Glh :5.ll s,n MIF Gtli .:s, ... ArliPS~c I.DI · th th ood herllfl 2>11 2"' Mod k l ~ 61'i Blllr Fii S.51 '·°' MllUS GV 10 0110·72 Ar!tns OS .21 services ra er an g s. ""''' o •14 ~ MOllwti It 15\lt 16v. Bonc1s1k 5.lS i.u Mii OmG 4·.i ,·15 ArmtoSt , 'Cl
Th bl of ser''·ce m· LN 1v. 1 Mlll'lt Col Pio l \<o 111111011 St '·" 7.jO Mu lmln '" , " Armcb 1111'10 e pro em -1Wi 11'111 •\It S Mo!lm P/ 11 11"4 BOii Fan '-5110.-41 Miit Shri ll ''M ,1.,, Aflnour 1-'cl
n ti uldn•t ~ nearl• so "'' U!U 12!.o. l M -e I I\ f\~ BO$I011 1.d '·"Mui T~t '" 'n Atmll(~ '° a on WO l,l'C l ht Brl.I 53\'J Ul':t ...._,.., s 1~"" l~ Bra-d St 11(.~ IJ.09 NEA. MU1 1:11 :.. ArmRUb l..o
bad if it could be e<>Mned. But ~l:l ~ '~ 1lJ t:l:t,T~~ ~-. 41\ 11"J~,:k c.1,~l; 1,,.1 ~:i '::.,., 1.'t .,.•" ~111c~ ·?
inflation. no matttt where it ~\:..,,11 :...i-o 1~ 1~\; =:(':.:.~ ,J::;: i1 ~fW!." 11:ll ~:fi N~11i:~.,.. ,sif.'io.jf, :sfc~ ~~2'1 begs·ns, soon , spreads. Tt en-~~'I',,' "u •, ,,~ 2w. ~~~1' E• ,.,. 7'4 N1tw s '·1' 10.01 B(H'ld in i 16 .-.11eoF1n .41lti , .. 23'4 ', 11'1 HY Vnt 12,H u .11 Olvld 1; ... ~·oo AllcoM!t •• velops everything, usin g no f'1ytn Mt 1s1? 1s~ ~l~ 1~ 2'l• 23'1<o 111,11.M Fd '·" 7.0I Grwi11 713 1·56 Atka Mtg w1
h . . d t th •r~ Ml l lV.. lt N c 1;~z ,s ~c Fd 1.1' •. ~1 Pl SI~ • 'DI ,·..., All AlcM WI more c 01ce 0< 1u gmen an 11y1°" 1"" , ••r•• 1 l~ '"'"'' 1. o ·a ,.,._ , ,, ,· •• ''"' • 1.0~
d f. ~'''.-0,.,,~Nll Br...., I"" '''' >•>>> "~" • -•• ., •-o\;; ' IP ti · · Stock 7 1• 7'90 Atl•1Cor11 WI oeS 31 Ire Inion D ,,., si, NllC•r II YI C.i>ll Shr S.S2 6.0S Ne! Crlr I" •.• A1111'1 .OV • lctw (II )p,o I NCmp CP 10>~ ,,11t1i Ceril Shr 1G,00 10.00 f\lww Cot i1> •» Au11t1I Oil If the garageman's bill goes """ o •'to< fa N•t, •"'o1 Ch•nnlM F11t111s· · • A Id s "!""Jandl~ . OQ•r co j' 5' N1 & l•V.11 B•l•n 10.Jlil.llNhlw Fd 11.,.17.,. kldof.ew'IO up, or u 1~ ""u raises ,,,_ E '" ,., N11 ':!~ .. 11~ 21 com S.t 1" i.to New wto 11,30 12.l! ••• ~ ,_ ,._ '" "' N•" ....... 1111 ltY> • 1 Ntw1on u.n u Cl ......... ,,.... .... the ren' then their customers ..,"M••' ,>,iv. !l1-Nit Pf! ,.: nre Grwin '·"' •· ' !'f1e11 s1r1 111 111 Ath.._ Ind .. ~ N S.Cll ·~ IN:om ... ,, 1.«I N-·• ,,· .. 13"n AllCTrEI ,.,,. must seek w Jloe increases In ~-•, '•..., -'» N:; 51.w ~ ~:i. ~111e1 ,_'-'! 1.61 0tnci111t 1:10 6.10 AtlCE• 111S.11 -C1 :J7 .... N · Clll~ Gf' · Ornea• .SIS Sn All RICl'lllO 2 Order' tO retain thtit TWMjtlon -TG•'"' ,"," ,",. •.!', sa1 ,fl~ .._,. CiP!I 5.61 6·1 100 fd 17:l'9 IJAJ AllRch oll.15 r--" .... l Fund 1.S1 1.17 101 Fel j.5l , l2 _All Rid'! Pl l in the economic scheme o( om Nim •'4 ..-~~11i ~:;: ~ Frn1 "'·'J •7·J' ffi9wms 1 ·1s i2'.7J A11Acn 11n .110
th' om,.,, 1\.'o . 1111t1s .... :JJi..l; :Wiit ~hr"l' ~~1,.,: Nt!l ll,U l1.ll All••Cl'lem I 1ngs. omo & 3~ ""' N~I• a lJ'4 u 11i P« • ·17 h ' 10 1 :12 .Att1s Cor11
[f this is the case then , how 1:::: .,.., ~~ ;.'Z ~~.,R~ 2:u. '~' ~=~1: 15
""' '· r~ ~~ ::~ ~ :~~::=Pr:•
can inflation be controlled ? ~:: .. If( ~n ~= ~Jr 6~ 1i~ ;m ~:X.y ~:l:1~:~ ~:~f :~ ::11 ~:tt :~': .:J:
Th t• th t' th t ~on Jloc:k 1i41 :27 NW N G l lJ, ~ Grw!h .S.lt S.IO Pfftr'I SQ '·l' 7 24 Avco pfJ .20 a s e ques ion a !""'''d 7l't 11ti Hw .. ~~~ '"" ljV. ~~'f" J-t ~f: P• Mut J. s l.1J AvttY Pd .10 stumps even the experts The antran II? I ~~ Nuc1 Rsc "" \) c 1 Grtn 10· s. 1o's. Pnlla ll.'1' lJ '' Avne! 111 -»P • 0011tr L 14\'I 15'.r.' ~Art v, 7h 0 · · Pllorrm .•~ e.st Avntt or.I.JO I M F .sled that h Oro s l l'o ·~ Ip w t "" ,,i,; (Otl'IS Bel 4.27 '·"' Pine S! '94 f '' A~onPd J. lo . . . sugg per aps °'"' Yr ·~ 11-'i kl• 10 2f,,., c w1111 All 1.21 1.J1 p on Ent 5:96 ,:,1 Au11: on )J1 "the broad instruments of rw1rcr lS'f> 16"'4 , 11 1v. 1 cwn~ c l.•J 1·~ Pion Fnd 10.2' 11.21 ~l'tl Mqt '" 9V. ttr T,-1•Wi 11\.\ (omp At. I.JI t . I Pl•n Inv f 20 10.0J
financial policy," such as ~: ~: ,: ~ .. ol<Yc.r• 1~ .... 1~ ~::::"8., t: ::g P•J~~.,,..,~'." '°·" ::~,.}".it ""''""''sed by tilt Nixon ad· UICll " SY, ' PEC hrl 12~ ll\'I ""'" Fd I.JS '·°' "' Er1 • fl f!J 8111 CE 112 -r:y . lll'H C I l :ili P.ost Br •IUo 61~ ornstk l.I •.17 N Hor 21.02 1 : 1 B•IC 018•:~ m1rustrat1on. may not be "', '•"' •'"' 111, P-.c Auro s1.1o flt. concora 10.o1210.•2 Pr• Fltl'lcl 1.so 1.so B•llG oK4
h . th n, I I I~ PK FIE 2f l Consol In f .7J 0.2'J Pro P<Wlf •.2t •.M BallQPnt .15D eOOUg ln emse!VeS. ~,t• Du 6'h 7 P•ktll Co l ;m i-11 In Uf\IVltt Provdnt 4 n '-"' B11119P ~ o • .,, ti -···-• I >'• Ollll Ml 6.SJ 6,52 ""•~t>o' •..• • !> "~ Cll 1.34 It said that additiona l means r11n p ~ 'l\t p,;;p Dr n t'A: on! Ctl\ 1.ss 1.'2 Pii_i,..m Funds• 81rik oi NY 1 'ghl be to t g:;Js Fd •>JO ~ P1rl(W H , o · sorp Lei 11 . .0 14.7$ E<rult 6.41.1. 11 Billll Tr 1.M m1 necessary coon er v Mfr 161-) 11,"' Piui.,. p , I!; ~111v C•r. to.31 11.u G-11 11.li n " B••b OH 1.511
wage and price increases and Del<°" l~ ~tt 3t1~ ~:;/'-Mt l~ 1~ C~~ ~8.~ ~:f' !:~ r::... ~·1~ i ~ g:~~ ~:c ·~
I d ·r. II u · Dtllll I Int All 1:\1 p In T 'l(~ 2 dtVt ll M SJ.o:I $1.G:I ln'tflt ,·m. ,.SI B1re1 Miii t name spee11ca Y an in-o.uir Ch s 1 52 P:-'E ... ln 11? ~~ Del•w••• G~1."ii ii v llra 6."91 1:.1 B11esM1 111 1
comes policy" which can °"~ \•,nf 14""' 15 P• G&w •,:~ ,.,,., 8.~~ ~1:1,11:n ,,',•,•,•,• •,:,,','·lo' R:l~1n1ngl'1.5G ' • • ' llV. l9•.1i Pt!!ll P•c ,;; ~ 0.11• t .14 6.11 Alnlret 11·:n u :oo B•111cht.D .10 mean . many_ things'. ranging -:i.:mE 1fl: 1Jt: ~:r:~1;-"• 37,,. 3' Dr•~•I 1 ·" 11.16 ~'-"' Fd • 66 5 09 B•Kt•l•b .10 from 1awborung lo direct con--~··,er I• 1"4 PhRell pf JS 1' Or1v1 Fel 10.U 11.M hustr 12:11 14'.02 B1vukCIP .so • IC nc • ''""' PMI vb '™ 11·~ Drtvf LV 11.40 12.49 cudOt• Funo.-8Nrlna1 1 trols on wages, prices and E:;j'~,,.JM 15~ ,,,. Pi..,1on ,.,... fio E•1011&How1re1: _ tnt 111v 11.t2·u .11 Bt•I Foi 1 ~· -• 5"o Pl kr1 ~7 4 Dilan t.n 10.-Sod 2NJ 12 S6 Bedtm•n .~ credil. ldSll L I\\ 11'1 P:ir "HI( 11 11\lt Grwlh 10.3111.27 Bil 11,J,\ 11:36 Beet Dkll .JO Dew Jon 27V. 2t Pro Golt ~ 3"11 iricorn s.n 6,00 Com St .57 t 52 Bft<l'I"' JSb Despite any add i t i onal 0ov11 ca iti.r, 20 Pr1111 ..,,.. 2in J~\ S11«1 1,33 1.01 Stc11r11v F1111111' Btico Pet .;ci t>rew NL 1'-i l PrUd Ml<1 2 2v. ~lock 11.'1 ll.02 Eoutv 2.66 2.11 Btlc!eil 1.60 melhods that might be used by oun111n o 12~ ,,.,., p11115 HH » 2!.'1 Et1trt1 1..se 12.66 tnvtt1 1 °' 1,. lltldn9H .-
the Nixon forces, a lot of fj'1~... lfv' lf"" ~::gs5 ~~ I~ l~ ~~:! ~ 1~::; 1!'.ff Ultr•Am I:~ ~:l'J ft:ll =(=
.conom,-815 are bett•'ng that ~.,,",,~ •,.. •\'J ".~~ 1v. 1VI Ener1v 11...s,11 . .s t 11t<5 11:1J 1••i BM>l1 co 1 .... ~ ··~ -~ t\lo ElllPl'M JA .... '"" c1n ·" 1.11 BPl'llll• 1.60
the recovery from ,._ 1970 ,c?E. L.1b0 1~ 19"A.''' L•,-,
1
'11~ n E1111nv •.ot t .'3 ~"" Fo 1 '' 1.•2 Bflllll• Pf l lllC .... Sy, ••• r..,.11"1' SI 1• U Eau! Gfh 1.12 I AD ,J,Hlf3.tS B-llCP 1.4'0
slump is going lo be made ilt!'lv~~ 1i~ 'itt =.rc'" ~ m ~:~.Pr• 1lfi . I ll 1 t~ ::tt l::ll :H:jg
more difficul t by 1 he !"•',,,•• •,~ '•"'•'•,.,,cM, ,.,.. lt Ever11 '" u .11 11m• Fu11111: B_,,.., ,, l.'t o• 5 !'1. ~ 0 Call VN V C1pll 1.12 7.t: Btllll""°I In
persistence or rising prices. ~!ct~~~ r1• ;~ ~~.u y~ 1f 1'~ ~:~d Bii t:ll :: ~~:~' ~-'i 'l62 c:~:c Pfo~p 'l"i;;J 4V1 514 R•nib E"I 17\.\i llt.r. Fed Grlll l • .u 11 h B t Qi t 06 Be!h Sii l IO
AND ASSOC., INC.
164t w .. tcHH Dr., """°" ..... 17141 642-8006 Check Your Horoscope
E Sv1 1~ ,,, Rive~~· '°' l l Fl<I C•ll lD.24 11 . I Inv 1~n 1.40 Bio 'thrH :'° El ,. 57 '3111 A1vm ~ ll"lo 1~ F!d Fund IJ . .S. 14. w nv GI 5.21 s 7D lll•ci< Ok .•• El Maclul ~ ~'14 Recot: q '101.'e ~ Flll Trlld :211.lf :n.07 Hvt r tnv 12.31 11j.5 81altJohn .~• Em11s on 1JVI ,, Jltt c~ »I? 31 Fln•ricl•I Prot: ~Cl•• S.99 l.S6 Bliss llllt 1 Eneroy C 71\lt 2'\li ll lddr Pv Ullo 161,;, Dynm J.56 J.to rm Cl •.11 ''' BlodC: HR .l6 Entr11 llt ~ N fl:llfi Sto 70 Joi l..OU~t l .)I l.70 tll SI Jt.1060..SO Blvt 8tll 1.lt Ennis 8 '"' 4\IJ Ro.II Ex :n~ lUi Inc.om S.I 5.66 !Nelmen F1.11111>: B~lnt Go .olt
Write +.t WMllZ Nr#Si.ltwt' ·~
~ ................................................................... ..
As the market changes, so should your stlwtegy.
tnvestment 1tretegy which "1ll'f hew beerfvalld yesterday may be less
so tomorrow and should be reevaluated in the light o1 recent economic
and market devetopmenls.
That is what our Research Department NI done 10 help you cope
wilh the coming phase ol the market.
They have prepared ~ new tnwstment Stralegy Memor~ndum 1
which ouUines four categoriff of 1tock1, twenty·IWO selected 1saue1 1
tt'\81: we leel mertt increased kweator attention.
For the latest oopy in our series of the lnYHtmenl Strategy l.Aemo-
randum. el no obllgaOon. limpfy PNil in the eoupon below.
Name'-------------------~
Addi .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Oly'--------&ote Zip Codi, __ _
Homo """"" Bua. """"'-------I)
[fil+tuttan
More than brokers.
&."-..... '' 4 .... .... ,.. ...... _ .... ,......,
Lolli ... -.._.. I z,•Gtl
&.......................................................
Entwlll I I 'll A<lbln M 20 nv. ,v,m•, ,J·!? ,',·! Am 11'111 ••....•• 8ol1C1' .l50 EOll Corp lVI 11\i RDMloll 5 !!i II • •'" ·•• Flduc S SJ 1.06 Bona Ind .67 E11ull Oii lov. 10\li A~ c 111 m Filtn 0 1, 1.n 1.3' Scl1r1 vr11v•ll BoollMth l 21 Er!! Tee: 1\~ 1\11 AUi S!ov ''V. 2JU. Ftl ltlGlh 1.12 7.'1 Sltln llt1t Fd., Bordf~ 1.7() Fii Ctta 1'4 2'4 RYll'I Ho 'JV. 11'4 F1I lt1Sllt. 1,4' ,.21 8tl 11." It." BoroW1t 1.15 Fib t s ~~ s Sldlltr l"4 Fii Mu!ll 1.n .15 C111 OP 7.n 7.1J B(W'mlM '°
F1rrlna ltW ~ 5<"'111 E 3111 m Fst M11 6 . .0 '·" SIV<k ll_jt, 11.56 Boo; Ed/1 i Jl Flndl1v 1~ 1111 5cflOll '" , YI Fst Sien :M.S6 31.11 l"" lnGt 1.11 l·/1 eoums 1ni F!narhl ' 'VI Sd CPlr 1~ V. Fief CIP 5,S6 , • ., VPlnS! t 3t . I Bri nl!Alr ~ Fit llo1t •1 •211 Sci Ind J•1 4 Fie! Fnd •.U ··.: ync.r Gt .1.lO 7,lt llrloeSt J-FitG Jte. 1 I Scot Sons lf~I 'la'" F • Giii ,,,1 5,H TMR Ap ,,tJ 10 $3 ISrlJIMY i 10 FS! WFln ll4 4 SCri.n H :211 21 Fnd Glh 11.,1 41.ls Tt~cllrs I .JS ,.1' llrl!IM1 11•2 ~:;:-i:p 'j,~ lr A t~l~~o p' '~ ...... ~=· ;Ji ,1: +~~~: l:" ,:7' Btll Ptl .32t
For•! Oii 11v.11;>Ji. Stll CmP 11'~ 1~~ Fr•nktl11 Grouo: Ttmo Gt 21.f!:u.ls ~' PeHr fri.::n. Forml<r J l V. 5eristrn °' ·~ ONTC 7,02 7,19 Towt M" •.3t ' 10 wy tit .90 Fast Glnt 301.i 11" eG > , • ., ' Grwlh S.Jt $,,I Tran C.to 4.Sl 1.0I Brkwr GI 60 Fotom J41. 4.:\ ·~ 'u• .~ '6V. u111 S.J •.n Tr1v 15:<1 1 n 1·" BklynUG l.12 '"'I C11 s"" , llln<IOh 5"' s"" 1ricom .It 2,07 Tudor Fd ll,'4 l .Joi Brown Co Frn~ ft E ...f flll mlill . M J\'o N Freldm 1.2' 7.,J TwnC GI 2.N .ff BwnSMrll .10
FllfYtW 1" j" S.li.S> S I nt Fd frMllt •.rt 1.1' TwnC In<: J.71 •.14 1111(\'Er 1.70 F-,.,.,, ,.,.. .. SC• W•I 1J" 1oll4 Fllllll Inc Grp: tJ1111 Mvt 1.u t .02 Budd ~· .~ FQIHI .... 4 •V. SaN Tel :M\li :1J Cmrc 1.31 it.11 U11 Id I 2 t" Blldd o 1115
trlnkl ln-. lJ Sw G1CP 14 ~ Ind Ttd 10.11 11,11 Unllftl Flill'llh: llud!lfl 111 .IM 1111 C1•11 '"' " S.OUn Gi '~ n:u, tm...c: 6.'6 1.°' Un C1oi!I I. .IJ Bl,ldt Pf.j,O
IS SVC' l~. I•\\ 5w E15¥C: 1•14 11 f>!IOI ,,15 •.n Accm '·°' • "' llvt'f"IO'ar9 1.10 Atr<lk I JV. s.-• \lo Flttlcl Arn 7.S6 1.21 •-ll.Y• 12.17 Bulow• w .60 ICll'll!t "-1\lo Stin.s.J: 70 21:y; Ct ltwY I.SI 7.11 Sclen j·~ j·U Bllftll Jl•ma ~~'~tr J~ 11: 1:: .. •rr.1J ~,. ~ ~B~ ;:~; I::~ u~:"t.n 1·ll 7:~ r.m'nt\·.~
teltl 1'' 21,ji 1'11"1• Str ·~,\II G;;,,; Sec: YtlN' l lr.t Fd : &utl!\1111' 1,77t ~fffl 7'• 1 tr•w c :U Ape• F I.SJ 7.IJ v,1 Ll~ 5.51 'M Bur NPI' !If.SS anti! 'l ''\Ii jubsc Tv 11/\ r;, 8•1 Fd 1.,S I.ff lncom •.30 •.10 Burnclv ,10 tin w 21'4 n ~I F l'J Cflf" St 11.6212.10 Siii Sit 4 45 4.ff Bu'""' .IO ob Rub 1\(o. J jrt llt F• jV. 6\lo Gt11'1Fd A 6.jS 4,,, VnctS slll 6,22 '· Busl!UriY .NI l::•::':':'::::'=:':~:::::•:•:•:•=:':':::'n=JGr111 Ind 1. 111,31 V•ndrb1 !·'s '· 1 Gr1p~11 !'·'2 U,12 Vanod .!4 3.IJ Gv1ron • 1.9t 21.'9 V1r Ind" 4.1J 4.60 !'bot C11 .70 H•m1t111r1: Vlklna s ,, 6.11 11 Fln1n1 l:=============;I H~I '·" '·'· W111s1 ... 1·~10.•s •ll1hn M~ 11 Giii 1.» '·'!Wish Mu 1, ... I .. C•mPlll • H•rbor 1.11 1. W•lllnoln Grouo: C•nlPS. 1. o Who c.,.,7 Htrtwll •Mo .... E•11lf 11.(11 ••. n Celn ~ .60
NP other ri1w1p1p•t h1 011
world &•rt1 1Mvt yo11r &or11m11°
tilty lib Ylllf &Orlltllllllify tl•il'f
11twip1p•r J o1l. It'• tfl• DAILY.
PILOT.
HI. Cll"I 1.1t I .It tw~I 1j.t'I' U,(lf Celn P.K l.:JO
HMb Gor 6.56 t.5f; ~OMI . .0 '·· C1nelRel 1.11 ktdtr '·°' '·" t(hv 7.10 C111 C 8da t HtrllH 1.11 ! 0-'"" '·" t.9t C•rbtUfl 1.5111 i1 M"lll 1l.1t IS.71 Wrlltll 1! I' 1111 Cltlhle .61
r:411t>111'!1! "6 j·" Wlllllr ·r: f CIA Ct.Ch S C:M oe1n1 ..... .12 w.,, tnll .• l·n C•tPll 1-'t !I Glh l ... •.02 W!l ltf\11 l , I I .:t:I C•PT(ll lM
1 1 \flt l ... t .)1 Wine• .... •.If •..SO C1trltrC:• '°
1'1111 C~• t.llS ··" W!nlltld i·~ J.io C•r1trW ~
tm11 Cth s.n j·>O w11c Fd ·ft f·'J c .. 1i.c:11: llOb lnc Fela 6.02 .iO W..111 '·' 7 Ctftt'rr t" 10
58 acres-Ventura Caunty
CCI Cor• Ceca Cori .to Ctt1nt11.Cp 1 C11.tn ~IA•Jo Crnco l~s .»
tnl Foy
m ~!Id 1,4 1n Ill l.,'14 II! I 014.50 tl'ltllP\ I.JC! '"1 La Ef.l tl\Ml>w l.11 11\I 5W ljg
Industrial-adjacent to airport
Slcrificed below market at $15,000 per acre .
TERMS. Will consider TRADES or STOCK
PURCHASE. :::~:m· .toe
ltf(I ' 60tt
Jack C. Graves, Realtor, A.F.8 .
635 North ''A" St., Oxnard
frl-C1f .• ~~11.f! ~01~ ~=~~., (805) 483-774S "-"M"I '<Pr ~J"r MOI ~~\,~'t
Market
S111nbols
..,
Monday, Septembtr 14, 1970 SC DAILY PILOT lJ
Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
s.r., ""' tlld:•,J Mftlt LIW Clffe CJ!t
llJH Ntl
CM1,J Hltll YWP Cien Cllt.
Royal hn ol Amer\~a. tnc.,
a San Diego-based network of
hoteb, restaurants and
cocktail lounges, has received
a favorable reply from the
American Stock Exdlange fcrr
the company's 1ppUcation to
list its common stock:.
Royal Inns of America
wholly~ .several .Royal
!ms, Jolly King Remuranl.$.
Lost Knight cocktail lounges,
and Royal Table Reetaurants.
The company. w1tlch now
sell.!! its common atock over
the counter, reported net earn·
ings for the fi rst six months: of
1970 increased 1110 ptttt:Dt to
'389.193, or 28 cents per tnare •
, .
•
~
JZ DAILY PILOT Tuesday, September l!>, l97Q
.
PllCES EfflCTIYI WEDNESDAY THROUGH TUESDAY
SEPTEMIEl 16, 17, 11, lt, 20, 21, & 22
.
4STAR
'I SPECIALS
ARE EXTRA SAVINGS MADE
MADE POSSIBU BY SPECW.
PURCHASES FROM THE MANUFACTURER
ANOPASSEDONTOYOUI
is count I en ' emi
Prices
EVERYDAY!
DEPENDABLE QUALITY
GROUND
BEEF
USDACHOICE• BONE IN
RUMP
ROAST
USDA CHOICE e lARGE EYE
55ii.
851i.
STANDING 87c Rib Roast lb.
USDA CHOICE• BONE IN STYLE
ROUND
STEAK 851b.
FARMER JOHN e PICNIC STYLE
PORK 47c ROAST lb.
FARMER JOHN e FAMILY PACK e SLICED
PORKLOIN87c CHOPS · lb.
FARMER JOHN• 8-0Z. PACKAGE
LINK
SAUSAGE
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• TutsdaJ, St11ttmbtr 15,.1970 s DAILY '11.0'T 1J
Coast Group to Discuss Scenic Highway Plan
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 ltlt O.lb' 'UM Sl•lf
71le Orange County Co1st Association
will meet Jn Laguna Beach Thursday
morning to discuss both a 42-mile scenic
highway project and sewage discharge
standards affecting much of the local
coastline.
The meeting is to begin at the Hotel
Laguna at 8 p.m.
Jim Killingsworth or the associalion':i:
I
en~ and ""Joey commlllff
wW ilis<USS the adequacy ol an ouUall
line Under design that would discharge
the Industrial waste of three coun-
ties-San Bernardino, Riverside and
Orange-into the oetan off Newport
Beach.
There is to ht discussion of difference
between primary and secondary treat-
ment of seWage and the differences in re-
quirements of re&ional water quality con-
trol boards.
l' ou Drink This St11ff
Tiie aaoclatton wnn1 .. boor a nport
from It L.. ''Les" Remmtra, cba1rmm of
the eo.... lleautlllcatton Commtltet.
Rtmmers and Warren Morg1n , com•
mlttee coordinator, will talk of the pro-
gress in a 10-year program to tum 42
miles of coast highway into a actnlc cor-
ridor with control of billboards and other
slgnlng, undergrounded uWlties and
roadside beautification with trees and
shrubs.
Ttlen will also be a slide pr.,.,,tauon.
Those glowing crystals are impurities found in a
.sample of Orange County tap water as they were
trapped on filter paper. The fibers are in the filter
paper. Both the impurities and the fibers are mag·
nified 400 times in this photo, taken by Micro-
graphics of Newport Beach with a scanning electron
microsce>pe.
Beach Hearings Planned
Pendleton Public Sand Access Discussed by Solons
By JOHN VALTEllZA
01 t1tt ~II»' P'llOI 51111
Bipartisan congressional support grew
today in California's fi ght to open 3.5
miles of Camp Pendleto11 Beach for the
public with an announcement that a l..4s
~geles congressman is "seriously co.
sidering" the initiating of Congressional
bearings on lhe issue.
: Reacling to a weekend letter from his
Republican counterpart J..4s Angeles,
Rep. Chet Holifield, a Democrat, said lhe
letter made a "very good point" i• ask·
ing that hearings be scheduled.
Rep. Holifield is chairman of the House
~ubcommiltee on fo.Iilitary Operations-a
body underneath the House Committee on
Government Operations.
Last Friday J..4s Angeles Republica11
Rep. Alfonzo Bell -long a supporter of
the state's beach request-asked
llolifield to use his influence in gaining
the heari11gs.
At issue is 3.5 miles of beach and bluff.
top downcoa st of San Onofre which has
been the subject of a lease dispute
'between the slate and the Marine Corps
for yea rs.
; The Corps, balking at reques ts that !ts ~training beaches be opened to the public,
·has offered. 1.5 miles of the beach as a
ac;:, state park.
But state officials, cJajming that so
1mall a section would be impossible lo
~evelop economically, have pressed for
;eve lop economically, have pri!ssed for
.the larger acreage.
• And state recre.Jtion officials and Rep.
~Ben have claimed that the Marines are
at.alli11g on an answer to the State's latest
:"request
: To end the asserted stalling, Bell called
'tor Holifield 's influence to schedule the
·hearings.
pcd for the conversion of the Trestles
Beach into a public surfing area.
Security officiaJs for President Nixon
caused the end to those plans because the
Smokey's Gone
Up in Smoke
INTERNATIONAL FAL!.S,
Minn. (AP) -Smokey the Bear,
that friendly symbol of fire preven·
lion, has gone up in smoke himself,
and the apparent vandalism had
local citizens smouldering.
The 26-foot-high, 82-ton Smokey, a
statue of steel frame and fiberglaS!
covering, was burned e a r I y
Saturday.
Police said the blaze apparently
"'as set deliberately. Officers
reported finding a five·gallon emp-
ty gasoline can nearby.
An anonymou s person o r
organization offerd a $50 reward
for information leading to a~
prehension of those who set the
fire.
Smokey and his cubs, erected
here in 1954: at a cost of $3,800 rais-
ed by civic donations, was a tourist
attraction at a municipal park near
downtown International Falls. 'I'tle
cubs also were destroyed by the
blaze.
throngs of beachgoers would have caused
security problems at the aearby Western
White House.
After tha t, attention skipped downcoast
to an expanse of bluffs with sandy
beaches below.
The talks between the state of6c\als
and Marine brass bogged down quickly
with a dispute oa beach size and tenns 0£
the lease.
The Corps, reluctant to let go of the
beach they say is valuable for training.
held that a short·lerm lease for a small
area would be adequate.
But slate officials said the projected
millions of dollars needed for develop·
ment of the beach meant that at least 25
years should be the limit for a lease of a
beach four miles long.
The last concessio11 of sorts came from
the Marines, who agreed to 1.5 at 25
years.
The state then trimmed its holdout to
3.S miles.
Since then the Corps has not reacted.
fo.1arine Commandant Gen. Leooard
Chapman last week maintained official
silence on Ute negotiations.
His only response to questions about
the beach issue was tha t there was of!e.
President Nixon-in some accounts-
has been described as following the situa·
tion closely, but thus far no official
statements about his interest have come
from the White House.
Rep. Bell apparently has no l1slde In·
ronnatlon about the President's interest,
either.
He said that unless the hearings before
the subcommittee are scheduled, the
public has "very little hope" of ever
walking Ute sands of the beach below the
3.5 miles of bluffs.
Rlmmers said when the Orange County
Coast AJM>c:latlon w11 formed 60 years
ago the entlrt county had only 721 miles
of road or hi&ftway Ind these include SIG
miles of dirt road, Jiii mUes of paved
sur£ace and 43 miles of state highway.
Remmers said there also will be an all-
day tour of the project area on Oct. 22 for
civic officials.
It will begin at Fashion tsland in
Newport Beach with a di9CUS!lon by
lrvlDe Company offk:lals of their project>
and move to Stal Beach. Huntington
Beach and down to Laguna Beach for
luncheon at Victor llUJ6 lM.
Dunrtng lun<heao, county planners will
speak on pending projects a n d
posslbililles. The group will hear also
from Avco CommWlity Developers, Inc.
which took over the Laguna NIJuel
Corporation.
The tour wl.11 move on to the Arnold
Hasken Foundatioll at Dana Point wbre
experimentation la curled out on 1111
resl.star1t plantl and lhnlb&.
Kenn<lh Sampoon, dlrector of the
Orange County Harbor District, will
spuk: on Dana Point ff arbor
Development.
The tour will move on to San Clemente
and back up Ule Santa Ana Freeway to
Lion Country Safari and Laguna Hills
Lelsr.ae World and then return to Fashion
Island.
Mobility Minded
Homes, Cycles Bounce to Council
The two major Issues passed by plan·
nlng commissioners last week as a
mobile home park for Shorecliffs and a
two-year extension of a motorcycle park
permit -will bounce onto the hands 0£
San Clemente city councilmen Wed-
nesclay.
Councilmen will take action on. both
items u requested by the commission.
The mobile home park matter -which
the council unanimously defeated a few
weeks ago -returns under a strongly
modified concept which won unanimous
approval by the commissioners.
The Lincoln Savings and Loan a~
Pornography
Report Nixed
By Commission
WASlllNGTON (AP) -A suit asking
for a coort ofder against issuing a con·
troversial Comml.uion o• Pornography
report was dismissed Monday, the com·
mission announced.
The suit was brought by President Nix·
on's only member of the commission,
Charles lt Keating Jr.
KeaUng sued to prohibit the com·
mission from recommending repeal of all
U.S. pomograplly laws for adults. He also
asked a court order against publication or
t:ie report unUI he had more time and
help in prepariag a minority report.
Dr. W. Cody Wilso•, the commission's
executive director, said the suit was &tt·
Ued out ol court. Keating eould not be
immed.tately reached for comment.
Wilson said the suit was dismissed on
the understanding the report will be
issued Sept. 30 -just before the com·
mission's life e:tpires-and Ktating will
have until then to issue his minority
report for inclusion.
·111 asking a court order against ia·
clusion of th e controversial recommen-
dation for repeal of all Jaws against
showing or selling pornography to adults,
Keating had argued Congress' mandate
on the contrary was for the commission
to find ways to control pornography.
His suit called the J8·member eom·
mission 's report a 'sham of the
Congress' natioflal concern involving traf·
fie in obscenity and pornography."
Keating became Nixon'" only member
on the commission when he was ap-
pointed to fill a vacancy. The commission
was created by Congress three years ago
and its members were appointed by then
President LYftdon B. Johnson.
Keating. a CinciMati lawyer and
founder of Citizens for Decent Literature
lnc., also said Ns report was limited
' 150 pages wl.lleqhe said the majority
report including ten volumes or technical
papers would n.111 to 10,000 pages.
Meanwhile, another comm issioner-the
Rev. Morton J. Jllll of New York de-
manded a commlsion aceounting of ha~
dling or its finances.
Hill said he wants to ll.now how much
the commission spent to send Wilson to a
recent conve11tion in Miami to publicly
comment on technical pape rs prepared
for the commission that the commissl·
oners until then had not known about.
Hill, in a letter to Commi~lon
Chairman William B. Lockhart, also said
$100.000 ha s been spent on the technical
reports while $12,000 is allocated for the
commissio11 reporl He said this would
limit the number of copies of the final
report that ca• be issued .
plication ror the deluxe part will come
before the council with a sUff new list Of
park development rules hnposed by the
developers upon themselves.
They include ringing the enUre
perimeter of the part near Ule 13th and
14th fairways of Sborecliffs COuntry Club
with modular houses of advanced,
modem design.
The standard coacheJ under severe
esthetic re!lricUons would be placed out
of sight of neighbors .
Councilmen could po~ibly set another
public hearing on the Lincoln application.
Tbey used that procedure the Last time
7'll 1wap you tlllo
DC-81 For a VC.10 ... •
Boating Mishap
Shocks Woman
At Dana Harbor
A 22-year-old woqian from Riverside
suffered electrical burns Jn a freak aail·
ing mishap at Dana Harbor Saturday
which nearly caused a fatal electrocution.
The woman, Susan Dtlweiler, was
standing on the deck of a sm11l 1ailboat
which was being launched at the harbor's
launching ramp when the aluminum mast
hi~ a 220-volt power llne.
The current surged down the shrouds of
the small boat and burned the woman,
but kn0cked her free.
She was taken for treatment of bums
at South Coast Community Hospital.
Lifeguards patrolling the waters at the
harbor sa id Utat crowd control problems
developed because the boai remained
"hot" with electricity until county
employes shut off the harbor's power
supply.
The guards said the party on the
boating trip had put up the collapsible
mast of the sailboat before arriving at
the launching ramp at 10 a.m.
The mast touched one line, but nar-
rowly avoided another which canied
7,000 volts. Jlad that line been touched
with the woman on board, guards said
the results would have been fatal.
The lines cross over the launching area
of the harbor as a temporary utility
Rrvice:.
Crews are tn the midst or digging
trenches for underground lines.
before turning the plans down.
The commlssioners agreed to the IJn..
coin proposals in principle, and said they
were indicating approval ror the use of
the land for mobile home parks. U the
council agrees with that Idea, then com-
missioners would work out !pedftc
development c o n d i t lo n s for the
developers when f.tie: precise plan appears
for approval.
The minibike action, which also mJght
take the fonn of a public hearing at a
subsequent meeting of the council, was
.approved quickly by planning com-
missioners last week.
Councilmen granted the sea-
Recreational Auoclation a thraMnontb
permit al the stai·t of summer.
Commissioners have suggested the
council renew the permit for as long is
the le ase for the land e:rlstJ wiUl the
Mormon Oturch. The time 1 i m t t ,
however, would be two years.
The granting three montJu: ago was
preceded by a loud protest from
homeowners who complained that the cy·
cle park would be a noisy nuisance 8Dd
attract Wldesirables to San Clemente.
But commissioners last week heard or
only a few minor complaints -one over
a dus ty road and another over butcher·
paper signs.
Both problems have beta ellmlnated by
the operators of the park.
Other action pending before the council
Wednesday includes:
-Condensation of lhe suggestions by
the major city commlulons aod clubs on
desi~ factors of the proposed new com-
muruty clubhouse. The suggestions will
include ooe from parka. RDd recreaUon.
commissioners that the city tennis com18
be moved from tbeJr spot 1ear the old
clubboll!C to Bonita Canyon Park. Many
other suggestions will come from other
city clubhouse plans drafted by Boucher
an.t Drtelsma Associates.
-CoruilderaUon of a proposal from the
Capistrano Unified School District that
the City of San Clemente split a prOjected
coat of $150,000 for a swimming pool .at
San Clemente High School. Under the
proposed joint-powers agreement the px1l
would be open for community recrea·
tional use.
-Holding of a public hearing on the
city's proposals to ttname Via de Frente
to Avenida del President -in honor of
President Nixon, whose villa is nearby •.
Residents and owners of property along
the freeway frontage road will be heard
Of! the months-old plans to change lhe
aame to something Presidential.
-Resumption of a public hearing to
consider appeals or objections to levi~J In
an improvement district &long F..ast
Avenida Cordoba.
-Consideration of bids from private
lr,..;urance carriers on the city public safe-
ty employes health and retirement in·
surance. The employes, who ar e
dissatisfied with the present city-ad~
ministered retirement plan, have said
they prefer one run by the State of
California -the P u b I i c Employees
Retirement System.
Councilmen early this summer
declared a 90-day freeze on a decision on
the idea until private firms had the
chance to bid on specifications similar to
the 1 t a t e plan. A c o s t comparison
between private and sla te plans will be
given to councilmen Wednesday by Cily
Manager Ken Carr.
... ''Only a pub lic hearing on the six-year·
·old negotiatloRs can put enough public
Jocus on the Marines' posiUon to bring
ll:bout a solution acceptible to the •tale
and people of caJifornia, "Bell said.
Pawnbroking: 2nd Oldest Profession
-Acceptance of more information on a
posed underground u t 11 l t y improve·
ment district of an a r e a slightly less
than half or the Pacesetter-Hillcrest
neighborhood. The district -as proposed
-could cost each homeowner about
,2,000 for slrett lighls and underground
utility lines. Several proposals for city
contributions up to $50,000 resulted in
hung votes by councilmen at their last
meeting. Councllman Thomas O'Keefe,
who recently returned from a var.alJon ti>
Hawaii, will attend Wedneaday night to
cast ltle deciding vote. He tenned lhe state's latest request -
1tlmmed down from more than rour
mlles earlier this year-as "modest".
Holifield this moraing said Bell "bas a
good point."
The enUre squabble over the beach
opening gathered steam early this year
\.Jth announcements that already con-
1ummatcd ftgotiations had been 3Cl'ap-
PILOT PRESENTS
'PLAY PICKEROO'
lt's plg1kJn picking time again in the
.DAILY PILOT. You can be a
rlgsk1n Pickeroo and win cash and Voit
footballs.
The player's t ntry form for the big
SlMKI contest appears today on Paa:e
By PATRICK BOYLE
OI IM ~IY '""' II.rt
The oniy valuabli'ltem Dom Raciti has
recently refused to loan money on is a
cow, ud then only because "it would eat
up the Interest."
Raciti owns Cost.a Mesa Jewelry amt
Loan at 1838 Newport Blvd., and the
greyl11g, middl e-aged family man Joans
money in return for collateral But he
does not like to call his business a •pawn
&hop,' and be resents even more 'bock
ibop.' ----As part of an effort to change a
stereotype In the public's mind, Raciti
says that he ls 110W Jn the collateral len~
ding buslne,..
Raciti is not 1 shlrty-eyed gangster-
lytte working out of a di!l'lY lit, skid·row
hock shop. He thinks that the movi~
have stereotyped this image of a
pawnbroker on many ~ple's minds, and
, be wants to change that Image.
• t"
"We: loan money to people who can't
gel a loan anywher.e else," he says, "and
we are ju.st in business to make: a llvilg."
·:e may well be: in the world '• SttOnd
oldest profession, for pawnbroking dates
! .. ck to the uclent Babylonians. 'nlc
business evolved t:> il"' present stage by
the Middle Ages, and the llrst true
pawnshops were establlshed by tho
authority of the Popes.
The Italians called their pawnshop!
11montl di plcta," mtanlng "mountalas of
compassion," and pledging vl.Juables to
obtain needed money was an e1cellent
method of funding without crediL
The New World may have i.e.ver been
dlscrvered by Columbus, had it not bffn
for a pawnbroker, for Queen taabella of
Spain pawt1ed her jewels to finance his
voyage.
Pawnbroking became popular in the
U.S. ~ur1ng the late J800's, and the in·
dustry la now r<gulated by thc lndlvtdual
state govtrnments. Thm are established
interest rates that may be cha rged, but
Dom RaciU says that not all pawn shops
follow those rates.
"There is a state orga•lzation now call·
ed. the Collateral Loan Assn.," he says,
"and the organizaUo•, of which l am a
member, is trying to got all collateral,
lending age ncies to abide by the
laws, but some of them won'L"
RaciU says that the interest rat.ff
established by the ;,late are reasonable:,
and they are no higher than lho&e: dtarg·
ed by finance compan ies.
1'The interest on a $100 k>an is $2.SO a
month," be says, "which ls 30 percent •
year."
"But a customer here has an ad-
vantage over going to a flna~ company
or a bank," he notes. 1'Here; they can get
Instant money. They don't baYA, to fill out
lorms and papers and answtt 1 lot of
embarrassing quesUons.11
Whm .a man brings u item to Racltl 's
lhop .as collateral for a loan, ·the Item Is
appraised, often by RaclU llimself or by
hi1 son, Robert
"The loan ii detennined co1!1derlng
lhe wholesale value of the Item," Robert
says, "and the demand on the market.
We have to try to project seven months
ahead for the market value , becauae the
k:..t ii a:ood for seven months."
After the aeven month period hit
elapsed, aod the i11tereit ls not rme:wed
the lhop may tell the ittm to anyone.
"An ex.amp~ of the market v1lu1 drop-
ping," Robert adds, "Is when loftg surf
boards were replaced by short ones u
the most popuJar. The Jone one1 are
.1.,..t wwthlm ......
"We also have to figure the pm:entap
for suaranteeb1g the ltem," be uys,
notlni that Ill merclwldlst ts ruarlllleed.
Famed Raphael
Painting Taken
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Police say a
$1.2 million painting of the Madonna and
Child by the Italian Renals.sance master
Raphael has been stolen from the borne
of .a Hollywood financier.
Ol!icero said Sunday that Charleo
Elkins reported that someone hid forced
open the front door or h!s house whiJe ba
WH at dinner Frld>y. Only the palnUng
WU missing.
The painting by RaphAel, 1413-1520,
depicti Mary and the tnfaot Jesus on .a
bench, with a landscape background.
Officers said lhe painting was lnsuttd
for $8001<KMl but WU 1ppra1Jed at $400,000 more.
1
Tursday, Srpttmbrr 15, 1970
After a slight delay, a Jetter to a
toy shop has been delivered. The
address read: "The toyshop that
is on the left of the road towards
the railway bridge where one turns
left to the Al. very close to the
British Rail,vays Car Park, Peter·
borough, England . • P•cldy , an 8-year-old mongrel,
has been left $3.60 a week for life in
the $103, 200 will of E rnett Good·
m•n, in Outwcll, England. • The national record for nonstop
· bagptpe playing ha s been broke,
Stevenage, England pipe band of-
ficials said Sunday. They said the
Stevenage's IO-hour, twa.minute
. nonstop playing beats the 9Y.I hour
record set in A1ay in London. •• Police had to rescue a man \vho
156came stuck in a garbage chute
c;>f. an apariment house·. Detectives
said the man, who was not idP.nli·
fied, was unable to gel to his girl-
friend on tile third floor by ordin-
ary means because he had no key
-so he tried the garbage chute.
He was freed after four hours in
Hudiksvall, Sweden. • Because of Hel l's Bells, the popu·
Jation of Hell declined in the 1970
census . The census showed that
the southeastern .Jlvfichigan commu-
nity's population dipped from 52
to 48. The Hell Chamber of Com-
merce said it \Vas due largely to
the drafting of brothers George and
Charles Bell into military service.
The chamber said the two were not
counted in the census, and added
the village "is proud of its contri·
bution to the armed forces, but like
most everyone, we \1:ill be happy
\\1hen Hell's Bells are back in Hell,
Mich." •
Clyde Olson a11d his dog Rocky, a
15-year old toirehaired terrier, take
a .stroll in a Chicago pa.Tk. \V/len
Rocky's hind legs became paralyzed
Ol.so1~ had him fitted with rubber·
wheeled substitute legs. • Honesty proved to be a good pol·
icy for Marie Colmer of Los Ange-
les. The 64-year-o\d widow found a
paid of man's pants on the front
Ja\\'TI of her home three months
ago. Jn the pockets she found a roll
of bills totaling $3,300. The honest
woman took the money to the sher~
iff's department. Friday deputies
brought the money back to Mrs.
Colmer since it had not been claim-
ed. "She \vas all smiles." Detec-
tive Jeffrey Plough said. "She told
me that she plans to use the ca,sh
to pay off some old bills '\\'hich
have accumulated."
New P11llout11
Red · Units Halt
Cambodia Drive
SAIGON (AP} -Enemy troops again
halted a government attempt to recap-
ture an important part of Cambodia'!
heartland today, and in Soulh Vietnam's
northern quarter fighting broke out at
fi ve places.
As the new fighting was reported, the
U.S. Command annot1nced more troop
withdrawals from Vietnam that will cut
American strength by more than 3,000,
and the South Vietnamese announced the
withdrawal of 1,500 of their troops from
Cambodian operations.
In Cambodia, a force of North Viet-
namese and Viet Cong troops entrenched
45 miles north of Phnom Penh and a
bridge destroyed by enemy commandos
stalled the Cambodian drive.
A spokesman for the Cambodian
military command said it was up to the
commander on the scene whether his
forces would again advance toward the
village of Taing Kauk.
A regiment of North Vietna mese and
Viet Cong turned back the spearhead of
the biggest Cambodian offensive of the
war at Taing Kauk Sunday and Monday,
killing 2.6 Cambodian troops and woun·
ding nearly 100.
The Cambodians sent reinforcements
Castro's Sister
Asks Help to
Oust the Reds
KYOTO, Japan (AP) -Fidel Castro's
sister called on Japan and other e<>untries
today for help and cooperation to rid her
fatherland o[ communism.
Miss Juanita Castro said she hoped she
could return to Cuba some day to ca rry
out anti-Communist movements and free
many of her compatriots from com·
munism. "I have long been considering
how to get back to my homeland." she
said.
f\.1iss Castro, who sought political
asylum in the Uniled States in !1964 and
now lives in Miami, Fla., was addressing
the opening session or a joint meeting of
the World Anti-Communist League and
the Asian People's Anti.COmmunist
League.
She told a news conference that her
brother. the Cuban Prime litinister. was
going in lhe wrong direction, ruling Cuba
wider communistic influences.
·Other speakers included Gen. Praphan
Kulapichitr of Thailand, who Is also
chairman of the world group, Dr. Ku
Cheog-kang of Nationalist China, and
Okinori Kaya, former finance mini ster of
.Japan and a ml'mbcr of wartime dicta tor
Hideki Tojo's Cal>lnet.
Kaya, a rigQ&;winger in Prime Minister
Eisaku Sato·s Liberal-Democrat party,
said all Asian people should closely
cooperate to stop "Communist ag-
gress ion" in the . region. A military
alliance bety,·een Communist China arid
North Korea and the Soviet Union's
stronger approach to Japanese Com·
munists are the "main threats in Asia,"
he said.
A total of 2,500 people including 146 na-
tional delegates of 57 foreign countries
and some flOO representatives of Japan
attended the session. Sen. Strom Thur-
mond tR-S.C. ), is due Friday.
329 P ersons Dead
In Wa ke of Floods
B0~1BA Y (UP I) -Floods that sy,·ept
through two villages of Broach in Gujarat
Stale lwo weeks ago left 329 persons
dead , State Chief Minister Hitcndra Desai
said today.
Desai said the deAlh toll was compiled
from reporlS furnished by heads of the
I wo villages. !¥lost of the victims \\'ere
reported to have drowned as the Holy
River Normada flooded .
~.
into lhe area, but the communist com·
mand was also reported reinfo~cing and
mupplylng its troops in Taing Kauk .
The spokesman said there had been no
action on the battle front overnight.
Associated Press correspondent John
T. Wheeler reported from Phnom Penh
that 600 refugees bad been flown to the
capita.I !rom the besieged provincia l
capitaJ of Kompong Thom. 80 miles to the
north. Kompong Thom is the object of the
current Cambodian drive, but one com·
mander said, "I don't think we'll ever get
to Kompona Thom."
The spokesman reported that only a
small number or civilian! remained in
Kompong Thom.
South Vietnamese headquarters
reported that its forces had closed out a
24.(iay Cam~ian operation near Neak
Luong, 40 miles southeast of Phnom
Penh. A spokesman said 35 North Viet·
na~ese and Viet Cong troops were killed
in the operation and that two Soqth Viel·
namese were killed. He said the end of
the operation reduced South Vietnamese
strength in Cambodia from lfl,000 to
13.500 troops .
In the northern part of South Vietnam,
North Vietnamese troops kept up their
siege of Fire Base O'Reilly and clashed
with government forces near artillery
base Barnett, 10 miles to the northwest.
Backed by artillery, South Vietnamese
troops reported killing 25 North Viet·
namese arqund Fire Base Barnett. Field
reports said five South Vietnamese
soldiers were killed and seven wounded.
American bombers kept up their heavy
raid s against North Vietnamese gun posi·
lions around O'Reilly and Barnett in ef.
forts to prevent a massive North Viet·
namese assault on the bases.
The U. S. Command said that eight
Arm y units we're taken out of action to-
day in South Vietnam and either will be
sent back to the United States or in·
aclivated in South Vietnam. The moves
are part of President Nixon's troop
reduction program that will cut U. S.
strength in Vietnam to 384,000 by Oct. 15.
Jt now is 396,300.
Tropical Storm
Seen Gaining
Hm·ricane Force
NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -Tropical
Storm Felice split in two this morning as
it neared the Louisiana coast. There were
indications the storm would intensify lo
hurricane force as it develops its new
center.
l'he \Veather Bureau s a i d the new
center wa s located by radar and "the
new ci rculation will bee<>me the main
center and the other one should
di ssipate ."
The Weather Bureau said that nerir
dawn. the tropical storm's developing
center was about 130 miles south of New
Orleans and carrying winds of gale force.
The new center, said the bureau, was
moving west-northwest about lfl miles
per hour.
"Highest sustained winds are estimated
at 60 mile s per hour, but winds may be
near hurricane force for brief periods in
heavier squalls just north of the center."
Tides of two to five feet were projected
along the Louisiana coast west to the
mouth of the Mississippi R i v e r .
Forerasters also predicted heavy rains
with local accumulations of fl lo 8 inches
in the path o( Felice.
There were no immediate preparations
lo evacuate any of the coastal areas, but
a close watch was being kept on the
,;torm for further intensification that
might make some evacuations necessary.
A hurricane watch was in effect from
tilorgan City, La., to Port O'CO'flnor, Tex .
and gale warnings were posted from the
mouth of the Mississippi to the Sabine
River.
Cold Front Hits Midwest
Felice Rips Gulf; Rains Soak Nation's Bread Basket
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GUNS AT THE READY, CAMBODIANS -PATROL
Near Siem Re•p, Troops Seek te Dislodge Enemy
350,000 Walk Ont
Auto Union Strikes GM;
Economic Impact Seen
DETROIT IUPll -About 350,000
United Auto \Yorkers Union members in
16 states and Canada struck General
M'otors Corp.. the world's largest
manufacturing firm, early tod ay. A pro-
longed strike could damage the nation's
uneasy economy.
UAW President Leonard Woodcock lef t
a listless negotiating session y,·ith Glit
just before midnight and announced.
"The company held out no other choice"
but to strike after 60 days of fruitless
negotiations.
Woodcock said union officials will con-
fer later today . "It is our fervent hope
th11t for the economic and social good for
all concerned and affected this can be
reso lved in a minimum of time," he said.
As thousands of auto workers picked up
picket signs to join about 3fl.000 others
\\•ho jumped the gun, chief GM negotiator
Earl Bramblett called the walkout "a
strike against reason ."
•·Nobody really wanted a strike. We
tried hard, but the demands are just too
many and too high," Bramblett said. fie
added negotiations may r e s u m e
"probably Wednesday'' on unresolved
issues of money. early retirement and
C'OSt-0f-living allowances.
Jn Washington. D. C .. Harold C. Passer,
assistant commerce secretary fo r
economic affairs. warned the strike could
"put a crimp in the rising Lrend of
economic activity. 1t would not, in my
view, jeopardize the upturn that is now
developing but it certainly would lower
the rate of increase.."
At GM's Cadillac assembly plant on
Detroit's lower west side. the consensus
viewpoint was a strike "of at least three
\\.'eeks."
"We're 100 percent behind him (\Vood·
cockl," said Bob \Vil\iams. a shop
~teward who was picketing in a cold
drizzle in his blue. Y:ork shirt. The sign
said ''UAW On Strike for Justice.'' Most
of the night shift stayed home and the
few workers Yo'ho show~ up at midnight I
\~:ere told, "it's orficial. This i! not a
wildcat."
Woodcock said the union has a record
$120 million strike fund , enough for six lo
eight weeks o( benefits. It will take about
that long for GM to run out of unsold new
cars. If it went beyond that, Woodcock
said, "then y,•e'll conduct a strike on the
old-fashined basis," ~ithout the $30 to $40
weekly benefits. Other unions have of-
fered to loan the UAW money."
Besides the imm~iate impact of sto~
ping production of 1971 models. including
the new subcompact Vega to combat
foreign imports, effects of the strike soon
would spread · to supplier steel. rubber
and glass industries.
It was the th ird national strike the
UAW has called against GM. The UA\V
struck GM for 119 days in 1945-46 and 10
days in 1964. Even before the death of
\Valter Reuther last spring. it was being
specula1ed GM would be the target.
The union 's ruling International Ex·
ecutive Board picked twin strike targets,
GM and smaller Chrysler Corp., on Sept.
2.
Ford, struck for seven weeks during the
last big three contract negotiations in
1967. was exempted. On Sunday, Chrysler
was exempted.
Although contracts expired at both
Chrysler and Ford litonday nidnight. both
continued operations. Chetkoff of union
dues. however, ceased. The strike did not
include 26 GM plants in the United States
and Canada which make parts for other
automakers.
Both sides were far apart on major
issues and bargaining Monday y,•as
listless. Neither invoked the traditional
neY:s "blackout" that indicates serious
bargaining.
"No real bargaining on either side took
place in the 14 hours preceding the
strike,'' -Woodcock said.
Thant Asks
T1·ib"¥al
I
For Hijacks
I
FR0~1 WIRE SERVICES
With some f>5 hostages from airline hi·
jackings still in the hands of Arab guer-
rillas, U.N. Secretary-General U Thant
bas proposed that hijackers '"be pro-
secuted in the name of the peoples of the
world" by a special international
tribunal.
A U.N. spokesman said Thant was sug·
gesting establishment of a court separate
from the present World Court at The
Hague •
Hijacking and abduction of foreign
diplomats by extremist groups "sow the
seeds of international anarchy," the
.secretary-general told about 2,000 persons
at a $150-a-plate dinner on the eve of
today 's opening of the 2flth · General
Assembly.
He said hijacking is a crime against an
international service affecting many na-
tions and individua l citii:ens, and added :
"This crime must be brought before an
tnterna tiOnal tribunal defending the in·
terests of all peoples and nations and not
of any particular people or nation."
Uljar ker Nan1ed
The man slain while attempting to hi·
jack an El Al airliner has been identified
by the British government as Patrick
Joseph Arguello, 28, a California-born
American citizen who had been livin& in
Managua, Nicaragua.
The Home Office said Monday that
identity was made through fingerprint
files of the Federal Bureau o f
Jnvestigalion.
Jn Managua, Oscar Arguello denied
that the slain hijacker was his son,
Patrick Jose Arguello Ryan, a graduate
of an American university.
Red Cross De l.ay•
The International Red Cross today held
off sending a team to negotiate with Arab
guerrillas for the release o.f about flO
airline hijack hostage s. with no In·
dicalions y,·hen the discussions would
resume .
The Popular Front for the Liberation or
Palestine tPFLPl, the guerrilla group
\vhich carried out the hijackings, said it
had not broken off negotiations with the
United States. West G er man y .
Switzerland and Britain. It said ''in·
direct" negotiations were continuing with
the three European nations, but did not
elaborate,
Applicant Flood
The government is being Oooded with
requests from people who want its newest
glamor job -airline security g~a.rd. .
The Federal Aviation Adm1n1strahon
said it has received innumerable requesls
from applicants. But none will be hired
until Congress approves President Nix·
on's request for funds lo train and
finance the secu rity program.
Nixon asked Congress Monday for $28
million to train 2,flOO security guards.
ti.lo.st of the recruits will oome from oth er
government agencies. but the FAA .s~id
··there are plans lo hire other quahfJed
personnel."
Lloyd'• Pay• Off
Lloyd's. the London under.vriters. said
~1onday British Overseas Airways Corp.
will recei ve $8.4 milion as an insurance
settlement for the VCIO a i r I in er
destroyed by Arab guerrillas in Jordan .
"The situation affecting !he other hi·
jacked aircrart has yet to be clarified , as
each one of !he policy wordings is dif·
ferent," Lloyd's said.
I
GENERAL MOTORS WORKERS IN DETROIT WAV E PICKET SIGNS AS WALKOU T BEG INS
Union and M1n19tmtnt Ag ree on On ly One Thing -They Ar• Still Fer From Solutlon
'
-------------------------------~--...
•
•
QUEENIE By Phll ln19rlandl Railroad
Walkout
Gets Delay
,..,
W ASRINGTON (AP) -The
nation has gotten at least a
week's respite in its third
railroad labor crisis this year
followioi a federal judge's
order forbidding a strike.
Although four AF L-C I 0
unions had called the strike
against only three lines, chief
railroad negotiator John P.
Hiltz had indicated the entire
industry would have shut down
in a retaliatory lockout.
DAILY PI LOY If
'Brainwashing'
Agnew Blasts Drug Songs
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -has been broken down by the have nffded to do some ex·
Vice President Spiro T , pill popping of a dulls who fjn· perlmentL'lg on thelr own."
Agnew, warning that the in~ cy they need a pill to get to Agnew sa.ld tha t in too many
nuence of drugs ''threatens to sleep an4 a pill to wake up\" of the lyrics ol popular songs
sap our national strength," Agnew slid. ..the me!Sllge of the drug
says some or the popular "Tb.is, Coupled with gro,wtn:,. culture is purveyed .•. at its
songs adult America regards adult alcoholJsm, was au that wi°rst, it ls blatant drug
as good, clean, noisy run are . ...:';:'m:::;:•.:of:....:'::":..'-'yo;;.•::•;:;8:;:":...;<::ll=ize:::•::s~Cl/::.:i:lt::ure:.::.l""r:.:!:pa::!g!:a:::nda=.--
ln fact 11latent drug culture
propaganda'' that is
brainwashing the young.
At a Republican fund-raising
dinner amid th e neon gliUer of
the Las Vegas gambling
''Casinos, Agnew lectured Mon-
day night against "creeping
permissiveness" in American
society. He said the ad-
m l n i s tr a t ion need s
Republicans in Congress to
help put a stop to it.
•$r ••• this is a holdup-come out with your arms
around me ; •• er, your hands out ••• no, nc> ••• ob,
forget it ••• '"
The last-minute temporary
restraining arder by U.S.
District Judge Howard F. Corcoran forbidding the 12:0l C. L. DENNIS, RAIL UNION HEAD, STARTS STRIKE
a.m. strike aappeared to Federal Judge's Order Delays W•lkout Temporarily
freeze the dispute until 1:45
"Let's vote in the men with
the backbone to turn back the
tide of weakness a n d
permissiveness in our national
life and our personal life," the
vice president told more than
J.200 persons at a $100..a-plate
dinner at the Sahara HoteJ..
New Orleans Police
Confront Panthers
NEW ORJ,EANS (UPI) -
Police wrapped in bulletproo!
vests and carrying pistols and
shotguns went into a black
neighborhood today to clear
armed Negroes Crom a Black
Panther headquarters.
Po 1 ice sup crlntendent
Clarence Giarruso said Black
Panthers beat two black men
and shot at a patrol car during
a night of violence. He called
it a "reign of terror."
Giarruso said warrants were
issued for the arrest (){ Black
Panther members. ·
were dragged from their auto
and severely beaten. Two
residents of the Desire Street
Projects were wotmded by
armed sniper fire. A n
automobile was burned. And
two buildings ha ve been
reportedly set on nre."
Explosives
Confiscated
In Chicago
"These warrants will be CHICAGO (UPI) -State
served and these persons will and federal 'agents an d
be arrested," he said. "If Chicago police raided a north
side apartment Monday night
these persons resist violently, and confiscated 620 sticks of and we have every reason to
believe they will, we shall use dynamite and arrested six
every means at our disposal to persons.
bring about their arrest." A spokesman £or the Illinois
Giarruso ardered abbut 60 Bureau of Investigation, John
police loaded onto buses and Dreiske, said the raid followed
moved into the b 1 8 c k a tip from a security guard at' ..w......l.ood a I a r g e Chicago-area in-
neii;u•·•""' · dustrial plant. The guard said
''There are reports from our the group planned to blow up
observers that between lO and the plant, Dreiske said.
JS persons have taken up The raid netted 620 sticks of
sniper positions surrounding dynamite, dynamite caps: u d
3542 Pietry Street, tile Panther detonating cord. he said. The
headquarters,'' Giarruso said. Jj'Jaterial was taken to the Ft.
"The purpose af these annal Sheridan, Ill., Anny Base. It
guards is obviously to fire up-was not known if those ar·
on police officers engaged in r ested belonged to any group,
Jaw enforcement activities and he said.
to assault residents." · Dreiske refused to identify
Police said Panthers burned the plant that was the target
one or two cars during the af the alleged plot because the
night and dumped them into a lBI did not warit to identify
p.m. Sept. 23. He set a bearing
for Sept 22.
The wage dispute involves
some 500,000 workers on all
rail lines.
In spite of the antistrike
order, there was pJcketing in
several cJties during the post-
midnight hours against the
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad,
the Chesapeake & 0 h i o
Railway, and the Southern
Pacific.
"The carriers have
demonstrated a b s o I u t e in·
flexibility," said C. L. Dennis.
President of the Brotherhood
or Railway Clerks, in breaking
o f f go ve~t-sponsared
negotiations and annauncing
the strike plans.
He said the railroads had
refused to budge from a one-
year, 7 percent wage hike of-
fer, compared with union
demands of · 40 percent or
more over three years. The
workers now average about
$3.50 per hour.
Dennis was backed in the
strike call by President
Charles Luna of the ijllited
Transportation Union, Presi-
dent Harold Crotty of the
Brotherhood of Maintenance
of Way Employes and Vi ce
President Richard Smith of
the Hotel and Restaurant
Employes.
Asst. Secretary of Labor W.
J. Usery, President ?fixon's
chief troubleshooter in the
dispute, had said Nixon would
not Invoke a 60-day strike
delay under · the Railway
Labor Act against the planned
partial strike.
But Usery had said a na-
tionwide lockout by the in-
dustry would have meant "a
whole new ball game" in
terms af the President's
decision.
Folk Singer
Sentenced
Sonae Violence
Race Troubles Disrupt
Many Schools in U.S.
Agnew said the nation must
"move hard and fast" to con-
trol a drug culture that
pervades the adult population -
and is spreading among the
young. ''We have arrived at
this culture partly because
society's natural resistance
By United Press Iaternatlonat
Racial violence forced the
closing of all public schools in
BogaJusa, La., Monday and
sent state troopers rushing to
Barnesville, Ga., M o n d a y
night.
Police had to use tear gas to
break up a brawl involving 600
black students and whltes at
Bogalusa, a town with a
history of racial strife. Several
students were injured in the
fighting and at least eight
persons were arrested.
"It was a combination or
provocation between b o t h
races," said Police Chief
Thomas J . Mixon. ' ' A
minimum amount or tear gas
was· used to separate the
blacks and the whites. Then a
police line was put between
the blacks and the whites until
we could get buses to bus the
majority of the students
away."
The 10 p u b 1 i e schools in
Bagalusa. which were in·
tegrated last year, were clos-
ed indefinitely after the brawl
by the school board.
The arrest of a Negro youth
on charges of harassing a
school bus driver touched off a
rock-throwing, window-smash-
ing rampage by 2,000 blacks at
Barnesville. Ga. a force of 35
state troopers, helped police
restore order. Two persons
were arrested. S e v er a I
persans were injured by rocks.
Mayor Herman Andrews of
Barnesville said he thought
the root of the trouble was
black objection to a federal
c o u rt-approved segregation
by-se:r pragram in public
schools.
At Memphis, Tenn.. three
youths were wounded in a
has been broken down by the
shoot-out at all-black Hamilton pill popping of adults who fan-
High school Mo n d a y • cy they need a pill to get to
Authorities said the Incident sleep and a pill to wake up ,"
apparently was a carryover Agnew said.
from an argument at a Agnew said the nation must
weekend dance. "move hard and fast" to con-
A group or 1\1 e x i ca n -trol a drug culture that
Americans stormed a meeting pervades the adult population
of the Houston School Board and is spreading among the
Monday night, th r o w in g young. "We have arrived at
chairs, lamps, ashtrays and this culture partly bec.ause
The Gremlin proves that a subcompact doesn't ba..e ID.
1ook like a scaled dciwn version of something else. .
So if you'reJtoing to buy an American madesubcuinf~
buy one that's distinctive. 1'hat ..on't fade Tnto lhemiwd.,
Buy the original.
lllo11lh*is111111ms*,,_.,.. .... ._ ,.. .......
other objects in a rampage society's natural resistance ,_
through the administration -""'=-'--"'""''--"'-'--'--------'::;...------------
building. The Mexican-
Americans a r e boycotting
schools to protest a desegrega-
tion order they claim fails to
recognize them as a distinct
minority.
Police at Mobile, Ala., r ing-
ed a formerly-white, now
p r e do ntinantly-black high
school fOr the thlrd day Mon-
day and conducted a room-to-
room search for trespassers.
Federal Judge Daniel H.
Thomas ordered the Mobile
School Board to s t o p
frustrating desegregation by
allowing parents to enroll their
children in the s~ls af their
choice instead of the schools to
which they were assigned.
Ike's Widow
Visits Nixons
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower,
widow of the late president; is
at the White House for a
private two or three-day visit
with the Nixons.
She also hoped to spend
same time with her grandson,
David Eisenhower, President
Nixon's son-in-law, befo r e
Eisenhower ente rs Naval af-
fi cers candidate school Oct.
24.
11130
a spri11ter can cover
nearty300 ~rds.
In the same time ~u
can dial a call a
in the country. @l!adftc111ep1""'9
i
canal near a black housing the security guard. The aoart-WASHINGTON (AP)-Folk
project. Two men were ment raided by age11ts or the singer Peter Yarrow has
reported beaten with pistols 181. the FBI and Chicago been sentenced to three
and sticks and one was stab-police is in Uptown, a North months in jail for taking "im·
bed In the back at the Black Side area inhabited mostly by moral liberties" with a 14·
Panther headquarters. Appalachian whites. Puerto year-old girl in a Washington
Police said bricks were Ricans and some Negroes. hotel on Aug. 31, I969. .----------------------
thrown at firemen who tried to Dreiske identified those ar-Yarrow, best known as 8,1~---------------------.1
put out the burning cars. rested as: memb!>r of tbe Peter. Paul
Palroimen Raymond Recd and Gary E. Lester, 26: Robert 1 J K d K ed , and Mary trio, had p eaded
Joseph Orticke said they were · enne y, 33: enn y s ·r y "' Ed d guilty in March. fired upon as they patrolled w1 e vonne. J<.J: war ~e hJ ack nei.....,borhood. Honeycutt. 21 , all of the apart-His wife, Mary Beth, 23d, "' ' ... t ·d d d n· h n1 cried softly as Judge Edwar
G'·arruso, ,·n a statement. men ra1 e ; an 1c a K I 24 f H lk Mi M. Curran handed down the
sa.,d Black Panthers "began a e so. · 0 ou a, ss .• and Henrv Les•-r 18 of sentence Monday after hear-~stematic reign of terror ad-· \.C • • MJ Oakwood Va ing a plea for mercy from at-
jacent to their headquarters. Lester ~as ~barged with ag-torney Edward B en n e t t
Two Negro ma 1 es were gravated assault. unlawful use Williams.
severely beaten. Two uniform-of a weapon and possession of Yarrow, 32, was led away
ed patrol officers were fired explosives, and the others immediately to begin serving
upon and injured by flying were charged with possession the term. With good behavior,
glass. A man and his wife of explOiSives, he said. he could be freed in 75 days.
L.
Bank Drops
Prime Rate
For Loans
..............................................................
Birthday
Clft
Problem
' Solve
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PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
The First Pennsylvania Bank·
ing and Trust Co. is droppin g
its prime interest rate a haU-
1' point from 8 to 7-1h: percent to-
day.
1t is the first large bank in
it
with a
TISSOT
c Extended banking hours: 8:30-5pm Monday-
Thur1day, Until 6 pm Fridays
c Fret Bank-by-Mail Suvic<
•••• ••• • ..
,.
the nation to reduce th:! rate
for large, credit-worthy busi-
ness borrowers. The action
produced a small rally on Wall
Street Monday. S e v e r a I
smaller banks in the nation
already have reduced their
rate.
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AND
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• DAILY PILOT EDITOllIAL PAGE
'
Jess
•
I Jess Unnih, the DemocraUc Party's candidat to
unseat Rooald Reagan in the gubernatorial race, · up
against It.
La<:king funds for full scale use of the various
medla, be elected to get hit expooure bl newspapers and
on the air by "making news" at no cost to himseU or
the Democratic Party.
He has succeeded in winning attention on a major
scale, but the question is whether hit methods haven't
been sell-defeating.
Unrub has been .wort.Ing hard to erese his "Big
Daddy" ima~e he won as Assembly Spe&ker, when his
heavy-handed tactics (such as lockjng llepublican legis-
lators in the Assembly overnight to force them to vote
on the Democratic majority's budget bill) gave him the
image of an old-style political boss.
But he had hardly begun the curnnt drive when he
replaced the old clgar with a foot In hit mouth.
Unrub accused Governor Reagan ol awarding a
"political payoff" to a man he contended helped the
governor run for President _in 1968. The alleged "pay·
oU, •• he said, was the appointment of the man's 28-year ..
old son as state medical director, a $30,000 per year job.
Then. came the bomb. The man in question. news·
men developed, died in 1960. "'I goofed,'' Unruh said,
adding he hoped it wouldn't be his personal Bay of. Pigs.
Taken with other actions, it might well be a contribut-
ing factor to such a debacle.
He led newsmen to the Bel Air mansion of million-
aire oilman and GOP stalwart Henry Salvatori. There,
alter first shakblg bands with Salvatori, he identified
the oilman as one of Reagan's •'kitchen cabfnet0 who,
he claimed, stood ~ receive a '4,W a year ta:r breek
if Reagan's tax reform bill had pa!sed the Legislatnre.
Salvatori called Unnih an ass and a liar and may
well have won the bizarre, ll'ontgate dol>ale.
Next, Unrub Jed another entourage to the front
Stunting
lawn of Governor lleagan•s Sacramento homi to, ht
said, illustrate a claim 1h4t Reepn is tied, to ll small
group of wealthy backers who bought the house so they
could rent It to him.
He did not mention the dangerous anclent f!ntrep
that ls the governor's mansion and which the Reagan
family sensibly refuses to live in. ·Or !be Legis.la·
ture's Jong foot-dragging on authorizing a suitable re-
placement home.
In another clrcu .. like performance, Unrub led a
band of followers to the scene of a planned Reagan ap-
pearance in the Bay Area-staging what he boped would
be a detracting political blow-off.
Unruh, by such stunting, may have regained llOl1ll
of . the identification he lost with hit A .. embly speaker-
ship -but the big question is whether he hasn't also
shed a lot ol the respect and support he might other·
wise have bad from California voters.
Time to Recycle
Light your home lights with a sack ol tresb?
Run your car on empty beer cans?
Well, not quite. But every American family of four throws away enough beat energy in trash to run the
family car for a year. ,
Dr. Hartmut H. Bosse( ol the University of Cali-
fornia at Santa Barbara notet that our over.abundance
of resources, lack of le,:tislation and excuses that opera.
tions would be too cosUy under salvage and recycling
are the reasons for our backwardness.
It's time-and then some-the U.S. called on the
imagination and in.genuity of it& 1cientists to go to work
with funds committed to long-range research 'and d•
velopment of reclamation methods.
Integration: No Breakthrough Yet
•
Separations
In British,
U.S. English
Dear
Gloomy
Gus: High Court to Hear School Issues
Sir Lawrence Olivier's illness has
forreS 5Uspension -temporarily. WI
hope -of rehearsals for an ~·~ V!c production this fall in London. Ollvier 1s
to play Nathan Detroit. the amall-Ume
ga mbler in the Damon Runyon musical.
"Guys and Dolls."
I share Sir Law· rence's enthusiasm
ror this 20-year-old
lihow as a "classic
of the musical com--
edy stage." My only
reservation is about
an all ·British cast
playing Natha n, Sky,
Nicely • Nicely, Chi-
cago Gus, and all
those other delight-
fully unsavory American characters.
IT WAS BERNARD SHAW, perhaps,
who once described England and the
United States as "two co u n tr 1 ta
l'ieparaled by the same language" -and
his jest has not Jost its linguistic point
C1Vet the years. British English and
American English, rar from fusing, have
remained stiffly independent, in diction,
cadence, construction and phrasing, M
well as in slang and Idiomatic
expressions.
Even the most skillful fictional
narrators in England fail to capture the
navor of American speech in their
stories. Whenever an American comes
on the scene, he punctuates his speech
with locutions like "I reckon," and "dad·
gum" and "shucks, ma'am," which
haven't been heard on our shores since
Huck Finn rode down the river.
Which ea.me fll'St at the Ruben
Salazar Inquest -the anned low·
men st.anding guard to ensurt
security. or thole wUneeael ,who
say they fear for their Uva?
-D. G. T. ""' .....,.. ..... ,....,.. ..........
--""' ... .. .... _,..,.... kllMll ..............................
WE ARE NO BE'ITER at Imltatlng
J!rtti3h rpeech. OUr authors depict BriUsh
charactm lllhli slang outdated by 1iO
years el1ber OXooiu « Cldne1, wbJcb
repreBeDt only two Sllllll lllven ol "Eng.
lisb accenl" 11le Jiirue "by jove" ii
abool ae frequent in Pic<adilly U.-
days as "dadgum" ls on Times Square~
Actor1 and actresses are no better.
"lbere are few thing more painful than
listening to a native American performer
trying to project. a high-tone British
accent and falling fiat on his a's.
Contrariwise, even so gifted an actor as
Sir Lawrence could not fool any
American for a moment into believing
that be was the promoter of the oldest
established, permanent floating crap.
game in New York.
IT IS NOT JUST that the words are
different. for the British cast will be
using the Runyon words. Or even the
accent itself. for accents can be
mimicked. It is the tut, the particular
rhythm and cadence of a dialect (and
both American English and British
English are by now dialects of the
Janguage) that giv1 the mark of
authenticity.
When Mark Twain's prim wife stood in
front of him and used a string of swear·
word s, to shame him into realizing how
he soonded., Mart replied: "You've got
the words, Livvie, but you don't have the
music." He understood the tr ll 1
distinctive nature of any lingo.
Statesmen in Sideburns
Home from Asia, Vice President
Agnew revealed he is growing sideburns.
It's a sign of the limes, which an
pretty hairy you'll allow. More and more
middle-aged males, who can't grow kmg
hair like the kids, are settling tor an
unshaved area in front of the ears.
'111ere Js a theory.
mosUy held by those
who don't sport .r. .
sideburns, that t
1
he .1'!'_.,;
middle· aged ma es c _,,,::;/
are hall • heartedly -
trying to look young. AI~.,. So the reporters ~ . ,. ... :. '"~
aboard Air Forc e ·~ 1 \;~
Two, 50me of whom
wear sideburns, asked Mr. Agnew tf
he was trying to look young for political
purposes, lhat ls, to attract young
Republican votes In the coming elecUcm.
Mr. Agnew said no, he was trytng to
escape a bald look alleged to show In his
photographs. .
A• everybody knows, or lh1nkl he
)(nows. the term for mutton chops
derived from Major Gtneral Ambn>K
Quotes
Rtbtcca 80111, S.F., • gteeraU.. pp
-11Wben 1 wu young J thought I knew il
all and my perenU knew nothing. lt wu
only when I -. up 11alntt the rtaliila
or everyday exi'1lence that t ruliz.ed how
much I had ta Jea.m. 1'
Burnside, who WON them bl tbt Civil
War.
THE GENERAL, alas, wu probably
the most mediocre military commander
of hi> day. Notwithstanding, Presldenl
Lincoln kepi him in corpe command,
probably berause he was IUCb a relief
from General McClellan, who wouldn't
fight at all. Bumside would fight, \Nt wai
always being JlcPd by the fuU.IJeard<d
Lee.
One ol the lmmoriAI mylhl Is that
Linco1n,""" WU ~Ven -he wu obecllre, when he became important
received a letter from a smaD g1rl asking
btm to grow 1 bean!. So he did. On him It
wu an improvement.
No Amer.tcan was ever so smothertd In
myth II WU Abraham Lincoln.
Hist.orlans have: waited lhouaands of
man-houri llylng vainly to oubotantiale
the yam that tome temperance folk
complaJned that General Grant drank
whist)', whereupon the Pres Id t n t
suggested they learn tile brand, BO he
could send 1 barrel to each of his
generoJJ. It !Olll1ded like • fronUer gag
Lincoln would tou off.
Let us ho1'0 Mr. Agnew'• s1deburno
don1 divide the 11&lion ., klng hair does.
A myth-making Vice Pre~ldent would be
man than n could beat.
WASHING'l'ON -Anyone driving into
Wuhlngton through parts of Virginia
aince public school opened would have
noticed that there were groups of black
children here and white children thert
waiting for their school buses. So~
busea appeared filled with black children
and in others white children
predominated.
The Republican governor of Virginia
escorted his daughter to a predominanlly
b l a c k school and
President Nixon said
thal the opening of
school, ao far as the
race issoe was con-.
cemed, "went beau·
tifully."
It went beautifully
In the sense that
there was no trouble.
The news pictures
showed whites enter.
ing formerly all-black ICbools and vice
versa.
Yet there may be Ove million School
children in the South who are attending
schools that are racially identifiable. Ac-
cording to BOme entries, a boycott of
public schools will increase enrollment in
newly formed all-white private schools to
400,000. The ha.sic iuue of desegregation
is in litigation in nearly 200 school
district.a:.
THIS CAN ONLY LEAD to the """
clusion that the breatthrougb in m.
tegration of the public ICbools bu not yet
come 16 years after the landmark
decision of the Supreme c.ourt. Much pro-
gress has been made. The final 10lution
bas not been lolmcl.
Now the liU(nllll Court is about to tJy
again to ftncl that IOlat.ion and ls nmnlng
the very dtfinlte riR that tu new tolu-
tion, li c:ooched In the tenns Indicated by
President Nbaa, may cause more con-
!Uslon and lunMIJ although this Is
precisely · the eondltlon Chief Jllltlce
Burger seeks to avoid.
The reason ror this threat ls that the
Supreme Court, In October, is to bear
arguments on the issues w!Uch have been
uppermost in what might be called the
reconsideration of prior decisions in the
courts. Those decisions., vague and con-
flictlng u they have been, have at lust
created a loose framework for less
sogregallon In the publle ICbools, so that
the progress made this fall stands in
lharp contrast with the somelimea
violent confrontatkml of other yean.
BVT rr JS ON THE general !lftJlllse
that busing to achieve racial balance. op.
posed by Nixon and seemingly di.sap.
proved under federal and t:tate laws, baa
under many cin:umstances a justifiable
legal foundation. U it does or does not,
busing, in feet, Is employed by local
school administrations under: court sane--
tion for racial miling in the public
schools. Cross-busing in one instance i1
intended to create a racial balance of 71
whites to. 29 black!.
Hearings have been set in October on
six southern cases involving outstanding
issues, including cross-busing. Entirely
aside from Uie issues involved, Cbitf
JuStice Burger's place in history on the
high judiciary is at stake. He took the
toad In deflning'the lauet In an early opi-
nion. That oplnm fJgured In • IOOll
dissertation. on neighborhood schools and
quality education. drifted by President
Nixon as a guide to the Supreme Court on
what the President of the United States
thought about the issues.
And now, the chief justice has brought
the,,e vague inaes on which there is lecal
conflict to the point of decision before
another school year be&ins in 1971.
TIDS IS A KIND. OF judicial activism
frowned on by traditionalists. But Burger
is breaking tradition right and left. He
called in two wire service reporters for a
background briefing in advance or the an-
nouncement that tbe cases would be
beard In October. Spurned by con·
gressional leaders in his desire to deliver
a state-of-the-judiciary message to a joint
session, Burger delivered one instead to
the American Bar Association.
The chief justice concerns him.self with
prw: interpretations of his position. He
has tried to exercise some restraints or
controls on the publication of his
speeches -which some traditionalists
do not think be should make at. all,
THE NET OF IT JS that Burger Is
establishing for bim!elf a publle iden-
tification ot image which would ·have
been c:onsidered unjudicial bl a chief
justice in a more conventional era.
What bis reasons for this may be are
not publicly known. Some have felt that
the Supreme Court has Jost a con~
siderable amount of its awe and respect,
and this is certainly reflected in public
opinion polls. It might be that Burger
wishes to restore the court to its former
level of respect.
The outcome, thererore, of the coort's
attempt, under Chief Justice Burger's
guidance, to be definitive on a range of
issues in school desegregation is a very
severe: test of his prestige as well as a
·critical juncture for integrated p u b I i c
education.
ti
President Plans a Drastic Overhaul
WASHINGTON -Pmidtnt NlllXI la
planning a drastic overhaul of the federal
regulatory agencies. If he carries out hia
1968 campaign pledges, a timid hierarchy
of reluctant regula tors will emerge from
t:..e: reorganization.
The special inter-
ests simply don't like
to be regulated , and
in return for th eir
campaign contribtJ..
tion s, Nixon sympa.
thized with them in
1968. He wrote a
private letter to
stockbrokers, deliv-
ered a campaign
pitch to oilmen and
gave personal assurances to other bus!·
ness tycoons that he would end "1overn-
ment harassment.'"
At stake ls the .tremeldou1 economic
power that the quasljuclicial regulatory
agencies wield. 1be Interstate Commerce
Commission , for iastance, can authorlie
billion-dollar mergers between great
railroads. The Civil Aeronautics Board
decides which aJrlines will get the choice
routes. Tlie Federal Power Commission
fixes the rates that millions of: corr
aumers pay for gas and electricity.
THE SECURITIES and Exchange
Commission can put a stockbroker out of
00.siness or compel a corporation to
withdrew from 1 stock m:hange. Aid the
Fecl.,.al Communlcalloas Commlsllon
.---B" Georwe --.
Dear Gtorge :
How CM I cure my wife of
bringing home every slray eat In
tht neighborhood?
TIRED OF IT
Dear Tired Of It: Brl-, home every llray clOf la
the neighborhood.
(Send your problems to George,
lovelorn columnist. AIIO hatelom
and neutral problems solved a:ood
cheap.)
allocates wave lengths for radio ud
television which have become so valuable
that station WICC.TV in Pittaburgh, for
one. wu told to the Cox Broadcasting
Company for ~u million Jl>ougb its
tangible auei. added up to only •u
million.
'lbe average citiun peys leant at-
tention to these public guardians who are
besieged iulead by the lawyers and lob-
byists of the corporations that are sup.
posed to be regulated. Congressmen have
additioul access to the commission
through back doors that may be clo6ed to
lobbyists. A pipeline company seeking a
rate Rduction or a Wall Street finn ac·
cused of stock irregularities will usually
hunt up a powerful Senator o r
Congressman t.o put in a word with :he
right commissioner.
~ THE NAME OF efficiency, Presi-
dent Nixon ii now preparing to remodel
and restructure l1lrt regulatory agencies.
tn place of the commisaims that now lit
in judgment on the lpecial interests, the
President would like: to appoint ain&le
Claims Against Estates
Alter a long illness, Mrs. Hunt, a
widow, died and her estate went equally
to her children. The court named her
eldest 10n executor of the tlllte. After be
petitioned to probate the will, he
published a notict to credilon to file
claims.
Eleven months later a locll clink: filed
a fl,500 bill, stating m.,.ly that It had
rendered extensive service while Mn.
Hunl was at a hospital, but it gavt no
dates nor lllttd the aervic:e1.
When the son rejected the clalm, the
clinlc sued but lost. Under the law any
creditor'• claim must be filed and
verlfted within four months of the ~ice
to creditors. creditors must attach aa
affidavit stattnc that the amount ii due
and that no poyment or olfJela to the
claim have been made. A I 1 t e
verUicaUon invalidates the claim iuelf
although ti had been filed In time.
TUE £XECU'IOR cannot waive a
clilm'• Umellneu. If he wants to pay the
claim hJmaeU be may but not with the
estate'• money.
After a claim ts filed, the executor may
pay tt, reject It, or compromise It. If he
reject.I, the creditor can then sue th•
astala wllhln tbnl months or forfeit his
------
claim. Rather than go to C'Our1 wi\b a suit
over a dlaputed claim, the executor·rnay
have a referee or IOme lmpltlial person
nview ti and report to the COIJli.
The uecutor can a1sO compromise and
settle clalms and hire accountants,
lawyen, and olhen to help him.
Al AN OFFI~ of the court, the
ttecutor must account lo the court for all
the estate's assets. Without a court order
ht cannot distribute the assets of an
estate.
The question ls ofttn Wed why the
problte laws are IO strict on fonnalitles.
For one thing, It ls in the Jntereat of
everybody that there be no undue delay
In s,ttllng an estate. The eourts make
every effort to close the cue promptly,
and the law gives no.one power to grant
excepth>ns once l't.llOftable notice bu
~ given throllflh publictUon.
Note: California latautri offer thlt
column 10 lfOU mGtf lcnoto about OUT
laws.
administrators.
No doubt this would reduct red tape
and increase efficiency. But it would also
give the President more power over
regulatory agencies that are now
reasonably free of presidential pressure.
He also wants to combine the three
transportatiOA agencies -Lhe IAterstate
Commerce Commission, Feder a I
Maritime Commission and C i v i I
Aeronautics Board -into a single,
streamlined body. And he would split the
Federal Trade Commission in two,
separating its anti-trust activities from
its consumer regulation.
TH I S SWEEPING reorganiiaUon
hasn't been unounced, but it b being
shaped in the back rooms of the White
House. It has been recommended by the
high-powered advisory council that the
President appointed to help h i m
streamline the huge federal bureaucracy.
The council i.s beaded by Roy Ash, presi~
dent of Litton lndli!tries -one of the
corpQratlom, iRCidentall~ tba& doal't
like to be .rt.JUJ!!iled.
While the bureaucracy 30J'ely needs
trimming, the public had better keep a
watchful eye to make sure tht fox dOesn't
re-design the chicken coop.
(
-----illiiiiiilai..
Tuesday, September 15, 1970
Tiie tdltorial JIO!I• of IM Dallr
Pilot 11tb to inform and lti,,..
ulatt rtadln by J>TtJmting thit -P"'• opfnl<ml and -mrntary on topicl of intnen
•nd lignlfiCl2itc•. l>v prm>iding •
fo"'m for th• ezprtttion o/
our reoden' opinlon.t, and br
pre.tentino Ou cUver1t ~
poinll of lnf°""'d obatTV<n
ond spoke,.... on topjCI af CM
day.
Robert N. We<d, PubUoher
'
'
' " " " ,,
CHECKING ·•UP•
:Wife'~ T~lking 1,
,
Saves Mar~iage?,
NO TAX BOOST?
ControUar Flournoy
State Tax
Boost 'Not
NOW PLAYING
Only on Cablevision
• •
''Extra Girl''
STARRING MABn NORMAND
DIRECTED BY MACK SENNETT
t-EWPORT: Mon.. Fri at 9 PM; also Sat., Si,,. et 6 PM.
MISSION VIE.JO: Mon.,~ Fri at 9 PM
Ncwr before on~ Coat TV: the original, lnCUt clnsic.
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Local
Channel 3
Cablevision
Coll 642-3260
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TUfMlar, Stpttmbtr 15, 1970 DAILY Pll~f '1
Anti-busing Law Heads for Courts
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -=ornia's new law Pro-
i\lng the ~ of school
en without the consent of
parents is headed ~ tests in
the State ~reme Court.
Within hours after GI/~·
Rona1d Reagan signed the b1U
Monday at Sacramento, the
San Francisco Board o f
Education filed a peU.tion ask·
ing the high court !or an in·
terpretation.
-The board ts starting a bus
system m·. one district, aiming
at greet.er r{tcial integration.
Another petition was flied by
the regional American Civil
Liberties .Union office whose
attorney Paul Halvonl.k .said
the law is "confusing and re-
quires clarification."
If it is intended to Interfere
with integration, it is "ob-
vi o u s I y unconstitutional,"
Halvonik asserted.
In Sacramento, attorney
Nathanael Colley of the Na-
tional Association for the
Advancement or Colored Peo-
ple declared be would file suit
With Interest
after-lhfl Jaw goes Into lifect neighborhood !JChool." Judiciary was intended to
Nov: 251 contending it violates ·''I do oot believe that in the legislate or run ou r pubtic:
both the federal and state con·_..;se;::par::;;.:•t;;;i•:;;•;._ol::.....;t>O::::w.:•:.:"::.· ...::'h::•;....;schoo::::::.:l•::.· _" :.R::•;:o•8~':::"c.:":::::ld::.. __
stitutions.
As tie signed the bill,
ReagadJ>randed forced busing as "a ridiculous waste lor time
and public money."
"( know that there are thooe
who charge that oppo~ing
compulsory busi ng is somehow
equivalent t o encouraging
,.,,scrimlnation." Reagan said:
But those who make this
charge lack understanding of
the real needs or our children,
whatever their race or ethnic
background ,"
Mandatory busing, he added,
"hampers the quality o f
edlJ(ation our children need
and deserve, siphons off
millions of dollars in school
funds" and robs pupils "of the
national environment of the
New Oil Drill Ban Urged
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nf6 cylif)(]e~and 1~ hp, 1he Pintogivesyoo only4 cylinders
and•75 hp.
And the Vtga'~standard mgine hasooi)'4 cy\iodenand •
90 hp.
Tht Gremlin's optional engine is bigger, klo. Yoa fllli&br.
st)' 1hat 11\t Gremlin has a bigger htJrt.
Tloel11hltlitil-•'*alJU ............. nAarioll...,..,
CaliforniaColle9e
"'"" ""}I f C 'merce ..................... , ... _ 0 Om 1s1.1ss Pi11t Av11111•
. Lo"t IHC:lt; Celi!.rnM tollS
ENROLL NOW· FALL TERM: September 28, 1970
TELEPHONE: 4:16-9767 or 435-5367
"DAY OR EVENING CLASSES"
TWO· YEH COURSE!
l w1ift111 Ad111 ilii1tr1litll
Hither AccMRli ..
AuHnliltf -IMlt PrtctHillf
l11<~liv1 S.,.nol1riiil
5HORT·llRM COURSE!
St1n119 .. pilic: Mt•ic1I Tronscri,:llM•itl
Cl1rit•I ful1-Ch11tt koklff9ilit
l(..,pund• l ruU.-up CloKes
1u,in111 MKloi"" Shor1t.1n• .... l'ftlillf
Dtftt1I Aui11in9 {Grett or AIC Shortll.n•)
ONE· YEAR COURSE!
L"'°I S.,.1111rilt
MMit1I s.tr1!11MI
S1cr1llri1I
(Gr"' tr AK SMr!Mwl).
Jvnitr Acc-tiat
start
ailY: change in appearance as
es quickly fade away •••
glances from
au love."
NO MEMBERSHIPS NO MESSY SWEA TSUITS
"Tell us the dress sire you· want to
'Near. We'll tell you how manv visits it
, , ;es and guarantee in 'Nriting you
.. ' ill reach your goal or we'll even let
,. ., 'y have FREE OF CHARGE any and
\ ' further visits until you d o.
, Tt'VrSWEEK!
StJtisTANTIAL
SAVI NGS
Call us fot o FREE courtesy vit•: j 1"
tt. No obligatio n. If you wish, I
bring a friend along. Duri ng f
your free visit, octuallv use the I -
exclusive fna chines designed
for quick safe effortless reduc-
ing. No disrobing. WE ARE
NOT A HEALTH SPA GYM. No
t lrenuaus e11erci1e, Come in
comfortable casual clothes.
Private playroom facilities for
small children.
,\1ncrica1t
J~~rrcs!'I
NEWPORT BEACH ALSO IN
AIMMllll, c .... 1 ... c,......, Dow~ .... , ...............
Les Y .. ~ Leitt 8"cli. N"""9ft hedi, "°""' Htl1"""4.
011terie, PllMtdeff, Su D .... , Se_,. ...... S... .........
l•t11IM14I, To,...., 11fff..CO, Wllltrief.
430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642·3630
CJ lleclis l•t ol lelltoe toy Cl1~l
SANTA ANA, 1840 W. 17th St. 50·9~57 re) Cop11rla ht 1970 Glori(J A-112r$halt Mot. Co. l'ne.
•
'
1
•
For The
Record
. Meetings
Death JVotfees
; TUISDAY
. Fr11'1k 0 . C1rt. IUt Hlllc,MI Drive, l1·
1un1 Beach. 0111 of .S.1th. S"'t It. Sur-
• v!ved b'f wlf1. Carer, of th• 11ome1 dl\IGll-
. h r., Mf1• Elll1be!h M1yer Alff W!dlll•,
• k1111111 1nd four •r1ndson1, S.f'\llces,
WedMldaY, S..I. 1&. 11 AM, Unlled
Communlly PtnllYtWriln Cllurtl'I ol L•·
··sun• 811dt, wllfl Dr. 011111 R. Tu"-r
, offk!1!1"9. lntermtflt to fll11-11 Ptdllc
VI-Memor!1I P1rtr. •. Sheffer U gu11o1
-. 9tath Mor1111rv. Dlrttlor1,
DUMlOt' 'w un11n F. Dunloo. AM 59. of 1-4« Te•·
.,_ n e. WfY, Uou11o1 Be1dl. 0111 of ffllll, -~ S....lember It. survived bY wll1, Mrs,
, Wiii• 0.1ne· DunloP1 dlUl lllH', Mr1. SNr-
<in Ann Vlone. Hunt1noton a.1cl'l1 two
•••Mtl'llldren. S-lcn, tod1Y, TulllJda't'.
2 l'M, Mettlft' • flmlt't' Cllapfl, Cltrden
Grove. lntllltfMtll, H1rbof Rn l Memoritl
....... Mettler Mor!Ulrl"• Dlredotl,
MAMOSKI!
Rot.rt F. M1rm1t1. Aff 41, ol '150
l lmtrld< Lllne, CO!ll MfU. 0.11 of
clHfll. S"'lembtr 11. Survived' llY wife,
S11ell1 A. Mtnr1$11;e; two sons, Miki and
llotlbr1 1f•U11lller. L•u'•• •It of tM homer
ttlrH ~1, leon.•d, ol F()fkl, W~
lngfoll; Geo•ff, Morirw, W11hl1111!0t1; •nd
Elmtl'" M1no1ke. ol Edmo111, W11lll(l'fton1
tl•ter, Mr•. Hert>e'f Gr111fm, MlflM,
c1n1.1 ·••renll. Mr. el\d Mr1, Afldr ...
M1..osk1, Monrw, W11llln<1ton. Ro11rv,
!O!l!tl!I, Tun<11v, 7:)) PM. Re~ulltl'll
Min, Wedntsday, 10 AM, bolll 11 SI.
Johll f~ B1p1!1I C:1lllolle (llurcll. I""
terintnl, Good Sllepllerd Cemt terv. F•m-
llv 1ut111!• tt'M)H wl1hlnt lo lftllkl mt-
morlal con1rfttoullon1. pl11sa conlrll)Vft' IP
the (flv of Hol>e. Brown COlonl1I Mortu• erv, Directors.
O'JU!lll
John O'Neill. Att d , ol IOOf V1ltMll prJvt. Costa Mesa, 0.11 ol deatll, Sept,
''· Sprvived bV wilt , Loire, .. ; d1uoll11rs.
-SheJ'Ofl McGradY 11\d Don111 T1bb1, bQlh
pf SO.ton; k1U1erlnt Creu10. Garden
• Grov11 ,_ SQns, Joh" 11\d Jamh, bolll
• m Cotl• Mei1. Sttv!cel. Wedne1d.v. 10
N/'., Bllll Co5!1 Me11 Ch1~I. l11l1r· ,....,1, Good Shrioherd Cemelerv. B1U1
Co1t1 Mn• Morlu1rv, Dlrttl()fl.
WALKElt
Mrs. Mlrlllt H. Walktr. Atoe ~6, of 101)6
01111ev (lrcle, Huntlntton Beach. Diie
ol 1111111, StPtembt!r 11. survived bV wn.
Emmett H. Jr,; d1uthl~1. Mrs. Sir.cl••
H aroo1 ... Mln11 Jtnn!ler L. 11\d Otb•• 11: Wilker; molt>er, Mrs. Jen11l1 Wrl11hl1
brothers, CllM, Niie 1nd Cr1l1 Wrl1111:
"''""· -Fav Ewlrrst 11\d Miidred B1!dln11 1 rar>dc:htldren. Brend• Broc>ilo; Brva~ ind
,.dim Walk1r1 11\d Emmt!I H, Wilker.
(halltl 'wrvkt t l\d lllletmtfll, Wtdnt td1y,
1;lll PM, Wtttmln1!et' Mtm«lel Par~ Mortuery 111\d ,.,....,,...,,
1AUCOWS K't
Blanche T. Z1l~owllk~. 111131 Grtlfl~iew Lt~ H1111tintton 8ffCl'I. Surv1vtd bV llu~l\d, Dim; brolhtr, l lwl'Wl'\CI Sthton•
ovtri 1wo 1lll .. s. Sttll• khmldl 1nd
G••C• Thom. ServkM, Wednt14tV •• PM,
Peelt F1mltv C:Olonl11 F11nerel Home.
ARBUCU.E • SON
W""'lllf Mor1Ur7 111 E. 171b Sl, C-Mesa -• BALTZ MOR'!VARIES
Coronl del l\fll' OR 1-1450
Cott. Mesa Ml a.iw • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Bro.dW8J, Cotti Mell u J.3411
" . McCORMIClt LAGUNA
BEACH MOR'IVARY
ll9'~~M. -• PACIPIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARlt
C.mtj<ry e M..-,.
Siii r..::fi... om.
N--' Baeb. Coll! .... •• ..,. .. Iii.me
• PEE1t F.UIU.Y
COLONIAL FtJNEllAL DOME
7'01 8oha Aft. ,,_...,._
• SH'~E-w-E-k ~tOR1tlARY
Llpna Beodi 04-1111
Sa1 Clemtate ...... • SMITHS' MORTUAllY
111 ..... 8L _.,.._ -
Tuesday, Stptembtr 15, 197Q
Futad R.-iser
Gov. Reagan to Speak~ Anaheim HAMS
" • • • So Good It Wiii
Haunt You 'Til It's Gone"
By O. C. HUSTINGS
01 tM cn11., '1101 stllff
UCI Offers
Business
Semi1iar
IRVINE -Enrollment Is
now open for a one~ay
seminar, "Business Aspects of
the Arts for Wtiters,'' to be
presented by UC Irvine Ex-
tension Sept. 26 at the
Airporter Inn at Orange Coun-
ty Airport.
Coordinated by freelance
writer Arnold Hano, J· h e
Se·minar will combine lectures
and workshops Jed by sue-.
cess!ul writers, editors and
agents. The seminar is design-
ed to help professional and
student writers sell what they
write as well as lo tell them
\\ilat is selling in today's
market.
The seminar will be held
from' 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
and the fee of $18 includes
lunch. Enrollment information
may be obtained from the UCJ
Extensictl office at 833-5414.
Dinner Set
For Society
The Orange County branch
of the Amer ican Cancer Socie-
ty will hold its annual dinner
meeting at the Balboa Bay
Club tonight at 7:30.
Dr. Irving S. Bengelsdorf.
science editor of the Los
Angeles Times, will deliver
the keynote address on "Of
Chromosomes and 1iten."
Anyone may attend the .fin-
ner. Reservations may be
made by calling the Cancer
Society at 838-0510.
Accidents Low
On Freeways
SACRAMENTO -Fatal ac-
cidents occurred on California
free .... ·ays in only three coun-
ties over the recent three-day
Labor Day Weekend. Six
freeway accidents in Ule three
COWllies -orange, Lo s
Angeles and San Bernardino
-accounted !or seven deaths.
In auto accidents on all
roads in Californi a, 66 people
Jost their lives during th e
Labor Dny •·ee.kend frort\ g
p.m. S.pt. ~ to midnight S.pl.
7, 1ccorrling to A.C. €step,
traffic engineer for the state
Oivlsion of lllghways.
Despite the low fatality rate,
freeways ·accounted for about
50 pertent of all milts driven
Jn Call!ornia durbig the three.
day por\O<I. Jn Orange County, two
pcnons dled in separate
freeway JCCldenU:, one. in •
rear..fn<I co1Ils'°n on tht Santa
Ana Freeway aOO ~ other
-.'hen his vehicle ran off the
roadway and overturned Oil
the Gardea Grove 1''reeway.
Califomia Federal pays
$1,236 a year on a $20,000 invesl1nent.
with absolute
6% annual interest
is what we're talking abou t.
i A high annual yield o.f 6.18 %.
'l'hat means $1,236 a year on
a $20,000 investment And not
only is interest substantial, but
your principal is fully insured
by an agency of the federal
government. It's one of the
world's safest investments.
Naturally, there are
~ome conditions •
First of all, to qualify for
California Federal's 6% cer-
tificate plan, the minimum
deposit is $5,000. Second, you
leave your money with us for
a period of two years or more.
However, withdrawals may be
made on certificate accounts
at any time before maturity
with some loss of interest.
Is it possible for a
family to invest more than
$20,000 and still have
the principal amount fully '
insured?
By opening three separate
accounts, a man and wife may
have up to $60, 000 fully insured.
What if you don't have
$5,000?
California Federal has a
wide variety of plans for invest-
ments under $5,000. Interest
ranges from 5% to 5.75%. One
of them und oubtedly is ideally
suited t o your particular cir-
cumstances.
Can you earn more than
6.18% yield?
Yes, you can earn 7.79%an-
nual yield on $100,000 or more
if left on deposit for 1 year or
more.Thatamountsto$7,779.00
annual interest on $100,000.
And the 7.5% yearly interest
rate is adjuEtable for terms
shorter than one year.
Does any Savings
and Loan Association in
California, under any
circumstances, pay a
higher interest rate than
California Federal?
No.
Do you have any other
questions?
Call any of our offices in
LosAngeles, Ventura or Orange
Counties. Or stop in. We'll have
the answers. Helping savers
earn more money on their
savings made us the nation's
largest federal.
California Federal.
Nationi Largest Federal.
For the money you can't afford to risk.
CaWomto federal Sovinos and Loon Assoc:iolion •Assets over $1.6 Billion • Head Of Meo: 5670 Wilshire Boulevard, los Angef•
Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave.· 776-2222
Costa Mesa Office: 2100 Harbor Blvd .• 546-2300
.
Orange Office: 4050 Metropolitan Dr.· 63 9-3033
Other GOSJVOnicnl oflic:oi lhroughoul los Aflgcle:. Orongo and Ventura Counties.
I
1.~ . .
OAILY PlLOI •
'
NOT.Cl OP MAltlMAl.'I U.L.li
IAlt l1't T-llJll NOTICI 011' THI TIMI AlllD H..\C:I Of' w. MOfll!AU ITIUIYlo!OltM-,.. .......
!Jig Race Begins LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
lllOTICI TO CltlOITOltl NOTICI TO Clt1Dt10111 11111.ltllll• Of' Tllll LOCAL AlllllCY Srt•v'*"' Ne. lJ .... l w ~I,..,,. .. l ft U •
IUl'llllOll COUltT o• Tllll IUl'lltlOll (OVIT 011' TMI HtaMATION COMMllllOlll 01' tcllllOft ltM,11111 on""""'' It, ltJl.lv l'l>e
STATI 011 CALU•OltlOA l'Oll JTATI 0' (ALlf!OltNIA OflANll C 0 U Ill TY , CALlllOlllOA, 11/Hrlor '-1, (-IY If Lot ,,,..._i.,,
TNI COUNTY 01' OllAMOI 1'01 TNI COUNTY O' OltANll WMIJll PltQ.POSID DltlOLUTION DI' Ste\" ff (11lllitf'11l1, -I l~I
Ill.. .......... Me. ,. ... PU '"' TAIJl•T HAlltAll 01n111cT .... ,.., "' t1v« ., .... lt ,., ... II •• llltl• tt llU'flt M. SUHl:tNG, l lM E.i11t ot 01\NllL llUOY, 11!.1 OAN 01' OltAltll COVNTY', I\ It O l...,._1 cl'lllll1or ,,.. 194111\1.I W. Mtt'Mll ~II., 1.ur14 $, SUHlllNG. OIC.Mll'CI. l._UOY, Dtn.Mlil. oaJICTIONS •• .. • 0 t Is Ts StrlYhonl •• "'°""""' llltMlr. sheWlllt •
NOTICE IS Hflla'I' OIVEN lo IN NOTICl IS HEl:f:l 'I' OIVEH 1'o 11W TNlllO, WILi. 11 .. llllNTIO ,01 lltl N l...u 9f .S,tlt.00 1du11!Y ..,_ ...
Cup Watchers Cram Street
By ALMON LOCKAJIEY
ktl+ftl •dltw
NEWPOR'f, R.I. -Narrow,
~n&way, cobble s toned Thames
Street in this ancient yachting
rapilal w ill be even nlpre
c rowded stiirting Tuesd ay as
y achtsmen from all parts or
lhe nation ming le with goggle-
tyed tourists -a ll hoping to
see one or more races of the
21st defense of the America 's
Cup.
Tb a mes Street (pronounced
Tin1s in England. but like it'.11
spelled in Newport) is the
·waterfront street in this town.
On its shore side ii houses the
Newport Shipyard whe r t both
the U .S. defender Intrepid and
I h e Australian challenger
Grelel II are berthed a few
yards apart.
Thames Stretl is also chock·
o-block with small b o a t
marinas, marine s upply stores
aod other marine related
business -t o say nothing of
h onkytonk beer joints. short·
order res taurants and other
smalJ businesses.
~1osl popular eateries arc
Chrystie's, hard b y t h e
Newport Shipya rd. Also a l W
& ~f ls Mac's Clam Shack. a
popular to u r I s t attraction
which offers every kind o f
delectable seafood -lo be
eaten either on the premises
or to t ake out.
There are other g o o d
restaurants in other parts of
town -but har dly any with
the plush inside or outside ap-
pear ances of suc h New port
Beach Restaurants as the
Stull Shirt, R e uben's, the
Reuben E. Ltt.inclent
M ariner, Five Cr wns or any
one of a doifn oth r t .
Up the HUI fr m Thames
Street is Bellevue treet. two-
w ay and o nly Ali htly m ore
modef"ll, where one finds the
s hopping cenlers. o the r good
restaurants, art, galler ies a nd
numerous olher enterprise s .
As you travel seaward out
Bellevue you find the palatial
old mansions -once c aIJed
"summer cottages" by the ex·
treme ly wealthy New Yorkers,
Phi\adelphians and "down·
e asters" who c ame l o
Ne wport to get away rrom the:
cities.
The old mansions are well·
preserved, despite lhe fact
that a fe w of them have been
!urned over to girls schools
and other s uch enterprises.
Ve r y few, if any of the
multimilliona ires who b uJlt
the wide-sweeping "cottages,"
or even their heirs, occupy
the m any more. Where would
one get the ser vants?
Newport, R .l. s tarted oul a s
a sailing town and is still a
sailing town.
Early in the century il don·
Boat Manufacturers Praise
Nixon Environ1nent Agency
crMll10R ,, tlll 1111\11 ~ llKflHl'lf cndlton ., '"" ·-· ll.ll'!lld ffcldtr\l NIAtllN• Miii l~I "' ,.... dll• ., ~
d .-. b ol · t ti IMI Ill --htv ..... Cltln't• 11111111 TM fhll tll -'°"'' 11tvl111 clelm1 1NIMI 11141 NOTICI! IS Hf l:EIY GIVL!:H INI 111 llWl ll(I fll Mkl uK11lloll, I lllYI i.vlM ne un; l&r artS OCrl C »Id d«.ldtlll -t•ul1'td II Ille !lllm, Wld .....,, l tt t•ulrld tt Hit IMll\, 1 ... llcetlon 1'11• btf11 fllM wllll Tiii 1.0CJll -111 11\ti tltM, 11111 t llil ktttr .. l ol
I •·· t ~. d """' IN "*-"' \IO<ICl'llr1, In 1n. "''l<I with tllt 11oK•1ttY VOl,l(l'ltr•. lft tlll' ll'flct A9tM'I' ll0t...,.1lon Commlultt1 of !ht wolt l\ldotm1111 cll01'or 111 thl ,_,.,,. 111 e egance W11'11:'11 J eam....,.ts an ., ,,. c"'11 011111 11111 ... 11111111111 covr1,., of 1111 clln or tt11•bt!Y•1111111~ cOll't,.,. c.u11w er Ort,,... s111t "' ciJINfnr.1. ""-c .... 11rv of Ori-. St111;of c11~n11.
I ·"l [ N y k to .,IMlll tl\tnl, wllh TM t'llCtl.,,f'Y 11 .,,_, thtm, with IM MCIUlfY •-1111111 lllal ul1f Commllllon ,.., ... dtt(rlbtd 11 lotlOWI: uxury y av, s rom ew or _,,.,., ,, "" ur41 .. 19MO 11 "'' of'ICI wO\IC.llWt, 11 1"' lll'llhf111Mc1 •t IM ettic. tnt .,_,.. •1H011111ot1 .+ "" T•\'*" Lot,,, 111 blodl m or I.•~• ,.,," ••
and neighborino New E'noland .. Mr •ll6r ... ¥: HVGH A. MOIAN llt, of ftl• llllH'llt¥l. ll:OIE" T L TOMS ...... 0r11111.. Dl•l•l(I ol Ort1'19t Cwn\¥, "'°""II Ill Mt• ncor'd9d kl boell '·NI• 1~ e ... t . Coiortclo l lvd., $\ill• at. Nl(HOU.S, 1(01.-LINEI, My I. I: s' C.l!lwt111. ,.,. ''°""'I eoll(on'lll1*1. lht • I> ... MIK•ll-llKIH'D ol "';'
c ities carr'ed the cream of P1ud11<11. c111t1H'11l1 91101 • ...,hl(h •• O'ANGELO • JUVEHS, ,_ w11o111r1 ~110W11111 fffltt•ll'r dt1trlbtd ,,.,. wlltch ClllltltV llCOl'Gtr or O••rw• C01.H1•Y •n,
•M "" 1ltct or llllJl"'11 of IM ~rodtu1tneo:I eo..,ll!v11d. L~ Jn,, .. ,, C•1lfot'11l1 fOIUJ, It ,,_, N•lkwlirtw HM:•lbtd 111¥ 1 1 .. 1 loct~ th JOT • '1nd $1., N-rt
American and international Ill 111 11'1111-llt•l1l11!nt 10 t"' '""' ol ....tild'I 11 it... l'll(t of w1111111 el lh• d.1Krl111fon on 1111 wltto 11 ... commlJ•l\Wl' • IHch, C1lll<lrn11. . , ••Id OC.O.nl, wl1hlp follr l'llOllll\1 •ll•r une11r1!t ntd 111 111 m1tt..-1 "'l1l11lnt to thl mtllM' -lion ot '"' T1l111tl NOTfCE IS MEltl!aY GIVE N lh~t Ill SOCJety to US p 11It\1l111t llrll '°"'blk1tlon •I lhls llOl!ce. 11\t tltl• (If 11ld dettdtnl, wlllllfl 1011r Dr1l11111 Ol1t1lc.I I• ,....,lllY IOCllll'CI •r1t11,, OclvW I, 1t10, 11 !:Ge •cloc•
mansions and beaches Even 01tld "'*'"' "· 1t10 111011t111 '"" ,.,. 11r11 .v1111c:111on 11 trll1 -•or 1111 Jent•....,. Rlw•r. 111 "'' ... 11 ,..M, '' "-' 01 counhou••·, "', w, . , ' Gll .. CE 1t05E M;HEl•LE nellu, Hllllll<>1lon a...c:11 ,, .. i l'd '1<1 !ti. Cllr 1Jlf! St .. City ol CMll Mtu. 11!Wn1, the mos:t widely known beach ElCK111rl• o1 1111 wm "' o.nci •-..st 21, n10 o1 1'1>111111111 v111tw, •lone witti v1r1cM c.wt11Y o1 O••ntt. s1191e of C•tllot11i1, 1
h B ·11 • •• h ' "" •llowo narnttl ffcedelll EO'NAIO w. OEIEHIA, ""'II .... bt1M IOct lld 111 "" .. 11 wm lflt •• .v11u, l lH:llol'I 10 IM hl1h•1! ere -8J ey s oc4C -IS HUM A. MOll.l\llt Ill l!.MKUIOI' II ,.... WHI Wff1mln11 ........ lht _,i'o Gll'dtn w.so. .. IOf' ~ In ltwlul _., "' "'·
an exclusive str etch of pnd • 1. c.w ... 11\14., 1w1t1 1tt "' ,,,. 11tov1 "'"'" lltcldent G•ov• ••••· "" -• s.1111 Al)I ,, .. , un1i..i ''''"· 111 "" rt.hi, 11111 tlld 111· ' ... M ..... c1111. '1111 •o••llT L TOMI !I'll WHI CM11 Mae ., .. '"' "" WM! .. , .. , II ltld l\111.,,...111 do.bier Ill Ill• wh.ich can be used only by t he Tel ' (1111 44t-4IU, ...... m NICMOl..U. 1(01.LINll. MYlll. ,,.,....,.,.. IHCh ..... •bo<H .. ,,,,bid ,,......ty, ..... ""rh
Wealthy few who can afford • Affwlll'I' .... I XKllll'll O'AN•ll.O • OIV.NS ., IM !lmt (If "" M••'"' noll(H llertitl 11\41•-' II n'llr "' MCttllrr "' ,.., .....
. l"llblllhtd °''"" CN ll Otilv l"ilO!, Mel Wlhllln ..... ...,'"' \lld ~·lit IM¥ "' ll'lfldllltd "-"' "" Uld ute:u!lon, wlllo '""'" l111t••1I 1114 membership -or wangle 1 s.1 ..... -1. • u, n, 1t10 1u1.1t1 '""' ..._.,.., c:111H>n111 ... u tOcllUOll of '""' •tt•ltorY 111 the vicinity cv.t" , , ,
d Tiii: fJlH -..1)\ of !I'll ..wo11I, 0.ttd t i Cfflt MHt , II Forn I .
guest car • LEGAL NOTICE "'".,_'..,. I••""" Nor1cE 1s l"UllTHE• GIVEN. 11111 SH11mt11• '' '"'· Since before the Civ il War. P11lltl•-°''"" C•t .r O•llv .. Ito!. st lcl c-lHloll "-' ll~td W~t¥ ,,. F•111C:l1 L. Gll llf
N b bee th · ~14 1.11-1 ti •M S.!t mbtr 1, t, lS, 1f10 2)rll 111¥"' St!>!""°"' H1'0 If Ille"°"''" M•ll~tl ewport as n e Site of r._. 1577·1'0 7:00 •'clock ,.,M. of u ld d•v ..,. •• ._ MunlclNI Cwrt (llTlf'ICAT.. Of' aUSINISS -'Oi O'lllO• C....,ty
one of America's key Naval f'ICT1T1ous NAM& •, • 11111 ~"" e111," \'""'.," ..,1:~ tton ·H•fbllr JUdtci.1 c 111r1c1
bases TM unc1trs1entc1 "°" ctriny M " 11 IM ---¥ "" ""' av E J .... ~ · , tondlll'llnt1 1 t>v1l11tu 11 lU• New--• LEGAL NOTICE l ulldlntl. JU NO<"lh S¥C1mort Sir.... s.<.ffni
Jn 1934 Jl becam e the head· 11¥11., c ... 11 MeM, Ct1Hor1111. undtr IM S111l1 •1111, Ctltfrotftll , •• lfM time tnd AUOUIT A. A•llY, JI.
f lh . ' tlcUllOlllo firm Mme or COAST •UCTION Piie• tor IN llfff\nt .. uld .,-.1 ... Nfrfll Otr1MW AY• quarte rs or e Americas NOUSE , ..... '"-' wld 11,.., 11 '°'"'"°*'of T"'l* totttlllf' .... itti 111 "'"'"" •M t1:1ltc111111s ,,,_.., ,_, C•litlr~lt .,,..
C"p races and still iS a 1111 loHowlllO --· WllOU lllrM In lull NOTIC• TO (ll!DITO•I • llllrllo whk~ !MY bt llltd 11141 II W'hkll .... 1ntit1i A,ltwlltY • . , 111111 •i.t:t o4 r111dtnc• 11 t• IOll0....1: SUPlllOI COUIT Of' TH• ltmt .... 1l1tt 111 """°"' lnl11Ullld l'ubllll>M Orlllll Ce.st Oillw !'Ito•,
premier selling for the worlds Ste1111t11 J. Mt:Ht.... $3U l !we• STATlf: 01'" CAl.lf'OINIA f'O• ltllA\11 mtY IPHlr '"" "ht••d, Selllffl'lber n. "· "· .,,. 1ff7·l0
. ·1· ta J Av.....,. HtwPOrl ltl<h C1IH THI COUHTY 01' Oltl\Nll Dllld: Au-I Jl, 1f10 --------------premie~ Saling.spec cu ar. Otlld i.11111111 )I, 1110 • . .... ~t· I V Ol:OEI OF THE LOCAL AGE'NCY
Bes I de !I Its s a i Ii n g s. J. MCH•'h f lllll Ill I Ol l!ltT '"UL GOIDON, FOttM•TION COMMIUIOH °" ORA.NGE b k d N • STAT E 0,. CALIFORNIA, •Isa ,._., 11 PAUL GO I DOH t nd ti COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
ac groun ' ewport IS also Oll•NGE COU NTY: llOllERT II, GOROON, OIK11lld. llCHAIO T, TUINEtt 1--,-.-.,-.-.-,,~,c,c,c,-o,c,.o,o,c"c'=-'c.c,~,c,"
widely koow.1 on the in· On ""''""' Jl, lf10, btllH't -· • NO!lf'Y HOT ICE IS HE1£lY GIVl!N 11 lh• E•tcllllvt Offictr . CIHTll:AL OllTllCf 01' CAl.lf'Oltfr'IA · I !. , . P11bllc In 11'4 lor ••Id S1•1t , oer-.!lv crHlllH'J or lht 1bDv• fWlmtd dtcHlenl Loc•t •••ntv Form•t•on -. 1414,
le rnat1ona tennL' c.trcuits, IPfflftd 51e~lltn J, MCN•Jh known 101\'ll lh•I ,11 ... r.on1 111~1111 <Ill"" 11111111 the Cor•u'lllHlon of Or•nM County. ...TITIOH 1N INYOLUN'JAIY
some of the top professionals 10 111 1"' ""''°" w1>1111 n•m• is uld chctdent •''·'"",'"" 10 1u. the!YI, c1u1ot1ll1 aAHtCIUll'TCY . lubKrlbld to lhl .... nhln Instrument 111d wllh lh• n1Ktl~trv VOllC...,I, In !ht olllc:t .. ubll!Nd O••nM COf•I 0•11\1 .. llOI, lH ' THE M.l\TTEI OF l'lllRE-TE(
play ing on the lawn courls. •ck11C1Wltdnd 111 e~tc11tt<1 "'' wm•, o1 1111 c11rll ol ll\e 1bOYI 1n11111111 courl, or StPlltll'lbtr • •nd 15, 1"0 105-Mi COlf'ORl\TtON, AllQIG ainlll\IPI.
The town is a lso known for Us (OFFICIAL SE,.Ll to ..,,unt them. with '"' n1e111•·~ Th• ••tlllon 111 8,~ cwitom Moldt,.
. . JN-L, NlllOn VO\Khtfl , lo 11\t 1111dt<1ltl\ld 11 lht ofllu LEG•, NOTICE IM .. Gold p11111c s.r~lcl Ill( .. l'l11tlc.1 & pop music festivals and more Ho11rv ,.ulltlc • c1mor1111 01 her tUO<"nt\I, J. JASON GALE. ts.II n.a.. C~l<'llicil• we1tern Int .. .,.. wo1'1Pn. . ,. I I P1lriclp.ol 0tr1c:1 In l'llM v .. m •Ori~• Wtll. "•lo• V1tdl1 Wtlllt• "''"" ' L1tln c .. A ' •• serious opera IC s pec acu ars. Or•nt• COlllllv E1t1te1. c111111n111, Which 11 tht 111c1 DI CASI NO, l"·tMn reui«ff1111y ,..,.,111111 •I'd .i.-11
There have been some wide· Mw Comm1111on EK•i•e• bllolntts or 1111 l.H'ldli'•l•llld In 1!1 millet• •All »M 1 · h · !...-•u1. l6, 1'1~ Hf'ltlnlnt Iii tht 111111 of iii,, ft(fdenf, tllTll'IC Tl Of' COl,OIATlo'N io1 l'lllrt-Tel!: Cor•r1!lon It • ,,,_vtd, sweep11.1g c anges 1n lue area Plltllllllld Ot•ntt Coast Dtl!' PHO!, wlltlln '""' ._.nts •fl•r lh• llrll TIANSAC~ION 01" IUSINISS UNO•• tllnl~ .. or COfl'>ITltf(ltl Cll,,_t!lon 10\t
since the Amer ica 's Cup races ~111tfl'lbl• 1, 1, u, n, 1979 1UJ.111 1111t1uc.11on 01 this 111111c1. f'ICTITIOUS NAMI h•• _ 1" ••lfKI••' 1111e1 of IN•lnoo•1 •t
CE 01ltd ..... 1111 21. lf1(J 1111 A,Mlltlm A........ C-.rt MtN, of 1967 . The Newport Bridge LEGAL NOTJ l\llt1-v lri lnlt Gordon THI! UHPEllS1GNED COll'OIATtON C•lltornlt, ,..1111111 1111 ' •boYt llldlcltL
I . 1------_,_.0'""-----1 Mmillltl•t1rlll If tM 111111 "' lllN1 htl'lltl' ctrllt¥ 11111 It 11 collducllllO • di trlc• lot lonttf' -·-or rht ti• tll
-the Ongest 1n New England ,..ai.. tht •tioY• ntmtd d1Cld9"1 · llll&lntts tact t..i 11 ..., 51•1• StrMt, ~"' ...... r~ ireclldl,..""" 1111111 of !hi•
-spans Narrattanselt Bav c••Tll'ICAT• Of' IUSINISI, J. JA,S(IN •ALI S.0...lh Gttl, Ct lllon'lll, I ncl 11 '" NOfltl petition 111111 In ..... Oltw!t hlllci.t dlslrlct. , • I> • , • l'ICTITIOUS NAMI IMt ll•IH ......... Ori\19 Wttl l rHdWtY. 51n!1 Anl, CtllfOrnll, lltldM l tld twfl debit. Ill 11\t l f!Wlllll Ill tl,CIOD,M
and IS the ma)Or h ighway In· Tiit lllldlrsl911td lllNI t~I,., Ill It [Of'-...... v ...... ltflltt. Ctllltr11l1 TIM-tlc11111111• ll•ll'I "'"" ol A,HA,H£1M or mart •tw:! 11 11111 • llwlldl1111 tl'd io.11 • l th . f duc11 .... twtlna1 II l'P2' Cllll Ori .... Ttl· Ult) ...... ,.. ..... trwm SECUllTY f'ATll:OL and IN! .. 1c1 ''"" l!I l n' • -1ci.11 rtllroH ii:ress In 0 t City rom Say, Hrw-t INCh, Ct lllornll, \llldlr lht lie· Attft-.... Ailmllll1trt1rlJ ~-14 ol Ille .. UOWlll'ljl COIPOrll\1111, r!~.~ or"t.llkltll Cll_I;.,,,. ""1 1:
Providence or other Rhode t111oin. ll•m 11.1m1 "' "LUS-OHE EN· P11t111sMc1 0.1,... coa11 111111, f'!tot. wflo11 .. 11KJNI 1111c1 t1 ...,.1,..n 11 '' _ ... ·111 1111 111111_ ., 111uik !If••
I I d .,. Tl!ll. .. 11.ISE:S Incl 1 ... 1 1110 ll•m It (-5tol-bl< 1 ••• u. n . .,,. lt2t·l0 lollowl! t •h-\lllon -ltbrkllllfl, s an Cl 1es . ....-al ·~· rollo•ln• per ..... whoil PACll'IC PETECT!VIE au•E•U AND II
And speaking of Rhode ntme 1n tu11 '"" 11l1c1 DI r11ldlfte:t I• •• ""'TIOL INC .. "" s1111 s1'"'· ioulh ,..11110 .... " '" creel!~ ., "'• ,11._.., . . lollow1! . . LEGAL NOTICE Gt lt. C..lllornl•. btlllo1"1111 t nd "'"' ,,.,.,11111 <l•llTI• flOt
LEGAL NOTICE
l sland , r emember ii IS the Mkhtel M11!1e<, ~ Chit o...... WITNESS It. h•nd "'" lllh .... "' conllnttnl II TO lltbltltv ,,,_,,,, ... Ill "'•
GREENWICH Co Th f th EPA as .ss.ntl·a1 ·• sa1·d F 1'sher1'es w 1·1hin !he Depart· II t tat 'th••-Jo 1 Newl'OI"• &llCh. C•t. Au1U1r. "'°' --11e 1o "°'oo or"'°'' 1n •~ceu ,1 ' nn. -e 0 e . sma es s e WI un:: nges Dlt..i A111111ll ,., lt111 UN•T•O STATl:S DllTtllCT COU•T ICORl'OIATE SE•LI ""·;;;; ..... 11111 Mid bv ll>tm.
Nat ional Assoc\aticm or Engint R ic hard' D. Snyder . N AEBM menl of Commerce, under the name. The proper name i.11 Mk11111 Mullet cl!NTIAL D1ST1teT o" CAt.1Pot110A l'AC1F1c OETEct1vE aul.EAu 111 Se · t· NOAA pla could lead lo Rhod I I Stt11 or c..111ornl1, Ori n'' c°"nt•: 111 a11•rt1111ey ..., 1ot> ANO ,.,.TIOL, INC. "IM dtlm• or 11euti-n ,,, tor ffOll•. and Boat Manufaclurers has c retary Jn commen Mg on ·n, e sand and the 0n •1191111 20. t'1o, t>ttor• 11'11, • Nott,,,. 0101:1 0111cT1No s1:11v1c• ., •· E1r1 5.r!Mf>l11 ••reJ, 111c1 mercht ndl .. seio '"' o.nv1,.,.
the reorganization plan. "fl over-emphasis on exploitation Providence Pia t t · d l'11b1tc: In •1'4 tor u!d s11t,, •••-11y 1N1101.UHTAIY ,. 1T1T1o1t IN ,.,,,1111111 1e no. •lleefd IMillllrutl wlihln two 12,
J'oined with ma,. 0 r con· ' n a 1?ns -.an ·-•td Mlc~•el Muller ~-n to me lo aANlttlUl'TCY .... llUILICATION STATE Of' CALIFOIHI• ¥1-•r• l••t .,,,, •• follow" should serve to coordinate and of our important fish resource no one heareabouls is about to bl 1111 "''"'11 .... .,. .. "'IN 11 11.0bK•lbtd 1H THE MATTEI OF FJaRE·TEK couH'fY 0 1' 011:1\NOE, u 1,.1 c uitom MoJd••i. '"'·
servalion gco,ps in s upport of expedite measures to protect and the eventual denial or this let yo f 1 ·i 1° 1111 wllhl11 1n11r11m111t •nd •<Know1..:111· co11 ,.0RAT10H, •11tot<1 llri•""t. °" tl'llJ 11th d•Y 11 Au ... ••, 1110. belo" Geier ,.,1111c s. .... 1c, Ill(. u orge I . ell M •~Klrtl'CI ti. Mmt . AT SANT• <\WI\. IN THIS OllTllCT. IN _,. I(. Gulli.f • HOlllV ll~lk ill l'lttllu ~ Clltnllttll President's Nixon·s plan to our vital natural resources, re sour ce lo the rec r eational tOFF1c1AL SEALt ON THE •TH o•v Of' SE l'T .. 1'7t. 1...i tor ••Id CMHllv •I'd s1111. •111c11~, Wt1 tern Int
I :MD.• l.iU.1'
· I d ' b d l t fisherman." LEGAL NOTICE LOIS "· HELSON Ul>ll" '"" •Pollc1t1on ot lllEI\ CUSTOM llltreln. clulY <omtn11tl0Md •flcl 'worn, Wolfsdll, wei111,, ••tell & establish a single agency for inc u 1ng our a un an wa er-HOii•¥ Public . c;1llltrftlt MOLDERS INC.. GOLO pl .. s TI c ll rlllnlll¥ ·-·'"" • EAIL !HEE HAN Lllln CP•'• way~. u n de r I he p I a n ' CflTlf'ICATE Of' atHtNI!~ Prlnclptl Olllcl In SE RVICE, INC.. p L .. t TI c' & ~-n lo mt lo bl th. ,.,.,lcltnl " lllt ' IV ll,1G.t•
e nvironme-.ital protection. PICTITIOUS H•MI! Ori noe C<llln1Y CHEMI CALS WESTER N INC., Ind corpor1tl011 lh•I HIKlll..i '"' wl!hln Wllll!ll !lie lot• 10 month "'IG!f
At the same time, NAEBM "However , we join v.•ith Reorga nization P lan No 4, the The 1,,..,,,,1,f\ld do<H c•rtuv ""~ ,,, MY commll~lon E~1lr•' WOLFSON. WEINEtt, IATOFF & L.Al'tN, tn1trwrnen1 .,. MMll 11 "" conoor"lon ••11Cfedlno 1.,, 1111111 ,1 11111 •flltlon, •I'd
others in asking for further ReorganizatiCJll P lan No. 4, the r:~:<');:u' rc:.117!:' 1~·' '°!:. Plthc'n~\·· Puoll:.:"''~,7;5~.~ "cN~t 0111¥ 1'11ol, z:::··~u1~1r:n~10~~~· .;:,,-:11~~~01~-:,:1;.; :~~·~::-~,,o,.:i:n -;::i:~= .':-~ :-~~ .. ~:.~~~~1~1 :~"'1~:-:: d:'rl="'r:
expressed reservations about study of Mr, Nixon 's second Bureau of C o m m e r c j a I ,111_ llrm ',,,_m, °' "cc:i.t.~~ GL,.1; .~ Auow1t Ji •~d 5t1111m1ttr 1, ~· 1s. "1111on in N n1u1111tt¥ b• ou11Hc111on1 •I'd lft w1111t11 w11trtof. 1 Mw• ht"*' ft" 1e1 "°' of 1111 ll•nk~l<Y •ti 111 11111 11 "16
the Placl·ng of ocean deveto~ plan. establishing the National fi·~eries would be one of the th1t u ld llrm 11 com.,....., of th• 1e11 ...... 1110 57'"N toOd ''11'' ,..,..,,i,,. "''•etor. 11 1~ my h.11'4 '"" 1111.111 m, ot11c:111 _, ftl4I rht be1ow.1tw:11c:11tc1 .. .,.o.1m111 """'' 11 r' :loll 1,,. l'trtons, wrio"' n•mn 1n lull ll'd OROEIEO. lhtl ""'let OJI 11'1t d1y tnd Yff• In lh11ctrtlllClll111'11 ttlovl 11\e btkNMlldlcittd trtdl!ort 'Ill ftlt t d ~ d Oceanic a n d Atmospheric agencies lransferl'd to the new 1111e11. of re1i<!ence ire •~ 1011ows· LEGAL NOTICE 1nvo1wnttl"I' Pe!ltlOll In tlankruita iht ll bl wr1n111. ellemotd lltnk'"""' an 1cc011nt ., 1n1ac...,,,
men an resear~ ' un er a Ad m 1·n1'stra110· n ... ,·1h1·n I he NOAA w1'th'1n t•· Commer ce c;,,,,. G. Jord1n, 1911 l1k1r si .. Co!!• ttv i ut111c111on °' lh• invo1un11rw "'111on IOFFIC1•L SE•Ll l-bl•d11111, '' teu-1~ 'jh' th De ., ll'C' Met•. C•llf, IAI Mft 111 l>al>ICruptcr Ind ol thlt IH'dtr, -~ M•ry I(, G11ltltl Traci. "'P" Com""' I 1J.l.6t neW agency WI ln e part· l)e t ( ( " Department. Frink L. McGtwrtn, IJ1 Colli M'M NOTICI TO Cll:IOIT015 111bllc:ltlon Iii tit mi di one time ot1I, on NottN ftvllllc:.Ct HlomMI .CO\lt Mtu
ment or Commerce. partmen ° ommerce, st .. cos11 Mffl. c.11, su,.••101 cou1T OI' TMI: s .. ffi'ro11er is. 1,10, In 11111 o .. n•• CN•' ofentt c<11111tv .c-1v wit" c -nw M.• Sny der conti',iued. "Our COB-Both reor ganization pla ns Dlted se.temt>er n , 1t10 tT1tTI 01' CALll'O•N•• 1<011 011tv .,.11o1 •nd u 11 tu•lhl• Mv commlul\Wl IE•plr11 T""""''"1 cie1,1,,. ?to.•
Under the P resident's pr<>-R .... od Id I . t rr I G•"' G. Jorden Tlfl COUHTY Of' OIANOI OROEllEO. tt.11 tt.. ttlW•J' dtl• ,,,,11 APrU lS, 1m MtcH"'Co. l ,OOl.00 1 lh · r d 1 11 cern is on behalf of the are :n:u u e o go 1n o e ec Freni; L. McG•v•i n 1111. A..,..,, IM' """' 111 d••• 1ne• '""' 11.1t111c1non WITTMAN 111iNo KNMIDT WMEIEFo•f. l'ttltl-• .,.,. ""'
po!!a • e major e era po U· m illions of OOatmen w h o rely about the first week in sT•TE OF C•L1FoRN1A, "•'•'• ot 1'1•Rt>\.O JOl'1N sisit. •flcl 111+ 111"..i N 11krvt1 ,,,.11 111w1 IP 1s.11 w111cutt or1w1.S¥1t• m skwlu.,, 1111, Mllllon, with 1 1u.....,.. lim1 control programs now ott•HGE cooNT'I': Oti;•••"· •ncl 1nc11>111ne s..1. n , 1t10 1, ·-·· ..... H""-' •NO. t•-lt """ ""' " ""'" -" ""' •lleetd &1Mrllf1
d r . on sport fishing as a source or October unless Co n gr es s 0n SeP•trni..r 11. u1t. btlorT ..... , NOTICE ts HEIEIY c;1111EN io ,.,. Ple10 '• 111e lnvokHlttrY Miiiion ln Tth """" ... •tovldfd 1,, itto ll•nknn>kv Act ,.., Sprea OUt over OUf agenCleS nd h 1 · d t 1 \' · f g Nol•rY Putill( 1., lllCI tor ltlcl St&te crtdho<I ~• 11'11 1tlel'l1 ntrnH dtuelnl N n'°'uotcw tnd ""°" llt l•lturt te q M •11.,M'll !hll II """ IN H h>dted bv ftlt COllfl 1e
a nd Ofle lnlerageocy council recreation. a l a t pacing a op s reso u urns r eJe<: in "'"0,11n, ·-••M Gt ,,,. G, Jord,11 ,,,d M'ltl .u "''°"' 1>1w1,,. c111ms , .. JM1 tlll w11t1111 n.. 11,,,. uiecr11eo1, 11 •h•H " """11""" o.,,,., C••~t DlllY 111111, bl , b•MI""'' wllhln ..,, Pl/l'YltW 111 ""
the Bureau of Commercial either one. Fr•nt L. McG•vr•" known to ,,,. 1o "" uld dtcl>llfl'll ••• '""',. It 111e !Mm, ldllldl<llMI • IMinlt""''· s.,1-1. 1. 11. n , im 1us.10 ll•n.krwflcv Act.
\\'OU]d be brought under the ------------~~.,...-.,------------1ht person -"'""' •• , '"""•llMid"' wilt\ ,,,. ntCUW•~ VWC:IM<l. "" "" Ol!lq ... I(, .. HEL .. S O•TEO: JUllt 11. 1'1' \l«ing of the Environmental Mvtrli••.....,1 tt.. wHllln 1n11.......,.n1 1M •dl-il!df.a Df ""c11r•" ""•tKl'I• 1n1111111 cwr1. w IEl'Ell:EE 1N t•NICI UPTCY LEGAL NOTI-••E• CUSTOM I----------------------------llllY e•'CUlfCI !ht Sim•. II •fllln! !lltll'\, With ll'lt nKHllf'Y 1""1 A. a..-...., "'Eio MOLOEIS tNC. Protection Agency. T he interrt 101tlc111 se1u YOllCNra. '' ""lllldtr•ltlnl<I t1 1111 ott1c:1 • 111-wr If au1n111•11:, tTUTMAN, . av· Peh!r ''•••u-
Mtrv IC He"" 01 ht• '"'"'"'•" MITCHELi. HAIT .. T••llTl:I • 01.ATT ...... , 'v1t'. Ptuldtnl '
is to organize the fight against Denture I nvent·1on Nllltl'T llUO!k.. C41itornl1 a11sco, 6U Clwk Clllltf Drl\ll W11t, .. ,~Ctr_..... CllTlf'ICATI cw IUtlN'ISt -CATEP: J\IM It. 191' environmenta l pollution on an Pr1nc:1011 01t k 1 r" sw111 ru. s.1111 A111, c1111. '2101, w111(h It A~ 11 LI• l'ICTITfOUt MAM• COLO ,.lASTiC
ort f\11 Coim" !ht: 111~1 of M inns Ol lhl l/l!Oitrllt l'ltO In •M SMttll lpr1"9'SlrMt Tiit Ul!Hrti.Mlil ill (tf11t¥ IN! •1'9 SEIVICE INC integra ted bas is, solidifying ,.,,. C0111m1111on E~•l•eo 111 m1ntr1 ...,1,1n1111111111l'fl1tt11 .. ld t.11 A""'lff. c;11111n111 ,..,. cllllllucll ... , ""''1""' 11 ~ cownt~. •~: M•ir GOtd.'
t he activities o r many 'For People w1"th "Upp-" and "Lowers" Nav. 2'· 1•n • ..,..,,, within loll• mPnlh• .n .. lht """"' ltlJ) UJ.tltt Ctlltornl1, 11nOer !ht Hc!lll0111 llrm nllY.. Vl(t ..... 1ci...1 v•• Pntill!lhed Or1110e Coa1t Otllv Piiot, flt1I ll\lllllc•llon Pl 11'111 llOllCI. Altlr"IYI flt l'llU\tllllll Cr11lll'" Of CA,llCATUIE WAYCH CO i ncl fhtl OA,Tl!O: Jun1 II, lt)O deparlm e-.1ts and agencies. Se•llm!M( n. "· ,, •I'd O<!&titr l Otll'CI 1\1191111 n. 1'10 PubUJhtd Of1n11 (IMIJI OtU• 1'11111, Id II II Id or n,; IOJIOWll\t f'U.STJCS ~ CHL!:MICALI '
Among the P'Osent agenc·teS The ne:artsl thing_ to having )'OUf hclJ» prolect gum1 from bruiung. 1'70 lito.70 VEIHA IL.I SISI( $Nlem!Mr I!, 1'10 1'*1·JO :. ..... :m...,.,.,,.co;;;::, in NH tlllll Plett• WES'TEll:N !NC. own teeth is pos111bl' now 1111lh a Yoo may bite hardtr, chtw bet· A,dmlnlitr1trl• .ot "'' 1'11111 of ,11111~1 1,1 11 1or1ows: aw: Wltlltm E. O'Grt1dY.
t hat would rau under ihe EPA plastic cream di11COvery that aC· ter. eat mor' na turally, LEGAL NOTICE MltCNILI. 0'Hl':T·:or.:S-tr:" dettdonl LEGAL NOTICE JI¥ Griff!'• Sth•tdO••· not fl lw er OATl!~~·~ie:' 11. 1•111
are the F ederal Waler Quality tually holds bolh "uppers" and fl.XOOENT may h,Jp you 1pe.alc •u c1v1c center Dt'lw• w1.11 Ave,, H1w1111rt 6'11e.11. WOlf'SOH, wEINE I , ••TOll'I' ' I " bel .... '· J be t "'*" Stlll HI H1r1rY John Ftrll.lrwitz, !tit H. & U."IH CPA'I Administration. the National 'owcr1 a1 nevtt ore poss! ""' more c..,ar y, mort a ea11e, c11T1f'ICATI: of' •IH•N•ss 1 c 11 1 "" ,..,...1 ,..1_, 111111 AM • olftol'I
ll's a revolutionary discover~ T he special pr.ncil·p(lint di!· f'ICTtTIOUI HAM• 111" Alli, • IWR I I CllT!f'l(ATI 01' IUUN•S• l lChlrd Armour aeber llO San JOI• •• , Jlhlll!p J. w •
Air Pollution Control Agency, c.al1ed f1XODENT•, for daily home pen~r ltts rou apot F 1xOOENT Tne u"Cl•••fvntd <to c1r111v ht 11 con· l~=-:".!, ... ~~1,11,1i ttCTITtous NAM• •win st .. l.11llf'll •••ch ' O•TE~~~'.:.~~rt;'::O
Parl of the Environmental ,-•.(U.S. Pot. 13.003.9881 w1·lh t.·ith precision ... where needed! d1tdlnv • tlU'J!noen 11 33» So. ll•l•lot, Unit I' 1 o c 0•1 ... Plkll. TM 11ride•,lu 1et1 c1o n rtllw 1twtv ,,, 01ttd A1>1w9! "· "" 11:"' ·o.-i..W "'11 -. 151, COltt Meu. C1lll1H'n!•, ,.-., '"' <'·· lltl lll'lt d '11191 oait " ..... , •·' ' >•• N JI ¥ khrtddP fl A,, ' 1 """' C I I Ad .. j j' f d l 0 < lt'c•lton moy l••l )O' """ " 511ttmbtr I I U U 1'10 162t<1tl to ....... , llO ' """ ntH I · 1'1trtlOI OUITTNll ITU1'MAN o n r o m r,11s r a ion. lXOOENT many tf1 urt wnrtrs n app1 . • tlt1<111s firm ~me or ••T ALA C•RTE • • ' • ai~d .• s1n11 Ant, c1111orn11, "'""' ,,,. H•n•Y F•rNndti TlllSTll •1 GLATT
pesticides rese·arc h and con· now cat. !peak, laugh • .,.•ith little hours.,D ,n lurcs that ht arll' •"" '"'' ••Id llrm 1, com.,...eo:i or tl'lt tlcittklu• !lrm n1m1 of cEMtHt •nd 1h1t tllc:h••d II-li'l:OllflStONAL COll"Ol•TION 111orry of dentures c.oming IOOK. c~sentia l t o hea lth. Sec your •oUowi119 l>fl"50ni, •hOH 111me1 In lull LEGAL NOTICE 11ld firm 1, '°"'"°"" 01 '"' +o11owl110 Stilt of C11tlotnlt . llY: l otlerl I\, GrftnllelO,
trol. and ra d iation control. The F,, OOEN.rormi an elast It den tist fe""larly. Get easv. ·IO-.,,. Pl-c11. ot r11ldenc1 11 •• 101111W1: ... ,... •• wrios• "'""" 111 •vi• •flcl 11~11 0r11111 C011ntv1 Anornt¥t !or EPA Id h · d ,~ Ge••lo LiCIOlltd, Ill Vlt 011110, NOTICI TO Cll:IDITOll Df rt•ldtntt ttt 11 lollewt; Oil A1111111 lt, lt7t, tlllore mt, t Not1ry Pf.'llllonlllll CrH llon wou ave an e!'lt lm a le membrane lhal helps absorb the U5' flXOOEh'T Dtnture Ad~ve h't Wl>Of'! lleacll, C1Ulornl1. SUPlllOI COUtlT 01' Tiii lltl!le L. -·· IMl lhodes Ort .... ""'t>llc In t nd for UIO Sit t•, Pf<IO"lllY STATE <iF CALll'OtHI•
b urlget Of $1.4 billion jn (iscaJ lhock of bitin& and che"in(-Crum at all dru1 COUnlcrl. llUtJ JtcJ<son, Xll VI• 011011. Ntw10rt STAT• Of' CAl.lf'OIN1A PO• Co>lt Mtu, C1U1«nl1, •-rid JI¥ r#r_., Scllrtdd .... Henrv COUNTY Of' LOS ANGELES I SS.
fte•cl'I, C•lilernlt , TH• COUNTY Of' OIANOI J•m11 T. -e. lid Rl>Delf$ Orlw1, Jlhn Ftmtill!Mt l lld tllc!'llrl l\r-l'llt• BllUtlk does t..rttw mt••
yea r 1971. °''"R~re~e_:~~4. 1t10. N•. A.ffnt c"1' Mitt. C•HllH'n!e. 1'"' know11 to"" "ii!:"':',,.":'~ toli!fNI Niii lh•I,,. 11 vlu l'<111dent ,,
··we VJe\V the establishment £1!1!1 ti JOHN c. O'Ul.UGHLIH, D1tlld AlllVll JI, 1'10 .. -llln'llS ,,, WM<r IO ~ •••• C11111)11'1 MolCN" 11'1(. • ~····
Hair Style
Cotu·se Set
At College
Creating coiffures r r om
unruly locks is a specialty of
studen ts enr olled in the cos·
metology dcparlment a t
Golden West College.
And s ince the vocational
program will move lo an
eight-hoor day this f a 1 I .I ~~~~~~~~~
s tudents v.•ill have an e ven.\.
longer time to practice thf4r
art.
The diangc, a ccording lo
Co..<imetology Director Mary
Callahan. will not only benefit
the students but mem ber s of
local communities who can
take advantage of the longer
hours.
Students. who do all or the
!lalon 1''ork. w ill be able to
1um out hair styles for
patrons rrom 9 a .m . to 2:30
p .rn, w~kdays.
ln case so1ne people might
fef!I apprehensive about serv·
ing as a "guinea pig," Mrs .
Callahan assures thnt the
students hs ve had pelnty of
practice berore being turned
loose on customers' heads .
lnleresled students may
enroll In tilt program through
next Tuesday. No registration
fee Is e hargt!d, but students
must purchase a sty ling kit.
Since H's a vocational pro-
gram. s tudents are not re-
quiml to enroll in any other
cla~es. A fl e r .wccnsfully
completlns ii. thty are award·
ed 1 certificate or achieve-
ment and a re eligible lo take
the s!Ale board Iicenslng ex·
aminatlon.
STARS
1iydn1w O m•l'I' ;, •11• •f th•
w•1ld'1 91111 111!ole91r•. Hit
col111nft 11 •~•. ef 1~1 DAILY
PILOT'S t '•1l f11t11,11.
nM!rl ''" comin1 to the
W11on Camp 11 Knoll"•
9,.,,, Ftrm •exl Sun•
d11. Seplcaiht;r 20th.
Don't ml111
I
Ger~kl Llcldltrd OiKHttd. lle"ll I.. -· lnl!tllllltlll 11111 ldlllfWMOMf lf'ley .X -et !ht N llll-rt 111o.,. lllll'\H', lf'llll II SI•!• el Cihlornlt, Ortntc County , NOTICE IS HERlilY GIVEN It the J1mtl T, MOO!'• IKllll'CI IM llmt. dllll' •1tlhorlud to 11'\l kf Hiii Pllllloll lft4I
On SHI. U , l'XI, Mio,... me, I h'ot1r, crtdlllH'J or 1111 t lMIYt ntmtd dtcedtfll St.it ti C1lltornl1, !OFl'IC IA,L SE•l.I lllll 1"1~ivll In 111 tltlltll tnd llltt -Plltltl t In •nd In• uld Stt hl . .,.,_,,11. ll\el t it 111,..,,, lltvl,,. cltlmt IOt lrul !I'll Countl' ol LOii Alltt!IJ H JollPh E, Dl¥11 1 1 i. conltllltd 111 ·,,,. foftellln9
''"'"'" GerilO Llcldl•"' •nd ltUt¥ 11111 d«.-nt •" ,111111rtd t• Ille them, On Alllllll 11, 1910, otfort ..,... , Nolt rJ Not1rv l'ubllc:, C11Uornl1 ~11fi:" illtltulttfMI bv tlld _.,.!Ion, Jtd<IOtl •nown to me 10 IM '"' •••IOlll wllll 11'11 MCtHlrf ¥011Chen Ill tht lllllct ""'tlllc: 111 tl'lll llH' 11!0 Sttte, P&rHllt l1¥ Prll'IC!N I Olllc:t 1" i re 1n.w. ;"!\OM "'n':'" trt iubicrl....., Iii Ill~ "'llhln Of tl\t cltt~ o1111t tlMIYI enllllff (O!Jr!, or 111P1••td llllllt L. Mollre 1nd Jt,.,..l f , o,,,,., C<111nr, PETEii lll.ASZC•IC nstrume ~nd t ck110Wlt0gf(I 11\tv t~· lo 11,119111 !him wllft Ult lllC!!1Yr~ MOort known to me 10 bl !1\s persons MY CommlM!CNO EK9ifll !Ol'FICl•L SE•LI ""'""° "': ••-, · 1 vouchen, !o 111~ 11ndel'lllflld t t c/o Who., ,,._ ••• WMCrllM.rl tt IM w!lhln Jwne ll, lt1t . ~ubSc;rlllld Mid 1we•ft to ltelorT ms thl, !OFFICt L s AL Wll.L~WOltlH SEIDEL & CR•tL 1'11 lnstrvment I nd tt•llOWllll•td !hi'/ ... Putllllhed o ...... CN•I OtllY "1'°1• 10". • J "" Ml ,,,. I(, Htnrw ' ' •i111usr 1S .,,d S..rtmtler I, •· U, "' 1¥ UM , Ncl•rY Putlli< _ Cllil '"I Wellcllll Ort...,, Suite 20', NtWIOfl lle1ch, tc\111'11 ll'lt ume. lt1il lstl·10 I OSALIE M. GIHTHElt Prlnclo~I OlliCI Ill o 1 C .. llornlt f1W0, wMcll 11 ti. Pllce ol IOFl'ICIA,L SEALI Nottrv l'ubtl<. • C1lll1•llll Oftt!Of Coun!Y butlntsl ol ll'lt 11ncltr1!•M11 In ti! m1"tt1 9""1tl.., GlhlR Or1110• Counl"t
Mw Comm!!~IM E. •I 11trl1lnln11 t1 IM 1:1!tlt 11 wld Olttdllll, Nolt•Y P11tl!lc:<1fttornl1 LEGAL NOTICE Mw Commlulcn Ei •lr11 Nov 21 19n ~ '"" wltt1l11 tour mMll•t 1119• ll'lt tlr11 Lo1 An0t1H COllllTY ' ' · 1'1'.1rdl 7, 1'71
.. II ... o ' ' • 0 " '' I lllblkl llon ... ltlf1 ncitlc:•. M1 Comll'llHlon Eaplrel 11.05ALIE M. GINT"Ell: Utl Sh •Inge Oii 1 ¥ le · Oiied ... 1111111 ll, lt10 •utll•I 2, 1171 CalTlf'ICATI Of' •USINISI, Sl•tE· (W. .CALIFORN IA ~;~emti.r 1!. n. ,_ t nd oc1oi;;;..:o 141111 A. 0 'L•llthll11 t'ub!ithlll Ort riM Cu ll 0111¥ f'llol. f'ICTITIOUI MAM• COUfiTY QI' LOS ANGCLE:t I SS.
E•KUlrl• "' lh• wm ol A111uit H l '>d S.•t•mbtr I, I, 15, Tiit urwl•r1l1Md do Ct•l!IY """ .,. M••. GOlcl def• htrtllY m1kt \.Olem11
LEGAL NOTICE !M 11>ov1 ruimed dettdenl lt10 151t·l'O c1nGudlll9 I butlllffl " 210I W.'QAtn 01trr 111111· !It Is Ylc:1 Pr"JW~I "' Gcl!ll WAl.SWOITH, lllDll. & CIAIL ~ron!, NtwPOtl le1ch, Ctlllor11lt, 11notr t'lllsltc Strvlct 111(., 1 cor11011llo11. -ti 1 ------~-------11111 W11tclltl Orlv• LEG L "OTICE Int llclltl...,1 firm n • m t er \he p.otl!l-ri 1bt!Y1 111"'"'' i nd I• duly
T4ttll Nftl'Pflrl a11d1, C•llllr11l1 t26M A. '" "StnG1ll'tt" ol Nt-' •ncl l II t I tlllhorllld to ll'lliil tt ld Nllllon 11'111 tt.11
NOflCI: TO CIEOITOIS Ttl: 1110 '41·'44t 111a firm Is coml0..0 ol 1n1 lollowl111 lllldlVll I" lh; lw.11111. Ind "''' "''
SUPElllOI! COUllT 01' THI: ... .,Ill'/.,., ·~IKUlrl• NOTtClf: OP INTINTIOH TO IHGAO• P8•10t11. '"''""'"•met Ill'"'"'"" oltul •l1l11N11ls cenlttllfd 111 lhe lorl>Oo/119 ST.t.TI! 0, CALll'OltNt• '01 P11bll1l!t0 Or1n1t Co11t Ot ll• .. 1101, IN THI' SALa 01' l\LCOHOl.IC ol r11 ld1nct ,,. I~ 101!11...,1; "tlllon iutlicrltl'.d 11¥ t1ld CIH'llOrt llon.
THE COUNTY 01' O••NOt: ~·!-bl< '· I, u. :r.z, 1'10 UJJ.10 llYllAGIS Ntll •. l111r1m. U30 w. Mttld•Y .,. ''""· HI, A,.ff'JI St11>t1mlwr H. lt10 l.tne, S1nl• Ant , C1, MA• GOLIO
E1tu1 of L1ROY MA,HEW SMITH, LEGAL NOTICE TO WHOM IT MAY CONCE:ltN: Henry "· Olf'Ulo, 1'111 ""' II .. "'"· Sut11c•lbld tnd swo•n i. btftrt IN lhlt Oece1Hd, Slltll•CI to lt1111nu of '"' lk~lll• ••. N·IOI , ....... llOrl llt1dl, C•. ltlh di~"' Jvnt. lt10. NOTICE IS HEIEl'IY GIVEN to !ht 11ffCI let, ncillct 11 Mrlltlv 9lv111 Ill.ft 1111 50M'!I J, OtllOfl, s..tt l\rr .... l'ltld A,we,. f0FF1CIAL SEl\LI crlldl!Ol'I flt tl\e 1bov1 nuNd dltedtWU IUl'lllO• COUIT 011 TNI: ufld,er1loned .,._ lo 1111 l ltol'lollc •111111 P1•k, C1. fOiXI VEIN E. SK£l'0
11-.1 t ll "''"°"' h•YlllO tltlnu .. 111\ll 11>r STATI Of' CAl.lf'OtlHIA 110• btve,.9n ti the iremlin, dtKTll>tO ti 0.ltd *I. U. 1t1(J Nolt l"I' .. llbllc u ld dtcfl'lenl 1rt •eoll'lrH lo flit ni.m, T"• COUNTY 01' ORANOI follows ; Hell It. ln1t•1m Sttlt 111 Ct lllotnli
wlrh 11\t nec1111ry VOIKl'ltro, 111 ll'lt off ice N<I. l\O•IMI CITATION '11S Et ll CNtl Hltl'lwtY, Coront tll H'l'lrJ "· 011'11111 CCKllll\I (If Liii ... t>tt ln
of the ci.rti"' 11'11! tbt!Ye enlltf+d court, pr In '"' Millet of 11\t "llltton lor Mir, NfWIM)rf 8e1Ch SonnY J , CUiian Sl•TE OF C•Lll'OINIA
to prfl<!nl "''"'· wUll Ille lllCllUl"I -'-lion II• llLEY 1.YHN 5ANOEIS, f'11r1111nt to sud! lnttnllon, 1111 u,,. 51•11 ol C1lllorn11, O•lllOt COll<I": COUNTY O,_ LOS ANGELEI I SS. _ .... ~. to,,,. unoer1l1Md 11 , .... lll!ln AdoPHM Sltc11>1rtnl. ft•tltned l!I 11111tvlf'le "' "" OfHrfmtlll On $tpt, u, 1910, ~ ..... ' Hetlrv Wlllltm E. O'G•eldw tlol-I 111''11' m1t•
of hf" a!llH'ney, CLAYTON 8 THOM."5. To· MAAVIN llAV SANOElroN. "'l\lcol'lollc: kv ..... ConlrDI lor klUl llCI PuDlk l11•1fld lor ••Id SI•'•· ,,,..,.,.u, Mlltl'llll Nth !hit ... ., ···•ldf'llf ,,
Unlpn !ltnll; Pl111, Svlte Ill, U'l1 Ytfl> 1¥ order of lhl• Cwrl, l'Oll tr• MrtDY bv lr•1ll!t~ of tn t leohollt bl\lefHt •-t rtd Hiii I:, lt11rtm. N9"1"1' P, .. letllc:t 6 Chemltt l• W•slern IM .• 1
lu•ll !I011ltv•rd, Sl'IMml n Olks. CllHor~lt c!ltd !I •~ttr lltfor1 lht J""'" llcfflH for Ille-. 9reml1n 11 followl ; 01,.lllo, 1tw:! kPft~ J, Otlfon k-19 "'4 te,_.lflon. -Ill 1111 Miiii_,, 1bovl>
t UM, whlc:ll 11 !ht olKt fll bvlllll'IS o1 li'rt11dl,,. In OtNrlment I II IM 1'""8 OH SALE GENEIAL, IONA l'IOE It be lt'lt illtr-""'°'"' Ill~ 1'1 1111'Md, 1flll It ltlll' 1utl!IH'l1et1 It ft'lt~• "" UMe"llntc:I In tll ll'll"en "'ltlnlnt1 tn!ltllld Court on Otcirmbt• 11, ltlfl, ti .. UILIC EATING PLACE •lllKctltled to lllt within lflll•ll!'llent Ind •t ld l>llltlon Ind !lllt i ffldlwll In 1"
" 1111 t1lli. Df Nold d~nl, wl!hlft tour t11' o'Clock t .m, of !toll dtY, llllfl •ncl AnYOlll dellrlf'll TO prolHI TM IH<llllCI tt k,_IHtt ll'lt• l •K"'lld lht W-. tlelllff, •I'd 11111 !hf llllHMlltl C9"1tllleol month1 tlltr ll'lt llrll Plltllltlllol<I 11 !hi• !Mrt lo llW>• c.1111, II 111Y \'Oii h•~, WIW ol' 1UCll llcelltt m1y IH• t vtrlf\td 1nit.11 !OFFICIAL SE.IL) Ill .._ fol~lll "1111.,. 1111111Crlbtd ..,
notlc•. !!It ,.1111o1<1 tt RILEY LYNN SANDERS 11 tnY office o1 JM Dfflrlmtnl Ill IEIA,H. CANETTI u lll cor..orttlon, 111 trw, Otltd s .. t..,,.ber 11, UIU N1r 111t1' tdfl9tlon of CLINTON OWHITE Alc:onollc 11~1" Control,.,. bv 11'1111 It Holtf'Y Publlc. C1lll1rnl1 WILLIAM E. O'GltEAt>Y
ELSIE I\. SMITH SANDEii.SON tnll TEtlfS.t. t1•YLEHI! ni. Ot!itrll'r'lenl el A,lcohollc a1v1r111 llrlntl11I Olllt• tn SuMcrlbed ~Ml ''"''"'" 19 "'°''mt 11\lt
E:..tc11!•i• ol !ht Wiii o4 s•NOEISON. '°"' minor -•I'd Control, nu 0 '""'· Stat,...nlo, 011ntt1 Count\! '"" ... ,Ill J\1111, 1,10, 1111 I~ ntlntd dec:edtnt: Olllthllf, lllould nor Ill 1r1ntld. C11l~r11l1 •SIU, •ltllnt 9f1111ndl ~ dt11lt l MY Commlulon E~Plrt1 CHAILl!l!H H. IUHOA
tl.AYTON •· TNOMAI t>t!H: A1111. :n, tt111. •• PfOVldtd bv ltw. 1~ 9'1ml111 1r1 ,..... ""'· 1•, ltl1 /Ol'f'1CIAL SEALI IHU VMlll•t •"'11 .. S•ll• .. ,. w. E. ST JOHN Llc:"llld tor lht tt1t of •ltollo!lc l"ulltltl'ltd o, .. .,. ;IMI·~ O~IY Pllol, CH•l:LEEN H. •u•IOA
....,,,.,. O•tt, C1lllwl!LI t1411 Cit!'• tllvttetn . Thi tonn of wtrlll(•tlon "''~ St1tembo• IJ, n, 1 '*•'t..: Nol1rv l'~tlllc • c1ntorn\1
T1I: UUI n..-11¥ JAHEt L SCHREINER bl oflltlll9d l~ ""' ornc1 Ill !llt 1171 1 .,. "rlncll'tl Office In
PulllllhM O••n•e Coe11 IOt!tY Piiot, °'"""' Cit.. O..•rtm1nt. LOI Af\11!" Co11n1Y h•I'"""'• U, 1t . :Ho t ll(I Otro!Mr !, W.t.Ll.l\CI, tlOWN 6 Cll\tN G&H I E$TAUl:l\NTS, tNC LEG1'.L NOTICI MY Clfl\mfstlon Plrtt 1'10 llt:J.10 l\tllt""'• ti Llw l"utltl1htd 0..1not Coe1t OtllY l'llol, J•-rv 1 1• • 1 ----c-ccc~-------ISYllt It DIYtr at1M1h1t $elllemblr IJ, ltlO ,...... STATE 0 .. CAI.
LEGAL NOTICE U> Dlnr Drl¥t T"'"' COUNTY 01' LO N !LES l SS.
1----· -:-co--=c------I NtiW-' lllth, C1lllwftl1 LEGAL NOTICE NOTltl TO Cll:IDITOtlS ,.hlll!11 J, woltlOn doe Mr•IW m•k• Ttll 111•1 '4Mt1f, Mf.Jtlf o• IU\.W. tlANlllllt Mllfl!'lll oath· ll'Wll M ••• lflflt••I ••1"11'1 ... •Alt l'9) Ali.l'lll'lt 191' Pt+llllMr Nollet II htrlbv •IYHI It ftl4I Crtdl!ort fJf wo111on. Welntr. R1"N ' L111n, NOTICI TO CllOITOIS l'llDlllhed Orintt Coa•I OtUr l'Uot, tAI UM Df OLAOYS J, M•Y, Tr~nrhfW, wl'I014 C"A'1, 1 •lllllttthJ•. -pl !111 su .. 111101 COUllT Ojt Tl41f: s.tottmOt• t, I , Ii, 7J, 1,10 ,.,,.,., HOTICI TO CllDITOll t11,1,J ..... _,,,. II 1'lt w. '"" s1 ... 1, Hlll'-9 tlloV• n1mtd, Ind t1 •111r STATf 01' CAl.ll'Oll:Nll\ 1'01 IUPlllOtl COUll:T 01' TM'I (11111 Miu, C-h of Or1ntt. Sl11l or iufllorlilfl to ll'll kt wlO 1111111111 1nd It'll~ TNI COVNTY Of' Olt.•NOI ITl\TI 011 CALIFOltNIA "Olt Ct lllor11l1, lt>t! t ll\llk tr1n1ltt It tllolll"' tfflttvlt 111 tit _,H, t l'lll 11111 t1W1
Ht, l\.ffNI LEGAL NOTICE Tiii COUNTY 011 OIANOI " mlOt 1, MAOELINE IAVAOE. 1111-11 con11tlltd 111 !hi '°'"01,,. l 1!1!1 er AUGUST<\ It. WEOGE. N<I, A.ffNf Tr111tflffl, ""'°'' bllllnt5f tddrl'tl 11 1!1 l>f!llllon 11111tc:r111>td bv 11ld ctttOr111111.
OIKN-. IAI Ull Etllll ol 'l'HOMAI It, ltUtTEtl llM Cltf,.,._., Co.II Mn11, COllnl"t Df ••• lt\l't,
NOTICE IS HE ll:EIY GIVEN II "" su .. 111011: COVIT 011 'fHI --· It THOMAS ll!H•UO llUTT!I , O••f!U· s11i. ... C1llfor11lt . ..HILi.it' J. WOLFSON
Cl'edl1on Ill lhe tflO<vt lllll'llO dtctdtnl ITATI O" CAl.IPOtlNtA f'Oa DlcHllll. Thi •r-tv to be !fet'ltNrttd It SuOKrlMd t nd 1-n .. btfott""' 11111 lh.11 t ll -IOllJ h1v1nt d 1rm1 11111111 !ht THI COUNTY Of" 01.A,... NOTICE 15 HElllY OIVEN It !ht toct tetl 11 nf W, ltlh Slrttl, (olllt Mest, 111~ dlY o1 Jl>Plt, HIO Uk!' dle<ldlnt l •I '""lrwd to Ille ll'ltim, A41'MI credllOrt (II IN 11M1¥1 ntl!IM dlK.9dtnl Coull" .,i 0.1 ..... $1111 ., C:1tllPrnl1. fllttn G. Ot"'"" ,
wllll ""lllClltff'Y llOll(l'llo, In Illa ol!IC• NOTICI or ...... ,,.. ON ,.,,lttoH 11111 111 -..... hlYirle clllm• INIMI "" S•IO .,,_,..., II HKPll!ft Ill .. ,.. .. 1 .OflfllCIAL S!'A,LI
of ll'lf Clfr11 .. the l bllv4 entl!IH c-1, tr f'OI l"IOaAtl 011 WILi. ANO llOll u ld Huclitlll t l'<I tM11lffd ti II .. lhtm, 11: A-,,_. IJI tr•,!!~'-""·-· EILEEN 0.. OA~OH
te "''""' '"'"" •1111 1i. M<t'Ull"I' L•"lll:S TllTAMINtAIY with ""M(BtlfY vouehtn, "" ""effkl ............. ,.., lllMlllY Mlon Nolll"I' .. Mlt>llt . Ct llt.fnl•
'fOllCl'll<'1. '° lllt llndM'lltMll II lht off1c1 E 1 t 1 t t 1 I t. U 1. U It AC H E L of tho Cltr1i "' !ht , ....... 1111tlllM towt, tr M lntU t·-11 ti Modern H1!r f't lhlOfl' li'rl~lell OtflCI In
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•
..... -. -----,.-----------·
, S•pttmbtr • , 11>70 DAILY PILOT
Monday's Oosing Pl'ices-Complete New Yorli Stoel{ Exchange List
I
;
J ! DAILY PtLOT Tutsday, Septtrnbtr 15, 1970
PRICES EfFICTIVE WEDNESDAY THROUGH TUESDAY
SIPTIMlll 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, & 22
--.-. . ISf!OQRt
Prf,f!e•
EV.ERYDAY!
DEPENDABLE QUALITY
GROUND SSC BEEF 111•
USDA CHOICE• BONE IN
8S 1~· RUMP
ROAST
USDA CHOICE e LARGE EYE
STANDING 87c
Rib Roast 111• SLICED BACON
USDA CHOICE e BONE INSffiE
ROUND
STEAK 8S 1~·
FARMER JOHN e PICNIC STYLE
a o G.c1
...,. 4
.'J f , I I
::,/)f'( 1.11 1
\ 4STAR
.i SPECIALS
ARE EXTRA SAVINGS MADE
MAD! POSSIBlE BY SPEOAL
PURCHASES flOM THE MAHUFACTURER
AND PASSED ON TO YOU!
PORK 47c
ROAST 111·
FARMERJOHNe FAMILY PACK• SLICED
PORll.< LOIN 87 c
CHOPS 111•
FARMER JOHN e 8-0Z. PACKAGE
LINK
SAUSAGE
SAUSAGE• 12-0Z.' PACKAGE 79 Oscar Mayer -c
S•okloU•k•
FRESH LINK SAUSAGE l·LB. PKG.
Oscar Mayor
Llttlo Fryers 79c
Pi1l;b~~c(;k'i';ALMOND 53c .,, an·~~;;~Rolls 39c:·
-i>iisE'lv'is·2~z. 49c fts11~;a0s·~i~-;1 79c
~ 6-0Z. BOX . 11 VARIETIES 1 sc 3-0Z. PACKAGE •••••••• 49c 62 QiP' JELLO QUART CON TAINER C
PILLSBURY HUNGRY JACK• 16-0Z.47 c Fad Cottage Cheese
I P . PINT SIZE e Cottoge Chee1e • 33c . nstant otatoes . . . ARRrVADERCI. Hl-.OZ.. FROZEN 59
a;.,.;.:i ii SYRUP2
'-"'-65c 4'· Jr. PIZZA !::~~:,: c
-~BETTY CROCKER • Comple1e • 26""44C .::~ pBIRUDSDEYED•ICNoolG'N c .. amy ~ '.'"'L41 C ~ Pancake Mix 1"'; •-v0
""'"'
.:~ 35 .~~ MORTON •l•-OZ.•FROZEN .,}. Chilsf (;~-(~';'.;;"s c ·•'· C1R0EA•M PIES 25c
fB·COCfKiES0
x•n-0z. 55c-f~;i:1Veget~bl;s 43c
•
MANHATTEN • 1<1-0z.Plr.g. 9 ~ AllMEATORSEEF 4 ( SCH AT'Se l.l /2-LB.LOAF 55c
sox oF
40
• suPeR oR REGULAR ' . ·Sliced Bologna Sheepherder Bread
139 .,, C10NoTADl1N •• B1-0 U,NCEoCAN sauc[ 8 c
24-0Z. SUPER SIZE BOTILE l
SCOPE J 59 . 2'-0UNCEBOTT lE c I ~~~~~~~ •WESSON Oil 9
::-:: .. RAY 119 ••ESS 49·
TAMPAX
40'S
USDA GRADE A • NOR BEST
HEN TURKEYS
O (w;1h=~~o,ge) 4S lb,
SUN.KIST e VALENCIA
ORANGES 6 POUNDS FDR •••
lOADED WITH FLAVOR
CARROTS l·LB. CELLO PKG •••
STEAK S1 ZE
MUSHROOMS 1/2 POUND... 39c
JUICY, VALENCIA
ORANGES I 0 POUND BAG ••• 9 Jc
NEWI DRY fALl FLOWERS AT DISCOUNT PRICES
• STRAW FLOWERS·
• STARFLOWERS
• DRIED WHEAT
• SEAOATS
• RABBIT FOOT
YOUR CHOICE 68C
OTHER FALL ITEMS ALSO AVAILABLE: CALIFORNIA OAK LEAVES EUCAL YPTU'
ARTICHOKE, AND PUFF KITS AT DISCOUNT PRICES I ' ...
l r
1
J
J
-. -~ --~· ---.-~-----. ~ -_,..-._.. .. ·---... _ ...... ,._ . ....., = ... _,_,_ ·--,..-----,..--.,,._,,, .......... :-~----~-~-~-~. -------------· ,
•
Lash es Eye New Role • Glamour
Enhancement Easy . ~~~~~
PlaMing an evening out on the town?
Or a cozy, intimate, glamorous at-home
party?
For women who want to inake a big
~plaiih on the beauty scene but are lack-
ing in natural endowments, f a I s e
eyelashes are an answer to glamour.
With the trend ·now away from heavy
eye makeup, lashes solve the dilemma of
what to do with the eyes : add luxurious
lashes and eye beauty is almost com·
plete.
A little practice is necessary for an
unobvious look, but after a few sessions
the la.shes can be applied with tht speed
and grace of a professional model.
To apply the lashes, first assemble the
tools: a wooden pick, tweezers, manicure
scissors, a mirror that can be propped to
a {.).degree angle and good strong light.
Next. lake one lash from its platform
and with the tweezers and take it at both
ends with the fingers. Curve it into a
horseshoe shape and flex it a few times
to encourage It to take the natural shape
of the lid.
Then grasp the lash at its outer, thicker
end, hold the arm parallel to the
shoulders and ra ise the lash abov e
eyebrow level. Bring it down with an in·
ward motion.
An important trick is to avoid looking
at the lash. Look at the eyelid where you
want it to touch down . slightly out from
the iMer corner of the eye where the
naturaJ lashes begin to thicken.
Touch down the lash and press it with
the index finger of the opposite hand, us-
ing a light, firm touch. The next step is
trimming. If the outer corner extends too
far beyond the corner of the·natural lash,
it should be shortened.
After taking a good look to determine
how much should be cut, the lash should
be removed and the excess taken off with
the manicure ~issors. M each cautious
cut is made, the lash ahould be placed
next to the natural lash to determine
when enough bas been cut.
When the glamorous evening is over
and it is time to remove makeup, grasp
lashes at outer ends and peel inward.
After each wearing the adhesive should
be removed with tweeurs or fingers,
starting in the middJe, r and the lashes
.should be soaked in lash cleaner cc·
casionally to keep them clean and aoft.
I
Just a few tools
are needed to
· put on lashes:
a wooden pick,
tweez:ers, scissors
and adhesive.
,
Eyeorows Receae
New.est Stick-on a Put-on?
By MARIAN CHRISTY
ltaly·s best-read book these days
is "Sinuhe, the Egyptian," and the
most.talked·about Jove 5cene is
where the hero, Sinuhe, amorously
caresses the clean-shaven head of a
woman and verbally extols the
beauty o! her 1mooth-as·marble
$kUU.
California d e 1 i g n e r Rudi
Gemreich, who has already read
the book, recently pred~ted that by
the year 2000 men and women will
have shaved heads simply because
it's more hygienic.
Roman fashion designers haven't
gone that far -although Dior·
Paris did insist some models get a
wiffle. Princess Sciara, the roya l
head of Rome's Elizabeth Arden
salon, approved of shaved eyebrows
in the Carosa winter 1970 show. But
for evening Carosa models dressed
up their eyes by pasting on fake
Arden-crea ted brows made from
cord and fringe.
Sounds preposterous?
Veroushka, the giant six.foot
Amaron who is a frequent Vogue
cover girl, already has shaved of(
her eyebrows. So has the daughter
of socially.prominent Luigi Brzini,
author of the '60s best.seller, "The
ltalians.''
Jane Forth, the model who will
goon replace Twiggy in fame and
fort~. has shaved all but four
hairs sitting in a slim clump above
the inner corner of each eye. And
European fashion editors with an
Irrepressible sense of adventure
have copycatted.
All the gutsy girls have a gaze ot
permanent surprise u lf. by magic
or lhoclc, the eyebn>W1 tnuplicabl;'
,,r.
ROME'S NEWEST COVERUP
m::eded into the hairline.
The daring trend bas becune
very controversial. 1
Femme Sistina·a Lisette Lenzi ,
owner of the posh beauty salon that
caters to ladles like Queen Anne
Marie of Greece and Princess Lee
Radziwill, appears on the brink or
an Ilalian tantrum when this kind
or shaving it mentioned : "The idea
is so oflooxious it gives me the
creeps," she aays In the: sort of
Americ·an slang picked up from
Unilod State& converiation bandied
about under the dryers.
Then a tirade : "AU the fashion
designers are talking about a &el•
ual revolution, freedom, going back
to nature and the agrarian Ideal.
Shaved heads and eyebrows are out
of C1>ntexl today. They·re anliser.
Why to a man it must be like mak·
ing Jove to a statue."
When the funnies are analyzed,
you realize that "fashion" has
become com_plex because it Is an
eVer-changitfl' Ule sty le t. h a t
rellecll the tutu of lbe limes.
•
I
it.I I.st t~o laslies 'oro
in place, neatly trimmed
to match the outer corner
of nalurol loshes, The
r .. ~ will nof look soft end
noturol if it extends
too for.
Lashes must be
flexed into a
horseshoe shape
to condition them
and ease them into
the proper form.
Only • pinpoint of adhesive
is necessary for 1pplication.
•
llltSday, Stpttmbfr 15, 1970
Hooks Baited for New Catch of Members
New members will be welcomed aboard by New-
pOrt Harbor PanheUenic during a membership
brunch at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow in the spa of the
Park Newport apartments, Newport Beach. Special
guests will be presidents of all area sorority alum-
nae groups and wiMers of the Minerva award. Fish-
ing for new members are (Jett to right) the Mmes.
C. R. Lenahan Jr., president; Eleanor Smith, social
chairman, and Lawrence Kittle, vice president.
Serving passengers
aboard '!WA domestic
flights from O'Hare ln-
t er national Air-
part, Chicago, will be
Susan Unruh, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John
A. Unruh of Corona del
Mar. Miss Unruh is a
graduate of Corona del
Mar High School and
attended San Diego
State College.
Republican
Gathering
Sandwiches and coffee will
be served when the Huntington
Beach Republican Women's
Club Federated meets at
11:30 a.m. tomorrow, in the
Huntington Beach. Recreation
Center.
Addressing the group will be
Cecil Hicks, district attorney
of Orange County. A native
Californian, he was educated
at the Unversity of Southern
California and has been in the
district attorney's office since
1968.
All interested women are in-
vited to attend the get-
aequalnted luncheon.
Twins' Mothers
Take Potluck
Saddleback ~1others o f
Twlnl Club will host a potluck
dinner and recipe exchange on
Tbur1day, Sept. 17. at 7 p.m.
In the Miuion Viejo home of
Mrs. Robert Figeira .
Members and guests who
plan to attend are asked to
brtn& a favorite dish and . a
copy of the recipe.
Rettrvatlons may be made
with Mrs. Michoel Healy. 496-
1111, or Mn. Figeira, 830-3531.
Andy's Fun
A* _, kid. "Ast Andy" Is fUft,
Sit It Satllf'dm 111 tht 't>AfLV
PILOT.
Publicity Workshop
Press Chairmen
Invited Again
The DAILY PILOT joined
Orange Coast College today in
announcing plans for a repeat
of the jointly 1pon1ored
publicity workshop which Jut
year drew more than 200 preu
chairmen and publicist.a.
The two-hour program
presented as part of the
Orange Coast E v e n i n g
College's annual lecture series
will take place on Wednesday,
Sept, 23, at Estancia High
School. The program will
begin at 7:30 p.m. in the
achoo!'• Forum.
Preregi.trants will b e
auted first and those plaMing
to register at the aesslon will
be seated on a first-come,
first-seated basis.
The program, g e a r e d
primarily to club publicity, is
designed also to help anyone,
layman or professional, who
handles news releases. It will
be a basic "how-to" course in
the preparation and
presentation of news releases.
A booklet published by the
DAILY PILOT wUI be handed
out free of charge at the
lecture. It will c on t a I n
highlights of the two-hour
presentation.
Dr. Thomas Blakely,
director of Orange Coast
College's Evening Division;
Robert N. Weed, DAILY
PILOT publisher; 'Thomas
Keevil , DAILY PILOT editor;
Mrs. Bea Anderson, DAILY
PILOT women 's editor, and
Thomas McCaM, D A I L Y
PILOT public s er v Ice
manager, will be among those
participating in the program.
There will be no charge for
the lecture.
Here is a coupon which can
be used for preregistration for
the workshop:
High Flyer
Serving as a steward·
e ss aboard United Air-
lines planes flying out
of Los Angeles is De-
borah Ann \Vi Is o n,
daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . W. J. Wilson of
Huntington Beach. Miss
\Vilson was graduated
from Huntington Beach
High School and attend:
ed Orange Coast Col-
lege.
r • •. • • • • • • •. • • -• • • • • • .,
I
PUBLICITY WORKSHOP REGISTRATION I Future
Forecast Pl1a11 reserve ...... places for m• al th• DAILY I
PILOT-OCC Publicity Workshop S1pt. 23 In the
Forum, Estanci1 High School. I under1t1nd I
mu•t be there not lat•r thin 7:15 p.m. fo r ftie
7:30-9:30 s•••ion. Pr•regl1tr1nt1 will hive fir•t
choice of seating.
Opening her Lido Isle home
for the first meeting of the
yea r for the Newport Chapter,
National Charity League will
be l\Irs. Ernest Theodore
Hinshaw.
NAME .........................................
ADDRESS (Strffl) . . . . .. ... . . . . . . .. . ..... .. .. ..
CITY
ORGANIZATION (If Any)
OFFICE HELD
ZIP .........
PHONE ........ .
t.iembers will participate in
table talks on the future of the
organization o n Thursday,
Sept. 17.
Mi it 19: Pftllc: S.,.,lct 0..-rtm"'I' Orl ... t CNJI OAILY f'ILOT, P.O.
••• 1we. Ce111 Meu. c1. JUH. The group is an organization
.I of mothers and daughters.
joining together as community
volunteers. ---------------------
Wedding
The Rev. Eugene R.
Schramm performed double
ring rites for his daughter,
Natalie Esther Schramm and
Gordon A. Michael ~1cGregor
in the. Redeemer Lutheran
ChurCh, Huntington Beach.
The bride also is the
daughter of Mrs. Schramm of
Huntington Beach and was at·
tended by her sister-in-law,
l\1rs. Cordon L. Schramm as
matron of honor. Another
sister-in-law, Mrs. Steve n T.
Schramm was a bridesmaid.
The bridegroom, son of t.1t.
and t.1rs. John F. McGregor of
Whittier, asked Raul Ameicua
to be his best man ind Donald
D. d'Ablalng as usher.
The bride attended Olympic
College, Bremerton, Wash.,
rod ls a graduate of Concordia
Performed
College, Ponland, Ore. Her
hushiind is a graduate of
Lulheran High School, \Vest
Los Angeles, attended Cerritos
College and now is enrolled al
Cali fornia St.ate College al
Long Beach.
The bridal couple will reside
in Corona del Mar.
Art Exhibited
Needlepoint designs will be
exhibited when th e Huntington
Harbour Art Associaton meets
at I p.m. tomorrow, in the
Huntington ltarbour Beach
Clubhouse.
l\1iss Cynthia Robinson of a
Corona del Mar needlepoint
shop will demonstrate the art.
WORKING
MOTHERS
The Greatest Legacy You
Can Give Your Child ...
A Montessori Education.
~
0011·1 wtlie lhe i'"p••l•nl P••·sthool "'''' , . ,
WI.lie you ••• wor~i119 your chil .. •ill r•ceiv• the moil
v•lu•ble •l~trl•11c1 In hi1 l!f1ti'"1 in lf'I 1ttttdlt1d
Mo11t1uoti $,hool.
C•ll Now for fill enrollment:
Newport Beach ......••.. , , , . . 548-9803
1 Costa Men ......••..••..•. , . 645-2822
Anaha;m . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 523-3843
INTERNATIONAL
MONTESSORI
SCHOOLS, Inc.
•
Ptf'Nt• k-.. .. o.cik9tff T• 9•.Ufor ld.cotf•t1
'
•
Friendship Takes Nose Dive. . . •
DUR ANN LANDERS : Am I to
blame? You be the judee. Several wetks
ago I stopped by the home of a friend .
We were to 10 to a meeting together. J
found h« at the foot of the basement
oWrs -~; and in pain. Her nose was
ANN LANDERS
~lnt lhe w111 certain it was
I · ped ber into my car and took
her the neareil hoopilal. She did
that operation, \us fathering days are
finished .
I have never stol a thing In mY 11,fe
and I resent being treated like a common
thief. Merchants are complalnlng because
business is bad. It might get better if
customers were treated like decent
citizens, which most of us are. -R.S. IN
THE NATION 'S CAPITAL
ind have a broken nose. 'I'tle doctor on
duty ;et It and she spent the night and
part ~ the next day there.
NCJW aeveraJ weeks later my friend is
not speaking to me. Why ? Because she
says I did a terrible thing by taking her
to a MIMeapolis hospital. She claims a
REAL friend would have driven her to
the Mayo Clinic which is ooly 90 miles
away. It aeems she ls very unhappy
about the way her nose looks. Frankly, It
wasn't ao good to begin with and I don't
di.ink It looks any different. Please
conunent, Ann. I can't seem to get
lbrough. -TALKED OUT
And consider, please, another
possibility -t.hls one comes straight out
of my own life. I was a widow with one
child. I married again last year and am
now pregnant. If it were the other way
around, and my husband had lived
instead of me, l' would want him to
rebuild his life wilb another wo_m.an and
have more chiklren.
I, too, am concerned about the
population explosion, but J don 't believe
the male operation is the answer for
everyone. -FROM KENTUCKY
DEAft!.R.S.: Of course moat people ire
dectnt clll1tn1, but the dllbooe•t one•
seem to be lncreaslag ht nambtr ud
1hopWlln& loaset are reachia1 alarailnt
proportions. Last year lo the Wa1hington,
D.C. area alone, the mercbantt tu.fferecl
lo1ses approacbln1 '90,000,000.
DEAR T. 0.: It would make no sense
for a bouaewHe wbo broke ber nose in
Ml1111e1potla to be driven to Rochester lo
set It set. Apparently your friend
expected plutic 1ur1ery alone with the
booe-MttM1 which of course Is rarely
done 01!11 u emersency basis. This
"friend" IOWld1 like a pain la lbe neck.
Wltb a llUle lack she may atop speaking
to yoa permue11Uy.
DEAR KEN: Neither do I -nor did I
say it was. Jt is my peraonal opia.lon that
no man under 35 sbollld ctinsider the
operatiCM unless be 11 certain be would
not want more children under any
conceJvable set of circumstances.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am an
average, middle-income homemaker who
dreads shopping. Whenever I enter a
store I feel as ir I run behtg watched.
Yesterday was tile Jim.it. I was trailed
out of the store by a woman who asked to
see the sales slip for the $3 purse I picked
up on the sales counter. When I showed it
to her she apologized. The incident made
me so nervous 1 had to take two nerve
pills when I got home.
The reason -dope. Users 11y
1hoplUUng 11 the easleat w1y to npp:irt
the habit. Meanwhile, back at the r1ocb,
the iovernment coaduues to cklle do\\ll
methadone t.re.atment center• because
"we can't afford them.'' Write to your
Senaton ud CongrePmeD, folU. And -
atlacb this column to your letter. People
In puJIUc office usually look twice at
something from a new1p1per.
lf you have trouble getting along wlili
your parents ••. if you can't get them to
•you live your own life, send for Ann
Landers' booklet, "Bugged By Parents'!'
How to Gd More Freedom." Send 50
cents in coin with your request and a long,
stamped, self-addressed envelope in care
ol Ille DAILY PILOT.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : In regard to
your answer to M.J .M. approving of
vasectomy: that's dandy ! But what about
people who lose their children in an
accident or a disaster? Once a man has
Hearing
Problems
On Agenda
Therapies and functions of
the Providence Speech and
Hearing Clinic will be disc uss-
eo when the Kiwi Club,
Newport Chapter meets al 8
p.m on Thursday, Sept. 17, in
the Costa Mesa home of Mrs.
Lynn Matta.
Mrs. Evelyn Hayes of the
clinic will lead the discussion.
Attending the meeting will
be Miss Kay Hansen of New
York, national Kiwi counselor.
Plans continue tor Plane 'n
Fancy, the annual charity
fashion show on Nov. 1. It will
take place aboard a OC· 10
Mock Up at McDonnell-
Douglas.
Membership is open to any
former American Ai r I I n e s
stewardesses. Information
may be received by calling
Mrs. Lee Meyners at 544-6645.
Guitarists
Featured
Jordan and John, guitarists
from Estancia High School,
will be the featured enter-
tainment when members of
the Irvine Terrace
Philharmonic A s s o c I s t e s
gather Thursday, Sept. 17, in
the Cameo Shores home of
Mrs. William B. Malouf.
Horoscope
Cancer:
WEDNESDAY
SEPTEMBER I 6
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Areas previously settled show
signs or disturbance. A friend
could become involved In
litigation. Keep guard up
again.st being sold bill of
goods.
TAURUS (A-ril 20-May 20):
Some restr ic tions are
necessary. Abide by rules
designed for your 9wn benefit,
safety. Capricorn individual
figures prominently. Long-
d is tan c e call proves
significant.
GE,,UNI (May 21.June 20):
Spark of temper c o u I d
threaten Jong-standing
fr iendship. No one is going to
hand you anything o n
proverbial silver platter. Get
fair share, but also give others
a chance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
New approach is most likely
to succeed. Some in positions
of authority act in eccentric
manner. Ride with the tide. Be
independent without b e i n g
arrogant.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Take
care with what you put in
writing. Caution should be
keynote, especially d u r i n g
travel. Some or y 0 u r
Fashions
In Focus
Ride With Tide
philosophical concepts a r e
subject to sudden change.
VIRGO (Aug. '-'Sept. 22):
Financial prospects are good
if you are will ing to utilize
unorthodox methods. Study
Leo message. Refuse to be
trapped by outmoded
concepts. Key is versatility.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Get
on with creative endeavors.
You now can break through
red tape. One who previously
opposes you becomes ally. Be
gracious. You are due for
some publicity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 )~
One conneccted with special
group, organization provides
inspiration. Be receptive. Aid
offered is genuine. Motive is
Convention
Reviewed
Fall activities of Chapter 121
of the American Association of
Retired Persons will get into
full swing witb a meeting at
noon on Thursday, Sept. 17,
featuring a talk by Eugene H.
Hite.
Hite, Southern California
director for AARP, w i 11
present highlights of the
organ I z at ion's national
convention in Oklahoma City.
Titling his talk Behind the
Scenes, he will discuss action
taken during the gathering.
Lloyd E. Morrison, chapter
president, also will present a
sincere. Respond accordingly.,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Cain Indicated by
sale of property you
developed. This is time 10
make necessary adjustments,
especially in domestic area.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Work behind the scenes.
Do some personal research .
You will have to stand on facts
-truth will make you
confident. Some. usu a 11 y
reliable, act in unorthodox
manner.
AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): You may have to make
some quick moves. Key is to
hand. One who relies upon you
studies performance charts.
Message will be clear.
Protect assets. If not wary,
you lose something ot value in
transit. Key is to handle
valuables yourself. Depending
on others now might be a
cosUy proposition.
Members Feted
The Huntington Beach home
of f\.1rs. Charles Hamburger
will be the setting Thursday,
Sept. 17, for the annual paid-
up membership luncheon of
the Orange Count Y· West
Chapter of Women's American
ORT.
Featured during the 11 a.m.
event will be a boutique, with
proceeds benefiting the new
school of engineering in Israel.
Jordan Cannady, active In
the choral music program at
the school, has appeared In the
musicals "Anything Goes" and
''Annie Get Your Gun," as
well as arranging songs for
the choral groups.
Current trends in . fashion talk on the convention.
will be discussed by Miss A community sing will be
Marge Swenson, fashion Jed by Mrs. James E. Sawyer
supervisor of the Santa Ana and a slide presentation of
YWCA. when Y-Wives gather desert flowers will conclude
at 9:30 a.m. on Thursday, the program.
Sept. 17. All person.! over the age of
A "Swap and sell'' session 55 are invited to attend the
\~lill follow the program for gathering in the S e n i o r
trade of clothing and Citizens Recreation Center,
John Childers, a baritone,
also has appeared in
''Anything" and "Annie ," and
\\'as featured in "The Music
Man" as well .
Included in the program will
be Amtf"ican and foreign folk
songs, country and western
music, Broadway show tunes
and modem ballads.
accessories. Newport Beach.
Y-Wlves will meet the firstlii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and third Thursdays of each
month for programs including
talks by Orange County
District 1-ttorney Cecil Hicks
and Orange County Home
Advisor Dorothy Wenck.
AOVEllTISING lYl'tST 14'0 llECEl'TIONllT '"' FIKl111t1no fltld flf IOv. 11Hd1 u COMlllll' ~ POll!bl!!!letlll Dvol•
JI U 1vpe, D'f"lmlc co. bnll1. 11· ml<, plus, btv It. offke. flub. ~
lor e. Op!y, IClvn. FtM, t l.O IM. t1c1, "'· lo• 1nr1ct, 1ccur111 IYl'-
C.11 AJ\rl lluntll. Ill. FM. C1ll Nll'ICY C1ri.on.
EXEC. 5EC. P.11.. .... TYPIST
Help pl•~ tncl t At<:utt Pll'llH & $0me ollkt t •Plr. Acc111rlt ,.,...
rnttllnQs !or 111111 comPl"Y· "'"· l"9 oiws VoU "'' -m tor • """' Alto tft ]lltll. C1!1 Elltft llogtt1. llV:>rllll~ U•fft. Fee. C1ll I.ill
Whitney,
PEJtS9NNIL 11ecP. , ....
Tllk 1111*' "" C..-..rlY l\tlW1 Pl"'
"""'" 1!1111• 9lrl 19 llt!JJ Ill lftl·
Ing. if'll-'-4 ..... tk, ~ fyfllng
I ll'IUll. ll'H. C1ll I ll"' JtOO-rJ,
BOOltKEEPIEll-CONGENIAL WOO
11-lllllt co. •l.....,,..,1tvt IOHS. E•o. 111vrolt • ttt1t"*'t1, T•rrlllc: ep1y, tor Vtfl. Hurrvt ""· C111 Miry Llt't"t.
2323 N. BROADWAY
ll!CEPTIONtlT-TYPt&T llU
Sllort Ott, *· C11'ff'.,,.,ll'odtd Incl.
Gd. l\'M l~V. lo nc, POI. Cen-
venl1t sl1tt "-""111. Ftt. C•ll
Miry LJl)'ll.
SANTA ANA 835-3111
IWtlls ll'lrfG ltnlc tk19 I
RND
OF THE
WEEK
Sterling s~ver split key ring with
space for two or three initials.
Ask ebout our engraving service.
ll's the key to his heart.
$6.95
Amtrlc'"' 1!•,..tll
ll~t.lmerk•nl ll'HI M.ttltr C~••lil· IM,
SLAVICK'S
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT IEACH-644-1 l80
I '·
'
'
. .
. .
-,
·~..,...,..---~-------------------·---··------,..'""
•
• DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
WELL, Klt7 ... HAPPY' wrrn
'IOUR NEW NAME?
MUTT AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
SAM,, Wotll O YOtl MIND
~ING VOWNSTA.Ui?::S.
i:JGHi /i.WAY ?
PLAIN JANE
O, I JUSTLOV! IT!"ECllO'IS.SUCH A l'RETIY NAME! 50 MJCH NICER 1lWl
•Klll'i.!..Q' GOURSE,'ECHO'IS A MUCH
LOll6£R v.oRO 1}\/\IPKID'i
WHICH MAKES IT LOTS
HARDER FOR SOME
Pl'OPL!:TO SAY!
JMON ALEXAM~
IS Oii THE PHONE! ..iE'S
ll.lklNG lO JOANNA!
PERKINS
I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I
ACROSS
l Of I
Frank i~h
people
• 6 Sllgl1t
)0 Comfort
]4 Quic~ty
l5 Scottish
isle ; 16 AclrtSSl!S -, BlyU1 ;ind
-tl•dirrg
I7 En n 18 Gr ating
· ~4 Contr~ial
drug: Sla'llJ 45 Tage _,
Former
s.,,edislf PM
47 Illuminated
naturally
51 V. Lopez'
tl11!1J1e SOll!J
52. Ci nema-goer:
2 words
54 l~tl!rn
cltaracter 58 Nea t as .-: ,
By Chester Gould
ANO™ER UTTLI OETAIL.
-HON AAE "'°'-' F IXEO
FORMONEV?
By Tom K. Ryan
YER PRrnY '!DUNG 10 ~E
SASSIN' M~ ~IKElllD.T!
YOU'RE
PRET1Y OLD W
l'f:SERVE !Tl
By Al Smith
By Harold Le Doux
By Frank Baginski
--.llJ State of tltilemimt
·20 Wrests
2 words
511 Flower
til Relali"ft.
62 Relish
MISS PEACH
22 Posture of a figure tn
a painting
24 Montt¥y
unit of
"" 2fi F lgtHeS of
SpttCh Z1 Oisc;ariied
)1 Members of
Pillliarnent:
Abbr. 32 Fancies JJ OecOfator's
items
35 Grey or
Stan~y ·-38 Early ltis b
;alphabet.:
V;a r.
3' C.oins
.tO Remedy
.tl Number 12 Part of 1
whole
•l CMgo w sstl
' ' J •
"
" ·-,.
.. " "
l2
" .. .. .. ,,
-
"
" '
8 Singk things 37 E:crual 9 Depressions: J9 Highly
2 words u-ban 63 Miss Ftrb~
64 -lily lD .. _ -40 N. Amierican
E;ast. .... : citizert 6S Sub ject of
Londoi1 statue
2 words .t2 Europtan
11 fleGLltt to .113 Poise
b6 Did .1 color ·
Mg job
nothing 44 Phol0111"aphic
47 Siqn on ' .,,.,
12 Slyly copies
di spar;aglng 46 Thfow iii'! 1
]) Sen. -·· high arc
KtfattYtr 47 Polluted
21 Held a atmosphere:
sessiOf! lnfonul DCWN
l Soshiess 21 Little dt•ils 48 Hea ... y
tran sactioa 25 Dfkt drinker
2 Su111111 il · 27 Uproar 4' Dispatch
3 Fta1urt of 28 Sharl)fltss boat
active 29 Twilled SO Behind
volcano coat tlolb sched ult 4 Dairy 30 Social 53 N1t111>Pr
product: •flair 55 Liqutly-
2 words J4 Unsa ilfn9 ,50 Endi11g ir.>td
5 Boston !tam JS Coagul.ated with barn
ft Signat11t: milt and tent
.lbbl'. 36 Strong 57 Approach
7 lbse11 ht1 olnt lltsire 60 Unhappy
·~ • ·1: " " "
-
Jo " " "
" , lJ
" -' ., '~ " ,
.Ill" " " ,. " -· .. .. -
I;"
., ..
~ " , ..
J .. » "
" 60 "
--1"
STEVE ROPER
PEANUTS
THE WORlD'S
1 0Ll6 HE ST
Ll'L ABNER
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
._,,,
@
" •
ANIMAL CRACKERS
I ~l.D\IE.
TO f'OIJPER.
T>E oovei:&e .•
By John Miles
--A.NO THE-'E 'U. SE'
5WEt.t.. DOOR ~l z.e'S FO*'
evER'IONe WI-I(} COMES
SA'K FOR 1HE Soc;DN D
r-r--..:.A,::;'~··~ --";'
By Mell
By Charles Ml Schult
N AJ.L 1HE WRU>, 1l{!RE ~
' N<JTl!ti6 J..l(f])je ~ ~ ! . l!IC1lli1 WILL SEE WU H®J' . ' ••
lH£ STtANGE WOtLD
MR.MUM
\
-. -
DAILY PILOT J $
By Charles Barsotti
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd 'Johnson
By RCKJel' BoUen
·-: .. •• };
;/)/;, l
--.
...
J 6 DAIL V PllDl Tutsday, Stott1nbtr l!i, 19>,
Huntington Playhouse 1
'Once More, With Eeeling'
TU ES DAY
l :JO \ 8 HEE HAW IS BACK!!! * HAPPIEST SHpW on TV JUTEMBCR 15
• Cheered by SRO Throng
ROY & DALE SA·LUTE! .
B tll(J)•EWSWOll"*Kn
(C) (60) Ro) Roters, D11t ['ianl
1:11 B llc .._ (C) (60) ind Bol>br Birt tutst. Usa Todd
Is lntltld uted 1s S1mshin1 Corn-0 DllC ""'9ltYic.t (C) (60) silk, th• blaub wllo dllHI Junior
DAlfll ...... ('C) (2~ ~r) Simples throu&fl the MW season.
Matis "' Minnett111 1w1111. I O @ @ m•m SWOfll Jiiii.i
0 SU: O'Cled MMe: -c..f!Mn·1 (C) (30) .. Rlady, Al/ft, flud ... Julia
htlly CMait" (COl!lldy) '53-V•n pti firtd Ill • PlfTOll tutbd. '""
JoflMrHI, J111f1 L1((h, Louis (jl J til HtnnH fiMI 1 aolution.
Mm, \tf1!ter Sltlal. I O 0....._ SllN (Cl (30) Henny
0 AbNtt ~ c.tlllt (C) (30) YOUJll,IMll ls f11h1rtd.
· m t11t Fli•..._ 1t> <301 0 im wa> • .... tf 111.
ID stet T,_ (60) Wtd: (C) .,... 1....ur (1d·l1)
@Cl) UC £Mini Nm: (t) (30) '69-Ghris ,..,,,., Bury S11lliv11l,
fD WUt'• NN (C) ()II) Je ssia Walter, Ralph Btl.lamy, CMot
3(1 I ynl'f'. A test drivt1, who pounsa QI ()) CIS llllft (t) ( l blood that tflllts ilnmunltJ to dis·
t Cl>Dwtrld/ .. _.. IC> (30) 11s.e, is i• p1ril whm tilt phenom-
q) l•tri&I (30) enon It disawered br 1 dyinc ty·
I { m I ... 11 Ult S. (C) (30) tOOll who will buy life ri 1n, prj,t.
~ I m Tllh • las Eltflllls (30) m David ''"' S1low (C) (90)
Q) Clllopillf ColtlHl (C) (JO) (D Ptrlrlit el 1 Stir (t) (60)'
6:ZOQJ @ w.ci1r (C) M1r11 Stil«s. "'Robtrt Mltdlum."
1;>0CJC11111M11 ""'" (30) tmrllMr r••llr <30J ma rn r_. ... rtittl <301 mu CllltitlldM <60>
mrn s. ... (lO) ~OOOQJl1JID•EW ..........
Cl)@ • Jll.._ ,..., (C) (30) Tu..., MiPt IWr. (C) '11le ltlt
Sttlri" ('II) (IMl'llurt) '67-St•rt ID DEJtrT T .... fJO) -Slilllll· Grtna•. llaz Clns, Clb!Wlt Lit.lldl.
l111ts." flr1I II 1 ·~ IM!ts, A dlsihlllioMd Alric»• hllld« cit·
lrtil ,....,...._ 111\dtrttn 11111 lhe cidlS to ~ 1 1Dnc·lhn1 obtts·
nltllft ti tllllty " IOt 1 IOlllhfll llOlt-IO mrtll (11,rt tnd dd!UJ •
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ot "'• O.lr """ '""
Standing l"OOm only crowds
are rare ~ences in loca l
theaters , but that's what was
on hand Friday night to cheer
"ONCE MOllL WITH l'"l!l!LING"
A comect"f b'r Karry Kumlt1, Olritc:lecl
by Tcm TINt, •rod!Kecl ff .. _.,
KffM, ti-""'1 .. •r Ann f lll111,
IKIWllc1I director A1f l O'°""lo' Wll!lcl
.. 111 llt1111"8 tw '"' Motl'Ll lld, ,,, Clftl111 1W C1rl1 Trl(k. Pf""11ecl
FriOIJI 1nO SlhlrUVI !llr-~ Oc:t. 10
1! !ft• HIMll"810n B.-Cll P'llJl'lol.>11,
1110 M1lr1 SI., Huntlftlllon &<la<:ll.
TM• CAST \!ll:lof Fl~lrl •• . . •• . . . . II.on AIMl"IHll
Do!IY F1bl"' •········· C1rol FIU!tlk~ MIJCWtlf Arcillr •••.•.. Mlir11" H. Fuc:f\1
('"''' ... Sltmm ••••••••••• eltl W1Ul1m1 Mr. Wiibur •.•••••.•••••. e111 Mor11tn0
GrfKN/JIKht ~eof ,t,nllo ~IMt
Lult l B1rom1 •••.•.•.••.. win., Atl•n
llldl1rO Hllllarl . . . . . . . l'lon FUJI"
the opening of ''Ooce More,
With Feeling" aL the Jiun·
tington Beach Playhouse .
Di rec ted by Tom Titus, the
comedy is the tale of a
tem peramental orchestra con·
ductor and his zany attempt!
to win back his estranged
wife.
Titus, who is becoming a
vele ran director in Orange
coast community theaters,
direded the producton with
style. No cast member ever
"hammed it up" or overacted
on the more broadly humorOU!
parts.
The 1wo stars of the show
\lo'Cre Ron Albertsen as Victor
Fabian, the conductor, and
Carol Faulstick as Dolly, hi s
wife.
Miss Faulstick, who is one
of the area's best com·
edienne!, does her usual ex·
cellent job. She is at her best
in the final act when she
starts screamint al t h e
fittd point. tMlt MJ·dll11ii111· l1bled ~lit!" altphaftt that ,... r•
El hftn * LMIC (30) rpgMiblt I« his flielllf'1 dealll.
m......, " 1Q (00) e"" ·-(t) 1"'1 ·"""·" 8' 1't ~ ~ (t) ())) BtrTJ Mcne, Jttt WllD\, Burt
IIi)s.&a .... U. (JO) Brinkerhoff, lilctJi1 r1nen cunt.
ID a w.w .,_, (C) (30) El ow.c:b/filll (C) <JOI
Steve l,4 llen Starts
Another ·TV Format
7:GCl8CIS &.Ille """' (t) (l1) 9:3089(1)N£W IWOfl Te 1 .. 1 ~ Will lawt (C) (JO) W1br 811• By VERNON SCOTT 8 iD llC lli&'Wf ,._, (ti (30) 111n )Dins U11 ast M '"""Pl
O tt!Cil fllM If 1111 .._. (t) Md'f ,ruin, wtio •ltl hit r.nn M HOLLYWOOD iUPI)
(BO) noyd Pitt.-Yi. Clltfl" lowt 11111 niu '° IDm• b 1 '14tit ·That telev ision war horse,
'"'o.wl" 6r9lft d~ tro111 Mtdla1 with his widoaolr ... 111.i.w tnd Steve Allen. goes to the post in
541111,. C1tdtn. his .......,.ltl&1'lftr1, his 12th show this season m I LM liq (30) fJ ID ... (C) (30) syndicated ii several dozen
cities which app r e c iate
ID lNt .. a.tk (C) (lO) Im....._,,.... D.-(C) something olher than pablum
:i"J OO ,,.... tel (JO) @II! IHCWl"'EI W (C) (la) for video fare .
m Md)91W ... Altill {JO) Li'l'e CIJIM'lll d M•lc•• '""""""'" On Allen's ne1v show the
Q) Cll Trd er c:....i-(C) ttU D17 flstMftN.. name of the ga me will be
@marill .. l..l'l'llc Wln1 (C) (3o) lelmlJQICll .. ..,. iO ... controve rsy and discussion.
m Si9lplil .... lhrie (55) ... fC) (ID) ~ ., c.n'd ll is beiJlg filmed to allow
llltlfllt • ,...... .. • ..,.. individual stations to run the
fDTW Cllt (C) (30J ii• b'lllt. ....,, ...._. -' program in »minute, 60-
7:15 Ml•• w1nace ""' t111 ""*'"" minute or 90-minute formats.
U GOV. REAGAN SPEAKS D m""" fC) fll1I Each station will beam the
*ON LAW & ORDER, U aJICJ)Q)..._ .._ M.D. show al whatever hour and
VIOUNCE. DRUGS, CC> (601 (R) --u.. llJ NI »11· day it chooses.
CRIME It COURTS 1ic. .. A ICIMftlt WIMI M ku • Steve's u11ending adventures
J:JI. a (I).. SLUCIJI lllftdillfY d••·· in television go all the way
...._ CCI (30) Thi Olmpetl . OW 11 ..... ~ QD) back to 1948 when he was
OtdlM to Wi1 lhlll" 11iH'1'-rnt1 Ill\-18 ...... u. (80) having fun on a local Los
lioll doUln to Wnfrlilllbl 1nd Angeles challllel pioneering rM II ·• Die l'fwiM • )!tip lt".JOGT.._ ,_ CSO> with music, jokes aod guests.
t01Y1 tt11 ~ • polhltloll. Rid! EM.....,.~ I Allen's bag Is humor. But
lfttl• ..,.,ti. hit I "' I u.r. 11:00IIDp18 m ..... (C> many view him with suspicion.
P11t epilodt. BC. '" 1., "hid IC> (30) He is unafraid to tackle
a@@ l:)PIDlfllC TM DH Rid 9'""" .-t c..ter •11d 11'"1 politics, religion, race and
llllfltl SllW (t) (60) Don )(notti ...,...,.,.. ,.st. wildly improbably nonse11se,
hosts hi• openln1 ...wy •• on.n t: (C) -c-1 ...... -. almost always in fun.
11ith fllld• (ydit GOfww. Anthony Miii DM"' (dr1m1) '55-.llmlift1 The result : "The r a r
Nwt.y, "Di1111J .. r•l'lllt" tfltf. »net., ~ Slldl.. th. r tetui •~d Don's ""Clftfriencl,M poli tical right inks m a tD M1rit: ..,. .. flip Wiit'" lwtll· Communist and the f a r [11ifll ~I. The lilll'nl C.IJ"fl· ...,. • '--~-"-'I " ' 1111) ~-.,.. ......... iep polilica l Jert thinks r m a
lert 1unL Cottm. fascist.·•
~fm~or S::m~n~6e' p~~~1 mr.,,.-"It ma y be said in good
anl'IOUnctl h1$ pltns 10 quit his po. (l'jj (}) S.. H1~t conscience that Alle1 i S
he• unclt1c:ovtr 11ork. I rU {t)tB (j) ...., (C) neither, Even he admits this m l rllltl II" CoR...-C• (t) (30) fact. Q) ltl's "* 1 Dul tc1 Thi.s season his guests will m hnJ Mno• (60) ll:JO IJ 9 (jJ Mwt Crtr11 ICJ include Barr y Goldwater,
EID TM Waz• l11111111t (t.J I~ hr) B ID@ m w.r, C.rm (t) I\ fort Sahl, Tom Smothers, San
C!)StllcW r~m: (C) (30) Olhwis:..,. fnip Atflk"' (• Francisco Mayor Jo s eph
eJ ... f1trte ~·· t• ,..... {XI) maric:•) '48--frllarllll'll Dittrich, Joh• Alioto aid others, usually six
J;55 G) c.ntitt IM Sil...... l ijnd, .INll Ar!llUI. or seven Oil 3 Single program
l:OOfJ9 (jJ NEW SfAJOll Crt111 O @ l])Q)M c..ett (t) amok in the give and takt of
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e JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Quality Printin9 •nd Dapendable S•rvic:•
for mort ihtr. • quert•r of • c1nf"ry.
anyone who listens to my
question! will be able to ilfer
some of my bias."
Allen laugh! easily. He is an
extraordinarily pleasant man
who is vitally interested in
everything from politics to
ecology to race problems,
c rime, music, drugs.
Everything.
"1ile door to our show ill
ope• to persons or a I I
persuasions," he said. •·we
have no trouble b o o It l n g
guests."
01!e of his first shows will be
a pip. The guests a.re a
strange melange: Charlton
Heston. George Jessel, Jamel
Leigh and Don Adams. They
will be chatting with Madalyn
Murray O'Hair, the woman
most .cesponsiblt for praytr
being elimi nat ed from
classrooms.
"Mrs. O'Hair said she was
put in jail after her lasl
appearance on my show,"
Allea grinned. "I don't think it
happened this time."
Jn addi tion to his roundlable
discussioas. S t e v e will
continue to entertain with a
monologue, with mu sic and his
irrepressable humor. He feels
the re is room -Indeed,· a
pressing need -for a show
such as his in primetime
network television.
''I'm for a show like ours.
with a Dick tavett or sometine
in my spot, at a tim e when
people could see it regularly ,"
Steve concluded. "But at the
momelt it's unlikely."
On Location
HOLLY,VOOD (U PI I -Hal
\Valli s '"'ill film his '·Red Sky
in the .l\1orning" a Im o s l
entirely on location near Santa
Fe,N.M.
'Ji1lia' Hetur1as
Pl! OT, PRI NTING ~
UTT war U LIOA an .. MIWPOn IUCH -6-41-4J21
Diahann Carroll ~a s nu Nie Julia Baker and .!\fa re
Copage as her so n Cory start their third sea son
In !he comedy series "Julia" !onighl al B:;JO on NBC
Channel 4. '
egomanfaca\ Victor.
Alberben's lnltrpretation Of
the conductor was on\par with
his oostar's. There were
:.everal opportunities for him
to overplay the part and make
Victor a buffoon, but he never
:slipped.
As played by Albertsen, Vic-
~:v\~~baj;'er:n a :~igh:~
hesitates to use any tactic to
gain his ovm ends.
Having stellar performances
alone fro 1J1 your leading
players will not make a hit
production. Fortunately, the
Huntington Beach production
is blessed with top
performances from the sup. WITH FEELING -Ron Albertsen (rie:ht) a tempts to intimidate Bill Mor~ ..
porting players a.s well as the Jand as Ca rol Faulstick "faints" into his a rms and Martin Fuchs. watc~es in
leads. mock horror in a scene from "Once More \Vith Feeling" at t he Huntmgton
Martin H. Fuchs a.s Victor's -=Be=•c::h:....::P..:l::•Y::h::ou=.••::·-----------------------agent, Maxwell Archer, turns
in one or the be.s t
performances of the · sup.
porting cast. He is one of the
few actors in community
theater to be able to suc·
cessfully bring o!f a Jewi sh
accent.
Two other cast standouts
were Arvid Malnaa as the
violinist brothers, Grischa and
Jascha Gendel , and Bi I I
Moreland as the helpless Mr.
Wilbur. Moreland delivers the
best line or the play when he
tells the conductor he Is
chairman of the board of
directors for the orchestra
because "It ~ame with the
pickle business."
Remaining cast mem.bers,
Bill Williams, Wa1ter Allen
and Ron Filian round out the
cast.
From tht opening four notes
of Beethoven'! Fi fth Sym·
phony to the closing bars of
Sousa's 0 Stars and Stripes
Forever," "Once More With
Feeling" is the best comedy
produclion of the new theater
seuon. Here's hoping the rest
of the season's offerings along
the coast will be a5 good.
Kids Steal
Lomhardo's
Audience
NE\V YORK (AP) -Sixty·
two kids from Wisconsin came
to New York this week and
demonstrated thei r musical
performing savvy by stealing
an audienct from G u y
Lombardo.
"The Kids from Wisconsin,''
the name for the group of
teen-age performers sponsored.
by the Wisconsln Exposition
Center had come to reco rd
highlight! of the repertory
they had developed since
coming together for a summer
camp-style music program in
mid.J"une.
Band leader Lombardo
invited t h e. boys-and-girls
troupe to Jones Beach, where
he is the producer of a "Sound
of Music" revival staged
summer nights at t he
oceanside outdoor stadium.
Afterwards, he invited them
tO do "about 20 minutes" of
their act ih the adjacent tent,
where ticketholders a r e
invited free for an hour or
Lomba rdo music for dancing.
Urge d on by call s of '·More !
i\fore!.. from the standing·
room crowd and an invitation
from Lombard<>. the group
performed more than an hour.
~nd Lombardo 's men never
did gtt to their bandstand.
The teen-age band members
and lhe chorus or singers and
dancers. au clad In mustard.
gold blazers and radiating a
·wholesomeness that charmed
the audience, continued with a
program that included popular
and show tunes, a Charleston
production, and a melange. of
Talk Show Moved
Will Hollywood Help Mer:v?
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (U PI)
CBS-TV, which says it is
tr y in g to be m or e
so phi s ticat e d in il.s
programming, has m o v e d
?..'lerv GriUin's 1 a t e-n i g h l
series permanently from New
York to Hollywood.
As everyone k n o w s •
Hollywood is a citadel (If
sophistication. I mean, if
mov ie stars aren "t sophisticaL
ed, who is?
The fact , of course, Is that
with Griffin. NBOTV's Johnny
Carson and ABC-TV's Dick
Cavett all originating their
late-night shows from New
York, the competition for
desirable guests there has
been fierce .
And. wi th Carson and Cavett
getting better reaction in the
show business industry. in
press notices and in word-Of·
mouth response, Gr i f r in ' s
position has hardly been
des irable.
So he is moving l o
l!ollywood, as has often been
predicted. One reason, says
tii:i; network, is to take
advanlage. of the reservoir o{
star power in filmtown.
You may recall that this
was a reason gi ve n for
originating Joey Bishop's late·
night ABC.TV series from
Hollywood. You may also
recall he was canceled despite
all the star power. and the
Cavett show in New York
replaced him, and is doing
well.
What it comes down to.
Teally, is that all of 'the star
power in the world doesn't
help if a show doesn't ha\·e the
right concept. Lhe righ t
attitude, the righl tone. 11any
movie st.ars have bombed oul
County Dance Theater
Auditions in At1aheim
hfich el Panaieff,1 artistic
director()( the Dance Theater
of Orange County, announces
that the second season of the
com pany will open w i t h
aud itions Sept. 24 at J 10 E.
Lincoln Ave.. Anaheim, for
male and female dancers and
apprentice dancers.
Dancers age 13 and older
may audition for the company
at 6:30 p.m. Apprenti ce
dance.rs, 11 and 12 years, male
and female, may audltion at 5
p.m. for the apprentice class
conducted by David Panaieff.
The second performance of
the Dance Theater. wh ich
t•ame to national attention
through good reviews or it s
Brian Aged
Brian Keith v.·ill play a 79-
year-old booze.y rancher in
Disney·s "Scandalous John.·'
first perform ance lasL J\1ay,
\lo'ill take place the evening of
Nov. 14. with a student
matinee scheduled for Sunday,
Nov. 15.
f'urther information i s
available at SJ5.1388 or 637-
5910. A me mbership drive is
currently under way for the
1970-71 season.
Actor Horton
Hospitalized
GLEN FALLS, N.Y. (AP)
Film . star E d wa r d
Evere tt Horton has been
admitted to Glens F a 11 s
ho spital for treat ment or an
ul\disclosed ailment.
The 83.ye.ar-old character
actor was taken to the hospital
Thursday from his Adirondack
summtr home at nearby Lake
George. His condition was
described al satisractory.
on television, and networks
learned lhat big n am •
celebrities have to do more
than just put in an appearance
to get ratings.
Jack Paar, the best. late
night hos t television has ever
had, held forth with such non·
stars as Alexander King, a
isu p e rb a nd wit t y
conservationalist: Genevieve,
an offbeat French perfonner;
and Dody Goodman, a zany
lady who was but a minor
actress. Yet all beca me
national celebrities because
the show's attitude was right.
Carson and Cavett, botti
exceptional hosts, also have
strong concepts that keep
their outings consistent and
usually enjoyable except for
the e\•entual feeling. of triv ia
that catches up with all video
chit-chat shows in the end.
Cavett is a generally finr.
conversationalist a n d a
h u mo ri s t o r deadl y
understatemen t. tarson is a
pov.·erhouse comedian and a
master showman who never
lets thing s flag for long,
\Vhether or not one likes them.
there is no doubt they are very
adept professionals.
Griffin, on the other hanrl.
~ms rudderless because he
has sot really bee n doing what
he does best, what he used t<>
do extremely ~·ell on his old,
less pressurized syndicated
series. !·!is secret then was
that he "'as an excellent
listne r who quietly and
amiably guided all types o(
guests into pro v o e at i ve,
pleasnt conversaiion.
Listening well is no sma\1
achie1'ement for a good host,
but he is a di[fer e nt
personality since g o i n g
network. He tells jokes now,
and he can't. He perform:ii:
more in general, and he can't
very well. He is often sill y,
giving the impression that he
is the kind of fellow who puts
(In funny hats at parties.
He has to return to his
natural self, and let his old
directness replace the coyness
and cuteness and gushing. I[
he doesn't, no change of venue
will help.
patriotic and peace songs. "•1111!!!!!!!!!!!!1
"Guy told me. 'I don't want II
lo go on that stage now, you
just round out the hour'."
Vernon G. Wendland said
Wednesday In talking of his
charges' success the night
befort.
Sinatra No
'Party Liner'
HOL L YWOOD !AP)-
Starts
Wodnotd•y
Sept. 16th
RATED "R"-Sth BIG WEEKI
Singer F'rank • .S.i11atra. 1a Don1ld
Sutherland· ~I-1\S ·ll . veter11n Demoda'Cic fund. ~ c=~i:..... • -..: :.'":"= ..:,....~
raiser , s:tunned Cali!omianas _,...... • tlUWTIMOTO• •u.c"
earlier this year with an ••"!!!!!ll!l!l!Jl!!l!'!!Jl!!!!'!l!''!!!!!"!!!!'!!l!l!!l!'!"~!!!'!!!!!!"!! ... !'"!!'l""!'Il!!IJ~•
endorsem ent of Republican
Cov. Ronald Rea1an, who
Sl!e.k.s re·e.le.ction .
But for secretary of state,
he announced, he will sup-
port. De.mocrat Edmund G.
Brown J r. -SO• of fonner
Gov. Edmund G. Brown, the
ma JI defeated for re~lection Jn
1966 by Rragan.
I
•F _ _,_,...._ ~-~--... ~-~.....,.,..,._ ""·'""'"· .,_,..., ., .... e"·"·'""·-·'"""'""°''"'',...--·r; • .,,.,.,,.,.,.-. -·-.:qr-.-.c--.,.,.-,.~.:'."a>="""·'"""•""°"'""'"•-·'"""-""'".,..,..,,,..,,,.,.,.,,., "'"'"""""=·. ;~"tr-J"'S"'"'...,...,-i .: · _ ~ . -fr -• -'-r----,, .. ,. . -
7
DAILY PILOT J7
At Westminster Huntington Hartford
'Bell, Book, Candle' 'No Place' Dramatizes Race Prejudice
Slqwed ~y Script By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of fM D•llY ,lltl St.it
··No Place to Be Somebody"
1 al tbe Huntington Hartford
Theater in Hollywood, ls 1
heaYy. !UMy , serious comedy-
drama t h a i unflinchingly
bares both white and black
prejudice.
throughout mosL or the play. believable. Nol tmUl after the
Dee's interaction with the second intennission does he
blacks is. a formidable acting clearly communicate ~ full
job Miss Pearson h:tndles meanlng of his twisted, racial
more than capablf. inversion, and then Only when
By TOM TI TUS
Of tht D•UY Piiot S"lf
The primary obstacle In ap-
proaching John VanDruten's
"Bell, Book and Candle'' is in
overcoming the datedness of
the play -not so much in
point of time, but in the struc-
ture of the work \tself, its
"IELL, 600!( ANO CA.NOLI!"
A &>!aY br John V1nDruttfl, O!tK!ed bY Jlldle Carr, tecr...lul dlrectDr ll:g.n
P latt. producl!Ol'I man111,,. Ge.,. T1r11V,
•t111e m1n111tr MlrChot L1nc1~•tr. p~M'flle<:I bv Ille Wtalmlntler Com·
munllY Tlletll!t' ~I. It, 15 arid 16 ~!
Finley School alldl!orlum, Edwaroi •I
Tr11k, wesrmln•ter.
THE CAST
c;11111n Hotf'OY<I •• . ••••. ll:olln<11 Orlow
Shft>llt'rd H-etlOtl , . GI.., Eck.nrorn
NltkY Kolrovd ............ 1l11lllfl Or1ow
Min Holro,o ••••••...•••.. Alkt Reich
!.IOr>eV Rfdlllch • . . ••. .John P"IUlp~
Pveweclo.tl . . • . . . . . . . • . . Ml•ltr Cal
talky, mannered forties style
of writing which today pro-
duces a s or t of theatrical
heartburn.
T h e Westminster Com·
munity Theater is o n l y
partially suocessful in this
regard, offering a production
which is pleasant and en-
tertaining, bot inordinately
slow afoot, despite a few fine
individual performances.
Working under a variety of
handicaps in both personnel
and technical areas, t h e
Westminster players h a v e
fashioned a loose fitting pro-
duction on the Finley School
stage. Stag na ncy and
superfluous movement con-
tinually unravel this rather
fluffy ba11 of theatrical yarn.
Judie Carr, who assumed
directorial responsibility for
the show just two weeks ago,
cannot be completely faulted
for the overall lack o f
cohesiveness of the produc.
tion. The blame must be
borne equally by G I e n
Eckenroth. who took over the
Jeadiog role on short notice, a
condition which is apparent in
his performance.
Eckenroth p I a y s the
"straight man" in a coven of
latter-day witches, a role
which could have, and should
have, been amplified to a
more three dimensional
character elicting s o m e
degree of empathy. In its hur-
riedly constructed form, it is a
picture of abject blandness
varying only in volwne, most
of which ls harsh and unsym-
pathetic.
HELD OVER
4th BIG WEEKI
>AN..¢VTSIOH8 T[CHMCQ.OFI~
·~;=~.~~
ALSO EXCITING-CO·HIT
'
...
Conversely; Rolinda, Orlow
as the lovely, restless witch
Gillian is excel.Jent, projecting
as much of herself with
flashing eyes and rolling
tongue as with her dialogue.
Her transitions are cri sp and
fully defined, though occa-
sionall y overmuch when
measured against the motiva-
tion. or lack of it, she. receives
from Eckenroth.
Ralph Orlow comes through
acct'1'tably as her devilish
v.·arlock brother, alt.bough his
Jines are not always sharply
punched. What he larks in
delivery. he compensates for
in chararler, and one can see
the inner wheel s turning al the
arch of an eyebrow.
The show is very nearly
slolen by the sp l endid
performance o( Alice Reich as
Charles Cordone's
Pulitzer Prize Best
1910
Play,
began a Los Angeles run at
the Hartford Monday night un-
lll Oct. 3.
Tht' author directs Ute Los
Angeles staging which hurls
razor sharp images or pre.
judice in all its mind-twisting,
gut.rotting horror acro,,s the
footlights.
FRIGKTINING w.u, 1., ...
Susan Willerman as the pan-he has resolved his confusion .
ty.waist, white civil rights ac-are we let in on the full range
tivist, just out of Elmira or his dementia.
Women's Coll ege, almost, but As Sweets Crane. Johnny's
not quite, makes the placard-hatred raison d'etre, Julius W.
carrying liberal believable. Hanis turns in a wann,
· Lynda Westrott as Evie humane treatment of the ex-
Ames manages to shine in con turned Uncle Tom .
every. brief scene she's in· Despite the trite stage
volved in. Her timing and business of pickpocketing for
precise delivery bring lines the fun o( it, Harris absorb!\
like .. Owe-revory -that's the hatreds of Johnny like a
Fre.nch for Bye, y'all" to the sponge and proves as vital a
polot ot hilarity. force to the movement or the
Ait the nursemaid who faces play onstage as much as he
conliderable color conftision did offstage, as Johnny an· ticipates his release frocu particularly in her ongoing rtlationships with men, Miss prison.
\"f.t'lt.colt establishes herself as John Retsek provide& a
a black talent sure to go th<lroughly believable s e t
hliher. which was adequa tely lighted
Ronnie Thompson as Shanty by Conrad Penrod.
1'1u11igan is another white who,J;=~~~~~~~:i~~
hi• assignment truly A I D!ol
Gillian's giddy aunt who also NOT IN SERVICE -Ralph Orlow "hexes" a neigh-
dabbles in witchcraft for her bor's t elephone as Alice Reich watches gleefully in
own amusement. Miss Reich this scene from the West.minster Community Thea·
blows in like an occasional ter production of "Bell. Book and Candle." breath of fresh air and creates --~-----------------
The play reaches out 10<1
grabs you, turns you upsldt
down, inside out as the black
and while cast portrays tlw
common elements or prejudit't'
that divide blacks rrom
v.·hites. Then, at lhe end. like
missionaries G<rdone sends
you out wondering what your
responsibility for prejudice
might be.
Blacks in the audience find
·much with which to identify
as the crystal clear charac-
terizations parade by. But.
whites too will see themselves
in the images Gontone weaves
into the contrasty interactions
or blacks and whites in West
Greenwich Village .
almost, but not. quite, makesll ID1l
Sunday med.in ' ~ Jil[WP'OIT IEACH • OL . . ~""" -...... ---
Susan G. Pearson is the
white, lesbia~. harlot enslaved j to pimp Wiiiiams. Stoned!.'" _____ _ ENDS TONIGHT
"'WOODSTOCK" the most truly amus i ng
character on stage.
Completing the cast is John
Phillips as a perennially pix-
ilated writer who contributes a
pair of effective seque'nces in
a small but well handled role.
The production itself takes a
bit or time to set itsell in mo·
lion -there's hardly a
chuckle throughout the long
first act -but it gains
r.iomentum as the evening
wears on. The ltlird act is a
singular triumph for Miss
Orlow, in particular the scene
where she realizes her occult
powers have vanished.
"Bell Book and Candle" will . . be staged for three more
performances, with t h i s
Friday's activity superseded
by a school function, in the
auditorium of Finley School,
Edwards an d Trask avenues,
w~tminster.
Cousteau T·v
Series Back
NEW YORK (UPI I -'"The
Undersea World 0£ J acques
Cousteau," is back on ABC for
the oew season. There will be
four new programs in the one-
hour skein and repeasts of
four old ones.
The first new it~m is "The
Tragedy or the Red Salmon ...
scheduled for a November
airing.
ENDS TONIGHT
WALT DISNEY'S
"JUNGLE BOOK" ••• "'THE LOVE BUG"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
ALSO
AUDREY
HEPBURN
ALAN ARKIN
RICHARD CRENNA
BARGAIN MATINEE
EVERY WEDNESDAY
1 P.M.
FREE ltEFRESHMENTS
ADULTS S1.0D
Neilsens Only Nemesis The play draws the audience
backdrop for the flowing
Della Reese
Taken Off
Critical List By CYNTIDA LOWRY "But T also kno\V lhat into the Village bar that is lhe
everybody 1 associale with i~ hatreds, inverted prejudices, HOLLYWOOD (AP)
going to age except me. So I and the prime arena for Wally Singer Della Reese '"took over
won "t get t a • g I e d up 1 · hU 1 port 1 r 1.000 stitches but she's okay emotionally. ln fact, in the Tay or's insig u raya 0 a·nd has bee n taken off lhe beginning of the series we get Johnny Williams' "Charley ' -· fe ver." crit ical list." her manager l,q" rid of the girl who was my Magid has reported . . Jove interest in the show that Taylor paces the bitter. Miss Reese, 37, was playing
STARTS WED.
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The
television cycle seems to be
like women's fa s hion s.
Scieace-fiction and fantasy are
currently out of sty le as
themes for new series. "The
Immortal," a new ABC effort.
ski rts cautiously around the
edges of both categories, but
comes up as aclion·adventure,
which again is definitely in .
was the pilot." white-hating role with 8 al the pool or her Bel Air
That pilot. which drew big precision and believeability home last Wedneday when she -auo '.\
audiences as a feature made that is as frightening as it is slipped and crashed through a ...,.8 cu-.-"THE HAW .......
ror television, will be rerun awes.me to watch. Hat red glass door. She s u r {ere dll==========d!::::==========i
Sept. IS. But lest the public burns within him a n d severe cuts on her left annl· In this weekly hour the hero
will play a man whi ch
makes him immune to age
and disease. He ca l'l die by
violence -and, of cou rse.
cancellation if the ratings are
low.
Christopher George, who
:;urvived two seasons of W(lrld
\Yar II guerrilla fighti l'lg in
''Rat Patrol'' with on I y
superflcial scratches, will play
a man blessed -or cursed -
by immortality but hunted by
an aging billionaire who wants
to use him as a Jiving blood
bank to insure his o\vn
longevity.
"We don 't say, but I figure
that Ben Richards -my
character -is between 40 and
50 years old, bi.it of course il
doesn'l show,., G e or g e
explained.
get the idea that "The manifests itself in disrespect and leg "'but her face was not
Immortal" is a dramatic for any human life. black or cut." the manager said.
cousin of ··Bewitched" or white, and particularly his Magid said doctors al UCLA
. ··star Trek," Chris and others own. Medica l Center helped Miss
in the cast use every Chuck Daniel as Gabe. Reese ·walk for an hour on
opportunity to explain that the proves to be a thorou ghly en-Sunday. short ly afler her
unique-blood premise is really gaging guide to the mys~ries removal from the intensive
not too far out. Chris carries a of prejudice. Not quite white. care ward ... ll hurts her like
clippil'lg about some man and not quite black either. the Lhe dickens to Y.'alk," Magid
whose blood type is so rare muse Gabe Gabriel sees and said, "but she "s very cheerful
that he earns about $12,000 a tells il like il is, from both even the doctors are ama1.ed."
year selling his blood to a sides. The manager said at one
research center. Daniel opens and closes the point Miss Reese told him
George, incidentally. was in travelogue, punctuating it with brightly: "I guess I'll be back
the happy position or being monologues that elicit au-working thank -God nothing
invited to star in two series d.ience response like a Georgia happened to my lungs."
spinni.Ag off a couple of ABC:J;::===='======'============jJ
films he made for TV. He
decided on "The Immortal"
because it did so weU as a one-
shot and because he plays a
swinging sort of hero -an
au tomobile test driver.
• f COMEDY-RATED "R" t-r No On• under 11 THFITrl ~! 673-6%60 Unless With Parent
Coron• del Mir
2905 Ecnt Coost Hwy.
"WAVES OF CHANGE" is for everyone! Watch
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THE LOS ANGELES TIMES SAYS:
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making .•. excellent , .. _ fine family fare .••
may be better technically than the 'Endless
Summer'.·' -.,, ' ••
\.:
C•pture• the exdltm111t, .th• comedy •"d t~e be.uty of 1url-
i119. A film from Greg MecGillt'fF•Y •nd J;m Ft••m•rt,
BALBOA PLAYING NIGHTLY
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7:30 •nd 9:30 p.m.
Times rated "G"
• J}
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rID HELLO ·~~-~-~no1.1;r!
John Wayne in His G!eatest Role
7*nWayne 1s \hisum" (G)
PLUS! Ct>Hft Hnry Fo111I• ·James $ttwer1 IR
"CHEYENNE SOCIAL Cl
stereo103FM'
the sounds of the harbor
marine weather reports - 7 times datly
.. I •
,rll!!l"!~(~ .... 2 ... 1~.~£1~.~4_"'!!.i~\~jp&l"'!!"!"'l!fr!IJll~<~t ... <<•U""'Z~U[d('SQIJ'l""!t~t•E""l\-•tlJ'I ... •~!"" ... -""':--""----~-"""~--.... ~~~~-... ._-..,._-".!!~-~·,...,,,.....,..,---~., or--.---..~__,_.,.__ ____ ...., -. -. ., ., , .
l ,JI DAIL V PILOT Tutsday, Srptrmbtr 15, 1970
I
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FLOYO PATTERSON JN TV FIGHT.
1970 Like 1969?
Same Old Ralston Team
-Fad es Fast at Fi11isl1
Mother year of John Ralslon has
befallen lhe football public and it has
become painfully obvious a f l e r
Saturday's television game that Ralston
1970 will be little dirferent from previous
years.
He probably has the best football team
on the We.st Coast Yet it's again doubtful
that he'll be able to guide Stanford
Ualversity to the Pacific.a championship
and a Rose Bowl bid.
Reason? Like its 1969 predecessor,
Ralston's team showed marve lous ability
to fade in the closing stages of the game
as a 27.0 Stanford lead melted into a 34·28
verdict over Arkansas Saturday.
And the latter was on thc Sla Rford fou r
with 29 seconds left. barely missing a
first down and lik.ely vic tory.
Last year Ralston was able to muster
his team into a pair of losses, a tie and a
near-miss when it should have been
Ullbeaten and bagged a first Rose 80'.lo·I
bid in 17 years for the uni\'ersity.
Recalling Ralston 1969. Stanford I e d
Purdue 35-21 1n the fourth quarter. Vet
Big John 's Big Red choked big and losl,
36-35.
The next Yif!'fkend Ralston outdid
himself for supposed heartbreak defeat
-I still Ulink he should have been in·
Chargers' Post
llas Kn ee In j w·y,
Out of Action
SAN DIEGO <AP) -San Diego
Charge r balfback Dick Post is out of Sun·
day's opening Nationa l Football Le.ague
game against the Baltimore Coils and his
Joss to the clu b may be a Jong one.
Trainer Jim Van Deusen sa id ~1onday
an injured left knee may require Post to
uJ1dergo l1is third operation. The
diagnosis. a torn cartilage, is not final
and another examination is s~heduled to-
day.
Post was hurt Satu~a¥,on San Diego's
second pl ay from scriminage in the
Sugar Bowl. He skipped six yards on a
sweep to the Ne"'' Orleans Sainls ' IS-yard
lint, then hopped on one foot off the field .
Coach Charlie Waller said Monday he
sensed he had !ml last seaso•'s America•
Football League rushing king .
vestigated for ha ving lost in the first
place.
USC did the trick , 26-24. capitalizing on
nose-pluggi•g coaching strategy, fumbles
and a 34-yard field goal with oo time
showing on the clock.
The blown strategy Y.'as when the I•·
dians tried to pass from deep in their own
territory in tbe closing seronds of the half
although leading 12-7. l"SC intercepted
and scored to take a 14-12 edge.
Another chapter in Jlalston·s sad saga
came late in October "·he111 the Indians
·-----WHITE
WASll ·----
1net t:CLA in lheir last gasp at staying
alive in the ruA for roses.
Again Stanford led -17-6 at haHtime.
Again Ralston's forces fizzled and fell
ir: the final half. settling for a 20·20 tie
and kissing fa rewell to all bow l hopes.
And his Tribe almost repeated in the
season finale as a 17-7 firs t quarter le.ad
over Cal was wh.ittled to 29-28 before the
final gun sa\•ed Stanford.
UnforttJnately for Ra!ston·s critics it
may also have saved his job siACC so1ne
Indian alumni wer e ma king fire Ralston
noises.
So no\\' we ha ve 10 more games of
Ralston football.
And if last year's record and this
year's opener at Lillie Rock are any
(.;riteria, hea ven help those who live and
die a little with each Stanford Unive rsity
encounter.
Howeve r, there is one raJ' of hope for
Ind ian drum thumpe rs -Stanford may
ha\'e so much natural talent that all other
handicaps "''ill be overcome and Stanford
v.·ill at long last-appear in a Rose Bowl
game.
* * * Ho\v can the Dodgers miss averaging
.300 for learn batting °"'ilh official
scorekeepers like the bird from Pasadena
calling the shot s?
Recalling a recent game at Dl:>dg~r
Stadium . three plays that looked li ke sure
errors "''ere called hits by former Ora11ge
County scribe Dick Robinson.
Patterson Faces End of Road
NEW YORK (AP ) -Jt has been
almosl 14 ye ars since Floyd Patterso•
became the youngest man to win the
world heavyweight bo:rlng cllampionsh.ip,
The "kid" with lhe peek·a-boo s t y I e
was only 21 that November night in 1956 when he flattened Arch.ie Moore i•
Chicago and took over the title vacated
by the retired Rocky Marclaoo.
Floyd was 24 when he reached anoti1er
plateau by wi.Ming back the title from
Inge.mar JohanMOO, the Swede With the
"thunder and lightning" right hand punch
who had knocked him loose from the title.
Many heavyweights have tried but ollly
' Trojans 3rd,
Stanford 4th
In Grid Poll
By Associated Press
Stanford's dramalic 34-28 victory over
Arkansas last Saturday accounted for the
only two changes today in The Associated
Press' first weekly poll of the regular
season.
The Indians jumped from 10th to
fourth, supplanling the Razorbacks, who
fell to 1 llh but are still very mu ch within
shooting distance. of the Top Ten.
Missouri, which walloped Baylor 38-0,
rose from 11th to 10th, the only
newcomer in the Top Ten .
Obio State and Texas, which were idle,
and Southern California, a 42·21 victor
over Alabama, retained the first three
spots, but the Trojans are right on the
heels of Texas' defending national
champs.
Twenty-four or the 40 football writers
and broadcasters who participated in the
poll cast their first-place votes fo r Ohio
State, "'hich accumulated 728 points.
Texas had six No. 1 YOtes and 657
points while Southern Cal was the top
choice of seven vote.rs but managed only
644 points. The other three first-place
votes went to Mississippi, Penn Slate and
1.fichigan. ,.
Round ing out the Top Ten behind No. 4
Stanford are Ole Miss, Notre Dame, Penn
State, Mi chigan, Nebraska and Missouri.
I, 011P05111t J4 IMI 12111. A"'.lllWI .. I IOI
2. Tt•.IS I M IS1U. LSU 0-0 ll'J
J. USC 1 1.0 ISTU. K•11w1 S!1te l·O 134
4. Sl•nlo•d 1.(1 dlU, Florlo• 1.0 ,,.
}. Ml11i11lppl I 0.0 021'. Houl!Oll 0.0 ti
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1. P..,n Sl1!1 I 0.(1 lUU. W. Vlrtl1111 1.0 '4
I. Mlc1111111 1 0..0 30111, Ol<l1ll<>m1 1.0 ..0
'· Nttor1P.1 1.0 2"1•. G,ior9l1 M 11
10. MllMlUtl J.(I 16020 .... rllON 51111 f.(I 16
011'4!rl re<t •vl"!I ~0111. ll1ttd tll>htl)elicllly: ... 1,
Fo•t•. "'*•Wma. "'uDurn, C1lllornl1, CGIO<IClo.
G.org!• TKll, K1nw1, Soult\ C1"'Un1. T1n11111tt,
Jo~, Ul1ll.
Patterson has been able to regain the
crown.
Now he is 3S wilh almost '8 million Ill
ring earnings to his credit.
Two one-round knockouts by Sonny
Ott TV Totti9ftt
Cft•nnel 9 at '1
Liston, another knockout de.real at the
hands of Cassi us Clay and a controversial
l>rcufld decision loss to Jimmy Ellis
ha ve reduced U!e ex-champ to scrambling
with the likes of Charlie "Devil" Green ,
his opponent tonight in Madison Square
Garden .
Why does Patterson kttp on ? Wby does
he want to \'°me back when it has bee11
two years syice he last fought aga.Wt
Ellis, Ulen the World Boxing Association
champ, in Stockholm? Only Patterson
bows. There is a dttp pride in this quiet
T'""'n who still thinks he can fight with the
best.
Green, the other man in the Garden
ring, is an undistinguished New Yorker
with a 13--6 record, who has knocked out
eight opponents and has been stopped
twice.
Green has one thing going for him, a
solid punch and a willingness to throw It.
He will go ool gunning lrom the firlit bell.
hopiAg to crack Patterson 's chin.
Patterson will get a .$25,000 euaiantee
against 32.~I percent of the gate af.d the
television ):noney from a special 6()..Sation
network. 1
Green gets tS'perce.qt and no guarantee
but a chance to make ~ name for himself.
Palterson is tbe. solid favorile.
A defeat "'·oul mean the end of the
road for Patterson. A victory could mean
another taste of the big money. If he
wins, the Garden will try to interest him
in a Jimmy Ellis rematch.
Lefty Says Fight Reports
Blown Out of Proportion
\MINNEAPOLIS.ST. PA U L (AP\ -
C81ifornia Angels' manager Lefty Phillips
said he would have no comment about
Monday night's rainout against the Mill·
nesota Twins, but, surprisingly. he had
plenty to say about a re.ported fight.
~1innesota manager Bill Rigney issued
some criticism about the postponement,
which was to be made up this afte.moo•.
But the biggest loser of all , even though
the Twins we.re leading 4-1 after the first
when the game was called,, probably \\·as
Min11e.sota left fielder Brant Alyea.
Alyea klft e.d a sacrifice f'lv to drive in a
run in lbe first inning for what would
On TV Tonlgftt
Cftan12el 5 at 6
have made h.im only one or five players
to drive in a run for IO straight games.
A1:!1 Ott and Babe Ruth hold the record at
II. Rich Monday and Lou Gehrig had 10
straight RBI games.
"I'll probab ly go out tomorrow and hit
without anybody on base," said Alyea,
1·:ho has driven in 17 runs in the. last 111ine
games and raised his batting average to
.299.
"I'm aware or the record. It would be
nice to break. But there isn't any
pressure. on me. The best way to break it
is to hit some home runs.''
Phillips, meantime, comm ented on a
reported fight Sunday between Angels
Chico Ruiz a111d Alex Johnson .
''Tbe whole thing was blow• out of pro--
portion by a writer who doesn't get along
with my left fielder Johnson." said
Phillips.
"There was not one punch thrown. lf
there had been, it "'·ouldn 't ha ve lasted
very long.
"T'.::~re. "·ere so me hot "'ords and shov·
ing. That's all. It 's all over."
Tbe T"·ins gave permission lo start
Monday night's game after a daylong
rail\. It wa:-raining lightly at tt.e start of
C1e game, but then umpires signaled a
h. It at the top of the second.
"If they we.re going to call the game,''
~lid Rigney, "''hose Twins le.ad the \Vest
Division of the American League by eight
1;ames, "why did they let it start in tile
first place." ·
The game "'as postponed because "or
Y.'e\ grounds and unplayable conditions."
"\Veil T wanted lo rest Harmon
Kille.brew tonight," said Ripey, "aid t
guess he gets his rest now."
Phillips didn't have too much to say
about the rainout even though the big
Twins' lead was "'iped off the books.
"All I am going to say is that with the
fie.Id the way it wa s." Phillips said, "we
could have sent several grounders past
t~em and had seven runs in the next two
or three innin gs. On the otber hand, we
hoped that they would only hit popups.'"
New York Tied for Lead
After 1 O-inni1ig Victory
MONTREAL lAP ) -For most or the
1970 National League season. the Mon·
I real Expos have been a thorn in the side
of t.he defending world champion New
York ~1ets.
ll appears, ho"'ever tbat the Mets
finally bave been able to shake their
nemesis.
They scored their fourth consecuti ve.
victory over the Expois !\.1onday nigh t and
evened the seaso11's series 8-8, "'ith a 9·S
victory in 10 innings to move into a vir-
tua l lie wit h Pittsburgh atop the East
Division standings.
The win, New York's eighth in its last
N1IM 1I LHfUe lllltCe 11 1 01111(1
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New York C~ICIOO
W•ft Lt1I " . II '' ,, ., " '"· llllirtt 'llY .UI 11
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. .$1• 11
Pl•hbu•on -..,! nomt 7, Mon!r,al •, Ntw Yo•~
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C1'1t* -... , IM>me J, St. Louis; Aw•y t•.
MonlrNI •. $!, LOUI• l, l"nillelttpl\11 l, Ntw Yor~ •.
11 starts, gives the Mets a 78-69 record
for a .5306 percentage compared with the
Pirales' 77.Q won-lost ledger for a .5310
niark.
Third-place Chicago follows the leaders
by oRe game.
"Thal !\.1ontreal club has been tough on
us all year ," said Mets• manager Gil
Hodges. "They never quit. You can't take
it easy against a11yon e. especially at !his
time of year.
"There is no ea sy team in the league.
so you just have to go out eYery day and
play your best.
''We had the breaks going for ll!'i
ton ight , but a good team takes ad\•anlage
of its breaks."
The breaks came in !he 10th inning as
errors by Expos' firs t baseman Ron Fair·
ly and catcher John~Bate.man aided the
l-let.s in their lour run rally.
Arter Jerry Grote opened the 10th with
a single, pinctl runner Rod Gaspar stole
second and took third when first baseman
Fairly bobbled Bud Harrelson's grounder.
"He bobbled the bunt and then he step-
ped on it," said Harrelson . "It might
have lo9ked like he came close to tagging
me but he wasn 't. He didn 't have the
ball . .,
On the next play, Tommie Agee bounc·
ed to third base.man Bob Bailey, w h o
threw to the plate to trap Gaspar in a
rur1down .
But Gaspar scooted home with the :ie-
br::aki ng run when Bateman's re.turn
throw licked off tlis hand and rolled oul
into left field .
A run·scoring double by Wayne Gar·
rell , a wa lk, Ron Swoboda ·s sacrifice. fly
and an RBI single by Donn Clenden on
completed the rall y.
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MAURY WILLS (30) TOPPLES OVER PADRES' DAVE CAMPBELL.
Doclge1·s' Pa1·l\:e1· Reaches
Spri11g Goal of 100 RBI
LOS ANGELES !AP) -Wes Parker .
ha ving his finest season in the major
leagues, likes to ra::all a conversation he
had a year ago '"ilh Wally ~loon, the
onetime Los Angeles Dodger star who
"·as then coaching at Sa n Diego.
"I talked a lot with Wally when he was
with the Dodgers," Parker said l\tonday
night. "and he always said he never judg.
ed a player on his nrst year in the big
leagues. He said he looked at a guy three
years. If he didn 't do anything by then,
he never "''ould.
"Well, last year. do"'n at San Diego
y,•he.n I was going pretty good, I re.minded
\\'ally it took me fi ve years -not three
-and I \vas lhe one exception to his
rule."
Park t'r had his best year in tht> majors
last yea r but he's wiping it aside wiUl
hi~ 1970 performance.
~tonday he topped the 100.rbi plaleau
for the first lime and also soared his
average to .322 in leading Los Angeles lo
a 12-4 runay,•ay over San Diego which
snapped the Padres' win streak at five
straight
Tonight, in the second game of the
three-game se ries, Don Sutton. 14·11.,
starts for Los Angeles and Mike Corkins,
5-6. for San Diego.
Parker had a single and a double, his
44th l\vo-base hit which tops the majors,
to drive in three runs and give him 102
ror Ule year.
"Ifs something I've strived ror alt
year," said Parker, baseball'• most tliai·
ble ba chelor.
''I wenl lo spring training with that
goal. I wanted to be a re.liable hitter most
of all. I don't hit the borne runs so I'm
extremely pleased to have that many rbis
wltbout all the homers.'' He has hit but 10
home.rs.
Land Speed Re~ord Under Fire S"'N OllEC"OO LOS ANOl"LIS
Ct.,,-11, 111
lloolH. u
•llfl'lrlll •'r •rbl JOJOWilll,n JllO
5 0f0 Gfrvn,Jb 1001
McDo,vell Hurt
In Robber y Try WENDOVER. Utah t AP \ -Feeling
just like a kki on Chri st.mas morning and
.drivina . ..a. landlocked rocket sh.ip called
"Blue Flame," Gary Gabe.lich of Long
Be1ch prepartd today for a11 assault at
the Bonneville Flats on Craig Breedlove·s
land spetd mark of 600.601 miles per
bO<Jr.
"I'm sure we c1n reach 6.\1 m.p.h ,"
says the JO..year~kt enjt'inttr and ra<:tr
"] even think we can break the sound
blnier It '720 m.p.h. Tht salt Js in
prefect condition.
"~lftdl or people contributed 10
buiJdln1 ibis car. A Jot ot experts have
their repulltions at stake. I ha ve my lift
at 1t1ke."
•
After surv1v1ng two close c a 11 s
Breedlovo piloted his ''Spirit of America "
lo the record on lhe salt. east of \\le•
dover. Olt Nov, 15, 1965. nie mark for
plston-dri "<'n cars is 409 m.p.h.
Last Aug. 26, Noel Black, 34,
Sacramento, suffered fatal injuries "·hen
his racer flipped over at 335 m.p.h.
Gabelleh, a bachelor whos<' father is on
hand , ha! driven a racer 3SO m.p.h! and a
dragboat 200 m.p.h. He al80 rides i
motorcycle and ~ky dives.
Starting at 18 as a mall clerk for North
American Rockwell Corp., G1belich
became the top rated or N o r I h
American's seven test astronauts and
assisted on the Apollo moon program.
"We picked him because he has neve r
lost bis cool at a111ything," says Jim Chat·
field. publicity director for the record try
aAd representative for the Institute of
Gas Technology -a group of 48 gas com·
panie.s sponsoring the Blue r~lame.
Gabellch was in the cockpit July 31 at
Union Grove, Wis., "·hen the rocket
motor, producing 16,000 pounds of thrust,
was static•tested at 630 m.p.h.
Built by Reaction Dynamics. lnc. of
A1 ilwaukee, the 38-fOOt·long. ractt, stan·
ding fi ve feet high, Is propelled by II·
quefied natural gas and hydroae• peroi·
ide. Jt has never been ractd.
Gabelich pla!Wd to reach 300 m.p.h. lit
r:rst in a series ot "bums," each lasting
• •
•
22 to 30 seconds ln the seven-mile run.
"\\le plan on building up the record in ' 100 m.p.h. increments,'' ChaUield .said al
a luncheon Monday.
The car starls coasting when Gabelich
runs out of fuel in JO seconds. T"''O chute:s
lheR open and the brakes ,are applied
\\'hen the speed is under ISO m.p.h. The
<'ar is refueled and Inspected after each
run .
If all g()('s "''ell, lhe record try coukl
come "tednesday or Thursday. but Chat·
field says. •·rt 's all so unpredictable.
\Ve're confident but "''e don't want lo
rush things."
o &•own, rl F..-r1r1, II Coltotrt, 1b
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CLEVE LAND (AP)--Cleve.land Indians
ace pitcher Sam "icDo"'·el\ was released
~fonday from Shaker ~1edical CenteT
after trtatment for a mikl concussion and
a head wound suffered when he was 1t·
tacked and robbed in down tow a
Cleveland Sunday night.
t\lcDo~·C!ll said at least three men at.
tacked him as he was returning to his
hotel suite. He said one of the men hit
him with a club and the thieves fled with
al least $120.
It look gevcn stitches to clOl!ie thl
wound. an Indians spoktsman said. but
he 15 expC!cte:d to be on the mound against
Detroit Thursday.
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Rustlers Beef Up
,In Forward Wall \
By HOWARD L. HA NDY
01 IM DlllV Pllet Siii!
• Experience is attained th r o u g h
participation and lack of same in an im·
The backup men aren't quite as big but
will give the team mo~ agility inside.
Behind Vorono are Steve Raupp (184) of
Fountain Valley and F.d Koclella (190) of
La Quinta . • portant football opener could be a serious
• detriment. Roger Epperson (190) from Pacirica
High is the backup man for Sutliff. E~
person didn't play last year, feeling he
would have more opportunity to see ac-
tion this season. Farrell says he is an e1.-
ceptionally smart football player.
· So, offensive line coach Gene Farrell at
• q<>lden West College is mildly worried
aboot the situation this week as the
Rustlers prepare to face bitter rival
Orange Coast College Saturday night in
LeBard Stadium. Smallest man on the interior forward
wall is center Dan Passalacqua (185)
from \Vestmlnster High. .
•·our center has to be a little faster and
more agile because he has to block so
many linebackers," Farrell says.
"We're a lot quicker than we v.·ere last
year." Farrell says, "but Orange Coast
will have an experience advantage with
those three down people on their
defensive line.
'·We're stronger physically than last
year in every position but one and I think
Vle have a lot n1ore potential.
"It will be a gre.at challenge to our kids
and it coold affect us. I think we wil l be
more aggressive and stronger than last
year before very long but the first game
·is always a question mark."
Passalacqua is backed by th'? oldest
player on the squad, Bruce Curtis (195)
from Centerline, Mich. Curtis, 24, is an
ex-serviceman having spent 3~ years in
the Air Force •
Keith Donaldson, an offensive fullback
and defensive halfback, will be the
Rustler center for punts and field goal
attempts. . Andy Vorono is the lone returning let-
terman on the offensive line and he is in·
experienced at a new posit ion this season. Perhaps the toughest lineman to
replace is tackle Jeff Jorgense n. At 225
pounds, Jorgensen was a starter all
season and was one of the biggest men on
the squad.
Vorono wa:r a starter at tackle in the
fi nal four Golden \Vest games last year.
· He will switch lo a gua rd position Satur-
day night and Farrell explains it this
way: The Rustle r coaching staff made a
switch. this week to bolster the tackle
position. Bill Balliet (210) from Rancho
Alamitos High and an all-county
perfonner, has been moved from defense
to offense.
"Our guards were overpowered last
year so we decided to switch some bigger
people to the inside. Vorono weighs 205
and will team with Curt Sutliff (205 ) from
Aiarina H..igh at guard."
Farrell feels the Rustlers will be
stronger at guard because of the change jn philosophy.
""· "Sutliff is our strongest man and with a
:)ttle more experience, be will be an ex-
ceptionally good guard in college foot-
ball." .
Alan Dag~s (215) of Westminster,
Roger Kenney (210) from Newport
Harbor and Bill Champion (210), Foun.
tain Valley, are \\'aging a torrid battle for
the two starting positions. NG decision
has been made on starters from these
three and probably won't be made until
Saturday night.
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OCC FULLBACK COE MEYER STARTS AGAINST GOLDEN WEST.
·Saitta Ana Lacks Speed
·-Opens Witl1 Mater Dei
By ROGER CA RI.SON quarterback Gary Brown a rightha111der
o• th• 0.1,., l'ii.t 111tt -\,--Who started a pai f ' f Bald · I• general terms, the first thought , r o games or Wl.I last year. regarding Santa Ana High School football
Jurns to speed -a category the Sai nts He's 6-2, 190 and also a senior.
have long been ble~ wilh in overabun-"We think we're going to be bet~r than
d last year. We think we have the 8;~· Saints open the 1970 grid season capabili ties to reall y put one together.
'Thursday when they meet Angelus Bu~ you'd never know it by Saturday's
League power 1'1al.er Dci at Santa Ana scrimmage with Fountain Valley.
Bowl. "We looked bad. Real bad. But we
But coach Tom Baldwin informs 011e never have looked good in scrimmages.
end all that this year's team might be the We used tG look awfully bad against
slowest he 's had at Santa Ana. In the Brea,'' says the inimitable Baldwin •
same breath, however, he admits this is man who thrives oa confideJllce. '
also the biggest squad he's ever had. Another gridder with speed Is Walter
llis interior offensive wall , all seniors, Mead. the only junior on the starting
averages 208 pounds per man. anchored el even. ?\otead (6-2, 180) figures to play at
.bx Bob Reyes, a &-4, 246-pounder. eithe~ spli.t end or tailback, depending on The rest of the wall is equally im· the s1tuaUon.
pressive with George Hea therington (6-3, Baldwin. in mid-seaso111 form, says hls
20$) and Olarlie \Valters (6·1, 210) flank-opponent Thursday night is scary.
Ing center Clint !luff (6-0, 200). "1'1ater Del is big. We're pretty big, but
His Ofl!y Jlon-200-pounder in the middle 1'1ate; Dei is really big. They're twice our
ri ve is tackle Jim Waters (6-0, 185). size. We saw what they did in the
• In addition, Bob Conley checks in from Newport Harbor scrimmage" said
his fullback position at 6-0, 250. And going Bnldwin. ' '
with that kind of beef are his two speed}' We asked him what phase of the Mater
backs, r.1onl,y Floyd and Kirk Dyers. 1 i attack especially concerns him -
Floyd's the fas test. and ls starting his "'hat might be Santa Ana's biggest pro-
lhird season at Santa Ana as a starter. blem?
Tl»: senior specdst~r is S.10. wei ghs 160. Baldwin ju$t laughed and muttered
~ycrs is slightly bigger, checking In at something lo the effect I.hat Mater Del
~. 170. would be entering the 1970 opener for
All of this size Is commanded by both teams with a mulU-attack.
•
Tutsday, Stpttmbfr 15. 11170 DAILY PILOT J9
RUSTLER LINEMEN -Andy Vorono (65). Jone returning letterman
on the Golden West College offensive line, tries blocking a pair of line-
backers. On the left is Tom Allanson (50) with Rul.v Membrila on the
right. The Rustlers face Orange Coast College Saturday night in Le-
.Bard Stadium in the season opener. ·
OCC Workout
Attracts Top
Pirate Back
By CRAIG SHEFF
Of ""' n.1" l'Ji.t lil•lf
When Coe Meyer moved to Huntingto111
Beach from Illinois after graduating
from high school in 1968, he had little
thought of playing any more football. •
At Wheeling High School, Meyer earned
all-conference honors, Jed the league in
rushing and was second in scori ng.
But when the Meyer family moved
from Illiaois tG the Orange Coast area,
Meyer immediately got a job in Long
Beach.
A year later, Meyer, a motorcycle
eAthusiast, happened to be riding his
Honda by Orange Coast College. Seeing a
group or fool.ball players ~·orking out, he
stopped to watch.
"I had never heard of Orange Coast
before that time," says Meyer, "but
when I saw the stadium and the players
wGrking out. 1 really got the bug to play
football again."
Meyer approached OCC line coach Jack
Fttir about playing for the Pirates and
\he groWldwork was set.
A S-ll, l9s.pou11der, Meyer im mediately
became the No. 1 fullback for I.he
Pirates, ultimately finishing as the
t:::am's second leading grouftd·gainer.
He totaled 251 yards in 83 carries for a
3.0 average, scoring a pair of
touchdowns.
A knee injury caused Meyer ta miss
one game (against Cerritos) and after
the season was completed, he had
surgery to remove cartilage in the right
knee.
''The knee was supposed to be in a cast
f .... six weeks," says Meyer, "but I only
had it on for 11 days."
l\leyer speri.t the past summer working
for the City of Rolling Meadows (near
Chicago) in the public works department
and in his off hours took physical therapy
exercises lo strengthen the knee.
"l alsa did a lot of weightlifting and
played quite a bit of handball. The knee
feels great."
There is no question about that. In
OCC's two scrimmages, Meyer has rush·
ed for 102 yard1.
Agalnst Mira Costa two weeks ago he
picked up 38 yards in seven carries, the•
added 64 yards against Whittier College
Jast Saturday, can-ying the ball eight
times.
His IG111gest gain last week wa s a 35-
yarder.
The 20-year old fullback, who has added
15 pounds since last season, will be in the
starting lineup Saturday night when the
Pirates host Golden West College in the
1970 opener.
Ptfeyer at this time is undecided about
his f\lture , but does say he would like to
continue playing college football .
"I'd like to play in Texas," says Meyer,
adding "I have some friend s at the
University of Houston and I might decide
I go there."
He has received a feeler from the
University of California (Berkeley) and
will probably get a lot more offers before
his final d"IOice is made.
"After college I'd really love to play
pro football, but I might be too small. I'd
like to give it a shot, thOu gh ,''
~feyer earned All..SOuth Co a 11 t
honorable mention honors last season and
Is currently majoring 111 Physiology, but
he say• he mlgbt switch and go into
coachlna:.
..
P acific-8 Grid · Roundup
We Can Beat SC--D·evaney
LINCOLN. Neb. (UPI) -Nebraska's
coaches expressed confidence ~1onday
the Cornhuskers can beat Southern
California Saturday night but conceded
the team will have to do better than it did
agains t Wake Forest.
"USC is a great football team. We"re
Jooking forward to the game and we're
going out there with the idea we're going
tG win," head coach Bob Devaney said.
•·Jr we didn't think we could beat them
we might just as well stay home."
Assistant coach. John Melton. who
scouted the Trojans' 42-21 shellacking of
Alabama Saturday, noted that every
member of the backfield that beat the
lluskers 31-21 last year is back and said
they shou ld be just as tough this year.
Defensively, he said the Trojans lost
several key players from last year's
squad and should be a little weaker.
Howeve r, he said, the defense has fGur
players or All-American caliber that
could cause trouble.
IJCLA
Tim Oesterling, one of the f e w ex·
perienced linemen on the UCLA defense.
was named l'acific-8 Con re re n c e
defensive player of the week r.1onday for
his role in the Bruins' 14-9 triumph over
Oregon State.
The 6-4, 232-pound senior from
Riverside led the UCLA front four in
tackles Saturday as the Bruins shut out
Oregon State in the seCond half while
scoring two touchdowns of their own to
achieve a win in the season opener.
IJSC
LOS ANGELES -The coach of the
Southern California Trojans looked ahead
to his team's Saturday night home game
and decided "Nebraska will be more like
us than Alabama."
Coach John McKay said Monday that
the University of Nebraska team has
,"bigger backs and a bigger defensive line
than Alabama."
Oregon State
CORVALLIS, Ore. -Oregon State,
a[ter a 14-9 loss to UCLA, renews an in-
tersectional rivalry Saturday ni ght when
the Beavers face an Iowa team they clob-
bered 42-14 last year.
Iowa, idle last week, will meet the
Beavers in Portland.
Oregon State coach Dee Andros made
some changes in his offensive unit f\.1on-
day during a Jight workout.
lie moved sophomore Mike Davenport
into the No. 1 fullback position replacing
Dave Schilling, who Inj ured his shoulder
against UCLA.
Sal Cirrincio ne moved ahead of Ralph
Show at halfback.
01·ego11
EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -Linebacker
Tom Graham, sidelined with a sprained
knee, did nol suit up for practice Monday
and was on the Universily o{ Oregon's
doubtful list for Sa turday's football in·
tcrs'cc tional againsl the University of 114
Iinois.
Graham was hurt in the second hair or
Oregon's 31-24 Paciflc-8 v i ct or y over
California.
Senior Tom Blanchard, who suffered
leg cramps in the opener, was back
throwing Monday as Oregon went
Major League Standings
AMERICAN LEAG UE
East Divi~oo
W L Pct. GR
Baltimore 95 51 .651
New York 81 65 .555 14
Detroit '15 71 .5 14 20
Boston 75 71 .514 20
Cleveland 71 76 .483 24 1la
Washington 68 '17 .469 261h
Minnesota
Oakland
Angels
Kans.is City
Milwaukee
Chicago
West Dlvi~lon
87 58
80 67
77 88
58 88
55 90
53 93
MfndlY'I •-lh.
Oakland If MllW•uli~. r1ln A"'tll II Mlnnffllll , rein On!~ ...... , Khedulld.
T••Y't OllM1
.800
.544
.531 .:m7
.379
.361
• JO
29 1>
32
341.-i
0..~llnd !Odom M -&""-1.(11 11 Mllwa.ull ..
(Mclfl'll ,., •nd Downing 4-1,), '· twl-nltht
CPI!("° CJllWlkt 10.UJ •f K•n1es City !Dr"° .. 1.), n!~I
A....it (lrldi..,. 2·• Ind Flshf<" •·ll 11 Min""" '°'' 1z-... 1nd H.11 MJ, nltht, t, d''""''-"' Dttroll {C1ln 12·11 11 Clr.otl•nd fH-6-IU, nl9h!
Boston (HltY f.J Incl Cull• lS.Ul 11 Ntw Yort
(Kim. '°' Ind llnnfffl 1).11), J, fWkllfltl
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct. GB
Pittsburgh 77 68 .5.'ll
New York 78 69 .531
Chicago 76 69 .524 t
St. Louis 70 77 .476 8
Philadelphia 66 81 .449 12
Montreal 64 82 .438 l3•h
West Division
Cincinnati 93 56 .624
Dodgers 79 67 .541 12'1.i
San Francisco 78 69 .5.'.H 14
Atlanta 72 77 .483 21
Houston 70 76 .479 21 ~
San Diego 58 90 ,392 3f11.t
MfMldlJ't lt111IB
New Vortr; f , Moftlrttl S, 10 lnnl1191
Deelten 11, S.n Dltve •
Sin FrM'ICIKO 7, All.,..!1 I
Oflfy 81mft tcf19(1ylc(I.
T••J't 01ntn NIW VOrtl fl(-atr IMI II Menlrtll (Mllrltrl
16-101, nlgM Pltttbyf'9h (Walktr 7111 11 Phll~tllll'lr. ILl'l"i.dt
S.J), nl9hl 51. Lout1 IC•rt1tron .. lf) •I Chic-fHolltmln
lf.1 1\ Clntlfll'lt11 CMcGlolhlln IJ4) If Movston (Dl9ft:·
f'f' 1~11), nl9hl
li.n Dino l Cortlnt U) •I o.ilttl"I (Molllef 1·1J, nktht
All.tnl• fRNCf 6-t) " San F,•neltce IP"'1Y ~lJ), ni.ht
DEAN L ·EWIS
1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
Service, Parts, & Body Shop
Now Open Until I p.m. Monday Nights I I
~ Orange County's Lorgest and Most Modern Toyota and Volto Dealer
through a light workout which stressed
improving the team 's running attack.
Stanford
PALO ALTO -Two Stanford regular1
may miss Saturday's San J ase State
game because of injuries, but running
star Hillary Shockley, \\1ho jammed a
thumb in Stanford's ope111ing win against
Arkansas, should be ready for more ac-
ti on.
Football coach Joh" Ralston said
A1ondav linebacker M i k e Simone and
gua rd ·Bob Brown may miss Saturday's
home opener because of injuries in last
Saturday's 34-28 upset victory.
Cal
BERKELEY -The California Golden
Bears prepared today for their Saturday
game against Texas with Cal roach Ray
Willsey predicting Texas may be as
strong as last year's national cham·
pionship squad.
The Longhorns are rated No. 2 in The
Associated Press· first week ly poll of the
regular season.
ll'a•hh1gton
SEAm..E -Trying to avoid the In-
juries that plagued the Huskies last year,
head coach Jim Owens isn't planning
much midweek scrimmaging as the
Huskies prepare for Saturday's £ootball
opener againsl Michigan State.
I ast year's starting quarterback, Gene
Willi!:, who has been counted on to do I.he
punting, retired early Monday after hav-
ing trouble with his knee, whlch was
rEpaired in the off season. •i
DEAN LEWIS
AUGUST SPICIALS
SPECIAL
1970 TOYOTA
~:~ $1694
All 0"'9r MMeh I• StM.11
Mart ll-Hll•• Pie ... ,_
LWtd Cnol..........C_..
VOLVO
DEMO
$2950
•1536
1967
TOYOTA CORONA
Sld•n, RMlo, tit1!1r, Avtom.tlc t-
(Vl"V Jl1)
$1095
I·
' ' ...
•
I
ff 11A1LY PILOT T..Wy, S.p-lS, 1970
Alamito s
.
Racirig
Checking Area Cross Country Outlool{
1'be loot eenlon on the Valley's nucleus. fort 100 thus overcome their juniors Ed Radmnacber, Bar· &Olid nucleus for the Tritons Generally rtgarded In somt
1qu:ld se MJke Donovan and lGtt.rell aees San~ Ana circuit opponents. ry Bray and Gordcm Rogers aklng with Ayer. clreles as I.he kitll o! county
Every ttam in the Irvine Chris Pogue, • pair ol mllus Valley as the ttam to beat In 1969 Mater Del placed ttturn to bolster the dlstaoct Reeves has another potenllal distance coaches, Hedaes is In
League CJ'Ol5 countrY. picture for coecb John Myers' track wllh 'Estancia right behlnd the sl.xth in the. CIF SouUtem Sec-corps. potnt-getter in T:>m Terry. the rather precarious state Ennies b .suppoetd to be improved in unit. Falcons in firepower. tlon and although Mulkerin Perez and Radennacher "'lltls is Tom's first year in (for him, anyhow) Of havlng
1970 and the loop's newest en-Perhaps the hoUe$t distan« Barring htjuriell, Folllltain isn't sure whether bis charges were the best mile-two--mlle cross country but he's been only one letlerman back from
try -Los Alamitos: -can nmnlOC prO$peCt in the coun. Valley at least figures to get up into that clw again, he combo on the Mission Viejo &Laying with Hunn and Smith tast year's Sunset League
al'° be included 1n thal &y, l4-year~ld Dennk Wll9cn, break even ln the loop. admits hLs Monarchs will be trade: squad laeit ...-mg, tum-ln our workouts so he could do champions.
category. -......!..-· one o!,the teams to be beat in lng in 9:5S and 4:39 marks, something good," s a Y s Senior Kevin Coleman. with -•·bJ ~-an lnc:omln8 fr-n from Hunt ington B •a cla th 1 · R • mil be • I 10 ~ Ill However, p1-y al ul'C HunUn&ton Beach.'• Wardlow ~ e eague race agaut. while Bray, Rogers and Given eev s. a two-e s~ o :w, w
top ol the Irvine's most im-Mulkerin note!, "once more have run in the lO:SOs over the W•st.infnst-r be. the team le1 '~~:.~ccordlng provtd list would be the School. allo adds itrength to Huntington Stach H 1 I h I th1ni It wlll be a battle fol' I.9-mile course. ., ., to Hedges whi e uu~ runn~•
Corona del Mar Sea Kings. the Olarge!' f'Olter. crou country coach Paul the champlon!b.lp between Jw\k>rs Steve Blaylock and Westminster High cros s from the 1969 junior vanity
The only horses Sea King Young Wlbon wu highly Wood is taking a wait and see ourselves and St. Anthony. Marvin MaM bolster Mission country coach Jack Hedges is will be bolstering the vanlty
J-•-Bl Ir 1..... -suootSSful ii-............ t b e attitude in regard to his "Th (St Antbo I h d d · mentor UlU! a "-"'• via ... .,.... ...... ~ ey • DY a a Vte)o's title chances while the in an od situation at present. corps.
graduation were sever a 1 summer in vmioul alk'omen team's 1970 pogsl.billties. good squad last year and most a1Tival of transfer MI k e Hedges explains, "we are Richard Hoy (IO;SO). Bob
seniors from the junk>r vanity meets and capturtd his bla· Wood opines, "ol courst we of the boys from that unit are Thompson ot c I are m 0 n t starting-off with Jess cross Dietz (10:25) and M Ike
squid. le9t plum kilt May tn an MU have four lettumen returning back," he adds. enhan«s the Diablo situation. couotry experience than 8'.iy Braunstein (10:40) were the
otherwise. Corona's harriers marathon at Palos Verdes. but we have also lost Jack Two lettennen return to aJd / time in the IZ..year history of stalwarts in the Lion jayvee
return intad. Unlesa a massive 1'Uh of in-McQuown. Stan Davenport Mater DeJ's tiUe chances. Neacpo r t Harbor our school." camp in '69 and they are ex-
Retuming seniors Nick Rose juries or misfortune plagutt and Phil McGee through Seniors Dick Davis and Bill Ht!dges has hefn al Lhe helm peded, along with Cole1nan, 1o
and Diet Day each clocked FAiaon, the Olargera abould graduation.'' Sundalll each tolled on the Newport Harbor High cross of Lion harri~rs ever since the form the heart of the Lion
9:56 in banier tuils last fan easily improve oo their 1169 The four rtturnet! in the Monarch varsity ln '69, but the cwntry mentor Bert Donaki is school's inception in 1958. nu cleus this fall.
with Rose turning in a 1:54.7 mark. Oiler camp, thouf" -·e good pair may be pushed out of the a man who beUeves 1 lot ln•p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii.m;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"'"i
half mile mark this past ones who are ., cd to No. 1 spot by Tony Bomkamp, tradition.
sprinD" in track. E1tanela who also pla-basketball and Why ? --e make Huntington o. oonafide ;, .. Blair rates the pair about Utle contender. who runs the 440 in track. Despite the fact. most op. even with junior Conrad •Clark Estancia High cross country The two other top Mater Dei posing coaches in the Sunset
(10 :15) not too far behind. coadl Tom Fisher ls op-Junior John Mullins lleads prospects expected to have an League pick Donald's bunch lo
A newcomer on the Sea King Umistic about his squad's title the lettermen's list after a equitable season are jwUor take the loop crown away
scene -senior Kevin Askew chances in the Irvine League topsy-turvy etoS.!I c 0 u n tr Y Pat Feeney and Chris Long, ~ perennial t i t 1 ls t
_ couJd gamer a vanity spot, thi1 fall campaign in 1969 which saw who Mulkerin calls ,,0 u r inster, the s c 0 t I a n d
even though this is his first "Right now I think wt're the the Oilers' title chances go sophomore wonder." thi n ks Westminster
crack at distance running. team to beat and I felt we kaput when be was injured in· should still be favored on
Perhaps tbe biggest surprise would've walked away with a pick~ foo1ball game. Marina tradition alone.
on the Sea King 1'08ter could the championship if we had "That shot us down and we "Although they have very
be senior Walt Farrar, last Jim Davidaon," Fisher says. ended up J.\I in the Sunset With its No. 1 nmnec.,from few lettermen back at
year's most imsroved runner, Davidson, a talented little League," Wood note.!I. 1969 bade: along with added Westminster, Jack Hedges
who was consistently lD. the man (~5) who tour~ two Supporting Mullins will be depth, Marina's 1970 cross (Westminster coach) always
10:»-10:30 nnge. milea in 9:41 last spring as a returnees Dana Babin, Joe country season could well be comes up with something, so
Seniors John GI en non, sopbionmre tract act, dkln 't Wheeler and Marc Mitchell. the school's best ever. they cannot be counted out,"
(10:311) and Jeff Masterson n.1n cross country last fall The latter recently clocked a Veteran Viking mentor Jack b
(10 :35) a1ao pe back for because he had temporarily fine 10:13 over the hilly Hun-Rowan admits with cautious e says.
another try at lht Irvine loop· moved back to Michigan with tington course during 8 prac-optimism that his team Is one "Having a winning tradition
diadem. hit family. Uce session. of the four best in the eight-~e;~.~ste really helps
Corona will find out tucUy 'Ibis summer as a result of Wood bas one goal right team Sunset League.
how good it is this year when anOtber fa~ 11 y move, now: "We're looting to nu in 'lbe aforementioned top nm-~ for Newport, the Tan
the Sea Kings host powerful DavidDI bas tramferred bi! with a good fdlh man and then ner is senior Dave Lockman, lost three big guns in Chris
Sunset U-a~ representative services to Santiago High in take it from there." v.'flo coasted to a 9:41 two-mile Bentley, Std Common and
Santa Ana m the lt'TO opener Garden Grove, this leaving Among candidates fer the as a junior. Davt Jafftt but a quintet o(
Thursday. senior Terry Haun (10:11) as last three spots on the Oiler 'lbe two biggest losses for sub-11 minute rumers are In
Co.t. /tf•sa •he top dog in the Eagle camp. varsity are junior Mark Hill, the Vikes are Oltris York and the fold. ~ phom B --At the lop ol !be Tars' list ls The latter is not the ooly ru~ so ores ruce J.11v1.upson Dave .Henderson. F'-;-1 0 0 I
ner Fisher has v.tio bas been and Dennis Potts: and seniors "But, we should have no Rlck ........... a : Sl.llTM RACE. J50 ¥•rd1. 1 Yflr olO!-Cl1lmi1"1Q, P~rw mao. Cl•lmlnt1 prk• u ...
MIH R•h ClllCll: fRabi-1 117
Thtl..-lon AG•lr) 117
!It Su•• ICld p,,..,.,.,I "' ll1rron llld ts1 .. 1111 170 '°l"Otfltf"OU• Qw1t (Smith) 1:t0
Costa Mesa's Mustang bar·
rien: will have four lettermen
from last year's 7.0 squad and
coach Joe Fisher bas only one
wish.
Kll'IY'I DOii ILl""lfYI) 1:10 "We ......... to WlD" ont more S~bltd IW1tsonl ll7 ~
Titne To Flt• IH••ll 110 meet this aeason and that's S~~ The Vt! 1'°1111'11 110
... ,...., ,_, 111 the league-finals," Fi.sher
AIM •HtlMI-,J.,,. Tnie Grit fSmllhl 111 em .... -sizes.
=1c.4:~r1t=1 In He adds, ''Wt year, alter
SEVllNTN 1tt.Ci:""i1o ••rdt. 'VHr going unbeaten in dual meets, ~':'.: ~11::t..~-~ ~D= :~~~~an= pt:l: ~«kit !Hartl 1U ~··i.a: (Sml'lV. 11t Irvine League finals, which ~ 91(~~,..;:~ il: decided the champlomhip." c1.~ •i!tt 1~1 ,1: The only graduation losses ~·~i:::!\=i 1R which plague Fisher are No. s
T-Tr.cw fW•!JOnl . '" m an Steve Dedlnger and Rich ~t::t"lt~~~ ?It Priest. wbo al ternated
•• ...,--between the second and third
okl' "=r ... c'91m1°111 "~i.' J£ po.sitioos throughout 1969. ~=~~Gl,.f.!~~· ,.. The four returning letter 01¥.....,.s .. , ferMtwl 1U Cl • 'uni ~ .. Gerll!'lime Mio,.... twar11in.1 ,20 wumers are J ors uvug ~g;.EIJ..f~hlt1Qi,,m1 l~t MacLean, John Olswang aDd
,1.c1m1r1t Red w11""'1 120 Tom Olswang and senior Bob
Roct" Mick ,..v.,.> 11J Golln" k AGoln' Miit l&I'*') 117 IC ,
NINTH ••ca. a;e:,.~. 3 .,.., ok:1t. Tall, lanky MacLean, def en·
t111m1ne. Pt.1rse *1• c111rni... prlcl ding lrvine mile champion. is ~,~n. Mo011 twa11or11 111 currently in the No. 1 spot in LI! le Plf"t..,I (Li.11.tml 120 !""" fT..tH1rt111191 111 the Mustangs' cross country ""I II IWl!llOll) 111 I Go L~• 11 111 pans but Fisher t hinks f=,·~~~r\i~1 l~ GoUnJck could push him for F1:~~ ,key ,J.~kll 11I No. l.
L1111e lllctv 1t,:: ~=1 117 Fisher says, "Gollnick was
Ttr'IY ~ fW•'""'' 111 our sil:th man last seaaon and
Racing
Results
LOS ALAMITOS ••SUL fl
MM!Hy, .... I. H, "" CIMr aN fl'•tl
,I.ST IA(I!. lm v1rd1. Mt\~" 2
'"' olOi. Cl•lm1111, Pur11 11900. OGo1h ll\sl ... ml t.1t1.tll ?,«I
lftsrtl1 CW1llOlll 1.«I 4,70
TrOPltv Snttcl'le1' (Ptrntr) c.oo
Tlmt~ .lt-J/10,
kf"tlched -G1nl1t .. Oii, MOMt
Chtnl, ICl'9Y'1 Moon, H1!f Quklr,
SECOND RAC.I!. 4llCI 'l't•d1. t Y&1r
&1111. C1tlml11t. Pur .. nooo.
CllnY Roctcet I""'' u.• 1.00 ~.II 11urt11'1 "l-'ol tll:oblnMl'll r.IO c.olO
Htlf Smtrl (Adtlrl 2.MI
T!mt: .»JllO,
tt HIOHTLT DOUI LI!, 2·0 .. t*I • r . c1 .. ., •-""'· ... 1i11 ,.,_..,
THt•o •AC.I. C1C1 .,,.._,' .,,,, e11t1
ltrl'd In (1111, Cltl'"lrltl, PU•Jt t1000. ,.,_w, Ow11 11 ... 11~1 r.«1 J OD i.1111
J-Cll1t ltr !Adtlrl 1.60 4.l'll
Cflltf Bllr llld !LlltMml 2 . .0
TlfN~ .J0.7110.
•OUltTH RAC.I. 1lll Ytrcl\, Mtllltf! t ,..., Oldt . .,,,,... t 1to0.
Allotto.I' Mttt 1Ad91lr1 4,10 J,e 2•
Yt Got l1'911blt !Ll,,..mf c.OO ~.Ill
MIYKd (WthOllJ 4,2(1
fifMI .1.111•.
•tl'Tlf U(I!, )$ Yl•fl, I .,,., Ollll
1Nf \II. Allow•-· P~•M tJOCIO.
T19tf' Rock" IH1rtl '·'° J . .O '·JO
"'-81d 1Slt8Ulll •.JO '·'° DTal'Mftd $\IOI -'-IH1r~l~1l '·JO
Tlmt; .11·1110,
..... KtWICMt,
•.• •.to l.• .. ,, •.to
O.M
strained muscles in hi.I instep
held him back quite a bit. He
is vastly improved."
MacLean bas the best lwo-
mile clocking of the returning
quartet with a t :SO while the
Olswangs are not far behind
with 9:53 (for John) and 9:56
(for Tom).
Senior Mike Yarnal, junior
Jeff Haight and sophs Phil
Carpenter, Eric Eckholm and
ifike Holiday have been pro-
moted to the varsity to battle
for the last three \1acancies.
Fisher feels the team race
in the Irvine will be close with
the Utle up for grabs.
Edison
Edison High did ollay for a
fint year school in the 1969
Irvine League Cr'O$ country
chase, winding up with a COU·
pie of wins.
But 1970 <OU!d fmd the
young Oiargers clooer to the
top of the Irvine pitche!' than
lhey think.
New coach John Whitney, •
r o r m e r Claremont-Mudd
College football and track
star, was originally hired for
U\e first Edison croas country
coaching job, but was tn-
terrup1ed by Uncle Sam.
In danger of be:ing drafted,
Whltney enlisted in the Na·
llonal Guard and Bee blsket.
ball mentor Barry Leigh step-
ped In tempocarily to tutor tbt
Charger harriers.
Whitney io baek O!I the ocene
and has been wor king
overtlmt during the summer,
preparing lU I n I I 0 u I
yoongstm for the upcomlns cross tOtlnb'y WU'S,
Of the first ~ EdiiOn
-" ooly two returnees
are 9CDkn w I t h un·
dtrtlassmen a Im o a l com-
pletely domlM!lng the pictu,..
Junior Mike Alvaru. a 4:311
miler, and ~ John
\Veston, a IO:OS two-miltt as •
fre9hman, head the Cbargtr
harrier cast.
Two other underclassmen.
junior John McClurt and
,ophomott Bob Younger, alio
O.Ure proml .. nt'1 In the
pW...
under the ll·minute ba rrier In Les Potts and Rob McNair. real trouble replacing them performer who should be
harrier competition. Kutt Taplin, a sen io r with all the fine prospects we among the league'• best If he
tranSer from Visalia, has "A thl " R w a can stay healthy. A whopping total of 13 other .... ve s year, o n DA'-'-" Flemi"D" are John
Ire d "" track experience but this is his asserts DQlllJl.I --e Eagle runners a a Y , ... ve • Holcomb (10:31), C'raig Clark
dipped below 11 mJnutes. first fling at cross country. Among the bright faces (lO:U). Steve Alward (l0:43 )
With Haun holding down the Freshmen Jim Schlitz and Rowan was referring to are and Dan Cline (IO :S8).
first spot, the other six places Dan Empfield and juniors letter winners Bob Brickner, a Tim Rudy (ll:OO), Dave
on the squad will probably be Frank Calzada and Bob Roa .(;43 miler and 10 :15 two-miler Cross (ll:04) and sophomore
taken up by junior Steve also are possibilities in Wood's Bob Phillips. Lee Batson will be fighting it
Schurema.n. (lO :OI), senior varsity plans. Sophomore Ken Martin turn· (IU\ for the sittb and seventh
Dennis Green (10:12), senior f.nnuna Beach ed a 4:39 mile as a freshman spots on the varsity.
Chock Sihilling (10:30), junior -u and Rowan thinks he has the Donald, who just returned
Eric Olson (10:24) and seniors There are no returning endurance to hold up well in from a summer in Scotland,
Bob Bell (10 :39) .nit Tony varsity lettennen at Laguna cross country, which is says he can't wait for the
Kasper (10 :40). Beach High to bolster the normally run over • l .S-mile sea.son to begin so he can find
Fiaher note!, "the first Artists' cross country hopes, course. out exactly bow his material
through fourth varsity spots but harrier mt1Jtor Len Mlller So p ho m o r e P r est o n
are almost sewed up with a st.ill thin'ks things are looking Campbell and senior John shapes up.
real battle a possibility to de--good with his young aces. Neilson fill out the fifth ~ San Clemente
cide the other three places." Miller says, "I'm enthu~ si1th places on the Viking
Other Eagles included in the but scared to death. squad. • San Clemente High11 new
battle to stay in varsity ranks "I spent the summer work-Concernlng the c r u c.1a 1 cross country boss Ra Y
are senior Mike Jones (10:36). ing in Culver City and ron· geventh spot for Ma r 1 n a Reeves state.!I flatly, "we
ju.nior Rick Neal (10:31) a~d a_ sequently hardly got to see Rowan says, "it's up for won't be beat in our ltague if
trio of sophomores who shinN , any of the kids at all. I'm grabs. I'd hate to mention any we stay away from injuries
in track last sprin~ as afraM they didn't do the nm· names in regards to it right ~i~ti:~~ unforeseen dif-
freshme? -Howard B~shop, ning in the summer that I'd now."
Bruce G1rasole and Art Liddle. like to have llad them doing." The Vikings receipted for Actually Reeves Is not new
Fisher. who spent several Twenty-twti p 0 tent i a 1 fourth in the Sunset. last at San Clemente, he's just new
days up in the . Sierras this d'ist·-•Jars ·-oot fM the season behind Westminster, in his job. -·•1 f ~ --· -• N t H -d Santa Last season Reeves tutored summer. _... ng 1n some 1'!~1 • ·guna pr=am with ~ibly ewpor a an
th ol the ~ -~ ~ A the Triton track and !ield atr wi some Cl'U!8 10 more in the wings. what na. L .. le din country runners, fiKUttS if bis wi'th v-•t'ion and o•'--sum~ team with Don Jeisy a g t ast ed ....... "'n::' ltl isslon \'ie jo the cross country runner.!I to charges. can ~ _ ~ rugg: mer distractions. the Crestview League cham-
Edison m the ~1tial loop en-"On the varsity level I don't Five varsity letter winners pionship.
counter the~. it should be know wt.at to expect." Miller return to give coach Gene This time around Reeves ~
smoother whng {rom there ibonfides, adding, "but we Gurule's Mission Viejo Oiablos herits the harrier coaching
on in. won't be a title contender tmtil another crack at t h e position while former El
"We'll be tough. along with next year when 75 pereent of crestview League cross coun-Modena staffer Bob Radford
two or three other teams in our boys will be back. try crown. moves into San Clemente's
the league, but Edison could "Another beautiful thing is (n 1969 the Diablos finished track job.
be the bl& aurprise," Fisher that we have four invitatiooal near the bottom of Uie The Tritons were second In
concludes. meets before our first dual Crfestview heap but Gurule is the nation last season in cross
F ount a in Valle11
Fountain Valley managed
only a 4-4 record last season in
Irvine League cross country
competition, even with aces
like Tim Funk and Steve
Christiano around.
But the blg names In the
Baron harrier pic1ure have
departed and first year coach
Jack Kittrell wtll have last
year's No. S runner, Wayne
Leeds, at the head of the cur·
rent pack.
Kittrell, a track aide to Matt
Leonard last sprlng, takes
over the reins of the Baron
distar>eemen as Leonard will
be devoting full time to the
track picture.
Leeds. ADen Bender and
Ron Sbanke.n are all capable
of clocklngs tn the mld-10
minutes while the rest of the
Baron cast has betn virtually
untested on the varsity level.
Jim Welch was slated to go
full tilt on last year's varsi1y
but knte trooble.s slowed him
considerably. Allen Glover and
Clyde Stirewalt are up from
the junior varsity and Jim
Neel 1nd John Saylt.. are dip-
ping Into croa coun\111 for the
first Ume.
Dave Miiier, a 10:30 runne.r .
waa upttted 10 keep up the
Barons' hopes but he transfer·
red to Westmln5ter during tht
~mmu, thus leaving a void
in the hw1 of Fountain
Ganie Cbanged
The prep foolball game pil·
Ung the Pt11sslon Vlejo Dlablos
•satnst s.ddleback's Roedrun-
nerl at Sa11ta Ana Bowl.
originally scheduled for Fri·
day ni&ht (8). has been moved
back to Saturday night (8) 1t
the aame alle.
meet. This will give us a bubbling with optimism when country in a system which
chance to get into shape for talking about his 1970 pro-combines the five best ln-
the duals ," Miller adds. spectus. dividual times on each team.
Ttle top individ\lal at Laguna "Most of the boys we have Bob Lineback, Craig Sterl-
is sophomore Josh Bright, the ran hard all summer and are lng, Ray Ezell, John Milligan,
school's Cee 1320 r e c o rd in pretty good sh:ipe," Gurule Gray Brashear and Brad Win-
holder at 3:22.6. says. ton were all partly responsible
Miller feels Bright will be as "I'd like to think we're going for the Tritons' classy 1969
strong as a soph as the lo take the league, but it showing but all have departed,
graduated Dave Hustwick was should be a real battle among leaving only Bill Ayer (9 :38)
as a senior. us, El Modena , Sari Clemente as the lone returnee among
Five-foot-nine, 13>pound Bill and Villa Park." the top seven ..
ctristi81\$f0 is another soph Consistent Mike Rattray Is Renee Hunn (10:30) and Tim
who rates highly in Miller's the Diablos' biggest gradua· Smith (10 :24), however, found
book. tlon )osg while seniors Ray time to earn varsity letters
Christiansen ran quite a bit Perez and Steve Given and and the pair should form a
during the summer and shouldfp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
be pushing Bright for the
Artists' No. 1 posi tion.
Seriior Rick Smith should
hold down the third spol with
the last four places still
undecided.
Seniors Alce Nelson, Randy
Pact •nd \Viii Upham and
junior Ruben Gonzales are
given the best chance of
breaking into the top seven
pennanently.
Mater De l
Ho hum.
It appears the Angelus
League cross country plcture
will be back to normal again
In 1970 -with Mater Dei atop
the. standings ..
The Monarchs, who are
under the tute!age of coach
Mark Mulkerin for tht third
year. have annexed 1 he
Ange!us harrltr crown ever
si~ tht school left the old
Parochial League back in the
"" 50s. While schools like Pius X.
Servlte and the other AngelUll
members have usually come
up with the lop lllgl>t In·
dlvidual performers in cross
country circles, the Monarchs
have comiistently bctn able to
ARCHITECT . .. u2.ooo
Schaal 1nd ho1p.ftAI design, 11111.
prif. Llcen1t rffd. H&nd!I pn., $!1r1 I'll compl•tlw, Flt. C111 A1111 R11u11!,
111AINEE OFFICE' .... S,100+
GrHr d1111e1 !or Mlv,. tor "'' tlt-
111-r whO "''"'' 10 9row •nd ally wllll ont flrm, Ben, F1t, C1ll Erllt WODll.
Jll. ACCOUNTANr , .... 1IOO+
Av1lllt1!1 ffnl'Mdllllly for t hi .. wort.ktQ, t nowl..-,Hllle c1rt1r ,..,.
""'· Grlll btntflti. FM. Ctll Er"k .....
Jll KEVJIUNtH ...... • .. $6tOO OM VMr UP. ~I'd, Mttll 1r1c .......
11111 ldVll'ICtrnlfrt. Med. Pi.ti, ··~ 11111 E,.,.._ ti t:.. ,.,.., Ct" Eric -·
Ml!CHAfrrllC AUTO "" ,, HG+ frrllt~I ltrm flt«ll 1t.i-Ptf·
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AVCO
PERBDNN•L
8ERVICE8
All ENCY
MECHANIC BRAKE$ ,, •• SIJO(I+ Terrific chl fl(I wllll 1 111111 cll!JI
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SALES TltAINEE "' ...... snoo Devrt1 Pfrd, Sclmt Wits t•fl. Goad • ..,._rl l'ICI. 1111111 lloml Hit. Ho1p,
"'911, Cir. op. Rtt, Frire. All.O ftt JOb$. Clll Eric Wcocl,
SALES •.•••.•.....•. , ..... $J.«IO
1t11111 h1rdw•1t 0011, JllNJ.lfll
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1¥1. ltflfl'I. FH. CIH AN1 ltlilNIM
MECHAHtC MUFFLER -· MJOa+
tlfln'lld11i.1'1 1v1lltb11 wllll I ,,.,.
JOI" (0. Tlll1 k •t1 Ml jott.. E•
-"-totld., 1111 blfllflft. FN. C.11
Eric Wood,
PHAll.MACEUTICAL SALIES ......
............. ••....•. 111.00I UP Tr111>t1, lfl(tl/Oft t•Ofll\t ~c-1, ur. Ollrl bOftul, d.,,... ~. c-plM• llenellt•. CIH Frw, an AM lt111MU,
SANTA ANA Us.31 11
1w1111 F•reo link 11119.1 muster an excellent team er., .. __________________ _
Pilot Pigskin
PJ!f(EROO
Co -Sponsored by
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And The
DAILY PILOT
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In Cosh For Each Week's
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ret1il price, $9.95). Nine runn er-up Pickeroo pick1ri
al10 etch 91t • Voit Coll19i1t1 footb1ll,
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····················1 • • • •
ENTRY BL.4NK
ClrcSe tH1111 re• tlTft will 1"1t tll1 w.-•, ,......,
(ho1119 '""' ls secottd ... llltMI
• Santa Ana vs Mater Dei
-: "-RUntington Beach vs La Habra
• • •
La P11ente vs Marina
Edison vs St. John Bosca
• Rancho Alamitos vs •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Fountain Valley • • San Clemente vs Brea, •
•
Katella vs Costa Mesa
Laguna Beach vs Las Amigos
Corona del Mar vs Newport
Westminster vs Lakewood
Estancia vs Tustin
MiHlan Viejo vs Sadclleback
• • • • • • • • • • • Golden West vs Orange Coast • • • Mira Costa vs Saddleback College • • • St. Louis vs Rams
• Baltimore vs San Diego Chargers • Nebraska YS use • • • • • • •
UCLA vs Pitt
Cal vs Texas
Colorado vs Indiana
• • • • • • • • • • • TIC BREAKER -M, ~i °" "'8 • 1'0t.I nvmlMt" of 1111lnb .corfd Ill 411 •
• 20 f lll1ft llrilef •lliowe II ............... , • .,.,.,,, ••• ,.,,,, •• _.,_ •
• NA.Ml •
• ADDllSS •
• CITT •
• PHOHI
21P
• • • • • • • • SIX • •••••••••••••••••••••
D A"\ 0 4 ,s.,.esc ~ '"'t ""\ =-. "( ,, 4! .. . ' -> 1 ~ \'.f\E\ '\"' ~ ' '\ • • • ·' -..-. ~Jf-:~ ---~ • I. .. -• • • . ..
Tutsday, Sitptlftlbff lS, 1970
•
= S•••••w...
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1000
~nJa Jj/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
101 Lind• Isle Drive
5 BR 4 baths; fam. rm. Mexican tile firs .•
expos'ed beam ceil ., cpts, drps -incl. W/Pier
& slip. Excellent Terms ........... $135,000
For information on all lots & homes -
CALL : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620
$795.
Total cost lo you to move in.
Vacant, 4 bcdrm, 2 bath
home w/dble ca_r garage &
cov patio w/brick qBQ. Ex-
cellent Costa Mesa Ioqi,tion.
YOU MUST HAVE 5 IN
FAMILY TO QUALIFY,
Exclusive With :
Nawport
11
f1irvlew
646-8811
(1nytime) & Co.
Yes, You Do Qualifyl
s22,soo
NEWPORT . BY OWNER
HEIGHTS . WESTCLIFF AREA
4 br. frp!c, all bllnl, w/w
DUPLEX C?P'8. •Prinkl•n, poo1-•
Ya.rd. Near all school• .I:
ll Bedroo~s each. ~ble Westcliff shopping, AvaU for Picture a quiet cul~e.sac garab'\l -Just painted· mside immed
sl.reflt and cute litUe home & out. -A buy at $29,500. ~ oNrY $31,500
tucked way back in bel wl'Cn Phone &16-nn zt24 H!gland Dr, N.8. 642.-1611
40' trees. then add 20' side or fi42-9996.
yards for garden and plaY 1..:;....;,;,.:;;.;:._,===-
area. Thl'n. with this coey DOVER SHORES
feeling add 2 f'Xtra roo ms SACRll"JCE SALE ot fabu-
for a rota! of 5 bedrooms. 1 -N=EED=,=,=.,,=0=, =w=o=m=.,.=,..=o1° 1 Iota 4 BR. 3 Ba, home at
then &11 together you have eslale salesman _ sales or $77,500 hllld lncludcd. WW
the nea te.st hOmc package rentals. consider lt-ase/option,
we've seen for a long time. Stephenson Realty Owner 548-9865
No income or credit quaJi. lli P.-1arine 674-4IXKI
fications. Balboa Island Newport Heights 1210
Nichols Real Estate
MENS LIBERATION
MOVEMENT!
with a gro~'ing family will ~ .... ~~!"'~~~,..
find this an ideal location,
Nn \\'Ork here • jusf swim-
n1ing in your ov.•n heated
pool in the middle of the
concrcl~ rear yard. S8000
flown to the pr'f!S('nt loan.
Shol1 of the full dO\\'n ! The
Oll'ner \I'll! help you with
rhat, ~2J,650 takes this beau-
;y.
/ca... co:Ts
~WALLACE
REALTORS
Open Evenings
• 962-4454 •
$7.50 MOVES YOU IN
3 BEDROOM
NE\\'PORT HEIGHTS
:fllilt's seve n dollars and fifty
c-enl~ .. Seller pays all costs
for Vet~. This CU.'itom built
home in NC\YpOrt licigbt.s is
a beautiful ranch Gtyle with
floor to ceiling brick fire-
place, beautiful shake roof,
2 queen sized baths, 18 x 10
brick patio & lrecs like a
forest. Owner asking $32,500
• !\lake Offer! 546-8660
EXCLUSIVE
SHORECUFFS
lALxlll")' Jiving in one of
C.Orona del Mar's f i n e s t
areas. 3 Br. 3 Baths. lovely
spacious living room and
large family area. Land-
scaped p.1tio. Phone 646-TITI
(or appointment or come
""· . Open Weds, Thurs, Fri.
1 • 5
short \\'alk to schools &
sMppin_g. This ideal 5 BR
home has charm & space for
entertaining, Formal dining
room, 3 Baths, 2 Story -
large kitchen with b!tins,
family room, near Mesa
Verde Golf Coul'S<' Price
$48,950. Call for sho~ing.
PAUL-WHtrE
CARNABAN
tSA.loTT co.
1093 Baker, l.:'.ll.f. ..,a46-s.440
4 BEDROOMS
$28,500
Name your terms _ IBAIV A
• NO DOWN or convention-
al, Excellent location, walk
to park_ schools & shopping.
Lots ot used brick family
room and heavy sh3ke roof.
Hurry • owner already pur-
chased! Call ili8424
MESA VERDE
FHA· VA
$28,500
3 B«l1'00m, 2 Bath, all clec-
trit· built-in ki tchen, large
family room on a corner
lot with room for Boat stOf'·
age. Assume law inlerest
loan. Sf!_!! Today! MG-2313.
1-0' THE REAL
~ F,:§'.f :'TE~~
LIDO WATERFRONT
APTS .-320 LIDO NORD
NOW REDUCED TO
$150,000-Xlnt Ter m5
6 Beautiful units. 6 car
garages & utility room with
80 ft. fronting on excellent
S\Vimming beach, Units are
newly furni!'hed.
Bill Grundy, Realtor
833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620
CUTE AS CAN BE
Two bedroon-1 "Doll House."
Quiet east-Side Costa Mesa
near St. Joachi ms and shop.
r ing. Priced at $22,750 a~I
$2800.00 1lov.·n f'll\Yn1<'nt will " Sparkling Pool
take it. Subject to an FHA Freshly rcdet'Ori1tcd thruout.
Loan wllh $15.1 mo. pay-Koll-buil t J\lcsa 1-lighlands
n1ent. \VlrY RENT? home on cul-<le-sac. Adull
W .1 k r & Lee occup;"' , & family nn. a e La"'' '""" ,,,, ,..,, " assumc. \Vell-prict'd,
(Ope n D.-eningsl RcaHors
f]Jll.\\ ,\ 111:.\f ll
llE.\U'\' l .\f.
ES" ,1Q ~75 1~~~
7'12 °/o LOAN
and no loan charges. for
this lg. 3 BR ranch home on
huge OO'xl05' Jot. Comp I tt-
pain!cd, new dshwshr, lge
dct cov 'd patio & outdr fire-
pl. & B-8-Q. Owncr \Viii al-
low $j()(). fpr crpls & drps.
Immed. poss. Only •
$29,500
PERRONE 642-1771
EMERALD BAY
HANDY MAN
3 Bedrooms
$23,950
EASTSIDE
f'Qpl is 75';0 compJcted. Just Newport H~ights
finish, No do1\•n Vets -Low Opportunity
down FHA, A,)i11Jc 1.'lbcnv Owner's bo11ghl l\MV home!
grease and paint. Won't last. 3 Bc<hm. 1~ ha family rm
Supc1•b ocean view -beau-Call 1oday, MS-8660. w/uscd brick f111\c, cpls,
tiful, lu.rac home w/evcry hnl\\'rl. firs, shake roof, dhlc
extra & the Oest conslroc· gnr., alley access, room for
lion -inl cresting &. flexible boat or camper. Fas! f'S-
rooin arrang'f!nlenl, Ownt'r ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; crow'
"ill finance. $145,000. y 'II s· I Fl' I La h RI .. Please call for our picture OU imp y rp C enmyer ty. 2700 Harbor Blvd , at Adams
5-IS-0-165 Open '!ti 9 Pl\t
POOL
Sue' a Jo1v pri~. $28,9.iO for CALL &l6-392S or M>-1183
s.t&·SllO brochu!'t" of currt!"ll listings" such a beauhful 4 BR &!;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~
OLLEl-Gd;E'"'R"~~TY P Q.I 1 family with fresh paint, all
• Co*' ... -new Jong shltg colorful
Lush deep pllc carpeting,
mas.sive dble lircplacc, fully
blt in kitchen, :I sparkling
baths & 3 C1versized bed-
roon1s plu!I family roon1 .
ranlastic valul' for only
$3~.950. CaU ~5-8424,
\outh . Coast
--.
FIX IT UPI
Bring cll'anlng gear, IJ11.lnl &
gnrdcnlrn:: 1oul1 + "TLC."
2 Story, 5 bcdnn k forn1a1
dining rm. 2Sll5 Sq, ft., Sa nla
AnR lfj!hl~. .Euy·to-buy!
Asklng"'"S3<t,500.
Open EVl'nlngs
""'llO ---LEGE REALTY
Mm .. Mlfler,Cll
·--.. C'-'-; ''I'' CLIFF LOT ,........ • :; ;;;;; carplg &: the clincher -· .
1mpical back yard spark!· China Cove
Beach House $38,950 83~700 ~2430 ing pool Leasehold· only $15 Ovrrlooking CO\'(!_ and l'nlll'f' ' llarhor at"f'a. Thls i~ "nnc
2 Bed.rm home in West New-
port. Goocl condition, J,~
block to beach. Good ~ntal
area ..
Cnll: 673-36& 673-8368 Eves
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
2025 W Balboci 67J-J66)
HAPPY
HALECREST
Spotless 4 Bedroom or 3 ~nd
• den -Kiddies' per1dii!it'
clo~ lo schools and 11 big
perk -Room for dad'11 bo•t
or lrlUer -only $26,960. Call
546-2313 NO\\'.
\-0 THE REAL
\'\.. ESTATERS
' '. ' r .,
3 BEDROOM
2 BATH
Hardwood Floors
Flrepl•ce $22,500
Wells-McCah:fle, Rltrs.
1810 Newport Blvd., C.!'11.
MS. 7729 Eves: 644~4
mo. lot in a m.illlon" ror the per-
~ 5'6·~80 .son Y!'hn want11 an excilini.;
rc.~~i~ PETE"BARRErr"RtIT
642-5200
* OCEANFRONT *
Rea11y Compan,v * DUPLEX *
WESTCLIFF Balboa Peninsula
Macnab-Irvine
646-3255 5.!V;'a J..oen, SpoUe511 3 BR, 2 $85,000
BRAND NEW bath hOmfo new kitchen din. George Will iamson ---' ~ ---LARGE HOME
This Dover ShO~s IY<l11 Wells 1n1 room On latge land~ap-Realtor BedCh Duplex s Bedrm. r11mtl_y rm .. xlnt home with Vk!w hag 3180 ~q. ed corner lot. RcduCed lo 673-4350 64~1564 Eves.
fl. ot living IU"ea. 4 Bedrm~, $,S,500. \VUI consider le.aac ONE LOT FROAI OCEAN 2 street lo .atreet 45 ft, lot.
31.S BA, panelled Jam rm w/ or h!llse O(lliOn, $7.50 MOYES BR k 3 BR Ytith fftm m B;.· app'l 0;r·
frplc •wet """ High be•m· 642-1235 675-3210 YOU IN PLUS I BR & Ila """" rm. .000
ed cell ing UY1ng rm., "coun-1 ~~~~~~~~~ I A1nt condition. Top 11.re11. for Owner may trade down fl>t 3
try'• kit w/brkfst area. S bt'droom Eutslda Co11tt1 livlrnr or l'l':ntlng. SSl.S«I Bdnr., llomo In Terraces,
-n..i.l!n .. iwlmml,... pool. UTILE RANCH ~le.!la, Sclltr will pay all ' . Cd~ w1rh ocean vi~. ~·~08 " .... ...,, c:mts for vets. 1 lull bllth~. CALL 'Ci)' 4 6'1414 LluO REALTY INC .
• 1 ,!IOO. Roy J. WB-td, R.eaL Small house on targe lot 166 fi I -·bl 9t•'dC. -V'· Lt•~ ~ -to", 646-1!!60, 0 ....,n daily, rep ace. u"" e Ji:B~e, _ .. _ ;w• lft uu t11.i-•J'N .--xlffil. Srpilrnle dbl. £:1l~ "'"-lot. ~fodcm k\l chen.
ASSUME 6% FHA __ .. •~ '"'' R2 ,.,...,... REALTY · EXPANDABLE rozy <:Om-,..., many u .. "' on uus • \Vhat a irteal for ~.tD>. Nt•r Ntwp•tl P•1t Offlt• pact. 3 Br, on 11. sunny !ot.
P.'m'"'' I•.•• than ttnt In-level lot $'24,950: with 10~1 lfVRR\', ~ ..... E"Cf"tlcnt n.ttia nc&r l!Chooll, down , Qwncr "'"'" carry 2nd • * TERRI FIC BUY * $52,500. O.vnt. &r:>-264.3.
$22,750 $29,950
c::lvrlc cw.ry!hln,ii:. Vtry 11· Ahoppinit. Spacious bf.!d. Wes~ldc 4 BR + i1tn, 2 T.D. to ~w IOAn. Call IO> Lovable 3 br home in prime -
1rac1ivc hume near beach. rooms. 21,~ batM, Jn.rge Jlv. b8thll, $24,000 at $205, ~r da,y fi16-T1 7l, Newport arell. Loaded with Huntington Beach 1400
135 foot d(!('p ground1.room ln1t room \\1th f'XOtlc tire-mo, r.11n be flnan«d, lnclud· "~xlr&11? Prlcro 10 sell fast -----__ _
ki. riool. SrmciOM bedrooms, pl11cc, femlly room, gleam. lni: P.l.T.I. 1.ow down po.y-at $32.500. Boy direct &: $1000. &low nlA, t br. cond.
flr.n, l11xuri0L111 ~g carpet-Ing bullt·il"l kiteticn, dllh· ment. SEE Yl)UR REALTOR !!llYe. Open dally, 1512 Pool. ~feet, bltns, ref
1
owe
Ina:. "·n.shc!r. Costa Mesa ln•stment FOR YOUR BIO FREE Prbcllla Ln, 8"6-ll55 (own. 2nd., lWm. 5!4~ FHA. ~0-1720 Torbell 5~1720 Tubell 54t-7711 Nl!:WCO>fERS KIT crt 4""3418 ·~~~~~~--~~~~~~ ~~--~~~--~~~~~~-·-~~~~~~--~~~....,,.~~--;;.o.;;"'-~~~~
•
CUSTOM TOWNHOUSE
LOW, LOW $17,900
PRINCESS ESTATE
2 Bf!droomt, neat q a pin.
Jdcal for business couple,
low maintenance. Conveo.
tent loeatk>n.
LEADERSHIP 142-4466
Relax &: enjoy carefree living
no upkttp worries. Just keep
up the low, low mo, pay.
rnent11, Cozy living nn, atep.
saver goUrmet kit. incl.
washf'r & dryer, 2 king size Huntington
BR's. Desirable l . story. __ H_a_rbou __ , ____ 1_405
Clubhouse, pool. Terms lo RED EC &: L n d 11 e pd
meet any budget Won't Waterfront 3 BR & dock !or
Wt! Take advantage. Call aa1 i.,e lag tion
(7141 962-~. ~221. ' or op
FOREST l OLSON
Inc. Real'ton
19131 Broo.khurst Ave.
Huntington Beach
'Fountain Valley 1410 ·-,-'---
TRA YEL . 1st CLASS!
CLOSE IN
A shingle sided 1-~m
cottage close to town &: walk
to beach. R-2 comer Jot
Fireplace, garage, .e<'lUd·
ed patio & large shade trees
PLUS low taxe11. Only $25,700
~Ian
REAL ESTATE
1715
Gener.11 -
Deluxe 4 Bedroom SHARP 2 BR bomc w/yard.
F'HA A I··• 131450 Bring baby, $135. 1111$ ppra _, ' WON'T LAST!
A11klng $30.9'.XI A11n. down, H F . nd '4~29Sl F11A Owner transl. J\tugt om.. • ers
lcll! CaJ1 847-3$31. R~t~r;-to-~ --
OEAL ESTATE
MART
WILL Shatt lge beach home
with "-oman 23 +or maple.
No sm<>J<ttrs. MN. Fenton
&&i-9933 Of' 673-2110 • Heated Pool Estate BACHELOR will .shire 2 BR.
2 BA apt with same. Ocean
CU&tomlted WHtmont, coiy view, I block to beach. StlXI
Ben Franklin fireplace, ce.. mo, 49-1"436
dar panelling, tropical 11:ur-CO,,,,-Ll.EG,.:,_,=E~!lf~rl~n-«d-.,.,-l~or~l l
roundlngs, 3 bedtQ\ lbarp a1r1 5 to share epl w/J)OOI nr
.l clean. 134.500. i9ut' j: Harbor. 6f&.,ll8S,
LEADERSHIP 142-4466 646-S31.4 IT'S Beach boo.le time. Big· :LA'"o=y"",-,-,.,....,.-.., .... -.,.,,-,..,2Br~1
ge1t 11electlon evtrl See lhe ai.~ C.M. WIS.mt, Nr.
aectlon nowt OCC .t S.D. FNy. S.W'/'29
-
Tutsd.lJ, Stpt~bet' l:>, 1'1ro 12 DA!lV PILO•
' R ENTALS RENTALS RENTAU RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS
Hou1H Fumlshod Hou1H Unfurnl.W !!f!o. Ful'lll.W _ Aflh. 'uml.W Apts. Fuml.W -. Fumlshod
ltontal1 to Sh•ro 2005
WOR.KJNG rtrt d e • t r e • roommate t4 ibare 2 br •Pt.
w/ame. i,, bl.k to bch.
BJ$...4IKM, at !, Nancy, days.
Aft. 9J804..
L•,....~•ch 2705 ~!~Ill mo1o;;;•;;.,.;;';;•;;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;«:OO:IO;j;.;H;;;un:::~::;ft9:..l~on:;;lla;:=od!:::...:-=.H::.::un;:.ll:::ngt!.!!on::..:lla::od!=:~-=-
L••sa/S.le Fumlshtd 3 BR. l.Jv rm, dJ n rm •I•
SHARE BM.ut. i..runa Bch.
apt. View. Walle Io
everythln1. \Y/clUn
mature employed WOl"l\lrl.
Aft. 5:30 p.rn, 494.9577
e WJU. SHARE HOME:
\V/Lady 21..SS. ChDd & Pet
OK. MOTHERLESS llOMF..
Alt 6 pm 847-4923.
S HARE my e l ega nt
watufronl home w/dock.
Man, J0.60 yn:. $150 mo.
m-4331 .
Lovaly llaach Condo famlly rm. 2 Ila. New -. ..... Fram $28 Wk.
Ava.IJ &pt 15 Wr lease thtu drapes le Jlxtures. Walk to Luxury S1naf.e Apts. Complete
June or longer. 2 BR, 2 BA. all achl• le "'°P'&· Wtr $.180 maid aervice hou&eware•
upper wllh Uvtna, dinuli'. per mo lease er for sale WI linrns all ~ belted pool
ldtcben areu main Door O\'-asti~able 6.5 lns. loan. hlllialds. restaurant ~
erk>oldng beautiful p o o I. &tz..8839. t&Us. •
1...arte J car port plus ah:lr-_.. VILLAGE INN
aa:t. A complete laundry fa.1 ~u;n;l•;;•;rs;:;;lty;;P;;~~rk;;;;;;;;;;;••;;•;;.•! Le.g\ula Be•ch 49f.S436
cllltie1. AU beaulitulb' & BALBOA INN
completety furnished, linen$, For Rentals 1n UnJveralty BaJIXla 675.8740
china_ etc, U desired. Only Park &: 1'urili! Rock, Call:
100 steps to pri\•aie beach.
1'eMla COW't It 2nd pool al-
IO on property vdth gorg. •
THE HIGHLANDER
"Scottish Treat''
16161 Porksldo Ln.
Mg r. 142-1'69
San Diego Frwy to
Beach Blvd. 4 b1ka
So. lo Holt, W. oil
J:lolt 1 blk.
eous landscaping thru~ut. LA QUINTA HERMOSA
Euy ""'" to "'"" mkt, ~-1,1!1'.c~tipooo, bl1."'Chil" ~.·
'"/ l11l1 "I '1·lld.
---'I l 1·11lii11'
832-7800
ah Ing l ·-lb ... !"' •ICOl .... ., "Modem Spanish" opp • e c. ..,., mo:i ' ok. ALL l.TI'IL PO.
winter basis, Will consider ht Westem Bank Bldi· TELE-TREND 16211 Parks ide Ln. FEAtALE Teacher desires
roommat.f; to 1hart apt, Call
aft 5 PM. 673-1489.
lease. purchase at outright Unlvel'lity Parle •--s· I Ad Mgr. 147-5441
"''· Adu!l.5 only. """· Day 833-0101 N'9hts Just-1"9 o ulla FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN 4$-2152 Mt or 837-0791 any.l'"""""'""""""""""'~I SOUTH BAY CLUB Lush landscaping. cabana, covered court·
Newport Btedt 2200 "u=·m='=· ======~ 13 BR. 2 Ba. tnhou.se •••• S340 APARTMENTS yards. sunken swim'& pools, BBQ's & foun--
* BAYSHORES * San Clemente 2710 4 Bdtms., 2~ baths •••• ~ N;;~ 8:~~ ta.ins. 1---------2 Bdrms., 1 bath •••••• _,., •-.:-~ ''THE ULTIMATE JN APTS" wtnttr rental5. 3 &: 4 BR. 3 BR. tnhouse EastbluU S385 (u-vuie and 16th)' ·~ ,, Avail ~ COLONY ONE (714) 64' •550 1 BR's-From $150 2 BR's-From $175
tum. _.,., • o. • .....-., ... -2 BR. 2 B.A.-ADULTS ONLY e RED JllLL REALTY '::!~~~~!!~~--il===~A~ll~ut~ll~. ~ln~c~I;,,· ~F~u~rn~&~U~n~fu~r~n::· === J u?ll! NO PETS $225 .f!n-3605 Univ, Park Center. frvlne I, HOLIDAY PLAZA
"C" THOllAS, Realtor Call Anytimf! 833-1»!20 DEWXE Spacious 1 Bdrm.
224 w. Cout Hwy 548-5527 RENTALS =='="'"======-!Furn apt. $135. Pi.us util. Newport Beech 4200 ~"?fon Beach 4400
DUPL.EX--lJpper. Ice 3 br, 2 Housel UnfumJshed Irvine 3231 He": te d pool. Ample $130-Yr rnd J,S, blk bch 1
ba, pr, $2'75 mo. UJ'l\·er: 3 General 3000 parking. No children -no B I ' Sn I k • br, J ln pr, $225 nlO. Both TURTLE ROCK·LEASE. .. pets. 1965 Pomona, C.M. r. dup ex. g a o ·
on oceanfront. \VW conaidu ---------BR, 2 ba., din' g Ir m , Blue Beacon * 64S..0111
untumb.iled. Ava.ii mid-Sept • lam/rm Atrium, patio!!. Nr. Cost• Mesa 4100 2 BR, 1 ba apt, Balboa. 1 blk
to mid-June. S-16-1093. 11 chs-pools-prla. $325/mo. from beach, no pets. Sl85 mo
\VATERFRONT. 3 br & den. 832•7800 7141833-1467 1 BDRi'1 Adlts-No pets. yrly lse, Util pe.id. 963-1793,
' ... ~•c. w•sher/d"""r 3 BR 2 BA ~. ~ --$105/mo, Open for inspec. Avail Oct. 1st. uv.o •J~ , • '*"' 0. F enced d I M """ 0 -• 1().12 2·~ 0 -ta d'h ... •-, fe----' "aTd. • Corona • ar ~~ .,.... pm. ;:i,a .>11n OCEANFRONT3Br l "' bo. ,...,,.,-, ..... "'... J yard, patio. double garg, An A A t O C M F ' x Winter. 3J"13 Finley. bl .:.sh ,_ a .ve, P • · · or tip-top Old ni~ cpl!! drps
2131693-6221) tns, u whr, ... .,le, crptl5, * 2 br-choice ana-walk to add rn fo: Call ~42 cov pat, g~. S27S mo' wnte;
drps. Nr. Goldenwest Co!-bcach-$215/mo., year lease. befol'I' 8 am or aft 6 pm or (1) 774-7465 ~l!I05
2 Br + den, wet bar, 2 Ba, 2 lt>ge, 673-1844 eve11. 1 _:21~3:_, ~·69-8859~~'-----l;i;C,,.,.-.,-';i';'-rui\;-;;;: Urepl, gar. laundry rm. TELE-TREND 2 N n-•-··•-A ,_ -0 CLEAN 1 Br. $12C. 1 Br. . ,_,,I ----------2 Br. Ba r . ...,._~an. A.:-<1p......., p ... , au.1e1C ve, 1130 2 Br •1.50 Util pd patio. 9 mo. $225 mo, ....,;1711 FOR •-nt· \"e re t -·1 G H Robe~--~1 Utll "d Gani ' . • . . .
38lb Sl' NB. """ • ... presen .... a mo, -. • ...,..,n, .--uv • pal • ea Adult.!! no ~ts. KI 7-115.i
ON BEACH!
• Single apls from $165
• 2 BR Furn. From $285 e 2 BP.. unfurn $260
Carpets-drapes.dishwasher
heated pool-sauna.tennla
rec room-ocean view• .. ~ ... -Security guards.
FURN. also Avail
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC ]8,000 rentals through-out Realtor. * 67~2440. living. Adults, no pets.
\VJNTER • lge .f br. 2 ba & Orange County. Houses. 2 Ba drps frpl 1 BR...$150 OCEANFRN'T: 2 Br Duplex. ru OCEAN VE
den, trplc, bllrul. $350 mo + Apartments, furnlsbed/un-JDeBIR ,· clpl5, 1295• ' 1800 Wallace Ave, C.M. Winter. $200/mo. &dlts. cnt) si148? H.B.
7101 S h "'·-'· .. """ ....... "-'-•-uxe up ex. on 213/795-3018 dep. eas ore • .a.w•wr·~ ,,.,.uw~n"" pets lease. Realtor 67S--1662 $15 Per W .. k & Up 1---------Otc. open 10 am-6 pm Dan,
TI4f642-7671, 213/624-9567 welcome. !dove in today. 3 BR 2 ba 1 H Frpl Bachelor & 1 br, TV & maid DELUXE 2 Br.. WestclW Managed by * 2 'BR._ Oceanfront * Placement in 30 days, 18 : • ~~ • .:!· Adul~ aerv. ava.iL 450 Victoria Joe. Pool &. bltns, Adults. Wil.LIAM WALTERS co. ..-::: _ 9 Months leue Orange County offices, com. patio, gar. ' :r•v• C 1 ' $210 mo -no lse. 64z...Q74. ~-·-· •on~1y~673-6298~~~========-l•f=i·~·~·r;;;;;::n<;fA'.;;;;iii>=t5da~iii~rii;f-i:i;;j;~~;;: REAt.TOR 673-4350 putenz""' accuracy. Tele-':: • . l BR. furn. Sl4S Avail ()ct S. OCEANffiONT-Oeluxe 3 br, LG Bachelor. Util paid. Near WINTER·!~ 5 br homf! on Trend, 832-7800. Huntington S.•ch 3400 Also 2 BR unfum, $l.fS. 2 ba, frplc. Ava.II 1011 $350 5 Points. Single female over
beach. $300 mo. 7201 SCHOOL Avail Sept IS. See Mgr, Apt mo yearly. 673-7053. 35. $97.50. Refs,&. Cleaning
Seashore Dr. 642.-3529 SPECIAL MEREDrm Gan:lens, 4 BR, H, 1846 Placentia. LRG 1 BR Adults, no peU:. dep req. 842-2'Z19,
3 BA, fam rm., form dining, Furn Bachelor & l BR. Yearly. 67s.8592 FREE Ulil. Furn 1 & 2 BR
Newport Shores 2220 ----4 BR 2% baths. 9 mos least,
S300 per mo.
Winton Real Estate 675-3331
Bayshor•• 2225
A'M'RACT. 2 Br, 2 ba,
dshwshr, Winter le ase.
Ref 1. $275. Call 548-5476.
2 BR. Home. 9 mos lease
$350 I mo. ()l\ Bayshore
Drive. 548--6330.
Irvine Terrace 224S
LOOK AT THJS! 3 BR, 2 air cond., auto sprjnklers. D:Cf!ptionally nice! or 642-0807 apl.!I. Pool. Walk to beach.
Bath home. Stove, carpels, $350 Per mo. Unturnished. Below rental value! 1 BR furn ()n Balboa Pen1n $130 up. 5.16-3777 or 536-7282
drapes, patio. $165/mo. --~rn~1~·CN;!;;:;;""i'Riii2V.l _..:21l~O~N~ewpo~~rt:,.=B~lv~d~,~CM~,~· utll paid, YI' lse, $185 mo.1-•-•_536--__ 1366 __ . -----
GRAB THIS FAST! 2 STORY: Nr bch. 3 BR/2~ e NASSAU Palms 2 Br 67!>-5416. 2 BR. Pool Adults.
Hom•Finders 645-2951 Ba, Fam/rm, frplc. Avail &: U f p 1 . l-OCEAN.::::.:.::.:FR:._O_N_T_2_B_R__ Beaut/Quiet! Util inc I
Sept 151.h $230/mo SJ6..-0880 apt. Furn n · 00 • ping-• gar, $200/mo. 17676 cameron,
• <>r 968-7472 ' pong, BBQ, shady lawns. wsht, dryr. Sept 15th to 842-61Zt.
. 1TI E. 22nd SI. 642-3&15 June 15th $225. 673-1247 "832 7800 HUNT. 1~' wolrlrnl J ·~ RGE 1 °•-NEAR 2 Bl-, 2 & turn, C11>"· <!rps, • BR. $550 (See ad und<'r * Sl45 mo. Qu ~• 2 BR. LA gua u •. dshwshr. No chlldren or
2 Br. HOUSe $150, Fenced class No. 1405 ) 644-4221 Healed pool. Crpts, drps, Ocean. Sl.50 m(>YEARLY pets. 73.l Lake. 536-0275 or
yant, garg, Otlldren ok. Wa-IJ4S.504l ' · ' dshwht. Adult onAly, no peCMts. Students ok. 673-8088 • 536-3700•
ter & gardener pcl. • 2295 Pacific ve, · ./ OCEANFRONT 1 2 3 &
TELE-TREND PAClFIC Sands -3 br, 2 ha. 548-6878 or 00-4429 4 BR' WINTER' JiOO. RENTALS
Children & pets ()k. Fenced, * WKLY-Lovely apt Bach ALS, ~. ~pts. Unfumlshecl * PENNY SAVER $225 mo 213/284-5384. "'cpl Furn. Kitci>. $35 wkl~...C....~~~~-
SHARP 2 BR Home., Fenced 4 BR condo-Pooh, elec bltns, & up. 546-0-iSl Oceanfrnt Winter lse Ge~ral 5000
•-M . G f . I A ., l.:i•_!B~R~.js~1o;!:__~·.J'"~''.:S056~_,.:;;;;:;:~~=:~;;;;;;;;;;; .1 ... u, patJo, BRIN the Kid-re ng w W crp, va1 · S:-~ WK ftf el Bungalow di~! $115 I mo. CALL now. $roo1mo, 1se. 493-3418 ,;ps S. "7r°~ $30 wk/up, s, DEWXE APr WIN~ YEN DOME
mo. QUICK!! * 4 Br, 2 Ba, All blbls. 2376 Newport Blvd. 54&-9755 RENTAL 673-26'17 * $l35/mo J1.U.1ACULATE APl'S!
Bill Grundy, Rltr. &1'2-4620 Hom•Finders 64.S..2951 Chlldn?n welcome. Call be!r *
4 BR 3 ht, Bay & Oce11n
v>ew 1n Irvine Terr. $700/
VERY CLEAN, like new and 12 noon 846-4229. Furn 1 Br & Bachelor OPEN 12-4 P1.1', Sal &. sun. ADULT and
Corona del Mar 2250 VACANT '5 this 3 bedrm I ""========-12110 Newport Blvd, CM 2ro) w. Oceanfront. 2 BR. FAl\llLY Sec-tioo
·----home in a new area near Fountaln Valley 3410 2 BR. Furn. Crpts, drps, wntr lse. $225/mo. 54s..-4928. Close to shopping, Park
EXEC Homt;, 3 BR 3 ba + So. Qit Plaza. $250 per mo. -m"---··--' Pool. Kids ok. 1998 Mapl4! 2 BR. l 'fs ba, frplc, dshwsr, : ~~~~Jl,BP~;s,a!_ban maid's quarters. S850 mo. Famlfies only. cau Agent 4 B~/2 BA: wg, 1.v voa..... Apt 1. 543--2808. Clean, 1 blk to bch, Yrly or """ l b---
Cameo Shores, panoramic 546-414L 64pa!i°w~. Imo lat A: last. winter. 673-245.5. * Frpl, Indivllndry lac'b
vie•·. Bay & Beach Rlty, ~~ * DELUXE LG 1 BJ{ * 1845 Anaheim Ave.
S75-3000. WALK to beach, large 2 YI' Quiet, gar, adtts. I.GE, Llke 1'1C'W 3 br, 2 ba, COSTA ~.;F.SA 642-2824
old home in a nice area. 4 Laguna •--ch 3705 2452 Elden, 646-2763 bch duplex. Sondeck, gar. '"'!""!!!!!~'!"'!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!" 3 BR cpt/drp, frpl, yard, B 3 B f rmal · · -Se t-J S2SO 549--0844 I : open beams. $2SO mo. IM R, A, 0 duung, l BR upper, newly redec. P . une · NEW 1-2-3 BR's. All bltns,
req. Sept 15-June'lS. JamilY" rm, $325 per mo. -Adlts only, No pels, S140 + cplll, drps, gar. Nr. s. Coast
606 JASMINE Coats & Wallace Rltrs. gas & elt!C. 64240M alt 5:45 Newport Hgta. 4210 Plnza. 54G-lm. S45-237l.
$200 Mi> 2 BR hse partly 1-!<~2-M~-54---=,,...,,-~-832-7800 $11:'>-l Br turn, util paid. DuPLEX, Lrg ] Br, Furn
turn Util Incl. Nr. market Move RiCJht In 2 BR widen. Furn or Uni. Qulel adult. Near slore!. apt, New fi rs &: drapes.
& ?"Ktaurant. Couple only, 1 BR. Carpet!, drapes, fenced $175 I $195. r~enced yard, 1985 Pomona, 548--0728. CLEAN. Mature ad u I t a
no pet!. 673-8936 patio. $98/mo. IT WON'T garg, stove. Kids&: pets ok. * CQ1.lPlEt'ELY turn. 1 only. No pet11. $135 yearly.
LAST!! \Vasher. BR apt. $95/mo. 54&-7165 Owner.
Balboa 2300
* CHARMING 4 BR or 3 BR
& de n. Bal Pen. Avail Sept-
J une. 2 BR upstain:, furn,
$300. 6(~1371
Lido Isle 2351
Hom•Finders 645--2951 TELE.TREND 1311'1o\\·er 646-788.1CLEAN1or2 BR. Adults, no
Country Living DAILY PILOT reporter and 1 hr S125. pool, spaceous, a· pets. Lrg klt. S135-S150. 2421
v.i fe Yo'B.nt to rent or lease dults Ideal for bachelors. E. 161h St. NB 646-1801.
IN TllE BEACH AREA! small furnished or unfum· 1993 Church 548-9633 \VINTER Rental-Spacious 2
Sharp 2 BR. Stove, refrig., ished house in Laguna Cnn· 1 BR lurn, $1SO incl utll, br, aptio, trple. Adults, no
S150/mo. CAU. NOW!? yon or other O.C, canyon pool, gar, disposal. AduJts, pels. 646-7li02 •
Hom•Finder1 645--2951 area by t>«-r_mbe.r . ~ no pets 6-12-23&3
3 Bedrm home in country days, 53G-ll95 e\'e!J, · Coron• del Mar 4250
Cost• Mesa 5100
ORLEANS APTS.
ADULTS ONLY
2 & 3 BR Avail Privale pa.
tit., pool ·indiv. laundry fac.
(Nr. Orang!! Co. Airport; Tus.
tin at 17th St: nr. \Vestclill).
1741 Tustin, Costa 1'1esa
l\1gr, folrs. Carson. 642-4641
PhoMS An Open 8:00 a.m •• S:30 p.m.
9 to Noon Saturday -Closed Sunday
DIAL DIRECT ••• 642-5678
WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNrY DIAL FREE 540-1220
Hunllnglon llNch: 540-1220 -Legun1 Buch' 494-9466
San Clomonto: 492-4420
Hours......,Regulations-Deodlines
IUOltl: M"'tlMn 1Mul4 chMk ttt• Ma MllJ Md Nport lmmedl•tlly •rror1
., Mltc1Maifle11tlona. THI DAILY PILOT auum•a ll•lllllty for •rror• only lo
tM estent ., 1111llllahlftfl the a4'ffrt1Mftl9ftt Cot'TlCtly on• tlm•·
DllADLINI FOil COPY AND KILLS: 1:31 P.M. tht lll•y btfor. publlc•tlon, •J:ctpt
forM9M•Y 11111'*' ....... lllUtllln• It S.h.lnl1y, 11 noon.
YOU MUST HAVI KILL NUMllll When ltllllnt an M llec•u•• of 11ulclt rflVlh,
N ...,,.. t. fNkt • rec~ .r the klll numMr 1Jv.n you by yovr ad taker •• nrtfkafleft ., r-ur calL
Ivery .rfwt la Ma.It te klll er cornet • MW M ttll'f ha1 bMn ordered, but we c•n-
net iv.nut ... t. de M untll the 94 hu •PPNNd In th• P41per.
DIMl·A·LINI Ms •N drldly cuh M Mvana •r mall or •t •ny ont of our offices.
NO phone erdwa.
Tt.e DAILY PILOT ,...,..,. the rlfht te cl•ulfy, edit, ctnlOr or refuse an)' •d•tr-
tiNment, and ft ch.ante lb r•ba •Ml "tul•tlont without prior notice.
Mill Add,...: la 1171, Newport IMch, C•llfornl•
CUlllf'llD COUNTIRS IN loc1ted u follows:
COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH
330 W. BAY 2211 W. BALBOA
HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA BEACH
17875 BEACH BLVD. 222 FOREST AVE.
SAN CLEMENTE -305 N. EL CAMINO REAL
Deily Pilot Clessified
CLASSIFIED . INDEX
HOUSES FOR SALE Apta. Fumlshed
•1N11UL ,.. RENTALS
COSTA MISA tttl OIN•llAL ...
MI SA OIL MA• 11• con• MllU 41 .. Ml!SA Vl!aoa l I MIU Vl•o• -411' cou•o• f'AllUC ,:,; HIWl'O•T lllfA('M .. NaWf'OaT a1ACM 1.,. HIWf'OaT ... IOHTI ift11
MIWf'O•T MllOHTI ltll MIWf'O•T SHl'itll tnt IAL.OA COVIS , Ull Wl!ITCLI,., iftJll MIWf'O•T SNOlll IHI UIUW•Sn'Y .. Aal inn IAYC•IST tm U CIC •AY ate IAYSMOlll tnl l!AIT ILUl"f' .,_, OOYl!I. SHOlla ll:ll COi.OMA Ol!L MAI 42H
w1nct.11"1" t t• IAt.aoA ""'
••0100 ... MU.MDI IW aAY !SU.Mot .... LIDO ISL.a 4311 UMl\lllSITY PA•IC 1:1:11' IALIOA ISU.NO 4JIU ~~"d:'a•Y ::: MUNTINOTOH alACM 44* IAITILU•• 1MI f'OUNTAIN VALLIY 4411 El Tl... 12._. llAL llACH 41H
'.
.. LONI IUCN 45" Ul\llHI Tal.l.ACI .. OftANOI COUNTY 4'to CORONA OIL MAI. ,,,. •••D•lf ••ov• .. lt TURTLI llOCI( ..... -... ·-··11)1 WISrM1NSTl!I. "11 IALIOA f'l!HINIUU. I* MIDW .. Y CITY "" ll!•COH aAY t»S SANTA ANA ":It LIMOA ISLI l* SANYA ANA KllOMn 40I l•Y Ill.AMOS 1)541 LIDO tSLI t•l TUSTIN .... aALSOA ISL.AND lJSf COAST"-47" HUNTllMTOM alACM 1• U.OUNA ll!ACN 41tS HUNTINOTOM H•.Llll.OUI 1• U.OUMA MIOUl!L 4701
Y 'Mii MISSM>H \llVO C711 f'OUMTAIM VAL.IA ... SAN CLl!MENTI! 1111 SI!"-•UCM IUNSIT IUCH ltQ SAN JUAN CAl"lstltAMO of7U GAi.DiN OllOVI ten CAf'ISTllANO au.CH C1)1 LOMe al!ACN ttlll DANA ~INT 4741 UJCIWOOD 1Ut '111f'L•X. .ic. ..,.. ORANGI COUNTY IM CONDOMIN IUM ~
OUT Of' COUNTY 1611 NOTIU ........ -··-----· 4'15
OUT o• STATI Ull ReNTALS
STA1'TOfl "" U fu i h-~ w1sTM1MlT•• '"' Apts. n m s -MIOWAY CITY ...... Ml•AL ... SAJfTA ANA t•:lt COSTA MllA llM UHTA AM MITL lUI MISA VlltDI 1111
01.AHOI tut MSWl"Oltl' lllACM 1111 TUSTIN ,... NIWl"Ol.T HllOlff'I ltll
MOll!Tlf TVnH• '"" M•W..oaT IMO••• •m AMAHllM l&M WllTtLlf'f' t'IJI llLVl!JtADO CAfn'Oll tlll UNIVlltSln .. ,,.. sm HAVASU U.WI 1'11 IJlVINE 1211 LAGUNA HILU 1711 IACK •AV SHI LAGUNA "l!ACM 1711 IAST ILU•I' St4T LACUNA l'flOUl!L 17'1 CO•OMA D•l MAI. SUI MISSION Vll lO 11'11 IALSOA StoO SAN ('l.l!Ml!NTl!r 1111 IAV ISU.HOS llSI SAN JUAN CAl"lrTltANO 17'15 LtOO ISLI SUI CAl"lstl.ANO a&AClf 17)1 HUNTINOTON •IACH 1401 DANA ll"OIMr 11.tl l"OUNTAIN \IALLIY 1•11 OCl!ANSIDI 1151 l•.t.BOA ISL.ANO SHS SAM 011!00 171S Sl!AL IEACH ~ •IVl!ltSIOI COUNTY t• LONO leACN JIOI NOUSl!'S TO I I! MOYID 1'90 OlllANGE COUNTY Ulll COMOOMINIUM 1t5t OA•Ol!N Oli!0\11 S41G OUf'LElll'IS l'Olt SALi lf71 Wl!STMINSTl!'I. S4U Al"AltTMINTI POI. SALi 1"I MIDWAY CITT 541'
RENTALS
Houses Fumlahed
Gl'Ml'llAL lll!MTAU TO IHAlla COSTA MllA Ml!SA Dl'L MA• MESA VlllOI COl.Ll'OI PARIC Mt:Wf'OltT IEACM NEWl'Ol.T MOTS.
--"" ,,.
1111
TIU
SAHTA AMA MH SANTA ANA HllGHTS StN TUSTIN ,.._ COASTAL 171111 U.OUNA 11',t,.CM 1115 LAGUNA l'llOUIL 5111 MllSIOM \lllJO Sl'OI SAH CLl'Ml!HTI!' 5111 SAN JUAN C.&l"IST9AMO sm CAl"ISTllANO lliACN 57:111 DAMA l"OINT S14t tltll"LIX, tic. Hit CONOOMlfllUM ltw
CA•l"INrlRINO "'9 CEMENT, c._..., fjff CMILD CARI', Uc..._ Ull CONTRACTORS 6',. --~(I ,.~'"'ff> IMH
CA•PEr U.YINO a 1.l'l"All. UH OolAl't ltlE \ 6'Jf OEMOLITIOM MU
.. O.~T •NO set\llCI U JJ
Dl.YWALL u• El.EC UllCAl -EOUll"MENT llMTALS UH l'l!NC1NO -f'L..QOltS ..... l'UltNA(I Rll'Al•S, l!k. "It •URlfn'Ulll! l.1!'5TOllllNO • •l!l'IN•HINO lf7I OAltOfiNI MG 4110 OENl!llAL ll!lt\llCl'I un OllAOING, DIKINO ""
GU.SS ''" GRl'l!M THUMI •1• GUl'I SMOI" •'11 HEALTH CLUll •1H
KAULINO ''M NOUSECLl!~INO •1U IMTl•IOlt a-.cotATIH• 1111 tNCOMI! TA"x ,, .. tROll, am.mtllt"-II"-l lSI lllOl'llNO 17U
IN~L>LArtNO 1711 IMSU•ANCE 1111 INVl!STIOATIJllO, ~ 11M JANITOltlAL •7'1 JEWELRY ltl!f'All. lie. .... UMDSCAf'IHO •111
1 OCKSMITM "1t
MAIO SERVICE ··-··-··-•• 1&1S MASONRT, IR lCK Ult MO\llMG a no•AOI! .....
PAINT1NQ, f'•Hrll ... •lllf ''" "AINTINO. Slt9 4*5S l"ATl05 ....
~HOT'OOIUf'HY WI l"Ll.STl!••tte, P.tcll, 1.tHlr , .. f'LUMl lNG lltl f'ET GltCIOMINe •tOI
POOL Sl!llVICI '"' l"OWaa swa11"1Me "u l"U"1P SER \llCI •ttt l.OOl"INO '9M ltADIO, lt.,.ln, ftc. •t» ltEMOOELINO a Rl:l"Allt ''41 lllEMODILINQ, KITCHl'MI 194S
SCllMn S"'~-•ttS SEWJHO 191f Sl'WINO MACMIHI l.El'A11tl 491: SE,.TIC T•HKS, SIWln. lie. •11! tAILORtHG lt70 TEftMITfi CONT•OL lt11 TILE, Ceramic 1'71 JILE. Lfntl"m I Mtl'!ltt 4t1S
TltEE SERVICI! ''" tEl,E\llSION, •• ,111 1, ate. •IU
Uf'HOL5TEllY ''" WELDING '"' WINDOW CLtANINO -, •ffi
JOBS & EMPLDYf'1ENT
JOI WAMTED, MM 1lfl JOI WANTED, W._ 1111 JOI WtHrEO, MEN I WOMEN 1tJO SCHOOLS I lllSTRUCTIOM 710~ JOI l'REl'AllATION 7100 THEAT RICAL l1lf
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE FURl'llTUR& atmosphel'l', Good schools & 2 BR. Comp!, f~rn. Hea~;l ----------
lot!I of shoppg. Avail now at San Clemente • 3710 Pool. Children k. See 3 BR 3 Ba, off-water home.; Monte Vista Ave, Ct.! FOR RENT -------~~~~~~~~--1 l'IEWl"O•T SMORll
Lik• Living in Your ~~~" .. 0;:~•••
"" "" -'"' ..., ltl!flTALI WAMTED ltft ROOMS 1'011! Rl!:MT Sff!
Ol'FIC I l'URN ITURI! OFFICE EOUll"Ml!NT STORE EOU1PMINT CAFE, RESTAUll:JINT SAR l!OU11""1ENT HOUSEHOLO GOCIDI GARAGE SALE FURNITURE AUCTION APl'LIANCEI IHTIOUES
-...
"" "" "" "" .,. t $~50 $230. per mo. Families only, urn., mo. Agent 546-4141. NE\Y 3 BR. 2 ba ()n goll BAOIELOR APT, desirable FURN APT COM.
Bill Grundy, Ritt. &12-4620 =°"'~-~,-=~~-course, Fam rm, formal Joe, Girl prclered. $110/mo. Bachelor Bright & Airy, All
23S5
$14~Redee 3 Br.1% Ba. Apt din'g rm, Ahiun1, Frplc, Call G42-S400. uG. Quiet! 67.>-5752, 540-2266
Patio. Chldrn/sngls ok. "" Bltns Drps & cp!J: L.se
Blue Beacon* 64,5...0111 $295 :no. 492-2033 ' ' LG 1 BR cpt/d11>. bHns, * ~. blk to ocean $125 mo & __ $130. No pet!. 2885 f\1cndoza up. incl. util.
\\'lNTER-Bnl. Isl .• fum home
<kt l to June 15. SpflJ'kling 3
BR, 2 BA, new carpet!!,
drapes; all app l iance s.
$250/mo. 673-3M7.
ft Capistrano Beach 3730 Dr, 54>5421 2500 Sraview, Cdi'-1. * LRG clean Bache Io t, SPACIOUS 2 Br Up(>t'r. So. 832-7800 4 BLKS from Ocean v.•I adult OVET 35. $105 utll pd. of Hwy. Nr ~!ores. Adlts.
$00.2 BR rum or uni. Dupl<'X. View? NEW 3 Br, ram nn, POOL.. 54S-2407. $225/mo. 673-0980
1010 So. 'dlllYrlont; <I BR 31~
ba waterlront home &: 2 Br
1 ba garage apt. Dock.
Fenced yard, patio, garg, din rm, epts, drpR, bllns,
retrig stove CJ'lllS washer $260 I~ 772-5677 or 774-i·165. Newport Beach 4200 Balboa 4300
\VON'T LAST! ' . -
TELE-TREND Condominium 3950 Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642-4620
3 BR, 21t.r ba, all el cc I ~C=o=d=a=M=,=,.====3=1=00 SAN Sebastian m an or ,
kitchen, Lge patio. .. Leisure \\'orld, New, many
A New Way To Live
in Newport Be•ch
OAKWOOD GARDEN
APARTMENTS
DELUXE Duplex, 2 Br ca.
Short block Bay or ocean,
Fireplace. $175 n10. 213:
69S-fi012 or 211 Cypress,
Balboa. * Aft 6, 6i~l238 * extras. lease for 1 yr.
1 br CONDQ.New ctlll bltn R.'.!6-79-19.
v.·ashrr & dryer, e~rport RENTALS
pool & pvt paho, Uderly Apts. Furnished
Laeun• Beach 2705
On 16th Strttt btwn
Irvine and Dover Dr. 2 BR. Bcachlront. Crpts,
drps. re!p. adulls only. no
chlrlrn, no pets. 64·\.-0753.
RENTALS/LEASES
UNFURNlSHED
let'. S bdrm. " tam. rm.
home. Cuatom decorattd,
new cafpt!ls, fireplace, bllt.
Ins, exc. ocean vitw. 1 yr.
leaM'. Ref, ~. S350 f\fo,
per"l!ion pn?.ferr-cd. $125/mo.
CalJ 8 to 5, ~
RENT OR LEASE
3 BR, 2 BA, clase to l!hoppg.
S230 Month
N ichols Real Estate
54G.9521
WURNISHEO REf\'TALS * 3 BR, 2 BA. Crpls, drps,
2 bdrm. •Pl. at Woocl11 Cove, College Park. $265/mo.
150 yd1. lo beach -4;e. ~>1~2534
~shaded patio. Lease for ~s1"t7AR"P""J'°""'B"R.'"""2'°""'B"A'",-d°"b""lo
$165 Mo. J?nr. Close to IK:hool11. $210.
2 bdrm. flt Victoria Beach. Call Larry, Hecl t age
Exe:. view, fireplc. A few Realtors, ~-~11St
attps to ~· t.~au "3~B~R--'"27b~•.~CJ~>~tl-d-.,,-.~. -,-,,-, -lncd~
Chann ahxllo, deck w/C1Ce:Bn yd. R.ds, lst ,, )Rm, clng
view, attan ride of hwy at dt>p. req. S19S. 541)..999(1,
Woods Cove. Lease
SU5 tifo. 3200
MISSION REAL TY .f94-0731 ---------985 So. Coal! Hwy. Laguna e lJDO lSLE-4 BR. S BA
acrosa from teMis crt, 1-BR boUJe, furn. + gueal ,A,,___. cl b . Le t I v · p.....,.lli, ""· u bouse &: boult • S.. e rp c. ic-beach. $850 mo. 67J...i~89 or tori& Bdl. Sltps to oce•.a. ~
Seduded-mi. GG--1272 BAY VJ:E\Y.OLUFT'S 4 BR, J BR. 1 Ba redec. ocee:n vu 3 21, •-twnMe. i..-am ~ bib ID Qe9ceol Bay. Avail pl ut1 1~ d a 8' Oct~une $225. ~ fr ' erp,.., l'J>.", pool. [.(>n&e $375. 1!33-Q52l.
oa:AN front tune, 3 BR, 2 BR. 2 ha. $225 or 15e/opt.
2 BA. Avall. Nov l-Apr L $175. Owner Oi.a-8200 E'-cs Be-""111 $21158 ..........
TiifJ SUM NEVEn SF:rS on
01a'"""'• acHon power.
Tor 111 ad to •II uound
!bedocti.dlal-
~~~-------rr • s •Beach how.e tlmt. Bl.a;·
.Rf'81 tclectfnn ever! Sr.e lhe
DAILY PIU)T • Clanlfied
&ecilon now!
(714) 642-1170
Gener•• 4000 \VATERFR01''T w/plcr & l BR On the Bay
float for lrg boat. 2 BR, 1 . $1~\Vinter
RENT FURNITURE.
ha, .rum or uni. Lrg .deck 67!)-453.1
\\'/view. Yrly nr wintr.r . ----------3601 Finley. Appt only. 2 BR. Apt. $250 lll()nthly. 315
Adlts, no pets. 833-1134 or E. Bay, Balboa. Jnq 11.t Apt * DIRECT TO TENANT 67:~9 C. 673-1521 or 51&-ffil.
24-llr. Delivery I ~'.'.:::~:'.,,.--~~---I ~LO=;:,,VE:;;;L~YC'ia.'="yr~,'::",::--::,~,,~. •p~,:;;:t ~
100% Purchase Option MESA MOT EL \Vinter $175fmo. Ull pd.
Complete l BR Apt as * W\V \VEEKLY RATES * gar. Yrly avail. 67H790
L<>w as SZ!/mo. Kitchen, TV's ma.id service. 1 BR. UHi, Paid. $120 \Vlnter
JO.Doy Minimum I-lent~ Pool on the Bay. * WlOF. VARILTY 646-9681 6IH5.'l.1. CUSTOM FURNITURE
RENTAL
517 \Y. 19th St., Ci\f, 548-3481
I Br. turn, l blk to heh, Yrly. e 3 BR. 2 !)a duplex e
l\h1n or couple, no pet,., SHiS mo, "''inter lse
$130. Vr:ory immac. Plenty * 205 1 SI, 673-2009 *
REMARKABLY pricing, 642-3656. 208 Grant/===========
UNBEUEVABLY SI., NB Balboa l1l1nd 4355
EXTRAORDINARILY * NEW BAYFRDNT ---
BEAUTIFUL 2 BR's. 2 Ba's. 221 19th St 1 BR. 1 ba Studio type apt
V•I D'ls•re G1rden Ap1s l.<>y,·er Duple:ir. S250 vdnter wino kitchen.
Putting gttoen, waterfall I f'f'nW.I. $330 \'rly. 57!>0236, * Aft 6, 675-1238 •
~um, ~ evet)'9oiltte, LG 1 Br: Bllins. patio. Btw: 2 BR w/boat ~k. furn or
45 poril. nic. room. bUJWds, nAy & &-ach. yr I y , unrurn. Nr1v. 'i rly ~ntal.
BBQ's, Sauna, fum-unfurn. Sl65/mo Adults. 675-6731 aft 6'i3-6640. 205 Gr.\nd C.1n.1I.
1 l 2 Br. a.190 Singles from 4. I BAYF'RO!\'T: 3 8: 4 BDRlof
$135, SH It! 2000 Parsons I BR. spl, Cl08t' to bay & SANDY B~EACH. 9/~/15
Rel., &t2.8670. Be~n liar-beach Jo'Urn/unl. 1216 W. i:V('!I. 673-5299.
bor & Ntwport . 2 Blk N. 19th Bal~ mvd, NB. Eves ~· --· ----
HEY Look Here! 67>-1876 •• •>1-225tl. • Hunllngl~•<!! «OD
Bachtk:lr Apt. NF. AR DELUXE 2 Br, 2 Ba. e APTS/Royal 1111\•ailn.n,
EVf;lt\'TlllNG, JN BE:ACH Carpet, butlt·in!I, enclo9cd pa.· Pool. rec. rm. J.'f'\t. 220
AREA. $100/mo, HURR\'I tlo, prage. Clean. 5000~2 12th SI. or 219 15th 51 .. H.B.
Hom•Ffnders 645-2951 Nt'plune l714\ 629-1492. BACHELOR. UUI. Paid.
Say )'-OU MW It ln the DAil.Y PILOT WANT AD. 1r NEAR OCEAN! * --~D=Al~L=Y~P~f~LO'M::..:,: __ -=Dl~~~~=~::..::c:..;A:..=cb:.:,'.'":=;'~IL~ LJNOBORGC0.536-~1'!t
OWN HOME •• t I Wl!'S'TCLIFf'
\Vhy ray $175 tor an apt'! -UNIVl!ltSITT f'Altl( ' IR\llNI! v.·hcn \l'c can rent you one IACIC 1AT
for $140. 2 BR., newly dee, l!~T 1Lu•~ 1!:1 Tt .. crpl/tlrp. encl patios, spac IR\l lNI! TIRl.ACI
grntl~. 2 Pools! Adults only. CORONA OIL MA• · \ E IALIOA 2283 Founta.1n Yay • <Har-IAY ISLAHOS
bor, turn \V, on Wilson}. LIOO ISLI! IALIOA llU,.O
HARBOR GREENS """""0
'
0
" """ FOUNTAIN ~ALLa1'
CARDl!:N Ir STUDIO API'S llAL llACN , 2 J BR' •-LOHO aeACN Bach . ..., , I . UUlil $110, OltANOI COUlfT"I'
2700 Peterson Way, C.M. ,..,..TA AHA 546-0370 Wl'ITMINSTll!• M10WAY ('!TY
VILLA MESA APTS. SANTA ANA Mlt•Mn COASTAL 2 BR, Prlv patio. Hid pool. LAOUHA ll:A(H
2 car encl'd ........ Children LAOUN• MIOUIL o-MISSIO .. VllJO v.-elcome, no pets please! SAN CLl!MEHTI'
SI" 719 W W"-INt JUAM CAl"lfnll ... mo. • ...,..,n_ c.t.Prn••rtO •••CM 646-1251. DANA f'Ol1'11' •1v1•11ol COUl'ITY FOR rent 2 bcdrom duplex, VACATION .a.IHTAU
very clean, i mm e di ate COHOOMINIUM
PoSsession, large yard. $160. OIJl"Ll lllll f'U•tt.
RENTALS
"" "" ... ·~ "" •• "" ,, .. ,, .. ,,. ••• ... ...
~" , ... --1111
"" .... -"" "" "" "" !Ill .... ....
"" --.... ...
llOOM a aOAllO fftl MOTELS. TltAILl!lt COURTS St91 OUIST HOMl!S Sttt MISC. 1.IN1ALS Im
REAL ESTATE,
General
IHCOMI l"ltOl'l•TY fflll IUSIMISS f'ROl"l!•TY 6051 r••.1LI'• "Al.Kl H!S IUl1Nl!SS llNTA\, 610 Ofl'fl'ICI' ltlMTAL 6171 IMOUST•IAL "ltOl"lltn .... COMMl.C IAL •oeS ll'IOUSTllAL 1.IMTAL '°'O
Lon '1• •AMCNll '1H Cn'l.UI oa.ovw1 •111
•ClllACI' '* LNCI IUIMORI ,,.,
•••oRT l"•cw>r•TT ''°' o•AMOI eo. l"ltOPl!llTY •lfl
OllT O• STATI f'ROI". ,,.. MOUMTAIN • Ol!SBll!T •TU IUIOIVISlotil LAND 0011
•l!AL ISTATI! sl!•vKa '"'
SEWI NG MACHll'IE• MUSICAL INSTllUMENT PIANOS .. OROANS RA010 TELl!\llSIOM "11·1'1 a STEREO TAl"I •ECORllEltl CAMERAS & EOUll"MlfNT HOll lT IUl'PLU!S SPORTING OOOOS llN OCU LARS, SCOl"ll MISCELLANEOUS MISC, WAMTl!:ll MACNINl!•Y, Et.. lUMlfilt SrORAOI! BU ILOINO MArl•IAU SWAl"S
....
'"' ...
lllO
"" ... ... ... a• "" n• "" M• •• ... -"" ...
"" "" ... ...
::1.._ •;~::::• !i': PETS and LIVESTOCK
BUSINES) ind ~!:~ 01"1•AL =:
FINANCIAL OOGS tilt tUSll'll!IS WAl'ITID UM NOii.SES .. ,.
11'1\ll.STMIMT o.............. 'J1f LIYESTOCk IM
IUSIH!:SS Ol"l"O•TUNITllS '* CALIFORNIA Ll':ING IHYISTMl.NT WANTIO '31S NURSIRll l I'll MONIT TO LO•,. 4)l'f SWIMMIMO f'OOLI ltlN
l'l.llSOl'IAL LOAl'IS '"' l"ATIOI "U
Conf11(•! Lois Conwel l
~1.'}..9191 or Jack Ayers
517-64TI Bkr. HouMS Unfumlshed JIWILl.Y LOAl'IS '111 AWMINOS IUt COLLATll.AL LOANS •tu \l,t.C:ATJ«;MI ttU
QUJET ADULT LMNG
1 &_ 2 BR. Shaa' crpti:, bltns,
pool, beaut. lndscpd, $150 &
$1 70 mo. incl AU util. Adults
only, no (X'ts.
iu Avocado St. 646-0979
NE\V 2 BDfilt. B tam
ceilings, v.'<lOd paneling, All
rec lealuI't"3, $165. Adulls,
JIO JX'IS, Qill now 64&-0073
:* 387 \Y, Bay Street. *
$170, 2 BR, bath Ir ~~ 1tudlo,
drp!, epts, patio. Avail 9/1.
714: MS-8301 ()I' 21 3 :
~-5227
NE\\'LY DECORATEI1
2 Br w/ garg $130, F'ncd yrd
wl pat~wtr pd. 22'28 lB)
Pb1centia Ave 636-4120.
$165--QtJlET! l..8.tge de.hlX4!
2 8R, l \i BA, GE kitchen,
2enr gar. adults, M pets. 240
E. 16th Pl, 548-6.132.
CLEAN 2 BR. l~ BA.
Stud!!\, Crpts, dtps. Pool.
\Vorklng epl pre(. $145.
646-0<!l6.
3 Br, 3 ba; CJ'P!I, d~. bltn:!'.,
.,ar. )'lrd. pool, Play area.
SillO/rno. 54fl..&1!\1 a.ft 6.
•INlltAl COSTA Ml!IA MESA OI L MAI. MESA Vl•DI COLLIOe l"ARIC
NEWl"O•T =~~If Nl!.Wl"OltT . NIW,.OltT SflOflll IA YIHOltl!:S 00\1€1. IMOltP WESTCLt•• UNl\11!1.llTl' l'Alt t•YINI •ACK aAT
l~T &LUfJlll II T-IR\llHI Tlfl.JIACI COllDN A OIL MAI
IALIOA IAY ll U.NOI LIDO lSLa IALaOA ttUlfO MEWf'O•T WIST 'l""TIHA'tON ll!ACM MUMTHtOTOM llAlllOH• NT AtM \IALLI' l'IAL •IACN tAltHM II.CIVIi LOMO II.ACM Oll:MOI C'OUNT'r SAl'ITA AHA WISTMlHSTI• MIOWAY Cl" IAMTA ANA HllOMn COAST Al LAOUl'IA al ACH U.GUMA ftlOUI!' MISSION YleJO \AN (llMfi'll T .. 1AM JUAN CAl"ITT•AJM CA. 111 lt•.NO ll-'t M DAMA l'OIMT WMDOMINIUM IUl'L.llCll UlliPll•.IL
lll'Al ISTATI LOANS '3 ..
-MOllTOAO!S, TrW ~ ''~' TRANSPORTATION II• MOMIY WAl'ITEO 4lM BOATS &· YACHTS
::: ANNOUNCEMENTS !~~:~"nuisaRs !;~ and NOTICES '"Eao-sK• 1c.•T1 121f l'OUND ,.,.. Mt) 6111 IOAT TllAllERs
ftt1 LOtt 44111 IO•T MAINTENIMCI nu l"l•SONAU .as BOAT U.UNCNINO m1 ANHOUMCtMlNT'I 6'10 M-.LllllMI! eou11",
It a1•rMI 6'11 IOAT SLll". MOOlt lMO
Jt •UHlllAL.I '41t IO'T IEltVICll:S Jtl7 l'AIO oatTUAl.Y '41' IOAT ltENTAU :: l"UNl•AL DlltlCTOllS tcU BOAT CHA~Tlflll
tM1 fl'LOllllTS ••H l"ISMlftO •O-'TS 11144 u•o o• TMANlll ...,, IOAT MOVlllO ntl IN MIMOllAM .rt, IOAT STOltlOI ,,.. CIMITl!R't LOTI Mlt 10 .. n WAllnD '* C•M•TIRY Cl.Tl"TS Mlf AlltCllA•T ('lttMATOltllS tc1f FLYINO Ll!SSOl'IS = MIMOlllAL l"A•U '4ll MO'llLE Mfl~CS UU AUCTIONS t-tJf MOrOlt HOMES
1271 AVIATtON ISllVICe '4tl :t.;'c~LR~~ URS
-,.,. --... "". "" "" "" "" "" ... -....
"" ...
"" "" :m ,,.
"" )tlf T•AYl:L .m Mll'll l lKl!S .... Alll T•ANlll"Ol.T .. 1101'1 .... MOTOltCTCLaS ..... nn
.. II AVTQ TllANSf'OllTATIOll "'4S ,,,.'lf"'ll:~(OOTJ'Rl
MM LIOAl l'IDTICU ...,_ AUTO Sl:lVICES & f'Alt TS )C7t TUTOl.IHe ._ *' SERVICE DIRECTORY f11.",,T1~E~oo~~•E1.ou 1"·
Mii ACCOUlfTINI Ult JRA.ILt:ll:S, Utllih Mlf AlfSWll.IMO SlllVICI UM TRUCKS Ml1 Al"f'Ll•Ntl! ltl'l'Al•S. .. .,,. l\•I Jl!l'f'S
Mii Af'l'llAlllMO 611' CAMl"l!RS
,N.)I All"HALT 011• ISlt CAM .. lll lll l l'IT.llll t1W AJl(HITICTU•AL SllllVICI .SU OUNI' auOOIEI
JM AIJIO REl"At,11) 4"I IMl"0R1fi0 '1.110S
Jm AUTO, se.I a111t. flttlo ltc, "" Sf'Oltr CARS 170I .;1¥•1Ttll'IO dH ANttOUl!S. CUSllCS 1111 IOAT MAINTIH•.NCI IUS ltACI CAlllS, ltOOS 11U lllCK. MASONll't, ft'&. "'° AUTO l:VCNTI IUI IUlllfllS llllYICI& t.HJ AUTOS W•NTIO
It• IUILDa•J. 4'11 HIW UllS
.... CA'tll.lllle ........ ---··-WI -..UTO ~llNO "" CAllN•lMAlllHO .... UllD CA•I
.... ... .... ... ..,, • .... tS11
"" "" "" ...
"" H ll •n• "" ... -'"' ....
NOW!
NEW!
PILOT
PENNY
-PINCHER
CL74SSIFIED 'ADS
WITH A
NEW-LOW-RATE
3 LINES
l TIMES
ANY ITEM
$ LESS
OR
e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e
e Ne Item Over $50 e No Commerci•I Firms •
e No Copy Ch1nges e No Abb,..,i•tion1 e
CAL~ •
642-5678
ASK FOR YOUR
DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR
~ND YOU MAY CHARGE. IT!
Gener ii
Time for
Through a
QUICK CASH
DAILY PILOT
5000 General 5000 Gener ii
'
0 l!eorrono• leue~ cof the
four Jtrombled words be-
low to form four simple words.
TEEMOL
11 11·-11
H A D I P
I I I 1· I I ·i I
C A B I S I ! A lady trovelrng to New f 5 I I I York by olr govo birth to a ~====:::'.='..-.. boy. Tke itewarde~s called I H E E R I T I Mm on --. .,.,5
I I I I' 11 O ~r,~~~h:":~~~·
• • • • • . . you dev1lop from ""' ~ 3 below. 8 PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS t
IN l HESE SQUAl!fS
Ci UNSCRAM81E L!ll!IS I I I • ~__::F:::O~R _::A:;N~SW::;:fl~-...1..-.L. -'-· --'
5000
SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8000
,-. -.---:-, -----.--. -•• ' -..
Tutsday, !eptt!lfMr 15. 1970 DAil~ '1LOT ff
* RENTALS RENTALS
Apts. Unlumlthod Apts. Unlurnlthod
Coste Mete 5100 Ntwport Btoch 520D -· 1 BR. Unf. O"pl,f, ~. 3 BR •. 2 Ba. OU I~ ~ch.
heattd pool. Chlldrtn ok. 12'1 3.5th St. Yrly $300 n10.
5ff l26 Alonte Vista Ave, i ~'---""--,.h---•lo:.:··:_~;:,,...:7Jz:1::3·c..--~
CM * ~ 1 BR. \VATERJollONT·
NE'\V Delu."t 2 t\ 3 BR. Cpts. BALBOA BAY CLUB A.PT.
D r p s , B I t n s , X t r a s , i ...:1':.:"':.c.:"""':::.:.· Call:::::.:$::18-::::22::.ll:___
Wondland at TusUn, C.M. LRC. BAY VlE\\1-Lldo 3 Br.
67S.2150. 1,... Ba. Cpts, drps. Adults .
./ 1 BR. All utll pd, $150. 642--0807, 67;)..8592.
Adults, infant ok. 3 O 1
Avocado. 543-7442. Newport Hei9htt 5210
RENTALS RENTALS
Apts. l,!nlumlthod Apt1. Un furnl1hod
$1nt1 An• 5620 Misc. Rent•I• 5999
CAWT BE BEAT
Single Story
South Sea Atmosphere
2 Betlroom 2 Bathl
Carpeta & Onl()('s
Alr Conditloned
Private Patios
Hc11.ted Pool
Plenty of la11'TI
ENCL, Storage Garaats for
l'f!nl, 01. $10 mo. lnq: 19'59
J\Iaplf! Ave., Apt. 5, Cf\f.
REAL ESTATE
Gentr•I --· ----
21,.~ Return & spendable. 3
Clean, renttd houses &. Onfl
11.partmP.nt. near 8 f! a ch
Blvd .. 1-luntlngton Beach. c.
4 Zo~. $10,000 Do w11t
$.15.000 Total.
:a BR. 2 Ba. Pool. Lrg NICE 2 Br. Pool. SUndttk.
cl0&ets. Adults, no pets, Utll B\tnj, C/O. Adults. no pets.
pd, 188~ 1.1onrovia. Ms--0336. $l5S. G4Z-800l, 6.ii..&Ml6
$135-Nlce 2 Br. mtsls, garg, I ============
lncd yard, HURRY! lrvint 5238
Blue Beacon* 64S.0111 I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;
l BR. Duplex. Crpts, drps, NOW LEASING! Cirport Ii storage
• * * * *
""" Wh•ddy• Wont? Wh•ddyo Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Speci1I Rate
5 Llnet -5 time s -5 bucks
•lll lS -AO MUST IMCltJDI
1-W118f '" Mv. i. ., ... , ._Wllal '°"' Wlfll Ill W.... ._'l'OU• ,.._, 111'1/ll' llld....._ 1-S 11 ...... MYft'f ....
J..-H01tllNO •oa SAll -TIUOll ONl'l'l kitch. furn. FPnced patio
yard. $145 mo. 646-2826. 242 Ne\\". family and adults units "'-•~ • · t b llIDDEN VILLAGE
Realonomlc:s Corp,
Com1J1-erciaJ Bkr. 675-6700
NEAT, clean, k>eal Mobile
Home Park.' Pool, re<: room
etc. S:pend $13,000 after
$75,000 down. 1% on
Bil l i n e e , Wally f\1~)',
6'15--0116 anytime.
To Piece Your Trader'• P•radlse Ad
'
Flower St. Cf\f. \\'I~ louu recreation cu and hool 1 2 3 GARDEN APTS PHONE 642-5671
BEAUT Nww 2 RR 4-plex pre-sc ' ' ' "-25(X) Sou h Sal
I bdrnu Jrom $150. Nr. shol)o 1 la 6 UNITS Eastside Costa Have r~ mOdel '61 Chev. apts. B Ins, cpt. pr iv . . 11 hool J Santa Ana * 546-1525 palios. X!nl E-side Joe $lRO. P111i:, go • sc 5. ust ............. "o;~iiiiiiii!'i'I -1\ic~. 2 BR. Pach. Ntt:e Noma d \Vagon. Pov.'er, very
Adlls. See 81 356 E. 20th St. &auth of San Di<'go Fwy. on VILLA MARSEILLES IJOl"I. Good rental area. de!lf'ndab\e S495 v a I u e Culver Dr .. Irvine. S.13-3133. Pyramid Exchan gors . Trade for tUrn. TD'S. '
NEW lge 2 BR triplex. Pvt PARK WEST BRAND NEW 676-8800 646-fi6s2
patio, shag cpts & drps, APARTMENTS SPACIOUS Blln range, encl gar. $175. 0 1 & 1 Bdrm. Apia. DUPLEX·s1n. 1 hr. 2 blocks 4 National cash registers
Avail around 1011. 54~7517 \Vned and Managed by from shopping. Qu iet C.M. compu!er lype rings from
1'he Irvine Con1pany Adult Living area. t.M.COO. 646-5754 le to $999, 3 'depts, trade 1 BR. unf. ·$150/mo. Pool. Furn & Unlum • • for house trailer or ? Call Elee & wti' pd. Adlts, no Dishwasher. color eoordlllal·•----------1
pets. f.tesa r.fanor. 2·11 East Bluff 5241 ed appliances • plush shag Butintll Rental 60601:54c.7:.,·15<~5::_· --,-===~
\Vil!!On Ave, CM". 548-1405 --choi'c ol 2 r ~ -* 11.S acres APPLE VAL-• NEW DELUXE e ..... .,..,. e co or \VEST S'd ' t CM ./ LRG 2 & 3 BR, 2 Baths. schemta • 2 baths • staU 1 e 0 ·' • across LEY land. 623 It, H1vy J8
F'rplc, blt·ins, crp1s, drps, 3 BR, 2 BA Apt tor lease. ahOwers . mlm>red ward· from . .11crv. dept Theo frontage. Value $25.000.
encl gar. patio, 5<16-tol4 lncl spac, master suite, din robe doors • inditect light. Robbins Ford, ~d be sm. TRADE for small Business.
2 Br. w/ """""rt. lll5. \Va. nn & dbl garage, auto door Ing 1n kitchen • bn!aldast pa.rt hst! <>r offitt c:r co!fee * * 644.1627. ~,.... opener avail. Pool & Rec. ba bu prtvat 1 need shOp. Lots ol p a--r--k g . ter pd, Nr schls. 2192 area. r • ge e e 646-2971 t\1oontain home
"'A" Placentia. 6.16-4130. • FROM $265 • patio • plush l'\.nusc:aplng . . S5500 equity for brick Bar-8-Q's. large heat· STORE OR OFFICE shop equipmeni. $140. 2 BR upper. No klds or 865 Amigos \Vay, NB •~ " la I 600 or 1200 Sq Ft Park•'"g ed poo ... « !la. · · " press brakt> or ?? pets. Util furn. Avail Sept. 11ana~ by 3101 So. Bristol St. Reasonable. 646-2414 6415-1233 20. 642-337:. days. \VILLJAM \VALTERS CO. (~Mi. N. ot So. c~:t Plaza) 2630 Avon St., Newport Ba I 3 I
-DELUXE-3 BR. 212 Ba S t A yfrnt dup ex : 4 Br
Sludio 11pf. New crpts & drps
1
iCiioiiriioiiniioi;;id;•;;I iiMiiiieiiriiiiii5~25~0 an a na HARBOR BLVD front. 19x37° units. Sandy tM!ach. Xlnt bltns. $190 per mo. 546-MSl PHONE; 557-8200 Y.'/reslroom. ruo Har~r inc rt'COl'd. Trade lorT.D.ii; "'!!~~~~~~~~~1 Blvd, CM $200 mo. years · • 3 Br. 2 Ba . Crpts, drps, 1016 .,.. -::: lease. 54g.:o78.l or lndustrlal. Eves: 673--5299
E l Camino Drivi>. Ct.1. ~~., ~!g~~.~-•-•_c_h ___ 5_7_D5 , ----_______ 120, ac. S yrs old, Orange ~a-3868. eves 675-8.'iSS. ~ i -Grove. Riverside Cnty,
.
...,. OCEAN VIE\V Lrg Office Rental 6070 mngnient free. $119 M, ••· * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. Bachelor, 1 & 2 BR apls.1----------1
Garden Apts. Bit-ins, priv. ON TEN ACRES Jo"urn or unfurn. Crpts. drpl'l, SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY $82 f\1. For: TD's, land <>r
patio, heated pool , frplc. 1 .a: 2 BR. Furn 1r: Unfur11 bltn,;, patios, w a J king 1-2-3 room, up to 3,000 sq. submlt. 494-2936.
Adults. $145 mo. 546-5163. Fireplaces I priv. patios I distance to town, 100 ClifJ IL office suites. Jmmed, oc. 3 BR, Jo/4 BA ea. One house
2 lge br, new c:rp1s, 11h ba, Pooh.fl'ennls .C.Ontnt'lBkfst,. Dr., Lag. Sch. 494-549& c:upanc:y, Orange Cnty. & 1 Condo. vacant. Both-
bltns. encl patio & gar. Gd 900 Sea Lane, CdM 64-4-2till y2 BLK TO BEACH I AirpoH Irvine Commerc. lower $20.000 bracket. Trade
loc. No pets. $159. 644.(1962 !MacArthur nr. Coll.st Hwyl From SIOO. New 1 & 2 Br. Con1plt>x, adj. Airporter eq, for TD's, auto, trlr or
EAST side • 2 br, 1112 ba, LRG new apls 2 BR 2 Ra on POOL, :n~ ~. Coast Hwy. SaHoteb~ Reslaursnt, banks, Ir) me? O\\·nr/agt 546-5580. o-~. d<p•, bltns. relrig.. •1 . S ' 499-3929 <>1' 497-1630 n 1cgo & N'Pt. F"vys. * * ... "arguer11e, . of H"''Y· ==========I UNCRO\.VDED PARKING *
8 Units, good n!nta.l area.
$.18,000 equity inc om f!~
SlJ.500. For hOu.se, com.
mercial or horse ranch.
OWNER67~
COl\1.MERCIAL lnC<>me pro.
perty, free & clear, next to
&an;. Val. $6.5,000. For
units, house or beach prop.
O\VNER 67s.Q.59
Pvt ply wiU trade equity in
5 acres 2 mi from downtown
Escondido for down P•Y·
ment on So. Orange Co.
home. 646-W.6 anytime.
24' cabin cruiser, '67 Chrys-
ler. fully equipped, Trade
$1500 in boot for house equ·
ity, c:ar. smaller boat or 7
Evenings 673--1266.
1935 Ford pick·UP truck,
Real classic, in mint cond.
$1200 equity + cash for late
model pa.o;senger car.
541).299\
Commercial & income prop.
erty do\\•ntown Laguna, old·
er. Trade for San Franc::lsc:&
or No. Calif. recreational
acreage. Owner 494-1652.
What cio )'OU b&V. to tn.de 1
List tt here -ID OraDI'
Count.V'• tanrest read trad-
aq, ""' -..,., ........ deoL
* * pool. No pels. 64&-6610 Bltns. c:pts, rlrps. $250. Rentals Wanted 5990 LO\VEST R'.ATES
LRG-3 BR. Crpls, drps, pool. ~148-7983 0\1'ner/mg:r, 2172 DuPont Dr.,l!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!•!I
Family &: 2 chilli . 2'Zl4 * COROLIDO AP'J'S. 2 Br, 1 DAILY PILOT re p.o ~I er Rm. 8, Newport Beach. REAL ESTATE BUSINESS and
College Ave. 6!6--0627 & lY.. BA., frplc, dbl car· v.•/family wants 2 or 3 BR 83.3-3123 Courtesy lo Brokers General FINAN.CIAL
2 BR apt-bltns. crpts, drps. ""rt&J .. ...,.,p --• 11~•"P apt, or home, fum or un----·'------Clean. lnquitt 1552-A 673..33711-.. !JUI. "" ' furn, yrly renl, max S240 HILLGREN SQUAR.E Lots 6100 Butlnttl
Coriander. 54&-5$8. n 10. on Balboa Penin or W. 1900 sq ft DelUXt! Olt1ces :;.:;~------::.:.;~ Opportunltle.1
3 BR. 2 ba, so of Jlwy. Frplc, Ne\vporl Bch aren. 54~380 Avail. for _immed. lease in A TIENTION
2 BR. unf. crpts. drps. Pools. patio, gar. $310, yrly, Adu• days-:llS...76&1 e\'es. one o( cities busiest shop.
Kid!! ok. 1998 Maple, Apt I. only. 673-ti298 , ping centers. Will divide. BUILDERS
548--2808 RELIABLE young couple · d AND · · DELUXE 2 sty, 2 BR & den, ,,,,1,.1n1. ref'!". df'siIT" unfurn Air-con ., music, paneling, %, Acre level. comp!. fenc'd.
$175 UTlL. pd. 2 Br. 112 ba. 2 BA, bltns, c:rpts, drp,;, 2 h 1 ho . NB crpts. drpii, Max. park'g It Rm for 10 units. Owner will SUDDENLY
Pvbl il~ati~h ~.e .,,,"]gr 339 irpl, patio, S/Hwy. ~2747. c:IO:~ 1~1 w~~r. $~5 1~r ~ maint. 270 E. 17th St .. C.1.1. fina,nce Joan at 11,;70 in· ~C:=•:=:':=:'=· ==·=~='"=·~='=·== 12 BR. North of llwy. rresWy or leS!'i on yrly basis. r.tr Bram 2lJ: 651·2700 collect terest. YOU'RE IN
pa i"'"'· Avail 9/15. 12'5. •18-1'39 DESK SPACE $22,SOO. 5200 675-3299 WRK'G CouptP. "''anl.s: 2 Br 305 No. El Cimino Reel PeJTOn Realty 642-1771 BUSINESS
PARK NEWPORT -care MARGUERITE, So, of unfurn. crpts, d r 11. pf! 11, Son Clemente -MA
free livg ovr!kg the water. 7 J-hvy. 1 Br. unf. Adults. no bulltins, fenced yard, pvt 4924420 Acreage 6200 KJNG
pools, 1 tennis c:ts, $750.000 ~ts. Squares only, 642-7898. garage, Approx. $130 mo. ----------1 GQQD MONEY
Spa. From $1 75 to $450. lfave 2 cats & l-Oy poodle. DESK SPACE CABIN & full 5 ac. S3.500.
Bach. I or 2 Br. Also 2 sty Balboa 5300 646-4665 afl. 6 & weekends. 222 Fore•! Avenuo Small down 8c. $.10 J)('r nlO. (Recession Proof)
Townhouses, Elcc:. kit. pri Real choice land-A Terriric
pat. or bal Subtrn prkg.pot OCEANf'RONT 2 BR lower Rooms for Rent 5995 Laguna Beoch buy! Free ipaps, Write We're ~proud to talk
maid ser. cpl~. drps Just N. duplrx, Penin, S250 ;i-ly, •94-n.•"" Roberts, Box 4:11 Yucca about our business. lt's of Fashion Isl al Jamboree 673--5729, BEAUT. home w/rool has ., ""°° Vall£'y; or local ca 11 fascinating. Dynamic. AP-
&. San Joe.quin Hills Rd. 644. extra BR for employed CORONA de! MAR: 5 642-1262. peals to the small investor. I.:.;:;.:::=-..,-,.-=,.---I No experience necf!SS8.ry. 1900 for lea.,ing info. la<ly. Pl'ivn. $100 mo. RM/SUIT E. Storage & Gcivernment land·S5 aci-e With very little money he
ON THE BAY Balboa Island 5355 546-6740 patk!ng. 1080 gq fl. Groond Write-Land Package, 1185 or she can achieve finan-
Enjny v.·aterfronr activity lo. LITTLE BAL ISL WOllK.ING Or college girl. 1,100
12.r, 2 Ba. Avail 6°7;~0~1· Arrowhead. San Bndo 9'1410 cial satisfaction -quickly
gether w/ the spaciousness G • Ki!chen &. home priv .l ;,·jji"u'ASEii:;;;'m~~->~··~'~1·===:::=====: or moderately. It's yours
ol luxurious.·apt. convenienc. o~;~id kca2;f ·B~a t;~,~~· S50/mo Ref. f\torn. :;is-3909. lt'OR LEASE Lrg modem -10 g~d1~ a vending ma-
es w/ the atmosphere of a oc · • · ocean view Offices. Shops R. E Wanted 6240 h. Th be Unfurn. Avai l Oct. J, $350/ CLEAN pvl: Rm-Ba . & ~uitahle-pror or busine~~ ___:__:;.;:c:;::::. __ .::,:.; <' 1ne firogram. e sL ~v~A.~;~~ :i:f' d;~ie;r!~; mo. yrly. No ehildren or f'n!ranct'. Io r rf'sponsiblc 1999 S OHthi Hwy Lagu~ WANTED Localion for ~fne~~ lf'.~f~bus~ss~'Jte "J!
pCt11. 673·0207 v.·nman. Aft 5, 1193--0!22 Bc:h. '49.t-9-t71. ' Liquor ~lore or cvcktail cations. Provide finest Une
palio, $650. 673·84!4 * ;1:, per \\'f't!k·up w/kil· . . lounge In Orange Co. \Viii o! snack items. W e train,
2 Br. unfurn. Crpts, drps, ------1 l'hen . s.10 per v .. C'ek-up Apts. L~xu:Y8N'wd oUi~s. pnmc purchase or lease prop. counsel, guide, hold your
patio. pool, bltns. $160. Huntington Beach 5400 MOTEL. 548-9T."i.i eac Iv ·· air, cp!s, 642-3982. hand until you're firmly
Se11.cliff ~fanor Ap1s, 152.'i =oc-=,,.-=-:-:=---,-1 rlrapes, etc, 2-4 or 6 rm. K . . entrenched. No experlena! Pla~ntia. 5'18-26S2 a, k Near Oceanfront. Dceanvic1v COLLEGE Or working girl. ~uitcs. {213) 3!»-00la call ATLUA ·K9NA: Res1dent1al necessary. J ust honesty, in.
about our discounr. sundeck. Sinogfl'{'P. Ne11·er Bal. Isl. Kil & TV rm, tele. collect ~~4).Suhmtf price & terms. t.egrily, \ViJ!ingness to lis-
(11."t 2 Br. bltns, cpl.~. drps, $70 rnn & up. 675-361.t * NEWPORT 107 After 12 noon. ten, work and give good
'l BR. 2 BA apt deluxe. High /n<Iry. Nr shops & pier. $165 BUSINESS d service <>n bluff w/bay view. Avail At11fs, haby ok. ;J36.-2131. Room & Board 5996 Bt'ach-mOOC<rn/dlx ofUce~. an You 'nf'ed a car and at
Oct. 1st. $265. Adlts nnly, no 1.c=:.c:.,::;::"-.:::::_::::c::::::__. I Air/cond. H1d . Priv. ba. ~A..::.;N~C~l~A~L,____ lrasl $600 to $1500 for
pets. 1.15 Domingo Dr. Apt. ;11:,.1 Br. R/O, Cp!s. t1rp11; 2400 W. Coas1 Hwy. B l minimum investment strlct-
5. 644-46.'lG or 64!"rl260. klids. pets, sngls, students ok. Motels, Trailer APPROX 700 sq ft at 1652 u0s ness1 'ti 6300 ly 11or eqNuipm1ent andxtin·
B u• Beacon * 645-0111 Court• 5997 N""'t Bl. CM. N•w c<pl, ppor uni et ven ol'y. o ee or e ra • BAYFRONT • -·· ,, '"' kiod "•"ired. "' NE\V LlJX 2 & 3 br. by $6Nt"GHT S:\O k drps. $150/mo. 642-2821. Altil. ambitious and willing to
LUXURY Apts. Starting beach! Crpts, drps:, bltru;, SUNNY AC~Es Moi~' ~~ 612-5106. WANTED 11 expand.
at $375. e 642-2202 ga r. 642-361 5. 646--0841. • UP 1 3600 1 Del · Vending Is a vigorous 4-,..::,""=~-'-=C:,.=-=--I ::;:;.:_:c:_::::::,_:=c:::.c.. __ 1 New port Blvd, CM . 0 sq t.-uxe, air PART TIME billion plus rt'Ce'SSion proof
'l BR. studio, 1112 BA, crpts. $125, 2 BR, Cpls, Drps, 5-1f:.!Pl55. cond, crpt11, drp11, In com· Reliable person for this area business. Cash sales. No
drp!I, nr Hoag Hosp. $11!.i Bltns, Garage. * * WEEKLY ·Rales. SJ.:A pute.r t.-eott'r bldg, 646-1425 lo rest<><;k candy & s~ack ac-c~dit risks. Equipment
ps. nr lloflg llosp. $185 * Aft 4 pin, 817--31'27 * LARK MOTEL. 2Z01 or ~6-60llO counts Jn co~mercial and v.•orks fot you d ay and
&12-{)5!16 2 HR. Near Ocean. Frplc, Newport !llvd, Costa MeM. Nt.:WPORT otrlc:es c:rpt & ractory locat1011s by our night -even while you * NEARLY new 3 hr, 2 Im, pa1io. Crpts. drps. Adul1s. -==========I <li-ps, ocean view, from $75. company. We are a nallon. sleep. Q u I c k turnover. l INDB -Call 'd · Original investment can frplc. crpts, rirps. No pets. . ORG CO. 536-2579 Guest Hames 5998 owner alt 6, 675-4644. Wl e co. rated in Dun & be returned in short time.
$275/mo. Jill 32nd s t . e 1 BR. NEW! F'in?place. --000-1200 Sq. fr. Office. also Bradstreet. Excellent Im· ReQuires <>nly 6 to 8
548--0272 Near Ocean. Patio, Adul!s. PRIV. Room for Ambulatory 600 sq. ft . store. S90 & $150. merlia!e cash income for 4 hours per week ot serlou5
3 BR. 2 BA. Unfurn. Crpts, LTNDBORG co. 536-2579 lady in 11c'd guest home, CM 646'2130. lo 8 hrs, weekly work {days attention. Like getting re·
drps, blk to ocean. Yearly 2 BR d hi CO!lta i\Tesa. Good food * NEWPORT BEACH * or evesi. You may expand tirement pay, annuity or ·~-67 .. onco ' Cl'J)ls, rps, tns, ~rrvrrl family 1 l y I e . eun/">O. Alr "o·d. lo .. full" li me later wit h our pension -only better! .,..,J, ·-.-.o\JOO· children ok. No p et s. 64,. ,~91 .,,,., " -.... " 1. If you're·~er1ous. slncf!re,
YEARLY $200/mo. 2 BR .. $130/mo. Call 5:'.6-ll!i:i .,....~. · Ervin • 6Th-lli01 inanc:lng if yciu desire No lf'.r~ talk. Letter preferl'f!d. ELDERLY Guests, ocean Pxperience npc:essary, • We g1v1ng n 11. me , address, ne~~327;;·l8th St. NB. 1 BR TwnhM', pool, garitgt, view, lovely h\'11ne in 2 Fumished Suile~. will train. phone number, and suffi-
crp!, (lrp11. bHns, wash-dry. Laguna Beach.,497-IS86. Coast lf\\•y, NB. $125/mo. $1750 TOTAL CASH cicnl refercnct• to verify.
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Marketplace
patio, $140. ;<,4~1019. Phone 645-2182 REQUIRED
2 Blks from beach. New 2
Br. Apt. Crpls, drps, patio,
g11.rage. $165/mo. 968-3132.
Wrilf'! To Fast results are just a phone Of1'F1CE Space av a I J, For more information wrire: U
call away! Call in yciur ad Newport Beach, 2043 "Dislributnr Division #2.1" tttry
now. 642-5678. Westcliff Dr. &1~2820. P.O.~ 1739, Covina, Calif: Industries, Inc.
91722. Include pho"e num· 119~ Empire CentraJ, Dept. 6715A 60l5 ber. Dallas-, Texas 75247. Fountain Valle y 5410Fountain Valley 5410 Commercial -~~~~~~iii~~~ii~iiiiiiiiiiii~. STO_R_E-~B-,d-.~Joi:~-.-~-.1B'~Eruc~o'-ME""'~Sc~l~l"'•"'m""p~lo_y__,•d
:J.ounlairu
~ledit~rra11ean Styl. Lu~ury
I '1 2 Bedrooms -! Balht
Adult Living
Fnmlshecl '1 Uolurnlahod . '""' • oi.11-.111.,. e Sli•1 C•rl'@I•
e Prl-. '•'kt' e CJ_,,,, C.r•1•• • ._,...., c.tu,.,.
9565 Slater Avenue
~ 01.J •• .,,_.., .. ft..-111 ~"Jr.I'.;., ~ ttf ... 11\llt f9 IHrtfl'llftll, 9fl8.6MS
' • 1
. .
686-698 W. 19th St. Bethe:! with a small investment.
To"'c.n corne r. 548--1768 agl. Grow with Union Oil Co in the }lun tinaton Beh
Industrial Rental 6090 area. Jli~h prollt & group
--· -<--. --·-·-. bf!nefUs. Cali Paul Lambach
Fiberglass OK
7'"JO sq, fl. -M-1 . .. .
'1KlO ~Q. ft. -lvl·l
Hlls 220/3 phase
Contact Tad Devine
day11 2131860-6.531, eves
213/244-3994.
Newspaper Dealership
F'or L.A. 1-let'll.ld Examiner
in Costa Mesa. Be In busl·
ness for You~U. Cash de.
posit n?q'd. Wri!e Box RP,
2662 Lincoln, Anaheim,
**RESTAURANT, 42 seal!!.
Fantastic opponuntty! Sub-
mit. DlinA Point. 496-904.2 aft
6, 494-8182 mornlng11,
R~altors
673·4400 ME.AT A-tARKET & DELI.
Next to Hun t l n1 l on
..,..,~~~~'!'!'""'""IHarbour. 3200 sq, f t .
M-1 SHOPS :ttl/;92-2444.
Costa MeM nr 16th It. Po-l,:;-;;Bo'::a:'.:u"ty'-Shopi':::-,"°"to"r"'..i..,-,.-=121
mon$, 1350 to 2100 i;q ft. 3 in Laguna Ct) Jn SC.
p h 11i ~ 4! power & htat. 49fr9839.
645-0991, e~: 673-e809. IBu,,::;;t..:l:;:l_::.,,Se,.,l'"J ~,-,_~'!'n~d,~11
FOR l5e • 5300 i;q. ft. prime -aeek II ·It'• all 1v1Uabl~
ware h 1 e ,o;pace.all/part. lhru Daily Pilot Owllied
lrvfM Ind, Mr. BuUAl'd ads. Place ~r • d
~l now •• CA1l direct 64.2-5678
ACTIVE PARTNER
MaMgemt'nt Ability Dutie"!i :
Coordlna!lng, Public rela-
tions. No se.lling req'd. Tuta1
cu.h Investment $25.IXXJ.
Salary S.100 per wk + share
ot profils, should exceed
$20,000 Jst year. MO$t rigid
investigation provided by
llppt only. Amtrtcan
Yachting Aune, 673Mll.
e:x~ U.
Moner to L .. n 6320
1st TD Loan
811 INTERESr
2nd TD Loan
Tmm buld on tqUltY.
642-1171 545411
krv!nf tbrbot area 21 )ft.
S.ttltr Mortv• .. Co.
3.16 E. l71h Street
............. ---,--.-----,,-.-.-·-~----------------- ---.--,.--.--r --.-,,--,-,--.--...-::--~-~--.--,-r.:--:-~---... -,-..,.-..,.._,,_,_ -
Morft••, Tru1t Deed1
$25.® lit 'I'D on 5 ac view
~•tatft: in San Ju a n
~Good owner will
build. .,.. int. only, qrtly
AU due 5 yttn:. Bkt, 49J.1106
or 49f.1100.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES
Found (FrH Add 6'00
FOUND: Sat. A.l-1.: Black
Labrador pup. Approx. 3
mos. old mal~. Vic. Santa
Ana & Santa In.be:!, N.B. _ ...
KEYS Found Oil be'acb vie.
Island & Balboa. Inquire
at tn:int counter, Daily
Pilot, 2'Zll Ba1boa, N.B.
TIGER-Striped ldtten Jound
vie J.fesa North Shopping
Cent~r. Has fl~a collar
549-0918.
Found-black & wt\ilt-kitten
w/tlea collar. Vic. Hunting·
ton Contirwntal. Claim RI
9602 Comwall H.B. 96S-5650
S~fALL Black .l w h i I e
~hAggy female dog vie
La.Paz Rd, Laguna Hills.
83"-1!129.
FOUND near Pariso & Mon-
tanoso in Mission Viejc>.
Gray tabby Perisan cat
v.·/flea collar. 830-6649 aft 5
FOUND dog, Vic. Nt~'land &
\Varner. H.B. Dtst r i be,
847-<SOO
APPROX 9-ll, gray/wht kil·
ten, Vic: Hanover St.,
College Parle:. 54&-7684
11)..Spd bike round ln Cd.M.
Oall to identify.
67>m'1
FOUND-Man'11 gold '\11-edding
ring, U-mnos Dr, C.M.
540-2458.
RING: Found Orange County
Airport.~1
Lost 6401
wsr Sept 12, black male
-poodle red flea & choke col-
lar, Llc. lag. Vicini!;)' Stater
Bros. on E. 22nd St. Family
sick over loss. 54s-6TI6 aft.
5. Reward!
LT TAN German Shepherd,
blk tip en tail, dark noge
name ''Nad a'' vie
Jeurgensert's Broad w a Y,
Laguna 496-4740
I..OSf-Mixed male sheepdog
4 yrs, Black w/white chest
&-feet. Gray head k hind
legs, Approx 35 lbs. "Troy".
Reward. 67l-50ll.
Bl.ACK & white cal wl
black moustache, vie Little
Corona Beach. $50 Reward!
sr~3497
LOST: Au1tralian Shepherd.
Grey wlblk $POI:$. Fem, 3
mos old. Vic: Balbca
Island. 615-3499
wsr yoong s~ cat,
two flea (.'Cll\ars v i c.
&oenario & Fantasia.
Reward 846-1543
Schools
and
Instructions
1'his variety of fine schools
could introduce
you to a new tomorrow.
For further information r•9•rdin9 tho Daily Pilot
Schools and Instruction Directory
•
•
•
•
•
•
CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325
.... 2 ..... 11
Hof li•l•nc•d l11nc;h••
s .... ,k •
Hom•·lik• •fmotphe1•
CoMNt• a ,, ... pl1y
Cr••tiv• •ctivifi•I
Colle9• tr•in•d +••Ch•''
CERTIFIED KINDERGARTEN
IN COSTA MESA-
2 LOCATIONS
1937 Church St.
\ 1 blk. HSI of Newport obovo 19th)
Phone: 646-3636
795 P•ul•rino
(2 blks. W. of Bristol nnr So. Coast Plaza)
Phone: 540-1919
ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES
ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES
Announcements 6410Announcement1 6410
Aircraft ~lying Service
Offers A
Back To School Special
PRIVATE PILOT LICENSE-$550
For 35 Hours Flight Training. A FUlly
Equipped Cessna 150. We Are Not A Club
& Do Not Charge Initiation Fees Or Month-
ly Dues. Rental Aircraft Available At Reas·
onable Rates. Fly The Special Cessna/Doyn
Skyhawk. FM & VA Approved Flight
ScbooL
19531 Campui Drive, Suite I
Orange County Airport, .540-9656
Enjoy Success in Life
through Modem Cosmetology
COLI.E'tE of BEAUTY
offers only the most advanced, updated
Courses and Techniques. Your &kills
will be only as good as the training you
have been given.
New Classes Start Each Tuesday
Register NOW
646-2919
o.,.. T• r.•nc -TMMey Tllf'I smn1 • .,
N• A,,.1~ NMellOrf -We.ti Dolle ly ShHlltflt.
1895 Newport Blvd.1 Costa Mesa
2817 S. Bristol, Santa Ana ·540-0667
SEW-KNITS
MEN ...... _. ....... ,,,,,,..,WOMEN
0. INHALATION THERAPY
0 MEDlCAi: ASSIST ANTS
0 DENTAi: ASSISTANTS
0 MEDICAi: SECRET ARY
0 EKG TECHN ICIAN
• REHABILITATION TECHNICIAN
0 ORTHODONTIC ASSISTANT
e STUDENT PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE e DAY l EVENING CLASSES
• OWNED I OPERATED I Y MEMBERS OF THE PROFESSION e GRADUATE PLACEMENT SERVICE
~v. ~ CALIFORNIA ~\ PROFESSIONAL ~ 't>Hru>THE WORLD SCHOOL
OF MEDICAL.& DENTAL PERSONNEL
1895 Newport Blvd., Costa Meu 645-2922
Introducing
Frog Lovers
To Chopin
Parents, don't wait until
1our child is out of the Frog 1
Lovers Age before you give
them the gift of music -
You wait and it may be too
late! Children in the Frog
Loving stage (4-8) are the
perfect age for ]earning
music.
Yamaha, after years of research, designed
the Yamaha Music Course to assure that all
children can learn music.
You do not have to buy an instrument. there
is no home study -just lots of fun for your
children while they learn music,
Classes are now enrolling -· \Von't you
please give us a call and let us show you the
whole story of tbe Yamaha Music Course!
Y Our biggest reward will be when your
frog lover looks up at you and tells you .•.
"I gave my frog a new name, Beethoven."
Yamaha Music School
642-1844 '
GLAD TIME
PRE-SCHOOL
15th & Monrovi• Strfft$
N1wport Bt•ch
(Hoag Hoipit•I Are•)
GLAD TIDINGS
PRE-SCHOOL -ELEMENTARY
Application$ Now Being Taken For Fall
ClasMS, Full Day Kindergarten & 1st Grade.
Small Cla$seS Individual Help
Phonic$
Licetlffd p,..School
With 9uolifled THChers Ir Dlfftter
SPECIAL RATES FOR FIRST 25
PRE-SCHOOLERS WHO REGISTER!!
646-6620 or 546-7866
SAUCERMAN SCHOOL
ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
88 FAIR DRIVE -COSTA MESA
Grades 1 through 9
Small group and individualized teaching to
meet the reaH stic needs of youngsters.
Abilities will be challenged by good teach·
ing and a variety of educational materials
so that more effec tive learning will result
MOTIVATION
Operates only from within a person -not
from the outside. Good teaching can stim-
ulate motivation within a youngster by
building on successful learning experiences.
Nothing succeeds like success !
WHERE THE PROGRAM
FITS THE CHILD !
\Villard H. Saucerman, Ed. O.
Telephone S4M060 School
548-1751 (eve.)
ENROLL NOW FOR FALL
IN COSTA MESA ===~~=~-=~-=====~1--------------.,
I ._. ~ -.: I ENROLL
NOW!
I t . I 't ~ I ii 1 •J, J SEPTEMBER 14 I
I.OST Vic Warner & .A.II-Day Classes -I· .r " I Newland-Siamese male. red For weight reducing program to establish I
flea collar k infected eye. statistics for rapid permanent weight Joss. Kindergarten thru 8th Grade I ~ o: S
WANTED
OVERWEIGHT LADIES
BLACK beaded coin pune containing rings. C.~1'. area.
Re\\11.rd 546-3811 M r s •
Foster
557-9302. conducted by qualified physical culturists.
SM. tan sh...,, "°" w/fi~ Mu.st be a minimum of 20 Pounds over-S-T·R-E-T-C-H e TEACHING THE. 4 R's WITH PHONICS I I :::'.~Asi'icm1'?"'ofo-~:~~ ~e~fi~\.~:;~~~~~;i,i>g~~~~'h /:i~~dJ~! c~'::;. •DOOR-TO-DOOR BUS SERVICE EARLY ACHIEVEMENTS CENTERS, INC. I
Reward pletely confidential. & SEW (TM) I LOST: Germ. Sheph~rd , • • e BEFORE AND A1'~TER SCHOOL CARE On September 14, the Sunflower Early
ft!male . Silver grey & black. A.SK FOR MISS POWE LL -537-5414 1 Achievement Center will open its doors to. I
REWARD. 897-1580 "!!!!!!!!!! CLASSES "!' Call or v.·rile today children ages 2-11. The program is designed I
C.M. Small B&\V beagle, -------II to support your child's individual growth male deg. Flea col & choke Personals 6405 Cemetery Lots 6418
chain.646-4165aft5 -------= 8 1 hr. $1500 HAWTHORNE I pattern while building his character, inde ..
GREEN _J>anot w / yello\\' FREE•' BEFORE heed sites in soon LnlOfts II pende~ce. re~~ect £or othe~s an~ respe.ct for I
head, 14". Hunt. Beach le be develcped atta at self (tn add1l1on to t h b · a~a. Call 842-2696 discount. Pacific View CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS mee ing is as1c cir· I J.1emoria1 Park. Paul Morning -Afternoon !.1 ricular needs).
E. C.M. Reward. Beige Ieng HUNTINGTON BEACH L!rlcten, Ccunselor 673-0372 and Evenin11
hair cat, male, blue eyes, • I I blk spot on"""' 54,_5657. POWER SQUADRON 'S SERVICE DIRECTORY IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY I For information and application lo tho
BASIC BOATING 1883' B kh t S t S II EAC ?<.1AN'S Yellow/g1.d . "''atch COURSE Appliance Repair• " roo · urs tree . l un ower -2515 \Vest Sunflower Ave .. 1 1.n.;t 9/ll. B.P.P.A. "' Huntington Beach Parti 6510 LINGERIE CLASSES Fountain Valley. California 92708 II Santa Ana -call Mrs. Ruth Brewer. Sun-
v.'tldge. Call 673-1-170. High School 1714) 962-3312 Dower Director, (714) 540-4750.
4 MOS. Striped calico kitten Rooms lll & 122 •washer k Dryer Repairs• 3 2 hr. $600 I
Glenneyre & Anita Laguna Starting Sopt. 14 and rree Estimates. \Vorlo: Lessons L A MEMBER OF THE u.s. FINANCIAL GROUP
Beach. REWARD. -494-2386 Guaranteed. Call 536-3159 ~======~=========ii!!!!!!!.J!!!~.!!!!~!!! - - - - - -each Monday throunh SERVICE DI ECT = November • R ~~ SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE ~!RECTORY S_ERV ICE Dl~!_CTORY SERVICE DIRECTO RY
Personals 6405 i ---------Babysitting 6550 -Do you "'Tile Poetry? --. Brick, Masonry, Cement, Concrete 6600 Carpet Cleening 6625 Gardening 6680 General Services 6682 Housecleaning' 6735
Remember what you tan de CHILD Care for mothers etc 6560 * nJU.Y LICENSED * with 1~ scribbles SS wise. who have tc v.wk & don't CONCRETE, All types, ~ ~· AL'S GARDENING RAIN gutters In s fa 1 led. SO. An1erican Lady olfel'li
Renowned Hindu Spiritualist SONGWRITER'S want to Jeavr their children BLOCKWAl.LS • Planters -est. Sawing, breaking, haul-;~ ~ tor Gardening & small land-Rainy seascn here soon. ser\'ict to cl ran houses,
.Advice on all mattm. \VORKSHOP just anywhere. walking Patios -Orivewa~ _ ing, & Skiplcading. Service ~-~ scaping services call 540-5198 Free est. Reas! %&-220,'l ironing, shopping, Exper.
~i~~~· ~~=s= {Song wt i I er• s artists distance lo Pomcna & Sidewalks. 642-9852 morn or . & qua lity. 54S-8868 Bob CARPET Serving NeWpOrt, CdM, Cos. Remodeling, fence bldg.. cocktail perlies. Business
week, 9 AM. 9 PM \\'Orkshop) Sen1inan; every \Vilson 5Chools. 64&-8662. eve. 110RE Concrete patio for STEAM CLEANED la Mesa, Dover Shores, painting &: gen'I repail'l'. prop\!' or fa1nilies 11·ithout
312 N. El.C8mino Reiil, Thur 7-9 pm. For info call ADAMS &. tl-fagnc\ia, nr le.ss money. Artistic ~Ning, REASONABL E RATES \Vestclifl . Reas. Xlnt. r'('f's. 642·5471. chil<lren. $20 day. 494-7480
San Oanente, Al 638·1297 btwn 6:30 & 9:30 Nr\vlarwi Sehl. F'ncd yan:I _ Cabinetmaking 6580 Lie., call Ma.i: at 6#-0687. 541-0807 JA PANESE Gardener. bf\h\'n JP!\! & 6P)I. wkdys
49'Z-9l36, Sj2-0076 l -'""'-""·~-====~-I good lunches, S da.}'11. Pick CEJ\1ENT \Vcrk ct all kinds. monthly rate, Gen. cleanup. Hauling 6730 I ,;';;"\;;;yr;! c.-;;::c::-=:::----
1"'-:--===-=,--PALM READINGS up no later than "6. $20 per Fine Cabinets & Shelving Free esl CARPET CLEANING Reascnable. F'rce est . -~--DUTCH l\1aint. ~er\flt'(', car-
Single • \Vidowed. Divorced Cards & Sand Readings \vk. 968-73~. * 494 _0602 * 63&-0074 Spo!tl'd areas hand cleanerl &12-2239 T.N.T. La\\'n Sc r vic ~. pel cll'11nln i:::. Ooor \\•axin.I!'.
Men & Women Help in All Matters EXPER Mothfor nr St. John's =========~I DECORATIVE CONCRETE befol'e & alter shampooing AL'S Landscaping, Tree ~arage cle_an-ups. ha~ling ,i:,-windo\v \l'as:hing. 537-1508 if
10 M.f-10 PM, 7 days &,, Sonora school!l ,v 1J 1 DRIVES-WALKS-PATIO to assul'(' removal cf an pos. removal. Yard remodeling, hght n1cv1ng , 5 4 8-.-i 86 3, no ans call aft 3.
213 • 697-9272 La HJ.bra babysit. my hollli.", Havt Carpentering 6590 CALL OON. 642-8514 sible stains. Fer fast guar· TrdSh hauling, lot cleanup. 531-3729 WOULD \'OU BELIEVE Everyone'• looking for the
right one, We have a Wa::J.
541-6667 24 hr, record.
FULLY UCENSED ~f'!i. 54&--1692. ·-------i"CONCREI'E \VOrk: patios, anteed service, Call G4&.so96. Repair sprnklers. 673---UOO. HAULING $10 A LOAD I'll Clean Your 1-lome fer
Lic'd Day <:arr. 7 am to 5:30 CARPENTRY drvways, etc. Ll ce n s e.d . __ . GARDENING SERVICE Clean Up. Tree Serv. Gen. Slue Chip Stamps.
pm "'kly, llot nie11.ls. Har-MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Phillips Cement. 548-6380 DIA-1\TOND Carpet Cleaning Experienced Japanese Pruning ~2528, 543-8043 894-6103
bar/Baker. 546-1539. Too Small. Cabinet in Pl'" Back to School Special 548-0228 TRASH & Gange clean-up, 7 \VJNDOVi'S & wall~ '''ashed. ~ ~ly~5!9~J~~~ -----------.-.-b-,,,-U~ti-ng-.-M-y-ho"m-,-ages I: o lb• r cabinets. Contractors 6620 300' S15. Fl'<'e E~t. EXP. Japanese Gardener. da)'ll. SlO a load. t'ttl!: est. Firs. stripped, sealM &
SAGE.-Aile: about cur Las FREE EL TORO 545-1175, Uno answer l~avt J-..... -------Jo"':::::'::ai::r·::l"'=ta=ll=. :::="="='='=17· Gen. cleanup. Hauling trees. Anytime, 548-50.11. \lll:\rd. Free est. 897-7834
I m!g at 646-2372. H. O. ll-1aint. yaJ'CI 646-0619 y ARD JG 8 r, c I ranu"-day nr night 613-3090. Vegas vacation,. 10 AM to Any age \\'t con1e. !'W·W * TH.E RE1'10DELERS * Floors 6665 '"
2 AM, 1 DAYS. 2930 \\'. TAKE Care of ""''r children Andtf'IOl'l Free ests -JOO',~ financing Complete Yard Caret Remove ln'i:J, ivy, trai;h. I · --
C-·I H-. NB. ~• •~. ,.. Q at C I -· K' c. ---------Jt•. "'" '"1 Grade>, backhoe, 962-8745. ron1n9 6755 .._.. .. ,, .._.__ Basic boating cours~ in my hon1e, Victoria & u onsr, carpen .. ,., ~ 1tc .... ns, garageii " .....,.....,,.,
BODY PAINTING offered to the public Harbor sr 11.rea. 642-1075. l!11g. all home imprvmnts. r a r ports Cc mp I et e CARPET VINYL TILE Caroening: La.net cleanups, M_OVING . ~arngc cl1>an.11p & \\'ILL DO IRONING
AT YOUR STUDIO by the Balboa Power e LOVING car~ in my No job 100 sm. Free est Rl!:modeling . LIC CONTR.. FREE ESf. sprnklr liY$ roto-cement hie hauhng. Reascnablc. Sl.25/hr. Collegr Park Arel!.
OR HOi\.1E Squadron. Sa i I as home -hot lunc:heg, Jenced ~1059. Qualily Contra<"tors 642--300) * 540-7262 * v."Crk . c.o. Y~ncey, 646-5860 Free estimates, 64:)..1002. 5.~7-!1705
A RELAXING AND well as power boat~ y11.n:I. C11.ll 646-5151. ' QUALIT\' \Voodcraft, sml MY \VA\', quality home F . R • CLEAN UP SP~lALIST Housecleaning 6735 * IRONING MY llO~IE SI ruN~FILLED ART J-"ORM ling taught. Starting • \\'ANTED: Childn:n to gen·t constr. & earpenteey. rep.air, Walls, l-eiling, floors um1tu,.. estor1n9 Nrw f~1K'e & repair. odd un hr. Sprclali7.ing ln pant!!
HRS.12-3A<\t, * 5$7-4290 * 7 PM M S t 21 tend. niy hom< C .~!. 1-'tee comulttttion & quote. 1!1c. No jOb loo small . & Rtfinl1hi"S1 6675 job!!. Rea!!.. 548-@55 & !lhirts. f>4~381L · on., ep . . Call Ken 64~. 548-4235. S.1J.-111!H BAY & BeA.Ch Janitorial SWINGERS! New Orange every ~fonday n j t e are11. ~G-6631. ROTOTILLING. Tre<>~ !: C • _ _, ,1 IRONING IN ~tY HOME ~-G·""· F-1-info t~lne Custom Wood"-11rk ADDITIONS LT Con.<1•--FURNITURE Slfipplng & o. '"· ---~ 1 arpel~. \\,,.._,ov.·!!.. • oor.:;, I" C '' SI•· h u.o. """"· "' .... ~. ' for 13 weeks. At New· --M····-. R•s'•·n"·I. '·n,m'I ' · · ull\,.-l(,,n.i.,,. remov•:u. new a"'"~· et", Res & c omm c ·I. ·~ .-; · .-..ii r "~~ SCSG PO Box n--tM •nt '"S · ... "" ...,., ua ....., lioo,single or2 t.._".pl•ns, refinishin&. ~ 1 .,.,,,,... " * "-•11rn70 *
n'l.JUI' , • • ' ' • port J-larbor ya Cb t DCNI al tnlMe ~ 0aW 64f>..0044, 548-4235 est & layouts. 847:i5u. •&12-9575• r 1 ~ •.'S • "'"'" ""6• &16-14(11. ,r,.,..,,.,
2111. ""°"''"'· 9'804 Club, 720 West Bay BO T CARPENTER 1..,,=::....::;;.;.:.::!=--=:-.-I.AWN CARE JOC'S CLEAN SERV • IRONING • .4.LCOHOLICS AnonymouA A Custom Cabinets, n>model Additions 1r Ren10dtllnc °'\ • 1-ty Hom!', $\ Hr. 1~-5t2-?2lT or "A>'lile 10 Avenue. New po r l 646-5219 &: repllir, fonn lc. v.'Ork:. F'red n . Get'Wlck, Lie. G1rdening 6680 FTIEE ESTI~fATES \\11: do t:vl!:rything-Res & Pl<'k Up &. Dclh·. -.1~·,ui • P'.G:'b l23S Costa Mcq. Be a c h. Bring note-I========= Reas. R:ltl's, 6-16-M19 673-6011 '* S49-2t70 I::=:::°'::'::' :::v=":::'·::":::;7·5:::•.;.•·_' -=~l,~Co~m~m~. F~re~o~E;,•~··~·~·t2-~r~.i!il. u .... ,,_.
TIRED d that old rumitureT book & p e n Ci 1 ~irst Brick, M1sonry. REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS LA\VN A Ya.rd Sorvice ),:;.,;. -NEED Your h0n1e ct apt Janitorial
It' rully mt that hard nJte. Any questions etc 6560 * CABINETS. Any size job C1rpet Cle1nfng 6625 per, Neat, R.easonftlbe: General Servic11 6682 cleaned~ Do try Nc11i>0rt ----
to. ttplaot. J\lat wtch the call 673-1855. 2S )TS exper. S48-6TI3 * 646-985.) '* Scrvlcti\, 11ii2,...122t SPARh'LEJ -.-.-11.-,,-.'"-.-w-,-,,.1
fumlQft 6 miloiel.lanecul OIURCH Choir a I I'l l r r 11 BRICK '* RLOCK • STONE * REPAIRS, l'W!modding &· SfEA~f Jet carpet cltAnlTig. Gardening Serv. By Ed's 01'.'anfng Sovkf' Me&& Cle11nln1t Service dow cltllning Suv. lVin-
eabnnm tn tM Clull.fitd need«!. OW'!rlunlty for By lhe hour. •lltr 5:30 patios. No jOb too 1m1ll. By ClllrK.11n:, nation . Y.'ide Japn.ntfi"f' All'lt'rican, Carpets -Upholsl't'ry -\Vln· Clirptts, "'indows, flooni, tte. do\vs, rrsid., comcl. C!'Oflll.
8edkln-90)0\gt, 844-425.i &-12·19-18 1r &45-0158 6~1T. .-rv!«. F'rff ~t. 642-44)5.\ '----'M_T_-2!>;__14___ dowi\ F1oor Ca~. 545-04117 J\M &: Commc'I, MS-4111 rlr&nup. Fret t'SI. !!62·0672
Sr caU ua & begin to live! Announcements 6410
6790
•
-----~ -----~-------~----------------------------------~-----------------.....
c· TLIHtfay, 1tpt•Mlltr '.!!, 1m
JOIS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT JOIS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT Joas • EMPLOYMENT
DAil Y PILOT 25
JOfi I. EMPLOYMENT
Kindergarten ReadineS<
Arts & Crafts
Music & Rhythm
Physical Fitness
Phonics
Colors & Numbers
Educational Field Trips
Hot Lunches
Basic Bible Stories
TOTAL -CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
NURSING
SCHOOi:
Te•ching Pr1ctic1I,
Nurses Aides,
Nursing Assistants,
Orderlies, Private.
Duty & Home Ca re
v Full Weeks Comprehensive Schooling.
,,. Full Weeks On The Job Training
In Acute Hospital
.,.., Student J ob Placement Assistance.
INVESTIGATE BEFORE YOU INVEST!
(No New Front-No Fancy Equip.)
Good Plain Nursing Taught
By Qualified Registertd Nurses.
New Cla sses Starting
ENROLL NOW!
Nurses Training Institute
4016 W. Commonwealth, Fullerton
525-7521
GET MORE
Out of
Life!
FUN
GOLF
INSTRUCTIONS
I
lnclivicluel o'
6-roup ln1truction
SKIP MAY
Pro·Owner
Compl•f• Stock of
6 olf Equipm•nt
545-9993
Membtr d
""'" Ad-Gulld Course approved I ":J:..":"' I
b11 the
Calif, Supt. of Public Instr. * Modoll09 ...i Tolnloloo * Cltanft r. p.,.-Dnolop111 .. t * D..-lcs-SpHU-Uttlo 'Iii-• * Spoclal Counft hlr Homomakon *ear-GI.ts
FlOUNCE SMALES
Dirtctor of Our State Licensed
Modeling Agmcv
151' N. Malo, s.to "-547°6'71
1965 SUMJ' Crost Dr. ,IS-y Hilb Ylllagol
hllortoo 197.1000
For 6 Weeks Course on the
HAMMOND ORGAN
You do not have to own an instrument.
Free practice time available. Register
now. Beginners register Tuesday night,
Sept. 22, at 7 P.M. Teacher, Laura
Mae Shelor.
Also classes for secondary & intermedi-
ate organ students, register same time.
Sign up now & avoid the rush!
FUN • ENTERTAINING • KNOWLEDGEABLE
Rent Organs
Avoilable
During Term
of Course.
Register NOWI Inquire for dttall1
Hammond Organ Studios
2854 E. Coast Highway, Corona dtl Mir
17JoltJO o,_ M..-., • Fridoy I v&
Newport Air Associates
Flile School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500.
'
-,,,.
MAIL COUPON TODAY ]
Name •• , ••••••••••• , •••••• , •• , •• , , ••
AddrtJS •••••• , •• , , , •• , • , , ••• , • , ••• , •
City •. ·., ••• , •• , •••.• Phone •••••••••• j
ANTHONY SCHOOLS
e A Full (fun) Lt1rnin9 Program
• Music '
e Art
• D1ncfn9
e Cru tlva Activities
e Hot Lunch11 & -Sn1ck1
e Ages 2 through lat grade
2110 Thurln Avo., Co1t1 Mo11 Ph: 646-1444
Gal Frid•y
Plush office8, good typing
11kills. Beach area, eaU Lor-
aine, Westclif! Penonnel
Agency, 2043 WestcliU Dr., I lnnkHpers lnJtltut• lntern1tion1I
PHONE 776.5800
1717 SOUTH llOOICHUIST
ANAHEIM, CALIF. 92104
CAPPIOYED FOi YITRANSI
q.-~~0~ .dft ~. ::.ns::; SALESMAN, <::§}~ ~ zy ~ ~ ~ part time, eves, Sat & Sun.
:=======:I Exper. pref'd. 2666 Harbor
Blvd. Costa Mesa •
HERE'S JOHNNY'S
Taking applications ~
AIRLINE & TRA YEL CAREERS
For Men and Women
e Travt l Agent • Reservations
• T icket Salts e Air freight Cargo
e Communications • Opera tions Agtnt
· Day •nd night cl1sst1
AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Accredited:
Santa An• 543-6596
610 E11t 17th StrHI
National Association Trade & Technical
Schools
Approved for Veterans
Eligible institution under the Federally m ..
sured Student Loan Program
Jobs-Mon, Worn. 7100 Joi..-Mon, Wom. 7100
APT Cleaning: 1st Class BARTENDER Part time $30
1.UIDS only for Newports shift at the Blue Beet
finest apts. Highest earh-673-9904 N.B.
ings guaranteed. ca 11 1..:,Bc:..:.;, :.:....:=0~---
Newpon Se"'l""" 64M224. USJOeSS pportunity
A-1 TELEPHONE Soliciting
THE
BRYMAN
SCHOOL
learn How You C1n Train In Just A Ftw
Months To Bacomt A e •• e Mtdical Assistant e Dtntal Assistant e Medical Receptionist
Be The Girl You Were Meant To Be, In A Re·
warding career For The 70's. Help Others &:
Fulfill Yourself! Call Or Write T<>day For Our
F.rC<! lllus~raled Brochure, "Some C&reer1 Are
More Rewarding."
THE DRYMAN SCHOOL
1120 N. lrookhunt
Anaheim, Cellt. 92101
Phone (714) 7711-4500
I Would Like A r.1ore Rewarding Carttr, Please
Send fl.le Your Free lllustrated Brochure.
Name .... ·-·····--····-··-·-·····----····--------Age ----·---Address ---·-····---.. --····--·······-····----·--·······--·--····-City-·-·-----··-···--------.. ----State .. ---Zip ---
Phone --·-··----·--·-·············· .. ·--·--·-.. -· .. ·······-··-----·-Last Grade Compl eted .............. -... -··--·-··-··-·-·---·-
• Full flM(', no exper. nee. Extra Income for men or
Imme iliatc Pniployment. women of any age. Part or
1869 Newport Blvd, Suit F full time, High earnings. Restaurant Management
<n..ta Mesa 548-5501 Pleasant dignified work,
ATTENTION JJex.iblc hours ••• Perfect for Trainees
Nttd full time & parttlme men with. jobs <>r women
doonnen &: runnen. cau with. school age children. Not A Job - A CarHr
Mr. Davis at 540-7632 be-Training provided, Contact Outstandl-Growth twN?n 9 & 11 am. 1-lerh aft. 6:00 pm. 968-1044. "•
CAREER IN Grants, one of the nations largest chains is BABYSITIER • 3 children REAL ESTATE d. . th t rant busm· ess Over (2,5,7) need loving care expan ing m e res au .
v.·hiie mom's in the hospital. Openings . for )'OUng prople 100 men and women have been appointed
e BUS BOY Al e BROILER Y e TRAY GIRL-HO~ e DISHWASHER I
Full or Part Time
Exi:dlent OpportunitY,
for Housewives '
Call In Person
9:00 AM • 5;00 PM
'n5 Baker, C.M.
HOUSEKEEPER le an fCll"
1 yr. old cbUd. Liw-.in only
when parents t raveltnc.
\Vould pffier husband at.a
stay when pattnta travtl.
Car provided •
Call: 644-2389
Housecleaning, part time. 2-
hrs da, $.2 hr, 4 du wk.
Cook eve meal. Westmont
track, nr Edlllgf'f &
Bushard F.V. M/have car
827--0020
HOUSEKEEPER • Uve-bt +
3 children who need loYirw
tare while mom'! in the
hospital, 1 mo. minimum. -!258
HOUSEKEEPER. Must low
children (2) Live ln. Five
days $40 a we e lt.
References. Newport Beach
area.. 644-41&8
HOUSEKEEPER • Pnct:ical
nurse, mature lady. ll pm.
1 am 11hilt. 646--6716
JR.VINE PERSONNEL
SERVICES•AGENCY
(Fonnerly Abilities Unllm.)'
TRISH HOPKINS
488 E. 11th. Suite 224. C.M.
642-1470
J. C. PENNEY CO.
Faahion Ia1and
Prefer live-in, Jt houl!Cwork. wanting to make a minimum restaurant manager 1ast ;r.ear. Top income,
Comptet• Coun• l11clucf•s: 1 mo minimum. 833-1258 of $1,000 per month and who excellent company benefits plus -better Has a full time JIOSitlon 1\llJt,
1ble in the beauty Alon.
40 Hours flight t ime in Cessn• I SO's with BABYSI'ITER, light bakpg, in \Viii work •nd learn. Need than average income while training. Ad,.
20 hrs. dual instruction. Club membership. pleasant Laguna Beach not be licensed to apply. If vancement fo management comes quickly to e HAIRSTYLIST e.
2 Month's free dues, Individual instruction, home. 4 mo old baby & 181 you are Ucensed, special those with ability and willingness to accept
tailored to YOU R •bility. gTader. 8-5 r.1on-J·'ri, S175 program available. Excel-responsibility. APPLY IN PERSON'
10 OTHER AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE mo. Lisa Munsat, 494·Mfi8. ~! t:n,~ngyoo~~.' ~~~ GRANT PLAU 24 Fashion w.. N.B. COSTA MESA ti LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY BABYSITIER for 0',> mo Walko. & L<e, foe .• Real-HUNTINGTON BEACH Equal opportunity employer
GOLF RANGE
Lea rn to fly now - - a nd hive fun I :~~~;ak1er ~~':Nie~ ~:~a~ and ask ior Brookhurst at Adims ·-LEG~O T::OINEE . * Fly Mexico & Canada Hours 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Deily XJn•t oppor. w/vuy ffnt'
2717 N Bl d * Special Ratos for Commorclal BABYSmER ,.edoo, lo CARRIER Sunday 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. llrm. Pl"'""' world"' ewport y • Instrument Students. Corona de! Mar 3-6 PM Mon. BOYS cond. Gd benefits. Call Mia;
Costa M.sa -9 am • J 0 pm . thru Frid•Y. C•ll 540-6373. W 7 OO Ellzab<th, 557-6122. Abigail For Complete Det1ils Call NOW Or aft 5:30. 675-5564-Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Job.-Mtn, om. 1 Abbot Pen;onnet Agency, 230
at Orango County Fai rgrounds 673. 0313 BABYSITTING w/ Love Jo WANTED -----~ W. Warner, Suite 2ll, Santa
SERVICE DIRECTORY ;;S::-ER;::V::l::-C::-E_D_IR_E_c_T_O_R_Y_,~s~E~R~V~IC~E~~D~l~R~E~C~T~O~R~Yr!!!!!'JO~B~S~&"'E~M~P"'Lo~Y~M~E"'N~TI ~: ':':•. c-:;: s::;'~ry' DAILY Pi LOT coco~~M~~~~~·s Dep~ -~ :::.· Mgn w/salH abil ..
6810 p . ,. :..;;.=-=.: -675--4!07. MUST BE oper rew """' car ......
Landscaping:---;;~';;'n~1:n;g~, ~====~68=S~01;P;;l~um:;;b~in~g;;;.-;--;:;;;i68~90;, Job Wanted,. Mtn 7000 BABYSITfER -ror 20 mo. Dana Poinl, San Juan 4647 MacArthur Blvd EXPERIENCED equip. Exp des/not MC-NE\V LA\VNS, re-seeding, Paperhanging boy, lite hscwork, live-in, C;p~~~=s!:1n. ~ Newport Beach. S.A. A Fuh Isl. ~7281.
rot o-tillnng. f(!novating, '""" -------_-DRAINS Plugged? Draining DENTAL technician seeks good pay_ NB. 644-5249.
clean-up. 897-2411 or ~ slow'!' Experlly cleaned $9. full/part time. nr·s office BABYSITTER Wanled nites, CQntact Mr. Seay at "" INTERVIEWING MON-FP..1 -COSMETIC-* LOTMAN *
846-0932. PLEASE YOU" 2' hr seiv. "10-3854. preferred. Rel erences My home NB p.,;,, 120 wk. .DAILY PILOT 2 TO 5 PM SALESLADY '°' uoed ""'· Ap~
Limousine Service 6815
Airports. 1-fMbora
Anywbcrt'.
Rates, 40c a mile. ~nn. 20
mi's. 24 hr resv. SJ0.2404.
Gladwell Pa.int Co. 24 HR PLUMBING _4.;.;9!>-..;1;;.806;.c.. ______ I Cali Donna, 546-2420. San Clemente <1filce • COOK • 2100 Harbor, C.M. *** 494-9816 *** &: REMODELLING J b W tod 30,· N El Cam'-•·aJ MECHANIC, ~,·gn •ar 0 In ' BABYSIITER. Newport Isl. • '"'' n<: NO EXPERIENCE NECES. I tfice ,.,.~ '" ~~ 557-9644 Wom•n 7020 area, 2:30-5:30, $1. hr. Call 4924420 SARY'. FULL TIME, PART Appty pe3nlni.o;ne o ' exRe'!1;·,.~~~133Foreip Car HOUSES, docks, boats. PLUMBING REPAID. c R WASH HELP oot ..-,,,__., f lagpoles , anyting No job too small EXP Social See'y/Co aft 6,67>8475. * A * 11ME,DAYS ORNJGHTS. M•n-emtntTm.u .. eve1'Ylhing: reasonably e 64•3128 • d · · Typl SJ-1 •-~p., BABYSITTER wanted by ~t.any oi:ienln?, full&: part THE BROADWAY -• ..--river. _ ng• • .1-N<C. & time JOb~. 3 locatlon11. * COOK-HOUSEKEEPER * 2 ;vn. college J..S Yl'I. work pain1ed. For tree estimate hrs flexible, Box P·l078 teacher weekdays 2 to 5. Orange County. METRO ' 8 h
MAID SERVICE 6825 Wr-9752. Remodeling A Daily Pilot Light houM?work, 499-4357 CAR WASH XiO liarbor ~:_ra~;i1:m~u~ 5Sa~~: Newport e•c :. m;!st~1~:!~
No Wasting Repair 6940 AIDES -!or convalescence, Panking Blvd, C-.M. Must have car, &14-1318 Agency, 2043 WestcliU Dr.,
C &. s P.1AlDS AVAIL. Im-*, .. w, ALLPAUP ~~I t GEN'L remodeling & malnt. elderly eare or fam ily ctttt. *TELLER/CLERK _*_C_A~SJ-1-lE_RS-_E-,-,-.d-0-,-1-y, No. 47 Fuhlon Island N.B_ 645-2770
mediately. Ref ere nee '. ...-en you ca ,. ac No job too s ma I I. Jlomemakers, 547..w!l. Part time. 30-3'! hrs per wk. top pay COCO'S REUBEN'S MANAGER for ocean-front
1:6'2-98;:,:io7;:3,,0;:r "'&l;:>-=:987='-==' 1548-1444 646-17ll Llc'd/insured. 67!Hl183. B OOK KEEPING/!!ecreta.r-Top wages. Ex-per. pref'rf. * CLOTHCNG SALESMEN"· -COMPLEX -Newport Ctnttr park apartmenb.
INTER. & Exter. Fa JI J11l, flR.rt/time job wanted. Apply or phone; 1st Western Exp'd only, x!nt salary. ** Ch&lme.rs Apts. ** Painting, Special, Avg. l atory exter. Sewing 6960 968-2078. Bank, 16932 Goldenwest Dr., *STOCK CLERKS-No exp. 464'1 MacArthur Blvd. An equal opportuni~ 364 "c:tiff Dr., Laguna Sch
Paperhanging 6850 stucco & overhang $10'Jll--...:.------1-lunt. Bch. S~2-77<\1 necessary. Newport Belch employtt
LO\VEST Prices! Higl.lfst labor & mal'I. 548-1546. QUALITY You-ve always Job.--Men,1Worn. 7100 Apply i\lon & Tue11, 10 am ~ LOOKING FOR
Quall ... ,,. Ape., r<s'I & PROFESSIONAL Painters • wanteri, Dressmaking -A Cl k Betty Bruce 1829 Newport Blvd, C.M. INTERVIEWING P.f0N·F1U ;t:p-;-Store~--WORK? • v alt ti. K Say 1763 cent er 2 TO s PM ~ • H-.. -·Id ou 1~-~ t comm '!, 20 yrs expcr. Quality mate r ials • era ons. ey , m l * CASlfIER/ ""' '""' y 'At! w pu 646-4871 cir fM7-4128. workmanship_ ·Beach refs. Orange Ave., C.M. 645-1292. Lile a_ccn t bkgr,. typing. Call COUNTER GUU. * Ovtr 11 yean YoUl' name and qualitica· ~1050 Loral,., WostcHll Por.wo"'l i6' xec • BUSBOYS -EXPERIENCED· "°"' '" the hands or IO,lll) * PAPERHANGER * e Dre~making .. Alterations Agency, 2043 WestcliU Dr., • a 7 lo 3:30, Mon thru Fri. Cllll e DISHWASHERS flrnu: In the next few web
Recognized AuUJOrlty COU.EGE StudenL'f, 3 YJ'l! DeCal""""', J *to ~l~rou,6. N.B_ fi45.mo /I 1ttN1 ....... ,"'1 n~!ngttwnon~5833--06llllPM "ENS CLOTHIN~' for '"0.00? our publka"'" Prior Inslructor 646-24'9 expcr. No drinking. Bill or o .,..,,..,.. ._../it E.xt ~"' , "" . -i • * DELIVERY BOY. Apply M ~ ••
1.tcAdanis Paillting Serv. Steve. 548-4:>19. Alttr•tions -642-5845 • Ancient Mariner "<j-l!l'l.C'J COASTAL AGENCY tn ~n. M11gna.vox OepL SALESMAN :U~~s!':t~ ~
ln!er. k Extcr. Spceial rates * PAPERHANG ING Neat, 11ccuratc-, 20 ~ar~ exp, A member of 2666 Harbor Blvd., C.M. employers. tf you need a
<>n apt!!. 64&-364a &: PAINTING, * 968-2425 --Now taking tippllc.'l llo~ for 410 W. Coast l{W¥1,. N.B. Snelling & Snelling lne. DENTAL Ass.lstant. tully APPLY PERSONNEt job, dnn't delay. Ca.II now
YOU SUPPLY ntE PAlNT Tiie, Ceramic •974 day 11hilt only, lull time dy appoint. &46--3939 i The World's Largest exper'd, desk only, part OFFICE, 3RO FLOOR 80 your name won't be left
A n-Pl11t•rin11, Pa tch , Professiona l tlm•. ·'t•-·• or •·-. out $10 Per verage """"m • / CERAMIC tilt lruitalled or "" .. ....,.. ... • Fl"en E!!t. 557.a638 Repair 6880 repa ired. Remodeling my • Busboys · • BROILER MAN, under 30 Employment Service Jnsurance exp dts'd. Hunt. THE BROADWAY J.EDISCO PER.WNNEL
PROFESSIONAL, 30 y ra s}lecialt;y, Work Stu a r . • k itchen Mtn PttL 'w/stcakhou.'IC exp. 27!)'1 Harbor Bl, Of 540-6055 ·Bch area, Call bet I am.9 AtANAGEJtS GUIDE.
* PATCH p• ·-ERING e Asst. Broiler men .• WAITER, under 25, w/gd Harbor Blvd. at Adams Vr". 846-3510. Newport Beech ln4J ~ exp. paperhanging &: pain-wl<>t · Reu, • pr1~. Frte ut. sltakhouse f!Xp. A PJtlY:
ting, from t'nglirnd. 968--7461 All lypes. Free t'fltimates 5.1&-2-t26 THE OCEAN TOAD, 103 N, COCh'T AIL ' STEAKHOUSE OEN TAJ, Sect'ttary-cixp'd. MAN To worlc part timt ln
Call ~ 1-==='======= APflly in penon Baysld Dr WAITRESS wanted for e p eopltH>tlf.nttd practief': fl FASltfON ISLAND rental yard. Ntat In ~ PAINTING . Ext,..Int.18 yn. T s. I '"° 2007 W, Coast Hwy., N.B. 644-403~ • N.B. or PH: NE \V 0 R PH AN A GE H.B. 841·1M9 am, 968--5782 pcaranctt. wm tttln. Anll
exper. Ins. Lie, Free e!lt. Plumblng 61-rH rv Ct -A-.-Cln.n l"": ltl Cius RESTAURANT • '·"'"''n& T ... -'"" wk t1nds. Appl$; Aeccit11t. Ceilings. ~9126. ""-BOB'S TREE SUR .---' .,. • """&" pm. Newport Ctnter , .... ,. ..,., GERY MAlOS only for Newportll Sell the old stuff BUy the new Beach. Call betwn, U PM, I ~--~-----1 1930 Newport BJvd. C.M. &i' Oua PiUnting: & P•Pt:!r lfOlit' REPAlRS Is back ot!erlng 1he aamo fln!!St aplJc, Hlghe11I stuff You can do both thru 494-2700. Denial HY&ieniat p/Ume, )ANITORS. l:xp'd: Full
tlanging. Free Est..-Call Pl11mbfng~cal $1.~ ltr. rine Quallly ~ 1'uvice. f'1tmlng11 st'IJl\ranteed. Call iUAJL'i PILOT WAnt Ads PlWT \\)ANT AD! 64l-5678 5pttlAlly practice 1bch JJTa. An eQUAI ovportunlf1 fimo; nights. C k M rtttl~ M.>3459. fi.12·Zi:t.'l ar G-t2.0506 * 54().37!)8 • Ntwport &orvitt!I. tw Z.-1n4. · ~Tl. tmployer • ,,,,_ ~-------:::::::::::.._ _____ ~ .. ~~~~~~=~~~~:S~~~~--~~~-~--~~ ~s.~rv;.;..;.·~"""~~'-"'"·---~·
...
---------------·-----·--------------------·---·----
ff DAllY PILOT Tucldly, Stpitmbtr 15, 1;10
• .i e.s & EMPLOYMENT JOiS & IMPLOYMENf JOiS & EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOlt 4 MERCHANDISE FOR -------.TRANSPORTATION -~NSPORTATION • !~SPORTATION
FREE TO YOU Sailboats
·~ ... Toi.:'. 1:::.-0:.~1-H_O_B_IE_C_A_T_S •••••••••e l"U'U'VU!I
SALE AND TRADE SALi AND TRADE
Jell• Men, Wom. 7100 Jobt Me.t, Wom. noo Jobt #Mn, Wom. 7100 -~--------Appllanc.. • 1100 Ml1colla._. NGO
9010 Mobile Hom•• 9200 Motorcycles 9300
Sales TRAINEE
A way for a high scbooJ gra~uate
to enter the newspaper busmess
DAILY PILOT
This highly successful local ne\\'St>aper ~as
an opening for a trainee in the c1rculat1on
sales area. Selected. applicant will receive a
liberal starting ulary, _regularly scheduled
railes, bonus opportun1t1es, and many frmge
benefits _such as paid vacat ions, paid group
insurance and a credit union. He will also be
provided a company car \vith personal use
privileges. •
Applicants musl be 18, have a clean driv-
ing record, have a high school d iploma and
should be reasonably-clear of military serv·
ice draft. Hours are generally 11 A.M. to 9
P.ltf. with some Saturday overtime.
J[ you are qualilied and are interested in
learning more about where this training
lead s, come to the DAILY PILOT office, 330
\Vest Bay Str eet and a sk for ~1r. Harding in
the Circ ula tion Department.
** WAIT~ 1time5 to 9 Pl.I. ** Jo'R.Y COOi\ aine. or
ex p'd1 put or n llnw. No
Sunday• or h0Jlday1
KRA>.\JER'S COLONlAoL
KITCHEN, ~12 \V, 19th SL
C.M. I
KENFl-10RE Auto wasber,
Xlnt oond $33, Wes~
auto wubu, Xlnc cond, $25.
S.17-81.lS, $46-8672.
* AUCTION * 2 ''""Very b • • • t 11" I ALL COLORS THE MEADOWS , TKINl
Fine J\lml1ure flta1amute" Husky, \Vhlte FREE DEMOS (In the Irvine HO,..TD,A:.
& Appllanceo " .,..,. AU sho". Good CAP'N EDS or•~• •rovH) ,..,.., A "-~d 7 30 -watchdor, Lows children. ··• • UCuvnl ,.,., lY. : p.m. Mu......... 9111 . Now rentlnn spaces Sii NEW /U&ed appliance& Ii: Wi d • A 1• B ·~ • ., TVs All 1 0 a r a n teed . in YI uc ion •rn LOVABLE t' maJ 2200 w. Cat Hwy. NB &G.22f4 r.lulti-~llUion Dollar •'FRIEDLANDER
Dunlap's. lllS Newport. CM 2075% Newport, CM 648-8686 Collie/Sheptll!'~ ~ ~~~ 26' SOLING '69 Olympic cl. l\lob:1.r. Honie Con11~~n\1y ,,,. UAOI (MWT. WI I WAITRESS . t'X(M'!rienced
Junche1 only. Apply In person
Delaneys Sea Shanty, 630
Udo Park Dr. N.B,
518-7788 Behind Tony'$ Bid&". Mat'l. 3 moa. Partly housr trained, Abbott North p_llt. Lots ur • 52 • :u:rn of fu~ hv1ng 531.68'24 • 893-7566 Jo~RIGJDAIRE EJec dryer, HAMMOND Otgan: MDL C· loves children. Needs a good xlraa $3950. Courtesy lo e $300I ,OOO& ;"1 '"'1ahona, I. f~ NEW·USEO-SERV.
:xlnt cond $40. \VOOgewood 102. Chenywood console. ho me, fent ed yard . brok~. J12 \Y. Coa.51 Hwy, c1a ·.cw w·a cen_er,
gus dryer, good cond $25. Like new. 2 crpt.grn/gld. 836-4493,. 9/17 N.B. 54.8-SMt llntt', 1n Jlt1rk .service (.'Cn· ~
347-8115. 546-8672. Ir. MilK". G&rage u.le type TOO MaflY kittens &. cats 37' AUXIUARY SLOOP co,,_ ter.
School .. tnstr uction 7600 REFRJCEft.ATORS .. Large i1em1. Set al 432 Carnation. xlnt pets variety 01 colorJ & verted 6 rneler, Well main.. • Dally smog -tree ocean
•• 1~-,'". I •'F> •.f!!: •-~ CdM. or 675-fil02 t-s. All house •-:nad iained & in excellf.nt con. brcet.cs, sUtTounded by?'' PIANO I: Voic. Lessons, "'"~'"'' .-. '"" « _. ~.-. ........ "" ang '""'VCS & mountains &16-7820. FOR Sale ntar new 2l'' anytime ti! 12 p M dil:ion. Call &16-0261 or (213) e o· v Pru., <'.rcdentlal teacher. t ==========I ro• .. -· mower. $40. 7, Stereo 536-7'179 9115 2.15--0866. e 7 min _rrom world's larg~st Jo"ree lesson every 3td mo. I' """3 I t (F h 54().....4757 . Antiques 1110 ~e cabinet $3$. New TWO Valuabl-19' WIND\VARD SI s iopping ccn er as ion Spanish & o'1!dlt. wall pla-~ young . oop, Island) ./SCUBA Cl.ASSES -~-.-NT-lQ_U_E ____ , quea:$35&$25.Call962-0161 Himalayan male cats by cabin, fre~~ w al er.• Championship la\Vn bo1vl·
Forming, l~eated Pools. Champion btt to good outboard auxU1ary, Beil .
• 64•1816 * SHOW&. SALE alt 8. home if taken together. otle-r o~r $100. Call 54~ll20 e s'"' •11""'n all ·-• .,.. Long Belch S~ Arena ........------_... 49'-2316 9 or 540-ll2l. . ma pets o11.,.,
Piano lessong in """''r ,,...__ I ... ~,. n... h m· ... -T~.wu;---ns Enjoy I~ abo\'e rro ot ~v-..,,.-.,ana: ........ D'Cac VUilo $2$ LOVABLE Yd lemate REPOSSF..5SION-1970 41' $11 50permo ~-=.T~'. 100 Antique Exhibits with f'Utchase or Cockapoo black w/ grey Erickson sa.iltio.t. Bid~ iil.C· 14!!51 Jeffrey Rd.
Largest show !n the West : qRPETING paws silky hair, tail docked, cepted thru .91'15110 Contacl tSA .fwy at Jeffrey r.d.
JEAN Dales Studio -t.?~I "'"S<"~~7;:'"'11 l~to 10 • Sept. only (40 ydl min1 Joves children gd watch dog Bob Goodwin or Leonard oUrampl
painting class now formuig. c ~·-.-C.A. Page 642-2071) 1-823-&189 or 836-4493. 9/11 Morgan TI<l/673-2500. CALL COLLECT
Wed n"IOmlng. &14-4905. SUnday l! 10 6 ~ ·LOVABLE Friendly oral'l;e 27' FEATil.ER Sloop, l~bgls 714/531-8105, 7W5.\0-:l9:',0
MERCHANDISE FOR ANTIQUES: Paintings. Tea D~ lklls1ve c ar v ed stripped female kitten about o/wd. mulf: sell. S169a or 714/832.8585 213/860-5210
SALE AND TRADE cart -Roc~r. Bronzes, Medit. 43"x81", ~ 6 mos. good w/dogs ndi m~ offer. 67S-1393 or ........... .
Va&es Pr. Comer O\ina. cori>al ·•upported. Matching permanent hOme. 546.2907 531-5363 ' ~abinets. SUwr, French lib/tbl $500. 8' Blu/cm 9/11'1'co""'L'U;:;MBT.;;1A.,-;ZZ;;;-,SLOO:;-;;=P.-l;:nc::c1c, 1---,PiiR>iE"11ii9ii7!1 ___ ,69 Kawaski F-l 175 dual
..
Furniture 8000
clock. Desk. French chair. plakl_quallty .sota. $150 firm, 1 YR old aJtered 1 cat head & ga.ll('y. XJnt cond. Inventory Sale! sprocket for dirt or strecl.
MUST SELL 536-8290afterS:30PM Tis-4542. Looks like s1'!1~ee s e: Pri~. to sell quiekly! e General24x51 •6277$9500 Auto oil ii\iCCtion Electric
, OVER STOCKED ANTIQUE wall hung SPECIAL Sale-Ma rdan Beal u lful blue eyes. 826-2562. • G e ne:·aJ.24xl6 #fi717 stru·ter. Almost nr\I,. ;.JOO
• Jobs Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobs Man, Wom. 7100
' • Maintenance Mech•nic Re&taurant Tw:illl $49.95, Fulb $59.95, pendulum clock, Strike11 the Thrift Shop honoring our 644-5967 • 9116 e p CAT No. 431-6 mos old, $1C ,200 • Universal 24x53 646-4274.
, Fountain VRlley School Dis-
tricl. REQUIR.EM.ENTS:
Valid Calil, bus drivers J\.
' censc, 4 )'I'll exp. in me<:hanl·
COCO'S
Fashion Island
Queens $89.95, Kings $119.95, hour & half hour $300. new botique & beck·tlHit"hool 1 LEFT 1 need d ho fully e q u l p pe d . Call #15313 $9900 ~Charted Ma· -.7-0-su-,-"-k-i -P-C-90-, -,-,,.-00-.t-/rl-,,-1,'
1V.1n Si1.e Hearlboards $7.95, 642-2931 coll~~on. 1810 Park, C.M. for swee~t~male O~tfy ;:;~ we<!kdays ll-2 pm. 675--0595 nor 24x60 #602 S_12,~ e less than 400 nii't;, $:!2:1,
Trundle Sets $89.95, Rolla-•$8.000 Oriental Rug-P..oyal beginning tl\ls Thurs. ten box trained &: weaned e 20' Sloop-wood keel boat, General I2x44 $149a. 616-3909, 200R Aliso Ave,
' cal repair ot i;chool bUS('S1. ~ way beds, $29.95, Studio Kerman 12x2.l Will take 356 A Ponche bumper, Pur--646-)403 1 9117 sleeps 2. CHAPMAN C.\t.
Couches $89.95. Bunk bed!i Best Of!er. * 6'13-S&l2. isf Delight! Never been ding. THREE Llttltt killens need $1100. 8.17-7039 M12060BNILEH ~~~ECSG 1969 SU ZUh'l • 2;(1 SavaJ::C
Xlnt. oond, 1200 miles $506 ..
or best orer. Call aft. ti P~l.
645-0271
automobile3, light trucks &. * INTERVlE\VlNG *' $&i o:i; "CH=AJRS-=~w=lnd~.,-,,-H~,~-,c~hco<:-~k. ed $75. Kei\more 21p. wash-......A ho • , • 20. stoo • o. a1uw, · • s:asolfne criginet_ $57~1
per mo. BENEFITS: 12 day!!
paid vacation per year, 12
days paid sick lea\·e per
year. inajor medical & den.
BUSBOYS
DISHWASHERS
SIES.fA SLEEP SHOP Vic · Wa! di . """" me, "' orange "' P * 531-8105 • tonan. nut era e. er. Sl!i, as Is. 548-3404 aft v;hite, 1 champagne &. Wood keel boat, Sleeps :!',
192'1 Harbor Blvd., CM All xtnl cond. 531-3768. 6 PM. >At.ite. 494-2432 9/15 JI.take offer. 837-7039 615-2760 :;::;:::=:::=;:::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::~1
3-4l55 Cst. Hwy, Dana Pt. Musical HOUSE FULL of Fw·n &. FREE To qualified home; * Hobie Cat 14 * "61 UNIVERSAL 24x60 1970 'friun1ph 250 Trophy, * REPO *
496-1$2 Instruments ll2S ODDS & ENDS. Jl.Iovint; female killen 4. mo's. Silver Sail No. 405. Xlnt t'Ond. 2 BJt, 2 bath, Landscaped. Xlnt t.'Ond, S650. Under
Jl.1ust sell All. Bfr: l pm grey \v/>A·hite, had shots. Call 644-6433 Jn adult "~tk, S7S mo, l\'arta.nly, 6 4 Ii -!> J 3 4 or ""'6-4229===---~=~ t Litter box tr ain e dl l°'B"•"l"boc:-:ca-;2;;;0',-,f i"'x:::ed:;-;t:-ea::;l,-1 cHAPMAN 7MS--450l
tal insurance. For applica-APPLY JN PERSON
Hon & 1est infonnation call #78 Fashion Island. N .B. SCRAM-LETS F~nd~~~:!"i~ ;ie , f\ln;. \\'otkman at 842-66.il
between 2 & 4:30 pin ONLY
, not lat& tha11 Sept. 16,
19i0.
MECHANIC-Exp'd, own
• tools. Xlnl opp'ty for right
man. Richfield, 19th &.
Newport, CM.
MECHANIC For tune ups &
brakes, Salary o pe n ,
Williams Texaco, 1 6 9 &
superior Ave. c.iu.
MEDICAL RECEPT.
$400
Nice N.B. Ol'c's, pleasant
working t.'Ond. Need exper.
Call MiM Elizabeth, 557-6122.
Abigail Abbot Person~)
Agency. 230 \V. Warner,
·suite 211. Santa Ana.
' * MEN o r WOMEN * Turn time into $$. Se! your
own hours, part or fu!J time.
Call 962-T:i.59.
MEDICAL Assistant, back
aft.ice, E.xpe:riencN. Must
know X·Ray, injection,
EKG . Salary optn. i\fission
Viejo areL J\tust be
versatUe and ellergtti e.
'837-7520
* ~fOTEL J\IAID *
Reliable. steady "'orkcr '* * * 494-75.'iT
FIREWOOD for sale. $47.50 54~1846 9/15 S4&-0rl.l2 MOBILE HOMES '68 BULTACO, 250 re. Gd. RESTAURANT help, female,
part time, over 21. Ph. d t
1:30 545-1686.
George Roberts, 83.J,.-331!5 ANSWERS FENDER TELECASTER
REG. Nurse -Apply in Almost new
cn:I, $77.50 J,i crd, Delv. &: FFFRLJEfEE-1si;a~m;;;;0;:,,.;:;;;,B1maaeclk;l--:.-*"°'W,;AN;;:TE~D~•"'•--I 1206 N. Harbor. S.A. for :strttt or dirt. Extras.
stckd free. Day or nite (1) labrador mix female. \Vhite, }'LIPPER SAILBOAT. 114/531-8105 $59.i. ~5198
688-()846, (1) 687-7599. 9 wks old. Great disposition. * Call 646-l5.59 * 650 Triumph Chopper
pt'rson. Country CIJJb Con.. Omelet -Aphid -Basic -!'JIS-9337 or 64fJ.,;)63(t
valescent Home, 20362 Santa Entire -AIR Jl.1ALE -.~o=L~D~S~T~r-u_m_po_t_e~
CAMPERS! Prtbl generator MS-2733 aft 6 9/15 :-;===-;;::--=7.::::1 12331 Bench Bl\•d, UG Rebuilt. Sacrifice! ~-..,, ==~~~====I* FLIPPER No. 4Zl-Great .,........ AC/DC used once, cost PETS and LIVESTOCK for kids. Red w/wh1te deck. 714/530--2930 673-1637
Ana Ave., Santa Ana . A lady traveling to New w/case * $80 • 962-5056 $179. sell SlOO. Must .sell ill· 1 '""'T0 r-;;::p;:lo"'W"i"de"C°'o"r::n::o;;ll-* '10 Triumph Bonnev1llf' -ness. 642-1232 ~ve~. Cats 8820 $285. 645-0~0 . * SALAD GIRL * York by air gave birth to a
boy. The stewardess called Must ~ave good preparation h' n AlR MALE expencnce. J.lon. thnt Fri. 1m a •
7-3: 30. Call r.1rs. Penning. SALE: GE dryer, lamps,
ton 833-0600 Ext 2031 bctwn. desk &. chair, si n g le
2-5 Pi\!. ' bed<0mpl. for mi. kitch. ael
w/6 cbrs & 2 ext's. 9xl2 rug, * SALAD GIRL * niglit litand, recliner & J\1on. thru Fri, 7-3:30, Call mort. Eves aft 6:15 Ph:
Mrs. Penninglqn, 833-0600 494-38.i7.
Ext 2037, bctwn 2-5 Pl\1. I •F~U~RNITURE===-,.----~lrom-
Sal"
MANAGEMENT
SALES
OPPORTUNITY
for an ar1iculate man with
ini tiative and maturity, lo
'l'o-'Ork independently with
strong &UPPO:rt from mgmt
A nalional organization i8
in search of a married man
with a good education and/
or business background who
jg eeonomically disturbed.
display studies, model hom.
es. decoraton1 cancellation.
Spanish & Mediterranean
R D FURNITURE
1144 Newport Bl., C.M.
every nite •tit 9
Wed., Sat. £: sun. 'tll '
SOFA. i It Contemporary,
quilted avocado green and
turquoise blue. reversible T
CUBhion&. near ly new JJ.75.
Matchini: love IC!at and
chair available at loc&I
store. 546-2054 after 5:30.
JUllcrcst e Flamillgo Like fll'IV, 4f00 1ni. ~1295 * A 0 ULT W a 1ker1 Beautiful Sealpoint Power Cruisers 9020 Paramount e Unlver&Rl firm. ~~2754.
!\Ian-made fur <'Oat ; 2 Siamese Kittens. Shots. Barrington • Broadmoor 50CC SUZUKI Dirt Bike
"ONE ONLY" SALE Rugs: 12 Tier cw·tains, 646-SZ41 SACRIFICE • 24 ft cabin Continen111 1 • Siar Good cond, COOd be11;inncrs
New &: Used ~1438. -.;;;;;"",.."'""="';-f cruiser 185 h.p. big Chrysler General e Hillr,rt.•it bike, $95. 962-4356
P IANOSs =~u=R=Fs=o"A'°'RD=,"°"c",.,.=k""'?"·"'•"'"·, I SIAMESE KITTENS 1.-tarine. Just p 11in 1 e d CHAPMAN 8 wk• old, $25. 647-1564 c p I I h II f{ONDA 30.') S<:1•amblrr. Xln1 Dccorntor Spine ....... $399 down rail. l\1ovie proj. & luruoul_, er ec s ape a MOBILE HOMES condition. Call Ken 6~6--4629
New KIM.BALL Console $699 camera. Ne\v Kodak M-16, Dogs oround. Jn water now. 12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. after 4 Pi\1
KIMBALL Grand •••••• $795 M-50. ~2393. 8825 Red uced prier $2100, Call * 7141530-2930 * ·====~~~~-
ORGANS ;-;;c=c;c;--;==-:::;:. :;;:. =I -;;~;-;;::::::-:::::;:::--::=I )'"~'C.'~'~30~P~·~m~. ;';":::3~!196::::.· ;;;:::d R:fV'Eff"jijijfCjAi[S-1 '70 YAMAHA lTJ Enduro, .4 UNUSUAL foreign pa'tnt1ngs TRAIN Your loving puppy 1/3 Partnership 32' Chris RIV~R SPECIAL_S n10 old. barely brokt'll in. m~:asN~:rd·;,A.i".,:: ~ .:z~: ... :~ p~elry OO\I'. Kindergarten Train. Craft Cabin Cruiser, twin New 12 \vlde homes, sliGhlly l ncl helmet $495. 673-T.158
liAMMOND B3 •••.•• $1995 ::==:;::;=======:I Class. New start Sept. 16. &;re"'• lully equip . .sips 6, ~maged, Perfe<;t ~or the do. DRAFlED. l\ilUST SELL!
M isc. W•nted 1610 Martincrest Ke n n('Js, xln'l cond. 838-5550 ll·YOW:SCik~. 011g1nal sell· BSA650 * $:i00
Includes bench, delivery & 546--0989. 9Ai\1-'.;Pil"f, 544-4748 aft 5. ing pnce Sli000-$7000. Reduc. * 5'15-681 1 *
LARGE f il Id l.k to . ~-ed for clearance $400l).$5IXXJ, I -~~=':c:,.=c.._---1 \YarTanty ••• ?itany other am Y 'A'OU 1 e BEAUTIFUL Black & gold JT Cabin Cruiser, 1a HP BAY HARBOR * '10 NORTON Con1n1ancto.
Bargains. . . buy a rel~~~r. AKC reg'd 2 yr old German Johnson. Fish or ski, xlnt 1425 Bak St Cos! ill . Xlnt t."Ond. \I.lust sl'll, $1200
li1UST BE SEEN! Shepherd female. r.1ust sell. cond, Trlr, slip. 673-5655. J 'So e~ H '• bor :i 1d e~a or besl ofrer. 546--4297
• ALSO • Call Jin1· 540-3009 eves ust . o ar v . "' 1~ ·~as C YA?.-IAHA e KIMBALL FREE TO YOU · · 1966 Tolly Craft 26' fbgls, San Diego .t'r 1vy. (714) JW./0:-A hopper,
• THOMAS AFGHAN PUPPIES lmma.c. 125 hr/full equip. 540-!M70 ""°·"' . Ex . 644--468 • .. :>48-:>161 * KOHLER , CAMPBELL otJc colors * 962-9989 $7000. :>4S-l936, ~. F Sal .l~•L· t•-·-" °' SUN.COUNTRY KENNELS . or e: 1 n o ""'" u-....,cr-COAST MUSIC LOVABLE Gold retrleve.r 20' CABIN ~nuser -Glass, ,veil insulated S600, E....:cl.
NEWPOr.T & HARBOR male 4 montM pap•r PUPS-Greyhound & deep v, 85 John.son. t
21
rlr. twin beds, cooler. heater, Auto Servic•
Costa P..Iesa * fi42.285l trained, hds good home shepherd, 6 wks old. $5. Call $2.400 or best offer. 96Z-59 elrc \vatl'r heater-new crpl, 1 __ &_P_•_rl_• ____ 94_001 Aug, Hn Only l !Mi M-Sat fenced yard 968-2379 9115 96B-l870. curtains toilet patio cnclo. • V\V pans, trans axles
This is a career oppor-KING-SZ BED: Firm. gtill A DOR ABLE Ki Ir ens ' BE Au T l F u L German Speed-Ski Boats 9030 SUl'C r~cythi~g furnished. &_ bodypart,;. 't . d . 125 e llAMMO.'l"D organ -Ll2'J... .. _ .. _...... ......, C U • •-~ tun1 y in a ynamic packaged fra.me. $ . .......,,...,.,,,.n m1""" ages, a Shepue.1-u Must .sell. Movhlg, 1969 LIKE new 11 ,t • 548-8629. Giv~ possession e 642-0443 e
field -creating and Worth $260. Usually heme! =s:.:e:":1:S banjo, etc. 644-2292 or 67:>-6935, f\1n. 4'2 mo. aft 5:30, 548-3789. Formula Deep v. lOO hp 2Jrli. ·vw--E-n-g-in-,-.-G-ood--C-on-d-.'
meeting challenges 1!4l-6.136. • CABLE, New 41 .. console Ta.pan 9115 • PUR·E BLOOD MALE Johnson: very few run'g,1---------e &12-0443 • n&WpDlf. daily. LEAVING Country! Mulrt. piano, \val. w/bench & del. FREE to gd home 5 lovable LABRADOR PUPS hrs. Loaded! Sa c r l I ice e '5.1 Nashua 8x28 $1000 e I==========!
Sac! Spanish Mediterranl!an 6 only! Lis{ pri~ ;895. our klt~s 4 blk & 1 blk & white 496-3713 -83'7·74'3 $1925. ~1 729 •59 venu.! •441195 1Dx46, Trailer, Travel 9425 petSDMaJ A salary rlu!! gubslantial Furn. 543-1184 price $699 ll.!SOrted males & female~ Toy Poodle puppies adorablr. J,'i' SKI b<Hll. In boa t'd. air cond. $2995 • •64 l0x55,
l'Omm. lo a qualified man • LGE. Med!L slyle din·g rm GOULD ?ilUSIC CO. 646-2169 911" AJ(C, apricot. Must sell E)(ccllcnl for the casual 2 BR, living nn EXPANOO, 1 ·.-.-58-N_O_R_TI!_W_ES_T_E-RN-e lgBncy leading to a permanent aaln table $45; Dinclte &et &. 6 SiTICe' 19tt FREE male 9 mos, Small quickly. 175. 846-~. skier or fisht'nnan. $300 or new -bl, new refriu, #5'00
.,.,.,., '"t" -o 11' Travel Trail<'r Profession•I Service A~lr ~g~~ can:~· I 1 rvl ch's $45, MS..7645. 204:; No. M-ain, S.A. blk & silver ball of fluff, e IRlSH SETTER PUPS Best oCfer. 213: 633-7738 $J.99j, Srna!I. Easy TC1ivirig
for th• employer" . nqumes a'."' n ~ ews JAKE'S Continuous S"'ap * 547--0681 * loves children, has shots & AKC • 1s· Glallll ski boat v.·/trlr, nu CHAPMAN $jj() * 616--7588
d h I• will be held in &lrict <.'O~ Meet Buy-Sell-Trade 117 Beninners Organ Clasi license ~71'15 9/l~ * .....,.,188 * big t ittl\. boat ne\vly MOBILE HOMES ' an t e app 1cant fidence Send resume-to Box · • • °"'"'" '68 Nl~IROD. Deluxe, Sips n. Ill Da O NB · Calif 0E=·=lB=th=, =CM='=·="='-="":::::==·! ENROLL NOW BEAUTITIJL Sca lpoint _ painted. All 5: :J.:lt-196,CI. 1206 N. Harbor, S.A. Stove, icebox, din'i table.
• ;:;.38;0' · ' ~:1 Santa Ana. · Olli F It IOlO Cla,.;s: starting Tues., July Siam~ ~a1e,t I~ Horses 8l30 Bo T •
1 9032 _•8714/5318-811~ *c c $59S. S48-4l5&.
NIGHT WAITRESS
• · M/F c• um ur• l41h, 7 p.m. 6 weeks COON~ very ~IJOM. e s ov· at ra1 ers i~.,.,1 each \u.. • • ·-
equal oppor, emplr, $11 1-IAMr.-TOND ORGAN lng home &16--0683 9/17 * 714/5.J0.2!130 *
• DILL'IANS e Relin'd 34x6tl wood desb, ,..___ GENTLE 4 yr old: WANTED: Trailer for 15' Trucks
" SALESMAN P05ition avail, $69.SO e Refin'd wood arm STUDIOS, 2854 E . .....,....t S Long-haired kiltens, 1 ~~Arab/th Qtr horse matt'. boat. Good cotl<l, like nf'l\',I-::======== 601 E. BAiboa Blvd .• NB office job. $18.000. per yr. Hwy .. Corona de I 1.tar. bb1.ck 3 tortoise shell, ] $3.j(J. * * M6-3lol2 &4~. 1· '58 Font P.U.-~~T. 6 cy\, ncw
Nursing Mu9t have 1 yr, ot' direct :_tary1~haf· ~·50 ,• ~e 613-8930. t ig er, S \vks old e HORSE STA S • l=========:IMotor Home-s 9215 paint, rebH rng, Can hf'
EXPER. AIDE 3-11 :-sales bkgrnd. Ages $-35. ve argcs se. cc .n '54&-8371. 9117 LL B SI' M . 9036 seen Texaco :-;talion J91h & -eo~:. ~""I ol used offic. furn in this S30 mo. * 5"B-56J6 o•t 1p oor1n9 1---------Pl a;hift. Apply Park Lw:lo Con. ~ · area. I! SALE 11 LOVABLE Samoyed / white 30• Dodge bu.'I, 9j',~ convert. accnl ia, Ci\1, 1'\lake offer.
\·alesce111 Center, 466 }~lag.l :SAL=~E-~E=.,,,--~C~h-,~,-,,.., m-a-s 1.fc Mahan Desk Big Piano & Organ Sale Shepherd n1ix 1 mo old TRANSPORTATION • 10 niotor home. Si ps 6, All '55 Chevy J>ickup S200
• lihip Rd., NB, 642-8<Mt money part time, Sarah 1S01J Newport Blvd. going on RIGHT NOW at female. To good home B SLIP A\!Bil-up 10 4 0 • • facil. ~ bh,·n 6pm & Pt'Clly good cond
NURSES: * RJ-1 or * LVN Coventry hiring no1v. No ifl. \VARO'S BALDWIN STUD~O 968-3.J70 9/17 oats & Yachts 9000 Newport Harbor, Call T(lny 9p 646-3149, 19.'">8 Placr:nlla, Ci\1
:Relief, mainly \1•k ends, all vest. no del. Free training. ===-"~"'~"°-=--==~ 1819 Newport, C.l\1. &12.3484 J Puppies lefl-2 brown, ] ---------! btwn 11 am-6 pm ( 21311-='"m=:.======= ' 6 7 F. o R D s u pc< F . Pl-I o• WALNUT desk 30 x liO ~ 872-2812. M' · B'k 92IS :shifts ava.il 646--1624, or info : 017-6388. dra•"er, lik.. n<'iv l\2!1. black, small mi...:cd breed. FREE 1n1 t es Van-automatic, Xlnt rond, 6 • • 21~B p ·r· A CM Boat Slip Side Ties up I I U 67" r.,,~, ORDER TAKERS. \Vomt>n· SALESMEN Part time \vith Swivel cha ir $31. Recept ion WURLITZER spinet piano, '"... aci ic ve. ·1 • to 25', $2 per Jt. cy · o m eage. ,,.-.NJJ.
:gi_rl1. over 19, daY!' or evrs. car. Leads furnished. WMk room f.urnlture. Corn' r excellent condition, 2 yrs old &12--0I76. 9/17 61J..6.i50 68 BONANZA l\Unt Bike. 31'i House l·lunting? Check thf'
'.Pleasant ~'Ork from O\lr aity 4 hrs, avt'rage SlOD. per group, seats 4, :1lde chair S500. 494-3895 2 AKC Per.sian l rrd 1 B ~==.,,,=,.-=,.-..,,,-I hp Licensed for strecl. DAILY PILOT O)X'n House
Santa Ana otffCf'. No exp, 1l'k & up. Call 544-8136 aft and 2 tables $50. !).!S-5.108 "'°'===:;::;====='I tortoise shell 2 yr:;. & 7 yrs, asic boating course • SLIPS l~'·38'. Also. Dry Approved i;park arrester t"Olu n1n in every Fridny J.·
nee. Salary Sl.65 per hr. 6PM. Television 1205 F'rtt 10 qualified home offe red to the public storage&. hoist lau11ch111g. $1 25. 633-5.176 Saturday.
can 547 1323 before 5 pin --,------,----Office Equipment 8011 -836-4493 9/17 by the BaJboa Power ''==;_•:,;6~7~3-~~*==:I~~~~~==~~;.":~~~~=~~;= I -, SALES. with Slim-Gym, you ZENITH 21" I TV Tu'-Sqtt d S . I M I 9•-M I 9 PART T . ... co or • "" 4 "'.'''"'• .. ,,.. 10 .. "·•·red, a ron. a 1 as -9031 otorcyc es _,, otorcyc es 300 1me, ma, .. re \\'oman can earn what you're warrantu-$195. Costa Mesa mo••-, ',, p·,~r~•m•'•n. well as power boat-Boat Rentals .II to welcome newcomers. 'A'Orth! Call Mary Lou Good, ELECTR. Calcul. Ne \1' -.:r un: _1 Jl.1ust have car & typeYITiter. 003-2416 or 543-8329. Tosca! mod. BC-1201 $99.i.: Servi<:fo Center 6 4 6•34 43 67J..812J. 9/17 ting taught. Starting 1---------•t
Call 495-4098, after 4:00 pm. SERVICE SfATJON ~~~EP~~~c~.stJ;~ ~ "n=~='·=·Sa=l.======ICll TRUCK load ol grevel. 7 Pltt Mon., Sept. 21, SAILBOAT For rent, Cal 25, JI,
PBX R ..,,,, f"'l'l'E'. You haul a w a Y every Monday n i le S30 per day, i1·kdys: S40 per t t . ecpt. ATTENDANT. full time · &12-9873. Cameras & 1 13 k dy "·knd s: $200 -r \\'k. •
Good · PBX Cal ==,--,-.,,...,.,.--,,.-,---,,.-.._ s.J6.-9001 9/17 o r wee S. At New-··-un tng on typing, exp. I mrchanical. Sharp man y,·!"Jo ROYAL por!able lype.,..·r!ll'r, Equipment l.wv t H bo Lesson." incl, full l'QUip.
Loraine, \VestcliU Pl11'80nnel \\'ants g ood opportunity. ovel'haulrd and in perlert -====----3'-4 Yds of good top a;oil. You br b ;~O r11Y a CBh t 96M840.
Agency, IDS3 "'es:tcliff Dr .. Smog license pref'd. Neat order. Sl5. 5'!6-6380 days or ROLLEIFLEX. F3.5 Tessar, haul . ls! t"OITlf' ·1st se.l"W'd. u , ¥,est ay !=======:;::;=,
N.B.S67TIO 1ippeara.nce nee. ALSO_ 536-ll95eves. rxct'llent rond .. $75. Days SlS-7042. 9117 Avenue , Newp o rt Moblle Homes 9290 HONDA PHOTOGRAPllER \Vantcd part lime ma.n. Apply to --~.~\~VA~N~TE=-0~,---:'46-638(), 53G-lJ 9j t'\'es. RELATIVELY LA1e model ·Be a C h. Bring note-
b" intrrna1•-~-' f 11 m Jerry, 2'.590 Ne"'P01't Blvd., * llONEY\VELL Pentax 35 re r r ; g. Tit'C'ds work. book & p en c il first -·-------, ~-c '! DRY PHOTOCOPIER 1 Tr'iple Wide Cornell -top w" ..... Fashion ,_ .. _··--------REASONABLE * '''·"""" mm. Good cond. $125 or o. &16-8226 9117 nite. Any questions ·-• =~ I ~ ~~ Conlincnt•l • Paramount bkgrnd. pref'd. 83.>3501. SERVICE Station hrlp, some er . .,., .... .w.1111 call 673·1855. . . lal _,._ Da _ DOG: Sllt'p. Collie, id &rringlon e Uni\'l'rsal
CATION Wanbl girl )&.ntlor • ......,.,-man, ys, Garage S•le 8022 "'/Children male. needs a Flamingo e Gcncl'l!.I
fDr Cimllation Dept, type 50 w/experience. Apply 1" Sporting Goods ISOO big yard. 642-30.'¥.l 9/17 FREE •' Broadmoor e Shir
wpm, 35 hr wk. $300 to slart J>Cl'90n Boyde Richfield 490 ---------(n4> M6-t3'10. E. 17th, C.M. Fi\NTASAC Bargain~ on POOL TABLE PURE Bred Beagle femal" 15 1-lillcrcst e Cambridge
SlK"de & !rn!her ir<'mi1. n1ns. to good ha rn,.. CHAPMAN
iiUALIFIED Couple, retired SERVICE Follow-up. pa.i1 Some like nl'w. !l/18 SAT. -ix 8 Rrgu]alion. 548-73.12 9116 HUNTINGTON BEACH MOBILE HOMES
lo -.Y.. aierriceg Jn 4'xch. time, 3 clays per \\'k after l , -21 Bl Complete "'ith all POWER SQUADRON'S ,.....,. N II bO S A ~··~ t · · $2 hr Prvf ..... pm . ..., ack!horn St. ,,.,...a ... ....:,,, Xlnt --•. ~!ALE Cal, :. n10 old, part · uuo . · 11r r, · .• for •Pl a_t Halfl:t'Cst Club. nutu"1"¥· ' per c· 1 1 NB .. 644-0035 Afl 6 pm. 13"° ........ .-.... ..;';;•.,,,,.., Siamese. To .-..i honic. BASIC BOATING * 714/531-8105 *
.l"'t •-~ children & ma re \\'O'fl\8.n , on ac -,.."°"==~--'..,-~ ~~·, •-COU ·~, o __ ·___ 642-0Mf> !1/lS RSE Youth J)l"Oll'amm ing. l nfor. OHice Mgr ~35. M 0 VI N G Ho 11 s I' hold _ _ H B ~
545-Ta06 SERVJCE Station attendants furniture & i;ara~e !lnle. M iscellaneous 8600 4 Far out 8 wk old k\tten11 untintton ee1;n
9500
NEW LOCATION
• • 7911 Warner Ave.
• Huntin9tan Beach
•
f II. t ·~-Al' >1ob'I 251_1 Se11vic"' Cdi\1. llon1f' box trained & lov l n11: High School •••.--AURANT-Now laki"" 11 • 1> ,_,,...,, 5 ' 1 e R 121 & 122 "-appl.l••"--s lor luU 0.,.:: Service 1!iOO \V. Balboa anytime belo~ -11 or after 2. 5-16-96.'\(J 9/15 ooms
.... uutJ ..... JAKE'S Contlnuou~ SYiap St II •-t 14 d
AT BEAOi -+ pool· 40xl8·. l
br. liv rn1. ktl, rull-s1a:e
bath, patio, driVl'"'ll)', ~Pl\~'t
lor boat • 1rlr. $5600.
6i5-S079
See HONDA'S New ATC 90
All Terrain Cycle 3 Wheeler DISHWASIJERS. No one ="'=vd~·=N=.B""'. ~-~~-GARAGE sale: Sofa, ch111rs, ~tttt. Bu~·Sell·'l"rade 177 E. SIAMESE & Part.Siameile •r "I -P • an
under 18 need 8 p ply. SERVICE Station Salesman dinette M'I, much mi11e. &r. lSth, CM 6-lZ-5666 .ktltenll 10 ~ood hCJm<-s. ••ch Monday through !OX~ •"'ning, g k 1 rt I n R,
COLONY KITCHEN. 32U wanted. Salary & -comm. Sun. 9 lo 4, 4612 Sensl'IOre. -~==~~-~~" 962-8218 9/15 November redwood cab., nu paint, NB 67S-M89 * J ACUZZI Whirlpool, Ii~ s.fioo furn. S2700 unluro. Jo Barbor Blvd. C.1\1. 10001 Beat:h Blvd. H.B. · · nf'"'· Cost $300; must M'li EXCEPTlpNALl~Y Cute kil· FOR LEASE 548-69
1-R•'...--rAURANT. J\We, Tas-SEWING Powtt machine Appliances SlOO. 67J..3l54. h!ns, .!!Ome fluffy. Weancd ,t. OR CHARTER rent. · tO . ... t;'Free.ze JI or over. Ap-operators. Exper, Top pay, 1100 .,.,-=:="~-,---,,---tmd. ~15 9/1~ $4·$5.000 Do\vn, G yn balanN!. Ytll "t-ORE &. suru·s UP!"
pl)' a.ti 2 PM. 2!'.J66 Brislol, &leady "wk. &w:im"-'f-aJ".1---------JAKE'S Contlnuou& S w 11. P BOY'S Schwinn bikr Jnunf' 40' Jo"tybridgc \Vbttier Cruis-2-lx~ 3 br. 1 ba. AcluH
c.M. 4001 "F" Birch. NB. Nr KEN~tORE ""•~h<-r:c & ~ee~ h ~~de, UT only z:,s E. 21.st St. C.i'il. fir. Slttps 8. Complettly park. Easy ll"rms. S..16-032J
n ru ~-t• .--... .. 1,... for O.C. Airport. df')'tl'1:, Coltl,pot rcfrli]:'s; ·. 1 ' l\f · 642--0812 911~ n"(()lldiliont'd throughout 10lt4j KIT \\•/scrttn rm. ~ ~-ul"O-' .. ·• }"l't'iitht dam~. N" w, SACRlfiCE \\'c:stern addle, ''J970", MINT CON o . Sl.900 cash or bsl ofr. AJll
qoaJIUed lllJ)nman. Work°" ST. JAMES PRODUCTIONS fully aua~tetd. reduction• Xlnt cond. w/aUver $200 S \Vk. old IO)' bassett & toy :\.~\S PLUS! ~hike oUer~ prk, NG ptb. ~
ta.bukim Irvine Ranch. Cood CU.Ing for 1if1.iC"l'S & 10 $80. p~ !J6l..ii8J Scan 673-iG9l. 1errler puppW!!. 2086'
1
c
5
"
J)OWliJ.al. ample floor time. f'rlettaintrs for booklno. Jtocbuck Co, Adams nl T'S" TANAKA SURFBOARD "'allatt C.M. / D~ ~i8 E\•es l: "'k· 10x43 ANGELUS w/c11.b1Ln&.
Income u;nll.milrd. Call Let! l'l"C(lrdifl.i & mgmt. Send Magnnll•. 118 ..... •de In H•wall • ........,. cond. FREE to ad ho~ 1 blk ", s . 3-340.i, ' ~ ()r bst o¥t;· Adi! Prk.
Rabal', flholo & details to 2377 S. El ..;..;"'-...;_;;..,=~=~-"'" 6"""' femael tno1.1sc 646-716'9 9/l:\ 41 CHRIS Trl-«b FB. S9,,-,;N;--O;;:P<="'-:-;;6'&-="'6'"=~= "'"' --• ~mlno "-al San Cle t .~ AND NOWI only $50. &ra-8917. 2; K"" ·1 J301V" e IWd nMI Rca.t.Y ._. nc men e r · ~-"--~------t PET Rau can Jt ( . ..... auto p1 ot '70 Dehtt 21xal 2 BR. 2 ba. m-oa> * TRJ~tMER or UPJ:IOJ..S. A W•1her & Dryer r.11NK 111~. aulumn haie, s.ts-8.'\0.t • ne.9~~ radio, RDF. Fatboml'\tr, ~Ing t1n. ll'undry rm,
Unt.. P.dt Cenlt'I'. Jf'Yine TER&R to work on boa! fn. BY EASY luxurious l'kln1, $1000 value, sho.,..·er, 2 heads. elee galley, extru. °"'l\Cr 968..filSS.
R.ELIAb.l.£ Uw-ln iltl1!1' f01' tcriot1 & canvas cove:r. $1Sl. * • • l-~'1.T1: 893 8405 $.150, 968-205.' 2 PUPPIES, lemale, Collie & $21 ,000 8'16--5041644-4221. In ~d of serYicc! \'ou'll
: .chL4le chndren. Unnd Perm, Joh, f'Mnge ~fll& * \VA Sii E R k aa1 "M"o"v"1N"G""'M",,"st"'s.=u."· Db;:;:;l-;hed:::o.I Sh!!phenl mix. 64r,.2332 9115 BEAUT 3.1' Stephcn.1, ChryA find the rls:ht one In the
motbP!r ok. J15 wk. Bt1on I LAKE ARROWHEAD MA· dr)ter--bolh for VA), ~nr's f'rogticu Re trig-, 1 YR old l!!n111.le Colli.. ('na. $12.;m..u.iOO down, Onr Scl'\licco Directory ol U~
pn\. 6t6-I01J.. RINA fT)4) 3.17.o&29. M()...l113 •fftr ~ W/l<:c"m•ktr. Etc, 5$7..llllT Slw'phcnt 6.JS..2332 Bil? must aacrlfice! 673-2807, Clngglfil"<i SttUon.
See HONDA'S ALL NEW
SL 3SOK1
SALES e PARTS
ACCESSORIES e
'
e SERVICE
INSURANCE
----....... ---.-·---------·--:=-=--.-=--------:------..,,.-,-----.----..,...,..------:...., ... _
TllANSl'ORTATION TllANSl'ORTATION-TRANSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION
TUf!IV, Stpttmbtr 15, 1970 DAILY 'tlOT J1l
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOllTATION TRANSl'OllTATION TRANSPORTATION TRAHSl'OR l'.AHCIN
•
-~--·
1T .;.;•.;.uc~k;.;;• ____ _.9.;.500;;.; Imported Autet -Imported Auto. ffOO lml':'!".'!'! Aute1 ffOO ~..!" C1rt ffOO Imported Aut.. 9600 lmpomd Aut01 '600 lmpo""!'_~ '600 Aut01 Wlftled
1970 GMC DA1SUN MG .
~
"MG'' _,IA,~
~O!ISCHI PORSCHE TOYOTA . VOLKSWAGIN VOLKSWAGIN
'67 PORSCHE 912 '64 PORSCHE
White with black interior. 3$6 SC COUPE
Alt11FM. ex-ctptlonally &OOd 8alboa blt1e, c:hroine wheels,
_runni.Jli. WYG945 radlal tires, concourse oon-
·--
!T!OJVfOITIAJ
DEMO
'63 VW Bug
MECHANIC SPECIAL
Uc. OKC-612
'63 vw
WE l'AY TW CASH
for Giid CUI I trucb
call IU tor !re. ..Umafil:,
1500 PICKUP
Willi CAMPER
"Leader 1q Tbt £eadl Cltiel''
292 engine, beat•r. deluxe ZIMMERMAN •
THINK
ID I
'°FRIEDLAMDER"'
'70 Corolla • 3824
$1694 $4295 dltlon. Ue. XOGW!
CHICK IVERSON CHIC~3~::~SON
$299 \
CHICK IVERSON
Low miles oo rebuilt •na:lne,
new clutch, new bralcet.
radio, ptrfect oondlUon. Can
be lffn at ~ Harbor
Blvd, or phoot 6611121 Sam GROTH CHEYROl.£1
tml ••ACM (HW'I'. •) -89.1-7566 • 1131"'821 19711 HA~ BLVD. VW
to6pm ••• vw Alk tor -..._ -""' Ext. 116 "' OT" '58 VW lJ21l Bacb Blvd.
cab, flberglut tires with
8 loot cab '"' Kins ol 2145 HARBOR BL VD. Road Camper. 'Stove, refrl&. 540-6410 NEW-USEO.Sl!RV.
~ COSfA MESA 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 6T
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
Cheek our .deals 1970 c~:J!:VD. Orfa:lnat black flnilh with Huathwtoa: Bftcb
8 O'l1iER DEMOS contrasting red interior. Uc M7-6081' Kl t.ml AT BIG SAVJNGS WANTED . GBV!IO.
era.tor, 1.1> gal. water tank.
oatunt wood with 101' of ENGLISH FORD
n>Om.
$3295
Sericl 58744
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harb:r Blvd. .
O>Sta Mesa 540-9640
ALL NEW ENGI..ml
FORDS NOW IN STOCK
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED
TO CLEAR
LAME SELEC!'!ON
1'0 CHOOSE FROM
Theodora
MG ---Immediate neuverr.
AUllodu
_l~l'lllJIOI I
_11111 p L1 I I ci
'70 911 'T' COSTA MESA
Demo. 3400 acruat mlln. a '67 T Gl'CJCI 911 Jpeed trana:., AM/FM, mac wbeell. emerald creen wttb 29,000 miles, 5 speed, mags,
black interior. (#1011fi6). AM/FM. <VGP424l
BILL YATES BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN
DEAN LEWIS 1·11 ..,. top doU.• tor ""' $38 Down
1966 Harbor, C.M. "8-9303 VOLKSWAGEN toda,y, C&D $311 down, .,. $29.78 for 24
BEST BARGAINS and ask for Ron Plnchot. months, APR Is 21.5% totaJ
WE PAY CASll
FOR YOUR CAI
COME SEE OUR 549-3031 Ext 66-67. 673-0900. interest. $148, Total cash
SELECTION OF •BUS •58 Nk• body "'" P'lc• $738. CONNELL TOYOTAS b'an1, tte. Blown eni. l350'. CHICK IVERSON CHEVROLIT
JIM SLEMONS cau 646-<9!0. VW 21211 -Bhd.
'68 CHEVY PICK UP ROBINS FORD MOO w. Caul H.,,. N.2.
• HJtbor Blvd. G«2-94lli MG-176'
32852 Valle Road
San Juan Capistrano
8374800/'93-45111499-2261
32352 Valle Road IMPORTS '68 V\V convt. Out1tanding $49-3031 Ext. 86 or 67 . Costa Mna 5f&12JO
San Juan Capistrano oond. Best otter. 543-&tM or 1910 HARBOR BLVD. WE PAY TOP DOILAR
8374800/493-45111499-2261 140 w. WARNER •73-<830. COSTA MESA FORTOPUSEDCAU
Long Bed, V8, .Muat atll! dlr. Costa M~ M2-0010 MG TD. Ciullc $350 with
(14710A) Will take trade or 1600 Datsun eflllne. $250 '61 PORSCHE
CABRIOLET
'65 Pon;ehe sc mint SANTA ANA ---;:,6Li50ivwru:;---l"t964,,,...,,VW;;'.:'.. :;Ex;.::'.ce'.::u,".'.:,,~.,,-"'1. U ""'car 11 """dour,
condition, low miles factory OPEN EVES N ·"· 1 19(1 UI flnt --" • BUG ew vu.y l"terio'-""'° BAUER BUICK air many extras must Kl.I Su k H ll
Hr rdtop, gleaminl' metallic _S2850c_"_._,._,,__,_1s_1_. ---& SUN. 546-4125 American mags, wide tires, m:~~· etc~ ~~. '11:s1a :ir ,.~ta "234 E. 17th s;_ -
.Uver, with brand DeW in-'60 SUPER 90.. Sunroof, custotn mellllic paint w·'h l\lake otrer. Call 546-9770 1--=;::-====-=-·"-1-
finance. 494-7744 FERRARI with original e ngine .
159 VW SUNROOF Excellent for restoration
RIH 673-4525 FERRAii enthusiast. 213: 633-7738
terlor, chrome wtieei., ft• AM-FM, Pirell1s, chrome TRIUMPH beautituJ. lace work. YPU. days, 538-5567 after 6PM. IMPORTS WANTED
dial tires AM/FM radio nns, hdrt, etc. Xlnt! U750, I---------901. As'k tor Wayne. Oran,p Counties
N--Ltd. ~ '68 MGBGT ~-9510 11!1&'.• Counl)l''I cmtY autbar-Wire wheels need.I body
Uc. WYvJ 215. ' 64&-3046. • Several other customized TOP $ BUYER
$2199 1969 Porsche 911-T '64 TR4 ROADSTER vw 10 <hOO,. '"'"' BILL WXEY TOYOT.i
CHICK IVERSON "' con<f, 1·753-00IO Britl<h ... c1ng ""'" with CHICK IYERSON VOLVO R. a.1:' -i:-:n.
·~---ized dealer. work. $1500.' '42 Willy's, 4 wheel drive, SAL.!!s.SERVIC!:~PARTS 557.9588
hubs, xlnt cond. i1050 or a100 W. Coe.tt Hwy. ~=~--
best offer. 531-5726 Newport Beach MGB
642-9405 540-176411;-;:;::-:===-.-o"'""= ~.!'mpers 9520 Authormed l'errut Dealer 1970 MGB Convl Low miles,
-----wire whsl, lug rack, ton-
'69 Ford Van Camper, 13,400 FIAT neau, loaded! Pvt pref.
1J1i's, R/H. auto, 61ps 5. ·--------ll.'S2695~~·,;5.1&-~1~1'l9;'.~~~
i3895. 644-6248. * 1965 MGB Good cond. New
Campers 9520 paint. $1400 or best offer.
536-34'6
New '70 Datsun · 1969 ·MGB-GT
VW RENAULT electric overdrive. Excellent VW eood. (XJV827) Saeritiee! 54~3031 Ext. 66 o• 6T
549-3031 Zx:t. 86 or S1' Small down or take trade. 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
197o~f~o~VD. '63. R.ENAULT-reblt eng & Will finance pvt, pty. Call 196S V\V BUS, New engine,
trans.;"iiew brakes A stereo. Maury dlr. aft 10 am 5f0.-3100 $1395. Aft 6 pm.
$300 ar beat ofl'. 64l-3139 ar 4!K-7503. 545-3509
1963 TRr4 aott top, hnl tp, '64 Karmann Ghia, Xlrrt
Demo! 5700 actual miles. S SAAB tonneau coVt!r, oryrdrive. rond. $725 or Best after.
Aute Lu1lnt tllO U'VV'LIU ~ THllll 1--------1
~'Y~O:
"FRIEDlANDER" -'69 911 ·s·
speed trans., mag whffl.a, '"'"" 54(}-4713 aft 6 .. ...,.. AM/FM. Special factory --------~· · 545-6519 or 96g-1 '"~· 2 dr. Demo. All M•k1s-All ,_.II ,
equipped, Yellow with blade Authorized Dealer VOLKSWAGEN '67 VW CONVRT. Beige-Nu * $2694 * Automobiles . Trudm
1800 OHC, Pkkup w!Jh camp. auto 8port ltd Gd coml, $2450. 64&8824
er. Sa1e price $2099 dlr. Authorized Sales e Service MORRIS
(# 67198)' WiU take car in DEMO SALE
trade. Will finance private 1970 Fiat 124 Sports Cpe. e WOODY-Morris MlriOi'.
party. Call 5464052 or Radio, healer, speeial ex-Qnp.lt/resfored. "Groovy
494.SSll. haust, pin stripini, radial Fun Car." 673-1933 e
interior. (#301224). Sales • Service • Parts brake~ Xlnt cond IPM 1a1.ctt CllWY. "' "Where Service
BILL YATES Sonet Coupes in Stock ,69 VW Bug trr..Cust:;-;_ $1250 &16-8049 NE893-W1566USE• 5.17-6824 Makes ihe Difference ..
Orange County's Newest Olr. tttior, radio. 'i!reen, xlnt '63 VW Bus-Cherry cond. a 0.SERV. Orange Co •• Newport Beach
METRO VAN ,.,.,, low mu... OPEL
1953 %. T builtin camper. $2975
VOLKSWAGEN COAST IMPORTS .. ,,, Pvt pty 11475. Musi "" to appHclate. -----=-=-:iil <4~57~0 Cam~pus~llt'~. 7~1~~
32852ValleRoad M6-63TI . • ~S~l300::::.·~o;s.::;;267~9~·,,,,,---l' ............... :..:=..;;:;:;,::;::;:.;:::=:._I:
San Juan Capl•trano el Orange County Ine. ''6 VW CAMPER. &d eend. '68 VW BUG VOLVO Uotd Cort swvo, •Ink, t<e bex, "'" 537-TITI cau Collect 1964 OPEL' WAGOl'I 83T.CSOO/f93.4511/499-2261 1200 \V. Paclllc Cout Hwy. $1800 or best offer. Automatic trans. AM/F~I
'60 PORSCHE Cabriolet. 1600 =="=2-04=06==·=54<-1529=== -~=•...,.,536-1~~933"-o*~,--radio, heater. 213: 926-1062 •10 Demo. • 15.36 Auto Referr•I Service
super, with hard top. New '69 RED VW Bug-black int, Larqe Selecti~n $2950 The revolutkma;.'Y way to ee
peting, panelling, bed, new 9625 Barden Grove Blvd. 1
paJnt. Xlnt condition. 18M'DIB*;l{rap• $500. ~ pty, 494-8660 * 545-7245 * 68 OPEL Station Wagon 102
/END of Summer Special! ~ hp eng, New paint. $11m.
8' 1968 Cabover Camper on e THINK &12-7319 aft 5 PM
engine, new clutch, new TOYOTA r/h, goOO cond. Clean. Of-Of VW C your automobile. We ha
Be' 5 549 .,,, -'< ampers, Clw<k °"' deal• 00,.,, ,..;..,._ F" 1n1or tires, new paint, AM/Flil, fer. ore , . .,,,,...,, .... er 1800 F Cpe lo d li • •~ .,,, Vans, Komb'1s, r e very. mation pb. &t2-443t. just like new, can be seen REPOI ..;;,:.•_:::~='::;·===~~ Overseas del Specialist.
at 2089 Harbor Blvd .. or • '66 vw SUNROOF R/H, B N & Used DEAN LEWIS WANTED· Good tl'anlporta-
ho •• .,_ •·-~ g UHS, IW lion cu. Uoed Mu"·-p ne '"""'....,._, .....,, w pm $875. Pvt ply. I _,1 D II ·-•
1966 i;, Ton Chevy truck. "flAj PORSCHE Auto/tm,., R/H. $2150.
968-2'23. 111 '63 PORSCHE-
·e '70 8' Overhead Camper
Sips 4 * Xlnt ~rut
SACRIFICE $900
644-6591 aft 8:30 pm
"fRIEDlAHllER'' 'S' coupe, Agean Blue finish.
AM/F~f. (JGE 972)
, f; 9 'T' '70 Toyot• M•rk II * 673-0152 * mm.-u •N • very 1966 Harbor, C.M. -646-9303· VW Bq. 6f2...3963 aft 5 PM
70 arga 11 Loadod -Fael<>ey el•, auto-l968 vw with Sunroof CHICK IVERSON '68 Voll'O 4 ''· • ""· R/H, THE QUIOUll YOU CAU. 13151 llACH IHwr. Jtl
893-7566 .• 537-6824 NEW-USED-SERV. BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
Demo! Exactly 682 Qliles. 4 matte. JUl'lt aver 2,000 miles. $ll95 675-6739 VW new radial tires. Xlnt cond.
speed, AM/FM, chrome Sacrifice! (642BQD) Teke :::::::.· ~-=~~:;...c.1 $1500 497 1013 --YOU -•
wheellf. trade or small down, Will NEW VW BUG 549-3031 Ext, f6 or 67 · -·· THE QUI~ _. •1970 VW Camper -fully
equipped, pop top. Xlnt
eond $3395. 546-2568 U'UVl.l'l;m 32852 Valle Road
San Juan Capllltrano
BILL YATES """""' P'iv pty. Call Sid $55 89 pr month 19711 HARBOR BLVD, Uttd Cori -.!std Cort ,,.
dlr. aft 10 am 540-3100 or • • ,roJ-.co~ST~A~>~<ES~A.-;;u.;:l~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I VOLKSWAGEN 4>1-7503. ·6' VW-M"'I ..U, be•I offel'. $147.71 down Includes ti.fags, 1tereo, newly reblt 196'7 FORD Truck & Cabover
Camper. Sleeps 4, x-lnt con-
dition. 4934677
Imported Cari 9600
'69 Fiat 124 Cpe 837-<BOOl<9J.45UJ<99-2261
Exotic red with black vinyl '70 Tar;.., 911 'T' 32852 v aUe Road
San JUM Capifltrano bucket seats. Low miles hafl ,,_ had excellent care sitcr1. Demo! Exactly 682 miles, 4 837-4800/493-45U/499-2261
fice! (XLY235)' Take older speed, AM I FM, chrome PORSCHE '67 912. New
car 1n trade, Will finance wheels. radi.P, chrome wtilil, AM·
privet. • u-ty. cau P" <11>. BILL YATES FM srw. New' •notne.
t•x & Lie. ()pen End eng:, Extras 846-0489 fTlln~1Ji'\JTl~ii VW LEASING '70 Duster Xlnt cand, ,au!o
AT console bckt .eats. 6 cyl, CHICK IVERSON s.ooo m;. s2.800. 64&2125
VW • '67 VW Bui. Extra clesn, AUSTIN HEALEY
AUSTIN AMERICA aft 1D : ~.l 49'-7503 S4l).3l.O(J ' $3900. 67M530 d ay. I
NEW FIAT . VOLKSWAGEN. • .;.c673-.:,,29'16=-'=-~a1t;..,.'__,,~~
11111 BEACH l~VD.
Hunt. ...... 147-1555 'ml"· cl Qlul: """· .. Bell '68 T"°la' brdtp_ Am/Fm,
411pd, xlnt cond. lo mi's .
Orig owner $1<00. 673-6655
1970 HARBOR BLVD. sunroof, fac 1tereo, $1250.
Sales, Service, Parts
Immediate Deliver)'
AUM<>deb
J1rluport
~I 111 po rt s
1970 I.SD SPYDER 32852 Valle Raorl e '6T Poncbe 911. S opd,
.All oolori to clX>Oel trom. San Juan Capitfrano Xlnt cond, 86,lllO ml' ..
$2335 + Tax & ue. 837-4800/493-45U/499-2261 $4500. 833-1331
All models to choose, N
Callfoml• Sport Cars 1-aw __ c_._,_• ·-------------
001 E. 1't, S.A. 542-'801
3100 w. CoUt Hwy., N.B. JAGUAR QBAu1a'i. 642-94~ 54B-1764 ---
CO::n'A MESA 962--2Ln.
YES! 1968 Volkll automatic 11'1 1967 VW
only $1400 Samoll.ana. Call R&H, Xlnt, Cone!.
5.16-3107 HURRY! $1195 673-2514
Red ·~! ~~~!!~. . H.;::uu:R~S
speed. radio, heater, dlr. The only authcrtzed JAGUAR
(0WP906) Take small down. dealer in U. ent1N Harbcl'
WW finance, Call 494-7744. Azea.
'59 HEALEY
100, 6 cyl. Overdrive, wire
wheels tonneau cover and
converiible top, Make offer!
892-2970.
Complefb SALES
Bm~c~~~~
BMW
SERVICE PARTS
BAUER
BUICK
IN
Aulhod•w DI•. COSTA MESA
Sales e Service e Parts 234 E. 17th Street
All Models to Choose From I --=~=548-=77~65'-==~
Service Monday 'till 7:00 PM '61 JAGUAR MARK IX
Sat 'till Noon Salon fittings, Runs COAST · IMPORTS G,.at. 5 •pd, gd mUea,.. Must Aell! 213: 656-3716 Of Orange County Inc.
1200 W. Pacific C.oast Hwy JAG!JAR Mark X, Every
642-0406 e 546-4529 possible extra, Perre ct
JIPl!Cimen $3500. 4~1702.
CORTINA
'68 Cortina GT
1600 engine. 4 1'~e<l. radi o.
(YNB!M8)
$899
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
328.52 Valle Road
San Juan Capistrano
837-4800/ 49345111499-2261
KARMANN GHIA
'63 VW GHIA
$1099
CHICK IVERSOl!ll
vw
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 DATSUN 1!170 HARBOR BLVD. 1"'•5,,...9 =oAf'""'SW-WlGDff _c:osrA MESA '66 GHIA
Overhead cam engi?8· 4 1 owner, canary )'t!llow exter-
speed. radio, low mileage. ior with black vinyl Inter.
Special inte.rior. Sacrifice. \or. tonneau cover. Has had
CXTG566l. Take trade or exce.llcnt care (SQX 122)
small down. Will finance pvt $1099 full price: Will finance
pty, Call t.1aury dlr. 540-3100 pvt. pty. dlr. Call Maury aft
or 494.7503 aft 10 am. to am 540.3100 or 494-7503.-
70 DATSUN METRO
4 Door Sedan, used $1799 full --------
price. (60.IAVAJ lllr. \Vill METRO VAN
take trade or finance pri· 1953 ·~ T buDUn camper.
vale party. Call 546-4052 or Stove, sink, See box, carpet,.
494ail. Ing, panelllnc, bed, n e w
DOT DATSUN pa1,1. :1°i:~11o~
OPEN DAILY
AND SUNDAYS
18835 Dcacll Blvd.
Huntington Beach
842-7181 or Y.D-0442
'67 DATSUN \VAGON
Radio, heater, automatic, Uc
UJS-462 $950
8'\RBOR AMERICAN'
1969 Harbor Blvd.
646-0:161
'61 Dalsun f!edan-SS.000 ml,
r&h, 4-spd, aood cond, mo.
962-0016.
234 E •. 17th ST. COSTA MESA
JAGUAR
2+2 1970 OPEL G.T. '68 JAGUAR
XKE
low mil1.191, I own1r li1111fy with
onl't 22.000 mil11. Chromt wir•
wh11l1, raclio, haaf1r, a11to1111fiG
tr1111111i11ion. J111t imm 1c11l1t1.
ISYWIOll
$3295
$
:~. ~~-H~.~~~~ P.S .. P.I .. 1"10~ $2795
air, I •w111r. 26.000 9e1111i11e mll••· CWOSIJ I), •
:~. ~~~~!~ .. ~! '''· $2395 ... 000 mile 11nconcfitio11el pow.tr trein w1r.
renty. Whit1 w/blat;k Yinyl roof. 0111 ow111r. l?UOIO)
Prestige Can at S.nslbl• Prices
'67 CONTINENT AL
2 Door kerdtop, You'll iu1t h1we to 11e tli!t 0111 to re11ly lielt1"'e It.
Full pow1r, 1lec. htetl re•f l r1cli11in9 P•••· 111t, .111+0.1 eir cond,.
1tc., 1tc. Y1ry tow mll••t•· IYWS61J I
$2895
'69 MERCURY
Mer-i1tl1 1tetion wef•"· Fu ll power ind f•ttory ei' co11dlllonl119, atareo
AM-FM r1clio, lo1cled with ell 1q11ip1111nt. Law l'llilee91, I ewntr, fee•
tory warr1nfy •~eUa"le. IYWT7t31 . $AYE
'68 BUICK
Spo,1 w19011. VI en9i111. e1tt.m1tic tr.1rt1mi11!011, ,ecllo, h11f,,, power
1fe1rl119 and power lir1k11, Yinyl int.rior. power ftil t•+• wi!Mfow, facto~ 1!r conclitle11i119. Flawlt11, IVHFI Ill
$3095
'65 OPEL CPE.
R1dio, heater, "·•peed
tra111ml11ioft, .(RGU0621'
'69 OPEL LS.
Sport co11pe. 1'edlo, li11l1r,
•·•P••d tre11111'1i11ion.
Ro.1d1t1r. l riti1h r1ci119 9r1111 with
1111d1 9ra111 l11ther i11t1rior. Yo11
wont find one clea11er. • tpeed, ••·
dio, heeler, chro'"e wlrt wh1el1.
l'r'UM9621
SAVE
195
Excellent Economy ,Can
'65 FORD
F1lrJ111e 100 h1r4top, VI, .111lom1tic, r1dio, li11lor, power 1te.1rl119 l
lireke1, lmm1cul1f1 1S1rtditio11. IPIZl411
$895
'65 MERCURY
COlony Perk wt9011. YI, 111lometie, r1cl1o, h11tar, power 1leerln9 &
Dr••••• 1!r concl., low n'llle191, I 1wner. COt6ASWI
$1395
'66 CHEVROLET
MellD11 2 Dr. M.T. VI, 111to111etic, rt clla, h•elar, powt r 1+ttrlri9, l1w
111Ue1. CYl'Wll71
I •
1961 CAMARO
2 Jr, llarOto, k1llyo. 6ro1n with oo"•
trotlint bl1ck intorlor, f1ctory 1ir coHI•
tlor1it19. lXEZ4-4)1
$2395
196-4 PLYMOUTH WAGON
Fury II, one owt11t car a. 111 1111:c1pti1s1I
va lue. Ono .Y••r w1rr1nty_ f0XS212)
$995
1969 MARK Ill
U11~11,,..1blv nic1 Rotl1°Ro1tc1 tr1llM11.
El19a11f dirk lil111 with l11ffltr 11phol1t1rt
A CordoYa top. (Ytry l11x11ry f11t11re~ czss.1141
$6395
1969 GTO 4-SPUD
l1111tif11I Y1rd1ro 6r1111, powtr 1t.tfl11f
I powtr di1c ltr1ka1. I ],000 111ilt• & f.t.t•
fory wan anty. {714.AFX)
$2795
1967 GRAND PRIX
F1totory 1ir co11ditio11ln9 , Yi11yl top I
load.tel with 111it11. A li11 ~tlf11I ftld.
ITRM)77l
$1895
1969 FIREBIRD CONV.
Sperkli119 rid will! bl1ck c111IOl'll trim.
power 1t1erln9 I feclory air. CZLH02JJ
$2795
1968 BONNEVILLI
2 llr. h•rcltop ·with •fr con4., powa, wi11o
-'ow1, light 9014 Body A '"•+thi119 i11f.1r•
lor. IWX6621l
$2495
1967 MUSTANG
2 ''· herdtop, Derk blu1 with "inyl top
I feclory 1lr, 0111ttendl119 1ood 111femo•
bilt. CXXYOl•l
$2195
1970 GRAND PRIX
Sterta r1dio, YJ11yl tip, fectery 1lr I
011ly S,000 bl'!ile1 011 tlil1 ll9lit 9rt111 p.tt•
1011el cir. An 01111ptlot1 el b11y f017·1ED)J (Xl\Stt<fJ
$4695
1969 PIRlllRD 350
T11rl.o hyclr1ffltlic. pawer 1fe•,lrt9, etc.
Verclero Wret11 harclte,.. Ucen1• N ..
1IYCJttJI
$2595
CLOHD IUNDAYI
•
IWJ;jROY CARVE R
1£\\JROLLS -ROYCE
2925 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA
S<6A444 ----!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!11!! __ ....,______
•
I
(
-------. ' -·--. -"
:tll D.>ll Y PILOT Tuesday, S'epltmbtr 15, 1'170
TRAN SPORTAT ION TRANSPORT ... TlON TR ANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
9100 New Cers 9800
I
BRAMD NEW
'71 DEMONS ON · SALE NOW!
ONCE YOU SEE IT -DRIVE IT -PRICE IT --YOU'LL NEVER WANT A FOREIGN CAR
BUILT IN AMERICA, BY AMERICANS, FOR AMERICANS . '
CLOSE-OUT SALE ON BRAND · NEW 1970 DODGES
B~:0 '70 DODGE CHALLENGER BRAND
NEW '70 DODGE DART 1
::;
0 '70 DODGE CHARGER 1~:~ '70 DODGE CORONET R.T.
CUSTOM 2·DOOa
No. IDB•lO
FACTORY INVOICE
COST $75 No. 17lll0
OVll FACTORY
INVOICE COST
5 75 No. I l5494
OVER FACTORY INVOICE ,
COST I
5 75 No. 110211
OVER -FACTORY INVOICE
COST
·5,000 BLUE CHIP
I went to think 111 of you folks who .. 1v1 bought
e1r1 1t Worthington Dodge i nd I want to think you
for referring your friends end rel1tiv1s to Worthing.
ton Dodge. You 111 nd your friends have made thi5 en•
of the largest Dodge Dealerships in the world. If I
.c•n helP. You in •ny 'l'•Y• p_l••1• droP. in.
NOTICE!
If you are short of money for the down
p1yment ind need extended terms ind
very low monthly payments, bring your
good credit references and come to Worth·
ington Dodge and see for yourself how
easy it is to get the fin1ncing you need. 1'J,.1t se• me fint •nd you'll receive
1,000 81111 Chip S!emp1 if vou buy
from me or eny other d11l1r."
''JUST SEE ME FIRST'' STAMPS
Sincerely,
Cal Worthington
PB!S!l!T THIS Ap FQB THIS! SPECIAL PRICES
* MONEY 81CR GUIRINTEE OR EYERY USED CAR lbVERTISED -* OFFH ....... WED. SEl'TEMIU 1'1H
'69 CHEV. Y2 Ton P. U.
8' Bed, top free Money Beck Guara ntee &
10 Day Tri<11I Exchan9e. 53 8 160.
'65 CHEV. Y2 Ton P. U.
Fr ee Money Ba ck Guarantee & 10 Day
Trial Exch en9e. C47966.
'68 CHEVROLET
Auto. trans., P.S., R&H. Free Mon ey Bac k
Guarantee & 10 Day Trial Exc h. VH8531 .
'69 PLYMOUTH FURY
Auto. Tran s., P.S., R&H. Free Money Back
Guar. & 10 Day Trial Eicc h. TFB94.
Used Ca rs
WE BUY
CARS
9900
~~
2100 Harbor Blvd. 6~3·0;166
BUICK
'67 BUICK Skyl;:irk convt.
A'.lt/f)I. Air, Clean. Low
book Sllj(J, 11·11l ~~\[ [or
$1300 .. Can f1n11n1·e. ffi5-4'1.17.
~ADILLAC
I~L\1ACl>LATE '61 Cad ..
65,000 mi's, 11 p1~T. Xlnt
cond. SlilOO or hsl olr. See,
19.10 1'\e11110rt Blvd., C.;\l.
Trash 10 Treasures 1 n
Saturday Dime-a-line!.
CADILLAC
'69 CAD 4 Dr. sedan DeVille.
Aqua firemist; air. stereo,
lilt-!elr, sentinf'l; 16.000 mi.
Kew tires. $5100. 833-0130.
e ·&1 SEDAN de Ville • full
fl\IT, fact air. AM/FM.
$993. 962-5751 after 5 wkriys
'j7 Cad.· Low mileage. Gd
end. Gd, !or restoring $200.
6-12-8748 after 4.
19&l CADILLAC Co u p e
DeV ille $125tl. 1961
Continentr~I $27;i. 57;....1554
CA MARO
"67 Camlll'O, 6 cyl. Xlnt cond,
3-spd. Bucket seals. $1300
or best offer. 646-i176n.
New Cars 9800New Cars 9800
NOW
IN COSTA MESA
HONDA s::.
• Al• COOt.fD ,.OH'f
ll!NGINl
• FltONT WMl!l!l OIUVf e l"OWlR A511STEO IEl.P•
AOJIJ5TING FROftf OISC
1111111.t.Kl!S
• MAXIMUM Sl'ffO fl MPH e UI' TO tO MIL.El PER
GAL\.OM
• POU•·PASSINGllt, 1 O•.
Sl!OAH " 1'1111 tl• "IW C•r P"'l'frllltn L9t•I frlnS. Tl• & l lc:MM
UNIVERSITY
OLDIMOllU
21$0 HARIOR ILVO. COSTA M!!A 540-9640
$1895
$695
$895
$1695
~AMARO -'68 CAMARO
• .. ....,.,..,. ......... ""lllJSWll P«bl MCl .... ~_,,flid. I
'66 CHEVROLET $795 Auto. tren5.1 P.S., R&H. Fr•• Mon•i B•ck
Guarant•• & 10 Day Tri1I Exch. RS 960
'68 PLYMOUTH $895 Auto. fr•n1., r1d io, he•f•r. Free Mon•/i
Back Guer. & 10 Dey Trial Exch. 6788 0
'69 PLYMOUTH $1695 Auto. tran s .. P.S., R&H. Fr•• Money B•ck
Guar. & 10 Day Tr ial Exch. UWS-430
'65 MUSTANG 2 + 2 $995 Auto. trans., P.S., V8, R&H, wsw. Fr••
mon1y bk. guar. & I 0 day trl. •xch. PFJl41"
CHEVROLET CORVAIR FORD
'66 MALIBU SS '66 CORVA1R 500. , "'· 3 . gpd 110 eng. R/H, 1st $400 TOP DOLLAR
'68 DODGE $1195 Auto. tr1n1., P.S., R&H . Fre• Mon•i Baek
Guarente1 & 10 Da y Trial Exch . VS 502
'67 FORD Y2 Ton P. U. $1295 long Bed •. 14578231 . Fr•• Money Beck
Guarantee & 10 Day Trial Exchanjjl•.
'69 DODGE Super Bee $1·995 Auto. trans., P.S., R&H. Free Mone~ Ba ck
Guarant•• & 10 Day Trial Exch. ZIC 365
'68 CHEVROLET %-T $1995 Carryall JO passenger. 1420331'
9900 Used Cars
MERCURY MUSTANG PONTIAC
MUSfANG '69 r.tach I, l'\1, '68 ?.ten::. Cyclone 2 Dr. VS, air , 4-spd, rt1sc/brks,
9900
~utomati.c, V8, J'IO"'er steer-takes. 842-7543 Automatic, power steering, ing, radio. healer. CFFP076)1======'====·1 !or
low mlleog, tWQD341) di,. $1099 CORVETIE CLEAN USED CARS
hrdtp. 390 eng, 4-V, pis,
p/b, console etc. $1575.
646--8554.
p.s., posi, stereo, sport
deck, air scoop S 2 S 5 0 .
646-4455 ext 35, niTc-642-288b.
'65 GTO
4 SPEED
Sn1all do,vn 1vil! linance pri. BILL YATES SeToHAEndDyDOB,RowEo
vate party. 546-4052 or '64 VE'ITE FB-'67 en~. Rolls MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE • 642-6173 •
<'4"1lt. VOLKSWAGEN Royoo Cood. ~ ..... 4ll .... ROBINS FORD
'68 CAiVIARO Convertible 32852 Valle Road DesperatP., must sell. $1995. m Harbor Blvd. .67 Mustang Conv. Burgun_ I---------'66 CATALINA Wagon: 9
power steering, auto tranl!, San Juan Capislrnno Before 12, 673-2577. Scorpio C.OSta Me.a d.v/wh. t ........ V!l/'289. Pw• • '69 Blue CuU11ss-perfect Pas~. p I S, p I B, R ;·H,
P'lvale P''Y $1495 W z=7 ~... • cond, Pvt. ply, Call bt\vn 8 \V/\V XI t -" ' · "" 8.17-4800/493.4511/499-2261 1965 YELLOW fastback 396 642-0010 str. A~l/F!\f radio deluxe ~' · ' n COrRJ, $1400. 714: 644-5173. :&< 11 a.m. 642-8.l!(). 962 3!1S!I .:.c::,.:::::::'.'..'.::_ ____ .1 -•• , .. S .. M'"°a'l"'1b'u-cs--s• engine, Radials. c I ea n .1,.,.,.--:-~=~=-=--int<>rior chrome dll!ih-v.'OC>ri ~-"'·=--c--c--o=I '68 SS, 3!16 auto., Af\f/Fi\1. Owner. 67;...1285 '6 3 EC 0 NOLINE-Cherry steering wheel V•.'/W, new '69 GTO convt auto, PIS,
d iscs, vinyl, con so le , Full rv.we r + air cond., dt,.1=========:1 cond. Must see 10 8P-brakes & tires top condition PLYMOUTH PDB, tinl I;la ss, consqle •.augc!i, 11ir shocks. $1750. •-f!ITCiale. ?-lake o If er. $1300 "'"274 G-• · l'l 1 I I 2'13: 592-2418 (NOS 392l. Must SelH \\'Ill COUGAR ' · .... ,,...., · """ pn~ "us se
financr. 494-7744, 536-4045• LEAVING country, Must '70 ·Plymouth Cuda, R&H . 548-41123·
'68 CAi'vtARO SS 350, Grotto 55 CHEVY 2 '66 Galaxie 500 conv V-8. Sac! '70 Mach I, Lo mi, 440-6, positraction, hvy dty. --,1966,,,.,Lo:-;,M;:a:-.,,,-C°'o"o-v,"'t.--1
blue w/blk vinyl to p. . . dr Black '67 COUGAR, PWl', 1teer.. &utom, pv>'r strg, R&H xlnt. Xlnl cond & 5 yr warranty. su'spension, $800. Take ovl'.'r Xlnt cond. 1 Owner,
}'/equipt. SllllO. 493-372.1 w~lack in!eno~, New 301 brakes; air; Rulo .. stereo. $995, Private. 494-3415° 548-1784 $1095. * * 646-4367 engine w/3.)1) hi-pert cam, New iires $1795. 673-6973, <-::======== pmts, $95.25 mo, &$--0461
CHEVROLET
'63 Chevy ·
Wagon
Auto., radio, heater, V8, pow-
er &leering. l.JBT726).
$599
.BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32852 Valle Road
San Juan Capis!rano
8.17-4800/ 493-451-l /.499-2261
'.9'1 Chevelle r.1alibu SS Auto
trans, RIH, lo mi, orig.
owner. $7:JO. 64·1-2356 aft 5
'64 Chevy tmpala-4 spd, needs
minor repairs.
$3.'15. ~8·4928
'69 CHEVY· 1\lalibu Convt
New tires, Perrcct cond.
*642-6431*
'55 CJfEVY Nomad for sale
lfai: bloWn rod, $250, Cali'att
4 Pr-.1. &l;)..21;,4
'66 CAPRICE
2 Door Hardtop. Au~n., rAdio, v:;. 11ir l'.'Onrl,, po\\'er .steer.
ing. <RYS4lll
$1499
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32852 V fllia Road
~n .Ju11.n CApi~tr1tno
837-4S00/4!1J..(.~U/49!l-2261
new balle'ry &. radiator. __ . 1· 1970 302 Boss, 5 mo old, lo 4:30-6PM.
J\1any extras $700 or Be~! FALCON MAVERICK mr~. $400 riwn, be.Janee •. ~.,~R~oa-d~R_""_"'-,-.~383~-.-....
offer. 55c7-4!l82 hefore 10:30 "~-3000~·->J&-__ "1_97_.~---I 4-spd, magi; & nr1v tire~.
ii.nd all !l::ID PJ\1 ·59 Mustang 351. a ir, tape deck. $2000 Qr hes! of.r.
p/b-disc, p/s, vin. root, tfust sell. 842-54.iO art 6:30.
RAMBLER
'62 RAMBLER '67 BISCAYNE
VS, autoniatic. air corld.,
power steering, i'a.dio, heat-
er. (VFC4.17l
'6-l 1"nlcon Squire Wa2. V-8. ·10 Maverick. $MO take over
Air, xlnt cond. $800. 548-1121 payments or will trade for $2495, Pvt ply. 67:)..5030. '70 Ouster xtnr cond. auto 4 Door, 6 C'yl., au1omatic,
bef/4 PM equivalent motorcycle,
64(;.1007 aft 5 pm
$H9
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32S.'J2 Valle RMrl
San Juan Capistrann
FORD
'65 FORD LTD
Radio, heater, Auto, & VB,
power steering. IDKV·665)
$699
.BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
83\4fl00/49:t-451 l/.f.l9.226t
'69 CAPRICE: ' Turbn .
f"act/air. 3:JO H.P. V-8.
P/S, P/8 • P/\\lind. 'Ti l t
wheel, AM /FM s t'e r E' n. 328.i2 Valle Road
Strati I sl'.'ats, tinted glass, San Juan Cliplstrann
f@nrle'r skirts, nr..w tire!. R37-4SCXl/493-45ll/499-2261
$2775 or bsl otr. 54&-2019 '66 Ford Country Sedan Sta-
l.ATE '66 Imp. Spt Cpe VS, Ho .• \Vagon, P/1;, P/b, alr.
27,500 mi. &ir. ps/pb, l pr Xlnt conrl. 673--4281.
pty ownf'r $1250. 67~ll!IO '69 Fairhuw, PS, &uto, A/C,
•'61 CHEVY: G(}Od' tires, 351 cu in, Nr..w tires, JI.lust
R/H, air, Gd. Cond. sell, $2.1.50. 673-8M8 .
$.'iOO. *** 644-2991 '66 GaJaxy ronv, autom, pwr
'66 El Caminn, Clean, Runs ll!f'i, xlnl, P.vt pty. $995 N
pcrfeetl.11. 5JG.ii146 &t~n hf>~I offrr. 494-3415.
8 & '4. '61 Ford Galaxie $150, Runs
·66 Chev Malibu, 11.uto, r/h, good, fl/II. p/b: Stt aft 6.
fllt! air, $850, Must &ell, 285 Ogle. Apt C. C.M.
going overseas 675-8813. "67 FORD Gal. Auto, P/s &:
'61 Chevy Bel Aire 283 eu In. P/b. 390 eng. Lo ml. Top
Good running $75. 310 w. rond, $1475, Pvt 548-6432.
Avoc&do._ Apt 9, Mr. Hayes Yoo don't need a 11:Un to
Saturday p DIME-A·LINES! Draw Fai;t whtn Yo11 pl1J:e an ~d In the DAILY PILOT
I
---
THE QUICKER YOU CAIL console bckt sel'lts, 6 cyl, JlO\\'er stN'ring, radio, heat;
THE QUICKER YOU SELL 8,000 ml. $2.600. 646-212.i eve er, (LFF1301
I
$399
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
a :i2 Valle Road
!-i11.n Juan Capi,~lrann
8.1i-4800/ 493-45J I/ 49!}.2261
T-BIRD
* '69 T-B1rrl. 2 dr Landall
f ully equlpflf'd
646-IJ281
1964 T-BIRO -1175 Good C-.
d\tion. Nl1 tirN:. •Ail. 111
Sanril Isa~!. C.~t.
• 196.l 'rHUNDERBIRO
• l500 * 1'47--0jl5
VALIANT
1966 VALIANT 6 c ~,
11utomptl c 4 door. 11\r/coi)A.
5.iOOO ml., 3 Tl('\~ fires ~\~
sno1v tittl'i and spere p1ttt
Best offer, m u 11 l ~I
;yfli-1548 or 646-6.t'W , ,,
DIAL direct 642-5678. ~ ~
your ad, then alt hi\ck ah(!
listen tti the pnone: rl!li!
'