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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-10-20 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 " ' • ' • • :e: • • •• •• ...... 2nd County Strip Due? • Stanford. Site Explosion • DAILY PILOT Triggered ~y Huge Bonab ' * * * 10' * * * . TUESPA Y AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 20, 1970 ... ' VOi., ai, fllO. UI, t tlCTIOflll, a IAOIS • Saloon Man Mesa ' ., '<'•1'\.•,r ~{idirape.t,, From :4. I ' ,· • ' '.{ I°•:' ":, .. New Airport r Envisioned Nixon Schedules --HUl1.·tfu .. gt. on _Slaln· ht ' ' "':.--:-·it-T---- ' Man Freed • ! For Countr :.Clemente Visit ' may !pend election ntg~t here. Uninjured ' ----By JIWiNE REYNOLDS . President Nii:op will be staying at the San Clemente Western White House for an undisclosed period beginitlng 'Oct. 29, the DAILY PIWT learned llday and Political observer1 are · calculating tG- Clay that the Pre1ident's stay •W be part of his present ca?npaign swin&, probably iii an eUort to bolster the s~lng re-elec· lion campaip of Senator George Murphy (!I-Calif.). A barroom . braggart. whose-ctalm fl· being a paroled killer from Tenneaee V(BS dou~ted . kidnaped .a C5>sla Mtt:a tavern p3.tron "'on:aay night after return- ii;ig ~ilh a ~ou6le-barretled shoti¥11' and four hood.I.um pals. Of tM D11tr f'fi.t Steft Orange County supervisors are stu- dying the acquisition of t,500 acres in the Capisb-ano area for a county airport as part of recommendaUon.s submitted to- day in Phase Il of the Air Transportation Muter Plan. The recommendation was one of · Si!Veral given In a 400-page study of ~x· isling air facilities submitted t o supervisors by Stan W a I s h , project manager for the Ralph E. Parsons Com· paiiy. A public' hearing on the report wu set for Nov. 17. The latest 'Par'Sorfs report ·males two general recommendations : -That Orange County take a cl lo n through zoning ordinances to pro:ted one of the existing military facilities from en- croaching development. -That the county acquire land for another jetport in a less developed area of the county. Panons report said three jet-capable airportll will be needed within the next 20 yean to handle the county's short haul air transport needs. Short · h a u I transportation is that used to tra•l wiiJt. in a ~mile radius. The 1tudy identified three types of air (S.. AIRPORT, Pare %) Israel Confident If War Erupts By United Pren l111ltrn1Uoal Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban uld today Jsrael has no doubt it would win another Middle East war if the CUT· rent cease-fire breaks down and leads to another all-out conflict. "War would Inflict immense suffering on Egypt." he-told a news conference in JerusaJem. "We do not want it. We think """the ceue:fire can much more lead to peace -fighting . ' ' .. Ebln's warning to Egypt came one day before Israeli Prime Mlnlste:r Golda Meir addreaes the U. N. General Aaembly in New York. He will Oy te New Y«k later this week lo direct lsnel'1 part in the Middle East debate demanded by Egypt and U>e Soviet Union. It appeared both Israel and Egypt were laying down their batUe lines before the debate start.I. On MODday, each nation hardened ill llne lot the approaching debale. "CAN'.T IMPORT PEACE ' 11rut's Amb•swdor .Rabin l~raeli. ~nvoy Makes Speech At N ewport,er ' BY Gf:<>RGE LEIDAL 01 1t1t 0.1" r1ttt 11111 li Peace is to' be.achitved in the Middie East it must oome from.a "reconciliation of those parties that are at war," 270 ~rsons attending the World Affairs Council dinner meeting at Newporter Tnn in Newport Beach were told Monday night. .. ·~Peace is not an import commodity," Israeli ambassador to the U.S. Ylt:.hak Rabin said. While outsiders can "encourage and . support" peace attempts "they cannot do it." ' The lonner milillry hero of Israel with 'l1 yean' service said, "Al a 10ldter lhe meaning of peace wu simple to me , .. when neighboring countries can 11 v e toge~thtr. and aotve their problem&, this was the meaning Of pe.ce." Since March of 19158, Rabin bu been (lie< ISllAEL, Pap I) Stanford Center Blast Triggered By Huge Bomb ! Authorities using the process of elimination to determine what caused a $50,000 explosion at the S ta n f o r d Research Institute near the' UC Irvine campus early Monday have concluded it was a bomb. Just exactly what type ·-and who planted It -remained a ma~ of con- jecture today. The explosion occurred in an air puri- fying unit, part of the system that con- trols the environment of two greenhou.ies ,in which plant virus and air poUution,... atudies are conducted. 'Several thousand tomato and bell pep. ~r ,plant! contained in the SRI green- tlouse facilitie.s were destroyed, while the shattered structures tbemselvea: are a total loS!. Dale Hutchinson, assistant e:s:ecutive director of operation& on the. 15-acre site at 19722 Jamboree Road, estimated half (See BLAST, Pa&e %) Additional speculation on NiJ:on cam- paign role circulated today when Victor C. Andrews or Laguna Beach, one of Nix-. on's top aides in California, called a press 'anferenc'.e. Andrew1, a resident of Emerald Bay and the President's ambassador to Expo 70 in Japan. set the meeUng with the press for .W,ednesday. at 11 4.m,, in lbe Civic Ceriler courthouJe complex in Santa Ana . The subject of the conference w~sn't announced. The Presidenuat visit, expected to resemble· campaign swings through other states ia recent weeks, wW come a day later than. originally expected. There bad been strong speculation lh1t the chit( executive would arrive in time for ctre~ies involylng the first-day issut of four new ect1logy stamps in San Clemente. That function· will take place , at the West.em ~ House on Oct. 28, a day befort Ni:s:on's expected arrival. Thi President in recent weeks tlas hit the campaign trail to help several GOP candldltea in 1tates' in the Mideait ~and the EuL Coeds Flunk Sex ·''. 'Uri T"-M .. K>LLED IN PASO ROBLES Shally BarM1, 4 ' ' Mµrderers :Run -' Rampant; ·Kill 9 • ' ' ' I ' In California . ' ' ' ' ' . t , • From Wirt. ServWet · SAN'I:A CRl:IZ ~ Nirie perlOflil .Were ~urd~. lri Ceqtr'at cillfornia 'in a fr:lan&Jt Of viclousneu .that peaked with · tfle e,e;cutlon-style slaylngs of a wealthy eye doctor 1 his wife, twl:i children and his · leCrelary." ' ' • ' ' Don't Kno_w What They're Doing , Firemen anawerlng ·a call to &: b.Ilzing' manskm on a hilltop .overlooking the -~Pacific Monday night found the fi ve CHARLESTON, S.C. (UP!) -A ra1> dom study of 500 coeds at the University of North Carolina shows. in effect, that ma11y of the girls are flunking tel. Dr. Takey Crist. ·an ·obstelriCian- gynecoJogist at the university's hospital in Oiapel Hill, N.C., reported to· a con· ference of fellow doc:1on Monday night on the IW'Vey. ~ or U>e 1119 coeds who 11id they ""e aenaally ac:Uve, be sakl 25.4 perttnt of U>em did nol hov. etlOlllh knowledge to put any answen on the questiormllrt. Only II.I percent 1111Wered hall ol lbe quesUons corTeCtly. 1bere were no perfect ........ "Their dem1nds for contraception and 1bartion 1ppear to be inttea•ln&." uJd • ertit, 1'Yet their knowledge lbout"l'IOfm&l reproductive phy1iolo0, contraception and 1U lpforma!lon appun· to be quite inadequate." . "It Is concluded l'rvm this. study that 11101t studenll learned from lrleodl and. liooks and nly 1 ... oo their panoll and· 1e:s: clisaes for' lnfonnaUon repn:Hnc a lj1osl Important upect ol lbelr lives." • · "It may be true that Ibey .,. ucitlng, lull of adven\ure, full of intellectual curloolly, but JI -....i. that they are also confused, rebelU0111 and inlecure, especially with reprdl to their l<X· uality.'' he sald. Hia conclusion: "Adequate ,., educa. lion lllould ~e place prior to enlerJn& coDep." bodies In a swimming pool tinted 'with lbelr blood. ' ·ne.vlctims were Or. Vlctor M. "Ohta, 45, an ophthalrnologlll ; tfis wlfe, VlrginJ1 1 '43;. their 19111, Derrick, 12, and Taggart, 11 ; Md U>e physi<lan'1 oecnollry, Doro- thy Cadwlllader, 'JI. ~ • ' ' AU had been (>c>md with red bandanu IJ!d sbqt, be(qre belnr bµried Into ·tl)e pool. Ill deck wu ·spattered with blood., Some have delcribed Dr. Ohta as a "rk:h l\lppif': bee•""' ot ·bls medical bolp ad- m~ to the nomadl. 'Another multiple ll:illhq: wu Wider ln- vestt11Uon near Puo llobtea, about 120 miles .OUth, of tbt tcene or Ole awlmmln& pool muntera. ' • 'Three _. 1"t and atabbed s man and wife ·to death and abducled and (!to lllJlll>lllUI, P ... I) The victiin was released unharmed in Huntington Beach, about Ill p.m., w~ a second man present during the 6:38 ·ab-. duction from the Viking Room, 618 W. 19th St., managed to escape . goin& alonl On the aimless ·ridi!. , Leon{lr<f Bowler, ~. who . has been staying with relatives at 7841 Sl111ter Ave., HW1tingtorr Beach since arri\fing on the Or:ange Coast four days ago caned at 10 p.m. to say he tlad ·been · freed near that 1ddress. Investigation · Into the case led to recovery of a shotgun believed to be the weapon involved from a Costa Mesa residence, according to Detective LL. Harold Fiscller. · He said witnesses corroborate Bowler'• atory, but added the victim bu not been very cooperative and proaecution of a IUSpeci seems unlikely. Police "' Mid BOwJer and Howard · ~ 'J'hor\lU<m,·46, of ,Sl3 W. Sunflower Ave., Sant.it hna,• were in the bar )¥hen the ancry, IWlpe;c:l and hil crew returoedlWitb weapons. . ' Bowltt an:ct Hopkins-nn··OUtaide, ae> !See IUDNAP,;Pap %) . {;eu& Weadler ' Tbe rainy • ....., 1111y llart II> night, the weatherman warns, bringing a cooling trend to the coast Wednesday. 1Temperaturea should aravitate between 65 and 70. ' ' ' INSmE TOQA 'l' Suck II In, gals: a-e<:ordlng to L. M .. Boyd, fat women out· numbe-r fa' men ae-wn · to OM, See. Oheckirig ! Up, PQJJc I, .. _ ,_ .. ·-t-:n.rc --............... ·--·--. . .._ - J • • •H .. .. • • " 1 .. 11 .. .. .. MllfMI ,... ,. ,. ...... .._ .... --. '-" 1 .. 1. --... ·-~ -" -. ............. ._..,, -1•1• --.. I DAILY PILOT s Pilots Push For Airport Extension ClutcbJnil picket signs urging "Savo Our Airport.•• .. Ktep the Extf:Dlioo," pilot& twued out in squadrons 1n Hun. Ungtoo Beocb Monday nlghl for the lat.st round In the M .. dowlark Airport con- troveny. About 70 pllots crowded Into the council chamber to hear City Administrator Doyle Mil ler give his report on the e.irport problem. The report recommended that only 320 '.feet of the MG-root runway extension be "permitted and that a blast fence be built behind iL The pilots broke out in applause when the council agreed to a suggestion by Councilman George McCracken that the blast fence be set back 100 feet from the end of the runway "as a safety factor". The extension would still be limited to 320 feet. That amendment, an inltruction ·to the city adminiJtrator to inquire into the co.st or putting obotrucl.lon Jlgbting Oii power lines around Meadowlark and the setting cf a 10 p.m. curfew m night fiying were the only changes' the council made in Miller's report. , . The council's action Monday night was all conditlon:at to decisions to be taken by !he planning commission tonight. The planning commission, which meets in the council chambers at 1 o'clOfk wui con- sider an application by tne-ilrpor't operator, John Turner, for a conditional exception perm.it for the runway ex· tension. Miller's recommendations were sug. gested as condiUons that the planning commls.sion could attach to the permit. 11 seemed likely :Jaat the pilots would be out again tordgbt for Turner cried out "We'll be there" after Mayor Donald ShiRl•y told tbom the council could take no formal action before the matter was considered by the planning commission. Miller told the council that the staff recommended cutting the runway ex· tension by 220 feet and putting the blast fence up to curtail noise and dust. Setting th e fence 100 feet back would serve the same purpose, be said. There was no public discus.sion of the Issue Monday night although Turner several times interrupted councilmen and the administrator as they spoke with remarks such u "That's for sure " and .. Now you're talking good sense." ' . Turner also walked back and forward tn front of the council with a sign over his shoulder as if he were picketing. Finally Councilman Jerry Matney en- joined Turner,' "You will help your cause more by .sitting down or walking outside." Turner remained but did not interrupt further. From Pagel BLAST .•• the loss was structural and the rest in destroyed research .work. "It was a total loss," Hutchinsoo remarked. The 3:45 a.m. blast -perhaps directed at the SRI facility because of defense and war-related projects at other among 12 branches around the world -was in a remote spot and no one was injured. A possiblt accident involving natural gas was considered, but finally ruled out. "We went through all the other poten· tial causes, eliminating them one by one, and so have concluded it was a bomb." said Orange County Shertfrs Capt. James Broadb<IL "As to who put Jt lhert and why , wt have reached no conclusions," he added. Projects under way at the SRI center are financed by private industry and specifically involve study of chemicals which may kill viruses that annually cause heavy loss to Southern California crops. DAILY PILOT i ....,.. .... ......... di .,_ .. _ . ............... h•r.I• ,.., ,_._ OltAHCt! COAST lt\llLISHING «Wt1Al4't Rob•rf N. w ••• Pr•ld..,! lll"A hflllll'ltr J•clt It, CVTlrt Vice ,,.\dent ..... ~.1,,....... lliom•t k•l'Yil Edl!w 11lom1t A. Mur,l.111• MIMI~ Ed119r 1U~h1'4 P. Hill Sov\h °''"" C-1)' UllW -Clstll MM: _,. W1tl It¥ S!rwt ....,_t k•dll '2'11 W•t .... , ._,,..... Ll9uM 9"'t<ll: m: ,.,..., ... _ ffwrt"""'" llMcll: 1111l hid! -.Ulw•,. "' IN """"*1 al """ LI c.nN II. .. • • - • TufSda)', October 20, 1971> Fl'OlliP .. el AIRPORT DUE? •.• • • facllltlts. 'J1io sho bal!I, Jil capebli -tywldo a!ri\ori·sy.tem-.... a.rut..-o.._i... lacillty .they labeled a Jeqiort. • aviation !aclJJty In tho event !bat· the ,Alao )denUfiM wu a~ era! avlatloli facility ~ abandoned by the Departnlf<lt facility for ''*"' by private pilots Oytna: o& Defet11e," the report continued. 1 nonjet planes. The Capistrano site ouUined by Parsons The third facility brieny covered in the is In the Bell Can~on area. Th.ey estimate repcirt w.as a sP211 Lake off and landing the cost of establishing an airport there (STOL} for Uie" by commuter helicopter at $52.17 million over a petiod of seven to services. . JO years. . • Jn 8 study of exl!itinl atr' facilities both Opera lint· within a system of county clvlllan and military the Parsons 'eom. alfports thi' Bell Canyon jetport ab o v 'e pany recOmmended ihat Orange CoUDty caplstrano would be able to satisfy P"C!" Airport be ma1fttalned u the county'a jected demands. "It cannot,. howev~r. · · al -~1-• .: • port stand alone a1 the onty jet IJr carrier prmcip geuc1·&1 1v11 ... oo a.U' . , airport in the 'county. The greatest de. •'Ibey also s~gges;ted .tbat Jets contmue mand ia the immediate future will be on 1 ~ use the facility limited by three fac-Orange County Airport Which Jn tll:ue tors: ~ ~ -may be complemented by jet airllne aer- , -"The analysis of lhe results of a 12 to vice out of El Toro 11 the Parsons study 18-month P:Ototype noise monitoring pro-contended. ' gram now m progress. The Bell Canyon airport, which Walsh -"The adoption of proposed stale tlr said will be built along a ridge top, "will federal noise standards or C()ffimunity be able to handle an ultimate capacity of noise levels. eight million passengers annually." "-The negotiaJions ~f 1 ease Walsh said unique aspects of the site agreements ~th ~irll~. stipulating the "also suggest a thorough examination of number tlf JCl aU'craft departures and an advanced terminal and passenger hours of operati0J1." movement system lo serve all modes. The El Toro Marine Air Station was The concept of a transportation terminal Identified as being "a p r o m i s i n g near the existing freewa y and close to a alternative" for the county's second jet possible right of wa y for a high speed capable airport. ground transportation system should "The civil joint use tlf this military air seriously be considered." facility would not be open to all air traf-Another air facility recomm'ended by fie, but as a joint use facility it could ac-the consultants .in the Southern County cept limited, well disciplined scheduled sector is O'Neill air park. Shark Beached in Laguna Ed Goltschlick of Laguna Beach (holding tail) shot this shark with a spear from a fishing boat. Al Fenn of ·orange (hofding' head), who w8s skin diV: . i:Dg nearby 1 brought. it ashore at Mountain Road •m Tlldlllf' l"tMfol Beach. The shark, a 7'h-fpot blue, weighed in at 235 pounds. It's teeth? All the better to eat you with, baby. airline operation. No general aviation flights would be permitted," the report states. In their study of'EI Toro the consulting firm estimated the cost of providing a civil air terminal, new aprons, taxiways and accesses to be $2. 75 million for the initial phase. Reagan Visits Anaheim; Seeks . To Unseat Cory TWA Cuts U.S. Flights As 5,400 ~orkers .Strike WAsJIJNGTON (UPI) -Trw World Airlines cancelled all of Jts nearly ~ domestic flights today and announced lharp curtailment of overseas operations as 5,400 stewardesses and stewards went on strike against the line. A TWA spokesman said the airline would try to operate about 10 in- ternational round-trip flights each day, about half the regular rate. Supervisory personnel were being used for the overseas fligh ts and even those were being shortened to stop at gateway cities such as London, Rome, Paris, Frankfurt, Lisbon and Hong Kong. A spokesman for the union representing striking stewardesses and stewards said, "The strike is solid and we expect other unions to honor our picket lines. I don't know of any cases where they are not.•• The first TWA overseas flight to leave from the United States since the strike began took off from New York for Lon· don at 10:20 a.m. EDT. 'l11e next. oV't!rseas flights are scheduled tonight. Picket lines appeared at ma}or air · terminals at 12:01 a.m. EDT today after last-minute negotiations between the airline and the transport workers un~on reached an impasse. TWA President F'. C. Wiser immediately announced can- cellation of domestic flights. Another negotiating session at National Mediation Boafd headquarters was scheduled for today. There was no immediate indication what issues remained unresolved after the Monday night session, but federal mediator FranCis A. O'Neill Jr. said the two sides "had succeeded in resolving a great majority of the issues." The stewardesses, stewards and in· flight service managers, who have work- ed without a contract for 17 months, have demanded wage increases up to 30 per- cent and improved fringe benefits in· eluding more expense money and maternity leave along with better hours and working coodilions. "From Pagel ISRAEL ENVOY ••. Jsrael's ambassador to the U.S. "Now, peace is more vague to me. The word can be used and abused at the same time," he said. Frequently "peace" means only that "the other side must accept my terms, otherwise it's not peace," he quipped. Noting that his views on the Middle East situation would not be "objective" because "1 talk as an Israeli," Rabin said, "it would be better if co·nfllcting sides each would present their own case. Then, a compromise can be worked out at the negotiating table. "It is better if people would be more specific about the meaning of peace. "Shouting peace Js always vague and sometimes misleading," Rabin said. "The meaning of peace is reconciliation -conciliation between those parties at war -Israel and the Arab countries. No one else can do it," he emphasized. He said he finds it "incredibl e" that the Arab countries refuse to recognize the state of Jsrael. "How can it be that they have fought three wars against somebody who doesn't exit?" In the Middle East, •·emotion and ir· rationality play a much greater role than rational, logical approaches to very com· plcx problems. Complicating the mid-east tensions is the lntervenUon of the Soviet Union which "decided 15 years ago to advance its im- perialist infiuence by exploiting tbe Aral> Israeli conflict," Rabin said. l The Russians have used their veto· power in the United Nations more than 40 times against resolutions that favor Israel. Further, they have" provided the Arab countries military advisers-''Who ~lse has provided military advisers ln the Middle East?" -techniciall9 and arms "worth $3 billion." "Since March. 1970. when the Arabs failed in their war of attritJon against JsraeJ," he noted, the soviets have seat thelr own forces Into the Middle East for the "first Ume since World War JI. From 12,000 to 15,000 Russians now are mBMing Soviet weapon system1, are rlying planes and operallng ground-to-air missiles, Rabin said. AJ far 1s Israel is concerned the price of peace is the territory it took rrom the Arab naUons in the Jwie, 1967, "1lx~y11 war. "Jt they w•nt })@.act, OK." Rabin said. "We'll give baok mosl ol the territory. U no pt:ace. no territory." Since 1948. Israel has not enjoyed legal boundaries and agreed upon borders with nelihborlng slates ls hnportant to Jsrae~ "not just more real estate," Rabin sald. Since Arab violations ol the 90-day cease fire have not ltd frrocl to in· aeased lrUSt tlf their oc.lghbor1, Rabin taid, lsratl would not return ocaiplcd lands or continue seekina 1greemcnt for • peace, until Arab nations prove they can keep earlier agreements. "What is the purpose of seeking agree- ment with a party that doesn 't keep its \\-'Ord?" he said. Israel is prepared to continue fighting its battles with no other nation's help - although it would like to "buy" arms from the U.S. -and is prepared to fight "even the Russians. We aren't going to be another Czechoslovakia," R a b in declared. "It is not enough to live for the sake of ·defending your counlry, but we must create something positive." Little is told about the achievements 1srael has made in the areas of agriculture. education. indll!try and science, Rabin said. ''But. people don't fight for a country unless it is worth liv· ing for it. "We have never lost bope thal peace will be achieved. We have lived and will continue to live hoping for the best but preparing for the worst," he concluded. [)Je to join Israel's Premier Mrs. Golda Meir in New Ytlrk for an a~ pearance before the U.N. General Assembly today, Rabin told the DAILY PILOT he expects the Arabs to bring a proposal to the U.N. next week, although he said he wasn't optimlstic about ru contents . When asked iI Israel might shift !ts position, Rabin replied "We believe in what we say. We don't have to change it every day." In response to a question from the au. dience, Rabin noted that people have forgotten that Israel 8Ct(lmmodated haJ( a million J ewish refugees from Arab countries in jus t eisht years following the 1952 attempt by the Arabs to "drive us into the sea." Until the Arab response of war to the U.N. partition "there were no ref,µgees in the Middle East." He charged the Arabs with using the Palestinian refugees "politic&lly" rather than moving the 500 lo 600.000 homele.u into society, with housing, education and medical programs such as were provided by Israel to Jts rcfugees. He compared the division by rcllglon Into the .states of\ Pakistan and India "which none seems to complain about" ~·Ith the partition of Israel from the rt1oslem people of the Arab natkms. Arab terrorists have kUled more Palestinian refugees than Isr•elis, Rabin said, "to buUd mistrust or the Israeli government in areas It adminlste:ra.,. "More have been killed by the Jorda· nlan Anny In the last six weeks than In the wan of the past 22 yeare." Isr•el's prime goal Is the establishment of "secured. rcco&nizcd and agreed upon boundaries with lta neighbors/' Rabin said. From Pagel MURDERS ... murdered their four.year-old daughter. The Paso Robles victims were Ronald Barnes. 27; his wife, Betty, 2~; and daughter, Shelly, 4. The wife's body was found with multi~ pie chest stab wounds in the home. The body of the husband was disc<:lvered several hours later in a car trunk. He had been bludgeoned to death. The little girl's body was found in a canal. Sheriff's deputies said they are holding John Archa, 26 of Fresno and his two teenaged brothers, Donnie, 14; and Ken- ny, 13; on suspicion of the killings. At Saratoga, 12 miles north of Soquel where the physician and four others were murdered, a 19-year-old gasoline station attendaitt was round slain by a bullet wound 1n the head. His hands had been tied behind bis back in the manner of the slayings at the $300,000 Ohta mansion. He was identified as Thomas S. Dececco. Santa Cruz County detective Bud Mur· ray said the Ohta mansion victims were appareaUy shot to death about 8 p.m. Monday. The killel'll had made several al· tempts to start a fire before successfully touching off a roaring blaze in the house 100 miles south of San Francisco. One of the family 's three cars, a 1968 Oldsmobile station wagon. was missing. Firemen who went to the Ohta pool for water found the bodies bound with scarves -A-1iss Cadwallader's noatlng ()n the surface, the others at the bottom of the Olympic-sized pool, its water stained pink and its tiles slippery with their blood. Each had been bound and then shot in the back of the bead, Dr. Ohta twice. Douglas James, Santa Cruz Ctluaty Sheriff, called the slayings "the most gruesome crime in county history." Police are still uncertain of a motive, or whether srawled words or other in- dications ()f the killers' mental state might be found, as were round after the slaying of actres!I Sharon Tate and four others near Los Angeles in 1969. Del. Murray described Ohta. a Japanese-American Air Foree veteran educated at Northwestern University, as a "very nice person, a tremendous doc· tor." His practice was jn Sanla Cruz. At Los Alamitos the Parsons Co. found the announced cutdown of air operations ''may have been premature." la recommending a continued study ()f the Naval Air Station the Parsons report notes "that use of this facility would be limited to nonjet aircraft. At the Santa Ana Marine Air StaUon, 1'general aviation joint use of the existing facility is not C<lnsidered feasible," the report stated. "Nevertheless, this aeronautical site should be assigned a role in the coun- Battle Renewed Near Northern Jordanian Town AMMAN, Jordan (AP) -New fighting between Jordanian troops and Palestinian guerrillas broke out today near the northern town tlf Ramlha. The Arab peace mission met in Amman and called for an immediate cease-fire. Its observen on the scene reported the fighting consisted mostly ()f exchanges between tank guns, artiller:y, mortars and machine guns. The scene of the figbtiiig i!I a cluster of five villages en the Syrian border between Ramtha and Irbld through which the guerrillas move their arms and sup- plies. Arab peace mission observers said the shelling began shortly after noon and C<lntinued for three hours. The peace commission decided earlier In the day to conduct an urgent inquiry into fighting in north Jordan last weekend. It announced those found responsible for the flareup will be handed over to Jtlrdanian authorities to be tried as violators of the cease.fire agreement r;lgned between King Hussein and guer· rilla leader Yasir Arafat last week. Both the Jordan government and the Central Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, the ·over-all guerrilla leadership, have pledged to abide by the findings of the inquiry, the C1'.lmmisslon said in a statement. It also said the two sides issued new in· !ltructions to their forces in the north to "avoid further frlcti()n". Within hours of the statement, fresh fighting bad broken out. By BILL STALL AP Political Writer There's a Democrat holding an Assembly seat deep in the heart of. California's political Dixie -Orange County -and Gov. Reagan heads that way today in a drive to unseat him. The target is Democratic Assemblyman Kenneth Cory of Garden Grove, opposed by Republi can Bruce Nestande, 32, an employe of Walter Knott, well known as a supporter of e<>nservalive political causes. In a county where patriotism runs strong, Nestande Is curator of t h e Independence Hall historical exhibit at Knott 's Berry Farm. This race Is one of a handful that will determine whether Republicans o r Democrats C<lntrol the SO.seat Assembly in 1971, and help determine the political course of califomia for the next decade. The GOP now holds a slim edge, 40-39 with one vacancy. · On a similar mission Monday, Reagan went to Ventura County to boost the can· didacy of Republican Randolph E. Siple:, a Ventura attorney, over Assemblyman Ken MacDonald (D-Ojai). "We need a majority on our side so we can continue to organize the legislature and continue to designate the com· mlttees," Reagan told a get-out-the--vote rally at Camarillo. The party in power next year will have the advantage in the process of redraw- ing Senate, Assembly and congressional district boundaries, which have to be ad· justed oa the basis of 1970 census figure.s. From Pagel KIDNAP ... cording to Police, and tried to hide behind telephone booths at an adjacent service station but were spotted. "Get in or I'll blow you away," Bowler: said he was told, while one of the five men involved aimed a .45 caliber pistol at Tiiomason's head . Detectives assigned to the case were given information about a residence tln Miner SI.reel where the shotgun was C1'.ln· liscated. "We know a k.idnaping did occur," Lt. Fischer explained today, but added that without cooperation by the victim it ap- pears there is insufficient · evidtnce to make any arrests. THENAMEOFTHEGAME There is i common practice of private labering jn the carpet industry. Large department stores, chain stores, and contractor~ at new tracts have ficticious. names on the sainples so that customtrt cannot easily shop brand name prices. Customers shopping at our store find the price of ••ch qu&lity prominently fHtured on tho sample book, because we are competitive. Also, because we feel the customer hu a right to know whit he is buyin9, wt never ch~n91 +ht nem1 on a sample book. The n&me of the game is integrity! ALDEN'S ~.-•• -,.-.-.-•• -0 ... -.-.-,..., CARPETS e DRAPES TUSTIN C.it ••• .,. ~.~'~•ms 1663 Placentlo Ave. 1074 ~,!!:'r'!: c.ttf. COSTA MESA ........ 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru ThurL, 9 lo 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -S.t., 9:30 to 5 .... •--: ' • I r " ..• ~ ·r . ~ ,~ .. . ' . . . ... . • Hnntirigton Beae_. .-voe. 63, NO. 2S f, l SECTIONS, ll PAGES , . • • Ie Ill ur Legal Flaw Dampens Bay Plan By ALAN Dffi KIN Of tllt Dtllr P'llel Stiff The Sunset Bay Project, a multi-million '1ollar development next to Huntington Harbour, won rave reviews from Hun· tington Beach city councilmen Monday night but ran aground on a legal flaw. Huntington Harbour resident Arthur Knox pointed out that no hardship had been established to allow the use variance and warned that he and others would go to coort If the application were granted in its present form. The council agreed to refer the development back to the planning corn· mission for a review of its findings and for a demonstration of hardship. ENTHUSIASA'l The councilmen were so enthusiastic about the project that would see the crta· lion of a small peninsula with two II· story towers on it that they directed the planning commission lo reconside: ~e application tonight. The comm1ss1on meets at 7 p.m. Councilman Al Coen expressed the mood of the council whee he suggeil.ed it be sent back to the planning commission "'in the hope that they can find th• hardship that would justify it." The council also passed a resolution later instructing the city administrator and city attorney to review ~he ord!nance on conditional exctptiool with a Vlt'.t' to enacting legislation that would give the council a freer hand. The Sunset Bay project. planned by Real Property Management of Beverly Hills. would be on the northeast side of -Pacific_ Coast Highway b e t w e e n Admiralty Drive and An~erson Street. PLANS TOW The plan calls for an ll·story apart· ment complex, an 11-story hotel, four three·story apartment units, a four·story office building, two shopping centers, 300 boat slips and homes and townhouses. The development, which required a zone variance, received no negative votes in the planning commission and appears to have the support of the majority of Huntington Harbour residents. The Huntington Harbour Resident! Association reported Monday night that the project was backed by 80 percent of the residents of the community. LAW CITED But the backers reckoned without Knox, an airline pilot, who made a detail· ed presentation against the development, claiming that the law had not been followed in several areas. . He referred to a memorandum wrilten a year ago by City Attorney Don Bonfa listing the conditions and findings that h8d to be made before a zone variance could be granted but Knox claimed city departments were not following Bonfa's instructions. He hammered at the point that either a hardship or exceptional circumstances had to be demonstrated, but there was no mention of these requirements in the planning staffs report or the planning commission's approval. Abe Lurie. representing Real Property Management. said that he had heard no prior mention of the hardship re· (See SUNSET, Page %t Oruge The rainy season may start to- night, the weatherman warns, bringing a cooling trend to the coast Wednesday. Temperatures shouJd 1ravitate between 65 and 70. INSmE TODAY Suck it in. ooll; according to L. /if. Boyd, fat ioomtn ·out· • number fat m.en ieven to anc. Set Checking Up, Page B. ''""'"" . Cllldlll!I Ut I C ... NllMI lt-N CM!ln 11 c..._..i tJ .,..... ltltlffl t ••lttrMt ,_ • ••""111ilwMlll ,, ""'-• lt-11 -" .C.111 Lt ..-n II Me'rill It MllMI ''"' 11 H'""'-1 .._ 4.J o ... "" c-rr ' """" '"" SIMI! M.wtllfl It-II T........_ 1t -,. ·-. WMt ....... ,, ............ ,.14 WWlli '""' ... • . OillY P'ILOT Sl•ff '""' MEADOWLARK PILOTS OISPLAY 'THEIR SENTIMENTS AT CITY COUNCIL MEETING 'Save Our Airport,' 'Save Our Liv~•,' 'KHp the Extension,' S.ld th1 Signs Pilots Laud Council ! • ... • . • Cou11-cilmen Agree · to M eadmvlark Blast · Fence Clutching picket signs urging "Save Our Airport," "Keep the Extension," pilots turned out in squadrons in Hun· tington Beach Monday night for the latest round in the Meadowlark Airport con· troversy. About 70 pilots crowded into the council chamber to hear City Administrator Doyle M11ler give his r~port on the airport problem. 'The report recommended that only 320 feet of the 540-foot runway extension be permitted and lhat a blast fence be bWlt Half-dug Pool Owners Still l.ef t High, Dry The dilemma or the half-dug swimming pool in a Huntington Beach family 's front yard won't be solved for another two weeks. Councilman Norma Gibbs asked Mon· day if the council could act immediately on the issue, but Assistant City Attorney Lou Ann Marshall said that ID days notice miist be given befort a bearing can be · held on the use vari~ •. The issue ls over the pool a co1ttractor started to build at 102.12 Cutty &ark Drive in _the front yar~ of the Ernest Shtrwoocls after the falnily had wrongly rectived a building per.mil for the job. The planning commis~iOO granled a use variance after the mistake was dlscover· ed, but Councilman Jack Gretn has since appealed that decision. The appeal will be heard at the Nov. 2 council meeting. Monday night Green sllid that· "far more" was ·involved in the situation· than had been brought out to date and urged the council to wait until Nov, 2 before considerin& the ca&e. ' behind it. The pilots broke out in applause when the council agreed to a suggestion by Councilman George McCracken that the blast fence be set back 100 feet from the end or the runway "as a safety factor". The extension would still be limited to 3~ feel. That amendment, an instruction to the city administrator to inquire into the cost of putting obstruction ligbt~g on power, lines around Meadowlark and the setting of a 10 p.m. curfew on night flying Were the only changes the council made 1n Miller 's report. The council 's action Monday night was all conditional to decisions to be taken by the planning • commission tonight. The planning commission, which meets in the council chambers at 7 o'clock will con· sider an .application by the airport operator, John Turner, for a conditional exceplion permit for the runway ex. tension. . Miller's recommendations were sug. (See PILOTS, P11e Z) .t Recall Attorney to Ask Seal Beach Ballot Date By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 1M Dtl" P'llll Ili ff An attorney hired by the proponent! of a recall movement against Seal Beach City Councilman Conway Fuhrman said Monday night he would seek legal action to force the council to set a date for the recall election. Glenn ·R. Watson said he would Sft?k a writ of mandaie within the next week to force the council to "fulfill· its responsibilities to the people" after an at- tempt to set the date for Jan. S was deadlocked by a 2·2 vote. Fuhrman abstalned from voting on the issue during the session. Councilmen Lloyd Gummere and Harold Holden favored the date while Mayor Morton A. Baum and Councilman Thomas Hogan! declared their opposition. About 6,300 signatures on the recall petition against Fuhrman are currently being certified by City Clerk Jerdys Weir. Fuhrman became the target of a recall July 27 after he sided with Mayor Baum and Councilman Hogard to oust City Manager Lee Risner. Alleged irregularities in the collection or signatures prompted the same three men to hire Attorney Russ~ll W. Bledsoe last week to ihv'estigate the recall moVement. Bledsoe's bill of ,$1,057.Jl ror his first week of services brought a threat of lawsuit from Watson during the Monday night session on the grounds that he was illegally hired. The three councilme n, according to Watson, are in· posSible violation of ttie Brown Act which provkfes that 24-hour notice be given to cowx:ilmen before a meeting is held. He pointed out that insuffir.ient notice was given to the council by Mayor Morton Baum on the day Bledsoe was hired. Following Wat.son's warning, the coun· ell tabled the ~yment to Bledsoe, ' This morning, Watson said he would Immediately file suit under the prdvisions of the Brown Act if any payment ii made · to Bledsoe. 12·tn.an ·Project .on.' Drawing Board ·in Huntin,gton Two scientist! from tbe McDonnell· Douglas Corporation today outlined the desiifl for a 12-man earth-orbit!~ space station now on the drawing board$ at lbe lfrnl'S Hunlingtoc Beacb plant. Ted E. Smith and 0. E. Charhut, both engineers for the astronautics company, told acient.ist.g1thered at the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics in Houston Uiit ·the station COllld bt built now. utllizlr« ""°"" tedmololY. 'lbe st.lion, they said. could be ready '1/or launch in 1rn ud would provide -...ntilts with 10 years of uterul tervice as a platform for observation of both t aitb and tuter 1pact. Scientists from McDonnell Douglas took the proposal under study last year when they were awarded a contract for preliminary design work by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. Their rtstarch indicates that the &ta· iion would weigh about 181,000 pounds and measure 111 feet in leflll,h and 33 le.et in diameter. It would be lluncbed Into a Ma-nautical fhilt orbit around the earth b7' a two- ltage vtrtlon of tht Saturn V rocket. "The 1tation 1'ould utillu the full J>Otentlal of man's ability as a worker and a declslon·m1ktr•in the conduct ti. 1taUon epe ratloaa and In -UM trbital ruearcb ..: program," the sCientlsts said. "Crewmen coold check out,-repalr and replace various S)'.Sttms aboard the sta- tion thereby minimizing the need for sus- tained ground support while making use of man's ability as a crealive-wotker," Much like the space station featured in the movie "2001," the project would featu* artificial gravlty by apinnip1 it arounl its axis. Basic elements of such a ataUon, ac- cording to the ~ientistl. would become the buildlng blocks for subeequect mlesions. These would include earth- • orbiting missions, as well ,u j·aunts to.tbl moon and' olber planeta:. '1 , am 3 Incidents· Of Vicious Death Seen From Wire. Se rl'lcn SANT A 'CRUZ ..:.... Nine persons wete murdered in Centra,l Califofnia in a · . ' triangle of viciousness that peaked with the execution·style S:layinj::S of a. we8.lthy eye doctor, his wife, two children and his secretary. Firemen answering a· call to a blazlng ' mansion on a hilltop overlooking tne . Pacific Monday night found the fi'!e bodies in a swimming poo( tinted with their blood. The. victims were Dr. Victor M. Ohta, 45, an ophthalmologist : his wife, Virginia, 4.1; their sons; Derrick, 12, and Ta~art. 11 : and the physician's .;ecretary, Doro- thy Cadwallader, 38. All had been bound with red bandanas and shot before being hurled into the pool. 1ts deck was spattered with blood. Some hi::ve described Dr. Ohta as a "rich hippie" because of his medical help ad· ministered to the nomads. Another muli.ipie killing was J!ld.er in- vestigation near· Pa&a Roble&,· about 120 miles south of the sc~e of the swimming. pool ·murders; Three persons.beat and· stabbed !l man· and wife to death and abducted and murdered their four-year-old daughter. The Paso Robles victims. were Ronald Barnes, fl; his wife, Betty, 2.i; and dauat#r, Shelly. I· , · Tfi'e1 Wife's' body waa foun'd with•multJ. pie chest stab wounds in the home. The body of the husband was disc'lvtred 1everal hours later in 1 car trunk. ~ hid been bludgeoned to de.a.th. The little g:tl'1 body was found in a canal. Sheriff's deputies said they are holding John Archa, 26 of Fresno and his two teenaged brother:s, Donqie, 14; and Ken~ ny, 1J; on suspicion of the killings. At Saratoga, 12 mUes north of Soquel where the physician and four o~hers ,were murdered, a 19-year-old gasoline station attendant . was found slain by a bullet wound in the head. His han'ds had been tied behind his back in the manner of the slayings at the t3oo.ooo Ohta mansion. He was idenUfied I.! !I'homas ,S.· DeCec.co. Santa Cruz Courity delective BuifMlii'· rly said the Ohta mansion victims were 11pparently shot to. death about 8 p.m. Monday. nie killers had made several at· tempts to start a fire before successfully touching off a roaring blaze in the house (St.e MllRDERS, Page %) . . ... ' ·-' Today's .Eln•I N.Y. ·Stocks U,ITe~ KILLEO IN PASO ROBLES Shelly B•rnes, 4 Fountain Valley Planner Action Fa~es Challenge · Thr'ee , plailnlng co~iri!Ssion dec;~ons ~ill be .challenged 1t tonight~s sessi(ITI. of the Fountain Valley City COunCll. The council Itself .ascked. for a look at plans for ·homes on the southwest comer of Magnolia Street and Ellis · Avenue whlc.t had been approved b'y planners. At the Oct. 6 council. meeting some 21 residents. comP,lain~ abol!t the design of the tract because it woukl-dulrip-more: traffic into neighboring streets instead of Magnolia . Residents threatened to appeal the planning commission approval, but coun- cilmen made that unnecessary by making their own request to review pJ8.ns for the homes.· ' · The other two appeals were made by developers who disagree with planning commission decisions. Union Oil C9. is asking for a reversal on denial for a gas station on the northwest corner of Euclid Street and Talbert Ave nue. ___fianners refused to permit.JI gas sta- tion there because it would be adjacent to existing homes. The other appeal Is made by Parkridge Homes which seeks to relieve some of the design restrictions placed by planners on lls, ti::act at the. Rorthwest 'comer of New~ope Street a.lid Warner Avenue. -THIS lS HOW ARTIST SEES 12-MAN Sl'AC I STAllON • . Wllh 3 E•perlm111I Modvl11 Attached, 1 Flying Fru,' Earth ,S!iuttlL .. .. ... . --•• -· -. • 2 DAILY PILOT H T.....,, Ort-20, 1'170 Freeway Rift Flares Mesa Officials Clash Over Appeal by Mayor Diplomatic efforts: to endorse legis\a. tion which could re!Ol\/e Orange Coast eonflicts on the future Pacific Coast Freeway route created a headon CX11llsion or vlewpointa late Monday on the Costa Mesa City Council. 'ibe healed debate WU -df by a lelter from Mayor Robert M. Wlllon ~ couragln1 hla counlerpartl-along Ille coast to supPort the bill by Sen. Jame11 E. Whetmore (R.Cardtn Grove) Jn the l!J'll sesaion. **'* *** Beach Vice Mayor.Pledge s Support for ~reeway Plan Reaction to Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson's approach to resolving Pacific c.oast Freeway conflicts was greeted ~ day by coastal mayors with cautious, but basic agreement on certain aspects. Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth responded by Jetter, urging a high degree of intercity cooperation. Laguna Beach Mayor R i c h a r d Goldberg said he will approach his coun- cil Wednesday night for their response, but personally would agree to nothing that might delay actual construction. Huntington Beach Vice Mayor Jerry Matney pledged his city's cooperation - as long as the Coet Freeway reache:i the Santa Ana River as now adopted -Jn smoothing Costa Mesa-Newport Beach coofllcts. f'rcnn P .. e J PILOTS ••• gested as conditions that the plaMing commission could attach to the permit. ·It seemed likely that the pllots would be out again tonight for Turner cried out "We'll be there" after Mayor Donald Shipley told them the councU could take no formal action before the matter was considered by the planning commission. Miller told the council that the staf! recommended cutting the runway ex- tension by 220 feet and putting the blast fence up to curtail noise and dust. Setting the fence 100 feet back wou1d serve the game purpose, he said. There was no public discussion ()f the Issue Monday night although Turner several times interrupted councilmen and the administrator as they spoke with remarks such as "'lbat's for sure," and "Now )'CIU're talking good sense." Turner a1s<i walked back and forward Jn front of the cotmeil with a sign over bis &boulder as ii be were picketing. Finally Councilman Jerry Matney en- joined Turner,' "You will help your cause more by aitting down or walking outside." Turner remained but d.Jd not interrupt furlber. Each city official abo ezpanded his Jn. ltial comments.. "I will read the letter at tomorrow night's City Council meeting and ask for the council's response as to how they feel about it," said Laguna Beach'& Goldberg, "Personally, I would be in agreement with what they are trying to do -mak· ing a circulation study in an effort to find an answer to the problem in so far as Newport Beach is concerned, but I would not agree with anything that would delay construction of the entire freeway route. "I will respond to the letter after T get the council's views tomorrow night," Goldberg concluded. "Your letter concerning the legialatlon proposed by Sen. Whetmore is ap- preciated." Newport Beach Mayor Hirth wrole. "Such action wollld certain1y seem to correct a weakness in the curttnt state freeway regulatiorui. I clnl sure that our council will wish to consider this matter when the bill is available and take a posi· lion at the appropriate time. "currently, we are spending every ef· fort to determine the best possible aolu· tion to handing the traffic within our city and through our city," Mayor Hirth con- tinued. "We are anxious to Induce full con- sideration for the needs and desires of adjoining cities. Consequently. we wlll keep you posted on OlU' progress and af. ford an opportunity to submit any traffic data you wish to offer," Hirth finished. "We're happy with the freeway route through our city," said Matney. speaking for Mayor Robert Shipley in Huntington Beach. "But we're flexible on the route near the Santa Ana River." "HunUngton Beach is not oppoaied to looking at realignment of the freeway between Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, he added. "We'll work with them any way we can ()0 that." "But we've got to have that freeway 1s far as the Santa Ana River for our own need!.'' Matney explained. He outlnned this position to feUow councilmen Monday, niglll He said there was general agreement on the city's stand. He bu not yot -Ult Wbetmore blli, which wu )Ult one oulspoken objection volced by Councllfuan Alvin L. Pinkley, a veteran viewer ()! freeway route in. fighting. Mincing no words, Councilman Pinkley charged Newport Beach interests both public and private have developed • tradition of treachery in dealing with Coata Mesa and it! freeway problems. "I am speaking only for myself and not UW: council," he emphasized strqly. His tones seemed to stun council col- leagues, who finally adjourned without approving the Wilson letter calling for support -in principle -of the Whet.. more bUL The legislation -as it is now u. derstood -would allow individual citiet to rt.open specific freeway route sections in an effort to solve mutual problems. State law and policy in effect now re- quires reopening of an entire freeway route to study, an inefficient procedure which ls wrapped up in red tape. Councilman Pinkley warned that bllbd endorsement of the Whetmore bill could signal disasler ahead for Costa Meaa citizens and its own interests. "If It was any other city than Newport Beach I could agree, but 1 have absolute.. ly no tniat In Newport Beach," Pinkley declared. He charged there bas been a smokesctt:en of publicity generated by lho militant Freeway Fighters org;aniu· Uon which wants to keep the Route One Coast Freeway out or the beach city at all cost. "It's Ume the people beard my side ()f this matter, which goes back to 1955, 15 years ago,'' Pinkley continued. "What happens to Costa Mesa? I have concern for our neighbors, but more for Costa Mesa. 'lbat's what we're elected for." Pinkley charged thal Newport Beach has tried five times since 196.1 asking the State Highway CommJsslon to reopen the Route One study, adding that twice they tried to bypass the commlsson. "Mr. Pinkley, you are in error •.• " began Councilman William L. St. Clair. "I've got the floor ••• you've had your say.'' Pinkley shot back. He continued on charging that Newport Beach must accept some responsibility for handling traffic problems generated by its surf and sand, drawing millions from inland areas each summer. lie noted that Costa Mesa agreed to reopen studies of the Newport Freeway Route 55 study at Newport Beach's re- quest , leading to the .so<alled Red Route. $JO mill ion more expensive than the previously adopted choice. By swinging westerly arotmd the downlown area from the old Newport BoWevard alignment chosen by the stae in 1944, 1,800 dwelling units ()f various types will also be wiped out. New Airport Site Eyed County Studies Purchase of Land in Capistrano By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI n. Deity '"li.t Stefl Orange County supervisors are stu. dying the acquisition of 1,500 acres in the Cipistrano area for a county airport as part of recommendations submitted to- dlfy in Phase II of the Air Transportation Master Plan. the recommendation was one of geveral given in a 400-page study of l!X· istlng air facilities submitted t o gu~rvisors by Stan W a I s h , project manager for the Ralph E. Parsons Com- pany. A public bearing on the report was set fo1' Nov. 17. The latest ParsoM rtpOrt makes lwo general recommendaUons: -'That Orange County take a c t I o n illn>ulb zoning ordinances to protect one ' DAILY PILOT OUNG!. COASl .. UILllH1HG CCM .. ANY "obtrt N. Wtt4 P'rnld'"I tr.t P1,t'Dlbl'ler Jttk I!:. C11rl1y Vic.I P'rnldtnl 1r.11 ~11n11 Mltltltr Thom1• Kt1vil Elliff Tllomtt A. M11r,.hl11e Mtnttl,.. 111,w . Altl'I Dir•i11 .,,., o,.,... COW!ty l!dfW Albert W. 1.1,1 .-.-.1ti. l!d!tor """ __ _ 17175 letdi k11IH•r4 ... m., AMrnt,I P.O .... 7t0, '2641 --a...-a-oi1 m ,._, ..,..,,.... c.t. ..... : • '"" ..,. ,.,... .......,, lltcfl1 D11 w.t h!Dte ~ .. C..... ...... &IQMN ... ·-. ()f the existing military facilities from en- -croaching development. -That the county acquire land for another jetport in a less developed arta of the county. Parsons report said three jet-capable airports will be needed within the next 20 years to handle the county's short haul air transport needs. Short h a u I transportation is that used to travel with· in a 400-mile radius. The study identitied three types of air facilities. The short haul, jet capable facility they labeled a jetport. Also idenUfied was a general aviation facility for use by pMvate pilots flyln& nonjet planes. The third facility briefly covered in the report wu a short take off and landing (STOL) for use by commuter helicopter services. In a study of emtlng alr facilities, both civilian aOOmllitary, the Pll1'30rui Com- pany recommended that Orange County Airport be maintained u the county's principal general aviation airport. They also suggested that jets. continue to use the facility limited by lhrte fac- tors: -"The analysis of the results of a 12 to 18-month prototype noise monJtoring pro- uam now in progress. -"The adoption of proposed state or federal noise standards or community noise levels . "-The negotiations of 1 e •a e agreement& with aiflines, stipulating the number of jet alrcratt departurtS and hours of operation." The El Toro Marine Alr SlaUon was Identified u being ••a prom ta Ing 1ltemaUve" for the county's second Jet capable airport. "The civil joint .,. of th~ mUltary air locUlty would not ba open to au air traf· fie. but 11 a joint use facility It could ac- cept limited. well disciplined ocheduled airline operation. No cenera1 avtaUon O"hl! would bt permitted," the report elates. In their study of El Toro the consulting firm .. t1m1led the cost of providing a clvll air terminal, new aprons, tulways and accesaes to be $2. 7S mUllon for the lnlUal phue. At Los Alamitos the Parsons Co. found the announced cut.down or alr oper1Uons ••may have bun premature." In recomme:ndlng a continued study or the NavaJ Air StaUon the Paraot11 report notes "that use of this facillty wuuld be llmlted to nonjet aircraft At tht Santa Ana Marine Air Station, "&eaeral avilUon Joint Ult of lht OI!alln& j fa cility Is not c<insidered feasible," the report stated1~. -- "Nevertheless. this aeronautical site should be assigned a role in the coun- tywide airport system as a future general aviation facility in the event that the fa cility is abandoned by the Department of Defense," the report continued. The Capistrano site ouUined by Parsons is in the Bell Canyon area. They estimate the cost of establishing an airport there at $52.17 million over a period of seven to 10 years. Operating within a .system of county airports the Bell Canyon jetport a b o v e Capislrano would be able to satisfy pro- jected dema'9ds. "It cannot, however. stand alone as the only jet air carrier airport In the county. The greatest de- mand in the immediate future will be on Orange County Airport which in time may be complemented by jet airline ser· vice out of El Toro," the Parsons study contended. The Bell Canyon airport. which Walsh said will be built along a ridge top. "will be able to handll!: an ultimate capacity of eight million passengers annually." Walsh said unique aspects of the site "also suggest a thorough examination of an advanced terminal and passenger movement sys tem to serve all modes. The concept of a transportation terminal near the existing freeway and close to a possible right of way for a high speed ground transportation system should seriously be considered." Another air faciija.y recommended by the consultants in the Southern County i;ector Is O'Neill air park. "This site offers a unique combination of an existing regional park wilh good recreational facilities on the Plano Trabuco. The site on this high plain. 900- foot elevallon. can be prepared easily to serve small general aviation aircraft. "FJight operation,, at this site would be during daylight hours only. Allbough mosl of the operations would ht touch· and-go, hikers and campers are e:ii:pec:ted to arrive by ligllt plane once the airport Is available, 11 the report stated. The coat. of e.stablishing a facility at O'Neill Park was estimated to be 11.118,000. A 1enerat aviation iite was alao Iden- tified ln tht city of Brea but the Parsons report warntd the site can only bt con· sldered suitable it lht city ls wllllng to rl!vlse Its general plan. Alrport Olrtctor Robtrt Brt'snaban who attended lhls morning'• mee:Una had no comment to make on the rtport. ''I 'haven 't had a chance to 1tudy Jt,'' be said. • f'rom Pa9e J s .UNSET .•. r '4 • qu irement and agrted that It bail not been demol\ltrated. ' . Councilman Jack GrM!i Aid the PIM· ruq ·staff Olllht to have stated the ·..hardship. "If the staff doesn't indicate the h•rdship I don!t see how you can make the recommendation for approval," be added. Green pointed out that since tile ap- plication was made the staff had been ordered Ip review all fulure applications to ensure they are made out properly. Coen felt that the council shoulit bear the brunt of the criticism. "The only reason this is posing a pro~ tern iJ because this is the only time a citizen has come forward to complain.•• Councilman Norma Gibbs had lhe last word on Knox' performance. "l think he's a lawyer on the side. J submit him for tbe next planning commission opening," From PCfe J MURDERS •.• 100 miles south of San Francisco1 One of the famil y's three cars, a 1961 Oldsmobile station wagon, was missing. Firemen who went to the Ohta pool for water found the bodies bound with scarves -Miss Cadwallader's floating on the surface, the others at the bottom of the Olympic-sized pool, its water stained pink and "its tiles slip"pery with their blood. VIEW OF LAHD PROPOSED FOR SUNSET BAY PROJECT Looking Acr011 Ch•nnel from Adm lr•lty Drive In H•rbour Each had been bound and then shot in the back of the bead, Dr. Ohta twice. Douglas James, Santa Cruz County Sheriff, called the slayings "the mest gruesome crime in county history." .. Beach Man Kidnaped In Mesa Bar Argument Police are still uncertain ef a motive, or whether srawled words or other in- dications of the killers' mental state might be found, as wetf: found after the slaying of actress Sharon Tatl!: and feur others near Los Angeles in 1969. Del Murray described Ohta, a Japanese-American Air Force veteran educated at Northwestern University, as a "very nice person, a tremendous: doc· tor." His practice was in Santa Cruz, A barroom braggart whose claim of being a paroled killer from Tennessee was doubled kidnaped a Costa Mesa tavern patron Monday night after return. ing with a double-barrelled shotgun' and four hoodlum pals. The victim was released unharmed in Huntington Beach, about lt.l p.m., while a second man present during the 6:30 ab- duction from the Viking Room, 686 W. 19th St., managed to escape going along on the aimless ride. Leonard Bowler, 25, who has been staying with relatives at 7841 Slater Ave .• HunUngton Beach since arriving on the Orange Coast four days ago called at 10 p.m. to say he had been freed near that address. Investigation into the case led to recovery of a shotgun believed to be the Judge, Students Exchange Vi ews Students will exchange views on t h e establishment and change, the 18-year· ()]d vote, pollution, and higher education with Superior Court Judge Bruce W. Sumner, Wednesday in the third Golden West Evening College series ()n parent- youth relations. The program, to be held in the College Center al 7;30 p.m., will be moderated by Mrs. Betty Inman, Orange C o a s t College counselor. It will be open to the public. The final program in the series, Oct. 28. will deal with youth and sex and will fea ture discussion with Or. William M. Hartman and Or. Marilya Fithian, of the Center for Marital and Sexual Studies. weapon involved from a Costa Mesa residence, actt1rding to Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. He said witnesses corroborate Bowler's story, but added the victim has not been very cooperative and prosecution ()f a suspect seems unlikely. Police said Bowler and Howard A. Thomason, 46, of 513 W. Sunflower Ave ., Santa Ana, were in the bar when the angry susPect and his crew returned with weapons. Bowler and Hopkins ran outside, ac- cording to poli~. and tried to h:ide beh:ind telephone booths at an adjacent service station but were spotted. "Get in or I'll blow you away." Bowler said he was told, while one of the five men involved aimed a .45 caliber pistol at Thomason's head. Detectives assigned to the case were given infonnatlon about a re!ldence on Miner Street where the shotgun was con- fiscated. '..'We know a kidnaping did oceur," Lt. Fischer explained today, but added that without cooperaUon by the victim It ap- pears there is insufficient evidence to make any arrests. John Monniger Services Slated Funeral services for John C. Monniger, 84. of 9912 Continental Drive, Huntington Beach, will be conducted at 11 a.m .. Wed. nesday. in Smith's Funeral Chapel. Burial will follow at Mt. View Cemetery, San Bernardino. Mr. Monniger died Monday. He was 1 retired San Bernardino city employe and had lived 10 years in Huntington Beach. He is survived by his wife , Mrs. Maude E. Monniger ; two sons, John R. Mon· niger, Fullerton, and J. Willard Mon. niger, San Bernardino ; four grandchildren and one great grandehlld. A socialite, he was described by another physician as the epitome of suc· cess. Th~ Ohtas had two ()Ider children, daughters who are at boarding school. Investigators have no motive for the kill- ings as yet. In the Barnes family slayings. divers found the body of the little blonde girl later in an irrigation canal. Authorities said the suspects knew the family. Barnes was a fann worker. The suspects were, officers said, traced by a license number supplied by neighbors. Mrs. Barnes was calling a neighbor about prowlers when the phone went dead, The wires had been cut. The neighbor summoned sberill's depuUes. Override Backed By City Council Huntington Beach councilmen have come ()Ut in unanimous support of the Huntington Beach Union High School District's ~nt tax override election. The council formally passed a resolu- tion in support of the override that would increase the tax rate to $2.08 on the re- quest of Councilman Norma Gibbs. She noted that all of the councilmen had backed the school vote individually. Several councilmen wondered whether tt was proper for the council to act but seemed to agree with Councilman Al Coen's argument "lhat the only test is whether the city will benefit from Its passage." Police Blame Arson BAY CITY, Mich. (AP) -Police blam- ed arsonists Monday for an early morn- ing fire at a U.S. Anny reserve training center that destroyed four truck! and a howitzer. THE NAME OF THE GAME There is 1 common pr1ctice of priv ate labelin g in the ca rpet industry. Large 'd1ptrtment stores, chain stores, ind contr1ctors 1t ntw tr1cts h1v1 ficticious names on +ht samples so th•+ cu1tom1rs c1nnot easily shop brand n•m• prices. Customers shopping 1t our store fi nd t~• price of oooh qu11ily prominently fHlured on tlio ...,pfo b'.ook, l)ec1use we 'Ire competitive. Also, '*=•UH we feel t ho ouslomor liu • right to lnow what he is b'uyin 9, wt never ch1n~1 tht Nlmt on 1· 11mplt boolt. Tho name of tht game ;, lnl09rily! \' ALDEN'S .--,-•• -,.-.-... -0-... -.-.,-.. CARPETS e DRAPES TUITIM C.. • 0 ALOIN'S .. _ --.I-A ... HILL ........ 166J r ... c....... • •. t 1174 ~,!!',= c.tlf, COST A MISA ui.su4 646-41JI HOURS' Mon. Thru Thura., 9 to 5:30 -Prl., 9 lo t -Sot., 9,30 to 5 , .. ) Nixon Due Israeli ita Newport Diplomat Looks At Mideast , War ·-CIAILV l'ILOT 11111 l'Mlt 'CAN'T IMPORT PEACE' lsra•l's Ambassador Rabin Battle Rene,ved Near Northern Jordanian Town Afi.U.tAN, Jordan tAP) -New figbting betwfen Jordanian troops and Palestinian guerrillas broke out today cear the northern tov.'n of Ramtha. The Arab peace mission met in Amman and called for an immediate cease-lire. Its observers on the scene reported the fighting consisted mostly of exchanges bet1veen tank guns, artillery, mortars and machine guns. The scene of the fighting is a cluster of five villages on the Syrian border bettA'ee n Ramtha and lrbid through which the guerrillas move lheir arms and sup- plies. Ara b peace mission observers said the shelling began shortly after noon and continued for three hours. The peace commission decided earlier tn the day to conduct an urgent inquiry into fightin g in north Jordan last v.·cekend. Jt announced lhose found responsible for lhe flareup will be handed over to Jordanian authorities to be tried as violators of the cease-fire agreement signed between King Hussein and guer- rilla leader Yasir Arafat last week. Both the Jordan government and the Cen tral Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization , the over-all gue rrilla leadership, have pledged to abide by the findings of the inquiry, the commission said in a statement. It al so said the tv;o sides issued new in- stru ctions to their forces in the north to "avoid further friction ", Within hours of the sta tement, fresh fighting had broken out. By GEORGE LEIDAL °'"" o.rr r11i11 ..... 1f peace is to be achieved in the Middle East it must come from a "recoilciliation of those parties that are at war," 270 persons attending the ·world Affalra Council ~r meeting at Newporter Inn In Newport Beach were told Monday night. "Peace is not an import commodity." Israeli ambassador to the U.S. Yltzhak Rabin said. \Vhile out!liders can "encourage and support" peace attempts "they cannot do it." The former military hero of Israel with T1 years' service said, ''As a soldier the meaning of peace was simple to me . , . when neighboring countries can I i v e together and solve their problems, lhls was the meaning of peact." S.ince March of 1968, Rabin hu been Jsrael's ambassador to the U.S. "Now, peace is more vague to me. The word can be used and abused at tbe same Ume, '' be said. Frequently "peace" means only that "the other side must accept my terms, otherwise it's not peace," he' quipped. Noting that his views on the Middle East situation would not be "objective" because •·1 talk as an Israeli," Rabin said, "it would· be better if connictlng sides each would present their own case. Then, a compromise ·can be worked out at the negotiating table. "It is better if people would be more specific about the meaning of peace. "Shouting peace is always vague and &ometimes misleading," Rabin said. "The meaning of peace is reconciliation -conciliation between those parties at war -Israel and the Arab countries. No one else can do it," he emphasized. He said he finds ii "incredible" that the Arab coUntries refuse to recognize the state of Israel. "How can il be lhat they have fought three wan: against somebody who doesn't exit?" Jn the: Middle East, "emotion and ir- rationality play a much greater role than rational, logical approac.bes to very com- plex problems. Co mplicating the mid-east tensions i! the intervention of the Soviet Union which "decided 15 years ago ta advance Its im- perialist innuence by ezplotting the Arab- Israeli conflict," Rabin said. The Russians have used their •elo power in the United Nations more than 40 times against resolutions that favor Israel. Further, they have provided the Arab countries military advisers - ''Who else has provided military advisers in the r-.1iddle East?" -technlcians and arms "worth $3 billion." "Since ro.1arch. 1970, v.·hen the Arabs failed.Jn their war of_ attr!Uon against Israel." he noted, the Soviets ha ve sent their own force!! into the Middle East for the "first time since World War II. From 12,000 to 15.000 Russians now are manning Soviet v.·eapon systems, are flying planes and operating ground-to-air missiles, Rabin said. As far as Israel is conet:rned the price of peace is the territory it took from the Arab nations in the June, 1967, "siz-day " v.·ar. "It they v.•ant peace, OK." Rabin said. "We'll give back most of the territory. If no peace. no territory." Since 1948, Israel has not enjoyed legal boundaries and agreed upon border• with neighboring states is impoftlnt to Israel, "not just more real estate," Rabin uid. Since Arab violationl of the 90-day ctase fin have not led Israel to In- creased lnlat of their neighbon, Rabin said, Israel would not return occupied lands or continue seeking agreement for peace, until Arab naitloru: prove they can ketp earlieT agreement!. "What ls the purpose. of seeking •ll'ff- menl with a party lhat doean 't ktep llS word?11 he said. Witnesses Say Sergeant Shot My Lai Civilians FT. HOOD, Tex. (UPI) -Two govem- mmt witne sses testified Monday they ' saw S. Sgt. David ro.tJtche\l empty two clips or ammunition from his automatic 1 rine in to a group of 30 unarmed Viet- namese old men. women and children herded into a ditch rive to six feet In front of Wm. The first public account ol the 1'fy Lal ma11sacre in which American combat M>ldiers allegedly killed more lh•n 100 Vietnamese clvlllans came as the govem- 1 ment opened Its tesum-ony in 'In attc·mpt to show Mitchell awiulted with the intent to murder 30 Vietn amese rivilians. Prosecuting attarney, Capt. MicharJ ~ Swan, apealdng slowly In his opening st1temtnt, said the 1overnment will 1 prove Mitchell's p I at o on movtd "dellberalely, but quickly through the ' village. cleared the hooches, a n d e11lhertd the people Into groups." lt WIS Ont Of thole. aroups, aalhered near 1 ditch In the ea1ttm part of My Lal, Mitchell is acculed of unulUng. Swan said be would pron: Mitchell and Lt. William Cilley 1'bf:rded and puahed" the. Vietnamese into a ditch, then opened fire on them with 1utom1Uc weaJ)ona. Charles Sltdge ot Sardis, Miss., and 0.Mis CoaU of Providence I\. I., beth r1di9 oper1ton for Calley at My Lal, told the court they uw MitcbeU MooUnc into Ill< ditch. Sledte. the rlrst witness called by Ure pf~cution. said Mitchell fired 1bout 20 shots Into the ·group, nlolkkd hll rlnt, and fired anothtr 20 tlmts. He said the Vletnarnae -all unarmed women, old men and children -were "falling and acreantina:" as Mitchell and Cllley fired. ConU 1tld he watched as Calley turned his rifle on a Vletnamtsc woman . "Jtcr head Oew Off, 'Thert WI! mare firing. and J turned •nd walked away," ConU said. J .. TutMIJ, llct>bo< 20, 1'70 H DAILY PILOT :Ii Day Later .:.--• Ill Clemente • PRESIDENT AUTOGRAPHS CAST OF KANSAS CITY POLICEMAN CHARLES ROBINSON For Two Officers Injured in Bomb Bl•1t, A Surprise Visit by the Comm•ncfer-in-chi1f Nixon Visits 2 Officers, Tells Concern for La,v JOH NSON CITY, Tenn. (UPI) -Presi· dent Nixon demonstrated his concern for law and order with an early morning visit to two police officers in Kansas City to- day and then flew to Tennessee to push his campaign to unseat Senator Albert Gore, a persistent critic of his Vietnam policy. "Instead of c~lling them pigs and spit- ting on them and shouting profane slopns as they go about their jobs, let's give our police respect,'' Nixon said when he emerged from a !~minute Yillt with two policemen hospitalized in Kansas Cl· ty with serious injuries suffered in a dynamite explosion. Nixon arrived at Johnson City In East Tennessee on the second day of his !lix- 1tate campaign swing lo b o o s t Republican candida~s and o us t Democrats who opj)Ose his V i e t n a m policies. TeMessee's Gore is one such critic. Nixon stepped off Air Force One in a light drizzle at the Johnson City Airport and was gree!_ed b Willi!__m Brock._Jhe Republican congressman who is trying to win Gore's seat. Nixon's aides issued a statement in which the President praised Brock as a man who stands for law en· foreanent, tJscal respansibility and local contro l of schools. Nixon campaigned in the Midv.•est on a theme that disrespect for the law must be stopped by electing law and order can· didates to Congress. He interrupted his trip in Kansas City to visit officers Charles Robinson, 30, and Kenneth M. Flemina. 38. Reagan Visits Anaheim; Seeks To Unseat Cory By Bll.L STALL ..,,. Ptl!llul Wrllw There's a Democrat holding an Assembly seat deep in the heart of California's political Dixie -Orange County -and Gov. Reagan heads that v.·ay today in a drive to unseat him. The target is DemocraUc Assemblyman Kenneth Cory of Garden Grove, opposed by Republi can Brure Nestande, 32, an employe of Walter Knott. well known as a supporter of conservative poli Ucal causes. Greenhouse Blast Explosion Near Irvine Was Bomb, Probers Say Authorities using lhe process or elimination to determine what caused a SS0.000 explosion at the S t a n f o r d Research Institute near the UC lrvine -campus early Monday have concluded it v.·as a bomb. J ust exactly what type -and who planted it -remained a matter of con- j~ture today. The explosion OCCWTed in an air purl· fying unit, part of the 5ystem that con- trols the environment of two greenhoutH in which plant virus and air pollution studies are conducted. Several thousand tomato and bell pep- per plants contained in thl'! SRJ 'reen- house fa cilities were destroyed, while the TWA Stewardess Strike Cancels 450 Air Flights WASHINGTON (U PI) -Trans World Airlines cancelled all of its nearly 450 domestic fli!Jhts today and announced sharp curtailment of overseas operation.'i as 5,400 slewardes5es and stewards went on strike against the line. A TWA spokesman said the airl!ne would try to operate about 10 in- terna tional round-trip Oighta each day, about half the regular rate. Supervisory personnel were being used for the overseas fli ghts and even those were being shortened to stop at gateway cities such as London, Rome, Paris, Frankfurt, Lisbon and Hong Kong. A spokesman for the union representing !triking stewardesses and stewards aald, "The stri ke is solid and we expect other unions to honor our picket lines. I don't know of any cases where they are not." The fi rst TWA overseas flight to leave from the United States since the strike began took off from New York for Lon· don at 10:20 a.m. EDT. The nezt overseas nights are scheduled tonight. Picket lines appeared at major air terminals at 12:01 a.m. EDT today after last-minute negotiations between lhe airline and the transport workers union reached an Impa sse. TWA President F. C. \Viser immediately announced can- cellation or domestic nights. Another negotiating session at National Mediation Board headquarters waa scheduled for today. shattered atructurea themselves are a total loss. Dale Hutchinson, assistant ezecutive director of operations on the IS-acre aite at 19722 Jamboree Road, estimated half the loss was structural and the rest in destroyed research work. "It was a total loss," Hutchinson remarked. The 3:45 a.m. blast -perhaps directed at the SRI facility because of defense and war-related projecb at other among 12 branches around lhe world -was in a remote spot and no one was Injured. A possible: 1ccldent involving natural gas was considered, but finally ruled out. "We went through all the other poten- tial causes, eliminating them one by one, and so have concluded It was a bomb," said Orange County Sheriff's Capt. James Broadbelt. "As to who put ll there and why, we have reached no conclusions," he added. ProjectJ under way at the SRI center are fina nced by private industry and specifically involve study of chemicals which ma y kill viruse1 that annually cau1e hea~ loss to Southern Callforl'!ii- crops. Air and water pollution research Is also carried out at the Irvine station, In- cluding the effects of smog on growing plants . R11dical student activists have demonstrated and committed 10me acts of violence aga inst other SRI facilities enga1ed in war rese1rch and product.ion. Pope Quoting Banned Writer VATICAN CITY (AP ) -Pope Paul VI has quoted from a work by Alezander Solzhenitsyn, Noble Prize winner for literature wbo has been denounced by Communist authorities in his naUve Soviet Union. The Pope used lht citation, seen as a possible indication of indirect aupport for Solzhenitsyn, in an addreM Monday to a group of Italian doctors. The quotation, from ''Cancer Ward," reads: ;'The fam ily doctor was the moat Intimate of figures. but they have eradicated him. The famil y doctor is the person wllhoul whom , In a developed society, the family Cannot exist. •. But how many adult.a today debate mutely , not knowing whert to find a doctor and a 50UI to whom they can ezpreu their ma1t aecret fears ••• " President To Arrive On Oct. 29 Pr<tld<nt Nixon will be stayloC at the San Clemente Western White House for an undisclosed perlOO beginnin& OcL 21. Ill< DAILY PILOT learned today aod inay spend election night here. Political observers are calculating to- day that the President's stay will be part of bis present campaign swing, probably in an effort to bolster the sagging re-«lec· tion campaign of Senator Cieorge Murphy, (R-Calif.). Additional speculatiOI\ ~n Nixon cam· paign role circulated tOday wben Victor C. Andrews of Laguna Beach, one of Ni.c- on's top aides in California, called a preu conference. Andrews, a resident of Emerald BaJ and the President's ambassador to Expp 70 in Japan. set the meeting with tho press for Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Civic Center courthouse complex in Santll Ana. 'Ille subject ol the conference wasn't aMounced. The Presidential visit, expected te resemble campaign swings throuib other states in recent weeks, will come a day later than originally expected. 'Ibere had been strong speculation that the chief executive would arrive in time for ceremonies involving the first-day issu<.. oUour new ecology stamps in Saa Clemente. That function will take place at the Western Mille House on Oct. 281 a day before Nixon's expected arrival. 2 Access Routes To Salt Creek Beach Studied Orange County officials today are con· aldering an offer of two accesa routes and the purcbue rights lo the beach at Sa~ Creek. The offtt wu made at the Board of Supervison meeting today by reprutn· tatives of AVOO Community Developen Jnc., new owners of Laguna Nlgue1. .The plan, presented by B 1 r r 'I _ McComic, ACDI counsel, encompusea donation and sale of 30 acres of llDd for parking, access and beach area. The plan submitted today includes the following points; -Donation by ACDI of land for two ao- ceu routes to the beach. -Donation of the tn&lneerlng and grading of one accesa route by ACDI. -Conveyance to the county of the AC. DI Interest In 11.f acres of beach, 1Ubject to a deed of !nut held by PrudenUtl Lile Insurance Company. -Sale to the county, at fa ir market value of 16.5 acres of land for two parking Jot.s. The value would be established by ·an independent appraiser. After-listening to McComic's presen- tation, supervisors voted lo consider tht matter in their Nov. 17 meeting. Supervisor Davi d Baker requested the heads of lhe county's rGad, engineering. purchasing, plaMing, harbor and legal departmentJ to study the offer. BreMan McClellan of Laguna Beach. a spokesman of the citlzerui group worklnc to save Salt Creek for the public, said be was very pleased wllh the AVCO offer. .. This is lhe finest upression of a cor· poration to the solution of a problem 1 have seen yet," he told supervllore:. "This offer Is as good or superior to tbe plan proposed by the COW'lty." The county plan he referred to tnvolvea a legal suit on the grounds of prtseripUv1 rights which would force the Laguna~ Niguel developers to maintain the public • beach on ,the grounds that it bas always been used as a public beach. There was no immediate estimate on total cost of the offer to the county but Robert L. Follett. vice president of ACDJ, said the county coud spend about $342,000 for the 11.4 acres of beach held m trust by Prudential. "The county will receive three acrH of aettSs at no cost and 16.5 acres: of park· ing at fair market value," he said. Follett alao said the comp.any Is willinc lo p\lt in interim access to the beach within 90 days. The Interim accesa would be temporary until permanent facilities could be completed within about J4 monlbl. Jn a county where patriotism ru ns strong , Nestande J!i curator or the Il'ldependence Hall historical e1hibit at Knott's Berry Farm. There v.•as no Immediate Indication what Issues rema ined unresolved after the Monday night session, but federal mediator Francis A. O'Neill Jr. said the two aides "had succeeded In re1alving a great majority of _the issues." ~oeds Flunk Sex This race is one of a handful that will determine whether Republicans o r Democrats control the ~uat Assembly in 1971, and help determine the political ·coul'M of California for the nci:t decade. The GOP now holds a slim qe, 40-39 with one vacancy. On a si milar mission ~fonday, Reagan went to Venturai County to boost the can- didacy of Republican h.andolph E. Siple, a Ventura attorney, over Assemblyman Ken MacDonald (O-Ojai). "We need a majority on our side so we can continue to organize !he legjslature and continue to designate the com· mltte~;· Reag•rt told a get-out-the-vote rally at Camarillo. The party in power next ytar1will have the advantage In the process of redraw- ing: Senate, A.'isembly and coniressional district boundaries, which have to be ad· Justtd on the basis of 1970 cwus figures. The stewardesses, stewards and in- Oight service manage.rs, who have v.·orJc· ed without a contract for 17 montM. have demanded wage lncrease1 up lo 30 pet• cent and improved frtn1e benefits In- cluding more expense money and motemlty Jeeve along with better houri and working conditions. Gas Blasl Kills Man DILLON. Colo. (U ll) -One man wa., k!lled and five other1 Injured Monday when a propane ga1 explosion rtpped through a new aki lodae being con- 11tructed on the west 1ide of Colorado's Loveland Pass. One workman at lhe Keystone Ski Area, six mtlu e~st of Dillon, said the gastwaa detteted ahortly before the cxplbsion, which could be beard for rnllea ln tht mountain country. Don't Know What They're Doing CHARLESTON, S.C. (UPI) - A ran- dom ltudy of MJO coeds at the University -<>! North Carolina allows, In effect, lbat many of tht alrls are nunkin1 m:. Dr. Takey Crist,~ 1n obstetrlclan- gynecoloalst 1t the unlver11ly'1 hospital In Chapel Hiii. N.C .. reported to a con- ference of fellow doctors Monday night on the aurvey. Of the 169 coeds who g&ld they were sexually active, he said 2&.4 percent of them did not have enough knowltdge to put any answtr1 on the que11Uonn1lre. _. Only 58.1 percent answered b•lf of the queations correctly. There were no perfect scores. "Their dem ands ror contr111cepUon and 1borUon appear to be increaslnc," aa.ld Crbt, "Yet thtlr knowled(e about normal reproductive phyaiology, conlracepUon - and aex lnformaUon 1ppem to be quite inadequate.'' "U b concluded from tltll stuctY lhlt 1 moat student! learned from friends and books and rely Im on lbelr parents and o m clas.ses for lnformatlon rtprdlrc a , most important upect of U!elr Uva" "It may ho true tbaL they aro exdtln(, lull of adventure, fuU of lnltllectual curiosity. but 1s observed that they are a1.. conl\ISCd, rebellious and -.. t1p<clally wllh regards lo lbelr - umllty/' he said. Hls conclusion: "Adequate •• educa- tion should take pltct prior lo enterlne college." > ' • • • • • Sir MJ._ch••I Carv , permanent secretary at the Ministry of Public Building and Works in London . has asked his employes to cut do,vn on the number of memos they send out. There is much too much wastage, he said. Cary made his appeal in a memo. • Some 500 cadets who gathered In Trafalgar Square, London Sun- day to mark the 165th anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar victory qad to salute empty rigginj!'. strung up to Nelson's column because EOmeone forgot the signal flags . "It was a bloody pitty." said Firit Sea Lord Sir Peter Hill-Norton. ,. • • \f f •• UJ'I Tt ........ • UAR PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT IC ) MEE TS HIGH RANKING ARMY COMMANDERS New Egypt Chief T•lk1 With Lt. Gen. Moh•mmed Fawzi, Lt. Gen. Moh•mmN Ahmed S.dek A Hollywood company is ?nak· iitg a movie in l\foundsville, W. Va .• and using local resident.! as extras 111 the film . "Fool's Parade," set in the 1930s. The residents are pa id $16 a day }or their work. However, t111yo11t' who has· a 1935 model car still in Tunning order is paid $30 a day for use of the automobile. • r.tiniature cowpokes were spotlighted as these unha ppy winne rs wer~ sel- ected in th e "Littlest Cowboy" con- test at th e 26th National llorse Show iii San Fr<rncisco recently. Two-year- old \Vendie McD011ald of Sanoma doesn't take to bei ng roped by a non· plussed Jan Jo nes, a wrangler from Pleasant Hilt. •• Nixon Will Meet Gromyko Over U.S., Russ Tensions NEW YORK (UPI) -President Nixon "''ill meet So\'let Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko In Washington Thursd~y for discussions aimed at easing the current tensions in Soviet-American relalions. Secretary of State \Villiam P. Rogers announced the meeting Monday night alter ronferring with Gromyko for two hours and 4S minutes. "This meeting, like any meeting. we hope will play a part in better unde rstanding," Rogers said. Nixon had considered the possibility 0£ meeting Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin at the United Nations. But Kosygin ca nceled his projected visit to the United Nations, rej)Ortedly because of a deterioration of Soviet-American rela- tions. The high level encounter climaxed two meetings between Rogers and Gromyko during which some progress has been made in easing the strain which developed as a result of Egyptian-Soviet missile violations of the Middle East cease-fire arrangements. Although Roge rs and Gromyko still were at a st.and-off over the missile viola- tions and prospects of resuming Arab- lsraeli peace contacts were dim. they ap- parently laid to rest the incipient crisis over Soviet naval construction at Cien- fuegos harbor in Cuba. U.S. delegation officials gave this ac· count of Rogers' second meeting with Gromyko at which, they said, the at· mosphere was better than at the first en- counter Friday night : ~~ 0. -1\.1r1cans-ann The Middle East -Roger s and Gromyko remained at loggerheads over the reported Soviet-Egyptian missile violations. No. • .campromise s o I u t i o n emerged for "rectifying" that :situation. But it see.med increasingly likely that the Middle East cease-fin would be extended on a day-to-day basis. The Soviet Union Snub by Nixon, W eigl1 Boycott -----indicated that it wouldJikc Arab-Israeli talks under the auspices of U.N.lnediator Gunnar V. Jarring to resume, although how this might take place remains UN ITED NATlONS, N.Y. (AP) -unclear. Some of the pre'.sidents and premiers in· The four-power talks on Berlin _ the vited to President Nixon's dinner Satur-two foreign ministers clean!d up a day night for the 25th anniversary of the misunderstanding over the Soviet position U.N. General Assembly are talking about at these talks. scheduled to meet again in boycotting the White House affair. They November. While the nature of the charge. that the P.reside~t :snubbed a misunderstanding was not specified, U.S. deleg~tlon representing African and other officials told nev.•smen they looked Ex-Nasse1· Aide Named To Top Post I By THE ASSOCI ATED PRESS Tnformanls in Cairo say President Anwar Sadat has chosen 71>-year-old Mahmoud Fawzi, for 18 years one of President Gama! Abdel Nasser's chief advi sers on foreign affairs, to be Egypt's new prime minister. Fawzi entereq Egypt's C()nsular service in 19'l6 and served in a succession of con- sular and ambassadorial posts under the monarchy. Six months after t h e overthrow of_ King Farouk in 1952, he was named foreign minister and held the post until 1964. when Nasser made him deputy prime minister for foreign affairs. In 1967. he became Nasser's assistant for foreign affairs, a post created for hint Las April he met ·with President Nixon as Na sser's personal representative to discuss U.S. efforts to achieve peace in the Middle East. The semiofficial newspaper Al Ahram said Monday that Sadat had chosen a ''prominent personality who enjoys gre'h respect on national and international levels." The newspaper did not say that r·awzi was Sadat's choice, but today it prominently diSj)layed an article review- ing his career. Al Ahram said the new prime minister will "have the authOrity as prov ided for in the constitution." This was interpreted to mean that Fawii will choose the members of his Cabinet. a freedom con- sistent with Sadat's pledge to spread authority to other membe'l's of his government. Sea..Ch Intensified • Canada Kidnap Victim Buried MONTREAL (UPI) -Canada today buries its martyr in the cause of Cana- dian unity, Pierre Laporte, . while the search Intensified for hls killers and !he kidnapers of British diplomat Jamtil L. Cross. Canadian political figures, including Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and op- position leaders from ottawa. were join- ing Laparte's family in paying f In a I r espects to the Quebec labor minister murdered Saturday, one week after his abduction by the Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ). Conservative leader Robert Stanfield Monday eulogized Laporte as "a martyr in the eyes Of all democratically minded Canadians." At the request of Laporte's wife, Fran- coise, the simple funeral at Notre Dame Cathedral in t.1ontreal was to be prh•ote. Extraordinary security, including the ~.000 federal troops mobilized Thursday by Trudeau, were poi:sed for pos.'iible FLQ trouble. Mean\\·hlle. 9,000 po Ii c e f r om throughout Quebec pressed their ~earch · for three men wanted as suspects in the kidnapings of Cross and Laporte. Since Trudeau Friday decreed emergency war power:s broadening police powers and suspending some Canadian civil rights, authorities have seized without charges 341 suspected FLQ leaders and sym- pathizers in 1,627 raids throughout Quebec. lreal JnternaUonal Airport, then 1board a oneway flight to Havana. Cross would be released when the kidnapers' arrived in Cuba. · But the FLQ has ignored the offer made Saturday night by Quebec hemicr Robert Bourassa al about the same tim1 police discoyered the bloody body ot Laporte stashed In the trunk or the auto in which he had been kidnaped . The l•'LQ has demanded release of 23 political prisoners and $500,000 gold in ransom for Cross. Trudeau and Bourassa were men dee)>' ly grieved on the day of Laporte'! funeral. Both le!lders were close personal friends of Laporte, as well as bemg ~is political colleague. It was Trudeau and Bourassa who bacl to make the wrenching decision not to trade the lives of Cross and Laporte for the kldnaper:s' demands, a deci:sion o;nade despite a dramatic appeal by Laporte as a personal friend. The government acceded to his wife'• wishes to avoid a st.ate funeral and keep the services private. Vietnam Jr1cir Lull Broke1'l By ~ighting They have failed to find the kidnapers or Cross, who was abducted from his suburban Montreal home Oct. S by artlled members of the FLQ. Apparently he still SAIGON (UPI) -Haavy fighting 80 is alive, for he sent 8 communique to miles from Saigon broke a lull of nearly a police Sunday begging them to call o!f week in action involving American forcts their search and accede to FLQ demands. in Vietnam. military spokesmen said to- The Canadian government \\'ailed for day. Two Gis were killed and six wound· word from the FLQ to its standing offer ed. for safe passage to Cuba for the kid· Comm.uniques fro'!l P~nom Penh said napers. If the abductors agree. they Cambodian troops .with air su~port today would bring Cross to the Concordia br?ke up what s~n1or ~mbod1an officers bridge over the St. Lawrence River at the -s~1d was a ma~or dnve by two North site of Expo '67, Montreal's world's Vietnamese regiments on Phn~m Penh fairgrounds. from the south: 1be Cambodians cap- There the kidnapers would turn Cross lured a ~orth V~etn~mese.battaUon com· over to the Cuban consul, hop into a wa it-m~1nder in the fighting. . ing helicopter for the short ride to Mon-We have forced them out of _their bas~ area and have destroyed their plans, Nightclub Star Piazza Marries MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP) -Opera and nightclub star J\1arguerite Piazza of f\femphis will marry San Francisco ex- ecutive F. H. "Harry" Bergtholdt on Nov. 8. The marriage will be the se.cond for the singer, who"is the widow of millionaire \Vllliam J. Condon of the Conwood Corp. Bergtholdt is president of Distribution Systems, Inc. An announcement Monday said Mis:s Piazza, who overcame I e n g t h y hospitalization for cancer. will be ma r- ried two days after she is to be inst.a11ed as 1971 national chairman of the American cancer Society. said Lt. Col. Prak f\1eng, commander o! the 60th Cambodian battalion. J.1eng's unit led a ID-battalion force o[ some 6,000 men puslllng south from the capital along highway 2. Cambodian of- ficers said 16 other North Vietnamese or- ficer:s were captured along with the bal· lalion commander and a number of north Vietnamese were kllled and wounded. The tf.S. Comnland said a un1t of the 3rd brigade of the 1st Air Cavalry Division came under small arms and rocket grenade attack Monday night from CommunisL troops.Jn a_ bunker complex 22 miles north·northeast of Ham Tan, capital of Binh Tuy Province. Artillery fire and ACll9 Shadow fixed wing gunships joined the fighting which lasted two hours. The Americans wen• unable to determine Communist losses. It was the first major fighting involving American units in Vietnam in nearly a week. r.fost litt/.e girls find playing witl~ girls satisfying but Maria Vorg_as,. 2, is an exceplio11. llere she plays wit h "Bab11." her si x-foot cincuate snake. A lot of lier male contempories i11 Mexico Citu would probably shy away from her family's pe t. nona_hgned nations. . . _f_orward with ~ew ho~ to ~he discussions President Kenne~h Kall'!da ~f Zam~1a on improving the Berlin situation. heads the delegation, which 1s touring major Western capitals tryiug to get sup- port for Black Africa's campaign against the white minority governments in southern Africa. The other members of the mission arc the foreign ministers of Algeria, Cameroon , Kenya and Mali. J\'I ysterious Plague l\.unstler~Urges S-tudent-s' Allied troops In Vietnam Monday reported killing 31 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong in fighting near the U.S. Green Beret camp al ThUCffig--nuc-;-24 mile-r- southwest of Da Nang. • A plea to help prevent boozy birds from breaking windows and commitin~ suicide has been issued by Dan Andrews, \Va shington State University Extension Service poul- try expert at Pullman, \Va sh. Birds throughout the state have gotten tipsy from eating fermenting mountain ash berries. Andrews said. He asked the public to close the blinds to protect the birds and \vindows lhe birds might not see in their tipsy state. Kaunda told a news conference at U.N. headquarters that before he left Africa, he was told Nixon would meet the mission in \Yashington on Oct. 20. But when he got to Rome. he said, he was told Nixon had changed the appointment to 9 a.m. Oct. 19, even though the Amer- ican Pre:sident "knew very well" Kaunda was speaking to the General Assembly that morning. "I suppose he did not want to see our ugly fa~s." Kaunda told a meeting of Asian and African delegates ?.1onday. Kills Hawaii Trees liONOLULU (AP) -Hawaii's unique koa and ohia trees are dying, and a baf· fled forester fears the killer may be an alien insect or disease ''that found a ripe climate." The mena ced fores Ls, found nowhere else in the world, cover 600,000 acres on Hawaii Island, the largest in the eight-island chain. .. In some places the trees are dying so quickly the leaves didn 't have time to fall," says the forester, Robert E. Nelson . director of the Institute of Pacific Islands Forestry. U.S. Weather Picture Mixed Rain, Frost and Indian Srtmmer AU Reported Help for l(ent Arrestees KENT. Ohlo (AP) -Greeting 1.000 ap- plauding students with a clenched fist above his head, attorney William Kunstler has urged them to band together to help 25 persons indicted in connection with violence at Kent State University. Kun stler lold the off-campus gathering Monday night that he intends to coordinate a common defense for as many of the 25 who wish it. They were in- dicted secretly in the deaths of four students and the wounding of nine others f\1ay 4 in a confrontation with Ohio Na- tional Guardsmen. Four persons, including Kent student bod y President Craig Morgan and an associate professor , ·were served with in- dictments Monday. to burn a campus ROTC building, slrik· ing a fireman and interfering with a fireman at a fire. He has been sentenced to 20 to 40 years in prison on three counts or selling hallucinogens. Placentia Girl Dies A 6-year-old Placentia girl who ran into the street to an ice cream truck died ltlonday at St. Jude •lospital in Fullerton. The Orange County Coroner 's Office said Michelle L. Reyes was struck Satur- day as she ran into the path of a car in front o( her home. The driver was not held. • Kunstler, a defense attorney in the Chicago seven riot trial. told the gather- ing Monday night. "The law is utilized by those in power lo force those not in po'A-·er to conform.'' ' Callfornla ,.,_ Wlrl IM'lllH SOUthlr11 c 11uor,,11 skln _,. mo.t· ho ..... "' kMMl'I' W!lh lo# tiWll• 110111 <Offlll IT\OUMtl'J' IO!'K otSI fol' lt!t .,. flltllt 11'11 lt•l'r rncrnl111 1'111.1'1. T .... 1>e•llllfltt. 111 LI'S A119rlts ... ,. folnc:tst r11 !flt low 1111 wl!ll lllr: owrr- 111"'1 low upec:1'9d to bl! n . Tiit Alt ,,,tlufle" Control 011lflfl PtHfclld 1i.it1 nt lrrllrU111 Ill !/It 111111r1. "-" bM>c.ltff -· <ieudy hi lilt ,.,...,,1r1g wll!I I l\ltW •un bllr111111 '"'-" 111 '"' '"''-""""· l'lltlll ffllftCI Mii' '6 whllt lllt Wlltr Wl l ,I. ll'lt "'111.1M1l111 Wtrt IUllll>' Wl!lt .. ltlls "' !ht low a... LOWI wtrt for•· <ISi 1111• U. 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'" .. •• " .. .. .. .. .. ~ " .. " " •• .. " " .. Morgan. 20, of the Columbus suburb of Upper Arlington, was arrested at student government offices by a Portage County ·' sheriff's detective and later released on ... $1 ,000 bond. He \\'as charged witb second- degrce riot. Dr. Thomas S. Lough, 42, an associate professor of sociology and anthropology, surrendered voluntarily and was relea:sed on $5.000 bond. He was charged with one cou.nt or inci ting to riot May 4. Tv.·o others indicted -Richard Felber, :?I. of Akron and Jerry H. Rupe. 22, or Ravenna -were already in jail on drug .os charges. Felber, a former Kent student. was charged with first-degree. riot , attempting •• ·" Officia l Tours Line -~· .ts DETROIT (AP) -Nicolae eta~. president of Romanta, and his wife tour a ma jor automobile 1ssembly line today, a :~~ Ford Motor Co. epokesman said. They .01 will sec !he assembly Une and stet! opera- tions at Fotd's River Rouge plant. . - , .... 11'1 T1leltfltte CHICAGO SEVEN LAWYER WILLIAM KUNSTLER He Saki In a Rally That IMictment1 Are Not Valid \ r I 7 7 ' 1 , Fo iain. v ·aJley ' ' . ···'teday'• :Fmal -' N.:Y. r • •• voe. 63 , NO. 25 f, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAl JFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, ~970 • • ' 1e ·1n ur er Legal Flaw Dampens Bay Plan · By ALAN DIRKIN Of "" Dll~ ..... , "'" The Sunset Bay Project, a multi-million dolfar development next to Huntington Harbour, won rave reviews from Hun· tington Beach city councilmen Monday night but ran aground on a legal flaw. Huntington Harbour resident Arthu r Knox pointed out that no hardship had been established to allow the use variance and warned that he and others wouJd go to court if the 11pplication' were granted in its present form. The council agreed to refer the development back to the planning corn· mission for a review of its findings.and for a demonstration of hardship. ENTHUSIASM The councilmen Were so enthusiastic about the project that would see the ctea· tion of a small peri.insula with two 11· story towers ·on it that they directed the p1"1ning commission to reconside~ the application tonighL The comm1ss1o n meets at 7 p.m. Councilman Al Coen expreMed the mood ol. the COllncil when he suggested it be sent back to the planning commission "'in 'the hope that they can find th• hi.rdshi_p that woold justify it." . The council also pasged a resol1.1hon 11ter instructing the city administrator and city attorney to revie'W the ordinance on conditional exceptions with a vie:-.v to enacting legislalion thal would give the council a freer hand. The-Sunset-Bly project,~ planned by Real Property Management of Beverly Hills woold be on the northeast side of Pacific Coast Highway b e t w e e n Admiralty Drive and Anderson Street. PLANS TOW The plan calls for an ti-story apart· ment ct1mplex, an 11-story hotel, four three-story apartment units, a four-story office building, two sh9pping centen, 300 boat slips and homes and townhouses. The developme nt, which required a wne-variaoce,...receiveitno.oegative votes in the planning ct1mmisston and appears to have the support of the majority ef Huntington Harbour residents. The Huntington Harbour Resi dents Association reported Monday night that the project was backed by 80 percent of the residents of the community. LA W mED But the backers reckoned without Knox. an airline pilot, who made a detail· ed presentation against the development, claiming that the Jaw had not been followed in several areas. He referred to a me!Tlorandum written 1 year ago by City Attorney Don Bonfa listing the con~itions and findings that had to be made before a zone variance could be granted but Knox claimed city departments were not following Bonfa's instructions. He hammered at the point that either a hardship or exce ptional circumstances had to be demonstrated, but there was. no mention or these requirements in the planning staff's report or the planning commission's approval. Abe Lurie, representing Real Property Management. said that he had heard no prior mention of the hardship · re· (Set: SUNSET, Page Z) C:.ast Weather The rainy season may start ~ night, the weatherman warns, bringing a cooling trend to the coast Wednesday. Temperatures ahould gravitate between 65 and '/1), INSmE TODAY ·Suck it ·in, gal.t: according to L. M. Boyd, fa' women out· number fat men 1eun to cme. Stt Chtcking Up, Page B. ' DAIL T l"ILDT lltff l"1'ttt MEADOWLARK PILOTS DISPLAY THEIRS ENTIMENTS AT CITY COUNCIL MEETING 'Save Our Airport,' 'Save Our Lives,' 'KHp the Extension,' Said th• Si9n1 \ Pilots · Lau·d Council . ' ' 'I ' Council;men Agree tv.Meadowlark B'Uut Fence Clutching picket signs urging "Save Our Airpoit;• ·"Kee p. the . E:rtension," pilots -Wmed out-in_squadl'Otll j n -Hun- tington Bea.ch Monday night for the latest round in the Meadowlark Airport con· troversy. About 70 pilots crowded into the council chamber to hear City Administrator Doyle Miller give his report on the airport problem . The report recommended that only 320 feet of the MO.foot runway extension be permitted and that a blast fence be built Half -dug Pool ' Owners Still Left High, Dry The dilemma of the half-dug swimming pool in a Huntington Beach family's front yard won't be solved for another two weeks. Councilman Norma Gibbs asked Mon- da y if the council could act immediately on the issue, but Assistant City Attorney Loo Ann Marshall said that 10 days notice must' be given before a. hearing can be. held on the use variance. The issue is over the pool a co11tractor started lo build at 10232 Cutty Sa rk Drive in the front yard of the Ernest Sherwoods after the family had wrongly received a building permit for the jOb. The planning co(llmiuion gi'anted a use Variantt after the mistake was discover· ed. but Councilman Jack Green has since appealed that decision. The appeal will be heard at the Nov. 2 council meeting .. Monday . aight ·Green said that "far more" was involved in the situation than had been brought out to date and urged the council to w;ill until Nov, 2 before considering the case, ' behind It. The pilots broke out in appla use when the-council agreed to a suggestion . by Councilman George McCracken that the blast fence be set back 100 feet from the end of the runway "as a safety faclor''.. The extension would still be limited to 320 feet. That amcndmenl. an instruction to the city administrator to inqu ire into the cost of putting obstruction· lighting on power lines around Meadowla rk and the setting .of a 10 p.m, curfew on night flying were the only changes the council · made in Mi lle r's report.• The ct1uncll's action Monday night was all conditional to decisions to be taken by the planniiig' commission t,pnigh t. The pl anning commission , which meets in Uie council chambers at 7 o'cloCk will con- sider an application by the airport operator, John Turner, for a conditional cxceptlon permit for the runway e~· tension. · Miller's recommendations were · sug- tSee PILOTS, P11e Z). ·Recall Attorney to Ask Seal Beach Ballot Date By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1tM D•ll'f' l"iltt SMH An attorney hired by the proponents or a recall movement against Seal Beach City Councilman Conway Fuhrman said · Monday night he would seek leg.al action to force the council to set a date for the recall election. Glenn R. Watson said he would seek a writ of mandate within the next week to force the cou ncil to "fuUill i ts responsibilities to the people" after an at- tempt to set the date for Jan. 5 was deadlocked by a 2-2 vote. Fuhrman abstained from voting on the issue during the session. Councilmen Lloyd Gummere and Harold Holden favored the date while Mayor Morton A. Baum and Councilman Thomas Hogard declared their opposition. About 6,300 signatures on the recall petition against Fuhrman are currently being certified by City Clerk Jerdys Weir. Fuhrman became the target of a recall July 'El after he sided with Mayor Baum and Councilman Hogard to oust City Manager Lee Risne r. Alleged irregularities In the collectiOR of signatures prompted the same three men to hire Attorney Russell W. BledsOe last week to investigate the recall movement. Bledsoe's bill of $1,057.11 for his first week of services brought a threat ot lawsuit from Watson during the Monday night session on the grounds that he was illegally hired. The three councilmen. acCording ·to Watson, are in possible violation of the Brow n Act which provides that 24-hour notice be given to councilmen before a meeting is held. He pointed out that insufficient notice was given to the council by Mayor Morton Baum on the day Bledsoe was hired. Following Wat.wn's warning, the coun- cil tabled the payment to Bledsoe', This morning , Watson said he would immediately file suit under the provisions of the Brown Act if any payment is made to Bledsoe. . Spaee · Station Unveiled 12~man Project .on Drawing Board in Huntingwn Tv.·o scientists from the McDonnell Dou_glas Corporation today outlined the design for 1 IZ.man earth-orbiting space station now on the drawing boards at the firm 's Huntington Beach plant. Ted E. Smith and D, E. Olarhut, both engineers/for the astronautics company, told scie n ists 1athered at the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics in Houston lhll the station could be built nOw, utilizing known technology. The atallon, they Hid. could be ready for launch In 1977 and would provide BCientist.s with 10 years of ~M:ful service as a platform for &bservatlen of both tarth and ..Uter space. I Scientists from McDonnell Douglas took the proposal UJ!.der study last year when they were awarded 1 contract for prellmlnary design work by NASA's lo1arshall Space Flight Center. Their research indicates that the st&· , tion would weigh about 117,000 pOu.nds and measure 111 feet in Jengtb aod 33 feet in dl1meter. lt would be l1uncbed into a •nautical mile orbit around thf! earth by a two- stage version of the Saturn V rocket. "The station W(l!Jld utilize the full potential of man's abllhy as a worker and a Oeefslon·make.r In the conduct of alalion operations and ln the orbital research ... program," the scientist! said. "Crewmen could check out, repair ind replace various systems aboard the st. lion thereby minlmiiing the need for ~ tained ground support while making UM of man's ability as a creative. worker." Much like tbe 'space slatloa featured in the movie "2001," the project would feature a~ficial gravity by spinnlnc it around its ·axis. 1 1 Basic elements oL.such a station, IC-' cordfng to the scltnUsti:, would btcotne the building blocks for subsequent m)ssions. These would lnClude earth· orbiting miMlons, 11 weU al jaunts to tbe moon and other planets. • a .m ' .. 3 -lncideuts ( j' •• Of ·vicious . . . . ' " . ' . ' Death Seen . .Fro,m Wire Seryices SANT A CRUZ -Nine persons were murdered i.n. CenJr.11 Califorpia in a triangle or viciousness that peaked with the executiOTI-style Slaying'S Or a wealthy eye doctor, his' wife, two chi.ldreri and his secretary. . F·iremen answering a call to a blating manSion on a hilltop overlooking tne f'aclfic' · Monday ntght found the fille bodies I~ a S:*imrrilng J>C.lOI tinted with their bloOd. The vict i.ms we~e Or. ·victor M. Ohta, 45._ an ophthalmologist; his wife, Virginia, 43; 'their sons ., De'rrick, 12, and Taggan, It; and the physician's .recretarr, Doro- thy· .Cadwallader, .38. · · · All had been bound with red bandanu IJIOIT ..... KILLED IN PASO ROBLES Sh•llv aarnes, 4 and shOt_l:J:efore ._ ~irig hurled into the poo1..11s deck was spattered with bll)C)d: Founta:,. Valley Some have described Or. Ohta a's a •'rich " " hippie" because of his medical help ad· ministered to th~ nomads. · Pla · A t • Another multiple killing, wao JOder In-. ~ner C. tOn vestigation near ~aso Ro~Jes, about 120 . ~f8 ms:i~~r~~ th~ scene of the swlmml~g ~F <;LC~· (;h~llenge· ThI:ee perSons beat and stabbed " man · Three • planniqg commiSsion' ~ietons and wife to death and abducted and ~II. be•.tjlaijepged f.l tonight's ·~ion of murdered their ·foµr~year~ld ·d.lushtf:r. the -Fountain Valley Cit,y Council. 'l'he Paso . ~bl es victims Were Hon aid The rouncil itself JISCked for .a look at B~. 27.;· h's ,wire,· Bettf, 25; Ind ... 1 111, for· homes••,"--uthwest co-r Saln.htef,··SbeUy, 4: .,., ! T,.· • · 1 ,.. ..,., "'c _,, ''"" ~o of f¥_fagnolia Str~t ~d , Ellis Ayenue 1'he W\fe'-a.body was 1fOund with mufti-which had.~'1 apwoved py, pi,nners. pie chest stab woubds lil the homt. The · At the OcL 6 council meeting •some 20 body of ti\! lrusbllld wu. <Jlll<'N• ~ .. l! complained aboat ~ -or several hOura later' m I Cir trunk. lie had llie tract because it would dump more been bludgeoned to death. The litile'g!rl'i traffic into neighboring streets instead of bodv.-we9-found in a canal. M,,,_,_,:A , =-=--......... ~· ---Sher:iffs deputies said they are holding Residents threatened . to a11peal 1the Johii• A'rcha, 26 of Fresno and hiJ two plaMing COfl'l11J.l$SlPn approval. but coun- . teena1ed• brolh<!rs, Donnie, ~14: and Ken-· cilnlen made that unnecesaary1by mak16.g ny, 13 ; on ji:usplc ion of Ute killings. their; a,wn request tG review· plans for the A.l·Se.ratoga, 12 niiles north of SoQuet homes. wbere·the physician and four ot~n were The other two appeals were made by murdered, a 19-year-old gasoline station de.veJopers , who disagree wiJ.b planning attenda'ni Was found slain by a bullet commission dedsioRs. wound in · the head. Union Oil Co. ls.asking for a reversal His ti,an<ts had ~n tied ~hind . his on denial for a ,gas station .on .the back Jn the manner of the Slayings Al the northwest corner of Euclid , Street and $300,poo Ohta mansion. He was identified Talbert Avenue: ' · · as Thomas S. Dececco. . · Plariners rf!fused to permit ' a ·us sla· Santa Cruz County detective BUd Mur-iton there because it ~ould be adjaCent to ray said the Ohta mansion·victims were existing homes. applrenUY shot to · dea'th about 8 p.m. The other appeal Is made by ParJWdge Monday. 1be killers had·made several al· Homes which seeks to relieve some of the tempts. to start a fire before successfully 4esign restrictions p,l~ced by planners on touching off a roaring blaze in the house its fraCt 'at 'the northwf!St cor9er of ·(See MURDERS, Page ZI N~whQj)e Street and Warner ·A~eriue.. , - 'THIS IS HOW ARTIST SEES 12;MAN SPACE STATION WI"' 3 Experiment MoclulH Att"""4d, l Flying l'rH, E"or"' Shuttli '--... I D~llY PILOT H Tu.Mt1y, Octobtr 20, 1~70 ~re~way Rift Flares Mesa Officia':S C~h Over Appeal by Mayor 'Die heoh!d dehlto l'U touched oft b7 a He bu not yet -the Whetmore bill, ... Front Page 1 SUNSET ••. ... qulrement Ind ogrttd that It bod Ml betn demONtrated.. Diplomotlc e!foris to eidorM legbla- lion which could resolve orange COilt conflicts on the future PacUic. Coast Freeway route created a headon collision of viewpoint.a late Monday on the Costa. Mesa Clty Coon<ll. let1er·1ronr·Mayor1lobert M. WUoon en---.ihlchwu uat mroutJpolten objectloo- couraOng b1s coun~erparta iloag the voiced by Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley, a Councilman Jack Green 1ald the plaft. 111111 lllalf OU1bt to have llah!d the hardship. "U tht staff doesn't indicate the hardship I don't see how you can in_ake the ~m~UOn ror approval," be added. coast to support the bill by Sen. James E. . Whetmore (R..carden Grove) in the 197l veteran viewer of free'!"ay route in. session. fighting. * * * * * * Mincing ·no words, Councilman Pinkley charged Newport Beach interests both public and private have developed 1 tradition of treachery ln dea ling with Costa Mesa and its freeway problems. Beach Vice Mayor Pledges Support for Freeway Plan Reaction to Costa Mesa Mayor Robert ' M. Wilson's approach to.rnolving Paclfic Coast Freeway conflicts was greeted to- dly by coastal mayors with cautious, but basic agreement on certain aspects. Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth responded by letter, urging a high degree of intercity cooperation. Laguna Beach Mayor R I c h 1 r d Goldberg said he will approach hi! coun· cil Wednesday night for their response, but personally would agree to nothing that might delay actual constructioo. Huntington Beach Vice Mayor Jerry Matney pledged his city's cooperation - as long as the Coast Freeway reaches the Santa Ana River as now adopted -in smoothing Costa Mesa-Newport Beach conflicts. From Page 1 PILOTS ••• gested u condit.ioo!I that the planning commission could attach to the pennit. lt seemed likely that the pilot.s would be out again tonight for Turner cried out .. We'll be there" after Mayor Donald Shipley told them the council could take no formal action before ·the matter was considered by the planning commission. Miller told the council that the staff reeommended cutting the runway e1· tension by 220 feet and putting the blast fence up to curtail noise and du.st. Setting the fence 100 feet back would serve the 1ame purpose, he p.id. There was oo public discussion of the Issue Monday night although Turner several times interrupted councilmen and the administrator as they spoke with remarks such as "That's for sure," and ••Now you're talking good sense." Turner also walked back and forward 1n front of the cotmcil with a sign over bis 1boulder as if he were picketing. Finally Councilman Jerry Matney en- joined Turner,' "You will help your cause more by sitting down or walking cut.side." Turner mna1ned but did not lntmupt !urther. Each city official also expanded his in- itial cilmment.s. "I will read the letter at tomorrow night's City Council meeting and ask for the council's response as to how they feel about it," said Laguna Beach's Goldberg. "Personally, J would be in agreement with what they are trying to do -mak· Ing a circulation study in an effort to find a .. ansWer to the problem in so far as Newport Beach is concerned, but I would not agree with anything that wOuld delay construction of the entire frttway route. "!will respond to the letter after 1 get the council's views tomorrow night," Goldberg concluded. "Your Jetter concerning the legislation proposed by Sen. Wbetmore is ap- preciated," Newport Beach Mayor Hirth wrote. ''Such action would certainly seem to correct a weakness in the current state freeway regulations. 1 am sure that our council will wish to consider this matter when the bill is available and take a poai· tion at tbe appropriate time. "CurrenUy, we are spending every ef· fort to determine the best possible solu- tion to handing the traffic within our city and through our city," Mayor Hirth con· tinued. "We are anxious to induce fUll con. · iideration for the needs and desires of adjoining cities. Conaequently, we will keep you posted on our progress and af- ford an opportunity to submit any traffic data you wish to offer," Hirth finished. "We're happy with the free.way route through our city," said Matney, speaking for Mayor Robert Shipley in Huntington Beach. "But we're nnible oo the route near the Santa Ana River." "Huntingtcn Beich ls not opposed to looking at realignment of the freeway between Newport Beach and Coata Mesa, tie added. "We'll work with them any way we can on that." "But we've got to have that freeway as far as the Santa Ana River for our own needs," Matney explained. He ouUnned this posit,ion to fellow councilmen Monday nlahl He said there was general agreement on the city'11tand. "I am speaking only for myself and not this council," he emphasized stroogly. His tones seemed to stwt council col· leagues, who finally adjourned without approving the Wilson letter carfmg for support -in principle -of the Whet.- mo~ bill. The legislation ~ as It ls now un-- derstood -would a1Jow individual cities to re-open specific freeway route sections in an eUort to solve mutual problems. State law and policy in eUect now re. quires reopening of an entire freeway route to study, an inefficient procedure which is wrapped up in red tape. Councilman Pinkley warned that blind endorsement of the Whetmore bill could signal disaster ahead for Cost.a Mesa ciUzens and it.s own intere.stl. "U It was any other city than Newport Beach I could agree, but 1 have absolute- ly no trust in Newport Beach,'' Pinkley declared. He charged there has been a smokescreen of publicity generated by the militant Freeway Fighters organiJ.a~ lion which wants to keep the Route One Coast Freeway out of the beach city at all coot. "It's time the people beard my side of this matter, which goes back to 1955, 15 years ago," Pinkley continued. "What happens to Costa Mesa? I have concern for our neighbors, but more for Costa Mesa. That's what we 're elected for." Pinkley charged that Newport Beach has tried live times since 1963 asking the State Highway Commission to rt!Open the Route One study, adding that twice they tried to bypass the commisson. "Mr. Pinkley, you are in error .•• " began r.otmcllman William L. St. Clair. "I've got the floor ••. you've had your say," Pinkley shot back. He continued on charging that Newport Beach must accept some responsibility for handling traffic problems generated by its surf and sand, drawing millions from inland areas each summer. He noted that Costa Mesa agreed to reopen studies of the Newport Freeway Route· 55 study at Newport Beach's re- quest, leading to the so.called Red Route. $10 million more expensive than the previously adopted choice. By swinging westerly around the downtown area from the old Newport . Boulevard align ment chosen by the stae in 1944, 1,800 dwelling wtits o! various types will also be wiped oul. New Airport Site Eyed Cou1tty Studies Purchase of Land in Capistrano By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .... DallY •11tt "'" Orange Cowtty supervisors are stu· dying the acquisition of 1,500 acres in the Capistrano area for a county airport as part of recommendations submitted to- day in Phase II of the Air Transportation Master Plan. The recommendation was one (If several given in a 400-page study of t1· 1.sting air facilities submitted t o gupervisors by Stan W a 1 s h • project manager for the Ralph E. Parsons C.om· pany. A public hearing on the report was set for Nov. 17. The latest Parsons report makes two general recomme.ndations: -That Orange County take act i on through zoning ordinanw to protect one DAILY PILOT OAAllGS CO.UT POat.ISHING COM•ANY R0Ji.1rt N. w,,4 Prnilllllt .,.. PU911&1W Jock R. c..,1.., Yke PmlH!rt #;ii ~·· ~ Tholfttf ICttril EOHor lltornt• A. i\t11r,hlne M"'•tlnt t:•IM Alo,_ Dirki11 w.1 er.. c.o.ity blW .;..lbtrt w. '''" Aaeoclti. £fltw HllttlllltN .._. Office 17175 l1od1 hule¥1r4 M•lllat Addro11 1 P.O .... JtO, t2Mt --Utwnlhkfl:m~, ....... C.lt ~I 211 Wnt SQ" Sir"' ~ hKfl: nn w..1 .. lbO• .......,.,., .._ ClillMrlte: *IS Notti! !I C'MtlM lt.-l ·-. of the existing military facilities from en- croaching development. -That the county acquire land for another jetport in a less developed arta of the county. Parsons report said three jet-capable airports will be needed within the ne1t 20 years to handle the cowtty's short haul air transport needs. Short ha u I transportation is that used to travel with· in a 40Q.mile radius. The study identified three types of air facilities:. The short haul, jet capable facility they labeled a jetport. Also identified was a general aviation facility for use by private pUota flying nonjet planes. The third facility briefly covered in the Nport was a short take off and landing (STOL) for use by commuter helicopter services. In a study of existing air fa cilities, both civilian and military, the ParlOna Com- pany recommended that Orange County Airport be maintained as the county's principal general aviation airport. They also suggested that jeta continue to use the faci!Jty limited by three fac· tors : -"The analysis of the result! of a 11 to 18-month prototype noise monitoring pro- gram now In progress. -"The adoption of proposed state or federal noi.!e 1tandard,, or community noise levels. "-The negotialions of t e 1 s e agreement! with airlines, stipulating the number of jet aircraft departures and hours of operation." The El Toro Marine Air Station was tdentiCied as belne "a pr o m I s I n g 1lternaUve" for the county'1 second Jet capable airport. "The clvll joint -or lhb mllltary ak f1cUlty would not be open tc all air traf. fie, but as 1 joint use. f1cUlty it could ac-- c:opt limiled, mll disciplined scheduled airline oper1tlon. No general 1vl1Uon Di&hta would be permitted," the report states. In their study of E1 Toro the consulting flrm estlmeted the cost of providing a clvl! air tennlRll, new aprons, taxiways ind accesses to be $17$ million for lhe lnlUal pha ... Al Los Alamitos the Parsons OJ. found the announced cutdown of air operatJons "may have been premature." lo recommending a conllnued study of the N1v1l A1r Station the Parsona report notes "that we of this facility would be limited to nonjet ai rcraft. At the Santa Ana Marine Alr Station, 1'1eneral 1vl1Uon joint use of the uislinl facility Is not considered feasible ," the report stated. "Nevertheless, this aeronautical site should be assigned a role in t.he coun- tywide airport system as a future general aviation fa cility in the event that the facility is abandoned by the Department of Defense." the report continued . The Capistrano site outlined by Parsons is in the Bell Canyon area. They estimat.e the cost of establishing an airport there at $52.17 million over a period of seven to 10 years. Operating within a system of county airports the Bell Canyon jetport above Capistrano would be able to satisfy pro- jected dema'lds. ..It cannot, however, stand alone as the only jet air carrier airport in the county. The greatest de. mand in the immediate future will be on Orange County Airport which in time may be complemented by jet airli ne ser· vice out of El Toro," the Parsons study contended. The Bell Canyon airport. which Walsh said will be built along a ridge top, "will be able to handle an ultimate capacity of eight million passengers annually ." Walsh said unique aspects of the site "also suggest a thorough e1amination or an advanced terminal and passe nger movement system lo serv~ all modes. The concept of a transportation terminal near the existing freeway and close to a possiblE: right of way for a high speed ground transportation system should seriously be considered." Another air facility recommended by the consultant! in the Southern County sector is O'Neill air park. ' "This site offers a unique combination or an existing regional park with good recreational facilities on the Plano Trahuco. The site on this high plain. 90I). foot elevation, can be prepared easily to serve small general avia tion aircraft. "Flight operations at this site would be dur ing daylight hours only. Although mos t of the operations would be touch- and-go. hikers and campers are expttted to arrive bY light plane once the airport is available," th~ ttpOrt sta ted. The cost of establishing a facility at O'Neill Park waa esllm1ttd t.o be 11 ,188,000. A gtntr&l avi1Uon site was also Iden· titled in the city of Brea but the Parsons report warned the site can only be con- sldrred suitable If the city ls willini to revise it.s general plan. Airport Director Robtrt Bresnahan who attended this: morning's meeting had no comment to make on the report. "l haven't had a chance to study tt/' he said. Green pointed out that 1incti the ap- • plication was made the slalf had bee11 ordered to review all future 1pplicatlens lo ensure they are made out properly. Coen felt that the council should bear the brunt or the criticism. "The only reuon this is posln1 a prob- lem Is because this Is the only time a citizen has come forward to complain." Councilman Nonna Gibbs had the last word on Kno1' performance. "I think he's a lawyer on the side. 1 submit him for the ne.1Ct planning commission opening." Front Page J MURDERS ... 100 miles south of San Ji'raocisco. One of the family 's three cars, 1 1981 Oldsmobile station wagon, was missing. Firemen who went to the Ohta pool for water found the bodies bound with scarves -Miss Cadwa11ader's floaiting on the surface, the others at the bottom of the Olympic.sized pool, its water staintd pink and its tiles slippery with their blood. VIEW OF LAND PROP.OSED FOR SUNSET BAY PROJECT Looklnt Acro11 Channel from Admir11lty Drive in H1rbour Each had been bound and then sbat in the back of the head, Dr. Ohta. twice. Douglas James, Santa Cruz County Sheriff, ca1led the slayi ngs "the most gruesome crime in county history." Beach Man Khlnnped Police are still uncertain of a motive, or whether stawled words or other in-- dications of the killers' mental state might be found, as' were found alter the slaying of actress Sharon Tate aDd four others near Los Angeles in 1919. In Mesa Bar Argument Del. Murray described Ohl.I. a Japanese-American Air Force veteran educated at Northwestern University, as a ''very nice person, a tremendoua doc- tor." His practice was in Santa Cruz. A barroom braggart whose claim of being a paroled killer from Te.Mes.see was doubted kidnaped a Costa Mesa tavern patron Monday night after return- ing with a double-barrelled shotgun and four hoodlum pals. The victim was released unharmed In Huntington Beach, about 10 p.m., while a second man present during the 6:30 ab- duction from the Viking Room, 686 W. 19th St .. managed to escape going along on the aimless ride .. Leonard Bowler, 25, who has been staying with relatives at 7841 Slater Ave., Huntington Beach since arriving on the Orange Coast four days ago called at 10 p.m. to say he had been freed near that address. Investigation into the case led to recovery o! a shotgun believed to be the Judge, Students Exchange Views Students will exchange views on t h e establishment and change, the 18-year· o!d vote, po)lution, and higher education with Superior Court Judge Bruce W. Sumner, Wednesday in the thi rd Golden West Evening College series on parent· youth relations. The program, to be held in the College Center at 7:30 p.m., wlll be moderated by Mrs. Betty Inman, Ora nge C o a s t College counselor, It will be open to the public. The final program in the series, Oct. 28, will deal will) youth and sex and will feature discussion with Dr. William M. Hartman and Dr. Marilyn Fith ian, of the Center for Marital and Sexual Studies. weapon involved from 1 Costa Mesa residence, according to Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. He said witnesses corroborate Bowler's stcry, but added the victim has not been very cooperative and prosecution of a suspect seems unlikely. Police said BOwler and Howard A. Thomason. 4'. of 513 W. Sunflower Ave., Santa Ana, were in the bar when the angry suspect and his crew returned with weapons. Bowler and Hopkins ran outside, ac- cording to police, and tried to hide behind telephone booths at an adjacent service station but were spotted. "Get in or I'll blow you away," Bowle r said he was told, while one of the five men involved aimed a .45 caliber pistcl at Thomason's head. Detectives assigned to the case were given information about 1 residence on Miner Street where the shotgun was con· fiscated. "We know a kidnaping did occur,'' Lt. Fischer explained today. but added that without cooperation by the victim Jt ap.. pears there is lnsuf!lcient evidence to make any arrests. John Monniger Services Slated Funeral services for John C. Monnlge r, 84. of 9912 Continental Drive, Huntington Beach, will be cond ucted at 11 a.m., Wed· nesday, in Smith's Funeral Chapel. Burial will follow at Mt. View Cemetery, San Bernardino. Mr. Monniger died Monday. He wag a retired San Bernardino city employe and had lived 10 years in Huntingtcn Beach. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Maude E. Monniger : two sons. John R. Mon· niger, Fullerton, and J. Willard Mon· niger, San Bernardino : four grandchildren and one great grandchild. A socialite, he was described by another physician as the epitome of 1uc· cess. The Ohl.ls had two older children, daughters who are al boarding schoo1. Investigators have no motive for the kill· ings as yet. In the Barnes family slayinis, divers found the body of the little blonde girl later in an irrigation canal. Authorlties •sald the suspects knew the family. Barnes was a farm worker. The suspect.s were, officers said, traced by 1 license number supplied by neighbors. Mrs. Barnes was calling a neighbor about prowlers when the phone went dead. The wires had been cut. The neighbor summoned sheriff's deputies. Override Backed By City Council Huntington Beach councilmen have come out in unanimous support of the Huntington Beach Union High School District's 89-cent tax override election. The council formally passed a resolu4 lion in support of the override that would increase the tax rate to $2.08 on the re~ quest of Councilman Nonna Gibbs. She noted that all of the councilmen had backed the school vote individually. Several councilmen wondertd whether It was proper for the council to 1ct but seemed to agree with Councilman Al Coe n's argument "that the only test is whether the city will benefit from it.s passage." Police Blame Arson BAY CITY, Mich. (AP) -Polict blarn. ed arsonist.s Monday for ~ early morn- ing fire at a U.S. Army reserve training center that destroyed four trucks Ind a howitzer. THENAMEOFTHEGAME There is 11 common practice of priv11t1 t.btfing in th1 corpet industry. L11r91 d1p11rtment stor,s, cha in stores, end contrector.s 11t new trects hive fictic ious nemes on the 111mpJes so that custcmers cennot eesily shop brand n11me prices. Customers shopping at our store find t~e price of each quelity promintn~y futured on the sample book,, because we 11r1 competitive. Also, l>ec11use we IHI the customer has • right lo lnow what ht is buying. we never chenge the n11m1 on 11 wmple bool. The nemt of the gem• is i•tegrity! ALDEN'S .-.. -.-,.-•• -.. -0-.. -•• -,-. CARPUS e DRAPES TUSTIN Cell •• , ar• :,\!'~,,.,. 1663 Placfftla AYe. • D1Am1n COST A MESA 11174 lr'f'I-. Tillthe. c.lf. ........ 646-4131 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thuro., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 It 9 -S.t., 9:30 to 5 ' l 1 • I vc - I tj01 COi Fn of Mr , let coo "" WI oe: - n b u e • • F b u t f I t • I P \!¥ ::u c1 t < ' ; cs; cc o ocz;ee csttDQ!C a a &;!AW¢4 e 4 eca e; c •Nt 04•••• 4 e c: aq ; c sf ; ; T• ;u o e u • u e * ,. • ..-"'• e -" ! Ne rt .Beaeh -VO~. 63, NO. 25 f, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA· JUESOAY,' O.CTOiER 20,. lf7.0 •. ' .TEN·cens • • Mesa Mayor Bids for : Route Cf)mpromise Bill I Diplomatic effor.ts kl endorse leglsla· tion which could resolve Orange Coast conflicts on the future Pacific Coast Frffway route created a headon .collision of vtewpoinls late Monday on the Costa Mesa City Council. 'Ibe heated debate was touched off by a letter f~om Mayor Robert M. Wi!IOD en- courafjng his counterparts along the cout to support the bill by Sen. James E. Whebnore (ft.Garden Grove) in the 1971 ..-. He ha• not yet teen the Whetmore blll, whicft wu just one outspoken objedjan voiced by-Councflman Alvin L. Phikley, &, veteran viewer of frtiway route in- flghlln&. Mincing no wor~J. Councilman Pinkley charged Newport Beach inttfe:Sll both public and private -have d~oped a tradition of treachery ln dealing with.- Costa Meu and ill freeway proltlems. "l am 1peakiac only for myself and not this COllllCil." be empl>uized stron11y. ._...OUD His !Mes ioemed to stun OOWICU col· leagues, who finally adjourned without ·approving the Wilaon letter callintl for l1IPflOrt -to principle -of the Wbet- more bill. !fbe legislation -as tt ls now un· derat.ood -would -allow individual .dliea: to re-open specUic freew1y route ltctkm .in an effort to 1<1lve mutual problems. State ~w and policy 1'1.eflect now re- qulm ·reopening of an entire 1..,,..ay route to study, aa Inefficient procedurt -. • whiCh ii wr1pped up in red tape. tlon which ~ani. to ~~p ~e· Route ' One ' COuncilman Pinkley warned 11>•1 bllnd , Coul frttway oul of lbe b<acll. Cll)' ~t . endorsement of the "Whetmore bill could all cost. signal disalter ahead for Costa Mesa "It's tlmt the people be.Z.d my 1ide of cltiz_~ ~ 1ls own interests. this matlf:r, which IO:t• back to 1955,. ~5 "lf it was any ~r city than Newport yea.rs •IQ,,''. Pinkley CQ1Jtlnued .. "What Beach I could aeree, but.I bavi ablolute-happens Jo Cost.J M._t. I,'ba.ve concern ly no trust in Newport 'Beich," Pinkley · for our: nti&hbon, but ,more "for· Coit.a · declared. · MtJU. 'Iba\'1 Tih•t 'tle'n elecied .fOr.0 • He charged there has been a Pinkley· ctiatged that Netrpoit:.Buth 1mokescreen of publicity-generated ~by has tried five tllnu atnce 191.1 aaktng 'tbt the milliul Freeway FlgblA!ri orpnlu· Sul<! Hllbway Commlsaloa to reopen tllo u 1es ew ... ' . 9 Slain • Ill Murder W av·e Mansion -Set Afire; Bodies Dumped in Pool From Wire Servlce1 Some have described Dr. Ohta u a ''rich SANTA CRUZ -Nine per50rul were hippie" because of his medi~ tie.Ip ad· murdered in ~ Central california in a ministered to the nom1ds. triangle of viciousneu that peaked with Another multiple killing was :ru:ter in- the ·e1eculion·1tyle 1layings of a wealthy vestigation near Paso Robles, abWt 120 eye doctor, hiJ wife, two children and hi.s miles south of the scene of the swim.ming aecret.ary. pool murders. Firemen answeriltg a call to a blai.ing Three persons ~at and stabbej;l a man tnansM>n on. a hilltop overlooking tne and wife to death and abducted and Pacific Mcnday night found the five murdettd their four-year-old diughter. bodiel in a swimming pool tinted wiUi. The Pm Robles' victims w~· ROoald their blood. -· l'I; llfl wife,' Jetty, =: mid The victims were ,pr. Victor M. Ohta, daqhler, Shelly, 4. "5, aa ~: hla wife, Vifllnia, 1be wife'• bQ91 wu found with muW. 43; their llOna, Derrick, u, ·and Taggart, pie chest stab Wounds Jn the bOme. 11'e 11 ; ud the physician's .oecretary, Doro-body of the husband. wu ~tsc,vered thy Cadwallader, 31. several boon: later in a ear trunk. He had All had betll bound with red bandanas -been bludgeoned to death. The little Jirl'• and shot before being hurled into the body was found in a canal. pool. Ii.. deck WU spattered with blood. Sberilf'I depuUes Mid Ibey are boldin& Statement Flied Newport Council Adopts Irvine City Stawment A five-point policy statement on the proposed boundaries of the city of Irvine was adopted by the Newport. Beach City Council Monday night. The statement. to be filed with the Local Agency Formation Commission, followed almost immediately an an· nouncement by officials of the Council of Communities of Irvine ~t tbey have agreed to modify their original boundary . maps. John Burton, CCI president, in a letter to Mayor Ed Hirth, said his group is will· ing to exclude two areas of conflict. the Orange County Airport and the Collins Radio Company property, from ill pro- posed city limits. Burton said similar letters, re-defining the l19undarles in other areas, were sent to the mayors of Orangt, Tustin, Costa Mesa and Lag-.ma Beach. Burton said,this morning that the CCI '• neW proposals have met general agree- ~ent from all communities involved. thousands of acre1 or agricultural preserve which will nol be de<feloped for many years and 1bould not b e prematurely brought into any in· corporated area. "3. 1be boundaries may encompass many areas adjacent to the city of Newport Beach and other cities that may not be logical in terms of good planning, natural boundaries, topography and service areas. 114, The boundaries encompass a r e 1 ' which have historically been considered properties for future IMtza'tion to othU cities and should be considered for re· moval from the incorporation proposal. ''5. Boundaries must consider the right of sell-determination a1 one of the most important·facton. Devdoped areas with· in the propoled incdh>oCation, whetMr industriaJ , commercial. or ..:residential, which may not care to 'become a pvt of !Seo IRVINE, Pap I) John Archa, 2t of FreSno 1nd his two Oldsmobile station wagon, was mlslln&. teenage.d brothers, Donnie, 14;' and Ken· Firemen who went to the Ohta pool for ny, IS ; on sus~on of the kUUrigs. w~ter fll!.Wd the bodies bound with' · At Saratoga, IZ miles north of ~uel · · M' Cad _,._,_ · n · where the physician and four otben Wire scarves -lSS •-rs oatiq en murdered, a l,..year-old gasolipe 1taUon the sorfact, the olber& it tht:·bottoni ti attendant wu found slain bY a bullet the Olympic-sized pool, its water stained wOUDd In the bead. · pink and ti.. · Ules · alippel')' with· their His handa bad been tied behind bil blood. . . · • back to.the IJUlllllU.Of lbe slaymp at the Each bacf been bound and'tben ahol In Poo,QOO Obta m..,...... wu ldenWled .• tb'e ba'1<oCiheliead; Or:Obta twlc<. ~ .. ._.. .. ·~ .. ". " .... ,,,......, ... saDll :O.:J(loooQ, . .,t!(;"ti Santi! Ciiq c.unty delecuve Bud 1lllr-Sheriff, called· the slaytnp "tbe - ry Mid ~ Ohio mapslon victims wen ,._ crime in counl)' bilto<y." apPc'hilly libot to' death aboUI I p.nl. POUct are lllll u1ce,.ia Ill a -.., Monday. Thi klllers bad made ttVeral at· or whether .1rawled '"*di or otbet Jn. templl \o start a fire before 1UCCtulully mc.tions If. the killers' menial ltlte tqocbing oil • roarin( bWe In the house might be found, .. ...... fOUDd alter the 100 miles aoutb of San Francisco. slayinl of actre11 Sharon T1te and four One of tbe family's tbr<e cara, a !IA othera near Loa An(el .. In ll!f. C:lty 'U•der Gan' ' . . . ~·,·wit....._ KILLED 'JN l'AIO'ROILIS SMiiy llirriea, 4 Attorney Grills Two Policemen In Hunt Trial Newport Eying Pact By JACK BROBAC!t Of "" Dlllr l"w.t 1 .. n Testimony of two Newport Beech police officers who were the first to arrive on the scene of the slaying of WilliJ Hunt Dec. 14 i.s being questioned in court today by defense counsel Sidney lrmas. , lrmas, defending Mrs. Willia Deln Hunt who is accused of murdering her husband with a butcher knife, has main· tained that Mrs. Hunt was not praperly advised of her rights by the officen. Officer Keith Collins first to arrive on the scene the night of Dec. 14 said he talked to a neighbor couple and Mrs. Hunt's daughter Dru in front of the home at 2607 .Harbor View Drive before en- tering the enclosed yard. Collins said he ente~ and saw Mre. Hunt kneeling over Mr. Hunt who wu lying in a. pool of blood beside the swim· , ming pool. Defense counsel trmas has argued that "because of the conversation In front ol the house officer Collins knew of the stabbinC before he entered the yard and (See HUNT, Pace Z) ' For Center Financtng By L. PETER KRIEG ...... DallY 1"1191 "'" Newport Beach may 1eek to establi!h a joint power1 agreement with tbt County of Orange to finance at leut part of ttl planned '8 million civic center. An alternate proposal voiced by a city councilman Monday night that 1hort-term notes be M>ld to meet the city's con-- tractual obligation with the county on court facilities will alao be studied. The city ls under the gun to make 11Dme decision on financing tnetbodl for at leut the detention facilities for ita· new police building to comply with terms of a con· tract now being ironed out with the coun- ty for construction of the new Harbor District Court facUiUes at Newport Center. · , Ch mo.r nsive than general ·"'-·a-'llon''-bonds, or five-fear warrahtl eltld by Councilman Carl K)'Tftla, N8wport Beach may be forced to eaublish a bullding 0 authority .jolnU:i. will> the counly in ordir to tor~ lta com- mitment to 'build the police 'facWty· by next mOnth. • The· county Board of Supervi&Ol'I last month said the court facility will be built In Newport Beach and said a contrr.ct on the land JnYolved mmt be dratted within 90 d,ays., , · ·To help entice the select.ion of lb civic compla, Newport Beach hA~ offered to provide dettntion ,facillUes in 1.it11 police building for courthouoe Ult. To keep ' that promise, the .. clty ap- paren~·willJbave to thaw ~ con- struction and financlnc plam·· for . tbe poiice·bulldlilg ... at leaat tbe jail faclUI)' have been complei..t· by-tfuot deadline. Paul C. Dlnblsplel, a,lep....entallve'ol stone aiid'Y.Uillberi, N""Jiort'a!iainctal consult.anti, ezplained that a rrierenihun would lie ·~ to flQlt the'. cheaper pnoral obilll"!i!'" ,bonds. ' • He sald there has been no proposed amendment.. to the boundaries that con- flict with Santa Ana because he has been unable to schedule a meeting with of· ficials of that city. CofC Blasts Store Tax He uid, however, no'vote ·o1~the people Is TOQWJ:ed U a joint bulfcjlric authority ii · created with the power to Kil lta on bonds. ' Councilman Carl Kymla, among otben on the boar.cl, voiced conctrl thlt lht residenll of the city should be elven thi opportunity to -Oil any mojor flnani <:iDC .Jntthod, however. and suggetled a· flnucin, plan to cover lbe Jmniedl&i,' Although there still are lesser areas of disagreement with the b o u n d a r I e 1 thraugh the eastern part of Newport Beach above Corona del Mar, Burton said be is confident they can be resolved , In adopling ill official position in ad- vance of the LAFC public hearin'g, Mayor Hirth pointed out that the council was considering only the official boundary proposa] on file wtth the commission, not the alternates presented this week by Council Hears Alleged Faults of Newport Pl,an . ijle plan that have been heard 1inct: It was introduced publicly two months 110. lhOuld wind up· tbe ·aJ11111ltnl by mDf11c a declatoo lmmed1'1A!ly the,.atter. ObUi:aUon. • ' ' • : · He . ...,.lted the city 11tD fiv .. yur Wamnla to : Ower· •only , the IM,llOll' ~to .build tile Mtenti!>il fac,Qltlff,. "hlch. litboligh . they 'wlll . event~ be. ~art of tbe police bulldbc. could bii. liuiit _ , CCt A formal J>\lblic bwl/>C on cllanges In lhe NewpOrt lleUh.bualMA tU will lab place November 9 u the city moves to bring an ,fli:I< lo· the 'furor 'that· liai iur· rounded a municipal plan .to .mer,... Iba· levy. The businesa commwtlty baa Jumped hard oo lbe prGpOSal, which ...uid more than double Current ""'revenues, but wt.Sch would alao inllllulA! a "I""' recelpll" tax on most retail merchants. A Newport Beach realtor who aerved on boll> tbe chamber and lbe Newport Beach-Coota Meaa Board of Ra!ton penels that lttHlied the tax, came \o the defenae ol the proposal. although be didn't 11y he 911pported the plan In ao m1ny words. Mcinnis suased sevual alternatives, but 11id be favoi's 'a plln tbit win \~' bine #le twu major catqotje., tu them on the basis of 1rou l\'Yffit. Olld'put a ceUtna on tb1t tar.-fl~JaPl~l. In ~llriini '""'-' buic llnlilt!nf methods bad nol ..__'the' ,ht Its policy statement, the council sa id It "MlPJ>Ort! the concept of the formation of a new city of Irvine , recogniziDI the benefits to the dtiztns of the area, specifically, and Orance County as ' whole, In the erderly planned dnelop- ment of the area under local control." The """"<II uld tt l .. b there It - "for further tvf,luation and adjustmtrrt ot boundary lines and lncorporaUon llmlll'' and suggested the following five pOlnts: "I. The ana'encompWO;f may tit tDo Jorge to be ldequalA!Jy and loglcally aup- ported and controlled by IUCb a tmall in· ilia! developed area. "2. The boundarlu 1 n c 1 m p a 1 1 ~ arguments conllnUed 1t a city council study session Monday. One c:oun- clfman, llmafd MCllmia, aaid 'be, too, does nol support the l)nlU recelpta category of the new tu package. CharlOI CUrNy, l peslcient of . the Newport ffl'J"tibr C2aamber of Commt1 de, ripped tbe plan "' a variety of fn>oi.. In .. acfdtua to Iba council. CUrm ,clied no new objectkm, but caref\llly ....,.rated afl1lllltllll qilnsl Francis Horvath reminded the council of the l!IOOlhl of atudy Iba! ba8 100• Into the plan, tbe effort made by tbe city to Iron the Jll'O)>C>Al out wtth buslnesa · groupa, and the feel that "nobody bas l'Hliy come up with anything bofler." COuoc:llman Mchulla and Hucft Mynall, manapr of Rlchlrd't Lido C..ter, boll> 11td Monday tbry have alttrutive pro. -It to off<t. • Tbeir propoaala will be COlll!dm~. but Mayor Ed Hirth, In achedulin& tllo hear· lzil, lndlcated !bat be feeil tlia eouncll The aecond maw clmillcitlon ·ol tbe propoted new aetup ihvOlvta: m1Jjor· ift. cluatrUl !Irma which,-~ ·Ille plan, would 'be IHed on lfOll payroll. Myn•tt said he had 1 coupte. of new propoaala, but aald Ibey are not ready .for . submlalon yeL -- Ont o1 ~ ker obJedll>na to tbe '""' recelpta plan, u propoaed, la !bat budneumen are rductanl to dfaclooe lhete !!gum to 1ocaf olficiafa. Clly Manager Harvey L. Harlbort of. fertd 1 aolutiOo to lllla fur, A1i"I lbat a "bracket" ayatem could be dlvtlopod. (Seo TAX, hp I) po.iil>Qlty.ol tbe ~·--· . ·'I" liad wd !bat beci• o1 tlli time' faclOr, the Joint powen •....-t would probably be neceaury. . He aald 1eneral obU,aUon.bonda wwid ba the llul upenalve long·term 'flnan. ciiii m.u.;a, but noled lbat a .. r.- ls requtr.d ·and llila COula not ta,te plioCi by tbe Dec. 11 deidllne. • . Dtnlltilplel rooommended tbe jilnt bulldloi aulbori17 !bat -Id be able to l..ue itl own bOnds \o cover the COit of the mUta II mlflloo police bull~. Vloe MaJOr !Iowan! Ro(en afao uld llM CllNTlll, P• IJ • ' I -Jlooile One aludy, addbig ~t1 twice !ht)'. tried to bypau the eommluon. .. Mr. P.in.kley, you an.: in error .~ ." -began Councilinaii William L. st. Clll.r. , "I'Ve Cot the floor.,'. )iOu•.ve bad )'OUr . uy," Pinkley shot bac)<. . · , • II• «!lltinued on chargfui tllat Ne'!Pi>rt Beach · must accept some resnom:ftimty for handling traffic problerm Cener,te& by 1ll 1urf and aand, drawing m!llloo1 (Seo FREEWAY, Pap I) .or Capistrano ~et Site Con·sidered 87 JOANNE REVNOLDll .... DllOr """" Stiff Orange· .c.ounty aupervilor• · are atu. dying .the acqullltlon of 1,500 acres In tllo, Capistrano area for a county alrpx1. II part of Teconunmclatiom 1Ubmitteil ·to- day In Pbue 11 of the Air Tramporlatioa Master. Plin. · . ~ ~ehdition WU ft of several glven ·in. a Gpage lbldy of-IU:· 11t1ng air faclflties iubninW : ! • mo_;,;~ by Sljm , W a lab "preliel ~!Or Iha llatpb s. ·~ eom. pany. · 4 public hearing oo the report wu aet for~.17. The lateat-P...-report maka two 1eneral reconuriendatkins: -That 0ranae County lab a c 11 ~· tflrough 20nin& otdlnancel to protect ona of the ezistinc military facilities from • crpacblng deve1-ent. -That the county acquire land for al\Olber jetport In a lw developed area of the eowtty. ParllORI rePort said tbne jet-caPable alrportl wW be ~ within the lMlt ~ yeara to handle the count1'• abOrt baul air lranaport needs. Short b au I trugportatlon i. that UJed IA> tnnl will> in a ~le . radius. The ttudy Identified three types of. air facllltlea. , The ·al)ort baul, jet copobl• facll~y they labeled a jetport. Alto kientUied wu a aeneral aviatMJa f1cWty for use by private pilots· Oyin( non jet ·planes. · The third facility britlly covered lnihe report waa a mat uke olf and lancftoc (STOL) for uae by commuter helicop&e 1miCea:. • "In a llUdy of exilting air facilities, both. civilian and military, the PilflOhl Comi pan~ r~e~ that Orange·eounty Airport W . malnloined aa· the coW!ty'1 principal leneral avi~on JairPort. · ~ TheY 11!0 suuested ·tffti jell ~tlhue to~ the faciltty 'lhhiled by ·thr .. ·r, .. toi'a : . -"The analysis of1he reiults of-a iz ta U.mooth prototype nolae monltorlng ·pro. sram now tn.prc:wreu. . -"The adoption ol ·pr~ atate er r,..-al no'91 standards or communtt)I ?¥list levels. • '"-The fte1oticitlons of I ea s • qreemeni.. with ainihes, al1J>\':latlng tllo -of jet alrt:ralt departura ancl b:lur1 of operation." · ' · · 'Ibe El-Toro Miniie Alf.,.Stitton wd identified u W.) .''a p.romi1ln1 (Soe 4111POF· ..... ,, " ....... . C:.Ut " I , t The ra&ty ,.._ may' .wt t.. night, tllo •eatbertnan -...mo, • bl'lngillg .•. c:oOlini ttend to "Uie cout Weclneadiy. Temperatures _ lhould cravitate between '5 and 70_ INSIDE TOD~Y • Suck ft fn, QGll; according to' t .' M. Solid, fat "'°"'"' °"~ n•mber Jot men 1l!!t1tn to °"'· Stt Chtck!ng Up , Paoe I. ·-. .......... i:~lZ:...1 --. llt1"111 i I, lt ,._. \•n -" • .......... 1• -" ! .... ~-· __ .. --. '""' , .. ,. .... ~ ... " ,....... " -... -. --" ............. ,.~ ......... . • -· • ' • • !' -. ' ,-% OAIL Y PILOT N T-, -20, 1970 Mayor Urges Support • • Frot11 Page J AIRPORT • .". .. . ' I alternative" for the county'• aeoond jet capable airport Hirth Asks Cooperation for Freeway Plan ~to Cost.a Mesa Mayor Robert "Pencmtlly, f would be~~ 11\\'1 are anslau1 o-tnduce fUU ..,.,___ M. Wilson's approach to resolving Pacific with whit they are trying to do -mak· alderatJon fc:r-the needs and desires of "The clvU joint uae of this mUlllry air facility would ..i be open to oll llr Ira!· lie, but as r, joint use lociUty II could ac- cept limiU¥1, well disclpllned scheduled ·airline o~ation. No generW aviation Olghta would be permitted," the report 1tates. Coast Freeway con!licts was greeted ~ tng a circulation study in an effort to find adjoining clUes. Consequently, we will day by couta1 mayors wl!h cautious, but an answer to ~ problem in IO far a1 keep you posted on our progress and af· basic agreement On certain aspects. Newport Beach is concerned, but 1 would . -. . Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth not agree wtth anything that would delay ford II\ opportunity to submit any llalbc responded by letter, urging a high degree construction of the entfre·freeway route. data you wish to of!er,'' lllrth finl.shed. of intercity cooperation. "I will respond to lhe letter after I get "We're happy with the freeway route Laguna Be.acb Ma yor: Richard the council's views tomorrow nigbt," through our city," said Matney, speaking Goldberg said he will approach his mll!l-Goldberg concluded.-for May1_>r Robert Shipley in Huntington cil Wednesday night for their response, "Your letter concerning the lq-islltion Beach. but ~Uy would agree to nothing proposed by Sen. Whetmore is ap. "But we're flexible on the route near that might delay actual construction. preciated," Newport Beach Mayor Hirth thl Santa Ana River." Huntington Beach Vice Mayor Jerry wrote. "Huntington Beach is not opposed to itatney pledged bis city's cooperation -"Such action would cutalhly seem to looking at realignment of the freeway as Jong as the Coast Freeway reaches the correct a weakness in the current state between Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, Santa Ana River as now adopted -in freeway regulations. I am sure that O\D' he added. "We'll work with them any smoothing eoSta Mesa-Newport Bea.ch council will wilb to consider thls matter way we can on that." conOlcts. when the bill ls available and take a posl· "But we've got to have that freeway 11 Each city official also apa,nded his ln-tion at tbe appropriate time. far as the Santa Ana River for our own ilia! comments. · "CUrrenUy, we are spending every ef-needs,'' Matney explained. He ouUnned "I will read the letter at tomorrow fort to determine the best ~Ible soli; ~is pG.Sltion to fellow councilmen Monday; night's City Council meeting and ask for lion to handing the traffic within our city rught. the council's response as to how they feel and through our city,'' Mayor Hirth con-He sa!d ~re was general agreement about it," aaid Laguna Beac.h's Goldberg. tinued. on the city s stand. Witness Says He Lied At Mesa Man's Trial A principal prosecution witness in tbe murder trial of Dennis L. Jefferson of Costa Mesa admitted on the witness stand Monday' th.at be lied on direct ex- aminatiOD testimony and in MwdcipaI - Coul at tbe preliminary bearing, Bud Thomas, who says be cannot read or write, told defense attorney Marvin Cooper under cross examination lhat he lied when be said he didn't actually witness the slaying of Gerald Hess last June 14 at 2132 11arbor Boulevard. Thomas told Cooper he did see the en- tire shooting in which Hess was killed by a so-called blunderbuss rifle as he lay he.Jpless on ground. Cooper also got Thomas to admit that he lied wben be denied in the preliminary hearing testimony that he saw the victim Hess kick in the door of the combination workshop-living quarters Jefferson bad been occupying. Monday Thomas testified tbat be did set Hess kick in the door. Thomas said he lied at the preliminary bearing and Monday on direct ex• aminaUon because Heas was lli5 friend. on re-direct examination prosecutor P~t Brian JOt the witness to admit that he was also a friend o{ Jefferson's and may have been trying to. protect him too. A jury of seven women and five men From Page I TAX •.. eliminating the need for merchants to report exact figures. Another point of contention Is the ex· tent of opposition to the tax as proposed. In his talk to the council. CUrrey hinted broadly that, to the man , the 1.aoo or so members of the chambers are unhappy with il He gaid his presence at the meeting precluded the appearance of most of them. "We could have had a lot of our 90(). 1,000 members here," he said, contending that all coocemed feel more orderly op- pos!Uon would be just as effective. Mayor Ed Hirth, in scheduling the hear· Ing, observed that the only reason there has been all the ruckus ls because the ci· ty asked for it. He said the counc il "did not realize how difficult an assignment we gave our staff'' when ordering it to rewrite the ta1 some 18 months ago. Hirth &aid other municipalities adopted gross receipts formulas in their business taxes with much less trouble because "they didn't bother to go into it like we did ." He was referring to the consultation with busine.u groups. DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST PU8LISHIHG COMP.i-HT Aob•rt N. w • .- J,,~ R. C11rl•'f Vici Pr911d•nl •1111 0.-,11 Mini ( Thol'l'I•' x ..... 11 !dllO• Thon'1t• A. M11rph in1 M1n11loo Editor l . P•t•r ICri•t Nl"NPOrt llH<fl en, EdilOt N...,,... laeck OHlq 111 I W1•t 111110• loul•"•rd M1ilint Mcfr•1u P.O. lox 1171, 92661 .,_ ........ Oii• IMN; UO W•t lltr 11rwt llfunl etilel'I: m l"or~1 ,..,._ Ml.llnl'IQ!Otl 9-dll 1111'5 IMdl hllll .... rd lln '""'*'": au Norltl El C.mlno RMI OAILY PILOf. wlltl wtlltl'I 1-1 comlllf1911 ~ ,,....._...,.,..., .. llUbli.lltd .. 11., ••ttPt """' .. , Ill ~·" .,,, __ ... u.-lllotdl. N....._1 a..dl, CO.,_ Mtw, Hlll'llirle""' INc.11 .... ,Citl'tlltM won.,., •IDl'IO •llfl .... ,...lo!WI! HltlOrll. Oflntt C..11 PutillllfllnO ~ llP'lrllll'll *"'" •re •t 2211 W• a.ttw. llW~ Newoor! IMC!I, IM bl W•I a.r $1•MI, COlll ~. , , ..... 0 l 1714J 64Jo4J21 CJ ....... .u. •• , ..... 642·1671 CoPJ'ttfht. 1•19, ore,..,. Cotu l"llfllllfrlll'IQ CMllN/IY. Ni -1totlft. m1111r.tltfli. ..,_WI 1MtW W H\ltrt...,_,11 """'"' -· ... ~-•l'ltllWI llfl'Clll ..,.. """''°" ., '°°"""' ._.,, ...... tlhe •1991 ...... ,......,, lltrHll .,.. C-.• MeM. (;111~ ~ .. , u ,,r.r U.ts monlfllr; Wlfttll U,1J ""'""'"' rl'lllltflry dUllM!lont., ltJJ rllDltfPl'Y. I will decide the fate of Jefferson who bas pleaded innocent and innoceJlt by reason of insanity. The prosecution charges that Jefferson blasted Hess at point blank range with the antique firearm following 1 flght. Earlier witnesses t.estlfied tblt both men bad been driJllting heavily durtog the day or the alleged murder. Jefferson and Hess reportedly argued over their respecUve physical beigbta. The former is sis feet. three ind:tes tall, and Hess wu a full 12 iDcbes aborter. The trial 1& lipected to continue for two more weeks in the court of Superior Judge Claude M. Owens. • From Page I IRVINE •.. the proposed city cl Irvine, lhould be givea the opportunity and time to make their_own independent determination." The statement contained the, city's for· ma! request for a delay 1n the ecbeduled November 12 hearing. In its other agreements with aurrouad· Ing COllllllun!Ues, Burton said that al· though there is not a "significant" amount of acteage involved, the ciUes Involved are now utlsfied with the boun- dary proposals. Burton said the boundary re-alignment Involving Costa Meu would esclude the industrial property bounded by . the San Diego Freeway, Palisades Road. Red Hill Avenue and the airport which Costa Mesa is planning to annex . The other changes primarily deal with lowering the boundary line to along the Loma de Santiago ridge and "generally" along Myford Road. Those two areas were in coaflict with the cities of Orange and Tustin, respec- tively. Burton did not get a formal response to his letter to Hir1h from the Newport council, but there is Utt.le doubt the proposals for exclusion or the airport and t.he 177·acre Collins tract are we!· corned by Newport officials. 'I'here has been no indication of a change of heart from the Irvine Com· pany. itself, on the Collins property, however, The land was included on a propo9ed city map filed by the company and New· port Beach's move to annex the land, which has already received LAFC ap- proval, have drawn threats of litigation from top company officials. The Irvine Company contends that be- cause it owns the property, only It has the right to agree to annexation of it to to any city. Collins and Newport BeJch maintain that because the electronics firm has a long-term (~year) lease on the land, that Collins has the ri&ht to make that determination. Planning Dlrtc:tor Laure1ee Wilson out- lined the other areas of conflict that are still unresolved between Newport Blvd. and the fututt city to the city council Monday. He said there are two specific areas east of MacArthur Boulevard and some general areas following the eventual ex· tension of San Joaquin Hills Road. Wilson, like BurtoJ1, indicated he feels the latter prnblem will l't!OIVe Itself when the route for Ole road b worked oUt. Fro111 Pfl9e l HUNT .•. should hava lrnmedlalely advlled Mrs. Hunt of bet rtcJ>ll. Col1lns 11ld be did Ml advise Mn. Hunt !rnmadltt.ly· and admllled under quesUonlng that he believed there was Dl'Qbable cau11 for arre$t of the woman. He denied, however, that Mrs. Hunt was pres!W'td to confess or an ofrer of tm· munlty was made.Jo obtain evidence. Judge William L. Murray 1Uowtd of· ficer Collins to testify that Ml"'I. Hunt said 1t once:, "l stabbed hJm." Officer Mltchell Thompson, the second officer to arrive on the scene wa~ also grllled by Jrrnas. He said he found Collins bent over the dying man and that Mrs . Hunt was stlil In the area. "Before anyone could say anytblne. 111• 'Slid. 'I did fl, I did It. I 1tabbed him,' ''officer Thompson testified . Thompson 51fd ho then look Mrs. Runt Into the home and advUtd her of het consOtulional n1hu. * * * From Pagel FREEWAY ... from inland areas each summer. He noted that c:oata Mesa agreed to reopen studies of the Newport Freeway Route· 55 study at Newport Beach's re- quest, leading to the so-called Red Route, $10 million more expensive than the previously adopted choice. By swinging westerly around the downtown area from the old Newport Boulevard alignment chosen by the stae in 19«, 1,800 dwelling units of various types will also be wiped out. "Tbe ink was hardly dry when they disavowed it," continued Pinkley, who was mayor at the Ume of the Newport Freeway route change and voted ag1inst the new route in a narrow, 3 to 2 ballot. He went on to say deletion of the Coast Freeway is a distinct possibility thnlugh Newport Beach political wheeling and dealing and offered three alternatives for Costa Mesa if it happens. One would be to stop the New- port Freeway at the Corona del Mar Freeway and channel beach-bound traffic down MacArthur Boulevard to the coast. "And right aCl'0$5 that miserable two. lane bridge," he snapped with a twinkle in his eye. Two would be to stop Route 55 at Bay Street and let Newport Boulevard Oood Newport Beach with traffic that would viciously clog its surface streets and worsen each year, Three would be to let the future Red Route of the freeway -looping westerly around the downtown area -carry traf· fie down to Pacific O>ast Highway, where It would back up for 20 milea. "None of theae alternatives are good for us and they're worse for Newport Beach," Councilman Pinkley added. "Thanks for your indulgence," he con- cluded. "I j~t had to get it off my chest.': "Well. ..fine ," said Mayor Wilson rather weakly. Councilman St. Clair hotly charged Orange Coast freeway problems the com· muniUes now face can be direcUy blamed on 1ttitudes and strategy such as Pinkley 's. "What P.fayor Wilson has introduced - to my mind -is some or the most significant legi slation in a long time," St. Clair conlinued. "Mayor, I congratulate you." Vice Mayor Willard T. Jordan remind· ed them the State Highway Commission has the ultimate choice, adding that legislation could give a chance to work out the problems. "I don't discount what CouncUman Pinkley says, although I don't necessarily agree with the reasoning behind it,'' com· mented Councilman Jack Hammett. "But he's been around a lot longer than l have. His concern is well founded." City Attorney Roy June told the council he is trying to a;et a copy of the Whet· more bill to see exactly what it propOSeS, but he may not be able to unUl It ii 1ub- mllted In the Le'isloture. From Page l CENTER ... he did not-feel any major commitment should1be made without a vote of the peo. pie. Dinke\spiel said other financlng methods are available, Including the establishment of a non·profit corporation and "pay-as-you-go" financing. Newport Beach hasn't got the cas for the latter. however, 1nd the non-profit corporation would be forced to pay hia;h interest rates. Dinkelspiel said the interest rates charged a building authority would be "about one-fourth" of a percent FUter than the city, Itself . would pay for aeneral obligaUon bonds . Other aources indicated It would bl more thin that. councilman Lindsley Parsons said the city Jl\USI wel&h the coot diff•""'Ual between the two, but noted that tbt con- tinuous rise in construction costs faced if the city waits to schedule a referendum may more than offset th e e:1tra Interest percentage that a building authority would eay. The council Monday afternoon viewed 1 sllde presentation by former city planner Ernest hf ayer, now Long Beach planning dlre~or. on various new civic comple1es built throughout the west. Mayer had toured some 30 com· munitie!, large and small, In planning a .similar racillty for Long Beach. Amons the major recommandlUons be made was that the council chambers be bull! In 1 forum·type building, with Iha 111lery 1eats raised above aod around the council seats. I In their study of El Toro the consulting firm estimated the cost of providing a civil air. terminal, new aprons, taxiways and accesses to be $2.75 million for the initial phase. At Los Alamitos the Parsons Co. found the announced cutdown of air operations "may have been premature." In recommending a continued study of the Naval Air Station the Parsons report notes "that use of this facility would be limited to nonjet aircraft At the Santa Ana Marine Air StaUon, ''general aviation jOint use of the existing facility la not considered feasible,•• the report stated. "Nevertheless, this aeronautical site should be assigned a role In the coun- tywide airport system as a futurt general aviation facility in the event that the facility is abandoned by the Department of Defense," the report continued. Sworn In DAILY PILOT Pi.tt '1 Ltl ~ff The Capistrano site outlined ,by Parsons Is in the Bell Canyon area. They estimate the cost of establishing an airport there at $52. lV million over a period of seven to 10 years. _ ___operating within a .. system or county airports the Bell Canyon jetport ~ b o v e --€'epistrano would be able to satisfy pro- jected demands. "lt cannot, however, stand alone as the only jet air carrier" airport in the county. The greatest de- mand in the immediate future Will be on Orange County Airport which in time may be complemented by jet airline: ser- vice out of El Toro/' the Parsons study contended. · Leslie H. Doyle (right)-takes oath of office as new marshal of Har· bor Judicial District Court from Judge Donald Dungan. Doyle, a Costa Mesa resident, succeeds F . L. "Snap" Glaser, who retired. Doyle has been with the marshal's office for 11 years. He now ad- ministers a staff of 17 clerks and deputy marshals operating out of the court in Costa Me:;a. ]{ilroy Empire Division Might Take Long Time Colorful Harbor Area yachtsman-en- trepreneur John B. "Jim" Kilroy and his wife of 22 years are about to be freed from the bonds of matrimony to marry others, but their $25 million empire isn't yet divided. Orange County Superior Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned" Rutter said Monday an in- terlocutory decree will be issued and liled some time this week. Mn. Kilroy, of 621 Via Lido Sowl, Lido Isle, and the man she married May 13, 1942, both plan to wed again. Judge Rutter said that is the basis for swift action on the decree. but added the financial entanglements may take much longer. "I'm going to Impose some controls on what the corporaUon does in the mean· time," he said, explaining that be will insure Mrs. Kilroy of fair treatment by so doing. Under terms of the decree handed down last Friday, she will get ap- proximately hair the Kilroy Industrial empire, 2S firms valued at approximately $1 million each in total. Judge Rutter -who chided the multimillionaire couple for their spending habits in spite of their wealth -awarded Mrs. Kilroy $2,500 per month In support. Indira Gandhi Talks With Russian Leader MOSCOW (AP) -Prime Minister Indira Gandhi of India interrupted her fli ght to the United States today for a talk with Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. The talk lasted about three hours and Mrs. Gandhi told newsmen later that she and Kosygin had a "wide-ranging, useful and valuable" conference. The monthly !tipend was filled out to $3,000, with a $250 allowance ordered for the Kilroys' two minor daughters living at home. Judge Rutter said Monday he has two alternatives in setUing the Kilroys' finances between them and time will tell which is used. He said he might order the business empire assessed and give Mrs. Kilroy haH, or wait unW the money market lqosens and tht! organization can offer public stock, then award her half those proceeds. 11te silver·halred Kilroy hai been In· volved with the Olympic games and is known for sailing victories scored in hi1 7J..foot vessel Klaloa. Churches Looted; Thieves Net $32 Three Corona del Mar churches were broken into Monday night, but thieves netted only $.12 for their efforts. The three churches -St. Michael and All Angels, Lutheran Church of the Master and the Second Church of Chris· tian Science -are all localed on Pacific View .Drive. About $5 was taken from St. Michael's where police said burglars entered through an unlocked window. The money was in a filing cabinet in the church of- fice. ' The Lutheran and Christian Science Churches were entered when the suspects pried open the doors. No money was missing from the Lutheran church, but $27 was taken from the office of the Christian Science church. The Btll Canyon a!rporl, which W al!h said will be built along a ridge top, "will be able to handle an ultimate capacity of eight milllon passengers annually ." . Walsh said unique aspects of the site "also suggest a thorough examination or an advanced terminal and passenger movement system to serve ail modes. The concept of a transportation terminal near the existing freeway and close io a possible right or way for a high speed ground transportation system should seriously be conside~." Another air facility recomm~nded by the consultants in the Southern County sector Is O'Neill air park. "This site offers a unique combination of an existing regional park With good recreational facilities on the Plano Trabuco. The site on this high plain, 900- root elevation, can be prepared easily to serve small general aviation aircraft. "Flight operations at this site would be during daylight hours only. Although most of the operations would be touch-- and-go; hikers and campers are expected to arrive by light plane once the airport is available," the report stated. The cost or establishing a facility 1t O'Neill Park was estimated to be $1 ,188,000. A general aviation site was also tden· tified in the city of Brea but the Parsons report warned the site can only be con· sidered auitable if the city is willlng to revise its general plan. Airport Director Robert Bresnahan who attended this morning's meeting had no comment to make on the report. "I haven't had a chance to study It," he said. Meeting Plannerl For New Cub Pack Ari organizational meeting for C u b Scout Pack 105 wilt be held tonight at 7:30 o'clock at Newport Elementary School. Parents and boys from 8 to 10 years of age are encouraged to attend and participate in planning pack 1ctivttiea for the schoo~ year. mE NAME OF nIE GAME T~l"I is • common practice of priv1te labeling in the carpet industr)'.. L1rge 'department stores, chain stores, and contractors at new tracts havt ficticious names on the samples so that customers cannot u5ily shop brand name prices. Customers shopping at our store find the prict of -h qu1lily ptomi•lfttly f..tu,.d on tho samplo book, bac•u11 w1 •re competitive. Ako, b1ca1111 ,.. IHI tho cuslomor Nii • right to btow whet he 11 ouying, we novor clwi•ge tho ftlmo °" 1 samplo book. Jnin•m• of tho g1mo i1 l•togrilyl ALDEN'S ..-,-.N-,.-•• -.. -0-.. -.. -, ~ CARPETS e DRAPES fUSTIN c.a ,,, ALDIN'S 110 Mn• curm 1663 Placentia Ave. 11174 u:~:~~ c.llf. COSTA MISA 1114144 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Tltura,, 9 to 5:30 -Fri, 9 19 9 -S.t, 9:30 to J ' l I 1 f;osta ·Mesa . . ' voe. 63 , NO. 25f, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES -ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNJA-' ' ~TUESDAY, OCTOBER .20,. 1970 ' . ~ --. ) . . ' . ' . . . . ••••• . . '~ . . \ ' I 1'. 'l'1. SteelU · -- · 'TEN CENTS Mesa Mayor Bids for Route C.omprfJmise Bill Dipiomatle efforts to endorse legisla- Uon which could resolve Orange Coast cOnOicts on the future Pacific Coast . Freeway route created a headon collision of viewpoints late Monday on the Costa Mesa City Council. 'I)'e heated debate was touched-off by a letter from Mayor Robert M. Wilson en· couraging hiJ counterparts along the coast to support the bill by Sen. James E. Wbetmore (ft.Garden Grove) in the 1971 - He bu nol yet ...,, the --. bill, which wu just one outspoken Objection. voiced by Councilman AlVin L. P,_inkley, a veteran viewer of fr:eeway route In- fighting. Mincinl no words, Councilman Pinkley charged Newport Beach lritefeai.. both• public and j>rivate have developed a tradition ol truchery in dealing with Costa Mesa and i1a freeway probltnu. "I am speaking only for myself and not thll COl.lldl," be elilpbuized .vooc1y. • • Ie Ill • New Airport?. County Studies Capistrano Site ~y JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ... DellY P'lt.t llltft Orange County supervisors are stu· dyinc the acquisition of 1,SOO_tcrea in the capistrano area for a county airport u part of recommendations submitted to-- day in Phase II of the Air Transportation Muter Plan. The recommendation wu one of aeveral given in a 4()0.page study of ti.· lsting air facilities submitted t o 1upervisors by Stan W a 11 h • project man•11« ror the Ralph E. Pamm Com- • pany. A public hearing on the report was set for Nov. 17. The latest Parsons report makes twti 1eneral recommendations: -That Orange C.ounty take a c t 1 o n through zoning ordinances to protect one of the existing military facilities from en- croaching development. -That the county acquire land for another jetport in a less developed aria of the county. Parsons report said three jel..c:apable airporb will be needed within the next 20 years to handle the county's abort haul air transport needs. Short h au I transportation ii that used to travel wilh· ln a 400-mile radius. The study Identified three types of air facilities. The short haul, jet capable facility they labeltd a jetport. Abo identified was a general aviation facility for use by private pilots Dying oonjet planes. The third facility brieny covered in the report· was a short take off and landing (STOL) for use by commuter helicopter services. In a study or existing air facilities, both civilian and military, the Parsons Com· pany recommended that Orange County Airport be maintained as the C0W1ty'1 principal general aviation airpart. They also suggested that jets continue to use the facility limited by three fac- tors: -"The analysis of the results of a 12 to ls.month prototype noise monitoring pro- gram now in progress. -"The adoption or proposed st.ate or federal noise standards or community noise levels. "..::.'I'tie negotiations of 1 e.a s e agreements with airlines, stipulating the number of jet aircraft departures and hours or operation." The El Toro Marine Air Station was Jdentified as being "a promising alternative" for the county's second jet capable airport. "The civil joint use of thi.s military air facility wouJd not be open to all air trai· He, but as 1 joint use facility lt ~d ac- cept limited, well disciplined ICheduled airline operation. No general i.viaUon flighta would be permitted," the report atates. Jn· thelr study of El Toro the consulting firm estimated the CX111t of providina; a (See AIR.PORT, P•ce I) l;J.each Victim Kidnaped At Mesa Bar A barroom braggart whose claim of being a paroled killer from Tennessee was doubted kidnaped a C.OSta Mesa tavern patron Monday night after return· ing with a double-barrelled abotgun and four hoodlum pals. The victim was released unbanned in lluntlngton Beach, about Ill p.m., while a second man present during the 6:30 ab- ductian from the Viking Room, 686 W. l!tth St., managed to escape going along on the aimless ride. Leonard Bowler, 25,. who has been staying with relatives at 78tl Slater Ave., Huntington Beach since arrivipg on the Orange Coast four days ago called at 10 p.m. to say he had been freed near that address. JnvestigaUon into the case led to recovery of a shotgun believed to be the weapon involved from a Costa Mesa residence, according to Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. He said witnesses corroborate Bowler's story, but added the victim has not been very cooperative and prosecution of a suspect seems unlikely. Police said Bowler and Howard A. Thomuon, 46, or SJ3 W. S11nflower Ave., Santa Ana, wtre in the bE' when the angry suspect and his crew returned with weapons. Bowler and Hopkins ran oUUide, ac- cording to police, and tried to .hide behind telephone boott\s at an· adj1ce.ilt service station but Were spotted. "Get in or I'll blow you away," Bowler said he was told, while one of .the rive men involveQ aimed a .f.5 caliber pistol at Thoma.son's head. Detectives assigned lo the case were given Information about a residence on Miner Street where the shotgun was con- fiscated . "We know a kidnaplng did occur." Lt. Fischer explained·today;buc added that without cooperation by the victim It ap. · peai'a: there is JnlUfficieot evidence to make. aey ar,resta. Bia tones 11eemed to slun council cot.- leagtles; who finally adjournECt without approvin& :..the Wilson letter caJllp1 fc;r support -~in J>rinclple -:-of the Whet· more bill. The legWIUon -as it i.J now un. detitood -would allow indivlOOal citiel to-~ specific fi-eew1y roU\e.1eeUofta in an tffcrt to 10lve mutual problems. •Slate la..-and policy In •fled--...,, qutm reopening of an entire freeway • r<lllle lo sludy, an lllelflclent procedUre ur . ' Mustang Girls Which is wrap~ up in red tape.· • Councilman Pinkley warned that blibd en<forsement or the Whet~ bilj ~lild signal q1saster ahead for Costa Me.sa cjtizens .and.lts own interests. • "Ii It was any other city than Newport l;k!ac.h ·I could agree , but I hue absOlute- lY._ no trust. in N~wpor.t Beach, .. _. Pfukley dfc:lared, . , , • · • He charged there , bas ~ ,. a smokeac;reen of publiclty gentt•ted by .Ille . milltant Freewl)' Fl&hten 0<11D\U· DAILY P'lt.OT llltft '"" ' ' 'Leading the singing for Cost3 Mesa Hlih School athletic forces this fell•are.these-'Mustang coeds-. At top' (from left) are Kim Turner and' Patti Rogers. In the center (from left) are Liz Brunton and Cinda Purdy. At the bottom (from left) ate Wendy Thayer and Sandi Van· . Valkenburg. . . . . . , frosecution Witness .Says He Lied in Murder Case A.principal prosecution witness in the iiiurder trial or Dennis L. Jefferson o( Costa · Mesa admitted on the witness · •!and Monday that be lied eo direct ea· aminition tesUmony aod tn Municipal Court at the preliminary hearing. Pie Shop Protest· ·Fails Bud Thomas, who says he canno.t read or write, told de'rense attorney 1 Maniin Cooper uoder'_crosS examination tbat 'be lied when be said be didn't actually Witness the slaylq of Gerald Heas' laat June 14 at 2132 Hatbor'Boulevard. Thomas told Cooper be dJd" see the tl)o tlre shooting in which Hw wu tilled by a so-called jllu~rbuss rille as he laY bclRJess on ground .. Mesa Council Approves Yum Yum Tree Zone Issue By ARTHUR 1\. VINSEL Of k .,...,. P'lt.t llaff Tbe chocolate chiffon hit the fao Mon- day nicht when a homeownen croup lbteoed, aghast, as the Costa Mesa City Council ...ied their pie shop protest by voting for It and a1alnst the bomeowrierl wishes. Pandemonium erupted· when t'h e residents -who succeufully rtSlsted an ke cream parlor planned for the site •t 1173 Irvine Ave., 111t February -beard the verdict. Six weeks hence when the change frem RI reslde.alill to C.1 CP ~mmerciaJ :tOD· ing ii •«ecUn, ..0.lructlon can begin on Ille Yum Yul)I T!oe-Jlie purve}'()l'1hip, "You 'd better be tWfnC,'' thouttd one man!tn the audience. "No .•• " gasped another. "Fix .• .fix ...... charged It.ID ottiers. IS f>fle woman besan Weepin& at the out· ..... or the hearing In wbicb old ""f"'"" ap(nsl tho orlilnal Ice cr<am parkJr proposal were echoed. ''Democracy in actioal.'' jetted one of the liomeoWMrl wbo llld fed a parade or speakers.__ to the podium In opPolitlon to the Far West Servkes Inc. p i e lhop. "How'd you Ult~ ft 1n Your backyard, feUa ?f' tried a.oother man· wboH pro- perty will abut tlle driv .. IJ! pie shop on land now occupied by a rundown, ~t !See PIE PROTEST, Pa1• I) ,, Cooper also got TbQmas to admit that he Ued when be denJed in the pre~ry beari.na tes~lmony, that .he saw the victim Hess kick in the door or the combin•lio~ workshop-Jivtn·g quarters JeUel'IOll bid been occupying. , · Monday Thomas tesUfled that be did see. Hess kick in the door. Thomas 11id he lied at the pre:UmiDary hearing and Monday on direct tx• amll'latlon because Hess was bis frltnd. On re-direct examination proeeeutor Pat Brian got the witness to admit *t ht was also a friend o( Jeffmori'1 aria ml)' bave been trylJ!i lo protect him too. •. .'l tlon which wants to keep the Route One Coast Fretway owt of the beach clb' at all cost. ···1t'1 time the people hea,rd my side of this matter .. which goes bacl ,to 1955,.fs years ago," Pinkley 1conUnued. "What happens to Cosla 'Meaa? .I have cOncern for our neiihbors, bul' moi-t !cir Cos\a Mesa. That's w~t we're elected for:" Pinkley cha.reed ~ Ne_wport Beach has tried five times since 1913· aakin&1 the State Highway 'ColrurUss1on to reopen the · 3 Incidents Of Vicious ' ' . Death Seen From Wtre lervk:ei SANTA CRUZ -Nine persona lftftl murd(l'ed in Central CallfonµI! in a trlancle of vlcklusnesa that peaked wttb the execution-ttyle slayiDp of. a wealthy eye doctor, hia wife, two childnm Ind bia secretary. , Firemen·IDIW•in& a call.·to a. Wulnc manai9ft on a · billtop .overlootlnc toe Pacific Mcrtday ' nlaht . fqund the five t,001 .. 11 a .. 1mmin1 pool tint«! with ...... ir .b1 ....... • .( ' .. , ' -' • ...... "!'(\I .. ... ·-.. -·")' >Tllo --JI'. Vietor ' ••• • 4$, an ophlllOJmolofill; bit.wile, V(rliftla, 43;,their IOOS ; Den'(ck, 1,1. &"!! , ... lift, 11: .... the phylida!''• _,,, Don> thy Cadwalllder, a. . AJl·hact·-betn bound ,,uh red blndanu and shot before • being hurled ittto the pool. Ill deck wa tpolteted with blood. Some have tte.:ribed Dr t Obta u a "rich hippie" becau.te of hil medical htlp ld- miniltered. to the nomad&. . Another multiple killing was l.'1der ifto vestiiation near Pa.so JlobleS, about 120 miles aouth of the scene of tM swirnmini pool murder•. Three persons beat and stabbed 1 man ud. wife .to d~tp ~d abducted and murdi!red their foui'-year~ld d3u1hter. The Puo Roblea v'ictiml •were HonaJd Barnes, 27; his wife, Betty, %,';; and daughter, Shelly, 4. The wife'• body wu found with multi· pie chelt slab wounds-in the home. The body or the hwband was di.sc•1vered several hours later in a car trunk. He had been bludgeoned to death·. The little g!rl'1 body was found in a canal. · - Sheriff's deputies said they are ho!d¥11 John Archa, 26 of Fresno and his two teenaged brothers, Donnie, 14; .and Ken· ny, 13; on suspicion of the killings. At Saratogr,-1% •miles north of Soquel where the physician and four others were1 murdered, a It.yearo(lid gasoline .station attendant was found 1lain by i bullet wound in the head. His hands had · betn tied behiDd his back in the maMer of the slaYirlls 1t the $300,000 Ohta mansion. He waa identlfied as 1bomu 8. Dececco. · Santa Crm County de:tec:Uve Bud Mur· ray aald the Ohta, mansion victims Wet. (See MUllDEU, Pap I) Trit."k ·or· Treat · , For UNICEF Set · By Councilmen 01Udren may go trk:k~r-trelting for donations to the United N1tionl Children'• Emerpncy Fund (UN[CEF) tb!J · Hallo- ween, but the Colla:, Meu City CouncU b.alked Mj>nday al procla!n>lol i UN Day. The -I voted lo unction the UNI· tEF charity collectiJlll wcheduled Oct. 23, 30 'nd 31; as requtsted by the Coaat- line Cb.apter of the Unl!ed Nations Ado-ciallon. ~ . Ch'Udren under IS, l ho•ever, nwat nQt solfclt ·afl<l'.. dark, ·ciluncilmeri sf-Oiuli led. Coins touect00 dlrouih· fltls ac!Mty provide clothing QC! educalion<il aids r.. Unfoi'tunate cbUdren 1 thtoiilhout 111 e world. • • ·• The council ...ted lo mei'ely· -eve and file a lttter from the Otani• Cout League of Women Vo&en Y1tlnc that lt proclaim next Sa'"""'t Uolled Nationl Day. .Councllpw> William L. a. Cla(r "&JI the only member to vote ,lllimt th t ,..tu,., wblcl> providol a IJi>lite IMlhod ol flnorln& molfara lJ! wblcti ell, olljdala -w ,...., ... -lnvol•od. • 1't1nllld,;lfalkw la not a. cuuword," -"" II, Clair: ' ' • Route One studY. adding that twice !her. ·~-· ' ' ·u:~ to bypass the rommiaaon. · · "Mr. PinkJe}r, you are in error •• .'' began c.oµncl!man William L. st: CWr. "r\.e r.t the noor ••. you,'ve bad your; uy,"•Pmkley abot back. He continue<! On charging that Neirport Be1ch mu.st ace~ some rupomibUtty· ror. b.a~ traffic probltm1 geoerat«I by ita surf and sand, drawing milUool ' (set FREEll'AY, pq. I) . . .,.,.......... . KILLED IN .PASO ROBLES / Shelly Barnet, 4 · 1 Last · Arguments l.Q Sl~um Trial Slated Today Final arguments by 1ttcimey1 were to be heard this afternoon 'in liz..week Jona: murder trial of Or. Wesley Slocum ot Colla Me11, charged wiUi kiUint hla tWo and one-half month old daughter in 19&1, ~efore the arguments, defense attome1 Michael Gtrbosi will offer the final wit. ness, Or. TerJance Moran, a' radiolosiJt.' . Or. Moran appeared for the prnsecu- tion last Thursday and. testified· that· x •. rays taken or the di1membered ttull ol the child showed two fractures , tinal argument.. are expeC1ecr to _c:on-,,, ~nue through Wednesday morning witli instructions to the seven-woman five. .. man jury by Judge Kenn!!th 'WtiuW i111 -the-afternoon. · · · ,. ; <• Empire State .{Jeale11n I No Longer Tallest'-./,\_ NEW YORK (UPI)·-A [our.ton piece of steel framework wu Htted In place Mond;ay mikl'ng, tbe north tower .Of, the World TradeJCent.er the 'talleat builcfina ia ·-. the world. · The_ateel Work, ii now 102 stOriet above atreet level at· s heJaht of ·J,254-.feet - four feet higher than the Empire State • Building. The . Trod• Center M!lfuail1, will. 110 1toriet. . ii '' 0r .. ,. The rainy -lellOa· m1y· start to- nl1ht , the, wea.lherman warns. bringing a coonnc trend lo the coat Wednesdly. Temperature1 should iravitate between 15 and 10. , ' INllDB 'TODAY " Sutk ,ft 11', QObi according to L, /II, 8!>1.<f, faf wom•~ out. 11vmbcr Ja:t mtn. aeven to OM. Set Chtcking Upt Pogt 8. -' ( ...... UP' • ---" :.:•:..:..... ': . .............. ,....,,..".' • 1• ..... l 11 -.. .... ~ 1• ...... . ,, I --" . .... ..._ ... --. ..... ...,. .......... "''' -.. -" -. =-.:T. ••. -m,1-<l --.. I ·- :t DAILY PILOT c Tutlday, Octobet 20, 1970 Mayor Urges . ~upp~rt - Hirth Asks Cooperation for Fre~ay Plan Reaction t.o Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Matney p1edced bla ,dty'a ~ -u azwwv to tht Jlr'Oblem la to far 11 ~1. Wilson's approach to resolving Pacific u lona u tbe Cout F'reewlJ rMCbll the Newport Bllcb 11 Concerned., but I would coast FreewaY. con01cl3 was greeted to-santa Alla ·!Uvw u now~ adopted -in not qree wttb anytblDc tblt would delay day by coastal mayors with cautious, but smoot6ing Costa Mesa·Newport Beach construction of the entire freeway route. basic agreement on certain aspects. conflicts. ''l wlll respond to the letter after I get Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth Each cU.y ,official also expanded hla in-the council's, viewt tomorrow night," responded by Jetter , urging a higb degree itlal comments. Goldberg concluded. . , of intercity cooperation. "I will read the letter: at tomorrow ;'Your letter concernuig the tegi!llat1on Laguna Beach Mayor Richard night's City Council meeting and ask for pro~ by Sen. Whetmore ls BJ>- Cioldberg said be will approach his coun-the council's response u to bow they feel prec1ated," Newport. Beach Mayor Hirth ell Wednesday night for their response, 1bout it/' said Laguna Beach's Goldberg. wrote. but personally would agree to oothl.n& ' ''Penon1lly, l would be in agreement "Such action would certainly 5ffT11 to that might delay actual construction. with what thty are trylng ta. do -mak-correct a wea~s,, in the current atate Huntington Beach Vice Mayor Jerry ing a circulation study in an effort to find freeway regulations. I am sure that our council will wish to consider this matter City 'Under Gun' when the bill is available and take a posi· Uon at the appropriate time. Ne'Ulport Eying Pact "CUrrenUy, we are spending every er-rort to determine the best possible solu- tion ta handing the traffic with.In our city and through our city," Mayor Hirth con- tinued. "We are anxious to induce-full con- sideration for the needs and desires of 4djolning cities. Consequently, we will keep you posted on our progress and af- ford an opportunity to submit any traffic data you wish to offer," Hirth finished. '- For Center Financing By L. PETER KRIEG Ot l~t D.ltlY ,llot SNlft Newport Beach may seek to establish a Joint powers agreement with the C.ounty of Orange to finance at least part of its planned $8 million civic center. Aii alternate proposal voiced by a city councilman Monday night that short-term notes be sold to meet the city's con- trac tual obligation with the county on court facilities will also be litudied. 'Ibe city is under the gun to make some decision on financing methods for at least the detention facilities for its new palice building to comply with terms of a C004 tract now being ironed out with the co~ ty for construction of the new Harbor District COOrt facilitiea at Newpart Center. Although more expensive than general obligation bonds, or five-year warrants suggested by Councilman Carl Kymla, Newport Beach may be forced to establish a building authority jointly with the county in order to tormalize its com- mitment to build the police facility by next month .. The CO;lD1ty Baard of Su~rvisora last month said the court facility will be built .Jn Newport Beach and said a contract on the land involved must be drafted within 90 days. To help entice the selection of its civic complex, Newport Beach had offered to provide detention facWUes in its police building for courthouse use. T<> keep that promise, the cily ap- parently will have to show concrete con- atnk:tian and financing plans for the police building or at least the jail facility have been completed by that deadline. Paul C. Dinkelsplel, a representative of Stone and Youngberg, Newport's financial consultants, explained that a referendum would be necessary to float the cheaper general obligation bonds. He said, however, no vote or the people Is requJred if a joint building authority is crt:ated with the power to sell its own bonds. Councilman Carl Kymla, among others C)n the -9<>a:rd, voiced conCUJl that the residentS of the city should be given the l;lpportunity to vote on any major finan- cing method, however, and suggested a financing plan to cover the immediate obligation. He suggested the city sell five-year warrants to cover only the $200,000 necessary to build the detention facilities, which although they will eventually be part of the police buildlng, could be built first. Dinkelspiel, in outlining four basic ftnanci ng methods, had not suggested the possibility of the short-term answer. He had said that because of the time factor, the joint powers agreement would probably be necessary. He said general obligation bonds would be the least expensive long-term finan- cing method, but noted that a referendum is required and this could not take place by the Dec •. 15 deadline. DAILY PILOT OIAHOE co.ut l"UILISKllfG COMPJ.>IY •ob1rt N. W1M Pnsid111t end l'UblllW , J11k l. Curlrt Vici Pntldlllt ...c G111tr1I M-..r 11ie"''' K11fll E41tor U.1110 A. M11rplli111 M-riltlf Editor c....11 .. Offke J]O Wed l1y SllHt M1ll1111 Acl4r••" PJJ. a. .. 1s,o. t2&26 ...... _ ttlWPllri ,.cti: 2211 w.1 ,,.., lourrnr• .....,.,. 9-Jtl t:a ........ "'""'" IM!tlf'IO* I_.: 11WS 1...:t1 111111..,,.'4 l1n ~ as Mlr1ll ~I CMin IMI Dinkelspiel reaimmended the joint building authority that would be able to issue its own bonds to cover the cost of the eotire $3 million police building. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers also said · he did not feel any major commitment shoukl be made without a vote of the peo- ple. D~lspiel said other financing , methods are available, including the establishment cf a non-profit corporation and "pay.as-you-go" financing. Newport Beach hasn't got the cash for the latter, however, and the non-profit corpcration would be forced to pay b.lgh interest rates. "We're happy with the freeway route through our city," said Matney. speaking for Mayor Robert Shipley in Huntington Beach. "But we're flexible on the route near the Santa Ana River.'' ·'Huntington Beach ii not opposed to looking at realignment of the freeway between Newpart Beach and Costa Mesa, he added. "We'll work with them any way we can on that." "But we've got to have that freeway as far as the Santa Ana River for our own needs," Matney explained. He ouUMed this posiUon to fellow councilmen Monday night. * * From P .. e J FREEWAY. • • from inland areu: each summer. He ooted that !mta Mesa agreed to reopen studiea of the Newport Freeway Route 55 study at Newport Beach's re· quest, leading to the so..called Red Route, SIO million more expenaive than the previously adopted choice. By swinging westerly around the downtown area from the old Newport Boulevard alignment chosen by the stle in 1944, 1,800 dwelling units of varlOU3 types will also be wiped ouL "The ink was hardly dry when they disavowed it," conUnued Pinkley, who was mayor at the time of the Newport Freeway route change and voted againat the new route in a narrow, 3 to 2 ballot. He went on to say deletion of the Coast Freeway is a diltinct possibility through Newport· Beach po!Hical wheeling and dealing and offtred three alternatives for Costa Mesa if it happens. One would be to stop the New· port Freeway at the Corona deJ Mar Freeway and channel beach-bound traffic down MacArthur lklulevard to the coast. "And right acrou that miserable two- lane bridge/' be snapped with a twinkle in his eye. Two would be to stop Route SS at Bay Stre<t and let Newport Boulevard flood Newport Beach with ' traffic that would viciausly clog its surface streets and worsen each year. Three would be to let the future Red Route of the freeway -looping westerly around the downtown area -carry tral· fic down to Pacific Cout Highway, where it would back up for 20 miles. "None of these alternatives are good for us and they're worse for Newport Beach," Councilman PinkJey added. "'nwlks for yCMir indulgence," he con- cluded. "'I just had to get it off my chest." "Well .. rme," said Mayor Wilson rather weakly. Councilman St. Clair belly charged Orange Cout freeway problems the com- munities now face ca'n be directly blamed on atUtudel and atrategy auch u ~--~· .~,•· "Whit Mayor Wilson has lntrodiad - to my mind :... ls tome of the most significant leglslaUon ln a Joni time," St. Clair continued. "'Mayor, I congratulate you." Vice Mayor Wlllard T. Jordan remlnd- ed them the Stale Highway Commilllon has the ultimate choice, adding that legislation couJd give a chance to work out the problems. "l don't discount what Councilman Plald.ey says, although I don't necessarily agree with the ruaoning behind it," com- mented Councilman Jack Hammett. ''But he's been around a }ot longer than I have. His concern ls well founded." C!ly Altomey Roy June told the council be is trying to get a copy of the Whet- more bill to see ei:acUy what it proposes, but be may not be able to unW it ii sub- mitted In the 1A&Jll1ture. From Pqe l PIE PROTEST .•• once-lavish residence. Mayor Robert M. Wilson threatened at the climax to adjourn the meeting and order the gallery -packed to standing room only at one point -cleared if order wasn't restored. He deci.ared he was suddenly reminded of campus riots. "Now you see why they have them. They aren't represented," shot back ene angry citizen. "See ... ? A good example," said the mayor. indicating bis point had jwt betn made, Tbe protestors stalked out almost as one, vowing to troop ta the palls next election and clean out city ball, with one man threatening to begin a secession movement and annex to adjacent Newport Beach. "I come up for election in abaut 31h; years and If you don't want to vote for me that's all r1gbt," said Vice 11-'ayor Willard T. Jordan. "We didn't vote for you last time," one dissident taunted Jordan, whose attempt lo discuss the pie shop's relative merits drew a chorus of catcalls. Clearly, the surprise decision on the Yum Ywn Tree left a bad taste In the mauths of Its future nelghbars . John Jensen, of 407 18th Place, ch•rged that nothing has really changed since the original ice cream parlor proposition. •·we don't want to be part of a Mack Senriett comedy In which the council throws pie in our faces," he declared. Ted &logh, of 286 Del Mar Ave., which is not in the same area but who claims to ha ve business b1terests in the neighOOr- hood tried at cne point to snatch up the banner of pie shop protest too . Mayor Wil!On ruled him oul of order. "On what grounds, Your Honor?," Bologh demanded. "Because l said so," the mayor respon. ded. Lyn Geronimi. of 383 Ogle st.. re- counted the history of the property and demand.tel assurances that the pie shop won't fail and become. a bottomless bar such as the Firehouse. One neighbor charged that all original petition signatures are still valid except for that of Bill Bastedo, of 1663 Irvine Ave., whom he accused of going to wark for the ple shop's parent company. "I do not work for Far West Services and t don't think t ever would," respond- ed an angry Bastedo, who said he didn 't Intend to speak unlil he was accused or such a thing. They appeared on the way to a victory patterned on their strategic fight agalnal a Farrell's tee Cream Parlor originally plaMed by Garden Square Factors Inc., a Garden Grove realty firm. John Ellir>tl, whose company was re- jected on the ice cream parlor and brought back the pie shop -which must -c1ose at 9 p.m. weekdays and 11 p.m. Saturdays under city aUpulation -spoke only briefly. CouncDman JaCk Hammetl's motion for dCniaJ of the zone change ended with an unexpected • to 1 vote against It, with Vice Mayor Jordan'• Immediate motion !or approval then pusinl by the ume martin. , City Clett Ellc<o Phinney-accepled pc- titJons bearln& ItO signatures against the pie shop, plua five prolest letters before the hearing, whJch featured tomt calorful conunenta. . One letter-writer charged the area ts being sold out to commercial interest., · not for '11llrty Pieces or Silver, but for Dirt! Pi..., ol Sliver. S~fic complilnt.s lnvol.ve noise, traf4 Uc. odor, rtduced residential property values and the U9trtlon that councilmen mu.I bow lo the will ol the people. ''The mess3ge 1 rectlved rrom the city council list February was that Farrell's was too Intense a commercial use," he explained, pointing out a more com- paUble utablLsbmeDt was t b t n developed. Elliott left City Hall via a rear exlt after the lengthy hearlnj: and lt.s rather loud climax. · "I can't help lt.,1''ht quibbed in the oor- rR:lor. •·rm a coward." A group of eight Japanese 1pect11ist1 visiUng Fairview State Hospital for special training in prychiitry we:re present earlier to observt Amerlu.n cit)' government and becomt honorary Cost.a Mesa citizens. They bad already Jett. I • J DAILY ,ILOT ....... IW Lit·- Sworn In Leslie H. Doyle (right) takes oath of ofiice as new marshal of Har- bor Judicial District Court from Judge Donald Dungan. Doyle, a Costa Mesa .resident, succeeds F. L. "Snap" Glaser, who retired. Doyle has been with the marshal's office for 11 years. He now ad- ministers a stall of 17 clerks and deputy marshals operating out of the court in Costa Mesa. Kilroy Empire Division Might Take Long Time Colorful Harbor Area yachtsman-en- trepreneur John B. "Jim" Kilroy and bis wife of 22 years are about to be freed from the bonds of matrimony to marry others, but their '25 million empire im't yet divided. IBM Typewriter Believed Part Of Mesa Booty Deteetives tracking down thousands of dollars worth of goods stolen by a Costa Mesa heroin addict and sold at cutrate prkes all over Orange County have turn- ed up some more. Detective tt. Harold Fischer said today an IBM Selectric typewriter valued at $400 new tias been confiscated from a man who purchased .it for $20 from the narcotics add.let. The addict was arrested 10 days ago on a routine 1hoplifilng charge In a store and Interrogation led hlm to reveal the whereabouts of literally a warehouse full of loot. . Jriveitlgatms viiited ciUes all around the county, seWng stolen television sets, luggage, jewelry, weapons , contraband drugs and other ltenu stolen during the past five months. Dozens of thefts and burglaries In the local area and surrounding communities are being cleared up by the discoveries, which leave many people liable to pro- secution themselves. Possession and receipt of stolen pro- perty is a felony crime under California Jaw. Orange County Superior Court Judge J.~.T. "Ned " Rutter said Monday an in· terlocutory decree will be issued and filed some time this week . Mrs. Kilroy, of 621 Via Lido Soud, Lido lsle, and the man she married May 13, 1942, both plan to wed again. Judge Rutter siid that Is the basis for ewift action on the decree, but added the financial entanglements may take much longer. "l'm going to impose some controls on what the corporation does in the mean- time," he said, explaining that be will insure Mrs. Kilroy of fair treatment by so doing. Under terms or the dec:ret handed down last Friday, she will get ap- proximately half the Kilroy industrial empire, 25 firms valued at approximately fl million each in total. Judge Rutter -who chided the multimillionaire couple for their spending habits in spite of their wealth -awarded Mrs. Kilroy $2,500 per month in support. The monthly stipend was filled out to $3,000. with a f250 allowance ordered for the Kilroys' two minor daughters living at home. Judge Rutter said Monday he has two alternatives in setUing the Kilroys' finances between them and time will tell which is used. He said he might order the business empire assessed and give Mrs. Kilroy half, or wait until the money market loosens and the organization can offer public stock, then award her half ttrose proceeds. The silver-hairtd Kilroy has been In- volved with the Olympic games and Is known for sailing victories scored In his 73-foot vessel Kialoa. F ...... r ... 1 MUR.l;>ERS .. . ' apparently lh>t to cluth al>oUt I p.m. Monday. The killers had made several a1· lfmpts--to start a fire before successfully touching oll a roarinl blaze In the - 1~:":; =~a~:.: ~nc: .. 11111 Oldsmobile station waion, was mlsslnc. Firemen who went ,to tl1e Ohta po01 for water found lhe bodies bound with scarves-Miss Cadwallader's noaunc on the surface, the others at ·the bottom of. the Olympic-sized pool, its water stained pink and Its tiles llllppery with their blood. Each bad bee;n bound and then ahtt la the back of the bead, Dr. Ohta twice. Douglas James; Santa Cruz County Sheriff, called the slaylngs "tbe most gruesome crime Jn county history.'' Police are 'still uncertain cf a mative, or whether srawled words or other in- dications of the killers' mental state might be tound, as were found after the slaying of actress Sharon Tate and four others near Los Angeles in 1969. Det. Murray described Ohta, a Ja'panese-Amerjcan Air Foree veteran educated at Northwe stern University, as a ''very_ruce person, a tremendous doc· , tor.'' His practice was in Santa Cruz. A socialite, he was described by another physician as the epitome ot sue- cess. ' The Obtas had two older children, daughters who are at boarding school. Investigators have no motive for the kill- ings as yet. Jn the Barnes family slayings, divers found 'the body of the little blonde &irl later in an irrigation canal. Authorities said the suspects knew the family. Barnes was a farm worker. The 1uspects we~. officers saici, traced by .a license number supplied by neighbors. Mrs. Barnes was calling a neighbor about prowlers when the pbene went dead. Tbe wire.s had been cut. The neighbor summoned sheriff's deputies. From Pqe J AIRPORT .•• civil air t.enrunal , new apron!, taxiways and accesses to be f2.75 million for the initial phase. At Los Alamitos the Parsons Co. found tl1e announced cutdown oj air operations "may have been premature." Jn recommending a continued study of the Naval Air Station the Parsons report note~ "that use of this facility would be limited to nonjet aircrafl At the Santa Ana Marine Air Station, "general aviation joint use of lhtl existing facility is not considered feasible," the report stated. "Nevertheless, this aeronautical aite should be assigned a role in the coun- tywide airport system as a future general avi ation facility in the. event that the facility is abandoned by the Department of Defense," the report continued. The Capistrano site ouUined by Panon1 ls in the Bell Canyon area. They eatimate the cost of establishing an airport there at $52.17 million over a period of seven to 10 years. • Operating within a system of county airports the Bell Canyon jetport a b o v e Capistrano would be able to satisfy prc.- jected demands. "It cannot, hclwever, stand alone as the only jet air carrier airport in the county. The greatest de- mand in the immedlate future will be on Orange County Airport which in time may be complemented by jet airline ser- vice out of El Toro," the Parsans study contended . The Bell Canyon airport, which Walsh said will be built along a ridge top , "will be able to handle an ultimate capacity of eight million passengers annually." Walsh said unique aspects of the alte "also suggest a thorough examination of an advanced terminal and passenger movement system to serve all modes. The concept of a transportation tenninal near the existing freeway and close to • possible right of way for a high speed ground transportation system should seriously be considered." Another air fa cility recommended by the consultants in the Southern County sector is O'Neill air park. · THENAMEOFTHEGAME Tliere fs 1 common pr1ctice of prlv1te 11t;elin9 jn the cerpet industry. Large ·deperfment stores, chain stores, and contractors at new trects have ficticious names on the simples so that customers cannot easily shop brand n1me prices. Customers shopping at our store find tlie price of Heh qu1lity prominently fHlurod on tho s1mplo book, because we ire competitive. Also, because we feel the customer has a right to know what he is buying, we never change the name on • umple book. Tho n•mo of tho g•mo is inlogrityl - ALD.EN'S SANTA ANA, OU.N•I TUSTIN C.tl ••• AUllM'1 llD HIU CAIPITI & DUNllD 11174 , ....... ,....._UH. IJMJ44 'CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4831 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thun., 9 to S:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -Sat., 9:30 to S ' I • I I I I .- 1 Sad.0.ehaek ' I \ Eoil-T ION Today's .FJ•al . \ • N.Y. Stoeks voe. 6J, NO. 25 r, J SECTIONS, 31 PASES • ' I • TUESDAY, OCTOBER. 20, 1970 TEN CENTS .. Salt Cre·ek Beach Offers Under Consideration Oranp County olflcU.ls lodlly m con- •iderins an offer of two ·~ rout.es and the purebue rilhls to th• beach at Salt Creek'. The offer wls made at the Board of Superviaors meeting today by represen- tatives of AVCO Community Developers lilc., new owners of Laguna Niguel. The plan, presented by B a r r y McComh:, ACDI counsel, ~passes donation and aale of 30 acres of land for partln(, accesa and beach mo. 1be plan submiUed todajl Includes the following pointl; _ceas 1::t!°"tobti:= land for two ~ -Donation ~ the ~ and gra<ling of --rout. by ACDI. -Conveyance to the cOunty ol the AC. DJ interest in 11.4 ICl'fJI of beadt. IUbject to a deed of truat h<ld by PrudenUal Life Insurance Company. • • Ie Ill .,.Sale to the county, at fair market value o11u·acm ol land f« two Porkinl Iota. 1be Vahle wo¢d be --by an independent appraiser. After listening to MCComlc'! p,...... . talion, aupet\'iao!'I voted to consider"Jhe matter in their. Nov. 17 meeting. Supervisor David Baku requested the beads--of tbt cowity's road, qinffrinc. purelluiJIC, planning, harbor and le1al departments to study the ofter, ur Brennan McClellan of Laguna Beach, a spokeaman of tbe citizens group working to aave Salt Creek for the public, said ht was very ple1sed with the AVCO offef.. 1"I1'l1 is the finesf..uprtssion of a cor- poraUon to the solution -of a problem I have seen yet," he told supervisors. .. This offer ts as good or superior to the plan proposed by the county." ~ county plan he referred to involves a·le&al suit on the ll'i>unda of prescriptive er President Air Site Studied Will Visit Oemente President Nixon will be staying at the San Clemente West.em White Hau&e for an undisclosed period begintµ.ng Oct. 29, the DAILY PILOT learned lodlly and may spend election night here. Political oblerven are ca1culaling: to- day that the President's stay will be part of bis present campaign swing, probably in aq effort to bolster the sap:ing rMlec- tion campaign of Senator George Murphy (R.Calif.), Additional mpecu!Nion on Niian cam- paign role circuleled today 1111en vi.. c. Anck<wl of Laguna Beach, -ol Na· on's top 1kles in California, called a press conference.. Andrews, a resident of Emera1il Bay and the President's ambassador to Expo 70 in Japan, set the meeting with the press for Wednesday at 11 a.m: in the Civic Center courthouse complex m Santa Ana. The subject of the conference wasn't announced. The Presidential visit , expected to resemble campaign swings through other stat.es in recent weeks, will come a day later than originally expected. There had been strong specuJalion that the chief executive would arrive in time for ceremonies involving: The fiiil--diy Jssu(. of rour new ecology stamps in San Clemente. That function will lake place at the Western White House on Oct. 7.8, 1 day before Nixon's erpected arrival. Laguna Students Vie for Fiel,d Service Stud y Two Laguna Beach High School juniors have been named semi-finalists for the 1971 Amer ican Field Service Am ericans Abroad program. Superv~ors Set Capo Area Hearing By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tt. INlllr '"" 11at1 Orange County superviaors are stu- dying the acquisition of 1,500 acres in the Capistrano area for a county airport as part of recommendations submitted to- , day in Phase II of the Air Transportation Master Plan. · lbe recommendation wu one ol several given in a tol).page study of U · ··' Isling facilities submitted . to supervisors by Stan W a l s h , projet.t manager for the Ralph E. Partom Com- pany. A public ht.ring on the report was set for Nov. 17. The. latest Parsons report makes two general recommendations : -That Orange County take act lo n FU11dlWf Ne P•'Mietlt. Beachfront'Patking Lots Def ended by Ex-Mayor Fonner Laguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder, who on April 19, l967, presented the first formal proposal for city ac- quisition of the Main Beach under a lease-purchase arrangement with a non· prori t corporation, this week questioned recent stateuienls regarding funding of the beachfront. Asked for his views on various pro- posals that would involve r a '11 n g beachfront buildings to make way for parking lots, Vedder said he does not believe the money problem is as grave as some have indicated. · "There have been statemeli.ts made about the cost and funi:ling of the Main Beach which are C o n f u s i n g and may come because of lack of ill- formatioh," said Vedder. "Certainly this Main Beach property requires careful at· tention in all aspects of costs, planning and development, but precl ptous action must not be taken that will later be regretted." Citing statements maintaining that ctr· tain Main Beach p~rties have not been bringing in enough lease revenue to cover the city's lax bills on them, Vedder refer- red to the city's Financii:I and Statistical Report for the Fiscal Year endin& Jw;ie 30, 19'/V. purCbased the Main Beach." Vedder noted that red uction of rental revenue by park development will have to be replaced, and that Festival funds lnay be st a maximum, but bed tax revenue probably will increase. "Cuh reserve .cLrry-ove.r........Js diln;lnisbing," he said, "but the need and desLl:ability of a revenue producing .facili- ty on a portion of the Main Beach should be studied in depth before action i.s tak- en.'' Vedder reiterated his earlier view that a phase development over • 10 to 12 year period should be ·undertaken, to 1void "precipitous and poorly anal y :r: e d decisions." Available revenue for payment on the beach bonds in 1970, he said, included $'14,389 from the Festival of Arts, •124,281 from 1be bed tax and '89,W from beach rents and parking for a total of $211,270. The sum of $129,948 was transferred in- to the beach front fund, he said, and this showed a cl.sh reserve of $27,270"111 or June 1970, while the combined Festival· bed tax tund reserve amounted to $37,111. ln addition lo contributing to pa,yment ol the beach bonds, Vedder noted, the Festival-bed tax fwxls alto provided $27 ,000 for cuJtural support, M2,000 for . community promotion, '21.700 for capital improvements and '44.000 for the general fund. through zoning ordinances to protect one of the existing military facUities from en- croaching development. -That the counly acquire land for another jetpOrt in a less developed area of the county. ·Par~ report said three jet.capable airports wiil be needed within the. nert 20 years-to 'handle the county's short haul air transport needs. ·Short h au l transportaUon is that used to travel with. ia a.; 4'11H\1ille i:adius. r The otuay ldenWled thr.. fypel ol air facilities. ThTt short hauJ, jet capeble facility they libeled • jetport. Al90 idenUfied was a general aviation facility for wie by private pUots Dying nonjet plane:s, _ __ _ _ The third facility brieny covered in the report was 'a short take off and landing (STOL) for use .by commuter helicopter services. Jn. a study of existing air facilities, both civilian and military, the Parsons Com- pany recommended that Ora:nge County Alr'port be maintained as the county's principal general aviation airport. They also suggested that jets cOntinue to use th e facility limited by three fac· tors': -,!-'The analysis of the reaUJf.&.of-a-11 to 18-month prototype noise monitoring pro- gram now in progress. ,._-"The adoption of propoted state or federal noise standards or community nOise levels. "-The negotiation.. of I e a s e agreement& with airlines, stipulating the number of jet aircraft departures and hours of operation." The El Toro Marine Air Station was Identified as being "a p r o m i s i n g alternative" for the county's second jet capable airport . "1'he clvU joint use of this military air facility would not be open to all air traf· fie, but as a joint \lie fac ility it could ac- cept limited, we ll disciplined scheduled airline operation. No general aviation flights would be permitted," the report: states. In their study of El Toro the CONulting firm esti mated the cost of providing a civil ·11r terminal, new aprons, taxiways and acceuea to be $2.7~ million for the lnltl1l p11 .... At Los Alamitos the Parsons Co. found (Set AIRPORT, Pap I ) righta which would forte the Lqwia Niguel devdopen to maintain the public beaCh on the grounds that It bis always been used IS I ptiblk: beach. ·There was no Immediate estimate on total cos·t of the offer to the county buJ Robert L. Follett, vice president of ACDI, said the county coud spend about $342,(0) for the 1-1.4' acrei of beach beld in trust by Prudential. "The county will receive three acres ol am KILLED IN PASO ROBLES ' · Shelly l~rnel, 4 Laguna Plann;ers Asks Irvine City Comment Right Lagwia Beach Planning Commissioners voked no objectlbn to incorporation plans of the City of Irvine Monday night as.long as their voic.e remains in future planning. On recommendation of City Planner Al Autry, the . commission forwarded the revie w to .the City Council with four sug- gestions. Staling It wants to know what is going to ha ppen and when, the commission will ask Local Agency Formation CommissiOn to consider a more logical southern boun- dary such as an arterial and recognize the Laguna Beach area of influence and right to comment on further annexation oceanward qf the southern boundary. . Planners also ask that , portion.. of Iriine within this , tO.ne of influence be referred to Laguni for comment prior to development, and that lrvl,ne retain routing of the Pacific Coast and Laguna Canyon freeways. access at no a>st and 16.5 acres or par~ ltig at fair market value," he saJd. FoU~U also said the company is willing lo put m interim access to the beach within 90 days. The interim access would be temporary until permanent facilities couJd be completed within about 24 months. According to the ACDI plan, one access route will run through the cenftr of the i (Sec SALT CREEK, Pa1e I) ) 3 Incidents Of Vicious DeathFound From Wire Services ¥ SANTA CRUZ -Nine persons were mlirdered in Central Galifornla in a triangle of viciousness that peaked with the execution-style slayings of a wealt hy eye doctor, his wife, two children and his secretary. Fifem~ answering a call to a bla1ing mansion on a hilltop overlooking tne Pacific Monday night found the five bodies in a swimming pool tinted with their blood. 'Ibe .victims were Dr. Victor M. Ohta. 45, an ophthaJmologist; his wife, Virginia, 43 ; their sons, Derrick, 12. and Tasgart. 11 ; and the physician 's Jeeret.ary, Doro. thy Ca~waJJader, 38. All had been bound with red bandanas and shot before being hurled into the pool.' Its lfeck was spattered wi th blood. Some have described Dr. Ohta as a ''rich h}ppie" because of his medical help ad· ministered to the nomads. Another multiple killing was :.1~der In- vestigation near Paso Robles, about 120 miles south of the seene of the swimming pool· murders. Three persons beat and stabbed 11 man and wife to death and abducted and murdered their four-year~ld daugh ter. the Paso Robles victims we.re Nonald Barne.s.---27 :-his wife, Betty, 2.'i; ·and daughter, SheJly, .ot. The wife's body was found with multl4 pie chest stab wounds in the home. The body of the husband was diSC'lvered several hours later in a car trunk. He had been bludgeoned to death . The little g!rl's (See MURDERS, Pa1e Ii Laguna Teachers Backing Riles Teachers In the Laguna Beach Unified School 'District have an no u n c e d e"" dorsement of Wilson Riles for State Superintendent of Public Instruction by the executive council of the Laguna Beach U n i f I e d Faculty Association !LAllUFA J. SuccessfuJ candidates, who now must wait lDllil spring to find out if they can be placed in homes overseas, are Karen Cutkomp. IS, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Cutkomp, 30 South Portola, in Three Arch Bay of South Laguna, Md Unda JohnBOn, II, daughter of 1ilr. and Mrs. Irving H. Johnson, 620 Mystic Way, · Laguna Beach. Both honor students and member! of the GaJifornia Scholarship Federation, Linda and Karen have applied for the year study programs which would place lhem with a family abroad •.vhere they would attend school in the language of the assigned country. "It show3 clearly," he .Uld. "that revenue from the'beach rent.all amounted to '89,366 during the year and that laxes for the whole thini amount to tZl,779. Bringing this up to '39,161 by adding maintenance and ldmlnistrltive costs, the lease revenue atlll more tblJl covered ~ the co!t." ORiy one small parcel, Vedder says, returned Jess than its property tax, This property returned $880 and bad a tax bill of $953, or a deficit of $353, ht said. Playhouse Gets Boost A statement iMued by the board said, "The counch felt that Or. Riles is the best'quallfied candidate to promote quali· ty education for Californ ia public school children and therefore echoed the official endorsement o( our mother organization, the California Teachers As.wciation, southern Section. Coast AppUcants go through. an intensive screening and interviewing process with the local AFS chapter before they art recomri'lended as semi-finalists to AFS headquarters in New York. After further screening in New York, finalists are noUfied in March if they are eligible to go abroad. An attempt is made to match them with overseas families who have offered to accept an American stu· amt. and those successfulJy placed are notified in summer o( their destination. Karen OJtcomp wu ae\ecled by Laguna Beach lifeguard! thiJ year as their Miss Ufegu.ard in the annual July 4 beauty contest, and liter appeared .tn a television 1pot for the American Cancer Society. An enthusiastic volleybeU player, she has won 1 number of troobin in local contests and also Is a school song leader. Unda Johnson has been aecreta.ry of the.high school AFS club, 1 member of Girls Athletic AMOCl1Uon and Choral Readers, end playa pi>no and gu!lar, I "One questions the wisdom or ex· pending. sever_al thousands of dollars to develop parking on this property to remove lite loss of '353." said the former Mayor. "Certainly it -1d be better to do some landscaplng on this 'property than to pat ...tornobUas on 1t It 1s pro- bably that pllklllg spaces on the beach will be uoed larg<ly b1 the -•Y beach vjsitor. This use is of little economic benefit to the city." Delving further tnto Main Beach fun- ding as m.al<d 1n the 1m 11nanc111 report, Vedder said that tbe-.ntl\lJll pMn· clpal plus interm payment on the bellCh bonds lies between $220,112 and S225,M2, which was entirely pakl from Festival oC - Arts. bed tu aod beocb nmat .......... "No tu molllts paid oat by LaJU11• Beach property owners were ued to Pl.1 for the beacb," Wd Vedder, "and the figures indicate th1t thelt revenue wourc- es can purchase tht Main Beach If matn-- tained, w1t.bout recourse to tu momey.'' "Th~ was the policy adopted and uatd by prev!OILI admlnlJtraUOlll t b a t t Theat;er Given Contriubutions to Keep Sho w on Roail By BARBARA IUIEJBICH Of .. Olltr ...... Sid The gloomy financial scene at the I.quna Moultoo Playhouae took on a brighter bue today as two 1Upporter1 came forward with f\mds to help keep the show on the road. Belly Role, vict president of the Players' board, announced that Miss Morgan! Swope, Jonctlme Laguna ... ~ dent and former bolltd manber, his given the pl1ybou8e "a moll pnerous -ol 11,000 which will belp pay the buge btll for our ..,. -equipment." Matdilng Mlla ._ •• -Is • '11,lllO -"""' -.......... Karl Slmooaon and Mn. -which, aald Ml'!. Role, "will bdp us _.oar payroll and .. able us to start pa""' off our creditors, who are being 'very 11)'111• pathetic." 1'he bolnl ol dirocton d the playhoua took over manaremenl it 1111 thealar tllla • week after terminating most of lt.s paid staff for economy reaaons. ' Amon1 those leavin1 the staff were general manaaer Jack Seymour, ad· mlnLltrative assistant Jim Duncan, tethnical director Jim Stewart and stage manqer Steve Fox. Mrs. Rose aaid Stewart already had planned lo leave the playhou.9e to return to New York and Fo1 left to So hick to school. '"Ibey~ both very talented and we on--1 ly wilh wt could afford to keep them," abe 'Mid. • . Two oti.er ltaff memben, rCOltUme1 deal1ner Bill Barbe and ......., ... Ba-a Deitz, left the playbouae Ocl. IS. Mrs. Role aald. the pla,m-w11 cibllll«I· to 1mta11 comp1etel1 -llOUlld equfement atter the theater ,.,, • , burgJ.arlsed durina the run of •iottver!" not llmply rtplicln1 !loltll llanl, but · UJJll'adlnJ the .. tire system whlcb .had been proven inadequale for Ule theater. Insurance covered only 1>1rt of the cost, she aaid. ' The sound equipment bill will be paid rrom the check handed over by Missi Swope, former wife of Llguna artist Roger Armstrong and onetime Hollywood fil m player, who ha's been a playhouse devotee for many years. ' ·The Simorwon donatioll,-Mrs. Role said, will cover the theater payroll. whichl oontlnues Ul1til· oct. JI, and will be dlstribllled amonc creditors• who haveo betn'notlfled ol the payment plan. • Notq that the playhoua' tlill· ...... - $27,000 on • bank loan In addition to its many bills, Mrs. Rose aaid, "We hopti tbeet two generous 1eatures will en. courall' other frlendt to help the playhoule,.11 not with ~. at ltast u volunteers. This ls a vrry 11r1e the1ttr to, tate can of and there'1 lotl of'workilo be d " -.... " . Weather The rainy se'son may start. ~ night, the weatherman warns, bringing a cooling trend to lhe coast Wednesday. Temperatures should gravitate between ~ and 70. INSIDE TODAY Su.ck it fn, aa1'; according to L. M. Bo~. fat 100mt n. out- number fat men seve:n to ont. Sc<. Ch~ktng l/p. Pflll• I. , ·-I Cll«ll .. UI' I ' C.._.lllM ' •1• ~-II -.. DMltl ~ • ............... . ....,.."""""' ,. ,.._.. U•ll -" 111111 ........,. ,. -" Z OAIL Y PILOT SC Tutldu, °'"°" 20, 1'70 Art for Asphalt - Laguna Artists Propose, 'Gallery by Sea' By BARBARA DUARTE ot !tit DallY ,lltl SlaH Two Laguna Beach artists offered to trade tbe clty art !or asphalt Monday nlghL I Strongly opposing a Planning Com- mlssion proposal to construct a "garage by the sea,'' along El Paseo. landscape architect and artist Richard Bigler of· fere<t his. professional knowhow to create "Laguna's Gallery by the Sea" jnstead. The presentation was made in reply to the commission's proposal to raze a cluster of beach houses along El Paseo to make way for a parking lot. With the assistance of artiat Paul Blaine Henrie who also operates aa art studio in the city--0wned beachfront com· plex, Bigler painted a picture of a "gaily· lit, old fashioned fnall" as an attempt to show an upgraded downtown se<:tlon and give art a shot in lhe arm. "We stand at a crossroads downtown," , Bigler declal'1!d. "When you destroy four businesses, the loss spreads to other business." Bigler's plan is to preserve six struc- tures in a tree-shaded mall between the Fro• Pagel M·URDERS •.. body was round in a canal. Sheriffs deputies said they are holding John Archa , 26 of Fresno and his two teenaged brothers, Donnie, 14; and Ken4 ny, 13; on suspicion of the killings. At Saratoga, 12 miles north or Soquet where the physician and four others were murdered, a 19-year-old gasoline station attendant was found slain by a bullet \''ound in the head. His hands had been tied behind his back in the manner of the slayings at the $300,000 Ohta mansion. He was identified as Thomas S. De<:ecco. Santa Cruz County detective Bud Mur· ray said the Ohta mansion victims were apparently shot to death about 8 p.m. 1.1onday. Tbe killers had made several at· tempts to start a fire before su~ssfully touching off a roaring blaze In the house 100 miles south of San Francisco. One of the family 's three cars, a 1968 Oldsmobile station wagon, was missing. Firemen who went to the Ohta pool for . water found the bodies bound with scarves -Miss Cadwallader's floating on the surface, the others at the bottom of the Olympic-sized pool, its water stained pink and its tiles slippery with their blood. Each bad been bound and then shot in the back of the head, Dr. Ohta twlce. Douglas James, Santa Cruz County Sheriff, called the slaylngs "the most gruesome crime in county history." Police are still uncertain of a motive, or whether srawled words or other in- dications of the killers' mental state might be found, as were found after the slaying of actress Sharon Tate and four others near Los Ange1es in 1969. Det. Murray described Ohta, a Japanese·Amerlcan Air Force veteran educated at Northwestern University, as a "very nice person, a tremendous doc· tor." His practice was in Santa Cruz. A socialite, he was described by another physician as the epitome of suc· cess. Laguna Moulton Theater Burgled The Laguna Moulton P I a y h o u s e , alrtady having financial problems, was another $S0 poorer today. Police reported $50 in cash was taken from the box office area o( the theater some time last Frlday night. Officers said the money was taken from a cash drawer which usually is kept locked, but apparenUy had been opened • with • key. DAILY PILOT Ntwl*t .. _. "°"""" .. ._. '81•• INc• r.11Mla Yllllur C.r. M... S. a .. , ... 0RAHl)E COA5T PU9ltaHIMW CQM,AHY a.oi1rt N. w,,, Prnid1111t tr.A M !lthtr J1ck It .Curl•v Vkt Pru1111nt 1r.d G4nl!'•I Mtrllttr tliall'ltt K11'tfl Edllw 71ioll'I•• A. Mllfph lne MIMIW!I Edllw R:cli1r4 P. Hill SOulh Otll'll9 °"""' Editor -Cit .. Mtu: U1 Witt..., lfl'Wt ""'°" !lff(JI: nu w10 .. .,. e.w1nlt4 • '-'"""' -.ac.111 m ''""' ..,_ ,_.111111""°" ll1K11: t"1S lttdl e.u1to111C w '*"'1!11; -JWtll £1 ""''"' .. .., DAILY PILOT, wlltl ~ldl k ~ "'9 tlt.,~·Prt\t. '' riu1t1!11tfd 110(1')' ~C9PI s-dt1 ... -r1'9 Wlt.,...fW ~ ...,0, t!twll'Ort .. Kii, eo,11 M-. tW!INlln '••1,11 1m FouM11n v1n1y. •lorll w11111 ""' r19iell1I "'111...,, Or«IM C..11 """llafl"" COMOltlY' 11'11111"' Olttrtl ,,. ti 1'11 Wll.I •1IM1 llvt .• N-1 Mt0. .,.. 1a w.t .. y ,,,..,, Catt Met•. ,..,._ .. en•> MJAJn Cl•lfW ~ 641.Un la Cle....,_ AD D1pu11w1t11 ~ Telop•111 .4tM4n °""'""'" 1m, 0r.,.. c...t ~ ~ .... -'--· llllottr ...... •""1tl -'*' ... ,..,.,,'""-" Mrtlll _., .,. , ...... ct. •11f19111 ...... ....... .... ""' ., "'"'""' -· '""°" (!f14 Mii ... '91'11 itt M~ ..._ ...... CllN Mt~, C.llHomie. '-«l .. ltll W """' ..,.., ,,_.,.," _.,. 1'1'1111 u.n "-'ltll)i1 ll'llPi.r.,. CnlllltOINo t.2Jf "*'"'"' I • El P-porklng. IOI end the buDdlq housing a · aandwlcb shop and' clothing· storell. Citing a "far greater return'' to the ci· ty than .LP.!rk.lng ·development, Bigler said tenants wou1d be willing to upgrade their studios and pay additional rent as well. With $14,000 a year in rent.al money, rental of booth space in the mall for artia:t ezbtbits, and donauon of bis eervtcq at no COit. Bigter sees an $18,600 return per year on the mall as opposed to a cost of $20,000 to construct a parking lot. "This particular beach is one of the moat desirable in the state,'' he added. "You have an ·Opportunity to begin ifl.. vestment now and use the revenue f o t other park-beach improvements." •·Artists in Laguna Beach are starv- ing," Henrie told the commission. "I am appalled at a plan to raze buildings when there Is a way to put Laguna Beach back on the map as an artist colony." "You would do the greatest Injustice you have ever done by putting hall-empty macadam in place of something really charming." Henrie added he has invested $25,<XXI in lmprovanents at hll gallery on El Pueo knowing his leue could be lermlnated. He ~moved an orange juice stand and erected a gallery which he says draws art buyers from across the country. "It's not going to eofit you any money even though you may take ~t .away in a year or so," lienrie said. Pointing to a rapidl y drawn "but expert painting of the concept, he described the plan as a chance to save a segment of the Art Colony's history while providing a quaint place for artists to hold shows and visitors to browse through. Bigler v.•ho also presented an artistic rendering of the mall concept said he and Henrie will donate all the trees for the mall as well. '·I know one or the commissioners has said he doesn't want to carry us, but this is 'a chance to save rather than destroy and carry the city too," Bigler concl uded. "I think It's a fantastic idea," Planning Commission chairman William Lam· boume told the artists. Comm!ssloner Robert Hastings added "it's very nice, but requires more study." The mall plan will be forwarded to the City Council for comment. Coast Freeway Measure Creates Heated Debate Diplomatic efforts to endorse legisla· tlon which could resolve Orange Coast conflicts on the future Pacific Coast Freeway route created a headon collision of viewpoint& late Monday on the Costa Mesa City Council. 'Ille heated debate was touched off by a Jetter from Mayor Robert M. Wilson en- couraging ha counterpartl along the coast to support the bill by Sen. James E. Whetmore CR-Garden Grove} in the 1971 session. He has not yet seen the Whetmore bill, which was just one outspoken objection voiced by Councilman Alvln L. Pinkley, a veteran viewer of freeway route in- fighting. Mincing no words, Councilman Pinkley charged Newport Beach interests both public and private have develoPed a tradition of treachery in dealing with Costa Mesa and its freeway problems. * * * Mayor Goldberg Does Not Want Freeway Delay Reaction to Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson's approach to resolving Pacific Coast Freeway connlcts was greeted to. day by coastal mayors with cautious, but basic agreement on certain aspects. Newport Beach Mayor ·Ed Hirth responded by letter, urging a high degree of intercity cooperation. Laguna Beach Mayor R I c h a r d Goldberg said he will approach his coun· cil Wednesday night for their response, but personally would agree to nothing that might delay actual construction. Huntington Beach Vice l\1ayor Jerry Matney pledged his city's cooperation - as Jong as the Coast Freeway reaches the Santa Ana River as now adopted -in smoothing Costa Mesa·NewpOrt Beach conflicts. Each city official also expanded his in· ilia! comments. ''I will read the letter at tomorrow night's City Council meeting and ask for the council's response as to how they feel about it," said Laguna Beach's Goldberg. ''Personally, I would be in agreement wilh what they are trying to do -mak· ing a circulation study in an effort to find a11 answer to the problem in so far as Newport Beach Is concerned, but I would not agree with anything that would delay construction of the entire freeway route. "l will respond to the letter after I get the council's views tomorrow night," Goldberg concluded. "Your letter concerning the legislation proposed by Sen. Whetmore Is ap- preciated," Newport Beach Mayer Hirth wrote .. "Such action would certainly seem to correct a weakness in the current state freeway regulations. I am sure that our council will wish to consider this matter when the bill is available and take a posi· lion at the appropriate time. ''CUrrently. we are spending every ef· fort to determine the best possible solu· tion lo handiog the traffic within our city and through our cily," Mayor Hirth con· linued. "We are anXious to lnduce full con- sideration for the need! and desires of adjoining cities. C.OnsequenUy. we ""ill keep you posted on our progress 1nd af • ford an opportunity to submit any traffic data you wish to offer," Hirth finished. ''We're hippy with the freeway route through our city," said Matney. speaking r0< M•yot Robert Shipley In Hunlington Beach. .. But we're nexlbte on the routt near lhe Santa Ana River." "HunUn(lon Stach b not o~d to Jook.tng at realtpment of the freeway bet¥t-etn Newport Beach and C.O.ta Mesa, he 1ddtd. "We'll work wllh lhem IJlY way we can cm that." "But we've got to hive th1t freeway IS far u the Santa Ana River for our own needs," Matney uplatned. He ouUnned lhb pooilton lo rellow councilmen Monday night He said there wu gentral agreement on lhe city•s stand. "I am speaking only for myself and not this council," he emphasiz.ed strongly. His tones seemed to stun council col· leagues, who finally adjourned without approving the Wilson letter calling for support -in principle -of the Whet- more bill. The legislation -as it is now un· derstood -would allow individual cities to re-ope n specific freeway route sections in an effort to solve mutual pi;oblems. State Jaw and policy in effect now re- quires reoperiing of an entire freeway route to study, an inefficient procedure which is wrapped up in red tape. Councilman Pinkley warned that blind endorsement of the Whetmore bill could signal disaster ahead for Costa Mesa citizens and its oWn interests. "If it was any other city than Newport Beach I could agree, but I have absolute- ly no trust in Newport Beach," Pinkley declared. He charged there has been a smokescreen of publicity generated by the militant Freeway Fighters organita• lion which wants to keep the Route One Coast Freeway out of the beach city at all cost. From Page 1 AIRPORT •.. the announced cutdown of air operations "may have been premature.'' In recommending a continued study or the Naval Air Station the Parsons report notes "that use of this facility would be limited to nonjet alrcraft. At the Santa Ana Marine Air Station, "general aviation joint use of the existing facility is not considered feasible," the report stated. "Nevertheless, this aeronauti cal site should be assigned a role in the coun- tywide airport system as a future general aviation facility in the event that the facility is abandoned by the Department of Defense," the report continued. The Capistrano site outlined by Parsons is in the Bell Canyon area. They estimate the cost of establishing an airport there at $52.17 million over a period of seven to 10 years. Operating within a system of county airports the Bell Canyon jetport above Capistrano would be able to satisfy pro- jected dema1u:ls. "It cannot, however. stand alone as the only jet air carrier airport in the county. The greatest de- mand in the immediate future will be on Orange County Airport which in time may be complemented by jet airline ser· vice out of El Toro," the Parsons study contended. The Bell Canyon airport, which Walsh said will be built \).ong a ridge top, "will be able to handle an ultimate capacity of eight million passengers annually.'' Walsh said unique aspects of the site "also suggest a thorough examination of an advanced terminal and passenger movement system to serve all modes. The concept of a transportation terminal near Ole existing freeway and close to a possible right of way for a high speed ground transportation system should seriously be considered." Another air facility recommended by the consultants in the Southern County sector is O'Neill air park. ''This site offer! a unique combination ()f an existing regional park with good recreational facilities on the Plano Trabuco. The site on this high plain. 900- foot elevation, <:an be prepartd easily to serve small general aviation aircraft. "Flight operations at th is site would be during daylight hours only. Although most of the operations would be touch- and·go. hikers and campers are expected to arrive by light plane once the airport ls Rvallable," the report stated . The cost ()f establishing a Jac.illty at O'Nelll Park was estimated to be $1,188,000. A general aviation site w&s a\30 iden· Ufled in the city of Brea but the P11orsons rtport warned the site c&n only be con· sldtrtd suita~le if the city 11 willing to revise its general plan. Airport Dire~tor Roberl Bresnahan who attended this morning's meeting had no comment to mak& on the report "I h1vcn 'l had a chance to 1tudy ll.'' he said. ·-. ·- Shark Beached in Laguna Ed Gottschlick of Laguna Beach (holding tail) shot this shark with a spear from a fishing boat, Al Fenn of Orange (holding head), who was skin div.· ing nearby, brought it ashore at Mountain Road Beach. The shark. • 71->-foot blue, welghed In at 235 pounds. It's teeth'! All the better to eat you ·With 1 baby. F rom Page 1 SALT CREEK • • property, directly from Pacific Coast Highway to the beach at. Salt Creek. The second access route is at the south end of the property adjacent to the Chandler·Shcrman property. Improve- ment and landscaping of both access routes and the parking lot would be paid for by the county, The 11.4 acres of beach under con· sideration include one mile of ocean Iron· tage between Monarch Bay and the Chandler.Sherman property. "We will receive no compensation for this land," said Follett. ;'It will be necessary however, to release the pri> perty from the potential deed of trust at a cost of about $312,000 which is about $30,000 per acre." The two access routes proposed by the firm would serve the two parking lots. One lot, located inland of Pacific Coast Highway would be served by the access route in the center of the property. The 1()..acre lot will provide parking for 750 cars. The second lot would be located on the oceanside of the highway at the southern end of the property. It is about seven acres and would accommodate 500 cars. Pope Qu()ting Banned Writer VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope Paul VI has quoted from a work by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Noble Prize winner for literature who has been denounced by Communist authorities in his native Soviet Union. The Pope used the citation, seen as a possible indication of indirect support for Solzhenitsyn, i1 an address Monday to a group of Italian doctors. The quotation, from "cancer Ward," reads: "The family doctor was the most intimate of figures. but they have eradicated him. The family doctor is the person without whom, in a developed society, the family cannot exist. •. But how many adults today debate mutely, not knowing where to find a doctor and a soul to whom they can express their most secret fears .•. " Laguna Planners Given Central Business Study By BARBARA DUARTE 01 lllt O•llr l"li.1 SllH Members of the Laguna Beach Plan· ning Qimmlssion officially received a recommended plan for the central business district Monday night while tak- ing issue with its major concepts. The 72..page report by general planners Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall details concepts for de velopment of the downtown basin. The plan envisions construction of a major arterial connecting Monterey Drive. 2nd Street and Catalina street, a downtown mall and two major parking structures in the downtown district. The commis.sion, indicating it wanbi to gather more public opinion and study before the plan is incorporated in the eenerql plan, labeled It "generally unac- ceptable." "Communication must have fallen down ," said commissioner J a m e s Schmitz. "I don't like 60 percent of it because it opposes ideas we submitted more than two years ago." "Most of us disfavor the Catalina ex· tension, the mall is larger than an· ticipaled and the parking structures should probably be in a di£ferent area," commission Chairman William Lam· bourne said. ''I thought we transmitted these thoughts before." City planner Al Autry told the com· mission many ideas were put forth too late to be incorporated in the CBD plan which has been in the city's hands for a month. ''I think we need a work session to ptn- point modifications which can be jn. corporated before the final . general plan is approved." In other business, the commis.sion: -Postponed a hearing on a variance application by Loren Haneline of The Seas to add 13 units to his complex In Sleepy Hollow while seeking additional height. -Denied Gold Ambulance Service permission to operate itll business at 2S5 B Thalia because of traffic and circula· tion problems Jn the Glenneyre-Thalia street intersection. -Approved a request by Harry Howard to provide seven building sites on a cul de sac at 2200 Temple Hills Drive. 3 Pool Spokesmen Picked Three representatives of the Capistrano Unified School District were selected 1.-1onday to mfet with San Clemente of· ficials to solve a stalemate in plans for a 50.50 split in costs for a new swimming pool at San Clemente High School. Thus far San Clemente has balked at spending $75,000 to pay for half of the new pool. The district would pay the other half. School District trustees Monday night appointed chairman Dr. Robert Beasley, Vice Chairman Nofie Famularo and Supt. Truman Benedict to bargain with a similar committee from San Clemente. Councilmen recently appointed Mayor Walter Evans, Vice Mayor Stan Northrup and City Manager Ken Carr to represent the city's side. City parks and recreation com· missioners have recommended that San. Clemente not contribute balf the moneY. for the pool bill. Councilmen have taken no final action on that proposal, however. Under the proposed agreement each agency would split the bill for a large. new swimming pool which would be made available to public use as well as students. THE NAME OF THE GAME There is a common practice of private labeling in the car pet ind'ustry. L1rge Clepert!"'ent stores, chein stores, end contractors et new trects hive ficti cious n1mes on the samples so th et customers cannot e1sily shop brand na me prices. Custom•,rs shopping 1t our store find t~e price of uch quality prominantly fe1 tur1d on th e sample book, because we ere competitive. Also, b1c1use we feel the customer hes a right to know wh et he is buying, wt never ch1nge the name on a sample book. The name of tha g•ma is integrity! ALDEN'S ~~-NT-.-•• -•. -.-.. -.,-,-. CARPETS e DRAPES TUITIN C.tl • , • ALDIN'S 110 ""' c•"m 1663 Placentia Ave. 11114 ~,!!:."r'!!t~ c.rt1. COSTA MESA ........ 646-4838 HOU RS: Mon. Thru Thun., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 .:.. S•t., 9:30 to 5 .. , I 7 ' I , l I • l ( ! I I l ' I . Lag N.Y. St.eb VOL 63, NO. 2 ~ I, 3 S~TtONS, 38 PAGES 20, 970 TEN CENTS Salt Creek Beach Offers Under Consideration Orange County officials today ""' con-parking, ..,.,... l!ld beach .,..., aidering an offer of two access rout.es and The plan 1Ubmitted. tod., includes the the purebaet rights to the beach at Salt followirig points; Creek. -Donation by ACDI of land fot two ac- The offer was made at the Board of Cess routes to the beach. SupervisQ.n meeting today by represen--Donation of the engineering and tatives Of AVCO /c.ommunlty Developers Cradipg of one access route by ACDI. Inc., new owners of Laguna Niguel. -dmveyance to the county of the AC. The plan, presented by Bar r·y_ DI interest in 11.4 acres of beach, subject McCimic, ACDI counsel. encompa~ to a deed of trust held by Prudential. ·Life donaUon and sale of 30 acres of land for Wurance COmpany. • • ' Ie Ill -saie bl lhe county, at falr marbt value of 11.6 aerta of land for two parkinl lots. The valU. woold be eJtabllsbed by an independent appraiser. · All<r listening bl McComlc's presep. talion, aupervtJOrs voted to. consider the · matter in their NoV. 17 meeting. Supervisor David Baker requested the heads of the county's road, engineerinl, purchasing, planning, harbor l!ld legal departmenll bl lludy lhe offer. ur lftnnan McClellan of J.a&una Beach. a spokesman of the ciUuns a:roup working to save Salt Creek for the public, said he wu very pleased wlth the AVCO offer. "This is the finest expression o( a cor- Jl(ll'alion to the solut"ion of a problem I ha Ve seen yet," he told supervisors. "Tb.ls offer ls " as good or superior to the plan proposed by t!te cowity." The county plan be referred to involves a lei al tu!~ on !he &l'O<inds of P£-lptiv• er President Air Site Studied rlght.s which would !Orce the Laguna N1guel developera to "malntiin the public beach on the groun~ that it ha1 always been used as a public beach. There was no immediate estimate on total ctist of the offer to the county but Robert L. Follett, vice president or ACDI, said the cqunty coud _spend about $342,000 for the 11.4· acres of beach held in trust by Prudeiitlal. "Tbe county wW receive thrtt acres of am • I • l access at no co.st and 16.5 acres of park- ing at fair market value," he said. Follett also said the company is willing to put in interim access to the beach within 00 days. The interim access would be temporary until permanent facilities could be completed within about 24 monLhs. According to the ACDI plan , one access route will run through the center of the (See SALT CREEK, P1&e Z) 3 Incidents Of Vicious Will Visit Oemente Supervisors Set Capo Area Hearing l DeatltF ound President Nixon wi11 be staying at the San Clemente Western White House for an undisclosed period beginning Oct. 29, the DAILY PILOT learned today and may spend election ~ight here. Political observer! are calculating to- day that the President's stay will be part of bis present campaign swing, proba bly in an effort to bolster the sagging re-elec· tion campaign ef Senator George Murphy (R.Calif.). Additicnal speculation on NiJ:on ~am·~ paign role circulated today when Victor C. Andrews of Laguna Beach, -one of ~ix· on's top aides in California, called a press conference. Andrews, 11 resident of Emerald Bay and the President's ambassador to Expo 70 in Japan, set the meeting with the press for Wednesday at Ii a.m. in the Civic Center courthouse complex in Santa Ana . The &11bject of the confereoce wasn't aMounced. The Presidential visit, expected le resemble campaign &wings thrpugh either &tates in recent weeks, will come a day later than originally expected. There had been strong speculation that the chief executive would arrive in Ume for ceremonies involving the first-day issut of four new ecology stamps in San Clemente. - That function wi!J take place at the Western White House on Oct. 28, a day before Nixon's expected arrival. Laguna Students Vie for Field Service Study Two Laguna Beach High School juniors have been named semi-finalists for the 1971 American Field Service Amerii.:ans Abroad program. Successful candidates, who now must wait until spring to find out if they can be placed in homes overseas, are Karen CUtkomp, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. CUtkomp, 30 South Portola, in Three Arch Bay of South LagUna, and Linda Johnson, 16, daughter of J.1r. and Mrs. Irving H. Johnson, 620 Mystic Way, Laguna Beach. Both honor students and me1nher, of the California Scholarship 1',cderation, Linda and Karen have applied for the year study programs which wnuld place them with a family abroad where they would attend school in the language oJ the assigned country. Applicants go through an intensive screening and interview'ing process with the local AFS chaJ?ler before they are recommended as semi-finalists to AFS headquarters in New York. Alter further screening in New York, finalist! are notified in March 1f they are eligible to gc> abroad. An attempt is made to ma tch them with overseas families who have offered to accept an American stu· dent. and tfiQse. succearutry placed are notified ln summer of their deatlnanon. Karen Cutcomp wp Hlccted b)' Laguna Beech liftguarda this year as their Miss Lifeguard In the annual July ' beauty contest, Ind-later appeared I•-• television spot for the American Cancer Society. An enthusiastic volleyball player, 1he hat won a number or lfo9hits in local cont.estl and also ia a school song leader. Linda JohMon has be<n ..crewy of the high school AFS club,· a member of Girls Athletic Association and Choral Readers, and plays piano and jtlltar • • . •1 By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 t1M D9l"I¥ ltlt.t lltff Orange County supervisors are stu- dying the acq uisition of l,SOO acres in tht Capistrano area for a county airport as part of recommendations submitted to- day in Phase II of the Air Transportation Master Plan. The recommendation was one of several given in a.400-page atudy of t i • isling air ·facilities submitted t,o superviscrs by Stan W a I 1 h , project manager for the Ralph. E. Panona Com· pany. A public bearin& on the report wu aet for Nov. 17. 1be latest ParlOlil report makes two general recommendations: -Thn Orange Count)' take act l o n • Fanding No p.,..~ Ileachfront Parking Lots Def ended by Ex-Mayor Former Laguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder, who on April lt, 1967, presented the first formal propo1al for city ac· quisition of the Main Beach under a lease-purchase arrangement with a non· profit corporation. this week questioned recent statements regarding fundin& of the beachfront. Asked for his viewi on various pro- posals that would involve r a z i n g beachfront buildings to make way for parking lots, Vedder said be does not believe the money problem is as grave as some have indicated. "There have been stateme111! made •bout the cost and funding of the Main Beach which ara confusing and may come because of lack o( in-- formation," said Vedder. "Certainly this Main Beach property requlre1 careful at- tention in all aspects of costs, planning and development, but preciptou1 action must not be taken that will later be regretted." Citing statements maintaining that cer- tain Main Beacfl properties have not been bringing in ent>ugb lease: revenue to cover the city 's tax biUs on them, Vedder refer· red to the city's Financial and Statistical Report for the Fiscal Year ending June 30, l!l'IG. purchased. the Main Beach." Vedder noted that reduction of rental rev~ by park development will have to. be replaced, and that Festival funds may be at a maxi mum ... but bed tu revenue probably. will increase. "Cash reserve carry.o ver ls diminishing," he said, "but the need and desirability of a revenue producing faclli· ty on a portion of the Main Beach should be studied in depth before action is tak. en." Vedder reiterated his earlier view that a phase development over a 10 to 12 year period should be undertaken, to avoid "precipitous and poorly a n a I y i e d decisiOns.'' Available revenue for payment on the beach bonds in 1970, he said, included $74.389 from the Festival of Arts, $124,2aa from the bed tax and '89,652 from beach renb and parking for a total of $288,270. The sum of $129,9'8 was transferred in-to the beach front fund, he said, and this showed a cash reserve of $27 ,270 as o( June 1970, while the rombined Festival· bed tax fWKI reaerve i mounted to $37,IBI. In addJUon to contributing to payment of the beach bonds, Vedder noted, the Festival·btd tax funds aJ90 provided ,27,000 for cultural support, $42,000 for community promotion, '21,700 for capitJl improvements and $44,000 for the eeneral fund. through zoning ordinanct.-' to protect one of t.he existing military facilities from en· croaching development. -That the county acquire land for another jetport ln a less developed arta of lhe couilty. . . Parsons rePort said three jet-capable airporta·will be needed within the neXt 20 years to hand1e the county's short haul air. 'transpOrt needs. Short ·ha u'l tTansportailon is that used (o travel with. lj\ jl,'Gm~ r~. . ~ atudY identuied three tyPes of air facilities. The 'short haul, jet capablt facility they labeled a jetport. Also identi tled was a general aviation facility for use by private pilots flying non jet planes. The third facility briefly covered in·the reoort was a abort take ofl and landing (STOL) for use by commuter helicopter services. , · In a study of existing alr facilities. both civilian and military, the Parsons Com· pany recommended that Orange County Airport.. be maintained aa the county'• principal general aviation airport. They also' SUR1ested that jets continue to use the facility limited by three fac- tors : -"The analysis of the re5'1lts of a 12 to ts.month · prototype noise monitoring pr~ gram now in progress. -"The adoption of proposed st.ate or federal noise 1tandards or commwtily noise levels. "-'M>e negotiations of 1 ease agreements with airlines, stipulating the number of jet aircraft departures and hours of operation." The El Toro Marine Air Station was Identified as being "a promis i ng alternative" for the county's aecond jet capa!):le airport. "The ciYll joint use of this military air facility would not be ·open to all air traf- fic, but as a joint use facility it could ac- cept limited, well "disciplined scbeduied airline operation. No general aviation flights would be permitted," the report alates. In their study of El Toro the consulting firm estimated the COit of providing a civil air terminal, new aprons, taxiways and accessea: to be $2.7S million for the initial phase. At Loa Alamitos the Parsons Co. found (See AIRPORT, Pat e !) , Ultl Telfflltlt Ki'LLED IN PASO ROBLES Shelly l•r"es, 4 I ' Laguna Planners Asks Irvine City Comment Right Laguna BeEich Planning Commissioners voiced no objection to incorporation plans of the City of Irvine Monday night as long as theiir voice remains in future planning. On recommendation of City Planner Al Autry, the commission forwarded the review to lhe City Council with four sug. gestions. Stating it wants to know what ls going to happeh and when, the commission will ask Local Agency Formatlor;i Comm ission to consider a more logical southern boun· dary such as an arterial and recogn ize the Laguna Beach area of influence and right to comment on further annexation oceanward of the &0uthern boundary. Planners also ask that portions of Irvine within this · zone of Influence be referred to J..a,gµna for comment prior to development, and that Irvine retain routing of the Pacific Coast and Laguna Canyon freeways. "It ahows· clearly," be said, "that revenue from the beac:h ren tals amounted to $89,3'6 during· the yeir and that taxes for the whole thing amount to $28,'TlO. Bringing this up to $39,111 by adding maintenance arid adminlstrative eoets, the leaae revenue still more than covertd the cost." • · Only one small parcel, Vedder uya, returned less than its property tax, This property relUrned $600 and bad a tax bill of '953, or a deficit of $35..1, he 1aid. Playhouse Gets Boost "One questions the wisdom of ex· pendinl ~verat tho;usands of doll.ars to develop parkin& on lhls property to remove the loss of '3$3," aa;d tbe former Mayor .... Certainly It wculd be better lO do some landacapi.Dg on this property than lO put automobiles on It. It is pro- bably that parking 1pace1 on the' beach will be uaed lvgely by the onM&y beach. visitor. This u&e is of l!We eeonomlc benefit to the city." Delving further Into Main Beach fun- dlng ;.; ....... led In lhe ll'IO financial report, Vedder 11ld that the annual prin· cipal plus interest payment. on the btacb bonds lies between '220,212 and $225,IC. whkh was enUrtly paid from Festival ot Am. bed tu and belch rut.al reveoue. "No tax m90les pold out by Lapna Beach property ownen Wtrt used to paJ for !he ]>each," nld Veddu, "l!ld the figures Indicate lhal thae revenue IOW'Co e1 can purchase the M&Jn Bt•ch if main- tained, without reccul"lt to tax momey.11 "Thil .,. the policy adopted l!ld ..... by P<••IOlll aclmlniatrallonl th a I ' . Theawr Given Contriu'butions to Keep Show on Road By BARBARA KREIBICB Of .. --.... 119" The· &Joomy financial scme at the 1 :La1un.a Moulton Playhouse took on a brighter bue today u two supporters came Jorward with funds to.help keep the ahow on the road. Belly Role, vtce president of the Playen' board, announced that Miu Margaret Swope, longtime Lapna .... ~ dent and former board member, hu CiVen the pl1yhouee "a' most tenel'O\.IS loan of 16.01111 which will help pay 'the huge blll for our ne• llNnd equiptnent." Matdllng Miss Swope'• contribution Is a 11.111111 cl>eck fl'om bolTd member Karl s1...._ and Mn. Slmonoon which, aald Mn. ROiie, ''will help DI meet our payroll and enable us to ltart paytna: off our ~Ion. who are bel.n& very aym. pathetic." • The board of dlncton of the pla~ •took over manqemeol of lhe tbealor 11111 . week after terminating most of It! paid 1taff for economy reuons. Amoog those leaving the staff •ere' general manager Jack Seymour,' 1(1.. n$Jislrltlve assistant Jlm Duncan, technical director Jim Stewart and ata£t manaeer .steve ·FOL · Mia. Rote said Stewart. already had planned to leive the playhou!e to return bl Ne.. York and Fox left to go back to tchool. "They're 1'oth very talented and we on· Jy wish we coukf afford to keep them," she said. 1'wo other staff members, costume dulgntr Bill Ba~ and aeamstress Barbara Deitz, loft the playhouae oct. Ii. ,._Mn. Rose stld the playhouse was ohllpd to lnst•U completely new -d equqnnent after the theater w 1 1 ~lariitd durin1' the . run of "Oliver !" nOt timplj repliclnc stolen 'Hems, blll ul'sildlng lhe enttrt aystem whlU bad been proven inalieq'Uate for the theater. Insurance covered only part of the cost, she sakt .. · The tound equipment bill will be paid from ur.e check handed over by Miss Swope, former wife of Laguna-. artist Roger Armstrong and onetime Hollywoc>d film player, who has been • playhouse devotee for many yean. The Simonson donaUon1 Mn. Rose said. win cover the theater payrol1,"1\1Cli conlinues until OCt. 31, and will be dist.i-ibuted ' f mOlig crtdltof' who have been notilled of lbe payment plan. Notin& Ulat the pl1yhouse sUll owes '27 ,000 on a bank loan in adillUon to its many bills, Mrs. Rose said, "We hope theie two generous gestures will en· courage olh<r friends to ho\P the playhoUse, If not with money, at least as voluntfers. This is a very lar,e theater to t;ake eare of ,Md thert's loll of work-to b6 dofti.• .. From Wlre Servlce1 SANT A CRUZ -Nine persons were murd ered in Central California In a triang le of viciousness that peaked with the execution-style slayings of a wealthy eye doctor, his wife, two children and his secretary . Firemen answering a call to a blazing mansion on a hilltop oYerlooking tne Pacific Monday night found the fi ve bodies in a swimming pool tinted with their blood. The victims were Or. Victor M. Oh ta, 45, an ophthalmologist; his wife, Virginia, 43; their sons, Derrick, 12, and Taggart, 11 ; and.the phy1iclan'1 aecretary, Doro- thy Cadwallader, 38. All had been bound with red bandanu and shot berore being hurled into the pool. -Its deck was spattered wi th blood. Some have described Dr. Ohta as a "rich hippie" because of his medical help ad· ministered to the nomads. Another multiple killing was J:ider m. vestigation near Paso Robles, about 120 miles south of the scene of the swimming pool murders. Three persons beat and stabbed a man and wife to death and abducted and murd ered their four.year-old dau ghter. Th e Paso Robles victims were Ronald Barnes, 27; his wife, Betty, 2.'"I; and daughter, Shelly, 4. The wife's body was fo~nd with multi· ple chest stab wounds in the home. The body of the husband was dlSC'lvered several hours later in a car trunk. He had been bludgeoned to death. The little t.rl'1 !See MURDERS, Page Z) Laguna Teachers Ba cking Riles Teachers in the Laguna Beach Unilied School District haYe an no u n c e d en- dorsement of Wilson Riles for State Superintendent of Public Instruction by the executive council ot the Laguna Beaclt U n i f i e d Faculty Association (LABUFA J. A statement Issued by the board said, 1'Tlte counci. felt that Dr. Riles is the best qualified candidate to promote quali· ty education for Califomia public school chlldfen and therefore echoed the official endorsement of our mother organization. the California Teachers Association, Southern Section. Orange Coast Weather The rainy season may start too night. t~e weatherman warns , bringing a cooling trend to the coast Wednesday. Temperatures should gravitate between 65 and 70. INSIDE . TODA. Y Suck 'e-'"· ool1: according to L. M. Boyd , jot fuo men out· number fat men seven to cme. See Checking Up, P.agoe 8. C1tlfWll't I Clledllltt Utl I ('9tjllflt' »ff Clftlk1 11 CNUft.... 1J °""' HlllCtt t •••lwttl ..... ' •lltff1•1411111t11 lf "'--1~11 ...__ u AIMI ~ 14 -" ' • f DAILY PILOT SC T...W.,,, Cctobw 20, 1970 Art for Asphalt Laguna Artists Propose.._'Gall ery by Sea' By BARBARA DUARTE El Pueo parldn& lot and the building 181pr<vemenll 1t hll gallery on El Pueo ot ttM N IW P11e1 11•" housing a aandw\cb ~ Ind clo&h1og kbowln& bit leue could be termhlated. Two Laguna ~ch artists offered to stores. l He removed an orange juice stand and trade the city art for asphalt Monday Citing a 0 far greater retGm" to the cl· erected a gallery which he says draws night. ty than a parking development, Big)er art buyers from across the country. said tenants would be willlng to upgrade 11It's not going to cost you any money Strongly opposing a Planning Com· their studios and pay additional rent as even though you may take it away in a mission proposal to construct a "garage well . With $14,IXK> a year in rental money, year or so," Henrie said. Pointing to a by the sea," along El Paseo, landscape ta! f booth · the u f dr b f , architect and artist Richard Bigler of· ren ° space m ma or rapidly awn ut expert painting o artist exhibits, and donaUon of his concept, he described the plan as fered his professional knowhow to create services at no cost, .Bigler sees an •ta,600 chance to save a segment -of the Art ''Laguna'.s Gallery by the Sea" instead. return per ytar on the mall as opposed to Colony's history while providing a quaint The presentation was made in reply to a cost of $20,00Cf to construct a parking place for artists to hold shows and the commis.slon·s proposal to raze a Jot. visitors to browse through. clusler of beach houses along El Paseo to "This particular beach is one of the Bigler who also presented an artistic make way for a parking lot. most desirable in the state," he added. rendering of the mall concept said be and With the as.slstance of artist Paul "You have an opportunity to be.gin in· Henrie will donate all the trees for the Blaine Henrie who also operates all art vestment now and use the revenue for mall as well . studio in the: city-owned beachfron l com· other park-beach improvements." ''l know one of the commissioners has plex, Bigler painted a picture of a "gaily· "Artists jn Lagurl4 Beach ~ starv· said he doesn't want to carry us, but this lit, old fashioned mall" as an att.empt to Ing," Henrie told the commission. "I am is a chance to save rather than destroy show an upgraded downtown section and appalled at a plan to raze buildings when and carry the city too," Bigler concluded. give art a shot in the arm. there is a way to put Laguna Beach back '..'.I t.hink it's a fantastic Jdea," Planning h .. We stand at a crbssroads downtown," on the map as an artist colony." Commission chairman William Lam· Bigler declared. "When you destroy four "You would do the greateat injustice: boume told the a'rtlsts. Commissioner businesses, the loss spreads to other you have ever done by putting half.empty Robert Hastings added "ll'1 very nice, business." macadam in place of something really but requites more study." Bigler's plan is to preserve six struc-charming." The mall plan will be forwarded to the lures in a tree-shaded mall between the Henrie added he bas invested ,25,000 ln City Council for comment. From Page I MURDERS ... body v.•as found in a canal. Sheriff's deputies said they are holding John Archa, 26 of Fresno and his two teenaged brothers, Donnie, 14 ; and Ken· ny, 13; on suspicion of the killings. Al Saratoga, 12 miles north of SoqueJ where the physician and four others were murdered a 19-year-old gasoline station . ' altendant. was found slain by a bullet v.·ound in the head. His hands had been lied behind his back in the manner of the slayings at the $300,oOO Ohta mansion. He was identified as Thomas S. Dececco. Santa Cruz County detective Bud Mur· ray said the Ohta mansion victims were apparently shot to death about 8 p.m. 1-fonday. 'Mte killers bad made several at- tempts to start a fire before successfully touching off a roaring blaze in the house 100 miles south of San Francisco. One of the family's three cars, a 1968 Oldsmobile station wagon, was mi!sing, Firemen who went to the Ohta pool for water found the bodies bound with scarves -Miss Cadwallader's floating on the surface, the others at the bottom of the Olympic-sized pool, its water stained pink and its tiles slippery with, their blood. Each had been bound and then shot in the back or the bead, Dr. Ohta twice. Doligias James, Santa Cruz County Sheriff, called the slayings "the most gruesome crime in county history." Police are still uncertain of a motive, •or whether srawled words or other in· dicatlons of the killers' mental state might be found , as were found after the slaying of actress Sharon Tate and four ethers near Los Angeles in 1969. Det. Murray described Ohta, a Japanese-American Air Force veteran educated at Northwestern University, as a "very nice person, a tremendous doc- tor." His practice was in Santa Cruz. A socialite. he was described by another physician as the epitome of suc· cess. Laguna Moulton Theater Burgled The Laguna 1'.1oulton P 1 a y house, already having financial problems, was another ~ poorer today. Police reported $50 in cash was taken from the box office area of the theater some time last Friday night. Officers said the money was taken from a cash drawer which usually Is kept Jocked, but apparently had been opened with a key. DAILY PILOT N11WPtff l exh Let•• ... ,. C.... Mn • ORANGE COAST l'tllll.ISH1NO Ctlli\PAHY Rabett N. W114 Pt11•4tnl 1rA PYblltMf' J•tl( R. Curley \'k t rru:otnl tr.d Ci_r,I Mt n111r l hom11 Ke1vi'I £ctltor 1liom11 A. M11rphi11e MIMll~ tctltor Rich1rd r. "•II S&lllh or111Q• Covntr 1c111or OHie• CoJlt Mtu! JJ0 Wtil llY Slrttl frl~•I ac:c.111 ml w .. 1 a1111o1 1111111v1rd • L•GVM llttl'I: ttt ,,.,._,, ot,v"'w H11r1tin0ton ett(ll: 1711J IMdl ..., .. ,,,,. ...a.n """"1"; ~ HOtltl 11 Ctmln9 llMI tiAtlY P11.or, w.111 ~lcfl IJ alllfltlllltd tl'l1 Ht11i..~. 11 111o1Dlbhed 411iz.::.-.i s-dtv In 1.1p1r•!lt tdllo&ru .,_ 111\l(I!, f'l•WP11rt lleJtl'I, CoPtll Met. H\fl\tinll•~ '"'ft 1r.ct ,,,,,,.,.1 ... "'"''' •ltftf w1rtt 1" r .. i&I' .. ! rd1t;on1, Ot~ C.JU "'*llilllftf c_..., prl!\!'tlf s:lt!M 1t1 ti nn Wnl l t 1'1i0o 11:...:1,, NtWfloO"I IM<l'I. t r.A -Pl W•I Ill' l lfHI, c.&11 MtU. l•l1pkM C7141 642-4)11 CIM11fl•d u..rthl .. 642·1171 >•• t'l•111•11t1 AR hp ....... : 1 .. ,,,. ... 492-4411 f.ocr1rfoall\, 1Jl0. 011~1 Ceftl Pwllltrtl ... ~,. N6 lltWl , .. ltl. hlllltrtl~ .. 111ri.1 ,,. .. "... .,. td...,,._. ,......,. """' 1111 ••OOluccct "'"'*" .,.i.1 ,_. rrilnlt" of c.pyrltlll G¥intt'. .l«etlO CllK n.tett f"Old tf ff......., .... •rd (.Ma. Mt _., (.111!0,..11, 5"'tlM:rloA'ltfl l'f c.t•flll' U.U .,,,.,,,.,,.,, t'l'fllll!IU.tf,,_llllYI m1111.1rr cr.1in.11e..., 1J.U rriet11J11r. • , Coast .Freeway Measure Creates Heated Debate Diplomatic efforts to endorse legisla· lion which could resolve Orange c.o&st conflicts on the future Pacific Coast Freeway route created a headon collision or viewpoint.! late Monday en the Costa Mesa City Council. 'Ille heated debate was touched off by a Jetter from Mayor Robert M. Wilson en- couraging his counterparts along the coast to support the bill by Sen. James E. Whetmore CR-Garden Grove) in the 1971 session. He has not yet seen the Wbetmore bill, which was just one ·outspoken objection voiced by C:Ouncllman Alvin L. Pinkley, a veteran viewer of freeway route Ur fig hting. Mincing no words, C:Ouncllman Pinkley charged Newport Beach interests both p,iblic and private have developed a tradition of treachery In dealing wlth Costa Mesa and lls freeway problems. * * * Mayor Goldberg 'Does Not Want Freeway Delay Reaction ta Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wil8on's approach to resolving Pacific Coast Freeway conflicts was greeted to- day by coastal mayors wit h cautious, but basic agre1!ment on certain aspect&. Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth responded by letter. urging a high degree of intercity cooperation. Laguna Beach Mayor R I c h a r d Goldberg said he will approach his coun· cil Wednesday night for their response, but perM1naJly would agree to nothing that might delay actual construction. Huntington Beach Vice Mayor Jerry :ti.1atney pledged his city's cooperation - as long as the Coast Freeway reaches the Santa Ana River as now adopled -in smoothing Costa Mesa-Newport Beach conflicts. Each city official also expanded his In· itial comments. "l will read the letter al tomorrow night's City Coungil meeting and ask for the council's response as to how they feel about it," said Laguna Beach's Goldberg. "Personally, I would be tn agreement with what they are trying to do -mak· ing a circulalion study in an effort to find an answer to t.he problem in so far as Newport...Bc:ac.h is concerned, but I would not agree with anything that would aelay construction or the entire freeway route. "I will respond to the Jetter after I get the council's views tomorrow night," Goldberg concluded. "Your letter concerning the legislation proposed by Sen. Whetmore Is ap- preciated," Newport Beach Mayor Hirth wrote. •·such action would certainly seem lo correct a weakness in the current state freeway regulations. I am sure that our council wilt wish to consider this matter when the bill ls available and take a posi· lion al the appropriate time. "Currently. we are spending every ef· fort to determine the best possible solu· lion to handing the traffic within our city and through our city," Mayor Hirth con· tinued. •·we are anJ1ious to tnduce full con· 11ideration for the needs and desires of adjoining cities. Consequently, we wUl keep you poated on our progress and tif· ford an opportunity to submit any traffic data you wish to otfer,''. Hir\h finished. "We're happy with the freeway route through our city," said Matney, speaking for Mayor RDbert..,Shipley in HunUni:ton Beach . (' "But we're fiuible on the route near the Santa Ana River.'' "HunUngton Btacb Is not oppos<d to looking at ru.llgnmeot oC the freeway between Newport Beach and Costa Mua. he addC!d. "We'll work with them an,y way v.'e can on that." "But we've 1ot to have that rseeway u far as the Sant8 Ana River for our own needs," Matney explained. He outlnned th.is po&l.Uoa to fellow councilmen Monday •l&hl. fie said lhere wu general agreement "1 tbe clly'I otand. "I am speaking only for myself and not this council," he emphaslztd strongly. His tones seemed to stun council col· leagues, who finally adjourned Without approving the Wilson letter calling for support -in principle -of the Whet· more bill. The legislation -as it is now un- derstood -would allow individual cities to re-open specific freeway route sections in an e_ffort to solve mutual problems. St.ate law and policy in effect now rt· quires reopening of an entire freeway route to stuCly, an inefficient proced'Jre which Is wrapped up in red tape. Councilman Pinkley warned that blind endorsement of the Whetmore bill could signal d.isaller ahead for Costa Mesa citizens and its own interesls. "If it was any other city than Newport Beach I could agree, but I have absolute- ly no trust in Newport Beach," Pinkley declared. He charged there has been a smokescreen or publicity generated by the militant Freeway Fighters organlia· lion which wants to keep the Route One Coast Freeway out of the beach city at all cost. From Page I AIRPORT ••. the announced cutdown or air operations "may have betn premature." In recommending a continued study of lhe Naval Ai r StaUon the Parson1 rePort notes "that use of this facility would be limited to nonjet aircraft. At the Santa Ana Marine Air Station. "general aviation joint use of the existing facility is not considered feasible," the report stated. "Nevertheless, this aeronautical site should be assigned a role in the coun· tywide airport system as a £uture general aviation facility in the event that the facility is abandoned by the Department of Defense." the report continued. The Capistrano site outlined by Parsons is in the Bell canyon area. They estimate the cost or establishing an airport there at $52.17 million over a period of eeven to 10 years. Operating within a system of county airports lhe Bell Canyon jetport a b o v e Capistrano would be able to satisfy pr~ jected demands. "It cannot, however, stand alone as the only jet air carrier airport In the county. The greatest de· mand in the im mediate future will be on Orange County Airport which In time mayl>e complemented by jet airline &er· vice out or El Toro," the Parsons study contended. The Bell Cany01) airport, which Walsh said will be built illong a ridge top. "Will be able to handle an ultimate capacity of eight million passengers annually." Walsh said unique aspects or the site "also suggest a thorough oamlnation or . an advanced terminal and passenger movement system to serve all modes. The concept of a transpartalion terminal near the existing freewaj', and close to a pos.sible rlght of way for a high speed ground transportation system should seriously. be considered." Another air facility recommended by the consultants in the Southern County sector is O'Neill alr park. "This site offers a unique combination of an existing regional park with good recreational facilities on the Plano Trabuco. The site on this high plain, 900- root elevation, can be prepared easily to serve small general aviation aircraft. "Flight operations at Ulit site would be during daylight hours only. Although m<>1t of tht operations would be touch· and.go. hikers arid campers are e1pected to arrive by light plane once the airport Js available," the report stated. The cost of establishing a facility at O'Neill Park was estimated to bf: ll.188,000. A general avtatlon-111te was also Iden. lilied in the city of Brea but lht: Parsons report warned the site can only be con· 1ldered auJtable tr the city ls willing to revise Its general plan. AlrpOrt Director Robert Bresnahan who flttended th\1 morning's meetln1 had no c.'Omment to make on Ule report. "[ haven't had a chance to study it.," he said. • Shark Beached in Laguna E d Gottschlick of Laguna Beach (holding tail) shot this shark with a spear from a fi shing boat. AI Fenn of Orange (holding head), who was skin div· ing nearby, brought it ashore at Mountain Road Beach. The shark, a 7'h·foot blue. weighed in at 235 pounds. It's teeth? All the better to eat you with, baby, .... · From Page I SALT CREEK • • property, directly from Pacific Coast • Highway to the beach at Salt Creek. The second access route is at the sou th end or the property adjacent to the Chandler-Sherman property. Improve- ment and landscaping of both access routes and the parking lot would be paid for by the coonty. The 11.4 acres or beach under con- sideration include one mile of ocean fron- tage between Monarch Bay and the Chandler-Shennan property. "We will receive no compensation for this land," said Follett. "ft will be necessary however, to release the pro- perty from the potential deed of trust at a cost of about $342,000 which Is about $.10.000 per acre." The two access: routes proposed by the firm would serve the two parking lols. One lot, located inland of Pacific Coast Highway would be served by the access route in the center or the property. The IG-acre lot will provide parking for 750 cars. Laguna Planners Given . . - Central Business Study By BARBARA DUARTE Of 1111 g111r r 1i.1 stiff Members of the Laguna Beach Plan- ning Commission officially received a recommended plan rOr the central business district Monday night while tak- ing issue with its major concepts. The 72·page report by general planners Daniel, MaM, Johnson and Mendenhall details concepts for development of the downtown basin. The plan envislons construction of a major arterial coMecting Monterey Drive, 2nd Street and catalina street, a downtown mall and two majof parking structures in the downtown district. The commission, indicating it wants to gather more public opinion and study before the plan is incorporated in the generql plan, labeled it "generally unac· ceptable." liclpaled and the parking structures should probably be in a different area," commission Chairman William Lam· bourne said. ''I thought we transmitted these thoughts before." City plaMer Al Autry told the com- mission many ideas v;ere put forth too -!ale to be incorporated in the CBD plan which has been in the city's hands for a month. "I think we need a work session to pin· point modifications which can be in. corporated before the final general plan is approved." In other business, the commission: -Postponed a hearing on a variance application by L<iren Haneline of The Seas to add 13 units to his complex in Sleepy Hollow while seeking additional height. . -Denied Gold Ambulanc~ Service permission to operate its business at 255 The second lot would be located on the oceanside of the highway at the southern end of the property. It is about seven acres and would accOmmodate 500 cars. "Communication must have fallen down," said commissioner J a m e s Schmlti. "I don't like 60 percent of it because it opposes ideas we submitted more than two years ago." B Thalia because of traffic and clrcula4 lion problems in the Glenneyre-Thalia 1 street interseclion. Pope Quoting Bannea Writer "Most of us disfavor the Catalina ex- tension, the mail is larger than an· -Approved a request by Harry Howard to provide seven building sites on a cul de sac at 2200 Temple Hills Drive. 3 Pool Spokesmen Picked VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope Paul VI has quoted from a work by AleJ1ander Solzhenitsyn, Noble Prize wiMer for IUerature who has been denounced by Communist authorities in his native Soviet Union. Three representatives or the Capistrano Unified School District were selected Monday to meet with San Clemente o!· ficials to solve a stalemate in plans for a 50·50 split in costs for a new swimming pool at San Clemente High School . Councilmen recently appotnted Mayor • , Walter Evans, Vice 1'.1ayor Stan Northrup and City Manager Ken Carr to represent I the city's side. The Pope used the citation, seen as a possible indica!lon of indirect support for Solzhenitsyn, iR an address Monday to a group of Italian doctors. , The quotation, from "Cancer Ward ,'' reads: "The family doctor was the most intimate of figures, but they have eradicated him. The family doctor ls the person without whom, in a developed society, the family cannot exist. .. But how many adults today debate mutely, not knowing where to find a doctor and a soul to whom they can express their most secret fears. , . " Thus far San Clemente has balked at spending $75,000 to pay for half of the new pool. The district would pay the other half. School District trustees Monday night app0lnted chairman Dr. Robert Beasley, Vice Chairman Nofie Famularo and Supt. Truman Benedict to bargain with a sln1Har committee from San Clemente. City parks and recreation co m. missioners have recommended that San Clemente not contribute half the money. for the pool bill. Councilmen have taken no final action on that proposal, however. Under the proposed agreement each agency would split the bill !or a large, new sv;imming pool which would be made available to public use as well as studenls. THE NAME OF THE GAME There is• common practice of private lab1lin9 in the carpet in<lustry. Large C:fep1rtment stores. chain stor111 1kcf contrectors at new tracts hi ve ficticious nemes on the samples so thet customers cannot e11sily shop brand name prices. Customers shoppin9 at o ur store fin d t~t price of eech quality promintntly featured on the sample book, because we are competitive. Al10, bectust wo feel tho cutiorMr hH • rlght to lnow what he is Duying, we never ch1n91 the name on • sample boot The n1m1 of tho 91m1 is intogrl ty l ALDEN'S .---,..-.,-.-•• -... -.-.... -.-, ""' CARP.ETS e DRAPES fUSflN C•H • , , ALDIN'S .. .-.1u .. ,,..,. 1663 Plae•ntla Ave. • " • . ' • ' 11174 ~,.::'r'!!.~ c.rit. COSTA MESA Ill.JI« 646-4838 •• HOURS: Men. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 lo 9 -S.t., 9:30 to 5 \ \ - j The Assoc \Vedn• least contn E ( If I boon man1 al arr prot< No stalk Fest are busi1 Th Fest pick Far( stall desc '""' Tt the the• L< f'ar1 ten a lhal casi that tiva Tl ~aid suet .. , only ··An var: on ; B """ buil Ent the entc buil If ;iila1 ano T s. H 1 be da• 100 OH 1 '" \\'ii Ire hi@ Fr ' I • \ L OAll Y PILOT !J • Selection Looms -for ~anager Dog taw -Te st Proposed Laguna Owners to Seek Trial of SPCA Pro.cedures By BARBARA KREIBICH Of 11•1 Ol llJ Plltl $1tff The Laguna Be~ch Dog Owners Association will urge lhe City Council Wednesday night to give the SPCA at least two months to tesl its new animal control procedures before enacting a new dog control ordinance. LB D 0 1\ spokesman Richard Challis said \fonday. The dog ordinance will appear on the agenda Wednelday night when cltv clerk Dorothy Musfelt presents o f f i c i 3 l certification of signa tures on a written petition to rescind Ordinance No. 6.lO Burglar Ala~ms Guard Festival By PATRICK BOYLE Of Ille Dl llJ f'lt.1 51111 lf burglars help no one else, they are ~ boon to the burglar alarm industry, those manufacturers of loud bells and silent alarms who paste a small sign onto every protected_ door. Nol to be outdone or undone by some stalker of the night. the buildings at the Festival of Arts grounds in Laguna Beach are now bur gla rproof. according to business manager Bob Leppert. The board of the directors of the Festival Sept. B authorized Leppert to pick a good alarm S}"tem. and Wells Fargo Company recently finished in- stalling the new systen\. which Leppert describes as very complicated and very exoensive. The system protects every tntrance lo the various buildings at the grounds and the cost of initial installation was $1.724. Leppert said that the board pays Wells Fargo an additional service and main- tenance charge of $136 a month. He said that a \\'ells Fargo man v.·il\ come oc- casionaily to check the system to insure that it works. the only true test being ac- ti vating the alarm. The alarm is complicated. Leppert !aid, because the Festival grounds keep such diverse hours. "Pt!any of the buildings here are in use nnly certain limes of the year," he said. ''And the hours that they are open may vary depending on \vhat activity is going on at the time." Because of this, Leppert said there is a special procedure necessary to enter a building when the alarm is in operation. Entrance requires a special key. a call to the Wells Fargo office in Leis Angeles and entering a certain door of the affected building. If the procedures are not follov.·cd. the alarm is triggered, which in turn triggers another chain or events. The 1larm is connected to a computer Seniors and Fathers llonored by A1·tists Tv.·o segments of the community will be honored by the student body at Fri- day night's Laguna Beach High School football game with traditional rival Brea.- Olinda. The city's senior citizens and the fath- ers of the high school football players "''iii be admitted free to the game. The free passes ma y be obtaintd In the high school administration offices before Friday. In the heavily guarded Wells Fargo offi- ces in Los Angeles. The computer pro- vides an in$tant print-out giving the loca· lion of the lactivated alarm, phone num· bcr of the police department to contact and the phone number and name of who to contact on the Festival board . ... The alarm is also connected to the Laguna Beach Police Department. who get the message before the burglar dou, Leppert said. The delay from the time the alarm Ls activated to the time the bell at the Festival grounds begins to ring givu the police a short head-start on an escaping burglar, Leppert said. .. Avco· Offers Salt Creek Access Plans Avco Community Developers lnc., which reci!nUy acquired the South County holdings of the Laguna Niguel Corpora· lion, is "diligently working on a number of alternate solutions for access to the beach at Salt Creek," executive vice president Robert Follett said. "We feel we can arrive at a very '"'orkable solution which will serve the needs of the community and the developer, 11 Follett told newsmen in a press conference at Laguna Niguel. He said he could not speculate on which solution would be best until the alternatives had bff:n presented to lhe Board or Supervisors, probably this y,·eek. At the request of Avco, the supervisors agreed Wednesday to delay for one week the filing of a suit to establish the public's prescriptive right to recreational use of the l'/i·mile beach bety,·een ?.1onarch Bay and Dana Point. In a letter to the board, Follett said, "It is the view of management th at reasonable access to the beach must be provided to the public. We \vould like to dn this in conjunction with a plan ac- ceptable to the county." He said Avco is "extremely interested'' in not having a suit initiated at this time since it is the firm's opinion that acetss can be provided without involvt:ment in litigation. Accident That Killed 4 .Probed y,·hlch would ban dogs from beaches and three parks. In ht:r statement to the council, Mrs. Musfelt notes that l ,731 signatures ap- pt:ared on the referendum petition filed Sept. 19. that l,190 of th~ s_ignatwa have been verified as complying with rt- qulrements as to date, street address and precinct number, in a check with county records, and that th1s oceeds the B7l verified signatures needed to validate Ute pelitlon. The council now is required to rescind the ordinance or place it before the elec- torate. "The referendum has been an in· dication of public sentiment," Challis 1aid. "These petitioners, v.•ho love the \•illage community atmosphere and out· door life, feel their personal freedom would be violated by Ordinance 6f10. They respect th~ rights of others and concur with thr current leash lav.·s. They point out that proper curbing of dogs \viii greatly lessen the fouling of side\\•alks, though this problem was in TI'J way resolved in the ordinance." Challis said the dog owners group hopes the increased staff and ra::l io con· trolled units to be employed by the SPCA under its new agreement with the cily will greatly improve the picture. "The Mayor has asked all citizens to 'become involved' in city matters,'' said Challis. "We hope all those both ior ::.nd against Ordinance 650 will express their views before the council Wednesday night." Expressing hope that the council will agree to test the SPCA procedures before adopting a new ordinance, Challis said, "If lhe council is determined to be un':l~n­ ding over this minor issue, 1 ask the peo- ple or Laguna Buch to consider how it will respond to public opinion on the ctlm· iiig big Issues of Main Beach De\·elop- ment and similar important matlers. "The mayor has said that the duties of the City Council are first and foremost to the people of Laguna Beach, and in 1.his instance 1,190 validated registererl voters have asked that their voices be heard, joined by almost another 2,000 who ftcl leash Jaws have not been effectively en- forced." Laguna Sclwol Enrollment Up By About 10% Student enrollment in the Laguna Beach Unified School District for the 1970- 71 school year has increased by about 10 percent, accord ing to district superinten- dent Dr. William Ullom. Ullom said that the total enrollmenl in the district for October, 1969, was 3,002. The total for October, 1970, is 3,297, he said. Ullom noted that the largest increase was recorded in the adult classes enroll- ment, grD"Wlng from 141 in 1969 to 321 in 1970. Broken down by grade levels. Ullom said that enrollment in both the kinder- garten and first grade dropped by 25 and 18 pupils relJ)ectlvely. J\fost other grades recorded a slight increase in enrollment, Ullom said. Investigation ts underway in en errort to Isolate the cause or causes or this trngic Friday accident scene that clalmed the lives of fout members of a family at San Clemente. Photograph was taken a\•er the car -crushed in foreground -veered across the freew ay Into path of tru ck carrying chemicals that caught !ire. The dead were Marlne Sgt. Reynold Lopez, his wife and two of their young children. FESTIVAL OF ISSUES COMING TO LAGUNA FORUM NEXT MONTH Nina Palmer, Van King, P•g Smith, Dr. William Routt Lag1111a Festival of Issues J outs iI1 Health Survey Lagunans are Invited to participate, as individuals or in groups, in the November ,.,estival or Issues to be presented in the Festival Forum as part of the Orange County health survey now under 1vay in the city. Van King. member of the health su rvey team. describes the Festival as "essen- tially a se ries or to1vn n1eetings during which issues existing in Laguna will be brought into focus and relaled to the community's health serv ice needs." The fi ve-night presentation, Nov. ti through t>.1ov. 15. will include drama presentati ons, disc ussion among the audi- ence and with survey learn members, booth exhibils by Laguna organizations and informational dis plays. •·Jrs actually the people of Laguna tak- Ing their own survey," said Kine, "and vo1cing their own opinions on what Uie community needs. Their ideas and con· cepts will be included in the final report.'' Peg Smith, who joined the survey team as liaison witli Voluiifeer5, added, "There i:; a place in this project for everyone ·who calls Laguna home, and a wide variety of ways to participate." Volunteera are needed, ahe said, for ac- ting, writing, music, offloe help, recep- tionists for the Volunteer Post and the F'estival week, people to help with booths and stage preparations ind many more." Organization of the Festival of Issun la under way at the survey team's Volunteer Post, 775 Broadw1y, and volunteers are invited to call the Post, 4!H-&375, Or drop by to learn details. New Publication Helps Police Find Runaways II A Y W AR D, (AP) -A new biwee kly newspaper with a single aim-to return juvenile runaways to their parents-is b«oing distributed to thousands of police agencies in the United Stales, Canada and r-.tcxico. The publication is the-brainchild oL.an Albany, Calif., furniture wholesaler, George Stamper, who said he worried about the obviously homeless kids "''an- derlng the street,. •·1 din 'l start ·:! :is a mon~y-meki..ig venture." he said . department can have." "That's true." said lnapector Al Weatherman of the San Francisco Police ml<:sing persons bureau. Asked what he thought of Stamper's project, Weatherman said, "'It's a good Idea. noting that his bure?au uses the publicatlon as a check c:gA1ns( pOllce files. Stamper eventually hopes to print up to 320 photos and descriptions 1 week. Weatherman aald some 500 San Francisco youngsters are reported miss- ing each month. and up to 3,000 a month around the nation. Laguna Pick To Be Bared Wednesday? The Llfllll'• Beach City Council'• 1<Jee. tion of a new city manqer is eq)ected to be announced at lhe Council meelln& Wedn<sday night. lttayor Richard Goldber1 said Monday lhat lhe lencthY p....., of IM:retnlnl ap- plicants la virtually completed and bt hopa to be able to a-lhe namt of the new city manager Wednelday. A total ol !Os per10ns responded to the city's quest for a new manager followinl the resignation of James Wheaton, who left Lliuna in AulUll after el1ht yeut, to become city manqer of Corona, Calif. The 105 appllca.Uona were 1erttned down to 25, of whom seven appllcanll were called to Lacuna for penonal in- terviews. Each final applicant was inttrvlewed once by the council u a whole and qaln by each individual councUm1n, wllh inost of the Interviews tattng place oa weeUnds durln& the past monlh. In establi>hing crllerla for lhe poslUon, councilmen aimed for a note of unanimous approval of lhe fin•I chOlce and it Ls expected thil will have been acbleved tvhen the aelection ti an- nounced. Councilman Roy Holm, who left on v1eaUon this weet, will not be at the Wednesday council M!Slon, but hll: vote presumably bu been cut. Boys Ouh Gets Van From JC.S 'I1le Lasuna Beach 11oy1• Club bu been presented a $4,000 Ford club model van by lhe LllUJI& Beach Jayue1 ud 5cuth Cout Motora. Sieve Denton, pretldont of lhe J.,._, said the Hrvict: club Tailed the fundl to malle lhe dolllUon thrl!Ufh lhe hJihlY sucwful Dart Tournament 1t the 1m Winter P'estival and prosram II.la at tbt 1970 Fostlval of Arll. The Jaycees paid hatt of the Pu<haao price and South Coast. Moton owner O.W. Stephens paid lhe olher hatt. The Boys' Club wJll use the vehicle to transport Its mny of younptor1 to spec· · ial eventa. Back to School Night Scheduled The admlniatr1t1on and staff Of Laguna Be>::h High School wm host par<ota Thursday at 7 p.m. for Back co School Ni11ht. Don Haugh!, principal of lhe b1cJi achool, said each te1cher will explain hla own clauroom 10111 to the parenta of bl.I pupil a. The evening will bt1tn with a pneral meetln& In the auditorium and will ad- journ to the respective clusrooms on a perlod·by·perlod bail. Gas Blast Kills Man DILLON, Colo. (Uil) -One man wu killed and five olherl Injured Monday when a J>!Opane g~_upblon rippe4 rough a new ski lodge btin1 con-- structed on the west aide of COiorado'• l.oveland Paa1. One workman al the Keystone Ski Arei, sl1' mlla eut of Dillon, said the gas was detected ahortly before the ei:ploslon, wblch could be beard for miles in the mountain country. For $28.50. the parents of a missing you nl:(ster can place In the National Miss- ing Youth Locator a photograph of the child, a full description and a brief message. Lunar Cart Set The six issues pri nted have included descriptions of about 75 teen-agers. Stamper said ea ch edition of !he 1..«ator is distributed free to 2,400 police d ep a r l men ts. 2,800 probation departments, I ,!!JO prlva1e Investigators, the 50 slate police agencies and to 91 Canadian cities and 41 cities in Mexico. The front page of lhe publication says. "A good photo is th e best aid o Police Democra ts RaHy r In Laguna Beach Congrtssman George Brown 1A1lll be featurtd speaker at an "old·fashioned pr~-eltclion r.111y" 10 ha-held-at 8...p.m. Thursday 111 l..aguna Beach Democratic Club headquarter•, 1$50 South Coast Highway. All interested South Coa.st resident5 are Invited to attend the rally, said president Patrick L. Birkett, who promise! live music, eelebritlts, hors d'oeuvres and · beverages, along with dlscusslon of politics, candidates and Issues. Further lriformatlon may be obtained by calling the he1dqua11?~ 494-4208. Moon 'Rickshaw' Will Hold Roehl WASHINGTON CAP) -The Apollo 11 astronauts will ao about the moon col- lect1n1 rock samples next February much as the houstwlfe cruises a t:roctry store with her shopping cart. In fact, the space ship wlll e1rry alon& a fancy version of such a cart. l t'! been called everything from a whttlbarrow and a rickshaw to nftnles unprintable, astronaut Edgar D. ~l\tchell uld Frid1y as he. showed oU the vtti~le for the firs t lime. Mitchell 11 tut11r module pilot ror the Jauhch scheduled Jan. 31. The 1pact.n"1ft commander will be Alan B. ShepArd, Amtrica's flnt man Iii space. Stuart A. Roosa, a space rookie, wUI be comrn&M module pilot. Offlcl1lly lht cart Is a modul1r equip.. ment tran1porter. More famlli1rly, It's known u a MET, like lhe New \orlc baseball team. . It's a 1ad1eteer'1 dre•!'fl with a place for everything 1 boy scout or mOOC'I ti~ plorer needs: 1 pocket here for 1 sample collector. a latctt there for a sho,·el, a f1attntr or a map. And m0W1ted on t"P 11 a earnera. The works fold up for stor11e In the IW1ar module ascent 1tage equlpmtnt bay. The Ida ii to aave utronaull Shepard and Milchell the troobla of car- rying lhe eqvlpmtnt. Evtn the hand10 la d .. lgned .. the lltrOlllUl -·· -lo curl hla 1tovld flnltn llnlUl1d II. "A sq......mc eperaUC. (N ~" Mllchell esplalned. U.Nld the Apollo 11 .... wwkf Ilka lo brine bock IO or 70 poundl of lunar material, but wlll be happy wlll\,U UUlo u 1$, And Jlloy won 't bo Joo cboooy oa what rock• !hey plcil. "We will worl< qulckly to (el a ..,... amount Of samplea ud wm lat Ille 1arUn1 out be done on earth," Mltcbell ••Id. "It would be folly to wNtt the lln10 available to us tryln( to mu. flald d1termlnatl0ftl." The Apollo II nipt 11 p ...... ed Jo ClrTf out lhe Ame objectlva u Apollo IS, which had !o be aborltd alter an U• ploslon. The Apollo II command ship II beinl mOdilMI to avoid N<ll mllha)1I. • -...: t .) ,. . ' l ' \ Sir Michael Cary, permanent secretary at the Ministry of Public Building and Works in London, has asked his employes to cut down on the number of memos they send · out. There is much too much \\'astage, he said. Cary made his appeal in a memo. • Some 500 cadets who gathered In Trafalgar Square. London Sun· day to mark the 16.5th all,J1iversary of the Battle of Trafalgar victory had to salute empty rigging strung up to Nelson's column because someone forgot the signal flags. "It was a bloody pitt.v." said First Sea Lord Sir Peter HHl-Nor ton. • A Hollywood company is mak· ing a movie i1t /.fou11cllville, iv. Vo ., and ming local reside11ts o.s extras in tl1e ftlm. "Fool's Parade." set in the 1930s. Tl1e residenls are paid $16 a day jar tl1eir work. Ho wever. pnyone who has a 1935 model car still 111 r1111nitzg order i.t paid $30 a day for use of the automobile. ~ llfiniature cowpokes were spotlighted 12.t t/Jese unhappy winners were sel· ected in the "l ittlest Cowboy" con· test at the 26th National Jfor se Sho10 iii San F'ra11cisco Tecently, Two-year· otd Wendie McDonald of Sanoma doesn't take to being roped by a non· plussed Jan Jo11e.t, a wrangler front Pleasa11t Hill. • . ' -·,~ • U,I T1 .. itMle UAR PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT (Cl MEE TS HIGH RANKING ARMY COMMANDER S New Egypt Chi ef T•lks With Lt. Gen. Moham med Fawzi, Lt. Gen. Moh•mmtd Ah med Sadik NEW YORK (UPI) -President Nixon ,viii meet Soviet Foreign Mlni!ter Andrei A. Gromyko in Washington Thursday for discussions aimed al easing the current tensions in Soviet-Ameri can relations. SecretaDr of State William P. Rogers announced the meeting Monday night after conferring with Gromyko for two hours and 45 minutes. "This meeting. like any meeting, we hope will play a part in better understanding," Rogers said. Nixon had considered the possibility of meeting Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin at the United Nations. But Kosygin canceled his projected visit to the United Nations, reportedly because of a deterioration of Soviet-American rela· lions. The high level encounter climaxed two Af1icans Oaiin Snub by Nixon, __ W ei gl1 Bo ycott . UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - Some of the presidents and prf mie rs in· vited to President Nixon's diMer Satur· day night for the 25th anniversary of the U.N. General Assembly are talking about boycotting the White House affair. They charge that the President snubbed a delegation representing African and other nonaligned nations. meetings between Rogers and Gromyko during which some progress has been made in easing the strain which developed as a result of Egyptian-Soviet missile violations of the Middle East cease-fire arrangements. Although Rogers and Gromyko still were at a stand-off over the missile viola· lions and prospects of resuming Arab. Israeli peace contacts were dim . they ap- parently laid to rest the incipient crisis over Soviet naval construction at Cicn· fucgos harbor in Cuba. U.S. delegation officials gave this ac· count of Rogers' second meeting wiltt Gromyko at ¥.'hich, they said. the al· mosphere was better than at the first en· counter Friday night: The ~fiddle East -Rogers and Gromyko remained at loggerheads over the reported Soviet-Egyptian missile violations. No compromise s o I u t i o n emerged for "rectifying" that situation. But It seemed increasingly likely that the J\.1iddle East cease-fire v.·ould be extended on a day-to-day basis. The Soviet Union indicated that it v.·ould like Arab-Israeli talks under the auspices of U.N. mediator Gunnar V. Jarring to resume, although how this ·n1ighl take place remains unclear. Ex-Nass e1· - A ide Nam ed To Top ,Post By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Informants in Cairo say President Anwar Sadat has chosen 70-year-old Mahmoud Fawzi, for 18 years one <lf President Gama! Abdel Nas~er's chief advisers on foreign affairs. to be Egypt's ne\v prime minister. Fawzi entered EgYPl's consular service In 1926 and served in a succession of con· sular and ambassadorial posts under the monarchy. Six months after t h e overthrow of King Farouk in 1952, he "'as named foreign minister and held the post until 1964, when Nasser made him deputy prime minister for foreign affairs. In 1967, he became NasSer's assistant for foreign affairs. a post created for him. Las April he met with President Nixon as Nasser's personal representative to discuss U.S. efforts to achieve peace in the ~1iddle East. The, semiofficial newspaper Al Ahram said ~tonday that Sadat had chosen a ''prominent personality who enjoys great respect on national and international levels." The newspaper did not say that Fawzi was Sadat's choice. but today it prominently disp layed an article review· ing his career. Al Ahram said the new prime ministe r will ''have the authority as provided for in the constitution." This was interpreted to mean that Fawii will choose the members of his Cabinet, a freedom con· sistent with Sadat's pledge to spread authority to other members of hls government. Searc;la Intensified Canad~ Kidnap Victim Bur.ied1 MONTREAL (UPI) -Canada today buries its martyr in the cause of Cana· dlan unity, Pierre Laporte, while the search intensified for his killer, and th e kldnapers of British diplomat Jame,; L. Cross. Canadian political figures, including Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and op- position leaders from Ottawa, were join· ing LaPorte's family In paying fin a I respects to the Quebec labor minister murdered Saturday, one wtek sfler his abduction by the Quebec Liberation Front {FLQ). Conservative leader Robert Stantield t.tonday eulog ized Laporte as "a n\artyr in the eyes of all democratically minded Canadians." At the request of Laporte's wife, Fran-- coise, the simple funeral at Notre Dame Cathedral in ifontreal was to be private. Extraordinary security, including the 4,000 federal troops mpbilized Thursday by Trudeau, were poised for possible FLQ trouble. iteanv,.hile, 9,000 po 1 i ce from throughout Quebec pressed their ~earch far three men wanted as suspects in the kidnapings of Cross and Laporte. Since Trudeau Friday decreed emerg~ncy war powers broadening police poWers and suspending some Ca'nadian civil rights. authorities have seized without charges 341 suspected FLQ leaders and sym· pathizers in 1,627 raids throughout Quebec. They have failed to find the kidnapers or Cross, who was abducted from his suburban Montreal home Oct. 5 by amied members of the FLQ. Apparently he still is alive, for he sent a communique to police Sunday begging them to call otf their search and accede to FLQ demands. The Canadian government "'·ailed for word from the FLQ to its standing offer for safe passage to Cuba for the kid· napers. If the abductors agree, thi:y would bring Cross to the Concordia bridge over the St. Lawrence Ri ver nt the site of Expo '67, ~tontreal's world's fairgrounds. There the lcidnapers would tum Cross over to the Cuban consul, hop into a wait· ing helicopter for the short ride to ?tioir Nightc lub Star Pia zza Marries ltfEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP) -Opera and nightclub star ~1arguerite Piazza of Memphis will marry San Francisco ex- ecutive F. H. "Harry" Bergtholdt on Nov. 8. The marriage will be the second for the singer. \\'ho is the widow of millionaire \Villiam J. Condon of the Conwood Corp. Bergtholdt ls president of Distribution Systems, Inc. An announcement ~fonday said ltfiss Piazza. who qvercame Jeng thy hospitalization for cancer, will be mar· ried two days after she is to be installed as 1971 national chairman of the American Cancer Society. treat International Airport, then aboarC a oneway flight to Havana. Cross woult be released \\'hen the kldnapers ·arrivct in Cuba. Buf the FLQ has ignored the offe1 made Saturday night by Quebec Yrcmic1 Robert Bourassa at about. the same tim• police discovered the bloody body ol Laporte stashed in the trunk of the au\< in which he had been kidnaped. The FLQ has demanded release of l3 political prisoners and $500,000 gold in ransom fo1 cross. Trudeau and Bourassa were men deei> ly. grieved op. the day <lf Laporte '! funeral. Both Jead~s were close personal friends of Laporte, as well as being hi.! political colleague. Jt was Trudeau and Bourassa who ha~ to make the wrenching decision not le trade the lives of Cross and Laporte fo1 the kidnapers' demands, a decision 'llade despite a dramatic appeal by Laporte a! a personal friend. The government acceded to his wife't wishes to avoid a state funeral and kee~ the services private. Vietnam War Lull Brokert By, Fighting SAIGON (UPI ) -Haavy fighling 8G miles from Saigon broke a lull or nearly a "·eek in action involving American forces in Vietnam. military spokesmen said to- day. Two Gis were killed and six wound· ed. Communiques from Phnom Penh said Cambodian troops wit h air support today broke up what senior Cambodian officers said was a major drive by two North Vietnamese regiments on Phnom Penh from the south. The Cambodians cap- tured a North Vietnamese battaliOn com· mander in the fighting. "We have forced them out of their base area and have d~troyed their plans." said Lt. Col. Prak J\le!JB. commander of the 60th Cambodian battalion. ~1eng's unit iecr a IO-battalion force ol some 6,000 men pushing south from the capital along highway 2, Cambodian of. ficers said 16 other North'lVietnamese of· ficers were captured along with the bat· talion commander and a number of north Vietnamese were kiDed and wounded. The U.S. Command said a unit of the 3rd brigade of the 1st Air Cavalry Dtvision came under small arms and rocket grenade attack Mooday night from Communist troops in a bunker complex 22 miles north-northeast of Ham Tan, cap ital of Binh Tuy Province. Artillery fire and AC119 Shadow fixed \\'ing gunships joined the fighting v.·hich lasted t"·o hours. ThT Americans were unable to determine Communist losses. It was the first major fighting involving American units in Vietnam in nearly a week. lolost littlt girls fh1d playing with girls satisfying but f.faria Vargas, 2, is an exceplio11. flere she plays witli "Baby," her six-foot cincuate s11oke. A lot of lier mole co11tempories ilt l\lexico Cit111oould probably shy away from her family's pet. President Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia heads the delegation, which is touring major Western capitals trying to get sup- port for Black Africa's campaign against the white minority governments in southern Africa. The other members or the mission are the foreign ministers of Algeria, Cameroon, Kenya and ~1ali. The faur·power talks on Berlin -the two foreign ministers cleared up a misunderstanding over the Soviet position at these talks. scheduled to meet again in November. While the nature of the misunderstanding was not specified, U.S. officials told newsmen they looked forv.'ard with new hope to the discussions on improving the Berlin situation. l\'I ysterious P lague J(ills Hawaii Trees l(u11 stler Urges Students' Allied troops in \'ietnam 1--fonday reported killing 31 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong in fighting near the U.S. Green Beret camp at Thuong Due, 24 miles southwest of Da Nang. • A plea to help prevent boozy birds from breaking windows and commiting suicide has been issued by Dan Andrews, \Vashington State University Extension Service pout. try expert at Pullman, Wash. Birds throughout the slate have gotten tipsy from eating fermenting mountain ash berries. Andre"'S said. He a sked the public to clo~e the blinds to protect th e birds and windows the birds might not see in their tipsy state. Kaunda told a nev.•s conference at U.N. headquarters that before he left Africa, he ¥.'as told Nixon would meet the mission in 'Vashington on Oct. 20. But when he got to Rome, he said , he was 1old Nixon had changed the appointment to 9 a.m. Oct. 19, even though the Amer· ican President "knew very well'' Kaunda was speaking to the General Assembly that morning. •IONOLULU (AP) -Hawaii's unique koa and ohia trees are dying, and a baf· fled forester fears the killer may be an alien insect or disease "that found a ripe climate." The n1enaced forests. found nowhere else in the world, cover 600,000 acres on l·lawaii Island, the la rgest in the eight·island chain. Help for l(ent Arrestees Placentia Girl Dies A &-year-old Placentia girl .,i,·ho ran into the street to an ice cream truck died hfonday at St. Jude Hospital in Fullerton. "I suppose he did not want to see our ugl }". faces," Kaund¥-told a_ meeting of Asian and African delegates Mondiy. "In some places the trees are dying so quickly the leaves didn't have time to fall." says the forester, Robert E. ~elson, directo. £ lhe ln:stitute of Pacific Islands Forestry. KENT, Ohio CAP) -Greeting 1.000 ap- plauding students with a clenched fist above his head. attorney 'Villiam Kunsller has urged them to band together to help 25 persons indicted in ci>nneclion with violence al Kent State University, Kunstler told the off.campus gathering h1onday night that lie intends to coordinate a common defense for as many o e w wiStl IL They were 1n. U.S. Wea th er Picture Mixed dieted seer Uy in the deaths of four students and the wounding of nine others May 4 in a confrontation with Ohio Na· tional Guard3men. Four persons, lncludtng Kent student body President Craig Morgan and an associate professor, were served with iJl. dictments Monday. R ain, Fro st and Indian Summer All R eported Kunstler, a defense attorney in the Chicago seven riot trial, told the gather· ing Monday night. "The law is utilized by those in power t.o force those not in power c.nrornla """" •ire kTYllt• lol.lltl<ltri C•lllotfll• 111.1,, _,, mo1!· fY MIMV todev •1111 hrw 'i-~ """' cot'111 ll'IOlllll1"11 fotftlll, fet li lt nl•h' •'1d """ mornlfl• "91/ri. TMYlllottlllltK In Ln Antlle1 _,, ....... lfl !hi low 1DI Wiii\ lhl OY"• nltllr low n,...;tW lo ~ •1. Tfle A.Ir Poll1tllo'I Con•rol Donriel ..-.clkfld liel'it IVI INl!tlion ltl 11\t bt•lfl. lt1M1fl .,.., ........ (loudy 1'1 '"' "'°"''"" wltll I 111rv 111n bu•nln1 ,,,_,. In the tlllnlGtll '-ti. Hl,~1 , ........ ""'' .. wllll• ,,,. ........... "· Tfll "*"ltt lfl) Wirt IU""1' Wlftl llltl\1 "' "" .... llOI. t. ... -· foft-, ... "'"' Jl. Tti. ._._ ..,.. 11rth• <lout°'I' lfl ltlt 11-r 1Jeov1tlaro1 Wfl1" It -· IUMV tllCI Mrtl'I II'! !tit iowl' ........ Tiii -• °""'" r1.....i In I~ JOI "'11'11.. W..11! !Pit•""""'• tt '""-• lllft'lllons -· Ir! IN llOI, Coolidtt. At\r., llM t"" nallofl'1 "'"' Of "· Olfltr llJtlll MeMt., tnd '9ttc.111 fN•l-1 fodev tMkldMlr ltntt Monlct ......_ ~ lttCll t). 7t, IVf"Oeflk 1.J.71, Ml. Wll1on f1...0, ~11""4M19 11o1J, It~'" 11•~. P1!m lll'1fll"f ..... l11(1r1li.ld 1'·11. '-" DI ........ trod lotflfl '6rtll•t '' "· THE BEST R••4•nlilp pollt prov• "P11• rivh" It •110 •f tho world'1 mo1t P•P•lor "''"Jc •ftlp1. Ro14 It 4tily ht tl!o DAILY PILOT, ' '•tllV (ICUdV tNIY, Lltol'lf V•tllbll wlfloO riltl\I •fld merl\lllt Mura 11«-.0 lf141 ,..,t to _,111wnt t 10 It kl'IOt• lfl •Ill"-lodtV ~ WtOnRdtr, Hltll 1001'1 15. CN"tt l1n1-tf\lfft tt f!M fr-fO .. ~- lll!lllCI torl'IH••l11rt1 rtnM from '' "~. Wlltt" fwnNttlllte Q , SMN, M_,.. Title• WIO,.llOA'I' flr1! 111ti. a:lt•.m, .J.1 !lllttl 10w '' M 1.m. J 6 )i(Olld fltl1~ l~•p.m. 4,S J«'Ol'ld tow lltOOP.l!I, O.• S1111 11:1-1·01 • "'' s.i,. •:n '·"'· "'-Al-!Orff •.111. kit 1!11 •. ..,, V .S. 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He charged that Christ was crucilied, Socrates was banished to jail and millions cf Jews v.·ere condemned to death on legal orders. Chl<t to $1 5J Cll\CIMelf 11 5G Morgan. 20, or the Columbus Suburb of Upper Arlington1 was arrested at student government offices by a Portage County • 1 sheriff's detective and later released on "' Ottwt• ,, :If De-. Mol~ •1 46 C.•roll " 4f Ftltl;lolnl<S 11 J Fort Wort!'I '' •I "'"'"" ,. 4t Hlltnt 5t 17 1+ono111111 .. 1• Ktrit81 CllV U 44 l•• v"''' n JJ LM Anllltl " f1 Sl,000 bond. He was charged with aeconcl· degree riot. Dr. Thomas S. Lough, 42, an associate profesoor of 90Ck>logy and anthropology, surrendered voluntarily and was released on $$,000 bond. He was charged with one count of inciting to riot May 4. Miami IJ 11 .Ol Two others indicted -Richard Felber. 21. oC Akron and Jerry H. Rupe , 22. of Ravtnna -wtre already in jail on drug charges. Ml-•POllt .:i '1 MfW 0.1N'" 7t ~· N-Yorio IJ •J North ,L.t,,. $f ., OtkL.t11<1 ~ .S. AS Felber. a former Kenl student, v.·as charged with llrst...degrec riot, attemptio; Okl•l'>Om• Crty '6 •S ~,,. S'f ,, "'"° Aobl11 17 o10 ,,.,,.,.,~ .. '' PllbD\lrtlt 11 4 PortllftCI 11 ).1 .11 Offi cial Tours Line lt•itlcl CllV U 11 lttd tluff ,. $,) _,, It-•• "' k(l1me11!0 )J Jll .OJ DF;TROIT <AP} -Nlcolae Ceausescu. president of Romania, and his wile tour a major automobile assembly line today, a :~~ ford hfotor Co. spokesman said. They -0> \viii see the assembly line and sttel opera· tlons at Ford's RJ''tr Rouge plant. 1111 ltkl CflY 11 •S Sfil'I 01-•• AJ Stfl l'rtnclKO St ).' SNUlt $6 J1 llllr>li•n1 $f ... s Tl'll"mll ·ft ., Wt.rlillflOl'I 11 SI to burn a campus ROTC building, strik· ing a fireman and interfering with a fireman at a fire . He has been sentenced to 20 to 40 years in prison on three count.,: of selling haliucinogeos. . The Orange County Coroner's Office said Michelle L. Reyes was struck Satur• day as she ran into the path of a car In front or her home. The driver \Vas not beld. l.1111 T11t111t1t CHICAGO SE VEN LAWYER WILLIAM KUNSTLER He Said In a Rally Th•t Indictments Art Not Valid I ( 17 17 .. San Cle111en1e • Toda '• Fln•I Capistl'ano • EDITION ·, N.Y •. Stoekll - VOL 63, N.O. 25 1", 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORAN&E COUNTY, CAllFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOJER 20, 1970 TEN CENTS Salt ·Creek Beach Offers Under . Consideration Orange County officials today are ccn- 1lderin& a.n offer of two access rout.es and the purchue rights to the beach at Salt Oeek. The· offer was made at the Boartj of Supervisors meeting today . by represen- tatives of AVCO CommUhi.ty Developers Inc., new otmen of Laguna Niguel. The plan, presented by B a r r y McComic, ACDI counsel, encompasses donation and sale of 30 acres of land for parklllg, -llld beach aru. Tbe J>lan..111bl!ll\k<! today ~pdea the followtnc polnta: -Donalioo by ACDI of land for two ... cess. routes to the beach. -Donation of · the enpnemng aDil grading of one M:ces& route by ACD[. --Conveyance to the county of the AC. DJ interest in 11.4 acres of beach, IObject to a deed of truat beld by ~al i.lfe lnallranct C...J>llll'. • •• Ie Ill -sale to tbe ccanty, at fair martret value ol 11.5 ICl"tl of J~ fOf two PHkin&' Iota. Tbe value -.Id be eatabltabed by .. independOnt appniler. After listening to McComic'1. ~ talion, supervilofl voted '1o consider the matter in their Nov. 17 meet&na. Supervisor David Baker requemd tbe heads of the county's road, englnetrlng, purchasing, planning, barbor liJcl legal departmenta to lludy the offer. ur Brennan McClellan Dl t.aiuna Beach, a spokesman of the ciUzens group working to uve Salt Creek for the public, said he wi.s ~ety plUsed with the AVCO Offer • ''This is the finesl expression oC a eo:r· porat.ioJ\. to the solution of a problem I hive lff.D yet," he told supervlsots. "'Ibis Olrer is as good or superior to the plan propoaed by the COWlly." The county plan he referred to involves a legal suit oo tbe lfOWlds of preacrlptlve er rights which would force the -Lacuna Niguel developers to maintain the public beach on the grounds that trhas always been used aa a public beach. There was no immediate estimate on total eosl ol the offer to the county but Robert L. FoUe!l, vice president of ACDI, said the county coud apend about $M2,000 for the 11:4 ·acres of beach held in trust by. Prudential. "The county will receive three acres ol am access at no cost and 16.S acres of park· Ing at fa ir market value," he said. Follett also said the company is willing · lG put In interim access to the beach within 90 days, The interim access would be temporary until permanent, facilities could be completed within about 24 months. According to the ACDI plan. one acces.!I r~te.1wlll run through the center of the (Set SALT CREEK, Pase Z) 3 Incidents President :Will Visit Air Site · Studied l Of Vicious Oemente President Nilon will be staying al the San Clemente Western White House for an undisclosed peMod beginning Oct. 29, the DAILY PlLOT learned today and may spend election night he.re. Political observers are ca1culating to- day that the President's stay will be part or his present campaign swing, probably in an effort to bolster the sagging re-elec· lion campaign of Senator G¢0rge Murpby (R.Calif.). Additional speculation on Ni.J:on cam- PalP r.ie circulaled today when Victor C. Andrews of Laguna Beach, one of Nix- on 's t.op aides in California, called a press conference. Andrews. a resident of Emerald Bay and the President's ambassador to Expo '10 in Japan, set the meeting with the prtss for Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Civic Center courthouse 'complex in Santa Ana. The subject ef the confe rence wasn't announced. The Presidentia1 visit, expected t.& resemble campaign swings through other states in recent weeks, will come a day later than originally expected. There had been strong speculation that the chief executive would arrive in time for ceremonies involving the first-day tssut of four new ecology stamps in San Clemente. That function will take place at the Western White House on Oct. 28, a day before Nixon's expeeted arriva1. Laguna Students Vie for FieUJ. Service Study Two Laguna Beach H.igh School juniors haveDeen named semi:fffiilists for the J971 American Field Service Amcrii.:ans Abroad program. Successful candidates, who now must wait until spring to find out if they can be placed in homes overseas, are Karen Cutkomp, 16, daughter of Mr. ,and Mrs. Thomas L. Cotkomp, 30 South Portola, in Three Arch Bay of South Laguna, and Linda Johnson, 16. daughter of Pitr. and Mq;. Jrvlng H. Johnson, 620 Mystic Way, ·Latuna Beach. Both honor students and member! of the California Scholarship Ft'deration, Linda and Karen have applied for the year study programs which would place them with a family abroad where they would attend school in tht language o( the assigried country. Applicants go through an intensiv!!I acreening and interviewing process with the local AFS chapter before they are recommended as semi·finalists to AFS headquarters in New York. After further screening in New York, flnalisu! are notified in March ti they are eligible to go abroad. An attempt Is made to match them with overseas families who have offered to accept an American 1tu- dent, and those successfully placed are notified in 1UJnmer or (helr destination. Karen CUtcom.p was selected by La~na Beach lifeguards this year a1 thmf-Mils Lifeguard In the annuJI July -4 buuty contest.. md later appeartd in a telivtsion spot ror the Amf.lican Caoctt Society. An enthusia.st.ic volleyblll player, ahe has won a number of tro~ies in local mntW and also is a stbool tone leader. Unda Johnson has been ttcretary of the high school AFS club, a member or Girls' Athletic Association and Qoral ReAlllm, llld plays ~ and aultar. Supervisors Set Capo Area Hearing By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot-.o.wr .......... ~•nee County sup!l'Viaon are .tu. dying the acquisition o[ 1,500 attes in the capistrano area. for a ce.,nty airport u part of recommendations IUbmttted to- day In Phase Il al the Air Tnnaportatioa Master Plan. The recorn.nw!ftdation wu one of several given In 1 4QO..page atudy of u- lating air facilities IUbm.itted to supervisors by Stan W al s h , project ~acer for tht _Ralph E. PIU'IOOI eam- Jlll'Y· A pUbli<-.,.,. tbt rep1 -Ill' fu' ·New. 17. . , The -Pa 1 nport .-...... 1e'*'1 rtcmtin1 l 1 I : J • • ~ ,. ' -Tbal·Orus• c...., lel:I •• ~ ... •, . l Fundl .. No J»rofJte.n Beachfront'Parking Lots • Def ended by Ex-Mayor Former Laguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder, who on April 19, 196'1, presented the first formal proposal for city •c· quisition of the Main Beach under a lease-purchase arrangement with a non· profit corporation, this week questioned recent statements regarding fw>ding of the beachfronl Asked for his views on various pro- posa1s that would involve r a z i n g beachfront buildings to make way for parking lots, Vedfjer said be does not believe the money problem is as.grave as some have indicated. "'There have bee n statemeats made about the cost and funding of the Main Beach whiCh are con r using and may come because of lack of In· formation," said Vedder, "Certainly this Main Beach property requires careful at· tention in all aspects of costs, planning and development, but preciptous actioo must not be taken that will laler be regretted." Citing statements maintaining that cer- tain Matn~Beacb-properties have-not been bringing in enough lease revenue to cover the city's tax bills on them, Vedder refer· red to the city's Financial and Statistical Report for the Fiscal Year ending June 30. 1970. purchased the Main Bea Ch." Vedder noted that-reduction of rental nvenue by park devek>pment will have to be replaced, and that Festival funds may be at a maximum. but bed. tar revenue probably will increase. "Cash reserve carry.over is diminishing," he said, ''but the need and desirability of a revenue producing facili- ty on a portion O,f the Main Beach should be studied in de'pth before action is tak- en ." Vedder reiterated his earlier view that a phase development over a 10 to 12 year period should be undertaken, to avoid "pre<:ij>itous and poorly a n a I y z e d decisioos." Available revenue for payment on the beach bonds in 1970, he said, included $74,389 from the Festival of Arts, $124,2.88 from the bed tax and sat,652 from beach rents and parking for a total of $281,270. The sum of $129,948 was transferred in- to the beach front fund, he said~ and this showed a cash reterve of '2'1,2'70 as of ·June 1'10, while the combined Festival· bed tu fund reserve amounted to $3'1,181. ln addition to contributing to payment of the beach bonds, Vedder noted, the Festival·bed tax funds alto provided $27,000 for cultural support, $42,000 for commUnlty promotion. $21 ,'100 for capital improvements and $44,000 for the general fllnd. ttrouah·zoning ordinances to Protect one or the existing military facilities from en· Cl'OIC~ development -That .the county acquire land for aootller jetport In a· Ida, ckvtloped ar•a a&llla--. "PVlonl:' report said three jet-capable airporta will be needed within the·nelt 20 years' to handle the count)"a short haul air ' 1ramport needs. Short h a u l a..,.._ 11 lllat -,., .. '"1 wiu.. ldil ta:nile na4iu. ' ( 'A l • 'M!.e ttudy identified three type! of air faciliUes. The abort haul, jtl capable facility they labeled a jetport. Also identified was a general aviation facility for use by prival.t pilots flying nonjet planes. The third facility briefly cov~ed in the report was a short take off and landing (STOL) fGr, use by commuter heJicopter 1trvlces. ·in a study ol esisting air facilities, both civilian and military, the Persons Com- pany. recommended that Orange County Airport be maintained as the county'• prinClpal ·general aviation airport. They alao suggested that jets continue to use the facility limited by three fac- tors: • . • -"The analysis of the results of s 12 to l&-month prototype noiae monitoring pro- gram now in progress. -"The adoption of proposed state or federal noise standards or community noise levels. "-The negoti~tjons of 1 ease agreements with iftiines. stipulating the oomber of jet aircraft departures and hours of operation." The El Toro Marine Air Station was Identified as being "a p r om is Inc all.tmative" for the county's second jet capable airport. "'M!e cjvil joint use of this military air facility would not be open to all air traf- fic, but as a joint use facility It could ac- cept limited, well dlsCiplined scheduled airline operation. No general 1vi1tion fllghts would be permitted," the report stale11. In their study of El Toro the consulting flrm e1Umated the cost or providing a civil air terminal, new aprons, taxiways and accesaes to be $2.7~ million for the inlUal phaae. At Loi Alamitos the Parsons Co. found (See AIRPORT, Pase 2) j , Ul':IT•! ....... KILLED IN PASO ROBLES .. Shtlly B•rnts, 4 Laguna Planners Asks lrvi1re City Com1nent Right Laguna Beach Planµing Commisslone!'1 voiced no objection to incorporation plans of the ·City of Irvine Monday night as long as their voice remains in future planning. On recommendation of City Planner Al Autry, the commission forwarded the· review 'to the City Council with four sug- gestions. Staling it wants to know what ls.1oing to happen and when, the commission will Mk ~al Agency Formation Commission to consider a more logical southern boun- dary such as an arterial and recognize the Laguna Beach area of inHuence and right to comment on further aMe.Xatioo oceanward of the southern boundary. Plariners also ask that portions of Irvine within this zone of lnfluence be rer~rTed tO La~ for coni~t Prior to development, and that Irvine retain routing or the Pacllc Coast and Laguna Canyon fretway1. l "It shows clearly," he said, "that revenue from the beach rentals amoun~ to $89,366 during the year and that taxes for the whoJe thing amount to $21,770. Bringing this up to '39.111 by adding maintenance and adminjst.rative costs, the lease revenue still more than covered the cost." Only one small parcel, Vedder sa)'ll, returned less than its property tax. This property """11ed !e(lO llld had a tu bill of $95.1, or a deficit of '353, be said. Play.house Gets _Boost "One questions the wisdom of ex-· pending several thousands of dollan t• develop parking on this property lt Theater Given Con:triubutions to Keep Show on Road remove the Ion of "c•," said the ftlrmer By BARBARA KREIBICH -Of .... DlllY 'lllf Miff Mayor. "Certatnly It would be ·better to do some landscaping on this property Tl:ie gloomy financial acene at the than to put automobiles on it. It ts pro-Laguna Moulton Playboale took on a bably that parking spaces 00 the beach brighter hue today as two aupporten will be used largely by the one.cfay beach came forward Wilh funds to help keep·the visitor. This use is or litUe ecooomic ahow on the road. benefit to the city." Betsy Role, vlco prealdent of tbe Delving further into Main ,Beach fun-Player•' board, announctid thal Miu ding as revealed in the 1970 financial Margaret Swope, lontf.lmf: LAcuna resi- report, Vedder said that the annual prin-dent and former board member, hu. c.ipal plus interest payment on tbt beach elven the playhoule ua molt pntr(!US· bond!" lies between $220,112 t nd 1215.182.-loan of IUlll wbic:h will help pay the which wa• enllttly paid from·FeotiHI of-hup 11111.f<r °""""w .....S "4111Poltl1t.'' Arts, bed tu llld beach ""ta! revenue. M.ttchin( !QM 8-'• contribution ii "No tu monies paid "'' by Laruna a 11.iitlO cbecl fnllll boird member Kul Beach property owners """ llltd to pay Slmonooa llld Mn. -wllicb, iald for the beach," stld v~. "and ~~ Mrs. Role, "wUI help "' meet"'~ payroll figures indicate that the9e {{!venue IOUrc-and enable ua to start paying olf our ts can purchase the Main Be1eb ir .main-creditors, who •re belns YVJ' fYID-- tained, without recourse. to tu momey." peithet.ic." "This w11 the policy adopted llld uoed The board of directors of the play- by p<'tYioUs admlnlatratlona t b a t toe!: over 11111111ernent of the theater dlil ,, . week after terminating moat of its paid staff for economy rea10os. Al'l'Klftl thost leavlng the ttaff were ge{teral manager Jack Seymour, ado mlnistrative asaistant Jim Duncan, technical direciOr Jim Stewart and stage rpanager Steve Fox. Mrs. Rote said Stewart already had· planned to leave the playbou!e to return tp New York and l'o• Ifft to "' bjlck le> school. · '·'Thiy're both vf!ryUJtnted and non-'· ly wloli we could afford to kl<P the JI\," •he ••id. Two other stalf m!mbers, costume desip Bill Barbe and aeamatrea· Barbm Delts,.Mft the pl~ Oct. II. l\ln. Rooe said tbe ptayholue w11· ol:lilt<I to Install completely' new llOUlld equipment after the !healer w a ' borglariaed durlqi 111< nm 61 "Oliver!"' riot almply replacing stbl"' • llemo, but uperadin& tbe enUra oystem wbldl llad ·' ' been proven Inadequate for the theater. Imurance.covered only part of the cost, ohe said. The sound equipment bill will be paid from the check handed over l)y Miss• Swope •. former wif' Of ' Laguna . artist Roger Armstrong and onetime' HODywood' Him pla)'tr,•wflo bas been a Playhodle devotee. for tnfiny ye,:rs. , · 1'ht SimoMM donation, • Mrs. RoSe sa,ld. will cov~r lM: 'theal.tr payroll, which c!ootimM!I \anUI Oct. 31, llld will ho distributed amdng creditors' who have been notified of the pa)'ll1enl pl~n. "NOling thil thi: pflyhOlllO still OW .. 127,000 on a bank 1,.n In 'addltlor: to Its many bills, Mrs. Role .. kl. ~1we hope these · two ceoerous g~turti w)ll tr>- courage ' other frlendl to bclp the fitaytioaat_ ff not with 'money, at least as voluntttrs. 'l;hls LI a vtry large lheater to take care of Jnd ~e'1 Iota of work to be done." DeathFound From Wlre Services SANT A CRUZ -Nine persons were murdered in 'Central California in a triangle of viciousness that peaked · with the execullon·style slayings of a wealthy eye doctor, his wire, two children and his secretary. Firemen answering a call to a blazing m~nsion on a hilltop overlooking tne Pacific Monday night found' the five bodies in a iWimming pool linted with their 'bfood . The ·Victims were Dr. Victor M. Ohta, 45, an ophthalmologist: his wife, Virginia, -43; their aons, Derrick, 12, and Taggan, 11; and the pbysiciah's .:;ecrelary, Doro- ttly Cadwallader, 38. All hal:I been bound with red bandanas and shot before being hurled into the pOol. Its deck was spattered with blood. Some have described Dr. Ohta as a "ric h hippie" because of his medical help ad- ministered to the nomads. Another· multiple killing was J!lder in- vestigation near Paso Robles, about 120 miles south of the scene of the swimming pool ' murders. Three persons beat and stabbed a man and wife to death and abducted and murdered their four-year-old daughter. The Paso Robles victims were . Ropald Barnes, 27 ; his wife, Betty, 2S; and daughter. Shelly, 4. The wife 's body was round with multi· pie chest stab wounds in the home. The body of the husband was disc?vered several hours later in a car trunk. He had been bludgeoned to death. The litUe g!rl's (See MURDERS, Page Z) Laguna Teachers Backing Riles Teachers In the Laguna Beach Unified School District have announced en. dorsement of Wilson Riles . ror State Superintendent of Public Instruction by the executive council or the Laguna Beac h U n i f t e d Faculty Association (LABUFA). A statement Issued by .the board said, ''The councG felt that Dr, Riles is the best.qualified candidate to promote quali- ty educaUon for California public .school children and thererore fchoed the official endorsement or our mother organization, the California Teachers AMociation, Southern Section. Oruge Cea1& The rainy season may start to- nisht, the weatherman warns, bringing a cooling trend to -the coast Wednesday. Te,nperat.ures should 'gravitate between 65 and 70 .. INSmE TODAY Suck i£ in, gala: according to L. 'M. Bbj/d, fa' womtn out.- number fat men seven to on1. Set Chtcki11g Up, Page B. I • I ' »M " " ' ,; 1 .. 11 " .. " MvlWtl ,..... ,, .... ,.... Mn's w °"''" c_.., t '""" , .. ,. •tw• .. ,. ... '"" TtS..ltlM i. -" *-• ...... ·-" .,._., N-l>lt., --.. • l ----:::-::::~t:::::::::wc=:-::--::---:::--:---;.~.-:.-:_:-:;,..-:------------------------:--.--.,----.,---~~--·.----~·-~-.-... 2 OAll V PILOT SC TUHd,y, Ottobtr 20, 1970 Art for ~.splial-1-~ L L~guna Artists Propo~e, 'Gallery by Sea' By 8AR8,\RA DUARTE 01 ... o.tlf P'lltt s1111 Two Laguna Beach artists offered to trede the city art for asphalt fttonday bight. SLrongly opposing a Planning Com· mission proposal tG construct a .. garage bv the sea " along El Paseo, landscape af.chitect a'nd artist Richard Bigler of- fered his professional knowhow to create "Laguna's Gallery by the Sea" instead. The presentation was made in reply to the commission's proposal to rate a cluster of beach houses along El Paseo to make way for a parking loL With the assistance of artist Paul Blaine Henrie who also operates a• art studio in the city-owned beachlront com· plex;-Bigier painted a picture of a ''gaily- lit, old fashioned mall" as an att~mpt to show an upgraded downtown section and give art a shot in the arm. .. We stand at a crQSSroads downOOwn,'' Biiler declared. ''When you destroy four businesses, the loss spreads to other business." Bigler's plan is to preserve six struc- tures in a tree-shaded m.aU bet'l\'een the From Pagel MURDERS ... body was found in a canal. Sheriff's deputies said they are holding John Archa, 26 of Fresno and his two teenaged brothers, Donnie, 14; and Ken- 11.Y· 13; on suspicion or the killings. At Saratoga, 1% miles north of Soquet \\'here the physician and four others were murdered. a l!l-year-old gasoline station altendant was found slain by a bullet \\'ound in the head. His hands bad been tied behind his back in the manner of the slayings at the $300,000 Ohta mansion. He was identified as Thomas S. Dececco. Santa Cruz County detective Bud Mur· ray said the Ohta mansion victims were apparently shot to death about 8 p.m. i\1onday. The killers bad made several at· tempts to start a fire before sueci!ssfully touching off a rQ.~ing blaze in the house 100 miles south of San Francisco. One of the family's three cars, a 1968 Oldsmobile station wagon, was missing. Firemen who went to the Ohta pool for water found the bodies bound with scarves -Miss Cadwallader's floating on the surface, the others at the bottom of the Olympic-sized pool, its water stained pink and its tiles slippery with their blood. Each had been bound and then shot in the back or the bead, Dr. Ohta twice. Douglas James, Sanla Cruz County Sheriff, called the slayings "the most gruesome crime in county history." Police are still uncertain ot a motive, or whether srawled words or other in- dications of the killers' mental state might t,e_fo_und,, as were found after the slaying or actress Sharon Tate and four others near Los Angeles in 1969. Det. Murray described Ohta , a Japanese-American Alr Force veteran educated at Northwestern University, as a "very nice person, a tremendous doc- tor." His practice was in Santa Cruz. A socialite, he was described by another pbysician as the epitome or suc-1 cess. Laguna Moulton Theater Blll·gled The Laguna Moulton P l a y h o u s e , already having financial problems, was another $50 poorer today. Police reported $50 in cash was taken from the box office area of the theater some time last Friday night. Officers said the money wu takeli from a cash drawer "''hich usually is kept Jocked, hut apparenUy had been opened with a key. DAILY PILOT N..,.n lex• H ......... .._. L9p1111 leod1 ........ ..., C•• Mn• S..C......._ , Oll:ANGE COAST l'Ull!SHING COMl'AMY Robt rt N. Wtt4 Prtskl911t ., .. PuMi.Mr J•t• R. <:url1v Vici Pre~.0-..1 fr.d Otn1r.1 Mlnttll' Thom•• K11Yil Edilor 7hom11 A. Murp\in• M_,,IDlt!t EO•tor ~;,f,.rd P. Nill ""1~ OrltlfO Cvunl r Editor Off1- Go!f9 ,,..,..~ llO WHI tty S!r•I "l'WJIOfl IUdl: ml WM! 11-1 lloultVfrd • L'OUN IMOI! 2tt tttAll ........ ..,. t4111'1tillf!Vn !IHcPI: 11111 leacfrl eeui.v•r• Jtn Cltm'"I" ~ Nor111 El. C..ml119 Awl r/ El Paseo J>ll:lllD& IOI 1nd the bulldlng . bousln& a sandwieb shop ond clothln1 stores. Citing a "far great.er return'' to the cl· ty than a parking developmen t, Bigler said tenants would be willing to upgrade their studios and pay additional rent as well. With $14,000 a year in rental money, rental of booth space in the mall for artist exhibits, and donation of his ~rvices at no cost, Bigler ~ an SIS.llOO return per year on the mall as opposed to a cost of $20,000 to construct a parking lot. ''This particular beach is one of the most desirable in the stati," he added. ··vou have an opportunity to begin in- vestment now and use the revenue I or other park-beach improvements." "Artists in Laguna Beach are star.v· ing," Henrie told the cOmmission. "I am appalled at a plan to raze bulldings when there is a way to put Laguna Beach back on the map .as an artist colony.'' "You wou1d do the greatest injustice you have ever done by putting half-empty macadam in place of something really charming." Henrie added be has invested $25,000 in Jmprovemenll at his gallery on El ·Paaeo knowlq his 1..,. could be terminated. He removed an orange juice stand and erected a gaUery which he says draws art buyers from across the country. "It's not going to cost you any money even though yciu may take it away in a year or so," Henrie said. Pointing to a rapidly drawn but expert painting of the concept, be described the plan as a chance to save a segment of the Art Colony's history while providing a~quaint place tor artists to hold shows and visitors to browse through. Bigler who also presented an artistic rendering of the mall concept said he and Henrie will donate all the trees for the mall as well. .. I know one of the commissioners has said -he doesn 'l want to carry us, but this ls a chance 00 save rather than destroy and calT)' the city too," Bigler concluded. "I think it's a fantastic idea,'' Planning Commission chairman William Lam· bourne told the artists. Commissioner Robert Hastings: added "It's very nice. but requires more study." The mall plan will be forwarded 00 the City Council for comment. Coast Freeway Measure Creates Heated Debate Diplomatic efforts to endorse Jegisla· tion wh.ich c<luld resolve Orange Coast conflicts on the future · Pacific Coast Freeway route created a headon collision of viewpoints late Monday on the Costa Mesa City Council. 'Die heated debate was touched off by a letter from Mayor Robert M. Wilson en- couraging his counterparts a1ong the coast to support the bill by Sen. James E. Whetmore CR-Garden Grove) in the 197 1 .session. lie has not yet seen the Whetmore bill, which was jwt one outspoken objection voiced by Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley, a veteran viewer of freeway route in- fighting. Mincing no words, Councilman Pinkley charged Newport Beach interests both public and private have developed a tradition of treachery in dealing with Costa Mesa and its freeway problems. * * * Mayor Goldberg Does Not Want Freeway Delay Reaction to Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson's approach to resolving Pacific Coast Freeway conflicts was greeted to- day by coastal mayors with cautious, but basic agreement on certain aspects. Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth responded by letter, urging a high degree or intercity cooperation. Laguna Beach Mayor R i c h a r d Goldberg said, he will ap proach his coun· cil Wednesday night for their response. but personally would agree to nothing that might delay actual construction. Huntington Beach Vice Mayor Jerry Matney pledged his city 's cooperation - as long as the Coast Freeway reaches the Santa Ana River as now adopted -in smoothing Costa Mesa·Newport Beach connicts. Each city official also expanded his in· itial comments. "I will read the letter at tomorrow night's City Council meeting and ask for the council's response as to how they feel about it." said Laguna Beach's Goldberg. ''Personall y, I would be in agreement "'ith what they are trying to do -mak- ing a circulation study in an effort to find an answer to the prohli!m in so far as Newport Beach is concerned, but 1 would not agree with anyth ing that would delay construction of the entire free way route. "I will respond 00 the Jetter after I get the council's views tomorrow night," Goldberg concluded. ''Your letter concerning the legislation propooed by Sen. Whetmore is ap- preciated," Newport Beach Mayor Hirth wrote. "Such action would certainly seem to correct a weakneSs in the current state freeway regulations. I am sure that our council will wish to consider lhis matter when the bill is available and take a poai· Uon at the appropriate time. "Currently, we a.re spending every ef· fort to determine the best possible solu· Lion to handing the traffic within our city and through our city," Pt1ayor Hirth con· tinued. "We are anxious to Induce full con· sideration for the needs •nd desires of adjoining cities. ConsequenUy •. we will keep you posted on our progress and af. ford an opportunity to submit •nY traffic data you wish to offer," Hirth finished. "We 'rt happy with the freeway route through our city," said Matney. apeaking !or Mayor ROl>Ort-shlpley in Huntington Beach. "But we're nextble on the route near the Santa Ana Rlver." · "llunUngton Beach ts not opposed to looking at realignment of the freeway betwe<n Newport B<ach and Costa Mesa, he added. "We'll work with them any way we can on that." "Bul we've got to have that freeway as far u the Santa Ana Rtver tor our own netth," M1tney explained. He outlnned Ulla: position to ftllow councilmen Monday nlghL · · He aald there waa general •gretment on !ht city'• 1land. "I am speaking only !or mysell and not this coWlCil," he emphasized strongly. His tones seemed to stun council col· leagues, who finally adjourned without approving the Wilson letter calling for support -in principle -of the Whet- more bill. The legislation -as it is now un· derstood -would allow individual cities to re-open specific freeway route sections in an effort to solve mutual problems. SI.ate Jaw and policy in effect now re- quires reopening of an entire fr eeway route lo study, an inefficient procedure which is wrapped up in red tape. Councilman Pinkley warned that blind endorsement of the Whetmore bill could signal disaster ahead for Costa Mesa citizens and its own interests. ·:11 it was any other city than Newport Beach I could agree, but I have absolute- ly no trust in Newport Beach," Pinkley declared. He .. charged there has been a smokescree n of publicity generated by the militant Freeway FightJ!;rs organiza· tion which wants 00 keep the Route One Coast Freeway out of the beach city at all cost. From Pagel AIRPORT ... the announced cutdown of air operations "may have been premature." In recommending a continued study of the Naval Air Station the Parsons report notes "that use of this facility would be limited to nonjet aircraft. At the Santa Ana Marine Air Station. "general aviation joint use of the existing facility is not considered feasible," the report stated. "Nevertheless. this aeronautical site should be assigned a role in the coun· tywide airport system as a future general aviation facility in the event that the facility is abandoned by the Department of Defense," the report continued. The Capistrano site outlined by Parsons is in the Bell Canyon area. They estimate the cost of establishing an airport there at $52.17 million over a period of seven to 10 yea rs. Operating within a system of county airports the Bell Canyon jetport a b o v e Capistrano woold be able to satisfy pro- jected dema1ds. "It cannot, however, stand alone as the only jel air carrier airport In the county. The greatest de· mand in the immediate future will be on Orange County Airport which in time may be complemented by jet' airline ser- vice out of El Toro," the Parsons study contended. The Bell CanYQn airport, whi ch Walsh said will be built along a ridge top, "will be able 00 handle an ultimate capacity of eight million passengers annually.'' Walsh said unique aspects of the site .,also suggest a thorough examination of an advanced terminal and passenger movement system to serve all modes. The concept of a transporl.ation terminal near the existing freeway and close to a possible right o( way for a high speed ground transportation system should seriously be considered.'' Another air faciJity recommended by the consultants in the Southern County sector is O'Neill air park, .. This site offers a unique combination of an existing regional park with good recreational facilities on lhe Plano Trabuco. The site on this high plain, 900- fool elevation. can be prepared easily to serve small general aviation aircraft. "Fllght operations at this site would be during daylight hours only. Although most of the operations would be touch- .and·go. hikers and camj)trs are expected to arrive by light plane once the airport is available," the report shated. The cost of esWbllshing a facility at O'Neill Park W8s estimated to be $1,188,000. A general aviation' site was also idea-. tlfied in the city of Brea .but the Parson.t report warned the site can only be con· sldcred suitable if the city ls willing to revise !ls general plan. Airport Director Robert Brt:snahan who attended th is morning"s meeting had no comment to make on the report. "I haven't bad a chance to study Jt,'' he 1aid. •' ' • • Shark Beached in Laguna Ed Gottschlick of Laguna Beach (holding tail) shot this shark with a spear from a fishing boat. AJ Fenn of Orange (holding head), who was skin div· ing nearby, brought it ashore at Mountain Road Beach. The shark, a 71h-foot blue, weighed in at 235 pounds. It's teeth? All the better to eat you with, baby, From Pa'ge l SALT CREEK • • property, directly from Pacific Coast Highway to the beach at Salt Creek. The second access route is at the south end of the property adjacent to the Chandler-Sherman property . Improve- ment and landscaping of both access routes and the parking lot would be paid for by the county. The 11.4 acres of beach under con· sideration include one mile of ocean fron- tase between Monarch Bay and the Chandler-Sherman property. "We will receive no compensation £or this land," said Follett. "It will be necessary however, to release the pro- perty from the potential deed or trust at a cost of about $342,000 which is about $30.000 per acre." The two access routes proposed by the firm would serve the two parking lot.:5. One Jot , located inland of Pacific Coast Highway would be served by the access route in the center of the properly. The JO-acre lot will provide parking for 7f>O cars. The second lot would be located on the oceanside of the highway at the southern end of the property. Jt is about seven acres and would accommodate 500 cars. Pope Quoting Banned Writer VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope Paul VI has quoted from a work by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Noble Prize winner for literature who has been denounced by Co mmunist authorities in hi.s native Soviet Union. The Pope used the citation, seen as a possible indication of indirect support for Solzhenitsyn. iA an address Monday to a group of Italian doctors. The quotation. from "Cancer Ward,'" reads: "The family doctor was the most intimate of figures. hut they have eradicated him. The family doctor is the person without whom. in a developed society, the family cannot exist. .. But how many adults today debate mutely. not knowing where to find a doctor and a soul to whom they can express their most secret fears .•. " Laguna Planners Given Central Business Study By BARBARA DUARTE Of tM Dlih' Piiot Sl•ll Members of the Laguna Beach Plan- ning Commission officially received a recommended pl an for the central busi ness district Monday night while tak· ing issue with its major concepts. The 72-page report by general pla Mers Daniel , Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall de~ils concepts for development of the downtown basin . The plan envisions construction of a major arterial connecting Monterey Drive, 2nd Street and Catalina street, a downtown mall and two major parking structures in the downtown district. The commission . indicating it wants to gather more public opinion and study before the plan is incorporated in the generql plan, labeled it "generally unac· ceptable." "Communication 'must have fallen down." said commissioner Jame s Schmitz. "I don't like 60 percent of it because it opposes ideas we submitted more than two years ago," ''J\.1ost of us disfavor the Catalina ex- tension, the mall is larger than an· ticipated and the parking structures should probably be in a different area," commission Chairman William Lam· bourne said. ''l thought we transmitted these thoughts be£ ore.'' City planner Al Autry told the com· mission many ideas were put forth too late to be incorporated in the CBO plan which has been in the city's hands for a month. "I think we need a work session 00 pin- point modifications which can be in- corporated before the final general plan is approved." ln other bus iness, the commission: -Postponed a hearing on a variance application by Loren Haneline of The Seas to add 13 units to his complex in Sleepy Hollow while seeking additional height. -Denied Gold Ambulance Service permission to operate its business at 255 B Thalia because of traffic and circula- tion problems in the Glenneyre-Tbalia street intersection. -Approved a request by Harry Howard to provide seven building sites on a cul de sac at 2200 Temp le Hills Drive, 3 Pool Spokesmen Picked. Three representatives 0£ the Capistrano Unified School District were selected Monday to meet with San Clemente of- ficials to solve a stalemate in plans for a 50·50 split in costs for a new swimming pool at San Clemente Hlgb School. Thus far San Clemente has balked at spending $75,000 to pay for half of the new pool. The district would pay the other haU. School District trustees Monday night appointed chairman Dr. Robert Beasley, Vice Chairman Nolie Famulare and Supt. Truman Benedict to bargain with a similar committee from San Clemente. Councilmen recently appointed Mayor Walter Evans, Vice Mayor Stan Northrup and City Manager Ken Carr to represent the city's side. City parks and recreation com· missioners have recommended that San Clemente not contribute half the money for the pool bill. Councilme n have taken no final aclien on that proposal, however. Under the proposed agreement each agency would split the bill for a large, new swimming pool wh ich would be made available to public use as well .as students. THENAMEOFTHEGAME I There is a common practice of private lab'eling in the carpet industry. Large department stores, chain stores, an'd contractors at ntw tracts have ficticious n•mes on the samples so th•t customers ca nnot easily shop brand name prices. Customers s.hopping at our store find tlie price of each quality promin1ntly foalured on the ••mpl1 book, because we are competitive. Also1 because we feel the customer has • right to know whet he is buyin9, we never chen9e the name on a sample booi. The nom1 of the gam1 l• integrity! ALDEN''S ~~~~~~~-.- SANTA ANA. OU.N•I fUITIN Clllll .,. ALDIN 'S llD HIU CAIPITS &. DlAPIRIU 11Jl4 1,.i,.., Tntl., c.fff. •••·>>44 CARP ET S e DRAPES 1663 Placentlo Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thu,.,, 9 I• 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -S.t., 9:30 to 5 .. • ' ' ' . ' ll!'""""""" ..................................................................................................................... ~~~ ......... ~ ... ~-:: ...... ~~~~~..,. ... ...,~~..--,-~~~~~~~~~1, ... ~~~~~~~·-~~~·~--·~· \ Fo1' The Recorel .~ Marriage Liceiases • Death 1\'ntice• 01\WSON Jim D•w~n. Ill Ill_,, St .. Co•ll Mt-1•. Servic•• ~'ldl"" 1r Wo~!Cll!I Cn1"'I MtJrhll,..,, 1'6·411'~ DONATI ,_ldlno II'. Oonan. ,t.~o ••, of ?ff O.I M'r. Cosio Me••. 011r or d•ntn, Octo- ber 11. 5ur•l•ed by wlte, Grice; ""<1 •On\, Ml<ll&el ~»!I Jt!l•tY; two d1u~h· '""· Gavit incl L1urlf; "''" bro•h•"· Vk :or. F••"" •"<I Cltmtnle l)o.ri1!1, Ill of (hl<•IOI Wllllom Donati, of Mt. ll•ln- ler, w11nlnqton; 11• ,111or1. Reven11 5..,1•h, "•bell wnilo. Lllllen Con1!1. Vic· tori1 Krewk~. June R'cn••dl •nd .. r. d,,.,1 cnalrt-;n, 111 of CMcevc. 5ervicu ~r>dlng 11 Bell fl·n•dw•• M0<h,.rv. MONNICE• Jo!ln C. Monniqer. """ u , o• ttn Con· lfnen•1! Or , HIH'l•1"9ton ll11cll Dere ol <1~11~, Otto~• 1• 511,.,.lve<:I bv wife. Elllel; two 'on•. Jor.n I!, i ncl J . Wllli•cl MMnloe•; toi•r er~n(kr.l!clren: •"" c-.. , .. f ....... ,..., ... uc1. S•NICfl. Weclne~d•Y· ti ~ m .• 5mltno Cn11>fl, 1nter,...,n1, l 1>.m., \"C<lr ... cl•Y. Moun11I" Vie.. C.e,...,, .. ,..., 5•" s~1rcllno, .Smlllls MOtiu••Y· Dl•K· lor,, ~ Jit, ARBUCKLE & SON w \Yc!itcllrf i\lortuary • 4%1 E. 11th St .. Costa Pilcsa t 61~'88 I BALTZ ~10RTUARlES b Corona del ~tar .... OR 3-9450 :, Costa Mcu ...... ·ml 6-~ DELL BROADWAY P.101\TUARV t 110 Broadwoy, CostJ fllesa !t LI 8·3il3 ' . • ~ t i r.tcCOR!'l1JCK J.AGUNA BEACll P.tORTUARY 1115 Laguna Canyon Rod. • PACIFIC VIEW 494·9415 flfE~fORIAL PARK Cemetery .~1or1 ! Chn~I Ii 3500 Pacific \'Jew Orie ,1·1e1 . Nc"•port Beach. a om11 • 614-llOI ' . f PEEK. f AAIJLY t COL0,1AI. FIJNERAL • HOME l 7801 Boin Ave. l We1lminster . 893~ ~ . -, SHEl'FER ~IORTUARY t.aguna Beach ....... 49~~1$.,5 "' Sin Clemeate ., ..... 49t-OIOO J 0 ~ S~llTllS' !\fORTUAllY 1~ 6t7 !'ltaln SI. llunUni;h1n Dc1clt 536-6539 • Poli.tlcal Notes Playboy Issues P1,efe1·e11ce 01art By O. C. HUSTINGS Of The 01llr ~iMll S1•11 Anything can happen during a political campaign, and generally does. bu t It has to be an election year triumph that sees the publication of a political preference chart in Playboy fl.1ag atine. Centered on \Yhat a r e described as ke y races. the ratings of the fully-clothed candidates is done on a report card basis. \Vith the aid or l he Congressional Quarterly, a "non.partisan research ae;en· ey," Hugh Hefner's staffers have compiled grades based ~ on the candidates' voting records and public statements on fou r issues-Vietnam , civil rights. individual liberties and pollution-plus a subjecllvf analysis of their courage, sincerity and dedication. • l utiday, Octobtr 20, 1'970 DAILY PILr. 1J LEGAL NOTICE L~GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE \Vilh this scientific system Playboy "writes off" George f\1urphy as "the former tap dancer'' and gives him a grade of D. His Democratic opponent John T u n n e y manages a 8-. bul the reader is cautioned that Tunney is ' ' s upercaulious.'' v.·hatever that means. Tiie article does admit that LEGAL NoTJCE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE' LE G L NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE the grading system is not the __ -~=---cc--=,--,,,-c------,-o-c---,.-,,,-,..,---,,,---,,-c-c-,.-.,,-,--~~=~A~~=~~,-~~=====,--,----most objective one on !he IESOLUT1011 110. ,..., 111111 J5116 01 "'' Gov1r11m.n1 Codr: 1...i I'"" ~1tc10" rulclln• wlllll<1 '~• 11rr11ory. ll E IT FUITMEI RES.OLVED THAT 1 <.TATE OF CALIFORNIA J k "Th . A IESOLUTION OF THI! CITY COUit-WHE llEAS, "''CITY (OUJ'ICll ol "'• (11¥ ee IT FURTHER RESOLVEO THl,1 httfll>O ~·II lie set !n no! l•n 11\111 111· COUNTY Of OR ... NGE I ''· mar el: e grading system CIL 0,. THE CITY OF COITA MESA, o/ Co111 Mti• !Inell -(!edl•U 11'11! ••Ill lllt lnl~llon .. IUbmll lht ove1tlo11 OI In· '"'" lU) GIYI llO< mo•• rh1n lor'IY UO) CITY OF COSTA MESA ) and the choice of tests are col-CALIFOttNIA. ttll!LATINO TO ... H l1110fl "' Hlhlonl ••• •l•nto DY Ml leu neullOfl lo rr.e tlt<;IOn ..... b•-u....., HYI t!ler 11\f PIH••• ,, lhl• r'50lut!on I, EILEEN P. PHINNEY, City Cieri. ol ' . . Nll!XATIOH OP Cl!ttTAIN Tll!llllTOl!Y "'"" 111\t•IQU•lll °' 11'1• <IU•lll\t<I elector1 11\f thlll'lne "'"' .... HllllOll "' peU!loM • ..., 11111 Slit llft•ln.v ls HI !Of "'' ,,,., lhe Clt\I •I Cos•• Mtli t ncl ••'illlld• ored by Playboy S trad1t1onally KNOWll AS MAlllNA YllW AN· 1111011111 wllh!n Ille lerrltorv Ill be .,.. drcu11rt11 1na 1ut1ml11ed 10 11>e Cllv of e11v el r•ovomlle•. 1'10, et 111to """'of 7:lll Cler~ 01 Ille Clf'I CouMll of 1111 City or I r I, bou[ 1·t Nll!XATION; ,ROVIOING FOii A M•HIJ •11<1 COlll Mtll (Ol'lllln not "°'" lll1n one-p.m .. 11 tr.e Courw;:ll Ch1111bfr•, n Ftlr C~lt M•••· l\fttl>Y urlltv 11111 IM 1boYI s rong ee 1ngs a equa I y ttESOLUTION CALLING l'Ott SPll!(l,liL WHEllEAS, ilkl te!lllOM •H!.lll"1 •n· '°"''" of Ill• <IUtUt!ed elt clon re~><li111 Orlv•, Coll• M~··· Cill!Of<1!1, •• wr.1(11 .,..., lor09ol"9 Rtsolullon No. ,.,, w•• and individual freedom of ac· ELll!CTIOll: OETlttMllONO. TH I M~••loft •o Ille Cllv ol Co11• MH41: •"" w11r.:n rri. 1errl!<lfY. time t nv H•scn ow..i.,. ·~•I PfCHrtY dulY 1...i re1ui.r1Y Pined •:id t dootfd lh' Jess Unruh. as a Big Daddy image gets a B, and is labeled a •·reborn fighting liberal." Reagan, on the other hand. scrapes by with a 0, •·with low marks in every category.'' · ,. SIJ,-FlCIEHCY OF THE PETITION WHE".E•S, ulcl ptfit10fl II' Miiii-. IE IT FURTHEll: 11.ESOLVEO THAT wlllll" ll>t leffho•v m1v 11>1>•1• be!Ot• Ille (ily CouJ'ICll ol 1111 Cll'Y ol COiii Mn• llOn. ll!OUfSTING IAIO IELE(TIOlll ,li llO 1•1 111Hlc\t nl In •II l\Pl!Cls 11<1'1WM le 11\e Cll'r ol Co•1• Mew n1s lutll(lltllOl'I 1~ 11\e 1 .. ltl.rlve body concerning ,..., writ. 11 1 ~•t~l1r mei!l"I llltrtol lltld on lht \Vith their political preferen- ces hanging out, staff Y.Titers OETll!ttMIHINCi THI JUttlSOl(TION SKtlllll lil16 11 lf\t Gove•nmerit (*; 1 c-ucrlng 1oencv 10 •roc:HG wllh ••1<2 ''" oro1tl11 tllt<I PU~U•M II) $t(licn l5120 3111 cl.Iv ol Octot>tt, lt1D. OF THI CITY TO Pll.OCE l!O Al THI I ncl t1Ktlo.., 1!1 t • t•ovkl~ lor I" Socllon ol 1~ Gov•r-~t Code, IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I l'llY• COttOUCTIMG AOINCY 1'01 SlilO WHERE ... $, lllt Hllllo~ •• ~tltlo"I Ill• llll• o1 llW Goverflmtnl Code of Int Slue l'A551!0 ANO ADOPTEO 11111 5th dlY hereunto VI mv ll•nd •ncl elll•eol !ht $e~I ANNll!XATION. .., .. 1111 Ill• City •• Co••• ,,.. ... es11bll1h of C1lilornl•. of Ocloblr, 1t10. °' IM Cllv 01 C•I• MtM, Ill!• till cllY ,, proceed lo note, "If there is THE CITY COUNC IL Of THE CITY lur!Mll(l)Ofl Wiii\ ... 1o lllJ'ICY lo Wt'c!llCI ll E IT FUii.THEii: 11.ESOLVEO THAT IOllEllT M. WIL5014 Oct~. ltlO any platitude "'°'· fam'1l'1ar OF COSTA MESA. CALIFORNl .... DOES lh• •n111~1!10fl he•tln ,,.,...kltd '°'· •tliKhe<l l\ertlo, m•rk•d E•hlblt "A" •ncl "'-¥Of'"' '"" Cll'lf Of EILEEN P. ,MINNEY HERE8Y RESOl.VE AS FOLLOWS: NOW. THEll.EFOltE, llE IT aeso+.V· bY ll!ls •Hc:!llC rritffJ'ICI mlde • Olr! Cotti MUI CllY (ll!f-.,..., e•-11lllclo Clt•k than a campaign promise it's TH.AT WHEllE•S. ctrll l" l>flltlon or EO Tl'iAT lllt CllY el COllt Melt lltre<i/, (1 • m1p .,,_Ing ,,,. *""•rl•s ATTEST; of , ... CUy CouJ'IClt °' IM Cll'f' . • 1>"lllfon1 r""ue1!1ft9 Ille 1nnex1llOfl ol 11!" dltlt•H 111 ln!mllon lo Clll 1 »td ll of 1111 IH'-tf'f lo bt 1nn.xflf, wlllcll Slkl EILEEN '· 1'1-llNNEY ot Coit• Mn.I, C•llloml1 The tv.·o C<lngressional races se lecte<t as "significant" by Playboy are in the 24th and 27th Congressional Districts in Los Angeles. the truism that few of them r!torv 10 n.. c1t11 •• <0111 Mew 111"1' til'tllon 111!1 turtllt• atcl1rn 1i. 1n1e1111en •~'"'••!lo" ,,,,.u ~ t e•lt•lfled ,, M••ln1 cuv c11r-" 111e Publl1"" or-t Cotll Delly Piiot. are kept afler the election . btf" complied I"" II~ ""'•ulnl lo St <• lo •ubmll "" ctun!lon ol 1nn•••llon to View AnM••llon. Cllv ol Cosl1 M''' 0.:totier 1(1, 11, 1'10 lt'l .. ID The races in the 24th pills John Birch Society member John Rousselot against Myrlie Evers, v.•idow of slain civil rights leader t.1edgar Evers. 1'he 2ith District has Barry "Althoug h no one has devis- ed a foolproof lit mus paper for political performance. Playboy l\iagazioe believes lhat there is a large gap between cam· paign rh eto r ic and )>('rformance CXpe<!talions." Now \\'hatevcr do you sup- pose gave them that idea? 9 Cou11ty Districts To Get State Fu11ds SACRAti.1ENT0 -N i n e school districts in Orange County will receive $17.87 million in stale funds to finance construction projects, it was announ ced by state 1reasurer Ivy Baker Priest. The funds, part of a total SI I:> million state allocation, have been raised by the sale of bonds \l'ilh a seven percent in!erest rate. The sale or bonds in some cases h:id been delayed a~ long as 18 months because of the five percent in!erest rate ceiling seL by la\v. The ceiling v.•as moved lo seven percent in June when California voters approved the increase and the sale was completed last week. The funds allocated lo Orange County schools will be put into Capistrano Unified, Centralia. Fountain Valley, Garden Grove Unified. Los Alamitos. Ocean View , Placentia Unified and San Joaquin school district coffers. The Capistrano U n i f i e d District has applied for $3.9 million To construct a Dan Hills High School and $290,000 to complete the second phase at Dana Elementary School. In Fountain Valley, !he fund~ will be applied to the construction of tv.•o n e w elementary scllools-Ok-a and Talbert. Aoproximatel y $1.19 million wil l be used on Oka and $1.26 \Viii ~o to\vard con· struction of Tablert School. In Los AL.'>milos, the bond monies will be used lo begin C<lnstruction of one elemen· tary school, and to complete additions on two others. Funds for the new \Vilsoo School \Viii C'ome to $482.000, and the. additions al Rush School and Weaver School \\'ill receive. $8.000 each. In Ocean Vie.w Schoo l Di!ilrict, $410.000 will be used toward construction of a new Golden View e I em en tar y school . Mall Plazas Dedicated Bond monies in the San Joa· quin Ele1nentary Schoo I District will be used for ac· quisition of two intermediate school sites. One site. identified in University Park al the in· tcrsection of i\lichelson and Yale Avenues, \\'ill receive $1.88 mill ion in state n1oney. The second, al the corner of t.fui rla nds and Lns Aliso Boul evards, in El Toro, v.•ill J(el a $2 million boost from the bond funds. VCI Library Receives I ts 400,000th IRVINE -The UC Trvine Library has acquired its 400.000th volume, a first edi· lion of Ri chard Henry Dana's "Two Years before the Mast. A Personal Narrative of Life at Sea." '!'he 400 ,000-volun1e mark \\'as reached only 30 months after !he 200,()00.volumc mark was passed . Unive r sity Librarian Joh n E. Smith said. ''\Vhen we hit our half-million mark, we 'll have a banquet," he added. "Two Yi?ars before 'he l\fast." puhlished in 1840 by Harper and Brothers in Ne\\' York. has special significance in Orange County hisl9ry because the author describes in detail lhe loading of hides purchased from the local In- dians. As a result Dana Point is named in his honor. The 200.000th volume In the library, a fir~t ed ition of Oliver 'Goldsmith's ''Vicar of Wakerle!d " published in Lon· don in 1766, was presented to the library by Dr. Adlolph A. Kroch in April 1968. LEGAL i'OTICE P .• .)HU CEITIFICATI OF IUSINISS l'ICTITIOUS NAMI Tiie unch,.!tnfd do ctrllhr lhfY I NI conau(l!nt • bt/1!11ff1 1! ~ N. N•wl'Of'I 81vd .. NfWH•I ,,1(11. c1Htornlt • .,._, !h~ f'~llll0>1' flt"' ~•"'t of THE CANDLE OOCK •M 11'1.11 s•kl """ It ~"°'" of fllt !Ollvwi,,. Pf•lll<'lt. wl\tit Mmu In Ii.Ill S NTA ANA Tw I ...... 119(.el of l'ftkltnct l rf II loll-! A1 -o new y-JlfM• F. Gocl'frtY. mt "'"''' '''"'· completed plazas In t h e CvP••"· c1n"""'1• "'610 Oontkl O. k-lcllr, 11101 LYllrtff Orange Couoly Civic.-Center .. ._., ArcM11 ... ceu1nn>t• "* mill v.•ere dedicated ~1onday. D•1t111 0c:,'F 1~1!,'"• Designated the Plaza of 1he 0-111 c kllnelfff' STATE OF C.ALtF01tNll., F1ags and the Plaza o( the OIANGE COUNTY. S th b 'It t t On Ocktllei' J, 1'71, ~·1 mt, • Not•rv un. ey were u1 a a c05 P1t1Mlc 111 lltld .-11111 ""'· .. ..._1"' of more than $1.3 million. .,.,.,.,..,, J11¥11t "· GOclf•t• 111!1 ~td Th Pl of t•· fl S!l'ln4ldt.r -now11 •• ~ la Ill! Ill!! nt'MM t aza ·~ ags: . ....tlett n • ..,., •• , ... ~1c ... w '" u ... wlllllft locattd dlrectly sou th o( 1~e :'~;:-;:. :' .... ~-'"-" ""' ..:- f l·slory county courthouse 1s 10t11e111 i.111 • , h 'th 1~·..1 I•-M. lltll square 1n 5 ape WI a rn "1::'I Not1rv •"~1ic. c-u1orn11 platform at its cent tr. Bordtr· .. ,1nr1 .. 1 oo•c• 1n I th k Clr•n•• Couril'tr ng e par are 50 flagpoles, My c.mm1ii10it-' E•"'''' ca:ch 2l1e.eL btJ!'.h 10 bear the '""'*'Mii 51~~~ 1'i!.,1 o~:~ ••i.t. neg!! or each of the states In 0t1ot>t< n. )0, ,, ·~11 N••-h., 1. the naUon. 1''° 1n.70 ; • ~,jW~~OJ·· ... 0 .s.a9•za·oo .. w. 4 10.73' @A 2 10•30'00" R•797 . ..,.'f' L''°'' ,._, 0 N.so•oz·ao -w. 2z1.s2' (!)s.0•3z 'oo-E. zts.6':J' © · s . .a7•z .,·oo "w.11es.6 4' © s .8!>'Z5'oo"w . 3do .os · 0 N.0•3z'oo"w, ~o.oo @s.e9•2s·oo·w. 1oe8.2tJ 1::: @ N . 1J•2s·oo"E. 201>.o e ' @N.,,,. ze·oa" E. "1-90 . ..,.·::. @ N .3, • .,, . .5o·e. Jvs.~o·~ @N. s,• 13 "oo ·te. noo.oo• @ N · !:t:.•s9 '0Q"E. 800.00' BN. zo~oz ·oo·E. <1 19.!A' @) N.s,•2s'oo -E..131s.31' @ s.o •:y2 ·oo"E. 1.;,o.zs' @ s .e,•za·oo·w. zs9.2s · @s. e 0 1s 'oo "W-z1:r.60' @ s .3.,•.,0·3o "w. ,,9.10· @s. s3•1<>'.30" w. JZ,. ez · @ ..s.11 •2~•oo w w. J72.&t' ;.,. @s. 23'4•·oo·w. 219. 1s' ~ s .1•zs'oo"w.z,.,.ss' N. W. COIC. TJ?, 65'3-·---•. ..., 3 N~ . L/,.« Tr. 653 G ST, MW.Co:%. l..ef flit, -- Tr. t;S.J ·-·· • --· -·-· .-· ~N w .Cor. ;r,..z9 7~ ····.{N-E. Cor. I.of ~~ f1 (1,2. Tr. 65'5 />c~,...,~~ .. / i..) -rh1-1~,, VICTORIA ~I • 5 ' • 60 J -1 I - © ® © @ ® ® @ ® " • > ~ , < 0 I •o • • \ Ex/sf Boundory of the C/ty of' Costa Mesa as d~serlbed irr the Rep1Jbl1c NI 4 An11~xof1'on io the Cit y oT Coste:: Mftso,. Cal/r.1 .dopfed Ocf. 17.19&01 by Ordi'nonce Nf3Z<f.. ~J(/sf. Boundory or th~ City or Costa M rsa os de.scri'bed tlte R~publ1C N! Z Ann~•af/on to the Clty of' Costa Me.so, Ca/I I'., adopf~d Apr. 2l0, l'!IS.,, 6y Ordi'na':'~ N : .,.5 . EKisf. Boundary df' thd Ci'fy of' Costa Mc-sa os de•crib~ tht1 Vii::for/a Sf. Anne1<af/on to the C/ty of' Costa Mc:;a, Cati'r., odopt~d Oct . .,1 196S, hy a,-d/nont:e NI 6S-3~. '" c,,.,3f. /Jovndary of' the C/ty of Costa Mesa 0.5 described /n th~ R i'ver N f ._, Ann e.110+:0,., to the City al' Costa Me30, Coli'f'., odop/~d D«.31 /'b2, by Ord/none< N~ GZ-46 , E11 i'sf. Boundary or the C/fy of' Costa M esr:1 as described In the R/v~r NI Z Arin••afi'on to the Ci'ty ol' Co:sfa Mt1so1 Ca/;f.1 adopted Oct. ''' 19&1,. hy Ord1'naric.e N~ 397. EJ(/sf. Boundary of' the Ci'ty of' Costa Mesa as d•at:ri~d In fhl!! R iv•r N • .3 Af'nel(af/ori to fiie Ct'ty ol' Costa M•MJ, Cal/f., adopt ed Nov. c:. 1961, by Ord/nonce N• 404 . E,ci'st. Sovridory ol' tlie C,.fy or Co:tfa Mesa OS' descri'6ed ,.,., t~ Harbor NI I Anne11.o.fion to the C i ty al' Costa Mesa, Cdf//f'., adopted Feb. 29, 19601 by Ordi;,onc a N~ 294. E XISTING BOUNDARY E~/st. Boundary o,,. the City of' Cosfa M~~a 0:1 d•tScri h•d i n the l?t!pvb//c. NI .J A""•1eaf/on fo the C/ty o/:'Co~to M e3a11 Co li('., adopted M ay 2 1 l 't:.01 by Ord/nonce N• 30.S. ---PROPOSED BOUNDARY MA.RINA VIEW _.,- ANNE XA llON TO THE CITY OF COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 78 . 07 ACRE:S (Revised 7·10-70) T~, Octobtt 20, 1970 • Ope1aing Night OVER THE COUNTER Complete-Ne,v York Stock Lisf HEW YOllK !Al'! 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Grtnb\I 160 2 l~> 2J 1 2j, + " Dr Loren r.1oll dean of Golden West Evening College welcomes the more than 200 students • "ho attended la st Tuesday night s opening session of four .part series on real estate investment c<>-sponsored by the college d1 str1ct lhe DAILY PILOT and Hunllngton Beach Fountain Valley Board or Realtors Second lecture 1n the series w11J be he Id tonight at 7 30 o clock at College Center on the Huntington Beach campus The series is open lo Ole public free of charge Arden '<I 11\ I"° HPwrd Gl no I o ADull Cl 1&41 I 11lti llh 11 0 1°"Fo>od 1 1ll !11.S JI\ 37\1 ll>t -\o ir1n<1Un 'IO •2<111 2Sh 21 2 , t '> A den pl JO ]1 Howm In 20'Jo ~ ... mEIPw 1.. 2" 1•"1 2 ... 21\') -Ii onFd ptf SCI • ff~ ••• l ,~,,, -1 '•"\'"' ti ?J 11 I ti • " • • Aork MnP ll\lil••Huck Ml J •.,1 !m,,e",',')f!, Ii' 12 11\oo 111 ..-b ot1Frtlv1111 '~ 21~ 21 • 27\'J-~ r1n1evll11 11 111k 11\0 11\o 1 Mow .. ->; ,,,~ Hwd PP .. ,. ncl 1H>.1 51V. J''1 '' > (on Loai nv 10 6\• 6 • 6 • flftlW I )I) 25 u >• 41~) '4~ + 0 ., ""' ., Hug G11 lJ~. lllili MUTUAL "G~nln1 Ml 42• 1Jh l\I. ll~ -i.. (onN•IG g 11 11<1oo 16h 2~' -l'I ••YD Q 110 • 2•, 1Jlo j~'"' + 'o Ir 101 I '"' H1>rll p , t :U. "Gn111. 011 to 11 14'-l 2•1• 2•\o -o cons POW• 1 •l 11;. lCl\lo lOto I' Al.P 1 "IO » 21 21H.o tlt -" AIC( Bo! 21 '> :14 1 HYll1 (p 21 ... ttVo "mHolll 10 II 10\• to 10 -lo fDf'PW p14 J(I J)r.I JI"'° S1 SJ -l~'J tNOflr I llo ) U , ll, ll, -',',',,', ",', ','• , .. , Hvfll Int , .. I 1 it. ~omt I 60 ll5 6l'i:o 6JI.. ol ... -\o Con!Alr 750 l ! 10 1 1~ 1 1~'1 f. ' INOHtk I 114 15 41 '1 IJ ~ • "'"' ... lh l\.o H;. A orne "' , t '"' f4\lo ,,... (onl C1n IO IS 3tl1 Jtl!Jo :1'\• -... tNN Dflll 60 l 22!t :11 • n. T •• !ltk!r 1n lo1t>k s .. 4\,, ,•mm1~,•,•,o t! t.1 lJ• »lo lJo +l>ci c•~Pll ?S 1JO SJ JI 51 -I •NN IJIA«I 1 IPll 12~0 1P o 911 "'"' 5 5"" >1~1110'•'•' '' 01• FUNDS -~,.,, .~"'. ,,"', ,I" ''"''""' ne JI I~ I t -11 1 West Finl 211 11 xi 2110 +1 , ll•1 n P 411 '' •'" N•"> .,. 4Mt!Cx 1•0 "'..., !• C I (p? 47 )J 4 :tt ]j , t 1, tWnUnU fO t 21 2010 10'1oi1 -• 11umrl 31'~ "" 1~iri•o"'" 26"' 11 1 AM•l(ll ol 1 13) ~ 'f ~+I 0 t:'tp P!11JO 16 Jt., 3l ll"' ... V, wUn 111118 l lt II 0 It + , l~~H !JI ll~tnl (Of'! J •• l"" :.r,,~:~0·2·l0 Ht ., IOI.. •I' +~C!CP plB?SO 1 ·s ~ tt" J~l'l +l i IWa~l!t~ XI 2 •• 1•1 ··-~ ::li!"riie 7l~ f:14 :~l'iiw~':. 1 1 "m Pho c 11 1<11 Ill'.• 9,, , , _ , can1M1r. •1 2:: ~:;: J6..: ,~.,. -g~:;n,g11n1 110tt 111,.o;l•16P, 1~ _ -. ll~lm IMd S S '> n1 Munl! ,: ' ,tl; Dilo< ·~1 :~·~~1 ~3e1 '~ ~!1' H ) f!" + 'i: ~:;:/ 0~11 p\' 1 llV. JJ'-1 l1Vo -,,., Grt~llound I 111 U t U•• ~'II; -" lier~ Ha :Jt\'r 11 '"' ''' 0 ''' _, Sl 1 ' 0_, su 4 21:v, 21 21'• -• Grotler \IO ii lS 2~ 1S --. 11 I L 1 21 21 > m P "" t I 2J>,;, + '!. ~· f9 1~ l1'o 23 t l G<ummnCc 1 IXI tt 1 ll!A lt\lo -• t I Ill • ., Int St pl 1! 110,. Oct_, lt Ill\/ CoA "5J 1' 62 A $me ' I 90 21' 28 21:i,, "" -,, °"' Te•,,,•, 411 "" .... •1 . +ti.I GlfLll11d «II 21 21 . 21"' i! -. 11111\iPS w 1'14 914 ln•tWI ·~· 101'1 NEW YORI( (API In\/ Gv d • 00 I llO ... m5DAI• 10 H ... ... •• ., • -• cori,A~ I~ ' JI . ll}"o l-1.\ r:uu 0 I 1 '° "'° lt\\ :II\'; li t ~ I I Cl * )l llll> lon1<1 16 17 -Tiii tollowlne -Inv 1ndlC 6 ll I 11 Am Sto I 41 lS<:.i ]4{o JJ + 1 (. .... Uni t !II l 21'-t 21\IJ :lll1 -, GW 1 Jin re es 27 10 , JD I)', -• Bl lclor 1\1. l~ II SoUI t 210~,! 1',• ',',',""•'o>l~•:r ',",.~' lnvp Sos 10 10 11 6t Am5t0 pll IS t HIO """ 100 ,,_1 ! l Oii tt JH'o Jl Jl>o .._ 1 Glllln ptl JO J 11\."i JP 11111 + lo Bl.le~ 11! 2t 1t J1col>s F ,. ~... ..,..1. lnve11Pr1 G<PUP Am Slfrll 'ii ll 21 10\. 21 .,._ \'I 00"f;,},n clAS I ..,,_-, '6\'t '6V, .j. ._, GullSllUT f6 11 10 ,,, .. • n •o -a Your Motaey's Worth Congress Eyes Healtl1 Plan ll~ut El 211 2~• J1011 n c 1 I'll; 11 on <>I ~11111" •Ds nal J IL! • n A Wu•r 1 60 11 Jllo J I 31\• 000 Tll 1 16 1J\t 11•, 11 • -, iu 1su 011 s2 ao J.!~o ,ffi sn. -l , :0 ' lier, 11' a • Jim Wit ~~'t. .~~ ,o,•,•I!~'.,, ·~ ••• ,',!! M•·":i' , .. ,, •• ",', '•'mU!l,..,P'.AI ~ SI l<tl t '4 ~· -1 c:i."l pl! 2S , UY, 16Vi 16''1 + • ulfWlnd OS lJ? '1\' 16 16 oolht lJ1' 1l • J1m1l F ..... -... .... is~~ ... ' 1~. ••• 1•• -• f.o<>I! '"° 110 51 SJ II )2 Sl"' +I • \IUW pll n 1 J 14 "'"' '1Vi _, !loon AH 11 11V.J lllY FOi l • •41hell <KUtllfl SI ltSlllqfAT&T ... , 'l.12 ,, 1 .. N-•c ll{lt Silt> 17 ~ n·~ ll'o -•1 uww p!lMI 1 •• , 61 -11.lo llot CtP ' ''°'J11n ... PO 21\~'1 (Ollld l'laYt bffn Sele(! 112 •JaAmT&T 260 UI 4~ •l\.o •J.>• ~:su 110 16 h l'J 1 .... 11,. Gt1UW PIS1' l 11 ..... ST\!) 51 .... !lrl'den ''• '• Klh~r St lS 3' "'"'{Ilk!) or IJOuOlll 111• Py 67' 114 AmWWk1 ..l6 2to 11,. 11 lll1 (orlntnll * tl '1, 11 '1 Gul1on Incl q O'~ 9 t it -'4 llrlnll1 I" 36'• JJ\~ KllSSI pl 11 II (•••••II MOM•y •n~ 11111'1 '°' • 39 AoW ..,..i 1" :to I .... ,. I 1111 Co•GW , ~ ]l IU l•t 11~ +JI' u1 !lrk1 Sc• 1' ... :70 • K1lv1 t• 2S l ld A•-l1ltl 11 111111 Im Zinc I 10 \ 10\1 10 , -\• Co cne!ln n JOI 1l 721~ 1l + I -rT" -llr-,., t\!o 10~~ IC1te G•.. ;"'" J\lo 4btrdn I 90 1 ,, VY • SJ 6 o;J Allle""' 10 J 20 ' "°"" "10 .. Cow H Com ,, • • ' I J :n • :n " -. 21•~ -..... Jf I + .. By SYL\ IA PORTER A nauonal health insurance bill v.1 11 be among the top leg1sla1ive topics when the new 92nd Congress convenes 1n Januarv It also sur ely 11. 11! be a central issue of the 1972 pres1dent1al e I e c t 1 o n cam pa1gn Righi no1v no one can forecast when national health insurance will become a reahtv Bui a reality 1t "111 be -and sooner than most of us think Savs W alter ~1 c N t. r ne y preside nt of lhe Blue C ross organ1zallons v. h1c h now ad rn1n1stcr the health insurance for 100 m1lhon Americans ' \Ve cannot wait much longer to do someth ing lhe issue has become too hot Socialized medicine US sl}le v.ould NOT necessarily be a simple expansion or our J\led1care system for the aged Nor "ould 1l necessarily be a copy of the much-cr1t1c12ed Br1t1sh system It could lake any ont. or a great v ariety of lorms And the yearly costs I have been bandie d around range aU !ht. way f rom an ex Ira $2 b1lhon to an extra $60 bilhon or more S1nct. this insurance will be of towering economic 1m portance to every one of us now 1s 11. hen you should be- come aware of the key pro- posals I ) The Gnf11ths plan 1n troduced early this year b y Re 11 Wlartha Griffiths J). M ich "ould expand today s P.1ed1care and P.1ed1ca1d pro- grams into a nut1onal heallh insurance plan c o v e r 1 n i:i: Americans of all ages and economic circum stances 2) The Health Security A ct ..,.. II u•" Bl 11 ~ 11 1t1•1m l l "-AdmlrallV Funds J Hncock 6 16 1 •6 "mtrtk 60.J 11 1 • 11"-t 0 -,, Co• Biiai 10 10 II" 11 • ..... ,'> U 'o 21'4 P'o~ed by 17 •enalor• of 1111<~•• i '1 1 Keir T I , It.. G .... 1~ s '1 '611 JOlln in In 11 r1 AMF nc 90 111 1s, 25 1•• ' ''!'">•!I 110 15 :io•o 1'1'111 •v l,~, J'h I''"' ~ ""'"" C.1> • • '> Kell111 2 1 1 0 1ncom J ~' l t) Kt•'1-F11nO> Amite IO t l6•a 3'1-16\o 1';.,, 1 6/lb • Jt•o J•l~ >• both parties would also be Bu•""'P s ,, ' 16 ' ltr!lwd 1•1. 1J.... 1"111• I 07 169 APOiio I ft I tt />.MP lf!< SI 11 1 XI • .. • XI -• ·~ II F " ! • ,, \lh SI 1~ lt k I CICLtAI l•flo11;..,ne 9 .... IO •"°Vll•I lal SOI CU\Bl11111'02 Am<>l!~Coo 111 11 11 11 ,.~romolCnlO 21 U I l>~ )I•• :_t financed by a hi e 1n Socia c11 w sv n~ n Jo 1ttY• J.lb 11;, 11 • ..,,,.,. Fo • cG ' 11 Cu• Bl 1111 "'3 Am11111 l .e n 31 , J I , 31 ~ !'°"''H!ncl t 1 20 1 ui. 11 lt!o .. 29>:. .. ""' Se II Canon M II 1• Kt~> Cui 10 > 11"' ... lllUald 6 XI 1 OJ Cu• 64 I 19 161 .i.mtel :n JI ,,,, I I rowCcl I Cl! ~110 JO 't t<1 Hiiiei Hlr /1 >>l lY ~ 1~ "t c.. C:Urlly pay ro taxes C8nnMB 101ri 1?'>K•V1IPC '1 1/i ... llllre 1!!6SS Cu\ Kl 11tllO .i.n1conc1190 IU11 11 21 ' nCok IJ617 •H•H"'-+•Hane1CoXI IS">.o1$o l~•t~o ,) Th J I I Cant1d l 1\li I( "4 I"! J\o I \ A t Am F .St al Cu• ltl Ill I 13 "nc" Hoc~ IS lJlt lj "IJ ! 1 ~':.-Z"ll 1 00 169 ~l 1'1"' 30'4 t+llll HtllflaM I )ll !~ 45 I t)-11 41.IJ "1" \1 C aVI S p an C1p MIO' 11 I 18 • Klll!ll El Jl, ....... lllllle t .LI 10 15 Cul 51 IS tJ ll.31 ... ncoroNSv 1 S 11\ Ill Ullo + "-rn z pH 20 1lt11 60 5& '° HlrC011rt I .., JI J6lo + \oo Spon d b Se Ja-b C10 Sow 1 • LMC D•T 1 .... 1 All>fl~ FO '61 10 XI Cui s' 191 '1) Atld Cl•• I 20 1,•, '•·"· •,,: "',,..! -1 1 CT_•,,',···' • ,,",," ·,~f"",J~' -~·.·.~-·. 1,n1, ', •,, •, -. •,·, ~ •,·,~-"T \.o sore Y n '"v C&p ln!A ] l•t Linet n 11'4 21 ~ it.m<1P '11 S It C11~ S) O Q I ~1 AoaclleC1> 11 •• ( •~ •-j " "" .. '" -,. J av1ts R N Y would extend C•PTt" 1 • 11t unc1 An 111 •I• Am ll w• 1 01 11~ Cu• s. l 11 • 11 ADcoDll l.lll J.11 l4 • ,,~· ,,. 1 11i.u.11 n l IJ • "'• 1l \o ..t.-1;,Mr~ 90 lOJ 2i.0 7G>.. 21 + t.. C• o~v 11 11 ., .. wo ''' 0 Am 0•" o • >o 1J Pel• J o' l Jl ,,, ,_, n ,, l ' '• +J ' ~-m n IOb 10 11 lO'• :JO'.< -H1r• Al I 20 1 u~, \°""' IT'ii + ~. '1 d M d d " ''" ·-< '" ~ "' 17~• 11' -'!Ii ~·· O I 9 9 • 9 • -'• .. I El I A J ?1,. 20 20 • + o " e 1 ca re e 1ca1 type f.•• • 11 • L1•M1n l~K • "mer E:~P"~~ "ckb • 'o '01 Aorc111N 10. 11 20\lll 191~ ., _1 l'c'"•"uo'w~• !, • ,11: 10,, 10, _ b ::1,•,•,, •• , ,, , " '' C1rrr GD ?I ,n , Ldrwn M 11\o 11 , Cap]! 7 llo I IM 1{11 ck f:I I U I Ji "PL pt (I 04 "I U> ti\ U-',f ur "" I 1l• ., ~ 0 coverage to the disabled and C1H HG 10•. 11\'I Leid• L4 11" u 1 1ncm" 1 Jt t 11 L"• G•lh 1 11 1 u ... 11 ... SY< 1 06 so 11ul. 1119• -' cv1 t• 11 1 1<1 '' 21•0 ' • 1o;, H11eu ne JI •~ • a ~ -\o II b d Cli!I (10 211 2. Le I (Ni l1• "l't 111Yt'1 197 I II L•• lliell ll ,, u 11 Aor<lliN "' 1 I n JJ l~O ... +I (ycic>o'. 1 Kt I , •• 1(. 2:\ I -HC ... Ind IDp u • ' ~l. ~. -i.. lo a Amel 1cans y m1 1973 ,',~,"~.,, tt, ,,,• ~,,,, ~!.~",' ,•, 11<.. 11 ~-1 1 " Llberf'! Jn J 111 Arcn Den 1 31 33 ll j1 • -:; ; CvP inM 1 '° °' SP s1 ~ • H..c:l•Mn 1 r 11 1• • J)" ,,.... -• • ) Th A 'I d ] • ''-~" I? 13 • Stoc-111 ~ ~· Lii~ S!k • 11 i Ii Arl1PSvc IOI 11 11'• 11 11 _ l"l -0-HI ni HJ 1 lt :b l !I.II> ll't + lo e mer1can ne 1ca r .. nt Lio 1~ 7!osinc M t 1 ,, 1 "m F<>• •11 1 11Llf• 1nv 611ia11 •n•DS 10 u 110 1 1 , 12 1 1 1 , Ht~,... Cllfl J •• '"' '' A '1 d red\ WOU)d be C1!1 nlA J<\ l LobllW I 1 I Jim Orth S '~ 5 IA L "' N~I 8 ,. 9 S6 .i.rmco~! 1 Oil 19 10'0 10 1 1(1 1 + >o Of!nll vr JJOS SI 2~o 1( H~ller 1111 IO 1Jll 10\a 19 lt~o -•t SSOS 1>e tC I Cti1 1 0 l\t 6~LOllCOV l ;1 Am!nv ttllll~OL1no 1si J91 ... mcop1JO 1511<~ 7o 11'+•°"ne~li.t, \Olll~ill• HelrMPdsl •lJ ,IS ... I)~ • a voluntary system 1n which Chm L~~ 1 1 'Loo Etrn 101i IJ , .t.m Mv• 111 •Sil Loom • ~~ • A mco 011 10 1s "11!.ll 'I'• 21>.. + , g:;/ ]"° iot 2 1, 31'• JI , H~tmrhP 10 •1 u l1lo It + >• C"t< 11\d 'o !~LJncll C 11h ll~.l.m'1 Gt" l to 7U Cln•d l11)J.12A'1n°"' 160 I"'• ..... _,,0.ll Poet<• 4n 1Jlo !l o H~m1pt1C•<> \J )\1 3> l'll-lo the poor v.ould rt.ce111eCtw1U!I 1l 11 1dGEI Ul.ol• AncllO<CrooP (Apo! , ...... m"C~ IO 11119 ,, .. ,.,,._,,OIYCoCPlll 7 ISo 1)• is> .... 'Htrr11nc 2St 111 ....... 6\,+I• I'.~ Br.-.1 " ~, I ltlty 6\o '. CeP I 1 Oii 111 Mwl 1J 11 lJ 61 Ato CorP 90 I 16 .. ""' lt • -D •tnHUCI }O ., 15 .... , ... 7Jl• + M .. , Inc: Ile lO 36>.. JO. H'>o + t. rcdtrallysubs1d1zed Vnucher!IChr\! 5 101 101 Mllkt lo! It > G,..,.11 •u1031Luln Bo ln60 l1 58Arv" lf>(I IJ 14 > llo 2•>.,.li o:inPL1t0 O 2l 11'4 l1+l1H.,tlnl 115 1171 Ill 11J -1' rt d is I Ch•IPI 90101 Mamt"• 1 ~1 ~ lncm• 7Xt7atMIOn81nl Olll94 ... ~M!d01110 tll•t•1J••ll~o T logplplAol1,lll041V1 •1•11 -1\oH.,lhFOllO 4 2l' ?S 71 I Vlaa systemO aXCre I O (tedel •~''Minn M )i) Fil Inv 1U ll6Ma11!1n •15 1 7iA.~nO l pr.tj(I I ~9 19 It -~• PLpfBl/5 ilCMI o13 •I 4 Htlib .. n IJ 11 I)<. 12>1 •l l'o +\o t COmprehen!ll el'.lltM!<I l~o1H\ ncrC 1'.i l Ven 3'6S"116MfUFO t &710~"Hd9row II I I~ /1-gPL plSJISi\OO•I •I .U lifwPl<l<lt 11Uo2)o2) +\• 1nves In v CUii u ... ,.,,,.,,., r M!g 1) u 11 APPll0 FO 1 6? A3JM•'1Gll!l015111)AlldDG 110 n 3> l"'• i..11 -. Pl.. otD14 l20 fl • 'l ,,,.,..,Hiii Vo11Ne 1l ,., ~ t •o +lo Private health insurance The c,',',,',,"•'• ',,',',,',~,,•.•,m,~,' '' '"""'"''""'" •1s l?6Ml<1 Tr n 17 111•"114 s1>11 110 I'~ ,. ,.. -O•ere co 1 11 36 lS • lS•.,.~'H111onH0111 1 n 111 11 Jin+ ~-11 1f A$tron 1 09 4 4'Mlt! ltll 1611 AMITtln ~ l l 9 I I l>o -~. OtlmarP l 1 '° 1'' 16 1 1'>~ ~ lHcl>lrl 110 t ;t ll ll .;. I.. plan would expand todays '"'~ Ml 1~ 2'1~Mltl LP ll wlllo AY• H0\1'1nlo" M ....... \61110 71Atlll0ftt Ind ,, 161 IPt 16 j,. De!Mne !IO 16 , •• l' ,.1,.; 'H<w•nll'll IO , lJ 2J 2J -I• Cl~Y!O" 1 ) P l Ml)tr 0 10 11 ~ F11~d A f f7 , 1(1 M~ 0 F'~ 11 )0 11 19 "• C Yet I J• ,•,•, ~ •• 0 ,,'::O )!'1 -+> .. r:I!~ A r 50 Ill JG'.,.; "">lo ... ,,•, •+ ~ l1oll El"'-1 " I I ,••.. • .. ,, ->o '1ed1ca>d system ond >n"ol··e a C1 n1 M•• in 11 ~ M • ,,· '' F' 111 B ',. 111 1111 d~ Mu • 12 s 11 11 II <"'l<I ; .. ... , , ,, • , n ,, '' " ' • • c111ono Slo !•M~•'"' 1 , Mnc~ J nsnM~d•CDlllJUll"~'~otJH 1100 '1 JI 51 enec n J s lio!iCl,nn 6 • 3 net1ncrease1n federalspenc1~wco 1> 1• .,..,, 70 11 ~1co 1 tt •:J1MOOC1v 1 1111uS1 "'Alc~o1J •9J'">t2 tJ \+~ 111K 1"1111 1 ~,1~,101 11 ,HollrAlltlb 2 "' 4 "-~ C""llt D 6 II\ i ll~fl~b'°" 121 l?IMIF Fii 16> 1?t"llltn PlliD tt .. ~\ 45.;;:._, OtMMI• t0 ,15 "4 II 11 ' I Holl\15111 1:70 10 II 16't 11 + • dong (Or health insurance of ,_, '' S! J• .~,L" , ~,,,', >• ! '''"' 1 ~ t ,. Mii' Gtto 4 63 s 01 1',', .. ',~m ! 10 72lo tt 1 n'~ ~ ', OlnnMI!! pt 1 1 10 0 olo 1 -llomtollr.1 ,10 H ,. • 21\o 2!'1 -~· "' "' • ., •C 0<p lt :p 2 .,_,,_ ' ~nylhl °' J(l)S HotWVwl I 30 Sit 111/t ll IJ o -1 • some $10 bilhon Coltm S• ) • l 'M did C1 p, '°'' 6~(0" II 1' 11 1' MuUS Gv 10 10 10 36 ATO Inc ~·~ H 1,~ t; i~ = ,: o:~i.olyln! 1 ?J, 2l 1~ • -• Hoov SI I 10 1 11•• 11 , 21~• -10 The Nixon Adminis tration JS c: .:$sir ;~I~ H, :::1~.:x GT l~~I 1i • ~r;~ ~~I : ~~ : ~ E~ ~~ ~~:::li !~r:~·1np1: ll t 1 ; ~ : -o:~!~' .. : ~o 3~ ~· • ~' ~~ -~:!i ·t~ ~ :~ lr.: r~~ ro \ -1'• r""''"' I 1\!oM<>ts G~• 1'1l-o 30 1 6~11<1s1~ 1 ! I ul flrslJ ?91l?tAvcoCp 6Qe 10 ll>o II, 11 ..,_,:oeS<>tolnc.IO l) 10,,,', r," >O :j: :HO\ldPlllS J 2~~ 1N 1!>t+ o now attemplmg to undermine c,~ ~10•, ',', c •,, , "•"' ,~!", 14 1s 11..,ion St 1 06 'n Mu• T•~1 1 '~ 1 91 Aovco ou 1G 10 '' "' ,,.. DflED 1 1 t6 , •. , "''' •• , 15 , 11 1 15 , + 11 ~··" , -)>,Jo B1>11 Fdntll10ot NE ... Mwt t Olt9Averv Pd10 '"'"'' ,,_ 1 11•.,,lt\li ll i"I"" "" the d rive for comprehensive c-T•I 1(1 21 .., ~ s.:1 1 5 nos1an 1 jO 110 ,..., 1,..., 8 _. 1" ..,v"f •n l'Oo 11 19 • 11~, 1t ~ • g:• Ste•1, 16 1~, u Mlo + • Hou ehF I ?O 1•• ""' 37h 31 -1" h ComHtn A l >MonwkA 16...,1 1 ~BrDOd Sll?lS IJltN~llnv1 6 66 171il•onPd llQ 1I 1l ll1 l•o -~Xlfr OO Ill JI 11 .+-\0 HoutFllMXI l!ll ... IJ IPll -'• coverage -throu~ estima tes com p,y 11'011.Moni Col 6 , 1,,Butock c11vln Nat stt..,, ser lilttOI 111 111 111-11 '' .,.~.~111F/~n110 ,, 36 , 3' .. :1&•+ ttou1F Pl2 l l n Jto sa . Y o -•1 (amp " • 1 11 1Pl Bll(k univ•\! Bal•n '~11 0'18 21 !J 111'1 IJ ~I'm£,. ml Vf II• 17 1 11t1 +•1MOU•ILP 1:70 11 I '• •0"1 •lo f.l o Iha! ll l\.'OU ld COSt nearly $80 Cmp Cm 11 1111 z:::.~ ~k ti.. , Canan vn•vl I llnnd 1 :o SU -6--D 'Si, p1 CJ s 11 \ ll , 111.o -, H""~!NGs IO 1t SO > JO ' ~) _. • ' I~+ \Ct If y•11 •r• "' Wli"'I Amw.n .. SefyJc1 Tt11 •t• Ht ,.rttl .. lllfl tf. ,.,, coll1 1 M0'1 OP OIL ,AINTINOS WHOLUAlf WAllHOUS! b II CmP 1n,1 4 ~ • Mt10te ~ 10 10 D v:.i \ln&,41 Div d J '>t • 61 Babek w !O J.O "" ,.. o 14s pl 01 70 no JS u ' 14 , -• HouG1 1>11 '° 6 " 1 ", "," ++ '• l IOn a year Cmc lK 4 t•MIOI Tr" 11 -.11, NAIW S \lllllvl l Grwl" 7tl 1 61 Sa~rOllT 6~ ••• ~ 20 o + ~ 0 1' !Ion 41 11 11, 11 o 1\ w-41 1tlowJnhn 11 1"1 11 o 6 > 1 ' '1 \----:-:C:::-:-:::-;:::: -----Com"' 10 1 M!aTr w J , , 0 HY \Int u""v•f Pt Jlk e ? 4 to Siii GE 111 !II "ll 1 "ll 1)1o o '•Pd ..,b 1l 60 , 60 , 60>!, + • Howmt'I 10 Ul 17 "t 11 11 LEGAL No1 ICE Cpn 11 "'~ ,. J1 Mo!Ch M • 5 ~ er H1wA! : so l ~1 1'1(0"' '5• s 07 ll•llG p1c 1 ,tl l\ ' ~~ • ''" • g ~~~11 0 60 ;9 n • 11 • 11 • ~ l o l'ubllrO 1 •It 32 21 • 1f • fl • + ~t O'IN TO THI PUILIC TELEPHONI ANS.WEllNG IUIUU UH I ~~No::' :rlfTA ANA PHONI lu-MOI 835-7777 REAL ESTATE • • An Investment • Worth take a Investigating look at the REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT SERIES Are you searclung h1~h and tow seek1ni just the ri ght 1n\estn1ent for )our money" This se ries of free lectures on the real estate market featuring top rated ex perts 1n the 1nvesment field might be exactly \1 hat you ha"Ye been looking for Plan now to attend the lectures to be held on Tuesday eve n1n gs at 7 30 o clock 10 the Coll ege Center Bldg or Golden \Vest Colle~c Re1nember there is no charge to you Just sign up this Thursday and let the experls point the \1 ay to successful 111vesl1ng through real estate Oct. LECTURE TOPICS 20-New Tax and Syndication Laws-Howard Wainberg Oct. 27-Creativity in Real Estate Exchanging-Jack Kistler and Bob Steele Nov. 3-Reco9ni1ln9 a Good Invest· ment-Don Olson IAODERATOR--PAT MoVAY L.!·------~-c-------\Con!rtd O\o 0 /1,(11 Cull 11 It lluW Fd 1 '1 •SI Stock 1 I 1 &ii IM gPnl 1~ ll I 0 J1 o \Gl<>•'ll o! U 1 lS ~' 18 , U"' -1 t-1\lllBIY 110 t 11 ' 1 -' ((In! a11 1 2ll Mufi! '. I CG FO 1A6 I Sll N~ G I~ ''~ 161 a~ngP pl ' 1 . -•• Olllh>thm '° IO 11 . ll. 11 l liui;tl'IHt1 j(I 4 lO) IDV, lO 't-~)1121 Coo~e LU l&•Mu!lllE• 2 1 ,C&o~mr 701 IHNf\IW(t 411 4 94B~nllf'p! lt r /' 11 1 111 -I 0 11 !14 pt"! ( 30 Je 30 -\o tiun!Chm "I '° 17: 11 , Jh.+ • Cll:IT9'1!(1T( OF IU~1"1($$ Corp ~ 4 • Ito Mver lE. 11 71J,1C•n llv 1 Of! l IA Nruw "'d I ! 11 6S Bk of (ftl I l• 1' 11 11 D lion Co U I Ii o 1S\lo } • 0. \o ld1 .. 0Pw l 60 •6' 11' 11 l ' FICTITIOUS ttAME Co•,.. 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I I> • r l 111m~ ol PllOFE5Sl0NAL P\lb"I~~ O•I"~• Co~ ! 011 • I'~· r(ICJ...ir> 1 l I"' 'vt>cr l'I I' 1 11 C•mpSD I 10 Iii 11 ' 11 2' 1 t "" ""n$ 1~ 1•, ' JI• 1 1 .. 0 _ , COUlt!EllS ~ncl l~OI Slid llrm Ii com ,.. ober 1J 10 11 f nO NOvomY. 1 l't1111 ~ t o0 f ll TMll .i.o 10 0t 11 01 Cn11 llrtw DI ~ 1, 1 , I • °'""' Al• I ~ •" ' llOitO ~· ll!f l~llow 119 Ol tan W~Oll ltl'D UU D Fr•~~!~ 0•~ on \Teoc"" I ,1 I '1 (dn F~t l 10 o 41t, •1 I + ~ '"•CIO-.~ Sir I JT' a l~l\ .. t "'"'' nr..,111nc1~11ceolrt11dtnctl••• l'JNT" "'"' 1 ... t~c11nc1 1 11 105(dPae tn12t1 1 11to '" 1/: ;!i',e°"'cv9 c; : 1;!'1 ,!~ ,:.;~ 1 Tl'l~ffl!io-'tllllh •krrflt1mibCllld111 fflltewl l:'G I NOTICE C.rw1" ''1 1 "ITtm~ Gt 2J 1l U 11 C•~ C 8dol 10l 11 l Jr , ,. ,.,....,..1 10 ,. , r -'> -!" 1111 tl«tt mi rktl rtllOttt.. Eclw••d c p .. -•• Ill Xlmtno Avt I 1:. "" UT t <"' ,,. lewr Mii , •• I 15 '••! .,. '° • 1~i.. u • Ill) Et lrOI 1 f'I l '' • '°1oo ',','' -•• ,.1., t ouru ,,, ··--···· ' l'(o 1 L-lhtth ----l"'l)m 1 ,. '~1, 1•~n r •o 6 !\ I 11 (M'O C&OI! s J IOCI JI ,. • II + t "'\~ Cedf•• .. • ' l"' .......... .. Oiied Stpt 21 ltl(I <EITll'l<.•Tt. 0, llUSINE ll r: M"m I '6 I ~' I Y En I I I ]O C•toPLt I.. 1 l 1lO.:. 1l 1l 0 + \o "' rl "'t l '" 1\ '~" II '":! ! : 1--Attot ,.trl Ot llltr11 bo-.ionrwil l'9JI EDwlrd ( Pl ~~· ,ICTITIOUS NIM( ~d trM 1 ,•~I '01 ~~Cr !:d, "> >1•0 u, ~ (ltPTt" 1 IO 11 ll•t 11 o l• , -, c~1 f." I I l•t )I .111 • ?! ~ )' ' _ h llUI l!Ctk div.,..... "-••olOol•o ••"' ! 1 ! ~ 1 ~·"" 1n< •11 I w " '"' C~"I' (p 00 !l 31 , J ~ l/i' r '' "' AA"" j_.O " ,. i: • r> , . .,. ..-.. "'" Slllt ol Ctl tor" I Tllo \lnclfro 01\tG Ooti Cff Y f , <"" cm ~ , \I t no TwnC ire l 11 • 11 c~ •Gn l lOt 70 , 1' 1 lt 0 _ "" c,tNr Iv •• 61 !,! I .., ,• ~ • \ = ~. dtnd 0-0tt .. rto or ••kl In Ir"' ''' o r1netCoo.ont' d\IClh\11 ttovtl,.,•u111(11 Ill• Mo111ont 1,.,,,.,. ••> rn•Un • MM! 1 2t •osl1 1,..H '°" :it If' 1 !'-\ ... E tt4•t~lr '• 1 •• °" IHI )I ltlO .,.lo • mr • l'(o I t¥ IN"'""" 111-oth. (•Hlornl1 .,.,.,.. ,... '"" Trd I~ 711 11 .. u~ 111 • "' •• I ~1•1et-6ott 1• )1 • ,,.~ 11'0 + • " ........ "" II ,, r~ . 11 • -" '""" 0 1tO•l>d ... Piie • I I ,,,, ..... ~"911< ;.n ~ IOf ....W.ICt Mt1t ttri.GlllUf fletll*.ro •1-nl-el HO DO Jo.S Pl~· ~ n -"' ll" C1oltl I 1' I.ti 11("rlr 1 10 111" JI , Jf"i J.1 , F,\.~~ ~I 'ol ~ l~ : 1 ~~ jl ~ 1 ~ l'•Y8~ft '" otock 11\0rl,,. !tit,. Hll,,,_~ I PHl•f'll (llWl1'111 c P1•k•r -no-IO m• ... ,.,,,,, .-· "'' ''' '•m ,, ·-~ ... m ',.,, ... U"".., Fllf'ld~ ,,, ,., '' '. ... • • "'~ ff ,, ' '' ,....... "" " •\ 1 ~4 •ccm flt .. ~ -• ! ~ml"" '° I '" '' , _ '• ,_ .. ..,. ""' •11<11i.....r"° or t o:<11111r11111o to~!11t11e<10"w~estn1m• •sullH• ~eel 01 I~• le!lelt'l"I ot•to~ w"o•t 11~"t~~v"< :,~ ,1, lncnm 1lnl1JbCttOC(.rp tO j U j' If, t kt I ~'• ff 0 I~ -..n~ II •~11 11 ... tnl '°'° n"'" n fu I ""° 0 Atl ol ruldr"(~ ' "I"'" ' ! •l I" ~Cl~ '~ , ' Ct!I.,. !!CD , • ,. .. 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I Oltlc' '" '""" ;:;;:;-..,,, ~ ,,,kt, rt~~!I JI. 6 •• 1 • t...:-1 •l • I• C '\ li'° <>Ii ~ -~ ff 1 .ff ' St \'J =1 't ~::'ft"J 1 j ') ;o 70 10 wtt~ cllvllltnlh In .,,.,~ ,,_ N"' 1ui,ie Or1nt1t Co\lnty STAT !! or c•\.tFOlll~ I I~ nd ,. •1 ,. .. Si>I s I I 11 sot !"' !rPl I XI )I 111. l1~ ,. -... Fli.c•C• I lit '' " ~~ "3'o -II ....... Id "'. •N• OlvkltM omlll.. ... My (ommlHIOft E••r~• \o••••<,OU"TY •v~•n ,,,.. 1¥llt11:eS 5D1IU 1" tnl L,1 E j 1~ 11 !f.1' ~'•l'l•TI;., .111 lit 'l~] 1~'-•""l 1errt00f111!1Uont1~1n 1 lu141w!M,.. Nov t•lt7t " ...... ''""""~....,bl ''l ... )'111M11w1• "'!' 5 1 +'•1'N(CFU 11J l1 lt1,\Tl -·-..-·D-••M '' fl ub!!11'1td Dr•n•" (MIT Ot!IY f'lt(>' .. 2'1,_ Ol:lctor II, ttlO 11110 • ....,,,,,' ·-,,non \1~"1111 l • '112 ! '° It • • 4 ~7\• F"'C .,, 7! ) "•r::' • •• ll'' -,. m...... .... -.... • "' Pl" II" "' ..... ... ~1t:n•I"' •JllH•fil Hft "'"' W Ttvl~r C: • • •1 I 111111-1"'1 I 11 J.tl f"TtlU tOD ti 11 • 1'\o \1"' -j ' Foote Cl .0 •'o h 11• •>" _ 1 ""' nllfrll!""d Cit" vo•• -•••••• ~. --t now11 -lo H -11_, Ptt•n ""° t "'"" I' ,,_ W1llSI In A$ 10 .U _...o I 60b )1 lf , 11 t I .J \o l'oo!e M 11 12 • 11 ._ '"' ~ ••- '"" ,. Oct 1, ll 30 1,,. 17'J-10 '"" .• illubl.!f 111 '"° lo •Rd " , "" • '' '' '"°" •" ... !.I~:::: :.,, I ~· 2 • ~ o ?ro FocnFi•• "' n it ' • 1~ •'Ot• 111¥lllH!:, 1-I'• • '" ._,, ..,,.,,. I EGAL l':OTICE ~•'l't 11 •u!ttt• "t'<I to t~r w 1h" '" ("-Vt1 !~ •1 I~,., W•fi~ 1-(.u IO 'i t1 16 t•I Hd IO 11 •'":! It • 19\l -, l'POle #11 II! 1 'l', 1< • tS ~ .,. (, tt 111<11111rtbull811 ••N •-S•tet ht tu• CO VONS.OllD IT •----~~ s•rU<Mnl it'll! •Unow!f'l!t«t llt ,,ttlt'ttd .• ~, I"" '11 ! "Wt n~ln Or~vp Ceri 'I'll Ill 'ti 10 '° 20 + • ll~rdM!lt ) iO n SI !G'~ ~,',> _ ,•,• tl9-C•1 co eT-!-Olvltlc!no v-";,.·~- , -MOT ICl~•IDITllltl ltof'l.tlfn' ""':;A. vo :•,<1";'° ~t' \~U1:1;!'•°1'> .... ~~ 110 Ulo U > U•-'"''°'M~ltJ b" 6f 1~" \ft•, ..,..,...,. D 'ILY PILOT CO""T o• T"f ' '11• lt\o lf•-1t"fMclC .t!.M I ,•,',' ,,1-11\t f.\,111.a •l>f 11~1 111 tvrt. •<lll~l•4!11t1> "' SUP!'ll/01 ., (0!11<111 St•, if/ H I'' • 11 Mcr11 111 t N "ldbrll 111( IOI 7'• i' ) • t" ,ct! Wiii to 11 11 '"•II-, ' "M I ST•TI 0, CALl,OlllMI& 'II• ..... H c e-u • I "'"~ 11 .... 1•"' l f(J'y I • ""''11'1 Pl •J u • I". ~ tftl Wll col I ,j ., u '!. -\~ .......... -• •.• ft-WllllOlll ... .. IN V'LLEY fHI COUMT'f'....Of OUNCE ~·••Y "'"'" (lllo•~I• .. ~"', '-'' ,,. Try11 t Ulll4'CJMt-s 1)0 n ,..., "'" 71 + •11'tdWO JI!!> I"' I' 1 ·•1, .,~. --Wll~ ••trttnte. ....... ,... HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTA ,., N• "'"'"" f'rlntfD~!Olfict 1" ' r \ "~· ~.,, ,,. """'' ,,.,l)fl' C:l'IA"''"y ' I• )r'"; ,,, )' ·-. r'•nllltf •D • s• 1· $:1 -., trlbvml 1-WP!t (' •o OF •• •LTORS 11:.1 .... o1 111Lo•1N " evHuM O.C••1 o.,.,., c°""''' ,•1 "" 1 " 4 1 W• '" lo ~111 ~' ~1111•M11 1111 .1u ", u .... ~· -1H~1su M •o 1' , 1c , "' , ' w " 1~ t1c1-1'l•d BOA"" "'_.,., eel ,.., c.,...mfuion Ei•I ., ' "• • •• • • w1no1 110 1 SI "'tMT• ~ 110 )Cl l P. It + lol t\lfll(o I Pr\ U 1" 1 • /' ) .; t i ,., tfl vtrT vf-n blnkru1tc:' ol' •It+!,.. I e.y r ' '''' .... ~· • '··1wn1 Ind 1..2" 'tt hl(ktr Mot n' ~... •'. f' -'" """'"Ill "' 171 , • H1 J ~111110 -,,,_ -····-·-... HOTICll: '' HI• G!ll N "' •"' i..e1 .. ,..., , ~c ,. ,, ~...,11 11 'J '1~ c~.iJP~ ,, ... G ~ ... .... •qo -~ COAST C~""UNITY COLLEGE DISTR ICT <ftdllo" el """ ...,. ntmtt flKllll t Pu11• 1-°'""'" Cc.ul D1 1, illllo• .. """' ~ •• i , ~ I'd • 1 •lot !"'"' '/" ' ~ tt >< J:. --linlr...-lt"f "'' • -·~tt•·o " .... ........ 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" ~ .... -· 11 tn<I ""' r"·" •llml'I 70e . .,,,,., )•" ~tl~~ (Ff: Coro (fS.F~~S\ 411 ti~ "'~" lbb McN L l.lbtrf'fCD .211 Ll&rl\I Ln t• LlllYLll 1111 25 lloa M'li{I ff 'I"""'., , l GM~ JS '11"' El A L 11el11Nt 1 IO L liw;~ 1113 ti::: AA lt t.Jno TV Ill S tl«MI C11n1 lttonlllCI _jOt t!lf:: ~'1 "~··' ,.-Loe Air l.OIWS 1111 I Lor!Clll .2'D t"'lf':l.J. L=1G1 I 1• lon11ll..I 1 :M lor•I C.1 l1L_l ,. LoullGE 1.JI lw Nath ._ Lowerlllll to l ubrliol l'O Llldl'I SI tc1b Ludlow I.II lllll:IM Sii I Luml t11C LVO C.1 L'l~1Vn11 451 Ll"k.YI pl1 SO MICAllF 20b MtcOPnld JG M1cbl Co 30 MICV JtH I MK il'd I t.11 M.., $q O.r M111cChi' '° M .. nvfllll~ MallDl'r I IO M111hll'ld Mb M•n-n M1nH1n 'IO MAPCO IO Mlr•ll"" 1 t.0 M1rct1r to Mire.or Ill A2 M1r...,nl 211 M1r Mid 170 M1r!fltllb 12 Mtrltn 1 0?1 Marcrull Cem M1>rlall IOI M.,.lllH l 10 Martl..M l Ml Mr¥1Cua «lb M•-'flCll 11 MtlOlll!I 72 M••Hf F l M1tt1t 10 MlrDSI!' 1 60 Mll'S JW JG ~C~'T"'' 1:0 McCord I Jab McC!'9f'I I 20 M.cC"' •'•.JG McOlrmll lb Mc~!d Ca MtD<WID 40 MtGrEIS 1 olO McGHln '°' Mtlnt'1>1 1 MtlCM I 12e MCLMn -Mcl.Clllll! .0,, MtNl!I 711 MNll Cara I Mull lllAJ to Mldu.-c 110 MEI Coro MllYSl\Oe 1S M1mor11t C11 Mtrt~ 11 Mtredl!I! I lO Mesa Ptl ID _,,,, ... Mnll Mc'h 2 MGM Mt!romd 50 MGIClnY 20 MlchGllUI I MlcTllO<ll Xie MlllCnTtl N MldSoU!lt K Midi<! It l"O MldltPIA 4 JS Mldw1t on J Mlltl1b 1 70 MHt •rK 1(1 Mln~MM 1' is Mln~f'Lt l 2C MIHi'ICP 2.15 Ml5flllot )Of Mo "KAS MPttm 160 MGP'ub$ IOI! MObllOU 1 .. MohMCD I" Mohwtc 01 I MOlnd l'" ~dl 110 -·~ -·· M""roe-. 1a =:"~Ifs Matt!DUI 1, 71 MontPw I'' MONY M_.Jf1 MOO.-.v.c .. or z::::~ ':g Mor Mor to .MolfM'Oll 1(1 MIS'ut_tS \'~ MIS!flT :If MSL Ind 40 Mun11newr I MurPl'o~ I JG Mu•ll!l'I Ind MUl1ihDll jt Mur!IO 11fl JO Murrl'Oll 40 • Ttlfsday October 20 1970 Tuesday's Closing~rices-Complet~ew Yor k ·Stoek Exch fil!g e List ~ Mod erate Trading Shows Market Mix NEW YORK (U PI) -Stocks closed mixed in moderate turnover Tuesday Near the !1nal bell. advances were leading de-- cl1nes, 661 to 634 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up about 2 pc1nts at 758 70 Tlfl 81d j,o T1lca!IN I I~ T1llRY ll'ld T1ht'I !"' T-... I to A turnover of around 10 750 000 shares com· pared with 9 890 000 shares traded Monday 111\dv CtrP •-nco "° TKllMll Ill T~11k001 Cl T"'-ttonl1 Telech'n 1 °" Ttl-.1¥ 1111 $t Tl!t• Coro Tem11leln 75 'Tltnl'IKO 1 u T l!'llllK I _, .JI Tc111c~ 1 60 T1d!;Tr11 1 51 Tt•G•sT IA T11G1 •I ff Tt11G ul M Closing prices incl uded AM T&T 43 5/8 Beth St 21 3/4 Chrysler 24 3/8, DuPont 119 Ford 50 3/4 Gen El 83 7/8 Gen Motors 71 1/2, IBM 291 1/8 and So Pac 32 1/4 Electronics and oils showed selective strength while most other maJor stock groups traded in frac- t1ons and generally 1n both d1rect1on s Some analysts said the market 1s still In a "corrective phase" following a general uptrend since May ~mt:r.1 : T11PLd 45-Ttx Utll 111 T1xtr1111 90 Tt•lr11 ~Of Teatrn 1111 40 TlllClll.ol M " " "I " ~ ~ " • ' .. " " • '" m .. " .. ~ t '! ,J ~ "" .. ' .. .,. H~ ,,. u .... ~-~-" .. ff:: " •• :~ ,.. ... '"' ,, . f,'-•• " ' ••• " " ti. 2•\\ " ;1 •• ,.~. " ~· " "" ll l1 '" ... ~~ ff• " • .. ·~ '"' " •• ... '" ,.. ~· "" t \'o T"°"'hl IM I '-Tlllln'l Ind 40 I V. ThllmJW to. "" -'• T11rl!IYDr • 4l"a 'f l"' Tl Coro 1 'JO :IS~\ + .. Tkltw1tM • 1'""-~Tl~I '"' U -\'oTI Ir JG 12 +ill r1 ~" 110 IS -I'll T!lf> ll:llY Ill '' -1 ToblnPko «1 ?tV. -.... Todd51'1D 1,11 O•o + ''t ToledEll 1 11 lS'-' -• Toot1t111 Q 11~;('::tr1 ... CD to '1~\ _ "-Tr1n1Un 1 lt 4 >to _ \'I Tr•n• w Air "" t • TrnWAlr .,.. 2 11 1 TrllWil'ln IOI SI _ \lo Tr1lltrl'lfl '' ,,,. + -Tr1nte011 10 6 • Tr1nKll 111" t Tr1n1llr1111 lt t + .. Tr1'1elei'I IO U -\~ Tr1Yil'rl pl 1 I~\ TrlCont 1 4~ lJ\lo + .., Tr!Con ot:z.JG 31 • Trl1t1Qlfld IO :»'--~ TJtW lllC I 30 fJtW pl• 40 SC DAILY PILOT J J I Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List • ..... .. .. CMI I 111111 Ltw CiM Cll1 ..... ""' 1 .... I Mllll Ltw Ctne (fie P a tricia Hoge Nurses J oins Miss Patricia M Hoa:e •• daughter of Mrs Paula H Hoge of Huntington Beach, wa:s r~ntly 1ccepted for partlclpaUon In the Army Stu· dent Nurse Program She will have no military duties while attending school, Six mont.M prklr to graduation 11 a rell!tered nurse, she will be commluloned a Second Lieutenant In the Army Nurse Corps and will be required to serve an active duty ror • period of lhrte yeara Ge ts Promoted .. Maru-.e Cpl Joha p. r, SmlLllJ.lnt, J r., b111band or the former Mlsa Kim Z. P e p e r •• 249 Joann St , Co&ta Mesa. •• was promoted lo his prelleflt ·: rank while len'lft& •Ith the • Finl Marine Ail'CNft Wini in ·! Vietnam. ----1,;- to I •• I . • • • JI DAILY PILOT Tmd.11, Oclobtr 20, 1970 • .. '\ .. ' . . . . . • , . .. . . - . . • LEGAL NOTICE .. 'ormer· Governor C.lamori ,lfg~at-the ' D()or ( ',.I• By:llOBEIJT H. MO'ITRAM JUNEAU. Alaska (AP) - ''I'be R\lll'wtio's been go~mor of . Alaska , longer than any ottWiJ!l-l lt£brief history as -a state ls cl8{Jloring ~t the door agi.itt this;. fall, calling for change in 1 the 'direction the state1js·headed. LEGAL N011CE LEGAL N011CE NOTICE INVITING llDS Nolle~ 11 ~ tl~n 11111 Ille Soard of ,.r1>tltt1 of ll>t c°"''' communl..., Col'"e Dlilrlcl of Or•ntt C1111n1y, C1tU0ntle. wUI recelw w1letl blell UP lo 11 :OG 1.m .. ,.hu•ld•v, Novemoer 5, 19111, ot Ille Purcll•lltl!I ~or. ol .. Id ..:!'>001 dl1trld ~led 11 131' Ml.,... Avenue, COlll Mt!.W. C1lltorn!1, 11 Wiiie!'> llrnt 111d bkh Wiii be pUl:ltlclY -necl I nd re•d tor :I eocn Mobl~ \11Por A"llY1l1 L1bot•IOf"I', All bid• •rt fo be In .KCordof>CI wilt\ Ille INtructlom •nd canc1n1on1 •nd S11etlllc8tloft1 Wiiiet> ,,., now on Ille lftd ,,,...., be .ecured In ll>t office ol ll>t P urch•1lrt11 "''Mii ol .. 111 Khool dltlrlcl. LEGAL N011CE Eoldt l)kkltr ,....,,, aubrrlll wllll 1111 llld I c•ll>itf"• WO;. certHlecl Qledl;, or bl6-dtr"I bond ,...de POYOblt fo IM order ol Ille C.,.,11 Cornmunl..., Collf'!• Ol11rlc:I Boord of Tru11et!I In In omovnt nol leu "'•n llv1 percent CS Pt!rCfflll ol "'' aum b'" 11 • -··"'" '""' 1t.e 11ldcle• wm LEGAL NOTICE ..,,er 1 .. 10 111• ~ Cont,..cl If lheJ -----"'-'-"=0--'"'----·I ...... 11 • .,,,_ 10 him. •n ""' ...,..,, ol P--64 fillurt lo ent.r ln19 wdl conlrlCI, the .CRa Tll'ICATE 01' SUS\NESl. Proceed• ot ""' chec• .. 111 be fcrltlltd. or l'tCTl,.tOUS NAMR In Jiit c•H 01 • bond. Ille f\111 iwm thereof 'The unchr1l•r>od dOet c1r111v dte 11 cor.- Wlll 11e forftl!ed 10 11lt1 llCllool dh,lrld. ductln• • bullnf.'H 11 no O Tulli" Ave .. No bkldl< miv wlllldriw 1111 bid tor 1 N-1 Beach, Cotllornl1. 11nder the fie· '""kid (Ill tortv.tlve !~l 6'YI t iter the t;ilom firm name of aAG ALLEY Ind t11te HI tor ""' -.,Ing ""''.... 111•1 11ld llrm II -.eel ol , ... foll-· TIW eoerd 01 TruslHS re11rvn ,... 1,,. per-., Wilow MIM ln full Ind ol1Ct or!Yl '"e DI relecllntr 1nv 1nd 111 blcll or ol re11dtrw:1 11 01 followl: fo wilve •nv !rre1111l•rllla or llllorrrwlllllts LI .. H-Hler. 205Vt SCI. Fuller Av1,. tn 1,,., bid or Jn tne blddlntr. l~ Anvlle1, Collf, 90G3' Sit~: NORMAN E. WATWM Doled 5et>I. 1', 1'10 Seclv ll°"''d of T<V$IHI Liii Hol'Uuler °"""' N"" J. 1'711 n ·OO 1.rn. Sr1t• of c 1nrornlo. Lot Antr•l,1 Counlv: Putiti'lllOJCi O...~ 'co.11 O.llY l"llof, On Sft>I. 1'. lt7a, betor' me, • Nol1rv Oc1ober 20 71 1910 lt"·10 1"11bllc: In Ind !or told Sit"' "'IOMHY ' ' 1<>9tl'" Ll11 H_ .. , tnown to ,,,. to te 1111 "''°" whoMI ,,..,.. 11 w t.crlbtd LEGAL NOTICE lo ftit 'll'lttiln ln1tr11m"'I Ind ocVIOWlecll· ·--"=C..,"',,.;~-:::::o:::::=---1 " Ille ••eclllecl ltle ...,,e. • N I !SEAL! ClllTtf'ICATE 01" •USI RS H<!l-Lotln J'ICTl,.IOUS ,lllM NAMR l "H' "HOERSIGNEO 'don htrtb'I MY Comtnllllon JU>lrn , " June 11, 1tn ctrtlfy 11111 she 11 conducll"' I rll1ll Mell o . MAllC VON SUtl•Ea, oroer bu1lnH• 11 P.O. llo• 1Ml. Cl..., ol Attw,,.., Hunlln1ton &e1ch. Coun..., fl/I Ort"le. 12.M Wllllllr• •Ml., lltlll SM St111 11t Collf0<nl1, u'l(ler Ille ticllllout A .. < ,_, ,.,, firm ftO!'t'lt Ill CUSTOMCRAFT 5TUOIO, Lft "'' ' 1 ,..,;.,. 1nd ft\111 .. lcl llrm II <~ ol the Pllblllhld Onlnlilt' CPld Dlltv P llol, 1o1-ln<11 _....... whoM "'"" Ind .tidreu 0c1 '-IJ :io 17 lfl'll 11:12-111 11 11 fllllowt, lo wll : F"'C::-"''~~· ;:;'-':;"-,===~""-"' Morr w. ICteltMI. ltl"2 Cwtntrv LEGAL NOTICE tine. Hun!l1t11!on 8eld'I, C1lll. ~ . WI TNE55 my ltlnd t11l1 14ttl doy pl , l'·)fffl October, l"a. ClllTIPICATE OP •UllNESI M1rv W. ICHhnel l'ICTITIOUS NAME STATE OF c ... LIFORNI... ,.... llA!ll•lltncd -c1!1lfy ht 11 ,_ COUNTY OF ORANGE du;;ll ... 1 bu11Mll o!. lt71 Wtlll CJ 51., ON THIS 11111 dOY of OCtober .... D .. lt10, Aot. t. Cos11 Me11. C1llfornl1, u,..,.r lht betor' me Gt'Clrlel 5. LO'l'I • Mo!~ ticlllloltl llrm nornt of $TEAM llRIGHT P11blic In and for 1old Coun..., 1tld 51tle, CARPET CLEANERS orwl ltlll llld firm re1ld!rt11 tt.e•tln, llUIY cornmltsl-" or>d Is cornl>OJe<I 11f 1111 fell-Int perlOfl, ,...,..n, H•tOMll• 1ppeare<I Mory w. wlloH nome In 11111 ind ploce 11f r11Jdtnc:• K""'nel t ..,wn lo me to be '"' .,.non I• •• tollo.,., whoH nornt 11 1u11K1!be<I l<I 1119 within Robert O. &tltnchm!tt. 1071 Wtlloct, lri11tumnot •nd Kk-l~e<I IO rM 11111 API. (. CCKll Mftl, C•llf. ll'lt ••Kvlfd the Umf, Oiled Oc!obet 11, ,,10 JN WITNESS WHEREOF, I "-•e R.obtrt 0. llllttKkmlfl htrt!lfl!o HI mv h•nG •"" tltl•td rn1 of• STATE OF CALIFOR.NlA. flcl1I H ll th' div •tld Yff• In 11111 OR ... NGE COUNTY: certlflc11! Uri.• 1bpyt wrnten. o.. OC!obsr n. 1'10, be-fort m1. • tOffkll l Set i) Noll!'Y P11bllc In '"" for .. Id Sl1te, G1brltl 5 lov1 penOMI"' oppeirH R o be r I D. Nol1rv PU'bllc In i nd for Uld 11.ier.dimlll It-i. rn1 to be 1'he. C011nlY 1nd s111e pef'IOll whcll• "'"" 11 111M<Tlbtd to Ille Mv c11mmlu lon tl!Plftl within lni1t11mtt1I 1nd ocknowltOlltd ltt FtbrYt•Y 11. ,,,, ,_cuted ,~ ... mt. PubH1htd 0 •1n11t c.,.,., [)j!Oy l"llo• (Soffl) Cc.lobet 70. 21 Ind Novtml!U J, 10. 11111 ltJ6.1' LEGAL NOTICE E1crow Nt. 115-1"' NOTICE TO CaEOITOl.I TO lHE CREOITOR5 OF E. M. Br~ ok1,.,1. lr1111t1ror: P~twlnf lo Secll-6105 and '107 of "" C1llfornl1 Unltorm corn ..... rkol Coile. LEGAL NOTICE VOii 1rt ntrebv n01Hled •• followi: O ·---'=::;;;:~:.:.:.:='---T••nsftror 11 obout lo mtkt 1 lron1ltr 1· ,. • .,.. lo !ht Undtrolt ne<I ALFI.ED L . CRaTll'ICATE OP' •USltolRIS llELT RAN end MllOREO MAR IE l'ICTITIOUS NAM• AM • t~ man behind the door ls dl.ggin'g in, delenninfd to <Win lu1 lint election. to the po6t' and Ii ad the state 'along the:"balanced" course he Ms clw1<!d. . . GoV. KeUh H. Miller, a ~Ucan, got his job when GOvi-,Walter H. Hickel was ap. poi!Jted ·secretary of th e Interidr and Miller, ttien ~ry ·of state, was a~ pointed> tcr.succeed him. Hic~el•won the .governorship from.tWfUiam A. Egan in 1966 in ~a·Very tight race. Egan, an immensely popular Alaskan whose Pl?Iijical career began in ·I Ml, ·.now is back. pr.,. claimipg.. ""'a new .era," aJK! calling for ''total rHvaluaUon ol r~U eur pi:ucrams." ~µ.,. ca~idaltes (orecast an extremely close .-race ·to be de?de"f strictfy on st a t e ~.;un1jke the Senate con- ~t , ti;wee11: Republican in· BEL TaAN, Tr1n•ltrff, ln 111111<, ell of !ht ,. ... undef1l1ned dO ctrllf'f l~•T trt ,.....,.111\, 111PP!lt,, rnerch1nd!1t ~ OJtMr conOYCll"I 1 bu1l""1 ol "· 0. Bos H, lnwntorv. •nd t11ulPmenl of "'" ct!1tln CYPrtu Colllomt1 "'311, under lltt flc- v1rl1!v 1111r1, t nown I• "8rooltl"ll tltlo!K f1nn notnt of CANDELA DESIGNS v1rleno" 111 of which 11 loc1te<1 •' lJOt ond 11\0l 111d llrm 11 tornPOSH al llle E11t Coot! Hl9hw1v, CllY of Nt-1 tollC>Wlnv Pt•l()n•, Wflotl n1me1 In tuH lleKh. COllnlv ol 0••"9e. C1llf0<n!1. tnd P!OCl l ol re1lclfnc.t ..... follC>W1: Thi Off'llnl llO""li 11r nome1 t nd Jim11 F . Goo:lfr...,, tl4t E1lllff Simi, bulllM!tl 1ddrn1n of Ille Tr1nof1ror •!Id cvor111, C1Hfornl• tOUO Tr1n1ferff •" •• lollowl: Oo!lald c. $cNlllOer. 11l'02 LynrOM TRAN5FEa OR 51rffl, "'r<llll1, C1Utornl1 '1006 E. M. llrookl"'•· 1H Pllln111tl1 Avt.. Oittd Oclobtt 2, lt1' Cor-.Ml M~t. C1llt. J1mtt F, GOlllrtv 1RAN5FEREI!! Don11d C. 5chntldet Atlrtd L. ll•ll••n• "2't L"~"'ur, (or-ST ... TE OF C'°'LIFOl.NIA, 1111 Mir, Ctlif. OR ... NGE COU NTY: Mlhtre<I Mi>rlt 81ltroft, '" l 1rt11P11r, Oft Oclllbe• 1, 1t1't. belort tfle, 1 Nftllrv c...-del Mlt, c.111. •ubllc ln •nd tor ••Id s11r1, per-llY All ofhtt t1u1lnn1 "'"'et 1Nll -'""" •-••H J1me1 F. Godlrf• •NII Dor\11<1 '1ltd llY Ille Tr1nsltr'OI' w!lnlft 1111 lll•llt! 5chneldtr lulown fv me lo be Ille .,.,'°"' 'fl!l'I losl POI\, IP fir 01 IUIOWn to Ille -•• .,,,,,.., '" 111llK•lbed lo 1111 wllllln ,.,,.,,,.,ee, 011: NOrlf, lnll<Vtnt"I 1tld 1ctnowltdttd 1111, •-· Tl>t bu1~ tr1n1fer 11 l<I be con•urntflottd ecu!H IM u.me, •I UNITED CALIFORN IA llANIC, CorDnl (Officlt l Still Oo!I Mar, 'O!flcl, n •I E11r C°"'ll H1tnw1y, lrtn1 M. llell Cor-Ml Mlor, COllnl• of Or11t111, Nellrr P...tollc. C1llf1Jr~le C..llll)Hli1, on or otltr r.ovtmlllr t. 1t10, Prlfl<:IPll Off!t t m 011~: Ck:fober ll. 1'70. Orlntt Cllllftl¥ Alfn!d L, a1nr1n MY Cammlnloll E•olro1 Mildred M1•l1 8t!lrtn $Hot. 10. ltl• PllbllVted Or1 ... 1 COlll D1llT Pll&I, Publl\l\ld Oro1191 C°"'I! 01lly Pllol, (lo;:-r :IO, llN 1141·10 ~loller ll. 21. 11 onc:r NG"""'bt< l. ltlll ,.,,.,. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE cumbent Ted Stevens and Democratic nominee Wendell Kay, who has made Nixon Administration poliCtes, · both foreign and domesUc, the key issue. In other respects, the two races are similar. Stevens, Ji~e Gov. Miiier. has yet to be elected to the Senate. He was appointed by then Gov. Hickel to succeed the late sen. E. L. Bartlett. Kay, like Egan, has knocked around A I a s k a polit.ics for years. Democrats hold a subslan· tial margin over Republicans, 30,672 to 18,217, in" iegistered voters; but the key to victory in both races lies witti the 54,501 Alaska voters wbo registered as independerXs. In many ways,. Alaska .has· ent~red" the .,new, era" Eg'.an' heralds. As a result of the 1969 sal of oil leases to some of its vast North Slope reseTVes, Alaska was ca tap u I l e d overnight from. a pauper st.ate to one with cash reserves of $900 million. The legislature held its longest ~ion in history this year -147 days -devising ways to spend the new wealth, -e.ven ~ing a bill to provide state pensions ror all of Aluka'a eJderly. Miller vetoed IL The &'tate politica1 picture is complicated, however, by Alaska's depe.ndence on declsions emanating fr om Washington -Mcisions over which a governor has very lit- Ue control. If it' is true Alaska has step- ped into a new era with oil, it , also is true that It has but one foot on solid grourKI. 'I'tle other is stuck in the muskeg, and it is Washington -not Juneau - that must wrtnch it free. Alaska's new fortune was a one-shot bonanza. Its hope of sustained wealth is pinned oo the royalties e~ed from the production, ol oil over the rest or the century. N9rth Slope oil companies • need a cross.state pipeline to move their oil to m~rket, but con- struction has been blocked by Interior Department refusal to grant a construction . permit until it is satisified the line can be operated. w i t h o u t' permanent damage to the en· vironment. Meanwhile, an even more critical problem has taken shape. 'llie U.S. House recess. _., . ed wlthout taking action on a began a ~year tenn in the -terms as aovemor .. or-tne -in- Senate.passed ~aska natiVi!. st.ate House of Represen· fant st.alt. land clalms bill. tati"es. In 1966 he was eleeted Miller sees the choice this The Interior Department ' ' Secre• ..... , of st.ate: as Hickel's year as one between "a had clamped ' freeze. on -3 allocation of public .land' in runnbig mate, and succeeded forW'ard·m,ovi'R'I ad· Ala.ska pending ~t~t H.ickel to .the govemorsh.ip on ministration ~ bas ~ witti nfUves who claim much Jan. 241 19'9. programs that should ~ea)fy ~ of the land is theirs. The Egan, 56. ~ a native-born continUed •.• or go1ng·back lo freeze eipires in December, Alaskan. He served in the ter· the .first. eight years ol and without ·I' congresaiooal ritorial legislature : from 1941 statehood." ' settlement by ·then, native until 1955, when. he was Egan says it's a· choice groups. are expected 'to -seek elected to the Alaska Constitu-between la~k ol direction and injunctive relid' thaf will tiOnal Convent.ion, and became "experience, together with a make pipeline _ constnictlon its presidf!nt. knowledge of priorities and · impossible reg:ard1ess o f A strong ad vocate o r planning to take advantage ~ lnlerior Deparb'nent·aclion. statehood, Egan won one of the challenges and potentials It is within 'this federally Alaska 's two "Senate" seats facing us." · dominate,i framework that under the Alaska·Tennessee Egan criticizes Miller for :fl,filler arid Egan are ·locking plan, and worked in the U.S. "too much pemmfpt h1 horns. • ~le from 1957 u n t i l task forct! and colnmiS!lion," Miller, born 45 years 88-0 In etatehood. He then retu.med to and charges that the governor Seattle, has _liv~ in Alaska forl• _A_las-:;j;ajiitiioiiwiii~niitiiwoiiiiijjsujjccossjjjj.jjjji•jj•iijjljjajjcjjksiiiiia~g~grjjessiiiiiiivenessiiiiiiii(i·iii· iiii;~ more than 20 :years. In the Alaskan tradition, he and his ~ \ wife homesteaded ln )"959 and DANISH FURNITURE 5 A L E 1960, near Talkeetna, and won ACCESSORIES a patent to•lil~ land In 1961 . 1(\ ~ M.illtr didn't enter state A ftj • 1 • • politics until 1962, when he: IUUA\ LOCAL No olh•r ritw1pefi1r t1Jl1 ' you more, 1Y1ry d1y, 1bo11t wh1!'1 9oin9 on in th1 Gr11t1r Or~n91 Co11t than ih1 DAILY f'ILOT. NOTICE TO ca101TORI su,.E•to• COUllT OF TN• STATE 01' CALIP.ORMIA l'Oa TNR. COUN,.Y 01' OaAJf•R -.. A°'71" ,.,.Aalt. S. GOlOAIHE, Why dic:bityou tell us you needed money? • ' I t ' I ' I We have more ways to loan money than you have reasons to heed it. Personal loans, automobile loans, boat loans, mobile home loans and business loans to name a few. So why need money when we're around? wnMIM Ol'UNftMlllo I ....,. llATlOllM um MrmbttfDIC COSTA MESA 230 E11,t 17th St .. 642°1660 • - .. • ' • • ~ l . ,. Good Grief, Pu1npkfns Picked If the party's as great as the pumpkins, it should be a notable bash. Mrs. Mike Darnold, left, and !\1rs. John Toner select pumpkins for decor at the San Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce "Great Pumpkin" party Oct. 30. The setting will be the San Juan Hills· Country Club with dinner at 8 p.m. and a "Good Grief'' social hour at 7. Da ne· ing will be to Joe Soukup Trio. Costumes are oir tional. Avco Offers • Salt Creek Access Plans Avoo Community Developers Inc., which recently acquired the South County holdingli of the Laguna Niguel Corpor•· lion, i! "diligently working on a number of alternate solutions for access to the beach at Salt Creek," executive vice president Robert Follett said. "We feel we can arrive at a very workable solution which will serve the needs of the community and the developer," Follett told newsmen in a press conference at Laguna Niguel. He .said he could not :ipeculate on which 11olution would be best until the alternatives had been presented to the Board of Supervisors, probably this week. At the request of Avco. the supervisors 11greed Wednesday to delay for one week the filing or a suit to establish 1lhe public's prescriptive right lo recreational u1e of the 1%-mile beach between Monarc h Bay and Dana Point. Jn a letter to the board, Follett sild, "It is the view of management l hat reasonable access to the beach must be provided to the public. We would like to do this in conjunction with a plan ac- ceptable to the county." He said Avco is "eii:tremely interes ted" In not having a su it initiated at this lime since it is the firm 's opinion that access can be provided without in volvement in litigation. New Publication Aids Policemen Find Runaways HAYWARD, Calil. (AP) -A new biweekly newspaper with a sln&le aim-to return juvenile runaways to their parents-is being distributed to thouundsl of police agencies In the United Slltta, Canada and 1'fexlco. 111e publication is the brainchild of an Alban y, Calif., furniture wholeaaler, C:eorii:e Stampe r; Who said he worried about the obviously homeless kids v.·an· dering the streets. "I dln't start It as a money·maklnc venture." he sald. P'or $28.50. the .parents of a mlssln& VOWlRSter can place In the National Miss· ing Youth Locator a photograph of the child, a full deacrlptlon and a brief measage. Tht 111 Issues printed have Included descriptions of 1bout 75 tee:n-11er1. Stamper said each edition of the l,ocator ts distributed free to 2,400 police dep1rtment1, 2,IOO probation departmentr, J,t10 prlv1tt lnvest11ators, 1he 50 state police aaencles and to tl Canadian cities ind 41 c!Ue1 in Me1lco. The front page of the publlcaUon 11y1. .. A good photo Is the bat aid a police department can have." ''That's tnle," 11ld 1nlpedor Al \\leathennan of the San Francisco Polle• mlAlna "penonl bureau. Asked what he tbovlhl of Stamper·s project, Wealhmnan 11ld, "lrs a good idea, notlng tl>at his bureau utt1 the· publication u a check against police files. . Groundhrealring Slate For New Dana High School Groundbreaking ceremonies for Dana Poinl's first high school, overlooking the beach or Salt Creek will be held at 10 :0:.Clock Friday morning with trustees and other district and community officials participating. The school, which is expected to o~ ror classes in the rail of 1972, will hold 1,800 pupils. The site is at the end of the street of the Golden Lantern about a quarter mile from a proposed interchange <;f the Pacific Coast Freeway. Drain work already has begun on !he site of the dlstrlct'-s second high school under a $217,777 contract. As soon as stale financing hAs been arranged bids v.·ill be Jet for the construction of the -buildings. The opening of the school will come just in lime to cope with an ancitipated soar- ing of school enrollment, Supt., Truntan Benedict said. San Clemente High School. planned for 1,800 pupils is clogged with 2,~00 this school year. When Dana HUis opens the Cistrlcl's high school population is projected at 3,200. A secondary role for the second high school will be to involve use of empiy classrooms for junior high school students until a second campus for that student bracket can be built. William E. Burlock and Partners of Corona del Mar are the desir.iers nf Dana Knolls High School, and the dra\v· lngs have won acclaim as one of the tops in the nation by the American Aasor.lation of School Administrators ln Atlantia-Glty. Clement,e CofC Back Sign Ban Proposals !or a billboard ban and tighter 1lgn control zone overlay for county areas have been endorsed by the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce. The action was taken recently by unanimous vote only two hours after Orange County Board of Supervisors authorized the planners to schedule public hearings on the sign ordinance plan . The board of supervisors asked recom- mendations of the planners on a Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce request for a billboard ban \Vilhin a one- mil e perimeter of Dana Harbor. The chamber sought the ban action plus details for new sign regulations lhrough an overl ay ordinance which, if enacled, could be added to any existing zone. The comprehensive proposals include the billboard ban and phasing out of ex· isting billboards within a three year limit. Blinking, rotating and on-roor signs would be (M'ohibited, as would all outdoor- advertising. Only identifiCAt ion signs or 150 square feet of total combined area for a single blL!iness would be allowed. Accident That Killed 4 Probed Down the Mission Trail District Bond · Meeting Slated MISSION VJEJO -The upcoming bond election in the TusUn Union High School District will be argued at the general meeting of the Mission Viejo Homeownen AllociaUon Thursday. Mike Shearer, prtsldent, will open the meeting al 7:30 p.m. In the multlpurpoa room of Mission Viejo High School. Speaking for the bond Issue will be a member of the scbool board and the com· millet working for the bond passage. SpeakJng against the measure wilt be Gerald Huntley who has written the op- position arguments which appear with the sample ballot. Also on the agenda will be a dl!CWlslon of the Parson's Engineering reporl wttich and discussion of the uses or the Marine Corps Air Station at El Toro. The report is being released on Oct. 20. e Nurses Sought SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Nurses are being sought to assist \\'ith the Regional Occupation Program In the San Clemente and Laguna Beach hi~h schools. Instruction is being prepared in the health aide field for two dozen students \l'ishing to learn job entry level skills. The volunteer nurses will be used to assist qualified teachers and to supervise students "''ho will be learning skills need· ed in hospitals. Hospitals in South Laguna and Capistrano Beach have volunteered to aid in the instruc tion. . Anyone interested may contact Mark Jones, director of the ROP program at the Capistrano Untried Di.strict Office, 400.1215 . e 1'1eal Otter CAP ISTRANO VALLEY -Free or reduced price meals are being offered to children in the Capistrano Untried School Distri ct. Qualification for free meals depends upon the level of family inrome as ouUin· ed under state regulations. For example, a family of two, one parent and one child, \1•ill qualify if the family income averages $210 a month or less from all sources. A family or elghrs inrome celling ls $485. lf a family's Income exceeds the free meal scale by not more than 2Q percent, the child may be eligible ror reduced price mea!:s. e Fact Forum MISSION VIEJO -Latesl medical in· formation on treatment and controls for crippling arthritis will be given at 7:30 tonight at a public "Arthritis Facts Forum " in La Paz Intermediate School auditoriu m, 25151 Pradera. Program speakers will be Dr. Sanford H. Anzel, assistant clinical professor orthopedic surgery at UCl and orthopedic surge ry chlefat Orange Qiunty Medical· Center and Dr. Leon Katz, Santa Ana rheumat ologllsl. North Viet Leader's ](iu Seized in South SAJGON (AP ) -A nephew of North Vie1namese Premier Pham Van Dong has been arrested in the mountain resort city of Dalal, 145 miles northeas t of Sai- gon. A spokesman said Pham Van Nhon. 36. was being detained ,.,hile an investiga- tion "M·as under way. Stamper eventually hopel to print up to :io photos and descrlpUons a ~·eek. \\'eatherman said some SOO San Francisco youn.:1ttr1 i re reported miss· Ing eacb month, and up to 3,000 a month Investigation IS underway In an effort to Isolate th e cause or causes of this tragic. Frida y accident scene that claimed lhe lives or !our mem~s or a family at San Clemente. Photograph was taken after t.he car -crushed lri foreground -veered acroKs the freeway Into path or truck carrying chemicals that caught fire. The dead were Marine Sgt. Reynald Lopez, his wile and two of their young children. ' t nxtnd Ole natlon. "" .. I DAILY l'ILDT UPIT ........ .,. . . D1111abf ounded Dalmatian A dog's loyalty can go only so !ar and HWa-Wa," whOse master is. a Sacramento fireman, wonders if his firehouse pals realJy mean 1t. A judge has declared the two-week-old strike by city firemen illegal. The men have been ordered back to work. See story, Page 8. Buses Reflect Images Of Campaigning Pair By CARL INGRAM SACRAMENTO !UPI ) -A luxury bua, complete with "''et bar and shower, aped smoothly along a freeway in Orange County while inside Ronald Reagan glanced at notes for his next campaign speech. The mellow voice of Frank Sinatra roll- ed softly from sttreG tape deck spukers and fil tered throughout the wood-paneled a'nd deeply carpeted private coach. Mites away, Jeu Unruh's conventional campaign bus wound through a blue- collar, middle-claS!I neighborhood in Downey, and headed for a "1pecial news event" where he would condemn rblng property taxes. Country and Western music from a Loa Angeles station blared from the bus radio. "Turn up the volume ," Unruh called t.o the driver. "Tha t's the best ver11ion of 'DaMy Boy' that's ever been done .'' Unruh. stumped In a rear seat, hum· med a couple of bar1 and 1un1 • couple~ff-key. Both men are running hard for governor. Thelr buses seem to renect their campaigns. Reagan's operates wlth the same ap- parent ease of an expensive. highly precision machine. It seldom falters. His ca mpaign is expected to cost more than $2 million. By contrast, Unruh's lacks the same preclsion but makes up for the loss with zeal and Intensity. }Jl& campaign is ex- pected to cost much less than Reagan'a -probably around $1 million. Unruh, former speaker of lhe State Assembly, is running for his political U!e on a platform which depicts him as a "real" man as opposed to what he calls Reagan's "image" record. He portrays Reagan as the "puppet" of powerfu l business interest! who he claims have "corrupted" the Republican governor s administration by • ' big money" at the expense ofthe taxpayer. At appearance• on college campu1es and fundralsln& affairs, Unruh charaes that the governor's record and h1I own record faU to mesh. He auerta tues have IOUed. 1t record rat.el under Reagan while the ec:Onomy bu slumped dramatically. "He's running the 11me campaign a11lnst me u he r1n four yeara ago a1atn1t Pat Brown," Unruh t e 111 newtmen. Rea1an, on the other hand, Hldom mentlom Unruh by name. And when he doe•, It UIUllly ii wll.hln the conte:.:t of a joke about when "Big Daddy". wu the powerful speaker of the Auembly. At carnpal&n atop alter campaign atop, whether It's at 1 $100.per-pllte Republi· c1n fundra ller or at a street comer •P- pearance ln a San Joaquin valley farm town, Reagan boasts of his recor~ as governor. He cites steps taken to fight en- vironmental pollution, attempt.! to reform welfare and ta:s:atlon and the meuures he has employed to bring more economy and efficiency to state government. Reagan campaigned as the "Citizen· politician '' against Incumbent Edmund G. Brown in 1966. He still considers hlmsetr one I! asked but dofsn't volunteer the label at public appearances. Both Reagan, 59, and Unruh. 48, appear In top phy1ic1l ahapt-better than many aide• half their 1ge. Neither dllplaya a trace of ifty halr. Unruh flr1t waa elected t.o the Asumbly from Inglewood in 19M and quickly roi;e to power. He was speaker for a record Hven yeara but was dethroned In 1969 by Republican Robert Monacan. when the GOP 1ained control. He surrendered hl1 Asatmbly 1tat to- run £or governor. Reagan had never 59ught public office before 1966. Te has said he intends lo serve the full four-yea r term if TMlected but hu refused to unequivocally comm it himself to It, saying some unlorsee:n in- cident suc h as serious illness could pre· vent that. Lunar Cart Set Moon 'Rickshaw' Will HoUl Rocks WASHINGTON (AP) -The Apollo 14 astronauts will go about the moon col- lecting rock samples next February much u the hougewlfe crulsea 1 1rocery atore with her shopping cart. Jn fact, the 1pace ship will carry alona 3 fancy version of such a c1rt. ll's been called everything from a wheelbarrow and a rickshaw to names unprintable. astronaut Edgar D. !ditrhell nld Frid1y u he showed off the v~hlcle for the rirst time. Mitchell is lunar module pilot .for the launch sc.htduled Jan. 31. Thti apac~raft commander will be Alan B. Shepard, America's first man in space. Stuart A. Roosa, a 1pace rookie, will be command module pilot omc1ally the cart ii a modular equip. menl transporter. P,,fore famllil.rly, It'• known .ea a MET, like the New ~ork bl1eblll team. Jt'1 a gadg eteer'll dream with a place for everything a boy scout or moon ex- plorer needs: a pocket here for 1 sample collector, a latcft there for a shovel, 1 faa!eoer or a map. And mounted on tnp Ja a camera. The works fold up for 1tor11e tn the lunar module a.scent stage equipment ba,y. The Idea Is to save astronauts Shepard and MltcheU the trouble of car- rying the equipment. Even the handle 11 designed ao the utronaut doesn't bave to curl his gloved finger• around Jt. "A squeezinl operation ceta tlrlnc," MilcheU e1plalned. lie said the Apollo 14 crew would Ilk• to brln1 back 60 or 70 pounds of lun1r material, but will be happy with as little as 25. And they won't be too choosy oa what rocks they pick. "We wlll work quickly lo 1et 1 larJ., amount of samples and wlll let tJle IOrt1ng out be don• on earth," Mltchlil aald. "It would be folly to waste tho tln1• available to us tryin1 to make fieJd determination•." Th• Apollo II 011ht 11 planned lo tln'f out the 11me objectlvu 11 Apollo 13, which had to · be aborted af'ttr an ..., plosion. The Apollo 14 command ahlp ls being modilled lo avoid auch mllhlpo. Sir Mlch11el Cary, permanent secretary al lhe Afinistry of Public Building and Works in London. bas asked bis employes to cut down on the number of memos they send out. There is much too much wastage, he said. Cary made his appeal in a memo. • Some 500 cadets who gathered. In Trafalgar Square. London Sun· day to mark the ls.5th anni.versary of the Battle of Trafalgar victory had to salute empty rigging strung up to Nelson's column because someone forgot the signal flags. "It was a bloody pitty." said First Se• Lord Sir Peter Hill-Norton. • A Hollywood company is mak- ing a movie in Moundsville, \V, Va., and usi11g local residents a& e:ttras iii the film, "Fool's Par~ ... set in the 1930s. The reside11ts are.ixiid $16 a day for their icork. flowever. llnyone who has a 1935 model car still i11 r1nu1ing order is paid $30 a b y for :e. of t~ aut:mobile. • ~1i11iature cowpokes were spotlighted as these u11h.app!J wi1u1ers were sel· ected in the ''Littlest Cowboy" coit· t est at the 26tl~ Natio11.o.l Horse Show in San Fra11cisco rece11!ly. Two-year· old \Vendie fffcDonald of Sonoma doesn't take to being roped by a non· plussed Jan Joiies, a wrangler from Plea.s:a11t Hill. 0 .............. -• • UPI T•le .... lt UAR PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT (C) MEE TS HIGH RANKING ARMY COMMANDERS New Egypt Ch ief Talks With Lt. Gen. Moham med Fawii, Lt. Gen. Mohammed Ahmed $11dek Nixon Will Meet Gromyko Over U.S., Russ Tensions NEW YORK (UPI) -President Nixon '"'ill meet Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko in Washington Thursday for discussions aimed at easing the current tensions in Soviet-American relations. Secretary of Stale \Villlam P. Rogers announced the meeting Monday night after conferring with Gromyko for l\\'O hours and 45 minutes. "This meeting, like any meeting, we hope will play a part in better understanding," Roge rs said. Nixon had considered the possibility or meeting Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin at the United Nations. But Kosygin can~led his projected visit to tbe United Nations, reportedly because of a deterioration of Soviet-American rela· t.ions. The high level encounter climaxed two Africa ns Oahn Snub by Nixon, W eigl1 Boycott UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Some of the presidents and premiers in· vited to President Nixon's dinner Satur· day night for the 25th anniversary of the U.N. General Assembly are talking about boycotting the \Vhi te House affair. They charge that the President snubbed a delegation representing Afr ican and other nonaligned nations. meetings between Rogers and Gromyko during which some progress has been made in easing the strain which developed as a result of Egyptian-Soviet missile violations of the Middle East cease-fire arrangements. Althou gh Rogers and Gromyko still 'vere at a stand-off over the missile viola· tions and prospects of resuming Arab. Israeli peace contacts were dim, they ap- parently laid to resl the incipient crisis over Soviet aaval construction at Cien· fuegos harbor in Cuba. U.S. delegation officials gave this ac· count of Rogers' second meeting with Gromyko at which. they said, the at- mosphere was helter than at the first en· counter Friday night : The Middle East -Rogers and Gromyko remained at loggerheads over the reported Soviet-Egyptian missile violations. No compromise s o I u t i o n emerged for "rectifying" that situaUon, But it seemed increasingly likely that the Middle East cease-fire "'Ol.!:ld be extended on a day-to-day basis. The Soviet Union indicated that it would like Arab-Israeli talks under the ausp ices of U.N. mediator Gunnar V. Jarring to resume, although how this might take place remains unclear. Ex-Nasse1· Aide Named To Top Post By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Informants in Cairo say President Anwar Sadat has chosen 70-year-old ~lahmoud Fawzi, for 13 years one or President Gama! Abdel Nasser's chief advisers on foreign affairs, to be Egypt's new prime minister. Fa"-'Zi entered Egypt's consular service in 1926 and served in a succession of con- sular and amba§Sadorial posts under the monarchy. Six ·months after th e overthrow ol King Farouk In 1952, he was named foreign minister and held the post until 1964. "'hen Nasser made him deputy prime minister for foreign affairs. In 1967, he became Nasser 's assistant for foreign affairs, a post created for him. Las April he met with President Nixon as Nasser's personal representative to discuss U.S. efforts to achieve peace in the Middle East. The semiofficial newspaper Al Abram said Monday that Sadat had chosen a "prominent personality who enjoys great respect on national · and international levels.'' The newspaper did not say that Fawzi was Sadat's choice, but today it prominently displayed an article review·. ing his career. Al Ahram sa id the new prime minister will "have the authority as provided fo r in the constitution." This was inlerpreted to mean that Fawzi will choose the members of his Cabinet, a freedom con- sistent with Sadars pledge to spread authority to other members of bis government. .. ,, ... •, . . · .. _, @:::at •i • • Canada · Kidnap " Victim-Buried MONTREAL (UPI) -Canada lr)day burles Us martyr in the cause. of Cana- dian unity, Pierre Laporte, while the seareh intensified for his killers and the kldnapers of British diplomat Jamr.; L. Cross. Canadian poliUcal figures, including Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and op- position leaders from Ottawa, were join· ing Laporte's family In paying f i n a 1 respects to the Quebec labor minister murdered Saturday, one week after his abduction by the Quebec L.iberation Front (FLQJ. . Conservative leader Robert Sta{itield ?.1onday eulogiztd Laporte as "a martyr in the eyes of all democratically mlilded Canadians.'' At the request of ·Laporte·s wife, Fran- coise, the simple funeral at Notre Dame Cathedral in Montreal was lo be private. Extraordinary security, Including the 4,000 federal troops mobilized Thursday by Trudeau, were poised for pos.~ible FLQ trouble. Meanv.'hile, 9,000 po Ii c e from throughout Quebec pr~sed their search for three meQ wanted as suspects in the kidnapings of Cross and Laporte. Since Trudeau Friday decreed emergency war powers broadening police powers and suspending some Canadian civil righ ts, authorities have seized without charge! 341 suspected FLQ Jeaders and sym· pathizers in 1,627 raids throughout Quebec. They have failed to find the kidnapers or Cross, who was abducted from his suburban Montreal home Oct. S by armed members of the FLQ. Apparently he still is alive, for he sent a communique to police Sunday begging them to call otf their search and accede to FLQ demands. The Canadian government "'aited for word from the FLQ to its standing offer for safe passage to CUba for the kid· napers. If the abductors agree, they would bring Cross to the Concordia bridge over the St. Lawrence River nt the site of Expo '67, lttontreal's world's fairgrounds. There the kidnapers would turn Cross ovtr to the CUban consul, hop into a wait- ing helicopter for the short ride lo Mon- Nig litc lub Star Piazza Marries MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -Opl!ra and nightclub star Marguerite Piazza cf ~femphis will marry San Francisco ex· cculive F. H. "Harry" Bergtholdt on Nov. 8. The marriage will be the second for the singer. who Is the widow of millionaire \Villiam J . Condon of the Con wood Corp. Bergtholdt is president of Distribution Systems, Inc. An announcement 11onday said Miss Piazza, who overcame I e n g t h y hospitalization for cancer, will be mar· ried two days after she is to be installed as 1971 national chairman of the American cancer Society. I treat International Airport, then aboarc a oneway flight lo Havana. Cross woulC be released "°'hen the kidnapers arrivec ln CUba. But the FLQ has ignored th e offe1 made Saturday night by Quebec 1-'rcmic1 Robert Bourassa at about the same tim1 police discovered the bloody body o! Laporte stashed in the trunk of the autc in which he had been kidnaped. 1'ht! t-•u; has demanded release of ~.3 polilical prisoni!rs and $500,000 gold in ransom fo: Cross. _ Tnldeau and Bourassa were men dM!fl' ly grieved on the day of Laporte'! funeral. Both"leaders were close persona: friends of Laporte, as well ·as bemg hi! political colleague. It was Trudeau and Bourassa who harl to make the wrenching decision not tc trade the lives of Cross and ~.porte fo1 the kidnapers' demands, a dec1.s1on 'lladc despite a dramatic appeal by Laporte a~ a personal friend . The government acceded to his wire'! ·wishes to avoid a state funeral and kee~ the services private. Vietnam lT1 ctr Lull Brokert By Fighti11g SAIGON (UPI ) -Haavy fighting 80 miles from Saigon broke a lull of nearly a week in action involving American forcet in Vietnam, military spokesmen sa id t0o. day. Two Gls were killed and six v;ound· ed . · Communiques from Phnom Penh said Cambodian troops with air supporl today broke up what senior Cambodian officers said "-'as a major drive by two Nor1h Vietnamese regiments on Phnom Penh from the south. The Cambodians cap- tured a North Vietnamese battalion con1· mander in the fighting. "\Ve have forced them oul of their bast area and have destroyed their plans." said Lt. Col. Prak ~1eng. rommander of the 60th Cambodian battalion . h1eng·s unit led a 10-baltalion force ol some 6,000 men pushing south from the capital along highway 2. cambodian of. ficers said 16 other North Vietnamese or· ficers were captured along with the bat· talion commander and a number or north Vietnamese \\'ere killed and wounded. The U.S. Command said a unit of the 3rd brigade of the Isl Air cavalry Division came under small arms and rocket grenade attack Monday night from Communist troops in a bunker complex 22 miles north-northeast of Ham Tan, capital of Binh Tuy Province. Artillery fire and ACIJ9 Shadow fixed \Ving gunships joined the fighting which lasted two hours. The Americans were unable to determine Communist losses. It was the first major fighting involving American units in Vietnam in nearly a week. ~fost little girls ftnd playi11g with girls satisfyi11g but lUo.ria Vargas, 2, is an exception. J{ere she plays with "Baby," her six-foot ci11c11ote snake. A lot of her mo.le co11tempories i1l l'ife:rico Citu would probably shy away f rom her family's pe t. • A plea to help prevent boozy President Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia heads the delegation, which is touring major Western capitals trying to get sup- port for Black Africa 's campaign against the white minority governments in southern Africa. The other members of the mission are the foreign ministers of Algeria , Cameroon, Kenya and Mali. Kaunda told a nev.•s conference at U.N. headquarters that before he left Africa, he "-'as told Nixon would meet the mission in Washington on Oct. 20. But \\-ilen he got to Rome, he said, he was told Nixon had changed the appointment to 9 a.m. Oct. 19, even though the Amer- ican President "knew very well" Kaunda wa s speaking to the General Assembly that morning. The four·po\ver talks on Berlin -the ty,•o foreign ministers cleared up a mi sunderstanding over the Soviet position at these talks, scheduled to meet again in November. While the nature o( the misunderstanding was not specified, U.S. officials told newsmen they looked forward with new hope to the discussions on improving the Berlin situation. l\'I ysterious Plague l(ills Hawaii Trees J!ONOLULU (AP) - Hawaii 's unique koa and ohia trees are dying, and a baf- fled forester fears the killer may be an alien insect or disease "that found a ripe climate." The menaced forests. found nowhere else in the world, cover 600.000 acres on Hawaii lsland, the largest in the cight·island chain. l{unstler Urges Stude11ts' Help for l{ent Arrestees Allied troops in Vietnam Monday reported killing 31 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong in fighting near the U.S. Green Bel1!t camp at Thuong Due, 24 miles southwest of Da Nang. Placentia Girl Dies A 6-year-old Placentia girl who ran Into the street to an ice cream truck died J\.fonday at St. Jude Hospital in Fullerton. KENT. Ohio (AP) -Greeting 1.000 ap- plauding students with a clenched fist above his head. attorney William Kunstler has urged them to band together lo help 2:; persons indicted in connection with violence at Kent State University, birds from breaking \Vindows and commiting suicide has been issued by Dan Andrews, \Vashington State University Extension Service poul- try expert at Pulln1an, Wash. Birds throughout the state have gotten tipsy from eating fermenting mountain ash berries. Andrews said. He asked the public to close 1 the blinds to protect the birds and windo\vs the birds might not see in their tipsy state. ''J suppose he did not want to see our ugly faces.'' Kaunda told a meeting of Asian and African delegates 1.-tonday. "ln some places the trees are dying so quickly the leaves didn't have time to fall,'' says the forester, Robert E. Nelson, director of the Institute of Pacific Islands Forestry. Kunstler told the off.campus gathering Monday night that he intends to coordinate a commoq defense for as many of the 25 who wish it. They were in- U.S. Wea th er Picture Mixed dicted secretly in the deaths of four students and the wounding of nine others hfay 4 in a confrontation with Ohio Na· tlonal Guardsml!n. Four persons, including Kent student body President Craig Morgan and an associate professor, were served with in- dictments Monday. , Rain, Fro st and lndia11, Summer All Reported KunsUer. a deferise attorney IQ the Chicago seven riot trial. told the gather· ing Monday night. "The law is utilized by those In power to force those not in power to conform." California l'rum Wire S1r~lc1; loo.l1t11r11 C1llfor11!1 1kift _, "'0$1· tv lllflllY toc111 wllh low clovch 1 1o ... c•1!1I mounl1ln1 l1lrtc.a1I lor 1111 n'9ht •fld e1rly mornl110 tlollri. 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Albll<ll>f,...l>f Ancflort .. .llllllll fl11ktr1ll,!d lll1mt "k 8alH llC1$IO" lll'flWfllYi!!I (!lltlfO C~IMttl ..... ...... _ l>f!roll F1lrbllnll1 For! WO!'lll ,_ Htlt fll . H~1>hl "'"''' (JfY l11 Vt'9t1 l o1 AflftlQ Mltml Ml ..... •PClll1 Nl'W °'1tll'lt Ntw Yortt Nortll Pltlht ()-1•/id Okl1110rt\1 CJtv ...... ,. ... •1t1111 ll'l>Ocfll11 Plthbvr•ll Por11'1111 lt••lol: ,,,., • .., lll~ft ··~ :.1cr•1111nto S•lt llkt Cltv $1'1 01'1!0 S111 Fr1nclaco S1;"lt 5CIOltl"' Tllt•"'ll W11lllllf!Ofl .. .. " " .. " ,. u .. ,. .. " ., " " .. u " " " lt ~ .. .. .. " ' .. .. " .. u " .. ,. .. .. " " " .. .. " .. " ,. .. ., .. u " " .. .. .. " • " ~ " " " ., " " .. " .. " .. • " " .. 0 .. ,, " " ,. " • •• .. " " " Morgan, 20, of the Columbus suburb of Upper Arlington, was arrested at student government offices by a Portage County • 1 sheriff's detective and later reltased on ·" ... $1.000 bond. He was charged with aecond· degree riot. Dr. Thomas S. Lough, 42, an associate: professcr of sociology and anthropology, surrenderl!d voluntarily and was released on $5,000 bond. He was charged with one count of incitlng to riot May 4. Two others indicted -Richard Felber • 21, of Akron and JelT)' H. Rupe, 22, of Ravtnna -were already in jail on Qrug charge$. ·" F elber, a former Kent student, was charged with first-degree riot, attempting ·'' · Official Tours Linc ,. JIJ DETROIT {AP) -NJcolae Ceausescu. president of Ron1anla. and his ""·lfe tour a m•Jor oulomobllt assembly line today. a ·" F _, ,11 on,1 Molor Co. spokesman said, They .o, \\'Iii ~e the as5t'mbly llne and steel opera- llofls at Ford's River Roua:e plant. to burn a campus ROTC building, slrik· ing a fireman and interfering with a fireman at a fire. HI! has been sentenced to 20 to 40 years In prison on three count.s of selling hallucinogens, The Orange County Coroner 's Office said A1ichelle L. Reyes was struck Satur· day as she ran into the path of a car in front of her home. The driver was not held. UPI .l tltthtlf CHICAGO SEVEN LAWYER WILLIAM KUNSTLEll He Seid in a Rally Th•t lndiclm•nta Are Not Valid I •• a €harges ,On ·Seal.e Dismissed CHICAGO (UP!) -U.S. District C.ourt Judge Jullus .J. Hoffman. w110 once ca:Ded Black Panther a at Ion a I cbainnan Bobby Seale "a dangerous man ••• who sooght to destroy and overturn the American judicial ,.system" bas dismissed riot conspiracy charges against him. Seale was bound and gagged h1 court for di s r uptive behavior during the trial of the ''Chicago Eight." lloffman Tuesday, Oclobff 20, 1970 DAILY Plllll $ Lindsay Endo1~ses Goldberg In NY, Draws Rocky Blast NEW YORK (UPI) -Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller aaid M9nday the endorsement of Arthur Goldberg for governor by Mayor John V. Undsa>: was an acl of "eJ:pediency" designed to further LindSay 's pOlitical ambitions. of Goldberg, former U.S. am- bassador &o the United NaUons and one"tlJne assoclalf: jlDtlce of the Supreme Court, added still anolher odd·sbaped piece to lhe cruy~ullt pattern of New York state politics. Olarles Goode'U and Attorney General I.cub Lefkowitz but made It clear ln his statement Monday he thought t h e Democrats were the best chance to end the city 's "an- nual role as a beggar for survival in Albany.'' Senate OK Fol' SST Predicted Jater "declared a mistrial for ur• JtltHeflt him, and the trial went.on as JOHN LINDSAY (Ll HAS ENDORSED ARTHUR GOLDBERG (C l Rockefeller was is k e d whether Lindsay's statement was the start of a campaign to obtain the Democra ti c· presidential nomination in the belief that he could not get the GOP ' nomination because of his liberalism. With a wry smile, the governor answered, .. what do you think!" Lindsay, who says "I am a Republican and inteod to re- main a Republican , '1 was denied the GOP mayoral ~ominaUon last year. He won on the liberal line with the blessings of a number of high ranking Democrats including Lindsay 's move, sent shock waves lhrougb. the major political parties but the reac- tions could have been an- ticipated. Democratic state chairman called Lindsay's en- dorsement "significant," while GOP state chairman said it would "lnc:rease support for Cov. Rockefeller." WASHINGTON (UPI) "!f'he baUl e !or the SST is over. We've got them beat!" that of the "Chicago Seven." The Mayor Hes Long Been at Oddi With Gov. ~llOft Rockefeller (R) U.S. Attorney William J.-------'------=-----------~---------­Goldberg. , That prediction came today from an indust ry source keep- ing close labs on the Senate lineup for an upcoming crucial vote on a $290 million ap- propriation ta construct two prototypes of the supersonic transport. \\'hat made him so sure? The source said the turning point was the failure of the Senate to vo~ on the bill before the election. "Once Congress decided to adjourn until after the elec- tion, the pressure was off some of the key senators. They didn't have to vote against it to win election," the source said. According to the source, backers of lite $1.2 billion pro- ject still felt they would wi n even if C',ongress had not ad- journed. "\Ve had them beat by about eight vot.es," he said. But after the election. "v1e'll pick up eight to JO more votes." Anti-SST forces show no signs or qui tting, however. Lasl .... ·eek, they won over still another supporter when Sen. Ralph T. Smith (R·lll. ), said he planned to vote against the fas t plane. 0'The money needed for the SST could be used for more important causes," S m i t h said. ~auer, v.·fio filed the dismissal request, s a i d t.1onday the government felt it was "inap- propriate to try Seale alone on a· coospiracy charge" since th e other seven defendants were acquitted or the charge earlier thi s year. The e i g h t co-defendents were accused of conspiring ro incite riots during the 1968 Democratic Nation a 1 Con- vention in Chicago. After Seale was severed from the trial, the remaining seven defendants were J'Q!.lnd innocent of conspiracy charges. but five were found guilly of individual acts to in- cite riots. All seven, and two of their lawrers, were charged with contempt and sentenced. Bauer said Hoffman in his action Monday dismissed all counts or an indictment a,qainst Seale in connection \vilh the co n ve ntion demonstrations . The in· di ctment had named Seale on tv.·o counts dealing w I t h speeehes he made as well as th e conspiracy count. Seale now faces a trial on murder conspiracy charges in Connecticut. He also has a four-yea r contempt sentence ordered by Hoffman P a nther s' Bom11 1ria l Opens NEW YORK (UP!) -The prosecution at the Black Panther trial here Monday said the 13 defenda,nts had plarmed in 1969 to boriib Aberooq1bif' and Fitch with the hope of obtaining ·weaportS' frim the store's seventh floor gun 1V9m. Assistant District Attorney Joseph A. Phillips. in his t'.lpe{l· Ing remarks, also said he would prove the defendants· planned and carried out a "strategic attack" in 1969 against a school building and a number of police stations. Are You Having a ••••• j: PARTY SERVE F.1.I ULOUS SPIRA L SLICED m~!W li~K~~ ~~00~ CONF1RM.l.TtON I Wl!'OOINO I l"ICNIC I Sl"ECl.l.l COMMUNION RECl!l'TIONS PARTY 9 ATHEllti.t'GI RnAIL STORES 1222 s. BROOKHURST I 3700 E. COAST' HWY. • ANAHEIM CORONA DEL MAR CH 111•11 IR vm ... CMl .. I 'n ·l4'1 ft •* w. l'I .. C....n) ., ..... I I J ' He has e.ndorsed some Republicans , such as Sen. Arguments on, Voting Age Before High Court End .. Lindsay was acting out of expediency to fuUiU t b e political ambitions or both men," said R ocke f e 1 l e r. .. There is no basic evidence of either commitment to prin- ciple or conviction In this pOlitical marriage of con- venience." * * * * * * Martha Mitchell Speaks, Wants Lindsay's Scalp WASIUNGTON (UPI) - Formal Supreme C o u r t arguments over the new federal law dropping the voting age to 18 have ended with a warning from the state of Arizona that "breaking the Constitulion for a g o o d purpose" could be the first step in the nation's downfall. The statement came Mon- day from Arizona Attorney General Gary K. Nelson Il '"ho said he personally has worked for a loweT voting age -but that a constitutional amendment was the way to do it. Congress chose to drop the voting age and ease other voting requirements, not by amendment, but by passing the Voting Rights Act of 1970. The court was expected to make an early decision on the Jaw's constitutionality because the new voting a1te is scheduI· ed to go into effect with the start of the new year. If the law stands, an estimated 10 million more Americans would be enfranchised. Jn Georgia and Kentucky 18 already is the legal voting age. The chief argument given the court Monday for lowering the 8.ge was that lS.year-<>lds are subject to the draft, old enough to work, pay t a J: e s and marry, and s h o u ld therefore have a say in the na- tion's electoral process.es. Attorney General Robert M. Robson of Idaho told the court, fiowever, that the other side of that coin was that some people are considered too old to fight for their country and -under the same reasoning -ought to be considered too old to vote. Robson said Congress by the laW had usurped the court's function of determining what is discriminatory against any segment of the population. He also attacked a section or the Jaw, effective with the 1972 elections, which w o u I d establish a 30-day s t a t e residency requirement r 0 r voting for president and vice president. He said the p~ vision would make It very dlr· ficult to detect fraud under the absentee voting provision. John M. McGowan, a lawyer from Phoenix, Ariz .. challeng- ed the law's ellminaUon of literacy requirements in 15 states as of la.st June 22 when Presldent Nixon signed the measure. McGowan said there were 73,400 illiterate persons in Arizona, only 18 of whom registered under an order by Justice William O. Douglas permitting_ registrations pen- ding the outcome of the lawsuit. He suggested "lack of interest" among the Navajo Indians as one of the reasons for the small response. Pledges Fall Short Money Crisis Tackled • By Episcop~ Church On Sunday the governor had urged Lindsay to "sit this one out ;" advice which Lindsay disregarded and G o I d b e r g characterized as "extremely inappropriate''. The endof'6ement by Lindsay WASHINGTON (UPI) - J ohn won't hear me." Mrs. Martha Mitchell says "1 have an u:tensk>n phone. New York Mayor John V. that goes all over the hotue," Lindsay is a "political op. she said Mooday night. "I portunitist" who should be ex· have to have someplace for. pelled from the Republican my soapbox so I won't be Party. Bu t she doubt.s the beard.'' Democrats would want him "J just got back from W aJt to Leave either. Florida and I'm furious with Lindsley," she said, using the The outspo~en wife of At· derogatory slur of Lindsay's Marine Corps torney G • n e r a I John N. name used by lhe late Mike Mitchell called a UPI reporter Quill, president of lb e SAIGON (AP) -Gen. Lewis from her Washington apart-Transport Workers Un lo n . W. Walt , the No. 2 man in the ment Monday night to com-Quill never referred to the U.S. Marine Corps and a plain about R ep u b Ii ca n mayor as anything bu t veteran or three wars, Is retir· Lindsay's endorsement o( New "Lindsley.'' ing Feb. I, it was learned here York Democratic gubernato ri· "'He (Lindsay) just wants lo today. al candidate Arthur Goldberg. do anything be can for \Valt, 57, will be replaced as Mrs. Mitchell called from himself," she said. "He's a HOlJS'I'ON ( U Pl ) Episcopalians an! singing the money blues for the second day in a row today as the 63rd general convention of the 3.5- assistant commandant of the the balcony of her apartment political opportunist. It will , Marine Corps by U. Gen to avoid being overheard by help Rockefeller. million member church tackJ... Keith B. McCutcheon, 55, a her husband, "Can't you hear "Get ·'Lindsley• out of the ed Its worst financial crisis in pioneer in M'arine aviation. the cars," ahe asked the Republican Party. To beck JO years. McCutcheon is now com-reporter. On a previous call, with him. We don't need him 1 mander of M a r I n e forces in she said she was calling from and n e l th er do the Suggest ons for keepi ng na-y· etnam her second floor bathroom "90 Democrats." Uonal church programs alive __ 1 --·---------------------------- First Lady Takes Stump rangOO from assessing each diocese proportionately to sell· in multi-million dollar na~ tiona\ headquarters building in downtown New York and mov- ing to a less expensive loca· lion. Some 900 delegates came to MINNEAPOIJS, M i n n , grips with the problem -one (UPI) -Pat Nixon, appearing affecting many ma Jo r a bit tind but poised, came to Protestant · denominations in Minnesota Monday to pay a recent years -at Monday's political debt her husband in-special joint session. Both the curred 10 years ago. house of bishop& and the house Rep. Oart MacGregor. now of deputies were set to take up in an uphill fight a g a i.n st the matter again today in formet" Vice President Hubert another joint session. Humphrey for a seat in th e The church's 90 dioceses U.S. Senate, aald he worked pledged $11.2 million for this vigorously for Nixon during year, missing a quota budget the last 10 days of the 1960 of $14.7 million by $3.S million, campaign. MacGregor was or almost one fourth. Forty-six elected to his flrsl term in dioceses refused to pledge " LOMG lfACH =====================oc -CaliforniaColletje Ofcommerce ... ;,;,..,..,OH< ...... r .. ..-. ISl·ISS Pille 1¥-l-. '-<II. cmt-i. MlJ : .... CONTINUOUS ENROtl.MENJ :rELEPHONE: ~9767 or 43SdM7 "DAY OR EVENING CLASSES" .. TWO-YEAR COURSES SHORT-TERM COURSES ONE-YEAR COURSES I luliR•ll A4111illblntiM Hitlitr AccevRtiflt .\<CDURfi"I -DI." hwtlsiltt. bec•liH Stcr•l.,W s,.,..,,.,hk Cltric•I K.,,-.,•clt l•5in111 Moch! .... h •t•l Auitlillt M"1ic1I lr1n1CriptiMlll F11U-Cher1• .... ...,.., ,,.,,1i .• , (l.11•1 . ' Shertlt.R4 1rtil l1'iflt (Gr.,1 er AIC SWINllllJ L.,•I Stcttf9tktl, M.dic•I Sectelsrlel S.cret.riel (Gr.,1 iH AK S~. Jw•illr Ac-"'1 Congress but Minnesota's vote n.-:~ uota --'d ·= q • for Prt= ent wenl to John F. oiiii;i;;;;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mjj Kennedy. 11 Monday, the nation's first Jady went to work f o r MacGregor, shaking the hands of about 100 at the airport and those of another soo at a recep- tion in a downtown hote l. Sears South Coast Plaza COAST SUPER· MARKET presents ''JEANS to LINGERIE" --MANNINGS BEEF THE FINEST QUALITY OBTAINABLE /; . ~ i ~ ., '" i:: ' •• the latest in know-how for washday ease A Seminer in the latest in home leundry use and techinque1 •nd fashion and fabric naws. Conducled by CAROL HEINZ Southern C1llfornl1 Edison Co. Home Economl1t C stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor • music • • D,\D.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE ' Reagan -altcl ileinecke II he has shown anytlllnf Jn bis four :ran as go.- emor, Ronald Reagan bas shown himself to be a very Murnan man -almost too human 'at'tililes. For example: While fully undentandlng.how and why · it came about, Governor Reagan•1 nain&-caJling, sbOving and eruption of temper _at a Board of Regents meeting last week was sometlling leas tllan the mark of a statesman one would seek in the 1tate'1 chief uecu- tlve. · But II Reagan's hurp!lJ!lless ha.-brought out hla errors, they also have brpugbt out his good intentions and his successes. Balancing those good intentions and auccesses a'ainst those of hiS opponent ·tn the Nov. S et.ec;.Uon, Jess Unruh, Rea~an emerges u the clear choice. He.is the better candidate. · Tb tlie surprise of his enemies, and to 1ome of his friends; Beagan has shown unusual aputude as an ad· mlnistrator. And as his tour in omce· has lengthened, he has shown creater and greater understanding of the corriplexities ·of 'aucli a giant '~overnmental operation. With·another tenn·in office, it is likely 'tb·at this season· ~ 1ng wquld as.sist him' Jn res9lving some C!f the perplex- ing dilemmas that grip'tlie nation's-~ populous slate. In two-·areas Reagan's..,performance thus f~r bu been· disappointing. He has fallen far short ~ his p~ to reform California's welfare program -in fact,. if anything, the system seems mote ~ut of control a~d more expensive than it was when be took ottlce. And m ,the area of the state's university-college~. Reagan has been a key/arty·in creating the schisms with ·ad- ministrators an faculty members that may never be healed. - -gan-on-all fnlllla, often broad genenilltles and VflT1 lltUe in concrete terms. Unruh may have escaped the Big Daddy Image in his quest.for the governor's 1ea~ bµt lifter -viewing the· 1970 campaign we are not certain we did not like Big Daddy better. No, it Is a clear decision: -fan ls the choice. --gan's lle~t governor, Ed Reinecke, la also 1_eeltlng n-electlon. e has done an excellent job in that poslUO. since Finch moved on to ihe naUonal pallUcal arena, deaarvu nHlectlon. Educational TV Ahead If all the pieces fall · Into place, It "eppear1 ,schools and colleges throughout Orange County wi11 be oerved by an educati~ television station begilmlog someUme m 1971. The station will ~operated by the Community College District made up of Orange Coast and-Golden West colleges. ' · Among the "pieces'' are.applicatton to~·• license, approval by the Federal Communications Commission, negotiation of a 10-year lease on a transmittinJ antenna site In the La Puente bills, and federal financmg of .tho transmitter. · Qnce in operation, the hope Is-that' open ting costs can be met by selling station services to educational agencies in the county. Planning for the station, done ''cautiously" over a period of years, includes the possililllty of attiliatlng with-the National Educational Television (NET) system With e~enmg public programming. OUic1als of the Community College Distric:t deserve credit for moving to keep educational techniqu" ahmist of the times. ' - -· _, ' 'fl"."• ..... ~ •• • But in making the choice on Nov. 3, voters will he deciding between Ronald Reagan and Jess Unruh. An4 Ugruh's campaign is like a political locomotive _gone amok. With jolts, ~ocks -and outrages, he belitUes ... .-/V\.Av~1~ ''THANKSH A LOT."' Most Men Are Afraid Of .the Truth •ye sball lmow lhe truth, sod lhe lrulh lball make ye free," is one o( the bal~­"°"" most ;:ipulsr quotes from the Bl· ble. Preadlen sod leclllrers use II _. atantly; ;iewspapers have adopted-II u the slogan-ol·a free Jll"'L But w!Iat .. ,..... Jy slop lo consider is our human disin- clination to know tbe truth. What we poerally wan~ in- etead, are comfort. able assurances that we are rlghl Fsll· tna this, we preler Ignorance lo lhe lruth. I am not even speaking of lofty political matters. but of small personal matters. I know a man -knOw him very well -who for the last three. months has been bothered by a dull, lte.ady ache in t.: abdomen. HE 18 WORRIED that it might be cancer; on the other hand, it i&: probably nothing serious. An X ray and a few simple tests would quickly reveal the truth. But he ls afraid that the truth may be "bad," and foolishly prefers the un- certainty to the medical examination. The truth would free him of his anxiety, but before that he has to free himself from fear. All men desire the truth, I• an latellectDal way; but most men fear lbe truth, in a deep emotional sense. THE 1rm CENTURY opllmi!ls about Dear Gloomy Gus: Apparently lhooe wbo are u'ytng to obtlin cflon&• Uuwgh use ol-vJo. Jenee hive declared war GD the. FBi. Pernaps many of our liberala do not rullze they'e belllnl their freedom on the FBI. -H.B. McD. hmnao pn>ll'9I bellevod that lporance wa1 tbe great enemr o1 menttnd, Md that anivual education -0000 rid lllCietyOI !ta flan and plllle< and fric. lionL We, 'Dvlng In the 20th Cenlury, know better. We "'-that man IJanks off lhe top of IUs head, but his troubles come from tbe bottom of his psyche. What be needs ii not to know more about the fact& of the universe -allhough tbej are im- portant -but more about bis own feel- ings toward UJe universe, toward hil fellow men, and toward himJelL uREASON" WAS the god of Western philosophy for nearly 200 years -witil the mooumental work of Freud and his aaocialell demonstrated beyond dispute that man's reason can more easily be the slave of his passions tilan their master. "Ye Bhall know lhe truth, and the lruth shall make ye free:," is not only an ethical statement, but a psychological one as well But the difficult paradox lies In this: that In order really to want lo know tbe truth, we first have lo be free enough to pur&Ue it, whatever its con· sequences may be. Before we can achieve freedom of the spirit, we must achieve freedom from the emotional chains lilal bind ua lo a dark past. And, having said this, I'm oil for sn X ray and a few llmpJe test& 'Shape Schools for '70s' Presidett Nixon has proclaimed Ocl 25-31 u American Education Week. In his proclamation he noted the theme of the week, .. Shape SCbools for the 70's/' and commented: "H ;tte are really going lo 'Shape .--SehoQs for the 70's'. then we must be ready . to reshape them with iWl~ hn· aglnation, greater boldness and greater energy than we have ever applied be.fore. I have every confidence that the educators of America, working with parents, atudenll and all Americans art reac!J' and able lo meet lhls challenge." The President pointed out that AE.W. urtad bf lhe NaUonal Educllion -atioa <nd lhe Amertcan Legion In 1921, Is " .•• portlcularly Important al a Ume wben lmpatleDI:e with old Jonns Is straining our aoclal fabric In ways which we have never experitDOed." rr IS JNTERElnNG lo nole lhat at such times of atrabt and stttss, the emo- Uooal approacb to problems often over· rides the lea frustrating but •!ways more -anline rational, considered apo piwch. --In the psst few years baa becuml a victim of: the emoUoul •Po )ln*h. 'nio adldols and their te•chm ue beJnc blamed for all tlie Ills of aoclefy. ltl oPlle of im!Utable evlcleooa that we Mvt a bell« ecb:allonal r)'lten1 Ihm n laa.e eYer bid in our hitb:lr1, lhere on -who coaclemn tlie whole 1ystom lor -ol HI falllls. It'• like klllln& a. --for a -In tho llf1ll ..... -cl c:onceJl1nllnC •mrlalthatl .... THERE ARE FAILINGS In our educa- tional system. Among these are that we art not reaching about 25 percent of the ' pupils, wbo evenluslly become lhe unschooled and unskilled unable to fmd jobs In a Space Ag<. n-unemployed end up on the streets, ln jaU, on wtlfare, which costs more than would special educaUonal prosrams designed to meet lhelrneeds. To meet the: needs of thtle unskilled and t1nltbooled ls-a major way bt which the schools mull. be reshaped for the '?O's. Thls does not mean tearing dow the whole pubUc school syltem because of Its ftults, N mMy of Us critics would now like to .do. RATHER, rr MEANS 1frenlthentng the weaknesses. It meant a rededication In ell<ri, energy, retOlll'C<I and -lo the Oreal Americao Dream -equal educstional opporlunily for all pupllt lo lnsuno that they wW -.. productive sod ._ible clURlll. It alto means a ........., of pr1or111ea sod lhallllng or -to -· -lhlt aU puplla como out ol adldol --ahln& more than jUll IIow'I 11pe11t Ihm no ma!tar how hard we bave lo ..rt with lblm M ~ 'Gal11o' Vtekhina, Martha Mitchell Two Vivacious Washington Women WASHINGTON -In lbe quiet-fol' U.S. secrets, the Sovieta 10methnt1 follow lhe ICl'ipt or lhe Jama Bond movie "Fn:m Russia wJth Love." This column, fer eumple, bas checked into the romantic conque.t qf modish, mini· skirted Galina "GaJya" fUfekhina whose intimate male friends would fill a Who 's Who. By day, Galya is R115Sla's cultur&I at- tsche in Washing· ton. She may be Ileen, dre&aed with peassnl modesty' escor1JoC ' ........... delegations from the Soviet Union around Washington. But by night, Calya llJps into a lrim blouH and abort skirt puttha5ed from the most chic boutiquts. She often turns up, usually escorted by an jmport· ant Americao, at aome IOftly lit reataur- anl GALYA 18 ALWAYS gay, sod she holds her liquor well. One escort has described her as sclnUllaling. She is alio a good listener. . She has dated prominent figures from capitol Hill. government a 1 e ft c i e a , Western embua.ies and t.be United Na- tli;,ns. She bu even romanced a few ~ byists, who have no official standing but who possess an intimate acquaintance wllh the backrooms of Wublnglon. AU the' men have me thing in common j" they .. are dole to the 1eat of power. We wm't publilb. the: nama or be:r many -TbeR la BO real ptOol that hive whispered an;yting mor ccniprMni- oing lnlo ber ar than aolt mdearmeota. WE KNOW SHE likes to dlllCUSS affairs ol llate with them. One poweriul·U.S. of· ficial, lpeaklnt 'from e :r per i enc e, acknowledged io us that Galya was more lnter..ted In polUlcal than cultural mal· lers. · F-ote: The pretly, blond Mrs. Utekhina ta separated or divorced from her husband. She is fl years old, but looks much yOWlger. Apparently, she learned of our investigation into her after-hours activities. Our repeated er~ forts to reach her were ignored. Tele-- phone calls were never returned, and she wu never in when we called her private. oCfice number. · MARTHA MITCHELL. the vivacious wife of the Attorney General, is as free with the taxpayers' money as abe ii with ·her verbal outbursts. The taJkaUve Martha has already spent more than $50,000 to refurbish Lhe inside of the Justice Department. Now she is spending another $50,000 to redo the greenery on the outside. Mrs. Mitchell has bullied the General Services AdministraUon into uprooting some of the fine yews put ln during Lady Bird Johnson's· beauUfication project. THE FIRST !50,000 went Into a - dining room and kilchea. at Justice ao Marlha could entertain cabinet wiyea. She personally directed the placement of tables, chairs and wall fii:tures and even arranged for litUe personal spotlights to be directed OD the lables. Queried about the money, Justice asserted that only $30,000 was spent on the kitchen and dining room, but the , figure is actually more than $50,000. LAST WEEK, Mrs. Mitchen ordered government painters to wort at night to transform her husband's corridors into a • primrose and forsythia<0lored pathway. This was in preparation for a visit by President Nixon to Justice to sign a crime bill. Martha's new plans for leaving her Jn. dividi:lal trademark on the Justice Department building have caused C.:smay in some young Jawyer·bolanists working for her husband. She has coerced General Services Administration into brutally cut- ting back the han dsome old magnolia trees.growing alongside the building. MANY OF THE azalea bu shes and shrulll round the Deparbnent are being dug Up to be replaced in this year of ecoo<lnY by expensive Japanese holly bushes and boxwoods. Martha's choice of bouoods shows 'how liUle she know• about Washington. The city's garden ex~ perts maintain that it is virtually im- possible to grow boxwoods in exhaust-rid- den downtown Washington without almost daily care. Mrs. Mitchell is also eager to give her busband a different view from his office window. So she is having the old oaks outside his window .chopped down even though they've been growing there for decades. When Martha Mitchell is finished will\ redesigning the outside of the Depart- ment., she will have spent more than $.100,000 of the taxpayers' money, all without full hearings by Congress, Mosquitoes Can't Stand Garlic Odor Things a columnist. might never know if he didn't open his mall: Jf you want to make mosquitoes keep ·their distance, eat a plate of snails with garlic butter. The mosquitoes don't mind the snails. but they can't stand garlic - particularly at close quarters, t's a waste ol. time worrying that you may be. hit by a "'falling 1tar." A!-- tronomers have cal· culated that an 00.. ject aa big u the entire continent of North America is likely to be mruck by a.meteorlle 100. inches er more wide only about onct In 50,000 yean. We might all live longer if ft IPtnt mort mooey trying to find out how to. Specialists estimate that ~ majot biomedical research program could in. crease healthful life expectancy by five to 15 years. but the amount now spent per person on such research is about eight C<nls a yesr -the price of a single candy bar. WHAT SHOULD a moiber do ff her child lrles lo l'I lls way by boldlng ill breath until It turns blue, faint. or even goes into convul1ions: The btlt attitude ahe can take is one o( "purpolflful neglect,'" says a Johns Hopkins lloopilal specialist. Such tantnims by the dlild don't do physical hann to i~ he 11y1, and c.an besl be dlmgarded Wllal the famliy wants to submit lo being dominated by lhese tactlcL .---•• Geerse ---. Dear George1 I wouldn't put up with a wif• who belonged to women's Ubl I wear tho panls In ncy family! BOSS MAN Dur-Man: Somehow, Bou Man. rm IOt quite Inspired by i dictator -· afraid to me bla OWD name. , t bush Brailllan mailmen. one In Ule Tongan Islands was browsed on by a .5hark, and a few years ago Afghanistan susperded rural deliveries because too many mailmen were dined on by leopards. SIGNS·OF OUR TIMES: 11Us one was in · a Manhattan liquor store: "Come in and be Staggered by our prices." A legend destroyed: For centuries it was thought th8.t birds could be laught to talk only if their tongyes had been slit 'This is no more true of birds than it would be of human beings. Vocal sounds in birds art produced wjtb the syrinl, a voice box structure in thtir throats. Odd fact: More hotel guests request Penalty Without a Trial A peraon can be penalized without 1 trial u he ls gullly of coolempt or couit: if he does somelhing or fails to do something which lencla to bold up, em- barrau, or keep a court from dlscharg· Ing Its duty. Lawmalien con llmll bow a Judg• may punish a penoa gu111y or con- tempt As a rule no judge can lmpooe punish- ment for-pubflc cr!Uclsm of his actions. Sucli crlUc:lsm ls free apeech, our courts hold, and rarely is it an "imminent peril'' to lhe duo admlnlllration of j...U.,., Judges and courll ore "public lliUrff or public instltutiont" which art properly subjected to commenl A> one c:ourt held. the law presumes a judge can take It and baa "the judicial llllmlna, backbone, sod f()rtltucle to -crilldsm." THE JUDGE BAS summary po-to keep onltr, and, If need be, to punbh thole •ho crtate disorder. but ta always subject lo review by a hJcher court. A> a rule the jlld(e Wllnll olfeadm before be bolda them In contempt. Wrillnc a 11U1J letter to a Jude• ... cusl .. ,bim ol ClOITuplloo may be oon- !<mpt-In "'"-a defendant yelled at tile judge, "Cardinal -melved I falnr lrlal lnxn the -c.m. "' IA"° ~ Actj~n; ' j munists than t received from this toort. '' The judge held blm In contempt. In sllll another, the judge saw a balU(f making love with a woman juror. He ordered the ballll! to lock hlmsett up or pay a big fine. A TARDY WITNESS, Juror, or lawyer la in contempt. At most, Callfoml1 courts can sentence a person to tlve days In jail and 11111--l>lm llOO. The penally can be greater, when. for example, a defend81l..t defies a court order. Thul the court may order a husband lo get a job and support hit children. II ho wilfuRy ,.ruses. lhe Judie may onler him pul In jail unUl be decides to obey. Federll Jaw allows pw>lshment of she months tn jail for contempt. There ii a pencUnc quetllon whellltt lllCb a pmon It enUUed lo a Jury ltlal before he cao be Jailed for six 1D0111h11 or long<r. Nolt: ColfJornlo lmDJ/m ofJ., lhlt COhlmK~IO JIOV NII boto..abolit 101'1' '°'°'· even-numbered l h a n odd·numbered rooms, says lrving Schatz. owner of the Henry Hudson hostelery here. Another quirk: guests going on their second hone~ are more likely to ask for the honeynloon suite than those on thei r first one. Worth remembering : "An old.timer is one who can remember when you could promise a kid the moon without giving him enough money to buy a spacesuiL" CUT11.NG IT SHORT: one reason peo- ple put on weig~t may be because their jntestines are too Jong. Three Danish surgeon$ reported to an international medical <Xlnvention that they had caused JO excesaively fat women to lose up to 300 pounds -and keep it off -by operations whk:h removed a section or their m. testlnes, thus lessening the amount or food they absorbed. Folklore: To dream of a giraffe mean, you will soon see a friend who came from a lonJ..-distance. Dreaming of an eagle slghU1e1 that honor and fame will come your way. Dream of hay being cul .and riches will replace your poverty, It was Josh Billings who observed, "I never knew a man who lived on hope but what spent his old age at somebody else's expense." --~-- Tuesday) October 20, 1970 Th• odltor1.a page oJ the DaUu Pilot see.b to in.form and stiJ'l'l.6 tdotc readct1 b*' presenting thli ntto1paper"1 oi>fniom and com- ' mtnta.ry ml topics of Interest anil iignif~nct, by prwidirig a fcm'm fo~.ttht txpre11krn of our rtadtr1 opinion1, and by pr111ndng Ou dioerse vfcw- pointl of fnfornwd o"'ervers and apo~e n 01' topfct of the dau. Robert N. eed, Ptlbllsber • • TUfsdl1, Octobtr 20, 1'170 OAILV PILOT '1 ~~~~~~~--~~~.:...:..:.:..:..;_~ • ' . ~-rEotal Discounts·'- E·VERYOA·v!. • PllCB EFFICTIYIWED. ThnlTUES~ OCTOBEI 21Tliru27. STOIE HOUIS: DAILY 10 a.111. to 9 p.m~ SAT. & SUN., 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. -GREEN GIANT • 303 CAN GREEN PEAS 23c #6i'll'.0°sALAMI 149 # SCHIUINGS • 12.5 OZ. Taco Casserole 52c • i'lowNiEMIX 45c ti WILSHIRE e •B OZ. JAR 69< DILLS .::•-, ' d -SUNSlilNE • l-lB. BOX ' Krispy Crackers 33c GIANT ROll • 170 COUNT e SPICETONE .. , ••.•• -zatr j 11 ... . ,..._.' ··~ .. . :': ..... ,. ~ . . ' .. '-' '(j!J I l/2lB. l0A F ' Fad Giant Bread "'i."u'NGCH 0MEAts'° MANHATTAN • All MEAT or All BEEF SLICED BOLOGNA ,.,, -All MEAT • 12-0Z. PKG . Hormel Wieners REGULAR or BUITERMILIC • 8-0Z. TUBE Pillsbury Biscuits a 6:ii~E s~fami t1 -Zll TDllLS • iitlf CIDER GOlOMttJ )) t1flOUR s:. . . USDA CHOICE •.LARGE EYE SYANDING RIB ROAST -USDA CHOICE ' BONE-IN ROUND STIAK LEAN • DEPENDABLE QUALITY FRISH GROUND BllF · · USDA CHO,ICE • lEAN AND MEATY SHORTRIBS · ofBiiF USOA·CHOICE'.9 GOURMErs FAVGRllE 791~. ·as~. 53~. IYIO'ROUND . ROA~T-_ .. _ 11~ 79,t .. FARMER JOHN QUALITY• FAMILY PACK • SLICIDPORK LOIN CHOPS FAR!.\ER JOHN EASTERN QUALITY PICNIC STYLI PORK ROAST FARMER JOHN e 8-0Z. PKG.• SKINLESS· PORK LINK . SAUSAGE FRESH FROZEN • USDA GRADE A NOliBiST HIN TURKEYS With Pq:M)ut Gauge CHICKEN OR BEEF 45~. SHUllTINDA .. . 89~ . . STEAKS ._, 35c 37c 59< 55c 9c 9~ C . _____ __,..._. 4·STAR ' . ~· SPE,CIALS ARE EXTRA SAVINGS ' _, MADE POS SIBLE BY SPECIAL PUR.C HA~ES F.RpMTHEMANU~ACTURER ANO PASSED ON TOY U! VAN D~ KAMP •FROZ!N e 71/20Z ~~ENCHILADA 37c . VENTREES : -. . BRIDGFORD e FROZEN • 1-lS. ,4iPake-ln-Box 21c ..,BREAD . r ' HALF GALLON • FA'MllY PACK FOREMOST ICE CREAM .63c 38-4 COUNT • SAVI He L~Q-TIPS ' 99c W,FAMILY CHEST , FAMILY SIZE • REG or MINT ,~CREST _~~ oz. TUfE 59 VTOOTHPASTE c J i OUNCE SIZE • SAVI 60< . ,~PERTuSSIN : 79c VPLUS . I ' I J ' 3 1/2 OUNCE sri • SAVE 2Dc VASELIN ~ 7ac .· HAIRTO,.,C usriACHOICE . DELICtoUS . ol/~N TENDER· BONILISS ·age $HOU"'IR CLOD ROAST _,._. ' . - JACK-0-LANTERN PUMPKINS ···-2 -1-, c -"'2 Ill. FLORIDA e WHITE GRAPEFRUIT -:a: 00 · . · . -~~ • MUSTARD GREENS ~ifof~·;ELICIOUS6 :l°o ... • SWISS CHARD ocw.,,..,.,......... • • COLLARDS CRANBERRIES 29' • KALE PERSIMMONS ~o~ -rouR cH01cE 1 oc PO"'EGRANATES 10'-. BUNCH - . .BEAUTIFUL • ·FRESH ·PO'l'rlD 'MUMS ~~,;,m J97 6"P01' .. " "' i ,, r • -· .. \ "' ~·t\ ... -\ • . ' . • • " ' .. . • • ' : t I I I I OAll V PJLOT T-, Oclobtt 20, 1970 CHECKING · •_UP--• Women Fatties Lead Men, 7 .. 1 By L. M. BOYD THAT THERE ARE as many naturally fair-haired boys as fair.flaited girls is common knowledge. It's a statirtJcal fact, howevtr, that th< ~ blonde girls in hJ&b schools nationwide out- nwnber the blond 'boys therein almost exactly by two to one •••. WERE YOU AWARE thf:tt are seven rat women for every fat man? It's possible some Jmnorous fellow who is overweight will want to know the whereabout. ol bis speclllc seven pJeasin@:ly plump ladies. But that's not what I meant, )'OU know that. EVERY TBIRD PEDES- TRIAN killed in the traf- fic hereabout! is over 65 .••. AM INFORMED th< C<>51 ol livinR over the last 20 years has gone up about $1.28 a fifth .••. IN mEX FEIU, N.J .. the rciosten are prohibited by Jaw from crowing before 6 a.m. .••• ',THREE TIMES as many women as men sufier frun migraine headaches. but don't ask me why • , •• OUR PLANET EXPERT says he now can verify the old claim that Leo men mak~ the best carpenters. if trained. CONSIDER THIS -Tl has been just 10 years since the Rolls Royce engineers in· vented a car engine that could run on peanut butter. Surpris- ed we've heard so little about it. By now you'd think the Carolina fannen would have a 2711.i: percent depletion allowance. Wait, that's flip. Adually. Rolls Royce came out with ... enc1ne deoip>ed mainly for miltwy vehicle.. It could UIO .-any 1 .. 1 tlial ml&i>t bl found C11 I bat· Ueliek!. Tests showed It even worked on PelnUt. butter. Mystery here is why such in· nova&.ions make no betdway in the a~omotive indultrx,. CVSTOMER SERVICE - Q. ''Which 90llC bu betrl ...:onled the ll10ll - 'Stardust' or 'St. Lou 11 Blues'?" A. Nobody knows. But the two of them have been recorded more lhan any other soogs. that's koown .•.• Q. "What letter do you find moat oft.en in English at the begin- ning of word?" /t.. That's S. In order lherealter, the most !Te- quent starling letten are E, P. A, T, B,M,D, R, F andH. SAY 11IE GROOM is 25 and the bride ......mat younger. lnsUTance statisticians figure the odds are three in 10 they'll both survive another half cen· tury •••• A LOS ANGELES suicide prevention center con· tends Wednesday night ap.. pears to be when the largest number of citizens~ temp I at e self-destruction. 'Tllat's wh<n th< phone calls for help hit their peak, at any rate •.•• NOTE IT CLAJMED the Irish are the world's greatest lovers. Is that ri~? ())uld be. 1bere art more than 40 words for "sweetheart" in Gaelic. LOVE ANO WAR -Those husbands most apt to engage in extramarit.aJ affairs are a<:· tors, traveling 1 a 1 e s m e n , musicians, army officers, seamen and doctors, or so says a matrimmial COUflflelor. Your que1tlom and com- ments art totltomed and will bt wtd ill Cl!EC!r!NG UP 10htrffft posfible-. PllG11 addrcil '°"' lttttr1 to L. II. llC!!ld, P.O. 1 .. 1176, N~ Boodl, Calif. Manson Show Biz Try Told by Talent-Scout LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Charlie Manson never sang anybody's songs but bis own: neither did anybody at the ranch,'' a Hollywood record producer retails. Gregg J akobson, a witness at the Sharon Tate murder trial, said he was so cap- tivated by Charles Manson's music and personality he tried to interest Doris Day's son in filming a documentary on Mamon. "Terry wasn't interested in the pack.age" said Jakobsen, referTing to Terry fl.lelcher, Miss Day's son and head of a recording firm. Manson, 35, Jeader of a hlp- pl.e-ltyle "famJly" ii on trial with three women followm, charged with murderln1 tht blonde actress and ail others in August 1969. Melcher prt!Vi0'111y lived In the rented hou111 where Ml11 Tate was killed. Jakobson, 30, was a talent tcOUt for Melchw'1 company In tile spring of Jllet when he recommended Manson for an a udition. But Manson failed two audi· tions with Melcher, 1 nd Jakobson testified Manson became agitated and wild~yed after hearing Melcher wuu't interested. Still. Jakobson enviaioned a possible documentary rum - '"Jhe Man and His Mule." He said he visited tbt Mamon clan ·s ranch one d•J end 11w a scene he thought perfect for the movie. "What my eyes took In u 1 stood in that field behlDd tht ranch with the green gru1 and the motorcycles and the glrll and tile brown ir..s and lhe blue sky would have made a nice picture ••• I aUU have It Jn my mind." But Jakobson, llid Manson broke the idyllic moment by launching a converaatkm 1bout 1 race war and predic- tlnc that blackl would ''rip olr" -kill -white lamllios in th1lr homes. Denture Invention For People with "Uppers" and "Lowers" Tbt nearest thin( to hi.Yin&: yow ht:lpt Protm rum• from bruial; on teelh is ~Ne now With a You ma,.-bitt harder. chew btt.-~c cream dilCO'ltl'J that ac-ta'. eat more nattnll,.-. tullly hold• lx>th "uppm" and F1xoor:Nt may help ,.-oa .pat ' .. ~ .. ••never befon: pciesiblc. men dee!,.-, be men at ~. It'• a rnolutionary d19lll»'ttY The special pencil·point di .. calltd Frxoo11.r.-r-. for daily horne pemer lets you spot PlJ:OOEHT '*· (US. Pat. fJ,003,988) Wilh with precision .,. where needed! FrxooENT many dmture wearers One application may la&l for now flit. ..-k. lau&h. with little hours. Dentures that fit are "°"'of drnh.itu comina looet. t&1ential to health. Ste rour F1xoo1tMT form• an ela1tic dtntilt reiularly. Get ~sy·to­mcrntnnt that helpt ahlorb tht Ult FIXOOKNT Denlutt: Adhelivc lbock of bitinc and cbt•i.na:-Cream at all dNc c:ounten. I See by T ooay' s Want Ads Land Deal By~Reagan .Questioned LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Jess Unruh today asked Gov. Ronald Reagan to explain why 2001 Cenlur)'·For booght 200 acres of Malibu Canyon land from him and paid $l million more than the fair market value. "Ronald Reagan was elected govtmor of Cali!omia in November 19611," the Democratic gubernatorial can· di.date told a news conference. "All or a sudden FOJ: perked up its ean ~ght the land -without Reagan ever having lilted il for public aale.·~ QUEENIE By Phil lnterlancli "20th Century.Fox became Rooald Reagan's Technicolor the only difference was thai Reagan g«i>t hJs in advance while T e c h n i c o I o r gave "I think you'll f'md this is not the ordinary kind George Murphy his on the in-of boss." stallment plan," Unruh added ---------=-.:.:=--------- His reference was to th~ $20,000 • year Technicolor paid the senator as a con· . IUltlng lee. Murphy no longer works for tile !inn. In a chaf'ts..an~asel session with newsmen, Unruh said the property! bought by Reagan in 1151, adJOined 2,500 acres in the canyon owned by Fox. He said the governor's plot was assewd by the county at ltH,000, but For booght ii for 11,930,000. "Since that incredible dea l Fox apparenUy has don~ nothing with the land," he said. "But it no doubt got its money's worth anyway. It's man was governor." Unruh said Reagan ap- pointed Harry Sokolov, an ex· ecuUve assistant to the presi- den\ of the film company, as chairman of the State Parks and Recreation Commission. "Now I doubt that Fo:1: paid $1 million bonus just to get its man appointed chairman of a slate commllllon, 11 U n T u h s1I~ "But the question re· mains why the extra million dollars was paid." He said if Reqm Jails to ezplain the tr.,..ction, "he . wlll cast cr•ve doubts on whether he 30U.ld hold high public office." Whan newsmen asked whetbtt he would decline such an offer, Unruh replied: "I'd r1tber be IOVetnoT and a cavemor that ~an d o something rather than make a million dollars." Unruh charged earlier Jn Sherman Oaks that Reagan and Murphy had failed to win key aerospace contracts and were responsible for Callfornl1'1 7 p e r c e n t unemployment rill. Prisoners Want Trial In Bay City SAN P'l\ANCJSCO (UPI) - Three CMvlcts charged v:ith. killing a guard at racially· troubled Soledad State Prison want the state court of appeal to keep their trial in San Fran· cisco. Attorneys for the 5-0-ea\led "Soledad Brothers" filed a petiUon Monday asking the ap- pell1le court to cverturn the decision in superior court of Judge Robert Drewes that the trial should be transferred to San Dieso. Defense ccunsel ?i-1 a r v i n Stender declared. "we believe that the prosecution's molion for a change of venue to San Diego is an illegal, unwar- ranted and blatant attempt lo increase the chances of con· vlction of three , innocent men." SF Policeman Slain ' In Bank Holdup Try; SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A policeman was shot to death and a bank robber critically wounded Monday in a wild shootout at a San Francisco branch bank. Patrolman H a r o I d L. Hamilton, ~. died on the operating table at 1:10 p.m. at Mission Emergency Hospital -the seventh policeman kill· ed this year in the line of duty in the San Francisco Bay Area and the fourth in San Frari· cisco itselr. The robbery suspect, Iden- tified as James sanchez, 'IT, was reported in critical con- dition with a bullet wound in the neck. Hamilton, a six-year veteran Simon Says He Set Off Reagan Rap LOS ANGELES (UPI) - University of Ca l ifornia Regent Norton Simon said Monday he touched off Gov. Ronald Reagan's name-calling incident at the r e g e n I s meeting by protesting he was being "gagged." · Simon said the Incident began when he said he wa s not being allowed to speak at the re gents' meetings until a f t e r the Nov. 3 election. "Reagan pr(\11lptly Jost COO· trot of himselt and swOfe in whlspered tones that h e wanted me to come oubide with him," Simon said. Then regent Fred Dutton reiterated Sinwn's charge in the open public meeting, Ile said. and Reagan called him a ''son of a bitch." of the pol!ce force, wa1 \l."Ouhded about 11 :30 a.m. when he and Patrolman J ef· frey Brosch surprised the robber escaping from a Wells Fargo branch bank with $605. · Hamilton and Brosch, sum- moned. by another branch of Wells Fargo. drove up in an unmarked car and Hamilton burst through the doors and into a hall of gunfire. Bank credit olricer Lee Rosemeyer said Hamilton was hit in the chest. "When they started shooting one of tlle officers yelled for everyone to get down on the Ooor," Rosemeyer said. "But by then everyone was down already." Brosch apparently brought down the robber a f t e r Hamilton was hit. Bank officials said Ml111 Jeanette MacDonald, 34, bank assis!Jmt operations m3111ger, was on the phone to another branch in Woodside when she noticed office m a n a gt T ?tianuel J . Mendes Jr. walking back toward the teller area followed by a man carrying a paper bag. She notified the Woodside bank that a holdup was in pro- gress, and Woodside officials relayed the information to the police. The robber attempted to force Miss MacDonald to act as a shield as he headed toward the door but she escaped during the abootout and was not banned. or the six previous pollce killings this year in the b1y area. four were appartnUy from terTorist activity or deliberate executions of policemen. Stylish Duo Rob Station "I have no question but that the governor knows tJiat lhe reason I was gagged was to avoid exposure of the extreme extent of the involvement of PALO ALTO (AP) -T\\'O Sen. (George) Murphy in the women v.·earing maxi-coats Irvine affair," Simon said. and carrying guns bound and The "Irvine affair" refef'Ted gagged a gas station attendant to attempts to ~ange a 1960 Sunday night and got away agreement under which the Irvine Co. gave lhe state 1,000 with $580. police said. acres ror a university campus J ames C. Green said he was in Orange Cowty. A student putting the money in the safe comm un ity was to be at Mc~na\d's station when established around the cam· the women came in. pus. He said the getaway driver . Simon said the company sulCe has sought daftges in the v.•as a man who can1e in dur· original agreemett. He and ing the holdup and told the Dutton opposed tht'changes on women to "Come on, hurry the grounds they Wbl.Jd benefit up. hurry up." the Irvine Co. a!ld not the Green later worked himself universitv. loose, hailed a cabbie and bor- "Sen. ~lurphy n~ obtained ·-::r=o=w=ed=a=d=im='='=o=c=al=I =po=l=ic='·=: considerable help and com-l r ., r ~VirltY ·•ooy• SLIM GYM SA T SI . mi 1nents rom m.1ny lrvine .. roop 3111 offi cials," Simon charged. "At ~ LOS(AOltlSS$1l£ least one of the Orooge County 1H 2 WEEKS WASl-ONGTON (AP) supervisors and the governor flll Mmy Pfc. John S. 1-lunt of himself have had some con· HOMIC1£MoNtU1Anott Santa Ana was the only .siderable backing by Irvine M TELEl'llONE WALT Californian listed ~1onday by people and their frhnds." "sL1M oYM (714) llt·S77S the Defense Depa rt 1n en 11.,;::;;,::~~~~z;:;;=::!:~=========. among eighteen .servicemen II )cllled in Southeast Asia flgbtln1. Hunt was the son of Mr. and ~1rs. William S. Hunt BIBLE TllOUGHTS e 'LOOKINC far • wtnttr of 2S29 Valencia Ave., Santa nntalt $1Cll by the month Ana. fAITH: "-faith co'"olh by ho1rl119 a11d ht1ri119 by tko word of Goel," Ro111. 10: to 9at FAITH (bali1f 111 Chri,t) fro111 tho l iltlo, MEN 1111111 to a th olhar mt11 tk~, faith fro111 tht llblt. "-w• h1¥1 th;, t roa1utt in EARTHEN ¥t11el-." 2 Cor. .. ?1, Rom. IO:ll-15. MEN art God'• or S2 tw.kb'. Oceanfront : 11~=========:::;-ll Una., TV, utllltlet indud.. ed. No peCI, San Qerne11te ..... • Htte's a aood buy? \\'alnul bunk beda. complete. in ~ condltiOn $65, e BUSINESS OPPORTUN- ITY! Coln lalllldcy 111 CO.ti y., .,. for .... e MontlCll OOlllQ CllAlf1 Nttd1 t'Oln11nkm .. I yr aid. llOUfl Galik lIT'S BE FRIENDl.Y JC you hJvr ~ TK'i~hOOnt or know of anyonr movin:: 11> our arel, please-It'll u5 NO that v•c may ~Xll•nd 11 friendly "·elcomr find h4'l11 thrm to bc>rome •CQUl\lntf'd 1n their IWVt' aurroundlnp. Se. Coast Yisitar ~ '""'* 111111' Yisitar '4M17C oartho11 .,,,,1, 111odo M cl1y, &,11. 2i1 • DO YOU WANT A G~EAT FAITH1 Th111 1ludy th1 l ibl•. God will fl OI wh;1p1• ifl yo1r tlf tho 9rtal f1tlt of !ht liblo; YOU mu1I 1h1dy to lo1r11 tho .. , 2 Ti111 , 2d J, 2 l ll'l'I , ]115·11, Hob. I 1 :6 Whtrt tho Bible i1 NOl th.trt, f1ith i11 Chri1t dot1 not a11i1t! If w• W•~t o_vr c.hildttn to "•Yt f1ith, wf l'l'lu1I leach tho111 God t wottl, 2 T1111, 1,5, 1r. lJ:•. Otho,wi1t, th1y ... al grow 11p a GODLESS 9011or1tlo11. H1.-o wo f1il1d th1m in thi1 1t1poc.tt It tht1 whit 11 wro119 wl •wr t111tJ,11 to41yt "ILISSID It th• 11tlio11 whott God 11 tht L•rd-", ''· )]112, h. 141) ... Htw dtt• l lli1• l_fudy~vr -~•· c•lftrtr• wttfi '!. wot1hl11tt C•m• stff,v the ll~lt ~ "'• lho, tell). Cl••••• kr tt11o1ltt •~d c.hil4r111. Ch11rch tf C.hftl, 217 W. Wl11011 $1., C•ti• M11o, Oo yo11 ht•• lll~E t1utttlt 1 Pht11• 146·1111, Mt·l76J. T-JV, a-& t , 7:JI ..... s.Mri Firemen • Ill Defeat - Sacramento Striker8 Get Le$al Setback SACRAMENTO (AP) -The bitter taste of deftlt Wll 1n the mouths of Sacramento'• 400 firemen today who Iambi· ed on a strike and appe&rtd to have lost. Eighteen have been fired, 22 demoted and all who struck will be reduced one level on the pay scale for one year, a city spokesman said Monday. The announcement came shorUy after Superior Court Judge WWiam M. Gallagher handed down a ruling which rejected the main argument the firemen had based their ilrike on. Gallagher said it ' was an illegal strlke and ordered the men back to work. A union spookesman said appeals were "being con- "d red" si e · The members or Sa!;ramento Firt F j i h t e r 11 Local Al AFIA:!O wW meel W'!lnlld•y mornlnf lo decide thelt' ~t move. 1111 ll-man executive committee wUJ offer recommendatka but thty hayen't bem worked out yat, said Ken Lenon, lnttmaUonal r-laUvt for the Ioctl. month and 11 paid holidays, HI _II.Id plckela .would be the 11me number 11 ether city wtthdi'awn and atnke held· employes. They' 11lo want a quarters closed because of the ral11 to $991, effecUve next llldl•'• orda' btll ht dwbled · l"•brulri'· eny men wo.ukl retum to·work Tht ctty h11 offered an Im· unUI after tho Wednelda1 medllte r1LH to $950 n11d -11n1 -U lhtn. another rallo lo 11,010 In July Cit~ ofrtclala ~1ld they were plu.s added pay for men with planning on havmg men return junior college and college Wednesday. degrees. But the city has of. The city had a s k e d fered no paid holidays. Gallagher to order the men back to work on the basis of state law forbidding firemen to strike. But the union said its . men .we~e released from their obligation not to strike becauSe the city had refused Second Sto11n Moves lo Sea to bargain in good faith. MANILA (UPI) -The s1" Gallagher rejected the union cond destructive typhoon to hit contention, sayin~ he had rail-the Philippines in a week mov- ed to find any evidence of bad ed towards the South China faith bargaining by city Sea today after leaving at negotiators. least 69 dead and as many as "Fire fighters grievances JOO others missing and reared against their employer may d~owned in the .southern pro- w.II have merit," s a j d v1nces. Oallqhtr. "However. as The disaster co n t r o I tmployes of the government of coordinating center or !he thlt city. they must be ex-Philippine c o n s t a b u 1 a r v pect.td to resolve their dif· reported that as many as 100 ferencu In a lawfully ap-persons were believed drown· proved m1nner." ed when Typhoon Kate washed The flttm1n now earn $900 a away 30 houses in a town in month and have no paid Zamboanga Del Sur, about 400 T11nney Asksri11oiu~·da!!ya!.§'I'h~ey~·~d~e~m~·~·d~l960~~·~m~u~· e~s~s~ou~lhgo1~•~1a;"~"~·-~~1 More Aid 1 For Israelis LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Characterizing Israel as the onl~ bastion in the way cf Soviet control cf the Persian Gulf and the rich oil supplies of the Middle East, Rep. John V. Tunney Monday called on President Nixon to make clear the nature and extent of U.S. commitment to the freedom and survival ol Israel. Addreain1 the Jtwllh 111· Uonal IUnd meeunc. t h • Democratic candkt1te tor U.S. Sen, Gearae MUJ'tlhy'1 IUt IC· cused tha lllala' Doportmont of "vague and v1cUl1Una pollcl11 in the Middle Etot " whicb h< said could !Old to 'rn1ocalcula· lion by tho Sovlelo and the Arabs th1t could CIUle WV. "I ask thlt we make It known to Ille llulllana and tho Arabo that we °""Ider Ille lilt of Israel and her people to bt non-negotiable," he said. "l ask that we insist upon direct negotiations between t h e Arabs and Israelis.,. Tunney also called on the ldmlnittration to 1111 jets and mis.sil~ to JSratl "in order to combat the force. of ag· aression Jn the Middle E1st.11 He said Soviet mlullea: emplaced in the Suei and the new government In El)'pt have placed the -st1te of l1Tael in its most "precarious posi- tion" in history. Underspend MOit retailers buy diamonds after they have been cut and polished and mounted. We buy diamon:ls in the rough. We do our own cutting, our own polishing, our own mounting. Whtn you add up the savings. you get much more diamond than you thought you c>luld afford. Which all goes to prove you, don't have to overspend tO overwhelm. Prices start at $150. SLAVICK'S Jt"-elers tince 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644-1380 Open Mondcry ond Friday until 9:30 l Suit Dismissed SANTA MONICA !UPI) -A paternity suit against actor Cary Grant was dismissed Monday jn Superior Court after the woman in the case ~-----------------J ' refused to take a blood t~sit.i.iiiii;iiijjiiijijiiji'i-ii~i-i;iiiijijii.li~~~·~-~~ _.........__ ---- ~lAAUToa .....~o ~oS1S WAYNE OWfNs 41;o 0-t >-"" .~ o"~ Buo <.,..t Y ~ COMPLETE AUTO BOOY )/~.\'.\' ~ AND PAINT SERVICE 1.s' 0 . l ·1.11111'1 ll!l 'IUfff~'~ Our f'nrllll!J I• One of llU! /tfo•t JtJodern In Orange Co11•t11 SAN DIEGO FREEWAY AT EUCLID 1112.1 liUCLID -POUNTAIN VALLIV Ml IMS or SC0.2111 .. -- Fo1~ Tlie ltJHrriuge Lice1tses DllWSON J;m O~w1on t~l B••!r ~· (Q 11 "''" ~·rvk~\ """~;n~ II Wt~ltHJ! ('••Ml 'M'ortv~ry. eu.o1111• DONATI A•l!i<IO II, Oon•TI llr.• jO, ol ?'l1 nrl Mn, c,11~ 11-e:-o. ll~Te rl ~-"~· 0 <'"· Mr U Svrvlvtd bt •·Ii. r;,.ce !v n ~""'' /,\l(~~el •nd Jt'lr-., lwo rl•<,<'"· l er1. G•vlt and L•""'· Inv· b•otl>e·-. V•('~r. Fr•n~ •"d C N"'""'t °""'" "" &I (l>'••~O: Wi!h3>T' Ocort or M' 11•' •· )rr, W••l>•nnlol\; J.~ •l•if"• R•vf"" ~n11•t>, t•~llO'lt W"itf, LI""' ll•nr'1, V•', re"• l(,r•·~or~. Jene P '""'~I ""~ ~-· """" Cl>•lrh·"· •II o! (_1>.,,.nn ·~•vo(f\ Pl'ft~1ng •• SeU n'"'""''' MOdVJ'" MOIOllGE1 Jc~n c "'""" "''· 11or '' o! "'~ cc~ t,n•.,t•I Or .• Hur' •ilt n ~e•<~ O•'t rl dt•'" Oroe~· 10 ~urvlv•~ DY .,.,,., Etl'>tl; !v;o •on1. Jol>n ~ ~rd J \"'ill~•~ Ml)'\n1~rr: fo•·• V""~'" •arr-~~~ "'~ a·eo1-aro...St~•'!I. St'"•'~'· V'~d''"~~Y. II ~"' Smotn• Cll~<t1"• !••~rmM• l ""'' w~,n..;d.,~. 11o°""1"'" v • • C•'I"~'•"""'· ~•n Ber..-rd•na SmU~\ Mii"~~·;, C"r~· tcrs. ARBUCKLE & SO:'-/ \\"<'slt"IHr ~tortu;)ry -127 E. lith St .. Costa ~lcsa 646·1SSS • BALTZ i\10RTUARlES Corona dcl i\lar , . , OR ~·9 511 Costa i\tcsa . . · mi G-2'124 • BELL BJI0:\0\\11\ \' i\IO:tTUA!tV 110 Broad\.\o"CI)', Co~ta i\tesa Lt 8·3133 • l\1eCOrt~11CK LAGUKA BEACH i\10RTIJAH\' li 95 Lagunu CaJ1yon Hod. • PACIFIC VTE\\I 494 -9tl5 i\IE;\-10RTAL PA RJ\ c~metery .;\ll'lr l Chapel ~snD Pacific View Orire Nc"'·port llca('h. California li4+.2";00 • PEEK FAMILY COLOl\IAL f'UKERAL 110:\IE 7801 Bolsa ,\\'t . \Vestminstcr • S3l.J515 • SllEFFER MORTUARY t..aguna Beach . , . , , . 41).1--15:5 San C:lcmeolc ..... <69?.0100 0 S1\llTllS' i\IOHTUAllY ~7 ~l:iln St. lluntlnJ1lo01 neath 536·6539 ! Tursday, Octobtr 20, 1q70 PoliticHl Notes LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ·-~-LEGAL NOTIC._E~-1---L_E_'u_'AL~N~o~·1_·1c_e ___ I LEGA"._ NO_T_Ic_e __ _ ClllTll'l<AT• .r"l"ICTITIOUI •••M "' ff(I. --M -fO "' 11141 "''''""' ol ..... MOTICI! TO c•101to•s C&"llttl'ICATI u OISCONTIHUA!ttl Playboy-Is sues !---------------Mllfll'I' ""-'" 0-H-M. 'n!ft't119t'. T~ 1 ,,_ NAMI Of' !OP,.lCt•t. SIALI ,,..._.,,i.,, !Mt tJIKvfMI Ille. wtltllt1 11'-SU,.llllOlll COUIT 0" tNI D• USI ANO/Oil A•ANIKIHMINT OF THI CALl~llHIAN ••ou, Nt!ICJ •. ""'°'' tlrllmfrlt ... """" ol tht '""''llooo STAtl 0111 U.LlllOllNIA l'U PICTITIOUS NAMI '(t'1 ..Ct•llf'1'-.Jri.l .l!(t t •t ~l.M I N.ol:tn l'Yblk·Ctlltwl\U !Mftlft ~ ... •n(.Klll)OWltcileC 'O ,..._ lM& CQ..V•T'I' 011" DAA8G THI UHOe ASIONlO -· lwftW '"' ttltlf l11vt1trn4!nt llut1t1n• ti 2111 f'rfnc:IHT Ott!ct In 111111 IU(fl (1)1".of-'*" u.te..,lecl tllt Mini. .. .. A"ntol ctrltly lhtt; tfT.Crti9 ~lf, 19'0 o ... ~ Otl.,., S.Ut .. 2..-Htw-t lffdl, Of"• .... (Ollflf'I' ln W1Mtt.I Wllfffff, I 1'11¥t-flft"WlllC! 'fl E1!1t. et OltACI AHN MIL\.lilN. llWY cu~ '9-00 IMllbtu "'(llltt 11\t. IJC· C•lllo,nle. ~ IM nc!ltlow !lrm "'""' M¥ C""mlHlot! E••lttl f'l'l'I' lllNI t nd tffl•ecl mY .inc .. t IHI IM DKffffCI, tlllau!o lltm "'""' Ill SANTA ANA of THE CALll'OiltNIA GllOUI', tl'ICI tl'lt t Mtrdl 16, UIJ C!•Y tlld ~''' 111 11111 Ctl"lll~l• llnt t lloovl NOTICI! IS HElll!IY CtVEH It !be C\.OTHINC CA•£ CENTEilt '' NJ W. P1·efe1·e11ce Cl1art 11\t llrm lt c-M<ll ti the IOtloW!t11 Hr• !T•Tt: OP (,fi!,.IPOllNIA J wr1ttfn. Crtelltor1 l'I ltll •""1t Nmff Clt<Mlf'fll 11tll St .. Stnlt .. ,,., c.ttlfort1l1. wllld! MNW<. wl\O'I* "'"'" tllll aOOt•~' trt; l u. COfflCIAL SEAL! 111~1 t it -tOM ....,¥1"' Cltltl'WI tNlt1Jt 1M bull""' Wtl f9tmcr" c-t<I l'I t11t Ot:HlllA\. llAll THlillS COUNTY OF Oll•NGI! I Ell!w w. Jon11n Mltl dtcedtftl t rt fHYll"td M lilt !ll«n, kll1Pwlrle ''" ............ IWlft'ltt ltl lull Kllhl'Yft o . •111t11n, l:ll~ £1ar Fr11'1tt1, On 1111, !Jiii d•v .. Oclobu, lt10, bttort Not•rv f'vbl1(·Ctlltornlt wlln HM M<tu.N _,,.,,, 1.1· 11\t tlf1Ct tr.cl itlftff OI l'llkltnu• ''' •• fDllowl. 10- ,_..,, ... S•nlt A!W. Ctlll0tnl1. """ o. T~• Co•. ""-!!~ ·~lllt•N f'tlfl<IH I Ofll« In ol ll'lt ctttll ot"" tboW tl'lll!ltd C0\11'1,., wit ; G. TPIOl'rlll COll. UH (iifN:rtl t, ""'' 0 , ThofT!fl Ca•. l\llOWtl " """ .. be. 11\t gr.,.,., C-1\r 16 ltl'ffetlt -· wUh 11\t MttM-",.. JNn S. Wlflllurn, 1'11 C••-11 LfM, By O. C. HUSTTNGS 01 Tht Ot111 Piiot 51tU Anything can happen during a Political campaign, and gen(·rnlly does. but it has to be :in election yc:ir triumph that ~ccs 1 he publication of a poli\1cal prt!feren<"e chart in Jll:1yboy ri1agnz:ine. Centt>recl on v.·hal a r c described as key i:aces. the rutinAs of the fully-clothed t•andid:ites is done on a report l·:i:·d basts. \\'1 th the aid of the Congrt'ss1onal Quarterly, a "nnn-p1:1rtisan research atien-- l')'." Hugh liefner's Sta ffers h;i\·e crnnpited grades based l'ln the candidates' voting records and public statements on fr1ur issues-Vietnam. c ivil ri~hts, individual liber ties and pullulion-plus a subjective :inalysis of their courage, since1•it.v 11nd dC"dication. \Vith this scientific systern i'l<Jyboy '"\\'files cff" George ~·lurphv as "the former lap cl.'.lnl·Cr" and gives him a gr11de of D. Jlis Democratic opponent John Tun n e y r.1anages a B--. but the reader ls cautioned that Tunney is '' s upcrcautious," whatever th:it 1neans. Jess Unruh. as a Big Daddy i1n:--;e sets a B. and is labeled <t .. reborn fi~hlinf! liberal." !~~ac;:an, on the other hand. ft'rapcs by \\'ith a D. "1\'i!h low m:irks in every C:itcgory.'' The I 11•0 congressional races .•·cl!.'t:!cd as "signifirant" by l'l:iyboy are in !he 24!h and 2ilh Congressional Districts in Los Angeles. The races in the 24th pills ,John Birch Society member Jchn Jlousselot against t-.1yr!ie J•;\'crs. \\'idow of slnin civil rl1:ht~ leader r.tedgar Evers_ The '.!ith Distr k·t hos Barry • J, l\tlthelm. c.111..-1111. ..., .... W/IOtt ....... 11 wblc•lbtd lo "" M1 Cam1T11lllon E-•l•tt VllUCM!'t. It !ht illllltfll•~ ,, "" ofllC'f ,,._,. let<l'l. c1111. LIMITID f'AlltNIRI wlll'llft lnllfllmtflf tl"" ''"""¥ 1 .. 1.C:I ol ..... u ,, 1'1• -nl ,,.., tllO•....,.&. E ............ ltdrotltt11 l lorO I!, WI~'"' 1611 c ........ 11 i011'1r>'ft G. A!Plllll. ttU ft$! Frel'ltfl, !flt CtlllGrnlt l' G,_. 111<1 ICltflOWltdttd llt!IVI "-• Tl\tlchtl' 1447 Wll•htrt &oultlrl,_, Suli. 40., llt1rtr• ltns, N""'llOrl lttch, C11fl, A~t. A. $tnl• """'• Ctlll<irnl•. to "'' 11111 ht w~rlbed Ike 11•111• of o. 1'tl W•tltlltt OrlY•· Svllt Jll l"f Hllh, Cellklr"nl• tG?ll, wlll(ll ~ tllt C:,trtlllcttt !Gr" "•,..•tllon ol bw1l"f" Mr. tlld Mr.. J1clt t., Ml11n1,, 3JO Thomll (Git "'-••lo ..... P•lnclN! •1141 hi• ...... "" '''°• C.llMr"'ll Piie• """"'lntu., "'' ""'°'"""" ltl tit llndef' lllt •bovt Uctlllou' "'""· ........ l ln•fl'r Lone ltttll. C1Uf0r11lt. OWll "'"'' ., tltO•M'I' lt1 Itel. ,.,....., 11\flNN" Htllltllf'lt ,, Int •'1•1t QI 11-11111 1111.tU!I of 111bl!c•!lon llltrtol, .,. on flit Mt, t l'l(f Mfl. Mlrllft It. Gf~lllMI, (OFl'ICl•L Sll!" .. L! Publblwd o, ..... COlll DlllY ,.Hal dt<tdtnl. wllllln fDUr montl'lt '"'' lllt '" '"' otllc• of "" (DU~" ,,.,_ el 31S H•nowtr OrlYt. cos11 "'"'' Ntl'(.V 1, Ht11Ptr "''· 2f, Otl. 6. 13. 20, 1110 IJM·l'D ilr•t 11111!1ct1!orl of 1111, l'IOll«. Or1"9t COl.lntv, llflll•r lllt 1rowl11ont ol Ci!lloi'A!•. NDl1ry Publlc-(1lllett1l1 LEGAL NOTICE D1IMI Octobet 16, 1no. SK!lon i •U of lht Ci•U Coclt. ' Fr•n• T. Sltblll , ,,,. Com1IOCk. l'•lfl<lttl Diii<• In Mt'1tftol Ill'!! IC1ltn WITNESI ... , 11111<1 11111 Ulll 111•1 of Ortntl, Callrorl'lt. Qllngt C1111nt~ T~ f~•Cu1'1X October. U"J'O. Mr. tlld M••. Ted C, \.lovC!, 7111 MY com111\1\lot1 E••I•• NOT1ce"To Clll:OITOIU ot 11\t Wiit ol the I J"'" s. Winburn At1mfdt , .. Pl. I . .&. ... helm, C1lllort1lt . Mtrcll 16, ltlJ $UlllilUOll COUllT 01' THI ebo¥t na"'l!d cltc•~~t1!. LloVC! £. Wll'bllr" llobert w. Polltlntho•n. •m Ar9rle Pvbl!IJ'IOlll O•tll9t COii! Ot11¥ ltllO!. ST•T• 01' CALll'ORNIA •AMiil AND ••OROllAH Publl1flf<I o ..... , Ctll•I D1lty l'llOI Drive, HVl'llMton ll•Kh, Ct111ornla. Ocie.lier Jt, J1 1M Nowtmbt< l. 1e. 1'011 THI COUNTY 01' OllAHOI •" Jtmtt •. l'lflltc~ Oc!cber 10, 11 fMI No~-btr L 10, I••" E. 8r.Oln, 1m1 Ga!wt1 StrHI, 1110 lt0•1t .... A4'tU .... , WllMll't l t11le¥tnl, '"'''... 1110 1'70-IO Gl,.,tn Gt11w. Ct1Hornl11. ftl•I• of M, EORYS H•GLE. tlM ·-ty Hmi. Ctt ......... MUI Jlmn A, Kom.1relc . .J.11 Norlh c-LEGAL NOTJCE •flOwn t i MAR'I' EOll'l'S HAGL!:, Dt-Tth ft1JI UJ-JUI LEGAL NOTJCE M011wt1Ull, No. '-• F ~ l It f I 0 ti, CN!td ll~"f fer ~tcvtrlJ C I f'llOI, f'.,..,J------ C1llfo..,.lt, f'·:IM2} NOTiCE 1$ HERESY GIVEN lt '""' WCI ...... (Ol$I • " CIRTl,.ICATI OP IUSIHllS. ltOMolO C. °""'comb<!, llU CKllKfllW Cl!llTlil'ICllT• 01' COlll'Oll•TIO/f ll"Oilt <•1tOllot1 of Ille t bo¥t ,..."'" lflCltClenl ~ober JO, 21 tl'll Novtmlltn lJta.1:1 ll"ICTlTIOUS NAMI: l•"f. knit A .... CtUlornlf. TIANU.CTION 011" •USINlll UNOlll !Ml •II H•~n1 h•vlnt clllm• f flll'it 11\t The ~·~ 0oH CHlll'f IV It cfll-Mt, '"" Ml"I. iltPberl G. CirlMft.. IOO lllCTITIDUI NAMI M1d ~nl t•t tt<1vlrt0 IO lilt """' L<'QAL NOTICE •~'" • M fl'll!"' 1t .Q9 W, ltltl, Ct11!1 Sou1h OvttnJbllt'Y, Ant~lm. C.llforni.. ,_' ~ -IH WITNESS Wt!EllEOF. lllt urder· tHI! UNDEllSIOHEO CORf'ORATION wllll 11\t l'll!C.!•<ury -..clltrt, In IN fll,.;t J --~====~"'===c--JMftl. C1Ulct,\;., llftll4lr Int lldllioli• tlrt11 11.,.,d II••• ••.c:IM<I tllll C"'1Hl<.llt, ef· dff1 IVttb'I' <•rllt'I' tnll 11 It condilctl"' I ol lllt t i•"' of lllt tbovt t nlllltd te.,,,, Of ClllTIJJICATI Of' I USIN l!SS ,..,.,. ol"O lo H SEllVtCE Ct:NTEll, tncl !Kil t ~IS lt10 lxlllllflt loc•'til ,, UOI Wost<;tltt Orlon, to ........ , '"'"'· WC!h "" 1'11Ctllt<¥ l'ICTITIOUS l'liltM 1114141 111111 Mid nrm w (OltlPOM<I " -follow• " GENER•l l'ARTNEllS Suitt )l1, Newport lttell. Ulll01t1jt llfl<lt• \l(ll,/Cf'l~s 10 1111 ""'°""111....:r 11 11\t C'ffkt Tiie llridef'S'9necl cut"lu 11111 ~ 1s 1"9 1Dtr10t1 .. wllolt nlmt I" full tlld •le~ llY· Kllhryn G AIPl'lin the lltllllout nrm Nomt of f'I ONli:Ell ol Ill' ttM•ntVI. THOMPSON A,"HD Ml\.· ~II~ t butlMU II JlU £1M!i ...... of rHlcltftCt It 11 16llowl: II\-: e; Tlloml .. Cox CON5TllUCTION CO, '"" 11111 Mid fltm \.Ell, '61l •tln!lr A¥tll\lf, W!llllltr, No, I,, Cotlt Mnt. CtNfor.W..; ufl(ltr Ille Alltll J, Ot"'-US H. WHI St., t.1Ml TE:o PAllTNEllS, b~ ltlt!t It compa1ecl of Ille followlnt (OfPOtlllofl. Ct lllCM'tllt , wllldl I• !ht Pl.Ct ti bu•IMU f1ctt!IOlll "'"' ... ,,,. ot VIVl•M Wood•" Anlllo'!lm. Ito ltl..f I nl l<I Wllne orlnclPtl •IKt llf bllfl~u b a1 ot 1f1t undtt1'9nt<I ltl t ll tNlle" Hrltl"" Ct1tmtllC1 tncl 11\tl Mid firm II ClllT'PO'lftl OtltCI SfPI. 'h, lf" ' •r>n· IC • PUrMll ' follo'WI· I t I.. " •• ,. • .. I 111'11 of Ille ••!low..,. --wftoMI -In fl.Ill -AUtn.J, Dan• • POiltt Of tl!Pmn 1rtl'lt0 or P16NEEll ROOF AMC $HINGLE ,.,. O Ht t"' U tC ... ' W ft Ind PIKt of tt:ltdtnc:t It ti tell-.~ Sl•lt ff ·CtllfOrn't, Or1 .... Counl\r : tl'll~ PUtPOSf, COMP•N'I', INC., 1501 WHfclllf Orlwt, lour motlll!l tllV !tit 11'11 Pllb!ktllOn of Mla>tllt H1tl' ilt•llOl'IJ•~'"'· 1117 On StPI. :1'1, 1'70, belor1 .... , I Holt,.,. , , 11, · Ktlll•1n G. All!l'llll Swllt Jl1, N-t! l tKl'I, (11!to,..lt . ll'lll f'IOllct. Eld~ Awe., NO. 1', Cosll MHa, ,.ubllc [ft 1no !Of" 11ld 5111•, Hftont ll" Goldwater, Jr. aga1nst Toni lh: G. T1'om•1 Co~ WITNESS 111 htrid ll'll• Ulfl ''"' ot Otltd October 14, 1910. Ctlllo•nl1 •PPftrfll Alltll J. o .... i<flOWtl lo .... I• K. I d th I STATE OF CALIFOllNIA S•Pltmtltl", ltl'D THOM•S T. llOUSSELOT D•lf'll ; Oc'-r n, 1tl0 bf Ille -•on wnn.e M me I' iubKrlfle.d 1mme' a gran mo er 'I ' H . "ION!ER ROOF AND Ex«11IOf • ~M\dlll!' ••lltClh'l't-lh• lo'"' Wllhltl 1 .. ,,.11mtt1I '"" tc-llOWlecle· Democrat COVNTY OF O~ANGE ' SHINGLE COM,.•NY, INC. Pl Ille Wiii of.... Subtct!btO tlld IWQrft "' belOt't ,,,, lfl!t ~(I "• flKU!ed Ille ....... ' On 11111 1Slh dt'I' nf Oclobtr, lflO, btlort ICDiltl'OltATE SEAL ) t be\le named dKMltnl 15111 dt'I' o1 Och:lllilr 1tlt. (OFFICIAL SE .. \.I Needless lo state, the tv.·o rrlf Ktll'l•Yn e;. Afpllln, "''°"'"' ,,. Ge<i••• M. T!'ltltl'ler. THOMPSON AHO Mlt.\.llt Evtlwn M. Ch1mlll!rt1I" MAll 'I' I(, HENR'I' . . . , llf.t•eC! Ktlhnn G. A!p!lin, ~flOWn lo ml Pr•1ldtnl 1114 f'alltlv AVtft... Nn!fN P\lbl!e • C1Ulornlt Nolt•Y Public . C11Uort1I• ladies se\ htgh rattngs-AS \0 lo be tl'lt pef'tOll wPl<lol n1me 11 •ubtcrltltd STATE OF CA0\.IF01tNIA. W~lllltr, C1tl ...... l1 .... J O••nQt County '"lnc!pfl Ottlct ltl be CXaCl-and the !\VO to ll'lt wlthl" loutrvment '' Ille •llc•n· COUNTY OF Oll•NGE. H. T1I: Oil) ,,._.lU IJJ-ltu My Comml11lcn Ex1lre1 Cringe Count. , . "' 1n l1U ol The Ctlllcrnltn (i•GOP. Incl On !Ill' 151h dlY el StplfmbO<. A.O. AllG,_.'I', tw li•KulCM' Mtv S, 1•11 Mw Commlsolon E•Plret RepublJCaUS arc SIVCll thumbs lck,_l~ed lo "'" lhtl tl>t 1ui.,trl-ltlO, belCt• mt • NolfrY ,.ub!lt In tAd Publl•hed Ortnge Co11I 01llr Pllol, "ubllll!tn Or1n11t Ca11t 0111¥ "llol, Nov. 2~. 1911 down v.·ith D's 111e "'"'' al Kar11rvn G. •lohlt1 ll'IP.•eto •1 tnr 1tld Counrv •nd ''''"· •••ldl"!ll Oc1otllr ;o, 11 tncl Noyembtr J, 10, Ott!>bt• 1Q, 21 '"" Nawtmbtr J, 10, l'ul)ll:ll'lell O•antt Ct1111 01llr ,.\101 . prlnclP•I •fld llet C'Wll "'"'' ., 111orney lhertln. duly cammiHIOtltd •nd IWGrA, 191t ltU•10 1'10 1931·10 5••1, :it, Ck"I. '· 13, ;o, 1111 111f·IO The article does admit lhat LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE the grading system is nol lhe l --~=c -----------------------------------------------·----most ob jective one on the lll!SOLUTION HD.,..., tltn "'1' af "'' Govtrl'mtni Codt: •n<I I'"'• 01ec1or1 rt•lol"' wu111n th• 1ur11orv. I E IT FU llTl-IEll llESOLVEO THAT• ~1•TE OF C•Lll'OllHI" I A llESOt.U TIOH OF TME CITY COUN· WHtllEA.$, '"' Cll\r Coun<ll" !flt cnv BE IT FUITHEll iltESOLVEO THA1 he•ol"9 111•11 tit U1 In "°' .... llltn Ill-COUHT'I' 01' OR•HGE I SS. market: .. ,,lC grading system CtL 01' TME CIT'I' OF COSTA MESA. 01 COl1t M••• tlN11 MO dKll•H t~·· ••14 '"' !ntenllon 10 •Ubmll \ht ouestlofl ot ·~· '"" (lJ) CU¥1 na• mcirt ll'ltn torl\r UOI CITY OF .COST• MESA I and !he choice of tests are col· c•Lll'OllMIA, RIL.ATll+O TO ..... Hll!lon or Hlllklfll ,,.,. •ltntd by nal 1~1 nt••tlon lo Tiit t lt(!Gr• ..... bt1td UPCltl O•V• lilt< lkt ••uttr ol 11111 re .... lwllon I, EILEEN ... PHINNEY. Cllv Clfrk at NIXATION OF ClllTAIN Tt'lll lTOllY llltn ont-IOU•lll cl tht •u•lllltd t!Klor• '"" tinoi ... l~•I !flt .,.1u1on or """"°"' ...... lh•I 1tld ht1rll'P 1, itl tor lllt 1MI Ille (11¥ OI Cott• MfM •Ml ··~llkio ored by Playboy's tradilionally KNOWN •s MAlllHA VllW AH· re1141nw w11~1n '"' Terrl«iry to bt .,.. clrcultte.:t 1nd 1ubrnhte.:t 1e tl>e CllY ot dt¥ of Novtmlllr. 1'10. 11 tl\t hour ol 7:lC Clerk ol tnt c11y Cour.th f>I 111t CITY ol t 1 t, bo J't NIXATION1 1'110\'!DtNQ FOil A "fXtcl i t Ad CO!ll Melt Cotlllll' no! inl tlltn _. P.m .• 11 Int CIMlll<U (f\tmbert, n Ft!r COSll Mtst. M••b"f ttrt!l\r It'll! !he 1bovt s rong ee.1ngs a ul equa I y llSO\.UTION CALLING "0" ll'ICIAt. WHEllEAS, •• 11 Mtll!Of\I fHUHI •n-IOUl"ll\ cl '"" llUtll!led elt(lor1 tt&ldl ... Drlv1. (Ollf Mflf, C•lltornlt, ., ..... lcll ll'ld lotqol"' RtlOh.rtl .... No, ,._.., Wtt and indiVidua) freedom Of ac-ll!"LECTION: OETlllMIHI NG TN I l'ltatllon lo Tiit City Of Cotlt Mtu; tfld wlll'lll' 1111 le"lllN"Y, Umt tn' per ..... _n!,,. rell pr-•h CIVI¥ •n<I •"9Ullrl'to Pt11ff t nd tdol>lfd D¥ '' ·on." SUf'l'ICll!N(Y OF TMI: f'El'ITION WHEllEA$, 1•1d •lllllel' tlT PtlllloM Ill IT FUllTHEll llESO\.VED THAT ... 11~1 .. IM ltnltorv mt¥ ·-·· belo,.,. ''"'e n, Council of lllt City ... Coll•,.., ••• t Rl!CIUESTINO S•IO l:LECTIOM 1 AND l ft tulll<ltnl 111 tit tl-PKll Plll'SY•~t lo Ille City o1 (0<.lt Mt1t llt1 lur!141clloft t i Ille IH llltllW bed¥ COl'Ce"'I"' tnr wdl· 11 t ~evut.r mtf'tl"'I rnereol hllcl on lht 'v.lh th · 1.1. I J Ol!TIRMIN ING THI: JURISDICTION Jf'Cf1tlll lJll6 of lhe Gowern"""t COM; t conducll"' t gena lo proc:etd wlln 1tl4 IHI oroltll• llle.:t PU1'1Ut nl N St<lion JJ12t 5111 Clt'I' of Oclobtr, l•IO. L e1r po l 1ca pre ereo-01' THE CITY TO l'ltOCl•D AS Ttt• Ind tlKllOtl. t ll tJ Pl'OYkle.:t lor In S.ct!Otl ol Tiit GOYUftftltllt c-. fH WITNESS WHEllfOF, I """• ccs haniring out staff \\'riters COHOUCTIHG AOINCY FOil U.10 Wt!EltEA$, lhe ...,1u1on OJ" HlfllltM flt. 1'116 ol ,~. Go¥tr-I COdt ot the $!flt PASSED AND ADOPTED !I'll• $th C!•Vll'l•ttllf\IO Mt my lllMI .... 1111-H '"" S.11 O" ' ANNEXATION, "' wUl'I Int Cllv ol Ct11t1 ,,.,.., ••ttb!IVI •l Ctl!forl'i•. ot October, 1t10. Ille cnw of Cost• Mes•. lflll 6111 <l•V o! proceed lo note. "If there is THE CITY COVNCll 01' THE CITY luthdltllon wltn .. kl HtfW.¥ 1e <;DllCllH;I llE IT FUllTHEll RESOLVED TH•T ll OllE llT M. WILSON Oclotltr. 1'10 " I 1·1 d f 'I' OF COS"{A MESA. CALIFORNI•, DOES Ille 1nnt••llPI' M•tln pf11vldtd I«. 1!1Klle.:t l>er,10. mt•-fd Exl'l lD!t "II" tnd Ml¥"" ol !l>t (Ill" ol EILEEN II. "t!INN E'I' .. ny p a I u e more am1 1a r HEllEll'I' RESOLVE AS FOLLOWS: NOW. THEREFOltE. I E IT I ESOLV· by lhl1 -clllc rtf•tHK:e m-• Pl<! Cotlt Mtst (11¥ Clerk l1ICI tx~rflclo Clo•k than a camp•ign p;-omiSe it's TH•T WHEREAS, ctrl•ln Ptlltlon CM' ED THAT '"' Cff\r ol (Ollt Mes• ""'''°'· It • mw t11owln1 !ht bollndt •IH ATT EST: of lilt cu .. (DUflCll ct '"' C"'I' . ' ' N lllloM •fllUt•llftl !ht t""tXt flon ol ler• de<l1re' Ht ll'ltntlOn lo ct ll t JPKltl OI lflt P<OHriy le be tl'nt•ea, whlcf\ 1t ld EILEEN •. l'HINNEY of Cosll Melt. Ctlllorft ll !he (r\llSm that fC\\' or them rltorv 1p '"' (lly tlf Collt Mt1• l'ltv• 'ltt;l\M I ncl l\lrt""' dt(lt•t1 1'1 l"ltnllon •nntal!ien 11'1•11 bt Ottl1n•lfd t i M1rlnt Cll., Cllrk cl !ht llubll<hed Or'"'' C0111 Otll' Pllo!, a re kept arter lhe election. bttn c&mone.:t •"" 1111111 """ut nt 10 S.t· to "'""'n '"'" •uttllon el '"""Kttlon 10 View .,,,"'~•tlon. cur.,, Co•t• ,...,,,. October 2'0. 11, 1t10 1n--1a "Although no one has clevis· cd a rootprool litmus papCr for political performance. Playboy Magazine believes lhat there is a large gap between cam· paign rhetoric and prrrormance expectations.·• Now \1·hatever do you sup- pose gave them that idea? 9 Cou11 ty Districts To Get State Funds SCALE:.-/'';GOO ' L•f 11Jt0 •• NW.Co1· '--"".["'·£· Co r . Lof '@ (t3Z. r,... 6S3 SACR A~IENTO -N int: ~chool d istricts in Orange Coun1v v.·ill receive $17.87 111illiOn 1n state funds to finance construction projects, it 11us announced bv state trcaSurcr Ivy B?ker Pfiest. The funds. part of a to1a1 Slla rni!!ion state allocation, have been raised by the sal~ of bonds v.·ith a seven percent 1n1ercst rate. The sale of bonds in son1c l':Jscs h:id been dela\'ed as Jong as 13 months bcl·ausc or the r:ve prrcenl interest rate i:c11ln~ set by law. The ceiling \Vas 111oved to seven percent in .June \\"hen California \'Olers 11pproved th<' increase and the sale \\•as completed last week. The funds allocalcd to Oran ~c County schools \\'iii be put into Caoistrano Unified, Centralia. Fountain Valley, (;ardcn Grove L'niflcd, Los A!an11tos, Ocean V i c 1v , Pl::iccntia l inified and San ,Joaquin school district coffers, The Cnpistrano Un i f l c d n1stricl has applied for $3.9 1n!llion lo construct a Dan l!ills l·ligh School and 5200,000 lo co1n p!t•te the second phase at Dana Ele1nentary School. In f 'o11n1 ain Valley. lhe hind:-; will be :ipplicd to lhc c onstruct1on of two n c \Y r lr1ncn\;:1ry schools -Oka and 1'albcrt. Anproxitna!ely $1.J!I n1illlon \l'ill be used on Oka :ind Sl.2G \Yi!l j.!O lo1~·ard con· struc:tion of T a blcrt School. ln Los Al:imilos. the bOfld monies \\'ill be used to begin construction of one elcmcn· lary schoOl. and to complete addilions on tv.•o others. Funds for the new 'Vilson School \1·i!J rome to M8?..000. and the a dditions ai Rush School and Weaver School will rcccivE! $8,000 each. In Oce an \lle\v S c hool District. $410,000 "'ill be uscd 10Wllrd ronstructinn of a new (inldrn ''iew cleme nt a ry ::;chool . Mall Plazas Dedicated SANTA ANA -Two newly· completed plaias in th t Oran£C County Civic Ctnter m all \\'Crt dedicated l\londey. Bond monies in the San Joa· quin Elementary Sc hoo I District v.·ill be used for ac· quisition of tv.•o intermediate school sites . One site, iden1Uled i n University Park at the in· lcrsection or ~1ichelson and Yale Avenues, \Viii receive $1.88 million in state money. The second, at the corner of l\1uirlands and Los Ali1'o Boulevards, in El T oro, \\'ill )!Cl a ~2 million boost from the bond funds. UC/ .Library Receives I ts 400,000th IllV INE -T he UC Irvine Library has acquired its 400.000th volume. a firs t edi· lion of Richard Henry Dana's "T1110 Years before the Mas t, A Personal Narrative of Lile at Sea." The 400.llOO·volume mark \1·as r eached only 30 months aft:?r the 200,000.volume mark was passed, U n i v e r s i t y Librarian J ohn E. Smith s aid. "\\!hen we hit our halfcmillion mark, we'll have a banquet," he added. "Two Yrars before 'he i\iasL'' published in 1840 by Harper and Brothers in New York, has special significance in Orange County history bt-C3use the author describes in det11il the loading or hides purchased from the local In· ·dians. As a result Dana Point is named in his honor. The 200,000th volume In the library. a first edition of Oliver Goldsmith's "Vicar of \Vakefield'' published in Lon· don in 1766, was presented to the library by Dr. Adlolph A . Kroch in April l!Jtlll. LEGAL ~OTICE .... JllttJ Cl'llTll'tC•Tll 01' 1V$1Hl5S l'ICTITIOUS HAMI: Tile lm(ltr1!9ft<!d "° (HllFY tl\t"V 1re to.,.,uc:I("' • bw1IM"H ti lOI H. Nt-fl lllvtt .. NewPO•I •~c.n. C•!llornlt , ""'°'' r~· 11•110"'" llrm ~ • ..,,of THE C•NOLE DOCK 41"11 !!lat »kl Firm r, tom~ OI !i'W tolltwlllll P•rlOnl, -H ftf_, ffl tull tnO p1~·· of '"~ ... '' !OllOW\: JHN't I'. (iedtr,y, tJO l111>1r Slrttl, C•O•ttt, Ctlllf-tl'lt '°6111 DtNIO 0. k!IMIMr. 11"2 l'l'lll'OU St•ttl, •rc~Olt, Ctll'"'"lt tloot Dt!H Oc!OIM-r t, 100 JMMI F GoOlrrw Designated the Plaza of the 5T•TE 01' ml~OCllN~.t"'kltl" l-1;?gs and the Pl nia of thc1011•NCf couNT'I': S th • h ·11 t a cost °" 0c1o1»< '· u ro. ""'o•r "''· • NII'•"" un, ey '\\err u1 a Pu1111c In ..... to• .. 14 5111,, __ ",., of more 1han Sl.3 million. 1•-•rtt1 Jtmfl " G!lld1.,, """·OOM111 • Sfll!>flder -l'CIWf! It "'f lo be Ille MrtO,,. 1'hc Plnm or the Flag~ . ..,,,,.,, "~""' ,,, .,11.ic.t1-,,., '"! w11111 .. located d irect!" south of the !ft",.,.._' 11111 Kkl'Clw~ "'" tx· I , l(yltCf !Mt ''""' ll·story county courthouse is 10111t1•l Stell I h 'h I d l•t•ieM ltlt '.;ua rc n s :lpe \\'It a ra sc No••"' ,....,t1<, c11Jflrn11 Platlorrn nt ifs ccnter. Border· itrtMJH• Oil1(• 1 .. Ortn"t County Ing the patk arr W flagpoles. M' c.or..,,,1tt1or1 E~•I••• r~ch 24 feet hiy.h tll bear the ,.ub11,~~11 s.8!~.!:~ "l!.11 D•ll'f Pltot. n11s~ 11r each Qf ·the SUltcs in 0t1_, 1J. ». t i '"' Now•m~•• ~­the natlon. J 1•10 1..0-n (!) s .Bg•zs 'oo"w . "'10 .73' ©.c1 ~10•3o'oo '" R•797,_,.,. L•l.,&.t<f ' © 1o1.e a•az'oo·w. 221.sz' (-!)s.a'"'z 'oa~E . ZIS-69 ' 0 · s .a,·2.,·oo ··w . -fl.tJS-6•' © s.e~·za 'oo··w. ~co.as· 0 1"1.0'3z'oo"w , .Jo.oo @s.e9•2o·co·w. 1oe e.2e '~ ® N . IJ"ZS'Oa"E. zo,.aa· B N. ,,,. 2lJ"OO" E. otf90 .•4':!. @ -N .340"'f.'°'-'O"E , .!9S.fJO'.! @N.sc;• 13 'oo ·~. eoo .oo • @ "'· !'.''°$9'00"£, 800.00' 8),v. 20·02·00"£ . .,.,,_s,a• @ N.s,·-z~·oo .. E. 1~1s.,1' @s.0·~2 ·00 .. e . b90.:ZS' @ :s.8''"~6 ·oo·w. zs,.2s· · @s. a•1s ·oo·w. z1s.60 · ~ S .3'f.'"-f0'3Q .. W , J,9.70• @s. S~'"lb '30" W • .JZ"J. 8 2 ' @ s .11•2 ,,·cc·w . 112.61 • ~ @s.23•411 'oo"w. z 19.1s' ~ s .7 •zs 'oo "w . Z94.8S ' ' • J J ~ ---EXISTING BOUNDARY s 60 ' --··---PROPOSED B OUNDAR Y @ ® © @ © ® @ ® MA.RINA VIEW { ,. I co r,.·""'"' s .w.Co" L•f 1~1, N.w.c.r. (•f 111 . r ... c;s.J 0 • E1¢/:sf. Boundary of the C /fy o{' Costa M e$a os d~:scri"hed in the Rt!publ1c N~ 4 Anne>t-af/on to the Ci ty of' Cos fa M •:so., Colfr., •dopf ed Oct. 17, 1960; by Ord/nonce N• -32..,.. E1'i$f. Boundory of the City or Costa M raa a.s ciecc,-/bed /n tile R~puhl/c N! 2 Ann~11of/on to tlir C i ty o f' Cos ta Me.so, Co /i f'.; adopf~d Apr. 2", l 'S<f, hy Ord1"no nce N~ 43 . Et</sf. ~oundory of fhd C,-fy of" Co:s fo Mesa a.s descr1ht!d 1n th11 Vict oria Sf. Annexof ,-on to the C ,-ty of' Costa Mc~a.. Cali't:, odopt~d Oct. "f; 1?6S, by Ord1'nonce N~ t0.5•341/. £,,.,/sf. &u,,dory of' the City of' Co;fo Mesa 0 5 d t!$t:ri bed /n the Ri'ver N!.., A.n11e;,,of(o,, f.:1 flit!!. C,-ly of' Cos to Me30~ Co/1"f".1 adopted Dt1e.3; 1''2, by Ord/nonce N! 'Z·<f 6. ~1t<1$f. Boundary or the C/fy or Costa Mtt:sa as cle:scr,-bed ,",, th• Ri'v~r NI Z A,,in1111of/on to the Ci'ty of' Cosfo Meso,Colif., adopted Oct. I G, 1961, hy Or-d/n o nc:.e Ng 39 7. Ex/s f . 8 oundo ry of' the Ci'ty of' Costa M e3o a .s ci•ccri~d in the R i v•r N' 3 Annc1'fofi'on to t~e C/ty of' Costa Mesa,Collt' • ., adopted Nov, •.1961, by Ordinance N • 404 . E:1'/sf. 8ovndory of the C/ty of Cos fa Mesa os dssc,.1'bed ,-,., thte Horho,. N~ I Anne•ofi on to the City of CosfQ M~sa11 Ca/11'., adopf<=d Feb. 29, /960, by Orci/nanc tt N~ 294. Ex/st. 8oundory of tlwt C i ty of' CosfoM~3a 0 3 deccr/b•d iri fhe R~pub l/c. N~-' A,.,n~Kof/on fo the C/fy o~Costo Mf!Sa, Co //-1'.J o dopte.d M o y 2. '''°C; by Ord/nant:e NI .30$. ANNEXATION TO T/.IE CITY OF COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 78 . 07 ACRES (Revi sed 7 -10-'TO) 1 •• I 1 ( I .. • • DAILY l'fl DT OVER THE COUNTER Co1nplete-New York Stoel{ tist l.NttMR!lft l•l.,.4ta1tr -111-1 ti _,_•llMltlV f I,. t._ N.l.$0 PtlcM .. Ml IMIV* <tllll tr 1M'11.W• 11W111lllewll .,. ff!llllllulea. Nt• y.,11; Stoel! hcllt"'lt .. k 111 DAILY P t~OT St•" l"lltlt Ope1iirag Night Dr Loren 11oll dean of Golden \Vest Evening College \velcome s lhe more than 200 ·students" who atte nded last Tuesday night's opening session of four-part series on real estate 1nvestm ent co-spoasored by the college d1str1ct,.s the DAILY P ILOT and lf unt1ngton Be acQ.-Fountarn Valley Board of Realtors Second lectu re 1n the series will be he Id tonigh t at 7 30 o clock at College Center on the Huntington Beach campus The series is open to·the pubhc free or charge Your Jtlo1aey's Worth Cong1·ess Eyes Health Plan NASO Listings for Mond•y, October 19, 1970 • "'"'-~"'""'~"'ill"'"'"'·"''""" ... ,AINC\ll /II ........ ~w • •0 Hll!:W VOltlC f"I') I Ctn ,.... )\oo Prvd Mlft ~\~ ff'I \tlM F4 ,Iii '\~ ~ ._ •• ::.:--: -T"' lolfowl119 aid Ft ll TH. ,11 lJ• Pu111 NM 11~ II .,.,.. lM 111 -. • ,.,., '" IM 1U.M Qllll• l'1rrlnt JI\ ~<'Vo 5 NC Im ~Git T•IM!t 111'1 l .-.. ft , •·~ llaM "'ll!lllecf 1W Ft:ll P 13 h U\li PWCW )\'I I f1plft W ti 'l ,.... ,, 11a •" ~'iron~~~~~~ ~1\48':.1 .J~ ,;(\ :11'l:,t..., 22~ !'! ~~1"t;.,, !tt 1~ = "';:', ' ..., 0.11tr1 I~ 1rt l'lfG Jl.,1 t' 1\'i P11rlly 51 I• TtM1n1 ltN 2014 ... ,.., .. 1 14 'IOI KIUl l lr1nwc "'' WF fl '" 3 PD\IO C• l~ '"' Tt••• AS l IVt ..... .. 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Am•dc: ,.... l\'I Hlfl01lf 5 1' 21 !w G.Co 131\ 1' -NtltM M It>\ ll:W. ,.... • ... 1 , •• ""' luSll H \'I 11 HIVttl Jn I\\ 1'~ w EISV.: l4l.O Ul.li 1101 " l lJI "'° ...... , • A El L•b 4"° •'\ HHllll In ,',':: .J,! >,H,fJ',', • t \'I 1tn NA Stli ~ " .. , 1 ._., Am E•P< 12\\ 72\li lie•Vtd ~ ., r> , llhu It\,\ 20\.. Wstn Ml• 61~ "' " .... • 1 •• Am Furn '"' 7 Ht rlt CP ,'",, ,1;.r:i s,•,o,,R,,101 11\\ It 1tn Pull t\li '" .... '"' •"' A Grt•I 56 ~ SI HldDC lnl .. .1P 2?V. 24 WI"-WI! 6 '"'ii "" '-I•• I •~ A Mrdlco "" 10'~ 1111111.,n ti. t\.I !!.,le $Ir 11'\lo 1'\lt ll( PL 70 20\~ .. n .,. •ti I Am Te!v 1S 15..., HOim El" ll 3t !l•IW Cl ~ )I W1d!w I!' '"°' J ,..,,11 • ,.., Anl\euo l'I 6111\ .... Wolobll'I 11 11,,., SutlK TY 2"i '" Wrl1M w 2411. 2t .. ..~ .. 1 ..... Atlktn In I\~ ... HDOIHlf lS\.I 31i, "11•11 F ~-6!\ YrdnY E t \o S\• ""IMI .,, -... ,, Intl l\t ~Horii Il e 1Q•I 1111 .. -..... ' .... At""' M n1 J\io How•d GI no II• ., """ ""' Ard111 pl :)0 32 -m 1" 70" ~1 ,.,.. " ._ .... A.rk Ml!P nv. 1011i ~~u ,ft' ,i ~ J :~·: '1>t "':.o Arrow H )'l:W. 31\'l H'~ G11. 12•, I>•• MUTUAL .t.r~IGI • J'-.. ;;r.1 p f tU "'" , .. 11 :~1~~ s1r 1~ ~~ ~:::: ft, 2~:: 11'! ~r~~w: .. ~ :: l'llktr 1,._. 17l• ~Y<lt Aln m !~ "" '11"~•• "" tl•I P• "' ,~. JI•\ .z:o.· ' ''" ,,. FUNDS .......... 1 -II •••In p "' ,... •• .. -~ ....... 4 liurnrt l•:I,!; 37 ,., Ind Nlic:I 16\o JI.., ,., 1 -•o<I ltVlt" lW U\' lntri ra J l ~ ,. l !Vt> 1 10 llteeflrn 11..., 2, ... lnl Cont f\o I ,.n1 ~n... a ,, t1llP 1$1t 1'1.lo ltU :~:r~W~~ ~i: r:t ""tol.<v J.., ::~~ ~~d ~1'1 4~~1 lnl Mul!ll 20 20\t ~~ ;,"':"'~Jh~ l tll Lib •1 4, 1"1 $v$ ~r f!i1 OCIOMr ,, 111¥ CoA 11 SS n n .. ) "'t I J llllluPt W 1'4 t ~ lfll $y pf t U 10\i N!W YORIC (AP) tnv Guf(I t OD I OD Am:.0...1r '" lllrd Son l) lJl~ /:Ol:~ l• 17 -TM lollowl"' a\/0-l"V 11\dl( I 42 I 4J "n~ .. ,r Ito 0 l l•!Cflr 2h ] 'i 11 SoUlll u~ 191• t11lon1 IUP!>l!td b"I' In"" tlot 10 Ill 11 If Am ~•d I llt tk .,I " 71:W. JteoDt F •1' 5 the Nlll0"'11 A•-1 n...,110"• Group AmSta Pt 1J llooue El 1li 21• J1oul11 c I l"i tlklfl of S.Cu<lllt• tOS ndl ] I! • n Am )lffH ... • 1:!!,.~1';. ,, .. ,, .·.~ J1rn Wit II.I. l"i Oe•le•I lllC ••• Mui I tl t St .. ~"""'' I ... -... ... •• Jtm1• " J.>n 3''• lllt Pl'lctt. II Wfll<fl Proo l IS • 01 A~~u ,,~ .,J 1'1001 AH 11 lJl'I Jlltv Fa• lh 4-lo lh•w 1..,;urlll11. sroc:k 16 5' 11 ti ••n~"' P• w 101 C11> ' '" Jhnlll Pd 21 1 21 coutd 111vt ~n 5tltcl 112 t)l A!&o w1 f•l dtll ••~ t,. Kt I Hr SI :u '' Miid (bid) or bouont V1r Pv I tt I II Aul 1j, • 2 60 l rlnk1 tn Jl 'l(o '111.i ic111s1 Ill 11 II <•ikld) Molldt v lnv Rtlfl • 02 o )II AmWWkl » •k1 Set 19•~ ff\ ICtlvi r 2• JJ llf Alll llltt 1113 11 ~I AN O 1111 I W lrwn Ar '"' 10.'.I Kiit Grn 2\0 l\oo Aotrdn LIO l tJ Ivy I 5l 1 5] Am 2 llC 11•11111 11• IT''> 11 Kivim l l"i Allrn r1t1v ""nd' J Hncod: '16 , _. .,,,,....,, 60 ... 51!91 Ntl li'Mlt I Kith 1.tw (Ifft <;1111 • ll!Mll SP ti -A-• ... ·-• • . -. • " -..... ,. • ... . 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Bv SYLVI A PORTER A national \\Lil be health insurance lhe top the l-1ed1care system for the aged 1'\or would it necessarily be a r.opy of the muc h-crit1c1zed B nLish syslem Jt eou.ld take any one of a great variety of forms An d the ) early costs J have been b and ied a round range a ll the w ay from an ex tra $2 bilhon tG an extra $60 b1lhoo or more proposed by 17 ~enators ol be both parties would also financed b y a hike tn Social Security payr oll taxes llu.i:•tv 4 t I ICfl' T I , 11, Grwtfl S 6116 21 JohM1n 11 J1 11 !7 •m11t( -11...,n CP ' ''t Kellett 2 , 2'i lllC""' J ~· l tJ ICtVll<>'lt Fltfld1 AM,. lllC 90 llurnuj) s ,6,,, M•1 Ktt!WCI ,.~. 7S • '"'U' I 02 1 ., ADOUo I 91 • 61 Arnt•c .llO among Jeg1s la1tve topics whe n new 92nd Congress convenes 1n January It also surely will be a central issue of the Im pres1dent1al e I e c t 1 o n cam pa1g n no• no one can Right forecast whe n nahonal health insurance w 111 become a reaht) But a reahty 1t will be -and sooner than most of us think Says Walter M c N er n e y, president of the Blue C r oss organ1zat1ons whic h nou ad m1n1ster the health insurance for 100 m 1lhon Americans •\Ve cannot \\811 much lo nger lo do son1eth1ng the issue has become too hot ' Socrahzed med1cuie ' U S style would NOT necess arily be a simple exp ansion of our Since this msurance "111 be of towering economic 1m portance to every one or us now 1s 1vhen you should be CQm e aware of the key pro po11als I) The Gr1ffilhs plan 1n lroduced early this year by Rep P.1artha Griffiths O P.1 1c h would expand todays f\.1e d1care a nd Med1cA1d pro grams into a national health umuran~ p lan c o v e r 1 n g Americans of all ages and ~onom1c c1rcumstanccs 2) The IJeallh Secunty A c! 31 The Jav1ts p I an sponsored b y Sen Jacob Jav1ts R N Y would extend P.I e d 1 car e tited1ca1d t)pe coverage to the disabled and to a ll Americans b y m id 1973 4) The American . P.1ed1cal CIC Lt91 lo K>t iceutl E 9'n10 ,AC1vlsrl 06' JOI CUI 61 11 721'011.M.-In est CAI W Sv 71~ 7l • ICtVf Fib 13'• H I• Aetna Fd I tO t 18 Cu• Bl 11111' 'J Am1>1• COIP (~non M 71 I• 1Ct11 C11~ JU"1 11 <t AH H~!d 650 IOJ Cu• IU IU 1•1 Am1..-U '"' C1nnM II 10<> 11 1> KtVll PC I~ lh A!11lrt 6SS •SS Cu• ICI 11( 710 Amil l4 C1nr1d 3 1~ 1(11\Q Int l \t •,.All Am F 5' M Cul IC2 4 Jl 4 I] >llll C0t10 I to C~I> Mtae 11>~ 11~ IC lll(ll El J~~ 'II) Allllalt '.,\DU Cu• SI B tl 17.31 Ancn h«~ / C11> Sow ''· • LMC Ott n. 1 AIPlll Fd '11 !O 50 CU• Sl 1 tl '7l ...... oro'"~" C1p ln!A l '• l"LlllCf In 21~21h Am<ID S1J J1' Cui Sl 6(] 102:.n:J.:.t"al .. ~ C~aTc~ 2'o ) I LI rid Rei Jlo •Ii Am Bu• ) 01 J II C111 M 3 16 ' 11 A»c:uUu I , 1 C1rr Or¥ II'. 11'. Ltne Wd ~' t Am Oyln 9 l610 J) Pol&• l O• ).l:I Ar''-,.1,0 ' C1•tt ~I 1~. ''· Ll•!.Oll 11'1oK • Amer E,,Prf \$ ICnlrtb '00 1 01 APL Pl LI°' C•rtr Gp 71 '11•Lirwn M Jllo 11 < C1al1 llli IO(IClllCll {;I 161 Ill .. ~ .. $•c 1.,. Ct1'C NG 10'• 11\'o Leid• Ld l)l~ 11\J tnemr I l'I t lJ Lt-Grlh 7 1? I .C. Arc111,,. 1 ... C•stl C'!I 21• 2 1 Len Coil 2'o 1~• Inv.,,! I 9J I 11 L•• R1cn ll 51 11 JI Arcn uan , Cefl!e~ 28\li 7' • Lel1ur G 11'• 11 511«1 '1 S4 Lllltr1y J '2 SID #<rllo"~vc 111& C•n ""' IN\ 111./o l.twll t F 12\. lJ\, S!oc:lt I •1 I S• L It S!k 4 11 5 15 "'in• uS ,., Cefll LIO ''· n1s1nc Mtt 111 I A"' Fq•v '" •nLUe Inv 6 7] 611 Armc:oS1 I•~ Assn S 1\fed 1cred1l ' WOUid be Cll1rnl~ ? ~ 1 Lobl•w 4\~ I Am Grin S ~ SP LlllC Nil I t6 f '6 "'"'•0 o" " Cf11rl 0 J~o 6 ~ LOU Cdv l 1·~ A,m In• 0 rJ • 11(1 Lina l Joi J" Ar"-r I Ill a voluntarv svstem 1n which Chm I.•~ • I ~ Loe Etrn u•~ u ~ A.m M111 1 11 1 ¥ L"""' s 51.,11• ""n" ... k ~ 1 1 Cl\e1 Intl •\, "• h C 11\\ II~~ AmN Gt~ 1110 J 14 Cft"Bd l• 11 ll 12 Arm~~ ob.iS lhe poor would rec c 1 v c C!w-1 u111 11 u l;r,O:: GEt ll .. u .t.ncn"' c.ro"P C;1>11 '0.\ , 4' .t.rm1<uo •.., fd II b d d h (nl 8•~1 •1 ~l Mtl 11.l!Y ,11 ,., Ctolt 109771 Mui 11611'&JAral.ora ~ !'era ysu Sl 11.e vouc ersc11r1•t s 1~• 101 Mtlltro i.s 69 ~ Grw1n tu103s1111n Bro 1oio 11y~~;;1~0 ~1 ~ v'a a system of lax cred its t o Ch•1•1 ~1 ?~ lQI Mgrnt A• 11.o 1 ~ 111c:mt ' XI 11• Mlpnft 111 1 09 • '' A•nvll on 411 Cl!•del 6 • I • Mft1lln M l 1 JI'> Fd In~ 7 •l I M Mftn~ln 4 l5 ' IS Aud llrt* 1n\est 1n comprchens1ve<1111 Mta 1"•11'•M•""' c 111 1 Vtnt :i.~\4ll .. M•u Fd •111010Auoo... ,,o C1llf U A 7l • ?U\ Ml• M!f 1l 11'1> A.l>ollo Fd J 61 1 lj MftU Giil l~ °' 11 •2 All<I ~Oii I 111 pnvntc health 1nsu1ance The c1t1r Ull ?l'•''"'M••m Gr ,, t.1.A•~'• 11\ 11 M111 Tr 11111•l'tA1<11r1n o,0 ( ,, ... Ml u • I!. M B•-· 71 tt ... 1...... 'ot 0" ,Y,tllS l 61 l 61 .. , -Jno plan \\OUld expand todays Cl•rk Ml ?O ,.,,, MAii! lll I! • 11 ...... ~ HOUQhlOll Mttl'W•I 1~ 1110 71 "'"-l"l'fl 'l• 'I d d d I Cl•Vlon I'' p, M•Yt< O 16 .. JI.... FuM A 'ti S tO Morf(I Fd 11 )0 U 1' All lll.1cn11<1 l 1• e 1ca1 system an 1nvo ve a c11n1 M•• 1~ 11 , Meouv n 2P F"M A , " 1 • MldA Mu '11 s 21 .t.t Ren 11u ,, I r d I (llntori 0 S>o l'o Mtdlc M 5' • , Stvck 1 ?1 Sn MOCl!y Cp 11Jl1'.ll All l<ltll Pt J ne increase in e era spen !!ow ca 11 , 1J , M'11 Mi1t 'IO'• 21 , Sci co l" 'J4 M<><ldv • 11 st 12 s1 At Ren •U 1111 dmg for health ins urance of ~u· 0 •'• '• M1a1r11 l•lh n, l•b10n a 11 1 i1 MrF "'• 111 1 tt All•• C"9rn 1 Oii•• Cp SS 59 Mt•ld In II\ 16 B~vrcl< I'll l'IMIF Gin 4 61 101 AHIU Corp some $10 billion Coltm s. 11• s • Mlald c1 no 1 : 11t1con 11 1' 11 It Mu us Gv ID 10 l~ 31 AlO inc ~· ro11l111 " 1' • lJ M dtt• 11, 1 • 11••1 ICn1 J 51 7 ll Mii OmG un•v1JI Aur"'• Proo The Nixon Adm1n1slration is Col°" s1r 111. 'fl~ Mkl* GT 11 1, 11111r "" .s .SJ 'OJ M11 om1n un1v11t .t.111om1n Ind l'.omc:tl 1 J:W. ~It G•• 79>. JOI lond1•• Jn I°" Mui in .. ll 2' IJ 1t A"CO Co -now attempting to undermine Corn cir c "' Miii VIG ", u ' oauon s1 1 06 1 n Mui rr11 1 9J 1 ts Avco .,J :io th d f h rorn "''' 11 ~1''Mo II.Kii 2:i.. J!llou Fdn 911\0ltNEA Mui •01 t 1tA•lf'YPd 20 e rive or co1npre ensive corn Tri 10•. 21 , M«J kl flo11on 1 JO 1 20 H1• Ind '"" ! " A•Mt 1~ <>io "OVC ag th h I I COIYI Mllll 8 ! ~ Mo~wk R 1:,: 1f1: lrOld M 11 ll 13 lt NI! lnvs! • U 21 :vne,: 0orz )0 .. r e -roug es ima e s Com P1Y 111, 11•, MP~f co• 61, ,~, e1111oc• c11v1n N•t Secur Ser "" that 1~ "ould cosl nearly saof~~pc~ 1: 1 :~:;::~ ';,.k ': •• 1:~: ~~~~ ~~:;::: :!)!,n ~~,~~~r?e't~u 1 ~t If yo• er. ... 11Sl99 Aat-nllf s.mc •. , ... -.. , ffftl .. •" 110081 OF OIL ,AINTINGS WHOLISALI W•llHOUSI OPIN TO THI PUILIC bilhon a }ear Cm11 '"'' •' S • Mm>r• ~ in, 10 , Olvld un••~ll O!Yld l ~· 4 Ol 1 ----,,ccc-,~~~-~-----ICmp lpc 6 A• Mlge Tr'A 171, II, Nt!W S unav•ll Gr,...n I ':I I ~J B•bck W JO Cornt•t ?•• ) Mt~lr .,, l , 1 0 NY V'nl un•vl ll Pl Sill I 77 'le 81t11.rUlll e, LEGAL NOT!f'E Con Rodi 2' 11 Mol(n M O<-s•, llr HIWlt 350 lll lncom •5• 5l'J .... 1 .. :: 1 ol •f r••r coll1 TELl,HONE •NSWEllNli IUllAU ~ Ult • ~~Mo:~4 :rMl ... ANA l"NON• IU-4* DEALERS Wi1,MTEO 835-7777 REAL ESTATE • • • An Investment Worth Investigating take a look at the REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT SERIES Arc you search1n_1.! h11?h and lo\v !leek1 ng 1ust the right 1nvestincnt for your money' This ser1e!> or free lectures on the real estate market fe aturing top-rated experts 1n th e 1n\ esment !1eld, nught be exactly \\hat yo u ha \e been look ing for Pl an no\v to attend th e lectures to be held on Tuesdav eve nin gs at 7 30 o'clock 1n the College Cen ter Bldg or Golden \Vest Colleee Remember . there 1s no charge to you Ju st sig n up th is Thu rsda y and let the cxperl" point th e \\ ay to successful 1n vcst1ng through reaJ estate Oct. Oct. Nov. LECTURE TOPICS 20-New Tax ar.d Syndication Laws-Howard Wainber9 Real 27-Creativity in Exchan9inq-Jacl1 and Bob Steele Estate Kistler l-Reco9n 1in9 me-Don a Gcioil lnvost· Olson MODERATOR-PAT McVAY CO S10HSO•IO ll' DAILY PILOT -HUNTINGTON BEACH · FOUNTAIN VALLEY BOARD OF REALTORS COAST COMMUN ITY COLLEGE DISTRICT •;i---------,:~=c-------·I C11J11'fd •11 I t Mot Cllil) 11 17>.. l ulM l"d St/ 6S4 51«k 7 1 J PI 1111tG p!C• ~ CDl'llrtn 2 2'o Mutlltr J•, 8 CG Fa 11• I !.II Nel Gr•~ 1 ~l 16' lltnQP'11 i.\.a I" ll'21 CO<lfttr L U I&' Mui RI El ) J , Ctoftmr I 01 J 71 N~uw C•1 • 51 4 94 811111P pl 1 C!JITllllCATE 01' ll fl"'H!SS Corp S '' •hMv!r LE 2•~2•i,.Ctpl! I"• ?tO lllNtuw Fd ltSll•Je1Ko1C1l IJ4 1'1C:TITIOUS NAME Co!."' Yr • J JD NCC llld •• s Ctplt snr s SI • O• Ntw Wld 11 3t" •S llank at NY 1 Tht unatnl•Md dot• ee•llh he Is ton Cr*lrd l• 1••• N•rrig c IS\116 4 Ctn! Slit 1017 11121"-te*ttn U q6 1411 tlon~ Ir JI~ duc11,.. • butlneu ., uo s..,,ltl Co••t Cr11 ,..,.t 11 • lt,, NfttCi• I! 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Penn ~O 7 11 I 11 Bttcn..r l>D Nol•rv PuDll< In •nd •o• !•a s111e Otlhl 1"' •'• "'!Noelt e J\ ~ 31 : rqut• l 41 111 Pe Mu i J 91 J '1 bt co ~.1 .W ~roon111v •l'P"••f<I John P•ttt Al>! ~lu• Ch 5? ' ~,,NA Rt:.c ]"" 1 , Fu'ld '69 10 st Pn la 11 d U l1 l!ricen I 4iO I •""*" lo me 10 bf !he Prnan WllO'l! l'lr! C•nT I•• 15 nr1r NC ', !O G•wth ~11 J6< P!i<trl"' •n 1'1 t>•ll "'°*AO 11•-I• su• 1CtlD•'1 1c tnt, wflnl" 1~ Del ll• 19 'II\ • Nfu~ o 1 ?•• l'• l11com 9 11 t 96 Pl,,. 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Concord 11 Dt 11 ot Prud !¥1 9 IS ID at l{flll ~II I w n.1.~,. ,. IA "A"'' B• 01i.."'.tan1011111011 1D12Pur1t1n tot t 1Jb111rh~« Ill IStP! 1t Ocl l_.!3...!!__lt10 !11SIO "l P•n• 1• 1 1• P~c A 10 t • Con!I Ml 611 •71 Putnam Fu""' Ille ~ ~· "~u C wl 5 ••Pnr Fal' r~•J'""Cot11 G!h 161 7 /J Eoull •~• J 31 tl•rJonn '" LEGAL NOTICE "••I !h ' 1 r'•-e~ co l 3,, C~·~ Ld u :19 u 1• G•n•o l? •9 1111 .,, u L~ug 1 ! -------",-,.-,, Fern L,n ?••1''•"•neol 1 7 ~Cn1v C1p 101151151 G•lh ~70 t11Slcck'1"1ll, "auc <• ••P8rkr D• 7 \,, Ct11WOI" SJI 581 lll<QM 1\1 111b11ebr• •u CElllll'IC:ITE 01' 1Ul!M[5S El P1•E 1 17 11 , Parkw H 1~1" 111'~ Ctn WO~I t ~ 1 U lnw•I 61• 6 R4 l l~llel Pl< > lflCTlTIOUl NAMI o: hi 5 <f • , 1' , PeulrY p..,,,_, A 1 dtV'1h M SJ It 51 If VIII• I It J 86 DOPb e ar~. 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SEAl1 !o o•ttfno l>\e"' wl!h !llf •Kt1•a,y Fvtr11 In 11271?J' Sl<"m• F"ndl llU..~t fn '"" ,_,,,_ltY IC HENltY voutfltrt 1G ll'>t und•,.lo"'d 11 !11• o!lfr t F'1ttd I•• t1' lADll ,., 1 1101111 .. ori 1 D Nol••~ Publlt Cillto111lt 1 ~., ,onn•n•• ROnEJIT A EASTM•N Farrn ~u I 7! 1 11 lnvrlt • tt in ~ lulov• '" ta "' ncla~I Ofllte In 0 > .. 0 ••• 1'1.'d Grth 11"" 'l '' T•u.11 •Ill J.ll gun~ ~•IYIO lt(I M•rDO• PO<•l•V~• u If .. um ,r •" F1r1 c~a 1n,. 1 lJl~"'l!h I.I I ti I ?J urlklt oil >Cl Or•~• County l'.o•1A M,u Calllornla t16'6 "'Ill{~ 11 th• F!r! r 1111d 13 ~l 15 11 s w1t l~v 7 16 I ~ 11un Ind 1 .., Mv CDl'l\mli<lon E•~l•f1 a l•<• ol bUI ~f'I ol !ht undt«l~"•d I" ~II Fiii ''"<' 1'I J4 nu~ ....... (;I \ •J s ,, B11tlt<O" 11,, Nov 2• 1tl2 rnatt~•I o•11•1n 11• to Ill• ~""1' &Iv~ Fl••n<l•I "'"" S.O"" In" '1JC1)•1 ju•lt<or pl» l'ubtl1~d Ort n• Con! 0111• Pllo! dec:e<I•~• '* 111 n tour l'l<)n1111 1ner tne o,nm ) u • "' 51"'<"' } 10 • ll urndw 10 51;.1 '1 Oct l lJ ~ !~ID 17'2 10 11"1 p1 l)I c~llon of !hit not <I l'Wlt"I l lt l 11 ~IFrrn GI Uft~v•lf UUrt~r• It ----.,-=c----------Ditt'd O<tall>"r 12 ltlO lnrC'<t'I 1 11 J61$fate St flllS •121 liu.1hU"V Ml LEGAL NOTICE ' • O V!'fll J J6 4 7' Sl,•drn.an Fund! ~...... ""' Y~u"' r ,IF V• t '' 1~ I'! .... ll'ICI ] JI l •1 E"kKUlrl•Dl lflt \"'11!o! r111n Dt 6t1 1l• Fllluc; SU .1,c111o1 CD~ l'.JNH lllt •Dnv, ~•mtd dtef'tltlll ">I 1 .. r.111 7 a1 t I• St~" lllM Fa1 C.1 Fln(lftl CllltTl,,C .. TI 0,. I UJINt:SS ll Oll!lltT A l!A~TMAN F ! I~~" 1 II ~" ""I '' 111&" .... l•nn "119 l'l(TITIOUJ NAME Ufl N•tlMlr l 1tt•ltv1rt F" I II 1 '' I •4 C ~G Oo 1 18 1 H z•ml':L I 01 T,. .. ...r.,11.iea OOf-I tfft ly ,.. 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I' -11 ...... ., ~ ·-~ .. ,, l~ •l«k ·~•I• t U t1 !St.to 1 Ill -~ ltJf, HllONt<i<i flll't ~11111 tn t•odlvhftftf J6 ?~'! l'i;i: ~ll : I\ el' ••'lfl11fllMI.., d•lt 1-S.1t1 111 fl,ll& ff • trl• Ult -•) tkl -C•llt d t~-!•ollvldtnl •-f•odl"~ tJ 111-t 12 U -... o lhll •flf Hltl lft t\llL 1-cl,_1!1-tl\lr~ -G-lluflon. ••-111 11eht 11W-Wll"""1 w•i- 11: f~1 '1l1, n~~ = :: '114• •-Witt! w•trln!t. wd-~ 11 11\ ' 11 -lt tll11r1~ wl-Wnt~ ttt\IH nd-NUI 2: :• U C -,, O•r atll""" •I-I~ tltn•""•ln o• lt<e•.,. " ~ IB~ 1t """i. .,. lll'I"' '-••nllf'<I .,.,Oer 11\t • lr. "• nl\ + '· l •fltu•wtt'r A«. "' ----., --u U'• • JJ•t -'• -I --· ~ "--· ' 1~ • l 0 IJ'• + \o c:em " .,,_ e•t ... ,.. 11""' Mltct " ' i I ''•' M4 nlttt91 -lllllJOll .. .. ' Oitobtr DAILY PILOT ·. Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ---------------~----------- Finance Briefs SAN FRA NCISCO (UP]) -.: CaUfom1a 's gross state pro-• • duel reached $110 billion dur-•• 1ng August, matching the •II· time high recorded In April. • The llgure surpasses the grosa : national product for the entire : • United States In I 9 2 9 • : • However, the state's economy :' was only 2 51 percent ahead or : • one year ago, Indicating a : : decline of nearly three percent : : Jn real production Inflation :: accounts for the difference. ·: NEW YORK (UPI) -Does ; your family have an 11nnual in-: • come of $15,000 to $25,000' U IO, you'rt in the f&rtest ._ growing family I n t: om e · ~ br&cket says 1 10-year survey : b y M e I n banl-Comm•rclal • Corp • factoring lD<I ffnancln& : company. · The f1nn's analysls of ;· government ngures &hows this :: Income group irew from 2.a : : perctdl ~ all families in I,. •: to 15 I percent In 196t-an in. :~ crtaN: of 521 percent It now ·: . embraces more than 7. t.'• ~ million families '· • J! DAILY PILOT LEGAL NOTICE NOTIC• INVITING a1os Notice la rierto¥ th•ffl th1t 1i.. Burd ol 'Truiltft of thl COft! communlh' Collet• Dlllrkl ol Or1ntt counrv. C1llforn\f., wnl r91;tlYt Mlled bld1 WI to 11:00 1.m., 'Tllurslt Y. Hovem!Mr 5, 1970, 11 tl'le P\ircN1l"9 D1tol. ol Mid ocr-1 dl1lrkl lou!ed 11 1]1' Ad.rn& Av111ut1. COllt MHt, C1lllorn11, at wlllcll lime .aid bids wl!I Dt oullllclY ~ 111d read tor :1 11cll Mobile VIJIO( Antl11l1 Ltbort!orv . . ,.11 Didi ire lo lie In 1ccord11K1 with 1111 INlruc110n1 '"" con11n1on1 '"" S~H!cttloNI """lcll •• ._ on Ille ..,,, ""' lie ~urld In the olllct ol lht Purcll11i"9 "''"' of u ld tcl><IOI dl1lrlct. Etcll Dldcltr mu1I .ullmll with 1111 bid I c11hlff'1 d\Klt, cert!lled clledl;, or Did· LEGAL NOTICE l:ICNW Ht. lP.l"I MOTICI: TO CR•OITORI 'TO THE CREDITORS OF E. M. llro-- okl"91• Tr1n1 .. ror: Purw1n1 to Sectlon1 610$ 1nd 1101 ol TuHd~, Octobtr 2Q, 1<170 LEGAL NOTICE Ille C1lllorn11 Uniform Commtrlctl Code, LEGAL NcrnCE YOll lfl 1'14!rlbY no!lfll'd II fo!IOW1 ; O ____ ::;::,;::,::::,,:_c:_;;_:::::.._ __ 'Tr1"1t1ror 11 •bout to IT>lkt 1 tr1n1!1rl' ,. • .,.,. to lht 11nder1l1ned ALFRED L . c••Tl,ICA'Tll! 0, aus1N•11 llELTRAN I nd MILDRED MARIE ,ICTITIOUS NAMI BELTllAN, Trtmltrtt, In bulk, t ll ol 11\t 'rht undersltntd do t tr!llY !MY lft m1t«l1la, 111H1llH, ,,...,,c"'-lldlH D' ollM!r c-..Cll"9 1 1111Slnt1s 11 P. o . a.ox 7t, ln.....,tol'Y. -ftlllPn'ltnl of ''?!'' ctrttln Cvtrns, Ct lllomlt fOill). under ti.. Ile· <rtr1th' llort, kllOWn II llrook1"91 tlllout llrm ntm<I of CANDELA DESIGNS V1ri.1v" 111.of which k loc1led •I J:IDt Ind trltl .aid firm 11 ~ of ll>t Eu! COlll Hl•hWl'I'. City of N-1 foll-Intl --· Whlnt ......... , In !ult ktc:ll, Gounty af Or11•111. C1lltoml1. i nd oltcn of rtoldtt'I« ••• 11 follows: Tllt .., .. n1 ......... or Nlmft ,,,,, J-F. Godlr..,, t:IH E1111tr Sl•MI, M lntn .......... af """ Trtml..-or Ind CYOrtllo C1tlforn\f. "6311 Trtntttrte ... II toriow.1 Don11d c . Sd1"9ldotr . 11701 l.'l'MOM TllANSFElllOlll SlrHI, Arcl<llt , C1lllornl1 t1006 E. M. •roolll"91, 225 PolnMnlt Aft., Ot!H October 2, 1•10 Cot-de! Mir, Ct lll. Jtmtl F. GOClfrtY TllAHSFEltlEW Dontld C. khntldll' A11'911 L. edltt ll, llt L-111>11r, Cllf'ON STA'TE OF CALll'OllNIA, M l Mir, Ct tlf. OllANGE COUN'TY; Mlldtllll Mari9 .. ttr1n, nt l.1rll1t111•, On Octobo:r 2, "10, before mt, t Nolt,.., Cortlf\I Ot1 Mt r, C.111. •11bllc I" tnd IOI'" 111d Stitt, HnoMllv All olller lllltlntu ntmtl tnd 1doclre1111 ll>tetred J1mt1 F, GodlrfV 1nd Donald W.ed !If the tr .... teror wltll!n tt>t ''"" kflnelOtr kno-Ill me lo be th« ""'°"' ~"" tut ..... to l1r 11 kftlr<ion 111 Int wllOtt n1me1 lrt 111b1Ctlbed lo Ille wllhl" Trt,,...,.H• t rt: N-. ln1lrvme"l Ind tek-!td91'd IMY I X• Thi butt. transl., 11 to be c-umfl\1lrd' 9C.uled tnt wme. I I UNl'TED CALIFORNIA BANIC, CorOl'I (Offlcl•I SNll Oft Mir, Olllct, JUI E11t C011t Hl1hw1v, Ir-M. llfl1 Coron• dfl Mtt, County ol Ott "91, NoltlY PuDUc • C1lltornl1 C.ftforllfl, Oii or 1fttr '"°"""btr 2, lt70. Prl,,.;htal Ofllct In Oiied; Octobtl' n . 1910, Ortnvt CounlY Allrld L. ll1ltr•n My Gommt111Dn E~tlrn Miidred Marlt 8t!lr1t1 $wt. 10. '"' 1'ubll1hed Or11111 COlll 0 111, Pl!ol, p 11bl11htcl °''"" Coesl Dt!ly Plkrt, Odobtl' 20, 1•711 1912·10 Oc!OC:ler I). 20. 21 t lld Novtmber 3, U10 11,,·10 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE \ • cumbent Ted Stevens a~ DemocraUc nomin~ Wendell Kay'o ~ has made Nixon Administration policies, both foreign and domeatit, the key lSSUe. In other regpects, the two races are similar. Stevens, like Gov. Miller, has yet to be ele<:ted to the Senate. He was appointed by then Gov , Hickel to s~ the late Sen. E. L. Bartlett, Kay, like Egan, .has knocked around A I a s k a politics for years. DemOCTats hold a subsJan· tial margin over Republicans, 30,672 to 18,217, in regist~red voters, but the key to victory in both rares lies with the 54,501 Alaska volers who registered aSTndependents. In many ways, Alaska has entt!:red the "new era" Egan heralds. As a result of the 1969 saJ of· oil.,leaseSt o some or its vast North . Slope reserves, Al~ska was •catapu l ted overnight-1'rom a pauper Slate to one with casil reserves of m.b million. The legislature held its longest ,session in history this year -147 days -devising ways to spend ttie new wealth, even passing a bill to provide slate pensjons for • all of Alaska's elderly. Miller vetoed it. The state political picture is compllcated, however, b y Alaska's depen.dence on decisions emanating f r o m Washington -®clsions over which a governor has Very lit.. tie control:. If It is true Alaska has step- ped into 'a new era with oil, it' also ls tru e that it has but one foot on solid ground. The other is stuck In the muskeg, and it is Washington -not Juneau - that must wrench it free. Alaska's new fortune was a one-shot bonanza. Jts hope or sustained wealth is pinned on the royalties expected from the production of oil over the rest of lhe century. North Slope oil companies need a cross-state pipeline to move their oil to market, but con. structioo has been blocked by Interior Department refusal to grant a construction permit until it Is satisified the line can be operated w i th o u t permanent damage to the en· viron ment. Meanwhile, an · even more critical ·problem has taken shape. The U.S. House recess- ed'Wilhoul taking action on a began a 'twtl-year term ln the tenni. as li)Vetncr Q[ lbe ln- Senate..passed Alasila native state House of Represeo-fant." state. land cl·'-· bill. . .....-taUva. In 1966 he was elected Miller sees, the ·cbc:>iee th.L! The • lnterlor Department. ' · ,,, had clamped· a freeae---on secretary of st.ate as Hickel's year as one ibetween allocation of public land in running mate, and succeeded f o r w a rd -m o v l. n f ad· Alaska pending setUement Hickel to the govemonhip on ministration \that tiU beRue with natives who claim' m~ -Jan. 24, 1989. • pro~ams that sh{>Uld really~ of the. land is , theirs. 1"e · Egai;i, 56, is a nalive-bom conhooed ..... or lo\nc back lo freeze expjres in December, Alaskan. He served in the ter-the ' first ~ht years ol and without· a congressional ritoria l legislature from 1941 statehood." . '' settlement by ttien , · na:Uve until 1955, when he was Egan .says · it's a choice groups. are expected to Seek elected to the Alaska Constitu· betw~ lack oC direction and injunctive relief ·that will tional Convention, and became "experience.· ro,ethtr with a make pipeline construdion its presid!!nt. knowledge of priorities and impossible regardless o f A strong advocate o f plarming to take advantage al Interior Department acUon. statehood, Egan won one of the challenges and potentials It is within this federally Alaska's two "Senate" seats facing us." . dominated framework that under the Alaska-Tennessee Egan criliclzes Miller for Miller and Eg·an are· locking .. plan, and worked in the U.S. "too much goV,ernmect b1 horns. Senate from 1957 u n t i I ta sk force and commission," Miller, born 45 years ago In statehood. He then returned to and charges ttiat.\he.govemot Seattle, has lived in Alaska for Alaska to win two. successive lacks aggresslv~ more than 20 years. J.n the\--:;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiii~iiijiiiiiij~ :i\laskan .tradition, he and his · wife homesteaded in 1959 and DANISH FURNiTURE $A. ~L· ,1· 1960, near Talkeetna, and won ACCESSORIES . a patent to the laitd in 1961. 4JW\ 1\\ l.IJLJlf,JiiJL. Miller didn 't enter state politics until 1962, when he LOCAL No. oth1t ntw1p1p1r t1l11 you mort, t Vlf'( dty, 1bout wh1l'1 9oin9 on ift th1 Gre1t1r Or1n91 Co11t th1" th e DAILY PICOT. • 2'40 E.Coo.sll-fll"J·• D<>H~ 9'30 '° S'lo .Swndoua 11. toS Why didtit you tell us you needed money! We have more ways to loan money than you h_ave reasons to need it. Personal loans, automobile loans, boat loans, mobile home loans and business loans to name a few. So why need money when we're around? ..,,...... CWJPJ JtJJ I ...r IMTIOllAL aN9( MariberFDIC COSTA MESA 230 Eut 17th St .. 642-1 660 ! ,_ ., .f ..• .. • ' ·. • •• t t ,, 1!' • • I I • • ~ • ' > J l l I ! i ;- .;· • • • , \ ·. ' . ' ~ • ' .. . ; ·- • . • ' , l ~ ~· • • ' I ' ' ' ' , ' ' ' , • .. ~ONG . S~Rl.NG 'S!:E~E' Droopy . Hemli l'i)es Continue-t DIOR .(;OVERS MILADY' JN' SILK CHIFFON While the Battle of the Hemline almost exceeds the Battle of ~ Bu1ge among arm-chair strategists, one fact definitely was established during showings by ma- jor designers wtio opened their spring collections for the nation's store buyers . Pantsuits are the great cop-out and are best-sellers nationwide fOr minJ enthusi· asts. "Mrs. Average America is going to take her clothes down inch by inch just as she took them up," predicts one designer. "Longer clothes ar~ here. That's a fact." . Even though women vented their wrath against midis and maxis by joining organizations, hem-cutting ceremonies end Ban-the-midi marches last fall, the midis klrt onslaught contii;ues to continue. Opening their collections featuring midis were Donald Brooks, Christian Dior and Pierre Cardin. Even Molli• P arnls, who wavered a bit in her fall col· lection has come over to it although she wishes everyone would forget the hemline issue for a while. Believing that hemlines are a seasonal affair y.'ere some designers who showed spring skirt lengths slightly shorter than the· ones featured for fall. Teal Traina said that there's no reason why lengths can't be longel in fall and come up a lit· tie in warmer weather. Although predicting that the mini won't be. back for a long, long time, many of the new spring d~igns feature peek·a-boo touches: slits up the front, back or sides, so thigh.high flashes of leg show. r Otherwise, thE; covered lady look will prevail with fewer sleeveless dresses, to- the-wrist sleeves, high necklines and to complete total cover, gloves and hats ' brimmed to or beyond the shoulder. Women are going to be very feminine again, commented one designer. Zodiac Governs Creativity S·tars Influence .Jackie's Favorite FUR WARMS VALENTINO'S MAXI COAT By MARIAN CHRISTY NEW YORK -Valentino, Rome's reigning fashion king and one of the un· disputed leaders of international fashion, js a very superstitious young man. Before he unveils his haute couture col· lectlon to the world press jammed into his Rome salo~ he visits a ~year-old female Italian fortune teller w h o assidoously studies the star in his astrological planet. Undoubtedly she in· fiuences Valentino's moves. "I believe in the Intangibles," he says. "There is much that cannot be explained with clear cut logic.'' Even though he is at the top rung of the ladder of suceess, Valentino clings to a bit or voodoo. He insist.! on the same palatial suite or rooms in the St. Regis Hotel, travels with the same staff, put& his collection on the same rack standing in the same corner. Once a picture has clicked successfully, he repeats it. SNAKES LUCKY The deslglier, one of Jackie Onassis' favorites, joined his bll8iness manager, Giancarlo, on a recent Capri holiday. First item Valentino bought for himself was a green enamel snake ring that winds seductively around his little finger. It has piercing ruby eyes. "Snakes are bad influences.'' ValenUno was born under the astrological sign of Taurus the Bull (Aprll 21-16ay 21) and he is the prototype of . his sign. The following are Taurus trails and. Valentino's comments which spotlight them. Taurus is tranquil and loves peace: "When the fashion world closes in on me, I retreal from lhe frenzied activities by going to my country house. I forget contract.t, clients, stares, sketches and clothes.-'\• Taurwi ii noted for quiet persistence: "I'm a pr isoner of my style. t created a look of subtlety, dignity and un· contrived ladylike clothes. Why should I ch3nge my look now?" Taurus Is drawn to the creative, especially dress designing: "Fashion is an art and part of the phenomena of our times. Elegant women today are ageless. They keep themselves slim, fit and young.looking. It's almost as if they've discovered Ponce de Leon's fountain of youlh." IMAGINATION IMPORTANT Taufus is ruled by the planet. of lovt and romance: ''I cannot tolerate women who wear sheer, see-through blouses over nolhing. Why must a woman be nagrant about her bosom? If she wants to entice a man, she must leave something to his imagination. Anyway, women with sagging bosoms cannot wear nudie clothes. And i£ they have wide hips, they cannot wear pants. Romance is a delicate, fragile thing and a ~om an must dress herself accordingly." 4 :;t season Jackie·O breezed into Valentino's suite and tried on 15 outfits • Currently Valentino doesn't like electric colors -most of his collection is brown, black, grey. Mrs. Onassis Is on the Same wave length. Reportedly she ordered a brown wool coat and black crepe pantsuit. Now she ls said to be interested in his wh ite midi capes trimmed in fox. Mala Rubinstein, head or the Helena Rubinstein cosmetic empire, also bought a few tailored dresses from the col· lectlon. It Is rumored that Vale ntino Is discussing lhe posslllility.of tying up with Rubinstein. Don 't forget Saint Laurent is owned by Cha,rles of the Ritz -and that link has been a smash. Ungaro ls doing a special perfume for Estee Lauder. But, In the end, Taurus tends to be frightened off by rich pillara of society. • • In •n •ttempt to mekt tht new midi length "bar•abl•,''· d•sign- •rs ere Naturing slits end slashes in their new spring collections. Getting in th• swim is• bathing suit dress labovt, left), •n offtr· ing of Donald Brooks, early expon•nt of the m id i, who goes ell out for exposure in tht bold orange party pajama (right). From th• Pi•rre Cardin Am•ricen Coll•ction lb•low) the midi length to P'••s• mini fans is shown in a four-slitted coat rtvu ling fl ashes of•Ieg • • • • • l 1· ". ' • .1 ' ,t ·~ .. 'f.;. . . i • • I ' ' . ,, • ~ • .. . ·-: • l J 4 DAILY PILOT Tue:sdiy, Oc:tobtt 20, 1970 -- - On One·Date She Strikes Out DEAR ANN LANDERS : Arn I super senslUve, paranoid or just plain nuts? 1 had a blind date with a fellow who seem-1 ANN LANDERS ~ ed turlbJy nice. \ found bim interesUng provocative.. and fun. I was sure he en- joyed himself, too. When he saw me to the door he said,. "I'll call you soon." That was three weeks ago and I haven't . heard a word from him alnce. This ls I.he third time a guy bu done thls to me since July. lf a fellow doesn't like a glrl, why does he say he will call her soon? Isn't this dishonest? It ~T· tainly does give a girl false hope. She waits and waits for a call that never comes. Finally she ge~ depressed and loses confidence in herself. Frankly, I'd rat.her t have a guy say, "Good night. I had a lousy time. You'll never hear from me again." Print this letter and let them set it -the rats. -NEW ARK KNOCKER DEAR NEW: C'moD, Kiddo. How would yoa feel If a fellow toot yoa to tbe doer aDd Alil, "Good lli&bt. l laad ·a ioa:IJ lime. Yoa'll aever bear from me again." s¥rts piling her groc1rloo oo top or mine before l've had a cbanct to 1et my allp and pay the bill. ' People are getting more impalile ind more inconsiderate, by ·the day. They snarl at each other and seem so ag· gresaive. What'• happening to our world? Why is everyone' so hostile? Art people changing? -PERPLEXED. DEAR PERP: Yes. Peeple are becom· Ille uarier ud ,... -petldY<. Some aadtorltla say H Is beclut Ulen are tot maay: people. ne "deuJty tbeory" bu bee. nbltanUated by espaimenll wltll • .lialmals. A Callfon.11 stady proved that "~" ntl b e c a m e bellllerat, datractlve ud vldou ..... llrp aumben wen: crowlled ~t. a HmJte4 1pace. n.e llllWtr: popalaUoe control - Yolualary -J llope, My a1st<r-nagged her husband Into a divorce two years , ago and 1 can tee myself doing the same thing. I love my ' husband and I know he loves me but U l don 't control this mouth of mine I wUJ lose him. Can you help me? - DISGUSTED WITH MYSELF DEAR DISGUSTED: A prtltltm recocailed b ball tolved. Finl, ....,. the fact tbat yoar busbud n a leUer· forietaer ud a towel-4ropper aad )'OU area't gotq Co chuce bim. Mall )'OU' owa letten and pick up Ml wet Sowell - aot for IDS sake, bat for yoan. MOit ~ wives are llCfttly dl11atlslled wtlll lbemoe!V... Pklblc away at a spocpe is easier .._ Mlil&: somdbl.nc about eae's own lnadequcla. Do yea Uve Olltleta diat prevlde yoa widl self esteem? A wUe wllo feels good abollt herself doesn't nag her bubud U..t details. Her uergy ls bel.Dg med etn- 1tructivdy -not destructively. friends Bet on Psychiat~ic Research It ml1llt be that Utt py DID enjoy blmaelf and wa11ted to aee yoa agala but _. maybe he broke bn leg, Iott bll job, was called out ,of tow11 uezpectedly or fell In love the nezt day. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've been m8.?Tled (our months and I'm ruining my marriage because or my terrible mouth. This morning after my huaband left for work I ut down and cried. I'm picking him to pieces and I know it. For u· ample, I found a Jetter in his pocket I asked him to mail yesterday. I yelled at him. Then I yelled because he left a wet towel on the bathroom floor. Drinking may be "in" to the kids. you run with -but it can put you "out" for keeps. You can cool it and stay popular. Read "Booze and You -For Teenqers Only." Send 35 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope with your request in care of the DAILY PILOT • jJore than 120 Orange Countians gathered in the Pak Tree Racing Association's clubhouse patio for a \)uffet Juncheon and day at the Santa Anita races t>enefitting Dr. Louis Gottschalk's children's psy- ~hiatric research pro8ram at UCI. Postive that they have picked a winner are (left to right) Mrs. . !; ' • ' • ' • ' • , .. ' ; Flatters and Slims Coot 62219 ' . . . , .. . . .. NormanHartnell , 1' Leave it to Norman Hartnell to put together a simply stunning coat and dress ensemble. The de- sign is superblY shaped to flatter and slim you. Cut in misses sizes 10-18, the coat, 62219 re- quires app.roximately 2 7/8 yards of 54" fabric for size 12. 62199, dress ; requires approximately 1 3/4 yards of 54" fabric for size 12. These precut. pre- perforated Spadea Designer Patterns produce a better fit. . , To order 62219 or 62199, state size. include name, address and zip code. Send $1.50 postpaid for EACH pattern. Address Spadea, Box N, Dept. CX-15, Mil- ford , N.J. 08848. Clement Hirsch, chairman; Robert 0. Hill, New- port Beach, and Miss Mary Ann Green, Harbor Isle. Also greeting guests were Hirsch, president of the racing association, and Dr. and Mrs. Justin Call. The race meeting concludes Saturday, Oct. 31. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why is there so much rudeness and pushing and shov- ing in the world today ? I see it wherever I go. Cafeteria lines, theater lines -it's the same story. Even at the supermarket checkout counter, some creep always European Tradition County Artists Sell Wares ln European tradition, amateur craftsmen will sell their wares from noon to 6 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 24, in the Retail Clerk's auditorium, Buena Park. Bazaar 70 is a marketplace of handcrafted items, providing a show· case for the staggering amount of crafts being done today. Among the crafts to be exhibited and sold are leather working, crocheting, knitting, decoupage, papier mache, pottery, ceramics, stitchery, sculpture, jewelry and other handiwork. The event will encompass every facet of art but concentrate on crafts. Amateur craftsmen are invited to participate by paying a small fee entitling them to sell their goods in assigned areas. No commercial bus- inesses will be allowed and the entrance fee will be 50 cents to the public. Mrs. Charles Horton of Fullerton is coordinating the bazaar which last year drew 1400 people to the Fullerton Ebell clubhouse. Interested per· sons may call Mrs. Horton for additional information at 879-6724. Spaghetti Twirled Spicy Sauce Simmers Sau~ is simmering for the second spaghetti d i n n e r sponsored by the Providence Speech and Hearing Clin ic Parenti' Club and taking place in the Holy Family Church Hall, Orange. Proceeds from last year's dinner Wen! used to renovate the playyard, purchase play equipment for the children and set up a library for the parents. The nonprofit, nonsectarian clinic In Orange provides evaluation for young children with speech and bearing; pro- blems. A therapy program is designed to meet the needs of each child, and any chlld In the county may be treated upon medical referral. Chainnan of the benefit din· ner, which will be served between I and 8 p.m., is John Matesevac. Assisting are Al Canale and Matt OlickJo, Jood preparation; Arthur Ross , tickets; Donald Cameron, prizes, James Gluth, refreshments. Also contributing to the ef- fort are the fi1mes. Cameron and James Place. boutique; Ross Schubert and William Hayes. hostesses and Arthur Ross, decorations. Tickets are available at the clinic according to Sister Margaret Anne Inman, ex- ecutive director. • Events Decorate Calendar < ' A combined meeting and patio party is planned for the Newport Beach Junior EbeUs at ID a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 22. Mrs. Jake Dutcher will open her Corona del Mar home for the event when Mrs. Clarence Williamson of the Frosting House and Mrs. Lewrence Hartmann of the Sweet Arts Club give a cake decorating demonstration. They will offer suggestions using l-lalloween and Christmas themes. Final plans for a Nov. 11 boutique will be made. The sale will take place in the Newport Beach Tennis Club. Horoscope • Aquarius: Changes Due WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 21 By SYDNEY OMARR ARJF.S (March 21-April 19): Emphasis on home, family and security. Check detaUs. Complete arrangement which include reservaUons, advance payments. TAURUS (April 2Q.May 20): Accent on short journeys, · dealing with relatives. Take care oC possessioftS. Otherwise, there could be loss while in transit. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Money comes your way-from surprise source. Family is in· volved. Be diplomatic . Gracious attitude results in ultimate gain. . CANCER (June 21.July 22): Cycle Is hlgh; circumstances • CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.J-an. turn in your favor. Be in-19): Emphasis on dependent, original-set pace. partnerships including mar- Msert n•. Lad the way. . 1 • t •~-"-Be LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):-r1age. ron ou ~. 1ure Much is likely to occur behind of facts. Don't delude you~ll ; the scenes. Accept about values. Legal adVice .; responsibility. Rewards can be may be nects.sary. great. Especially favorable for AQUARWS (Jan. 7JJ-Feti.: commurllty theater charitable 18): Work, em p Io y men t .. activities. ' changes indicated. Some ,,ho ~ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): perfonn special services may ; Some fr 1end1 issue seek delay, postponement. , ultimatums. Key is to ride PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)! 1 with the Ude. Don't permit Good lunar aspect coincides emotional blackmail. Your with romantic interests, self-esteem tbould enable you creative endeavors. Personal to weather storm. magnetism rating high; you LIBRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. 22): appeal to divergent groups. Emphasis on ambitions, civicljiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOii;;;;;;iOii;;;;;;;;;;iw,, affairs, special b o n o r s . Protect reputation. Do what nwst be done in efficient ~ ner. Be independent. .. . -:-•• '. ""!" . - S d SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): q ua ron Good lunar upect coincides with development of " .. ' DIAMONDS AND ES.TATE JEWELRY PURCHA,SED Sees Ahead pbllosophlcal concepts. You can ••k questlom and oblaln Future plans will be diSCUS!· answers. Key Is an open.mind. ed when members o( Squadron SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 4 of United States Air Force 21): Some seem intent on Mothers meet at 7:30 p.m. playing games with your emo- Thursday. Oct. 22, in Hyde tions. Strive for control and Park Mobile Estates, Santa exhibit sense of humor. One South Co11t Pt111 Ana. born under Cancer could sue. lrhtol 1t th1 Sin Oi1qo Fwy. Squadron chairmen from cessfully hand I e your Co1t1 M111 540·9066 flights in Long Beach, Whit· -i;m~oiin~ela~ryi,;;ipi;;ro;;b;ilei;m;:;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I''--- tier, Garden Grove, Anaheim, 1 Santa Ana and Costa Mesa will discuss the purchase of coupon books. Talk Unravels Allergy Puzzle WOW! Yes ••• thl1 Is what our cut- l'Omen •Y about ov ••••• STEAM CARPET CLEANING * AIHll-.1 * ActHfty,........ fM Mii! S..,. cl...-·1Hf91'l Roses Bloom at Convention Affiliates Toasted At Tea Baffling allergies will be ex. plored by Dr. Ken LaCroiI for members of Lhe Saddleback Mothers pf Twins Club on Wednesday, Oct. 21, during a 7 p.m. dinner meeting in Man· nlngs restaurant, L a g u 11 a Hills. * LMMl" ,.14MI * Tnily te. flliiU cS...'-tl WHY STEAM BRIGHT? Ptf"HNll Mnlc• mNn• 11u•llt7. work. Lew ewerhNCll m••n• rNIONlb • prlcu. Staging its own version of the Tournament of Roses will be the National Assislance League during the 22nd aMual convention in the l-lunUngton Sheraton H o t e I , Pasadena, opening Sunday I Oct, 25, Everything's Coming Up RO!eS will be the theme for the three-day even t which will draw 1000 delegates and representatives from 51 cha~ ters in the western United January Date States. Each chapter will pu_t its philanthropic project o n parade in the form of a small float. The floats will be on display and a judging com- mittee will present a sweepstakes award, queen's prize and president's trophy. Host chapter for the con- vention will be the Pasadena chapter, and keynote speaker will be Dr. William S • Betrothal News Told .DIANE AllLOTTO BrldHlect Plans for a Jan, 18 v"edding are being made by Diane Arlotto of NewPort Beach and Gabriel Stroeuel Loya of San. la Ana. News of the forthcoming event wu revealed by her mothtr, Mri. Michael F. Arlolto or Newport Beacb. The brlde-e.lect also Is the daughter of the I at e Mr. Michael F. Arlotto. Miu Atlotto is 1 graduate of Corona cltl Mir Hi&h School and at.tended Orange Coast Colle1e. ~ Htr tlanct. the 10n of Mrs. Hugh McGrqor of Stanto111 and the late Mr. Marlo T. Loyal b . • 1r.aduate of Maano1ia Hlfh School. He II· tended UCl and CaJJfomla State Colle1e at Fullerton. The ctremony will take placo In Our Lady Queen of Angels C.tholic Church. Baoowsky, chancellor of the new Pepperdine College at Malibu. Other highlights will include a fashion show presented by Bullock's Pasadena, a tour of the host chapter house and a visit through Its major fund- raiser, the· Haunted ~lfluse. Attending from Newport Beach chapter will be Mrs. John Boyd, who serves as vice president of admissions on the national board, and national committee members, t h e fi1mu. Richard S. Castle, Edward Pellegrin, Paul f!1. Rogers and Charles Ripley. JolnJng them will be the Mmes. Robert Crowner. Ken- neth C. Albright, \Yilbur Reynolds, William B r o w n , Joseph Metcalf. Joe Earhart, Arthur Best, James Winton. William OUimette, Co n r a d Schweitzer and R l ch a rd Stevens. Also partlcipaUng r r om Newport Beach will be Mrs. Sue Hi~hman, who with Mrs. Brown will di!euss t h e chapter'• phllanthroplc project G<>-Wrth which df!als with learning dlfflcultlts of teenagers at McNally Con- Unu.tloo High School. Laguna Beach members will feature 1 float Utled Festival of ,...rlenlishlp: Pagcnnt or Projtctl. The fettlval ld~a comes from the city'1 re. nowncd 1 rt display. and Frlendshlp Club for senior friendship from the · 1ooauc's citizens. Attending will be the Mmes. Thomas H. Jones, John Solomon, Thomas S. Maddock, Paul Beemer, Roy Thoroughman, W i 111 s t o n Bradway, Douglas Smith, Irwin Kee, Patrick Randall. William Phillips. Charles Cof· fyn and Gordon Greene. Also making the trek to Pasadena will be the Mmes. Theodore Taylor. Don a Id Conklin, Daniel S c h r y v e r , Robert Burnside, Fredrick 1-fughes. Nicholas M a I o u f , Roscoe Long, Howard Adams. Charles Fishburn, J u I e s Marine, Gerald Linke, Ted DuBois, Robert Malone, Frank Darling. Ro 11 a Thorsdale. Kathryn Richardson. Andrew Morthland. N. E. Hendrickson, earl Bull and Clifford Tinsman. Arriving from the Hun· Ungton Beach chapter will be the fl1mes. Gilbert Turnbull. James Sayer, Richard Crawford, Richard Crouch, 1',loyd Hair. Gray MiDer, Robert Murray, A r t h u r Newlin, Melvin Penhall and \Villiam Russell. Completing the conlingent will be the ?.tmes. Norman \Varner, John Wyatt, Jamea Dunton, John Gera, Kenneth Konopasek, I:.ouls Lapthrone Robert Neyman, E d w a r d Sullivan. Raymond Walker and Alfred Witt. Representing the S 11 v e r Anchor Auxiliary will be the fi1mes. O"'·en fltlller. William Rose, Cordon Brock a n d James Clarke. A champagne tea o n Wednesday, Oct. 11, at 2 p.m. will honor affiliate members of the Queen of Hearts Guild of Children 's Hospital of Orange County. Speaking during the tea served in the Emerald Bay home of Mrs. George Gade will be Mrs. Joseph Stawicki, guild coordinator, who will outline services performed by guilds and the hospital. Arrana:ements art being handled by Mrs. Wiiiiam Beck, hospitality chairman, with assistance from the Mmes. Herman Roestl, membership chairman, R.obert Cosgrove, Macauley Ropp. William Fergu1on and Bernard Syfan. Funds raised by Orange · C.Ounty guilds are used to maintain the outpatient deparlment 11 the hospital. This department p r o v l d e s partial pay factltt ies for out- patlent.s while averaging from 600 to 800 clinic viliLs per month. .. Members and their guests may make re!ervations with Mrs. Robert Figeira, presl· dent, 830.3531. STEAM BRIGHT CARPET CLEANERS ~~~I~~~~ 642-9143 OUT THEY GO! ALL REDUCED! THE YU.l'S IEST IUYS IN USID PIANOS,' OlGANS I GU.NDSf HAMMOND OiGAN ~~~;;~~ $1595 With Pull Rhythm, Pull Pwcua .. n, .... u. l11Nk•r -WhUt They Lut ~I.!~~~~~ :'.:=. llll WURLITZER ORGANS GULBRANSEI ORIAI · Sii& :.:":" .. ::. • •• ,". ... SUI MOOIL 41M WURLITZER Ol!iAI 1899 PIANOS MELVILLE CLARK •.:r;. •U& Wllllt ,....., w. Ml.MY M.W FLOOR IODELS:":"ro 160/o ... WURLITZER RECTRIC PIANOS WITH SUSTAllNIM• ,IDAL AND l"OllTA COVIil llMCM IN(LUND I •• NIW HAMMOND PIPER ...... ,.._. ..... ,... "' C'-.. ... _ fltll .. I "'"' -·-"" ""'''"*'' -~ fw .... ....,. -·· ----tt•ULAll tlllS GRANDS Sltlllw1y -· ""'""' Cllktl"lfll ·-·-"""',. """' ..... (Aft ... llil9wft It "' ...,...,.... ~ '"""" """ $884 •1886 \ Dlt ~ Ml DIAA TU AN Sol . l ..:: :! Ml I J~ Pl ACF l Cit. age. 5 To11 10 Tra '" 14 Pat sa 1r sai I 15 Sun Cor. lb Win 17 M a~ ~tr i l IJ Nat c" 20 l ill •Im 21 Vot 23 Joi 2b Co1 27 Th+ 1 • 30 Ja1 J 4 Hr. "' 35 Ca 37 Go 36 (.a "" 39 Ga , .. ~l u '. " '" 42 Wn 43 Sit l• 44 Re " " lO l ' .. .. DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS AN INDIAN"TO SE'.E 'IVU,C-OlONEl I .. -.-....... -'·~,,-~,. MUTT AND JEFF ................ , .. Wft.L ?OUTWITll n; OOY ! CAN'T WU SEE: l'M i!lJSY! SLEEP, MUTT, SLEEP! • • ly Chnter Gould -.... , • By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith U'L AINIR SALLY BANANAS N ~, 'P"' cam:t ~ II°""' -4a. .eoa.·~~ GORDO ....... ._ ........... ... JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Doux MOON MULLINS TELL ME SOMETM1N6 A.-· 1r WODLD F02 EXAMPlE. W ANP 6 Will &E l>UILDWG A. COW'lffi CJTV IN fj.jE NE't.1 TWO YEA.R:S •• SATELllTE CITIES OF A&IUT 100, 000 PEOPl..E 15 ~E OOAL: THEY ALRE Al7Y HAVE EIGHT ON THE Pli:,t.Wlt.IC:i !OAR-~5! W "ND!. IS tJOW GtITIW.6 JNVOlVED IN TltAW.SPOR:TAnON •• ~KING OW THE ME.&J.15 TO T~NSPOU PE"OPlE Fli:OM TME !>ATElUTE CITIES TO THE' lt-INEIZ (IT'\'! SA~, IT'S AN EXC1T1N6, FA.NT ... STlC CC>t'CEPT! I HOPE YOU WILL &ECOME A PAll:T OF JT ! &OUT W AND 8 INDUSmES, 6E EASlEIZ TO LIZ! WHAT Sll51 NE55 TE LL YOU WHAT A2E THEY IN:: "i1-lEV 'R:E NOT PLAIN JANE ACROSS 4S Form of souud l Cttansin9 rtproductio11 agtnl 47 Of!ictts Slop of~nc1tnt 10 Trading Romt ctnler 50 Famil y 14 Patron 51 Seat saint of 52 Bulge oul. sailors 2 word s 15 Sun: 5b Ttx~s c.i1y Comb, for m bO Make whole lb Winglike bl Appeasr 17 Make less b4 Scots 9at1it strict b5 "Arid so·- 19 Native of ---": 2 words Copenhagen bb English 21l Li119e1 colle9r alm!essly b7 Encou11le1 21 Vor1ciousriess b8 Express 23 Join a 1ho1HJhl 2b Conste1 1at 1011 b9 Calendar 27 Thef ler: abbrtv1alio11 2 words 30 Jap~n 34 He ar ing orga ns 35 Candterl 37 Gone by 38 Camel's hair fabric 39 Garment parts- .(l u s soldil'rs: s lano .(l Wron9: Prelh 43 S1n9e1 Le11a ---· 44 Rl'SCllt ' l ' " " 20 DOWN l Oisposr of 2 Polpourr1 J Both: Comb. rorrn 4 P11u!ine Joh11so11 or Gertrude Stein 5 Ma911~ ---··· b Unit of reluct1111t r 7 Hebrew pr iest 8 Maqnitl.l(lr l • " . " , IN, SAM! 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I / (,-,1 / By John Miles By Mell MOWE~, I MtliiiHT &RING M YSELF 70 WR/TR A GOOO Rf!Vlt:W IF YOLI Tl~HTeN UP THE FIRST ACT, Ct.AlllFY THE LEAD CHARACTER'S MOTIVATION A>JO SL.IP ME A FIVER. By Saunders and Overqard LEflil5TMlMl<S"Yi4E l'CS:Tl-!AT~E TltES:T~THE CIMT,liO ;Tr!ATWE~I E CUT /11U/.fEKOS MY F~!CNO--SEU;Tl-IESE PRic:Lr<.SS HASA YAN001 Uft/o : WE ktrrlOW 8L ... NCO • AA.TIFACTS To IJ I';-ACC.OMPUC.f.c \\~ M.&.t.:UEL BL.t..NCO AS TA.UC.IN& l'ELONGS TO A P:ING i SCl(UPIJLOIJS D'E~LE:ll!::h. IS A ASE SINO / TOiHEIKMECHA NIC TODP SMUGUL INUaJRSTOLEM 'AN OCOU.ECTOR.S·-A Ci UNf.1"'."·- l.JJTCHER 1 ~HAT IS OUR ARCMEOi..OGICM. TIC'EASUR~ NE'iCT MOVE ~ OOTOF TME CO \JtffRY-· PEANUTS OfF AU-HIS RO'jiE5, AND Tiii'.> AA.'.:E COULD 5i; ;.!$ '°""NCE TO MOVE Tl4E LOOT AC.~O'iS" Tt-1E soi:i:r:il -- Le.rus 1-<.i..ve A LliTt: TA.l.I( w:TH THIS 1VCD LU";'"(f.IE.t ! By Charles M. Schulz Tutsday, Octobtr 20, l(J7Q ' THE STIAHGE WOllD ~ ' ' J DAILY PILOT IS By Charles Barsotti :· Am&l~ . .f... ~~~ ~ . • By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson ' . DENNIS THE MENACE • ' I l • , ... I I I ')_fl • 1,.1r.· . ' '~IS NMIE .IS ~ENRY. 111/T 1 CAIL. MIM OAO fOlt SllORT. • ' I I ...................... --.................. --~ ..... ----~------~~~~~~~~~~--- • P r othro 1Lashes_ Out· • ·At Interception Rule LOS ANGELES (AP) -UCLA football coach Tommy Protlu'o doesn 't like the way the college pass interference rule ii being interpreted this year. As he sees it, "It's nearly impossible to play pass derense any more." Prothro's team won a thriller from California 24-21 Saturday and two fourth· quarter key pass lnterftrenet calls against the Golden Bears allowed Prolhro's. Bruins the life they needed. UCLA quarterback Dennis Dummlt set1red the 10-ahead touchdown "'ith four seconds lo play. "The game is out of control," Prothro said jokingly Monday, referring to his team's last four games, all won in ·the final· seconds-and only two of them' by the Bruins. Then he turned serious. "The way I understand the pass in· terference rule, when the ball was in the air every man had a right to go for it. Bul the new interpretation says that if the defensive man bumps the offensive man in the act of trying to intercept, that's interference. "It's getting so it's nearly Impossible to play pass defense any more." The NCAA Rulebook says: "Contact by any opponent which Interferes with an eligible receiver-defensive players in· eluded-beyond the neutral zone is pass interference. However, players are not guilty of interference when mak ing a simultaneous and bona fide effort lo reach the ball." running play and be knocked down the receiver. But the official saw that a potential nceiver wa1·knocked down and he thrtw his nag. That was in. terference.". Craig Fertig, Southern California assis. tant roach and USC's 111-Ume leading passing leader, said, "Yes, the defense ia at a disadvantage. 'I wish I could have thrown with that interpretation in effect. It's a distinct advantage for the offense." Prothro said, however, that football was~·t approaching an ''all--0ffense. no-- defense " game, a.s aome have suggested. "Right now it looks that way, but as soon as something new romes in and takes everybody by surprise, then along comes a defense for it." He said he wasn't criticizing officials, only the interpretation by the rules com- n1ittee. · "The rules committee is made up of coaches and former coaches," he said grinning, "and some of those former coaches, as soon as they get on the ~es committee. lhey "·ant to try soi;neth1ng new -something they wouldn t have dared try when they were coachin1." Says He Didn't Score Coach Up in .Arms Over Dummit TD OAKLAND CAP) -"Dennis Dummit did not score," California Bears' coach Ray Willsey said f\.tonday, et1ntending films backed him on the final touch· down in Saturday's 24·21 UCLA football victory. Dummit's knee touched the around at the two-yard line. "He did not go out of bounds, and UCLA had no timeouts left , and therefore would not have had time for another ·. play," Willsey told Northern California football writers Monday. OAKLAN D'S HEWRITT DIXON (35) SLASHES WAY TO. 164 YARDS IN 34-20 WI"! OVE R WASHINGTO N. The rule protects tht defender from being charged with interference while trying for the ball but the NCAA rules committee issued a new interpretation this year. Dummit, UCLA's quarterback dived in. to lhe end tone with four seconds to play to beat Cal. · The films, said an unhappy Willsey, show that when the quarte rback dived In· to the end uine with four seronds to play "facts are facts." \Villsey persisted. "I mean no renection on the officials-he just didn't set1re." Wisconsin Outfit Is Huge Having watched Wisconsin's No. 3 ranked prep football team in action Saturday afternoon it is th is column's observation that if that really was the third best team. Southland pov.·ers would run wild against Badger State high schools. Premonlre or Green Bay is undefeated and has four guys listed in the program who are physically designed to scare the opposition to death. For example. end Terry Young plays both ways. He's &-7 and 210. But he's puny v.•hen compared with mates Todd Tailor (6-0. 220), Steve Boex (6-2, 235). Or try the two gotiath! on the Cadet's roster -Ron Metzner (6-5, 290 ), Guy l.<ICasio (6-4, 265 ). When Premontre runs out on the field for warmup the other team is automatically behind 2&-0 psychologically. Premontre happened to be playing St. Mary of ?ttenas.ha the afternoon I ven· tured out to watch Cadet football . · Prtmontre scored three times the first seven minutH and then held on for a 11· U victory. cur to me that Premontre would be a fair match for any Southland prep powers. The Cadets' pass defe'nsc could be ripped apart by anyone coordinated enough to throw the ball 20 yards with accuracy. Unfortunately, St. Mary had no such OLIHN WNITI ------JT1HITE WA~ ------ perso n, Premonlre's secondary reaction was slower than its team speed and the latter ranked somewhere in the zero c11tegory. Premontre would probably have trouble bc~t ing winless \V('stminster. \Visconsin football is genuincly In· t~resting but it 11urely lags several steps behind what Y•e enjoy in Southern California. At least it does if Prcnlonlre reall y is the third best team in the state. * * * \\'ant a longshot that may not be as long as it would-first seem to be? Northwestern plays Ohio State Oct. 31 and that could be a meeting of Big Ten co.leaders. If the Wildcats can pull a miracle against Ohio State they'll have a shot al their fir st Rose Bowl trip since 1949. That's assuming they don't stumble against Purdue. Indiana, Michiga.n State, Jndiana and Minnesota . f\fost overrated college team in the land? Texas. !\1osl disappointing? Penn State , 2-3 for the season. l\iost underrated? San Diego State, '~hich demoli11hed Southern Mississippi.•· 14. And Southern Miss just got Utrougb cremating Ole 1'11ss, J0.14. It calls for an interference penalty if the defender "plays through" qr bumps the receiver, even if he is going for the ball. Prothro said: "I've heard of a defensive man leaping up and i11tercep- ling the ball cleanly but when he landed bar.:k on the ground, he bumped the receiver and that is now ruled in· terference. "It also means you can't hQld up a receiver at the line of scrimmage with a brush block because that would be in· terference. I guess I'm like all oldtimers: I'd like it the way it was when 1 was growing up." Jim Stangeland, coach at Long Beach State, agreed with Prothro. "I have sympathy with the defense : the defender must make sure he doesn't so much as touch the potential receiver and that gives the receiver a tremendous ad· vantage. "I saw a play once where t he quarterbock dropped back like he was going to pass but then handed off on a delay. _''The linebacker saw it was a straight Raiders Spank Redskins With Run s, Passin g OAKLAND (AP) -''We looked like we were waiting for somebody to do something." Washington Redsk ins ' coar:h Bill Austi n said of his tea m 's performance Monday night in a 34-20 ioss lo the Oakland Raiders. The Redskins and a na tional te\evision audience didn't have to wait long. •lc1vritt Dixon, the Raider s' bi~ fullback made a touchdown happen on the first Oakland play from sc rimmage to st art the Raiders toward victory in the Nationa l Football League game. Daryle Lamonica, who threw three touchdown passes for Oakland , sllid, "llewritt really came through. He fell iood tonight." Dixon rushed for 164 yards and Ra ider run ners totaled 226. "They were real terrors," La n1onica said. "Jt really helped our passing hame, too." The game ball "'ent lo Dixon, who now has 369 yard s rushing for lhe season. He gained only 398 all last year, when he was con1ing off a knee injury. Coach John Madden of the Raiders sairl he hasn't menlioned lhe old knee pro- blems to Dixon. "If you start lo get into the · psychological aspects, you sometin1es put an idea in a player's mind so I a\'Otd 1t. l\'s like telling a guy 'don't fumble' on a kickoff -~ureas hell he'll fumble." Dixon also picked up big yarda11:e on two third period drives as Oakland built a 34-13 lead. • Flrtl _, ll11l~ln9 ~1ri111t' P1111~ v1r111t1 PltUJ ·~· ~U'fla!M Im! Ylrcll P1n1ll1M ltldtklftl ltl! .. ~ . " 11 ,,. ,.,. ll2 , . .n.. lt-11.1 •·l' 2.)1 • • " n Jets Suffer More Misery -Namath Hurt 1''EW YORK (AP) -Jot Namalh Is in pain ... and the New York Jet! are hurting. The Jets' star quarterback. one of their few offensive threals this season, was nursing a broken bone in his right wri.st today and will probably miss this Sun· day's National Football League aame with Buffalo. Namath, despite the Injury suffered in Sunday's game with Baltimor1, was op- timistic. "We'll wait until the doctor sees It - maybe there's some lype of cast-they can put on it and l can play this week," sai~ the floppy-haired Jels' gem. But coach \\'eeb Ewbank appeared more realistic. "It just shows what type of et1mpetitor Joe is." said Ewbank, indicating there "'as little chance the right-hand throwing Namath would play. Ewbank. in fact , said the Jets will call up a quarlerback from the taxi squad, Bob Da vis, formerly wllh the New ·York Giants and Houston Oilers. Davis had ~n playing with the Jersey Jays of the Atlantic Coast Footba ll League. \Vilh Namath out Sunday, the starting assignment v.·ould probably fall to second· vear quarterback Al Woodall. • Thill would mark Namath's first" absence from a game due t.o Injury. Despite pain-ravaged knees, the con- troversial and colorful Namath has never missed a regular season game v.·ith the Jets because of injury since he joined them in 1965. He sat out the first game of that year as a rookie . Namalh 's wrist "'as broken Sunday as he fell to the ground after a pass Ill· tempt. five plays . from the end of the Jets' 29--22 loss to the Colts. He went on to complete 34 passes !or 397 yards. X-rays ~1onday showed a fracture. of a small bone at the base of the thumb. The Jets have a number of other of· [ensive starters on the shelf with injuries -including leading runner Matt Snell. Favored to win the American Conference Eastern Division, the Jets have lost four of their first five eames. College Grid Poll TN'" W·~I 1'1,, TN '" •l·I l"lf, 1, Otllo SI. (1t) U Mt 11. TlflntHet ,.1 UJ t. l lJtl (t ) 4·D 6)0 lt. Arl!Ollf SI. J-0 U1 3, N, 011n1 Id S·O SIS ll, Miu, •I 110 •. N111r11k1 nl J..0.1 411 u . Loui1l1n1 II. •·• 71 S. Mlth!tlri (ti S-0 JIT 1J. Houtl\lf! 3·1 4 6. AUOUrn (11 M "J II. UCLA •I )to 1, A.It Fotcl !11 ... 3~ 11. 51n DltVO 51. 6-0 II 1. s11n1tcrd J-1 iu 11. l"lthbu•Oll ,., 10 t, Al'lll llMI •I 2'1 lt. (IJtl CotttrMt >-I I 10. use ""'·' 11• t11tc1o ..o • Olttl'll ncervll'lf .,.t", ll11t111 11~111tk111~, 01r11110Ulfl, l'lo•1411. lril lueutl. Nortll-1trn Oki•· """'-· 0•1190'1· SOl/llltrri M!Hb.llor>I. S1"t<11tl , t ... lartt, Yl lt, The pre<:eding week the Cadets met un· dtfeated noncalll of titan t tow o c Premontre slipped 3.,..·ay with a 3f-O vtrdlcL • Houk Ma11ager of Year; Lefty Tl1ird tmpolin1 5COt'd, to be sure. And the brond o( footboll the Codell use reminds one of the 014 ~s In the Southwest Coofere'nce whtn 'traTil!t rare It punted on anything les.s than fourth and JO -1"hen the uMxpected was the norm. Premontn was passing on lhird down three and runoin1 fOf it on fourth 11nd flvt. And SL Mary was ju.st as wild , pass- ln1 on fourth a11d one from Its 38 (and oompletlnl ttl when anly trall)ng, NI. Howe vu, nol for one moment did It oc- POMPANO BEACH, Fla. (AP) '- Yankee skipper Ralph Houk WL'! 1tunned momen\arily at being named America n League manager of the year and t h t. n hinted New York just might ·win It all In 1971. "If 1 didn't rlgure we had 111 chance," BRid Houk, "'I wouldn't e\•er put on a un iform." 8111ltimore 0\1erwhelmcd the Al's Eastern Oivi3iori in 1970 and skirpe.>d away "'ith the \Vorld Seriea. Despite the Oriole accomplishme.nt.s. Earl \Veever "I be.lieve that winning 109 gamt.s failed ag11in to be named the ?\o. 1 might do It next year," he sa.id, "because manager. Detroit wlll be a lot bt!tter , Bostoo will "I assumed It would be Earl,'' Houk improve and Cleveland has got lo get bet· &aid. "Baltimore won everything in sight. -lcr wilh the young talent the lndians But, Uthe Yankees rleserve th honor, 1t have.." should go to I.he ballplayers and not me.." lfouk received Ill votes tO Wea.vcr·s 73 Houk took 1 floundcrlng expov,.~rnouse in a nationwide Associatrd Press po\\ or and finishel'I second by wlnnlng 9J games. llportswriters and bro1dc111tcrs. Hill The former army major believes oh'.'' a Rigney or the '\\1estern Divis ion t•hamrion 11\ight improven1ent might shove aside 1'1inne~ota TWlns received $SI, Lefty the "Bi& Bi.rd flif1chine." Phillips of the Cllifomi1 Angels got 32, • 1t1ilwaukee'1 Dave Bristol got On-ee, Washington's Ted Williams two. Houk w111 readyltig his sleek fishing boat for the warm pleasures of 3 Florida Winter whe.n the newa came by telephone. "It's due to kids like Bill Munson, John· ny Ellis and a lot of experienced hands like Danny Cater, Bobby Muret.r llnri Roy \\'h.ite," he said. "We 've got • new thin!( going with the Yankees -not 10 mu«h muscle. but a lot of fellows who ca n hlt J~20 homers for you ." But \Vil\sey added later on the of. ficiating per se : "My only comment is. that l have no comment. I've had the advantage of look· ing at films that the offi cials don't have when they make calls." The millimeter ammunition, in- cidentally, is being sent to Pac-8 com· missioner Tom Hamilton, said Willsey. for "review." Willsey. apparently closing the subject for the nioment, et1ncluded : Dummit is the most effective p a s s e r "'e've faced yet this year. He did a fine job of directing his team, especially in the last two minutes on that 85--yard-er- s:l·yard drive.'' John Ralston, coach of the Pac-8 leading Stanford Indians, said his team 's 63--16 victory over Washington State was "just one of those games where everything goes well. There's no way.~· we're almost 50 points better than Washington Slate." The Indians. 3-0 in the confertnce, face UCLA, 2-1, Saturday at the Los Angeles Coliseum. After losing to Texas and Oregon in the final seconds, then beating Cal in the · same Kinelof game, UCLA will probably • be sky high," Ralston said . He also predicted "the ball will be sail~ ing around the Coliseum a lot." willl ' Dummit and Stanford's Jim Plunkett •. throwing. Plunkett and John Read. quarterback for Pacific, shared Northern California Offensi ve Player-of-lhe-\\'eek. honors. Ski p Around The Pacifi c-8 Grid Circi1it ' BERKELEY -Dave Lawson, a derensive back for the California Golden . Bears. broke an arm Saturday and will ' miss the rest of the football season. . Coach Ra y Willsey said Monday Lawson probably was injured while fall· , ing on one of the final plays in the 24·211 loss to UCLA. Among players cited by \Villsey for outstanding play Salurday were co-cap-') lain Bob Richards. an offensive tackle, > and linebacker Phil Croyle. who w1s named top defensive player ol the week in the. Pacilic.fl. • • STANFORD -The Stanrord lndians picked up some injury problems on \Vashington State's Astroturf Saturday, coach John Ralston reports. and some '' players may not be re.ady by game time Saturday at UCLA. The worst are knees that might require surgery on defensive. tackle Tim McClure and defensive back Mark Brown. Defensive tackle Pete La.zetich has a stiff neck. As for the Bruins, Ralstcn said ; "After picking up a win over Cal in the last few seconds after two losses , I'm sure they'll be on cloud nine . It's a key game for us -"''e haven't been successful in the C,oliseum since 1962 .'' • EUGENE. Ore. -'The University of Oregon . the No. I passing team in the-na· lion , will be throwing against the Southern California se<.'Ondary in ill ners Pacific-3 footbaU test. The two teams meet Saturday In Eugene. "'ilh Oregon having a S.l con· ferenct record to 2-1 for USC. • CORVALLIS, Ore. -The Oregon State Beave rs had a light football v.·orkout f\tonday. spending part of the session 1n· doors listening to scouting rtporb and \Yatehlng films of the \Vashlnaton Husk.Jes in early season games. Oregon State will be at home against Washinaton in a Pacific-8 game Saturday. Fa Re Tc Golde: we re th' bea t Cont ere non-circ change( All ti back pl freshme The D win lht Shack.1e Rio Hor High) ti ln ott: LACC 11 LA Har LAH. Follov confere1 I. Go have th• ference them. Bucklar while il Jjnebacl defense. •• RI under n also co knockin (34-20) ing to C Fresh Tarang• Rancho around 3. LA Top Ii: Wilson, and frei Gates ( s, 2SO). Top quarter Mc Mid and rec Moses, LACC tories c 15), Sat Reed le] 4. E1 Goldin Slate J compile f\1onica losing I !G-9) I duced Huskie: eonfere S, LI usually Seaha\I lone wi wit!'t IOI San Ar. l4Z..JOL Quar JI.like ·: player! reet1rd losing (36-13). .6. Cy thus fa dlebacl Pasade Price, the c genera Cy pres they w mark I Cy pr around \Vester a mucl Fo Fa 04 Oran ball te: three f LY PU Gold Cl\'Cr f decide fcrenet Sant: Orange Confer· Sadd Soulh~ Gauch1 This l Gauch On ti picked Anahei ' the sa1 The about but th polnL t 0th• unlver: five O' Oregor Hew Y ll;trm , e7e': ~= ~M• Mlltr ~'1111 • ·-eunl1 lll•en .... '':':Ii!/ AM ~lltl t~ c~ ftl"'I •II"< Favor ite's Hofe Grie s To Ru stler s By CRAIG SHEFF Of Ille 0111'1' PUii 11111 Golden West, Rio Hondo and LACC were the preseason pick! as the teams to beat in the Southern Cali l ornla Conference football chase, and after four non-circuit games, that situation hasn't changed. All three teame have top lettermen back plu.s an influs: of some talented freshmen. The DAILY PILOT labs Golden West to win the championship, but Coach Ray Shack.Jeford's team will have to get by Rio Hondo Saturday night (at El Rancho Hi~h~~:Oc~~ference oi>tners this week, LACC Is at East LA and Cypress ho!ls LA Harbor at Westem High. LA Harbor is the defending champion. Following is a rundown on each of the conference teams: 1. Golden West -The Rustlers (3-1) have the best defell!lve record in the con- ference with 49 polnl.3 scored against them. All-America candidate Charlie Buckland leads a top notch running game while safety Tony Bonwell and middle !jnebacker Tom Allanson spearhead the defense. !. Rio Hondo -The Roadrunners, under new coach Marty Blackstone, have also compiled a 3-1 mark this season. knocking off Glendale (31·21 J, Cerritos f34-20) and Long Beach (14-7) while los- ing to Citrus (23-14). Freshmen running backs D e n n i s Tarango and DaMy Lara lboth from El Rancho) pace a bru ising Roadrunner ground attack. 3. LACC -The Cubs, as usual , au big. Top linemen include sophomore Jeff Wilson, an all-conference selection in '69 and freshmen Joe Trujillo (6-2. 300), Theo Gates (&.9, 285) and Harvey Goodman (S. ~. 250). ·' Top offensive players i n c I u d e quarterbacks John Bryan and Travis McMichael, runn ing back Philip llenry and receivers Nory W a t s o n and Greg Moses, cousin of Haven Moses. LACC has a 3-1 record to date with vic- tories over Pierce (31-30). San Diego l~- 15), San Bernardino (35-26 ) and a loss to Reedley (42-38 ). 4. East LA -Under new coach Joe Goldin (Bob Enger has moved on to Cal Stale Los Angeles!, the Huskies have compiled a 2-2 mark , defeating Sant.a ?i1onica (28-201 and Hartnell (14-131 and losing to the state's top team, Fresno, (lG-9) and LA Valley (11).-0). East LA pro- duced a 7-2 mark last sea90n and lhe Huskies just might be lhe sleeper of the Li>nfertnce race. 5. LA Harbor -Coach Scrappy Rhea usually produces a winner but the Seahawks are having trouble in '70. The lone win was over Orange Coast (33-24) wit)l losses.to San Diego Mesa (24-13). Mt. San Antonio (28-24) and Arizona Western (42·10). . Quarterback Rich Talmo and . fullback 1'1ike 'Sillcrs art the leading offensive players. LA Harbor compiled an 8·2 record last year (5--0 in the conference ), losing only to OCC (21-20) and Fresno t36-13). 6. Cypuss -The Chargers are winless thus far, losing to Riverlllde (26-0), Sad- dleback 11:>-BJ, Orange Coast (3:>--0l and Pasadena (38-20). Under new coach Bill Price, an assistant at Cypr~s last year, the Chargers have been unable to generate any consistency in their orfense. Cypress won just one game in '69, but they \\'ill be hard pressed to improve thal mark this year. Cypress gears it offensive attack around quarterback Bill Meers, a fonner \\'estern High product . The Chargers arc a much improved defensive tea m. F oothall Odds Favor Rustlers; OCC Underdog Orange Coast area juuior college foot· ball teams face Lough assignments on all three lronts this week according to DAl- L Y PILOT sports staff selections. Golden \Vest is favored by two points over Rio Hondo in a game that could decide the Southern California Con- ference winner in the opening contest. Santa Ana is picked by two over Orange Coasl College in a South Coast Conference outing. Saddleback iomcs face to face with Southwestern, the only team lo beat lhe Gauchos la st yea r in regular season play. 1'his ttme ifs a conference clash. The Gauchos are favored by four in this one. On the high schoo1 scene, Mater.Del is picked by one over St. Paul while Anaheim is selected to defeat 1.{arlna by the same margin. The Rams-Minnesota \71klngs clash is about as even as five pro'Ple can come but the Los Angeles club holds a one- polnt edge. Other games Involving Sou th I a n d univeraUy teams find Stanford picked by five over UCLA and USC by all over Oregon. 'Exclus ive Seat for Young Fan An unidentified young football fan climbs on a goal post crossbar to get a bird's eye view of ac- tivities following the Orange Coast-Fullerton JC game Saturday night. The easier than the climb up. trip do,vn was a lot T11rsd1y, Cktober 20, 1970 DAIL V PILOT J 7'. ' Anotlie r Shotgun Foe --... ~-' M.!.re ~iseries - • Due Mater "' De ~. 1i By ROGER CARU>ON 01 ..... 0.11, .. , .. , 11111 Mater Del High School's Monarchs had their share or trouble last week against a passing team throwing out of the shotgun formation -and this ~·eek's opponent figures to give the Red and White more of the same type treatment. The Monarchs fell victim lo Bishop Amat's brilliant duo of qua rterback Pat Haden and split end John P.1cKay, cinch All.CIF AAAA choices. The pair com- bined for five touchdown pass plays. Now old rival St. Pau1, a bitter enemy for the_ pa!l 11 years, provides the op- position Thursday night· at Santa Ana Bowl and coach Marljon Ancich's Swordsmen are winging along on a four- game win streak - a period in whic h they haven't been under severe pressure in racking up Huntington Beach, Poly, Notre Dame and SI. Anthony. But despite the success Amal had with Mater Dei ~48-16) Ancich expresses con- cern about the Monarchs. ··0ur games with ~1ater Dei are a little different from the norm. There's a little bit of feellng involved. They're going lo be ready for us, we know that. ''1 don't think anyone is 32 points belier than ~later Del. \Ve were relaxing after our win over St. Anthony . having some sandl''iches when we heard Lhe news. ''It depressed me. \Ve're getting ready ror Mater Del and then you bear something like that. They have to win this one now-it's going to be a d<H:lr-die game for both of us. , "We can't exchange the game fUms of the week before so we don't have anything except our scouting report . IL tells us Bishop Amat should be playing Southern Cal. It was a night where the y just couldn·t do anything wrong I guess ," says Ancich. Ancich took notes. however, on Amal'11 sucress with the shotgun formation and says his team will definitely employ the same tactic. "We've used the shotgun in four of our five games -especially on obvioll! pass- ing plays. We know we're not fooling anyone when (Jamie) Quirk goes under the center in these si tuations so why not just put him back a ways and give him more time to set up~ .. It's been successful iO far,'' says Ancich. And the Swordsmen boss says his corps of receivers has improved sin~ the starL of the campaign to further enhara Quirk's ef(ectiveness. Quirk is a 6-3, 185-pound junior who·s tossed seven touchdown puaea. ~·,.j His fa vorite target is. flanker ErrUe;:;1 Bobadilla I 175) but will a150 utilize:~ alternate split tndl Rick Elwood 16-3, .=t 135) and Jim Ortega (S-9, 150) without ... giving up any effectiveness. · ... Ancich says his: improved defense bu ' provided him his more p I ea s 1 n \ moments. :..: Leading that phase of lhe St. Paul at·~ tack has been middle guard Tim BeaJ ; along with a veteran secondary consiatin&:~ of Elwood. Ortega and either Gary Pebef't ., or Fred Van Allen. ~ Newport 1st In County Grid Rating s -:~ •' Newport Harbor High SchoOl's Sunset ~ League-leading Sa\lors have taken over • the No. I position in the DAILY PILOT 's ~ oifitljal rankings of Orange County prep • .. foot!SaU teams following their fourth shut-.-! out of the year Saturday night. -~ The Tars nicked third ranked Marina,;; 7-0, to replace Mater Dei, which wu·:, turned bar• decisively by Angelus Leagui power Bishop Amat, 48-11. It is the first time since the Inception··'.:.• of the county polls that Newport h~' ever led the ratings. .,. Mater Oei, despite the onesided IOSs to-~~ non-eounty power Amat, dropped only':' to second place. • ~ Edison Hlgh's Chargers, who have won:~ eight in a row counting the last three •. ,l!.&mes of 1969. moved into thi rd place~:· following their 40-12 decision over winles1:~: Santa Ana Valley. • · Edison will be put to a severe lest Sal· urday night against dangerous Los Al· amltos at Huntington Beach High. . Newport and Mater DPi will also be··~ under fire wlth the count?feaders facing -: unranked 13-1-1) Loara at La Palma ~ Stadiu 1n Saturday and the Monarchs host·;-: Ing St. Paul 14-1 ) Thursday night at ·, Santa Ana Bo\vl. ·~ St,__E.aul ( 4-1) is ranked fourth In tht . ·' CIF AAAA poll. ::: Another crucial on tap Friday is t~ ~: Anaheim·~{arina tussle at Westminste r :· High. ::::: Top Talent Could Gi ve Hear-ings on Boxing Slated Marina's Vikings dropped to seventh · place in the poll while Anaheim is Jn a tie for fourth with Rancho Alamitos. Bot!\ teams are involved in a four-way tie (2-1) for · second place in the Sunset race and victory appears mandatory for champ. lonship consideration. Other Orange Cgut area teams receiv· Ing-voles-were -Jrvine League elevens Founta in Valley and Estancia. Mater Dei fell from its lolly second spot to seventh while Redlands (9th) and Ar111heim (!Othl have traded places. GWC Winner About the on1Y similarity between last year's Golden West College basketball team and the lf7G-.71 club is its schediale. Everything else is different. Last season coach Dick Stricklin's l·lub posted a shoddy $-22 record. finishing last in the Southern California Conf~rence chase. But the 1970-71 edition of Golden West basketball is another thing. On paper, the Rustlers have some outstanding talent and figure to imµrove handsomely on that dismal record of last year. During the past summer Stricli::lin's club went undefeated in the Rio Hondo College league. Topping the list of returnees i!I forward-guard Rick Thompso, \Vho established 12 scoring marks last season while being aamed to the conference firsi team. The former Corona del Mar star sc:ort<J 707 points for the seali!Xl, averaging 26.2 points per game. Among the records set last year by Thompson were : most points in one game (50); most free throws in one game 1i4 ): best field goal percentage for a season 150.5); and best free throw per('entage for a season (82.4). Other lettermen returning include guards Rick Barnes (>IO), Drew Grevis (5-9) and Jefr Powers (6-2). Brian Amhrozich (6-Sl. who lettered two til!ason5 ago is also returning. 'l'he Rustlers' Lop scorer and rebounder t\\'O ye8rs ago. Ambrozlch figures to be a starter at forward, along with freshman Jim Anderson (6-5). Anderson. who prepped at Rancho Alamitos High, earned AIJ-CJF AAA f1r5t team honors last season. Mark Dekker, a 6-10 product from San- tiago High and Calvin Graham (6-51 lrom Rancho Alamitos, give the Rustlers plcn· ty of height in the front line. Kurt Brown (6-1 ) from Rancho and Don Daniels (6-1) and Greg Kyle ($-11 ) uf Sanlia.go Ugure to battle for lbe other s~rting pard spot. Other guard prospec:ts Include Curt Carlson (Huntln8ton Beach J, Rick J\.1ann (Westminster), Jeff Bowman (l!:dl!SOnJ ind Art Gama! {Garden Grove). The Rustlers will be playing In their own gymnasium for the first time this year (construction la due to be completed In mid-November) with the inaugural game set Nov . 27 against ML San JRcin- to. Other highlights of the schedule Include the Moorpark, ChAffey tind Rive:stde tournaments and non-conference l.)Utlngs against Orange Cocst and Saddlcback. Ex-Mater Dei Ace May Start for US C NEW YORK -A New York tun· gressman asserted Monday that boxing was "riddled with inequities'' and he would open informal hearings inlo the sport on Nov. 9. The congressman, Lester L. \Vo!ff, Democrat of Nassau County, called for the formation or a federal commission lo regu late the sport. "Boxing should have uniform la w-; and standards ," he told a press conference. "All the public is aware of now are the boxers in the r ing and little else. Bnt secret understandings seem to exist in boxing." Rep. Wolff said Edwin B. Dooley, chairman of Ole New York Athletic Com- mission ...,·ould be among those invited to testify. • LOS ANGELES -Southern Californl:l football coach John McKay announred Monday that his top two defensive left tackles are out with injuries and probably won't play Saturday in the fro jans' Pacific-I game at Oregon. Senior Tody Smith, 6-5. 250, and sophomore John Grant, M. 220. :1ave been bothered by various injuries most of the seaJOn. That leaves Troy with only thrtt defensive linemen who could rill the spol : junior John Vella. sophomore John ~k'.les and senior Steve Pultorak of Mater Oei. ~tcKay said he would decide later in the week who would start at the position. into Madison Square Garden tonight. Baylor. the veteran. 6-fool·S All-Pro. is suffering from an inflamed Achilles ten- don and will wear a cast for about a week before it will be known Whe,p-' he can return . • BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS. IJt1h - l'\!aintenance repairs and Jack or tuel for the Blue Flame rocket car J\.1onday push- ed any further attempts at a new world lald speed record back until about Thurs- day. The decision to delay another 1'Ll'crnpl at the existing 6tr.l.601 miles an hour speed record carne Monday. And it came only a few hours a ft e r Gary Gabel\ch fell short Sunday ni,lilht of surpassing the record set five years ago by Craig Breedlove. In or"der to break Brttdlove's record, the Bue Flame must exceed ii by I per- cent -or an average of 606.607 m.p.h. or better on two runs through the timed mile. On his first run Sunday , Gabelich piloted down the course at &04.0'l7 n1 .p.h. Crew members turned the 38-foot, 6,:,00. pound vehicle around and the Long Beach driver went back through the timed mile at 599.300 m.p,h. But the average for the '' two runs was only 601.655 -about live miles an hour short. • MODESTO -An Atwater High 'khotil football player died early Monda y C'f head injuries received in a game at i\1ar!posa Friday night. Vincent W. Maloney , 16 , a iun ior fullback, was transferred to Dut torl'i Hospital here from Mariposa Jlo~pital early Saturday. Coach Frank Castro of Atwater s11id Maloney, a varsity player, \~•as playing in a junior varsity game because of a player shortage and wa~ hurt in the fourth quarter of the contest. which Mariposa won 26-12. Castro said Maloney was carrying the oall on a line plunge and his head hit the ground hard on the play. • GREEN BAY. Wis. -Frank Howard . homer-hitting outfielder with t h e \Vashington Senators. was reported in "very good'' condition today after un· dergoing an appendectomy at St. Vincent Hospital. Howard. 34. of nearby De Pere. wa!I taken to the hospilal early Monday for "'hat was d"escribed as an emergency operation. Officials sa id late Monday he had been removed from the intensive care ward and was out or danger. --........ , Edison High's undefeated Chargers •· upped their rankin~ Sill:th. exchanging seats "·i1h seventh rated Rancho Alamitos. 01;,t.,,.GE COUJolTY TOI' U l'lec• TN "' 1'1'11'11 I NewPD•1 IJ.Ol 50 ? ~it• ~ c•n •1 l . Edloon ($.<ol JJ " (Tltl ... lllflm ll-1) ll llluw:llo AtemllCIJ (J.(I) JI I. 511nn,. MHl1 15-41 'l't 1 Mlrln1 1>71 lf J.. Otlf19" !•.0-11 IJ '· S110Cll•blck CS-01 19 10. El Mocltna (J.0) 1 Oll>trt; FO\ltli.ln V•Ut~ 1•n 4. Ett1nc11 (4·11 L Glrdtn Gr""'e !'-11 1. ..... l"l1c1 T .. ,., P1l11l1 t. I I""°" A"'1! (l-fl UO '· El Rl"C,_ (l-0) !St J, P1s1<11!"!11 tS.0) 1)6 4. St. P1wl 11·11 !11 J, Newport M1rbor (l-0) JIM 6. l l1lr ll·ll to I, Mett r Otl (4.1} l2 a. L""~ 8~•c~ wl1oon (l·ll 11 t . Redl~na• 1 1.~I ,.,,.. 10. An•~,Jrn 0 ·71 11 Oll>•rt: Nor!~ Torr•nct U ·O) IC'.'J, A•c1dl1 !J.0) f'l . ll~rbtn~ U·I) I, l"IGMtf !Ml •· 511111 l1rl11•1 14·1l 1. w,u T«ranc~ !•ll ind C1ntennlll !l-D·U 2 ~•t~. M1rln1 ll·~) •nd LI Strl'll U·l) I IKh, Ll~ewood 12·ll 'h. ... '· Ion II• I•· 11 "' '· 110111"' Hlll1 ,,., "' '· Glenoor1 , .. ., "' •. Cabrlllo , .. ., '" '· "'""" Hlll1 IHI .. ' Eot!i.on , ... , " ' R1ncllo At8"'!1os ,,., n •• Or11111• !~·O.U " • Gl rclfM GrGvt (l ·lJ ~ " Lt1~n 1•11 " .. '-Ttm0i. CllY , ... , , .. '· Muriollp , ... , '" '· (Mltl! 15-41 '" .. Seddl•blcll , .. ., '" •• Htrntl !J..0) " '· 81rstow (f.11 tl'"41 '· Et S""'*' (Hl n •• Indio 11-01 • • •• Nell i'-11 " "· Notllfl l •·I) "~ . , .. ~~· ' • NEW YORK -With forward Elgin Baylor out of the lineu.p for at least two wetks. the Los Angeles Lakers prepare to ta ke their aeason-openlng road show , JC Football Players of Week Vikes Win Ag ain Marina continued its relenUess march towards its first sunset League cross country cro\\'n Friday as coach Jack Rowan's Vikings recorded a I&-~ runaway over the visitlng Anaheim Colonists. The Vikings swept the first seven posi- tions with Dave Lockman (10:13), Bob Phillip& (18:19). Bob Brickner (10:26), Ken Martyn (10 :38), Preston Campbell (10;50). Jay Rogers fl 0:52) al)d Gary Blume (10:54) crossing the finish line in that order. Marina also won the junior varsity and fro!!h·soph racts by idt:nlicnl li-_50 scores vdU1 John Neilson and Doug Tallman the \op Vikings In each or the llghtwotght divisions. ROCKY FLETCHER S.ddloback CAVE GLEASON Or•n9t Co•st ST EVE GR.,FITH ' Golden Watt I " '. ' .r'"' l LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Prep A~~s ~~ Week . ' Samuels Sets -Pace , ' ••• 1711 MOTIC• TO CltliOtTOIS ,,.,. . Cl!llTl,ICAT• Oi< llKtN•SI ,ICflflOIJS NAMI! "TM unc11<1l9Md don terllf¥ I.hi 11 c- SV"••ipa cov•T 01' THE (IU'CI ..... IMnllllU ., "' s. AlcllilOtlo STAT• DI' e1o1.1,0•IO• 'O" .1.Nlhtlm, Clll!ornlt , wncllr thl llclUloU:I ::· ' •. : :: ' , .. '. JOHN MILES Coron11 del M•r LEE FRIEDERSDORF Estancia MIKE SWEENEY Laguna Beach 808 DULICH Mission Viejo PAT KALAMA Costa MMa ·808 McKENZIE Fount11in V11lley RON FAIRFAX Marina GRANT GELKER Newport Harbor KEN FUNKE EdllOn STEVE PICKFORD Huntington Beach MIKE PAINO Mater Oei 808 McNAMARA San Cl•m•nl• Corona de\ Mar Hlgh's Keith Samuels C<lntinues to dominate the passing statistics of the Orange Coast area prep foot- ball teams-as compiled by lhe DAILY PILOT. S&muels has ~mpleted $4 of 112 passes for 191 yard! -330 yards more than his closest rival, Edison's Jerry Hinojosa. C•rtM Ml Mlf' 11"41 Mll•I ,, ..... --...... 1( ..... 1 ... 1 TNtf 5111111•!' '~ 1t11Nll"'1 let 1111 49 , .. " >D ' n . " ' " ' " " . • "•1tln1 .. ,, jtl • SNnuel1 111 Sol 1 J~ 1 •• .,,, lh '·' ~ ~_, n ''·' 0 ,.. . '·' . u • 0.1 ' 1.0 0 ... ,d .,. .•n .. •q 17 ., " ~ ' . ' . ........ •.a. "' " ... ... • • • • • N K.. fl .fft HI Whl'9 " 1• J llJ ... Q!Fllf Ktrlml: Sclwtlftr t. 5wldl 6. AtnlH '· 1111 CIMMMt l.N) C•lll'llVO Marti' ....... McN•m•rt JIN'IK Urlbl "'« M_, .... .... llullllftl '" " " .. " " • ' • ' ' .. 1Hlrit ... "' "' " .. • " " • ' ., IWI 111'1 H o •.J 11 2.t 12 ,.0 ' •.f I 5.) 12 J.O I t.• 0 u • ·).l 0 •• "' ,1 .... .ct GlblOn 7' lJ 1 175 .«IS O!h•r 1corlM: ArtderlOll f, Ali•~lt 6, D•r 1. Tt•m 1. " " THI cetnfT''r"OP Ott.I.NOi nrm n1m1 ot .1..1.e . UPHOt:STl!lt't' ..,, Wi lli.er lol~!I ....... cr..n\p11n "- " • ' ,, ... 11 lt.• •• ... " " \ '"-M7* 11111 "'II nr'" It c_...i OI the lolJow. O Ell•lt of ALFlllEO P. FISCHER, •tk• 111!11 p1rto<1, wlllln ntme In 1\111 AMI ,11u 0 Alf" .. eD FJSCHEll, 11'.1 AL FISCHE"· of rltldfnC• 11 ., !OllOWI' ' -r 0 .... tt• .... '·"AL" FISCHER, Oec111f'd. Et•ll'll w. lloltllo. i1s11 "-I'" W•Y· NO"TIC!" IS HEREB't' GIVEN lo th• Glfllt'll Gr01<i. C1llt. 0 cttcllton ot tllt 1bclvt 111m1<1 l!Kedtnl Di!od Dc.lobtr ~· lf111 1111-.1 ..... ... ,... ' • • • ' • ·-.,. ,c •' W111ler $1 11 1 (Ill I 0 0 Otlltr ~orlM' •lcldll ,, ,, J1r1n1n 2, 0111 I, WHl'"J"'"" (0.JI llllllhl"' WlnklH ,,_ Miine """ Ha")' ·-· Holllllll or11fu1 Or•ublu9h M-y~~ ... "'' n ,., •1 105 " " U M • • ' " 10 11 ' ' ' • • ., • ' ... ,,,. .... D !Nit I ll --""Vine cltl'"I 111ln$1 "" E1•11'11 w. 8011110 O Miii -..,.1 oNI t-lrtcl_lo 1111 IMft1, STATE OF CALIFORNIA. I wllll ""'*""'"' vouc:hef"1, In IM ofll<t ORANGE COUNf't': of tfll dirt tf thl abctvt t ftllllt4 cou•I, Ot Oft Octatltr S. lt'°' belOtt ,,.., t .,..,..., ... t 19 ,,_, them. wllll lllt l'IKllHtv "UOJlc: Ill lln4 hlr .. kl 51"'' per..,..lh M llOUClltr .. to ,,,. lll!Cle"ltned II I ... ofllct ·•-rl'd Eltll'll w &ott!lo kr.o .... lo ,.,. 271 ,jQO ., ..... •tlornty, OAVIO s. TINGLER, 1501 lo bt 1111 ~•rs"" whose Mft'W II •Ubl<rlb- 0 .000 Wt•ICllH Ofl'ff, $Ullt :no_. NtwPOrl I t.cl!. od 10 in~ wllhln 1ni1rvm•nl t fl.G P1lf1r10n C•lllor11I• n6t0, Wiiie.ii I• lh• Pl•ct 01 ••k...,w19d,td 1h11~ecult01111111m1. bus!""' ot '""' undt"l''*' I" •II matttri co111c111 Se•ll Mrl•lnl"' to Ille ui.te ct "Id dt.:tdent. Mlrv K Henrv wtllllft folJr imnlhl •!Mr th• llrll 1111bllca• Nola..., ·Publk -C11ttoml11 !IOtl ol lllt1 110llc1. PrlnctP•I Ollice tn I YI pll 0.t.11 ()(loller t, lf111 O•IMt (OUftlv •.• ;,o RoMllt FIKM• MlklllOll My ((ltNl'IU!on E•Plr11 2.S O E•Kt.ilrl• Of lhl Wll1 ol Nov. ,,, \f72 1A • DAVID S . .;:-:G•~ nimed llKl'lltftl Publl~ Orlll!llt CN$1 O•llY '11111, l .G • Utl W•skUN Dr .• s111i. ):HI Def. •• n, ?II. 21, lt lO 11U1·1t S.3 2 N--1 .. •ell. c.nr. '2611 LEGAL NOTICE 21.0 0 T•I: M6..S'1 1,1 ' AlftllllJ Ill' ElKulrlJ "-lllH 1.• C Pubrl1htd Or1nge Cotti D1ily P llG!, ClllTIFJCATI! 01' CORPOllATION f'O-::: i: ?.~lobe· 13, n. l1 and Novtm~-t-~ '"ANSAc::g~iT~~~v~::~s IJNDllt ·1.6 o 1--------------1 "Tht u-r1l1M<I CorPOttllon dof'I Oll1•r KDrltlt: IClll•i.r JI), ltlllllltlt Cnta llMu n .. o . -ltl«• '· VllMnll'f n-u ...... 111, .. " M ~ .... ' "" . " ~· ... LEGAL NOTICE .... rel)y c._tlllw th•I II II o;-IJ(liltfl I Rt•I E1t1tt bU1IMU •I 26111 (1mh10 ell E•lrtlll , C1pl$lr•no llNdt, C11Uornl1 ltnlill"'I ld1 ..,, ••• ••• slt!m- 1•' llYI 11'1 l h ~ ~ ~:• !~ 2: y_, u-r Ille 11d1Uovt llrm illrne ol IAJl 1141 CHARLES DAVISSON REALTY tnd 11111 NOTICI TO Cltl!DITOJlS w lcl firm 11 cornpa1ecf ol' Tile follPWIM " . ... Wol!t -~· HunttrlOf~ sc"'"llltr 8ombo'f P•ul Arltluf' llktr kubnkl K1l•m• '',' "n' ,"', ,•, Hlrl'llV " 11' ,,7 ' <>""'" KIM"lnt.: Aldrld.'t :I. f! ;:: :J ;oiiiiiiiii••••iiii•iiii•iiii•iiii••;;;;;;.;;;ii;;.;;;;;;;;;;;iiiim••;;I • • " • j !! ! Pilot Pigskin SUPElllO" COUllT 0, THI! cor1>0r1llon, wnoH prlnr;Jp,11 pl•ct d STATE GI' CALIFO .. N1A 1'0111 DullMSI fl 11 lollowt:. THE COUNT'!" Of' 0"ANGE Name ol Corporttlon: Ch1rles O•vlHOI\ N .. A-41'» Con1trucl!on, Inc. E•"'' ol LORET"TA V I V I A N Prlnclo>ll Pl•ct ct 8u•IMll: 71tl! " ' ' ' t ·HI -I.I 0 ·~· Oarl'llll Dir""!! Arfhur ,.,,. .... :~ .. :7 .::· .. : Pi~~'M~IOO 73 Ill I 171 .d.J ,., ,, 3 1111 .llJI 13 I -,....-71 ~I Woll Otrltr , l , , .Ju l scorl""' "'''rdn U. l<tll~ 1idlvt1 IWI R111.,Jn1 1<1 nwt 1v1 11111 Mo•*•' HlnolDS• T. Mo;N•Y F11111tt .... B•ICll k l111'1!f' Sm!th 5. MCMtV ,,_ 70 '"' 3.1 11 Jl 711 '·' :JO I 101 11.1 1, ll 611 '·' 11 •105.00 lll•.020 I f t .O O 1 • 1.1 0 1 J J.O G ·11 ·l .O 0 f'•Hll'!f .. "' ,. HlrelOll 61 3:1 J ... ., ~· ·"' . llS H1rmon • l I " " MeNtv 1 1 e .... Othtr scorl,,.: F!1htr 11. Schul!t DI~"" "Tllomll IC•1'1r "Ttrrln Moor• RPl>trTIOn ·-· PYlt Conk1Yn ,~ .... w ....... JaYc• 51out .. , l!1l•ncl1 (4-11 let ~YI " "' 30 , .. ~' 1,1 1l '' • ' " ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' P11tl11f • M " " " " • ' • ' ., ... ••• ... "' •• ••• '" u •• ,.. 10.0 "' "' ... u -1 .0 I •• " • ,., " ' • • ' • • ' • • • • •• "' jtl , .. , "'' "Tllom11 '3 2t 3 SID .460 -· $711'.«llt l.011.t0on l o o a .ooo 01111r tcOf'll'lt: Frll'dtrs.Oorf n, Brawn 6, Ctr11,,,t•r !, TNm 1. '"""'"" v.11.., 1>-21 McKenrlt H•r11lle!ll SepUIVtdl s. Mohuli.1<1 Sl>!tlll• "ow1r M. Mohul1tl Sc111,1 Anderton 1<t111lntr V•rntY R111h!n1 !Cl nJt l~I •II Jf '60 '·' 1 •S 1t1 4.l ll ns •.1 " " " ' ' ' ' ' '•Hlnt '" M • " " " • • " '' '·' 11.6 " ,, •• •• " " " • • • • • • • ,. ~ el yd1 ,t i Power 1.l 11 1 lll .•II Shlbl!t :U lS l lll .•41 01htr tcorlnst: Htrfttndtl 11, MuUn1 11. Klckl 7. H11flliN1ton INdl (1-1) WI" Pick lord Dllvt1 (l1rtlll Nlt1-ow•kl RUii wi.;r1111d M•rlln R111111111 '" " " " ' ' ' ' " "" ... ·~ .. ' ' ' ... 111111 .. " " ., .. " ' . ' ·~· ti• '·' .1' '·' 0 l.6 0 1.0 12 1.1 0 7.J 0 " . .,,, ... , .. " '1 '" .,, ·"' 1c11rin9: Whitt '· Lltun• BHCh lt·ll llu1hl111 I<~ llYI I VI fll SI 11• J,I ' Co • Sjionsored by Voit And The DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT s10 10 In Cosh For Each Week's First Place Winner Voit Footballs each week ·- Be• pigskin prophet. Play the DAILY PILOT P ickeroo gem• for we1kly priz1s. Winn1r each weak r1ceives $1 0 cash end e Voi t Collegiate football I suggested retail pric1, $9.95). Nine runner-up Pick1roo pick1rs also each get e Voit Coll19iate football. Watch for ihis player's form e1ch week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section. C ircle the teams you th ink will win in the list of 20 t1ams and send in the pley1r's form or Teasonabler facs imile . Then watch the DAILY PILOT sports pe9es for each week's lis t of I 0 winn1rs. RULES I. Submit ln•1 entry blln" or 1 rtlSPNIDlt r~c1lm!l9 to ""'IU tne cOfltHI. 2. Senll ID: PILD"T PIGSKIN PICKE"OO CONTEST. Sp0r11 0.111rtmtn!, P. 0. llOX IS60, Cinta M111. Cl. 1262'. ~. Ont~ one enrry per poer~ ••~ -· 4. Enlrlrs mv1I be lleliverod !by mtll D• In ptrt""1) lo CAIL Y PILOT oflicl br s p.m. 1hu•5d•Y. i. AMF Voll Ind OAILY PILOT tmplCYtl Ind lht)r lmmedll!t l1male1 no! 1ll9lble to en11r. '· TIE 8REAkER must be filled In ar tMry 11 ¥Oid • I. In ca•e ot Ut hi• !!•JI plac1, cluplkl lt mercnan<1lse prl1H wm IHI 1w1rlled tnd wl""'" will equell,. .lhlrt In lhl SIO ctsn 11rlt1. I. Wl11n1r1 who pl~c• In !ht hip 10 mart than o>nce l!url~ lh• co"!oit h~vt !ht Ollllon, •ll'r rht I/rot win, ol •-chl"'l[il!ll th• volt tootbell for 1noth•r GUl ll!y VOit product ot equly llent Y•Tut. JACOll.SON, 1k• L 0 Ill ET l A V. camlno Of E1trtllt , Ct1>l1tr1110 l e1ch. JACOB.SON, t k1 LORET"TA, V. COL· Ct!lloml•. • , GROVE, Ind as LORE"TTA, V, COL· WITNESS 111 h•nd 11111 11th div fl GROVE JACOllSON, Oeccaltd. Autusl, HIO NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo TIM! N.O.ME OF CORPORA"TION: CNrlr• crl'dllon of lllt •bc'le narntd ~eden! O•vluon Contlruc:llCNl. Inc • that all --Nvlnt d1lm1 •etlntl llM! Charles O•vl110n, ltkl llec:tde"I Ire required la Ille IM•r" PrHlcltnl wll~ !hi M<HMrY Vouchlrt, In t~e ortlce Ellen C. O•vluon, Pf the dtt,_ ol IM 1bove t nlllled cour!. or ~re1arv hi Pre.uni lhfln, with lh1 neo;eu1rw STATE OF CALIFORNIA ' l vout lle'rt, lo !ht und~rs19nN1 111 CfO COUNTY OF ORANGE I 11. PLUNKEn & PLUNKETT, Allornevt ti On !hit 17th ll•Y ol --~9utl, 1970, blilO•• L•w, ~U Olive Avtn!Ji!, Pool Otllct &Cl• mc, 1 Nall•Y Public ln •ncl !or 111ld Coun- "'· HunrlMIOll 8t1ch. C11!1!orn!1 '16-11, IV ind srt1e. re1ldlM thertln, oulr com· Wll!th II the tl1te of blnlntu ot lhe m!11lontd incl 1wor11, perlQNlltV IPNtrtd vl'lcltral•ned In •II m11ler1 11trl•!nl"' to C"-r1H O.vlnon 11111 Elltn C. OIYlllOft !ht tll•I• of 111d dtcedenl. wltMn lour k-10 me 10 bl !hi Pre1kltnl •nd monlh1 lfltr lhl ftrtt publktllon ol' lhi1 secrettrv ar !hi c:orPOrallon 11>111 ••tcvtl'd nolkt. the within ln1!rumtnl "" bdl:ltf of lfil 01lfll SHI. 2S, U70 corPOrlllon rnereln nuned. • 11 d HOLLIS e . CA"R I nd •ckncwledlled to me lh•l 11.1Ch corPOrltlon JAMES 0 . PLUHKElT execultd !he itm1. • Cg.f:aecv10r1 Of the Wiii of WITNESS my htncl i nd ornc111 1e11. ll•e •bove n1med llccfllent (SEAL ) ~ "LUNk•TT & "l.UNICETT VlllGINIA 0 . WINEINGER 41! Olln A-Noll•Y Public • Ctlllo•nl1 "''' Offlet ltx Ht Prlndpt l Offlct In H11nlll!lllll ltldl, C1lll. ,,.... Or•11111e Counlv "Ttt.: "6-111• .,. Uf.tf1t M• Cornml11lon Explrn Atttnev1 llr C•E•K11l9n June 11. 1tt• Publ!thftl Or1"9e Ca.ii O•lly PilOI Publl"*' Or1""'c Co11! 01ily ,,llol . 5tPI. ,,, Oct. " lJ, '°· n1a 11111-11) Od. ,, u. :xi. 11, 1'10 l&M-70 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE NO"TICE INVITING llOS . NOTICE 1$ HERE8'1" GIVEN tn11 the OCEAN VIEW SC HOOL OISlRICT cl Orl"'llt Coun1y, C1lltornl1, 1ctin9 by 1nd !hr009~ it• Govtrnlft!I 80.r!l, herein•Uer refer· red lo 11 the Ol1trlct, w!ll receive ...., TO blot ""t 1•1er lhtn l :OO e.m. ot Ille Jrd lllY DI N...,ember 191G 1t1lod bid• for !ht 1w1rd of • <""l•ect for uin1t•uc1lon OI I """ tltmenl•,.., KhOOt k>c.lled in lh• 0111ricl . Such bklJ illlll Ill received '" rnt Aclmlnislran ... Otflc• o4 !ht Olt!rict 11 1'1'1 W1rner Avtn11t, Huntlnv!on lltach, Cetiforni1, Incl illllll be -Md encl 1>ublld1 rllll •loud 11 lht tbove 111rr<1 llmt and PllCf . In •-•ti, lhl1 prolttl com11ri1t1 thl' tanstructlon of ~ ont•tto...,. klndel'll••11n lhroueh 61h 1ritde Precall conc:rere and wood lr1me t ltmfnTtrv school «>nl•lnlnq IP1>•o~lm1t1lv :U,~ 1<1u•re IHI ol l~r aret. The wor~ •~•II be ccrnPl•!t In 111 •flll'Kls, Including utlltll11 tnd 1111>ur1tna..r oroun<I lmProvemtnlt • All bldt 1htl1 be mitde on• bid form lurnlsl>rd bv !lw! OlslrlCI, Etch bid mull c:onhlrm 1n11 bl rHP<>nlive 10 !he contrtcl llocumen!1, C<>lt~I o' Wlllch lrt now on 1111 In Int ollice of Anlllony lnll Llft!llcr!l/Archlttc~ 11C! E111 Wll!ttltr l lvd., Whltlltr. C11itorn!1, tnd mav be obll lned bv <18'0Jltl"9 Flf1 Y Doll•'1 UJOI for 1..:11 set lhl1 dfPOSll wj!I be •••vn-If rne 11otument1 ''" •• Twnld 111 tOOd c.,,.,ltlon wl!hln ,.., dtYJ •l11r ~ bid opening. "Tiit Oltrrlct rtHrvH tht •Ith! lo rrittl 1n1 or •It bid• or to W•IYt 1nr lrrpgu- l•rllft1 or l11lormtllllH '" •nv bids or In 11>e bld<!llllll. Prettrcnce win be mllle lft "'' •w1rd !or C1Hlornl1-m11M IVPPllt,, PU'5Ulnt ta Stcllo111 •JlO 10 •lJ.I, lnclu-slYt, Government Corle. "Tiit Olllr!d r..1 cltttrmlntd lh• 1tner1I 11rtval!ing •llt 01 111'•-l'laur w111111 !n !ht ~•lfly In Which "''' "'°'" 11 !o I:>-~erfnrl'l'\f>CI ror •oth t • •t1 pr IYP• 111 wor~m~~ Pleftltd lo t~tcvte lt>t c:ont,•ct, which wrn be eward!'d 10 the aucctnlul bidder, 10 bl II IOlloWI: CrlH, Clt1llflr:1lkll> •r Tw•1 AP""l!"ft"TICES1 M•Y be emolared In t ontormitr with seen..., 1111.5 ol tilt C•llhl•,,I• L1bor cooe 1CA""ENTE .. S: ' F11rem1n : Nat 1111 th.In 60c Hr hour more lt>1n JourntV'"tn Clrllf'hll• T•bl1 Pawcr S•w Opert!or Pl'llum•Hc Ntiltr or PoWf'r Sl•Plt• CAR,,E"T, LINOl.l!UM & SOl'T "TILE L.A't'E"S CEMENT MASONS: Fortm1n; Not lc11 lh1n 40c 01 r tiour more thin Journeym1" Cem'"' Mt$0ft Journtvm1n c....,.nl FIOor F lnl1~1.,, MIChl"I Doer.ior Curb Form & Pl•n~ Se11tr, lncludlnt itltln1 of Une1. 1IMH. tr.o'H Sc:r'ftd S.rter, inclucllnt ICrl'fd P•lll El.ECTll lCIAHSt V Fortm•n Journewman Wiremen Journ1vman Technician C•btc 5pllc1r GLAttEll: lllON WORkE"S: Forem•n: Not leH than •Sc per hour more thin JourntYm1n Relnlorclng l•onwo•-r• Sll'V(lvr1I Ironworker O•,,.mtnl1I ltonworlr.1r F"l!'n<e Ertctor LA80"1Ell5: A•Pnt tl Raker & '"'"'' L•borcr -Gtnertl or Canl!rutll°" Oo>tr•tor & Tender cf Pntumttlc & E!Ktrlc TOOi•. Vibrating M1chlnt• & Slmll•r M«h1nlct1 Tool• not HP••l!elv ct111ltlo(l herel" Hourtv W191 "''' "" .... .,, 5.7t '" 6.tJ 6.9S "' S.11 6.11 •.•a •• 6,11 .. Whipple, Buckland Leacl f Area JC Football Stats 011mtr Wit1bow•U SwttntY An<lrtwl kH1lor "T1b0• F!Hllt •S lSO l.l 11 l7 'l 1' 0 IJ 11 ].3 001 s :Ill 1.0 i ' l l 0 •S ·S1 -I.I 0 ...... 1"' I t • pc ti 'l'dt •<I 13 :!O s 260 .lll 1000 .000 FiHITe T•bOr Other 1corJng: K•ltlvlent 1, JohnMln , ................... . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ENTRY BLANK Clrcle '""" yo1 thh1t will wi• this wwt'1 ,._. lho .... tn111 19 MC•lld •H lbtHI -• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • LtY lflt of Non-Mel•lllc Plo>e. l11o;ludlft!I uwer pipe & drtln pipe Mtkll'l!r & C1ulltl"9 of All Na ... Mtlllllc PlOf Jalnll T•rm•n & M1>r!1rm.n Wetthm•" Window Cltl1>tr 0,,E .. ATING EHOINEE"5: Forrm1n: Nor IHI than SOc per !>Our ,,.ore tha" nlghea1 PllO cl111lflcatlon unllrr hll lllr•ttlcn ClrPUP I; Air ComprtlMlr, Pumo or Gtnt••lor OPPf•!Or GrOYP 2: Concrelf Mixer Oo>trator, SklP Tvo>e Skl1>lo1ll", W~ffl IYot, ·~ Ytrcl or ltn • 755 •.u.~ "" • 591 J.HI 1.Sfl . " ' • I i • ! Toby \Vhippl e and Charlie Buckland are f\\·o of lhe belter running backs in junior college football and their statistics after four games prO\'C H. Sadd leback's \Vhipp\e holds 11 90 yard adva ntage ·over Golden \Vest's Buckland, ac- cording to a rea JC stats con1· piled by the DAILY PILOT. \\'hippie has rushed for 653 yards in 13.1 carries for a 4.9 average . Buckland hns totaled 563 yards in 110 carries, a 5.1 clip. Buckland has lhe scoring lead with 42 points \1•hile \\'hippie trails with 36. Golden \\'est's Steve Griffith and Gary Valbucna of Orange Coast are v.·aging a tight duel for the passing leadership. Griffith has connrcted 3.". tinu~s in 80 attempts for 3i8 yards and l\\"O touchdowns . Valbuena has hit on 40 of 99 for 374 and four TOs. Sad- dleback's Chris H ector Is not far ·behind "'ilh 25 completions In 57 lries for 347 yards and fi ve touchdown s. Top receiver is Orange Coast's Doug Young "'ith 14 catches for 200 yards and three toochdowns. Teammate Tom Malone h.qs caught 12 for 138 ya rds. He is followed bv Saddleback 's Rick Da v 1 JI).. ~ 226) and Rick Geddes 19-1431 ) and Golden \Vest's K u r I l Dedrick 19-106). hit!~( .... ) ltfSlll.,. ft.. '' ,1 13) tto , Whl""1t --> WlllOtt .... 11 . Fi.Idler ...... J "'"'"' w ... ...... ~ ._,..,. l I """" ....... ,, 111 '"' lt ,. 0 10 n o lf Mt 0 , t I 0 ' . . ' ' . • • 10 I) 11 •J '.w"' ... H•l 'ft j7"" " ' ,,, IS I i in lttftl'lln• ~ti 14 '" . 1'1 ' " . ... ~ . • • • ' . • • ... . N "'· ..... ' .SJl ... ~C Ylh Iii 1a m J • Gedelr!' • HJ , Wl\IPP!r 1 11 i "40YI S SI 0 J. F ~lo;her 1 U t St0tln9-Whl1>Ple 3' It ld1 ), O•w II 13 !<Ill, llol,.,.OC-110 1>••1, i 19 ), Hector (l tll•I, GfOcle• Ci ldl!. Goldf" We•I ll·ll R111M"t !ell '' YI "er IC 110511f 6 S6JI Sil Jl} 1 llJ I tJ 11 J I~ 0 HIU 0 1t0 ' l 0 J 0 " V1n!l'"l•1l• Mo111n.n MtHl!I Hlr111 C•mPDlll M1rln1 U·U llutlllnt lcb nYI o!O ,,, 6S l lJ •I Ul • ' P•H inl " ·• ... 10.• .. ' ' ., .. 0 II PC •I Yd• Mon•h1n 51 ii 5 .SJl Olher ICP•I"•' l Q,ner !I . Will Mllfl' OtC 14-11 "' » " " •1 • I ... ,41, .,, I •YI •II •.1 Ii Buffalo vs New York Jets Rams vs Minnesata Stanford vs UCLA Group J: Statlonat\f P ipe Wrto>Pl/111 & Clt•nl"t M•chlne Doer11or Gr-•: Trcnchl"I Mtchlnf Doert!or (up IP 60 """' Oeolh) Gr01.11> l : MM111n!c1I Flnlthlnt ()per•lor. Trac!Or Doer- •lo>r -llrat lvl>t ll'lowl, bulkkl>tr, limper, Kr•per & l>Ulh lrlCIOr Grouo> " .l.JPl!tll or Concre!r Sa"t<!lft!I , Tt•tlar Oper1/or wlth -.n 1tt1chnwnh, trencMng M1clllne O....r11ar (o~er I-foot 11cp1~1 Clr1111<> 1: Motor P•!roj -Bltde O..tr1!or !1ln91t 1119lne! LATH EllS: Mt!•I Fvrrlft!I f'orem•n Mf1•1 Furring Lalher N1ll·On f'o>rtmtn Nlll·Oft L1t~er .. AINTEllS: U·Hff• 0•YI: 6.i1 ••• •. u "' . " "' 1,17 ,,,, 7.1lS 6.7JS Buc~l•no:I C:ornu-e F-,s:;flt>tc~ D<lw1un9 Ocn61doon s ....... n Gri!l!•n 3; ,l 1J -1! : DEAN CUNNINGHAM Sl...,.,cn H•UM rl "' Y.'oll-ltwl<t Jl111lllftl "' " ~ " " "" '" '" ,. '·' •1 l . :• USC vs Oregon Alabama vs Houston Minnesata vs Michigan Colorado vs Missauri Florida vs Tennessee St. Paul vs Mater Dei F"orem1n: Nol le» llll n I J.00 per dlY lildl!lont l lrv1h $Pr•v Gun or S1n<lbl•1!er Piper H•11t11trJ J011rnt Ym1n Sl9n P1lnt1r i.7! ··~ u ,,.,.1"' W•stminst•r Pl •c t i Jdl IC •<!. --------------fiQ ls • J71 1 .•JI '" 0 6.1 ,, "•ctlYln1 ., Jdl Id DNrlck 9 106 I Stwufihl'fSIY 1 .. 1 Hellon • IJ o ~tilt l •I D CornJ1<1 S Jl O DU9<'n ,J 2t O Goell n 1 t D 8ucki..n<1 • o eo..n•n• J o Scorl,,1-l •JCkllnd ., tJ !<IS), Cor- nukt li U t<I•), Otdrlc~ • {Id), G•ltllth • (1 !di, $~1ug~neuw 6 11 Id), Gfnllle • ti P•'· 1·1 P!. Piii. Ktnss l (l Pt11), Oownrno i (1-1 Pl. NI), Ol'•lltt C .. 11 fl·J) Millin E""illelnier Mtw...,. Vfn!lml91I• H1Ync1 e1rnen V~!O..fnl '""" ·- "1111Mn1 lcl YI '1 It 11' t JI 111 H 'll ll 0 It 67 11 1; i: ~ 21 " '' ' . ' ,, 11 12 "''''"' ••KtlJ<ll ft«l lll1l l !)(ltHJ lltl I~ '" ' 11• • "' d • " ' " . • • ... ... IC HI. • .C• I .Jll "~'"'' ,, ,,, " Vaunt 1' ~ J Mt lotle 11 1 ll 0 Btrntll 6 60 1 Ventlmllll• ' 10 a Mtvtr .,.1 H•rl • 11 0 El>Hlflo!l...,.r l 11 0 Cllh'llft!M1 l ll N....titrrr 1 71 0 Stfflt 1 ;M t _,,1.. , t 0 S!Utlbln• I I I Hl'l',.,..I 1 ' t (cr#111 l 1 0 scor1,,,_.,._, 1• r• tchl, R>'O<-• 110 NI•, 1 It). M~•t• n (1 l<'lll, l•llortlr.w ' II 'tl, ~llltt t ti Id), HtV/JtJ ' ti tdl. Prep Results I ll: 'OOTl 41.I. Tvtlln o • '' ._,, Mlt,10!! \1'1t lt It 6 6 ' '-"' Minion 11r,1~ «011119 -G•ttl'lt n. i'o ri.ri<11 I), llotCll.t.r l, C.ld'Alt •• l'Af-Wllll.•nnn 1 .. 111 Mtr!lnd•I• O. N1nr1 c1cu11n ' ' ' ,IUlftl 0.0 0 ·• ·i.O o .,, -1.J 0 13 Wi1mers In Pickeroo '' "' ,1 y41 1cl HIYPl'r! ti 15 • 3'1 .]T.l Clou\ll' I' 6 1 tJ .]IJ O. N1nr¥ S I 0 • .100 Othlr 1cor!M : Sh,lllOn I. J . N•nrv f, Pt\flO 1. Mltllefl Vltit (1·0 Thirteen entrants managed ""111111 lo garner prizes in the fifth Ha\mn '!: ::;• week or competiti on in t he JonH lJ ''' DA ILY PlLOT"s Pigskin Pick-~~1= ~: !~ eroo. D•vh • ,, Six of the I.op 13 had 19 of Anumill• ,.,u1 1n1 ' 20 correct y,·inners picked but •• •t •• Costa 1'.1esa·s R.l\1 . Vernon g~~f1" i~ ~~ : ... •• ... ... ••• "' ... ... " ' " • • 'I r•• •ttl ill .500 l1 .m Gt1v1n ,, Copped !Op honor s, being Only Olh1r Korln1: I-6.. 8rtNltn J. 14 points off the correc'-total """"" H••"• 1M1 of 765. "••hint td1 nw1 t WI pt1 The others y,·ho picked 19 Ett11r11n1 1J 265 •.t ' properly and their distances s ;mon1 H '" s., • Whllt $6 1•1 3.1 ll on the correct total of points,"ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. 1 '1 are Craig Johnson 124 ), Paulll Seidel (35), Chris Freed and Neil Anderson t!W apiece) and Mike Stewart (367). All of,the above reside In Costa Mesa. 12 .. s•/o YIELD FIRST MORTGAGES Thirty-six entrants guesaed 18 correct answers but Costa \VHEN PAID TO ~1ATURITY Mesa 's Dennis Ciolli managed r;. S YEARS outright J)OSsession of sixth DISCOUNTED tr;. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Orange Coast vs Santa Ana Newport vs Loara Costa Mesa vs Fountain Valley Los Alamitos vs Edison Golden West ¥S Rio Hondo Southwestern vs Saddleback Anaheim vs Marina Brea vs Laguna Beach Tustin vs San Clemente Westminster vs Huntington SA Valley vs Estancia • Tlf '"EAK!Jl -MY wtn ... "'' • tol1I IW"llllr 01 p0lri11 •C'Oflll In •II • • a ''""' "'"' 1bon 11 ........................................ .. place by matchinR the pOint MINIMUM $3000 total exactly at 765. • • Others picking up Volt Col· hr Ap,.l"'-t, Cen • . ··~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ legiale football• with i8 cot'· INVESTORS PROPERTY • -• rect picks \Vert Chris Brode-•. rick of Weslmi"5tcr Ill. Hunt· MANAGEMENT • ADHns ington Beach's DBn T'rubovitz • • (10). Andy Blanton of Newport 1700 NIWPOIT IL't'D.. • Cln ZIP • l"U.STE"l"ltSt For•m•n Pl11lertr Pl••lfr "Ttndfr "1.UMllHG & l'lnEllS: ForET11n: Nor ltH lhtn llY". tbol't oron Journey. m•n'1 rife Plumber sr111m1111tr Ulfllty "lc>el!ntt J011rn•y<n~n R .. rltt••llon Fl!tor, Uncertllled Refrloer1tlon Fllfer. Ctrlllltd 11100,l!"llS: Fort ma" Jour~1m1n SHEl!T METAL WOll:k£RS: For1m111 Journ1rm1n TILi!: • Fo•l'fTl•n' tn chtrlf' 01 IU1 th111 11 '"1~. !'IOI It !' !h1n 11 JI per d1v; r11 <Nrot ot 11 or mort men. u .oo 1><1r dlY ""'" lllln Tiit $tiler Tiit Stl!tr Tiie kiter H11Mr TlltllAltO• Fon11T11~: In tht....,, Of i or mo~ men, not lfll !h1n II.Ill 1>er d•v1 end In ch•f'9t OI J or more ~n. Sl.00 Hr ll•Y mo~ lh•n ltrr1uo Selftr Ttrr1irt1 Seller l•H M•tl!INI Ooer1110r FIOor M1chlnt1 <>Ptr•TOr & Ht!Pfr TIEAMS"Tl'llS1 Ol'tvtf1 -OUlnll Trucit, leu th1R l Y•rd1 w111r 11_,.I OrlV11'1' -Duma TnKk, lfll lh1n I Ylrcll DrlVltl -Durnt> Trvck •• YU'dt bl.ii lti.1 lh•n u ,.,di • •••• leVll Orlwrw -Tl'V(ll., 11!'9tl P•Ylolril <IP8tlty ltll 1n1n 6 lgf\• Ol"Cvtrt -"Truck, lttl! 11.-,tol<I c•,acllv btl*ftn I & 10 ID"I Orlvert -Trvcll. 1 ... , PIVICltcl t•1>1cllv llllWfffl 10 & "' 6. TO' ,,,95 1.l7 '" "" l,OS ... ll.1J . ... 6.27 .... 6.2, ••• ·~ ••• "' •.'OJ >.M ,. ,,_ w l>tlv•rt -Tr•"tll·M!I Tri.ft"•, vn<ler t v1rc11 5.19 Orlvtrw -Tr•n.11 Ml• "Truck, J w1r<11 or """' s IJ Tiie ••In of ,... diem Wiit• Mir e.u> ol lhe Ylrl01.11 cla11Ulct!lont 01 wor~ thtll be !hi htrtlllbtlor• 1el fol1h 11rtv•Ui,,., r1lt• of hourly wqu mulllPlil'(I bV t lsht Elothl houri wn con1tl!111t • 111v11 -rk. IJ llllnt lllldtr11ogc1 lh•t In the tYl'tlf -t-••• emtlo-.H 1tt1 th•n f!thl hovn per <11v !llt "' llitm ••••• ""'I be llftf!'ltCI rw lie lh.lt tr.ctlon fll' !flt "' lllem .. "11 ,,..,1" n11blltlr«I "'" "" fllJfTlbtr ol f'lovr"I 01 emt1lovmenl bHri hi tlthl llcwr1. 0....Umt 111111 lie Ptld 11 lhe r tle OI ""'"lme "'' the C•lll lnYl)IJod "'' wo.- ... rto•mftl i.. t•C•» of lhl rt111I.,. cl•Y'I W1;1rlt, wee~'I ..OOrk, Ir °" 5tturd•vt, S<md•vt 1nc1 holldtn. II 111•11 tit m•ndl!o,.., "'°" lhl CORlrtclor TO wl!Om 1 c11ntr1cl Ii a"'trlltd, •rilf -111 wbconlrKhlrt vnd•r lllm, to o>•v ""'' 1eu 1~1n 1•1d g1ntre1 ~re.1111,,. ••It• ti 111r !!ll'fll w.,11 lo 1!1 Mlr~m~ •melCft<l I" lht ••l'Cullan OI !lie con1r1~ Col!KllV9 tll1'9•1n<fl' 19•et'l'l'K'tt •aol!«blo lo '"' ol Ille Pltll<ultr trltki r-. i.llot 19 heltlll •ncl ,.../ltll, M1blli1t..n, 1tl n•P011.ilon llncl tr•'ltl lime, tll111 b9 *"tlulltd 111 lftl1 bill. Thi (ontr1c1or tll•ll kltll h!fnH!I '"lorl"lfd ti ie lft• <,,.,..., Ill ll'le 1bovt ••tt r1tei, M1Jlll lfld wtllart. S~blhlttrct, lrll<llPorl•tll)A •N trl'ftf •lit• ..., tllllt lncl\llk 1n' Int.rt•,.• In 111t D'd . ND b!Htt -y WllMrlW hit Diii tor I Mriocl OI IOf,.,.!IW 01,1 llftr lilt dl lt Beach. C.P' \Yilliam~ of Costll NIWPORT II.A.CH • • ~fesa and 1-flke Sprague of CALl~INIA tzuo • oEoRGE c. LOGAN Costa ~fe~. all only 15 off the PHONI 7141 171·1JIJ • PHONI Sii___ ~~zll 0~1~': =~lliftt 80tt11 H1 flOt 1111 Ol>ltlllll ol blei . correct totAI , and \Vrslmin· BRO''"RS •" •••••••••••••••••••• •_ OlllrlCI. O••noe (-ly, C•ll~l'1!!1 1'.r.. 'ulllllhtd Orll'ltt COll'I 0411'1 1'!101, OCtobl!r U, :ti, 1t'9 117, .• ster's George Broderick (211 ,.., ___ ..;. ____ _.,,,, ___________________ _,1---:::----------------=='" I ,, ' ' I l l ' / ·--~-... --~-;--·----~. Tut!day, Octobtr 20, 1Cl70 DAILY PILOT J 9 Lagana Youth Shines 'Mame' Top -Notch Musical for CtO . --~ -J:JD U HEE ijAW HAPPIEST * FUNNIEST TV SHOW IJ Ill (IJ "" ... (C) (60) ~-=~~~ c..ur. ~-fflftthl, flTIJ' Jn i i:4f' D laUn '•1•6111 (t) Tht Ll\ers ltke on th• ltBA Clllmp\Qn New YOik KnlcllerbocllerJ at Madison Squire G1rden. 5:0011 lic ... (t) (60) ""1 Dunphy. DUCK ll••rkt (C) (60) D 11 BYE, BYE, BIRDIE"-* Part I ANN-MARGRET, DICK VAN DYKE-4:olor D Sic O'Clocl ,..... (C) -.,., IPe. l lrdie'" Ptrt I (mlllicll) '6.1- Didl Vtn o,M. Jantl: Llilh. An11- M1rirtt, M1111een Stapleton, Ptul LJfldt, Bobby Rydell, Ed SU!li¥tn. A rock 'n' JOll tinier b about lo bl dl'lfted, 10 his a:ina:·trrittr man· trer starts a publil;lty pier. &\I ... -(C) (30) m"' -ICl llO> ID ff TU. 1 1\W (C) (60) ll1l m..., '"' (C) 160> ll!)-i.dp(C)(30) !i!ICIJ CIS -(C) (30) Ul)o.trudl/Mlllitllt (C) (30) ID""""'° 34 IC> 1601 l'B IMndl 11 U. Sall (C) (30) fiI:) T..U. M lu Eltsllllat (30) EE flt-. In U. INnd (C) (JO) UI D C;aadid C..a (30) m n. FIJiq .,. CC> <30> @rn "" -(C) 1301 and B1rban W•lttrt. lllll>""' (C) (30) .,.,,, "' Horror ... eor., ind t.tl xlleme to 1vold 4-reer old Kim untU Kim developi 1 bttter ldltmt. o @m muc """",., Wwi: (C) '"MW w .. • (COl!lllb') '70-Huch aerlan, Mnt F11ncb. M•rtlJ'fl Muwell, M1ri1 Wlndlllf. Adventure •bMI fivl holtlt mn· Yicb aiWn their tr-.dom !or ,.. Ina: n wM:s ol ..idilts 01 I d1nl9'QllS 111aion. m Dnid F• sa.. (C) (90) Sid Cawr, S.&io Fr1nc:ll~ Tiny nm ind Batblr1 W1he1s. m-(C) ""> f.E c...rutim (C) 13'1) (R) Wilk RIM Stl'llN 1nd Alan Jiy Lemer. mr-,..., (30) ., " ............. (C) (30) t.tOOllJ CIJ llJ)llCT-- (C) ....... " ~ (JIQPlnle) '68-Glorp Peppard, lnllf °StMM, Or10a W.Hta. An Amerit.111 drift• down Ofl hi1 luck in Plrit 11nwit· tinily becom• IM'Olvld In ltle plot ol 1 ri1ht-win1 ora:•nizl'lilln lo tab am France Ind build I Futllt empire. 0"' ·-(C) (60) m ,...., -(C) (IO) m"' -(C) !'Ol """'" public education lutlds to directly m Dt..... ftylnc (C) (30) "JLISt to p1renb in th• fonn of ¥11Ud!tll like A Bird." T1U-ofl1 ind landinp. lor 11311 It the xhool al their 9 (I) lltJ Fntrill ltllltila (30) choice? !!!) -.. """' (30) !Ill_, ... (C) (30) • • ' ' ~ ... By TOM TITIJS • Of n. 011t¥ Plttt Sltff Many a musical marvel has been faltl'lfully recreated for community consum_ption by the energeUc Long Beach Civic Light Opera Associa tion, "MAME" A mu11c•I CG!n9dv bl J•r1••Tll L....,rotne1 end llot>ort E. "· rnu11c •nd lvrlc1 bY JtrrY "'I'"'"· dlrt<:Jl! b~ Gery D1vl1, mi!iltl dlretlw 111 Rllkhl\ (hor9QOI' y .by Crl1 , Tm-mont. ~111111 O'I m KUll11e11wor1h. filn•:r!H Fr1e1a!ithr01111h Sull<Mn un.-ll'Y· l b I L-DllCh Clv;c OPtr 1111111 I Jord111 HI !di: 1u11ftw~um. Att1n1fc 1t Artt11r.' L-li6d'I. TH2 CAST M.-M lJIM.!1 , ••• Leur1 IClll1111111-n11 AllMI Good'! ........ Jtlf141fnt A!lobe!U vue Cfri.1 ......... Bl11V M11t1lncier P1lrkil 109 IOI ,,, .... ~rlH Curt!I PtrrlQ: aoe It) .. , ..... -Id Cn.sn11 !NW"Md ,, ,. . •• .. • rl1 Tlmmor.. 110' • .. .. • • .. • .. ••• A11lll011Y Otl Sl11110t• Dwlllhl ll1bcocli •. , • ICelth Houd't'll\ell M. Llndwy-Woalln ••• . Mlf'flll Clovd M~ Ul>Wll ............ R:\IF:" ,_ Mr. v"'°" .............. LIM• Glorle UOIClll ..•••••.. cer' Mii"" i not S.llY (110 ................ Mlrv Alli!11 Mo!Mr DUl'llllde .......... C1rgot GnM iu111or B/baldr. ......... ll~tld ~°"' ,.~1~ ::::::::::.~'1.1~nw1..".~~ which has scaled the peaks o( excellence in the past with such lyrical gems as "West Side Story" and "Camelot," to name but a few. It is a pleasure to report that the CL.O's opening pro- duction of the new season is cut frcm the same mold of general ex.cellence. "Mame" is sheer delight from overture to curtain call, a lavish, peppy vehicle that suffers not one whit by comparison to its big sister on Broadway which this reviewer visited last year. m"' - -ICl ,,., ell-llO> IS•-"' -llO> 10 -160) G)AIC E'Mil& JllWI ('C) (JO) t-.JD B Ql(i)Te .._will LM (C) 7:Da fl CIS EMti1tc ._ (C) (30) (30) WHll1n Deltlllt. Don Ciradf FUN GAL -Laura Killingsworth as "Mame" toasts Charles Curtis of Laguna Beach in a sc~ne from lhe Long Beach Civic Light Opera musical. A tour de force for its star it may be, but the Long Beach version rings out loud and clear as a shimmering ex- ample of ensemble expertise -its energy level several cuts above the norm and a cast and chorus thoroughly enamored of its assignment. It ranks among the hand.ful of cutslan- ding musicals mounted by the CLO organiza ticn. --. llC •-• (C) 111d r1111 Colt (An o1 MJ T1ltM · u ~ m (JO) Soni) 1r1 t\llllb ill .tiich tM MIU fJ Wbt'1 lty U.? {C) (JO) Endicott f1mily hllps Und1 Qllriey m @CJ) 1 LM L1CJ (JO) look for an lllli1a &irtfrllnd from World W1r I aftd hllpt Robbll 1nd ID Bui Ult C1oc11 (C) (30) Kiili pl1n , -=olld lioneymoon it 9@ ....... /1111..U Politfcll the Et11n11I CitJ. (t) fJ 11tw1 (C) (30) Bnler W11d. flil f1nflni (C) (90) (R) "'The ID ,.,.., 111-. (60) Mlductlon From the Ser11lio." Miil· New Broadway Show 'Rothschilds' Opens One ca11not tarry long in as- sessing a producticn 0 r "Mame'' without bringing up the lady herself -and here the superior talents or Laura KillingsW()l"th (one might add, "who else?") are brought into rull bloom. Miss Killingsworth presents a gutsy, vital heroine, amplifying all facets o f 1rt'1 romantic fantuy with b1m m ..... , ........... (CJ (30) Splrv M1l11 of the Metropollt11 IE M.ica J &tnlla (t) (30) Oper1 siniinc the role ol Osmin. qr1no El•lnt Cormll!J II Con-10:00 II a Ci) CIS ... 5'ldll ('C) .Rlnct, Ind lenor GflPOl'I Hirst IS (60) Belmonte. 1 .... isillrl 1nd Politics." Tiit 1131 tHI Ci) Tmll • c..-.11111cn (C) and 1~u~ of telew~ ill ~1itical tI!) Qrilt iM LiN& WoN (C) (30) e1mp111r11n& todlW IS IUfl'liflld. 11> _., 1.,, om -1C1 C'O> fl) That Ciit (C) (301 0 @ (])ED ... mt ...., U. , .. ~Tu.di lllftit· (C) .,.._ (C) (60) 1o Get Throul' the ._ ! · 'limtil" Dr. Welby's friend, • psy. 1 r.tecl. W.tlilt with •~hie laterll 7:25 td..W. it llJiAI • 11¥1 I air! OGOV. REAGAN SPEAKS '""'-- *OUT ON IMPORTANT fJ"' -IC) (60) ISSUES TO ALL m"' ,_ -Mil (C) (10) CALIFORNIA VOTERS .. 1niti1tion." A potpourri If photo- 0 R "'""" (C) fl'IPhS. films. 1raphic 1rts, Jill NCI• ind llldronic mulic, skillfully IS· 7:30 0 Q!J (j) n. llwlrlJ HillbBlln sembled to C01MJ 1tum1n emotions (C) (JO) Gr1nn)"1 conviction that surroundin1 ''first" uperltncn. Elly May's boyfriend, Na\I)' "lrt11· min" Mart Tll'!lpleton, ii turnln1 III Ml M"*" (30) into I fro1 le1ds her to conjUfl ai) Flltinl Maica11 (60) up 1 m11Jc potion In 1n effort tolO:IO m Ill --~ IO) keep him ltum.tn. .,., ( B m Doa Rnotts <Cl (60) Dennis m HeJ (30) Weaver, Leslle Warien, 1nd Smokl)' ll:OO II QI Cl) et .... (C) Robinson 1nd The Mlncles iuesL • o ll1l mm"" ..... c•> ,.,, u 11J oo m-cci "/ht SOl'li of WIUl1." S1mm1 D1Yis g c.1 Ye1 Top Db? CC) (30) ''· 1uesta •s Willie Rush, 1 ruthless ,. 0 ~-(C) ~OOM!I COAST MKllfU'f & mo motion pidu11 star whos1 lift is '"" tllrerlened. Other 1unU: Loi• D n.trt t: "Alllls l Dil.....,. F1l1n1, Horm1n Aldtn, LIWTtnee (c.omldy} 'iZ-lbiJ:rUew c,bulski, . • Conll and Biii W1lktr. ., ...... o 1111111111 , 111or1r. (C) -wKUst m '°' .. , ., fC> --- $flip In lllll Anr(' (comedy) '61 ID Moril: "A lllllt fw Wif(' I ---Jldl Lemmon.. Ricky Nelson, John tm)'llery) '55--Georp htt. ' ._ - Lund. Nn1I Llllrltn1nt 1i¥en com-@CI) P1nJ .._. ··--mind of 1 rk.uty old saili~I Yessal Jl'lllt • CRW lh1t knows nolhln1 m .... ~ (C) '0fldoly." .... IS 1bout sailln~ !Inds himself on 1 aJ NtticilfO K ~1n1erous mission. m Tr91i tr CemlqUlllCn (C) (30)11;JO ~ 9 CIJ M"' Criflill (C) Ron· Q) O.nlll loone (C) (60) 11te Schell, Sue Ant lan1don. IE Stlldld fU• (C) (30) 0 ~@ m Joli11111 Clno1 (C) €E Ma Fuerte lllMI 11 AIMii (30) N.Y. C1ty:1 M~yor .lohn Llnduy, The 5th Dunenston ind londofl Lu 7:45 D Llbr'1 W11p-Up (C} D lllwlr. -..m.r . 7:55 ail Cllllliol • S.IU!Hlof '54-0I~ Dirk, Belinda i~WJ') l:Gll 0 ta (J) 1r.. Acm {C) (30) Q Q) Dick CMtt {C) Cr.trtlll T1rr, HELD. OVER lff Marvin Clint E1stwood •\OJ~Trr:nJIS.-s lWNr ~WAGON _,.,..,,,.. .INIMl.Nl'IDUl ·- Cavett Renewed Lisa Dou1l1s Is seen In 1111 C.ounty directot of StltctiYI Setvie1; Mlltonl~~~~~~~~~~~ll Welf1re'1 soup lin1 br Mr. Hiney, Btrle; Bob Cr111e; 1nd pitlfbtl; ---------- •nd the rtsldents of Hool11Vlll1 1r1 Juli1n Srum. sure that th• Doutl•m hlWI IOCll m lllowil• ~ '""· .. ·,60 -·--0 Vlrlhli• Crakui S11ow (C) (60) (com 1) -Mitzl Gaynor, Guests 1r1 .loin Be:nnell, 1ttnrnQ'lZ:OD @(}) Dick emtt (C) Melvin 81111, comedl1n Jan Murri)' . ind sln11r Ll11r1 Grune. l:OD 11 lllON: (C) "la °" • TW' I Te Tiii UM Truth (CJ (30) (wspenM '&7-Ketnen Wynn. Fifi """' lal111S11111 (C) 0 fJ "-{C) ( ) f.E)LI t11111tNo,, (IO) m U.JticM 9...: .... W.• Yilr," "Mbd; If ... Ill.,. ... l:tll Erl) .... llldll (55} Ind .... -el llW. • WfDNISDAY m ,..... ... (drlm•) ·n--Al~ "°"'~'-'• WaHw """°"· "THE LAWYER" 10:008"" ~•-,.,..,) -STAm WIDNISDAT .. _ " ANTONIO'S C1rr Copcw, Witter HustrJft. ''ZABRISKIE POINT'' DAYTIME MOVIES Also Glen C1mpbell Kim Darby "NORWOOD" 8a1'CJ41in Matinee Every Wednesday 1 :00 p.m. FrH Refrethments Adults $1.00 JOIN US FOR A HAPPY AFTERNOON ~TIE ~ANF. L&YIE .. Im'! CIUI II! Dtl,.1• -........... -ALSO PLAYING - A ""Y hlMIJ ...... "Goodbye, Columbus'' u>mlCl """....,,.. '"""'>l':::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~Ji-t '58-Mtllony f'tltlns. Jo Yin f111t. 1; •:ooo (C).,..., ... ...,. ,__.•:tea"""'""..,... 1••••> • ., ",,.,......,._ ... .....,.'"""' Rated "G" It's for Everybody (m1111u~ ·sz-e11r1on w111b. -cu, eoofll', Dtboreh "'"· f O ... l'T• -:...n....ua-___ .... t :IO &\I CC> ........ (&l·fll '!I-am 4:!01J"" ""°""'"' u..• -·•-• TKE#jlOYELOFTMEYEAR -MOWAMOTIONPICTURE! Trmn, Wllll1m Sytynttr. (c:omtdy) '46-Abbott I c.t1llo. FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 1111 PilllJ'!lln!J~• MZZU NOW JHIU TVUDAY PaUL fMf ...- NEWMaN COOL HaNn lUKE -Al.SO- 'GtANT' ··IUllll --AIRPDRT lftT LUCasiD •DUI IAl1IW 1 tlEAI SEIEll •olACllBlllE llSSET ·-~· ............. . lg)-:==: .. . - Pa tr t e k Denn 1 s' un-brief, picture of bub b 1 y didly, preserving ~ upbta• conventional Auntie. eastern ariStocracy is painted spirit or the production. It is the complete Mame, with cleriched teeth by Carla Director Gary Davia h a s the tend(r,..ma.le.ma.I lady wb:i Mannlng as the dirilensionleas mounted an impressive tbow fervently wonders if things debutante who atifiOSt. snares on itll counts, a ••¥ame?t thal would be different ''If He Patrick:. lier boorish parents glistens w I t h profeulona Walked Into My Life Again'' are equally well interpreted by polish, while M I s s Kill· as well as the populJ(r con-Doug Lance and Rosslyn Teir lngsworth is a credit to the ception of a soaring (ree per. finest female role ("Dolly" In- spirit, wildly celebratihg only The production numbers -cludedi cr~ated in recent ,because "It's T 0 day .•' "It's Today," "Open a New years for the musical theater. Befy,·een these extremes . \Vindow," "That's How Young Two more weekends remain moments of high comedy I ~~eel'• and especially the litle for this lustrous lady and her abound in a performance segment which closes the first excellent ememble, Fridays deserving or the b i g h e 1 l act -are injected· with flair throui:h Sundays at Jordan laurels. and vitality. Jan Ritschel's High School auditor I um, Superb t'Omic support ls orchestra, under the baton of Atlantic at Artesia avenuee in delivered by Jeannine Altobelli .-D_a_v_ld_H_ub_l_er_,_:_pe_r_ronns __ '_:_P_l•_n· __ Lon--'g'---Be-•_ch_. ------ as the diminutive, squeaky- voiced Agnes Gooch. a plum role given a j u i c y in- terpretation. Betty "Motsinger creates a perfect Tallulah type in her portrayal of Mame's pixillated actress buddy, tak- ing high marks in her featured number, a new play which gets "mamed" opening night The younger Patrick Dennis is capably performed by 10- year-old Charles C u r t I s , remembered for his Artful Dodger in Laguna 's "Oliver" last summer. Bright and wistful , young Curtis comes through with boyish clarity, setting the stage fer another fine Patrick, the elder. played by Ronald Cessna. Cris Timmons offers a strong Old South charac- t er i z at ion of Mame's aris to cratic suitor Beauregard. doubling i n credits as the creator or the choreography. As the officious old man Babcock, K e i t h Houdyshell falls a bit short of his role's comic potential and double-take bluster. . Maf"\lia Cloyd, a distinguish-. ed actor on the loog Beach circuit, gives added strength to the role of Mame's straight man, Lindsay-Woolsey. Ronald Ross as Junior Babcock ls so funny that one wishes his role were far larger. A beautiluJ, if again all too ~do .....,,...__ ..... _ .. W..-1.NeW.-OLMJ• ENDS TONICJHT • "STRAWBERRY STATEMENT" -"LET IT BE'' STAm WIDNISDAY ''BELLO~ ~DOLLY!'' ~ _j<,,,f·tr I LO.~---~ BWRA STBEISIND ,,.,. ~--- 1•as111 (!/) . u• , ·• . .'/,.?-' . ' ~ ~ . EXCLUSIVE , -«> ENGAG™ENT · ·-z=w z w.f.u.iaMS. MI0..10.H --•••~ ;z s...1.oa.1o1s.5.a --.---· . 1,4,. 10.00 •11111••-illim ---. -·--· NORfSERVH>SIA?S· -----' Tew --FREf PARICJtiG -. '"n.n.1.ao. t.1 s fr;.7,00.MS, lo.)CI. Sci. lo4S.. S:Ja. S.1S,. 7iOQ. MS. lo.JO -21IS.4:00. s.4J, 1.ao. 9115- E)CCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT! \ ;,~ . -~~ diary '· of a mad housewife • fl'llnk peu r r film -.. richard benjamin carrie snodgress • frank langella Z.1111 ll&aVlll ~JIDllTll WAZ.SB" ~ .. ~.COSl"'lllESA,-UHUlt -I _______ .,,___ ~ CALL 546-3102 ., .. h.~7.::.!'.' ... ' 1 PLUS-ll:Oll Jeylor end Su1y Kendell in "DAlKlll: THAN AMlil"+Rel•d "R" STARTS WEDNESDAY JUJ.ira .IWCK AND~ .fiUDSON Also "THE HAWAIIANS- Elliott Gould Don•ld Sutherl•nd ... 1'1·1\S·ll . JAC9URtHl1A4r llSSIT . We•k Nitei: 6:00·l ;l 0·10i4S e F1id•y: 6·1;10·10:45 e Sat. I Sun.: l:OO-J:l 0-6:00·1:lO·IO:•S IN 'Tltl! WISTMINJ'Tl!ll CINTlilt A ROSS HUNTER Production ~-j •iw.. °''· .,..... • se.. oi... ,...,. CALL 892"4493 STARTS WED. OCTOBER 21 AIRPORT ·-..... St1rrin1 BURT LANCASTER e DEAN MARTIN HELD OVER ENDS TUES . George C. Scott -Kul Miiden 'nd Hit -P1wl Newme11 in ''WINNIN•" ''G" w1 .... .t 4Ac.&. A__. BARBRA. STREISAND WALTER MATIHAU NOW AT POPULAR PRICEi BEl.J.O,DOllJ! -· IWI ~ tllil!':"Dn••....-~ .................................. ______ ..., ____ __,..., .... _..._. _______________ ~--~~~~~~~~~~··~·- • -r HOUSES FOR SALE ~G;;=";'";;;r•;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;;OOl;;;\;;Go;;;;;;ne;;;r;;;•;;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'O;;;~;;~;;;Geo;;;;;;"';;;r;•;;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;*;\Gj~"';;;"';;;"r;;;•;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;DOO;;-;;;;;;;;;;•;;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;10;;~;~;,\ 0-ral clinda . J !Jl THE REAL * lOOI a.noraL_ "° 0-ral 1000 Costa Mou ,_B_EA_CH_D-UP--LEX-1 llDO * * * * TAYLOR * Sparkllng Value 2629 HARBOR BOUUYARD 546-8640 Open E v11nfng1 • 11111:30 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES ESTATERS 51 Linde Isle Dr. Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/3 frplcs .• circular stairway, decorator selected carp. & drapes, Shown by app~ $210,000 For complete information on all homes & lots, pleaM c•ll : CALL : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 0o-Dr., S..lte 3, N.11. 642-462C! WANT EVERYTHING? 4 bdrms.1 3lh baths, formal dn. rm. family rm., breakfast rm., laundry rm. with blt-in sewing center, lovely pool with loads of decking &c covered lana i fruit and shade tree yard, courtya rd en: t ry, and even a bomb shelter. AU for $65,950. Phone 646-7171 to inspec~ LOVELY BAYFRONT DUPLEX Never-ending view. Marble fireplaces in each unit. Live in luxurious upper a nd r ent 3 bd· rm., 2 ba. lower. Call to see. $160,000. WHITE WATER VIEWI $115,000 North Laguna ocean frt! 5 BR, 4 ba New E ngland farm house. Custom quality & top condition. Reall y different. Call for appt. ''Our 25th Year'' ONE LOT FR01.f OCEAN & with view. 2 BR & 3 BR \\·l{h fam rm. PLUS l BR & Ba guest unit. Xlnt condition, Top area for living or rent- in&. 5 HOUSES On 60x305 lot, Costa Mesa. No vacancies, Gocxl money .makers, S810 mo income. Asking only $69,900. CALL ·e: 646·1 414 ~ at $23,950. 3 bednn. 2 bath, dble gRrage, large patiO w/ BBQ, on corner lot with tall trees, Completely redecor. ate<!, new paint, new shag crpts, new drp!I, Perfect to niove into • now vacant, see anytime. FHA }ow down, 1enn11. Call 5-lB.1151 Heritage Realtors. Open Evenings, *TRIPLEX* Mesa Verde Luxury 2100 sq. ft $28,750 Gtner•I 1000 Generel II;;;;;;;;;;==;;;; ONLY $28,. BAYCREST DOCTORS, LAWYERS 1000 SIMPLY MAGNIFICENT Gracious adult living for two can be found in this spacio us bungalow with Roman baths, 2 secluded patios & fire-- place. AND an elegant garden walk to the pool and outdoor entertainment area. A special property to meet your special needs ••• only $48,500. To inquire call 673·8550. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 Son Joaquin Hiii• Road Ntiill'.Nt •porl Po al Ortlct Jdeal residential location, bt'autlfully kept & landscap.. ed, 3 garages + office, wiirk- shop & secluded patios, Good return. 5$.1,500. Wells·McCardle, Rltrs. l.8Ul Newport Blvd., C.M. That's the full price and this home is beautiful, it has a gorgeous l5x40 added family room plus formal dining r oom. sep- arate eating area. delux built-In kitchen, new fully padded shag car· peting throughout, buy it subject to existing 5% IJ., annual ~.. rate loan, total pml. will be $146.00 mo. 1.tove up to Costa htesa's most de· r;lrable area. 3. Bedroom Fixer-Upper $23,000 In C0&ta ?i.1esa this homl!: needs work bu.t what a price -The yard is 50rta messy, but the car- peting is almost new - It needs some paint bu t the neighborhood is very nice. The terms a.re fan- tastic -5"-% loan - $123.00 total subject to existing FHA Joan. Bet- ter hurry ? Sexy! That's what Jt ls, sexy, a 3 bedroom 211' be. th CoUege Pafk Pool Rome -great for entertaining around the sparkling heated and filtered Pool with outside drl'Slling room and be.th. Model home condition inside - big fireplace, built In kitchen -manicured yards. Asking ~ Make offer! Costa Mesa Cutie! $23,500 If this is your price ranG"e, see this for sure, VA No Down The trees. covered patio & the excellent care of this home makes thill tnlly en. joyable living, Located on quiet cul-de-sac stftet • please call ua right away on this goOO buy, Anxious own- er will even pay your clos- ing costs ao you do not have even one penny move-in ex-.,,,,., Nichols Real Estate 546-9521 6.5 x Gross 10 Se~te h:::nnes on large Eastside Jot l2ll x 300. Each unit h<is a garage Ir exlra parking. No vacancy here at Sl60. mo. each. A big 6.6% loan transferable at thi5 in- terest rate to you for a $25. fee. Call now • THIS ONE IS A 'VINNER, 29% Down • full price • $125,000 Newport •I Open Dai~ 328 Aliso or any professional man will enjoy the separate stlldy wilh shelves 10 accommo- date an extensive library plU!! an ideal luxury 4 bed· room home with formal din. ing room. large famUy room, magnificent master bedroom suite and pool. The ullimate for gracioUJ entertaining, AND Owner will trade for smaller in Northern Califomi& or Corona del Mar. OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY l.S 1424 LINCOLN LN. OR CALL fin.8550 O THE REAL "ESTAT ERS DOLL HOUSE No other words can describe this beautiful , adult occupied home, 3 Bedroonr;-1%·ba.th, bllnt, covered patio, seclud- ed yard. Don't look at this home if you're not in a buy. ing mood, VA-FHA terms. 126.000. • COATS WAL'i...a REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • Cape Cod Charm Wettcliil comer lot with abundant landscaping, Bay window in living room. Two charming fireplaces, large cove-r.,d patio-and veJY pri. vate rear yard. An. ou111tand- 1ng buy at $49,000 and excel- lent terms available. N=~.'::~~· Colesworthy 1 short block from Cliff Dr. & Co. By Owner $.16.500 REALTOR Spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath, Newport Beach Office living room with fireplace, 1028 Bayside Drive large dininG' area overlook-67~930 ing lovely secluded lanai, I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; II carpeting, drapes, built-in J 1 electric kitchen. Garage off Rentals/Leases alley with electric eye open. * J\tesa Verde Harbor EA. er. Nicely landscaped cor-Cates • clean, vacant, 4 &: ner tot,. family, Lse $260 Incl gar- &1&4632 S48-l444 dener. NEWPORT CENTER 641-4910 Realty Compaoy e ·oPEN DAILY 1·5 e * * * * * * 541-7729 Macnab-Irvine 1000 Genera) 1000 DOVER SHORES 'Til sold! Asswne 6%% VA BAY FRONT Joan. $148 Per mo, Redecor. "WIFE PLEASER" Read this ad completely and consider this five bedroom home on a quiet tree lined street in Newport Beach for onl y $44,950. This charmer has a secluded Jiving room, spacious family room, and a modern sunny kitchen. Now for the way of life; the back yard (it's 171 feet across the back) has a fantastic patio, lanai, a lawn, a lawn volleyball area, and a poot You must see this before you buy. Call 546-2313. SUPER HOUSE A roomv 1900 SQ, ft. with 3 Bedrooms. 3 baths, large separate Family Room and formal dining room. Near new lush car· peting -extra large landscaped yard with tons of concrete at a low, low, $32,· 500 -Only 10% down. Phone 673-8550 to inspect. THE TWINKLING LIGHTS will fascinate you. The fre s h ocean breeze will refresh you, and the spacious well·e ngineered floor plan will please you. 4 Bedrooms, 2'h: ba th s, walnut cabinets. tinted g l a ss and red brick patio, $57,500. A Lu s k Harbor View Hills View home. Call 673·8550. FOR 'A MR. FIX-rT One bedroom livable cottage in Newport Heights on a 50x127 foot lot. Rent or live in this until you are ready to build your dream home.· Best location in the Heights !or $19,950. Call for showing. 546-2313. ALMOST NEW CUSTOM DESIGNED 4 BEDROOM + POOL 675-3000 The number to call whcthC!r buying. selling or leasing CHRISTMAS JOY View the boat parade t:rom your own liv. nn. or nutr. BR., frorn this spac. 4 BR. home. Huge fam Uy rm., .(or. mat din. rm., bit-In wet bar. Deluxe feat\ll"eS thruout. Owners ,have purchased a larger home , • , asking $74.950. 675-3000 OPEN EVE.S. 2407 E. Coast II wy. Opposite MacArthur Blvd, fB II.\\ ,\ Ill : IC'll 111 11 .r1 ""' f. . • • ' • , ":; Dandy Duplex Large Eastside lot 70 x 107 gives a big yard tor owners apartment 2 Bednns in each unit; single car garage Jor each uni1. $29,950 Exclusive with: Newport at f•irview 646-8811 (anytime} CORONA DEL MAR FIXER·UP-$29,000 Executive type home with Mission Tile \Valk to Corona beach. Liltle r oof. Top quaj.ity thruout. Formal Din-work for a beach area. 3 ing + Family Room + Spacious Mas-bedrooms. Country kitchen. ter Bedroom + :>Car Garage. On quiet Cheery fireplace. Enjoy street with P ark and Schools close by. backyard BBQ + patio. $69,950. 646-7171 Store boat in back yard. AJ. · BLU""'S Icy access. A best buy. Bet- rT ter hurry. DRIVE BY!! DIAL 645-0303 21 50 Vista Dorado (Eastblufl Drive to FOREST E. OLSON Vista Dorado). DRIVE BY to see the love-REALTORS ly location and CALL US to see the 2299 H bor c beautiful condition inside this roomy 3 ar · .M. Bring your boat to a delight-3 B IV/W •-d-• lm-5 Bedroom Fix•r·Unnar r. cp.,., .... · ,..,..,. lul cu.stom home with huge med. possession! Only $!l,-Back Bay area, 2:185 JiQ. ft. bayside tenace overlooklng .... rat A -Needs pain!, yard \\'Ork, 950. 1984 Fcue ve. private pier & slip. 3 l.o\'e· Call p trick Wood ~• 2300 some repair. This one could : a • .,,..., use some imagination too. ly bedrooms, 2 baths, pan. e Bill Haven, Realtor 1 eled den with \\"et bar. Beau. 2lll E "·--• Cd'! -~· "Asking" price $34,750., . ......,....., "' a~ tilul decor, Immaculate con- dition; equipped with latest $2500 DOWN Here's A Challenge! 1· 'll7 ~ To assumable loan. Beaut, app 1ance11, " , ,. What would "you" do with 675-3210 M2..a23S lge 3 br, 2 ba home. Lovely thisunusualfloor plan?Takel =:i=:l:=:=~~==~~~:j easy care yard w/huge pa. a look • Jet us know, We tio. Owner/agent 5-11}.7823. need your id•.,. 2500 '"·ti. LIDO WATERFRONT in the 1'-Iesa Verde golt APTS.·320 LIDO NORD Newport Beillch 1200 course area. It could be just NOW REDUCED TO "your cup of tea." $150,~Xlnt Terms NEWPORT HEIGHTS So. of 15th St • $30,700 SCl·$llO 6 BeautUul units. 6 car (,_.cinerm u.na garages & utillly room with OLLEGE REAl..TY 80 fl frontage on excellent •lDAdllmlllllrllli,c.IL swimming beach, Un.its are 51/4 ACRES Planted in Avocado!! Exclusive eslate area with guarded gate Private road On property ,lo fabulOU!l home site Crop management available $<15,IXX> • Attracti ve terms Realtors ''Our 25th Year' In th• Harbor Are•'' 673-4400 HELP! Owner Screaming "Sell my modem ranch, lour bedroom and lamily room," says he. •·Too high priced." said we, ''REDUCE it, and sell it!" said he. So we did an::I \\.'e will! If you want a move-in condition home call now! At $31,500 ifs a rei\I buy! PA'IJLoWQIB CAll!IABAll aa•LT1' CO. 1093 Baker. C.M. 546-5440 newly furni!hed. Bill Grundy, Realtor 833 »over Dr., N.B. 642-4620 BLUFF VIEW $7500 DOWN Great view? Immacula1e 4 bedroom, oversi2e garage, eXtra car or boat space. $47,500 • $T";'l(I() Down. --Coldwell.Banker ~ 644-2430 Thal's right! Unbelievable In Newport Sl!ach. View, Large BR's,· Formal dining rm. Huge family rm. with cathe- dral bcai'n ct>ilings. 2 fire- places + BBQ. Paneling ,in fam. rm. Cheny kltchcn. 2 baths. Lath &: pla11ter, Cus- tom built. Brick patio. Ter. raced rear yd. -Won't last. Hun-y, Call <n41 962-5585. FOREST l OLSON Inc. Realtors 19131 Brookhurst Ave, tluntington Beach BY OWNER WESTCLIF,F .AREA 4 br, frplc, bltn!!, trpls, drp!, 1 PA~ER with large Jot., sprinklers, pool . si?.ed yard. 3 bednn & family rm, ready Nr school!. You own land. to move into at $34.9SO. VACANT. Ct'!>"-d.,,., t..n bltns, 128,800 ON Ly $38,SDO Joan is assumable, Owner 64z.t61l or 642-9996 moving north, must sell. =========I Don't pass up !his lovely home. Call Heritage Real- tors 5-lB.1151. Open Evenings VIEW FANTASTIC! From a high point in O:>rona Highlands. Panelled family / dining room, bulltin kilchcn, 2 bcd nns & 2 baths. Care- free yard with complete prL. vacy. Fee La~ $57,500. PETE BARRm Really Newport Heights 1210 EXECUTIVE MANOR Big 4 Br, 2 Ba prestige home. " Beaut decor, Lge kit with ,1 all bltns. J\1arble frplc, chan. deliers, lge living & din nn overlooking 20x40 POOL w/ 1• lots ol decking, Partial ocean view from ballroom size balcony, $55,000 or trade locally, car pet and outstanding greenbelt view. 1111 .--·--~111 Open Daily-515 Tustin HARBOR VIEW CALL 0 ,4,·1414 It'• a doll house, a good ., ......................... .. sized bedrooms, large II lot, just painted Inside and out. beautiful back yard with covered patio -no dov.·n VA or mini- mum down FHA -This won't last! - * Back Bay S bednn, dinini;:, family & brkfst nns. $325. Option to buy @ $34, 750 or best oUer. bedroom 21\i bath home -gold shag ,$1££1\j.:Y New~rt Heights Only $42,500 with excellent terms. Call "Move-in" condition -best e! 4 BR., 2~ ba. Walnut paneled 673 8550 CONDO financing. VACANT. Many lam. rm.; din. rm., frplc. • · A•·•·o"s o"t of !own owner! •·+" (eatures including "" " .. 9t~ Nr •r Nt wparl Pot t Ofrfee 4 Bedroom Bargain $25,995 Herc's v.·ha t it has 2 full baths -buil t-i n kitchen - forced air heat - double garage-- beautiful landscaping - 1prawling Jot and it's only 7 years old. All tenm avallable -call now and you'll be In by Ouillmasl Thanksgiving Dinner \Viii ~ served In ynur new house located in the area of Baker and Fair· view. It ha& 3 bedrooms -2 be.tbs -forced air M t -double garage - all for on1y $23,500. ,Gobbi. Cobble! Beat This! * 3 8ednn Ranch home * }\ill acre land * Room for 12 more units * 7\.!!% Financing * No loan charges * Jmmediate Occupancy * Price just reduced to $45,000 (Hurry. won't Jast k>ng al this price!) •. fPERRDN --;..1 .... ~.~.,-•'<!~T 642-1n1 Any11..,. ONE OF THE FEW * Proleuional offices • $84 to SUIO, near Westcliff. NEWPORT HEIGHTS 2.-Story 4 bdrm., 2 bath Cape Cod cottage. Lovely parquet floon, irplc., bl!ns, xlnt "'""· Call: G73-3663 642-2253 eves. associated BR OK ERS-REAl TORS 1025 W Balboa b7J-J66) NEWPORT HEIGHTS Unique Spanish Contlom in. ocean breeze, also 3 BR, l* $65.0CXI. CALL: 644-7fi62, lun1, 3 hl'drms. gold shag CUSTOM bath, lge family rm w/used -··-cat'J)t'ls, arched fireplace, .....,_, ......... brick fireplace, crpts. drps, .. ____ a11 ·~ 4 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2000 sq. fl home. y,•altt'd patio and all electric hdwd floors, shake roof, dble ~~""~I Situated in one of the most prestigious kitchl'n. Vacant, O\\'ner anx-garage, It's a beauty! neighborhoods. Completely refurbished ,;:: ~J%:·c~~~~u:,'· & Lachenmyer Rlty $32,000 and decorated throughout. Relax under Call 64s..3928 Eves: 642-0185 4 Bdr. + Family Rm. the covered patio or soak up the sun by 25 foot recreation l'OOln, na- lhe pool. Beautiful minimum car e land· BE WITH THE tural wood paneling, huge scaping makes the picture complete. master bdrm suite, dressing Total living for only $46,950. 546·231 3. LEADER rooms, ,hake roof, paLio, EASTSIDE SPARKLER CUSTOM 4-PLEX E:;:':1, ;'..m~~~·. 1:\~~ TA":e~i.t'°'i~5 Harbor It sparkles with cleanliness. has new Choice NeWpOrt Beach area, uali1.ed on-the-job training. COZY 3 BR on approx. ~~ kitchen, new bathroom, new carpets and l BR & 2 BR unit9 -exCC'l-Learn more • earn more, ln acre ocean vie"' lot. Tree d ra pes plus a beautifully landscaped lent owner occupied & tax an exciting, pleasant sur-lined cul-de-sac st. nr . yard and patio -alley entrance fo r shelter property. $12.0CXI rounding .• 5-16-2316 grammAr school. $27.500. E•rly American Charm in this 3 BR, tam rm, styled home, Lots of natural pine \\'OOClwrk, used brick lrple, shingles. Big trees w/euy upkeep yd. Drive by 435 Ir- vine Ave, call for appt, $30,000, xlnt terms, Onr 548-5106. Dover Shores 1227 ,,,,,, PANORAMIC VIEW Perfect f o r entertaining, Spanish contemp, Court & atrium, 5 BR, 5 ba, 5000 81:1 fl, hi ceiling, 4-car ear, $169.000. 548-7249 boat or traile r -$'24,500 -See anytime Down. Days 5-18--419'2 Eve! 642-U22 • • • 646-7171. $75,000 Universi~ Park 12~ SEE YOUR REALTOR •• ,.1 POOL HOME -$27,500 FOR YOUR BIG FREE 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;! It sparkles from the new roof a nd paint NO DOWN! NEWCOMERS KIT Grandchildren Welcome Beautiful adult oceupicd 3 DUPLEX job lo the pool. Can'& afford a pool -$2],950 I-Level, 3 BR. 2 Ba, town., bedroom 3 bath hn~ with Try this on fo r size ••• 3 Bedrooms, Bel F •1 Costa Mesa 1100 hou.~e. Frplc.. beame d ·upgraded crpls, drps, a pa. covered patio, Solar heated pool. All in 642-1771 Anytime 4 • + •m• Y Rm. c:eil's.: 11.trium separates 1io & !rundeck & a large cor. v.ith g3 ........ .,. $26.500. top condition _ P hone 646-7171. o .... '?N!r desperate. Book shelv. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I BR ,_ . . h ·--MESA NORTH '' ,·n -d•n, na•·-1 Palos • mstr. . uum guest bdnns. nt>r lot, It 's r1ear UCI wit Wells.McC•rdle, Rltrs. --~ ,...... FIXER Di · "'··-t-w.1o ba~. UNl"UE Ve-'""' •lO"A lirepla-. din.. ning rm. ~,.ny, "'''6"t pool, tennis courtJ and u.s 1810 Ne ............ Blvd., C.?.f. ,,. Located near b1.rgc shopping '"'"" ''"' '""' kitchen \\'ailed •-nt · ·~· -nt•-. s•hool• and •·n 1·ng rm, h"g• fo rnily room. · uu le rear up 10 a IQ\.-ely park. Asking 541-7729 Spanish Republic Home. Yes a large five ..... • .. .,... .. " garden Pool 1 •-b' · DI f p k I huilt.!n. Park like van:!. u PPER 5• 5• ennlll. 1" $34,950 will 11how anytime • 1 ~~~~~~~~~~II bedroom tri-level home in lovely Mesa ego l'C'('ivay, ar . P cnlc ~A,._1 ......., " cycling In 1hlii v.urry-free """" cve1un'"'. I · ES v d 'th ate famU 00 d grounds, lennlt courts and ......., ''u 1, • .,2 ~ 1 ~ ·~-TATE SALE er e WI a separ Y r m an TARBELL 295S Harbor c:omm"n v. ~ .~ COATS dinin;?: room. It has the largest yard in loads or fun near by, \\lell Barg11.in hunten auention! • " Prime E-side location ncu the !ltesa Verde area, 45xl54x49xl28x kt-pt Three Bdrms. 1% ~UI Westba y Income Hom•• Yard work&. daeoraling are red h·111 SA C.OUntry Qub. 3 Bednn, 104 If ' I lei f I h homt' with B/N's Rnd separ-TRI PLEX • ""'7.500 needed to -s-this 1914 · WALLACE hrtl , •-1 . you re oo ng or a arge ome 1 PRICE ro ~ ·• ..'.:"Ex_, •,xtra g Jot Ii and a lar.ee yard this ls it! Call now for aSEt•LLd "·ATnn.ONLY ~""" Best Eulsl~ Costa 1".tesa Jo-sq. ft. 4 bedrm" family rm REALTORS )1hu, Ira car gar. Sell l ...... .ivu cation. "Homes with an In-home on quiet street into 8 --'5M4111-4414t-}1,IA • VA er convenUonal an appointment' to n S P e c l. $53,500. WITH FHA /VA TERMS. come", 2035 1\lstin (cor. real show place. No down to (Open Ev.tnl"ts) $25,000, 546-2313. M. M. laBorde, Rltr. \Voodland Place), Builder vel'I. owner 'A'\11 sell at VA REALTY Univ, Pal'k Center, Irvine Call Anytime 83.1-082(1 Cost• M•1• Investment 646-0.S65 l:.Vc11; 548-3265 642-<l!}(l;i, appraisol, now vncMt for ll•-~E"•"••"s"1d"'•""!!C"o"1t"•""'M!'e"•"•'"'I ~77 1 1 2 DUPLEXES St•ble, Solid Baycrest inspection. must be sold!! SEE US ••• 2629 HARBOR BOllUYARO 548-1648 ASSUME $22.300 ntA LOAt-4, REPOSSESSIONS 2 BR. JX"r untt. 005C': 10 Good schools for permanent Call 540-llSt lleritage Rcal- $190 ~10, Includes ta.~es. Sparkling cl<'an homes, aiomr beach. You own lhe land! friendships. 4 BR. 21-i: BA, ton. Freshly JMllnttd 3 Bdnnt, ne<i.·ly 1>11lnlcd & carpeted. 2, $42.500 E11.ch ram nn.. 11one frplc., per· I C~;;~=;;;:;:::: I 1i,;, Baths on choice llARO-'\. " & !t bdrrru:. Some \11th. George Will iamson feet for wint~ study, Spac, JUST REDUCED WOOD Jo'LOORS. 12' x 16' pools, ,. .. HA-VA conv, terms, R•altor J11nd11Caped rear yard. '"nk'" R"m•"' Room. Cor-from 117.000 to 14-0.000. NEWPORT IEACH COSTA MESA 673-4350 645-1564 Ev... J EAN SMITH, RL TR Now 136,950 • 2000 sq. fl. 4 For 11 tine IK'lcctlon of homes orf(!l'ed tor sale in Univenit,y Park &; TurtJc Rock -Ptr-t hapi1 we have the right one 3 11 for YOU! ' ncr ~11 2 11epar11e yards. Colll1111 k Wall!! Irk'. 1700 Newport Blvd. 2790 Herbor Blvd. 6 UNITS 400 E, 171h, C.M. 64&.3255 bedrm, family & dining. Priced to 5ell At only laj,!'iOO, R&t::S AdAmA Ave. 962~23 646_7171 546_2313_ QUALI TY HOME Large covered J)lldo, drJ)ll, CAU. TODAY F O RD& 2 STORY A-FRAME 2 BR., hll"M, reh1i; .• ctpg .. lv1tn \VrllA&.Sonsntw •BR, l!h~ crpts, block \\'A.II A TAU.S. 3 BR, + den. Like new! CORONA DEL MAR INVESTMENTS f1rpr;; garage!. <hl:ncr will 3 Ba, family rm & P"ifr nn. \\'rought iron gate. £xeel- M. ff'. L•Borde, Rltr. E®>t)' &. ttady to 20. SttPI 332 M•rguerite 2784 Htrbor Blvd., hrlp flnant1,.•, l")rnmld J:::<-Court)•fU'd pool. VI E \V. Jent loeahon ntar park, 64G-05&1 l ~ ~~·c11. 673-&116 1.., fXC'•n. Only S32.500, 671·1550 Suit• 201 , Coif• Met• ChfllfllOt'!I 67~. !IOS.900, RO)· J. \\'ard, tutr., 11chool & shopping. Now va... • CAYWOOD REALTY TI'f' "" cit.nt .. make offer. Ctll Her~ JM Weatt!rn BMlrO.ld'" Opon Ev .. l~s [T'S Bf&Ch1•h001e ltmcr. Big-, 546-2316 ., • ~ MIC$1 draw 111 the 646-lS°"'l(I. O""tl Da:ny, -"• ., •-II' l==,.,..,.··=-:--7-'""= ltage Realtors ~ll5l, ~n Unlvcn!lt.v P&l'k '"I 1 I . . Ip I I '1·llil - --I: 1'11\tiw t lfl ,1:30 gn&I ttleetktn evcr! See w S:lUO \IJ, Cout Hwy., ND Exp erience El iminates Experiment est. .. n On1ly Pllol DIAt}';-A-LtNES. 6,12$8 Evc.nln<>.r D 833-0101 NI h il!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,..!!!!!!!!l!!!~1 -oect1o~-•-JtOW~'----1.141-;;,,;;:;~•~2'0c:....~"~2~.J4:..;;,,:76;,..::E~vo~s0•1._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~•··-C1-•_u~lfi<d~·~A~d~.~~~'-$7..::.;.~;..__ "~-----~-"""'""'~""'""'""'""'""',,,.1 ""•~Y""'""'""'""'""'~e~•,..•1 ·i I I M IBST -1111! :r$. [ j -~ c L A s s ·1 F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S lecNling Marketplace ·SIYB ~ASH! ·-· --------.·-------· --- HOUSES POR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE Tutsday, Octobfr 20, lq70 DAILY PILOT 21 RENTAL) RENTALS RENTALS REr.TALS Hou~ Unfurnished HouH1 Un'!'mlshod I Ailts. Fuml1hod Ap!L Fumhhod Co1ta,Mffa 3100 Huntington Beach 3400 Huntington Beach 4400 Hunllngton -- Coron• del M.r -LAST 2 DUPLEXES 3 BR HOME Redot'ed. Pti'"" Jo SeU Th~ ' \ * Craclilin" I -s BUDGET NEWLY d<col-ated 2 be, at-3 BR, 211 ba condo, 2 Olym- Wet!k Onl,y $ soo So or u 'INC ME" ~ ~ ~ -tacb!Xf pnagc. ldca.I for plwl~ poolJ, Call 6'2-3473 oft Q .JI. ltwy, Shoi1' watk 10 be~ch. pt S O IN FrR.EPLACE add lo Con,cientlou1? \\'Otklng or oldt-r t'Ouplc. or 511j....4J79 Mn. Clark. l ht & Gold~nrod. r'tne home chtinn of thll 1 Br. homo $110-2 Bedrooms, XLN'l' LO. Cose ID ahOp'g, $150 I o a uin a erm°'a .. ,.,,!BJ, O,,l1'd;-J<H oleab. "111ft1111 QN[f $23 000 1"ln'OW1ded by ..... ~ park CATION, Eattt .ooaia-M....---nay, 518-23!!; af 6 3 llc<J!_OOm Con 11 n en ta.,!,1 __ ~ 1ng '°''"'· i.r.., ""'"''· nu11. 1 llko landscapJ,.... GanJenec BLUE BEACON 833-3496. ' ~~=,.~i.:"!LER Casual eslate livlng. Enter La-Q~ulri=ta'lrer· • RENTALS R&tqALS HouMs Furnlt.Md Houses Unfvmlahec:I Gtneral 2000 General 3000 CaJI 644-0266 Fantullc value, you have to ,__ baths Cpts drps bltns ,,., , • """· lined walk "'ays to your apt. ShownatyourconvetUence. lrK.iUdedc ,.· lls"s·--'Ti * 645-0111 * 4 BR.+ tarn, nn. 2 Fu ll AOuL-only 2 br 2 ..__ mpsa's lush green atmosphere" stroll tree- . ""'· Nicety earpoted 3 BR RENTALS 541-161 '* CUDDLE UP COY. j,.11o. Ne . .....,;.., 127i ~1~"1>~-119; "'°' ALL UTILITIES INCLUDID FIXER Ul!l!ER home that'• clelll.aa_a pin. RENT-• A • HO'~E ·Before the llttillip ~~· ""~Y Mo, <>wnec &t>-0128 -• 1 ·-· Unf. $150 --Furnr$110•---•---2 BR. on valuable R.-2 lot, 2bathtt.Sep&rB.tegUestquar-M 1 '"" a.: ... ..,.... CONDOM1NIU M·2 Br, "IR U f $17S F $"10 N ten or USe aa rental. Panel. $95.00 & UP the privacy ot this 2 Br. 4 ~R, 2 be, referencoes, 3 CIU'pel!il, dn.pH, )'Ud, bit-' ' n ' -um. ' i:Si: P~~· ,Is~cg, carp.; Jing thrU..out . Good res:iden· Ahb SIZES • ALL. AREAS ~.J!2.tt,_etP!I!. -~ children, prefer teens, 1 pet. ins, C2l3l 430-5506 oe'1l-US2 3 Spac, fir. p1ans, decor. furnishin gs: live $32.51Xl tial area, Close to beach. 1''URN. OR UNFURN. Petscwe,.lt";$::(i ~nn~:;~:30 PM, 787 TWithlnedroman1tic s~ttingkw/!un or8 PQr?vacy1. MORGAN REALTY Don't be late on thi.t one. It ASK FOR JODI • · · Fountain Vallty 3410 errac poo , pri. sun en gas Bl s w 673-6642 67>6459 can't last. HWTy and call 832-7800 RENTALS 541-1~ REDECORATED 2 B"'s1o.;, _ · seculded seating comp!. w/Ramada & Foun· (1141 962-5585, I LUXURY LIVING nc Fai"'""', for married •BR, 2 BA, ltplc, bltna, $265 lain. GREAT VIEWI FOREST L OLSON Bh~~!~~ ;:~e •• fU~I :i~ cpl, l infant ok. 646-8226 mo, lstCall& laat * Color co-ord. kit w/ indirtct lightin9. Of harbor&: ocean. Atb', •Plit .......... ....., $210 -3 Bedrooms, 2 bathe, 3 Br, _2 ha,, bltns incl dsh\\·shr 592-5625 * Deluxe renge & ov•ns * Plush 1heg crptg, level home on IW 5100 sq. Ing room, 3 bath.!. '425 mo. fireplace, open bean. oefl. $Dl rt lot. Ide.al fur 4 apt, units. lnc. Realtors Bier. 540-1120. lngs. sundeck I: MANY /mo, 1mmed avail. Sent• Ana 3610 * Bonu1 itor•g• sp•c• * Cov. cerport U)J Im 2501 Ocea Blvd 19131 Brookhunt Avt. $110 • UTIL PAlD. Bachelor ontER EXTRAS! ~USl or 557-7648. * SculptU,.d merble pullinen I til e bat hs CclM. Sy app'I. onl;, ., Huntington Beach apt. Avail now. I.LUE BEACON OLDER l BR, lge food ya,ro, 3 hopBR, !~ bck ~ d9e to * El•gu•nlNrleScreation room. Call: 642-4620 Brol{er. S.'4-6980 no garage, $140 mo. s · • ......., mo, _, cln dep. F R HEO MODELS OPEN DAILY Biii Gcundy, RH11or .IOC) to Beach! * 645-Glll * * ,......, * See AN 1715 s. Brttt1111 SA. Blk fn)m Huntington Center, San Diego NEW 3 10 7 Bedcoonu; Rontal1 lo Shutt 2005 * ENJOY LIFE -Frwy .• Goldenwest Collue. Balboa Penlnsule 1300 W. Bay Waterfront Beautiful, newly redec. 4 BR + bonus room. Patio-deek- beach-pier & slip. $175,ooo: Bill Grundy, Realtor 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-462() from 121,440 Newpoct_Boach 3200 Laguna Baoch 3705 San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. o• FEMALE nl~ h ~ IN THIS ATTRACTIVE 3 Br. ... Rancho Le Cuesta wa = to s are 'l BEACON BAY * EMERALD BAY * Beach 3 blks. to Holt,· W. on Holt to ••• B kh t & Atla t BR home with 2. Costa 2 Bath home, stove, refrlg, Q 96S-l: • ':r~u"""on ';:aeb Mesa. $00. 545-0i35 crpts, drps. 2 car gar. $200. BAYFRONT 2 & den or 3 BR, 2 BA La uinta Hermosa 714: 847-5441 ,.,., C & S S--'y New. Carp. &: drapes: view1:1~300~mo=·==· ==494-84.l~;:,'l":=:=:=:=:=:=:~=:=-;"='=:;;;;;;;;;=:;;!I Ope:n 10 AM to 7 PM NON Drinker, non smoker -RENTALS'54a:°ll'8 of the entire bay. 2Car gar.I: 2 On An R-2 Lot "'"man to share home & '' 3 BR., 2 ho. R'gui.slte inter. Condominium 3950 Coste Mesa 4100 Belt»o. Island 4155 pool with same. ~2286. * ROOMY * I _______ ...:_..:_:: j cc-;-';;;;:::-';;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;:-" Lovely home in front, ttntal All uti.J. paid. ~ Perr- unit in rear. Best H.B. loca-Newport Beacfl 2200 $150-2 Bedroom, range&: ov-month. 2 ER + den, l~ BA. Pool & l ~;.!a,~~ IMMAC. 2 BR apt, blt-iil liquidate at $2'1,500. Submit YRSrental,LldoSands.2br, welcome >< -I ==~*;,."'~~~2-1~3'~*~=='efil~;f'i;;~-'i°T& ~~~· nopeta. y. tion. Illness, owner musl en, refrig, children &: pets 67$..,0SO 0 clubhouse. Near O.C.C. $12>/mo. S4S.S224 kiteh, MW crpta, ::ryrl· ND all tonns. 2 ba, ronm den, pool & BLUE BEACON -lllll"Wll Cl.,& 1~ • BEAUT. Baeh & I B'-1 ========:I Lido Isle 1351 KRAFT REAL TY paddle tennis priv. Blk from Duplexes Unfurn. 3975 apt. $29.SO ~ &: up. Huntington Beach 4400 ---------I 842-1418 962-6424 ocean. $375. M2-3337. * 645-0111 * 1''um,, inc utll. 546-0451 . ' REDUCED 2 BR/2 BA: Cmplt furn/Mod/ RENT • A • HOME LE~E . DUPLEX, 2 bedrooni, Clean ATTRAC. Fum. Stucllo. $115/ NE\Y 1 Br. at Sch! QUIET !Jnmac, 5 BR., family rm. 45 Fountain Valley 1410 Hse, w/gar. Thru 6115. $225/ $t5 & UP Near new, 3 king size bed· & quiet, ideal for mature mo, • Adults only, no pets. $150, bal of mo FR.EE. Look f ., Jot street to street. By ---------mo. Call 673-2648. ALL stzci -Al..J... AREAS rms, 2Mi bath, bllns, 2 frplcs, couple without children or 2135 Elden. See Mgr. Apt. 6. & you'll re.nt! I pi vt app't, only. EXECUTIVE!! 1 BR w/stove & refrig. FURN. OR UNFURN. near beach, NEW carpets, pets, References exchanged, NR Westclilf l ·Br. Pool.. It deck/patios. a'.>4-A 1th. $93,750 POOL (H&Fl Older couple prefen'ed, No ASK FOR JODI d~lec~y·eS:OOR:;tmo.y S150month, lst&.J.astmonth eooldng, util pd. Mature 1 ~6T.l--~1™_·_5.1G-~~U_19_-____ 1 LIDO REALTY INC. pets. Nr Jfoag. ~7421 831·7800 a 9 ~ plUJJ securily charge in ad· lady. SUS. 548-8051 2 BR. Pool. A·dulta. 3377 Vie Lido 673.7300 31~ermhot:lly~. 2 ~~hk LRG 2 BR oceanfront hse, LRG FAMILIES Call 64&392B or 545-J483 ~nt'e. Drive by 753 Scott FURN Bachelor & I Br. =~~e~~6~~ BBQ & patios. Fantastic!!! Frplc, Winier $Z50. Adults WELCOME 3 BR. 2~1 ba.; new ap:~1;:~·1c;:U~for Exceptionally nicel 8~121 HAFFDAL REALTY only. 673-8088. carpeting; patio. Faces · 2110 Newport Blvd, CM ~=,---,-,,--,--I Ul-440S $185 ~ 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, pool. RENTALS ~BR tum, 2273 I: 2277 P.1aple 1 LR.G room, sin&le houee, 1----------l===="'======c• Balboa 2300 huge fenced yard. REALTOR 54g..{j966 Apts. Fumlshed St, $160 including utilltiea. pvt patio, all util ' pd. CUSTOM TOWNHOUSE Ocange County 1600 c ~LE=AN=,-B-R-.-M-onth-ly..:ra:::t::e. BLUE BEACON * 2 BR. 1 BA, new cpl.''"" General 40001c":.:S-:..:59::U::..______ !i:f:"~~~d~I•~ Huntington Beach 1400 4 BR.· $19,900-Beach \Vow! Relax & enjoy care· free living, No upkeep W-Or· ries, Payments so J o w they're not a wony. Cozy living rm, Slep.~vcr gour- met kit. incl./refrig. 4 queen sized bedrooms. Desirable area. Clubhouse., PQOL Low, low down. Just listed, Won't last! Take advantage, Call (714) 962-558."i. FOREST L OLSON Inc. Realtors · 19131 Brookhurst' Ave, llunUngton Beach $17,900 Full Price Last of ltx kind • 2 extra large bedrooms, all bltn kitchen, I a r g e Jandsea~ yard, like new carpets & drapes, room for a boaV trlr. Close to the. oct?an. - Call today! REAL ESTATE HUNTINGTON BEACTf OFC. 894-5311 Open 7 days -8:30 lo 8:30 $18,500 BEACH! DIRT CHEAP!! ---------\Valk to shopping & bus. * 645-0111 * privacy, gar avail. Nr bclt. NOW RENTING! 2 Br furn. * AT OCEAN! l & 2 BR's BUILT . JN EVERYTHING, Prefer older couple. * BUDGET SAVER $215• no pets. 557-MOO REMARKARLY good Joe. Rec. room, heated Fresh paint 4 beaut bid.gs. range. oven, dish\\'&Sher, 548-3158 3237· UNBELrEVABLY PoOI. No ehlldrc.n. 646-5824 220 12th st or 215 15th st. vacuum sysll!m, \vater CH.lLDREN & SMAI..l. PET University Park 1 B ,,,<>=--~J Adults H~ Lido Isle 2351 WELCOME. 2 Br, Bltn 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I EXTRAORDINARILY r . ..,_..,,.,., · apac. • """""°',.----.--,----.,,,,--1 softener, stone fireplace, stove, &: rc!rlg. Crpts, drps, l • BEAUTIFUL \deaJ [or Baehelor, 1993 2 BR turn, downtown HB, no sprinklers, outside lights & --~----130 DON'T OELAYI Val D'isereGerdenApt Church. 54S-9633. _ children, no pebi, cove?Td patio, HUGE 3 bed. WINTER Rental$. 2 BR, 2 S (: & S Speed CALL US TOOAYI Adulls no pets s STUDIO. epts, drps, util * 536-7391 * rm 2 bath + rumpus room, bath, frplc. FA ht., $285. 4 RENTALS 541-j161 3 BR., mo, to mo ••••••• S350 Putting gree~, waterfall &: paid, Quiet pel'90n only. nr BACHELOR Apt, UW pd. GI ean buy JYJ down & sell· BR & den, 3'Ai BA. $450, 3 BR. 2t• balhs •••••••• $300 stream flo\\'e t'll everywhere 17th & Irvine, $100. 642--0538. NEAR OCEAN! er PllYS all closlng costs. 673-2559. 213: 285-285.l cozy COTTAGE Lea!!e/opUon s BR •••••• $325 45' J>OOi, rec. room, billiards: 1 Bedroom back apt. $60 per LINDBORG co. 536-2519 NEAR DISNEYLAND -_ 3 BR. 3 :88· oll-~tcr home $145 • 1 Bedroom, walk to 3 BR. 2 Ba. tnbouse •••• $340 BBQ's, Sauna, rurn.-unfum month. 546-2313 ask for Ter· --- , lm Furrushecl -$450 Mo. shoppi ng. OIILDREN & 2 BR. 1 ba, house · ••••• $250 Singles, 1 BR, 1 BR + den: ry. Laguna Beach ~ m_aculate 3 bedrm, 2 bath, Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642-4620 PETS OK. • eel h•11 2 BR. From $135. See it! 1 Br. furn Apt. Adult, no W>lh eampe' • boat • trlc BLUE BEACON r I -l'am>ns Rd., 642-8670 ...... 165/mo, 1816 Fullem• * BEACH APT. * storage + e~tra large gar-Balboa Island 2355 Between Harbor &: Newport Ave, Cl\1 . 548-1356. 2 Bdrms., fireplace, ext. age & lot Only $24.T::iCI No * '45-0111 * _ 2 Blk N. 19th. ocean view, a few 1teP1 to down GI , REALTY the sand at Victoria Beach. IOIO so. Baytronl; • Be. '"' H119e Corner Lot Univ, Puk Cent.,., Jl'Vinc RENT FURNITURE Newport Boa~-___!._~ $200 MO_ • LEASE DREAl\fY 4 bednn, 2 bath ba. waterfront home & 2 br, SPACIOUS 3 Br, 2 Ba, Stove, Call Anytime 833$lO A New Wey To Live MISSION RLTY. Pb. 49'.9131 just a short walk to be~ch. BlillbaG~.,:f ~~~· Doc~i-4G:zo crpts, drps. patio, fenced * DIRECT TO TENANT in Newport Beech 985 So. Coast Jlwy., 1..agum Ankle deep shag carpeting, yard, room for boat or trail· 24-Hr, Delivery OAKWOOD GARDEN $100 sm cozy place nr beach custom drps, take over GI Laguna Beech 2705 er. KIDDIES & PETS OK. FOR Rentals in Univenicy 100% Purchase. Option APARTMENTS for 1 respon employed adult loan with only $3850 down 1-:----------$210. Parle & TUl1le Rock, Call: Complete 1 BR Apt u On :61h Street btwn No pets. 494-4200 pymnt Lotsa• hOl.lSe for on1y 1· C & S Speedy Low as $22/mo. Jrvtnc and Dovel' Dr. $32,950. Leese/Sele Furnished RENTALS 548-1168 30-DAy Minimum (714) 642-8170 Caplstr•no Beach 4nl OUR FACE JS RED -and so arc the custom carpets and drapes, Decorator red- for Spanish or l\feditt taste. Jmmaeulate tri-level 4 bed- r1Tl 3 bath "Meridith Gar- dens Home". See it JYJW • make an oHer. Must aa.ve face fast Lerwin Realty, Inc. 962-6988 anytime Sante~na 1620 Below VA Appraisal 4 br home, lots of goodies. $29,000 by owner, 545-0800 Lovely Beech Condo * WIDE VARIETY Avau No" toe lease tbro CLEAN & QUIET CUSTOM FURNITURE BAYCLIFF MOTEL $1118. mo.129 wk, .....m.nt. June or Jonger. 2 BR, 2 BA, $145 • 2 Bedrooms. range A RENTAL * I.JJW WEEKLY RATES* Linens. TV, utilities 1ncl. a:> upper with llvlng, dining oven, refrig, carprts It ~~i w., .. -Bank Bldg. 517 W. 19th St., CM. 548-3481 Kitchen, TV's, maid service.' °"J>el>=·='=!l'J-<i07l===-====I kitehen areas main tloot ov. d--fe·--• yn•... u. ""'" ed '· ''"l"-0 • '"-""-' °"'"• Uni··-~ty n....-1. Heat PooL erlooking beautiful p 0 0 I. BLUE BEACON ..... ;>. rt&CK ~ 646-3265 Luxe 2 car pol't 01., ''°'· Doy 833-0101 Nights ,....rrvm $35 Wk. age & complete laundry fa. , ~=..,*~.;:64;;5-G7;-1;:1-'1:::*=':.-::::-;; Lloouy Single Apts. Complete WINTER rental by the SINGLE, TV, heated pool, 2 cilitics. All beautifully & 1 \rER'l CLEAN & spacious 3 maid service housewares bead\, perfeet apts for blk. from bch. S35. wk.· $1.115. completely furnished, linCns, bedrm. home with lge yard, E•st Bluff 3242 lir.i!ns, all·uiu: heated pool, mature lndivkluaL ~Ice, 1 mo. Dana Marina Inn. 3(lll china, etc_ U desired. On1y sprinklers, bllns, atone frplc ABOVE the fog &: 11mog. 3 bill iards. restaurant cock. BR. garage. No children. 1 ~""'='~t=H~wy-.'-,'.,_D_•_na_Ft. ___ 1 100 11lePS to private beach. for $240 per mo, r·amilles Br, 2 Ba, kit-fam rm, tails ' Sl35. mo Call aft 6 or wk-REr..iTALS Tennis court & 2nd pool .aJ. only. Agent 546-4141. gardener, $.liO yr Is e. VILLAGE INN ends. 673-2677. Apts. Unfumflhed so on property witb gorg. CHARMING 2 bednn, l bath, =li44-04'="=J{)=======ILaguna Beach 494-9«36 l BR. Near Beach, year eous la.ndsca.ping tbtu-out. Newiut Hghts, crpts, drps, BALBOA INN Ieal'oe. No pets, immed oo. Gentr•I 5000 Easy access lo super mkt, stove, ft':frig., adults. no Coron• del Mar 2150 Balboa 615-8740 cupancy, $135. :::43 -734ol .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.! shopping, etc, $325 month, pets. S175. 645-2423 642-5200. betwn 5 & 1 Pl\f. winter basis. Will consider $1J.5.UTILPAID.2BR,Avail LARGE 4 BR, 3 BA, split APARTMENT OCEANFRONT: 2 BR. lease • purchase or outright Child kay Duplex, very attractive, Dana Point YEN DOME 4740 sate. Adultii only. Refs. now. 0 ' level, Spanish decor. $37S. RENTAL $181/mo, Ad uJta. (213 ) That's right! You can't buy Laguna Beech 1705 Broker. 534-69811 Immed . oecupaney. 795-30l8 the dirt for this price! l\fod. ------499-2152 AM or 837-079! any. $111.').REDEC 3 B I need &16-0911, 642-Im $70.00 & UP l=o=-:.;.;:.;,....=~--~- IMMACULATE APTSJ ADULT and FAMILY Section Close to shopping, Park "'°" Spacloua 3 BR's, 2 b& ern 3 Bedroom. Family ,,·~~ --~":--"m;;e;;i.;-.,-,,-,,,-,=,-,c-· I ~ & • Kid ;.• ~ k 3 BR 2 B I ~ I 2 ALL SfZES • ALL AREAS COZY 3 BR oceanfront, <A; MEXICAN STYLE • yaau gar. s • pe 0 . • a new y """"'-g FURN. OR UNFUl~N. winter, $225. Adults only, dining. 2 Full baths. Latest Adobe briek & wood walls. • S225 mo. 2 br, crpts, drps. Broker. 534-6980 car gar, frpl, new pu11h bullon bu.ill-ins, Indoor. Pvt beadi. 3 Arch Bay, I o'"-:-'7~=~-~-~ cpt/stovc. $295/mo yr lse. ASK FOR BONNIE * 673-8088 * O"ldoo• bath H"•e ,.,,.....,,,,. Textured floors. Beamed 5-f9..-0206. $1Al6.~I • 2 BFR. f~J""""k y8'd. 61~2612 832-7800 Yrly $150, 1 BR ap• * Swim pool, pu t/green "' ' · ..,. "-U"'"" ceilings. Wrought iron fix-va1 now. am1 y o . or-., lol "'ith boat and trailer tures thrUout. Mexican cook-RENTALS Broker. ~ 2 BR. + fam. nn.. 2 Blkl. to HOLIDAY PLAZA Utilities paid * FrpJ, Indlv/lndry fac'll 1845 Anaheim Ave. ga.te. Enormous Co\'ered pa. l'llYle fireplace. Ocean View -~H~ou~1:!e!_l~U~n~f~u~m~l~1~h!ocl~-I ;;:::;:'=;;::::====;;:;;;;I orean, on Larkspur. $235 DELUXE Spacious 1 BR * 304 33rd St, * 1io. For i;uprisingly lcw down from all rooms. Dining AND __ Coste Mn• 3100 l\1o., util. includt'd furn apt S1J5. 2 BR + den 2 BR furn&: 3 BR furn. Close COSTA :.d:.SA 642-28'1 payment. Call (714) 962-5585. bt"Cakfast rooms. 2 Bed· General -Scenic Properties 67>5726 $100 .. Heated P?Ol· Ample to bead!, Winter or yearly. APARTMENT FOREST L OLSON room< & 2 both<. $56,500 • --------LE ASE /OPTION. 5%% 2 BDRM, 2 hath: view, I blk porl<ing. No ehild"" • no ll2 34th St. 613-2-113 evea. RENTAL includes Mexiean furnish. LANDLORDS I, I, A~umable. Ranch style trom beach! S 2 7 5 / mo . pets~ l96.5 Pomona, CM. BACHELOR apt-close to charmer with 3 large Realto•. 675--2440 4100 beach. Winter or yearly. 112 $70.00 .. UP Inc, Reailol's ings. bed-•, fam;ly nn, o"e-;,. ' Cosio Me10 '""' ' y "'" .,.,.~--,--'7""''""°=-1 -"::':::h.,:S::'-:..'::'::3-.,:2-1.::13:.:.,:ev:.:.:::"'::.· --I ALL SIZES • ALL AREAS 19131 Brookhun;t Ave, ed living nn, modern bltns 2 BR.. newly erpled $200 nMl. liiiiiiljiiiijjiiiiii!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiii!-Hunlinglon Beach ~ I Vacancy Problems Ended & 2 sp11.rklln$ baths. Priced no pets. 432 1''ernleaf. Call BACHELOR, furn + util, FURN. OR UNFURN, CONDOMINIUM .,.,../T'Oe-tZ4 FREE supply of qualified for immell1ate sale at 1213) 761-4767 HARBOR $137.50. 1525 Placentia, ask ASK FOR BONNIE A11sume existing $13,600 FHA REAL ESTATE tenants at no cost 10 yoU. $31,500-submlt on lease op-' ~a;;:bo:;;";;lc<o;'i"':.:;dl:;;"'°;,:":;"';;,·,;:543-;;;;268:;:;:2: 1 ___ __::832=.·::1800:::_-::=-I ~~:Y~~~e!14! pe~=t~~ 1100 Glenneyre St. Ask tor LEE or OLA =th ~=~·Re~:~rs~ _H_"_"_'_'n_g_1°" __ B_e_•_ch--3400-1 TOWNHOUSE °iEi:i~·~~~.~~~a:;~d anc:e. 2 Bf'drooms 2 bath, 6 ~·94-~9-1~73~=~~'°'549-03:;:~16'. I ;-ru;c;::S=]:-2-;:":;66i:;O':Oi:----;;7.: IM=o"v"I"N"G=--°'T'"'O,-°"H'°'O'°'N"°G= 2 STORY 4 BR hoose 3 Abbey Realty 642-3850 RENTAL FINDERS yn; new, v.·ilh modern elec EMERALD BAY 1 BR home tot/pet ok •• SllO KONG?! baths, tlee. kitchen, 2 car 2'l17 Harbor neat' Wilson OCEANFRONT newly dee 2 FrH To landlor• blln kitehcn, living rm with Just listed! Atlr. traditional 2 BR gar, tul/pet ok •• $105 Let !he Property Manage-garage. Fenced yard, Water Fumiahed BACHELOR apt. & 3 BR w/ gar. $350-$315 floor 10 ceiling fireplace, 3 BR. 3 Ba., sep. liv. rm., 3 BR, 4 kids/pct ok • •· · $1.SO rne.nt Division of South pd. $310/mo. $150 dep, Call l Adult • No pels • Heated mo, ~ Ol' 827-8000 645-0111 servicepon:h,plerityofstor-din. rm. & fam. nn. 4 BR, rumpUs rm Coast Realtors solve your 968-5230 pool • Near shopping LARGE l BR. NEAR 4JJW.1M.C..,.,._ age. large wardrobes, crpts, TI6 Emerald Bay $75,000 kids/pets: ·········-··· $175 prollbl:A~s~.2F1or apPOintment 2 BR duplex-Crpts, drps, pvt OCEAN. $150/mo. YEAR-I ~~~~.;.;...;;;:;.;.;;1 drp!!, patio, 200 steps to Shown by arip•t. 4 8,R dtachd runipus rm ea ""J-"O't • • gar. Close to town&: beach. Just for $Ingle Adults LY. Students ok, 6'73-8088 NEW DELUXE 2 BR l"'"""c sh<ippin,.. center com. Bill Grundy, Realtor kids/pets ok ....... · $195 3 BR, 2 ba condo, 2 car gar, Sl!O/mo. Located 314 SOUTH B•Y CLUB 2 Ba, Blt·in range, dshWhr, -b » 3 BR h , eh J / I $125 ., 2 BR Apt. YEARLY lease. h •-p\ex. Vacanl _ move Jn !(). 833 Dover Dr NB 642~620 ° Re ran 11 op patio; pool &: clubhse avail. Chieago. Adults ever 50, no APARTMENTS s ag crpts, ..... l"', P11'· f'rorn da,y. Anyone qualJCles. FABULOUS Ocean V iew STAR.LET 776--7330 S22S/mo. 540-6339. 'pets. Call aft6 pm, 536-0206 Newport Beech ~~~:.~~95-!t~2.39th ~j97~r~r ~>~t Plaza. a' parcel, lOOxlOO w/util, & General -G 1 __ 880 Irvine Ave . .-enere -Generel 3000 ). paving under way. $27,500: 1..::::::::.:.:::.. ____ =::;::::::::;::_ ____ .:::::::__::~~'.!-----='.!.I (Irvine and 16th Corona del Mar 4250 Costa Meu Hl-4471 ( ::::.J MMIDJ $5,tol dn w/..,00 ''"'" on , -~(::_7::14'.!_J.:_645-05'.'.:'.:~50~--l--------sum Top Selling OFFICE! l\1ont.h or Se ptember ls!. 2nd, 3rd place wlnncn HunUng. ton Beach/F"ounlain Valley balance. Bkr. 4M-8100 or •· 1-----------1 497_1021 eves. s Acapulco Apta. attractive, R00~1S $100 mo, Apts $125 PARTLY furn on F,..side (iiQ-Q s., .( D"C ~a.· Pool. Util pe.ld, Garden mo. CROWN OF THE SEA Charming cruiet &: pri te. $1000 DOWN \!:»" ~ ~)..-~ LJ(/"'W Uvlng. Adultl!'., no pcl.5. Mote!.2600 Coastllwy,Cd.M. 1 br & 'prtv. den. ~: Magnlllee•t ocean view lot The Puzzle w1"flr f/r.e Bu1'/f-ln C'uc"e I BR. 11<5 • 1150 613-8851, 675-4921. ''"'· tub & abower, Beam small but level $8,950 Bkr. n 1111 l8JO Wallace Ave, C.M. u· 497_1210 or 497.1021 eves. BACHELOR APT, man ce 1nga dilposa.I, BeD O l!earron9• letters of the 1 BR. $135/mo. Crpts, drps, prefem!d Utilities Franklin frplc, 2 end. four scrambled words b. ·all elec, laundry r m , Included: 675--5720 patios. Pot belly stove,~ low to form four slrnpl• worda. carport. No petll. Ask about & bookcase in den. blt·ln San ClemM'lta 1710 Board or Realtors. Olents ---------PUTRIH our di11COunt plAn. 741·B W. 2 BR. crpts & drps, pool. So. stove. frott·lree re fri g , 18th SI. ~2-U58 of Hwy. Adult.a, no pets. stainless alnk. Lots Qt "'ttlli ng • lh1t now! 841-8501 642.().127 431-3769 fl;t§li!'ll TAKE OVER G .I, RESALE 3 bedroom, 2 bath with eoiy tltt-place, step.saver kitchen, llUGE 20 x 30 family room. With amall down, on1y mo ..... all. 126,.., FlrLL PRICE. C-11 Collect Walker & Lee Rcal!Ot'I 1682 Edin«<' 2 STY res, 4 BR, 2 full & 2'2- ba, pvt ace, lo bc.h, l\1agn w , $66,500. Onr 7 14 I 871-$300, 492-Zlll by appt. 1ns 4 ACRE estate land or honie ranCh, nice vlew, ajd. other parcels. $48,000: $15.lm dn. will release dear bldg. Jlte for 100~ financing. Bkr. 497-1210 or 4!13-1706 <'ves. Aportmonh for Sale IMO ~~SC-44 __ ,;--.-0t'.,...."°"=5'~'°--1 WATERrRONT-Three 1 br •By owner, 4 br, 2~ ba, lgc tuUtt w/ckkk. $63,000, Prln- oorncr lot, M1-11M1, 17321 clples only. Ownu 673-2662 HEPES I' I I I 11 . ,.,,__..., DU FEM I f . ..,..,........ . I 'I s • A chiseler: Ha .doims that '-::~::;:=·=! ~I ~~on ~Is trip, lo Europe he coiled ,.. on f1va lings, He muat haVll I T 0 N Ky T l beenina-gome. • I 1 • I I I 0 Comttleie ..... dtu&I• ·~ by filll ... " ... "'"""' -~ -yatl develop frtm Mep No. i below. f) UNSCIAMBl.E AIOVE IEll!RS 10 GET ANSWElt l1BS Jea,e, ~l-~-Walk $125/mo mob htn w/acrnd ...... rage. to ~. porch, com\)! furn. lltd pool. Balboa 4300 $165. lit -lut mG·$50. ~ Adl!JI, no P,:ts, • Season's dtpOSIL Reapon1ible adultl Mob Eft. 2350 Nwpt. MS-6332 PENINSULA POINT only! 548-4093. DLX lg I be, new deo ~ cpb<, o.IW<" 2 BR, 2 BA. ~ ORLEANS APJS. lg be.le. gv, cntrl bl, dw, To desirable adults. Yrl)o. qUlet adult bldg. $125. $225. 67$-2•19'1 or after S, 54s.6956 eveA It wk.end!!, 675-1358. * NASSAU Palm~. 2-BR. 1M4 Mlramu Dr:lve. apt. F\lrn & Unf. Pool, ping· 2 Br. $250 monthly, ycnrly pong, BBQ, ghady lawn1. buitl. 315 E. Bo,y SI. Jnq. lTr E. '22nd "St. 61~5 Apt C ~1521 or 548--rr'll. . ADULTS ONLY 2 & S J3R._..AvalJ, Prtvate pa,. tlo, pool .. indlv, la.tmdry fee. (Nr. <>nonaoeo. Altport:~Tuo. t1n at 17th St; nr, WestcWO. l BR. Lrg clo8eta. Pool. BACHELOR Apt, tum, Bal 1741 Tuatlii, Costa Me. Shuff I e boa rd:. Ne ·1 Petdn, nr ocean, lge IUDdck. Mgr, l\trl. Thom(llOll &e.4&11 epl/drps_. Utll pd. 1884" $125 mo. 842--31'8 fl'onrcvia Ave, 0 1 LGE 3 hr, l" ba. apta. 1 BR turn. ruo .B. upstairs, Lido I 1 la '351 <rps, dlhw:shr, Down.ta.in. Orange Avenue, Costa1---------No pets, 2 chlldrtn *'Hr ' l\1eaa. SlXl. month. DELUXE Beach. Apia. Furn. tehool•. $160. 545-3215 ·---=------. ..;;Gu_moy_,_Ln_. -----• .,:af;;;J..;6..:pm=. -----SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7000 l BR FURN $150/mo fncl S love, re fl' I g, ga r . •1'-nB;;R.--,0i>"=='t='1'"'. "m"=-" .. "."-:-.. "t1o.,.-I' 11tll. Pool, gar, dlspo.sa.I, $2004250froo, lXl Nord. stow. SllO/mo. Adults. ., Adult•, no petll. 642-2383 64~ or ~ pts.. 543-41'.m •ft .t pm. ' ~/l•lllll!!Sli!ll!!d)IJIWl!l'l•Zlt,Ck4t~z~ss-2~.•2•2~s~ •• ,,,, .. 19'!""'P~.'~,.,,,~,..,.,~i•P,...•&,!"'!?t2'"•~.~s""';"'"'""~·~•~s..,c~e~u'"'"~'""cs~1,_.~.,..=~•=~•·•~ . .,.,,,.. .. ~s,...s .... ~c~•..,,=w....,,~,••~·•~'"~·-•~•-•~~··~~~~~~~·~~·~~·-··----··--· • , ( • i ·Looking For Someone To Take An Order? j ·We're Good At It We'll even pay the postage to get you to give us an order. Get ready . for some quick profits by malling in your order today. Put a hardaworking DAILY PILOT classified want ad to work for you. USE THIS ORDER FORM 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE UNE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 UNES • 7 • n11a nw11 . ..... 't1lla .. n11a - $4.50 $6.10 $5.10 $1.21 $6.00 $9.76 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 Publhh f1r •••••••••• tl1y1, 1»11111111111 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••··- Cla11ific1tlo1 , , , •• •• •• •• •• •• •• • • •. •. •. •• •• •• •• • • •• •• •• •• •• • • •• • • o N11111 ••••••• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• • • • • • • • • •• •• • • •• •• •• • • • • •• •• •••• •• • Addr111 • •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •••• ,. •• •• •• • • • • •• •• • • •• •••• •• • • • City •••••••••••••••• , • • • • • • •• •• • Ph•n• •••••••••••• , ••••••• , ••• - $10.65 $15.90 $13.10 $20.10 $15.55 $24.30 TO Pl•UU COST P11t only eno word 111 ooch 1p1c1 1bov1, l11clllll1 your 1cldr111 w ph1111 numb.,, Tho cod of Y''" 1d b ot the .:nd of tho lino on whlc.h tho lost wort! of Y•• od h writ• t111. Add $2.00 1irtr1 H yo• d11lr1 111 of DAILY PILOT l o• 11rvlc1 with •ritll..i , .. ,11 ... -----------CUT Hiii -PAm ON TOUI INmOPI ----------- BUSINESS REPLY ,MAIL flnt Cl111 Ptrmlt N• IJ, C::..I• M-, C.Hfoni• Orong1 Coast DAJLY PJLOT P. 0, lox 1560 Costa M11a, Calif. 92626 Clauffiod Dopt. Or Give Us an Order by Phone At 642-5678, The Direct Line to .. DAILY PILOT Cla1siflecl Want Ad RESULTS I Cllt' • • ,,.,_ fvct!"' • tie-" I fk!lllow I flANY 1ne M , the fl:IU 11111 I'"' Pl J .klhll I NIWPOrl l D4otld 0. frATE OJ OllANGIE 1 On tlM ,, .-. 1 Nor .. r1«11Jb'_ te mo1 te t11blo<rlbed ~no...19e1e l(lff!C!l t Ii j U• Tiii und• duct1111 1 C1lltornl1, f/f SPECT •Id llrrn -'°"·wt re1l<Mnc:t 8111 T11 ! Ut1h. , Oiied 0. u• Tht une condvc:tln1 l lvd., NII' IM ljctlllo 111d ilrrn ••son,, v al ruld.,. llobtrt No>rW1llt Ktrmt (O•ll M 01ttd ( !TATE 01 OJIANGI!. On Oct. 11'1/blk ln l~Nlre<I Kl1t1 k1'0' wPloff 111r lll!otrumen ec:ulld the (Olllcll l t Publ!ll\f :)c!obolr 1110 I UPI' ,,. '" NOTICE FOil P Ll!TTI! E1!1tt O.C11std. NOT1ec JAME5 I: CtTIZ2N! !itr1ln 1 1 l1r lu1111 ""tltlontr for h1•t~t -111cr wt lo~ o lltt Qll:rt u !O o;ot,11 #111, #I I 'D4ottd ( w " YOUN01 )15 W11t s.1111 &111 l'el9"1-"'"',.,.."' Pub11ii.. Octollfr t "' ·Tl>t u111 duo:ilnt 1 l"I., Cost Uctlllous P\IMP II It tonlPll -"' clinc.e 11 ,,_ Co•l1 /> 0.te<I I STATE Q ~"NGE On 0.."I l'JlbllC I" liPtlrf<:I llt Ille o II the w l f\t e•KU (0/'llClll 0 > Publl1h °'""'' ovo ClllTI The un d6ts Cir binl"ttl C"511 M llf'oo1" II STAT! I firm ls Co 0-M II II fnll D4ovlr l lvd ... Dllld • 0 Cou~I'!' o l'St1te o! • On Oc! Public Ir l ptt.ttred '" bt lht .. Oo K-nctWle (0fflCI. I : • T • ' Publ!s~ Oct.'· 1: , .. ,,,. . Conducllt 81lbo1 ( !ht licit ... ll:TISTJ MSl!d o! """'" "' IS toHow I ,_ I C211 N ......... ! 0.ltdl • s•111 o1 °" O<> #ublk Ir IPl!ffrtd W1.ri~o, ..... M "'""'"" eculH IP IOP'fl(I, ' ' • 0 • • "1.1~1111'1 Ott. t. U LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOT ICE ..... ,. C•llTl .. ICATI tlP' IUllNISS "ICTITIOUS NAMI T~ ~r•ltned -· CtrtHy hi 11 co... d\l(lln• • bullllltSI II N•-rT le<lcll. C•llforttll , ulldtt n.. lktllloul firm 111mt1 tf $PECTllA. FACTORING CO. 11'111 lhtl Mid lltm ls tomDOHd Ill 1111 lellowlnt .... .an. wllolt -In 11111 I nd Oll CI or re1i01nc1 11 •• lelfv'los: 11111 Took1, 4111 Nor111 Xl6 W11t, P~110, I Ut1ll. D1 ted O<t~ 11. ''70 ' 1111 Took.a ST.t.TE OF CALIFORNIA, ORANGE COUNTY: On ()c:loblr 12. 1t1D, btfor1 me, I Nol•rY Publlc In I nd tor 11i. St1!1, '*'llOnallv •-•red 1111 Tookt •nown IO ''" lo bl 1111 111rHn wnou 111m1 1, 1Yb•crlbed lo tl'lt wltl'lln ln1!rum.nt tl'lf KkftOWledted he 111.KUIMI thl tlmt, (Otllcltl Snll M1rv IC. Henrv Nott t'Y l>ubllc-c1111oml1 Prlnclptl Ollk1 In OrtM!t Countv Mv Comml11!on E~tlrtt Nov. 14, 1tn Publfll\f:d Ort ngt C11$1 Otlt~ •1101, OclcMr U. 2tl. 27 t nO Novtmbe, l . ttHI 1..,.1'8 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE IAlt 17H SUl"lltlOlt COUllT 01' THI STAT!' 01' CALIFOllNIA 1'0111 TNlr COUNTY 01' O•AN•I PM. A·"lM NOTICE 01' Hl .. ll:ING ON l'ETITIOpt 1'011 l'll:OaATI 01' Will ANO l'O• LETTlllS TESTAMENTAllY E1t111 ot STELLA A. SANDSTROM, o.«11t'd. NOT1ec 15 HERlraY GlVfN lMI JAMES E. SANDSTROM 11111 Cll:OCl<ER· (IT!ZENS NATIONAL aANI(, ll~v~ llltol Mr•I" ' IH!llllon tor Probete or Wiii •"" for luu1nc:1 of L•l!•ri Test•mtnll rv to ~tltil!Mrs, r1f1rtnc1 to wlllth 11 midi ler lu•1~tr 01rtlc11tars, I nd lhll lh1 tlm• ....., P••« o• M••lno IM •• ,,.., hll llffn wt li:>r O<teDer lO, 1'70, 11 t :)O 1.'!'I .• I" ltlt *''""om ol Dto1ttm1111 No. 3 ol Mid i»url. 11 100 C'•IC Ctnt~r D•IYt ~11t, Jll •~t Cllv of 51nl1 Ant . C1lllornl1. '0.tH Octo'"'' t , n~ -W, E. ST JOHN, CC<lnlY Clerk Vo .... 1 l'JtENNElt & HIWI , 3lJ w.-Third JlrHI S.hlt Ant. C1lll9r"l1 nn1 hi~-: !1U J S41~UI &ttel'f'9r1 kiri l'.illlt~•" P11brl111ec! Or1ng1 Co.it Ot!tr Piiot. Ck:lal'fr ll, It, 7(1, ltltl llla.-111 ~-ntt' (lrtT•PJCATE 01' I UUNISS l'ICTITIOUJ NAMI 1Tl11 undl11oltnetl deet ter111V ht t1 t~· tt\lc!l"9 1 bu1lnes1 t i 1'05 w11tmln1ter l'I., (0111 Me11, C1tltvr"l1, undar 1111 "cmlou1 form n1~ Of CONTINENTAL ""'~' INOUSTlttES Ind lhtl Slld !!rm It t11mP01el:I' of 11'e tM IOllowl"' otrson. llflese nllTW hi lull 1nd Plitt Of rtll· dtnc' 11 11 follo•o: J1son E. Gwinn, 160S Wt Jtmlns1tr Pl .. • Cosl1 Mesa, C1lil, •l6U Ot!ed OclaDtr U, ltl!I JtlOll E. Gwinn STATE OF (AllFOllNIA, ~flANGE COUNTY: J.On °""'· 11, 1•10. IWIO•• ""· • No11ry "tlJbll< I" 1nc:1 fnt ••I,, Sl•t•, oer10<>1ll• ••,••tll Jason E. Gwinn known to mt le tit Ille oerlllf\ whtlst n1mt Is •ult1trlhH Tl 111, wllhln lfl•trum~"' 1nd •CknDWltdtt !If ~~tcuted 1111 NITll. (0111cltl Still 1 M•rv 81th Morlan No!1tv Publ!c -C11llornl1 PrlndPtl Ol!\ct In Oruior Count~ . M• '''""'"lu !On E••lrH ,. .,,u '· ltll Pubthhte Or1ntt Cof~I D1llY 1'1111!, OttoDtr 11. 20. 11 1n• Novtml!tr 3. 1"70 lW.nl LEGAL NOTICE !'·)!"' ClltTl'ICATI 0" AIANDONMENT OP aUS1NISI. "ICITITIOUS NAME Tiit unders!91\ed, DAVIO P. (AUOlll. ~ ctrlllv 11111 ,.. I• ~b1naonlnt I blnirleU ti ~U E11t 171h SlrHI. Sullt )31, C.tt Meu, C1tltornl1, under !ht lie· lll'lou1 firm ntmt ot MOT!'L·MOl l~I!· SfAll! INVESTMENT co. I nd lhtl ,." firm 11 c•-td 11 ti.. 10llowln1 "''°"· ,wPl<>M .,.,,,,. In lull 1...i •ltco OI ••Sllltnc:t II 15 l ... IDws : I o.v!d I'. c 1uc1m. mu I . MOOt'ltY l t...d., Vl11U1, Cfllfot"ll . Otltd Octobef' I. UJfl D111fd P. C1udlll jCOUnlv of Tul1•1 S11t1 01 C1lltornl1 ! On October l, 1110, '"'la.rt mt . t NOi••¥ l'lltillc In 1J\d la.r 11ld S111t, H•IOlllll~ •!l!lff•ed 0 1vld P. C1ut1111. Known 10 mt to bf lh1 "''""' whftse n1mt II 1ub1crlO. ed to !ht w!lhll'I ln1truMtnl IM 11cknaw!.ottd "' PKUIH IN 1111'11. !OFFICIAL SEAL! EllHn P. Woodl" I Noltry l'ubllc, C1lllornl1 Prlnd111I 010tt !fl Tu11rt Co1.inlv ! Mv commlnloft 1!11lru Joot 12, 1tn ~ubllshftl Or11191; COlll Ot!!v 1'11111, Oci. ,, n. :io, 21. lt1'11 1Uf·70 1 LEGAL NOTICE P.JllllJ I ClltTl,ICATI! O' IUStNlll, !'ICTlT!OUI NAMI ni. "'"°'"lt0lltl 1111 Cll'tl,., l!lf¥ ••t (.onf...C:tiftl I 111111-,, 10) Mii" If,, 8tlbN (N .. Nl'I 8tl<lll C11tfornlt, "'"°'' 1111 flc:lltiOUI l!rll'I NIT't ol UNIOUI! AllTl$Tll:Y, •ncl lfltl M id llrll'I II tlm• _ _, of lf'lll 1(11\oW!llt MflOIU. wMM "~ Ill ~I Ind l lPCtl of ttllftl'llC4 •rt It fof!OWl! L-"' (11MY, W kl Guft lh .. Htt c111 "'·'·· Ml,..., Lu w1,..o. ~ 1 . l ''" """ let&ot. 0.tfd 10.1·1'1 / LtMnl coiew M1ry l11 W11hko s•111 of c111wn11, Or1nM c-1v, Oii OC:f!Ober l, 1'70, """ ..,., • NoltN f'WHt I" 1nd lot .. 1tl Slllt, Hl'IO'lftlW t~r"° L-rd C11ttw. MlrY Lu WttPllO, k-lo 11'11 lo llt tllt --~ n-1rt 1t;bterl'9tl fe lllt Wlli'llh i1U"""'"'1'1! l lld Kl-tlftH !flW Ill• ~Ulecl IP!I Ytnf, !O!'fl'l(IAI, llAll ClllP!lrlnt Mlcl'lltl N1!1ry Pvlllk>C1U'9fllll Prll'ICltll Olllu '" °''"'' c.i,,,.., + Mw cemm1n l011 txol1Jl kit!, L lt11 ft\ltlf!thtf O•t~.. ('Mii Olfl¥ P!ltt, Ott. " 11. to. Jf, lt11 l.,.,o -5 6 7 8 ·D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 -----------~~· ·-·--· .. ·~ -·-··. Dl,11. Y PILOT llNTAU RINTALS RINTALS RINTALS RENTALS . ~s. Unfumlllhld Aph. Unfurnlshe4 Apt1. Unfurnlshe4 ~h~~.".~-'!'!~-Aph_ Unfumlllhld CHio Mo10 5100 5100 Cosio MoMI 5100 Newport ... ch 5200 Huntlngleft IMch S400 l lko Llvlnt In y..,r ·tJIO·%-Br. pool: $HS. Conve-3 llR, 2 BA, cpla, drp<, blfu, OWN HOME • , • I I nit1 nCMt a~I~ 313 E. 17th ~~~ ~~~te!JZ7511~ 115 34tb \Yby"""»IY $175 for an ap1! • • · ·---·-'" -ON BEACH! whtn we can rent you oM 2 Bl( 1613 Santa Ana Ave. * 3 BR. 2 bl., frplc, encl • 2 BR uni. From $22S for $140. 2 BR., newly dee, Sµi(l/mo. Crpts, drps, 1tove/ 1erage, $230. @l3 Hilaria. 0 2 BR Furn, From $285 crpVdrp, eocr Pf.tlos, ap.IC rtf. 543-8572 or Kl 2-7279. MG-0003 C. rpttMtr1,pet-dJ1hwNhtt ... nds. 2 Poola! Adultl only. :m7 Harbor neAr Wilson heattd pool-sauna-ttnnlJ •· ' BR 1\1 BA STUDIO I &_ 2 BR apts. No petl, no lrvlM 5238 I 2283 f'auntain \Vay E. (Har. • dlildre rec room-octan v ewa her, turn W. On WHsonJ , 'I'OWNHOUSE .. $145/mo. ~ 642...5848 * 1=;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; pelia· .ample parkln.a. • Heatro pool-Adult11 only NOW LEASIN,.._I Security IU•rd• . .DUPLEX, 2 be<lroom • .c!o n e No-peta-AdJ-to-<hoPOi .. ..LllR,_2!o..BA. •ba'Pr ..,,!Ac "' -RUN.,.NG...,..N & quiet, ideal for mature drps, fncd. Avail now, $195 New, tamlly and adult.I unitA 11 'IV couple without children or e Quiet Adult Living mo. 545-4879 with total recreation club PACIFIC $~,!!·m~~th'"', ~•te~ ~~~~~:~h 2 BR, ShqcpU, bllrul, be.aut. LGE 2 br, ln ba 1tudio. abdnd pre.achoo!. l, 2, &_ 3 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. """' lndscpd. $170 mo incl all Crpts, drps, bltnl. No pets. ma from $150. Nr, shop. (714) 536-1487 plus security charge in •d· util. Adults only, no l>f'ls, $150. 545-5270 or 833.3540 Pln&', aolf, schoo!s. Just Ofc. open 10 1m-6 pm Oall)i YI.net. Drive by 753 Scott 241 Avocado St. 64$-0979 3 Bedroom. Adulll. 11>11th of San Die~ Fwy. on Managed by Wh•ddv• Wontt Whoddyo Gott SPECIAl CLASSIFICATION l'Olt NATURAL BORN SWAPPER$ Spoclol Rote Place, C.M. cau 5"48-3636 for CUl·-r Dr Irv! H• •733 HARBOR GREENS $165/mo. ~.. ., ne. ~ . \VILLIMf WALTERS co. Appointment lo ""· * Call 540--01!4 + PARK WEST I !!!!!!!!!!!!!~"!!!'""!',....,I 5 llnes-5 tlmo1-S llucko •ULIS -AD MUST INCLUDI 1-'#Mt ,... ...,.. "' .,.... ,_ ...... -...... ...... t-YOll• ,._. ... ,... ........ ..... ...... -·"I. + LRG 2 BR APT * GARDl!:N • Sl'UDlO APTS APARTMENTS . FRESH·AIR •-·• l 2 3 , tram SllO •LRG 2 BR, pvt pe.tio, w/w 1-NOTfUNe ~· Ml.I -TUDll OJllLTI w/w crpts, drpg, dispou.l, prv "'"""''-• • BR•. · d bl•--Owned and Manqed by Walk 3 blka to Beach! •-2100 P •·-W C •• crpt.s. fll&, .... , 1ar . pktio, adultl, no pet.. """""' to e..,..,,.,n AY. ·'"'· $135/mo 54S-1B67. Tht IrvbMi Company Beaut. big 2 br, apts. w/w appreciate. Av~ N_,v 1. 546-0370 [~!!!!!!!'!!!!~!!!~~'!'! crpts, drps, bltns except To Place Your Trackr'• ParadlM M PHONE '4W671 na.:;. 2047 Charle St. * 3 BR-21/t BA* E-SlDE lg 1 Br. cpta, drps,1: --rebig. $150 &i: SlSS. 1 child 49 improv'd R·l lots It Ac. 54l-60.10 or Mfr.1841. Like r home. lEiOO sq tt, new bltns, patio, aar. Ad.Ill, no B.ck S.y 5240 ok. No sngls/pets. 535-lTil. to S330,SOO. Oear. Waot e NOW RENTING e shag crpts, re-dec'd, elect 1"'~"~·~11~35~--~646-~~11~62~'===1l;vu.w2e;::-;;;;;;;;:-;;;;; NEW 1 Br at Bch! QUIET N'twport or Palm Sprints Ew ~. U52 al 6 •. :: * VIEW 2 Br. crpU, drps, home or ln-m •~h·-?.ftsa Vtrdt AreL N ..,... bit-ins. $195. 546-t « Mua Verde 5110 bltns, Ira pool.. S130, bal of mo FREE. Look "" e a . ..,.. ..... ., plexe1, 2 &: 3 BR, bllns, encl •II day wk ends. ----'--'-----[ Sl65/mo. 613-369(), &:. )-:pu'll rtntt ! Pv I (no smoa>. (714) 459-3103.. aar. patios, wshr I dl')ler '•°'B"'R....,u'°..i.,..-:;$1>5,,,-,-1:-;.B;,R;-::unl::;-.1 2dr BR, ~d.uJts,Sl Carpl!t "I=========== ~~~~=ti~U~1-A 14th. Have vacant &: Improved hOokup. Also lri' 2 &t 3 BR $130. Crpls, drps, bltns, apes, tins. 40. !att Bluff 52(2 • . . Ml lncotne, WANT: Rl lot i~ 4-plexe1, 546-1034 Pool. No children, no pets. ==,::;+~!4~~~21~:1:1~+~=='1---------BEACHBLUFF APT$ or hOrt\e, coastal area, New. VILLA MESA APTS. 325 -J E. 17th Pl, C.M. 2 BR. 2 Ba, pool, patio, F/H, port Stach thru Dana Point, 2 BR, Priv patio. Htd pool. -"'-8-'--27_3'_=~---Newport Beach 5200 NEWPORT BEACH dshwhr. 8231 Ellis. 673-6809. 2 car encl'd car. Children $170 -VIII• Grenada Apts. 842-8477 or 847-3957 1'r"'o~w"N=H"'o"u"sE~3=sR=,..,2"11~BA~, welcome, no pets please! J BR, l l;i BA, palio, blt-ln:s, ·P~ NEWPORT-care tree $750 Furnished, Five bed· 1 BR, refrl&, bltn.s, crplS, N.B. Pool, patio, frplc. VaJ. $165 mo. TU W. Wilson. crpls, drps. Ask about our livg overlkg the waler, 1 rooms & den With baloon~s drps pool, near beach $135 ue $32,500. Take low down, 646-1251_ discount plan, 880 Center St. ~ls,; tenn~17~ls i7~~ above & patio below. Grae-per~ .. adults, no pei'.s. T.D .. trailer or ? Owner LRG 2 Br. Newly dee. 642-8340 pa, rom to · loua llvlnr &: quiet Sllrl"OUnd. Tradewlnds Realty 847-851l 646-6654. Adu!"' Ool•, no p e I 5. -Bach. 1 or 3 Br. Also .2 st,y lngs for Wnily with children. SP C OUS 3 b 2 b& I " • THE SEVILLE • Townhouses. Elec, kt. prl. Near Corona del Mar High • A I r, , ge HAVE watertt'Ont Jot, Can- $150/mo. Nr Harbor &. ~ 2 BR. 11,J Ba w/ gar. pat. or bal Subtrn prJcc, pot SchooJ F':irepiace wet .___ fenced yard, encl a:ar. Cou-yon Lake, l hr fl"Om Orange Adama. Clll Eves & wknds, $155 (adults) cpts, drps, maid ser cpts, drps. Just b 1· • . I.HU pie w/2 children, no pet.I. Co. \VANT units, house, 540-39'Jl lncrl yd w/patio. Wtr pd-N. ot Fashion Isl at Jam-& ~I .t·in kite~~ applianc. $185. 842-4549. commercial property or ! LRG 2 & 3 Br. Crpts, drps, gardnr. 2619-L Santa Ana horee. & San Joaquin Hills ~shed hgh: 00.n'1 er u~urn-A'M'RAC. 2 Br. $145-$159. All 835-86&1 alt ::30 encl patio, kids y,•elcome. Ave. 636-1121) Rd 644-1900 for leasin& in· s or urniturc pure 11.se. extras. Pool. Kids/pets ok. 11).20 acres. Cl05e to big 1998 Apt 1 J\'laple Ave. BRANO new dlx 2 BR tripleA fo.. 835 ~~~.;;>Se~!r &644Co~1 17.Wl (A 'Of Ci Keelson. lake &. river Fish hunt 642--6344 apts. Priv patJos, shag 2 .BR. Unfum, O'pts, drps, Jl,1aniaini Aj'ent 847-7446. camp. Btwn hi-way 4o &. so'. * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. crpts, drps. bllns. gar. X1nt pa.lio, pool, bllns. $160. e QUJET 2 br, 11' ba, crpts, Nr Reno, Nev. Trade for Garden Apts, 'Bil-ins, priv. E·side loc. $175. Adults. 353 SeacliH ~1anor ApLs, 15251--=-~=~~~~ drps, garaa:t, li:t sundeck. car C11.mper or,'! S41).233.l patio, heated pool. lrplc. \Voodland Pl (nr Tustin &c Placentia. 548-2682 a1k e NEW DELUXE e Sl60 536-8739 Adults $145 mo: 546-5163 20th). 642-4905 about our dlscounl plan. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. · Trade: lst TD's (4) $6,000, 2 BR, 1 BA, bltn range, c"ts, NEW 2 BDR.i\1. Beam ceil-* BAYFRONT * Incl 1pac. muter sui~, dirl Santa Ana 5620 (6) $20,IXK> (6) $25,000, all • rm "dbl 1arag auto door ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;,;;lor "'"'1 for Newport proper. nice -uo, $135/mo. Also :Z ings, ~'OOCI paneling. All rec e, --r-~ LUXURY A t St t -" Pool •-•·-\Y or'!!! Br. turn. upstairs $145/mo. features. sis.;. Adults, no p s. ar • opener av..... • """"· No pet.1. 673-TI7S pets. Call now 64&-0073. ing at $365. * 642·2202 area. VILLA MARSEILLES 557-9700 or 499-4206 l e 387 w. Bay Street e 2 BR studio condo, 2~1 ha, e FROM $265 e BRAND NEW Horse barn, 4 5taI!s, hay & lEl~~· &u~:n. s~.'~~ltl~~ ?>10DERN 2 Br. crpt.s, drps, frp!c, W8Sh/dryer, pool, 865 AnUp Way, NB SPACIOUS tack rm, 5 paddocks, ridina: pet~. MESA l\1ANOR. 241 GE kitchen, e n c Io s e d saun11, Dover Shor es WI" 'AMM&nal'dWALTERSby CO. 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. ttena, fncd, 114 ac, rnch 1t)'l \Vllson Ave, CM . 548-7405 garage, neu bus. $145. Newport, Adlts $275. eves: ua.-.1. Adult Living hm. Trd for income or 'l 1. DECtf.lCE l & 2 BR. Adults. 12Q E. 20th. 968-3597 TNHSE • 2 br, '2\.J ba, bltlls, Furn. & Unfurn. \Velly l\lcCoy 675-0116 Garden Apts. Bit-ins, prlv. BEAUTlrUL Neow 2 Br, LARGE delxe 2 BR. 2 BA, frplc, patio, encl 1ar. 752 Olshwas~er. color coordinet-OWNER. Granada Hills 2 patio, heated pooJ, frplc. crpts, drps, 11.dults. no pels. crpts, drps, bltns, D/W, Amigos \Vey, 675-Sall ed t1.pphances • plush shsg sty vltw home Uke new Adults. $145 mo. 54&-5163. &16-76'M $165 & $185. Adults. infant carpet • choice of 2 color s57,750 val, 4 Br'. 3 Ba. fam'. 2 B OK. 642-4387, 642-1771 Corona del Mar 5250 schemes • 2 baths • 1tall rm. !-'or Duplex or Hmc NB BR. l~J A. sharp, crpts, * Clt!an 2 Br. 1~ ba, bltns, howe fl'lirro"'ed ward d........ approx 1200 sq ft. dshwsr, crpl, encl, patio, LI.DO Isle destrablt 1 BR. 5 rs • --or CdM 644-4571 646-0439 ... v C d In li robe dOOrl!I • indh'tCt light• . • • Av&il noY.'. $160 mo·• gar. SISO. 548-6357. rpt • etc. ..,.e v. rm. ~ .,. ,·0g In kitchen _ breakfast Patio roof material OT • ! 545-4879 \Valk ID stores. Q u I e I -2 BR. 1 ba, bltn kit. Crpts, teMnt. Lse. $175. 673-5148 Q.~ bar • huae private fenced wanted; trade for portraitJ NE\V lg DELUXE upper 2 drps, gar., fenced yd. $160. Ort• patio _ plush landscaping • or palntinat. by prominent Br. nr Westclill. cpls, drps, 673-2918. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Unf. Bltns, crpti, brlck B11.r·B-Q's • lar&:e heat. professional arlist. Ideal for bltns, patJo, llll'I· Adults. drps. $250/mo. * Call ON TEN AQlES en pools & la.nal. Chrislmas. 497.1050 67~7150 Pl.ANNING to move! You'll 541).7573· a.ft 5 968-8658. l • 2 BR. Furn • UnfUnt 3101 So. Bri5tol St. rr·s A bree2e. ,sell your I find an amuina: nw:nber ol 2 BR. I BA. erpt'd, drp'd. Fireplact1 I prlv. patk;s I (l,) ?tti. N. of So. Coas Plaza) Ret"reation . S. Lake Tahoe lttm1 with ea.se, use Daily homes in today's O&Mitied Westcliff area, Adults, SlT5 Pool&. Tean1a. C.Ontnt1 Bkflf.; Santa Ana % acre, all improvements ;P~i=lo;t ~Cl:;•:;;":;';;lit:d;. ~64~2-,;56;1~8=:.:...=•;::'~'·•Cih~•~ck~th~•m~no~w~. :~~""';;·;;"';:=-::"'::=';-::;::::==• llOO Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 PHONE: 557.alOO incl sewtrs. $2000 Eq., 7o/ <MacArthur nr C.0.st Hwyl I '.!!!~'.!!!~!!!'.!!!!!!!!!''.!!!"!!' loan, Trd for local RE or ·-·-Jack Hammond Bkr 540-llSl CORONA DEL MAR Loguno Booch 5705 . ' ' ' T ' NEY/ 3 Br. 3 Ba_ lower du· --What do you bave 10 trade p\ex. Closed patio. Cov. gar· OCEAN VIEW • Lr&: 1 BR List tt here -in Qranat qe, Beautifully landscaped. apts. Furn or unfurn. Crpls, County's ~at read trad- Complete bit-ins. Year Jease drps, blt·ins, patios. w1lkin£" lJI& poet _ aM m&kt a deal. at $325 per mo. Contact distance to to\vn. JOO CHU * * .. -1 BR N. end, % blk ghop/ Corona del Mar hide&WQ btach home, like new 2 BJt., view; val. $50.000. Trade tot TD's, unit. or!, Uniwnlb' Realty 67:J.6510. r S8000. equit,y, .... "4 ' ....... "'-· No. Tu..m, -area. 4 br, 2% ba, din, tam m, frplc. w/low int. Fot ac .• trailer, hou1e. 5!St7.0 Commercial ~ proper. r.y. free It clear; next to Seara:. va1. sas.ooo. For un. ts, hou1e or beach prop. i OWNER 675Q58 8 Units, aood rental area. $38,000 Equity: Income $13,500. For house. commer. clal or hone ranch, OWNER6~ Santa Barb. 12 units fUrn'd 151 Vi1ta for trff.clear bor:nl to Slll0,000. Capil, San Cem.. Lag, Ntwpt, CdM. 222-4309 I n4-67l-5C19. Huntincfon Beacb 4 BR b nn, dinina nn, 2 Ba, C9Z'- pets., drapes, TRADE true $1000 Eq. for Sar.ta Barbera or TDa or ? T '(805) 911SaS81 • Balance on 2 yr old ht lUld contract, approx $11,750 payable monthly, wUl tradt FOR house, condo, un:ttl. Jot or auto 673-5022 Lovely hi&h delert bome, & acres, $30,000 value. !» change for )'(KU' propert;y Newport, Laguna area. 4944748 or 499-1331 '67 MGB, all xtru. Take av. er payts. Trade $350. equl~ for car, boat, dunebum' !! 524-5703 eve1 or wk.ends. 20:<50 r.fobUe Home. Patio • cover, carport. Nu crpt/ drps. 2 BR/2 Ba·Adlt Prk. Low-low Prlce. Trade for Home, ear ! ! 524-Sl03 170 ac. beaut. N. Sall DielO County, ~ It clear. Trade all or part ($650 per a.c. val.) for cltar filhinC boet or '!! 557·9700 or 499-m. * * * • • 675.&oSO 0 Dr., Laguna Bch. 491-5498 * -91 •1 11J CL.& bc:h, !dry !acil. Adul!s, $;175 ------------------- up, 494-4188, 830-4237. REN TALS 4 Br. 21,J Ba Studio •Pt.a ="'CE=AN==rR=oN°'=T.-p-,~,,-.-0 .. -,ch..,-.1 Apts. Unfurnished Cleam. 714 Goldenrod. St di t Mt d It [--~-------u 0 ap · 8 urea u on· Rooms for Rent 5H5 REAL ESTATE General Office Re"tal 6078 $375/ mo. yr 1st. ~7573, ly. $150 Mo. 494-4653 aft 5 968-8658. DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA, N. BED In art 5tudlo, priv. I SUPER-DELUXE QUAl.JTY LRG Upper 2 Br, crpts, drps, end, nice view, '250, Also 1 closet & dresst.r. De1k top l.02.3 room, up to 3.00o 911. rel.rig, ranie. aar. Mat. si~e. 497-1056, 4~10. avail. Prlv. entrance (itmll ft. ottice 1ultas. Immed. oc. adlls. $175 mo lse. 704 _ 1ha1~ beth. $15 wk plu1 cupancy. Oranp C n t .,. Go through your place today. Look for everything isn't needed or enjoyed by your . family anymore. 1~N7arc~is~s~u='~,.-,~--..,---1 Dan• Point 5740 deposit Kit &. laundry priv. Airport Irvine Comm.-c. SPACIOUS 2 Br apt. nr ---------·I TV. phone. etc. Student Complex. adj. Airport.er beach. $2501 mo. Refs. DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA, many pl'9f, 546-3634. Hotel &: Restaura11t, ti.nb,. req'd, 673-4943. extra features. WUI leise. SLEEPING Rm $00 mo. Pvt San Ditao A N'pt. F'wys, Near Ocean & Shop'g 494-4T9l entranae & bath, Adlts. no UNCROWDED PAltKING Bra.nd new 2 BR. 2 BA pt~. Set Mgr Apt 6, 213.5 LOWEST RATES 326 l\lara:uerite. 548-7933 Rentals Wanted 5990 Elden Ave. C~f. Owner/mar. 2172 DuPont Dr .. 2 BR apt, CdM. $165, no pets I----------PLEASANT room for lady in Rm. 8, Newport Beach. or children. FR,EE C.J\1. near park. Heated 833-3223 Courtesy to Bl"Obn 67J.4171 after 4 flm pool. 646-0669 DELUXE oUc. 1ulte, sml. 2 BR W/ FIREPLACE. No RENTALS SERVICE S14-Prefer employed man Door, has own entrance and children, no pets, $175/mo. 1'Q near 17th & Irvine, CM. •t. address, WestclW· ·Dr. Call 673-9183 OWNERS & 646-8716. 450 gq. tt. wHh pvt. panel MANAGERS SLPJNG nn, no cookg, for offc. Desk apace 6 reoept. 2 BR. cpts. drps, Frplc & Call 541-1169 day workg man. By mo. on-$185. mo. on ll!ue, inc. &lr- 1uaa:e, $200 mo. 1 135 1543 Ori!. CM cond., utll., crptl .• dfal*. •675-3717* EXECUTIVE 45, widower, y. · nge. · 54~9586 NEW Lra: 2 level apt. 2 Br, 2 desires unfurnished 2 BR. MAN only, $60 mo. Kitchen DESK SPACE ba + den, bltns, crpt Ii view apt or small house to privil. 2161 Miner SI, Cl\L drpg. S275 mo. 673-6904. Lse. year round. Immed. oc· 64!N289 or B93-S370 222 Forest Avenue 2 BR. 2 Ba. Ocean slda ol c:upy. Mr. FlyM, Dsy, l B h Hwy.NictlyderoratMI. 21 3/583-8051, eve1Room&Ba.rd 5996 eg une eec f.lorgan Realty 6~2 1-213~1c,430-21'7765~· -==~~-[HOME for elderly, bri&ht I. 494-MM e LANDLORDS e cheerful 1urroundinas. Love-BEAUTIFUL ottk:es. a!r, Huntlntton BHch 5400 FREE RENTAL SERVICE ly ocean view, priv, rooms. carpets, paneled. Fac:lns Broker 534-6982 For inform1Uon 492-4089 Beach Blvd. Call Ml-2525 « 1 It 2 BR New apts. Frplc's. call o~r (213) EX 4-0015 Near Ocean! Patio. Adults. Rooms for Rent 5995 Motels, Traller 1 _;'°::;l::;l';;:'.:;t.~-~--~-1 LINDBORG CO. 53&-25111 ----Courts 5"7 DESK SPACE Iha, :i BR. untum. 1 Br furn. ROOM W/pvt entrance &. )05 N El r_ I R I 733 bath in quiet area. Nr ATTR, Rooms-Attr Rates. o.' -m no .. Crpts, drps, bltns. 2 Ba. s•-1 l30 k •-• ·-k S C l t Lake. 536-3700. 53'i-0275 Fa.irview It Baker 54o.0008 ... r w · =a ~ on tmtn e The ~==c-'--~"'"·---1 Motel, 2.101 Npt. Blvd. CM 492...&Q) 2 BR, l t,; BA. crpl!, drpa, MATURE working person: 646-7445. OFFIC~ Space, ....ime t...- b\tns, 1 blk to be1ch. no drinking or amoking: CM1 !==========~ I '" ~ cameras, furniture, spor11s equipment, a pp Ii an c es, out-~:mo . ..,_,065 '"''· * .......," Misc. Ront•'• 5999 :!'.'.:.,~.~=~·,:.: 1=======,=, ===1=o"F===.=v=,=, ===54=1=0 1-------a\'ail. 54:>-tsso grOWn Clothing, fOyS and Other fhingS YOU find are ;_F°"="':::;•i::.:cn..:cV.::.;• .:.:•:...r --'54~'-°"~"'°"'01"'-n-'-"'o '-'0'-y --'-'-'-'-LRG Dbl """*' ror-;;;;;, elc. Weather proof. Alie}' Commercl1I MU acceu. Ist & lut $40 mo. worth good, hard cash to folks who need them • • ~ H•. '3&-<801...... / srortE •Ida,. • ..i. as. ~ I D~B~L-G-..,,--,-S~l--1 698 w. 19th SI. Bfthel aT or ren • orage fDM;f'I c:omer. 548-l7't act, really, they're not worth a thing to you if they're not ,,. 0011. 1:1:1mo.1839 Pomona. ' c; C.M. MZ-9234• '42-41l20. l"dustrlal Rental 6otO being used. When you have your list, just dial direct 642-5678 and give It to the experienced Ad Writer who answers. She'll help you word your ad to get fastest resulls. The cost! Surprisingly lowl DAILY PILOT WANT ADS .. ~ :l:ounfairu Meditorrwn..,. Stylo Lusury 1a1w--1- .ua11 Uvln& 1lurUhed a Uatamllbell Bu1lnes1 Rental 6060 HARBOR BLVD. front , 19 x 37' w I ttatroom. 2110 •rarbor Blvd. CM. $2CXI mo. yoar'11 lease. 548-0783. Olffco Rontol 6078 FOR ~ oq It prime war e h s e tptce-.11/pat. Irvine Ind, Mr. Bullard -1. NEW bid&., U68 to 2300 ft, Nr Baktr 6 Fairview, 1'1t ltaae. Sulllvari, Mf..211'8 STO!IE tor I-SIOO oq It. •DELUXE air-<""Ond office in BalbDA Isle, Xlnl l 11. C.Omputer Center 8 I ct I -1 ,:639-::1203:;:====== I Crpt1, ctrape1. Up to 3600 sq, I· tt. 6'&-7425 or 5f6.6080. loll "°' 3(X).(i(X)..120() 8ft. ft. OFFICES, seo.m41!0, e WANTEO.LOl'I Costa l\fUL 6.46-2130 to bulld Apt'•· --CASH CORONA Oil MAR Writ• dotaU1 to: Daily PUot 5 RM suite, ab:lr A pkg, 2 bl, Box M-2004, 22U W. Balboa 1100 tq It., and nr. 673-6757 Bl~. N.B. ~ DOWNTOWN H.11. "M.,-.,_Lo"t_Coe,,_ta,....~M-••-.-.,..-I Remoctded otc ar ahop, blk to-build 40 unlfe. Pbll ,hWYae. occAn. Llndborr Co, 536-25?9 Reallor 543-6761.· ........................................................................... "'! ............................................... ~~ ......... ~~ ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~ -• f.f DAILY PILOT Tllffd•y, Ottobet 20, 1970 ~R~E~A~L~E~ •• ~T~A~TE---~~~AN~N~O~U"°N"'C~E~M~E~N~Ts---A~lNrnN""OUNCEMENTS G-ral and NOTICES° a nd NOTICES 1 1~~~~~~~1 ..:::.:...:;:.:;.;~=;:._~~.:;;;.:;..;.;.:::.:.;.;o;:;.:;~~\~ SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICI DlltlCTORY C•rpenterlng•-,,.;.....:.':.590:.:: G1rdenlng '6IO P1inting, JOIS • EMPLOYMENT JOIS • EMPLOYMENT JOBS • EMPLOYMENT Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobi Men, Wom . 7100 AcrNge 6200 Announcements-6'10 Announcements 6410 ~'-~~-~~~~ . CARPENT~RY A.L·:-i GARDEt'ltNG Piperh1nglng USO _ 10 A~c· So. Calif. $10 dn, tlO i'i\6. $99!-F/P. t.. Shewfclt. Sa& \V, lrd SI, LA 213:623-S!Ol. t'or Acreqe ln Orange Co. ?liJNOR llEr~AIRS, No Jpb for C11rd1~11lna & &1na\I 18.nd· • EXTERIOJl...INTERIOR * ----l'.on--SluaU.r-CaWnttt ln..,gar4 5Ciipi1)i serv~es call 54!).5198 \YQn~l-be undtrbidl Ontotn na:c• & other cabinet:;. Se11'1lni: Ne\\•port, CdM, Coa. \\'Ork, fully-iuar. Flnc>st ~5-Sl7ti t1 no •1U1\VCt lcavt '" 1.1esa, D<.l\1er Shores, paints. F'ree ~11./color con- mS&: at 6*2372. H. O, \\'cstclifl. suiting. Local rt>fl, l.ic, .'\nderson Prok>!lii. Garden P.1aint. Bond. ln1.. 64&-3679, ~9-0811 llanfa lt•alfy REDECORATING? Design & Pruning, lrec vi·ork, l!,pmklr No \\'a.ting For weight red ucin" pro"ram to establish ~st. odd jobs & n-pe.lr, !ierv, nf'ratiJn, ferl lll'li, * WALLPAP·ER * lVANTED- OVERWEIGHT LADIES 1 ~=='~Ca~l=l~&I~~~"""----~~1_ • • I Exp., rels. Odd hn:, &: free pest, dist'a.st, "A'~ control. \Vhen you call .. ,.lac" INVESTi\IENT Acreage. Cab staUsttcs for rapid -permanent we ~ht Joss, es1. 673-4280 or 673-J445 Cleanup jabs. ~ -S:-18-1444 ~ 646-tm , ,;itri • Excellent rt'turn • conducted by qualified physical culturists. REPAIRS * "A.LTERA-AL'S Landscaping. T r ee FALL 30 de.y speclal! Inter. IAw do"'"· Termi. Bkr. ~1r. !11ust be a minimum of · 20 Pounds over· TIONS • CABINETS. Any re1nova1. ,Yard re.modeling. & &ter palntlng. ~"'ree es!. DELIV~R _-TELEPHONE DIRECTORIES Men or v.•omen over 18 \Vith cars. station wago ns or ligh t trucks. Apply Friday. Octo- ber 23rd. 8:30 to 4 p.m. at location nearest you . 4l0 W. COLLINS, ORANGE l\'Ef.'.:D 'l v.'Ontcn or hu5"band ~ &: y,•lfto t1•11.n1s to 1na1·ket the to.buloo21 Sliln C)'n1. Ex· ,,- 11<e1nety hl lnc111e. full or pl·lhne. ·833-1 li7 PRESSER, Qu11.lily work, Pl-time, Huntini:ton Ctr Cleant'rs. 892--681.3. PUNCH Press Oprraror. 1\1ust be able lo ·make <Jwn i;eL-ups. Ex,pcr. In stw:et metal \\'Ork &. or martiie' hrd1\'f'. 770 \V. 17\h Sl .. C.M. flpply 8: 30-4 Pi\f. S4oilrmrr 968-346!=1 or \veight, have Jransporlation and not cur· sl:r:f' job Trash hauling lot cleanup. Local ref's. Ll c'd & Ins. 547-0189. Alllll .( lots Shelter rcnUy under dtl:tor's care. All inquiries com· • 2i yrs exper. f>18-6713 Repa!r sprnklers. 673-1166. Call Chuck, &liJ...-0809. REFINED lady as <:om· Co\·e pletely confidential. 1 ---'-~R~oo""'F~!~N~G-'---CLEAN UP SPEClAUSI' ii INT. or EXTEmOR --· . ---panion to eJderly v."Oman. 223 N. CRESCENT WAY, ANAHEIM 2221 S. ANNE ST., SANTA ANA 3321 W. 1st ST., SANTA ANA 40 AC. Zoned l\tobile Honies. & All 11ome Improvements, New fence &: repair. Mowing PAINTING Loe :Rel IM· Job Wanttd1 Jobs.-Men, Wom. 7100 Lite dutit-!I. Must drive. Paved frootage, Next to $.'iO ASK FOR MISS POWELL -537-5414 F'ree Est. ~1059 l edglng. Reas, ~55. P.·IED s ~· rvl ~e. Free Women 7020 Live in N.B. 3 nlO's, Palm i\lillion <kvt'lopment SAC! F1. or pt time, Take orders l! Spgs 9 mo'&, \Vrite Box 1'-f· for S 1900 f per aCrt'. ~!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!--. CUSTO~t Cabinets, remodel· HERRII'!'G'S c .o m PI~ I e estimates. 646-0210 AIDES • lor convalesctntt. make deliv, $2.90 hr profit 1026 Dail)' Pilot, lll \\'. TE"'fS·. n4: r-O<I 13551 ~BUS ESS nd ~ inr:: &: 11ddiUons. State lic'd Garden1n_1t Service. ~f1por U.BIEDIATE Est. on quality elderly cart' or family care. ro slarl. ~1&--.'l743 Bay, C.i\I. o--IN e I Lost u•J ,';~ .. ~-'o~"'~°"~'-1!_·~"~""~·~_9'-,---la-"•" •"& • I• I ;ii;iii ....................... 1 -~~=~=-=~~ FINANCIAL -1; .,.., '"......., .....,....,,..~ ,..,...:!ap" « c a Du P · inte.r & exter painting. Apts, Homemake.?'8. 547-6681 I • ---------REPAIR, Remodel & patios. 962-4914 homes or just a room. Jack.I========= F/C Bkkper/Sec'y R.E. TRACT SALES 1 6230 Monty to Loan 6320 REWARD: Trish Set 1 er Let the S1,·ede do It. LA\VN Carr, cleanups, trash 837-'925, <213) 4:»-2866, Job W1nted, $400 Lg sub.div, C.M. Good Colnm •Ro·/whltd. R•potd HoBn ~~!8!·2 Vic. l -~•94-:,:,,7;8;J~·:._;cor0,,:,67~,_,.,,.,0:~17=-hauling. F'.V., H.B., & PAINTING -E:xt.-lnt , 18 · Men & Wome~ 7030 P/time., 3-4 hl'!I a <lay Ai'l or I ~·=H='-'·=540<;--'°'-----1 na · · · ............, 71 w t t ,. · RENTAL to ·•--w/lamily CUS'l'ON! \VOOD\VORK cs n1s r. area_. ree t>SI. yrs. ex!>('r. Ins. Lie. Free . Pi\r, Lile 1ypinr::. Reconcile .,,...,"' · R.E. Exchange 1st TD Loan '\'IU. trade Income units for tiff &. clear il'ldustr\al pro- perty. Ca.llforn!a Terrain Corp. 714: 547-6663 BLUEPOINT Slameitc. 7 yrs, f urniture & Cabinets 847-.5802 • est. Accoust. Ce i I l n g 5, REFIN.ED middle age couple balance shef'ls. SznaU N.B. in exch for lite h.'lkpg. Mus C v1,',' 1\Y~.!.?LJ~ & f''ullerton, 5'18-423."I or 64:.-004~ JAPANESE Landscaping & oog...9126 Ex1pen,'"o.d1_ ... apt, 1Cnan.ag1crs oft, hHve car R93-7610. 8% INTEREST 2nd TD Loan ::·~' ~-·c.'."01~•"::•··~"8-~3202~.~>1~~5--0alJ~~I ""'""=====:,:,:== A~e·· . C U f .,.., now,,....,ge! om pete N t •RESTAURANT llELP• :::-: .--g •u .. 1ng !l(>tvlce.'1, a or FOR Your painting ~ i,.. '---· 1 1 1 & •wpor KE''S I t 10/17 . I C C t 66GO r , . i:.~o -~o mec ....... 1c11 ma n enance: p I t•"m>IA .. ~~1 ,,. • •r 21 os vie o ement, oner• e _ree t"stimatc . ......,..,......, or !er, Ii. ex\l'_r. at Jo1\'est pool servi~. 673-2128 ersonne Agency " '• ,,,.., m,, 0\ • BUSINESS end FINANCIAL Terms based on equity. Begonia, Cdl\I. rr found, CONCRETE AU t . -,. 546-0724 price&, P.aul 551-7455, 557-36181========== I 8~3 Dover Dr., N.B. Call an I:J{l, Sl:S..1686. pl<.'&5(' call 67~1 -• Y~. ree 642-3870 Sales est. Se."•!ng, breaking, haul-NEW l.a1.1•ns, n>·seed . Comp! PAINTING, neat & reliable, J:_o:_:b:_:'_':_:Man:::=_' ::W:..o:.:""=.::7_1::00~ !~~~~~~""""""' YOUNG MAN'S ing, & Skiploadlng, Service lawn car~. Clean up by job Call John for free esl. 1642-2171 545-0611 1----------Serving 1-larbor &n!ll 21 yrs, Business Opportunities Settler Mortgage Co. &, quality. 5-18-8668 Bob or mo. r'rct> est. For inlo 646-4811 or 847-4128 ACTRESSES &: P.lODELS. GENERAL cl('rk to "·ork in DREAM * FULLY LICENSED * C~MENT Work ()fall kinds. ~1-2411 ()f 846-0932. YOU SUPPLY TllE PAINT .ag~ tS.:25, &eeklng personal Production Control Ot'pt. If )'OU are ov'r 21, l ik~ ta1k· 6405 Personals Renowned Hindu Spiritualist Free est. EXPER. Japanese Gardener, $10 Per Average Room manager for motion pie-Requir<>inl'nts: 11.S. gr<1d.. lng lo'girls. "'hy not g(.1 paid Money to Loan 6320 Advice on all rnattcri;. 636.0374 complete yd service. Rella. l"ree Est. 557-8638. ~~7().16 lures & TV send picture & typing 5()..6() \1·pm, 10 key ror ii! A &ales program, 6300 l ====330==E=·='="="='="""='== fl\.tPORTAN1 Love, Man-iage, Businei;s & neat, f"ree esl. 64~389 EXPERT painting. lntcrlor resunie 10 Ne"··Tal & add ninch & dillo nwch. 1 yr dealing \I'/ .sing!(' girls, Our DTSl'RIBUTORSHlP PRIVATE Porly w,·11 b"y RcRrlings given 7 days a DECORATIVE CONCRETE ~~~--p 0 Bo< 111 El f'xp. in like pos. f':ood start· rnen earn $664 + per mo. ·-~~-~~~--- DRIVES \"ALKS PATIO a•• & Exterior. f"'---estimate•. ~.. · · · , Available in your area at this short tl'rm lst Trust Deeds. \1' .'t'k, 9 AM -9 P i\f -.. • Gener"'lll Services ~ 8 & J Painti~~9?~1S42, Toro, ca. &37-92ti7 ini:: salary + fringe bene· during training. Good bene. 1 time. There ls nothing like Reply to Daily Pilot, Box 312 N. El Camino Rea.t, CALL DON, 642--851.( fits. Ca.II fo1· in1e1·view fits. Call 1-4 pm ONLY, it in t~ vending buslness M-1028, 330 w. Bay St, San Clemente *CONCRETE work: patio.o;, TillNGS your husbll.nd does PA!l\'TING: Inter. & Exler. AAl~Xtl Re~~li~~i~~/Typ:~~-492-115.1 :O.lrs. Gon7.:11r7. 534-3081. today , Sensational canned Cosla i\tesa, Calif. 492-9136, 4!1J...007G drvirays, etc. L ic en sed , not ha\•e time to do! !\faint· Very reasonable. 64iHl818 .... c v~ gir • .,,., pre . · food products, ("SNACK-Phill!IJS Cement. 548.o380 repair! !\lost a n y 1 hi n g . aft 6 Pi\1 !or beautiful Bayf~nr _0U1ce HOTEL l\1AID, permanent, SALES CIOS('"'°We neM men PACK" made by HUf\'T-Mortgages, MASSA~~l~~.;CIAL i\10RE Concrete patio for S45--0820 *PAPERHANGER* v.•k/ends only. &12-.J'.J.5 year-n:nd4~~~l~n.;a1I ~us::r~n ~ise=~~~SaJ°: \\'ESSON) H 1gh 1 Y ad· Trust DHdS 6345 lie & She Heal!h Cluh less money, Artistic setHng. BOAT & lloosehold repairs. Professional 64&2449 AU. P.lODELS looking for ----------f'Xper , onl)'. Opportunity to ve:nised on National T.V. ,..A,,.ral H•-"Y"••·. El-. . \\'Ork should con!acr l.A.G. HO~iE\VORKERS \VANTED Scpat'Rle "'alk in Sauna's for Lie., caJI i\111.x at &l-1-0687 '-"' "" " " PAINTING • p rh earn lg<' Income ii quali!ied. Can be slarted parl timr JF YOU have $2700 t.: desire ficient & re a 10 nab I e ..._ ape ang1ng. TNC for in forn1aUon on (f:n\'elope Addre1t<1ers). -" pand-" · , I II Ladies&: Gen!leme_n 847-7819 CE,IEN-'"ORK 00 ,.. b too 1 .. , & E<t Ro·-·-ble 00 1. .,. .. olfe-" R h t d It d 2131 9:17-4900, 741 S, LaBre.a, auu ex "" 1n o a u monthly incn1 far 5 yrs. • • " • 673-1245 "· · · ..,..,,,.. · m e 1ng pos1 io •• s '"" us 1 ampc , se -a • time business. 2 lo 8 hours secured by ht intg, call 17434 lkach Blvd jcorroer s1na!l, rea~nR.ble. fo're(' Fl't'e estimate 5-1&-3820 aft 5 b)' lhc Company. Ph : drel!srcl envelope. ,L~-~·~·~90036~-,-,---,..- per \\'ciek You stock and of Sla!er l H.B. .Esthn. H. Sluflick, ~8-8615 NEED typing done? \Ve ~3.'>01 LA NG DON \IJ OR LD S,\LES.-Nl'cd 5 n1cn &. 5 collect the money fro1n new lc'c''='·~'~·7_;..s_30~3~~~=---*~~M=A=S~S~A~G~E~*--can do. Speedy. accurale, *PAPERHANGING ~I . d TRADF.RS PO Box 11·omen to df'mon st r ate • ed d' ANNOUNCEMENTS Contractors 6620 reasonable. 646-4238. & PAINTING. * 968-2425 Apt. caning: \\'oinan nee -27 " ' .:.,, ' .,_ h. s.Ll"f-GY,,1 .<· JET BATH. coin operat 1spensers. O SAUNA * \\'HIRLPOOL i'A!N;;;;;;;O;~~;,,;TI-;;;;-l·==========I ed. ex""r. Ov.·n transp. 11--A21. Redon ... o ix:ac , " · all 1 · and N TICES -1 · 11 ~ M Lo Good =0 2<16 \Ve furnish ocat1ons Lovely Gil·ls. Plus11 fa<'ilities. RA N gullen In s la ed. . , Personal l'ef's. tH2-12il. Cclif. 90278 1 ary u · """"' wi1h complete company F nd IF Ad) Ope 7da noo 'd . hi 1'1Y \VA\', qualify home Rainy scawn here soon. Pa1nt1ng, ___ $_3_40_H_O_U_R ___ 543--832!1. guidance.. ~lfn or ""Omen 1 _o_u ___ ,._e __ • __ 6400_ n YB, n-nH nig · repair. \Valls. «iling, Doors Free est. Reas! 968-2208 Repair 6PO A TT ENT I 0 N Lad ies! • I ..... 2930 \V. Coast Hw)', Nev.•port elc. No ,.. b loo small. Ground floor opportunit)' -Pt. lime eves. No C.'CP, nl'C. O.K. A~ no ac.ror, llUt you OUNO 0 -1 "·1•3608 SALE • earn Chri5tmas monry pan liml". Sarah Co\·cntry hiring now. No ln- \·cst, no del. free training. for info PJ I; 962-0:;56 must be sincere. F . a )'Ollng, black a<:ac i."' 5-13-1-494 * PATCll PLASTl:,"R.ING Earn S10-S15 an hour, niust \\·e-train. 1\1/lla\'e 6 n10's PLAN ONE Sl,2:l0.00 brt'~i:ian~;~ ~1• ~cl~:s f SHARE R00~1 Additions. 1 & 2 story Hauling -~JlO All types, !-'roe estlnlales be well-groomed & outgoing, residency in Orange County. PLAN 'rn'O Sl,89J.OO .a 1~ ~·ho ou ., 1 e n GAS EXPEN~E & gar. call Gen. Contractor T.N.T. Lawn Se r v_ice . Call 540-6825 Call 1'1rs. LoY.1tree 833-3902, 20 ~1EN & \\'0:0.lEN PLAN THREE 13 0~ 00 give 5uuu n1e I owner Ne-·' .. 1,,_ to Co•t• 'l•<a -m 10, Jo···e.•t pn·-&l"'988. Gara..,. clean-ups. hauling & -~ 6#-123.'i * NE:EDED * ~ ·"""· tlCK'snorclain1.6lS--423:iaf! '""•UC "'-u u ... , '""or I " 86 Pl b' ..:._ :::A-778 ·1·77g2 (CASH REQUIRED) Laguna, \\lorkin~ hrs, 8 to ight n1oving. 548-5 3, um 1ng -7V BARMAID. night shift. Ap. ,,.,,. I * :Y 1-SALES:\l.EN Part time with 6 pn1 Additions * R.en1odelin&: 531 31"" car. Leads fUrni shed. \\lork For pe1'li011a.I interview in 5. Call 612-<1321 (e.xt 270) G",., .. ,.,, & •-o, Lio. -~;J pl y in person hch1'n noon & HOUSEKEE~R &,.. subslitule · p 0 Bo FOUND t.1on. A.i\t; vie. d •"t -7,9 t · ~ • ~ PLUl\1BING REPAIR 6 P,1 •· t · n ... T any 4 hou rs. aver;iize $100. your arf'e. wnte: . . x ays, .,,,. -a ., a tcr :;i, 67,..,1 • °'9-2170 YARD. garage clean up and N . b U · ·. ~'O ti<!.~ °""r &\'ern. n101her for scllOO! le11cher BA A •-1·1 91102 Newport & Victoria, Costa ,>"Vlf'l "'' o JO loo sma A~" E 1711 c •1 pe.1· week&, up, Call ~4--W6 ; zusa. ....... 1 · • \VILL Baby,;1 y6U" hour-gellt'ral hauling. Have big • .. 2 3128 • .,,..., ~. · 1, ·" · "'It child in klntlrrgarten, (1 .... ,,,,,, yo"• p h t.1esa, Blk .. med. size male • = GEN'L rcmodelin.i:; & mainL k bl F .,., •• allf'r 6 P:\1. nu • one \\'hilc }'OU take I.rip or vaca-true , very reasona e ree --====~=--I BEAUTICIANS n<'edc<I In l\lus! love children, neat & number I. dog, r r se m b I es lge. lion. Middle-aged couple, No job loo 11 m al I. f'St. MS-1.146. i\1'1.rnatha H0~1E REPAIRS busy C.M. i>hop. Some even-dependahle, and have ll'ansp, SA LES \Von1an w/cl1·ess, AA>\ Coe k a po 0 · 64 2-'4;, JO· 1. bl k Llc'd/insurcd. 675-SlSJ y ARD 1 G,,. CI e••up. Plumbing.electrical. s7.50 Hr. ine: 1\•ork. Nt>l'J ~l'aduates \\'1consid. li\.'C-in. N.\V. San-sportswear expcr. Strady p/ 54>-1688. rr ia e oon-sn10 cri;. pct " 642-27:)5 or &12-0506 I CJ' I t ""o Cendy end Snack Supply \overs. Aft 6:30. 54&--~26. C r-t Clean·in• 6625 Remo\'f' trt>e~. iV)', 1rash. v.·e comf'. 1entc f' no la Ana. Ph: 54J...3,,.,,.,. lime oldf'r 11'0mitn. S-16.92li FOUND 1 alkativl" af-• ,..-• DRAINS Pl d' D . . C II i!0-us£"i<EEPfli::ciruPA~\;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ml We Est•bllsh all Routes NON-VERBAL Gracie. backhoe, 962-874J. ugge . ra1rung neCC'ssary. a manager, 11 0 USE KEEPF:R-CO:\IPA-feci ioniilc male Siamef,(" I • E -I I ...... S9 000 9919 S tNo 1ellillg involved! ENCOUNTER r t. 1\1 Cleaninr:: Service. TRASI{ & G•-"• clean-up, •2,0 •h'. xpe~~,r~~~t'i..,"""' · ""'o-NION. v('ry l\ghr dull('~, ec 'y-Dictaphone light \v/drk. points. Sar· c I d H 1· ·-~ r serv ...,....,,,,.... Plan one ••...•.. S975.00 SESSIONS .trpcTM c eane . o 1day 7 days. SIO a load. }'rce est. · BEELINF. fashions s e. J l ligh! cooking. $2j(] n10.. To SSOO Plan two .•...... 11625.00 grnnt Scntrys flea collar. *Call 673-7555" * Sj)('1·ial. Certi-Foarner, nc1.1· Anytime, 548-50.11. PLUMBING REPAIRS fhemsclve~ 11•hl'n yo u roon1 & board, li\'ein. \\'oold Xln'I en. Lovely nlc's. Very Plan three ...... S.'l150.00 646-6985 method, dries in 2 hrs. Frre i\l()VJNG, Garage clean-up & & Tnslall. 545.6688 display lhe1n. /'\eed ~ stytr. like latly with ear. 4944662 pleasant 1rorking conds. Cash Required. Exct'llent in-YOUNG cat, gray & brov.·n ALCOl10LICS Anonyn\OUs. est. 536-2247 or f>36-350S. lile hauling. Reasonable . . conscious \.••omen in .1his 1 HSKPRS Ef'pl pays fee. ''V<.irk for 1 very nice nian. come for a le111 hours week. stripe, long hair, v.·hite col-~~~~~~f;;i1~0~~a ~{;~: •. to Diainolld Carpet Cleaning free estiniales. fi.15-l60Z. Pool Service 6910 area. Pa.r1 •!!!'<'or full linie. Gco~e A!le Byl:uid AA:<'n-Top bcncrits. Call fllilis Eli1~ Jy v."Ork. <Days & Eveningsl. Jar. Near Santa Isabella & .,.. Autumn Special Call 1 -633-9~114 afl 6 pn1. cv JOO.B . 16th, S.A. abclh. f>,'17·6122, Abigail Ab-1-" Re,·11· ... II 1· Irvine Ave. 2323 ll'Vine Ave, '00' s~ 1· E t P 0 0 ' · 11 • I D lph' · ~ P I ~· 1 1ng auu co ec 1ng mon. Announcements ., ... u. ree s. Housecleantng 6735 ... ~e r v 1 cc - u ~ B ue 0 lft 5.J7--03!1:i uvt ersonnr Agency, "CN ey from coin operated dis-Ne~·port Beach 6410 Re1>3i1·-ln~lall. &lf>..tlll. 1---------·-Bch/Nev.•por1 area. $28.50, ""'. H~O~U-"SE~"-.E....::l.=P~E-R-L.--.--W. \\'arner. Sui1e 211, Santa .. nsers in Ne1.1'TV>rt Beach PEKAPOO? Gray 11·/ blk ARE you not salisfied \\'/chemicals Incl. 846-1646 \\';\!TRESSES, exp.-0\'. ~ '. "' •• rvr-in, no Ana. ..-STEAJ\I Jct carpet cleaning. COOKS .. ~--~ l'lo L·•do NB ironing F 'pan n I ok ood , .. _...,ndin< '""· (Hon. f'ars t.: red <.'Oller. Vic. COTION T-!lhirt fabric Sl.49/ B Cl K Jo .,,_ 11•ft way your car""ls fl,,,_ Daryl. ' .~...,., · · · · · · '~~~~~~~~~~1 ........ y ar arc. nat tl-\\'h.1<.: "" ;> ,... • ""'"''-=='========! . SlSO/n10. F,\'e!I 6,12-SO-IO. , . dies na~ brand candy and F..dwards & \Varn e r . yd. Like at oldC.l\l. KnlttinJll:. service. Free esl. 642-4055 & \1•11xiow~ look? Tr)' 11ie1-**Campus Security -1 SECRETARY J111acka. 1 t"or personal inter-&17--06.'>I American Knits, 2026-A N. Ou!ch way. Call Dutch Roofing 6950 Gllard-Female HOUS E\\'ORK. 4 n10rnini;s SH 90 T 60 I I N rt Be h Tustin, Ornni;::c. 637-6120. C L • • 1\laint &rviC'f' &. )'OU \\'.II · · G per wrck, ~2 hr. Ref s · yplng · Call t..o. v ew n C"A'PD ac CALICO kitten, 6 or 1 \\'ks 1 ,c.;c.'='~""'"°'-="""~'---I arpet ay1ng 1 • • . • _ 1 LEE ROOJ•JNG co· Roofinr:: Ten month!\ prun11on. rad· R ·r1 6-3--0809 raine-l)..lj.2770 \\'estcliff Per. area, send nanic. addrei;s old, fount! vie Carnation & llOLIDAY HEALTH SPA for Repair 6'26 s<'c thr difference. ;i.17-1.JOS IJ · uate & trained 10 work "·ilh eq · 1 •• '1 \g ' ~1 \\' l and phone numbl'r 10 Mulli-Ocean Blvrl., Cdi\1. Call 2 for i;ale. Call after 6. before SA.:\1 or all JPl\f. or ": lypes. r_e c o v_er · }'OUng -pie 1 IF YOU wear C'lothf'!' \\'ell, sonne 1 ency, es· State Distributing, Tnc. 1681 c~·es 673-13•17 &i2-.'ID73 CARPET LAYING HOUSE OF CLEAN repetrs, roof L'ORUngs. Lie&: ,...v . ll'r 11·ant you lo nioilel ror cliff Dr .. N.B. ;:~~"'.'"";'':;'==;;,:;; l ~C~.A~._!P~•~"'===,...'6'.'.''.:·~0 bonded sincr 1947. &12-7222 Tl If. f O R -O u T L ET . I TELEPHONE OPERATOR \Vest Broadway, Anaheim, FOUND fcma!r dog blk. .. ~ DOES EVERYTHING Apply PC'r;;onnrl OH1('r Calif. 92802 (714) 77g.j000_ possible rnix lure &ollic & Cemetery Lots 6418 EX.PERT Cornnl'I s.. Re.~. Cleaning BEFOR.E )OU buy, call T. 1601-IGth Sr., Ne"'fl'I Bt:h. ,i;i-1--:t:im Sonic r . ..:p. in Credit & Collec- \VANTEO PART TL\fE Pocw:lte. Vic or Dove.r & CARPET JNSTALLATION 2 824 Guy Roolini;:: Co. Recover lion, lor corllnl. plan, bene-' Reliable JM'l"i;On !or this area fl1ariner N.B. 5.IS-j210 ·I CHOICE LOTS In Bayview & REPAIR. 646-4191. 64 -6 $pee. 6~5-2780· S4S-gj9t1 NE\1/PORT-1\fESA fils, good l\'Ol'king cond'. ~1r. ..•. ---·-UNIFIED SCJIOOL DIST. r.101·tensen 492-4174. t.:l re&tock national bought FOUND Black & Brown 3 mo TC'n-acr . Pacific View Electrical 6640 Bny & Beach Janito1·ial Sewing 6960 [--~-,~~~==- products in rompan )' old n1ale puppy, Vic: Cen1f'l('ry. 6·12-14J2 Crpts, Windo\\'S, floorl! elc. 1----''-------CARRIER "!;;: TELEVISION commercials Sec\Jred account s, com-Orange Ave. C.J\f. 642--0.'184 SERVICE DIRECTORY ----·--~·-··· ---Res. & Comm 'I. 64&-1401. QUALITY \'ou'\•t aJ11·ays ...._ · -now casting for 13 weeks of merclal and tactor:y loca· ELECTRICIAN. Small jobs. ,,·anted Dressmaking BOYS --· TV rnmnicrcials. l.A.G. t~UND sm. bro"·n pup vi<': l\leM Cleaning Sen.·ice . , · · • · J INC. 0~-~ ~~1 tion.\. We are a highl)' B b "tt• ..:1:50 n111 intena~ & repa i r s. 1era11ons Key Say lr63 ""'"~.;.JU I d E Fairvie1v & \Vilson. for info a YSI tng o;i L. 'd Bo CaJ'P('tS, "'i ndows, lloors, etc. -· · . • -' ' I ~T"H""'E'""'D'°A""'l7L7Y~P~l~L-O=TI re erence company, X· call 548-7370 ·---------ic ,t, 11(\l'fl, 548-~>20:1 Res & Commc'l. 548-4111 Orange Ave., Ci\T. '14>1292 WANTED ceUenl immedia1e cash in-· 1 < 6 's~.~0~11~,N~.-,,-m-,~1,--p-,-.,-,-. -,c,it-h LICENSED child l'<J re my * ELECTRICIAN+ Plumb-EUROPEAN dressmaking E PERSQ ha.~ an opening ror an expe.ri- cncerl, journali.~I in ill! w0- men's departmf'nl. Applica nt rnu!!I be> 11hle In l't'PQrt, ll'l'itr elearly, understand 1.:>sentiall' of photography It la)'OUI. Top ('(Imp.any bc>nc. fi ts, ~ .~al;u·y, attractive ne1v quarlen.. Apply in v.·rit· com~ or to hours h. ,1 v ho'''"· •g••.·· 1 ,0 '· •10 ... thru Er. Installation & rrpairs. lron•·ng 6755 all ('U:<lon1 fitte<:I. Very for the I IR.VIN NNEL ("·ee\dy \\·orkdays or even-soo1e I\' 11e. . !'Sa erdc ~ ~" " " " N · b II • ings). You may t>xpancl to ar('a. !J.10-7629 Fri. Lt1111'hrs &. snnrks in-0 JO 100 611111 · ;}!5-tSl•I. l\'INDO\VS & 11 !led reasonable. tii3-l849 DAILY PILOT SER.VICES ~AGENCY f"ll t•'m• lotci w\1h 0 ... •x· eluded. Vic1n1ty of Baker & ·-· ·-~ ' •. \\'a s 'vas · Alteretions -642-5845 Do•• Pol"', "·" ''''" I " ... Bil<E fo"outl<f l\1f'ga Verde Floors 6665 f'lrs, s1nJlped, sealt'd & " ~ (t'cw111rl'll· Abili!ics t:nlim.) pan11ion program if ~'Ou al't'a. 0\1•ncr l den r if Y. c"-'=·'-"~olc.=>t~>.i-O_JS ____ 1-------·-· ·---\\•a:.:1·d. rrer c~t. day or Neat, accura1c, 20 years ex p, Capistrano nnd TRISH HOPKINS desire. No expe r ience 5-ID-7·1RO. B1\8YSl'ITING ro!' t tir nigh!. 673-3000. • Dre.ssmaklni:; -Alterations Capistrano Beach. I ..is:~ E. J7rh fat rr·vinel C.J\I, neCE'Ullry, \\"e v.ill ITain. \\IR I ST\IJ A TC II found mother 11•ho cares, my i\lt'sa CARPE:T VINYL TILE IRONING 'I ho II hr Designed to suit you. CCJnlacl ?.fr. Sea;\' ;it 642·1470 $12'50 lotal cash required. V<'rde Estate~ h<lmr-. l'cnc-LIC CONTH. fo'REE EST. 1 ' 1' >' ine, . ' Call Jo * 646-6446 DAILY PILOT For more information. l\Tilf' f11 1>h1on Island. Ott. 14 . f'fl _, 1 h TLC A * :'>10-7262 * Ot't'ssmaklng & Altcrat1ons.1--~-------I 64&-j293 ya,..,, UllC • • gf's l =======-o===I "':;.7"'1. DRESS~1AKING and se1ving. o .. n Cl•moot• aUi-D1slributor Division No, 100, 1 • • u;.....1592 _,...,.... .,., ~ ' .. 1111 \IJ. Robinhood, Si\tALL brown dachshund --·~'-~'-·'-'=·-----Gardening 6680 -·~ Dn'SM"!I fl'om $20. After 6 305 N. El Camino Real Stoc.klon, Calif. 95201 found \lir So. Bay Center l\fESA Verde molllPr dcsin-s MAIO SERVICE 6825 P~t. 673-1886 4!ll-4420 Include phone no. parking tol . &16-3132 babysitting. pcrmllflf'nt, 7 l==========:l~==~o~=:,=.=-~-= d:iys/i\'k. Can plck up & GEN. Cleanup-Tree & DOMESTICS Tile, Ceramic 6974 CHE:VR N sta.ti~n s BRANCH MANAGER hike homr. 516-2986 Sprinkler Serv. Ro to Ii 11 . Feel Like a Queen! man w/mech11n1cal t>xp. •--·I·· to•--, ...... ft, .. Lo Lost '"OJ New'''\"''' Spray•· .. , Re e c · Tll \V k Ol'lcga H""'/rrwy Sm ...,., ·'""" U\ld. ""~ " ng '" CHILD Care n1y hon1e nr · " · as. Havn a P.1AID in your hoinc eramic e or or J C ' Beach, Huntington Harbour fo'airv·ew & Arlams CM 6-l&-5848. 1 ll\· ·n ro Jo" $l 40. Plastering. Re:is. f"ree t--"'-"--'po,_. _____ _ al't'a. Cenl'ral management 1 · ·• .i • J 0 e 1 r as 1 as csl 5.16-2426 CHIROPRACTOR Any age. !'119--0752. apanesc Garriet"ll.'1'. Exp. S350 por n10. Servitts ren-1-----· -'---==--[ &. supcn-·ision sugr::e!'lted. LOsr 10-lG-70 Black kirtcn B HYS ITTING ho General Cleanup, Hauling drrril oil ou r or1 11._. or in-·--·· : -or Physical Therapist S300 per W<'ek lo start + "'ith white 1umm~', flea ooL fl '"' 1 1 my mf', • 5·t6-l894 e \.•our hnnif'. Plrase Call. Trff Service 6980 ror Therapy Center in C.l\l. Profits. !1!1.000 lnvestmcnt reas. rates. n an1s prer'd. • Jar 1uith Ix-II. AnJ111't1's 10 N.B. arra. 673-7182 F.XP. Japanese Gardener. 12131 266-62~1() Collef'l, Bob's Tree Surgery &12-0.i:.:J 10 am~ p111 :or:'& ~~~i~~~~1~n,loori rntme Knorrli, tC•ic CRnicJlill ~10111E'R GOING CRAZY! Gen, cleanup. Haul ing trees. LOCA i. Girl \\·ants lo clean * 5,1()...179R * COASTAL AGENCY ... ,tr Sant" Al'IJ.I, O!lta i\1esa , !\taint. yard &16--0619. , , · ho "" 1• • '"ft"'--ot rrferences. write Daily Pilot ~l'<'ds companion, for • yr RP s "' pr1v. n1e~ . ..,., re s " ,,,-.,11 ...:r Box flf-2007, 330 \\',Bay St., S:l.l. reward. Call ~9603· old. Hrs/nexlbl(', S-1:l--6.il7. GARDENING & Landscap-& l't'as. rates! ti·IZ...1724. Upholstery 6990 S11('tli ng & Snc•llini,: In<', 0is1a lote 511• \\'ILL bahysit dllys, 11ny agr. ing Pruning-Trimming & --The World's Largest 3 Y1 old fcn111le silky te1-rif'r, my hom('. Nr 19th & R.t'oovating 54!1--5~ aft 5 Painting, CZYKOSKJ'S (Csy-kos-keyl Profassional OUT Of Work:" \\'antt'd: Only 10 lbs. bl ur-black 11"/lt tan ~, . C '' .. ,9017 J •PANES" G d . Pana.rhanning 6850 Culltom Uphohllery, 1!131 Employment Service malure men, \\·omen or 1' onro\'ia, .: · .,...,... · " 1 r, 11 r en 1 ll i::: i--• N t Bl d C'I lace & fl•<'I, l\'11n1e Tico. Service. Ne111 11·ork. Cleanup,----------c ". JIO r v · · · 2790 I/arbor Bl, Ci\! :..10-lill:~l couples 1 hr11m'h ol 3.1 eor-stra,\'f'(t fJ'Olll 1400 hlk s. • · &12-14;,1. 11 ho 81 d A 1 poratklns has niOVt'd 11110 Brick , Masonry, yd . n1ai11t. 9M·2303 ./PAINTING, interior&: e . ..:. nr r v. al lan1J1 Coa.st lhvy, Lag Bo:h. Librral 6560 I -'='-'--'-='-'-:;..,:=~~~-I JOBS • EMPLOYMENT CaliJ. One of J l"""est profjt etc Complete Yard Carel tcrior. f~ rslimatt', COCIITA IL ~· food 11•11itresl!. ... ,. re\\tll'd. Ph i\'fr. Carson busine~1f'11 ll' USA. 494_6.\\'I. E,·es 4!U-lfl9!l;_ ----------1JJ:'ll 5-tG-4837 • ~>.16·8 120 • Job Wanted Men 7000 ~pply in prrson al Rrinctn Perm.anent lor lho!;r v.·m Bt·h.:k. block, .stotl('. Patios. -llll·A•l·,,,0 , p,,.,,,,.,, o ... -·. ' San Joaquin Goll Cour~ I t•.. I J f I.OST in Vlt'. ol \\'II~ $7.50 llR. L 8 11 d s..:" Pi n I!· ,,..-, ~ SC C II 1°"'21 C I Rd •PP)' ,...,1nse:\'t'S. nq . or · rntri•llCf" 1\'l.Yl'. NQ job 100 1•lranlng, p:unting, 1'1r, J.:..:. lnlt-r. k Extrr. Sptti:i_J rates RAM-LETS ,:in na. "'' u \'Cr · ttw !: legi11m11 tc info to r\f'11•por1 Blvd, l' hag g Y •111all &1&-ill25. Rrf (um. 1· hi t I .~ "' .,, •P''· •4".~·I · '_N_R_. _______ _ --'-~•a n•!OJ bl k I • ' 1 pc'r. rt' 111. r .• o 1n ...-..:0.18. " u-• ..,. ~ ,. ro,.,.,,,,1 success ~~ Ar cog. ,.n~" N' o z=--'==;7~;;~~~~=:~======~~~~~;~~~~='=='1 DENTAi. Rcreplionlsl. :'lfui;1 "Ta~101· 11117.r" .i \S--S-104 -If ANSWERS ASSOCIATE ha\'r rlenlal exprr. J0-1.l. PARTNF.R l\1ANACER found plf'aM' coritacl! \Ve ~~ -.r; , ~l~~39~, No competition In thi11 last nii11-<1 hini! .i;,~{IT\ STAR GA'ZER:fl:l'..,_ T11rn ip-ShN'r-ru111('d -DENTAL a sslsla n 1. 1 b I I"'~ I RE\\'ARD for inforniatlon 0 CL \YR l'Ul[I'. &f'O" ng us rtc.'18. ;ww n· 111s • ' • ~ '~ 1.-nolly -l'Oi.-EH Orthodl1ntic'. f';x1)1"1'lrn<.~I. vestmeont n1akcs you $2.JO leading 111 or 11•tt1rn ol 1n1U· ~ ,,.~,_, 11 H r;.,. Ooily .t,t1;.11y Guid"' H !t~r L~~·m• A 1,"'h\,r;..,l('r: llf' ('lal111i; thal agt• 21).:10: Diii ;118-22!11. ... k ••lo-~ •-rol> up mg 12 yt>or olrl a!ling bl:ick ..;t_,_ • Y ~ , ,. ' '' S• ...,. · I -..... -.-• '!'I frm<1.lt Scoltit> lo~t Sat. =--.-1t. " ,.r o• "'9 o • o~i. oci. ll , I on his tr _ 11 !O Euroj'Jt• he .call-DISTRJBUTORS l\'nnlrd in your sltt\!et & gl"t tta.d~· to 4~'-16--19-~ To de>1~klp mb.SOge lot Wednesdoy, J.IO-ll-2JA'." <'d on fJ\'f' king!!. He must "-.•oh '"'" for .,1;oMll)• go 10 v.wk. i\l r, Duke, night ln Costa :'lle ~a t./~~ 1eodwordscooespond•nglo n1.rnbers JJ,ilj).],Sal.;:. 1 1 1 POKER '-"' " " 778-48-11. 531-3132 -,-TAUIU'S ofyQUrZodlocbirth ~igr\ lll\'t' ICPn na. ~ !{Anie. kno1\·n prrwl11c1. y1\ur Oll'n LOST. ' .. 600 b'···k Vlst~ ,.{~\ A''-· 10 I °""' .JI .......o.-~1 c-..... ~~.·"0 f':\:PE:RT hou~clni;:. main-bu!ihlC!ill. CAii 494-1962. AVAIL. lmmcd to peMW>n ol " ""' " e:.~ · : Goorf :t?!.at.iai &2N<d ...... · ·~~~· executive ct..l i~r 1.1'hn ii Bonit<1, Blull!I, Black half 1" M..-110 JV.,.1 Jl Noct IJJ Womt ,.o(,,. .. !ntf', painilng, prllcl!c-al EAR~ING Chrt11tna!I m()IJ('~· sales oriented Exclush't' rt'Ollirlj: ~lasses 1n bh1ck ':::'\.J·.~U·1 ~~ :i;l:m,..,, :~= 1,..,26.34•1 nur1t1nii:. ~r ue "lran1ng. io; htn &. f'ftllY w/&iru.h temtory ~·/strong profit ca~ v./na1nr. Al!<oe hlnck GlMllfl 6f0" J60-.tvl 1JO C-r~ l7·~19 "~·lr .. '12 CQ\'f'ntr,v, no e'fll, no in,·e.~1. potential This ho: an f'xelting pho1M' a. addre~ book r..,.~w_.,11 i=, ~~i::, ~~ IAGITT.\l.IU5 S.\l-:25.\1, 530-1401 . .J.1~9066 marlccU~ coocept. ~Ir . Rf'v.'U n'I'! &11-2228 ~lf' .. r JU!lc 10 e ~ J9~ ""'''-• "'°"· '1 .J • Job W•nled, 7020 ~:1:ifCTRICALt'iinlltn1rtJM Allan. 213(931-4900. l4J s, UlST \\1litro ;>1tlt11~1cr • • ~ i.o co.. '"°Ot<."'-'Jo r.. o!c·. ,, f~ 1 _W:.:..:o~m~•~·---·----"pr d f 1 or. Nf' ~'~'· :-..,,1 . .s.n, .. 1 1~ ''II<~ 1 1r'°"'~ 41-0~s..stlf , t..a.Bttt, L.A. !'l0036, N'Rnl<' "Tnn~·." 11'l'~ghl R lb,;, '~-:;,IG-J?~ 11F,..-, ''" 12 1., ~-JD.8).90~ ;i X l.r\ T . CO.\'IPANIO:-\~ "."~11;11,. ~l11r1 _ S:.l •. h~, Tripp GOING buslntU kir sail', 0111l"r Tt'dtl;\' Nl'~1 som CANCtt l!~~.olo<• :~~~ :~~ CAPllCOIN a\·nU. f•ll' 11\•r-ln, j or 51 ~ F..lt'!c!rit 11'1<". -~G--1:ll •. Small coffN ~hOp , F:.12-39-19 O'~kv.1Xld Garden t .. ,Ju11t11 15r ...... , ~~N.,q~• ·~~-11tc,.21 ,1r._ di1)' 1\'k . En1p loyer p:i)'~ Downtown San!Jt Ana Joca. Ap1$. ~~Jlll~:' :,~...,,,:'~ :'~oblc ;~~~,1: J"" "~~~<:;;-trc. Jle~llh ;r:, family C;uc .Escrow Socret•rv Uon. SiOOO. f'~.P. Tenns U)ST·"'2-,.,,.-7.-.,~~-l'"'"Jl'-. ~1 ·V ·'1Q..>. 1as.tt. ''~n llCAuld 1.~·.!18-,_,.~ Attn(')'. S4i..f6~1 · 1·2\N. exper, TYPt" m. Sil •\·all. Day& Ml-3122. t:\11'.' blue Bal b;lr uca rr.1! 71-76 '19 &..rt 'o r~ 70 r:--' l6LM..JI 8(1, Xhft bfonto!it.i.. "'' -•• ,0 1_...-~Mill<• CO'.\tPETENT Kerv. d<'sin.o... C 54J.66.ll. h•OOl'd Otlldnon'1; pc1 5 LIO 2,"'2·:•• ,-,_ ---..11 1 •~ A~AllUS MISS EXE AGENCY --;. JVf' n ......,. "'"""' ~ poslllon 11·i1h roupll' trarel-' "'FTEE ~. p cho l·• 67;...2t>l3 I. )po ' 'J'lf.,,. ~l lnl1~ 82\uo'pfoM JAM.10 I R I I """"" u . 410 \\',Coo.st 1111.-y, NB -·•~ • ~---~--~· .-tJ0.1li1lt. ~Nat 8lA flill ._ Ilg e-' rxru1,,. .... au>. ~!:'1.h~1lY 01ocationl'ofor liMI & LOST, Old Enst(L~h Shttp 1)9°'.IJ·~~ r~::~ ~~ :.;~:,. .. 21~.i P2042. Daily Pl!Ot . • Al'\O ~~ilions "''pa • 11n11 int. prirt dog. rr1n11I(', blk "° "hi. oo 11.11.12, • it~· ~r ... " s.~v. "·61.J• ~. 1A P-AWs E J 11 d ~ ,,_.., ___ .., ___ _ r.edu red. iow dov.n, 4M-8182 l1tll , I blu l')e, I b~'n f')'f'. YllGO f''Tll"'<:' "''.r•t ~,.._ P11C.ti i!()U<.'.{'l\'Ork NA f'I llJ'('il 1· ·-· -alt. 8 Re\\'1u·rl, 673-7267 ~-, ,1ill(;.>l ieo.-...1 l.8'11t ee ··~o" . · ' · ~., ' EXPEl~IE • .;CEU IK'am!lrH5 I . ,,.,..,. vic,...1.1 89P1or.1 'f' u )-:-_, fl('(ICI ll'!lll~P, ;)10-1 .• 1. ~-' 11nrl al nnt'f'. pL 1in1r. COIN 11.undry • OJlllll ;\fe.M RF:WA'ltn-IMt f~m . D~ Ii. I .,. Slfr'. ~! r:io(£T~ ~~ 9()(11"'1•, .... , lt •"'.·-~ a·R:.."E • Cnr of lt'flll·ln-a.1sl111\nj:' flrt''l..~ m II kc r I tt'N-Jr.UOO till! prlot. II•· 1 lT VI• 191h & •·n•· ;A1J.J1 J6·!1<.. -, •i'I., · di " 01' 1!).11ol0)1• ••• -·i "• • .... ~ "' ~;..M-77-8().19 •ot<''-'l.i"' 1!'1Jn4~~ •-~:u1ul 677)1).88.. \'11 liri. fo'l\"f' rl~·1 11 \l'l'f'k. ~'.'.. \\'lt!l'f'~'I l11aklr11:: Ir. 111 1. R~f. ..... """'°" Ar. RJ\'U', C.\I ~IS..i219 J ----~~==~~i::===============~~---rirh•lnJ Rt'ff'rt'Ot'f"~ lit\...41161 _c_._11_61_ .... _1_r.i:_,_. ----- ' LADY 10 Pl'<'pare 2 lite ing only, ciling expl'riet'IC1'. ' mrah·, snn1c lite houSt"kt'ep. background S.-t'ducation 10 in~ in r x(:hangf' for free l\faryaret Gl't'.en man Per- roum BalboA I~. 3 blkii fl'tim sonnel t.IRnag-l'r, Bo~ lj6(1, F'rrry. C:i!t :>4R-~6 1!1 Costa tl-1rsR, Cnt ir. 92626. L.\DIES • Pt or fl lin1e. C & s .\laid Serv. 16~12 Ne1,·por1 * TOP SALARY * Bl\·cl C.:'11. 642-9117::! Fo1· f'.Xl)('I'. Cook.Housrkecp- rr 11·/~<t rcf'!I. r.1us1 be cap. '.\!ATOS F'or Aplf1'ype si hlR-ahle of cheei·fully carini;: for rinnJ;. Exp pref. Rr.~ponsihtr llOuse & youni::-st('rl!, Live.in. Adil~. ;\htlll be ovr/2j. Ap-677>-0-187 ply 111 person, J 11n1111ca Inn I 7 -,c;;-,;;cc;-;;-,;c---,=-·I Hot<'I 2101 E. Cnal!l H1\y, * TR l ?il !'IT ER 0 R Cd:'-1 811,·: 10-2 P:\I. UPHOLSTF.RER to v.orl( on boot int('riors 1-canvas i\·IAIDS. n1olel. E:-cp'd only, Apply in person. Cos111 lllesa rovl.'r~. Pt-rm. job. frin;::e I ,~-fl ~ 81 d benefits. nn, '"'"J ll.ruur "' LAKt. ARRO\VHF:AD ;\·IAIJJ....Experienced. 2,i or l\!ARJNA C714l :171-2.i(Jl .. over. f ull lime work. 31;)1 .roe,v-c;;;nn:;,-..,C:';;c"lf.. 1!11rbor Blv<I, C.r.1. TRUCK DRIVER, ran1iliar \\'ilh l.m Angel!!s & Ol'lln11;e -MANAGEMENr---Coun1y, \\1us1 ope r ate TRAINEE. rorklifl and sccurr O\\'n (;nod n1:\lh <1hllity, ,\!UST tK-loud~. Cl:i~s II li~nse rt· n111rricd. ~1ll i1Rry Cofnpl~1. (Juil"t'd . 17141 :,i74040. NI. C:ill Ann. &1:.-mo. \\'esl-USED CAR- cliH J'r1-si1ntl('l A!?c nc:y, 21).1:1 \\'"""" o, .. N.B SALESMAN ~IEOlANIC • Ao!o. /'\f'wport Colleii:e i;tu1lcnt preJerred, 21 Bch p1't·~lige IOC'. ~t'rvicc or older, PRn 1imf'. sln1ion "Nn ma.jor ITJ)flirs, MARCUS \\'\ti hfl \'{' 10 \15" A nc1v IU!'lf'- llj) 1n:1rhinf'; sniog li<' ill MOTORS PN'f. Salary open, \\'ri!r 2100 l-l111·bnr Bh·d, 1.'1tlly Pilot Box ~1 ·2005, 3JO COl'lta :0.le!ll \\',Ray SI. Costa ilfesi1. 'IASSEUSE-E'o"p'ii--\\'altn-~s-Appl)' In pcr!IOn \\'Om1'n. Al-"O TMl ilW'f', Del11.ncy'1 Sea S~nty. 6.11 C'llll 347•7879 Lido Park Dr, N.B. 6f;i-OIOO ~ _____ \\1ANTED: l.o<!al ~ung man ~11r~1;-----111-l:J) \\'lli«Jn "' t'1tirvll"\1', e EXPERIENCED e llstht yard work. :.48-MCM Nurses Aide Apply in per1orr HUNTINGTON BEACH CONVALESCENT ·HOSPITAL· J. 11 f'l()rkh• Sit. !String l.Gnrl llnntl~l'ln Bf'itt'h ~ A-lier 6 e WIG STYLIST-.-' Exp'd only. 6'12-0100 Sc:hool1-lnstruc.tion 7600 TIFFANY LAMPS ,\lalcr )'Our ""' 1 TiUan)' i l\nrll' Nf'1e1 <'14n 11ar!s Oct 22nd. St11:n up no~·-112 ~ rllf'~ltr S1 .. C :-01. ,.,7,?.069 PtA.0-1,.-;;ms-1n r0t~r hfmlr. 8"~\nnr-t"ll 11nr1 1'1i- v11ne""fl All !'!:!"f'C fi l>l':M \ JOIS -Schoo - AIRI e OP e TIC e RE • All •en e TR Alrlin 610 E TR, Hea· Appt I.oarn drag I !oadei J~ome for re mode1 Florid ls ope .. na1 S.bool Golde! Ca.111.. 547-75: MER< SALE Furn I i;uru< p!spla Cl!, de '"" R I 1844 I I Wed OOuN1 tbJ. 2 back< Jruitw ~latch .. ~. ~ maple p!ete, Seclio 1250. 838-811 SOLD w/hut rooool ootry sofa, 67~7? SWAP· uphol! Uphol Men • or co~ 8' sofa ftnral. Mat ct 53tJ.8l TOP tumiti brae, """'· BAYCJ Lime Twin items NEAR: tress, xtra $125. WALN oondil PAIR olive "'""· SAT·lO Jo"urnl of 10. Re.fin'• $69.50 rotar: havo "' "' ""'· DINE'I 6 '"' chair: 2 sto S7,50. Toi l el l!eat $1. Sit !sh ~ ha& Lag\>' HoUs'. 6-pc r.,rlni Stereo CMiT Vecy yoo. Hun 'ta~ Brool GOLF bookl clar1r ml'n)' °""' tract'. ' Re frig "'· ~ Appll " 3 l" ~ po nm $100. iiCA WAS! +MAl .... Hit, • ' ( Tutlday. Octobtr 20, 1970 OAJLY PILOT JI JOBS& EMPLOYMENT, MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISI POR FREE TO YOU TRANSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATi<iii fRAN>~Ut<TA flON TRANSPORTArlOto Sci-1 .. lnstructlon 7600 SALJ AND TRADI SALE AND TRADll Power CrulMro 9020 Mobllt Homt1 ~ T railor, Trtvtl M2S Imported Auto1 -Imported Autos - IT'S YOUR MOVE Applltnct1 llOO Mlictll•-NDO I>,~ERA~ =~i 28' OONZI, .;;;o;,"m,d;c2 * REl'_O_*__ '69 22' T E RRY AUSTIN HEALEY MG - KENMORE Ranees, clot~s HOLAWAY bed $_10.._! sect, male, ora~/wht fem , yn old, Ju1t completily • 8X28Naahau Unde $lOOO Fully self-C0!_1talncd, rrnt1----------1·--------,:- drytr1, Colds.Pot ref:rigera. couch, 12' ~I $1000. custom w Id Htrlpcd maJ&-bKut! overhauled. 1 of a kind boat, (KBU47) • ·si G~atl' Lakes puncho, aJpa 7. Like new, e 067 AU$11n Healey 3000, low __ -----INDUSTRY CAREERS ~and Mfttrs.-F'rlright will ~· for SJS, Nnd1 -10 wq box tralned:-MC-«>65 .all:e¥.. head,_alp1 t.;areat 20X.fr,aet up In Adult ?o.tc> OWntr ttadtd for lte mobile ~. one owner. ~ damaged, hilly gUantlleed. reuphol&terlna. Pole lamp 10122. ~ filhil'la: boat. Speed• aver 50 bfle Home PArk, Immed oc-home. T c; +•i-4~2623 • * • • THINll Up to $90. off, Phone $10. "Bttlthlnc" ne.urih).'de TERR ~ alll ml ranee. Ex~lve ............... 17~ c•=•i • ,,,.. Ch•pm •n Moblle Homes ''M .. 6'' ,_, chain It huge footstOOrl to J .. .-vu P'.IPPles < poo. and CottKOUI $6000 to fiMn. ..... _. .... ,, ~ ""'" w BMW ...-Tl81· SEARS ROEBUCK match $35 Telephone table die), 2 males, 2 femalet. 1 clng. WU1 ccnslder trade . Broadmoor lro2 set up In U06 N. Ha:rbor, S.A. - & CO., Adams & Mqnolia, $10. Silve"r ehafirv dlth, blk A white 3 all b.lack. 7 673-5022 Tustin Vlllop $59gs c• g. * 531-3105 * AIRLINf & TRAVEL e OPERATIONS AGENT e TICKET SALES llunt, Sch. -mp. ll5. Lam-IS. •·w-wkl old, Ff'H to..,,...,, home. -:::::,.=======:I -1 ~--Aulbortzed Dll'. . 'fR EDLAHDBI"' ""' .......... """' .~ -_ .. ·CHAPMAN T rucks 9500 Sales • Service • Part.a ' I • Kenmore coppertone 30" int machine $35. Ca.mtta & 296S1ii Ten')' Rd., Laiu'na M•rine l •ulp. 9035 gas r&fl¥e. Automatic oven projector $35. 546--36.'W Beach, 10/20 MOBILE HOMES All 1o.todcls t'O Choose From 1Plt tlACH INW'I'. w1 e RESERVATIONS - a AIR FREIGHT .CARGO e COMMUNICATIONS contn>la. L1"' now $15. I ~,~, Sill LOVABLE lemale •-p RADlOS, an<hora, lln.•, w; N -~-SA STRIKE POWER S.NlceMonday'tW7:00PM m.7'66 e "7.C. '" ' ' Y -• --"-"-* 11'11531 ':"1..:. *. . Sal 'tW Noon NEW-USE~ •ERV. 646-2423 or 548-9816 . Dachshund. Small doe . pumps, wlncie1, otm:.r mllC -o ..,,, ......., e TRAVEL AGENT 3 YR old O'Ktt(e &: Merritt to buy your paint apra.yers, Pref gd home w/fcncd marine hardware. All new. CONTEMPO-We ha"o a -ilock 01 ·.•-.. , COAST IMPORTS ~ lawn rollers, wheel barrows ..... · 1, .. ,,· o•"·· ~ " ~crlllce. Pvt pty. 962-4981 • ....... '"' ~ Contemp l!I &:aa range, 2 thl"" )'OU o 3" • u1e1-"""•~ , __ .. t,AGUNA HILLS 1970 G?.1C Camper trucks. Of Oranre County Inc, ovens incl overhead unil • · ' .,.s use nee a children 53&-8280 10120 an i pm & Wiuiul '""" w p cl!I ~--H yearT RENT what you need · 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. Buy now, beat the price uw • a C ......_1 -'WY MG Airline School1 P•cific Asking $~ 644-59Z7 from FREE to qualified homes SEAGULL Century M1:1tor, LAGUNA lULLS raise. Also Camper combln. 642-0406 • 546-4529 Sales, Servloe, Parts 610 E . ':l~9~nt• An• ~~o:. eI~cr=~ ';:! 710 ~J~ s~t~esa ~~~mi°:~ ~t~ ~~':t1~~; ~; ~ a~;'~~ni~ atioNUaNndlVusedERS""ITYcka. DATSUN Imm~ia~!'mtlvery, 1-=c..,-=-,T=o"""""B"'E'""'-· I dryer, good cond $50. Deliv • -64s.o760 * _ ~en. we will pey neutering 613-2771. l~ury apPQlntmenlS, put-, H:~N Equipm~nt • """· 841-8115. 546-86'2 * AUCTION * :E:"'~::.: '::-::o: Bott Sllp ~ring~ :;:b ~,.;': bobby shop, OLDSMOBILE $ OPERATOR Antiques 1110 Fine Furniture puppies of lup breed. SLIP >Vall, flneit In Nwprt, CALL ~ WM DATSUN mv"'9 J?rlllji lli I 31111por1 ~' Approved For Vets Le.arn to operate bulldozers, drag lines, cranes, scrapers, Joa.de.rs, 1ref'A."!hen, et c. Home Jrtudy prepares You for 1 resident ,trainln.g at our modem facUitiea In Miami, Florida. Hlgh.ly pa id career Is open itmbltlous men. Uni. versal Heavy Construction A Appliances ::i.18-2570 or 835-3608, call for !or \••-w-•·am .. ,·1"-·t 1._ ~~ Harbor ru"d. FINAL Going Out o t A U ~Id 7 30 ,...., ·-•v "" uua. Triple W a. Cornell _,., • Busil'l!!ss Sale! Batgilns-no uc ons .r• &)', : p.m. appointment. lOi.u 26' to 34'. Ph. Klngaley Continental • Paramount Costa fitesa 540-9&10 "Leade.rln'nleBeachCltlea" 31()0 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. reas, offe.r refused. Furn, Windy 's Auction Bern FREE kitten1, 2 M>lld black, 673-Snl Barrlnj'ton e Universal '70 TOYOTA HJ LUX PICK· ZIMMERMAN 642-9405 540-176' cut glass, bric-e.·brac, 9 x 12 2075'1S Newport. CM ~ 1 pure grey with gree:n eyes, BOAT &llp up to !i(I' Alao lide Flamingo e ~neral UP Under factory warrant)', 2845 HARBOR BLVD, '65 ?.1G Midget, reblt eng, rug, plcturu, 36 x 21" Behind Tony'• Bldg. Mat'l. 1 ICttY & onLl'ICt· MB-OSU or tie for ..Uboat up to it'. Broadmoor • Still' Can't tell th.ii one from a 540-6410 . many nu features, needs portable eJectric 1 lg n I l<i K Yellow Gold En&:a.ee-836-4493. .:..J/22 5t8-1608 aft 5 pm · Hillcrest e Cambridge new one, Priced to sell. $1899 DOT DATSUN 1Dme body wk. M/sae. $'150 changeable letters $25. Ce~ ment Wedd!itg' Rin& set 2 YR old male mittCI Pe'k~ *PVT dock Jor up to 2.8' CHAPMAN Lie. 27SVIV, Chick Iverson oi-bst ott. Ila.)' 64~lll.S/EV tury House Antiques, 2134 \r.v.s. qUallty, tine coklr. 66 Cocker. ~ kids. Hse-motor boM on channel. MOBILE HOMES Inc., 445 E. Coast H1AI)'.; N.B. OPEN DAIL y , °"646-"'-"5135~~~~~~-Newport Blvd, C.M just ,_,__, lo ~ ~me 67" -53 u " pa, Appraised $150. Will ... -.,,~ •""""' iv • 673-2662 aft 6 pm U06 N. llarbor, S.A. o>"V'7JU ext. or ..... AND 1967 MGB-GT ·-11,. .... Low b:eyond 21st St. 56-2338 10/22 :1 ....... -Sacrifice .. P. 0. Box 519, * n4/531.a:t05.* 196!': FORD. VB, aulomatic SUNDAYS milHge. $1875. Fine con- Lakewmd, Calif 90714. 1 black 4 white Ir 1 lf'eY &-Boat Rent•l1 9031 * REPO * transmission, power steer-1IS35 Beach Blvd. dilion. 83J..-0449. LIQUIDATION SALE white kittens. 4 mo old, To ing, power brakes. air con.. H'un~on Deaeb Early American Furniture one home. 675-3558 until 9:30 Rent A Sailboat '69 General 24X43 C• S-6328) ditioning with HI way 842-7'l81 or ~o.<1442 Schools Dept. 1203, 501 N. Sewing Mllchin• 8120 Golden Cir., suite 206, S.A., SPECIAL Calif., 927115 or (area) TI4/ """ . 547-7521. 1970 Singer Touch-0-matic, PORSCHE MERCHANDISE FOR ~atnut console, $3?.50 Compl liv rm set, dinette a m & after 6:30 pm. lQ.21 Cal 2S, ,1,.., <, Mly -•Ip. Dishwasher, awning & skirt. Camper Cruiser. Just the ,70 DATSUN ~.. .._ ~ .. ~ i""• S.t up in Hunti ..... on thin I t"· cle -up se•, ........ rm ~ts, pole lamp« SMAU. 1/yr old female dog ped, $30 per day, wkdys; $40 ''e "11' i or '"' cy o·-· '63 PORSCHE many mlsc household items. nds good borne Io v es per day wknds; $700 per wk By the Sea. Rent ;75, $11981. Dir. 540-9640 or 30-35-ID 4 Door Sedan, used (60.1AVA) CalJ Ken Reas * 962-2423 children &: &ood watch dog. LelSOnl incl 968-4840 CHAPMAN '62 STUDEBAKER ..Pickup. dlr. Will take trade o1• fin. COUPE Furniture 8000 Music•I BONNIE cash.In. Jax, black 548-9811 10120 ' ' MOBILE f10MES Needs work. $300 o~ of· anee private party. Call Hardtop, 11eamin&'. metamc SALE AND TRADE ··- Instruments 8125 leather jacket, silver fox PETS •nd LIVESTOCK Boat Ch1rt•r to3t 1!'6 ~4i~S.:~ s:-fer. 546-4052 or 494-SSll. silver, with brand new ~ ~returned from ----·-----lined. reversible, worn 545-4314 '67 D ti:rior, chra~ wheels, ra- Alsplay atudle1, model horn. e Drum Set e twice. Ori&. $150, accept P.t1, Gener•I llOO '""'-~·"· --w ~~-~,1 LEASE •49 CHEVY PANEL atsun dial tires, AM/FM ~ r--ancellation. Xlnt cond * 968-3448 .u ...... ...-.u-.. ... , ..... "-'".... • h Op I B W es, decorators c $350. Size 8-10. Aho custom-OJJN<:mu..AS: Em-......, Slps 6 * Dehix boat w it . ton to uy Truck. 673-4229 CICJOft Lie. PXW982. Spanish & Medltern.nean Sonola Accordian made suits a: some evening -··--, * 548-2434, 636-4034 * '68 24X53 Crusader Doll A t ll UD r-cr1 $2399 R D FURNITURE -·I ·~ 962 56,. ttir . 8 "''"ll7 illneu fon:ts sacrifice of '69 Cllevy 'ii ton P.U, u oma c. ( E 5911 .-· r u I az, ~-. ..., -·-~'·~'~u~• ~·~~~---I 294 prime animals&. equipt, !-=========I House complete w/skirts & Pvt pty, must sell fice! Will take trade or fin. CHICK IVERSON 1844 Newport Bl., C.M. ========= MAGNIFICENT Navajo rug, Call 536-2241 Mobile Homu t20Q awntne. Washer, dryer, De. • 548-3905 * a.nee private party. eau every nlte 'tll 9 Pianos & Org_~~! ~ approx 9'x13', S 4 5 O O . FOX, RARE, 7 mo. gold col· i;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;-tux throughout. Set up in .64 FORD Window Van-Stick 546-4052 or 494-681J, VW Wed .. Sat. &: Sun. 'til 6 Displayed at Hiatt'• Indian 1 blk 1 .._ . park near Knoll'• Berty ~t1. .,M1 Ex 66 _ ~y French, din'g rm SALE Crafts, 31808 Camino .. ~-le1·•-'•P :"...~~. mAJust, .',i1:[?1;i1!){:]1J1l1fj.'1 Farm. Call 714/530-2930, shift, 6 cyl, many e.xtras. FERRARI .... ~.. L or "' PIANOS • ORGANS capistrano, San Juan .... v•u ............ ., ~ ------Xlnt cond. Trade. 646-2698 1970 HARBOR BLVD, tbl. 2 exten leaves, 6 cane 7·30 54~2163 • SPACE available for COSTA ·-•· back chairs, dist r e s s e d Famou~ brands at tremen. Capistrano, 714/493-4425. · ' ' Mobile Livincr 20x50. AdullS, no pets. Near '67 Ford Van, air cond. 40,000 FERRARI i~ truitwood finish. Sac $345. dou.s savings! All with our FOR .sale, pri. pty, metal Cata U20 "It Hoag. 548-7421 mi's, aulo, 6 cyl. R&H, xln't Newport Imports Ltd. Or· '60 PORSCHE C&briolet. 1600 f.fatching host chairs $8.l exclusive Co&lt Music War-de&k, calculator, copy i 'ti'iRAw1i:LCERR,08x;;45;;;,-;;b-;:.,.-;;u~1:J.'"'~nd"'.,cTn1~._.'.64~S-~2'98~.~=~J ange Coun~·· only author-super, with~ top. New pair. 54;,.5911 ranfj'. machine, office chairs &: set Sil.KY Sealpolnt Siamese at Its Best fwnished. $2500 cai;h. Call e ·ss EL CAMINO -4 SPD & iz~er engine, new utcb, new MOVING -Sal<?m House ~~~: =:: • ~7-= dies &: cutter. ~to.to &'O. $25 ea. INffiVINEAGRICULTURAL btwn 5 & 7 eves 646-7016 sr;::?·3:30: ~353* 3100 ~~~~~:~TS :ts'u:wne~!n~~ maple din'g rm SC!!, com· rRAN -=========·J-========= -';:=:=;~==='==::;;;I =~~~~~~~~:! .. , t -u.~ Bl·J -nd $550 16' ,.. DS from $695 -~---PRESERVE-BEAUTIFUL! Mtnl Bikes 9275 Newport Beach a ~ ncu. ....... ~ ...... , -~t~n::n~f:. io9d ~nd, Bank terms, Trade-in& Misc. W1nted 1610 Dogs 1825 ---------· 1Jeep1 9510 642..9405 540-1764 phone 64.5-1982. 9am to llpm $25CI. UpboL chair $75. D~fi;;~~~ ~ 9 ------·-ALL PUPPIES NEW Bd~:iAN~ 4 hp, iood con· 6ii'S<it'iTV8,7,;.tl-;~1,,;A~u~tho<~l~,ed~;Ferr&ri~~~0e~o1~";1·67 PORSCHE 912, MINT 838-8891.. COAST MUSIC LGE, clean Abalone pearls. Presents n, · 1968 SCOUT V8, 4-whl drtve, cond. 46,000 mt. Lemon SOLD Hom.·. d•'nlng -m 'The Golden Waves, 16 Purebreds sh~ ..... ,, Mixed •642-3240• 4-spd, 10xl5 Cates tires. FIAT yt>:llow, new radial, $4,100, '"" NEWPORT L HARBOR Princess St., Sausalito, Ca. ' ·-to· ' ' Xtra clean, 646-6433 644-5290. w/hutch. lamp, roHee table C la M * 642-285l AKC Af&hans, Basseta, Shep. S300 ~ Motorcycle• 9300 console stereo, hi fi. scroll, 05 esa 94965 Phone 4151332-l019 herds, Collies, Dachshunds. --BO '64 PORSCHE entry cab. chest drawers, ALLEN ORGANS WANTED Balboa Bay Club Lots or Shaggies Poos, I 1---------Recre1t'n VehiclM 9515 ~a ~ 356 SC COUPE sofa. poker table etc. The musician's choice for Family fl.fembership . Reply Health Cert. Credit Cards, ~ .. ~ Balboa blue, chrome wbeds, 673-7784 home, school, churth .. Ex· to P.O. Box 282, Whittier, Open7day1.6624\Vestmins-RECREAllON \.VISIT OUR BIG radial · SWAP-4 pc sectional, newly elusively in So. Calif. at ~C=al="=·~"1608=,:...,· =~~~-1 ter Blvd .. Westminster. • HOTHNDAINI RECREATION auto •port ltd dition. ~~·x~~ oxr upholstered, never used. GOULD fl.tUSIC CO. Wanted: 1 CB Walkie 192-2276 CENTER Uphol. _1 0,., 1400. FOR Since 19ll Tallcie, any channel. Authorlzed Sales • Service $3099 '""~ CHIHUAHUAS, male, Cham-.. WE ARE THE DEMO SALE Men & womon'• golf cl"'' 2"15 No. Ma;n, S.A. 557-3732 p;,,n •tock, show quality. CENTER -"FRIEDLANDER'' SHOWCASE DEALER 1970 Fial rn Sports Cpe. CHICK IVERSON or color TV. 642-4280 * 547-0681 * Fawn wt-n eye1. Short· -FOR 1;:~:::::...:.:.:...:::....7'=.,=, 1----.F..."i:----FREE TO YOU ... ~~ Radio, heater, apeclal ex· vw ' 8' i;0fa. never used, quilted Beld w in haired $35 ea. without ,.,. tlACM tNWY. •I ~ Dorado Campers, hawt, pin atrlpift&', radial floral. Scotchguarded. $125. PIANOS & ORGANS paper.1 &: stud prlv. $75. 537-6824 e 893-7566 Mint Homes, Chaslll1 Mounts tires, ~ow miles. 549-3031 Ext. 68 or 67 Matchln&: toveseat $'15. New &: Used L(X}KJNG for good home or with papers It no rtrings. I SPACE RENTALS NEW-USED-SE RV. and Balboa Motor Homes. $2795 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 530-8l37 WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO is one year, 1 ill 5 mos. Stud FROM $11 .50 ftl'U"l.n.n OiOOSE FROM !1625 Garden G-·e Bl"d. COSTA MES/. l='='==:=--;:::-"7.:7:i I lhe people who love me. I'm rvice U 546-3334 I U K ••• • TOP dollar for used 1819 Newport, C.M. 642-8484-about 2 yrs. Gray&: white se ava · N AD LT PAR SHEU.S TO COMPLETELY 537.1177 Call Collect PORSCHE 9U immac. furniture, antiques, bric-a· OPEN SUNDAY male cat. 540-1943 10120 GOLDEN -PETS ALLOWED-iiiiP.ii~~~-li SELF.CONTAINED MODELS record& AM/FM Konia, brae, oriental rugs, oil pain-AITERNOONS APPROX. 50 yds gold RETRIEVERS MOORS ON $210.00 t o $'895.!)0 ~ chrome. rirna Bunch a . tings. Call 642-3445. * WANTED: Baby Grand carpeting, 125 f.lonte Vista AKC ** n4f532.0588 Try Before You Bu,y With Our • THINI prv. party, 557-7900. BAYCR~ furniture sale. 7' Preferably Ebony. (F 0 r Ave. lsl Come • ls t • SPRINGER s p AN IE L Reasonable Rental Service ~jr '57 PORSCHE Cpe>, Good eng. Lime channeled sola $100. Model Home). Served! 10/22 PUPS AKC. Champion Line-. DISPLAY THEODORE r111i Needs hood/minor work. As Twin bed $25, also miscl.1 ~==~"=4-64=-88-ooc-*=-,= G. SHORT hair pointer 6 ** 54&-1655 ** ROBINS FORD ID i5 $735. See anytime :Kl89 1,:;;';•m~•·.;":;;8-8:.;.;m~=:-:::-=:::-;-I WURLlTZER Model 4800 months old male fned yd LAB. Retriever Pups -EXAMPLE-2060 Harbor-Blvd. ''fRIEDLAH'Dni' Harbor, CM. 673-1S95 NEARLY New klng-sz mat-w/Leslie speaker, $1250 nets gd. home. 548-08l3 or AKC R91ia. _champ line BRAND NEW Cosla Mesa 642-0010 U 1!160 PORSCHE w/'64 1600 t'ress, Simmon's Beautyrest, J===*;6:73-<l!I=="=*=== 836-4493 10/22 Xmas Joy. 644-0505 MINI HOME 1J711 IUCH (Hwy. Jt) series C engine. $1350. Ja&in xtra linn, cost S250, sell 1.0=v"A°'B'°'LE="1n"te"1"11ge=nt,-,:-pu:::p:::p::-y,· I cMA"'"'"LE~SA~M°'o'°v"E"o'"."'1'"M=o"'"s. Ka.mp KJni Chassi1 Mount 893-'1500 • 53'1-6824 l9th St, N.B. 2nd Sty. 1125. 644-sesJ. CemerH & h•lndle rolor, pl •hephenl, • BEST OFFER • DOUBLE WIDES ,70 Honda 450 Fully sell. con1ained w;1h NEW-USED-SERV. '66PORSCHE9J2 WALNUT 8W1k Beds, good Equlpment · 8300 xlnt for kind, lovable child. 494-0593 popout rear bed, dual air ~ >&pd, chrm whls, AM/FM. oondition, complete $65. NEW Yashica Lynx 5000 642-3929 10122 Total Electric Low, low mue9• Like new. cond. Sun deck on ·n Chev. $3200. 673-2266 aft 6. ~~~Cal~l,,,962-~77_682==-=-o 1 35mm F1.8, $40~ New. Nik· LDVELY yng, lemale blk &: A~::~. M4\nl m~!sr:n~ (Gas Availablel dlr. Complete with camping Van, power b~kes, radio, '67 SPYDER • '63 PORSCHE -reblt eng.'. PAIR traditional gt u f fed kormat FTN F2, USO. New wht cat w/lg gr. eyes. nds females, 6 wks old. 646-8124 2 br., 1 bath, comp!, with trailer. •908442. Will take heater. Beautiful hlllf! & ·AM/FM, MW tirn, lki olive grn chairs, new-Xlnl Nikor 200mm, $150. 4x5 friendly family, 546-7308 carpet, drapes &-appliances. trade or finance private par. t,.hite. A real winner. 'liTust Super Sharp 4 1peed dlr. rack. $2350. 646-.5432. oond, $100. 833-0076. Bessler enlarger w/leru;es, 10/2'2 AKC reg champ sired long-Lg, awnings, both side1 & ty. Call 546-4052 or 49f.681.1. sell thi1 week, Stock 782. CTQC 558J Will take Car in '68 PORSOIE 912, ic.-...i, haired Doxies. Xlnt temper. Seri 6259 .... ....., SAT-10 hr Sale. The Used $150. Alt 6PM . 64~7 1 YR old cat and kitten, $'15. 832::!986 or 830-3400 full likirting-Tax & es $7't95 trade or finance private par. Mag whls, AM/FM, 11.M r~urnlture Factory. See ad smoke gray with wht. license-Completely set-up ty. 546-4052 or494-6811. new. ~2432 or 10/22/10. Sporling Good1 1500 m""ki...,. "'''' good AKC Doberm•n Pupo $9999 UNIVERSITY '63 PORSCHE: NU: Paint Office Furniture 8010 REIKER Buckle boots, sz 7; w/chiklren. 962-5973 10/22 6 wks. sro. ~aft 5 JA~UAR Blk, chrome/whls, Zennalt skis. Both &ood FREE to qual. home Great Horses ll30 SEE THE FABULOUS OLDS AM/FM. 538-!678, 64S-8707 cond s;;o. 644-5597. oane mix ma!• 1ocd yd. 30XSS CORNELL JAGUAR '64 PORSCHE sc. Efec • ...,,. Retin'd 34x60 wood desks,• =-,2=1=-0 °"G°'s""K"ne"';".,"i-=m"•"'•"k-:,.;;;\ 543-0813, 836-4493 10/22 PALAMINO Mare: 5 yrs, AND P.fANY OTilER HEAD"'UARmS root chrm whla, AM/FM $69.50 e Refin'd wood arm skis, Used 1,(i of 1 season. l FEfl.1ALE calkll kitten 1 REG (JN FOAL). Aft 3:30: MODELS INCLUDING 2850 Harbor Blvd. T Weber carba. $26()0. m-5SJ.B rotary chairs, .$29.50 e ~Ve $95. 516-8195 blk and wht kitten, Call aft. 968--0353. SINGLE-WIDES Costa Meu. 546-&?SO TMon!yauthorlzedJAGUARl=:========::-f have the 1.ariest selecho.n 2 SURFBOARDS. one 6'6", 6 675-2526 10/22 TRANSPORTAT ION -FINANCING AVAILABLE-Campers 9520 ::1ae:" in the entlnt Harbor RENAULT of used office tum in trus one 10', Both good cond. 8 WK. old bluish-gray w/wht a.rea Boats & Y•cht1 9000 1-11 JEFFREY RD ·Mc Mahan Desk * 673-2175 * markings kitten 10 gd home. -., ·==7"'=='°'='"""=·I ''CHASSIS MOUNT" 1800 Newport Bl .. d. SURFBOARD 6'4", Good 548-0813, 836-4493 l0/22 --------IRVINE 1"'"' KAWASAKI 175CC, 1315. • WHY NOT 1" Ml SO OF ""'° Argelus, 12~ ft. fully sell 642..8450 condilion, $35. NED. gd home for Shepherd · · 492--0346 or see at 1609 Las contained, sleeps 6, mounted + 64&3344 * mix male sweet dlsp. lncd TAKE A CRU ISE?? SANTA ANA FRWY. Bolas, San Clemente on 1 ton new '70 Chev., auto. !::========! yd. 548--0813. 836-4<9310/22 For Lttst Or CALL COLLECT 492-0346 Ch rt 71 • •32 •s•r trans., air, PS, PB. A real Mls cell•neout 8600 GD natured part Dachshund • •r ~--~-=~~~--~-LIKE New, '69 Hodaka Ace beauty. Must aacriflce. Stock DINE'ITE set; 2 extensions & male, xlnt. w/children. Gd LOW WINTER RATES! Triple W id• Cornell 100 $300 Finn. Both street & no. 778, Serial No. 24417. ·- 6 chairs $50. Rocker $20. 2 8 l\t~t movie projector $20. 8 home only. Sf'-3108 10120 40' WhHler Cniiaer: Sleepg 8. Hillcrest • F1a.mln.go dirt equipped. 609~ Jris $8t9S II well · 2 l Id Make appt. NOW! OWNER: CdM aft 6 PP.f chairs & ottoman $50. Bar & mm Be & Ho movie Parakeets -green, yr o , Paramount • Unlvenal · UNIVERSITY 2 stools S20. Baby hichair camera $10. Geiger counter 1 yellow, 6 mos, Incl cage, Wkda.VB 5.J9.897B Eves• wk-Barrington • Broadmoot HONDA SL-350 1970. "" all ho t ••• r· 10/22 ends: 827.1431, ' -II '"75 S7.50. Stroller $5. Car seat S5. ....-. srn a ...,., ll'm. food. 494-4170 eves. ContineontaJ e Siar ....... w m eage, .,.. • Toilet seat $1.50. Infant ____ s:i_i._7294 ____ 2 ANGORA kittens about 7 23' CABIN Cruiser, 320 hp, General • Hillcrest * 675-1780 * OLDS sC!at $1.50. Portable heater OFFICE or Den Naugh Sofa "'"ks 1 male, I female. Chrysler Inboard, SS radio, CHAPMAN '681,-2 SUZUKI 305 c c $1. SteC'I shelf, woodgrain fin. & Chair Pict, lamps, this, M0-2195 10/20 DF, V~rive, 1961, Newport MOBILE HOMES Scrambler. Xlnt eol'!(I, Must 28fl0 Harbor Blvd, ish s~. 15 lb. bowling ball & u p ho I· I heater I c hr's, YOUNG, attractive , very ~~~w~ll:. ~.v:~~~· 12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. 1_,._11_. ~"..,95~·.,C~al-1~548-4~~806~-1costa Mesa 546-6750 bcq; $7.50. 9J5 Park Ave., bdrm/set & Misc. Bargain! gentle male cat. LI B-J927. * 714/530-2930 * e '70 Suzuki 125 e N ,71 D Laguna Beach. 494-9822 · P.toving! 67>-5127 I0/22 26' Navy whale boat. Diesel Want To Uve In Near new, Aruiious to sell, eW atsun HOUSE&: Patio Sale: Comp! KIJ'iGSIZE, 1-Ully lined gen-=FR=E°'E=--.-u-pp""~'"•°'·Sho""n°'h"al-.:....i=.· \ =I~ ;:~=~1:u'!ue':. COSTA MESA make offer. 67a-0367 lGIXI OHC, Pickup with earnp. f'lrlngs a: me.ttrtsf $30: Ong1nal cost SllOO. Can be 10122. 1 ~-~9703~~· ==~~~-are serioua about buy. street or dirt. Extru. $595. {II 4382'1Jl Wiii take car In Stereos: Tablet; Bf' d s; used as wall hangll'lg or nJg, • 44' HOUSEBOAT, XI n t, moh\Je home ..• Now'• 540-5198. trade. Will finance prtvate Completti SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK lN COSTA MESA ·~ RENAULT, xln't cord. witti or without tape. $500 or bst oft'. 412 E. Ba.lboa, N.B. '68 • R-10, auto, Jt..H, iood cond,, below wholesale, JS mi. gal. 847-7928 SAAB 23C E. 17th Stn!et 548-7765 Authorized Dealer Sates e Service • Parts KARMANN GHIA &met Coupes ln stoc• 1----.-~ ........ __ Orange County's Newest Dir. '62 GHIA COAST IMPORTS of On.n1e County Inc._ U)O .W. Paelfle Cout: HWJ". 64Ul406 • - Radio. (JPR.346) $999 TOYOTA 6-pc Bdrm set i~ box ui~e-fur he d .!JP r e ad. good natured. 54 8-3 7 5 0. ~paces iwailable now! '68 BULTACO 250 cc. Gd for er. Sale price $2099 dlr. Ch:ilrs, & many misc items. $600. 837-8725. 2 AI.J.,.WH.ITE kittens, 1 live aboard, Slip Avail, to ~'"====~~-~-·I party. Call 546-4052 or Very cheap, Some tree i.J,0 l\fINK jackC!I, new. bel~e ~k!~~~ marki"f:;J * 548-2434 * BAY HA RBOR ·~ocl:;ui;:int~d.Sa;-: 4M-6Slt, Harbour v .w. ~~·nt~:!n Jn~:n1a1&'. :~~~s~1~1i1 1=~~:,o~~ DARLtNG Calico kitte ns S•llboatt 9010 1425M~AB,I LEs H10MHaEL1 sell. $550. 646-?353 J98 QW EiMPER 187ll BEACH BL 342-4435 (take 2nd lclt off 531-9206, fl.lrs. Roche, 12-7 w I pe.rso n a 11 ly. __________ .., Cos Mer t. at ~gf70 ~70 HONDA TRAIL 90 Fully equipped $2995 ZHX670 HUNTINGTON. BEXCH '71 COROLLAS Brookhunl. main '"""""I pm %-5242 10/22 ALL NEW 16, I• '" Lo ml $285. 96~9960 Cha,_. Mobllt Homtl ,6 VW GHIA HERE NOW GOLF clubs, car, furn., skis, e AKA.I Tape o e c k : ~B~EA,..UT=.~1o-,-,,..b,..le~l,..llU-;e-,"",..-~-I 17 WIDE ?tlOBILE HOME HARLEY Sportster frame, 12111 Beach Blvd, G.G. J W 2 Dn ~ booka, dishes, vi olin , SA.'lSUI No. 2XIO; 2 kitten free ft> rood home. HOBIE CATS le CABANA tong sprlnpr front end. * 714/SJ0..2930 * Convm.lble. Recent ensinc A:t:n":tica le 4 S~ clarinet, washr.r/dryer & ~ken. 17 Tapc?'&, used 5-18--3148 10/22 Newport Penin. area M2-7Dll uk for Ken. overhaul, hard t'O find mo-DEAN LIWl~S many misc. Uems. 2816 21mo·1. $85jJ, 548-7162 2 MALE kitteM B wks old, 1 ALL COLORS F ull prlc. $m5 a ',69 BSA 6SOcc CAMPER .. '67 Ford " Ton det, Radio, heat!r, 4 speed, ~~· C.f.I. (Mesa deJ Mar IG '"'E"''I='I~IN~G~m"-am-'-',."-ed,-'?~14~K blol'lde. l dark 5ong haired. FRE E D EMOS (Bll7!91>Dlr, 545-1242 * XWT COND. SAC! $950 P.U. 101Ai' cabover. f.1arui etc. 1966 l:farbor, C.M. ISt6.mm c engagement &. Yr'tdding ~ 546--0272 10/22 Priced f.rOm $llS5. Winter --=,,...;===o---· 1 * * 962-~1 * * extras, Clean, lo mi. $3695. $ 1 099 BllL GARAGE SALE "" 3 d~monds, 11 75. CALJCO kltl•M. 21em•les 6 Racing '1arll soon! w/l"~CovCO.LPUMB1"·.~·-., • '69 BSA 650cc M!l-164.1 CHICK IVERSON MAXEY Refrigerators, TV, dishwas~ &12--6478. wks , adorable 548-6045 Aft. CAP'N EDS wuu uu r WTI Pr. 540-1769 3 10/22 $1850 Xlnt mnd. Sllcrl1ie@ $9:!0. lmPorted Autos 9600 VW Cl.ARKE l:lardWood Floor ~9551 S.1nder DU-8, u11cd only FEMALE puppies 6 wks old, 2200 W, Crt. Hwy. NB &t.5-2244 C.M.-Newport area <DN7968) -,70i'1io;0..,nd...,-•"'750""",°'•'"~"""'"·1.-· I ---------..,I 549-30.11 Ext. flS or 61 Appllonct1 lwlcc. Co" 1500 new, 545-5097 10/22 14' HOBIE CAT • Dir,"'""' * "' AUSTIN HEALEY 1970 HARBOR BLVD. llNl l l ACH I LVD. 1---------~""="~ll~I"'~· ~1200_. _962-_7'_"62_. __ ,ADORABLE ld1te.n1 1t'ff to w/tr•ller. $1075.. ---=p"E"'R"'F"'E=c"'T""'"--Xlnt.~2$1.299 COSJ'A MESA Hunt, ludt 141..U 15 CU ft wht F'rlgidaire DJA~fONDS • LOG9e: All ~-~,:horn_:::::;';,.· :::":::3-<1::::;121::._.:l::'.0!.:/22~ l'°'m,Ca!J;;;,-,;6:-73-"-24"='13;:':0""i:':-'= 1 u x 57 1n five star adult ===,,;:~;;===:1--;;;;~:;--;:-;;:;;;;:::-J:========= J 1 ml. N. of Cout ~. • .. 3 "';'~d •• lm;t~nd. """ flOO CT. & ,,. ,.,... KfM'ENS ,,.. 10 ••od COLUMBIA Oe<endtt 29', park. No ...... ldw loca· Auto Strvlct AUSTIN AMERICA MERCEDES BENZ '69 C 0 Lill 213/ 41)..9857 homes. 9&M92T lOl2:1 &Jeeps 6. Xlhp, bnbrd., o. tion In Costa Me.aa. Pb. &. P•r1t ffOO Salet, Service, Pana Oro G GAS dryer, Westinghouse •• "~LE==TRA~"'PP~EU=R~skl~boo-ts""."rnEE lancy cuppie1. Pure rackl& A many extras. 646-8612. lmm:ii_la:;od~~Vtr)' hslback 4 *Pttd. Hat ha pennanent preu, xlnt cond. Mens s!Jc 9. $30 -atre .... th. $48-4476 10/20 646-6047' 494-77lS. BOUGirr a house... MUST VW Entlne, Good Cond, loving ca.re. S..crtnoe1 (XSp l!OO. SS'l-8835 615-26>2 ·~ SABOT "11lnc • rowing SEU, 2 lir liOme .. • 642-0l<l • 497) Tal<e amall down, wm RCA \VH.lRL.POOL El.EC/ POOL TABLES! 2 DARLING yellow kittens, dinghies must Id.I comp. Newport Bay 171(35 $00 mo. REBLT 36 HP VW enit 1: tlnance pvt pt)'. Call dlr. WASJlER DRYER$!'.(!, \Yhol sa1 1 the Public MB-3927 l0/22 J!lOCk wholesaJe pri c es . Full pr1ct $3800 or ofter. m1.1tOer, Ru1111 p>d, Oeu, Pat aft 10 am 5«1-SlOO or ~700 • e e 0 CHlLD'a sandbox 968-1815. • 64~1567 675--0331 $100. ~29 494·7506. Ttrm1. S,U..Q 10122 ,::.,;::;:;;;,-.,--:-=--..,I •l\tAYTAG ae.rvlce man ha1 p Ja C SHOCK 22' 11loop, -'P" 4, 1967 SUN Valley Mobile VW PARTS • '69 Corolla.-R.a.Jf, tape. wtabcn, drytrt In match. 9fS n arpets TABBY 1wtns 7 ..-·ks. old pea-101let, t in"' 1tove, main. j1b Home, 12x:~O. l BR. Call aft Chauil, Transm!Miolll I 31\tl W. Codi Hwy., N.8. deck. 17,000 mt. 11e11, btst 11J1.r. $31~7. * 545-8)()2 * pie lawn. !46-7308 10/22 ienot, 1llp lrK:I. $43--1127 5 pm. 64~ ._Bod~y~port-•_._ro--0« __ , ___ , fJ.12.!MCI stn-1764 • =======:;;; _lll_!O_. ____ ..,IK..nst"-'-~ 1100 I I I OA)LY PILOT T-. Oc•-20, 191D TRANSPOlTAT ION TRANSPORTATION T RANSPORTATION T~SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION I~ A--lmflO!:l!d Autu -lmportod Aul°' -Aut. LH•!!'f MIO Uwl C... 9900 Uwl Coro '90I Und Cora -Uood Citro -Now Coro 9100 TRIUMPH • VOLICSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN A LJt,5~971 CADILLAC .CHRYSLER LINCOLN PONTIAC . -_ _;_;::...:..:.;.;.:..;..:.__ SAOUF.lCE. • • fA rebll ef\I. WI')' Id CObd. $1600. 673-2629, aft 5:30 &. wknd~ --'63 -VW- Kombi '68 VW PINTO e CADILLAC '61 • 1966 CHRYSLER Station '63 IJNCOLN Continental. 4-e Pont. '67 9 PoH W09. AUTO-MAn·-=·=.i,==1 50.00 :tno. --COUP&-DE..lllLLE-wo..,~te>>:-•'"'"" ,,, .;r_cond, comp1'"" 1_..,_ F•Cl'O•Y r <3S mo > ---oo & ea rin-;-fiil.I . :-ownl!r';-~to rttel'ldkioned. SU..16711. cONr>lnoNING · power, factory air condltlon. appreciate. $11195.. 968--7043. Dlx. Catalina Station Wagon, A ~k tnc. AM-FM Ndio, tlll·lele. '67 CONVERT, 300, mint MUSTANG · V·S engine, power steer., PINTO •teerlrw wheel, power door cond. crmd.r. older conv, in power brakes. Auto. tram .• BAUE R°" • BUICK . '59 TR-3. Gd engine, needs bod~ ... .$Zl:S. Ca I I 6'-~5. 1970 ~ Triumph Clean 3 mo: old SJ&.72!M aft 5 PM Radio. OZX482) $1289 Black with black Interior, economy speclal, will fin. ance private · party. Lie. XEU-224, $1499 CHICK IVERSON vw Jocks, auto cruise contrQI, trade. '69 MACH I $2495 AIR. rad., htr .• WSW Ores, tilt $4 DAY etc. (WQR131) * $19:1> * * * * 642-3354 • auto I trans, AM I FM W/O wheel, elrctric re-;.r wi .,. .. ._..._JN AND SALE $3555 PRICE ·· --tm PIS. P/rnoc bru, etc. C'ISA·213l I 4¢ MILE o,.,.,. Coon!>'• Larpst COMET •port""'· 639-Mn SALE $2111 ' ' I VOLKSWAGEN Harbour V.W. '62 vw 187ll BEACH BL. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH '64 vw Convertible Gleaming white, with red In- 549-3001. Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. CX>SfA MESA I ----~----' 63 VW, rebuilt e~ne, new dutch, low milta&e, xlnt cond. $725. 536-3344 VOLVO PUT A Ll'ITLE KlCK IN YOUR LIFE! THEODORE ROBINS FORD a'.IOO HARBOR BLVD,. OOSfA·MEsA 64UJ010 Selection of QualltJ Cadillacs '67 MUSfANG 3-lpd, 289. Orange County's Largest , 1964 COM:m" automatic. 6 Pilrf. cond. New wide ovals. Selection of Quality Cadillacs Na.,.rs . Cadillac cy"""'' • •• ...... Radio, M•" ""·•st'"" m-1"'2 Nabers Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BLVD., Heater. A tine economy & Coota M... traNportatlon "'· Priced OLDSMO.ILE 2600 HARBOR BLVD., 546-9100 Open Sunday well below blue book at.I---------Costa Mesa '65 CPE ck Ville, air, landau, $37'5. Call !37-4239, E1 Toro. e OLDSMOBILE '68 540-9!00 ~"3180""""; all pwr a: extras, cie'an, CUTLASS ''S'' ·70 GTO, 455cu in, HP. &ood cond, $1695. 313: COIVEllE utumngoldwithblackvinyl Ram Air, 4 speed) close -4.11-8890 ratio, saf-t-trac (p»;i 3: 31. "Specializing • ) Radio, (SK1J891) terior, can finance private I---------party. Lie. 1165-BEJ UHd C•r1 . '900 e Corvette ,70-Interior, VS, automatic, ra-pwr disc brks, vari ratio --------e Caci. '64 Cpe. ft VIiie Stln11 R•y •,,1o. healer, new .glass R~ll PIS. Ride &. Handling Pkg, ~· $799 CHICK IVERSON vw ~ WE BUY FACTORY F>:CroRY res, power .steenng, u ...... er cordova top. con90le, hood m Quality" $499 CARS AIR CON~m~G Am OONDrrIONING 24,000 miles, (WOUlllJ tach ete. ALL BLACK $3.195. TH• 4rr# Full 1ea~r ~trr1or. Oube Sbowroom.treshfa.!ltbackwith SALE $2333 PR.ICE 646-4Ei65 'VOL.VO' ~ ...... c6htrol, tilt hoe!. A•toma· removeable ponds ,,;, v~ Nabers Cadillac '64 'PONTIAC Le MMS. 2100 Harbor mvd. 6C5-0466 ::=· ~ ~~ engine, FlnJ1hed in spark-2600 HARBOR BLVD., White w/ turquoi!e interior, "FRIEDLANDER'' SALE $1111 PRICE ling Ermine whi1' w/plush Costa Mesa bucket Seats, auto., poWer BUICK metallic blue vinyl interior. 540-9100 Open Sunday strg, xlnt mechanical con-. Nabers Cadillac AU "-·Incl •t ditlon. Very clean lruiide & Harbour V .W. _1970-=-~""'T""A""'·,;.,=~.,..vo_._ WANTED 18TI1 BEACH BL., 842-4435 1--•••••'••-•1 op....,.... ·pow". seer., '69 CUTLA00 Suprem•, v•-• ..,,,. -.... 2600 HARBOR BLVD brake J tr! wind ~ u•J"• out! $750, 16985 Edgewater 893-7566 • 5.17.Ql2.t e BUICK '61 RIVIERA • s, eec c ows. ht, 2 Dr, a ir. pis. p/b, Lane. Huntington Harbour, NEW0 USEO.SERV. FACTORY COSTA MESA "fd.i:o auto trans. Stereo auto. Best offer. eves & 846-4285 HUNTINGTON BEACH I'D pay top dolla~ for )'OW' NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. manlb $147.71 down tncludes tax & Lie. Open End VW LEASING AT CHICK IVERSON vw JJT0 HARBOR BLVD. C05TA MESA VOLKSWAGEN today, Call and ask. for Ron ?fnehot. 549-3031 Ext 66-67. 673-0900. ~. ..µR OONDrrIONING OPEN SUNDAY multiplex & just 7800 care. wknds. 673-8118 1..:.::..=------ ..._......_.... Full power, vinyl top, strato e Cad. '67 Convertible 1$11AYLdEriv$5en5m55uep•.R<'IS6ASIC QJ Olds '66 442, stick, jlFl:Ns~~~ 11~5 "·s"9"'vw="h•"'ll""1 "'1800re=-:-110""'H~.P=-.· I ~V..:O::L:;.V..:O;:::Cc,L::E;:A::.R..:A==N:..,C-'E-1 bucket seat11, chrome swrt FACTORY E Air, Pnwer, $1300 $500. ~mo sunroof, reams, loaded. IMMEDIATE ,ELIVERY wheels! AM I FM stereo, AIR OONDITJONING Naben Cadillac * 548-4059 aft 4 pm* week-end or aft. 5:30 week '?0-STATION WAGON S power door locks, tilt & tele· Full power, plush full leather 2600 HARBOR BLVD. days. Make otter. 897~. '?~ANS-l &. 4 Doon scopic steering wheel, Load. interior, stereo, tilt wheel, COSTA MESA '64 VW Bus. Engine rebuilt '7D-1800 E CPE. ed w/extru. (XOL..584.) door locks, light sentinel, OPEN SUNDAY and guarantee. Clutch '7()-164 SEDANS .SALE $3111 PRICE etc., etc. CVCU074l =..,,,;;:,;;::,,;;:::::~--1·-------- tra.n.5mission. Tires in ex-Orange Coonty's Largest SALE $2UI PRICE '63 CORVETTE !a.st back, 4 '67 BARRACUDA 2 dr sedan, cellent shape. Special at Selection of Quality Cadillacs Orange County's Largest gpeed, 327 mags. cau after 6 cyl, RJH, auto, lo mi. $1199. See 83130. chi c k Nabers Cadillac Sel~on ot Qualib' Cadillacs _50· '1:5.11:<-,'438,_~;;;;;,;;;..,.-J.;SI::;""~· 615-:;;:;~35::017~=== PLYMOUTH RAMBLER '63 1,,,,,.,.,., 1nc .. "' E. eo.1t 2600 Nabers Cadillac '64 CORVmE '64 vw Bug metAlllo -.... """' NB 673-0900 ~c "'~ HARBOR BLVD., "321", •• ~. AM I FM. finish chrome rear ;~; or~54'. · • ~ ~ Costa Me11a .2600 HARBOR BLVD., t"-""'"' PONTIAC American ~=,-.,,--..,,,...,-~ «•9100 o Su day 54!'9100 Open ~ .. ...1.... Brand new wide ovals, ccm-' '----------.... '"-"""W ··'• pn·-... ,_ ;:;;: 1966 H••bo• CM "'~"-0.,,,.. ~ pen n ....... ....., 1• ....... ur.o:: '"' ....., ..... uua '63 VW Camper. Xlnt cond. · • •, · · .,_........., pletely original, all this Vet '70 PONTIAC GTO. Blue. 2 week $1199. Lie ORK 717. ':;~_11!..~.·,,_...,-~stsell. e '68 VOLVO l2Z-S e '56 ' BUICK '6l CADILLAC: FULL' needs is a new home. OSC. dr. owner. Hydromat l c Radio, Heater, Automatic:. Chick Iverson Inc:., 445 E. ._... •• -..... ~.... Lift new. $1400 or trade. PDWER XLNT COND, $400 279. wJcon90le. AM/FJ\f stereo. Coe.at Hwy., N.B. 673-0000 --~-=---=-==c--~•1212 Sacrifice•, Must sell 1.nunedi-** 675-3623 ** CIQY440) ext 53 or 54. =======o.:. ==I ately! $150 tull price. (WBJ. 1961 CAD oonv, 1958 Chevy-ber. Ram air w i th ,66 VW ~ $1399 P/B, PIX. Like new rub- Autos W•nlod 9700 586) dlr. "'11 494-1744. 348. Moke ottor CHICK IVERSON lochom'"' in hood, 400 cu. $445 '69 Riviera, gold, bllc top, ====Mf>.=99="'=== YW in, 360 hp. Mag wheels Seda. n WE PAY TOP =~. :;95. ;:~~:· Xlnt CAMARO 549-3031 Ext. Qi Ol' 67 :!5· Original owner 642· Harbour V.W. '65 vw BUG America'n mags wide tires, custom metalliC paint w"h beautiful la~ work, YPU. OOL Radio. (RUF081 l CASH '10 SPORT WAGON ·Lil« ----'----l970~ST"!'0~VD. '67 LE MANS 18111 BEACH BL. """" new, ps/pb, air. $3500. '67 R.S, 325 cu, p/s, auto, I :========I Jil.JNTINGTON BEACH 545-9419 or 644-0631 air, FM, dilc brks, $1300 or V8, automatic, air cone!., I=='======= Several other cw:tomh:l!d VW to choose fron1 $1045 tor used ....... -Just ========I .."""~l_!•~ves'!''.:'~94-~2156~. --DODGE powe' .... ring, vinyl top, T -ilRD oall UI tor free ..Umote, CADILLAC '69 CAMARO RS. Orange, dlr. (# 288419) W"1 take CHICK IVERSON vw GROTH CHEVROLET P/S, P/B, All'. N• 11,.... '68 DODGE RT lradeorUnan"prlv'1•P81"· e Cad,''66 Cpe. de Ville $2700. * 67J.5811 FULL POWER + factory air, ty_ 5464052 or 494-6811. ·······-·---'67 Thunderbird: Landau top, 4 dr, low mil, ha11 every. thing, good tires. $2000. 494-4105 or 494-8486. 549.3031 Ext. 66 or 67 Karbour V.W. Ask for Sales Manaca FACTORY '69 CAMARO RS, air, disc Low miles, Must liquidate e '57 Pontiac e 18Z11 Beach Blvd. AIR CONDITIONING brakes, PIS. 350 eni. Blue irnmed.iatl!l.y. 1st $2099 buys, Clean, $25()1 968-1078 Huntizwton Buch Full power, all leather inter-w/vinyl top. $2900. 644-5937 XEU354, "'"'"' KI 9-1331 lor, Wt • tel•""•'' wboel. CHICK IVERSON Uood Cors '900Usod Can 9900 LATE MODEL AM I FM, light dimmer. CHEVROLET VW 1,;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1970 HARBOR BLVD. l8Tll. BEA~ BL. jWl-4435 '68 VW Bus. Blue finifih with HUNTINGTON BEACH white interior. Air condition. '62 YW I lng. Heavy duty rear tires, a Ug <SBB714) 4 to choose from. 1----------C~~~i:~s Take your pick, only, . • ATTENTION BUYERS 543-3031 Ext. Qi or 67 really good bu~ $2599. Lie. Radio, 4 11peed. excellent con- 146 BEL, Chick: Iverson dition. dlr. {BWM881) Will Inc:., 44S E. Coast Hwy., finance prlvate party. N.B. 673--0!llO Ext. 53 or 54. 54&-4052 or 4!J.H81.1. & ANY OTHER SALE $2333 PRICE Let us help you find a 1970 HARBOR BLVD. LATE MODEL Orange County's largest car at no cost to you, '70 CHALLENGER, F / P, GENERAL MOTORS CAR SelecUoc Quality Cadillacs Sellers also welcome, Air, Best Oller. Dys : '63 VW SUNROOF, Xln't •70 VW POP-TOP Camper cond. $700.. 6,000 ml. Side tent &. radio, SEE. CHUCK TRAPP OR Nabers Cadillac Call now ......,, """"" I Ext, ''" Eve.' BILL MAC CRACKEN 2600 HARBOR BLVD., Auto. Rehrral Service 64!>-2.jJS 833-3ll6 $3350. 837~ Dyll 494-7763 Nabers Cadillac ""'" Me.. '19 CAMARO ... ooooE °'" "' ,.., '66 VW BUG Competition orange w i th black interior. UOH144 $1099 CHICK IVERSON vw 5-i!l-3031 Ext. Qi or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA ME,qA '66 VW sqU&reback thb: one sparkles, Mi with spotless white interior, 8,000 mile on rebuilt engine xlnt throughout and priced at $1499 Lie YWF 682. Chick Iverson Inc., 445 E. Coast Hwy., N.B. 673-0000 ext. 53 "' 54. * 'Qi VW: Reblt/en g, Nu/tires, R/H. $950. Call Alt ~ 673-<819 Eves. e 'Qi VW BUG 8 Xlnt cond. $1050 or best oUer. 646-5564 eves or wknds '61 vw SUrroof, god cond. $325. Call after-6 pm """157 - 2600 HARBO 540-9UIO Open Sunday aedan, 6 cyl, RJH, auto, Cos,ta :ie!}:'VD, e Cad. '69 Seel. de Ville vs; air cond., powttgtettfl'lg. xlnt c:ond, must s e 11, FACTORY dlr, CUYB 942). Will take Sacrifice $725, 675-5655. 54D-9lOO Open Sunday AIR CONDm6NING trade or finance prlvat par-* '68 OODGE Charger. WE PAY CASH Fllll """"'· vinyl ""'· 1.wmr. -'"'~· _,..._ __ ,,,,_•!Jf.681J __ . _ t a...c ""'''Equ•pt ear: iowi cloth a leather interior. '65 I I SS By Pvt pt;y: 838-0034 * FOR YOUR CAR Dual comfort "~"·.Stereo mpa G 1966 alRONET 383, z.dr HT, '70 vw CAMPER • Pop top, multiplex, power door locks, Yellow with black interior. auto, ps/pb, nu tires, $1235 3 000 ml ~'JMVI .. .__ tilt & tele.......,lc wheel twl· Auto--u·c di• P-·e• ,t....... book, $1000. 645-1889 ' ~ '615.-0251 CONNELL -light gent;;!: power lrunk Ing, v~ Musi'selli ,995 f~ 'v_A_N __ -,-.,,--Spo-ru_m_a_n_v_s.11 I--· selection CHEVROLET opener, etc., etc. (065AGC) price. <RRG 77Sl. ca I I auto, alr, Nu wide-belted -'JI SALE $4999 PRICE . 494-17-44. tires, lo mi. :2295. ~1353 Of VW Ca-, ""8 llUbor Blvd, Ch-ange Councy'1 1.ug.,t ··T-".... Costa Mesa 64(>..lD! 1962 -. CHEV Impala 4 dr, Vans, Kombis. ,_W_E_P_A_Y_TO_P_OO_LLA_R_' Selection of. Quality Cadillacs auto trans, 60.000 mlles, FALCON Nab.rs Cadl"llac orig. owner. $345. 673-430.1 ---------11 Buses, New & Used FOR TOP USED CARS aft 6 pm. '61 FALCON . sta wagon I __ ,1 1 D II n your car is extra clean, 2fi<ll HARBOR BLVD., sacrifice $200. See at 106 mm911 • e e very see us f.irst. Costa Mesa BY OWNER • '64 Chev. "B'' l3rd St. Newport CHICK MRSON BAUER BUICK 54!'9100 Open S•nd•y Malibu Station w .. , .. v~. ======:;===di YW 234 E. 17th St. t'68 CAD, Coupe DeVille. ~7~· new' tires. $72S. FORD Costa Mesa 54S-7765 28,000 ml. Xlnt cohd. G~ -----------------11 549-3031 Ext. 66 (If' 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. IMPORTS WANTED w/blk leather &: int. $3800 '70 CHEVEU.E ~5ol: Aruien NOTICE INVITING Orange Counties or bst ofr. Eve11: 673-1456 Mags, Xlnt oond, Must Sell· SEALED BIOS rr·s Beach bow.e time. Big· TOP S BUYER CADILLAC eo,.,.,i"1t Ovr8 Seas Make Ofr. ,,,.... .,.. Sea.led bids will be accepted gest selection ever! See the 1962 VW Camper for sale, BILL MAXEY TOYOTA '67 COUPE DeVILLE until October 20th, 1970, 2 COSTA MESA 1968 LE MANS 2 DR. H.T. Vinyl top, pow1r 1t11ring, low mi11191, IYPYD6D l $2195 1969 CHEV. MALIBU 396 Feet. eir, bl1tk Yinyl top, 1p1rklin9 yel• low exterior, J ZKF597) $3195 1970 G.T.O. 1 dr. H.T. !1.tutiful gold with i1nd1lwood Yinyl top & Interior. Fectory eir condi• t ioning. IZ1277651 $3895 1970 OLDS CUTLASS F1cl. 1ir, pow1r 1t11r., ilereo f.tpe, pop11• l1r •·•peed, 1p•r•lin g red w/blec• Yinyl top & bucket i1•h. (.trl 932 151 $3295 1969 CAMARO . GIANT .. CLOSE· OUT NEW 1970 I OPE LS BRAND NEW 1970 OPEL 2 DOOR SEDAN (319335741) • BRAND NEW 1970 OPEL KADETTE RALL YE (929297506) • BRAND NEW 1970 OPEL. 2 DR, SPORT COUPE DELUXE (929270233) s23&1 • BRAND NEW 1970 OPEL DELUXE WAGON (399270104) • '. ' I DAILY PILOT Oa.ulfied pvt pty. Asking $ 6 50 . 18881 Beach Blvd. Full power, factory air, padd-'Qi CAPRICE. 2 dr. Po"·er PM, for five 1969 Ford, P0- '-',.=ctio=·=n=no=w=J ======-==-·=' =63>-=11•61===-'H".'"S.="="•· ==p="=· ="='=·8555= eel top, leather interior, ster. steering & brks, Air. \Vhite, lice, 4 door sedans. May be I' vinyl top. Like new $1699. -I 9600 eo AM-FM radio, tilt steer-&12-Sll5 seen at Corp, yAnl, 592 Su. 2 dr. H.T. VI, fectorv 1ir, turbo hydr1m•· tic, etc. Dirk grey with Yinyl top. !YOM 012) BRAND NEW 1970 OPEL 2 DOOR SPORT COUPE (919300363) l I mporhcl C•rt mportecl Autos 9600 Imported Autos ing wheel, power door locks, --'-------perior, Newport Beach. 1.!in. twilight sentinel, auto dim-'66 El Camino VS, auto, R/H, !mum bid sroo. For lnforma. mer. Very low mileage. cuslm Int. ll-1ake offer. 1605 tion, contact Purchasing WE HAVE TIIE BEST SELECTION OF BMW's IN ORANGE COUNTY • 1600'• • 2002 • 25GO ·-·-c e ALL COLORS eALLMODILI e IMMIDIATI DI LIVIR "ALMOST TOO GOOD TO II TIUE" CAI AND DllY I ct1lh ...._ "tt.. 111Mt 1pKt9C11ft baft• I• "'9 ..tfre .,_,,. ... ef ...,.,,. con." W.... ~~ crlrlc1 tet tMt ..,.Mlledlc, lt'1 thN te M. a tMt dri ... 0•'1 Yff HMM tM wheel co. tnlly -llN Hie ,..t1HtMKe of tills '°'"' trl• ....,. fre19 '"""-Y'1 ,...., Ina"-Moten Wertt1 •• , b1llllM; ef flM c•rs fw SJ .,..., Dr!" tM I~ .. , .. ,, .. ,, ...,. IMW ....,. ''7 FIAT WA<iO,. Spetiel Buick V/6 engine. Redio, he.tier, eutometic. IUVT·S60) 5599 '68 MERC:EDIS s2295 2000. Compl1t11y rebuilt ' engine. Redio, h11!1r, 4• 1p11d, fin1 m1ehenic•I cond. tYXU.9151 '68 YW ltedio, h11t1t, 111nroof. lteel Sherpl ''7-FIAT- '66 SIMCA s599 . 395 =-c- ••• ,. •. '_""" "'_"· -weUi, fully f.tctory 1q11ippecl. ICSJ-Dlll I I OV AC/DC outlet1, e~. rMlo, h11te,.'-Good t iret. lted with bleck but· ket 111ts. ITRV.Ol•I '70 YW CAMPER $AVE ·reftr., w1tlt through ......... i;c,1 ..... ,, low mil11 ()1911NI "68 l'IAT ISO Spid•r, 2 dr .. redto, heeter, ultr1 1he rpl cwn.61 6) 'H TRIUMPH Spitflr1 Mk Ill witt. e 11mo.,•bl• herctlop, wlrt wh1•l1, o.,erdrl.,e, fZNJ.294 1 PLUS A LAICH SELECTION OF YW IUSIS. ALL C:OLOIS DOMISTIC TRADES AT ·wHOWALI PllCIS ~ .... -·-,_ 1.e Berlettl'• T&M MOTORS IOll GARDEN GROVE BLVD. SALIS Of'IN SUNDAY PAIT'S. lllWICI TUU., THUH,. Til.L l:to l)WIM C'h •· L ef .._., 1'2·1111 (TFB567) AJTOyo, Lag Bch. 494-8813 Agent, Newport Beach City SALE $3111 PRICE 1958 CHEVY Station wagon Hall. 673-2110 Ext. 243. -o..., •• CnW>ty'• Lal'gO•t sioo or""" 011"· -~T-O~P-0-0-LLA~R--ll Selection of Quality Cadillacs ____ .,.._11_04 __ _ Nabers Cadillac: 2tiCXl HARBOR BLVD., '64 CHEVY 327, gd-cond, S495 or Best offer. Call Danyl at .... ,... Costa Mesa 540-9100 Open Sunday 1!~. ~!:~ta~i:.a~ns~ DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! but needs work. $100 or best Dial 642-5678 & charae ft. offer. 646-4277 before 'J p.m. Imported Cars -lmportodAutoo 9600 ·~.· COSTA MESA '71 HONDA s::. e Alll: COOl.10 ,.MT IMO/Ml e 'll:OfifT WKllL DlllYI • ..aw1a ASSISTED SllLl"- ADJUSTINO 'll:Of4T DIK llt'4kll e MAXIMUM Sl'llD 11 M,N e UI' TO 4t MILll l'I• 0'4LLON e flOUlt·l'AlllMOla,.1 Oil. II.DAN l'IW 11• M• c.r ,, ... ,, ... ~ .,.,_, T• a L"""9 UNIVERSITY OLDIMHIU IUO HARIOlt IL VD. COSTA MBA 540.9 • ' '"' CLEAN USED CARS See Andy Brnwn THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 64UJOIO '66 FAIRLANE WAGON Autmnatic, !>f>Wer 1tcering, A.Ir cond. 1leroo tape, dlr. (TAY 279) Will take car In trade or finance private par. ty. 546-4052 or 494-61111. '64 GALA.XIE 500 2 dr HT Aqua w/blk Int. Auto, tilt· &\\-'i,Y steerinJt whl, r&h. ps/pb. 61.000 orig mi. Xlnt cond $800 or best otter. 968-9915. '68 SI'N Wgn LTD Counlfy Squire, 10.pass, fac airlc, 37 ,000 mi's $2·150. &J6...6672 1962 Ford 11lation wagon, R& H, automatic:. Mechanics Speclal, Phone 968-5214 after 6 P.M. 67 FORD, Heavy duty Super Van 6 eyt.. $1.300. * 6734372 afl 5 * '68 Ford Cortina 4 ,dr d~IW<e. $81'. 96:J..SII5 70 Chate•u Club Wgn Like now * 675-1340 'U FORD-6, 2 DR . $100. * * 6'134343 LINCOLN 1966 LINCOLN' ContiMntaJ: Lltelblu. Gd.' Cond. Lot1 of Extru. moo. s15-5263 $2895 1969 FIREBIRD CONV. Sp1rldlng rid with bleck cuitom trim. pow1r 1t11ring I fectory eir, IZLHD2ll $2795 1967 MUSTANG 2 + 2 390 1n9 ., r1dio, heeter, power 1t11r. Er• ceptl on.t lly nice lo·mil••t• c.tr. ITX'r9411 $1895 . 1969 PONTIAC CUSTOM S 2 door h1rdtop. F1ctory eir, power 1t11r• ing, t~rbo hydr1m1ti11 iii~•• with bl1cli lnteriot, (ZOX672l $2795 1969 GTO 4 SPE!D Only 12,000 mil11 on thi1 b11uliful V1r. doro greeft .tulomobil1. 1784AFXI $2795 1970 MUSTANG MACH I Feclory eir, power 1t11rin9, power dl1• br••••· A Roll1-Royc1 trede with but 6,000 ml111. j071ACNI' $3495 CLOSI D SUNDAYS ~R O Y CARVER ~ROLL S -ROYCE 2925 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA ~IE~A 546.4444 • BRAND NEW 1970 OPEL G.T. 1942073648f s3359 PRICED TD SELL BAUER BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17111 St. COSTA MESA 548-7765 , , " . - soc the r ciA<o eCuti1 weau Inv Ca!' from surg' ""'" dilm1 Th> be lot TueS Pact mno Th wile• ..,,, tiinn He' t6e' '<Nt Fae; .sh all<! ~i lit Ohu T';iJ . .4 '1 I ' 'I