HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-09-27 - Orange Coast Pilot'
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Crash Vietim
CU.ILY l'ILOT l'~•lf '' ll lc~•nil Kethltr •
Resc uers pry George 0 ·1-Jara. 54. out of his car foll0\\1ing crash in
Ne v.•port Be ath. 0 '1-lara. 2077 -l'harle St .. Costa ~lcsa , \vas listed in
serious lO ndition today at l·loag ~1emorial J·lospital \Vith 1nulliple
f ractures. Acci dent occurred about 6 p.nt. Saturday. Policc said
O'Hara 's t ar V."ent out of control and plunged off Jamboree Road
and dov<'n 40-foot en1ba nkment south of new fire station.
Protests Flare
__ Over Atom-Tests
ANCHOR1\GE. Alsaka I CPl 1 -So1ne
00 µc1·sun~ along the parade rout e
·01·e1·cd h.v Pr<'S idcu! i\'.ixon ;ind J:ipa11es<"
~111pt·ro r tliroll ito µru1l'S1erl Sunda.r
1 ~:.dn st 1lie nnele;11· test planned 011
\rncl111kn Island in 111£' 1\leu1ian eh;iin
The µrotes! 11·;1s pcacet ul and tli c1·e
1·ere no arrests. II nu111h('r ot ~igns. one
·cading "Explode the bornb under
A';ishingron. DC not Am t hi!ka," were
lisplaycd along the route.
Flt111ti11.g E£1gle
Spurks Blc1ze
A \011.1 flying eagle t'oll1ded w11h a
high voltaj!e hne cHus1ng a brush
lire \l'hic h burned Ol'er 1hrce acres
11! tulh· l:111d Saturdav aboul a n11lr ~11u1h ·,,1 !ICI. Orang.f Coun!y V1 rr
Depart111c11t officers re po rted.
()[ficials said 1hc englc'~ fe<ither~
\1Cr(· set lirf and as the bird tell !O
tl1e ground 1hc dry grass 11·ns ig·
llllf'd
l·'irr unils from Orange Count y
1\1rpurr subdu ed the bl<izc in <ibout
;in hour.
Organization in both lhe Unit ed States
;i nd Japan fl·ar tidal 11al'eS and e<irth·
<J Uakrs ma~. resul1 frnn1 the schcdult·d
fil'e·inegaton underground blast
'!'he citv of Anchorage ha d urig 1nall.v
denied rill!~' and marl'h pcrinil s In !hf'
Alaska coc.lilion ;igainsl C;1nnik1n -a
nickna1ne for !he bias! Bu! a Super1or
Court rcversrd tha t clecisiun and lht'
slate Suprcn1e Court S11nda\' rnorn1ng
upheld the Superior Court ruling.
In Porlland. Orr .. t11·0 eviron1nc 11Lal
group s asked Nixon 1o i.;a l! off the blasl
because it 1:ould ha1·e srrious con-
sequences.
The Pacific North11'esl chdptcr of t1 1e
Sierra Club and the Don't :\1akc fl \V a1 e
C-On1n1iltee ol Vancou 1·er. B.C an-
nounced Sunday they srnt Nixon a lt•1!1·r
sa\'1ng th<' risks 111 the blast ll'l"re unv.·ar· rantl'~ [rom any po~s1blC' benefit~ rx-
pected
":)Ucha blast. lhf' largf'SI undt>r~nl!111d
te~t our nation has t·1·rr undertnke11.
l'ould ha ve serious <:On~eq utner~ for our
rn untry and olhcrs in 1ht• Par1f1l' area·•
lhe1r 111issi\'r s:ud.
The Ca11:1dia11 nrgan1znt1on 11· ;1 s
rcporled to be planning In send a :;hip 111
the /\le'1tiJ11 lslanrl to prol.csL the 1 e ~·
plosion. Jt v:a.~ lo drift jus1 ou lsidr U,S
territoria l waters, three n1i les fro111
Amchitka Island.
Newpo~t Doctor Accuse{]
Of B1·ainwashi11g Suspect
By TOM BARLEY
QI tflt Dt!IY !"lltl Stllf
A Nevrpor1 Beach psychiatrisrs week
long inlervrews wilh accused M ari~
i1ark Johnson were condemned loday as
''brai n1~1ashi ng·· by 1 8 erk e It y
psy t hologist called as !he first defense
\\'i1ness 111 the San Clcn1ente m :in·.11
\)range County Superior Cou1i murder
trial.
Dr. Da vid \\'i!son characterized 1hc
psychiatric se!lsions between Dr .
Theodore Lindauer and lhe 20-year-old
defrn dant as "a good job of inlerroga·
I ioo" which considerably reduced Jotm.
son\ wil l lo resist.
\Yilson agreed 11·ith defense attorney
Ra1 Sharp that Joh nson "'·as a passive
type of person who rtacled in a Lypi cal
fashioo to !he suggestion·that charges of
first degree murder would be filed
against him if lhe kind or statements
ctei;ircd hy the pro~ecut ion were not
furthcom1ng.
Lindauer told the prosecut ion !hat his
series of 1nterv1e~·s ~th John~n -tile
sessions lasted bcl\l~n 2.'l and 30 hourit
-lefl him v.·iU1 I.he impression that the
young l\1arlne police ma n \\la s im plicated
In lhc \dll lnR on June 16, 1970. or Connie
Lynn .Johnson
Johnson is accused of clubbing hi~
pregnant wHe wit.h a _bar stool and then
sta bb ing her more than 20 times. lie is on
trial fo r second degree mUn.l<'r .
Johnson told police shflr ll y after the
killing that he found ~·!rs. Johnson 's blood
splattered bocty sprawled on the lied in
their apartment at 416 Monterey Lane
v.·hen he rel.urned from dut y at Santa Ana
, Marine Corps Air Station.
Johnson told district attorney 's in-
vestigators shortly before his arresl a
;.year tater that he knew he had kllled hi!!:
wife but could nol recall the 11clual
details of. the murder.
He l.eilified under lht influence of
sodium amytol that he recalled hi ll ing
' her with the bar stool after c.limb1ng
through Ult window of the apanment but
could not recall the stabbing other IM n
tht fact that he-be.lieved he wn~hed off
the blood in the shower.
Johnson admitttd he vnd his wife fre-
rutntly quarreled bttau11e he insi!ted on
using marijuana. And he admitted to in·
vts1igators that he had bc<!n using pot
shortly before !he killlng a11d that ht9
wife had locked him out of the apar1 -
menL
'
---~-----.
DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * *
Agnew Blasts
Radieal Cause
MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 27. 197 1 In County Talk
VOL . ._., NO, t Jl, J SICTIO'll, • l'.t.••I
•
In This Case~ •Bad Guys~
Wore Police111an ~s Hat
STUCK IN THE MUCK, SAN FERNANDO FAMILY 'S YACHTS SITS IN UPPER NEWPORT BAY
Tht Schrams Stay Snug es • Bug Overnight end Weit for the Tide to Float Their Craft
Partygoer Makes
Rounds Wearing
Lawm:an's Hat
Somet inies it'!l hard lo lei! the good
guys fro1n the bad guys, unless you catch
1hen1 with incrin11nating eviden ce.
New1:iort Beach police, cracking down
on a loud parly al 4400 Seashore Drive in
\Vesl Newport ~,riday night. said they en-
countered s<nne bad guys .
During a melet thal resulted, Officer
Al DoUm has hL~ polict bnton stolen and
sorneone niade -0rf with Sgt. Bill Speirs'
hat.
Came Saturday night. Officer James
Gard iner was dispatched to another loud
party at 880:IrV'ine Ave., clear across on
th e other side of tov.•n.
Investigators discovered one party-goer
cavorting around ~·ith Sgt. Speirs' ha:t on
his head . whUe another was allegedly
armed with Officer Doum 'g nlghtsti<!k.
Lonnie R. Raruthers, 22, of 2701 Eb!r
1ide. Road, Coron&. del ~1a r,, and Brian J.
llenry. 20, of Mammoth Lakes. were in
city jail today, booked on suspi cion of
possession of stolen property.
Boat Maroo11ed
Vessel Agrouttd
A San Fernando Valley i.:ouplc who
came to the be<ich fo r some Sunday fun
didn't intend to exlend their sta y 2~
hours, bu1 then ti me and tide wait for no
man.
The Spencer Schram family's 19·foot
('ruiser was marooned in Upper Newporl
Bay when the tide went out.
Trapped aboard the boat stuck fast in
I he mud about 500 yards above the water
ski zone near the head of the bay.
Schram, his wi'fe Adrian and 2-year-old
daughter Glenna chose to wait it out.
Schram shouted ashore to a DAIL,.
PILOT photographer this morning thal
they were out of food, but otherwise all
right
Spokesmen for the Orange Counly
H11rbor Dtpa.rtment said they received
word of the Schram's predicament at
3:37 p.m. Sunday.
A Newport Beach police helicopter
crew was dispalched 10 the scene , but
said Schram decli ned a llarbor Depart-
ment tow.
Schram repcwtedly told them he would
rather just wait for the inconting tide to
noat the boat free today.
• Upper Bc1)· lit
llarbor Depnrtmcnt s p 0 k e s men
pred icted Loday the boat woul d be able to
get under way about 3 p.n1. when the high
tlde lifts it ag;iin
They also noted !'ichram·s pli ght i~ a
relatively freq uent one for banters
unaware of the Back Bay 's tidal qui rks.
J\ssembJyn1an,
Wife Injured
CLOVERDALE (AP) -Assemblyman
and !\trs. Frank P. Belotti were seriously
hurt Sund;i y night in an' auto acc ident on
Highway 1211 ncrrt h or here in Sonoma
County
The 73-year-old F.ureka Republican and
his wife, De lphone. according to rcporlS ,
1vere hurt wheo their c~r ran off the road
inlo a shallow creek.
Btlotti suffered a broken neck. wh ile
his 6&-year-old wife had fractures of th~
skull. hip and wrist
A spoke.'in1an at Sanln Rosa r.1cmorial
llospital said the couple wri~ in "gua rded
condition." -
Agnew Blasts
Radical Cause
111 Comity Talk
\'1ee Pre~idcnt Spiro T. /\gnc1\' told the
n:H1011's top law cnfflrcemenl officers to-
dHv <it Anaheim's Convl'ntion Center that lh~ 1\ttira prison riot h<is beco1ne ",vcr
.anolh rr cause celebre in the pantheon o(
r;1c11eat revoluliunar~' propaganda.'
··The rra! issue is not pri son reforn1,''
.-.aid the vice prcsidl'nt. speaking at rhc
78lh /\nnu:il Conference or !h<' lnlerna·
l1nnal Chiel s of Pol1ec
"N01\' thf' narnc t\U1ca" joins the li~t
nf gcog:raphir [ll<iccs and slogans "'hose
1·ery u!ler;incc. 111 thf' li!:iny of anti·
A11irric·<1n hate pre;1ch('d by rad1i.;;1! pro·
p;ig;1ndisr~_ 1.;, a daggrr at the r1cnrt of
11ur 1·01u11ty 's fr('C' i11-.1i1u!1on~." Agnc111
~a1tl
"Ct•rta1n!.1 the 111l'111bl'!''> of 1111 ~ au·
d1enec would he •nnong the first 111
rci:ogn izc lh::i l. !hn11gh thl' pince na111cs
;ind slog an:-ch:ingt'. !he modus operandi
in the development of lhesl' cclcbrntcd
radical lclt t·auses ren1ains tile sarne ·•
J\gnc1r sa id.
··Th is holds true. froin the ir (:enesis
unti l their final an ointment bv ediloriri l
pole1n1ci:.ts. who then righteouSly displHY
!hen' as the latest c~amples or !he en·
du ring guil t nr An,erit'a11 soc icl.1· ·•
Agnew sAid that one would havr In
fnllo"· the e~·enl'S al Attica "\Vith lhe ut-
111ost diligeni.:e·· to detennine thal the Ill·
sti gators had crirn1nal ret.'{}rds
"The ultimate issue HI Attica "'as not
prison reforn1 .'0 Agnew said. ··No, the.
(Sr e AGNE\V, Pagr 21
Orange Coast
Weather
Those ominous clouds will clear
by 1ni<l-rl11y loday and Tuesday,
with mostly sunny skie5 in the
afternoons.' Highs along the coast.
65 rising lo 75 inland. Lov.·5 tonight
bct1veen 57 and 58.
INSIDE TODAY
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Z tlAJl'I' PILOT s Mondi)', Stpttmbtr 27 , 1971
Bu1 Weekend V.S. Vnit Jfleets
Nixon, Hirohito POW's Relatives
Hold Epic Meet Vow Stern Moves
ANCHORAGE (UPI ) -President Nix-
on. looking a bit weary after an historic
meeting with Japan's Emperor Hirohito
that lasted nearly until 5 a , m .
WaahJ.naton time, today delayed his
departure for the nation's capital by 45
mimltes. ·
Alr Force One, originally scheduled to
take oU from Elmendorf AFB near
Ancborage at 8:30 a.m. Alaska time, was
rescheduled for departure at 9'.15 a .m.
(11:15 a.m. PDT).
Although they were not to arrive at
Washington until nearly 9 p.m. EDT, the
President and t>.frs. Nixon hoped to
.=h&nge into evening dress after their er·
;vaJ to attend the. "Diamond Jubilee"
finner honoring Mrs. ,._tamie Eisenhov.'er
lt the Washington Hilton .
Nixon's meeting late Sunday night with
Emperior Hirohito marked the first time
Schools Ruled
Segregated
In Michigan
DETROIT CAP ) - A ftdera\ judge rul-
. !d today that both Detroit and the St.ate
. •f Michigan 'are guilty of de jure segrega·
ion in their gchool gystems.
U.S. District Judgl! Stephen S. Roth rul·
-d in favor of the NAACP in a suit in
1•hich the civil rights group called for
;peedier integration of Oetrcit schools,
1artlcularl y high schools .
He held in abeyance a dec ision on a
·oncurrent request. which v.·as opposed
lY the NAACP, that nearby \Vayne,
.)ak.land and Caoomb counties bl! In·
:luded ,pecifically in the case.
Roth said the second action. filed by
he • Citizens· Committee for Better
~ducation in Metropolitan Det roit -
.:::CBE -"is lackig in !ipecificity and is
ramed in the broadest terms."
Roth said a CCBE "may wish to amend
ts proposal and resuhmit its propo5al
1nd resubmit it A.!i a comprehensive plan
,f desegregation."
A 5J>0kesman for the NAACP said
toth's decision had found that school
~gation in Detroit caused housing
;egregation and that the Detroit School
3oard was guilty of ~rpetuating school
;egfegation y gerrymandering -busing
liacka to other black schools rather than
o 11choolll with pr~ominantly v.·hite pupil
?nrollments.
"We feel that if we could prove
;egregation in Detroit as we have. we can
Jrove it in almost any other Northern ci·
:y." she said.
Burglar Loots
Lido Isle Home
Of Jewels, Guns
Someone who police l!iU!ipl!Ct crossed
'Jewport Harbor by boat and landed to
:oot a Lido Isle home of nearly $4.000 in
-firearms and jewelry v.·hile the residents
slept i! sought by deteclives today.
The burglar also stole a quantity or
drugs prescribed for the v.ife of victim
"'alter Douglas. investigators 5aid.
Detective Sgl. Art Campbell said
v.·ho@ver crept into the Douglas home 11t
932 Via Lido Nord cat burglar·style early
Saturday removed glass louvers from a
v.·1ndow facing the ba y.
Once inside the home, !he burl!;lar
methodically gatherl!d up $.3,600 \1•orth of
r.1rs. Dougla s' jev.'eiry, besides the other
additional valuables.
OUHGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
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a Japanese emperor had ever left hi!! own
country.
It capped a busy weekend for the
President, who visite-d four Pacific
Northwest states, announ cing a stepped-
up atomic energy program, intervening
perso na!Jy In the West Coast dock strike,
and dumping a little concrete into thl! Big
Libby dam in Montana.
Nixon's intercession Saturday in the 89-
day-old dock strike was the first such ac·
tion he had ever taken in a strike since
he became President.
His 21}mln.ute meetin g with Longshore
labor leader Harry Bridges and shippers
negotiator Ed Flynn brought pledges
from them to b"y ad end the strike by
this \.\'eekend.
The sirike by 15,000 members of the.
International Longshoremen's a n d
\Varehousemen's Union (ILWU) has tied
up 25 West Co3st ports and idled nearly
200 ships sincl! July I.
Nixon's said his (ace-to·face meeti ng
was "lo bring to their Bltentlon the
urgency of reaching a settll!ment."
If East Coast dock workers strike when
their contract expires Thursday. said the
President, he would consider it a nat ional
emergency and invoke the 80-day ·•cool·
ing off" injunction provisio ns of the Taft·
Hartley Act.
It's .Big Steve
\VASHINGTON (UPl)-The son of the
U.S. military commander Jn the Pacific
told government officials today he and
other relatives of American POWs might
embarrass the Adm inistration with
measures of their own if th ere is no
movement soon to gel their men home.
Joe McCain, son of Adm . John S.
?11cCain and brother of Lt. Cmd r. John S.
f\.1cCain Jr. who was shot down during a
fl ight over North Vietnam in 1967. ex-
pressed dissatisfaetio11 at Adm inistration
officials' explanations of how the issue of
POWs and t>.1IAs I ~issing in Action) is
being handled .
The younger t>.-lcCain was one of an
estimated ftOO persons attending a
meeting of the Nationril Lea~ue of
Families. of American Prisoners of \Var
and Mis~ing in Southe:ist Asia.
to.fcCain drew a burst nf applause from
the delegates assembled at the Sheraton
Pi'lrk Hotel when he said that unl ess the
families of men who are pri soners or
missi ng are gi\'en some answers soon
about when the men might be freed, •'the
people ma y go to measures that may
even embiirrass the Admini stration until
we do find out."
A State Department representative,
Fran k Sieverts. also got loud applaust
when he responded. "I hope it will also
embarrass the North Vietnamese. They
ha ve got the prisoners.''
~lcCain -which he said v.·as aimed at all
politicians and government officials wh~
had been talkin g ahout the PO\V issue -
thiit •·most of what goes on ge hind these
podlums is BS."
He later told reporters ht• was talking
about liberals. cflnsc•rl'atiVl·s and
everyone else when he made that
remark. He dc£>hned IQ say what he had
in mind 1vilh respecl to embarrassing
arls.
League olfici;:ls v.•asled no time in ~et·
ting down Lo the essentials. As the firs t
item on the agenda of the three-day
meeting, they scheduled a debate
between Sen. Rolwrt Dole tR·Kiln .~. and
Rep. Robert Legget! tD-Calif.1.
Leggett long has insisted I ht1t the
United States could reg::11n its PO\\'s from
the Comn1unists 1f it 1~·ould set a deadline
for v.·1thdrawi1I 11! i'ltl US militar\" forces
from South V1etna1n . J)1Jle. !he GOP na-
tio;ial t'hairrn11n. 1s a st;1unt•l1 ~11pporte r
of Nixo1J°s µnliry of grndual \\•ithdrawal
v.·ithou t a ri~cd tirnetablc.
Frustrations h:t\'c bt'en 1nounting
among lhe re!alJ1·cs 91 the rnore tha n
J.600 prisoners :i nd nib:~ing Arncric~ns.
The league, which h[1S workrd clo sely
with the Adm inis tration in seeking helter
treatment for PO \Vs in North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong pri son cain ps. is under
pressure from so me of its mC'mbcrs to go
beyond Jts "humane" gool and openly
criticize the Admin istrRt ion on political
terms.
Sunday. Nixon toured the Atomic
Energy Commission's Hanford , Wa sh .,
facility. He took the occasion to announce
the U.S. government, in conjunction wi th
privatl! business, would build two pro-
totype "f11st·breeder" reactors to harness
the atom for peaceful uses.
Plans to build one prototypl!, costing
&bout $500 million, were annou nced in
Angelita Lemus. 7, looks over a giant rorlra1t of actor Steve McQueen
painted on the side of a house by Ca State Los Angeles art student
Kent Twitchell. Twitchell completed the \vork in about two weeks at
a cost of under $50.
t>.1cCain told Sieverts and the Pen·
tagon's repr.osenla tlve, Roger Shields,
that "'I have personally understood only
about one-third of what you gentlemen
have said today."
This followed a preceding statement by
League officials oppv~e <'In effort by
these mer.1bers to revise the organiza·
tion's byl111\·s so that it can, in effect. join
the national mol"r mcnl for !\etting a
deadline. as a n1 rans of getung U.S.
forces out of Vietnam and freC'ing the
prisonC'rs. J une but the decision to eq>and the pro-
ject to two was new.
Nixon also ann ounced a $200 mill ion
commitment from the priv11!e power in·
dustry had made it possible to order pro-
duction of the first "fast-breeder"
nuclear reactor. Scientists believe the
reactor offers the hope of avoiding a
global energy crisis within SO years.
N. Viet Horde Pushing
Allies Out of Cambodia
Law Cooperation
Said Essential
To Curb Crime
The Adn11n1~1 r:1tH>11 w:.is cnu11t 111;.: on a
''silent 1na1ori!.J ·· 1\!thin 1he league to
stick bl' !he Prc~idl'rlt . An<l 1nC'mbers on
both si(lcs oi the 1~).1Ji;> predicted lh:.it the
propo~al. U• hr \'1tlcd on todi'ly, probably
would Ile defcalL·~L
But one league off1c\id cal1l 1onccl that
this did fl(l\. n1c:in the nrgani~at ion -
largest of its kind -)OU\d rrfrain lrnm
adopting orie or 1norc rr:-;eilu1ir)flS crilica l
of /\dm1nistr;it1on :irt1 [1n.s
"Fast-breeder" reactors produce their
own fuel by turning non·fissionable
uranium into fissionable plutonium and SAIGON (UPI) -Nearlv t1vn rlil"isions
offe r the prospect or adrquate su pplies of nf North Vietnamei;e re!!ul11r~ hat.tl1ng tn
non.polluting energy. drive nutnumhPrerl Sol1th Vietnamese nut
Saturday. the President tourf'd hv of their las1 foothold in eastern C;:imbodi;i
helicoper Libby Dam near Kalispcli". r:iined a "real hell o[ fire"' on the
'-1ont. He told an estimated 7,000 persnns defenders today in the heaviest fighting
in Kal ispell that his administration hoped since the 1970 allied operation into Cam-
to achieve "a whole generation of peace" bodia.
and open a dialogue with China. Such Gen. Nguyen Xu:in Tinh. commrinder or
communication, he said, ma y head off the South Vietnamese 25th infantry
any future confrontations with Peking division, 11aid in an interview at his head·
and the Western world. quarters in Tay Ninh City that the sltua· Nixon stood bareheaded in a driving liQn is more serious than it wa s at Snuol ~~\~ :t _the Libby _Dam site and. helped wh ere a force of 3.000 Snuth Vietnamese
hn.e.11long with Sen .. ,_.lansfield and "'·as trapped and cut to pleces earlier this
other pol1l!cal leaders which lowered a •ear
small load of concrete into the dam •·~ea · . . Pr~testers were in evidence along the ":he fighting v.•.as near th~ rubber p!.an-
Pres1d.ent's. route-beginning at Portland IAt10~ town of Kr~k . ,85 miles _nnr.thv.est
and chmaxing in Anchorage ~f Sa1gnn . Th~ tav.n ~as occur1ed in 1970 · 1n u•hat President Nixon heralded as a
drive to elimina!e Go mm u n i st
Baby Arrives
On Shoestring
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Using
a shoelace to tie ofr rhe umbilical
cord, two young Sa n Francisco
policemen successfully del ivered a
healthy boy in a parked car.
\\'ith the prescribed slap to the
back of baby Howard Armaodo
Gates, officers Vi'illiam Taylor and
Anthony Spiteri set the 6-pound. 13-
ounce tot breathing ~unday and
drew a lusty squawk in return.
Their attention ""'as drav.·n to 1h,
emergency about I :JO a m. by
some people fra ntica!ly a.~kin~ an
escort lo the hospital for a w(lman
in labor in a car, Frankie G11tei;:
··when we s11w t>.1rs. Gates,"
Taylor said , '0Wf!" knew it was too
late for the hospital.''
"sanc tuaries" in Ca mhnd ia.
The ha!lle pilled 20.0flll In 24,()()(1 North
Vietnamese agRi nst 13.000 Sou th Viet-
namese. and <'tnother Communist dll'is1nn
wa s reported ne<trhy. American fighter-
hombers and heHropte r gunshi ps were
called in to try Ln check the Cnmmunist
nffensi\"e 11nd a i;pokesman said they kill·
ed more than 100 Communists in one sec-
tor of th~ front.
But the Communist oflensi\'e alrearlv
had cut the South VietnamPse supplV
rou tes in fi ghting v.·hich spilled ol"er in1o
Sn11lh Vietn;im. srven miles below Krek,
and the dri\'e rippi>ared In be an rill nut
effnrt to end I.he AR\'N activities in Cam-
bodia .
Bnlh Ameriran and Sou !h ViPtn:imesP
off1ria1.~ had W<'lrned nf the pnssih1!1ty of
a Commun1.~t oHcn~i\'e aimed 11t d1sn1p-
t1nl! South \'ietnrim's Presidt>n!i<il elec-
tinns Ori. 3 The Comm11nl~ts alre:irlv
had opencd one major dri\"e just below
the Demilitarized Zone.
··In the la~t 48 hollrs our men ha1·e
Ileen 1il'i ng under a real hell of fir e."
Gen. Tin h said in his headquarters at Tay
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Press "'Periled'
ACLU Ck1in1s Federal Pressure
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Governmenl
criticism of the press has become so
''widespread and all-pervasive" I.hat it
constitutes a "massive federal-level at-
tempt to subvert the letter and spirit or
the First Amendment" a report issued
today by the Amer ican Civil Liberties
Union charged.
The report noted also ll "subtle ten-
dency . . of the press itse lf to pull back;
to consider the controversiality of its ac.-
tions before it takes lhem. and then. In
soml! cases. not to take those actions -
to engage in self-censorship,"
The report on censorship of the pre~~.
pre pared for the ACLU by free lance
journalist Fred Powledge, chari.?ed the
press with trying to "play it .safe ," to
avoid being singled out ror criticism.
The ACLU said Powledge, in private in·
lerviews with press and governmtnt
representatives, "'·a5 told hy some
newsmen of "harassing actions·· against
the pres.1:.
Powltdge, In the report, wrote he had
been t-Old by CBS Ne .... 'S Pre~ident
Richard Salant of a ''boycott" of the
prw by Defense Stcretary Melvin LRird .
He reported Jeck Nelson of the Lns
Angeles Times sa id he had been smeartd
by assistant FBI Director Thomas Bi.shop
as ·•• m11n wM drinks too much ."
Pov.·led ge 111.so rrpl':lrltd he had bH'n
•
told hy t.ouii; Kraar or Timf'·Life news
sen ·ice !hat he had been den iNI infonna·
lion and access W transportation in the
Far East.
The rf'1l0rl <ilso rharged the polirf' v.·i1h
"utter hara~i;1nenf' of underground and
campus papers.
He said, "it is nnt difficult for an
observer who possesses a healthy amount
of paranoia to conclurle I.hat. authorit ies
\vould treat the: ·stralghl" press in the
same crude ways, if they thought they
could get away with it.
0'And increasingly -11idcrt hy vice
presidential speeches. subpoenas from
!he J ustice ~partmen1, 'nnlices' from
tJle FCC. citation from congressmen,
cen:;orsh1p by the courl.s : In i;hnrt. "''hat
amount~ to a wide!'pread demf!nstralifln
of the government's total ('()ntempt for
th e press and the first amendment -the
aulhorities are coming to the conclusion
that they can get away wilh ii," the
report Cflnclucll!d.
The ACLU ~aid Pnv.,tedi.?e. who
reportedly fnrmC'rly u·nrkt'd on the Allan-
t11 Con!'titution. the t'ew York Times. t1nd
New Yorker t>.fag;iilne and hll~ written
for Life and Ntiw Ynrk maga7.ine, will dn
11 i;Prt's of investlgath•e. rrporlo; rnr the
ACLU.
A spnkesma n sa id the s£'ries would dt':tl
w\1h "broad e:ivll liberties i~~ues." in·
eluding crimin11l justice and racial Issue~ .
Ninh . acrnss the border from Krek.
Ile described Ille Communist offensive,
which began on Sunday. as mo re seri ous
than th e clri\'e v.•hich r ushed the South
Vietn nmese nut of Snuol. another fonner
plantation tO\\'n abnul 50 miles northeast
of Krek, last '-lay.
Frum Pagel
AGNEW ...
Issue al Attica -like the issue involved
whenever the orderly processes of a free
society are confronted by those who place
them~elves ahove or beynnd the law -is
whether thal sociely"s free institutions
are to survivP nr RO under"
Agnew ~t1id that in the pa st IO years,
6."l.'l American law enforcement officers
ha ve been killed as a result of criminal
art inn
"\Vhen those v.·ho protect us are at·
l:::ickc'fl. we are all attacked."' Agnew said.
''\\'hen !hose v.·ho sarC'guard our in·
i;:titutinni; are f'ndangered. our inslitutions
arP endangered
'·\rhen thfls e rr1v assignf'd to uphnlrl
our \av.·s ,1!1ve lhr1r lives in the ronduct of
lhf"1r rlu!y, thrn v.·e. the many v.·ho
sun·1ve. hrive a renewed responsibility lo
s<>r In if 1h;i! 1heir sacrifire was not in
v;i in -th11t !he government flf law for
.... h1rh lhPV rl1C'r! is upheld against those
v.·hfl ~·nutd tlr~trn~· ii ··
"lf. !hr n. th rre is a l;irgrr !~ssnn to be
dr :nvn frnrn 1hr ln<;s of life. at Attica, il is
1h;it Arncr1r;in~ who \'flluc our s ystem
;inrl 1!.~ free ins lih11inns cannot un-
derestimate lh" polcntial for violence e.rid
dr.~1ruct1nn inhrrr.nt in 1111y radical mili·
tant mnverncnt." Agnew ~<ti d.
GreRter cooperation by ::ill segments of
law enforcement -particulrirly judges -
is essentiril to curb America's growing
crin1e r:i!e. one government official
declared tnd:iv.
The rem;irks emerged fro1n one panel
discussion during !he 78!h Ann ual Con-
ference of the International Association
of Chiefs of Police con\'encd at the
Anaheim Con\•ention Center.
.Joseph Kaitz. a member of the l\'ew
York City Waterfronl Commission, said
policemen can't handle the monumental
job alone.
Courts. prosecutors. prob a ti o n
departments and parole. boards are all
equcJ ly responsible for A new cnmmit-
ment , he said
"Everyone concerned w11h law and
order is responsi ble , And that gocs for
judges IM, ..,,·ho shoulrt pla y a greater
role in reporting bre11kdo.,.,•ns v.•here they
occur." Kriiti remarked.
"And lhry should v.·ork more closely
v.•it h the police to hel p red11C'e crime. -
ou r natinn·s No. I problcn1." he con-
tinued
Dallas Police Chief Frank Orson
charged that in mo5t crises police gei the
blame 1vhen there is a breakdown in la1v
and order
Considering lhr tnpif' of rcsponsib1l1!y
for reduring rrime. Chief D~·son called
for 11 nal inn v.·idc crimrail!n a~11 inst ii
"Too nflrn. the cit17.en ii; o\"erlonkcd
He cnuld mrike i;nme valuable con·
trihutinns." Dyson Arg ucd
He i;uiu::rS'terl nev.· crim e · cont r{l 1
lc,l!isll'lltnn is one \va1· fl 1fln~ with more
anrl betlrr prngrl'lm s f11r c i I i z e n
partiripl'l1inn.
Chief f1 y$nn s;iid h1~ (111n Cl\\" l'"il l soon
!'!art a prevention r rngrflm tn krrp trark
nf s1n!en pn1perl\' by ron1rut cr
He sa1rl na11.1s has Al~n r~t<ihl1she<l
cnn1m iltef'S serving p;:irh of !!.~ !Ill! !V'lirc
beat :irel'IS to est;ihlish closer cnntart
v.·ith the pu blic.
M•'• IUM4) M1111't (Hew)
DIAMOND RING DIAMOND RING
1'11·0 nf the t11").':Jll 11.11t1nn's !r;iders
publicly q11l·~:!l<•ned 1\dn11n1 ).!r:i11011 policy
Sunda\" ill r:-; ,)(1:111 \ 11"·"11. Ila· Je;1l!ll<''S
no!ion~\ tonrdin111ur. s;1ul :-.t.1· \1;is d1 5ar·
pointed that !he l'rrs1dr11! h;H\ nOl
responded 10 the Viet Cor1r,·). Julv l offer
in exchange pr isnnrrs 111 ret 1.11n fnr a
U.S. commitment lo 11 11hdril.\\' t1•t<1lly
from South Victnam by the end of this
year.
Marines .Di e
In Base lneidenls
T1\'0 Carnp Pendleton l\l:i rincs d1erl in
separa!e inciden ts nn 1he bi1~e O\'cr 1he
ll'e.ekend. One. ~·oung n111n \1 ;is killed by
an exploding grenadf'.
B:i se ~poke~111cn irl1'n\1!1rrl th(' grenade
\"ictim as Pfc. Harold i\I. S1nl'rr, 18,
11·hnsC' parrnl~ li1r 1n Eh n;l. Ohrr,
Sto ve r \\"<IS killed 1ns1;i11 rlv 1• l,f'n hr anrl
a h11rlrlv 111:1nctf'rcrl 1nln ;;in· 'I i !l i::rrnadc.
laUJ1!'h1ng r:i ngt• :ind ~I( 1 •'r ;".tip:irC'n1ly
p1r k.f'rl 1q 1 ;1 r!11rl i:;:n'1l'l•I•
The pro1ec tilc l"'\Jl:11dl'd . kithni: the
~n11t h <1Jlfl 1nfh1 ·1111;: ~"1 4•r.il l1 .. i::1nrn·
!<IH"n 11'nt111d!'1 on tht· fll<'I' nf l'f" nannv
Troller . lR. nf \\":tlrn 11 ~ri•lnt!~. Tf'>. Trn!·
fer was rrp.:lf"trrt in s:111,J.1r !nr\ cond1·
t1nn lnl"l:tl' ;\I \!If' h:l\f' 1111.~1 ll;d
The Sfl('ntJd \1t·t'k1 nil d•·,1!h !•lok pl ;icc.
on ~;i !11nl;i1 A 11 •11111• 1r .. ·n11 : .. n tflm·
por:~r v !rl'l1n111~ l'l! I 'i>11dlr·tn11 !'Pt;11L1rl v
a{1 ;.ir·hrrt tn 1111' 1('111111 4)1'["•' 111 ".;111 n1r11n
-rnll;ip~1·d 1J11r1111' fl 1r1'r1 ~r~ and died
en rfllllC' t" l hr lt"'Jlil ;1\
llis nainc ":1s 11 1\hla·ld 1111!11 his fan1il.Y
c;in be cnnt;i1 ·~\·rl
$50 .•D ti tlYtlM
14 ~t ,0111 $200
LADIES
SOLITAIRE
1 cl i ptt
14 •1 wlll'9 t•l4
Oii.r1~!"'
to ~~pr•ll• ••
....,.,Mtrll
OVER 50 LADIES DIAMOND
RINGS TO CHOOSE FROM $25 & UP
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
OPEN DAILY 9 to 6 COME IN ANO IROWSE A~OUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA latwffll Harilor & lroodway
--
DOM RACITI
OUR MOST
UNUSUA L
DIAM OND
GUARANTEE
WIN!. yo• bwr • cll111rno11d ,,...,.
n wt wlll 'Yoron,._ rhot ~la•
111ort4 to epprolte ot 40•,. MDIII
ttio11 yo• pol~ for It or your
lllonty bock. co~ YO• do Ill -n
•IH'wh..-e7 C0"4rAlll.
I XPElT WATCH lllPAlll
OOHI OH PlllMlll1
7
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7
Huntington .Beaeh
Fountain Valley Today's Flaal
N.Y. Stoek.s
VOL. 64, NO. 23 I, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGE S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 197 1 TEN CENTS
Beach Hopes to Pull Plug on Winter 'Lal{e ·s'
By AL-'N DIRK IN or lh• o•ov 1'1111 11111
Huntington Beocll pubhl' w o 1 k: s
l"ngineers are hopu1g to pull lhe plug on
the lakes and ponds lhat dol the
downto~·n area everv "·inter. ' . They are planning a ne\1' drainage
system lhat 1\·ould pre1·ent backyards
fronl flooding into niudholes and in·
tersections from beco tning in1passab!e .
The public' works staff is ready to apply
for a federal grant of $fl52,000 for a
Boat Blaze
Victim
R esc u ed
•
Lifeguards rescued lhc skipper of a 48-
foot sloop from rough seas Saturday
afternoon as he lreaded Y:ater 11'ith his
boat in flames about tv.•o miles off Hun·
lington Bench Stale Park.
About an hour af ter being picked up by
state lifcgual"d S in the reSC'UC boal '·Surf
\Vatch,"" (;eorgC' Boukathc r. :\ O,
Northridge. i;;1\v hi s boat sink in 72 feet of
v.•ater.
Boukathcr was the only person a\xia rd.
llf' !old lifeguards he had iust ha d the
~loop"s tx1!lon1 repainled in Nrwporl
Reach and \1·a.~ returning lo ~1arina del
Hr" ,;lie h;1cl lo sh11t !he engine oH for a
v.·hile and tht'11 1l'hrn he restarted it.
lhere was •I flash and an ei;plosion."
Lifeguard ~lei Tubbs. operator of t_he
"Surf W11.tch'" s11id . '"He. grabbed a hfe
preserver and leaped overboard. but the
preserver got caught in ~ometh_ing and h•
l'Jlded up in the water without 1L
··lie WH S afraid to go ba ck be cause ot
t11e fuel tanks and the dange r of an ex·
plosion ."' Tubbs added .
"\\'hen we arri\'ed al J: 10 p.n1. lhf' bo:<I
1va s enveloped in flame s and he w<1s
I reading. water ~O yards fr?m . il. Hf'
v.as scared but wii s othcr"''ISe in good
shape_,··
A fireboat fron1 lh1 nt1ng ton Be<'lth ar-
ri\"ed al 3:28 p.1n. an d two men went
aboard \Vilh ho:.es. but lhe fire had burn-
ed a hole in \hf' front of the ''essel and at
4:08 p.m. ttif' $2:).000 sloop. called
··rre.ludc."' sank.
'"The hole \\'as about eight to JO feel
long.'' Tubbs explainC'd . ·'E\'ers time tl~e
ho;it pi!ched more \\'ater poured .• 1n. \\ e
had no chance lo use our pump!..
T'vo Pendleton
~1arinc~ Di e
In Base 1 neid enls
1\10 Ca1n p Pe11dlrtun i'.l an ne~ r!1ca 1n1
sepa1·ate 1nc1dcnts on 111e Ua~e ove r trte
\1•cekcnd. One ~·011ng miin \~<IS killed b.
an explodl n~ grenade.
Base spoke.~1ne11 identified the grenade
\'1ctim as Pfc. Harold M. Stover, 18,
whose parents li ve in Elyria. Ohio.
Slover wa s killed instantly when he and
" buddy wandered into an M-79 grenade
launching range and Stover "'Pparcntly
picked up a dud grenade. . .
The projectile exploded. k1lhng the
\"OUth and inflicting several fra gmen-
iation "''ounds on the face of Pfc. Da nny
Trotter. 18, of Walnut Srpings, Tex. Trot ·
ter u'as reported in satisfactory Condi·
!ion today at the base Mspital.
The second wttkend dea!h took place
on SaturdA y. A young recrui! on tenl·
pnrary trainins at Pcndleto1. -regularly
attached to the recruit depot in S;in Diego
-collap11ed during exercises and died
rn route to th!: hospital.
ll is name: wa s withheld unt il his fa rnily
1·;in be Ci>ntacted .
01amber Seeking
City Suggestions
Chamber or commerce officials this
momlng began sifting through hundreds
nf ideas for the improvement of Hun·
tingkln Be11ch.-
They are the: rt'Sult of a community
brain-storming ~~sion called the Con·
.1:re!l for Commun11y ProgreSll whtch at·
tracted 12.'l 1)ersons Saturday.
Held on the (;olden \Ve~t Ol\lege: cam·
pus. th!' cht1mber·sponsom:l congress
focused on sC'veral areas of community
concern. including blighL housing, oil
production 11nd i;ebools
Thr Idea~ v.•er" taken down by
recorder& attending each of the eight
~mall-group diM:U ~~lon se<:tions. ·rhey vd ll
he forwa rded to city olficl11l:o;.
drainage project for the 200·acre area
roughly bounded by Beach Bou le\'ard on
!he east. Adam s Avenue on the south, tht'
railroad on the west and /l.1a1n Street on
lhe v.·est and norlh.
But there is a hitch The project v.·ould
require formation of an assessme:nt
district to raise funds to rnatch !he
lederal grant.
The people who own property in the ~
al"ea will have to pay and the last tune
such a district v.'as planned in tht' mid -
J960's the land owners protested and
turned Jt do~·n.
'"The last t1mf' thf' cost v.'orked out at
about S2,000 an acre." Donald \Y. Kiser. a
l'.llY engineer. explained this n1orning.
"This time. the average cost should bf'
less because. we are applying ror the
federal grant, but there are n1any people
who live on pensions and fixed incomes in
the area. They would ha vt-10 years to
pay off the cost, but last time they voted
against it."
Kiser explained tha~ the reciso n the
11 ork 1s not CO\ ered by regular property
laxes is that in nev.' areas of lhe city thf'
<·osl of drainagt system~ -put in by
developers -is reflected in the price of
the new homes.
'"To make a citywide assessment \\"OU!d
mean 1he$e people in ne:v.•ly developed
areas v.·ould be ptt ying for someone else's
drainagt 1ystcn1," Kiser said.
KUer said the procedure under con·
sidf'ration is for the ''ity co uncil to ln-
itiate the assessment distric t under
health and safety provisions in the
government code.
"There will be at least l\\"O public hear·
ings before the council, however, to give
the owners a chance to express their reel·
ings." he. added.
The engineer said that the situation had
worsened since thi! last drainagt plan
was rejected .
"A.s each parcel is developed. it in-
creases the lot~ on the retention basins
and it is getting to the poinL where the
\\"hole area is going to be flooded ," Kiser
said.
The public work s staH says, if th e:
district is approved and the grant ob-
tained from the Department of Housina
and Urban Development tHUD~. con--
struction could begin next year and the
project completed in time to prevent
flooding in the winter or 1972-73.
Much or the area to be drained consists-
1Sel! DllAlNAGE. Page %)
Alaska Trip Ends
President R eturns to Washington
T oge tl1e 1· A !J«it1
\\'alter I·UC"kel, former secretary of the interior. chats amicably with
President Nixo n as the President arrives for reception at Hi cke l's
i101ne tn Anchorage . Alaska. /l.leet1n g' took place Sunday prior to i\1 r.
Nixon's 1neeting \Vilh Emperor Hirohito <>( Japan. Preside at !ired
Hickel earlier this yea r.
N atio11 al E1nharrass m e11t
Tl11~eate11ed by POW U11it
•
\\'A SHJ\'GTON (UPJ I -The SQll or !he
U.S. 1ni!itary con1mandcr in ihe. Pacific
!Old gove rnn1en1 offic1al.o; toda.v he and
other relatives of American PO\Ys mii.:ht
embarrass !he Adn1 inl.<ilr:it 1on ll'ilh
meJsures of the ir OYt'n 1r lhert.• is no
moven1ent soon to gel their men honir
Joe !1JcCa1n. son of Adm .John S.
'lcCain and brQ1hf'r of LI f'rndr .John S.
\JcCain Jr. \vho "·as shot dO\\'rl dunng a
fl nzht O''"r No rth Vtetnan1 in !9fii. ex-
prf.;;sed dissati.~fac!101 at Adm1nistra11011
11ff1t:ials" expliu1a!1on• of hn11' 1he l)>sll!' (ir
PO\\'s and ;\1lAs i ~l1ss1ng 1n Ar11on f 1s
lx'ing handled
The younger i\1rC :11n 11'as on!· nf ;111
f'St1n1alcd tiOO p1~r~n11~ <1ltend111g ;1
1neeti11~ of 1l1c Nal11•r1:il l,r;1J::t1l' of
Van1i!1es nf Ar1111n1·nn l'n~i~11crs of \\";ir
and ~'l1s.~ing in Snu1ht·11.~! ,'\si;i
i\1tCiJl ll dn.•\1' ;i blirst of upplau::.r lr1u11
the deleg ates assembled Ill the ShC'ra lon
Park l£ot('I 1vhen hr said lh:1I unlt•ss lhP
ramilies of men "''ho are pri~onrrs or
1nissing are given son1e answers soon
about when the men might be freed. "lhi!
prople may go lo measures Iha! may
even embarrass lhe Administration until
we do find out .''
A State Department re:p re.sentat ive,
Frank Sieverts. also got loud applau:.e
when he respunded. "I ho pe il will also
f'mbarrass the North Vietnamese. They
h11ve got lhe prisoner1."
~·lcCain told S1everts and the Pen-
!agon's repr<.sentati1•e. Roger Shield.~.
1h;i t '"I have personally undl'rstood only
aboul one·third of \Yhal you gentlemen
tia1·e said today."
This followed a preceding statement by
~lcCain -whi ch he said was ain1ed al all
polilil"ians and government officials who
hi1d bern lal kin~ about thr PO\V issu t -
thaL •·most of what got's on behind thes,.
pud1um!" IS BS."
He later told re po rters he wal'> talloni;:
aboul l1~ral s. t'Onservatives a 11 d
r~·e r\"IJnr elsf' v.•hcn he madt that
ren1i.l"k !-It> declined to sav what he had
1n n11 nd with resf>t't'/ to· embarrass in~
;u ·t.~
Lr.'lgut offirial:t 1vaste.d no t11n11; 111 get-
!111~ do11 11 !1~ the essent i:ib As the First
111'111 on thr agenda of lhe three·day
1ncc11ng . lhe~' .~eheduled a debatt
between Sen. Hobc>rt Dole 1 A.Ka ti J. and
Rep . Roberl Leggett, 1 D·Calif.1.
Legget! long ha5 insisted lhal tht
United States could regain its POWs from
the ColllJllUnisls if it would set a deadline
for withdrawal of all U.S. military force~
from South Vietnam . Dole, the GOP l"Ja·
Ilona! chairman. is a staunch supporter
of N!llon's policy of gradual withd rawal
v.·ithout a fixed timetablf'.
F'rustrattons have IJ;eeti mounting'
11monc the: relatives of the more lhan
!Stt POWs, Pagt t)
ANCHORAGE (UPI ) -Turning from
an historic gesture in international
diplomacy lo pressing dome:stic pro-
blems. President Nixon ne\V back lO
\liashington today from his meeting with
Japanese Emperor Hirohito.
The President and hi s wife Pat boarded
Air Force One in bright, :l5-0egree weath-
er at Elmendorf Air Force Base and took
off at 9:22 a.m. Alaska time 111 :22 a.m.
PD'T'l ror the six.hour. 20-minute flight.
Their departure v.·as delayed for nearly . '. .•,
Al eutian Atom
T est Scored
In Protests
ANCHORAGE . Alsak1 ft:Pl\ -Some
~00 per&ons along the par1dt route:
covered by President Nii on and Japanese
Empero r Hirohito protested Sunday
against the nuclear te sl planned on
An1ch1tka Island in Lht Aleutian chain .
The protes! was peaceful and !here
\veri no arrrsts. A number of signs. one
reading "Explode the bomb under
\Vashington. D.C .. not Amchitka.'' were
di splayed along !he route.
Organization in both lhe Unl!ed States
and Japan fear tidal w11ves and earth-
quakes ma y rtsul1 from the scheduled
fl\'e-mrgaton underground blast.
The city or Anchorage had original!)'
de nied rally and march pennits to thf'
Ata~ka coalition against Cannikin -a
nickname for the blast. But a S0Jl{'r1or
Court re\'f'rsrd th at decision and the
:.tale: Supreme Court Sund ay morning
uphf'ld tht Superior Courl ruling.
In Portland. Ore.. two evironmenlal
groups aske:d Nixon to <.'all off the bla st
becauSI! it '"ou!d have 5erious 1·on·
srqucnC'es
The Paciric i\orth111est t hapler of the
Sierra Club and lhe Don ·l ~1akr a \\la ve
Commi!lee or Vancouver. B.C.. an-
nounced Sunday lhe,v sent i\ixon a le ttrr
~ay ing !he risks in the blast were unw ar·
ranted fro m any possiblt benefits e.x·
pe cted.
,;Such a blasl. the largf'.S! un derg round
test our nation ha s ever undertaken.
rould have serious consequences for our
count ry and others in the Pacilic area,"'
their missive said.
The Canadian organit ation w 1 &
reported to be pl anning to send a ship to
the Aleutian lslsnd to protest the ex-
plosion. lt was to drift just ~lsidt u .~.
territorial waters, lbrte miles from
Amchitka Island .
Route ~Timetable Delayed
Co rona del Ma r, Ora nge Freeways Puslied Back
Culbacks in federal spending h.flve fore·
ed tht California Division of Higtrways lo
delay its construction timetable: for bolh
the Corona de! Mal' Orange freev.11ys.
the State Public Works Department said
today.
Tht Corona del Mar Freeway schedul·
ed to be built in segments throughout the
next five years, wlll bf! pushed one year
back on the timetable. accordlns to Jack
Peddy. assistanl state highw ay engineer
for program management .
Daniel Pengllly, chief eng!M.er for
budge! and control. said the Orange
Freeway which is still in the planning
stages through the coastal area wlll
likew ise be affected as will countless
othtr project!'! throughout California
He blamed lht delay!! on nr.w revenut>
t.stimates that forrcai;t Pi 12 perl·Cnl drop
in federal aid through !he next six ycN-41.
The reder11l govf!rnmenl pay~ 92 pel-.
cent of the cost of lnterii tate highWa)"ll
11nd 70 percent of the cost of other
primary super highways such a& these
two freeways.
Pe.ngilly said the exact effect of lnt
reductions in revenues will not be kno"n
until the state adopb ill 1'12·73 plannln&
program next spring.
Peddy said the t ffe<:t this year was
tnore than anticipated as California was
due to receive e total of U 'milllori but
th is had been trimmed by $144 mii!'ion.
"We ha\·e betn to ld that Ibis ii bein&
do!lf as part of lhe program of flg hUna
inflation." Peddy said.
Under lht new tentative: time:lab le. the
construction of the Corona de! Mar
l'reeway will not begin until early 197~
when lht section trom the San Diego
l'reew4'y just east of Fairview Road i!!
hullt connecting rt to the Interchange of
the Newport f're:eway that ls now ul'der
construction.
Oates for construction of the rt.mainfnc
sectloM, lo Bonita Canyon Road and
perhaps beyond to lhl planned Pacific
Co11t Freeway simply are not known at
thia llrm, Pengllly a1id.
Peddy polrtted out that tbt controver1y
over the eo11lal route hl J forced atat.t
engineers to stop all planning for th e
Corona del Mar Freeway below Bonita
canyon Rood .
The pllnned Ot•RCe Fi-ffway is un-
deraolnC • Nrle1 of preliminary studies
at the local level. Eaeh cuy that may bt
aflectea by fM raUte -whl(!h lttltNIYtly
follows the Santa Ana River south. or the
Santa AN treeway -has formed atudy
co mmittee1 ~a~ . have: bttn given slate
money to hire c:onJrultanta to study the ef-
fe<:t or the propased route.
Tht Orange Freeway is under con-
•trueticm fro m e point north of the Santa
Ane Freeway at 1lA mttn ecllon with the
Garden Grove freew1y north to lht
Riverside Freeway.
an hour to allow the presidenlial party a
few more minutes rest.
'T'he President loo ked a bit weary after
his history-making meeting with Hirohito
which wenl on until nearly ~ a.m. Mon:-
day Washington time. but was described
as ··very, very pleased " with how it went.
It was bright. clear. sunny and cold in
Alaska when Nixon awoke about 8 a.m.
local time. read the newspapers and
discussed briefly witb aides his Sunday
Bizarre
night meeting with the e1nperor.
Nixon 's meeting late Sunday night with
Emperior Hirohito marked the fir st tin1 e
a J apanese emperor had ever le (t his ov.·n
~Quntry.
It capped a busy weekend for the
President, who visit ed four Pacifi c
Nort hwest sla tes. announcing a stepped·
up a\on1ic enc-rgy program. intervening
persnn;i\lv in the \Vest Coast dock strike,
and du1ni11·1~ a ltll le concrete into the Big
ISee 1\'IXO~, Page ZJ
Death
Man Questioned, S'wa llo·ws Poison
SANTA CRUZ fU PI 1 -California
Hi8bway Patro l olficu1 S\.inl4y n1&bt
wtnt lD question a susp«t in a minor
traffic accident and the aUlipect com·
milled suicK:lc: before he was questioned.
The victim was Jobn A~ Salua, 4',
F'elton. v.·ho was pronounced dead on ar4
rival at Santa Cruz General Hospital
after swa llowing an unidentilied poison in
hi s home.
The two officers had responded to the
report of a traffi c accident on highway 9,
nnrlh of Santa Cruz. in which wi tnesses
had taken the license number of a car
tha1 had left the scene. The investigation
led to Salu z.
"fl didn't take you long lo get here."
Saluz greeted the patrolmen at the fron t
door of his home. lie said he wanted to
change his clothe:o;, then went into the: kit-
chen . .snatched a bottl e from the-cup-
board and swallowed its contents.
"I've just taken poison,'' he was quoted
as saying.
The officers called for an ambulanct .
But Saluz was dead. Coroner Deputy Ktn
Foster said an autopsy v.·ould be made to
determine wha t caused the victim's
death. The CHP reported the actual traf·
fic accident was minor and resulted in no
injuries.
Golden Wes t Theater Set
Fo1· Sa11 Francisco Ballet
l:olden \\'est College's ne1v 350-seat
coinmunity theate.r will host the San
Francisco Ballet in thret: public concerts
Oct 16·17
\\'bile formal dedica\1011 or the lhf'ater
i.~ planned later t!Hs fall , the ballet will _be
!he first evcnl 111 pla.v on the massive
stage .
Perfonnances will be held at 3: 15 p.ni.
Oct 16 . and a~ 2 p.m and 8.15 p.ni. Oct.
J ob l ntervie\V
Program Begins
A new program designed to help ap-
plicant:o1 with job interviews wUI be of·
fe red by the l-luntington Beach Com·
munity Center. beginning Tuesday.
The two-session course will teach pro-
per dress. appearance. how to fill out
forms and what to discuss during the in-
ter\·iel\' A practice interview and test
session is also offered .
Mrll'. Leslie White, progranl director,
said the meelings will be held every other
\Veek from fl a.m. to noon on Tuesdays
and Thursdays. The location is 222 5th St .
Groups will be kept to a n1aximum of
six students at a lime. Interested penons
may apply at lhe C.Ommunity Center. 309
Sth Sl.
Beach Airma n
Dies i n Vietnam
A U. S. Air Foret cnli.sted rn1 n from
Huntlnglon Beach is among servicemen
on a roster or fi ve casuallles of tht
Soulheaitit A.llia war. released Friday.
Alnnan 1-C Lawrence B. Forreater's
death wa!. listed 111s due to non·hostile
causes, 1tccord ing to the D e. f e n st
Deportment
Jle wa.!I the son of Mr. and Mrs.
~\\'rcncc C. Forrester, of I 6 2 fl 2
Gqlden&:tte Lane. ,
Ii. Tickets will go on advance &ale 11l th1
college bookstore Ocl. 4.
The San Francisco com pany will bring
a fuH corps of 3~ dancers. illC'lud u1g it~
principal soloisls. hghtin.i; and sound
technicians.
Ba llets to be perfonned incl ude "Fill-
ing Stalion.·· a con11n f'nt 011 U.l-i. hfe 1n
the J930's called !he first truly Amer ican
ballel ever protluccd ; "'1\uttunn Dances.''
and ''Shado"''s,"
Local da nce students. hlgh school age
and older, will work \Yith me1nbers of th•
co mpany in a master dance class fr om
10:30 a.m. tonoon Oct. 16. There will be
sections for beginners and ad \'anced
.students. Persons intere!ted should con-
tact Golden West dancr teacher rt1rs.
Carol Caniglia.
Following the elass. a public lecture_..
demonstcation u•UI be he ld from 2 p.m. lo
3 with a reception for the company at 3
p.m. in the community center.
F'or1ned in 1933. the San Franci~clJ
Ballel is the: oldest resident classical
ballet in the Un ited Sta tes.
Oraage Cout
Weac•e r
'Those ominous clouds wi ll cle1 r
by mid-day today and Tuesday.
with mosUy sunny skies in tht
afternoons. Highs along the coa:1t.
65 rising to 75 inland. l..(iws tonight
between 57 and 58.
INSIDE TODA. Y
\Vhen's the best tirl'lt to buu~
Rigll.t now. before the freet.t
me!r.s. according lo S11Lvia Po·r1·
er. Ste her analus1.! on Pagt 30
today.
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'
~ tlAJLY PI LOT H MOfldu, Septtmbef 27, 1971
Sadat's Trip 'Crucial'
Israel Asseses Coming Visit to Moscow
By United Press Lnternatlonal
Israeli government sources today
described as "very significant" Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat's forthcoming
visit to Moseow. They said It ":as certain
to impress the United States that Cairo is
unwilling to put up with fu rther delays to
&eek a Middle East peace settlement.
Th!: semiofficial Middle East News
Agency &Mounced in Cairo Sunday that
Sadat wilt vlsit the Soviet Union during
the first half of October. The trip follows
a recent purge of Communists and sym·
pathiurs in the Arab world, including
Egypt.
The Israeli sources in Tel Aviv &aid the
primary object of Sadat·s trip v.•ou\d be
''to clear the air'' in Egypt's relations
with the Soviet Union . The Kremlin is
Egypt's chief military benefactor and has
1ided with It polilica\ly against Israel.
In defiance of a U.N. Security Council
resolution adopted Saturday night , Israel
has instructed its U.N. ambassador,
Yosef Tekoah, to inform the United Na·
tiom that it intends to retain full control
af the occupied Jordanian sector of
Jerusalem and Its development ,
diplomatic sources said in Jerusalem .
The sources said Tekoah had been In-
structed to tell Secref.ary General Thant
that "Israel's policy regarding J erusalem
that the Israeli cahinet det::ided Sunday
will remain unchanged."
The council voted 14--0 for a reso lution
prompted by a Jordanif1n complaint call·
ing on Israel to halt all construction in
occupied Jerusalem which alters the
character of the citv and to rescind all
acts in that direciion. It inc luded a
prov'is.ian calling on Thant to dispatch a
faC'.t-finding mission to Jerusalem within
60 days to assure im plementation of the
resolution.
The sources said the government also
instructed Tekoah to tell Thant that
·Israel would not receiv e such a mission
nor would it hold any discussions with lt.
Israel hall defied all U.N. resolutians
since 1967 with regard to Jerusalem and
the withdrawal of it! forces from Arab
Irvine Heiress' Attack
Blasted by CCI Chief
One leadtng proponent af the• proposed note he was ~ CCI chairman -
city of Irvine Issued .a bitter, blistering twice -by leaders of the incorporatian·
reply today to ranch heiress Joan Irvine backing organizations the city will en-
Smith's latest broadside attack against compass.
lhe future city. "If then, I am a puppet, a tool, a Judas
John Burton, chairman of the Council goat and an Irvine Oimpany-appointed.
:>f (;ommunities of Irvine declared -automaton. so must be these community
among ether charges -Mrs.· Smith's leaders," Burton argues.
.;tatements published last week are a He declared his own home is, in effect,
misleading pack of lies. ccr headquarters for al! those promoting
He also said they made his awn wife incorporation within the community.
cry. Burton charges Mrs. Smith's promotion
The blonde heiress , owner of 21 percent of the Tax Reform Act in CongreS! is
.lf Irvine Company stock, had dug in with based on self·interest.
Ooth fttt in her battle to thwart the city ·'Her real interest is her personal argu·
.;he predicts will be giant slum. ment with the Irvine Foundalion, an
She is out of alignment with other argument that I don"t understand asi de
[rvine family and corporate stockholders from the well ·reportecl fact that she
ln the issue and her most recent ac-would like to see it destroyed," Stirton
::usations inflamed CCI C h a i r m a n claims. Burton. His denunciation goes on to say she has
"My first reaction was amusement testi fied in Congre.~s that Irvine ranch·
mixed with disgust." Burton declares in a lands aren't being develop«:! as fast
Jrepared statement. clue to Irvine Faunclation involvement.
· Hi!l remarks go on to show largely .. And she isn't getting the dividends
j isgust and dismay. that she should be." he declares.
"We are no a rich girl's plaything. We "Jn summary," Burton concludes. "her
are people," Burt.on fumed. charges ... particularly the personal
"To think that she (htrs. Smith) can fly ones, were unkind, unproducUve, unin-
t11to Orange County fram her estate in formed and untrue."
Virginia. call people names. spread lies. Burton notes he has never met Mr5.
flaunt her •influence.' challenge peaple'1 Smith, chargiqg she has seen none of the
mot ives and then run away to play in a reports prepared relative to tncorporatian
European resort is incredible," he C(ln-and all this ls just as well. "Because it is none. of her busi ness. :inues.
"It says something about Mrs. Sm ith, ..
Burton adds. charging her with a cam·
palgn designed to smear individuals and
jistort. faci., and confuse people and
issu es.
Burton said he called home. Friday
frl)m his North America n Rockwell office
ln Anaheim to find his wife. in tears.
"ll became. cl ear that this was a
vicious attack and r-.trs Smith had ck!ne. a
really terrible thing," Burton declares.
One allegation on which she. was quoted
•·as that the two-ti me CCI chairma n had
offices in Irvine Company headquarters.
Burton charges ~1rs, Smith fa iled to
Huntington Unit
Schedul es Talk
Remo Navone.. chief of the Public
Health Labaratory of Snu thern California ,
v•~l spea k to the llun!ing!rJn Beach
Environmental Council on "\\'ater Pollu-
tion " Tuesday night
His talk Is schedu!ed tn be~in al 7 30
pm. in the Administrative Annex, 523
?11ai n SL The public is inl'ited.
OU.N•l COAST
DAILY PllOT
~GE COAST PUILISHlNI) COMl'ANY
l ol>ert N. We.d ,,__ •nd l"l/bll~
J1U: ~ Cirrl•Y Vb ,.,....,_,, •nd ~I Maft&~•r
11io111a1 K.,,a
Editor
T1io11111 A. Mu-.1';"•
MaMO(l>9 Edoll>I"
Aft" Diti;"
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The people af Irvine will run the new ci-
ty, not Joan Irvine Smi th or anyo ne
else,". Burton declares.
Michiga11 Guilty
Of Segregation,
Judge Declares
DETROIT (AP) -A federa l judge rul·
ed tod ay that both Detroit 11nd the s:ate
of f\h chigan are guilly of df> jure segrega-
llon in their schoo l systems.
U.S. District JudgC' StPphPn S. Roth rul-
ed in fa vor of lhe NAACP in a suit in ~·hich the civil rights group callf>d for
speedier integration of Detroit schools,
particularly hi!i h schools.
He held in abeyance 11 d&is\on 1Jn 11
roncurrent request. "-'hich \\'flS opposed
bv the NA ACP. that nParhy \Vayne,
62.kla nd 11 nd CaC'Qmh cnun\1es be tn·
eluded specifically in the case.
Roth said th e second (!Clion, filf'd by
the Citizens' Cnmmittre for Better
F-lnr(!fion in Metropolit(!n nrtrnil -
CGBE -"is lackig in specificity and Is
framed in the broadest tf'rrns "
Roth said a CCBE •·may wish to amend
its proposal and resubmit its proposal
and resubmit it ~ a comprehensh·e plan
of desegregation."
A spokesman f<>r the NAACP l'airi
R.,th's decision had found that ~chonl
segregation in Detroit ct1u.sed . housing ~e!?regation and that the Detroi t School
Board was guilty of perpetut1tln g srhool
St'l!:regation y gerrymandering -businp:
blacks to other bl11ck schools rather lhl'l:n
to schools with predominl'l:ntly white pupil
enrollment ~. •·\Ve feel that if we C"ould provf!
~egregation in Det roi t as we have, we ca~
riro11e lt in 11lmost 11ny other Nnrthem CJ·
t.y.'' she said. The NAACP was seeking reinstatement
or a pll'ln authoriied by the previous
school beard for alterations in altend11nc.e
bound11ries of the 12 Detroit public hi gh
schools to achieve racial balance.
The r..CBE joined the suit l.11st Ju!y
asking that the integration program be
e.nlarjj!ed to include the thrre. counties
surrounding Detroit. where blacks com-
prise 20 percent af the pupil populaUon.
Beach Library Board
Seeking New Member
Applicants are n~ed to fill a vae11ncy
on the five-member Hun tington Bear.h
Library BOll rd. Dr. Don Mitchell. whose
term expires June 30. 1974. rezlgned
rec:e.ntly.
Applicat ion!I should bt sent to Llbr11ry
Director \\'alter Johnson 11t Post Office
Rox 190. The. \ibr•rY bc:111rd will screen the
applicants at1d the city council •UI select
the resident to be appolntffl.
'
territory 1eiied 1(1 the Middle'East war.
In Amman , King Huaseln tol d Jorda-
nian artillery soldiers that the. govern-
ment wilt not permit Palestinian guer·
rillas t.o operate in Jardanian cities
despite it.! support for the resistance.
mnvement.
"Resisting (Israeli) occupation Is the
right of ou r people. but this resistance
should be in the occupied lands," Hussein
said. "There must ~ resistance, but
against the enemy and ins ide the oc·
cupied territories ...
The guerrillas had been in a virtual
st.ate or \11ar wilh the army since Sep-
tember, 1970, but it climaxed with a
fierce five-da y battle in mid.July that
nearly exterminated the movement in
Jordan.
In the turbulent lsraeli-0ecu pied Gaza
Strip, an army patrol shot and killed two
local Arabs who has disobeyed orders to
ha lt, an army spokesman said. The
spokesman also Mid otle of two Israeli
:o;oldiers wounded by a guerrilla grenade
Sunday night died of wounds.
From Page 1
POWs • • •
1.600 prisoners and missing Americans.
The league , which has worked closely
with the Administration in seeking better
treatment for POV..'s in North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong prison camps, is under
pressure from some of its members to ga
beyond it! "humane" goal and openly
criticize the Administration on political
terms.
League officials oppose an effort by
these members to revise the organiza.
tion'& bylaws so that it can. in effect, join
the national movement for setting a
deadline as . a means of getting U.S.
fo~ces out of Vietnam and freeing the
pri soners.
The Adm inistration was counting on a
''sl!ent majority" within the. league to
slick by the President. And members on
hoth sides of the Issue predicted that the
pro posal. to be voted on today1 probably
V>'ould be defeated.
But on e league offici al cautioned that
!his did not rnean the organization -
largest of its kind -would refrain from
adopting one or more resolutions critical
of Administration actions .
Two of the organization·s leaders
publicly questioned Administration pollcy
Sunday. r-..1rs. Joan Vinson. the lea~e'1
national coord inator. said she was d1sa1>-
pointed tha t the President had not
responded ln the Viet C-Ong's July l offer
to exchange prisoners in return for a
U.S. commitment to withdraw totally
from South Vietnam by the end of this
year.
"I do think that perhaps we did have an
opportunity and maybe that opportunity
has slipped through our fingers," said
to.1rs. Vinson in a UPI interview.
Mr.~. Carl E. North. chairman of the
lrague·s board or directors. made clear
F.he did not agree with N i it o n ' s
determination not to leave South Vietn11m
until that country had been provided v.•ith
"a reasonable chance" of surviual
::igai ns! the Communists, She said th11t
"'hen she asked administration officials
how JonR lt "'Ould take fo r Saigon to
reach thal slage, &he r e c e i v e d
''nehulous" answers.
Roth "·omen said lhe y felt the United
States had fulfilled its obligation ta South
Vietna m and that release of the PO\Vs
should be the only abstacle to a tot11l U.S.
pullout.
The re "'as considerable. e,·idence th:i t
the \Vhile House "'as fully Aware of the
change in sentiment among P0\11
families. Se\•era l le;igue off icials were
understood to ha\'e met wilh Henry A.
KissinRt'r, the president's national securi·
1v arll"isrr, :ind l<o have 1·niced the Rrow·
ing concern af 1he families al the lack of
progress toward a negntia!erl settlement.
DQle told UPI I.hat he had nolicrd the.
change and that he had informed the
tffesident of it on more than one occa~ion
tfe <'dded, however, that he WAS col\
1·inred the ma jority uf POW families
were willing to keep lheir fa it h in Nixon·~
pledge to win release of the prisoners.
Federal Marshal
Held by Police
In Shoot Case
TRENTON. N J . <AP I -A fecitr&l
m;i rshal was taken into custody here Sun ·
d.1v night in th~ shoooting death of 1111
!nick drh·er duri ng 211 lrl'l:ff\c jam on the
Ne"-' Jersey Turn plk P.
State police ~aid Ramon Alejandro nf
lhe Bronx , N.V.. shot Lloyd F,,
Thompson, 39. l)f Ooltewah , Tenn .. th ree
!Imes In the chest and abdomen 11fter
Thompi;on allegedly &truck him with a
pipe.
Police gave this account:
A traffic accident involving a tractor·
trailer and an auto caused 1 m1111sslve tie-
up an the turnpike afle:r a load of met.31
pipe ipilled from the truck onta the
roadway
An argument apparenUy dtveloped IHI
Alejandro attempted to pau Thompson·•
truck In the heavy traffic.
Thompsan U~n got out of thf! cab of his
truck and 1pproachtd Alejandra brtn·
dishing 11 metnl club.
Alejandro told police he ldenUfitd
himself ta Thompson as a marsh&l. but
~aid the Tenne~see trucker &truck him an
th~ hrRd with th~ club.
Police said Alej11ndm the.n pulled • .M--
c111iber revolver and &hot his a!saihtnl
thrM times .
.Altj11ndm was treated for head injuries
~n".I held for investigation, police said.
Trapped in Crash
Rescuers pry George O'Hara, 54. out of his car following crash in
Newport Beach. O'Hara, 2077 Charle St .. Costa ?o.lesa. was listed in
serious condit_ion today at Hoag 11emorial Hospital \Vilh multiple
fractures. Accident occurred alxlut 6 p.m. Saturday. P olice said
O'Hara's car went out of control and plunged off Jamboree Road
and down 40·foot embankment south of nev: fire station.
N. Viet Horde Pushing
Allies Out of Canibodia
SAIGON fUPl) -Nearly two divisions
of North Vietn amese regulars battling to
drive outnumbered South Vietn11mese out
of their last foothold in eastern Camhodia
rainecl a "real hell of fire" on I.he
d.e renders today in the heaviest fighting
since the 1970 allied operatian into Cam·
OOclia.
Gen. Nguyen Xuan Tinh. commander of
the Sou!h . Vietnamese 25th infantry
division . i:aid in an interv ie"' at his head·
riuarte rs in Tay Ninh City that the situa-
ti0n is m0re serious than it was at Snuol
where a force 'of 3,000 South Vietnamese
"·as lrapperl and cut to pieces earlier this
~ear.
The fightinJl w;is near the rubber plan-
t11tlnn town of Krek , 85 mile!! northwest
Qf Saigon. The town was occu pied in 1970
in what President Nixon heralded as a
dri ve tn climina!e Co m m u n i s t
"s11nc!uanes" in Cambodia.
The battle pitted 20.l)()O tn 2t000 North
Vielnamese agai nst 13.000 Sou th Viet-
namrse. and another Commun ist di\'isinn
~·as repo rted ne11rbv. America n fi.i;:hter·
boml>ers and hPlicopter gunships were
c111leri in tn try to check the Communist
nffensh•e anri 11 spokesman F.aid they kil!·
erl more than JOO Communists in one sec-
tor of lhe front.
But the Communist offensive al readv
had cut lhe South Vietnamese suppl}.
rnu1PS in f1gh1ing which spilled O\'er into
Stiulh Vietnam, i:e11en miles below Krek.
and the drive l'l:ppeared to be an all ClUl
effnr1 to enrl the AllVN acti\"i ties in Cam·
IJ1xha .
Bo!h American and South Vietnamese
fllficials had warned of lhe possibi!it.y of
a Communist offensil'e aimed at. disrup-
ling South Vietnam's Presidential elec·
lions Oct. 3. The Commt1nists already
had opened one majrir dri\"e just below
the Demilita rized zone.
"In the last 48 hou rs our men ha ve
been li ving under 11 re~I hell 0f fire."'
Gen . Tinh sairl in his headquArters at Tay
Ninh , across !he htirder from Krek.
l·le described !he Communist offensive
which began on Sunday, as more serlnu~
rhan the dri ve which f)llshed the Soul h
Virtn;,n1cse out of Snu o/, 11norher forn1er
plantntion town 11hout 50 miles nor theast
of Krek . last M11y.
i\rek is abo11t R5 mi les nort hwest of
SaiRon ;1nd eight n11lcs arross the hordcr.
The J ,!111(1 n1C'n stationed there are the on·
ly main fnr<'C South Vietnan1cse units
still in Cambotl1a.
"The si!ua!ir)n is more scriou~ than
Snuol ·· Tlnh ~aid ... \Ve ha ve one di\"isinn
of ARVN fa ci ng most of two 1lil'isions of
NVJ\ ~Nnrfh Vietnamese regulars\."'
The fii;:h!ing hAs sprearl "·ell inln Tay
l\"inh Pro1 ince of Sou!h V1ctn;im since !he
Communist ass:-iu lt opened beforp rla1\·n
on Sunday. II v.·as on a larger scale than
the hlg Cllmmun1s! nffensi\'e at Snu01. ac-
rord1ng tn the fi gures and de!;i1ls ~1\"en
b~· Ttnh
T1 nh snid th:it !he J,!.rncra1 Con11nunist
bAll IC plrin Sf>l'll\f'll IO p!!. thr 5th ~\I A
Dn is1nn ;i~a111s1 his trn0ps al Krek. whi le
1he 71h ~\'A tned lo ~C'1ze Jilghwa ~ 22
;i nd att,1ck ~uth \ irtnamesc oulpnsts as
far a ~ IS ni1lf<s c:i sr of the rnarl
nesp1t(' !he hC'a1•y oclds against them.
hP s.'l1d. his mrn ··~11!1 ha1'e gnQd
morale .,,
.. \\"e arc confident in ourse!l'cs.'' he ad·
drd.
Rings
Mn'• I UMd) Mei~'• fN-1
Fro'" P.,e l
NIXON ..•
Libby dam ln f.,ontana .
Nixon's intercession Saturday in the 89-
day--0ld dock strike \\'as the. first such ac-
tion he had ever taken in a strike slnce
he became President.
His ZU..minute meeting with Longshore
labor le<Jder ~tarry Bridges and shi pper!
negotiator Ed Flynn brought pledges
from thcn1 to try ant.I end the stri ke by
this wee Kend.
The strike by 1~1000 rnembers of lhe
Tnterna!ional Lont:shor£>men's a n d
\Varehol.1Semen 's Union 1 IL\V UJ has tied
up 25 West Coast ports and idled nearly
200 ships since J uly !.
N1xon·s said !us face-to-face meeting
"'as "to bring lo thei r 1:1llention the
urgency of reaching a selllen1ent."
If East Co<ist dock workers strike when
their t'<lntracl exp ires Thursrla~. s11id the
President , he "'ould consider it a na tiona l
emergency and in1·f1ke the 11()..day "cool·
ing off" illJOrK'lion provisions of the Taft-
Harlley Act _
Sunday . Nixon loured the Atomic
Energy Commission's Hanford , \\1ash.,
facility . He took the occasian to annou nce
the U.S. gol'ernment. in conjunction with
private business, 1-l"ould build two pro·
tnlype. "fast·hreeder,. reactors to harness
the alom for peaceful uses.
Plans ta build orie prototype, costi ng
about i~ milli11n , 1-1·cre announced in
June but the de{"i~inn t.o expand the pro-
je<·t t11 tw() was 11cw.
Nixon also ;innoun{"cd a $200 n11\lion
commitn1ent fron1 the private power in-
d11stry had n1ade it possible to ordrr pro-
duction of the first "fast·brcecler"
nuclear reac1or. Sc1c11ti.sts bt•l1ev£> the
reactor offers the /1npc of avoiding a
global energy crisis within 50 ye ars.
''Fast-breeder'" rea("!Ors produ ce their
o"'n fuel hy turninJ.; non·fissionable
uraniun1 into f1ssitinable plutonium and
offer the prospect of adequate supplies of
non-polluting energy.
Saturday. the President loured by
helicoper Libby Dam near Kalispell,
~foot. lie told an estimated 7,000 persons
in Kalispell that his administration haped
lo achieve ''a v.·hole generation of peace"
and open a dialogue v.·ith China. Such
comm unica tion, he s:iid, rna v head off
any future enn[ronta1 ions 1vith Pr king
and the \Ves!C'rn 1-1·orld .
~ix·nn slfJotl b11rrhraded in a drivi ng
ra111 at the Lll;by Darn i>1te and helped
hnld a li ne along wilh Sen. l'vlr1nsf1eld and
other poli\1('nl Je;iders 1vhi(•h lo wered a
srnnll Jo;irl c.f roncrr1c fntn !he ctiun.
Prr1tes!l'l"S v1rrc in l'\ id1•nc'c :il nng !he
Prt's1dent's r11ure hl';.!1nning at Portl11nd
and rlirnaxing in Anchnrngr.
The first anl!-w<.ir lu'<."klin~ rncountered
by Nixon in 111onths occ11 rred in Portland
Satur?ay fron1 a sn1all but nrii.~y group at
!he airport and near his hotel. Three of
the protesters 11•erP arre!'tcd.
Upon his arrival in \\'alla \\Palla, \Vash.,
Sunday me1nbers of the conservative
Young Amerians ror freedom protested
his planned trip to Hed China.
About 500 protesters milled near the
President's motorcade 1 nu I e in
Ancharage. They opposed :i planned
nuclear test on Amchilka Island.
Fro111. Pnge 1
DRAIN AGE ...
of large t.r:icts of l;;ind. some of it
unusoihle because of the recurrent
flooding , Projects st1ch a~ 11 co111·;ilescen t
hospitAI and :ipartm('nt complexes are
h;ir? hit el'rry year, ,1rcorrl1ng to the
en1.?1nccrs.
Support fnr 11 drain;ige syslein has
comr. frnn1 .~r.rcral hu'>inesscs, the Hun-
t1ng!f1n Bcat'h l'ninn High School Dislrict
and ('OUnty ;igenl'iPS .
111e s1;:1ff ts sct·ku1g eon1n1c11t~ From
l'(!~idc·111 ~ in tile ;irr:i Thrv :ire Jn\"lted 10
\IT1te to pro;rct enc:1ner r Eric 1 Ln1·eJOy,
Post. Office B!l.'< t!lll. Huntington BeaC"h,
or c:ill 53fi·54~1 fnr lnf11rn1;it1r•n
llllll"s Jle~ision Du e
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ll ll un1phrcv 1n \ltnn •. dr·clar1ng he
~·:is only a "'h ;i1r·~ hrr:irlT h" ;i11".1\' frnm
ele~ti(ln iri Jflfifl, 11 Ill 1lf!'1df' 11"1th1n the
nrxt few monlh~ 11hrthrr to seek the
l1r1nocr11!1c non1111:i!11tn frir l'rri:irlrnt in
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•
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• MOl'ld17, Stptt1?1bfr 27, 1~71 H DAIL V P!l.OT ~
Agnew Bla·sts Radical Causes
Attica Riot Singled Out i11 County Address to Lawmen
It's Big Steve
Angelita Lemus, 7, looks over a giant portrait of actor Steve McQueen
painted on the s ide of a house by Cal State Los Angeles art student
Kent Twitchell. Twitchell completed the \York in about two weeks at
a cost of under $50.
Defense Seeki11g Bloc I{
On Henderso11 Testi.Inony
FT. MEADE , Md . (U Pll -The
defense in the court-martial of Col. Oran
K. Henderson sought today to block any
use of Henderson 's testimony to R Pen-
tagon panel lhat investigated lhe to.1y Lai
massacre.
Henderson is accused of lying to the
Pentagon panel, and the transcript of his
testimony would be a key factor for the
prosecution in atte mpting lo prove lts
charge. Henderson al so is accused of fail-
ing lo invesligate the JI.larch 16. 1968,
sweep into the South Vietna mese hamlet
that left moce than 100 civilian dead.
The prosecuting attorney, Jl.1aj. Carroll
Tichenor, insisted that the entire 406·page
lran!Cript of Henderson's testimony to
the SCK111led Peers Commission almos t
two years ago be admitted as evidence in
his court-martial.
But Henry Rothblatt. Henderslln's
civilian attorney, objected to admission
of the documenl or any part of it. Should
it be allowed. he argued, ii should be "all
or nothing at alt."
The military judge is considerin_g
allowing admission of a censored \'f'rsion
that v,.ou\d eliminate hearsay and other
inadmissible statements.
Rothblatt and Lt. CoL Frank Dorsev.
the chief military defense attorney, a!So
bitterly objected to delays in the lrial.
now in its sixth week. They charged the
prosecution has sc hed uled witnesses a nd
introducti on of documents in such a ·v.1ay
tha t the defense had inadequate time. to
exercise "effectiveness of counsel."
Jn the tria l itself. one of the scheduled
witnesses this week is Lt. Gen. William
R. Peers. v.·ho headed lhe high priority
investigation of My Lai in late 1969 and
early J970.
lienderson, 51, took command of the
America! Division's 11th brigade one day
before a unit of the brigade made the
assault on My Lai. The head of the task
force \l'1:1S Col. Prank Barker, who later
died in a helicopter crash.
Untll now, numerous out-of-court hear-
ings have concentrated on whether
Barker prepared and submitted a formal
report on th e Jl.1y Lai operation when it
v.•:is over.
\Vitnesses a t these hearings h11.ve
testified that whi!e they were convi nced
it existed. exhaustive searches and in·
ter\Piews hal'e turned up no information
as to its possi ble whereabouts.
The go\'ernment is onl.v a little past the
halfv.·ay point in its presentation. the
defr nse is expected lo lake even more
lin1c. and the case is not expected to All
hefore the Jury until some t ime 1n
Derrmber.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew told !he
nallon't top law enforcement officers t~
day at Anaheim '1 Convention Center that
the Attica prison riot has become ''yet
another cause celebre in the pantheon of
radicaJ revolutionary propaganda.'
Murder Case
Suspect Said
Brainwashed
By TOM BARLEY
Of ~ OlllY Pli.t lt•ft
A Newport Beach psychiatrist's ":Veek
long interviews with accused Marine
JI.lark Johnson were condemned today as
''brainwashing" by a Berke 1 e :,·
psychologist called as the first defense
witness in the. San Clemente man's
Orange County Superior Court murder
trial. '
Dr. David Wilson characterized the
psychiatric sessions between Dr .
'f'heOdore Lindauer snd the 20.year..old
defendant as "a good job of interroga-
tion" which considerably reduced John·
:son's will to resist.
Wilson agreed with defense attorney
Ray Sharp that Johnson was a passive
type of person who reacted in a typical
fashlon to the suggestion that char{'?! of
first degree murder would be filed
against him if the kind of statements
desired by the prosecution were not
forthooming.
Lindauer told the prosecution that his
series of interviews with Johnson -the
session.s luted between 25 and 30 hours
-left him with the impression that the
young Marine policeman was implicated
in the killing on June 16, 1970, of Connie
Lyna Johnson.
J ohnson is accused of clubbing his
pregnant wife with a bar stool .and lhen
stabbing her more than 20 times. He !son
trial for secol'ld degree murder.
Johnson told police shortly after the
killing that he found Mrs. Johnson's blood
splattered body sprawled on the bed in
their apartment at 416 Monterey Lane
when he returned from duly at Santa Ana
Marine Corps Air Statio n.
J ohnson told district attorney's in-
vestigators shortly before hi! arrest A
year later that he knew he had killed hi!!
Y•ife but could not recall the actual
details of !he murder.
He testified under the innuence of
sodium amytol that he recalled hitting
her "'ith the bar stool after cli mbing
through the window of the apartment but
could not recall the stabbing other than
the fact that he believed he washed off
the blood in the shov•er.
Johnson .admitted he :.nd h.is wife fre-
uently quarreled because he in:sistPd on
using marijuana. And he admitted to in-
vestigators that he liad been using pot
5horUy before the killing Bnd that his
wife had locked him out of the apart·
ment.
Wilson testified t.oday that he did not
beli eve addic tion to marijuana led to
violence. The psychiatrisl. who is also a
qualified attorney, said he had ne ver
hea rd of a case in which pot smoking
could be directly attributed to any crime
of violence.
Lindauer fesli£ied last week lhal
Johnson's psych.iatric makeup ~·as
directly attributable lo the punishment he
had recei\'ed as a child from his
dominant mother.
"The real issue is not prison reform,"
said the vice pre.sldent, speaking at the
78lh Annual Conference of the lnte.rna-
tional Chiefs o( PoUce.
''Now the name 'Attica" joins the list
of geographic places and l.logans whose
Flaniing Eagle
Spa rks Bwze
A low Oying eagle collided with a
high vo ltage line causing a brush
fire whi ch burned over three acres
of hilly land Saturday about a mile
south of UC!, Orange County Fire
Department officers reported.
Officials said the. eagle's feathers
were set fire and as the bird fell to
the ground the dry grass was ig-
nited.
Fire units from Orange County
Airport subdued the blaze in about
an hour.
Law Cooperation
Said Esse ntial
To Curb Crime
Greater cooperation by all segments of
law enforcement -perticularly judges -
is C!Sentlal te curb America's growing
crime rate, one. government official
declared today.
The remarks emerged from one panel
discussion during the 78th Annual Con·
ference of the International AMOCiation
of Chiefs or Police convened at the
Anaheim Convention Center.
Joseph Kaitz. a member of the New
York City Waterfront Coolmi&!ion, said
policemen can't handle the monumental
job alone.
Courts, prosecutors. pr o b a t i o n
departments and parole boards are all
equeJ!y responsible for a new commit·
mcnt, he said.
''Everyone concerned with ·taw and
order is responsible. And that goe1 for
judges too, who :should play a greater
role in reportiog breakdowns ~·here they
occur." Kaitz remarked.
"And they should work more closely
V.'ith the police to help reduce crime -
ou r nation's No. 1 problem," be con-
tinued.
Assemblyman,
Wife Injured
CLOVERDALE (AP) -A:iisemblyman
and Mrs. Frank P. Belotti were seriously
hurt Sunday night In an auto accident on
Highway 128 north of here in Sonoma
County.
The 73-year-old Eureka Republican and
his wHe, Delphone, according to reports.
were hurt when their car ran off the road
into a shallow creek.
Belotti 5uffered a broken neck, while
his 60-year-old wife had fracture8 of the
skull . hip and wrist.
A spokesman 11 t Santa Rosa Memorial
Hospital said the couple was in •·guarded
('nndition."
very uUerancie, in the Utany of an li·
American hate. preached by radical pnr-
pagandlsts, is a dagger at the heart of
our country'& free institution.Ii," Agnew
said.
"Cerlalnly lhc members of ~s au-
Angela Davis
Court Trial
Gets Dela y
SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (API -A
Superior Court judge today delayed the
start of the murder·kldnap trial of black
militant Angela Y. Davis to Nov. I.
The 27-year-old avow!d Communist and
former UCLA philosophy Instructor was
scheduled to go on trial today on murder,
kidnap and conspiracy charges stemmin.'(
from the Aug. 7, 1970 shoot.out al lhe
Marin County courthouse in which four
persons died.
Howard Moore Jr., chief counsel for
Miss Davis. asked for a continuance of
the trial, noting th.al several motions -
including one to move the trial from
~tarin County to San Francisco -had
not been heard.
PrOMCUtor Albert Harris Jr., the assis·
tant state attorney gerltral, said he had
"no alternative" but to agree to resetting
the trial date since under California law
all motiom must be heard before a trW
begins.
Judge Richard E. Amason then set
Monday, Nov . t at 9: 15 a.m. for the atart
of the trial. He asked Miss Davis, who
was wearlng a blue miniskirt and paisley
blouse, whether she agreed to the new
date.
"Yes t do," ~he replied. Arnason an-
nounced that Arguments on the pending
motions would be heard Oct. 4. He said
the motion to move the trial site would be
the last heard. The defense has also filed
a motion to suppres.! certain evidence.
At the start of the brief hearing. Moore
introduced a new attorney added lo the
defense team. Doris Walker, white
member an Oakland law firm.
2 Coootians Die
In Auto Crasl1es
A mother of four 11nd 11 17-year-old
bicyclisl were killed in separate weekend
county traffic accidents. the Orange
County Coroner's Office reported.
~frs. Ma rie Freeman, 36, of 10572 Mal·
Jard Drive, Ganfen Grove, died Saturday
night in a three-car accident at
Westminster Avenue at Taft Street in
Garden Grove.
Mrs. Freeman WB!!I waiting to leave a
parking Jot when two other cars coll ided
and one. of them slammed broadside into
her vehicle. Three other persons and her
four children were injured.
PRula Cla udette Weber. 17. of 1371
Debo rah Drive, Sanla Ana. was killed
late Saturday when the bicycl e she was
riding was struck from behind by a car
on Red HilJ Avenue at Sierra Alta Drive
near Tustin.
California Highway PRlrol hais the ac·
cident unde r inve.~tlgation.
dlence would be among the first to
recognize that , though the place n1me1
and slogans change, the modus operandi ,
ln the development of these ce.lebrated
radical lert causes remains the aame;1
Agnew said.
''This holds true. from their Genes!•
until lheir final anointment by editorial
polemicist!!, who then righteously display
them al! the latest example,; of the en-
during guilt of American society."
Agnew said that one would have to
follow the eventr; at AtticA "With the uf,
most-diligence" to determine that the in· ·,
stigatorl! had cr iminal record!!,
"The ultimate issue at Attica "'as not
prison reform,'' Agnew aaid. "No, the
issue at Attica -like the issue involved
whenever the orderly processes of • free
society are confronted by those "ho place
themselves abo\'e or beyond the law -~
whether that society's free institulloru1
are to survive or go under."
Agnew said that in the past 10 yean.
ll.33 American law enforcement orflt:er•
have been kil led as a result of crimlnal
actiOJ'I. •
"When those who protect us are at· ~
tacked. we are all attacked," Agnew said.
''When those who safeguard our in·
slitutions are endangered, our instltuUons "
are endangered. ~
..When those few assigned to uphold ·•
our laws give their live! in the conduct or
their duty, then we, the many who
:survive, have a renewed respomlbility t&
see to it that their sacrifice was nol in
vain -that the government of law for.
which they died Is uphdd 1pimt ._
who would destroy IL"
"If. then, there Is a larger lesaon lo be
drawn from the loss of life at AWca., it ii
that Americans who value our 1y1tem
and its free institutions cannot m-
derestimate the potential for violence and
destruction inherent in any radical mili-
tant movement," Agnew said.
Hartke Blasts Nixon .
ONTARIO, Calif. (UPI ) -Sen. Vance
Hartke (D-lnd.). urging an all-out effort
to unseat President Nixon In 1972, ha1 ac-
cused the chief executive or blatantly
lying for his statements on the Vietnam
War.
"Politicians have broken promiMI
before and gotten away wit h it," Hartlul
tol~he California Democratic State een ..
tral Commitee Saturday. "But never h.at
an American President lied so blatantly
for 60 long as has Richard Nixon on the
war in Vietnam." ,··
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Rafael Fontan correctly forecast
the outcome of 14 matches played
in Spain Sunday. The elderly
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newsmen leamed of his win. The
previous largest pool in Spain.
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\Vorks like m ag ic to enhance the flavor or even the f inest meat. 2 %, oz.
•
Ju!t the kind the tea cher likes·~ •.. but !O C-run~hy crisp thaf even the mos t pri:r:ed pupil will he!it.ate to rive
one away I So put a couple in htlf~er?) lunch •.. and have some on hand for a. moat welc.ome after school treat!
P-rice1 i-n. ef f erJ, Mon., Tutff .. lVcd ., Sept.17, t8. 19
No~' to dealers.
Frosted Shakes ... 6 for
Borden'• make.a 'm so delicioual 91/iii oz. &ize ••• 4 flavo~ t.o choose from I
P-nut Butter .......... 49,c
Smooth or crunchY,, .• trY, Springfield for volue ... 16 oz. jar at~· prloe!
Welch's Jelly and Preserves ....................... 49•
Choose you r favorite ••• jelly, jam or pretierves ••• bir 2 0 ou.nce jar!
Saran Wrap ................. so 1001 ioti. ..•.......... 33•
Making 1andwicht!5? ••. saving lt:!ft..overs! •• -• wrap 'em in Saran. v
ARCADIA : Son.et "'~ H1111\1nglon D1 :;:iii· PASADENA : :',1iil· SOUTH PASADENA ~ i'/i,:. HUNTINGTON BEACH : ::,i,' NEWPORT BEACH : !177 Nr•r'°'' Bl1.I ·'"
ll R,111rh o Center) . Jt'O We ',! Col!lrado ~tvrl Ir· 11~1,I 1'11! H1 1 1!1•11'1u.i l1r 'N.1111 r.1 ;111!1 Al;i~1nrp1111 ~11]r~w1I\. f P11 fr1 1 )',','1 ~I' !lilull Di 1f a\!liln1' V 1ll J ~e CrntP!
' I
•
•• DAU.V PILOT Monday, Stpttmbtr 27, 1971
KGB Seen Behind British Spy Furor
•' I ~ps
LONDON (UPI) -East European
&ources indicated today Soviet 1ecret
police (KGB) may have purposely chan·
neled some in!ormation on Ru.!sian in-
telligence activltie.! to Briti.!h authorities
in order to undermine the Kremlin's pol·
lcy of accommodation with the West.
The KGB, a Jaw unto itself in the Soviet
Union, wields tremendous power there
and, despite de-Slalinizalion. has re-
mained an all-Influential arm in the
hi,l!he.r polii-y C()Uncils of the Kremlin .
The KGB'..-polici~. the sources !Ug·
ge.sted, have often run aJ ong independent
lines and not Infrequently have opposed
the golo'emment'! softer moves in the
spheres of international relations.
The sources recalled a case several
years ago of a West Gennan electronics
engine.tr who was severely injured in an
attack with acid. That attack was ascrib-
ed tll the doings of the KGB, in outright
conflii-t at the time with wftening
government policy roward Wits t
Germany.
WC(tern d.iploma.1.ic sources said the.
Kremlin'.! foreign policy maker! may,
onCf; the present skirm has passed, try
quJckly to curb the KGB '! activities and
apparent power ambitions.
Communist diplomats a re un·
d"~dably cagey in th eir discussion of
KGB actlvltles, aJthough some of the
Ea~t European11 apparently have good
rea to resent their attempb at m«f.
dling in their nalioo's affairs.
There is "cooperation" between the
KGB and Its East European coun·
terµarl.s. but the Moscow organization is
r<!portedly acllng strictly on its own. us-
ing whatever assisting "branches" are at
its disposal outside Russia with due
~range Coast
!fid e Tur1ting W RMI WJiMip&p i\W) Hp pp!+ ;: WWW:ijh# W ¥&i;gl&!igp 1gm:ttWCQM · ;t.z; 4=E* 1 "'* •+•?!
:.l'· "' By THO:'t1AS r.tURPRtNE ..,.? or 1111 D•tl1 ~1111 5t•lf :... ·~ON THE BEACH: -These days you
"':lave all kinds of folks campaigning for ~;tireservatlon of our natural assets and for
~nservation in general. Like In the prG-
jlflotion of all causes. most of these people
.are factual. thoughtful and persuasive.
A few olhers, however. go to the wilder
£ide, like some of the writi ngs that have
recenUy represented the C a l i f o r n i a
'Coastal Allia\:e. In these, the phrase,
''the rip off "'° the California coast"
seems to be a favorite theme.
And the Orange Coast in particular ap-
•pears to be a favorite target.
· The SO<alltd "rip off'' is slangish for
suggesting that rich and evil forces are pt work to capture the coastline for
private use which will eventually destroy
rt.
ORANGE COUNTY and the Orange
Coast is a particularly (avori te targct....for
these kinds of attack.!. This occur•
beca use our home area has long been
considered by other places et 1) Rich. 21
IAnservative. 3J Des i r a b I e. 4)
Republican. 5) Growing.
Additionally, there are large private. in-
terests here such as the Irvine Ranch and
Standard Oil y,•hich have some key
holdings in areas considered prime for
public recreation or conservation.
For some minds, all of this is enough to
m<1 ke us suspect. •
!"'-'
St1uJents Protest
-, '
SO. WHEN TUE Orange Coo.st gets at-
tacked as part of th e "rip off of the
California Coast" il is pe r haps
worthwhile to pause for a moment and
review the record. For example, how are
we doing in the area of providing public
beaches and water areas for recreation
purposes~
Well. most recently just last week, the
Or ange County Board of Supervisors ap-
proved purchase of 22 acres of upla nd s
and 11 acres of beach -including 4.800
(eel of shoreline -for public use at Salt
Creek. The price was $2.5 million.
Opposing the European visit of Emperor Hirohito
and Empress Nagako, radical students demonstrat-
ed 1.n the streets near Tokyo International Airport
early today. The emperor and his wife left by air·
liner for a meeting with President Nixon_jn Alaska
and a goodwill tour of Europe.
Prior to that : U.S. Shows Trade Deficit
-The county purchased Aliso Beach in ·
6outh Laguna, built I pier, parking lot D ·1 N. s cl ge
'"d "'PP'"' fac ihties and converted it in-esp1 e IXOll ' ur 1ar to a public heach .
-The city of Laguna Beach purchased
ltli Ma in Beach frontage to assure public
access and use.
-The state. negotiated and obtained •
5ect1on of Cam p Pendleton Beach be.low
a..~n Ctemente and may obtain the releue
•f even more beai-h!ront for the public.
WASHIN GTON (AP) -Despite Presi·
dent Nixon 's import surcha rge the U.S.
blllance in trade ran in the red (or the
filth month in 11 row in August as
Americans imported $259.7 million more
in goods than they exported.
The deficit "'BS slightly improved from
July, when it ran to $304 million. But the
tnta l deficit for 1971 so far stands at
$936.1 million. which compares "'lth a
$2 .2 billion surplus for the same period a
year earlier.
-The county puri-hased and con-
structed Sunset Aquatic Park in the Hun·
tington Beach-Sunset Beach area.
-Thf' count)' and fed eral governmtnl
obtained properly and constructed Dana
Harbor in Dana Point.
IS ADDITION , erforts are under way
for creation of public shoreline park
are3s bet\\·een Laguna Beach and Corona
dt•! !\tar in such choice spots as El ~Iorro
Beach, Scotchman ·!'i Co,·e and Cryst..al
C<n·e
Wicks
,
Unfavorable trade flgures were among
!he chief reasons for President Nixon's
new economic policy annou nce d Aug. lri.
The policy include:s a 10 peri-ent added
tax on most imports . A tax wh ich lhe ad·
minislr3Hon is us ing as a bargaining tool
to Eeek a realignment nf international
currency rates to help correct the trade
deficit .
It had not been e.xpei-led that Au gust
lrade figures would show the effects of
the surcbage because it was announced in
mid-month and did not apply lo goods
that were in shipment at that limr. 11 woulri he less than honest to sugge.!t ,,-r haven't made some mistakes in lhe
past in shnrcl!ne planning and cnn·
S('r\'atlon. But the tide seems lo be turn·
ing ~ .__r-~ a
1-larold C. Passer. ass ist.ant i;ecretar~
of Commerce for ~nomic affairs. said
lhe West Coast doc k strike. '"'hlch began
,July I . "continued to exerci5e a dam·
pt>nin¥. innur.nce on both export s ;ind im·
port ~. I suspei-t that in some C1\her area s -
maybe '"'here some of the loudest con-
servation noises are cominc fr om -they
might hav e a tough time mat ching thP.
record of the Orange Coast in recent
years.
----~
'How do I know this
drink ain't polluted?'
''There were few signs nf diversion of
l'Xports to other ports," he said. "but
diversion of imports to East Coast and
Gulf ports. as well as to overland rou tes,
was clearly evident.'' Let 's hope they try.
North Chilly, South Warm
Freeze Warnings Alread y Out in New England
Callfornl a
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5 Go on Trial
In Greece; Fac e
Escape Sc hen1e
ATHEN S (AP ) -Five persons, in-
i-luding Lady Amalia Fleming and two
Americans. "'ent on trial before a special
tribunal today on charges they conspired
to sprln,e: a would·bc assassin from his
Greek prison.
A standing·room crowd packed the
courtroom of the Military Justice
Bulldinp; as the trial beg an before a
tribunal or four army officers and a
civilian judge.
1..ady Fleming, "'idow of the Scottish
scientis t who discove red penicillin, was
arrested Aui:. 31 along with two
Americans and a Greek national. The
government said they were about to e:i.:-
e:cute a plan to free a priso ner convicted
of attempting lo assassinal.e Premier
George Papadopou los.
All "'ere charged "'ith associ11tion for
cons piracy and for hiding a prisoner.
Lady Fleming, 62. hold.! Gerek and
British citizenship. The ot hl'r defendants
are R.ohf'rt Skelton. 2fi . of Yardley, Pa.,
tll rs. Atht>na Psvhog1os, 42. ol Min-
ncapo!1 s, fl1inn., and Co 11 s t a n ti n e.
Androut sopoulos. 30 , of Ath ens.
A f1f1h defe nd Rnl. a Greek soldier who
gua rded the prisoner. "'BS charged with
fa iling to tell his military superiors of the
alleged escape plans. The prisoner, Alex-
ander Panagoulis, was sentenced to death
In 1968, but his execution was ata yed
following protests in t1everal countries.
Lady Fleming. an Athens re.sident,
became a British subject art.et aht mar-
ried Scottish gcJenlist Sir Alexander
Fleming in 1955.
Russia Welcomes
Mrs. Gandhi, Ne'v
All y From India
MOSCOW (UPI) -Prime Minister
Indlra Gandhi of India arrivP.<I today in a
glow of Soviet-Indian good fellowship for
two days of consultation.! with her new
treaty partners.
Mrs. Gandhi'a plane arrived at
~lMCOw's Vnukovo Airport about 1 p.m.
after nying a circuitous route to avoid
Weal Parklstan airspace. Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin greeted her al the airport.
The Soviet press publlclud her visit ex-
tensively and hailed her u the leader of
a government that had raised India'•
economic well·being and pursued a
Soviet-approved foreign policy o f
nonali!nment.
It ~ so cited the So 11 I et -r n d i a n
friendship treaty, slgnP.<I in August. as an
alliance th~t "helps move aside. the
threat of a mllilary connicl that arose In
connection with the evrnt.s In East
Pakistan.''
"Welcome. esteemed ~trs. Gandhi.''
the press nollces said .
She also rece!vrd an admiring sendoff
from demonstrator8 In Ntw Of.lb!.
1usplclon and contempt.
The East Europe.an aource1 hinted they
would not put It past the KGB to have
bad 1 hand in channeling some in·
rormaUon on their agents activltle.J to
Britsh authorities to cause • major rum-
pus. The information now available to
Brili Ml aulhoritie.l goeia far beyond Brtt.ain
and involves other Western countries.
They !uggested guardedly one of the
reasoru: may have been the KGB'• plan to
torpedo. or at least &low down, the cur-
rent Soviet political drive for Improved
re.lationa with Weat Germany, other West
Ii
Thieu Opposed
European countries and the United
Stat.es.
They described the KGB as the
toughest, most hardline outfit that is cur-
rently operating within the bloc. with ten•
tacle1 stretched on a !C&lf' even unknown
to some o1 the Kremlin's top politlC81
leaders.
The present KGB chief. Yuri V.
Andropov. reputedl y is or was a friend ot
party chief Leonid Bre:t.hnev. But, the ex·
perts said, KGB chiefs seem to be. in the
habit of going their own way once in
power, and thal power Is very tempting.
'HG W 4 IN M?*
_Five Viet Cities
Hit by Protests
SAIGON (UPI ) -Demonstrations
against the one-man reelection race of
President Nguyen Van Thieu broke out
~ay in five of South Vietnam'.11 bigge st
cities, The demonstrations took an anti·
American tone in the Mekong Delta city
of Can Tho where three U.S. vehicles
were firebombed.
Thieu forces organized their own pro-
govenunent demonstration in Saigon but
only about 25 veterans turned up.
Thieu scheduled a telev ision ap-
pearance. ~onight with hi.! running mate,
former Prime Minister Tran Van Huong,
to discuss hi.! "campaign platform." The
President says he is running for a vote of
confidence from the Vietna mese people
sinc e all opposition dropped out of th~
race four weeks ago. charging that he
was trying to rig the elections.
A leading opposition senator told the
government today to stop blaming it.!
mistakes on the Communists, and
criticized police for using excessive force
in putting down anti-g ov ernment
demonstrations.
I Da Nang, the ooun Lry's second la.rgest
i-ily, polii-e. cofronled disabled veterans
and high school students who tried to
march on a main .street carrying anti·
Thieu banners and pictures of the Presi·
dent v.·1tb !I cross drawn 11cross his fa ce.
Police fired tear ga.'l to break up the
demonstratio n and the students respond-
ed by tossing firebombs and 111 least two
fragmentation grenades, only one of
v.·hich went off. One policeman v.•as
slightly wounded.
La ter the demo~trators, who retreated
Into their headquarters. tried to bring the
banners out again. Al that point the
police pulled ou t and regular South Viet·
namese army troops, armed with
machine.guns, v.·ere brought in for
another conf rontation. A thir d grenade
was thrown and five more persons v.·ere
s!ightly wounded. but th ere was no gun-
fire and the protest broke up at midafter-
noon.
In Qui Nhon. the fourth largest city 250
miles northeast of Saigon, about 100
veteraru an? war w1dows also ripped
dov.·n campaign posters. burned them tn
the streel.s, and marched on the province
he11dquarters.
Only Bien Hoa. the fifth largest city,
Brezhnev Ends
Balkan Travels
SOFIA, BulgAria fUPll -Leonid I.
Brezhnev flew home loday after a three.-
day visit to Yugoslavia and lightning
stops in Hungary and Bulgaria to report
on his talks "'ith Pre.~ideot Tito.
Brezhnev was given a full ceremonial
fare\\·cll y,·hen hill Jlyushin·62 jetliner took
off here for f\.1oscow. barely 20 hour.!
after he arrived from Budapest. His gala
greeting here was in .stark contr11st to the
low yrofil e nf his ahnO!St secre:t 24-hour
stop in Hungary,
China Trip Ends
which is a suburb of Saigon. apparently
remained. free of demonstrations today.
ln Can Tho , authorities said, four
disabled Vietnamese veterans forced a
U.S. Army station wagon tn slow down,
hurled a firebomb wh ich destroyed the
vehicle, and · then threw rocks at the
fleeting Vietnamese driver. No one was
hurt.
Nixon to OK
Trans-Alaska
ANCHORAG E. Alaska (UP[) -Presi ·
dent Nix on Sunday hinted strongly he
would approve the controversial trans·
Alaska oil pipeline but would give no con·
create oi ssu rances on th11 proposal to
move oil from Alaska's north slope to
shipping ports on th e .!iouthern i-oast
The President said Secretary of !he
Interior Rogers C. B. f\.1orton was prepar·
ing an analysis or the en vironmental
aspects on whether to go ahead v.·ith it
this fall .
In a statement issued shortly after his
arrival in Anchorage to y,•elcome
Emperior Hirohito of Japan nn his tv.·o·
hou r reviewing .stopover, Nixon said,
"Secretary Morton informed me just
before my departure from Wa shington
that the Department of Interior is in the
final stages of preparing the le~a\ly-man·
dated environmental statement of the
pipeline proposal.
"That sta tement wil! examine nol only
the environmental impact nf the. pipeline
and marine transport sys tem, but also
their economic impact on the. state of
Alaska, -their effect on Ala skan n;itives
and the alternative means for the move·
men! of Arctic oil."
Environmentalists and conservationists
have been fighting the pipeline in the
courts. An analysis of the env ironmental
impact of the pipeline was required of
f\-torton under a federal court injunction.
Nixon said signific;int portions of the.
impact analysis had bee n prepared "'it h
the assistance and actil'e cnllaboration of
the state of Alaska and the Uni\'ersi!y of
Alaska. He. indicated th:il he feels the
pipelin f' may be able tn ~o ahead
"Base.d on th(' infnrm;itinn n111v :it
hand." he said. "I do not bcl!C\'e th.1t the
apparent confl ict bet11·een nil and the en·
vironment represcn1s a pc.rm :,neot 1m·
passe. ··
Morton in an 1ntervie\\' \\'l1h l, S. New~
and World RC'rort said Ille p1pe linr roav
n1n from Alaska's norlh1Hn sl11ftt! throu::h
Canad a to the. 48 c:onliguous st11te s. 1 le
s11id Ottawa has not been approacher!
about the possibility but a gas pipeline i.!
already planned in Canada.
Noted Docwr Dampens
Mao Sickness Rumors
. HONG _ KONG (AP ) -:--American heart specialist Dr. Paul Dudley White
sa1_d on arrival from Peking today that he sa w nolhing during b!s stay In
China fl) ~upporl rumor! th at Communist party Chairman Mao Tse-tung hi .sick
. White. an 85-year-old Boston cardiologist who treated the late President
Dwight D. Ei~nhower, said he heard the speculation that Mao la seriously ill
only when he hstened to a Western radio broadcast.
He i;a ld he. asked Chin~se doctors about the radio report and they indicat.
ed no knowledge of 1erious dines.!. White said he had no personal conhict wlth
Mao or other government leaders during his 12-day stay,
. Rumor• began bubbling af&e.r Pe.kin& canceled it.i; tradi lional Oct 1
National Day parade. for the first time since the Communist.! seized poy,·e.~ 22 yean: ago. The talk included .!peculation that Mao had died or fallen g I
tll or tha~ Chin~'! top leaders wert engaged in a .power .!lruggJe. rave Y
Wh.Jte !Rid doctors In Peking told him the p11rade was called off simply
because 1t had become too ela borate.
. · "They explained that lhe.y want more people to take. part in the celebra.
ti_?"'S on Oct. I, and they are going to divide the population up among !eve al big parks," he addP.<I. r
~lte deplored _ rumors that he had gOne to China to lrtat ~1ao ror 11 he1trl ailment and said he had no idea whether the 77-ytar-old Chinese leader
act\lally 1ufrtred fro m heart trouble. He .!aid he traveled to Peking Al th
vitaUon of the Chinese Mrd ical Association. f' Ill·
.TtJe An:ierican praised st~ndard.! ati.a ined by Chinese doclor! and s;ild
tht y are do1ng 11 magnificent JOb, especially ""ilh the rural population in lh
..communes. whtre 90 percent ()f the ~pie Jive.'' e.
He sa id his 12-day vi1il was •·a remarkably fine. txpe.rlence."
. While wa.! 11ccompanltd by his wife. In a, Rnd by Or. Edmund Grry
0 1atnDnd of K1tnM5 City 1nd Di•mond'a wife, Mary,
7
7
----
New·po••t Beaeh
EDITI ON
..
Today's Final -• N.Y. Stocks -
--·
YOC. 64, NO. 23 I, 3 S~CTIO NS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1 ~7 1 TEN ' CENTS
Corona-Del Mar Freeway Stalled by Cutbacl{s
Cutbac:ks in federal ~µe.11rli 11g have forc-
f'd !hf' Cahfurni;i Div1~1u11 of Highways In
delay its eon.~t rul'lion 1111n'table fo r both
the Corona def ~1ar a11d Orange free-
w11ys, lhe S1att' l'llhhL \\'orks Uep<1n-
menl sanl toda).
The Corona Ul'l ;o.1ar Freey;;i\' schc<lul ·
ed tu he hui11 in segn1e11ts !hroUghout the
next five rears. will be pushed one year
hack on !he !i111c1able. al"cording to Jack
Pedd,v. assistant state highway engineer
for prugr;-irn n111nage1ne11t.
...
Daniel Peng illy, chief engineer for
budge! and control. said the Orange
l"reeway ..,.,·hieh is still in the pl;1r1ni11K
stages through the coastal are<i . will
likewise be affected as ..... 111 counlless
other projects throughout Califo rnia .
lie blamed the delays on new revenue
estimates that forecast a 12 percent drop
1n fede ral aid through the next six years.
Tht' federal govern1nent pays 92 per·
l't'lll Of the ('OSl of interstate highways
and 70 percent of the cost of other
primary su per highways such as these
two free..,.,·ays.
Pengilly sa id the exact effect of the
reductions in re\'enues "·ill not be known
until the state adopts its 1972·73 planning
progran1 next spring.
Peddy said the effect this year was
more than anticipated as California was
due to receive a total of $339 million but
this had been trimmed by $144 million.
"We have been told that this is being
PA RADE WATCHERS GATHER ON SIDEWALK AT FASHION ISLAND TO VIEW RARE EVENT
Yo u Do n't Often SH • Parad• in New port Beach. All Thi, •nd Lobster Too
N e·1vport' s 21st
Lobster Bllke
Terrned 'Success'
'rhref' tons of lobs!cr and about 1.5UO
sirloin s!e<1k Uinner!i were served thi.~
past \Veckcnd by lhc B<ilboa Ba.v Lions
Club at its n1os 1 successf11I Lobster B<ikC'·
L';1rn1v11\ ever.
Thi! ti s1 annua1 1.obstcr Bake was
highl1gh1 cd for 1he first lim<' by a n13Jur
p11r:ide throu).?h Fa!:>liion Island. 1~·hich at··
cording to 1>0l1ec drrw an c~timate<l J.000
t:pcclalors
Profi1 s for !he <'I cnt 1v1ll "ncore Lhan
quadruple any1h1ng 11·e did on the
beachl':-.."' .\1;irio Pacini b::ike cha1rn1a11.
s,1id !oda~·
Tiu• ha~t· 11r1:-. 111<-ved (ron1 Corona dcl
\l:ir bc<1cht·~ 10 F':i sl\11111 Island to <1r-
1·onin1oda!r a p:1rad.. and a lar(.!f'r
rn1dv. ;11
·•\\ r «1u.l :1 ~ !IHI( h hu~tnc·~~ hi·rr nn Fri
din al1111(' fl~ 1,f' ihd 111 111P da~·s corn·
b11;t'd .<it the br;it'h l';1r1n1 !".aid
P;.u·i111 ~;lid !hi~ 1f':lr ~ i;ucees~ will pro·
h:ihl~· 1n:11\e 11H' 1no1{' to '.t»,.por1 Ccnif'r"
;i prrn1:<nen1 11111• l 'lnn~ nrP :<lrt«Hl.1 ht'lll~ 1n:-id~· h•r nt'~t
1c:-ir 10 hflvt· {'11·1\ !~r~('I" rHrn11al rid <.·s.
Pricin 1 ~;11d
Singer 111 M o~pita l
"\1UNICH. Gennany 1AP 1 A ~pokesman for American gosp~l sin~er
t-.lahalia Jackso n says she 1s being
1reated in a U.S. Anny hospital her<' for
a serious ci rculatory ailment.
"She n·as in considerable pain v.·ht:n sht>
was admilled to the hospital Friday," thr
spokesman said Sunday. '"S~ ha s a
histor y_ of a hea'.·\. ailment and has been
1·onsulting physicians for i;on1t days
1100ul her condition."
Ora age roast
Weather
Those on1inous clouds v.·ill clear
by n11d-day today and Ttiesda),
\\'ith n1o~lly sunny skies in the
afternoons. Highs along the coast.
65 ri sing to 7:'1 inland. Lows tonight
between 57 and sa.
INS IDE TODA l'
\\'l1C'n 's 11ic hes! tanf' lo b1111'.'
f119J11 1101t\ before rh r free:r
,nelr.~. occo1·cl11111 10 S11h;u1 Port·
r:r .i;:;f'f !1c 1 riull/jj;;I( 1J 11 /.'c.:(Je 30
1oda11
l tllllll " '"" Lt lll otl ..
Cl lllft"lllt " ~ ... • (M c•f"' Ut .. "'''""'•! Ntw• .. c11n1 t11tt ll·.11 o ...... t 1w11!1 " t lflllt• .. Sylwlt ....... • (••11-·-.. '"''' U·J1
0••111 NOll<U " Slit-Ml••th ....
01 ....... " Ttlt ,.h ie!! ,.
l!~l!•r!•t ..... • ""'''" • 1E11t1t!f!ll"'f"1 ,. Wtl!h..-• ,lllH<• ~ .. WHllt ft'• "''""' 11·11 HlrtKIH .. Wt•lll ,.,.,., ..
Nixo11 Bacl{ i11 Capital
Af te1· W ea1·y Alas I{ a Trip
ANCHORAGE iLlPI 1 -Tu rnin g fron1
an historic gesture in 1ntern;1t1onnl
diplornac~· lo pressing don1estil· prn·
blcms. Presi den l Nixon flev. hack Iv
Y..'ashinglon today lrn111 his rnt•e1ing 11,•ilh
,Japanese En1peror Hirohito.
The President and his v.'ife P<11 bo<1rded
1\ir Forl'e One in bright. ~5-rlegrec weatl'l·
rr at El1nendorf Air ForC'e Hase and took
off al 9:22 a.111. Alaska tin1e l ll.22 a.111.
PDT1 for the six -l1our. 20-mi nut e fhghl.
Their departure 1vas delnyed for nearly
Partygoer Make.~
Rou1uls We aring
Lt111; 1nc111 '.~ 1-1 a/,
Sornftunes it's h:ird 111 11;'11 lhr g•hJd
guys f1·01n the bad gu ys. unl<'S!i \Oii c11lt•h
th<'nl 11·1th llll'l'lll1Ul<ll1ni: l'l'l(li'llt'i'.
.';e1vpnrl Be;1C 11 pnlii·('. IT:1•·k1ng i'! .. wn
on ;i loud pu1·1y al 44/Jfl Seash1)f'(' U1~11t• ir1
\Vest Newpor( Frida y ni~hl. said till'\" ('11
eountcrecl so mr bad guys.
Dw·ing a rpelee that resulted. OHu·('r
Al Doom had hi s police baton stolen and
sun1eone n1~de off v.·1!h Sg!. Bill Speir:-·
ha1.
Came Saturday nigh!. Officer .Jan1es
Gardiner 11·as dis pa tched to another loud
party al 880 Irvine Ave . clear across 011
the other side or town.
ln~tigators discovered one party-goer
cavorting around with Sgt. Speirs· hat on
his head. while another Wils· alleged!~·
ar1ned wilh Ofrieer Doun,.s 11ightslick.
Lonn ie R. Caruthers. 22, of Z70 1 ~:bb
tide Road, Corona rlrl 1\lar. and Br ian .I
Henry. 20. of Man1 mo!h Lakell. werl;' in
city jail toda~'· boQked on suspicion of
possession or stolen property. ..
an hour to allow the presidential parly •
Fe1v rnorr minutes rest.
The President looked a bit "'eary after
Ills his!ory·rnaking meet ing v.·ith Hirohito
which \1'ent on until nf'arly 5 a.ni. f\olon-
dal' \\'ashingturi tinie . bu1 v.•as described
as···very . very pleased" 11'i1h how il wen!.
I! 111as brigh1. l'!ear. sunn y and cold in
Alaska when Nixon awoke aOOul ll a 111
li1ca l ti1ne. read 1he newspapers and
discussed briefly with aides his Sunday
11i~ht rnee!ing with !he ernpt'ror
ixon·s meeting lale Sunday night v.·11h
E1npcrior Hirohito marked the firsl time
1:1 Japancst> emperor had r ver left his own
t·oun1ry.
It capped ;1 bu~y 'ol·eekend ror thr
l'residt·nt. who visi ted four Pa cific
i\orllJ.w<'5l states. ·announcing a ~ll;'pped
up ato1n1c enf'riD' progra111. i11terve111 n~
persunally in the \\le~t Coast dock slrikt'.
:ind d11mpu1g a hHle coOt'rele into 1he Bii;t:
l.lbb\ dam I!! ;\lnn1.1nit
~1~nn·s 1n!rrcess1on !;aturday in the 8!1-
d:11 ·olcl dork strike \\'as 1he first surh ar-
1u1i1 he hacl f'Vf'!' !aken 111 a stri k€' s1ntr
hr heean1c f'resiclcut
111.~ 20·1n1nu1r n1eel1n~ 11·1111 l.ongshorr
lahnr leadrr ll<1rry Hndges and shippe rs
ncgo l iat o1:. E(! 1:1yn11 brought pledges
fron1 !hen1 10 1ry anrl end !he s1rike b.1·
1hts weckC'l'ld.
The strike by 1~.000 me 1nbers or the
Inte rnational Longshoremen's a n d
\Varehouse1nen's Union ( ILWU' has tied
up 25 \Vesl Coast ports an d idled nearly
200 ships since .July I.
Ni xon·s said his face·to-h1ce 1neeting
11 as "to bring to their attention the
urgency of reaching a settlement .'1
If East Coast dock workers strike when
their contract expires Thur!da:y, said the
!'resident. he \l.'ould consider it a national
emergency and invoke the 80-rlay "cool-
ing of[" injunction provisions of the Taf\-
Hart ley Art.
Sunday, Ni)(on loured the Alon11r
fSee NIXON, Page 2)
Boat Marooned
Vess el Agrou1td in Upper Ba)·
A San Fernando Valley couple who
came to the beach for some Sunday fun
didn't intend to exlcnd their sta y 2~
hours. but then time anrl tide 1va1t ror 00
1nan.
T~ Spencer Schram lam1 l:y"! 1!J.foot
cruiser was marooned In Upper Newport
Bay when the tide v.•ent out.
Trapped aboard the boat stuck fast in
the mud about 500 yn rds above the v.·ater
ski zone near the hearl of' the ba.~·.
Schram. his wife Adr·ian and 2-year·Qlrl
daughter Glenna ch~f' to wa11 it out
Schram .~houted ashore to a f)AILV
PILOT photographer !hi~ morninJ:: lhnt
lhey wtre out or food. but otherwise all
rlghl.
~
Spokesmen for the Orange County
Harbor Department said they received
word of the Schram·! predicament at
3:37 p.m. Sunday.
A Newport Beach police helico pter
ere'>'' was dispatched to the scene, but
S-aid Schram declined a Harbor Depart-
ment tow
Schram reportedly told them he would
rather just wait for the incoming tide" to
float the boat free today.
Harbor Department s po k e s m e tl
predicted today the. boat v.·ould be able to
get uncler v.'ay about :J p.m. v.·hen the high
tide lifts ll again.
They also llOted Schrnm·s plight is 11
relatively Frequent one for boaters
unaware of the Back B.ay"!i tu;~I q11lrk5.
• I
done as parl of the program of !ighung
inflation." Peddy said.
Under !he new tent<llive timetable the
1·onstruct1on of the Corona rlel ~lar
~·reeway 1v1ll not begin until early 1974
when the section from the San Diego
Freeway just east or Fairv iew Roarl iii
built connecting it to the in terchangr of
!he Newport Freew11y that i!'I now under
construction.
Dates for construction of the remaining
~ect1011s. lo Bonita Cany<.in Road and
perhaps beyond to the planned Pacific
Coast Free\\·ay sunply are not knO\\'n at
this tune, Peng11ly said.
Peddy pointerl out that the controversy
over the coastal route ha;; forced slate
engineers lo stop all planning for the
Corona del ~1ar Freeway below Bonita
Canyon Road.
The planned Ootinge Freev.·ay is un·
dergoing a series of preliminary studies
al the local level. Each t•ity that n1ay be
affected by the route -,,...hich tentatively
fol!o1vs the Santa Ana River south of the
Sant;i Ana Freeway -has formed study
co1nrTI1ttees hat have been given state
money to hire consultants to study the ef ·
feet of the proposed route .
The Orange Free1vay 1~ under con·
struction fron1 a poin t north of the Santa
Ana Freeway at 1!s intersection \~1th the
(.;arden Grovt: Free\Ya y north to tbe
Riverside FrCC\l'Cl)'.
Heiress Assailed
Mrs. Smith's Account Called Lies
One leading proponent of the proposed
city of Irvi ne issued a bitter. blistering
reply today to ranch heiress Joan Jrvine
Srni lh 's latest broadside attack against
the future city.
John Burton. chainnan of the Council
of Commu nities of Irvine declared -
among other charges -i'vlrs. Smith·~
statements published lasl week are a
mis leading pack or li es.
He also said !hey n1ade his ov.•n v.·ift
cry.
·rhe blonde heiress. owner of 21 percent
nf Irvine Company stock, had dug in with
both feet in her ba ttle to t!11va rt the ci\v
she predicts will be giant sltun. ·
She is oul of alignment with olht·r
Irvine fa111ily anrl corporate stockholders
on the issut< anrl her most recent at··
cusalions inflamerl CC I Ch a i r m a n
Burlon.
"My first reaction was amustment
111ixed with disgust." Burton declares in a
prepared slatemenl.
His remarks 10 on to show larr~ely
disgu!t •nd dismay.
.. We are no a rich «irl"s playthin1. We
Absentee Bond
Ballots A vailahlc
Newport Beat'h residents who will he
out of the city for the Oct 5 civic center
bond election and who wlsh to cast
.absentee ballots must apply for them by
!"! p.m. Tuesday. City Clerk Laura Lagios
said toda y.
Deputy City Clerk Doris George
reporterl this morning an unll.'!ually large
number of such ballots. 165, al rearly have
t»tn submitted lo her office .
She said the total may surpass the 194
casl du ring the l\-larch freeway electirii1
when 56 4 percent of the regislercd
\'Oters. a record in a local election. 11·en1
lo !hr polls
Absentee ballot appl1cat1ons 1nay be oh-
!ri1ned only at lhe clerk'~ office in t•1t.1
hall
E :1.-1p1ec 11 lo .\1 a rry~ -
LONDON 1Ll Pl 1 -Fornier Queen
Soraya of Iran will 1narry lta\tan f1l n1
director Franco lnclovinci. 1he Lond on
IJoily E~prcss said today.
The L)(press said J11dovu1a, '42 . and
~raya. 39, have been close companions
for the past five years.
are people.·· Burton fun1ed.
.. To think that iihe l~-lrs. Smith ) can fly
inlo Orange County from her estale in
Virginia. call prople names, spread lies.
flaunt her 'tnfl uence,' challenge people 's
111otives and !hen run away to play in a
European resort is incredible," he con-
tinues.
..II S<1ys so1ncthing aboul t\1rs . Smith.''
Burton adds. charging her wit h a cam-
paign designed to smear individuals and
rl istorl fat•ts 01nd confuse peo pl e and
issues.
Bur1on said hr called hornc F'rirlav
fron1 his No!'th American Rockwell offict?
u1 Anaheim tu find his wife in tears.
.. lt becan1e clear that lhis was a
vicious a!laek and r.1rs. Smith had done a
reC1lly terrible thing." Burton declares.
One alle11ation on which she wa s quoted
v.·as that the two-time CCI chairman had
offices in Irvine Com pany headquarters.
Burton charges Mr!'I. Smith failed to
not.e he W<ts elected CCi chairman -
twicr--by leaders of the incorporation-
! Ser. IRVINE. Page %)
CRITICIZES HEIRESS
Cityhood Proponent Burton
...
i '
Newport Officials Seek
Civic Center Bond Okay
t:dnoi"s 11orr : So11 rces for the jol-
lownig story on //ow Netupol'I Beach
proposes tn finance o 11ew c1v1c center
rn·e /Hayor £d /1irih, l'ity J.'iu.ance Di·
recto r George Pappas U)td Assista11t
("If!/ 1Wn11oyer P/ii/ip HettC'ncourt.
Uy L. PETER KRIEG or "'• tl•i!Y 1'1191 il•fl
.\e11'port Beach electors w11! go to the
polls Oe1. 5 to let! ci!y f<.thers if thry
1\<1nt general ob!iga1 ion bonds to pay the
eosl of the pla11ned $6.9 million city hall
and pohce station complex at Newport
Center
(;eneral obllgat1 on bond~ are the chcap-
t''! n1cthod or fin.1nici11g civ:..llable to a
111ur11eipalJty other lhan ··pay-as-you-go ..
liul tor uhla1 11 llH'ltl lwn 1h1rds of lht'
pi·11µle vu.ting 111 1hr bond elec:11on n1u~1
s;1v ··yes
"°rhai 1~ a 111::i .,ct;He achieved only or-
1·;1sion;..lly and so. i11 the past, many
t'llies have turnc<l 10 alternate f1nanc1ng
1nethods 1vhen passage by 66 i :i pcrt>en!
fails
This usually happens when a publ ic
• \,
I
body gains a majority of ",yes" vote!'!,
b<1! the ln!al f;.Jl s short ol the two-thirds
needed for general obligation boJids.
Other types of 20 and 25-ye ar notes are
iivailablc. and thrr can he obtained
ihrough jo1nl powrrS f1nilnc1ng, whereby
one publil' agencv cont ra('ts with another
10 fonn a papc·r agency v.•h1ch. u"der
!itatc lav.·, has th e au!hont~· to sell bond.~
"'1thout a \'Otr of !he fX."Ople.
Theoretically. tht>se bonds aren'1 back·
<'d by a deelar:..tion of tl1e people. JSn
the~· cu~! rnure 1n 111teresl. The Join t
pov.·ers system 1s contro1 cr~1al :ind there
have been anempts u1 the Leg1~lature to
do a1v:.iy with 11
On Srpl 15. 1%9. !hr (·Jly agreed Ln
buy a totill ol 19 02 !lr r<·~ froin the Jr1·1nr
C:oinpan .v to ht-used /or a e1Vll' to1nple)(
1111.t was to 1ncludt• <t ne11· i.:1ly hall. po-
lice sta11on . <:ounl} courtllousP. library.
;;if'[ n1u~eu111 ancl l'ha1n!)rr nf cnn1111ercl'!
otr1t'es.
The 11,11:.i l 1·1,1st of lhe property wa!
SJ .834.000
t
However. the Irvine Cornpany .11greP.d
!See Cf.NTER. Page ?I
DAIL'!' .. ILOT 'llH ,,,....
$TUCK JN THE MUCK, SAN FERNANDO FAMl t Y"$ YACHTS SIT$ IN UPPER NEWPORT IAY
fht 51;J:trims Slty Snug as a lug Ovtrnifht and W1it fo r tht Tide to Float Thtlr Crtft
.. '
.1 DAllY PILOI__ N Mondq, -.-..11, 1971
Bond E·Iection Pushed
Tempo Picks Vp for Newport Civic Center
The campaign for approval of Mi 9
million in bonds for the Nrwporl Beach
Civic Ctnter continues this week as bond
11upporter1 makl! four separate. pre.sen·
tations.
Vcttrs will go to thl! polls Oct. 5 in a
1peciaJ election on the bond issue
The Corona de.I ~tar Kiwa nis Club will
bear talks by rea!tor Jim \Vood and
Police Lt. Gary Peterson Tuesday at
noon •l the Villa s .... ·eden Restaurant on
East Coast Highway Wood 1s chairman
of a citizens comm ittee supporting
passlgt of the que1Uon.
The Newport Harbor. Chamber of C.om-
~rce llrill spon.sor • "Sunrise Bull
Session'' Wednesday at 7:30 a.m. Four
civic ll!aders will SPf'.llk ln support of the
ntw complex at Newport Center.
C.Ouncilma n Donald Mcinnis will lead
off the breakfast at the Balboa Bay Club
.,...hile City f\.fanager Robert Wynn,
architect Kermit Darius and Wood will
hand!e questions and answers.
Tickets for the event, which is open to
the public , are $3.
Natio11al En1barrassment
Tlu·eatened by POW U11it
WASHTNGTON (UPI) -The son of the.
U.S. military commander in the Paci fic
tn!d government off icials today he and
other relatives of American POWs might
embarrass the Administration v.·irh
measures of !heir own if there is no
movement SOOD to get thei r men home.
Joe McCain, son of Adm. John S.
~1cCain and brother of Lt. Cmdr. John S.
McCain Jr. who v.•as shot down during a
f\i~ht over North Vietnam in 19fi7. ex·
pressed dissatisfaclion at Administration
officials' explanations of how the iss ue of
POWs and MIAs (Missing in Action) is
being handled.
The younger ~1cCain was one of an
estimated 600 persons attending a
meeting of the National League of
Families of American Prisoners of War
and ~lissing in Southeast Asia.
McCain drew a burst of applause from
the delegates assembled at the Sheraton
Park Hotel v.·hen he said that unless the
families of men who are prisoners or
missing are given some answers soon
about when the men might be freed, "the
people may go to measures that may
even embarrass the Administration until
v.·e do find out.''
A State Department representative,
Frank Sieverts, also got loud applause
when he re sponded, "1 hope it will also
emharrass the North Vietnamese. They
have. got the prisoners."
McCain told Sieverts and the Pen·
ta,i(ln's repro.sentative, Roger Shields.
that "I have personally understood only
about one-third of what you gentlemen
have said today."
This followed a preceding state.ment by
~tcCain -which he said was aimed at all
politicians and government officials who
had been talking about the POW issue. -
that "mom of what goe.s on De.hind these
pnrliums is BS ...
He later told reporters he ...,,as talking
about liberals, conservatives 1 n d
everyone else when he made that
remork. He declined to say what he had
in mind with respect lo embarrassini:
a,:s.
League offici als wasted no time in gct-
tin@i down to the essentials. As the. fint
item on the. agenda of the three-day
meeting, they scheduled a debate
bf tween Sen. Robert Dole (R-Kan . ), and
Rep. Robert Leggett \D-Calif .).
No Need to Call
Police to Crash
The police were. right on !he scene.
Saturday 1n Newport Beach V.·hen one
traffic accident occurred
Thini:s might have be.en different if
thev had been else...,·here
Officer Thomas F . Adams, 23. st!'lpped
his patrol car on Fashion \stand shopping
center property near Kewport Cent er
O:lve and started lo ~el ou t
Investigators said the dorir s!ruck 1he
passing motcircycle of Pa!ro!man Homer
t-.1essenger, 24. causing dama~e Hs1ed at
under $200 to the twO·\.\'heeler"s fr nders.
OUN61 COAST
DAILY PILOT
CUJ1G1 COAST PUILt$HIJll) ttlMPNlY
lle\t.rl N. W1M
.,.._."' PYll<lllW
J1c:lr a. Curl ..
Yb l'tllliHrll .... ~ ~
lli••• k11vil "'"" Tho1111t A. Jil U'fJ>l.lft•
..... nq;,. ffllaf
L P1+1r Kri1t ff..,_, 8Mdl Clry IE6'1W _ ..... .,_
l!lJ New,etl l oul1¥1rtl w.rr ... MJ,..u: r.o. hx 1&71, t26&J ............
(M'l9 .... , 331& Wal ,.., ""°" .....,._ 1 .. cti: m ,_t ,.,_,.,.
... n .. 41a1 1..0.: U'ITJ 11 .. c" Saul..,.,,.
.. c.lll'IMrl& -trW$ ~ c.-i. ._,
OAft.Y PILOT, .._ ..,..,_ II _.,.,... ""9
.. -"'-• ,....k,,. 1hlf1 •t""' -
4"Y "" ... ,..,. .. !!-. fW L ..... a ·-........ ~ C.lt .......... 1"'11'11~
.... ~WI V•llfY, lJI~ C""'*'"'
CU· Wll ... ..,._c.t,. ...... wi"' -
"""""' •JttM. '""""'t"I "'""""' .C.ftl II
--w.t .., ,,,._ c.. .. -·
.
, ... , •••• f714) '4J:-4Jt1
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~ 1m. ~ eaa.. ~1.toi,,. ~ .... """"' _,.., ..... ,,.,,..,,, .,_...1 _,,.,. w ....,~,. "'""''~ ~ -·~-LIC-wm.wr .,.uei ptlt'" ......... ~ .........
SIONI c.l•U """"' .. 1111 1t HfWJIOrf l~th '"" c...11 ........ C..1if9rn1'. ~1~1 .... ,, W ~ ....... ~.JI -911y1 IW -11 U "*"""YI ll\lllttry ._..,.... IUI -'Y•
Leggett long has insisted that the.
United States could regain it~.POWs from
the Communists if it Y.'OU!d set a deadline
for withdrawal of all U.S. military forces
from South Vietnam. Dole. the GOP na·
tional chairman, is a staunch supporter
of Nixon's policy of gradual wilhdra...,,aJ
without a fixed timetable.
Frustrations have been mounting
among the relali\'es of the more than
l,600 prisoners and missing Amer icans.
The league, which has ...,,orked closC'ly
with the Administration in seeking better
treatment for POWs in North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong _p.'.'ison camps. is under
pressure from some of its members to ,llO
beyond its "humane" goal and openly
criticize the Administration on political
terms.
League. officia ls oppose an effort by
these. members to revise. the organiza-
tion's bylaws so that it can, in effect, join
the national movement for setting a
deadline as a means of getting U.S.
forces out of Vietnam and freeing the
prisoners.
The. Administration was counting on a
"silent majority" within the league to
stick by the. President. And members on
both sides of the issue predicted that the
proposal, to be voted on today, probably
would be defeated.
But one league official caution~ that
this did not mean the organtiition -
largest of i111 kind -would refrain from
adopting one or more re$0lutions critical
of Administration actions.'
Two of the organization's leaders
publicly questioned Administration policy
Sunday. Mrs. Joan Vinson. the leaguf!'s
national coordinator. said she y,·as disap-
pointed thal the President had not
responded to the. Viet Cong's July 1 offer
to exchange prisoners in return for a
U.S. commitme.nt to. withdraw totally
from South Vit1nam by the end of this
year.
Burglar Loots
Lido Isle Honie
Of Je,vels, Gtms
Someone who police suspect crossed
Newport Harbor by boat and landed to
loot a Lido Isle home of nearly $4 ,000 In
firearms and jewelry while. the. residents
slept is sought by detectives today.
The burglar also stole R quantit~· (lf
drugs prescribed for the wife of vict im
\\'alter Douglas, investigators said_
Dete.ctive Sgt. Art Campbell said
whoe.ver crept into the. Douglas home at
932 Via Lido Nord cat burglar-style early
Saturday removed g\as~ louvers from .11
...,·indow facing the bay.
Once inside the home., the. burglar
methodically gathered up $.J ,600 worth of
Mrs. Douglas· jewelry, besid€s the other
additional valuables.
Portable Class
Contract Faces
School Trustees
Trustees of the Tustin Union High
School District tonight will be aske.d to
approve eithe.r the purchase or lease of
port.!lble classroom for use at ~lission
Viejo High School.
Superintendent William Zogg said thr~e
such facilities are oow needl!.d at the
school to 11ccommodate the overflowing
student body.
School officials had l!xpected an e.nrol1·
mtnt of 2,2&5 on the npenine: day of school
Sept. 1.1. but. were surprised when 2,400
youngsters attended classes. The. enroll·
mf.nt at the. end of the J9iD-71 schoo l year.
was J.9SO .
High Aehool princlpal Robert Bosanko
11aid five additional te11chers are being
hired to mttt the teaching demands .
The pr incipal note.d that the school h.1111
experienced few problems other then
crowdl!.d classrooms In mee.tlng the ln-
11tructional demands of the Increased stu·
dent population. ·
He nJd the portable. cl1ssrooms would
be iNJlalled at the campus •s 1100n as
possible if approved by &c:hool truattes
tonight.
The regular meeting of the board lg
schtduled for 7:30 p.m. In the conference
room at Tustin High School, 1171 Laguna
JWad in Tustin.
Othu items on the agenda !nc:\udl!:
-A r~mm,nd1tion lo 1dopt stag·
ge.red te.nns of Qfflc;e for trustees ser\·lng
on th~ board of the Coastline. Regional Oc·
rup11t i(lnal Program
-The. acceptance of 11 gilt 10 lhe
district of $491 in came.rs equipment
from tbe student body at FoothlU H.\gh
School.
?te1ld«.nta ol the Park Ne.wport
Apartm~ntl will bear funner mayor
Dorttn Marshall and Lt. Peterson 1t the
apartments \Vedntsday at 7:30 p.m.
At the same time, Assistant City
~111naitl!r Philip Bettencourt and C.oun·
cilman Milan Dostal ...,·[!J addre~~ the
Friends of the Library at the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club .
The regular Wednesday aftemoon tour
at ~:30 p.m. of the city hall and police
faciliti's wi!l also take. place. a§ will a
police. open house al 1 p.m. Sunday.
From Pagel
CENTER ...
to give Ne:wpon Beach four years 10 pay
tor the property (or until construcuon is
started. whichever comes first ).
Meanwhile, thl! city was to poy four
percent interest on the money while the
Irvine Company paid $6,JOO a year to
least the property back for use as !and·
fill storage..
By design, !his i~ a wash item.
Now, the cit.v has determ ined it wi!I
need 9.002 acres for the city fa cilities,
for which it y,•ill pay $800,(M)l. This '800 .1
000 is included in the proposed bond is-
i;ue.
Oran~e County has already bought 5 26
~ere~. for $439,749. for the Harbor ,Ju.
d1c1al District Courts. It has an option
to buy 1.74 more acres for $210,279.
If the option is exercised. this will
le.a ve 3.227 acres valued ot $384,500.
avait<1ble for the chamber and/or the
Newport Harbor Ari Museum.
If neither should wish to carry through
with .acquisition plans. the city <'Quid
eilher pay for the property or i;ell It -
unl,ss the lrvinf!' Company ex~cises its
option to buy it back.
Since the property's v::.lue has already
~calated considerably. it is likely the
land de velopment fi') would l!arge.rly
tai(e it back.
If it dir:ln"!, however, e c.ity coulrl buv
it. hold onto it for some time for somP.
f1i!ure usr. or sell it ~! a latrT time -
althou~h the Irvine option to re-pure.has!!
is for 25 vears.
The lrv.ine Company also retI>ins ;i 25·
ye;ir ri,(!"ht lo 11pprove 11 n.v ch.11nj.'!'.e in in·
tended use for tht properly.
Lanc1 cnsts. of course. are onlv a fn1 c-
tion nr the totfl! proposf'd to be spent
for !hf' new civic complex.
Here ill 11 hreakdown of other estimated
exOf'nditures ·
Actu11I CClnlitruclinn ro~ts :.~ e:i;timaterf
at $3,690.000 and site development has
been figured ;i\ J330.000, but 1he~ are
today's ct1sts. Tncluded in the $6.!1 million
total is an additional Sl,005.()()(1 contin·
.izencv to cover escalation of coots through
April 1973.
Ot~r eosts:
-Pml'e.ssional expenses farchittct.s'
fees. ell: ). $400.000.
-Permits. testing i.11rl insptt"!ion!i (in·
eluding soil tests\, $6~.000.
-Furnishing and decnr~tin11:. graphic~,
$200 000
-Landscapinit and irri11:ation, $100.fl;'IO.
-Off-site work (s('wers. storm drains
and v.•ater mains l, $100.000.
-Owner-fumisherl items lnrt crtst~ 11f.
ter trade-in~ on new desk~. et c. l. $200.000.
-Bnnd PlPrli(ln anrt misce:llanenus ex-
J>"'l~es . $15.000.
The $l'i 9 million rloes nnt incl11d.-surh
thinll'!i :.~ intertst nn th' loan . 1•.'hich .... ·ill
tnral slightly more than thl! princip111.
11nd movin,I!" COS!$. Anrl it does nnt CQver
ne...,. pnliC'e cnmmunic.:iLions equioment.
The latter. lo rost $98.00l'l. "''ill coml'
frnm itn alrrarly-approved ft'der.:il pra nt
covering $70,00l'l and S28.000 that wi ll h;,ve
to cnm,. from the currl!r.t ve;.r's munici·
pal burlget. ·
Frnm Pagf' I
IRVINE . • •
h;ick1ng organizations !ht city "''ill en·
compa~s.
"If then. 1 am a puppet. e tool. ll ,lurlas
goat Rnd an Trvine Company.appointed
aut.oma!(ln, ~\.must be lhei;e communlty
lead ers." Burton 11rgue.s.
He declared his l"lWn home is, in effect,
CCI headquarters for 811 tho!e. promoting
incorporation within the community.
Burton c.harges J\lrs. Smilh's promotion
of lhe TBx Reform Act in Congress b
basl!.d on self-Interest.
"He.r real Interest is her personal e.rgu·
ment with the Irvine Foundation, 8n
argument that I don't understand 11side
from the. well-re.ported (act that she
\l•ould like. to see it de.stroyed ," Burton
claims.
His denuncialinn goes on tn ~RY sh' h;i.~
testified in Congre.ss that Irvine ranch·
lMd.'i aren't be'ing developed as fast
due to Irvine Foundation involvement.
"And she. isn"t getting the dividends
that she i;hould be," he. declar~.
"In summary," Burton concludes, "her
charges . . . Jltlrtlcular\y the person11l
ones. were unkind, .ljPProducllve., unin·
formed and untnie."
Burton notes he. has never met Mrs.
Smith, charging ahe has seen none of th!!
reports prepared relative to lncorporalion
1nd all this Is jlllt as well.
"BecauM It iJ none of her buiiiness.
Tbe people of Irvine wtll rnn the new 1:\.
ty, not Jo.11n trvine Smitb or anyc,nc
elsl!.'' Burton dl!.clarta.
Solon Safe on Plane
LOS BANOS (UPI) -A Santi Barblir•
1lssemblyman e.nd his wife l1nded ufely
here. SUnday af ter their small prtv111tl!
plant developed engine. trouble nn. night
fmm thtlr tw'lme to Sacramento.
Assemblyman Don MacGllllvr11y fR·
Sllnt.11 BarblraJ, made e.n eme.rge.n('y Ian·
din& ln the slnale enaine cralt at tbe Los
Banoo municipal alrpOrt.
Hit Nuclea1·
.
1
Blast Plans
CU.ILY PILOT Phote by Rtch•r'd Ko1hltr
Trapped ita Crash
Rescuers pry George O'Hara, 54, out of his car follO\\'ing crash in
Newport Beach. O'Hara, 2077 Charle St., Costa J\1e~a. \\•as listed in
serious condition today at Hoag ?o.1emorial tlosp!t.al \Vith multiple
fractures. Accident occurred about 6 p.m. Saturdav. Police said
O'Hara's car v.•ent out of control and plunged off jamboree Road
and down 40·foot embankment south of ne\v fire station.
Archaeologists Discove1·
Ancie11t Tree in Cou11ty
A larp:e fnss\ized tree -perhaps 50
millinn yPars old -has been unearthed
on the Irv1 nl! R;inch at the county
sanitary land fill site near Santiago
Re~ervoir.
Th' fossil tree i.\ bel ieved tn he a type
now extinct, and never found before on
the P<ic ific Coast. archeologists say.
Cecil V. Robinson, an ama1eur rock
hound from Santa Ana. disco'"ered the
tree. three month5 ago, when he v.·atched
earth movers at the lane!. fill.
Police Checking
Dog Poisoning
Aut horities today are studying ...,,hat
kill ed a Newport Beach man's 5heepdog.
his third pet to bec(l1ne !he l'ictim of a
sad1~t1c poisoner in 111·0 months.
Albert F. Dunlap of 1627 Cornwall Lane
told police a veterinari;in lale last v.·eek
confirmed the dog ..... a.~ poisoned.
The pet died. Y.'T!thin~ in agnny, v.·11h1n
three hllurs of first showin~ symptoms
that some.thin~ ""'RS "'rong, Dunlap told
Officer Erl l\l n11ev.
A pa ckage de.Scribed R~ cnn1a1ntJil! "'
mP:ll·l lkt sub~lance, Rpp11 rentlv t(l~S('d
over 011nl11p'~ fence. wn~ !urned over 11'1
the Or;;nJ,:r Co11ol.v HeAl!h ~parlment
aJ11n~ with the rt(l~'ll tem:iin~.
f>uolap ~a1rl Another ring And !he fami lv
cat havr died w1th1n !he pA~I l\.\"O month's
under identic;i l circ11mst;inre~
Robinson now complrrins thrrt the tree.
was not prntectl'd hy Irvine offici;ils ;ind
snme chunks of it ha\'C been carried
8\.\'ll~'·
ArC'hrol!1p:1ca l Research. lnc, 1ARl 1. n
Costa f\lesa firm which CtJOrdina les all
scientif ic research on !he flO.OOO·acre
Irvine Ranch. ha~ kept !he find quiet the
past !hree m0nths 10 ;i\'Otd such pro-
b!e1ns.
Roge r De.,:iulcl.,, prrsidcnt of ART,
ann0unC't>d toda y thi'lt !he Irvine Com·
p11ny will dona te the tree to the cnun!y of
Orange t;ntil a ~uil ;ihle exhihi\1(ln site is
selected, the fOJisil tree v.·ill be displa yed
at Chapman roll ri;:c in Orange.
Dr. \'irginl ii l'ilgr. Str.infotd Universily
p<1leriht1!;ini~I. h.:is id('nf1fi('{[ the !rel' :is
belonging !O the Phyll<1ntho1deae fam ily,
b;ised on thin i;ection studies o! the rrce.
~he ,<;<11d th1~ i;cnus of tree "'as
prer1ou~lv unknnw111n the fo.<;~1l rrcord of
the r acl11c Co:1sl states. ··tt is quite
p<1~~1hle v..e llrf' d£'nlini:: wilh ;in exllrict
sper1es or ert'n 111 ex!!ncl grnu~." she
said .
[ku1ald Fife. a s1ale i::eol(1J::i't. savs the.
r11re fnss1l f1nrl 1s c11111;1111rtl u1 a 0\r(lS.~·
bedd1'tl. 111£'dlU!TI µr.1HJ(•d .'I r k (\ s I c
s1111!l.~tone hl'twrrr1 40 ;1od hO m11!1f\n
~·e:i rs (lid He 11d1lf'll thnt hf' li;1.~ rl\rl'lV
nhsrr1 ed f1)s.~11 t1 ee ~rec1 1nens of an~·
k111d 1n !hnt slr:i!ll
l)1•'n1l l ,'1'" 01 UH' !rrP i~ 110! yrt
k 11111111 The p:11·t c11rfrn1I,\ r.~posed !s JO
fret Ion.:
Dr An httr Flint llf Ch:i r rn;i o Colle~e
~prrul<i1rd !hr trr(' could be fiO feet Ion~
;i11rl lll'l"h 11'1 fp 22 11111 ..
Ring s
MMll't !Us.di M1111'1 !Mewl
DIAMOND RING DIAMOND RING
ANCHORAGE, Alsaka (U PI ) -Some
500 persons a!ong 1he parade route
C'OVtred by President Nh:on and Japanl!se
EmperQr Hirohito pn11estC'd Sunday
against lhe nuclear te st planned on
Amchitka Island in the Aleutian chain.
The protest was peaceful and lhere
y,·ere no arrests. A nurnber of signs. one
reading "'Explode the bomh under
\l/ashington , D.C , not Amthitka, •· "'ere
displ ayed along the roule.
Organization in both Lhe Uni ted Sla.te.s
and Japan fear tulal waves and earth·
qu;ikes may result frn1n the scheduled
five-megaton unde rground blast.
The ci ty of Anchorage had originally
denied rally and march permits to tbe
Alaska coalition against Cannikin -a
ni ckname for the blast. But a Superior
Court reve rsed that decision and lhe
i;tate Supreme Court Sunday morning
upheld the Superior Court rul ing.
In Portland. Ore., two evlronmental
groups nskcd Nixon lo call off the blast
because it could have serious con-
i;equences .
The Pacific Northwest chapter of the
Sie.rra Club and the Don't Make a \\'ave
Committee of Vancouver, B.C.. an-
nounced Sunday they SC'nt Nixon a letter
sayinj.l the risks in the bl ast v.·ere un war·
ranted from any possible benefits ex·
peeled.
"Such a blast, the.largest underground
test our nation has ever underta ken,
could have serious consequences for our
country and others in the Pacific area,"
their missive said.
The Ca11adian organization w s s
reported to be planning to send a ship to
the Aleutian Tsland to protest the ex·
plosion. It was to drift just outside U.S
territorial waters, three miles fron1
Amchitka Island.
Front Page l
NIXON ...
Ener~y Cnn1mission '~ lla nfor rl, V·i;ish ,
far1li ty. He t11(1k the occasion to announce
the U.S. government. in con1unc.tinn u•ith
private business. v.·(Juld hu 1!d tv.·o pro·
tntype ''fasl·breeder" reactors to harness
the atom for peaceful uses .
Plans to bu1hJ one prototype. costing
ahnut $;)00 million, \\"ere announced in
.June hu t the dt'C1sion to expand the pro-
ject to l\''0 \''as nc w.
Nixon also announced a S200 million
co1nm it mcnt fr om the private power in·
dustry had mBde 11 possible to 11rder pro-
duction of the first •·fast-breeder"
nuclt·a r re;irlor. St1ent1s!s believe the
reactor offe rs the hnpe of avoi ding a
global rncqo' trists 1~'1!hin 50 years,
"F'a.~t-hrecder " re:icl0rs produce their
own furl hy tun11ng nnn·fiss1onable
uranium inlo fissionable plutonium and
nfrer the prosper! 11[ ndcqu<r!e supplies of
non·J){)llU\iog cnergy.
S;itu rday. the l 'rr~ident lourrd hv
helicoper Libby Diln1 ne;ir f\alis pe li.
illont, Ile told an e~\illlatcd 7.()0(} persons
in K11li~pell that his ad n1Jtustrat1on hoped
t11 achie1•e .. a whole generalLQn Of pe~te"
and open a dialogur with China. Such
rnn1n1uniration. he :;;1id. may hcAd off
any future confruntn1111ns \.\l\h Peking
and lhe \\"r.~tcrn wnrld.
Nixon ~ond bareheadcd in s driving
r111n al the Libby l);11 n site and helpe.d
hold ;i 1tni> :ilnni:: \.\ifh Srn '.ll;ln~field and
other poht1c:i l !e;idcrs 11t11ch lowered a
s111<1ll lol:ld uf euncrrle inr11 the d;i111.
Prote~te rs "·ere 1n ('I 1dtnrr ;ilnn~ t)JP
President's rnl1le b1'g1nn111g :1l Portl;inrl
;inrt r·limaxing 111 A n··hllf'~11!1'
Th(' fi rs t an11-11;ir lll'rkl1ng r:1counterrrl
b~ :\"txon Hl n111111hs Ot'L'urred 111 Pnrt\and
S<i(urday fro1n il srnall hut nni~r ~rnup at
1he ;:ii1·1)(1rf and llt\1r 11111 hotrl. Three (lf
thr prnt,,~trw~ ""I'" :•r t'r•l'··I
$50 .fO cl clw1t.,
14 kt 9old $200
LADIES
SOLITAIRE
1 ctl ptt
14 kt wfrilte toll!
Gv•••"tHd "" ... ..,.,..1,. .,
~er Mt111
OVER 50 LADIES DIAMOND
RINGS TO CHOOSE FROM $25 & UP
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
OPEN DAILY 9 to 6 COMI IN AND IROWSI AROUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD . PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lotwelft Horbof & lroadwoy
,
DOM RACITl
OUR MOST
UNUSUAL
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
Wh ... Y•• ltvr 111 dte111•11d "•"'
•I Wt •Ill tWlll,1111,.. lh-' Ille•
111•1111 le •IJprel .. Of 40 11 "'40Rt
tltff rot pold for It er yewr
lllOMJ !>eek. Caft VOi do OI .. u
l fM•hlf't1 COMPA•l.
IX,IRT WATCH RE,All
7
··-..... ___ ---------.--
Today'• Fl•al
EDITION
VOL IA , NO. 23 I, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1971 TEN CENTS
Costa Me ·sa Pushing 300-acre Parli Pr9ject
Costa i\\esa·s Proie1.:l 80 com mittee has
1n11o unt'ed 1\s inlenl1011 to develop plans
for a 300-al're park bctwe('n the l'tt~ golf
<'ou r se and thf SRnla An<1 ltJ\'er
The land is still ow ned bv the state &ld
l'1ty officials have eKpre~sed a doubt thal
they can buy ii. but l'roJeCl 8J} me1nber1r
feel a park plan might con\'ince stale of-
ficials to save the land for park use.
··1n the next .10 da~·s \l't're going to eo n-
l;icl every t·ivie grnup 111 Costa Mesa for
input ()11 this pHrk dcvelopn1ent." says
.J atk Chapn1an chainHan (If the Project
110 Committee. ··We 'rf' also going to
~chedule }I puhlic hr<1ring un 1t."
'
• ..... : -0:. ' . ~ 't .,.,_ ·;-/_-f\. t ..... ., .. '-' ... 1'-11 1·/;,t._'\.#f'"' ., .. ,·,_!',-Lo,..,...,. . .;--.~ r. .. . ~ -·
' ..
. ___. . ..-.....
Letters vdll be sent to local schools re ·
que sting 1nformat1on from youths on how
!hey'd like a park developed.
"It's large enough for a county regional
park." Chapman adds ... And the property
is not flat. it has a nice rolling ter rain.
It's ideal for a park ··
The land in question hes JUSL north or
Estancia High School. State offici als have
s:Ud they will soon detlare 1hP \and
surplus and sell it
Local city and count y offit1als sur-
(·eeded in delaying the .. surplus·· declar;i -
lion so methods of finan cing the park ean
be studied. The price ta g on it is about $6
m1Jhon . hall its appraised va!u!'.
If the land is deC"lared surplus. local
govcrn1nents must come up with the
rnoney LO buy it quickly, or 11 v.•111 be sold
to private developers.
.. If ,,.e can show the state thorough
plans for a park. \11e rnight delay their
decision until n1onev can be found to buy
the land." Chapmazi say s.
One financing method which city of-
ficials 1nay tonsider is asking residents
tn approve a large park bond . Otherwise ,
it \Yill probably take a joint cit}'~!y
eflnrt to setore the acreage .
Chapman said his tommittee is
DAil Y ~llOT U•!I Plo1"
Ce1tte1· of Controversy
Orange c:ounty Supervisors are expected to decide
·ruesday \\'hether or not they should cancel county
Probat ion Uepartment lease of thili offire building.
1055 El C'an1in o Drive. c·osla l\1csa Probation de-
parttnent plannrd to use building for a branch of·
f1cc. bul homeo11·ners C"o1nplalned about having
fa cili ty for probationers in their \.esidC'nt ial neigh-
borhood.
Partygoer Makes
Rounds Wearing
Laiv11u11i' . ., Hat
Son1et 1me~ it'~ hard tn tell tht good
RUYS fron1 the bad i:11~s. unless ~011 catch
l hen1 "·1th 111cr1n11nat1ng r v+dentr
'\ewpor1 Be:i ch pol1cr. 1Tacking d1J11·n
nn a loud part) :t1 ~~00 SeashorP Ori\ r 1n
\\'cs! :\"ewpor! l·'n(!;i~ ni~hl. !><lid 1hry en·
c·otu1trred ...-on1e l>nd g11~ ~
lJuring a 111clcr th.it resulled. (_)ffietr·
Al [)oun1 had ht.s police halon stolen <ind
!'on1eone niflde nl f with S1.:1 Bill Spc1r.!i'
hat
Can1e Sat urday 11ighl. 01f1 cer Jaine~
Gardiner was dispatched lo another loud
party at 880 lr 1Jine Ave., tlear across on
the other side of tov.·n.
Investigators discovered one party-goer
cavorting around with Sgt. Speirs' hat on
his head,·. v.•hile another v.·as allegedly
armed wijh Officer Doum's nighlstie k
Lonnie ft . Caruthers, 22, of 2701 l!:bb-
lide Road. \:orone. del Mar. and Brian ./.
Henrv. 20. 'of ?i1ammoth Lakes. were in
city "jail lo\lay. booked on suspicion or
possession cif stolen property.
Coaat
\\'eather
1"hose ominou~ clouds v.·i!l C'lear
t)y 1nid·day toda y and Tuesday,
~ith moslly sunny skies in the
afternoons. Highs along the Cflasl,
6:i rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight
between 57 and 58.
INSIDE TODAY
\\/hen 's tlie best tinie to buy~
Right now. be}ort lhc frett e
n1 cft.s. accordi ng to Syh;ia Port-
r r. Sec hr,r a11alus1s 011 Page 30
to<.1011 •
1••11"1 " ·~ L•""•" " C•llllf•a. " M•Ylll " ChKklltl "' .. Jt1ll9ol•! """'' .. ,
(1••olll ... ,, . ... _ (IU"IJ " (•"'IC' .. ''"'" ~ ... , .. • c ...... ._.,.. .. s ..... U ·)7
0.•lh '!Ille•• " llt<k M•t,1h ....
Dl•ttefl " Tt1t .. 1tlt11 " l "ltrlll ,,,. • TltMlt" " ... , •• ,.111 ..... 111 " Wt•lfl•• • ,1 ..... ,. .. .. W1M111•• Now1 11·10 "· ... ~ " ••• ,,. ..... ...
N atio11al E111barrassn1e11t
Tl11·eaten ecl ll X POW U11it
1
\\"ASHl:\"f;TO:'\ 1U Pl 1-Tht' son of lhe
t S. m1hrary commander 111 the f"ar11\c
tnld ROvcrnn1rnl offlc1al~ toda1 ht> :111d
o!hrr rrla l1\·e.~ of An1enLan f'(/I\ ~ nllgh!
e111b;irr;1~~ !hr ,\dn11n1-:\r;1111ul 1111h
TilCil~UJ'!'O: Of lhf"!f U\1 11 1/ lt11•ff" i" 11'1
mn\r;>lllt'l11:.\)()111u gel 1l11•1r 111,•n !10111"
.Joe ;.11·Cain. "llil of Adn1 .lllhll S.
\li.:Ca1n and brffth rr ol I.I l"1ntll" .li1hll S
/VlcCain .Jr. 1'.ho "";-i~ ~ho! down Jun11g a
fli~hl 011er North V1c111:u11 111 191i7, r\-
pressed d1ssaLJsfact10111 at l\d1n1n1s1rat1on
nfficia\s' f'Xplanations of how thf 1:..~uc flf
POWs and MIAs (Missing 1n At!ionl is
being handled.
The )'Ounger !11cCain v.·as on t of an
estimated 600 J>(rsons attending ~
meeting of the National League of
Families of American Pr·isoners of \\'ar
Recycled Paper
May Be Putting
Poison in F oo<l
'\'ASHJ NC.TON' (APl -The Food <1nd
DruJ!: Admin istration sa1ci to<l<1y il has
rHscovered the presence of A pcrsls1cnl
poison callt'd PCBs in food p:ickaged 1n
containers made from recycled papP.r.
f'ederal regulations ban such t'QntAn1-
ln2.1l1s from oontainers. The agency said
il was present al levels or up to 433 parl.S
per million in the packages of an un-
identified shredded wheal manufacturer.
The agency did not say immediately at
-....·hat levels the PCBs were found In food .
The f~D.ti .!laid it is sampling 15 grocery
products for contamination.
PCR.!I, which are similar to DDT. wtre
fi rst discove~ in the .agency·~ "market
basktt survey" completed fou r month:oii
ago and traced ro shreddl'd wheat A
foUow-up !lurvey detected lhem in 11ine
of 28 products tested . Th!' 11genty did
not name the products.
PBCs hav" already rorced thf' .!IP:ir.urr
or d!'struc1ic11 of chickens. turkeys rgg:oii
and C1tlfish food l!f) fhr th1~ YP~r ll ha"
bttn blamt'd for an out breHk of )ivf'r And
.•kin •ilmen1!1 in Ja.pan And has causrrl
1 100 percenl morl Allly ra1e <.mong chick
tmbryes 111 laboretory test~
;ind \li~~l('g i11 So11thcas1 Asia.
\lrCa1n ~re11 a bur~I n! <ipplausr fron1
!ht· dC'lei;:alJ'~ a!'~f'nlhh•d at lht' Sheraton
Par~ H{ll..t' whrn hr -..aid !ha1 unlrs~ lh,.
!:1tnil 1P~ of nH'n 11 hu arr pn~oners or
nu~s1nµ arr g1vt•l'l sn111r <in~wrrs ~0011
al,otil 11l1Pll tl1r 111en 1111glit he frt'l!d. "lhe
pl'ople r11a1· l!ll lr1 niea-..11r<'" lh:it rna\·
f•1·en t'1nb.1rr;is~ lhe Acln11nistra1inn unt il
11(' lln find nll! ''
A Sta1f' !Jt'par1n1enl rtprcscnt<1l11't .
Frank Sievert .~. al::.o got ltiud applausr
when he re sponded . '"I hope 1t will also
('111ba rrass lhe North Vietnamese. Thry
have got the prisoners .··
~lcCain told Sicver!s and 1hr Pen-
tagon's repr;.sentalive. Roger Shields.
1h at "l have i:>ersonally understood only
about one-third or whal you genllemen
have said 1oday."
This follo\1•ed a preC'eding statement by
"JcCa1n -"'hich he said \\'8 5 aimed at all
pohlicians and go.,.enunenl offlcia1s 'who
had been 1alking abol!t the POW issUe -
lha1 ··n1ost of whal goes on behind these.
pod1u1n~ is Bs:-
lle later told reporters ht' was talking
about liberals, con servatives ;;i n d
everyone else ~·hen he made that
rem brk lie dee.lined lo say what he had
in mind with respet"t tfi embarrassine:
acts
League officials wasted no time in get-
hni, do111n to lhe essentials. As the fi rst
item fill lhe agenda or thr. three-<lay
111eeting. rhey scheduled a debate
between Sen. Robert Dole lR·f\an.1, and
Rep. Hobert. Leggelt (0..Calif.J.
Le.ggett long has insisted that the
United Slates oould regain its POWs from
the Communists if it would set a deadltne
for v.•ithdrawal of all U.S. mililllry forces
from South Vietnam. Dole, the GOP na-
tional chairman. is a staunch supporter ·
of Nixon's policy of gradual withdrawal
without a fixed timetable.
~·rustrations have been mounting
among the relatives of the more than
1.600 prisoners and missing Ame.rk:an".
The league. v.•hicb has worked closely
v.•ith the Administration In seeking better
treafment for POWs in North Vietname~e
and Viel Cong prison camps, i!'I under
pressurt from ~me of it~ me1nbers to go
he.yond its .. huma~" goal and openly
critfclie the Administration on politic11l
terms .
Leagur officials oppoU 1n effort bY
IS.• PRJ!ONEM, P1_1• lJ
<:ielt'rmined to Ignite a large community
error\ behind the park proposal.
.. We y,·ant the state to see our effort. lo
set our demand for the park." he ex·
plained .
All input the committee receives on
potential park plans will be turned over
to a small group of associate architects
t not fully licensed; who have vo lun teered
their ser.,.ices to sketch a pre!irninary
design for the park .•
"ln co mmittee v.·e have talked about
st1ch things as tennis courts. lots of grass.
big trees. perhaps a marina tie-i n. and
possibly -. large outdoor amphitheater
bu ilt on the side or the hill." Chapman
said
"Thi~ 300 acres would t1e-1n to a grttn-
beU that stretches almost the width or
Costa !\les.a," Chapman continued, poin-
ting to lht city golf course. Fairview
State Hospital, Orange Coast College. and
the Orange County Fairgrounds.
"Our objective is to keep this area for
parks and recreation use. no matter v.•ho
runs it.
"'\Ve will consider it a major ac-
co1nplishn1ent 11 we t·;1n just get this area
set a~ide as a land reserve for future
park del'elopn1ent. Once it"s built on,
we 'II never get it back."
One part of the park might also be sav-
ed for an archeological site. Chapman ad·
ded. Next Saturday members or the Pro-
ject 80 Committee will take a two-hour
hike over the land on a tour led by a
Long &ach professor who will explaJd
lhe history of the area.
The project 80 Committee is compo15ed
of citizens a_nd city staff members. Long·
range planning is Its JOb.
Chapman said the committee will an-
nounce the public hearing date on the
park proposal when ii is set. Letters t()
!he 1Jarious f ivie organization.~ wi!I bt
mailed ou! in the next 30 days .
Alaska Trip Ends
President Returns to Washington
ANCHORAGE {UPI) -Turning from
An historic gesture in international
diplomacy to pressing domestiC' pro-
blems. Presidenl Nixon flew back to
Washington today from his meeting with
Japanese Emperor Hirohito.
Tht> President and his v.·ife Pal boarded
Air Force One in bright, 35-<legru weatli ·
er at Elmendorf Air Force Bas!' and took
()ff at 9:22 a.m. Ala ska time 111 .22 a ni .
PDT1 for lhe six-hour. W·mlnute f11ghl
Their departure was delayed for nea rly
Mesa Schools
Vandal.ize4
Over Weekend
Burglars and vandals. picked a pair or
Costa Mesa 1chools as targets over the
weekend. using kni.,.es, firebombs and ink
111 a rampage of damage.
No actual deslruction OC("Urred at Kai-
sel' Intermediate School, 21:'10 Santa Ana
Ave., Saturday night bu! only by chance.
Officer Bruce Hagen s<iid three
1no!o1o" !'ocktail s were hurled at the
school. shattering on the grounds outside
hul quiC'kly bu,rning out.
Fred B. llarnilton of San Diego and
Carol C. Hornby of Newport Beach called
police after witnessing the explosions.
Hamilton .!laid flames shot as high oi.'I
1he sctiooi ·~ roof. adding I.hat he heard
1wo cars of American make speed aw11y
fro n1 lht scene seconds later
Nev.•port·~1es;i Unified School D1stnrt
nlfic·iats today v.·ere tabulating the cos1 of
damage done 10 Everett Rea School . SOI
Hamilton St . 01Jer the v.·eekern.1.
1·ht burghir!J wa~ reported Sunda1·
1n<1rn1ng b~' rn;n an \V R1cr. v.·ho found
sn1n eo11e had hroken into a loun1?e
thr ough -. hx·ked \\'i ndnw
Tl1e intruders spla shed ink on \he floor,
wn11r on lh!' wall s. ripped up c·ou,'h
i·ushions and rinallv fled \vilh a bottle of
11spirin and A necklace taken from the
lost·and·found drawer.
Ex-q uceu to l\'farry'?
LONDON IUPI I -Former Queen
Soraya of I.ran will marry Italian film
director Franco Indovina, the London
Daily Express said today.
The Express said h1dovina, 42. aod
Sora}a. 39. have. been close companions
for the past five ye;;irs.
an hour to allow the presidential party a
few more minutes rest.
The President looked a bit weary after
his history-making tneeting with Hirohito
which V.'C'n! on until nearly 5 a.m. Mon-
day \Vasijington li1ne. but was described
as "very. very pleased" v.•ith ho\v it v.•ent.
It \1•as bright. clear. sunny and cold in
Alaska when Nixon a\11oke about 8 a.m.
locll l lime. read thr newspapers and
discussed briefly v.•ith aides his Sunda y
nighl meetin~ with the emperor.
. . .. -
'J'••tril Blt1 ze1·
H1 chard Krcken1cycr. L'lty of
('osl.a l\lrsa's da1a processing
rnanagcr. is one of the first to
model nc1v blaze r \\•ilh muni-
ci pal e1nblen1 on pocket. rle
paid S4 I .80 for coat. as \Vil!
16 other city deparln1ent heads.
Cily \Vil] foot $418 bill for
coats five councilmen and five
planning commissioners \Vil!
wear .
i\'ixon·s meeting late Sunday niJht with
Emperior Hirohito marked the first time
a Japanese emperor had e'er lef t his 011 11
country .
I! capped a busy weekend for th1
President. who ,·isi!ed four Pacific
r-;01·1!iwr~1 states. announcing a stepped·
11p <1lo1ni~ energy progra1n. intervenin~
p('r:·onally in the \\'esl Coast dock strike,
and d11n1pi11g a lillle concrele into the Bi&
1See l'i!XO\'. Page ?)
Ran h Heiress
Criticized
By CCI Chief
One leadi11g proponent of the proposed
e ll.\' of Irvine issued .a bitter, blisWing
ref)ly today to ranch heiress Joan Irvin•
Srnith's !alesl broadside attack again.st
!he future city.
John Burton, chairman of the Council
of Communities of Irvine declared -
among other charges -?i1rs. Smith ·s
s\alements published last "'eek are a
misleading pack of lies.
lie al so said they made his own wif e
er~··
The blonde heiress. ov.·ner of 21 percent
of Irvine Con1pany stock. had dug in "'ilh
hoth feet in her battle lO thv.·art the city
she predicts v.'ill be giant slu m.
She is out of alignment with other
ll'vine famil y and corporate stockholder1
on the issue and her mosl recent ae-
eusa!ions inflamed CCI C h 11 i rm 11 n
Burton.
.. ~·1y fir s! reaetion 11 as amusement
n11xed with d1!!gust." Burton declilres in •
pl'epared slalemc111
His remark~ go on tu .'.'lliuw largely
dis~usl aod disma\'
"\Ve are no a r1Ch girl's plaything Y.'e
are people .'' Burton fun1cd .
"To think that sht' 11\lrs. Smil/1 1 can fl.v
into Orange Count y frorn her estate in
Virginia. call people name~. sp read lies,
tlaunl her 'influente,' challenge people's
motives and then run aw ay to play in a
European resort is incredible," he <.'1ln-
linues.
.. It says something about l\-1rs, Smith.''
Burton adds. charging her with a cam-
paign desig ned to smear individuals and
distort facts and confuse people .and
issues.
Burlon said ht: called home Friday
I See IRVIN~. Pace ZI
Route Timetable Delayed
Corona del Mar, Ora.nge Free.ways Pushed Back
Cutbacks In federal spending have rorc-
ed the California Division of Highways to
delay Its coT11truction Limetable ·for botb
the Corona del M.ar and Orange free-
ways, tile ·State· Publtc Work• Depart·
ment said toda~.
The Corona de'! Mar Treewty schedul-
ed to be built in segments throughout the
ne!Ct five )'tart, will be pushed one year
back on tbt timetable. according to Jack ·
Peddy, uam.anl state bighway engineer
for program management.
Daniel Pengnly. chief engineer for
budget and control. said the Orange
~·retwl,Y which is still In the planning
.~tages through the coast11l area, will
likewbe be affected as will countlw;
other projects throughout Ca lifornia.
He blamed the delaya on new reve.nue
e.stlmates that forecast & 12 perctnt drop
in federal aid through tbt next six years.
The federal government pa.y~ 92 per·
cent of the rost or interstate hlghweys
·' •
and 70 percent or the tost of other
primary super highways such as these
two freeways .
Pengllly said the exact effect of thfl
reduct.ions in revenues will not be known ~ntil the state adopt!! its 1972-73 planninf
program next spring,
Peddy said the effect lhi!I year wa!I
more than anlicipated as Ca.\ifornla w~
due to receive a total of $839 million but
this had been trimmed by $144 million.
"We have been told that this Is being
done as perl of lhe program of fighting
inflation." Peddy ~aid.
Under the new tentoitive. timetable the
construction of the Corona del Mar
Freeway will ool begin until early 1974
when the section rrom the San Diego
f"rttway just east of f alrview RoAd Is
built connecting It 1.0 the. interch1nge of
the. Newport freeway that Is now under
construction .
Oate3 for,co nstruction of the remalnln1
'
sections, to Bonita Canyon Ro•d and
perhaps beyond to the planned Pacific
Coast Freeway simply are not known al
this time.. Pengllly aaid.
Peddy pointed out lhat the controversy
over the coastal route-haJ forced itale
engineers to stop all plannin& for lh•
Corona de l Mar Free.way below Bonita
Canyon Road.
Tht planned Orange Freeway Is. un..
dergoing a seri~ of 1reliminary studies
at Utt local level. Each city thlit may be
affected by lht route -which tentatively
follows tM Sant<i Ana River sooth of thd
Santa Ana Free>A·ay --. ha,, formed studl
committees hat h11ve been &iven statl
monty to hire consu\tanl!I to study the ef·
feet of lht proposed route.
The Orange f'rttWAY Is under con--
struction from a point north of the Santa
Ana Freeway A~ iU interstetlon with tht
Garden Grove Freeway north to the
Riverside freeway.
•
:! DAILY PILOT e Mondu . Stptembtt 27, 1~71
OAll'I' l'llOT Slit! I'-
STUCK IN THE MUCK, SAN FERNANDO FAMILY'S YACHTS SIT S IN UPPER NEWPORT BAY
The Schrams Stay Sn ug as a Bug Overnight and Wai t for tht Ti_de to Float Their Craft
Boat Marooned
Vess el Aground in Upper B lL)'
A San Fernando Valley couple who
eame to the beach for some Sunday fun
didn't intend to extend their stay 24
hours, but then lime and tide watt for no
man.
The Spencer Schram family's 19-foot
cruilier was marooned in Upper Newport
Bay when the tide went out.
Trapped aboard the boat stuck fast in
the mud about 500 yards above the water
ski zone near the head of the bay.
Schram, his wife Adrian and 2·year-old
daughter Glenna chose to wait it out.
Schram shouted ashore to a DAILY
P ILOT photographer thi~ morning that
they were out of food , but otherv.·ise all
right.
Spokesmen for the Orange County
Harbor Department said they received
word of the Schram's predicament at
3:37 p.m. Sunday.
A Newport Beach police helicopter
crew was dispatched to the scene, but
said Schram declined a Harbor Depart-
ment tow .
Schram reportedly told them he would
rather just wait for the incoming lide to
float the boat free today.
Harbor Department s p o k e s m e n
predicted today the boa! would be able lo
get under v.·ay about 3 p.m. v.·hen the high
tide lifts it again.
They also noted Schram's plight is a
relatively freque nt one for hoaters
unaware of the Back Bay 's tidal quirks.
N. Viet Horde Pushing
Allies Out of Cambodia
SAIGON !UPI) -Nearly two divisions
of Nor th Vietnamese regulars battling tG
drive outnumbered South Vietnamese out
cl their last foothold i11 eastern Cambodia
rained a "real hell of fire" on the
defenders today in the heaviest fighting
sinre the 1970 allied operation into Cam-
bodia.
Gen. Nguyen Xuan Tinh, commander of
the South Vietnamese 25th infantry
division, said in an interview at his head-
quarters in Tay Ninh City that the situa-
tion is more serious than it was at Snuo\
Yr'here a force of 3,000 South Vietnamese
was trapped and cut to pieces earlier this
year.
The fighting ·was near the rubber plan-
tation town of Krek, M miles northv.'est
of Saigon. The to\\'n ""as occupied in 1970
in what President 1'\ixon heralded as a
drive lo eliminate Comm u n is t
"sanctuaries" in CambOOia.
The battle pitted 20.000 lo 24.000 j\l)rth
Vietnamese against 1.1000 South \'iet-
T1amese. and another Commun1~t r\J\'is1on
was reported nearby. Amenran fighter·
bomhers and heli coptt'r _gunships \\'ere
called in tn try tn check the Communist
offensive and a spnke~man said th<'y kill-
ed more than 100 Communi sts 1n one sec·
tor of the front. ·
But the Communtsl offensive already
had cul the South Vietnamese supply
routes in fighling which spilled over into
'
a11Juit com
DAILY PILOT
Cl'U.HCl c.om PUI UIHDtO COMl'MY
J.O.rt N. w • ..1 ,.,.'4n .,.,. """'Iii#
~ J1clt l. Corl.-. Yt:t ,,....,, and co...n.1 Mlft""'
noint• KttYil
Editor
11.ol"I•• A. M ~•p\in• fMN111'4li Ed110r
Chttet M. t .. , l ic\1•i ,, Nill ~ftt ,Ms,..._ EllllO!i
c .... 111 ... OMu
3)0 W11t l•y Strtef
Matlitt ,A,d;11u : r.0.1011 1$60, '2'2' -.o-
South Vietnam. seven miles below Krek,
and the drive appeared to be an all out
effort to end the ARYN acUvities In Cam-
bodia.
CRITIC IZES HE IRESS
Cityhood Proponent Burton
F r o m Page 1
IRVINE ...
fr om his 1'\orth American Rockwell office
in Anaheim to find his ~·ife in tears.
'"lt became clear 'that this was a
''icious attack and fo,1rs . Smith had done a
really terrible thing." Burton declares.
One allel(ation on ":hich she was quoted
v.·as that the l\l.'D-Lime CCI chairman had
offices in lr\·Lne Company headquarters.
Burton charges r-.1rs . Smith fa iled lo
note he was elect~ CCI chairman -
!Wice -by le;iders nf the incnrporation-
hacking organizations the city v.'ill en-
compass.
"If the n, I am a puppet , a tool. a Juda.!!
goat and an Irvine Company-appolnted
automato n, so must hf. these communily
leaders," Burton argues.
He declared hl.!1 O\\'n home is, in effect.
CCI headquarters for all those promoting
incorporation within the community.
Burton charges Mrs. Smith'!li promotio1
of the Tax Reform Act in Congress 11
based on self-interest.
"Her real interest is her per50nal argu·
menl with the Irvine Found:1tion. an
argument that I don't understand aside
from the well-report~ fact that she
~·ould like to see it destroyed," Burton
claims.
His denunciAtion got! on to say she h111s
testified In Congrrss that Irvine ranch-
la.nds aren 't being developed as fast
due to Irvine Foundalion in\'o\ve ment.
"And i;he i~n't getting the dividend!
that &ht shoo.Id be," he declare..
"In summary," Burton concludes. "her
chArges . , • particularly the personal
ones, were unk ind, unproductive. unin-
formed alld untrue."
From Page 1
NIXO N ...
Libby dam in Mo ntana.
Ni1on's intercession Saturday in the 89-
day-old dock strike was the first such ac·
lion he had ever taken in a strike since
he became President.
His 20-minute meeting with Longshore
labor leader Harry Bridges and shippers
negotiator Ed Flynn brought pledges
from them to try and e.nd the strike by
this ~·eekend.
The strike by 15,000 members of the
International Longshoremen's 11 n d
\Varehousemen's Union (IL\ViJ) ha!! Lied
up 25 West Coast ports and idled nearly
200 ships since July I.
Nixon's s;iid his face-to-face meeting
was '"lo briog to their attention the
urgency of reaching a settlement,"
If East Coast dock workers strike when
their contract expires Thursda}", sa id the
Presiden!, he would consider it a na tional
emergency and invoke the 80-day ··cool·
ing off" injunction provisions of the Taft·
Harlley Act.
Sunday, Nixon tnured the Atomic
Energy Commission's Hanford, Wash.,
faci lity. He took the occasion to announce
the U.S. government. in conjunclion with
private business, \l."ould build iwo pro-
totype "fast-breeder" reactors to harness
the alnm for pe.aceful uses.
Plans to build one prototype, costing
ahout $500 million, were announced in
June bul the decision to expand the pro-
ject to two was new .
Nixon also announced a $200 million
commitment from the private power in-
dustry had made it possible to order pro-
du<'tion of the first "fast·breeder"
nu cle;ir reactor. Scientists believe the
reactor offers the hope of avoiding a
global energy c-risis within 50 years.
"Fast-breeder" reactors produce their
own fuel hy turning non-fissionable
uraniu m into fissionable plutonium and
offer the prospect of adequate supplies of
nnn-po!luting energy.
S~lurday, . the President toured by
hel1coper Libby Dam near Kalispell,
J\1ont He told an estimated 7,000 persons
in Kalispell that his administration hoped
lo achieve "a whole generation of peace"
tind open a dialogue with China. Such
C'Ommunicalion, he said, ma y head off
any future confrontations with Peking
end the Western "'orld.
~ixon stood. bareheaded in a driving
r;iin at the Libby Dam site and helped
hnld a line along ~·i th Sen. r-.1ansfield and
other politictil leaders \l.'hich lowered a
small ln;id of concre!e intri the dam.
Prote~ters ~'ere in evidence along the
Pre~id.enr11. route beginning at Portland
and cl1max1ng in Anchoraj.'.!e.
Th~ firs~ ant i-war heckling encountered
hy Nixon 1n months occurred in Portland
5aturday from a small but noisy group at
!he airport and near his hotel. Thre.e of
the protesters \l.'ere arrested.
From Pag~ 1
PRISONERS • ••
these members lo revise the organi1.11-
tion's bylaws so that it can, in effect, join
the ryatlonal movement for setting a
deadhne. as a means of gettina U.S.
fo~ces out of Vietnam and freeing lhe
prisoners.
The Administration was counting on a
"silent majority" within the league lo
stick by the Pre.sident. And members on
hnth sicles nf the issue predicted that the
proposal, In be voted on today, probably
would be defeated.
But one league official cautioned that
this did not mean the. organluition -
largest of its kind -would refrain from
adopting nne or more resolutions critical
of Administration actions.
Two or the orii:anizalion'll leader1
publicly questioned Admlnlt:tration policy
Sunday. Mrs. Joan Vin!ICln, the league's
nalional coord ina tor. said she was disap-
pointed that the President had not
responded to the Viet Cong 's July 1 offer
to exchange prisoners in return for a
U.S. commitment to withdraw tot.ally
from South Vietnam by the end of thts
year.
HHH's Decision Due
WASHI NGTON (U Pl l -Sen. Hubert
ti. Humphrey ! D·Minn. l, declaring he
w31 only 11 "h11ir 1!l brc11dth" 11way from
eleclion In l!IM. will decide within the
next few months whether to seek Lhe
t>e.mocratlc nomination for President In
1'72.
•
-
Planning Many Futures
OCC Prof Seeks A nswers to Urban Blight
By TER RY CO\'ILL£
OI 1M o.llY l'llel l!ttl
Bri ghtly colored m1ps cover three
walls of Khosro Khaloghli'1 tiny offic~ at
Orange Coast College.
Khosro is a large Iranian -a fonner
national wrestling champion In his coun·
try. Now he wrestles with the problems
of studen ts in his urban planning course .
Their problems are his.
"I don'l believe you can accomplish
anything unless the teacher gets in volved .
You have to get people interested in the
cou rse.'' he says in .11 heavy accent.
The maps on the office wall testify lo
the involvement of Khosro's lf students
in a new experiment.al CTlUrse In urban
planning he designe.cl.
There were 14 students in the course.
They started work June 7 and kept at it
eight hours a day, sometimes stretching
into the night and on S.llturdays and Sun·
days.
Most of the students already held
degrees of some 80!'1., including one PhD
and two MAs. All of the students were.
unemployed.
"I taught them concentrated planning,"
says the young professor. "The trouble
v.•ith mo11t city planning departments is
there aren't enough professionals in
them."
The colored maps in Khosro's office
rep resent the several steps taken by the
students for a six-week projecl et the end
of the 16-week course. They designed a
complete general plan for the city of
Costa Mesa from 1985 to the year 2000.
"I think Ltiey ha ve done one of the most
complete jobs you'll find in any city,"
Khosro says. Last Thursday nighl the
students, ranging in age from 23 . to 55,
presented their work before p\anrung of·
ficials from cities in Orange County.
Three master plans were shown. Each
was done by a separate student com-
mittee. The main recommendations in
the plans cover~: .
-Elimination of "strip'' commercial
development, the type found along
Harbor Boulevard and New port
Aoulevard. Commercial development
should be centralized in shopping centers
ranging from neighborhood to regiona l
size, the students said.
-Placement of high d e n 1 i t y
.apartments along the two major streets
of Costa Mesa.
-"". -.
I • I
Dllll' ~ILOT Slt ll l'Mfe
PROVING HI S PO INT
OCC ln1tructor Kha loghll
-Provide more Industry, bul buffer it
~·ith lighter industry on the outside. and
heavier industry in the middle of a
development.
-Never mix industry. apartments and
residential. All should be in separate
areas.
-Build a green belt strip all around
the city.
-Constru ct nine neighborhood centers
in apartment areas which would consist
jointly of a school, a park and a ulility
shopping center.
-Parks and schools would be built
together in the home areas.
-Create green belt buffers along
freeways, don"t put homes next to
freeways.
-Develop the 300 acres between the ci·
ty golf course and the Santa Ana River as
a park .
One of the three maslerplans recom·
mended limiting the city population to
100,000. The other two designed a city
based on the expected population of
145.000 in 1!199.
"These students de\'e\oped their master
plan without any reference to the city's
rurrent masler plan." said Khosro. "I
didn •t want them to be influenced by it."
Costa Mesa's currt>nl mai;ter rlan 1ea
tuatly only goes up to 198S. City officials
are now l''Orking on longer range plans.
Khosro contends that the si,\l.nificanct
of the student work is found in the stepa
they took to develop a n1aster plan . "ll'1
11 far more thorough job thiin n1nsl Con-
sulting firms do for a city," he said.
1'hat's where the v.·a ll maps come In.
Each one is a different study of the ci ty,
Together they add up to .11 complete pie·
lure.
One map depicts current zoning.
Another shows elevations !height above
i;ea leave I I of the city. A third sho ws the
population dist~ibution in relation to age,
sex and income.
Another shows different annexations to
the city. A fifth map breaks down the
commercial and industrial areas and an
accompanying report tells "'hat types
they involve .
There is also a map showing all forms
of transportation and where they go. One
student drew a map outlining the ma jor
pipelines for all utilities , and another stu-
dent did one listing a:I schools and parks
and details about each.
The most interesting 1nap is \'.'hat
Khosro c::ills a "reconnnissance map."
£2.ich student was assigued a section of
the c1!y to walk around and get In know.
They can1e back and rnarked in·
tet'.JlS!ing poinls on 11 city map.
/'Such C001ments as: ''bar next to a
church. fair trailer courts. poo r
apartTne.nts, good apartments'' were
written down .
"The object is to get them physically
familiar with the city before they rlesign
its future . Too mJch work ls done behind
a desk," Khosro said.
Costa ,.,.1esa Planning Director William
Dunn praised the student \l."ork as "very
thorough" and asked Khosro for the use
of some of the preliminary maps.
The real success. however, has been In
job hunting. Of nine students seeking
employment, seven already have been
hired by various cities.
Khosro feel s his rirst course has proved
two poi n t s, One. that better, more
thorough planning can be accomplished
by cities. Two, that aconcentrated coorst!I
in planning, or othe.r subjec!~". can be. suc·
cessfully accomplished as a Job
retraining funct ion.
Ne wport's 21st
Lobsrer Bake
T ermed 'Success'
Archaeologists Discover
Ancient Tree in County
Three tons of lobster and abGut 1.500
sirloin 1teak dlnntra were served this
past \l.'eekend by the: Balboa Bay Lions
C!uh al its most successful Lobster Bske-
Carnival eve.r.
The 21st annual Lobster Bake was
highligh ted for the first time by a major
parade through Fashion Island, which ac-
cording lo police drew an estim ated 3,000
spectators.
Profits for the event will •·more than
quadruple anything we did on the
beaches," fo,lario Pacini, bake chairman,
said toda)'.
The bake ~·as moved from Corona de\
~l;ir beache.s to fashion Island I.ti ac-
commodate a parade and 11 h1rge.r
midway.
""'e did RS much business here on Fri-
d;i y Alone a~ \l.'e did in two days com·
bined Al the beach." Pacini said.
Parini ~aid this year's success will prn-
bably make the move to Ne~'JX)rl Center
a permanent nne.
Plans Are al ready being made. for next
larger camiv.111 rides,
A large fossilized tree -perhaps 50
million y!'ars old -has been unearthed
on !he Irvine Ranch at the county
sanitary land fill site near Santiago
Reservoir.
The fossil tree ill believed to be a type
now extinct. and never fo und before on
the Pacific Cna~t, archeologists say.
Cecil V. Rob inson, an tim;'lteur rock
hnund frnm Santa Ana. discovered the
tree three months ago, when he watched
earth movers at the lanr. fill.
Robinson now complains that the lre.e
\\"as not proLectecl by lr\·1ne officials and
some chunks of ll have been carried
(l\\'a}'.
Archeologic.11 RC"scarch, Inc., (AR!l, a
Costa r.1esa firm 1\•h1ch rnordina!es all
scientific research on the 80J)00-ac.re
Irvine Ranch. has kept the find quiet the
past three months lo a\"oid such prD-
blems
Hngf'r De.<>aulc l11. prr:;1dcnl of Alli,
announced toda v th,1l the Irvine Com-
pany will don:itc" the. lrC"e tn the cnunty of
Or;ini;ie l'nl 11 a :;u11ahlP. rxhihition site is
selected, the ln~sil trre 11·ill be di splayed
at Chapman Cnllege In ()ranRe .
Dr. Virginia Page. Stanford University
paleobotanisL has identified the tree as
belonging to !he Phyllanthoideae family.
Rings
M .. '1 I UMd) M•11'1 IHawl
based on thin section studies of the tree.
She i;a\d this genus of tree was
previously unknown in the fossil re.cord of
the Pacific Coast st.ates. "It is quite
possible we are dealing ~·ith an extinct
species or even in extinct genus," she
said.
Donald Fife. a state geologisl, says the
rare fossil find is contained in a cross-
hedded, medium-grained a r k o si c
sanrlstonc het~·cen 4rJ anrl 60 millinn
years old . He aclrled that he has rarely
observed fossi l tree speclmcns nf any
kind in that strat;i.
Overall size nf the tree is nnt yet
knnwn. The part currently ex posed is 30
feel long.
Dr. Arth ur Flint of fh:tp1nan College
speculated the trt'e could be 60 fee t lon g
and weigh up lo 22 t11ns.
Rulldn1.ers supplierl hv lhe c-nunty will
cut away the earth ~·1th1n a fe \\' feet of the
tree. then students fr nm the Chapman
College gerilogy ;ind paleontology classes-
"·111 care(ully finish the. digging \\'ilh hand
tools. Fl int said.
Pra nk Fa tal to Boy
LO\'.G BEA CH 1 UPI l ~ Ke\'1 n Kinder,
17. wa~ eler.trncuted Sunday night when
he apparently a1lempted In reverse Iha
· on a city light standard as a
DIAMOND RING DIAMOND RING
$50
LAO I ES
SOLITAIRE
1 tt l pfl
14 kt wtin. ••''
.•o c.t c.l111t.t
14 kt ••Id
. ....... , ....
k A-t i .. 11 "°""' It M•rel
$200
OVER 50 LADIES DIAMOND
RINGS TO CHOOSE FROM $25 & UP
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE l'ROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
OPEN DAI LY ' to 6 COME IN AND UOWSI AROUND
1838 NEWl'ORT ILVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOM RACITI
OUR MOST
UNUSUAL
01-'IMOND
GU-'IRANTE E
WMll y•• ltvy • dl•,,.•1141 fr•"'
n w• wlll ,,.,.,.,.. ,..._ di•·
"''"d hi •ppr1IM .., 40•.-M.0 11
'""" Y•• p•ld fot It '' yeur
1111Hy IHtt•. Coft y•u de .. wtU
e1Mwlie"r7 COMPAll.
IJPllT WATCH llPAJ I
7
' 'I
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Saddlebaek
EDITION
YOl. 64, NO . 23 I, J SECTIONS, 38 PAGES MONDAY, SEPTEMB R 27, 197 1
eat us ect • ra1nwas
A1aahei11i Talk
Agnew Assails
Radical Causes
\'1ee President Spiro T. Agnew told the
na11on's top lri w enforcernenl officers tn-
day a1 .-\naheinl°s Convention Center that
the At11ca prison riot has bC'come .. yet
Two Marines
Lose Lives
At Pe11dleto11
'Two Ctlnlp Pendleton tll~1r!nes died in
separate incidents on 1he base over the
'veekend. One young rnan \vas killed by
an eXploding grenade.
Base spokesn1en 1de11tlf1ed lhe grenade
,·1 ctim~ as Pfc. Harold i'-1 . Stover, lR,
n1iose parents 11,·e in Elyria . Ohio.
Stover v11as killed 1nstanllv when he and
a buddy \\'andered into an· J\1 .79 grenade
launching rangl' and Stover ?.pparen1ly
picked u~ a dud grenade
The proJecl ile exploded. kill ing 1ht
~·outh and in{\icling :severa l fragn1en·
lation wounds on the face of Pfc. Danny
Trotter. 18. or Walnut Srp1ngs. Te:x. Trot·
!er 'vas reported in s~lisfactory condi·
tion today at the base h06pital.
The second "·eekrnd death took place
on Satu rday. A young recrui!. on tern·
porary training at Pendleto1. -regularl.v
attached to the recruit depot in San Diego
-collapsed during exercisrs and died
en route to the hospital.
Mis name "'as \Vithheld until hls fam ilv
can be contacted. ·
Portable Class
Contract Faces
School Trustees
Trustees of the Tu stin Un1on H~h
School District tonight will be asked to
approve either !he purchase or lease of
portable classroom for use at f\1 ission
\"1eJO High School.
Superintendent \\'il11an1 l'.ogg said three
'i uch faci lities are 110\1· needed t11 the
schnol lo accon1111odat (' !he nverf!nv.1ng
i;tuden t bod\"
!:il'hoo1 nft;c1;il~ h;1d rxpci.:led an enroll·
incnt of 2.28;1 nu lhe upc n111g d8~' of :;chool
Sept 13. hul were :;urpn:;cd 11·hen 2.~00
.1ou11gs!el"S att enderl cla~scs. The tnroll·
rnen1 al Ille rnd of the 1970·71 school \'ear
\\;I S l .9~1l •
High school principal Robert Bosanko
~1d five additional 1eachers are being
hired to meet lhe teaching demands.
The principal noled that the school has
experienced fe\v problem!'. other than
crowded classrooms in meeting the in·
structional demands or the increased slu·
dent population.
lie said !he portable classrooms would
be inslalled at the can1pus as soon as
possible if ' approved by school trustees
tonight.
The regular meeting or the board is
~cheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the oonferenre
roon1 at Tustin High Sc hool, 11 71 Laguna
!load in Tustin
Other items on the agenda include ·
-A recommendation to adopt st ag·
gcred terms or affice for lrustees !'!erving
on lhe board of the Coastli ne Regiana! Oc·
cupational Progran1.
-The acceptance or • gift to the
district or $.f!ll in camer11 equipment
from the student body at foothill l{igh
School.
Benefit Fashion
Sho,ving Slated
A. benefit called Carnival of Fashions
for Parklane i.~ !Cheduled for Tuesday
from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on I.ht Parklane
Residenlial School campus. 234-42 El Toro
Road. El Toro
The e\·ent v.·ill be a sale of ne·w clothing
featuring famous brands frnm $-4 to •11
v.·1lh all proceeds benefitling the school
for menlally retarded.
~1rs. W. D. Lydick'., chairman or lhP
w(lys and means committee or the
Parklane Women's Jnform,.tion1l Coun-
cil. is in charge ol t!M! benefit.
anothe r cause celebre in the pantheon of
radical revolulionar.v propaganda.·
··The real issue is not pri son reforin .''
said the ,·ice presidenl, speaking at the
78t h Annual Conference of the Jnltrna·
tional Chiefs of Police .
'"Now the name "Att ica'' joins the li:>l
of geographic pla ces and slogans v.·hose
very utterance. in the litany or anti·
American hate preached by radical pro-
pagandists. is a dagger at the heart of
our country"s free institutions.·· .Agnew
said.
··certainly the n1embcrs of I his au·
dience \\'Ou!d be among the first lo
recognize that. though the pla ce natne~
and slogans change, th e 1nodus operandi
in the devclop1nen l of 1hcsc celebra ted
radlca l lcf! causes rcn1ains 1he sa1nc.·•
Agne"' said.
'"This hold~ !rue. fro111 their Genesis
until their final ano1ntn1t'nl bv c1ti\r1r t;i l
pole1nicists. ll'ho then ri~hteouSl.v displlly
them as the latest examples of thr rn·
during guilt of Amerit'<in societ y."'
Agne\V said lh11t one would ha\·1: lo
folJO\\' the event s at A!tica •'\Vith the u!·
rnost diligence"' to dr1ermine that the in-
stigators had t·rimi.na1 records.
··The ulti1nate issue al A!l ica was not
prison retOrm," Agnew said. "No. the
issue al Attica -like the issue involved
1~·henever the orderly processes of 21 frre
society are coofronted by those who place
themselves above or beyond the law -is
whether that society's free institutions
are lo survive or go under."
Agnew said thal in lhe past JO years,
1133 American law enforcement officers
have been killed a ~ a result of eriminat
action.
"'\Vhen those who protect us are al ·
tacked. we are all attacked," Agnew sa id.
"\Vhen those who safeguard our in·
slitutions are endangered . our inslitulions
are endangered.
·'\Vhen those fe\1· assigned lo uphold
our laws give thei r lives in Ille conduct of
their duty. then we . the many 11·ho
survive. have a renev.·ed reSJXlns1bilily (o
see to it that their sacrifice u•as not In
vain -that the govemment of la 11.• fur
\\·hich the)' died is upheld against those
who v.•ould destroy it.··
''If. then. there is a larger lesson lo bf:'
drawn from lhl' lo.~s of life at Attica. it 1s
lhAl Americans v.·ho value our systein
and it s fr ee institutions t'annot un·
derestima!e the potential for v1olen<'l' P.nd
destruction inherent 111 an y radical mih-
rant movement," Agne\\' :i;;-i1d.
Whoops
•
•
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'if·'
WHILE
.,; , D""ILT PILOT Sl•fl PMtto ~'.
JOHN , 6. POLISHES, PAUL ANO ANN ·CHECK THE RIGGING ON THEIR FLOATING HOME
The Neighborhood 11. Quiet •nd You Can Wake up in tlie Morning and Hear the Seagulls
Quiet on th.e Amethyst
Marina Family Finds Life Rewardi1ig Aboard Ship
By PATRI CK BOYLE
, 0 1 t~• Ol llW Pile! :l!llf
lt"s an emply neighborhood during the
week. with little traffit and fe11· c:illers,
excepl for an occasional se<1gull.
But on weekends. Paul and Anna ll ern·
1ners' solitude is su disrupted th<i! thc.v
freque ntly untie U1e1t ho1ne fro111 ii ~
Dana :\farina berth and head ou! to the
quiet. open sea.
··we had never really thought about lil'·
ing on the boat."' says Paul Hemmers
with a tou ch of his native German ac-
cent. ··but we sorl of got pushed into
making some pretty fa st arrangements.
The past four months aboard have really
been quite rtwarding. ·•
Hemrners. a self·tmp!oyed landscaJ*
n1aintenance specialisl. previously livert
111 a San Juan Capistraoo house that hf'
says wa s JUSt too big lor h(', his v.'ifr and
SIX ·yea r·old SOil.
Out of l·urios1ty. the~ pul the housr up
for sale and so1neone bought it im·
mediately. giving them 3£1 days to vacate.
After being unable to renl a home in the
area. Hemmers decided to try life aboard
his 37-fool sailboat. the Amethy st.
··o ne of the mol:il rewardi ng things
about living on the boat i~ to get up early
11.•hen el'ery!h1ng is qu iet and listen to the
seagulls." Hemn1ers says s itting in lhe
srnall cabin of the craft. "It is beautiful
to just v.·ake up in the morn ing:'
''And you become more appreeia!ive
about life arter living on the boat." hi s
prel\y blonde 1vifc add! as shr prepares
coffel': in the small galley. ··You begin to
see and noticr things you norm ally
wouldn 't see.·•
The fan1ily ha s discovered that. except
for the smaller amount of space, ship·
hoa rd life is more relaxing than living in
~·rowded suburbia -and less expensive
Gas, electric and water services are
provided as part o( the SlOO monthly sl lfl
rental fee. Hemmers pays no property
taxes on hi! home. A 10licitor never
pounds on his hatch and his telephone
never rings. becau se he doesn"t have -
or want -one.
'·There"s a pay phone at lhe end of !he
pier ir we need it: says Anna.
··we are both sort of loners." adds her
31-year·old husband. explaining that. only
four other families live ·aboard their
boats at the harbor.
Altho ugh !ht marina is practicaTi y
deserted during the week, Hemmers says
1l is jumping wi!h boa towners on
weekenn~. Thr llcn1mers have had so
many guests si nce first moving aboard
that they finally had to ask their friends
to stop visi ting in order lo get the normal
household chores done.
Despi!e thr pleasure of being able. to
<"atch your dlnn<'r 0111 the back door or
be ing rocked to sleep every night. 1lem-
n1ers says !hal boat life still has its pro-
blc1n s.
Whal he consider('d the biggest pro-
blem of living aboard -carrying a 50
pound block of ice down the pier every
day lo keep the food cold -he solved as
soon as possible.
During his first weeks aboard -
between visiting friends -he installed a
refrigeration unit on the boat and ha.a
carried no more ice. Another problen1.
which has yet to bt solved. is to kee,p the
family"! two sea-going cats from ex-
ploring 'ihe othtr boats berthed at the
marina.
And family squabbles don't go away by
living aboard, either, allhough the fight!!
are not over wht ch TV program lo watch.
Anna explain!! they are both enroTied in
a celestial nav igation course and spend
their evenings studying the heavens.
··one night. we had a terrible argument
over where one of the atars was," ahe
!'!ay1.
Clementean Wins
Snit Over Flood
' A Sin Clr,rnente 'l'ln has been awardtd
$11.J711. 1n .olmages but lhe lawsuit he
· -ully broug)ll agalnsl the ci ty may
· ~.Vf"'4> 80 fbrou&h I new Orall.ie County
• Supqlor c'ourt trial.
WUUain Bl'.OJghton. '2U A V 1 n I d a
PailzAda, gol tht dafnagea ror heavy
"flooding on his property . lie blamed
laulty dninaae facilille! aAd the city ror
ero!ion leading to t~ inundaUon of his
Up in the north woods they \\1tar cleals to th'eir log
rolling conlests. Thest. youngsters found out that
it's tougher than it look!i to stay atop a slippery log.
But it was fun trying. Shown at Mission Viejo Days
property. '
City officials have announced their in-
tention of appeall111 the trial court ruling
if !he planned motion lor ·• new trial ~ ilooied. .
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N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
? • e
Doctor Says
Questioning
Brol\:e Will
By T0,\1 BARLEY
Of 1~1 01!1r Pilol Sll!I
A Newport Beach psychialrist"s week
long interviews lfilh accused f\1ari ne
J\.!ark Johnson were COJ)den1ned today 1!11
"brainwashing.. by a B e r J,; e I e ""y
psychologis t called as the first defenn
witness in the San Clemenle man·•
Orange County Superior Court n1urder
trial.
Dr. David \Vilson characterized !he
psychiatric sessions betY:een I) r .
Theodore Lindauer and the 20..rcar-old
defeodant as •·a good job of in.lerroga-
tion" v.·hich considerably reduced John·
son's will to resist.
\\'i\son agreed 1vith defense att or nty
Ray Sh arp that Johnson \\"BS a µ.'.l s~ive
type of person who reacted 1n a typical
fashion to the suggestion that charges or
first degree n1urder 1vou\d be Filed
<i '!a1 11~1 hi111 if the kind of statements
<lesi red by 1he prosecution v.·ere not
lor!\lcnn1ing.
L.11,ilJuer told the prosecution thal hi8
series or interviews 1•:ilh Johnson -the
scs~1011s lasted bctv.·een 25 and 30 hour~
-lefl him with the im pressio n that th•
young r-.1arine policeman was implicate d
in the "killi ng on June 16. 1970 , of Connie
Lyn111 Johnson.
Joh11son is accused of clubbing hi1
pregnant wife with 1 bar stool and I.hen
stabbing her more than 20 times. He is on
trial fo r second degree murder.
Jo tinson told police shorll~· afler the
killing that he found Mrs. Johnson's blood
splattered body 1prawled on the bed in
their apartment at 416 Monterey Lan t
when he returned from duty at Santa Ana
Marine Co rps Air Station.
Johnson told district attorney·~ in·
vesligators shortly before his arrest a
year later that he knew he had killed hi~
lfife but cou ld not recall the actu al
details of lhe murder.
lie testified under .the i11flue ncc of
sodlun1 amytol that he recalled htll lnlJ
her with the bar stool after t'Jimbing
through the v.·indow of the apar!ment but
could not recall the stabbing other Iha"
the Fact lhat he belie\·ed he washed of!
the. blood in the shower.
Johnson admitted he and hi~ wife fre-
uently quarreled because he insisted on
using marijuana. And he admitted lo in -
vestigators that he had been using po t
shortly be!ore lhe kilting and that hi•
v•ife had locked him out of lhe apart·
ment
\\Tilson testified today that he did nol
believe add iction to marijuana led to
violence. The psychiat rist. \\"ho is also 11
qualified atlorney. said he had never
heard of 11 case in which pot ~nwking
could be directly a!tributed 10 any crime
o[ violence.
Lindauer tes tified lasl wrck !hat
Johnson 's psychiatri c n1akeup ~a ..
di reclly atlnbutab!e to the puni shn1en t he
had received as 11 child from hi•
dominant mother_
Dane Leader Resigns
COPENHAGEN IUPl l -Prim e
r-.tinister Hilmar Baunsgaard's center-
right coalition government resigned today
after 45 months in power.
The 51-year-old government chief ad·
vised King Frederick IX Lhal he. had fa.ii·
ed to rorm a broad rou r-party govern-
ment that would include the opposi tion
Social Democ rats.
Oraage C:.allt
Weather
Those ominous clouds will clear
by mid-day today and Tuesday,
with mostly sunny skies in the
aftemoons. High! along the l'OUt.
&S rising to 75 inland. Low! tonight
between 57 and :ii.
JNSmE TODAY
lVhen's the b11t time to bu.11~
Right now. tnfOTt the frttze
melu. according to S11lvia Port-
tr. See Iler analusi.s on. Page 30
Laday.
•Hfl~I )t c .. 1 ... ,,lfl ,.
CMC-1"" UP 14
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Cityhood Proponent Blast·s Heiress' Charges
One leadinJ proponent of the proposed
dtt al lrvlnt laued a bitter. bUstmng
rflP,b '9day '° rencll M-ite!l!I Joatt Irvine
Smllh's latest broadside attack against
the future city.
John Burton, chairman of lhe Council
el· Omununitles of Irvine declared -
among other eh1rges -Mrs. Smith 's
statements published last \\'eek are a
misleading pack ~ ll~.
He also Slid they made his O'A1l wile
<ry.
The blonde heiress. owner of 21 percent
ol Irvine C.Ompany stock, had dug in with
both reet in her battle to thwart the city
abe predicts will be giant alum.
She b out of alignm<ot 'lritJI other
Irvine lamtly and corporate atockholden
OD Ute iuue and her most recent ac·
cusations inflamed ccr C h a l r m a n
Burton .
"My finit reaction waa amu5ement
mi:xed With disgust," Burton declarts In a
prepared statement.
H~ remarks go on to show largely
disgust and dismay.
"We are no a rich girl's plaything. We
are people," Burton fumed .
Press "Periled'
ACLU Cl.aims Federal Pressure
WASHINGTON IUPJ) -Government
criticism of the press has become so
"widespread and aJl.pe.rvasive" that it
con&titutes a "massive federal·le\·el at.
tempt to subvert the letter and spirit of
Capo Valley
Ho1neowners
Meet Slated
~ ftrrl fall meeting of the Capistrano
Jalley Homeowners' Association will be
ll'!ld tonight at 8 o'clock at Valencia
.!:lementary School, 25661 Paseo de
/alencia in Laguna Hills.
The guest speaker at the session will be.
3art Sptndlove, president of the Sad-
Uebac k Area Coordinating Council, ex-
>laining the functions or his organiz ation.
Homeowners are expected to discuss
he-,new proposal for the county to pay
or construction of Mfssion Park in the
Lre&. The developer, Leadership Homes,
1ad previously pla nned to build the
-ecreational fa cility, but has since decid-
!d not to.
In addition, the continuing problem of
ipeeding motorists along 1\-IacKenzie
itreet will be discussed in hopes of seek-
ng new support for a plan to close the
hrough street with a cul de sac.
Tbe usoc:iation had once convinced the
)range c.ounty Board of Supervisors to
mdert.ak e such a project, but several
iomeowners objected and the plan was
ibandoned.
The county then agreed to iratall stop
dgns at Intersections along the road, but
1ssociation officials fear a county traffic
:ommittee will recommend against in-
:tallallon of the signs.
All residents of the C ap i11tran o
lighlands community, including non-
nembers of the association, may attend
he meeting.
the First Amendment," a report issued
today by the American Civil Liberties
Union charged.
The report noted also a "11ubtle ten-
dency .•. of the press Itself to pull back;
to coMider the controversiallty of its ac--
tions before It takes them, and then, in
some cases, not to take those actions -
to engage in sel!-eensorship."
The report on censorship of the press,
prepared for th e ACLU by free lance
journalist Fred Powledge, charged the
press with trying Lo "play it safe," to
a.void being singled out for criticism.
The ACLU said Powledge, in private in·
lerviews with prl!S5 and government
representatives, was told by some
newsmen o! "harassing actions" against
the press.
Powledge, in the report, wrote be had
been told by CBS News President
Richard Salant of a "boycott" of the
press by Defense Secretary Melvin Laird.
He reported Jack Nelson of the Los
Angeles Times said he had been smeared
by assistant FB I Director Thomas Bishop
as ''a man who drinks too much."
Powledge also reported he had been
I.old by Louis Kraar of Time-Life news
service that he had been den ied infonna·
lion and access to transportation in the
Far East.
The report also charged the police with
"utter harassment" of undergroun d 11nd
campus papers.
He said, "it is nnt difficult for an
observer who possesses a healthy amount
of paranoia to conclude lhst authorities
v.•ould treat the 'straight' press in the
same crude ways, i( they thought they
could get av.·ay \l'ith It.
"And increasingly -aided by vice
presidential speeches. subpoenas fro m
the Justice Department, 'not.ices' from
the FCC, citation Crom congressmen ,
censorship by the courts: in short, v.·hat
amoun ts to a "'idespread de monstration
of the government's total contempt for
the press and the first amendment -the
authorities are coming t.o the conclusion
that they can get away with it," the
report concluded.
Weary Nixon Returns
After Historic Meet
ANCHORA GE {UPI) -Turning from
tn historic gesture in international
!iplomacy kl pressing doTiiestic pro-
1lems , President Nixon new hack to
Vashington today frnm his meeting \11ith
lapanese Emperor Hirohit o.
Thi!. President ::ind hi5 v.·ife Pat hoarded
\ir Foree One in bri ght. :15-<iegree v.·ealh
'.t at Elmendorf Air Force Bai;e Rnd took
1ff t'll 9:22 a m. Alaska time 111 22 11 m.
'DT) for the six·hour, 20-minute flight.
Their departure was delayed for nearl}'
tn hour l~'allow the presid ential party a
OlANGE COA$l
DAILY PILOT
CM.NG!: COAST PUILISHIMO O:W•ANV
11:•'-•rt N. Weed l"r•!Mrrt ,,.. Put.I ...
J.cr R. c,,,..,
Y1't ,,..,... end Gtnirat M&mw
1\u•• Kl 1vi1
E•ltoor
Tft0"'1' A. Mvfp~i~• ~ltl§ Ed11Di'"
a.rlu H. leot 1l:id11fd P. Nin
Aull!tRI ~Mlll"lll EOi'°~
Let•-..... Offke
212 Fot•1I Avtn~•
M1m119 ...Uritn: P.O. 80• 66&, !1651
S.. C,._te Office
rew more minute! rest.
The President looked a bit. weary After
his: history-making meeting with Hirohi to
v.·hich v.·ent on until ne11r!y 5 a.m. Mon-
day \\'ashington time . but was d'scribed
a.s "very, very pleased" v.·ith how it went.
It was bright, clear. sunny ;ind cold in
Alaska "'hen Nixon awoke about II a m.
liical time. read the newspaper!'! and
discussed brieny \\•it h aides hill Sunday
night mee!ing v.·ith the ('mperor.
Nixon"ll meeting late Sunday night v.·lth
Emperior Hirohito marked the first time
a Japanese emperor had et·er left his own
country.
It capped a busy weekend fnr the
Prt'sident, who visi!ed fou r Pacific
Northwest states, announcing ;:i stepped·
up atomic energy program, intervening
personally in the West Coast dock strikt,
and dumping a little concrete into lhe Big
Libby dam in 11-fontana.
Nixon's intercession Saturday in the 89-
day.old dock strike was the first such BC·
I ion he had rver taken In a slrike since
he became President.
His 20-minute meeting \.\"ilh Longshore
labor leader Harr}' Bridges and 11hipper&
negotia tor Ed Flynn brought pledges
from Uiem to try ad end the strike by
this weekend.
.. To think that she (Mrs. Smith) tan Oy
fntc Orange County from her eatatE In
Virginia, call people names, IJlfUd lies,
11.aont htt 'influence.' challqe people '•
motives and then run away to play in a
European resort i& incredible," he con.
t.inues,
"It says something about Mrs .. Smith."
Burton adds, charging her with a cam-
paign designed to smear individuals and
distort fa rts and confuse people and
issues.
Burton said he called home Friday
from his North American Rockwell office
in Anaheim to find his wife in tears.
Together Again
.. It became clear that this was a
vldoul attack and Mrs. Smfth had done a
really terrible thing ," Burton declares.
One allegation on whfch ~he was quoted
was that the twe>-tlme CCI chairman had
offices In Irvine Company headquarters.,
Burt.on charges 11-Irs. Smith failed lo
note he was elected CCI chairman -
twice -by leaders of the Incorporation·
backing organizations the city will en-
com pass.
"!f !lien, I am a puppet, a tool. a Judas
gnat and an Irvine Company.appointed
automaton, ~ must be these community
leaders," Burton argues.
Walter Hickel, former secretary of the interior, chats amicably \vith
President Nixon as the President arrives for reception at Hickel 's
'1ome in Anchorage, Alaska. ?i-Ieeling took place Sunday prior to Mr.
Nixon's meeting with Emperor Hirohito of Japan. President fired
Hickel earlier this year.
Arcl1aeologists Dlscove1·
Ancie11t T1·ee in Comity
A large fossiized tree -pe rhaps 50
millio n years old -has been unearthed
on the Irvine Ranch at the county
sanitary land fill site near Santiago
Reservoir.
The fossil tree is hel!e.vffi to be a type
now ex!inct. and never found before on
the Pacific Coast, archeologists say.
Cec.il V. Robinson. an amateur rock
hound from SarJta Ana, discovered the
tree three months ago. "'hen he watched
earth movers at the land fill .
Robinson now complains thar the tree
was not protected by Irvine officials and
11ome chunks or it have ber.n c::irried
.awav.
Archeolo~ical Research, Inc . IARJ 1, a
Costa Mesa firm which coord in11tes all
scientific research on the 80.000·acre
Irvine Ranch. has kepl the find quiet the
past three months to avoid such pro-
blems.
Roger Desautels, president of Afll ,
announced loday !hat the Irvine Com·
pany "·ii! dnnale the tree to the cnuntv or
Oran~e. Un!ll a suitable exhibilinn i:ite i~
11elected. the fossil tree will be d1splaved
at Chapman College in Orange. ·
Dr. Virgin ia Page. Stanford Uni\·er~!lv
palcobotanisl. has identified the free :is
belonging to the Ph)'llanthoideae family,
Tire Shop Olvner
Hurt, Improving
A San Clemente tire shop owner v.·as
reported ""p rogressing well" at South
Coast Community Hospital toda y,
recovering from painful injuries suffered
Friday when a lruck pinned him against
a workbench.
Bruce Holley, the owner of Holley's
Tire Service at 1225 N. El Camino Real ,
suffered cut! and intemaJ Injuries in the
wa l9t area when the pickup rolled from a
repair rack.
Police and firemen ga ve the man first
aid after the truck was mo\'ed.
based on lhin uction 11tudies of the tret.
She ~aid this genus of tree v.·as
prev iously unknoy,·n in lhe fossil record of ~
the Pacific Coast stales. "It is quite
possible we Rte dealing \\'ith an extinct
11peries or e\'C'n in extinct genus," she
satd ,
Oonnld Fife. a state geo lo,l(ist. says the
rare fossil find is contained in a cross-
bedded. merlium-gr11ined a r k o s i c
sandstone bet"·een 40 rind 60 million
~e11rs nl d. He added that he has rarely
nhservrd fos.~il tree specimens of any
kind in th11t st rata .
Overall size of the iree is not yet
knDwn The part currently exposed is 30
fC"el long.
Dr. Arthur Flint of Chapman College
spC'culated the tree could be 60 feet long
;ind \\'Cigh up tn 22 tons.
Rulldnzers suppl ied by the cnunty will
C'Ut a11·av the e:>.rth v.·ith in a few feel of lhe
lrrr. !hen sludenls Imm the Chapman
Ciillege liteology and paleontology classes
t1•11l carefully finish the dili?ging "'ith hand
t(YllS. Flint s;ild.
111 II l's Uec ision Due
\\l/\Slll.'\fiTON 1UP!1 -Sen Hubert
H Humphrey (D-tl11nn. \. declaring he
"'as only a "hair's brendth" away frnm
eleclinn in \9fiR. will clecide within the
nexl fPw months whether to seek the
Democratic nomination for President in
1972.
He declared hl'i ov.·n home 14. in effec:l.
CCI headquarters for all tbole promoting
inc.orporation within the commun1ty.
Burton charges 1.trs. Smith '! promotion
of the Tax Refonn Act in Congress is
based on self-interest.
"Her real interest is her persona l argu-
ment with the Irvine Foundation, an
argument that J don 't understand aside
from the well-reported fact that she
v.·ould like to see it destroyed," Burton
claims.
His denunciation goes on lo say she has
tesLified in Congress that Irvine ranch-
lznds aren 't being dtveloped as fast
Dan1a9e Feared
due to lrvine Foundation 1nvolvemenl
··And she isn't getting the divldend.t
that she should be," he declare111.
"Jn summary." Burwn concludes, "her
cJ1arges ... particularly the personal
ones. were unkind, unproductive, unin·
formed and untrue."
Burton notes he has never met Mrs.
Smith, charging she has seen none of the
reports prepared relative to incorporation
and au this is ju.st as well.
"'Because it is none nf her business.
The poople of Irvine will run the new ci·
ty. not Joan Irvine Smith or anyone
else," Burton declares.
Protests Flare
Over Atom Tests
ANCHORAGI-.:, Alsaka (UPI \ -Some
500 persons along the parade route
cove red by President Nixon and Japanese
Empernr Hirohito prnte s!ed Sunday
ag11inst the nu clea r test planned on
Amchitka Island in the Aleutian chain,
The protest was peaceful and there
were no arrests. A number of signs. one
reading ''Explode the bomb under
\Vashinglon. D.C., not Amchitka,'' were
displayed alo11g the rnute.
Organization in both the United Stales
and Japan fea r tidal v.·aves and earth-
quake~ ma y result from the scheduled
fi ve-megaton underground hlasl.
The rity of Anchorage had originally
denied rall.v and march perm iti; to the
Alaska coalition against Cannikin -a
nickname for the blast. But a Superio r
C0urt revrrsed 1hat decision and the
state Supren1e Oiurt Sllnday morn ing
upheld the Superior Court ruling.
Jn Por!land. Ore .. b\·o evironrncnt;i l
~roups a ~kc>d f\ixnn 10 call (lff 1he blast
becriuse lt ci•ukl have serious con-
srquences.
The Pacific l\'.orthwesl chapter nf the
Sierra Cluh and the i>on"t ~take a \I/ave
Committee of Vancouver, B.C., an-
nounced Sunday the~· sent Nixon a letter
saying the risks in the blast v.·ere unwar-
ranted from any possible benefits ex.
peeled.
"Such a blast , the largest underground
t.tst ou r nat ion has ever undertaken,
Law Cooperation
Said Essential
To Curb Crime
Greater cl)()peration by all segments of
la"' enforcement -part1clllarly judges -
is essential lo curb America's growing
crime r:ili'. one government offi ci al
declared today,
The remarks emerged fr om one pane.I
discussion dur\n11: the 78\h Annual Con-
ference of the International Association
of C'hlefs of Pohre cont•ened at the
Anaheim ronvention Center.
,Joseph Ka i17.. a member r>f the Nev.•
Y<>rk City \\'aterfront Cnn1m1s.~ion, said
pcihccn1cn can't h:indlc the monumental
job al(lne.
Courts. proserutorF. probation
dep,1rtmerJl~ and parnle boards are all
C'tJU?JI.\" ri:Fpons1ble for 11 nev.• cornmit-
ment, he $.Sid
"'ErPr)une cnncerncd with law and
nrdrr is rrspons1ble. And that gl"ICs fnr
JUdges ton. wtin shD11ld pl11y a grt•a!er
role in report1nJ; brrakdnv.·ns u'her e they
occur," Ka itz rem arkrd.
"And they should work n1ore closely
with the police to help reduce crin1e -
our nation·s No , 1 problem ." he con·
linued .
Rings
could have serious consequences fo r our
coontry and others in the Pacific area,"
thelr missive said.
The Canadian organization \.\"a s
rl'ported to be planning to send a i;hi p to
tbe Aleuti;in Isl and to protest the ex·
plosion. It was to drift just outside. U.S.
territorial waters. three miles from
Amrhitka Island.
Flaniing Eagle
Sparks Bu1ze
A low flying eagle collided \vilh a
high voltage line causing a brush
fire which burned over three acres
of hilly !and Saturday about a mile
sou th r>f UCL Orange Cnun1y Fire
Depnrlment offi cers reported.
Officials said !he eagle's feathers
were set fire and AS the bird fell to
the ground the dry grass was ig-
ni ted.
Fire unit s from Orange County
Airport subdued the blaze in about
an hour .
Deputies Thlvart
Holdup Attempt
At Da11a Store
Sheriff's deputies on routine patrol
thwarted an alleged attempted holdup of
a Dana Point Liquor Store Sund::iy night.
Deput ies arrested two San Bernardin()
County men as the pa ir assertedly ap-
proached Phil's Liquor at 34210 Pacific
Coa:>t Hjghwa y. One of the piiir. officers
saltl. w;is c:irr~·ing a sawed·ofl .22-c·;i!ibcr
rifle.
lnves tigatnrs said lhe incid ent occurred
at about 9 p.m. ""hen deputies noticed a
car stoppetl in ;in :die~·. The auto's
license pla1es had been srneared ""1th
mud.
As Honald r.i. Elw01'1fl , 22. and Jame!!
F .• /onei::. 19. emC"rgcd drpuhes moved in
and arrested th e1n.
ln\e~t1galors :-aid f!l\C nf rhe pair
assertedly threw !he Y.Papnn into siime
bushes as officers approached.
Addresses of the h1·0 men "·ere nnt im·
mediately availrthle They were booked
into Orange County ;ail on charges of at·
tempted robbery.
Prank Fa ta l lo Boy
LO!\G BEACH ll1 !~!1 -Ke1·in Kinder,
17, "·as elec!roc11 tcd S1111day night "'ht'n
he a~parent]y attempted In re1'er~e the
w1ri11g on a eity li ght st<indard as a
prank.
Holley. v.·hose residence is at 503 Calle
De Soto. was injured shortly before noon. M•'• IU_,J M•'• IM .. J
Officers could nOt determine why lhe
lruck rolled from the rack .
DIAMOND RING
sso
DIAMOND RING
.90 cl clwster
14 kt told $200
W H.di El C.m!n• Rtal, flt.71
°""' °'"'"' emt11 M<llM• .JJO w .. r B•Y Sffft!
........,.., '-d\1 ml H-r1 l o;i11.,111f ttuntNllo .-II: 11'7J &ucll ao..1n'1nf
Gifted Students Programs
Studied by Capo District
LADIES
SOLITAIRE ,,,,,"
14 kt ...... 1914
0111 .. 111 ...
.... W!"t fM ti
~ ... Mtnl
OVER 50 LADIES DIAMOND
RINGS TO CHOOSE FROM $25 & UP
DOM llACITI
OUR MOST
UNUSUAL
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
'.
Trustee$ of the Capist rano Unified
St"hool District will continue their st11dy
of programs for mentally gifted students
11 tonight's 7:30 mttting In Serra School.
At lht last metting board membt.r
Robert Dahlberg prai!trf progrsm prG-
posals al four schools and criticb.ed five
at.Mrs wh.ich he '8Jd did noc metl boa.rd
standa rds.
Each lndlvid11al t>IPmentary sc~l pr~
posal will be e:tarnined on its own merits
at tonight's meeting.
Prog rams receiving pr11ise were those
prepa red by the pnncipalt' of Crown
Valley. Pali&ad~. San Juan and
Capistrano Schools Mo5t grou pt'd glfled
· s!udC"nts In a se-lf-contained classroom
•
with ltudtnll who excel.
Agreeing with Oahlberg'11n1lysi.s were
members ol Parent Aasoc:iation for Gifted
Education (PAGEJ which i1 a parent ad·
vl.sory group on the mentally gifted minor
prog rsm. •
Prni:i:rams critlciied by Dahtbtrg and
PACE Included arranf!emenl5 f n r
··rru~ter grouping" j!:ifted children in
eltimooms "'~re thtrt Is 11 brl\'ld r:lni;!'C'
of ment.al Jibililies and remo\·in~ ~ifled
rhlldren from their c 1 ass ro oms
perlodict'llly for "enrichment .''
D11hlberg charged that the5e progr11m11
were not better nr more varied than from
last year·a programs which were found
inadequate hy a ~peciAl consult.ant.
•
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
OPEN DAILY 9 to 6 COMf IN AND HOWSf AROUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA -letw"" H-I lroedway
•
~ ., •••• , • dhtlllt•d "'"'"'
n •• wttl t••""'"" 1h11t di•·
~ te o,prelM 11 40"• MOi i
tt.a. 'I'" 11old ,,.. It ,., .,,11,
111011ty t.oc,. Co11 r•• don -11
•IMwttor.1 CO Ml'All.
l lPIRT WA TCH llll'All
DOMI ON l'lllMl51$
I
I
I~
Lag1111a Beaeh
EDI TI ON
Today'• Fliaal
N.Y. Stoelu
:VOL 64, NO. 23 I , l SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1971 TEN CENTS
• a s a 1ca ~a use
Defense Opens
Murder Suspect
Brainwashed?
Bv TO:\I BARLF.,.
oi 1h• 0 1Uy ,.ilof H i ii
A i\e11'port Beach psychialrisrs week
long 1nter1•ie11·s 1vith actused f.·lar,ine
~lark Johnson were condemned today as
•·brain11·ashing·• by a B e r k e 1 e y
p~~·chologist called as the first defen~e
v•itne~s u1 Ill<' San Clemente 111an·~
Orangl' L'ounl .v S11pl'rior Court n1urdC'r
irial.
Dr Dtn1id \\'ilson <:haracterized the
psychiatrit: sessions between Dr .
·rheodore Lindauer and the _20-year.old
defendant as "a good job of interroga.
li on" which considerably reduced Joh11·
liOn·.11 will lo resist.
Wilson agreed "'ith defense attorney
23-ce nt W tiger
Nets F ort11 ne
~\ADRID 1 UPI I -A 7~year--0ld
retired postrnan living on a pension
of less lhan $57 a month parlayed a
23 ce nt bet into $700.000 by winnin g
Spain's biggest soccer pool. it was
announced today.
Rafael Fontan correctly foreca st
the <>1.1tcome or t4 matches played
in Spain Sunday. The elderly
\\'ic!O\l'Cr v•ent into hiding when
newsmen learned of his \Vin. The
previou5 lar~cst pool in Spain.
$470 .000. \\'3S won three yca r!'i ago
by 11 fannhand .
T'vo Pendleton
Marines Die
In Base Incidents
Two Can1p Pendleton i\·larines died in
separate inc1denls on 1he base o.ver the
ll"Cekend . One \·oung man v.·as killed by
an e:tploding gfcnade.
Base ~pokesmen identified the grcnadr
tictim as Pf<'. l\arold J\l. Stot·er, 18,
whn~e parents Ii\'!' in El~·rta. Ohio
Stover "·as kilied instantly "hen lie and
a huddv w;indered into an J\t-79 grenadf'
l~unchi.ng r<'lngP ;ind !-ilO\'C!" ci.pparently
p1Cked up a dud grenade
The projec11le c~p\oded . killing tb r
\Otl!h and inflicting Se\·eral (raj!men·
ia!ion \\'ound~ nn the face of Pfr. Danny
·rroUer. 18. of \\'a!n11l Srpings. Tex Trol -
ler \\'as reported in sa!isractory 1.:ond1-
lion today at the base hosp ital.
The seCond weekend death took place
on Saturday. A young recrui~ on tern·
porary !raining at Pendleto1. -regularly
attached to the recruit depot in San Diego
~ collapsed during exercise& and died
en route to lhe hospital .
tl is name was t\'ilhheld until his family
can be contacted.
Customs Agents
Capture Vessel
,Ii. small. yellow boat !leized by U.S.
Customs agents al ln·ine Cove Saturday
morning was apparently not carrying :u1y
contraband, officia ls said today.
The ves~I was discovered on the beach
at the private community at 8 a.m. by
Laguna Beach police. Police .'laid customs
off icials had been conducting surveillance
of the Laguna Beach area v.•atching for
such l' craft <'Ind agents were notiried
v.·hen tht boa! was discovered.
Agents in Los Angeles said today no ar-
rests have been made as a resul t of the
t:eizure. bul • detailed inspection of the
vessel is continuing. An agent speculated
!he crafl was sailed lo the U.S. fron1
1\le.~tco. The case is .till under in·
veshgation. ht noted.
Gal Solon Will Run
NEIY BEDFORD, Miw. (lJPI ) -Rep.
Shirley Chisholm ~D-N .Y.f. ~aying the
nation i:ii In a stale: "of massive sociAI
and polll\cal transrormation," has an-
nounced .11he \Yill enter four Pre!'lidential
primaries ncxl ~·car
Ray Sharp that Johnson y,·as a passive
type of person "'ho reacted in a typical
fashion to the suggestion that charges of
first degree murder would be riled
against him if the kind of statemenl!I
desired by !ht prosecution wer!' not
forthcoming.
Lindauer told the pro~ecut1on 1ha1 h1!!
series of intervietYS t\•ith Johnsou -the
sessions lasted belll'ecn 25 and 30 hours
-left him Y.'ith the impression that !hf'
}oung ~larine po!ice1nan \\"as irnphcaled
in the killing on .lune 16. 1970, of Connie
Lvn" Joh nso n.
·Johnson is accused or clubbing ~1111
pregnant v.·ife wit h a bar stool and then
stabbing her more than 20 times. lie is on
trial For second degrre murder.
Johnson told police shortly alter thf'
killing thal he found Mrs. Johnson ·~ blood
splattered bod.Y spra\\•led nn the bed u1
thei r :apartment a! 416 ~1on1 crey La nf'
1vhen he re1urned fron1 duly at Sanla Anil
~tarine Corps· Air St:ilion.
Johnsou 1old districl attorne) 's in·
\"e)'Tigat or~ shurtly before his arrest 11
year later that he knew he had killed· hi~
·1rife but eou\cl not re..:aU thr 11ctual
det11ils of !hr n1urder,
He testified under !hf' influencf' of
sodium amytol that he recalled hilling
h!'r ll'ilh the b<ir stool after t:hn1bing
through the window of Ille aparlment but
could not recall the stabbing other than
the fact that he believed he washed off
the blood in the shower.
Johnson admitt~ he ,,nd hi.~ wife fre-
11ently quarrel~ bet·ause he insisted on
using marijuana. And he adn1itted to in-
~·estigators . that he had he.en using pot
shortly before the kil1 1n~ and !hat his
wife had locked hin1 our of 1hC' aparl-
n1eni .
\\'ilson testified today !ha1 lie d)d no!
believe addiction lo mariju ana led lo
violence. The psychia1 rist. who 1s also a
qualified atlorney·. said he had never
heard of a case in which pot smoking
('Ou ld be direclty attributed to any crime
of vio lence.
Lindauer 1estif1ed last v.·eck tha!
Johnson's p.~ychialric makeup 11·a!I
directly altributable to the punish1nen1 be
had received as a child from h1~
dominan1 mother.
Lag una Planners
Set Study Meet
On Heig ht Lin1it
Laguna Beach planning cornniissione rll
\1•111 hold a study srssion tonight 10
discuss with Village La gun a officials the
incorporation or the 36-roo! height limit
into the general plan.
The meeting. scheduled for i :10 p.rn. al
city h11Jl. is being htld al the request of
Village Laguna. a ('t\'ll' organization
which v.·orked successfully for adopt111g
the height limit. Voters passed the new
lav.• at an Aug. 3 election.
Commiss ioners in late August agrf'.ed
lo begin changing portion!! or lhe (•1\v
building code lo conform wit h the ne1v
la w. At that time. cily planner Wayne
J\loody and city attorney Tully Seymour
v.·ere instructed to begin compiling a !isl
of sections of the code which 11·ould re-
quire change by co1nmission action .
No action ha s been taken on the 1na!tcr
since that time. Jn addition lo changing
specific section of the building code.
Village Laguna officials are asking for
the incorporation of the new law intc the
general plan.
Laguna Bids
For Third Win
Laguna Beach High's Artill t! will
be gunning for their third 1trai1ht
football triumph when they duel
arch-rival San Clrmente f"rlday
night 81. Laguna .
Coach Hal Akiru· Art lst.5 made ii
two straight over a two-season span
by rallying ror • I~ to 6 CQnquest of
(:ladstone Saturday night at C.:ltrus
College.
See page 26 for detailed account
nf the game.
•
•
DAILY PILOT 11111 ........
WHILE JOHN , 6, POLISHES, PAUL AND ANNA CHECK THE RIGGING ON THEIR FLOATING HOME
The Ne ighborhood 1, Quiet and You Can W •k• up in the Morning ind Ha ar the Seagull•
Quiet on the Amethyst
Marina Famil y Finds Lif c Re-ivarding Aboard Ship
By PATRICK 80\'1.E
0 1 1111 O•il• l"ilol ·OU H
Ifs an en1pty neighborhood dun11g lh!'
11cek. with l1nlc trafl1 c and fC'\V calJrrs.
cxeept for an oc..:aslona l seagull
But on \\'ee kends. Paul and Anna Hen1 -
rncrs· solitude 1s so d.isrnpted that lhey
lrequent!y untle !heir home Jrom its
Oa11a J\larina berth and head Ou\ to tht
1p 11ct. open liCa .
··\re had ncvt:r really thought aboul ln .
111g on !he boa1.'' says Paul llenunrr~
11 ill! a touch or his native Gennan ac-
l'C lll. .. bu! we ~ort of got pushed uito
n1ak1ng some pretty fa sl arrangements.
Lagu11a Trustees to Study
Hi1·ings Witl1 U.S. Mo11ey
Tht hiring of t11io leather a<;~istants
:ind !1\'0 teachet' aids under pro\·i~ions ()(
the feder::il Emergency Employment Act
1 EEA ) 111i!I IOI' mattrr.o; 10 cb d1scus:sed
:it a stud\' session of 1n1<;tees of !11r
Laguna Be<ich Lnificd &.·hOl'il D1str1<'t
Tuesday al 7 ::10 p.111
The four staff rnen1bers 11011ld he utilu·
,.d al the variou~ elernentary ~chool~ !<1
~lle\'1ale "growing pains" caused this f;1l l
by a slight increase in enrolltnent.
Education Group
Honors Thurston
Historv T ea ch er -' .
Thur~ton lntermedial!' School hl!ltory
Inst ruct()r Ron Rodec ker has been named
to the Leaders or American Secondary
Education.
Several top nolch educators each year
rrom th roughout !ht United State.'! are
given the recognition, according lo Dr.
<..'lifford Bee rs, director of the organ1t:1-
tioo
·r11ose honored . Beers said. "'ill be
given biographica l coverage in the annual
awards volume. Guidelines ror selection
include an educattlr's talent s in the
classroom. contribution to research, ad·
minislrative abilille:ii and civic service.
Rodecker. 3014 Nesta\I Court. Lagun11
Beach. h3s been with ttl( Laguna school
district since 1963 and his worked on
several differentiated staffing programs
for the district.
Singer in Ho:s pital
~TUNICH. Gmn11ny fA P\ A
spokesman ror Americ.an gospel singer
~tahalia Jackson uys she is being
lrtated in a U.S. Army hoapital here for
a serious circulator)' ailment.
"Sbe was in considerable pain when she
11•as admitted to the hospital Friday." lhe
spokesman s:tid Sunday. "She has a
his tory of a heart ail mrnt t1nd has been
consulting physicians for 80nle d1y1
about her condition "
.,
Board member's 11i·e1't asked to approvr
!ht ernployment of the four staff
rncmbcrs Tuesday. bu! decided the ma!·
rer required more study. The dislrict
would rec-e1ve $13.450 for the employmen t
or lhe le<ichcr~.
Also un the agend~ is a repor1 lron1
board president Bill Thomas on a numtwr
of priority items for study during the
1·01 ning v.•eek)'
Thomas so1icitcd items frorn members
nl lhe board and met v.·1\h Superintendenl
\1.'llliam Ullo1n 10 for111 a calendar or
.~tudy dates on the issues The rirst
so.~sion ls set for Oct 12.
"\\'e'll announce the topics at the
1neeting." 'i'homas said this morning,
without specifying what they might be.
Such matters a.'> textbook selection,
Leach~ hiring practices, the ITA reading
program and the Top of the W()r!d in·
structional program ha\•e been mentioned
in past meetings as possi ble topics for
study.
Dr. R()bert Reeves . director of in·
srrucUon. will report on administ ration
practices and counseling procedures at
I he conlinuation branch of Laguna Beach
Hi gh School. .
Board mernbers will also hear a report
on a trip last week by Dr. Norman
Brot\'e. Dr. Ullnm and Dr. Charles Hess.
businegs manager, to Sacrament() for a
meeting with other Basic Ale! Districts on
the !ubject or school rinancing.
Gang Robs Man
Of 'Pot'.iVfoney
A Haciend .:: Height s mM v.•ho told
poUce he had been attempting to
purchast marijuana Friday night was
r~·nf Sl ,100 otl Woodland Orl,,.e by a
sang of five men.
Police said 1he five. brandishing tire
trone. acC1>Sled the victim at thr end or
tbe 1hort street at about 10 p.m. Two of
the rol>ber.11 h...id him while the ()ther
three look the money from his wallrt. In·
vestlgators said.
Following lhe robbery. the 111.ng fled
tlit> iCene In an auto. officers said . ,.
The past rour months aboard have really
been qulle rewarding "
Hcrnn1ers. a self-en1ployed Jandscapt
rnaintcnance speciatlst, previo usly lived
111 a San .Juan Ca pistrano house that he
says w;is just 100 big for he. his 11i·ife and
si x-year-old son.
l)ut of c:unosity. they pu1 the house up
for sale and someone bought it im-
1nediately. giving !hem 30 days to vacate.
After being unable to rent a home in the
area. llcn1n1ers decided to try life aboard
lus 37-foot sailboat. the Amethyst.
··one or !he most re warding thing s
about li ving on the boa! is lo ge l up early
when everything 1s quiet and listen lo the
seagulls ... lle1n1ners says silting in the
.~mall cabin of the craft. ··1t is beautiful
10 1ust wake up tn lhe morning."
"And you becomf! more apprecialivr
about life afte r living on the boat .'' his
pretty blonde wifl' 11dds as she prepares
~·offee in the small galley ... You begin to
sec and notice rhings you normally
wouldn 't see .''
The farnil y ha~ d1.~cnvercd thal. except
f11r the smaller an1ount of .11pace, ship·
huard life 1~ morf relaxing than living in
1-ro11·fl~d subur bia -and less expensivC'.
l;:i~. electric and 11•ater services arc
provide/I as part of the $100 rnonthly slip
rental rec llen)n1crs pays no property
taxes on hi., home. i\ solicit or never
pounds on his hatch and his telephone
never rings. because he doesn't have -
or want -one.
"There·s a pay phone at lhe end of !ht
pie-H 11i•c need i\.' says Anna.
"\lie are both sort of loners ." adds her
:II -year-old hu sband. explaining that only
four other families live aboard their
boats at !he harbor.
Although the marina ts practically
deserted during the week. Hemmers says
it is jumping with boatowners on
week ends. The Hemmers have had so
many guests since flrsl moving aboard
that they rinally had to ask their friends
lo stop visiting in onler to get the normal
household chores done .
Despite the ple11sure of being able lo
cp:tcli your dinner out the back door or
being rocked lo sleep every night, Hem -
mers says that boat life still has its pro-
blems.
What he considered the biggest pro.
blem of living aboard -carrying a &Cl
Pound block of ice down the 'Pier every
day to keep the food cold -he &0lved as
soon as posidble,
During ~is first weeks .-rd -
between visiting friends -he inatalled a
relrigeratioo unit on the boa~ and hat
carried no more ice. Another problem,
which has yet to be solved. is to ketp the
family's two !et -going c.ats from e•-
pklring lhe other boats berthed at the
marina.
Arrd family aquabblea don 't 10 away ~
living aboard, either. although the Ogh&
are not over which TV program to watch.
Anna explains they are both enrolled ln
a ce\eatla.I navigation cour!lf: and spend
their evenings ftudylng the heavens.
"One night . we.had a terrible. argument
over wht.re one of the atars wu," •hi
slitys
I
County Talk
Singles Out
Attica Riot
\lice President Spiro T. Agnew told the
na tion's top la \11 enforcement officer! ro.
day at Anaheim 's Convention Center that
the Attica prison riot has become "yet
another cause celebre. in the pantheon ol.
radical revolutionary propaganda.'
"The real issue is not prison reform.''
said the vice president. speaking .at the
7.8th Ann _ua l C<i~ference o[ the lntem1·
l1onal Chiefs of Police.
"Now the name 'Att ica'' joins the list
of geographir places and llloga ns whose
very utterance. in the litany of an ti·
American hate preached by radical pro·
pagandis ts. is a dagger at the heart ot
our country's free institutions " Agnew said . '
."Certainly the members or this au·
d1ence would be am ong the firsl to
recognite that. !hough the place name~
~nd slogans change , the modus operandi
in the development of l he~e celebrated
radical left cau ses ren1 ains the liame:'
Agnew said.
"This holds true. from their Genesi~
until their final anointment by editorial
polemicists. \\'ho then righteously display
!hem as the latest eJ.amples or the en·
during guilt of American society.''
Agne\v said that one would have \ti
follow the events at Attica "With the ut·
most diligence" to determine lhlt the in·
iligators had criminal records.
"The ul!imate issue at Attica was not
prison refcirm ,'' Agnew said. "No. the
issue al Attica -like the issue invulved
11i•henever the orderly processes of a free
society are confron ted by those 1'.'ho place
themselves above or beyond the law -i.'I
·whether that societ v·s fre e institution•
arc lo survive or go · under."
Agnew said that in the past 10 years,
633 American law enforcement officer!!
have been killed as a result of criminal
aC!i()ll .
''\Vhen those "'ho protecr us are at-
lacked, we are all attacked .'' Agnew 1a id.
''\\'hen those 11•ho sa feguard our in·
sli!u1ions are endangered, our institutions
are endangered.
·•\Vhen !hose fe11· assigned lo uphold
our laws give their lives in the conduct of
their duty. then we , the many who
~urvtve. ha~·e a renewed respnlll!!ibilily to
~re lo it that their sacrifice was not in
\'aln -fhat the government or law ror
\\'hich they died i~ upht'ld against th<>MI
\1'ho would destrov ii "
"If. then , there ·is a larger lesson to bt
dratvn lrom the lo.~s of life al Attica, it is
!hat Americans who value our 1y1tem
and ii~ tree. institutions cannot un·
dereslimafe th t potential for violence Md
de~truclion inherent in any radicaJ m1li·
tant mo vemen t," Agnew said.
1-Iartke Bla:s ls Nixon
ONTARIO, Calif. IUP I I -Sen. Vance
l1artke !0.lnd.I, urging an all-out effort
to unseat President Nixon In 1972, has ac·
cused tht chief executi ve of blatantly
lying for his st.atemenls on the Vietnan1
\Var.
''Politician~ ha\'e broken promise'
before and gotten away with it." Hartke
told the California Democratic Stale Cen·
tr al Commitee Saturday ... Bui never ha~
an American President lied so blatantly
for iO long as has Richard Nii on on lb•
war in Vietnam."
Ceut
We•c•er
Those ominous clouds will clear
by mid-da y today and Tutsday,
"'ilh mostly sunny skies in lh•
a(temOOM. Highs along the coast.
6S rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight
between 57 and 58.
INSIDE TODA l'
\Vltt n's the best tinie Lo bu11:'
R1QhL now. before tlit frtet t
me/t.,-. eccordittO lo S11tvfo Port·
tr. Ste her a11alvsi" 011 Poot .to
todau. ...... • ............... .. C•llttnolt "
_ .. ~ n.ttii111 u, " 111 ............. ..
(lt..iti.I ..... .. _
'""" " ·-· " ,, ...... ,..,.. • , __
" ·-1•11
DMttl Mtfkft " .... .,........,., )t.JI
0 1¥Wtft " r.-..i. " •fllffl•I , .. , •
,_
" . ....,,.,_, " ·-• JllflM><• .. , :=--· Ill••' 1 .. 1. -·-" ...... ...
• I •
'
•
% OAILY PILOT SC Mor!d.,-, Stptm.btr l7, 1971
City hood Proponent Blasts Heire.ss' Charges
Ooe leacU.n& proponent (If the proposed
:lty "' --• bitter. blimrlnl
reply" today 10" ruch heir~ Joan Irvine.
Smlth't latest broadside attack against
he future city.
John Burton, chairman of the Counc!I
1f Communlliu of Irvine declared -
1mon1 other charges -l>frs. Smith's
;tatements published last week are a
nisleeding pack ot lie!.
He .also said they made his own wife
The blonde heiress, owner of 21 percent
of Irvine Company stock, had dug in with
both feet in her batUe lD thwart the city
&ht predlcta will be 1iant alum.
She la out of a.ligmnent with other
Irvine family and corporate 1tockholder1
on the issue and her most recent ac--
('U!lations Inflamed CCI C h a i r m a n
Burton.
"r.fy first reaction wais amusement
mix!<! wilh disgust ." Burton declares in a
prepartd statement.
His remarks go on to show largel y
di!lgust and dismay.
"We are no a rich girl's plaything. \\'e
are pt"Ople," Burton fumed.
Press •Periled'
ACLU Cl.aims Federal Pressure
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Government
r riucb:m of the press has become so
• widespread and sll-pervasive" that it
•'Onstitutes a "massive federal-level at-
l!tnpt to s:ubvert the letter and spirit of
1Capo Valley
Jlomeow11ers
ltleet Slated
The first fall meeting of the Capistrano
I alley Homeowners' Association will be
·eld tonight at 8 o'clock a t Valencia
l.Jementary School, 25661 Pas~ cle
! alencil in Laguna Hills.
The gu est speaker at the session wil l be
: art Spendlove, president or the Sad-
: le back Area Coordinatin g Council, e:z-
; laining the functions of his organitation.
Hom!Qwners are expected to discwi;s
: 1e new proposal for the county lO pay
11r con.c;tructJon of Mission Park in the
1rea. The developer, Leadership Homes,
1 id previously plannl!d to build the
'!creational facility, but has since decid-
1 j not to.
In addition, the continuing problem of
>eeding motorists along MacKenzie
'treet will be discussed in hopes of seek-
1g new 11upport for a plan tD close the
U"ough street with a cul de sac.
The usociation had once convinced the
range County Board of Supervisors to
ndertake IUCh a project. but several
xneownen objected and the plan was
Jandoned.
The county then agreed to inst.all stop
gns at intersections along the road, but
ssoc:iation officials fear a county traffic
Jmmittee will recommend against in·
a.!lation of the signs.
AU residents of the Capistr a no
ighlands: community, including non-
1embers or the association, may attend
1e meeting .
the First Amendment,'' a re port issued
today by the American Civil Libertiell
Union charged.
The repOrt noted also a ''subtle ten·
dency .... of the press itself to pull back;
l.o consider the controversiality of its ac-
tions before it takes them, and then, in
some cases, not to take those actions -
to engage in self-censorshi p.''
The report on censorshlp of the press.
prepared for the ACLU by free lanc e
journalist Fred Powledge, charged the
press with trying to "play it safe," to
avoid being singled out for criticism.
The ACLU said Powledge, in private in·
te.rviews with press and government
representatives, was told by some
newsmen of "harassing actions" against
the press.
Powledge, in the report, wrote he had
been told by CBS News President
Richard Salant of a "boycott'' of the
press by Defense Secretary Melvin La ird.
He reported Jack Nelson of the Los
Angeles Times said he had been smeared
by assistant FBI Director Thomas Bb:hop
as "a man who drinks loo much."
Powledge also reported he had been
told by Louis Kraar of Time-Life news
service that he had been denied informa-
tion and access to transportation in the
Far East.
The report also charged the police with
"utter harassment" of underground and
campus papers.
He said. "it is not dtfficull for an
observer v.'ho posses~es a healthy amount
of paranoia to conclude that authorities
"'OU!d treat the 'straight' press in the
same crude w.11ys. I( they thought they
could get away "'ith it.
"And increasingly -8ided by vice
presidential speeches. subpoenas from
the Jwtice Ilfpartment. 'notices' from
the FCC, citation from congressmen,
censorship by the courts; in short, what
amounts to a widespread demonstration
of the government's total contempt for
the press and the first .11mendment -the
authorities are coming to the conclusion
that they can get away with It," the
report co ncluded.
Weary Nixon Returns
4fter Hi-storic Meet
A."'CHORAGE <UPI) -Turning from
n historic gesture in international
iplomacy to pressing domestic pro-
lems, President ~1xon new back to
·ashington today from his meet ing with
apanese Emperor Hiroh1!11.
The President and his ~1fe Pat boarded
ir Force One in bright , .i5<1egrtt weath-
• at Elmendorf Air FOfce Base and took
:r at 9·22 am. Alaska time 111 ·Z2 am.
01') for the six-hour. 2Q·minute fl ight.
The ir departure "·as delayed for ne:ir!y
n hour to allow the pre.~1dent1al party a
OMHGl co.a.n
DAllY PllOT
~ to..uT PUl t lSKIKQ COlAl"AHY
lt<>l>•rt N. We.d ,,.iun, •r>Ct J'utll~
J•t\: •. Curl.., 'V8 ~ Md c;....,11 ...........
n oMll K't•vtl ....
n ;111•1 A. MV1l'M11
M8nqlrd Et!•
a..I• H. lo" Jlich 1.,r P. Nill ~~t:OIWI
Let-IMdi Offlq
J l? F-1t A'l't nu1
ll•1lt19 •ddr•u: r.o .... l 666, ,2652
S.• ci... .. Offke
few more minutes re!'l.
The President looked a bit weary after
his history-making meeting with Hirohit.o
v.·hich went on until nearly 5 a.m. Mon·
da y 'Vashington time. hut "'a!I de.~cr1hed
as "very, very pleased" "'ith how it "·ent.
It was bright , clear. su nny and cold in
Alaska when Nixon aw oke about 8 a.m.
local time, read lhe newspaper!; and
discussed briefly "•ith aides his Sunday
night meeting "'Ith the emperor.
Nixon's meeting late Sunday night ~·1th
Emperior Hiroh ito marked the first time
a Japane se emperor had ever left his own
country,
It capped a busy weekend for the
President, who visited four Pacific
Northwest 5tates, announcing a s!epped-
up al.Omic energy program, intervening
personally in the \\'est Coast dock strike.
and dumping a litllt cnncrele into the Big
Libby dam in Montana.
Nixon's intucesslon Saturd~y in the R9-
day-ol d dock strike was the firsl such ac-
tion he had ever taken in .11 strike since
he became President.
Hi! 2D-mlnute meeting with Longshore
labor lt..ader Harry Bridges and shippers
negoti.11tor Ed Flyn n brought pledgell
from tbem to try ad end the strike by
!hill weekend.
"To think that she (h-1.rs. Sm1th J can fly
inUI Orange County from her estate ln
Virginia, call people riamH, spread lies,
lllunt her 'lntlueoce.' challenge people'•
motivell and then run away to pl.11y in a
European resort i.! incrediblt," he con·
tinuell,
"fl &ays something abnut ~1rs. Smi th ,"
Bur(J)n adds, charging her with a cam·
paign designed to smear individuals anrl
distort f.acts and confuse prople and
issues. ~,
Burton said he called ~me F'riday
from hill North American Rock"·ell offic e
in Anaheim to find his wife in tears.
Together Again
"IL became clear that thir wu a
vicious attack and Mrs, Smith hid donr a
really terrible thing," Burton declares.
One allegation on which she was quoted
was that the two-time CCI chairman had
offlcell in Irvine Company headquarters ..
Burt.on l'harges Mrs. Smith failed to
note he was elected CCI chairman -
l\.\'ire -by leaders of the incorporation·
back ln~ nrganizations the city will en-
cnmrass.
"If then. I arn 11 puppet, a tool. a Judas
gnat and an Ir vin e Company-appointed
autornaton. i;n mus t he these community
leaders," Burton .argues.
\Valter 1-lickel, for mer secretary of the interior, r.hats amicably with
Presi dent Nixon as the P resident ar rives for reception at Hickel's
h om e in Anchorage, Alaska. 1'-1eeting took place Sunday prlor to Mr .
Nixon's meeting with Emperor Hirohito of Japan. President fired
Hickel earlier this year.
Archaeologists Discover
A11cie11t T1·ee iI1 County
A l.:irgt fossi1 zed tree -perhaps 51)
mill io n years old -has betn unearthed
on the Irvine Ranch at the ct1unty
sanilary land fill site near Santiago
Reservoir.
The fnssil tree 1s hfolieved tn be a type
now extinct. and ne\'er l11und before on
the FaC'ific Coast. archen!ogists say.
lecil V R:nhinson, ;in amateur rork
h11und frnm 1-'anla Ani1, disc0vererl the
tret' three mon!hs ag11, \\'hr.n he w.:itched
earth movers at the land rill.
Robinson now CQmf)lains that lhe tree
was not prnlected by Irvine nfficia!s and
snme chunks nf it ha\'e heen carried
811''1V. A~chPf'llngicat Rescan·h, Inc .. I ARI 1, a
Co!l!a Mesa fi rm "'hirh coordin;ite~ all
scientific rPst'arch on the 80,001).11cre
Irvine Ranch . has kep t tht find qu iet the
past three months tn avoid such pro-
blem.~.
Roger De.c;autel!I , pre!iident of ARI ,
a nnnu nrPd l.ndav that the Jr,·ine Com-
pan.Y 11·itl dl'lnate the !ree 111 the cnuntv nf
Orange. llnlil a suilahle PXhihilinn !"lit' 1s
l"elrcted , !he lns.~il lrl!e "'ill be disph1ved
al Chapman Colle~e in Oran~e. ·
Dr . VirR inia Pa~e. S1anford Un11·ers1tv
paleobn!a nist. has irlrntifierl !ht trPt aS
belonging to the Ph~·J!anthoideae fa mily,
1'ire Shop o,vucr
Hurt, I1nproving
A San Clen1enre lire shop owner was
reported "progressing weJJ " at Sriuth
Coast Community Hnsp1tal today
recQ\·ering from painful injuries suffer.ed
Friday "'hen a truck pinned him ag.:i inst
.11 workbench
Bruce Holley, the owner of Hollr>y's
Tire Service .11t 12ZS N. El Camino Real.
surfered cu ts and internal Injuries in the
waist area ~:hen the pickup rolled from a
repa ir rack .
Police and firemen ga\'e the man first
11id .after the truc k was moved.
based nn th in sPCtion studies of the tre:e.
She said this genus of tree was
previously unknown in the fossil record of
the Pacific Coast stales. ''It ls quite
possihle "'e are dealing with an ertinct
species nr e\'en in ext inct genus," sh e
said
Donald Fife. a stair geol(lgist, says the
r,:i rP fnss1I linrl is rontained in .:i cross·
bPdrlerl . medium ·grained a r k o sic
s;ind~1nne bPl 11·een 40 and 60 million
:i.cars nld He :idded that he has rarely
nhscrvrd fnss il tree specimens of any
k1nrl 1n th.<i! stral::i .
0 r('r;:ill Sl7e nf the !ree IS n11! yel
knn11'n. The part C'urrently ex posed is 30
fept long
Or Arthur Fhnl nf Chapman College
i;ppcula trd rhe lree could be 60 feet lnng
and 11•eiAh up lo 22 Inn~.
Bulldn1ers s11rrl1ed by the C''1unty will
C'\Jl a"·ay the e?.'1.h i,1·ithin a few feel of th e
1rPf'. then stud('n1s frnm the Chapman
r ,,llC'.C:P ,C('(llnl!'.v and palennlntogy classes
~·111 caN>fulll' fi nish the diF(ging with hand
tools. Fhnt said.
HH 1-f"s Decision Due
\\'A!'H!:-.:r.TO 'IJ 1lJP l 1 -Sen Hubert
H HumphrPv !0 -Minn . l, deC'l Rri n,c: he
"11.~ nnl y l'I "h:i1 r',~ hreadth" awav frnm
election in l!lfill, will dr>cide "·lthln lhe
nC"i.:t /pw mf1n!h.~ whether to seek the
IJC"m0<·r11!i{' nom1n:it.ion fnr President fn
1972
He. declared his own home Is, in effect,
CCI h<adquarwo for aU too.. pn>mmlng
incorporation within the community.
Burton chargts Mrs. Smith's promotion
of the Tax Reform Act in Congress ls
based on self-interest.
"Her real interest is her personal argu·
ment with the Irvine Foundation, an
argument that I don 't understand aside
from the well -reported fact that she
would like lo see it destroyed," Burton
claims:.
His denunciation goes on ln say she hA!I
testified in Coogress that Irvine ranch-
l&nds aren't being developed u fast
Damage Feared
due to Irvine Foundat1on involvemwt.
"And llhe isn't getting the dlvidenda
that she should bf:." he declares.
"In sum.mat)'." Burton conciudes, "her
charges .. , partlcul.11.rly the personal
ones, were unkind, unprod uctive, unin·
formed and untrue."
Burton notes he has nel'er met r.irs.
Smith, charging she has seen none of th•
reports prepared relative lo Incorporation
and all this is jLLSt as well.
"Because it is none of her busines~.
The people of Jrvi ne "'ill run the new ci·
ty, not J oan Irvine Smith or anyone
else," Burton declares.
Protests Flare
Over Atom Tests
ANCHORAG1':. Alsaka i IJPI ) -Soine
500 pt:rsons along the parade route
covered by President Nixon and J .11 panese
Em peror Hirohito pro tested Sunday
against the nuclear lr>st planned on
Amchitka Island in lhe Aleu!i an chain.
The protest was peaceful and there
1;1,·ere no arrests. A number of signs, one
reading "Explode the bomb under
\Vashington. D.C., not Amchitka,'' \\'ere
displayed along the r11ute.
Organization in OOth the United Slates
and Japan fear tidal \\.'aves and Parth-
quakes may result from the scheduled
five·megalon underground blast.
The city of Anchorage had originally
denied rall y and mnrch permits to the
Alaska coalition against Cann ikin -a
nickname for the bl ast. But a Superior
Court reversed that decision and the
stale Supreme Court Sunday morning
upheld the Superior Court ruling.
In Portland. Ore., two evironmental
J(roups asked Nixon lo call off the blast
because it could have serious con·
sequences.
The Pacifi c Northwest charter of the
Sierra Club and the Don't t>.lake a \\'.111·e
Committee nf Vanrouver. B.C.. an·
nounC'ed Sunday they sent Ni:ii:nn a letter
s a.1•in~ the risks in the blast "·ere unwar-
ranted from any possible benefits ex·
peeled.
"Such a blast, the largest underground
test our nation has e\'er undertaken,
Law Cooperation
Said Essential
To Curb Crime
Greater cooperal inn by all se,c:ments of
law enf orcement -pa rticularly juctges -
is essential to curb America's growing
crime rate, one government official
declared today.
Th e remarks emerged from one panel
discussion during the i8th Annual Con-
ference or the Internationa l Association or Chiefs of roli ce con1·ened at the
Anaheim Convention Center.
.Joseph Ka ilz. a member of lhe New
York City \Vatcrfront Co mmission, s;i1d
poliC"emen can 't handle the monumental
jnb alnne.
f(lort ~. prosecu !(1r.s. p r (I ba I i (I n
depar1menl!I 'lnrl p<i role bnarrts ::ire all
eq ual ly responsible for a ne"' commit-
men!. he said
"F.1·rryQne concernE'd 111\h la w· i1nd
onler 1s respnnsihle. Anet 1hal jilnes for
JUrl.C:l'S Inn, whn ~hnuld play a !'feater
rnle 1n rrp(lrt1n ~ hreakdO\.l'ns 11·hrre they
N'ru r." Kaitz remarked
"And they should 11·nrk more clnse!y
w1lh th e police tn hei r red11r-e {'r!ml' -
0u r nation 's Nn. I problem ."' he con·
l1nuerl .
Rings
tould ha ve senous consequences for our
country anrl others in the Pacific are11,''
their mL~sive 5aid.
The Can.iidian organization w a 5
report ed lo be planning to send 11 ship to
the Al eutian Island to protest lhe ex·
plosion. Tt "'as to drift just outside U.S.
territonal waters, three mile s from
Amchit ka Island .
Flarning Eagle
Sparks Blaze
A low nvini; eag le collided "'lth a
high volt<ige line causing a brush
fire which burned over three acres
of hllly land Saturday about a mile
south of UC!. Orange County Fire
Dep.11rtment officers reported.
Officials said the eagle's feathers
v.·ere set fire and as the bird fell to
the .'lround the dry grass \\'as ig-
nited . ·
f ire units from Orange County
Airport subdued the blaze in about
an hour.
Deputies Th,vart
Holdup Attempt
At Da11a Store
Sheriff's deputies on r1Ju!Jne patrol
tll\\•arted <tn alleged artemrterl holdup of
a Dao;i Point Liquor Stnr e Sund;iy night.
Depu11es arrested h1·11 San Bernardino
Count ~· men as !he pa ir assertedly ap-
proachrd Phil's L1riuor at .142!0 Paci fic
Coast Hig hwa y One of the pai r. officers
s::iirl. was carrying a saw!'d-off .22·caliber
r ifle~
ln1·est1gators sa1 rl the 1n{'i rie11t uccurred
at ahnu! 9 p m. when depulie$ noticed a
car i:tnpped in an alle\' The at1tn's
license pla tes had been , smeared "'ith
m1id.
A.~ Honalr! i\I Et"·nnd . 22, and Jame!
P .lnne~. 19. emr rged cteput1es mo\'ed in
and arre~1ed !hem.
ln1esliga !1•rs sri1d nne nf the pair
11ssertedly threw the 1,·ei1ron 1nlo some
hushes as officers approach ed
Addresses of the ti,1·0 men \I ere not 1m·
med1a1ely a1·:iil<ihle. They "'ere booked
inln Orange Cnunty Ja il on charges of at·
templ!"'d robber~·
Pra nk Fa ta l to Boy
LO;'oiG BEr\('1/ 1L'rl 1 -l\e11 n l\inr!er,
17, was eleclrnculed Sund;:i v n1$1 hl whe n
he apparently attemp!rd tn rr\'erse the
\\'iring on a city light standt1rd as a
prank.
Holley, whose residence is at 503 Calle
De So lo, was injured shortly before noon.
..... , IUwdl Mo'1 (N.,.I
Officers could not determine why the
truck rolled from the rack.
DIAMOND RING
$50
DIAMOND RING
.90 ct 11111,.,
14 ., 9•'' $200
3115 North 11 Ctmlno R•1 I, 92672
°""' OHluo c.t1' M-· U1 Wnt 11.Y S~ .....,_., &Mel\! 1Jll H-1 loou1 .... 11'1f ~ ... di: 1Jl7J 1Mc11 lkou11¥MI
Gifted Students Programs
Studied by Capo Dist1·ict
LADIES
SOLITAIRE ,,,,,,,.
14 ., ... ,,.. ,.,,
Ow1r•~•Mll
.. A-l lM •I
"" t1' Ml,t l
OVER 50 LADIES DIAMOND
RINGS TO CHOOSE FROM $25 & UP
DOM RAc;ITI
OUR MOST
UNUSUAL
DIAMOND
•
't'rusttts of the Caplslranri Unifi~
School DillfriC't will continue their 11tudy
or programs for mentally gifted students
at toni1Zht '1 7:30 meeting in Serra Schryl)l.
At the last mettil'lg board member
Robert Dahlberg pr11ised prngram pro-
posal~ at four schools and trltlcited five.
others v.'hich he 82.id did not meet board
stand11.rds.
Each Individual .-lementary schon l prl')-
posal wlll be examined on it1 o"'n merits
at tnnighf s mePling.
Programs te<'tiving pr1i~t ~·ere those
-prep11red by the: princlpal!I of Crown
V11lley. Palisades, San .Juan a n d
C11pistrann School~ ~1 ost 1:rouped Rifted
J1tudents in " self-coiitained cl assroom
'
with 11tudenb' who ucel.
Agreeln~ with Dahlberg's anatysi~ wert
members ol Parenl Association for Gifled
Education I PAGE ) which i1 1 parent ad·
\'IS(lry group
1
on the menLally girted minor
pm~ram.
rroii:ramii: criticized by Dahlberg and
PAr.E Included arrangement! for
"cl uster grouping " gi rted children in
classrooms "'here there is a brnad range
or mental 11bl1itlr~ and r?moving gifted
rhlldren from their c I 11 ~1 ro o ms
perlndlc;i!ly fnr ".-nrichment."
Dahlberg ch11rged that the11e programs:
""trP not heltPr or more varted than from
la&l year'• programs which were found
inadeq uate by a special consultant.
t .
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
OPEN DAILY 9 to 6 COMI IN AND IROWSI AROUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MBA -1-a .. H.,i... I ........ _,
'
GUARANTEE
w~ ... .,.~ b1, • 1111,,,.."111 ... .,.
n ..,, wllt t ••ra11,_ t~llt lllla.
111"4 '-•pptel• iet 40 '~ MOil(
tli• ro1 pold fer It ,, •••r
"'•"'' beet . c ... ., .. , c1 ...... n
al......_? COM PAll.
IJIPEl T WATCH •I PAl l
DOHI ON Pl lM ISIS
7
• j
I
• -·--,.
San Cle111enie
Capistrano EDITION
VO c. M , NO . 23 I, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1971
eat us ect • ra1nwas
A11uftei111 Tulk
Agnew Assails
Radical Causes
Vice President Spiro T. Agn ev.· told the
nation's top Jaw enforce ment officers to-
day at Anahe1n1 's Con\'enlion Center that
the Altlta prison riot has bccon1e .,yel
Two Mari11es
Lo se Live s
At Pe11dleto11
'!'wo Can1p Pendleton i\larines died in
separate incidents on the base over the
\\eekend. One young n1an wa s killed by
an exploding grenade.
Base spokesmen identified the grenade
t·icthn as Pfc ll<irold J\I. Stover. l~.
v.·hose parents 111·1" 111 El.vria. Ohio.
Stover 1vas kille<t ins!antl~· 11·he n he and
a budd_1· y.•:indered inlo an i\li!I grenade
l:iunchini; range and Stover ?.pparentl~·
picked u11 a dud grena<lf
The proJCClth~ exploded. ~illing the
routh and inflicting several frag111 en-
tation wound~ on the race of Pfc_ Danny
Trotler. 18. of \Va lnul Srpings. Tex. ·rro!-
ter v.·as reported in satisfactory l'Ond i-
!ion today at the base hospital.
The second "·eekend death took place
on Saturday. A young recruit on ten1-
porary training al Pend!eto1. -regularly
attached lo the recruit depot in San Diego
-collapsed duri ng exercises and died
r n route to the hospital.
ll1s na1ne "·as withheld un1 il lus famil\'
can be co ntacted. ·
Portable Class
Contract Faces
School Trustees
Trustees ol lhl' Tustin Union High
School District tonight \\'ill be 11sked to
approve either lhl' purchase or lease of
portable clas!lfoom for use al :\lission
\"ieJo High School ·
Su f)t'rintendenl \\'illl ani 7.ogg sa1d lhree
~uch fac1hlie~ are now needed at the
iH:hoo! lo accon1n1odate !ht. overflo\1·ing
i;ludenl body.
School official~ had e:<pet:t ed an enro1l -
1nent of 2.28.'i on the opening day of school
Sept. 13. but were surprised \.\'hen 2.400
youngsters attended classes. 'l'he enroll·
n1ent a! the end of the 1970-71 school year
11 as 1.950.
High school prii1c1pal Robert Bosanko
said five additional teachers are being
hired to meet the-. leaching demands.
The principal noted that the school ha'
experienced few problems olher than
cro'.l·ded classrooms in meet ing the in·
structional demand:o: of lhe increased sl.u·
dent populat ion.
He said the portable l'lassrooms "·ould
be in~talled at the campus as soon a~
possible if approved by M:hool trustees
tonight.
The regular meeting or the board is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the conference
room at Tustin High School, 1171 Laguna
Road in Tustin.
Other items on the agenda include-
-A recommendalion to adopl stag.
gered terms of orfict for trustees serving
nn the board of the Coastline Regional Oc-
cupational Program.
-Tht acceptance of a gift lo the
district of $49 1 in camera equi pment
from the student body at f'oothill High
School.
Benefit Fasl1ion
Showing Slated
A benefit called Carnival of fo'ashions
fnr Parklane i1 scheduled for Tuesday
rrom IO a .m. to 7 p.m. on I.he Park.lane
Residential School campus. 23442 El Toro
Road. El Toro.
The event will ht a sale or new c lothing
fealuring ramou' brands rrom $4 to i11
••Ith 111 proceeds benefitting the school
for mentall y retarded.
Mrs. W. O. Lydick, c hairm1n ()f tht
wav! 11nd means l'...'Ommiltee of the
Pai-klane Women's Informational Coun-
cil. Ii in chnrgc or the bcnefil
another cause celebre i11 the pantheon or
radical revolutionary propaganda.·
'"The real issue is nol prison reform."
said the vice president. speaking at the
78th Annual Conference of the lnterna·
tional Chiefs of Police.
'"NO'>'' the nan1e ·Atlica·• joins the list
of geographic places and slogans 1vhose
very utterance. in the litany of anti·
American hate preached by radical pro-
pagar.dists. is a dagger al the heart nr
our country·s free instilut1ons:· Agne1v
sa id .
"'Cer!ainll' \hf' n1en1bers or this au·
dience woU!d be ainong 1he first to
recognize that. though the place na1nt•s
and slogans c:hange. the 1nodus operandi
in the developmenl of these celebratrd
radical lef1 causes rcn1ains the san1e,''
A.i;:new said.
•
. •
. -.
OAllY 'llOT Sllff , ...... ""This holds true. fro1n thei r Genesis
until• ~heir final anointment by editori.al
polemicists. '~ho then righteously display
them as the lates t examples of the en-
during guilt or Amedcan societ;.·."'
WHILE JOHN, 6, POLISHES, PAUL AND ANNA CHECK THE RIGGING ON THEIR FLOATING HOME
Th• Neighborhood Is Qu iet ind You Can Wake up in the Morning and H••r th• S.egulls
,·, Agnew said lhat one would ha\'f' to
follow the events al Att ica ··\\'ilh the ut-
tnost diligen('e" to dch'rmine that the in·
stigators had l'rin1inal records.
"The ultimate issut al Allu.:a was not
prison reform.'' Agnew said. ""No. !he
issue at Attica -like the issue invoh•ed
whenever the: orderly processes ol 1 free
50Ciety are confronted by those who place
themselves above or beyond the Jaw -i:o:
whether that society's free institutions
are to survive or go under."'
Quiet on the Amethyst
Marina Family Finds Life Rewarding Aboard Ship
Agne\\" said that in the past 10 years.
6.'IJ American la'>'· enforcement officers
ha ve been killed as 1 result of t:rlminal
action ..
··\\'he11 thost who prolet1 us arr a!-
tackcd, we are 1111 altacked,'' Agntw said.
'•\Vhen those who safeguard our in·
slitution~ are etldangered. our institu1Jons
11re endangered.
"\Vhcn thosc fe'>'· a ssigned lo uphold
our laws give their li ves in the conduct of
their duly. then we. the 111any v.•ho
survi\'e, ha.ve a renewed responsibility 10
see to it that their sacrifice '>''8~ not in
vain -!hat the government of la\Y for
\\"hich they died is upheld against those
1\"ho would destrov it ··
··Jf. then. there ·1~ a larger lesson to be
dra'>''n from the loss or hfe al Attica. it IS
1hat Americans "'ho value our sr strm
and its free instilu\ions cannot un-
derestimate the polen!ial Fo r v1oleoce <111d
destruction inherent in any rad ical mili-
tant mol'ement." Ag new said.
. ·-. r.
Whoops
By PATRICK BOYLE
or Ill• D•ilr l"ilol :it•ll
It's an en1p!y neighborhood during lhe
week . with little 1raH1c and few callers,
except for an occasiona( seagull.
Bu1 011 weekends. Paul and Anna Hrn1-
mers" solitude 1s sn disrupted thal lhey
frequtnlly 111\llf~ thei r ho1ne frO!ll llS
Dana Marina berth and htad out lo the
qu1el. open sea,
"We had never re alty !hough! aboul 111 -
ing on the boat ."' saJ'!i Paul Hemmers
with ll touch of his na\lvf' German ac-
c.:en.t . "but "'l' sorl or got pushed 11110
1nek1ng some preny fast a rrangl'rnent ~.
The past four n1onths aboard have reall)'
been quilt rev.·arding ··
llen1 n1ers. a self-<'mployed la.nd.<:c.:ape
maintenanl'e specia list. pre\·ious!y l1l'ed
in a San J uan Ca pistrano house tha! hf'
says wa! jusl too big for hf'. his w1fr and
JilX·vear-old SOii
OUt of eurios1ty. thf.1' p11L lhe hou.'<.r 11r
for sale and someone bought il itn·
n1ediately, giving then1 30 days to vaca!e.
Arter being unable to rent a hon1e 1n !ht
area. llemn1ers decided to trl' life aboard
his 37-foot 11ailb<Jat. fhe An1elhysl.
··one of thf' 1110s! rewarding thu1gs
al>out living on the boat 1s lo gel up early
\.\·hen evf'rything is quiet and listen lo 1hc
seagulls:· l-len1mers says sitting in the
small cabin of 1he crall. "It is beautiful
lo just wake up 1n !he morning."
'·And you become more appreciative
al>ou l life after living on the boat.·• his
prel!y blonde '>'01fr adds as she prepares
coffee in !he small galley. ··'l'ou begin IC\
see and nolict 1hings you normally
wouldn't see.··
The family has discovered that. ex cept
for !he smaller amount of 1pace. ship-
board 1.fe is more relaxing than Jiving in
l'rowded suburbia -and less expens11'e.
(;as. electric and water ser\'1ces are
provided a~ p11rt of tht' 1100 monthly slip
Up in the north "·oods they wear cleats lo their log
tolling co11tests. The:-e youngsters found out that
it's tougher lh;in it Jook s lo stay atop a slippery log.
But it "·as run trying. Sho\\'n at htis~lon Viejo Days
are t1ark Satchell, Bart Ruksta.lis tnd Ron Beshk,
all 11. Catching a greased pig proved challenging
also. There are photos or that slippery event on
Page 3.
1
.I - '
rental fee Hemmers pay5 no property
taxes on his home. A solicitor never
pounds on hi s hatch and his telephone:
never rings. liet:aust he doesn'l have -
or wanl -one
··There's ll pa,\ phone al !he end of !he
pirr 1f we need it.' says Anna .
· \Ve are bt>lh sort of loners .. , adds her
3l-year-old husband. explaining that only
fou r olher families live aboard lheir
boa1.~ at the harbor.
A!though the marina Is practically
<leserted dunng 1he \veek. llemmers says
11 1s 1u111p1ng with boatowners on
\\'ttkend:;. Thf" Hemmers have had so
niany guests since first mo\'ing 11board
Iha! they finally had to ask their friend~
to stop visiting 1n order lo get the normal
household chores donr.
Oespite the pleasurt or being ablt to
catch your dinner out lhe back door or
beir1g rocked to slt.ep every night. Hen1·
n1ers says that boat llfe still has its pro-
blen1s.
\\lhat he consuJered the biggest pro-
blem or living aboard - carrying a 50
pound block of ice do'>''fl the pif"r every
day to keep the food cold -he solved as
soon as possible.
During his first v.·eeks abotrd -
between visiting friends -he installed a
refri geration unit on the boat and has
carried no more ice. Another problem,
which has yet to De solved. is to keep the
family"s lwo sea-going cals from ex-
plori.ng the other boals berthed at th«
marina.
And family squabbles dOffl go away by
living aboard. either. although the lights
are not over \\'hich TV program to watch.
Annit explains they are both enrolled ln
a celestial navigation course and spend
their evenings studying the heavens.
··one night, we had a terrible 1rgumenl
over where one of the 1llra was," she
says.
Clementean Wins
s.µ1 Over Flood
A San Clemente man his been awarded
$16,711 in damages but the IC'!'JSUil he
successfully brought against ltie elty may
have lo go lhrQUgh a new Oranae CoWlty
Superior Court tri1I .
William Broughton, 246 A v e n id 1
P11iza9a, got the damage! for heafy
flo<>ding on his prof>'rty. He blamed
faulty drainage f1clllties and !ht: city for
erosk>n \fading to the inundation of his
property.
City officials Nave 1nnounetd thtir in--
lentloo of fJJPelllng the lrlAl.court ruling
ir the planned rMHon for 11 new trial is
denied.
• I
Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Steeks
TEN CENTS
? • e
Docto1· Says
I
Questioning
B1·oke Will
By TO'.\I BARLEY
-or I"• D•fl' ,1111 Sitt! . ' A !\ewport Beach psyth>iilrist's week
long in terviews '.l'ith aci.:used i\larine
f.1ark Johnson \.\'ere condemned today •~
'·brainwamiing'' by a 8 erk e I e y
psychologist called as !ht first dtfen5•
"'i tness in the San Clemente man's
Orange County Superior Cour1 murder
trial.
Dr. David \Vilso n characterized the
psychiatril' sessions between Dr.
Theodor"' Lindauer and the 20-ie:i r-old
derf"ndant as "'a good jo b er 11lterroga4
tion" '.l'hich considerabll' rt'rtueed John-
aon·s wilJ to resisl. -
\\'i lson agreed 11·1th defrnse atturnev
Ray Sha1·p that Jol1n son 1\'as a passivl!
type of perso!l 11·ho reacted in a typu.:at
fa.~hion to the suggestion that charges or
[ir~t dcgrcr rnurder '.l'ould be filed
aga 1n~t hi111 if the klnd of statemen\:t
dcsirrtl by the prosecution 'vere not
for!l~C'lming.
Linda11c r told the prosecution that hi s
i;rrics of inter\'iews with J ohnson -the
ses~ions lasted between 25 and 30 hours
-left him with the impression that the
young r-.1arine policeman "'a~ im plicated
1n the killing on June 16, 1970. or Connie
Lyn• Johnson.
Johnson is aceused of clubbing h1:1
pregnant wife with 1 bar stool and then
stabbing her more than 20 limes. He is 011
trial for i>econd degree murder.
Johnson told pOlTC!-\!bortlv after th•
killing that he found Mrs. Johitson's blood
splattered body :sprawled on the bed in
their apartment at 418 f.1onlerey Laoe
when he returned from duty at Santa Ana
f.larine Corps Air Station.
Johnson told dlstricl .attorney's in·
vestigators shortly before his a~esl a
year later that he knew he had kill~ hi.111
\\•ire but could nol recall the actual
de!alls of !ht nnirder
lie testified under tbe in nuence of
sodiun1 amytol that he recalled hitting
her with the bar stool after climbing
through the windo"' of the apartment but
c.'Oulcl nol recall the stabbing other than
the fa ct that he believed he washed of{
lhe blood in the shower
Johnson admitttd ht t.nd his wift fre-
uen1 ly quarreled because he insisted 011
using marijuana. Ancl ht ad1nitted lo 1n-
ve:;tigalors that he had been using pot
shortly before t~ kllling and tha t hl!'I
wife had locked hi111 out of the apart-
ment.
\\"ilson testified todal' tha:t he <hd not
bel1f\'e addiction 10 inarijuana led l~
violence. Th~ psychiatri~t. \\'ho 1s also a
qualified attorney. said he had never
heard or a case 1n \\'hich pot smokin g
eould be directly attri buted to any crime
of violence.
Linda uer tcs!i f1ed last v:eek th~t
J ohnson's psychiatric rnakeup '>''8•
directly atlribut able lo the punishn1tnt he
had received as • child from 1·,j,,.
dominant fl\Q!her .
Dane Leader Resigns
COPEN11AGEN 1 UPI l -Pr i tn e
~Iinisler Hilmar Baunsgaard's center·
right coalition government resigned today
after 45 months in po\'i'er.
The SI-year-old go\'ernment chief ad~
vised King Frede-rick IX that he had fail·
ed to fonn a broad (our-party govern-
ment that would include the oppo!ition
Social Democrats.
Weadler
Those ominous clouds wUI clear
by mid-day today and Tuesday,
with moslly sunny skies in the
afternoons. Highs along the coast,
65 rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight
between S7 and 58.
INSWE TODAY
\Vlttn'& tht best time to but1'.9
Right uow, bt fo rt: tht freeze
mel!-t. ~cording to S11lvia. Po1·t·
~-Ste her anol11ris 011 Paoe lt
todau.
... llH H c 111"nlltl It
'""'-'" "'' u C\ft•lli.I U·• c-in tt ,,........... "
Dwl'll Ne!kft lt
otwr.:" n
l!.iMr1•1 ~"t •
llllW .. ift-1 "
'l<19Mt »n
"·--u
~ OAIL V PlLOT SC Mood.If, S.,.llmb« 71, 1971
Cityl1ood Proponent BlaSts Heiress' Charges
Oot ~adiag proponent of the proposed
oily "' !Milne -• bitter, blimrinl!
r~y todly lo ranch heiress Joan Irvine
Smith's latest bro.adslde attack agall'ISt
tht future city.
John Burton, chainnan of the Coun('i!
of Communities of Irvine declared -
a mong other charges -Mr~. Smith's
statements published last week are a
misle.ding p.'1ck of Lies.
iie also said they made his own wife
cry.
The blonde heiress, owner of 21 percent
of Irvine Company stock. had dug in with
Press
both feet in her battle to thwart the city
ahe predicts will be g~nt alum.
She ii out of allanment wllh other
Irvine family and C'Ot'JIOrate 1tockholder1
on the issue and htt most rtttnt ac·
eu!ations inflamed ccr c h a i r m a n
Burton ..
"My first reaclion was amusement
mixed with disgust.'' Burton declares in a
prepared statement.
His remarks go on to show largely
disgust and dismay.
"We are no a rich girl's plaything. \Ve
are people," Burton fumed .
ACLU Cu1inis FedeNJ,, Pressure
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Government
criticism of the press has become 60
''widespread and all-pervasive" that it
constitutes a "massive federal-level a t-
tempt to subvert the letter and spirit of
Capo Valley
Homeowners
Meet Slated
The first fall meef.iJli of the Capistrano
I/alley Homeowners' Association will be
leld tonight at 8 o'clock: at Valenci a
::lementary School, 25661 Paseo de
lalencia in Laguna Hills.
The guest speaker at the session will be
3art Spendlove, president of the Sad-
lleback Area Coordinating Council , ex-
>laining the functions of his organization.
Homeowners are expected to discuss
he new proposal for the county lo pay
or cons!J'uction of Mission Park in the
i.rea. The developer, Leadership Homes,
1ad previously planned to build the
·ecte.ational facility, but has since decid-
id not to.
In addition, the continuing problem of
ipeeding motorists along MacKenzie
itreet will be discussed in hopes of seek-
ng new support for a plan to close the
hrough stree.t with a cul de sac.
The usociation had once convinced the
)range County Board of Supervisors to
tndertake such A project, but several
iomeowners objected and the plan was
1bandoned.
The county then agreed to install stop
rlgns at intersections alon g the road, but
association officials fear a county traffic
:ommittee wilJ recommend against in-
tallation of the signs.
All residents of the C ap i sirano
lighlands community, including non-
nember.i of the association, may attend
be meeting.
the First Amendment," a report issued
today by the American Civil Liberties
Union charged.
The. re.port noted also a "subUe ten-
dency ... of the press Itself to pull back;
to consider the controversiality of its ac-
tions before. it takes them . and then, in
some cases, not to lake those actions -
to engage in self-censorship."
The report on censorship of the press,
prepared for the ACLU by free lance
journalist Fred Powledge, charged the
preM with trying to "play it safe," to
avoid being singled ou t for criJicism.
The ACLU said Powledge, in private in-
terviews with press and government
representatives, was told by some
newsmen of "harassing actions" against
the. press.
Pow\~ge, in the report, wrote he. had
been told by CBS News President
Richard Salant of a "boyCQtt" of the
press by Defense Secretary Mel vin Laird.
He reported Jack Nelson of the Los
Angeles Times said he had been smeared
by assistant FBI Director Thomas Bishop
as "a man who drinks too much."
Powledge also reported he had been
told by Louis Kraar of Time-Life news
service that he had been denied infonna·
tion and access to transportation in the
Far East.
The report also charged the. pnllce with
"utter harassment'' of underground and
campus papers.
He said, ''it is not difficult for an
observer who possesses a healthy amount
of paranoia to conclude that authorities
Yo'ou/d Ire.at the 'straight' press in the
same crude ways, If they thought they
could get away with it.
"And increasingly -aided by vice
presidential speechea, subpoenas from
the Justice Department, 'notices' from
the FCC, citation from rongressmen.
censorship by the courts: in short. what
amounts to a widespread demonstration
(lf the. government's total contempt for
the press and the first amendment -the
authorities are coming to the conclusion
that they can get away with it," the
report concluded.
Weary Nixon Returns
After Historic Meet
A.l'fCHORAGE (UPI). -Turning from
in historic gesture in inll.'rnational
lip!omacy to pressing domestic pro-
1lems, President Nixon flew back tn
\"'ashington today from his meeting with
1apanese. Emperor Hirohito .
The President and his wile Pat boarded
lir Foru One in bright , 35-<legree y,·eath
1; at Elmendorf Air Force Base and took
1!! at 9:22 a.m. Ala ska t!mf' (\\·22 a 1n.
>DT) for the six-hour, 20-minute fh ght.
Their departure y,•as delayed for nearly
III hour to allow the presidentia! parly a
ORANGE COA'IT
DAILY PILOT
OMHGe COAST PUBLl1HlHt. COMPANY
Kobtrt N. Weed
Pralffn1 Old Pvfollilld'
J ee\: fl. Co.n!1y y~ pttllOerlt 9""' <iww~I ~
lio111 11 K11¥iJ .. ~
nt1111t A. M "'"P~iRo
Mlo'lt lLPlll £di""
e>i.rt .. M. l oe1 Kid11nf r. Nin ~tllf Ml!Mil'!o Edi,.,,..
l.et•M lffdi Offk.
ll~ feTtll AYtftDt
M1ffi111 ollllr111: r.o. 10~ 666, t 2i.s2
Seit C'--t9 OHie.
few more minutes rt'~I.
The President loo ked a bit y,·eary after
his history-making meeting with Hirohita
y,•hich went on untU nearly 5 a.m. Mon-
day Washington time . but y,•as descril>ed
as "very, very pleased" v.·ith how it Yo'enl.
lt ""'as \)right , clear. sunny and cold in
Alaska when Nixon awoke about 8 3 m.
Jocal time. read the newspapers and
discussed briefly y,·i!h aides his Sunday
night meetinJ: Y.'Jlh the emperor.
N1.xo~·s meeting !are Sund;iy night y,•ith
Emperior Hirohito marked the fir st time
a Japanese emperor had ever left his own
counlry .
ll capped a busy Y.·eekend l0r the
President, who visited four P11cific
f\orthwest states, announcing a stepped.
up at-Omic energy program, intervening
personally in the West Coast dock strike,
and dumping a little. concrete into the Big
Libby dam in Montana.
Nixon's intercession Saturday in the 89·
day<i ld dock strike. w11s the. first such ac-
tion he had ever taken in a strike since.
he became. Prt.sident.
His 20-minute meeting with Longshore
labor leader Harry Bridges and shippers
negotiator Ed Flynn brought pledges
from them to try ad end the strike by
this weekend.
''To think that ahe (Mrs. Smith! can fly
into Orange. County from her ~state ln
Virginia, call people names, aprud lle.s.
naWlt her 'JnlllJeOCf'.' d!allenge people.'&
moth·es and then run away to play in a
European re.sort is incredible," he. con-
tiooes.
"It says something about Mrs. Smilh,"
Burton adds. charging her with a cam·
paign der;1gned to smear ind i\•iduals and
distort fa cts and confuse people and
issues
Burt.on said he c alled txime Fridav
from his /'>;orlh Americari Rockwell office
in Anahelm to find his wife in tears.
Together Agai11
"It became clear thal this was a
vicioul attack and Mn. Smith had done a
rully tEJTible thing," Burton declares.
One 1UegaUon on which she wa.s Quoted
I was th.at lhe two-time CCI ch~irman had
offices in Irvine Company headquarters ..
Burtnn charges Mrs. Smith failed to
note. he was elected CCI chairman -
1wi('e -by leaders of the incorporation-
backing organlz.ations the. city will en·
cnmpass.
"If then, I am a puppet, a tool. a Juda5
gnat and an Irvine Company·apix>inted
automaton. i;o mus! be these. community
leaders,'' Burton .argue.s.
Walter Hickel, former secretary of the interior, chats amicably with
President Nixon as the Presid ent arrives for reception at !-lickel's
'home in An chorage, Alaska. Meeting took place Sunday prior to li-1r.
Nixon's meeting with Emperor Hirohito of Japan. President fired
Hickel earlier this year.
A1·cl1aeologists Discove1·
A11cient Tree it1 Co1u1ty
A large fQssirzed tree -perhaps 50
milli(ln years nld -has been unearthed
on the Irvine Ranch at the county
sanitary land fill site near Santiago
Reservoir.
The f(ls!'il tree is believed lo be ii tYPt
now extinct. and never fnund bt'rore on
the Pacific Coast , archenlogists say.
Cecil V, Robinson. an amateur rO<'k
hound from Santa Ana. discovered the
tree three month~ agn. whPn he: watched
earth niovers 11:t the \anr! fill.
Robin~on now complain:o;: that !hf' trl"e
was not protected by lrv\ne (lfficiil!s and
~ome chunks of it have. been carried
away.
Archenlnl'!ic;:il Rese:irch. lnc. rARl l, ::i
Cn!!lil Mesa firm whii:-h cnordinate,11 1111
scientific re.search on the R0.000-acre
Ir,•ine Ranch. has kept the find quiet lhP.
past three months to avoid such pro-
blems.
Roger De.sautelc;, pre:o;:ident of ARI.
announced today that the Irvine ((lm·
pan:i-· will dnnale lhP lrl'e to the CQuntv of
Orange. Unt il a suitable exhibition sile. i:o;:
selected, the fo5sil tree will be di~pla~·erl
Bl Chapman College in Oran~e.
Dr. Vi rginia Page, Stanford Un1\"ersitv
paleobotanist. has identified the fret 11s
belonging to the Phyl!anthoideae fa mily,
Tire Shop o,vner
Hurt, Improving
A San Cl emente t.ire shop owner v:;u;
reported "progressing well" at South
Coast .Community Hospital to d a y,
re.covering from painful in juries suffered
Friday when a truck pinned him against
a workbench.
Bruce HoUey, the owner (lf Holley's
Tire Service al 1225 N. El Camino Real ,
suffered cut.s and internal injuries in the
waist area when the. pickup rolled from a
re.pair rack .
Police. and firemen gave the man first
aid after the truck was moved.
based on thin stttion studies of the tree.
She said this genus nf-tree was
previously unknown in the. foss il record of
the Pacific Coest states. ··u is quite
possi ble. we. are dealing with an extinct
Sf)f'cics or e\'en in ext inct genus," she
said.
Donalrl Fife. R state goolngist. says lhe
rare fossil find i::: contained in a cross-
bedderl, medium-grained a r k o s i c
sAnd.~!one between 40 and 60 mi!linn
.\'e:ir::: nld , He added that he ha.~ rarely
observer! fos~il tree. specimens of anY
kind in th <it strata.
0 1'eratl size. of the tree. is not yet
kn'lwn. The part currently exposed ls 30
fl'f'L long ·
Dr Arthur Flint nf Chapman College
spef"'ula lPd the tree ('f}Uld be 60 feel long
anrl 1~·f'igh up to 22 !ons.
Bulldnzer~ 5upplied h~· the county will
M..ll av:ay the tf'.;.b within a fey,· feet (lf the
lreP. then 5!Udents from the Chapman
College gffllogy and palenntology c!asse~
11·111 carefully finish tht> di11ging with hand
rnnli:. Fhnt said
HH Jr ,. Dec isio n Du e
\\'ASH!l\·r.roN 11Jr!1 -Sen Huhert
H l/11mphrr.v 1 D-lll1nn 1, de('l;inng he
v;ils only a '•h11.ir's hreildth" awa~· from
elec!inn in l!l6R, will decide within the
next few months whether to seek the
Democratic nnminntion for President in
1972
He declared his own hw'ne is, in effect,
CCI headquarter& for aU UlOM promoting
incorporation within the community.
Burton charges Mra. Smith's promotion
of the Tax Refonn Act in Congress is
based on self -interest.
"I-fer real interest is her personal argu·
men! with the Irvine F'oundation, an
argument that I don 't understand aside
from the well ·reported fa ct that she
would like to see it destroyed ," Burton
claims.
His denunciation goes on 1.0 say she has
testified in Coogre.ss th.at Irvine ranch·
lz11ds aren't be!ng developed as fast
Dauaage Feared
due to Irvme ~·oundalt0n mvol\•emenL
"And she isn't getting the dJvid8KIJ
that she. should be," he declares.
"In summary," Burton concludes . ''her
charges . . . particularly the personal
ones, were unk ind, unproductive , unln·
.formed and untrue."
Burton notes he has never n1et ~l rs.
Smilh, charging she has seen none of the
reports prepared re!;itive to incorporation
and aU Hus is just as "'ell.
"Because it is none 11f her busmess.
Th e people of Irvine y,·11! run the new ci·
ty, not. Joan l r\'1ne Snulh or anyone
else." Burton declares.
Protests Flare
Over Atom Tests
ANCHORAGE, A!saka (L:Pl l -Some
500 persons alnn~ !he parade route
C(l\•errd by President Nixon and Japanese
Emperor Hirohito protested Sunday
ai::alnst !he nuclea r test planned on
Amchi!ka Island in the Aleuti an chain.
The protest was peaceful and there
were no arrests. A number of signs. one
re;iding "Explode the bomb under
\Vashington. DC , nol Am rhitka ." "'ere
displayed alon1: the rnute.
Organization in both lhe United Slale.s
and Japan fea r tida l ·waves and earth·
quakes may resul t frnm the scheduled
five-megaton underi::round blast.
The ci!y of Anchorai:1e h.ad originally
den ied rally and march permits tn the
Ala ska coaliti11n ;igalnst Cannikin -ii
nickname for the blrisL But a Superior
Court revC'rsed that de('ision rind the
state Supreme Oiurt Sunday morning
upheld the Superio r Court ruling.
In Portland. Ore.. two t\'ironmental
groups asked Nixon !o cal! off the blast
because ii could have se rious con·
sequences.
The Pacifi c Nnrthwes\ chapler of the:
Sierra Club and the Don't f\1Ake a \Va\·e
Committee of Vancouver. B,C., an·
oounce.d Sundily !hey sent ~\x0n a letter
saying the ris ks in the blast "'ere unwa r·
ranted from any possible benefits ex-
pected.
"Such a blast. the la rgest underground
test our nation has ever undertakf'n,
Law Cooperation
Said Essential
To Curh Crime
Greater CO(l[)('ration by all segments of
Jaw enforcement -particuliirly judges -
is essential to curb Arnerica's growing
crime rate. nne government official
declared tnd;iy .
The remarks fmerged frnm nne panel
discussion durinii the 7Rth Annu:il ((ln·
rerence of 1he International Association
of Chiefs or Police con\'ened at the
Anaheim Convention Cen ter.
Joseph i\ai\1 .. a member of the New
York City \Valerlronr Com mis.~1on . 11a1d
policemen c;in't h;indlt:! the monuml:!ntal
JOb alont>.
((lurt~. prosecu tor~. pro h A t ion
drp;irtments anrl parole bria rds are all
equ?J \~· re~po11~1hle for ii neYo' CT\mm\l·
men!. hf' said.
..F;1·rr~n11e co11ccrnert y,·11h !;1111 ;ind
order ls resrv1n~1hle . And 1hAt l!:ot~ lrir
111dges !no. 11hn ~hnu\rl rli11 ii grcatf'r
rnlr 1•1 rrrnr11ng hre."l kdr•"ns 11here thf'y
Clccur ," Kaitz ren\nrkrd
"And they should 111ork ninre clnsely
with the policf' to help reduce crime -
our nation's No. I prQblern," he con·
tinued.
Rings
could have serious c:onsequcncl:'s fnr our
country and others in the Pacific area''
their missi\'e said, '
The Canadian organizalion w a s
reporled to be p!annin~ lo send a ship to
the Aleutian Island 10 protest the e.t·
plosion. It \l'as to drjft just outside U.S.
territorial V.'aters, three mi!es from
Amchitka Island.
Flaniin g Eag le
Sp<1rks Bla ze
A l(lw flying eagle eolliderl with a
high voltage line catising a brush
fire 11·ti.ich burned 01·er three acres
of hilly l;ind Saturday about a mile
south of UCI. Orange County Fire
Departm ent Qff1cers reported.
Officials said the eagle's feathers
were set fire and as the bird fell to
the i.;round the dry grass y,·as ig·
nit ed.
fire units from Orange County
Airport subdued the blaze ln about
an hour.
Deputies Th,vart
Holdup Attempt
At Dana Store
Sheriff's deputies on rn11!1ne patrol
thwarted an alleged attempted holdup of
a Dana Point Liquor S10re Sunday night.
Deputies arrested !wn S;+n Berna rd ini:>
Counr y men as tt1e ra1r a~serled ly ap-
proached Phil"s Liquor ;i t 34210 Pacific
C:na st H igliw rt~\', One nf the pair. officers
~aid. 1>.';Js carry1nl.( ;i ~11wcd-nff .22 rahber
rifle
lnl'er;t1g;1Lors s:i1d the 1ne1r1cnl nrr urrrd
at abriut 9 p.m. \1hrn rle put1es nol1ced a
car .~topped in Fri ;1llrl' Thr au!n"!!
license pl;i1es h;id bt•rn ~n1cared 11 11h
mu rt
,\s Honald t-1. F.:lt1nr1rl. 22, :ind James
f . .!ones. 19 .. enH·rge d dPpu11e s mn\·ed in
and arrested them .
l n1·esfii::atnr~ ~.11fl nne nf !hr n11 ir
asserted!~, lhrl'"' lhf' 11r~r<•n into some
bushes as nff1(·Prs appr(la('hed
Addresse.c <>f thr t11 n men 11ere nnt 1m-
media1e!v ;i \·ail:ible The\' "PrP bnnkcd
1ntn Oran11:,I' rr1unty Jtt!l nii ch;;r:?,t'S of at·
tem ple<:! rohbfr1
Pra11 k Fala ! l o Boy
LO\'<; BEi\r H 1l1'1 • -l-.r1·1 n EtnrlP r,
17. v.as electrocu1f'0 S11nrl111· nigh! 11h('n
he ariparenl l_y At lemr1~d In rr1·£'r~e the
w\~111~ on a city !1gt1t ;;tnndard a:; a
prank.
Holley, whose residence. is at 50:! Calle
De Soto, was injured shortly before. noon. M•'' CUIG41 Jr.l911'1 <N•wl
Officers could not determine why the
truck rolled from the rack.
DIAMOND RING
sso
DIAMOND RING
.90 cl chlltot'
14 kt 90111 $200
#OS Nedi lJ Co,..i110 Rttl, t21172
0......0Mc ..
c.t1 Mel4• ~ W111 e1'1' Sl•trt •-. aNC~! WS NIWt>orl Sou'tvtnf .....,,,"'--..w 1n1s kWt kliltv•rd
Gifted Students Programs
Studied by Capo District
LADIES
SOLITAIRE
01,.r1"ttMI
"' "PllBI• 11
~ .. .M•.-.1
OYER SO LADIES DIAMOND
RINGS TO CHOOSE FROM $25 & UP
DOM RACITI
OUR MOil
UNUSUAL
DIAMOND
GUARAN1EE
.,,.,11.T Pl\.OT,""""' ~Id! II Omli!""',,.,, "'~ It """"'..,,.,. 4111y ll(l jt1 SU... .,, -. ... ,..., •11-.. fer UOIM• e11t11,.
"'._. ... c-fl. Colft Mttt, """"llO'•~ ....,.... lt-t~llo Vt llrf, lift ti.""""' ~ ..... ~. l i0f'9 •IP, Oftl
""""41 oll!loli. '°''"'~' "'"''inrl pl-.f .. • a Wwf a.1 a,,_1,. c...11 M-.
, ... ,, f71 4l '42-4121
0 'FIM A-.m .. M1·J4TI
S. Cla fa .AJll o.,.....,.:
Ttl•t 11a 4fJ-44JI &..,1111 ...... Al D•i-t-":
T1l1ft11a 4ff.t4M °""'"""" ""' ~ CMlt ,...,,..,,, ... ~"'Y· fto -••'"· ftlwtr•tltl'lt. .. ltlllritl INttW M of'l'lr!l-fltltlll _,, ... ·~ •'""°"" """i.i ,.. m 1 .. i.n flf apyrWtr _...... ......... "--""" ........ ~ ~ .... CMI• M-, Gtllltnlt.. ·~ llY u ... 11r u.,, """"''YI ff -II D.11 .JMM!\ty1 mll!l•ry ~!'"'41tM, iJ.U ,,.,,1111y.
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified
School District •ill continue their /iitudy
of programs for mentally gifted students
at tonight's 7:30 meeting in Serr• School.
At the las1 m~ting bo•n:I member
Rnbert Dahlberg praised program pro-
posals at four schools and crilici~ fi ve
other! ~·hich he. said did not me.e.t bo.ard
stand.ards.
Each individual elementary school pro-
posal will be e:samlned on Its own merits
at tonii;:hr s meeting.
Programs re«lvtng praise. were thosie
pre.partd by the principal' of Crown
Valley, Pahsade.5, San Juan t n d
C:iplstran'l SchM1s Mn!it groupt'd gifted
students in a seH·conlained classroom
"i th stude.n~ "no excel.
Agreeing with Dahlberg's Analysis we.re
members of Parent AMOcia!ion for Girted
Education (PAGEl y,·hlch is • partnt ad·
vlsory group on the mentally gifted minor
program.
Programs criticized by Dahlberg sl'ld
PAGE lnclud~ arrangements f o r
"cluster grouping" ,q-lfted C'hlldren In
claS51"ooms Yo-here. thcTe Is 11 broed range
of mt'nlal abllitit's and removin${ £ifled
chilrlren from !heir c.1 as Sr o om s
periodically for "rnrlrhment."
Dah.lberg charged that the!e. programg
~·P.re. not better or more varltd tha.n from
la st year'• pro.gr~m11 which we.re found
inadequ11te by a special consultant.
'
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOA
OPEN DAILY 9 to 6 COMI IN AND IRO~Sl AROUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA M!SA -htwHft H""'°' r. lroodw.y
••
w i.. ... yo11 ~111y • dl•"'e11d fTe111
• ,.., •Ill 9111r111..,. 1h11t llio-
1110114 i. •rpr•IM ot ~o·. MOii
Htotl y•• p•lll f•r II or r••t
ll'IO"Y IH!c.k. Co11 'f•• do as .... n
.Jwwti-1 COMl'A ll.
lXl'fltT WATCH llPA.l•
DONI ON 1'•1M t5ES
Forsytes Forever
'
Station Brow)casts 24-liour 'S aga'
NEW YORK (UPI) -
DeYoteea of English literature
and .insomniacs were given a
apec1al treat over the weekend
a.s a television station broad·
cast 24 continuous hours of the
Forsyte Saga.
In what must have been a
television first for a dramatic
production, station WNET an
affiliate of the Public Br~ad·
casting System, showed all 26
chapters of the British Broad-
casting Corporation's produc·
lion of the John GaLswoclhy
story.
The station said dozens of
callers told them they stayed
up for the entire program
which began at 8 p.m. Satur-
day and ran through 8 p.m.
Sunday.
voluted romances and in·
fidelities or a British upper
middle class family between
1879 and 1926. Galsworthy,
who won the Nobel Prize tor
literature in 1932, a year
before his death, wrote the
Forsytt' Saga in a do1.en books
between 1906 and 1927.
WNET said that when they
aired the program in in·
stallments last year many
viewers ct1mplained that they
missed chapters and asked if
it could be run again. Thus,
\\'ith the aid oI a $20,000 grant ,
the station ct1mbined the
showing with an appeal for
funds for the noncommercial
network.
segments asking for con-
tributiorn for the staUon and
discussing the era in which the
fictional Forsytes lived.
Susan Hampshire, w b o
portra;-s Fleur Forsyte, won
an Emmy award last year for
the role. Also appearing in the
series were Eric Porter as
Soames Forsyte. the attorney
and patriarch of the family,
and Kenneth J..1oore as Jo
Forsyte.
When lhe series was shown
in Britain, church schedules
"'ere altered so that persoM
\\'ould not miss a chapter of
the story, a WNET spokesmen
said.
Monda)', !rpttmbtr '17, 1971
Gloria's
Return
Superb
8y WILLIAM GLOVER
NEW YORK rAP J -Glorla
Sw<1nson i.<t terrific in her
Broadway return.
The veteran star couples
emotior,al fin~ with ex -
pect.able glamor as the repen-
tant super-~fom of "But-
terflies Are Free,'' the long·
run Booth Theater hit which
now belongs to her.
The story chronicles the
economics tr ug g l es, con-
Between chapters of the
marathon viewing. television
and drama personalities ap.
peared in five·minute __ ,
He said the station received
at least $25.000 in telephone
pledges as a result of the
showing. 'Yo11 Brought A11chovies'
Before inviting the press in
as a prelude lo an al fresco
et.lebration of her first Rialto
stint in 20 years. th e
management allo~ed ~tiss
Swanson a week of critic-free
previe\\·s. Prrior to that she
did the role for seven months
on tour. The preparation paid
off. There wasn't a single line
fluff or timing hitch.
To be sure a purist mighl
fault an O\'erOuttery false
eyelash or two and an OC·
casional reminiscent oversllnk
from the good old silent
cinema days. Pretty soon such
I rifles seerned right in the
pervasive warmth of the posed
S'.\•anson portrayal.
Sa111n1y Thwarts
Death, Resting
Jacqu.ie f.toffetl takes \Vaiter Richard Stcpp's mixup in the roam service order
ln stride, "'hile Robert Engman does a slo\v burn in this scene from "Plaza
Suite," resuming Tuesday night at the Laguna htoulton Coinmunity Play.
house In Laguna Beach.
Monday
Evening
surt.MBER 7:1
LAS VEGAS (AP \ -Sam·
s:lrl!riend who k arrivin1 lfom my D:ivis Jr. has been releas·
Italy.
(I) Morie: (C) "TIMI Second Tlm• ed frotn a hospital but has
AtouMI" (comedy) '61 -0tbbi1 been ordered lo take It easy
PBS Contes Up With Laugher Frorn the moment , however.
t hat f\1iss Swanson emerges
onstage in that quietly ex·
travaganl beige slack suit with
just a long gold chain .and
wide bracelels for ornament,
the play is hers. Sh~eets the
challenge Y.'ilh gracious eclat.
l:GI IJ II( .... Jerry 01.111phy
(J) .... 8111 H11ddy
B DIC """ Torn Snyder U ,.._ Morris, McComick fJ IIJCIH!l Nit _,, !li't
hltbll .... Yoril Jtb It st. Louis
c.udlr11b.
o-. ... -m ... -QJl~el111Hlt
c151 m .....,...at Uidre 111 ...... 34 m._._.
(3') ...,.,, Int
&:308 ... ---(JJ CIS Mlwl W1lte.-Ctttnkitt
9 llllC llnn Joti" Ch1nctllor m DOtlT Andy Critftt Sbtw
m "" 1111 Ccrtbr .....,.
(l!S) .... 1111 70'1
m &*Id: a..k TbNtn .. S.pan
m .... •CWdl
(!9) "9111 Acm
fil!l 0 '""· ........
7:00 II CU .._ W1!1er Cmnkl11
7:30
CJ ID "IC,.._, John Ch1ncellCM'
m-o Wlllt'1 Mr UM?
9w..11 m1u.....,
CBI~"' )URllM
(15) l.ln lllltlldl Cbrt: m .......... lhl lltutllul ... "'M
fl9) TIM '1rsl"'-
1Il) Ylftedldft
IJ "STAND UP AND CHEER" * Musical salute to
America. Presented
by CHEVROLET
1J Stnd Up and Chw Popul11
r&eordln r 1rtisl BobbJ Goldsboro
rueAs.
fleynotds, Andy Critf1th. for a while.
0 ®) m World '™'It" Movie: "j \\'SS very close to dying,"
(C) C2hf'I "'Wbeft W•• 1011 Wl!tn the 45-year--old entertainer tN: l.ifhll Will\ Ollt1"' {com•d)')
'68 -Doris DI')'. Rob@rt Morse, said after being discharged
Terry·Thomes. Patrick O'Heal. Story Saturday night from Sunrise
set 1r1lnrt the b1tkdrup of !ht H · I
p1 ralyzing power f1ilu1e th1t blac~~ ospita ·
out the Eastern Seaboard in 1965. Davis, who underwent treat·
@ Wiid, Wiid West menl for an enlarged and
0 JACK PAlANCE in misaligned liver, said he \\"as
* "HOUSE OF NUMBERS" d ed I ·1 d · ki had or er o qui rm ng r
0 MllllCllJ Ntctrt Mo\lle: {lhl'I liauor and placed on a strict
"Hou• et Nut1btfs" (dr1m1) '57 diet,
-Jttk Palanu. 81rtl111 lDng, H1r-1o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. !
old l Stone. Brother ol 1 San Quen -11
tin convict )Dins lorm with con·
vict'1 wife lo m1~1 "mrtsidt~ 1r·
r1ngements tor his escape.
ED (15) Blad Joum11 (R) Georel•
legislator Julian Bond, pl1ywtl1hl
lm1111u Amiri Bar1k1 (leRol Jones),
Ope11tion Br11db1sket dlrectOJ Rev,
Jes~ Jac~son and Mryor Rk:hud
Hatcher ol C1ry, Ind.. 1rt ln!er-
vlttt<I. m Sotrrisa
ail Rosls p« Ye ronic1
m Tiie P'tDUldm
1:311 D OcKb Dly While In Roll'll on 1
shor1 V&Cation, ma&arl~ writer Doris
Marti/I 1.r1s In lave with 1n l11n1n,
tllen htr 1dvt"e oplnloa ol some
p1intings destroy! tier rcmtnct.
Ceu11 01110•11 iru•sti.
Cl) City ii MoUon
0 krttr,Wlfd Newt m 11 t•kts • 111111
ml Lt Cn.tz dt M1riv Crutn
lO:OOU I]) MJ Tllm Sorn Steve's look·
alike Scottish O'.lusin has hfs flrsf
dt!e with Terri Dowlint (Cues! AllJM
Francis).
O News Morris, McCormick
(I) To fen tllt Trvlt!
OTht Aft!ire11 m Nnrs Pu!nam. Ji!Jim1n
(15) £nnin1 et l'ops; m Currelll [ve11b "Comln1 or ...,.
In Calilomi1~
STEREO VISION ·--
CJ DJ. Slmoa Lieb -Mu" A hlppl1
neurosur110ft who hn dropped oul
of tllt prolaiiOft could help uvt
the life of Or. Sellers Mio re11ulrn (ID D Tomlllt
~p
UClUSIVE [JllGAGIMUfT
NOWPUTING br1Jn IUIJllJ bttlllM of I crtnlt l CE) Mt!lfnp
'"""""'· 1.t.30 D CJ) Amit ,t,n\!1 becomu tht (J) I Drum .i JelftM frvorile wtiippin1 boy cl his fellow
0 THE CHILDREN'S HOUR ttKutitts wht11 wile Ulli1n pm-* AUDREY HEPBURN motes 1 sc~trne wtiich stnds tht
Diiiy .I.I 11:30 -7'10 · l :IS • 5:30 •
7:00 • t :.U -10.lll
By ROBERT MUSEL
NEW YORK (UPJ) -"I
haven't heard people laugh
that hard since Laugh-In",
said lhe Public Broadcasting
Service executive. And since
he "'as talking about a sho1v
lor children aged seven to ten
years old it sounds as though
PBS may have found another
program to rank Ydlh its
award-winning • ' Sesame
Street."
The name of the show is
''The Electric Company". It
teaches reading in a format of
sketches and bla c kout s
superficially as zany 8.s the
Laugh-I n pattern but shrewdly
designed to slip the learning in
with the laughter.
'"Bill Cosby, Rita Moreno
and other top performers take
part," said the executive and
you should have heard the
yacking from the 400 adults we
asked lo preview it i n
preparation for its Oct. 25
debut."
Having said that the PBS
TWO lfWnCHING FUTUllS
"THE NIGHT OF
OARK SHADOWS"
COLOR -RAYED Gr
AND
O Miiion S MoM: (Zhr) "The Contintn!al f11nge Company offlct
Cl'lildrtn'1 Ho~ (drtma) '62 -penonntt lo wClO: ti ~:00 AM. [!~~:::;;:;:;;;;:;;~;;J~~ll!llll!llll!llll!llll!ll~ Jama G1mer, Audrey Hepburn, Shlr· Ci) M~: (2hr) "TM Hu111111 Mot-
ley Mtcl.aln.. lter" (myslery) ''G--Btll luROSI,
@l ltfs l&allf I Dttl m """ Bill John1 m...,_.,...,... HJEJ Diano
6) DrlrMt (39) Fntu11 Fil•: (t) "Monltftt. •
(15) look kit al o\dulb Only
ED CltJw*htrs 4 dey ti Dodi"
Sttdium, complete w!th inteMews. 11:00 B (l) rn ,., ...
ED Dct-Re-MI 0 i1QJ ID Nn'li
• -•-0 Bruins lw Action m-m Mlptlffil Yllcla Sho1f 0 00 CE Newt
O Mcrrie: "TOW!I Without Pffy"
1.«I fJ CJ) C.--* Johnnlt Whit1•er (d1am1) '61-Klrk !l!lu1las, t 6.
pleys 1 )'Ol.lnl boy In 11.uth ol his Mershi!I,
mottler In P•rt I Ill "'Waste"' episodt. m TO TELL THE TRUTH
Also 1VfSll111 is Ruth l!om1n. O di l!ll .....,...111 Scmn ~n * Back By Popular Demand
Rit1 Hqworth, pests n t ca~t m Te Tiii Ill Trvtll
WOflllll, I Wftlm lllfM and I IEJ lilt tJiii Ckd:
tipsy fl!m 1t1r. fI) Qt)wakliM 1>od1u S!adlum" n Mow11: <Zfh:tw) ..,..... et • m Dlnllwf •2 Nmi
t1.U."' (dr1m1} 'tZ -G11y Coo·
,.,, flft&I Wrirht. Writer B1MMn. tl;JO U ([)Mm i;lltfi11
GI Tnieti • C1•1qac c• Cil ...,.: "Riils 11119 U11•lr"
ID n. Vl!)Wte (West1m) 'SC-John PIJllt,
ttl(l5)htl ,,_ O @l mJJellRllJ C1r111 TotJ• r~lih k substitute hod.
Ill) ,... 0 ..... "Tiii ltdy Hn P'tlllr"
&El,... (mystery) '-42 -P1u1ttt• Gocldvd,
NATIONAL
9th Record Week!
ON
,.ANY
SUNNlY ...... ., ............ 11
. Al,o STEVE McOUEEN !ft ''THI lllYllS"
"OH ANY 5Ui't04Y" -&•T. & SUN. -l :U -1 · lf :U
''T"E RIEt\IERS'' -$.AT. & UIN, -\:U ·I · t:U "Ott .I.NY SUttO.l.T'" -WlillltOAYS -1 • lt:•
''T"E R1E1V•RS" -WEliltOAYS -l :U
Wll fltl1 'fAMAHA l!l!tt~MOl.IAO Mo -"""'"'°""" fll o.tC..
-A! o..o-OtNOtvqe c_,, Cyd• • 10~ t\I. ~. ~ -
IOI
l:JO m DRW Fr.t a.. Cuetb ire
ldllf fddJI Albfrt, 1l'HI ,._ Yotk
CltY tNChtf lfYln& Benlr.
cn>r..-.n.:......,.__. ,._.
Ray Mln1nd.
1J lfwlt: (C) •Ifs Ahl .. (tdven· l;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~====~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J
lure) '68 -Tommr Kirk. ShlrllJ
l!UDm.......c ....
1:00 B (I) Nwt'• llcy Illy !1ll1rd
(llllltt • u-. Mlf'l'J'1 loll( ~
Tuesday
bXYTIME MOViES
"'"'• m .... (C) ..,. .... et .,,_ ..
(mu11Cif) 'Sl-Molr1 Sllttflf.
Q) MoM: -,,.. '"It DH htdl"
hPDrts) '''-Otnnlt O'Kltft.
Ill"' ....
m ftl ., ,,,... h .....,.. (<Ir•·
Illa) ·~ C.lhoun, .lttft Sim-
""'-
I See ~Y Today's
Want Ads
e BE BEWlTOlED BY
1liESE YELlNES! 2 llrtl
~ all black femllln:, 1 •• a
• black male and manx, and
thry com~ with llw moth-
" • Frtt lo you in today'•
\\'ant &di!
e 1.JNt>EPt SlOO for • Gm-
f'?'a.I Dectrlc v.·u~r and
dryer! Look for tt ~
Appliant't' In to(lay',J pa.
pe•.
• vou·u.. FLIP FOR Tins
SENSATIONAL SA IL
BOAT: 11'1 a F11PJ)l!r 'n
~xcellent r:ondlliou • Have
rtn\!
e;.:ecs face fell . On his desk
wa.• a copy of a magazine
headlined, "Public Television:
is Anybody Watching?'' The
magazine said most public-TV
att?';;cts about one-tenth the
\'iewer! of even the least
"\\'e've enough for fi scal
1972," he said-$35 million in
federal funds iocluded-"but
"'e need established and long
term financing to be able lo
plan ahead."
Since PBS is free to seek out
Outlaw Fihn
popular prime time network programs anywhere it has BC· lfOLLYWOOD (AP)
show and what's more it is quired some of the best of the Director Franklin J . Schaffner
rb d t · d •od producer Joseph T. Naar watched basically by an au-supe ram a 1 c an d ( od 1· f ti have formed a partnership lo
dience dra"·n from the upper Ol'Umen ory pr uc ion ° ie d I 1·1 b d p ( British Broadcasting Corpora· eve op a I m ase on au
fi nancial and intellectual lion ~BBC \. In its second WeUman's novel. ''A Dynasty
group. season. whic h premieres Oct. of Western Outla"·s," for
PBS Columbia Pictures. "This doesn't accord \\'ilh J. · \\'Ill show the uncut · f The film will disclose the a c· our o"·n research", said the version o the BBC's "The Six: \Vives of Jlenry VIII". These tual bloodlines that existed
executive. Frank Little l.ly m:ignHicent dramas are now between some of America's
name. "We believe we are running 011 CBS-TV but with 13 most legend;iry outlaws. It
r eaching all segments of the minutes clipped to allow for traces the reign or lawlessness
population and in respectable co1nrnercials and stat i 0 n from Jesse James to Pretty
nu1nbers." breaks. 'r•B•o~ymFmlmoy~d •. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
PBS is a private, non-profit' "We will run them in full inli
corpo~ati~n sel up to 'select January," Little said, '"Every
and distribute progra1ns to the minute and every word."
209 non-commercial TV sta·!;;:==========::;!I
lions in th<' country. Li\lle said
this number is growing at the
rate of one or t"·o a month
and should reach JOO in the
foreseeable future , It has its
problems, foremost among
!hem financing.
}!fDTI D!Qj TI
fll£Wfl'OIT 8[ACH • Ott.3-8350'
12th BIG WEEK!
ENDS SOON -
S1111. thr• Th11n., I P•'"•
Fri. o..d SO't., 1:30 p.m,
Collthl•Olll 511•. fro'" 1 P·'"·
''ILUI WATll
WHrTE DU.TH"
•• '
J~~n WaYfl•
"llG J.l.llE"'
BALBOA
673-4048
Ol'IN
6:45
"'I. ...... .. ,. "'"'""'•
NOW-ENOS TUESDAY
&EORGE HAMILTON /::;J SUf LYON .
~ .,,., ~,\-KN1mm: ~,. 1 •1-.. ~
& "PRETTY MAIDS
-ALL IN A ROW"
IN COLOI -RATIO "I ''
e Storts Wf411ftdgy e
-ALSO rLAYING-
''THE ARRANGEMENT"
.,,.. Do•1l-Rlckr4 looN
Foye D•-ay-o.boro• letT
BEST OOCUMENTARY FEATURE /1970
LAS VEGAS
Wettword Ho-World't LCH'g.tt
Mo1el -1,000 "°°"" Be+ween ._ ...... ,.._,, .....
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TOU 'U SAVI '
DIAL "l FREE ...
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YOU PAY ONLY 18.80 1~1~. $10.90 for 2 P"f.''
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DAILY PllOT 29
1 •"'-'1 r" -Premit.>rc Engag~menc
S-fhi"I It -ttn .Jal.k:9.
.&omrrtlalna w..., .W.~
wet... ..... ..,., ..... ,__,, .. __ l_l._1......,
".LefiS-.
~~ lfJl-:!;PJ i. ._ ...
Om 1r S~ .. ,;1
In "THI HORSEMAN"
n e\TI)QO"'s life ~'s a
UMMEROF'4
"0..,.-, ...... .......
Al11•0-Y" ........ .
...
'
'
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30 DAI LY PILOT SC
LEGAL NOTICE Y oaar Jtfoneu
MO,I<• TO C•l!OITO•i STAR GA'ZEKI<~ ~;,:....--a.crJLPOCIAN'-:-T"-;,....;;u--1 M Y_...,_ ..... '/-""f·"rh y ~JoHteStors. oa n@~
Complete-New York Stock List
..... """ IU,.•111011 COUl:l 0" THI' STATI: 0' CALIFOll.H lA FOi: THS C0U NlT OF OltAMG I!.
!•l•lit a# l!!l llA81:TH ll lCWAl!OSON Oect•..a '
Holl« ll -•bf f Vtn 10 c....,lllln "
1M ..,.,.,., .,.mtet OK4'0t'M lt!tl f h --. n.vl,... cl1 mo •••IM• "" W'111 _.,,, ''' '"'""et! 10 Ult "'•m Wllh fl'I• fl9CH1"IO' vau011:n L" 1?11 <>Ille• 01
-C!enr. of fl'la •Ila~• .... 11111<1 <OUlj. e>r la Prl•tnl !Mm w !ti lN n«fiurv w°"""'" 10 .... oooert g-•In.-pH C• o1 .J-"" e McM.,m,. 1111 Ho ltlo.l .. .,. •tt -..1 Ctl lorn• •1001 w'11t.P! "
"'-p!aa af l>u•lrwu af 1ne unll• olgnod n
•11 m'""" "''"'" n"" to ,,,.. ••!ti• a! s• <1 O~I wl!Mn tour mon1t • 111* lh•
t •~1 pubHctl "" c1 Tfli• nol ct
0.19111 SeP!O'fTiber I 1'/1 J••ll •"" i;t!c• • .., k,_" •• J1•n AnM Il le~
E •rc.,tr • at "'' Will 111
•• d Oe<:tdlfll JMEION I MCM IJJ._J._IN mr '"'-LM1 Av• AH ...... C..Ufwlol1 tl•I
... ..._~ tor E•K.,IM• Pl!-tltl'l Publl-°'•"" c .. ~. O•U• PllO! S"'fll-r I 11 11 ll ~II 10l>I ll
LEGAL NOTICE
,. 1J)Jj J<ICTlltOUS BU~IN[~l NAME STATEMENT
1'1!1 fotlowinw ""'"°" • ao 111 bu• r>e•• .,
N<wP<>rt •op a ••I Bu lo o "'° N NewoQr1 B •d N~WD<l I B ~. ( ~ C• l!orn a J1fl'H'1 ft~ttM ~"1 lh l Ct~I (It• N1wp0r1 ll•1c" C• to•~• TP!I • bu•ll'l'U • bfl~g CO"d~cl«I lly ·~
Inc• dU& Jtm" Ba""" ~m tft ln 1 ••alement 1110<1 w '" t,,. '""" v c•~"' l>I o, .. ...,, c..u~i. on s .... 1.,,,,..., l':l 1911 by Beverly J M4<1!1<>1 OoputY COll<>-
IY (ltrll Put> l•netl Or&nlll' C<>••• 0• Iv Pllol
'H>ltml>er ,, •nG Ocl<K>et .. 11 11 1911 26'0 II
LEGAL NOTICE
F l:llOI FICTITIOUS 8UUNE S' MAMI! Sl.llEMEHl lh• In low n11 """on• • • mi n9 kl\nln•n •• Th• F~flk FtCTOr• JSI) So C<MH1 t<IOhwav laoun& B'act\, 91691 " .. th Frett CVIYU 611 lomb~rdy
L•"l' L119U"' ll•Ad> Cal IMnl• ~U1 Arie'/ R1n110r ~I Cit•I no L•vun• flN<h C•llflll'" 1 976S1 Thi• t:ou• ""' I• btuno tonducl"" by 1 ... Mr•I <>•rtMnhl<> l(el!n Fr"" (ulvfr Thi• •l•tempnf 111~ ..,llh lh• '"""'" Clerll of 01an11e (l)\jntv or. S.l'!einb<r )I
1911 b¥ Woller T t:ifl9 Ol!a.,ly (OUnlY Cluk Publl>l!Pd Oro~t• CW•I Oa IV Pllo1 kn~mtter 27 1na ouorar • 11 ti
1911 166)11
·~ .,
LEGAL NOTICE
F llJJt FICT ITIO US l lJSINE S1 NAME STA TEMENT
IOlklw!MI Per>an ls OOI~ bualr>en
.t.~T CONCEPTS llo!S Antn• m Av•
(Gil• Mn• ,,627 Ram"n Alvl>0 Men<lo•A Jt 11•! A .... nrlrn ...... No IB Ca>I• M•11 Thlt busln1 .. !I belnl C-Utled by 4n lndl• duo
R•mon Alvl.., Mftl<!l)1~ .Jr
lhls slal•menl ti «! w I~ I"' COlln1V Clerk cf Or6n..,.., COll"!v on Sr~t 11 191 fly 8ev11ly J MeOdo• Qepu!y Countv Cl•rk Publl.r..d Or~n~
S-!lffi'111f( 71 ,,,.,
''"
(Qll1 0 • I.. P!IOI Ol:!ato.r • 11 Ill
16J2 11
LEGAL NOTICE
Nolv is Best Time
To Do Purcl1asii1g
To &v.top INISOl)e fot'T"""'°Y, Nod ~COiiap>~tQ rurt.is 4-lS.
of 'Pl Zccloc birth$1g\o 'AolDid !1 0-,, a. 1r.-.. l1Thoaodi 6l~ ::iv....... JJ s. .. u. 34T-S ba-. 350..
6~1"'111 3"'a-
'AIJ*8 37 Part 8A. JIOon' By SYLVIA POR1ER no bottlenecks of Importance <1a-lfW .19Ut.
Is this a good time to buy'? lt s actually comfortable to ~~!:' { :ir=.• 1
I t 12Caincldt ,,j20f 'i es Because s 1op in sores now , JJH!ax.h •lo-,
(II Dur111" tlus freeze (51 The vast n1aior1ty of l l4f..._.. "'"c:.on.on ~ ~ISM "5Hor... prk~s are holding unnaturally Americans haven t started J l6WNlll "'6~
17 ~ "78.o 8•i;>dW ~ stead~ Many price hikes buying freely yet -and so "$3><:"4-"I , 18v.,.... ...aTrcUil. e.-,o• r 10
J .i9Qt B•lt C.E 111 wt11ch. "'ere schedu l~d fur you re well ahead or the mobs 63-76-79-89 '~~ :iOt-~::; '{t :ttl
these weeks h;l\e been In fact before the freeze a ~U:tTJ'.J ~:!-~~~ ~!~~ :;u;1
postponed and 11.t1en made b c • .t 2.lSrick si-'diW lh~ "'' 2S consun1er survey y om Ufi 2J .1 ,.,~~ .,1_ B~ o1c~1 ~ lhev mav turn ouL sn1atler ·~,. .,.. ·· ed"" M N'I' 1 mercia l Credit Co telegraphed ~ll '2s~ s~An Ba"k Tr 1.., th an onginaHv pruJectt'd But 1 JS E :U.No S6 And Ba !>HOii 11
don t expert muth inorl:' than an 1ntens1f1ed retrenchn1cnl F'~v~.~.~00'!!'-IJ 270.. 571" ~:~f~~~c-1Zi'
I hat An ac1oss !hr ho ird in buying and produced what I.Al.AUG n i ~~ ,, ~2:-g:::~ M"1'9.,t 1 freeze OD prl(Ct: L11d wa ges Dr Ra1mond J S~uln1er, of 'mStrr. l1 :: JOo....lop tiO~ g;~~~~~b10!0
<.ould not possi bly be effectl\e ( ol umb1a Un1vers1 ty calls 126-'JT. ; ~GoOt! @M.cm g:~~ l2ca l.> f h I th 90 d -. 6771..&.86 11" ~ B'~' "II• or rnu1.: onger an avs some rather scary results ' e,oe,t~d.\ 1 l', and )OU re Just about al the ~
h ilf11.a y mark So if you need To put it in plainer language ----------------------------1iffi~l7,k_:
or want a fairly expensi~e the survey suggested our B~i,oPer ~
prQduct or service take ad 1nodest 1971 recovery v.as ~:::~Hl ~b
vantage of this ph ase of un fading and ;tnother recession Med1"ca1 Lahorator1"es g:111~1~1°" 6(1 natural and only temJXlrary was a clehoar danger g~;:u·~ c,o,.'°
stabilil\ No w t ugh 111 o u n I 1 n g B•nd • ot J
121 No inatter what !he pubhc confidence could lead to :::;~:1c:1~ {I
precise details of the a 1naior spurt Jn consumer Beco1111"n0' B1"g Bus1"ness ~;~~.,"'•XI
b"y'"g from co.st to '""' iiio [':":',:•1" ", -,, restraints to be Imposed HI LJ ',~ r""
Pha se I I, prrces will start up I eople have monr:y to spend e u Tn·~· ~1
nga1n on a bruad front after The savings ratehas ri <:entn a NE\V YORK {UP!l But theres a gr ow1ng:1:f.~~~· J
d N be fccntastic 8 2 percent mure B ,. L~u~ 1 nu ovem r R1g1d prices Theres a rush on all over the tendency to ownership and BJ<><~ Ht;t 1~ are an 'mposs'b'l'ty '"
a than 8 cents out of e1 ery after 11 ue e-11 1 1(1
b ed I I f th I bs b Ill ~B II tax dollar Tax cuts are Qn the country to uy up m 1ca opera ion o e a Y a~b: e7k• dynamic growing economy -11 c
.a rw:l you ""ouldn l want the \\ 1y A strong pic k up 1n h1borator1es 111 order to cash groups of physicians and Booe1~, 02~
rigidity even if it were possi buying by consumers could in on the golden flood of scientists oriented towards g:::;,,.,\~0 1 21 easily develop B"'""n 1 1(1 ble Built into our econoniy 161 And in terest rates lia\e money from f.fedicare Dlue developing or arqu1ri ng new g~:;,~~r i\!s
are bas1r pressures which sug sli pped well bel ow their 1970 Cross and other public and and ultra so p h 1s t 1 ca led g~'k~· ,,;8-ig. gest !he best we can hope for d 1 1 lh 1 II B01J•n• inc
Peaks have decli ned pereep-private spending on health 1agnos JC loo s a w1 give Br~n 1 A rw Hl the years ahead is an an Br oust 1 '°
nua l rate of ri~e 111 !he 2 10 3 t1 b!y since the freeze was an The electronic cornpu!er and them something extra an :;1:::v' 111,f
percent range _ and il II be a nounced Gelling a loan will a wave of newly discovered edge over the field :: ~~,et10~~ ..
Jong time before the pace of not be difficult and the ratts mult1p!e testing and d1agnost1c f ore x amp I e , Cybertek :~:;.~1~1~~0 inflation slows lo that level chargehd vou wont beyas 1'1
1
1
1ff tcchruques has made the tnc or New York developed a g~;.,."0u~.,111
You can live with th s rate of as in 1 c recent past ou ie laboratory business extremely system or measuring the drug ~-=~~~~ 1'\. fl I It d bl able to fuiance iour house or f bl v I h ' • '' in a ion means a ou 1ng pro ita e o u me as metabolism index of individual B~~~'Er 1 10 Of pr•"es '" a q"arler~enlocy b1i:: ticket a pp! l a n c e or d II t h th ff s dd ca .... -... automobile soare_ un cos s a\e gone patients to monitor e e ect e~dd caui 5 or a generation and that s These are all excellent do11 n on them of therapeutic drugs g~~!, '14rni"°
lolerable But the Jong term reasons to bu y \I; hat you need Sales or the medical labs are This enables phys1c1ans to~~;~~~~ ~10
lrend of prices for iust about f'St1mated to have soard from d ter 1 dvance the Bun~ R~no lh g l d ti and want Whats more ynu II $1 ~ b1l11on 1n 1965 to $4 billion e mine n a I e,rn~R n11 ~ every in s up -an ius find this an e s p e c 1 a 11 Y Wilily of a patient to hand ea~~ I ~~di'i'i:.
I his makes today a good time 1 bl b 1n 1970 and they could hit $7 drug before therapy starts au 1No• cf ss
to huv avora e perrod 10 uy such h1ll1on 1n 1975 know ng people The idea 1s of course to deal ~~r~g~. 12o 1 3 ~ These arc the weeks product" a s in the bus111ess say with one of !he rnore pressing euih unv f ~ Back to school c Io the s be ore the trad1t1onal big SP"n Although the new diagnostic prnbl"ms 1n mod0 rn mcd1c1ne and school su nplLes Your kids '" " c~oo• cc l'J ding period or Thanksg1v1ng 1· equ1p1nent 1s ex pen s 1 v e the fact that so many patients ,",~•~'!',2"d Ch can use school clothes a nd " " n stmas -under normal medical labs are not capital ha~e serious a n d un ~:.!,a.i'~u:"'"!s circumstances excellent \1 eeks suppltes throughout the year intensive in anv big .ay and ed t bl t t \h ca R ,.. 4.'i of co urse at this time school pr tc a e reac ions o e ca:::g ~a 110 for shopping A price free2e clothes and supplies are tradi they become less and less drugs indicated for their [.1~'iI':1~v !ti
"o'''' '' "''''v G1uEtt •~•' 1hr cerlainlv turn~ this into a bet labor intensive each year a s)mpton1, c~nPac J2~
n !JOrlal lV nlarked down (dM"ac W 1<111ow"ll11""s"''<Nmte>" ... ~et1 <>•0~·•• lerlhannormalcircumstance facl that makes !h em a ti lh t t t ! t c '~ ,, .. ve l>ffn held bv th' Pa1.c• o,.,. imr"t • Used c&rs and car s ea ! ea I ex n erna 1ona nc c:~ ~nB~da
.,. lh• c+rY .,, c.,..1. Mn• tor• 1>t;fl0<1 n (~)(roods are plentiful f.1ost Th somewhat unique business al:;o u/ New York is run bv a cac tKod u •v<,,."' ~1"l'1v (90> 0~v• shches are stocked with 11.ha t r overs ese are bargain Some companies th it are r I d care un i .so .,,,. v "'n bk• """ b1~ b ~~ 1n•r• inonths for secondhand cars 24 man pru ess1ona .in scien ~·" ,,~ ..io
h ~fl -color unkm>wn on• 08 P ""1 reta ilers CalJ fresh merCh In expanding rapJdfy In !he ltfa: !Catll It h<1S one Of the erg T•~' 1 ~ NoT1CE 1~ fU~THE1t GtuE N rn•1 1 dtSe There are no shortages and accessories medical lab fie ld s1n1ply are t cor ~ cp 60 ,,.. own•r aP,..••• •"" prov•• h ' • .New ca rs Tiie PflCf' more C O rll p r e l l' n :-; I I e C". wa1 41l•
pwnt<"ln P or 1h .. P•0<>er1v w th n ~·;•n 1----,.L"E"C;::A"L-:NcO'f:::c1C=E:---·1 frcele plo s the almnsl "C•toin following co n v en ! 1 on a I diagnosli{ laboralor1es 1n Ne\I; ~!i!\~f•• 1 064
(l )day•lalDWln9thep blk•tlOfl al hi '-' bUSIOeSS !aCl!CSOfgrOl'.lngby y k [£ ge,CC (hllgCCi (orp Nailcf tn• 1 ue ·~·r~1a •nail ve1• in 1 "•·--;;:;;;c;;;;-o°'"-;;cc;;;;;;-;-;;-~,.;;--I repeal of the 7 percent e xcise or o e r I n Y t cc1 Cp cr1 2s
f narr u 1111"'• Dp .,,,. "' 1n ,. ... c IY 01 I NOflCI!' OF MA llSH AL ' SALi! 8""UIS!liOns f ' 0 m p•e employment ex Ce<:• (<>fO 91) CO.II Moi• " wh th <av lh• p opttt• l II A N s c 0 NT INENT•L (llE:Oll tax underline the appeal of ~'t ' C•l•"'-"l~CP 1 ,11.11 w wld 11 <>ubllc •u~lan •t • 11 ne ~E ~u CE 11<c P1~1nt111 vo FRANit o new cars am1nat1ons or y,orkers lo com ~~~·<~ P/!." ~ tnd d•I• 10 1>1 •nna<1ricecl CON TRI\~ Delend•nt No l l 7°' I t I bo l f<1c1hties for ce~ HI.Id 1 .a OATEO 5e.>11ffi'1bu :io 1•11 Bv v rtue "' •n '~""u' on .,uett on • \Vomen s and children s Pee a ra ory ' c,n!l•L! 1 ...,
R E NEl H ... .,a.,.1 :io 1t11 tw Th' Mun1c1oe1 court coals Ho"se•oa ls t~· Yoo 11 VoJttnlCCr ph~s1c1ans and clinics ~;~:t."~~e,'~o c~1,1 al Poll« WE5T ORA NGE COUNT'!' JUOiC1AL '"' "" B t fl I h I h Pub1hnfll Ol'•n<>e Coe•! O•llv Piiat 01sT111cr coun1v "' 0<1ni>e ~1•t~ a• ~Ce sales advertised take ad U eat ex a SO as <I ~~~~"', 1/0 ••• IHnt>lr 'T/ 10]1 14-ot./1 (fl fotn t Ul>Oft • IU<lgmenl ~nl• f!(I In I• Spe"lally a '"PhlS(IC"(Cd (Pn! ~u ... .,.or p1 lR ANScoNTINEMTAl CREDIT vantage of them S I y 1 e '" "" " c'nT,!Ut •o LEGAL NOTICE st11v1cE 1Nc "' 1ud11m•nt u•d ror• changes aren t nearly as im Controls therm ograplndc d1a
5
gnoeds11c ~~,;~~ 900 """ •a•lns! FRANK o CONlllAS •• device deve!ope in w en ------~~.,,------· 1;11<1QmeM d•bta• .t>ow n11 a nrt 0.1 .. nr• ct portant as in years back and f:-f'~';,"A ~o
F Dl'tll OF l~/j "8 •c1111llY du• en ••Id !udvm•nt on )Oll "O" •et a\l"aCll"O deals •End made in cl cxas h~ OiJrnes c,~~.~".",'',".;!.~ ST.lTSMINT OF ABANDON MENT th• d•I• ot mt !s1u1nc• o! 11 d urtu! on "-., ' v d " " "
J<I CTITIOUI 8USINESI NAM I! nl•r.,1 o! '" d udum•nt C•b!ot n tn• " USE OF 1 nov .. tv rd uoan 111 1ne r vnt 1111, """ • l-louse\V:lrC:-1 funuture, Rcq llCSlC 1 __ o_g_m_c_c_r_'"_g __ 0 _______ 1<,~•.,.~;;.~ Nn"' 1,
Th• 1ot1aw nv """o" ""' abandoned tn~ cr0<>trlv n 1n,, .,n1v c1 O••nq• 1111, ,,1 I amps ranges, 11.at~r heaters ~~!~;. 1 f.1'1
"'" q1 lh' tlctlt ov• bu• n,,. nam• co torn • <1r-cr1bfo<1 "' tollow• Bcirgain weeks c,~·.~,yn
1
1. Oallmhod Camou!tt ~.,.,,.,..., •I 1516 Lal 114 lr•n i2n M~P DOOi< 1116 LOS ANG ELES (AP) Th " "" • "" Poladln Av~ A""n'm Pa11•1 17 118 -Commonly ~nown n• •Piece goods QUiits. 01llO -e NEW YORK 1AP) Mond1v <0"10ltlccn ... vn 160 Tn• tlcllt .,.,. bu•,..._,,"""'" •et•rrtd lo '''" ··-· ,, ,,,,,, ·-····. ,,,,,, p Off d t r th N I I N•w '!'er~ St<><k E•cn1n11e orlO-• Cn•• Ohio ' · ' '" -·• • aints --ason 00les pres1 en o e a 1ona en'"''~ 1 o' •bowe w•• tiled•~ Or•noe Cou"lv cri .u~• Cal'"'" 1 • ( d """ ""' S•I•• Ne! en M ii SPP
• "M'•'•-••• ,_, '''' ,, ,,,_ ,.w, NOTICE 1s HEREB'!' CIV[N 111•1 on rar e111ng equipment If Associallon of f.1 anufacturers "''") Hltll low Clo••'"' en M 1 SP al • ~ " M~noav Oc!oblr ' lrll •r l! 00 • M II f en p.,..,r 1 An•nelm Cal torn a o<l<>Ck al Mari.ll•I • OllC• Cou•ti.01"e \OU t an Sll Ind thlS SOrt Of has Called for V01Unta ry wage--A -Cn PIP<I UP lhl• ll\l•!Mu wa• con!luc••d b'f •n ln 11u IY••lm1n,trr Avt c Iv "' eq1•1pmept on s I d f t I fie the en ° t NW 1 c an 1 )Ou price con r0 s a r cur •~'"'' -11 ,, , l', ,, , _ r•-••11 1011 tllvldual W••lmln~l~r Counh cl Orano• Stt!1 OI ,,.,.. • .,. "'••v Ann Ford cM 10 ".. 1 "'11 ••II ., p.,n1 ( •"'' on 1n know \Oll 11 nrcd 1t ne~t sum rent 9(}.day freeze ends :~'LF~ ;0,0 1~~ ~·: ~r"' f:,: _ .: ~~. : ,'.;" /p1 P1tOll,hM O••nve '""'' 0• IV Piiot rnt 11 ynn t boa" lo• Cl}h In 1ow•~1 mer buy 1t no11. You'll get \V p Gultander I o I d •cm~c1ev Ml n u, IJ , lj\., '•en en rvDf S.ptfm~t 11 onll Oclcbf' 'I! II nlonfV Q!lll•l/nl•dM&I•• ollthef~M AtmeMkl 2b 1 6, <.;J, 601o iCht~"'-1 6(1 1," 211o11 11 11!1• ano n"''" 01 $tlo 111<1;m•n• a•btor sign1 f1cant markdol'i ns from newsn1en Sunday that such a Adm•E• !<lg 11 I"• 7 . 11 .. c nm cl~
LEGAL NOTICE
F llHl l'tCTI TIO US BUSIHl!SS NAME STATEME NT tollowl"" Pl!""" ' ao ~II b"SlM•l
n mt ~bov• aru lbM ooo• v 01 •D bl d I d A<1M H1 JO Hl l/r 1 1 ,cn.-r 60 mu~~ tn•r'<lf ~· mav b• l'O"u• v 10 rcputa e ea crs S\Slenl should be a ministered A<1ar~~· 60V ~' 11 • 6 • l6 , r~ -•1~· wt
••l ••v '"a •'~ul un "''" e<<uea h ~1C'ns and \\Omens bv a citizens ad\1sorv board~~rn;~r.16o ~; ~r; ~j · ~j.; .:~!r~,11~1''~~ "o"R:.~na~~·"w~•mln•!or (•l !or"I• shoes fradttJonal sales cnm and the rederal Cosio! LJ\(!ng ::~~~rL: C~7 \t 1i ~o . 1~.~-·~~~G£~1l~;I,
sool•mll• 10 1011 ing up Counci l Howe\cr he opposes "',',',",",-!"t-J 7)1, 11,. 11 . c"rE rl • o 1 d <1 fJ w 1• '""" M•r1h•I ~ "'" n ~ ll , SJ> • t_ n ~+at + •0
Munit pol cou" ""''" O•• ee B 1t!ents :ind n1ulflt>rS any loga! enforcement power AA:'•-~•••"'•,, • 11 11 • n • ( r r "' 1
, ·~ )!I Jo '• J• 1 r 10\• "7 7'l ><om~ Counl> .lk>~·· •1 0 '" c• Sci me for th~<;e c.ullander said the NAf..1 has •••an• I• 11 •l • ,, ,. ' ' In• '" M'b•li! ...... ,., Ala G"••''P 'I\ ll t U1 r .. ~v P'"' ,.,,.,nor, o..~u1v China and d 1 sh t' s temporarily abandoned tis op-A.1~~~ In•~, l" , • 1(1 , 1 c r• ra 1 •O
'"' " "'""'•I•• ~-"'er ~ 11 8v~ N~w~o t ll•~ch
C81 !orn t Low Oftlc H ot H•r• tnd Mtrdk ln I l\lt>Pfl<>C )1 21 :111 .J!I JO r1 .,1o, r I '" J•"''' Ber•on ~"' '" 1 Co"RI c r(1
f 211 c E•" ccrnmonw•ollh J!lassware Sf'plem~r LS B posi tion to wage price rontro s Al~•h"• :kl 1• 11\. 11 , 11, , l1"' c11 11111 ,.~,.co·• 8•••" (_allDt n• Full ... !On '"'°'"I" 11 II bee r th t f th A l<•~•1vrn I 117 11\o 11 II ~ r,.,Flll ?I• T .. ,l)v,nN•l<llflf\VCOnauclf'dby1n PlolntlU••llorneY IJSIJ;l Jarga1nmon I aUSe O enaureo CA<:oStAnd JO 1 ll o 11 11 1 ,(~•I"" D!
l"<l vaue1 "vcl >11ro O••n~• '""'' Ooltv r 10• ln!he nex tfi1urcolumns I ll t'mergency' but it sill! op-!/~;::,a~~ 11: ,J f!, '!, 1:. 1 ~•·•0.~~9p l~ • ;1".";.",:,~~: ~01':..a~':/;:. '"• C0< ~, Srb!Pmt>er 11 70 29 1011 lJl• 11 :idd lo !his h l'ilC ad1 ll c hv poses any curbs on pro(1ts he An~o c., 109 .11 1l • 1 • l • .-' •1 " rt 1
c1• ' "' o •~9t cm""' an ~to 21 191 LEG AL NOTICE ~11 1ng 'nu r11Jcs \\ h1r h \I; 111 sa 1d I .!:i~L,'~.: .~~~~ ... ,, ,~i, •• ',,l, ~ ',J, • ". ;,~!, ~~~~ ... ~," t>• Brv..,ly J M~d~(I• Dtl>uh Cn<n> I I f d •w ,,, ·r· u Cltr~ 1-------c-=~-----he fl 1ru slash ris n111th a<: 50 (.;Onlr O<: on pro its ie sa1 A1r.nE1F ,,. H 79 19 • 1~. l•C<><a((ll '.! Pubns~~ Orong• Cn••' o..iv Pio• 'llJ t ptr-"'r1t o!f tlw co~\~ of key 11.ould hurl thC! businessmans ~"d~M~1~ ~~ U\ ~!; ~: ~: .~~~":..~1~"(1,u lr•>lemt>or ll •od OClollfr • I' \~ FICTITIOUS BU~IN ES S ' I k AHif<! I>~ '"°' 6 ~'> 19 1 l~, ,..<>l•r"' n l'flh 1911 1~11 11 NII.ME ST•TEMENT 1tcr11s 111 vnur to~l of 1v1ng -incentive to ma c new 1!1 .., ettS , 1.,, 71 ,1 ., .,.,. 'u , , ~~10"~~1~ 1 ~ ~uT,";~"'~sawn~ <>r••Qn• ••• aon9 e\cn though the pnces of vestments which create JObs :1/~~1':.Q!' !~~ ld' ~~.: J,1j, ·~~,;~~ R:g~
c•Nr•A WE~r P11001,1CT•CHlS 7)1 thc<:e iten1s will be r1s1n!'.: and spurt the economy A •• '!.~v,',""',,~ •ll 7SJ.\ 11 • J • -t • r:o•o1n1s1 1 04
------'•M• 1,~bf-(°"lo M!I~ l'.1 I! l:r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~;~~~~~~;;~~I "'"' .. , • • I• II 1• o r(IU !"<! Ml F 1n1J ~l••fSchwar• 1SJ ~""'• l>11lfl Ca""--------------A0~o,•,,.!,•,u 69 Sl.., ~. 5'l -11 Col• 1nnfl2J .''T'TIOU~ llUSl ~ESI ,., ~ "" & ?1 • 1$ .. ?6 .. -l... r<1.s I ""b Me•• §AMBAC JO Jll 11 11 " •t es 1>•1 "AME SlA.TEMENT C!'otll llabln_'°" ?Soll E d~n AY• .f: 1 0 0 0 Amer Es 110 .,,• ?! • 1,,',,' 1l lo -falu C.01 1 II T/>9 lollowlna Mn<1~• •fl do"' (c•I• ~·~ 'j AmH .. ,. :nd ,;, ,.. ~ ~I''> c_nl p ct •11
••nl""H I I ·--~ Th 1 bV' """ • bf-~I c;!lr1<lucll'd by a ""1 •• ,•,•,.~ ~ 61! I • !16 1 11• ~ (gl~ .. 1 !1:1 •o ,~,..INtTA 71)9 F•lfw hO .,.... ' ·• -nT "" 7~ ll • If.I 7" -(mbEn l lO .. ..,._ ~tftl'r,.,o ~ Am •lrl -?<!?j••l• 3' >\-(t1'1>Foll70 Co•I• M••• c11 1.,.n•~ ~ .. y. 5<:hwa•• ORDER I All••'' :'09 1 l' ,, • 11 . (omlS<llv .., L avd &<>ID"• ~1 ••<><-Aat ll 1nl• •l•1ernen1 t lf'd w 111 tnt Counl'v ., B 'f I A B•nll• 1 :'O !6l ·~ • • •1' -, (!l"'wE" 1 ?no Ca"• M••f Call!crnl• (l~ri. al O•anff Co<>nl• on 5.,01 II 1911 ~ eaUfl U •ml!de>! 110 ?I •S o •"• "'• 1 CornwEd WI El .... .-F G(l to.~ ~I •u(>(•lla AP! ev 8t~trly J M•ddO• OePll!• Coull, •xJ ' Amll ltl<I M l' l JI! 313 J I • Corn"' pl! oO 11 Co•l•M""'" C1ltorn11 (l~r1( S • k Am Can?XI l:Jl .l'/, ll il Jl1 C!lmE c!l•2 J1n•t E R aae 111 c•..,•111• L•"' p, M ,h.., 0••~9" c .... 11 0•11• p 11,,, flC -On ~mc(;...,"'1 ji11 J 1i ~ '~,. 2~! t t_::;o ~11 n""
c.0111 MfSI Cal IO<h • .. ~~pi.mb"' 11 ftnd ~!cbtr • 11 11 YOURS ~ A Chan 1 04 2l 16 , 2s '> 7~ "ComPvf j' This Dtnlne1 11 bem• C<>'lduc••d ur • 1971 1~1J 1l \ LABELS • <V•~ 111 llj ',",' 1S • J~ • = ~ (<>"'c ! °'' ~al Perln.,nhlP Am O •II I I \ I! 10 > torn•~ ~ .,,,, Golbtk E •'mo "o',',', .. ~,, 10 .,, •1 , •I,. + •COO"<! Ml111 ' '-1 LEGAL N011C I ,~11 IS I , ,1" IV. CO<'lnM! 1 I I T~ll •latem'M 11"" WI!~ ·~~ C°"n Y·'-------;;-;-;;;;:-------J& V ADlt~Vt pt~• ?" n ' 11 "• Conr~c 60 Clerk 01 Ot•nv• Coo(ltv an ~@elem be• 73. 1 Am!Pw I 10 16' 76 J6 ?O 'o + , ~:::: ~g1; 111 ~ 1•11 bv e .... ,rlr J M•d!IO• O•DUlv Coun F 1Jl10 TODAY I •m •D '"" 52 6'• 6 • 6 • -• c I' I s h Clfl'~ F~:i:,~osu; ... :~!'1NNE:s • ~;;: ~D f.!11 11~ fi ... ~~ ~~~ t . ,::;: F:.·~:io Publl.r>ed °''"'" c ... , O'l!v PllDI AGn8d I Otl l1 j6 1 161' 7r:• ""'Cor. Fa "'' 50 ,.0,.,,,tMr 11 ar.d O•lobtr • II ti T~ •ollO'* '1tl P,ri.an• • t 6&hlG A G~nln• 5') IA Ji, ll 1 '• 1 ~°" ~~.~~"1
l tll 161' II ~U•I""" d' .. Gnln cit !O 11 l l l•o l >o -'o C~NatG 1 It ·c::_ ______________ 1 cL011.11; .. 01oc.GE11 LE•1Hc11s 11J ".~~!,'1 1 "'• .~. ,'?~ .!.• L>, = ', c';;'~, PO'*rr ~
• 'l•<I St NPwDP.-1 t'IP•Ch Col I 9716(1 ~., ., """" "" ! 0 ''' '" LEGAL NOTICE ... ''"'""DI 1 I 11(1 110 170 an ... ,... Joi!" 8"•!1)""' I)! Am -Wly ... .., HO'O 2, II& J9 , ll J.1 • '• ant A ' l fl N~"'"" t B••<h •mlnvu i1a ,'j IJ , 11 • ll -; • r"r.:li?: 1
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LEGAL NOTJCI::
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Monday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List .... ...-----------, ...... ) ""' ~ c• , ..
t:l~:'r ~
Ml!ISU!ll "'' Mfd"'i:t l.O Mru.•m MI &rliOCI .0 M MPMM I IJ M n1>PLI 1 l:'.t MIHl!Co 1..0 M 1}1llVr l•I M(.PK A J MP C..,., 160 ~~~~ 2": Moll•• I IO Moll••<o I
MollWlo. DI • MolVOCI U Man• Cl> .0 MoPOllf'! lfld Mon a £11 10
Mon 001f.a "" I M0<11on t kl MMI• al 1.)S ~::~~ ::: MONYM IMJ
Moat McCor MoroenJ t t7 MOI M!SI> 7S MaTA 1 67<1 MorNO< kl Ma oro o 60 MrFut s 1 ao MIS oTT I )6
MSL l'ld •O Mllf\f'ord 7 • N'unl II e>l «I
Mun•I"°"" I M pl>v(o 1 02
Mo! In 1" Mu"" O I 1111 Mu rv0" 60 Mve • L 6Ca
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Mm·ket Declines
For 6tl1 Session
Un fl t>I'• 50 NEW YORK (UPf) -Stocks declrned for the ~~ f' :'i :0
slxth co11secut1ve session on \Vall Street Monday 8~1~f•0111~
Turnover was light ~~"~~c ~f.i1
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 5 84 ~~~::r 1":
at 883 47 near the ftnal bell Standard & Poor s 500 8~11~. P1'0•
stock mdex showed a loss of 071 at 9744 \\hile 8~~.!::.,,,•'°»
declines topped advance"" !'.194 to 368 among the 8 ~·s :13 18
1 653 issues crossing the tape 8~1f~ n "a1
Free world finance mrnisters and banke rs be-8~lG,:t:
gan the1 rannual meeting 1n \Vashtngton this week ~~t~J;..''i lo
1n search or a new world currency system The one 8~ ,N~~1'1o1 ..
that bas prevailed since \Vorld \Var II \\las JOited 1n 8S. ~t~E9, ~
1n1d August by Nocon s dr:imat1c announcement 0£ 8\t,\.-1' 2°/r11
new economic rcJorn1s \\lh1ch included the suspen ~l a.~:,,1 ~
s1on of converting dollars into gold 81G~~e 1 80
u lnduu <IO Electron ics were a1nong the da y's sortest spots, u Ly•·~ 11 :1 U P•C~ g, \Vhue oils and motors also attracted selling Chem1 8l>'i~ g/f~
cats steels and aircrafts generally traded over nar 8 ~,:r u
TO\\ ranges 8~r~~ \ ~
:191;, -~ Among the day's mo;)t active issues were Pan un • u11 " ,..,_.. Uni! U I wl
11 ~ + •• American \Vorld Airways TR\V Inc General Mills, u .. ui pn J7
11 -• 0 d a!P I 8"~'fl1~ o .. -.+-.. cct ent etro eum, and RCA u .. v ~ i rD ~,,. -"" Prices eased Jn mod\;rate turnover on the un1vc111• •11' .. -· 41\~ _,.. American Stock Exchange e~~1~1.!'" '>O ...
i -~ U!Ms 11 tgt n~~ +: ;~1 '"'°"'"1"1-alP .......... , • .,,, ................ _ •• 11·••m•mttG4 .. IOM•l e1:nc~ 10
81 ~ 1$~ PL 19J
Sears Opens
Mesa Store
Sean Roebuck and Co wi n
locate a new appllance-ut.alog
store in Cost.a Mesa. This
dltclosure wa1 made today by
Eugene W Weldon, Sears Im
Angela-Orange Co u n t I e s
District manager, in an
nounclng the leasing of a store
building for the new store at
270 E 17th Street Ill the
HUigren Shopplna Center
Complete Closing Prices -American Stoel\: Exchange List
SllH "'" (1141) Hit~ l l'W Cow Cht
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Ha ond U11
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He <1 lodv
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Wall Street
Chatter
NEW YORK (UPI)
Among the negatu e factor.ri
affecting lhe stock market
these days ls the fully lnv~ted
condition of the typical mutual
fund and some lnst1lutlons a!I
well according lo t h e
lnverne!ll Counsel Inc
•In addition' the firm nays
' a more prudent monetary
policy by the federal reserve
during a period of increasing
economic actlvl lv 1s not likely
to produ~ a irp1llover of ex
cess money from commerc1al
transaction!! t() 11 e c u r 11 y
markets Flnelly the buoyant
psychol ogical climate may
weaken as lht controls beinn
to chafe and 4(lacks on the
arlm1n1stration resume ' the
firm says
The uncerlaln lnternat1011al
monetary s1tuatlo11 has been
one factor responsihle for the
stock markets cauti ous
behavior recently accord1n,11;
lo the Alexander Hamilton
Institute Inc
The flnn noted the common
market has asked for a formal
devaluation of the dollar 1s
part or • global agreement
reallztng all ma1or cur·
renc1es Further the firm
noted the nations have asked
the United states to drop 11.s to
percent surcharge on Imports'
The nnn howeV!r still thinks
Lhe market Ir very burush.
t.
' ,I
Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts!
H•r11'• htre'1 , -·· ,,.,. .•
CHARLIE BROWN, •• and LUCV.,, and LINUS •.. •nd 8CHllOECER ••• and
' Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the
whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally.
I
r
-----
I
DA IL'I' PILOT PMl11 by L• P•Y111
Bringi11g Ho1ne Bncon
L_isa Osborry ~ets a firm grip on "tl·Iissio n Viejo _Days during the greased
pig ~ompet1t1on. She and lhe other yo ung !~dies proved that girls can
get Ju st as muddy as boys. And they were Just as enthusiastic during
the chase. -
Soutl1 Coast YMCA Slates
Y outl1 Rec1~uiti11g Nights
The South Coast Yri-1CA has announcer!
a series of recruitmenl nights in the
elementary school s of the Capistrano
Unified School District for three of its
youth programs, the l'·lnrlian t\.1airl cns,
Y-lndian Guides and GB.A-Y.
The series begins thii:: c\·ening '~·1 1h :i
7:30 meeting on 1he GRA-Y program in
the San Clemente High School Li1tlc
Theater for boys in !he f<111 rth thn1ugh
si:rth grades from the Ole Hansen. ('on-
cordia and Palisades school areas. Boys
11hou!d attend with their parcn1s.
Other programs on GRA-Y \Vill be held
at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 6 in the ,..·larco Forster
.Junior High School cafetorium for boys
in the R. lf. Dana, C11pistrano ll nd San
-Jl.lan school areas .end at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 7
in the Cro\\'n Valley School cafetorium
for boys in that school area.
Agnew H as Brr c kcrs
WASHINGTON !UPJ1 -ll u n1an
Events. the conserv;iti1·e. 11• e e k t y
magazine, pulJlished a poll todav sho11'l nj:t
one-fourth or the del cg<1tes flnd altcrnfltes
to the l96R Repuhlican J\"a !inn:ll Con·
vention fa v0r Vice President Spi ro T.
Agnew's renom ination.
Of 2.527 persons polled, the magazine
said 861 responded. Agnew 1~nn i::upport
from 623 for a second term and 603 frl t
he would strengthen the GOP ticket na-
tionv.·ide.
Recruitment nights for the Y-lndian
Maidens, a program for girls in the first
through third grades and their mothers,
ar!' scheduled as follows:
11 JI . Dana , 7:30 p.m., ~pt. 28,
mul!ipurpose room .
t\.fnrco Forster (San Juan school area)
7:JO pm, Scpl. 29, Room 204 .
Crown Valley, 7:30 p.m., Sept. 30,
cafcton um.
P11l isades, 7:30 p.m., Oct. 4 ,
mullipurpose room.
Concordi a, 7:30 p.m., Oct. 5,
n1ultipurpose room .
Ole llansen, 7:30 p.m., Oct. 7,
mulr ipurpose room .
Las Palmas, 7:30 p.m., Oct. 12,
portable classroom.
The Y-Tndian Guide program, for boys
in the first through third grades and the ir
fa thers, v.1ill have the following recruit-
ment n1eetings:
t\.1a rco Forster Junior 1-ligh (for the San
J uan. R. H. Dana, Capistrano and
Palisades school areas) 7:30 p.m. Sept.
28. cafetorium.
CtO\\"n Valley School, 7·30 p.m. Sept.
30. 1nuH1purpose room.
Ole Hanson School. 7:30 p.m. Oct. •,
multipurpose room.
P;ilisades School, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4.
multipurpose roo m.
Concordi a School, /Concordia and La5
Palrnas school areas) 7:30 p.m. Oct. 7,
.rnul!ipurpos!' room.
For further in formation regarding
l hc~c programs call the South Coast Yl\-1-
f ·\. 4~4·943!.
Sllght111 Soiled
Pat Griffith, 12. looks a Jili.le
the worse for wear after his
tu ssle with a greased pig at
1r1ission Viejo Days .
.Writing Class
For Publicity
Slated at OCC
For press chairmen -especially those
charged with handling publicity for clubs
and organiz..ations -Wednesday could be
the nig ht they find out "everything you
always wanted to know about writing
press releases."
Orange Coast College will present a
special two-hour seminar for press
chairmen at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the
Forum at Estancia High School, 2.123
Pla~ntia Ave .• Costa Mesa .
No admissio n will be charged and
regisrants can sign up at the door for
the session.
Dr. Thomas Blakely, district director
of the evening college program of Coast
Community College District, will open the
program.
Don Jacobs. community relations
director for Orange Coast College, will
conduct lhe session.
Basics in how to write a news release.
timing of a publicily campaign, some of
lhe do's and don't~ a press chairman
should observe in dealing with the news
med ia and other subjects will be CO\'ered.
The program is part of the college's
free lecture series and is belng presented
for the third cormecutlve year.
Football Feasts
To Start Friday
Laguna Be.<ich High School's trad itional
"football feasts·· will get under 1,1•ay
before the Hrst game of the l'ieason Fri·
day evening.
The pre-game family dinners. featuring
hamburgers. beans. salad , ice cream
cones allld coffee or milk ore schedu:ed
from 6 p.m. lo 7:3{1 on game nights in the
high school cafeteria.
All food is prepared and donated by
mot hers of LBJ-JS students. Proceeds of
tickets, $1.50 for adults and $1 for
students, benefit the .!itudenfs in providing
refreshments for the players after 1111
school athletic evnts and some funds are
used fo r the senior class year-end party.
Whoa, Pig
It takes fleet (eel to catch a greased pig. And then
there's the problem of hanging on. Thal takes good
hands. To make matters tougher at ?\-lission Viejo
Days, the competitors had to manipula te the un·
willing porkers to a circular area. All in al l it proved
to be a pretty dirt:1 business but lots of fun. It was
one of the more popular events at the community
ge t-together.
New 'Pill' Danger Told
Chromosome Breakage Evidence Founcl in Study
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A team or
scientists has found evidence lhat women
taking birth control pills appear more
likely than non-users and men to suffer
breakage of chromosomes, the threadlike
bodies ·which carry genes controlling
heredity.
But. the resct1rchcrs conducting a s!udy
for the Nalion;il lnsli1.ules of Health
INIJ I) caution thal the project is not over
yet and that its implications for human
health still are unclear.
For examp!c. an NIH spokesman said
similar chromosone breaks can be
caused by some drugs, Infections or com-
monly consumed substances like coffee .
About 8.5 million American women use
Library Slow,
Not Forgetful
Patrons of the Orange County Public
Library who are patien tly waiting for
news or books they have requested, take
heart.
It may take a little time. but the
library does not forget.
For example lhere·s the Laguna Beach
lad y who, on Oct. 20. 1969, asked !he local
branch to seek ror her a copy of a hook
titll'd .. Isadora Duncan."
The litt le book request form she fil!ed
out way hack then came back in the mail
this week. with an official repl y. dated
Aug. 6. 1971 -"Sorry. do not have."
birt h control •pills.
"Our data 5how a small but significant
increase in chromosomal aberrations in
women who are taking oral con-
traceptives," said the study by L. Gayle
Littlefield . a geneticist. and her col-
leai::ues at Oak Ridge \Tenn) Associated
Unive rsities.
So far. the study h;:is incl11ded 1nore
th an 10.000 bloocl cells From three grours
of persons. Some ch romosome breakage
h2"5 been found in each of t11e groupf;. But
the average incidence of breakage among
pill users \Yas 9.2 pe rC'C'nt as opposed to 6.8
percent for women nol taking the pill and
5.~ percent for men .
~lrs. Litllerield told UPI in n telephone
interview that none of the pill user:ii in the
i;ludy hav e slopped tak ing it and tha t she
has not advised lhcrn to stop. The fln·
dings of the project, now tv.·o-lhirds com·
p!ete. are too uncertain to warrant suc h
advice, sht> said.
But Dr. Jnhn S<'hrn,::1c. chief nf an NI!!
progra m intended to determine ll1e ef·
Trustees Sla te l\'l cel
On Tes ting Prog rrr111
A special 1\•ork shop on the 1971·i2
te sting pro gram v.•11! be held rnnigh t hy
trust!'cS of !he San Joaquin Elcm!'nlary
School Dis!rict.
The m!'ctlng will 1akc placr al 7 :10
p.111 m the district :.idn1inistral!on annex,
14600 Sand Canyon Ave .. Easl. Irvine.
fec:ts nf nral contraceptives. said "This ls
the most precise study of its kind."
··This means genetic damage poten-
ti all y 1f the chromosomes are broken in a
cell that has reproductive potential," ht
said.
And t\.1 rs. -Litllefield said that similar
rtnd ings by researchers in Cairo. Egypt,
were reported along with her conclusions
at the recent 4th International Congress
on Human Genetics in Paris,
The Littlefield study is based on blood
cell s rather than sex ,cells, which are
virtually impossible to obtain for
research.
Y Indian Guides
Meet it1 Laguna
L;:iguna B!'ach boys in !he first through
!h 1rd grades. ;:inrl their fathers, are in·
vitecf lo artend Y·lndian Guide recruit·
ment nights at t"·n Laguna Beach
el rmentary schools this week.
On Tuesday, information about the Y·
Indian Guide program v.•ill be given at a
7 30 p ni. meeting in the El Morro School
cafc!nrium.
Student s from Top nf the Wor!d llnd
Aliso Schools m11y attend a 7:30 p.m.
mecling \Vednesday in the Top of the -
"'"orJd School ca fetorium.
Adrl i1ional informalion may be obtained
hv ca lling Rod Carpenter st the South
Coa~t Yr-.tCA. 494-9431.
El Rancho h'as the hottest price in town!
London Broil ........... 5 1~b~
Boneless .•. \\'ith all the rich hearty goodne.sa your family deeerves!
Beef Brochettes .... 69~.
U.S.D.A. Choice bee f .•. ten{lcr cubes, skewered with onions. Mln. 6 oz.
Boneless Chicken Breasts ...... r.oRDON .B1.£u ...... •1.29u.
S,\·eet tend er v.·hite menl. stuffed in gourmet fashion ! Min. 14 oz.
Lawry's Lemon P1epper ............................. 43¢
\\'orks like n1agic to cnh nee lhe fla,·or of even the fineat meal 214 oz.
ARCADIA: Sunset and Huntiniton Or
,El Rancho CenterJ
..
~W1 /, PASADENA :
·:. ,..,,_J20 Wr .! r.olor .lllO Blv~
1:111
11111·
Just the kind the teacher likes to get ..
one away! So put a couple in his (her '!
Prices in effect Mnn.., Tur3., Wed., Sept. 27, !8, £9
No rnle1 lo dtu1.kra. "
1'runchy crisp that. even the most prized rn1pil will hesit.ate to give
... , and have some on hand for a most \velcome after school treat!
Frosted Shakes ... 6 '" $1
Borden'11 makes ·em so delicious ! 9 1;~ oz. size .•. 4 flavo rs to choose from !
P-nut Butter .......... (.9,c
Smooth or crunchy ••• try Springfield !or value ... l 6 oz. jar at this price!
Welch's Jelly and Preserves ...... . .. .......... 49•
Choose your favorite , .. jc!l.r. j11.m or preserves ·. , . big 20 l1unce jart
Saran Wrap ................. io r001 ROLL .. .. .. .. ....... 33•
Maklne; undwiches ? .•. saving lcft..-overs? .•• wrDJ.J 'em in Saran.
SOUTH PASADENA : 1:1 1 I
I 1111' HUNTINGTON BEACH : 1:1 ll
I 1111' NEWPORT BEACH : 1717 Newpor t Bl•d ·'"'I
1555 Eastblult Or IEaslblult Village Center . I rrmo11\ ;11111 Hu"t1ngto11 01 Warne1 and Al~onqu1n Roa1~walk Crnlrr
•
••
i
•
if · bA1tV ~LOT· -
l!LP 421 j -·=-------...... ----....... ~-------------------------............... ...,,
l(GB Seen Behind. British Spy Furor
. : '.:1-t
!-prl.nge Coast
:. ~i4e Turning . : . By THOMAS l't1URPHJNE ,. ot Ille Ollll~ ~lt.t UtH
• ON, THE BEACH : -These day1 you
fiave .all kinds of folks campaigning for
jreae:rvation of our natural assel& and for
t onservation in general. Like in the pro·
mot.ioo ol al~ cau.ses. most of these people
are factual, thoughtful and persuasive.
A few others, howeve r. go to the wi lder
Eide, like some of the wr.itings that have
receot!y represented the C a I i f o r n i a
Coastal Alliance. In these , the phrase,
"the rip off of the California coast"
ficems to be a favorile theme.
And the Orange Coast in particular ap-
pc:irs to be a favorite target.
The so.called "rip off" is slangish for
Euggesting that rich and evil force!i are
at work to capture the coastline for
private use v.·hich will eventually dutroy
it. -ORA NGE COUNTY and the Orange
Coast is a p~rticularly favorite targf!t for
lhese kinds of attacks. Thi s occurs
berause our home area has long been
considered by other places al 1) Rich. 2 I
Conse rvative. 31 De si rab l e . 4)
Republican. 51 Growing.
Additionally, there are la rge private in-
terests here such as the Irvine Ranch and
Sr :indard Oil y,•hich have some key
holdings 1n areas considered prime for
public recreation or conservation.
For snme minds, all of this is enough to
make us suspect.
SO. WlfEN THE Orange Chast gels at.
lacked as part of the "rip off of the
California Coast" it is per hap a
worthv>'hile to pause for a moment and
rcviev.· the record. For e.xample, how arl!!
we doing in the area of providing public
beaches and water areas for recreation
purposes:'
\\'ell, most recently just last week. the
Orange County Board of Supervisors ap-
proved purchase of 22 acres of upland!!
and 11 acres of beach -including 4.800
feet of shoreline -for public use at SaJt
Creek. The price was $2.5 million.
Prior to that:
LONOON IUPI ) -East Europe.an
sources indicated today Soviet 1ttret
police (KGB I may have purposely chan-
neled some Information on Russian in-
telligence activities to British authoritJes
in order to undermine the Kremlin's pol-
icy of accommodation with the West.
The KGB, & law unto itself in the Soviet
Union, wields tremendous power there
and, despite de-Sta.linizaUon , has re:-
mained an all·lnfluentia.l ann in thf.
h~her policy councils of the Kremlin.
The KGB '_, policies, the rources 11ug·
gested, ha ve often run along independent
linea: and not infrequenUy have opposed
the govemmenrs aofter move• in the
sphere& of inlemalional relation&.
The gources recalled a case several
years ago of a West German electronics
engin~r who was severely Injured ln an
attack with acid. That attack was ascrib-
ed to the dolnii:s of the KGB , in outright
conflict at the time with 50ftening
government policy toward W e s t
Germany.
Western diplomatic sources said Ule
Kremlin's fore ign policy makers may.
once the present storm has passed, try
quickly lo curb the KGlrs activiUes and
apparent power ambitions.
communist diplomats a r e Wl·
derstandably cagey in their disc ussion of
KGB activities. although &0me of the
East Europeans apparently ha.ve good
reason to resen t their aUempt.s at med-
d.Jmg in their nat.ion's affairs.
There is "cooperation" between the
KGB and its East Europe.an coun-
terparts. but the Moscow organization is
reportedly acting striclly on its own, us-
ing whatever assisting "branches" are at
its disposal outside Russia with due
w·~
Staulents Protest
Opposing the Europea n visi t of Emperor l·Iirohito
and Empress Nagako. radical studen ts demonstrat·
ed in the streets near Tokyo International Airport
early today. The emperor and his \Vile left by air·
liner for a meeting \V ith President Nixon in Alaska
and a good\viU tour of Europe.
,
U.S. Shows Trade Deficit 5 Go on Trinl
-The counly purchased Aliso Beach in
South Laguna, built a pier, parking lot D "t N" s h
'"" '"P""" 1aci1i1i .. '""convert.<! it i•· esp1 e IX On . urc arge lo a public beach.
In Gr eece; F lice
Escape Sc heme
-The city of Laguna Beach purchased
!ls 1.Iain Beach frontage to assure public
occess and USL'.
-The stale negotiated and obtained a
section of Cam p Pendleton Beach below
aSn Clemente and may oblain the release
of even more beachfront for the public.
WASHI NGTON fAP l -Despite Presi-
dent Nixon's import surcharge the U.S.
balance in trade ran in the red for the
fifth month in a rnw in August as
Americans imported 5259.7 million more
in i:;oods lhan they exported.
The deficit v.·as sli1?htly improved from
Ju!y, when it ran to S.104 million . But the
tot al deficit for 197! so rar stands al
$936.1 million. 11•hich rnmparcs \1·ith a
$2.2 billion surplus for the same period a
yea r earlier.
ATHENS (AP l -F11'e persons, in-
cluding Lady Amalia Fleming and two
Amer[cans. 11•cnt on trial before a spe<:ial
tribunal today on charges they conspired
lo spring a v .. ould·be assassin from his
Gree k prison .
-The county purchased and con·
slructed Sunset Aquatic Park in the Hun-
tington Beach-sunset Beach area .
-The county and federal government
'btained property and constructed Dana
Harbor in Dana Point.
IN ADOlTJON, efforts are under way
for creation of public shoreline pa rk
~rras between Laguna Beach and Corona
drl r.·lar in such choice spots as EI Morro
Beach, Scotchman·s Cove and Crystal
Col"e
ll \1·ou ld be less than honest to suggest
L'.f' haven"l made some mistakes in I.he
rni.~l in shoreline planning and con-
ser\ at1 on. But the tide seems to be turn-
ing.
Wkks Unfavorable trade figures wrrc amon_g
the chief reasons fnr President Nixon's
new economic policy announced Au.ii:. 15.
The pol icy includes 11 10 percent added
tax on most im ports. A lax v.·hich the a9-
ministration is using as a bargainin,i: tool
to seek a realignment (lf international
currency rates to help cofrect the trade
deficit.
It hacl not been expected that Au~usl
trade figures would show the effects nf
the su rchage because it 1vas announced in
mid·month and did not appl y to go~s
that were in shipment al that timr.
Harold C. Pa sser. as~1stant serretar~·
"' Cnmmrrcr. fnr rconnmi c afl.1irs. said
the \Vest O"iast dfl('k strikl'. 11·hirh Dr_gan
Julv !. "continued In e~rrci~r a 1l:in1·
periini:: influence nn hoth rxfl(lrls nnd 1m-
JXlrts ··
A standing-room crowd packed the
cour1room of !he r.ti!itary Justice
Bu ilding as the trial began before a
tri hunal of lour army officers' and a
cil•ilian judge.
Lady Fleming, v.·ido"' of the Scottish
scientist y,·ho discovered penicillin, wa s
arrested Au g. 31 along with tv.·o
Americans and a Greek national . The
government s:ud they y,•ere about to ex-
ec-ute a pl11n to free a prisoner convicted
of attempting to assassi nate Premier
George Papadopoulos.
All were charged wilh association for
conspiracy and for hiding a prisoner.
I sus pec! rhal in some other area~ -
m11yhe v.•here. some of the loudest con·
~ervation noises are coming from -they
rrugh~ have a tough time matching the
rerord of !he Orange Coast in recent
rea rs,
'How do I knn w thi•
drink ain 't polluted ?'
'"ThC're 11·ere few s1,i;:11s (If d1rer~1on of
PXpnrts Lo other port~ ... hi> sq1d. "but
diversion nf imports lO East Coa~t and
Gulf ports. as w~JI as to overland routes,
v.·as clearly el'idenl."
Larly Fleming, fi2, holds Gerek and
British citizenship. The other defendants
arf' Hohcrt Skelton. 26. of Yardley, Pll ..
:'<l rs Athena r s.rhogins. 42, of ~lln
flPilf)OIJs, .\lino, and C n n s t anti o e
Androut sopoul0~. JO. nl Athens.
1\ lifth dcfenfl:int. a Greek soldier v.'ho
guarded thr prisoner, was charged with
fa lhng to tell his military superiors of the
al lesed escape plans. The priso ner, Alex·
ander Panagoulis, was sentenced to death
in 19611. but his execution was stayed
folJoy,·ing protests in several coonlries.
Lct·s hope thry try.
North Chilly, South Warm Lady Fleming. an Athens resident,
became a British subject efter she mar·
ried Scottish scientist Sir Alexander
Fleming in 1955.
Fre":ze Warnings Alread y Out in New England Russia Welcomes
Mr s. Gandhi, Ne'Y
All y From India
California
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.n1 f,.10SCOW fU Pl 1 -Prime Minis ter
.01 lndira Gandhi of India arrived today in a
.o.. glow of Soviet·lndian good fellowship for
ty,·o days of consu!talions with her new
treaty partners.
Mrs. Gandhi's plane arrived at
·'' !\1oscow·s Vnukovo Airport about 2 p.m.
.11 after flying a circuitous route t.o avoid
\Vest Parkista n airspace. Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin greeted her at the airport.
,ff The Soviet press publicized her visit ex-
.11 lensively and hailed her as the leader of
11 ti government that had raised lndia'a
· economic well-being and pursued a
•16 Sovlet·approved foreign policy o ( •• nonalignment.
119 It also cited lh e S0\1 lel ·Indi11 n
friendship treaty. sig ned ln August, as an
·'J alliance that "helps move aside the
threa t of a mll itary connict that arose in
connec !ion y,•ith the events In East
Pakistan." 1
"\Velcome. esteemed Mr&. Gandhi,"
the press notices said,
11 She also recei\•ed an admiring send.off
~1 lrom demonstrators In New Delhi.
,usplcion and contempt.
The East European sources hinted they
would not put It past the KGB lo have
had • hand in channeHng some in-
tormaUon on their agents activities to
Britsh authorities to cauM: 1 major rum-
pus. The infonnation now 1vailable lo
British aulhorities goes rar beyond Britain
and involves othe.r Western countries.
They suggested guardedly one of the
reasons may ha ve been the KGB 's plan to
torpedo, or at least &low down, the cur.
rent Soviet polltical drive for improved
re.L"i tions with We.st Germany, other Wetit
Thieu Opposed
European countriea: and the Un.iW
St.ates.
Thev described the KGB as the
tought!st. most hardline outfit that is cur-
renlly operating within the bloc, with ten-
tacles stretched on a 5cale even unknown
to some of the Kremlin 's top political
leaders.
The present KGB chief, Yuri V.
Andropov, reputedly is or was a friend o(
party chief Leonid Brezhnev. But. the ex·
perts said, KGB chiefs seem to bci in the
habit of going their own way once in
power, and that power is very tempting.
Five Viet Cities
Hit by Protests
SAIGON (UPI) -Demonstrations
against the one-man reelection race of
Pre:sident Nguyen Van Thieu broke out
t~ay in five of South Vietnam's biggest
c1t1es. The demonstrations took an anti·
Amer ican tone in the Mekong Delta city
of Can Tho where three U.S. vehicles
were firebombed.
Thieu forces organized their own pro·
government demonstration in Saigon but
only about 25 veterans turned up.
Thieu scheduled a television ap.
pearance tonight with his running mate,
former Prime Minister Tran Van Huong
to discuss his "campaign platform." ·Th~
President says he is running for a vote o(
c.onfidence from lhe Vietnamese people.
since all opposition dropped out of the
race four weeks ago, charging that he
was trying to rig the elections.
A leading opposition senator told the
go_vernment today to stop blaming its
mistakes on the Communists, and
criticized police for using excessive force
in putting down anti ·government
dem onstrations.
_I Da r>.'~g. the country':s second l&rgest
c1ly, police cofronted disabled veterans
and high school students who tried to
march on a main street carrying anti·
Thieu banners and pictures of the Presi·
dent with a cross drawn across his face.
Police fired tear gas to hreak up the
demonstration and the sludent.s respond·
ed by tossing firebombs and at least two
fragmentation grenades. only one of
which went off. One policeman was
sl ightly wounded.
La ter the dem onstrators. who retreated
into their headquarters, tried to bring the
banners out again . At that point the
police pulled out and regular South Viet·
namese army troopi;, armed with
machineguns, were brought in for
another confrontation. A third grenade
was thrown and five more persons were
slighlly \vounded. but there was no gun·
fire and the protest broke up at mjdarter·
noon .
In Qui Nhon . the fou rth largest city 25ft
miles northeast of Saigon, about 100
vetera ns and war widows also ripped
down campaign posters, burned them in
the streets, and marched on the province
headquarter:s.
Onl y Bien Hoa. the fifth largest city,
Brezhnev Ends
Balkan Travels
SOFIA, Bulgaria <UPll -Leonid I.
Brezhnev flev.· home toda y after a three-
da !' visit lo Yu~oslavia and lightning
stops 1n Hungary and Bulgaria to report
on his lalks w1th President Titn.
Bre7.hnel' Y!a.s given a full ceremonial
farewell \\'hen his llyushln-fi2 jetliner took
off here for Jl.~oscow, barely 20 hours
af!er he arrived from Budapest.. His gala
greeting here was in stark contrast to the
low yrnhle of his almnst secret 24-hoor
stop In Hungary,
China Trip Ends
which is a suburb of Saigon. apparently
remained free of demonstrations today.
In Can Tho, authorities said, four
disabled Vietnamese veterans forced •
U.S. Army station wagon lo slow down,
hurled a firebomb which destroyed thl!I
vehicle, and then threv.· rocks at the
neeting Vietnamese driver. No one was
hurt.
Nixon to 01(
Tra11s-Alaska
Oil Pipeline?
ANCHORAGE. Alaska (UPI ) -Presi·
dent Nixon Sunday hinted strongly he
would approve the controvrrsial trans·
Alaska oil pipeline but would give no con-
create assurances nn the proposal to
move oJI from Alaska's north i;lope to
shippi11g ports on the southern coasL
The President said Secretary of th!
Interior Rogers C. B. 1\lorton wa s prepar·
ing an anal ysis of the envi ronmental
aspects on whether to go ahrad with it
this fall .
In a statement issued shortly after hi!!:
arrival in Anchorage. to v.·elcome
Emperior Hirohito of Japan on his 1 .... ·o·
hollr reviev.·ing stopover, Nixon said,
"5ecrelary !\1orlon informed me ju!;t
before my departure from \Vashington
tha t the Department nf Interior 1s in 1he
final slaRes of preparing the le~ally·man
dated environmental statement of the
pipe line proposal_
"Thal sla!emC'nl will examine not only
thf'. environmental impact of lhc pipeline
and marine transport system. but also
their economic impact on the stale of
Alaska, thE"i r eff('rt on Alaskan natives
and the allernative means for the move·
ment nf Arctic nil '•
Environrncnlalis!s and conservationists
have been fighlin~ the pipeline in the
courts. An analysis nf the environmental
impact of the fiipel ine v.·as required or
f\.for lon un der a federal court injunction.
Nixon said significant portions of the
impart 11nalysis had been prepared with
the assistance and aclil'~ collaboration of
the sta te nf A!a ~k:i and the Unive rsity of
Ala~ka. HP ind ita\rd 1h;it he ferls the
pipel ine may be ahle In go ahead.
"Based on !he 1nfnrmatinn llfl~ at
hand."' he said . •·1 dn no t be!1ere tha r the
apparent conflict brt11·ern oil :ind !h(' en·
1·lronmrnt represrnt.~ a prrm;.nent im·
passe ··
Jl.1orton in an in1rr\·1c111 1~·1ih l' S .\'r11 s
and World Report said the pipeline ruav
run from Alaska's npr!hcrn slnpc !hrnu.<.h
Canada tn the 48 contiguous st;itcs He
said Ottawa has not been approached
about the possibility but a gas pipeline i!
already planned in Canada.
Noted Doctor Dampens
Mao Sickness Rumors
. HO NG_ KONG (APl :--American heart specialist Or_ Paul Dudley White
sai_d on arrival from Peking today that he saw nothing during his stay in
China to ~pport rumors that Communist party Chairman Mao Tse-tung is sick .
. Whitt. ~n 85-year~I~ Boston card iologist who treated the late President
Dwight D. E15enhower. said he heard the speculation that Mao is seriou~ly ill
only when he listened to ll West ern radio broadcast. •
He &aid he asked Chinese doclor1 about the redio report and they indical·
ed no knowledge of serious illness. White said he had no personal contact with
!\1ao or other government leaders during his 12-day sUly.
. Rumors began bubbling a.lier Peking canceltd i!s traditional Oct I
National Day parade for the first time since !he Communists se.lzed powe~ 22
11ears ago. 1:1e ,ta.l k included sperulatlon that Mao had died or fallen gravely
Ill or Iha~ Chm~ s top leaders "'ere engaged in a IWJWtr struggle.
Wh_ite said doctors In reking told him the parade was called off simpl•
because. 1t had become too elaborate. •
. "They explained that they .want m?r.e people t.o take parl in the celebra.
llOl'IS on Oct. 1, and they •re going to d1v1d' the population up among several ~lg parks," he added.
~hite deplored. rumor5 that lie had gone to China to treAt ~1ao for •
heart aliment and said he. had no Idea v.·hether the. 77-year'{l!d Chinese le&d u
actually $Uffered from heart trouble. He Mid he trav@:led to Peking al I.he 11 vitation of the ChintM Medical Assoclaliol). 1'
The American pral11ed standards attained hy Chinese doctors and sa 'd
lhey "a.re doing a magn ificent job, etpttlAlly wJl.h the rural population in thfl
communes. wh ere 90 perce.nt of the ptople livP."
He _said his 12-<lay visit was "a remark;ib!y !Int etpt"rfence-."
Whitt was •ccompan ied by hit wlft. Jn;i. •nd bv Dr Edmund Grey
Diamond of Kansas City ind Diamond'• wife , Ma ry. -
NY Collapses
On I ts Arches
NEW YORK (U Pl1 -The llrsl
depu1y city health commis1k>ner
has disclosed that the health
departmenl was forced to stop
paying lor orlhope-dic shots under
the Medicaid program becau5e of
an ''epidemic" or Oat feet in lht cl·
ty.
Dr. Lo\\.·ell Bell in. the deputy
commissioner, said Sunday that the
number of prescriptions f o r
orthopedic shoes increased to l7 ,lm
a month under the Medicaid pro-
gram afler welfare recipients were
given a Oat grant instead of QJJoca-
t.lons for shoes and clothing.
Bellin indicated that the reti·
plent:s were going to one of ii:
number of podiatrists in the-city
and obtaininf,! prescriptions for l'!.~
pensive orthopedic shoes rather
than buying regular shoes.
Plea Lodged
For Dollar
By Connally
WASHINGTON IUPJ) -\.\'1th Treasury
SeCretary John B. Connally asking "nex-
lbHity and lairneSS".1 for the .dollar, the
118 members of the International
Monetary Fund began their annual
meeting today in search of a new world
currency system.
Nixon Hails New
Nuclear Power
Plant Pote1itial
MDndaiy, ~tptfmbtr 11, 1'"1 D.l1LY PILOT 6
Ladies Plead 'Fifth'
Women Keep Own Counsel on High Court
WASHINGTON (AP) -The three
women President Nixon has appointed to
the federal bench are exercising judicious
discretion, each declining to comment on
her chances of becoming the first female
Supreme Court justice.
Allhough no one can be !11.lre of the
President's support, Mrs, Nixon told
reporters Thursday she was "talking It
up" with her husband t.o appoint a
woman to the high court. She mentioned
that the President had appointed three
women to federal courts -Cornelia G.
Kennedy of the U.S. District Court in
Michigan and Sylvia Bacon and Norma\Je
Hollov•ay Johnson, both of the Super ior
Court of the District of Columbia.
In case "they don 't get one this time,"
1t1rs. Nixon said, "they're grooming
them. They'll be moved up to other
courts."
Kalamazoo Buses
Firebo1nb Target
Six weeks after President Ni1on ended
the international payment.'l ay:o1tem that
has prevailed since World War II by
suspending the convertibility of dollars
into gold, the J~IF delegates gathered in
\11hat Canadian Fin.once ~1inister Edgar
J . Benson described Sunday as a "eris.is''
atmosphere.
Benson predic ted the outbreak of a
trade war among the major economic
po'l>.'en; if their currencies c.onlinued to
"float" outside the parities fixed by the
11\.fF'. And. Benson added, there won 't be
a reallgnment of currencies so Jong a!I
lhe (U.S. import) surtax is there."
RlCllLAND (AP) -President Nixon
says a new lest facility under con-
struction at the Hanford Atomic \York3
gives promise of producing abundant
nuclear energy that is both inexpensive
and nonpolluting as measured against the
use of fossil fuels for power generation.
The next day, Mrs. Nixon said the
\Yhite House l:o1 giving careful con-
sideration to the idea of a \\.'Oman on the
court but added:
"The trouble is, the best qualified
women are too old."
SHIRLEY HUFSTEDLER
tha t he is more interested In a can-
didate·s judicial philoso phy than anything
els e, and reiterated that he wants
non1inecs \vho are ' 'st r i ct con·
structionists" or lhe Constitution.
""'" ..... RITA HAUSER.
KALA11AZOO, -~1ich. IUP!) -An at·
templed firebon1bing was reported ~rly
today in a parking lot \\.'here 2:> school
buses are kept. It was U1e first lncidrnt or
violence involving school buses sillce a
court-ordered school integration pro-.
gram went into effect Sept. 7.
But Connally, talking with reporters
Sunday afternoon, sald there had been no
change in the U.S. position -lhe IO per-
cent surcharge is temporary and will re.
main in ertect until the major trading na-
tions can agree on a formula to ease the
oppressive deficit in U.S. balance of
payments.
He said the work is being undertaken
by the Atomic Energy Commission in
cooperation v.·ith the electric power in·
dustry, which he said has pledged $200
million to supfX>rl a demonstration plant
in the largest single commitment to
research and development in its history.
rn addition to the three wo1nen·s1ngled
out by 1\1rs. Nixon, others being men-
tioned in speculation include Shirley rv1.
Hufstedler, who as a member of the U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals is the nation's
highest-ranking woman judge; Rita
Hauser. a New York Republican once
;1amed by Nixon as a United Nations
representative, and Mary Gardner Jones,
a member of the Federal Trade Com·
mission .
Judge Kennedy of Grosse Point Woods
v.•as the first woman in Michigan history
appointed to the federal bench. She is
regarded by her colleagues as a
moderate in her application of the law.
member of the prealiilous law review.
She then clerked for a year for I.he late
U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Harold M.
Stephens at a time when few women
were awarded auch poaltion s .
Afterward!!, she returned to Detroit to
p_ractice law with her falhtr. Elmer H.
Groefsema. a noted trial attorney. The device did not explode. There was
11: brief fire which left one bus slightly
damaged.
"Someone shoved a bottle underneath a
fence and then threw a 30-minute flare to
set it off," said Lt . 1'1ichael ~1oshier of the
Kalamazoo police department.
The power industry's response I to
development of a prototype fa st breeder
reactor has been so encouraging, the
President said, that the led er a I
governn:ient's program to develop a new
generation of nuclear reactors will be ex·
panded.
President Nixon, asked Thursday night
about the possibility of appointing a
\\'oman, told the DetrDit Eronomic Club
Born Aug. 4, 1923, Judge Kennedy grew
up in Detroit, attended the University of
~1ichigan and graduated from the
University'& law school in 1947, a
From 1~52 until 1987, when 1he was
elected to the 3rd Judicial Circuit Court,
the top trial court in Michigan, Judge
Kennedy was a partner In \be Detroit
fi~ of Markle ind Markle.
~
Nixon's Old Firm
Scored by Udall
Louisiana
Top Aide
Convicted WASH INGTON ~UPl l -A
senior member of the House
Post Office Committee today
accused a White llouse aide
and an off icial of the U.S.
Postal Service of "misconduct
and impropriety" in con·
nection \Vith a planned $250
million postal bond issue.
Rep. ~!orris K. Udall ( [)..
Ariz.>. chairman of the sub·
committee on Postal Service,
said in a report summing up a
Mamie to llave
Birthday Fete
WASH INGTON lAPJ
Pre!lident and Mrs. Nixon are
expected to attend a gala 75th
birthday banquet re u n i on
tonight for former First Lady
Mamie Eisenhower.
The Nixons. honorary
chairmen of the event, are
flying back frorn an Alaska
meeting with J a pa n e s e
Emperor Hirohito and his
v.·ife .
GLO-
IMPRovE IN ALL
THE SCHOOL SUBJECTS
By Citl1•n1 for
l etter Scltool1
NE\V ORLEANS (UPI)
n1pnth-long investigation by
his subcommittee staff that in·
Vl'St ment companies w it h
l\'hom the. two officials had Louisiana Attorney General
close personal lies and Presi· Jack Gremillion, facing up to
dent Nixon's old law firm 25 years in prison as the result
stood to make ''millions of of his perjury conviction, says
dollars" between them in the weekend verdict will not
handling the sale of the bonds. interfere with his plans to run
Udall also charged that the for re-election in Nov ember.
Postal Service's decision to "One little setback doesn't
sell the bonds on the prh·are ruin a career." he said as he
market rather than through stepped fro1n the federal
the Treasury Department \rith courthouse in the historic
government guarantees v;ould French quarter.
cost taxpayers ext ra 1nte1·t st Gremillion and his attorney
rates totalling ;i btlut Sl25 said they were preparing an
million . · • appeal of the decision.
Udall ~·as mainly critical of ''I . still ha~,en't ~on e
the roles Peter Flamigan, a • enyt~1ng wron.g, he said. .
special assistant to Nixon. and A Jury o.f six men a~ six
J11mes Hargrove, an assistant women dehber~t~ 90 minutes
f>(lstmaster general. played in ~lurday ~n~ dec1d~d to con·
se lection of the investment v1ct Grem1lhon on fl1·e count!
firms of perjury that charged he Heel
' \\.'hile testifying in 1969 before ''There is no compelling d · evidence ;it this lime of vio]a.
1
a federa l gran Jury
tions of the criminal code," he
said. ''\Ve 11re faced rather ENJOY OCEAN
wilh a lesser degree of
misconduct and impropriety."
He said •·it smacks of
cr()flyism in the Whrte House,"
but that there was no evidence
th8~ Nixon or Attorney
General .John N. Mitchell knew
about the negotia tions that
resu.Jted in choice of their old
New York law firm -Mudge.
Rose, Guthrie and Alexander
-le handle legal details of
the bond issue.
FRITZ WARREN 'S
BREEZES
IN DELUXE M-1
1900 I~-ft. •l"1"d1bl1 ful ly
'"rinld•r•d inodul••· foil c:•iling
'"d ) pli••• pow 1r. lnu,l1!1d
'''P•iird off+c•f. l 6'11! i nd Mon·
ro vi1, Coli• Me11,
TRICO REAL TY INC.
17141 645.0621
Sports Car Center of California, Inc .
has three French models
for you.
Th• repl Lkwl of S.lfott, eyiTabol of ov•r 80 y••n of Peug eot 304
Sedan $2,47SI' , Peupot.'1 autotnOtlvt creft.m1n1hip, now h11
I e n•w loc•I addr111.
1u1JNm1ion, dite br11i:e10 fully r.c:lit1inc
butli:et .. 1tt., rKk 1rad plnlora etMrin1.
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Peugeot 304
Station Wagon
$2, 7"9'
P1u1eot 50'4 •rnn with • .unroof, four·
wheel ditc braku, end 4-ll)eed lr1n1mi11ion
u fl1nd1rd equipment. Au1om1tlc u1n1mi11ion,
• optionel. Tha hupot 304 s.dtn •nd S1etl9n
~"LJ-WetO" 1 .. tut1 four~·the-ftoor, fronl-whHI drivt .
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$3,499'
FRITZ WARREN'S
Sports Car Center of California, Inc.
710 EAST JST STREET, SANTA ANA . CALIFORN IA .
547--0764
h 1working
on new s to make
electrici for you.
Ever since Thomas Edison
invented the electric light,
the electric indu stry has
been developing new and
better ways to generate
electricity.
Why? As the population
grows, so wi ll the nee d for
more electricity. Moreover,
increasing amounts of
electricity will be needed
to clean up the
environment.
Today power is pro-
duced by water, fossil
f uels and the atom.
Tomorrow electricity
may be generated
in Southern California 1t -
1. Fuel Cell II converts chemical ene<gy
d irectly to eleclriclty-somewhat like a
b attery.A fue l cell syslem is nearly pollution
free because there Is no flame. Experimental
home·sized 1units are now being tested by
some companies ; These fuel ce lls operate on
hydrogen which is extracted from natural gas.
But a major problem would be the c os I ol a
home-sized unit-about $6,000each. II used in
your home, you would have to buy or lease 11.
Status: The most practical application or the
fuel cell may be a single uni I large enough
to serve an entire community. This would no
doubl provide electricity al a much lower
cos! lhan 1 home·sized unit.
by fuel cells large enough to
serve entire com muni ties.
Or by harnessing steam from
the earth. Or by breeder
reactors that conserve vital
nuc lear fu el. Or by nu clear
fusion that forces atoms
together instead of splitting
them apart.
Or MHD. That's short for
magnetohydrodynamics.
To conserve our nation's na1ural resources,
lhe community-sized lust cell might use
hydrogen from sources other than n~tural
g as. Seawater is a possibility.
And possibly high-density
batteries can be developed
to store needed energy.
Edison is supporting
research and development
of all these methods and
others, incl uding a
$10 million pledge toward a
joint government-industry
research project to build
a nuclear breeder reactor
power plant.
Below are more
details on three of
the methods 1
we're exploring.
Sovt'111rn California Ediaon
being researched. Edison has tlso lened land \
near Mono Lake, east of Yosemite Nation1I Partc.
for exploration and development Drilling fa
expected to start this year.
2. Geothermal 10 some areas sleam 3. Breeder Reactor 11,.,,1..., 11 from lhe earth is being used lo generate
a small amounl of electricity. now used Jn nuclear reattors. but uranium Is a
limited nelu'rll reiource. A breeder reactOf'
In Soul hem Catlfornia, underground sources provides a vastly more etficienl u1e Of uranium.
of hot water and steam have also been found,
primarily in !he Jmperlal Valley. All hough
this s1eam may be of help ln meeting some
of !he growing need !or e lectricity here. ii
conlains excessive amounts ot salts.
Stalus: Ways lo remove the impurities e re
Status: Edison Is ccntribuling funds 10
support research al a small breeder reactor
wh ich is now producing c ommercial pawer.
In addition, Edison is a lso contributing
10 a government-industry proj&ct 10 build 1
lull·scete breeder reactor .
•
I r
I • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Methadone's .------------..... ·--------""'.".'.'."':':".'.".'::::"1~ o>\IS \~A P0oR fA~Mc~ ... llKE 51'\U-TOR 1 C\\ll~!ll'H , OUR LESSON 1"0DM ~ON EA~1"LAH!>! 1\"IE PA~ ~W. LMS AHD LOTS I
C1i' lo\OME~ !OR HOT CiROll/\H" Cl<Ol'S! I It's no easy matter, lbis corning back from heroin
addiction. Tbe dismal records shO\V that. Jn the history
of the federal drug rehabilitation center in Wington,
Ky., for example, no more than one or two percent of
the heroin addicts treated there have been cured.
Since 1964, a new treatment for heroin addicts has
been used experimentally in this country. Jt's being used
ri.,ht n<l\V in Orange County. It involves the use of an·
other hard narcotic, Methadone, a synthetic opiate de-
veloped by Uie Germans during \\'orld War II. The re--
habilitation rate in these "'lethadone maintenance pr~
grams ha s been dramatic, ranging from 60-85 percent.
For reasons not completely understood by medical
science, Methadone blocks the craving for heroin in
addicts. This enables them to respond to other rehabili·
talion efforts and to function in normal society.
But it is not as simple as popping a pill into your
mouth and "'ashing it down with a glass or orange juice.
First, t.he addict must want help. Second, ?\1ethadone,
really, is only a substitute addiction. It is not a miracle
solution.
Most addicts have other problems. Some may have
n1edical problems. unnoticed and neglected be·
cause of long use of the painkilling heroin. There ccr·
tainly are e1notional problems. \Vhy did the addict be-
come an addict?
There are social problems -t he "'reckage of the
past when the addict could concentrate on nothing more
than where his next fix was coming from . He must deal
with th e wreckage. And there is the matter of getting a
job. How does an addict explain those lost years to a
prospective employer?
Clearly, the waste, in human terms, resulting from
opiate addiction is inca1culable.
\Ve are stirred these days about saving the environ·
ment and recycling waste matter. Surely, we have the
capacity to try lo do somelhing about this waste o!
hu1nanlty.
But, should Yiasted humanity fail lo stir us, maybe
enlightened self interest wUJ. .
Take the heroin addict Y.iith a $100·a·day habit. He
mu st fe ed that habit 365 days a year. The majority of
addicts are going to ge t that $36,500 by one or more
oC three means -stealing, pushing drugs. or prostitu·
l ion. There are, at minimum estimate, 2,000 heroin ad·
diets in Orange County today. You figure the cost.
Strictly conlrolled Methadone maintenance pro--
grams, with accompanying job and psychological coun·
seling, hold some promise or reclai ming the human waste
that is the curse of-opiate addjction.
As one doc tor put it: "Although ii is not effecti ve
v,rith everyone. it is the most effective thing "'e've co1ne
across in 5,000 years of addiction."
Jn short, it is not a "cure" -but it's the best
ans"'cr \ve've got.
Bac k in Radio's Heyday
Television vie"'ers protesting programming inani·
ties should review network radio circa 1940.
The middle-age and senior c.itlzens will remember.
perhaps wi th some nostalgia, sut•h programs as Ma Per·
kins, Vic and Sade. Stella Dallas, Backstage Wife, Guid·
ing Light, Valiant Lady -ad nauscam.
\Vha t th ey may have forgotten was that for five
solid hours at a lime, every 15 minutes brought another
soap opera. Some tugged at heartstrings, n1any wallowed
in misery, others "'ere peppered with family-type jokes.
But none could be called elevating or educational or
good drama.
TV has its bad moments, too many of them. But
overall, the viewing and listening is an improvement on
some of I.he "golden days" of radio.
9.}'jy;\?\'E.~~
·~
Org anized
Charity's
Chie f Object
Negro Subculture llas Features of Its o,vi•
rhougbts al Llrgt:
The chief object of organlied charily is
to make itself indispensible by perpetual·
ty treating symptoms · rather than by ef·
lec~ing a cure. • • •
The same people
applaud a manyr on
the stage who woulcl
be among the fi rst
to persecute him In
the nesh. • •
Tocqueville'! "Dc-
mocrt.cy in Amrr-
lca." wriltrn we! I
ave r a centtu-y ago,
rtill remains tl1e
Dest book on our national character and
demJny Md should be forcmoo t in any
reading list for college students.
A crov•d is always worse than any of its
:onstituent members -.end this is true
;11•helher the crol't'd is called a mob, an
Army, a police force. or a parliament. .. . .
The difference be tween Alex8Jlder lhe
Sreat and most of his imitators is that
they persist Jn cutting Imo~ U1.e t can and
should be unl ied.
• • •
A man has no right lo be proud of
"twing able to make a Oec1sion" if at the
•amt: lime he 1s asharned of re vl'rs1ng it
when ht~ is 1,1-rung.
• •
There·s nothing al all \vronJ.i: wilh being
11.n l!Crentric, s11 long as one constantly
<t::eps in n11nd Bertrand nus..c;ell's wam-
rng 1hat "."-1orr cranks lake up un·
ra.~liionable errors than unfasluunab!e
trut hs .''
• •
As long as 'A'e continue lo look ujX)ll
l!ducotion as a "product'' rather than a.s
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
What's to be done about apart-
ment-dwelling dog owners so sel f·
ish and so indifferent to the righl'I
and peace of their neighbors that
they do nothing to suppresll the
constant day and night yapping
and barking of their pets?
-B. W. A.
Thi. h •tllf9 '"'"''-rtte.rf' vlilw., -MCHMorlly fMM ef ,,.. "IWIP•P•. 1111 ..
'"'' H I -•• tie GIMnl' Gu11, Dllif ~1 .. 1. ~
a "process,'' we will continue to turn ou t
students -...·ho art commodities rather
than citizens.
• • •
Children'a feeUngs cannot be entered
by the front door, but only Utrough lillle
slits and crannies too amall to admit an
iidult body.
• • •
The passion ror getting ahead is self-
clefcating if motivated by the desire to
lea\'e one~elf be-hind ; only the authent ic
man c::an genuinely enjoy h is
achievements or rest comfortably in his
success; the man running away from
h im~elf can never stop, no matter how
far he goes. • • •
"Liberty" and "equality" are mutually
antagonistic states, which can be brought
into equilibrium only by "frntrrnity" -
which is the first to go in the e<>n nict
between these two implacable rnemies.
(So that the only possi ble peacemaker is
the initial casualty of the y,·ar.)
• •
Every man has ii moral duty t.o pursue
11bsolute truth for l«mself, iind ft !IO('_ial
obliga!ion not to try to enforce it upon
iinyl)ody elSf'. • • •
When we pronounce the verdict that
modern soci~ty i.s "sick," each uf us
automatic.ally excludes his 01vn particular
form of sickness. (J ust as the lunatic is
perfectly capable of riiscerning the
madness in his fellow-patients, while in·
slsting on his own sanity.) • • •
"],!other-in-law" is a harsh and ugly
term for what the French so tactfully call
''Belle-mere'' (Beautiful mother.)
A rtist's Self-Portrait
An autobiogr11phy is only "a sort of
life." Graham (ireene notes at the outset
l)f his own. "A S&rt of Ult," written at
the age of 66. Th is i5 an odd, rather
muted self-examlnolion by the English
novrlist ("The Heart of lhe II.tatter"') and
entertainer t"Our P.tan in Havana") v.·ho
tias spent almost as mu ch time, as ht
1ays, ''with imaginary characters as with
real men and women.''
Grerne, lheo boy, seems almost to be an
imaginary character hl1n~elf, son of a
1choolmaster, gro-...·ing up in genteeJ
Edw ardian English surroundings. ~le was
an introsptttive child, afraid of bats and
bi rds. whose favorite tovs \\'t>re •
clockwork train and lead soldien. Yi1e are
lold of the books he rt'ad , about member!'
ltf his fam ily, about going up to Oxford
and embracing psychoanalysis al an tar·
ly age.
CiREENt: HAS rr:tain«I dream.. with
1lmost total ttel'llJ. Two novels end
MYeral shori stories emerged from his
Warns, he tell3 w , "and ~tim"' I
""have had hint.I or whet Is. called by the
difficult name ol e.-tr&aen.!Ory percep-
tion."
"A Sort of l..iftf' 11 in overly atlective
rmft.Nlontl that traces the making or •
llfrllt'r but 11 not a rncmorab lt
•utoblngraphy. Evm with Lhe fla vo r of
childhood to delicately 'voke<I , it has oon. of the raak.lnp of a good Greene
•
novel; fur one thing, the young Graham
is neither• convincing nor a particularly
interesting character.
Th.err: la le9S tiere than • dedicated
reader of Graham Greene would Hke to
know about lhe shaping of his novels and
entertainments: of his travels (in Africa,
for instance, where "A Burnt-Out Case"
was ployed ); ltbout his film work ("The
Third Man''); his wartime rcle in British
Intelligence.
HIS CATHOLICISM is only touched
upon, when hill Catholic novel . "The
Power aod the Glory," was condemned
by the Holy Office. Some time later.
however, Pope Poul VJ I.old the author he
had Ukf'd the book and added : "Some
ptJrtJ ()f Rll your book! will alwaya offend
some Cathoi!cs,"
This is his life as Grt>ene ehooses lo
reeall It. Tt Is i;et dov.·n wilh del ic1cy
tl)("rhaps too much) and llltlt humor. a
prcci~ record of .IU<'<'~!toes and f11ilure1 .
A portrait o'f !he: 11rti~t 11s, <'hlr.ny. a
young man, but fnr lhf' gf'nt'ral reader
onlv a wrt of book (Simon " Sc;hustcr;
16.9:.J.
\\'llllAm Hogan
Reasons Why It's Good to Be Black
Basically Albert Murray Is a literary
man, dedicated to "the dramatic sense of
lire" rather than the abstractions .end
c<..tegories of the so-
cial sciences. Whal
disturbs him pro-
foundly is the extent
to which leading in-
tellectuals of our
times, both black
and white, have
been led ast ray by
rocial science theor.
iell which are in his
view at Oest super.
ficial, and ;at their
worst lnteOectuolized e.-pressions of ra·
cial condescension.
For example. ~1urray charges in ''The
Omni-Americans: New Peripectives on
Black Experience and American Culture"
IOuterbridge & Dienstfrey, I 9 7 O;
di slributed by E. P. Dutton ) that the
social scient ist "substitutes academic
subject matter for culture. fie then
misrepresents deficiencies in formal
technical training as cultural deprivalion,
a very neat trick indeed."
CERTAINLY TllE Ameri can Negro
subculture has many identifiable fea tures
of its ov.'n -its language, its humor, its
music and dance, its gracious courtesy,
and above all , as ~1urray says, its high
sense of style. If people are well versed
H ayak awa
in all these aspects of culture but not in
academic subject matter, is it proper or
scientific to call them. whether in pity or
condescension , "culturally depri\·ed'''.':
Yet, says l\.1urray, many, including
even Negro spo kesmen and b Is ck
militants, accept Lhe "folklore of v•hite
supremacy and lhe fakelore of black
pathology • , . Even the most smugly
c::hauvlnistlc black spokesmen ... refer
to themselves as being fear-ridden ,
emasculated, and without self-respect.''
Books like "Bleck Rage," by \Villiam
Grier and Price Cobbs, and "Dark Ghet-
to," by Kenneth B. Cl2.rk, although writ-
ten hy blacks, ''present 11 point of vie\v
-...·hich is essentially white, insisting lh<Jt
slavery ahd oppression have reduced Ne-
groes to such a tangle of palhology that
all black American behavior is in effect
only a paUie!ic m2.riifestatim1 of black
cowardice. self-hatred, escapism find
des tructiveness . . . Almost r v er v
chapter or 'Dark GheUo' . , . represen ls
Neg roes as substandard human beings
who subsist in a sick community. Its im-
a~e of flarlem is. in effecl. th at of an
urban pit \1-rithing .,.,·i tl1 derelicts."
ALBERT MURRA Y'S indictment of
modern Neg ro writers -except _Ralph
Ellison -is fierce . Richard \Vrighl, for
example, ga ve an extremely distorted
view of Chicago: "Those seriously in·
terested in the actual texture of life in
the C h i c a g o of Bigger Thom~s
\\'flUld do well lo supplement reading
'Native Son' .,.,.i!h a dozen or so
recordings of Earl Hines· great Grand
Te rrace orchestra ... Despite the facl
that the rnusicia n has long occupied the
position of supr1.•me artist for U.S.
Negroes , \!.'rig ht almost alw ays wrote as
if he were totally unrelated to 1,1•hat Count
Baslr. Jimmie Lunceford. fats \Valier.
Lionel Hampton ... were saying about
bl ack exprrience during his day."
Because James Baldwin, says Murray,
"has relied m o r e and more on th e
abstract categories or social rescareh and
less And less on the pot•tic insights of The
creative artist," he has in his .,.,•ork
"drgradeO U.S. Negro life tu 1he level of
th e subhuman In the very process of
plefld ing the N~r,ro's human ity ... Life
in lfarlcn1 is thl~ very stuff of roniancc
and fiction, even as was life in Chauter's
F:nglanrl, Cer \•anlcs' Spain. llat.eJ;iis'
fran('e But y,•hat Bald.,.,•in \1-rites
about is not really lire in Ha rlem. He
writes about the econon1ic . . . and
material pl ight of Harlem. But far fr om
writing in !crms of a U.S . Neg ro tradi-
tion. he confuses everything with Jewish
traditio n and \\•rites abou t. life in a black
ghetto! ... He often writes HS if he were
reall.v a black, brown or beigt' New York
Jewifh intelleclual of i m mi g r a n t
parents,''
i\tl RRAY CONCEDES 1hat tt1crr is
truth in the ti:rrible 1h1ngs lti.1t black
wrlt(rs say ahnu1 f\cgr11 life in .o\1n1,>nea.
1'he pielurl' of black despair. h1Jwevrr. 1s
far from bein g the y,·hole truth The I l.S.
Negro is abo\'e all a spe<'in l kind of
American. an d .,.,,hat he ('l)nlnbulc:':i to the
culture uni <1uely 1s a srnse of sly1<':
"Style is not only insight but d1:,p11sition
and ~esturr ... It i.~ a 11'a~' of s17.1ng up
the world , aod so. ultimately cinr.I above
all else. "'· mode and rned1um of survival
, .. \\'ha t makes mfln hurnan 1~ style.
Hence the cruc1;il s1gn1rir:ince of art in
the qucly of human hchav1or.
"Rut 1hen perl1.'lps nnh· 11·orks of f1ct1on
on :he scale 111 Tul~tn~'. .loycc ;-iud
Thomas t\1an n c;.in truly do JllS1ice to the
enduring IHHn<1n111· 11r l' S Nrgroes. peo-
ple who. for 1n,~t c111t't'. C<Hl s;1y of lhl'1r Of!·
p.res~o 1·s. ''r'r·n h, 111• ai\1 fl lJr tr()UblCS al\
righl. llul st.1\1 :onrl :Ill, 1f whill' f0lk~
tnul d he hl <trk fnr 1\1'-1 nni' Sr1!i1rd:_1y night
the) 1\'fiulihft nr\rr w:inl to br whi te
fulk~ no n1ure :• "
P.} S. I. ll ;1y;1 kay,·a
l'rc~iden t
Sn n Franr l~<'(l State College
Fahie of Guinevere, the Last Virgin
Onct> upon a !irne , !bere was a o-.red
narned Guinevere c;recly .,.,•hcs r phone
never. nr1·cr rang.
''M'aybe," said her friend. Samanth;i,
hc!pfL.11~. "it's because of yo ur atlltude
lo\vercl sex .''
"Whars that?'' asked Guinevere. And
when Sa1nantha ex-
plained . Guine1•ere
was shocked. "But
Samantha." s be
said, "I'm a v\r.
gin."
"What's t h t.· t?
a s k e d S<1mantha.
And when Guinevere
explained, Samantha
was shocked. "In
this d.ey and age? I never heard or su ch
a thing."
"Oh. promise you won't tell,'' pleaded
Guinevere, turning scarlet with shame.
BUT OF COURSE Samantha did.
Every.,.,·here that Guinevere v.·ent on
campus, the young men eyed her
stran\!elv v.·hile the younjl lad ies tillered
and giggled and whispered such things As
"But she's not .ell THAT ugly !'' nr "Uoy,
talk about. your kinky hang-ups~"
Understandabl_y, such attention causrd
poor Guinevere to blush, But as her
yqung friends had never seen o girl blush
before, this only further whE"tted their in·
teresl. Soon. she wA s kno"'·n f.er and wide
as "that llCarlel Y."Oman."
Nol.urall y. the college daily gol .,.,·ind nf
lhe whole thing. They ran a picture of
Guinevere on the front pa~e under the
headline : "Unique Find Astounds Cam-
pus!" •
THE DEA N OF Letters and Science,
himself, persuaded Guinevere to submit
B11 Ge.-o r ge ---·
[)('ar George:
Do you pay for gags?
SCRIVENER
Dear Scri\'ener:
Pay for them? I wouldn 't C\'Cn
WE"ar them If my editor didn 't in·
Sill!.
Art Hoppe
111 extensive, cxan1inations. Thf' Dc>pa rt-
ment nf ~1edicine found her ''physically
healthy," The Department of Psy<:hil!t.ry
found her "menlal\y sound." And the
Departmcnl of Anthropology found her
•·an interesting throwback.''
She made the cover o{ 1'ime ("Last of
Her Kind") and appeared on face the
Press. "I guess I'm just y,•alting fer the
right man to come along," she explained
to the vie"'ing audience, blushing
crimson.
As a resull cf this nationa l publicily,
(;uilll'\'ere received more than a thousand
proposals. three of Lhem for m<'.rriage.
DAf'I\ Oi'\ C 'A~1PUS. her status ch;:ing-
f'<l r:idir:-ill y. \\'here the young n1en haO
lnf1kpd r111 li er bo'lurt> as si'•n1r kind (lf 11111.
th ey n1iw looked on hf'r as so1ne kind or
chflllrngc.
Ff'llows con~l11nlh' asked her for what
bl'ca1ne known as· •·a dote.'' Th ey ac-
1.uall}' bought HER dinner wit h THEIR
money -and tickets in the loges and
sometimes even flowers!
Such things hadn't happened for years.
Never had a young lady been more
popular. Guinevere's phone hardly ever
..stopped ringing.
I\ul Guinevere. who knew a good lhing
when she had it, kept it-until she met a
millionaire with a wedding ring, three
Threat to Wate r S upply
1\fter more lhan 10 years Of con·
struction. C<Jn1pletion of the first and 1na·
jor phase of the massive California Water
Project is in sighl. Ho1,1·ever, lhi~ am-
btlious undertaking lo assure a fut ure
-...·ater supply for Southern California is
racing a new period of crisis.
Two factors are currently threatening
lrouble. Years of innation have driven
construrllon coots beyond the $1-.75 bill ion
in bonds authori2c<l to finance the prcr
jec::I. Wlth the pri ce-tag now set at more
lha n $2.3 billion , special fin;i nring planii
have lo be arranged aod carried
out-such as selling electric power that
can be generated along the -...·aterway.
t.tORE SERIOUS , perhaps, are un -
foreseen new altitude~ toward con-
servation of w:itcr resources which could
ftffect the supply of 1,1·a1er available for
lhe project.
The pro(XlseO Peripheral Canal in San
.To11qu ln C..ou nl y has become a polltlcril
fnotbnll subject to vociferous oppo~ition
led by ll p .• Jerome Waldie. 0-Anllot'h,
ttnd S(lmt' ronserv11lion ,iJTOUfl".
In the end this oou!d be m-0re damaging
Gu est Ed itoria l ,)
than the funding problem since adequate
1,1.·ater supplies must be available for
delivery and sale to water 11serll or the
large bonded debt of I.he water project
canoot be paid off,
STATE WATER official.'! are warning
that Southern Califcrnians could face
water rationing at some time in the'
future if water allotments previously pro-
jected are curtailed from I he
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and from
three "wild rivers'' which are to be sites
of ne-...· dams.
'The new problems jeopardizing the
w:itf•r project suggest it is essentia l to
rt>rlf'finr And cl;inf\' ou r slate w:iter
policy so thal the C.illfornia Water Project
c~n go ahend 1\•ilh certainty lo Ila plan-
ned completion .
S11nU1 l\h>nlca E\•enlng Outlook
ca~tles in Spain and o htarl murmur.
r-.·EEDLE~~ TO SAY. ~he 11 "' th1' <'nvv
of all thi• i;1rl;> 1n 111•r 1 •!:1~" 11nt 1l1rl1 th('rC
was murh !h1•v r"11lrt dn .d1,1111 11 1\111 hrr lt>~~n 11 11 ~1 ~n ·i \u:-.\ ion tlw 11iro1111tu:
F reshrnrn Aud lrt l\lllr ..;ll••rl yr nrs. £"\'('ry
Sl'l\lng tad,v nn rnn1p11 :-. 11;1" ;1~ p111·,. ;1 s lhe
driven snow -llnd :ihrou! :is ll':l!'lll to
cuddle w(th. ll wa" ;-i b1i;i.;t'r fa d th<'ln
fnsbee toss in g.
Naturolly. the yn ung fTJl'tl soon los t in·
ll rest in young ladies and .,.,·cnt bac k to
their books and beer dnnking. And
naturally, the ~111ung IAdies went back to
paying' for their own dinners and n1ovics.
And na!uratly. !he nori sls all went broke.
HEt\ \IE1'/ K,'10\\'S how long the fad
11-ould have lasted if a co-ed named
lle-lilah, whnse phnnl' ne1'rr rang, hndn 't
fuddcn ly disco\·ered she was 1n favor ol
free movies. free dinners and free love.
Naturally. she got whAt she Y.'AS for.
ln reel, her phone hardly ever stopped
ringing.
i\10RAL: Jn 1he unendinl{ war between
the sexe.s, the fair sex isn't.
011.ANCiE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Veed, Pl(b/i.~her
Tllornos Kcevit. Editor
A l/)Prt \V, Rott$
£d1roriol T'oge Edllor
The editorial page ol lhc 01\lly P!lol
seE"ks IO lnfonn and s11mul111c re11t1.
rrs by presenting t)lis new.o;p..1JW'r'1
or1n1011s end ron1mrntary on loplc•
ot irrterest and significancr, by pro-
vit1ins;: 11 fllMJm f0r :he r'l'pf't"~."llon of
"''~ reatlrrJ.' opinions, anti hy p,.....
srnlln.': tht• d1vcr~r v1c11'P"'in1~ ol In·
formt'<l nb~rr\·r!"ll an<! spn\IP~men On
!oplc!l ol the (Jay.
Monday, Scptcn1bcr 27, 1971
•
N ixo1i the Kegler
Mond.1y, Stpttnibfr 27, 1971
Curriculum Changes
Students Dernand , R eceive 'R elevunce'
WASHINGTON \UPI)
Say what you will about col-
lege student de1nands fur '"rel-
f"'ance" and •·involve1nent,"
school curriculum changes th is
fall reflect these demands, re-
ports a major higher education
organ it.a lion.
"Environrnental studies are
eKpanding at a rapid rate, and
an increasini;: nun1ber of
universi ties offer degrees in
the v a r i o u s environmental
sciences." said the National
Association bf State
Universities and Land-Grant
Colleges.
The association su rveyed ils
117-rr.ernber schools and also
found :
-"More universities are in-
augurating or ex pa n d in g
ethnic programs, with particu-
!2.r emphasis on Arra-Ameri-
can Indian studies."
are wideni ng the choices of
students' majors at many in-
stitulions."
-''There are substantial
changes at some of the
medicals c h o o 1 s, Including
those which are shortening
their programs by a year."
Of course. students are not
the only voices urging colleges
to get in tune with the times.
N i x on A d mi nis!ration
spokesmen have long been
telling college3 lo examine
themsl'lves n1ore c I o s e I ~·
before asking for more federal
dollars. "They (colleges) have
not always responded to the
clear need of any viable in·
stitution for constant self-ex ·
amination and self-renewal,"
said Presidential Counselor
Robert H. Finch.
society 's needs.
"We ha ve seen disturbing
trends toward uniformity in
our instllulions. g r o w i n g
bureaucracy, overemphasis on
acadeinic credentials, isolatioo
of students and faculty fro1n
the world, a growing rigidity
and uniformity of structure
that makes higher education
reflect less and less the in-
terests of society." said the
report that was warmly en1-
Uraced by the administration.
So cu rnculun1 changes like
the following result fron1 more
!han just student pressures on
colleges.
The University of ~laryland
begins a bachelor's degree
program in Afro-An1erican
studies.
DAILY PILOT 7'
Co untian Na1ne d
Philip H. Robln.9on of 2242
Aralin, Newport Beach, was
eleclL-d governor-elect of the
C a Ii f o r 11ia-Nevada-Hawall
district of Kiwanis lnterna·
Uonal at recent convention in
Anaheim.
J>resident Nixon displays his bowling form after
receiving \Vinners of the 7th World Bo.,..•\ing Feder·
atiun at the \.Vhite !louse. The bowli ng alley is ln
the Executive Office Building just across from the
\Vhile l~ouse. Both the President and t-.1rs. NLxon
like to bowl.
-··New colleges are being
set up within a number of
universilics and new graduate
and undergraduate degrees
But a more telling argument
for reform can1e last spring
from a governn1enl task force
that said colleges v•ere in a
\'i rtua! academic lock-step
marching to the lune of a
drummer disinterested I n
Purdue Uni versity w i I I
launch CQurses in thermal
pollution and noise eontrol and
will offer a new air pollution
control course to seniors and
fir st -year graduate students
who will \\'Ork \Vilh local in-
dustry or government.
Mao Tse -tu11g--Ma11 of W a1·
By United Press Jnlernat!onal War TI did the fighting stop. slepped-up iron and steel pro-
And for two years a cease-fire duction at the expense of
1'1 a o Tse-tung, dictator, existed between Communists agriculture, but it. too. failed.
guerrilla leader, mi 1 it a r Y and Nationalists while Gen. plunging the world 's most
strategist, fllarxist theoreti-George c. Marshall attempted populous na1ion into three
clan and peasant. has been at unsuccessfully to bring the years of cconon1ic chaos. '¥\'ar most of his 77 years. ·d h two s1 es logel er_ By 1958. tl·lao 1,1•as making an
lie has fought against \\'ar resumed in 1947 and open bid for leadership in the
Chinese \\'3rlord don1inance raged on until 1949 when the International Co tn n1 u n i s t
and Westernization, against Kuomintang 1,1·as defeated and movement. In the 1960s, while
Chiang Kai-Shck Nationalism, exiled 10 Formosa. On Ocl. I, eontinuing to attaek the
Japanese i m Peri a Ii s m • titao stood above Peking's United States and (·;ipitali srn,
American capitalism a n d •·Gate of Celestial Peace" and he turned his back on the
Russian revisionism. \Vhere proclaimed China as a Com-Soviet Union. calling the
others have failed, Mao has munist nation. Hussians revisionists.
succeeded even against the Mao's 1,h,·losopl>y tho! 0,,,,, "The Chinese nation will u greatest of odds. b . 1 1 d · " h w", • ,.,.,, ,,.,,, .... ,,. v,·,1 .. ,.y fo• never e 1nsu a e again, e '" .. ......... ., , 11orn in Hunan Province, said, "we have stood up~ Let world Cornrnunisn1 ha s been
Dec. 26, ln93, the peasant the world tremble!" fell at l1on1e ttnd abroad. Since
son of a Confucian father and th" entry of Communist Chi na Bet1,1·een 1949 and 1957. i\.'lao .. a Buddhist mother, l\.1ao grew as a nucle<i r power in 1964, th e
II h ruled China ruthlessly. purg-up rebellious to a w o op-world has never turned i!s
h. Tod h I ing his adversaries and Ii-posed 1m. ay e rues back on the ri1ainland Chinese
h I h quidating the property owners more t an a. quarter o t e o .. their leader, to.1ao Tue-tun". until the old warlord class 1,1•as ' ., \VC1rld's population as <'-god-virtually wiped out. During Although he often has been
like, rarely seen dictator, lh' ·od Ch" • · reported as ill over the past l1ated, feared and orten misun-is per1 . ina s eeononuc growth was slow but steady _ five years, the western na!ions
derstood by millions in the Jn 1957 he called for open -in particular the United
\'t'estern world. d ' · d ·1· · I th St•tcs "''d tl>c 0-,,·,1 u0,·00 -ISCUSSIOO an cr1 ICIS!ll 0 e " " "'' Ile was educated as a fl1arx-Chinese Communist system know that should he die , his
ist and joined the ne1,1•!y form-and said, "let a hundred successor rnost likely will re-
ed Communist Party of China flowe rs bloom together, Jet a main l\'laoist. And they recall
in 1921. ti1ost of the lime from hundred schools of thought a song sung by the schoo l
then until 1949, when he content." But his "freedom,"' children of Peking:
esr~blishcd the Pe o PI e' s lasted only a few months. '"The suh rises and the sun
Repu blic of China, he was on lie called for a "g.reat leap sets, but ti1ao Tse-tung has
th e run . forward" a year later and risen and will never set~" In 1934 he Jed his pcasanti------------------------1
~uerrillas on the incredible
"long march," ravaged all
the way by hi s bitterest
enemy. Cllinng Kni-Shek and
t.he Kuoinintnng (Natio nalists)
Army.
NOW'STHE TIME TO ORDER!
His struggle spread In two
fronts in 1936. against Chiang
on one side and !he advancing
Japanese on the oilier. A year
lat('r he joined forces v•ith the
Nationalists to set up a united
front against. the Japanese. t
The front endured only four
years until trianqular fighting
broke out a~ain bet\11een Com-
munists. Nationalisls a n d
Japanese.
I\ot until after the \\'orld
Soles rnun
Buys Book
Store, Too
• } )
'
' ···.;,;~. ' NASHV ILLE . Tenn. (AP) -
Robert J. Bedford, an In-
dianapolis shoe Salesman in
Nashville lo see the Grand Ole
Opry, went shopping for a can
of shaving cream and bought a
bookstore.
\. '·'-·. ... ···'' ~''·"'' ..t.~ • ""'"""'
Bedford said he and a
fri end, Roy Berry. and their
wives wal ked downto1,1·n to bu y
some shaving cream when
they discovered llooberry's
eoo:i:store.
All the store's stock v;as put
up for sale after the owner, 88-
year-o!d Champc llooberry,
broke a hip and was admitted
to a hospital.
••we were rumma gi n g
through it and checking ~ few
prices and were J u s t
fascinated with the place and
its nostal gia," Bedford said .
"Sn I called my buddy aside
and said, 'Why don't we buy
this thing and ship it lo In-
dianapolis?"
Afler a hasly conference
with llooberry's son Clayton. a
price -undisclosed -v.·as
agreed upon.
Bedford said the entire stock
-incl uding about 15.000 books
-will be shipped to Carmel.
tnd .• an Indianapolis suburb,
where the store will be
reopened under the same
name. to which he and Bc.rry
purchased the rights.
Bedford is a re giona l
supervisor for a shoe company
end Berry is manager of ll
denta l products store in In·
dianapolis. Neither has owned
a store before, but Bedford
sai d, "\Ve"ve been In ret,.1il
Great holiday gift idea for the family:
9
CHARMING CHRISTMAS
PORTRAITS OF YOUR CHILD
777
all for only
• ON E LARGE 8xl0 FOR YOU TO KEEP
• TWO LOVELY 5x7 FOR GRAN DPARENTS
, SIX WAL LET-SIZE FOR THE FAMI LY!
Bri,l'lg your child in now. Our talented photographer
will captu re that special sparkle in • Christmas
Portrait that says '"we love you." And remember
. _.you can charge it al Penney's!
'
JCPenney
NEWPORT BEACH ,.,,h..., .. 1~""
21'1d"'-'1>"-1JI'
HUNTINGTON BEACH
llv"•I~;•"" c.oi-.
'"" fl"' 191-1771
1IPs all our liv('s.'" 1------------------------1
• • 1 ra ions:
Everything goes together
from room to room.
v. JCPenney
The values are here every day.
Suddenly everything lhafs new.
everything tha\'s novJ. everything
that's happening in llome
decorating 1s al Penneys.
We call it Vibrations.
Vibrations is a decorating concept
based on total room settings
where al! the designs, all lhe styles,
all the colors blend perlectly
lo produce e. single look.
All this so you can spend less lime
s hopping for your home and
more time enjoying it .
A. '"Wickets" window cur1ain. $11
B. Matching rayon shower cur1a1n. S12
C. l ld cover. 2.39
D. Vinyl covered hamper. $15
E, Was1ebaske1. $6
F. Bath mat. 21 • x 36"' 4.99
G. '"Wickets"' sheared cotton terry balh towel. 2.50
H. Space saver. S24
J. Scales. $5
K, 3 drawer cube insert. 34.95
L. Record rack cube 1nserl. 34.95
M. 4 cube cab1ne1. 89.95
N. Wine rack cube insert. 34.95
P. Diop lid desk unit with 2 drawers. 89.95 a. 2 door cabinet 89.95
A. 3 d•awer bachelor chest. 89.95
S. Eye ball floor lamp. 29.98
T. '"V1bral1ons'" framed wall art $50
U. Parsons chair Wh1!e hardwood l1ame. $1 29
II. Parsons bunching table. $50
W. 36" JC 60"" shag pile rug. Tri-shade colors. S17
X. Modern Plexiglas· desk lamp. 16.98
Y. Parsons cock!aol table. 560
Z. 78" daylsola. White hardwood hame. $249
AA. Colton velveteen pillow. 54
·,
Avoiloble ot the following 1\ores. CANOGA PARK CAR:lSBAD DOWNEY FASHION VAl lEY-SAN DIEGO FUllER:TON HUNTINGTON BEACH
LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR: NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" RIVER SIDE VENTURA. U1e Penney• Time Pciyment Pion.
'
j,
I
·-
•
•
/; Ul.IL Y P!LOT
Co1tee r1t Gro1v lng
D1·ug Dealer's Eyes Turning to India
NI::\\' OELlll 1 l"PJ I -Li S.
<11!d Indian r1arcot1cs officials
are :.hov.•uig concern that
India, now the 1>1ggest le~<il
t>xporter of opiunl in the
v.·orld , n1av !>e('(une a foc<tl
point for uilderworld ruircotics
traders cis the :rupply of illicit
op1un1 in 01t11•r <irra:-i dncs up
·rhcll' L"unct·ni eon1l'S 11l a
tune v.!1cn l'rc;.1dcnt t\ixon
has launC"lu~d a dri \'t' to trv to
persua de 11a111111s 11.h1ch 'are
nu""' 1hc st1u1Te uf 1lleJ.;al
up1uu1 and 1\s k1llf'r dt'rivali\'e
-hcrunl -lh l'fill'k down on
!i.I:~ W!.JILC.
St1ou1tl t-.1:.:un's pr u gr a n1
h:ivr 1 t~ l101.1ed fur elfetl 1111
the 11!1e1r 11f11111n n1:1rkct. of·
f1c1a!s :Wt· lht' under11·orld
lunung ~or ;1 .~our·ce of the
drug hl\\',1rd Jutl 1a. \\here unt il
nn" 1llt>t:al rr;·.!fic has be£'n
t'Xlrerncl~ lu\\ b£'cause of light
1·untru!s u11 produc1ion and
tran~r<w1
"There 's qu1le a bit of talenl
for srn11ggl1ng 1n l nd1<l in other
1·un1n1ud111e~ and 1he Indian
gu\'ern1ne111 1:-aware uf iL''
;.;11d 11111> 111·s1rrn S-llll"('t'
. Tll!'I' h11i111 Tl1;l1 lhPI' 111:11'
f111d ~1'•111111~ 1l:Jr'l'f1!1rs' 1raff1e
.111d llVitt lhl'1 'rr going to h<ne
111 !:11·1> up tr1 i.l .,
111 l1 ~1·a l !~170. !ht' l<i.-.t for
11t11rh <·ornpll·lt: figures are
:1111dah!(• !nrl1<1 !)hi pped <ibou t
$9 million worth of legal
opium lo overseas counlrie.s,
or about 500 tons. Brita in
bought $3.3 million worth and
I.he United States about $Z
million. It is used f o r
n1anufacturing morphine, co-
deine and other dn1gs.
1'his year n1ore than 100,000
ac-res of opium poppy are
under cultivation in t he
northern lndlan 11tales of Lit·
tar l'ardesh, ~fadhya Pardesh
;ind Rajasthan. The growing
season starts in August and
September and the harvest is
iu LI.larch
-Opiun1 growers have to ge t
a permit frorn the government
lo plant a crop. Total acreage
is controlled on !he basis of
estinu1tes of the world market
and each gro\rer's al101ed
aeres are monilored closely by
utspeclors. v.ho assign a
minimum quota that the
grov.·er n1us t Iii!.
The government buys the
entire crop. dries 1t in two fa c-
tories where it is processed in-
lo bricks of about 10 kilos
each. then ships the opium by
truck under a rmed guard lo
se<.iports and airports. A part.
nf the crop is kept in Ind ia for
local pharmaceutical ·Firms
<ind to provi de opium For
about 88 .000 Indian addirls
v.·h-0 are registered v.·ith the
go..-ernment.
•
Indian narcotics men point are not so IUtt. Cltlnl cor-
to their enforcement record ruption. they fear th.It prict1
v.·l th pride. They say that no p•kJ by intern.1Uonal narcotic•
illicit opiwn or h e r o i n dealers would bl a temptaUon.
re<..-overed in the United States The J n d i a n 1ovemment
has ever been traced to Ind ia. employs about 1,000 narcotjc1
'rhere is not a single cue on inspect.on in the areas whe~
recorrl of a drug offenae in· the opium poppies are 1row
vol\•ing heroin in India. and proce.ued. Re1Ul•r polic
Publicly. Indian narcotics are used lo guard th
agents state that there is no ii-shipments en route to ports,
legal opium tr8'Pic in Ind ia. where customs pertonnel are
Privately, they say that this is responsible.
not quite so. "If a man ill Government officials decline
growing 20 kilo.!1 worth of to put a figure on how much
opiun1 he can always put aside money is spent to admlnlster
half a kilo or one kilo and ii i.s narcotics Cilnlrob:, but aay
pretty hard to match," .say.s that in the palt year they have
one. narcotics man. increased their bud1et by
In the areas Y.'here ii is bo t $200 000 a u , .
grov.•n. illegal opi um v.·ill fetch/~==========~! about $24 ror a kilogram (2.21i
lbs ). The highest rate that a
gro"·er can gel from the
go l'ernmenl for it is about
$9.30.
In a seaport like Bombay or
Calcu tta, a kilo of il licit opium
is \\'Orth about $173 , according
to \\'ell-informed sour ct s .
Opium exported by the
&Ol'ernment to legal users
costs about $18 a kilo.
India n narcotics officials say
that once the opium leaves the
gro\.\·er's hands and enters
governn1ent control. i! is
virtually impossible for it to
enter !he illegal trade.
Some U.S. narcotics officials
l-R~%~\.~
R!C.$tu5
w$39.95
lell¥~lmY:
. -----10 W. le~..-11., Ce1ll M ... S ..... 1fl
3112 $eR Lull ttey Ill , JJ1·1'0f
OcN,.,l lfl
When nobody's ever heard of you,
you'd better sound better.
So, for a limited time only, we're
including headphones with our
15995 home entertainment system.
Be cause you haven't heard much about ou r stereos, we had to
1nake ourselves sound better than all those other systems you
ha•1e heard about. That's why we're including headphones with
this fe ature-packed home en tertainment syst em at our everyday
low price. But hurry, this offer is for a limited time only.
The values are here everyda y. Even Sund•Y· •
.. ,
S1c1co headphones
w+\h nd1ustaole he<1c1tland
and pada r cl ('<Hcur>s
Manual tape channel
changer
JC Penney
4 tpretlker ..,.'""-2 nlnu'I
gr.ined wood •neloMlres
each with 6"' woofer Md
2.IJz"' tweetef tor 1he """°'t
in •ler.c> reptoducdon
""Pop-up'" a 1racll: \lpe
player ~t»e1 •HY
lntertk>n and removal
of cartridges
"' 9peed 8SR Mini rKOJd
ellangor
,.llllCtMl8 comptele "°""9
~ ..,. ..... wtth ----• treck ....... ,....,.,
eMiheallplttlMI.
15995
Plus $7.42
SuppJ..-111 Dvty
tor priv,11e 1is1en1n9 The values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m . at the following 1tore1:
BU[N.\ PARK BURBANI< i...A.NOGA PARK CARLS BAD CHULA VISTA COLLEGE GROVE COMPTONt
OOWNI y l·ASHION VALLEY SA.I'll DlfGO rVt.LEATON GLENDALE GRANADA HILLSt HUNlll.C.TON BEACH
t•L'"'T \NGl ON PARKt INGL EWOOD LAl<EWOOD LONG BEACH LOS ALTOS MONTCLNR
NlWPORJ BEACH NORTH HOl ~ rwooo ORANGE ' THE CIT Y" RIVERSIDE SAN FE RNANDO SANTA MONICA TORRANCE
V4N NUYS VE NTURA \'.tSTCrl[Sl EA WEST COV\N.... WHITTWOOO. Us.I Penneys l llM Paymtnl. P1M.
,c10•" Swnda y.a
•
-
Portable color or
• black & white· T.V.
The values are here everyday. Even Sunday•
Penncre1tll portable colo r TV with remote control volume
and channel se lector. ta·· screen measured d iagonal ly
automatic line tuning, automatic color purifie r.
P•nncrttl" table model color TV with 18''
ac rt•n mea1ured d lagonelly. Automatic
line tuning, automat ic color purifier.
Pre-set V.H.F. tuning. Has lever type
controls. Early Ame rican styl e cabinet.
33995
M•dit•rran••n style colo r TV.
339"
Penncreate por11bl1 black and whit• TV
wtth 1 2" acreen meaaur•d dl1gonally.
13,000 volt• of pict ure power. ke yed
AGC tor u niform p icture contrasts. 2
111011 ol 1ignal boos ling p ower. High
impact plas tic c a binet. 79ss
I
399 95
Penncrest1> portable color TV with 11"
s creen .me a sured diago nally. Auto m1tl1
fine tuning, automatic color purilier,
"Quick-Pie" for instant pic ture
29995
Penncre stt portable black and whi te
TV wl1h 9'' screen measured dl1gonany,
Truly portable with 10,000 '<'Oita o l ·
picture,powe r. Offers 38 square inchct
o! Vi ew ing area. 3" front mo unted
speaker, high impact plastic cabinet
74ss
JC Penney
•Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores.
B UENA PARK BURBANK CA NOGA PARK CARLSBAD CHULA VIST A Ci:~_r-',E r.J P,..1V1
COMPTON·~ DOWNEY FA SHION VALLE Y-SAN DIEG O FULLE~TON f'",P f."L.,. .. 1 St
HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON PARK ·.-INGLEl/.'000 LAKE\'IOOD LONG BEJ.r .. i.. , --~ ·~ ,. --0;,
MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLYWOOD ORANGE. 'TNE CI T f' ;-. , ':.; :[
TORRANCE VENTURA \VESTCHESTER \\'CST COVIN . .\ Us e Penre1r.: ,...~;.a ,-"!·':."~
-tClottd S unday1
I
I
Monday, Sepltmb!r 27, 1971 DAILY PILOT 8
Incredible buys? You bet! During
Penney Days great isn't good enough.
Special
2sa
Boys' Penn Presta
jeans of polyester/
cotton denim. Flare
leg, creased sty!e in
solids and stripes.
Regulars 6-18,
sl im s 8-1 8.
Special
Bath towel $1
Face towel 70c Wash cloth 35c
Decorator style towel s to brighterl up
your bath. All in la.shionable velvety
sheared cotton terry. Choosa 'Tile
Tone.' in decorator sol ids and j acquards
or 'Tulip Talk' in splashy prints.
The values are here every day. Even Sunday*.
Special 144
Snoopy shirt is cotton/
polyester fleece. Many
colors, sizes 8 to 16.
Sizes 2 lo 8, 1.22
Special
199
Co tton corduroy slacks
with elastic \Vaist. In
solids and prints for
si zes 7 to 12.
Sizes 4-6X, 1.29
Penn Prest.,, Fortrel~
polyester double
knits with texture
inte rest. Solids
perfect for all
your sewing.
Special ggc
Nylon panty hose.
Fou r proport ioned
IP.ng !hs for helter
tit. Plain knit
w1 !h nude heel.
0 0'> oo
' ,I
!' \.,
I )
JCPenney
'
' ' ·e
' ', ' : ;
' ' ' ' '
'
' • : '
' '
*Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores:
_,
. '
Special
199
Men's Penn Prest!; sport
shi rts. Polyester/cotton
tong point collar styl e
w_1th short sleeves:
tapered and tai ls
in solids and
stripes.
Sizes
S-M-L-XL
Special 399
Men's Penn Prest!l ieans.
Flare style in cotton.
Stripes and solids in
sizes 28-36, short, medium Ind
long lengths.
BUENA PARK BURBANK CANOGA PARK CAR LSBAD CHULA VISTA COLLEGE GROVE DOWN EY FASHION VA LLEY-SAN DIEGO FULLERTON GLENDALE
HUNTINGTON BEACH INGLEWOOD LAK EW OOD LONG BEACH LOS ALTOS MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOL LYWOOD O RAN GE "THE CITY" RIVE RSIDE
SAN FERNArjDO SAN TA MONICA TO RRANCE VAN NUYS VENTURA WESTCHESTER WEST COVINA WHITTWOOD Prices in effect at all Penney stores Monday.
•
f 0 OAl lY PI LOT
Dock TaJk s QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi ,.....;.....~---~..,...-___:~~~,
Troubles A head?
Ge t Boost
Bv Nixon ..
SA\' FRANCI SL"CI r Ll 'I 1
IV11l1 rin ur~1ng fron1 Pres1drnt
r\1.~un to end the d1~p11tr ~oon.
negotiators i11 1he \\'e~t Cl;1.,t
dnck ~tnkt' 11rn! ha t'k It• !h('
barj.!a 1n1n~ t11l1lr l11d;11
1'hr l 'rr:-.1dl'r1l n1~·1 f11r :!ll
n11nulr<: lfl l'Plll!ind <111•.
11 l!li l:1bur h·.ulir ll;1r r1
R1 1dcc~ ;i111! •h1p1•1·1~· i·h,rf
1Jt'!.:Hl;t1!HI l•,d I J\!ifl d ollllfi,: ;1
~l11p01('r Si1!1ir da\ l•ll f11U!(' In
A!;1,~;1
"\t),nn ~:u(I :iri1·r lhr 1 1 .. ~1·d
door "l'~'-1<\I! ! h:1t llf•I ti Br tr!gr~
;ind l·'h nu harl prunH<:t•d I•)
"!'rt ;i i.:ual In tr; h ft ~rt·
!lrn1l'nl h.1 thr r ii 11! nr>.t
\~rrk "
Thf' 1~ Ollll 111r1nh"r \n!rr11;1-
1 It •!1;1J ] ,11!'!'' ll•lf/'11'•'/l.' ;11111
\\" " r r h 11 u ~ (·111cn's l 'niun
111.\\l • 11 ;1l~1·dt1ff \hr joh .111-
!1 J n\(•r n1ntr:i('t d1~pu1r<:
Thr .~t rt~f' rl·i~cd 2·1 111'~! t'(1:1•!
ports ;:H1•t I 1<'d 11p nr;if'I\' 21ll1
:-hip<:. !-!'l f'l'rl~ l1<1111pf'ring 1hr
inrrrr1:it 1or1tit trn<lc 1n !he
P;;l'if1r. ~1xn11'<.. hrirf intrrl'rn11nn in
the 1.1l k<; 11 :-.\ the f1 r~t 1l1nr
rl unng his tr1Hfft' 11s rrrs1drnt
!hiit !1C' h,1 <; !ll"r<;<1nall! in-
le r"edcd in :i ~l r1kr,
flp lrl! 01<:•11r:tnrc<; t h~! lie
11·nulrl nPI ir11okr ;i stri\;r ir1·
iunrt1nn l'l au~r of the T;1fl-
J·lartle1· /\<'1 un!cs~ Easl Cn:ist
ri ot'k 11•nrk1•r<; sl r1ke 11hrn
Their cuntrcu.:I expire s Thur~
d;i1•
Thr cn1·crnn1"nt'c:; ""~" fur
prn11d1n(! :i n :i ! in !I 11 i rl f'
('111Cfj.!l'IU'I' 1111uld 1,r \\f'.''k 1f
nnlv \\'<'<:! f 'n:1~! r!fw l" \\l'fi"
<'l()sf'rl hf' !-<iid "Th1'r" 111111111
he ;:1 1·('r1 ,::r111<11·h:i11rr a 1·n11rt
ll'flt1!d nnf 11phrJld 1hr usc nf
T al!-IJ;ir!lr1· ·•
Orcgnn <:n1· Tnnt ~)('f'111!
had suc:ge.~t rrl ~\·1xnn 1111li1.c
!hr l!O-li.1\1 "rr.nh ng nff" pro-
\'isinn nf 1he ;ic1.
Thc rncel 1111'.! 11·itl1 n rir!g cs
:ind Fl \'n n 1va s tn "hr111c tn
their <1t1 r nt10n thf' 11rgf'11r·v of
rearh1n~ a sc1tlr1nrnt .. :\1~on
said
··1 hrlir vrrl1hnt m\· mrr1 i1H'
v.·ith lhf'tTl in Pnrtlanrl rnuld
ver~· \1'rll heir tn 1:rt 1t off
clead cente r. One c;in never hr
sure."
Police Net
Bol<l R obb er
In Gun fight
LOS AN(;f·J.J::S I AP 1 -A
lone g11n1nan ll'ho robhed
;iboul ll)(I ratrnns nf a panc;ike
res10111r:int was \\"OU!Kled and
captured ;dong wi1h :Hl ;11'-
complice ;if!er :i frerw<i~
ch<ise ;ind gun haltlr, police
repor!rd.
Pol1t'e said the r n h hr r
ordered c11~ton1rrs 111 1h<'
Encino resl<iuran! -ir1l h1du1g
;i largr nurnhf'r of l·lu!d rf'!l -
tn lie face down nn the tlnor ;
1,·h1lr hr rnadf' nrr \1 11h s11~JO
lrnm the ea<;h rrgi~1rr i1n1t
cu~ton1f'r'-' 11a lll'l'-
,\l1 •rn!•n1s la1r·r :1 11 t11.•+nL!
pn1 1((' :-l·1i,:1·;1nl ~;111 ;1 1:!!'
rn:1tc·h1ng n t11·1i:td1·a\I r!1 ·,r·r1 11·
r+on 11n1I ~;t \(' 4 h:1,1• 1111· 11;111
f1rr<f :-4 l f•ntl ~h·1t~ fr•1n1 Jilt'
csr :1pc i :11· pnh1·1· · ;1!d
·1 l1r1 '1' 1 r· t !i:1~ .. i1 l!t11111i.;!i a
r (' •, J d (' 1111:11 !lfll'.llh111 t111od
h<'f.,,,, l11·111c. c11ntr11l :ind
~m;o,hlr1~ 111111 ;1 c·•·1111 •nl p1111cr
pol~· ;111d .1 1+<t1 i..~·d t'~1r.
Th•' Sl l'l'l'<"t< 1•1 11111u·rl lhe'1r
pi~l1\I~ .1! p11h1·r 1dflo 'C'rs 11hn
relurru·d 1,B slinl s. 11 1111ndi n,c:
thr pair, :i11!!11>ri1trs ~;11d
<:rf'i::(1r1• l);1111PI ~. ti. (I( Los
Angrlrs ~nd .l;1hnn H. /\!Jen.
25 . l\I Alh11(p1t•np1t'. N M ,
\l'f'rr hfio.,rd for 1111rsl1galion
fnr :1~:0.<111!1 with 111!••111 lo t·nn1-
rn1t rnurf'\rr Bro!h 11 r rr list£'1t
1n 1><1!1 <f;11·t11r1 1·,.11d1liun a!
Coun11 L ~1 · t-.lrrlH';1 l I rnter.
Allr n 11 :1~ 111\ 111 th<' lert
~h11ult!1·r .t11d 0.11111·1.~ ~urferf'd
.1 :ou p1•1 fn'1al h11ll1•t 111111nd. Of·
f1ecr" 11 1'n'n'I 1111unch•rl.
"•Oo Se ars ;
Ne~ ~~e.Wa!er7
Get the facts o
on your water 0
Phone your
nearest
Stars store
for FREE
•
water analyais
•
ff
by Sean Water
cond.itionlna: ei:pert•
K IDS LOVE
UNCLE LE~
So l urd oys in
Th e DAILY PIL OT
We lfare R eform Now
Earn To Start Frida y
'
"-~ secretary in t he lap is '"'orth two <?Ver there in
· the bushes •.• 11
'fax Refor111 Negotiating
Res11111es; Action Noted
SACRAJ\1 ENTO !UPI f -
Ca Jiforn1a 's comprehensive
"'elfare reform progra1n. a
product of co m pr o n1 is e
between 11cpublican G o v .
Ronald Reagan rind legislati ve
Democrats. goes int o t ffect
Friday with state officials
gearing for probable legal
chall('nges.
The plan. designed to sal'e
laxpa)ers nearly $200 m1ll1on
a year in welf<1re costs. was
hammered together la s t
1nonth during ma rat hon
negotiations between t he
Reagan Adm inistration and
I h e De moerat1c-control!ed
Jcg 1slalure.
Jlcagan sa luted the final
Y outli Held
In Sla y in g s
Of Hunters
package as "the most com·
pre hens i v e at tempted
anyplace in the United States"
and stale officials are prepar-
ing lo defend the plan against
expecled court challenges by
povert y lawyers.
'l'he program. which in·
clud rs a rnajor refor m of
t\1ed1·Ca ! est1n1ated lo save
another S200 niillion. is design·
ed lo sl<1p a lid on runaway
public assistance costs without
denyln~ aid to the "lruly
needy."
Although enacted in August.
implement<1tion ()f the dual
pack<1ge "'as delayed until
Oci. I lo give state and countv
adn11nistralors time to gear uP
for 1he regul;1tion changes.
But D·day is Friday ;ind
sta te officials are anlicipating
some problems in putting the
prograrns into effect end from
npponents who 11re prepared lo
chall('nge it.
"\Ve're doing everything we
can do to make it go as
smoothly as possible.'"" said
Jack A. Svahn , assista nt stale
daily interest on Passbook Accounts.
PISabook Tllrtft Accountw of any amount Ntn l'h"' ""''""" pold -day Invested to day whhdrawn. Your fUnde W ~ ..uabte.
lntereal credited and compounded quarterly.
Fund• placoct by IM 10th oarn trom Ure l 1L
Morris Plan
Newport, Beach -3700 Newport Blvd. -673-3700
S \CH/\:0.1 ENTO ! L1 Pl \
1;1,1•. Hnn<ild Hl'ag<111 and
lri::1sl:i111·(' Jc:idl'rs t Q d ;i y
plunge intn another ro und of
n1•gou:i tinns on !:ix reform
11 1th ~nn1e progress reported
in t•<irl ier !:ilks.
To be on hand fnr the
discussions, Heag;in canrf'!l('d
a planned trip to AnahC'im
11·herc he 11«1s \n hll\ e ad-
dressed t he lntern;it\onal
Police Chief ·s Association tcr
day.
~·:"~I~,,~,:·~·~·,~·='~'"~'~·~~~~-.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=============== SIERRA CITY (UPI) -1_
The gnl'ernor annou nced last
1n:1·k he 11·as keeping his
!-•·hrdu!t'd clear of ar-
J}j11ti1n1ents lo d('1·utc full time
1<J lhe 11ego!iatinns aimed <it
p1·1i1·1ding tax relief for pro-
pC'r!y 01\•ners and balancing
the sl<lte bu<lgeL
/\ tll('('!ing was scheduled fur
10:30 a ,m, betv.·een the
governor and his aides and a
12-memb('r team of
Jrgislators. Althou gh none has
s;iid a settlement is near
S('\'<'rill c I a i m negotiations
lhus far h<tl"e "narrov,:ed the
g<1p" of differences.
The tax shift proi;:rarn unde r
discussion includes propos;ils
to raise taxes on stale ~ales,
inrorn(' husi nessc.~. vl'hiC'les,
li<iuur and c1g:irettes frn1n .SI
llil!1on lo $1 8 billion.
n:ea g;in <ind lhe nemorrats
both are pushing for R reform
package th<it will pro1•ide tax
relief for property owners but
:ire at odds on the size of the
tax cut.
Hcag;1n \1•a nts lo give pro·
perly owners a $48.l rnillion
tax-rC'li<'f v.•ith an add1t1onal
5330 million lo be used to
h11lance the state bud,aet.
$3 yard:
Sierra Cou nty authorities plan
to file murder charges this
week against a 21-ye<1r-0ld
Chinese college student in the
gunshot deaths of three fellow
deer hunters at a Yuba River
cam psite.
District Altorney B e n
Rarton said Sunday lhal
Carter !lalt Yuen , 21, a rcsi-
drnt of San Fr <1 n c i s co' i;;
Chinato11•n. woul d he ch<1rged
wit.h three counts of murtlcr.
Yuen was suspected of kill-
ing Russel K. \Vong. 22 .
\Vcndcll Ll'C, 21. and D;iniel
Yen \Voo, 21. whose bt1llet-r id-
dled bodies were found Friday
in the Sicri·;i foothills along
the North Fork of the Yuba
Ri ver. The three victims also
1\•ere from Chinatown.
Elegant over and
under draperies.
Both for one low price.
I I \,.
·-
Choose from beautiful antique satins with matching sheers: ell
for wha t you would expect to pay for the over draperies alone.
One price gives ycu value pl•Js. Regular low Pe!VleY pr'°6s on
our finest fabrication.
Call collect (714) 523-6511
for our shop-at-home service .
JCPenney
•I-borne dwwl•ting
Decorate now. Us• Penne y• Um e payment piUlo
Warehouse
clearance!
Save up to 33%
Overstock and discontinued carpeting.
Hurry in!. Quantities are limited.
Now 3~Yd.
o.tg. 5.119
'Nylshag" long -ng nyl"" lllOQ pile -........
twist to la!ep Its spri ngy taxtuno. T-10 Colors.
Now s~Yd.
Orig. 8.50
"South Seas" long, lush polyosterpllo ~ .. , ltl&J)O
end soft. luxurious touch. Twee eta. &Cdor&.
Now 4~~Yd.
Orig. 5.99
"Comet' iamous DuPont 501° nylon ~ _,,, -·
Mutt i-leva toop pUe hk:See ioDtmlrk:I. Solildlllldlliil 11 d&
11 C<Mors.
Now 7:!Yc1.
Orig. II.SO
1nflnity' oculptu1'ed otlecl pie ol -.... • •
sheared for lnt9"'Sllng ourface. ~ 10 Cdcn.
JCPenney
, ............ 4 ... ... ... u--....... .. ..,., ;11111 a ....
.. ,.., floor ..........
....... ..,." m-t' ... aa._,,..s a ,, ••
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m • ..-t the1e Penney Slotff:
For corpet estlmote call loday: CANOGA PARK (883-3660) CAR LSBAD (729·79Sl1) DOWNEY ~l)
FASH ION VALLEY-SAN DIEGO (291 -6050) FULLERTON (871~) HUNnlGTON BEACH
7771) LAKEWOOD (634-7000) MONTCLAIR (621-3811) NEWPORT BEACH (6'4-2313) ORANGE '"THE =
(639-509 1) RIVERSIDE (687-3080) TORRANCE (772·5893) VENTURA (6'2·75e2)Buy It on p1,,,_ T)ne
Payment Plan.
•
I i
)
I
I
I
Monda y, September 27, 1971 DAILY PILD'._!!_
This should get you stirring:
20%off on all latex paint prices.
34ss
1399
'.j ' -1t1"
drill press.
F11s 1 .1 '
and ', ·
clcctr1C
a rills
PC'1111c1,1ft 6" gr·indcr v11!h
1•on11i9 ;i11arh11111nt.
29~9
renncrafl' router \N •tl'
,~HP moior.
CANOGA PARf. CAAL.SSA~
PENN CRAFT,
on l~1l'
Save $5
Sale 3499
Reg. 39.99. Penncraft • router
wi!h powerful ~8 HP motor.
Sale prices effective through Saturday.
ne
~IC
·... .. . . !JS
coat Pl ~~
FLAT LATEX/I ~'fE
1001 ·80 NON:YELLOWIHG WHITE
ONE GALLON
Power tool sale!
()'; -j I_ ~ ' '
Save $5
Sale 3499
Reg. 39.99. Penncraft • V2"
variable spee d, reverslble dri!I,
Screwdriver attachment.
2.92
6Y2" polishing bonnet,
1.29
Save $5
Sale 21 99
Reg. 26.99. Penncraft • 7V4"
circular saw with 1.7 HP motor.
JCPenney ·
~, .
• • , I ..,
•• ' ~
... ~
'·
Sa ve $8
le!
Penner aft· One Coat Plus Interior
Latex. Reg. 7.49, Sale 5.99
Penncraft' One Coat Interior
Late:<. Reg. 5.99, Sale 4.79
Penncraft" Decorator Interior
Latex. Reg. 6.99, Sale 5.59
Penner aft" Non-Yellowing Ceiling
Latex. Reg. 7.49, Sale 5.99
Penncraft" Texture Fin ish Latex.
Reg. 3.99, Sa le 3.19
Penncraf1 · One Coat Plus Latex
Semi-Gloss Enamel. Reg, 8.99. Sa le 7.19
Penncraf\" Non-Yell owing Latex
Semi-Gloss Enamel. Reg. 5.IJ9, ~a l e 4.79
Penncrafl'" De corator Latex Semi-Gloss
Enamel . Reg. 7.99, Sa le 6.39
Penncraft" Accent Latex Semi-Gloss
Enamel. Reg. 8.99, Sale 7.19
Penncraft" One Coat Plus Exterior
Latex. Reg. 8.99, Sa le 7.19
Penncraft ··One Coa t Exterior
Latex. Reg. 7.49, Sale 5.99
Penn craft· Self-Priming Exterior
L atex. Reg. 5.99, Sale 4.79
Pcnncral!' One Coat Plus La!ex Exlerior
Trin1 Enamel. Reg. 9.99 . Sale 7.99
Pen n era fl• Latex Fl oor and Porch
Interior/Exterior Enan1 c:I.
Reg. 6.99. Sale 5.5'
Quart sizes In most of these paints are on
sale through Saturday also.
999
14-piece heavy duty drill bit set.
I I
'
Sale 21 99 11 ••
Reg. 29.99. Penner aft• 2 speed, double
ln sulated sabre saw with tilt base.
999
5 stielf unit measures 72"x36"x12··.
Steel surface 1eslsts rusting. scr11t~h-
1ng and dlscolor1ng
72" 1136" x 18" sriell un•I, 11.99
9 bOx storage uni!, 11 99
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores:
UOWNE'f ~A SH IO~ VALLtY·SAN DIEGO FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAl<EWOOO MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" RIVERSIDE VENTURA. Use F'enne~s Time Payment Plan.
J 2 DAILY PILOT
Fo1· The
Dissol11tio11s
Of Marriage
l'olM \e<>t•"'"' 1'
! rl10lf'. Glori• .J••n •"" Erwin V•<IO<
,.,,,,,..,,, M~IYon I ann Jun• ~
'.'onr<>t ln~r< L •no l •o W , Jr
~n•w, J•n•• Lo~ •na Cn•rl•• Mollo•>
I ••ln•r., lYnn /.\~"' '"" J"'"'" D•••CI JO'l~ ................. f, • ., .._.,,
\V•ll>1 .... , Mo<n•ll M>CI DoV•G J.,,,n_
Dunnon c~'·"• ona r•rr••<• L~nr
"u"'1f ,, P•""''I '""" 1M O•V•CI M .
I Uol! V•t lot W, •rod Gf'<o•s'lnn•
"'""" >l••ITlff """' 11'<1 Goro<<I l.O~•n
r't lollo, K•nnr•n l l r><I ~"""' ll J•mtMl. £lron0t 1nd l.CN +>
Ouorlf, Lou»• O.nnf l "CI /,.,,n~r l 'V"
~·"' Q.,.,, I •ln<.s •.-..J P•lrtc11 1'
ll0<>m. Joon •"" P~ul J
~"~'"•• Jo••P" "'· eno R"'" C.""""9· Plw lH• l &nd $1on"v
(t ll<oon, Su>1n •'~rta •nCI M•,n11I
0ona1a
G1rr•1. /,\.i•·• Lu,,. """ 11,~,,
Allfn 0•"·'· M .. ,. ood IOr>I''
Ounl10. Donn• l •• ~...., li'~1>•r1 \'I
Pe1a. """""-'"" 11. """ O•"''''" >l<19fn. Janoc• """ B•"
1 nom""""' K•1nt>n t ntn '''" Jomfl \'\, ....
ll•rt•nd J<> Annt £ •nd 0011>1<> "!<rn
B••l>e<' J••< n• tv•1Ynt •nO R'1~n
J•mo!
, U90 P•'"<•• /,\ dnO (Owa <O ... s.1n, c .. rolvn ~u• onu li'•<~ora Ii'.•""
r11.~11 L. l 11<•'1• '"" W•lli•m o H•,,ins, //,Ml• O••n onO J<>l•n Nol•"
"•~llo, 11 .. ni•(• I. ond Fr•"" 0
i1'orr•I, ~0""" D• Mon• ono lo•tn•
'"" 8ro~•r. Lveroll L ... nd (mn• J
l'•llclano, !"laa •""Jo"
llpuo. R•• Jeon "'"' .V•li. P•n•. Ehf.., ( at>G l/&rcv1 ti
""'"'" sn •ltv ~·. """ £n"'"'" 1+ ••t•"•1n. Otan O """ Q,,,,,.
McCora11, R•"""'' "'"'""'""" •'" o .. n• ,~.
l.oY•IH ur. G!ot••"• I.I •nn l .,101 l
5,,1.~. J4mtl P . """ Bono\•r I o~. ~mell, Cl•••n<• O<Nlll•• ona D••n•
Atli .....
l.nlonv<<i. Poul &no Mory 0
"''""· <•rrntn C. """ Jonn v t.111 .. d. Sn1•on I._ and End1t L
Gebl~r, W•IClo L_ ar>G £fnt<T f .
M<>•oon, Cormfl& L. •r'ld Bol l
lh<l~fl l. Ell••b•ln A-~rid """"
S~ucfda.
Co••••· "Mo.n•n• Jon•I •co ll:ob•n
V>eto•.
Jt n••n, R111>,'I r:. •na L •~""''
C•rolyn o ........ c., •• """ "~'" ~
C•oay, Jf"'' l•"''"· •na
Ot"'""" '•l•d \<ol•mOtr H
~••mour. J~""' ( """ J0t1n Jolon11'>r'I, ~,.Yt<I C.•1nt •no l rf "O•
'"' l(lnc1'<1oe, Pot .. <••"'""•"" R•<l\l•d I , O• (11lro, J•n• 0 ar'l<I Ofl~noo f
Curri" B•"V• Ven• •nd Fr1nc•~
''''""'"" Bo•~•'• ~oD•" D and Vonnit C.
SO•nctr, B'fnna 11"" •n<I G•on! O
CJ'Mllley. luC•ll• E. •n<I J o/In • .,. J•<if
Eaw•rd
(O>. C~&rlU W••d '"" S•n<lr• l oulu .
Death Notice•
1011ll(EH c;..,.,, , . Bohlktr>. tS1• V•• C•o•I. t •·
•un• Bffd\. 0.11 ar Ot••n. ~eo!fmb••
PS, lt'/I, ~urviv.O by W•fe, Cl••• Ml.:
ol•Ullhl•r .. C1r<llll\8 Bo<0·N1•·· S•n c1 .. rnen1t1 • Bu·uer• .I.Cl!..,.,.,,,.,, N,.,...,,,
N..,.., Vlr••<>0.1 1ltl•r, l!:mrn1 M. J""""
jlol1wlmbr•. 5-er~I!:~ 1 11•-•· 11 • "'·• "'-cl!ic VJ.,.. ClloQ<!I, ,ni,.,nt-nl, P•Cll••
V1-M•mQri1I P1rll. p,,;flt VII'< Mor·
I ll•n'o OlrKtors.
IJllSCALOl"I"
••ew edffllcrtl. /lf1ll cvo••••· l 1ij""" BMcfl. Dire ef 11 .. fto, ~~•1""'""" 11,
lt11. l..,,it M Pt"><llnt •I P•«lk v .. ,.
#lorflNry,
Fl~l1ER
"*••d f l1h1r. A;e 7~. of ,913 (oo.ort,
N-1 llM<;n. Oii• o! <folln, S•<>'"""
H r H. 1t71. ~tvltt' """"'~Q 1t Wf.i
t !itt Cl'lo!P<i Mortua,y, 60 .-•IE!
l'LOTTEN
t'lk" M. FloUPn, U O••>o, l p<oo I•~<'"
P••~. HO"WJ>Grl ll•acn. Dalo 01 <111tr.,
S.,,1.,nt>lf 1•. 1•11. survtvoo by '"'o
roei>l1ew~. Clyde >I. E. Flo11t'fl, O••l •~n;
Jt"Y !1oOI<, Son llernu d ino: n:ec•. M"·
Gwe-nlvn Klrt(P•t•ocit ; 1nroo "'""""· Uw. M..,, ~. Lo"u•, M" I. Ho(llo. S•n
B•,n•rdlno: Mr., V. F louen. WO\! Co-
vin•. Fun•r•I t PNlc•I, Tu•\d•'-11 & "' •
~·Ill C°'t• MH• C~apel, wl!h Or J om.,
C.. lll•i,., olllt i•litlll, f>riva,. on to•monl
oi tnvl......,., f>•rlt <:~mot0<v. llal•1
Cos,• M~• Morl118•Y, O.r0<;!n•~
GIST
f h••lt• YI c,,,1, Av• 10. or 1•1 w 111~
~·. s~ 1. Newoo:irt II••<~. 0•" at ~·•'"
S•o•e-mD<er 75. 1'11. 5urviv"4 ,,. lou•
•""'• Lt Rov G,.t, ol Oown•v; Jo•« '"° cnucK Gil!, '"''" M~I•. NO"•
Gl11. Muntin•,on llN <"! "'''''· N•ll'" ~lfO&lhal, Ulan: tou• ora..ac~:1n .. ";
'"'"' O•H11·gr•n«hil<lttn. G••"•••dO ,.,
"''"'· Tu,.,i..v. 1 ~"'. ><•«>1>• ""'' M•mc•·~I ..... llell B'""'"'M• Mo"VM•.
KO~LESKI
rnv11,, ""'"l·• Kor ie••• H!ll (tt• ·'"'""
Q"vt , M "'"'~ "'""' O•'e o! dtJln. ~on ••m""'' 7t. 1•11 ~•"v v•d b< hu>h~na.
( "•'''' /',\ l(O•I•" "'"'"'' Ja...-•• '·'•"'"' , ,,.., ~· "'" D•n~• A<"l'I • ~~<•(""· f •••~•; ~ "1 P•( I ( V" v
(tt•o•I ~n•omto...,•n• p, -"< \/••" t.'•
..,0,,.1 "•" P~•·•u v •• ,. l.'o''"•'I r
l•o.-• II O•doo 1•01 # O'••n fro•• Nt ... ~o•• S•••" D•" n• d"'•'' ,., ....
b•• J!, 1'11 ,c""""" bf lwo ll•uQ"'"''•
//o''• V•'l<r '1o·'••I• OI t.l'"""'' II•''"
I.Ir\. Jon Q.n;.,el•, Co•'• f,l.,•l ""'" /~" ""'' W•l<on. Ar••On•. "''" •••'>!I <~·IOt•n , 0"' -r••' o<and<''•ld ~""""'·
\</'•t!nt'd"'· l ""' ~I 1•••"• I P••<rn>I
f"urtn. t.lr Noo'I ll••rn. lo"'"'"n' o,
,,,,, "''"' M•mo"•' Pa" 1!•11 fn·t• ,,..,. /,IO'IYa•y 0-<•r•~,,
WMlll
W•". R wn... !G• w w .. ,~.. {O' •• I."••• 01'~ "' <>••'" ~•P'f•"I>•" l~ ·•II ~urv•Ve<I "" w""· S••d • ll•uG"''' \, r:•
nt•• Mork•i•O. Aoolf "'"'"" f••• '.'•' ~d,,••'"· 5•" Bf'"•""'"" M•"• l'o"• ~nt• """· •on1, On·~ ~ .,.,.,,,,. ""
G•b•!•I. Efl'"'' W wn.1, ~'''"'' ntno Ing el P&rl!•< lf•t w Mo,.ul ••
ARBUCKLE & SOS
WESTCLIFF i\IORTUAR''
•21 E. 17th SI.. Costa J\1tsa
646-4883 • BALTZ ~IORTliA R lt:~
Corona drl J\tar C)R J-!14MI
C~la ~tt~a ~ti 6-2~24 • BEtL BRO AD\,A)'
l'l.IORTUARV
111 Broadway, Costa f.1e1•
Ll 8-3433 • J\1cCORi\UCK LAG UNA
REACH MORTUARY
1715 Liguna Can~·on Rd.
•94-9~15 • PACIFlf \'IE\f
J\1Ei\10RIAI. PAR !\
Cemetery J\1orluary
ChaJ"l
3511 Pacific Vinr Drlvt
Newpert Beach. CalUornl•
141-mt • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME
71tl Bola Ave. ,., ........... m.ms • SMrntS' l't10 RTUARY
en Malt SL
lluntl ngton Beach -
r.1onoat, St pLt111lltr 27, 1971
Anti-abortion Unit's Charges Rejected
By JACK BROBACK
OI 1119 Ot llf l"ll1t Stoll
SANTA ANA Chorgcs
111?.lle bv an an ll·Hbort1on
grouv lh~t eounly pt'rsnnnl'I
\\ere v1olat1ng the l;i\\' h:.o 1·
hl:.e n rejected by the Urttngt•
County (;rand Jury.
Mt>mbers of a groui' calling
itself the Citizens Acl:on Con1.
rnittee appeared before rhr•
county Board 111 Su pervi sor ..
l..i~l !.1111·ch 11nd a c.: c u s e d
11 elfart-WOl'kl'rS H ( t'll·
l'ouragu1g tile use of illd Ju nd~
tu f11\<Jn<:e al10rl 1uu:-
'l'he grouµ, 11l11l·l1 u1clui.lecJ a
\\."":.!111i11:.1t·r 11111ii:.1cr hat.I ;il~u
;-iccused µrivale r·uu nsel1ng
services of e11L-.:1w·<1g1ng u11 '.ll'd
1no!hers 111 lte to soci;d
"'<:!fare \1 ork cr~ 1!• ohtain
l1111d~.
Deputies wer e said to he urg·
111g young gir ls to .seek ;-ibor·
t1uns instead of tracku1g <lu1111
111iss1ng fa!/ler.s tu help :.tlp·
1.11.1rr !he au!1t1p:ited child
ln lls re!JtJrl s1~neU Ii\
(;r:ind Jurv l·'1weman IJort•t·r1
l\l;;rshalJ Or i\'i.-1.,,po rl llearh.
the pauel stalL'<i that nu
\ 1olallon uf law could lie
tl1 st·o11ered in its 1111 e.<i!1gation
1vhieh 1nclucted the scrl'ices ot
tlh· :.late t\1t1.11·11ey L;l·n~n1I .s
vftt{'f'
which were referred to the
jury by the supervisors were
1n ~de bv the Rev. Riis
Taderllil Or \\lestn1inster. Dr.
\1an;tnne K111r;:ht uf Orange
.uld San!;1 A11~ ti I t o r n t y
Hubert Sassone.
The JUTY reporl s a i d
rephes tu a request for factuat
111forn1ation gathered from
lhree con1p!aintants were sub-
n1itled by Sassone .
"The jury, b:1si ng i I s
rormation, could find no viol<i·
lion or law,,, !he report staled.
Berause the District Al·
torney·s office was accused
the Attorney Gener:1rs ;i1d
Di s ney \Vor kcr
"as ~ougl1l Altl'r rev1fwing
lht' 111tvl'nu111uu ~ul)nu!l«>d !h6
sta te 11ff1l '"r :-:n1d .. 1l 1s ex•
trl·ineh < 11uh1tul 11la1 :1 \ 1olt1·
ruin ,,( l;·.11 h:i-. 1K·eu.1ed ..
1:-:..tci 11g Co urt
\)(·t. 12 111 Or;uigi· /.,(JUnt1•
s~lllt'rlUf Cour\,
Talent Fraud Sus1Jecls
Get County Court Date
1\hu cli.1n~l'd iu lhe a1 1;1rl.
11;1~ the IJ1~\fl('l Al!urn1·1·'s
Fan1il,\ Sup111wt lJ i 1· 1' 1 (1-11.
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Tht· n 1 i g ! n a I ~·vn1pl..i111l'.
dett.sions on its 01\•n el'aluation
1J( this r<1ther ~ener;i l1zed in·
SANTA ANA -An Anahein1
teacher accusecJ tJf pot•keting
more 1hun SB,000 during thr
three years iu which he \YOrk·
ed as a part·l1me cashier ;-ii
Disneyland "'ill bt' arrargned
l::rnerv l.t•e ;o;11r;1tll·1. 4'.!,
bookL·li ·\111 luq.~1·11· ;ind i;n111rl
rh1'11 f'harge~ l'i \rre an SJ.Si:i
h:11L
SANT A ANA -Four ptin·
c..:i pals in a ''Take One" tale nt
hun1111g organn.ation t 11 at
allegedl.1• look lhou:;<inds ur
dolla rs frorn parents ~eck inJ!
non-esistent n1 o v , f' anct
lele\'is1otl jobs for I ht' I r
children ha1·e been nrdf'red !11
face trial Feb. 22 in Orang<'
Count.v Superior <.:ourl
Presiding Judge \\'il11arn l'
Spei rs sel the 1ria 1 date for
Orange a!lorney n i e ha r t1
\!urphy. 41. brothers Jerr.1.
4Z. of Santa Ana . and Oon
I I egg, 40. of Carden <:ro1 r iind
rl ober! J\1c(;1nn1s. :18. of Santa
.fi.n;i
All are l·h;1rged "'ilh i;rand
lhef!. conspirary and \'1ola·
\Jons of the state's co rporale
securi ties act. Thev have bC'en
ordered to appear.for pre!rial
ac tion Jan. 21 and are free on
bail.
They "'ere indicted by the
Orange County Cr<ind Jury
.arter it "'<ts alleged lh:tl lhf'
ciuarle! sold Sll.000 \1•orth of
~lurk in To1ke One Produrt1on~
\1 ifhout rej.!istering-!he st0<·k
\l llh !lie stalt>'s t·orpor:1 lr1111s
t:omn11 ssioner.
All four 1nen had ea rlier
been named in a tivil action
brought by the state and the
Board Ol(s
Dan1 Park
In F 111lcrlo11
FULLERTO N -Plan~ [ur
!he $2.4 mlllion Ful!erlon D:.in1
Hegional Park have been ap·
)1roved by Orange County
Super \'hi:ors and 11n 11pplicatio11
for 11 le ase of 10.1 acres fron1
1 he U S. Arn1y Corps (lr
J·:ngi net rs is being proc·t>ssed.
The lea.~e arrange1ne n!s ar"
being handled bv the cnu111 11
1Jep;irln1«>nt of ·l/;irhur s.
Bearhes and Parks for thr
rnile-!ong recreational f<tci!it y
north of the d a 111.
The park site is localed in 11
n;1tuf:1I \'alle.v roughl.v bound·
ed by Slate College ~oule\'ar<l .
Imperial l·ligh\\'a.v, !he Orange
l•'reel'.·ay a nd As s oe i a I ed
Hoad.
Tht first increinent of ~19
RCl'eS \\•ill bt' d('vcloped at R
cosl of $1.7 mi\lion. arrordinJ:
lri Thi rd Distnet Sup«>rv1snr
\\1dl1;11n L. Ph illip.~ n (
l·\111C"r1 011.
fJlanncd arr pla~·f1Plcls. nn
n111doo r a111phitheatrr. da\·
<·:un p si!es. p1<·n11· are;i~ :i
large pn nd and hiking. hikr
;1n1! rqu«>.<:!rian t rail ~
4 M eel ica I
Si1ule11Ls
Get, .4 u;art/,~
UC I Gets Cash
lHVINI-: -A $.lt)(I con·
lribution for the purchai;e of l
boo ks 1n lhf' f1t>ld of n1nun
1aineenng ha~ bt'en ~iven to
!he. UC lr\'1ne l.1hr;lr\' h\
f;l;iine Milletm:in Hrrlf1rld 1n l
mernor~· of a friertrl. ;t111hnr
11nd 1noun1a ineer Jan1I'!' Harn•
sey Ullman.
dislrict attonU.'\"s 11flu·f· in
ll'hich it was alli_.ged tJ1:1! 1)),.1
sold "publ1e rl'l at1nn~ <'tll1
tn1cls" rangil)g fron1 Sfi4J \\•
~OJ9 a .rear 10 par1·111~ 111-1
teresled in placing r hr i 1
children in 1nnvit> a1id 'I\'
c:o1nmertiol spots.
.o\ Superior Court inj11 r1el1011
'>l'hich prohibits npera\lun 11f
!he enterpnsl' is sr 11l 1n f(1rtr.
Nc 1v Cuunt,y
Gulf Cuur.~<'
Fa ce s Bourd
~ANTA ANA -l'J0111s tu
build a golf course on (;lc<1r
zone properly sout h of 1he
Orange Counf ~· Aiqx1rl ~·i ll llr
;tired before rhe co1u1tv Bo:1rcJ
uf Supervisors again Tursd;1y.
The 34-al're p3rce1 lies 11n-
11sed <ind lb«> c·ounl.\''<: Tl1•:1l
Properl,1' Sl'r1·1crs l>1r1·1·1ur
St anlev Krauss Hunks 3 j.!.ul!
l'ou rsr' l'.011 1<1 <lcvelop ine•J111r
fur the cnunt.v.
Development cost for " 9·
hole course on the 34 acres i~
estimated 8.1 $!51,000. Kraus('
also suggests lease of IS ad·
jacent acres fron1 the Irvine
Company to develop an 18-hnl«>
}lo!f J<1yo11t. This pro1ect would
t·o,<;l S256.000.
f ifth Di.~lrit·I Su pt'r\'isor
Hon:tld \\I . Caspers of Ne1\'\:H>r1
Beach has expressed doubts
<tbout lhe financial feas1 bll1t1
of the projel'L
llarteli118 '
Propertie.~
Go 011 Blo<·1•
SAi\'TA t\'.\A -l'rop1·r11
registered in tile 11.:in1t·~ ol I )r
Ehbe llartt>l1us and ll o,,1· tlt•h:1
Vaughn "·ill 1-:0 1111 the bl11el.
Oct. 15 to sa!blv ;i ~!O.f\I MI
Orange Count ~· s ulJt'nor ('ou11
judg1nent a1r01rded to a
r-.1e\1•por1 Bearh 11·11111:111 i11
jured in a Co.~ta ~1£'.~a 1r.1lf14
.irciden1.
Suzann E . Eb.\' ::uccr .... f1 1lh
argued i11 a rel'erll !rial tll:it
~I r!'. Va ui::hn 11;1s :1! 1:11111 i11 ;1
f·11!li~iou in 11·hi<'h \1 1'~ t-'111
\1·as injurPd /)r IJ;1r 1 rl111~ \\':"
!he 1111·11er oil !hr !'ill' 1\111' ti
enllided \\·11h lhe ~:\)1 \1•hi1·l1·
;It lhP 1n!£'r~t<rl11111 ol A11.1h1 ·11n
;Ul<f [~l/J Sli t'!'!'
l'p fur ~alf' tl(·I 1·1 1111! 1,,.
prOpPrr1· li<:lt•d ;11 filli II
ll'1l,<;011 ~t ;ind 2.1.'i:! t 'or 1wll ~!
tioth in l 'os1:i '.'lh·~a \l;or\t·\111,
;ind ,\!rs_ \';111;.:h11 11'l'I f' 1·1·
ll'llilnts o f thP \\'il.'-'flll S!i L'•·I
hunlf' :ii the 11111!' IH' \\':I S ;11'
, used of !1urn1ng: his 11lfl('l'S :11
2:H:1 E 1 ·o:i~1 11 i~h 11 ;i I'
l '1J rona del i11<ir
Thr ph\ si t'1:i11 11·;i, e!t':11 ... ~ 111
lhn~ ... t-harges in ;1 S11prr101
\'ourl \«1al. bul 11e now l:11·c'
h1rrhe1' r hnrP,t'!' nr hr1hl'1',\' :ind
insuraner fraud i11 I w o
separate trials. llf' fa; also due
10 :1ppe.:i r bel ore 11ie state
Bo:ird of J\lediea\ Exarn incrs
1o ans11·er Bllega1io1·.s 1h;1t ht•
u n l n 1r r u ! I ,\· ad1ninistered
1111rcnlic·~ to 11·011H.'11 pa!ienls.
nne pf \\'ho1n cl ird .
WM 201 ~GR
• l)Hl-!.ol.,J Sr.,o T~,,,. V"I •. ,,._S.-1"
• ~ ,.,. ''"'""' C'.a.,nol • r.,,,. !J'"'o" • "'"' ,.,., '"• • ,.,..i;.1.(.
• '"'""·'" u! 'V""''"lli\•N
GE SERVICE
•°'•-/,/•I'll /1''/"f~r{ -
\ J '"I'' ,\',.r11 /1"!
Contemporary M odl!N'n W•l"ur Styling
2S''a1AG, CONSOLE
COLOR TV
1n.o A<Nan<MI GE ?S"" C'4 ~~Na.. 1 -.1 .... T,,_1111 ............. ~ .. ...,. .. ~ _...,. . ..,..~ ...... -t>r ...... -.~""""°"-
f;(. h ...... ,..
• Gt. ~ 1· LIACOLOI\ CWl.SSS -E..,_.. ~ ....... v ... Bo'lji> .. si-... n...l ... li11 Colar ··-• ~:;c1'1$1TROMK; I'll$" T-... ~
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Only Coast & Southern offers savers all three:
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•Saturday Service. •The Insiders Club .
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1 i r • ''!> , , 1 t\) t 11:1 1 >' •!'I) 1·~t·r~1 h11 · ~ 1r011 n1'Pd trorn the l1nes1 ciose: 1.
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Yil'I C1H1 1>vP11 t 11v c,ii c. n1 tl1r "tl{'e( 'prier and n1olulc hon1 es a11d
'notor rvr le~ nr <.111 -~!il' rial :.av1nf.:s. l he I nc;rders Cit Hi also rirov1des
I g cJ,•r.ol111tc; r• lr! k1·t~ !O suort•r't-J and enterta•nmenl e~er11~ . ,
I •JJ:\ ,, :.11111·· 11,11i1 frl!'I!' ' I~· ··~ '..1!1> rlP00'.11 ! 'O:>.PS, f"lOney or0<-1.,
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IQO~t< Ma1nS1 •(ll t 1~t /9:'51
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l4t•ffl'1~) Mnnday, Stpttmbtr 17, 1971 Why Aren't
You A Straights Get the Word PHARMA~.Y
Good Talker?
,\ 11011.'d Pllflll.~hrr In Ch11:ai:o
1·e110rts R sfinplP t('C'hnit1111• or
1•1 f'ryd11y •"•111\•rrsauon 11·h1ch
•an I.Illy )'"U 1•'111 d11ld•·11rls 111
t-r•c1a and l1ui.111~s u1h an1·•·1n.,11 1
und 11'(1.rk~ l1 k•· n111 1:1r to J:"ll'f'
y1.11 poi.~i\ s•·lf-ro11fn.l('ncf' and
i,:r ... alt•r 1•1pulanry.
Orgc1nized flomosexull.ls D eter111inell to 'Fight Back' WE QUOTE
PRE SCRIPTION PRICE S
ON THE PHONE 1\(·rorrl111r: roi tl11s p11lll1~'1f'r.
rr"IHlly' p1•11111,. 1111 n .. t rral11.1• lull\'
nlu<·h lhf'y l'<•uld i11flu•·Hl"<' 01h-
!"·r~ s1n1ply hy 11 h111 thPy .~11~·
und h ()111 !hl'y ~uy ii. \\'/1f•!ht'r
in h11,q1nf'ss, at .~<n·i:i l func11ons. ,,r ,.., . ..,n In 1·a~1111I .-,.n1T·r~n1 1,,n~
\l"llh II•'" fH"<jL ln ll11alh•'~ lt)•"l l"
· r•' 1111~,., rn 1 1i:1~1· a g 1,,i(j 1n1-
1 •n·~slo11 f'l • 1~· !irti•· )1111 1alk.
Tri i!1'!1'l.11nr llh• rr•<Hll'rli nf
111 1~ pa111•1· 111tl1 1t11• ,.,,~.,.-1<1-
rrdl"'' 1 u l1·~ ft1!" d•·11•J,;p1u~
kill tn rvrr.1daJ <·nn11·rsa11"n.
l)H' 1)11h[1!>h1•rs llrl\l' jot1n!t ·d full lrra1ls .. r 1hr1r inl<·n·i;11ng
... 1r-1rain1n1:: 1n1•rh11d 111 a 111·11
'~w·klrt, "Ad1••n1t 11 ,•<; 1n Cn11.
<l'J~alion."' 11 liuh 11 t 11 l"I<'
·111.ilrd f1 ·('p I•• H•11 ••ror• 11ho rf'· ·ursts 11 1\,, ,,1.1 11:at 1.,n. S<'nd
1 out nam+'. iidrln·~~. and iip
odr tn: C1u111·rMlli<1n. 5.')5 E.
Lange St , rJ<'p1 9:17-90. ~!un
•;rlrin. JJ!. 600fifl. A postcard
·' ii l rlri.
•
NE W YORK I UPI I
1-fomosexuals, stii::matized and
o"tr:u·i1.ed by nJUj 'h of lht' ~
callNl slrai~ht "·orld. have
begun to fight back. deman-
ding an end lo polire raids and
to the thre<it of being fired
from their jobs.
"For countless yeiirs, gay
people have been
discrimina ted against." said
24·ye<ir-o!d Jin1 Owlcs, presi-
dent of the 300-niember Ga.v
Activist Allia nce of New \'erk
Cit.\_ .. It is l1rne hun1osexuals
y,·ere given equal footing \.\'ilh
every other n1inority."
In !he past fh·e years,
ho1nosexu.1!s have dt>\'eloped
political a wareness "'hich in
turn has Jed to the formation
of nu1nerous gay act1v1sl
organizations al'ross the coun-
try. These groups have begun
to seek, through militancv,
''full and equal prote{'\i1in
under the la"'" fair employ-
menl laws to proteet homosex-
uals, fair housing lav.'s and ex-
lension of publi c ac-
con1mod;it1un 1.'1ws to cover
hoinosexuals," Owles said,
··Nov.' is the time for
hon1osexuals lo corne out of
rhe clo:;cl'-.artti into the
slree ts," sa id Owl es, quoting a
favored slog11n of the gay
hberation forces.
The Nat ior11.1t lns!1!11le of
t.1C'ntal HC',1l1h estimated four
n11llion A rn e r i cans are
"predon11n;111tly homost'xual "
Although !he actual ranks of
militants is estiina!ed to
number fe wer than 100.000,
they have t/1e "spiritual" sup-
port of the no1111111Jtants, 0\1 !es
claimrd.
llon1osrxuats are subJC'<'l In
arrest under sodorny. srxual
n1isconducl or solicitat ion ltn1·s
in all states but Connec!lcu1,
Illi nois, Colorado and Idaho,
\\'here Jegisla!ion has hel'n
IS WORT • c EC IN
• •
passed permitting pr i v a t e
homosexu<il acts between con-
:i;enting adultf.. The activisls
seek thr enac!rnent of sin1 ilar
laws nation wide.
Jlartford. Co nn ., city official~!
early in Seplen1bC'r, said they
\rOuld tnke the case to court.
Kenneth C. !!land and Honald
C. r.lal\'in ;,,1id that by be ing
Hon1osexaals actually began forbidden lo legally n1a rry
organizing 20 years ago "'1th they were being denied such
the founding of the Mattachine benefit s as !he filing of joint 1
Sociely, considered b.Y today's ir1cu1nc l<lx returns and legal 2700 E. Coast Highw.,y, Coron" del Mar. at Fernle"f
llttivists to be a placid ·•Aun-inhtritanre of est;1les.
lie Tom" group with little 111-Denied legal n1 arr i age ,
fl uence. other liorn ust'.\'.Uiils have turn-
The n1iEtanr group<; <lid uol t.:d to '"gay rnar!'1ages" v.·hich, I
organize until !ate !%!l, foll(l\I-:-t1id Hobert Cll·ment of the
ing a rnutine raid by \"l'\V Church ul !lit' Uclo1ed D1sc:1ple 1
Stone\\'a!I Inn, a (;rccn'>l·ich religious and have nothing to
AMPLE PAR KI NG IN RE AR
Ho11r1 -':JO· 6:00 Doily
Clostd :Sundoyi and Holldoy1 ·y1,rk Ci ly l\ilk·I' 111 July on !he in J\lan!1al\;.rn, ··:ire strfcilyl
Village b<1 r fr<'quented by 1_d;;":--"~··~t1~1~l~h=e=l~"~"':· ':':::==:-:="-::::--:;--:=.:=:=;c----
homosexuals, v.·h('h led 101 r r-----------· ___ -_-, three n11.:hts <,f npar.r111\11l)!
under the rallying cry of
'"!;?.\' Pu1\f'r ''
Hcin10-"C'"l:Uals C'onsidcr the
"Stonev.·all Incide nt" to be th(•
'"Bos1on TPa Party of the gay
revolution.''
"I! 11·as the fir~t I 11nc ""e
rough! h;1ek.'" ~;1id Hick~. :1
young :0.1anh;;1tnn 1H'C'l)llnl.1nt .
\vli o, hkc rnany hn1nosexual.~.
refused !u d1 \·ul~r ht~ !:t<;\
nan1c ··for fc:ir rll losr rny
j'oh."
Across the country
l10111o~exun!s b c g a n to
org;1nize into such group s :l~
New York's (;ay Al'tivist
Alliance I C;AA 1, San Fran-
cisco's S<le1cty for lndi\'idual
Righrs i SIB \, the K;1lns Soi.:ie·
ty of Hartford. ('111111. J,11s
Angeles· Gay Libcrafiou Front
1GLF1, and The Third \\'orld
(;ay Bc1·nlu1inna ries, a group
of blark hotnosexuals i n
Chi cago .
Lesbians organized ;:is the
Daughters of Bilit is !DOB J.
founding various ch;rplcrs na·
tion11·ide. '"\Ve arl' the NAACP
of 1l1e hon1opl1ilc 1no\"en1ent.''
said El!en Bainer, 20, a
Bo~1011 !)OB 111c1n bcr.
Tt1cy hl•g;in· lobb_l"in~ fnr
equal rights IH11·.., :ind re\"i~ion
or revot:a lion of state sndr1my
or solicitation laws.
Jn Ne\v Yor k City, the GAA
claims responsibility for the
introduction or i1 proposed
hLunan right s !;i1\'. 11"hich is
currC'111!y btittlf'd up in 1he cit~·
cnuncil gl'ncral 11elfarr cotn·
miltee A sirni!:1r rnc:1~ure
\l"aS delc<1ted llv 1hr state
legisla ture in Albany this
ye<ir.
A hill 1u 11 ipe out la11 s
:iga1nst sexu;1J c on du c !
between consrn!ing ;idults \\"<IS
int roduced. but has nr1t heen
<1.c!ed upon, in the California
slate legislature, Si m i la r
Sears
•• l'rit:•" l·:ffJt<"'ii,·r ~un. ::-Ol'p L :?11
1 l1ru :-'u r .• '-'<'I,~ Home :r~.
.... _~:;'.... ~.:.. ~ntertainme~t
• f /\11'uncr-
_\n1r1lifi<'r
• l,'ull .!>izc 1"urntahlc
• ·r\\·i11 S 11<'akers
•Dust Coyer
644-757 5
----
n1e;isure·s "·ere d«ff';l\ed 1n
T('xas. \l:"Jssachuselts anrl
oth<'r ~L11cs . Stereo FM; M Music Systems
NO MINIMUM
bAlANCE
REOUiREd
The San Francisco g~v
mn1e1ncnt also turn<'d 11.s
sights 1111 1hc P;1('ific
TelC'phone :ind Tel egraph Co ..
seeking to fvrce thc 1elephnne
co1np:111.v 111 list a '"llorn ophilc
orgHniz;Hion.~"' categH1·y in the
\'ellov.· Pagrs. Tire slate
suprC'n1c eourt agrC>cd to
re1 le11· rhe c:1~r.
Fc,1rurcs aut<Hll.Hic rvr1 ird .,Jiut-o/( ,ind
cuci n,[: rnnrr1 ll 11 ir \,t ic p.1U \t' .n ;u1r11' i1 nt
in th<: rec11r,L Sr crc11 Fi\f/1\,\f r:1l!i!1 h.1s
AF(~ to l1 ltk in v:c:ik .~lal i •n1.;. (~O l'lll' i n
f()d:iy and r~kc :-tdv:in t:lgc o ( th is ,i..:n:.ir
88
Yes, that's riglit! Free checking -no minimum
bala nce required. Anything that's free is worth
checking, and now is the right lime lo check.into
Anaheim Savings new free services. We've joined
with a major national bank offering you comple\IJ
Savings and l oan plus banking services. On!y at
Anahei m Savings can you deposit $1000 and earn
the highest interest in lhe nation on insured savings
and receive !he bcnefils of .•• Free checking, Pre-
ferred Cus1omer ra tes on au to and boat loans, and
Preferred Cuslomer rates on personal loans. Learn
about these at our Huntington Beach office.
FREE SAFE
dEposiT boxEs
Fre• wit h •ccount ba lance of $ J ,000 or mor"•
6% Two to five year term
certificate accounts
with $5,000 minimum
balance.
50 YEARS OF SECURITY
Accounts are insured to $20,000 and protected
by Anaheim Savings' 100% record of safety.
ANAHEIM
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
MAI ~ OFFICE :
1e7 w L!l'Coln Avrr,
Anaheim, Cai11orn•ll
PR2-1532
L .. ~ 41 1 M1in St1eet
Hun!ington Beach, C.11i!"~r
LE&-6591 .. ____________ ...... ---
Another large! nr the gay
liberatinni sts is the "straight
institut 1<1n .. of r11:1rr1agr
Two tn<ilc hnn1n~C'>:Ual s 11 ho
\\'ere de nied an application fnrl1
a marriage l1Ci'nse b~
OCC Seeks
U.S .. L\.i<l
For (0111·!ic
()range ("o;:i.s! C"fillrgc !!',
sC'ckl11g ft·rlrr;;I runrJs 1n cnn-
t1n11e a Ji •h 1ra1ru11g prngr;;im
!hat !urns unr1npl(1.1'1·d in·
rf11 lth!:"d<; ln1n ;iUlo 111rt·fi;'.'ll!"S
The .sper1a! 1·1iursr, -r1t lrd
"automn111·c el11ster ."' 11·as in·
iti:Hed last year under 1hc
fcd<'ra! J\l:inpo"'l'r Devel<ip·
mrnt Tr:un1ng AC"t The col-
IC'ge has retrained 60 ml'n so
far.
'"Thi' prol!ram runs nut in
No\'e1nher. \\'e v.·anl tn kc<'p 11
gning annlher ycar."' John
011·ens, program director, cx-
11J<iined.
I~ is finflnt r<l entirel.v by
(('rlrral <iid. 'ro date $51i.3fi8
hnve b<.'C'll spent. The c1>urse is
open nnl.v In uncn1plr1.1·rd
per·sons referred to the college
by the Human Resources
De ve!nprnent office.
An individual can spcnrl two
weeks or two months in the
course because it is sci up in
blocks of instructinn . HC' can
lcarn to be just a tunc·tlp man.
a front end man, or Sl'Ver{ll
lypes nf rl'pairs -it's up to
hirn. The only objl'tl in the
cou rse is lo gel the n1an a job.
Jf rrderal funds are ob-
1...iincd. clnsses v.·ill start again
In December. Ow ens said.
Now Many Wear
I FALSE TEETH I With little Worry
Do fAl-.e l"'"lh ~mh1rr11..,. ynu hy
comil'llt" 1~ wh11n '"ou ~.•!. l•ui:;h, or r1 lk" II <trnt t•r" ~<fh""''' ,, r~n hrlr.
t'ASTE ~:Tl f • t• "' .. drnt1,1r('~ a fon 1·
•r, firm«r, •U>~•h•r h"l•I. Mak,... "ll-
inR murP t•n1"yAhlr. F<or mnrr..,...urH'J and comfort., U11e ~"/I STEl>Tll D•n-
tur, Ad h,1!11111 r o .. dPr. D•nl111•1
thal fi1 ar111 'ue11tl1I to hflalth, Set your df!nti1t r~11 ulo.rl7,
I
I
*31303
h:l rgain no\\" :it S~ir.;;!
Jiu,: \o\,· I h1 ;-;,•:1r.1·,.f,ru:1ry [).-·f1·rrr1l E ;1•y Payr11f'n l l'l:in. :\'11 pa~rurrir until Frl•r11 :1ry 1?;2
:FISl-IEI{"' S tereo
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2999 5
"l 'hc F i ~hcr ~() tl'nrcrsc·ti i1111 h.1,.1
'fllll Lo 1n pl c·n1en1 o! t 11111rul ". !ii\ 11 t.h -
.c._ and J.tlk" 1h.1r cn.1hlt )11u 111 !>c ·
It'll ihe ni111lc \'ti t11U \1 ~ ·y<1l1 \\i ~h f1J
li.'ltcn 111. J\1\l tu nt·r. l\J(J 1\',1.l l p1 11vcr
amplifit·r. ·1-~pccd aut11n1 .1ri c rurn-
tah!c. I.i.1 . .d1t,\·ci .~ht to nt· :1rn·1 t .111 h•_·
adjusted.# 50 l L
~rli r. l:i,JH·r :~0 1.1 (:11111 paet _\,ail-
a l>le wi1lt JJu~t ~~nyrr {1Jpl.ional. al
F-light additional co~t J . ; i -.· ... ···1
<i-Sp cakcr Console Stereo in
2 i\1agnificc ut Cahi tt «ls
l {l'~UJ11 r
Sl '>9.9:i 35988
r catures deluxe cabinetry, record stnr.tgc, tun·
in~ meter, matched 6spcaker sy~tcn11 mvod mu-
sic S\virch. Stereo alert lite and Fi\f, extcrnJl
j ack .~. )'our choice of contcn111o ra ry o r mcJi-
rcrr::i.nea n styl in~.
SHO" SUHOAT 12·NOON To S 00.p lft. • M0NDAT'O•v fi!OAT 9:JQo.m . lo 9:QO "'"' • SATUllOAYS 9:.IO <> m: fo 6:00 p.n'I; • 11(\\P.\lllC'ING ,,~, ····· .... ....... ............. """'" • 10!0 ......... ...,. """"' .......... ~01,,fot t'"" ............ " .. "'°"" . ....... . .. "" Sea rs '" "" ........ "'·"" ........... " .. """" ............... .. ..... ... '"""' C&.,T ""' "'"" Cuof(ln!••4 ,., .. ., .... ,.,, '" "" "'""" .,, .... , .. "" 7U "'' t ll UIO 01 Y•vrMt11e1 '""''"'" """"'r '""" ... ,. .. .. ,. ... """" , ..... , '"""""' ..... v""~"' P.n<~ ... , ..... ,,.,. .. 1 .. ,..,,,, .. '"' '" ''" '" "" " ' "" ,,., . .. .. ..... .. , .......... ,,, , ...... ,
. -
'
J f DAIL V PI LOf
CHECKING •UP•
Freeze Nol New,
Goe~ Bacli to 301
B~ I.. t\I. HOYD
\\"l-f£HE u1 thf' Rib!e i~ n1e1de mention r1f cats"' \0111iere.
I in told Ucld ! :11~ 11<11 f' bl'l'n dumest1ca1ed !or 4.000 vcar<;. ) et
11 e1·r 1gnon:d 111 thu.'!' 11nt1ngs Do gs. lh111c1er. <•ft' pr<llsl'd
111Pr1•1n \11ght h l'l.I E\"T ASKS 11 alt h:1h1(•s are born 111!h
blur l'.\t·" \1ni111~' 11h1!•·~ :1 l:M1ut une In 1•11·r1 fn 1· 1~ A111oni;I
'\l·g111l'' .iliuul unr u1 1'1 1•r1 ](WJ H ~r:11 b .i rof,,r that~ 1he
1·nlur '! 111,,~t ll•'llll'•rn l1.1hn•, 1·1e~
l'tJ.\:-.lllEll lh.11 llu.•b<1nd 11011 111 ht~ :-.cl"und ui;irnage Thi'
eu111pull'r 1)(11~ 11,11 1' 1lun 1• ,, ruru1011n '111 hun . tw To find ThE'
e11·t·r;1gt· It h1· l•!'ft' .1 111du11e r. he prubabl.1· was 'lUlrrie<l to
his fir~\ 111ft· l•Jf 16 1c:1r~ Then he re1narned al about tJ1e age of
44. !f tu~ l1r.•l 1n;iri-1:1ge r;t1her ended in divorce. 1fs likely he
1111]\· !11ed 111111 that 111ft' about sev£'n }e11rs. And hp remarried
;II iht· ;1g1• ul :::1 JU:.\ 111 0 and a h;ilf )ears :ifter s~1id divorce .
IT"S T llEOll F.TJCALl.Y 1x1ssible !u !ranspl;int li orguns
fn1 111 <>Ill' llu111.111 IJ(!d1 1<1 ;u1r)\her ;n ;1 single ~urg1c:1t Sl'SS1un
\IAll K .. :Tl\{j \.IE\ .~;i1 1·1·er1 third elel'lflr ~ki!lt't ~o ld g11L·~ !IJ a hndi· \\HY .11·1· ·~1 r,1ng(.1·s n~!erred h• as ··!Jt'rl1'(·t."'
pra.1"' ~rt DY •11 !clt'ph11ne btJ()ks ~hnws <I! k':l~t 29 II <I.I~
111 ~p1·ll ')1l_\ch·1· llJlllTIU:".Al.LY , 11 \ l'lilll!led f;llhrrs !•!I
daugh tc·r!' e\1'it1~11 Pl.1 t1•rHI 111 Ile better drt·<:sed th:111 1:Hhers ul I
:;on~ 0111.'
CERTAJ.\i.Y 1~ a lol 11[ prt'l't'Clt:lll fur IJrt·:-1dL0ll( \1\'on's
prize freeze. (:4,L·~ all lht 11;n· back tu .!t!l AD 11hen the Hom;1n
En1peror D10L·let1;ir1 d1 sal!o11·cd an~· further salar1 111creases
fur laborers. <orli~ans. ~rhoolm<1 ~ter~ and orator~ . :O.IOST IJlf.
f !CV LT Jorgrr1rs to dL•tect. police s;iy. ;ire those executed by
t:rin11na ls wllh rn1rrur 1·1.~1011. And suL·h !here be. Thel" !orge
:.1L;nature.~ u11~1dt' do11n . 1hus el11n1nate personal hand11r11 ing
L·haraclrns!ies of
1
tlle1r c.-1n . j
t:t:STO\IEH SEB\"J('E: Q '\\hal Uo ~ou (·all a girl 11hu s 1
:ill tht' 111111· ~t·;1 n·d tu d1•:1tl1 ~he sn1ells h.1d "· · .\ Thar..: a h1 r·
1·i•phub1ae :\•·1u;.tl1. h1n·i 1phnl11iJ 1, !lit" ll·:1r ,,( !;<•:11 i·dor ·.\111 '
told su1nt· t·11111·n" ~ul!1-r ~i, Hlllt"h fnun ~.irce <ht•\ re in1::-er~1hll"
11 th1 ·1 l;tn T ~lu1111•r ••·•t•r.il \1!1lt"" cJ01h !.J \len in •1h;.t
ll!'C'UIX.tn1n :lr"t• 11H1't :1pt lo 1111~1111!).!hl . 1111 :< •fpond job" 4,
~'.1rn1t·r~. 11 s ,;,1(! 1\ll!·r l!t.il u1 11rrlt•r 1•,,rt ll' tire11H·n . c;irpen-
tc·rs. 1xil1t'(·1nt'rl :111<1 po.-11111·11 .
;\\I ASl\E I) tu B:.Jllll' lho.,t' J"Ulll<llllll' n1;de !'l,ffS of ~t<ige.
~ereeri i!nd t1•:cv1s 11111. pasl ru1d present. who h<1\"e 11orn ha1r-
11ie<'rs. \\ho could n1er111on th<'ln ;ill".' Can only think of Fr:1nk
Sina1r;1. ll ugh [)011·ns. J or~· Bishop. Lorne f:reene. Fred Astaire.
J a<'k Benny. Fr:1nk .\1agt'l'. R~x ,Harrison. {;rne Kelly. Hurt Lan-
(·astcr. Let• .J. t 11hb. Sl':ln Cuiinery. Rin g Crosby. :0.lel Ferrer,
ll<'nr1 r nnda. F1·rd :\l ;1C'\!urr.1 .l :u.:k f';,~,r :'llieke~· f{oonr~.
Bai-r; Sul11·:i11. \:111 11,,11111 an d t"lc1rk 1;;1ble Dirl I n1b~ an.1·!
) ,, 1r 'I ''
1• ,I/ fd' '"'1'
f'/('(I'{ 111/1! •'
'ti ,,,,,/ ! f/U•l"('HI !)If' ,·1•/('/11111'1/ 1!1111
r 111-:1 ;,,·/\(; I I' ·1•1'•1'1<'' fl''" /I/,•
,1,1,, 1 "' , ' !" /. \/ Hrii11/ /' {} l~n·.
H iroliito Lo V isiL
'F uvo rite' --E1igl£111d
TUl\)0 1l l'l1 -1:111ptr11r
ll1rulut11 of ,);1p;i11 j, lo1ul uf
b1.it1 anun.1111111· :ind l·:u r'<>i•l'
ll 1n1h11u . \•ho~e 1•1111 ll'lp
nt11 ~1de u j .lt1p;11 \ \1 no;. ;1 'I\
ino111h t\!'lll'~1011 !(I Eu1 .ip,. ill
~t ars ai.:ci. 1-: ~11111i~ l1p 111\
(la~·s this tnl\ 1ii.11t•11•1 1111111•
he tour:. sci L'll l·'.lll"11pt•;\I\ • r11111
Ines. l!\~ rrturn 1u Eu11>pt· 1..::
tlw lu\11ll111('lll 1•t ;1 l1l ••\p11~
dretull
ll1111hLl•1 1.· 1hr lunc1"1 1t·1~11-
'l'hirl\ l\.id~
\Vi 11 :\.''an 1:-
For llt'lp
1 1!1rl~ !)111 ,,11d ..:111' l••I•
lif'1lt1I t•LI 111 I lit• \1·11·1u 11 I I :,.,11 I
P:irk~. Bl·:11 1 .... 1nrl lit·( 11.1
!1011 i)t·p~11"1i .. 1'1il 101 111f II
p<1rlu ·tpal l••ll ii' ~ U Ill II\ I I
-tia~eb;1!l 111••i.:1.1111-111 1•·• • 111
("{'l"t'tllllTlit'~.
Sl>l'l"l;ll ! •'I l\~11111••11 .1\\.!I !I ·
lll'l"l' l!.ll l'tl "II 1111 11,1,1• "'
. ~por1~1nan~h111. ~ .. 1111111110~ .11
1cnd<inL·t· 1t11d 1 '"1\J('1.1111111
Thusc lui1IDf cll 11·1 t•111•d :i
1·ert1hcate. ;1 lt·\lt•1 .. 1 •'•I•
1:ratulat1011~ lru111 I 'J\H < nl11
1n1ssion cha1nn;111 I Lill !'>t·i·b
and ;i c11~· nf '\r111>int 1\1 .. uh
l'1nb\e1n. The pr{' ~I' 11 I ,J I I ,, II ,<I
Tuesdil\"·s !'l·:H , •11111111•~1un
nlerting 11.1~ .1!1~ 111.l1\ I!·,
about 100 p:1rrlll' and 1:11n1l1
friends
Eighteen i,:11'b "•'1 '' l1111•1JI 1·01
fron1 !hr solll1all 11n11.t1<1111
Thev are·
3r-d <1nd 4th gr:1dr 1>t·h1.J1
Cla r. Kari Hush. ~ h., !' 1 1
Sle{·ens. Dorothy V a u g h I
l~slie \\'11lin 1ns and .1 ;1111111·
Gegler.
-5th and 6th grade. l'att 1
\\'ells. l\aren Raker . Candi
~1ontgomer~· . .Jeannie Ell;ide'
J\lichel!e \\'inne :ind P11\ Oun
can.
-7th and 81h ~r;111r Eilcl'n
Rose. l\risten (ll~on. P11111
Knox. J\!11111 <:eblcr. (;and}
Corsini and (.'hr1sl!ne Deihl
The 12 ho)~ honored f11r
baseball Bill J\l uh~. .lohll
J\lurphy, J\1all l'al111cr, Hick
Palmer. J\l1kr Borges. l\ris
Dunn. David !less, J\lonlc
l\•erson. ~l ike ,J(Jhn.:;011. J\lark"
\lagruder l'n1 nk \'l·ncl11."k anrl
Hon l'icrott1
ing 1111,uarL·h 111 lht' 11t11 Id 11:11
111~ ,;11 11n lh<" 1·h:-ysrinth1•rnun1
1hr"t1(' fur JlllJ H' 1h;111 44 .1't iJI"'
lft· 11n ~ •·11l•·n:111u'd 111
f111 n1:ilh !)1· 111u•I 1\j !lit 1"0\':11
l.11nil11•' 1i. l<11 rnpf• 111 1•121
llh\'11 :1~ l"f'Pl•J1 /JfllH'l'. IJ1· 11 ;1~
'l'lll lllPl'f' lo "'liro;ul('!I 111,
hor11<1n•;' :or1tl h:i~ ll•ni.: ~1ni·t>
'l';tl"lll'U 111 r•·1U111
1·1r,1 l\'urltl \\,11 I! ;111d !hl'n
;; :l.'1I 1-.u pt'riutl fol Pl'llll('l\t"f•.
f>/"1),!'rt\JE·d 111· I )r 11•nt;d 1•!l11t·~
1n.1dc· ~u1·11 .1 111p 11111>'•·~1l1lt·
Tht• 1·u1 ''111 IJ •P 11111 li1· l.11
11\H! I' l'>fJIJ:1j 111;11+ Ill' !'.!I lio•r
••II" Th" 1!111•·1;111 1•11 r!u•
t"' 1~·n ·r :1 ·,/1· 11111 Lll'' 111:111
"lll h1· 1n1p111;,1 l1 ••w11i~ .11111
01·1l:1l1•1IL' 11••1'! 111•• 't• 1
.1 lu·1!11I•· I' 1 I'. 111,! In 11111•1 .1h·tl
Tli!'lt I' .ti'" ;op1,fl\, (' d1f
I "I t'fl( I' 111 ! Iii I \\<' I• 1IJl l1t'\'
1111, d11:' 1 .. 11111 "1!11!11.! I 1"11•.
' 11'1 I•"' l,,I 111•,1 1· p·.11·1 11.il tn11,!f
I 11 ,,111 I :!1 .. 11 did Iii' i:fll
ti I)'
I·' "'1• )1p1 1111'111•·HI lit· s1 1·p'
1dl 1>1• :(·111 .1·1 ~(pl ~; :11
\1t1·l1 .. 1,1 ,, \1;1 i.,1 tilE· l1r~t
11111<' ;J .:;1p:ilH'C" 1'11\)ll'llll \1'11 1
I• •'I h,1\ •• ""! 111111 11 11
\1111·111·,111 ~"11 ;111U ~h;ikr~
1111• t1:11nJ •ii l'n· 1dt·11 r B11·hnr<I
'\1\011 ll 111ol111u 1111! ~l;ind
l11!11r1 !11• 1"11 Id "' 1lu· ·'' rllbol
to! t!11· 11111 lfl • th11 fl t It 11,:,1 11;1 •
l1u11
h1Llo·1·d ~ll!ll r .J ;1 jJ .. n 1' ~ f
11!J,1 ·111•r• l1t•lu·11• th.ti thr
••111 1i.t·1·1t11 ·~ l11p 1·111.Jld r1ut h.il c
1111111· :11 ~1 l)t:tlrr 11111e. In lhc·
t.u·r nl •lra~l l<' t'l'oruunu· and
d1pl"1n.iln 11•:i!J1111111•ol'. lh('
ul"!'I I •!"' lo1·l11•\1 111:11 !ht• ll"IJl
11111 ' 11.ilJlr• th•· 1·111p1·n1r In
1111111111 •' 1!\f' 1111a1.:1· nf hi"
11 "1 111 ,~1111 •.1•11 4 ·1111~1·11 1u~ 11~1
11<111
llqiloll!l:1T1i ll'lllt·1Hf<1~ :l"ld('
1111' l11p lo11· ili1· 1·111p1•ro1 '' lhe
l11l l1ll1n1·111 ••I ;1 l"11i! ·~tund•n;.;I
l\1 ,11 i.1 1r:i11·I ul1l~1dt' .Japan
1111 1lu· 111~1 t1n11' -1nr1• h•'
;1<t·1·ndt•d lbl· i1npt•r1:1I lh1011l'
111 l!ti1;
It 11 111 llf' li1r t1r~t t11p
1111111hf'n.· 1nr lho• , n1p1To; .•
111fe. l''.n1p1 ,.,, \,tl!'•k" .111d
lht' t"!lllll'I'••!' I" r1·1~11t1·d l•I t~·
••111ln;dlt·d 1101 ••1111 <11 r r
r1'lll1"f11tl1' to Eu!'o111.• h u 1
h('1·;1u,1· II II 11! lw· \lo1~~1hli '"'
ti1~ 11111 1,, ~,., !ht· i •11 111n•·n1 '"
"rll.
It I' II" ,,.,.1 , 1 huw 11111<·li
/11rnhllo ILkPd iu~ ""1 l1t•t 1 1 11
In Eun.pt' 111 ,, 1,111· 111·11, ''Uh··
ferencc 1111h \ n1t1 11 ;i 11
rcportt·r~ 111 1'1!11 11 11· 1"11p1i ni·
"'<IS a~ked 11hat 11;1' !hi' 11,,p.
µ1esl lln1c of luJ. l1h• 1
"l)UrillJ: Ill\" I 1•11 f 11 J.~n~land."' th!' 11 "n:i 1 rl1 1
rrphcd.
HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY !
Hang-a-Shade Famous "Pincor" Self Propelled
LIGHT FIXTURE REEL MOWER
• Cleon, contemporary styling -this fixture
con be used in any room.
• 16 inch styrene shade in your
choice of smoke, oronge or yellow
with on 8 inch glass globe.
•Includes 12 ft . chrome cha in with
16 ft . cord and oil necessary
hardware.
SAVE $4.00!
REG . 513.95
TUES . & WED . ONLY !
''Badger'' By lnsinkerator
"A Great Fall
fix-up Buyl"
V 2 h.p. Briggs & Stratton 4 cycle engine
with recoil storter.
V Cutting height adjustable
from 3/11 " to 3".
V Cast iron wheels with 9 14" tire s.
V Heavy duty steel & cost iron ch ossis.
V 18" cutting operation.
V Meets all safety standa.,ls.
REG. $89.99
SAVE 520.00!
$
TUES. & WID. ONlYI
Ctt~:.t.·I
<iARBA<iE DISPOSAL Hand Painted ~EXICAN POTTE RY
Severo/ styles in bright colo rs & beautiful d . FEATURES :
• y, h.p. motor. • p f es1gns.
er eel for your favorite plant, odd color
lo your garden _ 'II
L. • you wont several a t • Continuous feed operation.
• Stainless steel grinding elements. tnis grve-away price.
• 1 yr. warranty-U.l. approved. Values ta $3.99 YOUR CHOICE
REG . 526.99 SAVE s1.00!
$ 77
badger
TUES, & WlD. ONLYI
All -Weather VinYI
ROLL-UP BLINDS
• Full sun protection fo r breezeway,
porch or patio.
•Mode of non-fode 1/," PVC oval plastic .
• Ready to hong -ha rdware included.
•Avoc ado or white.
Jft.x 6ft. $169
R(G. $2.69 .......
4ft.x61t. $229
REG. $J.49 .......
5ft.x6ft. $299
REG. $4.J9 ........
TUlS. & WID. ONLY!
1 Inch x 6 inch x 6 ft.
REDWOOD FENCING
• Surround yourself wi!h the rich color & !e ll.lure
of redwood.
.
I I I
I ·-. -·-
LJ_
~-
I --
• Durable, fong-lo sting,
eosy to in 1toll.
REG .
59c 39c
l.U£5 . & WlD. ONl YI
7 '/411 Electric
POWER SAW
• Quality built by Skil-the finest
name in power fools.
• l 3/, h.p. motor.
SAVE s2~00!
•
• In cludes blade,
sawdust e je ction
system and accu-
rate control
guides. 4 1715
REG. $19.99
TUIS. & WED. ONLYI
AUTOMATIC
PERCOLATO R
• Brews 8 to 1 2 cups.
•Keeps coffee serv•'lg· .. O!.
• Safety top 1lcy1 put
when you pour,
• Avocodo for1>1h.
REG.
$12.99
SAVE
$4 .00!
TUES . & WED. ONLY!
TUES, & WED. O l'll Y!
Vinyl Covered
BAR STOOL
• Comfy podded 1eols
lop sturdy hordwood
fram es.
• Sll!Oh swivel-they're
great for kitchen,
bar or den.
• 24" or 30" high.
REG. $10.99
SAVE OVER $J .00
TUlS. & WlD. ONl YI
/
"
• • .. " .... lt""'·· ~ (_-·.
.. ,
-• •
MRS. JAY MAHONEY, MRS . REED BAUMAN SHIPWRECKED?
Ann La nders
Doe s Job
Opportunity
End at 4 0?
DEAR ANN LA NDERS : \\.'h at is a
woman suppnsed tn dn when she reaches
40? Kill herself? I'm too young for Soci al
Secufity and trlll old lo gel a job. Perso n-
nel directors !hcse days are interested
only in girls under 30 v.·Hh measurements
of 36-25-34.
I am an experienced sccret;iry h;n'ing
V.'(l rked fnr 14 years fnr two fine bosses. [
quit 11•nrk three years ago !n !ra1·eJ 11·ith
an elder\.1· woman v.·hn needed a cnm·
panion . Eight months ::ign the v.·nman
died. I've been trying unsuccessfully, to
get a job ever since. ~ty shorthand is ex-
cellent. typing. spell ing and grammatical
construction superb. f can manage an of~
fire and do bookkeeping if necessary.
Per1odically I note campaig ns to hire
the: handicapped, hire the veterans and
hire mrrnbcrs of minority groups -
H1111' ;ihoLit a c;impa1gn to hire 40-year.
o!d 11·0 1nen~ \\'E r\EED !I F.LP. -
JlETR EAD FR O:\\ l'E \St\COLA
~--f
I • • .
' I I
Fun Tunes
The spotlight will focu.s on mll.\JC in
October as Orange [,ounty Philharmonic
Society committees tune in their talents
to rais ing funds.
Sb.ipwreek on Shark Island casts
members of the Linda Isle crew in the
Lind.a Isle Beach and Clubhouse for grog
and gab at 6:30 p.m. on Sa turday. Oct. 9.
Foll owing an 8:30 p.m. d i nner,
nien1h£'rs will receive prizes £or cos tumes
and dance to !he music of a lively combo.
On 1'.1onda y, Oc t. 11. the chant of ali<··
tionee r John 5<.'0tt Trotter 11.'ill herald
Lido Isle Comm ittee·s annual Glamour
Auction. The silent and oral auction ~·ill
begin lit I I a.m. in the ba yfront home of
the Thayer Crispins.
r-.lrs. Richard J\leClure. committee
chairman, will be assisted by officers the
r-.-imes. J!'lhn Farrer. Fr<ink Bret , Paul
Elmquist and 1\ndrew Dossett.
~1rs. Cl inlon East m;:in i." coordinator of
the auction along 11.·lth the 11.tmes. J ohn
l .. aun . J<1me s Bradeson, John Scruggs and
\\'1lliam r-.1ead .
llilrs. DQnald r-.·letzger will head the food
committee "'hich consists of the Mmes.
Nei l Davis. Dossett, Laun . Scruggs and
\Vi!liam i\1orris.
Mrs. Richard Patterson "'ill be assisted
by members of the Men's Comm ittee and
J\lrs. Donald Tippett is in charge of setup
11.·ith 1'.1rs. Brel on cleanup:
In preparation for the annual event.
~1rs. Elmqu ist has conducted a summer
\vorkshop for items iA the silent aucti on.
?-.frs. Robert Vord.ele and ~1rs. Stanley
~lolander are in charge o~ the oral auc·
lion.
..
•
.· I
/ ,.-
Looking at the world through o child's
eyes is ai m of Mrs. Honk Holt, director
of Sulliv a n Preschool Center. The mother
of nine a chieves growth through success.
DEAR Rt:: l'erhaps you ha\'en't bef'n
back in th e country long enough to catch
up \\'ith th e nr\\·s, but the economy Is In a
slump and mosl firm!i 11re not hiring,
they are fir ing. A woman with your ex·
perience and "'nrk recflrd, howe1·er,
1bl'\u ld hal"e an ea~irr time th an the
chick, fres h out of 5ecretarial liichool -
even ""ith her J6-25-34. Check the rmp\oy-
mrnt aj!:encies regularly, read the "·ant
ads In th is paper and pass. lht word
among your friends that you want work.
Outlook Aids Vision
DEAR ANN LAN D~~RS : I hClpe the guy
whnsr girlfrirnd kreps throwing his ring
back in his f;:ice every time they have an
argun1Pnt "'ill sec this and . .1:et smart.
\Vhen J\1aggie and I were going together
she used to lhrow her engagement ring in
n1v face every two weeks . I used to think
it ·was kind of cute the wa y her eyes blaz-
ed and her chin would go up and she"d
11tan1p her tiny foot. '
I thought llhe'd outgrow her lempcr
tantrums efter wt were married, bul I
,,·as wrong. Maggie is still throwing
things -bottles. frying pans. hockey
sticks. anything handy. tr we didn't h;i.ve
a house full of kids. I'd take off but now
it 's out of the queslion.
I hope the young guys out there "·tm
have hot-tempered girls will see this and
head f1Jr the hills . -COt\STRUCTION
WORKER \.\1HO WEARS HIS HARD HAT
L.'i THE HOUSE.
lJEA R HARD HAT : Th11nks for lhe
tr.•timnn~·. For tbo5e who came In late. 11!1 rrpral: Onn'l eirp11ct marriage f.o
p ·e.rten tbe dlsPo~IUon or Improve I bad
le mper. Most cbange1 after marriage are
fo r lhe "·nrsc.
By JJ::AN \\'ILLIAi\IS
'c1 th• 0111, 1'1111 11111
"We 're not bahy-sitlers,'' 1aid Mrs .
Hank Holt. referring tn those in her field
of early childhood education,
The director of a newly-<>pened pre-
school center in Founta in Valley is
enthused over the way preschools are
being recognized as educational
"lt's exciting to find parents more In·
terested in preschool." she said, ''and the
interest Is extending into the com·
munily.·•
~1rs. Holl, who ha.~ 22 years of ex·
perience, not only heads 11 staff of 20 five
days a week al the &ehool but continues
to teach night cuurses in child develop-
ment at Orange [,(last l!nd Saddleback
college s,
'"Being conncclcd with R JUn 1or coll('Rt.
cnn$Lant.l y gives you new ideas," she
said, "It keeps you gro\\'ing."
She 1s bRppy tfl "ee education 11v111h1ble
for preshool teachers at the college level
and she anticipates that eventually junior
•
college students may work for college
credit at a school such as the Sullivan
Center.
She also is hopeful that legislation
~hort!y will enable students to receive
credenlia!s in early childhood education.
A former director of Head Start pro-
grams in Bellflo\\·er and Pasadena and
the Children's House in Orange. ~1rs.
Holl also led a p11renl-chlld workshop at
Orange Coa st College.
Besides her professioneJ training at the
Cni\'ersity of Cal ifornia, Berkeley. she
has had challenging personal experiences
in child raising.
She and her husband, 11n Interior
designer: have nine children now ranging
in age from 21 to 30.
Al the time they were married 10 years
ago, the. chil dren already composed part
of the family picture : but seven were his
and two were her s.
11.frs. Holt adm its that t;everal of the
youngsters were "skeptical "' that they aU
could livt. happily as one family,
Although there were adjustment pro-
•
h!ems in the beginning. eventuall y the
nine children became as c!ose as a.ny
brothers and sisters.
"It's one thing to read textbooks ,'' Mrs.
Holt commented , "and another to feed
and house and care fo r the need11 of
childl'en under your own roof."
At the Sullivan 'Preschool she
and her staff Arc concentrating on the
goal of all early childhood development
teachers: to make each child have a feel·
ing of success and to meet each child's
needs at his level.
When asked what problems she might
face with the children she said. •·we
never think in negative lerms. Rather
than think of problems. we loo k for
change and growth. \Ve 're here to help
the child grow.''
G111ncing nut her office window al the
multifaceted side~ of the strik ing
geodesic domes that house the school . IJle
you thful appearing director concluded,
"We hnve tn keep 11 ynung viewpoint. \.\'e
look at the "·orld through the child "s
eyes.''
fl•wlo ... ,..., ••••• ' ...... .. -... , ........ .. .. . ! .• . ---o ·-····---~
. -I
Music
Diversifie d wo rkers (left lo rig ht I t he
Mmes . J ohn Laun, Jomes Bradeson an d Vinc ent
Healy turn out po inting , needle point a ncl
sewing for Philh a rmoni c'• Glamour Auction,
6men
BEA AND ER SON, Editor
M1111011. StP!omb" 11, 1111 l'Ht II
Desire for Life
Creates Miracle
Ty White. V.'ho su rvived !>O 1nany grave
life-threaten!ni.? ailments !hat a doctor
dubbed him ''the ba hy \\•ho refused to
die." 11 nd his mother, Pal. who i r;
credited fnr instilling in him "the desi re
tn live·· dunni;: hrr Foor.month 1·ii;i:il at his
side . ha ve gone hnrnt' lo \\le slm1nslrr
lrnn1 Long He::it·h's chtldren·~ hospi tal.
Tv"s and l't1l's ordeal began nn
i\lnther·s Day, ,\!r1y 9, 11.·hen her labnr
pains started ;:i s she \\'a.~ on a fan11 l.v
outing nn the banks of Nnrthern
Califo rnia 's San Joa quin River and ended
on Srpl. J6 \\'llh his discharge from the
hospital.
The beg1nn1nl!, of l;.1b11r h<id lra~ic
overtone.<; for r-.1rs. Frank \\'hite .Jr.
It was in 1he .<;ixth month. Her 1h rre
earlier presnancirs h;id ended in miscar·
ri;:ig:es and two nr the~e . she pa infully
recall ed. were si>r-month babies. A~ she
was rushed to Lodi · Memorial Hospital.
she had "no hope at all."
SLOW I.ABOit
f'or the next two days. a procession of
doctors examined her and ordered in-
travenous alcohol to 11low her labor. Pal's
memorv becomes h;:izy but s h e
remembers !hat ''they ga ve me so much
alCT1hol, I was drunk when they put me on
the plane Ill take me home to my Long
Be<it h obsletriei;:in Dr. Jtobert \Velis.
Meanwhile. her f;ith cr, Thomas J.
?-.1etzger, 11 rrstdcnt of Wes!minster t1nd A
30.year veter;:i n of the l...os Angeles City
fire Department . arranged for an LA FD
11mbu!;:incc to meet Pat at International
Airport and rush her to Memoria l
Hospital hlcdical Ce nter of Long Beach
on ~1ey 12. .
Doctors at Long Beach Memoria l
managed tn slow labor of another two
and a half da ys but labor began pr(}o
gressing and couldn'I be dela yed. longer.
On t.iay 15, the Cesarean operR\Jfln wa&
performed. The 3.pound. 2-nun ce infant was placed
in a tran.~port incubator with battery-
operated life support systems and rushed
do"'" the corridor that connects Long
Beach Memnria\'.11 m11temity floor to tht
infMt special Intensive care ~nil in . the
adjacent Earl and Loraine Miller
Ch\ldrcn'li Hospital Medital Center.
For the fir!il four months of his life , Ty
\.\'ould rarely leave the brightly . ii·
lumin11!ed room or even the prottcl1ve
rnnfines or the enclosed incubator with
its arr11y of electron ic monit oring equ ip-
ment :ind life support gear.
Dr. Selrten C. Beebe , Ty's Jlf'diatrician ,
over those four months quarterbacked a
team of 16 doctors in various specialties.
Seventeen nur11es. at times singly or !.n
teams, would be monitoring and carini
fnr the infant 11roum:I the clock from
spring: to fall.
'"Ty '>\:enl throui::h six to eight criliies.
eac·h of 1-1•hich had no more than about JI
10 pt"r<'<'nl chanC"e nf ~urv1v;1 I," Dr. Be~
said. "The house staff (pediatric inten!t
;:i nd residents 1. the nurses and all lhl
ph~·sir1;:ins involvrd 11·rre cont inuous'.)'
amazed at Ty·s stamin<1 and his desire
nnt tn d1r. Ifs truly amazing becauie
each ont" of thesr episodrs. by itself. wat
enough to h;:i ve ended his life.''
\\"ILL TO LIV~ ·.
Stressing that '"there is such a 1h1ng ai
a psychological will to live In some tiny
infants." Dr Recbe cred ited Pat \Vhi~t
for the "willin.[l ness lo spend as mucb
tin1e with Ty as she did and the lnve Md
affection and cuddling she gave him." ·
\\'hen the pediatrician can1e by to vistl
Pat in her own hospital room the day
after de livery and SUJ:gested she fa ke a
wheelchair ride to her son's side she
reflected ''what J?ood would I be doing'!''
But she went that day and for the next
fQur month s was to average two visits i
day, seven days a \\'eek.
"I watched P;:it stand there next to the
isolette day after d;;y and I 1aw her give
her streflg!h to the baby,'' observed Mrs.
Thomas ""· Metzger, Ty'.~ matemlll
grandmother.
"Any child that's ill, especially in the
fir .<;t few months of life has lo be held·,
has to be shown love ... because wllhodt
this the child is just a: piece o[ pro-
toplasm th at's trying to be maintained,''
Dr. Beebe added. ·~
''.Just watching Ty turn his head at the
~und of rny voice. smile or kick when·t
touched him . and even respond when Q;11
nurses played tapes of me or music ("hi*
favorite is ·~J ary Pflppins' "l answered
my question on what good I could do for
him." Pat said.
"He did goed for me. too, during thoM
four months." she added. "I could bt
~·ith him and know that he was mine. I
could feel like 11 mother.''
And Ty's doctors aTid nurses. knowlnl or the three previous miscarriages •nd
Pal's strong feelings about motherhood.
battled overwhelming odds to do their
part ln keeping him alive. As Or. Beebe
put it: "Everybod)' from before his birth
on lhrou~h -In Lodi, Sacramento and
Long Beach -felt this was a premium
baby "'ho just hatl · to be brougb&:
thro11i;:h ."
(See DES IRE TO LIVE , Pa1e 18)
I
----. ,r -·~--· • Out ol the Mouths ••.
Soun ds of Music Previewed
Nothing Hurts Like the Truth
Uy EH.\IA BO)llJECK
There is an old l::nglish pro-
\'erb that Sit)'S. ··If ~OU want
the trut11. ask a ch ild."
\\'ell . v.ho 11·aots 11·: I ha\"e
suffer1·d rnure seH·confidence
breakdo1v11s a.~ a re~ul l of
r h1!dren s '"honesty and in·
l1•grllJ" rh1111 any "''01nan has
<I right !11 .!.Urfer.
Fn,111 thll~c ..... on de r r u ! ,
hunl'~l kids 11ho ga1·e nie,
"Bil~, 1110111. \Ollr arms are l>1~ger tflan Broo k s
Hob1n.~on 's," l also hal"e heen
t.hvv.ert'd v.1!h such gems as.
··t.;1ugh fur LProy, so he can
hear J11U snort "
\\"h.Jt ;ire ~vu ~(•1ng to be
11 f1c11 ~1·u gru11 up. ~\om~·'
··~1 .'.lrk"s rnr,th er said _\'QU
1'<11 ~o 111<Jtl\" T\" d1nnrrs th;:it
11l1cn they ·ni:11v .\1,u"JI hal"e
lhf' 1n~1dl's of a bnde. \\"ha\"s
1h;1t r11rnn'1"
"\\ t1;1rs hoinebakrd cookies,
~111111····
"llry. lha1 r1i:ron 1s here to
\J111 .\ uur rar ''
AT
WIT 'S
END
'"J erry's mother is a size 101;::::==---=====;
v.·ho l:ilill v.•f!ars her pompons, YOU C AN'T
3nd marching boots around· the h°"se."" I HIT A
"\\lhal"s the n1atter 11·1th BULL'S EYE
I hilt?"
•·r-.'othing H you ·re under Jj. W ITH A
Kow go play:· BLANK
make a notse, bul they sound From the window, I hc;i rd CARTRIDGE
nea t." him calling his fr iend, Je:Ty J ~n> ..,~ •• ·~•n >O<I Cl ft 00 t ,\5 a mother. I naturally '"lie\. Jerr\·. do v1Ju knn\1· \1 hr ~·'r". " ~ ,,~ .... 1ou• ·~· ··~·'
have taught m v children to rny ·.\loin tias 11 "111p II' hen she 1,, • ., • r' c••••rd o~ vi w1·11 fl••• .
1
yw '-"·•!·~~ "'''"·" m,~M11' tell only the truth every time s!ands up·! And 11 hv sht>
they open their mouth. As a doesn'l v.·e11r horpant~·.' \\<1 1t The
cov.·ard, I also ha\'e been Id! r tell you 11·h;it she sa1d l
knO\f!l tu feed them in· about you r mother." KNIT WI T
tr a venously and keep them un-l suppose you ha1 e all heard
der seda!ion when I can. the old pro1·erb ;ihout telling 1
The other day as I was 1hl' truth ... e1·en \1hen it l sou•~ c0~•1 P 14••
k. d h k h h··rts'. LOWE ii MA.lt. \~tir ·1ng aroun t e llC' en " c011, ,,..~,.
n1y s•1n asked, •·\!om, v.hy Thal kid isn't going to he $o liii
d t1 you ha1·e a lap v.·hen you able In sit on his integrity forl
sta rid up·.' ·' a week ! c·"'"'"'"-------,,,,.--.,,,-~
"\\"hen you have babies, ;1 lf;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;;~~-:'.::'::'.~~~~~~-;I snmet1m('s takes 20 or 30[j b:;~· .. to gel Y0"' Jig"" PROFESSIONAL
"Is th11t \vhy you don't v.•ear
hotpants'.'"' -If I
1'1rs. /\!Jan S . .Johnson 1lefl J ancl fll rs. Ric ha rd Ne1~1ell,
get the mess<1ge fron1 !\!rs. \1ictor !\'lalzah n's violin
about the first .. ·ral king i\l u~it" previe1v of the
Orange County Philha rmonic Society's new season.
No ted violinist and conduc tor, 1-lenri Temianka,
\\'ill den1onstrate p assages fro1n orchestral 111orks
on Thursday, Sep t. 30. The preconcert lectures a re
designed to in crease understanding an d app recia·
lion of major musical compositions. Sessions are at
f.d1v ard's J\:e1vport Center Theate r.
· ~ly 1111,th!'I" c;111't t·11n1e In
tile tluor r1ow. ~lit'.S h1d1ng in
tht' f11rn.'.lte rnorn.''
"1\1 0111, didn't you ~ay you
krirw Dully illad1 son~"
··1\·hat n1<1 krs that nn 1se
11 hrn yflur legs rub to,l!ethr r
v.·hen you v1al k ~ Crickets
•. , don't ""'ear ho!pan ts 0 essons
""'"" 1m g;rdle hangs °"'
ahout 17 inches."
'"Jerrv·s moth er wears hot·
pants,'.-he said.
Neckline
Double s
GOLF SCHOOLS
FOR
Your Horo scop e To morrow
Gemini: Sweeping Changes 1n
• Future
A t1\"0·part combinatio n by
Leo l\"a rducci for fa ll features
a double-coy,·led neckline on a
form·f1tting long s I e e v e d
sweater top .
. <\nd -11 long dressy skirt in
gray flannel v.·1th red and
green felt apphques. The
cli1uble·cri11'led neckline does
double du t\'.
TUESDAY
SEPTEMBER 2B
By SYD\ .. ~\' O'.\I AR!l
AR IES (~l ilrch 21·Apnl l!"l1 ;
Am bitions n1ay r o11f11cl \1·11h
lrgal cD 1nn)1tn1ents Hr willing
lo spend. but ,t:l'l rn1111ey·s
worth. fJu ild !1111·:ird S<'C11r1l y.
TA UHUS I Apri l 20·.\!:iv 20 1:
nesires fu lfilled if ht•;lilh fill"·
tors arc con!-idrred illPans
a1·oid taking on too 1nt1rh ;1l
once . Chec k d11'l Kel'Jl reeC'nt
resolutions.
Gf<.:1\llNI 1~1;1y 21·,/unr 2n1:
(:reative tlri1 ·e is hi(!hlii.:titrd.
\'ou get things dont'. Be n•iJdv
for s11·eC'ping c·han~!t'!i. :iddrd
oppi1rlun1ties. Aquuri us Pl'r.~011
plays r r11011 nrnl rulr. Ai1n
to1vard futurt•. nf'lt p;1~!. !\"u
morP i;,r-ll-n·enn11nt1!1ons.
CA:\CEH !.lune :ll·.l 11h 22 \:
Son1e hab1! r1:i\1{•f11" .~ll hJlTl tu
revision. I.Ion'\ ;1\1P111p! lo
block pro~rc~s. F :1 111 i I~·
me n1hrr 01ay br s111~·t•rr .. r1·l
misinfor111ed Be lo\ al 111tlh.111t
bC'1ng fooli.~h. ·
l.EO 1July 2'.J.Aug 22 1· llf'
selec!ivr . Ar!1uns !i:1~ed nn
in1 pulsc cnuld be l ' (• s L I y .
VIRGO (Au g. 2'.l·Sept. 22 •:
riirrrtinn nll11• claims you are
b<'ing t1>11 :-:eriuus
SCllBl'IO 10r! 2:1-\.,1· ~I \:
\·ou 111:1y lt:i1 e !o enib;irk on
shn1t juurrll'.v !u 11·nfy in·
f11r111at 11111. n11·ssa hl'. Hr fusc to
br held l>c1ck bv one who c-on·
t111der~t.1nd.
IF T()IJAY JS YOLH
HIHTllD/\Y IOU are <l n
oru!lnal th1nkCr You ~eldllm
follow crov.·d. You are con-
ccrned 1·.ith \1·elfare of 11!her~.
~11u could exh ibit special in·
ten'sl 111 ~·bem1stry. Start
niade this year -hu~1ne~s fl r
personal -1nll flourish 1n
~our heh;itf. Old paltt'.'rns
change. Yuu will he making a
new path for .\OtJrself
perha ps a nc11J narne in a dif-
ferent professional endearor.
It can be pulled (l\"C?r the
head for a hooded look.
i:;t;1nrlv tornplrlins. Li1r )<1tlr
1111·n life. Then vou ,~·1 11 also
n1akc loved ones'happicr.
SAGITTARI US !No\'. 22·
nee. 21 1: r.1on<'Y oppor!un1 ty
due . f\ey is 1u follov.· through
Agendas Spotlight Hobbies
1)1 1 rncndly :i d vier . ,f ug· Beta Sigma Ph i
J.:l'!>lio11s. i\ew 1,utlook is called f\ 1·:1("aU11n 0111l·t11111 tn henef1t
/Hr: t:1k<1 ;1 n1ore indepl111dcnt !hr ('~st1c F1hrosis ncse;irch
!i1;i oce. A~soci:ite.c; 1nay ho11•e l "t·Htl'r in Or:u1gr Coun !y is
1li:-.pute. Heinaiu objecti1·1.. pl:inned 1111 \\ednesd;i~·. Sept.
CAl'KICOH\I (Dec. 22.J:in. ?l. b1· lhc X1 X1 1'1 Chapter
Eli: \"our goal may h(' l'X· liC'la S1gn1:-1 l'h i.
pe11Sil"e. Cct f;ic!s. /1gurrs. t11rs. .101111 _i\1 o q u 1 n.
l.1•n1·l' S/1Cl"Ulat1on 10 others. pl11!an!hrop1C" 1·hatr1n11n. wil l
111· sure of 11ilcrr 1·ou :ire hf':H!· ~·J>t·n her Co!-la \1esa hume for
t·d ~ :uid \1l1y. \\"l'11"Dtni· t!'uth 1!~ 111·t:i~11u1. Sl·heduled to
-il n•allv t"<Jn sel \(1U !\'('£\ -8fg1 n :1l 8 p Ill.
.f11d ~tnf'11t .' inlui!ion \~ork r"ln\V-----..___ M d"I 1.
111 1ot1r h1·l•:1H. e 1 a ion
Ai/lJAIOl"S (.l:iri . 20 F<'b. The ~111dr111~ lntrrn;itional
<"Of)king and crafts acli\1!1cs
1v11J begin nn \\'cdnesday, Ott.
6. for the grour. \I h1t'h 1s
~pnnsnred hy !he l.;iguna
Beach Junior \\"on1an·s Club.
Garde n C lub
i\lemhcrs ul the llarhor
\'iew llllls (;ardl'n Clu b \1111
gathrr at 12.30 11.m. on
\\'ednrsdav, Sept. 29. HI the
Cornna drl ~1ar hnn1 e Of .1\lrs.
\\'illiam M:1grutler.
Follo11'i11g_rlhe bus 1 n c s .c;
nieet1ng !\lrs.• .Jc;tn H.irri s wil l
~i\·e a lecture demons!rat1on
of F11ll Flor11 I Arrangements
for !he Horne.
con11n11nieatlon v.·1!1
his talk.
Hlustrale
Westward Ho
i\Jen1bers or 1he \Vest1rard
!lo <"harter, Daughte rs of the
Jlnt1sh En1p1re are plann1n.I! to
n1eet at I 11111. on \\'ednesday,
:-iepl. 29. 1n lhe Laguna Beach
hDn1e of l\lrs. A n d re w
J\lorth!and.
tl1rs. Joseph Stawic ki, Cl-IOC
Guild Coord inator , will ac-1
quaint prospective members
v.·ith CHOC during the ID a.m.
el"ent in the Costa r-.lesa home
of t-.lrs. A. F'. Dugger.
Las Damas
r lans for the Darnas de
Caridad Bal l v.·ere outlined
during the group's general
meeting in the Fu\1rrtnn home
Din ner Club of ~lrs. \\"il!ian1 J\loorc.
fllrs. Hov.·ard Pelti e r , ~!alls ~lcd1a Hold the tl·lind chairrnan, announced that the
of r.·111nk1nd \\"ill be discussed hall \rill \;ike place in F<'hru-
h.v Hobert Dornan at a :i.ry jn the Anahc1n1 Conl'cnrion
1neeting of the Orange Coas~ Center y,•1th Carl Seh rnid l
l~xeeul11•es Dinner Club at 7 ag;i 1n serving ;is {110rdinator.
p m. on Thursd;iy. Sept. 20, in All d ·11 d Library Friends procpe s v.·1 go towa r the Ncwporter lnn. the mernbersh1p's pl erl~e !.n
A tal k by Philip Grignon on purchase a linear acr-elrrator
BEGINNERS
A ND
INTERMEDIATES
MEN • WOMEN
CHILDREN
WITH Tll.AININCi
e Swi nq , c;,i1p, S1onte
• Woodl, lronl
e Chippi ng ond Pi1ch!nq
e P~tlinq and Sond Tr opi.
e Go lf Cou.-.e f tlqu•lle
ond 11.~rn
$14 PER
MONTH
C LUliS A NO
BALLS FL;RNISHEO
Reduced 11.oltl For Mul~iple f n•ollmenr
PMONE i'IOW
"' FREE
Cr ..,~l·..,•"l~rv
l l'uon '"' lon11v111
968-4461
LOWER YOUR HANDICAP I
LEARN BETTE R BASICS
START FROM BEG INNING
INTERNATIONAL
GOLF SCHOOLS
FOUNTAIN VALLEY G O LF RANGE
9825 GARFIELD AVE. FOUNTAIN VALLEY
I Mil• S. of Fwy. -Brookhur~t cifl Romp
968-4461 Tntui!ive fl ash rnal1les v11u 10
ou tline cnrreer c., 1; rs e.
Percept iveness bceornt•s ~our
ally.
1H1· lln•:1k free frnn1 rt·~tr 1e· J\h•d1 tal 11111 s .. t·ir ly i.~ :i:.ponsor-
1i1111s. 'You ll<Jl"C :1 nght !11 t'n· lnJ.! :111 111tr11d11t"1or~ lecture on
JHV ynlll"sclf. Addl'.'r! pril"ilri.:t·s l ra11~t'!'!Ult:11!;d !1lt'd11ation on
;11·1· 1lut·. S:igi ttarius pcr~1111 \\1•dn('sd:1 .\·. St•pt 29, in the
~·111ild pl:1y pru 1111nent roh•. He LOJ1nn1ons Hulld1n1! of l.iCL
\c•rs:1ltl r. ~1 ;i k r i11l"ll1gl'nt Tht· i('l'lt1re. to hPgi n at 7
1·(1n1·ess1ons, but stiek to b11su.: p 111.. 11il\ n11tl1nr tnct hods for
pr11w1plr~ :1 n;1l11r:1I 1111·11t:1l technique
l'ISCEX !FPh J!J.\1;1rl'h 20 1: ;1 1111!'d ;11 i111T1'a~1ng rnental
the migra!lnn of grry Y.'hales Punch, J udy used in radiation therapy for
11·d[ be ft'a tu red during the fl efresh1nents c e n ! er c d -~d~'.".'Pl'__"'."."~l~c~d~t~"~m~o~rs~··----=---~======================~ first general meeting 11f lhe arllund cnf!ces of diffe rent 1:11111111111:1 1 1111"1•l1·f'n1ent 111-l·l;i11ty ;ind g111>el hr:illh. Newporl Reach Friends of the lands 11 Ill be served during an LIBRA (Sept. 23·0<"l. 22 1:
i\lan~· conunenl !hat .1our <111·
pcar.1nce has changrd. \·,.u
are more \"ital. fl e f i n i I c.
decis11 e l)r1f' \1 ho forrnrrh·
complained that you larked
llll';l!C'd. llO!J l;Jll/"t' IS HI IJll"·
lurl'. Don 't 11 r gl e t·t
re~pon~1hil1l1r~. If ~Hll dn. ~flu
1r1ll pa1· prwf'. N1n1e 111sh11s
Olff' f11)[1llcd. ;\IC'tllbt•r of 1111-
jlfJ'il!t· :-:1·x is in1ohed. Yuu 1111 1
Crow1~~11 g Glo1':-
l)e a11t y sal<>11s
Oftll twlNl/jGS ANO SU!!lliS
FINAL
WEEK
of SALE!
~i•l=-3;1Q3;1®it1!:U
Save over 50°/o now on a carefr ee luxury w ave I
• $2 0 M AGIC C URL $9.50
• $2 5 GLAMOU R C U RL $1 1.50
• $30 R EGAL CURL $14 .50
COMPLCTE
BUDGET PERM •••.•• alw •v• •595
(No1mal Hai1)
"'"' l •tl Wt4 l 1lrr Wot~
SHAM POO-SET
STYLE CUT
295 , ..
SOUTH COAST PLAZA -Phon1 546-7116
l twt• ltYt l -No•! HI l tart
011tn l'•t nl•ql
J4S
200
267 £.17th St .• COSTA MlSA -Phon• 541·9919
O H n f Ytn1••• •no Su~d•~
Wr CA• E 1t>oul ,ou• l""~ ~Ou• ltu!t ....................................... ~,,,..,...
Fabric Fair Lihn1ry <1t 7 p n1. on \l'cd-lnternat11lnal Coffee planocd
A F:ihric Fn1r, fpnturing nesda y. Sept. 29. in the b.v the Punch.and .Jud~· (:uil d ~;unplr~ nf 1n:1 trn;1I~ frorn all Ne11"porl l!arhor Yacht Club. 0£ the Children·s Jlosrital of
1Hf'r thr 1"1rl1I. 11 111 r;ike place A slide presenlat1on and Orange County on Thursday,
;1! 7 11 tn. tin \\'crtnr~day . Sept 1_1a_pe_d_s_o_"_n_d_o_f_fc_c_ts_o_1_,_,·h_a_1e __ s_o~r_1._J_11_. ______ _
~n u1 lhf' !..1 kf' Forr~1
( luhhnus r under the
~nn11~or.•l11p .. 111.e l.;ike Forest
\\n1nl'n":-. 1·1111i.
Cl ub for G irls
f;1rJ .~1 1U lrnt~ Ill !hf' r1flh
i::1·;11!P ;11ul .. lilt•r ;11 e i111 1tcd !n
;1 1rt:•qr;1l1n11 1nc·rt111~ bl' !hf' l,:1~1111'! 1lr:11 h I :irl:-.' . Club
f11 1l1\ '.\ •111 I'• :. pm. or\
\\"1·1il1P\dll\. :-;l'fll ::!!\
• 1ewels by 1oseph
OCTOBER BIRTHSTONES
iiie Op ti.l
I
01•11 1~ ut1• only found "lirre flnce
lhc·rc l1:td l~···n nn it1l11 nd ~11.
l t 1~ ll!I th oui.:h thr 4lying Jl'I.
hR•! l1·f1 th is vivid i.::•·111 in n1en1ory
uf 1~1nbfl1•11 that nrl"ln•d ahovr. it.
~n111t• ft·n r·rol the pn11rr nf tht
O p:i\. \1 h11"h \l'A!I r-••!•tltt'tl tn n111kr
11• ""n••r ln1 1~1ld.• "" th11t he
, ••111.t ··~··:i1\l· 1h~ r .. 11n1: t'} r or
1111~fu1tllnf', I.1ke ll' r"ttl/llltunn
1.u1h•111111·, !hi' Op"l ~l£l"lllirJ
h<'pr. l"h"' ·1nu n11Rl1nf'111~ l~lnnrt
U> l)f"h•l"'r. It 1~ 11 nnthrr Rltr11tll\"t
lnrth~tt>nr for me-n·~ j~wr lrr.
n ·rl!r y1111r b irt~•fnnf f l'?' ·lftii I I"'"''"''""'"'""' '.l!!r'
~e u •~ Co ••! Pl•r•
R•,1•01 •t '~• S•n D·•~o F ... v.
Cr••~ M··~ SAi) ~O~il
Our special budget perm.
Specially priced .
7. 77 for just 3 days.
Monday, Tuesday, and
Wed nesday.
ou r 'Festival ' perm 1s
just 7.77 Shampoo,
cut, and set are
included, of course.
No appointment nece11ary. Charge II!
JCPenney
beauty salon
HUNTIHQTON llACH
HfYl'PO"l lfACti
'""'(l"'•'•'d ,....,.,.,.,,& .. n•i
ko.,i,.•QIO" Co••ot
~"G~ICIG•ft)•7771
r
Come in and learn how to
install a Unique Invisible
Zipper. From an expert.
You, too, ca n in stall a Un ique l n\'isibJc Zippe r
in 5 minutes (or less) once you kno \v ho1v,
We have a representa ti ve of Un iquccon1ingin
. to give you the kn ow-how. She ll al so tea ch yo u
to put in invisible facing~. And an s\\'Cr yo ur
questions about sewing. So plan to appear.
ritiss Carol Simpson
is our expert at making invisible zippers dis·
appear.
The Unique Program of Invis ible Zippery
' I
On Tues., and \\'ed ., Sepl. 28th an d 29th at 11 00 1\.~l. and 2.00 P.Al.
JC Penney
The values are here every day.
!'ev.·port Reach. Fa ~h1 on l~lan d (1
•
,, ..,. ....... ..,. . ~ . ....... .. . "' . . . .
''
a eta!'
'
,
~
\
• \ .
' . ,
Alpha Beta Markets, you know, are Number One in Total Discounts.
And the only place you'll find famous Butcher's Pride Meats.
Alpha Beta also has their own terrific line of private label items.
Plus an even: greater variety of brands and sizes than you had at FAD.
••• --·' ... , •• ~ .... ~ \l".
OAILY PILOT 17
. .. •'
. ...
:: . · . . ..
•
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' . • What about FAD? We're going to Alpha Beta too. Starting Monday, September 27, all FAD Markets will be something else: Alpha Beta Markets. : .
And we're all looking forward to seeing you here. :
. .
' • • • .. . . • ' • '
•
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l
l
I Dlll.,. PILOT t.•nn~~Y c;...,,l•ml>•• ~? 1"11
From Page 15
• • • Desi re to Live Instilled
Ty today is .11 heallhy h.aby
tipping lht> K<tles at a ~t1ade
O\'f'r fh·e pounds. something
no one, his niother. doctors or
nurses, could begin even to
d ream possible unlll he turned
the corner fro1n cns1s In
recovery at the end or August.
Throughnu1 his first few
days, Ty had breathing pro-
blems. He v.·ould ~uddrnl) stnp
from ti me lo time. But that
was a f;:ir n1ore easily
manageable problem I h a n
defects and ailments l'•hich
were to be d1sco\·ered ovrr the
\lteelu and months that follow·
ed.
"'EIGHT DIPS
Ty's weight dipped rlnwn •
be.low three pounds a fe"· da)'S
a fter his birth and then the
problems began to sllO\\'h:t lJ :
-Ty, not unC'ominonly for
premature b a b 1 e s . h;id
d1gesli\"e
blems.
orrlererl
re\·ealed
and di;irrhca
Radiology
pro·
l es t s
by tile physici;in
he suffered from
blocked !)><.:tors retnuved the
tube .'l.nd !n.~erted a replace·
ment in the other side of his
neck.
In l<i le August. Ty be~an
producing his ov.·n platelets.
His p!atc!et count, v.·hich
should hal'e been about 300.000
and \1•h1th had fallen to only a
few thousand, began In climb
5.000. 10,000, 20,000. and
higher and higher toward
norma!acy.
His inc1sinns beg;in to heal
prDperly \\'Ith his nev.· clolling
ability and his gastrointestinal
system recuperated to lhe
point "·here Pat and the
nur~cs
mouth.
cQ1Jld feed h11n by
BEARDED WOMEN
ARE OUT!!
· CON 1T BE EMBARRASSED
L ET US SHOW YOU HOW
EASY IT JS TO REM OVE
EXCESS HAIR WITH
MODERN E\.ECTROLVS IS ,
MED I CALLY APPROVED
acute necro!1zing enterocolitis.
a se\'ere inflammation of in·
testines and colon, an ailment
from v.·hich only one out of ID
babies reco\'er to l1\·e.
PAT WHITE AND SON TY
-Ty also v.·as stricken by
the inability to p rod u c e
platelets, a vital component of
blood v.·h1ch is irnportant in
forming clots lo slop bleeding.
The dangers of this condition,
also 90 percent fatal for in-
fants, 1,1·ere
Tv's need
i;urgery.
SURGERY
compounded by
for abdominal
-\\'hen medical approaches
lo treat Ty's colitis condi tion
failed to show the desired
results. v is u t Kan-
chanapoom, a ~rerial1st in
such surgery on infants. did an
e:>:ploratory orera11on lie \\'as
able to detern11ne that con·
tinued treatment ,1·ith medica-
tions, rather than sur.l!ery on
the colon. v.•as \\•arrantcd. At
the same time. the su rgeon
discovered and repaired a
hernia.
It u•as v.•hile Ty v:as
recovering from the surgery
that laboratory tests shov.·erl
that his count of platelets in·
volved in 1he clotting of his
blood y,'as drnppi ng dangerous·
Jy. Ty v.·a~ admlnis!ered cer·
ta1n medications a nd o\'er the
course of the next six v•eeks
rccei\'Cd more lhan 4 0
transfusions.
tllis paternal grandfather,
Frank \\'h1!e Sr., a re.s1drnt of
\\'estm1nster and ch i e I
eslim;it(lr for San r erlrn's
Todd Shipyard y,•as responsible
lnr 16 of those t r:in~IL1.'•1on.~.
Eight ti1nes the
dnnald hlood _
'
grandlathrr
~
.
'
This is the fall
your hair's been waiting for,
and here's the way to do it!
Permanent Wave Special
17.50 24 .00 va lue
Yearn ing 10 lei your hair spill long ancJ
silky wilh BODY/ Or ... lo shag ii curl y
in a fluff of flaltery? Do ii! This is the
fall for fashion freedom. And here's our
special Helene Cu rlis permanent offer,
complele wilh perfect slyle cul and
shampoo sci lo complele the look. Call
for you r appbintment now. You'll head
for fall in whatever pleJse s you . nr
your favorite male.
• fjC1jli • Prdicur~t • M~nocurt~ • ll• • !" ' l•1uty S!ullui, N1 ... p1HI, ll! F1 ,~.,,~ l1l•"d, Newped C1"'''
For the clo5~sic look 1n o5ceto5te llnd nylon knit ted stripes.
Patr iotic comob~. mod mix e~
OUR REGULAR St .88 Yd.
Macliine Wa sli 45 " Wide
Fo5!1 and winter dark tone; but in limited quantities. Mllchine Washable,
never iron, sew o5 nd wear knits!
?.{ 0 (l yard
<::) 56"/58" wido
Furr·ccious FAKES
IT'S A FABRIC SAFARI
Our Fur r-ocoius fllkes are running wi ld on high pile
f15b rics!
Choose _. s:eek leopllrd , a slin ky
pan ther , a bold ocelot, a kooky
zebra.
Our Fakes come 1n calf llnd pony
loo.
ACETATE OR RAYON FACE
COTTON BACK . 54" WIDE
AND UP
HOUSEoFFllBRICS
So11th Coa1t ,.lcne-B•,.lol •' ~•" 01190 Fwy
Ceuo Mn-54S·l586
Or11119•lalr Mall-Or ,nq••~"'FI• 4 .,j H•,bo•
fwtlt 1!011-511i·l l l 4
Ho,..r 1'101-111~ ,, t •,.tol
ioltt• A11-S4J05551
1110110 'ark C911to,-t. p,1..,1 •I St.nto"
l1o1at10 l'•rk-IJl·•l JJ
Vard111 Gre~e
Hv111hnJle11 Ce111e1 -Ed'"~"' 111 •I !'""~~"''' A•• -Sl0· 1.5 •1
.1 !e1 <~ Bl•d H1111t1IUJl011 loo,h -lt7.IOIJ
LEGAL NOTICF:
NOlltl 0 1' ll{\J$Tfl'i •Al.l
\JNDI.• 01.1 0 0' l ~\J'I ,, llll\
LOAN N• ....... 11121•
Nfll<CR Ii l•fo<H>< 11••" !hOI WE ~l ~IDE
lHLE (()MPANV, .. L·"'""° ... ,, ... , ... D
•• "'"'"' ot Mi<teun• uu••ee or •Jll\tnul•O h u>lee ""''"''!In"'"<:!••<!"'
Hu•1 e~ec.u!eil I>• I IMO r Hf /,•
DON"-1'NI .t.IJD I' .t. I II I C I "-I>
Lt.UAL :-.O'l lCF.
/oOl!CI. Of \ltf; OF
llEAL l'llOPEllT T AT
PA1VA!l SAL[
Nt Ill 110
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and ••~Cr>•• ol lhp ln•>I•• •n~ ~• "•• •~• Un l•3 S1.,1< •on' '''"' " 1 I ~~I~
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llllo•nfy\ tor E••<u•or
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, 1-tAll.VEY, ~·t11<ron ... , •• "'''"'' "' •P LEGAL NOTICE ""<•"'· MA•Gll[lllTTF F L I F Nl--------ccccc-------
''AllYEV. o fem•I• l!•(!r• ii '""' nr r: \.IJ: .oo, ~·••I 1•<1 0 nor• o, wd~ I'•<'••>,.., STATEMENT OF to6~>1DONME>I T OF
1 1~1, (.Cl<)'T '"' •" n•a•r ("•"~'"~ •o U~E 0"
r ••••1• ....... "O"' r.•111.>r.1.Jtl>l!Tf" F ICll l •DU~ nUS!NE ~~ NA•.1E
EllEN Hll'IYEV 10 KAllEN .JEll•l Tl'•,,.,..,. <-"'4 ' !'•.< r '·•• 1
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DICK TRACY lw Chester Goulcl Ll'L ABNER
TUMBLEWEEDS
MAVSE nlEYl!E
(MltlSt"""S PACK.IGB
-AND Tl-IE
!=ELLER' WAS
Sl<OPPINC>
EARLV.
, NO, B . 0., Tl-I f: TAGS
TMlS OE.AO CMUT'IST V5EO oatir CARllY ~OLJDAY
G REETINGS.
By Tom K. Ryan
l1M IN
ONE OF MY
L.ONELY
MOODS ...
• li'S AWFUL. ~EI NG-1111: ONLY CH IL.D IN
GRIMY GULCH! •• .l'D LOVE 10 HAVE A
FRIEND MY AGE1V 60SSIP WliH AND
PLAY DOLLS WliH! EVE'RY LITTLE' GIRL
SHOULD HAVE' AT LE'ASTONE PLAYMATE!
MUTT AND JEFF
. ~:r-.~ 1 COULD..!:.~-~-,.'~ -
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FIGMENTS
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FORK !
PLAI N JANE
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DAIL y CROSSWORD •.. by R. A POWER I
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AS ·--· 43 -· lsla11i:!s'.
2 wo1!1> Pac1f1c groJIP
13 Allot'> 40 Plund t>r
21 Aust ralia1 47 E le~ated
hirrl platform used
23 Co11sp1res in preaching
25 Rebe ls 4B Tuerl du' to
27 farewe ll: dullness
lnlormal 411 Spanish city
2!! Presar;ie SU Of a king
29 c~use to 53 M~g ician's
c0t1e1e il'l';i:enenl
33 Post ('!hce 55 "*oroS!
des1g11at.ons: 51i 01Ht>re11t
2 words 57 Changed the
)4 Har~est witf\ co lor
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3~ Being: Sn. l'J1clionary ;
36 R1Yl'I' rJ E~rol)l' Abbr,
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"1·2 1
By Al Smith
WELL., IN THAT
CASE, L.ET ME
TAL.K TO
IONT0 1
';/. . r ,
By Dale Hale
By Frank Bagi nski
PEANUTS
:---·-=--;:
-~~r.p .,::-... ,.,
JUDGE PARKER
D i<:1V11J6 ev
°™E P/IRll:EI(' t10ME,
si1.M -'tJD .. ee ev
sroP lW TO MEET
JEEP Ci\ll!SOW
w~o MAS JUST
RETUIZ\IEtl FROM
c;,(.HOQL IN
SWlfZEll!LANP!
V"ES •• "MO ~D '!'OI S"'Y 11U.T YOU SiMQlH.P
JEEP W"S EIGMT SEE HEii!
W\.lE!J TM!S PIC.Tlle"E MOW "T
W"S T.U:EN, JllD6E-? SEVENTE-EN:
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MISS PEACH
•
KELL Y
Sc.flooL
KL.ARIOl'I
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•
NEWS·
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PERKINS
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ms 1.rAD. STORY
AllOUT THE
Piii.iNG> PAINT
All'OONP MEJll!"
I ~ IMf'!)llTANT, M
80lr1NG-AS
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GORDO
MOON MULLINS
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ANIMAL CRACKERS
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r·p &ETTER LET K._THEIZ1WE
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~e·s MELPING JEEP
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WW.T
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IS AN
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MOW AJOUT:
"Cl!AZIP
Pll!NCI PAL..
l!U"S AMOK ?'
By MeU
I
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By John Miles
WHAT' II= THE'f l='OLLOH
"KX.JlO OuR CITIE.S
AND DISCOJER THE'f'~[
.JUST AS FULLJ GLOP·
SPREADERS AS DOG·
PATCH
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•
DAIL V PILOT J I)
By Al Capp
I TMINK
~E'SOUF\
GIRL, M.._.
PRESIDENT-
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
WHA'r's
oN Now?
.:fHEO 11ESOlT ts,
iHE~1.S PJ.EWT<I
OI' FCOD "TO €0
Al'WA)D I we'Re
<iO<JR F~EHDS
Al.JD rT1S 1\1.L PA~ I
OF A\l•fVl2E'S fl.AfJ ·
µ
t;
By Roger Bollen
0 •
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']GNATZ, THE IWroFUL..'
., .
---
10 DAILY PILOT
Ghost's Advice Proves Fatal to Egyptian Plotters
CA1RO 1L'PI ! -The plot·
ten wanted to take over lhe
Egyp Uan govemment and !he
spirits told them they had it
made.
All they figured they needed
was a cabinet crisis. Then the
army would step in, President
Anwar Sdat would step down
and they would Slt"p up.
To ensure succes~. lhe
governmenl sa~·s Ibey rifled .
the pres1df'nt 's safe, bugged
his office. stockpiled y.·eapons,
set up sttret radios and a
printing press and created a
nationwide secret organiza.
lion.
As an added precauuon,
thrtt key members of the con-
spiral-0rs. led by former Vice ,
President Ali Sabrv, consulted
a locHl professor ~·ho dealt in
the occult. It wa s bingo. A
ghost told them their action
would s ucceed.
Unfortunately. Egypt I an
ghosts can be l'Tong and the
advice allegedly received by
for nlt'r \~'ar r..linister Gen.
~lahmoud F;:iv.·zi, I n I e r i or
~1inister Sharawi Gomaa and
Presidential Affairs f\1inister
Sarni Sharaf proved
disastrous.
Yi'hen the 91 plotters mo\·ed
on l\1 ay lJ, thelt n e x t
res idence turn~ out to be jail
rather lhan lhe national
palace.
F or a cabinet coup that
failed, It had a powerful array or members. They Included
Sabry and the chiefs of seven
ministries. Egypt's on I y
political party, the nalio11al
assembly and the secret
police.
But fail ll1ey did . TOOay all
face charges of high treason
and possible sentences of
death or life imprisonment in
Egypt 's biggest political trial
since the 1950s.
~~hammed Hassanei n
Heikal. editor of !he semi-of.
ficial newspaper Al Ahram
and close confLdant or
Sadat, disclosed lhe spiritual
influence lll the plot.
He quote<l the consulted
ghost as telling the plotters
'"You can do something in the
fra ction of a moment if you
are well .prepared."
The indlclrnent read l'l~;:1 insl
the men indicated they follo\v·
ed this <id V\C:e lo organize
betv.·een February and ~tay of
lh1s year. During this period.
it sa!d, they installed elec·
tronic listening devices In top
government offi ces. rttru1led
a nationwide network o f
followers and began
circulating fal se rumors
a.i:ainst Sadat's regime via
private radio transn11ss1ons
and clandestinely pr i nted
leaflets.
As zero hour for the coup
a pproached. they expanded
these effnrts by trying to rally
support arnong key military
eon1n1anders. \\'Orkers and
students. !he ind ictment $3id.
Portents of the pending
(Xl ll Cr strug~!e bega n emerg.
ing May 2 when Sadat fired
Sahry in a. dispute over the
president's dec1 s1on to merge
Egypt v.•ith Libya and Syria
in a federation. The following
Y.eek leaflet.! appeared in
Cairo caslLgaung the pres\-
dent 's policie!I.
On May 13 Sadat sacked (;o-
nia.a froni his job as interior
minister and head of the
secret police. but made no an-
noun cen1e11t of the move . The
plollers decided to act.
Shortly after sundown the
national radio began broad·
casting militant music and an-
nounced the ministers of in·
terior. v.·ar. presidential ar-
fa irs, information and housing
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944°1011 •• , ••• .., 122.1111
,
had resigned from t h e
government.
The indictment .said this was
the signal for the military and
demonstrators to start their
follow up. But nothing hap.
pened. The streets remained
silent. Then Sadat reacted.
Wlthin hours his backers
had regained contrN of the
radio station and arrested his
chief opponents without vio-
lence.
The high treason charges
provoked by these events have
led to the largest political con·
spiracy trial in Egypt since
1957. Political sources predict
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:..; ~ DAILY PIL.OT Zl
;Pre1nier Lyn~h Still Walking Tightrope
OU~LJN (UPI I -Sixteen
months ago , the bottom fell
out of Premit>r Jack Lynch's
prihtical "·orJd.
l!is cabinet v.as in disarray.
His party's itnage y.•as sha!-
tcrrd llis 0"111 prestige 11as
_Ahal of /lun1p1y-Dun1pty. Ill.~
; ~itica! future "'as nun1hered
·;, 'friend rtnd foe in dnys
kt}tier than weeks
': 'fo<lar. the n1llr!·m.•1nnrred
ntan fro1n ('fJl'k still walks ;i
pol1!1cal t1ich tn1pe bul slll!
;;urvircs. And !hilt ts a filc!or
ln efforts 111 bring peaee to
.. ~QJ":lhcrn lrel<ind.
I o'n fllay 6, 1970, shock
headlines greeted Irishmen at
the1r breakfast lai>les. Tu·o
cabinet ministers, p1!1 ar1 of
the ruling Fianna Fail Party,
had been fired.
An alleged plot lo smuggle
arrns to the Roman Catholic
minorltv in Northern Ir eland
had bfcn untovercd. Lynch
had accused l\1'0 o! hi s cah1net
colleagues or being part of it.
One n1inister \\'as Charles
Hau ghey . su11vr, teJentcd son-
10-!;111• or the h1te Premier
Se;in F Lean1nss, and cnn-
sirtered the golden bny of the
Fianna Fail Party. The other
\1:as Neil T. Bla ney, a tough,
ambitious, party e le c ti on
strategist.
Lynch put Blaney a n d
Haughey on trial. A lesser
court threw out the case
agr11nst Blaney for lack of
e\'1dencc. A Dublin Jury found
Haughc.v innocent of the
1.:l111rgt' of t'un~piring Lo import
arrns dleg11lly ,
Ho1h mlnisrcrs returne d
rrnn1 the courts triurnphant.
read~· to wrest th e party from
the soft-spoken. pipe-sn1nking
l.,vnrh, a battle f0r rontrnl of
F1a111ta F;iiJ began. at first in
rhe party's h;ickrooms, thf'n in
Da il Eireann (parliament I.
On each test of strength
Lyrit'h "n1er~ed the 1·ictor
despite all prc d ic t ions.
SA l'E •1 to •6!
PJusl1 T ext11re Rugs
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Fin;illy, al the annual co11-
vent1on of the party his \Jc-
tory seemed complete . He
received a n overv.·helm1ni
confidence vote from !he
delegates, Blaney was uusted
fron1 party office.
But the 1n1plica11ons of 1!1c
arn1s trial still hang heavy
over L.vnch's political future.
fla1·rJring his response to !he
escalating violence 1n
l\or!hern Jreland
Blane.v ;ind Haughey 11111
re m;:iin within the Fianna Fail
Par!y, In parliament thcy
have attracted a handful eif
other party members lo their
side. Lynch "'ilh 72 \'Otes in
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•Sturdy me13l bed frame
Regular $9 9.95
the 144-vole house needs the ir
support to glay in office. So
!3r they have given thal sup-
por! rather than face a
gent'ral election.
But Blan('y and Haughe~'.
1<.hO bcith demand action to
~~!'Ip !he 1n1nonty in !he north
v.'h1le d1savo1\·ing p h y s I ca I
force as a solution, are
outl<i\\'Cd I rish Repuhl1can
Other r:ir!y n1embers to the ir
side Lyn1·h v.·ltli 72 1·ntes !n
rhe 144-vote house ncerls their
su pport to ~ta.v in office. So
far the~· hal'e given that sup-
port rather than face a
ger1erat election.
But Blaney and Haughey,
0 •
' ;
v.·ho bolh demand action lo
help the minority in the north
v.·hiJ e disavo\\•lng p hys I c a I
force as a solullon, are
watching from the wings fnr
any softrning in Lynch 's all'
proach to the British govern-
ment nn the nnrthern s11ua1tr1n
Lyneh has been accused by
both British and Northern
Ireland authorities of fallinµ 10
curh the acti\·1ties of the
outlav.'ed I r is h flepuh!1c.1n
Anny !IHA1 on the southern
side of the horc!er "·h1rh
!ieparates the republic fron1
the six countries which form
part of the United Kingdom.
l
l
Lynch has rejected the ac·
cusat1ons. He sugges!ed a
U.N. border patrol to rheck on
security on both sides of the
200-mile border.
Lynch's ov.·n political dif·
ficult1es makes the task 1Jf
curbini;: the IRA so much
more difficul t. The Fianna
Fail (men of destiny\ Pa rty
wh it'h he heads was founded
hy President Eamon De
Valera in the 1920's v.·Jt h the
p'rime aim of reuniting the
country. It at t rac ted
11·1d£1spread support. son1e or it
mi litant. Although De \"alera,
and later Len1ass. reiected
phylilcal force. there were
a I wa ys sufficient bellicose
voices 111 the leadership io
make such a policy at least a
pos~1b1l1 !y.
This poss1h1lily succeeded
over 1he years in keeping the
support of many of !hi!!
mil1tan!s. al lhnugh there wa.~ a
i;:radual drift away toward
Sinn Fein f0urst>lves alnneJ,
the political front of the IRA .
Since Blaney and h i :ii
fnllo11·ers li;11'e shifted to the
extreme right, advocating a
tough "hard hne'' policy on the
north . Lynch 's position has
becon1e more vulnerable.
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IUINA ,All( COVINA HOUYWOOD OlYM,lC A.SOTO I Sears I POMONA SANT A MONICA TOltltANCI Satlsfacllon 394-•711 J4l·1511 t11·•400.J21-4SJO .... 0.11 ... ,.,,., .261·5111 629·5161 Guarantied CANOGA PAllC IL MONTI INGLIWOOD O lt ANGE '1CO SOUTH COAST PLAZA VAlllT
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22 DAI LY PI LOT
' ANIMALl!lk .,_ ,.,,
·GU-I "fo•D You oNAl'o~
CAN WACK."
Ger111a11s
Hold Big
Beer Bust
By ANITA ESCH\\"ElLER
~!\'ICH. Germany (UPI \
-The Red Cross attendant
shook his head snrrowfully
"Sometimes !he kids seem to
have as gieat a thtrsl as the
grov.'tiups. he said. ··nefOfe
the fest is Ol'er 1~·e will have
dealt \\'ith bet.,.,·een 20 and 30
com pletely drunken 11 ma I !
children.''
The Red Cross tent. in whic h
the attendant stood ready to
render first aid . "'·as almost
lost amid the seven gigantic
beer tents pegged out on the
Theresienv.·iesen ~leadows on
lhe outskirts of ~funich.
Each of the can1·as bee!-
halls are da ily packed v.·ith
tti'ousands of merrymakers
who ha1•e made the annual
pilgrimage to the two-week
Oktoberfest. renowned as the
v.·or!d's biggest beer bust. It
continues until Oct. 3.
From each tent comes the
oom·pah-pah sounds of old·
style German music, belted
out by musicians clad in
Bavaria's national lederhosen
costume. They play from
stages set in the center of
each tent. the bandstands
looking like boxing rings set
above the fO\Oo'S of plain
wooden tables.
Wa itresses in Ba ,. a r i 21 n
peasant cos tume scurry fr om
table to table v.·ith the quart
pots from v.·hich the beer flow·
ed down a multitude of th irsty
throats.
The record am ount of beer
consumed during the fest ival
was set in 1969 -9,000
gallons.
Although the Oktoberfest
concerns itself primarily with
beer, there is no lack of other
fare.
A separate tent features
guch delicacies as knuckles of
oxen and slmilar juicy di shes
fresh froom tl1e spit. There
are nine tents offerin~ roast
chicken. 2R kiQsks sellin.i: fr ied
and boiled \Oo"urst 'sausage\,
four fried fish establishments
and three coffee tents fo r
those who "·ant to cal\ it a day
ro far as beer is concerne<I.
There are also dozen s nf Ice
cream a.rid popcnm ''end()fS,
Other at tractions includl'! 11
hug!'! f11 irgrnund "'here, 11part
from the usual .c;"•ings and
roundabouts. a kill er \1•hale
fiwims in nnP huge a11uanum
·wh ile dolphins frolic i n
another.
See World
For Lo\\·
$10 Price
Now e\'eryone CM go kl
British Columbia, J Apa n.
Italy. Turke:y Ch ;na and E:gypl
for six months for only
•1()-round·trip.
No, this is not a airline com-
pany bargain. but a m!lre
vicarious tr i p - \' I a the:
Newport Harbor K i "' 11 n i ~
Club's travel and ad\·en1 ure
film series.
The first of the i;erie~ nf six
films will be shown f'riday al
8 p.m. in the Orange Coast
College Aud itoriu m. Tt will be
''British Columbia." presented
by Stan Midgley. "·ho has con-
tributed to the Kiwanis series
l_or nine years.
Continu ing lhrou~h March ,
the 13th annual travel series
will also feature "The Soul of
Japan," ''Florence 11nd the:
Heart of Ital y." "Turkey."
' 'Nationalist China-TaiwAn ..
and "Kayaks Down the Nile ."
Adult season tic kets are $10
and student tickel.s are SS.
Individual tickets of $2 for
aduJl! and $1 for sludents ire
en sale at the box office before
uch film .
Tickets are 1v1i11ble from
kiwanJ1 Club members. Barr
Jeweletl. AJ Forgit Hardwire
and Lawson Realty.
Serie.a' profit• will go In Cfll-
Jege &eholarships. Jopl in Boys
Ranch , Circle K, Key Club. !he
YMCA 1nd programs for
retarded children and foreien
exchange students
Monday, Stflttmbtr 27, 1 9~1
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Mondai, St pttmbtr '17, 1q71 OAI LV PILOJ D
Dodgers Return Home I Behind Wit~1 3 to Go ;
ATLANTA (AP) -The Los Angeles
[)Odgers. refusing to buckle under San
f<'rancisco's once imposing National
1..eague \Vest lead , returned home today
for a ~eason-cnding series Y:ith the
}louston Astros and hopes of coinpletinl:
a miracle finish with a division title.
"I'd like to 1,1.•in three 1nore ru1d take
our chances,•· said manager \Valt Alston
Sunday alter his DodgeJ'ls completed a
lhree-game sweep of the Atlanta Braves
S-2 and remained one game behind the
Gianls , who less than a month ago held
an 81h·game bulge.
"If you tell me what they're (Gianl:s)
going to do, I'll tell you what •se gotta do.
bul nobody knows," Alston said.
"There's no great decisions to 1nake
now. I just hope we stay hol..,
While the Dodgers prepare for the
Hou ston series beginning Tuesday. San
Francisco will head for San Diego where
they close with a three-game set aga inst
the Padres.
The Dodgers have now won 15 uf their
la st 22 games in their dri\le to reach flr sl
place in thr NL 'Vest for the first timc
sinct Aug. 23. 1969.
5unday·s vittory ci.nne-on th~ tionie run
po\ver of Richie Allen and Duke Sims and
thr timely relief pitching of 48-year-O ld
Hoy t \Vilhelrn. released by the Braves
eal'lier !his year.
"1 don't have any hard feeling against
anybody with the Braves.'' said \VilM.lm.
"l just didn't feel they gave me a chance
to pitch. Anyway , It was great to help 1,1.·ln
that game because we had to have it "
\Vilhe\rn worked out of a lit!Venlh inning
j:1n1 1vi1 h runners al second and th:ird by
fanolng Braves slugger Hank Aaron . who
une inning earlier smashed his 47th hon1e
run of the year over the left lield fence.
sµ1.uling southpa\v Claude Osteen's hope s
for a shutou t
Wiiheim then left bi the ninth Inning
after pulling ;,· muscle in his right leg
while balling in the eighth. Another
Dodger. Bill Buckner. suffered a shou lder
111jury during pregame balling practict
bu~ both players thought the inJuries lo
be only minor.
"11 's a real shame that Sa n f'rancisco
scored t2," said Sims of lhe Giants· 12-5
('1)1nebat·k victory over Cincinnati Sun·
day.
Told lhat the Red:s had used a f'9(1kli
pitcher during the ga1ne. Sims said jo~~
lngly, .. He can say ·1 pitrhed one gamf
11gainst U1e Giants' and won the pennant
fur 'ern_'
"Seriously. a lot of tf1nes a gug
nobod y's seen before gets 'en1 out.., Simi
said, "and he may never pitch another,
good ball game. This particular ga1ne. l
didn 't think the Giant s could com t b.::c*
on Cincy."
Pressure No Factor,
Says· Rams' Hero Ray
By P lllL ROSS
Ot r~t Dall~ Pllol S!•U
LOS A:\!Gl::LI<:S-David Ray ls a ll;_in-
dy fel low to have arou11d : or at least it's
fortunatt' that thl' Los Angeles Ran1s arc
t11e possessors or his talented toe.
Las! Sunday. before 57,895 \Vitness~s a1
the sa1ne locaUon , Ray hel1>ed his side
al'ert a 20·17 selback :ind figured heavily
in tl1e heroics us t11e Ranis n1anaged a 20·
20 deadlt1<:k wllh the surprising Natu111al
Football Leag ue \Vl'stern Div is i O n
pa cesett ing Allan!a Faleons.
Tilt' ! 11 i rd -~· e a r 1i!acekitk(·r-1\'1de
reeC'iver fl'o1n Alabarna kt•pt the H:1111s
( l-11 on !he faltons' u1ow 1-0·l ) fa ils with
his at(·ura1t' p!at t'llH'nts and <ilso v.•as a
foi l on a tnek 1oucl1do11·n play \l'hi ch pro-
\'ided I.A ll'ilh a 01on1e11tary 10·0 first
qu;1r1er advanta~e.
B11l Rav 's re;ll 1110111c11t WHS an
eleventh-110ur b11 ol' glor,v whicll u(·cun·<·d
\•:ilh no !1n1e sho1vi ng on the g:une clock
\\'lii:ri hl· hoo11'd a prcsstu·e·packell 4i-
~'anl 11cld goal. 'l'ht' sui.:ccssf ul kick
i_.nablt'tl thr hu~t :> tu pull out the !I(•.
Althou;;h h(' had ;i horrendous :if-
t('rnoon (1!hl'r"'isl'. Ha111~ q11art1•rh;i\·k
Hon1an Cabricl engint'erert the last p11sh
ll'hich led to H;1y 's fin al 1hret."-po1nh·r
After an Allant;i <lri ve µoo µed oul ot
the Ran1s 20 \v ith only I :34 lt•ft In the ti ll.
Gnhe 1novcd LA to the Falcons 40 whert>
the Harns had a second·and·IO situation
\1·1111 ius1. a seeond to go.
'!'lie early play on which Ray turned in
an Oscar ~rlonnance was supposed to
be a second iield goal atten1pt the earlier
h:1d toed one from 45 yards· out for a 3-0
Bam!I edge) by !he Alab<1n1an al the
Atlanta one.
F'irst·year head n1e11tor Prothro had a
better idea. !hough. And instead of going
for the su re three. holder Jf'rry Rho1ne
took the eent<:r snap. !'aiscd up, rolled to
1l1s right and hit Lighl end Bob Klein in
the right pot·tion of 1he end zone For sis:
111arkers.
A real ton1 pet11ur all !he 1\'ay. Ray
~·la ul1ed hl''s never read a ll<Nli like
!'sychocybernetie:; or any other literature
or that :;n r·t. But, nevertheless the 2i-
year·o ld spcrialis1 said he had no pro·
blcin lieep\ng a positive attitude.
According to Ray. "the lon ger kit· ks
and all the pressure involved don't bother
nie any 111ore than the shorter kicks.
'I reel pressure fietp;; nie n•ore in k.ick-
111~ bcl'ause r tend lo b,~ 1n1·nlvcrl 3 lillte
Di! n1ore then ."
lie <iddcd. "I lift 111~· head up <lilt·r
inu:-:t k1L·ks and , 11 the kick buuncei; f;iir
in the encl zone. I figure H's OK. Today I
had no prob len1 with that bt'cause I kick·
ed both field goa\5 right down tilt' 111iddle
of the uprights.·•
orr frun1 Gabriel on a right tackle trap
and tullowed blocks by Larry Smith and
.Jack Snow do1vn Lhe right sidel ine for a
50-ya rd TD romp.
Atlanta's point-making \Vas ac·
con1plished on a pair of TOs and PATs
and on 25 and 30-yard field goals by
rookie hooter Bill Bell in the second
stanz<i.
Falcons signal caller Bob Berry hooked
up with Cannonball Butler on a 27-ya rd
pa ss-and-run play in the i;econd quarter
for 1he initial visilors· 'rD while Joe
Profit bulled over fron1 luur y;1rds out for
the other tally in the fourth period.
While Berry connected on IS or 22
aerials for 301 yards. the fickle Rani fans
were constantly booing Gabe. who \Vent
the di stance except on the fake field goal
try. He \Vas !6 of 30 for 145.
Prothro stood his ground in de[endiA~
G;1be after the contest when he com-
111er1ted . "Gabe's nl y No. l quarterback
and he dir!n't do anything lo warrant his
J'elTIU\la].'.
. Oh well. al le<is1 th<'y didn 't give David
fla y the raspberries.
F<r ,, down'
11.u·.nu Y"'d' l'•»l~i •••d&Q• 'l<ll!f~ y•rd•ge p.,,,.
p""" ~urn~le' •o••
vora, ~"""'""tt
F•lcon• ll•m1 ,. ,.
J?•.lO Jl1•?
111 !11 " ' lj-1)' 11.JO.fi 1 7" 4.~, . ' ,, '
IAINTS' DOUG WY ATT TACKLES SF'S BOB WI NDSOR AND FINDS THAT FOOTBALL IS A ROUGH GAME ..• En!er R<iy and log \ht• rest as hi;;tury.
llay also slammed hun1e the PA'r
[l!!lowing a third period score by \\'il\ie
Ellison which shot the Hanis into a 17-!3
lead.
Oil the abul'r p1a.v, £l\1son took a hand-
~cort av Ou•<lt•• AH•"'" O >]
l<<• "'"~"!" 10 0 ' . " J I ~ 10
J'i1ne Chatiges Tl1i11gs
Will Lolich Beat Blue
In Cy Y 01111g Award Vot e?
Ho\v lin1es can change.
1t was early July and lVho would have
•et eg.ainst Vida Blue's chances of \Vin·
ing the Cy Young award -which is
,resented to the outstanding pitcher in
ile major league eat'b year.
Too, who would have given the Dodgers
1uch chance or ove rtaking the Giants in
1e drive for the National League \Ve st
t ie.
San Francisco \\'aS leading by six
ames going into the All·star break. Vid;i
llue had 1,1.•on 17 ga1ncs .already at !hal
oint and looked like a cinch Lo ll'in 30 . , ,
taybe even 35 before the season·s end.
But things have turned a r o u n d
,,__ _______ _
WHIT E
WASH .. ____ _
GLli:HN WHITl
ramatically. as they have been known to
' in the zany world of baseha!J.
Blue has w-0n but seven si~ !he AJl-
Ar classic and isn't even a ~~bet to
11tduel Detroit's Mickey 1..-0lich {25-13)
•r Cy Young Laurels,
Iron ically, Lolich was pitching in the
iadow of Denny McLain just three years
;zo when :l\fcLain (a) won JI games (b)
·rt Lolich stranded at the Washington
.C. airport after the All-star classic.
And , the Dodge rs are once again in hot
Jrsuit of the Giants. lagging by a game
ith three to play. The. trouble now is
1al "the Dodgers return home, "·here
1ey have not played \vell this year. to
ose out with Houston,
The Giants luck out by drawing their
!ason finale against the club with the
orst record in the bi g leagues -San
iego.
The Dodgers' chances of even tying for
n;t do indeed appear remote.
But as \\'e-say, baseballs lake many
1ny bounces.
* * * frlore on Willie Mays, lht Glanl3' Im ·
1ort1I wtiom we claim I!! O\'tr lite hill.
'llllt ha!i bad only uvtu hit!' In his la"t
I at batl and durtn1 that 1pan be'1
.ruck out 19 llme1.
Alto during that ptriod the Giants havt
st JS of %1 g:ame1.
"'flit br:imtred Sunday •bt a bl1 m•te~
·tre already ludla1 Claolnutl. Wltta he
'mt up eart~r In the 1•me ud bit club
·a• down 1.f and had U.e tylnir; run 11 ~
1nd, Mays fanntd.
Hit bomer came off an untesttd mlnnr
a,;utr namtd Sle''e Blaterle.
And speaking of that, tht Dodgers e1we
•mt.thing tn Rtdl managl'r Sparky
ndtr~on -likt a pun ch In the no8t -
fnr bringing In a kid like Blateric during
a game se \:ital to the champions hip race.
The Reds had cut San Francisco's lead
to 7·& when Sparky brought in the kid who
had just been brought up from the nickel
and dime leagues.
The Giants promptl y hit l\\'O twet-run
homers against the boy pitcher to put the
game out of reach.
* * * All kinds of wedding belli; in the nC\~·s.
Butch Pope, former Orange Coast
College and Nfwport H<irhor High
basketball player. will lie the knot Satur-
day with Nan ry \Va\ker. She sings at th e
Ancie nt l\1ariner.
Huntington Beach Hjgh basketball
t'oach Elmer Combs "'ill watch his
daughter Jenny journey do1vn the aisle
Dec. t She is to marry Ted Lord.
Wait Is Ove r
For Gill111an;
Chargers Lose
SAN DIEGO I AP) -John Madden wa~
worried about his Oakland Raiders while
Sid Gillman \\-'as waiting for what just a
week earl ier he called the inevitable for
his San Diego Chargers.
illadden needn't worry any longer. His
Raiders didn'l blow a 6-0 halftime lead on
Sunday as they did the week before in
losing to the New England Palriols. 20-6.
'l'he Raiders exploded in lhe second
half against a heretofore lough San Diego
defense and routed the Charger!i 3-0
before a San Diego Stadium record crowd
of 54,080 and a national television au·
dience.
Just a week earlier, after the Chargers
had come back in the second half for ,;.11
their points to defeat Kansas _qty,.;~;..
Gillman had remarked that no learn
could shut out the Chargers.
"\Ve couldn't afford a slow starl," said
Madden. and his quarterback, Daryle
Lamonica, added that lhe Raiders were
out to prove that the loss to the Patriots
in the_ season opener was just a fluke .
"Odr defensive perfonnancf: from the
overa '1 standpoint of steadiness was the.
best e've had since 1'~ been with the
Raide s," said Maddtn.
Gill n couldn't explain his team's cot.
lapse, offerlftg no e:icuses. "We just got
beat dly. We could not put anything
togeth r."
Char er quarterback John Hadl wall
nicked for five interceptions. two of them
by linebacker Dan Conners. 11s the San
Diego 111tark fizzled. -
•.. SO DOES DETRO IT'S STEVE OWENS (361 AGAIN ST NE W EN GLAND.
Right Attitude
Certain Fate Involved
In Harris' Golf Victor y
ROBINSON, Ill. IAP 1 -"1 think
there's a certain amount of late in-
volved."
Big Labron llarris wa s talking about
hi s sudden death playoff victory over
Bert Yancey for the $20.000 first pri1.e In
the Robinson Open golf tournament. Har-
ris' first triumph in seven years on the
pro tour.
"If you're going to win, you're going to
wfr\, ·• Harris said Sunday after canning a
rive-foot birdir putt on the lhird pl ayoff
hole .
"That is. if you've got the game. And I
think I have a J!Bme capable of \Vinning
!'Vt' been in position to win several !Imes,
so I lhink that shows I have the,gamc.
Then you have to have the right atlitude-
"l think I went Into thi s playo ff with
the right attitude." --,
Harris, a 6-fool-4 Oklahoma Strite
graduate, caught t h e front-running
Yancey with an eight foot birdie putt on
the 17111 hole of regulation pla y, then
preserved the lie when he made a par
putt of four feet after missing the. green
on lhe final hole.
He and Y11ncey each h:id four-unde r·
par 67s in their {1nal round uvcr tbe 6.:')85
yard Crawfo rd Country Club course and
(jnished at 274 , 10 under par.
Yancey collected $11,400 from the tot al
purse of $100,000 fo r his second place
finish.
Larry Hinson. J im Colbert and Gay
Brewer we re next. tied at 276. Hinson had
a 67, Colbert 68 and Bre\\'Cr 69 in the fi nal
t8 of the 36 hole wind-up. forced when
.~<ilurday's piny was washed out
Fon•! uo•~• ~"" m<lntV wlnnino• m •~• li'Ottln·
\O•l OP~" ool! 1ou•n&rnto! (X•W<lfl _.vooen ao.,111
plOyO!I \
"'L"h'O<> ""'"" l Xl,Oi'IO Ber! "'•"C~V. 11!,«l!l t~,,~ lion\"", 1!,300
Jim Col~•'· 1j,30Q
c;.,~ erewtr, 15,JOO
Jlrn J••nl"'°"· SJ,).SO r.nuck ce~nntY, 1J,lSO J, C 5ne~d, 1J,UO
Bob DIC~'°"· 11.soo
~ou G•ft"-m, i1,soo
Jot~v Cupl!, s1.SllO
Dwlihl N.,..11, tl,920 Oft~e E!ch,1berQ1t. SJ,110
Jim W~he•~. Sl.120 Grier ;.,,,11, 11.!XI
John L l~lt•, 11,JXI
tlob PAv<>e, 11.dO
Ml•t-Hill, 1\,0.\0
Gt(lrQo A•{htt. '1.100
o~~nt Bem~n. 11.m
IMb W\'<>n, 11,100 t om ..,,,on, 191~
llt•,on 1tvao11m. 191~
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11 11o•n 191
11,1n10 "' 1n n 69 ro-111
10 ,,. IJ·ll-"? r-> /l 6' IO-lt ?
(,Jo11::ale:: Wins Title
Billie Jea11 Blasts Ten1ii s,
l(1~an1er Blasts Billie J ea11
• LOS A1\f.ELES IA!'~ -An <'Jlgry
Billie .Jeng King \vanls tennis to be n1ore
professional. Jack Krainer, just as angry.
ealls on f\Jrs. King and Rosen1ary Casals
"to gro1v up."
The flareup resu lted in a double dcrault
(Jf the \1'omen's sirlgles ti!le Sunday In the
$73,000 Pacific Sou thwest Open tennis
1nurniin1t•nt, wher e jhc men 's litle wenl
to experit11ce, :t4.ye,1r·old r 11 n c ho
(;011z;1lcz. OVC'r .vnulh. 19-ycnr·old Jirn
<.:on riors. 2-6. 6·3. 6·J,
1\.1r.~. King 11nd f\l1ss Casa!~ were
pl<1yi ng tl1e !ietireaker of a 6-6 first set.
\\'hen Ho~emary·s :o;hot for lllf' fir st point
\1•as ruled good in side the backhne.
"I want her oul," 1\.Jrs. King, from
Long Beach said of tl1e volunteer
line srnan, Betty Chamic of Pacific
Palisades, who had n1ade the call.
011 e of Those
Ga111 e1S I Hat e
To Lose-Lefty
The longcsl season is over in Anaheim.
Jl ended Sunday mu ch as it began last
April , \vlth a frustrating loss.
The Chicago \Vhite Sox scored !he \Vin-
ning run on a two-out passed ball in the
10th inning to send the Angels down to a
fi·5 defeat, their 29th onC'·run loss In 1vhal
h<1s been a \'ear of aguny and fulility. in·
ternal d1 ssc11t anti sha.ttered en1otions,
It was !hr final home game of the
sea.son for California and they were a
disappointing 35·6 in their own park . They
conclude the season with three games at
i\-11nnesota beginning Tuesday where
Andy Messersmith \\'ill try for his 20th
v.·in .
'' l l was one of those game5 you hated
to lose,'' summarized manager Lefty
Phillips, 1,1.'ho. rumors have it , may not be
invited back to manage the Angels next
season.
"H was especially tough," Phillips ad·
ded, "heca11se of the 1vay \\'C b<itlled
back
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\\'hen the urnpJre. John Coleo1a11 , didn 't
make a s1vitch. the f\1•0 \l'Omen \Valked
off the court and t\ran1cr. tou rnament
director, ruled it a double default.
"This linesman had been callir1g bad!\'
all through the set," Mrs. King said . "I
\1'o ulrl say at least seven or eight shots. [
\Vasn 't particularly arguin g this las! one.
breause H was al !easl close. But I 1\'a:I
hilting and praying all al ong,
"Th~'rt' \vas 011 telling lu:iw shr \Youl d
tall 11·.-·
~l l S~ (';Jsab rron1 s~in Franl'i,.;t'O, ~aid It
\l'a.~ dil'fieull !(1 erilicize volunteer of-
lu·1rlls_ "They should bf' paid. If fhl"y
don't do a competent job. !hey ca n b~
rernoved "
Said Kramer:
"T \\'alched abou1 four g:<me;; of thei r
1natch and 1 saw the gi rls objeet to abl.lut
20 cal ls They ough1 to grn1v up. They're
pr01l'SS1onnl5 -th£'y ought tu <il}lde by
l hf' rt1 ](-'S "
"I! s so unrn)fCss1un;1I,'' ~Ir...-King
~a1rl nl tPn11i~ ·· 1nuch Ion Ions{'
"The playe rs are pro fcssiun;il 1101~· but
\l 's thi: sa1ne old prnblem with volunt;iry
offi cials. There should be hi gher stan-
d<irds. \Ve nee<l prorcssional offi ciaL'i ··
\Vhile Gon~alC'Z, from n('arby 1\·lalihu,
eollected $10.000. the $4,000 v.•on1en's fir st
prize . al)d $2.500 second-prize were no1
awarded. Conners. a UCLA student turn-
ed down his $5,(JOO prize lo remaln an
amateur.
"Just as lnng as it doesn't go to the
men." said Mi s5 C:assals of !hr withheld
purses.
,John Al e)(andcr and Philip Dent. both
of Australia. won the n1cn 's doubles over
Frank Froehling of fL Lauderdale. Fla.,
and Clnrk Graebner of t'ew York. 7-6, fi·1.
Mrs. Kin,g <ind Miss C:tsals eame back
lo win the women 's doubles title. worth
$400 each, by defeating Francoise Durr o(
1''rance and Judy Dalton of Auslralia, 2-6,
7-5, 7-6.
Dodgers Box
LOS ANGELES ATLANT.t. .. ' ~ ••l •b r fl .al
Will\, " • ' • Miii~~. " ' • , • V~lenll,,r, 2b • ' ' G~tt. " ' • ' ' W 0..~I~. (I , • • ~ A~•Oo , " ' ' ' ' 11 .A!l~n. JI> ' ' ' f Wlll lMnJ. ' ' • ' • Mnl•, " , ' , Vrt<•llO\, l1> , • ' • w I>•••"· " ' , • Ev•~-. » , • • • C•8W<C••I, ,, • ' , Lum, " • • • Sorn,, < ' ' ' ~ J~<~•on, " • , • O••e•~. ' ' , ' ' M Pt•tl. " ' ' ' • W11~•1m. ' ' , , • Stont . • ' • • • e'e"'t '. ' , • • , N1lb~ut1, 0 • • • • 0 B•Own, '" ' • , • Hou1e, • • • • • 1 .AorM. "' ' • ' I
B•rber . • • • • • Btt81.,,lt, "' ' • ' • f O!llt • "' l ot1l1 • ' • I
'~ Anlfllt> '" '» I: -' A11a nt1 .. "' 00 -' " " • .. .. •• 0•'"" !W,!•!I] t ,IJ • ' ' ' • Wll~~lm 1·1tl ' • • ' ' 8rtw•< ' ' • • • • ·~· IL, •. J) ' ' ' , • ,
l<l•11l'OV8• ' ' , • • • Heu>• ' ' , • • • ,.,h~• ' ' • • ' ' ~··· n .. ,..,, 11•1~ -S•on• po -$•m1,
lim'-'~ .llnen~•ntt ''·"'
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OAIL Y PILOT P ~oTo b~ L tt P•~n1
MI KE M<DOUGALL 166) CLEA RS THE WAY FOR EDI SON TEAMMAT E JACK HAYNES.
Paeifi<"·8 Roundup Pal1ner Fourth
Stanford, Huskie QBs Orioles Pitch er
f(e ezJ Tect11is Un defeated To Wiii 20
CLE\.~LAl\D (A P I -Jim Pill mer
By Tll E ASSOCl.\TED PRESS
The .i1-r11;1l ul S!i111ford Cn11·crsity
:iuartcrbaLk /)()11 Bunce, rcpl;;ccmc nt for
:•r.~rluatL1d llri~n1;;n 'J'rnphy \vinncr ,Jim
l'l•1nk<'!t has clo11rf•'rl tiH' Bn'ir J~nwl
i•'lri~,.., 1.r 1110 ,,r 1h1· n;111p11·:. 1011 ,<;(lph'>-
1·1 irl' 1;11.i1t1·:h.,.·k~ t:·.•! 1car. ~"lln~· ~I\·
::1iler nl \\':1~lut1g l1111 :111d !Jan Fouts 11!
'l;-i-:::·•11.
J::JIK'l'. ;J ~t~ ll~lt f1,·l1! gt'IHT ;il 1\)10 :;;1l
;·ul JJ~I :;l1;1.,1111 to s;111· lus cl1g1b1!11y.
1! ,qrt~ il! Ilic I• pol the· l'ac1f1r-ll c11nf~r
'n1·t· p;1s~111!.! l1 ~ts, alo11g v;i1h St\k1!ler1
~ a JU1l1or
1~,, l·',.111\ !1:1'\ h1•rn injurer!, huning
lluc~:\' tit le ( b:1nl'l'S.
n11n1·1• J It ltll 12 ()[ 2'i SaturrlHV for 2r,z
r;nds Rnrl tliref' to11chrloll'ns in St;inford's
rn 17 \it·tur\ n1rr llrf'~(lll.
rnul., lrf1 11ir· gnn1c 11·1 th a knrr• 1n111ry
· ft l·r !111' l 1r~1 h111f ll11t lhP (·Xlrnl of in·
.iirv 11 ;1~ nnL kno\\"n 11nr11·d1i11clv.
1'hr l l11~k1f•'\ rr•n1n111cd 1 1 nhr;i1~·n ;i .;, Si x·
illi'r ffl'\'>(«I 1110 !Oil<"hdowns ;inrl hit nn
II rn1n plPT1nn'\ in 24 atten1p!s fnr 210
;1 rc!s. \\;.i~h111gtnn earlier beat Tr."as
Burks 'fop f,,,akcrs
In Ha"·aii 1'ilt
\!(l\""OLI 1.L" tAP ! -Le11 i\lt'111rlnr anti
•;,.l , f1n11dt1rlµr l •l l l ail~d Ill a \••l"J'"J f1.:1!-
1.11· .~ll•111t1:1g nHHch tn lrarl !he
•1 11:iul,rl' Ht"\..; 111 .1 !II} lfl'.\ rxl11b111"n
., 1.ir-. 111 ~ r !:1t !.11:-; 1\nfi(les L:i\..rrs t.ere
t11 <1:1:, t11!.l•t
,.\Jr 1nrl11r ., "~' d :: : i1nd !1111 1rl r1dce .1! 111
· ,!-du1 I I ,:1J...l'r~' .li ·r~v \\rs! and (;;i1!
;, . .,,J11·h,1•l1n h:i d :!fl 1Y11111-..-.;uh
\l1·1·d,,r 1•11 t1 ila.1 111c \\Ir 1 l·J1:11hr r!;i 111
·11 II:<' 11 ,1• u11! rPh1111111lt•r! !Iii• l.ilkr r«
,1'rr 2ti «
Ci1nstian 4•1·26 1n an interscctional
ni;itch.
Sixkiller ha s cnn1plctcrl 40 nf 79 pa s.~rs
thi s F;e:isnn for 7fi!J yards ;ind i;ix
lotichrlowns. lie bas throv.n five in-
tcrcrpliuns. H11nce h:is h11 on 41 of 76 for
~.10 .\an!s ;u11! ,\{'ll'tl t11t1L·h fin11·11s 111th
lhri·c intl'rr('pl lon~.
111 ollit'r g :ulh'.'-111101\111g l':tl"!l trains,
C.1l1fnrn1;l rO tlll'4 1 rt1:il Snn .J11~e State 34-
10 : S.1111hrrn Cal hull! a cu111cbn("k :1ft('r
:1~1 op<'nlr\!! S!:"lltl(• lu~~ 11 i!h :111 i111prc~si1·c
2!1-0 11t·!or.1• 01 f'r 1 1111101~: ()rcgnn St;i!e
11:-11' du1npcd 41-(1 hy !he Big hfs :'\l!chigan
Statr : l\'ashinl-(loo St<it<' fi nally 11·on a
~:1111c. 31 ·20, n1rr l'l\1 nnl·~('lti1. :111rt CCI.A
l'.<I\ ~hu1 n11t for 111« f1rsl t1 n1(• in vears
:\3-11 by M1ch1gan. · '
\\"i!h H U-! rPt'or·d in tl1t• P;1t•.fl. f)r<:'g11n
\1·as hur1 h.v Fot1ls' in111rv. br("tHJSC he
:1nrt h.'.!('k B11hh.v ,\!001·c-)!11r !lit· Drwks
faint hnp('S for :i H(h{' Hn11 I ~pn! :"ll norc
/1:1s gained !50 _1;irrls HJ 7J fnr three
i:;.11nes.
The !)(11rrrf11I f<iur th·rHnkrd :'ll 1!'111~nn
\\'oih·t'rines i:nbh!rrl 11p l "f"l.r\ ·~ Bn11ns hv
n11111!11g h~u:I. Jlll11ls and 1nh·1·.-r·pt1011 ~ for
1 ~1; .1 arrb. The cn11tr~! 11..1~ :i rn11t,
:il1hn11(!h \1ichigan nu1i:;a1nrrl 1hf' Rn11ns
onlv 2R4-216.
flrcgfl!l s1:1tc \\':l~ trouncf'tl hv
~l1ch1r::in St:ite·s third srnng riuartrrba('k
fl<iy K1h·h, 11·hn hit nn scoring p;iss('s nf
1.1 and 23 ~ ;irds. Burl·e \"an Prlt rrturnrd
h1·n pHss 1ntercfplions fnr touchr\011 ns of
47 anti 40 v<i rd s,
Bernard, .Jackson led \\'Sl: 1n rnd an 11·
)::!<irne lflSl nJ! streak .. la!·kson rared 111·rr
\ltnne . .,ntn f('lr ;i lll-l';trrl sc·r•t P 01 r1rl gr:th-
hi·d fl T.r Pil'!lC p;1~~ f1•r H ~0-1;i •·rt ~("lff'.
Thi' C'oug:irs' rnt11rh;ir !.. i·;trllf' rit t··r 11\rv
lrit "llh ~1 ·2fl !air in 1hr lt11nt qu r~·1rr
• ··I s l•111i::h rlr>h'n~r :ill o\\o'd Srt11 .Jnsf'
01111 !17 1:1rrl\. :l' n11n11111.: ha"~~ l•.1.11·
t 1 11 1~ ~ind S!r \·C' Kr111n1!1rr r ron1r1hu!1'rl
11111 [(1uehrto1rns l'at h 111 lhr Be:i rs 1 Ir·
1·11·1
Baseball Standin~;s
,\\IF.RICA\" 1.EAr.l·f.:;
Eaq n i\ i~inn
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'< R.d •1mn:f' " :,;
nr1·n1t '" fi'l
p, 1" 11'/l B.l " \'r•1 Yr··k " 79
\\ a~J1111~1••n f "' '· ~l l
Cl1!\·rla11d '3 JOI
\\"c~I I 'ii i~inn
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1\hl11;1ukc" " !10
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rh1t.1gn R2 " !'ir11 \'nrk " " ;\lrntrC'r1l ,, ,,
l'h1l:1delphu1 " " \\rs! l)i1i;.ion
S;in Fr.1ncisco '" 71
nod.errs " ., '· 1\1 lan!a '" '° \111c111n;it1 ;n " Houslnn " " S.-;11 [)1f'i::n '" " x-Clinrbrd rl11·1~1011 111 II'
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646-9303
540-9468
began tn think 11·h;it next spring tr;iining
11·ould be like and didn"t like il. so he
\l'ent not and 11·on his 20th grnne Sunday
;is the R;:il!im'lre Orioles blanked
Clr1·rland. 5-0. :ind brcan1e the first 1.cil iTI
since 1920 to have !nur 20-ga nie winners
it1 ;1 SC;1'iO!l.
f'nln1er. 20·!1. f1rt•d a lhrcl'-h11!cr and
rp•tue1·d Ins ;ilrcady 1r;i1n ln11• f:T!A lo
:!.ti.'"i. He struck oul nine. \\"alked 1\1·0 and
retired the !as! 14 mrn in a row
Ile joined leamrnatrs Da\·e l'llc:\al!v,
20-S, ~like Cuell ar, 20.9 . and r at Dobson.
20-R, in the el ite group. Only one other
!P:1 m accotnplishcd that feat ~ the 1920
Chicago White Sox.
Thf'ir quartet or Urban Faber. 21-13,
Cl:iude \\l illia ms, 22·14, Dickie Kerr. 21 -9.
and Ed Cicotte. 21-10, f;iiled lo c:iptu re
I he pennant. ho1vrvrr. losing out to
Cl rvcland.
'"Can·r yoli just see 11·hat would happen
IH 'lC I spring training'.'" said Palmer.
sprculO'lting on 11·hat m1ghl have occurrC'd
h;1d Ile j11sl won 19 gar11rs.
"The phnt0F:raphcr.<all wnu!d be taking
p11·lurcs of Ilic nthrr 1hree guys logrr..hcr
11·it h nic off ti) fine side. I couldn 't [cl that
h:1nf1Cn. CIHtl<I 1:'"
111 jest. l':ol1ncr sa id that "winning this
••nP \l rtS l'C'ry import<int to me -hrck.
\1 hr11 I hr nthrr bnvs win 21J. I look bad if
r ilnn 't equ;il them.''
P:iln1rr sairl he "had excellent conlrfll
and good stuff"' and 111anagrr [Hrl
\\ c•:11·l'r :i$!rrrr1 -along \1·it h the Ind ians.
'l'h"Y are rlri.-.ing ('11 the 11·nrst mark
ia !hr tr;iin·s hi~tnr~· -51-102 ~ com-
p11,..r1 by-the 1914 cluh. Their thrre rc-
n1 t1ninc gan1es t1re \1·11h Delrllil.
H<ilhn1nrc. nn the ri!l1c r hand. has "·nn
t•irhl i11 ;i rii11 . upptn!! its ~ea son 1n ark In
ri1·. i i \\.itli thrrr c;in1rs left (rain 11;ishPrl
n11t f11ur n1hers lh\1 11'\'re not rr~rhrdul
r<l i lhr nr1olrs rn14d win JOO game!' f0r
1 11~· third str;in.~hl 1car <ind at~ C'O'lplurr
llit'lf !h1 rd ~lraight 1\n1cric·n11 LCHfiUe
111·11 n.111t
VOLVO
Ono OJ T~t
We•I~ .. S•IHt , ....
SAVE BIG
DURING OUR
BIG ACTION SALE
l!lg]tflott@
'71 COROLLA
DEMO SALE
LARGE NEW & USED
TOYOTA SELECTION
See Us Before
You Buy!
1966 HAR BOR BLV D.
COSTA MESA
'
Charger s' Streak at 17
After ·Lopsided Victory
By GENE LUBE
01 lh• Dl llY l'lltl i ll!I
Who savs you can't win 'em all?
Th1S aricirnt adage isn't on rhe cu r-
r1f'ult1m thes e d<1ys -t Edison Hig h.
And rookie c11at·h Vinre Asaro is car-
rying nn 1he tradition started in 1969
11'hen the Chargrrs launched thclr \Jn·
beaten streak -longest in Orange Coun-
ty
They n1ade it number 17 in a roll'
Saturda.v night by stopping the St. John
Hosco BrR\'es, 41 -26, in a \Yi!d one at
She~ F1e!d. Huntington Beach.
Asaro has been \\•i1h !he school since it
started playin~ football in 1969. That year
thr Chargers had a 4-3·2 record.
Edison tied ~1 agnolia, 7-7. then beat
Costa ~lesa. Estancia and f ountain
Valley to v.•1nd up the year . In 1970. the
Ch<1rgers won 13. includi ng the CJF AAA
championship and this year are com-
peting in the higher AAAA bracket.
And Asaro , 11v.'<1re of the tough schedule
ahe<id . \\'Ith S;intiago co ming th is week,
not onl y pulled out all stops lo win his
debut bul :ilso indicated 'he \\"as thinking
ahead.
.. \Ve phi ~·ed everyone we could and
s1nrted unloading 1be bench after the se·
c011d half ," the smiling 1nentor said.
Thr ChHrgers ahead 27-6. had every
reason to believe that the Braves were
beaten. bu t that was not the case with St .
John Bosco coach George ~1assick.
'"He t r..tassick ~ and I are good friends,"
said Asaro, "And George also played as
* * * GAM E STATISTICS
F">1 dO•,.•I '~'"'"g Fl•!I OD"'"' P•11•ng
l'ot" dOW"' P"f\alllel
To!&! fir" down•
Y~rO• '"'"'"g Y••OS P''""g
Y•<d\ I<>"
'°'t! ~Md\ gA<n~d
Punh A~•••O• at"•"ct
Pto•"•"/Y•ra• J>t"•ll1td FumPltJ/FumPI•• IDU Scoro o, Qu•rttri
• " • ' " ~· '" ,,
"' ? " 5 ...
'"
,,.
" ,
' " ,,,
'" " "' "' ' " " 1 ?O I• o o I RUHll~G
0 -41
ll -26
Ed'"'" '" " " ••g. Hormon ' ' ' " \IV~~" ' " ' ..
HtrMrn:IH " ,,, ' '" H•Yne~ • " ' " B•lc~ , " ' " l(i11per ' ' ' " ~mel•••o• ' ' , .,.
McN~v ' " • " Bav•rd ' • " ,.
Tc'al• " "' " " 8a•ca
v.croe" • • " " ' •ooo• -" '" ' " r:l•mlru -..!.: " " ' " Tot•I< " ,,, " " " IEdi"'n .. ~ "' .. ~ .. '1••mo" , ' ' " "' 6098rd " ' '" ,615
lolol• " " H2 .. ~
8o<e• Wo•d.,_ " " ' '" .~·
STEVENS EN ROLLS '
AT SOUTHERN CAL
~lark St£'vens, state high school shol
put champion from Ne1vport Harbor. has
enrolled al the Univrrsitv of Sou th ern
California, the DAILY, P1 L.OT learned to--
day.
Sterrns led !he nation's pr eps \Yilh a
67-2 14 heal'c 1Yhich he accomplished in
the st;itc n1eel at UCLA la st June. His
toss 1ras also a state meet record.
He also sta rred as a linemen on
Nc1\•port Harbor's Sunset League co-
championship football team. And he
earned All-C IF laurels as a gridder.
,
'
...
niany as he could, It was A good optner
for both or us. However, in that last
quarter. l had to send in the first uni t."
The Edison coach thought lhe Bosco se-
cond string \\"as better than the first.
\lass1ck kept in his ace quarterback r.iike
\Vordcn and \\'Orkhnuses Chief Ramirez
and Car! Topps, but he made some vi tal
defensi1·e ehanges that caught the
Chargers napping.
f or exa1nple the BraYes racked up 157
yards on the ground in the second half
after gaining only 49 in the first.
But Edison had its heroes and halfback
Fred Hernandez, v.'ho carried 19 times
for 204 yard s, was one of the greatest. He
started the first half Edison rout by
bursting through left tackle for 70 yards
that set up f\1ar k Ha rmon's two-yard TD
early in the game.
But gritty Bosco scored a TD in 12
plays, going 6 yards with Topps plugging
from the one. Larry Weimers' kick was
wide and the Chargers settled for a 7·6
first q4i1rter lead.
The Olargers rolled up three TDS In
the ! e c o n d quart.er. Rocky Whan
plunged from the one, Harmon scooted
across fr om the one-foo l line and to CAP
things off Buff Bogard hit Riek
Thom pson from two yards ('IUt ror the 27-0
halftime bulge.
Hernandez mo\•ed 25 yards over tackle
for a TD lo set the stage fo r the th ird
frame. But the Braves, 11·ith Worden
throwing frant ically. narrowed the score
to 34-13 when Don Murvin snagged A ti).
yarder in lhe end zone.
Edison"s scoring ended with 30 seconds
left in the third quarter when Hernan dez
took a handoff wd reeled off a 34-yard TD
jaunt. Balch's fi fth PAT ~·as good.
The fourth quarter belonged to Bosco
with Ramirez rolling around right end for
a 14-yard TD. Then the Braves got
possession of the ball on an onside kick
and six plays late r Topps ran in from the
six. A twC>-poin t conversion attempt fail·
ed.
Ch eeking Out Pr.os
Cardinals Battle Jets
111 Televis ed Grid Tilt
The choice at quarterback still stood in
question today as the SL Uluis Cardin als
awai!ed the invasion of the New York
Jets for tonight's televised National foot·
ball Lc;:igue game \Channel 7 al. 6).
''A lot of the decision will be based on
the condition of Jim Hart's ankle ," said
Cards coach Bob Hollway. He wo rked out
over the weekend . but 1nay ha ve !o give
\\'a~· to forme r USC star Pete Bcathard.
Mean\v hile in Sunday's NFL action,
Chicago provided the biggest upset of the
day, coming from behind to down Min-
nesota's Vikings , 20-!7.
Kent Nix fired a 26-1 ard toucl1dov.·n
pass to [)1('k Gordon with 1.42 lel! in the
gan1e to give the in\"ading Bears the vic-
tor\·.
Thr Brars forced a Viking punt "'1th
just ort•r rhn·c nunutcs left. On the first
dn11n. Nr~ p:issed 26 y;irds to Bob
\\"altacc, 11·ho caughl the ball of£ the
hand<: ()f \'1k1 ng n11dd!e linebacker Carl
Gcrshaeh ;ind frll at !he Minneso ta 19.
On t111rd and 10. Nix passed again to
c:ordon deep in the end zone for the v.·in-
n1ng Tll
In Baltimort', the Colt s 111.~o prored
itself the perfect host by offering a l"ic-
tory to the visi1or -and Clevel and ac-
c:epted ~racinusly,
The Brown'\. led by qu<1rlerbac k Bil!
Nelsen and runni ng back Leroy Kelly.
knncked nff the Col ts, 14·13. Kell y had
louchdown runs or one and three ya rds.
In Philadelp hia. Da llas continued to
roll hy the opposition. The Cnwboys blitz -
ed the Eagles, 42-7, intercept ing a team
record seven passc.::.
Dallas qu;irterback Cr:iig Morton
responded 1\ilh t\\"O touc hdo11o·n passes
anrl onr scoring run.
1'llean11o·hile, Georii.e Allrn's \.\'ash1ngton
Redskins captured their _!;econd victory in
' I
a ro w, do\\·ning the host Ne w York
Giants, 31}.3.
Redskins quarterback Billy Kilmer
decimated the Gi ants ' pass defense, hit·
ting 23 or 32 attempts !or 309 yards and
two touchdowns to Charley Taylor, one on
a 71-y ard firsl quarter play that put the
Sk ins ahead to slay.
l\liaml's Dolphins we nt north and al~o
came home a victor, walloping Buffalo,
29-14.
Garo Vep remian swung the big toe for
the Dolphiru, booti ng five field goeJ11
while Larry Csonka and J im Kiick churn·
ed !heir way lo a combi ned'12l! yards
agai nst the Bills.
Houston also \\'as a graciOU-'i hogt,
!ailing to the Kansas City Chiefs. 20-16.
The Chiefs" Len Da\\'Son passed for 207
yards -but it was \Varre n McVea '5 lour·
yard scoring scamper late 1n the final
period that enabled them to slip by the
Oilers.
Down soulh , San Francisco had an easy
time with host New Orleans, dumping the
Saints, 38-20.
Dan Abramowicz snared th re e
touchdowns passes for the losers but his
teamzna tes' errors pa ved the wa y to !our
of !he fi ve 49ers touchdown!\.
In lhe ea sl, hos t Nev• England was
routed by Detroit, 34·7 as lhe. \l'inners'
S1eve Owens plunged Ol'er from two
yards oul and teamed with quarterback
Greg Landry on a 74·yard TD pass.
In the only two home triumphs of the
day. Pittsburgh hea t Cincinnati . 21-lO And
Green Bay outlasted Denver. 34-!3.
Green Bay picked off six Don Hor n
pas.ses and the Packrr~ used the runn ing
nf John Brockington. Dave Hampton and
Donny Anderson lo down Denver.
Terry Bradshaw threw two touchdown
passes for Pittsburgh .
CALIFORNIA
Servlnt S1cramenlo. Sin fr1nciscn. San Jnse , 01•land, Orang~ Courrty, Onb rio. P'il m Sprinp 1rtd S.11 Diem
Phone (71 •) 540.4550 ror re~eivations. Or call ~ur loul tr1vel agent.
•
-~ ... ir ,,. -....... • .. • •• -• --' ... -
'
Mond.1y S~ptlmber 27. ltJ71 O,l,ILV PILOT 5 '-'-'~'--~~---=::c:._:..:=~~
BucsFaceToughRio·Hondo ~
After Convincing 28-15 Win
Rustle1·s' Def e11se Sparkles
111 35-14 Rout of Mt. SAC
ll) 110\\'Al\l) I., llANllr (luarler with the ~tort knot-
11-d 7·7. Th<" :0.lounllt'!t were
quarler a host oAiefensive
linemrn t'Ouverged on a loose
pitchout by ~f t. SAC at th•
~totrntie 14 11nd BiU Cornelius By CRAIG SHEFF
01 l~t Dolly 1'1111 ~1111
. Just huw s.trong 1s Orange
Coast Cu!tege s lwthall tea1n?
Thal question :;hould l>e
ansv,rere~ Saturday night when
coat'h D1<'k 'fucker'!> Pirates
tangle with tough ll10 Hondo
al El Hantho High.
Tu cke r's crew rolled to a
convincing 28-15 vic tory (11/er a
beety LA Har bor lean1 Satur-
day at LeBar(! Stadium . but
the \\'1n n11ghl hil \'e been a
t:ostly one.
ED NEWLAND
A11teaters
Captm·e
Polo Title
A high scoring UC Irvine
water polo team took up
v.·herc it le1t off a ye<J r ago by
•vinning its O\\'ll tourna rnent
Saturday with a convincing 12-
li vic torv over the Universitv
of &1uttiern Critifornia in Ui"e
chan1µion.~hip game.
t;CJ thus repealed as
!our11ey champion for the se-
cond year in a ro\V. this time
against the surprising USC
\.\'hith had defeated the
vaunted UCLA Bruin.o; in a
semifinal encounter, J0-7.
L'Cl's Anteaters gained Lhe
fi nals V.'ith a triple overtime
win over their big brothers
fron1 UC Berkeley in the
semis. 11-10, on Jav Brov:er·s
go;il in 1he third su.dden-dcath
overtime period.
Jn three ga1nes during the
lournainent , UCI s('ored 37
goals lo 26 f0r it s foes. This
didn'l bring rn:irkcd concen1
frorn coach Ed Ne1\·land,
hOl\'CVer.
"You have lo outscore lhc
opponents, don't you'.' That's
v•hat this game is all about.''
he added.
Asked if the current lcan1
h:ul a chance ot' repeating the
ro:1d t;1kcn liy llis t\'.CA1\
('hampio11ship squad o{ a ye;ir
ago. he replieJ
"This 1s a diflerenl ty pe ol'
teanL \Vr nl<1de a loL of
m1~!akc~ in 111 1.., tournamrnt
hut J Lh111!; lhc kids learnc;J a
lot too
"Une !Jun!:( you rnusl realize_
\\'c l111 vl' a k1L i.r 11\'0·rnctl'r
nlrll -big n1en who knov.' how
lo h::indlc thcrnsl'lvcs in thi s
pool \1·hich is under regul;-ition
~iie. Thry c.:ouldnl dn it. in a
bigs,!C'r pool."
Newland ;ilsu _pointed ouL
another factor in his squad's
ineeling USC for thr cham-
pionship instead of UCLA.
"/\ goalie 1nakes a big dif-
ference in this game and
UCLA's goalie Kevi n Hard.v is
in Europe \.\'ilh the U.S.
Adriatic Games squad. USC
scored quite a few goals ov er
th e head of two inexperienced
rnen and \\'hen Kevin gets
back. he 11'ill make a big dif-
ference ."
ln Saturday's act1011 . Jack
Oick1nann ~cored five limes in
the USC gaine and had four
again Berkeley, Bruce Olp.ck
h,1d six in the two encounters
for lhe runnerup position. But
11le hig goa l of !he day for UCI
came from Fullerton .JC
transfer Bov.•er to \Vin the
game v:ilh Berkeley.
UC! will play a star-studded
alumni team tonight at 7
o'clock in the home pool with
such former stalwarts as
'.\like Mart i n , Ferdy
f\lu ssJmino. Dale Hahn, Pal
GlasgO\\', f\la~o11 Phil pot. Bi!I
Leach. Bob Nealy and Don
Hon:lldson among others.
s .... H1~11•
LIC Ber1<.e1tv a • 1 ) 1 I 0-10
UC Irv! ... 1J21 111-I!
UC lrvl,.. 1cor+rt11: Bleck •·
01<-mu>n '· E•10ti, M(.C>on1kl. Browor,
criam111011t...,
use '''0-' UC lrvll'>I' • • O 4---U
UC lrvlr>e t~or!nt · Olckmenn J, 8f~ck
l. Ell•O<I ?, fhad~.,,~ ), Brow•• !.
Mn•! v•I""~" 1>l•••<i: l ,rr v l{lf ln
•"II Roel> E•M><I (Vtl l
.\ll·IOUrnt>' !lam Jl(V D!cwm~nn
lUC!l. Ci•r~o "'"" ... ,, Eric LH>OtOI"
(UCL ,t,\, Ft~n• H•(~I oO>d Jr>t ~"•~•n•n llJS[l. l 0tn ~·r•on!1 !U( 11~·•.~1~~1 -"~ l'lt!t Qv•~" cue l •n•• ll~•bt••I
Ace Bue quarterback Cary
\'albuena reinjured an ankle
and may have to sit out the
Rio Hondo game. And
although freshman s i g nat -
caller Alvin White direi:tecl the
Hues \veil lor three quarter . .::
Saturday, liis passing was
spotty.
"The ankle injil!'y looks a 1ol
\\'Orse ." suid Tucker. ··~1y
guess is he (Va lbuena) \1•on'l
play aga inst Rio Hondo. And
they 're going to be a handful."
\Vhile Valbuena 1nay miss
the Roadrunner Ill!. highly·
regarded running back Garth
\Vise is expected lo return.
\V ise suffered a le g injury
prior to the game witll Colden
\\'est.
Tucker y,• a s pa11icularly
ple~sed \~ith the Pirate run-
ning game Saturday night. "It
certainly looked a lot better
tha n it 's been. The offensive
line did a much better job
than last 'veek (against
Golden \\'est/."
Of !hi 01llv l"llOI 5!11!
Orange Coast plied up 1$5 \\'ALNlJ'(' <.:1·ed11 the l'<illed for illegal procedure on
net yards running against {;olden \\'est Colle<>e defen:"e. , punt that '---·nA.-1 "-" d• Harbor with Steve Mohulski t-> ·' '-'"'-'' = ..., yar ·
leading the way "-'ith 77 yard~ l\'ith a victory for thr Hu stler Ii• the Rustler 27 and wt're
in 19 <'i'lrries, i n t' Ju d i n g footbiill tca111 01'f'r !\IL San fvrced to ki ck again.
touchdo11·n runs of 25 and tv.·o Antonio Collfge Sa I u r d a y This \Hnf' big .Jot' f\.!ont<1nari
ya rds, night , 35---14. de sp1tt• <i gh1ri n~ 121.'il boorned through and hit
0 C '' '~ b•ead a0 d butto~ stat1 sta:al i1nha l,onc"' l h :i I .... ·• • · " -' ~ the hall luviard the goal1'1ne.
passing gan1e was off slightly doesn't 11(11Tv !lie Rl1s1!r1' ~ 15 of 35 fo r 169 yards). but il • coHchin~ st:if( :'llnnl;inari ran1b!ed inio thl'
1vas effective enough to handle DICK TUCKER •·1 thought we pl'-lyeU 3 lvl t.on•! 1u recover the hall f1ir ;i
t!1e Seahav.•li.s. -------------belle!' 10t1ig!n," ri1;11·h n:i.1 Sl'f/l'(' and it \\·as 14-7_
\Vhite connected on J:l of 30 Shackleford .s:iid fol1 011'111g ll10: 'l'ttr go:ill1ne s!and th:it h;id
passes ror 137 yards. One of UCJ Falls gan1e. "Our n_1nni11~ g;1111~· IJit· l'oaclnng s1aff btu.~.ing
those 1vas a 37-vard TD strikf' t•an11: into 1l:'l own ;111d ('1'tn
lo '
.. ·,d· .,,,·,.,.,, s [e v e 1 d. 1 .1 d 1 rn111e in the 1Jµe11i11g rninulrs • ..._ , 11ougll we 1tn o ;is 11H1i.:1
!Ste ROUT, Pase. ?7)
lli•MI' ST.t.fUTICI
F"" uo""' <v•to•no
F "' oown1 J&"•~t
F1<1t oown• o•n11tlr •
10111 r1r,1 do"'"'
Y•r~I rUl~·n~
Yatt!• P•<\inQ
Puni<l,1.v•rao* t!'"•"C•
P•~•lli,...rVar<'.' ptn1101td
Fvmolr!l~umtilt> lo•1
Stir• • .-Q"11!1•I
r.01oen Wt>' O I• 1
Ml I••• AnlO•l'O '/ 0 0
llUSHIMG
Goidon Wtt!
l(t ,,
" " "
.....
10 11 ' . . ' u ..
IU !ICIJ
.. J!J " ~ 11t ,.,
l /l! •120
Olli! 11/JOI
C/O I/)
1•-.U
0 -If
vi •vt • • • ••• •• Gauehos Stu11ned
!\tonahan that gave t he J 1 l M l passing. I thought our throw uf the third qt;arter A p<i.'.~
Pirates a 14-9 lead \l'ith 10 ll s ec ing ga 1ne 1vas adcqu;itt•. pl<t)' for 44 y;1rds put the ball (<"~"""' II " "' seconds left in the opening "But the defense 1\·as the or\ 1111' Colden \\'est t1\•o-yard ~~-~"'"0 ~: !
quarter. GregBealof UC lrvineplae-thing that helpedu~tonight l1n!'11lhf' t d '0 I t ~ .. * 1' 1 •1
We Just Stunk,
\Vhite aclua\h· should have ed third as the highest fini sher '' irs an g a 0 go. ~•m•"" o , .1.0 "The blocked pu nt in the se-Fot1r pta.vs later, th e s!ot1! s~~nr 11 s -5~
h'd l"'' mo'e TD tosses for UC Irvine in the first-ever -' " · cond quartt'r \\'rt~ the turning nustler defensive line had K~•••' l o '·'
lie threw .a Ion~ strike lo cross country competition in-point and \\'e v.•ent 011 to five given up one yard and the To
1
•
1
• Ml. '"" ~~i.n'!~ 14 ··~
l\1onahan midway through lhe valving the school Saturday, touchdowns ;1fter they 1 '.Ill threat \Vas ended. C••<>1>•"9 ~ '1 1-'
second quarter, but the forn1er but the Anteaters dropped an SAC ) got the rirsl one . (;olden \Vest's first score Grav n 111
'
1 a.•
Says Hartman
•t · 0 tl1'gh t d opped ,., at 18-42 decis ion to hosl Cal State ri.uc•<> • 10 0
,,, "arin.. s ar r · "Another thing L thou ght our ca me 11·ith JI :~ lefl i11 the se-p.,,,,, .> n ° •.•
the three-~·ard line. jLong Beach !. defense sho\\·cd a lot of' ~·la~s eond quarter \vhen r-.1ark Dunn sn~P<i·~ -' 11
•·'
1'h n with 3 t' left ,·,, the Beal. a for1ner Costa ~1esa Mon•on '
0 11
•.• e : " · on thal goalline stand. Thal ci rcled end for eight yards. Pritr 7 • 0 1.1
th. d "fan a \\'h,·te '' ,· t }ligh cross countl'V and lra•·li. w11,, 1 11 • to.• 1r .~ z . ,_ v.•as one of the best effor1s I The blocked punt came with '1 h t ,. ·1h ?!"J rd -il star, is a senior at UCI this .J"<~'"" i 1' " 1.1 ~· o u s 1 \VJ .1 .,-~'a aeri; ha ve see11 and 1·n1 sure when 2: 18 left in the same period r oi.1; •~ ll'IJ ll'I •·•
By PHIL ROSS or t11t 0111. Pllo1 s .. 11
The only thing \1•hich coach
<:eorge Jl artinan can be cer-
tain or today is the simple fa ct
that his Saddleback College
Gauchos will host Mt. San
Jacinta's Eagles this Saturday
night at f\1ission Viejo lligh in
the final non.('onference foot-
ball game of the 1971 Cam-
pa ign.
Other than that. llart1nan
can be excused if he \Valks
around mumbling to himself.
Last Saturday nlgbt ;it
Buena Park High. the Gaucho
head mentor 1vatched in
disgust. along with a gathering
of 1.523 fans. as his highly-
favored squad fe!l under an
aerial blitz by the inspired
Cypress Chargers, 24·13.
Both teams each no'v boast
1· 1 records. But more im·
por!ant, the setback gives
Sadd!eback's !\I i s s i o n Con-
ference opponents something
1no1·e concrete to shool at,
since llartn1an'll cre\v \\'as lhe
preseason loop fa vorite after
c;>,pturing !he circuit cro1vn in
1970.
At the same time, once
lightly-regarded Cypress must
11011' be reckoned \.\'ilh as a
possible contender in its loop
-the Soutllern California
Conference.
\Vllile Cha rgers head 1nan
Bill Price \.\'as elated af-
1.er\vards, all llartrnan rould
say v.•as. "v.•e didn°t \Vant to
play football, \Ve just stunk,
!hat's alL"
After a scoreless f i r ~ l
quarter, the winners \.rent 11·ild
in the second stanta. a1nassing
three touc hdow ns for an 16·0
halftime edge.
In fact. Saddleback
fn1Jo1\·ers merel.Y shrugged and
chucklf'd \l'hen !hev recovered
front t!ic. ini tial shock of the
Ch~1 rgt•rs· first TI) 11•ith just
32 sctonds gone in the seeond
reriod.
Freshm an quarterback Roh
Dill hooked up 1\·ith flanker
.Jolin r-.1cJ\anlce un a 14·yard
senring pas~ In capping a ti!·
y;:irrL se1·t•11-pla y dri1·c 11·1 th
l3udd.1· Ahourctk·s ronversion
li 1ek gning \.\'ide lo the right.
i\l cNa1n ee \\'as alt alone In
!hr right co rner <if the end
zone \l'ilh the nearest {:aucho
defender tv.·o ya rd s away.
A p:11r of offside penalties
<tgai nst Sa dd le back greatly
enhanced lhe C.vpress scoring
opportuni ly in that first suc-
cessful thrust for I he
Chargers.
Any aflershock suffered by
Gaucho (ans following the first
Cypress tally v;as trans(ormed
ro plain di sbelief when the
underdogs put another six ·
pointer on the board 12
n'inules later.
This lin1e Dill climaxed
another 61·yard push by con-
necling v.·ith his other flanker
-Bernie l\1edeiros :_ on a 26-
r;i rd pass-and run special. The
latler caught the bomb over
his· head at the Saddleback
rour anft skipped into paydirl
untouched.
A l\VO-point PAT ti·y failed
Prep, JC
Grid Scores
"ltll 5<h .. I O••nte •l. 'hoy 1'
l OI•" ,\.I, T~O\/'-n<I Oa-1 I )
e.irnowtt 1', Peclllc1 •
Se•vlte ,6, L•vol1 ,
W•1!e•n :)II, Sivan,.. 14 Nf'il 71, V1ltncl1 JC
Pioneer 3S. Whl!ll111 o ''"'1 .. c ...... S..N1 Mon!tl fl, F11li.tton' 11
P11.a-•• !en!• An• H Sen 0'"6 Mtst H, Groumonl 11
~1nt1 e1•bllr1 U , P110m1< !O
Be•••llleld :M. Ll""V 0
II.Ill HO<>do 'l'I. Cl!ru1 10 P~o.til• !i, El C:1mJ,,,, 10
Eel! LA u, L• V•ll~v )0
Wt•! LA ''• ltlve•1loM '
Li'. ~lliWUI .n. De11•I ll
!l1ncoc 1. It, Mot1<PM~ I
V0Mvr1 1$, Monlrr11 P1nin1u•1 I•
,l.~•~toD .. v~•it• ,16. M ... (O\!O 7
'"'''~w'"''" .. , Mt 51n Jttlnto ll Cillr>111lr .II. C ~elf•• !'
for a si:it·pointer -b11t it v.·as .i ear. they didn 't score. it turned and \vith the aid of a pair or l'AssiNc
Called b'Ck When one of the Scctin• -I ... ,QU<ll• (L8 ! 1a,S2; '· G•'dtn w .. 1 sw .. ney !Lfl). 3. 8••1 IU(ll ; '· things in (\UT direction.'' Dave Schoonover place kicks. P• f'C .. ~1 ¥•
officials blew his
1
whhistle wllile ~':uhaai: :~:i; 1~· s~,;:;~t~n \i~1i'1 :. T tic b Io ck e d ki c k ga ve the Rustlers a 14-7 ~~~~~~:~· 1~ ~ ~ •;
' '" ... ..., ..,,
but Saddleback \1·as slapped
·1vith a 15·yard persona l foul
penalty \.\'hich \\'as assessed on
the ensuing kickoff.
On that kicko(f, Abourezk
booted a \\'obbler from th e
Gaucho 45 (\\•here it \\'as teed
~up) !o the Sadd!eback 32,
wllere mate f\tark f\IcKay
recovered it.
the ball "'as in hg t. v1ugn8n cuc:1>: '· 011vrr 1uc:11i io. Shacklelord 11·as referring 10 halftime advantage. roi.a 1• 1 1 •
11,, .. ~r had 1·umoed lo a 9·0 "'"" 1uc:11: 11. se11 ILDL 11. Mt. san •nNftl• ~ --'-'c'~c'c"c"-'c"c'c"c'_'c'·c'c'c'•c•_c'"c'c"_:_ ___ c_a_'n_e __ ,_at_e __ i'_'_'_h_e_s_·e_c_o_od ____ "_"_"_'_'_'c'c'_''-r_1 _i_o_:_thc•_c'chci'cd_~'c':''_:_~_c':'...:c'c_c'c_':':'...:c'*'::: lead early in the first quarter
on a 37-vard field p;oal and a ~ --,
lt then took Cypress only
five plays and 33 seconds to
1nove in for its third TD on an
eight-yard run by freshman
tailback l\fike Hixson.
The Chargers addtd insult
to injury in the third quarter
and upped the ante to 24-0 on a
seven-yard scamper by Iii>:·
son.
Saddleback's scoring \vas
::icconlplished on a 96-,1ard
kickoff return b.v R l1 d y
Holmes fol!O\\'ing llixson·s st-
-cond tally and a six-point ef-
fort on a 12·ya rd pass fro1n
Rob Bosanko IQ H;>ro[d Proppe
in the final period .
Doug Rothrock toed (he l'AT
after i[oJmes· romp .
F r>I <IO"~~ r~•n•~;
~;,,, downs "a"'"9
F•"I <IO .. n~ P•~·n;.,
l <i•.-1 ""1 ao .. ns
V~r<I• •u•~•09
Y•r<H 1>&011"9
v a•d' ln<!
N<:! •Ar<I• 9~<n~d
l't1"1o/i'.V~'·l9~ <lo!!A~Ct
~en•l"~•IYArd< otnallud
i<umbl~S/Fvmtil~ IOI!
S(ot1 bY Q~1r11r<
' ' > • • ' 14 ,.
HJ tf
!JO ~55 .. " 1H lla
• •lJ 6170
I? '1 10 1/S!
S•ddl~~.,~ o O 1 (-n
0 -1• CY o•rn 0 II •
f!o'""~" '" Wll•on
T<llal<
Too'"
Ht>'>O" 0111
Su!lo•
llUSMING
S 1ddltl>1(~ ,.. ~·
" •
,
" " " . '" l~ 15)
" • " •
., •
"
' ' • ' '
" '. ' .
•• " " " .. II.\~"' (•,d•r~11:
' ' ' '
" ' " • H -D ~
l -LO
Hu~! ' Sl>ott! 1 • " 'M' Total~ .16 It
/,10'1 E MO RE l/,ORE MO R
PASSING
S1dd!rb1<~
80·"~'0
Du'''"
Tel•''
D''I [•'~"'" )t Tol~I'
Pl •>< pl>i V•
" '
·111 1 1 1 ~
' 11 \]
C •P''" ?O 1~
' ' l~ 1'
" ,.
0 111 . " e '~~
.. ,.
u
'
"' '" .700 .,
"' ~
,JtO
16-vard drive after recovering
a Pirate fumble.
But the Pir<'.tts struck back
with Valbuena scoring from
eight yards out on a keeper
around Jert tnd ••ith three
minutes lefl in the first period.
Then \Vhite'~ toss l o
i'.1onnhan put the Bucs ahead
to stay.
i\1ohulski then \venl !wo
vards in the second quarter
'and 25 in the final stanza ancl
after place-kicker Ben n \1
Ricardo hil on his fourth PAT
in a ro1v. the Bucs had ::i 23-9
lead.
Tttcker admitted that he
knew his club would come
back after it got behind, ~-0.
"There 'vas no doubt in my
mind that we \vould come
back. And 'vhen "'e scored
that first lo11chdo1vn 1 kne"·
\1'e'd \V in iL" said the OCC
<'Oach.
•,I.MS 5Ti'.TtSTICS ." " .. F·r<! ""'"'"' •u~,n~ "''''' d0"'"' ,,., •• ,, • F l"' down• 1>e11a1n~1
lo!•I li"t do·Nn>
v .. d. '"'"'"' Y1ro1 pa~•;"'
Y1,d$ IOI\
No! v•rt!i g•ined
Pvnh /,\.V@'IVt Oi<l•n••
Pon~l!;f5/Y1rt'..1 ff'l'I''"~
Fvml:>lt"!f~""'~le-. I~•' S•••• •• Clu1rll,.
L... Harbor • O 0
o'"''"r CO<I>< l< ! o
Moh" I'~'
Mo~I••
Volbu•"•
H1r!,lie1n
Mil'~• V1ntim;o1,.
L•Mtil1evr
To!1I•
(rOH
cn•a•h•m
Pov<ingt<
(<)Wiii ... ,,1,.,,~
Lonon
'"' Tol•I>
lll lllMING
O••nr• (N U
l<I• •• It ,9
• ;'0 ' . ,. ' .. ' . , ,,
' " •6 Ut
LA Hlfi.r
I! li 1 .. • • " " ' ,
" • •• 11;.
,ASSING
Oronp.t C•••t
,,
• •
'!7 11 10 .,,,
1'• 170
" " l!t '" •'l~
''" ,,, 61?f
115t
"
' --1J 7 -11
vi '"' '' '
,,
" 10 ,1 0
' " . " ••• . " . " " ' '
"
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..
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l'•l~u~"'°
TM•'t
•• •c ol>i ~· JO I J I lJI "' .d l s J a l~
J5 lS , ..
1..4 H•rl>lr
11 1 l l )~
• S I ~· )) 1~ 7 110
.~
"71 ,.,
,\W .us
Oi·a11ge Coast Poloists
Battle LBCC Tuesday
Orange CoasL Co I l e g e 's
\Valer polo I.earn bids for ii.~
fifth straight v1clory of the '71
i;eason Tuesda v when the
Pirates host. defending state
junior college champion Long
Beach City College.
The game is set (or :l.
LBCC is coachl!d by lfun-
tington BeaC'.h rrsidenl 'f\tontc
Nitzkowski.
Mean\\-·hlle, Golden West'~
Rustlers: lake a brief rest
before competing in 1 ht
. Northern California lourna·
ment. Friday and Saturda~'.
Coach To m Hcrmstad 's
Rustlers gained the fioals of
the Gaucho polo tournament in
Santa Barbara Saturday, only
to lose to tough fl.1t. San
Antonio. 12-4.
Orange Coast. had an tasy
time in winning its ov,·n Pirate
ln,·itational .
Coach Jnck Fullerl.on's Bucs
easily whipptd three roe~ -
down ing LA Harbor, 17·10.
College of the Sequoios. 10-4,
and Rio lfondo. 20-4. The
Pirates are averaging 14.8
goals per outing.
l~etferman Tom Warnecke
w;is the scoring star fo1 the
Pirates, getting 12 goals in the
three games. Former Costa
r-.tesa l.figh star f\like Beal
lossed in six goals.
<:olden West produced a
i;:tK>d team e(fort in defeating
Foothill, 5-3, in the semilinals
of the Gaucho tournament., but
the Rustlers fell apart in the
(Stt LBCC, Pa1e 21)
~ •AF•ca INSURANCE
• FIRE
•AUTO
•BOAT
•HOME
• BUSINESS
Bob Paley & Associates
474 E. 1nH STREET, COSTA MESA
642-6500 5~205
For Penney Days,
a wide profile
polyester cord tire
costs 20% less.
'
plus 1.81 fed. tallllCllS ..
B78-13 (reptec:esW.t8. .,.,
tilackwa ll lubekte!. Alg. flll
Mileagemaker Plus wide profile 4 ply polyester cord tire.
Bl1ckw1ll lubele11
f ed. Foa.
Size Replaces lax Reg. Sale Size Retplaces l1x Reg.. _.,
C78-1 3 700-1 3 .. 1.92 21.95 17.56
C78·14 . , 695·14., 2.07 .. 22.95 18.36
E78-14 735·14., 2.21 24.95 .. 19.96
F78·~4 .. 775·14 .. .2.38 .. 26.95 , , 21 .56
G78·14 825-14 •. 2.55 .• 2a95 .. D.tl
560-15 .. -.. 1.74 .• 23.95 .. ft11
G78-15 .. 825-15 .. 2.64 .. 2SA5 .. :r&86.
Whltew1111 only $3 rnor•
1-2-3 oil change and lube.
588
·::· 3 d1y service 1peclal (Mon., Tues., Wed. only]
Compare the lhings we do:
Change oil (up to ~cits. ol Pcn,,cy~ heavy dtftl
motor oil). ·
lt'is la!I nr.w 011 f1llcr ;;tn<l lubricafe cha~i~.
•Moat Am1rlc1n cars P111-; ,1 rrr.~ pit boss safety £heel<.
JCPenney
auto Center
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at these Penney Auto centers:
'BUENA PARK CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD CHULJ, VISTA DOWNEY FASHIONVALLEY-IAN
MONTCLAIR N•EWPDRT BEACH ORANGE
Use Penneys time paymen t plan.
DIEGO FU LLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH
"THE CITY" RIVERSIDE VENTUR~.
•orang11horp1 at ValleyVlew(Cloud Sund1.,.,J
l
I
"
:!_§ DAIL V PILOT
Estancia Sub Too Much for Tustin ROUT ...
fCuntinued From PaRe ?SI
u(M'n1nt: quarter of the !\It.
SAC lilt as the r-.1ount1es
STARS
Sydf\E'Y Omarr Is on~ or
thl.' ,vorld"s ~N"al astrolo·
grrs. l11s rulurnn i~ Olli' of
lhi! D1UL'i PILOT'S great
ATTENTION
YACHTSMEN
YCKltt lrolie+"ote l New loot
O.Ole~Jiip 1_..1..u For Hie. All
or rort l•ttrtil. Call 115-11 OG
8\1 ROGER CA RLS()\'
Ot IM D•ll' '"" Sitll
A perp!e>.lng quc.suon for
most prep football {·oat"hes is
what do you do v.•hen you lose
your all·league tailback?
'fhen what do you do when
your substitute is banjied up
on !he first play of the opening
g<1 1ne (if !he 1971 season?
If ''ou're toa('h Phil Arow11
of E~!anc1a Hig h SC'houl ~·uu
sin1ply (hg :1 litl!c deeper iritu
your bag of 1rn;k:; a11d co1ne
up "'1th a 145-pound junior
l\'llh no varsity e:..perience
\\'1th tailb:tl'h J1n1 Schultl
sidrlined and John l)ixon ail·
ing ten1porarily, Brn1,1·n 111·
serted U:in Pr1nc('(lttu 111 his
offensive line up ;ind !he S.-4
speOOstcr n1;1de l3ru1,1•n look
ltke a 111ag1cia n.
•
The move paid 0 r r
hand~n1el~ as Pr111ceutto ru~c
to the occu~1on \\'Jt h 195 nt·t
yards in 28 carries us he <ind
his Estancia rnat('s sw('pt to a
1:1.ll non ·league win o\cr
Tustin Saturday ru~ht nl
Newport Harbor before 4,600
fnns.
Bn1v.•n confided afterward
!hat had his No. I replaec111ent
( U1xon t not brt'n bani.:ed up un
till' fir st uffensi1'c piny of the
night 1! "as his intcn\luri llJ
kt'l'P lJ1xo11 at tailhack with
Pict Pyle al fullba ck.
Hut fate ga\(' Prin('('(ll\O the
t•hance and he didn 't w<1ste lhe
11p!JOrlun1ly.
In the style of lcan1n1ale
St·hultz. Princeotto slarnn1ed
his way through the Tustin
defense y,•1\h runs of 17, 13 14 ,
15, ll , l!, !2, t~ anti 4D an1011g
others.
1\11d 11·her1 Ii(' wa::;n'l busy in·
t1rn idat1ng the losers 11 y,·as
nixon nn 1hc a\la('k \Ylth runs
uf 10, 14 , 15, 33 aud 12 lwitc.
Dixon gol the Eagles of
Estanci;l 111 the scunng col-
urnn 1n thl' s1·cond quarter
1,1•1len IH' 1·:1pp('d a 40·yard
dnve \11\h a tl1rce·yard burst
behind Ille bl!Jf"king of Uoug
Brant and Jut' Barnet!.
&·oH (;ayner addl'd the PAT
for a 7·0 l::stanc1a lead.
The clinctung tourhdo\\'n
ca1ne in !he !hird stanza when
11uar1erback /lank fi.1oore fired
;i 10-yard strike to fJ;inker Lee
Jo~ t l'.
The £aglcs' defen s e
destroyed any hopes Tustin
might have had for an upset.
Thi> nnly scoring threat of the
night for the Tillers earne with
t.,..·o 111inutes remaining .
But Kiin Shores and Craig
Dennis stopped Tustin's Shawn
/lleath in his tracks at the
Eagle seven yard line.
St;1t ls1 ieally the fin<r.l n1ar gin
should h;i ve been more. but
Urown s<11d. "['in always hap·
py with a 11·111 Our learn
played better football than last
\t•<J r when 1,1•e beat thern 30·0"
· Bro1,1•n's hffensJ\"C 111t1eh1ne
\\"as stymied on the dnves
11l11ch ended on Tus!in's 19, 1:i.
17. 32 and 26-\'ard lines.
The punishing ground attack
of Estancia accounted for 18
r1rSt dOWl1S 1,1·ith the U\'er<1ll
OAIL Y P ll..01 Pho!o ~, ,.1lritk O'Denn1u
advantage 2J..5 over Tustin.
The shutout du pl ica I cd
F'.!>tanl'ia's opening conquest <•f
Tu.~t\11 la!>! yf:ir 1,1·hen Brn11n 's
crew went on to post a 9·2
n1<1rk.
GA.ME $TA.TISTICS
Fo"I down • •u•h•p11
F ·flt "°"'"' O•"tr>11 rlr\I aown• P•n•l!1fl
l ot•• '"'' oo .. n1
• " ' .,
" '"
' ' ' ' ' n YotO> <u>n1n11
YMO• •·•n•n~
Y~•O• IO•T
N"' v~•O• 11•onf'CI
. " " " ::.iii ~l
Punh "•<'~9• 01>l•nt•
Penolhe> VarOI <#n1li1"'1
FumDI•• FumOI•> IO"
l 71 I ll
• SI 3 11
0 0 I 0
!(Oro by Ou''"" E>!an<•• o I e o !l
''"'"' 000~0
Pton(eO!IO
D"O" """"'' EooOol
,,.,~ ..
lolo l•
(dlhcun
C.old>!Or>f
~tuM
l'd''"OVO
C•u•,.loy
Mr11n
Lon~
To Ioli
"'"''" Boev.i
'01111
llUSl11 "'G
E•1•Mil
!(b I• yl •Vt
11 )01 I 6~
It l IS 0 9 'i
IS ]) 11 I 0
1 I 0 • 0
1 I 0 f 0
'1Jool7S S8
TuOl•n
9 ~l 0 11
I I~ 11 0 ~
4 I~ 1 5
I l I 0 S • o 1 n 5 0 : I
I 0 ' U 1•11 101~
PASSING
f >l•n'<•
•• pc pnl •• P<'
9 • I " ... J
I 0 I 0 .0'"1 1~•7<1>~M
T"•lln u J o .1 .n1
f('aturl's. or 675-3020.
juinped to a S--0 Je1:1d. "ii;;;:;:;;;;;:;;;:'.!~~~:i-~-:;-:;-;:::::::;~:;;::~
Wit h Colden West's first1I
''"'" pl•Y"'g •II .lhe w•y '"1 HERBERT L MILLER TIRE SAYS lhe S"{·ond and third st<u1zas. CO e
lt1e Husllers n1atchcd the • · • ~~?e~~~i=~ il~a~i::s-j~~t ~~I In tires, it's not the
much to overcome.
C:olden \V est has three • It" h
games scheduled Friday in the) pnce you pay. s ow
Nor1)1ern (.';11 !OtJrriev. 1He eting1 •
01ablo V<1llcy and Cabril!o at •t
FM!hill College nod ''"'"" lhe often '-IOU pay I UC Cnliforn1a (Berkeley~! J •
junior \'<irsity tram in a nig ht ~-------------,
Ill! at \Vest V<1lley JC.
p.,11' lnv<IUl"'1•1
Scoff by Ou•rtt"
l" Horbor l? l S-10
O•M"'" (<>11,I 1 • 6 6-1/ Orar~>' Co••' "'"""" -WMneck• " 11,,,1 •na c,,.,., l. Mc•n•M1•. Hvla n<I
Fnr1n·n 1 Jon•~ 1"11 Moon I
lcquo"" 0 7 I 1-• O•rn,.[o~" 1J •710
O•onQr (oa•I 1<0'"'" W••n•c•e •. ~"' 1n J. W"'""' McA.ne..ey •no "'""'I
P u ftoMo llll-!
Qr,tn~c c~~" 6 s s • 10
t)l url~ .. (<>~•I KO• no W.tf'I·~·~ •
Seal C••u•~rtr on~ Wu'"" l. B1t1nan
"1 G••~c Sml tn, 0 a ... .,. Jori~• •""I B1alle•ro1~n I
G•u•no ln•ltJti•n•I
IAI s~nl• !Utb•••I
c1.1acn v. e•.t l ! , 7 i ,
Fer-.tn.tt o o 1 1 JI
Gol~t" 'he'! l<Q"n~ -M(lnly'O ),
.J ·r.n;~n H.-o•» arid M"rr"' I
IM S•n Antonlo J 1) i-121
O'·'""" (<t~" 0 1 I 1-~
r.nld•n We•I ~(opnq -M(lnl••• ~nd
Ro"' 1
ATT-SPORT CAR OWNERS
Let "' ihow you our ••sort·
ment of Michelin XAS, ZX,
VR & X treed deiign1.
I M•CHELIN l~I
"FOR S AF ETY'S SAKEN
HERBERT L. MILLER
TIRE CO . IN C.
-----JINCf 1921
SANTA ANA 209 lu1h Sr. , .... , ............. , , , 547-5615
COSTA MESA 1739 Superior /17th & Newport) , , .. 642·3314
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
6 ~o • 11 t>oac ~w~ll htlltle~5 QIU$
F10. [~.Tl~
$1.l6 r-,,,e end
tour old tin!'$
DAN PRINCEOTTO 1311 FOLLOWS ESTANCIA MATES LEE JOYCE . BOB CONKLYN IN WIN OVE R TUSTIN.
Rtistl er
Rt111ne r s
Plaee 211cl
\Jl)(iJi!'\ll!\ -Vrcsh fr om
n ~1·rnnd pLu·e fir ush in the
,\1<1 .. 1rp;u ~ lr111ta11on:1l cross
~ 11u111r\ n1n, ~;u!dcn \\'est
t · .. 111·1·1· t'lll•·r~ Su u the r n
( .1l1f,,, 111;1 ( .111f1•!'f'll('(' 111·t111n
tin 1•1•"" 111et'li11g 1,os
\:1 ,,1,. ·11\ l'nlll'i..:e and E<i ~t
J \ ,11 (,1 1111 1 l'ark u1 LA l·"rl·
;11 !i Tr1111 \11011· usll"r<;
,,•,,1 !'d :<C't11nd hi-hind El
i .111111111 111 Iii(· 1:11'gl' ~ch(1t1ls
d111,h1rl a1 \l•llorp;irk Sa1Ur·
rl:1\. LI f"a1n1n" !ntalerl 26
pu1nt ~ \1 hi1(• (;•ild('n \\'csl
lirll'hC'd 11 1th !'1t;
l•'rl·~h111an !l:nc Lockn1an
Ollt'I' ;1!.';1n1 pr11 Pd the Hu~!lcr~
"Ith a third ~l;u·l' fLni.~h 111
10 ?Jl [)wkn1:1n L!i a former
;\J;lt 111:1 .i ll~h ~t<•r.
TC';•rn1n;•ll' StC\C' \.:1ssegarr!
\l ilS Si'\!h Ill 20 ·46 11l11lr Bob
llf"l('kf\er 11/l!'\ 10th in 21 12
nu.~!lrr 1!1chard f 'rie~t p!;ic-
('d li"lh 121 ~~ 1 \"ic r.1;1rt1ne1.
11;1s 20111 121:491. n;11c
l l"ndcr~11 11 11·:.i~ 2Slh 1 2~ J:\1
;111d lltl'h Bulil'k w:is :.i~t
12:i OG •
The Col dc·n \\lrst B ll'nm,
11·11h Jacl< t-.lc·Quown run11in~
22 <11 . fini shed 11th in !he 12
sC'hool division . r.1cQuO\\'n has
hccn bothered hy the flu dtlr·
ir1il, Ille past l\~·o 1rce.ks and is
5]cJ11' round ing into sh;ipr.
C)r:in,i::e l'onst f1111~hcd 121h
fn the mecl
The r:il'C 11·11~ 11·on h\' !)a1 r
nah1r<1t·k1 or LA \';1!1('1· 111
111 4'.1 2 .,.. hi!e Uul) (:oodrriend
t)f El Ctim1no \1 a.~ sccun<l 1n
20 15
,,__...rtl l~ttll•!i...I ''°"' ....... , L••ff 1-1• l!•blt.te~! /LA. V•llt>I If l'I i , c.ooot<"-!I!• c.,.,..,01 20 is,
lo•n'14r> •Ge"'•" W•i•I ?0 Jfl • JOh,._., !IEI £.•l"IWl41 3l.Jt. l. Pfrklr>\ 1[1 C•m-) 'lO d
kot'"" -El C•''""O )I C.olO~" Wr\I )6.. II• ~ ... "~'o" 0 69
smoll $(1\M!I
·1~""' '"" " r,.,"
')t ~. t. W•OI••'·, If'•">"., , "~"' 1•d-'""' .... ,,~. ,. •
\ .......... ··~··•..... ~ ..... 1 .{ .• 1, J ~flO'!!< ·~·~·· .. ~. 1' "' \tll<•~• (•""·~· ,, •d• .,;t'
\·" oy tf\C P•l.,.,.M /'
Laguna Faces San Clemente
After Topplirig· Rii·cil, 13-6
J-:1 .1011 -.Z CA~"i
0! tn1 Di iiy Pllo! SI•!!
AZl 'S \ -Af\t'r ii sp;'.tkl11H!
l'Onlt'-f n11n·behind \"iCl1JrY 01 1•r
<;\:1rl s11111(' S;1turc!:i.v n i g 111
coal'l1 I !;ii Akin~· Luguna
H1•;u·!i •\r11~1s will hid frll' t11c1r
tl11rd 11111 111 ;i ru\\' Frida~·
111/'.111 :H'lllll I \'\Slfln~ San
([('11lt'l\I ••
1\k1 11,· t'l't'11 h <• n r11 c (I
Cl:1d ~1 .. n1's Cl;11l1;11111·s. l:!-6. UI
llit' 1~1;1 11111!1\;111 npt'lll'r fut'
hnth tt·11111s :1l (·11ru~ .JC The
victory 11·:1s L;1gu11;1 ·~ second
111 a n 11\' '1t d('fl'aterl E!
J)or:ido 111 thr ·70 :;eason
f1n<1lc t.
Tr;iiling 6-0 a1 th{' l1a H. 1h('
Artists came l](lu1u·1ng h:u·~ 111
!fl(' third quarter t<i t;1kl' li11•
Je;id for good.
\\'i!h 8.14 rcn1ainin1: in tliP
qu:1rl er. Telford (.'01\:1111 lfl(1k
:1 ~1i .. r1 pi t l"h f r111n
qu;irtcrback 1;ar.\· F ts('1ti' then
~e;in1pered fnur ) :irds around
left end for a touchdo1,1·t1. fi.11kl'
~1 flflrn1<111 ki cked tile l'AT tu
put Laguna ahl'<ld , 7·6.
f."isetlc guided 1he Art1~t:; I:!
.1 ;irds in ninr play~ 1 !is 21 -
yard p<iss 1n ~k1p \\'insh1p tu
npen the third prn11rl 11 ;i!-the
big g;11t\1'r. but 11 11 ~1' h!'1·lhrr
Jeff \\'1nsh1p 11hu f\11 ked llfl
1110.Sl of l)n• r'l'fn;11111ng ,1 ;ir(J.
age on thr 1!n1·(•
.l('ff <'~rn1·d f111Jr tinH'S for
g;1111~ t•f 1!1, f•. i :111d 11n1' \;1r1l
111 ;.!l'l 1he h:dl lo tho• r •lll'
Cla<l~l o111· <·1111tr1il l1'rl th" 111·
!irin 1h111U"h Il l<' r·l·111a11Hiiir ,,f
lht• )H'l'IOd ;111d 111·11 111111 1111'
f11i:il fr;l\l\\' hul l111;dl: l1 ;1d lo
punt tu tlw \i'll {lr~ 11\i11
~T n1 1 crl :111n1 ht•r 'r1111ng dn1e
frorn 1lil'u' <11111 2;1 vard line.
F1s('tle lrrl !ht• ·Arti.~ts un :i
111areh tha t trink 1!1 pl;iys
hl'forc the Laguna QB mana~·
rd to ~neak into the end zone
fron1 1hi> one
(;l:1d~!1ll1t' :iid(•cl lhc \rll· 1'
,1·ith ii 111;1p1r f11'11:'11ty t•\ pu•
thr b;•ll nn th(' 10 ;;f!rr .r,,rr
\\ 111,l11p h;1d p1•·l..1·d l!lf :. 111·,1
tlo11·11 11:1 ;1 f11t1rlh ;111d 1lir1•1'
~11 u:11 h!ll
1.-t•ur plays l:ite r. \1 Jth I :14
\1·fl 111 1hc g;1111c 1··1~1'rte l':tr·
n t'd "11·r fnr tl11• 1111.il ~rore .
Thr PAT k11·k 111•1:! 111th'
\lt'll [,Jgllfl'!-~t'('P'1d ITC!\lt'I"~'
nf :i l.:1gu11;o f11n1i>I(' g:nf' 1he
1 :lad1;1Jur~ th\' 111 .. :t<i ntu1n for
College Grid Seores
W(ST
u~c 1a 111,,,., .. o
~·~nloo4 Jt. O<..,..,n U
(•h'"'"'" l J ~~n JO>" ~1.1, 10 W•·.~·nul n ••. t ~"' (M •!•A~ 1\ ..,~.,'•"• S••·~ ·1 ~ •• ,.,n 5'•'t 11
I " •· ti p r ,1 •
(•I I•~·~" ~llr''~"' •),sou•~•'" v•·~
\lo'f r I
l'l"~'·""'~ 1• to "·• "'~ :t II~•'"'" r "t"~ •• '1••• 6 ...... 1 ..... ,1 ,, l'" ·" 11
c~,,~,, :1 c.~ o•"• 1<1
"Ir·~''~~· ~I,><••~··~ 11
l ''~Y•OI• ) (~lumll·• 0
O•rlm""'" Jl M•\IA(/'~0'1! '
Pr~n 1t, LtiVh 11
P u!Oft~ Jl Pr1r<•'~" II
llolllr>OY • IJ. Y'1'1 l 't'••• lJ. (""f>.K' r~! ~ ~OUTtl
l·ubu•~ 1~. T~nnt\:t t t (.~o,O•I ~I (''"'"'"I\ ,,.,,,. 16. '-"".1'0'• Ir·'• I>
""'"""' ,, "•~1~<·1 l~
I •r""''" )" ' Cl'" 0 ,,,,I ···"" .. !-! ' • ••
"''I'• l1!' !•• I N t ""'" l •'' J• i .. ' • (I
"'""•-&, M~'V f/+ fl•~·"''~ IA
r '·~•! " "'" ''·~ ~! ' ~' ·~·· .. Ml~··•""'' '" ~ ~.·
r torlfl• ~· lO l(•o•a• •
M••"'' l "I~ l 19. W~•r F'n•r>I •O
Sov•n C11 ~! n• 1• N~d~ (l•OI n1 S• I
,...~1>•0•11 lfl u< t ~ ~
MIDWEST
.. O•I•• O•m• ! P~•d<"• I
(n,~·•On ~ O• n S• ''
f'rn~ ~! " lnw• I<
"''""•O•r> \! 11 O•P<>c• ~' u
.n· '' '' ,. '" ·~ ~'' '1eb••"·" ll If•.!\ ~&f.' I
>••I''' "•·n •; SY•" , •
(SU )II N"it"' 'I 1.'
', .. ., ., Jj !IV"
f'•'•'""'A ~I)• \.•Q•"' f'f "
.,. """" ·" S1''\I B°"'t•n• r.,.-,,, •" [A>' f ••~· .,, )1
f''>•n U !I it•~• SI , w., •. 1.1s, 11. r .. n 1y rlr• 1 1
"''""'' 00-;01 1, n ...... o I)''°" 10 lOIJ"VIOI I~
ttou""" !I. C.•neonn~t1 1
ROC KIE
Ao•'¢'<•)), 1'•"0~''"~ It •.i;on1 S• •I \H•~ n
11,n I JI t<•••)o 1~., Vfo~• I
I • \' " ....... "'""'" )'!' .. ,.,.,,~.. ,, '""'" ~
•o .. nl••V(ST
1 • " 'c " ~
I " '' • 1 P•v)' ~" ~· I" I""'""'~ • ' 1,,,.,. ~
~n )I fr," ~· ··~'"" t
the (:J;1dslnnr !11uC'hdn1,1·n
Ear l~ in the St'cond <1u;irter.
:iftrr ;i r;1ad1a!nr punt, Ligon
pounred UPIJn :1 f11rnble on th('
Art1~1 ~1 . I
1\ 1.:1;.!llll:I pC'nalty :inr! [1111
run~ IJ1· Hoh :-,1 onday 111111 rtl
!Ill' ha!I lo 1t1r Lal!un;1 111
\>rt·~ S1·lt11f 1~1ld pirkrd up fl\\'
111n1·r .\ard.~ and Ha11(h t:tl l('I
le ).!.1\I 11 fi rst d(111 11 \lll 1 llt•
1\rt1:-I ~I\ Buh ~1Pg1·1•11 tlicn
n1111('d 1" tile on(•.
nirh \°t'lasqu('/. ~ot the final
yard on ;1 di 1 t' 01·er the renl<'r
nf lhc line 111th •I 411 ll'f\ in !hr ~
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: "'" '""" """'" ''"'· Gooa:~ YEAR Qll('l h;1d the C.ladiators tnul"· ,
"AH Weather W "
• Cl cAn sidcwaU d esign,
radi;i] d<1r\s on shoulder
• TriplP·lr:n1pcrf'd 11 :i l1J;1
col'd coris truclin n
• !i-runnin~ ribs v>'i1 h ~;i,.,·.1noth s!nppini:: 1' 'r•"'
ANY OF THESE
SIZES-ONE 7.75'14
LOW PRICE Bl ::l
WHITCWALlS l3.IJO lllOJ'I nth
4roR$72
0!at~•>ll tvbflf" Jllu• I~ 'J IO 11 )7 f •<'I !1. 111 Pl'' In• fdop end·
1t11 on !•11') and '""' old hti<
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t•arn 111:11 11 ;1s going to 1nn1·e ''""' ., , ,,
):'lck out in frnnl. I TO CHARGE !"''@··1 .,, -
8Al'fll CM OI T
UJID5 ICJNOR£tl • r
QOOl1YUll SEA VICE
STOllES A.MO ll05T
GOOOYU.11 DEAUllS.
tin DI!' •1hl tlllct "'91t1111 eec1u1e ot '" u-P"lff ~•..-Y dunar>d ID< C:OOCS1••• 1uts, wt "'"
""' out ol •nm• 11111 durln( tno< olht. bl.ot "' '"II ~ NPPJ !o order you• lilf 1u1 1t !ne •d•U• II~ 1Hic• 1...t lll~ TOii I fliQ C~tt' IOI IUl~le <1eH1••" o! \Ji• in111:n•nd•u .
•
u1;.: du\111 the l1l'ld in good ~
>ho pe, lookmg moch hke 0 3 WAYS ' •
But a cl1µp 1ng pen:ilt y on :i
play that hud rn0v('d thr h:ill ~i .. ••••••••;;:;;;;:,_, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,t
into i:;ood f1,,lrl r" 1~i111tn stoppr11 1 a
Iii(' rlri1t•. !orci ng I h ,.
(;!:idi;itnr~ 111 1111111. :;l'tting up
lhe final Artist {l r11·('
CAMf STAllSllCI
l'I•!! liowni '"'•""'0
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GREAT TIRE -EVERYDAY LOW PRICES FOR
PANELS, PICK·UPS, VANS & CAMPERS $2295 NYLON CORD ••·"-. . . =: ;r:; Rib H1 -M1ler •• , .. . _ ...... . •241&
111!1•1'-,...,., ...
r:t~'i' .. ......... '2895
'3185
ICIO•••-"""\ ...
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I
GOODYEAR-THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS" TIRES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
·-
COSTA MESA
1596 Ne,:,port Blvd ,
548-9383
LAGUNA
482 Ocean Ave.
494-666 6
THEODORE ROBINS FORD -2026 Ha rbor Bl vd. e Costa Mesa --------------• Phone 642·0010 ----
I
I
I --·
,
,,
,
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~ The Al/Mid Palmer Method }~ '"ATIUER: or THI: Dra.nr"
CHECK YOUR EYE-LINE
ON P lJITS
A grc::it deal is said abou t
alignment of the body on gol f
shots. including pulls. Normally.
the stated ideal is that you should
a lign your feet , hips, knees,
i.houldcrs, etc., all parallel-to the
intended line of your shot. Such
nlignn1ent is clearly shown in the
illustration.
\Vha t many golfers fai l to align properly is thei r
eye-line. And this is most important of all. If !he
eyes do not align· v.'ith t he target line-if · they mis-
align as in the illustration-then you v.i ll not sec the
proper line. You y.•ill not face the putter down the
same line that you selected y.•hen you read the gre en.
'You v.il l not stroke the ball in the direction yo u had
intended.
J\-lo~t golfers have misaligned their eyes, and mis~
aime d thei r putts fo r so long that the y've grad ually
built compensations in to their stro ke-such as pullin g
or pushing or rollin g or ope nin g the putterhead. But
compensations are difficult to duplicate time after time.
It's be lier if you set yo ur. eyes properly at first-
directly ove r the ball and parallel to the target line-
and the n sim ply n1ove the puttcrhead straight back and
through along that line. '19. ~e nn ,.An.-•. !,..,
Arnold Palmer '• "HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PUIT!NG." A eopy
of this hint.packed booklet is yours tar 20t when you enclosed
a ~tamped, self-addressed envelope along with your request lo
Arnolcl Palmer, In care of this newspaper.
Win Division
Mesa Runners
Shine in Meet
!\1ustang twins John and
Tom Olswang teamed 11'ith
Doug MacLean Saturd:iy lo
p;1ve Costa Mesa High a \'ic-
tnry Jn Division I of the sixth
annua l Corona <lei !\1ar in-
\'ilatinn cross country rncet
But lhe besl time of the rlav
11·as turned in bv Foothill
l-!igh's Larry cCrich 11ho
sh;ulcd thf.' Costa \1esans bv
one !-C'ennd. Crrich. running in
d1\'i-;ion tw n, clocked 111 !I
\1 h11c the three r-.1u~l.1ngs
pur 1,.1selv broke the tape 111th
the exni:l time Qf Jfl 12.
For his clfort Gerich 1-1as
n:imed outstanding runner of
the 1ncet.
Other r-.1ustang r u n n er s
standing out Saturday "'ere
r.t1ke Holliday. Nick Pric!>I.
r.1 1ke Stutsman and J'hll
Carpenter.
Sll'eeping di\'ision tv.'o \1·as
Sa!es1:.in. 11·h1le llunt1ngtnn
Beach tnnk d11·is1nn three
hnnors 1n \"ar 1:i1!.1 n11d frosll-
s ·ph. Trr•y 111 ;10: 1h!· rl11i~1nn
four 1·;1rs1t.v 11·111ncr nnd San
Clrrnrnte l~l'<ihbcd J ll n 1 o r
v;1 r~11.v and fra.~h-soph 1itlr~
rvlcan\\'hih'. thr t\ewport
Harbor Sailor<:. !ra1elcd tn
1\r1 :ida Saturday <rod lriok
third place 111 lht: second iln·
nau l Las Vri::~s annuiil iri-
\•11:itional e\'rnt
Sailo r .JQhn Ho\rl)mh d!1<:.ted
off a 9 4U to ta ke third place
r.tr.rk i;enr1 of S.inl:i An;i 1\on
lhe r:ice 1111h :i 9 211
Fire ral1fllrn1a 1 .... ;~n~. led
bi F:t Cf!J''1n. 111,. San 0 1rgr.
(IF eh;unr1on. !nuk the f1r5l
!11C' pl:H·r;; Thirteen lf';uns
11 f'rr r•n!••rrd
N•wll{)•I H••bcr 11 1, Malfr Otl 111, CasM /,\f \d l~,
Ol•i•ion Two
Vtr1;1y
Salt,•tn 39. Roncl'lo AIArn<IM ~1.
F\'.<ll~Lll ~1. Volenc•A 91, Loguno no
JU<'oor Var11lv
S&l•<>•n II. LOS AIAmo11> 51, 11oncl'ln
.1>.10.,,.101 59 . Foolhill 101. Lagun1 Btatn ..
Fro1h·So~h
S~l•l•An l_I, Foo!l'l1ll '" VAltn<'" ln~.
L•Q"n" Bt ocn 110, R:•"'"" Alom1!01
'" Dlwhion 'Tl'l•tt ...... n,
;., M .n;t~" Bt ocn JI. M'"'"" ..,,,,.,
41 i:.~"'"" Grove ••. E1•onc,o 101, La
MotoOo 114.
Ju""' V~t11ty
"""''"" V••oo 11. Go•<:I•" Grove lill. ............. al<''> St•Ch 10~. E<tonc;• 10'/. LA
Nl•~no 110.
l<ro"11-SIKln
Hun!U'IOIO'I B•acl\ .o. Miu lOl'I Vle ,o
<!, LA Mu•<M 10, G1•der. Grove -1-IJ,
Eot•n<••· no score.
Oi•i•i~" "OU~ V•rslty
T'l>Y 17, Cor°"'1 <:lei f<••· 67. P•cllk•
7J , S•dolebaclo &l. S•n Cl•mt<>!e. "o
Ju"ior Vt r.ilr S•" Clem9'1!e 19. Tnlr 41. Coro"• oel N•• I•. S•ddl~bocl< 101. no flltl\, l<rosh·SO~h
5•n (I("'"''")), TfOV j l, S•ddleb••~
<9, (•r<•• <!,I MM ~I, "O trt!n
ll• Ve~tl 1nvl1•hon11 ....... ,.
L 1 C~IO" <), Gr~n1d• !1Hl1 II.
l.P, ,.,,,. H~'~' 63. Sonl1 An~,
C•l1•orn•• (Wnlto,,,I
•lrwrwl H-.bor; JC)hn Holcnmb ~ •n,
O•v• C•o•I • SI c •• ,g (l1r~e IO·ni.
T'"' Qu~~ in 1~. L•• Bai-on !O lJ,
D•""v Cllt'" I~ 11. ~•m Slmrk» 10 •l.
corona de! Mir lnv11111en1!
Junior v •• .,iv
flnwppfl H••tl<lr Cl 1r~ Potl\oH ll l).
J"'' I'll••• II J~ Blll He;dbron~ 11 I~,
I'~'• SM••Q1l•J 1) ~. JP!! l(,.,g,l•v
11 (I 'T1"' Houto91" n Oii. Sieve
(fl•I·"'> 1' II,
Fro.W.-Soon
•l•Woorl H1rt>or L•• JO'<lln 11 l\,
J1r. MTn!t• ll ).I, Jet! ~,n9 !) lO 6r! I<•.,'"""' IJ 01. S<oll "'"' I] )9, Pa• (pl .n, I< G< Wei S•otlw•ll H 01
F"dl> v ... ,,,
lo• Ami9r>• 10. U"lverlll~ :W
.<o~u,.re lt.<ol 10 <I 1 S•nc""
/LA l;'a« llJI, 4 POQ~ ILO,•, ~
'""""""'" /lA\. 6. G1lv1n iu1, I 1.•~,,~·c• IUI p l(n••"'• (l•I, '
B•&lon IUI. 1~ M~1·~ IU I.
Frr>•"·Sl>D"
Area Totirneys
Sailors, Barons
Nab Polo Title s (
Keep your eye on the
r-;'e."·port Harbor Sailors .
The defending CIF water
rolo chn1npions opened their
season Saturday by splashing
over three opponents to cap-
ture the Corona del J\tar
tourney.
Newport llarbor. coached bv
Bil! Barnell. knocked off
J·'ullerton, ll-J. \\'hillier. 9-3.
and Irvine League kingpin
Cnronit <lei Polar. 11-:> for the
lourney ti!lr.
Sailor senuir Jay Farrer was
named outstanding 11layer of
the tournan1e11t. scoring seven
goals in the one-day event in
-~-.
Coron• <:IOI M•r T""'"''
Vlfll!r
N•w.-or1 t<ort>o• o • I )-1 t
Fuu•r19n o 1 1 0-l
N•w~or! tl••bo• ''"""9 -8olllng\ j, ~•1••• J Fl'""' 1 Youn'i 1. a""'" I, B•ifnt llrr I
N•WQQr! ~'"""'" 1 < I J-
WhdliO! ~ I I I
Ntwnoro H••b"' ""''"q -~'""' J !!tl!lng1 '· r.rm., l, Q~•nn I. O·Et ·~u
'
Nt,.,.l>Orl H"'""' n ~ l tl
(0>1>n• ~ol M~r l I l -i
Newnorl Q1•t>or ~c onng -"'oUnQ ~'
F1rmo• ~. Fff•rr I, Bolling> I. Scnmlol
1. Corono 001 Mar •corlng
1Cr11mo~o11 1, Mlll<li I,
Founll ln V1tltv ln•!t•tlon1I
1<rla1• va .. uy
L1;11~~ BeA<li 0) < !-1
e a.son o • 1 O-•
Logunt B•l<h \COtln; -Wo•• J.
H1•1:>01a l, 1.11a••on 1. Ettl•on .Ko•.no
-Moor•Pou•o l. Wou 1. B•1wn !.
l<O>Jn••ln V1!lty 1 l Q 1-11
P1clfic• 0 ! 1 D 1
Fo11n ta•" V•l!ev \Corono -Mc6dom•
~. W•U•"tld 1. Ab•P•O• 1. ""'"" H•<~•y ' Bu•n• Po•>" d••••!•d ~onr.100 bY
IDrleo• IO We•tmin1•t• dt•r1ttt1 t<U"·
!lnGIC)ft Bt•Ch bf •o-IPf!. HI.
S•1urdt Y
Stml!ln1I> i<OU""'" V•lioy
IV•<1mln1!rr
l<ounto.n V~I'•• """~" -B"'"'"" •. McA~on" l. Wr11t,lrld l. E"~ 1,
8rr!1n• 1 Wt.imln•1•• sco•ln9 -
H1bt c 1. C.oldllt •" l
tagun• l'lo•Ch 101) 1 n I I 1-S
Bu•nA P~·~ 0 1 1 0 0-1
L•~un• Boacn ""';"' -W••• l.
H•rbold 1.
S•una l'1fk
W•••m•n>IN
W•>"''•~l•tr
l<~\Ollon I
Fln1I•
Chl MQtOn1nlp
! l 1 1-1
0 0 ' 1)-.1
Hobe• 1,
~nuM•nV•ll•Y 4 Jl •-ll
L•ou<'• Br.c!> C I 7 1-• ~OU"'"'" V11l•v <cnflnQ l!•n,.n•, ;,
l\'cl\a•m\ J f.b•h,., 7 WO\l•"!I<' 1,
E.cn I. l •v !. Loouna 6o•cn >tO<'on9-
ll<dw,ll ). tlltbOld I
l'tO\P·Sool>
Cn•mp1on1h•P
Loou~• !IPA<n a, Wr•lm•n11er I
Third Pl1<t
f!Hen• P1t~ 1, FO>Jn!••n V•llt~ l
l"•wDC>rT·Ml'i• Du!rk! T•~rnlV
F<ldl Y'• lh1ulh
Tnlra ltound
F"'•h•SOt>P
Coron1 ~I M11
(011• Mn.o
Co110 Meue 1<o•ln9 Kan• 1.
Cor~tn!er T Ptn!KO•I ); (Or""• ,j•I
""•' a<o"ng -G11•1 \, Buov I, 0110 1. Junior Vt r111v
Coil~ M•°'" 1 l--1 !
C~tOn~ <:1-' //,~t I 11-I
Co<I• M~'I~ l•nr•nO -C•'t" 1, l.\1clenn 7. En~•lholm 1, T~on1~•·n~ 1. fl"""' 1. ~m•li,.,CO<I I. (0'0"1 d•I M t< !torlno -Connfr 1
~ro1n·Soo~
tJPwno•I llM~O'
(••~nttA
N•wnntl H1tbof 1cnrinO
1, M•rin!I 1. E1Tonc,• scoring
l!oicn 7. C•ll•n1n I Jun•or V1rl•l1
I !-? J ,_,
i;oO<l;ert
Gol•Q~ I,
'Je,,l>fl•f l'••bor 1 •-S
E:1•.J"' .~ 1 1-1
Ne"""'' fl••""' "n""" -Se•d..., ), l!i•e~ l E:!lln<i• ltO••nG -Fc1tor j,
D•v11 I
Ch1mo1on•n•• ltound
Fro>f>·Sl>Ph Cn•t• /,••••
E;I•"< •
Co111 Me1~ "'"""o r"'""'""" • "•n1•«>11 ~nr .1•0 0 1oeu 1
D•'l .. •h1 I
l 0 111....J
7 1 ' ,_,,
l(Ane 1,
1 ~ 1•onc•a
t •l!•h&n i.
'"''" .... .,. 1 ~I 1-4 Nowporl >l••fto• 1 l 1} _o (o"• l'•>o ""·no -'T~nmn•>.,, I
Mt An•nt '/ l Nt"'''"' "'•"b<l• •c·• •·~
-Sfl rlf! 1, Gl1I •' •· Bfo• J. 5m"" 1
which elght teams competed.
•·1t's always satisfying to
win , but it's a long season,"
said Barnett.
He considers his Sunset
League li llists stronger than
last season, but predicted the
rompetition will be tougher
than ever before.
The Fountain Vallev Barons
indicated t he y ' 1 ·1 hav t
son1elhing lo do with the out-
<:ome of the Irvine League
race by "'inning their own in-
1·1tationaJ lnurnamrnt, held
Friday and Saturday.
!n Friday's aclion, !he
Barons beat Pacifica. 12-2. and
on Saturday bounced
\\'estminster. 14·3. in the
semifinals, then tr nu n c e d
Laguna Beach·s Artists. 13-4.
in the championship game.
Baron coach 1'on1 Landis
praised seniors Jin1 McArla1ns
<ind Frank Bru11·ne. v• h !l
sr·(ired 12 arid ! I points in the
!11'P-da y cverll .
1!1\11'C1'rr. the coach at-
lrihuted viC"tory to t h e
defensive play 0f Pelc Noah.
"I-le v.·as ou1s tanding." said
Landis. "He has the ability lo
al "·ays be in the right place at
the right li1ne."
The Barons. third in the
fr1•1ne League last year, have
the same team back and Lan-
dis is hopeful for a successful
year.
Laguna Beach fought an
uphill battle lo reach lhe
finals. getting by Buena Park_
5-4. in an overti1ne contest.
\\'ith one second lefl in
regulation li me, Buena Park
cornmitted its 10th foul and
Artist Amor.v Ware poured in
the fnu l shot to lie the game .
4-4. The Artists then won in
overt!me.
In Friday's Ne"•porl-P.lesa
District tournament , I he
junior 11<1rsily Newport Harbor
Sailors downed Cost.a f\1esa·s
f\1ustangs, 9-4. for the cha m-
pionship.
And the Estancia Eagles
beat Cosla Mrsa, 6-3. for the
frosh-snph title.
!'lleanwhile, Terr~· Rnwrn·s
Cos!a ~1es<ins ;irr geHing
rl'ad,-for the An:ihchn tourn:i-
meni Thursday. The P.1uslangs
fell. 12-5. t11 Sunn~· Hills in lhe
~loore League tourney Friday
Baseball's
Top Ten
AMEltlCAI" LEAGUE
l"llver. Club G .1111 II M P<I.
O"VI , Min 11• •II I) I•• Jll
Mu•<••. N'f lo j l$ 9J 111 lJ1
R'"""~""-'"~· Bi i llll 411 I I IJJ l lO
1o••r,M~ 11-4 h,. ~ XlO .Jl l
(:~••N, M•M IU J/I ~8 116 .lO~
01,., K( 1•1 IJ~ BO 161 .J'I!
W, """'~"• 011 116 M 130 .)I• c N'•v. r"t 111 ••7 t.J 1u 111
Wh"~· •IV !d jl\ 17 I.. 71Q
Uhl~cnd•« (le 111' ?! JI II .111
l-lomt 1tun1
II Jac ~•oh, 01~11~d. Jl1 Mellnn
cn.c1;~. YI . C••P. D•!•OI!, JO. g
s"'''"• P,o'"'"· l9; f 1tnb•n1on. 11•1" r'>O•e. ll: P•!ro<•Uo. llo••<>n ll, Nt t·
11e1. Clt •fllnd., JI , l(oll•nrew. Ml<'nt
...... ?I
1111"' 8 •110'd In
i.111eb<,...,, Mo<'n••ot•, II~ r Oo"
;"'""· B•!!•mort . '1'>, Banao. O••IO"~
~" R Sm•lh, 801•on, •!; II llM>•n
'"" ll•lllm<>ro. j.',; Murct r, Nt.,.
...... ~. 01 ,
lS 0•<111...,,
1~•"1611~. B•"•mn•t . XI! !00. Blu•
1'1•"'~"~ ;• ' 1'11 r n"b'"" ()••
l•~>I T< I 1'<'1 r Oft!'I"'"· II•""""" ln thr u1 <lr.111 r r ., u \ I :; .
f\•"11•1 ·11 l!;ul11>1 \ l!.,\1' ( 1 1'1-'~
11 :1• 1•11;l1lh Al1cl ['r;11g t'l.irkl'
11 J, ·~ I'd 1111 !l
Tl1P 1111\1111' 1:1r.~1t \ ~11\d lro5h-
~(•ph S'1ilors won 1hr1r n1ec!~
in tl1e l"rwnnil <f\'1 ,\!;ir mert
11·11h r1 :1rk l'ntlloff :uul Lee
,Jnrrlan tur111ng 111 tnp l1n1es .
Lal\:ers, Bucl\:s Collide
Wednesday .at Foru1n
"1B 'I• (t;P11•• f\•lhmn•• 70'
1••• Polm•• llAlllmM~. ~ 9, 6t0
NA'TIO"AL LE•GUf.:
Plav.-. Cl~b G Ae II
TQ"e 511 ( 'Pn'~"'" l'un
f\e· •e•I ~n1
f•M'< Atf
I" el~ 9;
I JO \'1 ~I 111 \Kl !" 111 ~18 IM
H ~•rnn, .. ti !Jll
~·n;uollrn, PQh !JI
rJ,,..•>.llY '11l
M Al<>U. St!t "I Oil ~l
1\,1 •1• 11•
llS ~'.lO !
.. ,.,,
??II "'' 11/ 1•1
1~1 1•7
111 ,.~
llo(I .11~
I"" )I~
1 S1 .319 "'° .JI I
191 )l
lfl l •J Th,.. t niver~1111 Tr o J a n ~
en1rrrrl <:Ornpet1!ion f11r the
fir::! tune Fnd;;y and 1\rrc
do11 nrd h.1 Los Arnigo~. 20-36.
in :1 dual rncc1
Co'""' ~fl ""°' l"~ll•llO"•' o.~·•·o~ o".
v"'"" (""a ,,. ••• 11 E• 'l''"<J•"• •7 '-'~"•
C.•.>na-r ' M•lft o .. •I-lo<>' B••<h
Ju"ior V•••ll~
El M"<'I•<'• 11. N•w1><1•t 1-1~•1><>-•!.
(""I• ~··•~ !]. Boh~ c;._,,,,~ 81 tt•••·
0•1 1•1
l<r01h·S1X1h
Bol1• C.rtndt l~. E> MOOt~• s~.
LBCC ...
!Conti nued lron1 Pagt 2~1
hit Ed Parker on the next pl;:iy
fnr a ~rnrc.
rt ick Rice scored the r11ur1h
on ;i 20 yard end s11cep on the
:;econrl play of lhc fourth
p er io d and reserve
quar1rrb~rk .Jerry 1 hnojosa
hit .Jeff Losncr frorn the lwn-
vard line for the f in a I
i11uehdow11 with 4 2~ !ef1 tn
play with reser\'es hRndl ing
the s1tuatlon.
Schoonover wiis fivP·for·five
,for the night at the line.
"They scored a q u i ck
louchdo111n egains~ us In the
first quArltr bcfnre 11·e l."Ollld
ndiust our de fenses but after
th<it the~· didn"t score until the
1·e ry l'nd." dt>fensive coach
!Jon f11l"·e :idded.
The !lustier_, nr'I:! facr
\01n p!on CollPgr S;i1t1rd11y :it
1 .1fl p rn nn the Tartars· f1('\d
The Los Angel e!' Lakrrs
n[)l'n the basketball se;:i~on
v.•ith ;i hang \\'ednesd;iy n1~ht.
hr1s!ing a spectac ular
c!nu b!t'header al the f orum .
The Lakers pl~y the "'otld
c:hamp1nn fllilwaukee Bucks,
While Sidney \Vicks and the
Porliand Trailblazers meeL
!he ne"' look Golden State
\\'arriors.
The first game. with the
\\'arriors bat!l ing Portland,
begins al 7 p.m .. 11·hile lip-off
for the Laker·Buck game is
set for 9.
The game vd\1 be the only
pr e-season hnnte appearance
fnr lhe Laker~. whn will play
e1ghl pre-season gan1es on the
rn:id .
1'he wnrld champion Bucks,
led bv 7·2 superstar center
Lew Alc indor and a11-tin1e all-
pro guard Oscar BoberlSon.
~trengthened their frnnt line
!his $Ummer \l'ith the ac-
quisition or former USC stt1r
John Block.
New Laker co11ch B 1 11
!'harman and assistant K. C.
Jones ~·ill be making their
firsl appearances,,.. in l he
Forum. as well as fou r new
L:iker players.
~takin~ their Initial ap-
pi>ar;inces y;ill he rookies .Jim
C:lcanlons and Roger HrO"'n.
gu;ird Flynn Rnbin~n and
fonncr L:lker 1.('rny ~:lhi;
~:111~ :ind Hnb1 nsnn \\ rrr nr-
quired in nfr season lra des.
\Vick~. the UCLA star "'ho
led the Bruins lo national
t11les the past t"·o seasons.
\\~ill be n1aki11g his pro-
fessional debut when the
Trailblazers take on l ti e
C:.Olden State \\'arriors. The
Y.'arriors "'Ill have a new look
this sca!><ln, as well as a new
na me as Cazzie Russell joi ns
lhe bay are11 team afte r fi\'e
years with the Knick.s.
l\'O(k, Stl
W 0~1111. LA
Hom• ll:un•
~l•roelT, Pn••bu•;n. •J; H Aero".
A!l•n!~. <11 L M•~. (o<'<'nnet1 Jt
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1orte, SI. Lo~>\, 111, ~l••~••I, Pitl•
hu•O"· 11: H Aor.,.,, A!ll nlt , 11,,
Btl"d•· San l'r&ncllUI, 101: L. Mt v,
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l9!!, (!ncln,,.!I. 1~ •. n 1; 0own;n1.
l<» A"o•l•t. 70-1. JH, Ell ... Piii\· bu•;~. 10.t •• 11).1; Ct •llon, 11, L""''·
19.9, '"·
Pro F ootb~ll Standings
N1ll1tft1! l'&e!lllll lht•ut
Am1rlt1" Cenftrtll••
E111trn Olwl1l<>ft
M'~rnl
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(•ntl<'n•'•
Pilh"V'<>~
WOV>lon
lOO!OOO •Sll
110 .50tl •lll
I I 0 .50CI J6 11
010 .ooo u u
W11t1r" Dlvltlon
Son O<fltO I 1 a .500 71 al
(•"1411 (l!Y 1 I II .!«I l< J,
o..~1 • ...i 1 , 0 500 jl) 70
t»nver 011 000 11 ••
lll !lONI COOl!t<""c•
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Allon!• )(), Lo• An~elt• 70, lit
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081111 47. P~ll•Oe•a~lt I
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W~•l!1not<1n 111. f"9w "'a•-G11nri J
C•f .... 11•1 ;\.<, Oe<\Vt f 1l
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on1v ..,,,., tchf<lu'"d
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N~ .,.OI'~ Jel1 •I SI. L""l\, ' e m ,
(Mn"1!1 I
Qnlv ttm• 1cl!lldvltd
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O.•l~l'ld 11 Cltvt l•n<:I
Only oame IC~tdt.1111'(1
. ~ . ' . . . . .. ~" ~-. .. .. ... • . .. . ' . ..
• OAIL Y PILOT (7
--~
Sears I
Auto and Tire Center
• ' -
Heavy Duty
SHOCl(S
ll ·1 T' I ·:-.',
TO Y OT,\
.~:\D '1E TOO ~
Hf"11 1·•· llut•· Sl1o<"k .4.h ~nrl1e r
i'.ift·lir;H. C;Ll lll'lllllt•I'
I! t-l 1:~"V [)u1r ,,h,,.L /llh••rf.1·r (dih
dut< '" r.1uh' 1n:11l·ri•I< ~u.t ""rk111 .. n-
)h1p "r 'l•·;ir,.uc 1<·hil1· .i11j.;1n11.I r ur-~
•ha"·r \I'l l!'\" <Ar, H v.dl 1->t· u•pJ~,,·,J w ur• •n rc·ruro, ! tt'!' "' , hJrJ.t•'. ord11· rur-1·
1h•'t' rrae .. i11 be n•tun,ic.J. II 1he ;.
til'lt'•fl\'C ~h.,,k: ~h•nrht"r v.•;n 1n -
)t~ll t'd 1->r ~r~r•, .,t' v.·dl 111<1all nt.,,·
~hvlk ab~"rhrr< WHh nn ~har,11e fo r
IAhor.
~
.Ernhos~ed Nylon Throw Covers
}{~~ular $7.<Y_I
(.u,hioneJ with t10 lr {OQ.med Jam-
inalion. Fit1 .. ·rin k.le.free. 6~2.\ ......
S -1 ~ /:,' 'I !
Rq.:ular 'h.99 Car Hobe
5?.?. Pl.i i.I <~r rnhe in l •lA\l\' v.·arm 1••lnt\. ].J•11 ~v.e;ir1n 2 ••• Jur~hl e. t-.re,i;t lnr
~r'HI~ events 1no!
Hrµular $~2.99
Vol k s"'a!-?('11
Sc at Con·r«
.'41 £11 1999
Dur dbl e vin1·I. L11mpl r1c ~f·!,
lront and re.tr. l.nlorl: rerl ,
'9.h11e and black, E.t.1y If) 1n-
3tal l.
Regular !12.99
Se.ars S ter eo
Speaker Set
(,hrome platecl ,Rrillct. R
ohm' imped ance. Speaker•
mou nr 1 n door.~. kic k panel~.
Ei,1::ht wa ns max imum out-
pu t.
Lowes t Price of the Year!
~A ll,'
Lifetime (;uarantrf" 1-'or _\5
Long.i\s You Ov.·n Your C:ar
J~1·~ular
$7.~9 5?. .. ?
Fits ~In ~[ Cars ...
·-· J.
Lon~e r '\\<'ear
l'ric-=! Efferti\·e
:Sun ., ~ept. 26th
thru Tues., Sept. Z8tl1
c,.>uick-"Fit Best
Puff Woven Seal Covers
H and tor:1led scrnlt clesign. Srretchablc,
durabl~. lo hlue, hrnwn, black.
S.llH'I !
J)nor-to-Door i\fa ts
Dee r rihhin,1:: 1n pre,enr ~1 id 1n~. Fine
qu.ll 11 r ruhhcr f r•r Inn;.: ,,. t·ar. lo l I >lnr\
Ct;T 'fill!
,~olk s waf!:('ll
J!loor i\lat
599
RuAAe,J bla~k C'OCO fiher in-
rct'1.nven '9.·1rh ,.1tn!d •15al.
VJ/111 not ~cuff. E.i.sr to clean
h}' shak ing, ''acuuming.
Wa s '199.95 4 H.P. i\lini Bike
-1 H P.en,1.tirtt:.1·,,,.i,~,t!rir 1hro11Jc.13 gss
Re·~•1n'1 ~1artrr. J·c ~•r opcraied
rear ••heel bra~e. 'r uhular ~reel
lr am e. 1'1W17tf
\HOP SUNDAY 11-NOON To S 00 p m •MONDAY th•u flUOAY 9 lO o m to 9 00 pm • SAtUIDAYS 9·l0 om to 6 00 pm •Fill .. AIKING ... ~. .... ,.,.... . ...... -...................... , ...... . ....... .... "-~··· ..... _. ... _.... .., .. ' ... "'' ··-··· ......... .. .. '""'
... "'" "' "'' "''"-·"'-"'' ....... 1
......... <o•• '"''" ....... , .,, "" ........ ............. u ..
•o•n•o ""'' ••• '""•"••~"' '""' ... ,,., , ..... , ....... ,,,,,,, ............ " .. ,. ·······~'" ...... .. . ..... , '""' "'"" .... ,
""" "' "''""' ••v••<••ll M•h .,.,,_. h"•''~'" .._,_, ...... ,, ....... "'"" .......... _
1 i
•
-
. _,
\
•
•
•' CAi l Y PILOf
Windy Bay Proves
Fine for Lightning
--1 _______ _
By AL~tON U>CKABE Y
DAILY l"ILOT IMlftol '"""
Windy San Francisco Bay
turned into 11 millpond briefly
Saturday. but it was no dC'ter·
rant to Theo Stephens and his
Ba y Area crew aboard the 57-
fool sloop Lightning in the
final race of the City of San
Francisco Series.
When the v.·1nd f i n a I ! y
returned to the course off
Blossom Hoc k and Berkeley
Shoal~. L1gh!n1ng just hap-
pened to be in the hest spot to
pick it up first. Fron1 there on
she stayed in front al every
n1ark in the 20.i-inlle ..:ourse,
bt>ating Al Cassel's Ml-root
sloop Warrior, lhe scratch
boat. by 3 1 ~ min utes on elaps-
ed time.
The ra{'e started in a light
...
10.12: 'knot breeze. but co1n-
pletely fin ished after the /3-
boal fleet rounded t !' Blosson1 Ho('k buoy and he d-
ed tow:ird Berkeley Shoals. It
was :.in unusual sighl to s 'e
bo<t!s slatt111g helplessly and
lurnu1g 361Js on San Fr<1ncisco
Ba~·
The four-race Sl'ries was
sailed on a handicap basis
under the lnternatio11al Ocean
Huie (IOH 1.
Friun the start the series
dC\'elopcd in!o aduel between
\\'arrior and Ligh1ning.
\\':irrior hended a 11.st of
Southland vachts \rhich in-
cluded \\l id.geon fr o1n S.1nta
Barbara, Brushfire .fl n tJ
Zapata I lfro1n San D1egn,
'
,._
;;1•· ...... Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO Aranji :ind Aries fr om ON HER WAY -Ui.~pl:1y1ng tla11'lcss :-;pl1111:1ker 11'ork throui;hout the fou r ra1·e
Newport Beach. seril:!S, the Stephens' 57-!'uot alurnint11n sloop Lightning ran a11ay 11·ith the Cits
Co-Sponsored by
5outb Coast ?laza
And The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT
$f0
s
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Merchandise Certificate
For Each Winner
Winners Every Week
of Contest
Be• pigskin prophet. Pl<!i y the Pilot Pickeroo geme for
we1kly p ri1es. W inners each week receive <!I $10 gift
cer+ificete good 1 1 money at a ny Soul ~ Coe1t Pleta
1tore or bu1iness. Ea ch week'1 top winner will be in·
vited, along wit h• g uest, to be honored et the a nnual
South Co11t Pla1a Footbe ll Pla yers of the Ye er Be n.
que t.
W atch for thi1 player'1 form each week in the DAILY
PILOT S por+1 Sec.lion. C ircle th1 team you th ink w ill
win in 11ch pairing in th• li1t of 25 gam11 and 1end in
the pl1y1r'1 form entry blank or a rea1ona ble facs imile.
Then w a tch the DAILY PILOT 1por+1 pages for eech
week's list of f ive winner1.
RULES
1. Submi! lh1 1nlr}' -l•n~ l>olow or 1 rt•Mnlb1t ltc1lm ll1 " II le 1n1er
"'" ctnltll,
I. S-11 lo: ,ILOT "IGSICI N "ICl<l!IOO (ONTl!IT, Sport Deptrtmtnt,
,.0 . e•• u••· Co•!• M111, CA. t1'1'.
), O"IV tl\I I nt ..... J>O• ,._,..,, N <h Wt olo;.
4. l nlrlH fn.U1t b1 doli.,.etN lb, moll W in ,,_rHn) le OAILY "ILOT
olU<o by J p.m. Tftyt"'•Y·
I. StM!lh Co1 ol 'llu i nd DAILY P'ILOT 1mp10yH ind lhtlr lmm ... 1111
t•mlllH ,.., 1liv!bl1 lo 1nt1r.
f, T!I lllAIClll I LANI( MUST If l'"llllO IN 0~ INT•Y IS VOID.
•••••••••••••••••••• -ENTRY Bl,A 1~K • • • • • • • • • • • •
Clrcll "'°"" yo11 ttllnk wilt wl11 this week "t 9cim"
I hom1 '""' 11 ..,.:ond ,,.,. Jl1tl'tl)
Orange Coast vs . Rio Hondo
Golden West vs. Compton
Mt. San Jacinto vs. Saddleback
Santa Ana vs. Corona del Mar
Costa Mesa vs.· Newport
Estancia vs. Buena Park
San Clemente vs. Laguna Beach
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Fountain Volley vs. Huntington Beach • • Westminster vs. LB Wilson • • • • • • • • •
-Edison vs. Santiago
Marina vs. Hawthorne
University vs. Los Amigos
Mission Viejo vs. Pacifica
Mater Dei vs. Chaffey
• • • • • • • •
• San Diego Chargers vs. Pittsburgh • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Rams vs. Chicago
Oregon State vs . UCLA
USC vs. Oklahoma
Ore90n vs. Texas
Cal vs. Ohio State
Duke .vs. Stanford
Washington vs. llUnois
Mississippi vs . Alabama
Tennessee vs . Florida
Rice vs. LSU
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Tll l•IAlfll --'IJ t-lfl 11\1 .. i.I rw"""r l<I .. lft" t.t:•n4 • • • """"H p-llotlltllMftl,. • . ·-• ··-• • City"
• ..... ·-----
• • • • • • ... _________ " ____ .
••••••••••••••••••••
Other fo rme r Sou1hland of San Frantis1.:o 'l'rophy. J..1ghlning, fro 111 the host St. .Francis Yacht Club, ca1ne
y;ichls seen in acliun v.·ere south la st spring an cJ \\'Oil the \.\"h itney S('r1e~. Sala1.:ia, Amorita and Con-_____ _:_ _ _::_ ________ _:_ ________________ _
certo.
The St. f'rancis Yarht Club
sponsored series is fast
becoming a classic thnt draws
y;ichting fan s and con1pe!Jturs
from throughout Californ i:i . It
is unique in th<!! it 1s onr or
the fe\\' series th;it fe;i ture big
boats sailing O\'er closed
courses.
The event is ex !reme!y
popular in San F'raneisco in·
asn1uch as vir!ually nil of !he
courses are la id out in full
view ofthe cil v shoreline fron1
the Golden G.1te Bridge to
Jo'isherrnen·s \\'harf.
To further spark spect;itnr
interest. St. FYC i;larts one of
the race.~ ;it 4 p.111 . giving
businc~s rncn a ch11nce to get
uff early and view the r<ice
either frnn1 a spcc\<1!01" boat
or lhe clubhous('.
\\11th the first weather mark
estab!i.~hed off Cl"issy Field
near !he Colden C:nte Bridge,
rnany yachts tack lo \\'i!hin a
frw hundred feel uf 1he
clubhouse, seek ing slack cur-
rent. Thus !he clubhouse
sca"'all and ;1<lj<1cent shore
hecornes a jan1p:icked cheer-
ing galler~'.
llund1·cds of Sou I h I a n d
y:ich!s111p11 will rern;iin in Sr1n
Vr<111cisco until Thur s d ;i y
when the fan1ed Tinslev lsl:ind
S!;ig C:ruise gers under "'a\'.
Srnres 111nre v.·1JI makr n;e
ln p In the ll:iy Arl'il on
\\lednesdav.
Tiie s!:.1g cruise 1111nu:illv
1lri.!WS 1hc elite of the
worldwide .vacht1ng lraternitv.
T1n:-le_\' lsl:111d is loc<ited sonie
!lO n1iles up the San Joaquin
H1 1•t·r and is en\!relv owned bv
St FYC. S:11 I ::ind powCr
. v:irh!s :1s l<irge :is 56 feet are
1akt•n up tl1e river and n1oored
or ;1ncll1wcd oH lhe island.
ll ighJighL~ or !he cniise in-
clude panel d1sc:ussions hv
son1r or the v.·orld's top navar
arthitecls and designers.
~lill e r Takes
First Ra<'c
In Solin«s ~
()~·srr.n HAY . 1': y IAl'i
-1\:111d :'11il1Pr. 11f T11rn11tfJ .
\\[pll 111.· r11 ~11 ;u·1•11f tllt' \\',1rld
~1l1ng :->ailu1~ 1·ha111p1011.~h1p 11n
l.nru.: l).tan1l ~111111] S111ul.n
Sillth'~' ll;ilo.111s. ;1 11 (l I h ,. r
{";i11;ul1:in rr11111 T ll r" II t n '
l111 1~hrll ~i'rund in liil' \1 tnllc
'11.1 111111e l'i•Ur~r r;1ce .~:11l1'd 111
ll)!fll :Hld ~h1fl111j.! l';l~lt·rl\'
11111ds 11c1't'r J111orc 1l1an tii.,:ht.
kn .. rs. ·
Bnicr (;uldsmilh of ('l11c:1go
\.\'as tlurd. ill1\"ell North, S.111
Diego. rnu rt h <111<l H II b
1\losbacl1rr. li1111 ~ton, fif!h .
Hou11d1ng nu! i11f' (!!p 10 in :1
flcl'1 of 5.1 ho;1[s werr r·:1n:ir
l\oef11frd nnd J.:nlk· Nl·rgaard.
hoth of Osln. Nurw;i~·: Holwrt
.Johnstone, \\'illan1e1ti>, Ill. H
n. .Jud;th nr l.Jlltdon !','ld
.l:imcs ~1i11er, ll1s!er Ba\"
llunalll Cnh;i1i. C"tiit•ago. \.\';~;
1t1h. Karl :'\!"lit'. \\"r s t
<:e1'1n:u11·, 12111 ;ind !'11hnPr
:\p:irk1n.3n, Hn'ct .~1de, C1111n, .
131h.
The serond of the ~r1·rn-r:ice
se1·1es "'ill bes;1iled 1\londay,
6,000 Sec
Man J(ill ccl
I.ONC. RF.ACll tAI'\ -A
man has been killed in a 60
n1ile per hour l.11:1:1 1 tull1s1011 111
1 ;1 raee before 6.000 p~orle .
po\if"e s:iy.
Officers s:iid Hober! 1\-1 La
Tit1t>. a :t~-,·car~1ld I ;i v e r n
ov.·ner from· RnthnR 11 111.11, was
lhrnw n 1nttt the "atrr S11nday
by the collision. lie v.•:is d<'ad
on arril"al at Long Rench
Memorial Hospital.
Polrre al ~farine Stadnnn
said Cap Selleck. 35, of San
Pedro. pilnt of the ('(ll)1'1lnj?
boaL told them h~s i:ri11! h1I a
rollin11: wave and he lo~t c11n
trril Thr race "'Cl~ the 13oat
Ne"·s Champton5h1ps
NllYC, BYC Event
in F cill Regatta 136 Join •
NC'wpnr\ I/arbor Yacht Clt1h
and Balt>0a Yaeht Club Lca1n·
eel up S:Hurday and Sunday to
sl;ige Ille Fall J1cgatta.
The e1•cnt drew J3ti bo;its in
15 classes. NllYC handletl !he
outside classes and l.l \'C rode
herd on the sn1all craft r:1c1ng
inside. Fi11al r('sults.
Outside <J assrs
()Cl~AN BACING ISl
Prin1er:i, Pllil 1\1organ, NJ IY C.
PllHF 11a1 -fl f Band i1.
Corey 1\lyer. BYC: (2 ) Se·
quoya .. fun 1\1onre. SS.SC: t3 >
Pussy Cat, John Sza 1 a v,
BCYC. .
PC !51 -r11 ~le Too. Bill
Carlso n. N!IYC.
LUOt:HS-16 17 J -1!1 l're·
Empt. Leroy Sutherland.
NHYC.
RHODES~33 t4l -Folly II,
Blair Barnel!e, BYC.
56 Coinpclc
In Alan1ilos
Ol ympics
Fifly·six boats in f nu r
classes turned !!UL S~l!ur<l;.iy
;ind Sunday for 1\la n11tos
Bay \'ac·ht Cluh"s annual
Olyrnpic Classes ~tegattn .
It was the sn1allc.sl turnont
for ;in Olyn1pics \'[11sses regat-
ta in sever;1I ye;ll"s. Ahsrnt
froin lhe cn1ry lists were !11r
Stars <tnd Solings. F i n a J
resul ts:
F'LYIT':r. DUTCHil1A'J !161
-(I 1 Hippo Campus. Art
Lang, SS1\. 121 Ari('I !V.
Frank Cr;1y. AHY\': 1:11 Vag ;1-
hnnd 1;ary Lee. Sl)NSC : 141
Spaghl'tli Frir!ury. Ch:1rle!'-
l\ngcrs, SD'i'C: j5 1 \\'1111d
I J1111.~1·r. J);11•e Croshrrr, CY(".
Fl \"'J I l~ I -! 11 T11:1r1 I ;;jf•
lv Cf11l1n. ABYC ; 121 !\ull ~l11p. FrT<l C r;/v. 1\n \'c i.11
Soh1·(· I .:is I> :1~. H 11 h •' r t
(':irlcn. 1•\"S1\ l ·l l I.II!' \\'11 1•,
n11k1• .J111w~. 11,l'. !!°1• Hr:in<I
X. S11.,1· ll;11li;111:1_1. t "'('
llH•\\;11'\ 1\I• 111 T1;1n1;il,
r\ I'.. Silh.;t•r :->BY\ 1~ '1"11111
1'11111, :-.. !~. 'tho111;1s. \HYt ·.
1:l 1 \pf..f..t"ll. Til o1·11l•111 l!.111il111
Al lYC; t4• A11011 , ll,11 r
\\1glt•1. SH~·r ,;,1 \11d1·, l>dl
l '~'1'k 111~. 1\I{\'("
TE\ll'E:-..T (\-11 -~11 St1111·r
Sp:idt•. ll;i1~• <:ar1l.1t•t !1, Sa111:1
Cn1l ~·c 1:!1 r·:I 1J1:1blo 1111111.
l!ohcrt S1n1th. SS~(". 1J 1
l'l'r<'i:ru1e, Toni c; ;1 Ir~ .
SCC\'l': 14• A11d11l<'. Jriclo.
H;.1t1h. SSSC, 1 51 J\1iH'ho Gusto.
,\11ke J)ununire. SF\'SC.
SH IELns (II) -(1 \ Ailleen.
Scruggs & !)eland, NHYC : 121
Pa tience. Paul Yo~\, NHYC.
Insid e Cl;,sses .
LJ J)Q.J<lA ( !'3 1 ( I J
Pheem(·rs. 11.lerlin Gayn1an.
ABYC; (2) l..o"IY Hon1an,
llov•lanc! Lohn1an, BYC: i31
\\'ood1l'inll, l!;irry \V o o d .
ABYC.
LJDU-14B (211 -!II ll1 ~h
llupt'.'.~. Uean llOJW. BVC : en
Swal!uw, Hank \\'a I! n er,
NHYC : (~I [)on Quixote. Dick
Bradlcv, SFYC; t41 Burnhav
B('ndcr. Ted l!insha11'. LIYC·:
15) Fanny S()<tker, BruC'e
Orsborn. CBYC.
r.·!F:TCALF 191 -1!1 Last
1\·linute, B ob Kettenho!en.
BYC : 121 Van1oose. Hrirrv
n11urgcu1s. BYC. (31 Li:l
Dicken.c, Dick \Y1ll.~on. BYC.
KITE 1\ (91 -\IJ Bottom
Dunker, 'T'om \\'ilbr1n, BYC :
121 Pea Green, Phil Greene ,
BYC.
1.;;rr ~: R t5f -No. 634 , ~aney
H;iq.:ravcs. NllYC.
S1\HOT 1\ 111 1 -(l 1 11;icing
ill ;u·lnne, J\1 ;1rk C a u d i o .
r\l!YC; (21 F<irout. Ty Bcach.1
HYC, t31 N•i 7!61 , Jirn Buck·
i111~h;1111. Nll\'l'.
SA HO'!' l1 lllll -(I I Nu ,
4558. Chuek Shepardson. BYC :
121 1'1le Driv er. /\'('Ison Smith.
V\'C: c31 Pooh , Su:tannl'
Auhl'rl. NllYC. I
SAROT C -ill Nn. 5554 ,'
.lt:r1nifcr l\larT~·n. RIYC ;. 12 \1
~ 1'll11w Bug, H1l'h<trd Gales.
P.\'C: 1:11 l\1inuln1. Darl'
1;;iles. BYC : i41 No. 6849.1
\like Spain, NI 1YC. I
FLIPl'EH 181 -! l l Ye
!llde Dolphin. [1(ln Dorr:. B\"l", 1
12! Flip. Tom Forsy1h. BCYC.
Harbour Creiv Ag·cii11
Cu.ptiires Exculibiirs
Hcd narron :-;kipprrcd hy
Hil! l!;irtge of !1 11ntington
Jla rbou r Yacht ('luh w11h Ln'w
ur Unvc Arrnslr11ng and .li1n
\\"ilh<tms r<'pf'ated as E>.:·
1::d1 hur-26 .'Jal ion a I Ch<inl·
p111ns.
l'o1npf'l 111~ in Ilic fnur r;11.:rs
hos\l'<I h~1 !l11n!111i.:1<1n ll:irbour
Y;1eh t l"\ub \\"('re ~kippers
fro1n Oc:eans1c!e, Ne'" p {Ir !
Harhnr. Long Beacl1 . \.(ls
1\ngeles. Santa r.tonica Ba}
Wilson Tops
Pnbst Race
Bob \\"11.~on nf Ccil1Jnrn1a
Yill'hl Cluh in his t'ru1:o;er Ship-
111:1lt'S t111 1pcd ;1 lte\d of 21 r n·
1rit•s 111 1hc ~llh run111ni.:: of Ilic
J'\111111.111 l';1bsl Pred1t'lcd log
ra1·c S:1t11rd:1\"
\I !l.,11n 11:11 11::1lf'd lllf' l'Olll"~l'
-111i1th llH'l11d;:<l 111 0 '"bl11u!
1 111101.~·· 111th ;i l !l{l!l prr('C!ll
C! 11\J'
H11111u•n1p 11 1111 ;i I ~H p1·r-
;i nc! San Fr~111cisi.:o yacht
clui'Y.;:. I
SC'eond pl;:1cc h11nnrs l\lt're
c;q1tl1rcd hy Con1m,,t11Jn ;-;k11»
p1•rrd b.v J3(1b /\l<'an1hrac
.\lfYC. llnnl pl;ice hi" Yd) ll
i.f..1ppin'd hy 1!;111 \ ';il1ner n(
SI. 1.-rant"iS Y;1rhl < luh ;1n(I
fn\11"111 p]:l('(' hy EX('"l1!Jor
sk1ppt'!"l'd by T11n1 1\1,llug 11!
BYC I !;111 f'al11H'f 11 ;1:-; the
11 inner· nf the rct·ent S;u1 Fr;in·
t' i s e o -~~ n s c n a d :i R31.:f'
sp1111~orrd hy !llOHA o f
1\Pr!ht•n1 Cal1forni;1 J I
l';il1nt·r. of St. l•'ran1.:is'
\"arlil Club :ind ll;11·1gt• 1r('re
1·cclcl·!cd as President and
~e<'ri·T :1r)-tre<1~urt·r tlf thr Na-I
11nnal A.~sor1at1nn ;It a <l1nn('r 1
tnrc!inl! in the ll un11ni;Lun
Harbour Yacht Club I
Allion c \Vinn cr
\1 :1rk All11111r 11:1-: lb• 11111t11'1'
nf lhl' S~ibu! II \h:1n1p1nn•.l11p~
h1•ld :11 1'\1•11 port I l.11 h••r c 11111,r
ln1pll\ \\'lll/l+'f"~ l\Pfr 12• Si·u!I
\1 r•rn tl. AllY(" (~1 .h·H Sr•n[!
1.1rc. 1-11 .\(•d .11111r~, ,\llYl'.
1;,1 Jpff H:11.1'I. Cl('
1·(•111 t'rn1r l'>f!S Ct•11(' De===========
\ 111111i,:'i. ,\J;1 ri.:t·nr fr1•111 Sh:11·k
J ~l.11ut \':1e!1l ('111!1, i\r11pnr\
llr:u·h. 111hcr t11µ f1r11sh1'rs
11 1'1 t' (~1 Southern l·on1f1•rt,
• lu t)1 1 \';1111!hn, L"YC. 22·19: i41
l\!1111.~111111 I!, .Jat'k \\"l'st. San
l't•dru \'{.', 2 :lOii: !~I V;1:•a.
~ally Bana nas
Really Is ...
Bananas, That Is
CC'1T_I" Hoos, \·e1uc·e. YC. 2.4:ill~,.!::==========='
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,,
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winning
cars are
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1739 Superior Av•. (17ih & Ntwprrt)
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~.O. •o• •••"-• .,.,.,.,.,.,._ • .... 546-804S
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•r,••<le. hn.,, l~•~I. o• 11u~hly rOl>'l'M!nl•bom oeloles to pm<~M ~t-d °' "'~"e'~'' Nn ln<!u~lry Olan<!~•~ c"''~
STP
Oil
Treatment
71'
SANTA ANA
15 OUNCES
LIMIT~
1400 EDINGER AT BRISTOL
BUENA PARK
5301 BEACH BLVD .
COSTA MESA
:i,200 HARBOR AT WILSON
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5825 LINCOLN • WESTMINSTER
15440 BEACH BLVD. AT MCFADDEN
\
N'o . 1 on the Coast
"(ou r Hometown Newspaper Is
The DAI LY PILOT
I
--..--.
Forsytes Fore-ver
Station Broadcasts 24-huur 'Saga'
NE \V YOHK (U PI I vnluted romances etnd In·
Oe\'Otces of English literature fidelities of a British upper
and insomniacs v.·ere givl'n ;1 n11ddlc class fan11ly between
special treat over the weekend 1819 and 1926. Cals\1orthy.
. as a tclel'1sio11 station bro;:1d· wliu won the NnbC'l Prize for
cast 24 continuous hours of the llterature 1n 19~2. :-t year
Forsyte :iaga. before his death, wrote the
Jn what nnist have been <1 Ftir~vtc Sap:a 1n a cio~.l·n books
lrlevision first for ;i dl'ania1ic lle!w~·e11 190G and 1927.
prod uct11)rt. :;talion \Vf"ET. ;111 \\'NI-:'/' said !h:il 11hcn they
affiliate of the l'ublir Hrn;1d-aired the progrnm in in·
casting Systen1, ~ho11cd all 26 st.'.llltnent:-: l:ist year ninny
chi!pters of the British l3ro:-1d-viewers 1:nn,plainctl 1hat they
l'as11ng Corporatiun·!; prnduc-niissed chapters cind a.skct! 1r
l ion uf the J ohn Cals1\orthy 1l <'Duld be run ag;1in. Thus,
Sl(lry. 1\1th the :ud ol ;1 S:!OJllJU gr;1111.
1'he station said do zens of the station co111b1nc·d thu
callers told 1hen1 th('y stayed sho'>'·ing with ;.in appc;il for
up for lhe entire progr<"l\ll funds for the 11oncon1n1ereia l
1vhich began at 8 p 1n. S:llur· net11·ork.
d<Jy and ran lhrough B p.111. Bctll'cen chapters of the
Sunday. n111ratho11 viell'ini.:. ll·le\iS1U11
scg1nents asking for con·
tr1bolions for the statkln and
diseussing the era in which the
Jiclloual t'ors}1tes Jived .
Susa n H<1n1pshire, w ho
portrays Fleur Forsyte, 'A'Oll
0111 Einmy ;iward last year for
the role. Al.so ;ippearing in th'e
~l·ries 1vere f<~r!c Porter as
Soanies Forsyte, the attorney
ant.! patriarch or the family,
;ind Kenneth t.loure as Jo
f'1or·~_11h·.
\l'l1e11 the series 1vas shown
in Uritain. church schedules
11·ere altered so that persons
11·uuld no l miss a chapter of
the story, a WNET spokesmen
s;i1d.
.. ..... , .. ; . .. . . " .. . ' -~
Gloria's
Retur11
S11perb
Hy \\'I Ll~IA~I GLO\'J~ll
!\'EW YOHK •APi -l :l•·ri;i ~11·ansou is ll'rnf1e in hcr j
Broiidway return.
The vetert111 star cou ples
cn111tior.al finesse 11·lt11 e'·
pcctable gl:nnor as the repcn·
!ant supcr-1\\um nf "l\ut-
tcrrlies Are Frcl'." the Jonl\·
run Booth Theater hit 11•hicl1
nuw belungs to hl'r
Bf·fore invi tin g the prt>ss in
:is a prelude t11 au al !1'1·~c~1
l'clcl:tration of her lirst·J<ialto
stint in 20 years, t Ii l'
111a11ageinent «Jlo11·ed ·r.11ss
The story chronicles the and drama 1}('r~onah11es ap-
ccono1n1c s l rug g I e s , con· pe;1red in f 1 v c · 111 1 J1 u t e --'-~-'--~~~~~~~-
lie s;iid the station received
nt least S25,000 in telephone
pledges as a result of the
show ing. "Y 01c B1·01cr1l1t Anl'lrovies'
S\•:anson a \l'Cck of cri\ic-fre•'
pre\'ie'A'S. Prrior to U1at :-.h"
did the role fur seven nionths
on lour. The prcparatnJll p;ud
ntf 1'herc wasn't a single hnt•
fl uff or ltniing hit eh.
'1'•1 be sure a purist nih~ht
f:1ull un 011e rflut11·ry h1\~c
l'l'C'lash or t11·0 and an (X'·
c'a~ional ren1in1scent overshnk
lnJ111 lhl' good old :-.ilr11l
1·u1l·n1::1 nays. l'rctly soon su1·h
!nfleo> ser111ed righl in lhe
pcrvasi\·r \\'~1r111th of lhr posed
:-Jw;111sun portrayal.
f --0-
TV DAILY LOG ~a111111y Thwarts
]Jcath, Hcsling
Ja('quie ~·loffc lt takes 'vailer Rich ard Stepp's inixup in the roorn scrvn:c order
in stride. while Robert Engrnan does a s lov; burn Jn this s(·enc fron1 "Jllala
Suite," resuming ·ruesday n ight at th e Laguna !IIou!ton C'on1mun1!11 P!ay-hous~ in Laguna Beach. ·
Monday
Evening
SEPTEMBER 27
LAS VEGAS (AP 1 -Sa1n-
g,i1lfriend who is ar11vin& lrnm rny l)avis Jr. has been releas-lloly. cd fron1 a hospital but has (31 Mo~ir: {C:) "The Sec.ond Time
Around'' (comedy) '61 -Debbie bee n ordered to tnke il easy
PBS Con1es Up \Vitl1 Lcti1gl1e1· Fru1n tile 1110111en~, howe·,,er.
thal !l'lis~ ~w::insnll crnc rgcs
u11.~t:1gr in thal 4uirt!v 1•\•
1rav;1g;u1 t beige slack suit 1\·ith
Ju~l :1 Ion~ gold 1.:!1;-iin :111d
\\'Ide bracelets for orna1ne11L
the pla.11 is hers. She tncets thr
\'htJllenge with£r:t<:ious cclat.
6:00 EJ Big Ntws .lerr, Dunphy
(fl Hews Bill Huddy
O KNBC fttws Tom Snyder
O Neon Morns. McC01m1ck 0 (j)@ a) Hfl Mond1r Ni&:hf
Foo1b1n New Yolk Jets ., SI. LOUIS
Cardinals.
0 Wild, Wild West m Tht FHnlrtones fEJ I Dn <1m ol Jeannie
(IS) ID HGdrepod21 Lodft
i?i) lrtaticiero 34
ffi DeMtrt Repc>rt
(39) M1ybefTJ RFIJ
6:30 O Steve Allen Show Oil CBS Ntws Waller Cronkit9
(fOl NBC News Joh n C:han~el!or m DEBUT "ndr Crillin Show m Tht am Cosbr Show
(15) Space I" th1 70's \
ED Jabukl: tt1ntc The1tre 01 hp=n
ff) Belt the Odds
(39) G1een Acles
aD El Prof. S1gitario
7:00 O CBS Hews Walter Cron~1l e
0 ffi NBC News John Chancello r
(!ll Or1gnel
7:10
D What's Mr lint?
(lg, Adam·lZ m I lo•e Luer
ffi I Em1111 of .lr1nnlt
(15) Loni Kenneth Clu k
ffi M11(1t ind tht Be1uUlu1 Ma·
<•M
(39) The Yirgi nl1n
al) Y1rltd11le1
D "STAND UP AND CHEER" * Musical salute to
America. Presented
by CHEVROLET
f) Stand Up and Cheer Popul~rl
recordin2 ~rt11t Bobby Goldsborc
i.;uesls. I
D Dr. Simon Locke ''Ma1" A hippie
neurosuige~n w~o h3s dropped out
of the proless,on could help sa~e
lhe life ol Dr. Selle~ who reaune1
brain surgery betause of a cran>ill
1 neu1i~m.
(Bl I Drtam ol Jtannle
0 THE CHILDREN 'S HOUR * AUDREY HEPBURN
Reynolds. ,\ndy Griffi!h. for a \1•hile.
0 ITT>! ffi World Premiere Movie: "I 11•as very close to dyi ng,"
(C) (2hr) ''Whe1t Wfre You When !he 4$-year-o\d entertainer the Lifhls Wtnl Out?" (comedy)
'68 -Doris Day R~hcrt Mo~e. said aftC'r being discharged
Terr,-Thomas. Pah1ck O"Near. Story Saturchiy nigh t from Sunrise
~et against 1he bac~.drnp of !he l lospital.
paraly:zin~ powe1 failure Iha! blac~ed out the Eastern Seabaa1d in 1965. !Javis. 11·ho under11-·enl treat-
~ Wild, Wild West menl for an enlarged and
O JACK PALANCF.: in rni saligned li\•er. said he 11•as
*"HOUSE OF NU ~1 BERS" ordcret.! to quit drinking hard
Fl Mondiy Might Movie: (Zl1r) ticuor and placed on a strict
"H~use of Numbers" (drama) '57 diet.
-lac~ Palanc~. Barb3ra long, Har-1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, old J. Stone. Brother ol a S~ll Quen-11
Im convict i~ins !arces with con·
v1~1's wife 1o ma~P. "011tside" ar·
1angemenl> fnr hi~ tsc~p~.
ffi (15) Black Joum1I (R) Georgia
Legisl~!nr Julian E!ond, pl~ywright
lmamu Amiri s~raka (leRoi Jon~s),I
Operation Breadbasket director Rev,
J ~~~e Jackson and Mal'Or Rich~rd
Ha!ch~r ol Gary, lnd., ar e inter·
viewed.
~ Sonrisa'
('r.i Rosas pil Vernr.:c1
(!)The Persuaders
9:31l 0 D01is Day While in Rome nn •
shnrt vacation. magar•ne writer Doris
Martin la:I~ in lave w11h an l!aHan.
lhen h•r adv•t5t opinion nl some
paintings des11oys her 1om1nce.
Cesare Olnova guests.
(10 City In Motion
0 Baller Ward Kt'<n
W II Takes• Thitl
BJ LI Cruz de MariY Cruces
llJ:OO f) (fl M1 Three Sons Slev~·s look·
alike Scottish cousin has his firs!
rt~te w1Th Terri Dowling (gues! Anne
r ranc:is).
9 N~ws 111o"is. McCormick
(61 To Tell the Trnth
(=) The A~engers m News P11l~am. fo:;hm~n
(l 5) Evening 1! Pop~ I
ED Curren! E.vents "Coming o! Age
in Cal1fo1ma •
c:J El Tornitlo
CD Manhip
11):30 EJ '81 Arnie ,\rnip_.. becomes the
1Jv~rlle whipp.ng rHiy o! Ills fellow
~·~c~:•Y'S whtn "!e l1ll1a11 prn·
rio!•s 8 !.tl:e:ne -All•d1 ~end~ lht
C•"1hner1~1 f lan~e Crmna~v aff1ce
Tllf: UNl'UBU.<;lfA.81.!.' MJVEL.
JS NUWA!ofl-;RJCA.'S
flrosr COl'>7'RO\'ERSlAL FILM!
Sllt&roes:~~1 U.Sl!llANCOl.1:*~-' ~·1111 ·ii.:-..
x ~ .. ~-.; ..
'
STEFlEO VISION ·--...... ~Q
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
NOW PLAYING
O~lly A.1 1, JC ·~ 10 · J:•5 • S.30 •
1.00 ·I·~· 10,JO
By ROBERT J\IUSE L
NE \V YORK IUP IJ -''I
ha1•en't heard people l~"gh
that hard since Laugh·ln",
said the Public Broadcasting
Se rvi<:c executi11e. And since
he was talking about a shO \.\'
for chlldren aged seven to ten
years old it sounds as though
PBS n1ay ha \•e found another
program to rank with its
a1-1•ard-winning · · Ses a me
Street."
The name of tile show i!i
"The Electric Company". It
teaches reading in a format of
sketches and black outs
superficial!y as zany RS the
Laugh-In pattern but shre11•d\y
designed to slip the learning in
with the laughter.
"Bill Cosby, Rita Moreno
ttnd other top perfonncrs lake
par!," said the executi11e and
you should ha11e he;ird the
yocking from the 400 adults 11·e
a sked to previe,.,. it 1 n
preparation for its Oct. 25
debut"
tlaving said that the PBS
TWO IEWITCHING FEATURES
"THE NIGHT OF
DARK SHADOWS"
COLOA -RATED G~
'"'
0 Millien S Movie: (2~r) "Th~
Chi!drtn't Hour" {drama) '62 -
Jame~ Garn!r, Audrey Hepb~rn, Shir
le~ Macla1ne.
p•rsrnnel ta wMk at 5 no AM . :'~~:::;:;;:;;;:::;::;;~it'lll!!!!!!!!ll!~ {6• ~ovit: (2hr) ~rhe Human Mon·
}:~1" (nr'rr'I) 'M'-8€13 Lugn~i. --
nO" Le1'1 Make 1 Deal m Hoean's Herots .
IE) Dragnet
(I SJ Boo~ Beal
ED Cityw1tche111 A d~1
Stadium, con1plele w.ih
€D Dll·Re·Mi
m lassie
(!' N~ws E•ll Johns
a> £1 Dlario
I (39) fe~ture r11m:
al Adults Only
1! Dodgtt intc~l~WS 11:00 Fl (8' rn Ne""
0 1o' ffi News
CB Mi11u~Uto Y1!dez Show
0 Bruins in Action
0 fJ' (B News
D Movit: "Tnwn
l~iamal '6!-Ku~
Marshall.
Withou t
Dougla~. 1:00 fJ m Gunsmot1 Johnnit Whi!&ker
plays.a young boy in search ct h•I
mother in Par1 1 o! "Wa~te'" episode. m TO TELL TH E TRUTH
Also gue~!ing ls Ruth Roman. * Back By Popular Demand 0 [o) fD L1 u11h·ln Screen queen Rita Haywot1h, guesls as a cave m T!! Tell tilt Trut h
woman, 1 heartle~ nurse and a ID Beil the Clock
lipsy film star. fD Cityw1ld1e111 "Dodger S!•1ium"
I) Movie: (21/1hr) "Pridt of lhe CD Ch1nntl 4Z New1
Y~nkie~" (dram1l '42 -Gart Coo per. TertSll Wrieht. WaJlc1 Brennan. 11:30 IEJ (i1 Merv Grillin m Trulh 01 C<inttqut nces (3) Movie: "It.ails Into lar1m11"
ffi Tht Virginian (western) '54-John Payne.
O '@ ffi~hnnJ C1 rson Tolit
ED (15) World Press fie!ds., substi1ute host.
ffi Yettnli 0 Movie: ''The Ltdy Hit P11ns"
Cii) Nino (mysleTY) '42 -Pauletle Godd1rd,
·' .
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
.. ·
9th Record Week!
ON
.··ANY
SUNDAY
A FILM n WICI •RDWM
" 1'110 STEVE M<QUEEN ;" "THE lEIYERS"
"Olt AltY SUNDAY" -SAT, & SU N. -l:U • 7 · 10:41
"TME RElVER5" -SAT. & JUN. -i ,11 . S • l=<S
"ON ANY SUNDAY" -WEEKDAYS -7 -11:.0
''TME REIVERS" -WEEltDAYS -l :U
•1• fill~ YA.y,,\.l~A MIN~INDl/110 N<> l'~tt...,,. N« .. H•"' • f;JI Qui C-.
PO"l Al Th..,h• 0. A1 Q<ong• C""""v Cy<I•. JO~ N. ~i-. S<>nto -
l:Jo m David Froil stiow Guests are
11~1 Milland. l~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~===::~~~------;;1 acto1 Eddie Albert. ind New Yor~ 0 MoVit: (C) "lt't Ali~•" (adven· 11 City ltachtf 1rv1n11 Sema. lutr) '68 -Tommy Kirk, Shirley
(39) re1tu11 nlm: "81rbarl1n 1nd Boone. th1 Geish1." m Movie: (C) ''T1l11 ol Hollm1n"
(mu::l;al) '53-Molra Shearer.
1:45 0 Hfl Polt·Gamt ShDlf fD Movie: ''The Greil 01" P1t,h"
9:00 O ([l H1rt'1 tucy Kay Ball1td l (spor1s) '4S-Dtnnls D"lleele.
11ue.sts a1 Uncl1 Hury's lon2 lost ffi S~ Seen•
Tuesday
DXYT1ME MOVIES
t :OO m "Csupt fl'Vm S.h11&" !dr1m1)
'6l-Hilde111de Nell.
':lO O "Southside 1-1000" (myster,)
'50-0cn 0tfor1. "Rh11mbe" (ad·
~ntura) '3~tort• Rift, 0 (C} "Wttltl Wlkll DodM" (•d·
venture) 'il-Sllstn H1yw1rd, Rob·
ert Mitchum,
l0:30 (}) "P'rldt et Sl lolih~ (1ports) '52
--01n Daill)', Jo1nn1 0111.
1;00 0 "lJper1tlon P1<lflc" (~rtma) 'SI
-John Waynt. I
m (C) ~A Bulle! 11 Wtilln(' (drl·
ma) '!14--Ror, Calhoun, Jean Sim·
mons.
2:00 (E) {C) "C:tnpler Story" (dr1m1)
'60-Walter Matthau.
l:DO (I_) "Bt•u hmes .. tbillgraphy) ·~7
-Bob HOCH!, Veta Miles.
@ (CJ "$hllltnl Prince" (m11m1ij
'M-Ann Blyth, Edmund Purdom.
4:00 8 "Tht Two Mrs. Ct"olls" (dra·
ma) ''7-Humphrty Bo11rt, Bu
bl!! Sl8ftl¥YC~. AleJis Smit h,
4:l0 l'3) $H 10 AM Mdlnf
0 "Dntu!•" (myi!tlY) 'Jl-Btla
l11go~1.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e BE BEWTTO·lED B°i
THESE F1::LINES! 2 are
all black femal es. 1 as a
black male and manx. and
they come with th@' moth·
t"r • F'rtt to you in today 's
\liant ads!
e UNDER $100 for a Gen-
eral .El.ectrlc ·washer and
dryer! Look fC!r it under
Appliance In loday·1 pa.
"'" e YOU'LL FLIP FOR TlllS
SENSATIONAL ~A J l.
BOAT; It'll e F1ipper In
~xcelltnt condition· Jlave.
FUN!
execs face rel!. On his desk
wa.o; a copy uf a 11111gaz.i11e
hradlined. ''Public Tclevisi(ln:
is Anybody \\'atching?'' The
magaz.ine said mo~! public-TV
attracts about one-tenth lhe
\'ie'A•ers of even the lrast
popular prime li1ne net11ork
show and 1-1•hat's inure it is
11·atchcd basirally by au au-
dience drtnvn fron1 the upper
f1n a11cia! ;i n d intellectual
"\\"i•'le enougl1 fo1· fisc::il
l!lit," 111' said-$:i5 n11lli1111 in
fct.!cra l funds inc!udcd-''but
11·c need estahh~hrd and Ion~
tern1 flnan1 ·1ng lo be able to
pl:111 :1head. ''
Since l'BS is frer to seek out
progr:uns anyll"hl'rr it has ;u.:·
1111ired sonic uf lhe hes~ of th1·
suprrb d r a rn a t i c ;ind
do1:u1ncntary produetion uf th!!
Bnti~l1 Br11adr:istin).i Corpur;1-
t1011 1BU<'•. In 1ts second
Outlaw Fihn
1101,1.\'\VOOO (AP I
group. Sl'<1::.on. 11h1~·h pn'n1it'rcs Ucl.
"This dorsn'L accor<I 1l'ith :1. l'ilS 11·ill s!10\1' Ilic u1w11t
Director Franklin J. St·haffner ,
:uul producer Joseph 1'. r\~1;1r
h<n r fonned a partn!'rshi!J Ill
dcvf'ltip a film based 011 l'a11l
\\'c!lmiin·s 11orel, ··A J)yn:1:-;ty
of \\11·stern Uutla\\'S," for
C11lu1nhia l'ieturcs.
Ille \Vl"~Jun vf the UllC's "The Six our O'A'tl rese:ircll"', said l\'11'es uf llenr11 \'Ill". Tht·:-.~
Tiu· (ilrn 11ill disl·!;ise thr ~1r
\u;1l l1luod!inrs th.'.lt exi ~tl•1I
IJctwe('n :-orne or J\111erica'1,
r11 o~t l1'~t•nd.'.lry ou!l;iws. It
trnces 1ht: rrign nf l ;11\•l~s:;11r<:.\
lro111 Jesse Jaines tu Prl'!tl
Boy 1qo~·d . ·
cxccutil'e, Frank Little hy n1ngnifi('cnt dr.;1111;is ;.ire 1111,1·
11an1c. ""'e belicl'e we arc r111111i11g 011 CBS·TV bu1 \11th 1;1
reaching all scg tnents of tile 1ninuh:s clipped lo allow fu r
population and in respcct:iblc t'\ltlltlll'l'l'ii.lls :111d s I at i 11 11
n11n1 bers. •· bn:aks.
PBS is a privn te, non·prof 1t "\Ve will run l11e111 in full in
corpo1a11011 set up le) sl'lt·t l .l.1nunrv:· L1t1\e s,1id. • l·:1cr\'
:ind !hstr1bute progr;;i nts to th e rn111ult; a11d f'l'ery "'•lid" ·
209 non-comn1l'tCHtl TV sla-1----
l ions 1n the country. Li\llc S.'.lid BALBOA
llHS llUJIJber IS g1011·1ng al the
rate or une or 1110 a 1no11ti1 673-4048
m\'I • ",..,.,t ~ ... ~.~!~"""I ~ CO ROlt .. O(L MAit
;ind should reach 300 in lht>
foreseeable future. It has its
problems, furemost a1n1111g
!11en1 fin:incing.
/l!ITTT@ID!f
H£WPOllT BEAC ll • 011.3-83~0
12th BIG WEEK I
ENDS SOON
WltMROF OJ
2 ACADEMY AWARDS!
Sun. thru Thu r1., 8 p.m .
F<I. and Sat .. B:lO p.m.
Continuous Su n. f ram I p.m.
"llUE WATER
WHITE DEATH"
Jo~n w,.,yn~
"l tG JAKE"
TWO BIG ONES (RI I
I -JAN .. 11>1"-
NOW-ENDS TUESDAY 1
6EDR6E HAMILTON ~ SUELYON .
~ EVEL
.,; ~~ iK'!!~!_EL'
& "PRETTY MAIDS
-ALL IN A ROW"
IN COLOR -RATED "R"
-AlSO PLAYING-
e Slortl Wednnda1 • "THE ARRANGEMENT"
"SUMMER OF '42"
"WAIT UNTIL DARK" 1C fd1 Dau9la1-Rkhard Boane
Fayir Dunaway-Deborah l<err
~~ ONE WEEK ONLY! ~ '= J. . ONE SHOW NIT EL Y S:OJ
.. , . " . • ALL SEATS $1.50
a. .• ··:}"" J "' fl! ~'j"¢.Jl~··;;:;:.i~ w . ""'' i1 . 11 .· Wv·.g w88Wt :iH
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE / 1970
WcJtword Ho-World's largest
Motel -1,000 Rooms Between
Stordust Hotel & Dazzling New DIAL
FREE
FDR
ftlSfl!VATIOHS
(800 ) &Cl·68!1
Co!!lpH! Y1lue -204 N1w Roo111s. Doub!t Btd, frt1 TV
YOU PAY ONLY SB.BO single, $10.90 for 2 peopl e
CompJrt VJIUt -2 4oublt beds, stJrlini at $12.90 tor 2
0 11 Fri., Sat. & Itoliilays. n<ld $2.00. DtAl, Fr.Et..
I
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11
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FREE! BONUS FUN PACKAGE!!' I
BRING THIS COUPON TO FRONT DESK WHEN YOU CHECK IN
SEND NO MONfY NOW , • ORDER IY MAIL Olt PHONE! J.,,d w,;, od with you• ft1tr•.,llo<> "'" .. "· 11•! ;..,..,.dlo10 ..,,;u.,, <0nf;,..,.
<>t.<>"· 11un ohood. D1:h ! .. tad•Y "" mo~• r•101•0!;.."1 IO< • f~lur• Olay,
(•"""' "' "' '"'" '"•~•' <>11•M. P••.or ''~'
FROM CAllF., ARIZ., UTAH, OR(., IDAHO
DIAL FREE (BOO) 648-6898 Anylime
'""TV, 11 ,ooh, :4.hr. o ,,,.,,., ltul•~••nl, 100•• •i• ••"•lil(c111cd,
huftf•od• ol fo••,,lr un '"• 1'10 TtPPlt<G, l•t1lt•..,.,ic••d. M•H•r (ho19•
-
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<0•'1 .... " _ ........... .
··-· ... c ....... ...
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t::OWARDB
HARBOR c.~:.2
KA~IOll t l\>O. Af WIUOll! II. catr• llll• IU OSI>
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"friends"
•
• .;;. f<) I,;
r· • 1 ~" , ·'rl"'
"I LO VE MY WIFE" (R
l:olJWAROS
'
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l'r.1111l T< I "r-:·''· :!!••·nt
Son1tthin;: i1 i:of/O!r Jl't •ic:n.
.\01nPlh1nl.' ''"'' y<ll'ld,t1t•r y
1uct ... "''"! 1•l'r,YdPt1d. . . .,,.,.
.. ~11.·
jfN~lf(~
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j111 ,., c·1 \ 11 11· ' I ;ic t hc-ri·"s ;1
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""""" '""'" ~"''" • "" ""<G <•H
M.c!RLTOH ·""'· HESTON THE ' OME<i~ ~IW· ..,,\. 11>1~'.).tir MAtt -,,.,.~~'lf.l!;io'l ll''<llLl ~l Sll:'f!Ct OP
"Omtt• M11n It "(vrl X11it .. I"
AIM! n1C•ntil'lll 111•·0 Moll""' ll•tjl
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-~!) DAILY PILOT s Moriday, Stpttmbrt ?7, 1?71
LEGAL NOTICE Your ltlottefl Economy
Looks Up
Says BofA
MOTIQI TO C•lOITOltl
H._ 11·'9tlt
I Ull>•••o• cou•T Of' THW
•T11T• Of> Ciu.ll'OllHIA l'O•
THI COUNTY 01' OIL\"'01
""-'• -' ELl1AalTH I', •1C1i"ll:DS.OH. OecoeMO
No,v is Best Time
Nolle. 11 --a1 • .,, 11 crto:Hton fJf
""' ·~ Nml'd <l«-nl IMI t ll PWIMI ...... 1 ... cl•I"'' 1a•ln1• '"" ~••d
clK-1 •n1 r .. ul•O'd to Ille IT'e<'l'I, .. 11~
11\e """•IMfY •ouct1e.-... In Ill• fJfflce cl
"'• Cltf1r of 11\e •bo•• ""'ltllld cooin, or
lo "'"""' Ito..., Wlftl !tie n*'t.,•<v "°"'""''lo In• u~r1•11ne<1 ti rne fl!l ,c' er! Jt"llll II. ~ullln, ml No. Lt~•
A••, "11-n•, CtiUornl• tlODI. wtolcn "
IN PIK• OI bu1lne11 ol the wna•rilQnt~ In
•ii ,,,.11.,, i>ef'ltlnl"' 10 "'' '''''" 01 1•,n <1tce<1e111. wlltlln loo• month• tfl" '"'
11101 p~bllc•rlon al tllh """'"
To Do Purcl1asi11g
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Wit!'! "more r.eason lo expect
real progress in reducing
unemployment and slowing in·
flation, the U.S. economy
seems headed for a much im-
proved over-all performance
in 1912," the Bank of America
say.11 in its annual economic
forecast.
Dtllld S•Pllmbu l. It/I
J••n Ann Fl!ce, •l.o ~-" ••· Join Ann• Il le•.
E•eculr•K Cl "'' Wilt of •~IQ Dec:odenl
JOS!PH I . MCMULLIN,
12JI """' Lall• ""'· "n-na, Ctlller11!1 tlOOI
All•rnt¥ tw 'li•twlrlr
'""""\~ Publl•l'IO'd O••noe .,(:0111 Dolly Pllo•. ''P'""'~" •, II , 11. ~S. 1911 ) .. 1.11
LEGAL NOT ICE
, 1lll4
l'ICT1TIOUS llUS!Jll:SS
JI.I.Ml: STATEMEJIT
lhe lol!o-ont l>ff>On h no1111 b<olillf'll ..
NtwOOl'1 APP••li.tl llu•tdln1, "'° ,,.
N•WP<>r! 11\od , NPWOOI'! Ire (ti .
C•tllorn.t
J•int• ll••hln Sml!h, 1 C•n•I Circlr.
N-po•I B••cll, C•1>1.,..n!•.
lM1 bu1lnen II IH'lng C011dUcttoa bt •n l"c:Uv•GU•!. J""''' llA<lon Smith Tiii• >llltment fil..t will\ Irie County
CIP•k ol O•Ano<O c .... n1~ on S"<>••"""'' JJ.
lfn 111' !lt~lfl\o J. Mt-r, OtPUr'I ((IU,...
l y {.lfrk
P~bll>llO'd Or1n11p CM•! 01lly Pilot, lepl"'"~' )7, oNI Cktollfr ~. I\. II,
1911 1MJ.)•
LEGAL NOTICE
" U:IOI ,ICTITIOUS llUSIN!SS
JIAM& $TAT!EMENT
lnt lollo•••"nll Pf!flOn> art d<ll119
b.J•l""'1 "'· Th• Futok F1ctory, 1~ So. C<>111
Hl11hwa1r, Laoun• 6•8cll, 9?491.
l(el!h l'rea Cui••r. &71 LombArGv
Ltn•, Laaun• 6t•Ch. Collfortol1 97651 ,
Arie• ll•nger, (Ill (1l1!ln1, Loouna
Broch. Ctlll.,..nla, 91611 .
11111 1>1J1lrw:u !• 1><'1"11 con<lw<lt<I by •
CltN!r1I "'""'"'•hip Kelln Frt<I Culver
Tiii• •!alem•nl flit<! with I~• Cow~I~
Clt•k QI Ot•"ll• Counlf on Sept.....,bl!r 11.
l•n, bv W•Utr T. Klno. Otl>uty Countt C•er~
Publi""11 0..aM• c .... , O•ilY Pllo!,
Sf'<>lt..,bor 11, •.-.O Oc!-r 4, 11, II,
lt11 ll•B·ll
'"'
LEGAL NOTICE
" ll')f l'ICTITIOUS llUSINESI
"IAME sT.-r£MENl
lo!lowlnv .,.r,on n dC''"' busln1.s
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
F UJIJ
Fl(Tll!OUS &U,INE~S
NAM( STATf.MENT
loi'OY>•rt JI!•""' l.I <!Ong W!h~!!
Ll::GAL NOTICE
" lllll FICTITIOUS &USINESS
NAM!!: Sf.&.ll;MENf
LEGAL NOTICE
...
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
""" ,lCTITIOUI IUSlNISt
SPEtlALT'I' Plt00UC1S $AL ES((),.
10911 0•1• SI , $18~10", C•lllo•nl•
SPEC 14LT'I' PltO()U(l !O*I S. l..rot• "'1••'"" I~ C•ltfOl'~I•, :Se•net11bilr 1. Jt11, NAMI ST4TIMINT
Th .. tonowll'>t' !Wf>O" It dolnf ~•IMU ..
"M£111 1CAN tl0\,10,t'I" (LUii. OA1
11~11 s1r.,.t, Sul!• ?Ott, N•Wll'O"T 8Hd>, c,r ~-~f'ql•••v A, Col!lt• '64:H S•nt1 A••
Avt , "'"'· Ho lf , S.1111 .i.n1. Ct l '1"11 l~I• DIJ>l,,.•t '' ~l•>t <-.Cltd tly 111 l•O••klutl
G~l•r• I' Colli••
Thio 1111.-ntn• Oiod ,..,.~ ft>• CllOJ"'•
Cl"'' o1 °'•"" COUl'll\i o..· S•Cf 1', ""
I • ti••"'• l, Mtlldo~ i>.""'IY C°"~'"
Tt11, b~llftti1 II r-yc:lt<I b, • '"'""'""Of'! .SPECIALTY Pll.OOUCTIONS
lh· Ou•"" 0. Lov•-
Tl'lh l!ll•<n•n1 w~~ n•..., ""'"' I~• C&Utl·
rv Cllo<t 01 Oro...,~ C~l\< .., S.11-
ltf'l'IOtf U, U/1.
A•fllOLO '· IAALTllt ·--A•HOLO S, M.l.l Tl:lt,
II ,ltOf'llSION.l.l COltl'Olt.1.TIO"' t n W, _....St, "'•· t)tt
(l•r>
"~bll<fl•~ ~ .. t•m(lllo
9'11
L•• ..,.,. ... ,, '"''"'~'• au ~·O< ~•"9" !;.Oii•' 01lt; 1>1to1 l'\ltllhl!fl<I Ot'•~•• (n••t 0~1(, Pllf'I
•~a ()(.1~r 4, 11. 11. Srplflf1~' 11. •"<I O~•<lb" •. l•, I~.
1~1· " '911 ~ff,/
,.
"Employment, real Income,
and production in particular
should make important gains
next year," said the forecast
presented by Walter E .
1-Ioadley, executive \'ice presi-
dent and chief economist. at a
news conference Thursday.
Medical Laboratories
Nevertheless, lloadley said.
t he e con omy's 1972
performance "will p r o v e
generally satisfying to almost
nobody."
Beco1ning Big Business · "The nation shows a
paradoxical mood or skep-
ticism and unceMnty on the
one hand, and yet idealism
and even unrealistically high
hopes on the other." he said.
ORDER
YOURS
TODAY!
Penonalized •
p
-(
~~
'? ~··~
.~ ,
1
NEW YORK !UPI)
There's a rush on all over the
country to buy up medical
laboratories in order to cash
in on the golden flood of
money from ?.1edicare, Blue
Cross and other public and
private spending on health
The electronic computer and
11 wave of newly discovered
multiple testing and diagnostic
techniques has made the
JaDoratory business extremely
profitable. Vol u me has
soared; unit costs have gone
down.
Sales of the medical labs are
estimated to have soard from
$1.5 billion in 1965 to $4 billion
In 1970 and they could hit $7
billion in 1975, knowing people
in the business say.
Although the new diagnostic
equipment is ex pensive ,
medical labs are not capital
intensive in any big way and
they become less and less
labor intensive each year, a
fact that makes them a
some"·hat unique business.
Some companies that are
expanding rapidly in the
medical lab field simply are
following conv e ntiona l
business tactics of growing by
acquisitions.
Volunteer
Controls
.
1000 §
'eautiful
Stick-on
LABELS
?'°ONLY~
$125
~·•••c~
Stylish • Efficient
Order For Yourself er • Friend-
But there's a g r o w i n g
tendency lo ownership and
Qperation of the labs by
groups of physicians and
scientists oriented towards
developing or acquiring new
and ultra a o p h I st ic a led
diagnostic tools that will give
them something extra, an
edge over the field.
For e x a m p I e , Cybertek,
Inc., of New York developed a
system of measuring the drug
metabolism index of individual
patients to monitor the effect
on them of therapeutic drugs.
This enables physicians to
determine in advance the
2J:>ility of a palienl to handle a
drug before therapy starts.
The idea is, of course, to deal
with one of the more pressing
problems in modern medicine,
the fact that so many patients
have serious a n d un·
predictable reaclions to the
drugs indicated for their
symptoms.
Healthex International. Inc ..
also of New York, Is run by a
24-man professional and scien-
tific team. It has one of the
more comprehensive
diagnostic laboratories in New
York, offering everything
from pre-employment ex-
aminations of workers to com·
plete laboratory fa cilities for
physicians and clinics.
But Healtheic also has a
"And it is always difficult to
measure economic progress
and find agreement in the
campaign oratory of a
presidential election year."
Hoadley said he expects
President Nixon v•ill be work-
ing "to rree up as much of the
economy as he can" before
the wage-price freeze expires
Nov. It
He said he regards the
freeze as successrul in stop·
ping and rever s i n g in·
rlationary expectations and
turning the trend of doom and
gloom psychology.
lloadley warned against any
rigid controls on profits. He
said such controls now "would
endanger prospects for more
production, investment and
jobs."
"Justification f o r sug-
gested profit CQntrols I i es
largely on political rather than
economic grounds ,'' he
argued. "Profits are a
residual in our market system
after a!l other costs have been
met."
Hoadley said he had receiv-
ed assurances that the Nixon
administration is prepared to
give up the IO percent surtax
on foreign imports i n
bargaining on reforms in in-
ternational currency ar-
rangements.
specialty, a sophisticated • the r m ographic diagnostic ~~
device developed in Sweden
Wall Street and made in Texa.~ by Barnes
Engineering Co.
It is useful as a supplement
to orof the X·ray detecting
cancer, or opthalmology,
detecting carotid a r t e r y
lesions that could resull in
Cliatter
strokes. and many other rr-·:;--:;:.,-•. ;•_,, •--~~'
purposes. The device really is NE\V YORK IUPII
a scanning, i n fr a red Among the negative factors
radiometer which measures affecting the stock markel
surface temperatures b Y these days is the fully invested
me a n s of I her ma I condilion of the typical mutual
photography. Without being fund and some institutions as
technical, the areas that show y,•ell, acoording to the
up Ii g ht est under Inverness Counsel Inc.
thermography pant to the "Jn addition." the: firm na ys,
danger spots. The advantage "a more prudent monetary
of thermography over X·ray is policy by the federal reserve
that it is passive and non-in-during a period of increasing
\lasive, hence totally harless. economic act1vil~· is not likely
Still another medical lab to produce a spillover of ex -
fir[ll. Eloctro-Nucleonics, Inc· cess money from commercial
of Fairfield, N. J.. and transactions lo s e c urit y
Beslhesda. Md, has developed nlarkets. Finally, the buo~'<1 nt
Its OY.'n test for potential psychological climate may
hepatitis Infection of blood for weaken as the controls be~1n
transfusions. It is called the to chafe and attacks on the
hem agluUination inhibition arlm1nistration resume," the
lest and the company claims it firm sa)'S.
Is much more sensitive and
fa ster than other tests for
hepatitis in blood Jo r
transfusions.
Geologist
Cites Cost
Of Cooling
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
The cost of complying with
proposed revisions in therma l
s tandards for coastal waters
would outweigh the potenlial
benefits, according to a
Soulhfrn California Edison Co.
geologtst.
J. L. McNe:y told the State
Water Resources Cont r o I
Bonrd Thursday that the stan-
dards were arbitrary and
would be inefftctive.
The problem of President
Nixon's monetary moves and
imposition of a 11} percent
surcharge on imports "will
continue lo overh;ing the
market, lhough it should be
less crucial than the domestic
aspects of !hr Nixon program
as a determinant of stock
nrices," according to the Stan-
dard & Poors' outlook, "To en
important degree, the un-
certainties that have tempered
the market's en thus i 11 sm
should be clarified in coming
y,·eeks." the fi rm liays. "We
would not depart from 11 con-
structive: appro;ich toward
stock invest.ment."
The uncertain intemational
monetary !'iituation has been
<Jne factor responsible for the
stock market's ca u t i o u s
behavior rece:ntly, 11ccording
to the Alexander Jlamillon
Jnstitute:, 1.nc.
M•y ht u1ed on en'l"elopes ••return •ddress
l•bels, Al10 \"flry handy •1 id•nfific•fion
l•bels for mar~ing personal items such •1
books, r11card1 1 ~hoto11 etc. L•bel1 stick on
9l•11 •nd may b. us11d for rnarJr:ing home
c•nned focd ifern1. AU l•bels •re printed
with •tylish V09ue type on fjne qu•lity wh ite·
gummed p•p•r.
r -------------------,
1"111 '" ... II It._., itll• ..... ....it Will't f,J,U '-= I I 11>11e1 11>r1ot1i... L•bel on .. rA au u.ie I I c... Mac. c.111. nw
I I
I I I .
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lie so.id !he requiren1e:nt
limiting t em p l! r a tu re in-
creases in coastal waters from
indwitrial water discharge to
not more than four degrees
within 1,000 feet of shore for
more than 50 percent of the
time ''win be dlrf lcult to
monitor and to demonstrate
{'Ompllance.''
TQe firm noted the common
m arket has asked for a formal
devaluation of the dollar as
part of a global agrttment
realizing all major cur-
rencies. Further, the firm
noted the nations have asked
the United States to drop its 10
percent surcharge: on lmpofl'f.
The finn. however. still thlnks
the market Is very bullish.
I I I I L ____ ~ILC?_!_~!~I!~~---J
Ire also said the new stan-
dards y,·ou ld add $2ll million l.o
lhe S2S million cost of a cool·
ing lower plaMed for one of
the two nucl~Ar power plnnts
Edison plAM to build ne..ar thf!
extstlng San Onofrr facility.
Spear & Co. says the;
August-&>ptember reco\•ery on
the New York Stock Exchange
prQ<luced lhe first step low11rd
an improved outlook.
"
FAME-LESS
FACES
..
HfitN L ~fEI
-NATHAN Mill.ER
Think You Don't
Know Them?
You prob4by don 't recog nize a single name or
f4ce in this group and yet, if you1re one of th•
DA ILY PILOT'S very well informe d editorial page
readers, it is this ta lented team of wr iters which
helps you keep informed. They write the Editori-
al Research Reports. Though t heir own names
don't 4ppear on the articles which are pub lished
under the Ed ito riar Re sel!rc h Reports heading,
these are th e real pros -d iggers who go after
all the backround facts which put today's top
issues into perspective -without thouqht of
see kinq the fame that qoes with the name when
you're a n.stional columnist.
They're Your
INFORMERS
Yes, they could be your "informers." It's features
like Editorial Research Reports which moke the
DAILY' PILOT much moro than just the mos!
important hometown newspoper available to
residents along tho Orange Coest. Tho DAILY
PILOT is the total package. It males wh•tover
happens in the world "local news " and delivers
it daily right lo your home. Let this tum of dedi-
cated ''informers'' htlp you keep informed. Read
Editorial ResearcN Reports on tht tditorial page
-and all the other iyformat ive special features
in other parts of the
DAILY PILOT
. . . ~--~ . ·-'
AtlVlfltTltlfMlfNT
rl'he Daily
Today's DAILY PtLOT is a modern newspaper
producing seven editions a day with six-day·a·\\!eek
circulation nearing 45,000 in Orange Coast com·
munjties from Seal Beach to San Clemente.
And it's a long step removed from the turn·
of·the·century weeklies from which it descended.
The Costa ~1esa plant \•.ihi ch houses the sup·
port fu nctions of this multi-newspaper operation
has 32,408 square feet of v.·orking space.
Much of the space was created with lhe recent
d ismantling, ren1o deling and expanding of the
15,997·square·foot building which itself had evolv·
ed and expanded at the Bay and Thurtn streets
site over the years that the neiw·spaper has occupied
the corner.
All of the newspaper's seven editions -six
tailored for hom e delivery in as many commun1·
ties and one "slreet edition" for self-sale fro1n
area newsracks -are produced in the main pla11t.
The newspaper has staff \\'r iters and ed itors
who operate offices in l·luntington Beach, Ne\\'port
Beach, Laguna Beach and San Cle1nente. '!'hey all
feed ~ateria! to copy editors, photo technicians
and printers In Costa fli1esa to be transforn1ed into
the daiJy ne\vspaper DAJLY PIL01' carriers deliver
from Seal Beach lo San Clen1ente.
Sophisticated equipment and highly trained
craftsn1en work in Cos ta ~lesa to produce \vha t
amounts to seven differen t ne\vspapers each day
Monday through Saturday.
1'hei r 1nastheads la bel the m as just plain
"DA1LY l~ILO'f" (the street edition) or: .
. . . . . . . . . ...
Pilot
Be ach DAIL\' PILOT. SJddlebatk DAILY I'll.OT
(for Laguna Niguel, ?ilis~iun VieJo, El Toro and
surrounding areas), Co~l:t 1-1 eF>a D . .\11..Y PlL01', or
San (.'Jernente·Capistrano Ll.\IL'\' JlJLO'l'.
Editorial polirics and ne\1·s decisions :ire
greatly Jn fll1<1n<·f><I hy t:-d1tnr·-. in earh nr tile vat ious
areas. i\dv1.:r\1 scr:-. ar1• ~erred by :id vert1:-.1ng staff
pcr!Sonncl a~.':iig 11C'd tf) C.'.lch of the c·ornn1 unitics
served by the ne .. ~·s p:lpf'!.
n ut 1hc job or f11:i11g 1!Je pieces together -
lhe co1npl1 cated !;1'ik 11f processin g and ··1n anufal'·
luring'' t'ach da.v's ll l \r~pa pl'r-is handled at ho111c
base. :130 \\'(1st B:1y :-;t , t'osta r.lesa.
'!'he slory ca11 !Jc tuld 1n the I' e c 1 ta I of a
:-;!ring of f;il l":
CtRCULA TION -('o\'c•rs :ip1~rn\1n1;i!c·ly ) 1.-1
~<ll!Jre 1n1l l'~. a\·t·1.r. t' 11111r l· than 4 1.ouo enpH•:-p l·r
<J ay 111th a or1<'-c!:1_\ (ulln t Pl' 4-J::!l'j ftir :'ilart·t1 :1 1,
lfl71 . Su lJst'rthcr~ 1 11! p:iy rnort• 1l1an $1.2 n11l liur1
this yl':i r In h:11 c• p.1pcl'<: <!t·I J\t·rl·d by n1or1.: th.in
860 l'a rr1C'r .~
ErAPLOYES -1!'17 ft1Jl-1i111C'; 33 p:n·t·lllll (' -•
62 in prudnrlit'H ;incl l•l'iut1 n.:.: dl'p:trlnients. 36 i11
llC\\"S dcpartn1r11 t an d ~)~I in husinc'"s and t"1 rl'ul:1-
tion offi ces .. \1u1u;tl payroll thi:. yt·.1r 11 il l top $ l ~l
n)ilJion . (!'hat doe~n 'l u~cl udf' r:irr1l'rs 11hu \1ill
earn $325.500 1 111.~ yr:ir. pl11<: t';J~!1 ;incl 11\hPr priles
offered <i~ IJ011 u ~ i1H'<.•n1ivl':.. 1'1!L•y"rc indl'pt•t1clcn t
contrac tor~. 110L rn1ployc.., 1
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J-lunt1n gton Beach · Foun tain Valley DAILY
PILO'f, Newport Harbor D,.\JLY PILOT, Laguna
AD VERTISING -l.1 00 rl'gu!:1r :idvcr\1/;1 ·t·~
-7011 l"!'la1 I :1nd .j()() ill l"LIS.'">l l lL'd . .\('l\i'[J<ljll'/"0.'>
<Hlvcrlisuig r1•vc•n11L' l)rc;1k du\1 n 55 prr cent rl'l ai l,
37 pt:rccnt t·h1.~s1ficd li11::gL'. 6 pl'rccnt froin n:1t1nn·
ads and 2 pi~rl"t'll l J'run1 Jrgal ;ind 1111 sccll<1 n cn11~
Jclvcrti: eincn ts. HOME BAS E FOR ALL DAILY PILOT EDITIONS IS 'NEW' COSTA MESA PLANT
Editors Feed in News and Photos, Get Back Tail or-made Community Newspapt1rs
1. REPORTER.PHOTOGRAPHER team colllbO~tes on local i;tor y
which will be featured in the day's edition. DAILY JlJLOT often tca111S
camera specialist with wri tlng specialist.
4. COMPUTER boosts words on their way at almost u nhcfi('v:ihlf'
speed by assisting with job of perforating tape \Vhi ch aclivalc/; Lu10-
type mach ines. llere, paper tape is fed into $25,000 co1nputcr .
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7. PHOTOGRAPHS, meanwhile, are.-k ing selected lo be processed
in Photo Lab, putting pictures with words for the day's collectio n
oi information about your world and ybur community.
10. MAT TAKES impression or 1U type and engraving cuts v:hcn it
is laid on page form and forced uh der roller which exerts up to 3,000
pounds of pressure per square ioch.
2. WIRE REPORTS frorn 1h roughou\ rhr \l'l"Jrlcl .-irr ive on hoth J\S/;Of'·
ia tcd l'ress and United i'rC'~s !n\t'r11:11 11J11:i l \1 1r<'S :it J)AIL'{ 1'!1.0'1'.
Editors often select hcst clen1 c nt s frnt11 l.u11h repor ts. con1bine thenL
·5_ GALLEY OF TYPE is !"t':idy fnr prnnl1nr:-:ifl ('r lapC'-.'ll"liva\e<l
linecac 11n ~ 1na£"h111('s set it up in 11111·.., PHI' t'nlun1 n \1'Hll', 'l'hc lr:iy nn
\1h1t h 11 i :. arrallgcd i:. called a g;1lll"y. lt1•11 c-c the nan1f' '"galley proo f."
(
8. ENGR AVER take~ really cl ose look at the ncgntivc after making
a ph otocopy of a photograph lo be rcprnduced in the nc1\·spaper.
Image on negative \1·1JJ be etched on sensitized metal called a cut.
fl . PLATE MOLDED from n1at b:ikerT i11to ~ r11rvcd shape C'an be
lrirkt•d 1111 1.1 rotary prc·~s 11111ls, !1kl• !h(• one s!Hn1 11 here, 11h(•re carh
111.1 !~ rrint ~ one p;i gc of the n ct\'~papcr.
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3. COP Y DESK gets information from several different edi tors,
cherks stories for accuracy in spelling, grammar and style. Headlines
are \Vrillc n here. Copy is pneumatic "tubed" to printers on first floor.
/
6. PROOFREADING is next step. Galley proofs, pr oofs of headline.!!
:inrt printed proofs of pages all are checked in Proofreading Room
before next printing slcps are laken.
I
9. PAGE MA KEUP sees words and pictures brought together in a
fornt called a chase. It is like a metal frame, newspaper·page size,
in \vhich engravings ("cuts") and lines of type are arranged.
12. WHILE INK Is stiJ I d rying after the presRes spill out the day's
run of IJAILY 1'11 ,01' editions at 70.000 newspapers per hour, carrier
husllcs along his route t.e ... drop "today's world" on your lawn.
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Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts!
--.~i.--
Here'• here's . here'•
lat but not least,
her$'1 CHARLIE BROWN ••• and LUCY ••• and LINUS ... an:1
here's
SCHROEDER.,. and SNOOPY
Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to hav e the
whole Peanuts gang come and visit y ou dally .
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~'(.""· '·r 27, 1971 DAILY •ILOT J 3
Everyone He•
Something Thal
Someone El•e Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Yo u Can Soll It,
Find 11, Trade It
With e Want Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results
I~ I ............. . l~I .............
General
BEST "VIEW" IN DOVER SHORES!
M::ibllificent \'IE\V home. Elegant grounds
and entrv. /\ unique 5 bedroorn 5 bath home,
formal dining roorn . g-ourn1et's delight kit·
chcr.. fan11Jy roorn , 1naid's qtrs., 4 car garage.
A pll•asure to sho1v .... _ .. _ . $169,000
e EASTSIDJ::: FOURPLEX,
all n:on!C'd ,,;th ro1is1sten1
1nron1e of $6.X:l/Jno. Pnct>d
at a lcn1•, Joi\' $712,!i(IO.
e \~'t:STSIDI-~ Jo"'OURPLEX
11·11 h :l bedroon1 1'1 bath
sturi 10 apts "ouf-("l·!o,1n"
O\\'ller says srll for VA ap-
praisal ol S~S .000. \Vhuse
first~
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
12 Linda Isle O riv•
Elegant ne\v 5 BR. 41!.! ba. home \'.'/formal
din. rm., lam . rm .. wet bar. Impressive en-
try court \1'/16 ft. mahog. doors. . . $179 ,500
For Complete Information
On All Homes & Lots, P lease Call:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Islanders Bld9., at Linda Isl•
General
HlRISI E OLSO\ '" l?F A l TOR S
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
BUILDERS
"GIVE·A·WAY"
SACRIFICE
PRICE
Only 3 Left
Do you earn $800 a month?
Are you bafi:ain ben!? If 50-
don't hesitate to take 11.dv11.n..
-.... l~I -.... I~ [ -... -1~
General
* * * * * * TAYLOR CO.
Corone del Mair
4 BR, 2~ b&, J1e llv'c rm,
dln'r rm, b~a.ktut rm. Top
coOO. ACCfll to pvt bch.
$56,000 By owner. i73-J921.
LOVELY garden &: p&llo, 2
br, new crpl, frplc, R-2 loL
$33,500. fi75....3959.
Cott a Me1a
TOTAL PRICE $24,000
NO OOWN
0 .1. BUYERS
$100 DOWN
•• 52 GARDEN TYPE UNITS ••
52 RRAN D NE\V a-la·del uxe garden type
apartments . .i\ssorted 2 bedroo111 2 baths, 2
bcd roo n1 I bath , 1 bedroom units. Built in
kitchen. hu ge RECIZI::A'f!ON ROO!lf. filtered
e 1-;ASTSIDE MONEY NIAK-J41 B ayside Or.~ Suite I, N .8 . 675-6161
C:H 5 un II s on lrg 82 'x385' j ~!!!!!!!!"!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!':;"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! j
lot. 1·3 Bn 2 Ba un it w/pool. General Gen•r•I
tage of this opPOr!unity. 3 --~B:'O"U~Y~-~L~E~A::-O:S~E:-
hui;:e carpeted bedrooms.
E.xquislle 11ll Hlt> baths. LEASE OPTION
--
FHA·VA TERMS
FORMER MODEL
PAYMENT F.H.A.
for fhi1 fatiuloua: • bedroom,
2 ltOry lx>llle with 3 ban..
Ready for your occupancy
now, Completely CIU'pfttd
thruo\lt, Abo drape.. N._
~ 1c:i1chen with all buil.t-
in. includiflS dishwasher.
Double garage. Schoot1 and
.t.pplng nearby. LH WI
shaw II to you.
·1-2 BB. unirs. Total incomej ;;;;;;;;;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o; j '"'.:':-:-:::":O-Z'.::""""7'.:0::~,-S~:lO/n10. N.-. \'ac11nc!e s ht're. HARBOR VIEW
PO OL , prune area ...... , .. , .... $827,000
"TRIPLE TREAT" ON MARGUERITE
in Corona del Mar
TRIPLEX, South of the high\vay in beautiful,
desirable COH0f\1A DEL 1\1:\R. 2 · bed·
roon1. i -bedroo1n. llurry, hurry, this 1s
a GOODIE ... , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $58.000
OPERATION "MONEY MAKER"
16 SPLIT LEVF.L ADULT UNITS. all 2 bed·
ronn1 , 11'2 baths. electric kitchens, ceiling
rad iant heat. individual hot \\'alc r heaters,
,t:<lrb;:ige di ~posci J. n'JJ~ ~I/LE FROl\1 BEACl-f
localion. i\ "SURE !\·IONEY MA.KER"
al . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $250,000
8 "STACKED" WITH VIEW!!
in Eastbluff
f.l cre are eight super deluxe SPLIT LE VEL·
VIE\\' apartments. located in EASTBLUFF.
0\l'nei".~ uni !. 3 bedroon1. 21'2 baths: 4 . 2
bedroom. l 1h balh: 3 . 1 bedroom. 1 1~ bath.
You haven't seen anything like th ese units.
"t\dds up to a good return aL .... S198.450.
REALTORS
644-7270
(Formerly Delancy Real Estate)
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL M AR, CALIF. ·-·-----·-·
$75,000. CaJJ ~o ~ee.
+
N•wport
••
Fairview
646-8811
(anytime)
NEET AND CLEEN
U""lflUl t1()~(5
Ru.I E1t111, &75-6000
CdM SOUTH ll·lt 1t cond 3 BR 2 BA hon1e. South of the highway, R-2
cttvd pa(IU, brcele11-ay, n1an. h ~ ood fi • "-" k$ . an;w oors & m 1c 1curcd Jall'ns beaut shag ! 3 bed 2 h ths
CT/Its, drps. firep!, Jots of ot. room. a '
hard111ood fl(l(Jrs & brick 11ch pancll1ng. Clo~e 10 So.
Coast Plaza, nearby frivys. fireplace. Needs som-t color
s. lier 11•iU pay discount but is just S!Pps to Cainat.ion
points for FHA & VA fin-Park 11nd there's room for a
anc1ng, and g1\'e termite second unit. Priced to sell
clearanre. or assume exisT-for S-H,!YJO. Call U·NE EK to
ing low inl r11.le loan 1v11h snrak 11 peek.
p~yn1ts of $1 HI. !lf'r rnn incl
taxes & ins. Asking $23,9j(}.
• Katel!a Realty •
191() ~-Bri.~tol, S.A. 5.J7-5Jll
tColl!'rt C<1lls O.K.l
MES'i VERDE
Golf Course
U'°"l()Ul Ji()M(S
Real E.sl•te. 875-1000
140 E. co .. t Hwy.
Co10"' Oel M•1, c.ur.
CORONA
H IGHLANDS
Only $-18,000. 220o sri ft ol ON THr-..: HILLSIDE • Im·
th·ing area. Pl('H.1resquc maculalt> 3 bt"droom home
floor • ,_,. crihng vil'.'w win-with hrated & filtrred pool,
do11·s 01·crlook ihe ] Ith family room 11·11h l1rep!11C'e,
green. You mus1 sre this <'Ol"ert'd patio, \Vt'\ bar &
11·11rm 4 bedroom, J b;Hh view deck. Prire of $58.500
inchJdcs lan<i. home -prime corner Joca-
oon and plenty of room foc
pool,
C.l!l 5-IJ-S-124 f0(1t'.n eves)
\outh ~ (~ oast
PETE BARRETI
HO! !.~~I~;~ i
NEWl'ORT lfACH f)J
642 -5200 '·~· I•.
General
VA · NO DOWN
I General Sharp! Sharp! Sharp!
,-----------ll'irl'd of !onk1n~ at dirty 1'e-The Reynolds Have &1IC's? Th!'n sre this braul.y Macnab-Irvine
C I d Th • 1hat shc1ws like 11 01odcJ Rcrilt)I Com pany omp ete etr hrnnr. 3 lx'droom.~. 2 baths, HARBOR VIEW
.;rNS!IJ.\'E HO~IE w11h 3 Boat!! htul!·in li1rchrn i11clt1din1? HOMES
b1'!1rmn111, 2 h:tlhs plus 2 , Anrl nnw tht'y are i;:oing 10 d1 sh11-;1~hrr. nC'w beautiful Ne'v tisf.i ng -J bed P011t> c;ir ""'rai.:r. Conc1·rrc p;i rk-I 11· w ,. h>g · h · . ,.... s;i1 l rhr Pacif1r so thr 1r 1n1· s v1~ ' c11 r~ 111g, f1nn + mot tr·tn·la"'' room 111.i:: for ho;q nr canipcr, ,..n. niar ula!e 3 BR hnn1e 11'11h r!nuhle g11nt~f>. and ll{'{'l'SS anrl hath. Only model a\"iHl· clo~erl yarri 11·11h lruu trc('s fnrni;iJ rl ini n~ rO(lrn anrl for hoa1 or trailrr ,\IJ 1his a.hie a! this pnc~. Hurry'
HOME
\Ve have ano1hcr popular
f'ortofino modrJ in Harbor
Vil:'W Homes. Yt'll, ii has al.I
those special features: e Bonus room finished , car-
fl('tr.d and draped wi th
slcC'ping loft and bath
e Fee land · choice. prem·
ium lo!
• Conveni!"nl to SWlmming
pool anr! club houSP.. e Uy.gradrd C:R!'pf'ts and
draprs throughour
• Landscaped front and
re!!.r. e 4 brclrooms. dining room,
famil.v room, 31,J baths,
2600 SrJ. Ft,
C0.\1PARE' VALUES A1\'D
YOU'LL BUY~ $60,$00. Call
546·2313.
lO 'THEREAL
\"'-ESTATERS -uf'I" uNl!i ~µr,,
HARBOR ESTATES
Locatrd near llARBOR·
ADAi\1S SHOPPING CEN·
TER arid CfNEJl'v!A THEA·
TRE. Spacinus 4 bedroom.
T ~; bath. dining room home
v.1th B.I. £lee. kilchen 11.nd
&epara!t' 5erv1ce porch. Car·
pelf'd, drapm, dhl. gara~t'.
nicl'ly land§Cllped. Extra
room for boo1 or tTaill'f" slor·
age. Our buy or th<' month
at only S31.500 witJ1 excel·
lent terms.
Evenings Call 51S-3..~
DON'T GIVE UP
FOR..\lAL DINING . Built COl..J...EGE PARJ< 3 bedroom
ins. Ful!y landscaped and ]~ 00.th home with J'f!ar
fenced. Sprinklers. Concrete Jiving room, large dining/
drivr11•ay to double garage. f11.mily room and B.I. Elec.
SUPERIOR QUALITY C'ON-kitchen. Like ~ gtild car.
STRUCTfON. Unbelit>v11.ble pet-o:>mple1rly draped. Dbl.
at only $27.630. Ui11• down • garage, sprinklers, ~IO!t'd
Hw-ry. yard, nice l&nd!IC"apirc. $.'}(»
Dial 645-0303 OPTION MONEY • $160 Mo.
Z'99 Harbor, Costa. t1-res11. with $40 credit towards pur-
chaM!. VACA.NT -IMMED-
IORISI E Ol.~O\
'" REA( TORJ
'mu!Vn6e
WALK TO
IATE POSSES...~ON. FU.II
pri<."f' only $32.900.
CLUBHOUSE Evenings Call 644-7003
La.rge. 4 hedroom, family I'""""""""""""""""""" room with wet bar and fire-N•wport Dupl•x place. formal dining room,
J h th d d Steps to ocean. 3 BR. homl'! . a s, upgra e carpet~. plus apt. 3 Car gal'llge.
home only 3 years o!d, Owntor motiv11.ted! Pric-ed
across street fron1 golf at $63.000
cour.~e enrranct>. Still lime Ocean Air Duplex to ger selllerl lor ~chool. Re·
duced to SJ6.930. 1919 Kauai, 4 BR. 2 Ba. &: 2 BR•., l·Bi.I. c.r.r. unit. Some water view.
OPEN HOUSE X1nt rond. New carpets.
SAT. & SUN. 1-5 i~i;~3-3663 S4S-Ons Ewt.
•)ncsti\~nlc'.:ltcaCtr
546·5990
$54,500
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
2025 W Bolbo4 67).J66J
HOME
Stlil a ahow place! Shaa car-
ptts, t!replace, built:lrta,
~rlnlclers. 1hakt roof. J
Large bedrooms, 21~ baths,
separate utility room •. fam-
ily and dini.llr( room. NOW
VACANT, ready for rnow-
ln. l'uil price $28.950. No
down VA,
CaU 540-1151 (Open eves.)
POOL + RUMPUS
ROOM
Plus 4 bedroonu, 2 beth&,
built.in ki~n. new •hai:
c11.rpeting, 2 tittpl~s. Owr
600 1q. rt. rwnpu1 room
Include~ Y;et bar. No quallfy.
lng, no loan f-eet . just take
aver, 1\tbject to existing GI
Loan. Owner will cons!dt>r
Sl,<ro down, U.fMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY.
Walker & Lee
Re11..ltor1
2790 Hl.rbor Blvd. at Ad.ams
545-0t65 Open "til 9 Pt.I
• 3 Bedroom•
eBath&Yz e
Walker & Lee
ReaJtol'I
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Ad&m1
54>9491 Open 'ti! 9 PM
OPEN HOUSE rn:r P!\f TO MON AM
CORNER LOT, Jowly 4 BR
or den, tam rm, Jc all •lee
kit. Incl dw. dbl• frplc, ex-
tra e-xpensive 1ha1 ttptf .t. m-,t'. Lots of used brick,
FA heat. 2 Rear yd1 .I: pa-
tios w/room far additions.
L<iwly lndscpg I Ir dbl•
pr w/lndry tacit. Near COI-
i~, all 1ehool1, churches,
Pllrk & shoppg cntr. 132,500.
Will COl'l!!ide!' trade. By
°"'ner. 239 Pr!nctton, CM.
114: 823--4~.
Cambrld9a E1t•te1
2521 BOWDOIN PL.
Corner 3 BR. &: family rm.,
2 ba. home. Bltna, dbl. fpl,
2 Car gar. On pool1i?,e lot!
$32,500. Drive by &: call -
BALBOA BAY PROP.
~ W. Balboa, NB 173-7QJ
UNUSUAL 3 BR hoil>e on lot
zoned for ' units. E.'iltra
large Uv rm w/ trpk.
Formal din nn w/ bit-in
cabinru. Fruit lrffl In old·
fuhk>n garden. On 1 y
$22,900. Term1. Owner. U4
VA No Dawn
TO VE'TS. Fantastic REC-
REATION ROOr.1 11'ith pool
1ahle & 11'1'.'I har. Lovely !or.
mal d1n1ng room plus sunk-
en fan1ily room. 4 Larg~
bedrooms, J Oaths, in ahso-
lute in1macula1e condirion.
Prun e residential 1u1~11. -
Veterans Admini~lration
cerlificate o' reasonahle
v11J11e. $54,500, Unbelicval>Je
hu1 trur!
COLLEGE PARK Cupell, drapeo, ••nt•• 1.,,E,... '°"'=:c:51::-' CM_.-:::6lc:>44<,,.._.,,1·=I
patio, storage sheet BY Owner -tn.nst. Saw Se::-luded, tree lined cul-de-$23 500 T over $2,oo.1 on immac. 3 Br.
sac, family home -featur· ' • • • enns 2 Ba. home in Me!lll Woods
ing 3 big bedrooms, 2 brick Roy McCardl• Re•ltor 1..na than l yn. ol.d.
fireplaces. 11.ll bu iltin k"itch-1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. !145-6604
en with pantry, he11vy shake 548-7729 REPOSSESSIONS
roof. cnvt"red patin, fresh-!!!!!~~~~!:':'~!!"!\""
ly ruinr'd In&. o1it, plu.~ an * 2 DUPLEXES * J.5 BR'S thruoul County. •-., ~25M , .. akr &46-7739·, assumable 5~ 7n loa n. Hur-Now •id by •Id •-u oM er, e e, """" 5-3412. ry on !his at SJl,500. or both. 3 BR. 2 ba.. eL Near
~0-1151 (Open Evening1) bf!>ach $52.500 each. $2'JOO down, No 2nd f .D. No
G.Or9• Wllll•m1on closing cost, Meaa Verde • I na.11. • ~~rT8A,,Gl, j Realtor BR. 2 ba. cul-de-sae.
_ ~ -. 673-4350 645-1564 M>-9712 * "'""" Lall 545-8424 (~n eves.}
INVESTORS I I BY ownl'!r 3 BR, 2 BA, 1rplc,
* ELEGANCE * W•lk lo ,,..,,,_ ... .,, ! BR i;;~'."t~:;;;-;· """'' lo!.
2 ba . furn. home. Leasit'd 1! 1,.,----...:-;-::-------I
end garrl$•'2"·4°5•0
1
-"0n°"'· bn l?ht cherry k1t<'hf11 is 11nrl nnly s:r.1.:-.00 11nd SZl4 f"f't' land too. ss1 • .'Jcio.
• • pl'lr<'d for an 1mmrrllrttt' f)l'r tnonth including 1.1 .-:C's & 6T."1-:l:!10.
If ynu·ve lonkf'ri 110111 you llrt'
"All lnokrd out," rhPn don'!
qu11 until you h11ve seen
this fine 3 bl.'rlrOPm home
11•ilh din1n1: room and st>par.
ate kilchrn nook. !1"11 An
flUtstandini::: r-nmrr hnml' In
'T'R.ULY GREAT ffirnl1l ian al
only $2R.90fl Just $2900 cash
is 1111 you nrert.
IN DOVER SHORES S358 mo. til June. Slfi.500 D•n• Point .............. ~iiii;i~---1 CAYWOOO REALTY --.:---:--::::--,,.--EAS IDE CM D!!tOrator's custom home. 2 6306 W. Coe.51: Hwy., NB DUPLEX. spac. 2 BR unit!'!. * TS ' • Lge Bd rms. plus den; pm-ir.tol290 Nf>w dnpe1, view c1eck, priv 19~9 F"liLLERTON .....,...
OPEN DAILY l-6 fPss landsc;:ipe(I. lmpeccl\ble 1---.-.. .... ..-... .-.--rear pe.tio w/tish pool,
H"ll. Thi' hnn1e i;11.~ on a ('<"If· 1n~un1n1·f·.
Newport 11rr 1n1 ~.1·11 h 11n "n1yn1 pi(' Walker & Lee Macnab-Irvine at pr..,,11 s11r h11ck )llnt Thi'
642
•
823
5
, / !l111.~lfT an ~u1tr rs as Jnr1;r Rralt•'lr,s 67S-321D V rood1tinn. OPEN DAILY 1·5 * DUPLEX * ~3.500. 49&-J?Xi. acant rast esrrow l b" N 2 Bedrooms plus guest room, 1727 ANTIGUA. BR.. uns. r. shops Ee1t Bluft
Fairv1@W ;is II .•tnall .Bo11·l1n~ A!lry 2790 H;t rlJor Hh'<l Al Adams !==~;~~~~==
646-8811 1H1d 1hr pnrr IF> " ln'1 • r ... 01r.· o t 1 ~ P:\1 IVAN WELLS -
SHi.'lflll H U RRY!!.-.:'.'.. •:-1 prn ~ ·-BUILOER-$69,750
COATS
&
WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pen Evenin91)
CORBIN-''""'"Co., ru.... W -5ll00 hardwood floor~. d 1n1ng Balbo• llland e EXCLUSIVE AGENTS e room, serv1cp porch, on R.2
Jot.CJosC'IOri'llhoh"church. MARTIN SALES~LEASE '" ... LITILE lsland, So. Bay Assumt' H1 .f'HA loan, 7~~--:, r 2 I ho ifi'
1nlrrrs r. Room ror an()lhrr l roBROI, J 8°,1" FUSI! on one, ~ ~ t-.,.
1 .. y1;m•I '''""''" TWO TO SEE C'hr>1ee Rll ycrest s lrert. 4
DIRTY BARGAIN l\'F: ha1·r l11 ri Cnnr!r11ri1n1um~ Bdrms , hi·bram f;imily &·
$22,900 in ti ppr1• .'l!l'wpr1rT H~,1· Both l11·1 n~ rMm. C'nurty11rrl rn.
11rP :1 Rr>d rno111 .. 2 Ba lh 1111rl trv l...111·~,, y11rd , r(lf")m for rh 1<; l·.i ~l~ldl' eh.1rn1r>r l)('f'fl5 .
REAL TORS 644-7662 · · · 3 """"''· 3 5 ) unit. No f1nanc1ng chargt>~. Room a. i r conditlonen, 4l·r 12 t .. ff'
NEWPORT HEIGHTS-maids room k bath, liv nn (T.,S( ~_,,:~ Q!!/J Lochen my er I. P;ir·h h11 vr lni·;:p pr11·;i1r pool. Qu1('k IJ'f1SSess1on. I,,..,,...,,....,,... __ "!!!!!! ll',..1·k 1 h<'ril"nlin\1 .~1 \" .~1 1 ---~~~~~::--1 • 1/4 ACRE Up!lta.irs w/wet bar, shown J p:i l1os. A .i;::ir•IP!l li11" SPlfln~ PACESETIER n' 1"1. "" "'""· v''"' PATAGONIA _......... 11 1th h1 n s11·11ri n1lni.: pools.
pnr1•d '\QI\' ~.1r .. ~1i!fl • ARIZONA. 11\ hnle' rt1 anl!"1.1rrrl Jlllffini;: ME+SAPOVOERLDE 1~NaJ_IE"A~R·'"'NEWEvesP,6073.R75T75
grrr n a nr! ~huffle hl'l;irrJ. Coldwell,Banker Thar ·s 'vhere the-own('rs Pt'l(•rrl 11~ lflw as $.l•l,!150.
i;::onr. anrl 11anl ... hi~ COL· Call 64G-7lil. ~No cON,..,..,__........ A re11! Imm,. value 11-rll LIARBOR HIGH
Realtor"
H k I., 11 ,~ o·ly. •11-1325.~. •.X'.'.1:. rea ty lige trees -p.:ir . i e 111" mg I'!" " • ,~ " ........, ......,,,
for this charming 3 bed· Prlnclpa.la only. Owner P.O.
room. 2 bath be11.uty. l.11~ Box 212 Balboa Illand. 2414 Vi.Ila Dtl Oro
detached garare. Roorr. tor Ruby lot, $45,000
bo11t k trailer. Immaculate. 835--0801., 675-5837
Ne"!'IJOl1 Be11rh 644-1133
.$51.950
LC:(;E: PAflK J1nn1c sold ~ 11·011 h your lnSf)('C'tion. Jm. IP
nn11 • Ju~1 hslrd ar 0111,v n1aculate 3 hr!r d('O, t>l~c· See this line 3 BR OOme jusl
$25 ,950 S2i.:>OO. Complelr 1111h 3 833-0700 644-2430 tric B/I k1fCh£1'1. slate en. ils1ed 1% baths, Sunken hv· tw-droon1~. 2 baths, 01·t'r· try, beaut1lul f1repl1tcr, n1<:1!' 1ni;: room "'·1th u£€'11 hrlck
1 Bdr. + Family Rm.
s11.c(! hl'1 ng-r n1. £.· f;imlly 12 UNITS pa!to 20x~O ft. pool. A f1replece. Nice k i Ir hen
rm. Crra! Jocat1on on rreC'· VIEW MINDED? EASTSIDE real 11innt>r pn('Pfl 11.t only :;ria.~:1,e i:~ngw~m~~::; 1~"umt' ~r\'; 11 r r lo01n.
11.lovr n J;?h1 ln'. Lat ,;:r family
rm, ·1 h<>drm . r!rrRtl1 k11rhPn.
~40..17:'fl.
l1rl{'rl r(1l-fle .... 11~. <>nly ~tt>ps $-il.500. Phone 673-8550.
10 Oran~e Coast C0Ue11:e. 675-3000 Sl.'180 per month income bric k patio. Cliff H1 vl'n
I from these clean. sharp location only $42,000. EZ Call 11~ for furthrr rlr1;i1 s, AdJrr t11·rs 11'Qn't rlescnbe
,ooo o E I units on nne acre or la nd terms. 673-85.30. 0 111 ;H6-;;.,.,... ( Pt'" ves. this ~ BR .. d<'n & dining rm.
11·1rti 132 fool frontagl'!. Call TARBELL .~-l home. Enclosed pool in tor full information A1ld 1--'---"-.C:===== HERfTAGE alnum patl{!. P11.nor11mic [j
-.. , vif'11• ol harhor. Sr>t'Cl1" -_,, -•• .,, sevl" on ynur tax retucn this -, , -
• ::•-.:1 nr .. nr, ·• · p!ayroo1n lgl'. l'.'nough for i ... ~-~·:·~·~~";::.-~C~'~' ... ..,.!,~;;;::;;;::~;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::~·1 year. S.16-2313 now.
pool t11hle. Mo11v11tt'd ~cller LIKE NEW 1-Q'THEREAL \~ESTAT~R$ BIG CANYON
5 Bedroom
View Home Fairway
has .iusr reducrrt price But be.iler. 4 Bedroom.'! with s,·,.~iro. Price oow S 119 . .'JOO. beautifully upirarlM c.11r,,ets
BAY•BEACW & tile. Garden kltchr.n with
ealini: area. LOW r-.1'AIN· Panoramic ocean view. 3 TENANCE yard attractlve-
ptiv. beacbei & your own Jy landscaped. G11n1ge ha1 Cambridge Model pool. Beautifully lndscpd. elrctric door opener plus. 3.(00 IQ. n. home pith 4
REALTY "
29.700 -3 Bedroom, 2 hath, built In 1torage .It work txirms., famtly rm., 3 bat.he .. _ h a I '"· "-h la"'"'e f11 mi!y room, welkin uo:nc , 1>11t o u"" ..... ac '" &. 3 c:a.r garage, Or.meo
1-oTHEREAL
\"-ESTATERS ' .. ' ..
REDUC~D TO SELLll
$22,500
This home i~ located in •
$25.000 • S26,00l neighbor·
hood. 3 Otdrooms, double ga-
rage, large Jot •nd more.
Huljjl! 54&-8640.
-Farr,...W-Under construction for occupancy before
Chris tmas. Plan lC. r~ee land.
.l\lasler bedroom has fireplace as d(les living
room and ~pacinus family room , 5th bed-
room has o'l'.'n bath and could be maid's or
mothc r-in-ta11"s room. 3rd bath has both
tub and separate stall shov.ier. Separate
laundrv roon1 . 3 car garage. Many bu ilt-ins
;ind e~lra s. including Trashmaster. inter·
com wiring, garage door openers, etc.
clos~t. shag carpets. dnuble too~ S31.950. CALL 615-4930.
• 1. h Shore5. •121, $95,500. 1~ -.-&CCII 2629 Harbor, C.M. r1N"pl11ce. nverhl'Au 1g ling Home Show Realtors ..........:;""""'"'"' 1---====---
ln kitchen, m i rror w I Ike '"Armchair HOUSl'!bunling'' ,~T~ll·ttN <28,950 fl oors. 1h1ke r on f , .J
This j5 fl choice corn er lot at tlcrn1itagc
Lane and nova! St. George Drive. Buy
nnw rind rinse" escrow '.1.'hcn house is com·
plctcd .
By Owner -$89,500 -644-1 140
n111n1cuf'N{ lt111·ns, lre~hly .il1S E. Co;isT Hll')'., CdM INVEST WISELY 675-7225 p11 1ntl'd 1n and out. Prlcl.'rl·1-:--...,---,..-.,.--,.---,c I Yoor investment In thhs
Sl500 bt>Jo11• m111rkl'! fnr fast • * * • * • duplex wW e1rn you 11 nitt
&ate. Catt no11' -546-2313. Gracious Uvfn9 d!v1rlend . choice 3 bl'!droom
\O 'THEREAL ··~ ESTATERS
• ' r '• ' >'•'
Oeli~htlul Baycrt'1t area 4 fmnl ~me. Sha.ke roof. Ex-
Bedrm, din rm. lrg fam rm. poe.ed !>cam <'e~llnit. uM'd
A PLEASURE TO SHOW! brtck rlrepla~. Pr Iv a te
A Id & .._ d Jl'lio. 2 bA Utt1, plu1 1.tutllo
1906 SANTIAGO OR. rno rreU unit <1v"r g11ragl!' 1t~p loci·
!DOVER SHORES, N B.l .'WI E. 17th, C.ri-1, stS.n5.'J lion· 11.~k ing $63,500. CaJl
1 !Jedrm, large f11mily rm, 3 TRJ-PLE:X. Xlnr E-&ide C.ri.f. 67J...85.j(],
BA. Vl"w from l'!Vl'r-y flriclm. IO<'ntion, 13) 2 BR.8, frlcd
OPEN DAILY 1 TO 5 yard!!. Garai;:t>~. lnr11me
ROY J, \\'ARD RLTRS S·120 mn, SJl!.500. By Ownt'r,
640-02~ 642-5.'t.11
lo THE REAL
\"-ESTATER..'>
' '" ", , ,, I ' • •
4 Bdrm & Family Rm
Assume 5" 'Ai apr loin.
Wrought iron ornamental
fffiee around thi1 home. '
&drooms, Family Room.
Dining Room , Air Conditicm.
ing, a.10·1720,
TARBELL 2955 H•rbor
0\VNER mu~t Mil, 4
hr'droom, femlly rm. 2
blith~. p11rk lfkl' yard,
S~.9.10. BKR, Call day or
n11?ht 111 5"10·1720.
\Ve'll h<lp you Rell! 642-56~
A rare !ind. $41.950.
Walker & Lee
Real to"
2043 Westc11U Dnvt
616-n11 Opl'!n 'til 9 PM
OCEAN VIEW
$47,too
Old English cle~ign, elep.nt
3 bedroom. tpllt level · I~
cated high on Newport
Bluffs. See Catalina pa1»
ra mlc:Ally. Appoln!ment on-
1)'. 546-8640.
' 2629 Harbor, C.M.
2 STORY STEAL
A real ctt•m puff with OYl!1'
200) 1q. ft . of 11.mlly living,
fonnal dinlTIJ room, spac-
ious family l'(l()m, brldl'!'I
! kilche'n, 4 hurl'! bedroom•
with po!lh rnlllte'T' lllitl'!.
$29.500. WAU<ER il LEE,
~alfor1, 842-4455,
REPOSSESSIONS
Sparklln1 clean home1, tome
newly painted I carpeted. 2
3, ' I S bdrm,:, Some wtth Pl'l"lls. rnA-VA con .... term ..
from S20.0CO to S40.000.
COU..lNS • WATI'S INC.
8843 Adam, Ave, 96~23
F'rom "'Chr!Jtma1 N~ktl""
In OUIRlU"'fl Levtt -you can
turn •·tr11sh to ca•h"' In e
01'11.Y PILOT cl11as\f\l'!d td
~ call 612-567~
'400 ,. ft o! lwru,..., U"'-. Balboa P9nlnsul• •J .... a .--B-R-.-,-.,-.-,-B-,-.-N-,-.-,,.-«!U-; ~:.at~~~· f!:itlh~
a b ~-·~ 500 rm. tam rm, tinted windows u I. uuat ramp . .....,, .
Marshall Realty 87s-+600 A rnUt'h TJ\()tt. Open 1-5
daily, JD7 Arali1 SI. Call
Bayehores PEMON RLTY W-1771
BY Owner. 4 Bit + p&nelled FMfftf1ln V•lley
den, J BA, elec kit, fnrm --'·0::-::--::-:00"'.".'.0--din rm., ct)U, drp1, priv n72.2J PER MO.
community 6: btacbe-1. ] "-'mt 8%~ fHA. J BR 1 %
Bick !o yachl -landtnc. BA Coqdo., incl. crpt1, drpe,
$56,SOO. By 1ppl. 2591 Cirdli nbr(*>'r. 1117.20 mo
Dr ~ er Sf&-4.lOll pymt1 Incl H10C dun. A•k-
. tflr S2'J;!D). OwneJ" W/CVT"/
Coron. del M-r 2d. TD.
SOUTH O~ HWY.
F ixer-Upper. could be a nltt a bdrm., J bath borM. on
R-2 lot. O,nwnl•nt · ~.;
ciOM t.o 9Ytl')'thlns. Alkirs ~ 192.ssn :im2 Bee.di. Blvd,. H.B. ~~GAN RIAL TY
'73-6642 67U4.19 I BR. 2 BA, tam nn., cpU,
cutom drps, tr,>I, 2 car ** BEAUT 3 BR 2 BA with f&l'll"· dlrllnr nn w/Or,
rorpou• ocean view. Xtra bu, lndllcp. 132.000 9(19...Q'fO.
W... iof, mud> priqey. Huhtlng!an llHdl Thb 11 .IJI :dnt tun.11.y home . .-.._... F 1"·-·-=,,..,.---1
Gd Ooor pl&n tor @uy ex-SUNKEN
PMtion. $52,TSO. Owner LMnc room, family rm, I ~T. BR. 1!'1 lllPf!!' -on:cy 129,450.
HOME ~·:,,,AL. , Real Estate by
Btdrm. 3 <l'I trl-\twl and M VAY I 8'<lnn ronlaJ onll. Walk 0 .
to lhoppirc and beach. 10" "" •••• 111 ..... A.,I•• down.' CALL ~--
P ERRON RLTY 61~1m * J BATHROOMS * ~ard to Find PLUS 4 BEDROOMS!
Ch.lnnlna: oldtr 3 BR, 2 BA 20'"20' REC. R.OOM
home. Needs lntttlor ~c-ALL FOR $.ll.500.
ontlna. Priced to ,.11, Brok.. HAFFDAL REAL TY
er &W-7399. M2-440S Eve1:. ~l-2448 -=----------·
I '
I
. . '
OAILV PILOT Mond.ty, Strittl'!lber 27, 1?71
1~-~ .. ~ .... ~1~~1'1!::, :-: .. ~ .... ~1~~~1~-~ .. ~ .... ~1~~1 '1~~~~~":1•~· ~I ~~:1 L_~[ ~-~ •• ~ •• _ .. ~I~~'~[ ~ ...... ~., .... ~. ~l~~.1[~~ ~-~,.~ .... ~1~~1'1! 11._ ...... _._•••M_' I~
Huntington Beach
I. t;;;i
~1
Huntington 8••ch I Newport B•ach 170 tlou1es Furni•hed 300 HouMs Unfurn . 305 Hou1es Unfurn. 305 Townhou•• Unfurn. 335 Apts. Furn. 360
(.'HASE SP AC.E
Harem master Bedrn1 Suitt".
ON"SSing rm f(lr n1dady.
Walk on rloud-!1kc shag car-
pel in brlll111nt t!MH!gr to~
2 Ba up,, I ha do11.•n, \\'f'i
bar, cent A/C, Linder mkt.
&t $32,000. * C,\LL ~7.$._i07 •
(formerly Brash<!r Rlty.J
~o ~
"MINT JULIP
TIME"
Br-au1if1il colon11l/ mana hy
the sea. EntPrta1n your
friends-undrr lhe CO\'ered
veranda .:tnd loll .:thou! in
the cool ocean hreezrs. 4
huge bedrooms anrl 3 ba1hs
anrl ... pr1ct>J for a qu ick
sale: 842-25.\5
BY 011·ne r Paci.Ile S:lnds.
Btaunful 4 bdrm, 2 bath,
ltreplace, land1eaped.
Col'ntr lot, I mUe ID Ol"a<"h,
Pr!l'f'd tor quick Eiale.
~25. 9:il. 5.1fr8611.
4 BR-den, 24 BA. 3 car gar.
P~stige home. $4.S, 500.
St&-4i236. ------Irvin•
Popular Edinburg Plan
Has 3 brirms., 21., ba. &
fa1n 1ly roorn, Near g-rttn-
ti:•!1, I.Rs.<> 1han a blnck tn
1e1tllls l"llUri s & s11.1mmmg
pot)!. s:it;,on.
(ired hill
L:nrv.
Call
H.£.\L TY
Park Center, Irvine
,\ny11n1t, ~33·0~2()
PRIME LOCA~
Tree shaded comer nea ·u
Dr. .3 BR., "t'!'P· dining .
111'f'place. tld\\.'CI . floors &
~!.'!:. HIJil' bath & 1,i.
Db!. garage & carport on
allry. $.3•1,950.
MODERN
rmmaculate, charrrung home,
I'!'CE'ntly redet"OT3ted, 3 BR,
? Ba. New shag ai.rpe~
BAYFRONT
COMMERCIAL
On Ne111X1rt Blvd.
G~t restaurant location
75 F!. On t~ Bay
$195,000
Ueneral
LOS ALTOS
Pride of Ownership
Home
Family wHh 1" ok.
4 Berltoom 2 ha:h, 1ns.
carpeting, drapes, !ease $28.'i
per mo. Plione Loni: B~ach
213 -429-9551.
Balboa Island
F'\IT'place. kitchen bltns, 4 BEDR,\I, garage. ne1•Jy
rool pat!o. Dbl. gar. on a.J. REALTORS ttdet"d $150./)lo. 119 )!~r-
lry $37,950. SINCE 1944 He Ave. o.-ph 21 3·6S·l-2 153
C ALL 0 646 ·24 1-4 673-4400 f{L~:T frfl))! O~c..June, S~()'I '""""""""""""""""""""'I n1,.,, JnquU"e 2il~ Ruby, ,\!ESA Vrrde golf course, B111'n0 ._1_. ______ _ RF. AL TY ~-r"l'.t •r Nt .. por t Po11 Offi(t owner 1vtl l build to :!iU1t. Cul-Balboa P en insula
OWNER
LEAVING TOWN
Price reducrd $2,00'.l on this
3 bedroom Baycrest bea uty.
de.·sac: lot directly on gvU
course. 968--4027. 2 BH, '1al!1·d ill ratJl'!, nr
LGE. \'Je11• k1l,
J-lighlands, SI0.000
bal. al 7-;'.,, 5:>.~1651.
\\(l lf'r: 1111<11 J11ne l j!h. 213:
Corona :?·!1-:>.1Ji;, 216--1','.{f!;•.
[}(11l'll,'-----------
YRL \' S225. i\'c-w :::! BH 2 BA,
;\'r11r hay. Car[l0r1 , 320 AJ-
Comple!ely redecorated and Mountain, De sert, vararl•l Pl;i1·(',
UNUSUAL 4 BR available for immcliate oc-Resort 174
T ,, R k · CU""'"<'Y· Now you can livP 2 Slory ~pacious ho1nf', al~o Bro11rln1oor. uruc OC · 1m· .,....., . dlx 2 hdrrn apar1rn(tnL
med vie. UC! & !\ew Uni· in one ol Ne..-.'JlOrt 's choicest * Bog Bea• Lake • B;iyi.lf»r. R7l-!H67, 5-l6-957t versi!y High School, 1 blk locations for 0!'1ly $5.695 Do you ni>ed 8 placr to pu! ·
fmn1 priv. pco! & tennis d~TJ. $.)6,950. 646-TITI. Y')Ur sklls, ti~li lng rv>le or Corona del Mar
$19,950 IS THE PRICE rouns, 5 encl gardens, incl 'vife'.' Try ~his tine r 11 h1n for * idf'al fnr :l-'.l girl<-1 hlk tn
!or this very lovely 3 be<f. a irnim, brick pati05, Jrg tam only S:=t.~)5. Cal! Ro~s ! 711\ beach. 2 Bil, 2 bi1, iz7;;.
room. 2 ba1h h-•rne. The loan r•n. gallery, liv rm iv/[rplc., 5.30-17:li:: or 11-r11e : ~pencer 3HI!, .1 1111, s.~~i. 305
2 haths. S44.900 For Sale By R I " 1 p 0 °-"!28 1.~ high eoough that ynu can, (h\ner. 833-0788. ca ,._sia c, -oux "" , POJNSr--:·1·rA. ~l!i-8!165.
assume 1n1h payments of ,,':"'.'.':'~;:':".'.'~~=~~l --~0<'1EA:iNF'RO~T--Big Bear Lakf', cc·;cal~''"---IN;;';;;;;;;';i:-.<;;;~j;"'-'-
s16n fl('r rnontt1 . i1·h1ch in· BY 0\1':"\'ER -4 Br, 2i., Ba. Balboa (beauty on the board· Real Estate W~nt~d 184 N ewport Beach
eludes all, Jllodc-rn btillt-den, S29.500. JO':n dn. Pools. v.'3lk. Just stl'1)S from the OCEAN front house, ,\\Ir
ins, deep pilt> rarpets, also Tennis. Univ Pk. 673--SSlO. R-3 LAND \\'ANTED rt ti 2 BR I I l !
ma1 ch1n£1: (Ir<.""~. Double tJCean. 2 bedroortl3, 2 baths, S to JO acres . .\tc'.ll1chael 15 c · rp ' O\'C' Y .. ,,._ Laguna Beach ~··Uo-i,.,,~ & -''·hw--h•,, An BB patio. \\'in1er S250 mo.
boo'' C·'I IJU • .., u.<:> "" '" Company. fl) 871-3~ g.arage 10 · ·"' excellent buy for rental or I c-~=--------1 Ageri! 673-366:! or Walker & Lee LOWER a summer home. \VA.r'\TED 4-p!l"x ap1s. !\ear 54S-0715 evenings
3 ARCH BAY w lk & L Adenis & Harbor, Costas:O.!ALL 2 r m house.
Realtors
279'.l Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-Mffi Open 'nl fl P.\1
"SIMPLY
WONDERFUL"
.C::.ho11~ prid<' of o\1·nership.
!\lust Sff. this -4 1"11.'droorn
home 10 apprPr1ale the
11'orkmanship. CI o s e to
sch o o Is and shopping.
842-2535
$22,950
4 BR. $22,950., 2 baths, $2300
moves in. Seller pays all
C05ts, paymts less than I't'nl.
Crpts, drps, bookshelves,
decorator n1irro1,;, f1repl,
blt1n R/0, dish1vshr, F,\ ht,
lam rm, frncd & ld~cpd,
ovcrsizr dhl gar, clean
nf'ighborhoorl, "·alk 10 shop.
ping & i;chl~.
l' 1llage Real Estate
HZ-4471I::::J546-1103
a e r e e J\I esa 5-10-1923. Brick pa!h leads to cheerful $130/i\to. Ad\!s, m children
4 bdrm., 3 ba1h home, on Realtors or pcts Ref's reqd. 67;)..320S
01·rr.;1zed comer 101, over. :IDl3 \\'estcliff Drive L---'-'"_•_~_•_•• __ _,J! • l l-Ec'-'_&_•_·ckc'c""~· ---~= looking trees to the Blue 64&-nll Open 'til 9 P!'l-f _ Hou5es Unfurn. 305
Pacific. Built for acih•e
fan\ily, \\1th fenced yards, BEAUTIFUL \Vest c 11 f f
fB.n1ily room of! kitchen, home, 3 Br .. 2 ba, lam rm.. Business General
FREE!!
La ndlords-Owners
storage space galore, v.·ork-util rni .. b!tns, 2 lrplc, cov'rl Opportunity 200
sllf)p, bu1l1-in ki!chen \virh pa!io. Nr .. ~cbools, ~hpg, I·--'-'--·-.:..----·
dishwasher & double oven. park & tennis cts. $15,0()'.). * FA!\-lOUS BRAND NAJ\lE
&IZ-2686 CANDY SUPPLY \\If' '1'IU re/er 1enants 1o you even an ocean v1e111 service ' f DISTRl.BUTORSf fl P FREE o charge. , • 1\:any porch PLUS formal dining Newport Heights room, brick fireplace & CPART OR .FULL Tl:'.1E( df's1rable icnants on o ur
heamerl ceilings. REDUC-URGENT Now available in this area. waning li st.
ED _ $.89,500. Call_ MUST GO-GO All locations are coni-ALA Rentals e 645-3900
..AG tan
REAL ESTATE
1190 Glenneyre St.
49~-9473 5-19-0316
PRIVACY •
Panorama. Aorth side. \Va lk
to heach & village. 9 Yr.
contE'mpQrary. Conv, clen
plus 2 BR .. ht-ams. raised
hC"arlh-Ott 1011· ma1nt. 1/?lh
acre. Anx1011s -$57.500.
HILLIE r.tcCORMACK
REAL TOR 494·7J51
High potential, C-. 2 homes rncrcial or !ac!ory Ium1shed _ FURN _
on lrg lot. Suggesied S26,500 hy us. l'\o se!ling. Qualified e 1 MAN'S Donia.in 1n great
oranyoffer,Cail213661-3900 r .er.son w i l l become lo<:. Uhl incl'd, Sf:i.
after 5:30 pm. Bkr. d1str1hutor for our can<ly ALA Rentals• 645-3900
San Juan Capistrano iNesUes, Planters. Tootsie
Rolls, !l·Iilk Duds, etc). Very e COZY Cflllagt' • Pcrft>CI
V.'\LLEY & J\10UNTAINS h igh income poten11a!. You fnr one or lnv1ng c011ple.
Al)> yours from this spac1nus must have 2 tn 8 h~. pPr Uul 1nc!d 'd. S9.J.
3 herlroon1 hon1c. On quie t \\'f'f'k i;:pare !\me (days or ALA Rentals e 645-3900
C'Ul rle sac slret't. Spacious
family room 1-vhich adjoins
living room for easy en-
!ertainml!'rtt. S p a c i o u s
ki1chen is i;eparated trom
t111.flic by spaciou:i; bar.
Swepe lite controls, electric
garage door, AU this and
£'\'CS I.
Sll75 TO SJ'.J95 P.EQU111ED
{or more information ,1-rite:
''DISTRlBlITOR DlVISION
No. Zl",
P. Q, Box 1739, Covina.
91722 ph o nf'
e LAG L'NA nr;itll Bun:;alnw
-STf'ps lo 11·atrr, llTll inr·l'd.
$1:-.0.
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
-UNFURN. -
......... !!!!!!!!!!!! ...... !'!! .... \O\\"l"ER. &ach .l!.CCE'S, ocn
TWO ON A LOT vie11" 3 BR. 21,;;. BA, 1 rm. 2
ONLY $34,950
CAPJSTRANO VALl..EY
REALTY
Qlli!ornia
Jnclude
number
e RARE JndC'ed-Lrg 1 BR.
s1ove/rt"frig, infant, uu!
1nc-l'd. ~120.
LJge for income or for house trpls, nr new brick & cedar,
plus molher·in-law quar-$6!'.1.000. 494--5364.
ters. Onr .1-0C-rlt'1"Xl!TI a nd NF.\V 2 RR. 2 BA. o~n
onP J.hf'droom. Pl'(>sent 1n. unobsrrol'trrl r>cPan \'lf'W.
31501 Camino Capistraoo
49.l-1124
Di•tributors Needed
Limited numher ol DISTRT-
ALA Rentals • 645-3900
the pr1 ee of $22-700. 11·hirh I~---=~--,,----Real Estate, ,a rnme S270 per monlh. At SZ7,000. 673-7:),",(i ~
is only 7 r im"~ £f'O~s. ynu'd 1 0Lca"g0u_n_a_N..,cig0u_e _l ____ 1 L~-"-'-"-'-"-' __ _, -
BUTOP.S 001\1 available 1n e 1'RY THIS'.'. 2 BR's, cp!!'.,
)°"Ur area. Ne\\/ .\\u!tJ-i\l1l-!ned yard, encl gar, kJds &
ion Dollar advcrllsc-d PurJ. pt>ls. $150.
ding & Fn11t Cups. sold ALA Rentals • 645·3900
1hrough Auton1at1c ;"11erch-
a nd1sers. If qi1 al1f1ed, )'Oii
\I'll! he prov1drd 11·11h All
equ1pn1ent and locar1ons,
s nd he tra111erl 111 all phaS('S
e fi Er\ RllEEZES - 2 RR.
S1Q1·c/refrig, cptl r!rps. fq)!c.
Sl6:\, be1ter take·a look! EASY LIVING
Wa Iker & Lee 2 Bdrnt, 2 b"h>. Lge. fi'·
1ng rm . S.· a <l1n1ng rm. \\'llh
an adderl alcove. AH this, Realtors
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
:;.15-Q.16:1 Open '!1! 9 P:>1
5 BEDRM. 4 BATH
La~e family rm. 2 yrs. new,
Al! upgradf'.'rl. Submit ~·our
terms.
Real Estate by
Mc VAY
545-0458 893-8533
Mr Jr Exe cutive
L1\'e an10•1:::. the Vf P's a1 a
pnC'r .:inL! ran aHo.rrl J'o.-1!,
4 t>rr!rm. 2 hi!Th, ('('(11 fl<'riln
hrr•rze. 11·alk 10 the lx>arh.
c.i11 •
847-8531 • 592.5571
-'
11ith ;:in xlnt 1·1r w nf the
hills, 1n lhf' adult communi-
ty of Pact!ic Island Village
In Laguria N1gurL $39,:,00,
Laguna Niguel Realty
820-5050 499-1344
Lido Isle
4 RR. 4 B~ 4.'IXAA .. S\10,0W
4 RR. 5 Ba. '.;QxAA •. $11!l,500
:_i BR. 6 Ba 1l1~ 3.J:-;'.)(I Lot
11• p1<'r f..· ~Hp •... ~2-ti,950
LIDO REALTY INC,
67~-7JIJO
Mesa Verde
1>1:>1 ,,c1 L,,Tr: :.. sn, .1 B1\.
!~"l'llhll•' hhrnP. Lg )d,
frpk. hlr n~. fan1 rm.,
$12,;)()'l. CJ1111Fr. ~~.~SW.
M ission V iejo
BEGINNER'S
BARGAIN I
Apartm..,ts for sale 152 ---32 +UNITS
COSTA MESA
$370 M. $50 J\1 dn. Excel oc-
cupancy. 675-604 1 Owner-
Realtor.
Cemetery
Lots/Crypts 156
FOR Sale. 2 Cen1e!ery Plots.
Harbor Rest r.1emorial
f'ark. S~75 for Bo1h. 531-3884
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
o! this highly lucra1ive bus-e SPREAD l ~G Roon1 -4
incss !no sel!111t:\. You n1ust BR. 2 BA_ Cpt/drps, k irls/
be reliable, have a good car sml pe\. S1 90.
and 4 hours a "'eek spare ALA R entals • 645·3900
time, and be a ble to make
<111 lmn1rd:a1c lnvPst.ment or CALL DAY OR NIGHT
S.2100.00 !Secured1. Send ALA Rentals e 645-3900
n<imr . arldrrss and phonr 1999 Harber Blvd., CM
numho:'r to: l\t'll'fYJll lnTf'r !~9i·ii~ri:l3 na\1rinal Distr1hu1 1ng c.11-,.
pan~·. ~;oo Nr111....,r1 l~l1·d., R ENTAL FINDERS
days, ~IS-56.1\7 eve~. Ne11·pon Brach, Calli. 9266(), ollS w. 1,lb, COSlA MESA
Commercial Depr. =.~O,\. Houses* Apts.
P roperty 158 * FA'.l!OUS BR:\ND l'Ai\1~~ * 645-0111 *
-~--------~ • ,,-·1-. STORES & OFFICES
nn Newport Rlvrl.
$1.--.') '.\! f'<J\lity, r~n lea~rholr!.
;•~rQ loan Pi!rt in trade
p<1s~1h)<', 0'-1'ner 67~Jf,{}L
T\\'0 lri1s I! B. plus olr!
('1rnm'J bldi::. All Sl0,000.
1"rr11s. &r 40f\ Frank!or1,
1hrn call 6i3---&!11l
Condominiums
for sale 160
('_\'\D\' Sl'Prr.Y
0!.STP.IBl "TOHSI !!r
rrA1rr nn Fl'LL Tl'.l!F.1 k1.t~1rr1~ ~111:::1,,~ ~Oil' 8\'ailahlc 111 this art"\ 11.,11
1.,1,1 .,11 ... '
nk, ,\I« Ii
All locallons <HT r o1n BEACON * 645·011 I
n1<'rcJal or 1<1c!ory l\1rn1~l1rr!
hy us. No 6ell1ng-. Qual!f1erl $l"i7>·FIJRN 3 RR 11· "f"RPLC",
per son \\-\Jl beeorne lnrrl~Trl Cons\rlrr["K't.Sne;L-,
d 1i;1nhulor for Qllr canrly "'rlrnme.
I N<'i;t!es. Plan1er.;, Too1s1r BEACON * 645-0111
Rfllls. ·l\li lk nuns. etr 1. Vrn
high inrorne JYllrnTial. i'o11 * * *
General Irvin• Huntington Beach ·:'--~---Gen@ra l
~~~·------VACANT ·' BEDROO M NE\\' 2 BR, house, ba & 1ll· FOR lt>aM>, 3 llr 11 .i~h•r, ;{CH. l BA 11r1". ~l·p rlec'k. _ crpt/drpt, comm. e!h & l/O)IF~ 11·1111 b1~ o:anie roorn pooL S250. 644_1456. dryer, bluns, c·rpt, ri.o<il g<or, n1. !"~1~. "'•'r•~ t<• i'.,11 11r
and !hi.It-ins, tor only Ja r1 J 1!1e.s, $2!0/nio. ,.;, 1,,,.), 1<.1 11)" lldi. \\or11cr
S235/1no. 1st & last nlo rent Laguna 8e•ch _, __ ,,,_· -""-'-'-·-------I $1! "1 ti1..r1 ,;o
plus deposit rf'qlJ lN'd. Call I N rt B h DAYfrt\l\'T--1·-,"-,-11-,.,-,.-,-,,-,,,
A•""f· "'·'"-ll'f OCEAN v1t>1o.•, "~th 10 "-.,1, ewpc eac ~ ~~" ...,., ., ••¥ '-""" :!Htl \1 1n:(r r<'rllal S2 •.l
· Jrom unique 3 BR. 2 &. *-.-Adu°lts Preferred * ··· 11'
PP.IV ACY .... orn1al f'X('C. 3 Imme. (;oorme! bltn. kileh .. 3 BR., 2\, bo,, 2 r,~ g-o-~"'· bi.>-.J:>i'_ -------
bl", 2 ba, nr b<'h. Enter ove.r brick t f 1 · "' " .. ,, Balboa Island rp" Pane t n g, f~11c1n" ,~1. sr;.·,. 1-1·111e1., hr.;.itr.d pool, pines, k J h al I '"" ""'' ~--~ -----
founta,1nh, 4 p~r eouryards, !tZ..
1g ~~~. ',;·~,!;~:~ fiE:AL'fOR ~.li.fi:li;6 ./ 2 A!: furn ;ipt $l.li:~drn·1
be"\J!, Jndscpd-turn. S425 s.150 mo. Duplexes F urn. 345 Y•«11I.' Ll<ill,.,;. 1~J;,111i. C"ll
inn 1nf'I rna111t. flti2-1267. ~l!SSIO:-J REALTY 494----07l t li:::-,,:l'il
I Newport Beach S!L\~~.I' :1 b< 2 ba. :-hu~ rp!, .iBR":2 ba, cpt, eyn vi+>w. nr :-:-'---------
hi! In~. frnrN"I y;.nt. Shit1'p, $(;hotils, Top QI the \Vor!d . OCE:AN f'RO'.'\T CO!'nPr .1 Br.
B;ir2;i1n S'J2:. p/11t S.1151110.'1~-7007 2 Ba. Nf'w up1wr dupl•x-
\\'J\Lh;fP. & Ll-:E:, RJ.TftSI---'---'------Cpis, drp~. hHns. .~I I\
).1.42-!C,,,. l'NL'SU1\l. l BR. & lgr_ loft. SCa~ho1·e l)r \\1n1rr S~l.J
-VACANT NOW--~'1de ocean v1C'w. S235 JIIo_ 1• 61 .. 1.11 !\1ature adlts. 49-1-4653. nio. ·urn. ,>-.J ' ·
3 BR. 2 BA. L'pl<c, r1rp•, fr1"ll l L~id"o-'-l-sclec:..::__::.:_:.::::c.__ BEACHFRONT 3 BP.. l BA.
)rd, \\' t:xlra.s,. ~•:101-0T1~8:l_I-----------frp!l', pauo. !n1m('1! 111·cup.1.
Corona d e l Mar IJOUS E ror sale or Je11sf'. S2:l:i. n10. &'pl l'l ,JunP, li21U
Exquisite 4 BR, 4 ba. wet O(·f.'~nlronl. 121 31 :1~~;-J;o~
2 br , 1 h11., epl & rlrp~. ~ltns, liar. One of Lido J ~le~s n1ost
frple, pati'I. ;13 )larg\Je.r!te. h_:_au 11ful hOmes. $650 mo. ~2i?i. 41J-\--OIJj!i, 1-'c''"_22_1c6_. -------* VJ El\I 2 br. J'i ha, "rpt. Mesa Verde
drps, frpl c, pat1<•, :"\r. Och. RJ-:DEC lg 4. BR, 2 RA A-1 Costa Mesa
Balboa P eninsula
i•<'P."itl, \\inter ,
,, i·i-~~11. _!_OS Acac-~. J.772-0367 Anah. c:o nd., c'lose to schools, '$285. --,.--
4 B<lrin Jtarbor Viell' Ilon1es. Owner, S.10-30~8 PR!VATV rar10, f'l'l!'\ C-<Jr , ~2 e S".".i \\J.,; & L'P. On Ur·f';H1
S~7::; 1111111111 Yf'ar's lt:-'ase. N I B h B!~. ;-.·,,11 1·p1s .I;; dr1,~ 511>1] J,,,1 •'1j r.a.-h-J sn.r,rns. , •. I' ,... ewpor eac r·~i l ,,·-,,",-:',l,'.I". ni.;·r 1;,,,_ J . .n.
1
'-' '' '.lta11! ~1 r'-<'C Pr~.i . t:111 pd.
Costa M esa 3 B!1 2 BA. crpts/drps, ~Uc,cfcQcUclc: c,-,c,-, .. -, '1-cfl-a-,c-oc-l-I • Call •~i.~~7if/ •
hlTJns D\\', .,,,·ater con<l'r, ~ gar. Clri.~r schl.:/sh0r.". -,--$1-1-0---H A)~:-R-0-.-,-T
fpls, cor !01, Gardener pd. I Sl8::i, 51fi-.O.Hi~l, .i~,j-'..'~i':~ n26 E 3 2 \\'f;-.TJ·:r.. 1 Br ., . * 3110 Charle~ton. 4 S 5/ fl-lo, 6 4:1-0596 LGE 3 BR, nn rrpi ~. d~ J-;~1 lh1,;1 ti7J-!1j1~.
her!room plus bonus rm .. 21 ~00''c'"-'c1Ac:::gc1._______ appliances, $1j,i, fi.J&-2:l-l·l,
ba1l1s. douhle garage, fenc-2BR. 1 Ba. garage, !unde('k, $-18-~~3.i. 6-lfi--lt,.?.J.
e rl hack yarr!. S300 n10. C-.,rll 5n1all oeeanv1e11'. 3 i O 7 ·~
HF: Rf.TAG E RE AL Balhoa Blvd $165. (furn1 I BR , r-rple. Bearr1 <'<'IL
ESTATE -Ray Gault. IC5'C8C--OC2C1C3C. -------Pal10. S\.JS ulil prl. Open
54().1151 HARBOR Vie._1· Homes -3
B.. DIR, 2 Ba, frp!, lrg
-----------1 pRtlo. Pool lac. $350.
BRAl"D NP\\' r1 Is f j n ct iv e S33-.1ll94.
ho11sf', nnly 3 n10. old. jn l--.---------J\l('~f1 \·rrdf' Nnrlh. 3 Br/2 STE:PS to beac~. :I BR ..
' f I f , ,___ yearlv Jeasr . .'i26J il!onth "~· p r, ~1n m, f'X"ac, .~ R 1 !'t4R-l Z90
n1i•r iH•1i.:hhorh0od. 1710 r•:c1v ayii ra ty · ·
Jlamp.<;h1re Dr. S29.'i/mo. \VATER!ronl 2 .& conv r!en,
Ph· :ij7-11>1 3. :212 ba, hlrns, rpl, J>t!lio $450
NEAR GOLF COURSE Yrly Agt. 673-7120
Charn1111g houst> 1n perlecl Newport Heights
t"}llrl. 3 bdrn~. 2 hath. h!tns, 2 ... Br. Nice clean hm, fncd yd.
hr"!llllfll] fXl!lo, CI C'. Jmmed· C I <l S' , N h'f"
'
p s, rps. 01e. oc 111· 11111> noss('~s1n1i. . n pe1s. Sl7"; 642-7-% S273 JllO 673-6~'6/( or ir 110 ren. Pf"ls. J mo. ;"J.
fins, lra~e nirssage 5-15.9-Jjl , San Clemente
E-~ir!c-:2 Br. CnttagP. Adlts i\10DERN 2 Br. l·li Ba, 'bltn
onl.'-". no pr1i;. Beams, lrplc. stove & r cfrig. Ovt."/'looking
(1<11 11'1. Sl:i2/mo .• .'l' ear I y . '.11un. i<:1Jlf (.'OUrse. Adults on-
li•12-S~20. ly. S225/mn. 492---43!'.IZ or
Houst', 3.16 E. :!IJ:h. 6-12·S~.:1(l.
Dana P oint
DuplP.x-. 2
sq. ft . 2
sunrl{'ck.
547-14Ji,
D .-J u x r
Br. In.: r[n11, !h."111
fr [Jlr', '"l'L h1>1'.
s:1:1.-J/ffifl. I (7l j1
Newport Shores
2 Bil, 2 BA. huil l 111s, i:pts Sr
d rps. i"rHrly lse. S1S3. 2lli
({'rJar, i\ll'pl Shni·rs
Sunset Beach
Sl!lll -J111muc. 2 BR. -1 hl k
beach. Roo f ~ ."l r rl t' n
\1•/v.1r11'. (213) 5 9 2-;:; 0 4 3,
962-212ti.
Duplexes,
Furn. er Unfurn. 355
Corona del Mar
131• L'ppC'r + g-;:iragr.
~la!urc 1HH'k 1n.1< adu!I. .Ez
""';k 1n h\"11. \\-,1!rr pd, $l:i.J
!1l'1. li"/.>-03()7 1·,·cs/11·kn rls or
ti1~-1 17fJ r.:.) ~. -----·I Hnr:.\t furn 1,/~ara~r.
::llli•J'I> ,t· d1·a11. Gnorl !or,1-
11'111, 1ir shpc s1i;:i, hn2
!!1•lro11npc'. 616---{i3(IO or
hl !->.:::1j
51'.!l-I Hr Furn,
ul ()('I '.'\1.
l:np•r 11r• f,1,..t·
11111
1 mo nnly
~h-462"
garage, Y:.I
;,J("Jo: ~ 1r••11:s fr.r laily, Ct1l
f11rn. ~!111.rc.> k1trhrn. !'1·1.
{'Ill. l\n rlr 111k1ng.
r:r,.,..,111.-ililr-, 11~:1-mi.:L
B,\Cl l "f': F'nll b111h.
rnt. Furrt, u11 l. paid.
Yr111·l.v. 1;7:,__:,i'.!f;,
Pr1v.
SllO,
!\!CL ;q1L fnr r•~111, ·~ hlk 1.o
0t • .. n. L'uJ P'l. $1~5 1no.
'.':~111 !'•';'\\I•\\, ('11\f ~JJAfU' '.l hr, 2 ha 01·er!;'1zrrl 21::: ·!4;)-2.1'!:1 Balboa Island
y1-1ril, rlrit1hlc garage. S'.!10 .'°IL)lnST ne11• 2 BDn.;-..1~ ·~...,.,...,..,.. -,-.;-1·1:-. -11/l IU~
111r" C,111 Larry, ~4&--588U BA, e;mrl l'lcat1ort. ;\o ch1\rl-BP.J\.'\l) ,,,..\~ ,\, \:'"1 ''''''!1~ :\ , Hdi·rn. :; !1ath... J' ~1 I I q , ,.:_:1. n'n, no pe:~. $liJ. n10. jlt'I • ,, ,·,,•q\ ,
2111~. 1 ·1,1.~. drp. fnc<I. quif't,1,;'1o°'c·c''OOc:c7 _______ _
11{} rJoi:~. $\6; •. 517:,. :2Jl F. Tustin
Al'(\l·ari(i, 5 1h"2:il ~1~-1·105 1-----------, . * FOR LEASE "* ., Rr nr l\e11rr.1rl 1fc1ghls. 4 Bn 2 ba niodcr n home
,\rlult,·, nn prrs. Sl7:'i mo. mav,have ~hildnin, no prls:
'.11rs. LaPrrl<', hkr. ~8-2903. In ;ru~lln. S27.'i mo. 524-8021.
Fountain Valley Houses Furn. er ___.............,.,_____...._,. -~
1 Br, 2 H11, lrt: s•11min1ng Unfurn. 310
pro<•I ,r,. Jrl $2i;,, l\·r \Varner ·N---·1-B-e_a_c_h ___ _
.I.: !\lagnnl!;i. A1·all Ort. l. _•_w_po_, ______ _
r·1·r ;ippt 1·;iJI 21?. :i2.'r-::2Jfl. BEAtlT mod. to11"nhoust'. 3
:! BR. dt'rl & rainily rnt. Ctn·
tury J~ark llo1nc. A1·ajj
10/IJ. S2'-'1-~l.-ii-:i\72
81-. :!1~ B;:i, f111Jc. P'iTIO. ponl ,
2 car gar, aU bltn~. crpts,
drapl's. Lea.~E' S295 (11
513-1710 or 84&-5991 eves all LOVF;l.Y :i .~1y 5 Bn hon1r,
le .:id k bl1ns. S2S5 mo.1c':..::'cmc· _______ _
1vl~ardrnrr. !lhR-~2·13 aft 6. CondC'Jminiums
Harber Highlands Unfurn. 320
3 RR. 2 h~. fl'p!e. new dbl Huntington Beach
fJYf'n, t.· rrrll'r'. kit, srrv1('f" 3 BR, Nice crpts/drps.
por1•h, frl .~· hk ~rj t priv refrlg., 1vasher-d r yer,
p~lifl, 11r11 l.1 11ld$t•prl f'll ll;.!, ra11ge-0ven. pool~. rr'crea-
;itt,11'l1<•d rlt>I c; .. r, 11 /11· r•p!. tl'lll walk to schl~-$185 nic. drp~ & ~1i1111rr". '\!ar111rr. Agl .' 90)2-242!.
1·;n5ig-n f.· /!;:irl-O r !ll SC'hl:~· AVAIL Oct. 1st S225. 1no. 4
'.'\.i f'l'I~. lll'~nl !:-.1r Ort. S~.il RP. ~1 R \ 1 rl
1110. f,t,S..i~-12. I::arlv f'\'CS " ~ ~ 1 ' crp s. rpr;. · lrplc, rl sh1\·hr, close-10 [10(11.
Hu ntington i.leach
Z r'1r garage 3 chilrirrn rik.
!1.'lli-fl~·lfi.
.:J;f: '..'' llr\ r,1 nh•r ;ill 2 HfL rrpt I rlrr~. r<'frl )! ..
hl'i!l' ll/!''irJi:: :!. '·•I'' ~··r 11·:ishrr lrlryf't'.. ra11g0.r•\f'l'I,
c , ld'i" ·--~111;,( 111.:; ,\1':1\! r~.1-r;111n. SIRO ITIO. J\g!
11r11 ~.'ii! " >-!11"_ ~~111 :-Tl_,_,_,_z_f._I_. ______ _
1'•· . r,.,,!'.'\ ~11'. )l(){'r:"r, CUT!·'. 1'07~' 1 hr. rr-pi!<./rlrp.<-.
.n,n1-1\c~. refr i.r: .• \'-'ashcr/rlryer,
• 2 B ra n£"f'-01·rn • .$150 n10. Agl. :\LIV l10111r 3 BR '~· !11m ~2_2,121.
1·111 r1L~ kit1·l1 ;irpl ~. 11r1.:.':::__:.::c_ ______ _
l•rar h. shripp~ni:: ,r:., sehls. Santa Ana
l«'<fS(', '.l>i2-!'19."·\ .~ :.lll-217.~ 1-----------
" " I f l/d 2 BR. 2 ba , pool, s;iuna ,, r~r. 1·nn1p rr( r r, cp rp~.
r)r·l' hllns, iilir/•lt), S23~. h11 1ns. ds1vshr. cpts/drps.
Sl6.l/n10 536-2029 nrr Gpm
D1~hwa~hrr, !ra ~h n1;1~11rr.
F11rn. f•f uni.SI.fl 111" 1 ril .
\\'J:-;T():-: Jtl<1\I, ESTATE:
22!1 )lprinr. f\.dhr.a J;,l nnd
' __ __J lt§l ~artrnents fo-rRent ~
Apts . Furn. 360
General
Rent Beaut.ifL1l Furn1ru.re
for as little ns
ONE MONTH
complete with
your lOOo/o
Purchase Option
Inrl. item selec11on.
24 Hour Oely.
CUSTOM
Furniture R ent al
517 iv. lS:h, C.'.11, J.l,'-~l/:t
Anaheim 774-!~(iQ
Lallahr,1 6!:1-l-300il
Salisbury
Realty I
W E STI LL HAVE, ••
~111e q1111t11, 1111111'r 1'!'11'.•I"
lf'ft 111 l;:in:;l'r .t: :;.n1 ·1:~rr
llfllS., <11 l't'il~O/'lilhle r:i1r,,
In q11allf1erl 1Pn~t11~.
Salisbury
Realty
______ ,
Costa Mesa
H O LIOAY PLAZA
Dl·'.LU_\E :-ipac1011!> I BR.
ft11·11 ;1pt. Sl:l:i. l!e;,rtrod pr.,I.
A1np!r p:-1rk1n1:: .. .\dult,,.110
pCI~. J!lli;, Prinl'•llfl Air. C\1
,\TTJ:,\C 111 1·, B.1h'. e11trl ht.
!lf'll t'pl<c, h11gr l'IOSC'I~. i;:-;ir.
Sl ·:r), •\rl\l l!~. nn r r 1 ~
0.1'---fi'."I"~;
wesliBll9 21
;-: ••••.. Ii( ,11t1 1IU I gfl.flll'll ap1>rl-
ln1'Tl\~ 11 ll h
e l'()(]L e ~PA e
• (;,\n.\Gf. e
• AnrL TS -:-:o PETS •
2 RR-:! B .. \-S~\j Furn.
J:il E. 21.~t Si.. C ,\1.
• f..l~·fifilili •
Unbelit!vably s--•• -.-,~i7fu'l-I
\·,\J, r1 l:'l'.f!E G:.rdr11 Artie_
.\•llil l:-• no prr .... FJrt\1<'r~
1>1t 1: "I•"!• ~·rr,,nt l,-
\\',1•rrf.ill. 1;t p1~11 g('c·. r.:11,
!"C<11nt1, ~·I~ 1.2 Bd1·n1 Furn·
1·11 f111·n ir·.,111 :i;• ;,-,, Sf-:E IT,
:> 'l(t !'Ar<nn~, ,,.,~ ~itio.
--* SJ O WEEK & UP*
Studio & I BR apts.
SUNNY ACRES
MOTEL
l hJ ~, dl'I! "'/ ~ ,, •r::J'tolil1d.~
'" :-,r ijl·~i-t B!\11. ;,1:.'17:"1:1
Hr. s1_, ,\! S1.;11 :::! Gr SLlf1
!r:: !1'rr1! !r•r J\iH'hfinr'<.
S111n1 fl"'-•L A1llllt~ nnfy, 1\19:!
Ch11rl'h s:. :i !~-9633.
3l:i ~·IAP.l'.\E AVE. i;73.ti:!Oo ----E
R.\LHO,\ 1::1. .. A..;.'°c"~-I F urn. Bach . & 1 Br. x·
--------: c eptional nice. $130 up.
WE BUY
e HOMES e
FOR CASH
OCEAN FRONT exec. apt. 2
J BR. 2 ha CornPr lfl!, pon\-Bit 2 HA, O·Y-0.
~17.f'. A!l 1r111s. avail. S2!1.:iDO S·li.Ylfl. Oii•nrr 499-3()0;)
n111s! 11111·{' ? 1.-. s 1,r~ rrr SIT.J-2 Bit Bl 1n~. ('fllr;, r!rr~.
\\"ePk ~rarr time !rlay~ or n1cr P~llo. 'I 01 ok \';iran!"
('1·r~). BEACON * 645·0111 '--'-'------;; r.n :! H11. 1-'n1·r! ~.1i-rl
;\fl •\ J'ill, ~12-~'.'711. ATTHr\("f l H!: ;\fll. \l •nl•r 21 10 Newport Blvd.,
or \'P«l'l,1 . ~1nl11rr arlt11!1; QUICK CASH .. nJy. 11·• r•'fs. ,;~;.;.i;~1:, C.M.~. -------
,\IAR:il\ER REALTY 1\~S0C,
Sl2-~541 2·1 J1r. ans serv.
$23,500. Walk to Bch.
Lo·do11·"· 2 yr young hon1e,
lorma! J1v nn & dininJ<: Jt.rea,
bl l1n~. ]nl~ n! rah!n!'1~ 2
fllltlOS , FP s2.1.~:i:1 lak,, o~·rr
GI. 8-17-1221 ioP"n ro 9 pm1
e SEYJ\10UR REALTY e
1n-t1 Beach Blvr!., Jltgn Brh
CHECK this bargain. • By
ov.TlE'r, 2 story 3 Br., 2 ha
home .,.,,/lrg la.m rm. t1hag
cpl, cstm drps. No11• h17rf>'i:
the bonull: • HF:ATED
POOL \V/11tra <lrl1•p11•ay for
boat or trlr. P riC""ff right!
CaU for appL 968-3925.
SELLING
YOUR HOME?
Free appraisal • ~'e l)uy
equ11if!, Penonal 11.tteniion.
25 yrs. e"J)erlence.
COLLINS & WATTS
&5523 ~n Eves.
BY o .... ner, f'r11nc1scan Foun-
tains, 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 yrs old,
11pgrrl crpl~ & drp11, fully
-~~~ .. $37.900..:.. 847.f>B.30.
GLES f.1ar 4 Br. 2 Bil, hltm,
l blk fn schls. FHA/Va.
0\\-nf'!', 96U~.
Mitsion Viejo Realty
837-9500 830-2808 Eves. PARK Lido To11•nhouse. ~ RR. 211 BA Pool. r.;o points
Newport B" .. a_c_h____ s:i2.:ro. 011•ner. ~7-5846.
SlZ:l!I 10 S.~!f.I?> C;i~h Rrrfr! f or moN' in!rirnia!ion \\Tit<'· SJ;,()-1\J[)." ,!;;: PP!~ 11·cJeon1" Bl111~1 11.-. :>:r .\l cDo nnlrJ
"DJSTRIBI !TOR n tVl!"lO,'\' 1n tl11~-2 Br. hon1e 11 ~ar Dn11~I:~· $200, SJ2-:..)~fl.
" 23" P o Bo· ,-.,,.. & yarrJ. I ' ,.o .. ·' •. . x 1"'" BEACON * 645-0111 rvine Covina. Cahforn1a 91722 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
THROUGH A )J'.J~ flll'!I "'''·· Tl!'\\ <Tl•'•, TIRELl ol that old fur:ilture? •lrp"-, r1l'\1!y n~11111l't], 111~111rr
DAILY PILOT It's really no! th;il hard ;JP !i~ l!' , I~ I jl' ' '• , i'>l f'I~ l i I\(' 10 replare. Ju~1 1valch the WANT AD f\.rniture & m lscellaneo:is 1't1n"111nrl1tu::~ s1::~ .. :.1!'-fi~~n. $16,800 V.A . POPULAR f.l1>nlirPllri Comio
Anyone 11ual1fi{'S subj('Ct lo split-level model. $21,500.
VA Loan 1\·1111 6';, annual .::B0Y_'c'c''c"c'_· cM<>-.:c._14_'_1_· -~~
{X'rcentait{' ra1r. Total pay-Income Property 166
!nc.!ucle phonr . Sl 85·BACI\ BAY 3 Br !:imi]y
h'lme, Lrg yard. G11r. Child-
rt'n lv rieis ok,
columns In the Cl~i[ied T11rn unt1,P•I ill'1ns in1o qulck
;) RR 2 ha, fllnun1 .. S.100t3Z5 642-5678 Section. ra~ti. rilll lil2-56i8
:t Bil. 111 b<i rh~ ...... · · S.'llO l ;;:;:::;;:;::;;;:::::::::;;:::;;:;::;;;:::c!.;:::0::::=::::::c::::c::::::;;:;::::~.:::======;:::;;:;::;;;:-
nients Sl~~ ()('r mon1h.
ShArp 3 b~J'l')()n1 hoi-n,. glls-
1.-.111n.1: 11·llh HA RD\VOOO
}'!.<)()RS. 2 luxurious hath!<.,
rnod{'rn built • in ki1cl1en.
P.rflrly 10 occupy immed1-
alrly, Gt htl)'f'rs \•·clcon1e.
CALL ~
Walker.& Lee
Realtors
2790 llflrhor Blvrl. at Adams
~1-94!!1 Orr-n ·111 9 Pilt
~BEST AREA*
Clos 10 &y'!; Club. Takr !ls
i~ 4 Bn. lri; lam, din,
Y for pool. 423 F'ranci5·
CO, t
TRI HARBOR
'REALTORS
4(.(j East 17th, C.)I
f'46--32551 Eves~ 6'12:2225
OPEN SUN.
12.~ I BY O\\'NF.R
,\t,,1·1nt:. n1us1 sfll. Beautiful
Blt1rf~ f': Plan, \•1r11 of 11·11·
trr ,(. l 1gh1~ Gr<'"'1 Rell loc,
r<1butou~ 111Xlll <!(>11. Rrrlul'-
,.rl in S-1~.r.oo rir n1akr oflPr.
2HH \'1s1a En1rada ~-l~·Q1 7l
TO BUY OR
SELL A BUSINESS BEACON * 645-0111
EASTSIDE HOME HOLLAND BUS.
ANO INCOME SALES st;-,o..corona d('l )far Atrrac
''Th B k 'oh E lh " I BR Cot111ge, i;ro1•r, rrffl", 3 un11s altogc-thcr. Home has e ro er ivi mr>a 'J· cpl /dr~, bcani cei]. sl ldi;g ~ quf't>n _ sized hedroonl~. 1716 Orange Avt>., C.M, 1 d ~
Goro.rrous b11th a.nd a.Ji coin· 64~170/540--000!! eve. NC\1' r: 1.15'.'I r5 10 Yn•.
f. · ff fh t di BEACON * 645-0111
p!etely redecorated. 2 bache-, .... ·~·"~'"'~·~'·'!'~'~"~' .... ! \or inc-ome unn~ located in $29S·ND\'PORT !'HORES ,,
re11r v.·ith r(>n1s of SZ15 help MUST SELL Br. 2 B;:i 2 hlk.~ ocean.
you hl'e. rc-nt fTet'! Submit Es!ab, inter d{'signing hu~1. l\irl~/rif'ls •~in11;lC's ok,
)'flnr do .. 1>n payment. Full neP in N.B. B.ree . Call IZ131 BEACON * 645-0111 pric~ S37,S()). .. 339-1576 a.ft 6 pin. • • \\'A.U<ER & LEE. Rra\1ors Money to Loan 240 $!!0. 1 hr P'° • racan( hn1 , 2 •
Tnvt'11tment Dept. 1.,;.:._;... ______ _
..p'L"'E .. x"Es 1st TD Loan ''~· 0
" • • • s1.~:;, 2 Gr hn1, fnt'd ror k1rls/
Sfi.flOO do.,,,'!I. Price $5.'i,000. 7.25% lNTEREST , l"lf'I ~. C :>f
\Varner & Oak, llunt, Bch.. 2 d TD L .. * * ...
2 blk!<. W. o! Beach B!vM. n oa n .$1,\l'l 2 hr 11·/tverything,
Ne1v crpt5 & drps, f!repl"s, klrls lPt!s OK. H.B.
fa h .. gas bltirui. Gd fin. Termg bast'd C'Jn eq11!1y. • * *
Oprn Sa! & Stm from noon. 642·2171 54>0611 $l2<1. 3 hr \'Q C'lln! hm.
LEADERSHIP R . E. &rvlng H1trbor 11.re~ 21 yrs. JX"I oi.:.
• kiri,,-/
&42-4·166/S.Kl-::.3.36 '547.5913 Sattler Mort9age Co. ..
336 E. 17th Street •
2 hr pvl
• \\' pnr1l • • • • ZONED FOR 3 UNITS 1---------1$1.10, Ea~1!11d~ C<'l!lt1l l\lt>~a lo! C0l\1l\1ERC IAL LO ANS ,
~ari,v 10 h1111r! rin. Can tAkr Lnni:: !rrm. From $1:11.000·
maybr '1 unl1!<. r.ooo ll"ICll· J lfl,IJ00,000 Tt"!e. 5;,;.(l.'lll11.
1.1 .. n Anti price<1 rtght for Th~ fastest dnlw ~e \\1f'~I
~'(),, h111l'1rN 111 Sll.000 Cal! .. 1. Daily Pilot Cll!l~s!fle<l
s·1.~1 Trn /'Ill, h.-.u~r II''~
Brlrms & dcn. 1-i:tds k pers
01.:.
\YAl.J\FP. f. 1.F:E f:>l j·~-1'11 Ari. 1>12~~i~
i -
RENT A HOUSE
636 -28~0
:1 BR, 2 1 ~ h;i, rarn nn •• s.1.1;,
~ Bil, 2 h;i, hnn11s rm , , S.150
1 RP., 2• ... ba . lam rm SI'iO,J60
4 BH. 2'~ ba, r11m rn1 S3.YJ/3f'i0
\\ll'-: Iii\ VE: OTI-l ~:ns
1Job 1Prllil ,
---11lrnl!or
"SINCE 1~lol6"
ls! \\"p~!rrn Bank Bldiz.
l'nh·t'1~11y Park
Days 833-0101 N ights
* UNl\'ERSJTY PAR!\ *
I BR. 2't ha. lnhi.e •••• $.37:1
3 RR. 21.,. ha, 1nhse .•.• S32.'i
2 BR. 2 btt. tnhse ...... $300
.~ BR. :Z ha. h"111r • , , .•. S:lL'i
(ired hill
R:E.\LTY
Urul' P;irk Cl'n!er, Irv1 fl('
Call J\n,1·ltn1t', !'~3-0~20
ThC' !astest draw 1n the \\'c~t
, a P111ly P1k1t Cl~~Hicrl
1\rl r I~-·t,;i:,
S@\\~ lA-LG £tf s.,
The Puzrfe wifh the Bui/f./n Chuckle
O R:eorronge letters of llie
I01Jr scromblt'd words be·
low to form four ~imple words.
IRONIG
I I I' I z I
VOYEC I i .__, -, .-,-,__. i
l '-'H"-"-0-'T--'O'-T~_,, ~
J , ,. I I . Powder room chotter: "He's
__________ a w olf. He thinks lhe world
TI l ff O O 'owes him a-." t1~l1 1-,-:1'°"''"'1 '-'~1-"~1;e__1 ,~ O Comoletl'I !he chvc kln evote d h'( f.11111(1 ln the m•n•l"l(;I wo·dn
you develop trco"' 1!1!'f! No. 3 b~low. e PRINT NUMl!ERlD lEllfRS JN
THfSE SQUARES
UNSCl!AMBlE ABOVE ltll(RS
TO GE T ANSWf~
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900
---~ -,
Monday, StPttmbtr 27, 1'171 DAILY PILOT 35
.___ ... _ .. 1• _I~ I
Apts. Furn.
Costa Mesa
360 Apts. Furn. 360 ~pt. Unfurn. 365 Apt_ Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. l6S Apt. Unfurn. 365 Rooms 400 Misc. Rentals 465 Lost
Tiil: EXCITING
PALM MESA APTS.
. \IJ NUT~:s TO NE~Vl"r. BCll.
On~t1cvably lrg aJJls, hui.;I'!
p.J.)!, Jaeu~:-:i. l'lett bJr!ns,
shag t'rpls, drps, sauna (·:c.
Atlults. no pcrs,
SINGLES ...... $!q5,
I !1EDH.~·1 ...... frun1 Sl5:i.
2 BEfll{~l ...... f/'Olll Sl75.
Yuu 'r·e 1igh1. 111,.y're unrlrr-
/l!'ll.'<."I' 1 :~1 '.\11'~.t llt". (',:'IL
(., l1lk.~ ff\•111 N!'ll1/IOl'I illvd.I --C ASA de ORO
CASUAL Cali!. L1vi11g In a
wr1.rn1 :itcdl1erra11ean atn1os-
ph0re. Spacious color e(I.
orfJLnalC'd apts -dl'sig11ed &
rurn1~hC'd ,or style .~ coni.
forl e Heated pool e Kitl'h-
e.i w/ indl1i'.'c1 llghtin;: e
I )(•lux(' fl 0. Adtlll~. No JX't.>.
l H!l.-Sl75 furn.
UTILITIES INCLL'DED
3r,, \V, \ril.';<ln 642-1971
'.\'ICE I B!~ Dplx. Qu1e1.
Separa1rd by garages.
atlulr •11·cr 30. NO JK'ls.
6·1&-2768,
BACJI APTS--Furn $73 & S!fa
n10 incl u1 1L Older 1n<-i1
pref'd, 5-1-0-l!Gt:: s!1011·r! by
appl.
Sll:\RP 1 Br & 2 BR. H1d
pool. 1'.'r. sllQpS. Adulls. i\'o
pe1 s, l llil pd. 188 1 iltonrovla,
:,.i~:l:l6.
Newport Beach Corona del Mar Costa Mesa Huntington Beech
* Winter Rentals * CHAR ,\llNG I HR 11pt, u11l DELUXE
1-RR, 1 ba1h •••••••••• s11;1 IJd, Qult'l 1111 r r o u t1 d t n >: s APARTMENTS One bedroom for the inoney
F'Ul<N 0 1< UN1'1J~
2-BJC, ] bath .......... SIS5 w/pooL Nu flt'ls. S1~5/nio. ;\Jr Cond _ frplc's . ;1 swim-1\1.·o bedroon\ir; We will show
2-BH ., I bath .. , ....... S~IQO 1_&1_2-_8_4fl<J _________ 1 1ni11g Ptx)ls _ Mcalth Spa _ 1'hree bedf'(l()1~s ready
3 Br, 2 ba. Q<.'t'Ulllront • ~:~ :! BR, 2 ba .. Yearly lse, 'f('nnis Crts • Ganie & Bil· Come on lets go!
3 Br. 2 La. oceanlrorll. S350 1 blk Iron) Big Corona Jiai'd Rooni. Quiet. deadend ~tr ee 1,
~B R .• den -····-······ S325 Avail 10/1 * 673-7127 J RE:DR00~1 children. ixi s considert'd.
Call: 673-:1663 613-8086 F.v("~, F!~Ori.1 $150 7681 Ellis. 1 blk west o!
MEDITERRANEAN Beach Blvd & 5 Points
associated
8ROKEA5-REALTORS
2025 W. lalboo 67J~J66J
A'r'TJl. 2 BR .. 2 Ba & 3 BH. '.!
Ra. $175 & S22:i 1110. \\'intt•r
n•nlals. Steps 1(1 Ul'i'an &
6ay.
Balboa Real Estate C0.
700 I-';_ Ballxia Blv., Bcil boa
67:::---!140 G73--l°J9fi E'.vf'S.
BI-:ACH APT -:I IlNlr111 , ri..
Ba lh, brand new huilcl111g &
furr111ure. Blol'k lo bt:h &
sl11)f)-.., $2fiJ. n1n11th
**!-"OU R STA R•*
HEALTY
8~;,_.H22
BRAND N~E~W--
2 BR. 2 ha ap!s. w/dshwshr.
pvt Li:drony, use nf healed
pool. btlliarrl rm, j.1cuzzi S.::
RflQs. s,,,.. nl 'ltlIO:l Birch
St or n1gr. 5:)7-4:!-lfi.
Costa Mesa
New New New
Villa Cordova
COO!. -FRESH:
QUit.1' -SAFE
(Near Bal'k Hay)
40 Unit Adult
Apartment Complex
1 & 2 BR. Apts.
GA S & \\'ATER P1\lD
Mo. to Mo. From $140
2:12:i Elden Ave, c;-..1
See r.Igr '!'('d 1,1,'oodhcad
646-0032
Stores. S150 to Sl75. 847-75-17
VILLAGE " 841--0931.
'.!-IOO HarOor Blvd., C.111, 1 -~K71~D~s~w=E"L-,C"O~M=E~
(Tl~ I 5;17-fl02Q Attrae 2 BR $139 & $159. 3
R'ENTAL Ol-'F'!CE BR, $189, /\!l xtras. Pe1s Ilk.
OPEN IO AM TO 6 P!l1 Pool .. Rec bldg. 17:ffi2 "A"
FAIRWAY
VILLA APTS.
2 & 3 BR 's
l<l'Clson Lane. ~-7510 or
842~235.
SHO
2 Bil, unfurn, cpls, drps,
bltns. Children 1-1.·t'\come.
$JO. inove in allowance.
733 U!ica. 5~i--4SG!l.
S•n•• An•
CAN'T BE BEAT
SINGLE S1'0RY
South Sea Atmospher•
2 BR •• 2 BA 11·{
Carpets & drps
Au· Conditioned
P rivate Pallos
l!EATED POOL
Plenty of lawn
Carport & St<lrage
1-llDDEN VILLAGE
2500 Sourh Salta
Santa Ana • 546-l 52!i
370
Cotta Mesa
UleSliBllU
-ELDEN -
BEDROO~I. lg:e rlQ~"'· w/\I'
crpl, new iill (•1111,· l11Jn1c
l'.\t•11\11~s S.·. \\'I' I' k 1· n d ~
G-l&-2°'12.
JtOOilt & halh, pn ... ntr. Nr .
OCC. Cooking & 1x1ol pnv..:s.
Gl6-8186 rafirr 5.
CAMPERS & BOATS
1'~1'nced lot storage 50c
JJC-r fr . $10 1n1n. &12.6560
P~rson~ls-I~
·-----REWARD
For R.erovery Of
BRJE.FCASI::
No questions asked
Losr in fmnt or 1'urner
Drugs N.B. 5-18-1 153 ----LOSr Jn cos-ril MPSa-------;r;a
PVT 1\11111 ,V. r<JV1J1 fol' n1111 . lge "'1'.!lden doi; w/rk!ge up
p1 t 1·11tranc.·•-. paa<J. $~'5 wk. Personals S30 ba c k ( Ith o rl cs i an
.'>ll!---6~t'i;i. 1--.,-,--------.:.;. lt1rlgcbackl, An.'>\.1-·er.; 10
1.,,1 ~ *FULLY LICENSED * ":\tooS('··. Rev.•ard! Please ·-. \. h).1111, pvt horne 111' R d 111 ti S . . .
!"C < ,1 .. 111.11 C ,1 ' cnown<:! n u ptr1tua.list call ;,.l-0--0821. ~;!7-937!l. "-'• . ~}' I g. . . 8ITa. j , , • ";-;,;;,,--cc---c--c---1 ('all :>1~).lllli l At \It<' 011. all ll\d t!C'rS. 1 LOS1', ~ia rnf'Se fr1nale ca l
Sl.1 J!l'r \lt'•·k u11 w/ki!rlwn.
$3() per \,·ritk up apls. ~ulcl
• ;.1.~~J7:1 ).
l..o\•e. ~l arnage, Business 1 1110 old, Vu•Jr.r1a HPach lteadings given 7 days a J,agun11 . R••1varr!. 494-7.100 ll'r.rk, 10 a.n1. 10 JO p.n1,
312 N. r:J Can11no Real, BLACK Afghan ft'male. ~rk
San C!emt>nte Bay art'a. 833--74'.!9 o r Guest Home 415 4!12-9\36, 492-0070 557-0171\. * PRIVATE ROOM PAl'.'\TER sc(•ks st11d10. cnn
Fu· t•lrl<"rly l.ul,1. Bt1;:111 -pay up lo s1:1.00 a mon1h.
!'111,l•ry g:i1·dr11 ~tu·r.-iundltl)'!s. \\'rile CJ<1ss1J1C'd Ad No. 203
:".t111·1t101ts 111f':ds . :·~i.~-111::. [)a1Jy Pllo!, P .O. Box 156()
• St·:.\!l-l'r11"ah' 1.i,lnl 111 Co~l a ~lrsa, Calif. 92620.
i,:ur~1 J10111l' !or i:<"nt lP 111<1Jl, Al..COllOLTCS ,\nonymo11s.
• C<i ll f\·16--7::'00 * Phone 5"12-7217 nr 11Tite
P.n. Jkix 1223. Costa !>1esa.
Rentals to Share 430 CO'.\'FIDE'.\''J'IAL counseling
\\',\NTl~Ll . H0<Jlllina1" 1u ,I;-rrf,.rral for ahortinn &
share i\1r·sf1 Vf'l'dl'." hon1r. adur llon. ApC11rr . 6-12-4436.
Prefer;1hlt· ~1t1dc111, 10 111111 VASECTOMY INFO
f1·on1 OC {\>ll•'l;<'. l'!'l\'l<fl' ApC'l!rl'. &12~1!36
P.t••h'•'!.•IH. ,.,.,·y !'l~\.\\lll<Jbl{·.
Call lot11 n lo-2 JJ1n only, Social Clubs
;1.-17-!'ll:ill), 535
Cl),\'1 -:"\i ce 2 100111s 101• l:'ul,\-
U1\l. furn .. sh.1 n• kit. Pn.
rn1 . ~11 d r inking.
!1 C'11~011.1lile. fi7J-fl(ill
C1J1lh'111porary roup!rs
\\'!O F: \\'ORLI)
r11.n S3~·:!1~l or '.121-7728
~--'-"'_'_'"_'_"_'_" _ __,)(l~)
Schools &
instructions 575
Train To Be A
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
OPERATOR
1.Parn 10 operate Bullcloz-
('!'S, Drag I 1nl!~. Cranes,
Scrapers, l..<iadcrs. 'fr·Pn('h-
er.~. etc. .S1udy at hon1e.
f()]lo11·<>d hy 1-csidC"nt train-
in.; at our niodern Iacillty
111 M1an1i, Florida.
llomC' Office-i11ian1 i, Fla.
UNIVERSITY MEAVY
e B<l('h F, or unf., $110 tlfl
• ! HP.. Furn or Ull f $12.'i Up e 2 BR Furn or unf Sl·IO Up
25 ~·rds frun1 OCEAN -4 BR.
2'~ BA. Huge L/R I\'/
\l'BFP. nell' <:>rpt'g, n1od .
k11 ch(.'n, pan'lr! den, con1ril
f1n·n. S:l25 inrl'dJ:: u1 il. until
July \\'1ll ulso J ease .
6ij-.1642.
2 s·ruoENTS "''rd rl)('Jn\· 1 J [SJ
niatc. ~\'.lu1.· ~liar1• Si2. nio. l ost •11d Fouod Sparklini;: NE\V 2 BEDROO.:..I _ _ . _
garden apar!n1l'nt. Lu:....ur-_____ ,_7'_'_L_«_i2 ____ '--------'
CONSTRUCTION
sa-1001..s. Drpt. • 120J
501 Go!rl en C1rC'le Dnl'e
S.1n!a Ana. Calif. 92705
Phone: {714) !:>{7-7521 Adults. !'ool. 6-12-2181
Shady Gardens-Pool
1 & 1 BH. l'ror11 $13;1.
A'rrHAC'TIVE l BH. Furn.
Nrw pa1111. Hi,clt ix'a111 t·l'il·
ings. <._;ro und Jlnor. \Valk to
shop'g l't'ntcr & O CC.
AdulT~. no pets. $129.50.
549-36•13.
ious pool , h1sh landscaplni;:. Garages for Rent 435 Found {l•ae •d•)
S175. Adt1l1s . no p01s. 2311 -~...::--------• 550 Name············-·········-E'lcten Ave., C.':ill.
&15-5780 Or
STOH./\GE, 1 ·nr~. I' 'l u i p , --;-:~ ':"".-hors('~. l;<lfl.ts. i\'r. 0 . Cnl~ \~lUZ\G n1aJc c;11, idcn-Address •••••••• ,,,,,, .......
/\irpo!'T. Froin S 1 5 /111 0 . t1f 1ahle \Jy 111.Jll!'Cd tatl -
I I k
'
I '
, _1 . City ••••••••• ,, •• ,. ... , , ....
fi.16-Siili6 177 E. ~2nd St. 6-t!-3&15
• Av! now-I & ~ Hr furn
Pool. rec rn1. gd loc. No
('!1ilclrf'!1 nr prts. G46-:>S2·L
DU PLr:x l 81t flirn. No
t•nls, do~s . .,r n1olorcycles.
QUiC'I. ;>J8"Z720.
Quiet Adult Living
Shag cpl • d r ps e bltn.~
BcautiluJ Pool e All UtiJ Pd
2 BR. Sl70
J\dulls only-no pets
J.IS-;)f).J.1. I :1r " \I 11 c {,, O!'IJl~
AMJ.:ING Adult L l vi n g I c~~--------1 \1 "niell~·t l'l'.lllar. \'1r Jlar-State •••••••••• Zip ...•...•.
Beaut. l & 2 BR furn or unf Office Rental 440 l'kn' \'ww Jlon1es 4 6·1·1-0392. SECLUDF~J) hillside Buel>.
P<1noran11c '-'U, spa c 1 o u s 2~1 Avocado St. 646-0979 Apt.~. Self clean. ovens, li·H--0'.l~J:!. Phone • •• •• •• ... • • Age • ••••
D/\V On 2 BrJ displs, sbai;: DESl\ space ai·nilablc S:xl GOLF LESSONS
grounds. F rpl. patio. Ideal I""'"'""'"'"'""'"'"'""""
sluc!y for 11·r·1tf'1', rn1is1(•ian.
l'T('. Sl73. 5'18-77ll7.
Park-Like Surrounding
QUIET -DELUXE
cpts, drps, jacuzzi & sauna mu. \Vil! provide furniture PAHT Pt·1·~1<:1 11 kl!ll'n grr.v .~
at s:; 1no. Ans11•crini:: scn'ir;e vr.in;:f', 111111c no~1-. k'l'I & for beginners ,'I,,; advanced
rilaycr~. CaJJ Roy Eversole,
Cus!;t l\lesa Goll Cl u b ~10-i~iOO. '
VVHl\ 1 BR. Ch1ldn ·11 ok. Nn
J)CIS. J!P,:..led pooL \\'a~h 1'11\
f:tt•d, 1'.!li '.\lontr Visl;i. C)I.
-.J Br, pn 111111\:l, pool
1-2 & 3 BR APTS
balh~. Hug!'! pool. Merrimac Woods Available. 3f15 No. El ,·hr.~!. ~·1,.a !'<111 ~1'. Vu•
Can1ino Real, San ~\'!1 11<'11· S· :\!argarif\', Cd.\!. • l hlk 10 Beach-2 Br. Nh·,._
J.1 l"ur11. Ne\v cpis, pa1n1 &
di•ps. S2:1~1 irl('ldg u t 1 l.
Yi•l)rly. lll:l-Oi:{l
OCE1\;'\FftONT-Nr. P 1~'r,
K ids & )K'l s ok. $165 to $38.'i.
.l.ra!;l', C11.ll !\-14--i\111.
i\lsu Furn Ba<'hl'lors 425 ~1crnn1ac \\'ay, C.i\1, Clen1e 11Ce. ·1:t2--4420 ~;1:1~'ili~·~.
F'n' pa1ios .-Htd Pools
Nr shop'g * Adul !s only
"'"' DRIVE BY D.J::S1' ~pace avail;i blc $5t Y1~v·--,-,,-,c,,-, -,c,.-,,-.,,~,-~-,-,-,._
J.17 Floll'l'r S1. 1 AR. Furn n1n. \Viii provicle furni1u~ 1ri'll <'a!'f'd ror nQ idrnli-_ -~----__
FRENCH & GERMAN
Exreri Teacher. 8.1'.l-ff.i.1'1
Sl 39
!-[, E. 18th i\~2 -1(-0,1 ~n.1-020~
2 BR. Ft!l'n upper, $1i:i/1110.
Url! Paid. Cl11ld ok. \\'alk lo
slorcs. 5--19-?,Q.!3
Martinique Apts.
Jm f,._1nla Ana Ave., C;<.1
11-lgr . .<\pt J13 646-5ii-l2
or Un fu rn. Bes1 l01."<1lion in at S:i 1110. Answ('rin~ sen•ice fll'!lllt•n. Cullcg~ Pk. <tJ't'H . [~~~~~~~~~~~
Cos ta ille::;a. &l6-0'J20 ava:lllble. 222 Fort's! A\'l'. c \\, ::3~6 Hutgcrs IJr. I ~
Huntington 'Beach l..flguna Brach. ~9'1-9466 .-,i.-,-2t=i~c'"=· ccc-;----,.-~-Servku ilnd Repair. l
2 BR. 1Jnfurn ap!. Pool. Mesa Verde
Cor11•. to shop·g. Sl35. 313 E. l---"'.".=::~O-:O::::'.":~-
l7th Pl. ,·orncrs ul J7Lh & Y" ATTRACTIVE
• STU NNING Gard>:>n ApL
Pool. Sn1I dog ok. 1 RH Sl::Oj.
:l 131-l unf $11\0. &J,',_;,;,~.(I.
A1i·g,\c-r1v1·: ~ Bit.
!ltd Pull. llr!\llt !<'., 110 ]1(•ts,
SJ .-,i * +;.11-~:.211.
SiO S.· l 'f'~·lrw ii ~~~
Alt Trail<>rs. i\tan 11•11 ~
645-4:.~o or 6~2-J~t;;,,
Dana Pcint
~~~~~----~~~~-* * Si ng!£', TV, pool, p<'lS
ok. nA:"\1\ ;\larina lnu. 3·! LU
Co.1~1 !!l'.-y .
Hunting ton deach
Fl'tEE: \;111, f1Jrn l ,\· 2 BR.
nr ll('h JY>(ll St:lO u l'
:~16-~iii f.)~(\. ;~i:;.:2 1;1:>6-!3G6.
Laguna Beach
1 Hr Jurn apt. ;\lalu1·e adulls
only. QutP! grtrdc11 ct u1-
n1o~p\l(•J'<', I hlk tu ll!'h, ('a~~'
ll':ilkin~ d1st:i11cc 1<1 .'-hop~ Ii:
n1kl (;:1r:1gt' 1nt·I. 51~0 n10.
~."ill Cid! fir-. L. B . .\~.1-j;,;,7_
'i1'..'.~S 1n~·k~Rul'11 1·1 1!
p1!, col11r f \. a l Crr~1•ru 13tl,I'
Bl'h. 4fJ.!-2.'i!h~
Lido Isle
-----·---~-Bl~1\UT!Fl i L lli\Clll<l.OR
/\PT (l:-; R/\Y, ~Jl;{l.
~:!OJ ,\JO. \\'1nll'r. S:l25 yrl y. 4
Br.. 2 ba, J:i t"1 ng ocean,
nr\\'I) deror. <i-8032,
:! H!l furn S22j/:\lo, AUlls. no
«\\ild n'n or j)('IS. Her s reqd.
iii:..-~xis F.:ve .\: wk •'t1.-i~.
\\'I:\ J'l·:f{ J~·u!cil, 11i~·e 2~
n11t. All <:I<'\' ki1Ch«11, pn1•
p,1!1<1, ;\dulri; ouly. 67.'..-:t Wl.
• :l n!{, pa1io. \\'inter rental.
SiXOl!no.
2 L;R.;"\car l3cat:h. s11ndc1,;k.
frpl1:, sh.irri~ Arlult~. S2!:i
\\ 111!0'!'. s13:i yrly. 01:.-21~~
• :l HH. l ", Bil. STEP~ Tf)
Fll•:,\Cll' S2i5/1no. \\'1n lr.r
ir<ISf'• ~!2<!,\!12.
B;\LBl1i\ 13YA CLLlfl. Beaut
furn I lir. 01·t'rlMk1ng
!n1~·. ~11\-221 1 f'Xf lflfl.
Newport Heights
1hc
CLEA.'\J 1 or 2 Br. A<llts, no
1irts. lg kit. $135-Sl:JO. 1AZ1
E. JG1 h SL NB. 64&-180!.
Apt. Unfurn.
Gt'!neral
VENDOME
365
l.\J~L\IULATE APTS!
3 Bdrm * 2 Bath
Liv ing room 1-1.ith cathedral
ceJling & lrplc. Scp;1 ra1e
laundry ilrr.fl . Encl patio.
S11·1rnn1i ng IXlOI & children's
playground. $200.
Jl,\f{B{)P. GREENS
;, 16-4333 • • WESTBAY ELDEN
N1~1V l 11nd 2 Bedrin. garden
apl.~. 11· flOOl.
Santa Ana. 64 2-271 -1 2 to choose from -2 Br., new
3 BH, 2 ~A. bealJtifl!l crpts &
drp!>. Encl. p<:itio. I sml
Ph1ld ok. Sl75. Open 4 to 7
1la il,v. 5T)i\--Oli\4.
cpts, drps & paint. Xlnt Joc.
J\'r 5h0p'g & frv.•y, ideal for
couple. no children, no fl('ts.
SI40/mo. &15-3515 or 644-1408
or &14-0753 tor app:.
LO\VE!l 2 Br. S I~ 5 · DLX 2 & 3 BR, 2 _Ba, encl
R a n g e I_ oven I r.e In~~· gar. S1 50 & up. Ren1a.I O!c:
cpt/drps. r->o pels. 968-14J.J, 3095 ~111ce Ave :.,.16-10:\-1 5"18-7i2!l. j • • •
LRG l Br. apt unfurn. Cpts, Newport Beach
d!'ps. hllns. ~elrlg, S\4<1 mo A New Way to Live in
& up. No children, no pets. Newport Beach
!198 E. Camino, !i-\6---0451.
E.HO\I Sli:>. ADULTS * BEllUTIF'UL 1 & 2 BR. :!.'lll ElrlPn Av·e., C . .\1.
&1.J-J780
OAKWOOD GARDEN
APARTMENTS
• •
*BRAND NEW*
La Co sta Apts.
1 & 2 BH, bl111s. swimming
pool, lanai. b;1r-t1-que & gar-
a~c. All un! pd. $150 to $170.
Adults, no JX'\s.
3.1-1 i\VO(«'do. C:'ll 642.9708
Con!!'n1porary t;ardc.n Ap!s.
Pati os , f r p!c, pool .
S150-Sl 65. Call 54&-5163. &80
NE:\V 2 BR. 2 ha, dshwshr,
Nrwporl-North
Irvine .Ave 615.0.'!50
b.-'ll<'Ony, gar. Nr. OCC & So. Ne\l'f)()rt.South
Coast Plaza. $165. 968-672() 1700 16th St &l2-SJ70
or :i.t6-6399. PARK NEWPORT
A'ITRAL'T 2 Br, l'i Ba. APARTMENTS
Cpls, drps, b!lns. dshwhr, Bachelor, 1 or 2 Bedrooms,
encl gar. J>r1v patio. and Townhouses. Spa, pools,
645-2939. tennis. From $170, Across
r.TT!:SA Lido l BR ap!.s., Cpts, 2 Br. }'amily Unil,,, Nev,.!y from F'ashion Island at Jam-
i I I I P I 6. boree & San Joafjuin Hills <lqls. / In<:, ~· n~f' 10 shop'g dctor, t'O nv. oc. oo · SI .J. Road!!. 171 .0 644_1900.
& OCC. Ila.~ lrnlry rn1 , [Xl<l! V!LW\ Il1 ESA Apts, 719 W. --;--;;,;cocuoo-7'='°~-
& ,·:1n~11·1~ 1'1,t '"' 1nfn11t nk, \V1!sor1. £.1&-12:11. * BRAND NEW *
HPnls start front S l~.-}-Sl·KL REDEC. lge 2 BR. new drps, W.l:J2 Santa Ana. (Acro;;s
A ~k 11hnu1 our di«rount. 1~-Hi lill ns. Sl."-.0. Chtld OK. 766 fron1 S,,\. Country C.1ubJ.
Plan·ntJa, .\l;;:r. !\pt l!, C.\L Shalimar 642-7315. Spa(;.JOUS 1 & 2 BR un11s.
fi-tli-i.l;lf.4. .From $155. up, .Frplcs. priv.
SH AH.P 2 BR, 1\.1. BA, crpts, n~tte>!>, lood, ,I "1-e•-. BAY MEADOW APTS. d 1200 I A il '" " •0
• ~ rps. sq t. va · IJJW. Adults. r.1gr. 5$7-0211. l3t':11n rpt!ings, p11neling, $16:,/,1\10. 5:i7-7768. -
priv pa!los, Nrreatlon fa. , 1 ADULT LIVING
ON BEACH!
NE\V APTS
1 Br From $227
2 BR Fro1n $242
J Bil From S375
f urniture Available
Carpets-dra pcs-d ish11 ashcr
hcatf!d pool-saunas-tennis
rec room-ocean views
palios-an1ple parking
Security guards.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN AVE., H.B.
(71·1) 536-1487
Ofc open HI am--6 pm Dally
\\'ILLIAM WALTERS CO.
Parklike Ik>ach L1vin11
tor Adults
Casa Del Sol
& 2 BR-furnfunf. Pvt pa-
tio, Irp!c in 2 BR. eleva!ors,
dsh1.1•shrs, crpts. clrps. Pets
acl'rptcd. F rom Sl15.
21661 Brookhurst St, llB. * (7141 962-66.'i~ •
e OCEAN VIE\V From s13:;,
l Aft. Furn or \lr1[urn.
CA.5A PLA YA, 141h &
Wal nu t, llB. 53~3(;7.
Newport Beach * Cnll r,o; ... s:}l'.l *
CNCe_w_p_o_rt-sm h
ADULT nnd
FA'.\1IL'l Sl'C"t1on
Close to shopping, Park
Sp;;iclOllS 3 BR's, 2 ba
nlilirs. All aflnlfs, no pets, L~1 :1"lAC. 3 BR. 2 1~ BA.' crpts. Brand new. 1 &. 2 Bdrms. ~ 2 BR's t "HO:'II J\S LO\V •!rps. S'lOO/Mo. A~-a.il now. 1J1sh\\'ashers F irepl 2 VISTA DEL MESA c-11~ . accs.
• S111n1 fl{)()!, put ~<'n to.> ~1;;~ 1110. .-..i -1 • Ba1h~. Enrlosed patio~. Pool Apartments
:-.rAC'IOL'.S B11y fn1111-:-.1ocJ,.rn
11riprr 1i11 plP\ ?. Rr, ~ R·1.
Yi·;IJ 1~· S 1nn/111" II !lll<'r
s:~nc)/1110, '.:2.', \!ll h foil. '.\'IL
fil.-..-11~?.fi.
* Frrl. 1nd1v J.nrlry fflr'ls
1845 Anaheim A ve.
3Si \I". Bay St , C!\!. DUPLl•:X. 2 13R, J'("(" p;HntNI, & harbt'que. Carports & l .~. 2 RR. Furn, & Unf. ni.<ih·
('11!1 &lf;-OOi~ f'Jl<'I gar. pa110. -adlts. S\35. siorage. No lease required. \1·Hsh('r -SIQve St HrfriJ:! -
--R---1 f R----d Af! 7 pn1. 6-t.i-1062 211:112 S<inta 1\nll Avr_ Sha" o>rp1'g-Lri;: Rec t't'ntcr. '.\'l·:,\ new ~ . g-r011n ~--1 ' !1•1·c l 11/ i::cir:ii:e All ~·on· 2 BH, par!ly furn. Y' NOW OPEN llE.\iT s1a rts Sl'.1,\
---Apt. Unfurn.
Balboa Peninsula
365 vr111cnt·1·~. L;i q.:r ferwrd $110 .\Jo. !'lr) prts. Brand ncw-l Bil, Sl W-2 Bft Tustin & Mesa Dr ive
N':ir yard. Chlld nr prts • * &16-2270 • * $1~. up, All tllil pd . Priv. * 545-4855 * \\,\T1.:r.vr u1;-.r Ha ! !'<'11.
~p:11' •; 81' , [;1111 nn , pr1v
>(llHlrrk. ~nl li1x1t llH.l(lr.
\\'1111f'r lse. S'.!~.-1. :..1s-1~.9j,
fl.16-6966.
11· c Jc o 111 c, $1 75 / rn o. 3 ~ICE BR. bu11t1n.~. nQ JWls, palio, billiard rm, hid Jl'l(>l I ~sc.-.-,"•'A~n-.--~"----
!H5--241:1. 2 RA. Crpts & d,.,,.,s. SIG~. w t jacuzzi, /\dulls. 20101 \IATl~RFHON·r -Beautiful-I -~-'--'--------., B NE 'R ''"'" I BR d 962 ""7" 1rch St., N.B. 5:"17-42•16. Ray vit'W apts. 2 Br. uppc.r · 11 '... , ;;roun ""'\/\I "
apt w/piPr & sliri !1-1.·ill ar-lrvPI 11-/gan1gl'. All con-$175 _ 2 BR, studio, Adj. BREATiiTAKING VIEW
nCE,\N \'1!'11, ."\ BR. (~inimNlall' up 10 50 · bo;ill, \·~111enccs. l,arge fncrl rr.ar shop's::. Drp'd, Crpt'd. Den. $270. Hus;:e 2 BRapt. lligh on
11'fl-<l1/r11·y. :"! rnq1t1r1°-1111· S.l:lO/nio. yrarl,y. Al.so 2 lJr _, ynrrl , Ctnld '1r pr Is Gar. :AS-8301 , 213: 592-5227. Back Bay Bluffs v.·/2 pvt
n1:1r-1il<11P. $26i ~nnua \ 1,_, 8 , 10,,.,,~ .,1,1 ,,.,,,."~ W(']C'ln1o:'. SlT;i /mo. balconies. f.rplc, heat e d " ' " .... , S~1ALL 2 BR. incl u!il. $105. ·.;1n!rr. 6i.-J-7!:'rl or (2 !3) f;iril. S~OO/mo. y('~r!y. CaU fM~"-~1~:1_._______ pool. load5, of closels.
i99--l :i.1:7 G·l•l--2501 r>r 21'.l· r;~A.-Jll!ll!l. OU I ET-Downsta irs ~~l~omona, Apt. D , Adults. 745 Domingo Dr. \by
-\l'IN·Tl'f{ lt F~'T'L' 2 R I C.D.M.H.S.) Call 64~l2W. , · " · 2 OCEA'.'\FRONT 2 br, 2 ha. r, new s iat; cpts, paun, C 2 B bl d nAyfront · Pt'nins1il11. :1 BP.. cnt'I "llr. JV!aturn aduli". n~ L · r, tns. cplll, rps. SEACLIFF il!anor Ap~ 2 upprr apT. yrly. S275/mo. ,.. • " • th> gac $14-0 No ndls · Baths. $2~i0 month. rolJJ'l•d pn•('d. No Jl('!s. S14S/ ,P.'.1'7 50• &J "1"IS67· ,.~, · BR unfurn, l ~a Ba, cp1i;,
'
"\'·I·.-Rf,·•i.·r,· ,12 _000 ;,tJ7 E. Ralbou. 67~ RHr. , _ ~ d bl b '" ., " ,. -1 -"~'~"'_· ~"''.'.'"':::'1'~1~5~0~1~&1~4~0~7~'3~._J ,,.;;· ,.,,:· ~~· :'-;:;;;-:;;';;;;;;;-~:;;I rps, Ins. gar displ, pvt
:.;. BJ{. 2 Bn., 2 cloors fn:ini Corona del Mar SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 ba, newly 1 BR. Shag cpt, dshwhr, M'lf patio, $16{1. Also Furn.
I " I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii clean ov,.n. sundl"Ck $145. Bachelor u1 il pd. S145. 1525 waler, yr;ir y or :i nios. I' rcdC"coratC'cl. \\lalk to sch!s c 11' an & n\o d e r n. .1<: ~horg. l rhilrl, n<> pct~. I c3c7~7c'"vc. cwcuc"'=c"~· c54c8-:.,;.360:;:5c· -·l cpc1;'o"o.'~'';'•:..;Ac'c'c· :54:'-:·~268:· :2 __
71 4-71$--0709. ~ ... -Sl45. J11q : 7368 LaSalle Apl Deluxe 2 Br., 2 Ba. D~LUXE Bayrront-2 Br. 2
f'EN!:-1. f)(olu.\r \ Bi·. ari1. .,., 1. Ct-1. ~19-.:152·1 Cpts, drps, atove. AduJ:s Ba. Adults, no pels. Yr.arly. Slr'p~ 111 h:l.v ,'., ocra11. \'t'l.v 2 BR. Crp ls, Drps, Closeil only, no pl'ts. SlliO. 54.>lllO. S.1.-lO. Sli p Avail. 233 19th St.
$11:.0. '.\lalure pa r I le s. ON TEN ACRES gllrag~ + park1n~. Bltns. ilr1 & 2 BR., lrg rms, pool.1 ~"~··~· ~'0'"°-"'-c' -----l-'c'·c>-c21Jc•-c1ic. ----~--11 & 2 BR. Furn, le Unfum, Adlls. S\3~. 2210 Rt1lgers Dr. n:-shOps, ulil pd, 1884 J\.1011-DUPLEX ups!airs apr, Lido
\\"INTEH. rcn!al. Nt)l'porl Fireplaces I prlv, patios. _64G-6 __ 9_1_9,~6_1W __ M_9_. ___ rovia. 548-0336 area. Nr Ric hard's market.
Penlnsuta. 3 BR. 'l BA. gar, Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. ~10DERN l Br apt, cpts, 2 BR upstairs wfsundeck. Mature adult only. S175fmo.
"'JD. 1 blk In hay &-. heh roQ Sea Lane, CdM 644·2611 drps, ds hwsr, bltins. gar. 1 Nr shp'g cntr 2276 Pomona, Yearly rental. 673-6049
S2-IO/rno. 67~1. (~lacArlhur nr Coast Hwy) child ok. All lltil pcl. s1;i1J mo. CM 545-4391 aft 5 pm. YEARLY-Unfurn 2 Br. 1 Ba.
\VALK ro beach. :z BR, pa tio, _ BAYFRONT 307 Avocado, apt 9, 645-00&4. 2 BR, 1~ BA, prl. J)lltio, Upstairs. Patio Blk to
2 car gar. Yrly lPAse. • BAYVIEW Cl.EA>'>J 2 Br, l'-i: Ba Studio. shai;: <:rpl, d'l"pS. enclOM'd ocean. SWO. 673-8088.
VILLA MARSEILLES
BRAND NEW
SPACIOUS
I & 2 Bdrm. Apts.
Adult l iving
Furn. & Unfurn.
Oi sl11vashcr color coordinal·
ed Appliances • plush shag
carPet _ choice of 2 color
sc:heme1 • 2 baths • st11.JI
showers • mirrored ward-
robe donl'I _ indirect light.
Ing In kitchen -breakfast
bar • huge private fenced
patio _ pltJsh tandscap!ng _
brick Bar-B-Q's. le.ri:;e heat.
ed pools & lanai.
3101 So. Bristol St.
('i) Ml. N. of So. Coast Plaza)
Sant• An•
PHONE: 557-1200
fltntals
DES K 1~parc available . s;i0 LI 1:-;G Jiairt•(! }\Hin~ fn1! cal. ·
mo._ \\111 provid~ lurnitt;N' l'.hH' and "·h•h~ pcrsian
at S:i n10. J\ns~~·er1ng service 11·/\1 hi1c boo ls. !'lea coll;ir. Auto Waxing 11.v<iil~blc. l7S1;i Beacl~ Blvd. \'i.-. :llesa Dl·I ;\lac & Rock.
1-lunt1ngton Brar.Ii. 6-1..--1321 ('.:'11. .')Hi--Ol :..O. Sl~Et.¥rER'S Auto Polishing
CUT!~ ADOBI< !10\IS f•: -; .. c~-~~~~-~·I Co111pl jolJ 51 :i. Prnf. Free r·un OFFICE {)It ~·rDr-:F' !·(I\ ;-..u (I_,_ Bf'ulilul JenHl\(', P/U by appl. &l::.-2:J:JL
211 \\'. \\'il~nii, C :i.i" lon11111,\·11-h1 1t-._~alt ,'i, fll'P·
• Pt'r . 11011111! I.) Ile ring. Vil'.
\\'•"-;l1,r11 p:tr1 of f.ia1i1a Ana.
CdM OFFICES K:'.l-l'.18 1. ServicH aind Repaiira ~
Drh1-:1• <11r/rnnd l 11• ,','l: ~L \il ,HY ~-.,-,,"lei -1-11-,,,-,,-,~l-OU-i-I<:\.
1111~1t11tini.: 11111 r.i ~ 11~1· l'Hrl (.;c1·n111n Sht>phel'tl. Vici•••••••••••
tllt'rils llkr. li7::-iil L .Ai·ncailn !'I. ('osla :.re~. Babysitting -BAYV!E_W_O~FICES c.dl lt1 1r11~111fy. 6·12-7JS.J l---------D1,1u~·!\ Alr-C'1nd itio,.<'d n1orni11:::s rir 1·vrn1ng~. COSTA MESA
Lido Arca -~iOc 5(1. VI. ~'OUN!.J: sni;i!J black Crick· PRE.SCHOOL
Rf•;ilo11.1n1il·s Bkr, {!7:;,r,100 Enrol! 11ow for f'all ;1 -pr~1 r,•n1:ih-. !lurhor V1o'.'1v J"
I·--.ilh & illonrovia, ¥.i day + .i.1 to .$1.J rno. Cnl<'l fir·, 111)111 1·~. l\'i<"C•/y t.!annt'rd, fuJl day i;e~sions. Planned a1t'/cond, 16 4S -B -C-P 11·pJ I ·11·n1ntd. Can'l k\'l.'/l . N ,.. 11. fl 0 r ! HI v ,1, c :\I , f.l l-~'!<1.\7 prog1·;u11, hot lunches. ,\gl'S
612-2821. 6-11-lfliil. -·'-----~--2-6, lu-s 6:30 ,\:'II • 6 P.\I '-=---FOU;-.iD u~. 8('c.u1 1ful h•rrtalt'. $:!() \1'k-COtlll'ARE! &l2-4o:i0
.-Nr·:IVP ORT DJ:::\CH Poxlt'. Vic Sprin1'cla!e ·"' 'Vii\ .\lOTJ!Efl, IVtll lng lo sha,JY' ..,,,,..:lOO-Y-.llO fr . ~.;1c. l\',1 rn!'!', Jluntinglon Beath. 'J'LC
PJI. l'vlr, Ervin, tii.-rlfl-Ol >'IG-a122. in Illy Jion1r \\-·/your ,:;c-,,.-,.-----,-c I pr("-sehoolt>r. t.1cals, rnrl
445 FIHJNP Bf'llRle p11ppy ~1 plrly y1trd·\vki.lays 0 11 I y.
-----------1 n1•l old. f1in. Vic~ Cti !Je Cd!I J. Gi·l--<~:ZS.
Sl!O\\IROO.:..I !1di:. & fJfflct J ln~rH' .V GJr,r1t"ll<1 , !1l 1~s1on I 077"7-:0cc--O.-~~---I
Business Rental
-~~l'.tCl'. C."!f}Sf' 111 r ... ~:::11.i:a Joe, Vt1•1r1. S:\7-.~~~1 S1\VI'..: df'pl'llcla blr. Chris!lil!l
$.h h1 $3.)() n1•J. •l.H-IKo.1. ..-~---~~ hnnt<', )<l ri't 1\•!:1, H~~-is.
• --Bl.ACK ,~ !11 11 f'Uf)fly, li•iks 1·111r:-;. r iu!drcn ;!•~ yr:-; •• ~·
f Olt bu, ~JO ·"! fl t.·1-l IJld,c: Ilk<' f)11h•'rn1a11 .. VII'. 7-11 11p. ('.<11! 111 insp1.•rl . IHb-0127.
for n1:1('hlllC shop, f!(lfllJ:;C tlf i\!:rrkt, llll l~akcr, C.:>T. "1'11.--.1~11\r)· ~h"I'· ;1<li<-~i!17, B,\!JYS/'!"['l '.llG , 1ny llurn~-. . ..;:,-1177 '· I( --\\'t•t·k d;iys ,r:,, 11·,.1-kicnd ~. l l!ot * * !:{ I ~u. fl. ST(J l\I< "r f'(Jl''• Ii \I,,_,, I.,,., i<o·y '''' 'I I ,. I o l 'ij s .. .;, :,ll,1t'ks, 20 j~
IJFFICE. 'l?!'i/nir1. (:0:-,"J',\ ill" 10ili. V1<• ~«.llow Cl111rl1" I 11 " .,. :\JI 1 1 '1'f "-_\11 1H:e :"''.• 0\;i'll. 11r Pon1v111, _'.___";;_.i_. ~: ,·1cl. _____ I q11 ll;irl"'r Blvd. :~10-~16. Sehl. &1h---:1Rll.
. S\_lALI .. ufr.l!'I' or i.h11p . ~·(i\ ;;.,., "', ('il.\I, 11 ,.rl~i· Vi'>" ,. ,, ,,, "' , • ~·uuNr ; n1u1h1 ·1· 11 111 hallYs11
L. l.lh SI., t n.~1 " .\J,.s;i ~i.ll 11111" IH'('a. ,\I;dr l~·•horador n1 hf'r J10111r. ('h lldrti1 n g,..~
H••al1n1111111<'s Bkr. 1;7·,.11il~) t •Pllnw. (''ii !i !l·~>~Rii · " :!{1, h,v th•• 11·(•1•k. LunclH's, Tl·llJ~!l·lf' l.11•·. :'-1•11-··-"r 1>1 1··r11·~.._-,-,-1>1!.!-,-,-1 1-,irT halrrcl s11;1rk ~. J•::1 ~l~1d1' C.'.\1
fi.'1· ~p:11·1. l-\;i!l11.;1 11111 hlii •·I< i·•d. vir ]'{•;irl St., Lag r~1r-1t;,:;, ' ·
l!(oll"':' l·r"•l)l :r;,, i.7-, __ ~;111 r:. 11 \'+1 ... ,::12.
*0 ~'I· I! '!-: -,-, ,.-,...;']'() 1 ~ I :-ii \0 I< I .AC!\ ---i-:111"--m-a71e--,-,, ,-,-,,-.
HI-JI, :\!·\\"l'!lr.T Bl',,-\Cl!.1 ·do1oi11 li in•>S Vw T"P 11( !!;:
• C,11! •i';: ... Hilll. • \r1wl1t. 1.:1).( ... Rl'l1. ·1'.l l-&:.~7 <"
Indus trial Rental 450 Ti\l'I< 71•ronliTf;:;u11d-Cd.\l
ilr :Vl -l !:il'ACI': n1'1v bldg. )~80 H1 ·;1rh fi7.)-!l!l'YI.
~(I-r1. 1··1n111 nff"'" 11;•· r('<tr Lost 5S5
<foor Slti7. n10, J7Sl \\!J11ttier. .• . .
C.:'llA)ft Jj()(]Sl'J.!'l .. l h•on!LOS I: il-1ale Se alp o1n1
()1f1Ct'S, 2 b:Jl h, IJ::I' rrtr r door ~1•1n1(,:<" r al , vu ... w ,r;1Y &.
Sl'.lf) 1110. 121n Lo~n n St .. l.'ill1 SL N?.B. Rf'l\drtl.' Call
C.i\1. Days l~lfi-:i03J evc5, collrrt 2!.,-.AT-49.16•1.
~i--0681. lJ)ST 11<-·ar Cosfa lllr.sst GoH
*COSTA MESA C<Jur~P 32nc! Degree * :vlasonf1· ring. ScntlmC'nlal !2!11.t sq ri . '\!O-Z!I) P'111'f'r, JJl'i-v1d111-. Ht'\\'11rd. 540-2U:'~J.
val(' olf 1cc, n1•w bldi;:.
B1\BY . ..;rrT1:-.1;, niy hon1{'.
il!esa (!<'[ \1<Jl'.
;il:l-l:!ll
Carpente r
ADDl'r. & H.c palr, cab,
k11"n1ica, n1arl1lc, fi r tlll',
paneling. .An!iq. r·um. -
i;rpair & rcfin. }'rec c~t.
644-7:J!l8.
LARGE OR SMALL
AI: lypes 1-1.'0rk: Cut dOt'Jrs,
pl!.ncl, cabs. finish fra11K',
r.:,µ1ur, e tc. 962·t9til,
cusrou1 11·oodwork, fnrn11('jl
by Durkan-Jones. Rr>;1d.
Comm . 646-5168, fii;r7813.
Child Car•
Z-JJo SIJ fl, Ir~ f'/llwes. pl('n1y L.OST. 1-'unny fl'rnale feline, 'I
or parking, 11r !) D. frwy. mn's nld, rnrtoisl' color. flea * c. NArrRr~ss RL1'R. '* col!;ir. Cct:>l nrca . Days:
:!:\O E. 17111, C.:'11. &12-14~5 b73--163,1!, F.vc~: 67~7110. CH ILD Care; Intant lo 5 yr.-;.
Have lg home, fn1C1I yd. &
XTllA h;i:t, ~pri nkltrt'rl, In-2 BLK curly hair pups, 12 child 3 yrs. old. El Toro.
dust'I E-2. :l.7JO sq ll &. up . 11'k.~ nlcl. niale 1-1.'/whL chrs!, Jl-'l ission Viejo. g30-4370.
Nr. S.IJ .lii: (;.G, J''w.vs. f(•n1J 1v/11•ht dot on rhrst,
WC'sln11ns!er indlist pk . vi1· Rl'a Sct11. Cil-1. !'~111-~(fj(j. Cement, Concret•
1193-:157~' LO!:ii' lg altrred rn ale BEA'r The Rain! Concrete
INDUSTR!,\I. Unl!s, CM S1ame~c c at . Vic. 1loors, patios, drive&,
JJ0-220 power, S95. ' I~ Adams-Estancia, C.M. FleR suJewnlks. Don 642-8514.
$1 67./il-10, Ph: (i.12-1·185. ('(Illar. rewRrd. 557--0079, I P~A7T;l~O~S~.~wcal~k5c-,~dcric,~,,~instc-c-,"u l
Storage 455 PUG dog,.. male, v l c new \awn 11, saw, break,
Hamilton & Pomona, C.~1. rt'lllove. 548-8668 for est.
STORAGE yard \vith ~hed. App 2 yt'!!. Flea rol, chain. Contractor
2:"i00 s1 1 H. S5:1 mnnlh. 646-::.67.!. Adults. llQ J>l'ts. 4i09 River i\nnoul'l('l1l4: \hf' quiet opening AdulTs, no pets. Pool. Pri garage. 543-2822. 3 BR, 2 Ba, cpt/drps, bltn11 l
,A\·r •• ~· H. U7:t--081 :"1 f'f Riiypnrt Apls , .. for pa tio. 755 \\'. 18!h St. CM . Blk Br.h. Nr ghop'g cnlr,
YE:AllLY-Jr11n111r 2 Rr,.2 Ra. 1\rluH.!t. 1\r1cl l)ie 5l1gh1ly ll'~S r-.11~:;·'-"'-"c·--~----East Bluff Yrly. 6i3-8223 aft 4 pm .
Harbor & Rll'krr. 54!t--14Ji, 1 ... ~AC.:...LE::.:.=5-1 ---1--1-MY Way, ""alilv home 400 -----·------"' ame!i<' ost rom "u ~ Rentals Wanted 460 lxm ! dock nr RC\Jben E . remocl. \Vall s, cei!ir.g, floors Rooms
p11l 1f' la«tni:; ba,v Ad11l1~. no c1u 1l~ open1nl( Of Bayv!e1-1.• 2 BR IJelux !wnhouse, r pl, 1 SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba, cpt. FEMALE only. Bachelor
' I .•. , Q ,,., 19ih SI 'pl I ',,,,,.,,.," I Iii I ,. I 2 RR, 2 i ha, B!rns. Frplc. d-•. bll-. '""I ''"· 111,· pc s. ""'·' ni . . . ., " s. 11. 1 <"· c rps, 1 n~, P\'. pa 10, C'nc . ... "'' '" • Room S75fmo. Furn. Utll ''R ,-., ,,_.N: C II 171'1 "'·' ·--· I Ii I k Crpts, iDrps, 2-car garage, "P· •.• ,_,1-o-67'2370 i' , 1.-.-••w· a ~ .,..'t--.1J;:i.1 i;:11r. tH u s. sm pet o . " ,,., ,,., • .>-pd. Ideal for sltJde.nt. Poo\/rl."e area, $30 0 .1~=~~~~~~~-
llOL.SES & Ar1ts. \\tint,.r &
yf'arly, ll6:'i to St500,
(1111.rshall P.('alt)' 67j.....16()0
e ON BAY e
Nr. Lido. 1 Br
l t9:i. Gil-61:-.0
-.\\'INTER RP.NTAI~';-.-
2-3 S.· 4 BR. Apts
J.1313JiY ltl:'.ALTY 612-3S50
1-Ur, s1t1g!r. a<f11!1, pool, blk
tO '"'"an . .S l ~0-$1 ·1 :1.
6\,..72~.·,. l'+!--'lli17 r\f'~.
o II 'b I SHI~ .. ".009 C.mllrlgr, ~ll-1247 ""' ""'"' COZY " blk ""h l BR 1• 6'2-85~. S . ol 1V}'. r uxury apt. 1 ------~---V"t"t-"V't\l.J • ni .,,. • • • .... ="=-"--~--~~ \l'fde<:k. Ltke Jl('w lovr..oty LGR 2 . BR. $150. 2 l.Jl(.; •-h Ba. Patio. All extras. $250. NICE room for "'Orkin~
I GARAGES 120 EA ~' El Huntington ~ec Yrly. "A" "742. 67" "37. 11hag crpt, drpi;. S265-less · -· ·-.er< U"f9""V J"VI man. 'vlth or without cook-
for Rartlen!ng 675-6572. Ca rn1no. ~7-4-0l2. 673-1418. WALK TO BEACtjJ * BRAND New DELUXE 2 lng priv's, E. Costa Mesa.
\\',UJ< to beach & :i1twes. 2 1 BDR.\.f dnwnlo1-1.·n Cn~11;1 Lovely I. 2 & 3 BR'5, Cpt, Br, 2 Ba avaU Oct 15. 642--0326
UR., 1 ba., cpts, clrps, slo\·r. Mrsa. No chl]dren (Ir pets.1 ~'--';."'~·c.ob--lic""=o-d~w~hr~·-"~'-~c9Sc7_lcyc.,o'o'-IY;,·-675-3'00~~~·~~~~ -,-B-l_k5_1_ro_m_l_l._B_. -,-,.-,,~FU-rn
rrfrll'.:. No PtlS. $180 r-.10.1 ..:"-'-~"c"c' ~-~~---S\35 2 BR. 2 Ba, cpts, drps, LIDO Bayfront; Dock;, 3 Br, util pd. S75/mo. Ideal !or
y1.·11rly. 645--4•11~. F1\;\11LY 2 ~!.'r 2 Br -t s\')\'C. blll)S. $450. Oceanfront, turn, 3 Br. i;tudrnL 64Z-8.'i20.
'VALK 1 lilk !f\ ~llch t, Sl4ii/mo. 995 ·val e nt i a. 894-2l52or8~7-5491 $325, Agt. &l&-Cl732. Pui a ll!!le "loor" in your ~lon.-s, 2 HR, l BA upfl('r. Fn<'d _yd. :-.'r, Bakcrl~1cn· l,-.-D~R,-tll~lcl2"5c.cGo,-,~,c....wa_le-,·l2-cB"Rc,-1"1\::...b-,-.-s""_.Pc•_lo_o_c_"_"_·I Levis sell tho!\e b11ublc~ for
Cr1o;;, •!rp10. c;tovr/rf'fr1~ <ln,n. incl. I oldrr pE"mn prP.f. No Frplr, g;ir .. pAlio. $250 mo. "hucks". CaU Class>fied
smn t1111 y,, 1r11 r,r-....,;~r;i_ r ill i:;.i~.r,r,7~ ~ ~""": fl"!"-)W:W.,'UJ.1:-644-7597. 642-5137~.
~---------------
Le<'. SIO Jteward. Call Polly etc. No job too small.
Pf.R'.'11 Tennnt. II yr.~. 111 &l2-.'t2!l:t ,-!)<17,0036. 24 hr ans. Sf!rv.
present apt. 2 BR, unlurn,1 -'.----'-------Jg kit. \\"ill nlainTtiin , or.5ire SJL~ER Grry toy pooflle. Additions* Remoclrling
hoa! doek. $2(K), Refs. from hiur cul .stw~. co 11 a r Gern'ick & Son, LiC'.
landlord & ncii:-hbors. N_B, v.•/t>ells. Vic ~boo l_sle. 673-6(}41 * 549-2170
J:ilh to ;i(l1h, 61.r2205 nitcs. Ri•ward offered. 673-2.18:1. Driveways
Days 1!9&-54411 \VHITE poodle, male, flea HA\VLEY'S Dr iv ew aJ
PllOF'ESSIO'.'\AI. l'oupll' & mlor. name Nccps. I-I arbor Con ting, hflve It dorw> now,
dau11;h1 (lr, llf'Crl rurnished ;:!iMV 1-l!fl. G.M-IG3·I Rcwiu'(I Winter is roming >l>-51!5.
ituhlt'! Cd \-1. 2 Bil. hllr (Jr !..CJST Tues, Blk Lab, !I-fa.le, &-7 pm.
apt. fn1m 0 11·11c•r. \\'ill 111k1• \\'r11ring lt'afhcr ,~ flea col,
xl nt c1tr(', P ho ne 675--0305, lnr, Pll':-i ~e 1'1111 5.17·92.14 Electrical'
Apr . 1411. Ol>n't give up lhe ship? EL E CfRICIAN, licensed,
llOUSF: Jl 11ntl n~? \Va!<'h tho'.' "Li!il'' 11 in <'1&1!15ificd. Ship bonded. Sm.n l\ jQhs, me.int.
QPJ.~N llOUSF: rolp111n. lo Shore Jl('sUlt!I'. &12-5678 &. rep:\!t'!L 5'18-5203 ·--_____ ,
/
I
I
y
,,AIL Y PILOT Monda)', Srplrrn~ 27 l l1/1
Gaf'dening
AL'S GARDF'.NING
for ga.rden1rtg & & m a 11
Jantise'"aping servi('{'s. call
5'10-5198. Serving Newport.
CdM, O:l8111 MPS&, Do\'t>r
Shores, WestcHLJ~. c.~~* LANDSCAPING * 1\ew la.,.,11s, sprinklers, ar-
bors,. pa!IV'.\, frn~s. \rat!s.
L1c'd t'ontr . .\la!>trr Cha!'g(',
13 yrs Joc· 1':\IJ. 536-Jt"J:i.
PJ{OFl:'.SS!Q'.\',U:-c;al'dener,
Painting &
Paperhanging -··-------f\o \Vas;1n1;: * WALLPAPER * \\hl'u )tltl call ",\lac''
).l~l+H f,..lii.1711
* J;o.;TF:RIOR £..\"Tl::J{JOH. *
J41c, u-1.~. guar-.i.n!l't'd. C.i.li
lh1.rr1s, 612-i»s. E.~p1.'l·t
a1t'!ess spra}1ng.
30 lh}' Spec. l :;1ary ~tui·ro
& rn111 S2:i:i 1 st•1I")' -S3G~
Fret' t·~t. Li~'d/lns. :;o ;1')
tree 11ork, pr u n i n g, •·xp. l..o<'Hi ri'f".s. &::J-O"O':l
spMnk1er5., l'lf•an up JOI>$, PAl.'\Tl.'\C, pro!es£1onal. All
l andscap ing. G1"1lrge, \\Or k gu<1rn . Colo r
6·16-5.S93. $pe cl ~lis t. 96 2-61·13,
GA!{. & ~arr! c!t>anin~. \<'!) ~l i-1.Hl.
Chei'!P· No Job lOQ i;m •• call p '~A~P~E~ru=1A~,7•c7-=E=r.-. -<-U.,.,., ~IO,....m
842-i:!Ti or S 4 i -I 4 6 S v.'Ork, no job 10o1 small. All
an;1ime. Cu3J"ar._ For Frft' est. Call
Japan1>M' Gard,·rlt"r F.,_p·d. ~.•"--0.316.
Yard \\"ork. Cll'an-up. \'l'\YI.., paper ha nJ: in g
Tr 11nrntn~. plan1 1nt . ~~r..a.1::)t,\1 nri,t.;;u<,ran1ff'<l,
f,..!i>-O;l1;"--~-!l"h: <':>:, ri;1n :S.'h11ar.z
CREATIYF: l;~\RDE.'\l.'\G _;.;;-.. ; • .:..;p l•r S-h-:1 5:!.
.\lrnntl•nan._•,,_ Cl.-atHl;i ar'Jo.l PP..OF!-:::G:JU:"\,\L-p3-,:--i'.ll-"+---.
!and:;ca1nm; M.-1"\lct>. rn'l' 1n:1;r c'x·er He·~""'· \'.c~.rk.
estimall'!' 6-1&--l!P."l_ , ,e i 1_..5_ ~~~'7.-<:l. !-~'-1-11-l.
EXP. Ja]ltlMse Garrief)t't. pc\ I;.;-TI); G H or:~~ s I
Know h01\, up-keep, plant )!"'~a."an'.e•• .. ; ..,(•rk L.t·'d An)
pest, tnmming, cle.an-up. s:te ,oo. Ca:.! {;;;,..;,;.;o.
~3-186. \'OL' SlJf'ply n lt' pa 1 n;,
AL'S Landscapl!lg. Tree Rro!T'.~ p.i!nted ~JO ca. Alsc
Nmoval. Yard N'modeling. (';o,te r:or. Call ~l<J.-':'0¥5.
Trash haul:ng, Jot clranup,
P.l'pa:r ~pnnkJel"S. 673-UOO. Profession al-Reas
P.<-ts furn . Lie Ins. 8-17--1128 J apanese G<in:!en1ng
Commercial . Residential Pla;;ter, Patch, Re""lai r
Industrial 6-15-03-15 .. PATCH PLASTERI:-;G
Ex.PER. Hawaiian Gardener All typ€s . Free estim11te5.
Com pleteCarden 1ng Call ;..t0-6825
&-rviC't'. Kamalanl, &J&--16':'6. I "~-~------Plumbing EXP. Japanese gardefl('f,
Complete n1alnt. .Free STEVE'S Plwnbing repairs
estimates. &15-0.')..!7. & small install. Scr.·1ce
LA\\~ r.famt. Jfauling, rK'\lo' rails & hrly ra1ts. 826-:1-16~.
Jav.ils, clean-up, pruning. PLL . .\1BT:\'G H.EPA!P.
Fr('t: e~t. Call 5-16-73i3. _ t\o joh 100 s111all
Exper Japanese. Gardrncr I --~~·~&1~27-371~28=•==-
Complcte yd service. Neat COLE PLUMBING
& Rclia. Free est. 6-12--4389. 2-1 hr. senit'e. &15-1161
JAPAKESE GAP.DENER ~~?~ .. -·-----Complete Yard Care, -
P.easonab!c. 6-12-&185. T. Guy P.oof1ng, Oral D1rrct.
J do my 0\1-'n \\"Ork. 6-l:>--2i80,
C0:-01PLETE lawn & garden-:i.IS-9:">00.
i1.~ service. · • Jim 548-0<\05 Sewing/ Afferai1ons ---General Services EUROPEA!'l"
DP. ESS.\1AJ\INI,
TJ-11:"\GS by :-.loose, Lt. A!! C!l~\om Jilted. P<:'rsonal
elc'c1., plumb, tencr, 1 ill', I ~~l'_,_,_h'~'-"~'-"_vi~'-"·~G77~J~·l784_0_
ins!ln~. carpentry, paint etc. e Drt>ssn1ak1ni; -/\11 f'rat1ons
;:,l5-()S20. Dcsh;nf'd !o suit ;.-011.
Call .Jo * &\G-G-1~6 Hauling
Alterations -642-584.S HAUL!'."G, )-;:.rd 0<'".an-up ' -
•. «al, ntf'u ratr, .w yrars f'XP. by t:'Xpcnrnced c n 11 c i:: r
studenL Large truck. JWas.
~·1-l S.16.
Tile
CEH.A.\llC llle nl'.'W t,,_
cJcanuJ)!I. n;modr\. Free c&t. Small
r. U·,c< do•t. h·",
YARD, garage,
.emove .,, ' J joOs wt:'lcomr.. 536-2.J26. l c•~k~'~'~'~o~•-d~'-'_·_""~'-kh_~_·· ~~~~iiii~~-~~~ &17-2666. ;
TP.ASH & Garage clean-ur, I E"1l'oyment J[fi• ~
7 days. FJ'('e t'~t. Anyt1ml'. '·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~· ~T;;; ;tlS-5031. 1 Housecleaning Job Wanted, Male 700
Bac.k To S1·hool ~pel'ial ARTIST 11·ill do ur\11ork for
Currrt Cleanin~ By lil!Slll<'SS f 0 r m~. au~.
DIAMOND 1 ·1r!'ul.a1~. 1.ost!'r~ •1c, Vt'f)' 300· Shampoo ~1~. ~tell.m ~2.IJ r1·a~nahle. !J6Z-i.i~ill
Rc·pa1rs & JnstaJ!;it 1on 1 7~=-~~~-~=
Fi"C'r F:~t. &l~-1:'.17 Job Wanted, F emale 702 --l\l('Sa Cl('an!ng Srr.1rc
Carrw1s. \r1ndows, Fir.or ('tc.
Rl'sid . & C0mr11c'l. 5"18-1111
Bay & &•.:irh ,/noltr1nal
Crpts. \\"inrln11s. ([or>r:<, t>Tr .
Hr~. & C0n1rn). f>46-1 •1fll.
Ironing I---='-~---~-JRO'.\"JNG dllne in my home
$1 ~ 11n hr. * * 6!7HIS2.t> '* *
Masonry
fmrcK. Bl•1t'k f, Sl{1n~
l1r. C:.IJ bi't 1,·1"n ;:,p\I S.·
(,J'\i, f, 11· 1 ~!.1~.
Daily Pilot il'anl Ads rove
h:.ri;ain.'> galore.
* * *
('Q_\IPAXI0'.\·.~·1··y pn~111r,n
hy p{•r s on a bl1>, u11rn-
' 11 n1hl'n·1! l;_1dy. No---11c('irl<'nl
dJ'J vf'r. Vrr~<it ile.
f{('f('l"l'tl('('~. fi7.".--0:i2~ ---T\'PI~I. ;.;•'11 I .. fr •·-.:r.
l\l alurc p/r. !),\.\[ 1111 !2
nrrnn Tur~ lhni ~11 1 .
~~".ii-704:l.
r1<.: Bkk"p r. l!\'Y 1n<h1~
h1(•kcn,11nrl. \\'r111t" rr•p,
1 "'~111nn 11/ft1lt1rf'. $7fill. 1110.
i;:::l--S~i•1 , --------;\l[)/".<; f1\r Cr•n 1•n1r>~r1•r1('r,
,,Jrkrly <·:1rr •w f.1n1llY cnrc
l l•11 nf·rn;1kcr~, ;,17---(i.-:~1
Scol l idle i!en1s now~
* * *
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
J[Il]I .____ _ ...... _,,·e•__,J[II] I J[II] '--1 _ ..... _,-__,J[Il]I .__ _ ..... _, ••.. __,J[II] '~----·~J[II][L_ _ ..... _,-.. _J[II]
Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, No & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 ~ WantMI. M & F 710Help Wanted, M & F 710
.\ B<·Uf:'r l'l·mporary
POSl!lOn
URGENTLY
NEEDED
• Secretaries
• Typists
• Repro-Typists
• MTST Op~
• Keypunch Oprs
• Packers
!nt1 •1..,·J('\1 \ng l l•JUl':-r.
!l,1n1·ll.1n1 ,\ !r11n-tp111
\'.ork 11hl'n ,~. 1111erl'
.1.•!U \1 ,-,111'
Interim
Pe~onnel Service
778 W. 20th, C .M.
642-7523 546-2592
_.\cct~. Con .. :r. Sl:.!K
r c Bkkpr-Cons1r s·~:iO
Payro~!-Con:<'!" S!j((l
F C Hkkpr ~·(' ~ 1'00
[5,·rOI\ (JifH'•'r Opt_'ll
'.l!orl!;""g(' L.u;in S.-{"'y ~i~
.\c·c:ng Cli:rK SJOO
ChJi:f '.l!a,nL $.!-$6 111·
NEWPORT
Pe rsonnel Agency
833 Dover Or., N.B.
642-3870
LARGE OFFICE
RELOCATING
TO
NEWPORT BEACH
The Avco Financial Center will be the new home of GULF INSUR·
ANCE COMPANY'S P•cific Region . We will need a completely
new c lerical staff and insurance experience will assure you of Growth
Opportunity 4nd Adv•ncement with our FIRE and CASUA LTY
Company.
We have the fallowing
INSURANCE
positions available:
GENERAL OFFICE
Policy & Diet.phone Typists
Secretariel Rec eptionist
General Office Clerh
Casualty Raters.
Property Raters
Engineering & Audit Clerks
To Arrange An htterview
CALL ( 213 I 553-1757
Sund•y, Sept. 26-1 pm to 5pm
Mond•y, Sept. 27-9am to 5pm
THE GULF
HAIRDRESSER \II a n I e d .
f rlC;."rease your presen t
salary. Phone 67?,,...8250.
e JlousckeeIJ('r
L..aunclreg1 •
~tldd!e aged lady prel'<l. No
~)I.per. nee, will train. Apply
in person only, ask for ~·!rs.
Curney. Bay Vie1v Conval-
escent 1106p, aJ5~ Thurin St.
Costa P.1~a.
l!SKPRS Eniplyl' pays fee.
Geoq.~e Allen Byland Agen-
cy 106-B E. 16th, S. A.
547~395.
INVEST IN
YOUR FUTURE
BE YOUR OWN BOSS!
Leese A Yellow
Taxi Ceb
Call for .Appl
546· 1311
Ask for Hern1an
IRYINE PERSONNEL
SOOllCES.,AGENCY
Free & Fee Positions
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
ANGELS
DO-IT. YOURSELF CENTERS
\Vil ! Be Opening A l\e\v Store In
llunt ington Beach in October. _
\Ve \1•ill have a nun1ber of full & part t1n1e
positions available. \\'e a re uiterested in
career 111 i11ded people. Angels offer s an un-
usually great opportunity fo r advancernent
becattse of our r a pid gro\1•lh & expansion.
Excellent e1nploye benefits are avail able to
full time en1plo yes.
Jntervie\.\•s \viii be conducted on
Sept. 29th & 30th from 9 a.in. to 4 p.n,.
at the Royal Suites r>.1otel ,
15401 Beach Blvd., \Vesln1ins tcr
Please apply ln person.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2?TH
Experienced Sales JJositions On ly
PLUMBING-E LECTRICAL
HARDWARE-AUTOMOTIVE
HOUSEWARES-SPORTING GOODS
LUMBER-BUILDING MATERIALS
PAINT GARDEN-PATIO
THURSDAY, SEPT. 30TH
Non-sales Positions Onl y
CASHIERS e RECEIVING-WAREHOUSE
LUMBER STOCKERS e LUMBER LOADERS
TRUCK DRIVER e FORK LIFT DRIVER e CUSTODIAN e
Paid orientation, job instruction & on the job
training will be conducted in one of our exist·
ing Angels stores in Garden Grove or Nor·
walk prior to the new store opening date.
ANGELS HOME CENTERS
G Oup Acctng. Clerk to $500 A division of Daylin Incorporated INSURANCE R Document An equal opportun;ty employer
ACCOUXTING CLEP.K Control Clerk to $410 Help Wented M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 ,I-Clerk Typo.st fo $400 ' \\'e ar(' ]!)l)k1ng for il youni;: E I
ii·onian \":\fll"r. in p:iyroll, An E~ual ·Opportunity mp oyer Girl Friday $450 N.l'.:ED REAL ES ·r A 'f E ;,;;,;;;;,;;,;,..;;;,;;;;,;;,;;;;,;;;,;I
hank J"r>r<1rH•1hat'1on .~· stal t'·f ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~i'"ii"~~;;;;;;~~~~~I P /time Sec'y to $325 SALESPEOPLE. llai·e goo<l Rrc('pt/Typ1st HiO n1<"111 1i1'l·r .• \l u~t 11ork 11 ell _ -~.J M & F 710 b 1 111 w p n1, ~··oo
W d M&F710 H I Wanted M&F710 HelpWantsg, ,00 , ••• 1711, 1,1 1_,,""' C\l uyers uryouiose 1on1es · · · "" 1n a b'TOUJ1, :\lnr !><il:iry & Help ante • e P ' -.oo . • • '"---· & income Jll'Op<'l"ty loo. Call Crcdu .\Tgr lo ~.J70
frin••(' ho ·n,.ffl~ l'lt'll~e ~uh-----------642-1 470 t f I · · f~rcr·pl10ni~1 ~..,..... ., ~---~ EXl)ER. Nurses Aide, over Of ay or 1n1e1·vie11'. ~"'" n11t f[ttaltl1ra11ons 1,y 1n~1l t ,\.).$l:-lT,\'.\"'f Bookecpt·1· to BOYS 1~14 21 fu ll & p/tlme "knds: & \\'. -E . LACJIF~N.\1\'EP. B<o1k Telli>1' to ~·176
!•): Thr ,Jolly J{or:f'r, Jnr. h:uidie 11·nr1an!y journal, Lo deliver papers in the San • ho.tel JANITOR, expe11enced, .1860 Ncwpol"I Slid. Ktypunch J ·:;l}-.~:."lO pn1 12'.!7 Log;i n. C . .\l. ~(\;2G. dadv :-.ales sunin1ary, col-Clemente. San Juan Capis-11kda~s. fletirement • even 1 n gs & . n lg h I.' 646_3923 eves 67,1_1577 10 ~2.9J hr
ACc.-r·s Tr{,\l:\!EE: u ,t 1!1:!> lr<"t;on~. s<"1-v1ce t-ash, ;.1nd trano and Capistrano Beach !l62-5J31. pemiancnt, full t1me pos1. -H.i· AppojnlJTif'nl
PBX rl'lirf. Prefer au1o:n<J· area. EXPER Credit & Collection tion. S2.67/hour. 499-1311, NIGUEL NEWPORT 111\~lt'i·n gro11 Ing con1pan.1
~l'1!"1 you uff on .1·011r ln;:h
P1l} 111g c<>rr.·er. l.1·1·1·ly f\/c.,
f\111 p!'<>[Jh', \';11·u'(] <!U\lf'.S.
Co. pi!)!' fc·c. SlfMJ.
nve l'xperirnec, call .\1rs DAILY PILOT lite bkkpng 111 je11·elry more. ext. 356. PERSONNEL PERSONNEL
Brant al J ohnson & Son 492-4-120 40 Hr. \Vk. Salary open. 2300 'J·-A-N-'l_T_O_R_w_·-,,-,-,d-.-Ba~p-l~is-11 AGENCY AGENCY
L1neoln .'-.·li;rcury ;,io-:io:io. BUSBOY Harbor Bl., C.M. Conv. Hosp., 661 Center,
OrhPr F~·~ Joh~ Al'all.
Cull ;'\Jar~· Ler-, 3~()-61J~J
<-:0/IST,\L. /IGE~{"Y
.\S.<;l::\1BLY: Fine local eon1-EXJK'I'. Over 18. :'11L1st be EXPER. Cooks helper, 40 hr C.i'.t. 54S-:J;i8.). Secretary
puny is star1111g n~I\' d1v1sion Clean & Neat: Apply in per-wk. Very littl~ \1·knd '1·ork.lii""""""""""""""""""'ls11 JOO, 1y~ n11n. IQ. \!\Isl
nreds gals ll'llli so1ne rxper. son, SLjl'I & S1rlou1 , 5l!:IO \V. S33-6900. J. W 0 11•ork Salurdays. ;)und<i.y /.-
soldrnng pnnled eirt-uit Coas1 lll1y, N.B. l::XP\l Cake decorator. ROBINSON'S 1\lo111Jays oil. '.!l\XJ 1!:1rh\•r Bl td Adi<ul-.: 00 C II ~~--___ hoards. To S2_ hr. C1\SlllJ::H. .I',, Lountt>I' h<.-'lp. fcniale iv/some exp. a e NEWPORT e
Acct. Clk/Asst . Bkpr. (;,JI Helt:'n lluyrs, :>10-6().jj Vaealinn &. \[l~Jllcal plan. :i.IS-2&80 or 548-3031. BEACH Payroll Clerk
R<•q: t11in1mun1 <If .~ YJ's ··X· Ct/STAL AGENCY All wknds & holidays off. BP.OILEF:. cook 11, a 111 ed.
f!•'r. 11 .' iic·<·r.~ rf'Pll'. ea.<h 27fl{J llarbf.lr BJ al At!anis Cul! S:',3-M.f-ti a rt 2pm. • cxpd. Apply in pc™n, The 1~·,·r11•t~, bk ro•cnncil s. ~f'nl ASS~Ll~RS Jo r r·an1per Cl\JLDHEN BACK To Village !un. Balboa Island.
kr1n11!1•d<;e of ac1.:1g & hkkpg factory. Apply r.taJOr\\·ay, SCHOOL? You can earn _N~'o:_-:p~ho~o~•-<~'1~1~•~p-lro~"-·~~· pty)('(·IJ11rl'.'s, typing !"-,() 11'Pm S6!l \V, l!!th !';1. C.\1. I 1rhile they earn. Be nn FASHION :.lyllst for Bre ~l'l<:'f'll t< '· tmJ f:larr .~;i.J;o·y A'il'l~ACTIVJ:: young M,lrls & Avon rep1·csentat1ve. You'll Line. No invesl. \Viii train.
+ lrlnge l.o\!nt·li!.~. Call fnr "nnif'n for dtrec;L srlling. ha\·c your O\l'n business, }-"or \otcrvlew. can flo
lnt<·r•J•·w PP 1 ''.l·IJ F<>ntasti c -n1nney. Sc·ll & your O\\'ll hours, your own Armstreet. 523-9348.
·l'.12·1!.(!, ask for .\frs. Uon. id{'a . earn tangible 111oney. ea rn ings . Call no1v, .::.:::.:::.:='-"::..::::c:.__~I ~:i·,., FE.\1ALF.: Piano player, f',rl
_:' :___ _, l~f,~l;)-:..::.3"~·-7~-~~~--;,.J(J...j().ll. & Sat (:'Ve only. Call nigh1
ACCOUNTING CLE ~,K Auto Parts Delive ry .. -c-1.-E-R-,-.~T7Y~P~IS~T~-"-°/7b~kk7p-g bartender, Shamrock. 1\no11' poF-t1ng. A/P, AI K \l"e nf'rd one sharp young f'Xpcr. CREDIT.~· c,)l!eruon ().l6-1·128 Call Lorr:1ir11• f I I .:_c.:.ccc;:_,,~====~
Full Time &
Part Time Openings
for
MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
Exjl('ncncetl
f:xC\'ptional Benef1t,o;
.\Tu~r ba1·t' kno\\"ll'dgr f1[
11·urkl"rlr·n·.s conip. & .soine
d<11a procr~s1ng tiack:o,'l·1111r1d.
Accounting Clerk
;\lu;;t 'type-~JO 1v,p.n1, lTilni-
mun1, r\n(nvledge of A/P &
A/R. i\ljn. :.! y1·s 11·orking ex-
pel'. Kno1,·l<"U~e ot d""ta pro-
cessing hclpfl1L
\\"E.l1TCLIFI-' n1~n 10 11'nrk in c ·r P<o·t.~ 1iri,·kground hclpu. ?..3 irs. FIRE .DISPATCHER
Accounting T rainee
Son1e ~1a1ls11cal 1\"0rk. Ac-
curate lypi~t. IO .ad<ll'l". drpt. Sonic V\V parts kno11·1-l\gr lo :.::0. '"C n ED IT Apply l11 perwn JO-.l p.n1, f'ER.<;ON~E::L AGE'.\"CY cdL'" hr.lpfu!. But not nee-BliRE/\U, San Cle1nl"nle $633 A Mo. To Start # 2 Fashion Isl., N.B. Order Oe•k 20 13 \\'e:;trhff Dr., :\'_B. "'" I Year exper. operation of '" ess;tJ)'. Csll llcrh S-12.,1 13~, ·192~1104. Equal opportunity en1p!oyer ~lalr. i\Just. hf' AblP 10 611-277(} .::C~~=~"'"""""-\ multiple s1\·itchboard, radio-HARBOUR YW CLERK TYPIST telephone base unit, or sim-.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,.!!!!!""'!!!!!'I .ai least -lj . Gd fulurr .
For Police Dept. il:•: "qu1pn1ent. Ty~ .. 35 LOT MAN, GENERAL 27635 Forbes Road
type
ADVERTISING
PRODUCTION A RTIST HAHYSITTl.'IG In n1y hon1e.
For Nr>,\'f.J()l"t Bt•:ich Ad Agrn-.d:i.\s, 7.Jc hr. r.irl ::. boy 9 111
f l'. )hist J1in•e /.:•«l hoilrd s1·hc.:",l, Vic Penney 's, l!.8.
skills, ~ ;.Ille to ~p<·r 1.VfJ". X)i-712\ , _________ _
know p11nl111g, pP~!Ut'liOn [3,\LIYS!TTEll, l 1 \' c -In,
& ,~1·h1.•rhil1ng. G(~)d oppor-ninthl'r \\"orkirn? n11es only.
1un1 t~·. Srnd rl'~Un)<' lo (l,1s-H.oom/hOard & :-r. a I a r )'.
~l 'i(·d nd no .. ~'.\-!, J)a1l y f>1lnt,, ~'"~'"-"~·l~'<~··-~-~~--1'. Q _ B'IX I~, CO!\!a ;\lr1>a, 1-B.\ilYSJTTLlt lll'C'(lc>d, our (';1' ~!2li:!6.
Adm. Sales
COLLEGE
GRADUATES
START A
PROFESSIONAL
CAREER
TODAY!
hon1r, 1n:i1nrr. '.\Inn thru
!-"1'1, 2 ~11l t"h1ld, r,4z-107·1 af1
'· B.\B\':;rrTElt -l:1·i•-1n nr
out. (/wn 1r;on,r. " i>rn·5::))
1•n1 $1Ill1n•i, ,\12-1111.
l\,\fi l ."1f"!'TET: !0r :! rhil!h"r"I\,
1111 l1nn1f'_ ToH'~-~1\\l -!il'.\I. ~:~II• I ~11111'!'~ .. \~11,..?.li!~l.
Start $430 Per Mo. 11·.p.1n. Accept .resons1h1ht~ CaJI manager. rXi7-0520
l Yrar i;lcrical l'XJl('r. Type \1"ithout supervision. /\ppll-Laguna Niguel
4 ~ 1v.p.n1, App]1(·a11on fle11d-('iltion <lcad!inc Oct. 51h. Ap. 831 -1477 or 495·0417
11111• Oi·t. 5th. Apply :-11:, For-ply rio;i Fores! Ave., City of LUHRS _ _
r sr ,\ve .. CHy of Laguna Lag-una Beach. BOAT COMPANY ~URSES _AIDE: & ll~ ll r
Ilc'arh. LYN rchcr, pin shift. Bap-
Forklift Operators tlst C11n1·. !losp. 661 Ccnler Commission Salesman exprMencerl, n1ust be kno1vl-Needs C -1~ -·~-S1, ,i\I. .> ri-J.:xi.,. Nl'11·es1, !a~1cst, ~"01V1ng t'f1geable in proper fork!ifl
sport, youn~. ai:;grc-~s1ve, nJl('ratini;:: and s.11le1y pro<'e· CARPENTERS i\'.URSES /\i1!rs, all ~h1fl~.
ch•nnn1i r-. 1186,J Sk~· Park Cir dui-,.~. l.ei'i1t Mobil'" Sys-Exp'rl. Pcr w nncl rl e P 1 · ' Dr.. Hldg. l~E. ir...'in~ leni~ Inc. 96"l-'7i6 Hon)! JIO!'pil11I, r-.·.B.
Immediate Openings OfFJCJ-: girl !or dl.'ntnl !:~11,
COMMERCIAL
TELLER
Experienced
ft.:LL llmf'. 11·ill train, Plan1
,1ork, 40 hl' 11'el'k. Some
n1·t>rl1rne. Dfl~·~ & :o;1\1ng
~hlfl . 9\).1--0S71
GAL FRIDAY
H,1 rc (1p!J'H"lu1111y f,n· pr1•_.;0n
"·110 knows color .;,. dl'sign.
849 W. 18th St
Costa Mesa
Costa J\le~a ,
G-16-~-JOG~
OPERATORS
1.v:.;·i;-. all ~h.Hs. i'e1"s(ln11ct :';1Y1rls1\·rnr, \lfgr exp. 011 •. 1·
(lr>pl 1 lnaJ.: I! o ~fl 1 1 a J. S1eady, i,:11 p,1y, G1~-J.r<2. '.\H
Nt·,1Nr1 B•'a<'h. ORJ)rTGk,:r01,~t·1;-
Ilt·aneh Officp
.1S!8 tanipus Dr, N.B,
Noriu \\". J!eif1111a11 :~I0-0633
Recept. Sec'y to $500.
Li IP SI 1 uk. 1 ... 1v~·rly 11..,'ine
oh·~. of 1011 not'J co. Inter·
1·~1111<:: 1·a1·1rty .\]n"I bene-
fit ~-Call .\li~i; Connie,
.»:17~)121. t\fJiga1l i\hf)(Jt P..r-
;;;011111•1 Ag<·nc.1·, 2:io \V. \\'ar-
rlt'r, SUIJt• 21Y.1, S.A.
Restaurant
BUSBOYS
AND
DISHWASHERS
Day & Night
,\pply in 1:icr,,on only
REUBEN E. LEE
l."11 E. CO,\ST !!\VY.
NE\\"f'OrtT BEAC.lf
S.\l~ESL1\U\'
1-8 P,\I. .\1011 1111·11 F"l'i/Sat
11-0 P.\1, S;1lf's ""P rcq'd
:J!:',. 2 1-~0. 1IL1111 BC'h area.
Brr! ,t· 13ri rJi ,..;hop ~·17--0033
--SALESMA N
Yuu1~i:: co. til'<':\1 1~o:icntia1
C.111 :'.Jr~. Sr·hn1id t
\\"E.:;TCL!fl-'
Pl·:nso;.;~EL J\LiENC"{
20 1:; \\"eqtl'l 1ff Dr., NB
61:1-?ii(l , ___ _
S.\Ll:.S -.\i1'n
STOP!!!
LOOKING & ACT 'YOUl.I, :-1"\i(T l\1\lrf\.
1.\TJ·.LY ()-..;: A F"Cl.L lif!
BA1{11A1 1-l-Hll\T~r* FIREHOUSE * 17i !-: 17111 !-'l , C\1.
-UNITED-
CALIFORNIA BANK Xln'! t·s!ab. Irvine ar~:i c'f!. MACHINE SHOP ).:ids, nl'"r 1'.1. f'l 0·a~.,111
I SaJ('s 1n1ndcd person, ~ce Ior c •. 11 !\!1.~~ Juf!rtila, ;).j7~22. Taking appll<'fl!JOns for \\'O l'k from Ollf S.'lnt;i, i\l\(I ,-, .
p,\f:T Tl\ll:. ·rl!1\1 ;-:]'.'I. rl.'1-:1'.Ul :---11• 6 .\lor"u·,·11 R,,v r1a.z11
.VJ. L.ag1111a
-, ... 1 ynurs(•lr. a real career OT>-Ab1<>a1 l Abbot Pcrsonncl '·"""nencerJ Lo<'"an Turn:t rirf'. No e"per 11('{' •• -;;., flry '" " ... ~ .., 1;ortl.!nlly. . .. 111 future for i\"f'n<'Y., 230 \\I. \\'a.mer, LathP pro<luc11on mnn. Ap-$1.f,;; hr. 517-1:>.23 l>f'fnrr 5 Pl!(Jl;f'l i\:'l f TJ!,\f lllLL IOi ......... .__. ............
!•.XAl ;LI·; Vil!! TO ~TA!1T
\ 1.IVET!~I S CA I~ E ~'. H
\l'lTH !JI GN ITY t..· J'i!ES.
"' r 1i.;ht Jli.111. J:--:;irnings con1-
Sltlll' 209, S.,\. ply A.\l only • .%1 \\'. 161 h ·'c'~"~· -------~c I inetlC(' :rr,n1t>rli.1lely should
T!(;E,
TO l\t:P,P ttp \\'ITH Tl!F.
tO;\~T,\1'"'\' Dl:;"\IA ~D::; OF
Tift·: !·"AST, IO:XJ>,\NDli\C
l:>:Vl-.ST;\11·'.:"<T ffl·:Ln, \\'F:
NEED NI~\\' PEOl'LE TO
llF:L.i~ 1:-J t)UI{ SAJ.t:s .r,,
711AN,\C E~1ENT J)Ef-'1\TtT·
i\l!·:i'iTS TO lll~LI' ::>EltVE"
01JH QU,\!.!l-"JF.f1, l'llQ-
FE~S\0:\',\L (l,!I::'.\"TELC:,
® ~H~
EXECUTIVE
Personnel Age ncy
496-1273
'Equal Orpor. :Employer
COOK
r1t1n1e n11rs
JS & 01"f'l"
Apply A!
Gen'I Office $36-0 St., t\{•wport Bcaf'h PART 11n1e fP11111le, g~p'I ()f· bl' in ""f'<'.~~ nf SJOO. prr \\'k.
£ntry le1·cl pos11ion \\'/top 1\1AIDS '1111nterl. Also l\1ALES lire 1vnrk. \\'rift' class1f1Pfi No C':H1\<0~si11g or wlic-iting.
nolch .Irvine .a1't'a lirn1. In assist n1airls. Apply BPn arl No. 308 Daily Pilol. P. ri. J111c1vlr·11s by ;:iprointmerir
Benut. ofcs &-pleasant work-13rcn\'n'l\ tlto1or Hotel, 3JJffi Box l:J60. Costa Me~:1, !12626. nnl,11 !I-~ 11ct:'kdays. L:iu
ing conds. Prorno1iOtW spot. S. Coast, S. Laguna. PART rlnu.• n1a1c1, 2 hall dny~ I _c~·,~,m~o~·-'~'·7;,~r~, '~l.=---
Top bcnrfits. Call i\lls~ :"llANAGER TRAINE ~; -~r 11'k. Call 642-4~10 c"t. SALES
Laur11. ~">7-6 122, Abigail AD-Fernal<.>. Prelt>r roo.:1 421 ur4!14-(J lfj.ll. OPPORTUNITY
bot Personnel Agency. 230 background. i\lust bt' overliii""'-"""""""""""""" MALE • FEMALE
\V. \Varner. Suite-209. S.A. 2L Good hou-& -y. POPKAL CORP #2 1 · h -,,. ,...~ I (Tl.'HSP ,l\!lll' lll\"\)ffi('. SU •
PROFESSIONAL G I Of uoo Apply A! 1 :<lanti:tlly 111 ~our ~parr enera c. .,.. BL'C1,· BE,\0 D·s· N d T . $400 " " ee s ra 1nees 11n;r b.v repres1•11ung a i1n-
CARL JR'S
],J~) Ad.a111s /Ive
TECHNICAL Cos111 ~h'sa Sec'y (lite SH) 26061 LaPaz Rd. S508-$650 Per l\1o. i1p1r fond ra1~i11J;: prograni
SECRETARIAL Srr .\!gr. G11y Pinheiro Acctng Clerk $400 '.llission Viejo Minimum lu ~chool •, :<1'r\"li"e cluh.~ t:
& GENERAL OFFICE --(.'QQJ<:rrtY EXPER. Med. Transcriber Bt1rn J & 5 pn1 Daily ,,x·i:'.11 oi',gan11.a 11on! in 1.,
POSITIONS AVAIL . e BLUE DOLPHIN e Legal Sec'y to $650 iltANAGER Trainct> f or Youni:: 111en n1l"chon1ca1 ,.,-:. ;11\J11nd ~our •·01n1nl111lty_
''-------------------'' • (""1111}"
11
v (.of l'lun :1:1;15 Via Lido NR RUTH RYAN AGENCY Hickory Farms of Ohio per. ·11rlpll;I but not 1£'rfd. \\'" ,11(' ;:1 111il,ior 1n1!11111al I • l·111l 1-'illli.:t' n'"'11"t11!1 BY APPOINTMENT I I I I I D''.o'·T.'I· l(""''P1,0 .. ,,.1. ,.,.001 Store in N.B. Exper. in i\Iu.~t be 19 or ovf'r. ,\hie 10 Jlt1h 1~hr 1•, l1gl1 ro1111n1~~io11 1'70 1 1 .,~.'I fd e ·"1:in 11"11('1111!('.v 0 lY ,-" .,. ''" " ,-= N C\t ''6 1&'' I Ha ve 11"N': & ('lf'or ocr11n
VJew 101. Palos Verdes Pcn-
1n. \\"iH11 Orani;e Cou111y
home or duplex. i~M-6111
The-Jr"'in Co., Healtfln; -Bc-ac:h condo, 2 BR, $21J.~l."fl
value. \.\'ill C)[Chani::e for 3
Bit flxf'r-uppcr houst>. ;\ny.
ptacl' in Orange Cnis. Vn.J.
Jey {Uty, 496-6157.
Jlave 15()' Cornrr con1n1·1
bldg, a.f. RC'a1ly fnr ie11~1nt.
Lie for bar. Trade for dlx
home, 1ncornr or yacht.
Owner: 494-00M.
MINI-RANCH, 1 Back B11y
aret1, bof"S{'S. oonv. stahlc.
2 BR house, $38M vahit, $23
M l'<l· For Income 1~pcrty,
1'0'1 (>r r Bkr. 54Q-2011.
What do you have to trttde!
List It here -ln Orange
Count.Y's J.ar.gest ttad trad·
\~ pofit. 642-5678
* * -
.! ·c••11.'le ·• · 01:iy1t10-N & , " l•~.11 e\\·ror1 •. : <r• ~ ,.. retfl il sa\cs desirable. C;ill s1a r1 11·flrk 11nn1Crliatf'I)', H "'ilh <':;l;o1l1sli••d <1cCOl1nrs. I I " " t k "'"· E:-:p<'I'. ·ref~ req . .:-.A. .,.,.11 n llB 8'7 96n C II 'I L I lfir i1~n11•, oaucu, 1 e nl'11•. h.1,,211,.. ''"· . c-aC'h, ., -1 642-0072 hcl\\'!l Jlan1 & actrptc;!, For info c11 joh ;i • r. 1nrr nr inlet"\•lr.11 , ·1· I ~'"°'") 1• I ,,. l n ,, \' J·: Lf>OKl'.\·(;\,i\'.'\n. H NB ~ T ,.,,.,, ,.,,,, ,, .. ,. ' 1-11 r:J' c ,,,,_,.,_.. · c>< Y or f's 410 W Coa•t wy 4 ·.·~,,. pl•-"'"''''·. "911 "C'd•." -· 1 •• 1--••• ·'· 1». • . l'l\.";\:\'Cl1\I. INVEST\IF:NT . · ~ ., y "''I' "'-'" ' " " • e"1t,1 1,··'"I c·~.1a1e. &ix 41%, S I H 64'2716 DISHWASHER-NITES GIRL FRIDA n~ Jp' I S I M
" 1\;\_\l_,\':"\T R, i-:. r.HOl<ER, u1 e r . . i\IEDICAL sccretary/bkkpr .. ""111· "1 00 y. a es anagem e nt ~:11ni ~pnngs, 328-3~ /lpp\y ln P(•rson. Colony No exper nee .. Apply in per-"d 1 lfadll.-y AIR 776·8551 Candida to " ,, , I \\"ILi. HtLP !'"T'AllT '\'Otl -Kllchen, 3211 lfArbor Bl, C~I ~"" only, Club Grel"nbrook eXll on~· .. ' 1•,T:"~) E11. 3 ll\•r, • w.lU1• IX A c,\Jlf.:L R 'l1fAT JS AEAUTIC~AN wanted l)O\I'. ""'·~1 I" '--tw Ell" & A/P. ml'l'.:hcel lranscr1pt1011 necriN·l t· p1onrer nc\V f11'1:1· ~httg l'P". COil\', Joe. &· ("Jl,\LLJ-::\(;[N("I, c O:>!Pl:..'T· Com~lli:s1on & iruarantcr. Denta l Sec'y to $600 ~:tbe;~noF'.~.~lonn or~ ... fd~ct?phone1 •. lns. hilling.I~~~~~~!!!!! ... !!!!~ r111 (:t l1nr f\1r f'~t:il)h~hC>d na-~1.;ioo t'Q. 5 a i:re Lancas1er IT!\"F., i~LEf\SANT. I.· IJayt1me \\'Ot'k only. Cil~I No S!I. 0('nta! f'.Xpt>r, not 11am • Jpn1 See Jeannie i\f1ss1on VleJC; area. 9A:'l1-PRE-SCl-IOOL Teacher need· !\onul 111•111, _.\gr 2.) lo 3:'1,
bal $6.MQ, 6'~ for R.E.R. !llCJ IL\' BF:\\"AHDJ1'\, -rn1inager, ~8--9919 or 267 t . n!'Cess, Spl'C'laiist ne«!s ma-Ed d ' 6P7'.1 . Su brn1! l"l''Unlt' {"{/ in Hun1ing1on Beai•h. Top snlr~ IV'f'•ll~l r't'qu1r«f,
or! 5-l~l-:M21. nnr11 f"l.'IA;<.'CIALLY .t..1_1_1•_h_s_1_ .. _c_.s_1_. _____ 1 lure J.;a l l\'f)O likes 10 \\"Ork "·ar ~. 1,·/.c;alary r('((ultTrnen!s 10. E:-:pcl, over 2L Spl it «hi!L B;u·k;:-rnund 111 nfl.~r1 01·
\\'n111('n~11·f'1sui 1 ,tank.1't'g-sELt".~ATISFY l'.\'G. BEAUTY 01x·n1!nr, J::.xp1t. \\'/p('oplt'. Type accurately. GIRLS FOR Classified arl 110. 2;i0, Daily 6:30 ;i.m to 11:30. 2:30 to ~r"BPIH\':1rt~f)1'l'frrrctl.Con1 -
11li11or, ~l"';i ,,u, ga11gc. rtesl, G\\'EN'S JJEAUTY SJI DP· 1;oo.:i -fringe il('nrrits. Call WORLD TRADE Pilot. P.O. Box Jj6(1, Cosio ~:30. $2. hr. ro s1ar1. Days plt•!t: 1r11 1 111n~ r11.,,)::"r:in1. all
\111 l11rrl S'.lOO, T1"fl. fur gr! !:o-10 CALL NOW! .. ** ·1~1-3m .. • • i\l i:;s Belt.Y :,,)7-6172, Ah1g111l JIOS1csses. i\lodcl TypeA " :'ITe."M, ca. !12626, !"i.'l&-'.lJ.~. ('1'\'S ~36--Gijll. n 11npnn1• hPlll'fll~. (" 1111 ~P hlkf' prf'I, foreign 1n~rlc. 558 0444 Boal .\lanu fa c!unng Ahllor l't'l"SOnnt:'l AR<.>11cy. 230 ~aJe!I Pf'n;onllf'l. $4() ~r PROk'ESSIONAL p h 0 11 e f>:t:i.:il 11 .\lur1cl;1y ~<'pl 27 for
:tl.'>-!11111•.x1 •121 :ilt 3. • COLUMBIA YACHTS \V, \\"11rncr. ~\l ll r 209. S.A. l-'~'•~Y~·-'~'1=3~'-'=6='·="-'~'·~--I ilTrn. \Vornt11, Chi ldrrn tt0licllor. Dana Poinl. San ·ruf's &>p1 :?.~II\ ;:ip1)()111lllll'r1(,
0 ' O ft FAME & FORTUNE Si.T1p1on111111· lrw. • • * * * Ask for Mr. Dorma n Good benelil~. yesr round e519n ra sman (1emenle, Capistrano arl"a. ----
5:1().QOO llun1ingtfl!l lt.1rho11r 11'0rk 111 znorkrn facihlirs. Molr!s S47-5884 HAIRDRESSERS Could Awalt You \Vork In your own hon1e, Sl-llPPl;<.G\1-:-i\JtEHOUSE
h•in1f', o'.'!1'11.r. Trad<' f(•r Al~H.\I Sri·tirlly ~il•'l!ninn, lla1U\\·arr l11~1 11!lati11nis 1 . DRILL PRESS OPERATOR Th• H•ir Factory lndepcnd('nt production Best deal in area. POOne \\'l'll knoi\"11 r1rn1 111ov1ng to ~h)Ck~. 11'/lt"i;, T D:s or lll-1•-:pl'I'. l':st :ih. Jni·;d ('(). GrlCl'.lat 'J"ouc:h-U p. i\1ust be Great opp!y 10 grow \\'i!h lhis moving to new & beautiful film C'OF CES 83S-lol63 OOt\\·e('n 9:00 •.n1. l1vln" r1ro1,1n!e~ frorn th1.~
K11i\1:. (il4l S·lf>'.l:IO~. 612·3~:10 lo• •nr•. l'Xpericnccd. dyl"lllm1<' nc1v co. ]I.lust hav(' Salon at Builders Emporium Net>d fl NEW A •· .11nd noon . .-niry lo•vel joh.
• for 'IV r.ommC'l"cialt, J '' ti k 1 1 * /':no1111ou.~ An11riue V11n. ~ . . 775 MeCorml1·k Al'e. C.M, exf)f'r. dr1llln!l: 1· 1 r c u i t Center (E. 17th & SAnt11. n 1'<'r; n~ 11r11· n sJ'lf)r1 ng I
1'.137 n11u·nor1rl T 1•nn1···r1Prl ,\J,fJ·,R,\TIO~-l..:id,\•, 1 par! I-::qu;il opportunity ('n;ploycr ll(l(lrds. From $2.75 hr. Ana Ave.) \\"Jll hove open-.,..
0
2E:!8.JOE°.Rr INl!m,,!:,-55 RECEPTIONIST ~(lnols llf'lrl. ~!111·1 S~.50.
t1n1" niust ,.,, "~IX-r 1t!<"r. - -"" I , · I •• ~"r · "'· ... · D 0 Good T · Call ll<•h \V11~ .. n. ~~IO·ti0j5 lo hol1~r••:1r, \1·11r1h SllllO. Xlrtt 11 .,.rkir'l: Mn•l. ll7,l-2:l'JO BOUJ\l\J·:t-;J't:R. a11itur r, C;"Jll .rean Bro"·n, ;fflHi():iS inl(s orha1rd~srr:-,11l4m-IZ\:Jl 461 .3().il usy fr:. yp1ng
Trndr boar. TU, t•r "'??1------'---'----rxp'tl H\ u~IO!\ llnrlll'y COAST"AL AGENCY pon gir1, manlcuri~tl. 1---..:::::......:.:_::c_ ___ I ('all Lorrainr ('OST/\L 1\(:1.;:-.,·c v
I 'I • 27-'I '--1 A" C II ~ • "'"Jlt \\'l~TCl·IF0f' 21;1() llii.rtJ11r Rl 111 ;\'l111nt 6t'i-0:\03~k Of" r. Sll"tr~r VACANCIF::-('n~t ITIOTI<Y! Sysl'1Jl\ j,1r l'i\1!'.V GF' Olnf'e '"' rl'lruor n 111 .. aml'l ll oony V'<M1 M''S Beach ho\IM~ time, BIS:· ·~~ -
., · rv.nso~NFL \CE:\C\' !'1-:IJ°JX(f°"r c>ur b<J:..r.;--;·L1;-;-;: Rrn1 your hOU~<'" • ..,pl .. ~1nrc 111 ~11s~ion Vif'jo It. El Tom "'Ho11·Arrl '' 11·)'1('re 11rr you '.' ------~~--1 ~est &electioh ever! &e !he • · ' ' · ' • -" ,3-~·'"' [ ·1 P 'I 11· · Ad h Pl'~ O ttt·• -13 \\'l' . .11t••llfl Do·., N.B. 11-11 11 10~ srll 11 1--1 o,,·1y h!•h:., rlr·. !hnr ;1 r)nil}' Pllot Hl'Pfl, ,_,_,;..., Inst f.0111ethi11~! f'ind If, 181 y 1 ot 111! .'I ave DATLY uu• u~ mi '11" · •• "·' •
' ~ b I '· I &l.1.2i•O Pilnl l"l.1~~1 f\f'ri, r~12-~i!I f'h1•~ol1N! :1d l\"1''!1 lirlp V1J01-i<ell! r,.;~5fi711 plltr•t> 1_1n .otil ! 6-12-.~1711. 11.r~111 ~ gaore. 1r.ctmn now __
-·~---------* * *
•
-.. . . . -. . -. --
DAILY PILOT ;)7
[ ~ _.__, ..... ~l[Il]! ~ _._,__l[Il] I ![§] [_ ........ _-~][§] I .... ~ -·· )[El ;;;;;;;;;i T-"--1"""';;;;;;][i]-fli G"'""""~ )~ i_'_""'""_'1"1°'~)fil I
Bo.ft , Power 906 Camper•, Sale/Rent 920 Tra ilert 8 Travel 97~
I
945 Auto5, Imported Help W1nted, M & F 710 Help W•ntffi, M & F 710 M lscellaneoua
SECURITY
OFFICERS
Full & p/Umt'. Pa trol k
rW'fl dury ~r 35 yrs.
Uni!orm allowance. Apply
fllon. thru fr1, 3 10 5 P:\I,
Room 40:'>, 325 Ko. Broad.
way, S.A.
SECRETARY
Altractive Vlta1 won1an f0r
local space age l1rm. Hte
bookkeeping. Nice: i;'ilt'l .;..
CaJJ ~1ary Let>. 540-1i0~
COASTAL AGE~CY
Zi90 Harbor Bl. 11t Adam!
---SlfcrfETARTE_s _
Ma.)Or land dt'velopment
company Joe.at~ in Ne"-pnrt
Beach i>ttks sec~taries.
'l)'plng 60+. SH 80 +, Posi-
tions require background Jn
constn1ctlon, civil enginttr-
1n;;, ReaJ Esta!e or related
field.
gel! .!>taners \l•illln;;
Cl!'pt respons1b1!1ty.
benehn;, Sa ! a r y
mensurate w expt>r.
64·1·.12.V:.
SECRETARY
to ll.C·
Xln '!
com·
Call
Top !lhor thand &. typing skills
+ exp in le:tler comp mi 10
\\'k in th1~ beaut. bayfront
olfi~. \\'e are look1n.r: !or a
mature 11•om11n i ZS-40 yrs)
who is very \\'C'll groomed &
likes to meet & work \\ith
people. Sefld type-\\'flt!en
resume 1nclud1ng salary re·
quirement to: Box Holdrr.
# 2328, Newport Beach. 9266.l
SERVICE CENTER
AGENCY
500 Se\\·port Center Dr., ~B
*Sec'y /Med. M in . $475
Front ofctaccur typing/ !Jl('
bkkpng. * Bkkpr / A1it. to $500
Background ,\/P, A P... Op.
por for gro\\·th tn pos1non * Sec'y to $550
Carrcr oppor./top co. &. ben.
ef1ts. * Teller to $520
E.~per1enced only
BusyrPres5ure/f'un Job
Free/fee Po~111ons
Helen Schaffer
644"4981
SERVICE Station Salesm:in
p/Ume. :"\ear 1n appear.
E.xptr. 2500 Ne\\'p()rt Bl\·r! .•
C.:'11.
TELLER; BeaunfuJ bank lo-
catied in gcrn1c atta. Grtat
advanet!ment opportunity.
Start $400.
C&U Jean Bro"''"· 54(}..6055
COASTAL AGE'.\1CY
27'Xl Harbor Bl at Adams
TOOL MAKER
Call for appt. &9P:-.1
S.IB·S.135
VIETNAM
VETERAN
0n('e 1n a li fetimt oppor.
io !!art a mgmt carerr 1n 11.
local branch of one of rnun-
tnes b1ggtst compan1e~
Planned training program
lets you learn 1,1.•htle yo u
earn. Fine hE'l'"ll'lits pkg .
car, expensts paid. This is
not a Wes job. Star ! $5-100.
Call Jean Brown. 540-6055
COAST AL AGE~Ci'
~ Harbor BJ at Adams
\\'O.\!AN n e eded '" housecleaning. 5 hrs da. 5
days 11·. Can provide transp.
~S-l7Sfi.
I[§]
Antiques 800
A'.'ITJQUF. f'urniturP, sf1·eral
r1eces, 224 Sapphire, Balboa
Island.
Appliances 802
EZ au!o \\'asher, a\'OC'adn 2
yrs olr!. xln't cond. S7~
Guaranfeed I..· de 1 iv .
546-8672. 847-8115.
l\!AYTAG auto \\'asher, xh1'1
oornl. $6j. HQtpolnt auto
"ashrr $.j(J, Guaranteed &
r!e!1\·. 546-86i2. 847-8115.
L,\DY Kenmore auto \\'asher
x!n't cond $~:'>. Guarantccd
& dell\', ;,.j6-8672, S.17-..:11:1.
• i'>!AYT,\G repair man has
washf'r-xlnt cond-drlv \\'/90
d11y ~Jar. $:i0. 53I--S637.
G.F..'. \Vasher & dryer, l'lec.
II hlfP.. $95/lxJth, Cal)
557-9493, 830-1003.
CHEST type :O.!aytag Jreezcr.
$75. 646--0818.
St:ickable \Va~er/Dryer
ne\'Pr uSE'ri. Reriu1rE's 220
11·1r1ng. S275. 646-4i07
Came ra5 &
Equipment 808
• * Comp!f'te S.\l'.I! i\tOVJE
OL'TflT. CaU ;).ll-2138 fnr
d<'ta1ls.
-------·n ?4' BAYLJ/\'ER Exp. FOR Rrn1 or Perm Lar"e Selecti'on JOHN'S BIKES COME TO A:->DIALS R !;S iltynahs CnllM'r frbls. 7l~P. O~iC. l'\i! Bar1':11·1:rla c11 hover Rrslrll'nrf' .70 :"\nm;;rl ~It· ':II
NEW KEYS TO HAPPINESS $.39.95. Parrots SI~ 9.J, ~S. D.f'. Bau tar.k, n>fng ~~:-·P"r 11 /t)("•". t ul!~lrript oont:uned l~ 1rlr t>.J6..:'Jlj.li of fully
I h L-I I ' Poodlt>' $25. (;artrr ~nakr~ ;) ,,;; Call "'f! J :'II pm 5,. 1 d d k or t 11. gcoS v11. ues 1n Gallry. Enc:! hl'arl :-.1.n1 Reeond·11•1oned •Nfl supp y Ue to oc NEW. L:SED $2.98. 3645 IV, /'.lcFaddf'n, N~?i2". stnk conn. SS500. 962-.J~:i!J , c--;;:,-.,;,.,,--,---Auto Service, P a r is 949 ~EPA IRs ORGANS-PIANOS .S.A ~S.'i20 96&-.}123. '6'.l \'\\' Po,.....'fop llll'llJ""r !O:::C:C-0'.".'7",,....----Used v.w·s
,\LL .\!AKES & /'.JODELS You'll Ba Glad You Did GEESE, grey -&---;h11t& 1 ~. i:-.:so',~,R~Doc-c,,,,c,11c.,cc-~B.,,-11 v. Rt'<'t>n1 ovrrh1111J. n11 11rf'S CORVAIR Pans 63 trar.i.. Porsches-
mo '.'\eii·port Blvd, C.:\!, Satislaction Gua.rantl.'ed dt1rks. Bantams 11.11 kinds boat. 4 t')l. Univl'r~Al f ll ll .J6 l)'Y! m1 ~ S?.rll ~.'h-.7fiii. a.\I 4+.<:pr!, con1pletr 1111h
Cl J I J . SI s~ ;,'} 2612 ,, D chttth $75, al~ rl11frren11al c m rs & Vans OPE:\' 10.9 ,\Jon thru F'ri lOOM> rom arge r.e ecnon + -· . . c~11 r. MVP1'!., :\Int. SJOOO. 6;3-Si96 C B !or ·5:~ auto !r;-1ns. $20 . a pe
SAT b SUN 9.5 Convenient Terms C 852 1 c"o'-'c'c'c'c""-=='="c'~=-=~ ySc les, i"es, 9"5 !>4~:o11i ;iJt 10 11.n1 S11nr!ay ltfl':O 30 Day or 1000 1'.1ilcs 645-4720 Open Ev<'s 'ttl 9, St111 1-6 ats coole rs ' G11a.rao1ee
'66 GLASTRO:-: 23". lluer! l iii~'1~~~~~~~it i 2 C'he'l'y A~lros \\'Hh nre~ -\\'111 arrE'pt Trar!,.·In5-Bye'5 Keys to cnvtor. marint> h':'arl. hilit P:ir•s & LAhtlr • Engine •
31" Gaf/ers & Sat!~-r!hi Happinesa CHI:-.:CHJLLA slll'er PPrsia.t! tank. r'1dio, xlnl cnnr!. $~:!OO. V \V. 10 ChP1'Y ;irlap!<ir~. Tran~.• Front&· Rear Axle
h 1.::i"" E. \lb'<"•• Bli·d , kitren!i. ~l ·f', 7 \\'ks ~hnt~. ,,, • ., 81,. INVENTORY SALE rhro111r lu; r.u•i. IV "hl'~·J ,\~~l'mhlir-s e Brake Sys-O\'Cn gas r11.ngc, c mme trip .... "' " • "''--· ,,,, llX'ks. Bc~r offrr. 5!1i-">:wl. '' S $j5 Corl'l('r hl'rls 11·/tahlc, u ·hat1cr C!ll) 694-1076 S·IO, 830-59-11 tl'rn • ~.rl"tr1ca l . }i;tem spr~ad & b/Jlslers S:>O 2-2ti .. I----=-"=_:::_:._:_:.__ BURMESE K ITTENS riE:-;!'ERATE '.\!UST ~F:LL' BIG SAVINGS •GRA~'DoPE~!="G •-
ld WOULD YOU :;.Y r:.-n Cl;i~slr rn 11.~,... \I\\' .~· P<irV"hP RPn.;.ir ~ gn paneled room d1vrdrrs BELIEVE Shots, $·IQ.up. 5~7 .. 171.1 inc!iiding ml'llll'l!l,1:'. $1'::C.l r.r ,. !:~~et:\1~~r.~ H~ll~~lnlc~:~: FREE ORG . .\:-1 LESSO:-.'S Dogs &54 REST o~·Fr:R ;,.1~-'ii7! 1907Nl AYALLMANEH\ANS ?~;;~(;~!~,. ~7 1S. ~~~~ •. !~. ~~ o~ as lo"" as ,·ou llke•. No re<· 1:::-o::c::,.,-------,.,. ~ r hns Sea Sk1rf. 2f:3-f'h.~1.'· on lge fram~ s1:.. .. ..
• 5-\~ or fHZ-s:i!J.I * 1sirac1on. ~oobligation. Just SHEL TIE PllPf!IPS, s.lblt> 1nbd. ship to short>, DF 11rr! ' s
Come-. 1\fondays 7:30 pm S.· 11'h!le, ~\KC ~g. 4 mri~. rl t\in~. $2500 be ... r nff, 1· [ A ' <-][.~.) I\ ~O; * AUCTION * COAST MUSIC old S7J. ~J....31~1 aft 6 r :-.1 .\'l-1-::!ll:' AWARD MOTORS, INC uros M-te .., p
'
, ... F .. -,1 .. ~ &12-2851 FREF, 11·h1tr inal(' kn1rn~.l~====-oc----,,--...,,-1680 NEW PORT BLVD.I L. ... t '"" .... ,, ..... GORG£0l'S Ga.i'\1·nn•"I. !f. '•'
& App!iallCC'S PIANOS** ORGANS ncr<l i;r)O(f homes. 6 ii·k~. 1nhnaiY1. $'!;'11. Tnil.v ;in COSTA MESA IG l 950 5!1.3031 l.\t. hi> or 67 Auction~ Friday 7.00 11.m. L..~.rge !>ele<:"tJon _ Sa\'e SSS hou~roken. S-!f;..:i:>i7. O\', ~ERS PRIDE !'1r ';ii\'· I ~~~~~~~~~~~!..:.."-'-'°---~----,-19i!l HARBOR BLVD.
W indy's Auction Barn !\{,\\' • Use'1 • Easy Terms Kl:-.'DERGARTE~ r u r fl~· CA!l e\'f', ~l.'>-2':12~. ,. tt GP.EE~BRIER. s '1t cosr A \IESA
\Jo•• f•·• ,,. 't' 9 class PO"°.\'~ 2·C mo~. ~-~--THIN"' .. ,.." n~ ... IT "" ,,.~. --------·I '...l(}ij~~ Xe"'por!, C)l &16·8686 • ;, ;undav 1r5 il Sta.;1\ng ·~~ntrol !or tl)P '•r.;,7G~:is .. 'f',·:,~:~11"1 ~~:·;:~ •. • HON.DA s· ... j ·~.,. ~;J~r; ~~-p .. ~. AUSTIN AMERICA Beh'nd Tony's Bldg !Ila!'\ · ·•~• " .. ~ n ""~ fr1enr1J.v telr pOOne 1n!or. h<Jme & rommun11~· \\.~<! 6,~l;....)<l.'..I "k<l' ~ ;; 4 8_ 2 ~;; 4 11 l•"r {2 r "'"aU' R1t;. ~............... ..,_ .. ---·I
3.\! "609" copy p.a.pt>r type FIELD'S PIANO CO. Srr1 2'l 1 pm :\lart1nrr,.!>t, \\.kn<!s Sii' .. \/T \'\\', ran. S!IOO '69 AUSTI N
642. In or11pna! cartons. 1113.l Xe\\lJfl!'t Bh·r!. 1-\('JlllC'ls S.16--0!l:\9 •'fRIEDLAHDER'' fi.!2-<'i":' AMERICAN 2.f.OJ shH>ls S!, X J.I'' anr! c-1 \I• 71 ,1,1. 3,~ C 2.~· L:\'JF'LJTE T IS. f t; 1<'1 -------~~ '""a · sa ~ "'.r •.JV NO\'! E class ~tar1s Srpt T k 96' 3.000 sheets IP,' X II". r.rs on rt•hlt eng, ~!rrps ~. >"• ''''" ,.-. •> rue s w .,,>om·n.-" .t 1-.J p,,, .. II \'.11'!0'0 s 27. Ba sic & good n1ethnO of ., ,, .. , .............. .... '' r ~P"· •· '' '" S l! r p J us Ir om tr 1 a I ' · · · • t e 1 n \\'a Y. S~l)()(l 011·nr S·16-l~in h"l!Pr 1\ l<J chnor.e from \'ninaha. New .t used control dog heh av 1 n r. --C'::i~h fnr ypUr l ln:i<la '49 STUDEBAKER PU · · ' den1f'l!ls1ra11on. !'rice ~70. pianos of most makes. Best i\I :i r1 t n c re st Kenn<'ls, 22-;--Cahin Cnu;;:-l:il Hr 5.'ii-1>~2 1 • S:l:l·ij ,'6 '111 r !i-an as a p1n' 1 yf'ar
Call &12-4321, ext. 277. ,_ ,_,~ "'l,<o. ;\l,...rcru1'-"r. jus1 h.:inlP<l All ----fr,.,. !uh<' I:· 01' \~·1th ra,(·h "11ys Jn So. Cali!. at Schm!dt .,..<Ml" CYCLE T RAILER Ov+'rOn,·p 1t1rt.:~:ill BEST OFF'ER S1h·rr fox :'l!usic Co., •M7 N. ,1,. .. , 2 L· f'.\tr;>s. S'.l:!Kl. Ph. fi~.',-~)lf::l. Al r :1r ,,..,,,, '"'" FL)l1\Lf:: rha1npll~r1e po. mn,1 nt',1, hit1 ! fi h1k .. .., ~O $225 chub. Stat1f!er exer,'1r.e. 19" S,.,,,,. A"•. 1 1" BO'TO" ll'h•le• '" llP r 1 1 " ""' orl r~. ah<lul '.? n10'5 old. 1 yr ·> "' " " '· "" r •'n.:: '.-l 1 \\l•ir phnn,.
B\Vl'V, E1·r r!rrs~ sz. 14 . GR':"\D _, nlf! Gr,...at D;ine. m,1,. ,111 )l~T!'11ry F....: M nr!. :-,·('\\' .'>J(l.·.,,,;;r1 A~k f,,. B'll 11.,,.,,.,,1 Girls hike. Col!. 300 OLD ' '" piaMs, Tremcnnous , f'election fron1 Semi AKC. fi.!6--01.U, 333 E. 17rh TrAilrr. Sl~OO. ~'H'/.ins _,i;2-l!.1.~_:1frf'r .J prn
Europe post crrhi. 6i3-5552 Concf'rts to Babv Grarwis, St. C.\I. ~-.-.-,-T-E-EL_C_R_A_F ~T-. -n-"-,.-c,cs. 'hi H\l:XO.\ 121 l"I ~rr,e\hl:;;:-,
308 Larkspur Cd!ll. · 7.'7=C7'=-c----cc-·• •' all rerond1t1oned. Pr1Cf's GR.Afll!.\TE ~ 0 1. 1 c e Ql'l<'. r::ir!1n, rr1ll1 """ Sl ip a1a11. onl:v '] ;ro n111 .. ~ ,.•'I) e:........;
s:tart at S69.'i. C 0 AST <11rnre Shariwn you t.· ynur Sl2:J\. 51f>-!l3:.l 11ft fi ron<l . s.~.oo. ~:'.i'l.;.tl .; aft :t frames, n1a!fressrs fo r 111' '>:JC ' & H bo =--~--.,.=-~~= • ... ., • 1 ""'port · a.r r. <log fnr 1hf' silo"· r ing . \\'cd Boa ts, R ent/Chart 'r 908 r .m.
saml' $25. 5-lj..(19()6, Call C.:'11. fH2-2S51. Sept 29 S pm. ~tartJncrest ,,L.,T;--:c;;ll-cc~=--~-1 aftPr JO A~! Sunday. I cc-o7':==--c=-----,-· .,, ~" my Cllnrrrr In1· HA'.11:\10:"\D '.\f.3 \\'t revrrh, K1>nnels 5-\6-09S9. Cal 25 + Catlina 27 mrd S-, ,,1"" 4·-fl llnn•!.i AZURE:->E mmk 'Io I•. I ~-cc~-~-~=c--7100 H . C :\I Xlnt conr!, ST;)(), COAST Grr'1t Dane PUps. AKC beaul 5 \\'Prkr!ay!I for Sl ll'l. Fully s !~"· nr 1, ii! lr.:ir!c l('lr : arr.or. · ·
Borganza coat. An l J q u e .'lL'SIC, Ne"f!Ort & Harbor, Gnlden fawn & !igrr ~tript>rl f'f'[U ippe<I_ l.nc;<1!1<>n i\'e1,·port fi~t'-,)22.l, ~12-21:i'l, 645.0466
r.11\'f'r cof!cr urn. :\l1~c r 'I fi.12-2i1.il. 1B r 1 nd J e J • • G l A;..: T · • lliirtlor. 71~ 96f' 4S40 fnr 1nlo 2~':.'.~:c;'::C:::,.. __ ~l-----~-----1
r)o!hnii;:. &1-1-169 \. °"~==~~---------5 'l·itnr C\rh'< :n xln t rnr.r1 • J-l,\'.11.\10\'D Chord organ. Rf',1~. jji-i.JWI 2o;;· rll'r Cru15f'r S35 rlay l\111a~"'' 1-.i l.'n, Hnr:d;i 'VI liU
C,\RPET con1rac1nr l1as +'X· XIJ.i 1·onrl. S~$111. :\FGllA:-> ruppir~. AKC, ~;· !'.111, 'lrs .'i S.'S <J;v 1::• s11:·uki ~n. ~lu.uk! l.'11 l'D.
C'Pss sh:i;s. hi.Jows: S'l yr!. 6lt.Jlil7 eyf's ~hnii• quri.h!y, blk nia~k~. Sr<'! loa~f Cti1isi:a: Cltth :0::.11-';';l,;.,;,
up, fr!'e est. Ja!J:'.ln il4: PRIVATE P;i,rty \\·ants to ~1l1'f!r blorllies & apricot~. ="r"f101't H~rhor fil:'!-0,:1\11 492-2251. buy P iano for C'il.Sh. a.l~.i2J. ---;--SPORT-FISl!J~(;--;-
MARCUS
BUi\'K berls S25 :i.t e I I\!
MOTORS
!nTl:'rnaT1onal HarYestPr
"""NEWPOlfT""''
-. I lr.f.DJlTS.
3100 \\'. Cnasr H'~)'.
Xe1vport Beach
642·9405
'69 AUSTIN
AMERICAN
Auto. tran~
$995
JP.Vl\.E Co~~r Country Cll!b SJ5-22iS.
i;:nlf men1hersh111 s111rio . -----------
f<j :\ff, SCl~r\\JJ.;LEr.. ltll· P.F.CREATIO:X c~~\'T£R I
n111•' c us1.,111 ~.-.11 . r1.11•1.,r1 ROY CARVER Inc.
\'ORl•;JES, ehan1p. s1ri-r! .'1~rhn, ~hark. Sc;i Bnss. 6 i:rir~. Firn~hrfi tank. S~i;i. 2"'" >I ·'-Bl .'d . "· 1 "1'°211 " ) a1uor \ 3100 \\•,Coast !II'.)', 111alr~. 1\KC \Vhr\rprJ p,l~~. °"a ·""~ · fi:lo-tilf.11. Costa ~\!rsa ~'JG.-444') Frcrl i\01'!:!, 646 -~970, Sporting Goods t\('11·porr Beach
..
6-14-6~
\\IATEk. hed~. All sizri: 6'3" PROPHET surf hoard
S.W. :\lust
i /1Sl7 J. :i Gen. pedigree Boats, Sa il 909 Rlh:L'~ f0r rf'nt/~ali-. 3 ~rr!. FORD ~. Ton \\/S' cabnver 642.9405
furn. 642-f:68S ---------· " in I s •----------1 P e T 'I""" II I I " ~P·1, ~pr · p1nn111g 1"11111 pPr, p1'T brakr~. 1111•0,•· ·-.~==~-....... A , ., ;•:•.1. , n1·1ni; nrrr' BMW
'I' o-A k '--goorl rnnd11!on. ·'"1. s ii•M•Ul packa~c:
deals. 5 yr. 1iU'1r'1ntcP, \\'e I ,·c"'.,1c1 c"'1--,.,0
1
;o.i_· c-----~
r11n dell \'Cr. &lfi.22')6 RUSSELL, 1 '''0 f 1 n
\\'ALt\L'T bunk li':'oi~.
cnr:id. $'10. BC10kca<.e
Yr111h ht'd \\'/malt.
968-74·!•.
xlnt
Sf'1
5'0
~11r/hnard. Good conrl ihnn.
S 1~ * 1>.16-2.jlO
Store,
Bae
Restaur11.nr,
832
POODLE CLJPPl'.'\G \'. h•'t'l Riryrlr S!inp·B.1lboa 0'."12 f'n,1nt> All rn.11!p. V.,,.,.. 111 ~rll' f'lllly l'lf:;t:"rl. t1",11!Pr, .,
:-11'1\·rnrt Doi;: Grnomr1y ?.'lOJ ~.p:naker c:rar. ,,l', GMd lnn rl ... in ,\: ~<l m"rh. f nr.r!. -----------
C Nr .... ·port Bl. on Prn1nsula. cnnrl . lii:i-rtnii:l afi fi 1'170 f:;-,\ 1·\I \ 1,.Jr,r, tot~Kl )1 :-hi n1n~1r!Pr rr:inF . r.ir 111 A11t<Jn1otl\'C F..-;r,.!leoce
6T3-7jfili', '.>Ii-.-. -~·h;;;:,-""'""·o··· '""" m ,1.. """ ,,.,oe '"" "'·n·,;n e· 5~> 9 :\10:->Tl!S frma.IP silky !('r. .. ;;1~-~~l'l A L · 964 ""' rrpJ lfl. Jmma<'. :-.111~t ~r1I I=-~~ ~~---I uto easing nor, S7J. 201.1 \l allact", ,\pt. <"•1 g·.00 -o ,.l\l\llA ,,. ""., ;..·Mn in 4.:>npm, ,,...-,..,.., , , . , . .i r.nr.11rn .. 1-----------
E .. C\1 11fr"r ;, :;r\J-C!P\!, :i:ii-'.'l'.'l::O F \rr1 ron<l S:i''.1 nr flf!Pr ANNIVERSARY :so
GRE.\T o,\:->ES AKC. ra,\·o. Lmo 11 , ,.1 •• 1.,11, 11 ~1'<1 +:.1~..;.~nn ROY CARVER, Inc. HARLA~D Youni: Ool\ Pa!n· ~ k k I k ' ' --t• \ Tint~. 100 nian.v f(lr our EXCELl.E~T lare mor!el '1 1'· . ._ · pir tip in 11 · S~. :\lr11 ... 111~ 71 J!(l'l.flA :o;LlllO, Wil :iH!P~. R9fT·A:C.AR 292:) !!arbor Blvd.
«hrome 1900 series :\'CR _,_cn-_,;;_iS_21Jf'-ZIJ~SP.-;;c~~~ I ,°"=~•:;fi77. ->1"2 '* ""!'" 1·1 ··011r! ';'l71. Costa ).\"s, ___ '4_n_-4_4_<_4 sin! 11r1 • 1\lL'Sf SELL: · · --·' o " _
SERVICE Station a.ttC'ntfant
All fih ills open. Airport Tl'X· Furniture
~n -2:::;& s .• -1() 67:)..!JS:/6. l),\CJl:-illC''.'\D pup [l It'~. SACRJFICE 1nolrls S:· 100. t:\:'. l'.f.!+2~1:1 PT\TO \\'1,.\LTO. DATSUN l!'>'-COs°'T~'7,.cRcc,.,c.T~--.. c,---,1--., m111. Al~C. :\l~h0i::. rrr!, blk I ,.. ·i hn, f --.-.-,.=,-""" Bi··'ic.T~,l~"~n~-1 T o-d <-, i6 PC \l'allaCT' ~terlin~ ·· ........ ;,.. f'f} ... p. " & ,1, r 6,, ,018 nr .,;;i S-11 a., any air n •• • ran~ . .,, ay, "'. muc. 810
:'l!OVINC -BY 0\VNER -------11.ro. 4678 Campus Dr., N.B.
546-1757. -----------16 pc K & 0 BR sets. Cusr. bit
',, .. o ,·h1·•·he• ',,, . !:in .. ,, . .......... . ~11 ' .J ""' ~~e· Rr'hl'''' ~""-'"' ,,,.,·, THEODORE '72 D t B' 510 .!>lher.RO!if'Pdllern,Sl'f\'!:, "'' .~I~ '· \ ·Ill, -~=~~===ccccoo-I _" rrar('f'p""·"·"'·"·"'~ '"" a sun lg
lhl < I &ls-<>n -AFGll" llOu,DS AKC oJ2-ffi1'. "'' ., I'm '"-"°' I s 0 D co~t S12m. ~II Sol:(). :=.11-2.'l'S: ~ ,. cirs. ~r. .J • 11' HOBI E. C.l\T. \1·/1rlr '.\1nt ROB N F R
SERVICE Sta. Salt>AAHln . 8' sofa & lol'e SC'S!, ook & • RLD\\'000 S\\'J:->G &
f/limf', eve r;h1f1. E.xpt>r. J)"ran rolfl'e & con1mOOe SLIDE SET. g(')'>(! cor.dinnn,
only. l\'.l'al in appear. Apply sets, .,..·hue \·el\'t-t Mila, $JOO. Call h.t2..Jli.i7
lm[lOr!rd. Top ch.imp li nr~ t'flnd. SJ;',(1(1 ~~ Tnuniph B1kr, :':ill··~-. ;>Jiil 2f'l6Q HARROR BLVD. TV, Radio, H iFi,
Stereo 836 • 5-lfi-21!:1 * * fi1"1-jf.J7 * 111·. L1k" n"''· .~210 :'11:irrul' COSTi! ~lESA f'~!~-01)10
.\IJ.'\!ATl'RF.' hlA('\(, pnodJei:.,
A.\I, ~!j() NP .... por1 Bl. C.:'11. _gaine set. mirrors .~ many -~~==~~·---,.~-
l•mp• All •n"•' be ... Jd ST.\CFFER IJnir S~:l. S'J F.:REO 1'.l;J 100 .,...,tr, 6 \1ks nl.-J. ~ 1n. F lipper Xln't Cond.
$2)() fii.3·1763
X R. rir1.1n~~ A W 968 -- ---utos anted
... jl) llfl,\[),\ 18 ~ .ll • ~----............ -~
~ ~pr"d rllr S.F r . 'f,nt glass
unrlr:· L..00 m:!,...~. fu!!, f':lrl
11·;irrdn,y. Rr«. 811r ket .s<>ars. ,,....,l' ~rt'.< 1ll !DLf1 :\!us!
·""11' 1'11.P olr:1·r 1r.10e nr
r.m1!J rl'l\\fl \\'ill fin pv1 pty,
Call 5-J6.:0::.7::fi nr 1:1 1.1»11 aft
SERVICE Sta!ion 5;i!l'.'sn1rn. "' ~· .... , ,,.., ·
full & part time. a_pply 10 83:l~i4. 162G Foothill Lane. S:-na!I rlf'sk 1:i l"(I
;;:n/fn1 .~tr1T'O )lPX rarl10 & • 1>11-.~".I)
II 1rnck au:o upe d~ck 11·112 'scr"H"Nc'Acc~-zERS:-1111-,.-",-,-,-"-"
11·ay iur suspension SflCrtkf'r Al\C, Sal1 s,. p('ppl'r, Ii 11ks
2 'il(l n11 ,,,1n1 r on-1 WE PAY TOP
~ II' C 1 &inra Ana. •.'>48-1200 • pe~n. ~·~' . O/IS l---------~-tll"t'rl~ $rJmr rll'anup. Tr.1y s·.ooo: A\·rry N. ro fi7;...S~~ll 110."\nA CASH High .... ·ay, NF'\\'Pfrt Be11rh. f\1 0\l l~G. must sell, 10 pc POOL TABLE \\'Ir u es,
h d ' 11 ' Mils. covrr. T<'lhle 7• lon,1;.
~;.st em. Comrie re sho!s.Sl2:i 11p. il!/r.f;,i;._;;,i4],
'' /cali!e~. sl1rle roritrol~. --CAL .'\{ loadrr!. c:.-.nrl f·•r
(TUl~lM1; nr rar:n;::-i\f,1~e nf.
ff'r r~JJ 1:111 1 :l~7-:l l3:l.
1n llfl,<. 1\h<o]•1!rl.I' p;•rlf'c·t '
~:1:1), R.11'l-111i SCHOOL offering F.T. rare r rn1 s1111e, uu P
''·/hook•1•• l•p lg se"t $1i:i. ;:,,.1~1.i01i a!i. Ii. {'~l1rinr:c<i ! dlrtls. Snlcf for ALAS:l\A:-. J\lAlilmllt('~ 1\KC,
~ " ll \1k~ nlrf \\Jlh ~hot>. to chilrl 3-4 yrs in e.xcl1'1n;:r L• ~ " • • ~ •
tor moiher's help parl timf'. snfa, lan1p~. tahlr5. pall'l \\'HIP.LPOOL f('lr hnn1e use. ~:~-!;1.~f.i. A'su rne paymm1~ ·~1 BSA ~;i(t L[(-;HT:'-'l:"\G CAl! ui;: for free estimates.
fH6-.1i06.
STENO CLERK
S49J Mo. To Start
l Yl'a.r srenograph1(' l'Xflf'T.
Apphcrtti('ln <lt'adhne net.
5Th. Apply 511.. rof'f'!!.I Ave .•
clir~. 'upr!Rh l Hoover. Sl.iO or offrr.
fi1·!-\~.il ~.)7-03117 twfore 9 am.
&\CR!FICE Hercu\on R' oofa
,,. lo\·e .!'f'a !; !11'. rm furn.
1nrl. velvet so!a & love seat,
th!~. etc. Like ne.w. &15-1701.
M iscellaneous
Wanted 810
nf Sl.~.:.Q or total b~l ,.,r !l\4 1:,fl~1nl:7
=~---Sl:JS. 1:'1. l.' S.,\. SterPO Equip· !RISH S:ETIF.R p11pp;t'~.
1n,.,11t \\'arPhnu~e. 171.l!ll E. AKC, chiln1r:n:i hn"
l71h St Cosla \lesa. h.!.J-2.;.1::! • 5..>7-9-12il •
STF.REO. 1971 Garr a r d IP.JS.II S"tllir. ,\f.:C, ff'm11!r.
niro<ll'l, full stereo chAngf'!', !! 11·k~. Ch1unp1,,n urr. Rest
Boats, Slips/Oocks 910
DOCI\ ~P-'''"-.YJ' n1<1x. On
r.>nrtl, no sat! ho11t~/SZ ~ f r,
:;210 )larcus ): B. 613-?A~. --
$illfl nr trarlr f<>r cd In m1 u.'·
f'rl c~ r &lfi-1'ti,lll GROTH CHEVROLET 4 ~pd. r!lr Lll'!,• 1rwr1 , hug·
~"r or,1n:::" 11 ·n harr!rnr.
Jf•71) llnnrl~ CL-·lin. t•Y)<I ron. 1TBS:?2i1 E:..••'ll rnt r<lr.rl.
r!lloOI\. 1 n~ S-1n r-,.rn,1nr!o Ask fnr Sitlcs !llanliger 1hn1nur T,1kr ~n1.1!1 r!Ol•'fl.
JR2!1 13r.ach Blvd. (;ill _.r1 'l .ill ,,n1 ~'J.l.fiR11 •
Huntington Beach afr J 00 ~n1 r.1!1 .111i.S7.16
Mobile H omes 935 8·17.fif!$:7 KI 9-3331 ---·-
A1 P, S:in (Jpmrt1lr
Cuy of Laguna Beach. \\'ATERBEDS comple1e.
START your Christmas e11.rn· \I' po:-de.!>tal, frame. ma!· ing~ nO\\'. Shn'v ~arah ~s:·nifad, ~nly S6.'>
Coventry Je.,..elry. No 1n· 1 '>-<1• or •
CASH PAID FOR
fine furn1turr. Apphanr•'".
An tl qtl('S, Onr r)Jf'("(' or
h1111.~efnl Cali d~,. nr night.
a ir l'Ul'JX'tlSIOn s p e A k c r s of l1!1rr 1!~2-1612
\\' I c r 0' s. 0 v e r l'YS~em. I -c\ICICRC.FC:-OF'n","· CT~[c"R°"'P."1E'°"R's~
LrrTLE Balho<t ls!~nn '.lln.x.
9' br'1 nl S'\fl mo
l\?.l·l'C'Oi nr .;T:'l-VHi -=---:o"-· ::---1-w E OESPERATELY '71 BIG 510 SEDAN Be Our Gu est NEED A~f/F':\l /:\IPX rar!io !.:. AKC P.~:(,JSTERF.D PVT [lolf'k tr.r fl"•l\'Pr M;i1 \V
tape plav{lr, .•till hrantl nt'11. ;..:n.....,~-,j • E S"·, • ~..,. ,-. ,,... F A W k d • ~ . , ,,.,. 1r .r, "" .. " ~.. or ee en II ilS lf'lt on l a y. ;\ II' a y . 1------------1 hn .J <!"Jl f • ,~ .....
rlrin U\Prl r1r~
FANTASTIC PRICE S
0..·l'rhr;ir! C'-1n1, .1 SpPerl, dlr.
R.lri lo, Hr11rr, B:1ck{'t sea·~ .
lin•rd i;!"~~. I" lo n111 .. ~. QC·'
r11.,.... jj/):inrn. ~16.Si36 -
~ •·l ·f~~l.
\'estment. coJJ,.ctJng or \\'lllTI-.: F'rPnch PYo .. iJ1c1al ;i Rrn~. ... m,,. >-1...-, "' 0 Or More r .1;d fnr yn·1r ('.1r. p.lttl f·~r
0rl"<:"1011ll)' :<0lrl fnr S::2:'i, ray Horses 8.56 lf""'K ,,, P"'"I' tv>.'H, ''" ;;, fJi <<"f'\\f'I' moh1lr h"nlf' }II'· '' -· dehv. Call 540-061~. bedroom ~!. Sl2:>. 511·12~1 or 517·77.i3. r l! Ml<'lnce n! S!l!'i or ~mA:J ,. ""
?· <1"" I' -.; p, r II"!:' ,it 11~ hr~! hy \l<111n= D EAN LEWIS SR. Cn1zrn~. ~f\' st11 '1nrk.
p/tlme. S2 hr. Kin~·~ L:<ln
Arco, 361)') :-IP"·riort Rlvrl .
N B. lii:\-99.iO.
TE LE P~H~O~N=E--
SURVEY
,\la111rr 11·omcn tn phone fr0m
our ofl1 cr. Hourly 11·11i:;r, 4
hr.~ J)('r da.1, 1110rriini::s or
Afte rnoorl,.~ In Cos!a ~ll'$a.
Call Reserve Lile ln5un111ce
Co. 6'\f.. 7753
TITLE
SECRETARY
V1U1a.n Data ~111rhu1t's, \1)...
cared in the Irvine lnclu51.
rial Compl"X 1~ rurN'ntly
taluni. applications for a
.errctary to \\"Ork in our
o:intract.s department.
You must ha\'e J.;. yr.'ln rt"
4!'1:'!-.'i.'iOR
'* GOLD VEL''ET
LIKE ~f,\\ SlJ. c .. 11 ;,.13-39~7
CHA JR.
l 11.\~1~11 ll'alnut bar.<:lf'll'll<.
S!O fa. Call Sunda}',
h.it'...11191 or ;if: ~.30 "·kd\;;.
Garage Sale 812
M usical Instruments 822
CO.'\TELLn Arror,i1on. i; .~ :\
511·1trh. l'..\'l ""Y r. a ~ ~
r~~h ,v T r1 r r~ra111 ,\rilr>\
fh1r,., 11 Ir~·" S'l:1. P.•)lh x!nr
1·nnrl. !lti:!-0~~(1
·124
p1 .. m"r!~ Coll!'<'l1nn Drp!, HORSl::BACJ.: R1rl :n.i::; ·•~· ~ .,.., f)('r ·· • " rrl'I .. I S n h 1 I ! i;-· '>1~1 • 1ir n • .:in '•lf't"n 11"! ! 7!\111'.lJ-{!:ill. Lf'5<.('lf1S. n11r l)('lr<f' s·, prr l Pf'(' \\'l ff ,.,._ _ _: -+ l'flll!11.V~ mn~r l •1 \!if'l(•ll ~ TOYO TA . VOLVO
1'.!~2 ZF.\lTJ! Slllf" Snn.in~.:i rr\l'" lr<~,,n ,\I[ l'lt;"" 1Boats, Speed & Ski 911 rv1t•1lr horn" ,.,,1r.m11n1 11.-• l'o;r, H,\P.RnP. P.!.,'n
,\ti morlrl~ on rh~plRy. En::!:-t;, \\"r~tr~n. ll"f'f'!I · :-.nin!.' fl"" ''I i 111 '1 " 1•) rn·t1 ~1•·•-, 1 .;..,.·1~11,c; hn;H·rirri '.!i1 :i nin .=.:,j..l)'i~·i ~Kl or f1sh1ni: 00111 + tr!r, )1, .. ,, 11•·~ .~· n1)1rr rr< r• o11r1n. _' ' ~rll'r1 1rin
A nlt"!lna~ 2'? .\'"l r rro:: B.1•,· } :lly
fn1:r!nnr ta"\; ron111.
i:.la~s nn 1l·nnrl l111lr, nr~r :i,[r1t11Jr l1'ltr:r I r'•\tri r rl t"r ANNIVERSARY =50
nr1\' Chrfy~lrt ':1:1 ll~p. ;,nq r· l !•LI f-(if: l \.l·I • & AUTOS WANTED
!ref' lll·HI "''11~01" riil'l<"lr!• r:11ns l l~e n rJ $··,o J ;[~f:~:V,\TlCo '\~. \\' t 11 " fofl Onl!,ir fnr r l<''1Jl used Dr!;('f)1p\I~ l"'r c-a~h. ARC :.1'.'1-".1;-: ,r,,:irti ' .i. • r.( 1. B"' :!!1';'r1"i, ,..,n11 fi1 "::". :,:.7-::'.fili:l Calif \l.:1-'rl c;,rs. s,.,11 Anriy Rrri11•n. r .. 1,,r Tl', "lfi:.'1 ,.\11.1 n1a ai THEO l'i' Johnsn11 Sra ,<;;port ____ llrri P\li DORE '.ll.1::nnl111. H.B. 9f;...,\3~). . -!· * J ·rn-llull. l~l h r·r 110 '.11:111 CONTEMPO-ROBINS FORD TRl..\STO To"·<'r 60 '. 3 .<.tr· ~ Cnnrl. S.~6;11 h.1-1-~7.'JJ LAGUNA H ILLS 1:11n.<. \1·/r!O"r. n1rilor f..·
L'Otor. Rrgu!aled po1\'Cr gllp. Ci!RJ..;-cf?,\FT2o· 1l1illir:::. 2.l,)(IJ R!flGE R\lu·rE nR.
8Nt1 1nrl
Marin• [qu1pmflnt 20('-.Q ~!ARBOR BLVD.
1 1 C ll S spred ho);it. C\;i~~IC, g(l()rl iCnrnrr r,I i\loul!on !'kl'.)')
p ;E"!i, inr;ir.;, c!c, rt un-General 900 ronri. S7.~. f.?-= 71~? Pr,...~t1£eA•'.Hdtoomn1un1ty,d-r!11:v. &16-1091 or aft 5:30 "' .,.,.. "
COSTA :\IESA 642.l)(iln
\VE PAY TQP DOLLAR
fOR TOP USED CARS ---,,------912 J:1Cf'nt t<J l.r1f;t1re \\'nrlr! 11·krly~. CAPTAIN Boats, Storage R f 1 II If your r,1r I~ exrra clean, ·-~----== ~~ e11u1 111 .c;11rrn11nrl1 ni;:~. a R,,\DIO Tr;in£n1t1er BC-4fi0. linl11nited hrrn~e. anv trrn~~ luxnry aprninrmrnl.~. Thrr . .c;cc lls f1N;t.
flAT~{;,;.--l 'lfi7 -160()
Rn1<1~1,.r. ·v .. rv rlean. P\I•
rrllr nt rrin<lltlnn. Sl !'.15 00.
r 11 .i-1'>-~~.1 Rffr r 5 '.11 r ~1
Ii !'17 1 210 Z, :--Int rnn.-J .
:'Ill ·sr ~ELL. l"1\·1r.;; f0r
\'1,.111.11n rRll :l l'l-!~:lR
FERRARI
FERRARI
,\UTIIORlZF:D
SALES & SERVICE
' "'NEWPORT' • ~
. IMPORTS .·~ 2-\fi' mr. 10 channel. 61)() \V IO!l.~. 30 YP-1rs cX[lC'flf'f1('r Afl"Ullr pm\, ~aun'1r., ri.rr· BAUER BUICK
110 V A.C. 60C. ~1ngle sail & pn11•er. Prn!c~si'ln.-1! l r•llsport•!ion !ml rise gym, .i hlUl~rrt r:ihlcr., 2.'{.: E. 17th s:. 3100 \V, Coast llwy.
phal'/:. SJ(IO. Don ;,.~:£). s1nn fishing guide. :\le.~1c.:in niurh, much ninrf'! Cos1a~Je!'8 ~.;.i'i&'i Newporl Beach
l'SEn rfllor TV's "11ara11. & CPnl.ral An1crica & Pacif. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;1 .sc .. tl<'a111. furn mnrlr~s in f:\I POP.~.T=s~1"vA;=N=TE:;;D~=l-----,Fi;.-IA°'T" ___ _
1Pnl, S!¥.l.~ up. Brian TV. 1c CM~t 11·a1crs • InstrUC· ~ flilrk.hkr ~etrtng. Orange Coun :irs
uo '°"I """ ,· '·-1 h··dl'"' .,. Campers, Sala/Rent 920 CALJ "'" ·~ l'lYI Anahrim. C :\I .. ,..,,.,...., u " n lJUd "" " • ~ ,,-, "-"l'·"•M fir f;.11).7900 TOP ; BUYER BILL BARRY mans!up. DR & celestial BILL 'I XEY TOYOTA 3~1 "fi(Y.I" cnpy paper \:Vllf' 21 " Admiral Color TV 'j9 CHEVY ~, !/Jn 1~1s· ~ah B\' O\\'nPr, ::.ix20 Royal •"A.:
~nt ~P<Telar1al t xprr. & 1----~1 --e~ .. c.1~--.-".· I !'ATIO .Sat.>: ........,. 1es. "" 1ui 1·r gnod t)'ping i.· SH
nav!11:a1lon . PICK UP & fH2 . In original carton~. SlflO nr trar!e. 642-0.i2:l DELIVERY ANY\\'HE.RE: over. i;;lrrpi;: Ii. r1'('ently ~nrer, p11rt. furn, Lilts of 18.~ Beach Blvd. PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT
2.000 ~heel~ 81 ~ X 14" 11nrl RCA Color TV. perfect con-cap!;iin avl1ilahlc fnr .:x· n!hu!IT ':Iii Chtjflr.r, 3.J.1 cu xt ril~. :\hlt rontl. F-1m1ly H. Beach. Ph. 847-8.~ :>:r1\' trl7l f iiit Rill ~n
1klll~ "'11h the 11 h1!iry to
h;!.ndle a variety of clC"rical
dulil!'s. Contracts nr mar·
fttlng expt>r. in 11.n t'lec·
tTon1cs rompany l~ rieair-
a ble.
Good st!tninr sallll')' 1,' !rin~
benefits program inclurling
12 daY!I \'&ca tion during !he
l!~t year o! employment &
a stock purch11se Pl'Olttam.
VAR IAN DATA
MACHINES
11 V11ri11n suMidlary
7722 :i.rrOIE:LSON DRIVE
(SAN DIEGO rnEEWAYJ
AT JAMBOREE 0Ff·RA~1P
l BLOCK OOt..rrn Of
MICHEl.SON DR.
IRVINE, CALTF. 92664
!:qua.I opportUnlt)' employer
DAn..Y Ml.OT for action!
l'urn ur11!ed Items lnto qutck
CA&h. call M2-~7g
t1ques. \\•1cker, primat11 ~.<:. P?tlf! trunks. pie s.'llr. nlr!
pall phnne, spool c::ibinets.
beads for curtains. buggy
&eR t. old !Ables. dishes. has.
krts. P1C. 10216 Holburn 11.B.
!l6S-0955.
:\,000 shrrt!I 811 x 11". di!1on. t"ntl rd c.n11s1ng. Exten~lve In 11/tol'k l\11:ht lr;in~ r~rk,_$'.l.'JOO. 8 ·17-4•166.A ut9s, Imported 970 \l'i!hn1onza re<'iex:renoranrl
Su r PI us fr om 1r 1 a 1 fi.1!..flt)l!l .1)11rr i pm ar!mln1stra11ve cxperi,.nce. C J" ::t. n 1n 1 • 11 e 11'1 .v ~2~2~1 .. -lea1hPr hke vinyl black dPmon.~rral1on, Price $70. &16-2977, uph<:Jl~rC'r<'rl, ~ 111'.'IV !!r'l't , 2.fi fOP~ ~.ilc, ninh,lr hnmr. .. '68 TARG.i; $4595 hticket M"at~. pa-irlPr! rla.5h
Call 6•!2-4321, ext 277. ply, 2·111 ply. ,.\ b11r,1:,11n al 10;;~:., 1 hr fiirn. Pnrl p~iin, ,, ~peed. AM/F'. T, rhrome anr! instrument panl'l. wind·
2 NC!{ Class 21 cash I l[I SCRAMLETS SJ.::.Xl, :).lf;....fi.~~J. L1dn Vi!lai:e. N.R. ~.i,F,flfl. whPt>h, lnw nltlP!i, c!Piln AS shield w·1pl'r & °"''asher.
registrrs. $375 ea. I NCR 10 Frt!e 10 You p.::i' CAB 0 \'1:.1·:_ 12 '-'1Jl1 Ea~y !rrn1!I. 100 It fmm a pin. SpeC'\11.I cnoling sy!.ff'm \\ith
kty adr11n~ machine S7j; I 2 OO ANSWERS h~hf.tng. quef'n SIZ" he'!. hay. fii3-142n. Larg11. Stock Of vt'ar Mund anh!rt>cze and
f'OLD away hed. maple kit tank tv. -,,.,,,,., w/h"'·' 3 Linll'S, 2 Times,$ • ~1rlP d1nro tJo. '"'· 1cPhox, lo=~c;-;~;-:-."'cc""'°'~=I Used Por.sche5 ;,151 protl'!c!ion . Up 111 35 ··~ ' " " GREAT L11k!'~ 10x.'J.l' ..... 1g· table & chairs,.70riis~~s. hopnts on 1'.•het>l1'. $;.(). Fo~trr·~ Ori~n _ r:;ovey _ Too(h _Lo-cr[lt, roof rark & lar!<lrr. rxpansion. Stnrai;:e i<ht'<l. mi!rs 10 th .. gallon. ;\lax1-
& pang etc. 5 .xa~ re' f'recte, lOOt'M Brookhurst. LAB Retnever • Germ.an tion _LOVING. BQot & hounre-11.1\·ays. GOOtl Crntral Air cond. $.i7i()(), mum !>l•el'r! nvrr 7.; rn1lt'!I
Dr .. N.B. II. B. 96&-4740. Shephl'~, ff!m, 1 yr. 1111 Po\\"Cler room chatter. conr!. S700. S.!S-194:. .'J..l8-~. f!<'r t\<"lur A grt>a! car f<lr
GARAGE Sak Chilclrer1r. PORT. IB;\I 0 I ct a t Ing: shot!!. lie. Gd w ( kids ''He'r; II \\'f!lf. 1-le think~ thr F'0RD ~ Ton \\'IP.' cabovrr flnly Sl?.'15. plus UtX & \1c.
c 1 o I hes, n e \I' b o :<· m•·''"'· ·''~'' 22·1. 1-". >l&-4(143 Id b• ''' ,,,10 lfix32. Ft;R;..', l hr, clo~r 11'1 sr 16~10:-4 •"" '-'" ..,., !--------~-~ "'or Q\1'1'5 him 11 LOVING " campt>r. P"T •11 · · ha~'. $4.Slll). l\m11.ll r!ov.-n. 3100 \V, Coasr H....... • • springs/malt. 927 Coronado l\r\amkr \\'Onl1 top Pxec. BLACK malPs &. Sn1ok<'Y 3:12 engine. All f'qu ip. VP!)' d 6.,11~ · k , .. ,
0 CM 18' CABl.'i Boal. 2:1 h" lly~. '""' '4"· \\ n" ~ · :"c11-'J)Orf Beach Over '.!""' n~\\' .t· ust'1 cars r.. .1 • rl rsk, .'!f)x60 \\'/2flx40 retu rn, frm11le k1!1Pn~. lri~ky & ,. clean & grl mf't h. (<lnd. 67:1-R71lfi J ~·.,
M ach'inny 816 51.lO. 9&&-4721 ]ol'C"llhlt'. 1904 fer!ti·a l A\'e., Joh~son, ju~t o·haull'r! gr..-.r! J\ILght cons1der trans. ca.r in · · · · 642·9405 to rMn~ fl"'m
rnn.,., new paint. $.l7."'-JI' I 70• <=•n. ,,.~,, Hf.',t; DETROITER. ;,tlxl!. 2 'iO OPEL GT. auto e '6~ )')(11) E lsr S•. Santa Ana C'.\I R hn E d 5 h tradt'. I , :.. ,,..,,......,,),...,,
UPRIG HT ft?ezer $65. Full
~prlnC R· m!l!lre!.S S20. Tl'i·
po<! $.i. &12..{1872.
Bl.ACK Prn1an LA mh (n~t
1.i 16 \\!~~ $1000. Sit rr1 f11•e s»ij/l. fi44-j6ffi.
l\'f.AR new Sll.111n 220
Pholoropy marhint>. Onit
price $1200. Sell s a 0 0'
84&-0571 ,
826
J\llN~IALt. splllt'I Or,tdn!, liS
rPCPl\'Prl hy II< s:.•1 V~]lf'
~?f'<lkrr mOt'l"I Z:-1. $2:!:1
HRmmnnr! llPtaJ.;:rr JRZO
Sfi~ coA~ ~1us r c .
:\'.P•J..·rvirl It H;itlvit , r ~1
r.1z-2t·,1.
Cl\\/ at ~vinru e P =~=~~~-c-c--7 BR. bath, f'A ht'al, C<'JO\~r. '1'SC. GT, air e '69 TRrGT tl~t St l'lf F-A. Frwy.l h'lTTENS 2 11.ll b l 11 Ck 175 ""°762 CA.\IPE:R J rlhlP her!~. l\U!o I f 1!200 "'" 1-"ng., · .J'lo-v rrprrl. party 11rn. Ii+ • '68 ~1GC-GT e ·ro J.J<>· '-"!"' fl'ma.ie.s, l blAck ma!~ and 1-----------furnacf', toilr1, ~. (h\')', lull 6------! 64&-4159. fi4.">-J V> 240-Z car e '69 9U-E 'Targa. f\E\V 1!171 FIAT ~ Sed11n '· ''"'' "'''h m•1'•'· 1>42-3411 Bo t /M I •··T ol• -~ t~t <2""" '~' "" a 1 11.r ne 4'9'.i-2.i42.' """'" · ~ <NU· Motor Homes 940 • '68 912, air. • '66 912 • 11·11h r. miles. \'e.'>, thllt'•
1 SJA:'l1ESE, 1 tigf'r !triped Equip. t04 I c~=-,,c-c=c=---o;;""= 'AA TR·'!iO + '66 Sunbeam rl~h!, 35 mile,.; on 1t. Or<
kitten, 8 "k~ okl. Both "1---,,-------·,;9 V\V CA:\1PER roPTr"JP. '19 fl, HOUSE CAR 'f1,,.er. ~!AN\' ;\!ORE. !'ALP. for S120:'i.OO Plus tax I 1a· ELGIN Boat Tr;ulrr, \l'\th • !'111.mf'Sf'. &l.i-120 xln! ronrl. r1ininu1 S27:lS At1lhor1zed ~TGZ-Dealt.>r ,(! J1c )':o. 16lm. Dir. Phof'll'! v.·1nch. good tirrs, Si(\ F •I'" !n ,.,<'IOI'! hOme. .~·~ ~-,62 67J-3iR2. k 1 hn Ill 52.l-7231'1 ~~!IX(! , . ., ,.,..,......., ~tnl'"· t'W"n. Mn . t'"' x. '~=~-cc----~~1
Cdhr·nktt1,.n,8wks 1~71 CA.\1P£R ~hC'll tab!,, si .. em ~. 1\"'"' Val\N"(Put a little "loo!" 1n yf\Ur IT'S Bt"acn hot1t1t flme. Big:· ('111!· f.1~15SR "\l/EF.D 11 ~ "'"I"" ·"1"~n furn1.•hf"l1 + 1rt'hnx $:l:.O ..,.,. --= '°'"°,----out the 1re1i~ure~ & lra~h _ .J .. t. f"l',1dv 1n 111'1' 1n. $11'11 [,.(\·1.• ·~"I! 1hn~ h1111h!Ps for ~~I l.t'l!'rflnn 1>ver! Set' lh~
FREE WOOO tnm Into cft<h 1hni :i nallv fi7:-i,,.1•11 1 ____ nr ~~f nffl"r, 11rr"r>' rr11rJe.I 'h11rli~... CAJI Cla~~lflrrl DAILY PILOT Classlfied
16"1·1 Superif'1f. C:\I 646-:1231 Pi!ol Cla<1.lfletl ... r1 'W2~567ll r·0,-,-be-,-,-..,-.,~lts! 1'42-51l7R (';illfi.:f>·2'1.l~nr:l:~j •. 1:11ric1'c~. 1>12-:ii7~ ~E'cllon now!
..
I •
!
I
• -. OA.ll Y PILOT . ,
( Auto5 lor Sal• !§J I.__'"_'"'_"""_,!~ I .,,,.1~... .\§] I -----Autos lotS. l~l~I _ ..... _ .. _-__.!§] '"--'-'IMl_w""'__;l§]I .._ "'....,....l''."'-""'_.l§Jll'-_'''M-lw .... __,)§] I.__-_ ... _-__,~ '
Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Avtol, ln'lfliOl"t*f
MG.;.B:;;_ __ l--:TR::::7'.IU:::-M::P::".H:---VOLVO
9711 ....... !HM ---"°-·l·A---"-·-Uted-----"°-Autos, U .... ;,..........;_;__ __ _ ---FIAT MERCEDES BENZ I MG CHEVROLET FOID -PON_11A_C __
Think S«
"FRIEDLANDER"
l l75G BfACH BLVO.
:Hww. 391
Rf!.1.;x,,, e ;,~7 fi&'..11
HONDA
l-L\\'1 \<; t_;r1 1 '\'IJ:\
I ~ Jl 'B ' , t 11 ,1ra! 1 t -11
,., ,., \\. 1 ·• 11 I'• ~l ' '
-JAG UAR
1 .• _I '.1, So ' "1
...._ I .~ f.1 lo I' ~1Ul1. "I
L<, , '' • t .1
.I' I' '-' I .I.' I ;': 11 I
·1.1 I .I
!\\_ c
:'-.I 1 , 1 I
., I
' ..
"7 ' l'
,1 \l ,I \!' -\. .,
I• , .. ,, "
'71 Mercedes
280 S.E.
~ llr ,\,1 r"nd .\ulu111,11!(".
1 ~ .. • l' !'"•Tr'n\;, t:lt,i-i, \\ill•
1J.111, 1~.000 01111'~. ll'nry
1111t1 f.J1111 111lt'l")()I'. t::03CFX 1
$7495
':1 I \\. (°ll;t<I /II'~·
:-.;,.,, ~'r' P• .1rh
642-9405
-,-60-MERCEO -~S-
\ l·•~·r ."• ,! o:>. :..1<('' t\"OT:i:-'.:.'l
S845
1 • •1 I \' 1~ -~ 'fuf' ....
f~1ARCUS
f~OTORS
:"'"I II 01"+•·1· (",\I.
645-0466
.\ I· 11.• ·· l•·l·l •Ut ul r,re--011•n-
!!I 11 ii""(;,;'-. :•I
'69 MG
,\1lh•tll?ih(0 rnu1s, radio. hr ;ot-
,. ·. 11 1111(' 11 .d l~. !"('d 1111/1
!·J: 1n:rT. ~:.IJlf'r c-1t'.:in ,t; lo~·.·
1n•l1'\. J ) r, fll'(' lulie & 0 11
1•l1;1ll,:(• 11 llh this car.
$2295
'v'.NEWPORT . 's
Y.~ JMfORTS .
:!100 I\. Cuast l h1•y,
1\/1•1111<Jr1 J1.c11cJ1
642-9405
lll!O aEAClt !HW Y, l'll
8!.13-1566 e 537-6S:!-1
MG
AL'Tl!OP.JZED
SALES & SEl{VICI::
~~--# ... ,,. .. . ,;, .NEWPORT · ~
s;~;Jft!P .. ORTS : .. '
'70 MGB
Supc•r (ll'<i n, _1.1•Uow 11·11h blk
Hll1·r·1nr, r .1 d1 o, h~·ra it:r,
$2595
~'NEWPORT ' . 1 . . . ; .. ,IMPORTS
:.>If.II) \\', Co1ts! Hwy.
,\l•11 p.11·1 B••:1ch
TRIUritPH
SPORT CAR
CLEARANCE SALE
NOW!
FANTASTIC SAVINGS
ON
1971 VOLVOS
...DeMlr&t ~ VDLWll
FRITZ WARREN'S 1~46 1-larbor, C.M. &46-9303
SPORT CAR CENTER 1 ---~----"C I
710 E. 1st St., S.A, 547-0764 ~ lllllll °"'" daily 9.9, cl°""' s"""" 'YOL.YO'
'66 TRIUMPH
'58 CORVmE
Engine ol tnt~ ovmtauted,
4 speed. IIVZ570)
$895
Good Mon. & Tue5.
MARCUS
MOTORS
'70 FORD LTD
BROUGHAM
642-9405 Roa1lstt'r. 4 speed, radio, "FRIEDLANDER" 2100 Jlarbor. C.i\1,
Styte leadf'r, clean. Beaunful
British green metallic with
ivy inl<'rior & landau roof,
immaculate lhroughout. In
addition to auto trans, ra.
dio, heate-r it has pow, s1rg.
pow brks, fact 3\r cond.
Pow windcM·s, etc. p you .see
& drive this attractive car,
you will agre-e to its condi-
tion. 54'1AGD. Jobnson &
Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd ..
Costa r.tesa. 54().5630. ~~~-----1 hcatl'I". &-.. tl11s. (TFA3.>8) \]l;li H11.id~1l'r 'ti~. 2.J,000 $895 1111, i\.'11/t'.\I. O"dr11'f', Ill'.
;..11·;i .... _\l:1ke orfer :i.)7-1991. C~ ~Ion . & Tues.
OPlL
t11t1 •u0t urn.•· 645-0466 * 171 FORDS * _,,,,893-c:-•""'-:-~•o-531=--"'==, 1 '6J C11EVELLE Malibu Sta GALAXIES e MUSTANGS
Autos, Used '90 \\'gn. 4 dr., V-8, R&H. PS, TOr.INOS
MARCUS '"'° trano., aic, lo mi. S800. HERTZ CORP. "69 CONVERTIBLE loaded Call aft 4 pm. or Sal & Sun.
$700 ®"'n, s:nOO Ba I: 8~2-1694. (714 ) nl-4050
'!i7 J:ALJ.\"J-: t>:ade1, P..&1 1. Private party, 71~/492-2800 l ::o,,--=="'"°~~-=-• '70 GALAXIE 500
th \I' ' ng. o h;1ul ~· l>a!I Lo MOTORS BUICK '60 . 4?fEVY Station \\'gn. Sale priced 2 dr, H.T., Beau-
·111 . t..IJf".0 rubO.~r. Xlnt <"ond. Origi nal ov.;ner. S200 or bes~ 11luJ light h•y gold finish,
\'•'!'\ i·Jr:111. Si;jll. ;lj7-'.ltl.~ '63 SKYLARK, auto V-8, olfer. CaU 5-ti-«163, aft 6 \\'ith gold ln1rrior & dk.
J•JilJ(-1,.-•J l;T, cha1'!1't'u't' •1 00 I PS, PB, R/fl, 2 dr .. p.m. b1mvn landau roof. Equipped
,)111 , ond. j\lAKl-: t)FFE!t -l ~~~6 C .. \l. buckets. gr! c<>nd . Sl ·)(). 'j3 Chev. P-u, ne111 p11.1nt, wilh auto trans, Radio,
'70 PONTIAC
G.T.O.
Auto U'8.05., pr. !!tr, IJI'"-d!.r,
brks., landau IOP, clean, lo
mileage. 20880.
BILL BARRY
PONTIAC-GMC·FIAT • • O~r :mo Of'1v & u~d cars
!o cllOOll~ f1<0n1
Open 'Lil 10 p.m.
200 E. Isl St., Sanra Ana
l 1st SL at S.A. Frwy.)
.:.:.8-1000
'66 PONTIAC
CATALINA
2 DR. !IT cpe. rac.ho, heater
& !:.illy fac!ory eqUipped,
sea blut' v.·11h n1:i.tching in-
lerior. VZX.367.
SPECIAL $695
BILL BARRY
PORSCHE
"'" •----=..::...:.:.:.:. ____ I ~8-2846 s~-~23·,7 perfecl bod,\", 11c111 f'n~ine, hf'afer, f>O\Y win!lows, fac-(.":iJJ ;JI!;, j)ll!. ;1:1:t-."i!Mv. 1· ~ b
*'li3 TRl A * "~liJiieii':5ial;;;;>'iV;g.;; l -~":"~"~"'~k~<~•.;•;2.-~·~· ~:,~1s.;84~'.!0~.-lory air. 'fhis attractive cnr PONTIAC·GMC.f IAT Xln1 1·un111ng rond. SG50 days '6.J BUICK Station \Vagon e·:.J CHEVY• sl1011·s e..xccl!ent care. Ask e e "t'' -,,.,, -$300. Need;o; 1\·orlc 2188 Ca-o .o-.r''''" t'Vl' 64:>-o\»13. ,. d Joi 1-.,, fol' ricn1onstration. 395AUH_ OV<'r '20() ne1v & used ~ara ..,--,.,---.,---"."'"-:-17',.,,0,,CW;;;;c;o:::;;::;c-;;::;; I nyon Dr .. Coi;ta t.lesa ' Qe s ring l, .Ai. $2715 J h So 2626 'Gil :ii:? ,,...!'pd. ("rlnlplL•tc ly "ti!i TRIU!\ilPll Sp1tf!re i\·Jark ""~=,,.:..~::.:::_::::.:::__ 008-3 !01 · o nson & ·-n, !o choose from
l' l'--d 1 G""" -·' '60 BUICK 2-dr hdtp, new in-cc===~-=-=-c-Harbor Blvd. Costa .i\lesa O•"'-'11·1 10 p,1,,, 1·1 ·~1t'l'L'd. ov•·r S22li0 in-'"'-' s er. """ co,..,, '66 CJ IEVY c · 2 -'· · ' r-" s:..oo. ;H.'"r-Ofi67 rcr, runs l>eautilul. $130. • anric(', ......... air j.10-5630 2000 E . \st St., Santa An1.
11111·.;;i, <JF !.\ll'IJ l-:TS 3100 \V. Co.:i.~L ll11·y. \ L's T \' d . S :; :. 0 0 . J) ll y s . 2450 Neii'port Bl. C.i\~. contl, ll/H. good cond, $99j,l"""'"'""'===-c:-.' I , S A • tH~~!~'iO. J·:11e!': 61;J-2:1-J(J. ·;:,9 TR-:l Runs good, nC\\I •• 6·14-4213 ** 197 1 LTD Counlt'Y Squire JO I.1st St. at··. fr11·y.J --~--~-,.,..-,1ni 'i 1· ('ou11:,,-~ rnusl Ne11·1}()rt i.l('~C! -~.;.t'l-~l lj o 1l:i t;::.~ 111•111 • t'!l :011lhfll'lZ<'r!l ----~-----I d CADILLAC ~~-~~~--~~1 passcnge1· station \l"agon. j,)8.JOOQ 'lo"l l'Ul("''ll c.· '.Ill T, va 1·cs, eoH. recently tune . ~, \' ll hb 4 I <r _.·~\J r .i,~~1 ~t. 1 , :. , r:t·n1 1)1·.d(·1·. 6q;2 MGA · jfl[" I 'Jll>"'i ( \J,•.-l11••1rr, EL1<11a P;t rk.
.,.._ ,-' ega · att· ack spc · Air t'Ond, pwr, brakes, '68 PONTIAC GTO Hl\1/f!il, :"I<. IJ ll !").; U ll cJ y $~7:1. R°l6-!'..l./6. $2.000.
3 C d"ll 1968 li\t'ering-11•in<rows-, seats. L',,,.t ,,·-·pd a"to tra-, 11/hlrk. n1•1~t ~r!l, l)C~t of-TOYOTA a I ac ~~=c·~'~"~"'"'~·~20~:;2_~~1 A.\l/F.'11 Stt'reo. Pri\'ate ·,·l·k 1"n<1 '. bl" k ." 1' ~-\/ ,! JJ~~\.J:" \1•1.,·l.1•lf'1' :11 BPach
:.1111 \\ l'v;l'T IJ\<y, ILU!'l••IJ. .~;,l)l •t Arm Fii"},
1
___ ,_·, .. 1·1ll'lrt l:1·:i_•h;___ 111 :J~3-l:!:,:J
LOTUS
LOTUS
Al -l l!Oi'.!ZF:D
~.\! 1..: .t SJ· J:\'1r 1~
,,;~,1 \1 . Lv .. ~1 1111y.
."~1 -1\, "ol"I llf",11'11 --r.:~n:o
+,'' 3], ,'ti I' II ', '"· 11· I
Autos, 1-tew
r,, J":J~r1 O 'h7 200-D, :iu1n.
g •S .!_Jll-U, i\lll<l, :111· e
1 1 :!'-il-:-'L r·••\lf"' rnad\lt'I' •
-~. •;1d; e ,,,\ :!W-S
,, ! , 0 t,j ~·:11J -S. <1Uli'. :1JJ'
0 +,. ~· •'' "· ;i;iTn, :111" 0 'jQ
· ."F. hill Pi'''•'!' e iO
:: :1-1·r 'jl". \L\>IY :\IOrtr-:.
i\Ulll'•: ~P{I .\II: llo'al•·r
I I I :•.!''r j'.f.\)
980
'53 MGA COUPE
ll;i.rrl1up, lh(• h:ird 1<1
0 111• .\ll''·' !QL".\71G1
$995
AllARCUS
MOTORS
:!HNI 1!·11 hn1 C \I
645-0466
,, r 21 :1: .130-11:1:l C d v· I _ ac · a au c.: ac v1ny ____ ':""'._---i -:--:-:~:::-::::7-::~0::~· i pe. e 11 e 19G-l CHEV i\·lalibu 2 Dr.1_,_P'-'.c''-" _!·_t.ooo_._4_"-"' __ 14_.__ buckets. con s 0 I e, "'ood
".i9 l'Ott:-;cJIJ::, ne1\' tu·cs. LARGE SELECTION Vinyl lop. t'ioih & leather in-Scc!an. Air cond .. auto. $1100. grain. P/S, Ri ll. :Fact.
l'!lnd !rAns. Ulo11n t'n~in(', NEW & USED tcrior. FULL· POWER & Pri\'ate narty. 494-6814. LINCOLN niags/i\firhclin x !ires. J::x. 1-·~11· sal<' nr !rade. Good F ACTORY AIR CO NDI-CONTINENTAL eellent coodilion. J\fust Sell!
1r.u1' t·ar. s100. 9G.'1.-861 ~. "eoJt Lew14• ·rtONlNG '69 Lincoln Continental p . p ! •~ 1 41 1 , Al\1/F~1 radio, riv. ty. IV:..... SJ -43 , Clt'a rance priced. Beautiful
'to-\ P<.rs••hf' !!12, Ta.r.;;cnrw. TOYOTA /J('\V tires. fZNB761) 1970 MARK Ill plal inum blue, l~ith dk. blue s & r MOTORS am/1111 liratu. 1n:11nt. i\Ju,,( $2999
NABERS Cadl"lloc BEAlITlFl;f., FULLY LUX-Jcathrr and landau roof. ~C'll. l'\l pty. 67~'.!I~. 19:16 !!arbor C.~r &16-9303 1'RY EQUIPPE O CLASSIC. Lu:i.:111·.v equipped, J''uJJ po"·-
Tll fJI rr . .J ~pd m:.gii, ,\:'l-1/ "b6 T ' ·. . AUTHORIZED DEALER Every luxury e.xu·a plus only er. Includes fa.et air cood.,
l.·1 1, , ... ,,,~ ·,.~0,,1,, Xlc•t. oyota S1ou! Pickup Bins. · "J"" ,.,, S700 c II "A 2600 Harbor Blvd., 20,000 carefully dri\·en n1il-poll'C'r door 1;.t·ks. Tilt strg.
1941 Harbor Blvd., C.:'1-!.
~'·l.' 1,,2_00S6 · <i ... ,6-2486 or I
.io -"' ., " fi lS-.lllSO. Cos1a 1\lesa c.o. Thi5 luxlll)' car is na11'-1rtieel, ere. This is rC'al qua --'--!S~UUtNiliB~E~Aii;IM~--1."~~i'.~w'Al::iCi;i"'' [ .~ea~1~t~&~\]).~9l~OO~O~"'~";_;s~"'~"~''!'._Y k.ss in every detail, I invite ity. Not a 1ypical price lead-"67 VOLKSWAGEN C d"ll 1969 your in~ction as its near er -scr !oday. 1938.\IX vert1blc, (lr1ginaJ 01vner,
9uality Used Cars
$395 to $1295
FIREBIRD
C11~1v1n ·riG TiK<'r
.'i!L\l-:f'. n1:1ny ,.,:r<i5
Q I GC new oondition 111ill "--better SJ67j. John.;on & Son. 162G I 11 2" ue orced to s1: , H.B. ...,; '69 VW BUG Convertible appreciated_ The retail val-Harbor Blvd., c·c~ta :\le,;a. .'>!12-1723
.')lj~~l * (;12-i ::J:;
"\l'l:LD rt & ri':J fl" •. c lean 4 .spcl. c!!r. X!nt. cond. Sac-
. r 1r1rc: take older car In
Less than 21J.oOO mile~ lie of this car is $7370. (Kel-l-'-'~l]).~C~i6J~O~·====,~--
FACTORY ly Blue Book). llo11•cvr 1·, MERCURY
AIH. CONDITIONING "'ill <.'Onsider your oUer. l----------
'71 PONTIAC
CATALINA Oll i !hr trl'.i~lll'"~ & lrn ~li -1 \ :+r·r11\t:n·s ,,_.D~! Jll<inry! Rl'nl lr:.:.tle or s1na l1 down \Viii
ll1n 1 inl(1 (;1sh 1\ll'tl ..i l)atly ,\'Jll!' hfnl'1!'. .ipl.,_ ~t?re fin. pvt ply. 1vDY299)
Pdol Cl;.i!;s1111:tJ ad. Ul2-~78 I i\'.1;.: · ;·1.1 ~· ~\ru a Daily Pilot !"1-16-8736 or 49-1·6811. cau att
7 -,--'7----°' - _ -·~1
t{. fl arn.
Au to!:, New 980 Autos, New 980 1·1~.~-s~v~,,~,~8~-1~-~.1--
FULL P O\\"ER, plus full --!'l ha\'e driven thi5 f i n<' 1971 MERCURY
leather interior, tilt \\'heel, car since ne111, if ;you have STATION WAGONS
door locks, srereo multiplex, anl' questions, you may HERTZ CORP.
cruise control, eti::. Locally reach me at n1y home,
oneowncrdrivcn.(YPU623J 673-8811 or my ott ic e (714) 778-4050
4 d1·. hardtop. air rond.,
auto. trani;., pwr . str., p11-r
brks. radio & heater, run&
on regular gas, looks like
/}{'I\'. 301383
FREE
,~~ ug; 0 1\. llll ('Jl j?e,
:~O.OIXI 1ni. Ton rondi1ion.
'.l !Lt<:1 ~r·!I! Also J960 \I\\'.
Bad 1"0n<I. ,\JC'11• t' n g,
li-lG-9023. SC'I: 2Qj FJ011·cr St.,
C ;\1.
l~/1 V\V Ca111p1.•r Van. 9.000
n1l!rs :;~~:;. 1'1el\ up 111
Br1·111t>n. Gt•z·many. 646-5033
Ua:;.s. 646-0Q.111 C\·e~.
191.1~ V\V Ca1n))('r pop-up,
!"<'bit e11;::. goOO urr s. Vrry
1 lc;1 n. Carpctrd. .S 2 j 9 j.
~~11-1."i(i3 --------71 C:\.\ll't:R. ~till under
11,11"1<1nl), 'iln t c ont! •.
:1IS-l!l'..!S \1kndb; 811 J
11·kd~-s.
Jf~i \".\-' Hus. Clean, nr1\'
p;1111T ,t tirr5, r/h. Uaving
fol" V11•I N<1n1 . .S9ij. ;,.JS-6719
(IJ" 4!l6-4'l06 -
"61i V\\' VAN XLNT COND.
Sll:J.>. OP. BF:ST OFrER
• • 4'.J.1-9S\~ * *
l)ti VII". Runs bootl, Clean.
SJ.)() .• \Ju~t sell.
•• hi."...-0."1'.l l ••
·i)..; V\V ~CJ hk "ac.on. 1600
111i:. nf'I\' trtin!i. nr11· r !ulch,
h<'adf'rs. SJ 3:l0. K3~6i7J.
*'69 ~·· .\uto/stif'k. rth. .\Cki raf'k.
Xtra r!c11n . G-12-0777
NABERS Cadillac 1-""-c·co'600"""'8"''"10"'""'5°"'"'"'"'· -:--:·--cM=U"S"'T"'A"N=G~-
Aun10R1zED DEALER '52 IMPERIAL 1-~~====o:--
2600 Harbor Blvd., <l Door &:dan. Like nl'\I' 1971 MUSTANGS
·Cos1a ~l<'sa uphols1ery. 1'f;bu11t engme. HERTZ CORP.
Call SW-9100 Open Sunday {QUD617l , (714 ) 771-4050
Cadillac 1967 $495 1911 :\IUSTANG :\Jach !. Cpe. de Ville Good .\1on. &: Tur.~. Loaded v.•/extras. 11.000
FACTOR!' MARCUS mill'~. Likt> ne11·. 01vner
AIR CONDIT!ONL'\G 6T.r-i200
Padded >:op, full po\\•er. all "6.i :-.iuslang, a uto lr&n~. r/h,
le ather interior, stereo, door air. &:OOd cond. S 725.
Jocks, tilt & tell'sropic steer-MOTORS 968-38-li
ing, many other :'(tras. '67 i\1u5tang lstbck, Vii, Auto,
(UKP240J H/H, Nr ne1v tire<. Lo mi"s,
$2399 2100 HarbOr, C . .\I, &i;t ofr. 897-3619 aft l P/.1. NABERS Cadillac 645-0466
AU1110RIZED DEALER '69 J\lark JII, loaded, tully
2600 Harbor Blvd., t>qu ip. ~lust sell thi~ Yck:id.
Costa Mesa 557-9349.
OLDSMOBILE
'67 CUTLASS
Call 5-10-9100 Open Sunday
LARGEST
SELECTION OF
CADILLACS IN
ORANGE COUNTY
SALES-LEASING
AUTI-IORIZED
c=o=,=N=T='L-.=70~,~D=R~. -14~,=.,=14 Door. Power s1rering, aU!o-
' 1 · matic, radio, heater. t118-X\nt <.'Ood. Private par y. BIM)
-SERVICE .
Nabers Cadillac
2f,()() JI.ARBOR BL.,
COSTA 1.!ESA
540·9100 Open SUnday
Call M&-79-l.> Eve!I.
LINCOLN Continental, '68. 4
Dr. Luxury equipJM"d. Xln1
cond. $2, 7j(). 49·1-9926.
CORY AIR
'6:i Corvair. 3:X> HP, ;\lag
v;·heels, Spoiler, Very [aiil.
Imm11<' con d. B tl l
Jongbloed, 673-lm be f
Sam.
$895
Good !\-Ion. & Tlll'S.
MARCUS
MOTORS
2!00 Harbor, C.?II.
$349S
BILL BARRY
PONTIAC·GMC-FIAT • • 011cr 200 ne:w k used cars
ro chooSt' fron1
Oprn 'til 10 p.m.
200 E. lst St.. Santa Ana
\lst SL. al S.A, FNyl
____ >,;.:58-JOOO
"6.) PONTIAC CataJ 1~
lion \\·agon. All p1\r. air,
A:\1/F.\1, nl'\1• lires, trarl!I,
brake~. battery, star ter.
Good n1cchanicel <.t:ind. but
some body d<"n!~. $39.l.
494-4j()2. See al 361 Locuat,
Laguna Beach
T·BIRD ---'65 T-BIRD
Full po11·l'r. tlir condition.er.
lOS9t~JI
$595
t :ood :\Ion. & Tue~.
MARCUS
MOTORS
'Ii:, RUli xln1 i'Und. Ai\1/F:'l-1.
r:ut 1,1l~ + :.Ira~. iilb-9023.
~'il'> Flo11 f'l',,_::('~'~L----
1'.*i 1 V\\' hll'. 1-:ng )'.:l"l'n T.
~1·•!1 ... ,:i1l, S7~11. C':\ll ar-
l•'l"n!)fln •)I' 1'1•'-:,.1.~4~;12
·1;•lliC{;--;--\:l~1~t :\"•'11
Cadillac 1971
Cpe. de Ville
FACTORY
'66 Corva ir V8, Di!lc brakes, 1 "'""'"""°64~5--0466,,_~~~'7.
i\lag \1·het'I. car l!! un-'69 Old!i 98, 2 dr hn-Jtp. full 2100 IIarhor. C.~t
linlshc'rl hut husine!>S forces p11T. stl'rt'Q tape, xln't rood. 645-0466
AIR CO:\DITIONTXG
1-·1llJ J)O\\"C'I"_ l'inyl top, a 1 I
Jealht.'L' interior tilt & 1ele-
srop1c s t('{'nng.' s1erro. door
li'Cks, \oc,_.Jiy flrivrn !., abso-
lutely Ircsh~ 1!t;HDFAJ
sale. Bill Jong b I oe d. S297i ~7-9SSS. l .-;o--T--B-l_R_D--B-,-o-,-,.-h-,-m·I
67.1-l77Z Jx>r llan1. PONTIAC f/p1\T, ri!1 11 hl, lo n1i'!i.
e 'Gl Cor1:air. auto, ,-:-•-i.11 ------·----~potl rs<, nu 1 1J'e~. A/C r'!~·.
body. paint, IU'f'S, ci1g. $Uhl. "iO Grand Prix, au1v !rans. -~~-;;,o P1·r. p!,\. &\-1-2iW Fri.
6-16--26!18. ~~~c All". P/B, P/~. \'ln~I lhru :\l1h1. or 64 ·1-0277
111 llt"-llJl.
~.1j.j()Of, ('\'f'<.
$6999
--NABERS Cadillac
CORVETIE Ion. Lo 111i"s,
s1:00 .. 'lio-oos.-,_
:\!nl contl. 11 11~T 1 111r
VALIANT ~~\\/Bu~liS-~ni;:1nr. $jl)O. 19f.6'~000'7nill'.~. 42j hp, 1~9 GTO, I011derl 11/P~u·n.~.
'
-· 6~,.~ -· 7 .,2,1 r-AUTIIORIZED DEALER 4 •p<I, p/b. p/, .. , •/•, kl', X!n( c_o_n<_l_, t 0 11·1l<'r, Like '61 Valiant. ne1v pa.int, EOOCi 11.>-'"'·'or .1;J -., 1'1' ~-"""" Harbor Blvd., ' ~ ~ " -·~ I ·ai + !I 99-nt."W 61 >-1200 body. Nef'rfi; tra-mi•sion. 'GS V\V Sunrl, auto. SI095. '62 Costa j\lesa whee 5, rad1 5 + + · J • · "~
Chrv. In1pala 327, 11uto, ~C~•~ll'.;;&l-O:;·•~t~OO'...:O~"'~"~S~"~""~'Y'-I"'"'~~,"~'='~--,;c:;:;:;.-;".;;;;;;;;:l '64 GTO, orig o"'llE'r, ;d nt =I~"'-· _49'-_1_2~35~·-----I
.S200. f136-8677. .67 COUPE de Ville, >..int "66 fuel Injected Corvcllf' rond. Auto. Rl:l-1, lo mile s. Tum unused ilem11 into quick
••'6l V\V BUS•• rond. w/:"t lras. sell for S2395 $2200 or besl offer. Cail $699. 5116-2439 cash. call 64~
!\r11 ('ng. trans $5()() or beiil offer. 54S--51188 aft 5. 557-7272. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980
6-1:>-<14·11 or fi.16--0493 * '67 Cad Convl. Full po'l·er, FORD jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii * • '60 \'lV • * rac air rond, /\m-Fm stereo. e
t·an1A~l1<' Corn!. B~I Ori. S2100. Call 5-11-2338. '66 FORD Country Squin', 10
&12-62113 or &12-0-127 1 ___ C_H_EV __ E_L_LE~--1 pMsengf'r, air cond., $6JO.
S,\CR l t"TCE . "69 V\V ~72
1970 ~IAVERICK. lilanda.rd
\\'gn. 4-<lr, radio, healer, trans, R&H, l:J.000 mi. Xlnt
C:a n11Jt>r, ;\hchMin t 1 r' J . '6.) Chevellr i\1alibu Sta.
Xlnt 1-nnd, 67:>-573.~.
'68 V\V BUG, p1i.-r steering, auto. ale. cond. S1495. 548-0419.
ht'sl offr·r. \Viii ~II perfect rond. See to aJ>-=r~~-RESUL==~TS~-,...--..,,-~Do-~
e 49G-'.125;J • preciate. Sl 100. or best or-pend on. Call the SUper-
·70 V\\1 hus 1v/~unroof $2700. 1 -'~'~'·c..::55~7~-186=!~.-~---.Sa 1 e • m In. .Daily Pilol
or best olfcr. Pvt pty. A good \vant ad la a good Ousilled 64i-s&7I .. place
-194-2540 lnve5lmt'nt your 11.d • dwye ltt
Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos. Imported
If YOU All AN OWNll Of A
MG
MG MIDGET
SPRITE
AUSTIN AMERICA
LOTUS
,~! lfllt CW9'N ,., I fN9 ~ I Ill dllftl._ H1 Mllf1li.llo Mtltilll .....
TIM MW ._, & 11\Kl ,.liWlll If H ........ 1,,..rh IMic• th11 ,.r
•c-ln1911 ~hr ,.., i. -.i '"·
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
GOOD TMltU OCT. 111.
3100 W. Coast lh,y .
N~1\·port Beach
.'
t70
DEMONSTRATORS
NOW ON
SALE
'
OVER 26 Tq CHOOSE FROM
AT TREMENDOUS
SAYINGS!
TAU THI YALLIY YllW TUJlN·O'f llll:OM
SAN Dll•O I GARDEN GltOYI F-ll:llWATS
1