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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-10-26 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa. . ~ .. r ~·"'· ................. "': .......... . . . . . ~ ........ ._ .. . ......................................... , ................................................ _,,, ..... , ................................................. .. .. ......................................... ·-.- -AR~-ON-,F~ARED IN DE-S~TRU . ' ' . ' 17 ' ·--.. •• ·- • • • • •• •• • • • .... Irvihe· Bank Gutted • ' DAILY Pft.OT ........ &M '""" ' . I ' 10 Park Fracas _lnjtires 14 . · Policemen ,. ' ··-·· .......... llmcrill -~~-!If lllt !ill' ......u· ....... -.. .... pert .Ul'lll publlc ...• ~ ' ., .J ; • ' ' • ·Thi 1.ciifli ,. _ .... ·---c1o,. oft.er two ._.._ lNl ......, · ....... bold ' lflon ·-lid" poUco .. belltv1 U.t 't-.. ...... -.r. . • tcirty./our illitto'a wen .lrr!oled. 11 all.I aDI!·• iu-tJoo. NU. ti Gie""""" ~ ~ ........ ...i:ti!=:.: ' ~ .. __ , __ loldll.. .. ~ poUco Coptllli ..... Dfl Aid "'~ tin 11"111 UI{ -....... ..... =-. ' "l'lllc:9 Nlll llio -~ 111.1.tiiut llub._a_if_ ... ,.... occupied U., .porli Ill MM ti ~ wder. · Qfplain Kini uld lill -were lllbjocled .. --. 'olllcenJua . I and ltrd 1ridl ... dlllnb 00f C0Dere\e1 -. tin-. nob adboWeo. He .......... --·bld: -clubo ad fllll ad In 1111W1r' le crit.icitm by some enloaten and a ....,P.per writer the captal!I Aid, "Tluil wu no Sunday SChool picnic 1111 there. Our alliccn wore oubjec:W te a lull lledpd allaci<. and tbeJ "!!lidn'I juot COUNTY FtREMEN PROBE RUINS INSIDE BANK OF AMERICA Nl!AR UCI CAMIPUS In Early Moml"I Houra Today In Oron .. County, Oo1truction Strlkn ' Alain ... nd there ad ~ ll" Allbaup no lho!I were fired and no tear 1u wa lllld; Captain Kint said that at one time Ibero wore IHerally bandrecls of bottles fiyln( lllrDolb Ille atr. "'Ibey came well equipped WW. riot material " be lldded. • Government flars . ' Ordered to U!\C Low leaded G~s W A8111NG'IUll (AP) -l'restdel!i· Nix· ...... -all federal -.. use Jtw iud er unleaded &•line wberevtr practical and asked tbe govemen of all the states lo do the 11me •with ltal,e.(lwntd vehicles. ·J 3'be order will affect ! 0 0 , H 0 1iwammmt-owned cara throughout lbe couolrJ. 'Ille federal 1ovemment buys one-half of ... ,.....1 of all the _.. ~ In the United Siila -• m1111nn ptlonl lllllUallY. n-n· Train, cbainnan of th" Pr'llJdenl's Council on Envlronmentll Quality aald the purposes ol the regutaJ UM.,,; \WOfold : "To reduce alr pollution and to increue the market for low·lead and unlericted 1uoline." Bank Gutted Near ·~cl;· Firem~n Probing Arson BJ .\)lTBUR R. VINSEL In Which the stmford RMrlrdt lmtHute Of 111 _. ,. ""' was conducting o:perimmll on plant A $~,000 fire branded u highly viruses and air, ~ ,wu ~.wreck· suspl.cious In orlatn raged through a Bank ed , by a*·'* ez)loliOn. of America branch near the UC Irvine Authorities noted it waa only one-half campus e1Tly today, gutUng. the building milt from today's bank fire . on which rtvOlutionlry 1logans were One other apray-paint.ed meua1e in the lreahly painted. latest incident read: -of Am«lkkl. No one. was inj'Vfid and no erploslon The mlllpellinc of 1be na&kln'a' name -· wai"' reported, but Onnae Collhty Fire Nati-style -1J a Jmon tndmaark ol.. Department Captain BW Cnlo!<lh1nk rev~ r- s::~;'.".": AU Pmrto tire ied~.:"-:fl t'l.:r:· People," had been sprayed onto 'the tw0oo at Hillcrest Pmt ':In f'lllllrtlClt,, wtdch The captain chOr.,.i that the liicident WU orpniRd by CoJ Siole hlllnio and ~Junior CGIJole -·aa ·tho collep --"" ilNel. . '"llley fired llP 'till -Idell With the ..... -.. and I.it and lheo ----......... pl io:~ .... --'11 do,. A·pms -... blued Sunday night . by I lfCIUP " callins lllelf Tbe 11Jllcrest Liberallan Grnup. · 11 dlarJled police With "-y .bealln1 and injuring many people." In the bandoUt the group . promllta to (l!ee RIOT, Pap I) ~· Two..·c.Oemonauts . . .·See Disneyland . story atructure homing nine busineues police shut down to all, Mt 1 of blPllit adjacml lo the UC! CIJl\flUll In the Irvine gatherh)gs. lovle,I ~~I.I Vlloll ,8"vutyanov 1Wn Center. Despite the county fire caplatn'1 and Andrian NlllOlaitv loiltedJllllleyland • "When they rot· there. the whole damn reference to .....,,, Or-County In -and the Caltech Jet thing was in namea and it juat doesn't Sheriff's dep,IUM1 -..,.. betnC more PropulDcla •J.abortlory in Puldena dur· happen that way n1Wr1J.ly," uid one fire cautious. .Ing l.be'ftlklDd M part of. their natkml oblerver. "Wt blve •'I ·rn• u far a any tour. One wiCnea to the 12:13 1.m. flareup bQmb bl.., ., -.,.. wned," Tba l""'mw, Whole IPKf: YOYll' of • • • • • s u '"MONbAY AFTERNOON,'OCTOBER 2,, J970 • "'. k. 1111ta 1.ACl 1111 :M PAMI tr ~ · · Ad!iWl.t . b.' a 9eatlls ! ' J It "I ; · '.A'tt0rriey ·10-t Frazier Sars S·U$peet · lnsane mm Wlnfllrvtcel SAlll"A CRUZ -Jamea A. Jackson, JabUe dlftrrder appointed to defend John Unlq Fruler in the 1laylng of five p119111, iay1 that insanity Is a pouibie pin """' the case gel.I to court. "My peAona.f.oplnlon Ls that Fraizer is cru:y,·~ ·the · 'attOmey said ·Sunday aJthough he abo remarked the evidence a&alnst his client "so far bu not been by any•meant conclusive." Frazier 'Pleaded iMocent after being arruiecl Friday in hi.5 cabin less than a mllt away from the $300,000 mansion overWokinc the Pacific Ocean .where an eye lilrpciil, his wife, their two sons and his ' teentarY nre bound; slaughtered and ·diimped Into a 1wlmmln1 pool. mtlhor Santa Cna ilounty Sherilf'I· · DepuUet nor the State Bureau of Criminal l~ij~Uon and Investigation cominented on 'a· rc:port. by ·E d MonttomerY of the San Francisco Ex· aminer thlt Frazier's f Inge r pr l n ts matched those on a typewriter used to produce a nole left at·tht slaying scent. Montgomery, a Pu1itier Prize-winning c:rlmti ·reporter, ·said a riott declaring "World War ·3" against mat.trlalists and delpoilen, of the environment had been typed on a mfchint found in Dr. Victor M. Ohta'• mansion and that Fruler's fl••••P"lnt.s bad 'been found · on the rudllno. Montpmery quoted "a r e 11 ab I e IOUl'Ce." ' Sheriff's depuUes said the 1tory was "newt to us" and the state crime lab Wd lb fingerprint department was closed. Fri.Zier, 24, Ui charged with killing Dr. Ohta, 47; bls wife, Virginia, 41 ; their two IOftl, Rkhlrd, 12, and Victor, 11; and the dodor'1 teattar)', Mn. Doro t by C.dwallMer, 31. . A family friend SundaJ ufd he believes a sunman shot Virginia Ohta dead in her l)ome and then lay In wait to ptck off four m0rt vidirna. Tbe ·friend told an lntervle-be being usured hiJ name would not be us- ed. Ht aaid he based his opinions on in- formation he gathered while workln1 with sheriff's investigators, and "& careful retraCing of events." 'Ibe friend said Mrs. Ohta was alone tn the house lest Monday afternoon and when she did not show up to pick up the sorui,. school oUicials . telephoned Dr, Ohta's office. · · "I believe the killer goi Mrs. Ohta in the afternoon and simply waited for the olhers lo come," the friend said. Dr. Ohta picked up one son and Mrs. Cadwallader picked up the other boy at a different school, the friend said. · . The secretary a'rrived home first,.about half hour before the eye surgeon, becauae Dr. Ohta had stopped to viSit Ills mother, Mrs. Kike Ohta, 80, who lives In Santa Cruz, the friend added. The friend said he believed that when the doctor got home he wu met at the front door of bis home by ·tbs armed killer and ordered to walk to the swim- ming pool, where ·the bodies of .the three others had been thrown. · "I think he saw ·the first child's bOdy lying in the pool from the 1tep1 and he probably turned arid luDl:ed tor the killer (See BODIES, pq. " "'eatlaer • Fair skies and gusty winds will greet coastal residents Tuesday, with te mperature jumping to 73 degrees along the shore and up to 112 further Inland. INSIDE TODA t believed the next to die were Dr. Victor The battle for t:cology con bt M. Ohta's' aecretarf,. Doroth y· won with tools developed to, tacfJ.aUader, and 011e of the. O~ta aons ' cope with problems of oic:tt' abe bid brought' hl:>me from school. , space, according to a Hunting· ~.the. friend aaid, the evidence aug· ton Bt:ach aerospace e%J)frt. Set iestect lhlt Dr.' Ohta arrived with another . Finance, Page 20. IOl'I, f(MQ)CI ' out what wu going oo, lunged it the Jooe killer and WU shot dead in ~~~ :: :::.1 ..... lS . . -.... ' Train .... ii I.I bQped that by ordering lbe IW1tcl lo lllCh gasolines in 1ovem- menl can it, will ncourlCfl refiners lo mab sud! mort 1enerally pve Onmp County llbertff'1 deputies tn-18id Doportr J-....._ • · It*'" In .i.. Ill• ..........,. ..-, ~ lormallan leadins to mi afl.polnt.s bulletin 1-111 t111 - -~"'"""4 ... acoampari"'1 by thotr olllclll U.S. for two Ntp0 mooWa a plclwp•,wll'~IC~k--prtmlrilyotllco o'IUlll'•, ........ ariil ~ iibOiiiUl"EcJwmAJarlii,Jr., tlio tum. °**"" "' J ...... ~ 11 ' aald the~to die appeared .--i: •: :=-,.. .... ...;:,-1.--to have been UNI IOJl who came home c,_..., 11 , .... ..._ t1 --n-81•'1, 1--load fuel~ lie sold. ......,. hydro- carbon emlraioni bt~n lo 30 percent. H)'dro.carlxln emilStfltil are giVttl 1 ma- jor 111\an! oltbe blame for -problems ·thnioll>out tbe comtry. I 'h ' 'lbe Bank of America -u a syml:lol of teln' eoultlrl, WWII •~or -...t tnM on the moon. lhe American Eatlblilhmonl -bal -currooey In tlll-'!ft Tho poJr antvld In Loo An(eleo •S.!W' Ille target of radial aaboteun ~ th~ SqUdo lolallntl • 1nm.. In dor after tourtnc tlll MlllllOd !pl<eirllfl OMJntry. ·~ the blue, wldcll -wa Dnl Center· In -· 1111)' _, to Dy ta On1¥ a week aao. 1 greenhouJt complet tilol Ill.AZ!, Pap II -Sin Jl'toocllco tedoy. • Drltlll ........ 11 ,........ ti from IChool with hll father. He uid the 1.....,... ..._ , •-, 1 boy prObibty wuldl~t down while trytn& . ==" tat .. ~ ::.,:;:.,. ~ to (lee from the tcr. U•tU1Jt l& WW W .. TIM lrtend, Who had !mown Or. Ohta :JS -..-" ,..,... .,.anted an· Ullwvlew only after ' l ' - ---. ·-····--~·-···· Jf DAIL V PILOT s IOU. Vio .. tion1 Soviets Protest P ·lane ~Intrusion' MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet lovem- ment today protested ''the violaUon" of the Soviet atai. bordei'Dy a u.s. dlllttary plane and aaid it was a result of "the general military activity of the United States in areas adjoining the Soviet Union." An official announcement said the Soviet governmenl hu lodge<! a prolelt with the govemmem of the United States tn connectloa with the Vi9latlon Of th e USSR atat. herder by an Amerlcao mllllary plane on Oct. 21." 1he reference was to a U.S. military plane which striyed ~ the border from 1\a'tey on that date. Two American Anny generals, an Army Major pilot and a TUrkish colonel aboard the plane have been held in Yerevan, near the frontier. The protest, the Tau News Agency said, reminded the Nixon admini stration that "in the past three years alone Ulere were more than 10 unlawful violations of the USfill air space." "Violations of the USSR'1 air space by American planes happen by no means tiecause of some• chance, concurrency of circumstance, but are a result of the general military activity of the United States jn areas_adjoinlng the Soviet Union " it said. statement and draw appropriate con- clusions." -The Soviets also-.protested to tho- Turkish government, drawing its at. tention to the violation by an American plane. The statement to Turkey reminded' Ankara that after the flight of the American U2 spy plane the Turkish governm ent said it "will never give planes of allied or other powers the right to use ltJ bases and its air space In ag. gressive purposes capable of inflicting damage to the securJty andiranqullity-of II• neighbon." But the latest incident "shows that in reality things are qulte difierent," the protest said. Agnew Claims Southerner Due on Court GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) -Vlee Pres- ident Spiro T. Agnew said today Presi· deal Nixon is dfleonjned-tG..a ppo.io,LaD<L- "see confirmed a Southern strict construc- Uonist on the Supreme Court." • --· ·---·- "Th~ Soviet government has repeatedly drawn the attention of the United States government to this activity that is openly bosWe to RussiL The preservation of American military bases around the Soviet Union ii a mc.t seriow: source of danger and dou not accord in any way with the statement.a iD favor of an im· provement of Soviet.American relations that were repeatedly made by U.S. 1eaders." The protest said the Soviet government "eEpeets that the United States govern· nlent will dillplay a most serious ap- proach lo tbe poslUoo ouUlne<! in this "You of South Carolina will see this pledge redeemed," Agnew told a public rally in the hometown of one of twa IOUtbemers nominated by Ni.ion, but re- jected by the Senate. "I needn't remind you that Richard Ni.Ion remains determined to achi eve a b e t t e r ideological and geographical balance on the Supreme Court," Agnew said. "His resolution to achieve tha t balance will never waver, despite those radical liberals who still control the Senate," the Egypt Chief Says U.S. Aid Threatens WW3 From Page l BODIES •.. and rot lhot Wider the arm," the friend Aid. '!be killer then finished him off, lhe friend. aald. Police bave reported tbat all the vic- tims were shot once in the back of the bead wltb a .:ii.allber b\ollet,,exceP1 I>\'. Ohta, who waa sbot tbne Umes wltb a .!II -once under the arm. once in the back and oace in the back of the bead. The friend !Aid• believed the youngst<r wbo came borne with his father tried to run but was "cut with l;pi!:tol butt acroa his forehead," :ond then shot. Scarves found binding the victims' wrists "were very loosely tied," the friend said. He concluded all were dead when the killer tied their hands with the neckwear -from the doctor's wardrobe -and threw them in the pool. 'Ille killer then set fire to the house. The bodies were found by firemen rea. ponding to a neighbor's alarm call. Sheriff's Sgt. Richard Damon, one of the principaJ investigators, was asked his reacUon to the friend's uplanation of the ttime. Damon said he was 0 very glad this is coming out because there has been a lot of fears in the community." Many bad ezprused doubt that one person could have tilled all rive, and were ap- prehensive that murderous accomplices were at large. The investigator stressed th a t authorities were continuing to probe the possibility that more than one tiller was involved. Meanwhlle, security returned to normal at the county jail where Frazier is being heJd, the sheriff's office said. When he was brought in Friday, armed guards working in pairs were posted at all four corners of the bullding. DAILY PILOT tt .......... .... ,.. ,....,. S.Cl1MJtte Rolieri N. w,,4 Pruld111I er;d ,.,.blllller J•ck R. C11rlev Vk t ,.,.,..,., tr.d o-r1l Mww 1kom•• Keevll EIS!klr ThoM11 A. Murphi..- M•fllt~ Eclilor lich1r1f P. H•l:I lollth OfMll!t COWi!}' Edltw ....... Cod9 M-: ))0 W•I lty Slrwt NIWPOrt •••di: ttn Weu lt!NI I DUlntrd UOUM 8-dl: m Htesl Avtflue Hurlt ....... Btedl' 11'71 ltKl'I IDUlevtrd S.ri Qlmlrlll: a5 N011h El (Mnlno ftt1I ' • vice president sald. Agnew said that Clement F • Haynsworth Jr., chief judge of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals at Rich- mond, Va., and a resident of Greenville, was a "victim of anti-southern bias" when the Senate rejected his nomination to the Supreme Court last fall. The rej~ctlon was based on conflict of Interest charges. The Senate early this year rejected tile nomination of G. Harrold Carswell, a Florida federal judge, after a tflree.. month battle over allegations that he was racllyy biased and possessed mediocre talent. Agnew said in a prepared text that, despite the two defeats. "the pledge was -and the pledge still js -that th is ·ac:t. ministration will appdint and will see confirmed a aouthern s t r 1 c t con. structionist on the Supreme Court." The vice president renewed tha t pledge as he opened a final six-day cam paign push into the South and Midwest. Agne w had stops scheduled here and in Raleigh, N.C., tonight. The visit to South Carolina was chieOy tn behalf or Republican Congressman Albert Watson, who is locked in a tight gubernatorial contes t y;jth Democratic Lt Gov.'John.West. The vice president's Greenville speech was a broad ranging talk in which he repeatedly spoke of the administration's interest in the South, atlacked Hubert Humphrey, Clark Clifford and Ra msey Clark -"The Clark Twins" -he called. them. Agnew also restated t h e ad· ministration.s's opposition to school bus- ing. UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Rlad accused the United States today of risking world war by increasing milltary aid to Israel despite Israel's withdrawal from U.N. Newport Heads Attending Meet Of Cities Group Five Newport Beach city councilmen, Including Mayor Ed .Hirth. and their wives , and eight key admJnistrative of· ficl als are in San Diego today for the an-- nual League of California Cities con. ference. The four-day convention, which con· eludes Wednesday night, has attracted Councilmen Donald MclMis, Ric~ard Croul, Milan Dostal and Lindsley Parsons, and their wives, in addition to Mayor and Mrs. Hirth. City Manager and Mrs. Harvey L. Hurlburt are heading the delegation of staff personnel al the conference. They are accompanied by Recreation Director Calvin Stewart, Planning D l r e c to r Laurence Wilson, Public Works Director Joseph Devlin , and Dennis Q'NeU, assis- tant city attorney, and their wives. City Attorney Tully Seymour, Police Chief B. James Glavas and City Clerk ~frs. Laura Lagios are also attending . are also attending. State Takes ' lmmedinte Look at Bridge Snarl The State Division of Highways will start immediately to find a temporary solutlon to the trafllc problem created by the narrow Back Bay bridge in Newport Beach. Mayor Ed Hirth said today one of the solutions under study will be temporary widening of the existing bridge. He said this could be completed vt'lthln two years. Hirth reported on the results of a meeting wi th Haig Ayanlan. highway division district engineer. and local traf· fie personnel in Los Angeles Friday. llirth said the state indica ted it will provide some kind of temporary solution to the problem independent of a final cleclsion on the Pacific Coast Freeway. "They are lntet~d in doing what they can to help us solve the problem in the interim," he said. He said alternatives to simply widening the existing bridge will be considered, too, but gave the Impression that appears to be the most likely solution. Hirth said the possibility or con- structing a temporary br idge structure alongs ide while the existing bridge Is completely revamped wouJd also be con- sidered. But he stressed that these are onJy temporary solutions. "They do realize we have a traffic pro- blem and told us they will do what they can to solve It without wailing for a solu. tlon on our overall traffic problem." -The original plan for the bay cros.slng Is the conrtrucUon of two new bridges, ooe for the Coasi highway at a cost of $S million another span costing evCJ'I more for the future Pacific Coast r·reeway. ''They art plarming to at least design • these two permanent bridges, along wlt11 a new Dover Drive interchange,· au at the same time," Hirth said. Planning of permanent bay spans have bee n delayed, however, since the state lea rned of the controversy generated by the planned route of the freeway throU&h Newport Beach. . As originally planned, the new bridges would be high-rise structures giving at least 40 feet clearance. The local furor currently ts centered around petition drives by a group of Newport Beach residents who are seeking to force the city to rescind a signed agreement on the freeway route from a point just east of the bay crossing to the Corona del Mar city limit. A second petilion seeks a charter amendment requi ring a city-wide vote before any future freeway agreement can be adopted by the city council. Hirth said that v.·hatever temporary solution is decided by the Highway division, it would have to receive ap- proval from the U.S. Coast Guatd. J~e pointed out the Coast Guaf.d ls ex· tremely concerned about access to the Upper Bay. Hirth said he was not told how tong it will take before any recommendations on the temporary soluLlon are ready, but m.. dlcatcd it. will be only a matter of a few months, if the work Is to be done by 1972. Hirth was directed to Investigate the st.1tus or pla nning on the bridge by the ci· ty council l1u1t month. Tbe meeUng Fri· d3y resulted from a lefter he subse- quently sent }.yanlan uking for a pro- gre.ss report, lllrlh said the 11•1<1• of tbe plaM<d freeway, it.self, was not dlacussed. peace negotiations. Riad opened Middle East debate in the General Assembly -the first time the 127·nation body has taken up the issue. Previous discussions were in the security council, but Egypt got approval of the assembly debate over U.S. objections it would torpedo the peace talks. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban has said in advance Israel would not take a "defen.sive'' role in the debate. This became clear today in Tel Aviv when tbe Isrl eli army intelligence C&ief said Egypt 1 and Russta had used the CWlfJ-flre to . ' build one Pf the world's molt advanced anUaircraft systems on the west bank of the s ... C&nal. Riad, in accusing the United Sta,tes of obstructing miAjdle East pesoe through its aid to Jsrael , said, "the rul e of the charter makes it incumbent upon the United States to stand by the countries that are victims of aggressioh and not to support Israel, the aggressor." "By taking this hostile position towards the Arab peoples and by supporting Jsrael, the aggressor, the United Slates obstructs the realization of peace in the Middle East, endangers world peace and encourages the use of force in m. tematlonal relation ," Riad said. There bad been a possibility up until the last minute that today's debate might be post.paned for several days. Tilt United States and Britain privately ex· pressed fean a diplomatic disaster could nsu1t from the assembly charges and countercharges. But th e debate began as scheduled. "It has become Imperative that the United Nations keep the situation in the Middle East under its active attention, that it follow up constantly the effort.'1 for peace and make use of its powers unde r the charter, untU peace is finally secured by the withdrawal of Israel's aggressive forces from all the occ\ipied Arab ter· ritorles,'' Rlad said. · He declared Egypt's • • a b s o 1 u t e delermination to liberate every inch of the Arab territories occllpied by Jsral!I" and accused Israel of resisting all m. tcrnational efforts for peace. He said Israel "set out to suppress" the recent U.S. peace initiative "from the very mo. ment Israel announced its acceptance." · From Page l RIOT .•. "; confront the City COuncll Tuesday night • with demands that the park be opened. They said they plan a seven o'clock rally Tu esday night In a park across from city hall . At the rally an attempt will be made to raise bail money for "our brothers and sisters arrested Sunda.y." Police said the park has become an In- creasing problem In recent weeka with bands of long-haired youths harassing family groups who tried to use the park for a Sunday outlng. OfOcers said that drinking, use of drugs and several incidents of sexual pro- mlscuUy ha d taken place in the park. Hillcrest Park was closed in ~fay of 1969 alter similar incidents but no widespread trouble erupted. Pablo Picasso 89 MOUGINS, France ((UPI) -Pablo Pic~sso ctlebrated his '9Ut birthday at, hls home Sunday. Only close friends were lnvlted to join him In mark.in& th e event. I 'Qtakt SlaOck' • • Irvine Students Stunned by Fire By GEORGE LEJDAL Of !tit O.llr Plltl Steff Conference which last week sponsored a Black Panther·Free Bobby Seale rally, u.ld ~ m_embers of NUC "wouldn't. sup;. port such deStruction." R6bert Mar~1; a graduate student in history, said however he could understand the frustra- Crowds of disbelieving students, faculty and nearby residents of UC Irvine stood ln the wate r·logged grass around the gut· ted Bank of America in quiet shock. ''How were they so succeasfuJ?" a liOJJ Of some that wouJd lead them to depos.itor asked increduously. burn" the bank. Mrs. William E. Moore of University :;unw t»e media gives radi~ equal Part was going to deposit to her account time to articulate their positions such at the Town Center branch of Bank of things wiH happen/' Marshall said. "U America. Sbe arrived to find the bank there were an open dialogue in this cowr burned out. try property would not be so sanctified." "Thts is Just too much,'' she said. Emphasizing he wouldn't "blow up the Nbting the scribblings on the wall bani: myself," Marshall said.i "I can which read "Oint of America -death to emphathize with those who would." He pigs'' Mrs. Moore aald, "t·don'l th1nt any cited a need for increased e:ipoSlti<>n of point Is ever made with these things." 'issQe; including the Black Panthe'rs, Viet. She was concerned and said her bus--nam, Guatemala and the Near East in band was too hearing reports on the radio order to lessen tensions. this morning, whether her money was all Aoother student, Craig Harlan, toting right. an infant was more vehement about the A bank official who asked not to be :rTiedia's role in the Bank of America fire. t'lamed said no records or cash were lost "Read Rampartii magazine to find out in the blaze and damage was limited to why the Bank of America should be burn· furniture, fiJ:tures and c a I c u I at in g ed," be said. machines. four fireproof vaults held A survey of students in the commons depositors records and they were emptitd b1.;ilding across the street from Town early today for storage in an unnamed Center On campus revealed few students nearby bank. who were concerned about the lneidenL The spc;ikesman indicated that two But outside the bank where workmen trailers ~roulht in within houn of the were pounding plywood sheathing •int<- blaze which was reported at 12:15 a.m., place, a group of onlookers rew about wuold De readYfOTTl.Oa:nt:"O~onung. Tuesday. The Irvine branch does not of· fer safety dtPoSit box service, he noted. UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich said this morning bis reaction to the bank fire was the same u whenever property Is destroy«!. He expresaed annoyance· that students would be blamed automatically for the fire since .. the nature Of calls this morn- ing. indicate an immediate feeling the Ure js the result of students wben'that bas not yet been detennined ... The chapcellor a)S() noted that this parUcular branch besides serving the urUvenity community offered "vitally Important services to students in the area of financlal aid by servicing student loans." The chancellor dtplored the 1085 of these services even temporarily. A spokesman for tbe New University 'Just Looking,' Brit Skydivers Miss Needle SEATTLE · (UPI) S i x parachute-wearing young persons never got off the ground with their plan to "go up and IOok around " from the 520-foot high space needle observation· deck Sunday night. Five men and one woman; all .nembers of the Husky Skydiving :nub at the Unlversity o f Washington, were ref u 1 e d i>ennission to take the •t elevator ride to the top of. the symbol of the 1962 World 's Falr. The group donned skydiving suits and parachutes at the bottom of the leedle. An attendant saw them :hanging clottiet and dashed for a '<!.lephone to notify space needle of. ficials. 1be group was not allowed to board the elevator, even after members explained they had no in· tention of jumping. Bev Mon tgormery, 21, president of the skydiving club, said she and her friends just wanted "to go up and look around'' and get some publicity. .From Page l BLAZE ••• reported by a mao speaking in e1clted tones. They controlled the raging fire about 30 minutes after arriving -three minutes after the original call -from staUons at UCI, Orange County Airport and in Laguna Hills. Fire damage itsell was confined to the bank. office on the firs t floor of the two. story building, while smoke inflicted losses on other quarter! with.in the struc. ture. The facility also houses UCI public relations offices. A gang of onl ookers -some cheering -gathered to watch the blaze, reminis- cent of one last February that destroyed a Banlc of America b~ancb in Isla Vista, near the UC Santa Barbara campus. No problems were reported in keepin& order at the UCI scene. Investigators said 'they impounded u evidence a number of revoluUonary: posters taken from Uie scene. · "Free Bobby and all P o 11c 1 Prisoners , •. " read one slogan. One facility damaged in the fire at the University Park Shopping Cen ter on the north side of the Campus was a UCI booksi<lr<. The Bank of America is the world's largest financial institution and bas been hit by fires and window-smashing in- cidents blamed on students and radicals for lhe past year. Authorities have emphasized the basic lack of trouble at the 6,000-Student UCI campus in conservative Orange County and were cautious ln evaluating causes of the nearby bomb bl ast a week ago. They noted that while Stanford Research In!tltutt(s 12 branches around the world have done Defense Department war research the IrVine facility was engaged in purely peaceful. studies. No definite cause has beeft established In that case, but authotitiei"1ay it was undeniably a bombing, ' The precise llcation or the bink branch that was bumfd' is adjacent J.O the UCI campus in lhe~al area shope!ng center, facing ootwara toward an lrVlne Ranch field. NOT ALL ENDED HAPPILY T 'PARK sir! I . FULL ERTON Bloodied Hlllcnst Park Po rtlclpant Comforted by Friend I I I ... ' . ---·· ......... _, ...................................... . Huntington Jleae · _ . -EDIIION • -. . voi:: ~l. NO. 256, l SECTIONS, 3~ P.AGES. • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA: MONDAY, OCTOIEil 26, 1910 --· OJat,a Slapngs Attorn~y Labels Suspect ',Insane' From Wlre Services Frazier pleaded innoCent after being SANTA CRUZ -James A. Jackson, arrested Friday ln his cabin Jeu than a publle-defendtr-appointed-to-defend-John-mile-away from-the-f30Q;OOO-mansion-- Lin1ey Frazier in the slaying of five overlooking the Pacific Ocean where an ~. aays that insanity is a possible eye surgeon, bis wife, their two sons and plN when the case gets to court. his secretary were bound, slaughtered "My personal opinion is that Fraizer is and dumped into a swimming pool. crazy," the attorney said ~unday Neither Santa Cruz County Sheriff's although be also remarked the evidence Deputies nor the State Bureau al against his client "so far has not been by Crimina1 Identification and InvesU,ation "' any means conclusive." commented on a report by E d Group Wants Recreation At SA River A Huntington Beach citizens committee woold Uke to ,.. biking, hiking and riding trails a1dng the Santa Ana River. This recommendation ts ooe of a 1erie1 of s:uggestions the !committee makes to pll~ recrutmal ideve)opmelll GI the river lllil 111 perlpliery. '!'be oommltteo, headed by ~ Donald Shipley, m14e a study of ihe and Its potential development for cow> y officials and offk:.iaIS of neigbborin& cities who are anxious to preserve open space aJong the river. The committee recommends that the trials be established from the ocean along the levee with · Jinkages at the Talbert channel, the Orange County Sanitation District's treatment plant at the rivennouth. LeBard Park, the Edison easement below Garfield Avenue and Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley. . The Hunti11gton Beach study group also urged 'that the feasibility of building a marina at the rJvennouth be in· vestigated, that tht Orange Freeway (route 57) be terminated at the San Diego Freeway instead or continuing south to the ·coast and that odor from the treat· ment plant be minimized. Montgomery of the San Francisco Ex· aminer that Fratier's f i n g e r p r i n t s matched those on a typewriter used to produce a note l!!ft at the slaying scene. Montgomery, a Pulitzer Prize.winning crime reporter, said a note declaring "World War 3" against materialists and despoilers of the environment had been typed on a machine found in Dr. Victor M. Ohta's mansion and that Frazier's fingerprints had been found on the machlne. Montgomery quoted "a rt Ii ab It source.'' Sheriff's deputies said the story WIS ''news to us" and the st.ate crime lab said its fingerprint de~ent WU closed. ii charted wil!l ll:illlq Dr. Oli -· VlrglJlll,41; -t ... IMS . , 12,•ancl Victor, 11;• aad -- doct<><:'s secrelary, "Ir•· Dorothy Cadwjllader, 38. A f6mily frh!nd llUnday said he belle••• a IUJWJlan shot VirsJnla Ohta dead in her hornt '"and then lay ln watt to pick oU four more victims. The friend told an interviewer he believed the next to die were Dt. Victor M. Ohta's secretary, Dorothy Cadwallader, and one of the Ohta eons ahe bad brought home from school. Then, the friend said, the evidence sug. Kested that Dr. Ohta arrived with another son, found out what was going on, lwiged at the lone killer and was shot dead in turn. The friend said the last to die appeared to have been the son who came fiome from schoOI with his father . He said the boy probably was cut down while trying to Oee from the killer. The frleltd , who had known Dr. Ohta 25 years, granted an interview only after being assured his name would not be us· ed. He said he based his opinions on in· formation he gathered while working with sheriff's investigators, and "a The citizens also want the pipeline pro- ject from Riverside County to the sea to be delayed for further studies and that secondary treatment of sewage be made "until it is proven that bacteria and microorganisms are not harmful to sea life." The recommendations will be given to a firm ot architects, Eckbo, Dean, Aust.if' and William of Los Angeles, which has been charged with the responsibility of preparing a master plan for development of the Santa Ana River from the ocean to its source in the San Bernardino. mowrtains. careful retracing of events." "· The friend said Mrs. Ohta was alone in Em.battled Aide the house lest Monday afternoon and when she did not show up to pick up the Of Sea' } Beach sons, school ofiicials telephoned Dr. Ohta's office. "I believe the killer got Mrs. Ohta ln the afternoon and simply waited for the others to come," the frieod sakl. Dr .. Ohta picked up one son and Mrs. (lee BODIES, Pase 1) 'Junior Nader Raider.' Unit On Job in Fountain Vallev .; B1 RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Under his direction, the students gather °' ""' Deltr '*" ,..,. data on products and then make Ralph Nader would be proud of the 1enerallutiona about the products they "junior raiders" Jn training at Founlain have acruUnized. Valley High School under the direction of All the stud.Jes are open-ended with the Jwiior clau Ena:li.sh teacher Ro 1 answen heft up to the individual student. McVeigb. Some qut:ltkms to be answered are, ''Are --n-.1 the manufllcturtrs honest?" "Who ...,.,, He teaches a class ~ "' ... -.... -_., ............ for ad.-.*'-?" _ _.. "Is --Nuve for Consumers" wtllch Shows students ~ ... .....,. •uu .. ._.,_. how to 1111 llftlUllte •kills that sfin<trat. abopplq -?'" behind the ldvertllint camouflap of the Results al tbelr forays lllto the mullet ""'1nesl world. place hive been nVUling. In one cllll ua:ignment. 50 items W'UI Teenqm OJl'!nd l20 billion annually• found to be under the ltlle c:ontentl according to Dr. McVelgh, which ls one listed by the manulat'turer. · "' reuoo why manufacturers. direct their One student only found 11cookiesin 1 Illes campaigns toward the younc. He package marked as conta.J.nlni a dostn. just wants to make sure they're not ,WU.. In one nas>kiJ' roll there were only D b~ and get their money's worth. aheeta instead of the advertiaed '80. H As a result, teenagers have ~me Parenti allo have been inspired by the targtt of some very hith P~llUre lhelr ofrsprings' fervor and one mother merchandillng that is doing damage to WIS ao Incensed about that napkin count tamilleS even beyond the wane of that she took her complaint ri1ht to the mooey," he claims. company president. Items in the "high tell'' range Include Sbe pointed out the error to him, and everylhint from rock ""'rda Io· pimple on check1ll( the napkin counltr, tbey cum and mUlde can. -----<11dllo>ilcll"'•ermGed that it "" c h e a t J n 1 lrmlcllly, Dr •. McVeith U1ertl, the customen by 15 percent. merchandisers ire cashing in on the kkls' The business executive told her the antl-utablfahment alUtu4e1 to cull from rnachinie would be fixed and the woman'• them the money the establl$nent 1lves daughter received • Hluabh! 1e...., in them. consumer relation1, Dr. McVtlch reports. Gets New Post Lee Risner, the embattled Seal Beach city manager who was fired from his poet last Ju1y, has a new job ln La Habra. Beginning Nov. 1, ·he wlll '1£1imt!"the dutieJ of the city adminiatrator in the North Orange County city, "'placing Howard SchroyOr wbo wtti bec\lllle the ci· ty managu of Pico Rivera. Risner, 41, will receive an annual salary of $20,000 or SS,000 lesa than be was paid In Seal Beach. He was dismissed July rt 1fter four years of aervlce when a ntwly con.stltuted council ·voted 3-2 to oust him. His ........,, for dismissal lncludod llle alleged fallurt lo make proper financial reports, abeentlng himaelf from th8oUice to conduct prlvale busblea ml oon- duttin& leCftt 'bullnels l!llkJl!I with individual memhen·fi !be coandl.. Exchange Club . Honors Studeri~ Sii hill> achool studenlo Jtom Hun· Ungt.on Beach have received honors from the E1cblnge Club u top achollll'I ln<I all-around ltudenta. tor L'MI monUI of October. • Jan il«gerlOll ud ll1ck lllnry were honored .. the boy and Pl of.Ibo -lh from HllnllnttDn Beodl HIP ' So;hool1. Similar winnerl from Marina lllth Wert Melody Sharp and DamlJ SUll}rop, and from Edllon H!th. tbeJ. wcw ·Pit Killy and Marlr: Jobnlon. • -- . . ' .. '"Jnst Too , Mn~h!' • • • . ' . . . . VCI Community St.unned .by Fire By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. Dlllr '"" ltlft Crowd& GI disbelieving lludents , fa~ty and nearby· residents of UC Irvine .stood in the water·logge4,grus around the.eut-. led Bank of America In ,quiet abock. "How were they· so auooesstul?" a depositor asked intreduously: . Mrs. William E. Moore of Univtt!lty Park Wai loiiig to deposit to her accmin\ at the TflWn cent.er branch of Bank of America. She arrived to find the bank burned out. ' "This is just too much," she Aid; Noting the scribblings on the wall which ~ad "Oink of America -death to pl1s" Mrs. Moore said, "I don't th.ink 1111 polri.t is ever made with these thinp." She was concerned and uid her hus- band we too bearing reportl oo the ~dio tJtlJ morning, wbetber her money wu all rltlit· . A bank offtci1J .. wbo isll<cf ~ le be named uJd no recordl or cub ~-._ in the blue. and dam1p wu !1ml!od le fum11Ure, ·fixtures and e a 1 c u la t I • I machinu. Four flreprool vaults' held. depo1ltor1 l'e<'Orda and l!ley welt~ early today for storap in an .wmamecl nearby baCJk. + ' '!'be spokesman lndlcah!d tblt !WO trlllm brought in within houn al tl!O bla1.e· whlcb was reported at 12:11 a.m., wuold be re1<11 lor 1 IO 1.m. openinC Tuesday, '!'be -branch doff nor Of. fer safety dtposlt box 1erv1ce, he noted. UC Irvin& Cblnc<llor Ilanlel . Aiclrlcll uid lhil.mornlnl hil ructloo lo the - fire Wal the AJDe 81 wbeaeffr Jk'4*11J II dellro)'eili . He Hprtlled annoy1nce that -II would be blamed 1utom1dellly lor tbt fire lloce 11the nabrt of calll lbll.momo int lndlall an Immediate f"1lnl tbt !Ire ' fs tbnesult ol •ludents when thal hu not yet been.detenninell." The chancellor also noted that this pullculer branch beside• letVinl the univenlty . community~ ottered "vii.ally · (S,0 REACl'ION, Pap I) . _.,, . Government Cars · Otd~red t.O Use . Low Leaded Gas • WASHINGTON CAP) -President Nix· on tOday ordered an federal vehk:let to UJI low lead . pr unleaded a•aolipe Wbertver • practical -and askeCI tbe IOVlftOrl'o! Ill the ttlilel' to do tbe 'Ami 1'11"!--nblcla. . ' ·'!'be <rder ,will • lfflct • 100 ,000 ........ .., ... ,.ned ..n .lllraJtl>out u., cilaatry.. ' • ,,.. , federal 1ovemmm bo/ys . one-11111 Ot OM peil:tnt ol 111 llle .1 ... line t>urciiuea in 111• un1h!d "s111e1 ~ • mlUID pllons1 annuelly. ~ r .. Ruaell Train, cbaJnnan of t·b • )'ralcfent'I Council· OU .· E..-mental Qulllt7, laid the ~ of the resul•· llon uitwofold: '"l'o -air polluUon Ind le -the matltel for low·lead Ill( unleaded psollne." · · Train Nld 11 II hoped 1!111 by orderinl the IWltcb· to such piollnal In 1ovem· ment feart' It wUJ ehtoln'11t refinert to mate_ IUcb fuels tnOtt 1 t o e r a l l 7 •nllabllJ . Low~•"' ltltl1, lie llld, r<dlice· li)droo carboo tmlalonl by """ to lO -L H)'dre-clrboa emlaaiOlll an &1ven 1 a ~ Jor ... -bllm• lor -probilml tl!n)uJhoUI tilt cauntry • ( '" 4 . ' , • Today'• Fbull Arson Said Possibility By Firemen By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. ~11'1' ''*' ... A llJ5,000 fire branded u bilJ>ly llUl(>lclouJ in ori,in r11ed tbrouth 1 BIDk GI America branch near the UC Jrvklt C1111p11 euly today, IUllin& the buf1dln& an which revolutionary lloclDI •ere fmhly painted. No one wu injured and · nO aploslon was reported, but Oran1e c:Ounty Fire Deparbuent Capllln Bill Croo'<ablnl; ltrong1)' hinted at arson. "0..111 to the Pip , •. All Power to the' People," had beeD sprayed onto the twDo story structure houalng Dine buainelses adjacent to the UCI campus In the Irvin• :row~ Center. "When they got there, Ute whole damn thing was in flames and it just doesn't happen that way naturally,'' aid one firt observer. One witness to the U:13 a.m. fiareup pve Orqe County aherifi's deputies ~ fonuation leadinl to an lll·poinll bulletlA for two Negro men in a pickup truck. -The Bank of America -as a symbol of the: American Eltabliahment -has hem Ille target GI rlldlcll 11boteun uound !hi ·~· OlllJ 1weel:1p, 1 ......-.... pin ID wblcb U.,.Stanl«d Raearcb inllltu\o WU •caoductlng experiments "° · plant ' v1ruiea ~ air pollution was also wrec~ ed. by ..... aplaliM. AuthoriUe. noted it WU only one-bali mUe from today'l blnk fire. One other sprar1>1inted mesaa1e in tht latest incident read : Bank of Amerikka. The mi.sa:pelling of the nation 's name - Nui-1tyle -is a known trademark ot revol.utioDar)' factions. Investl1ators said another slogan refer- red to a rock and botUe-throwing incident at Hillcrest Park in Fullerton, which police abut down to all, because of hippie catherings. Despite the county fire captain's reference to arson, Orange County lberitf's depuUes were bein1 more cautious. "We have no information 13 far u any bomb bluts. or arson are concerned," said Deputy James Enearl. Loss in , the bank blaze includecl primarily ofiice equipment, furniture and tellen' counters, while no legal papers or: currency in the vaults were destrofed. Squads totaling 2S firemen rtsponded tcr the blaze; wbich authorities said was first reported by a man speaking in b.clted tones. They controlled the raging fire about 30 minutes after arriving -three minute• after the origlnal call -from slation.s at UC!,' Or1111e t::ounty Airport and in LRtona llilll. • Fire damage itseU was confined to the bank office on the first noor of the two- 1tory building, while lllloke lnlllcted losses on other quarters .within the struo- ture. The facility also hou.sel UC! public relations offlCes. A gang of onlookers -some cheering -gathered to watch the blaze, remirus. cent of one last Februan that destroyed a Bank of America braiich in Isla Vista,, (See BLAZE, P11e. l) Orufe C.ut 1''t"dler Flir skiff and 111111 wlndl will ire<t co111W ~nll Tueld!Y. wilh "'-"'""' jumpin1 to 71 degrees along tht shore and up to a further Inland. INSm.B TOD .. l' .... The bottlt for ecologv· can bf won wit~ tooU dtvtlope:d to copt with probltms of outtt 1pace, accord ind to a Hiinttnq· ton, Stach atrospa~ txpert. Sc• Fino.nee, Page 20. ...... .. -_., ·-....... ~·.t::·~ .. -·-• Td I I l~I -::_ut•.•~."' .. .. • •M .. " .. • .. ... " " -.. littttlMI ....... Or .... c-tY 11 -.... .............. , == :: w-. --.. .......... , .. 1, --.. • • • / ' .-• v 2 DAILY PILOT H • DAILY PILOT lt9ff ....... FOUNTAIN VALLEY HIGH BAND PUTS BEST FOOT FORWARD AT PARAOE Bond Took s..-1 During Four1h -I Paroclt' and Btiilocuo Enjoyed By About 15Clll Ptl'10nl DAILY PILOT Plllll .. L.91 l'- BRAVE VOLUNTEER WAS TARGET FOR HALLOWEEN SPONGES Girl S..,.. T~ .., f'"•mod Up Tllfa 80illh Fcir .JIV'Caf .. rillhl.i "'tlt'f Deadlocks 'Sweet Er!lie' Beats Rap In Dirty Word Mistrial A black UC Irvine graduate student ar- rested after using bad wor~ 49 times to apress his alleged contempt toward radical white students bas beaten ibe' rap, at least for the time being. Ernest A. "'Sweet Ernie" Smith 30 wu freed Saturday when J9dge ~ald Dungan roled the proceedings in Harbor Judicial District Court to be a m~trlal. 1be all-white jury which included seven women deadlocked 9 to 3 for conviction and Judge Dungan 's action followed refusal to Jet defense attorney James George individually poll the jurors. Smith, a former L<ls Angeles radio and t.elevi.slon talk lhow penonality, had been charged with disturbing the peace of • DAILY PILOT OIU.NGI COAST l'UILllHINO WMP/.JIY Robert H. WN4 .,.lcltnl .... ,....,. J,,1i; R. C1trl1y Vitt Pfllldwlt <Ir.II ~I Mll'lltll' Thom11 K1tvl1 £dlllr Tt.11t111 A. Mvrpfli111 ,y...,..g1nf ~~;or Al111 Dilki11 Wt1I Ot1,.. CWrlty atlln.t Albert W. ltt•• Auac:ltl• EdllOr HntlllftM ..... Offk. 171 75 ....... 1111•114 M•i1i111 Addr1111 r.o. a.. 790, 91641 Otller~ Lt.-IMdl: m l'or•I AVllllVll COttt M .... 1 nD W.I II'/' llfftt .....,.,, .. tell: ttll Wiii ...... ..,._,.. "" ""'"",.: .. IMrlll ., ~ Rell ' unlvenlty campaa following the May 15 Incident. During the weelt~ong trial, the !>,sic r.ontentioo by. Ille deflme was that-words and word-combinations used by Smith are common and IKll offensive to residents of Watts, where he was raised. Deputy District Attorney R u s s e 11 Serber, the prosecutor, d1sagreed and ap. parently convinced nine jurors to do the same. A decision will be made this week whether to move for a retrial or dismiss the charge entirely. Sweet Ernle and his defense counsel contended that he was addressed in like manner by the white radicals after call· ing then names, but DO one elae was ar· rested. Fountain Valley Stud~nts Study With Computers Some of the tedium in figuring has been taken off the shoulders of nearly 1,200 Marina and Fountain Valley High School students who are now using com· puters. They are taking part in a cooperative atudy between UC Jrvlne, Cal State Fullerton and tbe Orange C.OUnty Schools omco to see U they learn better by using electronic aid!. The total program, including the use or equipment and teotlng materials. Is being funded through a $44,000 NaUonal Science Foundation grant · at nO cost to tht district. The computer project was designed to melSW"t possible c b an g e s lJJ mathemaUcs lkll1s as well u ~ level o( motivation ln students using the equfp- mtnl to solvt problems related to their f'fl\llar classwork. . OOntrol groups or students art cur. mUJy being taught to aolvt almllar pro- blems by the convenUonal classroom techniques. • • 'Mle electronic tqul11ment will be available ca both campwu unUI June li11. Spooks Enjoy Valley Parade For Halloween Little goblins IJld ghosU ocampered across the streets Saturday as FOl.mtain Valley put oo Ill belt show yet lo< the dJy's Fourth Annual llalloween P1rlde tnd Barbecue. Fwr marcbin( band! tapped ou\ their lunes to a brislt pace down BuJhard Street. Hones, floats, and mobl ol human mard>en !Wed the gaps between the lively mu.sic. Some 1,500 residents downed tasty chunk! or barbecued beef served up by Fountain Valley Firemen with the help of the Jaycees, Girt Scouts and Boys" Club. Game.s and food booths al Fountain Valley Hlgb School were packed. One taco stand ran out of food before the day wa.s half over. Hobo K,lley, parade marshal, Was mobbed b~ the youngsters who watch ber on television. There were ao entries in this year's parade. The ~ in each ol ten categorl• were: . Floats; !Int, city ol Tu!tin; -· W"'1mluoter Ezchanp Club; third, Ban- jo Pickm ol w..-r. Banda: first, Santa Ana Rigb School; at<ond, Fountain Valley 'Hiab School; third, Los Amlp Hiab School. ,. ' DrlJI 'team: 'first, "l'wniUI Valfef High; aecond, Guardettes of Garden Gnwt: ,\bird. Sanla Ana lligb Sc:hool., 1~or.-1Guard, ilenior ~,divilloat firlt, Colla Mesa Police: aecopd, Amlrlcon Legion Post 131, Santa Ana. ' . Color Guard, junior cHvilion: flnt. Thunderbirds, Anaheim; secorid, Rqyal Lancers, Westmlnoter. " Speclalty-novelty: lint,,_ YMCA. lndlan Guides, HunUngtou Beach. tnd Fountain Valley; RCOnd. Fountain VaUey Woman's Club: third, Westminster Elb 1'!<11•· Drum and Bugle Corps, one winner on~ Iy, Kings Lancers, w .. tm1noter. Groupa : first, Matadors, Fountain Valley: secoud, Custer's Last Stand, Founlaln Valley; third, The Coachmen, Westminster. "' Equestrian: !Int. Sharon Autmon; se- cond, Virginia Ralh: third, Pam McLain, an of Fountain Valley. 1.1ajorettes: first, Carolyn's Colleens, Buena Park; seco!ld, Thunderbirds, Anaheim; third, Recre-ettes, Garden Grove. From Page 1 .BODIES ... ~dwallader picked up the other boy at a d1!ferent school, the friend said. The secretary arrived home first, about half hour befort the eye surgeon, because Dr. Ohta had stopped to visit hls mother. Mrs. Kike Ohta, 80, who lives in Santa Cruz:, the friend added. The friend said he believed· thiit When the doctor got home he was met at the front door of his home by ths a r m e d tilfer and ordered to walk to the swim- ming pool, where the bodJes of the three others had been thrown. "I think he saw the fint child's body lying in the pool from the step!! and be probably turned and lunged for the killer and got shot under the arm," the friend said. The klller then finished him off, the friend said. Police have reported that au the vic- tims were shot once Jn the back of the head with a .22-callber bullet, exce11t Or. Ohta. who was shot three Umes with a .38 -~nee under the arm, once in tl1e back and once in the back of the head. The · friend said be believed the youngster who came home with his father tried to run but waa "cut with a pistol butt across hil forehead," and Jhen shol Scl\NOI found binding the victims' wriats 11were very loosely tied," the friend said. He concluded all were dead v."hen the killer Ued their hands with the neckwear -from the doctor's wardrobe -and threw them in the pool. The killer then set fire to the house'. Tbe bodiea were found by firemen res- pondinl to a neighbor 's alarm call. · Shtrl!fs Sgt. Rlchard Damon, one of the prirlcipe.I investigators, was asked his rtacUon to the friend's explanation of the a lme. Damon aaJd be was ''very glad thla Is coming out because there has been a lot o1 rears In the community." Many had expressed doubt that one person could have killed All five. and were ap- prehensive that murderoua ....ampllceo 1'ert at l11ra:e. ,..,. ..... !__ BLAZE ••• l . • • . . ... meartheUCBanlalloi'"'* ... q. - No~-... repo,ted "'~ onter .at the ua -.. : : 1 1..-iptors Mid tl!!Y in>pounclod u evtdaOce ··-If ~ poaia!? !Un lrmltlbo -· •. ' ;•rw+a Bojlby !'"'I Ill Po 11 c e ~ ..• ,.rad eqe slqgan. · : Ollo'fadlllJ ._ ... in the fire et the UnJve~~ ""Park Shopping Center on the' nOith ·· W 'the campus wu .a ·ua bookstore. . ' ' The Barile or AmerJca la the World's larges( financial lru!Ulution and has been h1t by firea. ud wlndow·smashing in· cidents ~ed on students an4 rl.dicall for the JI~ year. Autborides have emphubed-tbe basic- lack or U.Uble et the 6.-UC! campus in COnserYative Orange Countr and were ca¢i.ous br evaluating cauaea ol the nearby bomb blast a week ago. They noted that w)lile Stanfonf Research Institute's 12 branches around the world have done Defense Department war research the Irvine facility wu engqed in puroly peaceful studies. No definite c:&111e lw f>eon eslobllobed fn that case, but autboriUel 18J it WU Wldenlably 1 hombJnc. The precise location of the bank branch that WU burned is adjacent to the UCI campus in the local area shopping center facing outward toward an JrviDe Ranch field. From Pflfle 1 REACTION ••• Important servlc:u to students in the ma of financial aid by servlcln& ltlldait loans." The chancellor deplond the loa or lbeJo aervtcea even tempororlly. · A spokesman for the New Unlvenity Cool.,...,. wblcb Jut ..et sponaond a Black Plllltbe!".,_ Bobby Seale rally, aaJd the members ol NUC "wouldn'~ sup- port such dOltructton." Robert Marsball, a graduata modent in history, said however be could understand the frustra- tion of BOme that would lead them to burn the bank. "UnUI the media gives radicals equal time to articulate thelr JIOS.itiona such thin11 will happen," Marshall said. "If there were an open cHalogue in this coun- try property would not be so sanctified.'' Emphasizing be wouldn't "blow up lhe bank mysell," Marshall aaid "I can emphathlze with those who would." He cited a need for incfeued uposltion of Jaues Including Jhe Black Ponthen, Viet- nam, Guatemala and the Near East in order to lessen tena1ons. -1t11dent, <n!g Harlan, toting an infant wu more vehement about tbe ""'"°''role in the Bani< ol America lire. "Mid 'llainpuU 11111-la find out """ tjle Bani< ol -llbouid be barn-ed," ho said. ' ' ~~~liom~ Center ... --,..,, ltudents who were cooCemed about the lnddenL But outside tbe bank where workmen were poUndJnc plywood W&tbJnc into place, a group of onlookers arew about midmorning. Most lllood wllh books in band ellring allenUy 'at the charred remalnl of the bank. As ii fttquenily the cue at UC Irvine, many wilbed not be to quoted. A new arrival on campm, a Jong. halred, freshman, social science major from Los Ga~ near Berkeley aid "I'm not impressed with UCI for its political action." Ricbard Bergboldt said be was on the scene at 1:30 a.m. with about five others. He laughed when told a riot squad had been called to the scene. Berghokit agreed with the contention of Marshall that there was not a political organilalion on the UCI campus capable of planning or carrying out the burning of the bank. Chancellor Aldrtch speculated that it is possible outside forces might want UCl to look more radical than it really is. The chancellor noted that Marshall would be a credible source in terms of the NUC and Us political stance in that "Bob was one of the ones who is most concerned that the free Bobtiy Seale r!lly be run without incident," Qancellor Aldrich said. The NUC ls a coaliUon of dridical '' organizations on the UCI campus and might be described 1s. holding the farthest left &lance of any group. DAil Y PILOT ,.,_.. W ltldllrll ..... FIREMEN PROBE CEILING FOR POSSIBLE INTERNAL FIRE Fire MMI Destruction Ne•r UCI ; f•mili1r-Slog•n1 on the W•ll R.uss Clinrge Violation Of Air Space by ¥ anks MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet govern- ment today protested "the violaUon" of the Soviet state border by a U.S. military plane and aaid it was a result ,ol "the general military activity of thtl United States in areas adjoining the Soviet Union." An official announcement said the Soviet government has lodged a protest with the government of the United States in couned!oo wtlh the vlolaUon ill t b e USSR state border by an American military ?lane on Oct. 21.'.'. 1 The refennu wu to a U.S. military plane which strayed aaoa the border from Turkey on that date. Two American Army generals, an Army Major pilot and a Turkish colonel aboard the plane have been held In Yerevan, near the frontier. The protest, the Tass New1 Agency said, reminded the Nixon adrninistraUon that "in the past three years alone there were more than 10 unlawful violations of the USSR air space." "Violations of the USSR's air space by American planes haJlpen by 'no means because of some chance, concurrency of circumstance, but are a relUlt of the general military ocUvlly ol the United Small Business Seminar Tuesday Huntington Beach bu.sinemnen in. terested in learning more about merchan· dising and cost factors can attend the se. cond small business seminar sponsored by the Chamber or Commerce at 7:30 p. m., Tuesday, in the communltv•ceoter of Golden West College. • i ~ L • The seminar ls free to· .chamber members and costs $1 for non-members. All busirie.ssmen are ilivited. • . · . Howard Mahy, manapr Of' the local Moittgomery' Wards store, will talk about mercllandising and. services niark· UJIS, and indirect hidden costs, ' States in areas adjoining the SOViet Union," it said. "The Soviet government has repeatedly drawn the attention of the United States government to this activity that is openly hostile to Russia. The preservatk>n of American military bases around the Soviet Union is a most serious IOW"ct of danger and does not aceord in any way, with the statements in favor of an im- provement of Soviet..American relatiool that were repeatedly made by U.S. leaders." 'Q>e' ~ said Jbe :;Qviet gov..-t "expects that tbe United Slates 1overn- ment will display a most serious ap- proach to the position outlined in thi1 statement and draw appropriate coo- clusions." : The Soviets also protested to the Turkish government, drawing its at.. tention to the violation by an American plane. · The statement to Turkey reminded Ankara that after the flight of the American U2 spy plane the Turkish government said it "will never giva planes of allied or other powers the riabt fo use its bases and its alr space 1n ag- gressive purposes capable of inflictinC damage 1D Jhe security and tranquWly ol its neighbors." . But Jhe latest· ~Olli "shows that in reality ~gs are quite different," the protest said. •. In this connection surprile alone can be caused by remarks made· by certain quarters in Turkey that T u r k i a b authoritl¥_are .not answerable.for the ac- tions of jthe violating plan~ since it belong, JQ t.jlt t,merican AJr Force," Russia •1~. !j Pab o· P~sso 89 MO~INS, Fri,.,. ((UPrl• -P1blo P_ica~ telebrath!i~ 89th birthday at his'bo isunday. Otlly close friends were invited to join him in marking.the event. OJtANOI COUNTY "litlMIN Sff'T TffROUOH lllUIN AT UCrS SANK O~~~"it~%°R'Aifc'H""' Sllortly Allor Mld!llght N01r UCI, Flomoa Fiiied Sky; D1ma91 Estlmilo $125,000 'I I 'I I 11 I I 1 1' ·- • ' L1rry ••Ml 1"1111• . _Eullerton __ . • Park Riot Injures 18 ... By JACK BROBACK 01 ttt. OtilY "lit! lllff Fourteen• police officers and four rioters were injured Sunday in a rock anct bottle throwing brawl over the closing of Fullerton's Hillcrest Park, Forty officers faced a crowd of about 500 dissidents at the start oC the hours- Jong riot which was triggered by the city .council's action closing the park lo the public. The facility was ordered closed on Sun· days arter two successive free concerts · were held there which led police to believe that incidents y,·ould occur. Forty.four rioters v.·cre arrested, 19 Mond~. Oc.tobtr 26, 1CJ70 H DAILY PILOT ;J POLICE CONFRONT HILLCREST PARK PEOP~E AFTER SUNOAY RIOTING BROKE OUT Free Concerti EM in Park Closure, 14 Officers In jured Along With Four Others adults and 25 juveniles. Nine of the adults \1'cre charged "'ilh multi ple crimes in- cluding felonies. Two v;ere jailed on charges of assault with intent to kill. Thr~e Killed In County Raad Crashes Three persons lost their Jives on Orange County highwa ys over the weekend, ooe in a spectacular wrong way crash en the San Diego Freeway in Costa Mesa. Authorilies Identified the dead as: Lupe Pacheco. 36, of Corona. l\1rs. Marina Zeilmaier, 43. of Anaheim. John R. l\-1onroe ID. 37, of Santa Ana. Pacheo was" killed Saturday night iD the wrong way driver crash . near the NewJXlrt Freeway interchange. Highway patrolman John Babroff spoi- led the car driven by Pacheco coming directly· at him. He ducked into th e center divider area. turned his car around. and witnessed the Pacheco car crashing into one driven by Larry Young, 24, of Los Angeles. A third car driven by Joseph D. Salamon, 41 , of 2134 Braemar Way, Newport Beach. piled into the first two. Mrs. Zeilmaier was fatally inj ured ear- ly Sunday on the Riverside Freeway near Royal Oak Street in Anaheim when the car in which she was riding was struck by a tractor-trailer. The truck driver v.·as not injured. Monroe was killed Saturda y when. the motorcycle he was riding collided with a caf at Flower Street and Civic Center Drive in Santa Ana. Officials Reveal Dump Cleanup Plan NORTHBORO. l\1ass. (UPI) Selectmen have decided to get rid of the brush and stumps at the town dump by selling them at $7 .50 per cubic yard. Selectman Robert Gab riel said the dump could chop the brush and stumps and sell the chips as kindling or landscape filling . He proposed a similar sale for the reams of paper clogging the dump. f'ullerton police Captain Fred King said knives, lire ir<>ns and other weapons were Agnew Tells South Nixon confiscated. • • l•rrv ••1111• l"l1t1• I Police said the trouble began at about 11 a.m. \vhen a mob of about 500 youths occupied the park in defiance of closing order. NOT ALL ENDEO HAPPILY AT PARK'SITE IN FULLERTON Bloodied Hillcrest Park P•rtiCipant Comforted b_y Friend St~l Fakrors Dixie Judge Captain King said his officers were subjected to verbal threats, obscenities and struck v.•ith large chunks of concrete, fieSena1e;"-the-bricks;-tire-tronr,r-ocknlfd"b!!tt1l!r.--GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) -Vice Pres-- ldenl Spiro T. Agnew said today Presi- denr""Nlxon is determined to appoint and "see confirmed a Southern strict construc- tionist on the Supreme Court." ''You or South Carolina will sec this pledge redeemed ," Agne\v told a public rally in the hometown or cne of tv.·o soulherners nominated by Nixcn. but re- jected by the Senate. llberals who still con ro vice president said. Agnew said that Clement F . Haynsworth Jr., chief judge cf the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals at Rich· mond. Va .. and a residen t cf Greenville. was a '"victim of anti-southern bias" ~·hen the Senate rejected hi s nomination lo the Supreme Court last fall. lle admitted the officers struck back with clubs and fists and in answer to criti cism by son1e onlookers and a newspnpcr writer the cap tain said, "That was no Sunday School picnic out -there. Our officers were subjected to a full Leary_ in Middle East, Say Informed Sources .. , needn 't remind you that Richard Nixon remains determined to achieve a better idl'O!ogicaJ and geo~raphical balance on the Supreme Court, ' Agnew said. "His resolution to achieve that balance v.•ill never waver, despite those radical The rejection was l:iased on connict or interest charges. The Senate early this year rejected the nomination of G. Harrold Carswell, a Florida fed eral judge, after a three- monlh battle over ~\legations that he was racilyy biased and possessed mediocre talent. Snoopy by Nose WWI Planes Arrive in Neiv York fledged attack and they couldn "t just From Wire Servicts stand there and take it." llEJRUT. Lebanon -Fugitive drug ad- Allhough no shOts "'·ere fired and no voe.ate Dr. Timothy Leary -his onetime tear gas was used, Captain King said that pac ifis nl gone sour -is now in the ti1id- at one time there were literally hundreds die East to study the .Arab guerrilla cf bottles flying through the air. "The y came well eq uipped with riot material," n1ovement and b.admouth 1srael,, ac· he added. ccrdlng to informed sources. The captain .charged that the incident One is fellow-fugitive Eldridge Cleaver. was organized by Cal State Fullerton and Leary. ~h<I was sentenced to a Prison Fullerton Junior College dissidents on the term of up to 10 years last ti1arch In college campus down the street. Oran:e County Super.ior Court. arrived in "They fired up lhe younRer kids v.•l!h A1gcria last v.·eek, where he was grarited the usual threats and talk and then polilicc l asylum by 8 now-red faced deserted those kids when the gbing got regi me. rough. as hippie leaders usually c!o,'' King said. The Algerian government thought Dr. A press release was issued Sunday Leary -a guest of Oeaver -was a night by a group calling ilsc\f The Negro C<lming to work in the exile head· Hillcrest Liberation Group. It charged qu arters of the Black Panther Party. NEW . YORK -TYtO comic strip Snoopy, Charlie Brown's captious beaa:le 1. . h 1 He and o\her ref11•tts in the Algerian h I t · ht t f T JI •-po tee wit "unne~rl y beating and -c arac ers -s ra1g cu o a man..,_ in "Peanuts," ca n go on chasing the Red , capital planned a press oeonference last A · 1· to Cou A. I I f injuring many people.' via ion a range nty 1rpor -e t Baron indef'n'tely. 1 lh h d 1 h 1 1 Thursday, bul officials forbade it. t h · 'd boo' Jh · • • n e an ou t e group prom ses o , youngs ers c eer1ng an 1n~ as e1r , Nobody in official circles much cares · 1 1 hed d s The little single engine planes had left confront the City Council Tuesday night anc1en panes touc own ere un· with demands that the park be opened. for Dr. Leary's visits. · ... day Ne~·ark Airport early in the morning on 1 · They said they plan a seven o'clock rally Lebanese officia s are not happy that "Curse you, Red Baron!" gro,vled a tbe last leg of a race that began in Santa Tuesday night in a park across from city he is in their country. after his clan- 300-pound Snoopy after healing his arch· Rosa. Calif., Oct. 2. That's not far from hall. destine arrival, accompanied by a black rival Sunday into Flushing aerodrome in the Sebastopol home cf Charles Shulz, At the rally an attempt will be made to man and a white girl. Queens by 28 seconds at the end or a creator of the whole Snoopy fantasy. raise ball money for "our brol.hers and She is identified as a Miss Dohrn, cross-country race in World War I vin-Snoopy was John W. Bagley or Los siste rs arrested Sunday." either Weatherman radical I ea de r tage planes. Angeles, a 300-pound fcrmer Marine pilot Police said the park has become an in-Bernadine Dohrn -latest female to ''He outwitted me," sneered the who wore a furry dog suit Jn an effort to creasing problem in recent weeks with make the FBrs 10 tttost Wanted villainous Teutonic aristocrat, Baron look like a beagle. Since no Sopwith bands of Jong-haired youths harassing Criminals list -or her sister, who isn't Manfred von Richto fen. Camels are in nying condition in this famil y groups who tried to use the par.k charged. "He cbp.ined my tail wheel to a ramp country, he new a reproduction cf a for a Sunday outing. Leary is a guest of Al Fatah.·the Arab at Newark when I wasn't looking .. , Nieupor1.-28. The origina l Snoopy nies a Officers said Jhal drinking. use of guerrilla front. according to one source. Thus. even as good triumphed over Sop\\1ith Camel. drugs and several incidents of sexual pr~ "We have nothing to do with these pe~ evil. the bitter rivalry between a comic Barnn von Richtofen. all Prussian spit miscuity had taken place in the park. pie,·· snapped a guerrilla spokesman ask- strip beagle and the memory of the and polish, bcmedalled and begoggled. Hillcrest Park was closed in May of ed about the validity of such a story. Kaiser"s most notorious flying ;ice lived v.•as a former U.S. Air Force pilot, James 1969 after similar Incidents but no l..eary was recognized bv one fe]lnw on. Nothing really \\'a5 settled. and S. Appleby of Asbury Park, N.J. \\'idespread trouble erupted. airline passenger after arriving at the ~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Beirut airport and asked i( be planned lG study th~ Arab movement. ..tt1aybe," he responded. Newsmen trying to contact tJ:ie Lqry party at their swanky·$46-per-day suite in Beirut's St. ~orges Hot e I said the former Harvard profes~r spen,t ·most of Saturday refusing to take their calls. Oeaver, his host, said Leary won't join the Black Panther Party but shares some of their beliefs and will work in close alli anct>. "I am satisfied he will give a positive contribution," said Cleaver. He relused lo say how Leary reached Al:,iers. "This simply shows that Jack (J. Edgar Hoover) and his FBI is a paper tiger," Cleaver added. • Two Cosmonauts See Disney JanCI Soviet cosmonauts Vitali Sevastyanov an~ Andrian Nlkolayev toured Disneyland in Anaheim and the Caltech Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena dur. ing the weekend as part of their na tional tcur. The Russians. whose space voyage o( 18 days in June sel an endurance record, were accompanied by ·their official U.S. escort. astronaut Edwin Aldrin Jr., the second man on the moon. The pair arrived in Los Angeles Satur- day after touring the MaMed Spacecraft Center in Houston. They were to fly to San Francisco today . El Rancho has the hottest price in town! • • • • • • • • • • • • Perfect size fo~ !antastic funqy faces, .. junior tal'\'el's love 'em!, .. 6 lb!I, or Je~s. I .;. ' ....... Kraft Caramels ............ 39c Assorted •.• 14 oz. pkg ..•. candy some apples! ' Marshmallows ................ 2sc Campfire .•. 1 lb. bag .•• time to toast 'em ! .. . . I t ~ AP,,le Cid,f .... : ................ 59c Tree ll'~p .. , hal~on ..... tangy and , delicious ! Vanilla C kies ............... 5~ Sunshine ••• Tru Bl~e ••• big 27 oz. package. Su11rr ai'zed p1tniphi11.R for 11ia3ter car1:ers, p1·iced a.t nuirked: B1tt, la rye or · sntall, p1tt a JC1.ck-o-ff1nlt rn i" your 1t:indo1u ! ~lmpo ea-ff am : ..... ~L!~1~5f ! .0~~~~ ••••• 59' Leo's •.• so Jean and so very satisfying! Sliced in convenient sand\vich size! 4 ounce packaie. U.S.D.A. Choice ... young ... tender ... FRESH! Lanlb, Chops.~!~. ~1 ~? . ~(~~E .. ~1~? Fresh l •.. not frozen I Compare the quality ••. and see that the value is greater at El Ra:nch~t " Saratoga Cbops ...... s1 .49 .. Boneless lamb ••. Join · ut ••• thick, lender I ' • Lamb Patties .................. 49~ Fresh ground ••• your as.surancc of quali ty J P"irrs in rffcct It/on .. T tit!., i~·ed.,"' Ort. J6, fli, ts. /olo snlcs to deale rs. ARCADIA: SunuJ and Huntiniton Dr. (El Rmho C.nltr) PASADENA: Jio W11t Colorado Bl•d . . SOUTH PASADENA: Fremont 1n~· ~unlini1cn Or. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Wain« and Alzonquin (80ird\·· ·· NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 NewPol1 Blvd. ind 2555 Easlblull Dr, ([1$\blull Vil\Jil C.nler) • J DAILY Pn.OT (~ .., .. n.!lr """ ....., Qu.odruplet girls born early Wed- naday have been named by their parents Amy, Barbara, Colleen and Di8ne, following the A, B, C and D sequence assigned by hos· pital authorities on their birth in Wlhchester, Mass. . • The Democratic National Com· U,I Ttl•Jlllflt •. • 8. Viets n ·rive· Into Camhodi~ ' SAIGON (UPI) - A l,000.mln South Vietnamese anny talk force drove deeper lnto Clmbodia today in cooper•· tlon with the Cambodian 1t111y, and Phnom Penh dlsp1lche1 reported South Vlebwn, Cambodlo and Thailand were working on a standby plAn to uve Cam· bodia'S rice from the Communistl. . The South Vlebwn.,. &th Wantry divi.sk>n moved into the Snoul area. 100 miles ,.i of Phnom Penh and about 90 miles northwest of Saigon, in a drive to oust Communist from aanctuaria they had reoccupied since lul sprlnc'• U.S.· Vietnam lncUrsion. The drive broua;ht to 17 ,000 the number of South Vietnamese aold1er1 operating in Cambodi• in support of the Cambodian anny. Government military 90urces aaid only light contact had been made so far as the new attack force push6d· beyond Snoul, which was wrecked by last spring's offensive. noithwestem prov!n~ of Bott.in~. which borden Thall•nd, to Phnom P<jU!. ffilbway 4 runs 120 mileLtoUtbeut from Phnom Penh to Komponc Som, the coun· tiy'1 only deepwater port, which is used for export of rice. Hou Neng uid cambodia's rice crop already has exceeded last year's export figure of 102,000 tons, and now 1WKll at 130,000 tons( I UPI correspondent Fronk Frosch reported meanwhile from the town of Tang Kauk, 52 miles north of Phnom Penh, that the government had now thrown a total of 20,000 soldiers into its stalled Operp.tion northward toward ·KomJ>ong Thom. . 'Ibe original 10.000 man operation - Cambodia's largest .of the war -has been stalled at Tang Kauk since Sept 13. This area is just west of the region where the south Vietnamese task force is mov· Ing. m.Ittee's mailing list apparenUy is in need of updating. The staff . of National Chairman L•wrence F. O'Brien sent a · letter t~ the ~over· of New Hampshire requesting a campaign contribution to help d~ feat Republicans in the election. The letter was addressed to G,oY. John W. >king, a Democrat who left office in 1968. Gov. Wolter PeterHn, seeking a second two- year term, is a Republican. • When Colin Thomton, 8, gels ex- CRIPPLED LIBERIAN TANKER PACIFIC GLORY RESTS ON ISLE OF WIGHT SHELF Flro Exlingulthod Allor Collision But Bottle Wllh Hut• 011 Sllck Continues In Phnom Penh, Cambodian Commerce Minister Hou Hong told UPI C1:1r• respondent Kate Webb in an interview that negotiations among Cambodia, Thailand and South Vietnam to protect Cambodia's rice crop involved protecting the highway from Phnom Penh to Saigon and the one from Phnom to the niai border town of Pol Pet. cited while reading his favorite history books, he chews on any .. thing close at hand. That is the· explanation given by the young· ster's father why Colin chewed through a lamp's electric cord. He Oil Slick From Tanker Broken Up MIT Professor Wins "At the moment we can still use highways 4 and 5 but we have begun negotiations with these other two governmtnt.s to make sure that we can get the rice out," he said. ---'has JJttn hospitalized with bums about the face and hands in Burne· ly, England. Economic Nobel Prize I Arthur Boniface put hi! moth· tr·in-law on a train at Newport Thursday -but it started up btfore ht could get off. The next stop was London, 300 mitt1 alDQy. Ht did mt have to pay for tht ridt. "'British rail Wa& eztrtrMly kind and understand- ing," ht!' 1aid. • caws startled. two foxhounds chasing a fox Thursday and caused chaos on a major highway in Eng- land. Authorities said the cows frightened the dogs who ran onto the roadway, causing motorists to swerve and brake to a halt. One dog was injured sli&htly when bit by a car. The fox got away. • Theodore Dubois, an Besancon, France old age pensioner, wrote a will Thursday leaving what he bad ta ~ose poorer than he was then threw himself into a river and drowned. Dubois left $109 to the town's needy, f!IO lo the aged of the city hospital and the remaining $21· lo the local newopaper for printine his death notice. • Pre1ldent Nixon Ma afgntd ltgi!lation which wiptl from tht atatute book.! a law which rt· quired the Army to buy its hor- ses and multi through open market auctions. Tht law waa abolished btcau.st tht Armt1 has had no mtd for horses or mults for ytars. The same legislation signed Thursday also abolishtd old requirement that tht Quar- termaster General sttl 16 ouncts of tobacco a day to all enlisted men asking it. • Edmond Durond, 60. 1aid Thurs- day doctors have told him he is still growing despite his age. Dur· and. who is 7 foot 1 Inch tall, said be began growing again at the age of 36 and physicians said he will probably continue growing un- til be dies. V,ENTNOR. Isle of Wight (AP) -Tugs using detergents had broken up a mile- Jong oil slick from the grounded tanker P•cific Glory today •nd officials said the danger of major pollution to Britain's southern beaches appeared "not ex- ceuive." A sPokesman for the Royal Navy said the 77,<XM>-ton tanker, which burned for -two days after a collision Friday ni&ht, wu bumping bottom four miles o!f the "le of Wight in the English Channel. Antipollution teams waited for gales and a hlgh sea to subs ide so they could transfer &0,000 tons of crude oil still in her tanks. Two tugs steadied the wreck, and of- ficials said there was little danger of a repelition of the Torrey Canyon disaster three years ago, when that grounded tanker spilled 90,000 tons of oil Into the waters of£ southwest England. Five crewmen wen! killed and eight others wen! missing arter the Pacific Glory and the fe,000.ton tanker Allegro collidtd and the P•clftl Glor)' exploded in flames. ne ship'1 29 other crewmen escaped. Shipping experts were puUled by the circumstances of ·the collision. It oc· currtd in .good visibility, with both ships headed in the same direction. The Pacific Glory is owned by Oceanic Tankers, Inc., and was chartered by Shell Oil. The Allegro Is owned by Petroleum Marine Carriers Corp. Montreal Elects Separatist Foe MONTREAL (UPI) -Jean Drapeau, who called his opponents soft on separatism and suspended active cam- paigning during the worst of Montreal's three-week kidnap crisis, Sunday won landslide ru:lection to a fifth term as mayor of Ganada's largest cily. "This is a clear demonstration that there is no place in Montreal for the false prophets, the false messiahs," Drapeau exulted. In the largest voter turnout in the city's history, Drapeau received more than 92 percent of the popular vote, and all 52 ci- ty council seats were filled by candidates from his civic party. STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Pro!. Paul A. Sainuel30n of the Massachusetts Institute ol Teclinology (MIT). whose textbook on economics has aold more than a million copies in 12 languages, today won the 1970 Nobel Prize for economy. The Swedish Academy of Science 1n. nounced Samuelson, 55, won the award worth '78.400 because "by his many con· trlbut.ions (he) baa done more than •ny other contemporary economist to raise the level of scientific analysts in economic theory." At hill home in Belmont, Mw., Samuel!IOn received the news with a joke. "It looks like a busy day," he told callerz. He said when he was awakened by a telephone call "I thought thert mU1t have been a death in the family ." Among his many works is the te1.tboak ''Economics: an Introductory Analysis." Hopes Brighten For Extension Of Mideast Lull By Ullliecl Preti latuutloul Hopes for extending the Middle E•st cease-fire beyond Jta Nov. s deadline bri&htened today. The aem.Iofficlal Cairo new1paper Al Abram 'said Egypt has no objection to extending the truce SO days. Al Abram, in an article Sunday, men- tioned the 61).day period for the first time. Prevklus indicatiOM on an ex- tenUon of the cease-fire revolved aroµnd another 90-day period or a possible day- by-day extension. Arab guerrillas Sunday fired on an Israeli border patrol, an Israeli military spokesman Jn Tel Aviv said. He said five policemen were wounded in the incident, which took place near Sheetula along the Lebanese border. Diplomatic efforts to extend the cease- fire and get Ara~Israeli talks resumed centered in the United Nations today. but U.S. and British diplomats were fearful a full-fledged U.N. General Assembly debate en the Middle East might hurt behind-the-scenes efforts. The debatt, called by the Egyptians. was to start to- day, with EgyptW! ForeJgn Minister Mahmoud Rlad schedule as the first speaker. • Fair Skies Grace Nation Some Cool Fronts Sweep Plains; Light Showers Fall COllllornla 5.unllv llA!tol wtl'tl ~··tidldtd for lodev tllll TUlltiNY -loulllerfl (•lllor,,11 wltl! ll'le l!llfl 111 l• AtlfllK forKttl •I 14 1111111 • 111111 ol It Ml for l.,..,.,.v. Thi Air 'ollllliDll Cortlrol D11lrlct P!"9Clldtllf lltl'lt no• lrrlltlllln trom t.mo9 I,, !tie beeln wllll ~ vl•lbllllv. TM fl¥9-dlv for'K.lttl P•l'Cllc!• mo.Uy ltlr .,.,.. ... l!!rou111out souin.rn c111. -: '°'""'' ...... --tUUV wr~ 111 IT\Clllll-lA•t••;"("~"""'~:::::t::~ tll,, ·-btl!Mlnt WMll!ftdt'I'. l"tm· .,..."",.. wm rlM 1r.iu1uv w!tt. hlthi '70 Ill tflt 111. Cottl•I HC!len1 Ctll l•PKI Iii.II• 1n .... "" Md -11l1hl '°'"'' 111 ti...,._ ... Md -hu!tlerll Ctlllon'llt bMchK -r• M11'W'r'1' ... ., With hllht rtl'lllllt lrom 6J to 1'0. 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W..,,ll'llf9tl .. n I First published in 1948 it has gone through seven editions and has sold more than one million cople1 in English, German, Italian, Hungarian, .. Polish, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Arabic Greek and even RU6Sian. ' Samuelson, born in Gary, Ind., al.so served as an econoi:rucs advisor to both President.s Dwia;ht D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy. He was educated at Chicago University and earned his graduate degrees from Harvard. He has been at MIT since 1940. According to the academy, Samuelson was awarded the prize for "The scientific work and through which he has developed. static and dynamic economic theory and actively contributed to raising the level of analysis in economic science." Highway 5 runs from the rict-rich * * * Ammo Ship Explodes In Typhoon's Wake SAIGON (UPI) - A U.S. Army am· munition barge exploded Sunday in the harbor of Da Nang, South Vietnam's st· cond largest city, military sources said. There were no reports of c1sualties, military sources said. The ammunition barge exploded about ? p.m. Sunday, four hours after the final gale winds of Typhoon Kate subsided at Da Nang, military sources said. The barge, which had been moored to a wharf in the Tien Cha Cove area of Da Nang's deepwater port, had taken a severe buf- feting during the storm, the sources said. Britain's PrinceSs Anne ' . Linked to Tall Prince LONOON (UPI) -About the lime Bri- tain's Princess Anne was born a clairvoyant peeped into her future 'and avowed in be.st storybook: fashion the in· fant IOmeday would help rule a foreign land. Not a remarkable prediction for a member of the greatest ruling dynasty 1till in business. And it has been repeated more than once over the last 20 years as the dauahttr of Queen Elizabeth II has grown to marriageable age. Enter, inevitably, Prince Charming. He ls tall, blond and Nordic. He will be 25 next April, making him eligible undef his northern land's Jaws to rei gn as its king. He is crown Prince Carl Gustaf of Sweden. close friend of Britain's heir to the throne Prince Charles and a fr"equent companion of the Princess. Court gossip around Buckingham Palace has been dripping hints or royal romance. The prince currently is in London to improve, he says, hi! background in Anglo-Swedish relations. Officially, that means talks with British politicians, trade officials and industrialists. Unofficially -only the gossips will venture a guess. The queen has scheduled a palace luncheon for the prince, related to th e British royal family through common links ta Queen Victoria. He will be welcomed warmly by Prince Philip, Charles and Anne's father, with whom he shares naval experience and intersest. All the blood ties and friend1hips in the world do not necessarily add up to romance. even when the princess ii 20, herself blonde, tall and eminently mar· riageable. Gari Gusta£ and Anne have met often on the prlnc:e's vi.slt.s to London. They get along noticeably weel. Both are avid, skilled horseback riders. Bo\h sail and swim and ski and skate. The prince dances well -and Anne rates dancing high among her pet pastimes.· Carl Gustaf was on hand at Windsor' Castle last summer to help celebrate Queen Mother Elizabeth 's birthday. usually very much a family affair. He has also been a guest of the royal family during their aMual holidays at Balmoral in ScoUand. Court watchers think it likely both Ann and Charles will be Invited to Stockholm next spring wben Carl GuaW officwty comes of age. U'IT ......... BREAK ING TRADITIONS Navy M•n !Isenhower Eisenhower Has Navy Haircut, Begins Duties NEWPORT, R.l. !UPI) -David Eise nhower, son 0£ a West Pointer and grandson of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, today began a series of examinations and routine indoctrination classes at Navy Of. ficer Candidates School (OCS). The 22--year-0ld Amherst C o 11 e g e graduate, who is married to Pre!ident Nixon's younger daughter, Julie, reported to OCS at the Newport Naval Base Satur- day. He was assigned to Oscar Company, a 25-man unit in a class or about 220. He secured his uniforms, got a haircut -Navy regulations allow hair up to 211.. inches -and setUed in over the weekend. Exams and indoctrination sessions were scheduled for this week. If Eisenhower, son of John Eisenhower, former Army officer who is U.S. Ambassador to Belgium, complete! the 18-week OCS course, he will be C1>m· missioned an ensign. Hls Navy tour is for three years wilh post-service plans indefinite, although be reportedly was considering law school. ",.,. ....... GOSSIP IN COURT CIRCLES HINTS AT A BRITISH, SWEDISH ROYAL MATCH Crown Prince Carl Gu1t1f, Currently Ell9lble for ftt• Throne incl Prine••• Ame I • ' ' ' ' I I • '' • • I '.l I ' . .. I . I i ' I ! • ~ l I ' I ' I I I ' t ' ' . ' , I bo lei II> " 'be ca a ,po re WI ' 1~ ' - f • ' • ' • • -~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor ,.....,, OdNll' "" 1,,, " ,_ u Artistic Hues Color · Exhibit Art in all media will brighten lbe Huntington Harbour Beach Club when the Huntington Harbour Art Association sponsors its annual Stroll Through the Arts. This year the varied exhibit will hang for a week beginning Satur- day, Nov. 14, and continuing through Sunday. Nov. 22, and the public is in- vited to view the display between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Both nonmembers ... and members of the association are invited to exhibit with entries limited to a maximum of three and a minimum of one per person. Registration will begin Sund ay, Nov. l, and continue through Friday, Nov . 6. Entry fee for nonmembers will .be $6 while members will be charged a $3 fee, and anyone wishing to display is invited to call Mrs. Everett (Si- \ grid) Ricker, 592-1545. giv ing name, telephone number, media and number of entries. J\llWMlts must-Detifi'gifffilaffiri'lot crea(ed -ffom copies or-klts, and all must be less than two years old; they must be ready to be hung or dis- played. • \ I ' IXING AND MATCHiNG -Color will reign for a ·week when e Huntington Harbour Art Association sponsors its annual Stroll rough the Arts. Putting finishing touches to works they will dis· Mrs. Kim Still. The public is invited lo view the collection in the The exhibits will be registered at the club Wednesday, Nov. 11, and members, guests, exhibitors and judges will attend a preview no-host cock- tail party between 7 and 9 p.m. Friday, Nov. 13. Judging this year's dis- play will be Dave Schnabel, teacher at the. Laguna Art School and Pasa· dena City College, Miss Mary Jane Leland, professor of art at California State College at Long Beach, and Bruce Piner, instructor at Orange Coast College. ,' I Huntington Harbour Beach Club between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. be- ginning Saturday, Nov.14. Association members and their guests also are looking forward ti;> a chartered bus trip Tuesday, Nov. 3, to view a 42-year-old Bel Air mansion selected for Design House \Vest . , ·1ay are (left to right) Mrs. Hall Wilson, Mrs. Donald Ritchie and ; 'Be-witching' ·Porty Plans Dusted Off ' Future philanthropies will benefit from receipts tal- lied from a Halloween costume party seonsored by the Green Valley Womerl 's Club 'af 9 p .. m. Friday, Oct. 30. Dancing, games, prizes and refreshments w.ill be oUered dur10g the evening's entertainment taking place in the clubhouse. Preparations for a Qe- witching party are )leine handled by (left to rieht) Mrs. Joseph •Dickerson, chairman; Mrs. John"Fig,. Jar. prizes and posters,' and Mrs-:-Altieft Sakelios, refreshments, r Funds for Philanthropies 'Scored Up' Scaring up old-fashioned ideas for new ways to raise money for their many philanthropies will be mem- bers and guests attending the Hallow.een party spon· sored by the Fountain Valley Woman's Club Fri· day, Oct. 30, in the civic center. They will bob for appl_es, line up for a judged costume parade, enjoy a finger buffet and other refreshments, dancing and games. Stuffing Mrs. Richard Gillum (center) with other ideas fo r the entertaining evening are Mrs. Norman Nieberlein, chairman (left), and Mrs. C. E. Stewmon. '. ~Durij.n,g ·Vocabulary Lesson Teenager Learns to Say 'Uncle' ' '• ' A DEAR ANN LANDERS : Last ....it my 1 brother and his wile went on a trip. They left their 14--year-old !IOn with us. From 1 the beginning, lhe boy's behavior toward Uus aunt was rude and mocking. tJfe ~ame smart..a1ecky on seven.I oo-· rcas!p. I warned him to watch his mou .. _ When he called my wife a~gar ame 1 warmed his rump with a, llftl· •pong paddle. From then on he was Jl)OSf" respectful and we had no more trouble lwllh him. t.. Yesterday my brother came for the _jl>oy-L tol<Lhim..exacU, wba happened._ tHiJI reaction astonished me . He said I had 1-ilo business laying a hand on hi! son. that ,..... shOOTd liive walled until he returned so lhe could administer the punishment - 'In his own wa y." ·--- I believe ~ cluld shoOl<I be puntlhed when be ~m:l.~behaves, not a week later,· -wlml do yoU say? -STRICT UNC!iE DEAR IJNC: ~ molliell of .u,cJplloe ihould llive been d11tu11M!d btfore UM! parents lelt. Slitce It was not, there s•ld be no crttk::tsm or the maaner In which )'OI dealt WK.If CM boy. I .... a loudl II lM lllllor bd paid more atteatton lo bit toa's earlltr up- brtaP,1, Ille boy Nld DOI be aslnr vtlg1t"lanpa1e with bl• aaat -or any· -- ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 1 pack rat-'.,,.-bo -clii-: articles and keeps them forever. I would: like to submit excerpts from. an article which appeared in Harper's magazine 16 years ago. It was written by John Fischer, who was editor- in-dlief. "Many U.S. men die early from ul cers _and.Jligb._bklod preSS\U'e beca_use their wives set out to rerorm them as soon as the wedding ceremony is over. Motit American-brides regard a husband as 1'15 pounds of raw material. She £eels it ls her duty to make something out of the sorry clod, even it she has to wear her tongue to the roots in Ole process. "This undaunted approach may have something . to do with the U.S. divorce rate, axe murders and the vas~number or characters who sit nursing shot glaMes in men's ban late at night. Nevertheless, it has made American women the envy of the world. "Never before in history has a nation devoted so large a share of Its brains and resourcea,to lhe !IOle purpo!le of keeping women deodorized, corseted. enstu'lned in chrome convertibles, curled, slenderized, rejuvenated and protected agaJMt all physicallaliOr. 1.feiinwhile th~ busbands or these household pets live In mute agony and d}e mercifully from ulcert and high blood pre..,ure." When I clipped lhi& article 16 years ago l was amused. Today I do not think it is runny. I see myself and I am ashamed. I hope you will pr nt the excerpt, Ann. My wife won't recognize herself because she believes she is perfect. -COWARD DEAR COWARD: ne es:cerpt ii amus- lag bu& It certainly does DOt apply to all womea. SMw me a maa wht tolera&el ... lloa1eltokl pet" wbo 1r1t1 to pap berselr · orr a1 a wife, and I'll How yoa a ma11 who enjoys belag taken ldvantage or, rtetds It and deserves It. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last week I went to a party. Three people I had never seen before came up and asked me to buy raffle tickets for a benefit. Sunday I attended a weddln& reception. Two casual acquaintances tried to sell me tickets to a bataar. Last night I was invited-to the ho~ a relative. No sooner had I enteredjlM house than lhc ll·year-old son or the hostess hit up every guest for a ticket to his Sunday school play. Of course no one had the nerve to re.ruse. t call this high-- grade blackmail. What do you call it? - PIGEON DEAR PIDGE: Low·grade manners. What awaits you on the other side o[ the marriage veil ? Ho\v can you be sure your marriage will work? Read Ann LanOers' booklet "Marriage -What te Expect." Send your request to Ann Lander• in--care--of the DAD.. y_ "1LIJI_ enclosing so cents tn coin and a loll£ -stamped , tell-addressed envelope. 11!-""" _____ ._..,.. ___ '""'1:'-"_".'"-:-" __ ~...-;------~--------· ·. • Pumpkin Pinned for Hospital Party · l-lalloween decor \Viii set the. scene Cor Laguna Beach Ebell Club's first hol iday party for its adopted ward in Fairview Hospital on Wednesday, Oct. 28. A pumpkin carving ceremony will be follo,ved by songs, games and refreshments as arranged by the lo.Imes. Howard Hinrichs, Gordon Forbes, Richard Racich. Edmund Van Deusen , Howard Wilson , Richard Carlson and David Young. Pinning the smile (or frown) on the pumpkin party game are (Je ft to right) Mrs. Gordon Dahlquist and Mrs. Harro Groettrup, party chainnan. It's a Dog's Lile Salads ' ' I Humor the Cat's Meow By ERMA llOMllECK I lf one more man 1ays to me, "l don't like funny. women. • 'ltiey remlnd me of a dog that walks on its hind legs. It's done, but not well," I am going to. bite him on the leg. Our hwnor makes us no less feminine, no less wilely, no Jess motherly than any other emotion. It's just that our . humor is bMlcslly different from that of a man. Jt's hard to eIJ)lain. ' My huiband nearly fell of! hil chair one day when a dog ran out onto the football field and the a'IDOtlDCel' 11 a i d , "There Is a dog oo the football fiekl ... •'Did you hear that?" he uked, wiping tears o ! laughter from hls eyeg. AT WIT'S END Thinking he v.·a.s In a jolly'" tnood, I said, "That reminds me of a· story about Phillis Diller. The interviewer asked her if she was a neat housekeeper, like when her husband got up to go to the bathroom did she make his bed while he WU gone. She said, 'MAKE IT! I have it sold before he gets back!'" My !Jusbar><! soberod up. "Where would you find some- one to buy a bed ~t that Associates Schedule First Fall Luncheon Gathering for a ways and ungodly hour?" means salad luncheon and Certainly, there ls not a wile card party at 11:30 a.m. on In the wc:rkl, married more Wednesday. Oct. 28, will be than three-hours, who has not sat in a comatose condition members of the 0 r a n g e waiting for her husband to District, Callfomia Federation finish with his "favorite joke." of Women's Clubs. Jn a group the other night Members of the di!llrict ex- my 'husband said, "Hey, did ecunve board will be hostesses you hear my favorite joke -for the event in the Ebcll abou t the talking dog ?" Clubhouse. Ana~lm: M rs • "That IS funny," said a man Clemens rrom1ath, district ~e. doubll.ng over. coni;I vice president, 1 s ••· . k ,. said chalrman of lbe event. Mrs. "That's not wit: JO e, Robert dePaszthory is in my husband. dJarge of tickets. "Is uu, the one where the Members of the 'l'\tst.ln Can· dog drinks?" giggled another yon. Fountain Valley' and one. Costa Mesa clubs will assist "No," said my husband, with the serving. Helping to punctuating each word with a set up will be members of the nostril snort. "This talking dog Rancho Viejo, Cypress and La was great. He played all the Palma clubs and the Ebell big night ~tubs and the talk Club of Newport Beach. shows. Then one day he got Tickets are available at sick and had to have an opera-$2.50 per person by calling lion . After that, he couldn't bet l\.1rs. dePaszthory at t31-2714. a job anywhere." "How come?" asked B \\'Oman. ,;Because all he did was sit there and bark ." NB Auxiliary The men scream~. with Joining for luncheon and Charity League ch apter s. laughter un'til I thought they their first fall meeting of the Once a year t:he group were going to have to have year will be members of the sponsors an art show and cof· surgery. Associates of the National fee in the Lido Isle home of "The women sat there puul- Charity Laague, Newpo r t Mrs. Linn C. Williams lo ed. "Dear," 1 interrupted. "It Chapter. benefit the philanthropies of wasn't because the dog just The Ladies' Auxiliary of Newport Beach Fire Depart- ment gathers lhe t h I r d Wednesday at 8 p.m. in various locations. Information regarding location may be ob- tained by calling Mrs. T. C. Dailey, Ma-9835. Mrs. James J. Eyrilann, new the Newport Chapter. barked. It was because all the Y H -" y--------------------------~ irman-wiU--gr.eet---gi11<uest..Us<------------.d!ogog talked-about--W.a.s-his ----our -oroscope .-o·morro~ during •. social hour at 1uo Problems operation." u was the a.m. which will be followed by women's tum to scream. Virgo: Avoid Wishful Thinking luncheon at 12:15 p.m. ThtlfS.o "That's not funny," he Wd. day. Oct. 29. in the Newport Explored "lt"s not my fault," I Harbor Yacht Club. Assisting countered, "It was your lousy will be Mrs. Paul M. Rogers. joke. Hostesses for the day will be Exploring housing an d "J f it's my joke. then haw TUESDAY OCTOBER 27 By SYDNEY Ol\IARR AR IES (~farch 21-Aprll 191 : Acti\'ity centers on legal mat- ters, par1nerships, abilily to accepl and cope with opposing Art Topic Announced Reproduclk:cs of Paintings will be the theme or the Wednesday, Oct. 28, luncheon meeting of the Orange County Branch, National League of American Pen Women, Inc. views. Gather fa cts. Strengthen position. Refuse to be intimidated by one who 1nakes threats. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Observe rules, safety regula- 1ions. Remember die l . Concentrate on guarding what is most precious: your Health. Jo~ollow through on hunch. You are able to sf! u11usual side or one close to you. GEMINI (May 2J.Junt 20): Romance is accented. Your creaUve urges soar l o forefront. Those who may have appeared indifferent display affection. Ch an g e routine. Fine for dining out with stimulating companion. CANCER (June 21-July 22): work. You can get project off ground. Keep appointments. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 lo Money, possessions -these are activated. Consult family member. Impulsive purchase or sale could create dissent Realizl!! this and act ac- cordingly. One close to you confides financial problem. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22J : Cooperate rather thaii fight. .Applies i;pecifieaJ\y to mate, partner or attorney. You may not be seeing things too clear- ly. Permit expert to offer in- formed guidance. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21\o What was secret, now is revealed. Your work methods come under scrutiny. Be prepared to defend yourself. Some insist you are going loo fast. They may be partly cor· rect. SAGrrTARIUS (Nov. 22- career should be put into ac· lion. Stress independence, ex- ude confidence. C re a t i v e endeavors succetd. Take the lead. You are going to be a winner. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Tra vel is emphasized. Ideas are put to test. Read and write . Gain shown if yo u are perceptive. Delect hidden meanings. Cooperate I\' i th Aries individual. PISCES (Feb. 19-1\.farch 20): Interest in unorthodox sub- jects is accented. Be flexible. You may change your mind about financial project. This is all to the good. You cannot st.and still and go forward at same time. To llnd out "'1'1D't 111di:y tor YOU In n"Ql'leY end IDw, order SY<INIY Omerr's booliltt •• "Secr111 1111111 for ""'" •nd Wqmen." Send t1Jrlh61t1 •nd 50 cen!s kl Om1rr klfroloty Secr11b, Ille OAll.V PILOT. llOlC :n«i, Gr•nd (tnlr•I Sii· !Ion, Hew Yort, N.V. 10017. B Tri t L employment needs or han-. 1 11 ·t ' the Mmes. William . t , . dieapped persons will be come I can t e di my ~a~ WEIGHT& Delford Fedderman. J~ph H. members of Glass Mountain \Vhy v.·ould a og re a . -~ Amok!. James F. Gable and something so painful as an \A./ATi(HERS Rogers. lnn. Inc. at 8 p.m. on Wed-ope ration? You're sick. I bet if VYt\11 .! fl The associates nre former nesday, Oct. 28• in the I said Phillis Diller sold the · Veterans Charitable Foun· k Some falking, some lisftning Ind a.-:tive n1embers of I he d . b 'Id S A bed before he could get bac 1 progrim thit works, ,. Ne\\•port Ch a pt c r and alton ui ing. anta na. into It .. voLl°d have laughed." Open ·-physically d1'sabl•d 'fl££ llOCHURE-CALt ·~5.5505 transferees from o I her w ~ ll~~O~c~c~ci~e<:l..--;;;o;;;;;;;;-~~~~~~;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;~ Southern California National persons. the organization is dedicated to the development or a cesidenlial rehabilitation MAMA MISSED THE BOAT! center. M~,... nfvfr 11..i • (!!Ince to usr • 'knHHl\ll m•tlllnr ' f d' bled -bu! \'OW 601 l.f'I US demonslrlle ovr "Bn;>ther'' Alumnae Meet Transportation or 1sa knltrlr\11 m.ch!M -••• l>ow e•sily you cln kn\! A rail luncheon for the members is provided by off. OrH•n •nd """' swlt•I Newport Harbor Alwnnae or duty firemen of the Santa Ana T H E K N I T w I T Chi Omega will take place on F~ernen·s Bene v o 1 en t Wednesday, Oct. 28, in the Association. Mrs. Elizabeth South Coast Plaza Stuft Shirt. LaRiviere may be called f LOWE• MAt.L f h 'nf t' t .,.,, Across trom WOOi_,.,., Area coeds who have joined urt er 1 onna wn 8 vu· cosTA MESA Ph. $($.2fl2 Panhellenic sororities will be J~19~53~·~;;;;~i)i~;r;~r;~~~~~~~~;~~~~;~~~~~~~~ announced by ~frs. K. Stanley Bell, files chairman or the Newport Harbor Panhellenic. Plans are being made for a Christmas party and a A1other-daughter coffee for ac- tive members of Chi Omega. Guest speaker for the noon meeting in tbe Grand Hotel, Anaheim will be J. O. Witte, • • Southern California artist who Many o( your natural talents, abilities are recognized and put to use. Be aware of details. There are s o m e roadblocks, but you overcome them. Take conservative course. Dec. 21): Some friends may --------------------l ll:&Wl"I tIDHC IIT @1\a11.C!5.:JA,l'\~~ • specializes in commercial art illustration, lettering a n d desjgn. Mrs. J. E. Parsons, a club officer, has beea named to the State Board Speakers Bureau of the national organization. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Avoid excess speed. Don't write letters while upset, angry. Sharp words could alienate neighbors, relaUves. Good for puWng ideas to appe:11r o v e r I y aggre!lsive. Don't COTflpound error. Lblen and evaluate. A child who makes deinands should be dealt with fairly but finnly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): DeclsHm affecting home, . gip Crowmng , Glory heautv salons Ap,olntm•nt1 W•ltOfl'tt lvt Not Alw•y1 Ntctlt•ry -........ -:-c..:>-.,. FROSTING SPECIAL Slreak • littlt 1untlgrlt lnlo you1 hair witl'l lhl1 min· ple11ln; btl;ht look t 1 2" Mon • Tues e Wtcl Crowning Glory (fo!Tl'ICr1y Caprice Cofliurc11l SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 f. 17111 ST. COSTA MW l.ow~r CCvCl-RHt lOSftr• --,._1 S4S.."lt ....... 546-71'6 0Pt"n Ev.-nfnp A Sunday ' ' .. _..,. • 35 FASIDON SQUARE SANTAANA colors in a new combination of sky bluo and a chestnut bronze so lovely that seei ng is believin g and truly exci ting blend of sil k and rayon the coatdress way of dressing for social •. -· --- J o :5 and daily act ivities tLJ'Q high llghting buttons of abalone pearl 14 back belted ~ 10 to 20 _,;::;,o -7600 «· .. .. • ) . [\:; -=· ~ .. _:·-:: ~ -.:.=----- v GIFT WITH PURC HASE ROBINSON 'S AND FRANCES DENNEY CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO ATTEND 'BEAUTY ENCOUNTER' A TWO HOUR CLINIC OF PERSONAL ANALYSIS AND INSTRUCT ION. AND RECEIVE A GIFT WORTH 17.00 WITH YOUR 5.0 0 ADMISSION FEE YOUR GIFT ••• A BEAUTY CLINIC KIT CONTAI NING SOURCE OF' BCAUTY CR CAM , CLEANSING WHIP , EYE SMOOTH, FLOWING MASQUE, LIPSTICK ANO MAKEUP CAPE, YOUR FEE.•• TOTALLY A PPLICABLE TOWARD THE PURCHASE OF ANY FRANCES DENNEY COSMETI C. YOUR I NSTRUCTORS ••• TRAINED FRANCES DENNEY ' BEAUTY EXPERTS JOEN TIREN, GERI RENNER ANO SHARON THOMAS. MARK YOUR CALENDAR D~TES FOR M ONDAY, NOVEMBER 2 1 AT 2:30 AND 6:30 PM. OR TUESDAY THRO.UGH FRlDA'f, NOVEMBE'R 3-6 Ai° 10:30 AM AND 2:30 PM. CLINIC IN OUR COSMETICS. Pl-I: YOt1't ll'CStll!V.O.flOOI TO l •HIOO, o_.., t.OAftO CllrQ9 /1:r t .ur, 01 ......._ - TO 1!011-'&o 2 rMIOllClll 1-.-, Miii_.,. C&HTtlt, H~ K.o.C:M , C.O.~!I 91 ... , .... r; ..... •UC!tft ... llQI.""' MIS"' Tlf'(. r•......cn <IUIHE'I' '-...nv .-..rrn•: (U.t« .,..,.. o-.. MOii'. 2 D .l!:lO l'M, Qfl c S:!O ,,., Dt'.1~$., "°"'• :S CtO:!O ..,M 011 C .l!:JO rM, C l -S,, t.'<IV, JS CJO:lO A,. O'IC2:JO PM, CJ .·:w •• Hov,.c C10:>0 ..,1o1 011Cl 2;X1 ~". C 1•1,,"°v.s C IQ:l0""'°"02:30pM. ""''------------'-"''---------<•n. __________ ~f"'~,----'""------ a<~-.:ir_ ~·T,.l"IT INC\.l'IS[a __ C.:AA""C ,loCC't ... _________ _ l'LI QI ""'° s v~::1 ... 1..u TM. --~•-r• ROBINSO~'S .. ROBINSONS NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644·2800 -j 17 7 ' f - --. .. .. ··- ·Fo11111ai11 Valley· Teday'• Final • N.Y. St.eeks . EDITIO VOL'63, NO. 256, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ' • . ire Ola~-Slafllnfi• Attorney Labels Suspect 'Insane' From Wire Servlca SANTA CRUZ -James A. Jackson, publlc.defender-appoint.ed..to..defend_John Linley Frazier in the slaying of five persons, says that insanity is a possible plea when the case gets to court. "My personal opinion i3 that Fraizer is crazy," the attorney said Sunday although be also remarked the evidence against his client "so far bas not been by any means cooclusiv1." Group Wants Recreation At SA River A Huntington Beach citizens committee would like to see biking, hiking and riding trails along the San la Ana River. This ra-ommendation is one of a series of suggestions the committee makes to pwih recreational development of the river and Its periphery. , The committee, headed by' Mayor Donald ~made 11 atudy of \be river and Iii pot!nUal development for OOQllty officlils and officials of neigbbcl'lnc cities who are anxious to preserve open space along the river. The committee recommends thii.t the trials be established from the ocean along the levee with linkages at the Talbert channel, the Orange County Sanitation District's treatment plant at t h e rivermouth. LeBard Park, the Edison easement below Garfield Avenue and Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley. 'J'he Huntington Beach study group also urged that the feasibility of building a marina at the rivermoulh be in· vestigated, that the Orange Freeway <route 57) be terminated at the San Diego Freeway instead of continuing soutb to the coa!t .and that odor from the treat· ment plant be minimized . The citizens also want the pipeline pro- ject from Riverside County to the sea to be delayed for further studies and that secondary treatment of sewage be made "until it is proven that bacteria and microorganisms are not harmful to sea life ." The recommendations will be given to 1 firm of architects, Eckbo, Dean, Awtin and William of Los Angeles, which has been charged with the responsibility of preparing a ma ster plan for development of the Santa Ana River from the ocean to its source in the San Bernardino mountairul. Frazier pleaded innocent after being arrested Friday in his cabln lea than a mile away from the $300,000 mansion overlooking ttle Pacl~81 eye surgeon, his wife, their two sons and his secretary were bound, slaughtered and dumped Jnto a swimming pool. Neither Santa Cruz County Sheriff's Deputies nor the State Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation commented on a report by E d Montgomery of the San Francisco Ex· aminer that Frazier's f i n g e r p r i n t s matched those on a typewriter used to produce a note left at the slaying scene. Montgomery, a Pulitzer Prize.winning crime reporter, said a note declaring "World War 3" against materialists and despoilers of the environment had been typed on a machine found In Dr. Victor M. Ohta's mansion and that Frazier's fingerprints had been fowid on the machine. Montgomery quoted "a re Ii able source." Sheriff's deputies said the story was "news. to us" and the .state crime lab said its fingerprint department was closed. Frazier, 24, is charged with killing Dr. Ohta, 47; hill .wif,e, Virginia , 41; their two 110111, llid!ard, ll, and Victor, 11; and tho doctor's 'secretary, Mrs. Dor o tbY. Cadw~ader, 38. · 11 A faii>Jly friend &lnday aid be believtS : a gunman shot Virginia Ohla dead in her home and then lay ln wait to pick off fout • more victims. The Triend told an interviewer he believed the nei:t to die were Dr. Victor M. Ohla's secretary, Doro t by Cadwallader, and one or the Ohta sons &he had brought home from school. Then, the friend said, the evidence sug· gested that Dr. Ohta arrived with another son, found out what was going on, lunged at the lone killer and was shot dead in tum. The friend said the last to die appeared to have been the son who came home from school with his father. He said the boy probably was cut down while trying to flee from the kill er. The friend, who hed known Dr. Ohta 25 years, granted an interview only after being assured his name would not be us- ed. He said he based his opinions on in· format.Wn he gathered while working with sheriff's investigators, and "a careful retracing of events." The friend said Mrs. Ohta was alone in the house lest Monday afternoon and when she did not show up to pick up the sons, school officials telephoned Dr. Ohta's office. "1 believe the killer got Mrs. Ohta In the afternoon and simply waited for the others to come," the friend said. Dr. Ohta picked up one son and Mrs. (See BODIES, Pare 3) 'Junior Nader Raider' Unit On Jo~ in Fountain -Valley By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of IN C.Ur ,lllt It.ft Ralph Nader wou1d be proud of the "junior raiders'' in training at Fountain Valley High. School under the direction of junior class Engli!h teacher R o n McVelgh. .. He teaches a class called 11Language for Consumers" which shows studenta how to UJe language skills that penetrate behlnd tho adYertlsing camoullai• of the buainm world. Tttn1prs spend hO billion &Mually , according to Dr. McVelgh, which la one reuon why manufacturen direct their sales campaigns toward the )'(IWll. He just wants to make sure they're not sulli· hie and get their mooey'1 worth. "As a result, teen&g!n have become the target of some very high pressure merchandising that is doing damage. to famlll11 even beyond 11>e wute of money,t• he claims. Items in the "high aell" range include: everything from rock record! to plmp1e curu and muscle cars. -Jronlc•lly, or.-MC:Ve1gh a.wrb, the merchandisers are cashing in on the kids' anti-establishment attitude1 to cuU rrom them the money tht utablishment a:lve1 u..m. l • Under hi! direction. the students gather data on products and then · make generaliutlom about the products lhey have acrullnized. AU the studies are open~nded with the answers. left up to the lnd.ivtdual student. Some quest.ions ,to be answered are, "Are the manufacturers honest?" "Who PIYlli for advertising?" and "la comparaUve shopping wortlrfrhiJe?" Results of ll>elr forays Into ll>e market place have been reyWJ.ng. In one cl .. assignment, SO items we~ found to be ,_, ll>e llala conl<nll listed by the manufacturer. One lludent only found 11 coolies In • package marked as containing a din.en. In one napkin roll there were only SOI aheela lnllead of ll>e adwtllOCf 380. P.,.nll abo have beea lnlplred , by their of&prings' fervor aDd one rt10lher WU 10 iDctnaed about that nlpkin count that she toot her c:omplalm rlCbt ID ll>e company pr .. 1c1ent. She polnt<d oot ll>e error ID him, and on cbeoking ll>e napkin counltr, ll>ey dilcOVeted that tt wu-c-h e a t-t n I customers by 15 percent. The business execuUve told her the tnachine woold be Cixed and the woman's daughter received 1 valuable lesson in consumer rtlalionl, Or. McVeigh reports. . . .., . . <?RANGE COUNTY, ·CALIFORN.IA ear ". r • • • TEN CElilTS -Arson Said Possibility By Firemen By ARTRIJR R. VINSEL Of ... De!IJ Pl• Stiff A ,125,000 fire branded u -hi&blY auapicious in origin raged through a Bank of America branch near the ·vc Irvine c&111pg:s earty-waa'y, · buUdinc "on which revolutionarr 1lopns were freshly painted. •• • ' .. '1 r' ' . • f ' ( '"'DAIL'v"pn.ot: ..... wL.it~ .... COUNTY FIREMEN PROBE RUINS INS1D~ BANK OF.'AMElll~A ·NEAif UC!.C~PUS.' · In Eerly Moml"I Houri Todey' In .Oren .. 'CountY, De1tl uctlon Strikes Apln ~~~~~~~~-'-~~-=-· . ' Embattled Aide Of Seal Beach Gets New Post Lee Risner, the embattled Seal Beach city m8l)lger who was fired from his post last July, has a new job in La Habra. Beginning Nov. 1, he 'l'lll assume the duties of the city admifii.strator in the North Orange County city, repla~g Howard Schroyer who will become the ci· ty manager of Pico Rivera. Rlaner, 41, wW tecelve an annual salary of $20,000 or ~.ooo leas than he was paid in Seal Beach. He was dismisled July "It aftir four rears of service when a newly consUlUltd council voted 3-2 to oust him. His reaJOm: for dismi!l"Jal lncludeG the alleged faUure to make proper Hnandal report:S, abeenUng himseU from the office to conduct privatfl,,-.ineu and con- ducting secret business ..,.Iona with lndMdual memben ol ll>e c:ouncll. . Exchange Club Honors Students Six high school lludenll from Rwi- tlngton ~ach have received bonon from the Exchan1• Club a• top llC!lolan and all-anMlnd lllldenta • for the month ol October. Jan Bor1•non anil lllcr lltlll)' _.. booored u the bo~ and 1lrl ol the lllOllth from HunUngton ·--JIJP kbooll. Similar winners from Marini High were Melody Sharp and Damll 8llllwa1on, and from Edison High Ibey wen Pat Kelly aod Mark Jolllllon. • •Just Too · Mu-~h-: . ' . ' . . . . . UCI Community. Stul'.lned by Fire By GEORGE LEIDA!. ~ .... DellJ l"ltlf ltlff Crowds of disbelieving students, faculty and nearby .residents of UC Irvine ltood in the. water-logged grass around tht rut· ted Banlt of America in quiet abock: "How were they 10 1uccesafuJ?!' a. • depositor asked lncreduoualy. Mrs. William E. Moore of University • Park was goin'g ~ dipoait to bet a~t. at the Town Center branch of 'Bank of America. She arrived to find lhe bank burned out. · "This is just too much," she sal~. Noting the scrlbbllng.s on the wall which read "Oink or America ..,.. death to pig&" Mrs. Moore sald, "I don't think a!Jy point is ever made with these things ." She was concernecS and said ber bUl- band. was too .~rinl reports on the radio this moiii1nc, whether her money "" all right. A bank official who uked not lo 114• named Aid no recorda or cub were losC in II!< blau. and ""-e -UmHed bi !urniturf:, fmtura and ca I cu I• ti n•c machinea. Four llJ;illl'oOf 'fal!lll held' depocllon ,_..,. and Uloy .... elnpllad early today for otorap ui an unnainOd. nearby baD:k. • ' . The ' apokaman .Jndlcaled· thit l1IO trailers brouihl· In within lloun ·ol, tllt' blsr.e 'Which ... rtp)l'ted at' JS: ti I.JD.,. wuold be rtady for a 10 a.m. ~· 'llle>day, The Irvin• branch doea not ol· let saiety dtposH box .. rvi<t, he noted. -, UC Irvine CballctUor Dank! Aldrlcb uid dllJ _,,.,. bla reaction ID tho bank flrt•WU tbe---u-~ la datroyed. ' Re eaprelled annoyance that ltudeatl wootd be blamed automatl<ally for tho fire lince "the nature of caµ. this tDOl'D- lnf lndlcate an lmmedlai. feelinf thi !!re , Is the result of atudents when Ufat bas not yet been detennlned." The chancellor also noted that this partlcular branch besides servin1 the univenJty community offered "vitally (See .REACl'ION, Pqe ·11 Governinent Cars . . Ordered to Use I.Ow leaded Gas WASHINGTON (AP) -Preaiclent Nix· on tOday oi-dered all federal vebtcles to • use low lead or unleaded gasoli11e wherever pr1actJcal and asked the 1overnan of all ·u,e states to do tbe same 1"1tb Mte-owned Ytbiciel. . ,,,. cm!er '!ill ailed • 0 0 ' O'O 0 aovernment-owned cars throuehOOt tbe country. . . . riie. it.kral IO .. rnment .buya OM·ha~ Of one ·percent ' of a11· the · 1asollne, purdlalel.1n U>e united 'fllitea -IOI miDlon ·--'1>'· Ruaaell Train, cbalrman of. t be Eidlat'•· Councll · on . Envlro1u;nental . lly, oal~ the . r]!Ol<S.of die,rtlul•·, are t,.;iotd; !.;. ~air pollUUon and ID hlcmte ll>e market for law-leod and unleaded paoltne." ' • • 'l'tain .uid H ·IJ bopOd that by ~ ll>e owllcll lo IUcil 1uolina in ......,.. ment can It Will --te maka ..cb fUa1I md't I t II I r I t l 7 IYIDlblt .t '• Low·lead futla, he 111d, r<aact ~ catboo emliam by .. ..,, lo II percent. Jhdtoarboo emillions art 1iven r mt· jor lhlre oltbe blame for m1IO( pro!>lam1 Ulf'Oupout die OOWllry. • • No one was injured ln4 Do uplosion waa reported, but Orange County Firt Department captain Bill Croolcabank atroncly hinted at arson. "Death tO .the Pip , •. AU l'Ower ID the People)' bad been sprayed onto the ~ rtory structure hduaing nine busineues adjacent to the UCJ campus iD tbe lrvine Town Center. "When Ibey IOI there, the who!< damn thing was in f111nta ancf it just doesn't happen that way naturally," said one Ure observer. One witness lo the 12:13 a.m. flareup p ve Orange County lheriff's deputies in- formation. leading to an all-points bulletiD for two Negr11 men in a pickup truck. 'Ille Bank of America -as a symbol of the Amerlcan Establishment -has been ~target of radical 11blJ!,eW"a alound mt country. Only a week ago , a grffl1hou9t comple1 In wllicb ll>e lllanfonl -lnslituta -conducun1 . ~f1Ulm-· Oil plant •irulel and '1r P,>DuUon wu allo neck· ecf; by I llO.lao up!oalon. Authorities noted It was ooly one-ball mile from today's bank fire . One other spray-painted meuage inJbt latest Incident read; Bank of Amerikka. The misspelling of the nation '• name--· Nazi-style -Is a known trademark: ol revol'1!tionary factions. Investigators said another sloglft refer· red to a rock and botUe-throwing incldent at Hillcrest Park In Fullerton, ~h police shut down to all, becaUJe of hippie 1atberings. Despite the county fire captain's reference to arson, Orange County Sheriff't depuU~ wete being more cautious. "We have no information as far u any bpmb blasts or arson are coDCernf.d," &aid Deputy James Enearl. Looa· in the bank blaze Included primarily ollice equl~t. fUrnlture and tellen' counters, while no lepJ papers or currency in the vaults were destroyed. squads totaling 25 firemen responded to the blaze, which authorities said wu first reported by a man speakin1 in excited tones. They controlled. the ra1tng ftre about SO minutes after arriving -three minutes after the original call -from stations at UC!, Orange County Airport and in Laguna Hiiis. Fire damage itself was confined to tbe bank o!fiCe on the fint Door of the tw.; story building, while •mob Inflicted Jones on other quart.en: within tbe struc- tun. . 1l1e laclllty also hou.., UC! public relations offices. A gang of onlooken -aome cheering -1athertd to watch· the blaze, remiflis.. cent o1 ·one last February that dettroyed a Banlt of America brancb in Isla Vista, (See BLAZE, Pap I) Oruge Wea~ Fall aides and paty · wlncla will greet coastal mlden!a Tuesday, with temperature jumpin1 to 73 degrees along the shore and up to 12 further Inland. INSIDE TODAY Tilt bottl• for ec~l•rw """ be won with toots deveioptd to cope with probiemi of outtr apace!, according to a: Huntmg. ton Stec°' iieroapoce ezpert.·S.• Fin:_GnCc, Pcige 20. Mltilll n Ml'tlm tt ce""""' " ,........ ,... .., ~ v. , °""" ~ 11 c:-...... -.M ...... ... c:.-... .... ,, __ .... ----c:,.._...~, 11 ,.....,... • "' ~ ......... 11 --" ........ , .. ' 4 •""'1••-t , t Mt"9 ... • ,.._ •11 _., ,._ 11-\1 ...,._ ,. ,,.,. ..... .. ... ,........, ,. . . 1 :It DAILY PILOT H Mondq, October 26, 1970 ·- . . . -..... -.... near the UC Slota Batba.ra campus.. • No problems wvt .._ied In uepjq order at the. UCl sCene. '. . . · · lnveatlgalon lald they impounded u ivtdence a -'>er ol molutiooor)' • posten, LWn ~ the ...... -· • • "Fnii Bobbf ond all P o 11 c • Fo Dlt.IL't ~!LOT Sletf ....... UNTAIN VALLEY HIGH BAND PUTS BEST FOOT FORWARD AT PARADE Bond Took 5-id During Fooirth Aftnuol Porodo ond Barl>ocuo Enjoyed By About 1500 Por1on1 ' DAILY Pn.oT ~ W lM ....... IRAVI VOLUNTEER WAS TAllGET FOR HA~L0¥fEl!N ' SPONGES Girl Scout Troop NI preomod Up 11111 Booth For Pli 'Col~brotlon lur11 Deadl~k• 'Sweet Ernie' Beats Rap In Dirty Word Mistrial A black UC Irvine graduate student ar· rested after using bad words 49 times to express his alleged e<>ntempt toward radlca1 wblte studenta has beaten the rap, at least for the time beillg. Ernest A. "SV.eet Ernie" Smith, 30, was freed Saturday when Judge Donald Dungan ruled the proceedl111s in.Harbor· Judicial District Court to be a mistrial. 1bt all-white jury which included seven women deadlocked I to 3 for conviction and Judge Dungan's action followed refusal to let defense attorney James George indlvldually poll the jurors. SmJtb, a former Lo& Angeles radio and television talk show personality, had been charged with disturbing the peace of a DAILY PILOT ORNtG& t:OA.IT PUllllHllfG ~AK't Robtrt N, w, .. Pr•klt11! W ,,_.!Mr J1ck R. C111l1y Yk4 "9sld1nt l r.4 ~•I tMllltlr Thom11 K11,JI l!dllor Tllo,,.11 A. Murpfil11e Mt11111r\t l!d'lilt' A1111 Di1kin W.! Or•nff CC111ntr MllW Atb1rt W. 11111 Mtoe1'111 l dltor tfntl ........ OMc. 1717$ lt11ll l111!1,1r4 M1ili111 Addrtu: P.O. ka 7!0, !2641 Otlitr Offlc• LllVM 81K/I: tu For111 AYllll.ll C.R M1llr DI W.191'11 .... t """"" .. ltlll 2211 W"I 81111fl 9oul_ ... .. II CMmtftlt: * ....-111 fl C.mlf!O Jl .. i univenity campus following the May 15 incident. During the week-long trial, the basic contention by the defense was that worda and word<ombinations used by Smith are common and 11ot offensive to residents of Watts, where he was raised. Deputy District Attorney Ru ss c 11 Serber, the prosecutor. disagreed and ap· parently CQOvinced nine jurors to do the same.• A decision will be made this week whether to move for a retrial or dismiss the charge entirely. Sweet Ernie and his defense counsel contended that he was addressed in like manner by the white radicals after call- ing then names, but no one else was ar· rested Fountain Valley Stqdents Study With Computers Some of the tedium in figuring has been taken off the shoulders of nearly 1,200 Marina and Fountain Valley High School students who are now using com· puters. They are taking part in a cooperative study between UC Irvine, Cal State Fullerton and the Orange County Schools Office to see if they learn better by using electronic aids. The total program, including the use of equipment and testing materJals, Js being fuoded through a 144.000 National Science Foundation grant at no cost to the dlstrlcL The computer project wu designed to mcaaw-e possible ( h an g e 1 1n mat.bematlcs skills as well a.s the level ot motivation in stude.nt.s using the equip- ment lo solve problems related to thelr regular cla..uwork. Control groups rA studenta are cur. rt'."IUy btlng taught to solve similar pro- blems by thf: conventional classroom . ttchnlquu. Tba electronic equipment will be available ca both ~mpuacs until June 117L ( Sp()Oks Enjoy Valley Parade For Halloween Utile goblins and ghosts scampered across the streets Saturday u Fountain Valley put oa its best show yet for the city's Fourth Annual Halloween Parade and Barbecue. FOW" marching bands tapped out their tunes to a brisk pace down Bu!bard Street. Horses, floats, and mobs of human marchers filled the gaps between the lively music. Some 1,500 residents downed tasty chwlks of barbecued beef served up by Fountain Valley Firemen with the help of the Jaycees, Girl Scouts and Boys' Club. · Games and food booths at Fountain Valley High School were packed. One taco stand ran out of food before the day was haU over. Hobo Kelley, parade marshal, was mobbed by tbe youngsters who watch her on television. There were 80 entries in this year's parade. The winners in each of ten categories were : Floats: -lint, city of Tuatln; seoond, -Westmlnller E•change Club ; thlrd, Ban- jo Pickers cif Westminster. Band>: first, Santa Ana High School; IOCO!ld, FOID!tain Valley High School; third, Loa Amigos Hlgh School. Drill team: lint, Fountain VaJJey High; oea>nd, GllOl'dettes of Garden Grove; tblJ:d, Santa Ana High School. \;olor_, Guard, senior division: , flnl. Costa Meaa Potlce; second, American Legion Post 131, Santa Ana. Color Guard, junior division: flnl. Thunderblrcla, Anaheim; second, Royal Lancers, Westminster. Specialty-novelty: lint, YMCA Indian Guides, HunUngton Beach and Fountain Valley; second, Fountain Valley Woman's Club; third, Westminster Elks Lodge. Drum and Bugle Corps, one winner on- ly, Kings Lancers, Westminster. Groups : first, Matadors, Fountain Valley ; ~nd, CUster's Last Sland, Fountain Villley; thlrd, The Coachmen, Westminster. Equestrian: first, Sharon Auterson: se- cond, Virginia Rath; third, Pam McLain, an of Fountain Valley. Majorettes: first, Carolyn's Colleens, Buena Park; second, Thunderbirds, Anaheim; third, Recre-ettes, Garden Grove. From Poge 1 BODIES ... Cadwallader picked up the other boy at a different school, the friend said. The secretary arrived home first. about half hour before the eye surgeon, bec3use Dr. Ohta had stopped to visit his mother, 1-lrs. Kike Ohta, 80, who live.s in Santa Cruz, the friend added. The friend said he believed that when the doctor got home he was met at the front door of his home by ths a r m e d klller end ordered to walk to the 11wtm· ming pool, wbere·tbe bodies of the three others had been thrown. "I think he saw the first child's body lying In the pool Jrom the step.s and he probably turned and lunged for the killer and got shot under the arm," the friend said. The killer then finished him off the friend said. ' Police have reported that all the vic- tims were shot once in the back or the head with a .22-caliber bullet. except Dr. Ohta, who was shot three times with a .38 -once under the arm, once in the back and once in the back of the head. The friend said he believed the youngster who came home wlth his father tried to run but was ;•cut with a pistol butt acroas bls forehead," and then shot. Scarves found binding the victima' wrists "were very loosely tied," tha fr iend said. He concluded all were dead ~'hen the killer Ued their hands with the neckwear -from the doctor's .wardrobe -and threw them in the pool. The killer then set fire to the house. 't'be bodies were found by firemen ru- ponding to a neighbor's alarm calL Sllerllf's Sgt. Richard Damon , one of the principal tnvesttgators. was asked his reaction to the frl.cnd's uplanation of the crime. ' Dllmon Slid he wa.1 "very glad this ts c~:ntr:4 cl!t beeausc there has betn 1 lot ot fears in the community ... Many had expressed doubt that one person could have killed all five, and were ap- prehensive that murderous 1ccompllct1 wm at large. Jlr1loa\en •.• " read one slogan. - Cloe focWI)' damop<\ in the fir< ot tho University Park Shopping Center on tht DOrlh 'iaide ~Gt 'the campua was a UCl bookstore. The Bank of America is the world's largest financial institution and has been h!t by fires and wtn~ow-smasbing in· c1denls blamed on students and radicals for lhe p&st year. Authorities have emphasized the basic lack of trouble at the 6,000-Student. UCI campus 1n coaservative Orange County and were cautious in evaluating cauaU of tbe nearby bomb blast a week ago. They noted that while Stanford Research Institute 's '12 brancbta around the world have done Defense Department war research the Irvine facility wu engaaed In purely peaceful sttldies. No definite ·cauae ha& been establisbed in that case, but autboritJea aay it was undeniably a bombing. The precise locaUon of the bank branch that was burned Is adjacent to the UCI campus in the local area shopping ttnter, facing outward toward an Irvine Ranch field. From Poge 1 REACTION •.. Important seivlces to students in the area of financial aid by aerviciog aNdent loans." The chancellor deplored the loss of these se:vkes even temporarily. . DAILY ,ILOT ....... W aldllrll ........ FIREMEN PllOBE CEILING FOR POSSIBLE INTERNAL 'FIRE Fire •nd DMtruction Hur UCI; F•mili•r Slog•ns on tt.e W•ll A spokesman for the New University Conference which last week sp:mored a Black Panther·Free Bobby Seale rally, aald the members of NUC "wouldn't sup- port IUCh deatructlon." Robert Mmball, a graduate student in history, aaid however he could understand the frustra· tlon of 110me that would lead them to Russ Clinrge Violation bum the bank. "Until the media gives radicals equal time to articulate tbetr positions such things wUI happen," Marahall 'IBid. "ll there were an open dialogue in this coun· try property would not be so sanctified." Of Air Space by Yanks Emphasizing he wouldn't "blow up the bank myself," Marshall said "I can emphathize with those who would." He cited a need for increased exposition ·of ~ues including the Black Panthers, Viet· nam, Guatemala and the Near East in order to lessen tensions. Another student. Craig Harlan, toting an infant was more vehement about the media's role in tbe Bank of America fire. "lleacl Ramparts magazine to find out wllY the Bonk of America ahoWd be bum· ed," he said. A !'\<"'Y ol students In the COl!llllODS b<:lldllll icroas the strOel from Town Center on campus revealed few students .who were conce.med about the incident. But outside tbe bant where workmen ...,. pounding plywood abeathlng Into place, a group of onlookers arew about midmorning. Most atoocl with books In band staring allenUy at tbe c:harrtd remains of the bank. As is frequenUy the case at UC Irvine, many wished not be to quoted. A new arrival on campus, a long- haired, freshman, social science major from Los Gatos near Berkeley said "I'm not impressed with UCI for its polillcal action." Richard Bergboldt said be was on lhe scene at 1:30 a.m. witb about five others. He laughed wfien told a riot squad MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet govern- ment today protested "the violaUon" of the Soviet slate border by a U.S. military plane and aald it was a result of "lhe general military activity of the United Slates in areas adjoining the Soviet Union." An official announcement said the Soviet government has lodged a protest with the government of the United Slates ln COMection with the violaUon of t h e USSR state border by an American military plane on Oct. 21." , The refer'"" WN lo & \JJ>, mllJiaey plane which strayed acroaa the border from Turkey on that date. Two American Army generals, an Army Major pilot and a Turkish colonel aboard tbe plane have been held In Yerevan, near the frontier. The protest, the Tass News Agency said, reminded the Nb:on admlnl!tratlon that "in the past three years alone· there were more than 10 unlawful violations of tbe USSR air apace." "ViolaUons of the USSR's air space by American planes happen by no means because of IOme chance, concurrency of circwnstance, but are a result of the 1eneral military activity of the United bad been called to the scene. S II B o Bergholdt agreed with the conlA!nUon of . ma US1Des8 Marshall that there was not a political---- organization on the UCI campus capable Se , T d of planning oc carrying out the bummg of m1nar ues ay the bank. Chancellor Aldrich speculated that it is possible outside forces might want UCI to look more radical than it really is. The cban~llor noted that Marshall would be a credible source in terms of the NUC and its political stance in that "Bob was one of the ones who is most concerned that the lr:ee Bobby Seale ri.lly be run without incldent " Chancellor Aldrich said. ' The NUC Is a coalition of "radical'' organizaUons on the UCI campus and• might be described as holdini tbt farthest leit stance of any group. · Huntington Beach businessnien · in- t~ested in learning m'ore about merchan· dlsing and cost factors can attend the se- cond small business seminar sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce at 7:30 p. m., Tuesday, in ·the commwiity center of Golden West Colle1e. · ·. The seminar is free to chamber members and coats SJ. for non·mf:mben. All businessmen are invited •. Howard Matheny, manager ot the local Montgqmery Wards store, will talk about merchandising and services, mark· ups, and indirect hidden costs. ' States in areas adjoining the Soviet Union," it said. "Th e Soviet governmenl has repeatedly drawn the attentfon of the United States government to this activity that is openly hostile to Russia. The preservation of American military basiS around the Soviet Union is a most serious source of danger and does not accord in any way with the statements in favor of an im- provement of Soviet-American relations that were repeatedly made by U.S. leaden." Tbe protest said the Soviet government "expects tbat tbe United Slates govern-ment will display a moSt serious a~ proach to the position ouUined In th11 statement and draw appropriate con- clusiorui." · . The Soviets alsG protested to the Turkish government~ drawing its at- tention to the violation by an American plane. The statement tG Turkey reminded Ankara that after the flight of tbe American U2 spy plane the Turkilh government said it "will never give plane! of allied or otber powers lhe right to use its bases and its air space in ag- gressive purposes capable of inflicting damage to the security and tranquility of its neighbors." But the latest incident "shows that tn reality things are quite different " the protest said. ' In this connection surprie alone can be caused by remarks made by certain quarters in Turkey that Turk i, b authorities are not answerable for the ac- tions of the violating plane since it belongs to the American Air Force '' Russia said. ' Pablo Picasso S9 MOUGINS, France ((UPI') -Pablo P_icasso celebrated. his 89th birthday at his home Sunday. Only close friends were invited lD join him in markin§.the event ' 17 J I I 11 I ' ·' 17 ... . -........ T" .. ;. -- N ' --e rt .Beaeh l. .• • voi:: ~1. NO. 256, ]' SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COIJNTY, CALIFQRNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1970 • . -' ' . ----~----• -. __ ire an· .. ear DAflY l'l\01' ..... W ........ ·~ FIREMEN PROBE CEILING FOR POSSIBLE INTERNAL FIRE Firt end Dutruction Ne11r UCI; F11mlll11r·Slog11n1 on the· Well •Just Too Mu~h" VCI Community Stunned by Fire By GEORGE LEIDAL Of lfll o.llf' l'lltl Sflll furniture, fixtures and c a 1 c u 1 a t I n g machines. Four fireproof vaults held depositors records and they were emptied early today £or storage in an unnamed nearby bank. / • -' . Crowds or disbelieving students, faculty and nearby residents of UC Irvine stood in the water-logged grass around the gut- ~ ted Bank of America in quiet shock. ".How were they so successful?" a depositor ask~ increduously. The spokesman indicated that two trailers brought in within hours of the bla1.e wh ich was reported al 1%:15 a.m., wuold· be .ready for a 10 a.m. opening Tuesday. The Jr vine branch does not of· fer safety dtposit box service, he noted. ·: ., • • DAILY ,IL~ ....... W Lit ,.,._ Mrs. Will iam E. Moore of University Park was going to deposit to her account at the Town Center branch of Bank of America. Sbe arrived to find the bank burned out. COUl'ITY FIREMl!N 'PROBE 'RUINS.INSIDl .l:ANIC OF llMERICA NEAR .UGI ,cAMPUS · · Irr Eerly· Mornlnf Houri Todey In Or.ft .. c'ountyr Deltructlon Strlkn .Ag•fn "This is just too much," she said. Noting the scribblings on the wall which read "Oink of America -death to pigs" Mrs. Moore said, "I don't think any point is ever made with these things." She was concerned and said her hus- band wa s too hearing reports on the radio this morning, whether her money was all right. , A bank official who asked not to be named said no records or cash were lost in the blaze and damage was limited to . UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich said th.is morning his reaction to the bank fire was the same as whenever property is destroyed. He expressed annoyance that students would be blamed automatically for the lire sin~ "the nature or calls this morn- ing indicate an immediate feeJing the fire is the resu.lt of students when that has not yet been determined." The chancellor also noted that thls particular branch besides serving the university community offered "vitally IS.. REACTION, Page II Cyclists Saved In N·e~-port Bay From 'Quickmud' Two nine-year-old Corona del Mar boys wW loilg remember a Saturday afternoon bicycle' hike . through r;wampy . upPer Newport Bay. lt nearly cost their lives. Students, UCI Aff ~cted The youth! strayed from Back Bay Drive and when the!.( bikes bogged down, they cllmbed ol! .. push them to 'hard crowid, But Dennll A. Martin IJld J1mu M. Tomb, boil! of 111$ Aml100 W1y, found themlelyes· not just-atuct, but rlinting, .111<1 1lnldng lut. By, Blast, Says Chancellor A mident spotted them from the nearby bluffJ and called poU.ce. With the lld of the Costa Mesa police . helicopter pldfng them to the l(Jbt, UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. today issued the following statement foOowing ,this morning's destruction of the Bank 11f America branch near cam- pus: ' Judge Rejects • A~~l Plea A motion for acquittal was denied to- day in ire trial of Willia Dean Hunt of Newport ~ach, accused of stabbing her husband lo death with a butct>er knife. Superior Judge William L. Murray de. nled the~mot.ion of defense atlOmey Sid- ney trmas, ruling that the pl'09eCUtlon had presented sufficient evidence of the pooslble ·111111 of the slender, dark-haired woman. , trmas.· wes lo call hJs lirst witness this 1fternoon. He and prosecutor ~fel Johnson have prtvloosly agreed that the death penalty will not be asked In the case. J "lt Is abhorrent to me -u I am aure police and Newport Beach lifeguard unJtr; be h raced to the tcene. They found the boya It Is to all responsible mem fl of t e mired in mud up to their necks. campus community -that at1yone, Llfegupdl Logari Locbbey, Bruce whether students or othtrs, would engage Baird and Bruce Reed, with the aid of Of. in sense!~ dlstructiCil and terrorilt IC'-flcers Stan Br.easier and Dennis Gillman Uvity of this kind. formed a human chain IJld worked tlieir "Beyond t1ie lmmodlata dam ... lo•Jl'O---.ay ..,.. llO feet . ..,... the murllJ tar· perty. 1nd the threat to the ulety of rain with lluoyo IJld nylon -· citizens which ~ involved I regret that . WrappJnc the buoyt around the youths, It seems necessary to point out thll the they lllruUlecl for Ill mlnula befort Ibey greatest a,..... of an Incident of lhis draged iliem .. firm (lnllllld. kind b to lludenls 111d to the univenlty. · The mcee fMm ll1lo ......... lo ave "I have met already this morning the bleyd-. wWt our campis administrator of dudent rtnanclal aids lo diacua our concern ovtt the poulble lou of """'els necessary to student k>ans, granb and other kinds of auistance. We expect to meet with of· ficlal1 of the Bank of America on t h i 1 matter lmmediltel)'. "We are also communicating with or- (icials of the Banlc of America and wllh the Orange County Sl>erilf'o Dept. to assure them of our cooperation and we are discu.ssing whatever implications this incident m•y have for the security of the campus and the surrounding com· municy." Students Prote1t Ban on Sex Movies TOKYO (UPI) -· Ja-otudenta angered by polk:e . raida • 1 • I n 1 t porqraphlc movlea have ......, raactlng with "' /URI fatiVall U I protest, Kyo4o Newt Agency aid today. "The J1pan undel'llWl1d ceiiter In Tokyo is 1wam'Pelt with request.a i01r. tel films from rtUdtiib "fl univerai!Jel 'all over the country," the apney laid. ' Skite ·Takes . l'.milwdiate Look at· Bridge S~rl · The State' bivl4i0n of ~Highways· will ' 1tart JtnmediateJy to 1fil1d a .temporary soiuUon to the traffic. p_roblem1created by ihe narrow, Back Bay bridge in Newport Beach'. · · Mayor Ed Hirth said today one of the . solutions llnder1 stuctY will t>e' teMpoi-ary widening of the existing bridge. He said this ~Id be cOritpleted withip two Yeah. Hirth reported on the resui(i . of. 1 meeting with Haig Ayanian, highway these two permanent bridges, along with a new Dover D(ive intercbang~. all 'at the same time," Hirth said. ' Planning of permanent b:ay'sp,ana bite been di!la)'ed, however, aince the state lf:amed of the controversy generated by ilie pfafi~a·roUte of the freeway tllrouib Newport Beach. A! originally planned, the new brldjJes Would be hlgh-rlse structures lfvlna at least 40 feet clearance. · division district engineer, and local trar. The local turor currently I! centered fie personnel in I.Os Angeles Frie.Say. ' around petition drives by a group of Hirth aid the state indicated it will Ntiirport Beach resktents wtio are seeking · ""Ovide IOme kind of tempo'rai-y solution to force the city to reSclnd a signed ,,. agreement on the freeway route from a to the problem Independent of a final point just east of the bay crossing to the deCiiiorr'on the l'aciflc l'l>art.·Frerwiy. Corona d!I Mar city Jtm.it. · · · •'They .• ,. lntarata4 in :t1o1ne what · A IK'Olld peUtioo ... "' a charter they can•to..help lfs.eolve the prOblen\~amendment riqulring a• city-wide vote the UKerim:o" he said. , ~ . ~ be:fore·aity'futwJ frJe'Way agr~l!leJlt can He aid lltema~ to simply 'l!ld<nlnl be adopjed bY the c~y counctl. the eiistfn1 bridge ·will ·be ccniilered; Hirth aald tbit whatever temporary too, but gave the 1_....ion thll ~ Solution ' ii deClded 'by the Highway to be the, l'l)Olt Uke!y sohnton. · · divtslOn; It would baVe h? rectlve . ap. · llil'th uld the pciulbUllJ d .,... provol from the. u-.s.• Coast Guard.- ltructing a temporary bridge ll(Uc!Uni He poln\elf QUI· the Coast Gu&rd ~ es· •loliplde wlille the Witlnl bridge ii . tremely cOncemed abour a~ 'to the cempletaly mampec1·,wou1a •llllo.lli Con' Ut>Ptr Bay. . 114.ered· 1!1rt1r uid he WJIS not told how long It .llUI lie -that -... only Will take before any -mmendalloos •• lftnPol"lry 10hrtklns. • the temporary aoluUon ire r~. but ln- ''They do rulti.ie we have-a traffic Jll'O' dicated 1t wtll be only a matter of a few blem ,llld told as they will do -they lMntha,Jlthe -k ii to be done by 1m. can to aolve Jt without Wlltinc !or I IOIU-Hirth wu directed' to Investigate the lion on our over11i trafllc problem." stat111 of pl&Jllllng on the bridge by the ci- The original pin for the bay .....i.1 ly Couhcll lasj month. The meeUng Fri· II the conatruction of two new bridges. ct.y mufted from a Jttter he aubse- Ofl' for the Coast &ipway It I cool of 15 ' queoUy "'1t Ayanlan uldng for I fl"> million another span cOstbtg even mort eren report. l<ir the futm Pacific Coast Frftway. lllrlh aald thO statuo of the planned 11They are pllMlnC to at leut _,. freew1y1 11.aelf, wu not dbcussed. ' , I, • Teday'• Final TEN CENTS • Arson Said Possibility By Firem_en ( • By Al\TBUR R.. VINSEL Of .. ..,,, ....... A 1125,000 f~e branded u hlcbly IUIJ>icious in origin raged through a Bank of America branch near the UC Irvine campus early today, gutting tht buildina: on which revolutionary alo11n1 1tere fresbly [Jllnted. No one wu injured and no explolion wu reported, but Orange County Fire Department Captain Bill C?oo!<lbank •troncly hinted at araon. "Death to the Pigs ••. All Power to tht People," had been sprayed aato the two- 1tory structure houalng nine bostoesses adjacent to the UCI campus in the lrvina Town Center. "When they got there, the whole damn thing wu in flames and it just doesn't happen that way naturally," said one flra oblerver. One witness to the 12: 13 a.m. nareup 11ve Oraqe County sheriffs deputies in· formation Ju.ding to an all-points bulletia for two Neani men·tn· a picku p truck. The B;ank of America -ts a ~ymbol of the American E!tablishment -has been the target of radical saboteurs around thl country. Only a week ap, i greenhouse com~ez In 1".hich the Stanf•d R<seorcb lnalltuta wu conducllng experiment. on plaDt •irulea and air pollution w·u .also 1'rkk· ocf, by I $i!O,Gill espiaatoo. Autboritla: ~ · tt ~al only one-ball mile from today'• blllt fire. . One other spray-painted meaace In the latest incldent ·read : s.nt of Amerikka. The nifupelllilg 6f'the ftation'1 name - !'iazi..tyJe -i> I Julown lrl-lrk of revolutionary factlona. . Investigators said ~ slogan refer• red to a rock and botUe-throwing incident at Hillcrest Park in Fullerton, which police shut down to all, because o( bippia ptherings. Despite the county fire captain'• refererice to anon, Oran1e County Sheriff's deputies were bein1 more CautiOUJ. "We hive no information u far u any bomb bluta or arson are conceraed," aaid Deputy James Enearl. Loss in the blllt blue Included prhn1rlly oftlce equipment, turniture llld tellers' counters, while no legal papers or cumncy in the vaullB were destroyed. Squads totaling 25 firemen responded to the blaze, which authorities said was fint reported by a man speaking In excited tones. . · They controlled the raging fire about 30 minutes after arriving -three miiiUtts after the orfcinal call -from r;talions at UCI, Orange County · Airport and tn Laguna Hills. Fire damage itself was confined to llie bank' of net on the first floor 'of the two- llory building, while tmoke Inflicted losses on other quarten within the •true· lure. The facility also bouses UC! publlc relations offices. A 1ang of onJooker:s -.l(lme cheering -gathered to watch the blue, reminis· cent of one Iut February that destroyed a B"anlc of America branch' in Iala Vitti, !See BLAZE, Pqe II Coan ll'eatller Fair 1kle1 and austy winds will greet coutal re1klenb Tueaday, with temperature jumping to 73 degrees along the shore and up to 112 further lnlud • !ASIDE TODAY The ba.tUe /or ecolog11 can be won with tool& developed to cope with problem..r of ottttr space, according to 4 Hun.ttna- to" Beach. aerospact t.tptrt. Set Finaf\Ce, PCQt-20. ....... 11 '-'"'"" '' Cllilllllllt "'' 1 ·-.... c--. --11 ('........... 11 ~ ...... " ...... , ... . llNtilil I 1 l t ...... -»fl -.. ,.........,.. ,. ~· -" MltteMI ......... OPWM C_.., 11 -.... ... Mlrllttt 111:11 r....,..... '' -.. -. Wiii"' .... II ......,,.,_.,f!.Jr ...,.. ,._ if' : I DAil y l'ILOT N Russ .; /' ~harge Lodged Agaif!&! U.S. Air Flights . , ll(OllCIJll (UPI) -Tbe Soviet .....,. meftt ·today~ prOteated "the violation'• or tbe Soviet llAle border by a U.S. military plane and nld Jt wis a re.suit of "the 1....-at military actlvlly or the United StllOs 1* ·..-.as alljoinln& lite Soviet Union." . ... An off*armouncement said the lioviet . t has loclled a protea! . ' ,...,, Deadlocks wllll Iba --ol tllo Unitod - In --tllo Ylolatlao If ,~, USSR atala btfdor by an AlMrlcan mUHary ~ .. Oct. 11 ... T!i. reference was lo a U.S. mllllary plane whldl alrV-0. _¥rqu tbe border Af!Dl' 1eoerals, .. l>imY Major pilot and a Turkish colonel abOard the plane have been held in Y envan, near the frontier. 'Ibo im.t, the TUa Newa. Ac"""1 llM, iWiliJld .. tbl ,.._ llbldbiltration Illa! "In the pal -)'MPS alone there wera more than to unlawful .. 1o1at1o111 or the USSR air space." ' "Violations of the USSR's air space by American planea happen by no means because of some chance, concurrency of circumstance, but are a result of the general military activity of the United Stites in areas adjoining the Soviet Union," it said. !Sweet Ernie' Beats Rap "The Soviet government bas repptedly drawn the attention of the United S~ government to this actmty that is openly boatlle lo Russia. '!be _..uon of American military bases around the Soviet Union is a most serious source of danger and does not accord in any way with the statements in favor of an im· P1:9vement pf Soviet-A!Q.erican relations that were .. peatedly made by U.S. 'leaden!' In ~irty Word Mis~rial A black UC Irvine gradual• student ar· rested after uslnc ti.ad words ,49 times to elJlress his alleged Ci)Dtempt toward radical white studenb has beaten1 the ' rap, at leaSt for the time being. Ernest A.. "Sweet Erpit" Smith, 30, N!W HOAG CHIEF Dr. Robert C. Woodruff Newport Dootor ' Named tQ J¥ad ' :floag Staffers Dr. Robert C. Woodruff, a Newport Beach gynecologist, bu been elected chief of staff at Hoag Memorial HOlpltaJ. Dr. Woodruff, 50, succeeds Dr.· John Palmer Miller, whose term expires this month. • A native of Bay City, Mich., Dr. Woodruff joined the staff at Hoag in 1955. He bas served on the staff uec:utive committee slnct 1967. A graduate of Michigan State Universi- ty, he obtained bis M.D. at the University of Michigan Medical School and served his internship at the Unlvenity'I af- li!lated ~Ital. Dr. Woodruff is a diplomat.e of the American Board of Obstetrica and Gyneeology and has been named a Fellow in the American Collete of Surceons and in tbe American OB-GYN CoDqe. He Ls a former president of tbe Orange County OB-GYN Society and Is a clinical instructor at the UCI Medical School. Dr. Woodruff, who is a licensed pilot., lives at 1606 Warwick Lane with hil wife, Phyllis and their four children. His practice ts localed at IOO Newport Center Drive. DAILY PILOT ' ClRANGE CO~ST l"\Jlll$MINO COM,.ANY Rob.rt N. Wtttl "r•lftlil •nd Pllbl....., J•ck l. Curlty Vkt ,mldtnt tncl 0-•I ~ nam•1 l(ff.,.if (fl!Of TI!om11 A. Murplil11t MIM:JI ... Editor l . ''''' ICritg Jil.twl!orl lllHCl'I Cl!f l:dl!Or Ntwp0rt .... Offk:a , 221 I Wt1f ltlkt l111ul •v1 rd M1ilint A.ldrfftl ,,0 , low 1111, fl66J. ... -Saturdl1 ..... Judie Dooald Dwiaan ruled lite P<O*diDp In ll>rbor Judlclal Diatrtct Court ,to be 1 mistrial '!be all-le juryllllidl IDcluded ae .. n women deadlocked I to s ,.,. c:onvtction and Jude• Dwiaan'1 acttan followed refusal to let dd-atlClme)' Jamoa George individually poll the Juron. Smith, a former Loo Ancelet radio and teJevlJioo talk allow penooallty, hod been cb1r1<cf with disturbing the peace ol a unlvenlty campua loilowlntl the 11.ay 11 -Durlog the -.i.ac trial, tllo boalc -by the-,,. .. thal-and wonkotnbinailom 1116d by Smtih ara common and aot ol!ensl" to .-11 ol wau., wbere be ..... nlled. Deputy Diatrtct AlfllnllJ R a II• II -·the prooecutor, dllqiood and ap. pmnlly -llfna Jltnin .. do tllo wne. A cWt.... will be made lhll -wbetbet to move for a retrtaJ Gr dismlu ~ the cbarp entlrely. Sweet Enole and hfl delenae coon.I eontended that be WU -in 1Jb manner by lite wblte radlca1a alter call· Ing then names, but DO CXle elle WU 11'- ratecf. Madrigal Choir Slmed for Show · In Kansas City The c.r... de! Mir 1ligh Sthool Madrtp1 l!lnprl and the ' eo.c.t Cbolr haft rteelvtd ,ln"ftta-to lfDI 11 events u fu-away 11 Jtamu Qty. Both. grwpa, dlrecttd by Don -· will openJbelr .~.-.rib a "'""am Nov. 11 ID 1111 C.... dtl Mar llllfl 8cbool JYID. • '"lllat Ill tf ,.. can pt Iha l7lll healed," -Aid. u the JIYlll la ... cold to bold • -i. the -will be ltven tn !be ICbool oafatarla. sbi1:° wtr:: ~~=: Ocl IO fyJr the Republican Rally to. Gecqe Murphy In the Anabelm C.0- vention Center. On NoV. 5, the Madrllal Slntlers will participate in a music featlval at co.ta Meas llfih Scbool whidJ will be lucfctd by Dr. <hrlene Archleeque or San Jooa Slate Coilqe. A aec<JOd lestlval la planned Dec. 4 at Troy High School tn Fullerton in which the Madrllal Sinlen also upect lo com· pei.. "Alter tbe llisl of !he i'ur. wt boiie lo be really moving around,'" Haneke said. The Madrigal Singers have been Invited to perform in March in Kansas City at the national conference of the American Choral Directora ASlocl.ation. The Concert Oloir hu been asked to sing in San Diego in April for the California Music Educators Association conference. The Ma1ri~al Sine:en, with a few ex- ceptions, is the group that toured Europe in critically acclaimed concert tour this summer. Pablo Picasso 89 MOUGINS, France ((UPI) -Pablo Picasso celebrated his ltth birthday 1t his home SU!lday. Only cloee lrlenda ,..... Invited to Join him tn marllinc the evcnl Tbe protest said the Soviet government 14upectl that the United States govern- ment wtU dllplay a moot -ap- proach lo the position outlined tn thla statement and draw appropriate coo- clusion11." Tbe Bovlela alao protested lo the Turkish government. drawing its at;.. tentlon lo tlie vinlatioa by an American plane. Tbe llAtemenl to Tllrkey remtndtd Ankara that alter the llilhl of lite American U2 1PY plane the Tllrklab government aaid it •'will never give planes ol allted "' other -thO rilb1 lo ... Ha -and Ha air space tn ... .,...ive -capable ol JnOidfnc damage lo the oecurtly and lranquiltty ol Ila neichbon-" But the Jalal -"obowa thjl In ruUty lblnp ara qulte dilleren~" Iba prolal Aid. In thll camedion SW pt lae alone can be cauaed by remarb made by ceiutn quarlera In Tllrkey tl>at T U r t t I h autborlUet are not answerable for the ac- tlona ol the violating plane alnce It belonp to the American Air For<e," Ruut.a Aid. Newport Heads Attending Meet Of Cities Group Five Newport Beocll clty eonncllmell, IDcllMfl.. lla)'ll" Ed Hirth, and lbelr -. llliil etcllt'loey -ol· l1clala .... tn San lll<CO lodl)' !or the ... llWll ~. ol Callfornja Cities -·--~ ..,,,,.-. -cina. c1udel Wedneadiy n)lbl, bu 1tlractod Councllmen Donatd MdnniJ, Richard Crouf, MlJan lloata1 and Llndaley P..--, and lbelr wlvts, In add11lon lo Mayor and Mn. Hirth. City Manacer and Mra. Harvey L. Hurlburt are headlnc the delqatlon of atalf penonnel at the con1.,...,... They ara accompanied by Recreallon Dlredor Calvin Stewart. Planning D 1 r e c t o r Laurence Wilton, Public Works Dlredor Jooeph Devlin, and DenniJ O'Neil, asaJa. tant city attorney, and their wives. 1 • City Attorney Tully Seymour, Police Chief B. Jamu Glavu and Ctty Clerk Mn. La-Lagios .... also alteldlng. .... also attendtn&. Vandals Busy Early Sunday Reaidenla in the 2lOO and 2300 blocks or Vista Huerta in Newport Beach awoke Sunday morning to find their walks, doors and shrubbery and outdoor furniture smeared with glue, molasses, shaving cream and eggs. Newport Beach police received a com- plaint from Mrs. Margaret Fates, 2249 Vista Huerta, shortly after 8 a.m. Swi- day. In addiUon to-the-molanes m the sidewalk and shaving cream on front door, Mn. Bates Aid she found trees and shrubbery festooned with toilet paper. ResJdents said the vandala were neither seen nor heard cfurtnc the-nJcbl Irvine Council Founders Face Dissension Problem Dissension within the Council of Com· muniUes of Irvine (CCI) that bolled over two weeks ago was dealt with heed-on 1$ a meeting of Iba council'• loundln1 lathers las1 week. The group Uatened to a 1triel of formal rte0mme0daU0111 by the mOll unhappy member, ..er.tar)' JUMI Heynt, a UC! student wbo hu publicly crlUclled the leadership of the council. Some ol his propooala, tncludtnl a re- quest for regular weekJy mkUnp, wer1 enacted. Tbe dlJcuslla> flared at Umea, and tho Impression that all la not ,.._ and llcht rematns lot aome obaerven. The council, wlill Ila direct con- fronlatloo, bu apparenllJr avoided any dam•lina, permuent tehbm, however. Durintl Ille dialogue, I Reyne waa crlUclztd for hls public llatemcla and oiller acUvlUea, lncludinl his rtquell that CCI PrtSld_,t John H. Burton reaJan. council member Ray Qul&ley voiced the tharpest criUcism. of Heyne 1t lhe Thursday session, charging that be has "misrepresented me, and Util council."· Heyne had acc~ the council wU ''crlals oriented" and that Burton wu not actlnc tn tht bell Interest ol t11e com. munlty tn lillnl inoorporatlon papera with the county. Other• members pointed out it wu un- fair to single out Heyne, because hua ail.ical remarks were the most recenl, as they pointed others "bad bffn guilty or lra.:.::cretions, too.'' Tbe debate broucht a suaeauon Illa! any statementa by councll members in th< luture be cleared throulh the council before they are re!eJIC<:I. Several cwncil members. lncludln1 Heyn<, argued qainst Ille proposal, poin· 1Jni oul It would abrllfie their freedom or speech. A cwensus was reached that any statements representing the councl~ it.elf, be cleared was reached, however. • • DAILY PILOT ,.... W •kMrf IC ....... ' Fn• r.,. J -nuzE.--;. I near the UC Santa Barbara c-I No problems were reported tn Uoplnc ·order at tbe ua scene. · lnveaUgalors said they impounded !ao · f ritdenc:a a nwnber of ~ ~ tsibD 1rom the 1et11t. _ •. I · "Free Bobby and. all Po 11 f e Prisoners •.. " read one Slogan. . 9Jte faclllty damaged in the fire at the University· Park Shopping Center on ihe .. noltb •Ide of the ·t.ampua· WU ·a UC! 1 booJtstofe. . ' f~--' ' 1 I The Bank or An\ertca Ill tbe worl~'• largest financial institution and has ·bden hit by _fires and wiJid<>1f .. m"8blnl !!>· c1dent.. blamed on ..stladelits and radlcF · for the past year. f • .. I. Authorities .have [f'JDphasl!ed the DP!C lack ni trouble·at,the S,000-student UCI campus in consertative Orange Ceunty and were cautious In evaluating ca111e1 of the nearby bomb Nan a week ago. They noted that while Stanford Research lnstitute's 12 branches around the world bave d,one Defense Department Wac.__rest,arcb the ~iDe fac::wty WU OJllqtd in jlllely peaoelul lludiea. No definite ca""' Im beeo ellabltabed ln that case, but authorities aay it was undeniably a bombing. ONLOOKERS SCAN PAPER FOR DETAILS ON BANK BLAZE Students •nd R11ident1 Give M!.xlld RHctlon to Dutruction 1be precise location of the bank branch that was burned is adjacent to tbe UCl campus in the local area shopping center, facing outward toward an Irvine Ranch field. * *·* • ' From p_,e J Accused In 5 Deaths REACTION ••• Attorney for Frazier Says Suspect Insane important services to students bl tht area of flll8llCial aid by servicing - loans." The cbancellor deplored the 1oa of these services even temponrl1y. A spokesman for the New Unlverslty C.onference which last week sponsortd a Black Panther-Free Bobby Seale nlly, said Ute members of NUC "wouldn't sup- port such destruction." Robert Manhall, From Wire Services SANTA CRUZ -James A. Jacbon, public defender appointed lo ddend John Linley Fruler tn the slaying ol five peraom, oays that Insanity is a po!JSlble plea when tbe cue gets to court. "My personal opinion Is that Fraiser Is crazy," the attorney said Sunda y although he a1ao remarked the evidence against his client "so far has not been by any means conclusive." Frazier pleaded innocent afh!r being ' amsted Friday tn hla-cabin less than a mile away from the '300,000 mansion overlooking the Pacific Ocean where an eye surgeon, his wife, their two IODS and his aecreta.ry """ -slaUlht<nd and dumped inlo a swtmminc pool. Neither Sanla er.. County Sherif!'• ~ nor the Slate Burean of Crlmtna1 Jdentillcatlon and Investigation commented '* a report by E d Montc-.y ol-the San Franciaco El· llDIDli' ht Frultr'1 f 1111 e r p r l a t 1 matched thole on a typewrit<r Ul8d to produce a note left at the liaylng acene. Mon!lomery, a Pulli>B Prlze.winniog crime ~. aald a note declaring "World War 3" against materlallsts and despoilers of the environment had been typed on a machine found Jn Dr. Victor M. Ohla'a mansinn and that Fruter's flngerprlnla bad been found oo the macblne. Newport Infant Dies in Crash 'Ibe infant daughter of a 17-year-Clld Newport Beach girl was lu1led Sunday when the car in which she was riding overturned on Interstate 15, about eight miles south of Las Vegas. Regina Lynn Bums, five months old, of 110 31st Street, was pronounced dead on arrival at a nearby hospital, according to the Nevada Highway Patrol. Her mother, Deborah Burns, an( two other occupant!'! of the car, St.ilnley Sauter, 23, cif 2589 Orange Ave. ahd Judy Serkowski, 16, of 1662 Newport Ave., both cif Costa Mesa, all sustained injuries in the crash. A hie:hway patrol spokesman said the accident took place ~bout 6:20 a.m. when the car, traveling north, veered off the bighw ay and overturned. Montco!DUJ quoted 'la re 11 ab I 1 source." a graduate student in history, said Sheriff'• depuUet aald the story wu however be could understand the frustra· "news to us" and the state crime lab aald tion of some that would lead them to ils llncerprtnt department wu cloatd. burn tbe bank. Frazier, 24, is charled with kllUng Dr. •'-'Until the media gives radicals equal Ohta h wll Vlr lnl •1 th-~ two time. to articulate lhelr positions such ,47; la e, .I a,.;= . · h "M shll Id "U things will appen, ar a sa . sons, Richard, 12, and Victor, 11; and the there were an open dialogue ip this coun... doctor's aeaetary, Mn. Doro th Y try property would not be so sanctified." Cadwallader, 31. Emphasizing be wouldn't "blow up the A family friend sundaJ uld he believes bank myself," Marshall said "I can 1 gunman lhat: Virlinia Ohta dud in her emphathize with those who would." He home and tbtn lay in wait to plct off four cited a need for increased uposltill'.I of mcft victim9. Wues including the Black Panthers, Vlet- 'Ibe friend told an interviewer be nam, Guatemala and the Near Ea.st in believed the oat to die were Dr. Victor order to lessen tepsions. M. Ohta'• IMfttary, Doro~~-~ / Another student, Craig Harlan. tetlng C&dnllader, and one of the Ohta~ an infant was more vehement about the she had brought home fnm IChool media's role in the Bank of America fire. Then, the friend .W, the evldmce 1111· "Read Ramparts magazine to !ind out gelled that Dr. Ohla arrived with another why the Bank of America ahould be bum· son, found out what was IOintl on, hmctd ed," be said. at the lone kWlr and WU lbot dead bi A survey of stud~ts in tbe commona tum. bcilding across the street from Town The friend aald the Jut to die appeared Center on campus revealed few student. to have been ,lhe son who came home who were concerned aboot the incident. from scbooJ with his father. He said ~e But out.side the bank where workmen boy probably was cut down wblle trying were pounding plywood sheathing into to nee from the tiller. place, a gf.oup of onlookers gr.ew about $900 Cash Plus Drugs Stolen From Pharmacy More than $900 in cash and an unknown amount of drugs were taken Jn a bur&IarY •t Ille.Corona dol liar J!bannacy, afi?-E .. Coast Highway someUme Saturday ntcht or Sunday morning. G. Hubert Peirsol, owner of the ~acy, discovered the break when he amved Sunday at 8:45 a.m. to open the store. Police said the lntrudera entered the store by prying a lock on the front door and apparenUy cutting a safety chain. midmorning. Most stood with books in band staring silently at the charred remains of the bank. As is frequently the case at UC Irvine, many wished not be to quoted. A new arrival on campus, a long- haired, freshman, social science major from Los Gatos near Berkeley said "l'm not impressed with UCl for its political act.ion." Richard Bergboldt said be wu on the scene at 1:30 a.m. with about five ()thers. He laughed when told a riot squad bad been called to the scene. · BergbOldt agretd' with the contention or Marshall that there W&l!i not • political organization on the UCI campus capable of plaMing or carrying eut the burning of the bank. 1· Qiancellor Aldrich speculated that it ls possible out.side forces might want UCI to look more radical than it really is. The tjlan(;el~r noted I.hit Marshall 'l'he safe inside was drtQed into back room and peeled open. would be. a credlble source .in terms of a the NUC and its ,political stance in that "'Bob was ooe of,._the ones Who is most concerned that the, free Bobby Seale rally be run without incident," ' Chancellor • A narcoUcs ctblnet WIS alao ix,ten In- to but tbe quantity of dnlp !alien wu not Immediately known. Police said initially '8lt wu reported, taken from the safe but Mn. Pelnol nld thla mornlntl a further Inventory diacloa'- ed the total wu more than '900. Aldrich saJd. • · The NUC is a _ ceAlition o( "radical" c;>rganiultions on the. UCl Clmpus and might be described as hl:lldln& the farthest left stance of any groop. __ OAILY l"ILOT l"llttl"' 1_ldltnl It,.._ ORANGE coufltY FIREMEN SIFT THRPUOH RUIN AT UCl'S llANK OF .AMERICA lllANOH • Shorlly Alter Ml.,l9ht Nou UCI, Fl•moa Fliltd Sky; Dam•1• Elllmalo $125,000 , -.. • ' . . I . I I ' ' • • ' ' ,, ' " ' ' • • • • • I • • ! I ' I l I '1· i I I • I t I I ' I ! I' I I i t I l • • i I [ ' I I ' ' • I • I I , I • I ' l ! ' t I I --1 I ' I I I I • ' t I • ' I t I l " " ' I ' • I ' . -- ' ,{t a ~t-s:wing ~ We.ight to Fracture !l's 11 season.· .. anothtt show for the South c..Jt Com- munity Hosp ·Auxiliary as the toprlh productioc( cl the rollicltiD( . " Fractured F ' looms inlo view. . · I · Uilder the expert.direction ot'cargill Productions of Nd York , ' .which provides costumes, script and sta·ge direction, talen~ ama· teurs from Nl!"'.!'!111 Beach through-San C!eJ11enllo will proyidi .three evenings of la\"j'; ~ Bnd dance, ' • t r I ' . Diri!/;ting tHe show, the fuurth since 1965, will be Peter Thomps or th~ company. 4 1 , ... • Tickets for , the 1970 Fractured Follies on 'Thursday.· riday· and Saturday., Nov. :a\and 7, a!'8 on sale no~, according_ to Mrs. Ed- mund Van-De'usen, r{ll chairman. 1be production will be.,;ta&ed In the Laguna Beach HiJb·School aµditoriuln. • Tiet~~ may be purchased at Peggy Taylor Realtors in· Laguna 8each from 1 to 3 p.m. Additional information or tickets for reserved Seats also mar be obtained from the auxiliary office in the hospital, 499-1311 , exteJll!oo 296, or Mrs. George Wolf, 494-3380. Behind the sCeites is an able cast 'or wOinen assisted. by·Qae mas· cultne talents ot Zachary T. Malaby, technical advisor; Jack J,yons, props and.sets, and V'V'·De\'sen, stage manager. . . • Among member• cl•the bard-working auxiliary under Ml:.. Van . · -Dj!usen's cbaihnanshljf are tire -Mmer..M;acauley Ropp, Violet ild.,,_., . ~ _Tpwsend , Malaby ud "Taylor. · · • Alsci assistipg in·d~onafj)ciiit~care the Mmes. W. L. Woo-Je}r; Wolf, Cha'rles Quilter, Sam .. Garst, Jolf'n M. Shea jr.; Alfred Kress, David Rosen, Theodore Taylor and David Kawasaki. Round\M oot \he ll_ac!<stage talent are the Mmes. Neal Amsden, E~yn.Reynolds, Gordbn Fleener; Jphn Jl. Lawson, Jack Snipes, Gene llrookbank and Jun Chino: ' . rt Proceeds,from tbe1 show will fuliill ah-auxiJiarY~Pledge of $100.· 000 I<> the hospital. The pledge goal soon will be reali~ed because of ef(ort put into the follies and the second main fund·raiser, the Valen· line Ball: ' • • • ' • Fol~es , ~~19iSO~N Ed '::,11. POSTING NOTl <!E -· 1970 Fractured Follies pooters designed by Mrs. David jtosen are admired by (left lo right) Dan Brown, South Coast Community Hospital administrator. Mrs. Alfred Kress, pos- ter ro-chainnan, and Dr. Bob Petersen. The posters formally an· nounce that reserved seat tickets are on sale now for the all·new Cargill production. I I I • I ' I I I ' . . 1 ;..crystal Ball Reflects I A crystal ball isn't necessary !or resfdents ol•Nriw· I port Island to forecast an enjoyable ~ening Sal- l urday, Nov. 21. For that Is the dale chosen by the t 1 Auxiliary to sponsor a Crystal Ball in the Newport· i i er Inn. Officers will be installe<l during the festivi· I I ties which include a cocktail boor, diiiner.and d.,.,.. ing. Selecting glittering gowns for-the · gala are (left lo right) the Mmes. Charles Miller, Vern Ah· rens and Alsen Inman, chairman. Festive ~Party r--q\l I l"\Q OW Candleglow will cast a romantic aura when members ol St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa Mesa gather in the Airporter Inn for a dimer dance Friday, Nov. s. Planned and hosted by the School Auxiliary, tbe amual funding event ls themed, Candlelighl and F Io w e r s . · Tables will be a profusion of floral arrangement! centered with lighted tapers. The 8:30 p.m. dinner will be followed by dancing to the music of Ray Engels' Harmonaires. In charge of arrangement!I is Mrs. Roeer Gibboo1 . Assi3tinl .,. Mn. John R. Wilson and Mrs. Clareoce: Clarke. " . LIGHTI NG THE WAY -Mrs. llqger Gibbons as Priscilla Alden puts her talent to work to ipsure 'enough candles for the Candle- light and Flowers dinner dance she is chairing. • I I . : j ~Dliri~g Vocabulary Les·son Teenager Learns to Say 'Uncle' : t D!AR ANN LAND~: Last -k my • brother and his-wife went on a trip. They 1 Jett their lf.year-old son with us. From tbe beginning, the boy's behavior toward f bk aunt was rude and mocking. Ht 1 became smirt-alecky on several oi!-· c:Ulons. l warned him to watch his ' mcllh. Wheti be called my wife a vulgar ' na~ I wii'rned his rump with· i 1-liit• • pOng paddle. From then on he wd lTIOll. f mpecttuI and we bad no more trouble 1 wJth him. Yesterday my brother came !or the boy. I told him exacUy whal ha~. f Hls reactiOn astonlShed ma. He ~ l .~ I no blllllnen l1ytng 1 hand on his son, that 1 should have waited until he returoed MJ he C<lllld administer Ule punllh-- "In hll own WiY·'' ANN LANDERS ~ " ' ' . I believe a child allould be punished .when he fuisbehavesn: a week later. • What do yoi! 11y! -Cf VNC!k, DEAR VNC: nt molllod of dllClpllile -.... ---....... parei(s left. Since It w11 DOt, a.ere 1boald be no crlUcltm et ~ mauer ii -,... ..... -... boy. . I ..... 1 -Ir tM latller •1<1 paid more attentien ti Ml to1111· tarUer ap. briailog, ... boJ waold IOt be Hing valiar lanpqe w:llll tab aant -or any. ooe ebo. • DEAR ANN·LANDERS: I am a pack ' rat .wbO .cui:m articles and keeps lhe.m forenr. J~d like to 11brqJt excerpts ln>m an · artk:le which lllP<ared in Harper's maguine 16 years 110. Jl was written by John Fischer, wh6 WU editor- ln-d>lef. "Many U.S. men die early from ulc.-ers and hlgJ! blood pressure becauae lllelr wives aet out to reform them as toon as the wedding ceremony la over. Most American brides regard a hmband u 175 pounds of raw material. She feels it is her duty to make something out of the sorry ckxl, even it she bas to wear her tongue to the roots in the process. "This undaunted approach may have t0mething to do wjlh the U.S. divorce rate, axe murders and the vast number of characters who sit nursing shot glasses In men 's bars late at night. Nevertheless, Jt has made American women the envy or the world. "Never be!ore in history has a nation devoted so large a share of IL! brains and resources to lhe sole' purpose of keeping women deodorized t coneted. enshrined in chrome convertibles, curled, slenderized, rejuvenated and protected against all physical labor. Meanwh.ile the husbands or Ihm ~ehold J)elS live In mute agony and die mercilulJy from ulcers and high blood presmire." When I clipped this article 16 years ago I was amused. Today I do not think it1is funny, I see m~lf and I am ashamed. I hope you will pr nt the excerpt, Ann. My wife won't recognize herself because she believes she is perfect. -COW ARD · DEAR COWARD : Tbe excerpt II •mu .. tn1 bat Jt certatnJy does not 1pply to .n womea. Sbow me • mu wbo loleratn "• boa1tbold pet" wbo tries to pu1 ltentlf off u • wife, ••d I 'll Mow Y.• • 1mn wllo en)oy1 belag tUea •vutqe tf, Dffdl It aad delet'Vft It. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last week I went to a party. Three people I had never seen befon!I came up and ;isked me to buy raf[le tickets for a benefit. Sunday I attended • weddin& reception. Two casual acquaintances tried to sell me tickets to a bauar. Last night I wu invited to the home of • relative. No sooner had I entered the house than the 11-year~lc\ son of the . hostess hit up every guest for a ticket to : : hls ~y school play. Of course no one . ' had the nerve to ref\l9e. I call this high-=· . grade blackmail. What do ,you call it? ~.: PIGEON DEAR PIOGE: Low·grade manners. What await! you on the other side or the marriage veil? llow can you be sure )'t>Ur marriage will work? Read Ann Landers' bookie! "l\larrlage -Whal to Expect." Send your request to AM Landers in care oC the DAILY PILO'l\, enclosing SO cents in coin and a long;· stamped, self-addressed envelope. · ' bAILY PILOT Monday, Octobtr 26, 1970 Pumpkin Pinned for Hosp ital Party 1-Ialloween decor will set the scene for Laguna Beach E bell Club's first holiday party for its adopted ward in Fairview Hospital on Wednesday, Oct. 28. A pumpkin carving ceremony will be followed by songs, games and refreshments as arranged by the l\tlmes. Howard Hinrichs, Gordon Forbes, ruchard Racich, Edmund Van Deusen, Howard Wilson, Richard Carlson and David Young, Pinning the smile (or frown) on the pumpkin party game are (left to right) Mrs. Gordon Dahlquist and Mrs. Hai:ro Groettrup, party chainnan. It's a Dog's Life Humor the Cat's Salads, Meo WD Serv ed C!Ullerlng for a waY> and -i!J"-Ell)IA BOMBECK If one more man 11y1 to me, 0 1 don't lite ftnJY women. "Ibey mnlod me ol a doi that walkl on its hiod ~gs. Jt's done, but not well/' I am gotzw lo bile him on the log. Our humor makes us no less feminine, no Jess wifely, no le# molllerly than any olher _ emotion..Jf1,._just .that ~­ humor ls basically different fr<R that of a man. It's hard to e~lain. My husband nearly fell of! his chair one day when a dog nn. out onto the football field and the amnouncer s a i d , "'Ibere is a dog oo the football field." "Did you hear that?" he .. ed, wiping tears 0 f ~ J•lllMr from bis -· AT WIT'S END • uogodly hour!"-.-. . ...... eBlad 1.00-IDll Certaln!J, tbrre is not a wife card party at 11:30 a.m. on In lhe world, -..... bo tllan tint"°""· wbo has not Wednesday, Oct. 211, wW sat in a ~ condlli«i members of the Or a n C e wal!Jni f<r her husband to District, Calllorni\ Federation finbh with bla "faVO{_ite jo~e." ot Women's Clubs. . In a group the oClier night Membel's of lhe district er· my husband said, "Hey, did ecuUve board will be ho6tessts Thinkipg he was in a jolly you hear my favorite joke for the event In. the Ebtll mood, ·1 said, "That reminds about the talking dog?" Clubhouse, Anaheim. M ~ s • me or 8stOeyabOUt.11NlllS-•'That~JS fuMr,1-said-a-man -Clanens-Fromlath, ,distrtct ~ Oilier. The Interviewer asked doubling over. conc;t vice president, 1 5 her if she was a neat "That's not the joke " said chatrman of the event .. ~· . ' Robert dePaszthory is rn housekeeper, ltke when her my husband. ch of f k ts husband got up to go to ~ "Is Utls the one where the =ben ICI ~Tustin Can· bathroor_n dkl. she make his dog drinks?" giggled aoother yon, FounWn Valley' and bed while he was gone. She one. Costa Mesa clubs will assist said, 'MAKE IT ! I h~1v1~ it sold "No," said my husband, with the serving. Helping t1> bef ... e be gels back . pm>etuating each word with a set up will be rnembenl al Ille My husband sobered up. nootril snort. ''This talking dog Rancho Viejo ~and La 14Whe~ would you find some-was great. He played all the.. Palma clubs' and, the Ebell one to buy a bed al that big night clubs and the talk Club ol Newport Boach. Associates Schedule shows. 11ien one day he got Tk:kets are available at sick and had to have an opera· $2.50 per person by calling tion. After that, he couldn't bet Mrs. dePantho"' al 431-1714. a job anywhere." -, First Fall Luncheon "How come?" asked a woman. "Because all he did was sit there and bark." NB Auxili ary The men screamed with Joining for luncheon and Charity League ch a Pt er s · laughter until I thought they their first fall meeting of the Once a year the group were going to have to have year will be members or the sponsors an art show and cof· Sll!"gery. Associates of the National fee in the Lido Isle home of ''The women sat there puut- Charity Laague, Newport Mrs. Linn C. \Villiams kl ed. "Dear," I interrupted. 11Jt The Ladies' Auxiliary of Newport Beach Fire Depart· ment gathers the t hi r d ~ Wednesday at 8 p.m. in various locations. Information regarding location may be ob- tained by calling Afrs. T. C. Chapter. benent the philanthropies of wasn't because the dog just Mrs. James J. EymaM, new the Newport Chapter. barked. It was becau,,e all the Dailey, 54$-9835. · chainnan will greet guests dog talked about was his Yo ur Horoscope Tomorrow during a llOCial hour at 1"30 D,.,ohlo operaLion." It was the ~~~~~~~~~~~,;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~m,.wbich.will.belollo"'"1.b~'-' .._,,_._.._.__~-"~~·;"!m~to~scream;;;;Trt;;·:ni;it f k luncheon at U :15 p.m. 1'lurs-"That's not funny, e Virgo: Avoid w ·ish ul Thin ing :rirl:°l.4:~it5~ Explored 1i~:;:,ed~·\t~;.,;:;t~ Don 't try to lose weight ; \ TUESDAY OCTOBER 27 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 2l·April .19): Activity centers on legal mat- ters, partnerships, ability to accept. and cope with opposing Art Topic Announced . RtproductlOM of Paintings will be the theme of the Wednesday, Oct. 28, luncheon meeting of the Orange County Branch, National League of American Pen Women, Inc. v iews. Gather facts . Strengthen ]mition. Refuse to be intimidated by one v..-bo makes threats. TAURUS (April ~May 20): Observe rules, safety regula· tions. Remember d I e t • Concentrate on guarding what is most precious: your health. Follow through on hunch. You are able lo see unusual side of one c1o$f: to you. GEl\fINl (May 21.June 20): Romance is accented. Your creative urges soar t o forefront. Those who may have a p p e a r e d indifferent display affection. C h a n g e routine. Fine-ror diiiing out with stimulating companion. CANCER (June 21.July 21): wwk. You can set project of.I career should be put into ac· growxl. Keep appotnlmelll!. . tion. stress independence, e'I· VIRGO (Aug .. 23-Sept. %2): ude conf'tdence. Creal iv e Money, possessiom -these endeavon ~· Take the a~ activated. Consult family letd. You are gomg to be a member. Impulsive purchale· ~r. or sale could create distenl. AQVARJUS (Jan, 26-Feb. Reallze this and act ac-18): Travel is emphasized. cordingly. One close to you Ideas are put to test. Read confides financial problem. and write. Gain shown if you UBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22 ): att: perceptive. Detect hidden Cooperate rather than fight. meanings. Cooperate w I t h Applies ipecifically to mate, Arie1 indiv1dual. partner or attorney. You may PISCES. <Feb. 19-l\1arch 201 : not be seeing things too clear-!ntere~t 1n unorthodox ~ub­ ly. Permit expert to offer in-Jecb 1s accented. Be flex1~le. formed guidance. You may change your muxt :tCQR~IO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): about financial project. This is What was secret now is all to the good . You cannot revealed. Your wor'k methods stand s.till and go forward at come under scrutiny. Be same time. prepared to defend yourself. To find °"'' -·· luct.1 •or 'l'OU lri Some insist you are going too "'_.,, •nd iov., order SYd!lfv Om1rr·• !·-. -· -•y be •partJy COr---191, "Secret Hlntl tor Mfri l rid """ • ~T ••-w-... SeftCI blrth0111 and 50 ceri11 reel lo Om1rr ilSl'rolO(ly S«rtll. !he DAILY • PILOT, Bo~ 1240, Grind C1nlr1I I! .. alone. :1. Hcmesaes for the day will be Exploring llousing and "If it's my joke, then how the Mmes. William B. Tritt, L. employment needs of ban-come I can't tell it my way? WEIGHT & Oelford Ff.dderman, Joseph H. dicapped persons will be Why v.·ould a dog rehash ._ J Amok!, James F. Gable and members of Glass Mountain something so painful as an /A.Tl( ERS'' I Rogers. lnn, Inc. at 8 p.m. on \\'ed-operation? You're sick. I bet if wf"\1 ~ H .t ...... The associates are former nesday, Oct . 28• in the I said Phillis Diller sold the Veter.-~--,·table FOUll ~ t1lk1·-, ,..--. lisltn;ng 1-:i· ar.Uve members ot . t h e "" vuru. • bed before he could get back ....,.,,. "• '"'"" nu Newport Ch 1 pt er and dation building, Santa Ana. into it, you'd have laughed.'' 1 progr1m th1t works. t• transferees -from other Open 00 phyt1ically c:Usabled;li~Or~~cr;..i~. -~~~;;;;:~~' -~~·~·~OClftl§lliiiiii-(iiiAiiilli:iiiil3~5iii·SiiilOiiiS~ Southern California National persons, the organiiation is dedicated to the development 01 a residential rehabilitauon MAMA MISSED THE BOAT! center. Transportation for disabled A lumnae Meet A fall luncheon for the members is ·provided by off. M1m1 ....,.., llad • ell•~ '° 1111 • tnlttt11111 rMCllln• --you do! Lii 111 lllt-!r1i. our "Bl'Oll!tr" knitting IMCfllnt -IR l'low w1il)" yw ari llnll 1111-•nlll ,..nt wlhl Newport Harbor Alumnae of duty firemen of the Santa Ana T H E K N I T W I T Chi Omoga will take place on Firemen's B • n • v o 1 e n I Wednesday, Oct. 211, Jn the Association. ~frs. Elizabeth Soatll C...t Plcml Stuft Shirt. LaRiviett may be called for LOWEil MALL !··-•·-._, t' t 61.1 Acretos f~ Wool-111'• Area coeds who have joil!ed Lii LJ."" Jnionna ion a • COSTA MESA Ph. J45.:atll: Panhellenle sororities will be,,_:11!953~. --~----_'.!~~~~~~~!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~ announced by Mrs. K. Stanley Bell, fTies chairman of the Newport Harb9r Panhellenic. Plans are being made for a Ohrlstm.as party and a Mother-daughter coflee for ac- tive members of OU Omega. Guest speaker for the noon meeting in the Grand Hotel, Anaheim will be J. 0 . Witte, · Southern California artist who specializes in commercial art illustration, lettering a n d design. Many or your natural talents. abilities are recognized and put to use. Be aware. of details. There are s o m e roadblocks, but you overcome them. Ta k e conservative course. SAGn"J'ARWS (Nov. 22· 11ori, New vort, N.v. 10611. Dec. 21): Some friend s may--------------------! BOOJTY CllNit !GT &:\••"-•fa,~ Mrs. J. E. Parsons, a club officer, bas beea named to the State Board Speakers Bureau of the national organization. LEO (July 23-~ug. 22): Avoid excess speed. Don't write letters wbUe upset, angry. Sharp words coold alienate neighbors, relatives, Good for putting ideas to appear o v er I y aggressive. Don't compound error. Listen and evaluate. A child who makes demands should be dealt with fairly bUt firmly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Decision ~fecting home, Crowtifng Glory beauty salons FREE CONDITIONING TREATMENT with your next shampoo and sat Famoua KR10 conditioner means healthier, lo velier hair. Pene- tratet hair to add protein! Now free with ou'r 1abu1ous fa ll coiffures. Mon• Tues • Wed ' SHAMPOO, SET and CONDITION ER •2" ., .. .,,.intMtnh Welam• lut Not AIWl )'I N9Ct ... ry . HA IRCUT ..... )' ~ ~ • FROSTING SPECIAL SlrNk I llttle l\lnllghl Into )'IH!r hair with this m•n· plta•l"V bright look '12'S Mon e Tues e Wod Cr owning Glory trormcrly C.pr1ce c orfJul"CI) SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 L 17 .. ST .. COSTA MW Lov.-er Level-Next to Sffn n.. 541·ff1 f -546-7116 Open Even.Ing• 01)C'n Evtnlnp A. Sunday colors in a new combination of sky blue and a chestnut bronze so lovely that seeing is believing and truly exciting blend of silk and rayon the coatdress way of dressing for social and da ily activities highlighting buttons ·of abalone pearl •,4 back belted 10 lo 20 35 FASIDON SQUARE SANTA ANA 35 F~ON S.QU~ J!~A ANA ..., WIFT WITH PURCHASE ROBI NSON'S AN D FRANCES DENNEY . . CORDI ALL Y INVITE YOU TO ATTEND 'BE AUTY ENCOUN TE R' A TWO HOU R CLI NIC OF PERSONAL AN ALYSIS AND INSTRUCTION. AND RE CEIVE A GIFT WORTH 17.00 WITH YOUR 5.00 ADMISSION FEE YOUR GIFT.• ,A, BEAUTY CLINI C KIT CONTAINiNG SOURCE OF BEAUTY CREAM, CLEANSING WHIP, EYE SMOOTH, FLOWING MASQUE, LIPSTICK ANO MAKEU,. CAPE, YOUR FEE,•• TOTALLY APPLICABLE TO\VARO THE PURCHASE OF. ANY FRANCES DENNEY CO~METI C ,_ YOUR INSTRUCTORS,•• TRA(NEO_f.'RANCES DENNEY BEAUTY EXPERTS JOEN TIREN, GERI RENNER ANO SHARON THOMAS, MARK YOUR CALENDAR DATES FOR MONDAY. NOVEMBER 2, AT 2:30 ANO 6 ;30 ·PM . OR TUESDAY THROUGH FRI DAY, NOVEMBER 3-6 AT 10:30 AM AND 2:30 PM. CLINI C IN OUR COSMETICS, _, ......... llOPV.o.TIOll TO .. w eoo, Ol!l:ICll """'" o~.,.. i\'t I -: Oii ......... - TO -INMM' ... 2 '"""'°" !~,"°""'"'-"~TUI• ti: .. -" KM:M, CAU,_ ... I JllO, ~ --·~Foa-ti! Tl«~ ~V 1NMITT-P': lCHEaC mno O"Y-TtttQ:• c-.. -· 2 0 2:30 , ... 011 CJ 1:30 ,.., t::Jniu,, NOV, l CI0:30 AM M C 2:30 "'I. Ctl!llU,, "°"• 5 C.0:30 AM 1111C2::JO l'lol, Cwiv •• HOV.4 cio:JOAMIP• c:z:JO,.., a'"'•·"°"·' c10::10AM011CJJ:::so ...... ·~,~~~-~-~~-~--"'~·~~-~~~-~ ·'"----------•TAT<-----"'----- ~11.llOC-,,_VNOCT -11Q.eMO-CtM.111;11. ACfl."T <---------- f'l.l:MI NJO s Va"'~.,......_ --· ..... ROBINSON'S ROBINSONS NE'NFORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 I I I • 7 7 .. • ' • f;osia ·Mesa VOL ~3, NO. 256, 3 SECTIONS, 3~ PAGES • , .. . ' . . . I DAILY P'ILOT ...... .., ltldMIN K......, ,.REMEN PROBE CE ILING FOR POSSIBLE INT ERNAL FIRE Fire and Destruction Near UCI ; F•mifler Stogen1 on tM Wall '"Just Too Mu~h~ VCI Comm unity Stunned by Fire By GEORGE LEIDAL ot 11'1• ~Uy "1'-1 Stiff Crowds of distielieving students, faculty and nearby residents of UC Irvine stood in the water.Jogged grass around the g~t­ ted Bank of America in quiet shock. "How wer'e . they so successful!" a depositor asklllllincreduously. Mrs. William E. Moore of University Park was going to deposit to her account at the Town Center branch of Bank ot America. She arrived to find the bank burned cu t. "This is just too much," she said. Noting the scribblings on the wall which read "Oink of America - death to pigs" Mrs. Moore said, "I don't think any point is ever made with these things." She was concerned and said· her hus- band was too hearing reports on the radio this morning, whether her money was all right. A bank official who asked not to be named said no records or cash were Jost In the blaze and damage was limited to furniture, fixtures and c a I c u I a t I n g machines. Four fireproof vaults held depositors records and they were emptied early today for storage -in an unnamed nearby bank. The spokesman indicated that two trailers· brought in within hours of the bla1,e which was reported at 12:15 a.m., wuold be ready for a 10 a.m. opening Tuesday, The Irvine branch does not of- fer safety dtposit box se rvice, he noted. uo·Jrvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich said this morning his reaction to the bank fire was the same as whenever property is destroyed. . He e:a:pressed annoyance that students would be blamed automatically for the fire since "the nature of calls this morn- ing: indicate an immediate feeling the fire is the result of students when that bas not yet been determined." Tbe chancellor also noted that this J\lrticular branch besides serving the university community offered "vitally (See REACTION, P11e !) Students, UCI Affected By ~la~!, S~xs Chancellor UCI Olancellor Daniel G. Aklrlch Jr. today Issued Uie followin& slatement follO'!'lng thiJ morning's destruction of the Bank of Am~ica branch near earn· pus:. " Judge Rejects Acquittal Plea A motion for acquittal wa1 denled ~ day in the trial of Willia Dean Hunt of Newpart Beach, accuaed of stabbing her "usband to death with 1 butcher tnlfe. Superl-;,.. Judge William L. Mllttoy de- n.led the motion of defense attorney Sid- ney lrmu, ruling Iha! lht .,.._..tlon had presented sufficient evidence of the possible guilt of. the slender, dark·balred woman. trmas was to catl his first witneu this afternoon . He 1nd prosecutor Mel John80fl have previously agreed that the death penalty will ... be a•k<~ .. lbe ..... --- "It Is abhorrent to me -as I am sure it is to all responsible members of the campus community -that anyone, whether students or others, would engage in senseless destruction and terrorist IC· livily of this kind. "Beyond the immediate damage to~ perty and lht lhrul lo lht aalely of cililena which are involved I regret that it seems necessary to point out that the greatest damage or an incident of this kind is to at.udenta and to the aniversUy. "I have met already U1il morning with our campus administrator of student financial ,aids to dlaam our concern over the possible Jou of records necessary to stOOmt loanl, granto and olhtr kindl of aaistance. We upect to meet with Of·· ficials of the Bank of America on t b I s matter immediately. "We are also communicating with of· ficials of the Bank of America and with the Oraflge County Sheriff's Dept. to assure them of our cooperation and we are di!ICussing whatever implications Lhis incident may have for the security .oi the campus and the surrounding com- munity." ORANGE COQNTY, CALl~RNIA 1 • ' • I ' ., t '" MONDAY;. OCTOBER 26, 1910-. -· • • an '' :-ear ' . -.... ·-: . . . '- • . ' ~ I • ' · ' I f ' " , " DAILY ,.11.,df' ...... '"' Lil'I'..,.. COUNTY FIREMEN PROBE RUINS INSID l!'•ANic:OF AMERICA NEAR UC l'CAMPus .. In E•rly Morning Houri Tod•y .In Orange C~untJ,. ·Dei'truction Stflli11 Al~i~ . ' Cyclists Saved In Newport Bay From 'Quickmud' Two nine-year-old cOrona del Mar boys will long remember a Saturday afternoon bicycle hike through swampy Upper Newport Bay. It nearly cost their lives. The youths strayed trom Back Bay Drive and when their bikes bogged down, lhey climbed off lo push them to hard ground. But Dennis A. MatUn and James M. Tomb, bolh of 83S Amigos Way, found themselves not just stllck, but ainlting, and sinking fast~ A resident spotted them from the nearby bluffs and called police. With the aid of the Costa Mesa police helicopter guiding ... them to the -spot, police and Newport Beach lifeguard unit;! raced to the scene. They found the boys mired in mud up to their necks. Lifeguards Logan Lockabey, Bruce Baird and Bruce Reed, with the aid of. Of- ficers Stan Bressler and DeMis Gillman formed a human <lhain and worked their way some 100 feet acroa the murky ter- rain with bl¥>YI and nylon lines. Wrapptog lhe baoys uoond tbt youths, they •trualed for 211 mlnutn before lhty dragged thtm lo firm ground. The rescut team allo man.aged to 11ve lht bicycles. Students Protest ' · Ban on Sex Movies TOKYO (UPI) -J-students angered by police • mda a I 1 I n s t pornographic movies hove begun reacting with se:s: film festivals as 1 protest, Kyodo News Agency aatd todly, "The Japan underground center In Toicyo ls swamped with requoo,l! for ,., films from students: i (!I, untvertitlee ·~ over the country," the •lenfy Aki. • ' Jury Deadlocks 'Sweet Ernie' IJeats Rap In Dirty Word Mistrial A black UC Irvine graduate ttudent ar· rested after using b,ad words 4t t'imes to · express bis .llUC1ed contempt toward radical white students has · beaten the · rap. at least for the time being. Ernest A. "Sweet Ernie'' ·Smith, 30, Government Cars Orilered to lJ se Lo w Leaded Gas · WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on today ordered all federal vehicles t"o use low lead or unleaded 1uo1ine ~ Wbertvtr practical and 111kecf lht governon of all the stltes to do tbe ume . with st.ate.owned vehicles. The · order will iffect IO o, o ~•; government~ cars throu&bout the country. , , • · The .fedtrol p..mmenl buys ·-half. of one percent of all lbe gasoline purcbaltl In lhe United Stain -a · million gallons aMUally. • Russell Tr1in, chairman of t b.e Presidebt's Council on Envlronmenta11 Qua!lty, Nid the purpooes of tbt rqula- lion are twoCold: "To reduce air poUuUon · ind to, Inc....,. lht morket for low·ltad' and unJeaded 11sollne." Train said II is hoped thot by orderinf the switch to such guollnes ln govem· ment ctn it will encoura1e. refiners, to' make such fuels more I en er al I y available. ' • was freed Saturday when Judge Donald Iiunglljl rU!ad the proceedinfs In Horbor .Tudiclal Dlsfrict Court to be a mi!trlal. · 'The all-white jury which included seven women 1:1ead1«:ked t to 3 fOr conviction · ai16 · Juda;e Dungin's action fOllowed refue&! to let defense attorney James George individually poll the jurors:. · sfuith, a former Los Angeles radio and television. talk show personality, Jiad.betn chirged with disturbing the peace of a uniftrsity campus following-the May 15 incident. During the week--long trial, the basic contention by the defense was that words ancl word-combinations used by Smith are coi:nmon "and wot offensive to residenta of Wattl, wbere be was raised. • Deputy District AUomey· Ru" t 11 Berber, the prosecutor, disagreed and ap. ~Uy convinced nine juron to do the ...... A decision will be ·mac1e this wiek whether to move for a retfial 6r dismlu the ch•!le entlrely. Sweet Ernie IJld bis defenae counsel oontended rthlt be :WU ,addfeue:d ln· llke 1)'tllH>er by the white · radicals after call· 'ip1 .tbea Di.mes, but no one die was ar-- i:atecf. . He prtaented a bo.1 of Candy to the pro. 1tCUtlon following final 1reumertts and pmenlltion of tht ..case lo 'tilt jury, sayinf tbt brand name was c!tvt'°""' loo late lo lnfrdduce It u defeme tvkltnc<. some brands of candy -lhb ooe it sold primarily In the black Chel!D -ore riamed Mother-Thia's. ·or Mother-niat11. . Sweet Ernie!s .commerc.iallY·rharketed confection II · simply · Uu.d: Mother ' . ' _,, ' '.l'oday's Fina) · N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Arso11 Said Possihili~y By Firemen By ARTllUR R. VINSEL OI' .. ~ .,.... ,..,, I• A $W,OOO fire br1nded u hicblY suspicious in origin raged through a Bank rAl!fel<Clirm<lrntanhe-lle-·1r<·1ne----1 campua early today, guttinf the buildlnl on which revolutionary 1!01ana •ere freshly painted. . · •. No one was injured and no· exploaion wu reported, but Oraoce County Fire Deportment Captain Bill cr.o!<lbuk 1trongly hinted at arson. "Dtalh lo the Pigs ••• All· Power lo the People," had been sprayed onto the t.. 1tory structure houalng nine businesaet . adjacent to the UCI campus in ibe lrville Town Center. "When they got there, the wbole damn thing. wu in names and it just doeln't happen that way naturally," said ooe Ure observer. One witness to the 12:13 a.m. Oareup gave Orange County aherifrl deputies ino formaUon leadinc to an all·points bulletia for two Ncgn.. men In a pickup truck. The Bank of Aiqeric.a.~_as a.symbol of the American Estlblishment -l1as been the targit of radical•uboteun around the country. ~ . Onlyaweekqo,1~.~e1. In which the ~'IUliSita~""' ...... ~ exptrlmmls .;,, plant • viruses aa"il lilr j>ollUUotl . ..., alao wr.cr. tel, by a IS0,000 explosion. Authorities noted it wa1 only oae-balt mile from today's bank fire. One other spray.painted message in the latest incident read : Bank of Amerikka. .The misspelling of tbe nation's name - Nati-style -is a known trademark of revolutionary factions. lnvestigators said another slogan refer- red to a·rock 111d bottle-throwing incident at Hillcrest Park in Fullerton, which police shut down to all, because of hippie githerings. Despite the county fire captain'• reference to arson. Orange County S!)eriff's deputies were being more cautious. "We have no information as far as any bomb blasts or arson are concerned,·• 18id Deputy James Enearl. Loss . in the bank blaze includtd primarily office equipment, furniture and tellers' counters, while no legal papers or currency In the vaults were destroyed. Bank of America officials emphasized lmpartarit records and cash were &ale, immediately ordering a shuttle bus ser- vice to take customers to a branch three miles away In Corona del Mar. They were bringing mobile trailer · fa- cilities to the ceJ11ter owned by the Irvine C.Ompany and promised to be back in business on a temporary basis within 48 hours. Squads tolaling 2S firemen responded te the blaze, which authorities said wu first reported by 1 man speaking in e:a:cited tones. They controlled the raging fire aboo.t 30 minutes after arriving -three minutes after the original call -from stations 1t UCI, Orange County Airport and in Laguna Hills. · Fire damage Itself was conflned to tbe (See BLAZE, Pap !) or .. ge Weatller Fair sides and gusty winds will greet coastal 'residents Tuetday, with temperature jumping to 73 degrees along the shore and up to 12 further inland. l NSIDIE T ODAY The battle for ecoloat1 con lie won ·with tools developed to cOpe with problems of outer space, according to a Hunting- ton Beach aero.space 1zperl. Set Finance, Paoe 20. ...... " -" <•""'"',. .. ·--.. ....... "' ' :::: _,, " , ... _ ... .. .. ,_, .. IMdl ._... IMI C'"1wtrtl " -" DMfll IN!kn " -.. •••ltrltl , ... • ·-• '""""'-' " -· ... .. ·-.. .. ___..,.... , .. ,, -.. --.. AM.._, " - '. r JI DAILY PILOT c ~-·· Octobtr 26, 1970 Russ Hit 'Violations' FreM p_,eJ BLAZE •.• • .. . Cfiarge Lodged Agai"!lt U.S. Air Flights bank olfloe on the first floor of the two- story building, wblle 1mo1<e lnlli<led I018t8 on other quarters wllhin the 'true· ~ laclllty alan• -·uct Public rolatlollo off!c;el. M<l8COW (UP!) -'Ibo Sovltl lfOY<n>-"1lb the IOV-al the Unit.cl Siiia men( todly proi<sled "the violation" of In -Ian with the violation II I h • the Soviet stale bord<r by a U.S. millllry USSR llato bonier 'by In Am<rlcan plane and said It was a result of ''lhe mWtary plane on Oct.11." general taj1i1ary activity of tbe United Tbe reference was to a U.S. military Statel in areas adjoining the, Soviet plane whlch atr'ayed aCrou· the border Union. 0 .. Army generala:, an Anny Major pilot and An"""official announcement-Aid-lbe_ a 'I'.ul'..~I aboard ~.ap~_have SOvlet a:~vernment has lod&ed a protest been held in Yerevan, oear the lroiiUer. Projeet Sought ' ' Mesa Planners to Study Hospital Expa11$wn Bid The Costa Mesa Planning Commllalon tonight will consider expansion plami for a hospital and two religiou orpni:.a· lions. The project scheduled by the Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, 501 Victoria St., has been approved by the Comprehensive Health Plamtll>C Allot:llllon (CllPA) llld would bqln within II< months. Now geared with ti beds, the facility ...Wd uJ>1J1C1 to 180 beds, plus expanding obstetrics care, conference rooms and adding new laboratories, intensive care and heart paUent ~Untts. The planl -submitted ariginally when Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital WU built -Involve more than 30,000 aqua.re feet of txponslDn. Planning afficlals recommend approval by the coqimlsalon and city council, the aame as they have for eKp811.Sion of a ma· ___Jal cbun:h_ancLfacUltiealar a hwn•niptjq r•liilool brotherbood. NEW HOAG CHIEF Dr. Robert C. Woodruff Newport Doctor Named to !read Hoag Staffers Dr. Robert C. Woodruff, a Newport Beach gynecologist, has been elected cblef of staff at Hoag Memorial Hospital Dr. Woodruff, 50, succtem Dr. John Palmer Miller, whose term eipires this month. A native or Bay City, Mich., Dr. Woodruff joined the st.au at Hoag in 1955. lie has served on the staff e1ecutive committee since 1967. A graduate of Michigan State Universl· ty, he obtained his 1-1.D. at the University a( Michigan Medical School and served his internship at the University's af. !iliated hospital. Dr. Woodruff is a diplomate of th e American Board af Obstetrics and Gynecology and has been named a Fellow in the American College af Surgeons and in the American OB.CYN College. He is a former pruident af the Orange County OB.CYN Society aod ls a clinical Instructor at the UCI Medical School. Dr. Woodruff, who ls a licensed pilo~ lives al 1606 Warwick Lane with his wife, Phyllis and their four children. His practice is located at 400 Newport Center Drive. DAILV PILOT OltAHGE COAST l'UILISHllfG ct)MPAIN lob..,t N. Wtt4 Pr"ld.,I •"" M tll/ltt J1c\: l. Corl1y Vici Prel!det!I tnd ~•I MiMt1t T11om11 11:, • .,.fl Editor 1liom11 A. M1,.,hi111 M-.lflt Etllw- C..r. M .. Offlct l!O W15t l1y $lr11t .M.1ill119 Addrtn: P'.O. In I S•O', 9262• -0-Ntwporl llKfl: 2211 "'"' ..... , lovltv1~ lNUM lffdl: 21:1 l' ... MI A- ....... llW'lll! a.cir.1 l111J tudl Jou~ "" ""'-"': JU Ntrffl l!I Cllfllflt a..1 • A 1<X1t nctption permit ls btlng llOUgltt by the Prlnct <i Puce Lutlttntn Cburdt, 2117 Mela Verde Drive, to enlarge the .-uary to hold 400 penons, plus ad· din( claaarooms and adminlltrative of. ficel. 'Ille permlt ls rtqUirtd btcatlle lbt cburcb ii in a resldentlal zone. A aecml sucli permit ls btlng .... quested by Laura Ell1s, of mt Fairview Road. to me her home in a commercially zoned area for religious meettna:s Mon- day nJsbL She is a teacher-advocate o f Manoooplly Inc., a nonprofit rtlJ&lous brotherhood recogn.iz:ed by 1 t a t e authoritiea and butd on the bumanllt canoas al Greece's Oraclt <i Dtlpltl. "Man, know thy ltlf," the report com. piled by Colla Mtsa plannlni technicilm for the commllalon cpder. 'lbe Manolophy center -recom- mended for colDlllllslon •Pll'OVal -will join a Melican restaurant and an abaft. doned -llaUoa In tbt Amt pntral area. Mrl. EUii plabt for a maxlunun of 25 peoplt durlnc the lour-hour Monday JJIChl ....tom, auw111& city olllclala that pmnaneot beadquarltri will bt nmted --tlll"""" •. ' Zont ezCtpllon permlll ..... ....., rtqUtOl<d Ire .a lroplcal flab and -ly llon!, plua a leathqoocls -aUoa In lbt same llruclurt. FAgar 0 , Hatton, al Zll W. Wllaon SL, plaM to build a new otort at that loca· lion, wblle DoucW C. Bean, of the ume addml, will manufacture the leather ittms. The slruclurt will bt'ln .. JI.I rt1ldtl> Ualzooe. Bulktin Screen Sign Will Come Crashing Down A ·changing sign screen heralded as a revolutionary development in the field o{ advertising when erected a year ago is about to be brought crashing down by Cosla Mesa officials. The B & L Advertising Company ap- plied for a 2one exception perm.It to change the sign at 1740 Superior Ave., in· to a billboard. Originally, the applicant said the Mitralux bulletin screen -illuminated by projector with changing signs -would signal the end of plain old billboards. City officials say now it won't even become a plain old billboard. They are prohibited in the downtawn area's SCH:alltd Red Zone, but the Mitralux screen was originally approved precisely because It was not a billboard. A $300 caab deposit was rtqUlrtd to finance eventual removal of the sign -a ct1mmoil device In Europe -l! it failed to become a bit with Orange Coast ad· vertisers. "The property owner reporta that this sign has not been maintained and that they have not received any rent for five months," says a City Hall communique. City Attorney Roy June ls being asked to initiate procffdlngs to have it remov· ed. financed by the original $300 deposit The new applicant's t5(l filing fee for the billboard request will be refunded. Woman Suffers Crash Injuries A Hunllngton Bttch woman 111fltred neck and back Injuries Sunday, whtn the car In Which she' was riding collided with a truck at a Jt'llljor Costa Mesa ln· teraectlon. Theda I. H•rriaon, 1131 of 11711 Reilly Drtve, Wtt treated I\ Cotta Mesa McmoMal Hospital •nd rtltaatd. Pollet lald slit was Injured on H•rbor Boulevard at th< san Dlqo frotw1y whtn vebleles driven by KnoWlea V. Allen, 46, of 11422 Larkin Drive, G•nlen Grove, and Carl W. Clair, 70, of Redondo Beach, coUlded. ·'Ibo l.""ttol• the Tua N•WI ActllCY lilol, -u. N1iflll MloinlJtratlon that ~ the paat tltrte yeara -thtre were more than 10 unlawful vtolaUoos o( the USSR air space." "Violations of the USSR's air space by American planea; happen by no means beca.11Se_of some_cbance:,_concurrency_ . ..__,,., circumstance, but are a result of the general military activity of the Unlted States in areas adjoining the Soviet Union ," it said. "The Soviet government has repeatedly drawn the attention of the United Statea government to ~ activity that Ls opehly hostile to Russia. The preservation of American military bases around the Soviet Union is a most serious source of danger and does not accord In any way with the statements in favor of an im· provemenl of Soviet·American relationa tbat were repeatedly made by U.S. leaders." The protest aaid the Soviet government .. expects that the United States govern- ment will display a most serloua ap- proach to the position outlined In this statement and draw appropriate con· cluaions.'' The Soviets also protested to the Turkish a:~t, drawing its at· tentlon to .ft.Violation by an American plane. 'Mle stat.ement to Turkey reminded Ankara that alter the flight of Ille American U2 spy plane the Turkish government aald it "will never give plants of allied er other powers th• right to·u..-111·baJeraninta lfr space Iii ag· grealve Jlllrpotltl capablt of Inflicting damagt to tht IOCurity llld tranquility of Jts fteilbbon, II But the laltsl lncldtnt "shows that In reallty thlnp are quite dllltren~" tbt prot..i lald. In this connecllon ~llt alont can bt caUJed by remarks made by certain quarters in TUrkey that T u r k j I b · authorJties are not answerable for the ac-- tions af tbe violating plane since it belongs to the American Air Foret," Russia said. Traf fie Study Shows Newport Busiest Road A 11udy conduclod to give Colla Mesa Ownber of Commerce leadera 1n Idea wlltt\i tn eToo! alps "'1comlni motoruts enlerlng the ctty prove1 what you proba. bly always thought. ~ -In via N~,l!Gultvard. 'Die fafonnatkll ia coDtained In a memo from Actin( ctly Mllllfer Fred Sonabal to Mrs. Lucie Pinkley, chairman of th< cbambtr'1 M>Called Front Door Commit- let. Data laktn during a 21-hour lrallic count conducted both on a weekday dur-lnl the summer and school years reveals 21,900 can IOUthbound dally on Ntwport Boulevard at ArliDgton Drtve. llarl>or Boultvard Is right bthlnd, with :a.tao oouthbound cars dally, jusl south <i the S&n Diep Fneway lnlel'ltCllOR. Third molt heavily tr1veled lnteneo. tion b Bmtol Street and Sunflower Ave- nue, with 11,18D C&J'1 per dly. Soraabat'1 f1cures oo othe.r locaUons show: 15,'34 dilly at Newport Boulevard and Jndwtrlal Way; 13,JJ3 at East 17th Street and Irvine Avenue, and 10,262 at Adams Avenue Md Estancia Drive. Dropping below the. 10,0IJO.per..day rate, TusUn Avenue and University Dr Ive showed 3,460 and Pomona and Superior aven,ues showed 2,398 per day. Mm·der Suspect Claims Fear Of Mesa Victim Dennis L. Je.Herson of Costa Mesa on trial In the death of his frie.nd Gerald Hess. testified today that he was afraid of Hesa. Jefferson, 36, told of two violent arguments he engaged in with the victim in a pair of Costa Meaa bais the night Hess was shot to death. The defendant said Hess and another friend left the second bar In the early morning hours in a car and he followed later on foot, leaving by the back door Jn an effort to avoid Hess.· He siid he walked-to his home al 2132 Harbor Boulevard and wu about to retire when he heard car doors slamming and loud voices outside. Jefferson's testimony as to what too k place that fateful night was to be offtred liter today. • The prosecuUon contends Jefferson shot Hess with an antique Italian mtade rlfle just outalde the apartment early in lbt momlni of June I~ Testimony may conclude Tuesday and th< we go to tht Jury Wedneaday. 2 So~iet Defectors Do Ballet Together LONDON (UPI) -Two d'fectors from Soviet ballet danced together In Ille West rec th• flnl tlm• Sunday. Natali• Makarova, who defected to Brl· lain lt:st month. danctd with Rudolf Nurt)'tv, wbo defected nln& yean ago, ln a British BroadcasUng O>rp, tpeelal that will be shown at Christmas. DAtL Y PILOT P""' 1W It~ kMlller ONLOOKERS SCAN PAPER FOR DETjULS ON BANK BLAZE Students •nd Resld..,ts Giv• MlxtMI Rt•ction to Destruction Accued In S Deaths ' . Attorne~ for Frazier Says Suspect Insane From Wire Services SANTA CRUZ -James A. Jackson, public defender appointed to defend John Linley Frazier in the slaying of five persons, says th.at insanity is a possible plea when the caS<! gets to court. "My personal oPinion is that Frazier is crazy," the attorney said Sunday although he also remarked the evidence against his client "so far bas not been by any means conclusive." Frailer pleaded innocent after being amsted Friday in his cabin leas th.an a mile away from the $300,000 mansion overlooking the Pacific Ocean where. an eye surgeon, bis wife, their two sons and his secretary were bound, slaughtered and dumped 1into a swimming pool. Neither Santa Cruz County Sheriff's Deputies nor the State Bureau of Criminal Identl!lcatfon ·anC1 Investigation commented on a report by E d Montgomery of the San Fr8:ncisco Ex· amln.-tlat Fraiu'1 f In & e rp r·i n ts matched Ume oo a typewriter used to produce a note left at the: &laying scene. Montgomery, a Pulitzer Priz.e.winning aime reporter, said a note declaring "World War 3" against materialists and despoilers of the environment had been typed on a machine found in Dr. Victor M. Ohta's mansion and that Frazier's fingerprint& bad been found oo the machine. Newport Infant Dies in Crash The infant daughter or a 11.year-old Newport Beach girl was killed Sunday when the car in which she was rid ing averturned on Interstate 15, about eight miles south of Las Vega s. Regina Lynn Bums, five months old, of 110 31st Street, was pronounced dead on arrival at a nea rby hospital, according to the Nevada Highway Patrol. Her mother. Deborah Burns, and two other occupants of the car, Stanley Sauter, 23, of 2589 Orange Ave. and Judy Serkowski, 16, of 1662 Newport Ave .. both of Costa Mesa, all sustained injuries in the crash. A highway patrol spokesman said Ute accident took place about 6:20 a.m. when the car, traveling: north, veered off the bigbway and overturned. Montgomery quoted "a re 11 a b I e source." Sberilf's deputies said the: story was "news to us" and the state crime lab said its fingerprint department was cloaed. Frazier, 24, is chargod with killing Dr. Ohta, 47; bis wl!e, Vlrglnla, 41 ; their two sons, Richard, 12, and Victor, 11; and the doctor's secretary, Mrs. Doro t by Cadwallader, 38. A family friend Sunda1 said he believes a gunman shot Virginia Ohta dead in her home and then lay in wait to pick off four more victims. Ttie friend told an interviewer he believed the next to dJe were Dr. Victor M. Ohta'• secretary, Dorothy Cadwallader, and ooe of the: Ohta aoos •ht had brought homt from llChool. Mesa Veterinary Specialist Dead; Services Slated Funeral service.!! are s c h e d u 1 e d Wednesday for a Costa Mesa veterinary specialist who died Saturday, after a career that included wartime duty and heTping found a statewide motorcycle club. Rites for Robert P. Wetherbee, 53, of 2263 Colgate Drive, will be at 1 p.m., in Westcliff Chapel Mortuary. Leaders of American Legion Post 291 will officiate, with interment following at Sawtelle V e t e r a n s ' Adrnin.i.s~atlon Cemetery in West Los Angeles. Mr. Wetherbee lived in Costa. Ne.aa· 'ince 1956 and worked at veterinary hospitals and supply houses. He served during World War JI in the U.S. Army Medical Corps with service in North Africa and the invasion of Italy. !-le was a. principal founder of the: California Road Riders Association, a motorcycle club, and rode with the Santa Ana Cruisers. Mr. Wetherbee was active Jn the: Veterans o( Foreign Wars organization and was past commander of the: VFW post Jn Stoughton, Mus., according to bis wife Hazel. Other survivors include a ton, Bud, and a daughter, Vlrginja, plus 1 sister, Lucy Locke, of Massacbll9elts and a· brother, Harold Wetherbee, of Montana. A. gaga pt onlookers -some chee!'l~g -gathered to watch tbe blaze, remuus· · cent of one last February that destroyed a Bank of America branch in Isla Vista, . -the uc.Sanll Barbara campus. ' ' '' . . . ' . .No problems were repot1ed in ~plng erdeuUbe_tJCLscene_~~· ~-~ Investigators said lbey Im~ as evidence a number of revolutiqaary posters taken frorrt the scene. ..Free Bobby · and all Po 11 c e Prisoners .•• " read one slogan. One facility dama&ed in the fire at the University Park Shopping Center oa tbe north side of the campus was a UCI ' bookstore. The Bank of America is f.he world's largest financial institution and has 1been hit by fires and window-smasbini in- cidents blamed on students and radicall for the past year. ' Authorities have emphasized the buic lock of troublt at Ille 6,ooo.tudtnt UC! campus in consuvative Orange c.ounty and were cautious in evaluating causes of the nearby bomb blast a week ago. They noted that while Stanferd Research lnstitute's 12 branches around the world have done De.fense Department war research the Irvine facility was engaged in purely peaceful studies. No definite cause has been established In that case, but authorities aay j\ wu undeniably a bombing. The precise location of the bank branch that was burned is adjacent to the UC[ campus in the local area shopping center, facing-outward toward-an-Ir.vine Ranch field. From Pflfle J REACTION ••• Important services to students in il'le area af financial aid by servicing student loans." 'lbe chancellor deplored the loss of these services even ternporarily. A spokesman for the New Univer1lty Conference which last week sponsored a Black Panther-Free Bobby Seale rally, aaJd the members of NUC "wouldn't sup- port such destruction." Robert Marshall, a graduate student in history, said however be could Wlderstand the fnl!tra· tlon of some that would lead them to burn the bank. "Until the: media gives radicals equal time to articulate their positions lllCh things will happen," Marshall said. "ll there were an apen dialogue in this COWl- try property would not~ IO sanctified." Emphasiling be wouldn't "blow up the bank myself," Marshall said "I can empbatbize with those who would." He cited a need for increased exposition of issues including the Black Panthers, Viet· nam, Guatemala and the Near East in order to lessen tensions. Another student, Craig Harlan, toting an infant was more vehement •bout the media's role. in the Bank of America fire. "Read Ramparts magazine to find out why UJe Bank of America should be burn· ed, .. be said. A survey of students in the c;ommon1 bWiding across the street from Town Center on campus reveal~ few students who were concerned about the incident. But outside the bank where workmen were pounding plywood sheathing into place, a group of onlookers grew about midmorning. M~ stood with books In hand staring silenUy at the charred remains of the bank. As is frequently the case at UC Irvine, many wished not be to quoted. A new arrival on campus, 1 long· haired, freshman, social science major from Los Gatos near Berkeley said "l 'm not impressed with UCI for its political action." Richard Bergholdt said be was on the sc.ene at 1:30 a.m. with about five others. He laughed when told a riot squad had been called to the scene.· Bfrgboldt agreed with the contention of Mai'Shall that there. was oot a poliUcal organization on the: UCJ caf11'US capable of planning or careying out the burning of the bank. Chana!llor Aldricb speculated that it il'I possible oufSide forces might want UCI te look more radical than it really is. They danced the Black Swan from "Swan L.akt.'' CAll.Y ,ILOf ..... ,, ff llcfl .......... ORANGE.COUNTY FIREMEN SIFT THl!PUGH RUfN AT UCl <S BANK' OF AMERICA' BRANCH Shortly Allor Mldnlthl NNr UCI , FlamH Flllod SltyJ Damago E1tlm1to $12.i,OOO • I Y,C - ( an> In tee di1 . I Pa at An bu • l wt pif po ba thi rig ' na in fw '"' ( J Ho P" .., Cl G< ne •• ... de ap '" in ,, pl c. In b' p l!l Cl w h• fo p< p1 of w D d1 . ~ . . .. , ...... "" .... • Saddlehaek . . ED~tlON VOL . "'if ~ 11 63, NO. 256, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES u ire 40Quiet S"ltoek' Irvine Students Stunned by Fire By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 tlte O.llY ,llfl Sltff Crowds of disbelieving students, faculty and-nearby_r_esidents_ofJlCJrv.ine stood In the water-logged grass around the gut- ted Bank of America in quiet shock. _ "How were they so successful?" a depositor asked increduoJ,1Sly. Mrs. William E. Moore · of University Par~ waa going to de~it to her account at the Town Center branch of Bank of America. She arrived to find the bank burned out., "This is just too much," she said. 'Noting the scribblings on the wall which read "Oink of America -death to pigs" Mrs. Moore said, "I don't think any point is ever made with these things." She was concerned and said her hus- band was too hearing reports on the radio this morning, whether her money was all right. A bank official who asked not to be named said no records or cash were lost in the blaze and damage was limited to furniture, fixtures and c a I c u I a t i n g machines. Four fireproof vaults held depositors records and they were emptied early today for storage in an unnamed nearby bank. -The---spokesman~indicatt:d._tbat two trailers brought in within hours of the blaze which was reported at 12: 15 a.m., wuold be ready for a 10 a.m. opening Tuesday. The Irvine branch does not of· fer safety dtpasit box service, ·he noted. UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich said this morning bis reaction to the bank fire was the same as whenever property is destroyed. He expressed annoyance that students would ~ blamed automatically for the fire since "the nature of calls this morn- ing indicate an immediate feeling the fire is the result of students when that has not yet been determined." The chancellor also noted that this particular branch besides serving the university community offered "vitaJly important services to students in the area of financial aid by servicing student loan!." The chancellor deplored the loss of these services even temporarily. Chapman Group Readies· Permits for Hospital Members of the Chapman General Hospital group from Orange began preparing applications this week for a 1eries of permits to be filed in San Clemente for the proposed San Clemente General Hospital scheduled to open late next year. After a Friday afternoon briefing with several city department heads, the representatives of the Orange Hospital develtipm ent group said they expected to appear for the first routine approvals from city planning commissioners early in November. Most of the technical data discussed at Friday's meeting involved fire hydrant placement on the 40-acre site along Camino Ios Mares and emergency park· ing provisions for police cars and am· bulances. The Chapman group re Iterated pr e I i m I n a r y projections that groundbreaking for the 116--bed acute· care hospital plus a convalescent hospital would take place late this November. Chapman officially wrested the critical health planning association endorsement for a San Clemente hospital from a com- petitor last Thursday. The agency, the Orange County Com· prebensive Health Planning Association, l)(ficially granted its endorsement after withdraw!~ earlier sanction for C. T. DeClnces, the developer of the long· delayed San Clemente Medical Center Oruge Weacker Fair skies and gusty winds will greet coastal residents Tuesday, with temperature jumping to 73 degrees along the shore and up to a further Inland. INSWE TODAY The bottle for ecologv can be won with toots developt!!d to cope with problems of outer space. according to a Hu1itino· ton Beach aerospace e%pfrL Sec Finance, Page 20. " .. ' .... .. .. " • " ... " " -" fllet!MM ..... .., or-"-" 11 _,, ..... lltdr Mllftlttl •11 T........... It TI>Httf'I It --. Wllll• W• !I ................. 1~11 --.. near the city hall. DeCinces has vowed to build his health care facility despite the loss of en· dorsement-approval of w h i c h guarantees the participation in a hospital by various health-care insurance !inns. Among the precise city approvals re- quired for the Chapman project will be a conditional use pennit for the proposed convalescent hospital which will be built simultaneously with the a c u t e -c a r e ospital. Variance requests dealing with parking· requirements also are an- titipated. The acreage involved in the master· planned hospital project is already zoned for use as an acute hospital site, but the convalescent usage on part ol the land will require the pennit and public hear· ings. The basic working drawings for the new facility will closely resemble the ex- isting Chapman General Hospital plant in Orange, said 1 spokesman for the developers. Those documents already have been submitted to the State Department of Public Health for approval which will take about six weeks. Because the department already has approved the similar Chapman plans, the approval is expected to be quicker than usual. The single-level facility built with a loan from Lincoln SavinJs and Loan. would be ready for ita first patienll sometime: in tbe fall. Oemente School To Take Part In Ceremonies San Clemente lliih School groups will play a key part in Wednelda.y'a official ceremonies at the We:stem White House commemoraUnc tho fltsl.day lllue hen of four antipollution postqe stam111. A color p1nl from tho Triton Jllnlor NRC1I'C will appear at the ceremonies, as well u tho high ochool bud IJld usher's club. Another studeot to participate In tho observance featurm« Postmuter General Winton Blount IJld Pr<okl<ntlal Aide ·Robert Finch will be Triton coed Denise Corwin, who deslpd 1n ••ard-wliDllnl ecoloflical aymbol. Miss Corwin "lll recdve: 1 special Jeatherbound islut of the four ecological atarnpc u an award for her aymbol. The four stamps urge Americans to aavt our water, clUes, aoU and all'. The ceremonies will take place at 11 a .m. on the front lawn of the Pretldentlal offfct comple:I. · • • ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDA-Y, OCTOBER 26, _1970 ' ' • • an ear .. , DAILY l"ILOT ...... ~ LM 1"'11141 COUNTY FIREMEN "PROBE RUINS INS_IDE BANI< OF AMERICA .NEAR UC! CAMPUS In E1rly Moming Hours Toct.y In OrM1ge County, O..struction Strikes Again _ Aids in Saie~y Clemente Lawmen Get Graphic Art A complete package of graphic aids to help San Clemente po~ in elementary school talk.! about safety and the policeman's role have been donated by the San Clemente Excha'1&e Club. The 1ldl, including comic boob;. a larie, durable ftlp c:harl wllh cartoons and ufety messages and "The Officer Bill Award" will help patrolmen In """" munity relations appearances. The ldl la geared spe.Ui<ally lo the local police department with the officers depicted In the boob and poston belring "San Clemente Pollce0 on the Hdeet. The dozen.page: coloring book baa WY• to-color illustrations of basic safety ru~1. including pedestrian ~lety tips, wamin1s againat cont.acts with strana:era, pollte- ness, seeking help from a policeman and the wearing of seat belta. Besides the informal talk with the youngsters, patrotmtn . volll{ltttring for the talks: give the .ch.ildre:n· a clOle look at a patrol car, the patrolman's uniform and equipment · • · · · A certificate In the form of an award fs given'to each Class after the patrolmin'1 appearance.. ' The traditional "Officer Bill" mate.rials were donated to the San c&tmente department by Dr. Richard Baker, 'a representative of 1he San Clemente E14 -change-Glu~ •part of an lntentational organization fOCUling on crime-fighting and law enforcement aupport ae:rvices. · The coats for the visual aids were borne by the Exchan&e: Club budaet. Attorney for Frazier SaysS~pectln8ane ,._ -"''""' SANT A CRUZ.,;;J,:r A. JlcklQn, publlc·-ldor Id defend John L1n1eJ Fru1er 111 , tbt llloylnc a1 11 .. -..,. 11"':1 -ly ii •· polllble pie• when tho ._ f!la to court. "My pmonal opinion II lhll Fralur Is crUJ," tho ·-said Sunday 11lhough ho alto nmarked Ille evldeneo a,galnst hir,client ••ao far bu•not been by any means «indmtw." Fr1der ·Pltlded -.nt oiler being amlled Friday In bia .. \>In lea lhu a \ ~ue· awat from the m .ooo mana10n .overlooking the Pacific Ocean where. a.n ey~ surgeon, bis wife, their two aom and his secretary were bound, sl•ugbtered 1nd dumped Into 1 1Wimmln1 pool. Neither Santi Qui County Sberlll's Deputies ""' tho SI.lie Burelu al Grlmlnal ldentlllcatlon and JnvttllpUon 1commented on 1 report by I!! d Montgomery of lhe Sin Franc!ICO II>· i alntner that Frailer'• f J n g er p rt n t 1 matched thoJe m a 1.ypewr:lter uaed to produce 1 note lei! at lhe 1laylnl scent. " Riot Explodes In Fullerton On Park Ban By JACK BROBACK Of !fie D1llr l"llM S!l'ff Fourteen police oflicers ' and four ri6te:rs were injured Sunday in a rock arid bofU.e: thro;Oing .brawl over the,closing Of Merton's ,Hillcrest Park. Forty ·officers faced a crowd of. aooyt . 500 d!Ukl<nll al tho slarl of !he· bouro- loOg riot which was lriggered by the city coUncil's action closin& the park to tbe public. 'lbe: facility was ordered c}osed on Sun· da)'1 after two auccesalve free concerts were held there which Jed police to be)ieve: that incidents would occur. Forty-four, rioters were airuted, 19 adulll and 25.juveniles. Nine of the adu1ts were cbarged With mW.tlple: Crimes ln- cluttin& fe:looles~ · Two were Jailed on ~har1es or Ula.Ult with int.enl •to till., r.11er1on1>0uc:e cap111n.n.d King aa1d kolveo, Ure 1-11\d olber '!'flpom ...... 1 confilcatid. . ; . · .Police slid tho troubl<. bepn 11 aboilt 11 a.m. "When • mob of about 500 youths :t~.ied the park In delia~ Pl ciollnl Capllln King slid bll olllcen were 1ubjec.ud to· verbal lbrt11t.s, ob&ctniUes and llNck wltb lqe chunks al -· • bricU, Ure irons. rocks m>S bo!Ues. . He admltled the otlicen atruck blck wJth clubl and fista and in answer to crtUctam by 10me: onlookers and • nr.npaper writer the cap(ain said, "That , wu no· &mu.1 School picnic out thete. Our' olfi<eil were subjected lo 1 lull fiedptl 1tlldc 1nd they -'dn'l jUal llllnd there 11/d lake I~" . • - --· N.Y. Steelul TEN CENTS I, Arso11 Said Possihili~y By Firemen By ARTHUR R. VINSEL or tlM Dlllr l"4alt Stetr A $125,000 fire branded u hlgbly suspiclOU3 in origin raged through a Bank of America branch near lh• UC Irvine campu. early today, gutlln1 the building on-which-revolutionary lloew Wet« freshly painted. No one was injured and · no es:ploliOn wu reported, but Orange County Fire Department Clpllin Bill "Cloolmhant atrona:ly .hinted at arson. '.'Death to the Pigs~ .. All Power ta the People," had been sprayed onto .the two- story slructure ·housing nine buaineues adjacent to the UCl campus Jn the Irvine Town Center. "When they got there, the whole damn thing was in flames and it just doesn't happen that way naturally," aa1d one fire observer. One witness to the 12 : 13 a.m. flareup gave.Orange County sheriff's deputies in- formation ie&dlng to an all·point.s bullttia for two Negro men in a pickup truck. The Bank of America -u a symbol of the American Establishment -Jiu been tll.e target of radical saboteurs around the coui!_try. Only a .week 110, • ~ eompln: f In which the Stanford 1\elearcb lnatitute was conductin& experiments on ·plant vlruies 'and air polluUoe Wu illo 1'ftft•··--J ed, by a '50,000 es:plOllon. · Authorities DOied . II w11 anly one-11111 mil• from lodl.Y'• -lire. ' One otbtt spray-painted meaaae: in the latest incident read: .Bank of Ameritta. The misspelling of the naUon's name - Nni·st)'~ -ia a known trademark of revolutionary factions. Investigators said another slogan re/er- red to a rock and bottle-throwing incident at Hillcrest Park in Fullerton, whlch police shut down to all, because of bippie 1atherings. · Despite the county fire captain'• reference to arson, Orange County Sheriff's deputies were bein1 more cautious. "We have no information u far 11 any bomb blasts or arson are concerned," said Deputy James Enearl. Loss in ~ bank blaze included primarily office equipment, furniture -and tellers' countera, while no legal papera or currency in the vaults were destroyed. Squads totaling_ 25 firemen responded to the blaze, whiCh authorities Aid was first reported by a man speaking in ucited tones. They controlled the raging fire about 30 minutes after arriving -three minutes after the original call -from stations at' UCI, Orange . County Airport andlft Laguna Hills. Fire damage itself was confined to tbe bank office on the first floor of the two- &tory building, whi~ smoke inflicted losses on other quart.era within the ltnJc.. lure. The facility also houses UCI public relations offices. A gang of onlookers -some cbeerial -gathered to watch the blue, rtmlnll-- cent of one last February that destroyed a Bank of America bralicb In ll1a Vista, near the Uc Santa Barbara campus. No problems wer< r<porled In keeplq order at the UCI sctoe. lnvesUgaton llld Ibey Impounded u evidence a number of revolutionary posten taken from the acene. "Free Bobby Ind all Pu 11 c e Priaonen ..• " read one 1tolan. . One facility dima1ed in °" firt at·tbe University Park Shoppln1 Center on tbe north aide of the campus wu a UCI bookstore. The Bank of America Is the world'• lorgest linlnci1l lnsUbdion and bas bMa hit by fires and window-smashing in- cidents blamed on 1Uadents and radicala for the past year. J.utborit.ies have e:mphasliect the bu.le laclt GI trouble al tho &,OQO.studenl UCI campus in cOMe:rvatlve Oraqe OluntJ and were cautious in evalu•Una cauaea el tho nearby "9mb bl11t a week l(O. They noted that while • Stanford Research lnstltute'a 12 branches around tho world have done Del..,. DepartmOlll war . meerch the Irvine lacllity •• eng11ed I• .,...1y peoceful studia ·No definite cause ha been e:stabllaW In thlt Cuti but 1uth0rttiea .. , it WU undeniably a bombing. The preciae locaUon of the bank brueh that wu burned Is ldjacent IO 1111 UCI campus In I.be kM:al art1 shoppinl center. l1ctnc outward toward an lrvillt Ruell lleld. ( • - J DAIL V PILDT SC Monda1. Ottobtr 26, 1970 -.1 Hit 'Violations' • Charge Lodged Against V.S. Air Flights MOSCOW (lJPI) -The Soviet gmm-' ment today protested ''the violation" of the Soviet state border by a U.S. military plane and said it was a result of "the general military activity of the United States in areas adjoining the Soviet Union." An o(fici81 announcement aaid the Soviet government has lodged a protest with tbt government of the United States In oaanectlon with the violation of t h e USSR-at.ate border by an American military plane on Oct. 21." The reference was to a U.S. military \ plane which strayed across the border from Tur.key on that date. Two American Ar!ny generals, an Army 1t1ajor pilot and a Turtish colonel aboard the plane have been be.Id in Yerevan, near the frontier. The piotesl, the Tasa News Agency said, reminded the Nixon administration that "in the past three years alone there were more Uian 10 unlawful violation& of I Jur" Deadlocks the USSR air~·" "Vtolatlonl of tbe USSR'1 air space b7 American p~nes happen by no meana. becau..se of some chance, concurrency of circumstanc:e, but are a result of the general military acUvity or the United States lfl areas adjo1nlng the Soviet Union," it said. ''The Soviet government has repeat.edly drawn the attention of the United States government to th.is activity that is openly hostile to Russia. The preservation of American military bases around the Soviet Union is a Dl06\ serious &OUrce of danger and does not accord in any way with the statements In favor of an Im- provement of Sovlet:American relations that were repeatedly made by U.S. leaders." The protest said the Soviet government "expects that the United States gqvern· ment will display a most serious ap- proach to the position outlined in I.his statement and draw appropriate con- clW1ions. '' 'Sweet Ernie' Beats Rap In Dirty Word Mistrial A black UC Irvine graduate s1udent ar· rested after using bad words 49 times to express his alleged contempt toward radical white students bas beaten the rap, at least for the Ume being. Ernest A. "Sweet Ernie'' Smith. 30, was freed Saturday when Judge I>Onald Dungan ruled the proceedings in Harbor Judicial District Court to be a mistrial. Tbe all-white jury which included seven women deadlocked • to 3 for convicUon and Judge Dungan's action followed refusal to let defense attorney James George individually poll the jurors. Smith, a former Los Angeles radio and television talk show personality, bad been ch.arged with disturbing the peaet of a university campus following the May 15 incident. During tbe week-long trial, tbe basic contention by tbe defense was that words and word-combinations used by Smith are common and aot. offensive to residents of Watts, where be wu raised. Deputy District Attorney R u 1 s e 11 Berber, tbe p!OleCU!or, disagreed and ap- parently COll'liDctd nine jurors to de tbe same. A decision will be made this week whether to move for a retrtal or dism1ss tbe cjw'ge enlluly. , I Sweet Emie and hls dtfense coansel contended that be was addttssed Jn like manner by the white radicals after call· ing then names, but no one else was ar· rested. He presented a box of candy to the pro- Former Banker Mr. Hartz Dies Elmer S. Hartz of Laguna Beach, a retired Bank of America executive and longtime California resident, died Satur- day at the Long Beach Veterans Hospital after a long illness. He was 76. There will be no funeral serviets for Mr. Hartz. Visitation will be held at Bell Broadway Mortuary In Costa ~1esa all day Tuesday and Wednesday and burial will be in Oltio. Mr. Hartz, who lived at 502 Treasure Island Trailer Park for the past 11 years, ts survived by a cous~ Mrs. Dorothy McFaul of Los Angeles. Mr. Hll'U,JUeJ<nn..of ll'orld..War.11 came to California Jn 1923 and was employed by the Bank of America in Los Angeles for 25 years until his retirement in 1959. -' DAILY PILOT M..,..,,._. H......_._. i.epM ... da ......... ... c-tt1 Mn• s.. Cl•••• OllAHGI C0"5T PUILISHIHCJ COMPANY Rob1rt N. W11• Ptt11ffnl tt.d l"u"lllMr J1ck JI.. -C11rl1y Via Pret!GVll 1r.d Gfnttl\ ~ Thom•• IC11vll Editor · 1ho11111 A. M111phifie Mm119l111 E~llll' Rlch1rd P. H1I Soulll Or•.,.. C-ty Editor Offg Cost• Mw: uo Wt1! hy '""" frlfWJIOl'I ••~cfl: nn Wnt 11111111 ._,,...,.,. • L••""' •••en: 2n ,..,. .. , "'"""" Hlifttlllfttll'I lu(fl1 11111 llffdl loll!...-1,. $111 Olm1nt1; m NOf1h £l Ceman. AMI secutioa following final argumentJ and pretentaUon of the case to the jury, aaying tbe brand name was developed too late to 1Dtroduce it as defense evidence, some brands of candy -this one is aold primarily In the black gbetto -are named MOther--:nilS'S, or Motber-1bat's. Sweet Ernie's commercially-marketed confection ls simply UU¢: Motber _ ... City Manager Tells Tax Bill In San Cwmente Included In this month's llllniing tax bill to San Clemente ~en wu a 15.5 percent lhare to tbe city, according to a lludy made this week by Clly Manager Ken Carr. Among otber agencies Wring the revenue from the tax bill were ICbool districts ln the area with the largest amount -53.781 percent, the County of Ofangt with H.281 porc:eil and water dlstricu with tbe smallaj >1119'JDt, ~.177 percent. Included in Carr's study is the average di.stributJon in dollar fonn from taxes on a resldenct of full cash valqe of '24,000 a::cording to assessor figures. Computed at IS percent of full cub value, the assessable amount for the pro- perty would be IS,000. The assessment would break down to $5,000 for the improvements and $1,000 for the land, Carr explained. Assuming-that there are oo exempUona or special usessme.nts, the owner of the hypothetical property would pay a total of $546.77 in taxes on a total rate of $9.4045 for each $100 of assessed valua- tion. Within that tax bill the school district ~ill receive about $294 ; the county $132. 76 and the city $84.50. The water district revenue would be $35.41. 'Just Looking,' But-Skydiverr Miss Needle SEATTLE (UPI) Six parachute-wearing young persons never got off the ground with their plan to "go up and look around'" from lhe 520-foot high space need.le observation deck Sunday night. Five men and one woman, alt :nembers of the Husky Skydiving ::IUb at the University o f Washington, were r e f u s e d ::iermission to take the $1 elevator i-ide to the top of the symbol of the 1962 World's Fair. The group donned skydiving suits and parachutes at the bottom of the Jeedle. An attend«nt saw them :han&ing clothes and dashed for a · "lcphone to notify space needle of· riclals. The group was not allowed to board the elevator, even after members explained they had no in- tention of jumping. Bev Montgormery, 21 , president of the akydlvin,:: clu b, said she ar,j her friends just wanted "to 10 up and look around" and get aome publicity. Halloween Carnival Slated at Palisades Palisades School PTA memben wUI sponsor their annual Halloween carnival at the Clplstrano Beach school S.lurday with COiium• judging. prizes, food COii• cessions a bake u.Je and sames. 1be public ls welcome to the 8Mllll ovenl w!ilch will run !rom I to I p.m. Tilt lioyioW •loo ~ to . tba Turkllh aovarnJllelll, driwlnl tta a~ tentlon to tbe vlolatlqn by an American plane. The statement to Turkey reminded Ankara that after the filght of the American U2 spy plane the Turkish government said it "will never give planes of allied or other powers the right to use its bases and ill air apace in ac- ·gressive purposes capable of lnflicttnc: damage to the $eCurity and tranqulpty Qf Its neighbors." But the latest incident "shows that 1n reality things are quite different,'' the protest said. In this connection surprise alone can be caused by remarks made by certain quarters in Turkey that 'P u r 11: 1 s h authorities are not answerable for the ac- tions of the violating plane since it belongs to the American Alr Force," l!uasla 1ald. Capistrano Backs Sign Law Curbs Endonement of tbe ~e CounlJ p®-' propooed ...rue ..... sign ..... tro1 ordinance has been &fVen by t"b t capistrano Beach Community Alaocla· Uon. The uaoclatlon w!tl ~ -of the ordln•nc-and eflab1Whmenf: ol itl controll In Clplltrano Beacb ond Dana Polii[ --. Pr .. ldent Arthur Blllateln aid tbe ac- tion was by 11nanimou1 ~ of members preseat. The ordinance -a tight sign COlltrol code which would be applied u an overlay restrlcUon on any county zone - has been wggeated by county planners u · an instrument to upgrade eatbetica in potentially ocenlc local ... The Orange Count7 Board o f Supervisors has aulhorlud public bear· ings on the propoeala, including a billboard ban. . Harold Ekman, county plaJmlnc com- mlsaioner from South Lquna, aaid be ex- pects c:oOaideratlon of tbe llgn c:ontrol detalla to be ad>eduled befcn tbe com- miaal<m within tbe next three -u. In a alm1lar endaraement on the same nlCI!~ ' 'San C!anen\I ct(J COUllcil-pralaed tt>e d!llmt>er or .....-.. m San Clemente f,. throwing ffa.llJPPCl't Jiehlnd tbe billboard ban. Tbe -•• u.. ttlll iialtli ~ cloned tba propooed code wblcb WU launcbed by a committee of Ibo ClplstrlDO Beach dwnher. Diver Rescued By Mesa Woman A novlet lkin diver wu rtllCUed by a Costa Mesa woman Stmday morning when he panicked after los1Dg. bll mouthpiece ln the water oU Mou Street Beach In Laguna Beacb. Bruce Moore, 19, of Van Nuys, wu making his second dive of his career at about 9 a.m. Sunday with a friend about 50 yards off shore when one of bis tan\: straps fell off, causing his mouth piece to come out of hiJ mouth, lifeguards said. The youth panicked, and began yelling for help. Before lifeguardJ could reach him, Peggy Ward, 21, of 3198 ~ibraltar Drive, Costa Mesa, had pulled him from the water. Miss Ward, who is president of a Costa Mesa skin diving club, was repar..ing_to_enter Jllt..Jr.J!q_whezi~ sh_:_ heard Moore's cries for help. ,iA Moore was not Injured and did" not re- quire medical attention. Cwmente Flares Only a Prank Distress narea launched during tbt weekend from the San Clemente pier sparked several calls to police and a plane crash scare. The pranksters., apprehended and warned by patrolmen late Friday nigh~ caused one coastline resident to report a plane down 1n the ocean off the Trafatiar beach. One of tbe flares remained allgbt in the water for several minutes. Another flare washed ashore at Cyprus Shore, causing several citilens to call from that beach as well. No formal charges ~ere filed. Argument Goes To Extremes ll probably seemed to a Lal\lna Beach couple that the sky was f11lin1 as they pre.pared to drive, away from a cocktail lounie early P'riday morning. Pollce lald tbe couple lefl the ROWJd Table ber about I a.m. A man cut.side the bar began an argumenl The couple entered \heir convertible. So d I d Ibo helU,ertnl But he w 11 unorthodox. He climbed on top of the con- vertible and began Jumping up end down until he wenl lhrough the canvu top. PoUce are Jnvest.J&•Una &ht cue of the mystery Jumper. • DAILY PILOT P11m "' ltk!Morll Kotlllll' Egypt Chief ·Blasts U.S . In War Risk UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Egyptian Foreign Minister P..1ahmoud Riad accused the United States today of risking world war by increasing military aid to Israel despite Israel's withdrawal from U.N. peace negotiations. Riad opened Middle East debate In the · General Assembly _. the first time the 127-nation body has taken up the ~ Previpus discussions were in the security counCll, -but Egypt got ai)pl'ovar of the as.sembly: d:ebat!' oter U.S._ objectiona-11 would-torpedo the peace talks. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban has said in advance Israel would not take a "defensive" role in the debate. This became clear today in Tel Aviv when the Jsraeli army intelligence chief said Egypt and Russia had used the cease-f~e lo build one of the '1.'0rld's most advanced antiaircraft systems on the west .bank of the Suez Cana l. Riad, in accusing the United States of obstructing middle East peace through its aid to Israel, said, "the rule of the charter makes it incwnbent upon the United States to stand by the counl!ies that are victims of aggressioh and not to support Israel, the aggressor." "By taking this hostile position towards the Arab peoples and by supporting lsrael, the aggressor, the United States obstructs the realization of peace in the Middle East, endangers wcirld peace and encourages the use of force in in· ternational relation," Riad said. FIREMEN PROBE CEILING FOR POSSIBLE INTERNAL FIRE Flrl "and°"Dfftruction Near UCI; Famili1r Sk>g1n1 on the Wall There had beeo a possibility up until the last minute that today's debate might be postponed for several days. Tht United States and Britain privately ex~ pressed fears a diplomatic disaster could result from the assembly charges and countercharges. But the debate began as scheduled. Blaze De~ried ----- UCI's Aldrich Issues Statement "It has become imperative that the United Nations keep the situation in the Middle East under its active .attention, that it follow up constantly the efforts for peace and make use of its powers under the charter, until peace Is fipally secured by the withdrawal of Israel's aggressive forces from all the occupied Arab ter- ritories," Riad said. -' UCI Otancellcr Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. today issued the following statement following this morniffg's destruction of the Bank of America branch near carn- pus: "It ls abhorrent to me -as I am sure It is to all responsible members of the campus community -that anyone, whether students or others, would engage 1n senseless destruction and terrorist ac- Uvfty of this kind. "Beyond the immediate damage to pro- perty and the threat to the safety of cit.liens which are involved I regret that tt seems necessary to polnt out that the sreatestr damage of an incident of this kind is to students and to the university. "I have met already. ttiis morning with our canir.il adn)!njstrafoi" of student finuclal aidl' to dlscUsl our concern over the poasible loss of records necesury to student loans, grants and other kinds or Laguna Schools Elect Student Body Officers Four Laguna Beach schools have elected student officers for the 1971>-71 school year. Andy Hedden was elected the new stu. dent body president of T h u r s to n Intermediate School Thursday, defeating Roy Jacobson and Anthony Cottam after a week of campaigning for the Office. Lisa Hallock defeated Tracy Tinder for the viet presidency of the school. Other students elected to posts at Thurston were : Lisa Jungclas, records com· missioner: Lynn Evans. assistant records commissioner; Oz Simmons, com- missioner of boys' intermurals; Nancy lison, commission.er_o · • in e - murals and Andy Gillespie, safety com- missioner. At Top of the World Elementary School, Laurel Rodecker was elected presiden t and David Nelson won the of- fi ce of vlet president. Qaig Benson was elected secretary. assistance. We expect to meet with of- ficials of th.e Bank of America on t h i s matter immediately. "We are also communicating with of-He declared Egypt's ••abs 0 Jute ficials of the Bank of America and with determination to liberate every inch of the Orange County Sheriff's Dept. to the Arab territories occupied by Israel" assure them of our cooperation and we 'and accused Israel of resisting all in. are discussing whatever implications this ternational efforts for peace. He said incident may have for the security o~f the Israel "set out to suppress" the recent campus and the surrounding U.S. peace initiative "from the very mo- munity." ment Israel announced its acceptance." Peace Officers Receive Honors from Saddlehack A total of 33 peace officers from several jurisdictions have won honors from Saddleback College for completion of the second offering of a special training course geared toward Western White House security. In a ceremony held recently on th.e Saddleback campus police science in· structor Robert. ferguson presented the class members with certificates from the FBI in recognition of completion of study in the use of nonlethal chemical agents. Separate certificates are forthcoming to the graduates of the s:ourse from the Commission of F'eaet ·otflcer Standards Laguna Authoress Publishes 15th Book and Training in Sacramento. The instructors In the two-week course Included specialists from the FBI, Secret Service and lhe U.S. Department ef State. Among the students were Marine military polict!men who are permanently assigned to a special security unit for th.e President when he is in residence at San Clemente. The graduates completing the course from the San Clemente Poliet Depart~ ment are Don Anderson, Burdell Burch, RDb-Charlton, Norris Cole, Robert \Va.Son, Raymond Bartman. Terry l\IacAdam, Sid 11CMl__cbael, Earnest h1uller. Chief Clifford Murray, Mike Reischl, Will Stockdale and John Ziegler. San Clemente officer Connie Atkinson also completed the course. She was the only ""'.Oman among the graduates. The lSth book by Laguna Beach chi!-Camp Pen<t}eton graduates included dren's auOlor Winifred Wise has just been Slelios Hagiper:os, Cal vin Grant, Gerald Guthrie, Robtri Handley, Ulrry Hosler, published by the Pareai._• _M_as_a_z_1·n_•_~"'av~i'.'d~•'.!1:'.:artinez,...£hiLl\1ichael1Maur-ice ~ -Chi Titled "The Revolt, of the Darumas," Nelson, Orley Van Engelenhoven, ares the book is a Japanese story. for ages Wahtemeyer ana 'Craig \Villiamson. four to eiH;ht with colorful illustrations California HigtiWay Patrolofficer, UC by a Japanese woman. Mile Wise was lrvine Security poliet, an Orange County recenUy named one of Laguna's five deputy marshal -and Oceanside Police Leading Ladles of 1970 and the book was patrolmen also were among the an outgrQ)Vth of her rece.iit trip to Japan. graduates. DAILY PILOT ltl'ltt1 ... l:lcMrf IC ....... ORANGE COUNTY FIREME/I SIFT THROUt;H RUIN-AT UC!'I BANK 0.F AM&R!,CA Bl(ANCH Shortly Aft9r Midnight NNr UC!, "•m11 F!l!acl Sky; D1m19• E1Ilm1t1 $125,000 • ' 1· • 1· • ,. ,. ·Lag•111a Beaeh VOL 63, NO. 256, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ' ' . ORANGE COUNTY~ c,AllFORNIA • ire -s Dead Fisla Dumped • Beaches Polluted With Anchovies 1 By BARBARA KREJBICH Of trle O•llJ 11'1111 11111 An over.abundant fishing catch, rather than ''fed tii;le" may have been 'responsi- ble for the Friday invasion of dead anchovies along Laguna's beaches. A Fish and Game Department spokesman today confirmed a report by Balboa Island sportsfishennan Bill Pigg that "at least 10" purse seiners w.ere fishing in the channel off Laguna Friday. The boats, Pigg said, were hauling up anchovies by the ton, as fast as they could operate their nets , and dumping dead fish back into the water as their boats were filled to capacity. "It was pollution -0f the rankest sort." said the Balboa sportsman. He said the waters of the channel were covered with ''acres of silver anchovies" so thick he had difficu1ty getting his boat through · them. Capt. W. H. Putman .ol the Fish and Game Department in Long Beach said the department's req)rds showed lZ Jl'l!&e seiners were fis,h1ng in the channe l between Dana PoinVand Newport Beach Friday, supposedly outside the three.mile limit. LaiUJWlS who saw the boa.ts said they seemed to be closer to shOre than usual. If the catch was as heavy as described, Putman said,. there was "a good pro- bability" that dumping had caused the problem on the Laguna Beaches. He said the Fish and Game Depart· ment monitors all fishing boats by plane and boat and checks them w h e n th e 1 return to port to find out where fish were caught. The purse seiners operating in lhe channel Friday, Putman said, were out of San Pedro. fishing for commercial can· neries, not for bail. A follow-up in· vestigation would be made, he added. Dead anchovies began washing up in the surfline Friday morning and, by afternoon, had been reported on beaches from El Morro to Sleepy Hollow. By late afternoon. complaints of a foul odor were accompanying reports of the dead fish. Experts at first believed the incident was another case of suffocation of the fish by "red tide" which shuts off oxygen in the water. Laguna lifeguards, however, said that "red tide," caused by dead plankton floating in the water, had been only moderate in recent weeks. Circulation of Recall • Papers Due T·his Week C.ut Weather Fair skles and gusty winds will greet coutal residents Tuelday, with temperature jumping lo 73 degrees along lhe shore IDd up to a further inland. INSmE TODAY The battle for icolog11 can be won with iooi.t deue~ped to •. cop• with problems of outir .spaci, according to o Hunting· ton Biach atro.spact t.tptrt. Stt Finance, Paai 20. ...... 11 e.....,.. ,. (lletll .... "' , (......... ..,,. ._.. " c.......ni ,, .,.... Miit.. 11 •••"1:1-' ,... ' •1111rllltlflMll ,. '"'-,.,, -" •1111 .. ....,. •• • -.• ................. Or-c..tf 11 ,_,. ..... Slldl Mlrll'lfl »tl T...,.._ It '"""" , . w...., ' 4 Mitt Wl'lfl 11 W-'1 ..... ·1•11 _.,. ..... .. • .,. -- ..-:-. . ··elar·· I . --~' I • : ' 1 • ,•) . . ... ' \ j • l •• . . ' ' ' " . ,_ N.Y.S~ TEN CENTS ., Arson .Said Pos~ibility . ~y Firemen ) - ' - I 'DAILY PILOT SC Mond11, Octobtr 26, 1970 H•t .. ,V. •. . 1· ·1·. ' 1: · ·· ·10 a ions . . . • Charge .Lodged >4gainst U.S •. Air Flights . MoscOw (UPI) -Tbo Soviet pero-the US$R olr ._.., 'Ille Soviet. ollo proloolod to the ment today protested "lhe violaUon" of 14Y1olat.10DI ol the l11&R'• alt tpatt" . ~kllts I ao•mwat. *ntiw HI .... the Soviet state border by a U.S. military American planea blppen bJ' no m6IDI ttntioa. to the vlOl&Uoa bJ u Amel1clD. becauae of tome chance, concurrency of plane and . s.aid it was a result of "the circumstance, but are a result of the plane. general ·military activity of the United general military activity of tbe United 'lbe statemeit to Turkey reminded Egypt Chief Blasts U.S. In War Risk Staia--1n_ar.gs adjoioiflg ~ ~viet ~I.el in areu adjoining the Soviet Ankara that after the D.ight of tht Union." Union.'1 it said. ~1'ner1can -m -spy-plane the--'J\u.kilh -- UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad accused the United States today of risking wo.rkt war by increasing military aid to Israel despite Israel's withdrawal from U.N. peace. ~gotiat.!_ons. An official announcement said the "The Soviet government has repeatedly government said it ''wW ne\V 1lve ~ aovernment has lodged a protest drawn the attenti.on of. ~e United States planes of allied or other powers the right will> the 1ovemment of-the-U ited States gov~rnm~t to t~is-4ictiv1!y lhat ls ~~nly_ to• 1•· b d . ._ -•-ln • -n hostile to Rll!l!iif....1be praervatwn of me l.;J ases an J .. __.-1pace . •I ln connection with tbe violation of the AmerJcan military , basc!s arowld the gresslve purposes capable• of inflletbtc tlMR atale border by an American Soviet Union ls a most serious source of damage to the securitJ aad tranquillt7 of military plane on Oct. 21." . danger and does not ~card in any way its neighbors." , 'l1le nfl!f'tDCe was to a U.S. military with the statements ln favor of an im· But the latest Incident •'shows that ln plane whJch strayed across the border provement oI Soviet-American relations reality things are quite different," the from Turkey on that date. Two American that were repeatecUy made by U.S. protest said. Anny generals, an Army Major pilot and leaders." In this connection surprise alone can be a 'l\lrkish colonel aboard the plane bav1 'lbe protest said the Soviet government caused by remarks made by certain been bt:ld in Yerevan, near the frolltier. "upect.I tbat the Unlted States govern-quarters in TUri.ey that Tur i.i 1 b The prot.eat. the TISI News Ageocy ment wm cHIPJay a moet serious ap-authorities are net an1werable for the ae- said, reminded the Nii:on administration proacb to ,the pcilltion ouUined ln this tlons of the vlolaUng plane stnce It that "in the past three years alone there stltement IDd draw appropriate con-belongs to the American Air Force.'' were more than 10 unlawful violaUou of cluska.." RUssJa Aid. Jurg Deadlocks 'Sweet Ernie' Beats Rap I~ Dirty Word Mistrial Capistrano Backs _Sign Law~Curbs " ~'-iii the Oran@ Comll)' A black UC Irvine graduate student ar· rested after using bad wards 49 times to express his alleged contempt toward radical white_ students bas beaten tbe rap, at least for the Ume being. Ernest A. "Sweet Ernie" Smith, 30, was freed Satu.rday when Judge Donald Dungan ruled the proceedings in Harbor Judicial District Court to be a mi.strial. . 'Ibe aJJ.wbite jury which included aeven women deadlocked 9 to 3 for convicUon and Judge Dungan's action followed refwial to let derense attorney James George individually poll the jurors. Sm.Jth, a former Los Angeles radio and television talk show personality, bad been charged with disturbing the pea~ of a university campus following the May 15 Incident Dwing the week-long trial, the basic Contention by the defense was that words Bnd·word<ombinations used by Smith are common and not offensJve to residents of Watts, wbere be was raised. Deputy District Attorney R u s s e 11 Serber, the prosecutor, disagreed and ap- parently convlnc<d Dille jurors to do the . same. A decision will be made this week whether to move for a retria,I or dlsmlss the charge entirely. 1 • Sweet ErnJe and bis defense counsel C'Olltended that be was addressed In, like manner by the white radicals after call· ing then names, but no ooe else wu ar- r.st<d. He pme!ded a box of candy to the P"'" Former Banker Mr. Hartz Dies Elmer S. Hartz of Laguna Beach, a retired Bank of America executive and longtime California resident, died Satur- day at the l.<lng Beach Veterans Hospital after a long illness. He was 76. There will be no funeral services for Mr. Hartz. Visitation will be held at Bell Broadway Mortuary in Costa Mesa all day Tuesday and Wednesday and burial will be in Ohio. Mr. Hartz, wbo lived at 502 Treasure planneri' . propoled IC$lle area. lip COD- oecutloo following rmal araumeni. Ind tml ordinance' has been pven by th• preaeotatloo of the ._ to the jwy, · Capillrano Beach Community -· sa!'lnl the brand oame was developecftoo - late to Introduce tt u defense el'ldenc:e. • ,,,. -ll<ln will oapport........., Some brands of candy -lhll ..,. ls ol lhe ordfDall<e ond ~ of Ila !Old primarily ln lhe black (belto -""' cootroi& In CapialrlllO Bw:b ms Dona named Motber-This'11, or Mother-TbaJ,'1. POlnl' .... Sweet Ernie's commerciaDy-m.arteted Prellldent Arthur BDlsteln Aid the ac- eoafectkm ii simply titled: Motber tion WU by unaninw,m vote of memh«I -·~ City Manager • Tells Tax. Bill In San Cl.e _mente prwent. Tbe orcflnan<e -I tJchl siln CUltroi code wblch would be appllod u an ov~lay fatrld.lon on any cwntJ .IODie - has .be,on l)IU..ted by """'ty plamMn u .. ~ to uwade -tlca fD potonllalfy """1ic loca1el. ·'Ille Crane• County Board o.f Supervllorr hu authorized public llw· inp 00 the propooall, lncJucflq • I tiillbolrd ban. · Harold Ekman, county plaoninc com- Included 1n this montb'.a lllnC1nc tu mlnL)ner from South Lquna, said be n• bill to Su Clemealo tupoyen 'iru a pects, c:onatderall<la of the algn CU1trol 15.5 percenl I/Im to Ille city; ICODrdlng d<talli lo be acbedulod before tbe com- toM 1. lludyKen~, lhil .-k by City ,mi.,ioo wltllln the -lhree -u. anqer iw&rr. In a lim11lr endonement mi the llJDI AmOll( other apncies .barin, the niihl. Su a.moato dly ......,_ revenue from the ta bill were ICbool'I praised tbe eMmher of ,,,11nllll'oe m Sm cflatrlcla tfD t4'o ... wllb the lirpat' Clementa for thrvwlnr Ila oapport belllnd amount -5.1. 718 percent, the O:Mlnty of the billboard ban. Orange With 14.281 percent and water Tbe d>amber earlier th.II IDontb m- districta wltlnlbe llDlllieot llDOUQI, .1.m ck...od the pr_.i code whlcb 'wu percenl • r: Jauncbed by a oommlttee al the Included in Carr's llludy ls the .. ....,. Capiltrano Beacb chamber. diatributloi:t !J1 dollar form tram ta1e1 on a" ruldencl""!'f ·tull CUh vJ!ue of #41000 ~ ·-fliures, Coaiputlil. at ~ pen:ent of f'lll1 cub nlue,'tbe ....... ble omount for the pro. petty would be '8.000. '!ii-""'-1 would break dowo to 16,009 for ~ bn-enta aocf l!,000 for Ille land, Carr HplOinod. Assuming tbal lhlr< .,. no nemptiOIUI or special auiessmtnts, the owner of the hypothetical property would pay a tot.I of '546.77 in taxes on a total rate of $9.4045 for e•ch $100 of assessed valua- tion. Within that tax bill the school district will re~ive about $294; the county $132. 76 and the city $84 .50. The water district revenue would be $35.41. Diver Rescued . By Mesa Woman A novice skin diver wu rescued by a Colt.a Mesa woman Sunday mominc when he panicked after lolinf hil mouthpiece in the water off Mcm street Beach in Laguna Beach. Bruce Moore, 19, of Vu Nuys, was making his second dive of his career at about 9 a.m. Sunday with a friend about 50 yards off shore when one of bis tank straps !ell off, causing bis mouth piece to come out of his mouth, lifeguards said. Island Trailer Park for the past 11 years, ' l T _ k. ' ----1,,-sun>lved-b)'-•-c:ousin;-Mr>o-Donrtby--., ust-J::l(Jo ing- McFaut of Los Angeles. ' The youth panicked, and began yelling £or help. Before lifeguards could reach him, Peggy Ward, 21, of 3191 Gibraltar Drive, Costa Mesa, had pulled him from -me mret:-MISS-Ward;"whoi s-president of- a Costa Mesa skin diving club, w•s preparin1 to enter the water when lhe heard Moore's cries for help. Mr. Hartz, a veterah of Wotld War 1~. B Sk , came to Caldornia in 1923 .••d. was ut ydivers employed by the Bank of America in Los !'ngeles for 25 years until bis reUreme.nt M. N dl .. 11151. uis ee e I DAILY PILOT " .......... .. -. .... .. _ OMNCIS COAST P'Ult.llHING COM,AX'f ~Mrt N. Weed Pnt1'el'lltr"~ J1ck J. Ct1tlrt Ylc:t ,....._, •nlll 0-0.1 ~ Tiioriftl tc11Ylt EOUtt 71io'"'' A. M11,,hi1M1 Mlll\lillftt lfl!tt «lc.htrl P. "'' '°""' or1r191 tour11r ldl'IOI' -Coste Mn•: JlD Wnl ..., ,,,..., Nl'Jl'Pllf1 IHdl: 2211 W.1 ....... '-l'C • Lll"N '"er.: m F..,.n, AWll'lllf "411f11'"'1.,. Bndl: 171TS IMdl ... ,.....,._ S.11 'ltmt:'lt.: lCJ NOJlll E.1 "mlno llul SEATTLE (UPI) Six parachute-wearing young persons never got off the ground with their ;.11.n to "go up Md look around'' from the 520-foot high space needle observ•tlon deck Sunday night. · Five men and one woman, all nemben ol the Hu.icy Skydiving :tub •t the Univeralty o f Washington, were refused ;iennllllion to take the St elevator ride to theJcm of Ute symbol of the 1982 World's Fair. The &r<>UP donned alcydiving suit. Ind par1chut81 at the bottom of the letdle. An attendant saw them :hanging clotbel and d•shed for • · '!!ephone k> notify space needle of· £icla1s. The group wu not allowed to board the elevator, even •fter members explained they had no in· tentlon of jumping. Bev Montgonnery, 21, president of the lkydlving club, sald sbe and her friends just wanted "to go up and look around" and get aome publicity. Halloween Carnival Slated at Palisades Pallaadu School Pl'A members will spon.wr their annual Halloween camiv•I at the Caplstrtn0 Beach acOOol Saturday with costume judging, prizes, rood C'On· cesslona a hike sale and games. ne publlc la wrtcome to the annual IVtllt which will nm &om l lo 9 p.m. • { Moore was not Injured and did not re- quire medical attention. Cl.emente Flares Only a Prank Dlstreu fiares launched' durinc the weekend from the San Clemente pW.r sparked several calls to police and a plane crash scare. The pranksters, apprehended and warned by patrolmen late Friday night, caused one coastline re1Jdent to report .• plane down iD tbe octan off the Trafalgar· beach. One of the nares remained alight in tbe water for several minutes. Another Oare washed ashore at Cyprus Shore, causing :!leveral citizens to call from that beach as well. No form•l charges we.re filtd. Argument Goes To Extremes It probably ... mec1 to a Lquna Beach couple that the sky wu falling u they prepared to drive aw.y from a cocktlll Jounce early FrtdaJ momln&. Pollco tald the """Pl• idt the Round T•ble blr •bout 2 a.m. A mu outaidt the bar be&•n •n argument. The couple entered their coavtrtlblt, So d I d the belligerent. But he w a 1 u:iortllodox. Ile climbed on top al the eo1> vertlble and began jumping up and down unUI he \\'ent through the canvas top. Police aro lnvutlialin( the we al the tllY1t•ry Jumpor. DAILY PILOT~ .... llldlll'f K..ti*° -F'fl{EMEN-PROBE CEltlNG FOR -POSSIBLE INTERNAL FIRE Fire and D•truction Near UCI; F•mlllar Slogans on the Wall lllaze De~ried VCI's Aldrich Issues Statement UCI Oi.aneellar DanJel G. Aldrich Jr. today issued the following statement following this morning's destruction of tbe Bank of America branch near cam· pis: "It Is abhorrent to me -as I am sure It is to all responsible members of the campus community -that anyone, whether students or others, would engage in senseless destruction and terrorist ac· tivitY of lhll kind. assistance. We expect to meet with of· ficials of the Bank of America on t h i 1 matter immediately. "We are also communicating with of· ficials of the Blink of America and wilh the Orange County Sheriff's Dept. to assure them of our cooperation and we are discussing whatever implications this incident may have for the security of the campus and the surrounding com- munity." Rlad opened 1.1iddle East debat.e~tn the General Assembly -the first time the 127-nation body has taken up the issue. P-revious·dilcu'.l&M>nl were_~eecurlty council, but Egypt got approval of the assembly debate over U.S. objectionl it would torpedo the peace talks. Israeli Fore1gn Minister Abba Eban has said ln advance Israel would not take a "defensive" role in the debate. This became clear today in Tel Aviv when the Israeli army intelligence chief said Egypt and Russia had used the cease-fire to build one of the world's most advanced antiaircraft systems on the west bank of the Suez Canal. ruad, in accusing the United Sllites of obstructing middle East peace through Its ai.d to Israel, said, "the rule of the charter makes it incumbent upon the Uniled States to stand by the countries that are victims of aggressioh and not to support Israel, the aggressor." "By taking this hostile position towards the Arab peoples and by supporting Israel, the aggressor, the United States obstructs the realization or peace in the Middle East, endangers world peace and encourages the use of force in in· ternational relation," Riad said. There had been a possibility up until the last minute that today's debate might be postponed for several days. Tht United Stat.es and Britain privately ei:· pressed fears a diplomatic disaster could result from the assembly charges and countercharges. But the debate began as acheduled. "It bas become imperative that the United Nations keep the situation in the Middle East under its active attention • that it follow up constantly the effort.! for peace and make use of its powers under the charter, until peace Is finally secured by the withdrawal of Israel's aggressive forces from all the occupied Arab ter· ritories," Riad said. He declared Egypt's '1 absolute determination to liberate every inch of the Arab territories occupied by Israel" and accused Israel of resisting all in- ternational efforts for peace. He. said Israel "set out to suppress" lhe rec6lt U.S. peace initiative •·from the very mo- ment Israel announced its aceeptance." "Bey,ond the immediate damage to pro- ~ and the threat to the safety o( CidMm which are involved I regret that it ailml necessary to point out that the O'Mtelt damqe of an incident of this tlQd ls to students and to the university. '1 Mve met already this morning with our campus admlnlmator of student ftnancial aids to discuss our concern over the poatble Joss of records necessary to student lolnl, grants and other kinds of Peace Officers Receive Laguna Schools Elect Student Body Officers Four Laguna Beach schools have elected student officers for the 1976-71 school year. Andy Hedden was elected the new stu. dent body president of T h u r s to n Intermediate School Thursday. defeating Roy Jacobson and Anthony Cottam after a week of campaigning for the office. Lisa Hallock defeated Tracy Tinder for the vice presidency of the school. Other students elected to ~i,, at Thurston were: Lisa JungclM.~ records com- QUssioner ; Lynn_Evl!__n;_ assistant records commissioner; Oz Simmons, com- missioner of beys' intermurals; Nancy Jlson, commissioner of g i r I s ' inter~ murals and Andy Giilespie, safety com- missioner. At Top or the World Elementary School, Laurel Rodeeker was elected president and David Nelson won the of- fl~ of vice presidenL Craig Benson was elected secretary. · Honors from Saddleback A total of 33 peace officers from several jurisdictions have won honors from Saddleback College for completion of the second offering of a special training course geared toward Western White House security. In a ceremony held recently on the Saddleback campus police science in· structor Robert Ferguson presented the class members with certificates from the FBI in recognition of completion of study in the use of nonlethal chemical agents. Separate certificates are forthcoming to the graduates of the course from the Commission of Peace Officer Standards Laguna Authoress Publishes 15th Book · The JSth book___by La11:111a Beach chil- dren's author Winifred Wise has just been p.1blished by the Parents' Magazlne Press. Titled "The Revolt of the Danuna11,'' .the book is a Japanese story for ages four to eight with col<riul Illustrations by a Japaaese woman. Miss Wi.!e ·was recently named one of Laguna's five Leading Ladies of 1970 and the book was an outgrowth of her recent trip to Japan. and Training In Sacramento. The instructors in the two-week course included specialists from the FBI, Secret Service and the U.S. Department •f State. Among the students were Marine military policemen who are permanently assigned to a special security unit for the President when he is in residence at San Clemente. The graduates completing the course from the San Clemente Police Depart. mcnt are Don Anderson, Burdell Burch, Rob Charlton, Norris Cole, Robert Wason, Raymond Bartman, Terry MacAdam, Sid McMichael, Ear ne st Muller, Chief Clifford Murray, Mike Reischl, Will Stockdale and John Ziegler. San Clemente officer Connie Atkinson also completed the course. She was the only woman among the graduates. Camp Pendleton graduates included Stelios Hagtpetos, Calvin Grant, Gerald Guthrie, Robert 'Handley, Larry Hosler, David Martinez, Phil Michael, Maurice Nelson, Orley.Van Engelenhoven, Charles Wahtemeyer and Craig Williamson. California Highway Patrolofficer, UC Irvine security police, an. Orange County deputy marshal and· Ocean~lde Police patrolmen also were amOOg t h 1 graduates. • • OAll. T 'J\OT ..... W l.ICfllft kt1111tr ORANGE COUNTY FIREMEN SIFT THROUGH RUIN AT UCf'S BANK OF AMERICA BRANCH Shortly After Midnight NHr UCI , Fl•m .. Fiiied Sky; D•m•g• Etl)mate $125,DDO ' I \ - - ' -. Ir '~ d F a A b v p f t t r n • I [ _., --;---r'•- -. Today'• l'bal San-f;leinenie Capistrano \, EDl'flOH · N.Y. Steeb voe 63, NO. 256, ·3 SECTIONS, 3~ P~GES • -~re - 4>Qulet Siwek' Irvine Students Stunned by Fire By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ftle 0.llY ,Ill! Stiff Crowds of disbelieving students, faculty and nearby 1esldents of UClfttine stood In the water-logged grass around the gut- , ted Bank of America in quiet shock. "How were they so successfu1?" a depositor asked increduously. Mrs. William E. Moore of University Park was going to deposit to her account at the Town Center branch of Bank of America. She arrived to find the bank burned out. "This is just too much," she said. Noting the scribblings on the wall which read "Oink of America -death to pigs" Pi.irs. Moore said. "I don't think any point is ever made with these things." She was concerned and said her hus- band was too hearing reports on the radio this morning, whether her money was all right. "A bank official who asked not to be nttmed said no records or cash were lost in the ~laze and damage was limited to furniture, fixtures and c a I c u I a t I n g machines. Four fireproof vault& held depositors records and they wert emptied early t~ay for storage in an unnamed nearby bank. The spokesman indicated that two trailers brolight in wJlhin hours of the blv.e which was reparted at 12: 15 a.m., wuold be ready for a 10 a.m. opening Tuesday, 'Ille Irvine branch doea not of· fer safety dtposit box service, he noted. UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich said this morning his reaction to the bank fire was the same as whenever property is destroyed. He .expressed annoyance that students would be blamed automatically for the fire since "the nature of calls this morn- . ing indicate an immediate feeling the fire ls the result of students when that has not yet been determined." The chancellor also noted that this particular branch besides serving the university community offered "vitally important services to atudenta In the area of financial aid by servicin1 student loans." The chancellor deplored the JO.. of these services even temporarily. c ·haptnan Group Readies Permits for Hospital Members or the Chapman Genera! Hospital group f.rom Orange began preparing applications this week for a 1eries of permits to be filed in San Clemente for the proposed San Clemente General Hospital scheduled to open late next year. After~ Friday afternoon briefing with several city department heads, the representatives ·of the Orange Hospital development group said they expected to appear for the first routine approvals from city planning commissioners early In November. "1ost of the technical data discussed at Friday's meeti ng involved fire hydrant placement on the 40-acre site along Camino los Mares and emergency park· Ing provisions for police cars and am· bu lances. The Chapman group re i le rated pr e 11 m i n a r y projecf.!ons that groundbreaking for the 116-bed acute. care hospital plus a convalescent hospital would take place late th is November. Chapman officially wrested the critical health planning association endo rsement for a San Clemente hospital from a com· petitor last Thursday. The agency, the Orange County Com· prehensive Health Planning-Association, officially granted its endorsement after · wllhdrawinJ( earlier sanct.Jon for C. T. DeClnces, the developer of the long· delayed San Clemente Medical Center Oruge C.ut We•t•er Fair skies and gusty winds will greet coastal residents Tuesday, with temperature jumping to 73 degrees along the shore and up to 12 further Inland. INSIDE TODAY The battlt for eeoloott can bt won with tools developtd to cope" with problemr of ouur 1pact, according to n Hunting· ton Bea.ch a.erospact tzpcrt. Ste Fina.net, Page 20. ...... tt Mnlll ,, C..'"'""9 It Mllti.Mt ,._ +.J OledlfM "'"' t °"-c-tt' n c........... ... .....,. t»ott C-4a II IMCll .......... t1 C,..._., It Yt!t¥1t1M 1t DHltl N9tlcft II YllMl9R 1t ·~,..,..,w.,._ 4 ••1111 ....... 1 1t Wl'I"" Wllll ti "'~ "'" W•-'t N-1f.IJ ...,._ 1• W"1111 ,,.... .., """ .. ..,.. u near the city hall. DeCinces has vowed to build his health care facility despite . the Joss of en- dorsement-approval of w h l c h guarantees the participation in a hospital by various health-care insurance finna. Among the precise city approvals re- quired for the Chapman project wlli be a conditional use permit for the proposed convalescent hospital which will be built simultaneously with the a c u t e -c a r e ospital. Variance requests dealing with parking requirements also are an· titipated. The acreage involved in the master- planned hospital project is already .zoned for use as an acute hospital site, but the convalescent usage on part of the land will require the permit . and public hear~ ings. the basic working drawings for the new facility will closely resemble the ex- isting Chapman General Hospital plant in Orange, said a spokesman for the developers. Those documents already have been submitted to the State Department of Public Health for approval which will take about six weeks. Because the department already has approved the similar Chapman ptans, the approval is expected to be quicker than usual. The single-level facility built with a loan from Lincoln Savtop and Loon, would be ready for its tint patients 10meUme in the fall. Clemente School To Take Part In Ceremonies San CJememe Hllh Schoof f!Tliupo will play a key part in Wednetday'a official ceremonlea al the Western White House commemorating the first-day islue bere of four antipollutJon postage stamp.. A color guard .... from the Triton Junior NROTC will appear at the cemnoa."8, aa well as the hlch school bend IOd usher'• club. Another atudmt to pwticipote in the observaix:e featurina ~Ollmuter General Winton Blount and Presldentlal Aide Robert Finch will be Triton coed Denise Corwin, who delianed an award·wiMin&· ecoloiical symbol. • Miss CorWln will rteelve a apec:lal leatherbound laue of the four ecofoclcal ltampe u an award for her symbol. The four alampi urge Americans to "ve our wattr, cities, toil and air. The ce,..,..ies will toke place 1t 11 a.m. on lhe front lawn of the Preai.dentlal office complez. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . ' MONDAY; OCTOBER 26, ·1 f70 · ' ' ' . ' TEN CENT~ ear ' D•l'-Y Pl"OT ~ltt LAI hfWI Ai·so11 Said Possibility By Firemen By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 ... Dlllf Pl ... Stiff , A $125,000 fire branded 11 highly 1uspicious in origin raged through a Bank of America branch near the UC Irvine _ camJ>.11!~1~ today, guttin1Jhe buJidin.I . on which revolutionary iloallil •er• freshly painted. No one waa injured mtd no uplotlon, was reported, but Orange' County Fire Deportment Coptain Bill Croo!uhonk ~ 1trongly hinted at anon. "Death to the Pip ... All Power to the People," had been sprayed onto the t~ story atructure hou1in1 nine busineaet adjacent to the UCI campus in the lrvine Town Center. "When they got there, the wbole·damn . thing wu in names and it just doesn't happen that way naturally," said one fire observer. One witness to the 12:13 a.m. flareup 1ave Orange County sheriff's deputies in- formation lead1n1 to an all~points bulleti.m for two Negro men in a pickup truck. · 1be Bank of America -u a symbol ol the American Establishment -Jiu beat the: target of radical uboteun arouDd'\ho <OW>lry. Ooly 1w•··· .......... -pl .. In which the SioiiWri ~ rn.tltutt -wu ;conducJllo& ~· • 1• • •irulel 111<1 oir pallutloe -olao ..,... ,.,, by I IS0,000 eqJo,lon. , ~-·-It wu only .... blll mile llOm tOcfai'• •bool; llrt. · One other spray..painted meSu1e In tM lotest incident rUd: Bink of AmerikkL The misspelling of the nation'• na,me - Nazi.style -11 a tnown trademark of revoluUonary !actions. Investigaton 111d another slogan refer. red to a rotk ood bottle-throwing Incident at Hillcrest Plrk in Fullerton, which police shut down to all, because of hippie 1athering1. Despite the county fire captain'• reference to arson , Orange County SbMiff'a deputies were bein1 more cautious. "We have no infonnation as far u any bomb bl8$1 or arson are coocUDed,'' aald Deputy Jam .. F.nearL COUNT,Y FIREMEN PROBE RUINS INS IDE BANK OF ·AMERICA NEAR UC! CAMPUS In Early Morning Hours Today in Orange County., Destruction Strikes Again ' . . . Loss in the bank blaze included primarily office equipment, furniture and teller•' counters, while no legal pa,..,...,...--, currency in the vaults were destro Squads totaling 25 firemen ,..,...,_ to Aids in Sal~ty Clemente Lawmen Get Graphic Art A complete package of graphic aids to help San Clemente police in elementary school talks about safety and the policeman's ro~ haVe been donated by the San Clemente E.Cbange Club. The akil, including comlc bookl1 a talge, durable flip chart with cortoons and safety 11\esaagea and "The Officer Bill Awml'"wlll hefp~trolmen in.,.... munity relatlons appearancea. The kit ii geared 1pecifically ta the local poli<e deportment with the officers depicted in the books and post.en bearing ••san Clemente Police" on the badges. The dozen-page coloring book has eaay- to-color illustrations of basic safety rules, including pedestrian safety tips, warnings against. contacts with strangers, polite- ness, seeking help from a policeman and the wearing of seat belts. Besides the Informal talk with the youngsten, patrolmen volunteering for the talks give the children a cl05e look at a patrol car, 'the patrolman's uniform and equ.ipment. - A certificate in the form of an award is given to each class after the patrolman's appearance. · • The traditional ''Officer Bill" materials were donated to the San CJemente department by :0r._ Richard ~ak:er, a representative of the San Clem~~ Ex- change Club-part of an international organization focusing on crime-fighting and law enforcement support services. The coats for the visual alds were ~me by the Exchange Club budget. Attorney for Frazier Says Suspect .. I~ane ,_ fit lervlceo SANTA CRUZ -1-s A. J1<klon, pUbllc defender aPJ>(lfnled' lo defend John Llnley Frazier In tbt lla)'inl of five penons, U)'I thlt tnaonlly II I _,hie plen•hen the c .. llb lo court. .. My .-1 oplnlolfll thlt P'rlber Is crQJ.'' the attornq uld Sundl,y allhoogh be oho remorbd the-evidence qainlt his clleot .. ,. far ha nol 1been by any means concJ.n... '' · Frozler pltaded 1!UIOOtnt after beinl ormted l'ridey in bis Clbin leSI tblO I mDe away . from the '300,000: mliilion overlookln1 the Pldfic Ocean ,where an eye surgeon, bis Wife, their two ton1 and his secretary were bound, slau&btered and dumped Into a 1wimmtnc pool, Neither Santa Qiiz COW>ty Shetlff1 Deputies 1 nor the Stale Bureau of Crlmlno! lden!Ulcation ind lnmllCation COf\\lllellted on 1 ~ by Ed Jotomc<>mery ~f. the San Fr1ncllco Ei- amlner that Fratler'• f l n 1 e r pr I n t 1 m1tched those on a typewriter Uled to produce 1 note left al the 1llylna ...... ' Riot Explodes In Fullerton On Park Ban ' By JACK BROBACK Of tM De lly Plr.t ll1tr Fourteen police officers and four rioters.were)njllffi.I Sunday in a rock •nd the blue, wbicb authorities ~d u f1nt repon.d by I 1D10 IJ>Ukinl in ucitecl tones. ' They controlled the raging fire about » minutes .after arriving -Uirff mtnut.er after the origlnal call -from stations at UC!, Orange County Airport and in · Laguna Hills. Fire dama1e itself was confined to the bank office on the first floor of the two- story buildlfll, while 1moke lnfllctetf losses on other quarttrs within the st.rue--· ture. The facility also ho;usea UCI public - relations Offk:es. A gang of onlookers -some cheerirw bottle tbrowtng brawl over tbe closiDJ: of -gathered to watch the blaze, reminil- Fulltrton'.J Hillcrest Park. • cent of one Jut February that destroyed Forty .offib~rs faced a crowd .of. about a Bank of America branch ln Isla Vilta, 500: disaldents at the start of the bciun--.near I.be UC Santa Barbara campus. . . . No problems were reported in keeplna Jong rklt which was triggered by the city order at the UCI 1ctne. council's action closing lbe park to· the Jnvestigaton said they impounded u public. --evidence 1 omnhtr of revollJliolllt1- 1'be facility was ordered closed on SUn· ~ten liken from.the scene. days arter two sucCes.sive fret concerts . Free ~Y and all P o 11 c e · Id th hlch led pol1... 1 Prisoners . • • nad one slogan. • were be ere w . . ""~ 0 One facility damaged in the fire ~t the believe that incidents would occur. Ulllveraity Park Sboppin1 Center On tbe Fort.Y-toUt rioters Were-am!sted, 11 north side of the campus wu a UCI adUl:t.1111d 25 juveniles. Nine of the adult& bookstore. · ·· ·th u1 · 1 · •-Tbt Bink of Americ1 is the w<irld'.s ~ charged. WI m Up e ~ "; J1rgest financial imtitution and ba beea clminc felooies. Two were . jelled en hit by fires and window-smuhlng ~ 1charps of uaault W'lth ~nt to 'kill. ' cidents tilamed on l&uclents and radicall 1 ·Fullerton p.uce Captain Fr«! Kij\( 111~ for, the past year. ·kntfts, tire trons ·arid otberlWeapom Were Authorities have emphasized the bade lconfllcated. · • 1 lack of trouble at the 1,000.llW,deot UC! l'Olk:e said the trouble ·!Jep ... at._ campus in coimerv1ti" onnp CGoml1 11 a.m. when a mob of about 500 youlhl and were cauUGus In evalu.alinc CIUlll ol occupied the part in. deflonce .of iIOlloi 1 the neorby bomb blll\ .._ ~ oe. · ....... ~ -Tbty , noted ,lllll·. 'wlaile ' •• ""' Coptain King "Id his officen were lleseu<h loslHule 'I lJ ~ lnlUrid aubjected to verbal thm!s, ~Ill~ the 'll!"fd hive done ..... r-~ and struck with large chunks of concrete. war research the Irvine faCtltty wia bricks, U.. Irons. roclll and botUeS'. • engaged in purely peocefld lltlldlll. He ldmltted the of Ileen llnl<k blc!< No definite c11111 ·1111 'betn - with clal>I ad flsta Ind in -to In thlt -· bul luthoritla 111 tt. WU critlcilm by ..... onlook•n .... I imdentably I bomblnl. . I ne-r writer the c1pJoin said,, "~t Tbt procllt locoUon of the bool; .-w• no 8imdoy School !)ici!tc aut .Uiere. lhot ,... bumecl II MJlceDt to. IM u~ O\Jr. llliioen ... ,. 111~jected to 1 fujl campus Jo the loc1l 1ru aboppt111 cootar, ne.lpd · 1ttld: ind they coUldO't jUll laclnf outword toWml on li'vtDe - l1and there and tafle It... field. ' , • r J DAILY PILOT SC Mol'ltliy, Ottobtr 26, 1910 Russ ' Hit 'Violations' Egyp~ Chief: Blasts U.S. ' ' • ~ Charge Lodged Against V.S. Air Flights ·1n WarRisW " - MOSCOW (1.IPI) -'!be SOYlel - ment today· protested "the violation'' of the Soviet state border by a U.S. ·military plane and said it was a resuJt of "the genenl mWtary actJvity of the United States ln areas adjoining ' the Soviet Union." An official announcement aald the sOvtet 1oftrnment has lodged • protest with the government of the United States In ~ect.ion with the violation of t h e uslR state border· by an American milllary plane on Oct. 21." The reference was to a U.S. military plane which strayed across the border from Turkey on that date. Two American Army generals. an Ariny Major pilot and a Turkish colonel aboard the plane have been held in Yeievan, near the lrontier. The protest, tbe Tass News Agency said, 'reminded the Nii:on administration that "in the past three years alone there were more than 10 unlawful violations ot Jury Deadlocks the USSR air space. •I "Vlol&UOOI of Ille USSR'a air -1IJ American planes happen by no mew bec:l111e of eome chance, concurrency or circumstance, bJ4 are a resuJt of the general military activity of lhe United S"1leJ In areas adJolnln& _ ~.JioxieL "Uiilon.''-i't s3id. "The Soviet government has repeatedly drawn the attention or the United St.ates government to lh1s activity tbal is openly hostile to Ruasia. 1be preservation of American mUillry bases around the Soviet Union Is a most aerlOU! aource of- danger and dOM not accord in any way with the statements ln favor of an im· provement of Soviet-American relations that were repeatedly made by U.S. leaders." The protest said the Soviet government "expects that the United States govern· ment will display a most serious ap- proach to the position outlined in this statement and draw appn>pria~ coo- cluakml." 'Sweet Ernie' Beats Rap In Dirty Word Mistrial A black UC Irvine graduate student u. rested after using bad words 49 Umes to express his alleged contempt toward radical white students bu beaten tbe rap, at least for the time being. Ernest A. "Sweet Ernie" Smith. 30, was freed Saturday when Judie Donald Dungan ruled the proceedings in Harbor Judicial District. Court to be a mistrial. 1be an-white jury which included seven women deadlocked 9 to 3 for conviction and Judge Dungan's action fo11owed refusal to Jet defense attorney James George individually poll the jurors. Smith, a former Los Angeles radio and television talk show personality, bad been charged wtth disturbing the peace of a university campus following the May 15 incident. . During Ille week-long lr!al, Ille basic contention by the defense was tbat words and word.combinations used by Smith are common and 11.ot offensive to reSldenta of Watts, where be was raised. Deputy District Attorney R u I I e 11 Serber, the prosecutor, disagreed and •P. parenlly coovlneed nine Jurors "1 do•~ wne. A decision will be made this week whether to move for • retrial or dismiss lbe clJ"rl!• e•!i'elf· ' I • ' ~ Ernie and blJ def""° ....,..! contended that be wu addressed in like maMer by the white radicaJs after caU· in1 then names, but no one else wu ar· ,..--Tested. Ht presealed a box ol candy lo Ille pro. Former Banker Mr. Hartz Dies Elmer S. Hartz of Laguna Beach, a retired Barut of America executive and longtime California resident, died Satur· day at the Long Beach Veterans Hospital afttt a long illness. He was 76. There will be no funeral services for Mr. Hartz. Visitation will be held at Bell Broadway Mortuary in Costa Mesa all day Tuesday and Wednesday and burial will be In Oblo. Mr. Hartz, who lived at 502 Treasure Island Trailer Park for the past 11 years, Is survived by a cousin,-Mn. Dorothy h1cFau1 of Los Angeles. Mr. Hartz, a veteran of World War II, came to CaHforn!a in 1923 and was employed by the Bank of America In Los Angeles for is years until bis reUrement in 1959. ' DAILY PILOT .. ...,.., .... iA111M l .. da C• .. "'"• ---......... .., ........... OltAHt;I! COAST POILISMING COMPANY Roh1rf tf, W1M Prllldelll .... l"ulJllNIW J1slt R. Curi.y Vitt ,,_!dent erA Gtnlrll Mll\tfll' l hom11 IC1nil EGllW J)io1111t A. Murphl111 M-gtfil t .i11r ft:ch1rd P. H1U lolllll Or•• 0-1)' E•rtot -c.i. MtM: U) Wnl lllY ST!Wf Jr(IWPOl'I •••ell: nn W•I ..... IO!lll'#INI • L.MllM BMd!: '1f l'Ol'nl A- tllll'ltlfte'lon ••c11: 1111s •••di 1 ... iw1re '611 Clt~le: ~ N911h IEI C.mlno 11•1 secuti.on following final 1rguments and prmntaUon ol Ille cue lo the jW')', aaying tbe brand name was developed too late lo Introduce 11 u defeme evldellce. Some brands of candy !.. this ooe is ao1d primarily In Ille black ghetto -are named Motber-Tbis'1, or Motber·'Ibal's. Sweet Enlle'1 commercially-marketed confeclloo ii simply UUed: Molber -'L City Manager Tells Tax Bill In San Cl.emente Included in this month'• stlnJin& tax bill to San Clemente tupeyers wu • 15.5 percent share lo Ille city, •=rdinc to a atudy made this week by Clty Manager Ken Clrr. . Among other qencles •h.arlnc the revenue from the tu blll were school districts in the ~ with the laraeat amount -53. ?II pe;cent, the County of Oran1e with M:.281 percent and water dlJbicls wilb !be rmllla1 ....... ~ 1.m pereent. ' Included in Carr'• study Js the average dlatribuUon in dollar form from taxes on a mldence of full cub value of $24,000 -., \0 .....,., nsum. Computed at 25 percent or full cub vaJue, tbe aasessable 1mount for the pro. pert}' would be 11,000. The uaessment would break down to $5,000 for tht improvements and Sl 000 for the land, Carr explained. ' Assuming that there are no exemptions or spedaJ assessment.I, the owner of the bypotheUcal property would pay a total of 1$46.'77 in taxes on a total rate of '9.4045 for each .SlOO of assessed valua~ lion. Wllbln lbal lu bill lbe school district will receive about $294; the county $132.76 and the c1ty $84.50. The water district revenue would be $35.41. 'Just Looking,' But Skydivers Miss Needle SEA'M'LE !UPI) Six parachute-wearing young persons never got off the ground with their plan to "go up and look around" from the S»foot high space needle observation deck Sunday night. Five men and one woman, all Jlembers of the Husky Skydiving :lub at the UnlversitY o f Washington, were r e r u s e d ?ermission to take the SI elevator ride to the top of the symbol of the 1982 World's Fair. The group donned skydiving suits and parachutes at the bottom of the leedle. An attendant saw them :hanging clothes and dashed tor a '~1ephone to notify space needle of· ficials. The group was not allowed to board the elevator, even after members erplalned they had no in· lention of jumping. Btv MontKormery, 21 , /resident of the skydivlnrclub, Di she and her friends just wanted ''to go up snd look around" and get some publicity. Halloween Carnival Slated at Palisades Palin du School PT A membcn will sponsor their 1Mual HAllOWffD carnival II Ille C.p~lrlllO 8 .. ch ad>ool Satunfay wllb costume judging, prlies, food c:on- cessiona a bake sale and j:ames. The public ls welcome to the annual event whlch will nm rrom t to I p,m, ' .. ~ -. . . .. The &>vlell allo ..-ect lo Ibo ~ ... ..,.,,.., ...... Ill a\. tenUon lo !be vlolalloa by on "-Icon ptane. 1be stalement to Turkey reminded ~· !bat alter Ille lli&!i! 21 !be_ - American U2 spy plane the Turkl!h ' government said it "will nevtr give planes or allied or other powers the right to use Its bases and its air space in a1· gres.slve purposes capable of lnfllcUnl damage to the seclitity-iiiirtranquWty of its neighbors." But the latest incident "lhowl that tn reality things are . quite different," the protest said. In this connection surprise alone can be caused by remarks made by certain quarters, in Turkey that Turki sh authorities are not answerable for the ac- tions of the violating plane since it belonp lo !be American Air Force." Rulail lald. Capistrano Backs Sign Law Curbs DAIL V PILOT .....,. n ltlctl•,.. KMllllf' En-ol !be Orange County plannert' propooed ICOllk: uu sip -lrOl ordinance hu been pven by th I C.plltrano ll<acb COIDm&mlty -· UOn. FIREMEN PROBE CEILING FOR POSSIBLE INTERNAL FIRE Fire .nd Dntruction Nur UCI; F•miliar Slogons on the Wall The UIOdolloa will~ ... - ol lbe -and ..tabllsbmml of Ill cootroil fn CaplltroDo ll<acb and Jlllla Potnl Prelldeol Arthur B111ate1n aald lbe ... Uon WU by on•ntmow: vote of membera pre.sent. Tile ordinance -I UChl sip control code which would be applied u an overlay restriction on any county sone - hu been suaeatect by cowrty plannen u an instrument to upgrade e.tbeUa in potenllally ICOllk: locales. Tile Orange County Board o I Supervisors hu authorl2ed public hear· lnp O!I !be propooail, Including I billboard ban. Harold Ekman, coanty plamllng com- mllaloner from south Llgunl, lald be··- pecla c:omtderalloa ~ !be sip cootrol detalla lo be ICheduled before lbe com- ml!alon wllbln lbe next lbree ....U. Blaze De~ried UCI's Aldrich Issues Statement UCI Chanctllor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. today issued the following statement following this morning's destruction of the Bank of America branch near cam· pus: "It is abhorrent to me -as I am sure ft Ls to all responsible members of the campus community -that anyone, whether students or others, would engage in senseless destruction and terrorist ac· t1vity of Uiis kind. · assistance. We expect to meet with of· ficials of the Ban k of America on t h i s matter immediately. · "We are also communicating with of. ficials of the Bank of America and wilh the Orange County Sheriffs Dept. to assure them of our cooperation and we are discussing whatever implications this incident may have for the security of the campus and the surrounding com· munity.'' J f UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Egyptiao Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad accuse•1 the UQiled States tqday of risking worl41 war by increasing military aid to Israeli despite Israel's withdrawal from U.M ' peace negotiations. m Riad opened 1i1iddle East debate in t.bl General Assembly -the first time ~ 127-nation body has taken up the Wu · Previous discussions were In the securit council, but Egypt got approval of the assef!1bly debate over U.S. objections i~ would torpedo the peace talks. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban ·has said in advance Israel would not take a ""defensive"· role in the debate . This became clear today in Tel Aviv when the Jsraell army intelligence chief said Egypt and Russia had used the cease-fire to -' build one of the world's most advanced antiaircraft systems OD the west bank or the Suez Canal. Riad, in accusing the United States of obstructing middle East peace through its aid to Israel, said, "the rule of the charter makes it incumbent upon the United States to stand by the countries that are victims of aggressioh and not to support Israel, the aggressor." "By taking this hostile position towards the Arab peoples and by supporting Israel, the aggres.wr, the United States obstructs the realization of peace in the J\1iddle East, endangers world peace and encourages the use of force in in- terna tional relation," Riad said. There had been a possibility up until the last minute that tod ay's debate might be postponed for several days. 'Ibt United States and Britain privately ex· pressed fea rs a dipl omatic disaster could result from the assembly charges and countercharges. But the debate began as scheduled. "It bas become imperative that the United Nations keep the situation in the Middle East under its active attention. that it follow up constantly the efforts for peace and make use of its powers under the charter, until peace is finally secured by the withdrawal of Israel's aggressive forces from all the occupied Arab ter· ritories," Riad said. He declared Egypt's ''abs o I u t e determination to liberate every inch of the Arab territories occupied by Israel'' and aceused Israel of resisting all in- ternational efforts for peace. He said Israel "set out to suppress" the recent U.S. peace initiative ''from the very mo- ment Israel &Mounced its acceptance." In a llmilar endcnement on the a.me night. Siil .,_,., dty ....... ,_ pralaed Ille -ol cioamm'ce In Siil aemente lot lbrowfnC 111 ~ bohfnd the billboard bon. "Beyond the immediate damage to pro- perty and the threat to the safety of citizens which are involved I regret that 11 eeema: nectsw"y to point out that the greatest damage of' an Incident of ·this kind is to student.I and to the university. Peace Officers Receive Tho c:bamber earlier lhla m<11!11 .,. doned !be ~ code wbfch -laundied by I commiU.. of lbe Clplltrano Beach clttmlw. Diver Rescued By Mesa Woman A novice UJn diver wu retCUed by a Costa Mesa woman Sunday morning when he panicked alter loalng blJ mouthpiece in the water off Mou Street Beach In Lquna Beach. Bruce Moore, 19, of Van Nuys, wu ~lng bis second dive of his career at about 9 a.m. Sunday with a friend about 50 yards off short when one of h1a tank straps fell off, causing his mouth piece to come out of his mouth, lifeguards said. The youth panicked, and began yelling for help. Before lifeguards could reach him, Peggy Ward, 21 , of 3191 Gibraltar Drive, Costa Mesa, had pulled him from the water. Miss Ward, who is president of a Costa Mesa skin diving club, 1'as preparing to enter the water when she heard Moore's cries for help. 1'1oore was not inj ured and did not re- quire medical attention. Clemente Flares Only a Prank Distress nares launched during tht weekend from the San Clemente plet sparked several Calls to police and a plane crash scare. The pranksters, apprehended and warned by patrolmen late Frld1y ntght, caused one coastline resident to report a ~lane down In !be oceu OU the Trafllgar beach. One of the OartS rem1ined alilht in I.be water for several minutes. Another flare washed uhore 1t Cypn11 Shore, causlng' several clUiens to call from that beach as well. No formaJ charges were filed. Argument Goes To Extremes It probably seemed to 1 IAguna Beach couple that the sky was falling as they prepared to drive away from a cocktaU lou"*e eatly Friday momlni. Police uld Ille """Pie left !be R4und Table bar •bout I a.m. A man outakSe &be bar began an argumtnt. The oouple entered thlJr coiiverUble. So d I d Ille belllgerent. Bui be w 1 s unorthodox. He climbed on top ot the con- vertible and began Jumpinl up and down until he went thr.ougb the canyq top. Police are lnvestlgalln& the COM of Ille Tlll'•tery Jumper. " "I ba'e met already this ,morning with our campus adminirtrator of student f1nancial aids to diacuu our concern over the poaible Jou of recordl necessary to atudent loans, grants and other kinds of Laguna Schools Elect · Student Body Officers Four Laguna Beach schools have eltcted student officers for the 1970.71 11Chool year. . Andy Hedden was elected the new stu- dent body president of Tb u rs ton Intermediate School Thursday, defeating Roy Jacobson and Anthony Cottam after a week of campaigning for the office. Lisa Hallock defeated Tracy Tinder for the vice presidency of the school , Other student.I elected to posts at Thurston were: Llsa Jungclas. records com- mission~r ; LyM Evans, assistant records commissioner; Oz SI mm on s , com· missioner of boys' intermurals: Nancy Uson, commissio ner of g i r 1 s ' inter- murals and Andy Gillespie, safety com. missioner. At Top of the World Elementary Schoo], Laurel Rodecker was elected president and David Nelson won the of· flee of vice president. cra.ig Ben.son was elected secretary. Honors from Saddlehack A total of 33 peace officers from several jurisdictions have won honors from Saddleback College for completion of the second offering of a special training course geared toward Western White House security. In a ceremony held recently on the Saddleback campus police science in· structor Robert Ferguson presented the class members with certificates from the FBI in recognition of completion of study in the use of nonlethaJ chemical agents. Separate certificates are forthcoming to ·the graduates of the course from the · Commission .of Peace Officer Standards Laguna Authoress Publishes 15th Book The 15th book by Laguna Beach chi!· dren's author Wini!red Wise has just been published by the Parents' Mqazine Press. Titled "~e Revolt of the · Darumas," the book is a Japanese story for ages four to eight with colorful illustrations by a Japanese woman. Miss Wise was recently named one of Laguna's five Leading Ladies of 1970 and the book was an outgrdwth of her recent trip to Japan. and Training In Sacramento. The instructors in the two-week course included specialists from the FBI, Secret Service and the U.S. Department of State. Among the students were Marine military policemen who are permanently assigned to a special security unit for the President when he is in residence at San Clemente. The graduates completing the course from the San Clemente Police De~ mcnt are Don Anderson, Burdell BurCh, Rob. Charlton, f;iorris Cole, Robert Wason, Raymond Bartman, T erry 1.1acAdam , Sid f\icMichael, Earnes t ~tuUer, Chief Clifford Murray, Mike Reischl, Will Stockdale and John Ziegler. San Clemente officer Connie Atkinson also completed the course. She was the only \\'Oi!ian amoog the graduates. Camp Pendlekin graduates included Stelios Hagiperq8, Calvin Grant, Gerald Guthrie, Robert .H;andley, Larry Hosler, Da vid Marfinez, Phil Michael, Maurice Nelson, Orley Van Engelenhoven, Charles Wahtemeyer and Craig Williamson. California Highway Patrolofficer, UC Irvine security police, an Orange County deputy marshal and Oceanside Police patrolmen also were among t h t graduates. DAILY 'ILOT t'Mlt .., •lt!IM ...... ORANGE COUNTY FIREMEN SIFT THROUGH ltU fN AT uc1•s BANK OF "AMERICA BRANCH "-Shortly Alier Midnight Noar UCI, FlomH Flllod Sky ; Oamago Estlm•I• $125,000 ~-------------------~-:-:----------------- ! l ' Monday, Octob('r 26,.1970 Fullerton Footllghters DAIL V PILOT -!{CQTIDl§J lr • • • • . MONDAY partntrt '" fll1115ft1 • docullltfttary 11aln1 Lucy IS thl lllbllC\. OM Cflcllton pl•rs Stew 1111117, Kim'• boJfllt nd. Pocket Sized Rendition Of 'Stop World' Staged HtWPOllT 8tACH • Ofl.J.8l50 W•lt., MO'ftH11 IABBBA STRDSAND :'' OC'TOllElt "" \ m-'"" -(C) ltOl Sllir1tJ Mtd.1lnt la: Siio suaL m -(C) 130) "''"" II· f"iTrs DR·l4." ' By TOM TITUS 01 ftll 01llY ,Ii.I Slllf "STO• THE WOil~ I WANT TO OST Of'F" Given ijle best of conditions. A. mu•1(11 ~ L••l11 ericuu• 1nc1 A11o ' 1:00""' -(C) (60) )lny ....... Im fjsllaf fmf17 (30) IE) Mipllltlt Y11dtz Diii' (li..1 th · belle muso·cal 1nonr Htwl..,. cllrO(IH 11v Antlloll• ere IS no r er1nc1t, p!fn1~1 Jett M•llff!aoru, chor•· around the community theater oor1111tr b¥ Denn• EdW•!'dt, pr1s1nted circuit than "Stop the World bv lh• Ful1erto11 Foottl9M1r1 Fr1<1 .. Y• f!J Qftt ""' (C) (60) Tom 1:45 IJ ~(I) &J Tiit l••I Ll"'9IS Snyder. (C).(60) ''W1 May 841 Betttt Sf'ln· Thirties films Showing Set 111d Sllurcl1~1 lhrouoh NII¥. l A 11 1n, -I Want lo Get Off." Even M1>ck11r1t11a1 ... c ... ,,,, n' 1111•.,. v1111 9 Till A11n Sbow (C) (90) Mtrty Allen, Roman Gabriel, Robert• fleck, Cioni Vidal, .lick P1l1nu, Robert Gr1en, Jim Bt1rd. airs." Mro11 Silvtrman btlltvt1 his youni dlent Is innoc1nt of 1 mairJ. j111n1 char1t. but hit ftth•r -.. 1r"s. Under less than i d e a 1 Drive, Ful~r1on. THE CAST circumstances. and on the 10th Ll111tt11&P ..••...••• scou llYh.111<1 viewing, it still m~es for a Ev11 ............. P1tr1c11 Ch111ee susa11 ....•...... , Donni eaw1rd1 highly enjoyable evening. J1,.,. .................. vlkk1 BUik! A double feature of two 0 ng Co nty' f if I h Cl'IOru• .••••.... LuJ111n1 connen. D IHHIH!l NFL """' "'"' flltbl51 ·(CJ (ZlA. hr) L.A. Rims vs. 9:0011 9 m ,..,..,,. . l.F.D. (C) B b k I I I ra e u s P.iiov ........ Gulblrt. 011111 Lr1l1~. (lO) Mlllli Is nimld tM Msl· us Y B e r e e Y mus ca S, version in six seasons o( the LINH Mt t<11v11. M1rv LYnn Sh .. , Minnesota Viklnp at Minnesott. O Cet Sm1rt (C) (30) '1he Dud Spy SC11wl1." Maxwell Sm1rt'1 life dtpendt on whether Of .. h1 un bett I pool W rk. dres.Md woman tn the t"OUnty, "Gold Digge rs or 1935" and sprightly". ,strongly sc or e d --'"-'-' _w_'"-'------- 0 9 @m Nit MNdq Mlwlr. "Foollight Parade" are this Anthony N e w I e Y -L e s 1 i e (?) -NTl11M In .. Two Won't C.-week's classics to be shown Bricusse circle of life is cur- (dr1m1) '69 -Rod St•lpr, Cl1lr1 Wednesday and Thursday, rently being produced by the m Thi Flillbtoftn CC> (30) m 11 , .... • nw <C> <60> 'Tht SIUl·Drivin1 Mtn." M•rio Andretll, . rernanclo lamas. Fetieit .Farr, Dick Smothers, Edward Binns tnd Gre1 Mullavey auest. fl!I .......... ..... (C) (30) "Bbd 81ndin1.'" i!tl])CBS "'"' (t) (JO) 13 Outreadl/Mllitalt (C) (30) 111-,. (C) (60) @n Winp .. AdYtntDre (C) (30) lli)T,...""'""""' 1301 1:25 m luplt Pllltkll (C) l:lo B tandid C.••r• (30> m Th• flfint: Jrlun (C) (30) '111 Vflfld." Sisler Btrtrillt interrupts 1 mobsters' meetinr. @ @ •IC -~) (30) m JOJCI Qen Coob (30) ''Wlnll1 Melon." 9 Cl) MJ fmritt Mlftill (30) I:) Pltttrll rti Urine (30) 8' Thi hert Report (C) (30) J1dl: lllh1m, Kim M1rrin1r. ml f1tftlm d1I AlllOr (30) 9:30 Bloom, Judy GMIOn, Dame Peau Oct 28 d 29 Ashcroft. The humdrum life or 1 · an · Fullerton Footlighters and 11res ex&CUti'Ve lfld hb: tchoolte•tfl· Gulld members will be ad-directed by Anthony Brandl, 1r wif1 is shaken to lb flimSJ miUed for, $l u d non-whose Anaheim Playhouse in- foundations when 1 ptrnrls!ivt girl members for $1.75 at the 8 augurated the "Stop I h e inters their little world. p.m. showings at the Orange - ,,. 'Illeater, 172 N. Glassel!, in World" cycle back in 1965. Ont r , .. ) (60) Brandt's "Stop the World'' mF....,...,. (C) (30) "Th•I ~O~r~anig~e."=========::~===='=====j, Nigh! of the Shark." Pert L Jlrnul; Dtl)' guests. fD••ct-(t) (60) I!) Outrudl/FD• (C} (30) IE lntrlc• (30) I!) Nallcllt (SO) BALBO~ 673-4048 NOW SHOWING TWO GREAT ATTRACTIONS e TONIGHT'S BEST BET! * THE DORIS DAY SHOW! esm••« .., i<l <•o> Myrn1 Gibbons Is duped Into a la$hlon Show sabolap plot when Doria models for dlllcntr Mon· flint (Johnny Ha)'1!1ftr). Held Over QllfWI (C) (30) Q)PMYJltlult (60) ft:) Musittlt/hslor'I Desk (C) (lii) Ill '--" (CJ (30) ~45 D <Hlill lll"°""" '.., (C) {j{l) "The Wix Ju"gle." While the trio lnvestigalts the syndicate'• grip on th1 recording lridustry, 1 singing star is munlertd. Guests are Linda Mtrsh, Rtlblrt Yuro, 3rd BIG WEEK 7~ II CIS Evenlnc f'lft (C) (30) Jued Martin, Didi Patt1rJOn and Witter eron~ite. R1gis Pllilbin. Dell Nit Nia:llt!J Nm (C) (30) 10:«1 II 9 @ Cnl l....tt Sllew (C) . (60) Barnadette Peters and Donald ll;;;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;::::;:::;:::;::;;:::=(I D•vld Brinkley, John Ch1ncellor, . O'Con~r ituest. I; Frink McGee. • l 0 m Nm (Cl (60) 0 Wlltt'a MJ I.JAi. (C) (30) O T1ll Saint (C) (GO) '8 I Lewi Luq (JO) ED rmnc UM (C) (60) 1111 1"111- CD l•lt thl Cl.a; (C) (30) blo Stof)'." Comm1nder Llord @ 00 Jalia (C) (30) Buthlr, ca:pt1in of the Pueblo. t im his aecount ti whit blpo fD Speculllioll (C) (60) (R) "'TIM p1Md in Jtnu1rr. 1968, wtien New Catholic Radicalism." frtnclne Horth Kor.n llghtint bolb air· DuPleud: Grar, 1uthor of ~Dsvine !'°undid the ship •114 drltpd ii Disob9dienu," •rid former pri1$1 into Wonsan harbor. BllM Bonf)lfle guest. fE Ml M-*' (30) QI(]) Ttaltl ., Co11M1111111e11 (C) I!) T.S.Ci ... ~ (2 ht) 19or111 u. Uviflc Word (Cl (30) 10:15 D MoM: CCI "'lllt wni.t • . stat' (w11t1rn) 'SS-«ilrk Doua:ln. &> itc.ri9 (30) Je1n111 Crtin, C!1ire Tmor. (1lMi CI:)Si111Pltlnwte M1ri1 (55) show will 119 intmuptm at 11:00 fOf a hllf-llOl.rt lllWSCht) 7:30lla@ l11.11S111ob (C) (60) • M1rshal Dillon is comarMI by thrtt 11:30 II) 1111 Jollll .. CC> (30) Siowc lndl1111. Coritlusion or two· @II) hny ..... (60) part 1pisode, "'Snow Train," fl!m1d II) CMdls J Qlltlnn (30') In U.. Blam Hills of South D1kola. ll:tD 119(IJ111 ._ (CJ ID@ @ l!Jhd --ID@ OO l!J-i<l (Cl (30) Vtn Johnson ruesls on IJ INllll Ill AcliM (C) Red'• Halloween show. 8 Jffl'V (C) (30) U ,.... (C) am Bonds. . D lll..tni t: "Th Qillrt11'1 0 MUiien $ Mor11: (C) "'lotlben ffOur" (dr1m1) '62---Audrer Hip.' 1-52"' (dr1m1) '57-Hrta111 Wood, burn, Shirler M1cl1lne, J1mei Efrem Zlmbalist Jr~ Kall Milden. G1mtr. A ~rgeant who restnts his tum· m Yo1 DMt SaJ (C) m1ndin& offictr Is ord1rtd Oft a II) Movie: "Vici Squed"' (mystalY) aecrtt mialot1 to test • B·52 '~dwttd G. Roblnaon, P1ultttt bombllr. Godd1rd, It T. Steveiis, Porter Ha1L m TM> " r:.-"""" i<l 13~ ID"'"' ,_ I<> IR> Q)htlll leOlll (C) (60) "C1·1t:lOfJ i3(()MlrYlriffi11 (C) Guests bola." Royal Dano 1ueati a• 1n 1r1 Rich1td CNmber11in, Dinny "This is the kind of movie a reviewer should pay to see!'' -N• Yor.t Po1t Starts Wednesday, Oct. 28 old tr11sutt huntar. H111, K1rtn V1ltntlne, Jtl'll HOW*rd, II!) SelKted fll• (C} (30) Mrs. Jtt.sa Unruh. j~;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::=;1 IE Mu f..tl •• bl Mor (30) ''"ail_ .......... ID@ 00 Ill"'"" .._ (C) Bob Newriart is substftirt1 holt. Oii .. ie• (C) l:OO D ~@ m LIUcft·ln (C) (GO) D Movie: (C) "Miii Wilfloat I ''Row1n 1nd M1rtin's Boo·ln." In star" (cont'd.) Sae 10:15 Jlltlns. an Hril, leery u tut1 lo Halloween, m Mowle: "Tiit C1n. lr1,a Qh:on Welles, 1ctor, m1giciln 1rid StOfJ" (drama) '60 -Sal Mineo, student o! !ht occult, 111ests. Su.san Kohn•r, James Derr"'-SU.n Ol1Vtr. B Vlrfhlla 1ra11at1 Siow (t) (60) l2:00 B 11...,: "'TlM R••erblllt .,.. ml• Tell tlll T1111Ji (C) (30) lllrn" (IXllT!ldy) '42 -Wil1'111 fE1 W.rlll "'*' (C) (60) Holdtn, Brian OonleYJ. !I!)"" ""' i<l 130> 12,45 D "'"' i<l 1111.1 -i<l l60> 1,aoe...., ....,. .. ""' .... (11hentu11) '56 -Rory Calhoun, 81rt>1r1 R1ish. l:G5 t1D Aqul ,,.. htln• (25) ''"" a i1l"""' ...., i<l (30) .. ·trt11 and Unel1 tl11TJ becom1 TUESDAY DAYTIME MOVIES a-<t> 2'!0" "'"''"" .. "" Dq (t) FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 • NOW PLAYING ONLY ON CABLEVISION ''MARK OF ZORRO'' STARRING DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS Th• Mir• of Zorro w11 Dout F1h b111k1' firtf •dv1ntur1 fUm •nd 111 011 1lyl1 for 111 th• f l1mboy1nt c.lo11r·•11d·1wo«f 1pi1od1t th1t w1r1 to fol!ow, A1 th1 f1111ou1 M1 .. i(11'1 Robln Hood who C•r•11 hi1 initl.11 wll1r1v1r h1 9011, Doug elt1r111t11 11 • fop •lld then 11 1 cru· rider for the ri9ht1 of oppr1111d Me .. Pc1n1. Zotto it 1 pictur1 f111t 111ver t11r1s ih1U 11rlou1!v. 1v111 th1 h11¥i1J l'I nit r11lly bid. NEWPORT: Monday through Friday al 9 PM; also Sat., Sun. at 6 PM. MiSSION VIEJO : Mon.; Wod., Fri.' at 9 PM. Local Channel 3 . Cablevision Call 642°3260 ''There's More To SH On Cable TV!" INltALLATIOH 114.tS is a pocket-sized, some\\'hat capsulized account of t~e show that proved the highlight of the 1969-70 county season at the Costa J\tesa C i v i c Playhouse. At Fullerton, the production is squeezed jnto the tiny J\iuckenthaler C e n t e r \'.'here cramped seating and poor visibility beyond the first ro•v of seats hamper the playgoer's enjoyment con- siderably. Apparently for economics of lime. the dircclor has am- putaled the opening and clos- ing scenes of the show, \\'hich carry out its circus at- mosphere theme and un- derscore the final line of the play. The choreography, an essential factor for in no ot her musical is the chorus so int- Costa Mesa Announces 'Opal' Cast A comedy centering around the theme of a t tempted murder will be presented by the Costa Mesa C i v i c Playhouse as its second pro- duclion of the season next month, "Everybody Loves Opal" by J ohn Patrick is currently in rehearsal under the direction of Pali Ta1nbellini. playhouse resident director. • Lois Wilson will take the ti· tle role of Opal, a little <lid lady \\'ho is heavily insured by three unsavory characters who seek' to do away with her and collect as beneficiaries. The villainous trio \\1111 be enacted by Ray Scott. Kathy Ladd and Rick G u nst. Completing the cast will be Bob Bannick and Dennis Backstrom in cameo roles as an insurance doctor and a policeman. Richard An.der se n is technical director for the show, assisled by Ron Gibb. "Opal" will open Nov. 21 for a three-weekend run at the Communi ty Center auditorium on the west gate of the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Advance reservations may be made by calling the Costa Mesa Rec re atio n Department at 1134-5303. ''Soldier Blue'' ALSO '1Rider on the Rain" •OTH lH COLOilll ~trf TIUTEI ~-.ff ...,. ((IUf -.a.--.--·· 673-6260 Exclusive Showing Phono 673·6260 IOJIOIRt OOUIMStS ,_ , Zf!RO ltlOSIG. HARRY B1LAFIQN're ~l:ls. LGVING" -Al.SO PLAYIHO - A "" fun"Y •••fe "Goodbye, Columbu1" • portant. is necessarily closeted into lhe microscopic playing area. 1ninimizing much of its potential effect. "PAINT I YOUR WAGON"·: COlO< -ALSO- Gl1t1 Co111,ltlll KIM Oerltor ''NORWOOD" Then there is the role of Lil· llechap, a highly p r i z e d assignment in musical theater. wh.ich falls on the shoulders of 17-year-ol d Scott Bylund and repeatedly threatens to topple off. Bylund possesses a strong Mollldoy t11111 Fridtly . "WAGON .. '9t 1:40 -Mo11. t~r11 Sot.- "DOLLY" ot 7 •M t :JO voice -though he lacks thell::==========''==~;;:~;;~;,,~ vocal range to do justice tot the show's superlative score - and scores high on energy level, but he is years away from the depth demanded of Littlechap. Bylund skips thi-ough his role as though rushing to catch a train, missing much of the juicy double entendre and potent satiri c punch of which his character is capable. Only in the late r scenes. pl ayi ng the e!der and re rl ective statesman, does young Bylund take a firm grasp on his role. In Patricia Chaffee. the Footlighters have con1e up \Yith a strikingly beautiful Evie, an actress or pl easing voice and high stage presence. However, she too falls short of her potential, struggling with the four accents she is called upon to convey and aJlowing herself to be rattled by her er· rors. Much more seasoning is needed here as well. Donna Ed\\'ards. w h o doubles a s choreographer and shows an imaginative touch in the compressed sur· roundings, and Vikki Budd are bright and effective aS the two daughters. And the chorus. cut b.Y necessity to six girls; func- tions as a smoothly operating unit. blessed with character and individuality as '"·ell as an abu ndance of physical charm. M u s i c a I accompaniment, limited to a single piano which mars Liltlechap's scenes with his employer, comes through acceptably. although Dave Brubeck might be a blt surprised to find himself in the Newley-Bricusse. score. \Vhatever its limitations. however, "Stop the \Vorld" makes for an entertaining eve ning -if you're lucky enough lo get a seat in the first or second row. The musical continues for two more weekends · at t h e f..tuckenthaler Center. 1 1 9 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. CALL 546-3102 • 1••1111 llM~.ii \~~ ~ ------•ca --····---Mlllllllllll ... 1. 1&'1, HlOO lml1111!1•---' =::.:.:'=-.:... NO RESERVED SEATS -·-·--FREE PARKING T•----- diary otamad housewife • fr•n~ pe11 v film Sll fl\nv ·richard benjamin carrie snodgress ·frank langella z.11 ·111.aavur ~Pll'l'I WAZ.SB'" AJso -JIOflN Morff• J.ck PolOMo Also • L;za Minelli' "TELL ME THAT YOU LOVE ME. JUtiiE-MOoN" IGPI FOR 1 WEEK ONL YI RATED "G" IT'S FO~ EVERYBODY ••• • •• . . . . • COtiT l!WT. ~f flAtAAf>!U~ B!VO., • N""'RT IEA(;H • .. &-OIAll Call 644-0760 Charlton Heston and STARTS WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 28 JUl..lffi ROCK .AND~WS (-iUDSON ~DAAllINGWlll@ Geraldine Chaplin In "THE HAWAIIANS" (GP) "**** IT'S AU. SO FUNNY!" I HIGHUT M'IWI I -N•• ¥Olli: °''" .... MWlfl>OllBSIW.Gm ••• "illl" . . ' . . . Itl·1\:S·ll . I I I Mo11. thr11 Fri. -7:00 I ':45 -S•t. -1:00-1:30-6:00·1:10·1 l;OO -Su". -1t l0·4t00·6:1 0·t:~O A ROS$ HUNlUt~ AIRPORT -BURTUNCAmR • DEAN MARTIN ·-"O" Barbra Strei11nd and Walter Matthau Alq Ci.1tf.t1ft H•tH • Cier•lillllO Cli.,lia 111 "Thi H•wollolll" CGPl .; ' L &¥¥2 a 4¥& ESZX±& sos t a @ q J ToFighiWar Complete-New York Stock List Group Ca n MfW YOJll( (A,.I • 'Moftill'I' .. ""1Pi.le Mtw 't'ot'lr. SIOCll l•Wfllt ,..ioH: W in Ec olo gy Problem Battle By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI Tiii 01lly Pile! Sl1H America Is now in a position to win the war against world C(.'(l!ogy problt!ms by using Uie managcmenl and technical tools developed to cope with the problems o! outer space. Thnt Is the <.'Onclusion or a teliQ} or 14 top-flight aerospace WASHINGTDN (UPI) _ -e.pa.-1&" chaired by 11 The Civil Aeronautics bnerd tihgtOn Beach resident Charles has aulhuriztld the Southern L. Stone. • Pacific and Santa F e ~ir findings, released to- . Railroads to buy Southern day 1n a ~O-page report, call Pacific Air fnlg!l!.._Ioc. and !?r establishment ~f a ~ew Express Air Freight, lnc-:-spac&-goal-one whicb_brmgs respectively. Jt is the first and .end to rhetoric an~ e.x- time railroads have been cuse , one which le!s .all Ide on permitted to enter the air earth. brea~e a little .~eeper freight forwarding bus· and live a htlle longer. iness. The group, called Ecology a n d lmplementatir>n Com- mitment Team (EDICT), was formed from Southern California scientists several months ago to solve en· viroflmental problems o( this nation wllhln a decade. ac- cording to Stone, a program manager for North American Aviation. "We have tools necessary for-lmplementaUon or a sue-=~ ·'t~1• cessruJ pro1ram to end con-ACF •net lAI I -lion of t """"... ' anuna our wa ers, aur """" ~ ,. soils, and our aJr; to funnel :=""~~ua ·':; lhe congested traffic Into a ~0':',' '·°'° rapidly moving, safe traffic :1~~~ c~• patterns; and to bring about :~ ,.Jnc.- solutions to man" athcr pro-A~ >a.11t.1s I Al~ It .609 b1ems p I a g u I n o our AJ 1ndv11r1M O Alfronl 11 bwnanlty,•1 the report states. Ala Go• 1.1• AtaUc• lnllfl ''It ts up to dynamic Alblnor.21 leadership to utillre these tools iF;nMi' ft. .to effect the desired results ·~=~T'~ before theR retOUTCes are Jost :ii::~ ~!: forev ... ~ " At1tt1Lw .., i o;;i • Allet P'w l.n In effect, Stone and his team :11~.~11 1·\ -en&lneen suggest a !11'=11~., ·~/. mobilll.ation of money and !1tl:'s!" .11: manpower similar to NASA's ::~~~ Apollo prom-am whlCh in-Ako. 1.90 e• A,...JSl,og 1.tO volved more than 3 O o O O AM&Ac: .so persons. A side benefit of ihat ::e~,E•p1f= plan, of course, would be ::_~-iW employment re 11 e f for :~1i~i ·~ thousands of a e r o s p a c e :;'r~= ;~ workers who lost their J-obs Am&Ou 1.10 • Am c.n t.10 because of. dwindling govern-~£1" p1 1.1s .. mClll'I oll1:I DENVER (UPI) -Slan- dard Oil Co. (Indiana} Pan American Petroltun1 subsidiary said It will build a natural gas precessing plant in the New Peoria oil field 40 miles east or Denver with a daily capacity of eight million cubic feel Money's Worth ment contracts. .., c1111n 11 .. AC,.,Sva ,olO Specifically, the task force ~&. J'.l.'!, l't(Ommends t he following :Wi.,~11114 e-0rrective aleps if the war ~.~1..r.:r against poll ution is to be won : Am""V~'·,rt. SYOSSET, N.Y. (UPI) - Kollsman Instrument Corp. has obtained a $7.S mHlion order for Se.rv~Pneumatic altimeters from Wright-Pat· terson Air Force Base at Dayton, Ohio. Employers Ponder Christmas Prese11t -ArTange for a firm federal if·~"~'!Z commitment to reduction of :~,, . ecology problems mby 50 per-~ 1:2, cent by the end of the deca.1-=nvnt .so uc, 1..111 coupled wilh $100 millioo fun-AMe ~ 111 • LEGAL NOTICE ·~~~~~~~~~~~~-· ""' MOTICI' TO Clll'OITOJIS -OF aULt; TltANSFllJI • • f$KL .i114111 v.c .c .1 .Nolle! II herelw 9lv~ lo I~ CredltO'I 'cit CLYDE E. 8"1lN"RO Ind MARILYN 8ARNAR0, Tr1n1lttor1. ~ builneq .. r;u. .. ins Plrk AVtn<il, Cotl• Mfow. Cllllol'f QI Or1<1H, 511~ ot C11lll11ml1, ~I • bult tr1n1ler It •IMNI ,.. be moG• to SAN8AR AQUARIUM Plt00UCT$, INC., 1 ~•tlorl, 1'r1n1l~f't, whoM bvllftftl ilddr ... II lt9S Port Avenoe, Cotlil Mtill, Countv of Or'"''' Slife ot C1111omi.. TM Pl'-1'f 10 bl lr1n1tertd k lot.llN et lt9S P•rtr: A-. Cosll MHI, COIHlt'f d Or11111, $11111 ot Clllf0<n!1. S.ld .,,_,,, It dtKrlWd 111 -II u : AH llOCt ln trildt, fl•tu•t'I, ec11.11Pnlenl •NI 9ood wlll of ltlill trOPlcll fllll &. -IMln bva!MU ... _ II ~ &. Milrllvn'1 <. Tre.ok•I Fl.rl ilnd loctl'ld 11 1"5 P1rll . A-· Cotti MeM, County el Onnoe. ,1(•1' ol' C11lforftl .. •• l111 lluhl ,,.,..,., w111 be con111mm'1ed "' Qt lfter ""' '"" dl'l' of "-'""· lt'1ll, 11 ll):OI A.M. 11 F1rmeo ilflCI : Me1diilnb a.nt of L-8fldl, 3112 Pine .('vti>vc, L-B<l!Kfl. C1111nt'f llf Lot ~ 5111!9 of Cl llfotflltll EK"""' Mo. 1.n1.u+M8. 'So fi r 11 ~ ,. floe Tr11111fer~. 111 MititP _,, ilNI .oclri1511o1S v9H bot ttle ,Tr-~ for .,.. ltl'ft 'l'PfJ. lall NII, 1•1: -· D•tecf: Octobtr It, 1'70. $AM8Alt AQUARIUM PROOUCTS, IMC. A cor-•tlon, Tr1111ft"I'"' llY J1mn L. llorbo\W, S.C./Tfffl. , ' -8Y Mk llHI E, Sil...,.,. Prtt, Fli_. & MWcN!lh ..... et ..... •udll ............ _ .:... Mkll. c 1•1tnii. Miil Pl,lblltl'M!d Or11'1H Co.t O.lly PUot , tl<fO!Mf> 1'. 1tn 19n-111 -LEGAL Nal'ICE SUPEllt°" COUJIT 01" THE STAT!! 01" CALll'OJIHIA l'Oll • TME COUNTY OF OJIAHOE • H•. A41U2 NO.TICE OF Ml!AJllNG OF Pl!T1Tl0111 POJI ,llOSAT• 0" WILL .. NO FOlt L'£TT•Jts Tl!tTAMINTAllY caoHO WAIYIOI .Ei!11l1 o1 DOROTHY S. MUSGRAVE. .i.-k_,, '' DOROTHY 8. STEWART M~~~"i'~s ~:~~GIVEN Tho! M••· rj+ M~r1w tlil• flltd ri.r1ln I J>elllion ~. l'raba!! of win •nd tor l1•u•ne1 ol """.,.' THt1ll'lilflt1ry to P1tni-r, "''"'tnte 11> v.llk h '1 m.ae tor hirl!\e• ,. .. 11cv11~. 1nd 11111 IN lime Ind pll(t Of l{t1r1,,. !IW wme ll1s ~ HI for f+c,11...,btt lJ. 1t7t. II t ::JO 1.m , in '""' c:o.wt<-91 d DtHrtrMnt No. J of Mid • (Wrl, II )00 (1¥1c Center Drive West, In lhf (!IV of Silf!ll An1 (11lllotn!1. Oiled October JJ. 1f79. W, E. ST JOHN, • CounlV Clerll ll*'1 A, E11!1111111 • '"' HI ....,. IW\fYl rl Sull• N.,.,.W Ml '<•II Mttoa, C11llerlll1 tu,. T .. 1 11141 ,....... AlftrlllY tw Pirtlfi.tw P11bll1htd Ori-COi$! Dell'f PllOl, Od~r lol, 1t, lD. 1'10 ltll>IO ' NEW YORK (UPI) -A special federal gz-and jury stu- dying industrial water pollu.- tion has indicted Standard Brands, Inc., charging 100 violations of a 71-year old federal law regarding waste and refuse disposal. Washburn Wire Co. was indicted for 50 violations of the same .1099 Jaw. 'The law provides for fines o( $500 to $2,500 for each violation. The two firms must plead to the indictments on Oct 29. ST . LOUIS !UPI) - Anheuser-Busch, 1 n c • , an- nounced it will build a $50 million office and industrial complex on a tract adjoining jts brewery at Columbus, Ohio, to be completed over the next 10 years. NEW YORK (UPI) - KiMey National Service, Inc., announced it bas b e g u n negotiations that may lead to the purchase of Simon & Schuster, Inc., a leading book publisber. PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) - Omark Industries, Inc., says it has developed a new bumper shock absorber system that can greatJy reduce damage lo cars in slow-speed collisions. The devjce hardly will be ready to market beofre the 1973 model year, the company said. ERLE, Pa. (UPI) -Zurn Industries, Inc., has obtained a $2.2 million contract to sup- ply a large generator for the Municipal Electric P o w e r System of Key West, Fla., with unique pollution controls • By SYLVIA PORTE R You already have or you soon v.·iH have at least a clue to the Cbristmas present your employer will give you some time before the end of 1970. If it's to be a cash bonus instead of a gift, you probably have some idea of the amount and whether it will be more or less than Jast .year's bonus; How will YOUR gift and/or bonus compare to those being received by others this year? What are today's key trends in company gift.giving? -Despite 1970's recession, profit decline and s t o c k ntarket crash. a full six out of 10 U.S. companies will give Christmas gifts to employes. customers and prospective customers in I 970 -v.·ell above 1965's 55 percent. And chances are strong, if you do not receive a gift from your employer, that you'll get a c.ash bonus or a slice o! this year's profits. -It's also llkely that ii you're among the millions who receive g1lts, thus year's gift will be at least as expensive as last year's. However. about one in rive of the gift-giving companies will cul back their spending lhis year because ol toda y's money and business squeeze. 1'he Christmas budget, for many companies, is an obvious place to trim. 'Ibe.se are just a few of the findings from a survey con· ducted by the Dartnell Corp. in Chicago, of 500 corporations with nearly 2,000,000 employees. Important new trends are now emerging in company gift-giving, Dartnell ' found. Among them : The list of Christmas gifts ls lengthening. Among the newer types of gifts are books, flowers and house plants. These are io addition to such old timers as: hams. lurkeys, candy. cheese and liquor : calendars. di aries and desk equipment; gift certificates; appliances and housewares: assortments of company pre> ducts. Only rarely do com· panies select individual gifl~ for individual cmploycs and customers; in most cases, everybody -inc l uding employes and customers - gets the same gift. The average price tag on a company Christmas present is climbing. Today. most com· panies spend belween $5 and $25 per gift vs. under $5 as recently as 1965. And a sizeable number of companies -one in 10 wholesale com· panies. one in seven service companies, and one in 20 manufacturing and retail com· panies -spends more than $25 for each gift. l\tany companies now .forbid employes to accept gifts cf any N?al value from suppliers who might be attempting to gain favor through Olristmas gifts. Says one company: "Business relationships should be based on good business practices, not 'bought'." Rules another, a Chicago insurance company: "No present of ·any kind may be accepted. Any gift received • will be returned." According to the survey, more than ha1f of the com· panies either flatly prohjbit employes from accepting any gifts from suppliers or restrict acceptable gifts to those with a minimal value. Increasingly, companies are replacing individual Christmas gifts with pooled contributions to charitable causes -in the name of employes a n d customers: one in five com- panies reports it b a s substituted such a pool for Christmas presents. Increasingly, too, companies are substituting a cash bonus for the traditional turkey or ham -with the bonus based on the number Of years of service or on the wage level of the cmp\oye. Even if you are among those who will receive neither a bonus nor a gift this year, take heart: The near certainty is that you'll at least get the "girt'• of a three -day Christmas weekend, s f n c e Dec. 25 falls on a Friday this yea r. And for mi llions. this holiday will stretch jnto a four-day v>'eekend. This "vacationette" could be worth a Jot more than a letter opener or a fruitcake! ··~· ding for initial-phase projecb AN•~;·1t during the first 11 monlhs. ~] 11 ~1 -Enlist the ~ of NASA ~s.J~, ~ program managers to manage ::mtr ,.;7' the first phase and provide ~:.i"' 1 7 continuity for future tasks. Am se.,ri'l A Sut•t 1.60 -Arrange a p erson n e I As...., pfA?.u management program to place ~ :'t ,.. Anl TIT 2M excess aerospace talent bact An1W'Wk1 .5' on the drawing boarda to plan ~ 7'~ 1.u the eUort. "1nwon M . ..... ... -Use a federal planning ~K'~· .. anide for career development AMP inc .se •-Am~ Corp of all job stills that are heavl-~~~ .J'"o Jy dependent on government ~,J:"I and government contractor -'"501.~,.,. • 1 And .J:[, 1.211 emp oyment. ~ oOll ~ iA --Research the v o t i n g :!1 ~°'a"..so records of all e l e c t e d ARA s~ 1.01 ,_ . th. , A•cal1N .1GI represenwilJves on 1s tsSUe Arcn D•ft 1 • ArltPSvc 1.01 and publicize them so the peo. Ar11ns os .20 I ho Armco51 IAO p e know w they should vote ArmcG pn,10 for in the next election. ~~~ 1._ij5 1be EDICT group claims :~'f~'s .,. d I f AmiRub \,6(1 pos11ve eve op m e nt o Ara Coro .to ecologlcal 30Jutions is both fil~ di'r'1.~ logical and IJmely. 'lbey :i~1B::!. "° h th I t Aste! DG 1.10 c arge a r ec e n pro-AKITr•n .o~ nouocements from Washington :rrcp1 '~• lack specific factors, such as ~:11Rc111et;/1.1f ' ·-·-.. d .,. Al lllcll pf 2 WR.Q, goal.:I, an spec1 IC AllRcll ott.IO dates for thei r ac-~ll:'t1:; 1 compUshment. ~Jf.J:<Pr':: Pinto Still Far B'ehind Volkswagen Autol'flh'I Ind Avco Co .to. A..uo l>!l.ft Av.,.,. Pd .ft AvMt In .20o Avllf'f pll.50 AVOtlPd I .I~ AltecOll .131 81ll:rOllT .tS 8111 GE 1.11 B1IG pflU.!~ B1nePnt .I~ B1bo:k W ,SO B11t191" J>ll .1J Bk of Cot 1.:M B1nt of MY 2 Bltllt Tr 1.M Bir!) 011 1.511 DETROIT (UPI) -Ford l:~ 'i:C :~ . g•tn Mff Motor Company's Pinto will a:lr ~.,:. pf 1 win the domestic subcoffipact 111m1" 012 • .so &.uld!Lb .IO sales race in 1971 but will still ::;~~c11: :l: " I V jt.-.. u Bt1rl1111 I t r a 1 o ""3wagen by a t:•t Fds 1 sizeable figure,'' Ward's Auto B:::'O~ ·:'ti Bi!'Kll .tilr ,15 World predicts. R:~:.."'11.&0so The industry publication's ::~~ ~: October-November e d i t i o n rier:,1:"~~cr' "d Pi t , · · B""'hf 1.60 sa1 n o s main e-0mpet1tor, a""'1l Pf J Chevrolet's Vega, is burdened !~l':.s'.'° by a production Jag caused by r=:1 pf::~ the General Motors Corp. g~W2.w strike and a higher price tag. ::;~ ,.i,:, However, Ward's said ·the &tnMC cor11 Vega will still make a battle in !\::t11~&: 1 ~ the sale race. . e=._Jmr ·:f LEGAL NOTICE ,_..,. Cl!ltTll'IC .. TE OF •uso1E1S. WILKES -BARRE. Pa. (UPI) -Westinghouse Elec- tric Corp. has broken ground for a $14.2 million plant to demineraliie :icid w a t e r drainage in abandoned coal mines in Hanover Tbwnship near the Susquehanna River. The plant is to be in operation in 1972 and is expected to pr~ duce five million gallons of ultrapure water ditily, Gov. Raymond P. Shafer took part in the ground breaking ceremonies. The plant's design culminates five years of rcsearc:h by Westinghouse. First Natio11al Bank Aroerlcan P.totors r---ra· l111e 1H11 f>M ._ • ""'.,... BluBtt pft, } uon's Gremlin, introduced last Bof»J• ll•k• spring as the first domestic ==~~:ic~2i° subcompa:ct. will place third ~'1.~' domestil!ally, mainly because =~":: ~~s AMC doesn't have the same Bot E<111 1.14 production capacity, the arti-:~:ll~:so cle said. t !:,'f:, '~ • l'ICTITIOUS NAME l,.. undenlonlcl doel Ctr11tY •II• I• (On· •~bnn. • bullnen 11 •1t Orc"icl A,,.., C0<6ti1 HI Mir. C1tifornll, 1,1ncler "" fie· tllleul llnn Nlmf of K .. REN JOY KNOWS -111111 i11icl flrm 11 wml'OMd OI !tie toltowl"f ""°"' wlloM n1me 111 tv!I •nd •llCI ol retldfllCt t1 l l follows: PALO ALTO (UPI) - Hewlett-Packard Co. has an- nounced it will build a factory at Grenoble, France, to employ 3,000 workers if the French government approves. A 4f>.acre tract will be bought from the city of Grenoble. The company is In medical. analyUcal, computing a n d other e lectroni c in- strumentation. Planning 8th Branch ~. . . d BrlirMv ..i 1 1 uc magazine, a1me at er11 ,.., .~ management in automotive =~~~~.[:·'~ and related lndustrieS, chose rrkw:i~I ~J Pinto bec1use it i$ prictd $172 Bkh'nUG 1.n • llrown Ct 1(11ren JO'I' HlllnlU. •If Orthld Avf., CGt"Cl"I dltl Mir, C1ll1otn\1, 011H OCT. t. lt'1ll Ker.,.. Jn HIM.I• Sl1t1 et C1llfot'nl1. ~-t Counf'f: 0.. ()(toblr t, 1970, !HIOrt ,,, .. I No",., i' P\/Ollt In Incl '1)r a•ld 511!•, 11e..,...~lly '...,..,..., K1ren JD'f Hllll'll\I ~-Ill ml '.,JO Ill tll9 --Wilow "'""" II Wbl(tlf). ' td' i. tlle wll!lln ""'"""""' .,,,. 0•"1V;-'"9td al\f! flK\llfd ttot MllW'. -. • (QFFICIAWEALI MAltY W:, HENlllY :-·· • Mf)l1ry P11bllc -C:tlllotn\1 PtlnCINI Oflkl In ~-'-',.,. ..... "'• , My eemmlulo!t E•i>I'" ,. ' HO¥, 1~. lfn ltUbllUlld On.nw C:cnl D1it¥ Pile!, ·Oc.r. 12. It, U. Mow. ?. lti't 111>70 •.; LEGAL NOTICE Continuing growth o[ the First National Bank of Orange County is aceented by the fact that they're already in plan- ning stages of establishing an eighth facility in Anaheim although the sixth and seventh units have.. been opcoedJ n less than 11 year, Newest branches In the TETERBORO. N.J. (UPI) Tu -, --Compu!ICan. Inc. says It has group are st1n s unit at Red developed a new page optical Hill and Walnut, particularly scanning mochine that can well-oriented to the Irvine read text or various sizes al Industrial Complex. and in "4 Ll!OAL 11or1c• s~eds of JOO characters a se· Vllla Park al Santin.go and :•'WOTICI! II ME.JIE&Y GIVEN th•! lhl cond. for the printing indUlllry. \Vanda. ·-~~---d.,-.., ."..,"~!,'~!'•.,. This institution originatod In ,_..,. n.. ..-• ...... It will sell for '36.000 and turn ~:·~;: ~':~~1 =: '°" • "'io. 111 copy lnto magnetic or pUnChed Orange and has confined Its .,~ .. °"' rt11 blk,, lttf• -.i. 1>111.n. ,_ tape or pwichcd cards. operations to the county o( Its blw llllfes. -,,_bit•· i nd .-111\0e iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijl origin all 64 years of its ex· w•llet. MOTICIE ,, FUllTHElll Gf'IEN lfllf II islcnce. .. ~ -~--: .:"'~~ 1,llO'I °'Oil PAINTIN•S The bank's assets now total ·1 '"'..., .. follo*ll'll"" ""'ic.1i... ol !hi• WHOLOAU WAllMOUH more than Ull million and ll ls Hoflet". 1111 tint ~ Wll v .. 1 !ft '~ OPIN TO THI PUILIC "" -11..,, 11 then be -or 1n itie c11Y .i enjoying notable acttplnncf! o( • (lll11 Me:U. i" ""1Cf) t•• "" ~ $5 ,-., novel re••-·e balan-a~ tllfill 11t llN -9 _.. WCI"" 11 • llmr ... :t ~ • "" ,_. . --g::ro": :~;,. 1111 L ;:::,r:,~•:...,.:'A AMA counl program 1r1 which It 1,,. • • II, E. NETM 1.:~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~1·~·~·~d~c~pos~i~··~"~·~·-~"~&~y~ou~r.1 , •• Cl'!lel Of Polf49 0£11Ll.lt$ WllMlGD ,_. - P\tbll"'" Oil"il'*' c..11 DilHY Pllol, ()(""'1 "· 1"' lfW.19 FAIR "':• . ALL TYPES ECj)UIP'MENT And MACHINERY LEASING AVAILABLE T•llMt H4t MOlllTl'IS <•• ...... 111•1 "'2411-1 1.111 .. 11 '""" tf' Ulll W"JU It N • """'· • own loan officer.'' Douglas K, Hill has been manager of the Costa Mesa branch at 1650 Adams for almost a year now, having the distinction of being a natlvt o( Orange CourAy and rttelvlng his A.A. degree in business ::ind economics from Orange· Coast College. His upper graduate work was completed at Cal State -Fullerton, llill has been asslstant manager of the Santa Ana branch before coming to the Costa ~fesa branch. under Veg1, >s styled to appeal llwnS11tr• .20 I . ported b nd . 8Wflsnot 1.M o nn car uyers a is Br""''w11 .10 backed by Ford's past sue-=~Er 01·~ cesses in selling small cars. ::= f0 ,f.J The magazine also selected ::.'1~ ti't 11da rk horses" among 1971 :~·~mo,. major car categories. In =~~"':;: regular s I z e automotim, :::i=:. :,:/~ Ward's said the standard g~m, ·~ Chevrolet, perennial s a I e s leader in the category, is the C11>ot Cp _,. "lightest shaded'' or the dark ~:r'll'~~r' horses, while Pontiac's new ~!::,'WL ~:~. Grand Ville raJseJ division ~:',~:w 1 .'~ hopes for a sales comeback:. ~:.,frt': l:'f: ln Intermediates. Ward's ~:~~ ~.n said Olevrolet's C.'hevelle will ~;~~·~ .. ~ 5 The ban~·s main office ls ~t be tested by Plymouth's Sebr-~·~Lt '·:& Chapman Ave. at the Pl.au 1n ings and Satellites and by z:~~1e~111: .. downtown Orangt, wltll two Dodge '.s Cb a r g er s and ci~ 1:1°' other Oranae offlm, plus the • Coronets, as well as AMC'• ~:r;:.~11 11\' ones in Co&a Mesa.1 Santa Matador. cc1 ~or, Ana . TUslin and Villa Park. Mavtrick was rtported 1 c:f~J'f James Beam. vice prtst.-H-ely repeater with top sale3 •ta~ f:,M;f dent, is the president af the w It b L I n co ln-Afercury'~ :1Hft1f.2: Orange County Chamber of Comet, a dark hor1e Jn com-.ri11'~L1ot•~ Commerce. pacts. Otb!r conlenden were :.1'Jl~I..~ Officers and diret.1ors are A~IC's Sportabout Wagon and ~!; 1:r C. E. Schroeder, president: Dodge's Dtmqnt, 11 well as =~•1y .P Don ald C. Caskey, senior vice Pontiac's new rntry, to be in· ~"'lo president and trust officer; lroductd earl,y in 1971. n•,..A1•1.;r Glenn Allen. Paul Cleary, ~tustana was expected to I:::'.\~:; Samuel Hurwlti, Donley Bol· make a ~trong tomtback to l::;t 11!! tnger, Alwin Dierker. Glenn reclaim IL! sales le1denhlp :".:r.,.' ,i;- Malhis, Vernon Valtntlne, from Chevrolet's Ca.maro' Jn ~-.. ~, sangsters and Robert Welch. i ports c o m p a c t s • Y"".\: ~)Milll\.-et... Market Sy111bob - I ) • I i M•c-'n"' 2011 M1t Oonld 10 Mltkl Ca JO MICV RH 1 Mid Fd 1 '41 Mta Sa G1r M1altCtll ill M~tnvo• I 20 Mtllor'I 1 80 M1nl'llrd Y b '"'~"-' n M~nH1n 2 IO IMPCO .Ill M1"11'1n 1.60 fAlrtlH' IO Mlrtor r" M1rtmn 211 Mir Mid 1 70 ~=~/::!.\' Mlf M1rci_111t Ct1'11 MerrJl:ltl .IOt Mtnl'IFd 1 10 M1rtlllM 1 10 MrYICllO .-MH«I Co .11 Me-II• .n Mlllef F 1 Ml111eVF In 1 Mtlttl 10 MevOStf' 1 60 .... , ,w " MsYllllO MCA ltoc: 60 McCord 1 200 McCrorv 1 '20 MCCl'Ol"l'lllt i MeOtnnlt lb Mct>ontld Ce> McDonnO AO M~Ed 1..«t McGl-!111 6011 MeGH pfl 20 MeGrff OM Mcintyre 1 Mel( .. 1121 McL11n &o. MtLOUlll -"°" MCNtll 70 Mead Coro 1 M11d plA.2 Ill "\ff(I pl82 IO Ml!I Coro Mel...Sllot 7S Mtmorn C• M .. ctnS 1..-0 Me!'ck :Z. Ml!'lld!tl'I 1 » MIH P.t !0 M1•1b!T Me MGM M.rromtl 50 Mt!Ed pf) t0 MGIC Inv 10 Midi Tube I Mluodot .:.0. MICICnTtl M Mld~Ulll ti Mlclld II lA Ml~w11 on J MU1L1b I 20 Miii Brtd 60 Mlnl'IMM 1 75 Ml""Plt 1 20 Mlttl!CP ''° Ml111tlv JOr MP Ctm 1 60 MoPUbS IOb MObllOll 2 '(I MolliKO 110 Mollwk Dtlt MOIYbcl 1 ti! Molrtl ¢1.50 M-m 1nd Mor*I RR MOft•oEa 60 ~•n llO MOMI 1>lf IS MonlDUI I 71 MOii! Pw l 6' MONV' M lt. MotJr MtCor MCiorllnJ i «I Mero1Sho 70 Ml9tnv I Ue Mor Nl)I' to Mo!Ol'Oll .60 Mtfl'UltS l" MISt1TT l6 MSL Ind AO fl1111tlflr#f' I flll!'t>hY 1 20 M\lf'pfrf Ind M\11'1h0!1 Ml Mur..O otSM MurrrOll &I) N11ta Cfl ~ N1rco fci ... N1J!W.C1> • Nil A!r1ln .jll) Njlt,Ylil 1 "'8 NI! lll!C 2 70 ~·' c... 's N•~~~rn~ lfz N1h .. lf'f'l 90 NII DIJ!lt !IO ••111 pl' lJ NO SI 012 ffi'' ""'' , ... ~r1Gt:'1it N::~~H Nt! m.~ I N1tSvc!n 60 Nit $l11'1d a ""•'•'1'!.<11, 'fl "' .. NII •I N1tUnEI ;j"i NITOAll ' ~ NtPIUM 1, fltV P~ l n . ~En 'i1!o u:~ 1~ Newmf t'!Of ' Complete Closing Prices - Monday Octobtt 26, 1'70 DAIL v PllDT I I American Stock Exchange List Pitchmen Cramped·· By Facts ·. NEW YORK (AP) -A <nmp Is being put m lht.otYI• of many pubtlc1sts, ~bhc rclaUoos m e n, promoters, advertisers and olhtr imqe makers by increu.111gly llrlct government concern with the facts. Fac!ts are whit thete men work wllh, of coune, but suspicions have been areUMd m consumer minds ~ .. ·the ,.gulatory world !hit· flCll, hke statiltlcs, can be midi lo crute. Ulusions. The Federal Trlde c.m. misalon, for eimnple, bfcame l0<enll«I a Year aco b)' • od· verUJement.a. that e I a i m a d tJm w'"' aalely t<Ofo4. at 1ptedl ln eicw: or too mllts ao hour, whlc:b was fllc:IU~ true. • What the ads left umaJd iru that the tests wm per!oniwd und<r test conditions, not :u.. <ondlUons uoder whldi ""Y ,purcllutt would norm • 11 y d~ve Md thouah thO illre ml!)lt not ruptun, would ft ,.. main attad>ed to the rim! -- NO-IRON SHIRTS . IN TWO SffiES FOR JR. BOYS Reg. 1.69· 1.77 3 days only! Choice of button-down coUar, cot- ton Dannel shirts in popu- lar fabrics, new colors. 3.7, '· COSTA .MESA ONLY. c::mr-? ................... c... ......... ia ........... e-..,_.. ............ MON·., TUES., WED. 10:00 A.M. TO 10:00 P.M . •. IRONING TABLE 55.55 Chrome-plated; fully &S\iustable Ironing bOard with perforated top. /Autumn Scene :7hne cat tail is ready to send its seeds-to the wind ·:as the other dries out in the sun in a swamp near : Hickory Corners, Wis. :~~Mrs. Nixon's Secret: • SOLID AND P:llNT FLANNELETTE . . '· . . REPLACEMENT KITS i''She's Fond of People' 30 DISPOSABLE PAMPERS sl.38 3 DAYS ONLY 41sa.oo ester. Guaranteed \vashable. Visit ow· ,, Permanent press 65% cotton 35% poly-3 7" ., . :~~WASHINGTON . (AP) :Mn. Richard M. Nixon has a -:ibnple approach to h e r · j)olilical campaigning: "l like people a;xt l would never be phony." 'Ending a week of cross- country travel in behalf <If Republican candidates, the President's wife saii:I she was ai.zrpnsed some poople think aUcb campaigning is unusual foi' ""· $he admits she has never &en ''clear round ~ coun-ti'Y" on her own before, "but ,,l~t• been in this since 1946." 'f!JiJ she plans to be out again ~ w~k -in Indianapolis ·p;~ay and later in San · · and San Francisco. · •Ask~ how the campaign 8JlaPes up for Republicans, Mrs. Nixon said exuberantly: >'Jt·looks great. .. ·.Mrs. Nixon proved she's a pro 1)1l a day-long trip to f}orida Thursday in which she lh>ok hands with al least 2,000 ~e and got a wann WeJcOme in return. She was is~ keys to two cities and {be mayor proclaime<:l "M rs. Rk:bard M. Nixon Day" in ~Or\ Myers. .&le smiled. said 1 ' HI , b6oey," patted hands. hugg~ 1"°ungsters , gave out .aut'ographs and 50 or so gold ~int pens with her name !ii/." 1hem. and posal •for !n- immerable pictures with can- ~ates and constituents. ' It didn't mzrtter that the main Senate candidate she c&me to iromote -Rep. WUI!am c. Cramer -was on ae_.tng votes elsewhere. Mrs. Nl1on, touring with Mn:. Cramer. said, "I didn't expect hfni and krew be was going to bi8' busy." · rnie-day of campaigning left Mrs. Nixon looking unruffled, Mr' ·blue-and-while silk print dress unwrinkled and her f1111le undisturbed. ·u1•m not dwelling upon myseU," she explained her c4inpatgn composure. She did ~he< right hand was "all ~ up" with fingernail ai:tAtcbes. But, ''These things .Drver bother me."· -...:--· • ·Hff day In Florida included ~ances al two receptions 1o-·l'o1nt Brittany and Fort ., where she stood each ~ fer about 90 minutes 'P,,amr San Diego's Pupils Tum To Farming SAN DIEGO (AP) -With the crack of dawn, like farmers everywhere; they're S·PC. HEARTH ENSEMBLE Our Reg. $25.84 3 DAYS ONLY 518.83 off working the soil, tilling and Black and bras!;' set with pull-chain screen. brass top grading, planting cabbage and bar. Srt has~ poker. shovel. stand, brush. cauliflower and starting seed·~-""'·"'-• li'JL'i!._....,-...--s,; lini;ts in the lathhouse. t~ 1:;s:r••• •;i1r -=c -xt.:&::::it'i~~""'"'---= They do it without pay as high .school students !earning KEM-TONE" WALL practical agriculture on two farms in downtown San Diego. The farms on city-owned land are laboratories for a ~ two-year horticulture and landscaping course open to any of the 24,000 high school pupils in the city. One is a two-acre plot next to Madison High. The other is five acres in sii.e adjacent to Wright Brothers Junior-Senior Hi gh. The 75 students taking part are driven to the fanns from PAINT FOR A RICH INTERIOR Our Reg. 6. 94 their own schools. The two-3 DAYS ONLY hour course is taught daily by professionals and provides four units of credit for two semesters' work. Jn San Diego's expanding occupational education pro- gram for high 9Cboolers, similar courses are beinl taught in nursing, data proc- essing, te1tiles and restaurant work. "We hope some of the students will become in- terested In agricultural teaching," a supervisor, Jesse Morjilew, says • ''In the past two years the demand for such teachen in caJifornia has been greater than the supply." Del u x e interior latex paint dries in 30 rp.ln. to a scrubbablc finisH. Easy to apply, waler clean-up! Most colors. SUPER Kem· Tone · A constant call !or trained horticulturists and landscape LADY VANITY DRYER Fits 3/4", 1" screw on or slip on chairs. Comes in choice or patterns. Do it yourseU replacement klL Softly padded, vinyl covered. FURNACE FILTERS ! 3/97¢ · _,,,. J All sizes! Treated with I bacteria -fighting hexa- chlorphene. Reduces dlt!St In furnace and home. ANSCOCHROME II FILM 3 DAYS ONLY • 51.97 Ansco regular 8 movie film. Indoor or outdoor. Processing Included. 6.75-u.• Colt•t• TOOTHPASTE ""· 17< 53c a 0.1• Family size Colgate with f1uoristan. liurry. "PRETEND FUR'' BOOTEES Yardage Dept. !or great savings. .Yd. 30..IN LONG FOOTLOCKERS' Our Reg. S8.88 3 DAYS ONLY ss.aa· Hand,y storage aid in 15-3/4 x 12-1/2 x 30" size. Sheet steel over veneer frame. Steel binding, metal tongue and groove valance, 2 leather handles. Colorfu l t>hamel finish, Charge lt. KODAK ROTO TRAY 3 Days $297 Ooly New Kodak roto tray holds 140 standard slides. Will fit all Kodak slide projectors using standard :slide trays. WOOL PlAID HUNT SHIRT R19. 7.67-3 D•ys 56.46 4-QT. DECANTER FOR llVERAGES R09. 96c 63C .J Days Slim styling. sllde seal pour· ing spout. Colors. u:perts comes from nurseries, sg 7 7 s1 0 0 ~::i~~m~;.ihoJ:l 011!R99.$12.34 Our Reg. $1.96 quari.rs, Morphew says. 3 DAYS ONLY .t 3 DAYS ONLY • F°' an outdoo• wear. 'Jbe course tries to dispel Warm, long-wearlni;: the noUon that agriculture Is I Model TC-8 hair dryer, bonnet and hose has I I Pretend penlan Jamb booUc 11llpptt1 for wool. ~llsh plaids or I only "tilling the soil" in aome I 4 'heat positiohs. La.rge mirror is set into cue I I women, teens. Choose from pink or blue. Com· I so1ld r S to XL. · remote hinterland, he says, I top. Styled of molded plastic. Colors. • I I rortable, "'arm. savings priced. 5-10. I ,... Ill a,.,.1111 ~ °"'' I adding: I I • . r .. Agriculture h not Just I j I · ' ~:· r!:sry s~:rro 10n!:.1 ~--~~!!.~~~-~~ __ 21 k __ ~~~.!'!.~!~n ____ --~ ~-------~.!'!.~!~~~---U power to cart for lt.s parks, sdlooh. beaches and public bulldlnp. Morphew. 39. h coon!!nalor of occupational educaUon for the 15 public high ecbooi• In • San Diego. . .. --~ 2200 HARBOR BL VD. ~~~:~· 0~1d COST A MESA · Harbor I l \ l\1e1v Salt Creek A ccess Proposal i1ap at top sho \vs new Salt Creek access and parking proposal pre· sented to the county by AVCO Community Developers. ne\v O\\·ners of La'guna Niguel. Shaded areas sho \v parking and access. J\lap at bottom is the old parking and access proposal worked out by team of county department heads ln negotiations \vilh Laguna Niguel and Chandler-Sherman Corp. It represented about 37 acres. County super- r • '• visors, who had abandoned Salt Creek Road to Laguna Niguel. delay· ed proposed litigation to :i;ecure beach access in ordere to study the new AVCO proposal. Salt Creek a rea is slated for resid ential develop- ment by AVCO. It had been a favored surfing area for years a nd the abandonment of the road touched off a county·\vide flap that included a rash of 0 Save Salt Creek" bumper stickers. Samaritan Tries To Revive Man In SF~ Robbed Snoopy by Nose Boy Picked Up 'Just Looking' On School Y ar<l SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -A U.S. Treasury Department examiner tried lo help a dying m;in Sunday, but learned there are few modern-day G o o d Samaritans. The examiner, Larry Cole, 'l:l, a visitor from San Bernardino, was walking in the North Beach area when he saw an old man lying unconscious and barely breathing in the gutter. The people pass!ng by paid no at- tention, and a barker for a topless show v.•as trying to lure customers. Cole bent over the man and started lo massage his chest, trying to revive him. After two minutes of ma ssaging the man 's chest. Cole went to a phone to call an ambulance. He asked some people who had gathered to continue the tnassage. 'but when he came back no one "'as doing anything. The ambulance came alter about 25 minutes. but Dante Boreen, 59, was dead on arri val at Harbor Emergen c y Hospital. Cole walked around after the incident for an hour and a half. and when he pass- ed the same intersection again someone put a gun in his back and forced him into an alley. WWI Planes Arrive in Ne iv York NEW YORK -Two comic strip cjtaracters -straight out of Tallmantz Aviation at Orange County Airport -left youngsters cheering and booing as their ancient planes touched do1vn here Sun· day. I "Curse you, Red. Baron ~" grO\lo'led a 300-pound Snoopy after beating hi s arch - rival Sunday into Flushing aerodrome in Queens by 28 seconds at the end of a cross-country race in World War I vi.ti· tage planes. "He outv.'ilted me." sneered the villainous Teutonic aristocrat, Bar11n J\fanfred von Richtofen. "He chajned my tail wheel to a ramp at Newark when I wasn't looking." Thus. even as good triumphed ove r evil, the bi tter rivalry between a comic strip beagle and the memory of the Kaiser's most notorious flyi ng ace lived on. Nothing really "'as settled. and Snoopy. Charlie Brown's captious beagle in "Peanuts." can 10 on chasing the Red Baron indelinitely. The little single engine planes had left Newark Airport early in the morning on the last leg of a race that began in Santa Rosa, Calif., Oct. 2. That's not far from the Sebastopol home of Charles Shulz, creator of the whole Snoopy fantasy. Snoopy was John \V, Bagley of Los Angeles, a JOO.pound former ~larine pilot \11ho '\\'Ore a furry dog suit -in an effort to look like a beagle. Since no Sop\\'it il Camels are in Dying condition in this country. he flew a reproduction of a Nieuport, 28. The original Snoopy flies a Sop\l•lth Camel. Barnn von Ricbtofen. all Prussian sp il and polish. bemedalled and begogg\ed. \\'as a fonner U.S. Air Force pilot, Jamn S. Appleby of Asbury Park. N.J. Both work for Tallmantz Aviation at Orange County Airport and never hated each other befo~ they stepped into the Schulz fantasy. ~veral hundred youngsters, many or them members of the Police Athletic League , cheered Snoopy and hissed the Baron as they landed. and were rewarded by a $500 check for PAL from tho Mon ogram Hobbykit Division of ~fattel, Tnc .. the sponsoring ~irm that makes a Snoopy Sopwith Camel kit. A lifattel spokesman said Snoopy presented similar $500 checks to local charities in each of the 22 citil?! along the race route. A l.aguna Beach student wenl back \() school early Saturd:iy morning ar.d ;!.lmost \11as ta ken Into custody by Laguna Be:ich poli~ as a burglary suspect. A police offic('r \\'as sent to Top ol lhe \\'orld El ementary School at :i a.m. Saturday following a report o r motorcycles. riding on the school grounds. The patrolling officer S8\I' someone v.·a!k· ing near the school buildings and left his patrol car to question the intruder. The "burglar" turned out ta be a nine- year-old boy ea ting candy who told the officer that he was ''just looking around." Police said there were no signs cf van- dalism at the schocl and lhe boy "'as turned over to his parents. Coed Gridtlcr Na n1ed OMAHA. Neb. j UPI ) -Two Crei ghton University coeds took home trophies after the th ird annual Powder Puff fool· ball game here Sunday. Kalie !\felon was a\l'arded the "best bac k'' trophy after leading her "Red'' squad lo an 18-2 victory. Pat Shelle of lhe "Blue" squad was named ''best front." El Rancho has the hottest price in town! • • • • • • • • • • • • Perfect size for fantastic funny faces, , • junior carvers lO\'e 'em!., • 6 lbs. or Jess. Apple Cider ....................... 59c Tree Top ••• ihall·pllon •• -. tangy and delicious ! Kraft Caramels ............. 39c Assorted •• , 14 oz. pkg .•.• candy gome apples ! Vanilla Cookies ............... 59' Marshmallows .................. 25c ·I I Sun~hine •.. Tru. Blue ••• big 27 oz. package. Campfire .•. 1 lb. bag, •• time to t.oRst 'em ! lmpo9'ted Ham ..... ~~~,~~! .0~~~s~ ..... 5 9c Leo's ••• so lean and .so very sati&fyin1 ! Sliced in convenient sand\\'ich size ! 4 ounce packa;e. U.S.D.A. Choice ... young ... tender ... FRESH! ----- Monday, Octobtr 2&, 1q10 s DAIL V PfL-i)T ~ St11dyin.g Arabs Leary Reported In Middle East P'rom Y.'Jre Services BEJRUT, LebanQn -Fugi tive drug ad- vocate D.r. Timothy Leary -his onetime pacifism gone sour -is now In lhe r.-lid- d.te East to study the Arab guerrilla movement and badmouth Israel, ac· cording Lo informed sources. One is fellow-fugitive Eldridge C!e'SV"er. Leary, "'ho was sentenced to a prison· term or up lo 10 years last !\'larch in Orange County Superior Court. arrived in Algeria last v•eek, where he was granted politica l asylum by a no"'·-red faced regi me. The Algerian government thought Dr. I .eary -a ~uest of Cleaver -was a t\cgro coining to \\'Ork in the exile head- quarters of the Black Panther Party. He and other retugces in the Algerian capital planned a press conference last Thursday, but officials forbade ii. Nobody in officia l circles much cares for Dr. Leary's visits. Lebanese officials are not happy that he is in lh('ir count ry. after his clan· destine arrival. acco mpanied by a black n1an and a v>hile girl. She is identi fied as a ~lis!'i Dohrn, rither \Veat herman radical I ea d e r Bernadine Dohrn -latest fern,ile to n1akc the FBl's 10 ~lost \\ranted Crin1iniils list -or her sister. \\'ho isn't charged. Leary is a JSUCSI of Al F'at<1h. lhe Arab bllPrrilla fronl . according to one source. "\Ve have nothing to do "'ilh these peo- plt'." ~napped a guerrilla spokesman ask- ed about the validity of such a story. Leary \\'as recognized by one fellow nirl ine passenger after arrivin~ at the Erlrut airport and asked if he planned to sludv the Arab movement. ·· ~Jiiybc," he responded. Newsmen tryi ng to contact the Lea ry part y at their S\l'anky $46-pcr-day suite in Briru!'s S\. Georges Ho l e I sa id the ronnrr Harvard profrssor spent most of Saturdny refusing to take their calls. Cleaver, his host. said Leary won't join the Black Pant her Parly but shares some of lheir beliefs and wi ll work in close alliance. "I am i1atisfied hr will give a posili\'c coritribulion." said Cleaver. I Ir r('(U scd to say ho11' Learv reached Al!!irr.~. · · "Thi:-. siu1ply sho11•s that Jack 1J. Fid;;ar I !cover! and his FBI is a paper liger.'' C!efll'Cr added. The Black Panther minister of in· forma1ion "'ho fled the U.S. in l968 said Tennis Tourney Forrn s R eady Entry forn1s now are available from the Laguna Beach Hccrea llon Depart- ment for the third annual Junkir Tennis Tournan1cnt sched uled for Nov. 14 and 15. A \1•ards will be presented lo winner! and runncrs·ur in all events of the three divisions of compclillon. The high school divisio n will consist of boys' singles and doubles. girls' singles an d mixed doubles. The intermediate division, made up of seven!h. eighth and ninth graders, \\'ill have boys' singles and doubles and girls' i;;1ngles. Boy's singles will be offered ii the ele mentary division. his party will closely cooperate with tht Palestinla n guerrilla moveme nt. lo e» pose Israel as a tool of Am erican im perialism. His latest aide in the str.uggle esca~ from the minimum security Los Padre1 !\fen's Colony PrilOn in San Luis Obisp1 six weeks ago, allegedly aided by th1 Wea thermen. Ltary and his v.•!fe Rosemary, 34, an< son John Leary. 20. were conv icted el possession of marijuana stemming fror1 a late 1968 arrest by Laguna Bead politt. Judge Byron K. ~lcMillan branded hht. a menace to society in passing sentence. Three Killed 111 County Road Crashes Three persons losl 1hcir lives o; Orange County highways oyer th4 11·eekcnd. one in a spectacular wrong way crash on the San Diego Freeway in Costs t.ie3a. Authorit~s identified the dead as: Lape Pacheco, 36. of Corona . !\trs. l\.1arlna Zeilmaler. 43, of Anaheim. John R. ~tonroe Ill, 37, of Sa nta Ana. Pacheo "'as killed Saturday night in tht "'rong "'ay driver crash near th4 Ne"·port Freeway interchange. Highway palrol man John B.a broff spot. ted the car driven by Pacheco comin1 directly at him. He ducked into th• center divider area. turned his cal around and witnessed the Pacheco cat crashing into one driven by Larry Young, 24 , of Los Angeles. A lhird car dri ven by Joseph D. Salamon, 41, of 2134 Braernar Way, Ne \l'J)Orl Beach, piled into the first two. Mrs. Zeilma ier was ratall y injured ear· ly Sunday on the Riverside Freeway near Royal Oak Street in Anaheim when tht car in which she was riding was struc' by a tractor-trailer. The truck dri vel was not injured. fi.tonroe was killed Saturday when the motorcycle he was riding collided with a • car at Flower Street and Civic Ceotet Drive in Santa Ana. Burglars Take $2,500 in Loot Laguna Beach police are Investigating lwo weekend burglaries which netted thieves about $2.500 in merchandise. Poli ce said that an unk nown ,;uspect cn!ered the. home of Thomas A. Fuller,_ 250 Crest St., so me time betw een 7:30 p.m. Friday and 1 l :30 a.m. Saturday. Reported missing were a $2,000 movie · camera and a .22 caliber blank pistol. Jn another incident, police said a burg~ Jar entered Benton's Coffee Shop, 133 S. Coast Highway, sometime Friday nigh~ and took a tape record er and ta pes vaJ,. ued at $459. Police noted that all the doors or the restaurant were locked and there were no signs of forced entry. SupP.r aized punipkin.1 for tnaatl'r carvers , pricrd 'a3 ~11a~·ked. 81tt. lal'gc or I/mo ll, p11.t a. Jock-trl,tnttr'f& in t101tr 11.:indow! Lamb Chops !~~~.~1 5r? .~~~~ .. ~1~? P1·icf'1t iii tf/ect Al on., Titci., 1rrr1 .• Oct. 26, 1!7, .lS. No 1ale1 to dcalf'ra. ARCADIA: ·Su...i and Hunlin~on Dr. ({I Rancho Cini!!) PASADENA: Fresh I ... not frozen! Compare U1e quality •.. and 1ee that the value i& r reater al El Rancho ! I Saratoga Chop5 ...... sl .49 ~ Lamb Patties ................. 49~ Boneless lamb ••• loin ~t •.. thick, tender! Fresh rround ••• your asaurance of quali ty! 320 Wat Colo<ado Blvd . . SOUTH PASADENA: rremont 1nd·H11ntinitcn Or. HUNTINGTON JEACH: Warner and Alzonq11ln (801rd.,.,'\. r r NEWPO RT BEACH: 2727 N1wpO<t Blvd. and 2555 E11tblull Dr. (Eastblull Y1ll•1• C.nler) ' DAILY PILOT C""-'"' .-, t11t Dlolly Plltl llettl Quadruplet ·girls born early w~, nesday have been named by their perents, Amy, Barbara, Colleen and Diane, following the A, B, C and· D sequence assign~ b,Y ho~­ pital authorities on therr birth 111 Winchester, Mass . • The Democratic National Con:i- mittee'a mailing list apparently 1s in need of updating. The •ta& or Ni.tional Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien sent a letter to the gover- of New Hampshire requesting a campaign contribution to help .de- feat Republicans in the election. The letter was addressed to Gov. John· W. King, a Democrat who left office in 1968. Gov. Walter Peterson,. seeking a second two. --------- · W. Viets , Drive • " Into Camho·dia SAIGON (UPI) - A 6,000..man South Vietnamese army task fore~ drove deeper into Cambodia today in coopera- tion with the Cambodia n army, and Phnom Penh dispatches repOrted South Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand were working on a standby plan to save Cam· bodia's rice from the Communists. The South Vietnamese 5th infantry division moved into the Snoul area, 100 miles east of Phnom Penh and about ·90 miles northwest of Saigon, in a drive to oust Communist from sanctuaries they had reoceupied since last spring's U.S.- Vie tnam incursion. The drive brought to 17,000 the number of South Vietnamese soldiers operating in Cambodia in support of the Cambodian army. Government military sources said only light CTJntact had been made so far as the new attack force pushed beyond Snoul, which ·was wrecked by last spring's offensive. northwestern province of Battambang, which borders Thailand, to Phnom Penh. Highway 4 runs 120 miles southeast from Phnom Penh to Kompong Som, the coun· try's only deepwater port, whi ch "is used lot' export of rice. r- Hou Neng said Cambodia's rice crop already has exceeded last year's export figure of 102,000 tons, and now stands at 130,000 tons. UPI correspondent Frank Frosch reported meanwhile from the town of Tang Kauk, 52 miles north of Phnom Penh, that the government had now thrown a total of 20,000 soldiers into its stalled operation northward toward Kompong Thom. , The original 10.000 man operatwn - Cambodia's largest of the war ..;_ has been stalled at Tang Kauk since Sept. 13. This area is just west of the region where the South-Vietnamese task force ls mov· ing. Year term i.. a Republican. • • When Colin Thomton, 8, gets ex- cited while reading his favorite history books, he chews on: any- thing close at hand. That is the explanation given by the young- ster's father why Colin chewed through a lamp's electric cord. He bas been hospitalized with burns about the face and hands in Burne· CRIPPLED LIBERIAN TANKER PACIFIC GLORY RESTS ON ISLE OF WIGHT SHELF Fire Extinguished After Collision But Battle With Huge Oil Slick Continues In Phnom Penh, Cambodian Commerce Minister Hou Hong told UPI cor· respondent Kate Webb in an intervi~w that negotiations among Cambodia, Thailand and South Vietnam to protect Cambodia's rice crop involved protecting the highway from Phnom Penh to Saigon and the one from Phnom to the Thal border town of Poi Pet. Oil Slick From Tanker Broken Up MIT Professor Wins "'At the moment we can still use highways 4 and 5 but we have begun negotiations with these ol~r two governmenls to make sure that we can get the rice out," he said. ' ly, England. ' Economic Nobel Prize • Arthur Boniface put hia motJt.. t.r·in·loW on a train at Newport Thursday -but it starttd up bt.fore he could get off. Tht. nt.%t stop waa London, 300 miles awoy. He did not have to pay for the ride. "British rail was e%trt.mely kind and understand- ino," ht. $Cid. • Cows startled two foxhounds chasing a fox Thursday and caused chaos on a major highway in Eng- land. Authorities said lhe cows frightened lhe dogs who ran onto the roadway, causing motorists to swerve and brake to a halt. On_e dog was injured slightly when hit by a car. The fox got away . • Thoodore Dubol•, an Besancon. France old age pensioner. wrote a will Thursday leaving what he bad to those poorer than he was then threw himself into a river and drowned. Duboio left $109 to the town's needy, $90 to the aged, of the city hospital and the remaining $21 to the local newspaper for printing hb death notice. • Prealdent Nixon has signed legislation which wi-pt;a from the atatutt books a low which re· quirt.d t~ Anny to buy its h.or- se1 and mules through opt.n market auctions. The law was abolisht.d becauae the Army ha.a had no ntt.d for horses or multi for years. The sa.me legislation signed Thursday also abolished old requirement that tht. Quar- tt"rm.aster General sell 16 ounces of tobacco a day to ell t.nli.sted men asking it. • Edmond Dur ..... , 60, said Thurs- aay doctors have told him he is still growine despite his age. Dur- gnd, who is 7 foot 1 inch tall, said he began crowing again at lhe age of 36 and physicians said he will probably continue growing un- til be dies. VENTNOR, Isle or Wight CAP) -Tugs usi ng detergents had broken up a mile· Jong oil slick from the grounded tanker Pacific Glory today and officials said the danger of ..major pollution to Britain's~ southern beaches appeared ''not ex- cessive." A spokesman for the :Royal Navy said the 77,000.ton tanker. which burned for two dayS after a collision Friday night, was bumping bottom four miles off the Isle of Wight in the English Channel. Antipollution teams waited for gales and a high sea to subside ' so they could transfer 60,000 tons of crude oil still in her tanks. Two tugs steadied the wreck, and of. ficials said there was little danger of a repetition of the Torrey Canyon disaster three years ago, when that grounded tanker spilled 90,000 tons of oil into the waters off southwest England. Five crewmen were killed and eight others were missing after the Pacific Glory and the .fe,000-ton tanker Allegro collided and the Pacifk Glory exploded in flames. The ship's 29 other crewmen escaped. Shipping experts were pw:zled by the circumstances of the collision. It oc- curred in good visibility, with both ships headed in the same direction. The Paciflc Glory is owned by Oceanic Tankers, Inc., and was chartered by Shell Oil. The Allegro is owned by Petroleum Marine carriers Corp. Montreal Elects Separatist Foe MONTREAL (UPI) -Jean Drapeau, who called his opponents soft on separatism and suspended active cam- paigning during the worst of Montreal 's three-week kidnap crisis, Sunday won landslide re.election to a fifth term as mayor of Canada's largest city. .. This is a clear demonstration that there is no place in Montreal for the false prophels, the false messiahs," Drapeau exulted. In the largest voter turnout in the city's history, Drapeau received more than 92 percent of the popular vote, and all 52 ci- ty council seats were filled by candidates from bis civic party. STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Prol. Paul A. Samuelson of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology <MIT), whose textbook on economics has sold more than a million copies in 12 languages, today won the 1970 Nobel Prize for economy. The Swedish Academy of Science an- nounced Samuelson, 55, won the award worlh $78,400 l>Ccause "by his many con· tributions (he) has done more than any other contemporary economist to raise the level of scientific analysis in economic theory." Al ' his home in Belmont, Mass., Samuelson received the news with a joke. "It looks like a busy day," he told callers. He said when he was awakened by a telephone call "l..thought there must have been a death in the family." Among his many works is the textbook ''Economics : an Introductory Analysis." Hopes Brighten For Extension Of Mideast Lull By United Press International Hopes for extending the Middle East cease-fire beyond its Nov. 5 deadline brightened today. The semiofficial Cairo newspaper Al Abram said Egypt has no objection to extending the truce 60 4ays. Al Abram, in an article Sunday, men- tioned the 60-day period for the first time. Previous indications ... on an ex- tenlion of the cease-fire revolved around another 9!ktay period or a possible day- by-day extension. Arab guerrillas Sunday fired on an lsraeli border patrol. an Israeli military spokesman in Tel Aviv said. He said five policemen were wounded in the incident, which took place near Sheetula along the Lebanese border. Diplomatic efforts to extend lhe cease- fire and get Arab-Israeli talks resumed centered in the United Nations today, but U.S. and British diplomats were fearful a full-fledged U.N. General· Assembly debate on the Middle East might hurt behind·thc-scenes efforts. The debatt, called by the Egyptians. was to start t<r day. with Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad schedule as the first speaker. Fair Skies Grace Nation Some Cool Fronts Sweep PUiins; Light Showers Fall Callfornle Ft lr ,....,, lltllt v1tl"'9 '111'"41 111t111 Mii """"'IM ~ bt<Ol'llll\9 WllfHIY J • IS ~~ hi lrt-1 tode1 tl'd Tllltdt,. Hltf'I tide' 6S to 10. 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M-11.1-t:•1.m. sm Jiu•·"'· K llttrld ~ llOflt I COid lnHll ,,,..Jiit IC'fll ll'lt Cllllrll Plrl el !!'It '°"'"'"'" '°"'' l'lttvy l!lulldtrll&rlnl movN tl'lraulll'I c111tr1r Okl1ll011'11. ll'tr· tlltr WM!, •-llurt'l11 dllltecr "" 1no1111111111 fnlnl '"" ~teltlc Horlllwfft 1111'0 fllt llOl'l'l'lt!'n •IMI ct11tr•I llock1t1. Temperatures TotmH,•lvl'ft llld Pf0Kiltlt1!ioll fW th• 2•hour "'"lod lftdl"ll '' • •·""· Hl1ll .... ·~ At~niu• u " A"ttlor•n ' " " All1nl1 .. ,. 81ll;tolltld " " 91.,,,1rcli: " " ... Bolt• " ,. ... Bo1!on " .. ... llrciw~vlll• M n . (llklDCI " ,. Clnc:l""111 " ,. ..,_ " " .n Ots Mollltt • ff . .. Ottrott .. " l'"t!rtlllnkt • , Fort Worth " " "'''"~ " " Htl..,t " ,, Ho"°IUllJ .1J K1nu1 City ,. ,. LIS V"l1 " " Los Alllt!tl " " Mllr'l'll M n MlnnttllOlll " " NM Yori: " " ·" ... °"""'' • ,. Ntr111 P11"9 • .. ·" ""'""' " ff Ok.19Nmt Cl" " " ....... " " '"''° lloblft n " -·' n .. "'"*'""' .. " llottl•nd .. .. 11.tDld (!" " " II.Id 91uff .. " ·-,. .. ... S.CNl'Mfllo " .. S.Jt Ltll;t Crtv .. " St" Dleoe " " $111 1"r111d KO " " St1Ult .. " ..... M " " Tlillrmt! " ... W11lll11tlO" .. n First published in 1948 it has gone through seven editions and has sold more than one million Copies in English, German, Italian. Hungarian,~ Polish, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Arabic, Greek and even Russian. Samuelson, born in Gary, Ind., also served as an economics advisor to both Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhowt!r and John F. Kennedy . He was educated at Chicago University and earned his graduate degrees from Harvard. He has been at MIT since 1940. According to the academy, Samuelson was awarded the prize for "The scientific work and through which he has developed static and dynamic economic theory and actively contribUted to raising the level of analysis in economic science ." Highway 5 runs from the rice·ricb * * * Ammo Ship Explodes In Typhoon's Wake SAIGON (UPI) -A U.S. Army am· munition barge exploded Sunday in the harbor of Da Nang, South Vietnam's se- cond largest city, military sources .s~id. There were no reports of casualties, military sources said . The ammunition barge exploded about 7 p.m. Sunday, four hours after the final gale winds of Typhoon Kate su~ided at Da Nang, military sources said. The barge, which had been moored to a wharf in the Tien· Cha Cove area of Da Nani's deepwater port, had taken a severe ~f· feting during the storm, the sources said. Britain's Princess Anne Linked to Tall Prince LONDON (UPI) -About the time Bri- tain's Princess Anne was born, a clairvoyant peeped into her future and avowed in best storybook fa shion the in- fant someday wouJd help rule a foreign land. Not a remarkable prediction for a member of the greatest ruling dynasty still in business. And it has been repeated more than once over the last 20 years as the daughter of Queen Elizabeth II bas grown to marriageable age. Enter, inevitably, Prlnce Charming. He is tall. blond and Nordic. He will be 25 next April, malting him eligible under his northern land 's laws to reign as its king. He is crown Prince Carl Gustaf ol Sweden, close friend of Britain's heir to the throne Prince Charles and a frequent companion of the Princess. Court gossip around Buckingham Palace has been dripping hints of royal romance. The prince currently is in London to improve. he says, his background in Anglo-Swedish relations. Officially, that means talks with British politicians, trade officials and industrialists. Unofficially -only the gossips will venture a guess. The queen has scheduled a palace luncheon for the prince, related to t h e British royal family through common links .to Queen Victoria. He will be welcomed warmly by Prince Philip, Charles and Anne's father, with whom he shares naval experience and intersest. All the blood ties: and friendships in the world do not necessarily add up to romance. even when the princess is 20, herself blonde, tall and eminently mar· riageable. Carl Gustaf and Anne have met often on the prince's·visits to London. They get along noticeably wee!. Both are avid, skilled horseback riders. Both sail and swim and ski and skate. The prince dances we.II -and Anne rates dancing high among her pe.t pastimes. Carl Gustaf was on hand at Windsor Castle last summer to help celebrate Queen Mothe r Elizabeth's birthday, usuall y very much a family affair. He has aJso been a guest of the. royal family during their aMual holidays at Balmoral in Scotland. Court watchers think it likely both Ann and Charles will be invited to Stockholm next spring when Carl Gustaf officially comes of age. BREAKING TRADITIONS Navy M•l'1 Eisenhow•r Eisenhower Has Navy Haircut,, Begins Duties NEWPORT. R.I. (UPI) -David Eisenhower. son of a West Pointer and grandson of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, today began a series of examinations and routine indoctrination classes at Navy Of- ficer Candidates School (OCS). The 22-year-old Amherst C o 1 I e g e graduate, who is married to President Nixon's younger cfaughler. Julie, reported to OCS at the Newport Naval Base Satur- da y. He was assigned to Oscar Company, a 25-man wtit in a class of about 220. He secured his uniforms, got a haircut -Navy regulations allow hair up to 2lh: inches -81id settled in over the weekend . Exams and indoctrination sessions were scheduled for this week. • If Eisenhower, son of John Eisenhower. former Army officer who is U.S. Ambassador to Belgium. completes the 18-week OC5 course, he will be com- missioned an ensign. His Navy tour .is for three years with post-service plar.s indefinite. although he reportedly was considering law school. GOSSIP IN COURT CIRCLES HINTS AT A BRITISH, SWEDISH ROYAL MATCH Crown Prine• C•rl Gust•f, Curr•ntly Ellglbl1 for the Throne and Princess Anni I 1 Mondli7, October 26, 19'70 DAil. y "1LOT IS Standoff in Detroit R~FEmr 'Anarchy • • • · • • •. ,, -,1 Nixon Rejects Smut Report Condoned' Militants Figlit 9 #ours, Surre1ider ,". ¥,·, • ·" ·:~.·,~. :,.;~ ..•• 1' .:,, 1 :: '! l 'M!~~i~~ _; WASHlNGTON (AP) can corrupt civUlution, that, fortheAmerfcanpeopleasthe TROIT (AP) -Filtetn scene, and permitted black plain clothes. was en route to ~.l~illi.~.~.r<tl~~"";;1 ~'.~lit ··) President Nixon has natly r&-"lf not halted at1d reversed, Pollution of our once-pure air m~bers o( a JSlack Panther community leaden and others assist when he suddenly wu -ff~· ;;.1:~··..., ~~~ · jected the conclusions and raa· could poiaon the welJ spr1n1s and water. ~ttt group fngaged police to attempt to tnOuence those rired upon and hit io the hand R ( •f'.~ · ,, . ....-,1~1Gr i jor recommendations of a of American Western culture "I have evaluated that ill ~-nine-hour armed standoff inside the building to sur-whlle driving by the head-..,'JJ.,.., •, ,_i-,., %t1l ·~~ J commission that urged an ea&-and clviliiatlon. report and ~ategorically reject Saturday night before sur-render peacefully, before quarters. ' ',,.:t.;i;,t t ing of m81ly restrictions on "The polluUon of our Its morally bankrupt ct'.ln· rendering early Sunday In the finally setting a deadline and Emtrson reported by radio ' ~~ pornography. ~l~ure, the ~llulion of our clusJons and major re<:om• Jtillhig of Ofle plainclothes ordering gas fired inside. and Smith drove. up within five ~~ In a statement released over c1v!llzation with smut and mendatlons," Nixon aakt black policeman and tbe Telephone cr'ewmen even minutes to assist him. \Vhen the weekend during a cam· filth, II U te.rlous a :slt1.LBUon But the comm Is s Ion wounding of another. . were called out to inSlall a Sn1ith. also in plain clothes paign stop near Baltimore, chairman, William Lockhart, 1be two policemen were telephone so those inside could and in an unmarked car. Nixon said permissiveness accused Nixon of ignoring shot outside the otar West communicate wltb natlooal alighted to ascertain the toward pornography "would 2 Brooklyn re.search on which the con- Aliti-Crime Solon Slain Side beadquaittrs of the Com-and local Pantbet .pa r i Y source of the gunfire he was contribute to an a~re clwlons were based mltttt to Combat Fascism, • leaders. . struck in the head by a bullet. condoning anarchy in every "I am sure be penonally branch of the Black Panther Police Identified the oUiccr He was dead on arrival at a field -and would increase the Police Shot has had no time to study the Party. killed as Patrolman Glenn E. hospital. threat to our social order as comm.ll!lon'a 8~age report. Tear gas was necessary to Smith, 26. and the man wound-City Council President 1.lel well as to our moral princl-coruldering h15 very busy force the last three holdouts ed as Patrolman Marshall Ravitz, acting mayor. was at Bl Sh ks pies ," NEW YORK (AP) -Two campaign schedule 1 Ince I H l l from the two-story former Emerson Jr., 25. The latter the scene and stood at the 88l OC The Natonal Commission on policemen were shot Sunday returning from Europe, and II, 01'1,0 U lt, residence. Twelve, including suffered only a superficial front of the building with Obscenity and Pornography night .u lbey in\lestigate~ a h1s preoccupation with war e ight females, previously had hand wound. Councilman Nicholas }lood. a Postal Worker had recommended Ii rt in g report of a holdup in the Flat-and peace," Lockhart said. HONOLUL1J (AP) -Five abandoned the building under Police reconstructed events Negro, while the first 12 filed many curbs on pornography bush section of Brooklyn,• The President, Lockhart hours before an assass in's a police threat to storm it. leading to the shooting of the out u n de r Commissioner WASHINGTON (UPI) _ A for adults. police reported. , said, "Is unhappy because the bullet struck him down in his Three automobiles, two of officers thus: Nichols' threat to stor1n the But Nixon called for tighter Two auspects were seiz· scientific stadie:J do not sup- own garage. state Sen . Larry them police vehicles, were A police car which answered building. postal employe was treated restrictions. ed, one in Manhatten, two port the assumptions con- N. Kurlyama wa s talking burn«t in the fringes or the a "trouble call" on the near Nichols originally ordered for shock Sunday nigbt after a "Smut should not be simply hours after the shooUng, the genial to his point of view. about crime at a political immediate area and some West Side, radioed r or police to await issuance or a package being moved on a contained at its present level; RCOnd In Brooklyn. "Our task was not to rally. cars were stoned in I.he vlcini· assistance in issuing loitering search warrant before en· conveyer belt exploded at the It should be outlawed in every The wounded patrolmen, please," aald Lockhart, dean ''When is something going fo ty, but there was no major tickets when a streetcorner tering the building, then held District of Columbia's main state In the union. And the Arthur Davie.s, 30, and Eugene of the University of Minnesota be done about getting the outbre' ak of v 1· 0 I e n c e group refused to break up. off hours longer wh.ile black legislatures and courts at Scarfkli, 23, were rushed to Law School. The l bl ks ., 1 d · 1 d" post orfice, police said. 1 police o[f traffic detail and on-assqtiated with the standoff. scene was wo oc commun1 Y ea ers, inc u 1ng every level of American Kinp County Hospita in The commission's report to crime where they ought to ~'hat sounded like sporadic from committee headquarters. newspaper woman N a d i n e Damage w a s negligible. government should act in police radio cars, where they was made public Sept. 30 and be?" Kuriyama asked. guqfire, however. was heard Patrolman Emerson. driv· Brown , attempted to influence Police said an investigation unison to achieve that goal." underwent surgery. Both were ran into lmmedJate Nixon ad· •le cited the slaying or Fran· !rcha time to time, but no in· ing an unmarked car and in those inside to surrender. was under way. He argued that pornography listed in critical condition. ministration objections. cis L. Burke, 38-year-old ex-j1Jties were repOrted because\---------------------------""---------:...---=---_;__;_;_ ___________ ._ ____ _,_ ___ _ convict, by two gurimen on a o it. busy street comer in the AfJer the o£ficen were shot, Chinatown district I a s t ,POHct q u i c k I y barricaded Wednesday. Burke had a fJl.reet.s surrounding the bead· police record for robbery and !1(iuarters, moved up armored " drug law vlolaUons. 1 equipment and Ooodllgbt.ed the The next night police ar-" building. rested six of B u r k e • ,/ Police Commissioner John associates, all armed, at a' Nichols took command at the football game in crowded _Honolulu stadium. 1 "The police are spendi~ their time on the wrooi things," Kuriyama said before hr: left the political rilUy Fri- day. "Crime is what lbiy ought to .be working on." Kuriyama, a Democrpt unopposed in the Nov. 3 e~· lion, turned down a frlerd's invitation for corree and drbve to bis hilltop home over)~ Pearl Harbor. 1 He parked bis station wagon In the garage-. A gunman, ttep- ped from the darkness 1 and fired five shots. Kuriyama, 49, a fat~r of five, died 30 minutes latq' at a hospital with a bullet .~ his heart. Police Chief Francis .Keala said Sunday no motive lor the slaying could be learned!. "He was a popular rqan with no known enemies," Kaela said. "We ruled rob~,.Y out as a motive because · wallet still had $20 in it." The body lies in s te al the capitol today. Bu ·al with military honors w set. for Tuesday morning a the Na· tional Memorial Ce etery of the Paci!ic. Policeman's Parents Hit Bias-tom Oergyman Steps Down BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) -Dr. J. Herbert Gilmore, who said he would not be pe.stor of a "racist church," preadled his last sermon Sun- day at the racially tom First Baptist Chun:h • ol Birm ingham. Following the sennon, some 300 members who had joined the minisl.tt in denouncing the congregation's refusal of membership to two blacks, said they also would resign. Gilmore, in his sennon, said a "positive stand by the pastor and many members on the matter oC integration has split the church." "But is lt more fearful to be split now by the weakness of man or to be sifted for eterni· ty by the judgments of God?" Dr. Byrn Williamson, chainnan ol. the group known as "Tile Company of the Com~ milted,'' said the m as s resignations would be e:Cfective as soon as arrangements to form a new church are com· plete. He said the group has enough money available to MINNEAPOLIS. ~fil'lt. <AP) continue the salaries o f -An explosion shattcfed the Gilmore and the rest or the windows of a kitchen and a staff, which also resigned, un· basement at the home of a Ul Jan. 1. police man's parents lu s t The 98-year-old downtown before midnight No one was church, which draws most of injured, its membership from the af- "1 don't know or eny fluent white suburbs, has been enemies we would have," ~\rs. in turmoil since June 28, when Stanley Fiega Sr. said tod~, Mrs. Winifred Bryand and her "but my son is a polie1?m n daughter, Twila, 11. presented and it could have something themselves for membership. do with that." After several delays, the The father and son have th congregation voted Sept, 27, to Mostf(\Utomobile,makers would.like you to.visit~the_showroom. Mercedes~Benz 'would rather you visit the factory. Almost any automobilr: can be made to look good in the showroom. Sloppy workmanship and production shortcuts are easily glosSt"d over amid a barrage of adjectives and the glitter of neon lights. But you.can't hide anything in the factory. It's as revealing as inspecting the kitchen of a resta'Urant. That's why, at Mercr:des.Benz, we' wish r:veryone could visit our factory 6e-1 fore they visit our showr&m. Here arc some of the things you'd ' discover. Some quaint notion' The work areas are clean and bright. The atmosphere order.,. and unhurried.' More like an Old World Guild Shop than a 1ypical automobile factory. While some brag about assembly lines that build JOO cars an hour, we boast of building 30. We take si:t \Vet:ks to craft our 600 model. 'skills to b~ild fumitureforourcxccutive offices. I .Minutes, not seconds an insputor.\ Inspectors Check vital welds by poundin1 away at them with a hammer and chisel. A 1kill so demandin1 they're scnt.bac).: to sc.hool twice each year.·· Even the assembly lines rr:flect ·this 'pace. Cars crawl along while workers , spend minutes, not seconds, on thr:ir spe- cialty. You'd find craftsmen fi.Jlin1. pindJ · ing, and smoothing a singJC roof seam for.~"'""""- 15 minutr:s or more. SoUdilying the body I ' Jnspr:ctors with white pUl.C· mittr:ns painstakingly ful ev. ~ r.ry inch of the unlinished body •. ,. Because the band is bettr:r thaal the eye in dr:t.ectlng miQur.e. into a single rattle-(,\ \ ·~~C:~!0fo:: :::s~~- 1And patiently fitting \ doors, hoods and 1runk) lids to a tolerance that l cannot vary more than\ ,. one 1nillimeler. • • A blow to time and motion expr:rts. 'But a boon to some.( appreciative owner.\ burrs and ripples, And after inspe(ton subject rear axlei to SS . mechanical and electronic! t checks, some to toleran- • ces as fine as 8/JO,OOOofj an inch, one in ten ii~, · jected by an amazing~ vice called the human car J "A small bullet ·for waste'' ·If it miaht nu. t, But in checkin1 disc And we have some refreshing· • brakes, our distrust loel Jy quaint notions about liow paint it largely unrewarded. automobiles should be built. You can't fullyappro-' Thr: machines I hat pro-' In our upholstery shop, ciatc the 44 pounds of .duce thr:discSareadjusted over 100 f ormerdressm:ikers rust protection we apply to artcr every 40 pieces. An cut. stitch and tailor each in· every car until you've exposed your electronic inspector mea~ terior with the care that goes Mercedes-Benz to thr: slush and suresfivecriticaldimensions into a designer's original. salt of several winters. on every disc they make. A A luxury to sor.nc But in our ractory you could production supervisorman-c.L.l,..~h.· makers. A necessity , begin to understand why it will ually re-clieclcs the dlmen- CI to Mercedes-Benz. j ·; resist the ravages of corrosion. <Autc '"_itttns sions on every fifth one. And I, Fi\•e 1 laye~s o~ You'd sec workers swab-r:::.'~!~1;,P«· aqualitycantrollermustpcr· matcria '. an inc ' bing zinc oxide paint on thr: /romcal/Hscs sonally take every di1efro"m or rubberized pad· 1 · back side of body panels be--1hat ml1ht impair the end of the line. ding and l6 fore they arc welded airtight. thciruru:annyttH.4ch. " Yet after all this. only one without his approva1. which he signifies '1by affixina a signature to tbe windshield. Thr: traditional signaturr: of Gottlieb I Daimler.Only then is itreadyfor,our ap- proval in the showroom. Th• mvk of f&r41 •~ U tlw gmcas it w.u ut 1!16. TIN sl('Wru• of Gottlllb DUnJa. $5,ooo and up. Adhcrins to an en&ineering ideal, not a price objective, bas put our automobiles amon1 the world'• moat costly. The least:e.xpensive Mercedr:s-Benz, our 220 Sedan, COsts SS,350.t • Bu1 to the man who buys an auto- mobUe to keep, not to trade every few \,Years, this see.ms no extravaa;~ce at aJL As the r:na:ine.ering editor of Road & (T1'4Ck mi.gazine noted in. a rr:cent article on his own Mercedes-Benz, "The most sat- isfying thing about the car is its sreit precision of operation and quality of manufacture. "At 35,000 miles; .. the car is more impressive ~han when nl.W." · same name, and Mrs. Fiega reject the blacks, and Giimore said her son told her someone' resigned. The rest of his staff had asked for his first name followed suit the following ~an-hours _ Spraying the underside with a resll· disc in a tl1ousand fails to meet our CJ:· OtJtr JOO formtr drrssmaktrs now go into CtJery j ient armor that actually "heals" itself acting standards. As an experienced con-- lion in S1ndtlfin1tn, Wtsr Germany. convertible top. h k · h II Id · "W h nl They work in our 11pholJtery shop. h , I w en struc wit a stone. tro er once to a visitor, e ave o y If you are planning to visit Europe this year, plan to visit our factory. To see, for yourself, why even the lowliest Men cCdes.:Benz is worth over $.5.000. at the staUon Saturday. 1 week. Jail Ov~r Dime Woman Figli~ Meter Fine BEDFORD, Ind. (UPI) - 1'.1rs. James Barrett, a so uthern l11d i ana businesswoman, will spend Lhe next week in jail for refusing to pay a-rine levied for alleged overtime parking. Mrs. Barrett. 59, of Mitchell, told the judge she would rathl!r spend lime In jail than pay the fine for what she says was a wrongful overtime parking ticket. She ls doing just that. A short. thin woman. her halr, fie<:ked with gray flfN. Barrell said Salurdny in Bed- ford Municipal Court she hoped Lawrence C n u n I Y Sheriff Levi Hatfield y,•rn1ld let her conduct. choir practice In the jail WcdnesdtiY night. Howtvt.r, a deputy said Sun- day It was unlikely her request would be granted. Mrs. Barrelt's case involved a dime and a ptlrking meter, She told the court she put the dJme in the meter. Pollet! .said It was one Iha~ took 011ly 11lckels and pennies and said ghe should have read tlle notice to that effect posted on the meter. 1 rs. Barrett claims she Is J nt or overUme parking, a that her offense or using the wrong a.ize coin was not ch ed against her. a matter-of fact. she - said,1 she actually paid for more time than she used and the .-iachlne gave her JlO ch an~. On <.\ug, 12 Mrs. Barrett was fined ~JI. She refused to paiy. Then ~me the showdown. Satuf9:a,y Judge D o n a 1 d Erdmllfl gave Mrs. Barrett a~~' chance to pay the fine. Shi! refused again. Mr!I. Barrett read the Ju<!ge a staten-.e.nt which concluded : "I know In my heart and you know in your heart that I am not guilty of overtime parking, and that l put lnto that park- ing meter 1 d1me -lhe equivalent or ten cents or two nickels -and did not park ror the full amount of time, two hours, which that money paid for." The Jud~e fi•ed ber $36 after she fini shed her statement. She said she would not P'Y it. t·le sehtenced her to seven days In jail to cover the fine, 1,uding court CMt.s. ' --- . T at 5 onger Hand painting the front of thr: car \a very small basket for waste," than it takes ~ost man~fac1urers to as-\Vi th an extra coat of specially formulated scmble an c'.1t1~e convertible, tnainel designed to shrug off gravr:I. tOne man decides Expensive. Of course: But t~e top of Even the in sides of the bumpers act 1 But after passing thousands 0£ qual- a Mercedes· Benz convertible will neve r a protective coOll of paint -,.lty control checks, it all comes down to billow or flutter. And it muffics road noise • one man.A sort of "ultimate Inspector.ff better than most hardtops. The ear rejects 1 in 10 He spends at least 20 minutes with Cabinetmakers, not chemists We have still another old-fashioned idea. It concerns the wood trim that goes into our automobiles. Wr: think it should come from a tree, Not a plaslic . mold. So instead of chemists we ha.ve cabinetmakers. They take bouts to select and match grains; highlight and accent the wood's charac- lcr whh artist's brushes and stain, protect ils beauty wl1h five coats of varnish: then polish it with oil and pumice. When time pr:r· , mils lhey use theircabi.netmakinJ Wending your way throuah the fae-each car as the world's fussiest critic. tory, you'd notice a curious mix in our Fceling,cbr:cking and testing anything he labor force. 0';!_e of evefy ten workers is suspecU~ No car can leave the factory 'Onttumplcof ourWOf'k. Tit• Mt1ct:dt.s·Btnt. l!OSE, • l•l~n;ecttd 11'1""""'" '"""' for •"°"t 1 J/¥). To make arrangements, just check the coupon. Our man in charge of tours, Pelr:r Grassl, will send details. And if you'd like to see the rest of Europe in yoiir own-Mercedes-Benz, sim- ply check the boi: for: our Guide to Eure> pean Delivery. tWHI eo.u "°"' ol' t>llry. ndila1 ... ol' lrln1porUtioa,opt1eu, ac••••l!d lout u-. tt •nr. Copfrl1lu ltl'O, MeK9dft.9m1 .. Korth"Amcrlclo. 1tie. r~-~;.;:.~~.~.;;;;:~--~--1 \CJ Santo Aila, CollMml• t2707 O PSAaM ~me the det.1.111 of your factory tour. a PSeue lnclwk the Morcedes-Beo.i. Gii.ide 10 Euro-1 1 Pan Dclivct)'. N... I Addres•------------~Cl-17~----~~~~~~~~~~-"'_""""-_--I _ ZIP'---Telepbone ====-l Jim Siemens Imports, Inc. 120 W. Warner Avenue, 'S.tnta Ana, California 92707 Phone: 714-546-4114 r EOZ&ZCC .O WW ~y PILOT a s : '-'' a t : s a __ " \ .. CHECKING: •UP• __ 4_n.m. Best Time To Attaek 'Bugs • NIGllTWl!All -Alr<ady reported weie Jhe per«ntaps cl American women who sleep iJI pojanw, nl&btgowns and nothing. Unreported we r e wbat American men sleep in eucUy. Lel'S flx tbaL Latest surveys indicate. 28 percent of the men sleep raw, 22 percent sleep in tb&r underwear, 18 percent sleep in their pajama bottoms or tops .ooJy, and ap- proximately 30 percent sleep in. full pojamas. If you tally Jhe foregoing. you'll fiJld Ibey add up to 98 percent. Just 2 pucent of the American men sleep tn "other." Hobnailed boots, knitted caps, shorty gown!, overalls, nlgbtshlrts, whatnot. HOW MUCH NEWS do you get on a half hour !JV news show? Just 22\2 minutes' worth .•. NOW IT HAS COME to pass that more than half of all the musical instruments sold nationwide are guilars .•• AM TOLD the Chinatown at Carson City, Nev., is the only place in the world where there's a two-story outhouse. BEST TIME TO SPRAY bugs is around 4 p.m. Why is a mystery, but the little beasts are more susceptible to chemical killers at that time or day. Or so the scienct boys say they recently diseovered • . . AMONG NUMBERS on whiskey bottle bottoms, you'll usually ftnd either the letter D or the letter R. An authority on liquor tells me the D stands for Distilled and the R means Rectified. "I wouldn't drink the stuff if it Jsn't stamped with the D," says he. cunoMER SERVICE -Q. "Hu a commercial airllntr ever crashed because the pilot "·as drunk.?0 A. No rect1rd of any such case •.• Q. "How many whales are killed every year now?" A. Maybe I0,000 ••• Q. "Where's California's oldest winery?'" A. At Mission San Gabriel near Los Angeles ••• Q. •.ocan a wiJ4cat catch a jackrabbit.?" A. Not in a race. A coyote eventually can, though • • • Q. "Dkfn't the World Warn brides from Ita- ly outnumber the war brides from France?" A. Just barely. CONSIDER ·THIS -Here's a medical fellow who contends all of us human folk harbor an innate fear ol getting bJt in the midsection. Tbls is why babies ought not to be . put down on their backs, aaya he. It makes them nervous. They're only comfortable when their toft waisUioes are unexposed. He goes so far as to say babies left on their backs are apt to become neurotic in their later years, given to unre'asonable anxieties that could lead to drink, drugs and unbridled wild notion l!I. Interesting. Might be soriiething ·to it, althoogb J>O!Slbly not muob. OPEN QUES'nON -How do you account' for the fact that few good poker players are good bridge players and vice versa? YouT qutstlO'M and com- ments are welcomed and will be used in CHECKING UP whereveT possible. Please addf'tSS 1JOUT lettert to L; M. Boud. P.O. Boz 1875, Netoporl Sta.ch, Calif. LAST 5 DAYSI Come in now before the .rush/ CHRISTMAS PORTRAITS OF YOU OR YOUR CHILD SALE 50% OFF any size, any finish, any quantity Jin 1111 "" ...... ,, .. lJJicll ........ ,.. .. -~ OM lx10 portrllt -r.sul•rly 110. f!OWon'1 IS Thrff 5x1 portnl!b _ ..... r.111i.rty 124, nowonfJ •12 . All *It 1111 1,eclil Jdcn II 1fftct 11 Ufl ~Clftr, tttl .lt'.s here ••• our .big once·•yeer portrait .sale! Because this is our ..slowest season, wt~Ye slashed prices In half •• :and )'OU can reap the 11vlngsl Hurry, have 111 your family's alft portraits taken now before the Christmas rush bqlns ••• at 50% OFF OUR REGULAR PRICES! \J3FlC>AD"\IVA."Y HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON CENTER 892-3331, Ext. 283 Phofogroph S1udio 111 Floor . ' ( a & a a was a 'f• J Founder's Days! as~ &pecfoJJ Seaml1U 1tretch nylon panty · hose, pertecUy proportioned In 1hort, average, long 1izes. Buy several pall'I in 1untanorcoffee bean. .... 4s9 Ladies'hand- washable acrylic . slacks In acetate-bonded plaids and solids. Straight leg, no-waist tailoring insizes10-18. I a e == • . 1 ·2so Speciall These apart shirts come In 1 big assortment ol bright oollds and laahion slripes. with long or short sleeves. N- 4' lashion collar and slim lil Polyester/ cotlon that"a Penn Prest• for no Ironing. Men's sizes S-M-L·Xl.. 5aa . Tunic Ind pents IOb for gitla. COiorfui woven acrylic plalda bonded with nylon. Two llytt1 to chooee from ; -8to14. • a = ' ' I I 'I enn. • I . Special! Handsomely styled sweatshirts of 100% Orlon ® acrylic that's soft to the touch .. Popular crew neck styling in long or short sleeve. Royal, ivy, gold, coffee, navy. S·M·L 199 • j • CHARGE THESE VALUES AT '(O ; -------~·-~-----------------..,...---------------_.....,........_._ ---.--- . ,, ill~ I \ 299 --Boys' Penn Prest~ never-iron polyester/ cotton lla{e leg Jeans fn stripes and plaids, 6-18 reg., 6-16 slim. .. 1 It would be hard to find a greater decorating value than · . these lined 'RMera' antique satin draperies of rayon/acetate in decorator fashion colors. • 48x54•,48x84', $6. 98X 54•, 98X 84',$12. 144 x 84',·$18. "Riviera' antique satin bedspniads, the perfect companion to our matching drapes. Rayon/acetate in fashion decorator shades. Twin or lull, $12. Klnjlor-. $18. Feminine and filmy. NY!on shift llyle gowns in all the prettlesfcolors ... and at a most special priceJorYol:i or for gifts. Women's sli~ s-M-1.. YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE I . . .. 2so Men's full fashioned acrylic knit .shills in solidi and stripes. S-M-l·XL. .. 299 Terrific colieclion cf women 'a acrytic.faallion-ters in·stripes and sollcls, fnciuding'sleeveless · and short sleeve styles, • sizes 34-40 • Elactric blanket special. 45% polyester/35% rayon/~ cotton In mess, gold, pinkor peacock. . . ) Twln,11~-. $11. Full,lilllle_,, $12 • . Full, dull_,, $14. oueen-.$21. Klllglfze,$31, .. • Mondu. O<toi" 26. 1970 DAIU PILOT 'i' FAMILY CIRCLE "fint th•• was God. Next come George Washington, and then Daddy.• Filipinos Clamor For Jobs in Navy WASHINGroN (AP) -The as stewards. But the number Navy,.ateeped in tradition in or··regular enlisted men work· an age of missiles , jet.s and in& as Navy stewards still nuclear-powered ships, still .totals only about 1,100. com- recruits hundieds of 'FilipinQS pared to nearly 13 ,500 to serve only as cOoks1 waiters Flllpinos. and cabin boys. The Navy, wbich used to Doiens or white-gloved and -re<:ruit between 1,000 and 2,000 jacketed stewards recruited In Filipinos a year, bas dropped the Philippines under a uni-il.s-quota to 35·a month. que, 23-year-old treaty can be "The Navy is aware of the found aboard almost · every racial or ethnic imbalance Jn · large ship of the fleet, serving t4e steward ratings and it la meals in the officers' mess trying to even it," says Cmdr. and cleaning officers' state Benjamin Frank. director of rooms. · th,e Navy's minoritY affairs of- They also are assigned to ~ flee. ~ . shore stations and to the Naval The agreement between the Academy where students are United States and the. Pbilip- waited on by 365 stew~, 258 pine Islands signed ·tn 1M7 of them Filipino. Serving ad-allowi: enlistment of Philippine mlrals at the Pentagon or nations. Tbis is the only coun- waiting on tables in the White try where the United Statu Houae dining room is a volun-has this right. tary and hig hly sought·after Allhough a Filipino is paid assignment. the same as a regtilar enlisted The Navy has little trouble man, bis life in the U.S. Navj enlisting Filipinos even though is far different than that of an they are relegated to menial American citizen. He knows chores requiring little ,skill. beforeband. the only job o~ Recruiters at.the ·U.S. Navy is ll'a'steward. stati~n at Sangley .~oint near . Offlctr commissiOllS are not Manila have a waiting. list of available to bim unless he thousands . becomes a U.S. citiun. And he "It's.a belter life than back , can't.apply ror citizenship un- in "tbe, bartios of tbe P~ Ul atter·be i:e-enlilts for a se· pintl," iiys a ·Na~ personnel · OODd f~year tour. •ffiCW, ~ they sip· up . Bul UI& Navy dies the high loo aiire 9'!"Y ·than lhef can elillllmelll.,nte Of Filipinos - tam ~ bal:De. · 95 percent si.,n up for a second But , mounting criticiim of bitch -as j>roof" they are hap- lhia !i•!Y lradUon -none ~f py wllh tllelr wort. - the other · aerv1ces e n I 1 s t ''11lis, is a good akiU area foreign natiQnals -is tcrctnc and ,a ·tot of people reaJJy en- a gradual c~nge. joy it." ·says Lt. Cmdr. Barry Two yeari ago, the 1Navy Spofford of the Navy bureau of began recruiting Caucasians personnel. "Steward ratings and now for the first time are highly desirable skills and more Ca u c a s i a n s than are useful in the hotel services Filipinos are being signed on when thty retJre." ' ' ' . _, ' . YU .... "Tes" to Z,OS9 Joa•• O'el'J o{e$.! How about aiaa 2.1138~----"" -they need each .... --Pia Wiien ""' need lllOllly for blll ~ car repalrw, m>Y r9lllOfl-Qll Yl'll!' Uclllll P11n Manager: on 1-.111111 cen bo11ow· flom $100 to'$5.000; ormo'rit, wlih peyirieall ICIMICI- 'uled tf1e way you want them; ' Cl'ancell 819yoa11hafty...,;__,111e _ d17. Thal'• how Int we C111 MY"YM'° ltlilanll Plan. And we eey It 2,11311 _a _k. . Morris Plan1 61l·l7ot . Newport leaeh-3700 Newport leulevtrcl f ij &J£LW. ~Ci M ¢W Qi i§JLS 4 SI '' $65) ii~BO 5 ;_ DMLY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE .. • ! A Hope for Leadership· ·-- . • Jn its halcyon political days or a decade ago, Orange County's Sacramento delegation was one 0£ the most out.standing legislative teams ever seen in the state's capital. Guided by Sen. John A. Murdy Jr., ably assisted by Democratic Assemblyman Richard T. J-fanna and Republican Assemblyman Bruce Sumner, the delegation was a ~ower!ul and respected force in capital circles. Those days may not come again. and next 'veek's election may not offe r candidtes who can re-fonn such a strong political machine, but it does offer the oppor- tunity to make selections that could improve Orange County's influence in Saf:ramento. For instance, in the 34th Senatorial District. Sen. Dennis Carpenter just may be the man who can guide an influential delegation such as the one J:ohn Murdy guided so ably before. Carpenter is young, aggressive, and highly respected as a leader within ~is own party -\Vitness, as a prime ~xample. his position as chair- man of the Republican ~tate Central Committee. Moreover. Carpenter is a realistic, practica:t poli- tician and a man who understands the machinery of politics. The OAlLY PILOT warmly recommends his election. (The county's other state senator, James E. Whet· more. is not up for re-election this year.) The county's assembly delegation has grown from two to four in the last 10 years. These are the OA1LY PILOT's vieWs of the candidates in those four d.istricts: 69th Assembly District: Ken Cory (D-Anaheim} faces a strong battle from the welJ-financed cam- paign of Bruce Nestande. Cory bas run a moderate course in Sacramento, bas served his constituency well and has proved to be an Intelligent legislator . 70tb Assembly DiStrict: Robert H. Burke (R·Hunt- ington Beach) is opposed by Democrat Lloyd Nocker, "'hO shows no particular qualifications for office and offers no solid reason that he would be a n improve- ment over Burke. Burke gets credit for being one of the Legislature's hardest wor~ing members. 7lst Assembly District: Robert E. Badham faces only token opposition from Democrat David Ascher. Badham has made a better performance each term as assemblyman. Although he has occasiona lly shown what could only be considered lapses in judgment, cer· tainly he oflers far more in qualifications and leader· ship than does his opponent. \Vhile Badham has not reached what many feel is his potential he is deserv-. . . . ing of re·elect1on. . 35tb Assembly District : This north county district 1s represente~ by. Assemblyman John Briggs. whose perfo"!Jance 1n th_e Legislature bas consisted chiefly of harassing education officials and producing little in the form of constructive legislation. Based on this rec· ord, the DAILY PILOT cannot endorse ltim. Nonethe· Jess, Briggs' opponent, James J . Slaven is a non- candidate who hasn't even been in the di st;ict since he \vas nominated to the office. That'S· ~he lineup. Election of this group, the DAILY ~!LOT believes, could strengthen considerably the ef· f1cacy of Orange Co unty's representa tion in Sacra· mento. For State Senator, Dennis Carpenter. For As· sembly, Ken Cory, Bob Burke and Bob Badham. 0 Campus Bonan%a for Radical• ' In Writing, Profanity ls A Defect Dear Gloomy t Gus: . Rf{volutionaries Claim Fancy Fees $-<!.:)'&.@%"! !! Remember when that used to be "swearing'· in a story? Or. sometimes, .swearing was this··.-! Later. the more: daring authors would subtly ronvey their meaning by a discreet d-n or-1. I thought of these swiftly ctian&ing mores the other night, when l settled down al home for a quiet evening ' of reading with a new novel purporting to reflect the "oow generation." EVERY OTHER WORD In the book. il seemed , was vulgar, profane or obscene. This obsession with coarse language, seemingly for its own sake,· annoyed and irritated me -and also impeded the now of the story. My objections to such 1 super-abuft. da nce of obscenity are 11ot moral : I am sure the author is an earnest and h i g h • minded "'.artist, who sincerely felt that he must faithfully re· produce the realistic speech of his charac· ters. But I think he is wrong, and I.hat the profanity is a de· feet rather than an asset in I.he book. I HAVE NOT NOTICED lh1t any or the great literary figures of the put were at all handicapped in being unable to print I have concluded that the most 1n· considerate and dangerous groups are (a.) little girls· driving V<>lks- wagens. and (b.) little boys driv· ing half-ton pickups ... and all al a collltant thousand-miles-per· hour. -H.B. Tlll1 tMhlr. rltflectl ''"'"' <wltwt. ""' -•ltf tMM ti ffMo .. ---· 511114 ,._. -" -" t. • ..,,,. Gu" 01111 l'llet. the then unprintable words. In fact, lheir artistry consisted in making a character come fully alive withoot being so explicit.· - Dostoyevsld, in such p r o f o v n d I y re.alistic works as "Crime and Puni.lh- ment," ''Tiie Idiot.'' and "Brothe"' Karamazov," plumbed the depths of despair and depravity without the need for obscenity. Tolstoy's "War and Peace." perhap.s the greatest novel ever written, is not perceptibly flawed by the absence of dirty words. BOTH SHAKESPEARE and Chaucer. it Is true, were extremely bawdy -bul mostly in their romic moments, where sex has a quality . of wholeS<>me coarseness. Rabelais and Balzac also are <>ften called "dirty" writers -but they were primarily satirists of mankind and scoffers. The quality or a work of art is determined by how successfully it stirs the imagination <>f the reader. not by the way it reproduces the flat and dreary profanity that has no meaning and no strength. Filth is always a sign of weakness -in the mouth of the user and in the mind of the writer. Disaster Dogs His Step There's a big differtnce between what happens to a girl who can't say no and a fellow wh<> can't say no. The girl is wined and dined and tak en t'Verywhere, and may end up married to a successful lawyer or even -if she plays the game well -to a ric"h pro basketball player. A different rate. however, awaits a fellow who can't say no. Disaster dogs his step as he plods from woe t.o woe. C:verytime In a new 11ituatlon that he nods his head in assent he rinds himself knee-deep in another trouble. So i( he doesn't want to spend his li fe being a football of misfortune, kicked a round by everybody, he has to learn when to ref,ly with a flnn negative, 'Here, fo r examp e, are a few Invasions which, if accepted, lead only to sorrow : '·LET ME APPOINT you chairman af !he committee. Doo'l worry. I'll see that somebody elte does all the work.·· "We want lO lbrow a surpri.9e party for old Geor11:e on his birthday. l'fow abOul U$ing your apartment? Tf theft's •ny damage, we'll Jll chip in and pay for It." "Look whll 2 round In the basement- 111n old hul• hoop. Remember when we first tried It what happtned to your back? Let's see if you 're any better at it now." 11 1! It was.n'I a hot mink coat, do you think t'd be 1elllng it so )'OU In an alley? But my wife need.I an operat ion, and I'm de>perale. If 2 lcnocl< lilo price down to '50, wiP )'(IU take it?" 111 COULD TF,,U. )'ou were a classy guy I.be minute you stepped lnlo 1he bar. mlsk.r. How about buying a lonesome girl a Letnl!)'•WetnUy drink?" •·Jwt becau.se he's "rearing a unlfonn and a bldlf, 1ou're· oot going to lei him yle f gel away with talking lo you like that, are you, Rodney? Tell him who you are." "l didn't know an old sofa could be so heavy. Arter we get it out on the front porch, you take the front end back down the stairs. Don't you think it will be lighter that way ?" "I think there"s a pheasanl in that patch of tall grass just ahead. Why don'I you try lo nush it. and I'll stand back he.rt and wing it when it Oies up ?" "MAYBE YOUR LUCK will change if wt raise the ante to $5. Okay?'' "My yogi showOO me an exercise that will make a new man of you. 1-!('_re, just bend over and slart to stand on your head, and I'll-.'' "Th.is restaurant looks so quaint and small I'm sure it couldn't be very ex· pensive. Lel'a go in." "My, it is warm , Isn't It? \Vhy don't you drive with one hand while I help you take your toat off?'' "'The only way to Impress a boss i.'! lo speak up to him. 11ow about Lelling your!I that he has to gl\Pe you • mcril raise or you'll peddle your wares elsewhere?" •'GO ON AND PASS him. You're not chicken, are you ?" "You hold the nail -I'll do the ham· mering.'' "The be.!it wa y lo win respect rrom one of these teen-age kids Is to Lake him oul in tbt back yard, put on the gloves, and show him who's who. I did it with mine. •nd nOw he calls me mi ster. Db you want to borrow 111.1 1loves?'' WASHINGTON -The answer as to who and what was behind t bat mysterious suit to block publication or the House Internal Security Ccmmittee's report on "'radical revolutionaries" who got fancy fees for lecturing a t universities may rest in the rommittce itseU. A committee member is strongly suspected by his colleagues of being directly involved In the Ameri can Civil !--i.bertieS Union's surprise attempt to en- JO!n the committee's re1><>rt -an un· precedented legal action, so far as is known. · . Three significant factors are being cited by committeemen as the basis for their ausplcion : The suspected member is a militant civil libertarian with reputed ties with the ACLU; he disapproved of the in- vestigation and sniped at it throughout its duration; the ACLU obviously was in possession <>f an advance copy of the report because it quoted from the docu- ment in the injunction petition filed in a federal rourt before the report was released -in Oat defiance or the court's temporary restraining order. STILL UNKNOWN is why the ACLU sought to suppress the committee's find· ings. The ACLU professes to be a vigor. ous foe <>f secrecy and great cham- pion of the "people's right to know." Yet the express purpose of its sudden suit r Allen~~.;:-~··~· j \-..""· ... • -..:~....:Jl.....J.:I.;>./ was to bar the publication of the names of "radical revolutionaries" who were paid thousands <>( doUars for delivering • extremist lectures t.o college sludents. The committee's rmdings are explicit on that. as foU oWs: Of the 134 colleges and universities surveyed, 1,168 outside speakers delivered 1,411 talks for which lbey received $909,335 in bmoraria. A con- siderable percentage ol highly paid lec- turers were Communists, radicals and a wide. range of other militants and ex· tremists. ' · CONCLUDES THE report ' "ff, in a sampling of 31h percent of the institutions of higher e d u c a t i o n , payments of this magnitude are derived by such individuals, lbe Congress and the pt.>ople or the United St.ates have a right lo conclude that the campus-speaking circuit is certainly the source of signifi· cant financing for the promoters of disorderly and revolutionary activity among students. Such speak i, g engagements are not only revenue pr~ flucing. but afr<>rd a forum where the radicalization process may be continually expanded." Prom inently listed among th e "radical revolutionaries" who were paid thousands of dollars for letturing at col· leges are the following : ANGELA DA VIS, H. Rap Brown, Stokely Carmichael. Rennie Davis, Dayid Dellinger, Iierbert Aptheker, Tom Hayden, Abbie Hoffman, W i 11 i a m Kunstler, Jerry Rubin, J. Mark Rudd, Claude Lightfoot, Bobby Seale . The committee found that in many in· stances extremists were selected as Jee. turers where student funds ~were in- volved. Declares the report: "Analysis of the fees shows that Bludents (through student funds} and not college and university administrators are primarily responsible for giving radical orators a campus platform .... Where school administration is involved in in- vitation and payment or fees, it was ''found most campuses provide a balanced diet o£ speakers." Under subcapti<>ns, the report Usted the following '• r.a di ca I revolutionary" arganiz.ations and lecturers affiliated with them : COMMUNIST PARTY, USA -eight speakers, among them Angela Davis, Herbert Aptheker and Claude Lightfoot, the party's 1968 presidential candidate. Bfack Panther Party -11 speakers, among therg Bobby Seale, F I o y d Hardwick, Elmer Dixon, Elaine Brown, II. Rap Brown. Students for a Democratic Society -18 speakers, among them Rennie Davis, t om Hayden. J . Mark Rudd, Mike ~peigel, Carl Oglesby, Richard Rothstein. Youth International Party -14 speakers, among them Abbie Hollman, Jerry Rubin, Paul Krassner. Progressive Labor Party (Trotskyite Ccmmunist) -eight speakers who received fees ranging from $1,250 to 11,500. New t.1obilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam -12 speakers, among them David Dellinger, Edward Keating, Floyd McKissick, Sidney Peck, Douglas Dowd. DEC4RES THE report' .. The movement of the New Left quite candidly pvbllahed la 'guide' af names, addresses and fees charged by a list of some 100 radical Pied Pipers of pernlciow: propaganda. Of the 120 listings our staff tabulated, largely by culling tnrough news accounts or radi cal orators appearing on campuses, we found a select group of people repeatedly in· volved, particularly those convicted in the Chicago conspiracy trial. "Jerry Rubin, Abbie Hoffmctn, Dave Dellinger and Retmie Davis cropped up repeatedly. Stokely Carmichael and Eldridge Cleaver, panderers of black racism in our COWltry, and Rap Brown, prior to his disappearance on the eve of his trial for riot incitement, also found already.made audience on campuses." By Robert S. Allen and Job.a A. Goldsmith IRS Confiscates Rifle from Nixon WASHINGTON -Treasury aides have conDscated a Chinese-made AK-47 automatic assault rifle, a trophy or the Cambodian invasion, from President Nix· on. His possession of the weapon violated federal firearms Jaws. Illegal weapons have also been seized from two White House aides, four ~enatorS, four Representatives end three Governors. Criminal charges aren't likely to De pr er erred, however, against the President and his distinguished fello\\ law·breakers. The Jnternal Revenue Service, which ronducted the raids upon the 14 high of- fi cials. was most rt- luctant to talk about it. After debating for two days whelher to answer our inquirles, the IRS finally ack- nowledged that t h e weapons had b e e n "captured in Cam· bodian sanctuaries and presented to members ol lhe Presi- denl's fact.finding missJon which went 10 the area in June.·• THE GUNS WER.E personal gifts from U.S. and South Vietnamese military B11 George --~ Dear <leorge: I have worked for this firm for four years without a raise. ~1y boss S3Y'J the firm can't afford It. yet his silly, little blonde secrttary got a rai!ie. Should r march into bis office :ind ask lo be treated thl!l same way es his bloOOe secretary? f'URJOUS SAL Dear $31: I don'l think so. Why don 't you just ask for a raise? " leaders and were brought illegally into the U.S. The IRS. however, tried lo phrase this a Jillie more delicately. "The weapons were received by the U.S. civilian officials," explained the careful IRS statement to this column, "as representatives ()f the U.S. and, therefore, will be given to military museums as the property of the U.S. government.'' The President's AK.-47 and another · enemy rifle in his possession ''have been turned over lo the Smithsonian Institution pending completion of 1 presidential library,'' said the IRS. TBE 011IER dignitarles who lost their semi·automaUc Chinese carbines to the federal raiders were identified by the 1RS as While House aides llerb Klein and Rryce Harlow: Senators Howard cannon. D·Nev .. Tom Mcintyre, 0-N.H., George ~1urpby, R.Calif .. and John Tonr. R· Tex.; Representatives Bill Bray, R-lnd., O. C. Fisher, D-Te.x.1 Mel Price, ().JI\., ci nd Bill Whitehurst R-Va.: Governors John Love, R.COlo., Robert P.fcNair, I). S.C., and Raymond Shafer. R-Pa. The lRS arranged for military men. pre.'iumably weapons specialists, to pick up the illegal weapons on Ca pitol Hill. The servlctmtn brought along a special carrying case, so the Chinese guns could b@ lugged out or the Capitol building v.·llhout alarming legislators and tourists. 01\'E CONGRESSMAN had already ar· ranged a place on his wall for his carbine when he lcarnC(j from the IRS that It was against lhe ll'W for him lo poS!C5.' i°L Most of the trophies, however. were con- fisca ted rrom congres.i;ion.al closets. Scn:Hor Mcintyre told thia column he didn't want the Chinese carbine in the fi rst place. F'ederal firearms laws have barred machineguns from civilians since the t:angland days of the 1930s. The import of these lethal, rapid fire weapons is also banned without special licenses. None of the 14 dignitaries, of course, had been issued a license. CHIEF JUSTICE \Varren Burger has alerted federal e<>urts across the country to tighten securily as a precaution against terrorist tactics. He acted after Judge Harold J. Haley was abducted from his courtroom in San Rafael. Calif., by black mllitants, who decapitated him with a shot gun blast dur· ing .a shootout with law office.rs. Police said the guns used by the militants had been purchased by Communist glamor girl Angela Dil.vis. The Chief Justice has turned the pro- blem of courtroom security over to Judge Clement Haynsworlh, wh<> remained on the fifth Circuit Co11r~ after his ap- pointment lo the Supreme C<>urt was re· jected by the Senate. WHAT WORRIES Burger a n d Haynsworth Is that the courts are pro- ltct.ed by federal marshals, who are often untrained polllical appointees. In Baltimore. for instance, federal Judges have appealed to Senator Charles "~tac" ~lathlas. R-~td .• lO stop the Republicans from replacing t.tarShal Frank Udorr with a political appointee. Udoff. a Ocmocralic appointee. has done an excellent iob of handling dlsrupti<>n~. Senator-*Mafhlas, therefore, telephoned !he Justice Department and asked his fellow Republican. Deputy Attorney General Richard Kleindienst, to leave Udo ff on the job. In Chicago. the numbtr of ftderal marshals et cou rt proceedings have been doubled from 10 to 20. and 111 court.room clerks have been Brmed. Other courts are carefully checking the ldenUUes of •11 visitors and searching anyone who looks suspicious. THIS COLUMN reported on Sept. 28 U!~t the U.S. Inrormation Service bad "distributed a classified memorandum to its missions throughout the world poin· ling out that the Soviets cannot be trusted." In another reference on October 2, we noted that the n1e1no had equated the Middle East cease-fire violations with the Cuban missile crisis. "During U!e 1962 Cuban missi le crisis," we reported, "high Soviet officials were caughl in 19 outright lies." OUR STORIES have oow been con· firmed by the \Vashington Post. which also bas revealed that the secret USlS memo led Secretary of State BUI Rogers to sC<>ld ISIS chief Frank Shakespeare for making foreign policy on his own. The inside fact is, however. that Shakt:ipeart got tus guidance directly from the White House. The controversial memo merely r e peated what Shakespeare had been told by aides close to Presldenl Nixon. ----- Mond ay, Oclober 26, 1970 Tiit ed itorial page of t/1e Dally Pilot seeks to inform a11rl s11m· ttlate rcacifrs by prese11!ing this newspaper's opi11icr11$ a11d conl· mtnta~ on UJpit:t~of inttrrst and significance, b~ providing a foritm for the expreisitm of our readers' opinion.t, and bu presenting 01e diver.te vlew- poini.t of i11/ormcd obstrvl!r1 and spokesmen on. topics of th• dav. Robert N. Weed, Publisher --------···--·----·- f.1 onday, Otlober 26, 1970 CAILV PILOT 9 Orange Coas·t Inaugurates Tu.tor ~en.ter Why It Pays to Know ··our prog ram is one or peo- ple helping people." Orange Coast Collegt in· slructor John Coales used that <Jne sentence summation to describe the n<>w Tutorial Center at OCC. The center is located on the fourth floo r of the new OCC Library. "In our society the success n1ystique is so slrong, and the failurl! taboo so terrifying, that many are scared to death of th~ fornut!ized schoolroom approach with its emphasis on grades and failure." Coates said. "The center is our at- tempt to combat this . ., Coates said the center "'ill rlraw tutors from two sources. Coates said he feel s there is a great reservior of talen t in Ocean View District Assisting Colleges The Ocean View School District has 1nore than trir.\·d its efforts this y,eur to assist local colleges and universities V.'ilh their teacher training progra1ns. Fifly·s ix ieachcrs w i 11 "learn by doing" in Ocean \'ie\V classrooms thi s year, as compared to 16 last year. The trainees \~·ill be supervised in their work by a veteran Ocean View teacher an d a training director from lhcir campus. Cal Stale Long Beach c:ur· rently sends 12 students to ! l ' -~ -4'1:i'"'"""~ l Ocean View classroon1s, y,·ith onother 24 scheduled to lake their places behind t he podiums later this year. Cal St.ate Fullerton has five stu· dent teachers in the district, as does Chapman College. ,\lso using the districrs classro o·rns as their laboratories are 10 ''honors in· terns ·• from USC y,•ho are cur- rently doing graduate \vork in educatiOn which will earn them a teaching credential an d a possible master 's degree. Christmas Special! One Large 8x10 and Six Lovely Wallet-Size ' Portraits of Your Child 88 only Hurry in now for !he most spectacular portrait event in townl You 'll get a big, beautiful 8x 10 end six charming wallet-size for fam - ily ond friends. A fin~ portrait of your child is a worm and wanted gift for Christmas. Remember ... you con chorge it at Penn•ys I ~~!!~~"' flU!,,Ll•fON o·~~<i..-•"' '""'''' t"" fl-. Ill 4" HUNrlMOTOfrf ll l•CH t<~'fl!lol'llr-.11 c.t!hl~ ,,...., 1ioor, 1n 1111 .,...,,.,., "'"" c1,,.M •n.mr BOB PALEY Let Mr. Penney help you fight the high cost of living. Founder's Day! Roll out the barrels. Roll in the savings. SaleS338 Reg. 1375. 5 !le. game group--48 .. dia. game table and 4 swivel chairs. Sa1es239 Reg. SHI. -1' pc. bar group--48" wide bar, 2 swivel stools and wall lamp. SaleS289 Reg. S325. 4 pc. sofa gr~74 .. bamll sofa, 2 end !ables, coffee table. SaleS866 Reg. SM&. 13 pc. barrel group includes sofa, 2 end tables, coffee table, game table and A. chairs, bar, 2 bar s1ools and wall lamp. Put this set where lhe act ion 's livelieM,,, . it"U sh rug oft the hardest wear. t(iln dried barrels are ringed with steel hoops, have a rich oak linish. Cushioning is latex foam rubber or polyurethan e foam. Use Penneys time payment plan ar any 61 these stores: FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER • NEWPORT IEACH Penney• furniture prices Include deUvery within local delivery area, Sho p Sun day, too. 12 to 5 P.M.1 HUNTING TON CENTER HUNTING TON BEACH .. " ' "' ·, • V0<ctbulary Records ' If'• l•y •d h• to U1t•• CNld Lffr11t 'Cloildr111 111d 1ch1h1 11ilo:e ctn <1dd ·,•~01111nd1 of r11w word1 to their wor•Jn9 "oc1bt,1l1rie1 with thi1 oul- 1t111dl-.g Vot1bul11y Studi11 Cour•e ! Author.cl by f1ma111 Or. 8er9111 Ew1n1, profenor of Er19li1h 11 Northwetterr1 U., 1ulhor, lecl11r11r i nd TV p1r1on1lily, con1i1h of 5 l' recoult n1u1ted by Rob1rt 8r1e11 end 5 study <Juid11. A bettor • "ot1bt,1l1ry rn1li11 it e11i1• lo le 1111 , helps you 1e1d belt1r, wri t1 ind .~1l li b.,tter , , • y111, e •en th in• beH1r l.ec1111e we thir11r in words! 'U1ed by hundr1d1 of 1duc1tori "' , ...,,11 11 b111ineur1 lo imp•o•• el. i~c+iv1r1e11 of 11111 peronn1I, •~•~· ulive. T•Y IT F•EE F0• 10 DAYS! Don't Send Monty ... Ju1I M<1il Coupon! Cornplel• Co11fle Will Bo M1il1d Po1t19e Prep1id. VOCAIUU.•Y STUDIES ltttJ1tr1r'1 otflct Ill Olvtf'ly ,.1r1<w11, Dept, :IOS-'11 ,._, C~ic191, llllMll .:KU • 1'11111 find "'' Voc1bul1ry Sludie1, l!il: me or1ly $'4.95 per month, f.>r only 6 l'll0nlh1 !Total pric1 i 29.70J. 'I will remit within 10 d1v1 or re · 1urn Voc1bul1ry Siuc:l :e1 •nd owe ·r olhin9 . ~••• "'oney, ti yo11 ch,ck h1r1 •nd ;111clo11 P•vment i~ full $24.95, ¥0" l ••e S4.75. Return 9uer1nl11 ~p · .p Ji11 of COU'11, ""''"' ....................... . Adc:lrt~I • •,, •,,,,.,,,,,,,, •• ,, Cit ¥. • ••• , ••••• ." ••••• ,, ••••.. St•te , ••••••••... Zip • , ••..•. DAILY PILOT .Baby Dies; Left Alone In Tragedy !\IONTE BELLO tUPI ) -A 6-month-old boy starved to dea th in his crib apparently in the '\'eek-long period his parents were missed. Their bodies were found Sunday and police said the parents were murder-suicide victims. Authorities said neighbors or ~tr. and ~1rs. William D. Zuzulin became worried when they did not ~ the couple since last \\'eek and called police. When officers forced open a window or their home they round Lynn Zuzulin. 28, lying in a bed in the master bedroom. She died of a head wound. CUL TUR ED PEARLS TO POUR Over everything _en masse. This year's lengths are growing strong . From a collection of length in our delicious world. 16" Choker. $50. l 8" Pr incess. $60. 22H Matinee, $75. 10" Opera, S100. Baroque necklace nearly 7 ft .. S 150. Cl'll'lll A((i)v~h ln~Utoel Af"lollrlC•n !'P'"' B-•..,..icefll •1'111 ""''"' Cfl•rft. loo SLAV ICK'S J<'"'<'l"M> Shll'(' 1917 I 8 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -bH.1380 OPftt Monday enc:J . Ftidoy u11til 9:30 • . -. .. ~AK$\{ 2$ Ziij!S ~t >au:; a t s s a ' ~ . .. . .... -.. Monday, October 2f.i, 1970 R eagan's Aides See Big W in Stat(i to Go To Low-lead SACRAMENTO !UPI) - Nearly all of the State's huge motor vehicle fleet v.·ill run exclusively on I o w • I e a d gasoline next year, I h e Reagan Admi•istration has announced. The move is intended to reduce auto-caused air pollu· lion. The State Department of General Services and the State Air Resources Board an· nounced Saturday that the U n i o n Oil Compa ny of California has been awarded a $9.29 million credit-card con- tract for 15.5 million gallons of the fuel next year. QUEENIE EVERY TUESDAY AND THURSDAY FROM 4 P.M. TD CLOSING IS 'BUCK' NIGHT AT GRANTS FAMILY SPECIALS YOUR CHOICE' * Roast Turkey Dinner * Golden Fried Chicken * Roast Beef Au Jus * Ham Steak Hawaiian Wltti potcrtOft, choice of •••etebl• or crHiny col• 1low, roll oltd better. $ Monday and Wednesday Evenings Only BRADFORD HOUSE STEAK DINNER Served with toned ''"" utad, potatoes, hot roll arMI butter. 2 ••• $300 BROOKHURST & ADAMS HUNTINGTON BEACH J ,~ By Phil lnterlandi ltlolotov . Cocktail Bnta Tunney Hit in Full-page Ads for Crime Bill Vote Runaway Truck Hits 14 Vehicles on Freeway EMIGRANT GAP (UPI) -runaway" and added tests A "runaway" truck careening v.'Ould be conducted on its do"·n a Sierra Nevada freeway mechanical condition. smashed into a 14 other ---,-0-,.-,-,-,.-,.-,-.-,-- vehicles Sunday, killing one person and injuring 20. the California Highway P a t r o I said. The dead man was iden· tified as Denvil Garmen. 51, Auburn, occupant of one of the cars. Nine of the injured were hospitalized. The driver of the truck Oed the scene on foot and was not jmmediately found. Worried About FALSE TEETH Coriiln9 Loose? Don't be .o l.fhld tl'iai rour ft.1&9 tlieth will comt IOOM or drop JUI!\ at the wron1 tlme. For man •curltY and oomfon, •Prill.Ill• PASTEETH• DentUr9 Adh•l1'e Powdef on your pl&tet.. •ASTDTH bolds denturu finner lo~. Mel• •tl.ng euler, 7ASTBJn'll ll n°' acid. No gummy, aooey, JJUtr ta.te. Oen\W'ft, tll.at flt art ~u.1 to beal\.b. See >'GUZ' ~tllt reiruiarlJ'. Ge\ et.ay·to-Ulll Beauty Bulletin From Penneys: Come in Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday and we'll give you a festive holiday frosting for just 14.88. l'ULLl:ll'TOM '"•4"9,,,.;r C..Mf' . ~ uoor. tll-4UJ t\nne~1 be•uty uk>n HUNTINGTON 81iloG. ........ 1...-c- 2...i flOD<", lft-1111 .... "'TH C""" """"' NliWf'OltT •CACtl """ICln k56nd :h:I ,_., ~nn According to the CHP, traf· Uc was backed up about a half-mile on Interstate 80 because of a previous ac- cident. •..&8'1'BTll •tall ~couuten.. ''----------------------' An orfi cer had gone back to direct trarfic when the tractor- trailer carrying a load of welding rods came around a curve sounding its horn. .. .•.. The truck hit a CHP car al about 40 miles per hour then hit 13 more vehicles. lt came to a stop after it "·ent over a bank, pushing three cars ahead of it. Highway Patrol officers said the truck was ''apparently a Mayor Yorty 1\fay Bow Out NEW YORK I UPI ) -Los Mayor Sam Yorty, with three years yet to serve in the of- fice, may leave shortly to take a job in the oil industry. ac.· cording to Newseek f\.lagazine. The magazine's latest issue said Yorty, a regi stere d Democrat ~·ho often endorses Republican candidates. was considering an executive post with Occidental Petroleum. Annand Hammer, the com- pany's chairman is an old friend or the mayor. s59 Special Buy! portable TV. with 3 year"picture tube guarantee. First Time In Huntington Beach PlZZAHUT ; SMORGASBORD Every Monday Nlglat, 5:30 • 9:00 ALL THE PIZZA YOU CAN EAT Adults $1.25 CAl•Y OUT o•Dns AY_,\11.Alll AT 111GUU.I P•ICES Children 65c IUNDEI 1tl S POPULAR YAlllnllS AYAll.ASLI Penncrest• port1bl• black and while TV. Features 12 inch screen measurea diagonally. Monopole VHF antenna. Fully molded, high impacl plastic cabinet. 3 year picture tube guarentee: Penneys provides home service on 1ny Penncresti8 TV (in·slore 1ervice on porlable.TV) for de!ecls in materials or workmanlhip eppearing within 90 days 01 purchase. We replace your pfc· lure tube (Ulfng a rebuill picture tube) 11 derective wilhin 3 years on black and white TV. We provide replacement !or any piirt ii delec1ive withi n 1 yeBr. La bor is exua after 90 days. Contact Penneys tor authorized servi ~ urtder guarantee. ~RRe'ft SERVING MORE THAN 70,000 PIZZAS COAST.TO.COAST DAILY Availabtt •t theM Penntf •lores: Buy rt. on Ponncrs time paym•nl pl111. 19071 BROOKHURST 962-1333 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER e NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTINGTON BEACH • , ' " ' < • , • ' • " • ' L • • ' • ' • • • • ' • b " • " • . i j, t " • ' • ' ' • • ' • < • • < • ' ' ' ' • • ' < • • • • • ' < • ' ' For The Record Death J\'otl.,es (LA.Jiit' W1lttr Edw1rd Cltrll. Sr. A111 13, 11/ 1906 Al!ur1 Orlvt, CorMt del Mir, Ot1t ol !lttll>. 0<.I~ 2,, Survlvttl bv '°"I, Wtl- ,.., F. (ltrk, Jr., CorDN1 dtl Mtr; Jtck -.. Citric, L1111n. llffch; Wlllltm W. Cltrk, Anthtlm: Geoiroe W. CJ1,.., C~­ f'oil1 P1rk: 1l1t1r, Htitl C, $chletley, Arc~di~: tl or1ndclllldrtn; lS oretT· ortndchlldtn. Strvlcts. !O<Hv, M"""'"· 12:30 11.m., 811!1 (O•OO"I del Mtr Cl\11111. wl!h lh11. John P. "slit¥ otllcl1lln1. In· t~rmenl 11rlv1!t. Btl!r (OrO!lt dtl Mtr Mor1u1ry, DlrtctorJ. '" John EdOtr Co•. lllH Frt•h Mt~ISOw Ltnt, All!. U-1. S.tl B .. ch. Diii ol dHth, Odober ?•. su,..r~ by wu~. Et~r. St rvlcu, lut1d1¥. 1 •un .• Pad rk \lll'W CMH l. lnttrmtnl, Ptclllc Vltw Mt morltl Ptrll. Ptcl!lc View Morl111rv, DlrK!Orl. CllLL, Jlt. 811nt:1mln (. (Jt d!) (r!U, Jr, •tt 5'. of llf5 Slltnl'IClfl Ltnt, Cotlt ~u. Dal• el dealtl, Oct•r 1•. s.., .... 1.,ed ll'f' wl!e. Miidred; '°"'• L-11. of S•nla Su1an1; Dale Crill, Cot1t Mnt: dt~Mer, Gwtn- Ol:llvn Ho1!; Cot1t Meur brol"'-r, Gii· be<'! Ctlll, Marr<:> 1111: 17 •tnde:hlktrtnr two t reat1rtndson•. s1 .... 1cn. Wednn· dt"f, 2 11.m., lltf! llroa<l'f<t"f (htHI. 111· t1rrn1n1, Htrbor RH!. lltll llrNclway >-flftvtrr, DirKlar1. • HAITt oElrrlU" $. Htrh". Alt 1'. of 5M Ttff$U~ ilti•'ld Troijor Pt!"lf. L191tftt llHch. Otti f'rl auth, Ociobl:t ll. su .... IYlld ll'f' cou,111. Mrl. Ooro1h¥ McF1ul, LO• .l1111le1. V!sl· t•!lon wl!! be "'-'d Tu11C111. n """" ,,.....,.,,,,.. Wedt11l<I••· aeu llrotdw•Y Ch•· "1. IMitrmtnl will bl In CtlVI"' Ctmt· ll•"f, To••· Ol'llo. llt!I lltMllwtV Mort ... •rv, OlrKtora. SMl.TH Jr,rltlur M. Smith. 2)19 Rural Pltce. Costa M~w. Otlt of cltitlh, Oct. 2l. su .... 1v~ bv wife, Ell1tbtlll1 two dau1M1ro, Mro. Rul!I Clar~ tnd Mr1. Mtr•arat Clifford; IOl'I. Mlcllaol Smllh1 two or1nc:1cnlld'111 Sen.kn •nd !n!trmenl wUI be held In N ..... Yorti. W11rctltf Ch•Hf Mortu1 ..... '4MIU, '-··~Ina ~l•M:IGU. V.lLeNTtNE Carlton O. Val~llt11. "''' 99. of 465 E. 11111 St .. (Ml• Mew. 0•1• of dttltl, De· tobl<' ll. su,...lvlld ll'f' nlK e1, Je1n '"" Cltlrt V1lenrin11 Mtl. Lt nt1tY llroolc1 t nd J1ne Owrc1111. Servlc11, INI••· Mon· dtV, 11 t .m.; 11111 arotdWtY Chip.el, wlrh h Y. Lortn Fllcklntt t offlcl111 .. ,, 1 ... unwnen!. Holtvwnocr c .... ererv. llen llrot dWt Y Morl11•"'· Oirtcton. WADE ,t,o$dle l(. Wtde 111. Aoe 4 , or 11171 Lo- tus, FDl>fltt ln V•lll"f. Ot!e ol de11n. Otl. 2~. Su .... Jvtd br mDltll•, Mtt W8dt; two d•110hl1rt, Shtron Alm' •1111 Terrtt W•dt: sit...-, ?111• T111..-l11; two grtnokhlldren, ..:tla•.n tnd T1mtr1 .llm1. Mr. W-wt1 •·;ontm0tr Ill ltll Hvnllntl!ln lltt-ell M• -..,k Lod9•. Servk.n, T11t11111v, n '·"'·· s..ttltns CN1>tl. lnltrnm..,!, P1cllk Vlt"' ~rl1I 1"111!. kftlttla Morl11t1rv, O!rec. ~· W•TNIUta•• l rt P. Wt!hlrDH, 1263 Colt1lt DI'., ~. Ot>lt of (Mt!ll, Oc!. 2~. Sur· br ""If•, H1111r d•111httr. Vlr1l.,l1r 11 ... d; 1l1!fr, LIKY tee••· M11s1tlW• brottMr, H1rold Wt!htrU., M09- 1nd 11v"' trtndChlld,..n. S1rvk 11, e1d1v. I o.m .. Westcll!I Cht1>tl. with E' C•fl LHlllfl Poll ''" cUlclt!lnt. "'"'· S1wttll1 V1ter~n1 ce,...!l'J'Y. off Chtptl Mort111rv. 6U.11U, 01· '•"· ~ ARBUCKLE & SON ~ WHtclUf Mortuary ~ E. 17th St., Costl l\fesa If ..._ • • BALTZ l'lfORTUARIES ~a dtl Mar : ... OR S-!MSI C.ta Mesa ........ mi g..%04 -. f; BELL BROADWAY .,_ MORTUARY 1ie 8roadw1y, Costa J\fe1a LI 8-3133 • McCOMITCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Rod. f.94·9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortulry Chapel 35eO Pacific View Dri ve Newport Beach, California 1«-noo • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 lkHN Avt.. Westminster .... 113-3SU • SHEFFER MORTUARY La(Wla Be1etl ....... 4M-1W San Cleme1&t ..•.... 412-GIOI • SMITHS' MORTUARY IZl Malo St. Jluntl•"°" Beach - '·-·-MOnd.iy, Ocl06tr26, 1q10 DAILY PILOT J ! UCI Prof Awarded -~ Research Grant IRVINE -UC Irv I n e UCJ's medical school, said the medical professor .Edward R. study will Involve an in- Arquilla has been awarded a vestlgatlon of the possible ef· $6,000 research grant for a feet of insulin on t h e project. that could lead to an transmission of Information u n d e r s t a n d i n g of lhe from the gentic material of mechanisms or heart disease lhe cell. and stroke. uone of the major problems The award was announced In the U.S. today ls diabetes ~.!:..:=.::::~:;::::;~ by Dr. Fred P. Sattler, mellitus and It is intimately f chairman or the Orange Coun-concerned with cardiOvascular ty Reart Association research dlseas, hypertension, Tenal committee, who said 1t was disease and vascular diseases made possible lhtough dona· leading to blindness," the Make a Shor p Tradei Use Dime·A-Lines lions of county residents. -;;'~'~";'~r~c;;he~r.;'.;sa~i~d.i;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;!;i:~;:iii::;::~;:iii:::;:iii;:iii:::;:iii::: Arquilla, who is chairman ofl ~ the pathology department at Herb Klein Talk Slated SANTA ANA -Herbert 8. NEED A DENTIST? - EMERGENCY PLATE REPAIRS yo~":i!,, .~ ' ,. ' r New U.S. Citizens Sworn l,n Klein, President Nixon's top press aide. will address a mee~ing of the World Affairs Council of Orange County Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m. at the Sad- dleback Inn here. Klein, who Is director of Fillin9s - Pentothal Extractions -Credit .• J, i: .J ., SANTA ANA -Thirty-eight residents of the Orange Coast are among the newest 157 U.S. citizens sworn in d u r i n g ceremonies in Orange County Superior Court. communications for the e.x· D WATT :~: John Charles, Sr., 1651 w. Place, Costa h-1esa, Sweden. Maria, Capistrano B e a c h I ttutive branch, will speak on r. Baker St., Costa Mesa, Great Dida L. Juranick, 7811 Sweden. the topic, ''T he Com-COSTA MESA Britain. Talbert Ave., Hunt Ing ton Paula and Marlin Senicki, munications Challenge." Klein 261 E. 17th St. _ Phone 646-1882 Sherman J . Gray. 1612 San-Beach, Denmark. 17742 Lewis Lane, Hunlington is the former editor of the San dalwood Lane , Costa Mesa, Marita E. Roddick. 3408 Via _B~ea~c~h:_. ~C~a~n;ad~•;·;;;:::;::=;,Fiiiij~D~ie~g~o~U~n~i~o~n.:_ _____ _.'.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Huntington Beach leads the Orange Coast cities with 16 of the new citizens living there. Second is Costa ~1esa ~'ith eight, followed by Fountain Valley with four. Newport Beach and" San Clemente with three and Jrvine, Capistrano Beach, Laguna Beach and Mission Viejo with one each. The group is the last to be naturalized in Orange County this year. A spokesman for the county clerk's office said 577 new citizens have b e e n naturalized here this year-a record for the county. Orange Coast reside n ls gaining their citizenship in- clude: Anne-Rene Copeman. 15972 Oundalk L a n e , Huntington Beach. Germany. Isabel ~1argarita Capote, 5961 Chinook Drive, Hun- tington Beach, Cuba. Norman A. Craig, 2572 Bayshore Drive. N e w p o r t Beach. Great Britain. Andrew Louis' Mansur. 16522 Fountain Laiie, Huntington Beach, Jordan. , Joyce Wen-Ying Vermilyea, 3115 Bern Drive, Laguna Beach, Great ~ritain, Canada. Oporto, Newport Be a ch ·1- Munscn A. Ali, 798 Scott Germany, Place, Costa ~·lesa. Great Bri· Norah L. Smith, 1175 Dorset lain. Land, Costa Mesa , Canada. Brust.an ~I. Halling, 285.San· Rhona A. Villanueva. 16784 to Toma s, Costa Mes a, Olive St., Fountain Valley, Canada. Chile. Shirle y 0 . !i.'lcKinley, 25021 John J\JcJl,fullan , 15812 Hum- Spadra Lane, Mission Viejo, mingbird Lane, Huntington Canada. Beach, Great Britain. l\tary and Frank Palcsik, 511 Anthony C. Oyynstee, 2733 S. Presido Ave., San Clemente, El Camino Real, San Hun gary. Clemente, Canada. Isabel C. Capote, 59 61 Robert J. ti.titchc\l, 17931 Chinook Drive, Huntington Butler St., Irvine, Canada. Beach, Cuba. Hedwig and Hans Merten , Tony Scott-Hamilton, 16061 9700 Raven Circle, Fountain Hilton Lane, 11 u n ting t on Valley, Germany. Beach, Great Britain. Socrates Karageorge. 11>537 Esther R. Filardo, 22121 Walnut St., Fountain Valley, ]slander La n e, Hunti ngton Greece. Beach. Mex ico. 1'hcodore Willen. 2137 Elden, Gurli 1\.1. and Bjarne Schoen-Cosla Mesa. Poland. burg. 6442 Harmony Circle, P.iitry f\1. McKay, 1O9 Huntington Beach. Denmark. Yorktown Lane, Costa P.tesa, Patrick J. and Georg ina Canada. Bryan;' 6791 Breeland Drive, Gunars Pulnins, 1830 16th HLlTltington Beach, Great Bri-St .. Newport Beach. Latvia. lain. Stefan K. Hultin, 26758 Calle P.lary A. O'Connor. 16.11 2 ;:::==========.I Opera Lane, Huntington -Beach, Canada. Germana Zorrilla. 1 6 3 4 1 Normandy Lane, Huntington Beach. Cuba. , Margreta Sabi, 224 Virginia LOCAL No olhtr n1w1p1p1r t1tl1 you mo•t, 1v1ry day, 1bo11t wh1 f 1 9oin9 on in t~t Grttltr Or1n91 Cot,f th•n th1 DA ILY PILOT. Call Collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at-home service, free. Call now! Save up to 1 /3 on custom draperies . Decorate o\ow for the holidays at these tremendous savings. Sava up to 1/3 on beautiful custom draperies. Choose from casual open weaves, sheers, all cotton, and othera~Ragu la• !OW Penney prices for fabrication. ~J!..,ey• Decor1t1 nowl U11 P1nn1ys lime payment plan. Founder's Day! Let Mr. Penney help you fight the high cost of living. Through Saturday only! Sale19 99 Ref. 24.H. Pennct"alt• 2 .,..cl..,_ MW, Heavy duty saw f11atu,..1 !) HP motor that deliv11rs up to 2,800 one Inch slroktl per minute. Cuts 4"x4" at 45° right Dr left, 6"x6" 111 90" Sale2499 Reg. 29.lt, P9MCtaft• double lntulaled, nrfllbla 1pffd, revetslbl• drlll. PDwerlut 3 amp. motor delivers 0-1,000 RPM. Double reduction gearing. remov11ble sida handla. .. Speed loe" '°' IT'ftlltiple speed contrDI. Sale2899 Rag. 33.11, Penncratt• douMt lnwl11M, 7~" clrcular saw.1.9 HP rn Dlor, high culllng speed Df 5,200 RPM. Cutt 2~,. at oo• and 1~~ 1t 45". lneludea adjuslabl• rip r.nee. Penncreft s 8 pc. screwdriver 11t. 3ss Tools ••• Tools ••• Toolsl Camp axe ................................ -•• -.• -•• 2.41 3 piece plier set ................................... .2.11 Hack saw ................................................ 2.41 1 O" togglelock wrench ........................ 2.19 Folding rule ............................. , .• , .......... .2.91 24'' aluminum level ........... -.................. 2.49 Tool box ............................................... .2.49 8 Pt. hand saw ...................................... 1.H Comb. squ are .............. -..... ···-····· ......... .2.39 Water pump ptier ....... ·-·----·-·-·-···.2.59 5 pc. screwdriver set ........................... 2.11 5 pc. open end wrench set ... ·--···· .... 1.H -~nne111 Charge It at these Pennev stores: FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER e NEWPORT BEACH Shop Sun day. too, 12 to 5 P.W HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTINGTON BEACH • • • b£iW i.g JJfifl? §¥} 2 (C§Qj; ;; l ij&UA>A OLWASZ&Jlt ;cs a e cn;u zoo, o: • 0 ••• ii ' . ' . J ;l DAil Y PI LOT Monday, October 26. iq70 -Six High· In Hobie Newport Barbor Yacht Club ' Gold Cup Regatta Draws 262 Entries Regatta By At.MON LOCKABEl' , .. ,"" r•1,., Battling gusty trade winds a11d high seas of( Diamond •lead. six Southland sailors - including a lf»..)'ear-old boy from Newport Beach -placed aniong the first 10 in the se- cood annual 11obie Cat na- tional cha mpionship regatla. Cappy Sheeley, a 27-year old boat manufacturer's represe11- tative from Honolulu ~·as the \\'inner in a light duel with Hobie Aller or San Juan Capislrano. Sheeley beat Alter by one quarter of a point, but only after the designer-builder of 1he Hobies ~·as s we p I overboard from his boat dur- ing the last race Sunday. Aller managed to hold on by ot1e ann and hoist himselr back aboard to finish the race Star of the regalia was 15- year old John Ross-Dug~an of Ne~'J)Orl Beach "'ho placed seventh in the field of 45 veteran Hobie Cat sai lors. ,The youngster had ne\'er sailed in winds and seas stronger than tho s e ex- perienced off Newport Beach. Pretty Hiking D e11ao1astrntion Newport Harbor Yacht Club calls it the Fall Gold Cup Regatta. .But_lhe........suony <tay.z_ ~nd moderate sailing winds which greeted 262 boats in 22 classes Saturday and Sunday could have bef:n mistaken for a spring or summer r~gatta. The turnout rivaled m o s I midsummer regattas held on inside and outside courses al Newport. FoUowing are the trophy winners in the 22 classes: OCEAN RACING (6) -II I Tren~. Jay Linderman, BYC: (2) Jig Time, John Hall. INHYC) (3) Serapis II. Bill Barry, BCYC. PHRF (25 ) -(I) Kealoha. Matcha \Vold, VYC; (2 ) Blue Fin, Duffy Duffield, NHYC: (3) Bonita, Goldie Joseph. LIYC . RHOOES..33 (7 t -(I) Fire- fly, John Kewell, BYC: t2) Impulse. T. O. Clevidcnce Ji .. BYC : 131 Folly II, Blair Barnette. BYC. SHIELDS (13) -11\ Jean. Carl Reinhart. VYC; 12) Aileen, Peter Scruggs, NHYC: (31 Katherine. R. Evans. VYC. FLYI NG JR 19) -(I) Bob Shirley, ABYC : ,2) Tom \Vilson. ABYC: 13J Ayres Brothers. NHYC. \Vinds during the three-day regatta averaged 20 inols. gusting to 40 and "ldckin~ up mountainous seas off the Dia- mond Head buoy. There were 45 Mtries in the Sara Dixo~ lak~s l? the . ~eather rail a s skipper Alan Johnson brings dinghy championship re~atta. 10 of up o_n a brisk wind 1n sa1J 1ng d emonstra lion in Long Beach Harbor. They will whom \\'ere last m i n u I e pa rticipa t e in the sailing c linics, one of the features of the annua l Lon,E! Beach qualifiers in race.~ off Waikiki Sailboat Show now in progress at the Long Beach Arena . • last Thursday. nie other 3."i ~---------'--"-":.::_::.:....c.:...:::.:cc:_::.:::=..c.:.:..::::::: ________ _ INTERNATIONAL,.14 f I 2) -(I) Mike Allen. BYC ; t2l Lead Kept Bv s,vede hacl qualified in regional sailoffs earlier i11 the year. The 14-fool Hobie C at catamaran is the fa c;test grow· ing small sailboat fleet in the 11•orld. more tha11 4.000 having been produced in the last two year:;_ Other Southland i<:kipners v.•ho finished among the fir st 10 were \Vayne Schaefer of Dana Point. Ray Seaman of "1alibu. T e d Hendrickson. Newport Beach. a11d Richard Loufek. Camarillo. Lost Boat Picked Up By Russians AGAN A , Guam jLJPJ)- Ronald Ardery's missi oi 21 ·catamaran has been located. deck~ on a Soviet spy ship five miles off the coast or Guam. The 14-foo\, twin-hulled sail· ing boat that Ardery built himself was cut loose by van. dais a v.·eek ago. U.S. Navy pl anes. tracking the Soviet trawler Ampermetr photographed the ha I r -ton catamar an on the ship's deck, partially covered by canvas. Tht trawler keeps a con- stant station off r.uam lo report c111 U.S. Polaris sub- . marine activities and flights of : B~ bombers from Anderson Air Base. Ardery. a General Electric technical representative fron1 L~inchburg. Va.. m;iy never see his catamaran again. The craft is now the lav.1u1 property of the Soviet crew, according to Rear Adm. Paul E. Pugh, commander or naval forces in the ~1ariana s Islands. You can do it! Art too m•ny ch•nqes cominq at you the1e days, tiid too f•1f? You'rt not •lone. But you can learn to ~eep up with chanqe. •nd to discover more good in chanqe than you ever guessed. Robert H. Mitchell, of Th• Chri1tian Science Boa rd ·of lecfure1hip, says it ·ft~el willin9ne11 to let qo 'of old idets, tnd to learn 'tbout your1elf •s God'1 :imege. It may 1urpri1 e you :to learn how good you :really are, how capablt, and able to 1fty in tune with pro9rt11. Hear Robert Mitch.11'1 frte, public lat'tOr't "Are You Rectptivt lo Cha nqt7"' , CHllSTIAN SCllNCI LICTUll "A•t Yo111 loc1p+iw• to • Ch,,.,~•1" 1tr lelirHt H. Ml~ .. 11. C.J ,I, T~. Oct. 11-1 P.M. ,;,., Chtdl 9f c•ritt. ki..tkt Jl1 6 v;, de ,.,,,.,,,, s'" c1,.,11"'' Youth Lost As Sailboat • Capsizes SANTA BARBARA fUPl l - T~·o persons were thrown into !he ocean when a 10-foot sailboat overturned about 10 miles west of here Saturday. Jan Porter, 20, swam the rni!e and a half to shore, but Ed Hass. 20, ~·ho stayed ~·ith lhs overtumed cr i1rt , ~·as missing. A helicopter ;ind the 95-root cutter Ca pe Hatteras initiated a search. Miss Porter said she and Hass. both of Goleta, tried to right the sailboat. When they failed, lhey decided one of them would have to s~·im for help. Hass said he had swallowed a considerable amount of water and thought he cou ldn't make it. Crews See Boat Sho,v A tour of one of the nation's leading boat-building shops and a visit to the nation's only a 11 -s a i Ibo a t show were scheduled loday as off-water acti\1ilies for lhe eight col - legiate teams ~·hich \viii battle Friday and Saturdav in the rifth annual Dougias Cup P.1atch Race Series of f Long Beach Harbor. Teams from d e f c 11 d n n !!; champion Tulane. host Ca l State Lon g Beach. Bro\vn. HaYoa ii. Ohio St<1te, Stevens In stitute. USC and \V ashington \\'ill tour the displays of lhc Loni; Beach Sail boat Show a1 Leng Beach Arena. wh ich con- tinues through Sund ay. as guests or lhe s p o n s or in g Southern California P.tarinc Assn. F'riday evening. Brushfire Captures LA's Harbor Series AUCKLAN D. Nc1v Zealand. 1 AP) -Kent Carlsson of Sweden. winning both of Friday's races, retained his lead with no penalty points Gene Treple's 47-foot sloop OVERALL -I I) Brushfire: after three races in the world Brushfire from San Diego YC O.K. Dinghy championships. !2l Vector II : (3) Dorolh.Y 0 . Cl R be ts f N ,.,.as declared the overall and eve o r o e I\' Class A winner or Los Angeles CLASS A -(1 ) Brushfi re: Zealand ~·as second with 13.7 Yacht Club's Harbor Series 121 Vector 11 : (3) Dorothy 0 . points. Sunday. winning all but the CLASS B -(J) Tabasco ; Craig Thomas wa s the top final race or the lhree-race !21 Vl.,.a : f3 l Blue Norther. American in 10th place with series. Bill Sullivan. LA YC. 29.7 points. Gene Kohlmal't was Second for the entire series CLASS C -11 l Centurion: 26th wth 55.27 and Gary \\'as Merb Johnson's 47.fool ::"='=P=l=ei:.ed_e_s_' _13..:1'-'M::i::ra::g::.~_1_1._....:=C=ar=lo=m="='a:.s ::27_1_h_w_i1_h..:56=.3::0 . ..::,I sloop Vector II. atso from ['---- SDYC. and third was Robert B ca u champ·s Colu mbia·57 I See by Today's Dorothy 0, Newport Harbor · Yacht Club. Vector II was the overall W t Ad and Class winner in Sunday's an S· Marineland race. also known as the Mazatlan Tune-uf.i. Most of the yachts in the series are also entries in the Mazatlan race which slarts from Les An geles Nov. 7, Following .are the winners in Sunday's ~1arineland race: OVERALL -11 l Vector 11 : f2J Brushfire: (3) Capricious I II. Ben Williams LA YC. I CLASS A -(I) Vector fl : f2) Brushfire: !31 Tabascc.1 George Griffith. LA YC. CLASS 8 -l It Tabasco ; (2~ Conquest. Bill Polly. LBYC; 13) Viva. Gorham Getchell. \V\'C. CLASS C -j I) Vivan!. Mori llaskcll , LBYC: (2~ Pleicdes. Ha ndv Smvth , HHY C; !3 1 Solit:iire. 80b Young. LA YC. e A TTRACTI\IE \\" 0 i\f A N ncf'ded ror par1/full time 11-0rk. Teach professional 111ake-up techniques. Free !raining fOI'" qualified pe r- !<On. Excellenl. posiHon availabl('. e BAl..D\VJN BEAUTY ! Or- ga-Son1c Bald11·in organ 11·i1h lwnch, likf' llf'IY for sale. This could I)(' lhe one you've been looking ror. • DeltLxe mini ranch for sale in Rivrrside area. 11;, acre'!;, large home wilh PGOI. barn, s1a11s. • \VOOD shop f'qUipn1ent 1rR ntt"d. lf you wan1 to Sl'IJ your shop tools, see clas. i;ified today. Ftnal Series Standinics _~==::-":'=...""...""-='=."=.==============~I 11"•111 l>ollllc•I Adv•rlls•m•nl! GO WITH A. WINNER By Elecli11g A s T a:r Collector ROBERT L. "BOB" CITRON 10 Yeors on Oronge Counly lox Collector l st Jn Primory, 1st to File for Public Office Endorsed b'I The MOZLEY'S C.W. and Ethel ttl 0'"" Or .. Slnl1 ,I.ft• You Wwk Less You Save Money Keeps things cleaner withou t effort . eliminates bath tab rin~s Soap and clothing last longer ~mOGthrr, l·'.•,irr Slll\·t t ....... .-.~o..n- Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans FREE Estimates! Phone Sears Today! [Sears [ '"""'oot-.t::o>••to So. Coast Plaia' = Briltol St. pi-., 54e.3333 ... ...... Tim Murison, LJYC : (3) Doug Weber, BYC .. EXCAL!BUR (6) -Ill fj_Qwlin OwJ. Lew R o s s , NHYC; (2) !vain. Hubert Pickup, VYC: 131 Pussycat, Jobn Szalay. BCYC. SOLJ NG (20) -ft) Lowell North, SDYC : (21 Roger Welsh, NHYC; (3) B. Burns. CYC: (4) Qon Bever, S\VYC; l5l Marti n 'Gleich, SDYC. LUDERS-16 jl3 l -(I) Kildee. Ben Hromadka, LYC: 121 Windsong, Bi 11 Fun- denberg. NHYC: (3) Haiku, Louise Fundenberg, NHYC ; 14) Cat's Paw, Keith Dinsmoore, BYC. PC 16) -(I) Saturday! P.1orning, Lance M c C a b e . BYC; (2) P.1 is t y Ange Braalhen. RNYC . 5-0-5 !10) -f l ) Vector. B. Shenk, MBYC; t2l G"s A-Go- Go, P. Gantz, ABYC; Il l Smagger. Charles Legg. MIT. Na ut ical Assn. MACHINE NO THREE CAl.,.20 (6) -I I) Taro 2, N. Lamport. S~1YC: t2 ) La Duena, A. Andrews . BYC; 13) PJ. Praister & \Vilson, NHYC. ENPEAVOR ~8 ! -II) Stormy, John Amies. BCYC ; 12) Calamity. F'r;:ink Jayne. SSSC: 13) Iri sh bass. Elaine li1artin. NHYC. "THISTLE llll -(I) c:olda R, Evertt Ross. BYC : !21 San- dy Andi. Sandy Littlejohn. CBYC: (3 ) Cavort. \Vi 11 ·rempleton. BCYC. SABOT A (16) -II ) ~1ark Gaudio, NJ.IYC: 12) Mike Hayden. BC Y C : Mark Hinshaw, LIYC : j4) David J ohnson, BYC. SABOT B (7) -(I) Bertha Bents. NHYC: 121 N i c k1 P.1adigan, NHYC: 13) Steve ~1cClarty, LIYC ; (3) Merlin Will.so~. BYC; t4) Lance Gayman. ABYC. Davis, NHYC. LJl)().148 113) -i i) G. P. SABOT C (14) -(I) Regina Dunigan Jr., BYC: 12) Hen ry Parker. NHYC ; (2\ Wendy \Vagner Jr., Nl1YC; ( 3) Bents. NHYC: (3) Joy Pike, Gaston Ortiz. BYC. NHYC; (4) Bill Bilsborough. F'INN (181 -l l) ~lark BCYC. Hughes, BYC: 121 Peter KITE A (151 -(1) C.E1 Wilson, NHYC: 13) Peter \Villiams. BCYC; (2) John Parker, NHYC; t.f) Bob Ket· Daigh, NHYC ; (3) N i n a tenhoren. B\'C. Nielsen, NHYC; (.f) Terriannej'; ====:::=~=::::::::=.::C-- Parker, NHYC. tvt"Y ·•oov· SLIM GYM KITE B (10) -(I) Bruce '~O 1.0S£A011tsssizr T1vitchell, VYC; t2) Tim ... °'~ O'Rlelly. N~IYC: 13) Bill ,,. 2 ..-ctu Lapworth. NHYC: (4) Shelia •111 Siegrist, ABYC. MOM( otMONtTRATtclH LIDO I.A 171 (I I Do 11r1:15i*•· TELEPHON°E WALT · I -n .t.11..1111 Gv111 C71 .. )1Jt-S77S Robertson, ABYC: 12) J~ac~k~=======:::;;;:;;; NO TRICKS ., JfJST TREATS MONTH- END SALE AT BAAROWS 3404 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH I I Sears I Silverlone Owne r s ••• I s Your TV Picture Dim, Fuzzy or Color Blurred? Let Sears Install a Replacement Color Tube for You ..• NOW ; :,,)\ '.:, SEil RS TV PI CTURE T UBES .•. Co lor picture rubes have newly install ed e lecu on gun , reused e n~ velope. Screen and phos phors are 1ested before re- use, to the same r igid standards as new envelopes, screens and pbos. phors. See all the p.J!!y..§ in the big games ••• .fil!.jQy. all the color and clarity of other great programs ::! I." Diagonal Measure .\lode! 21FJP'22A Color Picture Tube Installed 95 l.)ac Sears Eaay Payment /'I.an Phone the Se ars Service Center Nearest You Today for Free Picture Tube Check· No Obligation METROPOLITAN I.OS ANGELES t;LENDALE PACIF IC 1610"-~'~"· 71191 ~nr..,._... I toO .tip 'II'~· ci...t• 1'1f"l'Ur..o .... rahl.,L4. 2Jt-4Tll 1174-2110 2.U.. •t 121-ltSll l l l-l£S't COV INA POMONA TORRANCE !,ONG HF.ACR ...,~ ... c..i.. ........ lf!li16~in.,)l,.-lalo-tll«l61U7J.I 2•&.Ss..s•h ..... T-·-· .. ~ ....... 111 .... i.111> ............ 4.t& • .W.11 :\0. HOLLYWOOD I l ... l l'!..,.,,_.,l'i .. ...,._ 7114-11109 , ......... . BUENA PARK IUtt.Pol_ll_oP'..l (114lUJ l.e'10.S TEMl'LEcm· Sllf ,"'· a--...i. T·-·~ .. ,,, l l T·64tl Open Monday thru Saturday 9 :30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. PRICE EFFECTIVE UNTIL OGTOBER 31. 1970 h ... ~IE •• 'CO J, 0 I C , hE ri 0 Fo d 0 h• ril f,1 iE • ' l I .E ft h s s \I f --·----------------------,- • • / • by providing ample electricity ... by helping to improve the environment ... ~Jectricity brings us light, keeps food fresh, jfonditions the air we bre;ithe, and brings th e iworldwithin our reach by rad io and television. t Jn factories, el ectricity is essential to keep reduction lines rolli ng. Without it, there 1 ould be fewer jobs and less prosperity. On he farm, electricity pumps water to irrigate raps, and does everything from milking ows to coaxing chickens to lay more eggs. ortunately, electricity is clean, flameless, dorless and does n't create by-products of •· ombustion at its point of use. · Everything man does has some effect on ~he environment, and the production and dis-~ribution of electricity are not exceptions. But : f,we failed to supply electricity for the facto- ies, farms and homes in the 14-county area ~e serve in Centra l and Sou thern California, he impact on all ou r lives would be devastat - ng. After all, electricity is one energy we '.j::annot do without. t " Electricity is vital. A high standard of livi ng and electricity go hand-in-hand. Shu t off electri city and you shill down plants, computers, radios, TV sets, freezers , hospitals-and even sewage treatment pl ants. Two of our major goals are to continue to supply ample and reliable electricity and to work to improve the environment with rela- tion to our generating plants ;md other fa cili- ties. We'd like to tell you how we do it. Water was once the primary source of power used to spin the turbines that gener- ated electricity for Central and Southern California. To trap the melting snows in the High Sierra, Edison.created the vast Big Creek Hydroelectric Pro ject. It meant open- ing up a mountain wilderness and build ing a network of dams and powe r plants. Today "Big Creek" provides electricity for hundreds of thousands of people. It also provides a vacation parad ise for th e public to enjoy, including campgrounds, six major man-made lakes, and streams well- stocked with trout. Moreover, "Big Creek" means flood con- tro l and irrigation water for the farmlands of the San Joaquin Valley below. After most feasible hydroelectric sources for Ed ison customers h ad been tapped, Peaceful use of the atom. Edison turned to fo ssi l-fuel power plants as {primary source for the growing demand for electric energy. Power plants in Southern California have never been the major contributor to air pol- lution, but when fuel is burned in power plants. certain by-products of combustion are released into the atmosphere. This is true when burning gas or oil in power plants, gas in homes, or gasoline in autos. To minimize by-products of combustion from our power plants, Ed ison has been working for many years in many ways. For example, Edison launched extensive air pol- lution research programs over 15 years ago. We were among the Jirst companies in the nation to activate suc h prog rams . We were also the first utility in California to use a low- sulfur oil from Indonesia. It's costly, but it burns much cleaner. We have succeeded in making significant reductions in emissions from our power plants. We are wo rking to reduce them even further. Nuclear generation of electr icity has two distinct advantages. It is a clean source of electricity, ~ and it helps conserve our natural resources. Above, San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, near San Clemente. Two additional units are scheduled at this site. Although the plant is a source of a miniscule amount of radiation, the amount is far below the levels set by the AEC. • A vacation paradise. Edison's Big Creek Hydroelei;tric Project, located in the High Sie rra in Central California,, supplies eleclricity and provides a vast recreation area fo r Jhe public. We believe generating. electricity at nuclear power plants is another effective way we can help to improve the environment. In a nuclear reactor there is no combustion, so there are no by-products of combustion. , Therefore, we plan to build ·additional nuclear units. Two are scheduled for opera- tion in 1976 and 1977 at the San Onofre Ge nerating Station near San Clemente. Thereafter, the only major generating facil i- ties Edison plans to build in Southern Califor- n ia's South Coast basin will be nuclear plants. SjC.E Southern California Edison Emission control. Through recent developments and applica, l io n of pollution control te chniques , emis- sions from Edison's fossil-fuel plants have been substantially reduced, including a significant reduction jn nitrogen oxi des. Ocean studies. Marine biologist checks sea life near the San Onofre Nucl ear Plant.to determine If sea water, used to cool plant condensers, affects the marine ~nvironment when the water is returned to the ocean. Nineteen surveys have revealed no ad'lerse effects. .: I I a s a a : a a a a a 0 4 4 • • = w ) f DAILY PILOT Moriday, October 26, 1970 LBJ Agonies Cited Lady Bird Writes 'Wliite House Diar y' •• NEW YORK (UPI ) for Lyn (her son) and all of When the President finally -----,,resraenl Lyndon B. Jiiliil~so""n~,;us~. Sfie oes notwantymn;~, ~aec~1aea0i1Mii'al-,no an· debated whether to announce give up. Lynda hopes you will nounce his retlrement at the his decision to retire as part oC run. She told me so this af· end of his speed! revealing he his State or <the Union address ternoon, with a sort of terrible had ordered a ces.'tltlon of Jan. 17, 1968. earnestness, because her hus-bombing in North Vietnam , But his daughters were baOO is going to war and she Mrs. Johnson said sbe fett divided on the decision and thinks there will be a better "stUMed ..• maybe Jt was a Lady Bird Johnson said she chance of getting him back calm finality in Lyndon's had discussed Jt all with him alive and the.. war settled if voice, and maybe we believed • before -"'I can 't tell you you are President. Me -I hUn for the first time. Lyndon • ~'hat to do." don 't know. I have said it all seemed to be congealing into a Jn the months leading up to be(ore. I can't tell you what to calm, quiet state of mind, out do.'" ol ach his decision, Johnson ex· re · pressed doubts he could unite ~frs. Johnson said she began "And what did I feel? I was the country, Mrs. Johnson to wonder "if I had been off so uncertain of the future. And ·writes in her forth coming the beam'' in her misgi\lings I would 00! dare to try to book, "A \llhite House Diary," 'A'hen Congress gave him a persuade him one way or the which also is being publi shed "great roar" of applause and other. There was mud!. in me in the November and the President hadn 't an· that cried out to go on. to call December issues o( ~fcCall's nounced his intentionS to on every friend we ha\le, to ~1agazine. retire. But when Johnson met give aOO work , lo spend and The President. agonizing 'A'ilh cabinet members and fight. right up to the la st. And O\'er the Vietnam war. read a congressional leaders a few if we lost, well and good - retirement statement to his minutes later and there was were free! family just before giving his "no rush forward to say that "But if we didn't rJn, we State of the Uni on message to was a great speech, Mr. Presi· could be free without all this t:ongress, seeking their ad· dent •.• the first maggots of draining of his friends,'' Mrs. vice. "He was rushed. Stan· doubt began to gnaw at the Johnson wrote. ding in the door betwe<!n the good feeling 1 had." The President then deli\lered big oval office and his little The President's wife said his nationwide address and one, he said : 'Well. 'A'hat do during the decisioA--making rea~ the final Jines he had you think? What shall I do?'" period she thought "what was discussed with the First Lady Mrs. Johnson wrote . uppennost in Lyndon's mind earlier : "I looked at him 'A'ith a was wh.at I had heard him say "I 3lall not seek and will not helpless feeling and said: increasingly t he s e last accept, the nomination of my 'Lucy hopes you won't run. months : 'I do not believe I can party for another tenn as She wants you for herself and unite this country.'" your President." Physical Volume Declines State Cash Sales Dip 2% SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The State Board of Equaliza. tion has reported that cash sales of goods in California dropped two percent during the second quarter of 1970 in comparison with the similar period last year. In the preceding quarter of this year there wa s a drop of one peft'ent as compared with the 1969 figure . The last time durable sales suff ere d year..f.o-year con· tractions in the overall level of sales was in the first and se· C-Ond quarters of the 1967 mini· recession," the board said in a 6tatemenl. The board also said the physical volume of goods declined during the second quarter despite an increase in t a x a b I e transactions. A spokesman said this was due to inflation. Transactions subject t o sales tax reached a second· quarter peak of $10.9 million and surpassed the year-earlier pe~iod by 2.7 percent. "An increase o f ap- proximately fi\le percent in the consumer price index in· dicates that highe r prices more than accowited for all the monetary growth in self· assessed t a x a b 1 e transac- tions." the board said. Sales and use tax collections in the second quarter of this year te>taled $445.37 million with figures for local sales and use taxes making an overall total of $559.42 million. Estimates o f nontaxable transactions for the quarter, the board said, amounted to $1.84 billion in food for home consumption, $145 million for prescription medicines. and $7&3.40 million for 2.25 billion gallons of gasoline and Ii· REAL ESTATE ••• An Investment Worth Investigating Take a look at the quefied petroleum gas for highway use. I 'J'he board noted that the biggest relative decreases in the sales of durable goods were reported by dealers in lumber and building materials -18 percent, and fann im- plements, -17 percent. Declines in sales by new and used car dealers strongly af· fected the agg regate sales level," the board said. The board said that counties o uts ide the st a te's metropolitan areas increased their share of statewide tax· able transactions. , According to the board, a comparison of second-quarter sales with those of the prior yea r indicated the following gains: Los Angeles and Or- ange Counties, 2.2 percent, San Francisco Bay Area. 1.8 per· cent; and the 47 remaining C<Junties, 4.1 percent. REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT SERIES Are you searching high and low, seeking just the right investment for your money? This series or free lectures on the real estate market featuring lop·rated experts in the inyestmen·t field, might be exacUy what you have been_ looking for. Plan now tp attend the lectures to be held on Tuesday evenings at 7:30 o'clock in \ke College Center Rldg. of Golden West College. Remember ... there is no charge to you. Just sign up this Tuesday and let the experts point the way to successful investing through real estate. LECTURE TOPICS OCT. 27 -CREATIVITY IN REAL ESTATE EXCHANGING Speakers -Jack Kittler end Bob Steele NOV. 3-RECOGNIZING A GOOD INVESTMENT Speaker -Don Olson ModeNtor-P'at McVay CO.SPONSORED IY DAILY PILOT HUNTINGTON BEACH-FOUNTAIN VALLEY BOARD OF REALTORS COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT - 0 • • ·---------.....--... ~-----·------- RCA's new system for color TV. , Model for Model, dollar for dollar, the most vivid, most life-like, most consistently accurate, most dependable in RCA's history. ONE WEEK ONLY! Our ReguJ1r $49.95 All-Channel COLOR ANTENNA $14. 95 ONLY .... WITH "flCHASI OF ANY COLOI 'T~LIYIS16N CONSOLI -OFFER GOOD TH RU SAT., OCT. J l1f ONLY! Spanlsh--style cabinet wit h concealed swivel casters; solid state chassis slides out for quick and easy accessibility. Automatic, fiddl&-free fine. tuning, Trans Vista GP..&51 23" dlag. picture . . . RCA'• AceuColor cont'1flporary model at budget pr ices. It features automatic fine tuning, Automatic ctlrOma1Contio1; New . Vista.VHF tuner .. .. New Vista GP·590 23"-d1'9t Pict.ufe DAVIS-BROWNS FALL SALE of RCA COLOR -·TV! .. c 23" diag. C ont e mp. SALE Mediterranean .. Pecan, SALE 23". di a g . New Vlita s~ W a I n u t C reden1a on Tilt Out Control Panel. Danish COnsole. Swivel · ' casters: 't.>ouble spkrs. $53r5 A.F.T, 23" diag. picture. $52r5 base. $529'6 Suggested l ist $659.95 Suggested (ist $599.95 Suggested List $599.95 ------· · ·--·-- Contemp. Modern-Wal· nut. 23 " diag. pie. with A.F.T. 25,000 volts. Sugg•sted l ist $599.95 Italian Prov. Cabinet - Fruitwood. Accu-Color, easy t ilt-out controls. Suggested list $799.95 SALE SALE $729'5 Mediterranean Da rk ·Oak finish. New Vista 23 " SALE diag. Console on cast- ers. Glare-proof super $58"95 brite picture. 7 Suggested list $699.95 Double spkr. Med. Style. SALE On casters. Super brite tube. A.F.T. $66,5 Suggested List $859. 95 Mediterranean Pe c a n finish . 23" diag. Accu· Tint circuitry. Suggested l ist $679.95 23" d i a 9. 295 sq. in. SALi Table model, solid state. SALi I II tube r.Ctifier] Trans ' Vi .t •. w.1nut wood -$58"91 Cabinet. • '7-- Suggested list $649.95 REMOTE CONTROL COLOR TV SPECIALS New V i, ta 23" diag . SALE Med. style, full-funct ion remote. Suggested l ist $749.95 Danish Modern, Oiled Walnut cab;net. 25,000 volt chassis. Su99•s.ted List $749 .95 SALE Early American, Maple SALi ca binet. Credenza. A.F. . $599'5 T. Giere proof super $629'6 brite lube. Suggested List $749.95 SINCE 1941 IN COSTA MESA I 411 E. 17th-Costa Mesa 646-1684 DAILY 9 • 9, SATURDAY· 9 • 6 IN EL TORO· 24366 Rockfteld (Nert to Sav-On) Laguna Hills Plaza 837-3830 DAILY 10 • 6, MONDAY & FRIDAY 10 • 9 • l j j l ' t I ~ I I ' " • ,, ' I I I ' ' ' l I I • l I I I , I • I f ' I t I I ' • 1 ' l I I I I ' I I I I • I I I I ' • I t ! l I I I ' l ··-·---·-·-----~- .. Ca$J Swings W ~ight to Fracture Follies It's another season ... another show for the South Coast Com· • ·munity Hospital Auxjllary as the fourth productloo of the rollickin& Fractured FolUes looms into view. Under the expert direction of Cargill Productions of N~w York , grovides costumes.....EQpt and stag direction talented ama· teurs from ,Newport Beach through San Clemente will prov1 e ee evenings. of laughs, sbng and dance. ' . Dire~ting the shoW, the fourth since 1965, will be Peter Thonlas of ~ company. · J Tickets !or the 1970 Fractured Follies ofi Thursday, Frid~y andJSaturd~y. Nov. 5, 6 and 7, are on sale now. according to Mrs. Ed· muld Van. Deusen, general chail'll)an. The production will be stage;d in~the ~g~pa Beach High School·auditorium. . Tickets may be purchased at Peggy Taylor Realtors in Laguna Be1ch from 1 to 3 p.m. Additional information or tickets for reserved seats also niay be obtained from the auxiliary office in the hospital, 499fl311 , extension 296, or Mrs. George Wolf, 494-3380. ' Behind the scenes is an able cast of women assisted by the mas· cullne .~lents of Zachary T. Malaby, technical advisor; Jack Lyons, props and sets, and Van Deusen, stage manager. Amoog·members Qflhe hard·w_orkipg a~iliary under 1'.1rs. Van Detisen's chairmanship are the Mmes. Macauley Ropp, ·violet Adams, Je4re-y Towsend, Malaby and Taylor. l Also· assisting in directional positions are the Mmes. W. L'. Wocr ley; \Volf, Charles .Quilter, Sam Garst, John M. Shea Jr., Alfred Kress, David Rosen, Theodore Taylor and David Kawasaki. Rounding out the backstage talent are the Mmes. Neal Amsden, Ev41yn R·eynolds, Gordon Fleener, John B. Lawson , Jack Snipes, Gene B~kbank and Jun Chin<>. • 1 Proceeds from the show will fulfill an auxiliary ,Pledge of $100,- 000~o the hospital. The.pledge goal soon will be realized because of ell put into the follies and the second main fund-raiser, the Valen· tin Ball. . t ' • • • ~men BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 ,,,,.,,.,, Odlllw 16. 1'71 J ,,_ It POSTING NOTICE -1970 Fractured Follies posters designed by Mrs. David Rosen are admired by (left to right) Dan Brown, South.. Coast Community Hospital administrator, Mrs. Alfred Kress, pos· ter co-chairman, and Dr. Bob Petersen. The posters formally an-. nounce that reserved seat tickets are on sale no\v for the all-new Ca rgill production. I i I Harvey Makes Appearance for First Nighters First Nighters will welcome-the elusive "Harvey" to the stage of · Laguna Moulton, Playhouse tomorrow evening at 8:30. Miss Ann ' Metzleur watches as Mrs. Einar Christensen and director Bert· . r- ram Tanswell set the stage for the production which runs Tues- day through Saturday nights througH Nov. 14. "Harvey'' stars David Paul and Harriet McConnell in tiUe roles. ,. The Laguna Line Camino Real Recalls Days of the Padres t HE HISTORIC VILLA.GE named after Richard flenry Dana still can boast about history as members of the Hi story and Land· marks Section of El Camino Real \Voman 's Club of Dana Point learn about the ancestry of a member. Mrs. Oli ve LeBlanc. ~1rs. LeBlanc, chairman of the section, \viii describe the 30 years \vhen her grandfa ther was mayor do1no of San Gabriel Mission. A bronze plaque now marks the mission site where he \Vas buried. The dessert meeting wi ll be hosted by Mrs. Henry Meents all :30 p .111. on 1' .. riday, Oi:t. 30, in her San Clemente home. With this as a preview, the section will make a field trip to the mission in the near future. SOUTH COAST residents were among a large gathering honor- in g French Ambassador Charles Lucet as he spoke on France and foreign affairs in the Disneyland 1.ffolel. The ambassador appeared on behalf of the World Affairs CounCil of Orange County and express· ~d hi s · delight over visiting California and his dismay for being so close to Disneyland and missing it. · Taking part Jn the ceremony were the Georges Aries, Arthur S. \Viley s and the Mmes. Harold Maitland. Jasper Morgan and Leon Volkmar, all of Laguna Beach and Mrs. Laura Duvall of Capistrano Beach. THE CITY OF FLORENCE was given top honors for friendli- ness and beauty by Professor Neill Cooney and hjs wife Carole of South Laguna. The couple toured Europe via air and Eurail pass for a month vi siting ItaJy, Holland, England. France and Switzerland \\•here they spent a delightful few days as guests on a quaint chicken fann in Volkets,vil. The professor is an instructor at Cypress College \Vhile Carole teaches in Fountain Valley. f, ;. I I ' During Voca ·bulary Lesso ·n Teen·ager Learns to Say 'Uncle' ! t DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last week my "' brother and his wife we.nt on a trip. They left their 14-year~ld son with us. From the beginning, the boy's behavior toward i his aunt was rude and mocking. lie t became smart-alecky on seYeral oc- ) casions. I warned him to wattjl. his tnjltlh. When he called my wire a vulgar 1 name I warmed his rump 'With a-ptn,g .... -1 pong paddle. From then on he war'lnellt re!J>eCUul and we· had no more trouble with hlln. Yesterday my brother came for lhe , boy. I told him exactly what happened. I His reacUon astonished me. He aaMi I had oo buginess laying a hand on bts son, that. t should have waited until be returned IO • I he COllld administer the punllhment- "ln his own way." ANN LANDERS ~ J believe a child should be punished When he misbehaves, not ' week later. What do you say? -STRICT UNCLE ' DEAR UNC: Tiie ........ of dlsclpllae .-..a-uve btta diK••·ed Weft U. parents left. Since It was DOI., there lboald be • erllicilm ti tJte mauer 11 -· ,.. dull -... boy. l u .. a ...,. W tk l1U.. hd palol m"' aUtntten ti •11 MD'• earlier up. lw9&Jol, the boy "'"kl DOI be using ...... ia.,.... wftb bit .... -tr ..,. -•!lo. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I aim a pack rat who clips arUcles aind keeps them forever. I would like to subrnlt excerpts trom an arOcle which appeared in Harper'• magazine 16 years ago. It was written by John Fischer, who was editor· irK:hlef. "Many U.S. men die early from ulcers and high blood pressure becau.,e their wives set out to reform them as soon as the weddJng ceremony is over. Most Amerkan brides reaard a husband a!! 17t po1J11ds of raw material . She reels it Is her duty to rr.ake so mething out or the sorry clod, even it she has to wear her tongue to the roots in the process. .. This undaunted approach may have !Omething to do with the U.S. divorce rate, axe murders and the vast number of charac~ers who sit nur sing shot glaMCs in men's barS late at nlg'hl. Nevertheless, it has made American women the envy of the world. "Never before in history has a nation devoted so large a share of its brains and resources to the aole purpose of kee ping women deOdorized , corseted, enshrined in chrome convertibles, curled, slenderized, rejuvenated and protected against all physical labor. Meanwhile the husbands of these household pel!J live In mute agony and die mercifully from ulcers and high blood pressure.·• When I clipped this article 16 years ago J was amused. Today I do not think it is runny. I see myself and 1 am ashamed. 1 hope you will pr nt the excerpt, Ann. My wtfe won't recognize herself because she believes she Is perfect. -COWARD DEAR COWARD: The excerpt 11 amus· lnl but It cerialnly does DOl apply to all women. Sbow me a man wbo tolerates"• boaebold pe.t" wliO trkfl to pals 11tt1etf orr 11 • lflft, and I'll show you a -man who enjoys beiag tall.ea ldvaa1a1e or, aeeds It and desuves ll. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last week I wenl lo a party. Three people I had never •seen before came up and asked me to buy rarne ticket! lot a benefit. Sunday r atterKted a weddlne reception. Two casual acq uaintances tried to sell me tickets to a bazaar. Last night I was invited to the home of a relative. ~o sooner had I entered the house than the II -year-old son or the hostess hit up every guest for a ticket to hls Sunday school play. Of course no one had the nerve to refuse. I call this bigb- grade blackmail. What do you call it? - PIGEON DEAR PlDG!: Low·&rD maaaen;-- What awaits you on th!!: othtr side fff the marriage veil ? How can you be SUre your marriage will work? Read Ann Landen' booklet "Marriage -What to Expect." Sen<l your requesl to Ann Landers in care of the DAILY PILOT enclosing 50 cents In coin and a Jona, atamped. self-a<klressed envek>pe. • L:::=============================~=·--====-·=··----·-• '· - Pumpkin Pinned for Hospital Party Halloween decor \viii set the scene for Laguna Beach Ebell Club's first holiday party for its adopted ward in Fairview Hospital on \Vednesday, Oct. 28. A pumpkin carving ceremony will be followed by songs, games and refreshments as arranged by the i1mes. Howard Hinrichs, Gordon Forbes, Richard Your Horoscope Tomorrow Racich, Edmund Van Deusen, Howard Wilson, Richard Carlson and David Young. Pinning the smile (or frown) on the pumpkin party game are (left to right) Mrs. Gordon Dahlquist and Mrs. Harro Groettrup, party chairman. Virgo: Avoid Wishful Thinking TUESDAY OCTOBER 27 By SYDNEY O~IARR ARIES (March 21.April 19): Activity centers on legal mat· !ers, partnerships, abiUty to accept and cope with opposing Art Topic Announced v iews. Gatl'ler fact s . Strengthen postUon. Re!use to be intimktated by one who makes threats. TAURUS (Ap<U :Ml-May 20)o Observe rules, safety regula-. tions. Remember diet, Concentrate on guarding what is most precious : your health. .Follow tl).rough on hunch. You are able to see unusual side of one close to you. GEl\fiNI (l\lay 21-June 20): Romance is accented. Your creative urges soar t o forefront. 1bose who may have a p p e a r e d indifferent Reproductions of Paintings display affection. ch an g e will be the theme of the routine. Fine for dining out '\'ednesday. Oct. 28, luncheon Ydlh stimulating companion. meeting of the Orange County CANCER {June 21-July 22l : Branch. National League of ~tany of your natural talents. American Pen \Vomen . Inc. abilities are recognized and Cuest speaker for the noon put to use. Be aware of meeting in U!e Grand Hotel, details. There are s om e work. You cu pt project oU ground. Keep awoin-· VIRGO (AUi. 23&pt. 22l ' Money, po&stS.Siom -tbne are activated. ConsWt fanillt member. Impulsive pun:bue or sale eoukl tftaie dissent. Realize this and act ..:. conliJ>.!fy. One elol< to ,.., confides financial prob&tm.. LIBRA (Sept 2J.-Od. 22 lo Cooperate rather than fight. Applies specifically to mate, partner or attorney. You may not be seeing thinp too dur· Jy. Permit es:pert to offer in· formed guidance. SOOKPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 I: \Vhal was sec ret. now is revealed. Your work methods come under scrutiny. Be prepared to deftnd youl'9fllf. Some insist you are going too fast They may be partly cor· rr.ct. caretr shou1d be put into ac- tion. Stress independence, e1. udt O>nfkJ:ence. Creative endravors succeed. Take the lead. You are going to be a Winner. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 11): Travel is emphasized. Ideas are put to test. Read and write. Gain shown if you are percepUve. Detect hiddtn meanings. Cooperate w i t h Aries individual. PISCES (Feb. 19-~iarch 20 l: Interest in unorthodos: sub- jects is accented. Be flexible. You may change your mind about financia l project. This is all to the good. You cannot stand st.ill and go forward at same timt. To lll'ld octt who't l<.ld:• !or •ou 111 rnoM' 011111 loYt, .,,,,. S''""' Om1rr's botklel, "S~~ Hlflh IOI' IMfl tNI W-." hfld ~J1fW:lolt 111111 50 Ctflb frt Omerr Altroltrf Stv1t,, tht DAILY ~ILOT, loll ne, Gr111d (tfllrol II .. !loo\, H-Y•k, N.Y. 10ll7. It's a Dog's . Lile Ht1mor the Cat's Meow Salads Served ly ERMA BOMBECI( tr one mare man 11ya to me, "l don't like funny women. 'Ibey remind me of a dog that walks on Jts hlnd legs. It's dane, but not wtU," I am aolng to, bile him oo the leg. Our humor makes ua no lns r~. no less wil'ely, no Jes motherly than any other emotion. lt11 just that our humor is ba&lcally. different from that o! a man. It's hard to explain. My husband nearly fell oIC hi1 chair one day when a dog ran oot onto the football field and the annotmcer • a 1 d • ''11w:rt ls a dog m the foolball field." "Did you hear t.hat?0 he ulied, wiping ' tean o I laua!>W froln hl1 ey ... AT WIT'S END Thinking he was in a Jolly mood, I said, '"I'haf reminds me of a story about Phlllis Diller. The int«:rvlewer asked her iC she v.1as a neat hoUsekeeper, like v.then her husband got up to go to the bathroom did she make h1s bed "'ilile he was gone. She said, 'MAKE IT! 1 have it IOld before he gets back!'" My husband sobered up. "Where would you find som e.. one to buy a bed at that ungodly holr?" Cfrtainly, thert is not a wife in the world, ·married more than three hours, who hu not sat in a comakr.: condJUon waiting for her husband to finish with his "favorite joke." In a lfOUP the other nrgbt my husband said, "Hey, did you hear my favorite joke about the talking dog ?" "That IS tunny," said a man doubling over. "That's not the joke," said my hu&blnd . "Is this the one where the dog drinks?" giggled another one. Gathering r"I' a ways and means salad ·luncheon and card party at 11 :J) a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 28, will be members of the 0 r a n g e District, California Federation of Women's Clubs. Members of the district ex- ecutive board will be laost.estes for the event in the Ebell Clubhouse, Aolheim. M r 1 • Clemens Fromlalh, dist.rid se. cond vice president, I s chairman of the event. Mrs. Robert dePasztOOry is in charge or tickets. Members of the Tustin, Can· yon. Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa clubs will assist with the serving. Helping to set up will be members of the Randlo Viejo, Cypr<SS and La Palma clubs and the Ebell Club of Newport Beach. Associates Schedule First Fall Luncheon "No," said my husband, punctuating each word with a nostril snort. ''This talkinc dog wu great. He played all the big nlght clubs and the talk sho\\·s. Then one day he got sick and had to have an opera- tion. After that, he couldn't bet a job anywhere." "How come?" asked a Tickets are available at $2.SO per per!Oll by calling Mrs. dePasithory. Al 43l·l114. w~~~us'e all he did was sit NB Auxiliary there and bark." The Ladies' Auxiliary of Joinin& for luncheon and their flrat !ail meeting of the year will be member• of the Associates of the NaUonal 01atl.ty Laague, Newport Olaptu. Mrs. James J. Eymann, new c:hatrman will greet i\)t!ts during a social hoor at 11 :30 a.m. which will be !ollowtd by luncheon at t2:15 p.m. Thurs.- day, Oct. 29, Jn the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Assisting wHI be Mrs. Paul M. Rogers. Hostesses for the day will be the Mmes. WHllam B. Tritt, L. Delford Feddennan, JOleph H. Arnold, James F. Gable and Rocers. The as.sociala are former active members of t h e Newport Chapter and transferffS from o t h e r Southern California National Alumnae Meet C,harity Lugue c h a p t e r s. Once a year the group sponsors an art show and cor. fee in the Lido Isle home of Mrs. Linn C. \Vllliams to benefit the philanthropies of the NewpGrt Chapter. Problems Explored The men screamed "'ith Newport Beach Fire Depart· laughter until 1 thought they ment gathers the t h l r d wert going lo have .to have Wednesday at 8 p.m. in surgery. various locations. Information "The \\'omen sal lhere puzzl. regarding location may be ob- ed. "Dear," I interrupted. "It tained by calling Mrs. T. C. "'asn·t because the dog just Dailey, 541-9835. barked. Tl was because all the•-==='======== dca; talked about was his o~ation." l t v;as the v.·omen's tum to scream, '·That's not fu My," he said. "It's not m,y fault," I countered. •;Jt v.18! your lousy Don 'I try to lose weight , ,1 l0nr.. , joke. Erploring housing and "If it's my joke. then how employment needs of han· come I can'l I.ell it my way? I dicapped persons will be WEIGHT& members or Glass ~fountain Why would a dog rehash ' '45!:~ something so painful as an wl.4.Ti(HERS Inn. Inc. at 8 p.m. on Wed· operation? You 're sick. I bet If 1\11 • ·'O nesday • Oct. 2.8, in the I said Phillis Dlller sold the Veterans Charitable Foun-bed before he could get back So,111 talki ng, somt listening anif dation building, Sant.a Apa. into it , you'd have laughed." 1 program th1t works. '• Open to physically disablt d Or cried. 1 FIU llOCHUll:-CALL 13S·ISOS persons. the organization is ;;;~~~i;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiii:iiiiij dedicated to the development!i o1 a residenlial rehabilitation MAMA MISSED THE IOAT! center. Transportation for disabltd A fall luf'lcheon for the members is provided by off. M•m. nWltl' hid ' c.!11nc1 ht VJI I kll!ttlng rnulll~• -4Mlf yov 601 Liit .,, d""'°"1tr1t1 ovr "8rotl\ef" knlllll'lf m•chlM -•M llow Miiiy JO\I c111 knlt lltHits oriel P1nl su!lll Newport Harbor Alumnae of duty firemen of the Santa Ana T H I K N I T W I T Chi Omega will take place on Firemen's B • n • v o I • n t Wednesday, Oct. 28, in the ASKICiation. Atrs. Elizabeth South Coast PlaH Sluft Shirt. LaRiviere may be called for Lowe" MALL Area coeds who have ,.. ined further information at 642-Acrou from Woo~'• COSTA MESA !"ti. 5'5-202 Panhellenic sororities will be· .:''!llS3".':_. _ _:__~~--_.J!oo"!'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"~ announced by Mrs. K. Stanley/· Bell, files chairman of the: Newport Harbor P anhellenic. Plans are being made for a Christmas patty and a !\!other-daughter coffee. for ac· tlve members of Chi Omt1a. --~Aiiatieiii1WiTI-ise I. O. Wlt~-;-roadblocks, but yoo overcome Southern California artist who them. Ta k e conservative specializes in commercia l art course. SAGmAJUUs (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Some friends may --------------------1 llfAUTI WNit :m @j,I •• ".~~ . . ; . • • • . ' • f • illustration, lettering a nd LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): design. Avoid excess speed. Don·t Mrs. J. E. Parsons, a club \Vrite letters \\1\Ue upset. officer. has been named to the angry. Sharp words could St.ate Board Speakers Bureau alienate neighbors, relatives. o,f the national organization. Good for putting ideas to appear o v e r I y aggressive. Don't C1lmpound error. Listen and evaluate. A child who makes demands should be dealt with fairly b\Jl firmly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Decision affecting home, fJii) . Crowning Glory beauty salons FREE CONDITIONING TREATMENT with your next shampoo and set •2.50 famous KR10 condilioner means health ier, lovelier hair. Pene· trates hair to add protein! Now free with our fabulous fa ll coiflures. Mon. :rues. Wed SHAMPOO, SET and CONDITIONEl'I 12" S1J/,;1p,;,,,,1;ghfly!ig!,, HAIRCUT 11H A,,.r"tft'lent• Wel,•m• lut Net Alwar1 NKeltary FROSTING SPECIAL S1ttall: • liltlt aunllghl lnlo your h1lr wit h lhl• man- plenl"O i.1,,.1 -'12" -MO. 8Tu118Wod •• Crowning . Glory flormtrl.y Caprict: Coftlurnl SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 I. 17111 ST., COSTA MHA Lov.•er J..ewl -Next to Sean "'""" 146-7116 ...... 141.,,19 fM(JQt,# plat«. combinat ion of sky blu e and a chestnut bronze so love ly that seeing is believi ng and truly exciting blend of si lk ind riyon the coa tdress way ol dressing for social and d1ily act ivi ties highlighting buttons of abalone purl "' back belted 10 to 20- 7600 35 FASWON SQUARE SANTAANA v GIFT WJTH PURCHASE ROBINSON 'S AND FRANCES DENNEY CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO ATTEND 'BEAUTY ENCOUNTER' A TWO HOUR CLINIC OF PERSONAL ANALYSIS AND INSTRUCTION. AND RECEIVE A GIFT WORTH 17.00 WITH YOUR 5.00 ADMISSION FEE YOUR GIFT., ,A BEAUTY CLINIC KIT CONTAINING SOURCE OF BEAUTY CREAM , CLEANSING WH IP, EYE SMOOTH. FLOWING MASQUE, LIPSTICK AND MAKEUP CAPE, YOUR F!:E,.,TOTALLY APPLICABLE TOWARD THE PURCHASE OF' ANY FRANCES DENNEY COSMETIC, YOUR INSTRUCTORS.•, TRAINED FRANCES DENNEY BEAUTY EXP ERTS JOEN TIREN, GERI RENNER ANO SHARON THOMAS, MARK YOUR CALENDAR OATES FOR MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, AT 2:30 AHO 6:30 PM• OR 'TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 1 NOVEMBER 3-6 AT 10:30 AM AND 2!30 PM, CLINIC IN OUR COSMETICS • PHl>llr. ,.Olr<l llCSOVATU>H TO 1u•-:iaoo, o"""" ..,,...., Of'CH,AT .,., .. :OJI ~·L~ 'tO 11a.1 WI' .. J. rARl!Ofl ,_.., Nrw .... llT ('"""1;11, H(:Wl'O<IT lltAQ4, C.0.1..,..0lltl!A .l ,60. Pl.C ... 111 llctllllVC WI.CC -Ml: Ill THI: r"""ca lll!Hnc• '•lAlllY C>ICOUHTVI': (UtCC.C ll01H 01<,. -TIMIJl' 0 MOM,, llGV. 2 D 2~l0 r1o1. ot1 C l :JO 'Mo C tuu., NOV. :I C to:lO ..... 011 c 2:)0 .... C n.u111,, N~v. s Cho:>O AM 011 Ct:>O PM. ~wm., NOV. A CIO:!O AM Oii Cl Z:lO l'V, C r •r,, llOY. a C I0:30 AM 011 CJ t :SO r M, "'"'---~-------DllCll'-------­"N·,-----:-..,.----liTAT•~.,----"•·----­ <.>!A'"GC-rA'fMl111' llNCl.051,1:1-CllAllGC ACC'T ··---------- !'itASC A00 J ~"9"1.~f TM, ROBINSON'S Oprn F.Venlna• Open Evminp A Sunday 35 FAS RION -~![Allf., SANT A ANA ROBINSON'S NEVI/FORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644·2800 \ ) ------ ~--:--------------~~--.-~-.------~--.- ' -~ - I Height of Fashion Di111in11tiv. i 72010 ' Misses / NA-2059-Z ftalf Size .61529 \ The coat dress Is the height of fashion no matter what the season. The princess seaming and double·breasted buttons are most slimming. Low patch pockets add the finishing touch to this design. . Make it in gabardine, silk and wool. W?rst~d, tweed, ~ool, synthe,tic blends. 72010 Dunmut1ve sizes 8:-~. · 1 I Siz 12, with sleeves, requires appr~xuna e Y 3 1/8 y s of 54" fabric. 61529 Half S1Zes 12'1l- 221'.i . f• · . l I Size 161.h with sleeves requires app~oxuna . e Y 3 1/4 Yf'rds of 54" fabric. NA-2059-2 Misses sizes 8-18. . . l I Size 12 with sleeves reqwres appr~x~ma. e Y 3 1/4 yards of 54" fabric. O~der 120.10 D.1mmut1ve, 61529 Half Sizes NA-2059-2 Misses, give SlZe, name. address, and Zip. Send $2 postpaid. Address SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX-15, Millord, N.J. 08848. Wide Range Keyed Club Tuned to Music Show tunes, ballads and spirituals will be included in a program pf traditional barbershop and Western tunes during the next meeting of the Wednesday Morning Club or Costa Mesa. The Pitchpipers, a venatile male quartet with a wide style range, will present the pro- gram at 10:45 a.m. in the Balboa Bay Club Wednesday, Oct. 28. They will be in- troduced by Mrs. Louis Kozel, program chairman. Reservations for luncheon may be made by calling ti.frs. Arden Mead, and an afternoon Committee Member To Speak 1'-1eeting at 10 a.m. on \Vednesday, Oct. 28, in the Huntington Seacliff Country Club will be Ule Republlcan \Vomen·s Club of Huntington Harbour. ~1rs. John Bowler, former Republican N a t i o n a I Com- n1ittee Woman for California, will speak. She is currently a member of the executi ve com- mittee of the Republican State Central Committee a n d fipccial events chainnan for Cali!omia Federation or Republi can Women. All interested women are in. vited to attend. of bridge wiU follow. The Junior Section will meet Nov. 11 in the home of Mrs. David Forge when Mrs. Betty ?\-1iller will demonstrate stretch and se'.V techniques. On Nov. 5, Mrs. H. A. Lynes and her-Globetrotter Section will have lunch in the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion at the Mwie Center and then view "Forty Carats." Colleges Send Representative A representative a! the eastern Seven College Con- ference will be at Mission Vie- jo and Tustin high schools Tue!day, Oct. 27, to offer in- fonnatioo and a slide program about the colleges. Included in lhe conference are Barnard, Bryn l\1awr, Mount H o I yo k e , Radcliffe, Smith, Vassar and Wellesley colleges. Mrs. John R Fassett of Irvine may be contacted for infonnalion. Ironing Hung-up A new hang-up for iron and ironing board is mounted to a wall or door. Made of steel C04ted vinyl, the wire formation holds an iron upright positiOn and has prongs below for off-the-floor storage of an ironing board. .\~{' TWO PIECES • -• BELTED ~" ~z;, TUNIC TOP AND SKIRT ~.~ ~ " 1 • ~1 <r i ? 1 " • ~I 1 • ., ,. TRI ACETATE & NYLON BLEND. GREY & WHITE. $27. SIZES 1·11 • 0 Arnel Ac•t•t• in Brown Prin t ·-·-···-$25. ~k.. BIDTIQUE 3467 ¥1o Lido. """port -· '73-4510 "afl-l=taw~ey c;laims- Bride in NB Ceremony so1~-­ Say Vows J!K'Quellne Anne Goggin and Christopher R e I m e r ex· changed their wedding pledges during a late afternoon ceremony. in the Costa Mesa Ctty llall. -"lbe bride ls the daughter or- lltrs. Anna Marie Goggin o[ Costa Mesa and the late Mr. Goggin, and the bridegroom is the son of the Jack Reimers, also of Costa Mesa. Attending the bridal rouple were the bride's brother and sister, 'David and Deidre Gog- gin. The new ·Mrs. Reimer at- tended Newport Harbor High School, is a graduate of Estan- cia High School and attends Orange Coast College. Her husband l:s an alumnus of NHHS. They will reside in Costa 1\>tesa. Alumnae Concerned Concerned ·with s e I f • i m· provement, alumnae of Delta Gamma, Huntingtcn Beach Chapter will gather at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 29, in the Fountain Valley home of Mrs. Donald Jensen. Skin Care and Creative Makeup, a discussion or beau- ty procedures, will be given by !\1iss Ulla Parker. Alumnae who are newcomers to the area are in· vited to attend the session. In progress through November is the group's an- nual Christmas card sale. Proceeds will go to sight con- servation and aid to the blind . Mrs. Richard Shrader at ~110 is handling the card sale. Auxiliary Disguised Costume Ideas will b e discus~ and potluck dishes planned when women of the Orange County Chi ropractic Society auxiliary meet tomor- row in the Santa Ana office of Dr. Paul DeLoe. Chiropractic doctors, ·wives and friends will celebrate Halloween with a party in the DeLoe home in Orange begin· ning at 8:30 p.m. Friday, Ocl 30. Brian N. Jlawley of Newport Beach claimed Susan Ann Ryan as his bride during MRS. B. N. HAWLEY Newport Beacii Home ceremonies conduded by the Rev. Dr. <barles H. DifttD. field bl St. Andrew's Presbyterian C~, Newport Beach. Parmts of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. Robtrt Ryan ,of Garden Grove and Mr. and Mrs. Norman P. Hawley of Corona. Miss Kathy Ryan w'as her sister'i maid of honor , while bridesmaids were Mrs. Marie .J1earron and Miss Donna Mathews. Attending as best man was Daren A. Groth: Philip F. Bet- tencourt and Arthur C. Simo. nian werf! ushers, and Thomas and James Ryan , the bride's brothers served as acolytes. Following a San Francisco honeymoon, the newlyweds will reside in Newport.Beach_ The bride i:s a graduate o( Bolsa Grande High School. Garden Grove and attended Orange Coast Collegf'. Her hwband is a graduate of the University of Ca 11 for ni a , Riverside. Huntington Beac_h Rite Vo....,vs Recited Susan l\1arie Jahn and Barry Stanley exchanged v<..vs and rings before the Rev. Harvey A. Anderson in the King of Glory Lutheran Church, Hun- tington Beach. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard C._Jahn of Huntington Beach, was given in marriage by her father. Mrs. Dean S~ W:OS her honor attendant and 1'-1iss Environment On Agenda Environment, Health. Work and Play will be discussed by Mrs. Tom Thompson and Mrs. Mark Du8oufdieu before the Pi Pi'chapter, Beta Sigma Phi at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 27. Mrs. Al Rozek will open her Huntingtoft Beach home and l\1rs. Richard Milche\I will assist wilh hostess duties. Pi Pi and Zi Zi Pi Chapters will host a meeting of lhe West Grove Area Council on Thursday, Nov. s. in the com- munity room, Golden West College. Marsha Tufford served as maid of hooor. The bridegroom, son cf Mr. and Mrs. Cyril W. Stanley of Anaheim, asked his brother, Roy J. W. Stanley to be his best man. K€inneth A. Trickett was the usher. The bride is a graduate of Fountain Valley High School and Golden West C<illege and currently is enrolled a t California State College at Fullerton. Her husband ls a graduate of Mira Costa High School ana earned his bachelor of arts degree at California Slate College at Long Beach. Fil ms Selected A new color film dealing with ecology, "Alone in UlC .i\1idst of the Land" will be ' shown at 7:30 p.m. tc"llrrow in Marine.r s Library, Newportj Beach, continuing the library 's monthly film :series. Shown with it will be "Mer- ry Go Round Horse," a new film about a ragamuffin ROB! NSON'S . ~= THE GEMINI CUT TWO LOOKS FOR THE BEST OF TWO WORLDS. KEEPING PACE W ITH TOO~Y 1S WOMAN :..No TOOAY1S FASHI ON .. SHORT ENOUGH FOR EASY-CARE DAYTIME FASHION,, •• LONG ENOUGH FOR DRESS-VP l:VENING HAIRDOS, INDIVIDUALLY STYL!::D AND SHAPED TO FL.ATTER YOUR BEST FEATURES. !5.00. GEMINI CONTOUR PERM . AT ts.oo. IN OVA BEAUTY SALON, OON 1T ENVY HAIR-FREE L OVELINESS .•• ENJOY IT! CONSULT DUR kREE EXPERT IN PERMANENT HA'R ~MOVAL . FROSTING SPECIAL! INCLUDING SHAMPOO AND SET , REG . 30 ,00 VALUE, NOW ONLY 19.90. ROBINSON'~RT ·FASH ION ISLAND · 644-2800 .... . .. -~------.... -·-·--·----~------------·--~---- Donna Honnette WILL WED Troth Told At Dinner The engagement of ~nna Honnette and Michael Johnson was announced duri ng a din- ner party for fam ily and friends in the Laguna Niguel home of the Robert A. Hon- nett es. The dinner follo\vcd an in- formal reception after a church service cond.uctcd by lhe bride-elecl's father in Crown Valley Covenan t Churt h. t-.1iss Honette was graduated Crom South lligh School in Torrance and attended El Camino Col l ege. The bridegroom-elect, son of the Wade Johnsons of El Toro. is a graduate of Rolling llills 11igh School. The couple will v•ed in early spring of 1971. Party Planned The Costa Mesa home of Mr, and Mrs. Loy Lisk'will be opened on Saturday, Oct. 31. for a potluck dinner and Halloween party for n1-embers of Eta Eta, Epsilon Sigma Alpha International sorority. r ' H Monday, Octobtr 26, 1Cl70 DAILY PILOT IT Mesa-Ceremony -. Bobbi Carich Marries -EW!anglng vows and.rings before the Rev. Donald Kribs !n St Joachim's C~lllollc Churclt, Coeta Mesa were Bo!>- 'bf Lynn 'Carlth and George Harold Dav~. Parenll ol the bridal couple are Mt. and Mrs. AndrCVI' J. Carlcti ot Costa Mesa and Mr. and Mrs. George M. Davis of C1l1ary, AJberta, Canada, Given in marriage by her father, the bride asked Miss Sue Wasserman to be her - maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Robert Davis and the M·lsscs Barbara Wasserman, Debbie Doore, Fran Doore and K a t b y Lindsey. Attending his brother as bc!t man was Rob Davis, and ush~rs were Bill Davis, the bridegroom's brother, Jack MRS. G. H. DAVIS Exchanges Vow s Modena 'High Scllool and •l· tended DCC. Carlch~the brlde':s brother and/p;;-----;;;;;~-~ Rick Davis. llAUTJFUL CLOTHIS ••• n>e newlyweds will reside in o..1w s11oi.11y v • .., Costa Mesa. The bride ls a ~1~i:: ~w~"~r!:~r '° ti. •Hn graduate of Newport Harbor Tl!rlr I.en• -Your O.Jn High Sc..ilool and a t t e n d s Orange Coast College. Her husband Is a graduate of El THE $ECOND TIME AROUND ...0 E. 11111 $1,. Co1t1 Mn& Opt11 11 It I -'42 .. MI NO TRICKS JUST TREATS MONTH· END SALE AT BARROWS 3404 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH Little girl florals, mod designs and co:ors for teens. A cuddly soft and warm sleepwear fabric for granny gowns, p.j.'s and robes. Great for toddlero creepers and baby blanlets, too! Compare at 69¢ a yard 36" wide Wa•hable ~(?yd. Tweeds "MILANO" TWEEDS -im ported from Italy, in sunny Chevrons, Diagonals and Textures Rayon/cotton/acrylic/nylon /flax 58"/liO" wide "DONEGAL" TWEED COORDINATES to mix or (natch chevrons 'and textures. Great for suits 'n pants 'n gauchos! Wool & Nylon 54" wide AND yd, DOUBLE 1>( NITS OUBLE1 \NITS 100% Poly.ester Jacquard · Double Knits MACHINE WASH "{;;: NEVER IRON A beautiful jacquard design on a first quality, fun bolt double lnit. They need no lining, they never sag or lose shape. $6.98 a yard value • 56 "/58 " widths _HOUSE oF FaBRICS SM" c...t ,. __ lri1tol •t Sin Ol1to ~y. H..., ,._._17th 1f lrl1to/ Ce1te 111 ... -l41·2JJ4 5-N M• -S4J·!ll!11 o,..... .. , 1111111 -Or1n91tho•p t trul Htrltot ..... PM C ...... -Lt Ptlm• tf St1"t'" F•ll.,,_.. -126-2)J4 1..,.. P.t -12MJIJ Hlllltl""" C_.., -Ed11191r el l11th 11 ... d. Hntt...-... •-"7.tOIJ ... __ _ J . . • . . • . ' . '-a 0411 x.. PllOf Monday, October 2b, 1910 DICK TRACY TUMILEWIEDS ly Tom K. Ryan 1'AIR ONE: I HI. ttfRE 10 /\SK fOR '11'.JUR ltANP IN MARRIAcrE. OH DEAR! 1\115 ISSO 5U~N! NONSENSE ... NI' 111'1'N MU_l.UNG" rr OV<.R FOR WEEKS. MUTI AND JEFF JEFF, !'ROM NOW o N lAMAMAN Ol'F£W WORDS! ' • OH··· I AIN'T HAO MUCH EDUCATION M~ELF! 'S(.A.ll&\.I! 5tRlllLt •Jl t WHEN I SECKON W1TH MY l'INGER LIKE THIS, THAT .MEANS~! I'M A MAN OF FEW· wo~cs MYSELF· WHEN I SHAKE MY -HEAO L.\KET+WS- By Al Smith THAT MEAr.IS I AIN'T COMIN'! JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Don A!, SAM DRIVE• MEETS VICTOR TlEIMNE, THE PrEilPENT OF W ANP 15 INPU5· TRIES, A CONTRACT 15 PLA.c.EP !EFORE ™E YOUN6 ATTORNEY! REAP "TWE CONTI~ SAM! YOU'LL FIND IT QUITE GENEROUS! WE START YOU Af FIFTY TMOUSA.ND A. VE,&.lt WITH STOCK OPTIONS! YOtJR TITU WILL 8E Pllt'ECT'OR OF OUR LEGAL PEPAUMENT! PLAIN JANE CERflJWlV 'YOU KNOW · rM. INTERESTEO TMAT t HAVOl'T !EEN IN YOUll: POTEW- IN me PlAC.TICE OF TIA.L! I WAWT U.W VERY LONG: I 'M SOMEONE WMO lE ... LLV j.. WOBOPV! WHY POES Nor H,6.V£ M,l.VE YOU SELEC.TE" Fill.Ee> !PEAS ME? ABOllT TME LAW! PERKINS I DAILY CROSSWORD • "by R .• POWER I ACROSS I So. Alrica's ''" Chr istian··- b New York Ra f'l9trs, 1!.9. 10 Small flaps l~ Hiding pl act 15 Town in Ntvilda 16 Quat!litd 17 Boy 's name 18 Pe t 19 Ptrust 20 Down .tJ Solld 44 Htarlng organ 45 Witty 1tnli 48 Go IWl y 51 Cub ic mettr 52 Egg dishts 5~ '"-·-and Isolde" 58 Custom;uy func tion 59 llalits: Abbr . bl Sparkle &2 Cana!: Anal bl Ftma1e l £ A ~ 5 w 211no MISS PEACH LOOI(, 00 YOU MIN" IF I KEEP ,l.SKINY SOME QUESTIONS &E- FORE t REA" TM15 cowrv.cr~ I 'M. AFaAID Tm.f IF I PICK IT UP, I 'LL SIGN IT REAL FAST ! By Frank laglnski ,_ .. ~ ·-- to earth person 22 Obscurity 24 Canada's Saint ---Mounta ins 2& Sttsaw animal b4 R lgld &5 Understands bb l ooked 9 Unvar itd voice pitc h 10 North Carolin• na tive 38Fixtd1'" 39 Kind o tmploymtnl -i2 Me1chanls -AND 'TH!N WHAT '"" MARC:IA SAY? 27 Cigar 30 En lirt !h!ng 31 Body of solditrs 32 Smiil ll t ire Its 37 A lrcraft of the hrtlll'I!: Abbr. 38 Small grovt In En9lant1 -iO An1m1l's sound 41 Ctrl1ln lev ies: 2 words ' " Intently 1t L7 Perfuml! oll DOWN 11 Rtd IS 2 words 12 Sound l B\tmlsh loudl y fro111 lnj11ry 13 Ct rtmoniil! 2 Boy dinntr: 3 Bruin's Judaism homl! ground : 21 Thus : Latin Abbr, 2l Girl's namt 4 Polltlctl 25 Oklahoma ns group: 27 Sign on 2 words 11 door 5 Prtcttding 28 No un end ing lrom old 29 Actress -agt H1yworth L Ftmllt 33 Nol stable leavlng 3.t Dlschargt wlll )5 Pulltd 1p1rt 7 Animal 36 Unspecllltd 8 ktl1ttd quantity 4) Sudden ri st ln • stream 46 For t1t h .t7 Grain apptndage .ta Girl's na mt .t9 Act without ta ltnl 50 Wtsl Indies >.1olcano 53 Rtm•in 55 ColOf SL Looptd handlt : Archeol 51 At no timt : Pot!. 60 Part of "lo bt" 10126/20 i I r l -------- Sc.11•oL fS*H01.0141rr STEVE ROPER f!:!JHEN T/IE!i! 6~EAKS /)OWN '"'711 FA TIGUE AllP fAVIT11A71CW, MtKE 1711Ef SOME VrWSUA/. rNMAPY· U'L ABNER -Pl'Ol'ESSOR J.\ANS >--{AF\HITTENSTIEN )5 THE NAME ,MJD THE PFSOU.l'lGG 15 WH GAME.!! SALLY BANANAS GORDO ANIMAL CRACKERS ..-----.. 0000, !J~ KIJOl<J wHAT's wro>.>o& \IJl'Tfl 1'11: IUOIZLD TOD/>.4? ~t 6H! S»<'""-SH&'l.L HATEi M! FO\ltfiV!R AND Wll.I. G!T &Vl!N WITH ME IF IT TAi<EiS 'TliE REST OF OU\t l.IVE:5. By Mell 111./T, 51!1! ~ YOU SAID I WASN'T CAPABLE OF FORMING A LA5TING- RELATION5HIP... By Sa11nders and OverCJClrd NOTHING PERSONA J(lD··JUSf A LJffiE. MCXITH 'TO MOUTH flESUSCtTAflON·· ~--·--- ly Charles M. Schub: ···-~·-·· • I By Gus Arriola __ ....... __ ~~, POfiT/ j 1 ; "f"HATIS )..A1!>h WHP.T lfr r~ 111Z11rJt1 ~c-,z ... AO 1/01( (•I T/4E'/ TllOLJGl/1" OMITTE/! T>lev WE!ZE. Wf,.»I! ff "'OIN& 'It> f ji ST"!EoAJ. Ii~. .1 IT'S 't>AMP, Tl~IN"i wo,.1<, ~i\PY P. .:r WAI), f.Vff:llOIJ~ TAl(ES 1HllJWS 1?>0 ~~1.1-<,>~ LtT U~ 2£ 1~E cowwts DENNIS THE MENACE ! -· " n , ., _, • " • 11o lb! 1iWI.!. BE 11lE 00 hW6m°! 11\o\Tl.l. ~ lllE W.Y I' ' . .. • MONDAY l:llO 11111 NtWI (C) (60) J1111 Dunphy. D llNIC Nm (C) (60) Tom Sn7d11. D n. Mil Silow (C) (il'.I) M1rty Allll\. Roman ct.Oriti, RoOtrt t fl1ek. Corl Yidtl, Jack h ltnet, R*rt Cn111, Jim Biard. 8 117lCD l!l Nft -•1111 flllllll (C) (Z% hr) L.A. R11111 vs. Mlenuota Vlijnp 1t MlnnnolL Q Cd Saart (C) (JO) '1'111 DNd S,, Scrawls..,. MuwtU S1Nrt'1 lift d•Plllda on whllhtr Clf llOl hi u n bttl • pool all1rt. •• ~ •• (C) (30) m ri , ..... ™"' (C) c60l "The Stt1l.QriYln1 Man." M1rio Andrltll, Fernando llm.1s, f11ld1 Farr, Dick Smothers. Ed'dtd Binns ind C1111 MuUtw11 1uNI:. 111 .0. ............ Ctl 1301 "Bird 81ndin1.'' a m ?S .... 1C1 '"' &ii O~t••• CCI C30) .,_!l (C)(!O) ll!l Wllo It -CCI C30) U!)Tlltrl • laa ~ (30) 1:%5 !!) Re111n Palitictl (C) 1;30 fJ Cllldid C1111tr1 (JD) m Tht flJi"I Nun (C) (30) "Ill WilMi. .. Silttr ltrtrille inltmrpts 1 mobJten' 111tttln1- IU@ NBC Nttn (C) (30) fD }OfCI Ckn CooU (30) ''Winttr Melon." Qjl CIJ ................. C30) em hftern '" LMn1 (30) a;'! Tht Dtstrl R1port (C) Jack Lathem, Kim M1rffoer. ai) f1rftivN dll A111r (30) (JO) l:JCI e TONIGHT'S BEST SETI * THE DORIS DAY SHOW! a a oo 0o1is n., ,,, <30) Myrna Gibbons is duped into • f1Jhion sllow ubotlre plot wlltn Doris mod tls '°' dai&n• Mon· h p e (Johnny HIJTWI'). D-ICI ClOI mr'"' ..... 160) Si) lllllicalt/PllWs (>)) Ill """"' ICl C30) .... (t) ~II 0 II!l CD IB T>o "'"' ,.,.. ICI (30) "Tht Wu Jun1le." Whilt tile trio invtsti11tes the syndic1tt'I 1rip on the recordinl industl)', I siniln1 stir Is mU1dertd. Goests 111 Lindi M1rsh, Rob.rt Yuro. 7:001J CBS Evrnln1 ftews (C) (30) Jared Mertin, Dick Patterson and Willer Cronkite. R11is Philbin. NOW SHOWING TWO GREAT ATTRACTIONS Over 3rd BIG WEEK 0 m Nit Ni1htty News (Cl (30) 10:00 D 9 Ci) Cini llflttl SIMw (C) . . (60) Btrnadette Peters and Oonald 1':;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;:::;::;:::;:::~1 David Brinkley, John Ch1nc1!101, O'Connor llUtll Ii rrank Mt<;et. B m ..._ (C) (60) O Whirs Mr UrM1 (C) (JO) D n. Sailll (C) (60) m I lm ._.CJ (30) ID Belt ttle Clldi: (t) {30) ta) (61 Juti1 (C) (JO) fl') SpttiilatiOll (C) (60) (R) "The New Ctfhotic Radicalism." f11ncine DuPlwix Gray, 1uthor of "Otvine Oisobeditnc1," and lormtr p1i11l Bl1se Bonpane auesl m ,.,,. u. ICl 160l .,,,. ,.... tTo story." Com1111 11def Lloyd Bucher, capbill of lhl Pueblo, 1i"tt1 his 1ccount of what h•p· ll!ned in Un111ry. 1968, wtlt1 North Kore1n fithlin1 bails sur- raundtd the ship i nd dr•uef ii into Wonun hlrbor. ill Iii llNllrl (JO) Q11 (j) Trlltlt tf C.n1111•n1 (C) m> Tll..C.... klMtin• (2 hr) S CIUilt U. litiq W1td CC) (3{1) 10:15 D MMr: (C) "'Mia W-.t I St..-(wllttm) '55--Ki1~ Douala. 111 hMrle (30) Jr1nn1 Clain. Cltirt Trevor, (T\t a;) SIMPlftntfltl M1ri1 (~) show will bt intenupted at 11:00 for 1 hl!f·llallr n1WSC1St) 7:l01)9(1)C1n1111ot11 (C) (60) M1111!1t Dillon la corMred hy th111 IO:JG 6J Ill .Jollm ..... (C) (lO) Si aux lndi1n .. Conclusion of two· @W ""1 ._ (60) part episod1, "Snow Tr1in," tllmtd IE CU•du J Q11illms (30) in lht Black Hills of South D1kot1. ll:GD IJ a (J) IE) 11 ... (C) O li3C!J !Etod ,._ "" O llJIIl!E-Ctl (C) (30) Yin Johnson IU•sh on O Int' I Adill Ctl Red's Ha!lowetn show. • 11 0 NYP'D (C) (30) 0 NIWI (C) Bill Bonds. $ ... .._ 0 Thllln !: "1111 QWdnft•• 0 Mlllio1 Movie: (C) ........ Hour" (dralftl) '624ud1ey Ht~ l .SZ'' (dr1m1) 'S7~11ilit Wood, burn, Shirler M1cl1in1, J1mu Orem Zimb•litt Jr. Kut M1tcltn. li1rnu, A ser1!ant who 1estn!J his com· m fM DM1: S1J (t) m1ndln1 otfJCrr Is ord111d on 1 :itcrtt llllssiot lo Int I B.SZ bomber. m Truth er Conttquences (C) (30) m 11ov11: ""flCI 111..,.. (mrst•l'Yl 'Sl-£dw1rd C. Robinson, P1 ulett1 Godd1rd, K. T. Slwens. Porter H•IL fD World l'ms (C) (R) Q) Daniel 100111 (Cl (60) "Ci· 11:30 0 ta (j) Mll'f Criffi1 (C) Cunts bola." Roy1I Dino ru tsts is •n 1r1 Rlc:hard Chlmbtrl1in, Den,,, "This is the kind of movie a reviewer should pay to see!'.' -Nw 'fort'°'' Starts Wednesday, Oct. 28 old treasure hunter. H1tl, K1r1n V1l1ntl111, .Mnt HoWlrd. Mr .. Jm1 Unruh, 1'::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;:::;;;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;;; t!i) StlH'ttcl Fn• (C) (30) ill Mn fMrte _,., hi AM" (30) o @ oo m ,...., """' tti h Uab Htw111rt Is 111bstltut1 host. 7:55 ell) Cwltlon de St1undts 0 MIYW i;,.. CCI 1:00 D @ (j) m Llu11t-ln (Cl (60) 0 Mowit: (C) .,.," Without • "Row1n and Mutin's Boo.In." In stir" (cont'd.) Set JO:IS listlna. 1n eerie, 1e117 s11~11 lo H11lowe1n, m Movlt: ""TIM Ctn -1tr1p1 Orson W1ll1s, 1dor, m•11lci1n llHI SICHJ" (drll'l'll) '60 -S•I MllllO, student of the occult, 111tst.. Sus1n Kohrttr, James D1rren, Soun Ollm . O Ylrtinll Cralll• Sllow' (C) (60) U.-00 B M*-"""-1,.,rkal, Alo m r• Tiii t1t1 TMti (C) (30) drn" ccom1e1y> ·42 _ w1111 .. f.D World rrw (C) (60) Holden, 8ri1n Dolll""J. m Tiii st"' 1t1 <JO> 12:4s o Jfftl (C) aa LI Cosqui111 (C) (60) 1:00 II h it: "flirM t. KMJ ...,. C1dventu11) '56 -Rory C11houn, B1rb111 Rush. 1:115 Q)Aqui Tm Plttnts (25) l :JO B a CIJ H«t'1 C..CJ (C) C30l Crail Ind l/nc:lt HllTJ blconll TUE SD A Y OAYi'IME MOVIES t:OO D (ti -JM T..t If Ntw Drlllnt" cmuticl~ '50-Mlfio llllll, flllh· '711 G111)'30n. ., .... .,,_ -.... -(col!lldy) '41 -Jimmy LJOon. Cllar1ta Smllh, 011111 l.Jnn, '10tfll 0 -ICI ''". _,. .... "" .., ICl Tl'lflll" ("'*1') 'JS -J. Clml H1blt. D "l"'1 ,... c.;,,• '"'''""' 'Sl~IOl'll Rift, Colftn Gra7. m ,...."....-r '"'""> •e2 _ Mltdoft11d Clny, 811'111111 ShtntJ, Phllip ftitfld., 2:00 D (C) "Altlt1der tfll Crwt' {dr• m1) '56-RKt•rd Burton, frldrlc M1rdl, a.irt Bloom. m.,,,., --(dram1) '58-«'uss T•mbfJft. Mtmi. • .. , Dortn. 4:00 8 ..,._ ...._. (drt1111) '4Z- Robtrt Cum111i11rs. Prbdll1 Ul!f, °"'"'-· FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEK EN .DER PHONE 642-4321 NOW PLAYING ONLY ON CABLEVISION ''MARK OF ZORRO'' STARRING DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS Th, Mtrlr of Zerro w11 00119 Ftirbtnl1' fint 1dv•ntur• filr11 ,ftd ••t th • 1tvl• for all th• lt•mb.y1nt tlo•lr-•nd-1word ep!•ode1 thtt w•r• to f•l!•w. A1 th• ftmo1n M••ican R•bin Hoff .. ho ••r••1 hi1 inilitl1 wh•r•••r h• 90•1, D•u9 t ll1rn•I•• 11 • l•p t nd tht n 11 • t•11• 1td1r f•r th, ri9hh of oppr•u1d Me•lc1n•. Zo;ro i1 • plcl11r1 th1t l'l••e• l•kes ih•lf l•riou1ly, '"'" !~1 ht 1vie1 ''' not l•tlly bid. NEWPORT: Monday through Friday •I 9 PM; •l•o Sot., Sun. •t 6 PM. MISSION VIEJO: Mon., Wed., Fri. et 9 PM . Local Channel 3 Cablevision Ca,, 642-3260 hThere's Mare Ta S.. On Cable TV!" INlYAlLATION J14.tl MONTHLY llkVllCI l6.IO is a pocket-sized, somewhat capsulized account or the show that proved the highlight of the IOOS-7() county season at the Costa l\1esa C i v i c Play'house. Al Fullerton. the produclion is squeezed into the tiny l\luckenthalcr C e n t e r \~·here cramped scaling and poor visibility beyond the first row of seal s hamper the playgoer's enjoyment con· si derably, Apparently for economics or time. the director has an1· putated the Opening and clos· ing scenes or the show. which carry out its circus at· mosphere theme and un· derscore the final line of the play. The choreography, an essential factor for in no other musical is the chorus so im· Costa Mesa Announces 'Opal' Cast A comedy centering around the theme or attempte d murder will be presented by the Costa Mesa C i v i c Playhouse as its second pro· duction of the season next month. "Everybody Loves Opal" by J ohn Patrick is currently in rehearsal under the direction 0£ Pati Tambell ini, playhouse resident director. Lois Wilson will take th{' Ii· tie role· <lf Opal. a little old lady who is heavily insured by three unsav<lry characters who seek to do away with her and collect as beneficiaries. The villainous trio will be enacted by Ray Scott. Kathy Ladd and Rick Gun st. Completing the cast will be portent , is necessarUy closeltd into the n1icrol)cOpic pl::i.vlng area, minimizing much of its J><>tential effect. Then there is the role of Lit- tlechap, a hahly p r i i e d assignment in musica l theater. '~hich falls on the shoulders of 17-year-old Scott Bylund · and ---~----·--· • BARBRA STREISAND \ ''~''"°"'' )•1-1112 •01 ltOO!• nOlj COlOll Loe Menl• Cll1t l•fwood "PAINT YOUR WAGON'' -ALSO - Gle11 Compbtll l':hn Dorlly repeatedly threatens to topple -M••· thr11 s .. t.- off. Bylund possesses a strong "DO LLY" ot 1 .. d f :JO "NORWOOO" Molldoy thr• Jrldoy "WAGO N"-' 1:40 voice -lhough he lacks lhe1~---------~ vocal range to do justice tol===--__:...:_ ___ _'..':::========'= the show's superlative score - and scores high on energy level, but he is years away fr<lm the depth demanded of Litt lechap. Bylund sjc.ips through his role as thOugh rushing to catch a train, missing much of lhe juicy double entendre and potent saliric punch of which his character is capable. Only in lhe later scenes, playing the elder and re f lective statesman, does young Bylund take a firn1 grasp on his role. In P~tricia Chaffee. the Fo0tlightei:s have come up with a strikingly beautiful Evie. an actress or pleasing voice and high stage presence. Ho\vever, she too falls short of her potential, struggling wilh the four accents she is called upon to convey and allowing herself to be rallied by her er- rors. f.1uch more seasoning is needed here as y,•ell. Donna Edwards. w h o doubles a s cboreographer and shows an imaginative touch in the compressed sur. roundings, and Vikki Budd are bright and effective as the two daughlers. And the chorus. cut l.Jy necessity to six girls, func. lions as a smoothly operating unit. blessed wit h character and individu ality as well as an abundance of physical charm. M u s i c a I accompaniment, limited to a single piano which mars Littlechap's scenes with his employer, comes through acceptably, although Dave Brubeck might be a bit surprised lo find himself in the Newley-Bricusse score. · \Vhatever its limitations. however. "Stop the World" makes for an entertaining evening -if you 're lucky enough to get a seat in the first or second row. 'l'he musical continues for two more Y1eekends at t h e 1r1uckenthaler Center, I I 9 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. 1mai111 111111111 ~-ii '~·-· [!!i _ ...... =----&----·---.. --·-·· l!llllllll•-.-- \ol.l11J,l.11).W'-MIO. It.It . ~lAIQ..1,11.!LJlt. I 41. !O.CIO ,_lf.mt:IU'flm I ..... .., __ NORESERVIDSEATS .::"~ •• .: FRff PARKING Moll. lfn 111.n. 7:30. "IS . Fri.7:00,1;4S,.10o30. Sel.1:4S. lo>O.. S.IS. 7,00,M S, 10,)(I Sul!. 'l: 11. 4'00. Mi 71IO, t. IS EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT! diary otamad housewife a frank perry film •'-1"9 richard benjamin --L - carrie snodgress ·frank langella Bob BaMick a nd Dennis -----------1 Backstrom Jn cameo roles as an insuranco doctor and .a policeman. Richard Ander se n is technical director for the show, assisted by Ron Gibb. "Opal" will open Nov. 21 for a three-weekend run at the Community Center auditorium on the west gate or the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Aiesa. Advance reservations may be made by calling the Costa Mesa R ec r eation Department at 834·5303. · ·"Soldier Blue" ALSO "Rider on 'the Rain" I OtH IN COLO!t ~,trof ~~_,.'*"_ ~ ......... -...... 673-6260 Exclustve Showi ng Phone 673-6260 ......,. ..,_ - %AIRO CALL 546-3102 1.11r11&av1x ~DllTI WAZ.SB"" Ah1 -Jff'tlle MOfffll Jaclr. PoloJteo ... ~ --Also e Liza Minelli: "TELL ME THAT YOU LOYE ME. JUNIE MOON" FOR 1 WEEK ONL YI RATED "G" IT'S FOR EVERYBOOY Call 644.-0760 JUlllE ANDREWS ~OCK l-IUDSON Ch1rlton H•1ton i nd Ger•ldine Chaplin in ''THE HAWAIIANS" CGP) STARTS WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 28 "**** rrs ALL so FUNNY!" ( MIOHUY M11NG I -N•• r11k o.;rr"'""' •mw •cma mlARG8U ... "'It"' . . . . ~l -1\:S ·ll " S11n. -I :10·4:00-6:10·9:00 AIRPORT BURT LANCASTER· DEAN MARTIN ..... ..... MQST&-R1teef'•G,,.. It's for Everyllodyt B1rbr1 Str.lwnd-and Welter Mltth1u ··~i I (•Dl -llOWFOI Titt F1RST TillEATPOPUWPlllC£SI' ~..... ~~,~~~=n-r-=-= BELLO, DOLLY. l..a\llt8'" CALL 892·4493 lO!lt!!llMUlll ;;:,;. '""'""""" Ill . -AU O PU.TING -' .. A "'Y f••11y MO•le Abe Cfl•l'leto1t Hntow • G1folda Ch•plln ht "Thi' Howolla111" IGPl "Goodbye, Columbus" .· • • • ff DAIL V PILOT s Monday, Oclobtr 26, 1970 ~ ----~-.... --..;-;.._=~=----; •TICe nf'll'TI ... •IDI ,_Finance EDieT-T ·o F ·i ·ght War ' ,..... ,.,_.k Will Ill rtnl ....... '"" -f ~= MUOIO' " C-IW l•,llltt• < KIIii ...... , '"" 81lle ... _ fl'MllllW ....,_: ... o. .. tltJI. ,_ • .. .. v • .,,.. C.llt0•·111t, tfM ... ., ...... t the llfl NY lif ..._,,..,, lt1t ot 11:111 Briefs Group Can Win Eco logy Problem Battle • 1.111,,, ti wllldl 11,... flllW oolltt tit Mlklv ~ ....... Md , ... hi .... ltf'flcl., ........ ,d crf DI""'°" M 1-.U Ellls AVMIN, I'-~ a.i,. v111w. C1llf9ml.I, '9r; I • !EWElt TtUNIC "8" -l,INlT 1 i UPPEA NEWl"OltT 8AY CIOSllNG CONTl:ACT NO. t-11 I 11111 l tt ..... ulttol for lht tnfl" WO<ll ftf<•l'*I llertln. TllOt -" It IO Ill 00<\e tcc•dln1 I• tlll' •I•,. tlld -•ncatklN "" n1e In ..,. of· 1 flee f/I flle MCl'fll,.,. fl/ """ Dl"tl« 1..a Mid pltfll IO'lf IH(lfktlklM lfl by • rt lelWIC• ~ • ••rt of 11111 llOtlct. I Pltns. 1Ht.llluron1 Md otti.r cont?'Kf llllM:-'-,,,.., i. Ptmlnef ti ~ Dfl•u , ol fl'll Count~ S.111l1llon 0 11111trNo. t tt , 10&-W Em1 A\1'9nue. Fovnt1ln v111n, • (tllfo/"lllt , COl>lfl OI 111t (Ol>l•tCt : Cl«Ul'ntflll Incl Pl..,I .... y Df GO!ttnecl , trom fM tboYt-mentloftN offlct 11 1 c111t , Cll 110.00, """""' <O•I II "'1f reh1..o&blt • •"81tllltU Ill "'1Woll\er tho Olelll t/111 • -.lllal'lonl t rt ntwl!M or !IOI. Pit"' • •NI -•11c.11on1 wm tit ,,..11e<1 '° •ro. , •Hdl~ lllcldtn. It rMlltittcl, lor • tw ol , lS.00 (-d\ll!Nllle) '9 CO"l'I' IN C.OSI C11 .... ,-.e •rid ,...nd ....... All bkn lnl/SI be mode In KCVl'donn • Wf11'1 the lfOIVtn of Cotltor,,I•, IO<ll i•ws , ..ollable tMrtia, IM1t~lan1 le 8INl'f1, , fhe p,,_1, TN P""'1 o"'ll Sfotcifk•lloni • 0$ riil•lf<I Ill thl1 -~. • 810der1 lrt r..ertlw Nlfiltetl tMI : :i•:::n~.~::v;~~Ot:l~M rt!·~~~ Dtrector1 of Couftf~ 5Mll•llM OIUrlcl No. J "-1 OM:trtolntd fM Prrt•lllnt r•k of .,... d'-'"'"" o1 tM ioc..u,., '" wt1kll Wiit .w1. K lO be Nfformecl. ""'lctlll• , fO IM wor'll ta lit donl, to lie •1 oltltlltd If! lllt louhnl C•N~ "'-rfw Ullot "'''ttmtnl" flle<f 1,. tr... alt\(• ot the c...,nty Sonltollon Dlslrktl of <Kt• CounlY •nG Ill IN ofllct ot tllt ... 1soci.tod ~I Cofltr.,.,,1 of "'merk1, 5oultlt<'11 , C•llfor11i. Cll1pter, • Ho bid wlU ... CONIOPrl'Cf llftlnl It b • ..,.at: 111'1 • bl1nlt lorm hH'llhl>ed bv IN ' County $1nll1flon Dl1lrld on.I 1t11K ln ll>e itnek:Md «IWkN>t IUl>llllod bv ftle Oi1trk:I, bt1rlno '"' llllt ol Ills -•k 1na • Ill• ....... ol lh• bidder. One! '""II belr .... ~ ol/ltr C11itlf19U]Wll"' m•l1c. If II ""' .alol , ,._1bll!1Y ol Ille blcklel" Iv Mt thll 1111 , bid It rtcelved In ••-• 11,.... MY blCI • tt<el"'° oll•r lllt Klltcllllod tlo1lnt Timi r for receipt ol bld1 Wll tie r.-rurllell to !ht lllOCler~ • fO(J'I bidder ......,., tit 11'2Mld 91111 auotltltcl to .,ertorm lllt w«1I; tanl1lned If! • IMH clocU!Mfl~. .. ... bid .... "°' les 1111 .. ''-" '""ctlll 1111%1 ol !tit 1vl•I bid t~ WIJI be • 1eavlrM willl etCI> lllCI •NI 1111 blCI 1,...n M ~ <on•I-11..ies& IUC/I bid ucurll'f' b • ~r.clHed n.r.111. : • TM eo.rd of Dlr.cloo " lhe Cowl!¥ , ~lt1lloll Dlstrkl No. .$ rHttWI 11\t • mM ta ... kc! aft,. or •II bkls •nf ,. ' .-11" •RY Ot t M lrr"11lotfllt1. : I 8Y ORDER OF THE ,. • B041t0 OF DlltECTORS. .. , COUHTY S4HIT4TION : , OIST!tlCT NO, J • " Dr'"" c_,,.,, Ctllf0t11ll. • J. W1Yt1e S1h<a.Mr, • S.UrltrY .. • .. .. ,,.11....... Or-C.O.St C.llY l'llof, ; .cctobtr 'H 11111 Hov«nbtr J, mt 1'2t-7' ""' NOTICI: TO CltlDITOJll OP SULK TRA .. Sf'IR lS.'-''11141" U.C.C.J ; l. NollOt II Mreb¥ tl\1111 ta !ht Cred!tor1 • 'llf CL YOE£. 8ARNARD tllll MA.RILYN , T_8AJtNARO, Tr1n1ltror1, whole tw1lnt1t .. aOd•HI Is 1ffS P•tk Awnu1, COl!t Mtll. ' !C...,nfY of Or•11111. 51111 ol C1111om11, 11111 • • 111111( tr1ntler It tboul lo boi! m.t<l8 IO , •AN8Alt AOU41UUM PROOUCTJ, INC •• • • cor-1tlofl, Tr1nlltrH, -.0 111111""1 : oddre11 11 llU P1r1< A""'lll'· COlll MeM, Countp of Ortnff, $1tff ol Ctllfomlt. The K-rl\I 11 bl lr•111le .... hi b;tltcl •I 1WS 1'111c A....nue, C01t1 MeM. C-f'f ._ f1f 0!"1 ... , $11!1 " C•Hlamlt. $1111 -rl\I 11 delQ\btd Ill ''°""'' '" All 1tock 111 tr.0., ll•hlre" ...,1........,1 oM 900ll Wiii -thlt lr1111kol ll1h *' IWP-• JllJll:!I 111/illllHI k-II GfM & ,...J"lly11'1 Tr11111(1I Flllt onGI JOctlf<I 11 lffS Ptr\ ,,,.,,_, Coslt MtM, c-l't " Or-•· Slllt ol Ctlllor11l1. _ TM bl/lit lr-1.r Wiii bf c.o1rn.umMeled • .,, or •litr 111e 11111 u,. ot Nowmbtr, 1'1o. •I ID:OO A.M. 1t F1rlnl't'' tllll Merdlt11tl Btnlt " L-8tt</I, 302 l'lrie A_, Lollt 8H<tl, (Ollftfy ol LOI "'*"'""' Sit• ti C1lllwllleJ EKl'OW Ht. l·m-...MI. St •r M I!-M IM Tr-IH'M, IH tM.ial--.,.., lldclrn-ll$M W tM • T,.,.,...,. tw "" fll,._ Yll,_ Int .. If, Ort;_,., DtMlll: Odlllllr 1t, 1t10. S4H8Alt AQUAltlUM l'lt0DUCT5, INC. 4 c_._1lloft, Trtml.rM "" Jlmft L. Borbour, Sec:.ITtNI. 8\1 M!Ch .. I E. S1neltf1. P rn. ' , ... _ •• Mtnhtlllt ''"" .......... di jlft PlM A- < L-ltKll. Coffftnll• ""' l'ubllslted Or'1nN Cell'I C.I .... Piiot, O<!Dtlt!' ,... 1t70 ,,,,.)ID LEGAL NOTICE su••RIOI: COURT 0' THI! $TAT• OF CA\.IFOtllOA FOR THI COUNTY OF ORAHG• .... A41"1 NOTICll 01' Hl!AllNO 01' PITITtON l'Olt PltOIAT• Of' WILL ANO '011: Ll!TTl!llS TISTAMl!NTARY CaGND ~ W41YllDI • t s._te el DOlrOTHY 5. MUSGl:AllE'. ialso Ir;-•• DOROTHY a , STEWART • MUSGllAYE, 0.Cflltd. ' NOTICE 15 NERE8Y GIVEN Tllll Hlf. t'llOll M111ttlll'I 1'111 !Heel 11trel11 i Pf'tlllon • ,tor •teti.h: ol Wiit •1111 tor llwonc:t ot • """' Tn11 .... 1111r¥ to l'etltk>Mr, • ftler•M• to wh!c/I It mtclf' far lurttwr • _.,11cui.1'1. trod tlllt tM !!me tnd 111<1 ol ; ~1rlrlt tM 11...,. h•• beffl 1rt '°' "l ttowmlltf' IJ, 1'10, ol f ;:lll 1.m., I~ the .. uurtroom of DtHrtm-..t Ke. i ot stlcl '°""'' •I 100 Clllle Ce11ter Orlw Wtt!. 111 "-tM CllY ol Slnt1 Al'lt Ctllfomlt. : • o.mi Dclobtr 1i. 1•10. • W. E. ST JOHN. Caunl'f' Clerk ....... A. 1!•1t1n•11 .. ,,,. " ............. "'"' ' Sulto N111nMI' Ml it.to MoM, Ctll..,lllt '14H Toi: 111•1 Mf•tlM Atlel'MY fir """ltMr • Publbhtd OrtrlN Cotlt DlllY PllOI, OCtobor ,_, 2', JO, 1'70 1tP10 .,... . ' ' LEGAL NOTICE . ----------... . .. . ..,. \ 1 Cl!RTll'ICATI! 01' S~IN•sl, , l'ICTITIOUS NAMli " 'TN 1111del'Jltil'llld doll Ctr111Y lht Is CGll• ; = ci!1 =~'.":!1:~n~~; ~'.';~,.":~ -ftllous firm "'""' ot KAREN JOY , l(NOWS tlld lhllt uid tl•m 1' COin-.! o1 fllt..flllloWfflo ~ .,.,,,,., "'""' In lull _., •IKI ol !ftlllt1'Ct 11 n tallows: K-JOT Hlllnt11. 41t Otclli. Avr ., • Col'Clflt *1 Mir, C11ttomlt. DtlH D<t. f , lt1fl K•re11 Jw H•lll'ltu tltle of Ctllforlll1, <K°"" COUlltp: Oii Octobw f , 1m betort ,,.,., I Nlll•N I Pvbll( In ...... tor Slid Sl1te, ~.._..1 .. -•rW Kt,..., Joy Httin.11 k-to me fO bt h WMl'I .,,..,. ,.._ h wllKrlb• ... "' .... """"" l111t"""'""' ...... ' 1Kk•-1•d•td ...... ICVlld .,,. ........ I l(IFFICl4L $EAL> • lo\41tY II(, H£MltY ' Nol•rr """'lie. Ctl!Wlllt l'rl!lclHI Olfla 11'1 .,._....., MY C-ls&IM Enlrtt Hw, ~'-lt7! P\lblh.1"411 o ... -Cffl1 D1!1Y ~net. ! Ck.I, 11. 1,, N. NO\I, 2, lml 117$-1' I LEGAL NOTICE ·~---1---~--1 Lt.At MOTICll NOTICE' IS Hf'll:E8Y GIVEN "'-t tlll • totiowi... llfm• a1 IOU!'ld or ...,,. "'°",..,,. "'"' bHll he1t O'I' 1llt l'alla o.trtmfftl , -' tlle City cl CO'lt• Mtw fW I "'lod In •~«» of ~ tttl 1t1n1 Dnt .... bl-t. "''" ,_.. blk:f!ll, four DALLAS (UPI) -LTV Aerospict Corp. said Its SyneUcs Co. sub8ldl ory bas obtained a $24.a million CQn- tract from the National SpJce & Aeronautics Administration for work on the Scout Launch Vehicle Program. • WASlfiNGTON !UPI) - The Civil Aeronautics board has authorized the Southern Pacific and Santa F e Railroads to buy Southern Pacific Air Freight, Tnc., and ,Express Air Freight, Inc., respectively. It is tht: first time railroads havr: been re.nnitted to enter tht: air freight forwarding business. DENVER (UPI) -Stan- dard Oil Co. (Indiana) Pan American Petroleun1 subsidiary said it will build a natural gas processing plant in the New Peoria oil field 4D miles east of Denver with a daily capacity of eight million cubic feet. SYOSSET, N.Y. (UPI) - Kollsman 1Il5trument Corp. has obtained a $7 .5 million order for Servo-Pneumatic altimeters from Wright-Pat- terson Air Force Base at Daytoo, Qhio. NEW YORK (UPI) -A special federal grand jury stu· dying industrial water pollu· lion has indicted Standard Brands, Inc., charging 100 violations of a 71-year ()Jd federal law regarding waste and refuse djsposal. Washburn Wire Co. was indictet'.1 for 50 violations of the same 1899 Jaw. The law provides for fines of $500 to $2,:IOO for each violation. 'Ille two firms must plead to the indictments on Ocl. 29. ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Anheuser-Busch. I n c • , an- nounced it will build a $50 million office and industrial complex on a tract adjoining its brewery at Columbus, Ohio, to be completed over the next 10 yeal"3. NEW YORK (UPI) - Kinney National Service, Inc., announced il has b e g u n negotiations that may lead to the purchase of Simon & Schuster, Inc., a leading book publ~ber. PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) - Oroark Industries, Inc., says it has developed a new bumper shock absorber system that can greatly reduce damage to cars in slow-speed collisions, The device hardly will be ready to market beofre the 1973 model year, the compan)' said. ERIE. Pa. (UPI) ~ Zurn Industries, Inc., has obtained a $2.2 million contract to SUP" ply a large generator for the Municipal Electric Po w e r System of Key West. Fla., with unique poUution controls. WILKES -BARRE, Pa. (UPI) -Westinghouse Elec. tric Corp. has broken ground for a $14.2 million plant to demineralize acid w a t e r drainage in abandoned coal mines in Hanover Tbwnship near the Susquehanna River. The plant is to be in operation in 1972 and is ,expected t.o pro- duce five million gallons of ultrapure water daily. Gov. Raymond P. Sha£ er took part in the ground breaking ceremonies, The plant's design culminates five years of research by Westinghouse. PALO ALTO CUPJ) - llewlett-Packard Co. has an- nounced it will build a factory at Grenoble, France. I o employ 3,000 workers if the French government approves. A 45-acre tract will be bought from the city of Grenoble. The company is in medical . analytica1, computing a n d other electronic in· strumentation. TETERBORO. N.J. (UPI) -Compuscan. Inc. says ii has developed a new page optical scanning machine that can read text or various sizes at speeds or 100 characters a se- cond, for the printing industry. It will sell for $36,000 and tum copy into magnetic or punched tape ()r puncht'd cards. • lllut' bl•"' -''"" blU. .,.. .,. blue ""'' 1 ""· I iiii••iiiiiiiiii<iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I NOTICI! 1$ FURTHE" OIVl!M "'-9 ff ... -·-·,, .,.. ,.,...... "" _...rthlol el "" .,_.,., W11t1111 -1, .... , Of OIL PAIHTIN•s f1l d•n foltowlnt "" ~la""' Ill' rlllt WHOLUALI WA.llHOUSI Noll«, tiw lln. ~ Wll ""' Ill !flt OPIM TO THI PUlllC ......... It ""19 M -or ... lfll Cfl'Y Ill' : C•ll MtM. 1tt .... id> aw !flt _...,.,., 4t~ ' ,..•~•," ,."",.'!~..'!.!-~ " a .,., ' -~ _, lr. ,,.. .,.._,.,,..,, -,......,:::..-=-L -~ 04l!D; Oc"*" ,._ 1'11 _,,. IDIM.... HTA-lttA ft . E. Nl!TN l>MOttl ~ (ti~ of J'tlkt 1-0EAl..EIUi W.Ml1EO • ~ Or .... c..f Dtlly "'""·•= Uy RUDI NJEDZIEISIU OI Tiit Dlll1 l'llM Sllff America la: now ln a position to win the war agaimt world ecology problems by using the managernent and technical tools developed to cope with the problems or outer space-. That is the conclusion of a team of 14 top-flight aerQ.!ipace experts. chaired by llun- tington Beach resident Charles L. Stone. Their findings , released to- day in a IO-page report, call ror establishment of a new "'space goal-one which brings and end to rhetoric and ex· cuse; one which lets all life on earth breathe a little deeper and live a little longer." The group. called Ecology a n d Implementation Com· mitment Team {EDICT ), was formed from Southern California xientists severaJ months ago to solve m- vironmental problelll'!l o( this nalion within a decade, ac· cording to Stone, a program manager for North American Aviation. "We have tools necessary _M_o_n_e'--'y'-'-'-s_W.:..:.orth Employers Ponder Christmas Present By SYLVIA PORTER You already have or you soon will have at least a clue to the Christmas present your employer will give yoU some time before the end or 1970. lf it's to be a casb bonus instead ()f a gin, you probably have some idea of the amount and whether it will be more or Jess than last year's bonus. How will YOUR gift and/or bonus compare to those being received by others this year? What are today's key trends in l.'Ompany gift-giving? -Oe!i1Jite 1970's recession, profit decline and s t o c k market crash. a full six out of 10 U.S. companies will give Christmas gifl'i to employes. customers and prospective customers in 1970 -well above l965's 55 percent. And chances are strong, if you do not receive a gift from your employer, that you'll get a cash bonus or a slice of this year·s prorits. -It's also likely that if you're among the millions who re:ceive gifl!I, thus year's girt will be at least as expensive as last year's. However, about one in five of lhe girt-giving companies will cut back their spending this year because or today's money and business squeeze. The Christmas budget, for many companies is an obvious place to trim. These are just a few of the findings from a survey con ~u~ by the .!}t_rtnell Corp 1n Chicago, or SOOCOrporation~ with nearly 2,000,000 employees. Import.ant new trends are now emerging in company gift-giving, Dartnell found. Among them: The list of Christmas gifts is lengthening. Among the newer types of gifts are books, flowers and house plants. These are in addition to such ()Id timers as: hams. turkeys, candy, cheese and liquor : calendars, diaries and desk equipment; gift certificates: appliances and housewares : assortments of company pro- ducts. Only rarely do com- panies select individual gifts for individual cmployes and customersj in most cases1 everybody -including employes and customers - gets the same gift. 'I'be average price tag <m a .:ompany Christmas present '.is climbing. Today, most com· panies spend between '5 81\d $25 per gift vs. under $5 as rectnt1y as 1965. And a sizeable number of companies -one in 10 wholesale com· panies, ()Ile in seven servil:e companies, and one in j20 manufacturing and retail cmn- panies -spends more than $25 for each gilt Many companies now forbid employes to accept gifts ,of any real va1ue from suppliers who might be attempting to gain favor through Christmas gifts. Says one company: "Business relationships should be based on good business practices, not 'bought'." Rules another, a Chicago insurance company: "No present of any kind may be accepted. Arey gift received • • • will be returned.'' According to the survey, more than half of the com- panies either flatly prohibit employes from accepting any gifts from suppliers or restrict acceptable gifts to those with a minimal value. Increasingly, companies are replacing individual Ouistmas gifts with pooled contributions to charitable causes -in ttie name ot employes a n1d customers:· one in fivt com- panies reports it h aiz substituted such a pool · fer Christmas presents. Jncreasingly, too, companie~ are substituting a cash bonu$ for the traditional turkey or ham -with the bonus based on the number of years rl. service or on the wage level m the employe. Even if you are among those who will receive neither a bonus nor a gift this year, take heart: The near certainty is that you'll at least get the ''gift" of a three.day Christmas weekend. s j n c .e Dec. 25 falls ()n a Friday Uli'S year. And for millions. lbi!ol holiday will stretch into a four-day weekend . This "vacationette" could be worth a lot more than a letter €1pener or 1 fruitcake! First National Bank Planning 8th Branch Continuing growth of the First National Bank 0£ Orange County is accented by the fact that they're already in plan· ning stages of establishing an eighth facility in Anaheim although the sixth and seventh units ha ve been opened in less lhan a year. Newest branches In the group are Tustin's unit at Red Hill and Walnut, partic:ularly well-oriented to the Irvine Industrial Complex. and In Villa Park at Santiago and Wanda. This institution originnted In Orange and has confined Its operations to the county of its origin all M )'ears o( Jts u- 1stence. The ~nk's a~ now total more than $60 million and ii is enjoying notable acceptanct. o( its novel rrserve balance &e• eoonl ~lnWtiich n-,.,. vttes depositors lo "Be your own loan officer.'' Douglas K. Hill has hem manager of the Costa Mesa branch at 1650 Adams for a lmost a year now, having tht distinction or being a native al. Orange County and rect!ivirc his A.A. degree in business and economics from Orange Coasl College. His upper graduate work: was completed at Cal State -Fullerton. HID has been assistant manager <i the Santa Ana branch before <.'Ol'l'ling to the Costa Mesa branch. ~ The bank's main office is at Chapman Ave.. at the Plaza in downtown Orang~. with two otbtt Orange offices, plus ti. OMS in Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, TU.st.in and Villa Park. James Beam. vice presi- tlt:nt, is the pm.ident ot the Orange COunty Chirnber d Comlfftrt'f:- Officert and dirtetors a~ <. E. Sdoroeder, l'l"sldent: ~"' ,... ,..,.,. : =~========;~ ALL TYl'ES E9Ull'MENT Donald C. Caskey, xnior vice president and trust officer; Glenn Allt:n, Paul Cleary, Samuel lfurwib, Donley ao-.. lngtt, Alwin Dierker, Glena ?ltatllls, Vernon Valentine, Sang>CUS aod Jlo!l<rt Welch. • . FAIR ' .. , ...... ,,., ........... t." "' : f•ri, 111t, f.acfv1 l. Tloe10 1 , And MACHINERY LEASING AVAILABLE :~ •JM'f•i;•• 011 tfta DAILY ,IL01 : • Mit .. tl•I , •••••• ,, ... ,. I "~~~~~~~~~~~~~-!I • for lmplemtnl.atlon of 1 suc- cessful program c.o e.nd· con- taml.naUon of our waters, our soils, and our 1ir: to funnel the congested traffic into a npJdl)'" moving, aare traffic pallel'OI: and lo bring about solutions to many other pro.. blel'M plaguin g our humanity," lbe report stales. "It Is up to dynamic leadersblp to utilize these tools to effect the desired results before these resources are lost forever." In effect, Stone and bis team ()f engineers suggest a mobilization or money and manpower similar to NASA's Apollo program which m. volved more than 3 o O O o -. persons. A side benefit of that plan, of course, would be employment r e I i e f for thousand,, ~ aerospace workers who Jost their jobs because of dwindling govern- ment contracts. Specifically, the task force recommends t h e following corrective steps if the war against pollution is to be won: -Arrange for a flnn federal <.'Ommitment to reductioo of. ecology problems mby r.o per- cent by the end of the decade, coupled with $100 million fun. ding for initial·phase projects during the first 18 months. -Enlist the aid 0£ NASA program managers to manage the first phase and providt continuity for future tasks. -Artange a personnel management program to place excess aerospace talent back on the drawifl& blards to plan the effort. -Use a federal planning guide for career development or all job skills that are heavi- ly dependent on government and government contractor employment. -Research the v o t i n g reCQrds ()f all e i-e ct e d representatives on this issue and publicize them so the peo- ple know who they should vote for in the next election. The EDICT 1roup claims positive de v e Io pm en t of ecological solutions is both logical and timely. 'nley charge that re c e n t pro- nouncements Crom Washington lack specific £actors, such as fund!, goals, and specific datt.s for their ac .. complisbment. Pinto Still Far Behind Volkswagen DETROIT (UPI) -Ford Motor Company·s Pinto will win the domestic subc1Jmpact sales race in 1971 but will still t r a i I Volkswagen by "a sizeable figure," Ward's Auto World predicts. The industry publication's October-November e d I t i o n said Pinto's main competitor, Chevrolet's Vega, is burdened by a production lag caused by the General Motors Corp • strike and a higher price tag. However. Ward's said the Vega will still make a battle in the sale race. American 1o.1otors Corpora· lion's Gremlin, introduced last spring as the first domestic subcompact. will place third domestically, mainly because AMC doesn't have the same production capacity, the arti· cle said. The magazine, aimed at management in automotive and related industries, chose Pinto because it is priced $172 under Vega, is styled to appeal to imported car buyers and is backed by Ford's put SOC• cesses in selling small cars. The magazine also selected 11dark horses" among 1971 major car categories. Jn regular s I z e automotives, Ward's said the standard Chevrolel, perennial 1 a I e s leader ln the category, is the "lightest shaded" of the dark horses, while Pontiac's new Grand Ville raises divi sion hopes for a sales comeback. Jn intermediates, Ward's said Chevrolet's Chevelle will be lesled by Plymoolb's Sebr· ings and Satellites and by Dodge's Chargers and C.Oro~ as well as AMC's M118dor. Maverick wn reported a likely repeater with top sales, w t t h L I n c o In-Mercury's Cometi a dark horse in com- ~cts. Other conte:nde:rs were-- AM C's Sportabout Wagon and !?2dB:e's De.mom:. as wr:U as POntlae's new entry, to be ln· lrodtlttd early In 1'11. 1\tusUlng was expected lo make a strong cvmeback to rtclaim its sales letdershlp from Cbr:vrol~t's camaro in •ports compacts. Pitchmen ·-·· Cramped _ By Facts - NEW YORK (AP) - A crimp is being put In Ille style of many publiclib, public telationel • m en• promoters, advertisers and other image makers by increasingly strict government concern with the facts. Facts are what these men work with, of course, but &USpicions have been aroused in consumer minds and the regulatory-wwld tt.ot facts. like statistics, can be made to create illusions, The Federal Trade Com- mission, for example, became incensed a year ago by ad- vertisements that c I a i m e d tires were safely tested at speeds in excess of 100 miles an hour, which was factually true. What the ads left unsaid was that the tests were performed under test conditions, not the condJtions Wlder which any J>U!cltaser would n o r m a 11 y drive. Aod though the tire might not rupture, would lt re- main attached to the rim? Pressed to product the most favorable im~ for their pro- ducts, publicists are &omettme. lorool to strelc:h their imaginations, which is to say U>ey 3lretch the defin.. nition of truth as well. It wasn't unknown, and still may not be, for an automotive advertisement to depict a sleek, handsome vehicle with all the extras adorning it, but list in large letters the price of the sbipped model, and in tiny letters the details. ' OUtrlght lies became com- mon during the 1960s in an· other area of corporate life . Mergers grew increasingly common, and so did the phrase: "We are not negotiating with any company at the pre,,ent time." Almost as commonly, this denial was fol1owed by a stat~ ment that ABC Corp. bad coo- cluded merger arrangementS with XYZ Corp. A lie? or course, but in the view of the principals, an understandable and even necessary lie. Their argwnent was that a premature disclosure o f negottatiom might destroy Jbe talks altog-and might also cause price fluctuations in the shares d. the comPafiies involved. With the Securities and Eii:· change Commission eyeing such statements c I o s e l y , especia11y since the fortunes of . usually involved, publicists to- day are becoming more legalistic, less creative. Some observers maintain that as a rsult, ·the public rela~ tions craft is becoming more professional and more credible -that it has learned to deal with an intelligent public that expects the truth and can spot anything less. They theorize that if their company wltlmolds the un- favorable, the favorable then b e c om e s Its.! believable. Moreover, it destroys their standing with editors and writers. In any sound com· pany. they feel, there is enough good news to offset the bad. The choice is becoming more academic a n y w a y , because the SEC has now warned publicly-owned com- panles that they must make Tull and prompt disclosure or unfavorable news as well as the news or favorable events. For oldtimers. this is an un- nerving edict. For years they have been acct.momed to turn- ing out a flood of innocuous reports on company activities, a goodly peroootage of them being the promotion ol person- nel. ~ appointment <ll a new district manager or the eleva- tion or a plant foreman always is good news to ttie public, because most people like to see a man get ahead. But does it really mean anything more than that? Another common an- nouncement is the receipt of a new contract, but often a com- pany fails to add that 1l may looe money on the old con- tract, or that the rettppt of the new contrad still leaves the company behind last year's pace. "Corporate releases which disclose personnel changts, the rectipt of new tontracts, orders and other favorable deve\opmeatl but do not even suggest existirlg adverse cor- porate developmtnts do not serve the public needs." This is the warning Issued by the SEC, which adds thal such proeedurt1 may evt!n violate the a.ntilraud pro- vlsions of the F e d er a I securities laws. • ..... •I ···' ........ ~·-·-·-----.... -.......... . TH~NEEDLE • IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN And th1 m a" who kM1DI ;wt hoto to tu"' th.I phnut to oet SM _. .. , of U.. l>cub lo DAILY PILOT column. lot SJl<lnq Homs •• H• Mr ben called the modern· da¥ Htti1"V M1nckeft. If ¥OU're Ttad~ for hit mt of the QCfd odjcetio e and t " o " o " t • proookino proac to gfH ~OU the mt<Ut ••• if vou tocme to fiM 10tRtthino to 111.ink obo11.t in what you read ••• IJ you have 4 .sense of humor, you b t lo no with Teadn1 who dcHoht '" ttUino otk<T1 -"SJl<I l<lid" frl OM of the Mtfon'I _. • qootod IOI_,. Some Sample Bar/Js Recently Thrown By Sydney Harris: 140ne et tht highest 1Nid Jobi In Am1rlct conti1t1 of 1t1ncllng up in front of 1 mic· rophon•, Mp1r1tln9 thi good r1cord• from the bMf on• -ind pl•ylng tht bod-.u "It'• sad but true that while alcoholics are tbe best argument for .abstinence, so many abstainers are equally effective ar~ -I for I lilUe drink DOW Ind Ulen.• '!Molt of-tN IO-Cllltd 'incomp1tibllity' In m1rrl• apri"I' from the fact th•t to moat men, IN ft an act; while to 111 women, tt Is an emotion. And this differ· •nee In attttudl llft lie brWgecl only by ...... .. The sole difference between a 'dedica- ted cnuader' and a 'nosy reformer' con. lists in our agreement or diJagreement with bis objecti•es. '' "The "*' •plosive co mbln•tion In the world MMilh of 1iMtrity tddtd to ,..., ...... For .. Whenever I am the recipJent of an es- ~ hearty handshake, I IUSped Mr. Jluocles Is tryiftg to sell somethlns. hide llDme\hiDi, or prove 1omeUibJ&, • E4itorial P1re Sig1ature . . :. . ) ;'~·. .... . .... ·-· . ~·'f ' .. Nelp You Find Tie Latest Q1otables Created By 'T•e Needler' For His Col- A Reg1lar Feature of It'll 1mn, tH DAILY PILOT Your -Delly Newspepw .- -· . • • • • - ---~----------~---·-----·------·-·------· -· ------------ • ··, ·--· • ~-• .,._,..,\'"'"'' '' ''.' ... ~ ;•·•~------_. .... , '-o<• .. ,• .. , ............ --•• '·--.. • •' • ..-.. w• r•-••• .... __,,, .......... ,_, ____ .. , ••••••• --·-----··••-• .. ~,.. .... _..,_. .. ___ ,'' •••''••••I •!"'••••••••••'••'••~·• .. ,. .. ._, .. .._ .. ,·-----••••••• • •, :· . .. . . . . • ' . NO MA TIER WHAT they're in the market for, our readers find the DAILY PILOT is the best place to put the bite on bargains. And they 'do it with the same gusto as the gourmet here showing how much he appreciates the wares of the famed Alkmaar Cheese Market in The Netherlands. You don 't have to travel so far to find good things to eat, nice things to wear, new appliances at bargain prices, a real car l)uy-or even a chunk of cheese. Just shop the "armchair market," the one our advertisers deliver to your door every dar,. . . .. • c- -. "·· . DAILY PILOT .. . ' ' -. ' ' • I ". " .. '" "' I . I " .. I I -.I . ' .. 1 . I .. . . ;; . ' '1 ....... " I .. , .. ... . .... ·-· ' .. . .. -·~· + ... ..,. a ;:tp;,;;.; .+•fat• .. • !O 9 •¢<,;+-& .'f ,,,.., .,. .• ,t i 14 OP ... "f.• =tP ·"te J ... ye . NO-IRON SHIRTS IM TWO smES FOR JR. BOYS RecJ. 1.69-1.77 H -M T • ·"" Ea. 3 days only! Choice of button-down collar, cot- ton flannel shirts In popu- lar fabrics, new colors. 3-7. ::Autumn Scene ·One cat tail Is ready to send tis se~ds to the wind' .as the other dries out in the sun in a swamp near Hickory Corners, Wis. Mrs. Nixon's Secret: ' _:'She's Fond of People' 30 DISPOSABLE PAMPERS sl.38 WASHINGTON (AP) Mrs. Richard M. Nixon has a ~imple approach to h e r political campaigning: "1 like people a:xl l would never be phony." Ending a week of croa- country travel in behalf cl Republican candidates, the President's wife said she was llUJ1)rised some people think !UCh campaigning is unusual for her. ~ admits -she has neva' been "clear round the coun-tryu on her own before, "but I've been in this si~e IMS." And she plans to be CMJt again nert week -In lndianapolls Wednesday and later in San b!ego and San Francisco. , Asked how the campaign Mar-; up for Republicarui, Mrs. Nixon said exuberantJ y: "it looks great." Mrs. Nixon 1proved she's a pro on a day-long · trip to Florida Thursday in wh ich she &hook hands with at least 2,000 people and got a warm welcome In return. She was given keys to two cities and the mayor proclaimed "Mrs. Rtchard M. Nixon Day" in Fort Myers. She smiled, said '1 HI • boney," patted hands. hugr-d y,oungl!lters, gave out autographs and 50 or so gold ball-point pens with he" name on them. and PQsed for in.o numerable · pictures with ca~ didatel and constituents. lt didn't md ter that the m'ain Senate candidate ahe came to promote -Rep. Wllliam C. Cramer -was off ~ votes elsewhere. Mr!. Nixon, ~tpuring with Mrs. Gramer. said, "I didn 't expect him and knew he was going to " busy." • :Jill! day or campaignlng left Mn. Nixon looking unruffled, her b1'*8nd-whlte silk print dml uowrinlded and her tinile undisturbed. -"'I'm not dwelling upon ~." she explained her 0.Upajgn composure. She did ~her right hand was "111 ~ up" with fingernail ~· But, "These th!np Mwr bother me." · 'lier day in Florida included '~ances at two receptions • :>Point Brittany and Fort Mien where she stood each ~ for about 90 minutes .. . I willlout letup, shaking hands. Our Re" $1 68 "This is what l love,'' Mrs. '21" • 1 Ni.on said aJt«wards. "I love 3 DAYS ONLY to have a word or tWo with Layers and layers of sortnei;s, al\\·ays frf'Sh and sanitary. Pamp- N>nl'\}e and have a word with ers Daytime disposables for babies over 11 pounds save time !;.:?.:: ~'Id 1 1 1 and effort al home or away. Commended by Parents' btaga-u~ uu ren. ove peop e 1;"<>."c;'·,;S~toc~k~u~no!w~. ~ and I think that I completely 1 captlvate them." J... When two small boys in the crowd at an airport fence held up a hand-pairted wooden sign reading: "Peace Pat," she shook hmlds with them and said smiling at 1helr placard: "Say, I'm for that I'm glad you art, too." San Diego's Pupils Turn To Farming • S.-PC. HEARTH ENSEM.ILE Our RecJ. $25.84 3 DAYS ONLY . s1a.83 ~1 Black and brass ir;et with pull-chain screen. brass top bar. Set has !!;er shovel, stand, brush. KEM-TONE~ WALL PAINT FOR A RICH INTERIOR Our Reg. 6. 94 3 DAYS ONLY De 1 u x e lntf!rlor latex paint dries In 30 min. to a ACrubb8blc finish. Euy to apply! water clean-up! Most co ors. 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Will fit all Kodak alide projectors using 5t.andard slide trays. WOOL PLAID HUNT SHIRT Sfi.46 4·01 DECANTER FOR BEVERAGES . ..... 96• 63C 3 Days Slim stylin&. sl idl! seal pour- ing spout. Colors. I r I I j ' ( I l t I ( t I I ( ( ( ( I I l I I ' ·-------~------~------~~ & Mondoy, O<tobtf 26, 1970 DAI LY PILOT JS • MINNEAPOLis.sT. PAUL <AP) -In plooship. ••Our championshp 1ame with Min· Kansas City Chiefs In the Suptt Bowl last The Rams' defense, oPpoeed by the silence of the Los Angeles dressing GabrieJ, deciding not to call il quits, nesota last year was a classic/' said January, the VJklngs avenged the defeat quarterback Gary C\Jouo's play making, R··-·------------·· ams, Viki llg s in T V CI 3.sh Tonight Still Stills Two Ri vals room last Dec. 27, Roman Gabriel wrote later about the game: '"There are coach George AUeri of Ute Rams, "and it 27-10 in this year's season opener. appear! just as powerfu1. The Rams have mumbled something about possibly retir· no excuses. Napoleon didn't get a could have gone either way. We played as "It was tough enough playing Los sacked opposing quarterbacks 23 times In Pl ff ing frodt the National Football League. rematch after Waterloo." well as we eoUld play the game but they Angeles last year,'' said Minnesota coach and have allowed only 392 yards rushing a 0 -~:albriel -i~--But-Napoleon--didn't-tlave-to-fight-11---------------IBttd-Grant, 'but-this-time-lt-should-bie-e--a-a-MMlnnesOta-strongpoin,bb------===-=_;;==.,,'-'===-----· magnificently against the Minnesota Vlk· Roman , ·and tonight the Gabriel-led Rams Chaaael. 7 a~ 8 !Ven tougher because they'll be trying to Last week's No. I and No. 2 NFL lngs that frozen day at Metropolitan get their rematch against the Vikings in get back at us." scorers will be facing eac~·other on the Stadium. But the Rams, leading 17-7 at the 6 o'clock game at Metropolitan just beat us •. This should be 1 heck of 8 Gal;lriel will be facing lhe NFL's No. 1 kicking tees. Minnesota's Fred Cox has 51 the half, crumbled to a second half rally Stadium. 1ame." statistical defense. The Vikings have points on 12 field goals and 15 extra that thrust the Vikings to a 23-20 victory -l}oth teams bring glitterillg 4-1 records The Vikings shoulc\ be·well aware about posted two shutouts and held opponents to points. Dave Ray has giVen the Rams 12 and the Western Conference chllni.· h1to the weekly television special. grudge matches. After losing 23-7 to the only 36 points. field goals and 13 extra points. Irish Takes Aim At Clay Tonight In Non-title Fight ATLANTA (AP) -Muhammad All, lecturer, actor and fast food dealer, returns to his true profession of prize fighting tonight in a scheduled I:>.round bout agaiMt Irish Jerry Quarry. ''This how I earn my living; this is my job," said Ali on the eve of his first fight since being stripped of his heavyweight championship following his conviction for refusing induction into the Army. The conviction still is be ing appealed. During tbe time since he knocked out Zora Folley, March 22, 1967, Ali has lec- tured at colleges throughout the country, starred in the short-lived Broadway play "Buck White" and opened a chain of burger and french fry stands. Despite his long absence fr6m the ring. excepting a few exhibitions . Ali rules as the top heavy favorite in the fight which has drawn little gambling interest. But there is general Interest for the bout because of the controversial nature of Ali who rose to the boxing heights as .Cassius Clay. The fight will be shown 011 closed circuit television at Anaheim Convention Center and will be beamed via satellite to Europe, South America, Asia and Russia. With tickets for the 5,000-seat Atlanta Municipal Auditorium scaled from $15 to $100, and not all sold, and 900,000 seats available for closed circuit television, the projected gross for the fight is $3 million. Ali has been guaranteed $200,000 against 42~ percent of the gross which would bring him about $1.~ million. Quarry is guaranteed $100,000 against 221h: percent. A victory for Ali would set the stage for a big money fight with J oe Fraiier who ascended to the tiUe during Ali's exile. And an upset by Qu•ry would give the Californian another shot at-Fru.ier who knocked him out in seven rounds June 23, 1969. However, Frazier must first defend his tiUe against light heavyweight king Bob Foster Nov. 18 in Detroit. Just getting a license to fight in Atlanta was a victory ror Ali v.·ho had seen numerous attempt! for fights foiled since his conviction. Gov. Lester Maddo% bu publicly opposed the right but he cannot 1eg811y stop it because Georgia has no state boxing commission. Quarry, who has been subdued during training and who has left all the bombast to the garrulous Ali, admitted he has been upset by his treatment on the part of the press. "They've called me a cry baby and said. other things," he said. "They have talked about me as if I'm just a trial horse for a Clay.Joe Frazier fighl "Let me tell you. They will talk dif· ferently when I catch him on the chin. That fight will never come off. I'll see to that. I saw in this morning'$ paper that 95 percent of the newspapermen are pick- ing Clay to win. "Take it from me. Five percent art right. I'm going to win. When l do, I may not tali. to anybody." Plunket ¢, Dummi t Out Stanford-UCLA Grune Clears Heisman Vi sta -' LOS ANGELES -It seems logical that the Heisman Trophy winner for 1970 may have been decided Saturday night when Stanford edged UCLA, !l-7, at the Coliseum. Two of the candidates mentioned for the award which is supposed to go to the top collegiate football player in the na. tiona were performing. Representing the Leland Stanford Jr. Farm was one James Plunkett, a quarterback who is supposed to be ab\~ to pass with such accuracy that some think he has built-in radar. The UCLA answer to Plunkett was none other than Dennis Dummit. Now that their confrontation i.s history I ! , eLINN WHITS -=--------· WH ITE JV ASH -------- you may pass the env~lope, please. Mr. Dummit may leave. So may Mt. Plunkett * * * The winner~ A Beverly Hills type who wandered to the Farm to get his kicks out or football. • Perhaps Steve Horowitz is our choice 8fter Saturday -at least he did 11omclhing neither Plunkclt nor Dummit 9>uld do ... he scored point!. ln fact he scored all of Stanford 's tallies, booting lhrce field goals. candidate is like being asked to imagine that a nickel is a million dollars; that a pencil is a rocket ship; that taxes haven't gone up : that your mother-in.Jaw Is human; that the Ku Klux Klan is a front for the NAACP ; that Spiro Agnew will someday be PresidenL * * * Then there's the matter of Oummit. Dennis Dummit. He showed me in last year's USC game that he was a candidate for nothing more than a varsity letter. Saturday night against Stanford he showed me that he may not even qualify for that. Otnnis Dummit had two slight flaws. He couldn't pass for dood le when the pressure was on. And when he tried to make like an O.J. Simpson he moved about as well as molasses in Alaska. Other than that he was tremeridous. So the Heisman race seriously boils down to Rex Kern of Ohio State, Archibald Manning of Mississippi and Joe Theismann of Notre Dame. Kem directl the team alleged to be the best America has. \Vhat else he does is a matter for con- jecture. Manning haJ press clippings. What else he has is also speculative. Theisman leads what i! the best team tn the country and is the backbone of an offense more dangerous than frozen dynamite. So now you know your re.al winner. ILLINOIS COACH FIRED, REHIRED UPI Ttl..itel91 CASSIUS CLAY HOPES HIS MOTTO ON SHIRT WILL COME TRUE TONIGHT. 1 Ralston Nixes Bowl Chatter After 9-7 Win I • • JERRY QUARRY PREDICTS DEFEAT OF CASSIUS CLAY. McKa y Throws in Towel For Trojan Bowl Hopes EUGENE. Ore. (UPI) -John McKay ruled his Southern California team out of a fiflh straight Rose Bowl appearance after the Trojal)S lost to Oregon, J0-7, in the rain Saturday. "I would say our RO!e Bowl chances are complete1y finished,'' he said. lt was Ortgon coach Jerry Frei's first win over the Trojans and the first since the two teams renewed play in 1967 after not meeting between .959-66. McKay's r;quad beat Oregon 23-6 in 1967 and 20-3 In 1968- when you hold lhat team to one touchdown, that has to be great. They are a big, strong, good running team. Johnny McKay has not exaggerated the ability of lhal team to run. And McKay, whoM: Trojjlns have ooly lost four times in ruMing up 33 victories and three ties In three and a half years, took the loss -philosophicall y: "Getting beat h1 part of Jiving. You learn how other• have felt in other locker roo ms." LOS ANGELES CAP) -Stanford foot- ~11 coach John Ralston, having led the Indians out of the wilderness, ·was not prone to discuss the Rose Bowl today. And TOmmy Prothro of UCLA had cause to ponder the vicissitudes or th(! game. Winner over UCLA, 9-7, and unbeaten in fou r Paclfic-8 Conference games, Ralston said before heading back to Palo Alto : •·we are not thinking about any Rose Bowl yet. We have three more tough con· ference games in the next four weeks and all our attention is on Oregon State." OREGON STATE NEXT Oregon State is next on the Indians' list Saturday at home. Washington and legendary rival California remain on the conference schedule. The Rose Bow I , regardless of Ralston 's view, is awfully close. Prothro has been around college foot· ball for many years. The season of 1970 lo him is unbelievable -lhree defeats by a total of six points . There was Texas, 20-17 ; Oregon, 41-40, and now Stanford by two. 1'here were 83,518 on hand in Memorial Coliseum for Saturday night's engage- ment. Few 1ert before it was over. Defense was a big thing. Stanford had to settle for three field goals by Sieve Horowitz -38, 35 and the come-trom- behind, last-quarter clincher of 30 yards. SCORED ON BREAK UCLA got 1 touchdown on a break. In- dian Hillary Shockley fumbled 1 pit.ct.- back from Jim P 1 u n k.e t t, UCLA recovered on the 15 and four plays later Marv Kendrick went in from the two. A 42-yard slrike from Plunkett to Ran· dy Vataha set the scene for the winning fie ld goal, and Stanford 's first win over UCLA since 1962. Stanrord 's rushing -Shock I e y alternating with Jackie Brown -rolled up 219 yards to the Bruins' 25. "Yes," Prothro concluded, "it's tough Josin& three a:ama by si:i points." NAPA, Calif.' (AP)-"[ never gave up on myself," Ken SUH 1aid. "I struggled and fought and had troubles, but I never gave up on myself." He was talking about the season-long slump that bas plagued him, but the ir· repres.1ible Still .could have been talking about the long , 37-hole wind-up that brought him the $30,000 first prize in the Kaiser Inteni.ational golf tournament Sunday. Still, a ~year-<1ld bachelor who came into his own last season with his first two tour victories and a spot on the Ryder CUp team, had to whip tough Lee Trevino and Bert Yancey on the first extra hole of a sudden death playoff. He had gone into the 36-hole finale - forced when Friday's play was rained out -with a two stroke lead. He took a 71 in the moming round and Trevino closed to within a single stroke. , And in the afte rnoon, Still lost, regain· ed, then lost the lead again with three. putt bogeys on the 15th and 16th holes. That put him one stroke back or Trevino and Yancey, in the clubhouae with 278s, 10 under par. He came lo the 18th, 1 par five, needing a birdie to tie. Still chipped lo eight feet and dropped thl putt for a share. Then on the rirst extra hole, Still ripped an iron to within three feet of the hole and made the bifdie putt that secured it. Yancey had a par from a trap anct Trevino, wi.Mer of two playoffs this season, was lying three: and had no chance when Still made it. "I just said to myself, 'Okay, grandma, here we go,' " Still said, and explained his grandmother, Mrs. Mary McCready, died last week and he had dedicated the tournament to her. "I'd have done the same thing whether 1 had finished 50th or first;" Still said. "It's tough work ," he said. "You have to keep 'your composure all the way." He finished with a final 72, Trevino bad a 71 and Yancey at 70. Lakers Batter Hapless Cavs LOS ANGELES (AP) -Will Cham- berlain's 24 points and ~ rebounds led the Los Angeles Lake.rs to a 123-96 vic- tory over lhe hapless Cleveland Cavaliers Sunday evening in National Basketball Associalion play. The Lake.rs extended Cleveland's losing streak to seven without victory as they swept their bench and the Cavaliers off the court at the same time. The Lakers, now 3-3, roared to a 12-0 lead. With C:hamberl ain and Keith Erickson pumping in baskets, they held a 32-24 lead after Ule first quarter of play. They expanded their margin to 61·39 late in the second quarter on the fine shooting of Jerry West and held a 64-49 hall-time advantage over the Cavaliers. Cleveland got some scoring from Luther Rackley and Bobby Smith but the La kers conti nued to maintain at least 1 12-point margin in the third period and coa!ted into the final quarter with an 89- 70 lead. CLIVILANO LOI ANtlLll • I ' • ' ' , ... _ ' .. " Erldlton > M " M<L-• ... 1' McMll'-" .. , " II.Kt.In • » " Cl'l1mllttl•Ln lt ... " --0 J.J ' ....... ' •.. • Warr.., ' .. " *"' ' .. • WnJtv ' ., " r.._,.,..ftl ' ,. " Smllfl ••• " llo&efton ' • •• ' ... ~ ... . " • llll9y ' ... • L-lt ' .. • MtC.rtw ' ... • '"' . .. • Hefl1I ' "' ' , ... ' .. , Tltl•lt 41 , ... It .. Tot,li " 1s.J1 '" CleY1l1P'lll ,. J.S 11 ·-.. LO. A1'19tl .. 32 n 1.s .u -113 ,111111111 eul -N .... 1. Tetll IOUll -Cll ..... nd JS. ~ ,.,..._ 17. Plunkett, meanwhile. booted a sure touchdown when a receiver had gotten so far behind the UCLA secondary that it ippeared he might die of loneliness. The pass Plunkett threw also looked like it "'·ould die of loneliness, It was so badl y overthrown. Plunkett looked for all the world like an average c o 1 I e g e «JUarterback. That's all . He completed 18 of 37 passes and was intercepted twice. CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) -Jim Valek was reinstated as a lame duck h e a d football coach at the Univenity of 111\iiois Sunday after one of the most bizarre weekends in college alhleUc history. "lf we had had our choice," sald Frei or the weather, "we would have liked very much for it not to be raining.'' . The Oregon coach said the weather was a factor in his club throwing the football . He said, "I suppose it was a factor to dlem (SC) in holding on to the football." Race -Crash Kills Counfian Admittedly he wasn't as bad as the day M JlRd five interceptions and a costly furtible in the 26-14 loss to hapless Purdue. Up Stanford way they'll tell you the Hoover Llbrary will be renamed for J>Jun>tett stnce he·, about to tead the In· dlans to .thf:ir first Rose Bowl berth in HI years ~II' Hoover only led tile nation in· to depression. .. -To imagu\e him as a Hebman Trophy Over · a span ol 50 hours, Valek was fired Friday, sent hl! inspired Illini Into a notable, if losing, performance against lo~ranked Ohio State Saturday; and re- hired for the remainder ol the aeaaon SundiY after a threatened protest ltrlke by Illini players. After a show of loyalty aod perhaps student power by the entire football squad, lhe school athletlc board Sunday quickly modified its dismiual acU-On which had term.lnated Valek's 1ervices following the lllini'a t&-29 Bia Ten loss to Ohio State. However, McKay declined to blame the downpour for the lms. "We didn't play well , the better team won, It usually does. "1 don't think tM r'1n bN any effect on the outcome of the game. It only got us wet." Fril · aald both his defensive and of· tensive unitl eot·the feeling golng· for a win. •·To me it became a real feeling of the guj!i &ayine. 'Hey, we're goir11 to win this pme.' "Defensively, we just did a ireat job, SACRAMENTO (AP) -Auto race fans ln Sacramento mourned the loss of three popular local drivers today and pondered the impact of their deatil would have on racin in the ca ital city area. The lhree men died In two accidents Sunday afternoon , the last day of racing at the old state fairgrounds race track before the 50-year-okJ track fal!J belore the wrecker 's ball. Dead are Ernie Purruell, 27, Nevadi. City: Calif., who w11 klllt<l In ·an occ!dtnt 1n the flrst ~at. rac:e-4f. the four-event procram. Alao, Walt Reiff, 41, of Sacramento and Anaheim, who wa1 struck and killed by anolher car while trying to warn ott-tr c8f'S to stop for the Pw-!.se.11 accident; and Jimmie Gordon, 26, of Sacramento, killed in a f>try explosion during the 3Sth lap of lhe 100-lap super-modified and caged sprint open competition. Gordon'• car. rurining in sixth place, locked wheels with 1 car he was trying to pass, nipped end over end and wa1 hit by a \hlrd car, exploding into names. Promoter J. C. Agajanla.n then c111led the race and the leadtr 1fler 3$ laps, Jer· ' ' ry Blundy of Gale.burg, Iii., w11 declared tile winner with Bob Evan1 of Loo& Beach, and Joe: Saldana of Lincoln, Neb.~ second and third. Reiff was not driving at the tlme of the Pursselt accident. When he saw h, he leaped·over the guardrail onto the track to Irv flagging down the othtt can •• they ·approached Purssell's car, bUt on• of thtm slruck him insteid. The driver. Robel'\ Thomas, 39, of Walnut Croek, Calif., wu listed ill satisfactory condltlon in Sacramento County G"'eral HospUal. -24 DA,!LY PJLOT Mol'ldlY, Ottobtr 26, 1970 Saddlehacl{ in Driver '~·-···s~·~1·-··Af-ter ·--·2 ·1~ 1·2 .. ··wia--· . . . By CRAIG SHEFF Of .. °"'" PllM ..... George Hartman tsn'l about to uy that his Saddleback Collegfi! football team has a lock on the Mission Confercnci! cham· ·plonship. But he does admit that the Gauchoe are in the drive.r's seat after a hard-earned 21 -12 victory ove r Southwestern College Saturday night at MWion Viejo. "We're in a great position, but we've got four more tough games left," said Hartman after the Gaueho.5 hid notched their third straight circuit win aod fifth of the season. "We like being on top and we think we have the character to stay there, but anyone can knock you off in this con- ference," added Hartman. Statue Set For Greek Vault Ace ATHENS (AP) -Greece's pole vault champion Christos Papanicola u a a i d Sunday he dreamed he had set a world record of 18 feet and a quarter inch the night before he actually became the first human to vault over 18 feet. The stocky 28-year-0ld bachelor, who said he had no plans to marry until he competes in the 1972 Olympic Game,, in Muriich, emphasized he is not too con- cerned if anyone breaches the record be set Saturday. PapaJJicolau has become Greece'• newest VIP. His birthplace, Trikalla in central Greece, known for its shaggy rugs, announced it will erect a statue in one of the main l'iQuares to honor him. "Holding onto the world record is not my primary concern .. Some day l'll lose It. Great vaulters like East Germany's Wolfgang Nordwig and F r a n c o is e Tracanelli of France can very easily set a new record," he said. Papanicolau said, "what J am primari- ly interested in is winn ing the pole vault event at the Olympic Games in Munich. It is a victory that would remain with me forever.'' Papanicolau's record may become old before it is officially recognized by the International Track and Field Federa- tion . He said he planned to try to break it next Saturday at a national track and field competition. He said that from now on he will traiJI systematically For the Munich Games. "I'll be 30-years.old then, and after the . Olympics I plan to quit active com· petition and then even to think about marrying," he said. The Gaucho. travel to GroMmont this S1turday, then conclude the regular semn slate against San BemardiM, Citrus and Riverside. The San Bernardino and Riverslde games are at Miulon Viejo.__ _ Hartman called the victory over Southwestern a total team effort and in· deed it was. Down 6-0 at the ha!(, the Gauchos con- lroUed the ball and the game after the in- termission. ''We were: too tight ln the first hall," related Hartman. "At the half we told the kids to relax and go out and play foot- ball." The Gaucho coach revealed that the game plan wu to control the football. "We·didn't want to &Ive up the football. We knew they were capable of throwing the lorl8 bomb." • And in the final 1naly1i1, it was a pair of blj: gambles that helped the Gauchos to victory No. $. Gamble NoL I cJ.rne early in the third quarter. On a fourth and one situation from ill own 35, Saddleback went for the fint down with fullback Rocky Fjetcller · plunging for lhe necessary one yard. Then with tailback Toby Whipple doing most of the work, the Gauchos marched the remaining 65 ya,rds for their first touchdown. Whipple went the final three yards, Doug Rothrock added a perfect PAT boot and Sadd.leback had the lead for good. Gamble No. 2 came the nut lime the Gauchoe bid the bill, this time on their WHIPPLE ON THE MOVE -Saddleback CoUege tailback Toby Whipple (rigbt). beltind blocking o! !Wcky Fletcher (30) runs for yard· age against Southwestern Saturday night. Saddleback won the Mission own 29. Needing just a half yard on a fourth down play, quarterback Chris Hec- tor got two. Eight plays later a l!ector 13-yard pass to receiver Rick Geddea and Rothrock's kick gave the Gauchos a~l.J.{I lead with 14 :S9 le!t in the fourth quarter. Saddleback then put the game out of reach with a touchdown-drive that con- sumed· seven minutes. 'Jlie Gauchos marched 83 yards in 15 plays with Whip- ple going the final two. Again Rothrock's klck was perfect. In that drive Whipple carried the bi.11 12 times for 60 1yards. He finished the night with 222 yards and carried the ball 48 times, a school record. Southwestern got its aecond touchdown with 3:21 remaining on an ll·yord pasa from quarterback Dan Arana to nanker Bob Kramer. The first TD On the open- ln1 qu1rter) came on a 1S-yard run by halfback Andy S1nchei. Hartman cffillted the play of Rocky F1etcher and center-llneblcker Don Martin , both of whom went both w1ys and he also had praite tor the out.stair dlnl( play of Whipple IDd tackle Bryan Colbert. "It was a tot.1 team effort,'' con- cjuded the S.ddleback coach. e.t.M• ITATISTl(S SI "'· " ' . ' ' ' 2J 11 ,.. ·~ U OM 1S '' S14 HI tJJJ,I S/JJ,, DAILY PILOT .. ._.. ., ·~ KMlllw Conference titanic, 21-12, to remain unbeaten. Chris Hector (9) is auo pictured. Gaucho quarterback Commenting on his feelings im- mediately after clearing the bar 1t l& feet, he said, "from my happiness I sud- denly lost my breath. I could hardly believe It." Sunset League Grid Plot Thickens Papanicolau is the first Greek ever to set a world record in a track and field event. His Herculean feat brought him '--numerous accolades and congratulations from Premier George Papadopoulos and Deputy Premier Stylianos Patakos. Three-way Tie for Lead After Loara Stuns Tars , 12-7 Papanicolau said that at present he is training the Greek national track and field team. "My dream is to develop a crown prince who can someday set his own records," he said. The pole vaulter is a graduate from San Jose State College in califomia and a track and field star there. He is a physical education instructor at Athens University. He said he has been Invited to participate in several indoor track meets in the United St.ates and be will leave early in January to begin training. ,. By ROGER CARLSON Of ftl• Dlll1 l'lltf 11•11 The plot has thickened in the hectic Sunset League football race and Newport Harbor High's Sailol"S (S.l overall and 3-1 in circuit action) are faced now with a win or else situation in each of their three re- maining loop games following Saturday's 12·7 loss to Loara. Coach Ernie Johnson's Tars will host Western Friday ni ght and it would ap- pear that defeat for any of the three leaders (Newpor t Harbor, Anahei m and Loara} in the. final three rounds of action will nullify any chances for a portion of Belgium's lckx Zooms To Grand Prix Victory trying to get them to stop as soon as possible and not make the customary ex· tra lap because or the danger created by the mass of spectators who spilled on to the track. the Utle and a CIF playoff berth. That's how it stands today after Loara came from behind to score twice in the second quarter before 8,000 fans at La Palma stadium -then held on for the vital victory to give the Saxons new Ille in the race for Sunset supremacy. Johnson was steamed about his team's showing against Loara and said, "Loara played well and deserved to win. "We played to lose and it goes back to what I said originally. The team that makes mistakes is going to lose and we made them." Newport was rocked by several key calls by the oFUcials but Johnson said, "We beat ourselves, the officials didn't. It's more painful that way. Like cutting yourself shaving." Loara won it In the second half when the Saxons took lhe kickoff, drove keep into Newport territory and then p~ cceded to force the Bluejacketl'i to play with poor field position. The Tars had possession four times in the second half, taking over on their five, 12, 21 and 11. The best Newport could do on any se- cond half drive wal'i out to the Tars' 38. Loara held the Sailors to two first downs in that span and 36 yardJ net run- ning and passing to au1p the Tars' five- game win streak. The winning touchdown drive was a 75- yard effort in 13 plays that culminated with 35 seconds to go in the hall on junior quarterback Dean Lappin'a one-yard keeper. lt nullified Newport's only score, a first quarter pass from Alvin White to Bill Whitford covering 15 yards. White added the PAT with 1:32 to go in the quarter. The score followed the Sailors first unsuccessful march that ended on the Loara five on White 's wide field goal at· tempt. " Loara 's initial touchdown was a five- yard pass play from Lappin to Ken Knotts. The tw~point conversion try fail· ed. Newport's only other threat came in the second stanza when Richie Simons' 41>-yard reception from Whi te put the ball on the Loara seven. However, Loara sacked White twice at [._t point to get out of danger. Newport's secondary, which had in- tercepted 15 enemy passes in the first five wins, was unable to solve Lappin, who completed nine of 20 for 119 yards. GAMI STATISTICS HH ' Finl do-1 rushlno ' • Flr11 6owm p.1ul119 ' • FlrU dowr'lt P9Mlritit ' • Total llrsl doWl't5 " " Yards r\NllnO .. , . Y1rd1 pa111no •« '" Y•rd1 IOSI " " Net ylnh gelMd "' >» Pu11ll/Awreg1 d!lll llCI ~/36.$ l /31,J P1t11llle /Y1rd1 Jl9f'l•ll11d 5111 "" F11mbln /Furnbln 1011 '" ,,, kin ~y CIHl'tll"t NIWf>et1 Hlrbof' ' • • . -' lHfl . " • o-11 llUSHINO N-ptrt H1111or •• " " .... E•slwllng ' " • '" Simons • " ' " s .. 1, ' ' • ... Whir• " " " '·' Tott ls ,. .. " "' Lt1r• l•~n • " " • •• a..., ... , " " • "' H1nn1 • " ' ... Elkln1 " " " "' ·-· ' • • ... Tol1ll ~ ,. " ,., ~ASSJNO Ml•llolrt Hlrt)ff .. .. ... " .... ..... " ' 0 •« ... L11r1 LIN>ln " " 0 11• "" . ; . P11M11i.1v1rc11 PIN"'" 11/llf ,,u:~ Flll'l'lbltl/F~ 11161 "' ., .. kWil by Qlllrttrt • ' -,, $0\.l!ll-1«11 • 0 llOdlfftdl 0 0 1 1' -?I ttUJMINO .......... .. " !' . .. w11rr;1t • "' ... HK " " " .., II . Fllklltr " • • ... ,,_ • " • "' w ... ' l • "' WlllOll ' • ,,,- Toti It " "' " "' S.lllh-lttll H .. _ ' » • ... '""' " » " ••• S111tM1 ' « • ••• Gon.1•11.1 ' " ' u ,,_ ' ' " ·2.7 • Toll It tt ·~ " "' PAISINO S1UlltbKI! .. .. "" " .... HK~ " • • " "" ~.,,., AllM " " l OM ... Rustlers Shot Down By Mistake~ By BOWARD L. HANDY Of 1M Oell'r Plltf Statf Rio Hondo is building a football dy- nasty and the time table for c:orutruction Is right on schedule under the watchful eye of coach Marty Blackstone, building 1uperintendent. The Roadrunners crushed Golden West College Saturday night with a dev~st.ating defensive game and an opportunistic of- fen~ in opening Southern California ac- tion at El Rancho High, 37.(1, In reviewing lhe happenings of the night, coach Ray Shackleford of Golden West was in a wondering mood. "When a team does things like w~ did tonight, you can't help but Wonder if the opposition caused them . We fumbl ed. had passes intercepted and dropped passes when we were in the open," he recount· ed. "Usually w~ so many of these th ings happen to a team, the opposition is ca us- ing at least a good portion of thefu and I think Rio Hondo did that tonight. 'Ibey are a good football team, the best we !lave played thi s year." Blackstone, beaming over the fortunes that have made his Roadrunners the con· ference favorite after only one gam:e, · was exuberant. "I th ink Golden West Is a fine football team. They have in outstanding defense and we are mlghty proud to score that many points against them." He didn't add that the 37 points is the most any Roadrunner squad has scored in a single game in tne school's history. He did admit that his defense was f!eared to stop Golden West's Charlie Buckland. "He's as good a back as there is around and we bad to stop him." . Blackstone then asked, "did we have. a single drive for a touchdown tonight?" The Roadrunners may not have had .a succession of time and ground consum. ing drives for scores but they made the most of four Golden West miscues. The first two scores were set up on fumble recoveries in Golden West terri· tory. The third came after a paJs -inter· ceptlon and the fourth after the Rustlers missed on a fourth down play with ."ix inches to gain . GAME STATISTICS P'lrst down1 ...,.hlng Finl do~ ,,_ttlng Fl.-.1 clown.I PIMl11es Tolll 111'1! downs Y1rd1 ru1hllllf Yard~ panlllQ Y1rds lost NH V•nlt l!llMll Punl1/Avtr1ge dltll/ICI P11Mlllt1/Yanls PIMllled P'11mbles/F11ml:llt1 lost owe "" ' " ' ' ' ,. 1l 1t 101 n• 14<1 157 " ~ ,,, ,.,. •l».1 !/HJ: 10/,, ,,,. '" 21•. Sari by Q111rt1n Galdtft Weil o o 0 0 -e· Rio Hondo 1 10 7 13 ->7 • Buckler.cl Grlf!l!ll Comuk• F lll:~b«k 00-1119 To,. ts T1r1ngo l1r1 '~· Gullottl Hedi ti Mor .. u Glenn P1rei Noglt To!fll GrllUl!I PtMblrtOll .._, Tolt ls G1111oltl llUSHIN!) OGIOen Wnt lcb 'l'I " " . " . " , . ' ' <tel 10) 11 11 No!Mlt . " " . ' " " . ' " . " , ' ' " ' . • n• PASSING GoN1t1 Wut " ' n • • • " • ' • ,. • • ' • • ~ ., . .. ,, , ' 12.a ,. ·1.0 1•.lt •• J.I ,_• Pl PC Jlfll VI pet._" ~! t l I ll .Jlil> 1 1 O 4 I.GOO S 302l .600 31 ll > lu .•t•• Iii. ""'" 21 11 1 1S7 ..»' MEXICO CITY (AP ) -Jackie lckx of Belgium wheeled to victory Sunday in the Mexican G·rand Prix and clinched stcood place in the world Formula I driving championship behind late Jochen Rindt of Austria. An estimated 250,000, largefit crowd for an auto nee In Mexican history, wal'i on hand for the 13th and final Formula 1 Grand Prix of the year. V albuena Sparks Orange Coast to Second Victory The start of the race was delayed while authorities attempted to clear thousands nf people off the track. They had climbed over a fence. Jcks: led through most of the 62 laps. Several spectators were almost hit after Jcltx croaaed the fini sh line in his Ferrari. The flag man wav!XI frantically to the drivers u ·they crossed the finish line, Horowitz Earns Pacific-8 Honors SAN FRANCfSCO (AP) -Steve Horo- wtt£• tbree lleld goal& In Stan(ord'a Jm· port.ant f.7 victory ovtt UCLA earned blm_ Paclfic-f honors as offensive player ol the w .. k. HorowitJ booted 1 »-yard field 1oal with 4:51 rema1n1ng and Slanford trail· Ina 7-t. 1'be deddlna l<lck capped an 80- )'ard drive. , Horow!U kicked his llrat lhr«·pointer 111 the first quarter from 38 yltds and the 1econd In the second quarler from JI yards out. Ickx took the lead on the second lap by edging Clay Regauoni and led the re- mainder of the way on the Magdalena Mlshuca circuit. Regazzoni. also in a Ferrari, finished second. Denis Hulme of New Zealand, driving a McLaren, was third, followed by England's Chris Amon in a March, Jean Pierre Beltoise in a Matra and Mex- Jco's Pedro Rodriguez irr a BR~f. Official places and timi rig of the cars In th e top ten of Mezic:o's Grand Prix Sun· day (Only first five finished): I. Jacky Jck:x, Ferrari, 1:53.28, 108.780 m.p.h. 2. Clay Regauonl, Ferrari, 1: 54.13, 108.079. 3. Denis Hulm e, McLarcn·Ford, 1:54.14, 1116 :1162. 4. Chris Amon, Marth-Fotd STP, I :$l.l$, 1116.048. S. Jean Pierre Beltolat-, ~111tra-Simca1 1:$l.l8, 111$.999. 6. Ped ro Rodriguez, BRM , I :54,53. 7. Jackie Oliver, BRM. 1:54.14. 8. John Surtw1 Surtees·Ford, I :54.29. 9. Henry Pescarolo, h1atra Slmc1, 1:$!.$2. 10. Reine Wlssell, Lotu.s·Ford, 1:53.34. • Pirates Find New Approach, 34-7 ::. By RON EVANS 01 1111 01llY Piii! 11•11 Orange Coast College's football team was a little late arriving at Santa Ana Bowl Saturday night for it& game wi th Santa Ana College. Santa Ana probably wishes the Pirates hadn't come at all. "Our buses didn't show up to t.ake us to the game," related OCC coach Dick Tucker. "SO we had to go over in cars. Psychologically I thought It would throw us oft." It dldn•t 'l'be Pirates. rebounding from a 21·7 loss to Fullerton the prevk>us week, put il to the Dons by a 34·7 mar1ln and dominated the game In all phases of play. While quarterback Gary Valbuena sparked the offensive attack of the Pirates. the defense. stood out 1galn. Santa Ana wu held to Just 17 net yards rushing by OCC, which wtnt tnto t.he game with a handful of defensive stars on - the sideline with Injuries._ "Everything went well for UI," said Tucker, who praised his club for both its o(fens.ive and defensive work. In the victory over santa Ana , Val· buena was a standout. The freshman stgnal caller led 1 21· point second que.rter assault by throwing for one touchdown paas and running for another. After a scoreless first quarter In which both teams made mistakes. the Pirates got on the board with 13:65 ieft In the se- cond period wtien Valbuena hit freshman rtctlver Doug Young wi th 1 l$.y1rd pass. Bob Ryder added the ertra point with a perfect kick. Three minutes later Valbuena went 39 yards around right end to give the Pirates their second touchdown. R y d e r ag11ln added the PAT. Craig Zaitoslcy. OCC-s • 1 c It Ing freshman punl return sptcialist, a:ave the Dues a three touchdown lead late In the second quarter when he returned 1 Santa Ana boot 53 yards. Ryder wu again perfect and OCC had a 21~ lead at the in- terml.Sslon. Valbuena's »yard touchdown run in the final quarter capped a SO.yard drive and gave the Bucs a·M advantage. Santa Ana 1 got one back when quarterback Mike Erickson tossed a short pass to fl1nker Keith Denson who raced for a TO. 'Ttle play covered 84 yarda. Immediately after the S.,ta Ana score, Pirate ruerve quarterback BJU Shedd hit rtttlver Dare! Blood with a s+.yard strike and the Pirate, had 34 points, the nu>St they've scored 11g1inst a Santa Ana teem since 1958 (39-6). 9ANll ITATllTICS ,lrst dO"""' rwllll!Qi l'lr.t ~ Nlllne ,.,,., doWftt PtNlllll r-0111 ""' cltWM Ytl'Cl rv~ll'IO occ ' • , u '" .. ' ' ' ' '" Y1n:ll ptHllll Yl nll loll NII v•r~ g1tntd P1111ll/Awer•1H lillllllC• F11rn.bllt./Fumlllfl 11111 ·~ " "' .,, •. , V> ,. • ov U/*2.1 '" "-.., °"'"'" Or111111 COlll 0 ii D 1)-,.. ,- SIM• AM 0007-7 VtlWtM v .... 11,,..19111 M1ttl11 ............ H•-·-'""' """" Corwl11 Tt11t1 "''""""' ..... Tol1l1 •rkk..,.. Mc011Cklfl Tot•~ llUSHINO Orlllf'" Ct11I .. " ' " " ~ " n ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' " ' . ~ rn llflt• .. .,. II l7 ' . . ., M ' n ' . )) l~J PASllMO o ...... ,,,,, " u • • • ' • " • • .. • .. ' • " • -... '" ., .. .. "' •1.1 "·'· ... ,_,. ... , . ... 10.7 • •• oJ f: ":' ~ r. .:;· •~I .Ml.IOI ltllll«i.m lt"'I Ml '4 I I UO .D aoeo .ooe 12 I I 120 .UO • ( i. f Ii E I le 0 c "' 2 b ~ ir I: ti b 0 le ti • h p ll c c c b F '• I> ( a q } d r n p v g • t ( ' ' ' ' ' • ( ' • ' .. ···----------------------------...,.----~----~·---------··· ... - Mondiy, Otlobtf 2&, 1970 • DAil Y PILOT 25 • Penneys Automotive Week explained. • ___ It's wh.e_n you get all this ln _o_ur Auto. Center at ,uper low prices • OUTSTANDING UCI STAR -Mike Marlin (27), UC Irvine water polo star, is fouled while attempting to score against the University of Southern Cali· fornia's Dennis Neddleman. Martin hit on two goals and played an outstand· titg defensive game to lead th e Anteaters to a 10-6 victory over the Trojans Saturday in the winner's pool. UC I is now 18-1 for the year and will face Cal Poly (Pomona) Friday in its next game. Magnolia Victim CdM Faces Mesa After 21-14 Win By MANNY PINEDA Of TIM Pallr Pitel S"ff "Everybody will be ready for Costa Mesa," assured coach Dave Holland after his Corona de! Mar e I e v e n out!Rs ted battling Magnolia, 21-14, in an Irvine League foot - ball game Saturday night al Newport Harbor High. The Sea Kings, after chalk- ing up their second loop win. face Mesa Saturday night on the same Davidson Field. "It's an important game because it's in the le8gue," continued Holland in pointing for another natural and tradi- tional rival. Corona end Karl Killefer. who started against Magnolia, had to leave after only a cou- ple of plays becau~ or a light injury. The Sea Kings' high command didn't care to take changes with the Mesa game coming up. Holland hailed one of his 'heroes against Magnolia. Bob Rowles, who a lertly picked up 'a rumble and dashed 55 yards to the touchdown that put Corona del Mar eight points ahead early in the second quarter. .. He started his first game,'' Holland pointed out. "He plays defensive back and handles the wide side." The coach noted that Rowles had im- proved to the point u•here he won a starting job. Holland had to change his game plan against Magnolia. "We planned to pass more. but they were doing a fine job defensively. \Ve switched to running the ball." Pro Grid Standings .t.m.,.ic111 CIH'ltl1't1Kt E1111 DIVlilOll W L T ,ct, ,II. 01' Blltlrl'lllrt S I 0 .Ill 13' Hl9 Ml1ml ~ 2 0 .Ml 101 91 B11U1lt ) .f 0 .lll 11 Ill 80flon I J O ,lt7 •1 l'l~ wew vortc Jett. 1 s a .111 111 lu Cle'l'el'ncl -·~ Prttsbur9'1 ClntllllWlll Ctllh'll D1¥1slen t 1 0 ,667 lff lJD l l 1 .fGO JOJ 1"2 2 .fO .lJl11 94 I 5 0 ,161 '2 15' Wtil DlvbiN oenver ' 2 o -"'' 121 lQG O.klltld l 2 I .600 161 115 K1ns11 C!t'I' l J O .~ I» 1~ Sin DI-I l 1 .2XI 122 1..0 N1lllft1I C.MlrlllCI Iii! Dl¥1slen W L T P<1. '"· 0, 011111 .t 2 o .6'7 I~ 10'1 ~fagnolia and Corona de! ~1ar traded fumbl es f o r touchdowns, with the Sentinels scoring first. Sea King quarterback Keith Samuels pitched out to John Miles but threw behind him while on his own 12-yard line. Gary Devian of Mjl.gnoli3 pick· ed up the ball and scored. Sen· tine! quarterback John Kin- dred attempted to run for a two.pointer, but tailed. A poor punt that went a mere 22 yards gave the Sea Kings excellent field position on the Magnolia 40. In six plays Corona's Bob Ferraro. who carried 2t times for 96 yards, scored from the eight. Joe Ricca's PAT kick gave the Sea Kings a 7-6 lead. Then came the play or the game early in the second quarter. Magnolia had brought the ensuing kickort past midfield when Hank Bauer was about to be thrown for a huge Joss. Bauer attempted a pitch back to Kind red, but the ball never reached him. Rowles, following the action. scooped it up and raced 55 yards for the TD. Ricca again converted and lhe Sea Kings led 14-6. Corona boosted it to 21-6 the next lime it got the ball on a punt exchange, moving 60 yards in 13 plays. Samuels ran it over from the six and Ricca added his third conversion. C.t.ME ST.t.l'IST1CS Firs! downs n11hing Fi••I downs 11a:uln11 F ird down• ~•Illes 101~1 11.,1 aawm Y1rd1 ru1hlng Y1rd1 1,.'51nll' Yards 101! Net yard• t•intd Puntt/Avv. d is!1n<e Penanln /Yds. Pt"naliltd Fumblts/Fumblts last <OM • M ' ' ' ' . " . 170 1?1 " ' '" •m • .,. " " '" S/lS.t "" '" Scort by Ou•rt•r• M1;roo11a ' o o 1-14 Caron• df! M•r 1 H O 0-11 Ferrtro S•muels Miit\ To1!1 101111 Ori!•~ B1ve• kindred Tat1IJ S1mut!t Kindred RUSHING COr0111 dtl Mir ICb YI yl 1¥9 11 100 • • .• 9 AO 0 •.• 10 ... 0 ,,, I 0 0 0 •1 Ut 4.0 M111101i1 "' " " ... u " • '·' • ., ' ... " " " ·l.S " "' • u l'ASUHG C .... M t.! Mlf .. K ,,.; .. "' • ' • " • ~•Miii .. K "' " ... .. ' ' " " UCI Polo Tea1n Rips USC ,,.10-6 Mike Martin turned in one of his best efforts or the season in leading the UC Irvine water polo team to a 11).6 victory o\·er the University of Southern California Trojans Saturday in ihe winners' pool. Coach Ed Newland was high in his praise 0£ the Anteater distance swimming star. "He played a gTeat game and scored two key goals in the second period to put us in front," Newland said after the game. "'But the mosl important thing he did was to play an outstanding game on defense. J1e intercepl'!d several passes and stole the ball from SC men to give us a big lift." Scoring in the game was evenly divided with Ferdy Massimino, Dale Hahn and Bruce Black each getting a pair of goals in addition to Martin. MaS-On Philpott and Jack Dickmann each had one. Black got the ac<ion under way with a beautiful backhand shot but the Trojans moved in front 2-1 at conclusion of the first period . A big five goal effort in the second stanza put t h e Anteaters ahead to stay. Philpott scored on a penalty shot to make it 3-2 in favor of Troy. Hahn then took a pass from Massimino and fired a sidearm shot that tied the count. Martin then drilled a pass to Hahn and the latter scored on a driving shot to put ucr in front. It was Martin's turn to score the next two goals with assists from Hahn and Massimino to bring the count to 6-3. USC scored on a last second goal as the hair ended with the score at &-4 in favor of UCJ. Massimino scored his two 11:oals in the third period, the first on a solo drive and the second with an assist from Philpott. Black rammed in his second of the game on an assist rrom Martin with a left handed sweep shot. A pair o; penalty shots con- cluded the action in the final period. UCI is now 18-1 for the season with the next game Friday at Cal Poly (Pomona). SI Loul1 4 2 0 .667 Ill 130 N~ YOl1( G!1nh l l O ,500 117 la6 Wlt.hlntlO!I l l 0 .500 llf 111 Phlllclel!IMI o 6 O .000 101 1'i Ctnlr•I Dlvhltn Collegiate Grid Scores Olfrv\I Mlnnffl!tl Gf'll&lllllY C11lc100 i 1 0 .Ill Ill 12 4 10.tcoUl .'t 4 2 0 ,HI Ill Id 1 I 0 .llJ 1~ 110 W1tl 01¥1t1_. LOI .t.ntelti ~ I 0 .ICO 127 t4 s.n fr1nc.lsco • 1 1 ,&Cill lJt lGt .t.llelllf l l O .51111 101 101 N-()t"l11n1 I 4 1 .lCO .. l~ S.111111'1"1 RIMlll1 l1ltlmor1 21, BMIM l 9uff•lo 10. NtW York Jcli • c._.•ncl 71, MJ1ml o ""'1Slon JI, Sin 011119 31, 111 O.kl1ncl l\, Pith.burl!\ 14 O.trolt '" C11k1119 10 All111'11 32, N!!W Orttlnt ~4 G""" Bl¥ ;,o. PllllMM'lpl'llf 11 New 'l"llfk GLl11h li, SI. Loult 11 W.tl'll ... -20. Clnc:lnNll 0 ., ..... 27, w. ....... cuw '' Stn fr1nc:ltco lt, Dlnvtr 14 T91119'11'1 GMlll "-" Mwikl ti MlnnHO!I, flll!hl, Ill• Oantl lV 1'"' ,.,......,, .......... lllfflla 11 Botlon Mltml 11 .. nlme~ Otk~ 11 tc:-• Cltv 1111 01-01 Cl1v1!1ncl (lllcato 11 Alltnlf Of'wn 111'1' If Sin f'rtnc:lt(O Lei "'"""' ., N4'W Orltlnt Mlnriflol1 11 DttrOll PllllHtl.r!l1 11 0.lllS H611110f! II $1, Louis N"' VUl't Gl1ntt. ft Nirw Votk Jeri Wtt.hlfll'!Dn ti l)enYtf WEST St1nh1nl t, UCL.t. 7 Sin Jose St1t~ ll, P1cll!t 1 Or"ori 10, USC J Cat Poly !SLO) "· Y1lltY St )l C1I LYtl\ft'lll f, USIU l UC Rlvtrt ldt ll, (llt«ll t St. M1rv'1 12, U. Sin Ditvo 1 liledllOdl '°· p-7 Cl1-nl-Mvdcl 7, LoYOll 0 C.tllfa...,!I tS, W111111ntton St. 0 Wwllllntton 29, Oreton St, 711 ldlhO 17, Porfl11'111 St, 16 Fr .... Slllr JI, (II St111 !LOI Al'l- ttfftl • UC S.nt1 l1rti.r1 :n, H11W1!1 )II WllU!ler 21. Occ1Mnl1I t l!AST v111 ;,1, c-11 ' ~moulfl l1. H1rv1rd u PflllC•IOl'I 22, '"'" " C011111 10, lll'(JWll 6 Cotvrnbl• .)0, R111ttn '' PtM St, •• Amoy U l"ith~rtll a , Mltml !flt.) 11 S~ratllll 11, lf111Y .- Vll!-1 )I, HOiy CfMt U we11 v1roi..11 u , Colar.ado St. 11 SOUTH Geart\1 n, Kt11l\Kll:'I' S itlwl~I SI. '1. Solllfl C1rt!1111 ll WOiford JS. 0.<tldJOl'I 1) LSU 11, A~bllrll I 1ll!MllH •• Ftorldf 7 0Uli1 21, Cl9't'!Mlf! lo w.-.. FOAll lt, Nortll , ...... 1111 u YIP'lll"lt SJ, WIUl1n1 .. M1r~ 6 ClllNI U, YMI ' RJtlln'loM a. E•sl C1rou,.. lr . ' Geaf1!1 lrc.11 :JO, Tu11ne • Wtsttrn Mlc11101n ll, M1r1ll111 I Ylrg!nl1 TKll 31, llUlfllo 14 MIHIU!i:ll>I SI. JI, SoVlhtrn Ml111H IP• pl lJ Nortll C1r01hlf SI, •• M1rvlllnd 0 M111lttli:ll>I 7'-Y1nclet"bllt 11 T 1rn11<1 ll, X1vll1' !Ollie) lD Furl'l'lln II. Cllett•-• 11 MlDW•IT Wltc011Sl11 :xi, lncll1na It Horfll"""l1rn ll, Pvrd\lt 11 To!-3'. l('"t St. 17 .M!1tnl COlllDI 7, i.-!111t Grte11 J C;llC"-11 :It, Ollla U. 21 Otolo St. d , llllnolt :It Mlclllffn )II, Mlnnffolt 6 MICflJt1n SI. ti, law1 O IC1nsa1 14. 111¥11 St. 10 M.._1 JO, Collrld9 " NlbrfS~I 65. Oklillcltftt SI. )I 1(-11 St. It, Okl1llom1 I• Mtm11hl1 St. 11, NOl1h TU111 St. 1 SOUTHWIS1' T11r11 TICll 14. SMU 10 .t.l1tllmt :xi, Houston 21 B1y!Or 1', T•••S Aa.M 2l T•••• •J. Ric• '1 .t.rtc1ns11 t-7, W1thll1 51. I Wttl Ttllts Slftt :JG, Wtw M ... lc't ll•M 1 , ROCKt•I .t.1r Forti SJ, Botton (OlltM 10 u1111 t•. Arlr-O Ntw Mt•lee u . WYOrnlfllll l' a't'U t1, Ult~ St. )II .t.tllON 4. ,., •• , 1£1 l'tllO) 11 44 700-1>- whitawaJI tubelts1 plus 1.90 ted. llllC and old ttr~. Foremost" 'El Tigre' 2+2 with 2 belts of fiber glass on a 2 ply polyester cord body. Dual whitewall design, too. Sale 2088 Aq. 25.95. for•motl• Sup1r Hlgh·Voll B•ll•ry. "mJlltR HIGH VOLT 48 MO. GUARANTEE snould aoy Foremost SuPlf Hl9h '-'oll b1tt1rv i•ll ~not merely dlJ<luir91) w iltlln lll month' 1rom Ult ciMtl'Of l)ur1;h1S11, return It t o Penn1y~ •nd 11 Wiii tl4I r1pllt:1d free ol ch1rge. Af\1r 18 months but prior to tll• •x1>1r1tlon 0111 or th• 9u•r1n11e, J. c . Penney Co. wUI replKt 111• b11t1ry 1;ll11glng onty IOf th• period ol ownennip, b1S11d nn t hl c:uucnt prlc1 11 lllt lime ol retu10, pro 11ltd O•ll lht JC.led 9u1r•nle111 month1. Sale3300 Reg. 37.50. A FIX OM-plecm allolminum dhte wftffl. A design knockout! Die casl aluminum wheel include1 cent tr IM.lb and ft/gs, Fits 111 disc brake appllcatlons. 14x7-•¥.-" 1.c. 14•7-41h"l .C. TIRE SAVER SPECIAL ' Here's what we do: align wheels, adjust brakes, balance 4 wheels. 8" Heavy duty shock absorbers 6 .. ' each We will install a complete set of 4 tor only 32.11 Yes, you can shop 12 to 5 Sundays, too, 1t any of these Penney Auto Centers: FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER e NEWPORT BEACH Sale2644 plus fed. qr and old tirt. DUii whitewall f\lbefeu. Size Replaces Rtg. F.cl. lai C78-14 695-14 30,95 2.15 560-15 29.95 1.58 Sale3044 plu1 led. tar 1nd old tire. Dnl wl\it1w1U lubtlns. - Size Replaces Reg. Fld. tu E78·1' 735-14 32.95 !.35 F7S-14 ns.14 34.95 2.ss F78·15 775·15 34.95 2.61 Sale3344 plus fed. In and old lira. Dual whltewan lllbel .... Sizt Repllctt Reg. ftd, Ill G78-14 825·14 36.95 2.67 H78-14 855·14 38.95 2.93 G78-1 5 815-15 36.95 2.7 7 H78·1 5 845·15 38.95 2.98 Sale3644 plus fed. lax and old lire. Dual whil•wall tubtl .... Size R1place1 Reg. Fief. tax J78-14 8S5·14 40.95 2.8& 900·15 40,95 2.90 L78-15 915-15 '2.95 3.22 Sale 5988 Reg. 19.95. a track 1ltreo tape deck p.itk1g1. Top quality deck packs a strong aud io wallop. Modern design boasts thumb wheel tuning and sliding balance control. With an audio output of 5.5 watts per channel, you get powerful sound quality, Includes two hang-on or in-door speakers. Sale 232~ .. e7D-15/l-blltkwa11 tUbt type plus 2.77 fed. lal( For plck-up, van and camperoY1ne1s: cargorna1ter 130 With nylon cord body. Sele 25.15-rog. 29.95-710·15-plus 2.95 led. lax Solo 21.15-rog. 32.95-700·15-plus 3.28 fed. tox Sale 24.95-reg. 28.95-650..16-plus 2.96 fed. tax Salo 37.15-rog. 41.95-750·16-plus 4.19 led. tax UM Penneys time po,-plln • HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTINGTON BEACH ... Trojans ·After.4th Victory By ARMAf/D HANSON 0 1 Ti. ounr Pllo>t l ltff Believe ii or not Uni\'ersily High will go after iU fourth foot ball victory of the 1970 campaign Friday night when the 'Drojam host San Dimu 1t i\tission Viejo High. Quarterback Tom Walker Ted the young Trojans to 1 lopsided 40--6 ·win o v e r Workman JV Saturday night at Tustin to give tht Trojans a 3::z· season mark. Walker· scored '"'O touchdowns and passed for two more. Leading 6-() arter one quarter, the Trojans of coach Jerry Redman blitzed tht Lobos \vith thret touchdowru in the second quarter to take a 27--0 halftime lead into tht dressing room. The Trojans outplayed the Lobos so dec4sively in the first half that Redman got an op- portunity to look al a lot or reser\'es in the second half. Universily outgaioed' the Lobos 133-3 on the ground and 97-0 yards through the air. The Lobos were held to one first down in the fir st half, and that ·was aided by a five yard penalty. The Trojans ac- counted for eight during Ure first half rout. As one sided as the first half \Vas, it didn 't look like it \\'as going lo be that kind of a game during the opening minutes when the Trojans drew three penalties on their first six play attempts, then fumbled thr ball and lost it lo \Vorkman. But the visilors a:ained only four yards in three plays and v.·ere forced to punt. The Tro- jans promptly returned the ball to the Lobos via an in· terceptcd pass and appeared headed for a long night. But the Lobos were just as eager to play defense, fumbl· ing the ball ria:ht back to University v.·ith J ohn Schaef- fer making the recovery. On the first play Walker pitched a perfect 52-yard touchdown pass to T o m Jarmon. The Trojan s' Ed Call plung· cd for a two pointer to give his team an 8·0 lead. The next lin1e University got Its hands on the ball it drove 64 yards in 15 plays wilh Walker scoring on an It-yard romp. Cil.MI" ITil.TISTlCS Fit1t down1 ru1l>ifl• Flnt down• H tsln• Flrir 11-nt Ptnlllles T11!1I 11'11 down1 Y1nl1 rull\ln, Y1•ds p111tn9 Y1rd1 lost llltl 'l'lfdl 11l11td ll'un1S/il.v1. dlll•nct ll'tn1ttiu/Vdt. Hnl!lted F~m111n1il'ume1t1 !011 Sew• .,, Ou1r11n " ' • ' .. '" "' ' w "" 101n '" U~l'l'tr1l!y I 19 1 Wor11m•n O o o IUSHING U11h·..,11y w • ' ' • .. " .. '" ]{11 •m "' GUI IC• 'l't 'l'I I VI 1' ti S J.S H1rnev Ct ll Wtl~1r ""' ·~· llCl'ltlwtl! C!\lm,11~ lott ll W1ll t• I 10 0 ' ' ' " ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' 3' 111 ll'il.$U NG UNvenll'f • ' ' ' ' '' IC •Ill 'l't U l l!tJ ••• " " " " " '' • "' .1a I p _ s a a a ; ,, ¥ u I : i $ A j • ';"lf 11.''fE~• .. ' . I . . -·· . . . -".;; 1. . ···--.... -.. -.. SPEEDY MUSTANG -Costa Mesa's Kim Wolf 123) attempts to elude Eldon Kidd of Fountain Valley a s Woll's teammate Gary Schoettler (32) DAILY •1LOT ,,..,_.., LM '''" waits (or play lo develop. Fountain Valley won, 18-7, to stay tied for the lrvine League lead with Edison. FV Overcomes Slow Start Baro11,s Come From Behind to Trip Mesa, 18-7 Best Overall Effort Paces Ed~on to 30-14 Triumph By PHIL ROS-9 aecuUve victory (a current the Griffin ZS, one step ln back: °'"" o.ur ••1tt 111n county hi&:h) on its way with of the defender, and then tore Jt emoUona play a major 3:23 lo go In the initial stanza. down the right sideline the re· part in football victories, The 185-pounder b I i t z e d malning distance for the sli Edi.son'3 unbeaten Chargers th.rough the Griffin front wall points. - c • ... en "' ... ... ... coWd-remaln-uneeathed·--ifl.. on a se<:00d.and~lght altuaUon The Chargers completed the a hemAtaillltlJ!l'lhr•"J>Rl'll-blltrtr!•g'liire··-t,."POint....,,.eep--11>--+~ their remaining three lrvine stripe, catching quarterback on the last play of the quarter • .1. League contesb -beginning Jim Hamilton in his own end when Funke ran an in· Saturday night at Western zone for a safety and a Z..O terce ption back ~ yards for High against the I o w 1 y Edison edge. another score. · ?.tagnoUa Sentinels. Edison further boggled t h e I-le picked the ball off in Oiarger grid ctuef Bill Vail, Griffhu' minds a minute and a midair &! the Edison line was half later when wingback Ter· dumping Hamilton for an l J>' who watched his team tum in ry McNay caught a Los parent loss. what he termed, "their best Alamitos defensive back nap-· Tailback Jim Moxley had a overall efrort" wlth a 30-14 win ping on a pass play from Jer-pair or second half scores· on over the Los Alantitos Griffins ry Hinojosa which totaled 50 five and one yard run3 while Saturday night at HWltington yarcb. Gary Balch kicked fou r.for· Beach High Is uncertain about, "iiiiMiiciiNiiaiiyiiciiaiiugiihiit iithiieiiboiiiimiibiiaiitiiiifiiouriiiiiiin iitheiiiiPiiAiiTiidiieiipaiiriitmeiiiiniit."i winless Magnolia . 11 "They tied Loara (a M noo- league contest last month) and any team that tle3 Loara ha.s to be good. We'll have to wakh out for them. "We were more emotionally ready for this game . (against Los Alamitos) than we were for any other one this season and we realize we have lo be up lo play anyone. Including Magnolia," Vail added. Although he was uncertain earlier in the v;eek as -to whether he would employ any razzle dazzle tactics against the Griffins. Vail watched his magicians put on a sparkling display in downing coach fo,rank Ooretti's eleven. For all intent and purpose the Chargers put the affair out of reach in the first quarter when they banged out 16 points in all ways, shapes and forms. Alert linebacker Ken Funke got the Chargers' ninth con· •ii.ME STATISTICS • ... .. 3.01 ····1 '·' ••• " "' ... ... .... ... Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Co • Sponsored by Voit And The DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT In Cash For Each WHk's First Ploce Winner Voit Footbolls eoch week Be • pigski n proph•t. Plo1 y the DAILY PILOT Pickeroo 9•m• for we•kly pri1es. Winn er eo1ch week receiv•s $10 cash o1nd • Voit Collegio1te footb1ll (suggested reto1 il price, $9.95 ). Nine runner-up Pickeroo pic k•rl o1lso ••ch get • Voit Collegi1te footbo1ll. Wo1 tch for thi s pl1yer'1 form eo1ch week in the DAILY Pl.LO_T Sport.' Section. Circl e the t eo1ms you think will win 1n the l11t of 20 teo1ms •n" send in the plo1yer's form or reo11oneble fac simile. Th en wo1tch the DAILY PILOT 1ports p•9es fo r ••ch wee k'1 list of I 0 winners. RULES 1. Submll !hit lnlry bt111k er • •e•1cnab!1 foc1lmllr 111 e11•t• lht con!nt 1. Send to: PILOT PlGSKIH P ICkEll:OO CONTEST, SiMrli OtjNr1Mtfi14 '"· o. eox 1.wo, co.i11 Mae, c1. tlr.26. J. Only -1111ry PJ• ptr$0n Hen wffll. "Enlflts mus! bt dtUvtrtcl !by m1U e r In 111r111n) ti 01\ILY ll'ILOT ettlcti by 5 p.m. Thund•r . I. A.MF VO ii •P'<ll Oil.IL y PILOT 1mpleyes •P'<ll 1'11lr lmmtcll•I• flll'lll lft not tliOlbl1 !11 tnlw • '-TIE 8REil.ICElt must ?19 fll11d In 11r 1ntry It W'Olcl • 1. lfl c1s1 111 !11 tor first pl1c1, dupllc11t m1rch1r>e1l1t prins wlll ~ 1w.ro111 i ncl wlnn1r1 will eqUlllY sner1 In '"'' 110 c•ll'l 'Prllt . I. W!nntrs """' pl1c1 1., tht top 10 mert 11\•n once during 1111 eonl•st 111vi •~• (ll)tion, •llu tM 11111 wl~. 111 ltXcJlt l'l911'19 tilt Voit too11Ntll ror 1notlltt OllUIUIJ Veit product of eci.ulw•ltnl v11ut. 1•··················1 • ENTRY BL.i\NK • • • • " • Circle fMMI .,.. ,., .. will wit thlt w ... 's te,,.. CllelM tet1111 ls1ece11cl e1te Hatecll Roms vs New Orleans Minnesota vs Detroit • • • "' '" . .. "" .... M•, .... ., ., c ' c I ' ' .. • • •• ... "" ... '" a. " ... I < < ' ' ' ; .. I •• '" M> l .. Wo W• "' ' ' ' ' (6i •• .. .. GO .. ... Lo ' .. ' .. " ,. .. "' ,. <• "' .. I " • "' ' w .. .. •• .. ... " Course Record Set By Rustlers' McK~n Diagnostic Center for car check-ups. .... lf1 Penneys Scientific Testing Center ~J ~an hell? to point out weak spots • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Son Diego vs Cleveland Woshington Stote vs UCLA Col vs use Oregon Tech vs Stanford Georgia Tech vs Duke Nebroska. vs Colorodo Northwestern vs Ohio State Oregon vs Woshington Cerritos vs Oronge Coast Saddlebock vs Grossmont Golden West vs LA Harbor • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • c c Golden West C.Ollege cross country star Terry McKean will seek to keep his unblem· ished record intacl this v.·ee k when he leads the Rustlers in- lo the annual f\11. San Antonio College ln\'ilational Friday. Golden West , Saddleback and Orange Coast all have teams entered in the annual mttt. ircKeon set a Rustler course record of 18:SS in leading his team to victories ovtt East LA llMll and Cypress (1$-48) Friday. The old mark wa" 19·41 set by FuUerlon J C's Ron Fisltt four sell30ns •Ro . The double victory earned Bucs Face Santa Ana Orange C o a 1 t College._, '"'altr polo teem, fre.•h from :in impreylve M victory over f<'ullerton, hosl3 Santa Ana College Tuesday at 3:30. Coach Jack Fullerton's OCC P i rate s are J-3 ln South Coast Confert:nc:e ac:tiQn. Santa Ana comet into the catnt with a 3-l mark, one game bfhlnd Cerritos. tn another polo matth, 'l\>ts- day Golden \\'est travels 10 I.A.CC In a Southtm California Conferent0 .Wgclo. coach Tom Noon 's team the Southern California Confer- ence dual meet ch ampionship. Colden West finished \1•ith ;i 6-0 circuit mark and are no"· i~ for the season in dual meets, The Rustlers also had the third through sixth place fin· is hers. Steve Varga was third In 20 :14 and Steve Lassegard al· ~ had the tame clocking in finidling fourth. Rick Pri~t was fifth In 20 :30 and Ken •1urst ran 20 :36 in capturing the sixth place spot. David Henderson was ni nth for Golden West in 21 :11 and teammatti Steve ChrlsUano clocked 21:50 for the No. 11 spot. Thf Rustlen' Dove Nel· son was 13th In 21 :59. In a triangular meet run o\'er the El Niguel Countr,v Club course. S"addlcback fell lo a pair of foes. The Gauchos were upended by Citrus. 2i-29, and fell tn f\fission Conference dual meet champion Gross· mont. 15-50, Brad 'Vinion had the bc.51 lndivldual pe.rformance lor Saddleback, clocking 11 time of 22 :58. He finished firs t ns:aln.~1 Citrus and 10th against Gross- moot. Te~mmate Steve Pall~n r11n second against Ci1n1~ 11nd ~·n~ 12th 11g&lnst Gro.l\Smont. He posted a time of 23 '09. 0~00 1n certain vital areas of your car. I 0 ·~ !-_,, In less than one hour we put your car through a series of scientific \\\ 0 ° ~ tests (212 of them ). Steering, engine, brakes, transmission, ,r:;/ electrical and cooling systems. You watch the results co!Tie out o~ an , electronic typewnter. './1 '"--"' The written report shows the results of the tests. It indicates what teated V parts of your car are weak and what parts are strong. A trained diagnostician will go over the repcrt with you. If you wish, he'll give you an estimate of any necessary repairs costing big money. There 's no obligation to have any of the work done. You decide what to fix and where to fix it. Tho cost? Only g 88 Not bad for a check-up these d1ys. Penneys Scientific Testing Center Pen~~"· Charge n at any of lhcse Penney Auto Centers: BUENA PARK IOr•n;•thorPt 11 valteyVitwJ CARLSBAD FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE ''THE CITY" Dl1gno1tic l1ne1 open Monday through Saturday. • • • Corona del Mor vs Costa Mesa • • • • • • • • • • Morino vs Huntington Beach Los Alamitos vs Estancio . Western vs Newport Laguna Beach vs Saddlebock Edison vs Mognolio Son Clemente vs Katello • • • Tll! &lt•il.Kl!lt -My IV"' ""' Tiit Iii lllhl """'"" of eookl .. t(t/'ld In Ill '"!' • 21 911!'1e9 lll'9f '"°"' II ............. , •···•·•··•·••·•·•···•······•· • • • .... , • • A!Dll!S • • • • • • crn Zll' • • • a PHONI SU • ••••••••••••••••••• •i· .. .. · 0 " I c • ' ' c • • • C, P-re!R--l· Football Standings tcM.ITMIRN CAL CON,IAINCI ··-.,,.... LACC GoMt!I Wiii U. H1rW' r: .. 1 LA, WLP,,PA I I J1 0 1 • 2l 21 1 • 27 ,, 0 1 0 31 0 I 71 7> 0 1 21 27 .. ..,,,.,., Seem K£EP YOUR HANDS ''.QUIET'' AT TOP OF IACKSWINU . \ ... ,I --··~"11:-!'J:G-ll"~' ~---1-·--- •• U.CC %7, E111 LA 21 T!Wndlf'I 0..llW E••' LA "'· CrPreu II W•llfn Hlth ,,....,., o- •• HOndo •I LACC ...... ,. . .._ GolOll'I W•I 1t LA HertlOI' SOUTM COAST CONl'llllNCf WLPfll'A P:11llerter! l I U lf c .... 1to1 l o " ., or-COnt I 1 .,jJ 21 San Dino ,,,..,,,. I 2 :M 67 .S.nt1 Atw1 I 2 S6 i7 Ml.S-~ 0 215&2 •laftOl-lt:ZS50 • .., .... , •• SC... ·0,111911 c-t :M. S.nl1 AM 1 • Fllller1on 29, S.... Dleeo 12 . c.err1• u •. s..i or-Meu '' SalllnNY'• o- cemtat 11 Or-coe11 Ml. S... Mfonlo w. F11ll9t1oll 11 AfleNlm $18dlurn S.n DI-11 Santi Al\li MISSIOH co•u••••NCI W L 11'1' l'A SMldltWdt l I 7' 11 South-tern 2 I 12 50 Groumonl 'I 1 '* 31 Rlvenlct. 2 I M 50 Cllrw 1 271'1 Ch1fftV I l 1' 96 1'1tor1wr 1 2 • 79 S.n ll'l'ntrdlno I l 70 12S S.lul"llllr'• s-.. s.ddleb.lck 21, Souttl-.tern 12 Grou"*!t ai, P11o1Nr 7 Clwffe'f !>1, 51n lhrntrdlno • RIYenldJ 21, Cllrv• '' fr*.,. ... '"" Ctwoffn' 11 Rlv1r11d1 s-stem 11 San ~rltlne S.t.l'lllY't G9m" S11Mll'bKI< 11 GrGii.rnonl Cllrw 11 1"1klmlr SUN$11T Ll;t.GUI: W L '" PA i N-1 H1rbor J I If 21 f AMIMlm l 1 13 V loen. J 1 ~ :2t Meri,,. 2 l n !S s.1111 Allll l l ,, .. W•lem 22n51 Wtslfnlnsll'I' I J 7J ~ Huntlnt!Dl'I lluc:h t 4 » 10.S 111 ....... Y". ,_.. Loer1 12. NtwPOl'I H1rboc' 7 ,,....,., ··-M•,IM 11 HuntlneTan 8t1ch WHlern I I N .... _, Htrbor Loerl 11 WHtml111ler Sanll Allll YI. Anlhtlm I I 119 A (6:JD) ! 8AllDIM OR.DY• LIAOUf W L l'I" P'A R1ncho A,.mllos I o 73 21 I Peclflc. J o 73 •• Sln!lllO 2 1 JO 21 G•rd.n Grove 2 2 d ~ f lloll<I Gr1ncl1 I 2 ~7 l! La Qulnte t 2 J'I ll Lem Amlp t I • l:Jn .. ,,,.,,....,.1 '"'' 1l1nd!o Al1ml!OI 13. lolll Grendrl 6 l"riMY'I OllM Bohl Gr1ncte YI, Lt QUlnl1 ti Gtr• ......... Sanlltoo vs. Rtndlo Altmltoi. tt llolM Grt""" "..,....,.. Ol lM P..:lflc.I t i Glrckn Grove l•YINE LEAGUE W L l"JI l'A £11!"'" • • 10.S 51 I FClll!llt ln Viii.rt I 0 Hit ... E1t1nd1 l 1 ~ a CClf"llf\I del Mar 1 2 12 17 L111A&ll'ftl,._ t 2 G 6J (moll Miq; I l 3' !S Ma111111U1 t I 11 13 ! Sallll An1 \llttl'Y 0 I # 13' Slotu .... Y'• ,_ C._ del MM ti, Ma-II• 11 £11llOll 30. Los Alaml!Or. II Founllln \11lln 11, C111!ol M~ 7 l"rlMr'I OllM Los A11m1!111 YI. Et11ncl1 II Or1nM '"" S'ltvrdll'l''I ....... C-• del Mi r ..... Coll• Mn• II ·-Edl"'" YI. M""°ll1 11 W•!1rn Founll!n Vt!llY vii. lA Vt lhlY •• Wlltmlnsler Olt.ANOI: L IAOU• w ' ,~ PA Slddlfblck t 0 Sonor• 2 a 76 lJ 51 l l llrN I I Many golfers ruin their swings by cockina the wrists too much at the top of the backswing (illus. tration #1). Their hal'lds get too 1'flippy" as a r•• .suit of trying to make • big, full backswing. When the wrists cock too much at the top of the swing, they uncock too soon on the downswing . I suggest trying consciously to curtail ANYcockina: of your wrists at the top of your backswing. Don't •worry·if this shortens your swing. Make tertain th1t the back of your left wrist never cups inward so' that wrinkles appear at the .base of the back of your hand. (I'm in the proper positjon in lllustra· lion #2). Give this a try d\Jring one or two practice ses- session. Streu controlling the club with ·your left hand. If it. doesn't work, merely ·eo back to your otd·swinB::·;:. · •O,,.,..*""~.,...- Tars, Eagles, HB Notch Polo Wins Coach Bill 8 a r n e t t ' s Chuck Holloway led \the Newport Harbor Tars, the losers with l"'-'O goals. power house unit of the Sunsel Newport took the junior League, got a jump on other and area prep water polo teams by varsity game by forfeit capturing a pair of wins over chalked up a 7-4 win in the the weekend. frosh-soph category as Jim Barnett's poloists made hay Lord got credit for all seven on Friday with an 8-7 closie winning goals._ over host La Serna and then Newport will travel out of returned to the Estancia High the county Tuesday in its next pool Saturday to record a 12-3 triumph ove r S un s et action racing the rugged challenger Marina. Downey Vikings, a perenniaJ In other Friday activity, contender for CIF laurels. Estancia stopped visiting non-Coach Barry Fry's Estancia league foe Los Altos. &3 and Eag les took time of( from invading Huntington Beach their normal Irvine League squeaked past the Fountain labors with the decision over Valley Barons, M . A trio of Ta: poloists shared Los Altos, which absorbed on- high scoring honors in the ly its second setback Df the sQuad's narrow escape aaginst season. The Conquerors' other La Sema. loss was suffered against Newport's Jay Farrer. Mall rful La p t Greer and John Wilcox canned powe uen e. two goals each. Dan Kent Was the high goal The Newporters also swept maker for the Eagles with to wins in the Bee and Cee · three bingoes with teammatr:s games by 10.2 and S-2 tallies. Randy, Blattennan, St e v e Gary Robertson (f o ur ) , Webster and Milton Kawabe Steve Batcheller {two) and managing; one goal apiece. Bruce D'Eliseu (two) hit dou-Estancia also won the ble figures for the Bees with jayvee contest, 14-3, behind Steve Smith (tv.·o) garnering the six-goal r:ffort of Bob top honors for the Cees. Petrina while Los Altos came ·--· •• ,_.i i ii 1'f ,, \'ii '5F ..... Mond.ay, OctDbfr 26, 1970 DAIL V PILOT 21 slimeu1-f4ils,._; --1Dl.llieet:e~P-'-•· rt;;a...._....:. • Dominate Mat Team Newport, bions Triumph Fish Report IMl"llllA~ l •AClf -.. -""• U ll'i..11 .. tyM, '--l'lldt"-. t w.· coo. 1/MCtlf, SAN Ol~M ("'"NIIMI ,...,, -,,, -WJl ~!ltWl1lL SJt Y"'-1 II Marina's VUdngs capt~ Huntington's DaN Babin filth their filth C011SeCUUve Sunset at to:az. With only 'three lettermen returning. Golden W e. s t College's wrestling team will rt1y primarily on freshmen League dual meet victory, Vikings Preston Campbell taking a 1&;44 verdict from the (IO:U) and Chris RDgen host HunUngton Beach Oilers (10:37) filled out the final two Friday to highlight the area's spots in the top seven during tbe 197~71 season. weekend prep cross counlry Marina won the juni~ varsl- Tbe season be iDS Nw. 20 ~cUon. ·-__ _ _Jy and frosh--so h races by (7:30) against Fullerton on the lnapiiar Df other S~t Identical 23-34 ICOl'Ts with the GDJde West l du als Involving aru units Fn-Vikings' John Ne 1 s D n and n mas. day, host Newport downed Bruce Alvarez th e top tn- Dale Deffner takes over the \V ester n : I .s · 4 9 and dividuals in each of those wrestling reigns at Golden Westminster s Lions stymied categories Wesl He was tbe bud wrestl· visiting Westel'lll by a 19-40 N rt·· ~··1 d th count ewpo s .-><ii ors , un er e ing and gymnastics coach at · tutelage Di Bert Donald, cop-Saturday Costa M e s a ' s ped the · •·· I Long Beach Jordan last year 1'tustangs and the~ Estancia si:r ~t vars ty spots --• haoclled the bead t · b against Western. .uu ma JD Eagles ccmpeted at the Palos Tar John Holcomb set a at Cal state (Long Beach) for 'Verdes Invitational on a rug-Newport school record for a foor seasons prior to that. ged 2.2-mile course across junior in winning the varsity The three returning let· from Palos Verdes High Tace in 10:16 with mate Rick termen are Dave Beck (113), School. F1eming just a step behirtd in Coach Joe Fisher's Mesa 10 17 Bill Golden (142 or 150) and team was sixth in the overall ~r~ig Clark (10 :29), DeMy Steve McOanoold (145). team standings at a team total Cline (10:34 ), Tim Rudy Westminster 's Dave or one hour and one sewnd (10 :44) and Art Bal9on (10:51) Womack, wbo placed serond while the Eagles or coach Tom went 3-4-5-6 for the victors. lunl, ...,, to. 1 btfrlCVIU . LOMG llACM I~~· -(seventh, 11:01). 102 tl'lll••11 1..,, 1 ~ Th "· k ho j l;IOl'll11o. :IOI rte.I Cl , • l at• . e wvns too me ayvee _, 1'111'1 -101 -i.r.1 • "'"· ., honors, 15:50, with Bob Men-=-:::=:: •u• ..;.J:,,f~~~ doz1 I.he best individual with ~-1 -11 1Ml•11 " Y•I· an 11:21 clock.l.ng, lowltll, •2 Mrraevcll, m .. u, 1tt lllOt'llto. flt rock (Id. Cost.a Mes1's JDM Olswang '"" 01100 I"'""'' LINlllll -!' ~11111 lit MNlo. IJJ ullc1 ..... l I was the fastnt area runner at 'TeV#C>aT 1Arr1 ~ -'l &1'6 blU, vtikJwl11i, 1 t I Cid. t Paloa Ver<ks, :amer1 .... the -l•r•i ts NrrlCYOl1 llO •to. • sixth best rnar of the-da ~ u -t~~ .. - with an 11:26. t:;k1~~:j~t1:~~;~~ Other top Mesans were Tom 1.~ ~~ cod. ,, a.on11e. • 111u. 'i Olswang ~11 :44), Doug ::!lYl•1o1.; n • -1en1 u111,. Macl.ean (12 :00) and Bob "t 111~•~5"'11~~1".,..=.il.• .-hlll Gollllick (12:20). r;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;~;;;;;;; Four Eslancia r u n n e rs broke the 13-minute baJTier with Steve Schureman (12 :25), Terry Haun (12:39), Bob Bell (12 :40) and Mike Jones (12 :53) placing in that order. Mesa's Mike Stuts man fl3:26) and Jeff Haight (13:37) and Estancia's John Silva (13 :421 were the fastest area jayvees. Whittier Wins in the CIF finals last year and Fisher (nD relation) sett1ed for Ken \Vamel paced the Tars four\b the year before, will be 21st with an aggregate total or to a 22-33 jayvee win with an going in the 126-pound class. I ·63 ·40 II 08 k WHITTIER -Frestiman Tom Foss from Estancia ·The·· unbeaten Vikings of 0 e ~~ding c h ampi on Dave Johnson's running and and Tim Flynn (Fountain roach J ack Rowan showed no Westminster joined its area Tim Fa1Tell's kicking gave Valley) will vie for the 134-mercy in rolling over coach counterparts in bogging the Whittier a 23.g football victory pound divisiDn. Foss came in Paul Wood 's Oil City runners spotlight. Saturday night ove r Oc,cidental foortb last year in the finals as Marina swept to six of the Kevin Coleman of the Liol"ls in Southern California lnter- while Flynr1 was the sectional top seveit spots in the varsity ran 10:26 tt> beat DUt Loara's collegiate Athletic Conference champ. rompeUtion. Ken Pecchia (10 :34) with•-;:p;:l:;•Y:;·======== Pat Breeiley (marina) '''ill Top performer for Marina \Vest:minster's Dave· Miller-: compete'witb Beck in the 118-was Dave Lockmari . who claiming third in 10:38. pound spot. clocked 9:59 on the undulating Others in the top seven for Steve Spry, J im Lassik and Oiler course. coach Jack Hedges' victorious Ron Er b , a 11 from Mates Bob Phillips (10:10), crew were BDb Dietz (4th, Westminster, will wresUe in Bob Brickner (10:16) and Ken 10:50), Jeff Young (fifth, the 142, 150, and l 5 8 Martyn (10 : 18) came home in 10:52), Tom Shirley (sixth, categories. order behind Lockman with 10:57) and Mike Braunstein ALL TYPES Elj)UIPMENT And MACHINERY LEASING AVAILABLE TIJIMS ..... MONTMS Ctlt McGrew (1141 ..... .-1 ...... 11 .. -. .. 11\J> •»-n&J 11 .. t .. ... V11en<l1 l "~=di : : . " » " " " ~ The Sailors raced from a 2-1 out on the better end of a 5-3 halftime e d g e to clobber frosh-soph score. Marina in the second half or a Bob Webster had two goaJs ' Slht,...J"'I $ewe Sm!or11 lt, El Dor~ 1 ,,,..,..,., ··-.,, .. 1t El Oorffo " wild affair whiclt included 35 for the Eagles' frosh-soph fouls. unit. Greer paced the winners Tuesday Estancia h o s t s ...,_ lttdl '15. Sidltlt'INlc-•I ...... with four scores while mates Garden Grove, a team it beat Jim Smith and Craig Farmer in the Estancia tourney . • 511..,...J"'I Otml S-t t i V1ltnc,. chipped in with three and two. Huntington·s Oilers (10.2) had five of their starting seven Pro Cage, Hockey players foul out but still managed to hang <lfl to defeat Fountain Valley in a non· league tiff. ••• A~nilC Olvllllfl .. l 11tlf"l'I C1111f1r1nc1 NMr Yorll ~=ltpltll 11\lflllO Wiii l t 1t P'cl. 5 ' .71J s 1 .~n l • .•It I l .HO . a.111mor1 Ctntr1l Dl'f11I011 . , ·"' »• ... ... """''' Clnc!nnell C""'tlt lld ' ' . ' . ' Wfti.rll c:..tiA~Ct MlfWMI DIYlllM ot.r.11 MllWl\I~" f 0 1CI" """"" 1 0 1.000 l I .750 l l ,llOO ) l .JOO l"tdfk Olwlllln *"" 5lfl Fr1n<llCll Lot A1111t1n Sit! DI- "'<'""' ' ' ' • , , ' ' • .... ... ... ... ..,, •• , '" , '" ... '" ' "' Ylrolnl1 F IO-rldl New Vorlr. l(&nl11tk, Pl!taburoh Corollr11 Ula~ lncllll'll M-P~i~ Oenvtr Te~•• A•• The Oilers enjoyed a 3-1 l'••t Di•l•ion halftime lead and a 6-3 margin 5 0 1 000 ,,_ after three periods. •1 .MI,. • 1 .sn 1 Rick Henry and Clay Evans ~ ~ :;~ 3 were at the top of the scoring o s .ooo chart for coach Jack Green-w.11 Dl•l1lon ) J 0 1.000 ,,, field's winne rs with two goa s 6 1 .?so each. while Kurt Westerfield l?.JJJ'\.. hi 1 • .J1l 1 and Fred Lammers eac ro - ,1111,..,.: 11,:111" ·000 31" lected a pair for the Barons <lf icei-111ck, ua. Pltt•nv•!lfl uo coach Tom La ndis. v1 ... 1n11 1ae. MemoM• 101 Fountain Valley took the Ut1h 11•. lncH1n1 111 ,~,...,., 11 .... 111 jayvee tilt by a 9.fl rount and Ntw Yorio; 1\J, PIH•bo.lroh ff . t . b f f ., °'""'' 112, India"' 116. o...1rtim1. was VIC or1ous y a or e1 ure NNL in the frosh-soph match. E11! Dlv;,,len !;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::::: W L T 't>ts. GF GA )01 113211 •M-N .... ToO! J I I 11 23 10 '. Mor>tr~tl s 1 1 11 71 ,. JS1 620 Jl R£TUllN OF TIE CllAMPIOll AND THE NO. I CIW.llllCDI 11, V1nc:ouvtr I.... f1111t1lo ?J S107J Oelroll 1s s n '' Toronto IS0 2 162l M1tw111k" 1n. 1111tlm0f1 1tt. IW'fl _,_ Iii-Yorll 115, Clnclfl'\111 lOJ Jollarl Ill, Alltnll 10' W11! Di~illen (hlCIOO 5 I t 11 'n PhllttlelOl!ll • l I ' 10 !J9n DIHO 116, Phllldllofl(,f 111 51in F,tnel.eo 11•. Portl1nd 115 6tlrolt 114, 811!11lo •S !)nly 11mn K'*lllllcl ,: 11tM1y's ••vi" Mll..-Uk" IU. SHnl1 101 U. Anoltlll llJ. Cll\lltl•n<I M Pl'IOfnhl 111, Sin Dleeo " tlll~ l JI, POrT111ld 116 O!llY .. ml• Khldulld. Tllll ... t'• Olm11 Stltl11 11 D.iroll "'*"'' 11 c rnclMlll °"'~ 11.na ld!ldultd. s 1.LC11111 l 2 J • 10 LOI Anteltl • 1 a • 71 Mlnnno•• J ) a ' IJ Plttsbur9'1 I 3 3 S 10 Calllomit 0 6 1 1 lt ,.,.,,...y, lttlVlh Chkavo 1. Torar.lo o Ntw Yor': I. MJnntSOIA 1 Monlrf'oll J, PM1edel!>l'l11 l L°' Alltel~ J, St. lovl1 1 S\Mllll'l''I AetYlh N.-w Yori<. !. '_l;•l!lornl1 ;. Ii• Cl>lcl90 .1, Bliffllo 0 Manlrtll J. Oetroll J, llt llQlton I, Pl'lllldtll'tllt 3 Plll1bo.11'11'1 I, V1nc:o11ver 1, tl• VW BRAKE SPECIAL ....... 4 wt.It MKhlM 4 Drvml o..ha-.t 4 WhMI CJllndtn :M.• Mlle U-411tiMI .......... (MOT PllO«ATIDI $39.95 Anaheim · Convention Center Exhibition Hall All Seats $7.50 VW SHOCKS --· .. ··-··· $7.'5 l_.ed 100,000 mil e ruaranteed (not J)fo-rated). Doon Op111 6:30 P.M. Tickets On Salt At: .. WE DO AU. FOREIGN CARS. e DISC llAil lt'ICIAUIT e COSTA MESA STORE ONLY Jll1 H-"r lll'tl. l4t-40ll ., 14f·Ult Anohtlm ConTtntion Cent1r, All Tickelron Agencies, locotad 01,/Stors Storts. fht lroodwoy, May Co .. Horrk & Fronk ond 9ullotk'\. . PRICED LOW AT ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS HONORED " 9izll 7.00.'D .. b&ctwen with ...... in. plus fechir91 ..... oftUOpettiN 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE BRAKE RELINE • • • • Ragged 4-ply nylon card •Good trac&ian and skid re~atamce • Good mileage at a law price Sizes Whitewall Blackwall F.E.T. 7.00-13" $16.60 $10.95 $1.90 7.75-14 18.25 15.45 217 8.25-14 20.55 17.75 . 233 5.60-15" 17.15 14.45 1.58 7 .75-15 18.25 15.45 219 8.25-15 20.55 17.75 236 8.55-14 22.20 -2.53 8.55-15 22.20 -257 • 2 ~ ,,., Ntt4 USE OUll tlAfN CHICK PllOGftAM. 8.F.Goodrich wiA Vil YoU b in ~ WMt. Should we run out cf your lil-9 di.Iring 1hil on.. M • be Nppv to itlue you • niin cMck and .-yoar tnac die..,..._. prioi IOf funn ct.l.IYwy, h,.,tW..ti...W, $ , ... ," .. ,. .. ...., .... ALL s,.1.i Lii• "'--CARS ll •Ctf'! OIMI JONES TIRE SERVICE 2049 HARBOR BLVD. 1100 N. TUSTIN AYE. lat Boyl COSTA MESA ORANGE 646•4421 PH NIS 532•3383 I .... , .. °' unun11 UDIAL Tiii•• ,.... "'' MIDUl.O,,,,.,.... Oii 7,,,.,.. AlT. I .... I ' ' , ··~-·· .............. _ ....... ·-· .................... -·-· ............... - ! " -•• ' ' ' • ,, ,, ·! ' ' ,. ' ., , ~· •• ~ ...................... ~ ••• , ·-·· •••..••..• _, ....... ~--.. -· ... ;.! •••• .,. ~---·· .... --------. -·----------'- Pin~h Y ou1·seli A Pile Of Pennies (Or Even Dolla1·s) Penny Pinchers Dial Direct for Details 642-5678 Pile Up Profits North County, 540·1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS • ' l , HC 3 ' 0 • b ~ " ti c & • , HOUSES l'OR SALi --· 0-.1 M..,, -26, 1970 DAJl Y PILOT HOUSES FOil SALi Gener•t--· HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi I HOUSES FOR SA~!_ I ~OUSES l'OR IALI HOU•t:s I'~ S~E-' l!i'._~~ES-~R SALE _ I ti:..u ES FUR SA'i:l rot I ... Gwrol 1000 ·-·•-0007-o-~t •-r• . --··-··!!••!!ii_ 1•~1-"'-•I • ~--111 2629 HARBOR BOUUVARD 546-8640 Open Ev•nl"ll• till 1:30 3 Bedroom-2 Bath Fireplace $23,950. No Down to Vet!. llale- crest area o1 Costa ?itesa. Forced air heat.- built in Kitchen • large. eatilti area. Oose to schools-church. New on the market •• 50, hurry. Call to see today. 546· 8640 Costa Mesa Fixer-upper $23,500. Clean It up • you'll have everything you need. A rd! doll house with 3 good med Bedrooms.. • large lot. in a quiet neighborhood. Tenns. 546-8640 BARGAIN 4 Bedroom Just $25,995. . ' ,.._ __ --* ~·ri~:ld:i!"'~. NEWPORT HEIGHTS * *· OCEAJNFRONT *·*)~~Mu~~t.~~ .. .:. .... · Lra. Three Bdrme, two bath, So '. f 15th St ' . . family room, nrc~111cc, l~t . Spacious living rm. wilb • a . . -. . IAN CtlMiNT·I ' . ' . Ba!M .. W/W ~-. '""20 * * *'* , TAYLOR * MAGNIFICENT BAY ISLAND 5 Bedroom &. deli homo wllh p,ler & slip. Enjoy the quiet Peaceful living on this small- est tropical · private island in qie "Wonder· -ful-World of N.wpon.!!.Call-for-<1ppt,.IB7, CONVENIENCES UNLIMITED! 3 Bdrm, pool home Offers playground, Ji. ~brary;----school,-shop.P.ing--within-a--stone-ts­ throw. Quiet Westclill 1treet,-+ other ex- tras. Invest your time seeing this one. $44,950 ,....__ "'"inr.Rm. (with ''TH.E FINEST .. cyp-rr SIKiRES" """""' ..... •b., ,.,. with BII b\lttel and china cloeell $30 700 In ftw.J , autQ qp(ner. Pro:"r:rty clear electric Kil :ll'x29' l>mily 1 · · owner wtU •tin<, Ill ''" ' rm. <with lll'eplaC<) fltlly • This 1/3 aero; 1~ted estate has a 4,400 It. ,,,_. "An"r.iT c....,ted & d'8ped, f)Ome. Thatsrlahl! Unballevable '" single level bome. Tht lonnalllving rm, for-rO:tlO w " I PLUS One bdnn apartment N~wport Beach. View. Large nial dining rm, kitchen, breakfast rm, fam· REALTY &'.2-43M w1lh Bil "Kit large rear BR's. Fomial dining nn. ily rm & master bedroom all overlook the -hl.,,,.-e=-with llttplaaoc ~-wllh.wbe. 1ea .. A~d 4 more..bedrQo1111 , & balhs, a 3 C'!':_ WAU<-TO..IEAClil Three car saraie & all dra1 beam ceWnp. 2 fire. garage, heated pool & private steps tO Uie se-rvices and utlllties in places + BBQ. Paneling In beach and you have a perfect home. A fine Near new 3 Kina: lize bl;d· garage. Front landscaped tam. rrn. Cherry kitchen. 2 value at '190,000. nn1 2\t baths, extra lie liv. incJuaffii •"P i•Tn it "rs. beths:--ba1h-~~p1a9te1 . eu,,.. ---FNd la~ R-l E.._ 1nc i-m., 2 dftptaces, b1tn1, I I t --......1 tom built. Bl"M-k pa.Lio. Ter. ~ -•1u1w redealnlted. new crpta, dble Separa e y e ..... ~ rear __ .. '"' _ v· , ,__ * (714) 1~51M. * ~~ _,_ yards Located near C.M. ~.,...,,,rear""· on t ia&t. _ -•-iaraae ........ ~ u-, va. Park 'and Dow?ltown. EASY }{Uny, CAlJ CTI-4) 962-5585. cant $49,950, WESLEY N:·~A it~~ .. co., Rtalton ;;oUY_R~ To~~ FO~ FOREST E. OLSON Gononl 1000 o-r•I 1100 ~=.:my: ':Z83 2111 San Jo--.uln Hiiis Road DETAILS. Inc. Realtors NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 M. M. loBordo, Rllr. 19131 Brookhunt Ave. ,IJW. BEAMED CEILING BEAUTY * * * * . * * SPANISH •"NoR-:79 H""""''°" Beach Gonorol 1000 Gonorol 1000 B. R 1' POOL Open Dai~ DUPLEX 11;;;;;;;;;;;===;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;; 5 Pus 328 Aliso cl .!J. " Big and beautitul. Spanir;h IMAGINATION with ..,.... 126.000. A home for the l.mq\natiw! Here ls• 1parkllna: one )'W' Well ... McCarclle Rltra. A • frame beamed ce:Ulng, old home that ahOws like a l8'la Newpot1 Blvd., C.M. alump •tone ftreplac-e dom-model. Thia 3 b!drm home 541-7729 • ·A arches to carved-wood-dou-tn a " (/ ble-doo• •• ..,,. Tri -level PRESTIGE w ATERFRONT HOMES charm. Huge master '"'''· Step.down formal dining, Separate family room. Large breakfast ttta In all elec. kitchen. 2% balhll. Red We roof, Covered rose garden11. Trees. Sparkling pool. Jt's AAA -it's different -So hUJTY, Call (n4) 962-5585.. , 26 Linda 1111 Drive Corp. owned. 5 Br. 5 b.ath home facing Harbor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna. Comp. furnM for imrned. occupancy. W/dock ........ $200,000 For Complete I mallon on all homes & lots, rl••M call: CALL: BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR FOREST E. OLSON Newport--He19hts-Ina.tea 1 wall and the other Jeatures a huge muter1::======== cornf!r ot Beacon wall Is allding glau doors hednn aulte, lovely llll'den\. I short block from opening onto waUed-ln front kitchen, 2 patios, upgraded Costa Mua lllf' Cliff Dr. yard 4 Bedrms + large 11h~ crpta & CU!'tom drpa.I -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; By Owner $36,500 study. Thia home la in excel-The owrsited lot ha.a; rooml• Spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath, lent condition now and cou1d for a boat Ir: trlr and ls RXER UPFER living room with fireplace, be d@COl'at@d to be fa.ntu. ~utitully landscaped with Veterans Administration says luge dining area cverlook-tic. Make otter. many exotlc plants. The priee $32,000 on thl& big 1914 lng lovely secluded lanai, work ta all done for you sq ft fixer upper 4 i.rge carpeting, drapes, built-in ~re. Mov~ ln and ~tart liv. ~ •• lamily .l .dble Pl'· electric kitchen. Garaee oU lfl&'.. ~Ult listed • $3 ·.950. a.ge, Bring paint brush 1r: 133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 ••. Nicely land>Caped =-1 ·u,::::::P:;;P:;;E::R=B'°'A"'Y~B'°'R'°'E"'E"'z=E & """· 1.12,.., '°"" 10 Veta ·· alley with electrk: eye ~ ~ COATS yard tools. Excellent Joca. lpc. Realtors ner lot. FOR AIL YEAR roMFORT, WALLACE no down payment required. 19131 Brookhunt Ave. 646-4032 M&-l"4 Fam.Uy tun and activity REAL TORS Vi.c.'Ult • move tn qutck. Call 1000 Huntington Bea·h-I ijji;;;;;;;;i'"""'""'""'"iiiiiii. I ··-!ta"""' at ne~..a.... NEW~ n-... E-I -540-1151 HerUace RetJton;-•-''"""""'"'"""'iiio .... 1 ' .... .1--.. .,, -r-n ven nga open evenings. II;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. c EO SHOR' ES !'ORT YMCA. Introduce • '62-4454 • General ..L-1000 Gonorot· II· • IRVINE C\>VE AM '°"'wile '0 TWO STORY'"!"~'!""'!'!"~~"'!""'·~-/ As1umo 6'14'4 VA-loan Ocean view home at ENGUSH CHARM of FOUR I ' SPECTACULAR VIEW 324 cameo S1'>in Road Bdnn•. with huge walk-in TRIPLEX-$41,500 Low Mo. paymta. 3 ""·BR.; DIVORCE SALE :llie mar'luid You are cordially Invited to vlew our NE\V 1971 ~fodel Home, elegantly decorated &: furnished. This luxuriously different 5 bedroom home with panor. amic view of the Bay, Fash. ion Island & the Mountains will surely make you want to live in Dover Shores. Open Daily 10 A~t to S PM 1033 Mariners Drive (just south oL Galaxy) Ivan Wells & Sons Spacious 5· bedrm & family, 3 bath home on Jge comer lot. Ownera ~ sell NOW! Submit oHen;: . Asking .• , $42,950 CUSTOM 4-PLEX Choke Newport Beach area, 3 BR "' 2 BR units -exce.I· lent owner occupied &: tax shdter property. $12,(WX) DoWn. $75,000 °' - Ultra excl. 6 BR., 51Ai ba. OPEN HOUSE Dally closetii, FORMAL DINING Neat and dean. No care on rt!dKOt., w/w cpts a: tfrP.1. home in seclud!'d commun. 3 Bedrooms, including ANO FAMILY ROOM PLUS this one! Two bedroom units lmmed. po~. $22,SOO. - ity, ?\leticuJously landscaped huge muter auite with three baths for the 1pttial in excellent quiet EAST-or lea.se/optiOn for 1 year#/ paUoa &:: gardens; 125 ft. of dreulng room .i u.una. value of $43,000. Safe cul.de-SIDE locafon. lofay trade $500 option mo~y; Sl.85 ltt>., ocean frontage with steps paneled den sac street with boat storage up. This one ls prlcrd for lat A 1¥t mo&. $25 Mo. to to private, u.ndy 1wimming formal dining room accesa, Owner invites lease-immediate aa1e Better call ~ credited t~ buyer upon beach. $290,000. private, enclosed patio purchase at $.125. ~month. now1 • exercising optKln. ~ see tOOay M •. M. La Borde, Rltr. c· I h Call: Patrick Wood 545-23<ll ....-----....... '"·""' -642-'43• o eswort y :i ~'~t~.;';M R~~ ~ ...... COME UP 1'< TIME ON MARKET _...:...,.. • FOR AIR & Co FOR SALE * BY oWNER in this smoa:-free Huntington • Custom built Executive type Beach 3 bedroom bungalow. REALTOR home. Panoramic view. Im- Immenst: brick patio, FIRE-Newport Beach OHlce maculate s BR, -4 BA. Realtors Pl..ACE, push. button kitch-1028 Bayalde Drive Gigantic tte rm w/wet bar, 67~ "000 "Our 25111 Y•or •• dooe <o m>Jor h'eeway• ~ > ""'" 3 •Jail ..,-. On '33-0700 644-2430 "1"'.3 In the H•rbor Art•'' and ih>PPinl', '28.500 with fairwa)' of Mesa Verde goolf Roy J. Ward Co. The numbeT to call whether 4400 VAorFHATenns. WW pay HELPI course. May auume 6%% EXCLUSIVE AGENTS buying, selling or leasing 673• buyer's ooe:tJ. Owner Screaming loan. Must see to apprec. PERRON ~ .. .. .................. ... 1033 Marin<n Drive 646-15511 -==64=2=·1=n=l=An=yt=l=m=·==:I ROME IS CALLING I l"'!!!!"""~!"'!"'!'!"!'!!!!!!!•I w lk & L e "Sell my modem-•,'""' -1176. (Ope• Dally) ;;; Thi. "Lido Sand>" OwneJ'" CORONA a er e bedroom and family n>0m,"1-~c~A."P'"T"'"A"IN"""B.,.L"IG"H.- Absolutely immaculate. 4 BEDROOM leaving soon as we r;dl hi'r DEL MAR Realtora sayg he. "Too h\gh priced," ill Coln& to miu chasing rah-~ ~ ~ 3 bdnn. newly decor. home. 2790 Harbor Blvd, at Adams said W'e. "REDUCE It, and bits In the tlelda below this Newly painted through· l_\_/°"........_\,_/"........_~ Loe. only 1 blk. from the f1XER·UPPER 54>9491 Open 'tll 9:00 PM a.tll It!." said he. So we did cozy 3 br home on estate- out. ~fodel home condl·l lllliiiii 2 BATH ocean -also has comm. $Z,,OOO anG. we will! If you want a sized ocean view lol Tree tlon. 2 Full Baths • Bil =====:I pxil Ir; playground privileges. mow-in condition home call Uned CUl _ de • sac, near Newly painted 1 •• 1,_ • out $33 900 Llttle work for a beach area. now' At $30 400 It's a real h 1 --~--Kitchen. forced air '"'"" • ' • · • •C oo s .............. ._,,,. heating. Beautifully ONl Y S2&,• ;!'t :~~ d~!:;e~ ~nnsf=~ :~ Heall)' O>mpany bey! MMm; EWs 642-1!22. ~laJt!4caped tar,e lot··· au.tomaUc water"" AOftentr. backyard BBQ + Patio. ENTERTAIN P.llJLe:WBl'l'i 9ptn ttouse D•llv _1-J aJmos< too''°" <o be VA No Down 11100 nown to i" m. Full s1or. boat'" baekyanl, al-LAVISHLY C:illlABAft ~itil''~J.;'•""''"-· price ley access. A best buy. Hur. And live graciously fn thir; ••.&LTT c •· ~·· : · true, but O\\'ner has Th) trtts. covered patio & $ 00 'Y' bough' another home, t thl 23,0 1.2407 .... E .... """ ........ H_wy ...... CdM .... ,).~"· AL 645-o~o~ beau.tlful (Ive bedroom 1093 &ker, C.M. ~ Miia Del M•r 1105 the excellent care o s ~ ~ home. Formal dlnlna: room, ..,..,..,.., ... ..,..,.,,..,l;:.::::::-;o.;;':':~-:-:--;-"-:- 'a Y'' "SEU.• Low Mme mak" !hi. tntly eo. Newport OPEN HOUSE FOREST E. OLSON tamlly room, mulu •ulte, '"'UIET ELEGANCE LOVELY 4 BR. 2 BA, beau< down, euy payment!. joy:ible living. Located on SUNDAY 1 to 5 TORS walled courtyard entry make T landKaping, many custom May we show you :i~:e-:.~~~ht ~~; 0~ •t 407 Signal Rd. m.J~bor. c.M. this a borne or distinction. ~~ ~ :U1::birr:=ious,.. l5~~re,,.•. A. ~-i~·:»Y• through? M6-8640 Fairview Cute 2 bedrm, Jqe Jot. hard-""'""'"'"'""'"""°'"'"'""'" SSM.500. .... • "'.,., . _.... 0 • this good buy. Anxious oclwn-•. --J Doon, detached ...... LIDO WATERFRONT 6424225 675-3210 in this llJlllCiout bunp.Iow $32,!UI 557-7533 daYI or Steal a 4 bedroom • On~ $24,900. Move right in on this 51;4% Annual % ratt' er will even ~ your 05-646-8811 ~ .. -I ~~~~"'l!"l'"'!:~~ I with Roman bathl'. Two 91.!· 546-6027 eves Ii: wk-ends. ingcostssoyoudonothave age, popular Newport APTS.-320 LIDO NORD l!Toke Over G.I. ReHll eluded pattoe, ~place, even one peruiy move-in ex-(anytime} Heights area, just off QIU $150,000 Price with 7% l at AND a ,, .. __ 1,, .. -...t..n Newport •-•ch 1200 "-i!!!!!!!!!!~~""'~!!!!J Dri aubiett to VA Loan. 3 bed· ..,, ..... ,., .. ,. gcu,,_ -.. pense. ve. T.D. 6 Beaut. furn. units; room, 2 bath, COZY FIRE-walk to the. pool and out. Nl'chols Real ['state Lorge ·~d Livoblo & . '"'' ....... & "Ill. n>Om. Pl.ACE, Step-sav .. kllchen. -eolectalnme•t area, BEACH DUPLEX Enjoy one of "COST A _, 80 Ft. en r;wlmmlng beach. ONLY $48.500 l\.IE.5A;S FINE.ST" located llC:lllt1iial Will consider trade for boat Huge 2.0x30 fa.mil)' room. CALL 673-8550 546-9521 near WESTCLIFF SHOP. -GE.,R~'IJ or maximum $85,000 l&e. 4 Small down • only i 150.oo -pays all $26,500 fUll price. PING CENTER... Ample-========= BR. house, CALL 0 THE REAL' ·.~ESTATE~~ room for your Iarge fumi. Iii Bill Grundy, Rltr. & 1 tw-e. TJu-ee GIGANTIC BED. LEASE 833 nov .. DI'., N.B. ti42-4QJ Walker ee ROOMS, new golden harvest Near new, 3 king size bed· shag ca!l>flt, Double LOG rma:, 2* bath, bltru, 2 frplca, Realtors Joyous Living . SIZE fireplaee in the fam. near beach. Completely re· SUPER SHARP 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adam.I Relax I enjoy life aroand this 'ioan. Payments total ll::l:Z::Z::::Z::::Z::::Z::::Z::::Z::::Z::: just $129. per month II •1 J K mCKOLS ONE LOT FROM OCEAN I: with view. 2 BR&:. 3 BR with !am nn. PLUS l BR Ii: Ba guest unit. Xlnt condltlon, Top atta for Uvln1 or ftJll· ""'· 5 HUUSES incl taxes and insur- ance. 3 (count 'em) ,3 Bathrooms makes this just right tor your large family. Call us for de- tail> ...... 546-8640 CoDege Park 3 BR 2 Bath BEST !POOL) BUY Uy room. Fresh sparkling decorated. with NEW car. 4 Bedroom, 2 bath, dining, 545-0465 Open 'Ill 9 PM beautiful heated & filtered white decor inslde and out pets, dble garage, $300 mo. bltns, shag crpt, dble gar-RtsldtnCll & Income pool, Home la custom built, On 60x305 lot, Costa Mesa. SIDIHHinnl! It's a sleeper! Bright, cheerful kitchen Lachenmyer Realty age, Full prtee $22,950. Top 4 bedroom, 1% bath, detach-No vacancies. Good money Don't tell anyone else 'IU with garden view? $2900. in. Call 646-3928 or 5"4~3483 Costa Mesa location near 2 Bdrm., 2 bath plus bunk ed garage, on a quil!t cul· makers, $810 mo income. you've seen lt yourself. Bes! itial F1lA Investment. OUR schools & shops. Call Herl. lb de.sac street In Back Bay I ' '"'I: only .$69,900. riced h<> e in r-.tesa de! 2 DUPLEXES rm. Xlnt cond. Plus • r. P m BEST VALUE! $33,950. 1age ~altors S40-ll51, open apt. over dbl. garage. Near atta. WW show anytime -t. • "='-: 146-1414 ~~™!_ ~~~ A4 R8~, M. M. LaBorde, Rltr. 2 BR. per unit. aese to evenings. beach, Priced at $52,500. call us . 9'•~•MML "' . . g 646-0555 Eves: 646-4579 beach. You own the land! I"'""'!!!!"!~~~~!!!!.., I Call: 673-3663 673-8368 Eves 1 ,......_.. bedrooms + family room -===-..,=~~-$42,500 Each EASTSIDE ~ 141·5111 · REALTY • and beautiful big back yard SUPER SWAP George Williamson FAMILY HOME (-dntrnlllwfllt Nriir.Nt•perl P••t otrlct :;'i"ou~ .J"~A J~ 4 BR + DR + FR 673-4350 R:~~~ EvH. ld~:,:;; ~""•"= ~~=~11 WE:icm~EA".tEA PRAISAL OF !29,000! BOAT SUP 1-~. dahwuhe• -Ph" a • br ~· bl ,_ COATS Owne• will ..... all th!,. CUSTOM BAYCREST ,;~·,.,.,...,. •• and.... New Furnished Model ' •• ...:kr.~ . .::-.:~;::.i: &. for GOOD Jot or Land. Brand Newly listed 3 bedroom, pan. arate 'worbhop. $25,500 -e WANT TRADE 0 Nr ichools. You own land. new waterfront home with eUed den, dining •m home. Phone s.nn. 3 BR..., 1% bath home in Al-"The Marquis" ls Juxurloudy VACANT. . WALLACE 36' boat d ip. VACANT. Im-Self cleaning pool, tine In-badena (Pasa. area>. For different. 5 bedroom1, pan. ONLY $31,500 REALTOR$ mediate possession possible. door/outdoor Jiving, $69.500. r;lmilar In Costa Mesa. Tua. oramlc view of the Bay, M2-l6ll or 642-9998 Z·Z·Z·Z·Z·Z·Z .-546 4141-Vlllued at $84,500. Bring pm BARRm tin ttta. D. J. Feenstra. FaatUon Island and ~ BAYFRONT~lce 2 Br College Park 3 BR 2 (Open EveninttJ what you have &nd lets REALTY M2-S21)) Realtor, 1S7'9 No. Lake Ave., mountains. elegantly decor. apt. Zoned for busine•. Bath. Owner has found.11z::z:=:z::::z::::z::::z::::= I trade. HURRY! '-:::~~~:::!!:::!!:::!!:::!!~gCa11~~642-~'6~ll;,•~•;;-~;,:•:;;c=-~Al:;:lod;;;;:•;;na;:·,;(;;21l;i)~'l98-;;;•~1~00~. =I ated, pool. Open Dally 10 Tenns. $49,500. Re a 1 t 0 ~ o !""'" home and will II DIAL 645-0303 I: AM to 5 PM. Roy J. Want 6'&--0'132. """'i"'" sny ,..,,..,..,. Newport Heights FOREST E: OLSON Gon•r•I 10000 ... rot 1-r•I 1100 !.ru~ .. ~-~646-~15511~. ==---!~§~;;::===;;;; off"-11/F Pool lw Open Dolly--515 Tustin REALTORS R~POSSESSIONS, 0...r -., 1227 "fl.1ove-in" condltlon. be11tot s-""11-clean hornet 90me ANon•utc dressing room and % ---=-7.,;;";:"':;:"°c:'c,· "c;:.M.::· __ 1 Q fjlQ J'\' .. f) "C ~ .-........ ' ,,.,.,, P ,_,.. bath. Now ts the time to !~e;,:~n::1~~~ 675-3000 p\!;a \\Cit.I~~ ... c:, P.'l·S• ~~iyit~i~~~-~ted.;i~ Perfect '':'o1~";n~trc. steal a Pool home. We ocean breeie, also 3 BR, 1% The number to call wMther 71 p / t t B / . r 1 1 poola. ntA·VA conv. terms. Spanllb cxintemp Court I have seve.-al to •how to ball!, 1ge tarnily rm w/...., Buying, Selling °' Leuln& ne un e wiln fne ui 1-rn Cnucl1e '""" 111.000 10 $40,000. atrlwn, 5 BR 5 b. 5000 oq you. ~6-8640 brick tireplaCf!, crpts, drps, WESTCLIFF 0 '• 199 5.ttm of the Olllina a: Watt. Inc. n,' bl ceflini .... pr, hdwd noors, r;haJre roof, dble OPEN DAILY 1_5 · four ·~mbi.d word• i,.. f. _.::"'-'ltAdanll~~iiiAtveV,'f962E'1.SOf23_1~11~.,;::·"";:;:;,· ~513c;· ;,:"'~""=== 2629 HARBOR BOULEVARD 546-8640 Opon Evonl"ll• till ,,. garage. It's 11. beauty! 1215 Nottingham Rd. lb# to f°"" fovr llmple words. • HARBOR VIEW Lachenmyer Rlty IO% Down. Luge 5%% I COY H A.R I 4BR.,>\lba.Walnutpaneled1;U:;n:;l•;;;•:;;rll;;IY;;;·;;;p;;;•:;;"';;;;;;;;l;;;2;,37 Call &a&.3928 Eves: 642-0185 Loan. Beaut. lndscpd. A 1 1 1 I' 1 1 fam. rm;; din, rm., frplc, jil maintained. $48,500. _ _ _ _ _ Anxious out of town OWDeT! Haven for Chlldreft. POOL HOME-f6!S,O'JO, CALL' 614-166>. MU .. at -patho ,lhnl $z7 500 'I D E H E G 11·· ---·-~ park: baa ...... ' • • C""""!·~AlmNj]~ -~ ~ IOU. We have both 11 spe.rkle1 from the new roof I f f & f ~=::=;..~..;.=='"'~\ hou-. A: townhouet from and paint lob to the pool, _ _ • _ I _ l,CO> ~ 2.800 111. ft.; priced Can'< aJtonl a pool -Tl'y "°' ,:. Cout Hwy., CdM I · $156 t.fo. """' "8.000 to 14',Wl 1•~ on '"' '""· • ·3 Bed-rl II A D A R 1 · I: Assume SV• APR. loon . = ::;~i:~.So!'. ~,_s::_ _ 11 1 1 1-_ • "T~ ~~~i;;·~ "::;::::.::.~:;.::: • red hi[I dltlon -Phone 646-nn. WOE REALTY .r-------~ tho Cuff Hon " -.· ...... aystem, l'U.0 VudH 1!1111-•··· PA 'I y A 6 E A s I =--. ™' 5% REALTY O THF: REAL ~ f:ST.l\TERS Booch Spoclol • $29,500 3 BR. + lg, lam. rm., 11)(. bf.. New cptg., all A·l cond. Stein lo ocean! CAYWOOD REAL TY 6306 W. Coast Jtwy., NB Flxor Uppor • 0 Comploto tho -.:·~ APR loan! ..>ill! • Ui.lv. Parl< C...tu, ""1ne 5 l!edroo°"' "'8S oq, n .• 2 I 1 • 1 • 1 by fittlni 1n 1ho ml:'?-•· Torboll ·2959 Hor"°' Coll Anytime l33-0l20 •IOl'l' cotonlal, ownt't 1i uk. : you cWwlop '°"' .., Nit. htilow. * &.ycrelf J , . 8 K-A l'f D S 0 M E TOWN·' ~':i ~00~-~~n~-~~~ i ''~Es~UWY~~s lfTTEltS IN r r I' r r· I * Newport Ilea ch HOUSE: • BR.12"' BA. y..,. otl"' may .. the ..... • *--port H9hlt $)>,900 ' I i::all ut now! I 1~SCIAMll.f AIOV! UTTllS I I I I I j· -It Specl•ltlr!1 * 1133-1120 or l33..o820 * r:c:11 cho Lo Cuesta f ':.it VI _33 Sotd CUILDERS CLOSE OUT!! ** ...._ of credit ,. lectlon1, we haw 9 ho_. ovolloblo tho! hod bNn soloctod ..,. oorly b~rs. c r:c mes On Choice Lots th•! ,,.ry '" .... '""" 3to7bod-,I& 4bolhs,2&1ar '°"'" md comploto w II h 111 bvllt • IM, basic c•rp1tl"1, ehab roof & concrete drlvew•ys -from $33,940 A11d Ody 11/J ~ Froill Huntington State lleadt ••• Wt wlll teke .......,.. tlon1 In our MXf unit within 4 lo 6 wooks ind • price lncrene 11 goln9 lo bo - ovoldoblo --don't procra1tln•t•ll SAVI MONEY AND IUY NOWlllll Rancho la Cuesta Ayres H001es Since 1905 Mais at Br~al!Hrst ' ·Atlanta HUllTlllCTOll BEACH Open lf lll tD 1 P.fl f':m.itNIA •~..;, Alli •• • 541-1290. For an ad to HU aJ'OllDd th. clock, dial 6U-$6'7I. TO GR ANSW(t -• • • • • 4 a 5 hdroom HortMt WatOt 1rofll Ii:. piddles 1eD I SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7000 JEAN SMITH, RLTR. iu.. Hot c... •ttb 400 E'. lTth, C.M. .&16-3255 CUltfStd Ade! f -- ' DAILY l'fiOT It.....,, Ocloher 2~. 1970 , ~~~!!~~~~~~~~E~~~~~~=-1·1tlf'NTAL ·--" .. -··--·111NT'A(S'"····-· .. Riiffi['s"'"-........ -RiNTALS RENTALS' ___ -RIHTAts-.. ·--·--.~ 1115 Houses Furnished Housos Unlurnl"*' Housos Unlurnl"*' Apts. fumlshosl Apts. Fum(shosl • Apts. Unlllrnhltod lHI -lftllon Booch 1400 L .. uno Booch Bo-l1lond 235.1 COii• -· 3100 HuntlntlOft llHdt -HunHngten Bo .... -HUii! ........ Booclt -Costa MeH 5100 . "llEALL y UVE" m Ho-.:Ancl lac-JOJO so. -· • Br. SI! LE A s E /OPTION 5%" HUNTINGTON ~· rn a vWqe at Un.tvcrsltY $850 , AL INVEST CLASSICNORMANDYardt. b&.walertrmtbomt8¢2br. Aaswnable. Ran~ style "*'1rnt.lBR.~~b:;i: fJ Q .Jl •r*Puer:o ~: .. ts. Park.Sp&ekNl3bfdroom.2 . ltecture ts ltatured ta thli lbLOJ'IP&pt.Doclc". charmer with 3 lat1• "deck" dock. 1-or i.: oLa ui·nia e mo'a ~ ..... batll l&mil1 rooo1 -· V• nat 1118111! 2 BR. den, 2 BA _., Bill Grundy RI... 6'2-4620 -1am11y rm • ...,.lz. -3'00. IU·UU '' r ~ * * * * o1 tel\nb courtt, 1wtmmtrw home filth attached .1N4io. OfAR.MING l+ bt, i;; be., ed livlrc rm, modem bltns l*W41 ' Cuual estate living. Enter La Quinta Her· 1-2 Bedroom Apts. pools and rteft•tional faeiJ. c l..arse 1*lrms, 2 run baths, Sunny Patiol, Declr. and Utile Island honle. comg & 2 spark]illg battui. Prictd LOVELY l'fttb 3 BR. 2..... mosa's lwh green atmnimbere & stroll tree· -S130 up lncl. utilities IUt• Included, There's much l"OYlftd patio, boat A trir Gudens of.fer privacy from furn. XJnt Joe:.. 613-2191 for Immediate Ale at • .... Un -r Also tum. Pool & Recreation more to aee lor J;ll,500, Call gate, 1ult price $23,750, va-lhe FURNISHED FOUR. · Ul,500-submit on lease op. ::1 d:, urA':. "r!,.ewpo~ ed W~1.w~1 ~1.f.'~f 1;ftLUDED area. Quiet EnY1ronment now for an Inspection, cant 4 rtady. HUIT)' on thil PI.EX in rear, oonl\ltln1 of S.•I Beich 2450 tlon te:rms. c.II ~ mo. waie:r pd. Own.,. I BR. Uni. •l50 _ furn. SllO Off street po.rklng, No pet& -$46-2313------2 apacious.one.BR ap!Ji wlth. -~ South Co&st Rea!Jon._ · ,. 1959-1961 Maple Ave. -0 THE REAL I"-!:::STATERS ' ' . Corona del Mar 1250 • CATHEDRAL CEILINGS OCEANFRONT SJ)8.Caolll 2 3 BR 2 BA crpts drpa. . :Z-IR.:"tfiif.$17 -Pum;-$2l0,---1-~~~-;~0tcta-;;;;;;;~~~--- and 2 axntoctable studio BR. 2 BA. 2 car garage. frplc " fa.mUy'rm $25o Lit. 3 Bedroom Continental 3 Spac. fir. plans, decor. furnishings: live ~ aptt, Loca!!Qn t•~ BLOCKS. S2!il. -·· be., •ho """ u. i BR ., • .,-.;.me;-'m ..Townhm>14'-$1BO. FIJLLER within romantic 1eltlng wj lun-qr privacy. • MARTINIQUE • REAL F.STATE HUNTINGTON BEAOl OFC. 194-5311 Open 7 days .. 8;30 to 8;30 FROM BEACJ-1 and WALK-year 'round. 1213) 592--1-489, adults only 3 BR 2 BA Apta' REALTY 54&-08:14. Terraced pool, pri. &unkeJt gia BBQ's w/ Park-Like Surrounding• ING dtstantt to DOWN· eve1 213/ 59l-S376. Sl60 · ' · D 1 .seculd ed seating compl wJRamada & Foun- TOWN LAGUNA uaures w.1l1-McC1rdl1, Rltr1. up IXH Unturn. 3975 tain. ~~L~~~sl·2 ! 3 ~~d Ai:~~ 100% occupancy. Now o~r. Laguna Beach 2705 lBlO Newport Blvd., Of DUPLEX 2 ._..__ Cl * Color co-ord. •lt w'/ tndir1ct li9hting. Nr shop'g e Adul!Ji only BARGAINll VA 6%"/o Tuke a look at thll nice 2 Asaume $23,000 loan payable bdnn, home on R-2 lot. $212 pu mo including taxes, Frplc •• carp, le: drapes: nice 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2 yrs ed at $88.000. Olm.latent L /S I F I had 548-7729 .__ qul•t.' lde::"""for"'"ma~~ * Deluxe rang• Ir ovens * Plv1h sheg crptg. lm Santa Ana Ave, Of UOSI OVH' Sll,000. Call easel a e urn s & .... • ... ., * a I ~ c rt 113 • ..,.,,., broker at 499-1219 for appt. Love y Beach Condo couple without cbildrt:n or onus ' orage SP:•C• ov. cerpo t.fgr, Apt SEE TODAY Avail Now for lease thru Mesi Del Mar 3105 petll Refertnces exclwl&td * Sculptur.d m•rble pu !men A tile beths * STUDIO APT. * June or Jonger. 2 BR, 2 BA, $150,month lat & last month * Elegant recr••tion room. e 2 BEDROOM upper with livt"i, din~ $325 Per Month pl"' _ .. ., '""'" tn ... FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY • 2 BATH patio. Rm. to build addltio~ oew, 73 x 100 lot, Jarae Ii v-al unit. You can watch your Jng room wilh fireplace. 16x investment crow 00 t h i 1 25 Pado, oU big fan1ily room property, It you have been looking for a 2 BR 2 BA hOme wilh VIEW, PRNACY, TREES, Jaca!ed within WALKING distance to BEACH, t h l s home Is for you. Other fea- tures i n c I u d e dramatic OPEN BEAM CEfl.INGS, plush karuran c.arpeting and EXTENS IVE USE OF kitchen areas maln floor ov. vance. Drive by 753 Scott Blk from Huntington ~nter, San Diego e ADULTS ONLY erlooking beautiful po o I. Yff, It 's sharp, sharp, 3 bed. Place, C.M. Call~ Jor ,. Frwy., Goldenwest Colle~e. e HEATED POOL Larae 2 car port plus stor-room, 2 bath near sctiools & appointment to see. San Diego ~. to Beach Blvd., So. on 1024 Miulon Apt D, CM I shopping, .... "J ~~11 "iu'u• comA!pl '"'., Ja~nct, "', fa· Ed Riddle Reeltor RENTAL~ Beach 3 bl.ks. to Holli W. on Holt to . . . 54().9608 540-1....., MORGAN REAL TY with pass thnt in kitchen. 6734641 675-6459 Bltn range & oven, dish· washtr. upgraded s h a g c es. auhuly & .a-... FUrnlthecf UQuinta Hermo1a 714: 847.§441 * LRG2BRAPT* completely furnished, linens 646-8111 "f'•• ... ,_ I china, etc. if desired. on1Y ""'---r•I -''=====~===~=======~= i"tw crpts-. drps, ...,.posa • prv COTTAGE SMALL tTPt:s, w/vtdrps, completely 321 NARCISSUS~ block v.•alled, landscaped, -1~ patio, adulll, m pets. See to lOO steps to private beach. Mesa Verde 3110 •----------!Cost• ••-•• 4100 Lido Ide 4351 appreciate . .Avail Nov L Fo 'ced sale, $.16,000 Sunday sprinklers, In.tit trees, over only! Neat 2 bdrm. Provin.. slud dble garage. GLASS, offering an unend· Teoob court & 2nd pool al---------1' RENT fURNIJURE ~ $15'. »ti Chui< St. &O on properly ·with gorg-LSE option, ~5 BR. 3 be., 3 DELUXE Beach Apts, Furn. 5(8-Ql30 or 646-1841. ~s Jandscapif1i' thru.out. frplc, 3-car gar, l&e Jot, e BEAUT. Bach Ii: 1 Br. StoVe, refrig, gar. •NOW RENTING e .t.1f1..? access to super mkt, fncd. $425 n10. New Mesa * DIRECT TO TENANT apt. $29.50 ,vkly I: up. ~250/mo. ~ Nord. &honping, etc, 1325 monht, Vf'rde home, lse thru June, 2 .. Hr. Delivery l<'um .• inc utlJ. ~ 642-409f. or 535-6696. ~fesa Verd2 • 3Att8RLb!NtnEW ~j clal home, Open Sun. for 1, ing view of the blUe Pacllie. your inspection from 12 to Re.alisUcally pr I c e d at 4 P •1 ~t JI $34,500, Call broker at . ·" · .. rs. opper 962-4471 ( -1146-1101 499-1219 for appt. wintor baa'-. Will consider 557 ""~" JOO"' -.__._ ___ n..t1 plexes-, & , S. e l:; ..,...,., 7' •u.n.;-uyuon FURN S.chelor & 1 Br. · hr I d le~ . purchase or outright r--pl ,. 1 a• A Balbo. l1l1nd 4355 gar, pauos, "''& ryer '-'VIII e n ·Pt u Excopto"onolly nt'col hOoku AI •-2 • 3 BR University Realty 673-6510 ..,... ---.==-=,,..--- JOOl E. """''Hwy., CdM SANTA CLAUS OCEAN * PANORAMIC VIEW IS ALIVE VIEW Luxury Ocean Blvd, Duplex. Overlooking Jetty Ii. Harbor. By 0....-ner: 673-8866 * 58.le. Adults prtferred, P.efs. Newport Beach 3200 Low as $2'2/mo. p. so ug • 499-2152 AM or 837-0791 al'IY· 30-D Min" 2110 Newport Blvd, CM On the Bay with Dock in 4-plexes. 546-1034 tlm•. CLIFrHAVEN. 3 Bd"!'s· * Wl~E V~ NOW RENTING! 2 Br furn, 5 Room APT.* 3 BR, 2 Bath. $135-$155 Lido Isle 1351 SALESMAN WANTED \\1e have an opening lor a creative & knowledgeable person who would like the freedom of & smaller oUiee & the advanta1es of a prime location, deallni in finer proroerties. and working for you on this 5 bedroom, 2 bath channer wilh SEPARATE 7.() x 30 Bonus Room and seller wilJ. lng to pay your costs. Tow- 3 Bedrcioms. 2 baths, Large <'nclO&ed entry court, Wood paneling thruolt; beamed ceilings, used brick tlre. place, Only $33,950, REN.~T~A~L~S~----1 ~~· .. $325 Includlllg CUSTOM FURNITURE good loc. Rec. room, heated $325 ~arly. 671-7228 2 Br. unturn. Drps, crpts, •--oor l.~~t:.;~~~·~·~-';.!'.··~·~~-1 ~:;:::~~~~~~ I '1ov•, ,.~ •. ALSO 1 Br. H U~-I·'-• J BORMS.. ·~w •---, RENTAL poo · 0 c .,..,n. goog.. "' OUst_S nru.rn .,,191111 '"'" ,,.,.,.., Huntington Beach 4400 avail Nov 3rd. Ask about Irvine T e rr a c e . $550 517 W. lltth St., CM, 548-3481 1 Br. $125-pool, spac. Adults, ' our di.seount plan. 741~w. General ering tree-shaded street in ~~ Brick Fireplace executi,•e neighborhood. No ..,./T"O/a. #'# down GI or low FHA tenns I~ availablo. Movo lo by Christ· REAL ESTATE FOR Cl!RIS!'MAS STOCK. mas. $30,t'OO FULL PRICE. ll!IO GJenneyre St. lNGS! Sharp 3 Br, 2 Ba, Walker & Lee ,'=="'==·"'=73====Sl=~=1=6 I stove, refiig, crpts. drp•, t. ga1 . Pets & child1-en ok. 5 J $225/mo. Realtors •n uan 1725 C & S Speedy Including gard<'ner ideal for Bachelor, 1993 * 1 BR. $135/mo. lSth St. &12-1158. Joo'From $35 Wk. Church. 54g..9633· . Fumi1hed.overlooking beaut. ~ Salisbury , ·r ·Real!~ 315 l\1ARJNE AVE. 673-6900 BALBOA ISLAND BEACON BAY Luxury Single Apts, Complete BACHELOR apt, all. util. garden patio & hid pool. e THE SEVILLE e nWd 1ervice bouaiewares Old~r adults. No children, Adult.. 1035 12th St. (acrou Lrg 2 BR, llf.i Ba w/ gar. lir.e.ru:, all utU', •--ted ......._, no pell. $115/mo. 646-8464 from Lake Park), 536-4900 $155 (aduljsl cpts. drps, ,.,... ........, fncd yd w?patll. Wtr pd- bllll&nb:, restaurant. cock. 2 BR, l Ba furn, up.stain, NEW l Br. at Bch! QUIET gardnr. 2619-L Santa. Ana tails. bltn ra~. crpts. No pebl. $150, bal of mo FREE. Look Ave. 636-4120 VILLAGE INN $145/~. 673-TI78. & you'll renl!! Pvt ".~.Qucil°"ot"Ad=u::;l't'L'-lv::;i-=-1 BAY FRONT l.a"1fll. Beach 49f.9t36*''==*======::: I deck/patios, ~A 14th. ·-. . BALBOA INN 673--1784, ~1319. 2 BR. Shag cpts, bltns, beaut. New, Carp, &. drapes; view Balboa 675-8740 Newport Beach 4200 'OCEA==N~FR=NT=-v~;-,w-=Su-oo~k-. 1ndscpd. $170 mo incl all of the entire bay. 2 Car gar.1..,..,~!"!"~~".!!-!i.;.,;;.1·;:N,;-W,;;T,;-LI;;;-util. Adults only, no pets. 3 BR., 2 ba. Exqulsite inter.I' A New Way To Live N~"''tr spec. dbc 2 Br. 241 Avocado St. &IS-0979 All t'I ., $500 P APARTMENT • N I •-h El•gaot turo., btW, patio, 1682 Edinger Capistrano RENTALS * 548-1168 bowaAb toweon JR. I • ..:":"'::'"~-~or~540-51~~ .. :::.. ... 1 ;:;;-;t:;;j;--;~;;;;;tt;;;;"A I !•~B~R~i<tm;~·r~.::=:-s~ Aeclc.ort I• GI R sate no qualltylnr A me util • • • • • • 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 STOP EYERYTHINGI,! beau~iful 'home nr marina. 2 BR vacant on!;: •.•••••• $90 Lawson C\Jatom home on large dbl. lot, Din. :m., conv. den w I , wet bar, maid's nn. & ba. 'Huge patio. Unusually good financing,Aok.$89,000, .boWORl> lowsol'l Jri. aeoltoa 16 Via Lido 675-4562 REDUCED Jmmac, 5 BR., family nn. 4-5 , 1.. kit street to street. By ·app'I, only. 193,750 •LIDO REAL TY INC. 'U77 Vi• Lido 673-7300 Jiontlnglot1 lleoch 1'00 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, bltns-, lge 2 BR fn~d for kids • •·. $120 u 1 • pai · er in ewpor uwec lndry, Nr. shops & pier. $195. HARBOR GREENS ,_,_ Can mak S BR 3 BR 4 kids OK •••••••• $150 (139 per mo pays all ups .... -. rm. e 4 BR rumpus rm kid.I OK $195 ., homo. Shag cptg. 1•• 1'1r.~ 2 BR dtx ho"' '""':h .. $170 yd , boat space $29511. down. 4 BR dlx horse ranch .. S225 mono1. RENTAL OAKWOOD GARDEN Adults. Infant OK. 536-2131. 0 APARTMENTS GARDEN • STUDJO APTS t , 675·6050 $70.00 & UP On :6th Street btv ... n SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Bath. Bach. l. 2, 3 BR's. from $lltl . IW •l''PPB'J CL,a . ALL SJZ&S -ALL AREAS Irvine and Dover Or. POOL. 1 cblld ok. $185. 2320 2100 Peterson Wq, C1L Just assume the low 51.4 '1<> 492-8418 STAR.LET 776-7330 ~· annum VA Joan. Extra FURN. OR UNroR.N. (7l4) 642-8170 Florida. '* ~107 546-0370 PARK NE\VPORT~are free ASK FOR BONNIE e LARGE .rtudlo, block to BRAND NE\V dlx 2 BR w;d• ""'"" 101, boat .... 1_c .. _d_o_m_1._1._m ___ "_5o "Nifty & Thrifty" & play area, beaut cri>ts. 3 large bedrms, family rm, all bltn kitchen, plus a POOL, tuu price $26.400. No down vets, low down F11A. livg overlkg the water. 7 132-7800 BA YCLIFF ~OTEL ocean, FM, Inquire 219 15th triplex apts. Priv patioe:. pools. 7 tennis cts Si50,00J Just for Single Adults * LO\V WEEKLY RATES * St., HB. shag crpts. gar. $1 75. 353 Grffn is Beeutlful NEAT 2 BR. Stove, refrig, Spa. From Sl75 to st'.iO. SOUTH BAY CLUB Kitchen, 'IV's, ma.id llt'rvice. c1-e"'R"'.-.S1"5tl".-..,,poo=1;,-,,wat=k-:::to ~~) ~~ Cnr Tustin I: Save Green Dollan In Green carpe:~. drapes :: garage. Bach. l or 2 Br. Al.to 2 sty APARTMENTS Heated Pool. ocean, fresh paint. Adults. ;":;,;;::,.:i<;;-=;;=-<;:::-;"=I Valley hurry to gee this near Only Sl35/mo. Townhouses. Elec. kt. pri. Newport Beech 646-3265 m 11th St., HB LRG 1 BR. Avail Nov 8, Lrg ne\v :slngle story, 3 bedr, 2 C & S Snaedy pat. or bal Subtrn prkg, pol 880 Irvine Ave. 2 BR furn, downto\vn HB, no 2 BR. Avail Nov 18. Carport ba with all the eoodies incl r-· maid ser cpts,.drp&. J u.st N. (Irvine and 161h) BACHELOR, furn + util, & pool. From $1.35. Ask our an assumable gov'! loan, RENTALS * 548-1168 of f ashion lsl at Jamboree (714) 645-0550 $137.50. 1525 Placentia, ask <:hlldre~ ~~ * discount plan. 1S46 Placen- low, low dn pyment. (Separ. * CHEAP * & San Joaquin Htlls Rd, 644-.about 9ur dilCOUllt. 54&-2S81 tia, See Mgr apt H. ate family &. adult areas 1900 for leasing info. HOLIDAY PLAZA 2 Br. Completely redec. New BACHELOR Apt. 1.Jtil pd. REAL ESl'ATE $110. llARD TO BELIEVE? BEAUTIFUL hOm", ~'ttping DELUXE S~cious 1 BR shag crpfs, 50' to bch. Encl NEAR OCEAN! LRG l Br. Garden Apt. HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. t~:~tn Realty. Inc. ~OBN~T· L~.,S~slLOde N6~. ation. view of bay. 3 Bdr., 3 bath, furn apt $135. 2 BR + den patio. No student S..?()(l mo. UNDBORG CO. 536-2579 Patio. Newly dee, Central 894.5311 962~988 anytime 1· hug<' laniily rm. 2 pallos aJ. $Ui0. Heated pool. Ample 'til June 15. 6Ta-3345. ~!~ ~:56r. Bltns. Adults. $140. Open 1 dllys. 8:30 to 8:30 * BLUE BEACON * 'llh . t u' d. 1 parking. No children • no''====~~=-...,-1 Lagun• Be1ch 4705 c~,;.';;-;:--;-;;:'°"::;:c-:;=I * 645-(1111 * so"' view, u inngnn., f 1965 Po 0.f F1JRNISHED 2 BR apt. ,-Aru.rtments for built·ins. BRK $425 mo. pe s. mona, . $145/mo. 933,,,_ W. Balboa. * BEACH APT. * LRG 2 & 3 Br. Crpts, drpg, BETTER THAN NEWI ·-RENT • A • HOME >t•mo y Adu! •ncl paHo. ltid• wd'°"". I (H&F) Sale 1910 ~·~~'ROm:=;w;;;;;=~l~C:::o::_•l~•~Mo=~,.~::-::::-:~4::100:i~·~u~t~Y·~....,.-";·="°,,..,;P<"l4"'.1 2 Bdrms., fireplace, exc. 1998 Apt 1 Maple Ave. S~llng Poo $95. & UP OCEANFRONT y,•/vlew, 3 838--0038 ocean view, a few steps to 642-Q.W \ BEACH PROPERTY 4 rm+ F•mily Rm WATERFRONT·'l'hrtt 1 br ALl. SIZES_ ALL AREAS BR, 2 story, $285 n 10. 2002 REMARKABLY . BEACH House duplex, 2 BR, the sand at Victoria Beach. "'"'"""'==-.;::".::-=I . Custom features! Best area! uni•· w1•--•. 0",000. Prin-"'"6300 2 A 4 h I s~ MO LEASE NEW 2 BDRM. Beam cell-"~ ~ ....., FURN. OR UNFURN, \V . Oceanlront. ....,,.. , UNBELIEVABLY B . ses rom ocean. ""N • -neling All 1J BR-ONLY $18,500 UHooA'F'FpnD·cedAL!!RI EALTY dples only. Owner 67l-2G62 ASK FOR JODI 673-7211 EXTRAORDINARILY St5.i mo. UtU pd, Adults. 'ti! r<.flSSION RLTY. Ph. 494-0731 ~~:~~ t'"ss. Aifutts. r: iii all 6 pm. 832·7800 Newport Sl]Ores-3 br, 2 ha, , BEAUTIF1JL June. 962-8983. 985 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna pet!, Call oow 646-0073. · -Ml-4405 RENTALS LANDLORDS!! pool/ clu ..... --·p•v, ""40/mo. Val D !sere Garden Apts 2 Bedroom furnished ?i1obile DELUXE bachelor apt, e 387 \V. Bav Street e ~·Wow! Hard to believe.-Atod-_XL_NT_vi_•_w-,"-,-0,-,----m-g-olt H F I h-..1 .-e '' .,.. I Id Util -;;:;;;--;::C::--i;'i-::c;-;;-;-:=I " '"' ouses urns..,. l.~e 213/681-1278 Adults, m pets Home. $1JO/mo. Elderly cean, carport, ry. . FoR lca.5(', l\font ic~llo ·ern 3 Bedroom '2 ruir baths, coune, very lge modilled 2 1----------~!IE BLUFFS • 4 BR 2 Putting green, waterfall. & ad_ulls. Bayside Village. 213: furn. 497-1056 or 494--5810 Twnhse, 2 BR. 2 ha, Adulbl, , fa.nilly si:r.c d!nlng, latest BR. 3 ba, 1004 tam rm General 2000 * . · tilream, Dowers everywhert, 245-4763. 143 MorTistown Ln, 56-0772, .push button built-ins. Large w/beam ceillna:. lge Uv rm, RENT • A • HO"E Vacancy Problems Ended BA. Pool. $325/mo. call 45' pool, rec. room, billiards, FURNISH.ED Bachelor Apt Dana Point 4740 540-480l 'comer lot v.i th boat gate, formal din'g rm, bltn bbq in M FREE supply of qualified 644-4869, aft 5 & wknds BBQ'1, Sauna, turn.-unturn, % blk to BEACH! .Enormous covered patio. Id., bltn range & oven, $95.00 & UP tenants at no cost lo you. 3 BR, 3 ba Lownh!e, trplc, Singles, 1 BR, l BR + den, ** 675-l066 '** SINGLE, TV, heated pool, 2 l BR. unf. $150/mo. Pool. .Low, low down. Vacant, Fast detach gar, open house .• by ALL SIZES • ALL AREAS Ask for LEE or OLA pool. child y,"eJcome. $275. 2 BR. F'rom $135. See It! OCEANFRONT 3 BR. Ye~.._ blk, from heh. $35. wk. -J].35. Elec & wtr pd. AdlU, m ·possession. \Von't la11t. Hur. own<'r, 1·5 pm Sundays. FURN. OR UNFURN. S32.6600 Agt. &16-0732 2(XXJ Parsons Rd., 64 2-8670. 1 lease ..... mo, Dana Marina Inn, 34lll pets. l\!E~ MANOR. !U1 ;ry & Call (714) 962-5585. 846-6754 all G pm ASK FOR JODI 3 BR. 2 Ba.. cpU, cb1>s., Between liarbor & Newport y it 67l-4724 * Cout Hwy., Dana Pt. \VilAOn Ave, CM. 548-7400 FOREST [. OLSON 2 On An R-2 Lot 832-7800 *NEAR OCEAN* lrpl., potlo. J Cu """''· • 2 Blk N. 19th. AT "'"" 1100 & Sl4-0 tor RENTALSnlu 2d~~ l~:..~~ 't;;;"· :"~i Lovely home in IJ'Ont. renlal * SINGLES OKAY $175 ~ SHARP 2. Bedl~~ RF.AL TOR 548-6966. * SUNNY * business people; also $250 Apts. U mlsfled Avail now. $160 mo., Inc. Realtors unit in rear. Best H.B. Joca. 1 hed Bed home, stove, refrig, en1.o:u * ACRES * for lamily, yrty, 675--097'1. General 5000 5'15-4879 ~ 19~~n~':~u~a::e. ;:~idai:!n:s·m:~r Su=: i:~N:~ 1::n~!d Y~ 10; yard for kids & pets. DON'T Newport Heights 3110 2 BR. 1 ba. Comp! turn. Has I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; LRG 2 Br. Newly dee. lio0iiii0ii0iiOiiOii0ii0ii09 1 all terms. tot & 0 pet, CALL NO,V? *DE'tLY~E BEACON * 3 BR, l ha, F .A. heat, frplc, * Motel·Apts. * everything. linerni dishes. VENDOME Adoll~. only, no pets. WHY RENT?. KRAFT REAL TY * BLUE BEACON * * 64S-Olll * harrt\\'ood noors, dbl pr, Studio & 1 Bedrooms Oceanfrnt. $175. 61a-l562. $150/mo. Nr Harbor & 842-1418 96~24 * 64S-0111 * --encl pat, $195. See at 528 LOW RATES CCZY 3 BR oceanfront. IW.fACULATE API'S! Adams. call Eves & wknd&, BY Owner-i br, lam rm. =="'===='"'===I FAMILY SPECIAL Redlands or call 67l-i99J alt Oil)', Week or Month winter. $225. Adults only. ADULT and 541)..3997. . $16,950 full price den. 1..ge fenced )'llJ't\. Rent•l1 to Share 2005 SPACIOUS 4 Br. 2 Ba, bltns 2 pni Sat. • Color TV Afr Cond. * 673-8088 • Cl FA~~Y Sectlon k 3 BR, 2 BA, walk in ck>&ets, garage. $500 down, 536-0438 -'-'-------·I stove, crpts, d11>&, relrig, • Pool & Phone Serv incl * ON TitE BEACH! J Br. OSI to .,,oppinv. Par v.·/w crpls, drps. Adull1. aft 6 FEMALE Roommate, no v.·ash<'r & clryrr. NEAR University Park 3137 • ?tfald Service avail drps, crpts. frplc. Yearly or _., Spacious 3 BR'a, :Z ha $165/mo. Ref's. 546--0154, 2 Extra large bedl"ITIS, V<'f'Y neat, clean, Yi'/W crpts, lge lot, mod em ag 1omorTOw klt.chen, p er f e ct starter ·home. can today. REAL ESTATE BVNTINGTON BEAD-I OFC, • 894-5311 ,Open i days. 8:30 to 8:30 'Top Selling • OFFICE! Month ot September 1st, 2nd, ·w plaee winners Hunting. ton Beach/Fountain Valley Bolkrd ot Realtors. Oi<'nls waHtng • li&t nov.·! i47-8507 64Uf27 431-3769 m;4§0!ra •By owner, 4 br, 2~ ba., tgc 1.corTll!r lot, &11-1047, 11321 ,::;umcy t.n. children, no pets, 5hare lrg SHOPPING. S22S/nio. l Signal So, of O.C. \\'inter. !'.162-2341. -+ Swim pool, put/green Atl 6-6922 or 548-!M57. * ~fUST SELL ntlS WEEK .~~~~ •Laltgu5nP•M.Be a c h . C & S Sn11edy FOR R'nlals ln University Fafrgrou~ ,,_, $ 50 I BR * FrpJ. Indlv/lodry fac'la * DELUXE 1 A: 2 BR. 4 BR/3 Ba. Owner Anxious! ""'"......., r-· p k & Tu ti •-·k Call 2376 Ne•.-BJvd. i.· uy 1 · apt, 1145 An h • A Agt: 645-1070, 962-7524 * RENTALS * 54fr1168 ar r e """-· : ~....,.. Uti lities paid a 11m ve. Garden Apts. Bll-ins, priv. FEMALE ROOM?itATE, S48-9T:i5 * 3IH 3Jrd St * CC'STA :.~ &12-2824 patio, heated pool, frp\c. 170 mo. * BEACH $30 WEEK & UP BALBOA BAY ' CLUB AduH• 11<5 mo. 5'G-516J So. := .. N.B. COTIAGE 1 BR. or Studios, furn w/klt. Furto bach 1 S48-S2GS APARTMENT NR new 2 Br, l~~ ba, BUILT. IN EVERYTIJTNG, . u· . cozy Daily, \Vkly, l'-lonthly, Util. e or. RENTAL cpt/drps, stv/dwhr, gar. nnge, oven, dishwasher. NON Dtink1!r, non smoker -$110-lncluding ut ities. Linens i: ph, urv incl, No SAIL-INN itOTEL Avl 10/26. 7fi6 W. Wilson. vacuum system, y,•ater v.'Oman to thare home & l Bedroom. STEPS TO chlldren or pets Hid Pool Adj Bay &-Beach. Deluxe $70.00 & UP 642_79.;s. softener, 5 tone fireplace, pool with same. ~2286. BEAOi. Small tot & pct v.·el-1 l5t \Ve~tcm. Bank BJdr. 2080 Ne'A-port Bivd, at 2~t rms tr $37.50 y,•k. 6'ia-1841 ALL SIZES • ALL AREAS 1,.:=~~~~=-- sprlnklers, outside llghls &-come, HURRY ! Un1vers1ty Park • * 64:Z·2SU * NEWLY furn, J BR, 2 ba, i,9 FURN. OR UNFURN. MESA Vl'rde 2 BR, comp. <:ovcred patio. JIUGE 3 bed. Newport Beach 2200 * BLUE BEACON * Da y 833-0101 Nights B/Americard e r.-t/ChM"ge blk lron1 \\'8.ter. Ask for ASK FOR BONNIE l<'!e!y redecorated Incl. new * 645 0111 * 132 7100 sha_g carpel. $150. Adults, no rrr. 2 bath + l'Umponoom. 2 BR/2 BAo Cmptt Ium/Mod/ =="'='=C:-, ~~~~-. * HARD TO FIND Arut•, Jooo• RWty 67:1-6210 • "'"· >l>-4063. Gt can buy no down Ir st'll-Hse w/gar Thru 6115 '225/ POPCORN & Roasted Irvine Terrace 3145 ., BR, all ocean view &: er pa.ya all closing «>ot<, mo.' Call 673· .-·•. · Marshmallows BACHELOR API' in great lo-.. . sm 2 BR. 1613 Santa Ana Ave. -I U iii. . "ncl ded pe.tio. Slti.a/mo. 3107~ \V. $150/mo ~ .. drps •t--/ lN THE FIREPLACE. Lrg GORGEOUS VIE:\\'-3 br, 3 cat on. 1 ties 1 u · Balboa Blvd .. 548-0213 RENTAL FINDERS ...... t>~, ' ,,. .. NEAR DISNEYLAND, Im· LRG 2 BR oceanfront hse, 2 BR. Stove, crpl~. drps. bn. dln'g rm. Avail tor lse . Only $100/mo. FrH To Landlords rtf. 543-8572 or Kl 2-7279. m~culate 3 bcdnn, :Z bath, Frplc, Winter $250. Adult! huge tencd )'artl, Ch\ldren 61:>-7996, 675-6971. C & S Speedy 1 & 2 BR ap_ts. N.o pets, no y,•lth camper_ boat • trlr only, 673-80S!I. ok. $160/mo. RENTALS * ~1168 Back Bey 4240 645.0llT children. storage + extra large gar. N H 2210 C & S Speedy Corona del Mar .3250 Acapulco Apts, attractive, * 642-5M8 * age &: kit. Only $U,'i..O No iwport gts. RENTALS * 548-1168 Pool, Utll paid, Garden XLNT location. 1 hr. turn,,!!:~:::;::""'"°="'"°"..-•3 BR .Condo. l \i Ba. Ctl>ta:. down GI · NICEl.Y Furnt.•hed ~·••t 2 Bit fl"f'sh paint, Ile\\' cpts, living. Adults. no ""Is. heated pool, adult, 110 pels. NEW DELUXE 2 BR d-•. dstnvhr. pool. Near •-VERY CLEAN & 11pnetous 3 S 1 1 N t ,... $lll. Also 2 hr uni. LI ~4;) ·,. hou·• $125 mo. Utlt I"-· 0 \\\~'. 0 Pe s · 1 BR • $145 & Sl50 2 Ba. Bit-In rang,, dshwhr, OCC 549-2432 -·• h<'drm hon1<' 11·ith lgo yard, 12001 -132 f rnle f 213 · · DREA?tfY 4 bedrm, 2 bath "luded, Empk>·~ "'""" t bi 1 t nio. e a · : 1800 W&llace Ave C ?if. shag,.,,,,, drp,, garg. From NEWLY de• 2 br. u-talr• . .,, _._A ··-'k be h ... J'"" !iprlnk el'S, lns, slonc rp c l ,.'7"'6!':-4';7~67'_~-~-~-l;;;-,n,.-:--FiliiN' C-,. ITT:SI • '" ~~: ;:;prt sh:• c1:,_,,~; .. ; ow.r 25 yn. old . 642-Sno. lor $2·10 per 1110. 1''aniiUes LllG 2 Br, 1 Ba, bltns, ruJlu ,.... 2 BR. FURN. $155 Corona de~ar 4250 $175. Nr. S. Coast Plaza. Crpl!, drps. dbl gar. Adults, ~ .. ~ ... 06 only. ,\g<'nl J.16-4141. 3 Pool bltns cpts d""" no 544}.1973 or 545-2321 $165. 1814 Viola Pl cu1tom drps, take ovtr GI Corot1o dol Mor 2150 crpt"d, encl porch, near . · • ' '..... BACHELOR-$100 inc utll. be S~ I .,."" childre:n, no pets. 325.J E. N k k . 1t LRG 2 BR. pvt patio, loan with only m50 down Costa Mesa 3100 11ch. ~~;i un um, -11 h Pl CM &48-2738 onsmo e.r, no coo g, Costa Mesa 5100 pymnt. Lotsa' housa for onJ,y * :z BR • CHARM! ---------fu1•n. 67:i-l9.ll t ·• · business man. S. of h"'Y· 'f.'/w crpl!, drps, bltns, pr. $32.~. Homey little furn. Doll· ~I 0 V l NG T 0 II 0 N G LARGE 4 BR. l BA, Afllil $30 Wk. l . per, w/kit $35. Quiet. 675-4859. Lik1 Llvin9 in Your $l3S/mo, ~l867. House. tr'-am ct 111 n1 s . KONG?? level Spanish dt'cor S.175 ?ilald ser, hnens, TV, & lele. 1 BR ($100) or 2 BR ($280) OWN HOME I I 3 LG Br. 2 Ba, new cpU, Orang• County 1600 OUR FACE IS RED -and Oceanside of hwy. 'Valk to Let the Property :\lanagt· I n1 ~1 e d . oc cu p~ n <:Y : ~~t ~i~s 230l NJ)!: Harbor ,,lew .. New rum ., 'Vhy pay $175 for.~· apt? • drps. no pets, chldrn ok. Avl :. NOW'S TH£ '° ~ the C\lltom earpetll e\oe_rythlng, Ltue. $ 19 0 . ment Division of South 646-0911. 6'12-tnt ~ paint &; cptg. NI'! children. when we can rent you one Nov. l $l65, S45-724a aft S. , and drapes, Decorator rt'd-Shown by appt. 67)...$13. Coa1't Rcallors ROl\'e your SOUTlf 01 h"'Y· Ntw 3 BR. 2 'It NASSAU Palm1. l ~R. 2530 Se•vlew, 673-2823. for $140. 2 OR., newly de<:, 3 BR. 2~> BA, !harp, crpll, tor Spanish or Pitedltt tute, l BR. HOUSE, fumlshed. probleml!. For appointment BA. Shag cptg, drps. Avail apt. FUrn & Unl, Pool, ping· 2 BR crpb il d ..... pool So crpt/drp, encl patlol, 1pnc drpa, fncd . Avail now. $19$ TIME FOR I I t I~ I I 4 ~ call ~5-842-1. • poog BBn shadv la"·ns ' .,..., ' ' .-... 2 ~-1 'Ad t oJ mo """'!19 mmacuae-,,.eve ,,.,... $1W/mo. Ult. $265. mo. 646-2523 lT7 i:.2'2Dd'sL 64~5 ·of Hwy. Adults, no pets. 1> ...... 11-ruul. u l•o y, --·-~-~-~----t nn 3 btth "~1erldltb Gar-Call 968-M27. l\tESA VERDE: l·lARBOR CU'J'F; l br. !epani.tc yard. $115 lease. 673-8213. 2:283 Fountain 'Vay E. (Jiu. LGE :z br, l~li ba. studio. dertA Home". Stt It now • ESTATES· clean, ''acant, 4 Adult-', no pets, $l50/mo. 1 BR. Lrg closets. Pool. bor, tum \V. on W119on). Crpl!, drps, bltns. No pets. QUICK CASH ms.ke an oUcr. t.1·ust save Lido Isle 2151 & lamlly. \.ee.K> $260 In· Call an 5. 673-195.1. Shuffleboard . Ne ·1 Balboe 4300 DUPLEX, 2 bedroom. Ol!an JI50, 56-5270 or 833-3540 face tu t ---------·! d uding gardener. Agent. I========== cpt/drp11, Vtil pd. 1884 1---------& quiet, Ideal for mature QVTET-2 Br. Iii Ba, .-ar 1 Larw1-Realty, lnc4 S BR .• ~~' bll. wattrlront 546-5880 Huntington 81ach 3400 1\'onrovla Ai;e, Ot 2 Br. S250 monthly, yearly couple y,1thout childrTn or pool, cpt1/drps. Adults THRO. UQH A 96149Q anytime hotne w/dock, on Lido 4 BR. 2 ba, re£1!~nce1. 3 * \VtNTER RATES* bas.is, 3I5 E. Be.)' St. tnq. P«!tl. References exchanecd. _•;_nlc;Yc.·-""~"'-"-·-6<_'-80< __ ,_. __ 1 1------'----I Nord. ·11500 Month chlldn!n, pl"l!fer tecnt, I pet. AlJULTS only, 2 br. 2 ba.. l BR. f\1rn $1.25. Bachelor's Apt C 673-1521or5-18--1771. $150 month, 1st A last month 3 BR. 3 Ba. off.water home $220 n10 . .t:4s.8:30 Pl\1, 787 Fully crptd, drpt. $195 mo. SUS. Adults, no pets Stt PENlN~ BAYl'"'RONT plus gecurity charge In •d· o..EAN 3 BR. 2 bra. nr Baker DAILY-,1-101 L.,una Beech 1705 turniibed ••• $4SO month Joann, C.~t. ihcl uill. 536-4546. Mgr.~ Elden, No. 6 ·c~I. 3 BR. 2 baths, fum., -frplc. vanct' .......... .i. __ 753 Scott " Fairview, Avail new, Bill G ~ RI ., • ., ~-u-ri"¥i: "' children OK. $160~ 5'>11182 N·~)' Ir. ~ 3 BR, 11, b.1, lge f<"OC"Cd SPACIOUS 4 Br Nr. Bch & ll~ BR. Crplli. drp1, Winter rental. $350 mo. Pia~. C.M, Call~ iot EMERALD BAY \VINTER Renl-.11. 2 BR, 2 »ltd, l:Br. Me11t Verde. !\Chis. Lwcury livifli w/blln sundeck. Davis Realfll 642-700) appointment to see. * 2 BR. l 1i BA St'UDIO WANT AD J \Jst llsttd! Allr. tradlUanal bllh, frplc.. FA hi., $235. 4 S195. S.lS-Sl24 or 5-IO--OlOO Cl-. l \'r IJIC. $2:'-iO, !lfi8.S453 Broktr. ~ YEARLY • Bachelor * MOOF.RN 2 BR. crpts, ~;r s'fJ::?,! ~~rps. 3 BR, S 8&., atP. Jlv, rm., BR 6' de:n, 31' DA. $450. 3 Br 2 ba, bl tns lnel dSh\~'!ihr $225-3 Blt, crpt!, drps, frpl, $125-2 BR Trailer. l or :Z $125/mo, 1 .SR. $165/mo. Clrps, CE kitchen, enclosed . . . din, rm. 1 t.am. nn. 673-2559. 213: 28$28Sl ,m/mt>. Jrnmed a v a I I . fncd yrd, Ch1ld/pet ok, adu1ts only, no pets. Util In. incl utU. By the 10th St. bch. gart:et. near bus. $1.U: -1 BR. Cprts, <fr'p8, Pillo, nB Dntrald Bu $7S,OOO Ca1J todt.J • Sell tomorrow! 5'1G-ll!ll or 557·76·'8. Broker. 5.ll-6980. d uded. &i~. 673-llO!I. Adultt. a) £. 20lh. .tow. SUO/mo. Adult&, m 64f5171 S~'n b)' app't. Fasl multa: wllb • Dally 2 BR Freshly p.'lintf!d & dt" 6 Bdrn1, 2 Ba. dtn, bbq, 1 BR FURN $150/mo. fnrJ ~11;;;25;-)T:::;:ty:c.1;-b;::r:--•::p:;t,"'Ium=:--0::,cci>l:;· ~ HEU»? t,,ooji Lx tt pets. !>~aft 4 pm. Biii G tundy, Reeltor Pilot Classified Ad • .DlaJ Nice yllnl. Oldtr rouplc bltn,. Nr. 1\tarina JU sch!. utll. Pool, p.r, dispoeal. turn. All util paid. Rtfs. Phbne g,O..stm DAILY Plt.m' WANT .ADS! 833 Dover Or., NB ll42-f820 direct 642-5673 -NOW! prtl'd, Call &16-45.'iO ;\\•ail now $28$. 968-5700 .art 5 AduJts, m pt!J. 642-238!. Appt wknM, 67~1980 In PJlot ClasaUled. Dial 6C-56'71 • charp ft. - - RI -.. F• ., 3 .. & p ... ' " y w '-' " SI 0 * B bl s: IX r, B • 3i " .. JI dt ~ WI 2 •• $1' d ,. Ir - '" • a b p • c '" B. • b E I • ,., d p ' t. ( ' " e ; 83 • J l ( ' i I I c • l I ' ~ I I! I N ! • I s • l l 2 i i ' ltlNTALS Apts. Unlumlthod RENTALS --- Aph. U"t!ml- RINTALS lllNTALS RIAL I STATE Aph. Unlumlahod Aptt. Unluml-O-r1I DAIL y l'ILDT SJ 1• ...... * ..... *11111-..* ..... * .... llliliAJiii«>uNiCiiiiDffs ~n=1tv=1=ce~_~D.!.=•llfll'~ 1:;;.:...;.;._ . --Cerp1t Cl1anfne 6625 Newport Beech !200 co.,.,. dtl Ma; -Senti AM 5621 It_,. fer lttnl "'5 Loft 6100 -------'--* IA YRlONT * UN IQUE, lie. pvt, new l ALL NEW ROO)l For Rent-tor worlttnr • toW:;:;rf~~'f::" F urn lohtd & unfurnloh· :',"~·~~ts&drpl, PARK PLAZA' -mon or iaey. CASH od, •lorllng $295. I:':'======== For Adwts l=Cal='=~=:=';:o·=·==== Write .. lall, '°' Dally Pilot 642·2202 Huntington lletdt 540t I BR. '137 e i BR $167 Mite ltontila S'99 Box M·lOOI, 2211 W. Balboa 2 BR. U'nl"Wl\, Ol>ll, drpii, ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i 3824 South no~·tt St, SA • ;;Bl-cv,..d.,. • .,N,...BO,.~-~--- patlo, pool, blllU. i1r.o. ON BEACH I i blkl E. Brlttot &: l\fac. FOR RENT • Weekends .t R-t Lot Costa l\:1~11.. can SeacllU Manor Apts, 1$2$ , Arthur, nr S. Coa1t Plua Ew1. Sp&ciou• hall avaU. build 40 unlt1. Phil Sullivan. Placentia. MB·2M2 aa k {714) 54$-3214 for rttp. teu or what blVf Realtor 54M761. boul·GUr dl!COUnt plan, • 2--BR unl,From-5323 you. Foe Info. 64()..112~ Eti.lERALD Bay, ~•n vlew 2 BR, crpt'd, drp'd, bltns, C 2 BR Furn. From S28S Tustin 5640 R&AL liSTATI o n pvt communltrAP:- tJcc xar dr. On t~ Beach! c. rpet!-dra"!s-dla):iwuher . DOWNING APTS Gener•I prox Tax112 for u.te or Wheddr11 Want? Whaddy1 Got? Ye•rly 642-3978 eves & heated pooJ.sa.una-1ennls -tn.de. $18,500, Pvt Pty. u·knds. rcc -room-ccean vlewi CORNER of WllLlAl\fS I Income Property 6000 646-1535 SPECIA CLASSIFICATION FOR Ptnonalt 61:>! --• ----F • M Oeaninl Strvk:e. * FULLY LICENSED * Remwnec!. Hindu Spirltuo.llst Advice on all mattm . Love, M&JT1.lif', Bustnta.1 ResrUna:a lfveD 7 days a WJe.k, 9 Arif -9 PM 312 N. Et C&mlno Re&J, San Clemtnle 402-9136. 402-0076 MASSAGE SPECIAL -s-001w· He &: She Health Club..._ c~:-)tt• cleaned. Holidl.y r.~=lo.l. Cf$.~"orune.r. oew n1:~. drln 1n 2 hn. nee e~l ~2247 or 53&-lSO&. Dlamund Carpet Cle&Jiiii Autumn Speclal 400' ""· ,,.. Eat. Repair-lnatall. 66-1311. C1 rpet L1ylng & Rtpolr- Separate walk ln Sauna'• tor e EXPERT e Ladles & Gentlemen 847·7879 carpet inst&llatlonl p"lo ampl• parkin& ALLIANCE, '111>1100. 2 BR.l;;;.:.:;.;:.;_:..:.;~;.:.:._::=;1•=======.: I NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS ';:':,;,E ~~: '.1~~: '0~1~: HUs.NeuTnl1YNi:uGart1TO"N. ~~i!:'.~~i°v.':."!~':i°~: 8 UNITS Renchtt 615D s Linoa~!r!,!•~! bucks 17434 Beach Blv,, <corner * 539-832'1 * 01 Stat.rt H.B -CA=R=P'°E=T'CL~A"Y~l~N~G~I Sl~ & $18J, Adu lu. lntant Mgr • 15507 AU\ance "Don't wait till Jan." Now Is 0 EL u x P.1 1 n. r. n ( h • llULll -AD MUJT IN(LUDI + MASSAGE * C.A. Page 64>-:mo SAUNA * 1)VHIRLPOOL e EXPERT e OK. 642-4387, &IZ-lnt PACIFIC ;:o='=p=ho=ne='=O=wne=='=""""'====l=I the time to lnvt:it, Pride ol RlV'tr&ldto, t~ Ac., I(! t,~~'.";...an:.:,.:,r-:;,,_ ~J:: :"'Z.v"'.:= ~ \VESI'CLIFF • 2 Br • .l~i 711 owner&hlp In prime ttntaJ home, pool, b&rn, 1ta111, 1-ftOTIUN• ,Oft UL.I -TltADU OM LYI Lovely Cltia:. Plush facilities. carpet irw!allatlona Open_ 7 d&,)-'11, noon-mldnight. * 5.1&-3311 * 2930 W. Co.1st Hwy, Newport 1 ----~=~"E"R"T:----I &llCh. 548-3608 .......... Ba. twnhse, cpt.s, d""s, OCEANC7lll 5t,VE1,;7• H.B. Legune leech 5715 location. Call tor complete ~7.SOO. 685-M82 T I .,. --~==...:;;;;;:;;"'---"=I 1n1orm tJo •·~·-$100000 r::;;=:i=:::==:,=== o Piece Your Trader's ParadlM Ad b tns, adults only, no pet1. Ofc. open 10 am-6 pm Daily a n, ~. ' . 1 · PHONE 642-5671 $210/mo. ~S-7533, ~15 P.tllJ\llgod by MODERN IU'dtn IOWnhouae, M&-2ll.3 Citrus Grov11 6175 CARPET INSTALLATION &: REPAIR. M6-41SL DO Y N. end, 2-ltory l BR lt,Si BA, Sa t •··b 2 ou have 3 friends'! For \VIl.LIAf.I \VALTERS CO. patio, aundfdc, l blk ahop. 5.ACRIFICE PRICll n • ...., . 1 units lum'd U' HOUSEBOAT, Xlnl, Live $75 ea. live In belluf. new 4. .. ,..,.,._,ch. Ad"'lo. ••1,_ The ta! Vilta for clear-fret: home aboard, slip avail. Will take Announctmtntt '410 BR ,...,., ""' 11.1 .n.c OV.'l"ltr says "5'11 this 40 1100 . 2 BA, fiiilc, 2 car pr. CASA del SOL i. .-.. 4~ 7 10 .000 Capis, San Cltm, car or a_maller boat in trade .............,.NT-•"'-ta•-, $I.~/ bay & beach apt, 673--9352. . -mo. acre yr. old crow In Wood. La&', N.ewpt, Cdl\f, 213-fo.: equity. i .... v. i.ike iwCi.twKn1 u:: Eltctricai 3 B 2 Ba ts ,,~ OCEAN VIEW • Lr1 1 BR We1tb•y Income Homel crest ET& for $3250 ptr m-4309 I nu1J..5'lS. * 5'1S..2GI '*' yd. at old . . 1 ... ,., r, • <:rp • .... .,.., blln5, Cha.rmo'n " •· apll. ~.--unl\lm. ~.. TRJP' -•.. 1.""" at're." We 'll divJd .. into 10 '•="".c..:=.==;;::::..---.,,.--~~~~-I American Knill, ~A N. -frig, 1250. 2 doo" ., (, <'UU • Dl!W ap .. d ~••u•"" '-'I'.., ~ .., """ ~ 1'8 U ' ~ •• I '"-~ h -bit 1•--1•·-·'"In a . .,_~ · or 20 a<'re blocks. :X1n'I nits, Rood rental atta. 9 units on the beach, San Tustin, 0ra""e. 637..6120. e ELECTRICIAN • Plwnt>- er. Installation ii: repairs. No job too small 5G-4614. ELECTRICIAN. Small joba, maintenance Ir r e p a Ir 1. Llc'd a: Bonded. 548.-sm ocean. 642-9242, 615-7179. 8 """ .,.,a<' · •.-, ·•-a, .-...... Wa.a &: go;-Sf .,,...,tslde Costa ~tesa I~ Ma 000 1 •• 1 BR. From S162 distance to town, 100 CUtf cation, "Homn wtth_an in,. tenns avail. w/prepald in • ....,, Equ ty; income Clemente, $25.000 equity, in. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Unt Bltns, crpt1, 2 BR, From $215 Dr., Lquna Bcb. 4~91 come", 2005 T\lsUn (cor. !ete5t acceptable. YOO can't $13.500. For house, commer. • come $18,000 yr. Trade for Ctmtftry l;ots 6411 drps. $250/mo. * Call 21661 Brookhurst St HB SPECTACULAR cttanfrcnt \Vaodland Place), Builder duplicate th is pve any. clal or horse ranch. land, lots or home. 540-7573, alt 5 9fi8..86S8, l7;il:i4~-;iff-i;2;:,·;.":.;S"l"'' =-I 2 BR, i BA, putt\--n. l·'-64>-4-'-'905"='··=-===~-whe~ at this price, For O\VNER 675-6259 496-3702 after s OCEAN View Paci t I c ... •••• =--..,.;,=:.==-'----I l\femorial Park· l cemetery \VESfCLlfF beaullful 2 BR, ---.:i'ERITAGE APTS pool, adults no pets. $350. lB UNITS more Info. please call K.W, Commercial inconie proper. Trade 3 Br. l* ba. home, plot. lot 322, 2 crypts 77 2 BA. 1250 Mt fL townhouse. AVAILABLE NO\V! 499-2354 or 499-2851. Small w/EckoH & Assoc., 'Y. free &: clear: next to Altadena IPasa. a.rea) for 673-1.594. _F_loo_n ____ "'5 apt No. 1275. l\tgr, MS-0252 17401 Keelson Ln, H.B. •DELUXE 2 BR. Ocean Excellent Investment In top Inc. SJ2..2538. Eve1 A wknds Sears. Val. $85.000. For un.. similar, Costa l\1e1a-Tuat1nl..::::...:::.::.._ ____ _ Lrg Attrac 2 Br. ;14s,;159 view deck, J blk heh. New location and top condition.1 ~538-=5971==· ====== Its, house or beach prop. 9.rea. Feenstra, RJIT, 1979 N. SERVICE DIRECTORY l<ids ok. All extrar. Pool. shg crpt1, drp1. refria:/1tv. You must att to appreciate. , ~-O~\V-'NE:cR.:....:6.:;1~c.=259:;,.,._ Lake, Alta. 213: 7!1&9166 Newport Halght1 !210 CARPF:l' VINYL Tit.E LIC CONTR. FR.EE EST. * 540-7262 • Pvt patio area. Rec bldi. $190/mo. 494-9835. Cali for con1p\ele inform&· ,A_c_ro_•~•~•--'' ___ 6_2_00_ Land for units; view; 700 ft. Balboa Island residence, Auto Repairs 6530 $170, 3 BR, frplc, bl!M, cpts, 347.8335 or 841-7446 DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA, view, tion. Alkins $325.000. 546-2313 COMMERICIAL frontage. Can dlvlde to 9 $25,0IX) eqult.y. Will trade for TOP V\V mechanic works G•rdenlng 66IO drps. patio, gar a i e. 1 ---'.,F;;.;~,:.;.;:=--I elec e)-e ganp, )dry. lots. San Juan Capo. $135-t.t Glendale residence. d~'S will fix your car eve:n-6~708. 297 Ogle. \Val: 3 ~t~·~~ch! 497-1056 or 4!H-5810 ACRE! Val; $100.ti.1 .eq, For Im· \Villiam C, H!:l.rde11ty lngs. Call 548-7986 * LANDSCAPING * Beaut. big 2 br, apts. w/w 1 BR N. end, i,, blk shop/ An arre in the-"Golden ™· proved or TD's. 4S4-4653 Rt>altor 675-2800 New lawns, lawn removal. crp11, drps, bltiw except bch., ldry facil. Adlllll, $1751-========= anrle" close to South Coast Canyon Lake, 1 iot trom V.'B· Horse barn, 4 stalls, hlly &: B•by1lttlng 6550 renovating. All P h a a e • 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I relrlg. S150 &: $155. 1 child up. 494-f48S 830-4237 1· Pla:za, Ideal for hotel, mo-ter, $4200 equity. Want tack rm, 5 paddock&, riding LOVING mother de & ires landse&Pe install &: desf&na. 11 NOW LEASING! ok. No sngls/pet&. 536--lTil OCEANFRONT, prtv. beach. Bu1lnt1t Rant•I 6060 tel <Jr commercial income home, lnconie or Jot, Al· u-e.na, fncd, 11' ac. rnch scyJ babysitting during wee.k. 9 Lic'd contt, 12 yrs Joe. exp. Huntl.nnton Granada Studio apt. ~taluft_ ad~t on-STORE 23.X<l.O tor l se . units, Investigate before In. hambra a.i:;_a7:7... run11, .11 1';"1_1.or 16nco70 ::"us or ! mos to 3 yn preferred. Fen· 536-l225. lrv1nt !231 N:'h 1:1~ ~:;:!~ u~~~ ''5' ly. $150 Mo. 494-46il presently tutUon bide-away vesting, Call 546-2313. ..., v.» a Y ,, ... '"'oy """ ced yard, happy com· ror G~!~~=~and-drHS shop Some fix! llave 20 units, Trade for Paltn Desert: 2 Fine R...JI panlons. 50c hrly. Full time, and pre-school. 1, 2, & 3 1 BR. From Sl35 S•n Cltmentt 5710 · ures, more units <IT 11ubmlt, l t ,..,__bid 16 l M < ooo tcapin1 servicu' call 5«).Sl98 bdmu from $150. Nr. ahon. 2 BR, 2 BA. From $155 ="-==='--..::.'"-'I Avail Dtc 1. 333 E. 17th St., n "· ......_., un II,....,, part tin1c or occasional. Nr serving Newport, CdM, C.O... F y c M 645-Wl Fortin Co., Realtors Trade for resident or inc Harbor Shopp'ft~ Center. ping, golf, scbool1. Jwil Sep FAl\!ILY SECTION tor NE\ 3 br, cptg/drps, nr bch, " ' l7ll.C \\'estcllU Drive u'6 ta J.1esa, Dowr Shores, llOUth or San Dieio Fwy. on children under 5. $215. mo. 232 Victoria Apt HARBOR BLVD. front. property, N.B. or Cd~1. !148-1395 WestcUH. Culver Dr., Irvine. &lJ.3733. Jus1 South ol Warner C. San Clemente. 492-3651 1!1 x 37' w I restr')Om. 2ll0 ~;Ea::~y Eda:e of Newport Beach 542•5000 Owner: 7141673-3048• R~E~L~l~A~B~LE=-, -,-,-,.~,-. -F-,----Pr<>=-~1..,-'-.-,G~artl~on~Maln~~L-1 PARK WEST <Jn Golden West, H.B. Harbor Blvd, CM. S100 IM. •Comm corner S 12 , 0 00 , COIN operated &: cleaning Will trade my $15,000 equlty yard, crafts Ir: creatlYe &C· Pruning, tne work. sprnldr APARTMENTS (714) 147-1243 Rent•I• WtntM 5990 year's lease. 548-0783. 15% dwn, nt Apple Valley agency in new shopping in north Fulltrton trl·level tivltie5. Hot lunch & snacks. serv, aera~n. fe r t i li se, Owned and Managed by NEW 1 Br at Sch! QUIET 16443 Magnolia, Westmill.!iter. Inn center, \Vil! trade tquity fllr home for small property in Weekdays, Nr Perry School, pest, disease, v.'Hd control The Irvine Company $130, b&l of mo FREE. Look RESPONSIBLE couple with Storelollice 14'x50', in shp1 • 2-1 Ac res Jots nr golf as home, real estate or ?1? Ne\.\'JIOrt area. 1.:.:"::·Bo.·.::OO=.....,c:::::..____ Cleanup jobll'. 64&-6893 I':'!~!!!!~~~~~~~ I ' you'll rent!! P v 1 <Jne school-age chUd and one cntr nr SO trwy, $135 mo. $6750 & $1:al, 15% dn. Vie..,;. 543-4102; 962-9125. --~71..-41_5_24-0083-'----l'BABYSIITING for the AL"""'"'S-;Landoc-7,,-"a-p"'lnl,.,..,-=r'"r-e-e'I i; deck/patios. 204-A 14th. expected v.·ould like lo find 494-0216. * * Bkr, Englund 673-4144. 1 -----~---ltnve 2 choice esta~ Jots, mother who cares, my ~IMa removal. Yard remodelln&:. 1 B_1c_k.o...;B"1"y'----5"2:;.40;.; l ~6;;7l-;;l™;;o·,;53&-;:;o;;ll;;l9;·~=~· I ~: 1::! w1:1~Y~Q OFFICE, Sl'ORE, nr. N'pt-:-10 Ac. &:>. Calif. $iO dn, SlO Home, Mesa \Voods C,r.1. 10 &., Pasa. Free & clear. Verde Eatalts home. Fenc-Truh' hauling lot cleanup, * VIEW % B t d BEACHBLUFF APTS · , Bch. Post Orf! . .l Greyhound mo. $995 F/P. L. Shewfelf, mo's old $5.000 eq. f1iA Want improved property up ed yard, lunch, TLC. A&es Repair aprnkltn. 673-1166. bltns. lrg poor· crp s, rps, 2 BR, 2 Ba. pool, patio, F/H, RENOVATE. Up to $135 depot. 12X27. $75 mo, lse, 326 '" 3rd St L A $28,000 Joan at 7~%. Trade ti:-$250.000. l.·5. 546-3592. CLEAN UP SPECIAUSl" S165/nw. 673-3690. dshwhr. 8231 Ellis. -mo~.:..C..~l!~p~l•~·~aan=t =m_o_111o_r_.;_ ... 1~G~'~'ha::'m~PJ~1>jSl6<6-~;":."=;:;::, _21_3_,6_23-_s1_01_. ___ • --tor Puadena area home, lot r-.1adge Davis Rltr. 642-7000 EXP1r.10TJiER u•ill bab)'lit. New fence: &: repair. Mowizlc 842-8477 or 847-3957 law. 538-6540 Off ice Rent•I 6070 For Acreare in Oran1e Co. 1'-'_T_.o_._·,_. _s.s_1_.1_653_.___ l70 ac·hwy 79 nr Scout Camp My homt. Nr BristOI &: &. edging. Reas. ~ Ea1t Bluff 5142 NEW! Never Llved·In: 2 Ir 3 FREE Have: 1st TD's (41 $6,000 .Warntr Hot Springs, tree & Baker St'a & Sonora school. LAWN Care, cleanups, truh 1---------1 BDR:-.ts. Nr. Beach. Agt: ' SUPER·DELUXE QUALITY llattla lttaltg (6) $20.000 16) $25,000, all or cir •• all/part-$615 ac val.1'w"",,.~.,.16'"~,..·~h~~--,.--I hauUn1. rF.V., H.B., I: 645-1070 RENTALS SERVICE 1.z,3 room, up to 3,000 sq. part For Newport, 0. Cnty 1o·or CLEAR prop. bont I a Y1it in my home Westmstr. attL f'rM a t NEWPORT BEACH e $l30. 2 BR, crpts, drpe, TO ft. office suites, Immed. OC· ,,,..=..,,.C_aU~64~2--6560~-~~--lproperty, boat tSJ0.$50~I)or (SJOM.$501\ll or 7? 557.9700 tor infants or toddlen, day 847-5802 · Villa Granada Apts. hltns, dshwahr, garage. Aft OWNERS & cupancy. Orana:e C n t y, 40 AC. Zoned 11oblle l:lomf!1. !! 557-9700 or 499-4206 or 49S-4206. or nl.&:ht. Vie Harbor&: Vic· JAPANESE Land1e&Pin&: I: Furnis hed. Flve bedrooms & .a R Airport llvine Comm•-. Paved frontage, Next to sso * lorla, Re.ls. 5"18-7123 d . h bal I bo •-4 pm, 84l·3m MAN"'GE S ·~ ""-* * * * * NEWPORT H•o'ghl> ·-a. gardening servica. Call for en, wt! con es a ve ..: I ~"=""'~'--=--=-~~-C II ... 1169 Complex, adj. A•_,.,rte:r M111Nn development. SAC! "'" ,__ u·ma1e ••• - patio below. Gracious Uvlng •NE\V lrg 2 Br. D&hwhr, '°"=~·..,..._---~---I Hole) & Restauran7"~. Jor Sl900/per acre. Large yd &: li&ndbox. ~~ • ~·~ or & quiet sulTOundlngs tor patio. (Sall Diego fN'Y at 3 BR, 2 ba, unfl.lm apt or San Diego Ir: N'pt Fwys TERMS: 714: 682--1357 Bal~ lunch. Xln't care. ~--·------1 fam ily v.·ith children. Near Edinger). $165. M2-7062. hse, for adult cpl 4: 2 UNCRO\YDED P.ARKIN.G IO AC 8 . So IUSINESS •nd BUSINESS and 645-2154. NEW Lawns, re·Red. Comp! ' hlld N ., orange5; m1. . or F AN • •· Q by job Corona de! J\tar lligh School. e QUIET 2 br, 1%. ba, crpts, teenage <' ren. ewport LQWESf RATES Rivenlde. 6 Yr. old tree• in FINANCIAL IN Cl"'L BABYSlTI'lNG in my Home. ~wn care. ean up ' Fireplace, wet bar & built-drps, garaae, lge 1undeck. Ha or comparable art& in Ownl!r/mgr 2177 DuPont Dr xlnt cond. $35,000. Sub. B I -M---W--t_-,--6.1-50-1 Bay Vlew Ir:. !\Jonte Vista or mo, Fre;.,.e!!.; .. For 1rdo ~ in kitchen appliances. \Vill $160 536-8739. N.B. or C.M. Sl50 max. Rh 8 N ' •-h " ....__ oc.•o ........ UI nt.11 Only •n wu School ·-a. RE AS. 897-l<J17 or C101r.1.M 'A'Ould like lrplc. 67~ aft ' ' ewport DC&C • I-"-""-·---------0 JI '300 ,..., • • cc;nsider unf\lrni.shed or turn. NEW 2 BR, 2 ba, frplc, cpts, 6 'wknds. 833-3223 Courtesy to Broken GOV'T Land, S5 acre. \\'rite; pporfun t ti ;;;;;;;--;;::;::::::;:~:;-;:-;;-1 ~"""'"~~87~------IGEN aeanup, Utt 4 spmldr '. iture purchaae. drps, bltns. nr heh, $175 mo. e LANDLORDS e PRESTIGE OFFICE Land Packa;e, 1185 No. Ar· I----------PRIV. Party v.·anta 2nd T.D. MY home. fenced bk yd. &er'\/. Rototill. Handyman. 835 Al\IJGOS \VAV 644-2991 646--0841. 548-0131 , 0 r 0 w he 8 d Ave • Sa n IMPORTANT on ~fesa Verde home. Have warm meals Reas 3ii8 CN:id jobs. Reas. 66.58t8 Coldwell. Banker&: Co. l & 2 BR New apts. Frplc'i, FREE RENTAL SERVICE ' l'I THE BAY" Bernardino, Ca. Available In your area at this ~~e; .. ~uity. Pa,y 10%64t,_nt7.000: Jlamllton, c.M. 64_>--0S_.29. GARDENING Ir Landscal> l\fanaglllit agent 833-0700 Near '"'-•an! Patio. Adults. I '==B=ro="'=r=. =534-6982====1 At l .. ido yacht anchorage time. There is nothin1 like .,,..,,.,...."'°"' Ing ~·nlng·Trlm-•·-• ""'-' 1 room • Ground noo1· .. · ~-00· b · ~'" ..... ,. • LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 R E W ttd 6240 " in ""' ve ing usinesi; Brick, M•1onry, Reoovating 548-5209 aft 5 ~==~===~~ R fo R t 5995 Air cond., crpts, drps. • • an today. Sensatiooal canned ANNOUNCEMENTS e NEW DELUXE. 1 BR APT, 3 blltS from eoms r tn E-Z parking, Utit paid PVT part y ,van ls food products, ("SNACK·i •~n'.!!d!_!N!O~T~IC:!E:'S~---l;;;:•:;;tc-;:;:;:--:::::--;;:6!:;:::60 JAPANESE Ga rd e nlna l 3 BR, l BA Apt for lease. beach. $135. Sfilfl-Retlred Engllsh COU· $125 per monlh unobstructtd oct:an view Me PACK" made by HIJNT· Brick, block, atone. PaUos, Service. Neat work. Oeanup : Incl spac. muter suite, din ;84~7-4=·~;;1==•;r==53&-=1;;7:10~ I pie with 2 very \\"ell behav· 717 Lido Park Ori,·e or lc4. 2417 Rocklna:hone WESSON). lf ig h I)' ad-Found (FrH Acf1) 6400 entrance ways. No job too yd. maint. 968-2.103 i ~dbl ~ara~~u: ~~ Fountiin Villay ~"'lO ed dogs wish to rent or Newpor:. B!ach 673-1060 Rd., Stn Pedro, 90732 vertlsed on Nalional T.V. f AWN Color-p / German small. 646-7825, Ref turn. Compltft Y•rd C•rtl : ,... .. ~. av • . .,.. lease unturn 2 Bedrm house DELUXE oUc, suite, grnd. BUSINESS ind Can be startt'd part time nt.-t 5404831 ' area. or coUqe in So, Orange floor, his own entrance and and expanded into a luJI Shepherd, male. Torn C t I 6590 ' e FROM S2S5 e ALL NEW r A•-t (So FINANCl•L ttme bu•loe••-2 10 8 ho"'"" leash/choke chain. Vic 8th arptn er ng CARDENING VALLEY PARK ....uou area. . Lquna. \\'e1tcllff Dr. st. address, "' ... ,. By Experienced J &panl!ll 865 Am1gos \Vay, NB southward) max $140 mo. 450 i;q. ft. wit h pvt. pane.11 -8--------per week. You shxk And St & 19th St, Balboa CAll CARPENTRY * 548-0228 * Managed by For f''Al't11LfES Yi'ith pre-very clean & quiet; olfc. J>1!5k space~&: ncept. uilneis collect the money from new G?J-5&:!5• MINOR REPAIRS. No Job ===-~;:,.:;=-o-~-·I• WILLIAM WALTERS CO. school children only, relerencts avail. 496-4123 or $185. mo on lease, inc air-Opport'!;tltlt1 •JOO roin opcoraled di!pensers. BLACK And while 1'"ox Te.r-Too Smail. Cabifll'!t in gar· EXPER. Japanese Gardener, ; TNHSE . 2 br, 21ii ba, bltns, 2 & 3 BR and 2 BR Studi<J 492-8815. mnd., util., crpta., drapei. *C•ndy Supply Dlitr.* We fumisll all locations rier. AM. to ''Speedy" Vic ages &: other cabinets. con1plete yd servlce. Rella. j frp\c , patio, encl gar. 752 $160 to $215 BED In art studk>, priv. 548-9586 (PART OR FULL TJr-.tEJ with romplf'le company or 16th Ir. Newport. Devoled 545-8175 Uno answer leave &:: neat. Freee1L642-4389 . Amigos \Vay, 6Th-5033 17256 South Euclid, fV closet i. dresser. J>l!sk top * DELUXE l..room oilice. VERY HIGH INCOME guide~. ~fen or women to master. n1asler very ill! msg at 64&-2372. H. O. GARDENER-EXP'D ~ (Just South of Warner) avail. Priv. entrance (semil ,,,.Ja-nl to _._,r Inn • N "·bl I 0 O.K. Aje no factor, but you REWARD!! 646-3561. Anderson * 675-4952 * 1 d M .,. {71•) ... •7•• k l'W ,_._ ..... .,.... .,. ow ava ... e n range must be ~inc-ere. l "',-.,---~~---1;=====~~-~"===='=====I Corona ti er 5...-" ~ -share bath. SI5 <A' plus Orange Cnty, Alrpart. County and surrounding PLAN ONE Sl.250.00 Black puppy w/whlte paw1 REDECORATING? Oesifn&I' l~~~;;;;;~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~ =========='I depo.sit. Kil ~ laundry priv. Carp., drape5, music, air· areas. All location5 are eoni· PLAN TWO Sl.S9:'.1.00 round vie, 18th St .. &: Crest. const. odd jobs &: repair. Gentr~I Strvlctt 6612 ; ~· ~~;._ ON TEN ACRi:S l I: 2 BR. Furn I: Ullf'Unl Fireplaots I prlv. patlca I Poola. Tennlt:. Contnt'I Bid!(, 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-Zb'll (MacArthur nr. <mst Hwyl CORONA oiL MAR NEV/ 3 Br. 3 Ba, Jowf!r du- plex. Closed patio. Cov, 1ar- a~. Beautifully landscaped. CoffipJet! b1t.in1. Year least at $325 pe.r mo. Contact >' 175-6010 0 --·· ...... Sent• An• 5'20 TV, phone, etc. Student C"Oncl .. el<:. $1Z f\tonth mereial or taelory furnished PLANT THREE SJ.6.10.00 Tn(lnt, CM. 64~75 Exp., reJ1. Odd hn. Ir: free I .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I pref. M&-3634. 833-0101 OR 833-0144 by us. Qua!Uied person will (CASH REQUIRED) FOUND. ~~ Tortle point, I,~ a;l. 67l-4280 or ~73-4445 ~Nh~~e ~; ~~~M=-•, VILLA MARSEILLES LAGUNA Beach; Be au t · DESK SPACE berome dis tributor ror our For pet'!Onal 111teivlew ln Seal paint, 6 mo <JI d, REPAIRS * ALTERA· repair! Jl,jost any t h i na:. : BRAND NEW kingslze bdrm & ba, kitchen candy (Nl!'ILtles, Planters, your area, wrU..e; Am1>1ican Wakrbury Ln, HB. 968-725!1 TIONS * CABINETS. Any M.>-0820 ,I SPACIOUS prlv. Private home. Ideal 222 Forest Avenus Tootsie Roils, Milk Duds, Enterprise &: DistribuUngl---~------l alze job 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt1. for young cple, $25 wk for 2. legun a Beech ~tc.i. You must have 2 to Co.: P.O. Box EA; Azusa, FOUNO-Artectionale calico 25 yrs exper. MHn3 GAR AGE dOM'$ and ! Adult Livi. a $20 for 1 person. l\tuit like 8 hr:s per \.\'eek spa.re time Calif. 91702. <Include your kitten, CdM. ROOFING 1,,_. operators serviced and in-'1 • peta. 494-0101 Gf.9416 ho bo -67}1347 " stalled, E. Harrtaon 12!1 Furn. & Unfvrn. (day~ or evcs1. P ne num rJ. . & All Home Improvements. G<J\lernor St. 646-8505. j e SLEEPING room, re1t BEAUTlf1JL offlce1, air, $1750 CASH REQU IRED AlU FOUND F~e Est. 53&-1059 Dishwasher· co.lor coordinat--m laeillti••· Older adult. c·-ts, ·•-t-•. Facing F · I 1 ~·--• BOAT & Household ,. •• -' d Ila I h ,..., ......... ..-·~"" or more 1n or1naton WJ'\te: WANTED PART TL\IE .....,....,nnan, m~e. CUSTOM WOODWORK ~-· I e app nces • P u5h 1 a&: 64&-.8464 &ach Blvd. Call 84~2525 or "DISTRIBUTOR DIVISION 675-5525 General Handyman. Ef· ~=e; ~~le~~ 2. c:::~ *$15 per ,,-~k·Up \11/klt-call owner (213) EX 4--0015 •23. P.O. Box 1739. Covina, Reliable 'Per II on tor this YNG, Blk, cat w/collar nr F~~:e o~ =~s f67ic~e~~w &: re a son able • showers • JTtlrro~ ward-chtns. S30 ptr v.·tek-up,1..:'°:.:il;:;ec,:,I:;,. =,-.,=..,..,=,.-C'1if. 91722 Include phone area 10 res Io ck na· Bay St. I:. Orange Ave, c .M.1-,======== .r :> : A.ls. 'IOTEL u .. 9-• DESK SPACE nu1nber, 1innll.I dls!rlbu!ion of COF· ,,.,, ~"•4 C C ••-NEED tunlns done:! We : robe: doors • indirect li1ht· " · ... •iJ,;I. .,...,..., .... • tmtnf, oncrtte wvvu v t- "' kl he •-kl 'lAL~E · I hou N OUT Of W-k•. w··i~·. Ootl y f'EE and hot drink products • -can do. Speedy, accurate, l Ing tc n • 1.11..:a ut " ~-ntire ~~ o It, 105 o. El Camino Real v• ""''"" d bl ha · -~ r~. ~· 115 '-' mature men, worn•" 0 , In company secure ac-Lost 6401 CONCRETE, All ....... s. Free reuuna e, 646-4238. r • huge private fenced .....,.. .... ,.,esa.. wee,..y, S•n Clement• I and ~•-I :=,.-...,,.'-""-';---'-,~~~1 " Call .. "l9I" coupl••. 1 b--h 01 33 cor-counts, oommercia fac-nt. Sawing, breaking, haul· RAIN <>ntters lnotall e d. f>Stio • plu.sh landscaping • .r " 492-«20 ....... •---· W HEARTBROKEN ~ il I •· poratioM has mowd Into tory ....u.tions. e are • Mlm Y ost Ing & Slclploading. Service & Rainy seas:in here l!IOOG. brick 81.r-B·Q's • lara:e hut-~LEASANT room for lady, * NEWPORT BEACH clvic Calif. One of 3 l&rie•t profit highly referenced company, our 5h&liY blk & br.vn quality. ~ Bob.· Free ~t. Reas! 96S-Zll3 td poolii &:: lanai. 1n C.l\f. near Park. Heated Center 300 ft to 1000 ft bu s 1nes1e 1 in USA. Excellent immediate cash Yorkshire te~r. n1ale, CEMENT W k t all kind 3101 So. Brittol St. Pool. Call 646--0669. An1Werlns k Secrttarial'. Permanent for thole who lnoomc for 4 to 6 hrs. Vic: 600 blk, Victoria St, F~ ut or 0 s, H1ullng 67311 ('n, ML N, of So. Cou Plau) Old :you ever think of llWl.p-rn.-1001 apply themselvei. lnq. for ('4o'eekly lrork days or eve5.) Cl\1. Rwd. 642--1959 ' ....... 0374 SPACIOUS 2 BR apt. cpts. Santo Ant •--~-.,~,,. El ·•·• tn' .::;,,:::::;;~-----You may -.. nd lull lime "(i'S'i'fil;O>-.;J;;:t;(,;;;:;;1-~=~~~~~-~-IT NT ' • S I .... wat "nuc e..,_.,t 1:LAW ou· · -·e •-lego'tlmal• Info to ,.... L051' 10/20•, blk. &: fawn . _ · · · ... wn e r v e e . •-bltn ...... n•tio + PH·O-NE•, -.5-57.a2-00 -. ice SJ*e!, pnme .... .,. I 'th . * CONCRETE ·-rk· n.11tio1 .., .,s, s, ,..... . ..-· the attic far IOJ'Dtthinl you location In Newport Bch tttmendoua IU"!CeU 548-0:!03. ater w1 our expansion female Gfrm. Shep, pup. 4 1 .... • .-• Garage clean-ups. haul.in& A mOther-in-law apt. Quiet 1 .,"!!'_l!!~;.,,!!!!!!J'!!""• can UH! Try the Traders y,•/tuil se-·l--s Secre'·-'·; Pl"Olratn if you dtsire, No niO& "Canada" v 1 c drvway1, etc, LI e en se d · light mo'Yin&. :i 48-5863 , cpl, no kids or pets, avaiJ I: Builnnl °"10ttUJlltlel Pandlse rolwnn in u. Dal· &en.rice: a~~il~ MS-ls&l~l&I Associate rxperlence necessary. Wt eon;;;,. de! ?-far. ·Rev.•ard. Phillipe: Cement. 548-6380 531-3729 Nov. l , 6~2278. lnToday'1 \VJ11t Adll. lyPUot Wa.nt Ad1. PARTNER will train. Sla50 total cuh 6T3-8804. l\10RE Concrete patio for YARD /Gar, Cl eanup. 4 Br, 21,J ba Studio apt. . • 2 FURNISHED Of1tce 1uite1, ~rm'""",,,·do.n, .'.!!.rte o'"°"'t•tri'bulion-r LOST: Man·a v.·alle~ lu'", "'°,an"'MY. Artll1~~. ~~ng. Remove tne1, tvy, trash. Cleam. 714 Go Iden r od , Fount•ln V•llty 5410 ,euntaln V•lt.y 5410 250 Mr .ft. ll25/mo. Cout $12.500 cash, ~lust he •vail· '0u1 .. 1,lon Now." lOO. 2171 Ra.lph Giesler &; Iowa, C.M., Wed. ·• ax a "'""""°' Grade, backhoe, 962-3745 . "7•'/ mo. yr toe, 540.7573, Hwy, Nwpt Bch. 66-tll2 hi I d & ti M • CE'"EN• WO"'" job •-.,} • e mme . ac ve. an. Ave., Slockton, ca 11 t , PM. Val. pictures Ir: driven l.. -n.n. no ......, TRASH & Garqe cle&IM.lp, 11.fl 5 !168-8658. :JOO.too.12X) IQ, ft. ager experie nce nee. $25K to Include phOne no. lie. Rew. $4$-1630: 546--0SM. small, re:uon~ble. Free_ 7 days. $10 a load, Free eat * lJ\11\lAC. 3 BR DUPLEX OFFICES, $60-$90-$180, S301\ annullUy. S25o v.•eek . E~tlm, H. Stufitck, 54S-861:i Anytime, 5f3.5031. lY, BA. convenient loc. Cotta Me:sa. 646-2130 start. Call lmmed. 636-2170. GOING business for sale. LOS'!': All \.\'hile, long haired CUSTOM CONCRETE CORONA bEL MA Sm a l I co r fee sh op • cat. f'em . {DEAFJ Vic: PATIO.DRIVES-ETC M0VING, Garap clean·ut I: 673-2402 R MANUFACTURING Oowntoy,'n 5a11111. Ana loca· 42nd sr. NPT. 67i>-3577. Free estimate. 67s:sa,6 lite hauling, Reuoneble. Near Ocean & Shorl'.11: 5 RM aulte, itor & plq:, 2 bt, Need man to supeNlse pro-t\on. $4000. F.P. Terrm SIA.l\IESE 2 yr m•le, Ille col· Fref! estimates. MS-1602. Brand new· 2 BR, 2 BA llOO sq tt .. Ind fir. 67J.6'J5? duction, Ena:lncerln1 & plant avail . Day• 5-11-3122, e\lt: or, lost vie Mtrer Pl & 19th. DECORATIVE CONCRETE 326 l\1arguer\le. Sl&-19S3 ~ £XECUT1VE suite • Harbor 1upervllk>n helpful but not 543--5643. Reward 646-22SS DRIVES· WALKS • PATIO HousKlt•nlnt •m UNIQUE trr.e level apt 2 br 1i· front.are nr Newport Blvd ntce1s•ry, will tnln. St!,000 --. • CALL oo~. 642&14 HOUSE OF CLEAN nr heh w/pool. S225/prl ·nun a: MA for leue. 1.000 + M! ft. ln\•1tment requlrtd. S..lary .Mono • .::;;.:Y!...:1".:..:L:;o:.:•:;•c...._.;.6320:.::.: Ptrson•l1 6405 0 $ l!V fu '3I Dllhll 54~10 u W,,.., N.B. Ph: ~ ror appt. ptu1 share of profit•. For -Contractors '620 D ! IRYTHING "'· •· · •• ,1. m•1 m-w, .. ~ M. 1st TD loan sHARE °"""''.RH. o""""' ~f:.~.R :1 ~rN~~~~ac~~ Ttltdiw,.,._. Se,M la.ury l~C::-::.::m=•:.:rc::l•::;I~-....:-= wru. itll 5.,_ ~a ln Ira _ GAS EXPINSE Mrey .... 1~1~· .... quceolilltylng "°'"11oon' 642-6824 Cd~I. 615-Sra> I i STORE Blda tor &ale 616. dtli rtataurant. Wil1hlrt It 89' INTEREST Need tide to Co1ta MtM ft'om _.... ...... • ll:IMrooma-lla&M • w. 19th SI. Bethel talrfa.x area. Gl'OIS ules 2nd TD loan Laguna, \Vork1ng tin. 8 10 etc. No job too Sm.all. WINDOWS. 'Willi~. 2 ER w I FIREPLACE, No .u.tt UTlll Ti 5"8-l~ ihd exctrd SJOO,<XX> per yr. 5, C.U 642-4321 (e.xt 770) SU..l494. Fin, 1tripptd, .e&led fl dllldren, m pets. $lll mo. .......... A 1Jllla:nlaW owers corner. art. S46--0'.Kl2 aft 1 PM daya, 4M-S139 after 5. GEN'L remodtllng A maJnL waxed. F1'ff at. dl1 or Call 6.,,_918.1 lnclu1trl•I Rtnt•I 60fO ORANGE J\JL1US-Sacrillce. Term1 bNad on eqnlly. SWINGERS! New Onnce No 'ti/Job too small, nl&ht. 673-3090. NOW $165/mo. lse. Le U1)9tr 1.;.;.;=====;;.__;.:..; Franchise pa)d. Owner "'1·2171 545-0611 Co. Gu\<M, ~info OCSG, Uc Insured. 615-3133 EXPEJUENCED HCl!.lJtClieln. 2 Br, cpta/drps/ttfr/nnre, e DMx••• FOR. Ll.e-5300 ICI ft prime movtne north. Full price 5et'Vhw Harbor area 2JCyn. P .O. Bax 2W. Anaheim GEN. Contr. RemOdefui 6 er, by di.>'. Own tranaparta. --C't. Adlll. '104 Nartlal\n • _. ... C..,,... w a rt hae Jptet4.ll/part. ir:m c;ro.1 $26.o:xk:on•kte.r Sattler Morft• o. m.--019.l. room &ddltlons. l..k. •Ins. tion. 831>-8897. 2 BOR.:'fS-f'urn or unfum. • ,..... ,.,,.. lrvlne Ind, Mr. Bullanl (lffe~ fj46..9!187 or 646-4047. 3311 E, llth Street HEALnt Spa mernbenhlp 64!)..(1991, evea 613-6&JIJ. 1 --,Bay=~.~-=,-,J-ant"torltl=..,..-I $165/mo. Adults on I y -: r:=,,~ M&-3051. UNUSUAL opportunity • At. for sale for 2, Take ovtr AddltklNI * Rerno&!:ling Crpll, windows. Doon el&. l 613-t.tn alter 4 pm. 2900 Sq. ft. w/<Jttiee, ·1r1 re:ar (nctlve boutique, N.8. oetan ~::.·~!.-,.j1 6345 pymts. 1l mo. Jen. 64J.397l Gerwtc.k • Son, Uc. Res . It Comm;t -.itn. , NEW 2 br. '2 ba It 3 br. 3 ba. 1585 llaW Anmlt 6oor $29!1 mo. Eve 1 k>catlon. Ett.&bllihed 3 yn. _;.:..:;::...:.,....:.:.:::.:.:.--·---aJ'L Sor week.e.nds &Jl)'timt. 673-elML * 549-2170 GENERAL ~. I South of Hwy. t:.J,!.f •• ~...1! -.-6*-06&1: dy 6*$.33 . .1240 Xlnt lffie, Malle otter. 11"-YOU ·havt $2100 "dt&:ire ALCOHOLICS Monymoua. aptl Ofl11. Phone .,._™' Ir;; ~,i!!Jl: 1-n St. Sp No. L, C.M. 67'-365.1 or 531-5363. ""'"lhly tncm l•>r 5 yn, Phone. 512-m1 or write to Ctrf!t Cl11nln9 6625 OOWl32 or 111.- 2 BR. 2 811, Ocean ilde of w RENT M-1 l.125 JtJ. ft.-C'OIN l•undry -Coll& Me11 securtd by Ut mtg, call P.O. Box 1273 Colla Mesa. STEAM Jet ct.rpll cleanlna. Meaa CleAn.ln& Sarvlc9 (I Hwy. NlttlY <teeonted. $12.i/mo. 13!& Lopll Avt. arta. ~ full prlce. 1..:•::"'c.· .::e-r.;.3303::..:=-----I For an ad W ell around Py ClarKare, na&n-wkie CUpcts. wlndowJ. ftoon ate. 1\lotpn Real1y ~2 Cl\1. lm--5116. 5t~3641 Saturday -DIML-A·LIN'ES! the clock, dial '4~5671. 1ervfceo. Frte !!St. 6f.2-<IOSS Res It Commc'I, &tMin • -· . IVICI DIRICTOR'i JOIS i EMPLOYMENT JOiS & EMPLOYMENT JOllS & EMPLOYMINT 0 JOllS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPL°OYMINT -MERClt\NDISI POlt MlltCHANDISI POlt SALE AND TRADE MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE H-ocle...... 6735 Job Wonhd, Mon 7000 Jobe Men, w-7100 Jobo-Mon, w-. t 100 Jobo--Mon, Wom. 7100 Ja•• Mon, w-7100 SALE AND TRADI ARE .,.. not oatWlod w/ SCRAM LETS Fumlluro IOOO tho ...,, ,..., .,..,,..,, !loon • DAYTIME Go"""" tor 2 IF YOU w,... dothet well. RECEPT., o11rac:t '""""' "'11 THE DAIL y PILOT i -------- •windows lmk? Try the children 4 &: 6, CdM, Rd'• we want you to model fur to wol'I< Sun. 9:30-2:30, Ap. haaanopenin&forana.........i EXECUTIVE dtlk ;11s. Dutch ''a:f· Call Du t<lh ANSWERS ~ m-3838 alt 6 •~FOR -OU TLET, ply2ZUFalrviewR.d,C.M. tnced, jou.rna.list ln ti,~; Jlardwood"8.rti; tlnilb Xlfit Mainl Service &: )'OIJ will SALE • Earn Chrlabnai mt,n'1 department. Appllc:ant cond. Uke ~. 646-l'rn ate the dlHm!nc.'f'. 637·1508 Crayo H~ Dram DENTAL Receptionbt. Must e INDUSI'RIAL ENGINEER money part lime. Sarah must be able to report, I========== bcioft &AM or alt lPM. Sa n-oi:VY a-bavt dental ex~r. 31MS. Expandlnc Ora.net County O>vcntry hlrlng now. No In-wrtte dearly, undentand Offk:e furniture •10 vage -54$-.8395 non-de!enee manufacturer vest, no del, f'l'ff trainina. ••-• l ho I I 6755 A no-credit rrstaurant algn: of '-!ah roductio .~ l r PH .... <.uen....,a 0 P togn,pey A 1;.;.""'"'--"9,:... ______ "The Only Thing You Get on OE NT AL • 11is1 a flt, P~~cJ ctter: ~~~~ er fl 0 : 962--0556 layou1, Top i:om.pany bene-Rettfl'd MxfiO wood desks. IRONING, 1\1,y home, $.1 hr. 1he cun He~ ts GRAVY:' OrihodonUc. Experienced, carter ~rtunib' to fully *~!!:':!~,!!"G ~~~· ~ l&la.ry, attractive ~:~ ~"'!.. wood50 e""'w Drtsamaklne 6 AlteraU0111.1·~;';;:~t::::i= ... ::"""'~:-e..n-64&--2'J&l.~ (fUTI rrre~d--i·n-d D E • n w ~-llLlfl'it:_ ro ..... ,, , .,...... e 64L J b-W ted 21-23 yn-fun.-$$$. I ng only clUnc experltnce ll:lv lbe-i&rge-lt-ael~tlofl 54>7 o an , _ Engineer. Degn!e required, Do ) ha ba ~nd i: ed ti ~ ' ot used ottice furn lD th1I Women 7020 TELEPHONE -·m1n1mum1·•ytms expet klii .. ~m a se-fltt ot ~1c uca on to ar MAID SERVICE 6125 MTM or CPD. Salary com: umor. 'ileeff11"irn!tif4: arcarff---Grieenman, ... Pff.. ea.Mc nt8JWfl)i11C-- GIRL FRIDAY poaition. DIRECTORIES menaurate with abil i ty. girls. Wehave 11eve.1'aJ t)lpes aonnel Manage_r, Box156o, DOMESTICS Ex11'd, reliable yo u ng Send J'ellume and salary re-ot club11. Call: C<Nitn Mesa, Calif. 92626, 1800 Newport Blvd. FHI tlke • au.enl ·woman. Prerer small <lllice. Men or women over 11 qt1Jrement1 to: Personnel 835-5834 6~2-9981 * TRIMMER OR UPHOL-&tU450 Ha\'e a MAID in yoor home Plione' ~2134 with cars, st•tion w•9· Manager, P. O. Box 476, SECRETARY • s a I e 1 STERER to work on boat to live in for a.~ low as $140-AIDES _ for convale~nce. ons or light trucks, Santa Ana, Cali(. <>riented. Shorthruid 90 Interiors 6 ean'flis covers. Office Equipment I011 $350 per mo. Services ren-elderly care oc tamiJy.care. Apply 1:30 AM, 10 :30 LADY to pl'!'pare 2 lite \Vpm: cyp!ng. Call for appt. ~nn. job, fringe benefits. dtted at our oHiee or In Homemakers, 547~1 · AM or 1:30 PM st•rt· meal ... , aome lite housekeep. 557-4123 MARINA (n4J 337·2S01 ... ' ' your home. Please Call, I W-• sd ~ (2'13)266-QSoCollect. OAY\VORK-1.oc.ref's.,own "I .une •y, \,A.to-Ing in exchange for free TRUCKOrlvu,J amillar 1,.::::;:..:;;;:,,:=:.,=.:""':0-:;::o I trana. Call ~ alt. 4 ber 21th. room Balboa Is. 3 blks from Secretary $500 with LOis Angele& A Orange Local Girl .,..,,,, to clean p.n1. Santa Ana 15040 Goldenwest Circ. Ferry. Call 548-8619 Residential development di. County, ~lust operate apts & priv. homK. Gd re:fs Westminster, C•llf. MAIDS For Aptfl'ype sltua-\'ision for civU engineering, fork!IU and secure own It reu. rates! 642-1224 Job Wanted, EARLY Morning tlf'v.'!paper tlons. Exp pref. Responsible Lrg land dev. oo_ Type ,00, load1. Cius II license re- Men & Women 7030 delivery, Sat &. sun. Truck Adil!!. ri.tust be ovr/'l5. Ap-SH 80. CJUired. tn4J 557-4CMO FREE TO YOU Painting, REFINED .ddl I needed. Aft 6. 5-W-6207. ply in person, Jamaica Inn MISS EXEC AGENCY TRUCK mechanic. r.fu1t P•perhangfna 6850 ml e age coupe Hotel 2101 E C08.St Hwy 410 W. <:oast Hwy, NB have O"""JI tools A diesel ex-1-.:...:~=°'-"="--"--' Experienced apl managers ELD~RLY genUeman needs Cd!\I. Btw: lo.'.2 PM . ' 646-3939 pe:r. Apply in person, 13431 :;=:=;=:=:=::=;;;;;: * EXTERJOlt-lNTERIOR • w/ koov.·ledge of complete llve-1n housekttper lor ••--F ,_ C -Won't be underbid! Custom meochanical maintenance & Leisure \\'orld 2 BR, 2 BA A1ATURE lady or man for IW>U ee Posillo1UI ....,..an, .J.I. G•r• .. Sele 1022 "'Orie, fully guar. Fi~t pool. service. 67~2US lower manor. Plea54? phone part or full time, liquor SECRETARY USED CAR .. ints. Free est./color con-837--0907. store, Costa Mesa. 546-9921 SALESMAN J •-••--W Good skills, college, young co. . sutling. Local re[a. Lie, o~, om. 7100 MAKE full time wages pt· Call Loraine, \V~stclllf Per-College 1tudent preferred, 21 or older. Part time. Bond, Ina. 492-5338, 549-0811 ALL J\IODELS toeking for ELECTRONIC time. Be a distributor or aonnel Agency, 2043 \Vest- 11\'T-Ext painting, State & ci· °"'·ork should contact l.A.G. -INSPECTOR-pure organic food sup-cliff Dr., N.B. 645-2TIO ty Jicen~. 30 yrs exp call JNC for information on plements, cleaners & cos-I iiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiii Bill tor tree est. ~2--0238 it model!ng positions offered Experienced in sub-assembly. metlci. Mr. Liles. 673--5212 SERVICE CENTER no ans, ~5268. by the Company. p b : wiring, circuit board and MOTHER'S Helper. ~tatun Employment Agency No Waiting 835-3501 total s y s t e m Inspection woman. Universil)' Pk. Tur-* WALLPAPER * ASS I STANT Manager, checkout of con1mercial pro... ~e ~k12area.h 2:0~5:30, \Vhen you call "Mac" sporting goods. Experience ducts. Able to instruct olh-on-Fri. per r . ......-3139 548-1444 646-lnI required. Over 20, K-Mart ers. Should have lmowl~ge 1,•,,•,,1 =6·==-o~-o,-- Sportlng Goods, 2 2 o o of in-process and receiving MEOIAN'IC • Auto. Newport PA I NT I NG: }fonest Guaranteed v."Ork. Lic'd, local ref s. Call 6/:>-5740 aft 5. Harbor. O l inspection. Bch prestige Joe. service .~.::T:cT,cR:cA~C:.:T-l_V_E~-wo-m-,.-.·1 station. No major repairs, will have to use a new tune- part/full time. Teach pro! \Veil qualified individ-up machine; smog Uc Is make-up techniques. F"ree uals should send their p1-el. Salary open_ \Vrite training for quaJif. person, ·1 2006 Exec position avall. Viviane resume to: Dai Y Pilot Box l\I· , 330 Wocdard Cosm'etics GATES W.BaySt.C<istal'o1eaa. 642--0197. LEARJET CORP. NEED 5 °"'"Omen or husband •-~ Von Kannan A"e & wil• te0 -· to market the Apt. Cleaning: Y..'oman need-,l.Ol;!Jl ~ •• ....... ~. exper. C»A•n transp. Equ Irvine, CaHf. 92664 1 fabulous Slim Gym. Ex- Personal rel's. 642_1224_ al opportunity emp O)let tremely hi incme. Full or pt-time. 833-1177 IMMEDIATE Est. on quality BABYSITTER for church ES'fJ.:\1A!OR-Shet't st e e 1l;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I inter&exterpalntlng.Apts, nursery, 9:l5 to ll:l5 am fabr1catl(ln plant need• NOTE DEP.r. GIRL home!I or just a room. Jack, eve"" Sunday St John the t~notch estimator fo r Do ha /hand! INTER & Exter painting. Free est. Luca! rers. Lic'd & ins. Call Chuck, 645--0809 r' INT. or E.XTERIOR PAINTING. Loe. Ref. U.1- MED Service. Free estimates. 646---0210 1 -(213) 4""""""" . :"' . · • prod 1· & . I ycu veexper, w . 83 ...,.,..,, .,.,,...~. D1v1ne Episcopal Church uc ions c u • o m . . f I ., PAINTING -Ext.-lnt, 18 C.M. 548-8326 mornings ' precision v.·ork, \\'e are l'IO\V ~ & p,r:easm!e: c:ns· L' ,_ -------='---1 engaged in e J e c Iron I c is es a . co. s a ex. ~ .. ~~~~n~ei1Ji ngs, * BABYSITTER: Rcsponsi-cahinelt'Y and all l)IJ>eS of per. quick mind. Start $400. ble. won1an, to care for 2 heavy comm<:rcla1 work. Call Jean Brown, 540-6055. 96&-9126 chldm, i\.1 y home. 11:31).9:30 1 m 01 e di ate oppoi1 unlty, COASTAL AGENCY FOR Your. painting needs in--Start 11/16: 962-5327 good salary and benelitl. 2790 Harbor Bl., CJ\1 *Sec'y ........... $600 Responsible position lor \\'ell quaJified gal "'ho i1 gd "'/ figures, type 60 & 11 con- genial under pressure. *Soc'y/p/t;mo $2.25 hr Jf you're bored at ho1ne & love to type thi1 is lor ycu. Hrs. approv. 10 A~f.J PJ\1. TYPl" 70+ _ 500 Ne.wpon Center Dr .. NB Suite 200. By Appl . 64.t-4981 ter & exter. at lowest BABYSITIER. Afternoons. Phone: 714-5.'17~04.0. Other fee/tree jobs avail. priCe!I, Paul 557·7455, 557-3618 temporary •. my hom_c. ov.·n F/C Bookk""""'" 1600. SERVICE Sta Attendant, lull · .. '"'"~ "'"•~· time, 7-3PM l 3-11 shill. PATh'TING, neat & reliable. trans .• Rel s. 67.)-0~~. Manul·,turing ''P· Call NEWSPAPER auto route. " E I "l A 4 6Al'I 7 Apply in person 8a)'Shorr Call John !or free est. BABYSITI'ER. responsible., Lnrain. \Vcstcliff Dr. N.B. ar Y ~· · pprox -" ' Richfield, 200 \V, Coast 646-4Sn or 847-4128 appro~ 2 days/2 nights "'k. s.i,;..mo days a "'eek. Excellent YOU SUPPLY ntE PAINT Harbor View area. 644--7222 FULL . T k part-time income. Wan I c1c,1"'""''',' =N7·8~·~~~-- A n-or pt time. a e responsible mature person. SERVICE Sta 1\1 an ager $10 Per verage ....... m BABYSITTER, 3 mornings a orders &: make deli\•. $2.90 540-3006 w/mechanlcal exp. S a I Free Est. 557-86311, 540-7046 v.-eek, Reliable person for l hi' prof to~-546--574:) ·1,o°'P"E~RA~T~0~.~051~~1 -_-••• ~1-open, local ref's. 548-1930 EXPER~ paln11.... Intt'tk>r .,.. old hoy 61'9006 ~ ng e '""""' e. ·~ .... '6 • .,. • .,... • flJLLTl~IE help, female, Exp'd only. Top pay. & Exterior. Free estimates. BEAUTY CONSULTANTS }.fon-Fri, approx. 3 ltl 8 PM. ROLS'S MFG. 863 Produc- SE\\'ING poY.'er machine operators, experienced - sv.1m \\'ear. 4001 F, Btrch St .. N.8. nr OC alrp<>rt. e & J Painting 49'Jr78'12. n«'ded by Genera1 Foods to Call Mt'!'!. penning ton tlon Pl., N.B. 6-Ki-0008 :PtfcAdams Painting Serv. teach makeup artistry, \Vill 833--0600 Ext 2037 . Inter. & Exler. Special rates train, Exec. po!!ition avail. , PART/Full time. Earn ex· on apts. 646-3645 VIVIANE WOODARD CO~ HANDYMAN Wanted for tra Cllrtstmas $$ Sho\v &. * STILL LOOKING * PAINTING &: Paperhanging. METICS. 544-1464 re:::~~ ~ts ';:r .:~::, ~i~a:!o~:i~=J~: for exper'd. housekl'eper with Int. "-Ext. Reasonable. BEAUTICIAN: 5 day \\'k, town owner. J\1ust be 6ct2-0l9'l. xlnl ref's. :Ptlust be gd_ mgr, Free estimate 5'16-3820 With JoUowing prel'd. Gd trusty,·orthy & self starter.J;;;;;~;i;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;• gd cook, capable or caring PAINTING: Inter, & Exler. Wary. 847-9164 art 1:30. 213/62Z-9193 day I or REGIS. NURSE for hse & family ol 5. Top 8 2131388-5255 eves. Wary to qual. applicant. Very reasonable, &15--081 Blue Dolphin _ Must be able to" handll'! all Liv~ in beaut N.B, home. aft 6 PJ\f \VA ITRESSES ex -<N.L2S HOMEWORKERS WANTED back ofc. duties. Exper. in 675-0487 * PAPERHANGER * COOKS 335.'i 'vi &do 'N 8 · <Envelope Addttssers). E.K.G, Gd oppor for experl ..:;.:..:::::; ______ _ Professional, 646-2449 ' a ' · ·Rush stamped, aelf·&.d· person. $4 hr. Call Gloria $650 *PAPERHANGING BOYS' SUPERVISORS ~~~sG~~N e~voe~~P;· ~~A~~·AGENCY s:~1;;~na::ei;:~nt ~r~;~~ &: PAINTING. * 968-2425 TRADERS, P .O. Box 2'l90 Harbor Bl., C~I complete. CalJ Ann, West- Earn $U>$175 per week. ll2'l-A21, Redclndo Beach, cliff Personnel Agency, 2043 Painting, \Vork 28 houn a week. Ages Calif. 902'18 Other Jee/free jobs avail. \Vestcl\f! Dr., N.B. 645-2n0 Repair 6880 18-35 yea.rs old. Need Jarge_ HSKPRS Em ~ fee . . , Sedan or Station Wagon Su. p yr pays ' RELIABLE lady m SO &-60 I . Bo 12-16 . George Allen Byland Agen-to share lovely hme. nr TELEVISION commercials now casting for 13 week• ol TV commercials, I.A.G. INC. ll>-3501 * PATCH PLASTERING All types. Free estimates Cail 54()..6825 1"1d"'Th1se. ,~'no1'"' u· years cy ]()6.8 E, 16th, S.A. Brookhurst & Ad~ ms O • JI "" R SE! 1ng po. 547...o3$ sition! Contact Mr, Waller-563618 stein. (213) 861)..5783 between I BM Composer lit~~~~~~!ii;i;;;~~~~~tg•~·~~~~~~~ij 10 A>l 1 P>I _.........,.n. om. 1 111e1t. orn. -· r.fust have exper. $475 + mo. PLU~IBlNG REPAIR CASHIER, exp'd, for fine 8:30-5 PJ\f, Fun group to l• No job too small womens clothing store, p8rt ""Ork with. Local N.B. ofc. Retail Plumbing • 642-3128 • lime/Xmas. Sales position Newport HOME REPAIBS also open for exp'd. No Personnel Agency Plumbing-electrical. S7.50Hr. phone calls please . 133 Dover Dr., N.8 . 642-2'755 or 642-0506 Backstreet, No. 25 Fashion 642-3870 kD~RA""°I~N~S~P"°l_ugg_od~?~D~,..~l~nl~,-.I 21~,l~and~,~N~B~~~~--1::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::· slow? E>tportly <loaned 19· CAREER IN 2-1. br !let'Y. 530-3B:rl Roofing 6950 LEE ROOFING CO : Rooling ot all types, r ecover, repairs, roof coatings. Lie & bonded since 1947. &12-7222 BEFORE )IOU buy, call T. Guy Roofing Co. Rerover spec.. 645-2m. 548-9590 Sowi.. 6960 QifALJTY You've always wanted, Dressmakini • t.lte.ratlons. Key Sa.)', 1'763 orange Ave., CM. 645-1292 EUROPEAN dressmaking all custom Utted. Very reasonable. 673-1849 e l)reSSmaklng • Alteraticns l)l!signed to suit you. Call Jo * 646-M46 Alt.rotlon1 -'42·5145 Neet, accurate, 3> yean exp. 6974 Tiie. Cer•mic •-'----------•V~. The Tile Man• CUit. work. Install & repairs. No job too sml. Plaster patchlnc. Leaking fihoYter ._ir, 8'l·J9ST/-. REAL ESTATE !;;. .. . -· Openings for enthusiastic people v.•anting to make a minimum of $1000 per month a.net v.·ho are v.·illing to work and learn. Need not be Ji. _ censcd to apply. If licensed special program, exeellenl training program, and )1)U can earn while you learn. CaU Walker & Ltt, Realtors, 842-4455 and · ask for Man- !RVINE PERSONNEL SER.VICES .. AGENCY CFonnerly Abilities Unllm.) ager. CARRIER BOYS WANTED l!r the DAILY PILOT Dana Paint, San Juan Capistrano and Capistrano Beach, Contacl J.tr. Sea.y at DAILY PILOT San Clemt>nte office 305 N, El Camino Re.al <92M20 CHIROPRACTOR or Physlc•I Therapist S.cret•ry Sharp, attract, gd skills. R.E. investment. mortagllge or slmiliar background. M .T .S.T . Opr. Prefer 1 yr t.1.T.S.T, exper. Secret•ry Sec'y lo credit mgr. Collec- tion t:xper. + gt! sec'y skills. Travel beneUts. Tellers i\lust havt> banking or sav. ings & Joan bckgrnd. Escrow Girl Frf. 1 Yr, ~xPt'r. In bank or R.E. J::scrow dt>pl. e Ctramk Tile Work or for TIM:-rapy Center in C.M Pluterlnc. iwu. Frff 64UM50 10 am-5 pm. Receptionist ed. 536-242& COO.'TAIL & food wailrcss. E~lally sharp )'OOng lady I===-==="-='·:.:. ""=='=="·-= Apply in person at Rancho w/abo\·e avg, typing It £tn'I Tree 5Hvlce 6tto San Joaquin Golf Course ore ex-per. 1---------Cantlna. Jam CUlvu Rd. Ahra}1 LM'1,.... Sttvtc. N.B. TRISH HOPKINS Ards~ prun.lns &: ftl\'IO\'&l, COOK-Exp'd breakfast . 488 E. J71h (at lrvlneJ C.l\I. ~ lfte acap l ng. v.·/pe.y to abll. App in '42·1470 =· l.Jc'd • in•. pcnon, ODIE'S. 1400 w.1::::::::::::::::::::::::::: -· T SU Cotut H.-y., N.B. M . T.S. T. OPR $500 1 reo rgory CUSTOMER REP. I yT. oxpor, Gd typllt, No * :>I0-3799 * $475 MO. ,,.1..,.. U....._. "90 !!aro ltflpor, .,, .. xln'I ''" MISS EXEC AGENCY .. -m_ry,,_ _ _.~-Some d111la proc:tulng bck· 410 W. Cbut Hwy, ~1J ctYKOSKI'S Cc..y-kol-lcey) pnd. Call J.liu Laura. 646-3939 0.lOm Upbc>lattry, J8ll 557-6122, Abitail Abbot Per-Alit0 F~ PosiOont Newpor t Blvd. CM, IOfln~I Aatney, 230 W, War-I'!'!~~!!!!!~'!'"~~~· CU-1454. ntr, SUhe ?ll, Santa Ana. Piiot Oa.ullltd. ~ CAREER OPPORTUNITIES In Ret•lling with ANGELS Horne Improvement Centers C•liforni1's Gre•te1t Do-lt·Yourulf Centers * * * * ANGELS, NEW ORANGE COUNTY BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER, IS NEARING COMPLETION. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS e Retail Mlin-sier1 • A11i1t•nt Mln19er s e De,,.rtment M•n•gers • Clerks • Warehouse Mon • Truck Drivers • Lo1ders e Stockert • Exper ienced Cashiers • Experienced Lumber Salesmen Excellent Pay -ComJMny Benefits - Incentive Pay-Excellent Opportunities For Advancement. Join one or Calltomla's largest, fastest gro,v- ing retail chai ns -train now for a reward· Ing career in retailing. Earn while you learn in preparaUon for the ope ninl( of our new Orange County center. Other Orange Coun ty sites planned early In 1971. Excellent op- portunities for advancement to executive positions. TALK OVER YOUR FUTURE wrrn GEORGE REYES ANGELS PERSONNEL DmECTOR IJN.-TUES.-WED., OCT. 26-27-28 APPLY 9 A.~l • 5 P.M. CALIFORNIA DEPT. OF HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT 2823 SO. BRISTOL, SANTA /\NA Advertisement Pald For By Emplo)·er MARCUS MOTORS AIRLINES A natural for young people "'ho want l'Xcite.ment plus! Ticket Agent? Air Freight? Station age n t? Reserva. lions? Ramp or tr.lvel agent! We'll train YoU .for these and more. day or nite. \\'e include placement as· i;istancc, Airline Schools P•cific 610 E. 17th, S•nt• An• 546596 TRAIN TO BE A Heavy Equipment OPERATOR Approved For V•ts Learn to operate bulldozers, drag lines, cranes, scrapers, loaders, trenchers. e t c, Home study prepares you for resident training at our mOdern lacililies in J\Iiami, :rlorida, Highly paid career is open ambitious men. Uni· vt>rsal Heavy Construction Schools Dt'pt. 1200, 501 N. Golden Cir., suite 206, S.A., Calif., 92705 or (area) 714/ 547.7;,21. Antiques 1110 ANTIQUE SHOP FOR SALE OR LEASE on Newport Blv<l, C.i\1. 645-1970, 5-18-1817 VERY exquisite 18.K gold bracelt>t o!ht'r neat th ings. 544-1563 aft. 9 BE A TRAVEL AGEi\'T Pl"t'pere for exciting career, meet new people, go Pe\\' places. A lcv.· opp's. in Fall cla~ses. Intv's. 10-2 pm claily, INT'I.. SCHOOL OF TRAVEL 122-C Agate, Bal. Isl. 6r,JT."l'!. lOf7l' TV's 30 day guar $2ij up, Fi\! I ~==-,-,.,,.-c,---;--,-c~ I $14.00 WEEK Y"' SPECIAL iuners SlO. Girl's 3 spd bike YOUNG Adult altered male Pt. time eves. No exp, net>. 1970 Singer Touch·o-malic, Sl5 B<>y's 20 .. bik~ $8-$17 cat. shots, Owner allergic to \\'c ll'ain. 1\1/Ha\·c 6 mo's Bt>aut \\'alnut console, $37.50 Rndios: A~l-F:\1 , tape deck, cat!I. 548-0813 836-4493.J0/27 rt'Sidency in Orange County. 545-8238 trans. 117 E. l!!lh St. C'.\t. S.\tAU. Adorable puppies: to 15MEN • AK.AI Tape Deck: goodhome.548-1225 10/27 + NEEDED * Musical SANSUI No. 2(00; 2 GOOD flov.·er bed mulch, YoU 547-7781 * 547-7782 lnstrvm•nts 1125 Speakers. 11 Tapes, used pick up. 5'18-4888 10/27 ~1USIC teacher • Qualified, 2 REALISTIC i\llsc &: s1ands, 2/mo's. $850. MS-2162 ASSORTED rabbits, vtl")' exp'd, piano, organ, ac-Bogen 85 v.·att amp (5 mie CARPET la)·et'S, have shag lovable. 847-$13 10/26 cordion, beginning guitar. lmputsl, Vox (Phanton1) 12 crpts deal direct, exp in· 7 k Id ''ou,. hom•. ,.,.... 7661 ._.,... 0 .,21 T1\BBY t\1.;ns, w o l • .......-slrg elec guitar AL..\IOST 11tall, can fin, ~ • people-lovers. 546-7308 10/2'/' MERCH•.,DISE FOR NE\V, 2 Jennln1tfi 15" spkn .8'l7:;:._'_,::.,:.:'°:_----=~ ...,. I b S'I -CUTE kitten ftmale orange SALE AND T n •oE n ca . 1 wrtone amp & 8 ~l~I movie pro;.w.tor $20, s ~ ,-.. kr · b 0 " -· "1 ·--blk k \\'hlte. 673-8963 10/2'7 ;, sp in ca · v-u-.-... .,. nun Bell &. Hov.·ell mo\•ie Furniture IOOO P i\I. can1era $10, Geiger counter PETS •nd LIVESTOCK Sonol• Accordi•n $3S. timall boat $35 firm. FURNITURE returned from "~I-· Pll1, Gener•I llOO Full fiZ,' $200. 962-5618 ~~-..:::.~:.·::·-=---,--·I display studies. model ham-========= ~ es, decorators et.nc:'ellatlon. SfAUFFER table, good COO-CJUNOllLLAS: Emera-ency Spanmh & Mediterranean P l•nos & Organs 1130 dll lon, C<>mplt>te "'ith dlrec-illness forces 1acrlliee cl R D FURNITURE • STOP • ~.'°i·"~ 00o1, klot & uma $80. 291 prim• animaa & .. ulpt. 1144 Newport Bl., C.M. ·• ~ " Call ~2241 9 COAST f\tUSJC IDEAL Chrl1ihnas gift! One-=========I every nlte '•ll ll20 W , Su "I ,. EXPA.'lSJON SALE thil'd cara1 perlectly n1atch-;C::•::.'''------""-" ed.,Sat,ai: n. ti v Fbl B _ a u ous uys! ed dian1ond earrings for ABYSSIN, !AN ki!t'"'• 13 LEAVING stale, forced to NEAR NE\V :r;plnt>I & con-pk!rCf'd ellrS. 549--067.t It'll my beaut!. Medlter· ,.1 pla-0 1~-1-,:::,::,::::-::::::::..=.;::,,c.....--wks, housebroken. e ·~a • • • • 'Oil\ '"'" • JIELP! Going to Vietnam! * &16-8128 * rant'an furn,, king bdrm. GRANDS, ~llnisht'd & re. ,,..., 1 ,1 .,,. I==="-'======( set, liv. rm .• Spanish game b .1 1 ... ;c ~·· as$3.g<'-, "'as -l • Ul I. 8.1 0 SA •••••• '. $895 (',Qld CONN coronet $50. "'-1125 !let. cof.fff tables, den furn., ORGANS, eltclllng seJecUon ~2Ta4 .,.,.., plclures, lan1ps, etc. Pleese t I he · ..:::'.:::=. _____ _ call 71-1/ 96&-9951. nr I \e g:1nncr as ""ell o~~F1CE Dtsk-Black mttal Sil.KY Terrier Pups: AKC. as the, Accompll1hed organ-w/v."llinut top It left-hand 1 h o t 1 • Champ I sired. UXl8 CllJlKlling "'"/pad $50, h t "Would You Believe" -tum. ,_,1 ...... -Sam & T~rms! 846-$347. Xlnl cond. Corner I I 11'"" '" ......, '" .. " • ·• ·•••••··•••••· rom . .., ~-. ,, lon-rn.· 6T'a-8600. • SK\'E Temtt milk, 1% n1a1chlng ccUtt !able $10 "EXTRA BONUS" Full trans. "I"" Sv.•lng mach. in cabintl tstor1zed ne\\' ,;plnet Ol"lan t.EA.VING State, rn~ust ec:U; :;an old, AKC. ~13 $10. 6' rih•an $15. All .!ti good \\1th auton\aUc rh)>thm, patio furn., TVs, ap S. ::.:;'=====7""7"7·1 cond, 'll2 \V, 18th, Apt A. TlilS \VEEK ON LY •. $995 .ev.1ng machine &. e SPRJNCER SP AN IE L CM 011tu Surldl.Ys l2-S househok! ltema, 91)Z..9926. r-.,pupg AKC. Champkm Line. 8' 10la, nevtr \lied, quilted Dally tll 6 -Fril tll 9 DellghUul hard fircWOOd * • MS-lGOO • * Ooral, Scotchguarded, $125. .~ COAST ·MUSIC 2 cords at. $25 each LAB. Retrifvt'!' P\lpg tlfatchlna: Jo\.'escat fl5-• NE\\'PORT It HARBOR • 5-18-8207 e AKC Rtgts. ~ champ liot S30-33S7 Costa 1.ttta 1t 642-2851 USED bikes, rtCCnditicntd. Xma.s joy. &W-0505 TOP &liar tor us t d BALD\YJN Orga-Sonk: oraan all kind -3. 5, 10 irpeeds e OACHSllVNPS. Reg AKC, tumlture, antiques. brk-a· w/bench: like new: ~TS. 642-9867 Champ line, Beaut i ful • brae, oritnf.al rugs, oil pain-~caJ::=l.c' ,:8'.:;T.;-"':.:..:.·•t.:,. ----e EARN free toys, H&\'C a ~. E\1!1: 544>-8902 ti~a. CaJI 642--3-MS. SPL'IJET Pie.no wlllt heneh, Blum Tuy party. AKC ttg, l\fln\ Getman THE SUN NEVER SETS on S\lpcrb condition. ke')'I Bev Dugan 1t 531-7593 SchMuttn, 4 m•ltJ, 2 Pilot Oualtled · pt.rfcct $325.. 962-5101 Dial ~ i: abuat It. females, 6 wks•ald-6*-8124 • MontloJ, Od4btt U. 1970 PITS •NI.LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRAHSPORTATION. -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATll rRANSPORTATION s 8115 Boot Slip Mooring 9036 Moblio HomH 9200 Trucks 95811 tme•tod Autos 9600 Imported ~lol ffOO Imported Autos ffOO Imported Autot 9600 DATSUN OPEL VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN i--w-E_P_A_Y_T-oP" Autos W1nted ALL PUPPIES Presenl1 Purebrtds, Shaggi,1, rifixe<t. AS:C Af&:hans, BaW'ls, Shep. ~~rds, Collies, Dac!Uihunds. ~tJ ol Sbl\Rglt11 Poos. l-le11.lth Ctrt. Credit Cards, Open 7 day,, 6624 Westmlns. I~ Blvd. \Vestmlnster, I i92-2276 CI-fiHUA•tUAS;--mQlt;, Cham· p!ptt stock, show Qua.lily. Fawn w/grre.n eyes. Short· DOCK space for '20'-i' HU, 32'40' rA>\\'tr. Nr' Arches. &12-4&+1. *PVT dock for up to 28' motor boat on ctwinet. 6'13-2Ei6.2 aft 6 pm Boat R~ntals 9031 Triple Wide Cornell C:O.O~lal e Paramount Banina1on e Unl"""'1 Flamineo • General 6roadmoor • Star Hlllcrttl e C•mbrldp CHAPMAN MOBILE HOM ES 1206 N, Harbor, S.A.. 195< FPRD Picl<-.p. &hit( reblt 390 enc. tires. $BJ. 646-6138 Utility Truck Boie $75 .• ~ti 6-8959 • • 1969 Ford camper apecia.I, % ton. Bir enc. -Rent A Sailboat Cal :Q. sleeps 4, hU.~11:: I ===·=n='=153='-3l=05=*==ol,;R;oc~ro~~"'t':;n_V:;•::h::lc:;l?:"~'~S1:.::5 DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNOAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. Huntin&ton Beach 842-7'7t1 or 5'!0-GCG '68 Opel Chrome wheel1, new t.ltt1 I 1 paint • Metallic blue, low mileage, <XBP205> Will take trade or t1nam-e i;irlvate par. ty. 546-f052 or 494-68U '68 vw Sedan e '67 DATSUN WAGON e f---fljC')-RSeHE lladlo.-IWAKO»I A-1 COND-* $850-;--f--' If' YOU baYe '$GCIO, yol,I v.'ill bey ihla ' obe. New Paint, tires, clutch, reblt enr. Alt 6, S.Hl.T CASH tor uaed e&r1 A trucks just call us for tree estimate, GROTH CHEVROLET '66 VW squareback lhls Qne sparkles, red with spotless white Interior, 8,000 mile on rebuilt en11ne xlnt Ask for Sales Atanaaer thro\llhout ana priced at 18211 Beach Blvd. $1499 Uc YWF 682. Chick Huntttwroa Beach lwraon Inc., 445 E. Coast 847~ Kl 9.S33l · hi1ftd S35 -. without papers & stud priv. $75. with papers & no strings. 1 is'one year, l is 5 mos. Stud service 11.vail. 54()..3634 !led, $30 Pt'r day, 1o11kdys; $40 pP,r day wknds: $200 per \11k. Lessons incl, 96MMO, MotorcyclH 9300 VISIT OUR BIG 642-55210< ~ $]5~ftft n.nl'U'V'l, __ R_E,i::.r~~OJI -FERR~ll '6"H'ORSCHE -. l7L H~ .• -N.B._673.-0900_ut.--5.l A:rE-MODE---<-- ..-54. CADILLACS :>.1ALTESE quality AKC pup. pies, male & female. Jo~rom st!io. F..'arly Christma! for one you love. 714: ~1~2026 Sil.VER TOY POODLES! 2 fttALES, 1 1''EMALE AKC R.EG. 646-0142, 333 1711'1 St. GOLDEN RETRIEVERS AKC· * * 714/532-6588 *-sgfNA_UZER PUPS *-i1ale at stud 213/330-6595 AKC Oob.rm1n Pup$ 6 wks. $6J). 540-8638 alt 5 Horses 8830 Bo1t Ch.1 rt er 9039 32' T\vin-scrcw Chris Crait Sips 6 * Oelux boat * 548-2UI, 630-4034 * Flying Lessons 9150 AIRLIN E Pilot off c r i ng flight illtitructlon. Prlv11.tl' thru A.T.R. Your plane or mint'. Reasonable rate s 968-4840. Mobile Homes 9200 ] 1:r?11 !l?i!l•I• !l.11"-J Mobile Living at Its Best 1---------IN IRVINE AGR ICULTURAL SHOW GELDING AQHA Registered 4 yr old gelding • Over 6 mo. prof. training. Shown at halter & 'ol."eStern pleasufe. Very clas- sy. $1200. Call 540-5630 days or 633-3394 \\'cekends or evenings . J\sk for Dick. AQHA Regi stered lillle, 2 yrs. old. Jet black • \Veil bred • Slre Gaupho Bars. Must sell. Asking $500, terms. cau 540-5630 days or 6J3..3394 .weekends or even. Ing,_ Ask for Dick. TRANSPORTATION Boats & Yachts 9000 WHY NOT TAKE A CRUISE?? For Lease Or Charter LOW WINTER RATES! 40' Wheeler Cruiser: Sleeps 8. Make appt, NO\V! 0\VNER: \Vkda.vs 539-8978 Eves &: wk- ends: 827-1431. PRESERVE-BEAUTIFUL! NEW $3001000 RECREATION CENTER SPACE RENTALS FROM $81.50 IN ADULT PARK -PETS ALLOWED- M0D£LS OH DISPLAY -EXAMPLE- BRAND NEW DOUBLE WIDES 28' QIRIS rn1n 283's, 'fi6, Dbl planked, bendix radar, S-S, Fathometer, v a po r detector, hold ing tank, RDF, Clean, 200 hrs. $8950. ALSO Catalina mooring, Total Electric Av a Ion Harbor, $2500. (Gas Available) 838-3791, 83(}....3875. 2 br., 1 bath, compl, wt1h /,BOSTO~=N~IV:;;ha=:,:l,'=,"'"u"·."°'T"c::a"ne:::,c_ I carpet, drapes & appliances. 20 hp Chrysler. CortliOIC. Lg_ awnings, both sides &: full skirting-Tax & Bimini top and canopy. nooo •• * 675-3441 license-Complell'ly set-up 17' BOSTON Whaler 100 & 6 $9999 hp, Xtra tanks, bail tank, deck, rail, cover, trlr, elec-SEE THE FABULOUS trOnlc equip. $2500. 642-4048. 30X55 CORNELL X I t AND MANY OTHER e «' HOUSEBOAT, n ' MODELS lNCLUDING live aboard. Slip Avail. * 54g.24~ * SINGLE-WIDES '""""""',,;;;;;,;;;;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,I -FINANCING AVAILABLE. THINK sao~E D~ -:ouPE Harbour V W HONDA FOR FERRARI Hardtop, gl•amlnr m•talllc • • Lal'C)• Selection WANTED &: ANY OTHER LATE 1'100EL Newport Imporu Ltd. Or-ailvei· with brand new In. Kl El Dorado Campers, ange County's only author-t~rior'. chrome wheels, ra-1871H1UBNTIEANCHGTOBLN.,BEA642-4CH435 Of YW Campers, ?.fini 1-lomea, Chassis Mounta iud d al V K bl ''FRIED· UlllfR'' and Belboa Moloc Hom... • "· dial '""'· AM/FM radio, vw LEASING OM, om s, GENERAL 1'101'0RS CAR SEE CHUCK TRAPP OR BILL MAC CRACKEN UUW CHOOSE FROM SALES.SERVICE-PARTS uc" P"""2. AT Buses, New & Used ,_ ~ .-. •1 SHELLS TO COMPLETELY 3lOO W. C...t Hl>y. $2399 Nabers Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BLVD., COsta Mesa 5,J!,6824 • 8'3-1>66 SELF·CONTAINED MODELS 64~941>,N•wport Beact;.,_1164 CHICK IVERSON CHICK IVERSON lmmedl1to Dollvory NEW-USED-SERV. $210.00 to $989S.OO Authorl"d Ferran D<al" VW VW CHICK IVERSON ~ TryBeforeYou8uyWitbOur 1970 HARBOR BLVD. VW · &asonable Rental Service FIAT 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 <:?STA MESA 549-3031 Ext. 68 or 8t 540-9100 ()pen Sunday '70 Honda 450 Low, low milea. Like new. dlr. Complete with camping trailer. • 908442. Will take tiade or finance private par. ty. Call 546-4052 or 494-68U. 3-RAIL motorcycle trlr $115. '68 Honda 305. like ne1v. $390. '69 Yamaha 250 Endum, also like new $495. Pvt pty must sell 673-7436. HON DA 350 SL Honda, 350 Ice), candy red pe.lnt, Dunlop trials I tires l 1800 mi's, Xlnt cond, Try ;575. &~2556 eves BLACK CYCLE JACKETS: Sl2.50 1961 Harbor Blvd, Cl\.t. * * 548--0353 * * LIKE New, '69 Hodaka Ace 100 $300 Firm. Both street & dirt equlppl'd . 609!1 Iru Cdl\.I aft 6 PM. '67 Triumph 650, Semi-chop- ped. xlnt running, $650 OF. FER * 846-~l e '70 Suzuki 125 e Near new, Anxious to sell, make offer. 675-0367 1970 Y Al\lAHA 250 Enduro Lo miles. Xlnt cone!. $550 &1~781 305 C!-lOPPER Good c<>ncliOon, rigid frame S-493. f\11 6-$959 THEODORE 19'10 HARBOR sLvD. '62 VW Bun "'° HARBOR eLvo. WE PAY CASH ROBINS FORD COSTA MESA -:;i COSTA MESA 2060 Hatbor Blvd. ~ '64 PORSCHE Rad'c, oi speed, excellent con. ===~-~-~ FOR YOUR CAR Costa M•sa 642-0010 K dltloo. d~. (BIVMSSI) WW 1968 VW·Xlot cornl. New w/w ==.Miiii1Niif1-'iHii01iMMiF""-:::j.--'::'-1.HIN -11----356-SC COUPE--fi·n an c e -priva1e-party. -tires, cooomat11, auttrlrans. Kamp Kin;-Cha!sb Mount aamu Ba.lboa blue, chrome wheel3, 546-4052 or 494-6811. 26,000 mi, ;1600. Call M&-1077 CONNELL Fully self • COlltalned with ~ radial Ures, concourse con-aft 5. popout rear bed, dual alr ditlon, Lie. XOG991 '66 vw 1962 VW BaJa type. New int. CHEVROLET cond, Sun deck on •n Chev. NEW 124 CPE. DEMO $3099 new 1ire1, SO h.p. engine 2828 Harbor Blvd. ~:'t~r"'"'; •• ~~';,1:d1';; $279S • CHICK IVERSON r-"'-:IH04-:-co-oc=~=,,_-1 ·-:WE"'eo."'""P1a"'°AY"°M";'"'oP""":"'·'"'::i.'""',....1 whit•" A ><al win'"" ·•u•I "FRIEO ... LAHDER" vw Sedan '66. vw BUG FOR TOP USED CARS sell this week. Stock 781 5'19-3031 Ext. fi6 or 67 Competition orange \v I th II your car is extra clean, Seriea 6259. 1l710 11.ACH ILYD. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. black interior. UOH144 see us first. $7995 tHwp. Jtl COSTA MES/. Radio" (RUFOOI) $1099 BAUER BUICK UNIVERSITY N~:m:~7~. '"'PORSCHE C.brlol•t, 1600 $1045 CHICKVWIVERSON Coola'!: .. ~· !1th St.0< .. 7165 super, with hard top. New OLDS ·--- - -o .,,..,., "'" clutch, new IMPORTS WANTED ----------------I tires, ne'!V paint, AM!Fr.l. H b v w 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 Orange Countiet 2a5(I Jtarbor Blvd. ar Our TOP$ BUYER fl jwt like new, can be seen • • 1970 HARBOR BLVD. BILL r.tAA'"EY TOYOTA g.m at 2089 Harbor Blvd., or COSfA l\fESA l.SS8l Beach Blvd. Costa Mesa 546-6750 Phone 645-1982, 9arn to 6pm 18nl BEACH BL. 842-44l:ii--~~~=~--HUNTINGTON BEACH '68 VW H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 k. PORSCHE 912 lmmac .1 --~~~==--Campers 9520 "tHASSIS MOUNT" Arg1!lus, U* ft. fl:!!y self contained, sleeps 6, mounted on 1 ton new '70 Chev., auto. trans., air, PS, PB. A real beauty_ Must sacrltice. Stock no, m. Serial No, 2'417. $8995 UNIVERSITY OLDS 2850 Harbor Blvd, Costa ~fesa ~ aato •port ltd ""°"'' AM/FM !<o"'" WANTED AUTO MATIC Authorl?:ed Sales e Servi~ chrome, rln:s Bursch ex. I'll pay top dolla-for your Bl:lek with black Interior, DEMO SALE prv. part)'. 557-T!OJ. VOLKSWAGEN today call econom)' IJleClal, will fin. 1970 Fiat 124 Sports Cpe. '67 PORSCIIE 912, MINT and ask for Ron Pl~hot ance private party. Lie. Radio, heater, special ex-cond. 46.000 mi .j, Lemon 549-3031 Ext. 66-67. 673·0900. XEU-224. huust, pin striping, radial yellow. new rad la . ;4.100. $1499 tires, :ow miles. 644-3290. 'fill VW, red, .Ml/F~f. Chrm. SON $2795 1'·66~=Po-nc-,..he-,,912'°'1"<.~Pr'"'i-va7IO whls, oupc• ct•an. 115:i0. CHICK IVER 675-0228 eves. 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. party. Clean &:. hcalthy.1~~=--~----I VW 537.7777 Call Collect $3275. 646--5945. '69 VW pop top camper. 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 61 .=.,,....cF=IA-T~-8'0=.~s=p=rn=E=R,:.::C=v"'"n1~--.'°"'·68"'P"o"=,.,.::-c9"12;;-;;.;---I Good cond. 2l,OOO ml'a. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Xlnt cond. Lo mi, R/il. Good cond. $-1100. $2800. 646-4l3l COSTA MESA Pirelli tires. $1595 By Pvt * 644-2810 * Pty: wkdys 833--16U/Extl========== I 1603 NllO & wk•ndo: RENAULT 67>-9309 NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. month '70 VW POP-TOP Camper 6,000 ml. Side tent & radio, $3350. 837-8900 Dys 494--7763 Eves. New '71 Datsun '67 SPY DER x1 $147.78 down lnc1uc1 .. 1961 RENAULT R·IO, oL lex & Lie. O-n End '61 VIV HiOI" OHC, Pickup with camp. cond $750 r-bed with bl Uret ;500 er. Sale price $2099 dlr. Super Sharp. 4 speed. dlr. · * 5.to-2006 * '68 VW Bus. Blue finish with Bob g · (a 43827J) Will take car in <TQC 5581 Will take car ln'1--~---~-=-~ 1 white interior. Air condition. 544-3417 trade. Will finance private trade or finance private par-• 1962 Renault · RAH. Good Ing. Heavy duty rear tires, a1·.~.64=vw=Sq=-u-.,.=ba-c"k"°'" C;;;l"'•anc:-, party. Call 5116-4052 or ty. 546-4052 or 494-fiflll. transpOrtatlon. really good buy $25!19. Lie. xlnt mnd $795. LEASE A NE\V 1971 PINTO $50.00 mo. <36 mo.) RENT A NEW 1971 PINTO $4 DAY AND 4¢ MILE PUT A LI'ITLE KICK IN YOUR LIFE! 9810 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA ?t1.ESA 6424110 ===~~~~:====j'11~75~" =d·,..~n~16::,=·~t~t;5 146 BEL. chlcl< 1venon * ·546-7308 * 4~1• GUAR '--~.,.....=--~~ =-;=~-----JA Inc., 445 E. Coast Hwy.,r· Used c,..r1 .-'62 CHEV Van. Camper SAAi N.B. S73--0!nl Ext. 53 or 54. '66 VW 1300, Xlnt concl, $1000 1 ______ _,c:::..__1 equip, New tires, toilet. =="°"'c--=CC"==I or otr. 548--2691, 10 7 WE BUY stove, ice box, luggage JAGUAR 1---------'64 VW Bug metallic copper Highland NB or 306t,.S Iris CARS rack. Wired for AC & 12V, HEAD"'UARTERS. Authorim! Dealer finlah . chrome ~ar whetls CdM. ' ' bucket seals $1250. 536-1131 ..,.-Sales e Service e Parts runs hke new sale price ttWr°'"==---,-,.,.,-.,.- The onl)' autboNed JAGUAR Sonet C.Oupes In Stock week $ll99, Lie ORK 717. ,/ '66 VW camper bubble top 1969 TOYOTA pick-up, hilux. .._al In the "-u.~ Chick lvono" Inc., 445 E---" enaine and body. 11600 15000 I 1895 Call alt • """ "" en ...... ~"""' Orange County's Newest"Dlr. .. · · Iii ............... • m ·• S • • Atta. Coe.II Hwy., N.B, 67~ 673--7182 N.B. p.m. 64>-3293 Compln. COAST IMPORTS ext 5.1 or >1. '69 VW Bta. R&H. 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 1970 Yamaha 175. Chamber, Dune Buggies 9525 comp. release. $495. I -'-~'---"=.;.;..---­SALES '66 vw 1 Pas,. 123$" SERVICE of Onn&e County Inc. * 61'"3966 * PARTS 1200 W. PacWc Coa!lt Hwy. '65 VW Sedan· $650 BUICK e BUICK '61 RIVIERA FACTORY Call 962-8219 1962/650-BSA Chopper. Corvair Dune Buggy $400 BAUER 642-0406 • 5464529 Call 54&-3648 or 673-2497 Sailboats 9010 14851 JEFFREY RD., 1475 ALL NEW 16' % 1~,V ~E OF ·70 suz~K~':c ~" ooly BUICK SIMCA Sedan Full ....... vinyl top, ...... 544-3417 AIR CONDITIONING HOBIE CATS SANTA ANA FRtvY" 72mi·," Still "" loct. worr" CALL COLLEC.T $200. Wkdys an 6. 548-9857. IN VOLVO bucket seats, chrome sport COSTA MESA '67 SIMCA whocl'! AM I FM sl"'°• AUSTIN HEALEY Radio. (ZB\V123) powec door locks, tilt. tel•· Imported Autos • ' ' l l FAiiE~g~:e5s --t-~T~1 .. 1~.,8~32~·~8:"~,---+~:..om;A TRA~~ Priccrl from $ll95. \Vinter 2M E. 17th Street '-door. Nice little car! $ VOLVO CLEARANCE I sropic steering wheel. Load-_AU5.llhl_AMEHJl~._+====518-=11=65===;;j.---~<VDL-049l -1, ')f_ IMl\tEDIATE •=LIVERY ed w/extras. (XDl...SSI) ~ $595 tQ;,--'ltl=STATION·W•GONS-SAloE.'-$31H-PRIGE-1·--I Sal.,, S.rnce, Parts KARMANN GHIA ~ 1/(otdu '70-SEDANS-2 & 4 °""" Ornngo Crnmty's • ·-.. t Racing starts soon! COMPLETE e '69 BSA s;:.occ CAP 'N EDS PACKAGE XI96o; =':'i"" .. S.cri!ico 1950" Immediate Oellveey ..-..5 AU Modelt H b v w '70-1800 E CPE. Selection of Quality Cadillacs The following uni!s complete &r~ 2200 W. Cs!. Hwy. NB 6'&2241 w/fulJ skirt, 8xJO awn ing, c.19=700--yoo.,.-a"°'ha--,2S0""'°"°'E"rnl_,.uro- lOxJO carnnrt, steps, 6x8 Lo "I XI t C d PARTNER wanted. 113 Int. · .-nu es. n on · shed. sales tax & license. S550. 646-m81 In sharp COLU~1BIA 29 AU units arc nc\1': SAILBOAT. AIL'< 30 HP, sips e 24X5l GENERAL '70 Honda 750. 4 <'Yi. 6. galley, encl hd, :xtras. 1/3 coo~, $10 375 Xlnt. cond. $1211.I inl-$4000 valu, make olr. ON~• UX:;j'ijN"JVERsAL 838-5042 .64..,6-<300~=' ="=""=72""""11.,-,.,.-=~ I <5313' · ·· ·· ·· ...... ' SU.450 Auto Service .; 5.5 METER Col. In NPT • 20X57 PARAr.10UNT & Parts 9400 slip, at 655 Lido Park (S6851 .............. S11,450 r----'------ Dr. Ov.-ner in Apl Jli'o. 27. e 2-IX(i() SflERATON $3500 Terms! 673--0766 • * (5002) ••....... -..••. $13.575 PACIFIC Catamaran no. 368 e 20X43 STAR witrlr, fully equipped . (S7006) ................ $7975 Harkan blocks, trapeze & CHAPMAN oover. Phone673-3872 MOBILE HOMES z.·, GLADIATOR. SLOOP, 1206 N. Harbor, S.A, • 714/531-8105 * 356-A PORSOJE f r on l bumper, never been dinged o"r bent. ;50 complete. Chron1e &'a l uminum . 548-8404 btwn 6 & 7 VW Engine, Good Cond. • &12-0443 • J1rtuµort · 3hnports 31.ll W, Codt Hwy., N.B. b-12-9400 54().1764 '62 AUSTIN Healey r.h:.rk It 3000. Restottd. Must sell. \\'iU sac. lllake ofr. 63S-6989 BMW Authorized Dir. Sales e Service • Partt All ~1odels to Choose From Service ll1onday 'till 7:W PM Sat 'till Noon Lap\\'Orth design, f b g I s . Race/cruise. Comp!. equip Triple Wide Cornell llst avail. 54&-456.l Hillcrest e Flamingo VW PARTS Chassis, Transmlssk>ns Body parts. 6'12-0143 & COAST IMPORTS Of Orange County Inc. 1200 \V. Paclllc Coast Hwy 642-0406 • 546-4529 HOpIE CAT 14 . 9 t.1o'!! old. Paramount e Universal I Xlnt eond. J1ave Barrington • Broadrlioor moved-i\1ust sell $950 Continental • Star 641-6433 or nile 830-5092. General • Hillcrest CHAPMAN * , VE]\j'TURE-21; Trailer MOBILE HOMES l\1trc 3.9, galley, fresh v.·ater & lights. Many Xtras 12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. XInt_cond. $2195. 962-2136 * 7141530-2930 * SHOCK 22' sloop, sips 4, CONTE:-01PO- toi1et, sink, stove, mnln, jib LAGUNA HILLS genoa, slip incL 543--1127 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. ,,,;;:;::c:::'-'-~-c"'°"'c.-c-1 LAGUNA HILLS LIDO 14 No. 285. xlnL l\la11)' t:'reslige adull community. xtru. $775. After 6 pm. Beaut!ful surroundings. all "'"?==*=&=1=2·="="=*=== I luxury appointments, put- -' ting gl'C(!n. hobby shop, P~r Cruisers 9020 much mof't'. CALL 830-3900 BAYS1Df<.: Village sp. BR. 2 B<i . immcd. $10,950. xlnt ttms. 675--0968 302 2 "°"" Own. '62 Pontiac Paris • 646-4171 * Trailer, Travel 9425 15' Terry tr!r, $500 eq. & T.O.P. $150 bu.I. Can be pd $25 mo. 645-0068. Trucks 9500 STRIKE POWER \V'e have a gooc_ stock of :~e··1 1970 GMC Camper trucM. Buy now, beat the price raise. Also camll<!r eombl.n- atlons and used trucks. UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE CORTINA '67 Cortin.1 GT $690 * 644-2032 * DATSUN ""'I DA, .. , ... "~ade1· In The Beach Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2845 HARIJOR BLVD. 540-6410 --·=7oc--:DATS=u=N~ 4 Door Sedan, !lied (SO.JAVA) dlr. \\'Ill take trade or fln- 28" ~DPNZI, custm made, 2 )Tl ()]d, Just completely owrhauJed. 1 of a kind boat, galley, head, sips 4, great fithing boat. Speros over 50 200 .mi rangr. Expensi\'e artS '°1egoW1 $6000 to finan- cleii; \Vill consider trade. fi7Mo22 Want To Live In COSTA MESA 2t';iO llarbor Blvd. ance private pQ.rty, Ca 11 Local spaces available now! Costa Mesa 540·9640 54G-f052 or 494.Qll, If you arc serlou• about buy. --~~~----·I lnP' a mohlle borne., .Now'• 'TO TOYOTA HI LUX PICK-'67 Datsun SpiHd-Skl Bo.ts 9030 the time 10 llCt' UP Under factory warranty. 19•lrAL1FORNIAN, bl.y/skV BAY HARBOR ean·t tell w, one from ' Wagon fT ho MOBILE HOMES new one. PriCt'd to 91!11 . $1899 Automatic, IUDS 591) s.t-;r-1. fur, .,boat, I/0, trlr, muc u 275VIV Ch ck I aeotu al radio. See to &P.. 1425 Baker St. cat Harborl c. · i \"t?t'IM flee! \Vlll take trade o.· fin- • XI -• -· Coola '!"a u•9470 Inc., 445 E. Col\st J-hvy., N.B, ance prtvate party. Call prec. nt COnu. ~...-.:>. n .,.,. 6~ --53 u • • ........ """ c ... ., or"'"· 546-4052 or 4~. Rd.!634. 8-5 M·F. 1577 l\fon-ROAD'fA STER 30 1 ;;Ma; N•wport Bch. " • 1~ >-ORD. va. au Joma tic '66 DATSUN PICKUP Complete u•/awnlng!I. New transmiuion, power t letr· 1970 Tlhiti Jct, 455, 3 mo old. rt.frig. & 11!r condl!loncr Ing, po1,1,·t.r brakes, air co~ Ut650. $800. 3l3 W. Bay, CM Space diliorUru;i: with H I way ==;=;4'6-4;:-=309=alt=e=' ='=pm== "':..· ;:;81c.4-<1_::29~2 ==~--1 Camper Ouber. J111t t h e • PERFECT thlnr for the cycle rroup. Marine Equip. 9035 l2 x 57 In fJve star adult Dlr. MG-9640 or 540-$10 75i H.P; EVINRUDE O/B park. No pc.la, Jdeal loca· TJtE Fastest draw In the *· Depth F' I n d 0 r , lion in Costa Mesa. Ph. We at. , .a Dally P 11 o 1 ~ "75. 6r.M370 646-8612. ClaMlfled Art. 642--S6'78 I Radio, htattr, dlr, 4 1(1ffd, (""Y J320J Will t&ke CAr In trade or flnanceo private party. 5464m2 or •M-6811 .• e '69 DATSUN X0J ROADSTER. $m> -* ... 642-3519 ·*-* '63 vw GHIA 2100 Hacboc Blvd" 645-0466 ar our . • '70-164 SEDANS Nabers Cadillac Convertible. Recent engintl:========= 187ll BEACH BL., 842-4435 overhaul, hard lo find mo-TOYOTA HUNTINGTON BEAOI de!. Radio. heater, 4 speed, I--------'=----------1 etc" . '67 FORD '64 vw S1099 Gleaming whlte, with red In- 2600 HARBOR BLVD., Costa ?.tesa 540-9100 Open Sunday CHICK IVERSON RANGER P.U. terior, can finance private 1966 Harbor, C.M, 69 BUICK Electra 225, 4 dr. Air cond. Desert gold. Full pwr. Tiit strg whl. 4 way 11ea1. Sharp! Pvt Pty. '4&-3086 8 ft. bed. 3 speed with ovcr-VW drive, radk>, healer, fresh!)' 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 painted. Thi! pickup is a 1970 HARBOR BLVD. real jewel, llflG.BQDI COSTA MESA $1799 MERCEDES BENZ O r.111~e County·.,· L.1r 9e-s t Selec tion Nl·w 8. Usf'd Mr rc1,di:-s Br nz Jim Sie mens Imps W .1r11f'r & M aul St SanfJ An a 546-41 14 ~~ 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 [TIQIYLQJTIA! '71 COROLLAS HERE NOW Wagons, 2 On, Coupes Automatics & • Speeds DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ....:...... BIIJ.. MAXEY • ~.H1N~ fT!OfYl§IT IAl MG 18881 BEACH BLVD. 111 Hunt. Beech 1474555 ''fR!EDLAHDER" 1 ml N. ot Clout ltwy."' Belt TRIUMPH 1J1Jt IU.CM CMW'Y, m 893-1566 • S31-68U NEW-USED-SERV. '59 TR,-3. Gd '"glno, ""d' body work. $225. C a J I ~ <M-1284 '" 5. MG 1970 SOOcc Triumph. Clean 3 mo. old 5J6. 72iM alt S PM party. Lie. 865-BEJ $799 CHICK IVERSON vw 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '65 vw BUG 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '69 vw Sedan Radio. (YNZ260> $1775 Harbour V.W. SaJea, Service, Parta Immediate Delivery, AU ?ilodcls VOLKSWAGEN 1!111 BEACH BL", 642-143$ 1---------1 HUNTINGTON BEACH ~1rtu por t II I ~ 'N VW Bua. Enatne rebuilt and guarMtee. Cl u t c: h transmission. Tittl tn ex- ttllent shape. Special at 3100 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. $1199. See 83130. C h I c k 642-9405 540-1164 lvtt'90n Inc., 445 E. Coast MORRIS Hwy., N.B. 673-0900 Ext. 53 or 54. '59 MORRIS Woody + H.lllman for We. $300. both. 64>-1028" 'S!J '63 V\Y SUNROOf", X1n't I cond. $100. or ~6 OPEL '70 OPEL CT. 4-sJ)(l, R/H, Bia: tng, asking $2900, Pvt .ply, 510.-1097 or 646-3333 • e '63 VW CAMPER e XLNT nm.uoUT_ SU50 CALL' 64M925 '59 V\V BUS '65EoJilnol400 MI 6-t959 '62 vw Convertible Radio. (SKU89ll $415 Harbour V.W. 18711 BEACH BL.. S42-H35 HUNTINGTON BEAOI I Ll"Ll'VLl'LI THINl ~YO!YO: e 1968 Riviera & 1968 Sport Wagon. Both clean, man)' options. $3,000 ea. Pvt pty. 644-5576 aft 6 pm 11FRIEDLANDER" 1:11ff l lAC" tHWY. Jf) 893-7566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV • ·~: COSTA MESA '71 HONDA :.. e .t.1• COOL•D l'llON1' •NOtN• e l'lllONT WNllL OllllYt e l'OWll AttllTIO Ill~ .t.D.IUITINO f',llONf DtlC llllAKll e MAXIMUM l"llO n M,M e UI" TO .. MILll ,llt DALLOH e "oU•·PASSINDllt, 2 Oii. 110.t.N l"llli ••• ,._ ~, ,.,..,.,,,1111 ~II Trlftt. tu. LICIM9 UNIVERSITY OLDIMOllLI COSTA llllSA 540 fMO ,, rws;s:ss I m2 •e11 s 11wwwwss:eJ2szo a_x oswe s 6 1 o o a 4 •• OAILV-riLOT-M°""''' Octobof <I>.· 1970-~~~~T~~~fT~~~~~~;~T~R~A~N~SPO~R!:!T~A~T:!!IO~N~ITRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSpQRTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION !.: -Used Cort -Used Cora -Ulld Coro 9900 Ulld Coro -Ulld Coro t'ioa Ulld Coro 9900 Ulld Con ,,.. U::.::'°":.:. :..' C:;0:;•.;;• ___ .;.;.;.;.11 u .... c ... BAUER BUICK CADILLAC CHRYSLER FORD MUSTANG OLDSMOJILI PONTIAC PONTIAC T-llRD l------~-l·-------·1:1962::::~.-....:-':'"".-:~--:::: '702~rLANDAU •CH. '69 Seel. de Vlllt '62 IMPERIAL H. 1.uto:!::1 ::! •'S9 MUSfANC Mach I, SS!, '69 QU>S Roya]e. Full pwr, • Pont.;!~~11 Wag. '69 FIREBIRD 400. Pvt Pty. Air, lull pwr, AM/f'M steno, '••R COFANCTODrrRIOY'~'G Special, Phone 968-5214 after air, 4-afld, full pwr, stereo. 1teering, brke, wndw, seat. Am CONDmONING lo ml. PIS, AM I FM, air, Balance of unlimited lat yr· <N ,,u, Full po\\'Cr, dlr. Excellent g P.M. Reas. 643-2886. Air, tilt whl,' landau top. 1 S ., vinyl top. Immaculate! 8 to wananty + 1./50, Powd Full power, vinyl top. LUXW'· condltl Onl 60 000 ·1 Sharp! $3550. Days 64&-7141; Dix. cat.al na tauon Wqon, 5 pm. Mon-Fri, 644-2442, blue w/rlch blue top. Lo ml. 1ous cli>th &: leather inlerior, (Y~) Ta~ ~de ;-1~ '65 FORD Country Sedan eves 6t6-4568 Bob. V-8 engine, power ·•teer., -oM..:'=· ..:M;:cAc.dc,a~m-·-=,..,-= 1 Can assist w/Unancin&. Dual comfort seal.II, Stereo finance private pa 11 y, ":'gn. 9-pau. Pa/Pb, r& h. OLDSMOBILE 1966 OLDS F-85 Dix wagon. power br&ketl. Aut~. trans., e •57 Pontiac, RuriS we:ll aft 6 pm, 644-4177. multiplex, power door locks, ,.,.,, •""'" ,_ 4, .. .._.. air, 11f!W trans. $800. PS, n•u, M'·•·im· Rad'·'·, rad., btr., wsw tirH, till SlSO. 295 Knox Pl., CM, S6 ~--•· xi 'I ·1 • I I •-1 · ...., .............. "' ;rt-VOu .,.,... r-.91 ,......_... u:.., ......, wheel, electric rev window, T·BJRD ' ._._........, n tit • te escop c Wu ... -.:• twl· u•"""1.1 e OLDSMOBILE ''8 new brakes, 26,000 ml. Xlnt 6t6-9T4l. lb light &entinel, power trunk TIN N CUTLASS "S'' etc, (TSA-273) =='""""'°'===:-::;:I cond., full pwr, 11f!W pa t. ·--+"f-°"'ner. eic., etc. f065AGC!__ CON E TAL ... UfSJA.,,._ Au"·---•• ~th••--•....... cond. 1!600. 54&-2399. SALE $2111 PRICE CLEAN '62 TEMPEST ala ,.mov. top w I ponhol") .:-XC'E"l4999'"'PRfCE-_... l!t~-......... .,, ~~ -•u..,-..t.. Or:an&e-Cowlt)l!s;-Largest wag, R&.H-new paint $300 or Cont'! kit. Orig. ownt. $4295)' , 1966 LINCOLN Continental -, _ -. Interior, VS, ·autom&tic, r•--fiO'NTIAC Selection of Quality cadlllacs ..:bec;';c'c,· 64&-=..:7082:,..~~~-673-3178. IN MESA "Specializing • lll Quality" DRASTIC SAVINGS ON THE ENTIRE USED CAR INVENTORY '66 CHEVELLE M1libu . 2 cir, H.T .. V-8, 1ulo., P.S., r1dio, h11t1r. lYPW. 1171 ltlLLY ILUI IOOK $1 475 51295 '65 FORD F1irl1n• 2 dr. M.T. V-1, 1ufo· rn1tic, r11dio, h11t1r, powlt 1t11rin9. !PJZl411 KILLY ILUI IOOK $1055 5895 '68 PLYMOUTH G.T.X. 2 dr. H.T. VI, 1utom1tic, P.S., redio, h11!1r, ¥inyl roof, ••"· IWl81521 UU Y ILUE IOOll: S2020 51695 '69 TORINO Ora~e County 1 Larg~st Lite blue. Good cond, lots of 65 MUSTANGJ VS, 14,000 mi. ~lo heater, neW glau belt 'N L-C d'lla '69 Pontiac Flreblrd 400, p.s, ,:;;_:,;;;~64"'Land==~F0/;:::::'J.~ Selection of 9uallty Cadillacs extras. S2000. 67!>-5263 Estate ~e. . See a I tln!s, poWe.r steering, under '66 B:ARR.ACUOA· V-S autb, auwrs a I c p.b, auto. CUJtm inter., TF~~~ 'co~pl :bit, ~! Nabers Cadillac Bayshore Rich~eld, 200 E. 24,000 miles. (WDUlll) air cond, p/1, disc brks, 2600 HARBOR BLVD., S2600. 968-4707 maculate $695. 644-4356 2600 HARBOR BLVD., CORYAIR ~t ~1:1~~cce~e;: SALE $2333 PRICE new tires $975. 968-5358 54G-9100 Co&ta ~= Surlday *'fili TEMPF.Sr Sport eves. Costa :P.fesa Dept li1 noon. Nov. 2. Attn: Nabers Cadillac ~·~""~· ~----~ Coupe. Good cond. $625. S17 -"'-~.~.,.,~. ~T~·B"IR"'D"""'•,_~, 540-9100 Open Sunday e '63 CORVAIR MONZA M. W. Fairchild. Details on 2600 HARBOR BLVD., e '57 Pontiac sta wgn, 298 '64 PONTIAC ·Le Mans. Victoria, CM. 548-671.S. Nu: Paint, Tires, Brakffl CADILLAC R/H, Xlnt shape, S295 window slicker. C.O.ta Mesa eng, American mags. $200. White w/ turquoise interior. Elc. Call for Info: 642-7774}. '67 COUPE DeVILLE 123 Edgewater, N.B. 673-3261 '70 l\1USTANG BOSS-302 540-9100 Open Sunday _K_im"'7.646-54Tl~=-cc· ,__~~-:~~\1~a::ec:~i~J'°= RAMBLER '55 T-Birtt. orig. equip. Hard Full power, factory a!r, padd-Must sell! Xtras. 1968 OLD's 98: 4 Dr, '60 Ponti11c $75 dilion. Very clean inside & & soft tops. Good mrd • eel top, leather interior, ster. CORVmE • 4964!M9, 496-5584 • vlnyl/tOp fabric/Int, alt, * 646-4171 * out! $750. 16985' Edgewater '67 REBEL 2 dr ~an. PI S. ~'=""'::;:.·,"-.;c,.='-· ~==-=I eo M1·Fl\t radio, tilt steer-e Cor vette ,70 •1970 BOSS 302 White. P/Seats, AM/FM , IT'S A brene .. sell )'OUI' Lane, Huntington llarbour, 6 cyl. Nu tire's, trans, • '63 T·Bird, air, AM~ ii. ing wheel, power door locks, Perfect rond. A re a I till/wh1. $2400. PH: 8 am-5 items with eue, wie Daily 846-4285 brks. eng. Rec-ently Over-p.11., p.b., pov.'der blu i twilight sentinel, auto dim-Sting Ray sacri1ice! $2750. 673-8261. pm. 673--702'Z Pilot Clu:sified, 642-5618 1 ~o~n.n;..=·~A~-LINE==s.~......,.~~ hauled. 862-3185 • Mfr.9738 * mer. Very low mileaa;e. FACTORY (TFB.567) AIR COti'OITlONING tao0 SALE $llll PRICE Showroomtreshfastbackwith --------------------------~~~~===o!!~o!!~~~=-.;;...!:~~:'...:::!!!_ __ ....;::.=~JI rcmovcable panels 350 V-8 Orange CoWlty's Largest Selecdon of Quality C&dillacs engine. Finished In spark-ling Ermine white w/plush Npbers Cadjllac metallic blue vinyl interior. 2fiOO HARBOR BLVD., All oµtions incl. power steer., Costa l\fesa brakes, electric windows. 540-9100 Open Sunday Jfydro auto trans. Stereo C d '66 c d v·11 multiplex & just 7800 care- • a • pe. • 1 e fully driven miles. (756ASQ) FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING SALE $5555 PRICE Full po\.\-er, all leather inter. Nabers Cadillac lor, tilt & telescopic w~I. 2600 HARBOR BLVD, AM I FM, light dimmer. COSTA l\fESA (588714) 4 to choose from. OPEN SUNDAY Take your pick, only .. , SALE $2333 PRICE Orange County's Largest Selection Quality Cadillacs Nabers Cadillac aiOO HARBOR BLVD,. Costa Mesa 540-9100 Open Sunday e Cad. '67 Convertible FACTORY · AIR CONDITIONING Full power, plush full leather interior, stereo, tilt \Vheel, door Jocks lighl sentinf!J, etc., etc. 1Vcu07-4l SALE $2888 PRICE Orange County's Largest Selection of Quality Cadillacs Nabers Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BLVD., 5-i0..9100 Open Sunday e Cad. '64 Cpe. de Ville FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING Full leather" interior. Cruise control, tilt wheel. Automa- tic dimmer. Full power. An exC'f!ptional value. (I\VI..673) SALE $1111 PRICE Nabers Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BLVD. '64 CORVmE "327", 4 speed. AM I FM, Brand new wide ovals, com- pletely original, all this Vet needs Is a new home. OSC- 21!'. $1399 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA ~IBSA COUGAR '69 Cougar XR7, Must sell, $2795, f u I l power. 12,000 mi's. 546--0945 DODGE '68 DODGE RT FULL PO'VER + factory air, Lo\v miles. l\-fust liquidate lmmediatCly. 1st $2099 buys, XEUJS.1. CHICK IVERSON vw 519-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA OPEN SUNDAY 'li6 DODGE Dart 270 2-dr '66 FLEE'IWOOO: XI n l sedan, 6 cyl, RIH, auto, C.ond! Nu/tires, 47,0CKI mL xlnt cond, must sell, AT JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN MERCURY • <ONE DOLLAR) Over Factory Invoice ON ALL 1970 MERCURY MONTEGOS 1111 That's Right Only 0 n e Do 11 a r Over Fadory Invoice. Fadory Invoice Dlsplayed On All Montego 2 Drs., & 4 Doon. Hurry, This Offer Good 5 Days Only. Ends Od. 26th. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON ALL Sport roof. V.t, •ufo., RlH, Pvt Pty; 675-7470/644-5924 $800. 675-5565 power 1t••ri11g, fectory eir. l"===""======:o l=========· 1971 LINCOLN-MERCURYS! tXDll70), CA MARO KILLY ILUI IOOl $2710 52245 '68 DODGE Coronel 440 4 cir. 11cl. v.1, •ulo., R&H, pow•r 1l•1rin9, _f•clory ah. (UFD71)) KELLY ILUE 1001< $1960 51495 '70 LTD WAGON 548-7765 '69 CAMARO Z-28, 4 speed trans, xlnt cond. Low miles, never raced. 548-4287. "68 CAf\1ARO CONVRT: V-8 air, P/B, PIS, New tires. $1700 • * 675-2109 ·59 CAMARO RS. Orange, P/S, P/B, Air. Nu tires. $ZIOO. * 673-58ll CHEVROLET FALCON ·ss FORD Falcon 2-dr cpe, auto, R/H, lo mi's, Orig Owner Xlnt, $795. 673-7030. FORD 'li-4 F"ORIJ ECONOUNE VAN Automatic transmission, new paint, new tires. This car is immaculate! (OOS-468) $1399 1/tdwu~ 2100 Harbor Blvd. TOP DOLLAR 2100 Harbor Blvd. '66 FAIRLANE WAGON WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION! " NICEST USED CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY Over 50 To Choose From '69 CONTINENTAL Coupe. 8. factory atr condition- ing, full power, radio, heater, Landau Roof. All Continental luxury features. {YPT8.30) 54222 I '69 CONTINENTAL 2 door Hardtop. Full powf'r & factory air. Landau roof. Lie. XSR 85~ 53888 I '65 COMET CALIENH Convertible. automatic trans .. nilsslon, radio, heater, power stecrlnit, power brakes, very clean. 'VAB 885. I 5966 '66 MERCURY COLONY PARK Station Wagon. Full power with factory air, driven only 33,000 miles. fRR2734J 51666 '68 I 2 Dr. Hardtop. Automatic OLDSMOllLE Delta 18 $2333 transmission, radio, heater, JX)\ver sttcring, factory air, Landau root. Immaculate thru-out VGY 989. • Cpe. The essence of luxury, I 68 CONTINENTAL s3555 fully power equipped, leather interior, factory air, 1..Andau top. Stereo tape tilt steering '\'heel. Lie. XE'V 331 . I 4 door Hardtop Power steer-I 68 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME ing,~wer bra.kes, factory air, Lan au roof. etc. XEZ 510 52066 I 4 Dr. Hardtop. Full &. com-'65 OLDS 91 plete f.°Jwer Including tilt wh«-. REG 736 51188 I Convertible. Full power lnclud-I 68 CADILLAC ing factory air. LJc. VZD 123 53591 I Scd!ln De Ville. Full power. and I 67 CADILLAC $2666 facto~ air. Very clean. AGB 25. BETTER IDEAS MAKE BETTER CARS AT :Johnson-. son 540-5630 COSTA MESA 2626 Harbor Blvd. 642-0981 TUR.EE GENER ATIONS I N TBE A VTOMOBILE BVSINESS TH C OlDIST ISTAILISHlll "FACTORY DIRICT" LINCOLN·MUCURY DI ALER IN OllANGI COUNTY I • ...... • ,. M f