HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-09-25 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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DAILY PILOT Sexy Anato1ny Textboola
* * * 10' * * * Draff's Wrath of Prof
MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 25, 19n
VOL ti. NO. W, t Sl!CTIONJ, M PMP
-· . -.-• • • •• ·-.,.,,--·-· • • ~--
Hoag Ilospital Secret Today
Ice Crean• Shop Bit
Sacramento Jet
Crash Kills 22
SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A vintage jet
righter taking off at an air show smashed
into a packed shopping center ice cream
parlor here, killing 2'l persons, many of
them youngsters attending a Uttle
League footbaU celebration.
Another 16 persons were Injured Sun-
day when the prtvattly-owned F86 Sabre-
jet barrelled across a highway, struck
three vehicles and bounced in a "ball of
fire" into Farrell's Jee Cream Parlor.
"I'm sorry ... I'm sorry. Get the peo-
ple out," groaned Richard Bingham, 36,
of Richmond, Calif., pilot of the plane.
He was pulled from the wreckage while
200 screaming children and adults fought
to escape flames that turned the Gay·90s
style shop into an inferno.
Bingham escaped with some broken
bones and a cut face.
In Washington, the Nation a 1
Transportation Sakly Board said the
crash was the worst in U.S. history in
tenns of ground deaths.
He said the next worst occured tn
Flagler, Colo., on SepL 15, 1951, when the
pilot of an experimental plane crashed
while attempting a roll. Nineteen were
killed and 10 seriously injured.
Sacramento County Coroner George L.
Nielsen said 12 of the victims were
youngsters, five boys and seven girls.
Five women and five men were also kill·
ed.
He said at least two complete families
were among the dead.
The nose of the Korean conflict~•
Orange Coast
Weather
Sunny skies through Wednesday,
with highs In the 70s, both Inland
and •IOlli the beaches. Lows to-
night around 58, acoordlng to the
wealberla<l,y.
INSmE TODAY
A lone QU1"""n flred "" th•
Toollllll Divt.!ion police 1t41lon
,.rlif thll morning with' such, 11>-
ltnrlly that j>ollctmfn insidt
thoqght 1"'1/ iqero u!ldtr att4Ck
~ a gong of mtn a"""d with machint guns. 1See 1tory on
Page 5.
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plane, one of America's first fighter jets
being displayed across the street at
Sacramento's Ezecutlve Airport, smash-
ed into the parlor's Howard Hughes
Room.
A party was being held in the room for
20 youngsters from the Sacramento 49ers
Utile League football team.
Doo McCluskey, an employe, was fill-
ing salt shakers in the room when the
plane bit.
"After I picked myself up, I grabbed
five kids and broke a window and got
them oat," he said. •lBut ·by then, the
smoke and flames were too intense and I
couldn't get back in."
l.Jnda Fourby, 17, Sacramento, was in
a car which the plane missed by 100 feet.
(See CRASH, Page Z)
'Sexy' Anatomy
Text Draws Fire
From Professor
LANSING, Mich. (AP) -An anatomy '
text with a sexy touch, coauthored by a
Michigan State University professor, has
drawn the wrath of a female profeaeor.
"1be Anatomical Basis of Medical
Practice" contains photos of nude women
t1pWhlng In the 111111 and posing leduc-
tlvely on swings.
But R. Frederick Becker, a profesoor
of blornecbanlcs al Statt, m.i.to he In-
tended only lo "liven up a pretty deadly
area.
"I cert8lnly don 't think we were trying
to exploit anybody's sexuality or
anythlng like that," said the MSU In-
structor.
He wrott the book with two other
teachers while an thtte were teaching at
Duke UDlversllY.
Bui Dr. Estebe Ramey, a profe-of
physiology and biophysics at Goorletown
Univenily's School of Medlcino, ... ys the
boot la ID ·-d<DlgraUon of ,,.,_ ••• a laaclvltg approocb to lhe
lludy ol ·w1om1. •
Jn a letter to I he J,000 • member
Asaoclallon of Women In .Science
(AWIS), of whidl she la president-elect,
Dr. Ramey aaid, 0 The book was ob-
vloualy lnlMded lo mab a Joi of money
by gingering up a rather dull subject ·
with the fun and pmes of prurient
phQ!ocrapbs of leertog naked w~ In
teducUve poees.0
Dr. Ramey Aid tho wrlUng In the book
waa "aesll&,.,. &lYlnf tbls quote as an ex-
ample:
"Wt "'9,-.,. lbllt, we eannot make 18eo AHAnJllY, hp I)
., .
.. '
Pedaling for Prop. 20
OAIL Y "llOT Stiff '"''° PROPOSITION 20 BACKERS PAUSE IN FASHION ISLAND DURING LONG BIKE RIDE
Stet• Sen. J1me1 Mills (With Mustache), leads Group of About 80 Toward San Diego
Pollee Traps Fall
Killer Suspect Evades
Law Again in Manhunt
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ,.,. .,..., '"" lllft
The manhunt for suspected police killer
Hennan L. Clouston, who has literally
come and gone af'OWld two counties for
five days, continued today with an appeal
for his gUaranteed-safety surrender.
So far, the man aougbt in connection
with the shoollnJ death of Buena Park
Police Detective Darrel D. "Bud" Catt
last 1bUl'lday bu ...,,.ged to escape
several p0tenUal p0llce traps.
Gunfire has erupted each lime. the last
one involving a burst of 20 shots which
peppered • n..inc car carrying • soared
car salesman rnlalaken for Clouston.
He 'tried to speed away lb avol~ exaaly
f 1u, gunllre resulting_ -as be fled with
two terrified glrla In the car -wlllch he
feared. WIMl1d come alter Clouston was
ttpOrted 11 the car lot.
Sjlmebow tho lerrilied trio escaped
without Injury •
Buena Park Pollce Chief Dudley D. Gow:leJ today appealed lo Clouston, an
U-OOll•ict who claims ho won't be taken
alive, to surrender with someone as an
escort.
He suggested it be done In company
with a newspaper reporter, a minister, a
priest, or someone as a third party.
"I urge him to surrender before other
innocent people arc needlessly hurt. in·
jured or killed," Chief Gourley declared.
The bunt wlllch has ranged from the
Buena Park·Anaheim are.a up to south
Los Angeles County twice now has m.
{See SUSPECT, Page Z)
SPAIN VILLAGE
TRULY BARREN
BO VEDA, Spain I UPI) -In the
remote Galician village of Mostelro no
one has been born for 24 years, the news
agency Logos said.
Nine £smilies live in the village but all
the members are "of an advanced age,"
the agency S8id.
rvi ills Criticizes
Lack of Coastal
Law in California
"caiifornia, Alabama and S o u t h
Carolina are the only states which have
no plans gove rning coastal management
and planning. Every olher state bl essed
with this kind of precious natural
resource has taken some action to
preserve and enhance it," Sen. James R.
Mills ( O.San Diego), told a crowd of
Lagunans Sunday as hi bicycled into
town to boost Proposition 20, the
Coa.sUine Protection Initiative on the
November ballot.
Mills and his fellow cyclists stopped at
Laguna's Main Beach for lunch as they
neared the end of their 500-mile "coastal
protection" bike ride from San Francisco
lo San Diego.
They were p;reeted by Mayor Charlton
Boyd, Vice Mayor Roy Holm and con·
servatloni st William Wilcoxen, all of
whom spoke ln support of the Coastline
Initiative .
After the lunch stop, the cyclists pedal·
ed o£f to San Clemente to spend th e night
at lhe State Park In that city before pro-
ceeding lo San Diego.
"You may not think there is much
drama in the spectacle of a middle-agtd .
balding legislator huffing and polling his
(See CYCUST, Psge Zl
Action Set
On Family
Ce11ter Row
By L. PETER KRIEG
ot th• D•llY root St•tt
The men and \1•01ncn 'vho run Hoag
Me1norial Hospital in Newport Beach
were scheduled to me<'t behinrl closed
doors today to act on a recommendati on
by the medical staff that the hospital's
three-year-old Family Practice Center be
closed as of next June 30.
Under pressure from doctors to shut it
do\.\.'n and from the community to keep it
open, directors were to meel at 4 p.m. to
review sca led-do\\'11 budgets prepared by
Dr. J. Blair Pace. program director. that
may allow the program to be salvaged.
A. Vincent Jorge nsen, president of the
hospital board, this morning again
declined to speculate on the outcome of
the meeting. He did promise a decision,
however.
He said he does nol yet kno1v whether
efforts to find nc111 sources of revenue
from the private sector of the communi!y
to help defray the costs of the program
will be successful or not.
They were de;ilt a blow Sunday,
however. when the man working on
search for fund s. l~ospital Treasur er
Charles J. Fi shback, suffered chest pains
an d was 1'Ushed to the hospital q'here he
is now in good condition.
Jorgensen sairl he does rcn1ain op-
timistic about the future of the prog ran1
"I support it. It want it conti nued. I
believe in it. It's a good program,·•
Jorgensen said.
"We're going le go over the budget
again and see if we can make a reduced
program work," he said. •
An aide to Pace said this momlng that
the revised budget trims the program to
12 doctors. There are no\v 13.
But Dr. Taylor Jepson, one of the
residents' obtaining his, general practice
training in the program . said that under
th e revised program the doctors would
have expa11ded duties and would serve
!See HOSPITAL. Page 2)
C tR AD CLICKS
0 V FIRST CALL
i he price was right and so was the
buyer. It took just one call to make the
sale ilftr.r thi5 ad appeared in the DAILY
PILO'l':
'fi:i Dat.si1n wa~n. new tires,
h:'11L f'lf'. Ori~. O\\'l11•r, 46,000
n1i. S460. ;c.xx-xx,'I(.".,
\'('s. the first coller bou~ht the wagon.
O.,th bu vf'r and seller reported they were
happy. ~tu~ make .you happy, too, We
can fi nd buyers, sellers, renter t ,
"'hatever you're looking for. Dial the
rtirec t line to result~. Phone 642-Wll,
DAILY PILO'l'. Classified AdvertlsiJ\c
llept.
..,
' ·, 1
KOREAN WAR VINTAGE JET SITS IN FRONT OF TRAGIC SACRAMENTO SITE
Plene Wis Extr1cted From Ice Cream Parlor After Crash Which Took Heavy Toll of Young Lives
Vieti111s Listed
All 20 Believed From Sacra1n ento
SACRAMENTO (AP l -Here is a partial -list of the 22 pefsons killed in.the
crash of a Korean conflict-vintage jct fighter Sunday, released by Sacramento
County coroner George Niel sen.
Ages of most victims were not available. All were believed from the
Sacramento area.
I. Mr. Warren Krier.
2. Mrs . Warren Krier.
3. The Kriers' daughter, Janette.
4. Mr. Leon Warrain.
S. f\.frs. Leon Warra in.
6. Mr. Louis Jugum .
7, Jugum 's daughter, Elain1;.
8. Mr. Gene Lavine.
9. Mrs. Gene Lavine. to. Nancy Rodriquez.
11 . Nancy Keys.
12. Sally Keys.
13. Mr. Anthony Martin.
14. Mrs. Anthony Martin.
ts, 16, 17. The Martini' children, Sean, Gregory, Jannioe.
18. Francis Kri!tln.
19. Jeffory Nash , S.
20. Joan Bacci , 29.
2t, 22, Nol identmed.
Vintage Craft
Death Airplane Owned
,By Millionaire's Firm
SAN RAFAEL (UPll -The blue and
gold F86 Sabre jet that crashed into a
Sacramento ice cream parlor here bore
the name "William Penn Patrick" on its
nose.
The pla ne belongs to Spectrum Air
Services Inc .. one of many enterprises of
1nillionaire Patrick of this cl1y just north
of San Francisco.
Patrick, a 42-year-old Ai r Force
ve teran, occasionally takes a spin in his
Stearman biplane. one of several vintage
aircrah he's lx>ugh t with the profits fro m
his Holiday T\tagic cosmetic n1anufac·
luring concern and other businesses.
He sometimes exhibits !he planes at
aviation shows. as was the case 1,1•ith the
Korean conflict era jet which "'as taking
DAILY PILOT
off to return home when it crashed.
Spectrum Air is headquartered at
No vato. near Patrick's San Rafael home.
The widow and !IOn of a lawyer killed in
a light plane won an $865.000 judgment
last week from Spectrum and one of its
mechanics for alleged failure to repair a
defective tail control device.
Patrick, ultra..conservalive in his.
politics . riWl unsuccessfully against
Ca lifornia Gov. Ronald Reagan .for the
gubernatorial nomination in 1966.
Richard Bingham, the pilot of the
plane, said in a recent interview that he
flew the plane under Federal Aviation
Administration visual Oight rules for
"experimental aircraft."
Bingham . general manager of Spec·
!rum Air Services Inc .. live'.) in No\'alo , a
snuil! con11n unit y north of San F'ranci~co.
lie said in the story that he directed
the reconstruction of the plane after it
had been stored in crates in Canadil for
eight years.
FromPageJ
CRASH ...
She aaid she ran toward the screaming
and breaking glass" at Far-rells.
"People were saying 'get me out, get
me out! Where's my kids?t Everybody
was trying to help everybody."
Chairs were used to break windows and
people poured from the doorways.
One girl. Christie Kiehn, 12, Stockton.
said she helped a friend get out safely and
tried to return but couldn't.
•·1 climbed over all sorts of stuff,
ma ybe some of it was bodies," said the
girl, whose mother , Joan Bacci. 29, V.'aS
arnong those killed.
One 10-yea r--old boy, Steve Martin,
Sacramento, was later found _ safely
crouched under a table in the party
room.
The plane. owned by Spectrum Air
Services, which belongs to millionaire
cosmetics manufacturer William Penn
Patrick, hit one car on a highway and
two in a parking lot and dragged them
into the parlor.
Roger Lindberg, a newscaster for
Sacramento station KXTV, said he
witnessed the crash when he waa leaving
the air show. '
"There was a power failure ," he said.
"The pilot dropped back to the runway,
hit his brakes, then flipped up llke a
catapult onto Freeport Boulevard where
the plane exploded into a ball of fire and
cartwheeled into Farrell's."
Clouds of dense smoke poured out of
the colorfully decorated Ice cream
parlor, whose employes wear straw hats
and black and white uniforms a n d
red, white and blue garters.
"The heat was terrific. It was terribly
smoky," said sacramento Fire Chief
Winston Wilson.
He said the ch ildren who poured out of
the shop "looked like all the kids you
know."
One eyewitness said: "As far as I'm
concerned this should be the end of air
shows," referring to the death of a pilot
last Sunday in a crash et the National
Air Races in Reno, Nev.
In June, 1971, four pilots flying World
War II planes died in two separate col-
lisions during a vintage air race at Cape
A-1ay County Airport, N.J. ,
In the worst of two crashes at the 1965
Paris air show, an Italian training jet
crashed into a parking area, killing the
pilot end seven visitors.
Aero Strike Averted •
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A strike was
averted by acceptance of a 27·ccnt hourly
wage increase Su?ictay1 retroactive lo July
12 . by machinist s at the Solar Divi sion of
International tfarvester Co. The pay
under the old contract ranged between
$4.07 and $4.54 an hour.
TII• Orll'Off Co.ul O.ll Y PI LOT, wit" w11~'°'
h cO<nbirltd lh" Ne..,.Prn~. '' Pll"llt.IWd tor
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Se1~vices Slated Tuesday
For Walter S. Spicer, 80
Funeral services for Harbor area
pioneer Walter Scott Spicer will be con-
ducted 111 II a.m. Tuesday at the Com-
munity Congregational Church of Corona
del Mar by the pastor, the Rev. Philip
Murray.
Mr. Spicer. e Jong.time area resident
and civic leader died In his sleep F'rldny
night at tloag f!.1em orial 11ospital. He was
80 years old.
A native of Nebraska who was
graduated from Wh ittler College. Mr.
Spicer moved to Santa Ana In 1921 and in
1930. he came lo Newport Beach where
tie opened his lumber yard on Pac ific
Coasl fllghway. lt was the first com·
merclnl establishment in the city.
Mr. Splcl'r. Hn nctlve bus inessman .
was also a director and vice president or
the old Newport-Balboa Savings and
Loan Association. president of the
Newport Jfarbor Chamber of Commerce
in 1936, and a member of the. board of
,
(
directors of the Santa Ana Community
llospital.
lie was a founding member of the San-
ta Ana Lions and was active in the Willkle
campa.ign for the county Republican Cen--
tral CommJttee from 1931 to t94l.
I le served on the Orange County
Harbor Commission from 1940 to 1963
and was chairman of the commWion
from 1940 to 19'1.
A resident of Harbor Island, Mr. Spicer
enjoyed boating and had been a member
o( the Newport Harbor Y•chl Club since
1946. lie was also an avid golfer and
belonged to tlie Sa~ Ana Country Club
from 1944 to 1963 alld wa1 1 director of
the club from 1944 to Jtte.
Mr. Spicer leaves hia wUt of 47 ~1n,
Faye of the family home; a kin, Walter
L.' Spicer, of Kentfleld, C.111.: two
daughters, catolyn S. Burke, of Boise,
Idaho and Harrie! S. Allin of Pebble
Beach, and nine fP'lndcblldren.
Fiery. Crash
Horro1· Told
By Ob se rver
...
By BARBARA FfNE
WrltlM t.r l~I AUKMllM ..... \•
SACRA~1ENTO -!t happen ed in what
was just a few split seconds.
I noticed a piece or what loo ked like a
plane's wing. It evidently deflected off
the roof of Fan-ell's. At first, t thought it
was going to hit the window of the fabric
store where 1 work.
Then there was an explosion with a ball
of flames. Jt was just huge, It was bright
orange and yellow with black smoke
around it.
ri1y first thought was that an airplane
had crashed, and I knew that Farrell's
was packed with children. I ran out to
see if I could help. Everybody was run-
ning out of Farrell's.
Right after I saw the ball of ftre, I
went right to the phone and dialed "0"
for the operator. I told her to send as
many ambulances as she could. She told
me she already knew there had been a
disaster.
I got several bolts of muslin and I cut
them into strips. I went outside and I
bandaged anybody I could. People
we ren 't crying and sereaming -it
wasn 't hysteria. People were in shock.
a'hey were just pale and standing
around like they couldn't believe what
had happened. Others were looking for
their children and trying to reunite
families.
Some people were bleeding. One cblld I
was comforting was burned very badly
on her feet and her legs. She was quite
frightened so I tried to stay with her as
long as t could.
Lon.gshoremen
Backing Nixon
WASHIN GTON (UPI) -Thomas
W. Gleason, president of the
11 S , O O O ·member International
Longshoremen's Association . today
endorsed President Nixon for re-
elecUon, reversing the union's
traditional Democratic stand.
Gleason. whose union represents
East and Gulf Coast longshoremen,
Sa.id :
"Unfortunately, this year the
Democratic party has been cap-
tured by elements whose beliefs
are not ours and whose policies are
alien to our own. Essentially, lsol.a•
tionist in outlook, they would like to
-a wealwled .\lllerieiotll!i4 a retreat lrom world lnvolvenionl."
'Just Call Me
David, Folks'
HONOLULU (AP ) -Kekoa
K.aapu, a candidate for mayor here,
mlCJ>l have probleml 1et1lng votrrt w remember him li he uaed hll fUll
name.
Hl1 full name i s
H11 full name is Kekoalaullion-
apallhauliollokekoolau David K•a·
puawaokamehameha .
The first name mean• "the fint-
leafed Koa tree on the verdant
c!Ufs of the Koolau Mountains,"
and the la.st name mean• "the awe·
rup bearer of Kamehameha The
Great."
From Page J
SUSPECT ...
volved shooting incidents on four oc-
casions.
"We have had several near-tragedies,"
Chi ef Gourley said Sunday.
•·we want to avoid any more of these
situations," be continued. "He may think he cannot give himself
up safely because he killed a police _of-
ficer ," Chief Gourley added, presum~ng
Clouston is indeed the slayer of Detective
Cate, Who left five children. .
Clouston has escaped a narrowing
police dragnet several times, the most
recent case being one in which he fled on
root via a flood control channel after an
exchange of abots.
He had been recognized from news
photos. according to investigators, when
he allegedly tried to trade his .22 caliber
pistol for a used car at an agency.
The frightened salesman talked the
suspect into going out for a cup of coffee
while he considered the deal and called
police after the man identified as
Clouston left.
And when officers arrived, the car
salesman tried to get away himself to
avoid the confrontation, but was mistaken
for the suspect due to his actions.
Frona Page 1
ANATOMY ...
available the addresses of the young
ladies who grace ou r pages . . . our
wives burneQ our little address books
"
Becker called her obj e ctions
"ridiculous." "We set out to write with a
breezy literary style," he sa id, adding
that his students "really enjoyed" the
writing.
Becker said the pictures were obtained
from a California photographer specializ-
ing in nudes, instead of the Duke art
departmept, became the Duke pictures
were of 'YOlunteers "who had no traintng ..
They did.9't know how to pose to brint-et•
tentlon td'oeertain Iandinarks the studel'tt ~
must recognize. They were ... ~just
plain bad," said Becker.
.FrOMP .. e I
CYCLIST.··
wa doWn the l'oa!lt hJ&bWly," Milli told
tti.eycrowd "But you are not looking at It
from my pen;pecll ve. 11\tre a r 1
moments v.·hen 1 feel an acute sense of
drama _ not 10 11y alarm - u 1 "t.ry to
keep up witli the no1t of our porty.
Streaslng the serlOUJl\HI of the tour,
Mills added, "A wide awareneas , that
there is a problem is almost • solution In
it.sell. Thll has been the pattern in other
states. ((Jastline controls have ~n Im·
posed only after some demonatration by
the public that they want their beaches
unspoiled, that they want acce1s to their
own beaches, and that they will no longer
tolerate unrestricted, haphaW'd devetop.-
ment of their coastline."
With two-third! of call.fornla's 1,100-
mile coaslline alre3dy pr1v.ately OY•ned,
and only 250 miles of what is left u~~le
as recreation beaches by 20 m1lhon
Californians, "!here is not much left to
preserve," said the sen~to~.
Proposition 20, he said, 1s not of£e~ed
as the ultimate solution to ~h~ c~sthne
crisis. but LS a method of gaining tlDle lo
develop plans for the coast
Jt calls for the creation or a Coastal
Zone Commission and six regional com-
missions to plan the best use of the
coastline. The commiMions v•ould be
made up half by representatives of local
governments and ha!: by public members
appointed by the Governor and
Leg!sl<iture.
The commission would be required to
submit a plan to the Legislature by 1975,
and in the meantime, no coastal develop..
ment could take place within 1,000 yards
of the shoreline without a special permit.
From Page J
HOSPITAL .•.
not just at Hoag but would rotate through
other hospitals and various physicians'
offices.
The protest against the medical staf(
vote continued to flood the hospital to-
day. -
Hospital administrator l.Alu Kaa said
there \\'ere more than 150 letters from
residents throughout · southern Orange
County on his desk this morning.
f!.tost or them .,,-~re form letters
circulated by the residents through their
patients.
About 1,200 persons a month are
treated by the doctors in the residency
training program.
The residents have also hired Santa
Ana attorney Barry Michaelson who this
morning said he is preparing a letter for
the doctors to sign requesting that the
direct on do act definitively today.
"If they're going to sustain the vote
they (the doctors) have all got to make
arrangementa as soon as possible to get
into other programs," Michaebon said.
He also ' said he is trying to talk with
officials of the University of California
Irvine medical school to enlist their sup..
port in continuation of Ille program.
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Makeshift Sehool Popular
BLACKBOARDS HANG ON PAPERED WALLS IN CLASSROOMS
Students Sit in Carpeted Bedrooms As Ruth Kisman Tuches.
EL DORADO STUDENTS GATHER AT FOUNTAIN DURING RECESS
Former Cordillera Students Still Wear T01hir.ts at New School
DAil Y PILOT Sl•ff Ptioto1 LIVING. ROOMS CONVERTED TO STUDY AREAS FOR MISSION VIEJO 'SCHOOL
Judy .G1belman Instr ucts in El Dorado Model HorN Don.fed by Mission Viejo Compa ny
Temporary Viejo School
Students Like El Dorado
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 ti!• DlllJ Piiat Sl11ff
Trees drape down over Storybook Lane
in Mission Viejo, which winds by the
homes of Alice in Wonderland, Winnie
ihe Pooh and other friends.
Children learn science in the
Jingerbread Man's kitchen and read in
~he bedroom with Charlie Brown and His
Jang.
The 1antasy world is very much alive
1t the El Dorado Prirnc.ry School in
Mission Viejo, where 125 first, second
and third graders, seven teachers and
ieven teachers' aides meet in model
10mes.
Intended as only a temporary solution
to double sessions, it is now a school no
>ne wants to leave.
Mission Viejo Company officials pro-
vided the homes at the urging of resident
Linda Whistler, whose children attend
:::Ordillera School .
The conversion of six homes and a
~\es office to a mini-school was ac·
oomplished in two weeks. The action took
three Mission Viejo schools -Cordillera,
Lloda Vista and Del Cerro -out from
under tbe threat of. double sessions.
Almost all of the El Dorado students
are from the Sev1lle Homes tract, which
Mrs. Whistler said had the "blg,.st prob-
Jem school wise."
Cordi llera principal Ken Anderson, who
doubleJ as chief at El Oor~do, calls the
little school "a country club."
Children, running down grassy slopes.
playing four.square in the parking lot and
studying on sun-lit patios, call it "neato.''
There are no school bells shattering the
qW.t.
'l'eachel'3, who volunteered for the new
assignment, call it "relaxed," "fantas-
tic," says they "love it," and joke that
they will "cry," "quit" or jw;t "take it
in stride" when they have to leave.
The homes have bright carpet -In
pink , red, green, yellow and orange -
and decorative wallpaper which help
dispel any schoolish atmosphere. Th e
different rooms provide natural in--
dividual learning centers.
"It's more like home than schools."
said one teacher, addin~ that she did
have to get used to telling studenLs to
"go into the bedroom and read."
Most homes have at least two or three
bedrooms, living room, kitchen, two
bathrooms, a patio and backyard.
Each home has a name aod the m.
ttrior decoration carries Its theme.
-Anna Tyo and her aide Kathy Hume
!tacit se<ond graders In the Gingerbread
Man's house.
Crash Kill,s Countian
James C. Kirkpatrick of 7590 Silver St.,
Buena Park, was killed early this morn·
ing when the car in which he was a
passenger went out o!'COlltrol and cfash.
ed In Anaheim.
The car driven by Michael Sides, ll, of
Anaheim, slammed lnl4 • utlltty pole on
a lnlfic Island on Euclid Avenue near
Linc.In Boulevard.
Klrkpotrlck -dead at the scene, the
Orange County Coroner's office reported.
Skits ii in crilloal condlUon today In
Anaheim M<tnorlal Hoopilal.
'
-Ruth K.isman and aide Fran Cumings
teach third graders in Alice-in·Won·
derland's home, where the fireplace is
decorated as the door Alice fell through.
-Shirlee Trutner and aide Valerie
Pickrell use the home of Charlie Brown
and His Gang to teach third graders.
-In Mickey's Mans.ion, Judy Garn·
belman arid aide Shirley Bush work with
first.graders.
-Raggedy Ann and Andy's house is
peopled with first.graders, t e a c h e r
Marianne .Sivak and aide Dorothy
Gerber.
-Jeanne Black, aide Carol Moss and
first-graders inhabit the home of Pooh
Bea;· and Friends
-The Wonka Factory (from the st.ory
of Willie \Vonka and his chocolate fac·
tory) houses Joanne Coles, aide Jackie
Homes and second-graders.
The unschoolish atmosphere of El
Dorado is not destined for a long life. The
children there will go to a still unnamed
school on Carillo Drive in Mission Viejo
when it Js completed in September, 1973.
Storybook Lane will be !ell behind. But
hopefully, this feeling won't. "I get up in
the morning," said Mrs. Tnllner, "and
say, 'l want t.o go to work.'"
Author · in Hospital
BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) -Author
Pearl Buck has been admitted to Ver·
mant MMical Center after her doctor
reported she developed abdominal dis·
comfort whlle recuperating from pleurisy
at her home In Danby. A hospital spokes·
m&n sakl Mlss Buck, 80, was undergoing
tcsL' and was resting comfortably. The
pleurisy altack cauaecl her to be bospltal·
lzed in Rutland Wt July.
Trustees W ei g l1
Mediator Plan
To Halt Impasse
Tustin Union High School District
trustees tonight at 7:30 at Tustin High
sChool will consider a ne\Y policy which
would call for an outside agency to ap-
point a mediator during employe con-
tract negotiaions.
Current policy says the district
superintendent will appoint the third
member to a fact-finding panel if teachers
and district representatives can't agree
on the position.
Trustees are not expected to take ac-
tion on the new policy tonight, but to
refer it to the Oct. 9 meeting.
Under it, the California State Con·
ciliation Service would be asked to find
an authority in solving s a I a r y
disagreements.
Trustees will also hear reports on
]andscaping and tennis court construction
at University High School in Irvine.
Tustin High School is at 1171 Laguna
Roa d, Tustin.
Gr and1na to Paint
BIRMINGHAM, England <UP!l
Kay Brazier. a grandmotehr. ha s
declared war on motorists who she says
prowl the town in their cars at night
looking for prostitutes to pick up.
Mrs. Brazier says she will spray bright
green paint on such cars.
,673-5051
Opon Wod. thru Mon.
9:30 to 5:30, clo1ed T uo1.
l-UMlrk•4 • Ma1t.r c11_,.
Monday, Septtmbtr 25, 1972 s DAIL V PILOT 3
Ed isma Contro ls
Pollution Chief
Tells Optimism
Dy JACK BROBACK
Of lh• D11ly ,Hot $1111
The nev.·!y approved additions to
Southern California Edison's Huntington
Beach steam plant "'ill produce only a
fraction of the air pollutanls that 1\·ould
have belched out of two units proposed in
1969.
The lower pollution power generating
units have been approved by the Orange
County Air Pollution Control District.
William Fitchen, air pollution control of·
Tax Boost
May A ffect
F i r m Only
Orange County 'f'a:< Collector Robert
Citron's charges that Irvine taxes were
boosted by incorporation may br ac·
curate so far as the· Irvine Company is
concerned.
However. City t-.lanager \Villiam
Woollel t Jr. noted the range of tax in-
creases from 72 cents to $1.42 per $100 of
assessed valuation cited by Citron should
not affect any others of the city's tax-
payers.
Citron includes a 70-cent per $100 tax
increase by school districts serving
Irvine in hi s estimnte which supports hls
contention that "in some areas of the
new city, property taxpayers just 'traded
dollars' in approving incorporation."
_ Woollett agreed that portions of the city
that Were not in county service areas
last year v.'Ou\d suffer the m'ost from the
city's 1972·73 tax rate of 33 cents per $100
of property valuation.
"However, since only areas of the city
\\1ith people living in then1 would have
been part of a service dislrict, only the
Irvine Company which pays the taxes on
the undeveloped parts of the city \vould
be affected by the increases," \Voo\lett
said.
Although the rate on this property
might be higher, agricultural land is not
assessed as heavily as industrial or com-
n1ercia\ property,
In two county service areas now within
the city, the new combined tax rate is
substantially less than last year's rate
paid to the county, Woollett recalled,
The average of all the rates applied to
inhabited areas of the city is two cents
per $100 less -including the city's 33·
cent rate -than was paid by Irvine
residents Jast year.
Homosex ual Unit
B acks McGover1i
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The leader
of a Democratic club for homosexuals
s ays the group plans to campaign ac·
tively for Sen. George McGovern's elec-
tion.
"We'll deCinitely carry the majority of
the gay vote for McGovern," said Judd
Ziebell, 27, coordinator of the Alice B.
Toklas Memorial Democratic Club.
He said the group is accredited by the _
California Democratic Council.
"But it isn't a cut·and·dried thing."
Ziebell added. "The senator is being hit
from the left of the gay community for
not doing enough ... and he's being hit
from the other side, too, by those who
would rather remain in the shadows."
fleer, said Friday the combined cycle
unifs "'Ould comply with all of. the
district's rules and the rulings of the
State Supreme Court.
'·To deny this (construction)." the
pollution conlrol district stated, ''would
seriously curtail the development of ad·
d~·d fucili1ies and \\'ould result in
arbitrary and unreasonable taking of the
applicant 's property \\'1thout benefit to
tht: p<>oplc of ihe county."
In denying Edison's application t"·o
Yt':1rs ago to add two conventional units.
the court ruled that Edison must not only
meet e I cc t r i ca I Po"'Cr·demand stan-
dards Sf.'t by the State J>ublic Ulilittt"S
Comn1ission (PUCl but n1ust also comply
11ith county air pollutio11 ruh:s.
Thl' PUC had approved the. plant a rtcr
thl' air polluti on district dC'nil'd ii. Tht•
district rind lhe county appi:•:tled.
In a letter to the Bo.-ird of Supe rvisors.
F'itchen said, "l an1 sure th:ll \Vi!h the
authorization of thi s cons1ruct1on, I \Viii
b(' accused by many or pulling a copout
and selling out t.o the Edison Con1pany.
"f aCcept this as p<irt of the price o!
doing business as your air pollution con·
trol officer as I have pledged the support
of the district to Edison to assist them in
nny 1vay possible to furnish needed
energy and help thcn1 rf'duce thei r
emissions to the lov;('S! level."
Fitchcn added. ·· 1 have advised Edison
of the demands for action thcit our
district Villi rquirc in the event of
t•mergency smog alerts and they havl' ,
agreed to curtciil operations i f
necessary."
"This might inconvenience some of our
gocxi citizens. but l am sure those people
won't mind doing their part, particularly
those-extre~·-envtronmentalists who
\Yant zero pollution. but are not willing to '
pay the price to get it," the air pollution .1
officer said.
He said he was excited over the new •
proposal by Edison as a \yay of meeting
t!1e electrical energy crisis that "is star-
ing us in the face and still be able to
tll('<'t air pollution requi rements with a
1nini1num of contaminants.
Fitchcn said Ed i so n promised
rcrrormance shov.·s that the new com-
bined cycle units reduce emissions by 73
percent over the t.wo units proposed in
1969.
''The most significant reduction is ob·
tained in sulphur dioxide and with the
available supply of natural gas becoming
1nore critical these levels are increasini.;
in the old Wtits and will continue lo do
so," the air officer stated,
Fitchen said emissions from the
present facilities at Huntington Beach11
had been reduced to the point that they
arc two-thirds less today than they were
in 1969 when they were denied authority
to construct two new units.
In a letter to Edison, Fitchen warned
that the permit to construct "d~it not
constitute a pennit to operate."
He then attached a long list of require-.
ments and tests that will be mandatory
before the plants can be put into llctual
operation.
The air pa\lution officer said the units
planned are quite similar to those which
have recently been approved by the Los
Angeles Air Pollution Control District for
construction in Long Beach.
He urged the Board of Supervisors to
support the proposed expansion of th e
Huntington Beach plant as approved by
the district and added that he hnd
testified in support of expanded nuclear
power producing facilities a San Onofre
also.
The recommendation will appear on
the board's Oct. 3 agenda unless a
member brings lt up "off agenda
Tuesday.
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__:J ~l :~IL~l Mondiy, ~ltmbtt' 25 , 1972 , (
-----Japan, Chinese Open Historic Talks
'~ wt ch
Tom
urpbine
Ho w to Play
Taps fo r Flag
OLD GLORIES DEPT. -You may
think that most or the troubles that have
developed over mis-use of the U.S. Flag
involve shaggy-haired types who have
converted our national banner into cur-
ta ins. table clot hes or tee-shirts. We've
had a number of arrests for these in-
fractions in our region.
Some or the offenders, when ap-
prehended doing violence to the colors,
simply pleaded ignorance. That is prob-
ably appropriate.
It develops, however, that a lot of folks
don't know precisely what the rules and
regulations demand when dealing with
the U.S. Flag. This ts particularly true
when the colors gel old, faded, soiled or
raggedy around the edges.
AN INTERESTNIG study has been
conducted by Exchange Clubs right here
io Orange County to detennine what peo-
ple do with old Flags. The Exchange out
in Irvine recently published some of the
findings in its club bulletin called, "Wind
Sock."
The Exchange folks delennined that a
falr number of corporations, banks, civic
·and service organizations and individuals
had old Flags that they recognized were
no longer in condition to be flown .
But mindful of the emphuia 01 ar-
resting people who desecrate the Flag,
-many_ of these folk!-vowed, by golly, that
they we ren't going to get caught doing
some thing wrong with an old Flag. So
!hey just kept them in storage.
Others, the Exchange study showed,
already knew that old Flag! should be
properly destroyed by burning. So one
gentleman hung his old Flag on the
barbecue coals just after he had remov·
ed the hot dogs and hamburgers.
IN ANOTHER INSTANCE, the citizen
destroyed a tattered ensign by placing it
on the garbage conveyor belt. along with
the garbage, and gave It a snappy salute
as it moved on down toward the furnace.
Well , you might giggle over these Flag
retirement efforts but at least these folkl!I
were gettlng close.
Destruction of an old U.S. Flag is
governed under Public Law 829 which
recites, "when the Flag i1 no Jong a fit·
ting emblem for display, it .should be
destroyed in a dignified way, preferably
by burning."
Exchange Club members who did the
re!earch note that no further details are
given on how the chore .should be ac·
complished. So you could say that the
fellow with the barbecue fire and the
chap ~ith his conveyor belt likely met
the letter of tbe law even if their
methods were a touch bizarre.
Anyway, because Public Law 829 is a
bit obscure as to precise methods of
destroying and old Old Glory, the Ex-
change Club has established a model
ceremony by which colors may be laid to
rest. 1bey have a regular fonnat that
can be used by clubs or civic organiza-
tions. The rites take about 4-0 minutes.
Details should be available at your local
Exchange Club.
* THINGS YOU AL\VAYS needed to
khow are now available through the
latest U.S. government publications.
Prime examples of booklets include :
subterranean Tennites, 20 cents: Dental
Floss, 15 cents; Upper Wind Code tno
doubt for politicians) $2; llomosexuality
·in Prisons, 35 cents ; and Canceled
Careers, two bit!.
Ma ybe I'll spend a quarter just to find
out if the government ha s canceled my
career while I wasn't looking.
Congresswoman Fall s
PORTLA:\U. {)rr. 1AP J -Rep. Ed ith
Green ID·Ore .. 1 \1·111 be hospilalized for
about t~·o 11·ccks fo r treatm('n l of a
crack('d peh·is, her fr1mily and .staff
said. The congrcssy,·oman shpped and
fell at her 1~ortland apartment Sunday.
they said.
PEKING ~AP I -The Japanese fl:i.g
flew lD Pek ing today for th~ first ume In
27 years as Prime ~1 tnister Kakuei
Tanaka began talks with Chou r:n-la1 on
establishment of diplomaUc rtlattons
betwefn a new Japan and a ne1v China
The visiting Japanese d es c r 1 b C' <I
Tanaka 's opening scs.s!on with the
Chinese premier a! •·surprisingly frank
a11d very usefu l."
At a banquet later Chou said the six·
day visit opens a new page ln relations
between the two former cncmif!. The
Chinese leader touched briefly on what
he called the "Striou! da mage" Ch ina
had suffered at the hands of Japan
between 1894 and 1945 and e1preased a
hope that the past would serve as a good
lr:Json for future friendly relaHoos.
Tanaka then expressed to Chou and
111her Chinese at the banquet a "deep
sense of self-reflection over the great
troubles'' of the past. This was con-
sidered to be lhe first fonnal Japanese
apology to China for previous militarl!m.
"The time bas come for both countries
to have talk.a for the benefit of tomor-
row,'' Tanaka said. "Our frank talks will
contribute to peace in Asia and th~
world."
In most respects the welcome given
Tanaka at the airport was similar to that
given President Nixon whtn he arrived
here in the chlll of a February day. The
airport ceremony was sparsely attended
and the Chinese honor guard contained
lhe same number of soldiers thal lined
up for Nixon.
Peking's weather was wann and clear
in contrast to the weather at the time or
Nixon's visit.
The conversations between Chou and
53 Leading
Filipinos
Put Away
MANILA (UPI) -Information
Secretary Francisco s .. Tatad said today
that 53 persons including aenators, con-
gressmen, governors and publishers had
been arrested since President Ferdinand
E. Marcos put the Philippines under
martial law.
Tatad told a news cooference the ar·
rests were carried out under Marcos'
proclamation Saturday announc~g a na-
tional emergency as part of what the
government called ·a crackdown against
u,.1 T.,.,,,.._ Communist ·Conspirators, gun runnen,
FISH POPS UP OUT OF WATE.R ON McGOV&RN CAMPAIGN TRAIL smuggler.1 and "othtt criminal ac-
Ntw York Resident Hold s Up Catch at 'Environment1I P1911nt' tivlties." Marcos was to make a zpeecb later today.
--"~~" --.,,., •· --~ -L-E''l'T'-'fhoS€8rreStedincruae·oppositioilp8rty
M G SI h A Sens.' Benigno S. Aquino Jr., and Ramon
C Ovel•11 as es way M.itra and independent Sen. Jose W. 01okno. Others were Congressmen Roque
Ablan, Rafael Aquino and David Puzon,
At Nixo11, Big Bu siness
all of t he m members of the ruling
Nacionalista Party, Govs: Lino Bocalan
and Rolando Puzon, both Nacionallsta
party members and Manila Times
Publisher Joaquin P. Roces Jr. and Free
Press magazine Publisher Teodoro
Loe.son. BILLINGS, r.1ont. I AP) -Se n. George
McGovern, describing President Nixon 's
administration as one "bought lock, stock
and barrel by the special interests," is
drumming a demand that the
Republicans name the donors Of what he
calls a $IO.million secret campaign slush
fund.
The assertion that big busine ss and
special interests dominate the Nixon
government has become a central one in
( ___ cA_M_P A_r_r._.N_'_1z_J
McGovern's Democratic presidential
campaign. H(' made ii his text again to-
day.
"If there was ever an administration
that was bought lock, stock and barrel by
the special interests or this country, it's
the N ix on - A g n e w administration,··
1\1.cGovem told more than 700 persons at
a $50 fund-raising luncheon in New York .
At home in Sioux Falls, S.D ,
~tcGovern called that the principal issue
of the 1972 campaign. He addressed an
Schmitz Assails
Tr ade Witli Russ
TUCSON. Ariz. (AP ) -Califon1ia
Congressman John Schmitz, the Ameri·
can Party candidate for president, has
laid the blame for the American difficul-
ty in Vietnam to trade agreements with
th(' Soviet Union.
Schmitz said here Saturday !he U.S.
and NATO nation s provided Russia with
90 to 95 percent of it s technology which
is being used 10 construct antiaircraft
missiles and other u·capons for the Norlh
Vietnamese.
He said Pre.sidrnt ~ixon 1vas "pursuing
~ treasonous foreign PQlicy by ncgotiat·
1ng with the So\'iets \\'h1 lc Soviet technol·
ogy is being used to shoot down Ameri·
can pilots."
airport rally y,·here. police said, 2.500
persons showed up. Aides sold 1,500
lickets to a $25-a-plate dinner.
Day after campaign day. McGovern is
reciting his litany of charges against the
administration on that point : the ITT
case; !he Lockheed Aircraft Corp. loan
guarantee, approved by Congress at ad·
1ninistration urging ; the alleged advance
li)>-{lff to grain exporters about U.S.
wheat sales to the Soviet Union -which
he called "the foulest deed of all."
In Billings. today, McGovern said in a
s~ch prepared for the Western State
\Vater and Power Conference:
"Under the administration of 'ltichard
Nixon, the banks, the conglomerate
giants, the oil and utility corporations
and their coal subsidiaries have received
the tender, loving care of our govern -
ment. and the little fellow has had benign
neglect."
McGovern said no administration since
lhat of Warren G. Harding has been so
beholden to big business as Nixon's.
He said the Interior Department and
lhe Federal Power Commission have
been "loaded with friends of the utilities
and big oil companies .....
H'lcks
I
'Yoy're w atching 100 much
football!'
T H RE E CONS11TIJTIONA L Con-
vention delegates including covention
Vice President Napoleon Rama, at least
six newsmen and flve other persons also
were arrested, Tatad said.
Of those under detention, Sen. Aquino,
Congressman Ablan and publisher Roces
"Bre the best known internationally.
Aquino has been a leading Marcos
critic. Ablao, r e g a r d e d as a Mar-
cos friend, i.s t h e chainnan of the
Philippine Tourist and Travel Association
and past president of the Pacific Area
Travel Association (PATA ). Ro c es
publishes the Philippines' I a r g est
newspaper and has been active in-
ternationally in the international press
institute, a walchdog on press freedom.
All but four of the 53 remained under
dete ntion today. They are living in "com-
fortable quarters" and pennitted to be
,·isited by relatives, Tatad said.
-American Planes
Blast Big Guris
Nea r Quang Tri
SAIGON (UPI) -American jets
ca ught No rth Vietnamese units trying to
move heavy I30mm artillery pieces to
high ground in an attempt to shell reoc-
cu pied Quang Tri City and destroyed at
least six of the big gun~, U.S. military
sources said today.
The American air crews bad advance
\\'Ord of the Communist move from
prisoner interrogation and "other in-
formation," one source said.
"We \Vere waiting for them," he said.
TIIE U.S. JETS struck Sunday as the
Communists were movlng toward high
ground north of the Ba L<lng VaUey
between Quang Tri City, 404 miles north
of Saigon, and the former U.S. Marine
base at Khe Sanh to the west.
North Half of U.S. Cold
The 130mm guns are the heaViest in
the North Vietnamese arsenel and can
fire a 73-pound shell 17 miles. They re-
quire a sl:x-man crew and can fire five to
six rounds per minute.
To the south, government forces Sun·
day turned back a stepped-up Communist
drive that ranged Into three adjplnlng
provinces of the north-central coast, field
reports and military spokesmen sald. Freeze Wa rnings ii i Effect; Som e Srio w Fa lls
Te111pe r11 t11res
Hlel'I LOW r •.
71 ,,. .11
13 61 . ,
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c-tcd Weather
P111ty wn11y tod.,-. LIOf'll vtrlttllf
wtncb l'llQhl •l'ld mlll'nlng tlo!H'1 becOm-
1"9 '°"'"'"""' to -ll 10 to 11 tkrioh
In •fl.,_ todtY ll'ld Tt.Nsdll'f. Hlglt
!Cld•v. •• to 11.
CMll•I htMptr1lur•1 r.anot lrom '3
to n . ll'lltll<I ''ll'lfl4'•h.1r11 ••not from
1-1 !O 1t . Wti.f' lfll'llltl'llW. 61.
S nu, Moon. Ttde•
MONDAY
~Oftd 11191'1 , lt :OO 1.m. 4,l
In the heaviest attack, hundreds of
Co mmunists with amphib!OUJ tanks and
130 mm guns assaulted a hill near Titn
Phuoc, 330 miles north of Saigon.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtll"'1 of U.. Dal~ Pilot
Is guarantttd
Mondt.,... .. rldtYI It '1'911 .. flOI ftlVI """ ~"" by 11a p,m,, cell .., "°"' cion Wiii
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\'Oii. c.1 .. '" .-..en unlll lO 1.rn.
II'! Wl.\IMllt •OtOCAil. :II SKOl'ld low • . S:tS P,t'l'I . .O.J
TUISOAY
M .. I Orll'lfl c-ty ANll .• • .•• ~I
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"'" C1'l'nlnt9. CIPlttrt!lt -..0. S.11 Jt,1111 C.MtrMll. o.t11 "'°Jnl,
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•
Tanaka began two hours after Tanaka
arrived.
ject.s. . ,_ The establishment or relall~ ~ eJ·
peeled to precipitate a break in Japain's
ties with the Nationalist Chinese govern-
ment of Chiang Kal-shek on Taiwan.
The dac:liptk:m of the talks was given
by Japanese dtlt.gatlon aources ~n
:ifter they wound up. The exchanges, 1n
the Crut Hall of the People, began with
40 mlnutts of poUte small talk, then went
into a two-hour working session which
wound up at 4:40 p.m.
Neither side di1telosed what had been
discussed but the shape and nature of
future relations, includ1ng a new peace
treaty and · a commercial pact, were
believed to have been the central su~
Tanaka is here with 51 aides, including
Foreign Minister rt1asayoshl Ohlra .
The Chinese raised the present day !·
Japanese flag of a big red sun on a white
field at the atrport about a hair hour
before Tanaka's jet landed . The old ris-"'
ing sun flag of Imperial Japan of Wor!d war II wa! hauled down in surrender lll
Peking in 1945. ,
FAMILY AWt.ITS REUNION WITH RUNAWAY DAUGHTER
Parents Mi1 takenly Id entified Girl as Murder Victim in Park
. Daughter 'Born Again'
·-Not Killed After All
~ CHICAGO (AP! -It was "like having a new daughler born," said tht ~i father of a runaway girl who contacted poUce after her parents mistakenly
.,. identified her as one or two teauigers found slain in a park.
~ Rosemarie Pilewicz, 17, said she read a newspaper report of her death
and thought, "How can the world aay .this? I'm breathing."
'
I
Her parents had reported her rnisling Aug. 10.
• Her return left police with the bodies of two nameless girls, each shot ••
once in the back of the head with a .32-caliber pistol and left lying face up In
\V~shington Park on the city's South Side. They were fowid early Saturday by
a Jogger.
There were no signs of a struggle and neither girl had been sexually ~
· molested, poUce sald. ~ ~ Six other womeo and an infant girl have been found dead in unsolved µ homicides in Chicago and Its surburbs since June.
As~ed ho~ she ml~t.aken.ly ~tified one of the dead girls as her daugh-
ter. Violet Pllewicz said, "The gU"I was just like a twin. Even the earrings
were the same."
1 Richard Pilewicz, who had viewed the bOdy after his wife bad come out ol ·~ the morgue weeping, told reporters, "I went in and my eyes were foggy and I
I was shaking and It looked eucUy lli:e her."
· A -family friend, Sigmun Rataj, theorized that when police called and said 'i they bad a body that might be Rosemarie'~ the mother "went to the morgue
1 expecting to see her daughter dead •.. it wa.s an emotional thing."
~ family made flllle_ral arrangements and spent a grief-stricken, sl~
less rught before Rosemane read that she had been identified as a victim and
then contacted . poli ce .. Rosemarie said !he had been living with female friends.
'\ After the reunion, police held her overnight at a juvenile home.
Asked why his daughter had run away Pilewicz said "I don't know 1~
J M~ybe .my type of life !s different from he~s." Mrs. Plle~cz said the girl· !;fl t1
pr1mar1ly because of differences over her social hours I
Rataj '. who said he had once lived in the neighborhood and had returned I
to offer his cond?lences upon hearing the re~rt of Rosemarle'.!J death, waved
•i an arm at the tiny backyard and a narrow street lined tightly wilh rows of
three-story apartment buildings. ~ . ·;~he wa~ trying to break out of this neighborhood. You can see what It'• ~
like. He Pointed to the tavern next door, where singing blared from the juke. ~
box. rt
r.,,Cl<,X-"' • ''~ --,,:z;:O.:nM<:IO;r:;,,, "r,\Oo.,,.._.U " '-.: • .,. -I -.'W' • 1r .... :c-.r.u= •
Nixon Proposes Thorough
Reform of Mone y System
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on called today for "thorough-going
reronn of the world monetary system to
clear the path for the healthy com-
petition of the future."
a.t Oak Ridge National Laboratory CIU·
t1on that a potential breakthrough in the
treatment of cancer cannot yet be
regarded as the discovery of a complete cure.
.:
' i·
t
t
T
~
.,
In an unU1Ual appearance before the
annual meetlng of the World Bank and
the InteranUOnal Monetary Fund, Nixon
pledged that the United States would
··not tum Inward and isolationist."
The warning was Issued durtng the
weekend a11 a barrage of telephone calls .
came to the laboratory after tt an· !'
nounced that the bacterial agent BCG : .,
He asked a slmllar pledge from olher
nsUons as he eald that monetary refonn
must embrace lntematlon11\ economic af·
fairs. Including trade and Investment op.
portunlty u well .
e Cuftlo I.eel f'oMnd
RENO, Nev. (AP) -Federal
authortUn have recvvmd 11211,280 of the
1178,SOO stolen In the robbery Tuaday at
Harrah's C.atno In Lake Tahoe -the
largest casino robbery tn Nevada history.
Yem Loetterle, special FBI agent in
charge, said Sunday that the money ,..,
found "In the Lake Talloe area." He did
not reveal how the recovery was made
ar;d said the rest of the money had noL
been located.
Four men were chaf'l'd In the case
S.turday by federal and Dou1l11 County
authorlUes.
• c.-c-i1oa ""'" OAK RlllCE. Tenn. (AP) -SclenUst.t
I
l'_I_N-SH-0-RT=--•. -. -)1
had betn found "100 percent effective" In '
lrtating cancer In animals. .
Dr. Michael Hanna Jr.. an ORNL
ac!entlat wbo anoouncec1 the ltndtna• Fri-day, llid BCG CllUX>t be regarded defW.Uve cure tor cancer u a ...
• . I ~ e llltgrt111t Wom.m Behl .
UNION SPRINGS, Ala. (AP) -A ;
telephone Up from a camlttl nne:r led ·;
to the '"'" Sltunt1y night of • ml !; woman charged with tradln& har :;: 1
i;on for a .\lied car ln Florida '
ll'edn...S.y' Union Sprtna, pollco Nici IUt.
JennUer Sharon Slmt, alJas J...it .
Fire, about 23, WU '""tad u •lie .,,.:
ed at a carnlval aldcs1-outalde ~
small town 50 mlleo -· I
Montsomery, police'"*-Joe n:,..
froe llld.
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Ul'I T......,.
WHITTIER GIRL CATCHES ADMIRING GLANCES
It's Women's Appreciation Wffk at LA Cenhr
Libbers: Don't Squawk
-It's A Harmless G,awk
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -"Don't get but the week began officially Sunday
sore -just turn the other cheek," said a under sPonsorsh.ip of the International
classy looking gal to her companion as Society of Girl Watchers.
she strolled through a benevolent The shoe was on the other foot, one
cauntlet of admiring males. might say, as part of today's observance
The sccrie was CentttryC!ty,il highrl~rr a contest to detenni~· the most
office-medical-residential complex on the sensuous man among the girl watchers.
city's west side and the occasion the Century Clty became SensuOUI City fo r
third annual Girl Watching Week. the day at least.
• On Thursday there will be a lecture by
Joseph Beagln, ·society president, who is
a master at sneaking a look at a comely
derriere very subtly without the
knowledge of the woman he may be
escorting.
GIRL WATCHING is really a year·
round sport in th is area with its abun-
dance of pretty office workers and nurses
4 Die, 7 Hurt
In Auto Crash
ESCONDIDO (AP) -Four persons
were killed in a three-car collision on
Jnterstate 5 late Sunday night in which
seven other persons were hurt.
The dead were identified as Lee
Frederic:.. Willett, 30, of Claremont; Ed-
mund K. Lucitt, 41 , of Duarte; Joe
Lozano Jr., 25, and his wife Carmen, 24,
both of San Diego.
The injured were Willett's widow. Mary
Lou ; his father, Kemp Willett of Helena,
Mont.; George N. Hambleton, 21, of La
Sierra and his passengers. Michaelin
Drouiem. 5. Christopher Perry, 4, and
Janine Druiem. 25. all of Riverside, and
Patricia Fitzmorris, 23, a passenger in
Lozano's car.
The California Highway Patrol said one
motorist apparently tried to pass a sec-
ond and crashed headon Into a third
with another approaching vehicle tben
hitting the others.
The socitey's parent group, the Century
City Civic Council, received a letter of
protest last week from the Los Angeles
chapter o{ NOW -National Organization
of Women.
CHAPTER PRESIDENT Virginia L.
Carter declared Girl Watching Week was
"laughingly outmoded but nonetheless
outrageously offensive."
Miss Carter-threatened ' ' g r e a t
economic pressure" against what she
called a "vulgar circm" by a group in·
tent on increasing sales in the Century
City shopping center.
In reply, Bea gin, who I n s i s t s on
gentlemanly girl watching (no leers.
please), said:
"It is distJ:essing to witness the op-
position of women's orgt1.nizations like
NOW to the ancient practice of girl
watching.
"They make a major protest over girl
watching as somehow turning women in·
to sex objects. That is patently
ridiculous! Appreciating the beauty and
attraction of the opposite sex is hardly an
insult -and don't think that women
don't watch men as well.
Ul'I TtltMltr.
CLIMBER NEAL OLSON RESTS AFTER YOSEMITE RESCUE
El C1plt1n Acclclent Broke His L-2,100 Feet Up
McGovern's
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Democrats
and Republicans were at odds today over
whether local McGovern headquartm
helped organizers of an anti·Nixon
demonstration that the GOP claimed
could start "a riot" when the President
arrives Wednesday.
Democratic spokesmen said they did
no such thing. but coo.ceded that the
organizers of the demonstration bad been
allowed to use the telephones at
McGovern headquarters.
A REPUBLICAN representative said
he had evidence or a "huge nwnber" of
calls made on phones at the McGovern
office to organize a crowd Qf "people who
have a record of burning the American
flag, carrying the Viet Cong flag and
have arrest records for causing previous
demonstrations.
"These aren't the kind of people who
are interested in a political campaign,
they are interested in starting a r iot,"
said Jack Easton, communications
chainnan for the California Committee
to ~lect the President
Nixon is scheduled to address a $1,000-
a-plate fund·raising dinner at the Century
Plaza Hotel Wednesday night. A coalition
of antiwar groups has announced plans
for a demonstration against him.
THE "CENTURY Plaza Reception
Committee" said tbey expect more than
20,000 demonstrators. Police officials say
they have estimates ranging from that
figure down to 1,000.
A spokesman for the local McGovern
campaign, Tom Sullivan, said "no ooe in
our campaign bas endorsed or actively
organized" the deID:onstration. Press aide
Fred Epstein conCeded earlier that "a
handful" or demonstration organizers
had used telepllones at McGovern head-
quarters here for two nights, but said the
practice was stopped.
Monday Stpttmbtr 25, 1972 DAI L PILOT 5 -------
Policemen 'Besieged'
Suicide-bent Gunman Fires on Station
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A gunman
peppered the Foothill Division potice sla·
tion with sporadic rifle fire for more than
an hour Sunday night and early today .
Police said they l!lfeSled a man y,•ho
claimed he fired on the station because
he wanted to commit suicide.
one inside \vas injured. Police shot fromthat n1ore than one gunman was in·
sneaked out Wlder the fire. volvC'd.
Sgt. Nate Pranell said Grant was shot
by tv.'o officers near the station. The of·
ficers said the man reportedly fired shots
At them and they returned the fire,
'''ound1ng h1n1 .
Michael Grant, 25, of suburban Glen-
dale was in fair condltion at Pacoima
Lutheran Hospital with gunshot wounds
in both legs and one hand, officials
reported.. No other persons were injured
in the incident. Police said Grant would
be booked for investigation of assault
with a deadly weapon.
POLICE SAID that shots started COin·
ing "from all directions" during the
morning watch roll call shortly before
midnight Sunday. Officers: ducked for
cover and the station was darkened as a
barrage of bullets bounced off the three-
story building, police said.
Officers estimated that about 40 rounds
of •ammunition were exchanged between
officers and the gunman. One shot pass-
ed through a window of the station but no
P'OUCE SAID that at lhe height of the
attack gunshots came front three sides of
the station, lead ing the1n to believe then
the stat1011 rooftop v.'hile other officers
Tembwrs Hit
Monterey Bay
MONTEREY (UPI) -A se ries
of small temblors c r a c k r d
pavements and shook residents in
the r.<ton terey Bay area just prior to
a v:eekend meeting of earthquake
experts to discuss g e o Io g i ('a I
ha1..ards.
Four quakes. measurin~ bel\1·vrn
3.5 and 4.0 on the Richter Scall',
s1vaycd tall buildini;s 111 11rarh.\'
Salinas. Saturday.
Three CRA Officers
Walk Out Of Meeting
BERKELEY (AP)-Saying IT ALSO blasted the Ctll'fl'nt
the conservative, pro • Nixon board of directors for "re·
ca J if 0 r n i a Re publican maining silent -v.•hi\e the cur·
A bl h band A...1 , rent administration has o·un up
ssem Y as a Oncu its , a deficit of over $40 billion in
Police said thev fou nd Grant's car
pa rked near the Station, located in the
San Pernando Valley. the city's northern
"bcdroonl'' area. and determined that
some of the shols he allegedly fired came
fron1 behind a 1vall in front of a house
a'-'.ross fron1 !he Foothill Di\ision .
The \\·oundcd Grant. t11·0 rifles and
1hreC' boxes of ammunition 1Yere found
behind a pick·up truck 11•hich 1Yas parked
arro~s the street from the station .
Detective DeWaync Sill s satd c;ran1
told police he fired on the stfl t'1on
"lx·cause I 1vantcd to <.:on1mit suicide··
llUll l NG TIIE SJIOOTING, nenrby st:i· ·
ti11ns \1·crr placed on tactical ;ilert un<l
111l'tnt:H.•rs of a special \l'rapons ll'<ITH j
s1•;1 rthl'd !hr .... ·idc residential arc·a \\'hich ,
1ras s1·alcd off from traff11.:.
"esta·bii:Shed princi.ples. o,~ one year."
responsible .Republ icanism, CRA acting chainnan David
three CRA office rs and several Galer denied a clain1 by
members have resigned after Downard th a t CRA mcm-
w~lking out ~f a board of bershfP has-decITne<I-sffilrpYy
lcpt1mMr 27th 1lau October lit, boun I PM to 10 PM
Lut da,-Sund.y, Octobtt 1st, 12 Noon 10 6 PM
••Ill• M•lll•• Cl•I• Avllllerl••• M•I" •treet & P4•• .....
D1llrO-Prltff • Ad"'l111Dft'$1~75-• CMI ... ~ t2 frM
dr1ectors meeting. to "about 2 300 members."
"As responsi'ble Republicans · ii~!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiii~ we can oo longer support the
CRA," said a statement sign-
ed by Wally Reemelin and
Stephen Downard , v i c e
president.$, and Sue Smith ,
assistant secretary.
THE THREE, joined in their
exod us Sunday by about nine
BRITISH
EXPO
1972
SOUTH
COAST
PLAZA
supporters, said there was
Rescuers Bring wide spread dissalisfactionl--.:.;;~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~;:---within the volunteer organiza·
lion by members unhappy
Sll'T. 21 ·OCT. I
Down Climber ~id;:;ANi:.rsemenl of
Downard said 31 C R A
W'th B k T _._ members were resigning to } rO en .LA;g join the United Republioans of
California, an o t h er con-.
YOSEMITE (UPI) -Sandy-haired servalive wlunteer g r o u p
Neal Olson, 24, said after bis rescue S11n-which bas C\l(lor.oed Rep. John
day that dangling from the 2,:JOO.foot Ashbrook, (R-Ohio), for presi-
level of El Capitan monolith w i t h a dent.
broken leg "wasn't so bad to me." · "We are aware of the grave
"People are making more out of it than danger to America posed by
it really is," the yoong mountaineer said the McGovern candidacy, and
from his hospital bed. we recognize the absolute
Olson, Portland, Ore., was struck by a necessity of a Republican vic-
boulder Saturday morning while scaling tory in November," a state-
the popular "nose route" of the sheer ment by the three resigning
rock ln Yosemite National Park with a officers said.
hometown partner, Wayne Haack, 24:.
Four volunteer rescuers, three men 'jBUT AS r e s p on s i b I e
and a woman, used a hand winch Sunday Republicans we retain the
to lower Olson, who was @feet from right to criticize governmental
completing his week-long climb, to the policies contrary to honored
Yosemite Valley floor. ··Republican principles ... "
Olson said he was two steps from a Rather than "adhering to its
.,. established principles o f
ledge where the climbers camped Friday responsible Republicanism ,"
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"A Private School of Distinction Founded in 1942"
night "when a big boulder became the statement continued, the
detached from the wall." CRA has "become a 'rubber1----=====--'----=---'-----'------'--'--'---=c:c:_-=::c:_=====-==--
"I straddled Jt, but it came off, glanced stamp' for any administration
off my head and back and hit my right policy regardless of Its viola-
leg," said Olson. ti on of these basic beliefs."
Debris from the accident showered two The statement said the
other climbers on a lower edge, Mark President's wage-price control
Hamond, 28, Fresno and Michael Dent, policy, approved by the CRA,
'IT, Los Angeles. They were told of the in· "contradicted one of our prin-
jury and climbed down the majestic ciples, the belief in a free
rock to seek help. market economy." 1---=--~--~~~~~~~--'-~~~1
e
'
..
:ROI.BX
PHARMACY THE VERY SPECIAL WATCH
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gallons or more 'of Union 76 gasoline. Choose •
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WE QUOTE PRICES
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Try Saturday's News Quiz
•
•
s DAD.Y PROT EDITOR IAL PAGE
Use It to Cut Taxes .
Although spending by Congress may produce a def·
ic1t of $34 billion in the current fiscal year, it never·
theless appears that sharing of federal funds with
states, counties and cities will go through.
l! it does, the prospect is that Calllornia will receive
about $369.7 million in the !irst year. or this total, $205
million \\'Ould go to counties and $163.8 million lo cities.
Orange County may receive $27.3 million per year,
10 be divided $14 .6 million for county government and
$12 .69 million for cities. U the $10 million anticipated
for this year were applied directly to property tax re-
11cf, it could amount to 25 cents per $100 assessed val·
uation on the cou nty's $1 .95 tax rate, less on city rates.
But it may be -unrealistic to assume funds will go
for property tax relief. County and city governments
well could spend the money on roads, buildings, salary
increases and everything but tax reduction.
Revenue sharing should be set aside for property
tax relief, as Second District Supervisor David Baker
has urged. If the windfaJI cannot be applied directly
to tax relief, it should be used only for programs which
will reduce laxes.
Hanoi's Phony Propaganda
North Vietnam has its own version of an ''open
door policy." Jane Fonda, Ramsey Clark and Huey New-
ton have been through that special "open door." And
undoubtedly Senator McGovern or Teddy Kennedy
would be especially welcome.
Another, more important, door is kept closed by
J-tanoi, however. That is the door which would admit
the International Committee of the Red Cross.
North Vietnam was one of more than 114 nations
\Vhich signed JRC conventions which permit inspection
of lhe prisoner of war ca mps and disclosure of
the names ol prisoners being held. Not only has Hanoi
excluded the Red Cross in violation of the conventiont
it has also refused the efforts o! Bob Hope and others
to deliver Christmas gifts and other aids to the POWs.
While Ramsey Clark came away from his guided
tour saying the prisoners are well treated and in good
health, and McGovern contends they're rotting in their
cells, the fact ls neither one really knows.
Propaganda is the name or Hanoi's game. The latest
is the release of three POWs to a pair of anti-war acti·
vists. It's a transparent effort to influence the American
election.
Hanoi would look better in the eyes of the world
as would the Fondas and Clarks, if due recognition were
given to the Red Cross. Certainly North Vietnam's cred:
ibility would be improved and their propaganda pur·
poses better served by a show of humanitarian concern
through admitting a non-political Red Cross inspeelion
team.
Seven Musical 'Feasts'
Orange CQunty Philharmonlc Society has for nearly
20 years brought world-renowned orchestras, conduc-
tors and soloists to county audiences. Its proud record
continues.
Seven concerts -six at UCI-Crawford Hall , one at
Orange Coast College -will be given by great arches·
tras and famed conductors between Oct. 29 and Mar. 18.
The rush is on for tickets. They're available at the
Philharmonic office, 20l W. Coast l·lighWay, Newport
Beach, 92660 -phone 646-6411.
The time lo assure yourseU of seven °feasts" of
fine music is now.
~Fakery in ltlcGov~Campalgn's Inner. Tensimis-
Art Forms
Runs High
~YD NEY J. HARRI~
t got a big chuckle out of lhal New
Yorker cartoon depic1lng an art museum
director watching some patrons admire
an "abstract" painting, The director
turned to his assistant and whispered, "J
haven't got the heart
to tell them they're
looking at the ven-
tilator."
It often happens.
that in our 1nad pur-
suit of Culture. we
wind up admiring
ventilalors instead of
real paintings. The
tenacious h u m a n
mind likes lo find significa nce where
there really is none , as in so much of
modern poetry.
AN AMUSING cxa1nple of this sort of
thing happened at the i m port a f1 t
carlsbad chess loumament or 1907. A
player named Cohn won o brilliancy
prize for "a beautiful combina tion
slarting from an <'Xtraordinarily pro-
found pawn sacrifice."
After the game. Cohn coofcssed that he
hadn't. intended lo sacrifice the pawn at
all -'he merely lost ii through
carelessness. From then on, he had to
play way over his head to win lhe game.
The fact that he won it had nothing to do
with the "brilliant combination."
DUR£NG THE febrile 1920s, one. of the
Jeader.i of the avant·garde poelry move-
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
If the ancient Greek! had invented
television before they invented
philosophy, there would have been
no Golden Age or Greece.
-L.L.
Tiii• ,.. .. ,. rtlltCtt tHdtl"'• vltwt., ""'
M<fl .. fllY "'°"' . ti tfle MWWfHf. $-
JMtr Ht ,...,, "' GIMlltY OUl. 0.llY l"lltr,
ment was Hart Crane, whose "greatest"
work is a poem called "The Bridge." Yet
I have never met anyone who cou1d ex·
plain what the poem was about, and I
doubt whether Crane himself could. It is
the most damned mixed-up hunk of syn-
tax in the English language.
Unfortunately, most poets are not so
honest as Robert Browning, who, when
asked what s certain poem of his meant.
gave the classic reply : "Madam, when I
wrote it, only God and I knew what it
meant. Now only God knows."
IT HAS BEEN lying heavily on my
conscience for lhe past 15 years, but r
mu~t confess to an imposture of this sort .
J once wrote a long poem and submitted
it 'to Harriet Monroe, the high priestess
of the poetry movement, whose magazine
Poetry was to literature what making
the Rose Bowl game i.! to a football
team . I made the magazine, which
devoted three whole pages lo the poem-
and to this day. I don't know what the
poem is about. It was just a gag .
Poetry magazine did, and t suppose
still does, publish some wonderfu l new
stuff, but the percentage of fakery in any
art·form Is appallingly high. 1t wouldn't
hurt to check those ventilators before we
start gushing.
Unloved United Nations
The United Nations ('{Insis ts of 132
member countries . and it is in1possible
lo please all of them all of the time.
These days. it is especially difficult to
please lhe United Stales. To underscore
ifs disa pproval of recent U.N. actions
this country has proposed to reduce its
share or the or ganization's budget from
31.5 le> 25 percent.
It is cust1>mary for A me r i ca n
Pres idents to pay tribute to the United
Nations at least once a year, President
Nixon did so -but s ome'"' hat
backhandedly -in his Feb. 9, 1972,
foreign policy message to Congress. "We
need to deal real istica!ly with the fact
that the United Nalions is facing \\'hat I
tan only call a crisis or confidence," Nii·
on .said . "Whatever its cu r rent
weaknesses, the U.N. makes an essential
contribution to the structure of world
peace and thus to mankind's future."
The •jcrisis of ronf.idence" stemmed lrl
part from last October's General
Assembly vote to seat Mainland China
and to deny representation to the Na·
tlonalist regime of Chiang Kal-shek.
More recent U.N. actions also have ir-
ritated the Nixon admlnistraUon. On
Aug. 28, for ti:ample, the U.N. Special
Committee on Colonialism voted to put
Puerto Rico under study as a colonJal
territory of the United States entitled to
lndependen<t. And on &pt. 10, U.S.
Amb.awdor George Bu!lh vetoed a
S<curity Council resolution that caUed !or
<.UPlion of "all milUary operations" in
the Middle East but made no mmtlon of
the Olympic Games tragedy.
IMMTABLY, THEN, the cumol ,U.S
elfon 1o reduce Ill OnlDdal aupport GI
tht -... ...-will be viewed ..
.. !Kl a1 rotallltioll. Both lbe nou .. and
se,nate ......., o1 the 11xa1 1m Senato-
~ I
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
Justice-Commerce appropriations bill
placed a 25 percent ceiling on annual U.S.
contributions to the U.N. budget.
A memorandum dislributed to ell U.N.
members on Aug. 28 stated the Niion. ad-
ministration's case for lower U.S. finan-
cial contributions: "The view is widely
held in the United States that in a
virtually universal organization or
sovereign. equal slates, the total
membership must share its financial
responsibllities more equitably . , • "
Richard t... Tobln, writing in Saturday
Review, saw things differently: "The 25
percent figure represents, In the view o{
bQth the State Department and Congrest,
a rate more tn balance between actual
capacity to J>JY and the influence the
U.S. is now able to exercise in the
organization."
THE CURRENT DEBATE on ·u.N.
financing brings to mind a similar con-
troversy that erupted more than a
decade ago. On Jan. 30, 1962, President
Kennedy proposed thBI the United States
subscribe to one-half of a $200 million
bond l!8ue lo be !looted by the U.N., for
support of peacekeepini;i operaUons.
congress refused to purchase any bonds,
but it did 111uthori1.e appropriations of up
to $100 million as a loan to the world
organllatloo.
No IUCh rtpritve for the U.N. Is in tht
ollJng this Um<. Congress and lbe White
lloule ...., determined to cut back lbe
U .S cootr1bulion clcspite the Uke1lhood
that U.S. lnlluence ln the Unll<d N1tloot .. m dedlne obo.
I
Reconciling With Regular
WASHINGTON -The internal tensions
of the McGovern campaign arise from
natural causes. Mixing up the old
Democrats with the new Denlocrats has
fouled lines of communication. as might
naturally be expected. The effect on the
Outcome of the election probably will be
minimal.
For the fact has
to be faced that
Senator McGovern
must run as a con-
ventional Democra-
lic candidate. His ap-
peal to the indepen-
dent and undecided
voWr has proved
thus far not lo be
great enough to justify conJrontations
with the regular Democratic establish-
ment.
Campaign chairman Lawrence F.
O'Brien has gotten across his point that
~fcGovem·s greatest asset is the
Democratic party and its majority status
in the electorate. This is what the strain
between O'Brien and the pre-nomination
managers of McGovern was all about,
and O'Brien apparently has prevailed, at
least for the time being.
fl.1cGOVERN AS a conventional can-
didate loses some of his left-wing
glamour. He is not the candidate Gary
Hart and Jean Westwood manased in the
pre-nomination stage. But O'Brien's point
that McGovern would have been weaker
on balance as a maverick Democrat is
well supimrted by the trend of the polls
since his nomination.
It could have been otherwise i!
?t-lcGovem had had the personal · appeal
of a Kennedy, or even Adlai E.
Stevenson, but he does not stand alone es
a great political personality; on the con-
trary, he must rely most on tbe normal
Democratic alignment of a majority of
the registered voters.
McGovern yearns for the support of
both the new and the old Democrats and
this undoubtedly led him to tolerate the
confusion in his Washington beadquaners
.... ·hich led to resignations and threatened
resignatiOM 'of top personnel who were
virtually nnknown to the average voter.
HE COULD WELL have reasoned,
therefort, that such internal squabbles
v.·ere of no lasting significance, although
they do keep aJive the question of how he
expects to be able to run the country if
he cannot keep his own house in order.
There was already too much doubt on
that point arising from the Eagleton and
Salinger affairs coupled v.•ith some inept
reactions on McGovern's part to current
news developments.
But so far as campaign organization
and direction is concerned. the public
could not care Jess whether Larry
O'Brien, Jean Wtstwood, or Gary Hart is
in control. Public attention focuses on the
candidate, not his organlzatioo nor their
ideological struggle!. His interest lie.s in
being as nearly as possible the candidate
ot the Democrati c party as a whole,
which is the point O'Brien got across.
THIS IS THE ONLY sound strategy for
McGovern to follow in the existing
circumstances. 'There is no k n o w n
Republicans for McGovern movement, no
significant independent mavement aside
from the war protesters, few bodies of
conremed citizens rising against the Nix-
on administration.
McGovern must therefore rely most on
voters who will compulsively vote
Democratic and anti-Nixon whatever
their reservations, and whatever they
were telling poll-takers today. This, of
course, is not a happy thought for those
Demos
\rho dreamed of a "new coalition" of an
undefined nature \\1hich would blaze fresh
palitical trails. But it is the kind of reall·
ly Harry S Truman exploited under rd
~·holly dissimilar clrtumstances. Truman
v.•as elected with less than a majorlty
because he was a Democrat first and
foremost.
THE McGOVERN.SIIRIVER campailn
has consequently been transfonned from
a "new politics" movement into a con-
ventional Democratic attack on a
Republican administraUon as tbe tool of
the rich and privileged, and sowxtlna
more and more e v er y day lllte
Hubert Humphrey, Ed Muskie or even
Lyndon Johnson. The theme is the same
from the 11T case on through the
Watergate caper, the dairy price rise and
the Russian grain deals. This is the way
the rich and privileged Republicans rig
things their own way end bilk the com-
mon man.
It is a familiar strategy, but possibly
effective. The poll-takers are very wary
of their O'A'TI results giving Nixon a 30
percent margin over McGovern. Gallup
says three voters In 10 admit they mighl
desert NixOJJ by election day. If they
shifted to McGovern that still might not
be enough, but ii could make the close
race President Ni1on says be expect!.
Muskie Forces Dug Dirt on Rivals
WASHINGTON -Sen. Edmund
Muskie's Senate subcommittee was busi-
ly digging up dirt on his Democratic
rivals during the presidential primaries.
Confidential memos from the files of
Musk ie's Subcommittee on
Intergovernmental Relations are packed
with derogatory in·
formation against
George McGovern
i.ind Hubert Humph-
rey and Gov. George
\Va llace. All three
battled Muskie for
t h e Democratic
presidential nomina-
tion.
The research on
the candidates was dom by staff mem-
bers whose salaries were paid by the tax-
payers.
ONE FOUR-PAGE memo rips into
McGovern's inconsistencies on the Viet·
nam War.
"So far," declares the report, 1'Ceorge
McGovern hes gotten away with portray-
ill8 hims<'lf as a man of conscience who
was al,,.,•ays endowed with the vision and
courage to fight our military involvement
in Vietnam."
The memo quoted McGovern's st.ate-
mont that '"!'here baa seldom been a day
Bt1 George ---
Dear George :
The doclor has mommeoded
more exercbe and told me to go
bicycling. I keep fallinc oil. WhY
hasn't somebody invented a three.
wheeled bicycle, ond is !hi> Idea
original with me? Could there be
money in my idea?
, WONDERING
Dear Wondering :
IT'S A GOLD MINE I Good luck!
Other peoplt, ldmltttcUy, hav•
lried lo invent 1 lhree-wbeeled
bicycle, blll ..,. UtUe bUg al1'l)'I
did them in. p..,p. llllistecl ... Cllj. I• It I lrieyde.
in the last eight years that my heart has
not literally ached for that bloody con·
flict." Then the memo cites McGovern's
early pro-war votes and statements as
"some of the Jess publicized symptoms of
George McGovern's heartache."
ANOTHER STAFF memo dated
February 17, 1972, begins : "McGovern
bas made tt appear that he waa 'right' on
Vietnam and 'right' on the defense
budget ever slnce he got out of diapers."
Then it Uck.s off !leVeral "lltUe known
facts" from McGovern's pro-Vietnam
record.
The memo adds: "The notion that
Senator McGovern is the leadJns llboral
in the Demoeratlc party, compared lo
Senator MuskSe, has litUe vaHdlty. Jn
their ratings of aenaton, the liberal
AmericBM for Democratic Action have
as.signed a higher career 'liberal quo-
tient' for Senator Muskie than Senator
McGovern.".
A STAFF MEMO on Hubert Own·
phrey, who m> with Munte on the 1968
Democn.Uc ticket, begins with the
challenge: 11WW the ttt1 Hu be rt
Hwnphrey pleMe 1tand up?"
The -ls bllstertna: "l!llbert lfwnplny bu been ~for olllce ..
long and 111 loud !hat hll li&hl mouth -·t amn 1o know Olll' man wllat his
Jell mouth ls say1Jlg. Here .rt -ex· 1mples o( the recent l'<COl'd o( Hubert
Humphrey the Dip.flop Clllldldate."
'l'bere IOUOW five pagee of Uwnpbrey'1
alleged lnconsiatencles.
Bui George Wallatt recelvu the
barsherl tre.ltmenl f(Otn M u I k I e ' I
..... arc11en.
"'W H EN WALLACE bec1me
l°"tJnOf ," I staff tnemo ISltJ'tS,
"Allbomo .... ranked fltb -lbe lllal8 In per coplto -... Wiim Ille
Gearr• and Lurle<n aeward.1htp ended,
\
Alabama had dropped to 48th ....
"While posing as a friend of the work-
ing man, Wallace was telling northern
businessmen that they should come to
Alabama because it was, as he described
it, 'the Profit Opportunity State.'
"These days Wallace is warning the
Democrats and Republicans : 'They had
better give tax relief to the working man
and put the burden on the shoulders of
the filthy rich on Wall Street.'
"WllAT HE DOESN'T mention was
that, during the Wallace regime, he ram-
med a law through the state legislature
that provided that taxes on corporations
could only be raised by constitutional
amendment -literally an impossibility
in the Wallace-dominated
legislature .•..
"When Wallace was running for
governor back In 1963, he promised to
•put Alabama Jn !he forefront or !he
Sooth and Ci•• the state a public school
1ysttm equal lo ony In the U.S.A.' But
after JO y .. r1 ot talk, Alabama's school.I
Isn't It the Truth!
By CARL RIBLET JR.
The difference between exaggeration
and lalstboodo ls found In which polltlcal
candldlte say1 whaL Jt our candidate
says &hat red Is blue, it ls a Ile. U my
favored candldlta says It, I look thn>11gh
my .......,.lored glosses and excuse him
as being color blind.
"I loot to Mar him lit."
• -William Shaktsp<ar• m "LmH!'J Labor LoJt, T"
My neighbor down the ro11d, the retired
Wyomlna: oowboy and horse Y{J'anglcr.
admli.s that be has caught a lot of hell In
his Ille and It is a lact. he say•. that
nearly a1ways it came 11 1 result of
c:hasillg ll.
"II ihne U"'no Hdl, a good many
pr1acher1 OTC oblalnlng tnO!llU
tmdcr folu pr•'-<•· •
-afllr S""'1a!/
I '
are in worse shape today than they were
when Wallace waa elected.''
MUSK IE TOLD US thal be WU
unaware that his subcommittee staff bad
produced "negalive research" against
opposing candidates. He suggested that
individual staff members must bave done
the work voluntarily on their own time.
The subcommittee staff director, Alvin
From, acknowledged to u.s that he had
supervised "to 110me extent" the staff
researchers who produced lhe memos for
Muskie. While admJtting some overla~
ping, he said moot of !he polttlcal work
had been done voluntarily by staffe:ra on
their own time.
THE "NEGATIVE research," he said.
had be<n done chiefly by J.. Alh!'iibt
who was a vohuiteer and drew only a
no mine 1 $10k-month subcanunltlce
salary for three montm.
Some of the mell\Od, however were
signed by Tom Rlluh and ,Al Fi1...u1
who drew run pay from the sub-
committee. From emphasized that the
subcommittee handled ill Ml load of
legitimate work throughout the wn-
palgn.
DAILY PILOT
N
T ""' VE ...
L • • "' l.lml r• <•'"" ..
CIM ., ....
NOT• •• •• "" " NO
OU• Wiii
0" Ct1IU 1m, -t•ld
""' ....
"" .... ... ,
"" .,_ .... .... 1m.
0
• ...
• "" "
~· • •
T
I·----=-----
For the Record
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
ARBUCKLE & SON m E. tliil ~i:;co.ta Mesa
1114B88 • BAL'l'I: BERGERON
. FUNERAL HOME
eor .. a de1 Mar m.IM58
Costa Mesa . 146-W4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, C.OSta l\.lesa
[J W'3I • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACB MORTUARY
1705 Lapna Canyon Rd.
-u • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAii][
Ceme1<r1 Mo....,..
1 • Oapel ---·,t
-PacUlc View Drive
Newport Beacll, CaJlfornla
14U7111 • PEEK FAMILY
COWNIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7SG1 Bol11a Ave.
Westminster 193-35!5 • SMITH'S MORTUARY
117 Main St.
Bantfnl!ttla Beach -PUBLIC NOTICE
Death Notice•
Donors
Sought
SANTA ANA -The Red
Croes Blood Center at 001
N. Golden Circle Drive
here ls seeking blood
donors.
Donors must first make
appointments by caJling
83f>.5.'181 or 871-3934. The
center Is open M<lnday
through Friday from 8:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Tom Harmon
To Promote
_Easter _Seals_
ORANGE -Tom Harmon,
sports commentator a n d
former football star, will serve
as chainnan of the 1972-73
Orange O>unty Ea:sier Seal
Society membership drive for
the foorth consecutive year.
S e v e n -y ear-old Joseph
Greico or Anaheim, a patient
at the Society's Rehabilitation
Center in Orange, will act as
cochainnan.
OHTent active membership
is 6,600 and this year's goal is
to achieve a mentiership of
8,000. The cost is $3 for a sup-
porting membet-and $100 for a
patron.
For more tnronnation, call
&33-7400.
Girls : Suing
Motorist
SANTA ANA -Two Irvine
girls who claim they were
seriously injured in a collision
at Campus Drive a n d
California Avenue bave•sued a
man identified as the other
motorist for $300,000.
Donna Lee Hall, 16, ol !Troll
Pillmento and Joan Marie
PICTmou• •VSIN••• Mitchell, 16, of 17662 Queen's
NAM• •TAT•M•NT Way, name William Bren,t
The tonowh111 person• •r• doing Anderson as defendant 1D their buslnftl 11:
DAVIS MOISILEHOME SA.LES IN· Orange COUnty Superior Court
VESTOAS. 111)5 Jt rntlt• Road, Col•• action. M.U, C..llt, 9'2:62'
1..1-..-w. Mkll•nd. ltoS J•malc;1 The lawsuit states that the
ROid, COJll ~. Cl . tKM. id t ed the UC DI•"' M. Mldl•nd, nos J•m•lc• ace en occurr near ~~·.!:S~.~t..'i:g ~::;uc, .. 11y , Irvine campus last April 7. It
Llmlttd P1rtnerJ111p. was filed by Richard Hall and
O!tnt M. Mldl1nd p Mitch ll ih I f TM• '''"'"""' n1e1t with 1111 county eter e , e paren s o
c11rk o1 Or•• county on A119. 31, 1tn . the two plaintiffs. ev 8 11ty J. ISl'flltn. Oepuly CounlYl-----'---------1
c1.,-1i:. PUBUC NOTICE , 1tt14
"1.rtil llhtd Dl"lf!Oe Coast Dally P1lo1,l------.--------I
s.crttmllef' 4, 11, 11, :u, 19n UIM-1'1 su•••IOA COURT OP TMI
PUBIJC NOTICE STAT• OP CA.LlllOttMIA FOR THa COUNTY Of' OllA.NOE ..... ,,...
NOTICI TO DICU.ll CANDIDACY MOTICI o• HEARING o• AMl!MDl!D
l'OR SCHOOL DISTRICT GOVIRNINO l"l!TITION l'OR: l"R~ATI 01" WILL
IDARO MllMllR llLllCTION TO tE AND CODICIL ANO l"Olt LITTERS
NIELD IN THI l'OUHTAIM YALLliT TISTAMllfTARY SCttOOL DISTltlCT E1t1tt ol WALLACE JENNINGS
NOTICE IS Hl!REISY GIVEN TO ALL H~1~~i~~NH~GIVEN tllel ANH
QUALlf'IEO PERSOHS 11111 aft eltcllon H HUTCHINSON 1181 flled Mrtln .,. wlt1 bl lltld In llw F-t•ln V•lll'I' Sdw:lol ~ petition lot Proo.rt of Wiii and Dl1trkT. Coul'ltY of Dl"enoe. St111 of Codkll ~ hll' lll\\llQ of lltt•r•
C1tttomlll, on !Ill Sfh day of Dlclmblr, Tntl!'Mfllll'Y to fl'll pell11onlf, rderlt!ICI
1972.. tor 1111 pvrpOM of 1lec:tlno -to W'llkh 11 ""°' tor "'"""' pmrtlcultn. mlft'lblr to flll ti-.. v.uncy on 11'11 lftd 11111 fl'll time ind plKI of hHrlng the
90Yfflllnv board of wkl ldlool dlltrlct, "'"' "" "'" .,, tor Ottoblr 10. 1•7t. 11 H id .....,,.,.,. to -dUtlnQ ltll r1-t :OO 1.m., In tlM oilrtr~ of Otplrl·
malnOlr of !I'll term In wttlcl\ IM YICtntT !Mlil Nil. J of H id court. •I 700 Civic
M1 occwr.ct. cent.,-Or1w Wnl, In !I'll City of S•nl1 Form• tor dllearlnt tl'ndk!Ky Incl fot ,..na, C1lllotnl1. tn. l'ICWl'lln111on of c•ndlc:Satn tor tt-.. eltc· ' 0.1911 s.tpttmbtt 21, ltn
net! tr• 1v1t1•tN fTom IM ottlc1 of tlM WIUIAM E. SI. JOHN,
R90IJ1r1r ol Votw1 11 1119 1!111 CM1llllll, County Clerk
Sant• Ana, Callloml1. l'ITI• ,, LINDIN
Otcl1r1t1on1 ol undldKy 1nd nom1n1· Wll RI T-ltd .• $11111 2t2
tion. It'!' ..,on11or1 m111t bl fllld with 1111 111 '"°" C.H.,...
A:eQl1tr1r of VOllfl 11 !I'll tOOW lddr111 Tlh C114) llW1J1 r;;;, 111..-ttlln S:OO P.M. on Ottoblf '· "=:-1;~°''' DtUY •not,
oitW ""' 1th .,.,. of ~.,.,.. 1tn. Slptemlllf' 23. » ind Octollltf° 1• ~n R. 0. HILi.MAN, _.,
Ortntt COi.Mi'!'
SUPlflnttncMnl of kf\CICll1
l"utllltNd 0!"1noe Coe1t Dally Piiot,
Slfl)lotMIMr to. 2S. Ind Otloblt" f, 11n u1>-n
PUBLIC .NOTICE
• I
Allen Ashworth
.,... -"f'bl ... ,..,..,..,_ f!10411t ...... ..,_._ ·-----·-c.. Asllw•111 Optical ---·---., a ,,.. ..,, . , .-.11tt
prow, Grow .•••
How dou your prden
gr<>w? You can get hlnll on
how to make It gmr ...,
bettu by reading the Homo
and Gorden Page every
S.turdly ID Ibo DAILY
PILOI' •
Mooday, ~pttmbtr 2~. 1972 DA.IL V PILOT f
Politieal Notes
Demos, GOP Plan Fund Raisers
ORANGE COllOY
Burn Cent.er
Gets $1,500
SANTA ANA -The Burn
Center, a special section for
treating burned patients at the
Orange County M e d i c a I
Center, has received $1,500
from the Ora~e Olapter of
the California Division of
Forestry Employes AsSocia-
tion. 1
The brush and structure
fire-fi«bt<!rs raised Ille funds
by sponsoring a rodeo to !"0-
vide the center with new
equipment.
By O. C. llUSTINGS
Of 1flt CNIUJ f'lt9t Stitt
Orange County Democrats
are planning an old-fashJoned
political picnic Oct. 8 at the
Mission Viejo Ranch, which ls
owned by Democratic Party
chieftain Richard O'Neill.
Traditional picnic foods will
be available at booths manned
by Orange COunty Democratic
candidates and their sup-
porters. Proceeds from the
sale ol everything !nJrn hot
dogs to watermelon will go
toward the campaign funds of
the individual candidates.
Families are invited. The
picnic grolDld.s open at noon .
There Is a $1 charge to get on
ihe grounds.
The Mission Viejo Ranch
can be reached by taking the
Sa n Diego Freeway to tho
Ortega Highway in San Juan
Capistrano and f o 11 o w i n g
Ortega Highway east. There
will be signs indicating the
location of. the picnic grounds,
according to organizers of the
event.
MEANWHni, 0 r a n g e
County Republicans are plan-
ning a rally Oct. 9 in Anaheim
in honor or President Nixon .
Program Chairman Alex
Robertson Jr. says there will
be a $11»-a-plate dinner for an
estimated 2,000 of the party
faithful starting at 6 p.m. at
the Anaheim Con ve n 11 on
Center. Luminaries such as
Arizona Senator B a r r y
Goldwater a n d California
Governor Ronald Reagan are
expected ror the "strictly
social" dinner, Robertson said.
Di.Mer guests later will
move to the convention center
auditorium , joining an an-
ticipated 7,000 other GOP
backers who will pay up to 13
per seat ror a celebrity-stud-
ded stage sa lute to the
President. 'I1ie show starts at 8
p.m.
* PACIFIC Telephone is ap-
pealing to candidates of all
parties to restrain t h e i r
"'ork ers rrom hanging ca m--Tom Rehmann and Cathy lt. Miranda has been ap-
paign posters on telephone Sullivan (v ice chairmen), pointed Orange County dlrec-
poles. 70th Assembly District. tor of the National tilspanlc
"For one thing, it 's a mJsde-Pat Scalera, 7 I s t Finan1.-e Committee to Re--
meanor," says P a c i r i c Assembly District. elect the President. Miranda
Telephone executive Standlee * will be responsible for all Ni.1:-
l{. Krau tz. "It's also a con-JOHN BLACK, Democratic on campaign fund raising in
tribution to visual pollution rontcnder for th e 3 9th Orange County among Spanish
and definitely a s a re t y Congressional District seat, speaking resi.denls.
hazard.'' says he has been endorsed by ~=========::::;
Krautz points out th a t the Committee on Political
telephone linemen (some are EduC'<i!ion or t he AFl.tCIO
women) climb poles dailv rind by the Southern Califo rnia
throughout the county and a Commwuty Action Program.
\\'orker's climbing s pi kc s political ann of the United
"cou ld come in contac t with a Auto Workers.
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDAYS IN
THE DAILY PILOT
poster nail or staple. possibly *
resulting in a slip or fa ll \\'ilh -~·S~-~-l~'T:':'.'A~A~N~'A~r~e'.'al~lo~r'...:'J~a~m~e~s~-===========~
serious injury."
* DISTRICT campaign
leaders have ~n appointed
by the Ameri can lndependen1
Party in Orange County. They
include :
Al Solomon, 3 5 l h
Assembly District.
-Jim Manis and Donald
Swenson (Co--chairmen), 69th
Assembly District.
Ed Sheehan, 7 0th
Assembl y District.
Denture Invention~
For People with
'4Uppers'' and ••Lowers''
1'hc n.,arest thin~ to having yr)Ut
owo 1l't'th '~ 1><•0~1bll'. now l'l"1th a
111.~~tu· rr1·nn1 111.,.;0l'~ry Iha! :ictu·
Dlly holds bo1h ··uppers'' nnd
"li•wen;"' a~ fll'\'<'f t>clurc poR11hle.
I t'sa discovery (ailed F1xocw.Nr•
fnr daily hOml! use (U .S. P al.
JJ.003.988) and it h:is revnlU·
l 1()111ied denture wearing. F 1xouEr.'T
forms an elastic mrmhrane th<1t
h.:!ps absorb 1hc ~h(ll. ~~ of b1tinc
aud chewing.
With F1XOOl-'~T miny dcnlure
wearen; mny cal. Sflt!i1k, lauRh. wittl
little worry ul denturt'!coming IOOiSC.
One appl1cat1o n m:iy l ast for
houra. DcDturcs that fit are es,.'1('11-·
tial to health. See your Jcnt1 ~t.
regularly. Get eo.iy ·IO· U9e .. ~lJtOOt:NT
Denture Adhesi,·c Cream. j
.Mercedes-Benz
sliatters the stereotype of tlie 1
$10,000 ''luxury'' car.
"Cars-Or lhe-$10,000c iass -arouse1 accordingiy:It is uncannily efficient.
bearing -manner. Luxury has_ come to( 'tremely.accurate.Thecarglidesnimbly ~
r
image1 of bulk, brocade and an over; Steering is power assisted and ex ..
nican pomp. . , , through traffic. Manual effort is wonder-
The new Mercedes-' ,,.-----,..---, fully light. (Tell you r
f
Benz 280SE 4.S Sedan wife.)
rejects this hollow Intelligent detail: a ·
approach. It is an invest-stalk on the steering col-
l ment in fine machinery. umn . lets you fli ck on
This mechanical excel-thewipersanddimhead-
lence not only elevates lights without removing
your standard of living; yo ur hands from the
ic raises your standard whee l.
of driving.Canyouthink
of a more wonhwhile Tired of fatigue?
'luxury than that?
Nochaalfeurneeded N-mSE4.fV.1tr ... w.,...._.. ruc.r-UM • ......_.~ f1MI Uo~ u•
rnoniol8f"i1N i1•in.. •Jotca. Co&Mttl"I
The engineers even
took a different ap-
proach to the seats in the
4.5 Sedan. Rather than drows-
1 ing in the rear seat while
\ somconcelsedrives,you
,...,, ... ~ •• ,;.. ,.. .... ,. -0c ...
... .,,. -""la•• .... bf. ..... ·•--blr. "The uninitiated arc,
at first any,1:ay, put off
W t -~11,•ao:k •11.i-pU• l.ll-•1k ._._
, willactUallylookfonvard l to taking the wheel of this car.
Credit the Mercedes-Benz engineers.
[They pulled out all the stops:
• Power flows from the same large
V-8 used in the new 450SL sports car.
Don't worry; this engine is tamed to a.
purr.
· •You ride on one of the most
r elaborately engineered suspcQ..
.sions on any passenger car, siJni ..
1lar in principle to the ~inde
pendent systems used on200..mph
1 racing machines. .
•Racing machines employ
4-wheel disc brakes; so does your
4.S Seda n. Even the costliest d°'"
mcstic luxu ry sedan, on the other
hand, uses disc brakes only on the
front wheels.
' • Functional design keeps the
'4.S abnost 3 feet shoncr and half
a ton lighter than America's best·
selling luxury sedan. An agile car.
The photo at right dramatizes
all these pluses. You see a 4.5 rip-
ping at speed around Germany's
NUrburgring nee circuit as if it
were a sports car, not a $10,378
'aedao4Areassuringdemoosuation.
Mouth-watering details
Th"c enginecn fitted that V-8
rwiih a computer to check speed,
load, tcmpcra1ure-cven altitude
1-and meter fud 10 lhc cylinders
by the firm Mercedes
seats,'' observes R oad& Track magazi ne,
•'but after several hours of traveling
these same people arc still comfortable
-they're beginning to know what
Mercedes cars are all about.,.
Your 4.5 comes wi th air condition·
ing alread y built in. That power
rs teering and automatic Shift, tilus
power brakes, electric windows, tinted
glass, AM-FM receiver, heated rear.
~Window-all standard fittings.
Standard too is a bit of technical
·\vizardry called a central locking sysfen1.
Touch a button and all 4 doors, 1he
trunk lid and the gas port silently lock .
by vacuum po\vcr. Ins tant sec urity.
· You can order some options. They
include Jea1her upholstery and a sliding
.steel sunroof.
Additionally, two elongated versions
of the 4.5 Seda n are available : the
280SEL 4.5 at $10,969,and thc300SEL
4.5 at $14,227. Both afford 4 more
inches of rear-seat legroom. The
300SE L 4.5 uses an air-suspension system.
The car is put together with care
and patience. It is more than ~·fioe \vork·.
, manship." It is a zeal for perfection.
1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, etc.
A $10,000 car is clearly no short-
tenn investment. Your 4.5 was put to-
gether to slay together-an old Merccdcs-
Bcnz tradition that reflects an old Eu ro-
pean tradition. Unafflicted by new-car
mania, Europeans tend to hang on to
'their cars a good long time.
The long life expectancy-OF'"a!
Mercedes-Ben z is aided by its welded~
"'unit" body; far fewer nuts and bolts to
possibly work 'Joose, squeak and rant
''our 4.5 carries 44 lbs of anti<orrosion
defe nse in its primer and paint coats 1
alone. More than 20 lbs of plasticized un•
dcrco:ning arc bonded to the undersi~'
Mcr(cdc.;-Benz mol or 1.:ars:
f:on1 SlS,lSl• to $6,439f
/l·lerccdc~·Bcnt offers a va~1 •ange of
moJcl•. Here .uc 5ug1es1el! re1;il price~
for 7 of the mo~1 popular lype':
450SL C:oup<"
4 50SL C..oul"'IR01dnct
2HOSE 4.~ ~cJdn
!50Coure
250 Scd3n
220~cdan
l20 D•c>cl ~cJ~n
SIJ,18Z
SI l .7'1 1
) 10,1711
S R,l,,9
S 7,JIS
$ 6.M1 s f'l,4J\I
• ... , °'"' ,.., ' •J <not•, .-.C!Utl ... "'""'~ti!""'• N"'I
"l'>lan•. '""' •~~ '"''' 1.-.. ;f •nl' t..of>!tolhl l•TJ,
M<"•"'•·B<"' '" SuubA,..._ I""-
"The best available today,.
Mercedes-Benz engineers poured
the cream of their expertise into the
280SE 4.5 Sedan. They believe it is
worth every penny of th at $101378 price.)
Other experts concu r:
"One has to pay through the'
nose for the best, hut for those
who can afford it and demand rea l
roadability \Vith their luxury, co~
fort and prestige, the 280SE with I
the V~8, in either rcguk1r or L ''l'r·
sioa, is the bes t available today."
....!Ro.,J & Tni.i:k 1n:ig .. line
No\v sec if you concur. Send
the cou pon belO\V for a free color
brochure with full detai ls on :ill
Mercedes-Benz models; or pick
up your brochure wh en you visi t
your authorized Mercedes-Benz
dea ler for a test drive. 1
f (6)-:~==~:=11; I lH w. W•ntW Aw'"" I 11n11 .Ana. Cllll, '21'1
I l'lt~•t 1tnd mt yl'ur full-culorbroch111e I I o( 1hc ,\\crccde~·B~n1motOf10au. I
I I I N•me I
I Ad.irtt• I
I ~::. ~· I T.1.,. ......... ___ _
L--.----
Jim Siemens Imports, Inc. 120 W. Warner Avenue, Santa Ana, California 92707 Phone : 714-546-4114
• I
Mondq, Stptmb« 25, 1912
TONIGHT'S Show Centers_ on sa .. dy
TV IDGID.IGHTS
KHJ ID 7:30 -"What's So Bad About Feeling
Good? George Peppard an d Mary Tyle r Moore look
for the answer to this rhetorical question in this
1968 comedy.
' "
'
r•. CBS D 8:00 -"Gunsmoke." Richard Kiley plays \
a traveling faith healer who is exposed by Doc
Adams {llfilburn Stone). " ' NBC 0 9:00 -"See No Evil." Mia Farrow stars • ~
' ~ 35 a blind girl who holds the clues to the murders
of her relatives in this 1971 suspense movie.
I l' t, ABC 0 9,00 -"The Rookies." A high-speed
~· .auto chase and crash leads to the uncovering of a
fur smuggling r ing.
.. . ..,.... .
TV , DAILY LOG
BJ TOM PAIMER
Of ""' ~"' 1'11111 .,~
Was Sandy Duncan
recuperating from her eye
operation last year in !he
beach residence of Ryan
O'Neal?
Was she honeymooning In
Europe last spring'?
W8$ that she sitting on the
steps of the Braille Institute
rrying?
All of those stories were in
the imaginations CJf movie
magazine e d i t o r s, said
MW Duncan on a visit lo her
apartment at Parle Newport in
Newport Beach.
She had never met Ryan
O'Neal. wasn't divorced be-
fore last summer (so how
('OU!d she be on a European
honeymoon?) and the other
alleged episode in t be
television actress' life was too
far-fetched even to comment
on .
''f DON 'T object to
newspaper columns, where
there is some basis of tru th to
what's printed," she said,
"but you can't even sue tfle
magazines -they always
have a. ghost corporation or go
bankrupt, so It's no use." DAILY PILOT Stiff l"IWte
decline." """ two mm1, "The
star-Spangled Girl " and Walt
l>lsney's "Million Do 11 a r
Duct,'' did not please her
overly.
"l'M LOOKING carefully
for a role that's right," she
said. But si nce July she has
been taping one television
show a week, and until the
season ls completed she "·iU
have little time for anything
but that.
Heroes? Miss Duncan says
she's not "a fan," really, but
does admire the work of Gwen
Verdon, the Broadway actress
wbo starred in ' ' Dam n
Yankees" and "Sweet Chari·
ty," and Woody Allen, star of
most of his own films, ''Play
diffcient than she appears to
her television public. But she
doesn't think there 's any con-
flict. . "I don't think l'm lying to
anybody. That's ~rt of me.:·
Born in Overton, Tex., Miss
Duncan moved to Tyler, Tex .,
at 10 and went to New York at
18. She started dancing at age
••
SHE COULD not explain
why a Texas or Southern
drawl has not stayed with her,
but suggested il might have
been the ei<posure to English G"t;"GE C. SCOTT theater presentation.s a n d ~
swnmer theater in Dallas and STACY KEACH
New York. •TB£ lfEW '"The only thing I really CENTURIONS'
studied was learning to use a .. __ ..,.,,,i:io;~~;,·~-~-~c~,--i
•----~-.... -~---·-~---..----~----~-""'--..---·-~----------••-·--•-••-·-~--·-~•1 IN THEATRE II-2 I •:1 M•"""ifi Mfi1;ll'I '/(•~ "I med to get ealls from tll!I 11101/1er:
'Sandra! H'"" could you?' But 11om s/1e
just clips out the piet11res.''
It Again, Sam," "Take the
Money and Run," the recent
"Everything Yoo A I way s
Wanted to Know About Sex,"
Md others.
lower voice,"' she said grin·
1\ing, ''but it didn't work.··
"Other than work , I really
lead a fairly dull life,·• she
says. And as if to prove it, she
11..im1' r.:..n1 J~ r...,,.,.
So last year's "Funny Face"
is resigned to the tales that
come with the kind or stardom
she · has achieved. as she
begins her second regular
television seri es on CBS airing
each Sunday at 8:30 p.m.
SANDY DUNCAN RELAXES AT NEWPORT HOME
Resuming Her TV Career With New Show Format
She is not a jolner, says
Miss Duncan, and though she
considers herself a Unitarian,
"is not big on organizations.
"People banning together for
any purpose sort of scares
said that during the summer ._--~==...-:--!
she took a plant class. IN THEATRE 114
When asked about marriage, CADE MY AWARD
Monday
Evening
SEPTIMBER 25
''°' lfJ O [I! ID !IJ Ill""' 0 l'ondtrt1o1 "The Fe1r Mtrdi•nls"
0 CIJ 00 Iii) NFC ·-NIPI fNUMll Klnus City 1t Ntw Or1t1M
Q Wiid Wild '#tit m Tiit Flintrlltnt1 ID CofMr ,.,.. USMC OJI 117 lrldlHNJ II ,..., ...
'"'"' EE Rou1 ,.,, Ynnla
ED HodCtPtd1• Lodp ~ Movlt: (C) "lMt Mt Ttndtt"' CJ;)""""" ...... ll) T1lnt Stoop1
1:30 (I) CIS Nfwl
Alison, tH.ne Grayson, Honn1n Llh·
ley, S111h (Miu F1rrow), perm1-
neMly blinded b1 1 tall hom her
horst, roes to liv1 with htr 1unt
and uncle 1114 !Mir d1u1t111r, Ont
day 1!1er 1oin1 hotMb1ck ridinr.
51111! returns home to find tn1
boditt o( her rel1tiv•s. SPHI !Irids
1n 1d1ntllicltlon brtctltt tllt killtr
dt09Ptd and still h11 It In htr
~~ wtitn h• 11!11ml.
U .flfnl 1NJ111 Sc!i!dul•d Is • 10
round fulhlrwtlaht bout Mtwttt
RoOollo Lobato Ind Hup llr11z1.
f11tht"iltflht Cfl1mplori of Colom·
bi1.
Ci) n. Mwwr"1'•
0 BEST SETI
*SEASON'S
SMASH NEW ACTION
HIT! "THE ROOKIES"
o rn m "" '""" "Th• lnform1nt'" A youth m1ll1s 1 hi1h
"I used to get calls from my
mother: "Sandra! How could
you?' But now she just clips
out the pictures."
The name of her series this
year, "11le Sandy Duncan
Show," is indicative of the
change "Funny Face" un-
derwent to become the 1972
version. · ·•
•'IT'S AN edult comedy
well, as adult as television
ever gets," Miss Duncan said.
According to the star of the
show, the writing, subjects
and situations are m o r e
•sophisticated in 1972. But most
significantly, Sandy Duncan is
the center of the show.
Though this season's pro-
gram gives her six supporting
characters, none d e t r a c I s
from the smiles and talent oC
the star. The show is Ull-
doubtedly written to show off
an already popular personal·
ity.
Miss Duncan ls performing
this-year beTore-a li ve au-
dience, and the show is spon~
taneous, not taped, shot in
small segments and spliced
together -a method which
last year detracted from Its
·liveliness and appeal.
"\VE WON'T BE saying the
lines 20 limes -onJy once,"
she observes, speculating the
show "may im prove so much
it will go off the air. h-1ediocri-
ty unfortunately has come to
be appreciated."
But she approves of the
rating system. "People should
have what they want."
M a film and stage actress
also, ~iss Qy.ncal} appreciates
the advantages of e a c h
medium. She started in
theater and considers it the
most gratifying, th o u gh
television is much more
lucrative.
"Film is more specialized
and aimed at a minority," she
added. "That's why it"s in a
me." 1
Political issues? She su p-
ports Sen. George S.
McGovern for president, but
said she was unsure whether
she would be doing any stum·
ping for him.
MARIJUANA? "f lb..ink it
should be legalized. The...J' kn ow
foi fa&lha:fCfgaretfes and Ji.
quor aro harmful. But they
punish people for smokJng
something they're not sure
about, and that doesn't ring
true."
Miss Duncan, for he r
relatively liberal person a I
views, might seem to be much
she says candidly that she just INN ER
got out of one mistake. and
doesn 't want to make another. l:inema 5 presents
She docs see a UCL1\ pro-
fessor regularly. and has he Garden nothing a g a i n s 1 marriage,
"just against rushing into It.·· f f he
Mis.s Duncan likes popular
music in moderation, and • • c t" •
among her ravoritc artists "" 1nz1· on IRI Neil Diamond. Crosbv, Stills,
Nash and Young (or" various o~N8rl=::.'.. ~
combinations of members· of "SUCH GO-ODtRIENti"S"
that defunct groupl and "old. "----------'
fast jazz" like that of Lam·
bert, Hendricks and Ross.
SHE HAD patronized an
Orange Coast dancing
establishment during 1-M!r visit .
and called a local band shc"d
heard, Purple Creek. ·'much
better than average ... (fij) M•rv lirfffi~ Show m Andy Griffitll m R1dn1 S...pibku
(j); Xrislln1m~rti 111 Doobb Ind
C.rt1intie1
speed aet1way 1ttempt with 1ookits
Terry Webster i nd Wllll1 Gilli• in
purwil. Tht dl1u ends In 1
Ctlth i nd I l11d to • fu1 llllUI ·
fltnc Tine.-
Miss Duncan acquired her
Ne"•port apartment I a s 1 Nielsen Rater for a Week
fD M1kin1 Thlnp Crew m JMnnt C.flOll
Ql) ,,.,.... hlkill m c.llldiM Fett.Nn
fl) U1 Vlflllll I'm hc:tnl1t
mu~.,.,. He's Got a Voice in Televi,sion's Fate
January. but planned to use it
most during the season, •·after
long weeks of taping."'
She is optimistic about the
reception of hef new show
with its altered fonnat. ''°' lfJ II IL'l -0 llWr. (lttr) .,,_ Mat1ftf' (dra)
'65-lttt• om, W•ndJ Cttla. CIJ --OWMt'1 Mr U..1 m,...,""'
I!) I DrtM 11 Jln1tlt m ,,., D1N111r.
llll -... -Corl ... ...
ED Of Word• ind DMds
(D D Amor Titnt C.111 • Mujtr
C!E ltv. by ~"'
l!lO IJ (I) '*" Der ... Ptttf ltw·
ford, 11119.J Ill his ncurrin1 rolt of
Dt. Ptttr Lnmtct, Dorb M1rtl 11'1
sw1i11, In ord• lo solvl • preuln1
economic ptObltm Oorit pb I job
11s 1n 111.niitit t1dlo 11ttJ0111llty,
1nina: 1 nom·de·plume. As 1 r11ult
ilM repe1ttd1t dte9S ott to slHp.
Thl1 uneapl1lntd btlllvlor ,ltop1rd·
izes her hold on the doctor 11'1d
htr daytlmt job 11 Todq's World.
(IJ >o1111 WIJIM Thulrt om-
1:45fJlSll C..1dl1 Fnerita
7:.JO 6 Jtllnny Mln~'I Sbllli "' Ind IO;OO 8 (I) T1ll .... 1111 c.lip .. Cllttr Vincent J>rict 1utm. 0 The N1W P'rke Is ltlilrt ktor-sln11r-compoMr AntllOny Ntw·
\Ill thi rtrtrrt Ci111t ~ tnd comedllfl Tltll Col!wlJ lrt
0 ''What 's So Bad About 8111 Cosby's lutltl. * Feeling Good ?" ~=
FINO OUT TONIGHT! 0-t I "SO ..,. ......
(J Millien $ Movie: (C) (fir) ln1 lot sit d1ys, 111 1it1i11tr l11Mh.,
"Whlt'1 St 114 ~ F•Vltf kt erttr 1nd p1istn1111 1likt '"'r
'llH1"' (tom) '68--GIOrfl Ptpp1rf, lll•t ttit, ~IYI notie•d IWlthlrt1
Mary lyl11 Moore. amiss.
®J Wiid ~ntfNI 0 Cri91 npten .lf11111 SllWlrt m l+t11•n'1 Ktroa m Ill c.., SJtn
QJ Drq:llri llll Mutwpitc1 Th11trt
(tj) Jmll l,...Rl: %OUI CfttirlJ fD Dattllftt l l "The Rtl•J''
M111 IR) al lldl S.•r1
EE-CB••-• m Tiie Adw!lfmf m ""'"°UM 42 ai:l Mf11111tto Ylldtz Show m lllnldo• tf tlle S.1 m Ac1d11111 r1111i1J IO:JO (1) Ast tht Chine.It or
1:000[() 'u1111111k1 "Boh1nn1n" O Tifk lid:
R1cha1d Kiley I Ullll II I lallh m Trut Advtfrtl"
he1ler who tr1vtls !ht West min. fI1 LI Sltl11kl
ltl.trin1 lo I slrt•m ol auppll· a lllwlt: "hlltr111"
c1nl1 Ind non·btlim rl t hkt . Doc ff) 9;j k91M
Ad1ms. skeptlul ol Boh1nn1n'1 l!) D""'-s,.ta.111
()(111)') r1pu11d turts, brlnp som1
ol 1h1 PtOP'• 1h1 m•n his 1r1,ttd 11:0011CJ 0 Ill m EB"""
IO l'.lodll in In tffOrt IO l ljlOM CJ) (j) @l lhwt
Boh111n1n 11 1 Ch1rl1t1n. OOH stlJ ..,._.
0 OJ Ci) lt•P·I• PortlJ William (j) M1rsll1I DJllt1
Conr1d, TYs pti¥11t tyt "Cannon," 0 Mlooril: .. ,..,..., C.C.lle"
IUllll IS Ille lormer d1ntin1 ltn· m Trotll tr t.ft~ .. MU
~hon or fl'IOYlt musiuls tnd 1s 6) HIP Qeplml
tht tlpe·elad superman, C.pl1i11 @ Hltbytp
Am1rin1. C•m•o 1uesls 1rt BMI fl) C1r111r T .. Arlldrtnt
Cra1111, N11111t1e f1br1y Henry Min· t•~1. ind A!1dt Smo!h.' 11:15 Ill lontr C1111e1 m Tll1t 'irl 11;)01J CJ) CIS lt'9 Mew11: "Mall Or·
6) Tel1lun/ltfllJ' M.non 111r lriOt" (c.om) ·~uddy Ell·
fE HIOIMIMI Cofllft sen )(1ir Oul11 Lois N1ttltton. rn (]j) TIM Mllll .. Miii rn' MOYit: "WIM: ....... ,,.
€E flhcht II• 11111 Q i1Q) m Joll11ftf CmM >oty
Of; l1Mbtll P1drt1 ~s. Oodieri Bisllop Is wbslllut• host
CID &tldoo c.ntJ1I O lobfrt X. DtnMI SMw
(D Movlt; (2'1r) "WOllClfttf' (j) Mowfe: "'Mtllr di Mt"
l:lO m Mtrt Crittin Show 0 MIM: (C) '1tw YHtPll'll" m Tt Till Utt Trttll
t:OO 1J (I) Htft'• Luer ltdrlddtn (f) MtN
frlCIUrt victim l~c, 1rilw1 homt
from !lie hoil)l!ll 11 list Ta tlim· 12:00 m Mot.II: "Up in M1btl'1 btlll,.
By VALLIANT G. CORLEY
DES MOINES, Iowa <APl -
If Dinah Shore·s morning
television program had a jum p
in its Nielsen rating a few
weeks ago, she may ha ve my
5-ycar-old daughter to thank.
For one week -Thursday
through Wednesday -we
were one of the 1,200 families
coast-to-coast keeping track of
the television programs we
were watching so the Nielsen
people could tell television ex-
ecutives how many million
people were watching their
shows.
It all started with a
telephone call a week or two
before our important week.
"Is this the Vee Corley
residence?" a man·s voice
asked.
"This is long distance from
Peoria," the voice said. He
identified himself as a Nielsen
representative and then asked
if J owned a television set.
I LOOKED up at the 12·inch
portable my wife and I had
splurged $100 on shortly after
we were married eight years
.ago and said "Certainly."
TEOHOOt.at•· f!O"W-h.
AW.-~~D-
ALSO IGPJ
JACk LIMMON
"WAR BETWEEN
MEN AND WOMEN"
"Do you ha ve more than one
set?" he asked.
"No." l replied. beginning
to feel a little embarrassed
about being a one-set family.
He asked i{ we were willing
to be a Nielsen family for a
week and faithfully keep track"
of all television programs
anyone in the fa mily watched
and report them without fail.
. J vowed we would, on our
sacred hooor.
Our Nielsen diary came in
the mail a week later. The
family gathered around as I
opened it and discovered two
quarters attached to a card
with a note this was a ''token"
payment ror our work.
WITH THE diary were in-
structions saying. "your diary
is important.'' Another section
that t o I d how we were
"computer-selected from a !isl.
of households" in ou r com-
munity made us feel only a lit-
tle less important.
The Nielsen people wanted a
written record of television
viewing in our home by all
members of the family.
For most families, that
might not be a problem . But
many of us Associated Press
newsmen do no t work the
mqst regular hours. And most
WOODY AUIN
IS HILAllOUS IN
"PlA Y IT AGAIN,
SAM" ---IUTH GORDON
"HAROLD AND
MAUDE"
in1t1 lh• cost or 1 nu1se Hiliy (com) U-Olnnla O'K .. fe, Mir·
1r11n11s for h•mstlf 1nd ~1111 ol Jo1l1 Reynolcb. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~
tlley'1 frltndt lo 11t1 IUIM al lhtl m W•dtrint I =====
job 1tcorclm2 1o • scll1dul1 al 11:30 O H11~.., P1trt1
work $hit\;$. 1 GJ C.U•try .... Tl11t 0 [j m NIC M111d1r Mwit: (C)
(llr) "'Sit ... l•ll" (tut) '11-l:OO CIJ Q (l)fttwt
Mlt F1rrow, Robin BtlltJ, Oofoltlf l:lOIJ MO'l'lt: (C) "O h it" (wtl) '4f
Tuesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
1o00 m <ci ~ ... ---XIII" (rn)'I) '65--Chriltl)Jllllr Lofal\
l11ct1ti1 l.M.
l :lO 0 '1.Ull Slit,... (df1) 'Sl~IOfl•
Rift Dorothy Hirt.
1:00 m "Iron Cllltllt" (dfl) ''&-0 (C) °'LMt11'11' for Llwt" (roin)
D1n1 Andrews, GtM T11mrp. '5'-;Connl1 rf1ncls, Sut1n OUvtr.
t ;JO 0 "Dwnklltl" (dtt) ·~ -~hft J;OO CJ) "fill ts tM HtM!t4r' Ptrt I
Mlllt, IUChtld At1tflllotou1l. • (dfl) '64-Gltftn font. Nancy K••n.
10:00 (}) "ft11Kk.. (com) ·50-0or111d d§l "Thut Wllftr Tt1t1" (dl'I) '5&
O'Conl'IOf, Pair~ ~•dint. -.H11111 Ctlf!IY. 8'1bt11 Slln·
D "Hiit ""''" <•> '54-Aln .,ct. ~. fHll11y B"'*-4:00 IJ ......... fw Ml" (dfl) 'S9-uaa,_ ... -Lio' ("") c~ ...... Ci<1ol ..... "~ '""" ,.... !JM. 4'.111 (J) S-• '"" -
I I
---CINFDDMF ?D .
" .~.....:.. 1 • 1'" 1L> --CINFODMF l l
•• -_·7 , •. l ".1..
JMBiUM-:'z ··•.\•.
"~-·-~
---t St/10/Ultf !
" -,••1.. --
'"IUTTa lll:,.Llll U t 1'11:•1"' 11"11
otlflt ..... & Hwaf'f "...,,
11M "1'HI OIUDUAn•
... °""" 1111111 ....... " ...... ..,.,.... ..... Wllwlto-fl J ~ A .. Nlil
"PIODLlll: OH THI 11:001'"'
Ill
.. CHAll:Y 01" A MAD HOUSBWll'•"
"HOT ,SUMMllll: WllK" (POI • .. THI LONllll:S" (fil l
"IU.lolMllt 0" '41" (It! • "KLUTI" llll:)
'"'THI flllW CINTUllOHS00 tll:J ... -:=. c. kMt
.... U.Y MtlTY ..-oll Ml'" CI J
or that week I was assigned on
an evening shift. not arriving
home until shortly after 10:30
p.m.
When I work late. my wife,
Ca rol usually adjusts her
schedule to mine -going to
bed late and sleeping late in
the morning.
However, Suzanne, our 5-
year-old, stays on a regular
day schedule. She gets up,
wakes someone up to fix her
breakfast, and once breakfast
is done and the parents are
back in bed. she either takes
out a toy and plays or watches
television. -·
(i'{\:l•"w"'f ~-'·~!;-~(-.\M<.MAI"
I ice Mess" 1
Aa.. Ar•l11
FllST SHOW-7:00
watching any television . But But she's realistic too. Last
year's show "'as well received usually sbe watched Family by the viewing audience if not
Affair, Bewitched, maybe a by the critics. This year she
game show and once or t\vice thinks it will be something she
a soap opera, and of course can be really proud of.
Dinah Shore. "Except for every fourth
\Veck "'hen we're on opposite During the week "'e were a Colombo -1'11 get killed in Nielsen family, I hurried home the ratings.'"
eaeh night in time to watchlfr~~~~~~~~~~I Dick Cavett. [I
I HAD HEARD of the appeal
by Jack Parr to let the
Nielsens know there was an
audience out there. And here I
RICH llnLl-Hlll VOL.I.ND
"ANOTHER
NICE MESS"
A Aw•rd Wl1•l19 Short
"PRELUDE"
GEORGE C.SCOTT
"THE HOSPITAr'
AUO PG
Pnt• SElltRS
"THE PARTY"
Wl<DAYS6·8 · l0
SAT.& SUt. 2 .... 6. a. 10
Woody Allen's
''Evel'}'.thing ~}')uatways wanted to
know about
* Plus SHORT SUBJECT
& IOAD RUNNER
CARTOON "' Comfortably Air Conditioned
.....
Hlkk9d!'1
"l'lll:ENtY• -•
Clillt .........
.,.LAY MISTY l'Olll: Ml"
I t"" In Ctlw
'"
S..• c_,., ..
J1mt1 ...
s ....... 1 ........ ,
"THI NOT •~:~~.
Ll\11 TWICI"
ltlli 111 C.IN"
IOlil" -,. ... -
"'lll:l\IATI DUTY fllUlll:Sal"
..... )ft CfJlr , .. ,
'"
S...11 C.-.rv
At JMMI .....
"'TMUNOllll:IALL~
Y'fW Ofltr Ltv. 1'Wkt'" .... ·-=..,, '"'
'BWEBEARD' it, He rid ~ witll •J ............ . -
ALFRED I ''-"" HITCHCOCK'S 1 ..
"FRENZY" ~
The(\. 1d1cr ., Oiana
:_ Muld1ur
'
f,\on!'lay Srpttmbtr 25, 1972 OAll V PILOT 8
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
TUESDAY &
WEDNESDAY
ONLY!
·' :~
•
........... _....
"Er .. :and tr you'd ever like lo be.slft·wrapped 1 bope you'll come to me." •
'4· M. Boyd'
Count Dracula
Had Bad Temper
Consider citizens who crave at least nine hours sleep a
night as opposed to thoee who get by niftily on only six.
Man for man, the nine-hour llOul. i.s far more apt to be
Mn!ltlve worrier. The six-boor dour is lncllned to be the
uaruffied aales personality. Or so sd!olarly invextlgatloo
indicates.
-ro·TRE profeaaional hOrologlst lately, I'm told~ 11•1 an
aceurate Umeplece if ft neither gains
nor loses any more than one second I every 6,000 years. Men, synchronize
your Mickey Mice. What's referred to .
here is the atomic cloc~. • ~ ~ A STUDENT or psychology in Cal· J
ifornia says he has taught bears how .,.
to play basketball. Certainly would 1>'
like to see them. Make great rebound.
MOVIE COLOR FILM lleg. 2.56· 2 0..,.
Movie cartridge of Super 1 '' 8 color movie film. Con
be used both indoors 'n
outdoors. 50 fl. Sova !
6''
Shock·res.i,tont, wot.,..
N'listont• onti-M09"'tic.
Shop earty for best choke I
~
I ' .
Ii . I
·'
"
-;;<-NIMA•n'
1
, ...... 1---
Jr-----,
CHARGE
R!
·.·~· •. -, . ----} ;_
' . ·.> • ~ .·• >.
era, imagine. But thil trainer's pas-
time is not so whlmaicaJ. Claims he •wi..i.c-.«O•o-..IU)"Mlr_...,... r. .. • .., intends to prQiram such beast3 eventually to handle stoop
labor. Pick cucumbe.FS, maybe, whatnot.
QUERIES -Q. "WAS there a real Count Dracula?"
A. So it's said. In the Middle Ages. Nothing extra·
ordinary about his canine teeth. History records he had a
nasty temper, however .
~='.'."" ,.
~~=
\
Q. "DO mama pljeons really give milt?"
A. Tiley do. And papa plgeonJ. too.
Q. "WHEN newlyweds leave the church, on which side
of the groom does the bride walk!"
A. She's supposed to cling to his left arm and leave
his right arm free to beat off the covetous savages. That's
lhe tradition .
LOVE AND WAR -Please nole this statement: "I
usually find what men talk about more interesting than
what women talk about." The foregoing was shown to 120,.
000 women who \Vere asked to comment. FUty percent
agreed. Forty perei!nl didn't. Clearly, a large majority o(
women prefer masculine over feminine companion.ship.
SCHOLARS with PhDa at Harvard don't use the tiUe
SCHOLARS with Pb.D.'s at Harvard don't use the btle
IN LONDON, a batch oC businessmen whose nantH are
colors -like Brown, Gray, Gre!n, White -organized a
luncheon group they call the "Rainbow Club.'" Do you
know any candldater for honorary memberahip? Not all
who try can join, must mention. They turned down an
eager applicant named Lemon, allbough a Rose was ac-
cepted.
DID I say that motorcycle daredevil Evel Knievel
won't fly In an airplane? Wrong! Numerous correspondents
report he's a dandy pilot.
Address moil to L. l'tf. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New-
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
Very Antsy
Professor Counts Them
• ' •
,,
• J~.
'
L,
• (
TUCSON. Ariz. (APl -
Floyd G. Werner spends his
da ys counting ants.
The professor or entomology
1t the University of Arizona
each day stakes out a square
yard or desert ground near
here and for six hours watches
as the anU march in a column
past him with their loads of
grass seed.
put his information into a ~
computer simulation in which
he can show bow various ,
weather conditions will affect •J
the anti and their relationship
with the surrounding f)elds.
'1WHAT WE'RE trying to do
is understand the lntera'ctlon
between plants and animals,"
Werner said. "By knowing the
number of ants in a field, \Yt
can detennine how miany
grass seeds they are taking
Crom that field for food . The
more seed they take, the le&.i
grass will grow."
Werner eventually hopes to
IN HIS WORK, Werner 11)'1
its not necessary to know
whether you've counted a
specific ant twice or not, you
just keep counting ants as
they come by and then at the
end or the day compare the
figure with what you totaled
the day before. . .
"Actually It's not as hard as ~
it souhds," Wttner said. "'!lit ~
ants are very oe(anlied and 'i
cooperate by moving in a col-~
umn. But as you can imagine, ~
aboul 1lx hours al a Ume Is all
you can take of this kind of
thing."
WhatDoMimYDoctOrs Use
When They Suffer Pain
OfHemorrlioidal Tisauea?
Excluoiwi Formula Ci.a Pc~ T<ll)pOralf lWief
In MOllY Ca.. froM Such Poln. Aloo Helpo Shrink
COZY DURAFLAMfLOG
Reg . 87•
2 Days
O~ log will mo k• a comp~!• evening's lire. It
light1 in1tontly. no kindling required. 8utnl
bri1kly 2 to 3 houri. Sa~ at K rna'rt.
-• ~·\Ii. : ••
ONE.COAT LA TEX
WALL PAINT
Reg.
2.88 196
2 Days
"Red Label " l atex interior
wall po int. Select w hite'or one
of six popu!-:--colors. Sovel
USE YOUR
K MART CHARGE
BANKAMERICARD
OR
MASTER CHARGE
,J
....... "'
. Swellinc of Sudt·n.u. Dua lo lnlei:tion. •w •· "
'
i
~
MEN'S KNIT
DRESS SLACKS
2 Days 0.ly
44
Polyester double kn it dress
solids & fa ncies. Si:r:es 29-40.
$/eeks 1n
, . •
L ................. .. ·---.; ..
;
• ..
' •
t • ~ SAVE ON STYROCUPS
2 Da ys Only ~
L Pack of 51 7-oz .. polystyrene
cups for hot or cold drinks.
~ ,..., .• ...0:. -
J ' I 31c
,t· . ·~ • ..l
I.,, ..
18 DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS
Reg . 99<·
Regular size fits t 2 22 lbs.
Cotton, cellulose center.
More absorbent!
. " ,., ..... -..._
POCKET RADIO
....
l .58
·-
~ •
TUESDAY ONLY
CHOPPED BEEF STEAK
French Fried Potatoe'
Tossed Green Salad
Wdrm Roll & Butter
117
WEDNESDAY ONLY
VEAL PARMIGIANA -
••
With Spaghetti Sa uce
Whipped Pot atoes & G ravy
Buttered Vegetable
Ro ll & Sutter
1'' .. . .. .. -'
CANNON®BATH TOWELS
Our Reg. 971
2 Days Only
Solt and p re11y 24 .. '46" "Tangier" sll1pes or "Cha/Ieng·
e r'' solids in many colors and white.Charge it and .a .....
Wa1ft Cloth, 12x21 " ···-10c ea.
30''STEEL FOOT LOCKER
Our Reg. 8.38 511
15·3/.t"x12Y,. ... x30N. Sheet steel over nnMr
frame. Enomel finish in black, blue. red or grffn.
Stffl binding; metal tongue; plastic hondlH •
SPACE-SAVING RADIO
Regular
31.87 2388
lighted \lide Me dtol. Switchable AFC on FM, and
Vilrnier Nnil'lg provide , prtt<:ition station Mlt<tiofl.
Walnut-groin fin i,h on poly)tyrene. Charge 11.
Tn~IUl'WIJ,doctort'"'9~ -I eMetfrotnpein.~
what ,,,.,, -lo e . ---P•lnhal .,... ta. ~ ..... elarlak
d .. lor1· "tli:'tlnf ao d lhoy fW"lliOI ol ouch ...._ •hae ~jthtr'*~lioeHthtil). w11~~¥ameci.J';lllft! Mlvn or In thelr oSc. prlCUoe. ___.._... P'NPlration .n-
Pres-ration K li\'el prompt. doanl btlp ,,,... OW..t or
.., lt•mporary re.lie( for boun In 1UOPOlitod&:
2 200 HARBOR BLVD. ~~~:~'0:1d COSTA ·MESA
Harbor
-
'.
!
" 5 •
!
•• i
r
t
'
J 0 DAILY PILOT s
Money's Worth
Defined Plirases
E11d 'Bafflegah'
By SYLVIA PORTER
\\fhen the finance ministers
or 123 nalions convene in
\~·ashington loday to mark the
formal start of negotiations
for reform of the \\'cstern
v.·orld's rnonetary s y st e m ,
'·dollar crisis" headlines !real
or engineered I will again
erupt around the globe. It will
be fascinating !tuff, of pro-
found importance to the future
of your own job, paycheck,
coot Of living, investments.
But it will also underline at
its abysmal f
v.•orst t h e
bafflcg11b <lf
i ntemational
high rinancr.
Do you. ror
instance. on·
dcrstand
such color-
ful finan cial
phrases as ~011.t•ll
"Dirty Floating," know what
is behind such inltlals as
SDIU? Do you. in fact, knnw
what an lnternational Mone-
tary System IS?
\Vest's currency network, will
almost surely become eve n
more powerful in the revised
monetary system.
SDRs: SPECJAL Drawing
Rights. also frequen!lv called
"Paper Gold." The SDRs are
a new form of world money
and are destined to replace
gold and the U.S. dollar as the
prime "international money"
in the monetary svstem.
They're so important I'll do a
column on them later this
week.
Group or 20: The committee or finance ministers, from 20
nations -11 industrial. nine
Jess develoned -whi ch will
ncgntiate thr new svsle111 .
Now represPnting the US. is
Trea~ury Secretary ShuH7..
The artulll bargaining \Vlll be
done by deputies.
Group of 10: The groun of
finance ministers of the
world 's wealthiest trading na-
tions which ha s now been
enlarged to the Groun of 20 to
give the smaller nations some
rcoresentation. Tn G-10 in ad-
dition to the U.S. are :
Belp;ium, Canada, Fr a n c e .
r.ermany. ltalv. Japan. th<>
Netherlands, Sv.'edcn. United
King:dom. S\vitzerland sits in
as an observer.
UPI Ttleptlolt
~Festive Occasion
Gov. Ronald Reagan and Nancy Williamson of San
1''ranrisco talk about California wines after Reagan
named Mi ss Williamson National Wine t lostess last
week. The governor received an invitation to attend
the National \Vine Festival in October.
Distaff Farmers
If' YOU DO, you are hip. If
you do not. herewilh my little
anti-bafn cgab dictionary lo
help you peek into 1972's
historic money mectinr.s. Clip
and save.
lntcrnation11I m one t a r y
system: The network or struc-
ture or systen1 of currency
relatiOnships that permits dif·
f e r e n t governments, en-
FLOATING' T 11 E u~-w on1e1t T £1ki1ig Vp tlie Plow pegging of the Western Yo'Orld s
currencies from the fixed
-·lerprises or just plain in·
dividuab;, such as you and me,
in a vast number of countries
l-0 do business with each
other; to travel with relatively
1ittle difficulty across each
other's borders for work or
pleasure; to communicate in a
counUess variety of ways.
WITH. THIS systen1. planes
fly, freight ships sail, doors
and stores are open . Without
it, world trade would slump
and we would r isk
catastrophic depression. To
revise the now ou tdat ed
system we have, so it helps
the world to greater pros-
perity, Is what the meetings
this week are all about.
IMF: The International
Monetary Fund, the system
for currency stabilization
created by the f~ world na-
tioru: at the BreUon Woods,
N.H., conlereoce in 1944. It's
the JMF which ls opening its
annual meeting with a me1n-
bership of 123 nations today . lt
stands at the core of the
._ . . ·---·~· .}...
Fine C11s10,n Tailoring
Wntcllff P'tao, I I J2 l"IH Aff,
Newport leoch, Callfor11la
PHONI!: 645-1072
' \
pnrities at which thev held in
relationship to the U.S. dollar
until President Nixon tore the
dollar from its peg and sel our
currencv floating on Aui:::. 15,
1971. After that. Kev forei~n
currencies noated up w a rd
against the dollar -makin,g
nur goods chcaoer in terms of
f o r e i g n currencies and
therefore our export!'l more at-
tactive la key U.S. ob·
jective l.
Dirty Floating : Interference
by a nation's government with
the floating of its currPncy so
that the currency is not
permitted to respond freel y to
market forces or supply and
demand. In late 1971, fo r in-
stance, Japan v igo ro us I y
fought against having the yen
become more expe n sive
again.cit the doltar by heavily
selling yen and buying dollars.
Smithsonian A~eement: Ac-
cord reached Dec . 18, 1971,
at the Smithsonian Tnstitution
in \Vashington under which cur-
rency values were rradjustcd
nnd the U.S. dollar ~·as
formally devalued.
TJIE NATIONS also agreed
that henceforth cu r re n c y
values could fluctuate in a
wider "band" of 2V4 percent
either below or above their
tixed rates (parities) against
the dollar or a total "tunnel"
of 412 percent. This was a ma-
jor ste p toward more flexible
currency rates.
Snake In The Tunnel : The
much narrower band within
which the Common J\iarket
nations -the increasingly
JX)\\'erlul European bloc, soon
In he 10 nations. including Bri-
tain -permit their o"'n cur-
rencies to fluctuate against
each other.
1000 §
ORDER \ ' ·'• Beautiful ' .. ' Stick-on
YOURS ·-i~ LABELS \
TODAY! I
(
Personalized . • Stylish • Efficient
By GAY PAl)LEY But as the study pointed out
NEW Y.QRK (!JPi l _ 'fhat_ ~the figures for A~ril "are fair -
hired hand on the farm new ly-low for a gr t cu 1 tu r a I
may he a "'Oman. · employment. as t~e. peak
They're not labelling it part months of far~ ac!tvity are
of the womcn ·s liberation June and July .. April was the
moven1ent. but women are genera! measu.rtng slandar.d, .a
showing up as part of the spokesman said. because 1t 1s
farm labor forctJ. many of a peak mon~ for almost all
them as owners o1· managers. other occupallons. 'I
The women arc h;irdly get·
STATISTICA LLY THE ting rich in agricu!tur11 I jobs.
number of \.\'Omen on thf' farm although you have to count th~1
(toesn't sound all that iin-fringe benefits of fresh air.
pressive. But there are enough plenty of outdoor exercise and
women in agricultural jobs for in many instances a well-
the Farm Journal magazine to laden table of foods, fresh,
devote an article to them and frozen or canned.
to urge thal farmers. finding The \Vomen's Bureau said
themselves short of help, well the current median income
might look to the women as a year-;ound for w 0 m e n
source. The \Vomen 's Bureau of the employed fulltime in the
U.S. Department of Labor agriculture, forestry and
eslimates that in July of this fisheries Industry (the jobs a~e
_vear (July'.s a pe;ik month for Jumped together .t~al way) JS
farm employment). there were · $3,309. For men. its $4,028.
121,000 women farmers and TIIE FARM Journal, assess-
farm managers, and another ing women as a hel~ potential,
604.000 foremen and laborers. says that they make up a
Those figures were for "·omen disproportionate number of
16 years and older. those on the unemployed rolls.
Apparent~y their numbers ''So," it asks. "why not look
are on th~ increase. but not at there fi rst when you need to
a fantastic rate. hire someone for a responsible
IN 1969, THE Women's job?''
Bureau published a massive It cites several examples of
study of women in all job women doing farm work as
categories. It listed 82,000 well as. often better. than men .
\\'omen farmers and farm Clarence Potter, an Oregon
managers and 472.000 others farmer, has hired high school
;is foremen and laborers. The and college girls for the past
figures then were for April , several years to drive his
1968. and counted women 14 trucks during the w he a t
years and up. harvest.
Ora1ige
Cou1ity
B1isiness
POTIER Si\ VS the bovs
-. ""have some advantages, suCh
as greater familiarity with
machines and equipment. But
t 1n turn the girls "don't have to
>• prove how much abuse a truck
1 can take."
..
S!e"·art Title Co mpany has
named Robert J. ~1oore as
president of the company's
Orange County operations.
i\foore, of Santa Ana. \\'as
forn1crly vice president and
n1:1nag<>r. lie also served as
assis ta nt \ice president and
director of broker relations for
First American Title Company
for three years.
* II. Robert Hundley of Costa
~1esa has been named prin·
cipal legal
;idviser for
the Drfense
Contract Ad-
m i n Is tra·
lion Serv·
1r(':-Hcgion
111 Los An-
The gentle touch of the fAir
sex pays off for other farmers
too. Mr. and f..1rs. Elroy
Honadel. a lllilwau kee County,
\Vis .. couple find that their
crew of apple picking mothers
keeps bruised fruit to a
minimum.
The \VUliam \\'itters family
of Rock Island County, Ill.,
ahvays hired women to plant
their acres of tomatoes. Said
i\frs. Witters, · · \Vo m e n ' s
natural love for young living
things was our security of a
full crop.''
Cosmetics
Finn Guilty
•
In Fraud
Order For Yourself or a Friend 1 ge les. ,.
~11NNEAPOLIS, Minn . (AP )
-Two representatives or
Holiday f\:lagi c Inc., R
CaUfomia cosmeti~ firm , and
the COmPIRY ilseU have been
found guilty of violating. the
Minne90ta Consumer Fraud
May b• us •d on e nvelopes as return ;iddre\\
l•bels. Also very handy as identification
lab•l1 for mfrking personal iiems such as
book1, record1, phofos, efc. labels stick on
Cjlles1 end mey be us•d for mark ing home
cann•d foc.d items. All labels are printed
with stylish Vogue type on fine quality white
CjlUmmed piper.
The rr'!ion /
a d n1in1stcrs HVHDL•v
ne arly S7 billion "'Orth of
defense :ind NASA contracts
in Southern Ca I i [or n i a.
Atizona and Ne\•ada .
* Laguna Beach resident
IIelnz Juenthner has been
named manager of export-im-
part sales for !1'T Cannon
Eltctrlc in Sanla Ana .
Juenthner joined the division
of International Telephone and
Telegr11ph Corparation as a
tool and die design engineer in
1959.
* Richard Schwanz. of Foun-
I a w prohibiting rnuIUlevel
dislrlbutonhlps.
Hennepin Dislrict. J u d g e
Dougw K. Amdahl fined lhe
company •t.000 and lhe two
representatives, James A .
Solem, 25, St. Paul, and James
A. Russell, 38, Waconia, '3
each and gave each 90-day
suspended Jaji term~.
Amdahl n o t e d prospecil
we~ told they could etlrn as
mu ch as '45,600 on a part·lime
basis, but to do so would have
to Bell aboilt..-.GOt worlb of
Wall Street • • •
Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own
We couldn't prove it, of course, but it seems
stock.
likely
that the the here Or-.
in ' IS even greater percentage
ange Coast area and it's growing every day.
That's
to
why the DAILY PILOT
be the first newspaper . 1n
was proud, yea rs a g o,
Orange County to bring
its readers "today's final stocks tuday" via Dataspeed
United Press International. We're still doing it ' wires of
in every home-delivered edition and the • service gets
better all the time.
Wall Street's computers "talk to" computers in
DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate
more than
the
of
12 1,000 words per minute. It takes only
minutes to move the entire New York and American
Stock the Exchange reports from
Street to the typesetting
canyons of Wall
DAILY PILOT machines of the
right here on the Orange Coast.
And when
the
technology finds a way to beat that speed
DAILY PILOT, na doubt, will be among the
use it to bring
record,
first to
When it comes
readers "today's action today ."
to financial news, the one that means
business is the
DAIJ PILOT •' .
tain Valley has been named
program vice president or
Saturn Launch Vehicles for
Nort~ Am.rtcu -...U'•
Space Division. ·
cosmellcs. !•------------------------------
l • ·1 r
•
•
l.
Buy The DAIL V PILOT For Peanuts!
Her1'a tieN'•. here'•
CHARLIE BROWN ••• and LUCY.,. end LINUS ••• and
here's
SCHROEDER,., and
last but not Jlut,
here's
SNOOPY
Phone 642-4321 (Clreulatlo11 Department) to have t h e
whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally.
••
I
J
J 2 DAILY PILOT MondaJ, --2}, 1972
Rookie's .Joh T ough
Policewoman Patrols LA. Street.s
LOS ANGELES (AP) -In
the briefing room at the Eut
Loi Angeles llherifl'a station,
most of the ofrlctrs are joking
among the~lvts:, waiting for
the sergeant to begin. ln the
middle ls a rookie. Tht others
are talking around the young,
inexperienced officer.
A detective goes by the
door.
"Hey, Baker," he says to
the rookie, ''Ttlm your head."
Baker does. Tht detective
makes a gesture. EVttyOne
Jaugh.s. Baker tries not to
notice.
THE BRIEFING begins.
1bere are reports, and in·
i;pection will be tomorrow.
Someone cracks a dirty joke.
BUT IN A llklrt Imel !>km ..
with bor -ahe, she CMIJlOt bt •• lmpoolng .. the
lllO-poulld depJly she replaced,
even though she 8PO<U a
police sharpshooter m • d a I
under her badge:.
Duffey spew frankly about
the program . as tr Mrs. Baker
were not seated two feet to his
right in the air-conditioned
patrol car, bor ey., Biiiing
ovtt the bot slrtetl ol East
U>s Angel.. for signs ol
crime. Th.is la not a beat
where police are respected or
welcomed. Blank Mexic.an-
Ameriean faces stare sullenJy
as the patrol car glide• by.
., just hope """" the time
comes, she's there," Duffey
says.
cue ...,,. time be lllllil wttll
• roolde, Dulfey ldmll.t, "Oh.
that'• true.
"11'1 JUI! Iha! when yoa're
1'11h a guy, you feel that he's
180, 170, 180 pound& and he'1
just a little bit more muscle to
take core ol you in actual
phylical combat."
To hetp 10lve that p-oblem.
Mary was tralned extensiveJy
ln weaponless dtfenae, which
she say1 really meant dirty
fighting -"klc:ld"i In the
right place."
Gays Get
Lounge
NEW YORIC (AP) -
C'.ohnnblo CoUec• Dean
P<I« Poaney hu ....
-be oereed -homoeexuals are a.s ~
titled to I "minority
Jounge" as blacU, Latins
and Asians.
The other minorities
have aeparate l o u n g e 1
r<eognizod by the ~
dergraduate 0>U.ge of
Columbia University, but
Gay Liberation leodm
d>arged they were being
dtcied the same """8Jll·
lion.
A loonge !requenled by
homoeexuals baa b e e n
functioning at Columbia,
but without off icia l
recognition.
Mountain Drive
,tCTmtul 11.11•IU ,-tcTrTICWI MlllMU&
PIJB[JC N<mCE PUBLIC NOTICE
...... IT&,...,.,... ...... ITliTIIMllWT
Campaign waged Ttw ........ ,.,_-..... ,,.~ ..............
_.._ 16: tn Htlf' -:!Nt41L1. CIOMITT• JllMCL TMf l'tlDlfl:MOO ~ tlll OrdlW Or .. We1f1t1l•tltr• ~ l.tflM...... ~ Dfi.... ~ ..... _,., = ,,, ,,_., ..... Hll."" cir.:Hii Dr ... "= ::tJ91'. M L ....... l)ri..... -:.:-..:· ~*" Y• ..... '='~'t';:.""t UNt , ... Hlln11••-~,~ltl..,. Dl'M. ......, ...... C.11. Metf'O C.tll,.,..., ™" ...,.... ' ........ ~ .,., t ~~ ~~· ... ,. Clllil!JcM "' • ,............ ,..,._n111 .. For Mulholland
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
citizens committee aaya the
city government must take
"Immediate and coorag<ou1
action'' to preserve
Mulholland Drive as a n
"island of natural tranquility
In the ruldst of a metropo!iJ."
The Mulholland QUuns
Advisory Committee reported
( ~COLOGY)
.,_ .....,., L.,., fll IN Ceuntf CMf1tt W. Hin
TNt ............. ~ s.pt, •• ltt1. TI\11 ... ...-. flltd wlftt ... ~ ~,.....~°":-.:=. o.itY c-rv Ci.tit ol Or•• C°"'"ty Oil: St,:tlmW 14 sanitation specla1lat Re::r: B. c~ • ,. 111 1tn. 11 .._., J, ~ ~ Gou • ,...,,. Cieri!.
• hOl!tllff ~ (OMt Otl!1 f'llOI, • tlOI ..,....,..., 11. M, ZS ITICI Oc ...... 2, P\ltllllhttf °"""" (Nit Dally ,"tt!.; e Sult Flied 1m • 2316-n s.,11m11er 11. u tl'lll octoW t. ~
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The ,
city's acqulsltloo ol land tori --~PUBU~~C~N~OTl~C~E;--/--iPVPiiiBiiuJici:NNoOTITKCEE-;-the Sl billion Pa Im d al el-l'IC1'rTIOUI ,.,.,,.,,,
J.atematlmal Airport bas been •AMI ITATIMl•T ....,..-
tbrutened by a COMerVatioo ~ ~ """°"' •rt Hll'l(ll MOTICl ..... TOA C:.,,hfTOU l
group's lawsuJt. MllA 0 l'T IC,. L ElfllltH:ISES, S_,_ Oiort ol fl'lll lfllllt tf Ctill:.t• M ,...,... ,...... CotM ....... for IN County M Ol"MIOI. nae Siem Club end senn "".....,.... nm. ,_., c-t• r11111 .. f;V'IL YN RUTIC • • ·•~-of •·•·"'-v-n-w ICM ----.. "" -o.c-MC1 , reu~ '""~ aJrc,, 1 MfM, CfilNnlla ""'· Notte• t1 ""'"""' ""*" to ~ "'°' where the airport l! to be ..._., --.. • .., ,...,.... cetlfl "" ..... _... ..... ~ ~·
boil• '--nlo+ -.. c,~,., IMM, (tllfonlle t»#. A .. _11 ,...._ 11tW1o dtl!N tttlMt ... ~ .. ............ ~ ..-i-'.... ..,..... ....,.. JMf ....,.. ¥1 .. ,__ ...... .,. ,..,,,... .... "'*"" 'Pith
Court sull Mita. Ctllftrlllt. t'MD._ " Ml "" -.el'T 'lll,IUdltn. '" "" ~ ·°' Tllb IMMtM .. Mll'll thl Clift ol fhl ·~ """9liM = They CCll'lten:f that °'9 Loi INIYlcMt, to prntnl llMfn wlttl ltle
Angel D t t f ~ w.1611 vauchen to till _......,,_, -' tl'lf
A few officers lauith Ughtlv.
Not Baker. Then officer Duf-
fey and Baker leave or their
car , Baker haulirtl'! a box file
full of form s. Duffey the
shotguns. Duffy tests the
weapon 's acUon exoertlv, easi-
ly. He hPndles the weapon
with confidence.
"So far, l have no reason to
believe that she wouldn't be.
We've had a couple of minor
situations when she was there
and ready to ,go to work when
I needed her."
IN ORDER TO fairly
evaluate the new program. the
co-ed .equad car gets no
IPf.clal treatment frarn dilo
paldien at the stallon. Duffey
and Baker will go into any
situation that a patrol would
normally encounter. '-----------~
to the city council its recom.
mendations for the drive,
which has been designated as
the city 's first scenic
parkway.
es e p a r m e n o 1'1111 11.1-1 fllM with thl c-ty of Hirmori o. '9111_. •M J«OIM o. Airports failed to prepare an cw11 ., °"...,..County°";,~ c"Le':.': S.Y111Jct, um v11111, ..... a1vd .. st.. '1-.
d WllllAME.STJOHN.COv'"' 'S"9tmlll Otb. CtlH. tUOl tohldl llltlb9 environmental ITpact stu Y by e_,.., J. Mtdlfa,x, OePUfv. p11e1 of 11111111911 al the und.,..11"9!! 1111111
ASKED IF that isn't the
h-frs. Baker says she feels
odd in her position, but "l'm
enjoying my job.
"I feel really stupid , but I
imagine that anv rookie who starts out feels that way."
Baker takes a tum prac-----------------------
tlcing loadlnsi: arrt 11nload\"'i:(
the weapon. A shtll falls to the
tarmac.
"Oh .... " 5afS Baker.
llands shake slil!htly with
exertion. concentration. anx-
iety. Tou,lt'h to be a rookie.
Tou.ith to be a cop. But the
cards are really stacked
against Baker.
BAKER STANDS five feet
four inches, and weighs 105
pounds.
She is 26, the mother of a 6-
yeaMld .son. wife of a Los
Angeles policeman and a
female cop on 1he streets of
L.A. .
Famll" Circus -
Discove ry
Discounted
By Museum
JERUSALEM (AP)
Evidence of a cruclfixlon
about 2,000 years ago con-
tinues to arouse speculation
abroad, but the Rockefeller
Museum in Jerusalem is con-
vinced. that the relic has
nothing to do with the death of
Christ.
The 12-member panel said
the drive, which twists along
the crest of the Santa Monica
Mountains, '1loold have the
character of "a ribbon-like
park."
as required by the Cafifomla ' .ut ,,,.u.,.. p1r111111"' ta ~ 11111e er !Mid . f f'llblltllld Or11noe Co.11 o.Hy Piiot. ft(Mtnl, wltlllll four rnanJ"-....,.i l{)t Environmental Quality Act o Seplfmbll' Tl. is -i 0Cto111r 2, '· fin! putllkitl<lll of r1111 110lk.1. 1 1970 lt72 104-12 e>e!ed Sftlllmbtr 14 "71. ' fU'DM'I ROl"'1
• Crantelt Seen PUBUC NOTICE S~~1~111
F'l' BR.AG(; (AP) MARMOM D. SPANN•• i ~-....:·ct· f I PICTITtoUI l lltlN•ss J••DMI o. SAV•NICIC vimu u ion o noc ear power MAM• n .t.T'IMl'WT 1sua VllllW• 11¥11 .. M'9 ,,, plant construction threatens n. ......_ Plf'MN .,, dolno ,...,,.,... Dlkll. c.i1"'""• ,,.,. " _ __.,,.,. I a-tMll ••~ .t."'"""' ter ......., e S"laoto Closed an energy uuu1.:u n •OTH v o u "o , E • so" "' E L 111111
REDWOOD CITY Northern and C e n t r a I 1&:•v1c1 01" ANAHEIM. l3'0 SOUtll htltl"*I ~ C•" o.tr, "°'· (AP) Callfomi the president of. Mtn.lm. Mlhtlm. Ctllfol'l'll• tllOS Slplln'IOll" 11. is tlld Od*t" .Z.. ~
Pollution forced cloQng of the Pacific das &: Electric Co. ~ .. v~ ~1~0: water skiing and boat show at .d .'----c"'""..-1 *' Wlbl'llrt aovtfYn,1-----------Martne World-Africa U.S.A. sa.i ~ Lo. ......_ c1HfDnllt fOOM, PUBIJC NOTICE Alt.hough cause of the pollu-PG&E projecta the demand TMt ........ '-bt+"ll ~ .,., '1----------
tion -a broken sewage pipe for power -which climbed torpor•~:;"'°""" ,,.,_,1111 s.rv1c11 Notic•,.~~ ~¥.rr,~" SA&.J
in one ol. the recreatiM """'"k's from a million kilowatts in ~ Lo. ~ •• ~ •nc,~dll!T °" Tu.1<111. oet. l1, 1m. •t 11:01tAM., r--. , , , .olmet "· r g,,,, NATIONAL COMMUNITY AOVJ6011:$, lagoons -was repaired, the 1940 to 12 mtlhon kilowatt! m 1~1. 111ttm111t 111111 w1111 ""' cOUflfv iNc .• ti duty eppo111rec1 r""'" ""*' •lld
Show was not resumed "unt1'l 1972 -will reach 19 milDon Cl••k at Or•...., c°""ty on SiP!etnber 13• pvrtu1111 to °"" o1 Trust r«orOH . ' !Jn. •v &IYll1y J. M161;1ax, DeflU1Y Auoint ... 1'70. II 11111. N~ IU., '"boat: the highest environmental kilowatts 1n 1980, John F. Bon-COWtlV cltf'•. , :itnt ,., p1g1 IDS. at 0tt1c1M 11:~. in rhl
I nd rd be acbi ed " ner told 1•-annual n....1.-• ..1 UT« · ollkt of lhl c°""ty ll:ICOl'der o1 Ormtt• s a a s can ev , a ire ncuwuuu l"Ulbfh!Md Or•not CNJt O•llV Pllol, c°""ty Cilltornr• Will SELL AT
spokesman said. Empire Association. meeting, s.i1tntbtr 1a, "· tM Ockltler ,!!o.~ PU1L1C AUCT1oti ro HIGHEST •10-'Ibe evidence is an ank1e Water in the ma""-made He supported the pro,._.,.,f rm oe11: Fe>« CASH !P1Vlflle 11 tlrnt o1 ...._
•c ..,._1------------1111 1tWM _., of fM Ul'll!ed Stllal 1t bone with a steel nan driven lagoon was grossly polluted Mendocino nuclear power Dl'nn •c NOTICE rhl -"" tra111 1ntrtnee to ttw ow
through il lt was found 1n with disease -causing 'ect and oiticbed what he ~vP&.& ~ C-'Y ~. kuNd • ttw pro) 1'00 81octt ol W•I Stnll Arw e A11 .....
1969, but the discovery was oot =iaf:'1~.!,; bea~ ~-~-~.~ ..... ~ wnP01tT-M11S.t. uttil'1•o settOOL ~:'i'.. ~~~ f::~: ~ until last vear ............. pan • ~K:T <VOIU~ "rr-'IM& ~ Dtrnl:ICT • .... "' ... -..... lit It ...... ltld
-'!l-i.t.d-heln,..,,,--fe--
aJ'ld dirln't like Jt." site savs.
· ~ ' said San Mateo Qxmhf water construci\&D. .._ tlr<'ffl .. aws-o.-of_tmtt ln Jta.....,........,-tir -pnfinl 1-atudy.---------.,_ -·~ -----~ ---"°"KE IS--Mnlrl""'O~ 1iii1 (MtT trill' ltaft dltaflitd n :
EXPERTS SAY r..,areh .... ,.. .... .., ................ ,.. .. ..., .... ...,..,
brd al Edvetllool of rl'll """"'1-Mew Lot • ol TtlCI No. M$1, !fl ti. dtY of
Ullllltid $cfllal Dl•trlct of Or .. C-!Y, CO.It M1111 t• OW Mtp ~ 111
C•llforrrlt, wlll fK'91\l'I Mll«t t>ldl \IP to aoot 163, Pl9ft 7 Ind I of
11:09 A.M. on fl'lll 1111-dly ol OCftber. lfTJ Mltcll\--~ In !hi d1lct of thil
ti '"' offlet al Nld School Dlstrkl, County •9Cllfdlr al Hid c-ry.
j
j
•
I
r r.
I
Nothing new for women to
be cops. But for two weeks, 12
Los Angeles Countv fem ;ile
deputies have teamed with
male partners to patrol the
streets of Los Angeles. The
prosi:ram is experimental.
Mar;; Baker has one yea r to
prove her worth on the beat.
She totes ell the standard gear
for a patrolman -gun , Mace,
cuffs, everything.
BRmSH
EXPO
1972 srrr. 21 . ocr. 1
-...::.\"™~-
SOUTH
COAST
PLAZA
m
banished any thought that the
bone mlght be from the body
of Christ. Bo t Bl d laciMd t i US? Ptl<e!lllt A'ftl'llll, C•I• Tht •lf'ltt tddreu Mid other comlftaft a &;! am e MKI, Clllforlllt, ti wNch llFM Mid bids dftlm'llllon, 11 tny, of !hi n.1 ~ ~ _ will tie p11bllcl1 optMd ~ rNd lot; dttcrlbtlll PGYI It PVrPOF"IMI "'bl: "Since the dl·-·ery of the ' TIV.CTOlt MOWE• II" 81-rl Wty, C..I• MMI, ...... v. an bldl 1r1 to 111 rn 1«ordt!lee w1r11 c.ii1am11 bone there has been no further i' ColldlllOF!S. 111 t I, II t 11 0"'' tlld Thi und9f'llgntd Tnn.I .. dltc:11llM """'
development of any SOrt'" D B ks o $JllCIH~L wllkh tn -Oii tilt tn ll•bllfty 1111' 111~ ltoc:OtACllllll ol the ltfwt Yse ntery rea Ut !tie otllc• Of fhl l"un:l'llslllll A'""I of &aid &<klrtlS tlld 0""1' tamn'IOll 4"'911tllon, If says museum curator Moshe Sdlod Dbtrkl. 1w Pl1etn111 """""'• 1ny, .,_ 11er.111.
Dolan. • Casl1 Mffl, C•ll"°""'. ~Id NII "'"1 bl mtde, bllt wl"*1t
£Kfl biOdlf' must llUl)fnll I bMI cllposlt nYtMlll fllf -rtnty, I~ fl/f hftpntd, Archeologist v 8 s 5 i I i us ' P_HOENJX, Ariz., (AP) -A lack of good sanitation 111 '"" 1orm t1 • etrtln.d at c1111i.n r9g1rd11111 11H1, ~ flt tn-.. -~ .........._,,out~• of"'----· dwell or a !Md boM tqUtl"' flw perctnl allflOrlll'W:'ft., to p1y 'Ill ~ Jll'J,,.. Tzafttis a Greek Orthodox , practice ca~ a .. ........,}"'.._. ui~ .. ,,_.... .... ,,among u~, 11 1t11 _.. °' .,.. tlld. "'* cFPll IUl'l'I ot ~ 110-.hl tfCVNd w Mid ""'....:.....:-~ -w.... In Is-el pel"IOD.! 001ting on the C.Olorado River during the -8 .,. .. to .,.. ...... a1 "" ~~ D"9d of Trwt. to-wtt: dl.31U4. wtt1ri lt1-"-"11~Udll •~-....'& •<1 , .t-" Ufllrltd $dloM Oitfrkl. A 'erlonnlllCI leA'SI "'*'--u ,.......... M ... d believes the chances of fioding smnmer, an Arizona Health CommisDJn official said. ..... _., • ,.....,. -' 1111 Obct'tlklfl o1 llofw<•l.. ....._,It..., . ......,.""' · ~-·s -·•-aro .,;.,. .... n.. Dr. Frank Reider said the tnfectjoq was not, 1 resa1t "" otltrkt ... tr. _, of tt11w1 to of wltit DIM °' Trut1 ...... ~l 11;au.uu,, Y .. ........, M1i1t1' lntfl M1Ct1 COMnd. fht fll'OC*lft al ~Cf .. T"""'" tl'ld ti._ -n ol, water quality in the rfver. thl dlKil wN M farlllt.d, at Ill ctll Ill I Cl'Hlofd b1 .... Dlld of Trvst. •
~ "JI basJ 11 LA-L~ traced ~ ~ -at.-bofrld.. fM WI IUlfl "*'-"' will ltlf Tiii MMfldtrt ....., _, a-.-.t ca :v a.wr. ~ ..., a pawm Wiii forftlled ie saw SCt1110t '*"1cl ., o..._. Trwi .,......,, ... •ICVfild tftd ...,.._...
"ACTUALLY THERE 15 no
real search for the body of
Christ," be says. "Where does
one: begin! ThouslDi:b were
cl'Ucified during Ronlan limes.
Jnvariably, the famllles claim-
ed. the bodies and extracted
the nails."
rtrer bolts and river rafts, .. be said. c-iy. .. "" •• ..,..., • wrlttrlft ~ °' --~· -·~ by --~-In •'--No Oldctlr 11WY wttndr*W Nf Md for' I Dl'ltvtl tnd OWntnd for lall, tl'ld I writ• "We llWUI. it was \;GU-.a poor Mlll~UI WC ptl'lod M tany ...... 1'51 ..,.,, alllf'_ ... llfl Notlcl tf o.twtt .. illCtllft .. .,.,.. handling Of food and portable toilets," be said. 11119 wt for fl'lll Olllfli"9 """"'· Tlw 1111dtl'1ilfr*I ~ .... Ntftct °'
D-U-sald .. _ Stale H-'lh ""--1 -· £........... TM._.. .. Educltfefl ol"" ~ DlfRll ... l!!llcflofl ...... to .... ,_. neJUel WK: elilJ ~.....,.., ...-.... WAU'6 Mftt Unlllld kN* Dll"1r:t TH«WS rl'll .. In '!ht Co11M1Y wtwr. flll ...r .,,,....ry II steps to correct the situatkln. rlglll to Ri.ct eny flt aft ~ tlld llOI lactlld.
He said letters are being received from many parts :_._:: =::.:: '::i'~~·.:~ 1~ Dttt: "'·~-~~··~·L ~O::UN1TY
Of the United States, 0>mp1 .. t..1 .... of the outbreak. '""bid ,~Yid. Aov150fts. •HC .. ~ 0.ttd ~. 1Slfl. Im '' h"UllM. bl' _0,. NEWPOll:'t·MESA TITLE IN$U.,.NCI AND :~.;J;t~ .. ~~J:StiilMFO'liili'J.t'lJiiililiiiilCh, UNIFIED $(1f()Ol Tll:UST COMPANY
DllTll:!CT Agent
al Or1not County, C•llf. By Lodlml 0. Coffmln
•v Doroflly MlfYIY F!IMr A11rhorllld Slg!lllUT•
Purcl'wl1l"9 Aael\I J4M4
64J.1100 Publl1hed Or•ncll (NJ! Otlly l"llot,
r.~~~ ........................ ..., ..... """""'~
~ DAILY 1 O • 10; SUN. 10 • 7 l. ~:N.•T UES.·WED. @NLY!
:ao. .,.., ... m • z• ·r . -
. PUtlltalMd OrlnOI CNst ll1t1y Piiat. St:pt1mbll' " Ind Octoblr 2,. '· ltn $Ip!. 11 1rlCI StJ>l. :t!i, 1'72 le.i-12 'll12·12
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE TO COHTW.ACTO•I
<M¥trt~t t1re11t11
NEWl"Oll't-MIEU. Uf\11,l•D ICMOOt.. 01n11cT
N.tlQ lll'riHlll ....
DOUBLE DISCOU TS
P«>T lCE IS HE•EBY GIVEN 11'111 1'111 eo. .... al lhk.lcillall of ltle Hl•SIOI I MM
Unlllld ScflD04 Dbrtlt1 OI Or11191 '-'tty, C•lltamll, Wiii rl(:tlht: -lld bldl llP
19 J:• P.M.. T ...... y, OC ..... 11, lftl. t i fl'll 9ffk• .t Wiii Sdlool Dblrkt,
lecl,_ I f 11151 l'IKlfltll A-. Co.II Mftl, Cellfomll, 11 wllldl llmt saw DIM
•Ill " putillcly °'*"" tlld rtilCI tor: New ACCORO+oH FOLDING DOOlS & DEMOUf\ITAaLE
PAll:TITIONS -UNrT$ "O, E .I. F" et E4$TllLUFF SCHOOL
All bilh er• le be Ill ICQl'dtllc1 wlrh Conditions, lntlfuc:tlan, 1M Spl'clfk"'1oN
wnlcll 11r1 -on Ill• In 1'111 oflln ol !tie Archlltc:I, CtrmlcJt.ltJ.IC.mp, An:fllltch,
2170 Lot Fltll f'ltw,. Los Ant111S. CtHlonlil.
EKll Dida ... ff!WI 11.1bml! t bid .,._It In 1'h9 form OI t certllltd or ce.,,1 ... 1
cllldt ar 1 bid bond fQUll liO i.n perCll'lt OD°'lo l Of Ill• 1movn1 of IM bid, midi
PIY•blfl to lfll ordf!I' OI 1111 NewporJ.Mfta Unified S<llOD! Otslrlcl, 111 !tie .....,,1
Of l1ll11r1 to tn!W Into iUCl'I contr•ct, t119 ~· ti tile dl«ll wm ii. tor'fMtlld,
or In ~'• ol 1 bal!d, 1119 full 1um tlllrlOI wm bl tor'ltlltd ta will ldloGll OlflTlcl
of °''"'" C-ty.
BONDED
SLACKS
3 Days Ooly
322
.... 3.11
A colorful stltctlon of sleeks in
a v•riaty of 1tyla1. Acrylic bond ·
I ad to nylon or rayon ectt•te.
Sizt1 8-18.
COSTA MESA
BULK'Y
CARDIGAN
SWEATERS
REGo. 5.'6
Full fashion long sletvt bullry cardi9•n1
in pocketed •nd be lted styleL Smtr+ pop.
ular colors. Sizes S.M.L
~ ~ ··~~
~·
COMFY, IRIJSHED
ACUATE/NnON
TAILORED PJs
222
3 DAYS ONLY
Soft brushed acetate.
nylon pajamu th.at' giva
warmth ww.o.t weitht.
M lft"ttilored coDat with
pi pinz trim. Populer
colors. 32~
SMART SPORT TOPS
0.. .... 1.'6
J Days O.ly 133
Selection of long·sleeve styles in eolor--
ful aolldtl and atripes. lolade of 100% cot·
ton, nylon or pol)oee:ter, 4-14. Charle it.
CO!lDUROY SLACKS
0. .... 1.37
J Days Ooly 111
Ala.eotton tltch with ehilf..dtl&ing fllftMI
lining. Mill and h1lf•boxer styling with
bock pocktt. 5Po<tv colors. 3-611'°11ra< k
2200 HARIOR ILVD. !Corner of Wiison)
HUNTINGTON BEACH
19101 MAGNOUA (Comer of Ga1fleld)
,, • I
JI A dlpollt Of IU.• W tel will bl requlrld to 111.1er111lw th1 rwtvm, In oaocl • cancHllon ol pl11'16 111d 1P«lllctllon1 wlthlll FIVE CS) cl1)'l tller 111tt bid OP9nir>9 .....
Ho bid will be KC9')11d from 1 cantrtelor wtio hi• llDt bMn lk9nl.td Jn ICCOf'd-•rK• wlrh !hi Pl'D'Vbloros of "'-Contra<:ter'1 LksiM Act or to whom 1 Pl'OOOlll
Form fin llCll bt.\ ls.aved IPltlllctlly tor 11\t PVl"PllM of Wbrnlttl1111 t bid tor l~ls ~llCI.
Ho blOOef' IM'f wl!Mrww 1111 bid for t Pll'lod or torty.nv1 (4111 c11ys 11'1er tM
IUtlt Mt tor "" 0p9nlng "*'M>I·
Tll9 0111r1c1 "'• dltwmlr>ld "" 9Wlll'•I rirw11u..., r111 of PIT' llllln't ""''" 111 tilt !octllty Ill wllldl 11111 worll Is to ii. ~fol nled tor lllCh mil tr l'f'lt of
worll.mlfl "'*"tell to IXIC\ll'e 1111 conlTec:t, wltlcfl IJll'IU 1111 tWll'dtd to ll'tt '"""'"" bldOlr, liO bl .. tollawt:
SIX 9AStc t •.t.O•I fLM ......... l!lf ar....,. Cttftlyl
CAJtl"•NT•llS
H"lth I. w.111'* -'1c ,_. l'lovr'
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;,i V~llon StvlnslWioMdty -50e per hour J For1m1111 Rttltl,... not l&SI th111 olOc Pl!' houf' mart 111t11 till 1lol.Jrly Rte *' tf11
1 """*' C1'""""l9f d•utl'laitlall D'l'er Wfllct! 111 hit rtlflOl'lllblll!Y. e~cludl"'9 "P~k Niu ... or ,._ Stepler."
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S.w ~1111'
T1bi. POWll" 5lw ~•tor
PMvmlllC N•Her Cl!' f>Ow9r $1•"4111" u.•ott••s Htttth I. Wllff1r1 -lSc-Sl1/7JJ '5c ·S/1(7J "-Ian -Sl.10 . s11m1 SI.JS . !11111
Vtctllon -»=•lllfll; 3.k·S/1/73
mm M.ll
1.u '·" t.Jl 1.n .,.
FDAl'l'lllH f\l(lf l9sl ll'lln .50t Plf "-mon fhlf'I lilt lloorty W991 rtle
lligl!ftt Clllllflct!lon OYtl" Wiiiett hi Ml IM6tnfl!p, .....
s11m ..... .... . ,,,,.
57,ga
.uttiow~ ·" ·" '"' ... "'"' 17.M •nm .....
...
t11m
•• ..
A gen tJn imite,..
Mrs. Carl Bode shows
telly and Bria.11 how .
to fish for church
festival prizes.
Crestfallen
,,
~men
Relativity Matters?
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I must com·
ment on the letter from the reader who
wrote to say she was incensed to
,discover that an acquaintance was using
·an ancestraJ crest very similar to theirs
and she was sure the woman had
"copied" IL Isn't it amazing what some
people view as a problem? It must be
wonderful to have so little to worry
about!
One or the great things about the
United States is that, with few ex-
ceptions, ils people have rejected status
by inheritance in favor of status by
achievement. Each person must stand or
fall on the strength of what he is able to
make of himself.
Who cares about noble ancestors if
nobility of character baa not been passed
along through parent-dilld relatlonahlpg!
And what does It matter If one's· an-
cestors were bastarda so long as the
person himself has risen above bastardly
conduct?
Some people with similar family m!sts
'deserve each other. The fact that the
woman would complain suggests that she
ls leaning heavily on her dead relatives
for status. -NEW MEXICO
DEAR NEW: 1be mental picture of a
persoa ltanlag on dead reladves is
somewhat ladlcrou1, but It puts the whole
'; :thlng ln proper perspective. Thanks for ~1'rilhltl.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l"ve got a li~
~. deVlce for that lfOman who wonders If
she ahould Insist that her husband
demly his box flll<d with plctureo of
former girl friend& Doll'! do I~ dear. Put
the box away, out ·o1 algl1I, ao you ""°'I
run Into It every time you clean.
Forget about tite"bloomtn' lhtng and ·one day you'll ·be glad JOU did.
. • Tnm and I celebrated our 30t!I ftddlng
·anniversary last week and I decided the
»jtme had com~ to sit down and go
'Uirough lhe bo( of ptclum. Well, Ann,
.;,,. llughed ao hard teart rolled down nur
-~kl. The nuUIJs, the bO!r-doa, the f}lot!ea -It was beiter than an old movie.
.; My husband and I 114rtecl to remtntace.
Jt waa amazing how lll8llJ •! the 1Jt1s
r( ho were once mle and ()OIJUS ate now
out-<>f....shape Mld no ionter ettract!Ve.
The hotshot o( yesteryear selected as
1emost likely to succeed"' WU lost iR the
shuffle aod never board from qalll. Tell
yoor readers that tinwlllg out picl1ms
can bt o big mistake. Advise U... to l)UI
away thole mementos aatl tne day
they'll be glad they · did. -STllL
LAUGJllNG
DEAR STILL: I wish rd thoaglll ot
this angle. 11tauks fOI' improving on my
advice.
DEAR ANN LANDERS o The pastor of
our church has been visiting a widow
who tives near me, almost daily since her
husband died. At first we thought it was
very considerate el t.im to take 1aeb a
peeonal loteresl ill her, bat K'a been
three ,..rs DOW and she's hai pleoty of
lime to """'1 bow II iludle lier erie(
alone.
There is a 1o1·01 Wblsperlng in our town
about this twosome and I don't think it is
doing our church any good. Should we
speak to the woman, to the 'minister, or
to the mllilter'• wife!
We wilnl lo proceed in a way Chol will
be -..i lor •verybodr. We feel oertahl
thal H ll>o mlnJtlor .-hit wt!1 were
aware of lbt -1P ... -id behaYe dlf·
lerently. Pleaoe 1dvtse. -OBSERVERS
Dl!AR OIISl!RVEIUJ: H tile millillor
has been_, a,,.,... ......,. day !or
lbree ,..,. ... -,.ue prebobly -
aboal 11 ud II ~S 11 la the ..., Illa!
Js-for loor.MJ-t11o mbld ,.ur
own bcu:Utets.
IJ alcoholism ndnillg your life? Know
the danger 11111111 Md what to do. 11 .. d
the booklet, .. Alccllollsra -Hope and
Help," 111 Ann Landers. 8nelo6e l5 cents
in cotn wltll y.-r•'llaol an« a long,
stamped, aelf-adctf111M tJM:lwpe to the .
DAILY PM!'.
Clllb dab!I already Im! crowding the
Octobtr calendar with various members
getting their feet wet, fishing for new
projects, tuning up for fund-raisers and
playing with the idea or holiday bou-
tiques.
Friday, Oct. 6, for instance, is reserved
for a church carnival, harbor cruise and
sorority book review.
Families or Sts. Simon and Jude
Catholic Church in Huntington Beach are
inviting g:uedl ii their parish for a three-
day Fall Fet:tival of rides, booths, bou-
tique, white elephant sale and en-
teriaimrteftt. Proceeds will benefit the
buildtn( fond.
Liter that day, the Assistance League
of Huntington Beach will embark 'On the
new club year with two cocktail cruises
aboard the Pavilion Queen and a dinner
dance in TaJe of the Whale restaurant.
Party.goers will start the festivities at
7:30 p.rn. knowing that their $1~ tickets
help support the Speech C e n t e r ,
scholarships and campershlps.
Meanwhile, the South Coast Alumnae
of Pi Beta Phi will be hosting the first
session of their 19th annual Celebrity
Boot Serie!'(Nitb Carlotta Williams as lit·
erary critic. I
A'11thor David St. Clair will comment
(lft hia "Pifchic World of California."
late~ persons may contact Mrs.
ftalph GUI, at 137-5855, for reservations
and directions.
And .the Pi Phis will be putting
finishing touches on their Thursday, Oct.
12, sale of Arrowmont and Arrowcraft
handmade articles in the Costa Mesa
home of Mrs. Donald Cooke.
Early Christmas shoppers are invited
to choose gifts from the Baby Dear, Toy
Corner, Kitchen Boutique, Beautiful
Dining. Fireside Nook and House
Beaut.iful categories. Coffee a n d
rekeshments will be served.
Walldering minstrels, jesters and an
DizabethaD lutist will entertain Upper 1J!o1 Assoclatos ol the Orange County
l'llllllonnaC'J .... Society-.t -Smythe-Glurt.
~Bay en Balboa Island on Sunday,
Oct. 8.
The hosting Robert Smiths and Mrs. WDsoo Little, chairman, will greet the
lords and ladies arriving for the feast of
joints of boeuf and tankards of ale
plarmed by the Mmes. Victor Malzahn
2nd John Dean.
Assisting will be Dr. and Mmes. Robert
Crawford and Robert Saunders and
Messrs. and Mmes. Ralph Deaver,
William Eilers. Edward Fretz, Don Hud~ 4lestoa. Allan Johnson, !Wbert Leith,
William Mason and Emmett O'DolUle.ll
and Jllra. A. C. Flega~
Molly Marr shows her
mother Mrs. Michael
Marr and Mrs. James
Wilson (left I her
favorite Pi Phi toys.
Mmes. Ralph Deaver (top)
and Donald Deaver
call Philharmonic
friends to English
feast.
---
An Oct. b dinner dance
" anticipated by Huntington
Beech Assistance Leaguers
(left to right) the Mmes .
Richard Burgess, Paul
Sullivan and Jack McKnight.
(
,
l .j DAILY PILOT Monday, ~ptembtr 2~, iq12
Sophisticated Benefit Brews in Dogpatch
Your Horoscope Tom orrow
Cancer: Dig Beneath Surface
TUESDA Y
SEPTEMBER 26
Ry SYDNEY OM A RR
Pisces women are sensitive,
secretive and romantic. They
also are more than Blightfy
psychic. The Pisces woman
has alluring eyes, a s~ volce
and 1oves to share special
recipes. Dramatic talent is
second nature to this woman,
who also can express herself
in writing. She is in love with
love and can love more than
one man simultaneously. She
is com plicated -but worth it !
ARIES (March 21 ·April 19):
tendency to be uncertain, corr
fused. You are prov lded with
information supposedly con-
fidential. Key is to evaluatt.
Relax at social gathering.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Puzzle is solved with aid of
concerned fri61'Jd. Be aware of
details. fine points. Some of
your desires are restricted.
However, if patient, you
ultimately get w:bat you need.
Member of opposite sex is in.
volved .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Emphasis is on change con-
nected with occupation. am-
bition, basic drive for power.
Gemini and Virgo persom
play prominent roles. Be
analytical. Find out why
events have occurred. Reject
superficial explanations.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
tale better lertm.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Obtain valid hint from Ubra
message. Be wary in con--
nertion with agreements, con-
tracts. Talk of marriage could
be featured. Nothing is apt to
happen halfway. Know this
and don't play games. Stakes
are high.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 23-
Dec. 21 ): You are finishing
project. Many may snipe at
you. Key is to rise above the
petty. Artea plays key role.
Build ror future. Become
familiar with potential. Cor-
rect minor flaw by consulting
expert. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan .
19): Be a self-starter. Refuse
to be discouraged by one who
constanUy sings blues. Love is
in picture. Be creative, op-
timistic. Your ideas a r e
values, undtratandlng needs or
older person.
PISCES (Feb. !!I-Marth 20):
Short trip appears to be on
agenda . Versatility is
highlighted. Forces, efforts
tend to be spread too thin.
Leave details to others. You
do best oow by grasping pie·
ture as a whole. Special
message is due.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTIIDAY you are a natural
executive. You are ready and
willing to assume responaibll-
ity. You work too hard for
your own good. Augus_t was a
significant month -m Octo-
ber you will ~starling anew.
Your desires are intense, 5'1·
dom lukewann. You are at·
tractive to opposite sex and
when you love it is all or
nothing.
Since the Home Brew will be providing the dance
music, the Mmes. Les Lano, Bob Puckett of Hunting-
ton Beach and Mike Skibba (left to right) start load-
ing "moonshine" for the Saturday, Sept. 30, dance to
be presented by the Young Sophisticates \Voman's
Club of Southern California. The stomping will start
at 8:30 p.m. in Costa Mesa Country Club.
New approach brings pror-
itable results. Be creative,
express or. i gin a l concepts,
ideas, Guard val uables. Don 't
sell yoursel f short. Confidence
now can mean money. Submit
format, special program. Ef-
forts will be well received.
TAURUS (AprU 20-Ma y 20):
Obtain hint from Arie 1
message. Push forth with
ideas, make new contacts,
deal with Aquarian. What was
rejected in recent past could
now be aceepted. Proceed ac-
cordingly. Wear brig ht colors.
Family {ember expresses
long-rang desire. Strive to
understa . Don 't ridicule.
Seek harmony. Be receptive,
willing to learn. Key now is
creative thinking. Be wllling to
change your mind.
workable and will be ap-·-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
preciated. Present t h e m . 11 !
Don't hide light under bushel. Dlftle!
AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb. ' lilll
18): Follow through on hunch.
You are on right track. Know
it and act like you know it.
Expect some obstacles. They
can be hurdled . Accent is on
solid structure, property, basic
Allt STEP -&EllNAllOO -KIMEL eowAl;O$
Homemaker's Role
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
O!oose quality. Don' be fooled
by foolish claims. Eschew get-
rich-quick schemes. Tie loose
ends. One who trusts you also
-GERBERICH -
Pl' FLYERS ·· U.S. KEOS cane• w .. r roy O..ns-111
'"-'Pf!lo 01nc:1 Shalt
CtrrKllYt lilOff 19r CMtdrtll
225 I. 17tti St.
Colt• Meao • 141·2771
World of Women Widening Don't take others or yourse lf
too seriously. People exhibit
co uld make financial offer. "jiiiiiiiiiiiii Weigh odds. Don't take un-11
necessary risk . You can die· HAIRCUTS o,.. 1 o • .,.
~1 ~-shO o . Ulti46 By JO OLSON
Of t"4 O•UV l'Uot ll•ff
"How are we ali ke? How are
We dilferent in our reaci1ons
to persons and things? How do
we think and feel and react to
the sea, air, earth and sky?
"What a re th~ things we
have in common? What are
the goals of our society, our
nation, our community, our
family, ourselves?
"What can we do when we
find ourselves in conflict?
"What is the aim of life?"
With these questions Molly
Morganroth of Corona del
ft far, a retired college home
To avoid disappotntment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy r.boto-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women s De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time will not
be used.
fl"or engagement announcements it ts
imperative that the B'tory, aJso accompanied
by a black and wblte glossy picture. be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline ls not met, only a story wtil
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed-
ding and engagement stories, forms are
available in all of the IJAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered b'l.
Women's Section staff members at 642-432 .
Coast Ceremonies
economics teacher, opened the
first session or Orange Coast
College's lecture series ,
Widening Worlds of Women.
Her topic was Woman the
Homemaker, and subsequent
topics will be Woman the
Consumer, W o m a n the
Volunteer and Woman the
Voter.
"When women get together
we have much to share," Mrs.
Morganroth told the air
proxin1a tely 25 w o in e n
nssernblcd in Island House.
fashion lsland. "I sometin1es
feel I'm so flexible I'm a
jellyfish.
"We have much to teach
each other. Each of us has liv-
ed through things the others
would like to know about."
The women, a11
homemakers, agreed that all
women have dreams and
aspirations and are searching
for fulfillmen t. They expressed
concern that the women 's
liberation movement will not
allow homemakers to be con-
tent in thei r role. and
lamented that it is difficult for
home:nakers to meet new peo-
ple to expand their circle of
friends.
Mrs. Morganroth told the
women that they have to keep
alive the values upon which
America was founded. "There
isn't freedom for anyone
unless there is freedom for
all ," she said.
Nuptial Pledges Read
THOMAS-HOLSTEIN
The Santa Ana Heights
home of Mr. and Mrs. George
Meade Holstein III was the
setting for the marriage of
their daughter. Sandra Hol·
stein and Arthur J .B. Thomas,
son of J\.fr. and 1\-trs. J . Oran
Thomas of Corona del ~1ar.
Mrs. Patrick Mcintosh was
the matron of honor ;
bridesn1aids were the J\.1isses
Pennie Glasgow, Sally Hol·
stein, Judy New and J\I rs. Dan
DeMille ; best man. Steven
High School where her hus-
band graduated. He now at-
tends UCLA.
MURRA Y-MclNTYRE
The Anaheim home of Lt.
Col. (ret.) and Mrs. William
D. Mcintyre was the setting
for the ma rriage of their
daughter Donna D la n e
J\fclnlyre and Billy Barton
Murray.
J\·frs. Carol McKelly and
Steve Nozet attended the cou-
ple while Edward McCreary,
and William D. Mcintyre Jr.
were ushers.
The bridegroom . son of Mrs.
Charlotte Murray of Los
Angeles and J. B. Murray of
Newport Beach, will enroll at
California State University,
U>ng Beach. He has served in
the Navy for four years and
attended Orange Coast
College.
The newlyweds will reside in
Costa Mesa while the new
Mrs. Murray studies at UCL
She attended Anaheim High
School, Los Altos College.
Cha pm an World Ca m pus
Afloat and OCC.
Hollander. ushers. Ste v r n jiljjiiiijiiijjiiiiliiiijjjiiijiiiiiiijjjiiijjjji-~!iijjjijil~!iiili~
1
Seaton, ftfark Kellam. Ph.ii
Siromberg and Pal Mcintosh. ONE-WEEK SPECIALS! The bride, a Children's
Home Society dcbutante, Is a
graduate of Corona de! J\1ar ONE WEEK ONLY! SIPT. 25 to 30
Petting Zoo
tuet.·JUll , Sept. 26,.0et. I.
l y p•pul 1r Jem•"' #iey'te b1~k l
The 1Jor1bl1 b1bv 111im1I•
frol!'I ell over the world who
love to be pette4 111d fed , ..
1dmh1lon JI cenh, 111 the
M1tl, tpecl1I rite for
field trlp1, ek. Huntin1to11
C.ttter'• efr co11dltlonM mill
•f k1clt •nd f4lf19er, Se 11 D!e90
Freewev. HI
I ULTRA C-VITAMIN C
CHIWA•LI
100 ••bl•'•': :.~ulu 1.25 SPECIAL 99C
HAIN COLD PRESSID SAFFLOWll OIL .~:,~~" .. , SPECIAL a9c
SUNFLOWER SEEDS I f'LUMI" a. llll.ICIOUI '•'~.I!~ ::~ SPECIAL 59c
I VITAMIN A I 25,000 U.l ,P.
•oo c:~:~,:;"'::.~I!, 1.1• SPECIAL 99c
Coastl ine Health Foods
TUSTIN
10M lrvhte llri.
Nt1r l1v..O.
M+71M
COSTA MUA
HllftrttW '-"''-270 L 17th It. _,
How docs a woma n keep on Peering Around an even keel during th e "down
cycles" of life? "Find the .. --.-
framework of your life and ----~~~c 1a
don't overextend yourself," MISS KATHLEEN Phipps, a ·home in San Btmardirlo Coun-
she said. "You hi:i.ve t.o have a sophomore at Cottey Coll ege, ty.
balance. The Pur1tan1cal past led lier class scholastically
ot=;;'~;;;c.s ,_....~--...., '.:-.. 111.P __ .. •. ___ .1 .,......_..,. :::7.:" $2.50 dUWlCtU
·--· 750 WIYI I MANICURES PEDICURES
says we shouldn't take time . 1.. • • for ourselves." w1tu a straight A grade-point CRUISING to Ciaracas and
nine ports in the West Indies
aboard the MS Southward
were Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Taylor of El Toro and Dorothy
Root of Newport Beach.
5.50
10.50
14.00
1695 IRVINE
!ABOVE HI-TIME GOURMET)
COSTA MESA
645-1050 or 548-9986
The women sha red !ht;r average last yea r. She was
special ways of combating honored recently during a
unhappiness . which included scholarship dinner as one of
'.""alking along ~he .beach, bowl-the top 10 scholastically in the
ing. ~olf, ~r~1tatio~. re.ad~ng. second-year class. She is the cooking, kn1tt1ng , 011 painting. d ght f M d M C 1 _________ _:
sewing. walking at sunset and au er 0. r. an rs. ·1
l'rl., Sf! .. Su~.
l"rl<H Sllfhlly Mith" l"NKAMERICARD -MASTER CHARGE
listening to good music. ~alter Phipps Jr. of Hunt-
Also. "living one da y at a 1ngton Beach.
time." cleaning h o u s e .
praying, refinishing furniture,
doing new things and going
new places.
GRADUATED from Con-
tin.ental Airlines• hostess
tr3ining school ls Mi ss Christy
Wand, daughter of Lt. Col. and
Mrs. James F. Wand of
''Growth is an amazing
thing," Mrs. Morganroth said.
"I wouldn't pretend to know what life is all about. Just be Laguna Hills.
comfortable with yourself." J\1iss Wand also is a
St ressing that "we (women) graduate of Mission Viejo
need each other," she invited High School and Saddleback
the audience to come to her College. She is ass igned to ~~~e t~la~~~~ tea arxl e:ic-duties out of Denver.
In conc lusion, she asked all
the women to join bands and
have a few moments of
silence. "Quiet is such a love-
ly, uniting blessing," she ex-
plained.
The next lecture will take
place at 9:30 a.m. Thursday,
Sept. 28, in Island House.
Night Motes
Lots of teen-age lingerie is
matched or blended With short
night shifts or tents over bikini
pants.
CELEBRATrNG their 4ill.h
•vedding anniversary during a
reception given in the Newporl
Beach home of their daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard A. Leckie. were Mr.
and Mrs. Young F. Hamiratt
of Anaheim.
llOUSEGUEST of l\'lr. and
Mrs. George M. Thomas of
Newport Beach was Alan
\Villiams who just retu rned
from a trip in the Orient. He
\\'i ll leave for a few weeks tour
of England and then return
~~
Long shag/ Page shag! Lion's mane!
French bob! All perfect styles for
our easy breezy Aircut.
No rollers! No set! No fuss! First a
shampoo, next a superbly shaped
wet hair cut. Then quick
drying with the hand-blower a~d brush.
Aircut ... 6.00 up
Body Perm Special ..• 15.95
A-.i :t.M mll\ll'IMlm _,.. le IMlik 11,tlrtwt Jrkt, ti' 'l'Mlr nt1•UIMll "ke fir tMt .-rvke.
")'Ir..,,.... .. ...,,. 111iw • ~ AND WIG BOUTIQUE
BEAUTY SALONS
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
1100 sltp• from lht Mey Co. I
Appointment• not 1lw1yl n1c11s1ry
APl'Ollfflt!!NTI NOT ALWAYS NECESSARY
'
LARGEST & FINEST SELECTION OF
ONLY FIRST QUALITY FABRICS
BONDED
KNITS AND WOVEN
SUITINGS
1celal1 Lee•
*KNIT tweed t extures, sweater knits and solid5.
Great for sportswear or dress up in all the
fabulous fall fashion colors. Polyester/r•yon/
acetate blends.
*SUITING S in pl•ids, checks, noverties. Bea utifu l
for skirts and vests, pa nt suits, dresses, all fall
and winter wear. Acrylic/rayon /nylon /wool
blends .
54 .. /56" w;dths
VALUES TO 52.98 YARD
YARDS
ONLY
uilted fabrics
QUILTED COTTON PRINTS ~198 YD.
nvlon/ac1t•le bntk
QUILTED SHEER PRINTS ~22' YD.
polv1tl1r/t ollon-I i11th 1c•lete b1tk
QUILTED GINGHAM CHECKS $24' YD.
• nvlon/nvlon b1cli.
QUILTED SATIN SOLIDS 5298 YD.
•c1!1!1 lrlcot/ecetete b•eli.
QUILTED JERSEY PRINTS
"2" to 41" wldffis
$2" YD.
•HOUSE OF FJ.iBRICS
always first quality f abrica .
Sovtt. c .. , rtoae -l d1tol •f 5111 Diego r-wv. Ho,..,,. ... -17t~ •• 8111101
CMta M ... -141·11N S.11tti AM -14J•ll11
Or•ftf•f•lr Moll -Or'1119tlhorpe •11cl H1rber lfffl• P•r• C:.... -l • P1l11t1 •I Sta"1011
Pol--IU·2JJ4 -htl -121-412>
..,....Grtin -12111lroo•hunt 111ewft0Von'1l -li .. 114t k•llfl.-C..tor -Ecli1191r et l11ch 11 ... cl., H..,..._.. IMdl-lfY·I01 J
I • I ' -)
• • ~·
SAN DIEGO'S DAVE WILLIAMS (84), RANDY MONTGOMERY CLASH.
Chargers Unload
Rookie, Catching On
-To Passes, That ls
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Aft.r six seasons
as cornerback, Joe .Beauchamp is
catching on to his new position at free
safety.
Beauchamp was sy,·itched to safely
when San Diego Chargers starter Chris
FJetcher was injured in a 34-3 loss to San
Francisco last week. He tied a club
record with three interceptions Sunday at
San Diego's 37-14 National Football
League victory over the Denver Broncos.
"If Thad my choice,'' said Beauchamp,
•it'd stay at salety. There are many
more times the chances to intercept
passeS there -and there 's 200 percent
Jess pressure.
"At comer you're going one-on-one
with a receiver . , . in front of 50 or 60,000
people and the slightest mistake means
six points. You say th.at doesn't mean
pressure?"
Beauchamp brought one of his in·
terceptions back 47 yards for a
touchdown with 2:07 left in the second
quarter as San Diego evened its record in
the Western Division of the American
Football Conference to t-t.
San Diego intercepted six passes, tying
another club record, after Denver had
bolted to a 7-0 lead on Randy
Montgomery 's 94-yard return for
touchdown on the opening ltickoff.
"After that ltickorf return ." said
Chargers coach Harland Svare, "J knew
"'e would win. That was too much. It pull-
eel us together. Things were getting too
silly. We 'd had enough."
San Diego's defensive line, maligned in
the past because of its poor pass rush,
sacked Den ver quarterbacks S t e v e
Ramsey and Charley Johnson five times.
''We've got four wild men Jn that line,"
said Beauchamp, who was awarded one
of two game balls by Captain Deacon
Jones. "There're four bad dudes and I've
got a lot or confidence in them. When you
know the quarterback has six or seven
seconds to throw the ball, it's tough."
Beauchamp said he made a bet with
Jones before the season started that he
would have more interceptions than
Jones would ha ve sacks.
"Two sacks by the Deacon equal one
lnterceptioil," said Beauchamp. Jones
had one sack Sunday.
Denver Bronco. 7 O o 7 -u
~n Diego Ch1trver1 lJ ii o l -11
Dton. -Monloomery, f4 kk l<.oll re!urn !Turner
kickt
50 ·-FG. Parlet 45
SO -FG, PllrlH 11
SO -Garrett. 'I run (P11rlH kJ<kl
SO -C.1trrlsJOn, 9 PflH trC)m H8dl !P11r1~ kick)
SD -Wll!11ms, 31 P!ISs from HOHSI 1Pllt1'1t klCk~
SO-BeaucMmp, 47 lnt1rcepllon return (Partee
""" Den. -llams1y, Iron ITur~r kick)
SO -FG. McC'°11<1 ,7
A1tma1nc1 -.,,M .
Finl do-.a
II~ -y1rUs
P•s•l"!I yards llehlrn y11rds
P11 .. n PIMIJ
Fumbl~ -lo'it
P-111~ -yards
·-" " 21·11
"' " l1·1'M
S-11 .. '"
Chergtrs
" l~J.11
"' '" :12·1}·1 . " .,
1.10
Posey Protests $ $ Loss
To Redman at Riverside
Dy HOWARD I... HANDY
Of IN O•llY l"llllf Sl11f
RIVERSIDE -Sam Posey of San Juan
Capistrano ls a diplomat, on and off the
race course.
tie also is a man of mRny moods. most
or them pleasant and cheerful and is a
r11ce driver with a co mpet i ti ve
detennination .
When he feels he 's been wronged on
!he race track. he doesn't hesitate to let
his feelings be known.
At Riverside lntematio111I Raceway
Sunday, during the runnJnr ol lhe seoond
heat of the u.M Conlioental 5000 grand
prix, he became lnc:ensed over Brian
Red.man's apparent passing under the
yellow caution 011.g early In the: race.
Redman kept the lead for the balance ol
the race.
When he emelJed from his Winston·
Delta Surtecs TS-11 racing machine in
second place. he joined his crew for an
ofliclal protest of the situation and was
lold to put it in wrtllng and orflciels
would check lhe tapes .
After vl!llting the victory circle with
Redmon , he catmcd down t'On.SiderabJy
and actually praised hls foe along wllh
leaving a loophole for olOctals w etcape.
"During lhe early lap1 ol lhe IOC<llld
heat, I enjoyed a slim lead over Brian ."
Posey said. "I let of£ a little bit in tum
nine when J saw the yellow flag.
"My feeling is that it is entirely pass i-
ble he might not have tried to wi n the sec-
ond heat if he had remained in second
place.
"Brian's drive was impeccable and I
ought to know because J "'as within 100
feet of him all the way. He never turned
a wheel wrong and lt wasn't a piece of
dirty driving.
"It's quite possible that he didn't sec
the caution flag ."
Redman himself confirmed this theory.
"I have been drtvlng since 1959 and
have never b<!en penalized. Jf there was a
flag showing at tum nine, I didn't see it.''
Under lhe COmplJcat.d Nlea governing
the series, two 100 mJle racea art held
with at leaat an hour In between for
repairs, fuel and tire changes. The cars
llre all owed to go to the garage area dur·
ing this break in the acUon.
• .iooday, S1pt1mbtr 25, 1972 DAIL\' PILOT JS
Rams Blow Out of Windy City
With Ailing Gabriel, 13-13 Tie
Percival's
45-yard Kick
Paces Bears
CHICAGO (AP) -For the first time in
89 games and seven years, Roma n
Gabriel has fa iled tG start a s
quarterback for the Los Angeles Rams.
Gabriel finally made it into Sunday's
13-13 tie with the Chicago Bears. It was
just in time for him to get intercepted
and set up Chicago's only touchdown of
the game, a 30-yard pass lrom Bobby
Douglass to Earl Thomas.
"He had no feeling in his frngers," said
Rams coach Tommy Prothro of his
veteran quarterback. Gabriel has "had
trouble with his elbow for two years
now."
"I had planned w start." said Gabriel,
"but wDen I started to warm up I
couldn't throw at all. I squeezed a rubber
sponge and it felt better. If it hadn't felt
better, I wouldn't have tried to play."
The National Football League game
produced no sus tained drives of con-
sequence.
Every score resulted from a turnover
by the defense prompting Bears coach
Abe Gibron lo say, "Sure, but we didn 't
walk in for a free one."
THE FREE ONE
Ul"IT....._
The "Free one" came late In the first
quarter when Coy Bacon tipped a
Douglass pass inf<> the hands of Gene
Howard, who raced 24 yards fcrr a
touchdown. It set the pattern for the day. WASHINGTON'S VERLON BIGGS (89) PUTS THE CLAMPS TO ST. LOUIS QB TIM VANGALDER.
"Our defense rose to the occasion,"
said Gibron. "Our offense staggered but
so did theirs."
In addition to the lipped pass
touchdown. the Rams scored on field
goals of 20 and 45 yards by Davi d Ray.
The Douglass-Thomas pass pulled the
Bears within three points at 13-10 and
late in the fourth quarter, Ma c Percival
booted a 4S..yarder for the tie.
With 31 seconds to play, Ray attempted
a 47 yard field goal which "missed by in-
ches" according to Bear linebacker Doug
Buffone. ''I thought it was going to hit
the post and trickle in." ;,
Just as surprising as Gabriel's failure
to start was Los Angeles' failure to use
ruruting back Bob Thomas who last week
rushed for 144 yards in a 34-14 victory
over New Orleans as a substitute for
Willie Ellison.
"Thomas never plays when Ellison Is
ready," said Prothro, who added that he
decided to bring Gabriel into the game
late in the third quarter because "Gabe
thought he might be able to do
something. We certainly didn't do
anything without him."
As to what difference there was
without Gabriel, the Bears apparently'
didn 't care.
MADE NO DIFFERENCE
"Gabriel will never leave the pocket
but the other guy will run," said Gibron.
"It made no Wfference to us who
started," said Dick Butkus, who was in
on 15 tack.Jes. "We played sound footbaJI.
We were ready f o r everything and
stayed with our good game plan. \Ve
were alert for reverses with Beathard in
there but they didn't ~ry any of that
stuff."
"Maybe we didn't try any because they
were expecting it," said Prothro.
Statistics usually don 't tell the story
but in this game they warrant a second
look.
The Rams totaled 164 yards on offense,
99 rushing and 65 passing. The Bears had
170 ya rds. 144 rushing and a net of 26
passing.
A! Ch!c1CK1 -55.1~1
R1m1 7 J ! ...... Be11r1 o o l~-!J LA -H.,..ard 24 ""''' !nlerc~lkt<I relur" (Ill y k•Ck) LA -FG Ra,. 20
CM -FG Perclv"I 19 LA -FG 1!11y 4S
Cni -Tl'lo<n;i~ ClOl 1•U1 from Douallss IP1rclv11 • klcll"t
Chi -FG Perciv11I 4S
IJIOIVIOU.t.L l•ADERS
RUSHING -Los Anae!n. EIUIOll 11·.S, Smilh 1 .. JI; Ch;cacio. Dovqr11n 1.f:2,. llr rison l6.il6
RECEIVING -LM Anoeltt Elli'on 3.15, Sml!h ). iii, Chkacio, Thom1t1 1·•5.
PASSING -LM Antre11!1, BMIMrd .. 12-0. 46 WUll1. G1bf!•I l·lJ.-0, 19 Ylrd1; Chlc.t90, Douql,.11 ,;.
15·0, 52 '"nSI.
lo. Angel"' R1m1 I J J O -lJ
Chic.:tQO 8~1r11 o o J 10 -lJ
LA -Ho .. 11nr, ;, ~11 inlerceptlon (II•• klc~! LA -FG, 1!1y 10
Chi, -FG, Prrclv1I If
LA -FG. !lay 4S
CM, -Thoma11, :>O fMlll from OovollH IPtrcl·
VII klCI()
Chi. -FG, P9'"<:1\lll 4S
Attendanc1 -M.701.
F lr1t downt
Ru11lfl -y11rd1 P111l11Q y1rds
Rt!um y1n:11
P11sr1 Pllfl!S
Fumb!n -Iott
Prn.atroes -y1rd1
..... • ....
" " 1·11·1
·~ > 10·91
••n " ,.,u
" " ).fj.] ..., ,., ,.,
Area Gridders Staine
Wolverines' Hopes High
With Russell, Wilmore
Left in the wake of the weekend visit to
the Southland by the umversity of
Michigan football team are a rew in·
teresting tidbits, as given to this column
by U or M sports infonnation director
Will Perry.
During his visit to Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa, Perry talked about past.
present and future events which m<1y be
of interest to you.
For instance:
-Michigan's first air trip to the West
Coast \Vas in 1940 when Tom Harmon &
WHITE
WASH
Co. flew oul in 3 DC3s to play Cal at
Berke ley. Harmon celebrated his 21st
brilhday that Saturday afternoon by scor·
ing the first touchdown in a 41-0 romp.
-The upcoming Michigan basketball
team could be one of the finest the
Wolverines have tumed out and one of
the reasons for high hopes is a guy nan1-
ed Ru sselL
He's a 6-7 sophomore \vho's already
being acclaimed as another Cazzie
Russell , the ex· Wolverine great who now
plays in the NBA . \Vith Campy Russell is
Henry \Vilmore. t\vo time All-American.
Perry says Michigan could be as good as
any team in the country, excludin g
UCLA, which he fee ls is in a class by
itsclr.
-Mi chigan and Notre Dame will
rekindle a football rival ry that has been
renewed only twice since 1909 when they
lock horns in 1978 at South Bend. They'll
meet three more times after '78 before
that contract expires.
They've played 10 times s i n c e
Michigan won 3.() in 1887 with the
Wolverines holding an 8·2 series edge.
Notre Dame won the last meeting -35·
12 in 1943. Michigan "'on th e '42 tiff, 32·
20.
Citing other football rivalries. Perry
says there is none so intense as
Michigan-Ohio State because of the
ferocity of OSU fans. "It's unsafe to be a
Michigan fan when ~'c play in Colum-
bus." Perry tells.
-Why is Michigan football coach
Glenn Schembechler called Bo? It is a
monickcr that carried over from when
his little sister called him that, unable to
pronounce the word brother.
-And while other sports at l\1ichigan
have gleaned national r e c o g n i t i o n
through the years, Wolverine baseball
has turned out major leaguers such as
George Sisler (Hall of Farner), Bill
Freehan (catcher on the current title-
contending Detroit team ), Dick
Wakefield and Ted Sizemore (National
League rookie of year when with the
Dodgers ).
* * * There has probabl y never been a more
Sllt:cessful \reekend in football by our 15
Oraqge Coast area high schools and the
three area junior co lleges.
Out of 17 games played, ·Thursday
through Saturday, area sc hools turned
out winners 12 times. All three of the JC
teams won and the on ly prep losers were
Mission Viejo 18-7), Dana Hills (28·22),
University 121 -7), Newport Harbor (21-0J
and Costa Mesa (34-0 ).
Newport lost to another area team ,
Dana Hills did a standout job. con·
sidering the Dolphins were in thei r fi rst·
ever game against a school with a tough.
1vinning tradition (Carlsbad Army-Na vy ).
1'>1isslon Viejo fell to a two point con·
version and Uni \Vas simply outmanned.
Costa MeSSl·s score was the most
lopsided but the ti1ustangs "·ere again!>!
!he runnerup in !he 1971 large schools
CIF playoffs and a team ranked No. 1 in
all of Sout hern Californ ia in some circles.
Of the winners. Marina earns highest
acclaim for beating heavily favored El
Rancho. One writer had picked El
Rancho, sa--0, giving some indication of
ho1v highly touted the Dons were.
It 's "'ith considerable pride thal I offer
a doff of the hat to · all of our area
schools, coaches and players for a job
''ell done in those openers.
Tanner Upset String Ends
Smit/,, Outserves Youtliful Vpstnrt
WS ANGELES (AP)-Now lhal Wim·
bledoo champion Stan Smith has won
his first Pacific Southwest Open title and
110,000. his next challenge will be to keep
the Davis CUp in America for the fifth
year in a row.
"I think we ·11 be the underdogs against
Romania for the first time," Smith said
about the Davis Cup after defeating
RGscoe Tanner in straight sets Sunday
to capture the Pacific Southwest tille.
Smith beat Tanner. 6-4. ~ to become
the first player all week to survive the
ex .... <;tanford southpaw's name-throwing
service. Tanner collected the runner-up
check ol I0.000.
Smith outserved Tanner, out.aced him
9-8, and even outvolleyed and out-return+
ed him. He needed only 50 minutes to
smash Tanner who rose from t.he obscur·
ity of his 16th seeded position to the fin-
• als. defeating several prestigious play-
ers including Pancho Gonzalez. Nastase,
Manuel Orantes and Tom Okker.
After his win Sunday, Smith spoke
candidly about the Davis Cup linals in
Bucharest Oct. 13-15. l-Te talked about
the slow clay courts, the crowds and
other conditions that will favor Roman·
ians tile Nastase and Jon TirlRc.
.. They have au the.o;e things going for
them ," Smith said. "I know thcy·ve
bocn lelllng !heir Pllblic thal lhty could
beat us · if the matches were played ln
thtlr country. They're saying, 1We'll
kill 'em.' Well, that's what their fans
wlll be expecting them to do. Even if we
do get beaten that badly. it won't be any
worse than they expected."
Smith called his match with Tanner
Sunday "very close," but the lose r trom
Lookout Mountain. Tenn .. said, "If )'Ou
analyze It. right now I fl..-el like J v•11s
playing against a stone wall .''
In the women 's slngle~ finals, J\tarita
Redondo of National City, defeated Jan·
lco Melcalf of Claremonl, Calif .. 6-3. H .
6-2 for lhe dlomplonship of lht all·am·
ateur women's play.
Angels Play
Rangers After
Edging Twins
l\ll>IN EAPOLIS·ST. PAUL (AP) -
California's Rud y "'lay chC'cked the l\·hn·
ncsota Twins 2-1 on seven hits Sunday as
Chris Coletta hit his first major league
home run.
Coletta powered a Jim Perry pitch 390
fee t into the right !JeJd •blcachers in lhe
Angeb Slate
5'1>!. '~ Sel>I. 16
Sept, 21
AH lollllft ON KMl"C 17101
At1Qll1 11 l1•11 ~·}! Pm.
S;SJ P.tn.
~;5S p.m.
A1111ar1 11 Ttx••
AnQ1l1 11 l1•11
eigh1h inning aftC'r the Twins'
righthander had retired 19 straight bat·
tcrs.
The home r was one of only fo ur hits off
Perry, 13-15. J\1<iy boosted his record to
11· 11. losing his shutout \lt'hen Eric
Soderholm celebrated his 24th birthday
with a pinch-hit homer in the eighth.
Tonight the Angels are at Texas for a
game with the Rangers.
C•llf1nil1 UI MlflMMta HI
• ••rhrlll •brll'°"'
11.lcmar, 'b 4 0 2 Q TO•llr, II ' O 2 O
ll:l"e<s, ct • O I O lhOmp,.on, so ' 0 O O
Hc .. ~•d, lb • o O O l<dlrbre ... 111 4 o o o
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(Ol•lla. II J I 1 1 B•v•. ti J 0 I 0
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l<uwiyer, c l 0 O 0 J.Perrr, P 1 0 O O
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LaRoi;l>e, p O O O o Tol~I• lO ] 6 1 Totals )I 1 1 t
(11llv•nl1 010 000 010 -)
Minnno!a 000 000 010 -I
OP -California ), M1nn..,.01a I. LOB -C11h
lorn•~ 1, Mlnn~!a 5. ]6 -0af .. >n, ~Iver" HR' •
(olrha 01, !>odt<hOlm {111, SS Teva•. Br1111n.
~F -P1rk1r.
IP H R l'R ti 10
R.May ~W,11 ·1!) 9 I I 1 ? 7
J Perry (l,1:J.15J I • 7 1 o '
LlllOC..hl 1 1 0 0 0 I
Time -1;11. All•ndancr -S.259
Dodgei·s Ho st
Padres Tonight
LOS ANGELES -The 1972 National
League West win production of th e
Dodgers must be particularly frustrating
for manager Walt Alston as his team
heads into the final two Weeks or COITI-
petilion with what appears to be the best
pitching staff in the Nationa l League .
Alston's chaps poured il to San Fran·
cisco Sunday artemoon, 7·0. before 19.222
at Dodge r Stadium but still remain 1 L
games off the pace o( Cincinnati.
Al Do"11ing registered the Dodgers'
22nd shutout M"ilh a four·hitler .
San Diego moves in tonight for the
start or a three-game set starting al 8.
Claude Osteen shoots for his 19th victory
against the Pndrcs· Fred Nonnan 19-10 1
The Dodgers learned Sunday they have'
lost startlng pitcher Tommy John for the
balance of the season. The lefthander \vill
undergo surgery Tuesday for the
removal of a bone chip in his ltft elbow.
Si" lfr-IK• !01 Ln A..,.tn 01
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M8ddo~. cl
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elt rllrltf lllt r litt'lll
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3 0 I 0 McO.r'"°"· ID s 0 I •
lOOOlt:11u111,,~ S 010
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IOO~Dciwn1n<t,P JO O •
0 0 0 0
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l l O I O Totll1 '6 1 I' I
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111 .... 0fr 11 '] ) ' ' 1 l McMINft 1l !Ot e
DDwnl<>Q (W •I I t 4 0 t t
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I.
16 DAI LY PI LOT
Brother vs Brother
In GWC-Tartars Tilt
B)' HOWARD I.. llANO)'
01 Ill• P•!ly 1"1"'1 $1•11
\\1hen Golden \Vest College
rootball coac h Ray
Shackleford was p 1 a y I n g
quarterback at Co m p ton
College Jn 1958, he had an In-
terested, four-year.old ran slt-
tJng in the stands watching hb
performances.
Friday night, 14 years tater,
that wne fan will be trying to
defeat his brot~'s Golden
West College team when the
Rustlers entertain the
Compton Tart11ra at Orange
Coast College.
That fan is Ray's brother.
Kent , currently a freshman
quarterback !or Comptcn who
will probably get his first start
against the Rustlers on Fri·
day.
Kent la In h.is second year at
Compton but didn't play foot-
ball last seaaon and made a
late •tart llU. fall.
•11 was planning on getting
1narried."' he said lhis week.
"Rut coach (Chalk Ramsey at
Compton} t3lked inc into
playing and getting an educa·
Uon and my girl friend and I
agreed it was best."
The wedding date bu been
put oU for at least a year or
two and Ktnt Is loo~ng
forward to playing Ulla season
and nut for the Tartars
before moving to Ray's alma
rnater, t h e UnJverslty of
Arizona at TucJOn.
How does Kent look at
Friday's confrontation with
brother Ray and the Golden
West Rustlers?
"lt's got to be be a different
game, something special, for
me," he says with a broad
smlle. "We Just have to beat
Golden West."
Has Ray helped him with his
career In SPorts?-he's also a
third baseman In baseball.
"He was always too much
older than I was but he has
Sports In Brief • • ' Chiefs on TV;
Bull Gets Loose
..
helped mt some. Gene {f'~ar
rell J and I arc prretty good
friends and he l(Jds n1e a lot
about the game. lle's also
htlped me."
Whet about his mother and
father when the twein meet
on the gridiron? How will they
he rooting during the game?
"I think everybody ln our
family is !or me," Kent says.
Then hastens to add, "with ex-
ception of Ray and hls wife, of
course.''
At Com pton, Kent Is lollow-
lng in the footsttps of brother
Ray who was an outstanding
quarterback in his own right.
11e directed the 1957 and
1958 Tartar teams and In hls
second year was named to the
second team all-conference
squad at quarterback.
Who was the first team
signal-caller ? Bill Nelsen of
Cerritos and now a pro-
fessional with the Cleveland
Browns.
Ray recall.I one game for
the Tartars against Ventura.
"It was a third down situa-
tion and we lined up in short
punt formation ," he says.
"The ball was snapped to our
deep man. and J took off
downfield . He threw me a pass
and I scored on a 47-yard
play."
Later In the same game,
Shackleford threw a 31-yard
touchdown pass, but not to the
same halfback.
Pro Roundup
Passing Record
For Unitns, Joe
The New York Jets wU.hout
Joe Namath are llkti a car
without a motor, aCO)rd lng to
wide receiver Don Maynard .
The oft·times controversial
Namath led tbe Jets to a 44-34
victory over the Baltimore
Colts Sunday causing Maynard
to comment :
"Joe is so great, he makes
up for any weakness we have
in other spot.II."
Namath passed for sb.
touchdowns and 498 yards. His
touchdown total was one shy
of the National Football
League record and the most
by any quaterback in the past
decade. lfiJ yardage was the
third highest in league history .
Namath and Balti m ore
quarterback Johnny UnJtas s~t
an NFL record of 872 yards tn
a single garne. Namath com-
pleted 15 of 28 and Unit .. 26 or
44 for 376 yanll.
AT BUFFALO 0. J.
Simpson. the former Hel!man
Trophy winner from USC and
a San Francisco bay area
youngster when John Brodie
(37) and Charlie Krueger (3Sl
were breaking into NFL ac-
tion, showed his former he roes
some fancy running Sunday in
leading the Buffalo Bills to
a 27·20 victory over the 49ers.
Sunday. he ran for U8 yards
against them and. Brodie was
forced to watch most of the
action this time -from the
49er bench. He was out with
an injured wrist suffered in
the second quarter.
Atlanta's Bill Bell blew a 10·
yard field goal u·y with 28 sec-
ood.s left after kicking 1 .... ·o
from 38 and 21 yards out .
AT MIAMI -The Miami
Dolphins g r o u n d down
Houston 's defense on the rain·
slicked artificial turf of the
Orange Bowl Sunday for a 34·
13 victory over the Oilers.
Jim Klick, Larry Csonka
and Mercury Morris expressed
with the turf displeasure
despite the Miami victory as
the Dolphins kept pace with
the New York Jets with 2--0
record In the AFC East.
AT DETROIT -The Detroit
Lions lost their ninth straight
decision to the Minnesota Vi·
kings Sunday, 34·10, before
54 418 fa ns in Tiger Stadium a~ a national television au·
dlence. The Viklng victory string
daW back to 1968 with the
two teams scheduled to meet
again Nov. 12 in 1t1innesota.
AT NEW YORK -The
Dallas Cowboys beat the New
York Giants Sunday. 23-14,
thanks to a number of mis·
takes by th e losers.
One was an interception by
Chuck Howley and another
was a fumble recovery, bolh
setting up Dallas scoring.
AT WASHINGTON -Larry
Brown gained 148 yards in 26
attempts Sunday to lead the
Washington Redskins to a 24--
10 win over the St. Louis
Cardinals.
Jones Wins
As Marad
Blows Lead
RODINSON, Iii. !AP) -
Dave ).1arad, who had Just
blown his first big chance ta
win a title on the tough pro
golf tour, gave a rueful lltUe
shrug of his shoulders and
said:
HJ guess I got a little
careleess.
"I had !hat big lead and I
was out there thinking about
$20.000 and a year's exemption
and everything lhat goes wllh
being a winner."
That was on the 10th hole of
the water • logged Crawford
County Country Club Sunday
when the longshot struggler
had a five stroke lead over
Grier Jones.
Jones. however, made up
five strokes over the Jast
seven holes, rorced a playofl
and beat Marad on the second
extra hole for the '20.000 flrsl
prize in Robinson 's Fall Goll
Classic.
Jones, who had W0'1 the
Hawaiian Open earlier t h I !
season, got a second life when
h-1arad three-putted for a
bogey on the 72nd hple.
That set up the 15th playofl
on the tour this season -and
lhe fourth in as many years in
this tournament -and Jone~
1von it ""ilh a par on the sec-
ond playoff hale. r.1arad bog-
eyed it. missing a fourt foot
putt-about the distance of his
second putt on the final r'gu-
lation hole.
Jones had a three-under-par
68 in the final round on the
damp and soggy course whlle
Marad had a 69 as they tied at
273.
NEW QRLEANS -The
veteran, established Kansas
City Chiefs go against the
youthful, struggling New
Orleans Sai nt s before G na-
tional television audience
tonight with the Chiefs a solid
choice to rebound from an
opening R&me defeaL The
gan1(' is on area TV, Channel 7
at 6.
Stram referred to t h e
penchant or the 1971 Saints'
outfit for rising to unexpected
helghts ~gainst the league's
best teams, a tendency that
led to upsets 0£ Dallas, Los
Angeles and San Francisco
and a tie with Oakland .
To start that 1958 campaign,
Ray !llffered a shou lder
sepa ration and missed some of
the early games. Kent has
missed most of the first two
this year. but for a different
reason.
11e didn't report for the
Tartars tet(ll unli1 the day
before the opener and after
sitting out the 1971 ca mpaign.
his throwing arm was a bit
rusty .
COMPTON'S KENT SHACKLEFORD
AT GREEN BAY -Jack
Tatum picked up a fumble
four yards deep in hl5 own end
zone and rambled 104 yards to
a touchdown in leading the
Oakland Raiders to a 20-14
victory over the Green Bay
Packers Sunday.
Brown upped his four-year
career mark to 3,214 yards.
bettering the old Redskins
record of 3.112 yards by Don
Bosseler.
Jim Colbert was third with a
67 for 275. Labron Harris. the
1971 wiMer, and !\lac Mel.en·
don were at 276 with Larry
Hinson and John tied at 277.
Kansas City, commi tting
four turnoverS, lost 2~10 10
the ~1 iam i Dolphins last week
while the Saints were
smothered 34-14 by the Lo5
Angeles Rams.
Coach Hank Stram . aware
that his Chiefs are the ob-
viously superior untt on paper,
warned however, that the
Saints may noL go down
wilhout a strugg le.
''New Orleans surprised too
many teams a year ago for us
to lake them lightly,"' said
Stran1. "They make up in
sheer hustle what they still
might lack in experience and
Iha! means we ca n't afford to
let do.,.,·n at al!."
Baseball's
Top Ten
••i.tll Oii 411 11 1111.
AMERICAN L•AGua
l"t1vtf Club C A• It H ~ct.
C•r•w Min 111 s11 60 lit .m
ltydl O~k Tll S71 f] 111 .llO
0 . Alltn Clll 1~ ltl 90 1J4 .:lOf
~ch.elnblu,., KC 171 47' 51 112 .DI
Plnltll~ KC U] J.4] l l 166 .JOI
C. M•V Clll 144 SH I! H! .XII
fhk 8111 113 l:J(I 12 1711 ,300
0111 KC llS SOI 70 lSO .7116
M1yt>errv l(C 111 •11 S9 1411 .1tl
Mllf(f r N'!' 1'6 SH 9t Ul .189
H1t111e •u111
o . All111. C11lc1go, JI; Mvrce•. New
Vo••, lO: Kltltb,..,, M!nneonl•. !!. E~·
tltln, 01k!1nd, 1S; R Jlck1on, Oa~·
\111d, JS.
lt\1111 l•!ltd ln
o . Al!tn. CMc1go. 111. Mtytt.rrv.
Kt ,.111 (l1y. t1: M11rter. Nt., Vo•~
tO; S.C:oll. Mllw1vk..,, 11; J Powell,
Btlllrnort. I I .
l"llchl"'I 1' 01c111 ... ,
1-ivnl•r. Ot~ltnd, :Ill I •. 141 : Tll nl.
e.uton. 1'·!. lll, Pt lmfr, BeUl"'O'f•
1!.t .. 10Cl1 ()(111,.,,. Otkltn!I. l•·I, ,100,
Kl•ne, Ntw Y~r~. l~I. UI. Holl1m•11.
0~~1~,.,d. 1111, 671. Lohch. Detr~i•,
)11], l it, Wno<1, (n1r,1go. 11.n, .I!!
l•H• Oii IOO ti Ith.
NATIOPIAL LEAGUE
"l•ytr Cl\111 0 Al I
e w,w~m· (111 1u s•o 91
R~O t• All 170 H \ loO
C.fdtno lHll IJ) Sll 101
Gtrr A•I 111 S1\ 11
lli.Ollvt • llgll 1)) S)I IS
!lrocci. S•L U6 600 7' s.,,1,, ''" 111 4'1 e1
R"'' ''" 1•1 611 IOl S!tr;1ll PQ!I IXI •U n
W1!J"" Mtn 112 !JO 11 't1rot11 Pon lJO ..i.6 11 .. _ 111\1111
M l"cr
18• lll
111 l:S
!I• .)2~
161 l71
l•t )IS
111 .lt1
Ill :;10
191 )10
10 .30)
16] .JOI
ld .JO!
Col llert, !111 01190. ll; l'ltncl!, (Tn
Clnn•ll. 311 !1.Wlllltma, Clllt•;o. 3•;
Sl1~u. P111Htvrgl!, )Ji H.Al•O<i. At·
''""· 31. lhr111 l1li.d Ill
!11nc11. Clnc:!nn1t1, 1111 !l.W•ll•~m,,
Chle100. 111; St••o~11, Pl!hllurQ~ 111 :
Coln.rt. s ... Olf'VO. 11).1 ; L.M1y. HovJ•
ion, ti.
l"llchl"f U Dtcl•lon•
Nol•"· Cl<•el11n111, u .J. Ill; 111~11.
PltlJbUrQll. 11·1. 710; Ctrllon, Pno!od@I
01111. 11-10, .111, Junn. LO\ llin<1~!tl I!
I &If, l>Al'll}A•. (llt(•oo. IS./. ~·' 1.1 .,,1u11. Mll"1rt•I. ,. I. ~I. Elh•
P111•t1vroll. 11-1 661 C.•or1•1lt•· (,,...
[11\1\ll!i. 14·1 1411.
Meet the Man
Behind the
Safeco Smile.
e AUTO e HOME e YACHT e INDUSTRIAL e COMMERCIAL
• llONDS
ALi\1ER IA. Spain A
lighting bull found the outside
world as hard as the bull ring
Saturday when he escaped
rrom the ar&0a only to be cut
down by a police bullet after a
half hour of terrorizing ar-
ternoon shoppers.
The 600-pound bull wa s sixth
on the afternoon's card to be
fou gh t by mounted
bu!Uighters, Rafael a n d
Ange! J'eralta at Berja bull
ring ,
TJ1e bull escaped when
Rafael Peralta opened an out-
er door to see ir the brothers·
specially-bred horses had ar-
·rived at the arena. ll leaped
over the bullring barrier and
charged through the open door
into the main streets of Berja.
Three persons r e c e i v e d
slighl injuries as the animal
\\"ent on a rampage until it
\1·as finally :stopped by a
Gua rdia Civil {armed rural
police 1 bullet
-t.c ):,·
VA~COUVER. B.C.
Prime Minister Trudeau said
Sa turday he felt it would not
be \.\'isc for Montreal to stage
the type of "huge" Olympic
games in 1976 as those
recently concluded In Munich.
1\1ontreal Mayor J ea n
Drapeau ''seems to be taking
the same attitude," the prime
minister commented on a
rildlo prog ram.
··IJc has expressed the op in·
ion. :i n d I certainly agree
1vith 11. that lhere has perhaps
l)(>t"n ;111 over an1ount of
pres11i;e and status attached to
lhesc games. and y.•e should
return to something closer to
rhe original Olympic spirit."
Trudeau said.
u 'fr * ZA(:TlEB. Yugoslavla
Bulga ria's Jordanka Blagoeva
set a \vomen's world high
jump record . clearing 6 feet
41 1 inthcs Sunday at an in-
!ernntionat traek and field
meet
Thl' \\"Ot'lil l"C'{'nl'd or 6.:l1 1
"'ils sharrd hv A11s1n:1·s Ilona
c;u s C'nh:iuer :ind \\'est
(rcnn<tny"s UlrikC' ~leyfarth.
-----1
• BOB PALEY
& A•i.cl•lltt, lftC,
474 E. 17TH STREET
COSTA MESA
642-6500 -546-3205
··1 think il"s about read}
right now," he says.
In the Pasadena game he
completed two of six pass at·
tempts and Ramsey says he
will be the st a r I i n g
quarterback as soon as he is
ready. probably on Frida y
night.
I'll Probably Hide
My Eyes , Says Mom
The Raiders also scored
after a 32-yard pass in-
terference call that gave the
Raiders a first dow n on the
Green Bay one. Several
Packers fell the officials had
misjudged both plays .
AT CINCINNATI -Terry
Bradshav.· felt officials missed
at least tv.·o calls Sunday as
the Pittsburgh Steelers went
down lo defeat at the hands or
the Cincinnati Bengals.
Bob Menne. who had a share
of the lead "·ith l\larad -his
roornm;ite and I on g -t i m e
friend -starting thC day's
play -slipped to a 74 for 278.
The start of the da y's play
\\'SS hetd up for three hours:
and IS minutes by a heavy
rainstorm.
How does Ra y look at the
game Friday night ?
"It's an interesting situa-
!ion," he says . "But \vc'Jl ap·
proach its ju.<>t like any other
game. It really doesn't malter
who lhe quArlerback is." he
adds somewhat facetiously.
"Sure, there has to be some
feel ing and It adds a little
!lpice to the game."
That's as fa r as he will go in
expressing his feelings about
the meeting.
Naturally, he will secretly
be hoping his kid brother
doesn't get hurt but no other
holds will be barred . The
Rustlers will be stu nting and
red-dogging the Comp ton
quarterback ar. !hough his
pame \'i'as Smith or Jones and
Tiot Shackleford . the same as
their head coach.
\Vhen the Shackleford clan
gathers at the crossroads in
Orange Coast stadiUlTl Friday
night to watch the Golden
West Rustlers do battle with
the C.Ompton C.01\ege Tartars.
feminine famil y members will
have a hard time controlling
their emotions .
\\l i!h older brother Hay
coaching Golden West and
younger brother Kent calling
signals for the Tartars, those
closest to the t .... ·o were asked
how they felt about the game.
f'ilrs. Ra y (Ro sa ma y)
Shackleford. the mother of the
two combatants "·ho teaches
school, says:
"I think I'll st av home."'
Then as an artei-thought. she
adds:
··r just e'•en hate to see this
one come about. ru probably
hide my eyes 1nost of the
time.
Blassie-Shihuya Battle
Tops Wrestling Card
Freddie Blassic returns by
popular demand to battle
Japan's Kinji Shibuya ;ind a
six-man gang \.\'ar \Vilh almost
1.500 PCJUnds of human weight
in lhe ring at the same time
lakes place on Tuesday night's
v.:restling card at I he
Fairgrounds in Costa t.·lesa .
Blassie, the former four·
time world he a \' y "' e i g ht
champion, returns to Costa
Mesa alter an absence of
more than two years to battle
Shibuya Jn one of the main
events.
The promoter b a r r c d
Shibuya from the Fairgrounds
two weeks ago <tnd kept him
off last week's card as well .
but Shibuya \Va s fh('rC' 1.is!
week nevertheless lie r::in into
!he ring and attacked lhc pro·
inoter for bt?ing prejudiced
;iga.inst him.
~tcanwhilc . muscular Eurl
l ~lr. Universe) Ma ynard .
West Ger many's Eric Froelich
and MexJc.c's La Pantera
Negra squart off against Jan
Madrid, Rocky Montero and
Japan's Massa 5aito in the
other main event Tuesda y
night.
During a four·man tag-team
n1atch last "'eek at 1 he
~·airgrounds. ~Iadrld and Saito
first injured Pantcra's partner
and then gangC'd up on
Pantera until 1\layna rd ran in·
to the ring to make the odds
e\'en. Froelich soon ran into
!he ring as well . at which tin1e
t.Iadrid and Saito ran out of
the ring .
Madrid and &lilo soo n
returned to the ring deman·
ding to bring Montero with
them for a six-man gang war
grudge match a g a I n s t
Maynard, Fr o e 1 i ch and
Pantera.
Fitness Class
Adult · physical f i t n e s s
classes arc availabl.-. n I
Edison High School under Uie
superv ision of John Myers
The classes are at 7 p.m,
Tuesday nights with en1pha~is
on weight training, flexlbiU ly
exercises and cardi(rvascular
excercises.
{ee for the clus is $6.
LEASE DIRECT
lt7l PONTIAC GllAND PllX
s1oa~R
MO.
1• l't'IO, Optl'I end .... t " L, IMl t lr, AM•,M, vt!'lyl too. I". Wind., tUI wllltl.
Ol!~r may be wlft'lllr1wn
l !IVll!l\t.
OlD•R NOW POR IARLJIST DILIVUY
ASK l'OI PIED DOllAN
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
YOUR PAtTORY AUTHORIZID DIALU Z480 H-~lvd. tot fair Dr., C-M-14'-'017
•
··Perhaps my grandson
(Ray 's boy) is right. He said
y.•e would have to sit in the ivy
in the end zone and be for both
of them. It's going to be pretty
hard to be neutral."
Sister Sherry, v.•ho 'vas on
hand at Golden West's game
against Mt. San Antonio Satur·
day night with her husband
and mother , says:
··1 think I'll be tor Kent. He
still needs to prove him.sel f
while Ray's more self suf-
ficient."
Sherry is in the middle of
the two Shackleford brothers,
agewise.
Perhaps Ray's wife Pat said
it best , though.
•·1 really don't know how I'IJ
feel. I've known Kent since he
was born. He's grown up just
like one of my own kids.
"I guess I want to see him
do good in the game but l
\Vant us to win."
The battle lines are drawn
<ind the Shackleford family
members are looking forward
to Friday night and !he first
confrontation of the brothers
Shackleford.
Tatum's spectacular run-
back, which erased a 7-3
Green Bay lead. wiped out the
National Football League's
oldest record.
George If alas of the Chicago
' Bears held the old mark with
a 98-yard fumble re tu r n
against Ma rion in 1923 .
On the play. the Packers
argued that Mac.Arthur Lane
muffed the ball instead of
fumbling it and therefore,
Tatum was ineligible to return
it under the ru1ebook .
AT FOXBOBO, MIH. -
earl Garrett is glad to he back
with the New England
Patriots and proved bis point
Sunday in a 21·20 victory over
the Atlanta Falcons.
Garrett was traded to Dallas
in 1971 £or Duane 1bomas but
when the latter refused to
report to New England , Gar·
rett was sent back.
Sunday he scored t h e
deciding touchdown on a 12·
yard run mid way through the
fourth period despite having
strained li gaments in his left
knee.
The two plays he was refer·
ring to were calls against wid e
receiver Ron Shanklin on
passes ruled inc omp lete
because he caught them out-
of-bounds.
P.1arad. 139th on the money
list this season and trying for
the third to make a go of it on
the tour, romped out to a big,
quick lead.
Pro Grid Standings
"" Amedt1n Conr1r~nc.
New YO•~ it!•
M!t m!
81/lftlo
Hew Enol•nc
ltlUmort
CIJIC111Ntl
l"fthri.uroh
Clt Ytll lld
HOUllOll
01kl1nd
Si n Dll'QO
0 111ver
1(1nt1J City
l••I
W \. T Pct. Pt•.01"
1001.000 l!ll
?001.0001~13
l 1 0 .SOO ~I 6!
1 I 0 .SOO 11 l\
010 .00031!'
C1ntrtl
' • 0 1.000 • " ' • • ·"" .. " ' • • ·"" " " • ' • .... ~ •
Wt "
' • . ·"' .. ..
' ' • ·"" •• • ' ' • "" .. " • ' • .... " " Ntllonll Conftrtnt1
l••t
0111••
W11l!lnglon
SI Lov!l
New York G!1nl1
Ph·l!•d•IP'llt
W L T l"t l. lllt. 01'
1 O 0 1.000 Sl 20
)001,000 •1 .ll
1 1 o IOO ;o n
070.000 .JO H
0!0.0001J U
C1~1r11
M!nne1011 G,...n ••v
Otlntll
Ch!c100
••• • • '
' ' •
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.11)(1 •O j(I
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LO• Anotlt• I 0 l ISO ll 11
S1n Frt r>el!CO 1 1 0 .SOO Sol JO
lliTltnU 1 I 0 .$00 )1 41
Ntw Orl11n1 0 I 0 .000 11 )l
Swn•tY'• 1111..,.111
SI~ Oit90 31, Dtnver U
Mi1ml l•. Hou•ton 13
Ntw v,,..t J1t1 44, 811!1~• )I
Cinc:ln,,111 IS, Plll!Dvl"llh 10
01111, 2J, New York Gltnll If
Loi AllQtlH n , (~ICIOQ 1), llt
Mln1111<1t1 ll, l>ttron 10
W11~lno1011 ll, SI Lwl• 10
N•w Engl1f\O 11. Allenr1 70
Clt Ytltl\C 11, P~ll•llf!Ohtt 17
01~l1nd l'O, Ci•l'fll lltY Tl
l ut11!0 11. Stn ~r1nclKo 20
Tonlthl'I Olmt
l(.inu~ C•h •I Ntw Orlt1n1. N•ll,,.,tl
" Sund1y'1 Ot!MI
811!0"10rt II Bw!!tlo
Cl~clnnlll ti (11Ytl1nd
0.11,, ~I. G•ttll B•v ., MnwM•
O@lrolr •• '~•CIOQ
ll~n,~1 Coty ~1 Dt nYf•
LOI •P>Ot!tl t i A1l•nl1
Mlt ml 11 MlnMIOll
"'" Vor~ Jtll 11 Mot11!on
Po!!tburol! •I 51, Lovl1
S1n Oleto 11 Otklll"ld
Sin Fr•n(!lco ti Ntw Orlllnt W11~1ng1on •I New Enol•M
Baseball Standings DEAN LEWIS
NATIONAL LEAGU~
East Dtvtston w L
x-Pittsbu rgh 92 55
Chicago 81 66
New York 76 70
St. Louis 11 78
~fontreal 67 79
Philadelphia 55 92
West Division
x-Cincinnati 9l 56
Houston 81 65
Dodgers 80 87
Atlanta 68 79
San Francisco 63 85
San Diego 56 89
x-Cllnched Division Tille.
S11ftf1V't ltwlt\
Montrrll 1. Pllht11.110~ l
Nrw York 1, Phllad1llltli1 l
Sin 0 1,..0 2. A!l1nl1 1
SI. Louil 2. ChlCl9" 1. 10 i!lnlnG~
ClnclllNH 10. ~slOll J
U. ~ ,, S.n ,,Witco t
~ .,....,.. .......
5-ln 0 1'11• {Nor"'*" fo.10) II LH tftll , .. ,,
Only ··~ Klldulffl. T,,.......,'1 i;..,_.,
C!llel90 ... ,..,..,h'ffl
JllttMMwh It ""Utdttloflle
Ntw Yorti: 8' tr. l.oult
"'''-"'• •t c1nc1-11 ,.., "'""llc:o 11 Holn!Ott Sff D+.tl et Lit ..........
Pct.
.626
.551
.ill .In
.459
.J74
.619
.555
.544
.463
.426
.386
GB
11
1s1~
22
24Vl
37
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ea5t Division w L Pct. GU
Boston 80 66 .548
Detroit 80 66 ."41
Baltimore 78 69 .531 2" New York 78 70 .527 3
Cleveland 67 83 .447 15
t.1il'¥\'aukee 61 87 .412 20
Wei t Dlvl1ion
Oakland 87 60 .592
Chicago 83 63 .!68 3112
Minnesota 75 70 .517 11
Kansas City 72 74 .193 14 'h.
An1el1 69 78 _4&1 18
Texas 52 94 .356 341·2
111111..,'I lllH1tllt
Ntw YOl't; fol, Clwtl•nd •J, ISi Ol"'t II lnnlno~
""""' , ' Detroit , C1llr.t"lll1 2, MlnNtolt I
Clll<~'° J. T1~11 • 11-lllfl'IOtt 4, MllWl\lkt~ )
1(1n1•1 (lty 1·1. 0.kllnd 1·f
TMtlY'• 0-•
c1Hl9nlill flltv1n 11.1n 11 tn•1 !!lotm1" '·ti MlftllttOll (Coftllit .. ,, •I 0.klll'lll fl4o!h,..1n
11-101 OnlY ttmft Odled\llW. ,.,....,.,. '""'" MlmllOll 1t Oet;ttt'lll
C..lftnM 11 Tull
IClfl"'° City .t Ol!ute CltYtllfld 11 11""'-9
MOW..,._ 9" """" ontYMIMI ......... •
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lllNANCIH~ A•AIU,llJ
WITH HO DOWM P4'•DIT
0 .A.C.
I
22 Ready
For Rac e
Off Coast
fl,onday , SrptPnlbf'r 25 _1_.,_2 __ _
OAILV PILOT #7 ------------------....,
Some 22 yachts arc expected
to answer the sta rting signal
Tuesday at San F'rancisco for
!he 385-mile Californla Coastal
Race lo Newport Bea{'h.
The event is co-sponsored by
St. f'rancis Y·achl Club and
Newport Harbo r Yacht Club.
The top trophy at stake is the
Baldw i n ~f . Baldwin
Perpetual.
The race will start In front
of St. Francis Yacht Cl ub near
the Golden Gate and finish off
th e Newport Pier.
The race is limited to 50
sailing yachts. All 1nust have
International Offshore Rule
certificates and must be
enrolled in a rcrognized yacht
club.
For most of the local yachts
entered in the race it will be a
OOmeward bound affair follow-
ing the racing at San Fran-
ci~co earlier this month and
lht T i n s I e y Island Stag
Cruise sporu;ored by St. Fran-
cis Yacht Club.
Thayer Crispin is general
chairman and John MOO'lllle
and Larry Somers are ar
chairmen of the finish com-
mittee.
Thia will be the second year
of the race.
Fran Boldt
Cops Race
For Ladies
Fran Boldt of King Harbor
Yacht Club was the winner in
the largest class in last week's
Little Old Ladies Regatta c.;
sponsored by Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club, Balboa Yacht
Club, Lido Isle Yacht Club and
!\e\•,.port Harbor Yacht Club.
~1rs. Boldt won the Sabot A
class with 21 entries. Sum·
mary:
SABOT A t21J -Fran
Boldt, KHYC; (2) Le!lle
DrOC<!, SMYC; (3) Betty
i1ogan, NHYC: (4) Monica
·Manzer. SDYC ; {S) Fay
Hwnphrey, ABYC.
SABOT B -It ) Kay Pennel,
SDYC; (II Connie Melhorn,
SDYC; (3) Ruth Brown,
SDYC; (4 ) Dottie Munroe,
NHYC ; 1S) Betty Graves,
LYC.
SABOT C -(I) Jean
Taylor, SSSC: (2) Orothy
\Vheeler. SDYC ; (3) Barbara
ti.loon. BCYC: (4) Carol
Martin, NHY C; (5) Jane Ber·
linji!er, SBYC.
WI NARD SABOT-A -(I)
Barbara Bishop. PDYC; (21
Ann Hagen . PDYC ; (3) Jean
Howard, CYC; (41 Ellie Frien-
derstin, CYC.
WINARD SABOT-B -(1 )
Eleanor Torees, KHYC.
LID0-14 -Betty Brooks,
BYC.
Log Race
Captured
By Margene
Margene, skippered by Gene
De Young of Shark Island
Yacbt Club, Newport Beacb,
was the winner of California
Yacht Club's sixth aMual
predicted log race for the
\Valter Del Mar Perpetual
Trophy Sunda y.
Sixteen cruisers started the
41-mile race from three dif-
ferent locattons with a com·
mon finish line at Cat Harbor.
Calallna Island. The starting
areas were Marina del Rey.
Long Beacb and Newport
Beach. The Oeet rounded a
"bllnd point" - a latitude and
longitude posltion b e Io r e
flnlshlng at Cat Hamor.
Mareene's percentage of
error over the course wa!I
1.218. Summary:
(1) Margene, Gene De Young ,
SIYC. t.218 ; (2) Jae Tel, Jack
Plessis, DRYC, 1.2811; (3) Nani
Kai Dexter Wood, SIYC,
2.az9; (4\ Arrlbo, Mel Lurie.
Venice YC, 2.314; (I) Carole
Gee, Irv Herman, Venice YC.
2.62Ao
Flood Havoc
SEOUL (AP) -South
Korea's wont floods In 47
y .. rt left 413 persons dead
last month and cau..ed proJ>-
erty d11m11ge totalln1 nt.arly
$67 million, Ute Constructlon
Ministry reported.
. MAalNI
HOLDIN• TANKS
MIW l"YlflMI CHI
Ull IXIJfl ... MIAD
BOATING
Entri.es Due
For Argosy
Bay Race
Entries for Newport Ocean
Sailing Association 's 15th an·
nuaJ Alamitos Bay Argosy
Race Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 must
postmarked before midnight
next Friday, race chairman
Preston Zillgitt announced .
The first race or the Argosy
is from Newport to Alamitos
Bay on Saturday. The Oeet
will rendezvous at Long Beach
Yacbt Club Saturday night and
race home Sunday.
The event has been ex·
tremely popular since its in-
ception as it gives sailing
families and their guests an
opportunity to participate in
racing and enjoy a pleasant
weekend.
Trophy lt'inners Listed
Many Vie in Regatta
\
The ~ual Fall Regatta,
Jointly sponsored by Balboa
'Yacht Club and Ncv.•port
llarbor Yacht Club drew a
large entry li st in 14 classes
Saturday and Sunday. Follow·
ing arc troph y winners by
class:
Newport Barbor Yacht Club
Outt.ide Classes
OCEAN HA CING -(ti
S wift, Arrigo and
Mallinckrodt, NHYC and
BYC; (2) Porpy, Roy Sioclair,
BYC; (3) Ana Marla II, Al
Schoellennan. BCYC.
RHODES..33 -(I) Mistress,
Bill Taylor, BYC; (2) Firefly,
John Kewell . BYC; (3)
Impulse. Paul Marx , NHYC.
EXCALIBUR -It) Com-
m o ti o n . Butler·Alcwnbrac,
NHYC; (2) Husky, Flint
Smith. BYC; (3) Howlin Ch\•I,
Inmates Get
Grin1 News
KUALA LUMPUR , Malaysia
(AP) -The Malaysian deputy
prime minister has turned
down a proposal that married
men jailed without trial be
allowed c o n j u g a 1 relations
with their wives. Detained
persons can be held for a tw.;
year period without trial under
a security law.
\VoodJCarrob. NHYC. KITE A -! l l Bottom
SHIELDS -Patience. C'arl f>unker, Tom \Villson, BYC. STARS
Reinhart. NHYC; f2l Tomina, KITE B _ (!) No name. Sydnry On1al'r is nnC' ol
111 .. \l'lrld'.:; i;rcal as1rolv-Bill f\.1artin, NH)'C. Nancy Hargraves, BYC. J:•·rs. !li:i; ~·Clhunn i~ on•• or
LUDEllS-16 -(I l Kildl'(". FLIPJ>Elt _ Lemon Drop. th•· DALLY l'rt.O·r S ~rl.'at Ben Hromad ka, Lahaina YC; f('<..t urC's.
(2 ) Geranium. Ruth Haskell , l j~Sc~o~ttiCa~r~ter~,~B~C~Y~C~.iiiiii~~::;;;;;;;;~iiiiiiiiill NHYC. Ii
PHRF-I I ) Ham pshire
Roads, Dennis Burnett, S.SSC:
(21 Bonita , Goldie Joseph,
LIYC.
ENDEAVOR -(II Happy
Go Lucky, Hap Lord. BYC:
(2) Mullany, Bob Myers. BYC.
Balboa Yacht Club
Inside Classes
SABOT A -j I ! Racing
Machine, Mark G a u di o ,
NHYC; (2) Buckshot. Jim
Buckingham, NHYC; (3~ Far
Out, Ty Beach, BYC.
SABOT B -(I) ThC' \Vh ite
Hope, Wally Gerrie. NHYC:
121 No name, Steve Rados.,
NHYC: ( 3 I Waterwiggle.
Kathle€'n Gerrie. NHYC.
SABOT C -(I ) Scott Ben-
Jamin. NMYC; (2) No name,
Brooks Benjamin, NHYC ; (3)
Shoo, Libby McDonald, BYC.
L!D0-14A -(1) One-For·
The-Road. Jim Tyler, BYC;
(2) Phaster, Alan Oleson,
BYC; (Jl Fang, Don
Stoughton, BYC.
LID0-148 -(1 \ Julie ll,
Fred Toepel, BYC; (!) Too
Grand, Bob Ucciferri, SI
BYC : {3l Chaste, George
Chalfont. BYC.
m eet the SI0,000 panthe1·* ...
by dcTom11so ... in11•)r!N1 for Lincoln-~tc~ry. ltali~n
1oaC'h11•ork CP'fl1l'd by th•• brillianl Ghia Studios of Turin.
F'ord designC'd !he .1~1 CID ·l\' \1-3 cngin<'. Four 11·h('('I _111-
dcpcndrnt suo,;pc nsinn 11nd rnjd-.o:hi[l rn~inr placement. Flvf'
sp1•t'Cl ~1>ar box, full) synchronizC'd ..
PANTERA
r:inlcra .. ltuhan fllr Panth•·r
Or.1•Jt Co••l:/.s ~ 1-..,,.;111/ r:;.,, Ci1rs•
• 540.5530
football fans whohuy·
. For /oya/1<am /Ions or more of She;!/
··· f)·lf,upof ~~~· · t1lfna.3he//5tat1ons. 8'ffl1
1 • eatnar1,,/C!p J
9850,1n r'
J(.am
emblem
on one
·.5ide.
""'------------· . --~~ .. -
I
. OPficia_I #,fl
;ns1i 111a on
eother
·side.
\
*Offer m1yv1ry at
particlp1tln1 stations.
Most Shill statlDns
ire partlclpatin1.
Shell products pe1form THI HOLDING tclflOPlUIY ............... ~
• I .
Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO
Co-Sponsored this week by
HARBOR VIEW
CENTER
San Joaquin Hills Road & MacArthur Blvd.
Newport Beach
And The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT
Top Weekly Prize in
Merchandise Certificates
For Weekly Second
Place Winner
Each for Third, Fourth
and Fi~h Place Winners
Plus Bonus Prize Game Tickets
from the DAILY PILOT
Be a pigskin prophet for profit. _Play the Pi!ot Pigskin
PI CKEROO game for weekly ·pr11es. Top winner ·~ch
week receives $25 gift certificate from the 1ponsor1n9
~hoppin9 center. Second place winn er 9ets $10 cer·
tifi cate and third, fourth and fifth place winneri e~c:;h
get $5 certificate. Each cert ificat• is sp~ndablo, 1~1t
like money, .,+ •ny store in the 5ponsor1n9 shopping
center.
Sponsorihip rotates wit h a different. center sponsor-
ing each week's con test. Participating centers are:
Wesfcliff Plaza , 17th and Irvine, Newport Be.ach ;
Ha rbor View Center, San Joaquin Hills Road and
MacArthur Boulev ard, Newport Beach ; Eastbluff
Vill age Cent er, Eastbluff Dr ive, Newport Bea ch; Bay-
side Center, Bayside Drive and Jamboree Road, New-
port Bea ch; and Un ivers ity Park Shoppin9 Center,
Culver and Michelson, Irvine.
Watch for th is player's form each we•k in the DAILY
Pl:..OT Sports Section. Circle the teem you think will
win in ea ch pairing in tho list of 30 games •nd send i"
the player's form entry blank ore reesonable facsimil e.
Then watch -the DAILY PILOT sports page' for Hc:;h
week's list of five winners.
RULES
1. S11llm1t Hit .,, •• .,. lll•ftk llflllW ••• r•IMl!lllt l-ctlmU1 If II .. tfll•r
lhl COf11151.
I, S.nd If lo: 1"1LOT l"IGSICIH PICl<EllOO COl>IT&ST. SpOrl o.,..11mt111, P.O.••• 1$4.t, Co111 M .... , CA. tl'26.
:I, O:ilt'f' lftl tlllry pet' HrlOll M Ch -II.
4, E'ltrlff ""'" k Pfflm.rtiftl ,,., 11111' ft!1t1 mh:l11it111 Wed11•Ml•'f' 1r lltllvlfed It l1lt OAILY l"ILOT •lllct lly S p.m. Th11rH1y,
J. P'•l1klP1tl11t IMl'Cfll ftl• Ind DAILY l"ILOT •mfleY••• Inc\ lhtlr tmrn. 1111111 l•mllltl ftOI 1W,illlt lo tt1t1r.
6. TIE aJIEAKE• eU.HK MUST 81i fLLLEO IH Oil EHTllY IS VOID.
•••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY BLANK • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
•
Circle ,.... r•• ttilU. wUI wl11 rills wee•'• 901Mt
(hOIM tMM ii HCOftd OIM ll1ted)
Rams vs. Atlanta
San Dleo vs. Oakland
Cincinnati vs. Cleveland
Miami vs. Minnesota,
Oregan vs. UCLA
Michigan State vs. USC
Purdue vs. Notre Dame
Tennessee vs. Auburn
Minnesota vs. Nebraska
Northwsetern vs. Pitt
Cal vs. Missouri
Illinois vs. Washin9ton
Wisconsin vs. LSU
Rice vs . Georgia Tech
Maryland vs. Syracuse
Compton vs. Golden West
Rio Hondo vs. Oran9e Coast
Citrus vs. Saddleback
Marinia vs. Estancia
Pacifica vs. Mission Viejo
LB Wiison vs. Westminster
San Clemente vs Alemany
Army-Navy vs. La9una
Edison vs. Oran9e
Costa Mesa vs. NewllOrt
Mater Dei vs. Chaffey
Los Ami9os vs. University
FY vs. Huntin9ton Beach
CdM n. Santa Ana
Dana Hill vs. Rim of World
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• ht •n • Pf!Mt lltttcl ,....,_ 11 •
• H•IM •
• • • Add,... •
• •
• C_l-'---ly ---· -----%Ip _ _ _ • • •
• '"•• S.• ---• ...... -.. -... -.-....... .
I
-
DICK TRACY
TUMBLE WEEDS
vou" GLASSES ARE
SROl<EN,YOUA: CL.OT~ES
ARE OtRTV.
By Chester Gould
A. TYPICAL ·
IU!VOLUTIONARY '. I
-MA.MMA ANO
I PIANUT BUTTER SOLVE
EVEQYT~JNG!
By Tom K. Ryan
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
SNAKE·f:Yf: JUST ~ROKE OUT OF
JAIL.! ... HE L.EFT1HIS NOTE: ...
OH IS 'TllAT SOI WSLL, H~'S A•SOLUTSLY Rl&HT! MOVI! 111! CITt L.IMllS SIGNS
11 OU1' A"°U1' rll'lY '(ARPS!
M< FRl31'W. '/His io·
1"i TW12 lr:R e/"ffl
Rij2'f::Ric .... . 11WAR NIN6! TEL.L. 1HE JUD(;f: 1J.1 IS
TOWN AIN'T E'IG ENOUGH FOR
eon1 OF OSJ 11
MUTT AND JEFF
,.,_ ___ ,....---; ....... -T"i:'"I i! 5~
' J
J
J
! •
By Al Smith GORDO
• • •
I WONDER ooW
... ~ ......... -' ... ~ ...... .._ .... MOON MULLINS
FIGMENTS
-.,
NANCY
\;\ £££ ... IYf
w T n11o PET MOL£
TIIAT FaJ.OW5 ME
-... __J E:VERYW11E~ ...
"
, ... ···· ....
WOW···A
QUARTER
DAILY CROSSWORD By R. A. ·11'ower
ACROSS 44 Se~o ... :
lnfoun!ll
I Mounta•n '" Co,,odtid 47 French pa'' ~lllSOt\i "I Ho1~1m .... + ~9 P•ece of l~nd 9 8•1hp1"5 !>Cl Concord~. tor
nec~~111y on" I~ At ~1: Srr>t. " Bllcoma £nil. 15 C•lv on ma 52 Young Aar· Var. ho11•!1!l 16 Manie Ltlf M lho,,nht GarOen' !ill 0 .. 11 fmlsh 17 C"rt~in U.S. 60 Young 11nimRI pol•llc11>nl " Fnot rro1.1Ulcs
19 ·-··· cti~'ll" 6:;! Accu1ed 70 Up fo< ·-··· p<1rson's 21 AfH1or11me· rhl hlnS•! Pre!,. ~4 Sun<!~ nl ~ 22 H~rnl'11¥'. p"lrn ] At>I>! wf>"h 2J O"&~tlOn hli D~~r.upt,.n ;i4 r·1~1. l"w<11n>1 26 w .. ,01,u ot bl \,orlrlo~~ ol 1'1111.; P'l"c«I!'"" ]9 M.-11 (•R \.,!1"1'"•\IOU IJAv"'·'I'~ 1/l 1 h(• h1•.,VOU' Jt Cornn"'" /<I (,~""''llfl<t<l r.nnl•,,ri.,,n " f\.1•"''C$ J7 M~n !•V OOWN
w'"""'''l ' IJ»~'1•""'"''N
JJ M"'" " ·f"'H(l11 !lll<'ll~nl., "' ,.,,,~ 36 J .. 1 .. , v~"'n 3 M r>ril ~at h~•o, i ,1w1
38 \" l'"t l• ~ 1 hn alphAt•t! 39 11"· "M" ol !.o Cclloc "R(.Mf''• '"'!1''"1" 41 w.~nch • f; p .......... , •3 a~1-~•¥ ti•'""' Jl'Odu~I I l>o .tho,,,tl
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Nearl:y Everyone
Listens to Landers
I
"
PEANUTS
By Dale Hale
By Ernie BushmHler
OH; GOODY--
IT'S
YOURS ·
?! ""o Whom It Moy 1; ~' -• Concern; h
jl ,[
GIMME
A HANI>,
' ,,
ANIMAL CRACKERS
By Charles M. Schulz
.--------~ .Dear Whom,
JUDGE PARKER • By Harold Le Doux
A FTER THEY
WATCH LEE BORG-
SON LEAVE HIS
MOTEL, THE
POLICE LIEUTEN-
ANT CALLS ON
TANYA WHILE
SAM DRIVER
WAIT5 IN
THE CAR!
WHERE IS I ... 1
YOUR HUS· DON'T
8AND, MRS. KNOW ...
BORGSON?
WHEN W.H.L·.' HE DIDN'T SAY!
HE 6E I THINK MAYBE
B K? HE WENT BOWLING !
. HE DIDN'T KNOW
ANYTHING ABOUT
l HAl BEVERLY
. 8AR5lOW ...
HE MUST HAVE KNOWN SOMETHl
ABOUT HER! YOU PEOPLE SENT
HER A 81LL FOR $2.-0:;0~--lll ... FOR SERVICES ~
RENDERED! WHAT
.KIND OF SERVICES?
MISS PEACH By Men
!
j
i
! •
At.AS,
'fHE
TR EE !
T).fe'.RE HE NOW
STANDS, 5HIVElllNG
AND FORLORN,
AL ONE'. AG.4/NST
'fl.IE ELEMENT~ ...
---
PERKINS
SOON w1~1r!S
IC.Y LASH HE Wll.t..
FEEL, MIS S'AP'
CO NISEALING-,.MIS
l'/ltlTTlE. 9Al<I<
nAJ<IN& TO ~r
VNfJL,F'l~LLY,
HIS l<Al/A/;6>
*ELETON'!'/ILl. STAND,
WITM EACH S 'L''"·
9LEAK ANp STAll:l<
A6'Al~T WINTEll:'S
~li:SH PACl(G.~NP. . '
W/'fAT'$
WITH '
MIM
1'
14f'S PREPAlllf•I'
fOR MIS CA~Ull:
ASAN
All:TIF'IC"'t.
FLCWEIC
~AUiSMAN ...
By John Miles
i•n, t)>o •,.iw 1 '""' Tt1-.•)••I•"•
J ('r,:JM 1·lS
. •
i
l
! -
1'!1EY ONLY
GOT ONE
SHOVEL ...
... AllD J!l/E 601' ·
NAST(/. ISC~APes .
A~D 5GRATCHE6
AU. OV!ll ME !
l ..
"
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
'!,,_ <40TfA l<'EEP
NEWMAlH IN
\lS P~,ACE ...
By Roger Bollen
:t Ml)Sr Ht.we.
~~9iW~11<l
THE GIRLS
9·1> '?,,,.,
"Well, there's r:nore of J'Ollr manufacturer's indiff
for you -the mstructi?n manual doesn 't even me~~e
funny httle screeches."
DENNIS THE MENACE
• !l ~
I
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•
I,
..
' I
1' I • \
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..
..
'
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Mondly, Sfpttmbtr 25, 1972 DAILY PILOT Jlf
Everyone Hai
Something That
Someone Elie Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Seti It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Want Ad ·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
General General
• • -----:--""-7
.,~~~ •1 .•
'
BEST BUY ON BAY , • , ,
. , ..•.. PIER AND SLIP
1306 We11t Bay on the Balboa Peninsula, re-
duced again by motivated seller who will
carry the first TD with 20% down at 7~ %.
Delightful family home -5 bedroom, family
room with forever view. New price $179,500
VIEW , ••• -
•• , •. HARBOR AND OCEAN
~joy it all from this 3-bedroom, 2 bath
me with 2 fireplaces (l in living room , 1
dining roo1n), builtin kitchen. See bar·
bor lights at night from your own garden
patio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $64,950.
LIDO ISLE , , • , , , .•.
. , .• , , , , LUXURY
... in this beautiful 2 story 4-bedroom. 3
bath home with many extras and builtin kit·
cheo. On extra wide lot, so you can store your
boat or trailer . . . . . . . ............. $79,500.
BUI LDERS ATTENTION •• , .. ,
. , , . , VACANT LOTS
In Costa l\ilesa -Good land value. T\vo 60'
lots have to be sold together. 1108 & 1110
Victori'a. Take a look and make an offer
... $32 ,500.
DANA POI NT , ••• ,
, • , •• DUPLEX
Jn up-and-con1i ng area of Dana Point. XLNT
INCOME PHOPERTY. One-2 bedroom, one-1
bedroon1 . .close to everything including the
harbor. This will go in a hurry ..... $35,000
~ NDASSllCwtS
REALTORS
644-7270
2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
Just listed!! One of the best values it has
been our privilege to offer in the "BROAD·
MOOR ESTATES". 4 Spacious BR. plus for-
mal din. rm . & family rm. 21h Baths. 3 Car
gar. with door to rear 'yard for the hobbyLc;t.
All of this PLUS an xlnt VIEW of ocean &
bay, for $78 ,500 -~ the lo\vest price in Broad-
moor.
Convenient parkini-easy to be
a "DROP-IN" at Bay 6: Beach Realty 675-3000 _I BAY & BEACl-I R·~AL
, ... .,~ .. ,,., ~••10• aua 1"'" ,..,
MACNAB
IRVINE
DOVE R SHDR ES-
NEW LIST,ING
Ivan Welb: built. bay ll
mountain view from f'very
room. Large }"R I.: lot size
make this lhe perlt'cl honie
for the expanding latnily.
~.500. (}-~15!.
TU RTLE ROCK-
PANDRAMIC VIEW
Excf'llent localion! 4 BR.
FR, pool! Price reduct'd for
Quick Sn lr! L as:tlo
Sharkany 644-6200. tF12f.
HA RBOR VIEW HI LLS
MUST SELL
l--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
: General
REAL ESTATE
'
General
NEWPORT ISLAND
2 Brirn1. home plus 1-bdrm.
unit on ehoiff' R·2 conier
!ut. 1':1u~y to sho1~', o:all lor
kpp1. SCi4i.500.
Call 6i~'.'.tl61 !i7'3-S086 Evrs
PENINSULA PT,
JUST ARRIVED! :: B<lrn1s .. '.! ltalh~: prlv.
t ·I ("nc l . p:tl1u. 1' rp lr-. tlnnu· .~ l111,1n1·"'" ,(· 1;11 ~·· nt ,. I t I t I .._ o n1 p ell' ~ !'Ct l'l'Ol'll ec . un ,, "I", 'l••t 1n !h•· h•'ar1 I 1 • ·1 • • f I . 'n1·('tl :it .>ti ,.Jl(l. ••f I , .... :.. ,\J, •.I I ll" tlll > C.tll· 673-JG6J < 1:-'--071" E '.::!,flOCl. 1 :u,1 1h·~~ hu1lcl1ni.: · ;, s J \'('S,
HOUSE FO R SA LE, BUT YOU CAN'T SEE IT f :111 ii~· 11~1·d 1•11· " i.:r('.1t associated 'J'hat 's right! \Ve'll give you the address an d \arh·I) IJl\l'I) i Bl:. t It.\
you can drive by. but no fa ir peeking (1.:ur-11 .. n11• '" n\'\\ly 1.1r1i.·1,·1t BROKERS-REALTORS
%025 W 8olboo 613-J66) rcntly rented)! It 's one block fronl the oct1an i\1•11 1urna1·1·. Cl"s'' •u
1
111 Corona del b1ar : there's three bedroo1n ~. .-·,·1·r~·1tiing.
lots of used brick charm and irs sohd as a UNITED FARM AG. --W--H-0-'S_T_H_E_
bri ck house can be! The price of Sfi7,500 1s INC .
excellent for a 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in FREE * 645-7344 * LUCKY ONE?
Old Cd'!. ('(lust 1n Cn11~1 ('alalug! !Y $2SO is all you nf'f'ri lo huy th1!'
Handsomely appointer!, " This Will Be T~ large 4 br \\'ilh h1nt1l.v roon1 BR., ~ hath, 3-car ~aragc. CONTACT UNIQUE HOMES of COl ONA DEL MAR, 415·4000 in one of Costa t.lesn's
WaterfaJl. view. Obsen.'<l-Last Home You finest arC'ns. Anxious sC'll1i·
lion deck. patio:;. gas BBQ. U ~I ()U I: ti()MI:§ L k At \1·ill pay all your other C'O<;l!'
self-cleaning 0\'€'1'1. PanC>le<I ~ 00 at the pricf' o( $29.000. Co•n
FR, bar. Custon1 c11rpC>ting REAL ESTAT E Eastside Beauty j tral loca11on near South
& drapc'S. i{e<lucM for !lfl!ll-lllfl!IJ!!!!lf!!IJIJ!!!!!!!!!!!!lf!!IJ""'IJ!!!!!l!!IJ!!!IJ!!!lllJl!!'l!mlllllll I Supc'r sharp 4 he<lt·ooin Coasl 1~1n1A1 an<I utcn l for
QUICK SALE -$S9,!l00. Ff'C. j --- -------hotnf'. graC'iOU!' \ivini:: in schools. Call
DonM Chiehcstf'r. 642-S235. •·r ~rci1 G eneral 2991 ll<J. r1. '.\ta 5 s i ,, 1,
'""'""'""'""""""""""""!!!!!!""""""""""""""""'I DELIG HTFUL sl<'p-<1011 n run1pus rmn1 l'-G-en-e-ral Ge neral 3 BR, con1·crt1ble dl'll. Jl('arly fl'Onl roinpl<'tl'ly modt'rnlz·
0 WALKER & LEE
J ~ Re11ltors 5":r!Jl!ll nt'1r Easl sirle Costa fl1esa. J. ed rhaniix'rs, k i t c h c n , 1 • Opcn EVf'S Quiel o:Ul·dC'-Si\t' nea r tn a j e SC'plll'atc fan1ily roonl. 2 iiiiiiiiiii.;.. ..................
schools. Jusl the place for a firrplnet>!I + BBQ & insi<lf' ** ** ** grow;,, family. At $35.950 PRESTIGE WATE RFRONT HOMES r;,h "°"tl. Th;, o"• wm
the price is Tight! Charles dazzle your imagination.
TAKE IT EASY
*TAYLOR CO.* Arnold 642-8235. (F22). 3 Linda Isle Drive
Beautiful new 5 BR., 41h Ba. home. Water-
front living rm. & formal dining. l:landsome
oak paneled fam. rm., (rplc, wet bar. Large
master suite has frplc. & cozy lounge area.
View of Bay & the mountains .... $179,500.
QUICK OCCUPANCY
Out-of-town owner anxious to sell and has
reduced the price to $67,500. A littl e TLC can
make thi s 3 BR, 2 bath rustic home into a
real charmer. Balboa Peninsula Pt. WE ARE
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE
SPECIAL
For Complete Information
On All Homes & Lots, Pleas, Call:
Ge nera l
A GAZEBO
LOOKS
TD SEA
J..ocoatM in lhc heort of
Laguna's famed Riviera
coastline. U It r a con-
tl."rnporary style architec-
ture, \\'/DE:I'AILED EX-
TERIOR 01'" STONE,
\VOOD. STUCCO. IN
MODIFIED "FLYING A"
DE'SIGN.
Spacious entry foy e r
\\'/floors of BLACK
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B.
Huge 2 story, 4 den+ or 5 '""""""""'""""""""""""""'""""""'"""'""""""
675-6161
bedroom executive's home, General General
Costa t.1esa''" best area. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;; I·---------
Near Balearic School. Very COUNTRY ESTATE
SPYGLASS PLAN 74 nice back yard ln a quiet t.u.'<ury horse ranch .
oo-I l · ••'-5 bdrm area. No do\11n tc. qualified .J01J11 P us sq t m ....,. • Outstanding country home
• b I bo bo veterans. CALL N 0 \V a, p us nus rm me with 4,200 ...... ft. of lux:-v I P I
-
Ce tral BEFORE THIS ONE IS ..... on a ... oca n urious living. 4. BR, 4 baths.
air cond .• intercQm & built-GONE. Priced at $4S,OOJ. Family rm. & formal dining
in record player. No-wax rm. CentraJ air.con d .
vinyl, shag carpeting, wal· lleated pool. 3.3 Acres 1vith
nut cabinets in kitchen, pool· Realtors 545--0465 box stalls, pipe corrals. feed
sized lot & breath-takin~ Open Eves ~ room & tack room. Truly
view of ocean & coastline. the showplace of Orange
Yoo can celebcate the boU-Golf Course 'Home County. Pr;ccd at $198.000. days tn your ~eW home. Call C<tll Bob Ma r.Lenn 637-400CI. now. Sl!i0,000 1nc:ludlng land. E. r.47 2917
General
SIX BEDROOMS
Realtors 545--0465
Oprn Eves
HOW ABOUT
A 4-PLEX?
\rhy nol n1akf' th(' be.~t bu y
011 a gl'f'at 1':asts1c!C' 4·plC'x
ll'!th lan::r 2 bdrn1 units JO· 1
In this 3 bcW.·n1 2 I.lath with
all bullUns, patio, double
garage, clubhouse A pools.
CONDO, tor a low. low
price of $20,900. CALI.
quick, \\'On't last. act fnst!
Only one of thi!I plan
available.
Call S40-11 51 f()['lf'n F.vr11.)
~"HERITAGE
. -,. REALTORS
l':1tl'd 11·11h111 11·alkini.: tits-... .-------.!!!!!
t:in,·1• to !'\1•1\'flo11 Bhd. & GREEN-TH UMB-
lilh St. :-ih<lp11u1t.: :orf':i~. S PECIAL
011 nrr 11·iU h('l11 11 ith hnan1·· You can o"·n thf' lallrst pine 1ng anrl 11·an\s last sak·. tree in ~l('sa tlet r.tar, sur-Ask1ng S55.000. Cull 540.1151 0 E rounded "·ith lush landscap-
pen ~vcs. ing and you r own
:~p .. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
INVESTOR'S SPECIAL
This Is an exttllent Newport
Beach area, commercially
zoned. TheN' are two units
on a Jot. 2 Bl1. front, I-BR.
rl'nr. Fron! unil C'a!l lit" ron-
greenhouse. Also in<'lude~ a
charming 3 Bdrm honie.
Priced right et $33,500.
CALL ANYTIME
646-39llor Evo. 54'"4132
Lachenmyer1
Rc.1 lto r
General General SLATE. Opens 10 SUNK.EN 1-------------------t LrY. RM . \VITH FREE tO red hill ~:w;~~~:;}~;.~~::~::~ {i-re.d hi.II
For the aclivr. fun lovm~
family, ltli.s is ii! A 6
bedroom, 3 bath, easy
maintenance m a n s i o u .
Located on a wide lu~h
greenbelt ju~ sleps from
pool & tennis. Many extras
including built-in vacuum &
intE'rcom system. In the
finest section or beautiful
Universi!y Ptu'k • t111ly
elegant, carelrec living: for
you & your family. l..l'nst
expensive Oxford modrl 011
the market.
vf'rtM to 11 husinc>ss. f'ri<·cd . -000 to sell. $2!1,.-..oo. I * 7 Units • ;12, 1$560 mo.
TRIPLEX f" 1 "'""II Jo-URi'o·f FfREPLACE OF
SLUhfPSTONE & BLACK
lRON STACK. REACl·IING l
\W try Club. Owner building
REALTY new hon1e. will considt'r
Univ. Park Center, Irvine long escrow or lease/back :l.EAL TY lil9iili6iliilliW.Wlliliil TO HIGH PEAKED CEIL-ING OF OPEN BEAMS &
GLASS GABLES. Central
hall opens to 3 BDRMS. &
DEN. serviced by 2 &at;len
type b a t h s . Artistically
Call Anytime 833-()DI from purchasir. Call us for
I I
NEW LI STINGI VIEW! designed kitchen h a s
BUILT-IN RANGE &
Office hOlln 8 AM to 8 PM detail< & appt. to ""'· THE ROOM CORBIN-AT THE TOP NEWPORT-GOLF
$36,950!
La Cuesta. El Dorado 1'1'Jdel MARTIN featuring 3 bedrooms, fami·
ly room ""h f;n,place, and BeautlJul Burlingame -5 BR ., 3 baths;
family rm. Prof. decor. & landscaping -
38' pool w/pool sweep. $114 ,950 Includes
land. Carol Tatum I
0 VEN . DISH\\' ASHER,
ETC.
Sliding Gla11s walls opC>n to
renr grounds & PATIO
R E AL TORS 644-7662 formal dining area -and
Just minutes to airport,''"'"""""""'""""""""'" 1300 sq. ft . upstairs ready
beach. or Newport Center! Newport Heights-for completion as huge rum-
0 t GOLF I pus room. a d ditional
Formal Dine
NEW LIST ING
Charming Corona Del f\-1ar duplex. $i9.500
To see the pla ns , call :-Mary Lou Marion
CUSTOM 4 BR--3 BA-FAM. RM.
In Huntington Harbour w/formal dining
rm. laundry rm.; occupied by original own-
ers.' At $6S,OOO -You will like this! 1 Blk.
to water. AJ Fink
HARBOR VIEW HILL S
Lovely "Lusk" built -4 BR., 21> baths.
family rm. w/fireplace & wet bar. ~w
maintenance yard. $69,500. Cathryn Tennille
LIDO ISLE-NEW LISTING
70' Lot, St. to St.; 3 BR. -fantastic poten-
tial! Hurryl For details call us! $91 ,500.
Eugene Vreeland
LUSK 3 BR. 3 BATH HOME
In Harbor View Hills -dramatic cathedral
ceil 's., 2 brick frpks., $72,500 . For lease -
Lusk 3 BR. home, decorator perfect. $500
Per month. La Vera Burns
SHORECLIFFS BY THE SEA
Finest area adjacent to ocean. Traditional
5 BR. home w/den, family rm. & gourmet
kitchen. Lovely gardens & workshop off
garage. $110,000. M. Harvey
ON THE BEACH IN IRVINE COVE
1st TIME OFFERED -this 3 BR., 3 ba. &
den home bas a magnificent view -over-
looking prlv. beach, in excl. Irvine .cove.
AU the comforts for happy, luxury living!
'195,000. Edie Olson
LIDO ISLE
A "MUST SELL" OPPORTUNITY! Love-
ly 3 Bdrm., 3 bath, lam, nn. home on 2
lge. lots, Steps to private beaches & club,
$129,500. Kathryn Rau!Jton
133-0700 _.....
ColclvAl~Brier .........
550 NI WPORT CENTIR DR.. N.I .
·for Action ••• Call 642-5678
Daily Pilot .Clastified Ads
,I
\VITll FIREPIT. At the
furthrrmost reach of the
land is a mas.o;ive GAZEBO
WITl-1 COMPLETELY
CLASSED WALLS THAT
AFFORDS AN A \VE IN-
SPIRING VIEW OF TII E
OCEAN & THE Vlll.AGE
BELOW. In a village famed
for Gazebos. this hOme is
surely a priiewinner, for
only
ppos1 e . "",w . Split Leve
CO RSE bedrooms and baths -or '? U s1tc. Mass t v e Featuring plenty of rough Based on current base price
brick firep\2ce. FORMAL sawn \\'OOd and glass. TY•O of new units, N'placement
DINING! Cheery country fireplaces including l h e rnst of this home is approx.
ki.tchen. ~i~nt master suite master bedroom. Plenty of $47,500. O\\'flCr transferred
with bu11t-1n desk, Huge room for a pool table in the and W'ill sell for $45,500. p~tio. IMMACULATE from family room. Th r c e Pleagc phone 546-2313 for w1~ding stone walkway, bedroom!l, 1%. baths. Bright more infonnation.
brick facade to I a r g e kitchen \vith all the built·
secluded park-like yard. ins A fine homt on a fine
NOTHING BUYS IT! Hurry qui~t street. Low main-
-Call now, 645-0303. tenance landscaping. $44,750
$55,000 FULL PRICE
TERMS OPEN TO OFFER
MISSION REAL TY
g8j So. Coast Hwy., Laguna
Phon e 17141 494-0731
4·BEDROOM
PLUS POOL
IORl\I I. 01\0\
"'t "· -c,,,~
4-UNITS
EASTSIDE
and worth It.
C. P. Colesworthy
& Company
640-0020
PRIDE OF
OWNERSHIP
Enjoy th is luxurious 3
• bedroom, 2 bath home on a
prirle of ownershir street.
The family room & master
,bedroom overlook the pool
size yard with huge roverf!d
patio, lush lawn & p~
fesslonal landscape. This
home I• in excellent move-In
condiUon. ~.500. C a 11
, are only hvo of the •
many amenities of thil
sharp home. Other goodies
Include w/w crpts &: drps
thruout, wallpaper in hall-
111ay le dining area, used
brick tlrepl, 3 car gar, patio,
nice ldscpg and E.Z walking
dist. to new Plevin School
and new park. Th i• new
listina: Is priced at $36,950.
Stop the house • hunUng •
blue11, call for appt. to 1tt
2 Bedroom separate houses
on large lot. Owner will
trade up for six or more
units. Equity of $20,000. Call
for details.
this beauty.
$63,500.
Newport 54&-2313 for more info.
'&THE REAL' ESTATERS · '' ·.· .....
l' CAR
531·5111 C :=1 531-51H !!:~!!!-!-!!!!!!l!I!!, !!!\. ENTHUSIASTS ·
Newport Heights $700. MOVE IN TRABILOEARTLOOVRERS
R sed\ Seller pays alJ eosbl. 38R eposses 2 BA. $21.500. FP l••lurt• WE HA VE THE HOME FOR
$37 ,500·$900 Dn. ''"' •1t1n Rto, FA ht , wtw you_ F1n1 t1m• ., ..,. lh'•
WO'Wl Totally NEW PAINT crpUI le. drps, paUo, xlnt Joe, one year okl 3 bedroom
ln and out! White brick w11.lk to S l'NJOr sl)opping home on quiet street m
manteltd f I r e p 1 a c e een
1
ten, pa.ymtl less than Newport. S Garages, 2
F'oRMAL DINING ROOM! n!n • carports. Pffettd at $.58,500.
t.<i.u.-. kltchon with blr. I' PETE BARRETI
p&nlry. 24'<17' atepdown -REALTOR-TAMILY ROOM! Huge t6M471 ( :::,) 546-1103 <M ,_
muter suite with private "':"::":i'::'::;:~~::'::i:"'J~~~~~~~;;;::;~~~ ~~•~':.'n1'.°~ :W~1o: -Bayfront Condo ~
approx Mo. PAY~· 3 Br, 2 Ba, pool, oler :,:11" $900. DN.
Hurry call now , Dellgh!lul ' • REPOSSESSION
6 EMERALD IAY s Bdrm 2 bath .., 1antt1111c
Immaculate 1 Br + fam. rm. · ttte shaded 1treet. Btst
Vkow Reduced lo Sm.500. hurry on thl1 one! I CALL
Tod Hubort .. As.OC. 545.IM24, SOUTH c 0 As T
IOl:l\I 1111\11\ . .
3471 VII Udo ~ REAL TORS. --------_;.;;;..;;.;.:;;,;;:;'----~
' • '
3 BR + Rumpus
Rm. $23, 900.
lIURRY to this nice 3 lx>d·
room home on a QUIET
TREE LINED STREIT!
Scparale 16' x 20· panelled
rumpus room pl us double
dC'tac:hrrl garai;:-e and Dough-
bo)' pool all add up 1o the
BEST BUY IN TO\\'N.
COATS
&
. WALLACE
REALTOR S
-546-4141-
(0pen Evenings )
$25,950
"SECLUDED"
1'-fove Into this I o v e I y 3
bedroom ho mt. Grscklu!I
living room enhanced by
handsome flreplact', bulll-in
dream kitchen, even a
dlsh'\\'8.Sher. Beautilul patio.
Pool sized well landscaped
ground~. Near all con-
vt'n~nce1. Brk, S.'°"'1720.
TARBELL
2955 Ht11001', C.OSta Mesa
BELOW market at $29,950!
Several thouPnrl b e I o \1'
market 11.llowi lor redecora·
tlon. 3 1'paclou!I bedrooms, 2
lovely baths, larie fam. rm.
with fireplace, additional
fireplace tn gracious living
rm. Summrr partirs In the
patio. Jr. Estate grounds,
park lik<' landscaping. Near
library, beach, schools &
shopplnir. Brk. 540-ln:I.
C WALl<ER & LH Jt's the 1Jn1e to invrst. Live 3 Bdnn., du ch clean,
in one ,i;. rf'nl h1·0. There are $26,900.
Realtors 64&-77II
.»13 \Vestclltf Drive
()per. 'till 9 PM
t11·0 niCt' bd rms., a large * 4 Bdrnt. IM>auty · · · .$54.900
living rm. It has bit-ins in * !l.·I Acl'{', OC('an/n11. vie"'·
the kitchen & a ciining area. $14:-i,OOO.
There is a lge. private patio Ontu
& f'nclosed garages. Two ~
GDV'T · NEWPORT HEIGHTS blocks from major shop-~21 ping.
REPOSSESSION FAREL \VALKER. Realtors
Just released sharp 3 557·5080
bedroom, 2 bath Ne"'POrt iiiiiii ... i.ii..ii;o.;.iiiiiiiiiiiiio
Bf'ach home. Good carpet'!,
buillins, lireplace, double
garage. I-l uge s eparate
family room. Terrillc loca-
tion on tree lined street
cloi;C' to occnn. Only $900.
down paymi. Evct)'One is
clegible to buy this home.
Call us immediately.
546-5880 Open Evt's.
<i>'§"~ HERITAGE
.; ' • REALTORS
Home & Business
C·2 Zone
Perfect Starter. Corner lot.
70' x 120· -2 Jkrlrm. den
home. easily converted to
office. studio or combina·
tion. FcncC'd yard -2 car
gar could be rf'pair ~op
plus parking spacc. Lovely
furniture includ('().
* 5 Bedrooms * 2 Baths * Family Area * 18 x J8 Pool * Only $41.950.
A beautifully upgr11dcd home
to bP 11ved tn and enjoyro.
Not anottlt'r home on the
n1arket to compare. Call
TIO IY 847-QIJO,
CALL UM LIKE
WE SEE UM
Genuine, tor -~al, :\lesa
Verde fixC'r upper. AC't no1v
and have your choice of
crpts, drps, paint, etc. GrC'at
3 BR, 2 BA & family roon1
plan on quiet cuJ.fle.sae. Ot-
tered at $31.950. SC'e it now
beforC' 01vner rC'furhishes
and raises price. VA trnns
availablf' .
Call 5"0·1151 fOpen Eves.>
~~ $"• HERITAGE
· . ' , REALTORS.
$19,950
"Cheapie
Tee-Pee "
3 bedroom. 2 bath homf' 1vith
laniily area for only $l9,9j().
Good for a slartcr home.
You must call now 842-:;sJS,
O"·nrr mus! move to desert
for h<'<h reasons. 4 BR,
21:: BA. lrg. c~dting area.
rrpl. & xtra lrg. yd. Good
1-"ountain Valley locationit.
AIL terms • Prlrc only
$31.950.
COWN!' & \VATTS, INC.
962-5Sl3 * C&W *
FIXER-UPPER
OWNER trangferred, built-In Can be a 001..L 1-IOUSE!
stereo in living room in-2 BR. Near N'pt Heights
eluded. 3 bedrooms, 2 Atklnst $22,500
"P"•" b"'"'· ttecloo..t ON BROADWAY l!vlng room with ttrepla«s. 3 Bd f I
I•-ho 1 nn11.. am ly rm., I.gt>. .... nge, oven. Wlf! r n-p11.tlo. w/BBQ. Dbl . garagt> eluded. Freshly painted. A II on (l cy. $3l.500. quiet cul-<l~sac s I r o e t r
REAL !:."STATE 64S-722t
SPANISH ·
SPANISH
$33,900
It 's a beautiful 3 bedroom.
1% bath Spanish home 1l'lth
la.rg<' family roon1, Palos
Verde llrcplaec. fonnnl din-
ing roon1 and n1urh nlflrc
You n1ust see H. Cnll NO\V,
842·2."'3.i.
Feeding
A Landlord
!'11cAA [l(ol ritar 4-plrx. Room
for a pool. CN"al rina n11ng-
lO 'ih do"·n, 2 bC'clrooin!'. 2
barhs each. ruH pnl'f'
$62,500. U1v1H•r I\ 111 t.:11 rry
2nd T.O. This 11·on ! last,
call us today!
Realtors ;..\5-9-l!H
Open Eve11
TRILEVEL
4 Bedroon1, formal dining, 3
baths + lamlly r o o n1
w/wet har. A truly lamily
home. $-10,500. C!lll for ap1it.
Ci JNNY MOR.RISON
*** -REALTORS-•• "* lflm MH& •CiM •Vtrde Dr. Ea!!t, ._ .... _ • Costa Ml"Y. *• ,.... 5af-tl30
I 0 1X'n £.'vtonings)
Owning Beats
Renting
Call us for details. t DR.. 2
BA, only $26,900. You name
trrm-",
COLLINS &. \\1 A TI'S, INC.
962-SSlJ * c & w *
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
REPOSS ESS ION Brk, $27,450. ~1720. CAL91L e, 64,·1414
THE BL UFFS -4 BR, Ill clC. ·1 an. ' ba. '"'· lam. nn. frpl, Xlnt rond. $37,500
Ronus rm., family rm .. for · REALTY BALBOA BAY PROP m~I din, rm., bit-In kltch. N1•r Ntwport ro1t orrlc 11 * 642_7491 * .
Pr1v, garden pello. Crtcn I NICE area-nice ntighhors
belt view, Make otrer! You CAN a.fiord thi1' one I NE\V DUPLEX ...... $"8.9'!i0.
REAL ESTATE 1126.000. 3 Bdnns. 2 Baths 3. 2. Bdrm. 151 E. ll&1
TR EASU RES CANTREU. REALTY ICos!A M•"· &G-4137
l83I Wt"stclllf, NB 664770 833-2214 ct.ASSin£O wtU .U ttl
20 DAILY PILOT MOnd.ty, Stpttmbtr 25, 1972 ~~~1 ~~~~1 ~~~~l~~~~I '~~~~
l._-_, ..... __JI~ I _..... ~ L-1 -_ ... _ .. __;l~.,i.....1 -----.Jl~ I _,,,.. I~ ~I ;;-~"';;. .. ~l~~ie~l ;;--;;·-"';; ... -;!l~;;.e~l..\i[ •"~~;.::"~I~~~·~~"·:~:" ~I
General I DUPLEX .:C::••::•;•~Me;:.;;•;:•-;:::;:-;:--j;F;;:°":;:";'•;:ln::;;V;:•;";;ey;;;;;::;;;;:;;. i H;;;u;;n;;:t;;i119;ton;;:;;;;a.;;odl;;:;;;;:;;-l-'N.C•;.;w'-'po=rt;...;;a..ct.=:::..... __ :;N::••.:.!:po::rt~llN=::<h:.:._ ___ 1condominlums Condominium• t6t I Soon hl lit-bull!, Sr• 1Jf HW)'. ! 1 -l;;~';;•;r;•;•;l;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;60::;;'•;;r:;•:;•;;l•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I 2 BR CAIU:-: ~l)IJI )C\'1'l-J!Qud 1':>.151lt1,i,: 2 & dl'n plu~ ni•v. CAPE COD A PLACE JN THE SUN BEACH LIVING 1;
'""".""" w' "''· ""'"'· 1 ' bdrm. ""'' ""'" ~"'""" MOVIELAND • '"""' "'"'"'""" ' ""'" AT ITS BEST Pre-Grand Opening Sale! J•.1nh f~1r111~11.-.,I r•nr•·d 111 .Xlnt 1,1<. ,\t1kina: sn.tlXI.
or1ly ~l·I ~(I lh1111, ;Hl't1ou~. 703 BEGONIA TYPE STREET new Sol Vi.Jta with gorge<>u!I Sh111·p 3 ~lroom, 2~ b31h,
1 .. 01:ntt1I :-.11.\'EJt ,\1111 t",\,\ , pool ;ind pr o r r 5 i> 1 v n a! new c·.:irpt•l.!I, boa1 ga 11•. low
YOS l\liTJ-:Ll.A fl l-:.11.1.TV, Lovely •IU1il!•x, So. ul Ji'>!.). P llt·ketl wllh 1•mol10nl'<I and landscaping. All yOu ~ nialnlt'na.ncto yard. What
&'i"·9400 Charnung -BU . 11Jus lurn. pr11.t'llrAI :1pfll't1 I _ Shingles ror family lun. Only $44,750. mor«!' N>Ulrl you expct't for
• · 1 Il ft, '~'/tire-, hlt·11u.. Cop-_ bJiuttt'r.< walnsrol -only SJ9,SOO. iiv Ownt1· 4 Bdnn,:? liath, .--1' pJun1l11n•·. Xlnt l()(,i1f1o n, '"" " tlorl'ht'r 1\·1nc~w•"li. A v.a rrn pan!'led f;1n1. nn . builr -in (ioo<I fin1111c1ng. ()wnrr 1nay HAPPY HACIENDA
J.;11t'h(·n, 2 story, J;;.'<:li poo l, c .-.rry, {)rive by &: rnll uo; lo
kil~ or 1m11J<,:1ll Jll1Ki.~rnrinl{, s.i..-. Only $68.500
""'1'Jlt'111 <'Ond. \\c want 10 MORGAN REAL TY
sell: PncC'tl lx·lu\11 1narkc! 673-6642 675-6459
at ~.9:'i0 5.'.i7-40!'l
flr1·pll1l'"· •1111111~ r o ri 111. Tilt• ronf. IJ<·wn t.'1.'.ilu i.gs.
h1.rgl' k1!ch1·n <ind I\ real te01tlJlll.'lf'ly wall1•tl )a.rtl,
f1unlly-f11mllv l'O'lrn ~ :id1\llf' f 1 r /' f'l in r <', 4 4 Bf.(.Jr'fJl11n, 2 bull!. good ya.rd bedroom.~. 'l'h1s homP nnd lit:drwrns, la rnily roorrl. On-for only S2!.i.~. Subnllt
IJ\e t•n t irt' Oi!lj:;hbOrh(lt')d ly $6:S(Xj, Cash 10 l'XIMl lng
BARGAIN DAYS
ARE HERE
your terms no\\'.
STOP PAYING RENT!!!
Take Advantage of Our
CLOSE-OUT SPECIAL
~flOrkl··~ Vdlh rndf' O! \',\ ](!o1ll,
<'l11r11·r:sh11l Don 'I I (• I! l',\l.L ;,.;.J.--0,l:,g Balboa lsfand
SPLASH!
CALL 51j-()1:i8 CONDOMINIUMS
On The Last 5 Condominiums
IN PHASE TWO 11nyorw., Just sec It. Sl!l.9JO ............... •. ·~
tiMrTl71. ~· ....,,..,.
\O 'THEREAL ~EsrA'.fERS
• Minimum $950 Moves You In .
• No Closing Costs . Lofty living awaits you!
Act sw1r11y
BY 011fll'!' {'h:u·1uu1i: ll•lulc
1u1 txlra lf1: lo! 4 BR. 3Bo\,
tlC'l'I, forn1 IJ.!!, I.iv fl,\f
.,,/frpli·. us.'(! l•rio·k 11nllu, I
lilH11 k1[1·h. ~hunrr~. \\'/\\'
crpr , draJlf'f)', All 111 1err!l11·
rond. Plu8 11 srn;~rlly furn
:': U.H, :l UA, PJll10 n•ntoil. 7"'.,
loan ··an h(o 1111/iiurnt'll, l~nu1
!Ionic Plu~ rncomr, Prl'I ~
day ~ro11'. Af>st huy on
Ji;la.nd. Sll2,000 p1·11K'. onl.}
675-5380.
2 .c;rory, 4 BR. 1.lf'~a \'rnil'
/l('ouly! Ct:.."ITRAL AIR
('ONO.! Gflrgrous poor
11 I ,iacuni: Ove1"3iud ror·
ni:·r. S44,9CO. &.ibm11 your
11.:rm.s' CALL 979-10.:.0, --==========:IOWNEP. n1usl aell 4 }T.
ANKLE DEEP
NEW GREEN
SHAG CARPETS
ne11'-short bike to beach! 3
bedroom.!, 2 baths, den.
l'll'gant fin'filnt.'l" in f:imily
roorn convenient lo lhe
bu1ll1n kitchen, hand y
LOW DOWN
ALL TERMS
Beau1y is the word for thl! 3
bedroom. 1% bath Spanish
Styll' homt•. It is priced
rh:ht to sell al $33,900. If
features a large family
roon1, a Palos Vt.!rdCs sLOne
fireplace in lhr IJving room.
a formal dining 1'00111 and a
pool sized lo!. Call 847--0010
no1v.
1o select your own
Newport Beact) condominium.
V1s111he 1emporary olhces ol lhe
Newport Crest lnlo1ma!1on Center,
• Free Upgrade Carpet.
• Immediate Possession.
IN ADDITION, you get 2 & 3 bedrooms, 1'4 &
2 baths, built-in range, oven, hood, d1 sh-
\Vasber, disposal, individual laundry area, en-
closed private garage, pr ivate entrances,
choice of carpet color. cnble TV, S\Vimming
poo l, gas B-S.Q & park-like recreational
area.
Just pa inted lmirlt-nnll ou1 thsh11·asher. Lovely patio,
and a.~k ing $26,900 nil t•·rnis Jo.1ds of d('('king, hi>atcd .~
for !h i~ gTeat be11u1y \•:1th 2 filtered pool. Ca r pct Ing
hui:1· bath~. Covt'l'('{I pal1o Uiniout including kilchen!
s u r round t:: d by lu:sh Rrk, $,.10,00J. 842-6691.
l;1ndsc11ptu.ll'. FcnC"ed lm tk .:.::.:::...:::::::::;c..::.:c..:.:.:cc __
yartJ. Double garag<". e V J\CANT e ~fcxlrl home
convenien!ly located at
?<100 West Coas1 Highway
~ui1e 0, Newport Beach.
Upen Daily 10 am. to sunset.
Balboa Peninsula I;:;::.:::.:.:..;;..;==:.::..--I * A.I\ YFRONT tlupll'X. l'vt
hrarh. l'1er righls. 01vm •r.
673-8786 . .::... ------
Corona d•I Ma,.
4 BEDROOM
HILL-TOP
RETREAT!
SEPARATE
WORKSHOP
0\\'nf'r \\'Ill 1u1y :11,~ pis,
lov.·ard Joan un I h i 3
''Starter" horne. 3 Bdrm.~.
hUji;C' ya.nJ. $2!11;ilX). AJI
terms. e larwin realty e
968-4405
GOOD AS GOLD
Mci..a Del Mar. All built-ins.
fireplact", 2 halhi;. \\111.lk In
SI. John's and O.C.C. $31.900
all rcrms.
0 WA Ll<ER & LEE
• .J Bdrrn., :l bath, has :1
car gar, garllerl kitch, fami-
ly rn1, dining rm. 1nlrrored
RealLOrs 545--0465 doors. Located on large oor-
Open Eves. rw:r lot. Just reduced lo
COOL EVENINGS 14~'.:tL THE REAL
Enjoy th is lovl'ly 3 Jx.droom ESTATE FAIR
home with double fireplace 536-2551 '
oJl('ns to family room and , ~ . .
livini; room. Loads Of del'p O\\NER !caving. R1t'h u·~
shaJ.t Privacy ff'nr ed and P an CI 1 n g, exp ens1ve
on lu1v niounlenanl·e c<"lrnrr 1\·aJ!p..'lrw:r accents IC'nds
l11L All ll.'n11s, only $32.000. pe_rso~l.lfy . and charm to
$19,500
Newly dC'COral(>(I 5 room, 2
bath, builtins, l-,A heal, new
11•/1v carpets. Wt1.lking dis-
lanre 10 shopping & school.
Jus1 l1SIC'd! Hurry!
CALL 962-8851
All this for as little as $207 per month,
cJudes everything.
Santa Ana F\vy. to Culver, right about i;, mile
to Walnut (!st road on ·Jell). left I mile to
"\.Valnut Square"; or San Diego Fwy. to
Culver, left about 3 miles to \Valnut, right to
"Walnut Square" or ca ll 714/832-9670.
Magnificent vil'1v from 1his
ch R rrnint: e11tcrta1nmcnt
home in Coronn dcl Mar.
Your children will love the
sparkling swim ming pool.
the fide pool,; <1rvl pr1vnte
bea('h. You \•.'Ill lh01'0uf!hly
.enjoy !hr grncinu.~ hospil11J j.
ly of lh11> ho1ne. Be forn1al or
in formal ii'> your mood
dcman1!s. This is appt. only.
673-8550.
""""! WA LI( E R & LE E
Realtors
OPEN
:i4.-r-!l49T
EVES.
Jlu11y, tlu"i ii·on'l lasl. lh1 s d1st1nct1ve -4 bedroom, 2
CALL M4''·l<IJ~ bath home. El egant
• fiN'plaC"l', deluxe builuns,
Acreage for sale ISO I ;lr;v;i;;";;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Laguna Beach 1
Big c~;.,~o~c1~u1~~'~ in1 ,l;;.....,;;;'";SaJ;•;;J~l;ie~J 'M PATTI • dishYoasher. coveml patio.
.... WAlKElf Near future park and nl'.w LOCATION SAN MARCOS
J.'i ACll ES
:o ·THEREAL
\" ESTATERS
'"' o, L ' • '
HARBOR VIEW
3 ~room, 2 Bath View
Home. Out.slanding Jtock
Fireplacl'. Calhedral C"ll·
ings. Creal Palio for Vif'v.·-
ing and Entertaining, CaU
fi75-727S.
TWO UNITS * EASTSIDE *
l -3 BEDRl\-f, 1·2 BEDRt-.1
$30,000.
Roy McCardle Realtor
ltllO Ncwjioh Blvd., C.M.
543-n29
•w.1u ... ,. ~hool ! Brk. ~ .'.l l , 0 0 O •
17171 Beach Blvd .• 11.B. ~~5566.
LOVELY Jrg: 2sly 4BR, .home
21;2 ba, frp~, bltln grui kltch
==::_ ____ _
$1.00
dsh/wsh. Furn. J1uge yard. MOVES VA BUYER into
Sprinklers. $38,500. Owner, 1600 sq fl of 3 bednns. 2 1 ~
97G Denver Dr., CM . bath quality Tiburon co ndo.
540-2442. Popular Balboa modf'! in
a·-y"-0-,-'°c'Cr-.-E-a-,t-,-;d-,-3-b-r-.·. l prime location, Only 2 yrs
rumpus rm. w/fireplace, old.
BROKERS INC.
VALUE MINDED?
lfere it is, 4 big bedrooms,
2 balhs, upgraded shag.
!luge block 11•aU fenced yard
and on chilrl 1Hlf(' strcel, two
blocks lo e!C"men tary. Shar1>-
C'St horn(' in area, only
$2S,500.
Is lhe "name of the game"
1vhen buying a home. This
listing 1viU IT"ally fit the bill
• 3 bdnns., 2~fi baths, family
rm.: bacl<s major greenbelt,
view of mountains beyond.
ProfC'SS. decorated thruout.
A MU!:.! SEE!
beaut gal'den sPtling, 3 BR,11
3 ba., spac. <hnin~ & liv. N rt B h
areas. \Veil planned kitch. ewpo eac
Lge. vie\v clcck & palio FREE
area. fl1any cx!J·as. \Vet har,
tinted glass. garage door Wa lf'r \vilh this spark!in~
opcnC'r, sclf-t'iean oven: POOL plus 4 Brlrms., 21 ~
very fu nclionnl, 1vr.IJ pl'ln· bath, large ~~m1ly nn.,
ned homC'. ,, jcii·C'I foi· cathedral cl'1l1ngs plus
On Hi.lll(·ho Santa Fr Rd,
J :C'ady lo <lC've!o p
wilh al! utili ties
tn the propcMy
$143,500 ruu l'ricc
ENTERTAIN in huge yard
w/ht>atcd POOL, covered
pntio, To111cring trees. Pror
lndscpd, 3 Rft, 2 BA, Fam
Hm. nu shag crpll'I, many
xrras Spotlt>ss! $34,!150. For
apl't. a1G-6!'156.
lar.i::c ]I)\ on quiet Cul de Sac. larwin realty inc.
Call 642·055.~. !:IGS-4105 (24 Jl<.llll'S)
Dana Point Huntington Beach
COLWELL
PROPERTIES, INC.
REALTORS
$39.900 honH>. .1 br w / pvt
wine; to use or rent. Lo'v
dv.•n + low mo pymt.s.
Beaut cul de sac st. Great
for yng cpl to grow into.
5-18-8118; 67:r7725: G-IG-<r&
AgL
SP~:c 'vie"'" :1 Bit & fan1 r m FREE POOL!!!
\v/!rpl, 2 BJ\. $39,450. 33252 Fantnstic price! 3 Bedroom.
Mesa Vi~ta. 493-3359. 2 bnth, 500 sq. It. bonus r1n ..
Fountain Vafley huge IOI. You can't beat it
for SJS.000. IMMAC 2 BR hst.' w/slreAA-
ed garage for 2nd unit. By
01\•ner, $43,500 f i r n1.
675-4048.'
O\VNER sacn(icc. 4 bi~ CALL 968-44.')6
e DUPLEX C'XCel loc &:
cond. 2 Br·I bo f'a. COM-
PARE. Owner. 6T.">-1934
MESA de! Mar 4 Hr, 2 Bt1,
fam rn1, fl(•1v plush crpr,
n1a11y extl'as. $3.i/.OO, By
bedrooms. 2 /Ja1hs, iwla!M ·~ rear living room Pnlianced ,
by fireplace. Builtin klt-
<:hl'n, d ish\\·a~her. }-'orccd!I ---------"--
a ir heating. Strikin~ la.n;:c GLASS t 'OOD PllEPARA·
fan1ily home! Brk. $31,000, TION ARJ::A, VIEWS, sunny
962-.11$(;5. shaded back yard. Pass-lhru You don'I n('('d A gun to 01vnC'1\ Opf'n houst' Sun.
"Drew Fast" when you pit er ~'Pl. 2·1. Hy a pp! thcrrnJIC'r.
an ad in the DAILY P!LO'l'I llJll Sonora Rd. 546-4131.
Want Ads! Call now • • • Sf'U Ilic old sruil. l:luy the
&12--.<i:i78. rll'IY stuff.
BY 011•ncr, sharp 3 br + dC'n
+ bonus rm. l\1n11y xtras.
Ln Linda/f\1 i Sqr $32.750
5.)1-8351.
patio din ing, thir k carpets
you sink in!o, drapes are
cusion1 floor lo vaulled Cf'il-
ings. SinaJl('r hqme in
prt'Slige area 11'/a lo1v
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE price. BKR .. 962~5511. J------.;;::;::::;::::::::::::::::::::---------~~:'.'.'.'.~'.'..'..'.:~-----fo\\'NER despe>rat'e, :l bdrm.
,.ICTITIOU5 I USINl!SS 71Jlf hotnc. Built-in d ream
N.\ME STATtMENT NOTICI! 01' SALi! 0, llEAL
T11e lolloWiMO J>f•J.0<1 Is dolno ttuS1MO) .. ROl'EllTV AT l'RIVATE SALi! kilchen, family room ad-
••• HG. A nott jat'f'nt v•ith an inviting O"VE'S SERVICE CENTER. 70}1 In IM Svperlc,.. Courr of !he Stal• of I' I 6 24 I I Gar<1111 Gr11v• 11/wd,. G•rllen Gro•e, CtlllO!'nl• lor "'-C1111nrv of Or1no,. 1rep a('(', I X t. enc O.S-C•IU, •n lh• ~tt1r of •h• E1111• 111 cd patio 11·ith cascading O."' ···-·· ''''' ' SHIRLEY 0. SCHIAVONE, Dect11«1, • ....... ~,, · Lorene , I "'•lerlall. Home 1-•h"• Orlw , LI Mlr.01 f06J& Note• 1 ~reby g1¥tn lht l !he un-" ''"~ ~
Tnl1 M ln.u Ii ti.ln11 con<tvcltd by •n ""'•i9nt'CI wltl •ell •I Pdv1t1 ••le, IG the-painted txttrior. Br k , lt>dlvldu•f. hlgllH I '"" ~" bidder, IUDIKI lo t-29 oa-.. 'ttlll>dl" llrmar1on ol said Superior (01Jrl, ,,,. or $' ,950, ~-
l11l1 1l1ltmen1 Iii.cl wnn IM c°"'"ry 111..,. 11>1 2Jl!I dl'f of Sepleni~. 1972. ,, (ler~ ot Orange Covnty on ; Sep!, I , ltJ1• Ille Dlfl« ol CALVIN N. WINN, EM!, 11~1
Bv l!rtlty J. 1!11ro11in, OtPlllY Counrv Nori/\ Ivar Awnl>f. HoUvw~. C•lllornl• (ltr~ 9002t. C011nly of Los An;1le1. Sta11 ol
F-Jtlll C•lilornla, I ll Ille rlgt>t, Hilt Ind lnltrtll
Put.ll1n.a Or•ni;1 co.HI 01111y Plloi. of 11ld dett•ltd 11 rnt llm1 of a111n •rxt ~~l>ltmlM• l!, II, 'l 1nd Octobfr· 1. •II 111• rig/II, 1)111 •nd lnttrt•I Illar ri. 1~11 2390 12 t1!1!1 ot H id atc•~ll!'d na1 acoulrtd by
oi>er1!!Gn of law or 01nerwlH otntr 1nan
Of 1 .. •dOIHon lo 1n1t of •1!<1 dKtlll!'d, Ill
1n., time of dtdlll, In and re 1111 !ht c1r11ln PUBLIC NOTICt:
F1CT!TIOUJ SUllNESS
NAME STATEMENT
·~•I orQPtrly 1i11111td 1n ll•t Cou1>ly or
Oruw;it, CO\ln!y or Los Angele1, S!tlt cl
(ali10t"ni1. 111r!lc111trly aeKrlbtd 11 lallow1, lo-wl!: An undlvldtd one-n11r ln·
1tre11 In 1nd to·
O\\'NER desperate. No do"''"
ltrms-Ou t of State Ol\'llCJ'
('Xlr<'mcly an xio us! 4
b\.'{Jrooms, 2 bath~. large
family room \Vith Ii.l'eplaCl',
bu iltins, d1sl11\'asher. Lovely
pa110. Brk. 534.950. 842-2561.
CALL 8-12-1418
•
,ATTI
WALKER
l tA,1.tllAfl " 17\il Bl'al·h lll\11. 11.B.
>'CREAM PUFF-
s26.ooo Total price, le;s lhan
4'"' do11•n. Buy lhis ex-
•~mely 10 .. ·ely fresh I y
painted. :1 Bit, l:i4 bath
hon1e. !las a.II "th e
amenities, such as frplc,
r ange & ovt'n. Oulsland\ng
l!'l'CS i;;urround the brick
work &: large Gazebo in
rear yard. This will go fast .
Re liable Real Estate
eves 8!}.t-Jlfi.I lfays 816-3391
PLUSH SHAG
DRAPES &
WALLPAPER
Tiled atrium entry, formal
dining, 4 bedrm .. 2~~ bath,
family rn1 .. sC'p. laundr,
sprinklers front & rear.
$.35.i50. CALL 968-4456. •• IT SPARKLES
Thill immaculale 3 Bdnn.
h:1s cverylhing incl, 1v/1Y
crpts. drps, 11•shr, dryr.
rt"frig., C\'Cn ~rrinkll'rs in
i::ardC'n·palio. Go-sN· this
brand new Jisl'ing no1v, i1
won't last at $23,900.
13oh"PelH!,
""~ . .. ··' . ,, ' . 'lR:' I ... -~··""'· rn !or
"SINCE 1946"
1st \\'estcrn Bank Bldg.
University Park, Irvine-
Day• SS2-7000 Night>
TIME BOMB
\\'ill "go off" soon as !he
price has been reduced 10
$42,500. Lovely Turtleroc:k
Broodmoor wit h 3 lxlrn11< ..
family room. formal dini11~
&: a v\e11•.
(ired hill-
REALTY
Univ. Park Ce11tC'r, Irvine
Call Anytime 833--0820
Of[iCC' hours 8 Artf to 8 P~f
BY O\\'NER. I M 1\-1 E D
POSSESSION. Beaut nc1v
home in Culverdale 6 hol1$es
from park, pool, & comp.
tC'C an-a. Excel school,;, 2
~ry, 4 Br, 21h b a,
landscaped. shag c r flt.
d r a p e s . S.16.995, 3622
Hamilton, 832-69:.tl.
TURTLEROCK lltlt~. -l Br ..
FR. exec. Viel\', Bf'lo1v
mar kf'I. Al!iO IC'ase at S47.)
n10. 833-1710.
L1gun1 Beach
cntcrtaiing. S&J.:11i;1. n1any c:x1ras. ·~
.-·19'..>-:.!.'I()() * Only $,JJ,000
CALL ·0 · 646·24 14 ~
Nr•r Nrwpor1 Po11 Oftit1
Newport ~h---
PRIVATE BACK -4 -.
But oot $l'('iudetl, \11th this 4 ))(' ~ 1 B dR t am
bdrn1., 2 bath family home. rm-n. l'\.\' Y t'alrated.
Be au r i r u J unobstructed By . 0\l't"IE'r S4s.;oo. 1r:.0
ocean view lrom living & Irvine. Open Sat-~un.
.family rooms. Sparkling HARBOR V1e1v OppoMunity,
clean home. Ask tor Earl o 1v n er transfC'rrcd, i1n-
\Valerbury. $52,500. mL•diate occup.11ley, 5 BR. 3
-Iatan
REAL ESTATE
6A. privn!e. 644·6022
I !ARBOR VJE\V J-IOME
l\ION'ACO. 2 + drn, 2 ba.
J.'cc. Olvnr-agt. &14-2536.
1100 Glcnncyre St. 2 Lg durlcxes, next door, 1;,
494-9-173 :-t-19--0316 blk fron1. ocPan hcach. * OCEAN V!l-.:\V GAZEBO Sl!il,000 ea. Agt 673--8:>63.
* 3 BEDROOMS . 2'BATHS-
3 BR., den, 2 haths. Slatt <'r>-Close to w::can, $37.500
fry, sunkl'n llv. rn1, fpl. lli Cantrell Realty 83J-2ZM
REALTORS
Sir\'CE l!H-1
673·4400
Apartments
For Sale 152
Eastside Units
These 12 units have evtry
shopper's desire: sharp and
1·!ea n, low maintenance, no
vacancy proble.ns, nice pool
in rear and fresh paint. AU
uni1s ai·t> Jun11sh('tl except
lh<' O\\'nC'r's. Pr i c c is
51 75.0CXJ. For furlher in for.
n1ation, <:all ou r lnveslmcnt
Division . 546-1600.
ri>l THE REAL ~ESTATERS
\ • i)/ > r, ''• 'I
peaked cC'il., open '?Cams, SPY GLASS 1-llLL
Klass gables. B!tn. kitchen. Fantastic vie11· Plan '1100 Business Property I ..
A prize \\'inner at $55,000. B · · I :::::::::::::...:c..:,:!:!'._:.!._~~:: Mission Realty 4M--0731 3 R, :l500 sq~ ft. Cape COd.
NEW S U AT BEACH
1136:! Atlanla, 118. 539-tiffl
Owner. &W-5598. * Money Maker*
Laguna Niguel Newport Heights s::1.500 Do11·n $210.!XXI F.P.
NE'\V CONDO on Ea~t 9, Shoppini:; cen1rr 11· Is o 11 d
\'iew golf course, J Br, 2 Ba, NEAR NEW -IN C.M . l cnant.c; in wcat arC'a, show·
owner. 61:r50?.J. 3 BR, 2 ba., 2 frplr. + ing a solid 13.T.i'/o cash
----'--"-'-------1 formal din. rm. + + 20:-:20 spendable on pro jected in-Lido Isle r •41 ·~ an1. rn1. .. .;""''· COmC' of $3011:-il. A!Jov.·ance
VIA HAVRE Call /or Onp·1 lot· m;:mt.. resC'r\'c and
5 BR .. faniily rm. L.t:l'. child-LIOO REAL TY v.lcancy nl 1~'";. f1~urt>t1 in.
rcn':s playrm., sundc>ck. Lg. 3377 Via Lido, N.B. 673--i?.OO Don'! ll':llt on this bn~ain.
palio. 40:.:110' Lot . $125,000. BY O'VNER 3 BR. 1Bt\, r\'ur l:int·~. j11~t prolitahle!
r l' m odelefl, red1>rora1rd. * 9 Units * bC>C.OORil law.on JA.
aeoltoe
3416 Via Lido
Open house 12-3, i'Yton !hru Solirl n1ulli ten<lnt, indu~trial
Fri. 1-4 Sun. S :; 8. 3 0 0 . !1u1ldin~. $220,000, \n South ln, 1011owlnv perM>~• •rt dalng
b~$lneu l l '
(ASA BONll A IN'/(~lOR S, ltell
Loi 121 cl lr•cl No, 'J21, It> ll>f Cl!y
or Wt•lm;nlltr. Coun!y o! Or1n111, STtlt
or c 1111orn11, ... Pl'• mep rKordtd rn
Book 10 P•Ott 21, 1l 111!0 ,. o!
Mit<;1ll1ntou1 M•pi. In r~ Oltl~• or lh•
* V.A. REPO. *
Shorecrest West
:l BR. :Z baths. $36,;ilO
$1,875. Down. $331 rt1o. PITI
Authoriztd Broker
673-1658, 675-761G, 645-868·1. Santa Ann. On!y 2-yrz. old.
Sant.\ Ana 1f,'li Do11·n. yields projected
I' 531-5800
11/Jge Real Estate
TRI·level custom home. VA NewDOrt Beach
financing avail. 3 Br., iso• ( ~"':) 531-5100
Jam11lt1 R°""' co111 Mt••· c11a. 9'l47•
l1wrer1<1 W, Mldllnd, lll05 J1m11t1
Rao!d, Cotlt Ml$8, C1. t7~16
Gtna Sullivan, 1~71 Crt•lvltw Orlvt,
N....,porl Btacn, C1. '26'0
Tiii~ busln•'l 11 l)elnQ torlduct'4 by 1
LJml!td P1r1n1rJl\lp,
L1wr1nce W. MoDllNl
l l>I• llllement tiltd wirn 1n1 (ounry Cl~rlt Cl O••ng~ Co11n!y an· A11Q11s1 ll,
IY11 By Betty J, B1rg~11n, D•1111tv Ccunry (lrrlr
" lfflJ P~bllll>fD Or•nQf (0111t Oa•ly 11•101,
5•11!1m1Hr •.I I, 11, 2!, lfn 111072
Pl.'BLIC NOTICE
16'B
NOTICE 01< SALi! 01' "EAL
P•OPERTY AT ~IUVAlli Sil.LE
"''· A 7:1Ct1 IM 1119 Superior Coutt of tilt S•llt 01
(AiofornJ1, tor •lie (oun1y or Or1n11r.
In ll>t Ml lltr of Ille Estel• ol FRolNI(
... IARCU5 SCHl,t,VONE. Ot<:elltd, No!lte 11 ner1ov 11l•t1> 111o1t '""' un.
de.,lgntd Wiit HU •• Prlvflf ••It, IQ 11•e
l>lgMtl I nd bnt ~IOt:rtr. IUbit(t !C {On•
ll•motlon ol 1010 S111>erl0t' lour!, on or
•lr•r tl>t 211n <11v ol Sti!•tm~r. 1912. di Int olllct of CALI/IN N. WINN, llQ, l)O Nonn lv•r Aveow. Hollvwood, (llito""•
9'0011 COU1>1y of LOlo Ar>gol11, St•I• "' C1lltorn11, 111 Int rl1111r. !Irle 1n<1 inro,.,1
of I A•ll Ofit~SC'G II Ult tlmt 111 gt•!h ~"~
•II 1"9 rlgM. lillt """ !Mtrt \I !ll•T Ille
t \!111 OI l••d Of(flHO h•1 tCllVictd bv ooe•.,!101> OI liw llt 01,,.rw!1e orn,. th•n
OI In •aalh!ln IO lhll! al Mid dtC .. hf\l, ~1
llNI 11..,. Of llt,,h, 1n tnd to •II 11>• ·~•'••'1 re•I P•-rly 1Uyolf'11• In Ill• t'"'"1• "'
Or•"ll"• Sttl• ot C•lifoinl1, Plrlltul••I•
"""rlbed tl lollows. IO·W•l; An yn~···~r.1
-·n111 1n11re1t In •nd to
l OI .,, ot Tr•<• NO ,,21, In ltW (.'1~
ol wt11mi"11.,., Coun•v llf O••<>o~. ~1.1 .. ~I (•lllor11l1, 11 l>P' "'"O •t<W ""<I I"
l!!l-10, Pl9"1 11, 11, •f'l<I )• cl
M11C;flll -I ....... ,,., In tn.. Olln • Cit lh•
L0111>ty llfKorO<tr ot' 11!d cou .. ry ,
Tiit 'loklt!r of ,,,. r1m11111nci on1·n•1t 1n11•111 will 1>1rllclP11lt In ••la salt
MOii commonly kno-11. 6102 (flot.
.... D<'IVf, WtllmlnU••· (•IUoinlt , l"9
p-rly 11 It 1HP IOlo "" 1~ "•• I•"
NllL t JICIPI ti lo 11111,
f"'ml of Mii Cllh In lt.,1111 rl'>QAty Cl
IM United Stain on c:entlrm.tlon 01 ••I•.
'!~11 percanl al 1mounl '"a lo 1,.
.. POllrtr:r wl!ll l id.
l!!lld1 or Olltrl IP tit In ..-111"" •"a ... 111
b9 t'KllV9CI I I the l fOl-ld ofll'I •I t ny
tlmt an1r In. !I'll publk11!on her-er tnd
llt!Oll 11!1 of ......
D••ld 1111, 11111 <tmv of s.01., nn.
TONY C. $CIHAV0HE '
Mmlnl11r11or .i ll'lt
aQ•ltlt ol ltlcl Otc.aden!.
CALV°" l>I. WINN
A"""llt'J Al l.1w
Covntv Rt(Ot'der ot 11ld Covnly. l~ 11o101r of '""' rtm1lnlnv one-11111 Interest will p1rtkip11t In said ••It.
Mort commonly k11own '" 6102 Choe· r1w Orll·e. W11lml11S!er, Ct lirornl1.
lllfl P<OPt•!Y r1 lo bl !IOld ,,,. an "•• h " b.>111. •"t"lll 11 ro llllt,
1.,,.,,~ ot ••le tasll 111 l1wl11I mon.y or
tl>t Vnlred Sld!t> 0<1 conflrm1!1on o! Mil~
ftn perctl!I or •mount bia to i,.
d•110~l1.o wl!h Dia,
B•<I> ol oHtri hi l>t Ill wr11,nq •f'ld ~ II
be •ec.,••11 •1 11\f •lo•••~·" 011,ce •I.,.,
1 .. ne alle• tl>t '" 1! PVOl1t:d11on neitol aNI
Dcln,t ll•tt OI Sdlt
o .. rN lhl• IHI! oay or St11•. 1tn.
TONY C. SCti lAVONE
A<lmonl>lr.,l<>r ol tllr t;lt!•
ol W11<! Oe<tatnr
CALVIN N, WINN
Attorntt 11 L•w • 11t1 NO. lv1r • Ptntllow.•
HO!lywoi:ttt. c 111t, 90021
"'''· nu1 ••2,.s1 Altor111y lor Adml"IJlr111r
Pubtl•flff Ordnoe CCMI! Cally Piiot.
$e11t1mblr II. 19, 2S. 1•n 2·01•11
PUBUC NOTICE -----------fl(f!TIOUS l!!IUUNESS
N..liME STAfEMENr
Tt•t tgllow+ng """'"' ••t doing bY!h•~ll n•
GREE:NE ll fill TY. )lo!O Countr~
C11•tt o""' c~"" Mf1~ C•I•• •1616.
Elt&llOI S (.·eenf, ll•O CO~n1r y Clvfl
Or (O\I• M••• 91616
llobt•I C G••fnt. Jl.O Covntry (lub
Or (Oat• M•I" '1116
lhl, "'"'"'" 1, lltlfl.tj "'f>dvt:lt<l by • I' o1M~"'"'"
t::l~~no• ~. e,,~t~
'~" \lotop,.,., 1111'{1 W••h .. ,. (OUll1Y
• • .,. nl Or•r>Oe" Cwn!v Oii ~r 1, 1911
WILLll,M E ST JOHN, C.0\JNTY CLEltK,
l>V l'l•!!y J lll rQllth, Dfl><fly.
, ltlll
P11bll_,, Or•"'1• CCIII Dally Pilot,
~~pl•mtlll< II, IS, ll I nd {lf1obfr ), 1tn 1l11 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
---,ICTITICUS 8V11Ni!S~.--
NAMI! STATll"lliNT
The foll-Ing perMlfll 1r1 do1t>t bt,nlnttl ••.
TOTAL SEllVICES CO .. 'lSOO N•wCOt"I &lvd .. NO, 6, Cot11 Ma,., C1L t)t)I lilty l'.l Ovtrf~''· 1511 NewPOrt Bl~ll
Na. 1. C01t1 M•t•, c 11. mn, ·
Vll'l('t'nt (. lil••o•n. 173' lgw1. (otl• Me.-. C•I.
Willltm ti. Ht!"l!t.on. 7J00 tow°"!
81vd , No J, COlll Mt'•· (1! t l611. 1111~ 1>11111111& !1 Conduc1td by • P•rl!Mr•lllp,
lil•v G. 0v•Y1"t•
* 548-6570 *
REPOSSESSIONS
For Information and Joc.atlon
of these FHA A VA bomea.
contact -
KASABIAN
Real Estate 962-6644
GOV'T. OWNED
l?cposscs~d l1omcs. Lo1v
do\1 n. Gove.rnnif'nl pays
closing cosls. Call 968-41'11. * Crest Realty
ocean vie\v.
O\\INER anxious. Pride of $74,995
01\·TK'r5hip home with '1 Seeing is Buying
spacious b e d r o o m s , 3 Portafina Laguna
gleaming pullman balhs, 714/494-9388
dC'luxe builtin kit•hen op-___ __:::..::-=.:...:=c..--
pusi!e the family roorn ,,.1th CUSTOM home. Beautiful
fireplace. Completely in-ocean view. Underground ~ula!C'd. Qua I i 1 y mn-uWlties. 3 Br., 2 ba,
slrut:lion. Patio. Sprinklers, $69,995
c-.:p('J'tly landscaped. Brk. Atrium-Founlain
$ll950. 962-T3i3. Portaiina Laguna
----7l4/4!M-9388 * S!KIO 00\Vf\1~ * ----"
3 Br.. 2Ba., 3 yr. olri. Cpt, $64,995
llrps. bltns, sprklrs. $31,000. Unlimited ocean view . .2 Br.,
833-1103 eves 642-2312. 2 ba.
Need .. "Pad"? P.lace an ad! CLASSIFIED \Ylll sell Ill
Port1fin• Lagun1
n4/4!M-93S8
O l!eorrono11 l1tt1rs cf the
four xrombled wordi be · Jow 10 forr.i fou r srJ11ole word1 I HYLLOW.
1 I I I I I
I I t GUPER j
I I I 11 J .r------* i N Y RE V l .~
i I I I • Barroom scuttlebuth "She I J . said •he wos In !ho Spring.
I
time of life. I dunno. She must
TI.RYAR l havohad a he<kofa --.•
i 4 I j Is I' I O Complef9 the C:hvdla 9q-u!t~ _ _ _ . by fill~ In the rn!uJng 'WOfcf
, you dM/op from Sltp No, 3 below.
Lovely 3 and
$29,500.
Den
WESTCLIFF
AREA· $40, 950
LARGE RUMPUS
ROOM-POOL Ju.st a real sharp home.
clf'an as a pin. upgn11IC'd
Just begin~ to tell the l'!tory crpts. drps, and appl's.
about this Newport Beach DelighUul nbrhood nr sc>hls
home. An exciting poolside &: shopping, minimun1 SHiOO.
RlmOsphl'l'f' that f J o \\' z dn anrl paymC'nts less thnu
through lhe large n1111pus renl . Call today, you'll likt'
room with llreplaet' 1tnd 11·hat you see.
Stl'pdown ,,·c1 bar. Thret' I'
bedrooms. l''irst t I me
advorHsed! &l&-7171 . 531 -5100 ( -·' 5 ~... 31·5800
1 1l~ge Real Estate
11 ~0 l'ash rctW11 on $32,928.
i;rhC'dulcd inrnml'
Grubb & Ellis; Bkrs,
5.17-7900
FOR Salt'; Re:i! Eslate ofri('('
rrnt. C.~1. inrl R.F:. 1v/adcl'J
inromr. ti42·G56 0 or
Gl.'r-Z02Q.
Commercial
P roperty ISi
Shopping Centers
11'.)THEREAL \~ ES'J'ATERS
Hi Slt>rt's * * * _ r.Jajor
markf'r. hank _ niajor
franch1sr foort . l.(lng l('rm
leases, cx1·1'l len1 l lnani·in~.
s;nclemtnte h1~h rrturn, selling Pril't' $72j,OOIJ, 'I', •
-=======""1SELL ($44,900) or trod• 3 17 Commerc"tal Ponderosa Ranch BR, 2 BA ocean vlew home $ San Oemente for N, Orange Stores
42,500 ~Co_ . .:..544_:.-4.:.2!)1=·-----I AM"'I "'°"· 1.53.950 •toblc S~1cc ~e~~~('!~~foc~~ San Juen Capistrano tennnL~. sales prlt>e $421,<00.
I lo n . L o ve I Y q u le I 1 BR, 2~ BA, fam rm , din 1ii1~~-ncighborhood. lrlcal for ex-rm, fTplc, bltns, fncd yard,
panding family ' separate 1 mile Dana Puint Harbor. %!t1
0
•l1t.·
1
•
family ro<>1n with fireplace. By Ownl'r. 493-3743. ~ ~--...
Bit-In kl lch cn with • .
d I s hv.·a:iht•r. Out.sl<\nding Un1vers1ty P•rk NEWLY LISTED
pool si:r:l' yard. Many l::\11
'"'"· A ""' Jim• oll=d. C-1 LAND
Call 673-8550. I MobiteHomes j(J•) Loc11!ed tn f:JJ>l 1tl'oWln1i1: •rtll
. . 1vlth A. till(' IO('nhon. Th!, 4.6 llCl'e p~perty I~ flnly Sl.13 II
Mobil• ~omes sq. II. i: ull price Is sm 500
F.or Sile l2S Also on \Varr'l('r AW!.' i~
* PIER & SLIP *I-_;..,;.;.;;,.._ _ _..;;;;, r.ountoln V<ii•y, "'' hove 2'x60 We'lterntt, like new. 2 ive lolJI with JrOOd rrontaA"l'
•-d•• ""l bar ••• nd 8 1 only $30,00() r>c r lol, For " Fl 3 Bdnns 3 "6
•'--DI', ..... -· • -co · r "-uu " ·• uau15 Acrosa lrt from bch, 536--Ul7G urt,..·r Information, call our Jmmaculalcl $240,000 •• ., Jnvr11tment Dtv1aJl)fl , 1 LIDO REAL TY "'-r..n >06-lflltl.
33n Via Lido, Npt Beach rm~•J:::T:l~~""-'' -H~G6~~:~~T~: ·~.~~!i''· l•l --#}\!
Sht'IJ«o: roof, 118Cd brick, new,!~~;;;;;~~~ ••••1.I che.crlul J)l'Ofru. decor. 5jl BALBOA Island C-I ~--:
16 PRINT NUMBfR[D U:llfRS IN I
THESE SQUAt6$
"
:
' $
11u Ha. lwtr • , .. ,..._
Httl~ C•lll. ,..... 1'.t. Ull) "1.tl51
Tl'lll 1111-1 flltd Wllll 1,,_ (Ollh!V
C11•• ol 0•1~ C01111!y °" S..p!, 1 ''11
WILLIAM Ii. sr JOHN, COUNTY ~l.11tlC a v Siiiy J , l!!ltrg11lfl,, Dlovly, • :& u~~~~~~E unus I I I I I I I BR. din rm., 3 bl. AcrNge for ule 150 Choice Arr:a.. -Loadl of •,
"""' .. ., tw AllMllllllW.W
"'11Mltl\9d Or ... ~ Dally "'!lot.
......,,.., '" ''· u. '"' tm.n
' -.
'"Miii PUbll Jhtd Or•not COi" Diiiy Piiot
""''tr'rlbw 11, 11. 11 1"11 Ottlllltr 1: 1,n nt4-n
• •
SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION Bll
---""EM Pnton11AJ. Bkr . .,,,_1221, '"' ·-40 ACRE IN N.M.
1610 W. 0oaat H..,. N.B.
REALTORS -
ROLLING HILLS, PINES.
$350 dn., 129 mo. 536-3019
J
[ ltulbt:Mt, ...... 1 Hil I
Monday , Stptttnbtr 25, 1 '172 DAILY PILOT 2J . ------------
l[iJ ;;I ~;;;.llil~ I -·-11~/i -·-I~ I -·-J~l-·-J~ I···-··· l ~i-··-1~ ~':~lumo IM R•nch11, Fuma, M-v ft L•n 240 H°"'" Unfum. JDS H..,, .. Unfum. JDS Houlll fum..,.. Aplt. Fum. 360 Apt. Unlum. J'5 Apt. Unfllm. -l=:~~i----...::: Growt 1• BORROW TO izs,OJO on the 0-r•t Huntl-lleod! _U.,,...nl_u_m_.,..... ___ 3_10 Corono dll Mor Gener•I General BEAUT. Condo, 3 BR, 3 BA, y c
-~~ Ont •~ B Owner: 10.U acrta: equity In )'OUI' bouR. UH B•I~ -ltl•nd 1iiiiiiiiiii ... ~1• Y -.ooo. · be fl"'·' " A,.. -1·a DUPLE.'C -l Ult w/;'IU'd. JI 10% dn, Hunt t::1 ..... COAST-au •w .r.·yr ........ avocado the ll><>MY for MY P\O'PO•· 3 BEDROOM . 2 Bath.
U NE, 53&-3m ......... £:rovt , Bon.aall am ~ 9S9'. Ovt.r $5,000 an na.I e11a1e NO\V is y0ur cha.nee to Uve UtJI pd. J18:i mo. O ean I VILLA MARSEILLES
Haas, 5';0 Fuerte. C:Omple~ and pttll)nlJ pro.....-ty. Call $200 per month. Bl Ins, cloae to thf. So, bav on the cute Adul ts, no Pe l I. SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. ELEGANT
' BR, 2 ba I I I ed ~ u ~ xlnt condition. 962-4471 ' 836-<lJIG9 · am Y enc · E.ACt! ent 10il. AVCO Island. yearly, for only $C75 177-'-;ii'====,.-,~= Furnlshtd a UnfurnlsMd rm, pool, rtt nn.-.a.Jt for 29"."0 down -will Can')' FINANCIAL SERVICES Or 546-8103. Agt. nio. Jniniar, t11.mlly home: ** OCEANFRONl" I BR, Adult Living
leu than S.15.<m. Agent, r>apert. $10.900. per acre. 500 N. Alla.ho lln Blvd ., 3 BR. & den, unfurn., ready $250. CALL Bl:."J'\\'EE.i~ 8: 30 Dish\vasher color coordina ted appliances -
642-3073 or 644-8814. [ 714: 1'2S-23-U. Anaheim 535-2816 Alone on lot St~. Pr1v fncd to 1nove in t0d11y~ 136 Topni ·'1 J: :W. ~;)I I L P lush s hag c arpet .. mirrored wardrobe doors-
Dupltx•s/Unfts Re•I Est•te W•nted 184 240 S. Euclid St ., hom~. Crpl.!l, drp.s. \VfNTER leo!t', 011 lhe Nor1 h rURNISHEO Apr Sl45 u1 11 indir ect lighting in k itche n. breakfast bar.
Hl1 162 --Anaheim '77G·!250 Thete Are Jull A Few of Our Ront-A-Hou1e 979-1430 boy. Vi•w. ' BK., lamlly paid. ', hlk lo °'"n. No h uge private fenced patio • plush !andscap. * Quick Cash * 1879
Harbor Blvd., L\'lANY Avail. Rentals. lrvlne rrn., rw·n. S·t2S ?1-fo. pcl~. 2500 &-:i ,·h•ii·, Cd~T. inf • brick Ber-~Ques • large heated pool.s SUPER dt lux Spanish style \\'ill b II COila J\le5a '42·34!4 * \\'I~TER lease, 3 Brlnn11: 2 C I M , . . i .
Duplex, Eut Costa Mesa, cash u~l~~r ti~Y· C~ 617 \V, 17th St., $88 • FIXER Upper, l Br. baths. $300 1no. 236 Agat~· os 11 esa ix anei. Air condtt on1ng. SS
7
-I_
Each 38R. 2'BA w/shag Santa Ana 547-4431 3 BR. 2 ba th · ......... $330 '·"fl hive many other WEEKLY-MONTHLY 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana _.._ "" S1ove, retrlg. Pet/sngls ok. 4 BR ., b I IJ90 COLDWELL BANKER & CO crpl, All elect kltchn. .rul7 S, Main St., ·• ~ 2 a., am r1n \v1ntcr &. yearly l'Cntals Executive Suites , •
Spanlsh decor. Klngaard Santa Ana M9-3361 * 4 BR., 21';; ba, tam nn •• S.350 ava1lablr 00\\' 2080 N MANAGING AGENT
Real Estate. 642-2222. Ul!ll BnXlkhunt Blvd., Sl13 -STUDENTS! 1 Br. 4 BR., 2a ba, fam rm •· $400 WILLIAM WINTON ewport Blvd.
NEW DUPL E Gard~ Grove 530-4300 Sto\'!', rncd yard. Ptt ok. 4 BR .. 2~ ba, tam rm .• $4lS REAL TY 67.S.3331 Cost• Met•
EX S &JU Wettmwl•r Blvd., * 642-2611 Apll. Furn. BUILDER SELLING NO\V. Wt rtmintter B93-~ SlSO • PRIVATE~ 2 Br. lido Isla STUDIOS & I BR'S :UO I Apt. tJnturn.
--------·
$45,950 WE •• 2 Homt. gar, kids/pel.U ·-N-FURN---1.--1-1---le }-~REE Llnf!n."I L~guna Be,.ch CDr Jlw11i11,1on /Adams, 11 .B. arraJlie .1.11l & nd RE * , · ear Y t'll.U-. 3 • FRE<' Uillo t••• I r-~~~~~~~
962.a&Sl l Al BR J Ba 1315 M h c. ~ R<.10i\tS $2:1 \\'k, rri 1110 536-1111 /~~~~~~~~~~I oans. '° purthue TDs. $175 • NE\VPORT HGTS ! 3 · 1 ' 1 on! ' • f'"ull K't n )
Coron• d•I Mar
l-;-ln_c_o_m_e-'.P.i-r'°o"~:..:.:ttc.y_"°'!"°'6 Bier. 492-833 Z, f92.M24. Br, Car. Jiugo ,.--.. for F1u300R~.!o~IBh.R. \Vi111rr leos.-, e llcared1 ~,,:1~ ,\pis. fror11 Sl 10. llrA!!'I
,...... ......, " .. 1-..•ol. n1•ar hf':ic-h. Lu ~u!l;1 ]~ Mortg•g•t, kids/pets. "'SINCE 1946" Bryunt \\'if'SI, !tlrr. 6_ • ..,123 • U.1u11J1y fac1l 111ti.~ :-.lotur liu i 1 ~,0:, :\, Const D.c:..i .. ~ TAX SHELTER Financiaf
Ne w ! ! ! F ini! OWllC'r
depreciation available'. \\ll•
have tllt' be1:I 1nvrltltory of
new apts. In the t'Ounty, }"'or
example: 22 unlls, $325.000.
12) 24 units, Sa&l,500 &
$679,500. 29 units (luxuryl
$532,000. JG unils $.}32,000.
(714) 8J3.0040.
• Trust DMd1 260 * Jst Western Bank Bldi:. ~-o-~~---'-~---1
• TV & nu1lJ scrv &v:11l Hi\'\'. !.:i~un:-i !{c-a<·h_
3185 -OCEAN Breeze! 3 Br., Univer sity Park, Irvi ne Condominrums • Pho11(' :-lr1"\•1cr
XLNT l.st TO's. S?,000. 25 2 Ba. gar. fncd for kids. Days 552-7000 Ni,.ht1 Unfurn. 320 * t "O WEEK & UP * Newport Beach
Business
Opportunity 200
YOUR
OWN BUSINESS?
Vanda Beauty Counselor, a
dlvlaton of Dart IndUJtrie1
which Includes such famout
names 1'1.S Tupperware, Wt.!lt
years at 8Vo inL $14,000. 10 LORDSI • ..
Y .% · Bl LAND Gener•I e Studio & I BR Aprs ._._ ears u1t. g. Bear FREE FENTAL SERVICE e TV & 1'.la.ld Sc v ie A . II \\'I' ha1·1• \\lintl'l' Rt'nl!'l!s lakefront pro~rtY. \Viii d'•· S 3 BR 2 bath' 13"" 1 e 'n 11' 11 T k 01 I 1 r -.. BEACON RENTAL ' . ......... w COSTA MESA 3BR 2\~BA , • Phone Scrvicc-Jl!d Pool l :I L'.., llll'll s ::~ ~%p'rn. 213
! 638-02"".JS * 645-0111 * 2 BR. 2 baths ·····' •• • $300 newly painted, $295 per n10. • Children &. Pet M'Ctlon ,\l"1.i (l('\'Ul\rronls avnil
J BR, 2 ba. fam rm. ·• $425 MR CATERfNO, 962-4471. 2376 Newport Blv<I, C'! .j BH. :l BA • " ••• "" •" $.1;)0 Huntington Beach area . "BR 2 balh' 1350 • "I' ., R\ I~' .. · • • · ·' '' · • 548-9755 or 6·15--3007 " '· • ' · ·'' • '' '• · • • ~
Sharp 3 bedroom Dutch 8 eel h II Costa Met• This Ad \Vorth S5 on R<'nt I RH., l B1\ ............ Sl75 Haven hOme. New shag r 1• l BR homo ............ 1275
~
ON TEN ACRES
Apt!t. furn./un furn. LcaMi
F ireplaces I vr1 v, patios.
Pools Ttnnls Conbit'I BkJ~.
900 Sea Lane-, Cd~t 6·1'1·26ll
t\-1acArlbur IU' Coa1I Hwy)
T\VO bclnn .. 1 1 ~ b a t h ,
f.ireplace. $24:; Incl AU.
utilities. Phon<' ( 7 1 4 )
644·881-1 nr 6-12-:lt)i~.
Jn\l(!stment Div
»fl Bu\iness Cenlt'r Drive
Jrvine, Calif Bend a nd syroco ii planning Housea Furnlshtcl 300
Carpl'ts with match i n g 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drps, El Puerto Mesa CALL: tiTl-3663 drapes. Sparkling cltan. bllns, $235 mo. Children,
Rentis$230permonth. pe!s OK, S"'·im p o ol . 1 BR's -$130 UP
COLWELL
PROPERTIES, INC.
REALTORS
TRIPLEXES
$41 ,500
TAKE '\'OUR PICK
a major expansion of its G ''"•_n_e_r_•"I _____ _
dh't'ct !lellJng c o s m e t 1 c
dl.stributorships, \Ve are FrH Rental Servlc11 seeking rouples interested TO
in a business in which LANDLORDS ,'.ND
primary responsibility will TENANTS
be on the ll'ntale side. She All prices and aU areas
should \\"ant to m a k e 675-7225 5S.0222
3 Bedroom, 2 bath Costa REALTY 546-JTIO. Furnished Apts.
Mesa a rea. Double garagt . Univ. Park Cen!e.r, Irvine Huntington &each All Utilit ies P aid
covered patio, ne'v paint. Call Anytim~. 8.lJ.0820 Pool & Rccr1•rt 110n associated
fenced yard. For rent or op.. Office hours 8 A:\I to 8 P"f 4 Br, c1·pts, dl'ps, pool, R/O, 1959 .\Inn Ir /'I\ r., (' '.\!
hon at sno per month. Call \\'hr/dryr, ref~. clullhst'. -~ ----. . . .
3 BR. 2 Ba. home o'looking :!225. 54S-l405, 537.s."Ul4. Sll AR~ .<111 a pl Sl, 11 h• Sl.1 fJCEANFRON r nr JCll), I.~
BROKERS-REALTORS
2025 W 8atboa 67)-)66)
LG J-; 3 Bit i bit. vie11·, frplc,
bll ns, beam ce1l'R. So. 1111)'.
S32a. 67~·1ll.
Deaut. I Hr apt. Caqll.'l't.
lf'nnis caurt. pox.I. 11 .1tr1· pd.
~ho~l'S 1\p1 fi-1()..(l')~'l a t1 5. adll. pool ill Univ. Park. \lk. U11l. phon1•, 11001 Ill• I ~BH, lB,\, lTJll~. ilq1s.
$32.J. O\\•ner S44-JSl8. 3 BP., O\'cn/rangc>. refi-ig, '.\ll'n 01· 11<111\l'll 2 .: < (; li·11h·. blt111s, rn.r. pallu, $:t00 Cost• Mas•
crp1 .s Recrea1ion facilitic~. Nrwpnn Uhd. (" '1 \\'intrr S-WO )l'ilrl}, 111cl ul ll.
-"'WALKER & L[f
RealtOl'll 545-S491
Opf.'11 Eves. * 3-2 BR unils, N. Costa
M<'sa • 2 BR, dupll'X +
hatchelor , E-side, C.M.
a prorit, gro1v, and dirtct
other ~Jes women.
Each distributor is assi&ned
a protected area of con-
centration.
COLWELL
PROPERTIES, INC.
LANDLORDS!
We Speclallze 1D Newport
Stach • Corona del Mar e
.l Laguna, Our Rental SU.
Laguna Beach $200 mo. 962-0.'i.57. 6-15-:{967. IM2-2'940. · New duplex•s &
S185 -Util pd . J Br .• frplc, Newport Beach * $25 PER WEE-K * OCEAN}"f<ONT cornt<r rlph:, triplex••
gar, ocean vu. Carden set-BRAND 1 t' . ho 3 &: Up, Pool & n1a1d service. \1 intrr: 2 Br., h11·, frplc; 4 • 2 BR • adults -Sl9:i.
ting. br 2,~ ;e vTh xe~l ff m;fioo Kitchens av11.·1, l\lotel Tahiti Br. 2 Ba upr, bltn. kitchen. e 3 BR . 1 child. i295.. CALL 642"-l rn
The. it'Owth of the cosmet1c1
industry ls predicted to be
250';0 during tht 70'.s. It
you would likt to hear more
about participation in this
exciting, protltable &rowth
opportunity, write
REALTORS $300 • Charming 2 + Oen ' 1 t &a,J t esr~ d"'· .t comer Harbor & Victor ia. 5011 Seashore, NB. ~9079 Beaut., new, apacioUJ apts
Ontu~ ~21
e TRIPLEX . 7x's gross. Try
10% down. Only $42,500,
Xlnl buy!
e FOURPLEX $6.S.000.
Pride-of-0\\·nrrship, :-r y
Jl)r; do\.\ n.
• .qooo FEET C""4 rron1agt' on
BC'ach Blvd • $500. pc<r
fron t fool .
CALL THE REAL
ESTATE · FAIR,
SU-2551
NEW DUPLEX $41,950.
featuring 3 bdrm., 2 ha,
"Ov•ner's unit" &: 2 bdrm., 1
ba. Jncome unit. Xlnt loca·
tion. Large l'l.lttactive un!t1.
Quiet privacy. Sff ]51 E.
B4y St., Costa r.1 e s a ,
64z..4837.
2 FOURPLEXES. buy one (Ir
both. Nt'f.>d so me 11·ork.
10 UN IT m0Qey·n1aker.
$8.'i,000 Sell or e:-.:change
FORTIN, ReaJtor 642-5000
INVES'T'O RS 7';':i Down. New
4 unit apt. \Vestmins ter Ir
Huntington Beach, 96&--0407,
~2586 betwn 9 am &: 12
pm. * 4-ple.x nr. So. Coot Plaza.
Deluxe 3 Br owner's unit
Bier. 5'5-2321 .
M-1 LAND
<IJ,000 sq. fl. for long lerm
lease ~·l lh option lo buy.
Prime west side Costa
Mesa. ED RJDOLE ReaJtor,
646-8811.
Lots for Salt 170
R·4 COST A MES~
Level 63' x 290' nr. Harbor
Bl. OK for 12 unit1 $36,540.
Choice R-4 level • 36,540 Sq.
Ft. OK for .24 unit•. $94.290.
Wesley N, Taylor Co,
REALTOJ-tS
2111 San Joaquin !fills Rd .
Ne"'J>(lrt Ct'ntcr 6-14-1910
• LIOO lot fur sull.' or 1rade,
one of lh<' lasl Jols avail. 0 11
LiOO. Corner Jot 4ll' on
lfa\Tt! & Ithaca & l!S' on
Ll<ki Soud. Q\\·ner, 548-81116.
NE\VPORT Beach 90' froD-
taae, view of ocean &
harbc>r. $65,000. 646-3613
~6444262.
PRESIDENT
VANDA BEAUTY
COUNSELOR
8480 Beverly Boulevard
Uis Angeles, callfornia 90048 * RISK CAPITAL * 15,000-$250,000
Mui II-Plant Or an g e Co.
Growth Co. Jntercsted in
bu.!l. oppt'y!I, Seek owner·
shi p participation in bus.
responsive to dynamic mamt
& creative merchandizing.
Call Frank, 546-8.30.1 or writt
Box 1225, CM.
1-lA VE BUYERS FOR •••
• Liquor Stores e Cbemical mf.& plant
• Jo'ood proee.!ls. plant
NEED ANY TYPE MFG ...•
HOLLAND Bus. SolH
1n6 Orange, C.M. 645-4170
1-'ULL Time/Part tim e .
\\'ould you like lo make $500
a month or more. Ideal for
hu.!lbnnd or wile. For appt:
call 774-2379
E L ECTRJCAL contractor
\\•ill lie. corp. or individual
CRME). Must have sound
ttrnuicial .!l la le men t,
979.2137_
lnv11tm•nt
Opportunity
FI NANCIAL
220
P ARTNER.
B•lboa Island vice ia FREE to You! Try
Nu-View!
WINTER. 4 Br, nr. r\ew, NU VIEW RENTALS baylront, $360 mo, W• h•v• "
others bayfront or in.!lide. 6734030 ar 494-3248
Sallsbury Realty lIUNT. Sch. area -1 yr new
315 Marine Ave. 67J....t3900 4 Bdnn single story home.
PREF Students. 4 br, 2 ba, S 2 7 5 / mo• Lease &
Avail now. $350 mo, utils references r e q u i r f! d ,
pd_ See 126 Collins Ave, or fa milies only -no big pets.
call Evt s, 1213) 289-8366. Av a i l. O c t, 2 0 -7 2.
Q\\•ncr /agt, Chuck Everett,
Balbo• Ptninsul• 5"6-414 1 or 642-5719.
MNTER on BAY $300 3BR * \VHY RENT? \Ve have
2 BA , trplc, CTV, \V/D. 619 houses &\·ail for nothing
\V. Bay, blk to ocean. at down to vets & 5% down to
Buena Vista \Vith view. anyone. Call a n Y I i m e •
673-6467 or 673-fi050. SCOTI' REALTY, 536-753.1.
$90 • Mob Hm. Sep Garqe Corona dtl Mar
Unit $100. Bal Isl $125. All UNIQUE Rustic 3 Br + loft.
util pd. 2 t ba hs
Rent-A-House 979-1430 Ner:i c~:n ~ • s=~
COZY 3 bdrm near jetty & $450/mo. 846-5065.
ocean. Wood panel, frplc,
shag crpt, dshwhr. secluded _c_o_•_t•_Mo __ •• ____ _
patio. Ti! June 15th. $350. Three bedroom, 2 bath wi th
n10. 5'18-3797. fireplace, built·ins, n e 1Y
YEARLY L.O\\'ER DUPLEX shag carpets .l drapes. $230
2 Br, 2 Ba. $240 Carport. 320 per month. Frte rental
Alvarado Place. servi~.
3 BR, 2% Ba, modernized. 3-
car park'g. S350 mo. 305 C:::WAll\fH /I. I l l
Montero. 1-879·5991. Realtors 646-7711
SPAC, 3 Bl'., 2 Ba bay view 2043 Westcllff Drive
hQuae, $240 or dhc: 2 Br apl. Open 'ti! 9 PM
$175. 546--9574, 871-9467. 2 Br. + Family rm, new
Costa Mes• pa.int/crpts, 2 car + boat/
camper/garden 1p. E·C.l\f.
LOVELY 4 BR, 2~~ BA. Ni;. To resp, marrieds \v/l sch!·
?.1ay Co. Dishes. linens, age child. $185. Jsl/last +
\vshr/dryer. dshwhr. lrg S50 {refund). Avail now.
yrd. sprinklen, dbl gar. 976 536-0414.
Denver Dr. Cl\f. 540-2442. -'-~-~~~,--~-Earn $9000 a y<>ar for the 4 Bdrm. Family Room, home
rest of your life on a fu lly L•guna Beech for lease in N e w 9 o r t secured Investment o f I _ _.________ Jf•o'ghls ·-a Top Con
$75 -Util pd. &ch a pt. nr "' ...... • · $21,000. Call R. H i 11 , '--h ditlon, $435 mo. Call r.·rr. 5.i?-!~1. ucac &-I0\\''1.
$150 • 1 Br. compl furn., Bailey Agent 673·8550.
Monty to Loan 240 patio, good Joe. Child ok. SMALL 2 BR, w/w cpl.
HO?l-fEOWNERS! $300 -Oceanfront 3 Br., frplc, P atio, privalt fenced yard
BORROW gar, lrg deck, beaut vu. w/lots of room for garden·
NU-VIEW RENTALS ing 1148. 642-2'30. F & L +
673-4030 or 494-3248 Dep, Avail OcL 1.
$1000 • $10,DOO Up Lido itle
LOW MONTHLY
PAYMENTS WlN'l'ER 2 BR. 2 ba, so.
LOANS on ANY HOME, palio, dbl gar, frplc, F.A.
PAID FOR or NOT heat, (213 ) 794·.5683 day!!;
C0~1PARE OUR cos T s (213) 793-7832 eves: 675-25().1
* 2 Br, 1 Ba. Townhouse.
Lrg. patio, a:ar /po o l .
Washel'odryer hookup. $205
to $225. Child ok. 833·8974.
frplc home. No. end. ::~ii snow. ~35-eposi · * CLEAN 2 Br. Close tol;o-"'.-.' .,'4.,.5-
7
5..-1..-10-.,.,...--,-..-w/tncd yard.I, patiol A: quiet
S325 -2 + den + l\'Orksho!), shops. Adulrs only, no pets. SEACLJ FF .\la11or AP ts prtvacy. No pets. 151 E, &1
frplc, IOJ'il'bUS view. San Juan Ci1pi1tr•no Inquire l7!1~~ Rochester, RA rhf'lor ap t. nt!I pd. St. (at f'"ullerton St.), C.M.
Child/pet ~ I · PJ-IONE: 642-4837 NU-VIEW RENTALS LEASE. Capistrano Villas C.~1. .,1.1...:_;,o, Poo 1:;25 Plat't'n111t
Best Joe 3 BR 2 BA N" SML 1 B d I F 1. A1 P., :i~k abou1 our rli ~t'oun1 Park-Like Surroundin9 673-1030 or 494-3248 · · · 1 r, up ex, r p c, • JS...2'6~Z
('Ondo Free maint, pool , bean1 <"t'il, patio, \\·/ii·, 1i,-'-·"·=-· ~-oc-----QUIET DELUXE
NE\V 4 Br, 2 Ba. Crpts, drps. crpts, drapery, S285 mo. day adu lt only. Yrnrly Sl40. 187 :: RR. '...! H;i, nu 1·1'p!«. 1, 2 ,ft 3 BR APTS.
bltns, $290 J)t'r mo. Days 213-531-2584 or C'Vcs F.. 21 .st SL, Ct-.!. 64."i-l:J l7. ;\lnnThly. 20~1 ;1 !2nd :-ii ALSO FtJRN BACH!::LOR
830-7000 ext 75 M r .~, 213-351-97>48. CllRISTJAN I d 40 ·I s:ti:>/n10 . l\r. b c ,1 \'I•. PvL J111.t1os * I-ltd. Pools J\.lcDanic!s: Eves & 1vknds, . a ~·: v-I~ 1• 1'., 1;12-7611. ?\:r Shop'g * Adults Only
5"5--0966. sn1okc-ctr1nk-u1 1I s r><I. s-..-, -. • • A
Townhouse Unfurn. 335 ino. 5.1:;:_1939 fl:t-l\ '"" 2 Bit '1. ba 11/lrplr. t'f'fr1k. Mart1n1que pts.
LOVELY older '4 bedroorn H ~-7720 Rltr. '¥ blk 10 b€-och. PA.r1I~· fur11. 1777 Santa Ana Ave .. C.M.
m ansion, on 11 .secluded untington Beach ~2:-,0 mo. ~Tike 610-1;,{)(] t•xl r.1gr. Apt. 11 3 64~2
Bk 61p ......,,,, _ Furn Bach & I Br. EX. ·~n 1 61' ,.,. acre. r. :.>-•u.:i. . BDR'I bl tn •-1 ""' < ayi;; <'\'C'S .r-.11. s. * * $180 * * " "' s, '-'I' c, ne,w ceptionally nice ! 2110 1 °"'~-=~:;;"""--"':..C:.C..._
Newport S.•ch shag crpt. Pool. No pe s. N Bl d CM BAY FRONT Dlx u p P (' r J Br. 21~ Bn . ne111ly painted. Al.so 2 bdrm. 962·1674, lwport y , · · dupll'x. :: Br, 2 Ba .
THE BLUFFS
LEASES AVAIL
SPACIOUS. deluxe l ·BR.,
1-luntington 1-larbour. $300
Month.
2 BR. & de n. 2·sty. Bluffs
Plaza, end unit. $350 Month.
4 BR, 3 Ba. Fre.!lhly painted.
Children/pets 0 .K. $42j Mo.
l·STY. :I Br., 2 Ba. Choice
cal'ly arcn. $42j l\fo.
BRANO ne1v 3 Br., tam. rm.
Deluxe app'ts. $475 Mo. * FURNISHED *
3 BR .. 2 ba. l·sty. 8 Mos.
lease, $375 Mo.
3 & FAJ\1. rni. Nr. new. F ully
furn. $575 ~fo.
1·STY. spac. 3 plus lanai.
Winter month.5. $600 Mo.
Bltns, crpt/{lrps, cnC'I patio. Duplexes Furn. '45 $90 &: up. ~icely furni~hed 1 ''.rly-,$400. A?lt.> 2.1.1 19111 Nr flt'h!s &: shop'i· Childrf'n
-"----------1 Br. Tra1lf'rs. Adu l I <1 . SI., No. C, 67:;..()2J6. ok, No peti. 880 Center SI, .,N:::e_:w'.!oo~tl!_:B:'.:e~o~c:'.h~---l ;64-',5-<~530;;;;;.;;;'~12TiW~.~\V'il~['°~"::;·~Di-.1. DE LUXF. 1vatcrlrnrlt :I l~r. Cl'vf. Call Mon'!!, Wed'• & -* Stunning 1 & 2 BR. 2 Ba. }.:":•r, patlo. floa1 , S28:1/1no. F ri's 1-5 pn1 .• Tues lo 11:30
\VJNTER Lease. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Garden a pt. Pool. 64~5530. Lrg. 2 Br, palio, d()('k pl'1v11. am. J\ll day \\1knds. 642-8340
On beachfront. Top $375. 710 W. 18th St, CM. S260 mo. Winter. 544-2013. Uiwer $325. 673-9728 UPPER, clean 2 Br. encl
1 BDRM apt & 1 bachelor, OCEANFRONT Lrg Near gar. Nr. OCC & ahop'g,
Duplexes 1Jnfurn. 350 partially furnishrd Incl util ne11" 3 BR, 2 BA. frplc, 5703 Adult!!, no pel.!l. 2984 Royal
SIIO. mo. &12-8,100. St'nshorr 645-~16 \\'inl L'r or Paln1 Dr. $ l 5 2 /mo. Costa Mesa BEAUT. FURN 2 BR $1 75 up '"rl,v. 615·331J.
2 BDR:\I nr11·Jy decorated, Ulll paid. l·ltd Pool. Adlls, no 1'1~1'A_Tc_E_A_<_F_R(~l,-N=T-,-.p-0-,._-::-8~R Ll?G 1 BR. $140 + Dep.
bltns, lgc yd & patio. Avail pets. Also 2 Br unf &12-9520. & F'/R . hn<i t ~lo<'k a\'I. Yi·. Crpts, carport &: lndry ln
10/l . Rrfs rt"q'd. $235. mu. CHRISTIAN lady, 40---ish, 110 Jsc. $12.i. 675-$7!12 o r bldg. Nr. shops, 1Chl1 & ~ Cecil Place, rear. smokc-drink-utll's pd, $85 642-3!'"1."i!l. fn1'y. 1016. 998 El Camino,
Huntington B••di mo. J im at 548-i720 Rltr. ''w"1"'N'°T"E=.R-.-,,-.-b"lk-,o-oo-,-,-,,_-.;•, Apt l, C~t. S46-045 l.
IMM OCCUPANCY l Br. $140. Adu lts (I nly. Br, pvt patio S275/n10, Call SPAC I. 2 & 3 Br apt $140 up.
ED 2 & 3 B S/Pool. Ideal for Bache lors 642-9485 anytime ,1·k11d or Pool, cpl/drp, bl ln5, kid s ~~wgaragc, d:ha::~ 1993 Church SI. 548-96.33. , ~·~"~6-wc.kd:;,Yc.'~· ----~ ok. 'OcE 2206 College No. 5 •.• 642-7035 Cor Huntington/Adams, H.B. $82.50. Small furn trailer 11·/ ANF'RONT 3 BR, 2 Ba. l996 l\·laple No. 1 .•.. 642-3813 536-8188 canab.a. Uli/11 pd. Adlts, no Fpl .. new carp. $300 l\1on th
pe!s. 544-1539. \\'inter. Agent 6ia-1642. DE L.UXE 2 Br, 11,~ Ba. Studio 'f.;.. Newport Be•ch on dead~nd street. Crpta. :·1·, ,...._ LRC. clC'a n 2 Br., 2 Ba., \VO\V! Ocranft'ont Ap t, f'ev.r d I bltn J 6 ' 2 b I B r p1, poo • s, pr v. -\.)J3&(' NE\VPORT f."llP D e I u .'< pool , ul t. pd., adults over 35 r, pvt, crp . us. n1e r1 patio!. :SI S5. 1 child ok. No a.st §_ .·•,'I II \Vatertront \Y/pier. float 3 SloG. 518-2407 545-4636. pref'd. $325. 64~3167. " b · I pets. 548-7154. BR. 2 BA, Juns, frig, trp r, \VlNTER duplex avail . 3 .'< .. , renJly ne1,· crpting, & sunrl rk. o;.;oo Huntington Bt•ch BR, 2 ba, 2 BR, l 1i11 . /'\r. 2 B~,E~~;~x 0;1~~~~t;~pd. ~... Yrly lease. Adlts only. oc:ran. 673-856.1. 2'1' v· t d·' o 67"1612 Call b1''11 1 & :-i. 636-4120. .. .. is a '" ro .r-• LaQUJNTA HERMOSA OCEANFRONT 1 Br. Apl. Nr\\'JX>rt Bt'ach 2176 Placcnlia Ave "B" $140. 64~_1133 ANYTI~1E Duplexes, Spru1ish Counlry Estaft L.lv-Win ter. $165. Util pd. LR I 2 B 2 Ba U
Furn • .,, Uafurn. 355 Ing & Spaclou9 Apts. Ter-* 548-1930 * G. c ean r., · P-
$210 -Ne1Y 2 Br., 111 ba, ~~ raced pool; 'sunken gas _ per, Pool. Utll pd. Adlts
blk ocean. Child/pet ok. General BBQ Unbelitvable Llvln& 4 BB., 2 BA on Beach, Ava il over 35. $145. 548-2407 or
$225 • 2 Br. bltns, ne\v C'.rplll", 1----------1 0 , • ~ no111 thru J une 16, 1973. 645-4636.
drps, gar. dock, chan· 1-BR. & den unf. Quain! 2n~R. STUDIO -$240 &is--0245 or 5-47-9726--Boh. ** BEAUTf}~UL l & 2 BR.
nl'lfron!. Corona del ?l-1ar toe. 1 House ALL UTILITIES PAID DELUXE J BR. Apt. Stepg Conteniporary Garde'tl Apt.
$31:; • Lrg. 2 Bl'., 21,;, bn, off :'<Int beach. $200. Adults No pets to Ocean. Sl40/mo + Util. Patio!'!, f r p I r . , pool,
frplc., gar, Eastblufl. Sml 3 BR . 2 ba. r u r n · · \\'inter renta l, 673-2677. Sl55-S1 70. Cnll ~6-516:~.
pet ok. unob.!lt ructed ba,ytront. $42j , (4 blks S. of San Dle&o Frwy 27' Tra iler, l Br. Full ba . DELUXE 1 &: 2 SR, I &: 2
NU-VIEW RENTALS 3,u:· ~2~a oceanfront, un-on B¥ch, l blk W. on lioll Acro.u from bench.~ $125 ha , $160 up. Pool. J\rlult~.
673-4030 01· 49.1-3248 Th I " Ca RI "ulll to 16211 Parkside Lane.) p!u~ CIC'a11111g fre. 548--1119. Ut!I !""i J~4 E' 20th SI e l"\\Jn · trs. ,,., .. " (714) 847-5441 ' · ., S22a--:: Br. Bltns, n r w 2 BR. Apts. OcC'anlront. Near 64:>-4761
F1RSI'! \vknds
FIRESIDE LOAN 2 BR. &: dE,,,. Choice Lido loc.
GUARANTEE: $600 Mo. lhru June, Incl.
4 BR, 2 Ba. exec. Frpl.,
patio, Fairview-El camino.
Ideal kids. $361).<Jf!er. 714:
523-9670.
crpt/tlrps, gar. channcllrnl. $11 .. $I G-Bench. \\lintrr-or Yl'11 rly. '1-&°"2""B"R"°'•-•·/'°1,-.,-n-.-,-.,..,,1.'""'Jl!d s~i· Br. 2 Ba. B!!ns. Gar. I Ap~rlm~nl~ !Of R~nl fE I Bachl"lor ,_J 1 Bl:. patios. 646--0525 or 673-761! I. pool. $1.10 & up. Adult!'!. SjJ
vu (If bay. 50· oc:ea n. L.: ~ frplc's, prlv. ga1·a51:cs • 3 BDR~ls., 2 Ru ths, 2 rloors Crnfer SI, 64f)...llll65.
[f yo u can get the SA~tE xardener. Profess. decor. &
LOA.i'l from any OlliER t."Om p. furnished
LENDER In California at Laweon. Rt'o.Jtor 675--i562
RATES LESS TIIAN \VE Newport Beach OFFER. return thel;.;,;.;;.:;.;;.;.;...;:.;;.;;.;;;;.. __ _
h-10NEY within 15 days, and $94.M • Util pd. Bach at
YOUR LOAN with US ls beach. Idtal for student.
rnEE! R.C. WERNER • Ba.100.
Prelfdent $175 -2 Br. Frplc. Gar.,
3 BR, 2 bath, den, large ft'll(.'-
ed yard. room for boat or
trailer. $230. & mo. Ava Oct.
1st 979-2242.
J.ri<. 2 BR REOEC. Sil.I.
Kid1/pels ok.
Rent-A-Hou.. 979-&430
3 Br, $190 Per Mo
Depos req'd. 962-8131 &ft 5
$-tOJ--2 + den. 2 Ba, Frplc. f ·--------· Dh·i<l<'d h.'11 h & lo!~ of rron1 O('t'a n. \'rarl.11. 0c{'3 n SPAC. 1 BR, adll~. tlll pe l.s.
Beaut. pa1io 11•/dock lncl'd. Apts. Furn. 360 elose1.~. Het: hall, pool & vil'IY'. Sh:irp. 673-282:1. Quiet area. N1· shop ping.
NU-VIEW RENTALS IXJrll tulJlcs. ,.,aun:1 baths. OCEANFRONT "'inter. J br Sl•IO. AGT. ~10-ll:ll
673--4030 or 494-3248 B•lboa Island ~e fur your~lf! 17301 uppcr . Frplc, garage. Vle1v. E-SIDE 2 BR. $ISO
HARBOR VTE."W Nf'tl ~r1 L11. ft hlk \\'. of $290 mo. 548--4477. Bltns, i~·/1\'. rcfflg. Pool.
0 -IAR,..IINC B a Y f r On I s Beach, I blk N. of SlarC'1'), e \YfNTER.. RENTALS e Adult!!, no pets. &U-9520, .; BR Montego. F I R, DI R., \Vinter Both w/frplc &: shaa: 842-7848 2.~, Br. Some on beach
frg. patio. \Vater Softn£"r, c~, 3 BR 2 BA 311 N '..,-=,--,-..--.-----2 BR, bar, bltns. crpt'd,
gardener. Near comm. pool B~~front. :s35o. 2 nR. 1 BA: 1 B~CH . ~pt. . Lilri:r. Vl'ry ABBEY REAL TY 642·:\RSO $165/mo. U!ll Incl. 135
•Waterfront. 30' tmt slip.
Lot 7, Coll ins l s land .
673-1770.
patio. Or avaU yrly $225. FIRESIDE Thrift $350 -Winter 3 Br .. 2 Ba
2328 Harbor Bl., C.M. 645-1000 l\Je., nu tum. Comp I .
3 BR 2 BA, fenced yard
nice area, near 1chools.
$235. * 548-7672
$175. 644-5698. 401 N. Bayfront $ 3 0 0 • nire. Res1dent1s/ tract ~uth DL.'(' 2 Br, trpJ , lrg kitchen & Albert Pl, Mgr. Apt C, CM.
3 BR. l ·sty, Newport Shores. 673-3245 of 1-lamilton ncnr Erhson ba. 1 blk: lo ocean or bl'l.y, LRG. 2 BR, unlurn. $145. 158
RI t W lk .A .. _ · Pinnt & Ed. High. Rc11t fr<'e $250. Yrly. 675-3570 1' 11 La C M . tns, e c. . a u• ...... ar.h. EXTRA SPACIOUS. !luge Iii Oct. 11t, $1~0 n10.l"-""''-:-"ic'-':.=-o:..:...,,.,_,.. u p ne, ost.a eaa.
Mobile Home!
Tralltr P•rkt 172
TRANSf'£RRED! Must sell
by Oct t..tl 18 Space• + 2
BR hou!t. Monry n1akf'r!
Kt nnedy, Rltr 963-30 10
-2910.
,.fobllt hon1e. 12ldi0,
Rancho Trier Prk, Palm
Springs, Completely furn.
It de«nted. ~2939
Mount11n, o ... rt,
Reaort 174
LOT 1n f&mOUll t.ke Havuu.
-al Ille -lamt1111 London Br1dp. '-lod
..... ., aR -· .. cttJ. S91JOO or ..W !ride for Cost.
Meu or Newport Beach ta>
eome prop. 6"-468'f.
BEAU'l1FUL ocean view
k>ta. $18, ?:io & up. Terms.
Undfl'IJWnd utll1Ue1.
491.9388
PORTAFINA LAGUNA
tutdt draw ln lhc wm
••. I DaDJ< Pilot O&al&d Ad.-
819 N. Main. S.A. 547-0684 remodeled.
1st TD Loans NU-VIEW RENTALS
~ ()r C!J.1-3248
WINTER rtntaJs on beach, 2
:~~35~." yrly. 548-12901213: hv rm. 2 b1·, patio, BBQ. lncludt's 1111 u!il. Call : NE\V 3 Br, 2 ~a. Ds~1y,·hr, Call tor key-548-2106.
SMAL.L 3 Br. nic e ly -'C..,,'7-===----frplr. sh:i g thruout. ~nr, 1: %8-69Xi ;"l flcrS P~l. frplc. Ne"· fur~·11 ture, \\Inter NE\Vdlx :i BR tri-plex. Pvt
decoro.led Bltn.s, Crpt'g & NORnr BLUFFS • Vie1v, ~ blk to bC'h. 1\rllt s. 1rin1cr -$300/mo. 54R-al 20 yd & patio, enc gar, fro!.
6~ % INTEREST drp!. $22,j mo. 837-9517. br. 2~1 ba townhi;e. Fnn1 $250 mo. (ii ."l-8989 l'REE util 'll. Fii~-r~ 1 & 2 rEARLY Is<'. 2 doori; f rorn Coorl l'X". S2i:i. 8T'.rl849,
I I CU I N _ _ bdrm. aplJI nro.u ht·11 ch. 1 1 " 1 1 C 1'n1. 'oo · 11 eatures, r \VINT J<:rt (JI' Yearly, N•'11·ly •?r -i~-1 . ·1,.1 .• 2 1<'1, • .ir. part urn. pis, * Stunning l " 2 br, Br, house S330. t Br. npt ;D;,;•_n_•_P..;o_l'-nt ____ _
$21'.Xl. 646-9291 f'Ve l:. 540-2S46
days. 2nd TD Loans
Lowest ralet Oranae Co. WATERFRONT Cabin for I
11WE BUY TO'S" or 2 lldult1. $135/mo. Ulll
S•ttler Mtg, Co. pd, Wi nter. Blcyshore Trailer
ir_.ir .u. Park, Ph. 646-2634. 642•2171 _._n WATERFRONT. ' -de!W<e !lftvlng Harbor .,.., 21 ""' -· 3 Br., boat docJc. 6'?>1X2 or * NEED MONEY? , ~1115/~6B!:.:,.-G4:=;,_;'°::,l:,;;lect.:::,.,...,.
We repreeent teYetal prtnte 1 On the Stach • $175 3 br hm.
Jendm. Borrow araJ.Mt the uUl pd. Kldt: ok.
"l"ilY In ,.... home. Coll Rent·A ·H..,10 '794430 for tree appn.ial.
llALBOA BAY PROP. S.n Cl9mtnte * 642-74'1 * -U>VELY 2 BR, 28a, nr bch,
Lf:ASI-~. Beaut Jle\\' 1 br. 2
ba. vie.w. Nr bch. Hu
cvcrythill(I;. $325. 962-1194.
Fount•ln Va01y
$285 • 3 Bedroom sharp
home. quit! street near all.
Fireplace, huce lfvinc rm.
Lease. Vacant. Move in to-
day. CAU. 842-4466.
leaclf'rship u ncaL ESTAT(
Huntington Beach .
$395 644-0.,.,._ . ,,,..,...,./' oi J.•<r "" . I 12-G 2 3 schll'I, · .1..,. 41 f'i·o 1· :t ! r 11 2 BR -----r rp~. j(]/mo. I -. ~.\.1. 2 ba, pool. rt'c areg.
$12:> • Utll pd. 2 Br. Crpl, dny:oi~73--0I JO or «' v c ~ L•Jlun• B•ach NewPOrt Heivhts 615-j."J.-:tl 710 \V. 181h St, C.M.
slO\'C, cplC't1/"1glcs/kldt . 675-3412. VJ Ll~AGE INN. Apts. and SlG:ifmo-1 BR, 2 BA. 0,,ts,
Rent-A -House 979-8430 NEARLY ne w 3 RR. 2 BA. ~1ns:l<'s lr'tJ111 S~~l1o1•k or ~!;~:~~eo~i;, ~~~~:"~~ 1lrps. bit-i ns. Clean. No pets.
2 BR, frpl, bllnll, elec. aar. con1pl. furn. All £'\cct kiteh., :Sl60~n10. J-leated pool,
0
ml'l.1d E. lSth St. NB 646-l SOl 962-:W.ll.
door, \Va.lk to beach. $250, frpl r:. patio. BBQ. Lease !lf'rv1cc. laund ro1ntit. 1s blk · · · -~ 1 -~-.. Sept..Junt. 638-8470/5.19-883.T. to bl-aC'h. 696 s. Co11st lhvy. Apt. Unfvrn. 3'J , •• y ..... ~. ='w'°AIJ<'i-:."'C'.1o"bo~•.:_clC:,,~x"1"n"1 "l"'B"°R, Xln t apt, for married cpl. 49-1-9-136. B•lboa lafend
tam. nn .• kty. $350 Yrly 1 dr to AOOt h Bay, ~n. CITIZEN redu~.:«f r•tl!.1:-=--------~ Reilly ~1290 100 Olral. Blu:h. Nr. beach. color TV, LIITLE J&land. Yf':arly. $275.
R Balbol Penlnsul• 11111 pd. Sl2S up. 6/J-4367 l level '75' frontagt. 1 BR. N'E\VPO T Short-a on "'l'l.f~r. _ alt <I. Bll n kit., huge L/R, 1ar. ~~~·t.1as~A~ Rm., e $25 WK A: Up-On Ocean OCEANFRONT 2 Sit. deck, Some turn. 67J....n 78.
l.cwf'IY Ba~h • I Br. · fl"plc., beam c e 111ng 1 . B•lbo1 P1nln1ul1 3 BR. 2 BA, rondo, Eastlufla, Rooms . ?1-tald Service -Pool \\'!ntrr. No Pf'I•. 494-~792.
LllC. 2 Br , :) Ba., bltrll,
priv, garg . .+-l'f'Svd. pq.,
view Nr. So. c. Plu. S46-6976
e mOPICAL POOL e
2 Br !l!udlo, 11 2 bs, trpl. 145
E. 18th St., No. 15, 548-1161.
I Br. Crpltdro, !!love, reOi.
Nr. ~hop'i:. No children or
pt'lit ~1 2.1. 67;\--nli3.
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
adults, no pot1,' $250. mo.
1407 Toledo, (7t•l526-4157.
Immnc CCJ'ld. $385 mo. Cs.II -Util Pd. -:, ~ 3 Br. 2 ba Dix Apt. Incl frplc, • Nrvtr More! 2 Br. nr bch. 644-l8l3 or 673-9000. • Cn ll 67;)..8140 • CHOTCF. loca!lon. 2 Ill· .. Rll .l bnll·nni(•i;, din rm. & i~ 1 Kids ok. UtU Incl $120. I' . \\-ooden CC'lllng. $200, /mo. blk from 00y & O<'tlln. 1 yr
~"=",.....,,.--1 PHIV. Pallo. 2 BR. Crpt~.
rlrps. h!t.in!'l, r.nr. No pct..
SJ 111/mCl. ;,,i7..;:o080
WANT AD
642-5671
Hou••• Unfurn. 365 ALA Rentels e 645--3'00 l Sin Clement• 2 BR, 1 ., BA . pallo, balcony, No pets. 538-209;> l\ft a. lr·ru;e. Days, 644_.161 : nllrs,
BEAUTIFUL 3 BR, 2 BA on 315 E. Bay,$~ mo. nn yrly l B N••th -• 0 ' . , i;•·,..•"""
G•nerat e \VAL.I< to octan! 1 Br.
furn. Klds/pct1 ok. Sl2S.
~Avtll Oct 1. Spock'"' 5 ALA Rent•l1 e 645-3900
BR, 3 BA, din rm, Colonial.
Nr. S.A. Country Club. Seil U.. old ""11. S., llio
~ •3544. ..:"="..:'c.'utt=·-----
lse. Jnq. at Apt C 673--1:>21 r, "' f'rKi . 1,:eAn vi~. _.'..:_~>VU.
ShOttcllff CoU Co u r s c . or ~7771 Close to heh & 1hopplni:. No r-:nv""eu-,-,,-m""'B~a-yl~ro-ni-A~r-,..
Lt11sc $300 n10. '192·2033. · chldn, no JM..'U. 494--7079. Frplc, a:as BBQ, bltn~. prlv.
3 BR. 2 BA. OCf'ln view. Sell Idle Items • · · &1.2-56?8 BAO £. n.t Crescen1 Heh. bt11 ch & pier. 3 BR. 2 BA.
Adults only. 1 27 SI mo, Sefi Idle ttema now! C&ll Co\or TV, utll pd. Sli'> nio. saltmo. 2 8R. 2 RA.
Av1ll. Oct. JO. 714:544-429(. 642-5678 no11Vl $jO wk up. 494-JjOg. $600/mo. )'H r ly. Sit6-4J53.
••
i ./ L.RG~ ~11nny .. 1""'Br".-,-P-..,-
nu crpts. drps, bltn!I, re(rla.
$1IO 1mo :;-~5270, 833-3540.
lla\'t' aon1ethlni )"OU ""-ht to
ff'll : Cla.~Ultd ads do I
\\'t'll • C'llU NOW eu-S1I.
I
I
I'
.
I
i'-
22 0/JLYPROr
..... ~, ..... ~~1 1-""'-l~I ! ._.-...... J~ I -I~ I -I~ [ ---l~ 1...-... ~ I~ l1_._r.,...,_,. •• __,J[Il]
11
[ b,.,,_ lrIIl . , _________ , ______ ,.! . ~ ;;;---;;;;;;~; ielp W•nted, MI F 710
• u f 365 Apt Unfum 365 t Apt Unturn. 365 Rent•la to Share 4i30 Per10ql1 53' -.:.__..,. Housecleentng Jobt Wantlld, M & F 704 _"11 1 1:~:!0'..:1:..· .::.::"::.":;'"".:::.---'-"'I · · · . • ,._.. ASSEMUU:R for IW...,.. c ec-
Costll Mela H nti"tl fon Beach Newport S.•ch LADY share my loYcly 4 Br * HINOO SP'fRITUAlJSI' • LARGE OR SMALL Jr 0 lJ S EKEEPER-O>mpan-PT time cm p Io 'i me o t tro mech. 1na.i1uf. c0. Nffd l;ii;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I 7i' Ba. home. r r 11 I c . Let thi.t ad cha.nae YoUr All Type.1 Work?' Cut doors, kin, live.in, ~ day s , y,•anted. So. CaliL Colh.1:C. V.'Omtn w/gd vi.lion /,c dtx·
JI * f..fOVf.: IN TODAY • EASTBLUFF Dish(?5, linens, Wlhr/d.ryer, whol• t>utlook on life for the panel, remodel, f I n Ith, v:t-ekt<nds oll, Excellent Costa Mesa, is row in tcrlty. Pl'rin & f/timit. Non-
Sp;1r. 2 & 3 Bft in 4-plex. All Villa Granada Apts. dsh...,T. l..rg yrd. Nr. Ma)' beth:r Professional advice b'ame, repaln, etc. 962-1961. refs. 549-2847, 24 hn. Ftt. session. Many of rJ u r .sniokl·r req'd. No e~per. HARBOR GREENS
Furnished &
Unfurnished
From $130 to $215 mo
Bachelors • I Bdrms
2 Bdrms • 3 Bdrm•
I V2 or 2 Full Baths
extras. Pool. rec bi d{.;, J<ld!I O 1'0\\INJIOUSF:. !'()3ckiu1 4 Co. SIOO/mo. Please no on !If~. Llcen~. Readlnp • CARPENTRY • Rough & Dedicated Cleanlt19 students would apprec pl nee. J'leasunt ~or k 1 n C
.-·rlcon1t, From SL'l9. See
1
nn. 211, l\a .. baJconle!I-. 1r~A''''· no d r Ink• rs , dally JO AM 10 I'M 1· lo n1e·•• ••II .• ~ . .,, information · · · '"-' · -· F'ini!h patio Tops & cement. * \VE DO EVERYT}llNG • 1m4' t'mJl Y· 1 · ~ ... .., con ... ~. '''"'" • ~f~r. li37 1 K~·!wn ''B". frp ll"., "''1.:l har. attached 1 fri0-2142. •92 9136 492-9034 3U No El 545-1178 1 39 9am-4pm 1 Jf' d ad no 52'l cto 'lf"--51!1 r "•1-1260 1800 11 c -. R , 64~n. 5"~1594. Refs. Free ~st. 646-2839 , eJt , . c ass ic o 'eo 1560
. ..,r ir"" . "ar i:aragc. Ml · . ~1AL.E roo1nmate want(.'(I to nm in o ea I , Sa n Carpet Se-1··· HOUSE OF CLEAN APARTMENT Mgn:. Sharp Dally Pilot, PC. 1'1 9,!"" ,
L.gun. Be.ch $37:i/mo. .._ .. llR h Ba\'"--Clemente •"' -1 Costa J\otesa a 1 W'-"·
I
e Jo:XF:CUTl\'F:. To11,.•nhou~ .Siud't '' sc on IA>ll • f1oors, windows. crpt, y,•alls. and Experienced coup!t> or · ' ·
OC • , T c d " BR d ., 1$. Yrly, 675-0070. HUNT·1''ISH-CA MP. Private J OHN 'S Ca.rptt & Upholstery G •-. 1.n ••ea. ~4. unit management 545-T143. ASS£~1BLY trarnt>es. No ex· tANfl?ON . 0 n (). • -~PllCIOUS ;, ., 1·n. "Ba.. d d ·-I b ...._. ~·" .... but must \\·oRKJNG '"" o 21 1 uncrow e ranc, ..... s wt vit·Shampoo lre e Scot•b. . . 1-,,· ........... rK'Ct"s~ry . Blut'B1 rd B('h. :l B H., frpl c .. \\('! har. anaeht•d 2 • .,,,, \'er o .. "' ...... ..
,.1,.\'lllOr & root. S<lOO per I l'ar qaragc. 2660 i;q. fL !'hare ap! in Fountain cal)ins trail<'r &: camping guard 4$oil fletardanls). Jan1tor1al iole lo Wanted, M & F 710 ha\'f' good <'Ye sight & linger
1 I .-11..
1
S""I Valley \\.'/same. 962--0993. areas_ Riveri1. lakes. OC<'an Degreall('rg &. all c.'Q\or d1;~terity, Apply in petl!O~ 1110., yr. ease, ·1:r.1-""· ..;.JU 1110 1 1 h --d k 'ld ln Je fl's Cleaning Service & , SAE .11 · G ron · ............ r. uc s, \VI p~, brighte··-& 10 01111 .. ,. C 'al 1 •-t"""""n 9 · .. , • Pool f<i c1 tics • a r ages for Rent 435 '"''" " .. Res1denlial _ ommerc1 Aceounting Clerica "" "" 1 .\l.'lster stze bffirooms w/ Laguna Niguel 1\r. Ctl:O•l Hig h SchoO! upland game, etc. $150 yr bleach for v.·hite carpets. '* &l&-6384 * r·\~ Paid Advanced Packaging, nc. t~ig h beam ceilings. large I LAGUNA NIGUEL R~:J An1igo!'I \\lay, NA &Jil-2'.f.ll GARAGE. Nr 19lh & Np! \~·/~e~~p in private Save your money by saving ----'------Bookkeeper F/C $600 2165 Grand, Santa Ana.plo An
living rooro 1v1,c::a.s or A Blvd., Cos1<1 M<'sa . $ll n10. cu · · me ex-tra trip!!. \Viii clean Landscaping Exec-. Secretary to s700 equal opPOrtunity em ~r.
"'ood burning hrrpla<:e. partments San Clemente Avail Oct. l, Alt 6 pm, JOJlN-All is forgi\'en. Will liv~ng rm., dining rm. & A 1· t p F A • t In Lab Conv•ni'ent la<1n•-· ar•a 1 fir., I Ra .: $HIS • 2 Br .. I on7 "l!l6 •-t llo d' R h 11 ANOSCAPING PP •can ays ee SSIS off kitchen. Enclosed pa. Bn; $225. e 2 Br., 2 B:i.; C.11ARl\1JNG qu1\'l Ocean & · · .. ~ '"' • _, • I °"..., "" a · war s estauranr a $15. Any rm. $7.50, L G'•I Frida• $4~.
tios. 2 51,·immlng ponls, SZ35 I ~ardf'n vir>v.· apt. 2 BR, Bar, Cffice Rental 440 PVl"JY eve at 6:30 pm. We'U couch SlO. Chair $5. 15 yrs. For unique & personalized Sec'y (sh lOO) 10 $.SSO sa una.~ rtt1'tation tacd.1· ( fncld c;.:i,., T\' C.;ihlc & \\'Ir r•nv gar. bfk to b<·h & shop-have a delicious \Velght exp. is what counts. not .style ln landscaping call Exec, Sec'y (dictaph) S600 e
llel<. :-;ccurity guard. No
1
Fully iTplrl .!t drJ'lfl nee ping. $165 .• 492-()492. DESK space available S50 Walcher.s dinner & talk it method. 1 do \\'Ork mySC'lf. James C. Elmer • Land· Bookkceprl" $600 e Packaging
Wareh.-i••
Ship/Rec
pets. f.ac-tl ll!r'l Pool. ABQ a rel1. I mo. Will provide furnilure out. E. K. Good ref. 531-0101. s<'a ping & ttainleni..nce Co. 1 Girl Offi~ $550
Apts at SS mo. Answering service PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-•·Rcnovaling Iav:ns, A ne· Acclng Cl·rk to •rJV1 e Mod.I. Open '11'1 I pm. 29041 Aloma J\\(•. ., u· bl ~ F t A C ·1· ' r ~MJ 1 ~ 4.'fJ-m7 •1r ·19~:1-5271 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ava a e . .r..r..r. ores ve, fident, s y mp at he 1 i c •1 tngs ccssily at this time.' Free A/P Cashier S450
1'2700 P eterson Way, CM Laguna Brach, 494-9466 pregnancy rounscling. Abor· --.-SP_A_R_K_L-lN-'G-.-,-V-ll-IT_!_:_ est. 646-7229 aft 5. General Oflice lo S450
nr Harbor Blvd & Lido Isle Costa Me_s_~-----• ' -DF..Sf\ space avuiable $50 lion & Adoptions ref. AP· Nc\v acoustical cei li ngs Painting & Receptionist to $450
• BAYFRO'.\'T-.1 BR. 2 ha. mo. Will provide furniture CARI::. 64~536. Any tin1e., 644-71&3 Reas. Panarhanging Ord. Desk lo S400
No Exper. Ntces.s.
fmmed. temporary
assignment•
Short & long term
H ighe st hourly rates
Adams
546-5025
DELUXE
APARTMENTS
Air Cood • Frplc'c · 3 S"'•im·
ming Pools · Health Spa ·
Tennill Court! • Game and
Billiard Room.
1 BR. From $160
l BR. & D('n 1'~ron1 SlRO
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
2400 Jlar!)or Bl\'d., C.1\1.
1714) 557-8-020
RENTAL orr~ICE
OPEN 10 J\ht lo 6 PM
GARDEN-SETIING
For fam ily ur adult living.
2-3 bedrooin~. fireplace,
patio. pool. Gl"t'at location.
THE VENDOME
1845 AnnhPim. 642-2824
THE VICTORIAN
2 Br w/gar-aduhs. cpl~.
rlrps, fncrl yrd w/patio. \rtr
pd. Call btwn 1 & 5,
ll."IG-4120.
I •1 · 1 h /·' at $5 mo. Ans'ol·er'ag iservtce --~·-· _ _c_;,,.. ___ l!\.1edical Recept $350 ;1 I •1 tns 1nr v.·as er ...,rycr available. 17875 Beach Blvd. WANT to coniact a girl who ~ ( h
60113 50
hr
& frerzrr, frplc, g:ir. S:i.JO ** NEW ** Hunting-Ion Beach. 642-4321 has been or ls on Prob. or Cement, Concrete No Wasnng P/time Sec'y s · ·
mo, .vrly lsc. Avail Oct. Isl. Par. C.D.D., C.Y.A. or ? * WALLPAPER * Free & Fee Position!'oi "'"''" LA COSTA APTS. BAY VIEW OFFICES 640.£841 '"'";"•'· FREE ;d,.,, odv;,. ano Whon you ..u "Mae" RUTH RYAN AGENCY APPLY AT ONCE M esa Verde Deluxt', Air·conditioned I ·----'-.:::..:____ estimates. All I charge for 54&-14" &46-lnt 17931 Beach. H.B. M7-9617
Redceorated. Lido area Social Clubt 53~ is a beautiful job al a reas. YOU Supplv The Paint Rms 1793 Newport. C,M. 646--4854
DELUXE 2 & 3 BR., 2 Ba . 1 & 2 Bedroom Realonomics, Bkr. 675-6700 price. 645-5073. ~
Pncl. gar. $155 up. Rental 9 Built·in~ e Shug carpels Ol'~FICE-Store. 525 sq. fl OU flND YOURSELF PATJOS-SIDE\VALKS Painl~d $IO ca avg. Also, ACCOUNTING Clerk -This
0 1 ·-· M A IN SOMEONE ELSE exterior. R"fs 30 Yrs exper. _. h . e.. ,JV;iJ a('(' vc .. • Drapes e \Valk in closets St. Pkg. Utt!. 2052 Newport , • CEMENT CONTRACTOR 54G-7046 person mu,.. ave preV10us ~>1~1034. 0 Swimmlng Pool Blvd .. CM 646--1252 DISCOVER Call Max ** 644-0087 · payroK cxper & have a
Newpor:f Beach • Bar·h·Ques DISCOVERY INT & EXT painting, paper sound knowledge or gen·1
• F:r11·!osed Garage f'LVSlf small J..office suite, 714/835-6885 213/38'i·~'l!J3 • CUSTOil-1 CEMENT \VORI< hangi ng, natural wood accounting procedures. Litr • ·--
T·Girl
&
T-Man THE NEW All U!1'l1"!1'es Pa1'd Nr.wport Center. 644-8814 or . -Drives, \VALKS, patios, finishing. s•S-7905 or but accurate typing skills
VERSAILLES "'·3
0
73 I llSJ pool d"ks. Don, 642-8514 548-27:"1. aloo """';""'· Xlot '°· 2182 DUPONT DRIVE 2 Adjoining offices. busy in-Loit and FCKn:t PATIOS-PLANTERS HO USE·painting, int. & ext.. benefits. Call Judy Zandy,
o n the BLUFFS /l.flul1s. no pet s !er!'olection C.r-.l. $90. Util's •·-------J All Concrete v.·ork. Brick, accousticn l ceilings, Tl\1 Communica!ions Co. IRVINE
at NEWPORT \\':11l<1n;:: 1li.s1ancc to incl. 6·12-6.'ifi{t , slun1pstone v.•k. 894·:!533. reasonable. (ree cs t . (7141 5574)400. An Equal, ---=8~3-3~-1~2_9~S-.,.--,-01·,-..~, vi"11 , 2·1 hou r hou.~c ~hllp"in;:: t rnter. B O E pl " N I •-I '' ' '' usiness Rental 445 PATIOS, waJk:i;, drives. Sa\v, 714/536-5857. ppor .• m oyer e ASSIST A T or ~au y sf·t·1Jr1I)'. ll partmf'nts dr· 354 Avocado St., C.M. c_:.;c;.:.:::.:;.;.:.:;;;...;.:: __ .c;: Found (frff ads) 550 b . .,. 5370 "2-9708 -reak. remove & replace SEPT. sale, blg di sc ,, ACCOUNTING C LERK ; shop AHracltve. 1Y1:>-or s1g,nc<l 11·1111 <l l\1ast£'r·s u-. L EASE PROFESSIONAL TW t o.o oo-f G I I t~ · I · "2 '"34 • rN black male cats. Real concre e . .rso-oQOO or est. 547-5846, wallpaper & •·og. rea co. oca ~.in rv1nc O'I ~ • touch, l•xcluslvr club 1v1th SUITES, center Laguna .... r ... ..:...;,:.:,=====,--·I
un iquf' Aquabar. fountains Beach. Doctors, attorneys, characters, White on face, CUSTOM concrete, patios, ing, 10,000. Samples 'The complex.,. E xpe.r. $4in33A/1;. & ATTENTION
and forinaJ gardens. All archilects, accountants, chest & paws. Part driveways, sidewalks. Free Hangman. A/~ S ary to · Cl" Saleswomen & Men
part of 1he South Coast's We81iB.AU20 related professions prefer· ~~~ .. C.M. area, est. 536-7378. *PAINTING_ PAPERING ~~~~Al~~~4~0~0 ~~ $25,000 to .~50,000
finest apartment commun· Sparkling New Adul t Apl!l, red. Contemporary design, I ~==---~-----C-"tractor Interior Exlerior Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 O Glamorous, ac1ting, adv~·
ily. 1 BR. Furn. $190. ocean views, elevalor, t'asy FOUND, Fri. Tiny Oiihuahua Lie. Jnsured Guaranteed Harbor Bl. C.M. tur6us -~Jes career with
I bedroom/studios from $195. 2 RR, 2 BA furn $245 parking. Xlnl 1enns, Im· in street sewer, Npt. Bch. REMODEL or renovat e. Call Harris 642-4558 ' Clubpacif1ca flying all of
2 Bedroom from $295. Private pallos, lush forest mediate occupancy. Ask for area. cau City Hall Mon-General contractor & sons. PROF p . 1. al 1 Administrative u.s. & Mexico. No age bar· D I 3 '-"". C rt Id d 67'2110 ~· Ll & bond-" "" · run ing, 50 roo s, T · $807 33 · I e uxe ....... droon1 1ng, arpo s, gas pa . Gary Fosler, 499-1397. ay mom., .,. . ext LO'l. c. .,..., .;;v yrs. exp. accous. ceil., inter/exter. r~1~ee . • n ers. Earn as you earn. ~1odels open 9 A.l\f. to 6 P.M, 114 E. 20th SI., C.M. 548-0137 LINGO REAL ESTATE REWARD: Blk & while Ger. Free est. 831-1109. Li !In Fre t 645-5191 Unhm1ted po1enbal \v/v,.·orld Mr. McDonald
VERSAILLES SHADY r:LMS · POOL Prime Orange County man shepherd los! at Bolsa JACK Tau I an e·Repair PA~T~G e; · t cl • \Vide rorp. \\li!l train . !or 557-4751
on the BLUFFS 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn Shopping Center Space Chica state Bch. Bt"longs to rcmod .. adrlit. 20 yrs. exp. • ones • ean, management vr executive. AUTOMOTIVE
$140 to $170. Rent furn. arts lifeguard. CaU: !i39-79n. Lic'd. My Way Co. 547-003G. guaranteed work. Licensed J\.lus1 have recent BA LOT BOY (if,7 Victoria St (£' $1.i!l at NEWPORT 1 .. -. J 'II 6,000 Sq. Ft. 2Sc & insured. 675-574-0. degrEl(', outstand i n g ------------1 From Newnnrt Blvd turn al iuu une & you own the E J! t "" & k LADIES' gold brat·clet, keep-Additions * Remodeling * BRAND NEW• * ,~ ·· furniture. lTI E. 22nd Sr., xce l"n <:'x,~,sure par • G PAINTING & PAPERfNG. benefits including ~:ock. Must be hard v.'Orker. Apply • Hospira! Roar! fl hlock ing. \Viii Divide. Spaces at sak('. Vi(.'. JLB., F.V .. Re-e.rv.·ick & Son, Lic'd C 11 001 ,122 Ab' 11 Abbot M T 2 Br, b!lnf>. dsh1\·hr, l't"''"· C.M. 642-3645. arc1r ""'" A2J3 673-fr.Ml * 54~21~,0 19 yrs in Harbor area. Lie & a ""-v , 1ga in person 1o r. . ahove Paclfic Coasl 1-lwy, at other locations. w · """'.., · bonded. Refs furn. 642-2356. Personnel Agent•y, 23() W. DAVE ROSS drps, surulrck. Lndry Mok· Lido fsJe) to entrance. Call: L. J. 1\l~let FOUND G -Sh h d Dr"1ve a IV s ·1 209 s A un. Adults. $200/mo. ,.., ' e.,.,an cp er w YI PAINTING -I.Jones!, •l•an, arner, ut e • · · PONTIAC " 900 CagnC"y ·..nnc, NcwpoM I )~ AGENT puppy B"lboa Isla d 540 645·7554. & · "' n · u-OCEANVIEIV Constr. en. guaranteed -work. Licensed ARTJST-P!f.".lsant studio in Beach. Ca. 92660. Telephone: Rtnt.111 ,. 714: S-11-5155 7308 2480 Harbor Blvd. e TOWNHOUSE (714) 645-0060. :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~.:
1
. , T JI E FA~RY", _..G ~=R=A',Y' ,..,,,-a1-~· --.--1 Our specially in asphalt & insured. 67fr5740. 1h>ubl11'c relations f1i rm ' s Costa Mf'M
2 B 1 B C d ~~=~~==~== '-' v .. ..,.,. em e tiger kitten. repairs, paving. sealcoating, PROF. paint('r, honest work. anc some new o f ice s<J----=-=-''-'"---sto~~. ~~v. a~ati~~t~arrZ~: PARK NEWPORT sisting of 32 unique boutique Red flea collar. Magoolia, jet-seal & grading 645-SITO. reas. lie/ins. Jnt/t.xf. fr('{' awaits a young artist who Auto
APARTMENTS Rooms 400 shops, has 2 openings in !he C.M. 642-3767. Ref 548-2759 can provide ideas; do Import car salt-sman. Orange
Adults, no pets. l46 Melody mall ranging from $80 mo. F.lectrical ='='="--'-· ~--·---1 roughs, finished art, Jet· Countys most establi!hai Ln., f'~T . ROOMS $18 wk. up w/kit. C AUSfRALIAN sheepdog. Vic ----------FOR I & . . --------1 on the bay $30. wk up Apts. T -w ard. tobacco & yardage Elden Ave. &: Santa Isabell, E CTR c can neat pamting, tering, pastcups: & hand!(' dealers.
BRAND new 2 BR, 1 BA Luxury apartment living OV· thl 2376 N >..OJ shops esp. wanted. 425 30th CM 548-7012 r!i!ed iCl~,i-b licensed, ln1erior, reas. rates. Call production details w i 1 h Fritz Warren
apts. Slil:i mo. Call hetwn '1 -looking the water. E·'·y mon Y ra!es ewport St.. NewpoM B ca c h' . . . . ma J<J s, maint. Dick, 968-406.5. prlnten. Must have rtcent SPORT CAR CENTER
& 6 ··na. 9G8--0-l07 or "' "JV Blvd, CM 548-9755. 673-9606 or 642-8520. Lost SSS & repairs, 548-5203· "'-,--,=-c'"'"-,,--..,-1 · I · no E I San 547 ~· $7"'.J(),OCXl health spa, 7 swim· Plaster, Patch, Repair Pro fess1ona experience. . st, la Ana ..,,'" 9l>S-2:il-'~ after 6 p n1 . 1 Br. ful ba. lrg closet, prv 2 Of , & sJ 1 Gardening ';"';;'.;:;;;:;:;-;;c;:;;;::;;;;;;;l ~838-""::":'"°~·-------1AVON CHRl~"s EARN· ming pools, 1 lighted ten· c. space iops or FEMALE German Shepherd -----''------•••~ S.IR-OO:i:. patio & <'ntr. 3 hlks from I 800 1 1700 fl * PATCH PLASTERING
nis courts. phis miles of bf>ac.h & bay. 645-6688. ea~£<. 0 sq. · tan & silver, black saddle, 1 BOB'S GARDENING All types. Fret' estimates ASSEMBLERS & lNGS can help make the
Dana P oint bicycle trails, putting, shut· Air/r:ond.. 2 °·head drs. yr old. Lvng Beach tags No. & LANDSCAPING Call 540-6825 holidays happier for your
Oelxiard . ........,.,uel. Junior 1'11 Ll?G tu rn roon1• \\larking Next 10 Barden's Pest Con. 15759, v;c of Classic Hom•s, Irvine Industrial PACKERS entire family! 11'1 easy !ell· OCEAN vie"'·· large 2 BR. 2 ---., coupll' J <l J 1 696 d I .. Pl b. BA, cpls, drps, & bit ins, llUn from $174.50 monthly: al.so 1 "7,'l . .......,,'-' •. or a Y a one . tro. Ran o ph Ave., F.V. 839-8961. Complex('s. um rng Urgently Needed ing, fine Avon products for
and 2-bedroom plans and " •NO). C.r-.t 546-5570 ask for J\.1r. 7 299 r our irresistible Oiristmas balcony. $190, per n1o. B d PERSIAN si lver/\vhitc {'a l, 55 -4 a !er 5pni. L.R. OTIS PLUMBING \Vill Train o.17_39~ nr 837_"'-. 2·story town houses. EJcc. Cot"Onn <lel !\1<rr. furn. Pvt :cru-::..::~'"~·~~-,-,--= HALLORAN'S lawn ••rvi'c•. Catal()gue. Ca11 Now, n. ~· "'"' : J\.1ale, Eastbluff area. Nr Remodels & Repairs. \Valer NevPr /\. rre
trlc kitchens, private patios ha & enlr. Sl OO ino. ulils pd. Rentals Wanted 460 CdM High. R (' 1v a rd , quality·w or km a n ship, hearers. dispos:ils, furnaces. lntervil'w Hour~ 1~54_(}._7~04_1~·-------
2 o_.~~-R. "1'175v. i~~v~bll!~~m~ or balconies, carpeting, dra· Rtfl'l'{'nC('S. 673-9lll3. 644-0703. reliable, reasonable after 6 dsh\\•shrs. 979-3730 MIC & 9 am-11 am & 1 pm·4 BABYSJTIER • hi sch!.
u u peries. Subtcmulean park· Room & Board 40S GARAGE \VANTED • fnr BIA All D ·1 P'lot senior. Alternoo"•. CdM $85. 494-6848. Inquire 10'.'.0 Ing ivl!h elcvntor-s. Optional furniture storagl'. Call LOST: Adult male ca I p.m .• 962-9703. . . ru Y l areu. \Vork "''hen & ivhere .... .
Souih Cons!, Lag-una Bench. maid service. Just north ol R00!11. board & laundry fur * 673-9119 * \v/long yellow hair. Vic EXPERT Jar an cs e Drains unclogged -$7.50 you y,·ant! 6T.-r-I43S aft 6 pm.
NE\V OCEAN vn•:iv APT. Fashion Island at JamborC"e f'lderl.v . .retired gentleman. WANTED to rent, garage in Jamaica Inn. NB. Re\vard Gardener, kn o 1v ·ho 1v, Sewer line to 100' -$15 Interim * BEAUTICIAN Wl'NEAT
'1 BR. $190 and San Joaquin Hill~ n()ad. Refined private home in Daha Point. San Clemente 552-8071. upkeep, plant, pest, trim -==*=54="-=250~'=*==-I Personnel Serv.ice :Js~ ESJ~O~ ~ ~:l;. FOR
96&-:l."ii.1 Collecl if toll Telephone (TI4) 644-1900 beach area. Family con· area. Call 546-1234. RED IRISH Sctter Bitch lost cleanup. 968-3486. PLUMBrNG REPAffi
H11ntir1C1for. Beach fnr rental lnformat!on sul1a1i6n re q u cs I ed. M isc. Rentals 465 17th & Plattntia, C.l\t. 9/18. * LANDSCAPING * No job too small 778 W, 20th, C.M. BILLING Clerk: Typing&: 10
!IT!l---7396. Reward. &16-5143. Neiv laivns, s pr i ,, k JC' r 11 • * 642-3128 * 642-7523 546-2592 key adding mach. a must. LUXURY
OCEANFRONT ON BEACH!
2 BR, 2 BA Uni. Fr. $251
2 BR. Furn F'r. S308
ADULTS ONLY
Furniture Available
C s r p ~t~rapes-rlishwa~her
heated pool.saunas-tennis
rec room-Ot""ean views
patios-ample parkin&
Secu rity Guard~.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
Bn1nd 11(•11·, :: c;;ir 1>rk~. 4
Bdrrn ,. d1n111i.: rn1., hu~e.
1111;1lilv rr,.idrnr('. $.'l;,Q R·
S&Xl ~n. Ydy, 67~r-197'.! or
4~1-0Ci1'1,
o n the BLUFFS
at NEWPORT
~EACl..l Ff l\l:loor /\pts. 2
Hr $16 1. Poo l. Cr·p1.~. dr·p~.
hl!ns, i::irh. ,11~111. 1:i2.1
/'lnt'f'l•tia A\'f•. /\.•J.. ;1bout
h:l.
fpl.
Guest Home 415 FOR Rent off street parking decks. cleanup. State lic'd. COLE PLUMBING ASSEMBLY \Ve are wilting to train OOt
................. ----........ spaC!'s lOx.30. night lighting. 536·122.5. 24 hr. service. 645-llGl SOLDERERS·WIRE WRAP must like detailed 'M>rk.
*PRIVATE ROOM* $10/mo. 2436-B Ne\vport I ){J•} ---=""'=o=----1 Experienced Call ~9501 for appt
for :imhularor.v lady. Good Blvd., Costa Mesa. 548-1322. ~;;';"';'';"ii"ii"ii"iiiiiiiii~~~ RELIABLE PLUMBING repairs and in· Irvine 54{)-4,l5!1 BOYS• food , nice cheerful sur· LO C . and experienced. stallations, painting. Free NF:VER A FEE 11.T TE~1 PO • T. fcn,ced. storage, .M. Free estimates 963-1072 E c II & 839 0372 " I ••" rounrlin~s-. st. a save. ·. . T•mpo T•mpnrary H•lp n.<:.:u tvro boys to lill ncan-Boats. campers, e1c. 50c per " ... * Call 54R·4753 * 64,, ...,,.,. Schools & TUSTIN area. R d I & R • cies on best newspaper boy
COJ\IE SC<', l1avc your p:lrent
cared for as you \\'OUld do.
ft/$8.50 minimum. ~. emo e epa1r Help Wanted, M & F 710 -w. 0 n 1 ... •-"•···" instructions 515 dcpendablr. reliable ....... ~ ~.,..,, .... o:u
SPrvice. 96s--0832 CUSTOM Home Rcmodelin1?f,..---------, I boys considered. Top pay
1imt' rwrn1 ittini:::. 642·9278 I l!•I P~rsonals
Vacation Rent a Is 425 'limiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:;~~ * * Bir. Rt•ar LR.kt' -Largc I
ca bin av:ul. by v.·cckcnd or
V.'('t'k. ftescrve now for fall
Persona It
,t, 11·inter. 6•14-1548.
530
AIRLINE
Gen ~ral 5.e rvices Alterations. Kitchens. David and bonus. Are you good
Ste\va11 Assoc. 963-3131. enough to quality! U so
1-fANOYMAN • AU k!nrls of 51 ... ~~q/Aftera tlons call: '
\VOrk, small jobs a _ ,_,_ ,_,. ........... _ 54~ll47
'"'°;,1ty. 956-9174: 546·9723 SEWING-DESIGNING BOYS 12-16
Men/\\1omen. Reas. Rate11 ARMY YETEIAN5 Join Top Crew sell ing Orange Hauling 7U OCEAN /\VF. .. 11.D.
(71•) ~1487
Ofc open IO ain-6 pm Daily
\VILLIAM \\'ALTERS CO.
EASTRLlJFI' 2 br. 2'¥
111! cl1·r. qunl11_v r1n.
dbl ,gar, oon1n1 pool.
101 12. &M-r,.10: •.
111'1 II /\ \VA I I -Lux. Exec.
ALCOHOLICS Anonymou!I.
Phone 542-72l7 or write
P.O. Box 1223. Costa Mesa.
&
TRAVEL AGENCY TREE & lrg plant removal.
Rototil, renovate. ya r rl
cleanups. Move/haul. Call
M,~T. 642-1403.
SIO min. Call 846-7450 Coast's favorite Neivspaper.
vtCKI·s ORIGINAIS \Vork 2 evenings and Sa1ur.
_ -----B11ylr0111 home, 2 Ba. 2 Bn. CAREER
TRAINING
Custom designing & restyling day. Generous Commi~ion
2 BR. t I~ B:i . rrplC' •• 11rt1io, I s:.OO/lll(), Car av a i I • Aity day is the BEST DAY to
hlk fr .. 111 (li-1•1111. S2;.0 per 673-SkSli. nm an ad~ Don•t delay ...
• allerations. 645-4325. Looking anr1 Bonus. 1.lake Mont>y
Alterations-642·5845 and Kl'l'p up \\'ilh School·
1110. 4!11."1 llivrr. r.7;~3!.)(W; aft "c~1,-.. -,-.fi-od_A_rl-,-.. -.-,-.,-"-"6"lll--. call today 642-5678.
f, P-IT). ;iiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiii.:.iiiiiiiiiii~iiliiiiiiii I
Children Welcome e FAMILY AFFAIR e ..Airhn e DlffCJf gardcfl('r.
cn1plL st"r.. call
536-2300 days or
213/630-546.1 p.m.
exper.,
Gerrit,
Ari c
N('nt, accura1e. 20 years exp. for a ........ \VOrk, too, :!57·67.19.
Tile 5vvu BOYS • b#li ~ge ]0.14 to d(!hver papers
CERA.MIC tile new & JO Ir 111 the Dana Point. San Oe-
remoclel. ·Free est. Small mentr areal'!.
jobs "''clcome. 53&-2426. DAILY PILOT
1, 2 & :; !lit·~. $1 5fl io S23!i N~.\\l,JP.·r Tcnn1~ .. t, flOC'll. DBQ. 1·tiild . . I' 1' 11 1 11 s !I I ;1
'1"1rl\ r-; 2 l'rll'1" 2 l•·ll1 * pl;J,V :1rra. D:iy care ccnlc1-, .1.' ·,, · ' ,1 • ~ ~·' ., tr. . I ld . 1 I S--ll " Bd1·ui. _ h.11h. $21.•. ,, !'< 11y l'f'(". 1 g. Ult . ):}'nl .,7 .. l'J"' . •t'l ""I'
& par1y mis. LII::Srl;Ni-:11 ~'..'...~-·-'"-"'----* * * * * Scfioo~
4!12·44211 t'OJ{ "/'f!I·: (: n r, \\I ING $[',\('J()llS :! Ar. 2 H;1, 1 l1lk I
1'~ I\ /II I L Y . SJ· t·: 1·1J nN. to tiny, ! hlk to fl('rnn.
MODELS. 17141 .S42·0Gt.l. Yrarly. $250 inn. Bk r.
6~01 \\'AHNER AV~~. 675·4911. I
1 BR Pri 1·<l\\•nhvusc-p.'\lio, NE\VL\' drror. upprr l BR.
dbl ~nr, crptinc, dr;qll·~. 2 ba .. frpk, vrlv l1·a~r. Nc11 ..
blt in ki!ch. frplc & J'!OQI . pnrt Sl1nrr'.',' 1;.12.!()20.
!"':as~. s1:,.·, rnn. Cull l'OllC't"t I 2 BR. rlosc !O beach. No
'11.l-.11fl--0800, c:ill CV('.~. all ix·ts. S22:i. ~Ji·v \\t'rkL>nds. I GC'O. \\'1ll1am~n Rltr ~i·1~·ti5ifl
3 Br :1pt. pn 1111110, ir1sid,-. * 3 Mlt :!BA. 1 hlh. It) b<·nch.
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
Y) . /). f -aClf'lC
610 E. 17th St.
Santa Ana
543-6655
AL'S L.>tr)/'j1'eaping, Tree
!'l'mo\·al. Yard remodC"!ing.
Trash hauling. lot cleanup.
Repair sprinklers, 673-1Hi6.
EXP. H1nvaiian Gardener. I l!i •,] Complete gardening servi(.'t' E'n1iloyrnent f
Kamalani. 646-4616. I oiiiiiiiliiilllliiioliii.ilJI
COMPLETE Lawn & J.Jb Wanted, Mal.t 700 Gardening service. Hauling
& clean-up, .Tim 548-040.).
JAPANESE Gardener,
Complete Yard \Vork a.nd
Clean.up. Free est. 642-3102.
YOUNG. man seeks
fuU/p1-time employment in
landscaping & gardening.
Exp. 646-7251.
If you've been out
18 months or less, you
may be able to come
back in without losing
a thing.
You can keep your
stripes and got a job
of your choice near
home or anywhe re
else, for at least one
year if there is room.
And, all the time you
spent with us before
Cafeteria Pf rsonnel-
Cash ft'rs, NJuntrr girls, t'lc.
\Vorking hours, Mon thru
Fri 7 am to 3 pm. /\.JI holi·
days off, Call 833·8666 at!C"r I pm,
CANVAS goods • Male.
Knowledge of hoals nee. To
mea.~Ul'E' & fl! boat eovers &
CUlihions. 501 29th St
Newporl &-a ch. ·· ~;1r. 1•ntry •o 11pt e!Cc i!<lf rral'i.\'
' u dollars For Qualillcation Info
Ir ,.. II c I r> ) St(,() rp I rJ rs. C;11l li73-21'1~1. 217'.:2 ~. llrookhur.~1 !)6.l227i!, ' ---' :-A~:iZ'ili. Lt'X. l1arf1"Qn1 . Br 2 H11, t 11,\\j~('~ 1)11 fol, SS!'Jl)(l 111\ VE $39,
':':""-----""'.,-,,""'.--------,,,,..-..I I l'lANO Teacher has openings , for ha.rd workers. 000 lst T.D., puy· 548·8494
YAR.D & Garage Cleanup.
Free f'!JI. 7 days. Call
1111ytimC", 548-5031.
HOUSEMAN·Drlver, Chine!IE!
speaking. >.1nt f'U91 Awll
irnmcd. 1213) ~7-a196.
J-0-b-W-.-0-10-d-,-F~.-m-.-1.~7-02"" wi ll count towards
CARPENTER
t yr cxl)('rlrnce in boa! nifg
or cabln('l .~hop, -" -BEACHBLUFF-Aph. rner :11·a•l. ~i:.o )Th . :.!J4 ,,..[1111)'' FtJIC 20111 :-ii. ~;;:r;iSi,'\. 11('."11' nt'll'
2 Hr .. '1 Ba .. pool, p111io, DIO:LUXE ,\pl JR 1lV'rplc.
n1t:.l•)r l1QnH', 1rt1~r dr('(ls or
dshwshr. 82:11 El!l~ A .... vt.11·rint lo!. Call f•arly nn1
8'17-2'12ti. ''early. 21:i ;',.~1•1 ~I f'all <1rc nr l111e pn1. G42·4ti0'.l.
6 prn. nr "'·knrts 67~i-6Z2:l. l))T 111Ln.k(·1·11hne in f'l1nl' WALK TO BEACH
I • 2 "" Cpts, <lrp:t, I J{H. Ari. i'l:':trly. $175/ino. \11 llt1g1\ ·rra<lt' "'' hou~t·
d.~hn-shr, 205 15th: 308 16th. no yx·t~. or duplex.
847-3957. Call 67:l-(ffi7 ~-v1\~ 1.: \\'knedi; C1\l.1.
2 BR upstairs apt. New v.·/y,• Bnchclor flt thr h<:"Ach~ Util 11-1·49'.l ·J.'1(12
pai<i. '" ACIU•'.S Ko. (':1 l1f. cpl thruou!. Drps. dh;posal.
b!tlnii:, Ga r. 962-8578 for SIOO/mo. * 67~2AA.'l. Tr'l"('s. 1'101'(' '" l<lll'n &
:ippt 10 ~cc. j I Br, I htt :'IJ1t, l btk tn bay or 11111<c. S2000. v;;ilur. Tl';1Ur
, ot•('an. Yrl)', S l 7 ;:i f na 0 .
1
for ca1·, <Jr :·?
l RR lO\l•nhour.e \\'/frplc. 67 .• r--4fi00. li14l &15·fi201t
\•·~hr/dryer, bltns, patio. ll~l 91:.2-6846 DLX 2 BR. 2 BA. UPJl('r, for CLJl-::NT l1as 4 llDft:\I 2 RA
, --qu i('t i1d11H!!, T('fTllt'f'. $190. hon)1• in N. Co~la ~'11 ·~a •
1._XTJlA lgt> 2 hr, ullls pd. I 6@-1276. :1 1~~12 Sl0,00), ('(f. \\'111 trttfll' tnr
Cp111, drp$. patio. no f)('L-.. 4 pl cx CM a ~ Pl ~tR f<ill~ OK. S16S. 53&-0121 13 RH , 2BA. Y"arly, S'175 IM. • · ·, ·., • rt"· '.-• . ---Rl!in5, crpt11 <1r11 ~11 f'l()ji;f' Bl.ACK, <J15·K·l2,I BKP. .
I r:1·: 2. BR In qul01_ 4-plrx. / '" h<h. 673-2'11 · * * * $150. Encl J:al'., PftllO. fncd
)IT(!. No qct&. 342-4549. Sell Idle llm~ . , . &i2-5613 I -~
I •
. .
n hi<' $295 rno.
Calif. on }Jwy
in('()ml'. rcsid
plus land. No.
. 1: want local TEMPJ~E Shnron Pre-School
cntial or com· 617 Hamilton, CM 646-1246
8.ll·S·60. or 557-7838.
GEN. J.fnuling. T'rce/i;hrub
trtm. Gar & yd eleanup,
Est. 8.19-2ll3, &'i-6904. GOOD TYPIST
Will do your typing •I
her homo, Will f lokup
•nd dollvor loco H.B.,
F. V., Wnt, 7Sc per pg.
or will work by hour
c•ll 147-3095.
nirrc. Agent
'19 Cl lOICE u nils, Riverside
Xtnr T'l'lurn. ' take house to ...._..,_
plex. on coast.
Clcnr. $350,000., I
$90,000. or du· . ~iiiiiiiiiiiii I~
SKIPLOADER & dun1p truck
work. Concrete, asphalt,
sawing, breaking. 846-7110.
YARD, prtij!;e cleanup,;,
.Remove tree!I, dirt, tvy.
Drlvcwys, grading. 847-2006. Agent
10 Acn.•s, h•
nH'tHI, Cal., ..:
art of Sunny·
!car, at $85.000
area property.
y J, Amison,
7260.
\VANT IX!och
SUBl\1IT. rio
Rf'al!or. 49'1-
Like lo trade? Our Tl"nde.r·•
mn Is for you!
lne
Parndlse l'Olu
51
ysitting H'ustcleanlf19 NEED help a t Mme? We
have Aides. Nurse•,
BABYsmING my home. MF..5A Cleaning. Carpets, Hou S('kpnl, Companjon1.
bl.Ir flll'l(ed ylll'd. Day or w!n(I0\\'11, fioonr:, et c . ~lomcm&Jctn. U p J o h n ,
evening. Orange area (near Resid/com'1, 55 7-6 7 ' 2, 547-()681.
the Treawry). 636-1983. 548-4111 . 1 M=A=ro=n=E,...•~lfi"«~.,-.~,-,D'"a-n""'t•h
BABYSITTER Mon-Sat., any , LAO'r* v.•nls housecleaning lady wishes apt. In t".X·
schedull". "~rk. e:irperlenced, ow 11 change for work. 979-3868,
Call 642-1592 bclort 4 prn 1n1n~po,rtation. call -487-36.17. 9--JO am A: ~11.
retirement.
If you're inter·
estcd, find out if you
qualify by talking to
your local Army
Recraiter. For his
location, call 800-24:J.
6000toll lreo. Or better
yet, oee the Carellr
Counselor at the
nearest Army p09t.
Do it today, whne
there's still room.
ISLANDER YACHTS
1Tl \\I. 17th SL
Costa Mi-sa
CllILD caro, 3-9 Pm. A<>me
Slts. 8 yr old girl. M
home, Npt Sch, 5$..~ •
day1; 644-n>s e~s.
ClilLD care after SChooJ, '4Ui .
grader· Bayvjew Dist After 6pm.~.· -
CHRISTMAS 1$1 SJart t
1ng now~ f'ull or Part 0:;-
SeU~nit Chrl.Mmas girt, 1.,;
NationQI Cotmetic Firm No
lnvcgtment. High ca~ll'lg'
potentle.I. Jnr~ciw by
AP(>!: Pho~ 84&-5419.
5 d
tor s r-""'enter -Expert Hou1ecleanlng-SEC'TY, exp'd., 1..glrl oltlce _. , • Fat ~t 11 &ttlinat 'fVbrn ,
By Oay. Refs, 836-0648 bkpg, pyrll, AP, etc. Call ~ 111n through l"elUll'fl•· ,
ay• b..-
* *
" •
* MrNOR home reyalra. Pluni·
bing • ...,,.n.,, -palfltlna .
roonntr. Cl1I !M0-6580.
EXP. HOUSEWORK-Marion, 1194-2:112. HOUSF. Hunlina! W•teb fb<! ~ DoJly POot Claas!ii.d ' ~ hr. 641--1150 Need a ''P>d''f ~ an lfli OPEN HOUSE column. ~ '
I I
I
I
I
DAil Y PllOT f!
I l[Il) ( l[Il] I l[Il] I ....__ ...... _,,,_ •• _,)[Il] ( -I~!
Holp Wantod, Ma f 710 Help Want..i, M a F 710
][fl] ~r ~!iiiiiiiii ........ ~·· ;;;
Help Wantacl,M a F 710 'Help Wanted, Ma fl 710 Help Wanted, M & F 7IO Help Want..i, M & F 710 C1morH lo Ml•call1,_1 111 Mu•lcal ln1trument1 m
RELIEF COOK SHOE Shi"< girl want<d ap. Equipment IOI * OLD STOVE * BLUE .,... NI 9"12; while Cltric&l Electronic A1umbly
C.M, area. 642-042
EXP£RIENCED d o u b 1 •
needle I-blind stitch sew1n&:
machine. operator. Spantah
1peaking ok. Apply Sea
Suits, 825 W. iStJ, St, Costa
Mesa.
LAUND~ tun t i ra e .
Mel& Vade ~nt
-· 161 Center SL, C.M.
PART time driven A: COO~
Over 21. Apply •t l8fill
Beach Blvd .• lt.B.
Cood e1npklyff bt.'flc.1111, \r&-fa ~ ply In penoti. Airponer Inn KOBENA •21 Super 8 lllO\'ie Smallu old \\'OOd bu..rnirie alab door 32"; 90 ~.
CAllOn I: holiday•. S.rber Salon, 1 8 7 O O ca1nerM. Jnstant cartri""e stove! 2 holes on top, tront good cond. 67S-002l. BILLING
CLERK TYPIST -LOAN OFFfCER
Bayview A1anor ...,,,,
Ret1ttn1ent Center A1acArlhur Blvd., N.B. loadln~. Po\\·er teltphoto door . Nt>eda Joli of work Office P.urnrture/
5-1(). 7095 v.<ide aftl:"le Jena:. AJmost but could be-re at nJce when E I 124
SHOI> OPENJNGS ncv.'. S75 <lr r.111.ke otter finl!!ht"d. I I~ tlf'('d."I In be -~~q_u_P~·-----
trnmcdlnte ol)('nina. A1u11t use
JBA1 clcelric lypcv.'ritf'r I
·electric adding nntchinc. 5
Clay week k frl~e benefits.
Apply In Pl'r.son
MARTEC, INC.
Fee Paid
Sr. Attnt.CPA/Conslr $15K
Mech.. Designer S825
Girl Ftidn.y to $700
Exec. Secrelary $650
Pol!Hon available lor Individ-
ual to join our atatt in CQ,ala
Meaa. Real Eitote le.ndhii
or appralaal baekzfound
hrlptul. Prefer Individual w/
local exper. Xln't work.Ing
c:onds A fringe benefits.
PA YROU.. clerk for EJec.
trlcal Construction ornce In
Irvine. Bxp. w/Peg Board
S)'stem, Slate Construction
Payroll Ir 1'.1on!hly Union
Re port!!. Compu(t'r puyroll
exp. helplul but not req.
Must bt-1tood typist nhlc: to
help \\/phont". fr l 11 Ke
bc-ntofits. Pairt vncat10ns.
S :i la r y c" mn1en~ur11tt'
v.·/abillty. l\l «il l'IJn1 plct<•
resume to P, O. Box 10040,
Santa Ana.
RJ.:TIRED rouplt', J>arf 111111', ITT JABSCO S.12 in·I f'\'t'!I & 1o1·<'rke:nds. welded on. I slartcd sandln~ NEW walnut 4-l "ic:82" e:x-
blf' \lur k, earn n1 n ·" · PRODUCTS Furniture ltO 11, but didn't rlnWi, ao lr11 ecutlve rlesk & mnlchl.ng
allo"11lllr under Soc .. c.:;i·c. Has in1mt'di11te openings tori-----------qu l!1• rustc~I. A SlO l'hfllr. S11t·rlJlCl· bo•h tor ~lu~t hnvr ov"n trans. lhc follov.·l ng fJOs11tons: 1'RUNDLE bt:'d. J>Cl.'411 l\n!sh, saui;lblnsung Job wo uld take $600. I'hono ln4) 644-8814
liil('r\l !('V.'5 'l\Jc>s. :ll)lh, 8 to Impeller Proceasor con1plell' ~·i1h nu1ttN'i.:.."'-'" carr of th11r. It \\'OUl!I m11kc or 642-3071 . 3:30. Apply Vot1Khl Dev. 290 A • I 1 I t ---~-~-=-=.,,--1 11embler nnu spr 111.-:11. good <.'Ondltlon 8 1.'U <' P o.n er: or rut u <."6n· i::.."EC i;v. vl ehr Sia _ 23 Sec 1'111cher Ave., CoslA i\11".~. II' I t • •·1 Turret Lithe Opr $60. a nut fin isll rhlr1<1 \'f'l':.11. ion PU."<"C·IUI l'nu tau c chr SM _ 1~ ttr~ks Nits stls
Sa!r s Chucker Operator f'riblnl'I, lop glass !lilding \\"ilh a n1aguz1n1· l(·d1i:c. I 867 w l!:!th Ci\1 00·3408. T & G'ft P rt'es .100-~rl"tt -,,1,·uo" ""' prud 135 for 1t·n><•k• (1lff'r. Payroll Clerk $G50
11 1577 Plecentle Ave.
Newport Beech
AP BooklcE't!per $600
Inventory Clerk to $525
Please Send Resume Or
Letter outlining exper &:
oy I a I Xln'I benl'(1t.s 4 11urku1g · '~. '"" ' • ., " _.,. IBi\1 Sclt'{'lric typewritfr
House\\'tVes. demonstrators co nds. fi-1!1·02S3, 5-12-ln -t eves anti \Vttkcnds. 1a·'. '.ll'ln'I rontl. 1'1 u!!I see W
earn to $2.000 by Oe<.'. l. Apply at FR E NC 11 prov In i: I a I SCRAM LETS appn-1·. $39:.. 979-1744. Typist $500 SAlary history to the Per·
.BOnnel Dept, (No Phone Calls Please)
Equal Opp:ir. Employer
, CLERICAL
! Flgur• Cl•rk
{tlterviewlng !or -.-.'Ork in Los
•Angeles until move> to
~e\\•port rnd of Septe1nber.
)~REE daily bus transporta-
Jion providl'd untll move.
] PACIFIC MUTUAL
~pply l\oton. 1hru Fri. 9 un1-l2
pn1 at ow· new building, 700
Ne'Wf>O"t Center Drive>.
Also Fee Positions
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
833 Dover Or., N.B.
642.3870
Flexowriter
Train•• to $455
Entry level posilinn \V/xlnt
Irvine are! c."6. \Vi\\ train
person "'' kno11•s som<'
keypunch. lp;u1ant new of-
fiC'('.<: & t h<>nefits. Call
5j7-()122, Abigal\ A b bo t
Pcr&0nnel Agency, 230 W.
\Varnl~'. Suite 209, S.A.
Glendale Fedetel
Savings
4-01 No . Brend Blvd
Gl1ndal1, Ca 91203
LVN'S EXPER.
k Nurses Aides. 54\J.3()6\
MACHINIST
Top man, mills & pro!llcrs.
flfake ov.·n se!-ops. Thor·
oughly understand prints &
Jost data. Top pay. Morl"iHOn
Engineering Co. 17642 Arm·
strong Ave, S.A.
J.'INANCIAL success & MAINTENANCE MAN
economic Independence can
be yours. National Co. look-
ing for creative people who
ean train & motivate others.
Call (714) 540-2'270-c. ~
-FURNITURE
..
• DAY BUSBOY
Full Time
Apply In Person
78 Fe1hlon lslend
Newport Beech
COMPANION
For an 11 yr old boy who's
fathc-r nc>eds hrlp v.•ilh the
home, some rooking &
cleaning, n1oslly companion·
.ship. Usual hours 4 lo 7,
1.1on thru Fri, llut Dad
travels occo.sionAJly and
n1ight bC' latl'. Involvement
with son imp<>rnt ive. Salary
open. N.B. area, Own trans.
"540-6575, 9 to 5.
COOK
I.st Ous Oinntt Coo "k
wfrreat exper. in lrg. food
operation. Call Chef Fred
(Il4) 644-1700.
ASSEMBLERS &
SEAMSTRESSES
Exper pref. Ne\\.' Orange
Coun1 y Company. Grc>at fu·
lure. l\.Iany lll'nrfil ~. Domino
I 11dustriPs, 17672 Armstrong
A\'t>., Irvine. 557-6052 Open·
1ngs.
Gal Friday $3.50 hr.
P/t!me. 25 hrs per wk.
AnsWt'r phones, type letters,
etc. Pleasant variety duties
for beach llrt"8. manuf. Call
557-£122, Abigail A b bot
Personnel Agency, 230 W.
Warner, Suite 209, S.A.
GIRLS w/late model cars to
pick up & deliver envelopes.
Ph. 846-3686.
Graveyard fry rook
International House of
Pancakes. 329 E 17th St, 0.t
HA \VKERS, openings for
maj. ~ent1 at 0 , C. l R. S7
hr. Over 18. Jack, 838-1103
befnre noon on \Ved. only.
Housekuper-Sitter
For wknds only, : .i.ve-in $20
per day. N.B. Employu
pays fee.
UNKEL AGENCY
1819 No, Broadway, SA
K, exper. Park Lido 541-33!3
Conv. Hospital, 6 Flagship I ~H~o-u=s=E~K=E=E=P_E_R_.~1-ive--in.
·Rd., N.B. 642-aMt. Very little cooking. Small
C O OK-HOUSEKEEPER, fam. 546-5141: 673-9098.
exp'd, for "-oman alone. 1H 0~a~u=SE=KE=E=P=rn=---eoo=---.-. -...,
Live-in. $250. 671-11179. children. Live-in. 5 day wk.
DELIVERY of D A1l:Y Pvt rm. 675-8248.
PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to ltOUSEKEEPER \vanted, 3
new1paperboys. Requires days wk. 1 child. Must have
the use of a Station \Vagon refs. & own transp. Alt 5
or Van. Contact Pt1r. Harry pm. 83J.-2659.
!6etley, 330 \Vest Bay St.,
'Costa t.tesa
DENT AL Receplionlat. ex·
per. necess. for a preventive
dental ofc. MuM be bright
"'enthusiastic & cheerful. -·
.... .-.--.-.--~~
~PERSONNEL
~ES•AGENCY
Free &: Fee Positions
Secretary/Coruitr lo S675
Exec. Sec'y/Mktng to f700
OESICNER, e I e ctr 0 n I c Sec)i/Marketing to $S50
'ha.n:lware. Commercial &: Sec'y/Banking $450+
.mllitaryconnector, ex-General Office S47a
;perience·prefe.rttd. Appl~ at Rcccptlonist/\Vknds S2 hr
•SAE Advanced Packagmg., 488 E, l71h {at trviflt') CM
Inc. 2165 Grand, Santa ~na. 442-1470
An eqUal opportunity ____ ~ ~
:'employer. -~-
DETAIL&:. polish men exper. The Irvine Co.
J1eceas. Apply ln penon. Is Seeking
Costa Meu. Car \Vash, 2059
'Harbor Blvd, 01.
DISHWASHER
F /time _ Nltes. Apply tn
person, Colony Kitchen, 3211
.Harbor BJ., CM,
ELECTRONICS
LAB TECHNICIAN
J..5 yrs experience In con·
s1ruct\ng, acljustin~. testlni?
4-inapccling rxperiml"ntal
elcclronle & electro-mech·
anical ~ubasscmblies & com·
poncnt1.
Please apply in J>C'rson,
Polter & BrumfiPld Div.
Af\tF Incorporated
26181 Ave, Areopuf'rlo
, San Juan CaplstrflOO M equal oppor, employer
f M!F
:fiigtncer
PRECISION
VALVE DESIGNER.
An xlnt opportunity for an
exptrlenced design engineer
in pneumatic A: hydraulic
valves I: reh11tf<I c_'flm·
pon~nt11, with <'Rpablll!y of
produet &: machine p11;rt11
dcitan. nits po1illon nfrera
the challenge of devtloplng
.products !rom Inception to
compl<1Uon with arowth op-
i>ortunlty in It 11>1id A
J)"AOd@rn inctwitrla11y oriented
. c:omp&.ny.
• Call or .end re1ume lo
Hamp Jll\ey
Accounting Cl•rks ,,.
With min. 3 yn. exper. Abill-
ty to complete A/P thru
trial balance requittd. ILite
typing required. X1nl v.'Ork-
ing conda. & c:o. benefits.
C•ll Mrs. Smoot
644-3389
IDEAL for student·P/time
job. eves, Mon-Fri &; Slllt
AM. llrly wagt: &. bonus.
AppJy 15056 Jackson ,
Midway City. 894-2331.
INSPECTOR, ma1ure,
reliable. Apply in peraon,
MacCr~r Yacht Corp,
1631 P l acentia CM.
7am-3pm.
INSTALLERS for un·
derground cable TV. Exper.
desired, trninee considered.
2624 \V. Coa,it Hwy. N.B.
Telepromptcr·"An equal op-
por. employer".
JV TRAINEE: Uke to UMI
your t e~hnlcl\I M:hoolin11:.
Great bos.<: .... -1u trnin. $3
llour. cull llclel\.. Hayea,
540--60M, Coastal Aacncy.
2190 llnrbor Bl, CliI
JANtTOR. full time. apply In
person. &vt1rly Manor Con-
valescent Hosp., 340 Vic-
toria St., C.M •
JOBS
URGENTLY NF.Elll:D
Larae Apartment <.'Omplex.
l\!ust be thoroughly expcr.
ienced and have good rc>f·
erc>nces, $500 rer month 10
start.
Phone 546-5025
MARINE MECHANIC
Anchor f\l arinl' Rrpa1r
Has <in imrncd. openlng. Ex·
per. nf!<"!d only apJlly, 1171
Back Ray Dr .. N.B. (inside
the Ne\>.·port Dunes!
MATUlt E male or fcn1alc>
lull charge bookkeep e r
wuntcd immediately. Must
have heavy general ledger
experience. Please call Mrs.
Butler, 540-8833.
MATURE v.·on1a1. for l l-7
am shift. Sawyers llome,
G46-6n6. 2619 Orangeo, C.M.
MECHANIC
with smoi::-licensc-. Have -O\l'n
1001~. Call r~1&-1757
1\IRPORT TEXACO
4C7S Campu!i! Dr. N.B. ---NATIONAL Lumbr1· C o .
needs t'xper. cashirrs. Pd .
vac., pd holidays, pd. mc.'\I
ins., pd dental, pd life ins. &
profit sharing. Apply at
19172 Brookhurst, Hun I •
Bch. ~Ion. lhru Fi·i. 9: 3().
4:30 PM. * NEEDED ~ Two exper-
ienced Real Estate Sales-
men. BonWI, higher commis·
sion, beautiful o!flces.
GINNY MORRISON
*** .J?EALTORS-.... * • 15ai Mesa •C.M •Verde Or. East, "* _,_ * CoslA MPs& ···•* 557-4.130 tU1X'n EveninJ;s )
NE\VCOMER \VELCOl\IING:
l lospitality llostc-ss
To Call LOCAU. Y on new
resident famUiea br!Jlglng
gifts & civic Into. Good pay
P/time:. Must have: happy
amlle, car, typf.na ability,
547-3095.
NEW FACTORY
EXPANSION
$458 • $640 Por Mo.
As Per Written
Agr•em•nt
Full Timi
Young men -nicchanical
aptitude hc>lplul. but not
requireci. Must be 19 or
over Ahle to i;tart 11'0rk im-
mediately, i! accep1cd. 1',or
Job information.
Call Tuesdey
10 a.m. -4 p.m.
n1H1551
££!!!! -NURSES, pvt duty, all types,
a11 shifts. Lescoulie Nu rse·s
Registry. 3.il Hospital Rd.,
N.B.
642-99~5 or ~ln-9954
Interview 9-5 M/F
NURSES Aides, c x per .
pre!'d, 7-3:30. Park Llrlo
Conv. Ctr, 466 Flagship Rrl ..
N.B. 642-8044.
NURSES Ald<."S, 11-7 P.1c-!'1.'\
Verde Conv. Hosp., 661
Center, C.M. 548-Sf,SS.
OFFIC~ TEMPOR ARY
Summer'• Almost Gone
, •• but we 1!W have plenty
of temporary oUlce jobs with
top pay, lnltn!1tfng variety,
all local 2 )Tl o!flct exper
preferrrd, OVt'r 18.
Brown~• Temporery
10236 Lakewood Blvd , Downey
86.9-24.U or 521-5202
OmCE xirl, young am-
blUoua Kiri wanted tor
rrowing Orange C o u n t y
flrm . Mn.sttt Blueprint. 2.'4
Flachtt Ave., Costa Mesa,
540-9373.
PC ASSEMBLY
To $2.75 Per Hr
ASSEMBLERS
Sl.00 Per Hr Up
Lite exper. & rra inres
CALL US NO\\'!
P.P.S.
Pacific
Per5onnel Services
l 12 No. To111cr
Union Bank Square
Orange , Calif.
547-6446
Af-.k for Rachel l\lay
Personnel Clerk
The Irvine Con1pany seeks a
personnel clerk \v/pleasing
personality &: xln't clerical
skills.
Tact, diplomacy, &: sound
judgment in dealing \\'/peo-
ple is a rnu5'. Typing 60-70
\V.p.m. XJn't co benefits.
Call Mrs. Smoot
644-3389
i'llONE SOLICITOR 3 lo 4
hrs rer day. Hourly or coin·
mission. Send qualifif'ations,
'Vrite Classi11ed ad No. 442,
Da.ily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560
Costa Mesa, Calif. 9~26.
e PLASTICS e
Injection Mold Opr.
Or Trainees
For Plastics Manufacturer.
Days & Graveyard shift.
Must be neat & dependable.
F'e1nalc pref d. l\1ust be able
to work Sat. or Sun.
Apply 1 PA'I·4 PAf
*Orange Coast Plastics *
R50 \Vest 18th St.
Costa A-Iesa, Calif.
PO\VOER girt for donut
shop. Restaurant or cofll'e
shop exper. pref'd. Age 25
or over. Full, p/time.
847-7000.
PRESSMEN-
MUL Tl OPE RA TORS
NO DELIVERIES, NO COL-1485 Dale Wey, CM h1t it1roo.I bl'eakfront SZ7:i • 126 LECTJONS. FREE HOST· 54S-8251 \\'Ii.lit· c1ble tlresser v.·ith Pia nos/Organs
ESS G1F"TS. N,.ed car. Equal Oppor. Employl"r nunw Sj(J. Studen t desk, ANSWERS PIANOS -ORGANS
979-4?.07. Gilts 'N Gadgels. I •!!!!~~~!'"'!!"''!'~"""' uphOI lounge <'hair, also llummood, \\'urluzer, many SALE~ Clerk, n1ature fe m. STENO CLERK misc. 5.57-3473 557-74n7. \\'holly -Puri::r -Nc•r.·y -others. Jlrc-5ea.son &pecials,
F /I i me. Advanccn1t'nt Prol;T('ssive ill!luranre film, \\l,\RREN Im port ga1nc M>f. Ranty -\\'INTP.R 1l'IOdel clo~r-nu~". 1~iano &
p o s s 1 b 1 I it i e s. Apply ?\i'l\'por t Bench IO<'ation, n-1vl1·1ng Cane Ba C' k lia.JTOOlll scuUJ.•butl · "Siu• 0 1·gan rentals, l\loney $3V·
\Vhirllgig Store!. 801 Baker good slartini;-sali1ry, J1hc ral Cha irs, Sacr ifice $ 3 9 5. ~n 1d slu• l\"<ts-1r1 lhl' ~pn ns::-· ing bargains :ire hc>re ri&:hl
Ave .. C.l\1. A~k for A11. b c n e fits, Call lo.lrs. 67:>-5698. tn111~ of hfr. I dunno. Sh(' nO\v al:
SALES\\IO~IAN, in a I u r e .
!.J .B . dr e s s s hop .
c\res~/hpli;1vr l".xp l"<'<fd.
SIC'ruly pHl'I !in1<' incl Sun·
1!ays S94-{;232.
SALES. E1ll'n ('Xlra Xrnas
rnoney & rlo!hcs. No i11-
\'CS!n1cnl. 'T'rans necessary.
Call S:W-7863.
SALESGIRL
Expcr. in better high-lash\on
mrrchandist! for llf'IV store
in So. Cst Plaza. Phone col·
lt.-ct 1213) 325-3442.
SALESLAD\' for bakery &
sand11·ich shop, Attn & eves.
Balboa l.~lancl. Plt'flo.;r call
collcc1, !TI4J 496-1574.
---~ SEAMS'fRESS -Knowledge
. of boats hl>lp!ul. 501 29th SL,
Ne\\'port Beach.
Sec:retary
\\'ith 3 years exr::riencr.
Background in ronslruelion
field working w/archilf!<"!ls.
project managers desired.
Accurate 10 w.p.m., 1h or
diclaphonc proficiency &
ab!lily to operate 10 key
addlng machine required.
Call Mrs. Smoot
644-3389
llun11l10~, &14-5600.. DIVAN. nu1k"11 lll'rt ... r hr ., Bit ~~';'.~tT~'."1 \'.: hlld 11 hi•i·k of a Wallichs Music City
Occidente I Life sultt< S<-w n1ach. 1\11 ,·a n"", -i . ". 10.-·30 '"'' ~ulh Coast P ht1a ,,. ....... Insurance Company 9x 12 rug_ l\h.~<' Z~i:.! '.!211rl, !-.lt-.:1<.EO . D •'I u -" c l~J72 --
l!:qunl opportunity t'n1plo_ycr C.l\1. <;an·:-u·d modi•/, J:1rgc pro-*PIANOS.ORGANS*
STUDENTS openings l u I' * * * Sofa & 1na!r hinL:" !O\'('
year around p/tin1<" food sett!, llC\'Cr userl. llolh Sl j(},
rcss1onat chnngci·, 8 speakf·r Going Ou1 For Busi11('ss
a ir s11spcnsion .sou n d Tlcst qll3lity • prit~'.'> • scrv.
hclJl on Sats. o. C. Prlvale. 96.'i-7910. s y ~ t (' 111 , 1 J O \V n 1 I l~;n1·al-Stl'in\\'Oy-!Ja lcl\\'in , etc
Rat•ev..·ay, 838-U03 bcfOI'(' r.100EnN }'URN. Xlrll cond. A:\l/Fl\1/l\lf"." radio v.·Jlh Plo.J('r Pinno~ & Rolls
noon. Bed, sofa, \\1tll unit, l"Ug, 1''ET. Tape deck. Si ii! flt'\\', Ren!11.lr; ......... \\'c lluy-~U
TELEPHONE Sales: Sell chrs, e!c. 6'1 2-1101. \l'ns left u n c l a I n1 c t.l • Dally l!}.6 ~uri U..5
Southern Orange County's RUG. genuine Ch 1 n t' :s f'.
Favorite Newspaper from s·x10·, Solid br1((f', pl'r f
your home. Make u much cond. S.'l50. 61()...-0().[,.
Gu nranlrl'd. Orig. $5QIJ.95. FIELD'S PTANOS
N-0\Y S2J(J. Trrn1s. Collection Costa Me~i' 11141 &l'.>-3130
dt:'pf. 714 : 893-0501. FINE Le s I c r spine I
need Ge IB'.\1 e 1 c (' I f i (' !ypev.Ti!er. as you · nerous com. TALL LAMPS oldt'I" n1odc>l. IZ,u}(·h rctu1·n nUsslon on each sale. Call
557-6739. * 644-4047 .. carriagt• S·IO. G73-12G2, ,;:;;~:..-,::--c:--=c:--o--:ccl<G;;.;;r::;•;;;g;,-;ss..;;1;;;.:----:8~1il2 ("Ul.C)NIAL U IN. R:\1. TOP Dra\\'er is lookTnJ.:" for
ft · · I I P'.). !'.!~ E. 1S1h SL a n a raeuve young-m1 n1 Pc GARAGE SALE
I I • Sat & S A ~'l~I~. s:ic~auy. un. +. P-ITEMS WANTED! plv 111 person, 221 l\tlll'lllt:',
&lboa Island. Costa lo.1<>sa lt•Jh11·y Clul• i.~ Miscollaneou1
SET
C.:\t.
.-.c-c--=--.,..-----1 St'<'kin.i;: furn it u r". :irt-Wanted 820
PIAN0-&1.cr ifiN' S-100. See et
404 40th St, N1\•pt Island.
673--058!"1.
'\lANTE11; ~Upl'I" p Ump
player pinno i11 1:oocl cond.
G41-!IOGS
PRJVATL J•AflTY \\'A[';TS
TO BUY PIANO r·o1t
CASH. 83."l--2271l. \Vaiter-Room Service pliancc!I, houi;rhold gvocls,1-.----------
J.1ust be exper. F/time sporting good~. fixtu~s and &\~~ Plano, reasonAble Store. R•steurent.
See Personnel J.1a.nager clothing for n community gll'h.!lh looking bunk beds Ber 132
Balboa Bey Club garage sale 10 be held 8 r ea son ab 1 e, Mila-bed
l2Z1 W. Coast Hwy. a .m. to 5 p.m. Sntunlay, l~veseat aize. P b one
Newport Beach Oct. 14, for bcnc1il of youth:i ~"'~4-<68~~'-· --~--~
projects in Jlarbor Arca 11nd CONCl~E.'TE table & benches
MexiL'O. Call 641Hl102 during for patio. Also pntio teblt'!!
business hours or 54G-103Ci & chairs in near new c:ond .
WAITRESSES, exper. over
18. Apply in JX:TSOn, Jim-
oo·s. 3050 E. Coast llv.')'.,
CdM. evPnings to have your items 645-3500.
8x4 Folding wall dilplay, 6
panels, both 11lde1 U1.111.bl~. 2
aets avail. $95 ca. 673--7~
Chicken bronster. uud
Only i 795. Value new ·$DID. * &12--0590 *
picked up. Or they tnay bed a"~l-l"~A-·-b~t~l-~h~t~h--.,,_to trade'!' OUr Trader'• \VAITRESS EXPER. d \" d I 11 l -1 ,, ca ne or u c . nn. "'"11\.,
Lunch-Dinnc-r ShH! e iyl"re 0 !c sa c ~1 c'. lique or new, Large. ParadiM'! column t.s for you!
l\1 F~ s A c 1'. N T I·. n R bl &\~-46.~7 5 Un 5 d "! for !'i bucks e BLUE DOLPHIN • AUTO:\IOTJ Vf:. l+i1h anrl r nsnna '"· · I es. a; · ·
Seerera<y 3355 'V;a Lido, N.B. Oconge, Co"a M''"· a lror C. I •••••••••••••••••••
• \V0!\1AN to v•ork in Donul p.m. 1',riclay, Oct. 6.
Administrative -,~--"""'-=--=-===--; Secretary please. \Vin.chelrs 2941 11nished $3.50 10 S7. nusc. Shop aftns. ~o phone ralJr; 114" Plywood, 4x!I, Pl'C· ·• ... ,. ~~· ~'Wti
Jlarbor Blvd. c .r-.1. sizes to 12. llallaw·l'Orc \\'ith experience processing
real estate documents. 3 VIETNAM VETERAN cabinet & passage dooni, -::.r.=
m\RJO !lizes ~l-16. Auto mini ,. -~ ... \ A COHV[N1tNT ....,._NC ANO Years eicper_ in field related Sta.rt a management career "'" "' __,...,
bike rack $10. V\V tow bar -c Sf.WINC GUIDE fOll THE to real l'!ltate, loan proces-in local branch of a na-. GAL ON THE co.
sing, Jpgal or escrow a nee· tiona1ly known co. On the $25. Kiln. Xlnt cond. $65.
essity. The individual t1.•e job training. Earn while you Tandem bicycle $ 5 0 .
select mu.st have ability to learn. Approved GI job 645-1'40IJ. 1721 Kings Rd.
interpret & draft lega l docu· !raining. To $7,500. ca11 1 _N_.B_. ---------I
mcnls, Typing 70 w.p.m, Helen Hayes, 5 • 0-6 O 5 5,
For en ad Jn Wom•n'a World
Call Muy Both 642·5671, axt J30
C.11 Mr. Smoot ~--·1al Agency, 2790 Machinery 116 lmmediale openings for ex-• '-'*b 1-----'------I
perienced pressmen on sec-644-3389 llarbor Blvd., C.M. DAVIS.Well11 fablc-~ 8 \V . Slim Sensation! Fun to Croc:hetl
ond shift v.·/reccnt 1•x-YOU can work in our Los Phone 56-4935 wl'()kends or A' .1 .,
perienc-e on l.1iC'h!C 36" • Secretaries $450-$650 Angeles Tlmt>s telephone after 5 pm.
&/or 2650/~75 Mullis. • Legal Sec'ys $600-$650 sates rm., selling !he L.A. I-----------
• F/C Bkkpr, CPA exp $700 Times. Full or pt. time. Mfsctllen•ous
App!y Jn Pc-rson
MARTEC, INC.
tsn Placentie Av•.
Newport Beach
(No Phone Calls PleascJ
Equal Oppor. Employer
PRODUCTION TilAINEE
Receiving & i n spe c I o r
trainee for electronics ('(lm·
ponrnt testing, l\1TL, Inc.
17312 Gillette. S.A. 546-55.il .
-Reel Estate !iel•s
FREE
Lic•nse Tra ining
Limited Time Only
Famous Ucenst' course now
available thru Tarbt'll l.'om·
pnny, Applicants fully re.
lmbur1cd upon qualification.
New or experienced sales
peoplt'. Openings available.
Complete training program.
Future management oppor·
tunities. Call ~tr Sloan at
842·5581.
TARBELL
REALTORS
REAL ESTATE
PROFESSIONAL
R, E. SALF,$
Ea rnin.i;:.<i of $1500 or more
per n1onth is ca~ the
Larwin "·uy. \\'e furniRh
listing N ~l"lt ing lrl'lct refer·
ral lead!I. lllgh r1dvcrtlsing
lludgt'1, lol!'I or floor time.
bonus program, monthly
conr ests, medical insur.
pnld. Cnll lor app't. Lou
Sangrnnaoo,
larwin reelty inc.
968·4405 124 liour.J
• A/P Construction S.57~ Guar. hrly v.·a~c-& com-
YOUR FEES PAID missions. For details, caJJ STEREO 1972 Garrard
818
Liz Rci ndcr·~ Af;c ncy 5·10--0301. model, full alze changer, air
1300 Campus Dr. \'OUNG man v.·anted for suspension a pl' a k er a,
54&-2118 Ne\vport Bench AM/FM ate-radio Tape f/time position in clothing ....... -!'ECRETARY .l'ltore. h'Iuiit be strong in deck plug In jacka. Brand
Average Skills s e 111 n g, Apply 274 new. Guar. Was I e ft
Call l..o1Tai11C Broadway, Laguna Beach. unclaJmed. Orig. $289.95.
\VESTCLll~F 4!n-2060. Now $95 Terms. Collection
Pl'rsonnel Agency dept. 714: ~1-
2013 w .. toHll o. .. N.B. * AUCTION *
645-2770 ~ II~) Fine Furniture
SECRETARY . & AppB"""'
Admin. Assistant Auctlona Friday, 7:30 p.m.
Tn tnp exec. Lile lyping & Antlqut1 IOO Windy's Auction Barn ,,
goocl a! details. JI a rd ;,:
\\'f!rk-bul fun. 1'.liss Lee, * ANTIQUES -Circa 1840 20Th% Newport, CM 646·8686 .. ):
antique claw foot table, Behind Tony'1 Bldg M1t'I /". 833-~~CRETARY wbt/14k gold solid oak. KOBENA 421 Super 8 movle
Top Exec. wtth NYSE listed
t•o. needs top fl ight gal.
Ca r cc r Oflportunily. At-
tractive salary k xln't
hcnefits. Ptti.~s Lee, 833-9650.
Security
Officers
Value $3000, $950 or best of-camera.. Jnstan' cartr idge 4\"
fer. 2 11mall side tables Sl!iO. loading. Power telephoto .. \!,
pair 673-0052. \Yidc angle lens, Almost ·~
ROLL-TOP DESK new. S75 or make otter.
$500. * 548-5120 542-1734 eves &: \\'eckcnds.
Appliance• 802 CRYSTAL • Cut crystal OC·
!angular bowl on legt, SJO;
'
•
' •
i
Part lime &: Full lime
Av€'ragc $100 per u·eek to
;o;tart, paid v nc atl<ln,
hospital lo lire insurance.
Opportunity to advance to
de!C"<·tive. Contact Security
A~t'nl , "'hirr Front Stnre,
2222 So. !·!arbor, Anahehn ,
\Vrdncsday, Sept. 27th .
9AM-12 noon.
MA YT AG repairman has cut lead crystal pitcher and (
washen: $35. to $100. Can 6 cut lead crystal matching
deliver w/J yr. guam. glasses, SE: crystal con·
83~1778. J in1rnt sci with pede&tal, -~
WASHERS, Dryer a, $40. 644-4146. '--:...'"""'r''i_..--
Dish\vMhers l't"COndi!loncd. 2 Chinese porcelain ginger
guarn . Delivered jflrs with lops, hlue and
SERVICE station evening
mKr & Salesman-lube man.
Top pay. Fringo benclll.1.
Exp pref. >,ull or pl Lin1E!'
avail. Apply Shell Station,
11th & Irvine, N.B.
54&-5718/~7620. white, $75; Fn!'nch oil lamp
Rent Washers/Dryers v.·i~d for electricity, S40:
S2 \\'k Full main!. pine antlquf'! wAsh stalld · * i.19-1202 * v.·ilh black marble lop, $75.
9349
SIZES
&i4-4146.
OVER 200 "'ashers, dryers, , ,. . Start \\'l!h a slr\'k .1nrl
fM. r '"r• from •M 9,-STORAGF.. cnb1nct, ironer, 1 1 1 dd re s::-e aw ~· . rock mnple dining table, 7 s mp c !I iape, thrn a a
545--0,780. wtde rollAr and you hav!' R=E~FR,o.,I~G~ER=-A~T~O~R~-.-,-,-,-1·. 1 chairs, yellow desk &:. chair, iallhion 's !avorite .shirt look!
work! & looks like new SriO. l't'flar chcllt, girl's 3 llpd, Have it tn one or tv.'O culor.s.
Schwinn, Prov. 110fa & tbls.. Print«f Pattern 9,A9; New 7130 Westminstc>r Ave, Bro\\·nc .Jordan pat.io set. 11 tf SI 10,L .,:;, 1,.,
APT' size USED STOVES l 673--0052 8 ze11 ~ • .u r.1, n .
rl c p c LE AN ' . 16~V. 18~. 20~ii. Size 14'~
up ght. · • · FOR sale. Dtnner for less fbust 37) takes 3~' yar<ls 33-
673-8088. 1hnn $2.50. J-fon1emadc so up irich.
SERVICE Station Attendnnt Auctfon 804 & salRd + cntrcc Ht ez:vt:NTY-FTV1.: CENTS
p/time 0 ve!S k \\'kndl!I. Ex-----------Ho\van:l"a Rc.!ltnurant, Np1 for each pattern -add 25
pe:r. Neat Appearance. 1\p-UIG I Boo!'lleN>ttes f)n h<>11a l! Bl:h. cents for each pllttcrn for
ply moms. ZiOO Ne"''J)Orl or The Un1v. or Ca1if., I u d s lat II Irvine. will hold 11 t..o~t & MOVING bargains. Kenmnre Ar Ma an P« ·an-
Bl.. C.l\.f._ ------1-·n1111d Auction &pt. 271h. l\"ru;hrr & dryer, $:ll l'U, or filing; othtrwise thlrd-clus
SF,RVICF: a:lntlon Ollf'ndontl't. 1972 _ Following typei;; of S~ hnlh. 3 bikc>s, S7 ca. delivery will take thn.-c>
exp'd .. per1n . pot1tlion. F'ull ltrnis will be auf'lioni•tl: 64&-0SOO. \\'eek!S or more. Send to
&: part tJmc opening!!. 1-----------A1ar lan Martin. lhfo DAILY Pallsarlt'!I Shell, 1 5 1 2 Clolhlng, book?t, g Y m RAYNE wlr. condilionl'r. 1 Plt.01', 442• Pattem Dept ..
Brlstol/Palisw.cles, S.A. ciothf's & llpor1!! i:ear, etc, yr oht , $220. l$00) new). 232 West 18th St, New
at UCI C<'tltral Pa rk, 11 am
1
. Asst'd beds, ~1v!ng fir!. York, N.Y. tOOU. Prifl1 SERVICE Sta. Allendant It "-.... 1-• •t o ems can ""' u ... pcc .._,, 64:l--032lt N.Ut:E. ADDRESS '"Ith
Full or pt/time. ExJ)f'r. Ap-10 11 am on lhl' 27th. A.II * CORV~E hub l'.ll 8 & ZIP, SIZE and m'"U: ply, In pcr10n, Brown'• llenis poreha~ must <be ~·' P
;
7496
She'll love> ~i11i,:-pla~ 1n
thls cozy, hrig ht :\t'I ~
QUICKJfo: SQUAHF.~ in 3
gay color!'! :irr ea!'ly to
n1<'rnor1ze. ro j(lln! Cf(l{'het
nl knitt !n~ \\'Or!ltf'd. Pattrrn
7•196: jOinin~ charts, dl~c·
lions for t'Oal Si"f,Cs 2-12, beret
included.
8EVENTY·P1V!.: CENTS
klr each patte:m • add 25
cent• tor e'1.ch pa,ttern for'
Air Mall tLnd Special Hancll-
lng; otherwise thlrd~ua
dt'llvery will take thret
wee.kl or more. Send to
Alice Brooks the DAILY
PILOT. :oo. Needlecrsn
Dept., Box 163, Old Clelse:a
Station, New York, N.Y.
10011. Print Name, A~
Zip. 1>a11eru Number.
Totally New lt'11 N~
en.fl CatalOJ crammed with
knit, cmchcl styles. c:rafta.
150 desl!lns. FREE patte:ma
75 Ct"nts.
NEW! lnlltanl !\1oeey lloc*.
Learn IO make e:ctra dollan
trom your crafts ........ $1. :µn N. Brookhur.t, An111helm
P.O. Box 36013 17Hl10
,Equal opportunity ~mploym<
U(:ROW OFFICER' I ol
the faatert smwlnc flrm1 In
'IU'l!t. Fant111stlc carett cp-
portunltyl Salary to SOOO.
'CAil •leltn Ha.yet, ~.
0>11tal AjrOney' 2 7 9 0
1iarbor BI,.CM
• Secretttlts
OFFICE Rca!ptionliit. perm
pogJUon. Emplo)'ee benefJts
Inch.Kling vac p&y &:
holld1.y1. Bayview M8nor,
R.E . Traiooe. Brier &
Shell, 900 E. Cit. Hwy.. pald for the aame day 01 ~auly rims. Make oUer. ~mDL
~N=.'=B".-:::-==:-:::--;:7."-;-I auction. 542-1734. t!ve1 & wknds. JOO Top Fall·~'lntcr Pat·
SERV ~t11 :\llendant, lull &c :-0-m-1-,-0-,-,,,,....-----1 OLDER CAR M1\GAZlNt-:S terna tn all-new Faalllon11 to Jn1tant l'ltacrame Book •• SL
lla.Jrpla crochet Booll ••• $1-
lnslant Crochet Boole •••• $1.
Don't stvt up the 1hlpl
'"'I.lit" It ln clmlJled, Ship
to Slao Rnu!UI Ml-M1L
• Keypunch Operatcra
• Jnrtu11lri8l e Blllirtg Oerk Typist
trvlrwt 5·WH450
NEVER A l'1!:E AT TEMPO
Tempo Temporary Help
LATIIE &: mlll operators,
job shop exper min 3 yrs.
ExPtr ahtttmetlll man. A.C.
FOii"' Mia. U3 Call• de
Jnduslrlu, Sen Clemtntfl.
O..ASS171ED W1ii ltll ttl
-· PARKING lol ettenct11nt for
pvt country club, mature
men. Mual h!vt nif1. Apply
In ptrlOn, BIR Canycn Coun-
try Club, l Bia Caeyon Or,
N.B.
Have JOmethtna you wtnt to 1
seUt OasalUtd 1d1 do ii I
""" • e.11 NOW &11-5671.
dPVc lopcr "i ll train A:
~ponsor fur lie. Call between
]081n-3pm. 54!">-1124.
RECf:PT /SECRETARY
?lfl'dical office. Lquna area.
i \11,!,. t1J...,. & qu&J . \\'rlle
clt1~!'llllcd ad No ~92 c/o
Dally Plltll, P.O. Box 1560
CostR A·lesa. Ca. 92626.
llt'C"ept'klnlll!Secretuy
MAii Ordf'r Bu11tnen
C.plmano Bch. 4911-5141
part. OnyR, awing. wave E 1 nt 808 * 542-1734 * Sew Catalor! PllUI Fnbu\ou1
)'Ord. Salary + comm. qu pm• .,.-----eves & weekcndi: bonus -choose • FREE
1;7 3320 ·-p:1ttem. 75 «nts, 3-, llAVE .-imetht"" yl)u wsnl SPECIAL Sha~ Carpet Sii.le JNS"TANT SEWING BOOK
SHAR PGril Friday needed to develop in !he> dRrk from $2.SS yd. Can Install
by bu11y Nr"'l'IOt1 n rnch Ad room? Sharp So1Ar cn\ary,:!'r 1i.ea1. Guar. 642-7101 Pvc.
aitr:-ney. \Vt•!l -motlvnlc>d RClf· with 3/lmm & 2 ~~. n<'RAl h>(> SECRETARY d k 111,.
tlC1 rt1·r with Cll<'tllcnr lyp· mounts. Other nu!lc. dArk "5 ·
ln1t &: otf!t·t akltl s. Llaht room Items w/salt". The cab!~, lemp ' chnlr. Co py
bookkfltplna. \\'ltOLF. thtng for $&5. Machine 11uppllc11. ~&-8~
MJw loda.y, wear tomorrow.
It.
INS'T'ANT FASHJON
BOOK flundNda of
t.ashion facts. $1. ·
1n1tan1 01n 600k ........ s1.
C-On111hilf! Ar1h1n Booll ... $1.
18 .Jiffy Hu e, Book ...... 50e
11 l'rl1e Alah•in• Do<* ••• ~
Qullt Boole 1-16 paltmis 50c
~lt1.wum Q111ll llooll 2 50ct
IS Qullta for T*7 llool 50ct
·ro SlOO 4!14-2386 "'"· hCyA~;'!!, ~~.;-'. ~::n •••••••••••••••••·••• Olll 10:00A.i'1 to noon -...... ~
fl.Ilsa Jonts ~7 ... J$7l. Oaaatfltd Ads • '42-56~ • $46--670 e ~~ =....:::.-'-'--'-'-'---I
\
,
24 DA.ILY Pl.LOT Monctar. S~ttmher 1'S, t1n
TV, ~dlo, tllFI, s1e ....
ZENrnt I RCA TV'S prk.'t'd
lt!!ll than Uie dlllcOunteni. 3
yr piclun~ tu~. 1 yr part11 &
lt'rvli-e. All a v a t I a b I ('
models In stork. Cash 90
plan or up to 36 mo. fintlf)o-
clng. Phone prices OK. ABC
C'.olor TV, 9021 Atlanta,
lluntinglon fk11ch 968-3329.
•'--''" '_' v ... __,)~
3 Lines, 2 Tlmff, $2.00
MOVING. fi.fust find home
for ix'autiful Siamese cat.
Call after 5 p.m. 545-5Jl4.
][B
Pets, General 8SO
BOARDING fnc.~· 12' inside.
outside runs) Groomin~.
Poodle puppies, Sherry's,
541)..2848,
TURTLE FREAKS -9'
aquarium & turtles & ac-
cessories, $100. 494--6212.
Dogs 854
8 HAPPINESS is a black
button nose, 2 big brown
eyes and a furry little
body-all attached to a Silky
Terrier pup. Tv,10 adorable
females. All sho1s. Best oUer
&.'ID-83.13
OBEDIENCE class to start
tn th('! Irvine/NC\Vf)()rt
Beach area, Wed., Oct. 4,
7: 30 pm. Open to all dogs
over 5 mos. 546-4928.
OBEDIENCE classes Tues &
Sat, 8:30 to 9:30 am. Begin-
ning 9/23. Martincrest Ken-
nels, 546--0989.
HUNTERS! Champ AKC
Field line. English Spring·
en. 4 mos. M/F. $50.
979-2329.
GEH~tAN Shorthair pups,
AKC, $100. or make offer.
Mar1in-Cre11t Kenne I s ,
546--0989.
DARLTNG t.'Otkapoo11 6 \vk11
$.15. Also bm111.'11 6 ~·k poodle.
642-4818 days; 534-3885 aft
6.
AKC German Shepherd 11
months. Must sell very
reasonable. 847--0744.
TOY Poodles AKC reg.,
&bots. $50. Tiny Toys $75. * 547-3851 *
GERMAN Shepherd puppies,
S mo old, male & female,
pure. Call s:JG....00j9
Boata, Poww
56 UP Pl5 f"brglus hull
w/extra eng ~~S H P •
Blut>/wllt. Comp, redone.
f(OO or best OUf'r. Mus-t sell
673-3327.
Boats. Rent/Ch11rt'r 908
CAL 30, Incl insur &: bet·th,
$317.5() rno.
• &12-1403 •
KITE No, 19, Pte!!tlge no,
Good cond. Yard Dolly.
<.·uhlu hllist, Now loc BBC
yard stor. sp 55. Rl'ady to
sail $.'if'l. Flipper No 475
Good <.'Ond. Yard doUy.
Minot sail repair desirable.
Now 1<><'. BBC Dry Storage.
$250. Will sell both boats &
yrd dotlys for $750, 54S-0069,
612·0887.
SA ILBOA'J' lovers-Winter
discount ft)r yr ound fun .
Brand nl"1\' l'I' S a b o t
\\1 /aluminum masts & sail
$200, 979~8G09 aft 5.
21' Santana Sloop \\'/tra1ler,
sails. motor & gear. Best of.
ft'r. Skip, 714: 645-0222.
14' Sailfish type sailboa1, $75.
6 1.~· dinghy glass over v"ood
$25. 537-3296.
Boats. Slips/Docks 910
FOR rent 16x<IO U boat slip,
<I way tie. $135/mo.
MichRel Renlty. 67'.l..s&'W.
._____r'_'""'_"'_'_"·_·_,)J m J
MolorHomn
S•lo/Ront --------Motor Ho.,.. R9nt11l1
Available tor dally. weekly
or monthly buts. 21'. 23',
and 23' ult conta!Md Mo-
tor }Je>me .. all equlPt with
generator, roof air. and
many other extras. All
Coaches are 1972 models.
We have the all stttl Amigo
also. Please caU 8.19·9560.
Motor Home Rentals
SALES & LEASING
full ser.•lce facil ity
Oanmar Motor Homes
531 -6800
'64 Travco 'rlO Dodge Zl'
Motor llome. Loaded V.'ith
Xlra!. $7@, Any d .i. y
979-7965.
Rent A Motor Home
for your Vacation * 839-4301 *
T railer s, T r avel 945
Af P.STREA~I -1967. 22'
Twin Salati. Jmmac. Xtras
$3750 offer. 64~1786.
Auto Service, Parts 949
OfoTENHAUSER dual port,
high rise manifold and 800
cfm Holley double pump 4
hhl. fits Chevy V8. 3 months
nld. $75. 893-6490. * CORVETTE hub caps &
beauty rims. Make oUer.
~2-1 Tl..A ev~ & wknd~.
:~mper1, Sale/Re~_t_!:? r ... __ ._''_"_'_"-_'_'~-~J[ ~ l
FACTORY DIRECT -
Fully !urn cabovcr camper11,
no dO\vn, $31. per mo. Camp-
er shetls. No down. 642-8471.
VAN '68 Dodge, rebuilt.
Radials. Clean. $ 19 5 O •
642-1391; eves 6<12-2789.
Antiques/Classtcs 953
1929 MODEL A Ford coupe.
Ex, condition_ Kay Eldridge
3154 Limerick Ln., C.M.
Cycles; Sikes,
Scooters
Sports, Race, Rods 959
'125
4 Rail cycle trailer with ad·
justable axle & 1ow bar
$200 /in:n. Fine for club or
l11rge family. DTIE 250 cc
1~71 Yaha1na, stripped do1vn
'71 JAVELIN SSf, American
Mo!ors nnS\ver to sportscar
suprC'macy! Factory air.
hucket seat~. Jols of exti·11s.
Pvt p!y. Call 494·0602.
for dirt. New f't>ar knobby T rucks 962
tire, hooker exp ans ion ---------
chamber, high rise fronr '70 Chevy 1/2 Ton
fender, slr<'Ct equipment Pickup, Custom Sport, VS,
avail. $425. See at TI2 Vic-auto. trans., factory air,
toria, \Vest of Harbor or power steering, radio, heat-
5'18--090(}, er, tinted glass, st(_>p bump-
'71 CB-500-4, Bronze 2330 ml. er. mirrors. bucket seats.
Like new, Bought Nt1v. •11. Heavy duty. (Y53222l $2995.
$1200. days, 64&-2486, eves, dlr. Ca~ 836-6535.
645-7643 '67 EL CAMINO. 4 speed,
'72 Malador JSDT, all equip, bucket seats, radio, heater,
+ trick ext, Jo mi. P(>rf (Q29509) $1499 DAVE ROSS
cond '72 strt plates. $800. PONTIAC, 2480 H a r b or
979-2329. Blvd., Costa J\lesa 546-8017. m.ISH setter pups, AKC reg
6wks old. 5 males, <I fem.
• 548-4882 •
WEIMARANER P~U~P~S~
AKC REGISTERED
GRAY * 516-9772
Price effective thru '70 Kav.·asaki 500, Exl!'nd!'d
forks, !'XC'Cllent condition, 9/'l5/72.
AKC Champagne m i n i .
Poodles, females, also 2
m11les. 646-0142 or 548-1022.
Horse1 156
RIBBON Winning, gent)!",
large pinto mare pony
wl Pa1omino colt, $150. 962·
6722.
1971 Premier horse trier
4 whls, 2 horse, Excrl conil.
$850. Call aft 6, 6«-0823.
l10RSE for sale. Must
sell soon. can aft 3,
646-8128
HORSE for lease. Mus! have
exp. For information call
IW6·1167.
EXTRA Special
Gelding. Parade
$550. Call 89"-1044.
I ..... ""' Marine Equipment
Pinto
Quality.
I~
64&4472 alko· 5 pm. '70 Chevy l/4 Ton
RABBIT motor scooter, $200. Pick-up. Custom cab, V8,
For information ca ll aulo. trans.. factory air,
673-5584. po11·!'r steering, radio, heat·
1970 KAWASAKI 500. er ,sl<'p bumper, mirrors,
$600. lo1v miles. (37693F). $3195
548--5168 dlr. Call 836-6535.
1971 YAMAHA
$600.
543-5168
MOTOR cyl trailer, Comet 3
rail, new. !\lake offer, alter
6, 646-5213.
'72 H.D. Sportster, lSOO
n1iles, blue, extras. make
orrer. Afl('r 6, &16-5213.
'8 BSA 650cc J·lornct.
N(\'ds \\'Ork. $375.
4g.1-4390 Lag Bch area.
'70 SUZUKI TC 90, 2;-m
miles, dirt/road bike. )l.1nt
cond. $200. &15-5927 aft 4: 30.
Motor H om es
Sale/Rent 940
NO\V SI [0\YING
1973
'11 JEEP 4 wheel drive
pickup. V-6 engine, power
steering, air ronditioning.
(448CIB) $3-499. DAVE
ROSS PONTIAC, 2 4 8 0
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa,
54G-8017. Price effective
thru 9/25/72.
'71 DODGE Pickup, Camper
Special.Adventu re
Package, Full Po1...,er, Air
Cond. f77312L). $3595. dlr,
5'17-5826.
• * 1962 Chevy, 4 spd. Big 6
cng Excel \v/custom
campc'r. UCB radio. A/C,
nu brakes. Body cond. & int.
Excel, radio/heatl'r, stereo
tape deck, $1500. 646-0903.
1965 FORD 'ii TON PICKUP.
Good cond.
$995 * Call 833-1113
I •
-. ... -1§1 I _..... I~ I -·· l§J I --· I~ [ _ .....
970 -.•m....-m -.•n...-i '111 Autos, Uood 9'0Aulol, Ullll
FORD REWARD
WILL PAY OVER
Kelly Blue Book
For l11t11 model, cl111n,
low mlle11ge domes--
tics, imports, t rucks or
campers.
Call and 1u1k for Beyf!r
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mes• 546--8017
WE PAY TOP CASH
tor osed can I truekt, just
call tts for free t-stlm• tea.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask tor Sales Man11.1er
18211 Beach Blvd.
Huntfnaton Beacb
841.lllJ87 Kl ~
INSTANT
CASH
\Ve need your Import car.
Buyer on duty 9 to 9 daily.
B. I. Sportscar Center
2833 ·Harbor, Cost.a Mesa
540--4491
WE buy all makes Of clean
used sports cars, paid for
or not. Please drlva ln for
free llppra.isal.
NEWPORT ;
. IMPORTS
1970 J.'iat 124 Spyder.
AMIF'M Sharp car, Must
sell-leaving oountry. Best
offer. 847....rz2L
HONDA
'72 Hollda Custom coupe. Lil
mlle11, Take (Iver S38mo
pymts:, pri I pty lvatL
&'U--3231 eves: 963-3210.
JAGUAR
PORSCHE
'59 Coupe. re.bit eng.. tnnL.
H~ po.Int A-tnt. F.xcel
rond. Must be aeen. $1250.
or offer. 645-8277.
'65 cabrolette for sale by
orig owner, super cond., lo
mi., new top, lthr seatJ,
AM/FM, $2950, 644-1852.
'55 Speedaler 1500cc chrome
whl. Xtra Clellll.. Nu top.
835·5919 a.ft 5 Ptt
RENAULT '68 JAGUAR 2 + 2. Cordova 1---------
brown, auto. tnui., air '68 RENAULT 4D, lo milea, 4
rood., wire ~ bee I s. spd., AM radio, come quic.
(AZV8S2) $3699. DAVE VHB19. Only S7'9S.
ROSS PONTIAC. 2 4 8 0 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA,
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 18881 Beach Vlvd., Hun-
546-8017 Price effective thru tington Beach. 847-8555.
9!'15112.
'71 Jaguar Conv. AIC, wires, ROVER
wine, Concours cond. $5,450. '70 3500S 4 door sedan, tobac-
Also '69 Cpc. equal cond. co color. V-8, full power &
$3850. Pvt. ply, 673-1232. alr, low mileage, xlnt cond.
KARMANN GHIA ,_s2995_· _673-_n_•_7• __ _
'70 KARMANN Ghia,
new cond.. AM/FM,
brks, 557-1868 eves,
MAZDA
MAZDA
LEASE SPECIAL
New '72 RX3
$57.56
like
disc
Loaded. ROTARY powered.
36 mo. + T & L. For resp.
pty, Trades cons_ • 'n ROTARY'S
"Demo Sale"
10 TO CHOOSE
"BIGGEST SAVINGS"
''Service is the diflerf'nC'e'"
HUNTINGTON BEACH
MAZDA
17331 Beach Dlvd.
842-6600 Lease Mgr. Mr. Fry
SUBARU * SUBARU * ~ Low as $1599
FRITZ WARREN'S
Sport Car Center
8 ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST no E. !st St., S.A. 547-0764
TOYOTA
SAVINGS ! ! !
ON ALL
'72
TOYOTAS
&
Demonstrators
Examples:
VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC
1971 FORD LTD
8 •·Door Brougham Hardtop
8 tOO cld, 2v, V-8 e~)~e
8 Automatic transnuss100 e Power Stetring e Power Brakes, Disc Front
e Air Condi1ioning
• Tilt \Vhc-el
• Altf-FM Stereo Radio
e Tinted Glass e Body Perfect -Color \\bite e P.1cchanically Ext'cllcnL e Mileage only 12,5())
$3,000
SEE AT DAIL'i PILO'r
PAR.KING LOT
•
VW New fastback, auto, '67 Cadillac El J)Orado ~ 330 \V, Bay, Costa Mesa
sedan. red body. blk vinl original miles e_very possa-.56 FORD 2 dr wagon 3
int, X-serles motor, full ble option. Uris car is • • t
balance of factory wat· u n b e I i e v a b I y clean. 11~·~ rebullt V8, runs grea •
ranty, Just brought from Probably the cleanest used ongina.I. $250. W.21"68.
Germany. 5,300 mi I es. El Dorado in Orange Co. HOR'NET
Private pty. $2,750 (TI4) 492-9034 or 492-9136, San ------....,.~
552-9541. Clemente $3000. ·n 11ornel Sportabout. For
'67 VW '67 SEDAN DeVillc. Full sflle or trade eqUity f(lr
1600ce, 75 hp, wide tire!, poWl'r. factory air con-(llder car. 645-7795 aft 4:30
wheels, HD suspensi(ln. ditioning. (TYY045) $1599!-"pm=.. --:=:;;:---
Many xtras. Xln't cond. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, JEEP
Orig ownr. $1000. 2480 Harbor Blvd.. Costa
830-6044 aft 6 PM Mesa 546-8017. Pri~ et· ,-62-w-·'°u_s_w_ago_n.-:4c-::\V~.o::'. l
, fective thru 9125172. A~t.; .. ~ ~1050 68 VW 9 pass. Very Calllow e l968 EL OORAOO e ~,...* ~.Ii
miles. Must sell. •'>IVll'I t --..,;~~:;~.--I 536-9659 Very Cleau •• ~· 1· LINCOLN ' 492-1338 • B:J5.1104
VOLVO CAMARO 1.-68-L-,,-oo-ln-2-dr-, _m_ed_,,i_um_,
SAVINGS J. J. J. bl"t/blk l"P· 1.156 Galaxy, '68 CAMARO. 327. Good N.B. 645-3178
ON ALL
'72
VOLVOS
Demonstrators
Examples:
'72 VOLVO
2 Dr., 4 SP., Radio
Heat., Rad, Tires
$3494.00
'°"'· $;~;~i;:·~ouor. 1.:c=-M~u"'s"°T"A=N"G,.--·1
CHEVELLE '65 ?l!UST ANG. Fully equip-
---------I pt>d. (N0\\'9671 $399 DAVE
1971 CHEVELLE. V-8 auto, ROSS PDNTIAC. 2 4 8 0
vinyl top, p11'r steering, Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa.
cstm hood, rally 1vheels, 546-8017. Price eUective
striping. Very sh a r P. thru 9/25/72.
$2,49S/offer, 646-4230. 1970 Mustang, lo mileage Ex-
CHEVROLET «l cond. Maoy xtras! Must see. Sell or trade? (aft 5)
• ·Need A
Nice Chevy?
We lia"e cloan c are; at
cAsh discount.
842-8691.
'70 Be& Mustang 302, tnagg,
headers. .Ba.Ia.need. $2700.
831).1825. 3100 W. Coast Hwy1 Newport Beach
642·9405
\VE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP lTSJ'i":"D CARS
'72 Station Wag~ !
Corolla l
(#262730)
*Financing
Available
\VITI I
We Can
Fi.nance You
OLDSMOBILE
'69 OE"lta 88 conv. Good cone!.
1 owner. Pri/pty $1600.
Dennis Moore 494-74&1 <>r
545--0487 E'X 30 (anytime).
1!171 OLDS 98, <I door h.t.
P/S, P/B, air new tires,
$3800/offer. &32-5242.
It your car b extra clean,
see us [i rst.
BAUER BUICK
2925 1-Iarbor-Blvd.
Costa ~lesa 979.2500
L\1:PORTS WANTED_
Orange Countiea
TOP J BUYER
SILL MAXEY TOYOTA
1600 CC. Engine, Auto.,
Radio, Air Cond.
$2394.00
#TEXS-0506505
;t)Wt ltwi&
-TOYOTA
No Down
Payment
0.A.C.
·:oWt ltwi&
-YOLYO
Bank1·vpt OK, Repo OK,
~o~~A·~'r 0~1TY •
1:11'·' 11,~····~·1ir:.
847.6559
'61 OLDS. 1·ew tires & 1970 Qev. Conoours Estate, Brak l200
8 Pass. Sta. Wgn. Pwr. 543.::i ' 549-1690
18881 Beach Blvd.
R. Beacb. P~ 147-3555
STOP! Don't junk it. Any car
that runs. Let us buy yaur
trouble, Up to $1 0 0 0 0 .
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 1966 Harborj C.M. 646-9303
Steering & braket, AM-FMl.oc;;:--==-==-= Stereo radio, tilt steer. wbl. 194.9 OLDS w/28,«Xl orig.
Factory Air, luggage ~'adt, miles. $700.
541-9075.
Autos, Imported 970 1970 Mercedes 300 SEL,
-A-'L-'F-A-..:.,;.R..;.O.;. .. -E-0--' '"'an. 6.3. while wi red lot.
"" Exct!I cond, loaded, 49,550
mi, special price. $12.000.
'67 ALFA ROMEO. 5 speed, Contact Jack Gray or Dan
hardtop and ~ft top, radio, Harber, 2501 E. Chapman,
heater. Lo mil(>s. (\VUT933) orange, 633-lOll.
'70 Toyota £ •• inter. 21.000 tru. Very gd cond. $1,005.
3rd car. 548-4142.
TRIUMPH
1970 Triumph Spitfire, Excel
cond. All maint l't!C()rd.S.
Red w/tan int. .22,000 mi.
TI4-846-1764.
VOLKSWAGEN
$1999 DA VE ROSS PON-1--~-=-=-----
TIAC, 2480 Harbor BJvd., MG '70 VW bus. Over size brks.
Xlnt cond. 8 tr11..ck stereo &
'66 MGB low mile!, nu paint tapes. $1950. 642-6606. 2300
Nu brakes, Excel cortd. $875 Holiday Rd, N.B.
Costa Mesa 546-&'.117. Price
effective thru 9/25/72.
BMW
. -..
Visit our new bomel
0
644-6529 1959 VW double door bus. --------1 1972 engloe, rebll tran..,
MGB
'66 MGB Roadster,
coruf. $800.
5411-1m
OPEL
Excel
'72 OPEL GT Coupe. Orange.
4 spero, radio, heater, ex-
cellent. {130FVJJ $ 2 6 9 9
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC,
2480 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa, 54&-8017. Price ef-
fective thru 9t25m.
'69 OPEL KADETTE LS
4 speed, radio, heater. (ZXZ·
666). $975 dlr. 8J&.6535.
new brks. All n e w
throughout, .$950. 496-5687.
'66 vw
MAKE OFFE'R can eves 644-1680
'71 KARMANN GHIA. Im-
mac. Air. R&H. $1875 firm.
Cali 963-2539.
'70 Bus, 22,000 miles, &at
Tracs, & shag. 828--4913 Be!t
offer/take over pymts.
SEE This! '68 W Bus. Rblt
e ng. Good coM. $1600. 1901
Glenwood, NB 548-6237.
'69 Bug. XJ.nt. Best offer over
$850.
-8923 .. 968-8923
new tires &:.: brakes. Panel· 968-6104
Autos, Used 990 ing. Asking $2899. 557-4S61. OLDS '64. Air, full pwr, beau.
FLEET SALE 1963 Chev. Sedan. Cbmpletely two tone, 1n pert cond. ~ e 'TI Datsun Pickup 1ow restored. Runs beautifully. owner. $550, 830-0190.
miles $1550. e '69 T:Bird, Good eng. & traru. 1900 0' PLYMOUTH 20M, full power & air, $2475. best offer! Call Steve1 __________ 1
• '69 Ford Torino, 2 door, 879-3828. BRAND new '73 Grand
clean, air, $1450. 8 '69 Ford '64 Chevy Malibu Sta. Wag. Coupe 9!11 miles. Cump.
LTD, 2 door, air, vinyl roof, Auto V-8, air &: pwr, ;380. \\<UTanty. Loaded Must
$1675. • '68 Ford Torino Sta 54iHilOO. 675-5604. Saerifice lmmed. 544-5652
~'gn. 9 pass, air, $1275. • '55 CI-IEV. 3 speed, 6 cyl. PONTIAC
67 Ford Sta \Vgn, 9 paM, $150. Needs \\·ork, good lires. l----------1
air $750. 543-3691 549-1690 '63 GRAND PRTX. One Sell or lease
South Coast Car Leasing, tne. CHRYSLER <>wner & excellent condition.
300 West Coast Hwy, N.e.1----------Only 66,000 mlle1,
645-Zl82, after 5 pm 673-8269 '69 NEWPORT A"tomatic traru., air ool>d., romfortable bucket seats,
$$AVE MONEY
NEW OR USED CAR
C.1 11 OJr. after 8 p.m.
846-7368
BUICK
l'actory air A IOaded. $1695. Magnesium wh~ls. AM-FM
<020ABR>. dlr. CaU 83S-6535. ndlo. $550 fDt qu1ck tale.
CONTINENTAL 1--_,=--:.==c=--
·10 MAR m. goldeo bm. :::::::P::::O::::NTI:::::::A_c __ 1 fully equip. Nu tires. Ex·
quiaite. 979-1414.
CORVAIR
Boats, General
Boat Auction
PACE ARROW '71 DODGE van. Excel cond.
V-S automatic. ROY CARVER, Inc. PEUGEOT
'61 VW Bug. New tires, new
brakes rebuilt engine -very
good condition. 614-1875.
'71 VW Bus, lo mi
557-1802 1973
234 E. 11th St.
Costa Mesa 5'164444
TIOGA DATSUN
CASH OUT
·n Peugeot 304 \Vagon. Under
13.000 1niles at LOW BOOK
$1440. 646·5052.
Xln't cond 552-9794
1971 Volks Super BC<.'tle. '71 BUICK Centuri<>n 4. Dr.
AM-FM stereo, many xtras. hardtop. Fully equipped.
S<>all"d hids only, Dearll'1ne
Q(•!obcr 2nd. 5 sail boats.
li1''1nrt nr-11". a!] 1ra ilf'r;1hk-.
21' ,t 23' ll1ghest hil'I n\·rr
dealer cost ..,n Tug.(((•d bo:i1s
only. 2200 1;·. c:ou.~! lli;;h·
way, New rx •1 1 Bl'ach.
LIM IT ED SUPPLY
OF 1972'S AT
BIG SAVIN GS
'72 Chev .. ,4, Camper Deluxe.
I Po1vC'r. a ir, auto. 7500 mi.
f AH 6 pn1 & wknds 67$-622.1.
'GS Dodi;c Van, 6 stick.
Gd. running ('()nd.
$375 or offl'r. 772--2398
'fiS Datsun 1600. New con· l9n Peugeot 504,
"ertiblc top. tires & battery. trans, Sunroof
Lo\v miles. Runs great! J\1ichelin tires,
4dr, auto
4 new
$249 5.
Like new. 644-6J4S. E."1Ccetlent. condition.
'65 VW 833-2122 aft 6 pm. Ask for Le
l50<' Excellent eooou~~"s CADILLAC
Boats/ Marine
Equip. 904
2 Scoop bait bag $12.GO llf1V·
400 cycle 750 v•att lite pl an1
$40. 2.5 KW ll5V gcnf'ra!or
$70. 536-3912.
Bo•ts. Power 906
''1971 SEA f{,\ \""'
455 Olds. Pack-a-Jct, 20", 200
Ser ies, EquiJ'IJ>C'd !or \\/aH·1·
Skiing &: lishinl!. tan<:C'nl
trailer. Call nflcr l'.!.00
noon. (7141 830-6482. t1 US'1"
SELL!
ESTATE Sall'. '72 F/Gls
F/W cool Chryi;lers. Need
bids.
38' M<>nk FIB cus-t Exp,
2Z 01ryslers:, F/\V cooled,
Alllt. &t'n. $13, 7".iO Broker
714: &G-ln.9. 21.J; 433-8751.
14' 0 /B Flbergla.s11 $250. 11'
0/S wttrler $500.~ 16' Out·
bo3ld Ul.). 12' Aqua Cat.
$350. 546-4990 wkdaya.
'11 15' fiberglass skilJ. 9'ii
HP John8on, fully equip.
1550. 6r,...908.
BOSTON Whaler '67, 13". 40
hp Evinrudf!, Ur, Mu.st
1tll/make oUtr. 54()...a>lS.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
CREVIER
MOTOR HOMES
:.lfl~ \V. 1st, S.A. l{l:i·~171
OPEN ROAD
?l!OTOR l{O?lfES
80Sl. G11rd1'n Grove Blvd.
Cflrden Grove 894.4479
·66 Beachwood 22'
f\l(ltorhon1e-Air, Cn, $M9~.
968-3965 or !MiS-1170. Good
roncl.
NE\V l.IFE1'1ME~Th~ \\'Ork!I
& nt ft1nlas!ic rnlc8. Pvt
pty. &18-tl:i33 Tustin. * \\'INT ER RAtES *
Mtr home ren1al~. $165' wk +
ml. Ri:sel"V'e now. 5-16--0291.
SH.AST A mtr home, for rent.
18', sips 6, Rell cont .. Air.
Pvt. pty. Alt G, -497-2384.
UM to Ind<? Out 'lnder's
P41tdlle column 111~ ~l
·:i1 G:\:IC 2',li T. Dump truck,
i;::ood rond. $350. l 8 5
Bochcster before 4PM.
Auto Leasing
LEASE NOW
'73's
964
LEASE ALL
MOD!:LS AtJD
MAKE S
Scuthern California
1st National
Bank Leasing
2001 ?111chclo;on Oriv"
(Corner of MaeArthurJ
Irvine. Calif, !12W4
714 /811-8620 21.1/627-0j~j
Au tos Wanted '16£
TOP DOU.AR FOil J UNK on WRECKED CARS.
Day or nltc, 6.17 -:1720
WILL pay more for junk:Or
wrecked auto11.
543~1
llOUSE HWlting! Watch the
OPEN HOUSE column.
$1,150. 642<J697. 671".rS.343.
'71 Dat'"o pickup, 23,000 mi. PORSCHE vw Bug '62• good i ---Y-O_U_R_O_N_L_Y __
conditl'", 1275
'70 PONTIAC Bonneville 9
pass wagon, Auto, trans.,
v_B. power steering, factory
air. roof rack, low miles.
C2 6 24 6 0 Rl30017) 13~.
DA VE ROSS PONTIAC.
2480 Harbor Blvd ., Costa
Radio, extendo bumper, 1 _________ _
$1685. 557-8l87. 1970 914-6, Excel cond. Must
sell
Call 67$-0929 FACTORY
AUTHORIZED '67 VW Von. $400.
You'll find It In aas.~ifled * 673-2799 * * ~ * CADILLAC
~-STAR GAZEK"'~ F"""'7.!::-r:..:...-..::.e, cur lt roLLAN·--~-u-,-.,.~-f Ji. Yow Coilt J.dffiff Gvi</e )/.. Slfr, J> rh.
According lo the St111rs. oc:..11~~
To develop messoge forTu~sdof, 1• reod WOl"ds corr!Sponding to numbtl"$ 1-17-2.J·3:f
of your Zodiac birth sign. 1-76-81
1 W1kon19 31 MO( d't 8-
2 Yov'U 32 From .,"')to> .3 Yov 3J Thor ..,,.
A c-1 34 Mu!t;ptf 6' T obrl 5 ,.... ~s first "5 Guant 6 eooi.. 36 ..._.. '6 No.t-70.. ,,_ " .....
ISav 38A A "
9YOll J9~ 69~
10 ~ AO Reiott4 70 II II You 4111 71,....
12<>-ilnt .. 2Goorl 72Aoolnd
IJ r~ "'3To 7n,~.'!"¥ l4Mi,e .UTo ""'"
IS The •So-ti"'"' 156 ....... )6 Af.at .46 Ac-IMflll ) ~
,17Maf A7A"-77NO 115'tofl 4TM 71~
19YE$ A90\9lf 79W-
'20 Copodty M ShQtw 10 Gft ::u For .51 Yov',. 11 ,,,.....,
22 To .5~ AvoUobCI 12 ..
2J Mob 3J N-.d IJ Hofti ..
2" ClmJrMltlft, 5" Not "' Mottwr't 25 F.i .5.5 Movre es Actkn 268oc:kJiolf ~To 116To 27~N .57You 17Tht-tfly
21 ~ M Fr""4ihlp 11 IJp:wt 29 Now M hod IP F"-'4 ~ ... ,.. .. _ .. ,_
~~~ ,@c;o,a @Ad-()Nl.::!i .
I
DEALER Mesa 54&-&:117 Price ef.
Largest 11eleetlon of Cadd· fective thru 9/25/72.
lacs In Orana• CounQ<. ~l;:=;~""~~~="°I Sales·Leulng. 7 '66 LEMANS Coupe. V8.
autometlc, power steering
ti Nabers 1sLw81s> ""DAVE RosS Slatidn wagon, VS, auto PONTIAC, 2480 H a r b 0 r Cadillac trans. factory air, J>0~1er Bl~d., Costa Mesa 546-81'll7.
2600 JIARBOR BL., windows, po\ver steering, Priet' e I I c c 1 1 v e 11 COSTA MESA power brake1, white wall 9/'15172. iru
540-9100 Open Sunday tires. (732CAK). $.1595 dlr. '6S BONNEVUL
.67 El !lo •-~1· bl Call 8J6.6S35. E < o,., 11.T. . ra""'· un..,... 1eva e Full power, factory &Jr con-..
but ~~. only 22,000-ortg, MU&"!' SEU.! 1911 LTD ditloning, AM~FM radio
mfles. Car .. ahtoluteJy bet-custom Brougham, Air, (WXF1S7) $1299 DA\' E
tel' than new,'You must tee etec. w1ndows -a~ we&.tl. ROSS PONTIAC 2 4 8 thJi 10fPOU3 black beau()I'. deluxe int., stel'l'O radio, tilt llarbor Blvd., Co~ M~~
Pvt. pty. 640-3650. whl,, landau. top, 23,«X> mL 54&-«Jl.7. Price effective
'69 El ~do. 43,000 mi's. Xlllt cond. ~7230. < lhnl 9/Zm.
Still in WUT'lbty. Loedcd '70 Ford LTD, 4 Dr. Atr, '69 PONTIAC Grand Pr1
w/xlr'as. Pert' cond thtuout. p/1, p/teats, p/Wlndows, model J. Air, pwr. wimow;
Bookit for $45S5 WUJ ~II for p/b. Private party. Days 1t.ee:r., brakes. New tirta'.
$43'.XI. Pvt pty, 675-4619. 2 1 3 : • 3 9 • 0 2 7 4 , fvt'I lo mi, $2,395,
'63 C.d. Full pwr. 13511 '61i 714,11684718. * OWNER 644.filU *
Olds 88. Full pwr, $400. or '7t PINTO Comm. Spcl. 2000 '63 LeMana Conv. WU\ aeU
will trade for pick-up. cc eng-. Disc brks, 4 spd, <>t' trade for motorcycle
543-9291. like new cond. 549--2085. 6'J5..4.781 att 5 or w~kends.'
J910 CADILLAC SEDAN DE 1960 Ford Falooo wagon. Ex· VEGA
VILLE. AU. exlru. eel cand. Must sell. . .
'4.ooo. -m-48:16 l;SH~A::RP::'-::,12:::-::v'"...,"""1.o,_.;-.. -0-e_ .,
'70 Cpe DoVllleo Full pwr. '!i Ford LTD 4 dr, lull pwr. Tai<• _,. PIYlneoC.: Sill
wthrr. v1..,,1 mp. Pvt. plJI. Low mil ... pa Goodall, 9 61-u u ., •
$3901), 545'4411. 213/IJt-11111 -•
I •
""
7
7
' '
San Oemen'te
Capistrano
VOL 65, NO. 269, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's Fbual
N.Y. Stoen
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1972 TEN CENTS
DA Studies New Charge After Freeway Deaths
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of,~ Dally P'li.t Sl•ff
The District Attorney's o[fice will
delermine this week if new charges will
be filed against the driver or a Car which
1werved across the center divider of a
freeway in San Clemente Friday and
allegedly caused a grinding crash which
killed three persons.
The driver of the car and his two com-
panion! -all sailors stationed i.n San
Diego -already face charges of
possession of marijuana.
Leo Walker, 19, was the driver of the
1965 sport-model car which went out of
control al sunset Friday, cl"OMed the
unguarded strip of freeway north of
Avenida Pico, then slammed beadon into
a smaU foreign station wagon.
Three of four occupant,, of the car
were killed instantly'.
A fourth, Long Beach &choolteacher
Niguel Bank Heist
Tustin Man Set
As Case
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of .... Dally l'llet It.ti'
An eight-member gang that burglariz-
ed the Laguna Niguel braDCb of United
Calilornia Bank took $5 million 19 cash.
jewelry and securiUes, an Ohio man in-
dicted in the ..... allegedly conllded to a
friend.
The statement assertedly WB! made by
Charles Albert Mulligan, 38, o I
'Sex y' A natomy
Text Draws Fire
From Professor
LANSING, Mlcb. (AP) -An anatomy
text with a sexy touch, coauthored by a
Mlcliigan State University profemr, has
drawn lhe wrath of a female professor.
"The Anatomical Basi.! of Medical
Practice" contains photos of nude women
splashing in the surf and posing seduc-
tively on swings.
But R. Frederick Beeker, a professor
or biomechanics at State, insi$ls he ill-'
tended only to "liven up a pretty deadly
a:tll.
"I certainly don 't think we were trying
to exploit anybody's sexuality or
snything like that," said the MSU in-
structor.
He wrote the book with two other
teachers while all three were teaching at
Duke University. ·
But Dr. Estelle Ramey, a professor of
physiology and biophysics at Georgetown
University's School of Medlcint, says the
book is an "obscene denigraUon of
women ... a lascivious approach to lhe
study or anatomy."
Jn a letter to th e 1,000 • member
Association of Women in Science
(AWIS), of whJ ch she Is president-elect,
Dr. Ramey said, "The book was ob-
viously Intended to make a lot of money
b)' gingering up a rather dull subject
with the fWl and games of prurient
photographs ·of Jeering naked women in
seductive poses."
Dr. Ramey said the writing In the boot
was "sexist," giving this quote as an ex-
ample:
"We are sorry that we cannot make
available tbe addresses of the young
ladies who grace our pages •• , our
wives burned our little address books , ..
• ·B~cker called her o b j e c t i o n s
"ridiculous." "We ~et out to write with a
breezy llteraty style," he said, adding
(See ANATOMY, Page %)
CA R AD CL ICKS
ON FIRST CALL
The price WU right and IO WU the
buyer, It tool: just one call to make the
sale after lhll ad appeared In the DAILY
PILOT: '65 Datsun WliQR, nn tires,
batt. ttc. orta:. owner, 46,000
ml. $460. xxx-ioooc.
Yes, the first <aller bought tho wagon.
Both buytr and ,.ner reported they were
happy. Let ua make you happy , too. We
can find bu)'en, sellers, r en t e r s •
whalever y<>U're Iooklnc lor. <Im! lbe
dlred line to .. su111. Phone IG-6l7I,
DAILY pIL(]I' Clallifled Adveru.ilil
Dept.
' • •
Witness
Youngstown, Ohio to Earl Dawson or
Tustin.
Mulligan, authorities asserted, told
Dawson tbat eight men broke Into the
bank's vault in March and collected $5
million in loot. The gang lh<n 30ld the
securiUes for 11 percent of their face
value and kept the cash and jewels,
Mulligan reportedly told Dawson.
The statements, which defense at .. lomef.l· lor Mulllpll have attempted lo
bar from ,court. will be lldmltled when
tho trial Ojlem ,.,.,.,, U.S.. Distr1c:1
Court Judge Matt Byrlie rule!! Friday.
Mulligan, along with Amll lllnsfO, 38, of
Boardman, Ohio and Pbillp Christopher,
29, nf CleveJand face charges of bank
burglary, ronspiracy and bank larceny.
Two brothers, Ronald and H&rry Barbu,
have been Indicted but remain at large.
Judge Byrne al'° denied a motion by
attorney Anlhony Gla.ssman, represent·
Ing Cbrblopher, lo suppr.ss u evl-
den<e $10,000 in cub Rlzed by FBI
RSI. Two '5 bUl1, autborill .. say, can be
traced lo the Laguna Niguel bank.
Byrne alto denied a mollon by
Mulligan'• attorneys to a:clude from
<0urt cutllng torches and other evldenc:e
seized from the trunk of a getaway car
allegedly discovered in Dawson's garage'.
Mulligan was arrested June 2 In Tustin
apparently on his way to Dawson's ~
pick up the car.
Byrne was expected to rule this af.
ternoon on whether a $20 bill found tn
Dinsio's home may be accepted 85
evidence in the trial. The bill was found
authorities said, in the purse of Mrs:
Mary Mulligan, the mother of Charles
Mulligan and mother-in-law of Dlnsio.
The money hll! been traced to the
Laguna Niguel bank.
In a separate ruling Friday, Byrne said
Christopher, Dlnsio and Mulligan shall
stand trlal together, denying defense mo-
tions to separate the trial of the three
men.
.. 'I'm pleased with the rulings, so far,''
U.S. Attorney Jack Walters said this
morning. "Otherwise, I have no t'Omment
on the case."
Jury &election Is scl!i!duled lor 9:30
a.m. Tuesday, with opening atatemenls
and motions to be made on Wednesday,
Walters said. '!be trial Is upected to run
two to three weeks.
17-year-old Surfer
Hurt at San Onofre
A 17·yeaN>ld Azusa youth surfing at
San Onofre State Beach over the
weekend suffered a deep cut in his leg,
rangers reported today.
Armtndo Dan Hernande! was given
first aid by atate llfeguanls after the
mishap Sw!d&Y noon al the ••duded, ·
rugged bead!.· then talten to San
Clemente G.neraI Hospital where be
recotved stlldles to clooe the wound In
bis lower leg.
'nle· youth WU rtJtued after """"II""
cy treatmen~
Troop Strength Cut
SAIGON (AP) -U.S. lroop stmigth
In Vietnam dropped by 400 to 3' 100 last
week; tho U.S, Command annouOced to-
day. 'nle f.rrey c:ul Ill fon:e by 200 m<n
i»qd Ille , Air Force by 300, but Marine
ltmlda lncu-"1 100, ~ to olllclil ~.. cit 111indn. ,..
denl llbon ...a..nc..i lie 'wt8 .......
U.S. .troop llftnalb· la Vietnam to J7,000 .., Die.!.
Betty Moffitt, 35, was critically hurt.
Mrs. Moffitt was treated first at San
Clemen~ General Hospital, then later
transferred to MWi<>n C o m m u n I t y
Hospital where nurses this morning said
she was making "very slight im-
provdnt."
The lone survivor in the car suffered
severe head, internal and hip injW"ies as
well as multiple cub and bruises.
Her companions were the driver,
Robert Marvin Pratte, 35 ; his wife,
Brlgltte, l2, both of Long Beach, and
Laura Jo Washle, M, La Palma.
The four were described by highway
patrolmen as "innocent victims" in the
crash which took place in a stretch mar-
red by the most seriow: local accidents
experienced in San Clemente for the past
several years.
Workmen . have • been preparing the
area for the installation of center-strip
protection ror the past several months.
Fences are due to be lnstalled there in
a matter of days.
Highway patrol investigators said there
was no indication that the marijuana
directly was related to the crash.
The weed was found in a man's sock in
the car, officials said.
The discovery prompted the arrest of
all three men -Walker, Nikolai Pen-
nington, 22, and John Jensen, 21.
DAILY P'ILOT 11•11 P'llOI•
PROPOSITION 20 BACKERS PAUSE IN FASHION ISLAND DURING LONG BIKE RIDE
Stal9 Son. JamM Miiii (With -tachel, Leads Group of About IO Toward San DI..,
Mills in Laguna, Raps
Lack of Coastline Law
uealifornia, Alabama and s 0 u th
Carolina are the on1y states which have
no plans governing coastaJ management
and planning. Every other State blessed
with this kind of precious natural
resource bas taken some action to
preserve and enhance it," Sen. James R.
Mills (0-San Diego). told a crowd of
Lagunans Sunday as he bi<yded into
town to boost ProPJsition 20, the
COasUine Protection Initiative on the
November ballot.
Mills and his fellow cydists stopped at
Laguna's Main Beach for lunch as they
neared the end of their 500-mile "c:oastal
protertion" bike ride from San Francisco
to San Diego.
They were pied by Mayor Charlton
Boyd, Vice Mayor Roy Hohn and c:on-
servaUoni!t William Wilcoxen, all of
whom spoke In support of the eoa..tline
Initiative.
After the lunch stop, the cycllsts pedal·
ed off to San Clemente to spend the night
at the State Park in that city befi>re pro-
ceeding to San Diego.
"You may not think there is mu ch
drama In the spectacle of a middle-aged,
balding leglslator huffing and puffing his
way down the coast highway," Mills told
the crowd. "But you are not looking at it
from my perspective. There a r e
momenls when I feel an acute sense of
drama -not to say alarm -as I try to
keep up with the rest of our party."
Stressing the seriousness of the tour,
Mills added, "A wide awareness that
there ls a problem is almost a solution in
itsell. Thi! has been the pattern in other
states. Coastline t'Onlrols tuive been im-
posed only after some demonstration by
the public that they want their bea<he•
unspoiled, that they want a<oess lo their
own beaches, aod that they will no longer
tolerate unrestricted, bapbazard develop-
ment of their coasUine."
Wtth two-thirds of Califomla11 1,100.
(See CYCLIST, Pas• %)
New Development Freeze
For Capistrano WeiP"hed
Propooals lor a !e«llld lre.-ze In
develoiment this year in San Juan
c.aplstrano will come heloN! ctly <OW>
cllmen tonight after winning pttllminary
approval bwn planning commissioners.
'Ille temporary ban on ...identlal pn>j·
ec1I of five units or more was proposed
to give the city's &mall planning and
• englneerlnC sta!f a breather from a
mountain of work.
Planning commlasloners, who 1Ug·
gested the freeze in a S.-1 vote, l8Jd they
hope tile moratorium would n:maln In d ·
fe<l 181W 'lhe eoundl afll"O .... "a definite "°"°' ·PolkJ" In the clfy """' besieged by de~. A ~ ':::t.7. ODICled tar'1 this year by Ibo city llciandL
,,,. ,,.... eiplred -Ibo Apr\I ..
. \ •
llonl; the ..,.. coundl did not renew II.
Sinoe lhen, however, the rate of. houS+
Ing projecll in the small city has ooa....S
to the point lhal dly employes· can not
efnclenUy -the worklood.
Othu Items.Rt for coundl deliberation
tonight Include new guldellnet for the
grading of llltet for housing pro)ecll, pnr
pc>1als offered by the city engineer In an
tffort to seek a guarantee that grading
projects are completed once they are
started.
Another major agenda Item involves a
report from Orange County Transit
Dlstrlc:I Manager Dr. Gonion J. Fielding.
Dr. -Fielding will lnlroduc:e t h e dlllrict'• prai-d .... bus aenl<e whlcb 1iUI Jnc!n4t new routes u..up South
'*""~ C!!!!junnn(Uol.
Capo Chamber
To Hear Details
Of 45-15 Concept
Capistrano Unified School District
Superintendent Truman Benedict will ex ..
plain the concept of the ~15 all-year
school plan to members of the San Juan
Capistrano Char;iber of Qimmerce at a
meeting Wednesday.
Benedict will appear at an 8 a.m.
breakfast meeting of the chamber at
Pete and Clara's Resteurant.
The appearance is the nrst by a
district official after trustees recently
approved a campaign to inform residents
of a proposal calculated to keep elemen·
tary pupils at school on a 12-month basis.
Thus far the district's official position
is one of disseminating information only.
Trustees will decide on the merits <lf
the plan in December -afte1 residents
of the district have been informed and
their opinions l!lOUght.
Chamber officials also expect
discussion on the local effort lo obtain
4,000 voters' signatures on petitions to
create a special service district to corr
struct two swimming pools at district
high schools.
Time will be set aside for questions
from the floor, chamber aides said.
Guests are welcome.
Capo Beach Sets
Color Carnival
Sou th Coast artists and craftsmen were
urged this week lo register for the
seventh annual Carnival of C.Olor open-air
art festival &et for downtown Capistrano
Bea<h Oct. 7 •nd 1.
Louise Leyden, chairman of the event
spon.wed by the C&pistrano Beach
Chamber of Commerce, said exhlblt and
sales stalls wiU be avall1tble at the
festival site In the Caplslrano Beach
Plsua Shopping Center.
Artists can apply for booths by calling
lle-!208.
Included ln the weekend activities wilt
be a drawing for an oil painting of a
lond1<1pe oe<ne done by Mn. Leyden, a
well known South Colsl ertlst for many ,...,.
, . ,• -
All three men also suffered injuries in
the crash and remain under care in the
Orange County Medical Center jail ward.
ln\'estigators quoted \\'a!ker as saying
he "'as cut off by another car, sy,·erved tB
avoid a colJision, then IE"rt the northbound
lanes and crossed the Cf:!nter strip. col·
liding with J>ratte's southbc>und vehicle.
The ensuing traffic snarl blocked all
lanes of the freeway for nearly an hQur.
The route was blocked beyond San Juan
Capistrano, patrolmen said .
• a1n.
Policeman's
l{iller Still
'At J.JarQ"e'
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 ""9 01Ur l'lllt J11f1
The manhunt for suspected police killer
I-Terman L. Clouston, who has literally
come and gone around two counties for
five days, continued today with an appeal
fot his guaranteed-safety surrender.
So far, the man sought in connection
with the shooting death of Buena Park
Police Detective Darrel D. "Bud" Cate
last Thursday has managed to escape
several potential police traps.
Gunfire has erupted each time, the last
one involving a burst of 20 shots which
peppe....S a fleeing car canyfng a scar.cl
car salesman mistaken for Clouston.
He trted to speed away to avoid exactly
f ie gunfi re re.suiting -as he fled with
two terrified girls in the car - which he
feared would t'Ome after Clouston was
reported at the car lot.
Somehow the terrified trio escaped
without injury.
Buena Park Police Chief Dudley D.
Gourley today appealed to Clouston, an
ex-convict wbo claims he won't be taken
alive, to mrrender with someone as an
escort.
He suggested it be done in company
with a newspaper reporter, a minister, a
pri:st, or someone as a third party.
.. I urge him to surrender before other
innocent people are needlessly hurt. in-
jured or killed," Chief Gourley declared.
The hunt which has ranged from the
Buena Park-Anaheim area up to south
Los Angeles County twice now has in·
volved shooting incidents on foW' oc-
casions.
"We have had several near·tragedles,"
Chief Gourley said Sunday.
"We want to avoid any more or these
situations," he continued.
''He may think he cannot give himself
up safely because he killed a police of·
ficer," Chief Gourley added, presuming
Clous ton is indeed the slayer of Detecti•e
C:.:e, who left five children.
Clouston has escaped a narrowing
police dragnet several times. the most
recent case being one in which he fled on
foot via a flood control channel after an
exchange of shots.
He bad been recognized from ne'o''S
photos, according to investigators, when
he allegedly tried to trade his .22 caliber
pistol for a used car at an agency.
The frightened salesman talked the
suspect into going out for a cup of t'Offee
!See SUSPECT, Page %)
Orang e .coast
W•nther
Sunny skies through Wednesday,
with highs in the 705, OOth inland
and along the beaches. Lows to-
night around 58, according to the
weatherlady.
INSW E T ODAY
A lone gunman firtd an the
Foothill Division police .station
earl11 thii morning with such in-
tensit11 that palicemen tn.sidt
thought the~ were under attack
by a gang of men arnted tmth
machine gun!. See stOTy on
Page S.
l .M. l•'t'tl • A!\11 LI~ 14
lhtll'll " w..~lt• • C•Uftf'lll• S N1t1t11al ,._.. •
CN•llllff , .. ,~ Or•"" c~""" ' Co1t1lc• n svt-r• P'lfilf' 1t c11111wlf'lll l l S-'I 1•1r °"''" l'fflk.. 1 "'" Mlrklh 1 .. 11 1•11.n.1 ''" ' Tll•r1t1.. I
111"*"411-llt • ""''""" • P'IMnct 1 .. 11 Wllftltf 4 P'W ... Rtc9N , W-'t ,,...... 1>•• ...,...__. 1J ...... ~ 4
tLY PILO, SC Monda1, Stpttmbtr 25, 1972
Fr om Page 1
(:YCLIST ...
• mile coutllne aJreedy privately owned,
and onJy 250 milts of what 11 left us.ible
as rccreallon beathts by 20 millio n
Callfomians. "there la not much left to
prcttrVt," 11id the senator.
rroposlllon 20, he Mid, i:i; not offf'rt>d
as the ultfnl:tlt' solu1lon to the coa~tline
t·ri:iis. bu! .. s a methOO of gaining time In
d1.•velop plans for the coast.
Jt calls for the t·r1•ation of a (;o;1~1 ;1!
Zone Commiuion and aix reg1onaJ com ·
missions lo plan the h(ost use of thl'
coastline. 11\e commi ssions would hf>
made up hall by r('presentat1ves of local
govemrnents nod hal. by public members
appointro by the Governor a n d
Legislature.
The commis.'lion would be required to
.submit a plan tn !he Legislature by 1975,
and 1n thl' 111eantime, no coastal develop-
n1ent could take place within 1,000 yards
of the shoreline without a special pennit.
"Opposition to coastline protection is
formidable, and the Legislature has been
unable to overcome It," Mills said . "An
unusual alliance or both big business and
segments of organized labor opposed
coastline proteclion legislation this year.
The oil interests are afrai dof losing prof-
its. and some or our largest unions are
afraid of losing construction jobs.
"If we can learn anything from the
legislative defeat of coastline protection,
it is that the opponents of Proposition 20
are wealthy, well organized and
powerful. We can expect a very slick,
professional campaign against this ap-
proach to coastline protection in the
week! ahead."
Referring to coastline p r o t e c t I c n
legislation In other states, Mills took an
indirect swipe at Governor Reagan. In
these states. he said, "There was another
for m of pressure that is missing in
California -strong leadership by the
governor."
Delaware, which has one of the
strongest coastline proteclion laws In the
nation, said Mills, "also has a courageous
Republican Gove rnor, Ru~e\J Peterson,
who stood up to opposition not only from
the special interests but from Seeretary
of Commerce Maurice Stans an d the Nix-
on Administration to get its Jaw enact·
ed."
The Ca llrornia coastline. he said. now
falls unde r the overlapping jurisdiction of
15 county governments, 46 city
governments and dozens of specia l
clistrict boards ... even assuming all
lhese local governments have nothing but
the best interests or their cili:.::ens at
heart, it Is unrealistic indeed to believe
that all of them can agree on a uniform
coastline plan or even what the be!lt use
of the coastline ill."
Urging a Yes vote on Proposition 20, he
·asked his Jistenert to remember "the one
critical fact -that there are only 250
miles of public beaches tert -for 20
million of us."
Frottt Page I
SUSPECT ...
while he considered the dea l and called
police after the man identified as
Clouston left.
And when officers arrived. the car
salesman tried to get away himself to
avoid the con!ronlation, but was mistaken
fo r the suspect due to his actions.
Currently, more th an 200 officers
operating from two command posts in
Orange and Los Angeles counties are In·
volved in the search for Clouston.
He is reportedly the man who fled over
a fence afte r Detective Cate was killed
by twp . bullets during an attempt to a~
rest a suspect -presumably Clous ton -
on a sex crime charge.
From Page I
ANATOMY ...
lhal his students "really enjoyed" the
writing.
Becker said the pictures were obtained
!tom a California photographer specializ-
ing in nudes, instead of the Duke art
department, because the Duke pictures
were of volunteers ''who had no training.
They didn't know how to pose to bring at-
tention lo certain landmarks the student
1nust recognize. They were just
plain bad," said Becker.
OIANQ.I COAST K
DAILY PILOT
'l'l'!e Of'•"'" C.•I DAILY PILOT, WI!" wtilc1'
ti comol"" 1n. Ntwi·Prett, I' PYlllltl'ltll .tty
,.,, O••no• Co.it f'ublltllll'lf CtmQofO'IY. $e11t-
r.it ~l11ot11 •r• pUb!/1,,«1, Mond1y ,,,.,~.,.,,
Frld1y, l11r Cotl• Mt11, Nt....,,.rt 8t1<,,,
Kuflllt\91Gn Bttf"IJ'°""'lli" V•!lty, l1gu"'
lltttll, lrviM/$.-cklltNtk •ml Sa" Cltmtn!t /
~In Ju1n C111ll!•1r>11. A •lflQle •tll•O•,.t
l'd illon ~l Pllbllllted StlU•OtYl lfld $11ndl Vt.
Tiit JM"lnfh:UI Oll(l!l1lllnt i:>ltnl I\ I t l)O Wr•I
ll•y $htet, Co.it Mt1t, Ctl+tOtf\lt. t11l•.
Robert N. W11J
Pre'"'''" tncl P~Oll•ll.,.
J t tk R. Curlt v
V•<t Prttldtfll •nd Gtnt••I M1n~1r
Tho1r111 ktt vil
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tfl!atitl ""'"' Of ...... ,'"'"'"'" llt tflft ...,,y bf fWodll(td wlll'IO\ll wtel•I '"''
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Ul'I Ttlt.itolt
Ice Crea••• Shop H•t
Sacramento Jet
Crash Kills 22
• SACRAMENTO I UPI ) -A vintage jet
fighter taking off at an air show smashed
into a packed shopping center ice cream
parlor here, killing 22 persons, many of
them youngsters attending a Little
League football celebration.
Another 16 persons were injured Sun-
day when the privately-owned F86 Sabre--
jet barrelled across a highway, struck
three vehicles and bounced in a "ball cf
fire" into Farrell's Ice Cream Parlor.
';l"m sorry ... I'm sorry. Get the peo-
ple out," gro'aned Richard Bingham , 36,
of Richmond, Calif., pilot of the plane.
lie was pulled from the wreckage while
200 screaming children and adults fought
to escape flames that turned the Gay·90S
style shop into an inferno.
Bingham escaped with some broken
bones and a cut face.
In Washington, the Na t I c n a l
Transportation Safety Board said the
crash was the worst in U.S. histcry in
tenns or ground deaths.
girl. whose mother, Joan Bacci. 29, was
among those killed. . One IO-year-old bOy, Steve ~1art1n.
Sacramento. was later foun d safely
crouched under a table in the party
room. . .
The plane, OYined by Spect~~ ~1r
Services which belongs to mlil1ona1re cosmeti~s manufacturer William Penn
Patrick. hit one car on a highway and
two in a parking lot and dragged them
into the parlor,
Roger Lindberg. a newscaster for
Sacramento station KXTV. said . he
witnessed the crash "'hen he was leaving
the air show.
* * Fiery Horror
Of Crash Told
He said the ne1t worst occured in B Ob Flagler, Colo., on Se pt. 15, 1951, when the y server
pilot of an experimental plane crashed
while attempting a roll. Nineteen were By BARBARA FINE
killed and 10 seriously injured. wrnt•" tot "" Auoclnttl Prt11
KOREAN WAR VINTAGE JET SITS IN FRONT OF TRAGIC SACRAMENTO SITE
Pl•n• Was Extracted From Ice Cream Parlor After Crash Which Took Heavy Toll of Young Lives
Sacramento County Coroner George L. SACRAMENTO _ !t happened in \vhat Nielse n .said 12 of the victims were
youngsters, five boys and seven girls. was just a few split seconds.
Five women and five men were also kill· I noticed a piece of what looked like a
Hoag Directors Set Secret
Meeting on Family Center
'Jo1ui Doe' Helcl
Aft,er Nude Pose
Shocks Resident
ed. plane's wing. It evidently deflected o~r
He said at least two complete families the roof of Farrell's. At first. I thought it
v.·ere among the dead. was going to hit the window of the fabri c
The nose of the Korean conflict-era store where I work.
plane, one of America's first fighter jets Then there was an explosion with a ball
being displayed across the street at of flames. It was just huge. It was bright
Sacramento's Executive Airport, smash-orange and yellow with black smcke
ed into the parlor's Howard Hughes around it.
Room. My firat thought was that an airplane
A party was being held i9 the room for had crashed, and I knew that Fatrell's
Orange County Sheriff's officers and a 20 youngsters from the Sacramento 49ers was packed with child ren. I ran out to By L. PETER KRIEG
Of Ille 01111' Pllol' Slltl
The men and .women who run Hoag
Memorial Hospital .in Newport Beach
were scheduled to meet be hind closed
doors today to act on a recommendation
by the medical staff that the hospital's
three-year-old Family Practice Center be
closed as of next JWJe 30.
Under pressure from doctors to shut it
down and from the community to keep it
open, directors were to meet at 4 p.m. to
rtvlew scaled-down budget! prepared by
Dr. J. Blair Pace, program director, that
may allow the program to be salvaged.
A. Vincent Jorgensen, president of the
hospital board, thi! morning again
declined to speculate on the outcome of
Clement,e Adult
Scliool Signups
Begi1i Tonight
Registration for fh(' fall scmest.er of
classes at San Clemente adult sc hool will
start tonight and continue through
\Vl'dncsda y.
Th(' signups ror dozens of classes will
be held in the San Clemente High School
library from 7 lo 9 p.tn. each evening.
Classes -open to all persons over 18
\Vith diploma or not -also can be taken
on approval of a counse lor by hiRh ·
school-age students. The adult school
year "·HI start ncxl v.·cck.
Registration fee for ench class has
been increased this year to $6.
Previously the fee was $5 for any num·
ber of classes.
The fet>s, howeve r. will not be charged
to students taking classes for high school
credit, pupils in American citizenship
classes or persons studying English as a
second language.
Students will be asked to furnish their
ov.•n textbooks and other learning
materials.
Courses arc taught al San Clemente
high as v.'ell .as San Juan , Dana and
Marco Forster schools, the San Clemente
Beach Club and the Rancho Alip;.rz
Clubhouse in San ,Juan Capistrano.
Adult School Principal Al Valentine
said Students interested in registering
for credit arc asked to contact the adult
school office nt San Clemente high after
I p.m. during the .slgnup period.
Subjects offered this year include arts,
English, bu siness education, homemak·
ing, foreign language, math, science and
socia l science.
Sufficient students inte rest must be
shO\\"!l in Ctt<.'h course to keep it schedul·
ed .
E11(·h cour~e n1u~1 s1arl \l"ilh :?tl
n1g1~f('J"('d pupils Jf lt'SS apply th l• l"OUl"Sl'
11 ill bt' clin11naterl.
Votin g Signups
Se t at UC Irvine
The Ornngr County League of \Vomen
Votf'rs will providr voter registrars to
reluming UC Irvine students beginning
Wednesday.
Rcgistr1irs wlll sign up person!> who
will be 13 ye1irs old by Nov . 7 Rt booths
1 t~ in G!lte\\'AY Pla1.n from 10 l'l.m. to
" p.111. \Vcdncsday and Thursday and
a~aln Oct, 5 and fi .
I.H.·ndline for rcgislrrin~ to vote In the
November general election is Oct . 8, but
thoae registering Rfler Sept 14 will not
rrcti9e II sample ballot. County voter
rejlistration officials wUJ however, notify
n1'\~ rc~lstri.lnls of their appropri:itc poll·
ini:t place .
. -
the meeting. He did promise a decision, bewildered Santa Ana Heights rtsident Little League football team. see if I could help. Everybody was run·
however. whose I i v i rig room resembled a Don McClus key, an empJoye, was fill· ning out of Farrell's. · He said he does not yet kno w whether ing salt shakers in the room when the Righ t after I saw the ball of fi re, I
efforts to find new sources of revenue Cosmopolitan Magazine layout for a fe w plane hit. wen t right to the phone and dialed "0"
from the private sector of the community minutes during the weekend have one "After J picked myselt up, I grabbed for the operator. I told her to send as
lo help defray the costs of the program thing In common today. five kids and broke a window and got many ambulances as she could. She told
will be successful or not. They just don't know the identity of the them out," he said. "But by then, the me she already knew there hnd been a
They were dealt a blow Sunday, nocturnal nude who did a Burt Reynolds smoke and names were too intense and I disaster.
however. \•ihen the man working on couldn't get back in." 1 got several bolts of muslin and J cut
search for funds, Hospital Treasurer act on th e couch of the astoqished Linda Fourby, 17, Sacramento, was tn them into strips. I went outside and I
Charles J. Fishback, suffered chest pains homeowner who found the intruder in his a car which tile plane missed by 100 feet. bandaged anybody I could. People
and was rushed to the hospital where he living room in the early hours of Sunday. She said she ran toward the screaming weren't crying and &"Creaming -it
is now in good condition. Deputies who arrested the ungarbed in· and breaking glass" at Farrells. wasn't hysteria. People were in ~k..
Jorgensen said he does remain op-vader on burglary charges booked him "People were saying 'get me out, get They were just pale and standing
timistic about the future of the i:rogram. into the county jail as Jotm Doe. And me out! Where's my kids?' Everybody around like they couldn't believe what
"I support it. It want it continued. I that's the name the six.foot defendant was trying to help everybcxly." had happened. Others were looking for
believe in it. It's a good program ," goet by today in the mental health Chairs were used to break windows and their children and trying to reunite
Jorgensen aald. division at Orange County Medlcal people eoured from the doorways. families.
"We're going to go over the budget Center. One glrl, OuisUe Kiehn, 12, Stockton, Some people were bleeding. One child I
again and see if we can make a reduced Deputies who were called to. Bristol said she )lei~ a frien d get out safely ~ I\ was comforting was bu med very badly
program work," he said. Street tQ, make the arrest ate 1iLso In· tried to' return but t ouldn't. • ., on ht!r feet and her legs. She was quite
An aide to Pace said this morning tha t vestigating a breakin at about the same "f climbed over all sorts of stuff. frightened so I tried to stay with he'r as
the revised budget trims the program to j~t:ime:::•t:2422::::Br:lslo::l:Road.::::::::::::::::m;:a~ybe::;:'°;:m;:e;:o;:f;:i;:t ;:w;:as;:::hodl;:::e;:s;:,':' ;:Sll;:·d~th;:e;:::;:lo;:n~g;:a;:s;:l;:coo;:::l;:d.;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::; 12 doctors. There are now 13.
But Dr. Taylor Jepson, one of the
residents obtaining his general practice
training in the program, said that under
lhe revised program the doctors would
have expaaded duties and would serve
not just at Hoag but would rotate through
other hospilals and various physicians'
offices.
The protest against the medical staff
vo te continued to flood the hospital to-
dny.
Hospital administrator Lou Kaa said
there \\•err more than 150 letters from
resid('nts throughout southern Orange
Coun ty on hi s desk this morning.
~1ost or them v•ere fonn letters
circulated by the residents through their
patients.
About 1.200 persons a month are
treated by the doctors In the residency
training program,
The residents have also hired Santa
Ana attorney Barry Michaelson who this
morning said he is preparing a letter for
the doctors to sign requesting that the
directors do act definilively today.
"If they 're going to sustain the vote
they (the doctors) have ~II got to make
Hrrangements as soon as possible to get
into other programs,'' Michaelson said.
l~e also said he is trying to talk with
officials of the University of California
Irvine medica l school to enlist their sup-
port in continuation of the program.
Ecolog y Group
To Hold Meeting
At Ah·porter Inn
The second meeting of ecology·minded
grllu ps con templating format ion cf an en·
v1ronn1t•nt.-il coalition \\'ill !)(' held at 7:30
p.1n. Tuesday Ill the Airportcr Inn by the
t)r:111ge County irport.
!~(·ports on orgnnization ancl goals from
111·0 co111mittces set up at ·the last
meeting will be presented for con-
,!;ideration by representatives of various
environmental organizations.
The Goals Committee will issue a
statement on lhe proposed targets for ac--
tion ly the coalition, as well as methods
of implementing the goals and priorities
for action .
The Organization Committee will
pn:sent a framework for tl\e banding
together of the groups.
Among priorit ies set by the Goals
Committee are passage of Proposition 20,
a moratorium on the Laguna Greenbelt
area. the South Laguuo Development
mor11torium, and the La C&nada deve~
n1cnt.
• j
ALL
REMAINING
STOCK •••
' ••• 1972 Ad111lrol. REFRIGERATORS
INCLUDING FLOOR SA·MPLES AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS!
SUPER SIZE 24 CU.
INCLUDIN• FT AUTOMATIC
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FR.EEZER /REFRIGERATOR-24.0 f.:U.n •• MHef IND 2421
UP,11 fREUfll fature1Au1orn .. 1k1c. Mtktr ••• Space
lor ltt Crum, J1,1i<* CaM, Other Often-UMCl ltet1111I
lOWfll fllfllfll hu lmt0¥1ble Solfd AlllMllMIM ~ •••
Adju11 .. ble Door Sh--lva ••• Cllda-Oul ._.,II
l fFlllClllATOI .... AdJwtable Te111P4'f9d ca.. ...........
frltkl MHl IC"I*, S.l.tl Crifpet, ~-Dtlmt ,_._.
Giant Size 20.3 Cu. Ft.
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Medel PND 20JI
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12.2 ~~:;c '248"
DELUXE 17.5 c~~c '268"
AND MANY MORE I ~-·~.,....~.Af·~ '588
ii.il!r---:=::==:::::
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Momber of
C1l lforni1'1 L1rgest
l1l Cooper1tiv1 Buylne
Group With Tho
Volumo Buying
AUTHORIZED
AdmllWlo
MASTER
MAINTAINANCI
SERVICE
CENTER Powor of 110 StorH
M1 lr AllllDJTa L-------' ...... ,.., ...
1815 NEWPORT BL~. Downtm Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788
'
QUEENIE I Phil lnt1rlancll
TUESDAY &
WEDNESDAY
ONLY!
L. M. Boyd
Count Dracula
Had Bad Temper
Consider citizens who crave at least nine hours sleep a
night as opposed to those who get by niftily on only six.
Man for man, the nine-hour soul is far more apt to be
sensitive worrier, The six-hour do:zer ts inclined to be the
unruffled sales personality. Or so scholarly investigation
Indicates.
TO THE professional horologist lately, I'm !Did, it's an
1 accurate timepiece if it neither gains
nor loses any more than one second
every 6,000 years. Men, synchronize
your Mickey Mice. What's referred to
here is the atomic clock.
A STUDENT of psychology In Cal-
ifornia says he has taught bears how
to play basketball. Certainly would
like to see them. Make great rebound-.
ers, imagine. But this trainer's pas-
time is not so whimsical. Claims he
intends to program such beasts eventually to handle stoop
labor. Pick cucumbers, maybe, whatnot.
QUERIES -Q. "WAS there a real Count Dracula?"
A. So it's said. In the Middle Ages. Nothing extra-
ordinary about his canine teeth. Hmory records he had a
nasty temper, however.
Q. 0 00 mama pigeons really give milk?"
A. They do. And papa pigeons. too.
Q. "WHEN newlyweds leave the church, on which side
or the groom does the bride walk?"
A. She's supposed to cling to his left arm and leave
bis right arm free to beat ol( the covetous savages. That's
the tradition .
LOVE ANO WAR -Please note this statement: "I
usually find what men talk about more interesting than
what women talk about." The foregoing was shown to 120,-
000 women who were asked to comment. Fifty percent
agreed. Forty pereent didn't. Clearly, a large majority of
women prefer masculine over feminine companlonstllp.
' "
' g
MOVIE COLOR FILM lteg. 2.56 · 2 Days
Movie cartridge of Sup•r 197
8 color movie film. Con
be used both indoors 'n
outdoors. 50 ft. Save!
. '
DEPENDABLE
SPORT WATCH
Reg.8.97
697
COZY DURAFLAMfLOG
SCHOLARS with PhDs at Harvard don' use the tiUe
SCHOLARS with Ph.D. 's at Harvard don't use the tiUe
JN LONOON,.a batch of businessmen whose names are
colors -like Brown, Gray, Green, White -organized a
ltmchem group they caU the "Rainbow Club." Do you
know any candidates for honorary membership? Not all
who try can join, must menli<>n. They turned down an
eager applicant named Lemon, although a Rose was ac-
cepted.
I ~ Reg. 87• 51 C
I
2 Day•
;'. One log will make o complele eve'1 ing's fire. h
I . lights in~lo'1tly, no kindli"9 requi red. Burn•
DID I sa y that motorcycle daredevil Evel Knievel
won 't fly in an airplane? Wrong! Numerous correspondents
report he's a dandy pilot.
l~ly2<t:::=:~::~.:'~-~~~
Address mail to L. M. Baud, P. 0 . Box 1875, New-
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
Very Antsy
Professor Counts Tliem
TUCSON. Ariz. (AP ) -
F1oyd G. Werner spends his
days counting ants.
The professor of entomology
at the University of Arizona
each day stakes out a square
yard of deoert ground near
here Md for six hours watches
as the ants march in a column
past him with thelr. loads of
grass seed.
"WJIAT WE'RE trying In do
is understand the interaction
between plants and animals,"
Werner said. "By knowing the
number of ants in a field, we
can detennine how many
grass seed& they are taking
from that field f0< food. The
more seed they take, the less
grass will grow."
Werner eventually hopes to
put his information into a
computer slmulaUoo in which
he can show how various
weather condltloils will affect
the ants and t!>eir ttlatlon!hlp
with the llUJTOUlldq fields.
IN BIS WORX, Werner says
its not 1!eCf6SMY to -whether you've counted a
specific ant twice or not, you
just keep ooonUng ants as
they come by and then at the
end of the day compare the
figure with what you totaled ~
the day before. .!,
"Actually It'• not as hard as i
it sounds," Werner said. "The
ants are very W,anized and ,
cooperate by moving In 1 co~
um~t But as you can imacine,
about alx hours at a time ts Ill
you can take of this kind of
thing."
WhatDo ManiDoct.ors Use,
When They Suft"er Pain
OfHemorrhoidal Tissues?.
Exclusive Formula c;.. Pl~ T~ RdiJ
In M1ny C.... lnim Such PMi. Afoo Helpo Shrink
Swelling ol Such Tliia Due lo Infection.
In a •1.lf'Y91, doctor...,. Mbd what tlwy '* to ,.-. _. Poinfw~W-Gf,..
doeton N.JIOrti"I: oalil ~ either-~H....-.
aelvt1 or ID t.hllr om. prs •1•
Prei-ratian H JiVll P" I $ t, ~mporary relief foe hoan In
OME-COA T LA TEX
WALL PAINT
Reg.
2.88 1 9~ 2 Days
"Red Lobel"' latex interior
wall point. Select white or on•
of six populc r colors. Save I
...
USE YOUR
K MART CHARGE
BANKAMERICARD
OR
MASTER CHARGE
'
"
••
'
' ' ~
~
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.. , ~
J
Mo'1day SPpltmhtr 25, 1972 DAILY PILO T f;
--~·-·~·-·~
TUESDAY ONLY
---I
CHARGE
IT!
MEN'S KNIT
DRESS SLACKS
2 Days Only
44
Polyester double kn it dress slacks 1'1
solids & fancies. Sites 29-40.
2 Days Only
PC!Ck of 51 7·oz .. polystyrene
cups for hot or cold drinks.
• •
~~ ..
18 DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS
Reg. 99<·
POCKET RADIO
R09. 284 3.58
-..
• •
CHOPPED BEEF STEAK
French Fr ied Pot atoes
Tossed Green S.,lad
W 4rm Roll & Butter
117
WEDNESDAY ONLY
VEAL PARMIGIANA
With Spd ghctti Sauc e
Whipped Potatoes & Gravy
Buttered Vegetdble
Roll & Butter
107
i.: ~ tl ~~jJfJlij&ii£:>1"•¥£TI!"'U'=----·1 .. •-!t•"'-" _ _,,;r
' I " -
I
1
I
.. ,
r •
,
® . CANNON BATH TOWELS
Ou r RE>g . 97•
2 Days Only
Solt and pretty '24.l 46" "Tangier" stripes or "ChoUeng ·
e r'" solid } on many colors ond wh11e.Chorge ii and save.
Wash Cloth, 12x21" .......... .,,.10c ea.
30''STEEL FOOT LOCKER
Our lteg. 8.38 5aa
15·3/.4"lC12 Yt '"x30 ... Sheet stHI ov•r venHr
frame. Enomel finish in block, blue. r•d or green.
StHI binding; metal tongue; plastic handle1.
' ;
SPACE-SAVING RADIO
Regular 2388 31.87
l ighted slide rvle dial. Switchable AFC on FM, ond
ve rnier hining provide , prec11ion static" sel9Ctt0n.
Walnu,.groin finiih on polysty rene. Charge it.
•
•
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•
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,
JO DAILY PI LOT SC Monday, 51pt1mbtr 25, 1~72
Itloiaey's lt'ortli
Defined Phrases
E11d 'Bafflegab'
By SYLVIA PORTER
\Vhen the rinance m1n1st ers
of 12.3 nations COllY('ne 1n
"'ash1ngton today to 1nnrk lhe
fonnal .&tart or negoli ntlons
for reform of the We.~t('rn
world's monei.ry !> y s t e m •
"dollar crisis" headhnl'.S ( rf'ri!
or eng1neered 1 will aj.Jain
erupt around the globe. It will
be fascinating stuff. or pro-
found import•nce to the future
of your own job , paycheck ,
cost Of living, investments.
But It will also underline at
its abysmal
v•orst t h e
baffleg.11b of
i ntemationol
high finan ce.
Do you, for
instance, un·
derstand
such color·
fut financial
phrases as 10o1tTE1t
"Dirty Floating.'' know what
Is behind such initials as
SDR.9? Do you , in fact, know
"'1at an International i\1one-
tary System IS?
IF YOU DO, you are hip. I(
you do not, herewith my little
anli-bafnegab dictionary to
help you ~t"k into 1972's
historic money meeti ngs. Clip
and save.
Jnternatlonttl n1 o n e l :i r v
system: The network or struC-
ture or system of currencv
relationships that permits dir-
f ere n t governments, cn-
terpri.sts or just plain in-
dividuals, such as you and me,
in a vast number of countries
to do business with each
other; to travel with relatively
little difficulty across each
other's borders for work or
pleasure; to communica te in a
countless variety of ways.
WITII TllTS :iiystem. planes
fly. fre ight ships sail, doors
and stores are open . Withou t
it, world trade would !'lump
and we would r isk
catastrophic depression. To
revise the now outd ated
system we have. so it helps
the world to greater pros-
perity, Is what the meetings
this week nre all about.
lMF: The International
Monetary Fund, the system
for c u r r e n c y stabilization
crea led by the free world na-
tions at the Brelton Woods.
N.fl., confe rence in 1944. It's
the lMF which is opening its
annual meeting with a mem-
bership of 12.1 na tions today. fl
stands at the core of the
Fin~ Cu5tom Tailoring
W .. tcllff l'fft9, 11J2 lrftM A~.
Newport leoch, CallfM11la
PHONI: 645·1 072
ORDER
YOURS
TODAY!
'
\\'e~t 's currtncy network , will
:Jlmost surtly bt<'ome even
nwre powerful in the rev,sed
11,uoC'tary system.
SORs : SPf:CJAI. 0r3'4'ing
Rlght <c:. also frrquentlv call ed
"Paper r.olt1 .. The SDRs are
a nrw form cf world mone y
8nd are destined In replace
1-:old and the U.S. dollar as the
prime "internationa l money"
in the rnonetary svstem .
They're so Important I'll do a
C'-Olumn on them later th is
\4 eek.
(irou p of 20 The <'Ommittre
of fuiancc n1inislers frorn 20
naiions -JI ind11!i1rial. ninr
Jes.~ dl'vC'!onecl -whil"h w11I
neµo ti:i 1r the n('\11 svstern.
No1v rl'prcsentin~ !he U.S. ls
Trf':\1'urv Secretary Shultz.
The a1·tua l barg:-uning will be
done by <lt!putics
<iruup of 1n· The (.(roup of
nnant•e m inist~rs of th e
world 's wealthi es t tr.:idinJ? na-
tions '4'hich has now been
enlar~ed to the Croun of 20 to
give the smaller natioos some
representation. In G-10 in ad-
rlition to the U.S. arc:
Re-lgium. Ctu1ada, f' ran c C' •
r;ermanv. ltalv .. Jarian, !hr
Netherl and<:.. S"·edcn. 1Jnitt'd
Kinl(dom. S\1·it1,('rl:ind si1s in
as an Qbser1·r·r
1:1.oATING: T II E un·
prgg ing of lht• \\'rstrrn 11·or!d '"
currencies fro111 1he fixl"d
p<lril ies :1t whi ch !hl'~' held in
relalionship to the U.S. doll:i r
unt il President Nixon tore the
dollar from its peg and set our
currencv noaling on Aug. JS.
1971. After that , key foreign
currencies floated u p w a rd
e1~ainst !he dollar -nlaking
nur goods cheaoe.r in terms of
f o r r i g n currencies and
lher('fore our exports more al·
tac1il't> fa key VS. ob-
jcf'll\'C I.
Dirty Floating: Jntcrfercnc-l'
hy a nation's government with
the flo~l ing of its currency sn
that the currencv is not
permitted to respon.d freely tn
market forces of supplv and
demand. In late 1971, for in-
stance. Japan \I i go r o us I y
fought against having the yen
bf-come morr rxpensive
~gainst the dollar by heavilv
sell in~ yen and buying dollars.
Smithsonian Ait"reement : A<'·
cord reached Dee. 18, 1971 ,
:it thc Smithsoni;in Tnslitution
in Washin~ton under ·whiC'h cur-
rency values were rradjustrd
:1rtd 1he U.S. dollar wa s
for'11:tll y devalued.
TllE NATIONS also agreed
that henceforth cu r re n c y
v:llues could nuctua!e in a
wider "band" of 21, percent
either below or above their
fi xed rates (pari ties) against
the dollar or a total "tunnel"
of 4 1~ percent. This was a ma-
jor step toward more nexi ble
currency rates.
SnRkc In The Tunnel · The
n1uch narrower band \Vilhin
\vhich lhe Common ~1arket
nations -lhe inereasingl_v
pO\\'Crful European bloc, soon
lo be 10 ntttion<:., including Bri-
t!'lin -pern1it 1hr1r o\1•n cur-
rencie<:. In Jh1rtu:11e ai;:a1nsl
Pach olher.
1000
~eautiful
Stick-on
LABELS
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order For Yourself or a Friend
May be Ulod on eovelopei "s r(lf urn addrei \
lebtls. Also very hondy "' ideotifi c.ition
l•bels for m•r~inq personal items 'uch "'
books, record~. photos, etc. Labels sti ck on
9 ltss 1nd rnay be used for mtrking home
c1nned foc d items. All label$ are printed
with stylish Vogue typ• on f ine qu•lity whit ..
g:urnmed piper.
·r-------------------------,
''11 Jn lfllt t.•Ull'"• tllll ""d m•ll w11~ 11.U I•~ 1 f '1'-' Prll'llnt1 LUKI 01¥,, , .0 . l~A U•I I I C11!f M•u. C•lll, ,,,,.
I I
I
I
I
I I I L---~~L~! PRl~J!~~ ___ J
•
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST
..£.~'-4U~a~Jrii'24..::
............... ~ LadO& . i'.J ~ l:}l r 1e u~ ?1"'-'" ~ 1 ~: = l ~n Wi n.~.lt c= ~ ME•i:i I.OM ~ 1,\o\ I, ri-=-\41 lllff *" I.JO
Ad MJH~ .10 U ~ ii@ \,\ . ... JlmSor' 1.U =.~ r. l~ 'I~ I ~ • .... ,fll~2 MfML IM 1 t l-. 5"t-t14 ChaM 1Nt 1 AeM.al.f l>f l .t .-.. -1116 ClnMtl U6ll
AO\.llrtt (e 11 lJ lN 1n:-Vt Cflectr Mti1
!!td '.$ j , ~-:: I~ ~=n ,::
A J lf'IOW!rt 4J', ~ . + "4lo Co UO A~lOl'ltln tg A.I• G•t I I 1 Iii.I.-\'o "*tOh Ntd
.t..1.i•pt t .21 1100 I . 10i'h l.S\li -+-i ::rE~u If~ :::~:oe:1nw it! ~~ '3"" i: -1 MU• c1 A.tbertn .)N 15 ~ l~ )Jftl:j:' MllCD P
.t..1c ... .t..1 ·*' ,,n ~ ~ n,..14--v. Nrr:rmu ~ i~~L! .J: l~ fo" ft~ ~: ~ h
1~' ~: ·~AMI. ,1411 21 12\'o 12 iW.+ (:l I Cr•n A leclCD ,IOcl 11 N N ,...__ \'t llr1lfM .Ml " ~L...o , n 7n'I ~ fTl'I>-..., hrtml p1 J
A lo LudPI J '' l 1'4 .0 AO -IYI ..,,=:: ...,1 A.llCI Pw 1.«I 1' 21'1''1 20"'t ~ :l IMtQ 110
Allen Grp '' r.' "",.• -,.-"",.-+ In 8•11 1 ::io "flt!Ch 1.10 ..., -G.I I•• A.I dM" .•.SO ' 311116 31\la )114-"" In ' ·"" Alld .... lllt .1S l :n 22 22 -11. nG ot t.JO AlhfProd .M 7 U 16". 1~ '-n G E Of l Alll.,OPdpl J 1 l 1\lt i.'V. l~ "i lnMUlt l,«I AIUfd~I lAO 117 1'Vo 2Wo 1' -Vt 1'L:s!~12.A All'1 St!On'•I 41 '"" .f\'4 ~•.<,+ 14 ld<I I.lid
Altlt Ch .20d "'~ 12'\lo 1,..4 ,~ • I"" Inv .n A!lr Ault> . .-ri I• ,,..., I~ 14 ht Inv wtt A.li:m. Pl 17 S IS"lt 1"'° 1~ .... lf'r ln"r pl 2 '°'lrn.o 1,lli! 2' t,i.i, "-'l'o 0:01,\-I.ti. l•r1ECI lV.
AM•IS11 1 ~ ~ '~" 2.1 1sv.+"" ltrk on «> Ambbf .°'II IJ lSV. 1'!'> .... 1$\"-"i 1•\l(lll l;IO Am~rlK 1.10 6 2~ 2f'4 7~ \\ f!'V•EI 2 2t :.,..e~:: '.~ ,J ~ :fv. :...+~ .::~:: f:~ AH••"' :r " 11' !OS lO? ....... ~~ '41v•&. Piii ... m ... kl"I _a YB .. '41 ~ L'lllll.-"" ...... Pitt IB "'"' ~"rr""• ~-1 1•''-t>'·'> ~"' hro1 Co 1 A1>'66k .1':1 ,. ''' ..... .,.,,_ Vo 111110 P 90 A. llrt'ld 7,.-I'll 11.;, ~4 4itt''-~ u.ttP pt' I A Brl'Y 1 ?O o• n~ ,...... nYt+ lol NA. Fin .5' Am 1111:111 J' 'I .... .lo ,.,,. ,,,,.._ \I, N ... pf 1.10
A.I>' Ce .. 1 :tO t'M ,. 1116'/l'P.\tt ~ ·~ otlf SI G1
UPI T1 .. P'hota A. C~" of Id'• • ?" ,.... 24ll't+ 1+'> 1tl~IG!Of 1.lf Am Cem •I ~ 6... ~ ~ aetCol l.U
A CnM 1 l'l~ 1"7 ''"• '' ,,.__... V. oi:•&on ,)4 .O.m (~ftln 1 1" 11._ 11"41 71.14 oldwl 6f'lkr ._ .... r•so \ fCI 11 ,,._ 3(l"' :tQ,\+ \\ oleoi::oln ·°' !;:'.:f~:;. ~·~.. 12.r. ;.;;? ~ :r:._ ~ olot~p'~ 1J~ Festive Occasioii
Gov. Ronald Reagan and Nancy Williamson of San
r·rancisco talk about California wines after Reagan
named Miss \Villiamso n National Wine Ho.stess last
week. The governor received an invitation to attend
the National \Vine Festival in October.
A.M Ql•llll l 3 ,,..,., ,,.l'I ~ ol I.Al~ ..56 AD••1Tel fl 1" ,714 .,;>t, ""''4-l&lo ol In 111..:110 A Duftl .\4<1 13 I ll'• l'4 ~ 14 ol P-,lS AD"! of ,I•~ • ,,.... 1114 12'1!+ 14 olonltl SI 1 A.ME~ 1.14 ~ 77'\ I!'> ~31Wo-'~ ollntll lAO
'°'"' ExDM' •• ~ 3\.4io :>'+-14 3' In.Ill •.O A.m Ew.or of i:50l:I 1J'li 1IHtt ~.... fDIA 1.60
A. F ;n~v \ 10 ' 1N \N lN-14 ti" pt •V•
• l'ln llf ". ll9I! '""" 111\9 1~ v. ri ..... A.(".n6 1 <7d ,, 77'\i ,.,..,. ~--. Dre1 1 A r.cvS .JM ~1• 7'1l'o Pl.ii '1?~+ 1,1, o •s 1.12
A "" '"' .<? H!'l 11"11 ~"''• 1~ V. "I Plcturts A r;,. "' 1 ~~ ~ '°'It 2'"'io '°';, . o 5 Oh 1.14 •m Holt .lft '" 13 101'1 111-_ '>\ om~ 1 .~ !.;:H:~ i?? ~~ l~t 1~:t ,~~~ ;:::,! 'l 1:10
"'"' l,.v 3'~ •-. 10\lo 1"''> 10'"-·~ om d or 1 A Mt'dOrl 11 >V 1'1o 1l"o ,,~,.i. •; wEdDI 1.11
A M"<!lc,.,ro "" '''• 1 " .. 1 "•+ V. wEdol 1.fO Distaff Farmers
'A~~.:<:~MJ,."'! 1:n 1'1''i 241;, 1'1l'i omwEd '"'' " .... -'" S'• I ~" ~ omEd 8wt
W 01ne11, T"ki1ig V1J tlie Plow AmNGs 1 :'O in :it•• J! JI · omvt 011 11 AIT'Shl'> !"" ~ ,~., ,~.,.. ,....+ .._ wOlh•I 1.n
A Smet! ! » V1 IA'• 1 !~ l!P.-·~ omu! .Sf, AmS Air .I~ ,.,, •"'> .,~ "71'o-\., omputr Sc! A.m $Ind .IO SI 1·1_.. U'i 11~lo--''-Comouf Son AmSldM ~'· v S1J 571.tl ~ + •~ Cone Mith 1
By GAV PAULEY
NEW YORK <UPI! -That
hired hand on the farm now
n111y be a woman.
They're not labelling it part
of the women's liberation
movernenl, but women are
showin~ up as part of the
farm Jahor force, many of
them as O\vners 01· managers.
STATISTICALLY THE
num ber of \\'omen on the farm
doesn't sound all that hn·
prcssivc. 13ut there are enough
.... ·orncn in agricultural jobs ror
the Farm Journal rnagazine to
<le~·ote an article to them and
to ur~e that far1n ers, finding
themselves short of help, well
might took to the women as a
source.
'rhe Women·s Bure<1u of the
U.S. Dcparln1ent of Labor
cstin1atcs that in July of this
year (July's a peak month for
farm employment ), there were
12l.OOO l\'On1en !<Jrmers and
farm managers. :ind another
604.000 forcn1en and l11borers.
Those figures 11•ere foF women
lfi vears anrl older.
Apparently their numbers
are on the increase. but not at
a fantastic rate.
IN 1969. THE \Vomen"s
Dureau published a nlassive
study of \Vomen in all jab
categories. It listed 82,000
wotnen farmers and farm
managers and 472 .000 others
as foremen and laborers. The
fi gures then 11•ere for April.
1968. and counted "'Otnen 14
yc;1 rs :ind up.
•
" '
Ora1ige
Co unty
B 11,si11.ess
~:twl!.rf Tith• Company ha s
namt"d Ro~rl J. f\1oore as
president or !he company 's
Ornn!!e County ope rations.
'.\1oorc, of Sn nta Ana. \\'as
f111·111erlv vice pres1d~·nt <Ul<l
1n i111;1r.r1· He a t.~o St'l'\f'd as
"'~l~lan! I ICC rr£>81dent nnO
i l11'l'l'l~1r of !Jrnk<.'r rt•l;1T1011.~ fur'
Fi r ~• Anu·r11"t111 T1lll' C11111pany
f,1r thrt•c years
* II. ltobert lh1nrllcy of Costa
~1('Sil has hecn nnmed prin-
<'i ptil lrga!
advls<'r f o r
!he f>rfense
ronlr:icl Ad-
111 in is tra-
!Ion S('rv-
k•t'S B l'~iO!l
in Los 1\n·
~<'l1•s
Thr r1·c1011 J
;, d m1n1s1t1rs liUNOl.E'r
ncarl)" ~i h1llio11 \Ynrlh Of
d~fens1• ;1nrl \,\SA <'on tracts
in Southcru C.: n l i f o r n i ",
Arizona and Nevada.
* La guna Beach r e s i d f n t
ll clni Juenthntr has been
nan1C'd manager of export-im-
port sales for 'TT Cannon
t:l~C'lrlc In San!:'l l\nn.
Juenlhnt"r joinL'<i the dh•ision
of lnlernellonal Telephone and
Telegraph CorpornHon as :i
tool and die desi gn eng1 nt'C'r in
1959 .
* Rlch11rd Sc h"·arti , of f oun-
tain Valley has been nan1f.'d
program Vice president of
Saturn Launch Vehicles for
Nartll American Roc:kwell's
Space Division.
AmS!erll .~ 3~ ll! !1'·'4 3,.,.._ ~it CnnMI l.l'ld
B h d · ed t •mTU ,., , ... •"•.J;! -. .. C011r11cc .60 ul as l e stu y point ou •m'ii' ~ , .., ,... ,., ___ "" c Ed 11111 .... "1 '°••• ..... ~+ \\ c::sEd ot' • the figures for April "are fai r-~'.!!w',,', '::..' 1.,. '"" '"' ~Ed ' s """ -'3 t2l.O ~ .~·14 on: Fdl'lV. ly low for a g r i cu It u r a I ::i~,::: 1::1 it-'Oll 1,..,.. """ W'( ... Fdot 4v,
employment as the peak Ameiet:: • .o. ,l,~ ;; -;~ ~ ·,". .. : FL'~.l.!J • , !'.MF In 1,08 -.. , -,,.. N .• •OS months or farm actiVlty are Amt&e .60 21 ,..,. 21v, "'"'+"It c:!mG,..,... 2
.June and July." April was the~~ J't 1l 1"n. ~ 1~ "~r;,f: 14)i
I . · t d d A.mpe~ Cp 113 JV. SJ,\ ~ IJ. tmtt A.Ir i.n genera measuring s an ar , a Amrep corp '5 15 1-1~+ v. enc • ., 1.60
spokesman said, because it is~;.?!~~ !:~ ~ m'; : ~ ~ ~°C'00[J~~
a peak month for almost all ~~!l~n ·6: ~ .r"' .k,. ,T"'t ~ c:l1'~ .. ~~ other occupations. "m't'! •n .20 :u s-• S'>\ sVt-\~ (' cnn1e 211J ""acorid• nl TW. 17VJ 17Vt-\.\ ~onllll 1.67d The '4'0men are hardly get· ',~~Ho_...!. • 1111J l2'"' :nv.-llJ ,on11nys1 11 ·~~... ...,.,. 10 "' fYo ,_"" ""~' J,O&<;t tin" rich in agricultural i'obs And C! 1.20q s ·~~ • .wVt ,...,., r on11 011 ,,., I> ' Anv~lo<:• .lt S 40 3'V. 39\'J-Vo ("Oftf 011 i>I 2 although yo u have to count the "'P11c1>ec J2 ;\S 1slh u•.-. 1s•.__. ~• r n s1..,,r ·'°
r · "· 1. f f h . Apeo 011 ll .o 77•~ 26"1 2~-v. ~°"l Tel 0 .« nngc U\:ne its o res air. AIJl'co .16d 1~2 ,.... 1•1, ™ ,.:;01,,1 ,~1~a
I t f d · d API. Cor11 6 70\• 1f'4 If\;. v,,. pen y o out oor exercise an 11.ppu~ Mp !>6 •·~ 1 1 -.. onwd 1.t0 · · II A.R.t.. sv 1 21 309 1&2~ 1'1 16lv.::. v. f= ~ 'IJ 1n many instances a we -Arcat•N :" ~2 IP• 11't9 11''-+ ..., rOO(JL~b ·,~1 laden table of foods fresh ArcherOnl 1 1 ll'llo 31'.i JI,,.,_ 'h COO(JrT s1<:1 ' 'Arctic Enlp ll 77V. 2,,,. 27:\\., .. Cooo pt ' 1•. frozen or canned. Ar;z PS 1.16 1• :zo 19\.\ l'P'lt... c_.na .llO Arlftnl D St I• lV. 3"• ~ \4t c-lll1r>1n
The Women's Bureau said 11.,·.~-",,','°', 1ls t• ll'ii 1l'M+ \(, coows11 1.lll ··-~ *" J1"o 10'M ~ ~ (orn G 2'17~ the cu rrent median income Arm ot 1.10 10 79'\'i 2t 29 -~ ~ou,1n 1.9Sd A.rmutpf 1'4 150 tl 60'1o '°"'-v. """" Com year-round for women Arms c11. .10 .n lJ'l'I 311"' 11•-i. o".~-'1 ·Jg
em ployed fullti me Jn the !~:St:.~ ~~ ~ ~ ~:~ ... ::v. ~~a~D 1.io . It r t d Arvlnlnd .f? 29 2lV. 11 2J -""f.rt'dll Fl ,,, agr1cu ure. ores ry a n AJM 011 1.'° 175 ~ 2' 29 _ v. ~rnc11. ... 1.u
fisheries industry (the jobs are ~igcrtGB~ ~i ~ .. .tS'Z°: .~v.:::" c~ ."!:
I ~ t th th t ) ., .... Spr 1 '1111 I Jl\.'J l 1U,, ll,,.._ 14 ~·-II c 41 um""'"' oge er l!i way J Assoc T;,,,1 3 ,1 ... 11;r. n"o+,,. 1~,c~
$3.309. For men. it's $4,028. :n1c':i ·~ 7~ ~?': ~~!! ~~ ;t ~s c o ~
. A!IClyE l.40 7t 11~ 21t,_ 21.,.._ l4 l.lllkien .7t
TllE FARi\f Journal. assess-"'llCE~ s•• 1 u Vt ""' .. ...._ v.. ~::;;r:,m""0;~ • . Al Rld•lld 1 10t U ll 6' b<l14-Vi Curtin Wrl 1ng 11·ornco as a help potential. •Re~ p1 l'~ 1110 !S s.i ss +l curnsiwr A
says that they make up a !i1iic,ri~.r·~ '~ 1~~ i~\lo ,,il,'2..:·'" ?~'1~ ~i~
di sproportionate number of !~is Inc c~ff i: ~:~ r'" ?"'_·,,,. Cy11•us M5 1
!hose on the unemployed rolls. ~~;~, ~-;.!i~ fi •:,, 8:11 '1~-111 R:~ ..... c~
"So·· it asks "•,•:hy not look"""' Cor11 '' 1.µ,, ut.o ,,~.+ \~ D•n11C11 1.JO • • A.vc11 Cp wh 30 J'4 .'.n1i .l\\ O•rl '" .lOll th C'rc first \\•hen y·ou need to Avco 111 J.10 1s •• zy,, O'~-·~ n1rtlnd ot 1 Aver.Pd .2l !I rnT Jl\~ ll\'•-\it fl11yeo 1.1' hire someone for a responsible .t..Yr11<>e .Hid 10 "'Jo •t1' ,,~-v, O•V<: .,, .. " . b'" A.v"el .22d lJ llV. 11'4 111\-...., n1vlln 1 .2• JO • A~ne!tn o! 1 I ?r.o 2•.,._ l•.,._ Yo DtVlonH .Jl AYonPd l.ll 7' 119''• 111 1]1 -1 f)1~Pll l.M Jt cites several examples of .t..11tt 011 61 '8 11\'o w:. 10~.__. 'A 011PL01 1.10 -• &--fl<l11n W .20d women doing farm work as a111>&w11 .s~ ~ ""' ,, 1'1'+-,.. DH•• 1.0l 811ch• .!Cid "' t1'o 9\\ •\Ii-•t. nerP~l l .12 well as, often better, than men. B11k~ rn .16 xm l""' " 3~ _.,. oer Mn1 1.10 Ba~erOil .1'0 \J S.'11 U14 Sra l'lellt Ar .~ Clarence Potter, an Oregon e~11G11 1.8' "' ,.,_ 2~ n _ \\ De111e tntn • . BllG~ pf ,,., J110 '1 ~ ti 61 0.llllNI '" farmer, has hired high school BftnCa1 1.J1 1 Jot.l.< '6V. 1'.''-.:.:.·v; r>tnn11n .69 9,...,.,., l~c 6l ,,,, t7 t7 + v, °"""''" Df I and college gi rls for the past Aftneor ,.~ 11 1~·~ i~ i•l'.-v. r>ennv1rt .IM
I d ""''"' ' ' "" "" ''"•+ "• Denh.plv 1 severa years to rive his B11111r11f p,. 1 ,,. ~ 1,~ 1,,._ 111 l)eS.-101n .«t
t k d . h h t '"' o• NY > •S •> oc•• •'"•-,_., ('lelFdll 1 «I rue s ur111g I e w ea A~nk "" 1o l' :lo\'~ 1~;-; ".\1,-I .. 'le1"" ll'I 9.:n harvest. o,',",!.',c.,,'',', •5? ,,.,. 60''• 61 Dt.1E "' 1....r.s ""'' I lt!14 ~'I• :16\1,. .... ::~0.!Enl S'• Flard CR .ll <1 p~:. :ie l!! ..., De•!r Cp .~ POTTER SAYS 1he boys Batie In .iO 10 t ''• 114 I\~= ,1, 0111 f"ln .n A~!esM .Hd 1 ct\(,, ~ 91~ Dll lrott 1,9(1 h~ivc sonic adva ntages. such BftlesM 01 1 1 1s is ts _,.... g::~11ms11~ 1,
. • . """' ll'd ."1 " JP• J.11l,; ~,,._ v. . "' as grealer fam1 har1ly \\'ith 1111uschL .• , :r>J ~1• :is•\ .10;v.-1~ Ol•Shc>t' !Jo
machines and equipnlcnt. But ::~~c~ :!J " 's" '~'" .~~·4-\<. ~~.for>
h . I '"d ' h "4!11rlno1 I? ? }~~ 11"'4 11"11 + \\ DIGJorvo• llO 1n turn 1 e g1r s on t ave to B''"' , ,, · .i..i;v. '""·· • 01o11111 Eiii>' 1'0 -Miit 11'4 "7'4.-~ P')ltll nall A
Prove ho\11 much abuse a truck 11,!0',0",0 ·'.?:! 9 o1i1•t.i ,.. "' Diiion( ..,.. ~~ "" .&I 44V. .U ll'.._"" l)lfPfVW ·.'lOG can take." ,',~~.~,,.,. .-"Oii,, ii ''\lo 2""11 U'f-"" ., urt>n .ilJd .... .. 1.SOO 9\lt , l -·~ '>!111t5ff .70
The gentle touch of the fair ",",~0',0," ,_·~ " 1l ''" '~ ~ Dlwnlfd In "' t !Slit 2:$'4 ;>51!, l}!YA'li:I 2 7Jd
sex pays off for other farmers =:;~;~11 :~ 2:S i~ is .... is.st.., Dr"Paoor ·.~
t M d M El "' 1 c ~ = ~"' ~=~~" ·.e oo. r. an rs. roy 11::.;~ 0 ,._~ ,, 04 .. ,1116 ,1.._ .. 'lvnL.5 ~
llonadel. a ~tilwaukee Count y, """,co 1.10 11 .M\11 '"'" ""'-" l'>llfltlev • _.. . . """ Pof '"' 1•10 l'.I 11'A: :n -+ 1 ,.,..,le O> n \\'Is.. couple find th at their "''""r"' •.JO 11 100.v, Tl'lll 1t11o _ ,~ 0orr ou..:.~
( I · k" h ~enCll<>f' ''" ino ~ St ~+ '1. DonrtC 10 ere .... · o ;ip p e p ie ing mot ers Flim•uet 1n n1 Alt ,.... ~ -v. DOw~fl :n
k . b . d f . 't t 8trtty PllO 1'2 :n 10IVt '°"-"'°" Ch l.IO ecps ru1se 1u1 o a ee111sn r.10 111 ~ ~ 77¥-V. r>PF 1ncp n11 nin1un1. Black&O h;r If 106 104 10..'h-t"' 1'lr11wC 1.lO Bl~lr Jn .41 n ll\'o 12'\ 12'1 v. nreu er 1.40
The \Villiatn \Vitters family :1:.::sk~~·" ,! ,!~ lT'li ll~ lr .,., +14 8,r:;,~ J·102
vf Rock Island Counl y. 111 .. ::.':1:1~:11 6;.tsi. ~ .,""._ ~ "~":++t: ~.'...~oMt
ah ... ays hired women to plant 6,.~.·.~,' _,.,,.., ttl 22~ ""' 21~-..., OUk• P 1.e ~ "40t '"• ""' ....... l4t Dull• pf •. 10 !heir acres of ton1;.toes. Said ,•,-,,M •,M_-~. 2 •Vi •~ ~ ~ 'l\111• pf 1.1111 ,o 2 211~ '811t :in.... OUllP fl' t"'" !\!rs. \V11lcrs. · ' \Vo 1n c n · s eor~n 1.10 •2 1m. 21v. Vt\ -+V. 11\M"' er 1.lO
I I Boro wr I'•• 11 3.1 3.J\\ 3N-v.. "lu tn Co natura ove for voung living eorm•ns 111 J.I •\; 6\'t ,,,._ v. ~""' :w.c1
h. ' I f Brl' Mv 1.20 '' ~ t-1411 "4!ol>-1~ uPn pt .,,... I 1ngs WCIS Ollr SC'Cur ty o a er1. Mv 111 2 ~ "...., " "'A ti<\ uPn flf ,...,
full c:rop " :~::1 1.~ ~ 1~1,.. 1!,:~ 1~,. +~ """':t ,1./1
6rfnllf Jll. 21t IS\' U~ 1~ 14 .._ .Md
8011rnJ Inc t lt\.lo ltlli l".4-l'o qOy,,C~ Am 6oJf Ed 1 . .U 21 lt14 ,. l6~ 14 6rltPt1 .lld 21)4 IV.. U"' I™ F." .. Pl ,,4 6rOCI li•l .Ill 11 .)6\1, l6 l6 _ 1; E•SCOC .Sl'l!ir Broe~ GI .12 1' 1~ 214 1'4-'>'I ~"1t.,.n A.Ir
8rUnGs 1.n s '"'' 24i. tl\4>-~ E!?, •u"M 1\'l. Brown (nm 11 1014 10 10 , !'In, .,...
8rGr01111 !It) 1 3111\i 31 ¥ill~ +~ ••=KDd l ,04a Brn Sl'trp 10 l 14ilti 1•1' ~+ ~ •!On l·"'° 6tFerrls .OI 11>02 77411 tsl'i 1\4 =• .lt
Brun•wk I 123 11'11 3J:t4t )\'! +t.\ ~ tlM •M Orusto 20d 3' :n\.\ Sl:llri l l*'-\4 ~~d J~ •' BUC Y E 1 1(1 JO 2S'6 ~ 2J'il,; ,.,.1d C •
BuQ'<I Com11 IS u •.<. Ut' IS\.\-t.\ ltn.5:,nG 1 ·1 ~ g::gg~o 1111J 1110 6S 6'\<l lS +~ .. F !lf"I As•oc
'""'' o< ·°' n, •,;' 'r 9 -''Fl P•I" S¥, "" • 7"• +1• lllf,.,I M""" 6111 Frn 1 iO It 11·, 11~< 17''• •1 M1mr ,.,
Bulov•W 60 Ii 13'• lJ ... U•o-""Fkll~ "'~" ' I NNE Q M' Bunk R~'"° 113 10•~ 91(, ,,,_ ~. c 11v1r ln(I .11 1 ·AP LJS, inn . tAP I Bu~A 01 ,.~ 11 31 'ill 31'·-J, F 111.11.,0NG 1 6utl I" 1 IO 61 32'1 l2'~ ))l~ t:1tr1("~ 1 ?! T\\'O rcprrsentatives of Buri No 11 • ·~ 4''i •Slli #'•+ -" "m~·e 1 t 1' Our!N of .SS 7 7•~ 7V. 7t~ "m<=• ~' :"" Holiday ~trini r Jnc a Bu•ncw c 10 s 3S\t l~ U1t "m•.,,.lr .n '>!' " Bur roto\ .~ 63 713'' 212•~ 213 t i e...,.,"1" ,J!J Ca lifo rnia cosmetics firm. and 8"'11 u~1~• 1' ·~ 111. •~-•• ,F.m11r1 1.:roo -C C-Ml 1.1 i
h I ha C•bel C11 10 f -1(11~ '°"" 40tli +lit ll!:moOs 1, I (' comp11n y ts~lf ve t>etn Cldoll'ICI Ind ' ··~ atii Ir.-\~ "t'l'IDP'B ...
r d 'I . Ja , Jh Ctetl'1 Wd 7' S'i J1to J~ \~ Em11 FtM )I oun gu1 ty of ''10 tin~ e c.111 F1n11•c l! ""' ,.,., 11.<, «'"'"' ... o~ •1· t ~-F" d C•ll•hn Ml" 11 ''• '"' "' .. Sf: .. ,c 1• 1nneso a ...vnsumer rau C•m11tr.• . .IS 11 1l" 33'\li u,,,_ " .,.,. "" ••
l a w prohibiting multilevel ~!';''&;.. 1.~ " '7" 2111o 17'._ "' ~"" .. ,,, •
distributorships r•nP11t .'611 ,J 1~ l~ 1.=--"!'!""l~.r..f ' C•"•I R. 1.10 10 11" l:M ll"'-.,.. il..,,ri.., f.Q
I lennepin Distric t Ju d g e ~:~~~ ~11 1 ~ ~11. ~ ~:t: ~ ~!.~''d 111 Douglas K. Amdahl fined the f'1r11,1e .62 ' ti" 20\4! »*'-'' ;s111"1t I.: P Ctrolfrt .l6 a 11\t l:JI' I>" u •fllU l!'IC company $1 ,000 and the two C•r ,, r. 1... · ·• -.. •11•tnr 1
C T .10
1 l~ l1'.: ~--~ \\ 111'"" flf '· representatives, James A • c!~~~ _,, 111 1! ,_:,, f~ "It !.~11t aJ
Solem. 25. St. Paul. and James ~:~a..i 1:~ .J ~~ ~ W::: ~ ,.~~~ ~-
A. nu~scll, 38. Waconia. S3 ~.·,•."."',.' ,,·'!!! Yl'I ,,., lt\41 1ar.-" llf(ttl 0 .• • , • .. loll "'""' .. ,, U \ti-" •tndu,.. each and ftllVC each 90-day c .. w com c11 '' 1 f\O 1-\t-"'
ded • "I C C I Corl' :n Sl.li l~ !it\ !"a.,.._. ,J10 SU$pen JlH terms. c 1 c1o 01 ; 1tlli 1~ ,,,,.._. i~ l"41Cf0f ...,
Amdahl n o 'c d prospects ~ -~ " J,'• l:. l;.+ ~Ci 'rt.
were told they could eam u ~~ ·~ 4
Jll6 Im "" '• "' iC . C~m;~ ... I .. niuch as $45,600 on a part-tlme c,Ot'sf ,, 231• ~ ~ , 1:
basis, but to do .. would hav.~i 1-ll ~ f~ r.; mt-" w !: to sell aboul fjli,000 worlll !JI l::> j\:' ,' 1rrto 1f"/,: .-ti. cosmetics. :. >• fi .-+ ~ .Ill
Cosmetics
Firm GuiJt"·
111 Frattd
N
N ~. m ~I
~· S· N • N • ~
N " •o ~:1 N• NO No NO No No No
N
N N• Nw Nw
~-N• • •• NW No a .. ~'i'
•
•,
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•
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''" "" ... ... "" •• •• PP •• ..
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'
Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Sto ck Exchange List
Nixon Talk Fails
To Spm· Mai·ket
Jtlarket Tl'eltd
S•i.t H• ,,.,.,. "• .._ c .... c-.
SC
:11 1• 11 n -"' nc..t • --W W-Wl11100:1 110 t190 W t.s 5' +V o Wl1111..UOO » !' 4'1 .e;iVt-<1 Wh Ell" lj..1 .. '• ~ n,+1 Wl-c:l'S IJO JO .,, 11 >...lf'o; '• Wll<O (II 9' I •'• "'l 4 Vllr lo WoAv'WW .)6 10 ''" l1 11 \ Wll'T'IC9 "' + It-1'o lfu ... lo WOOdlC.D .. "ji, ~ -'•Wool"'" ll'O 'l 1, !tl'a 1,~ ... Wool of j M $6 O• 0\o-... W0t!<1 A t W l 1''1 It'. lt'o+ '• Wrla!t vC ~ 17 ll\o )1'-Ml,• I• w~rl111r .a 10 71 7lo it -I
ff •S '3 ~ 9' -._ X1•o~Co M ::la o J1'? 11\.i-~, K llA. 111(
71 , 23 2' t !, Yo~:8' "' 3 lS\, IS"lo lW.-lo l •I oro i4 16 21 • t li.. ll' .. -• 1111 opl &O
I ll\t 31._ j8\o-111 2111111 Co•11 lO~ 10l. Mo 1av•• C•j'" I ! ! s ?11111~11 c IVll e1~ I ~ Zu•n Ind ~I
DAILY PILOT J .(
'' 10, ,, ~. ~ 7"' 1•~-'·1----------------IN 1!<, \SH ,. lo Sh 11'• 11 o
• "' " '" 8 V tllit11 Bid ,,, S• ""' S• l', 11 2l • ~-'• LOS ANGELES -Sout'"-m U~\ ltl~ I•'-•, I.rt:
'6 11•11 11•-. isL..o+ " Cahrom1a Ga! C.O said an 19 11 ... 71 ?I ... '• 14 '1 • 1s-. 3s•-.-t--\o unden.,.r1t1na g.....,"' headed by 4 14"> Tl •, 14'" I') '"'"'t'
•1 ll\• :>t'• w..-'• l)1ll1on. Read & C.O , Inc o(
4Q ,, • i"'• ir. I ,0, ~·· 41 ,, • J'\e11 York 11ns the succcss[u
,.! ;! .. ;!"' ~!~-biddtr on :l $45 m1tl1on issue or
11~~ ~. ~ :. 1he ut1ht\ ~ 25 \car first
, :
1 ~"'• rnortgage b<lnds
" "" The bonds \\ 111 n11turt" ln I '\ ,
" 1~1. ~ 1997 Prot•ttds "111 he 11-;rd lo ,.... '• I • ,, 1 rpay short 11 rn1 Hl< ebtedn!'.'<;s ,} , •• , h , ,.,, 1otepart•n1<:nmp'1r1\
~: lf,: •: Pacific Lighting Co and ror
'' ~"'•-" the uUhty s consl111c11011 and 8 ~ .......
1:.; ;:!:-:-1 __ •_xcpan __ ,_io_n__:p_,_•8='-•-"'-'----'° ,,, >+ ••
• . ~ " •••• ~ .. , " ~· ,., . .. .... ' " . " ~. y •,
" lt~: ' ,. . , ..
" ·~ t)'o ,, .. ,. .. '"' . ,, 14 ,.
Complete Closing Prices-A"llerican Stoel{ Exchange List
S&tff IN•f
thlh I Hlt1'1 Lew (loM Cll1
W e
\&IH Htl
llHlt ) H lg~ LtW (It .. Cll<j..
• ti•· '" •'' I I' 1 "'· .. ' >--\o
Dare You ...
Eve ry Saturday
• ' ..
,• • '
.
f
..
t
" £1
j~ OAJLY PILOT Monday, """"'"" 2S, 1972
Rookie!>s Job Tough Gays Get
Lounge
Mountain Drive
Campaign Waged
pVBLIC NOl'IC!l
l'lCTlnouJ IVIUfUS P't::.:.~AT-:::::s •Ni'I STAT&ldWf#t dcll'IO
Ttlt '-''"°"" ,......j ... .,_ TN followfne ""'°"'
Policewoman Patrols LA Street.s
..,._, M.; _ . _ _ ........ •; ctOMflTf SERVICE, THI!~ f'UMD. f1' Hlfh ~~ Or Wtit!'ll lfllflT• o.M.U.-...ot.~· .,,. ..
,,.,. H""' L.,.., 11' Hlllll ()flw. c~-..... Miii ".., ordlld Qr .• L..-~ c.... CIWM C.illfWlll;.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -In
the briefing room at the Ea8t
Los Angeles aheriff's station,
m0$t of the officers are joking
among themselves, walling for
the sergeant to begin . In the
mldd1e Is a rookie. The others
are talking around the young,
inexperienced officer.
A dete<:tive goes by the
door.
"Hey, Baker," he says to
the rookie, "Tum your head."
Baker does. The deteetive
makes a gesture . Everyone
laughs. Baker tries not to
notjce.
mE BRIEFING begins.
There are reports, and in-
~pection wfll be tomorrow.
Someone cracks a dirty joke.
A few officers laui;:!h lightly.
Not Baker. Then officer Duf·
fey and Baker leave or their
car, Baker haulinfi! a box file
full of forms, Duffey the
shotguns . Duffy tests the
weapon's action expertlv. easi-
ly. He handles the weapon
with confidence.
Bl!r IN A 11k1rt and bloule,
trith her dimlnutlve ..... •he
cannot be as lmpootng u the
180-pound d<J>Uly ahe r<placod,
even though she ipOIU •
Police sharpohoottr med a I
under her bad&e.
Duffey spew frankly about
the program. as ii MTB. Baker
were not seated two feet to his
rlght in tbe air-condltloned
palrol car, her ey .. flJttJng
over the hot atreeta of East
Los Angeles for signs of
crime. Thl5 b not a beat
where police are respected or
welcomed. Blank Mexican-
American faces 1tare sulJenJy
as the patrol car glides by.
"I just hope when the time
comer, .she's there," Duffey
says.
"So far, I have no reason to
believe that she wouldn't be.
We've had a couple or minor
situations when she was there
and ready to ,li!O to work when
t needed her."
ASKED IF that isn't the
cue • ...,, llml! ho starla with
a rookie. Duffey admits, .. Ob,
that's true.
"It's just that wtlerJ you're
with a guy, you fed that he'1
180, ITO, 180 poundl and he's
just a little bit more muscle to
tUe care of you in actual
pllyslcat combat."
To help &Olve that problem,
Mary wu trained extensively
bl weaponless defenst, which
1he ... y1 really meant dirty
ligllling -"klcklng in the
right plac.e."
IN ORDER TO fairly
evaluate the new program, the
co-ed squad car gets no
special treatment from db>
pokhers at the stalion. ~ey
and Baker will go into any
N1:W YORK IAl'l
Columbia Oollege Dean
Peter Pamcy hu ....
now>ced he OlfOOd thll
homoeexuals are u flDo
lilied lo • "minority
lounge" as blacb, Latins
""' Asians. The other minorities
have separate Io u n g e 1
l"tOlgnlud by the un-
dtrgraduate college of
Columbia Unlvenity, bot
Gay Llberalioo leoden
charged they ...,. being
denied Ille lllJllO """'1111·
tion.
A loonge frequented by
homosexuals bu b e e n
functioning at Columbia,
but without official
recognition.
situation that a patrol would L-----------' normally encounter.
Mrs. Baker says she feels
odd in her position, but "I'm
enjoying my job.
"I feel Teally stupid, but l
imagine that any rookie who
starts out feels that way."
Uf* ... L,... N LIMI I ... on ... , W•fmlNIW• ....... fJW1 VM allAl'I< .........,, ...,c..m.rw. 11111• tM (t.llionlM
C:""'11• Wlllltiftt L.,.., M l.'""9 bk Hunftncll\lll s.!:r1,.,,1,ic11. itn OKtlld °"-N'""1 -..ell. c.llf. .Wr<O ,,._,
TN& MINI& ... ..,,. afldl,o(_-"" • Dr .• W.ln'llntlM'. ~ w • ,.,,,.,..,..,..,. ,,. .. ~ ki l*Plll ( For Mulholland
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
dtlzen.s commlll<e says the
ctty government must take
"lmmedl.ate and courageous
actlon '' to pre.serve
Mulholland Drive as a n
"island of natural tranquility
1n the nUdst of a metropolis."
The MuJbolland Cltil'.em
Advisory Cmunitt"' r.ported
( ECOLOGY)
to the city council Its recom·
mendatlons for the drive,
which has been designated as
the city's first s c en Jc
parkway.
'"'°' HerTY ""°" p.,,MfVll,. 111 1111• ,.....,._. ilW .... tt1t Colltlt'f Chl1'111 W • H rtl .,,. county
C ... ~ of Or_,. C-IV f!! s.pt. I. lt1t. Tiit• '''""""' 1ll9d ""'· SfplllT'IDlf" 14,
sanitation sped.aJJst Rex H. ~""' J • ..,..._. ~ c-t>t ~ ;,.°":::J.,~~ :M.i. OtPvtY ,...n , . .,tt (AMinly Clttk. _,,. uuu. ,,_,1.,.. °"""" c:...t ~UJ' ~lot. I'
s.otfmMP 11, 11. 1$ lilll ()do09I' 2, l'ullllhtd °"""' Cotrt Celf'y Pilot, •S•lt Filetl 1m ___ _.:-:::.."ci"'-11 is •nit OC!Oblr" '· 1•n ' 2~1·n LOS ANGELES (AP) -'lbel----
city'1 acqulsltloo of land forl. __ P~UB~LIC~~NOn~~CE:!---1 --roBiJ~ii)Tlci:-) d I PUBLIC NOTICE the $1 billion P a m a e l'ICTrTIOUS •i.ttr•tt
J.ntemational Airport bu been lllAMI ITAT&MIJtT
threatened by a comervaUon IJ;n"':.. ~"' ,...... •19 une . •OT1c1.,!o.-~"'°"'
group's lawsuit. MUA o ,. T 1 c "L ~ettP•tses. s~ Court of ,,.. s1•i. ot ctn1orn11
• 20a ......,.., Aw.. Cott• MeN. '°' 1M eavntv or Or"91· The Sierra Club amf leffll Celtfoml• t'll!1. ftlelt ot liVEl. YN RUTH ROSSEN.
residents of Ant.dope Valley, ,!.':, =·n:r. ... '""'1' Costa ~-11 '*'*" 91....,, to crW!lt)B of where the airport is to be Morlllent ....,.., 1Nfi-,..,.,..., '°"' ~ot ~ MITlld dectdtrlt tMt 111
built 1.-··""t .u.A c..........u... IMt.t. C:altfotml• '1t27.' perJOnf ,...,.11111 c111ms "'111Mt "'* 1tld , Lll\l\olp,u WllC .-~ • .,. 11'1'11" '"""" M .....-11,_w,, Cotti ~t -,...ilrM to 1111 ,...,,,, wlrh Court suit. MfM, CMtfroml•, "'27.t' fM MC,..,,..,. ~·· In ltll Office ot Tiffi ~ i. bllllf Cfndlldtd W In IN Chr'lc ot tllt et.ow tnrltted court, 91" 11iiey contend that the Loi lnclNfcfVll, hi prHll'!I ~ wlrh tTll M( .. llry •-I D t t of ~ Wlndef voucht-r\ to tl'll ~!gM4 it thf C'Hlce ~"'.'61! fS ~ p 8 r men l111t lt1191'MOI llllcl· -1th tM COUl'llY of Hirmon 0. S~ 1nd Jlfoml D.
Airports failed to prepare an Cltfk ot Orlll!llH' Count'f on: hlit. 14. itn, S.vtnlck 1sm v1nhK• ervd., Stt. "1" ·---~-1 1"mpact study 'Nil.LIAM E. ST JOtlN, CO~NTY CLEll:IC, ~·n' o.~ •. Celt!, 91.lOl wlllcll •• 11'19 envuvuuieuws lrY ~ J , ~. DiilW'Y· piece ol bullMn of tl'HI 11"Clfn/9!lfd lit •II as required by the California I' lltm m•ttrrs p1r11lnlnt ti> tit• ••••I• et ••Id . ta) fl\lbll"1otd ()r~ C:otlf 01rty Pllol. ~~I wlrhln ~r monllll lfllf' tM
Env1ronmen Quality Act of Stpltml)lf' n. " •nd October 2. '· flrat D11bi1<1t!on of 11111 M!lce. 1970. 1tn 2cu-n O•ltd S.ottmNr 1•. 1tn.
EU91'1'1 ROMet!
• Crulll!la Seen PUBIJC N011CE ~~~ ~,~11
rr BRAGG (AP) " NAaMO• o. SPAllfNll & • • I PICTm0Us llJSINftl JllOMl 0, IAVENICI( Obstruction of nuc ear power •AM• IT,t.TrM•lfT 1sm vwtw• ,,.,..,, ..itt "'
Baker takes a tum prac. ----------------------
Discovery
Discount,ed
By Museum
The 12-member panel said
the drive, which twists along
the crest of the Santa Monica
Mount.aim, should have the
character of "a ribbon-like
park."
e Slaow Closed
plant construction threat.cps n.. ~ PM"MM .r. doll'IG sfllrmM Olb. C•tlftnlla t1•
u -~1.H j IMI,,.. u · An.tMJ't ,.. f.-cotef ticing loadin~ anrl unloadi'lg
the weapon. A shell la!ls to Ille
tarmac.
"Oh .... "says Baker.
Hands shake slightly with
exertion, concentration. anx-
iety. Tough to be a rookie.
TouRh to be a cop. But the
cards ari? really stacked
against Baker.
BAKER STANDS five feet
four inches. and weighs 105
pounds.
She is 26, the mother of a 6-
year-old son. wife of a Loo
Angeles policeman and a
female cop on the streets of.
L.A .•
"I tried being a housewife
and didn't like it,!' she says.
Nothlng new for women to
be cops. But for two weeks, 12
Los Angeles Countv fem11le
deputies have teamed with
male partners to pi\trol the
streets of Los Angeles. The
pro'(ram is exoerimental.
Mar.v Baker ha s one year to
prove her worth on the beat.
She totes all the standarrl ~ear
for a patrolman -gun, Mace,
cuffs. everything.
Famll11 Circus
BRmSH
EXPO
1972
S!l'T. 28 ·OCT. I
BONDED
SLACKS
3 Days O.ly
322
Re<J. 3.18
SOUTH
COAST
PLAZA
-
.... r:rG¥+ •1W1
JERUSALEM (AP)
Evidence of a crucifixion
about 2,000 years ago con-
tinues to arouse speculation
abroad, but the Rockefeller
Museum in Jerusalem is con-
vinced that the relic has
nothing to do with the death of
Christ.
The evidence is an ankle
bone with a steel nail driven
through it. II was found In
1969, but the discovezy was not.
8lUIOllllCed ttnlll WI year,
pending •.lb!dY.
REDWOOD CITY (AP)
Pollution forced closing of the
water skiing and boat show at
Marine World-Africa U.S.A.
Although cause d. the pollu·
tion - a broken sewage pipe
in one of the recreation park's
lagoons -wu repaired, the
show was not resumed "until
the h i g h e s t environmental
standards can be achieved," a
spokesman said.
Water in the man-made
lagoon was grossly paUuted
with disease -c a u s I n g
bacterlJl and posed a health
hazard for show parl!clpanls,
said San Mateo County water
an energy uwa;.a1 n aon. YoUllfG •P£•soNNEL Dl\lt Northern and c e D t ?'a 1 IEJl:VtcE °' AHAHEIM. l!NO $outll Putllthtd ~ COftl C.lly l"llof,
Calilo · the -"'-! of Al'llflllm.·""""'4rr.. C:•llft!r'nl• ,_ ~ 11. :is •nd Octobfr J. ,, rm rrua, .,.~.. aot11 v.... ,......... htvltl' or L• ta3-11
Pacific Gas &· Electric C.o ~ tncorp«•ffti' CA ea111orr11.1, -----------
said 1.-' ColpoiMklft) )HO . Wllll\lrl iouMYln!,I•
IK:le. Los """'"' C•llftnlll fOOllS. PUBLIC NOTICE PG&E proj8CCs 1be demand TtiF• IM11'1111 '' •hlt ·Uflducltd lrY '1-----------
1 ~• h llmhed CC:rporetlol\. NOT1Cl 01' TJl:USTll"I sALa or power -"we C 1tott1 Y~ ""'°"""' Serv1c•• J'.i . Ni. 1.1f1su.
from a million kilowatt& in °', '" ,-, "'•.'... 1';..,· rc1t 1 °" Twsdav. Oct. 31, 1m. 1111:00 A.M., · · k" · '""' · r "" n NA T!ONAL COMMUNI TY ADVISORS. 1940 to U milhon llowatts m Tlllt tt1'-f flt.ct with the countv INC., ••duty ~lnted Tr1111e. 11ndlf' and 1972 _ .will reach 19 mllllon Cllrk 01 Or~ County on tepi.mber 13. p!,ll''uant "' .o-i et Trust recorded
k·1 tts . 1980 John F D--1972. av hYlf'ly J, M1611C>le, [)eopllty Ain111st 21. 191'0, '' Inst, No. 11$4, In !look
l owa In ' ' !Xllr" COl.lllty c~ , 2tlll '381. Plflt' IOS, of Ofllci•I lt<KOl'd• ln ""'
ner told the 8MUa1 Redwood At-OC " olllc• ol flll Covnty Recorlllf' et 0.-enge , , • ~ Or11'191 Cots! OtJIV Piiot, C011nty, C1Utornl•, WILL SELL. AT Empire Association meeting, S~tcmti.r lt. 2S, Ind October ,, '· PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST Ill). He ~lnl'V\rted the p~ '7n j~n OER FOfl CASH (pj!Ylbl• ,, llmt ot .... ·-~ •">""""'!------------, 11'1 llwlul ..-.v et 1t!t Unllwd Stlta) et Mendocino nuclea!' power PVBUC N()TICE 111e Miii"' mint tntrante ro "" Old
project and critlcbied what he ~Tioc~~~~·~~ calJed the "pictmt fence {'°"'*1'( WW 6th St.t s.nt. AM, ••--~-j•~u" 0...._.;_ -~t. llllWPOln'...sA UWll'llO K~ Cllltomll. all r~, 1111111111 .. _... ~ ~wi-orvu1 y....,..... ~ OJITW:ICT ..._ to. •!Id 1'111W """' Ir( It undlf' Mid constructlon. ....,. llWlttllt ai. Defld or Trust in "" pr'CllllrtJ tltMtllll In
• NOTICE 11 MUl:EIY CIVIN l'holt ltll Yk1 CouMJ' end Sii"' ~ •: -~ --~-..----•C..,,;. 86ei'd' et Ed'W:ett.-i· of "'9-N-1-MtM -t.ot&"11f'Tr.ct No...U. In ~city ol
• Ufll'flld kt!Col "Oiltrkf of°" .... c...,ty, C'ost• Nee .. ,,... M•P ~ In EXPERTS SAY reaearcb .,........................................ C1llfornl .. wllf ~ .... Maltd bidt llP to look 161, P191S 7 •l'ld • ol banished ,._ •i.-... w. that the II 11:00 A.IA. en ttie Attt *1 Gf oetoblr, lffl MIKtll•-Meps, Ill ltll llfflct of fM
_.., ~ et 1t1e offla "' .. 111 ScMal Oltlrlct. c-ty RKOl'Olr or uld County.
. bone might be from the body Bo 1 BJ ed Iota..., ,, ..,, ""-ctntt• Awnvoa, cost• TN '''"' ldd,.... n ~ ~ Christ a IEI awn. Mne. Celllonlla, et which 111'111 Mid bids dell'llllllon. H •ny. or ""' 'FNI pr'lpM"tV of · 13 ~ wlll .,. pvbflcty """*' 1nd relll for: dtt(rl~ 111cM> Is""""°""" IO.,.: "Since the di .. ""Very of the ' TltACTO!t MOWER 1161 ll&m•rtl; W1y, Cost• M-. "'-V An bids -Ho 111 In l«"Ol'da~ wlrh c1111on1l1 bone there has been no further } Condlfl-. I "I I r II e I I 0" I . •M The uncllf'llvned Trwl" dltd11nu lftY
d I t f rt " D B ks o $Pttf"c111on1, \lltllcll ,,. -on t!,. lfl llebl'Hty lor tnY lntDl'l'KIMn et lftt ,,,...,
eve Opmen 0 any S0 ' yse1• •~ry rea . ut !ht office of !he 1'ur"Che1lt111 A(llftl (If Mld .odr•lt Ind olllef' common dHlgnellorl, It says museum curator Moshe "i..t:::: Sd"tcol orstrlcl, 1w Pl1Ctnt1a A-.. •llY· ,,_,, l'llf'lln. t: Cott• MH1, Cl'llfoml1. s.ld .,1e wUI bl me.de, but wlf!MiOI Dot.an. ,; . Etch bidder mvst 1Vbm11 1 bid depmll COWMl'lt or w1rr1nty, ••pr'"' or lmolllcl. Archeologist v ass i J ju s ~ ~ROENJX, Ariz. (AP) - A Jack of good sanita~ lft Ille '-"" ot • 1;11rTllltd « Cl lhllf'I r.,gMdh'IO Tiiie, l'OIMtslon. ·Of -
Tzaferis a Greek Orthodox practice caused a widespread outbreak of dysentery among ~ : ~d.=.. eci:i11 ri! ":.per~ ~ ;_ ':.,';:; ~":.,. ~
..........: .. .:_.:. _-:;d;~ tn Israel, persons floating_ on the Colorado _River during_ . the ....,.,.. ....,,""to..,. order If,.,. ~ o-i If Trwt. ll>wlt: ~ w1~ ~ \AU~ n:::::ll .. '& J""'M U!IJfNIS kflOd l)ldrkf, A Ptrlormlnce ler:esl """-'• ea provided In Mid believes the chances of finding summer, an Ariz.ma Heahh Commission official aaw. 80l'ld""" .. ~ .. ,!tie dllCr'Wlloft of noiitl•I. ld\'Ml(ff. II eny, under"" tpmts
Christ'• --•-·are ttit"ht .. n.. Dr. Frank Reider said the Infection was not a resaJ.t: ""' Ol•lcl. '" "'9 _, If 11Hur• to " uld o.w ot Trvtt, t-. en.ron Md 1~1.lol:IJIQ •a.........., ...,. 1n1o "11:11 Coilfl'ld. tM,,..... ef ~ o1 fM TrvstM end II fllll .,_.. nil · of water quality 1n the river. ""en.ck,.., .. bl·torflllld. or"' uw of• Cl'Mttd "'1114 Deed or TTVtt. · "II ,,...._,.., bas •-traced '---1.1--Mii. &... lloM. ttte full IMl!"n ,._..,, 1'1n bl The befllflclefv .,...,. Ifill D9ld et
_..........,. ~ W & II'~ ~ M.:11 ~fl9d M Mid lcklol Dlllrlcl of Orent1 Trust· lle!'etofore, eocvl9d end Olltwrld
u A,......'ALLY THERE Is no river boats aod river rafts, N be said. • c_.... "'..,. ........ 11 ... d • wrtnM Dec1"..m ot ~•v ''W ·~-• It -~ by --~11oo in •L-No 1lldd« _,. wl"'<lr•w hll Md for• o.t....tt ....o o.menct for Seit, end• writ• real search for the body or e 1.lllllA. was ..aWK:U poor CWlu.lw. "'"' pw1o11 ot fwfy-fM c..s1 drft. ett" "" ..,. ~' " e...mon to S111. ~~M" he sa~s. ""~-.does · handling of food and portable tolleta:,'• fle said. c11t1o.., for !tie'--"""*"'· n. c.-.i u. Motlc• o1 ..,.._w., num-., Tl'll lolrf fll EdUCl"on el ltM MIWPClrt-o.twn lfld ~to S4I to.,.~ one begin? were Reider said the State Health Department was taking Mn11M111tid $dlOOI 011tr1c1 ,....,._ rM.tttfttt1e(DClllfywMr11t11rM1,,.....,.,11
M-lo ~ ~-sttuatlon 11Sht i. r11.et "'Y or 111 Mft1 •nd noi IOtated. cnreified during Roman times. ""'¥"' "11!=.'1. ... n: • --~Y Kft9I • forriwtt t11"' Ind to 0.1,; s.ptirmNr 11, 1•n. Invariably, the families claim-He said letters are being receiVed from many parts WIM wry ~ " 1rr...,11rlly 11'1 NATIONAi.. COMMUNITY
I the Unl.ted States ............... of .. _ --~ k •llY bid r~v.d. ADVIS.OA:S, INC., ed the bodies and extracted O • ~., ... V-U..,.'6 un: vuwica · oettd Stpt, 1st1t, ttn 11 1rvs1 ... tN
lhe na"·." NEWPORT-MESA TITLE IN$URANCI AND ~ ~ 'lll!bi_~ VNIFU!D SOfOOL TRUST COMPANY
·-~
DAILY 10. JO: SUN. 10. 7
MON.· TUES.· WED.
@N LY!
•
DIST•ICT AOtnt • et Or"""' COUflo!Y, Ctlll, BY Ladef'n• G. Cotlman ay Dorothy H.,....y Fl.i'llr Aul!lor!Itd ~l9Nfur1
Pun:1'111h'IQ """"' $484 ~1100 Publl1hed Or1not Cotlt Dally 11'1101, ~lhM Ot'enot CO.It D9Hy Pl)OI, kplember 2S Ind OC!obl!' 2, t, ltn
5-pl. It lfld Sip!. 2L lffl 2-ti-7"J 25\l-1'J
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
MOTICI TO COMTllACTOtl:I
IMftr'l.__I IM llftl
•twl'OaToMa54 UNl,110 SCHOOt. DISTltlCT Nllln llMlfllt lia
NOTIC:I! IS HEllll!IY GIVEN 11'111 1t1e loltrd Of Edvallori ot the N.wport-Mtu
unullcl ki'lool Dlltrlcl 11 or.ne-Covntv, C.llfomla, wm AC~ INled bilk 11p IO 2:• P.M., T......,, OC...., I .. 1'72. 11 tTll office If .. Id Sdlool Dlstrlel, klcalmf II 1157 PllCll'ltil A-. Coate Mal, C•llfomll, •t whld'I llmt ...... ltlcl9.
WHI bl publicly Ol*lild -"" ,_, !Or:
NEW ACCORDIDH FOLOIHO DOOR5 I. DEMOUNTAl!lll.f'
PARTITIONS -UNns "D. E .. F'" et ~A5T8LVFF SCHOOt.
All bldt ,,, ,,, " In ICCOf'G.ll'KI With condtllol'll, l"'lrucOOl'I, •nd Speclflcltlorls
whkh ar. ,_ on Ill• In 1111 office et Ille Arcriuect, Cermleheef.Kemp, Archltetfl,
'810 Loi ,.i11 PllQ, LM ""'"""' Ct1lfonll1,
BULKY COMFY, IRUSHED
ACETATE/NYLON
TAILORED PJS
eecti Okldtr ,.,.,., Wbmll • Old depostt In ttt. form et • cwtflltd or u•lllw"s
en.ck Or • bid bol'lcl ..w•I -Nn ,...., .. , 11°"'-> of 11'11 lll'IOIJJll of fll• bid, INd•
~yabt1 to lhl !>l'dl" of rha Ntwp0rt·Mef1 Unl!l«I kflOOI Dls,,.lcl. In Iha avtnt
of taltur• to ll'lter Into •i.>ell contrect, Ille Pl'OCffd1 Of Ille cl!Kk w111 .,. forllltld,
Of" In CIH of • bOnd, rh• II.Ill lllrtl "*"'°' Wiii be twi.illd hi ...... School Dltlrlcl of Drenpe COl,lnty,
CARDIGAN
SWEATERS
l Days Owly
RECi. 5.96
222
3 DAYS ONLY
A OIPOl!I Of IU.W pw Mt will lie fft!Vlted IO OV.1r1n'" ~ """"'' In oood eoncll!lon et plens end 1ptelflc.ltlon1 wl!l'lln FIVE (J) lfjoyS elter 111• bid CIPfl'llnO 11111.
No bid will lie ~ h'oo1I • eonlTector .,..,_ r..1 nat been llct'l!Hd I"' llCUlfd • 11ic1 wilt! !tie proYlllons OI !tie Contr1etw'1 Lie-Act Of to ..tlofn • Pl"O(IOMI
Form llQ l'IOot bMI LNIMd lf*lllcally tor 11'11 P'll'PC>I• Of IM.lbmlttlne • bid for lhll ll'OIKf.
No bldellf' '"'Y wlthdr-1111 bid tor • wlod et fOrtv·nvt (4) dap ,,,_. tll9
0•19 "' tor "" .... ""' tllel'IOf. ni. DlllrlCt 1'111 ~"*' 1119 IMMl'•I prev•lll!!O rete ot per dl1m '"9M In
111e IOCllllV In Wl'llth rhl• won 1s to ii. Ptr1om\ed tor MCI! °"'" or 1ype et
-rkl'Nn """" ,. .Xl'Clli. the contr•ct, Which Wiii bl •••rded I!> 11'11 IUC~I bidder, to bl "follow11
SIX lt.UIC T•ADU 0 ... AlltllM tllf °""'" C-ty) CAAl"aNTl!tl
MHtth I. w.lflA -61C pr llovr
Ptn1lon -7k pt,r '-
V1c1tlon $av1ng..,t+oll01y -50c Plf llovr
Foremen: lll:t<l'l-,,., llf• ft'l•n ~ Plf l'IOvr mor• ft'ltit Ille hoo.irly rJte of Ill•
lllr;il'Mllt Cerpenllf' c11u111ca11on O'ilf' Wfllell he h•• l'ftPONlbUffY, ellcludlno "P,..umetlc N•lllr or Powf!' SllplM."
C1rpwotw
stlll'lglfl'
MlllWrlglll sew Fl191'
TatNe P-S-0Plf1tor P-~llc Nllltf' II' ~ llltll.,. l.AIOll•as
H-.Mth . Wltf•r• -1k·Sfl/n1 '6c ·S/1m
S/lf71
11.!l
1.26 •.D 1.11 t .11 ...
Full f•shion long slHv• bulky cardi9•ns
in pocketed t1nd b•lt1d 1tyle1. Sm1rt pop-
ular colors. S i1et S.M.L.
Soft brushed t«t:att.
nytoa pajamas rhat aivc
w:armth without weight.
MUH::ailored c:oH1t with
pipins trim. Popw.ltr
colors. 32-40.
P-lon -11.10 • S/\/1'J1 SI.»• $11111
V&e,,llon -Jllc:·ltllnl1 Jk·.f/lln FOrlme": Not 1111 lllln IOc per ,_.. ,,_. !hen the hovrtJ' WIOI ,...
• ...,_, c,.ttlfk.lllon _. Mitch Ill 11111 1196fnlllp.
S/1/72
'·"' ..., 111m S.945 ....
....
SMART SPORT TOPS
Ovr R111. 1.96
3 Days Only 133
Selection of tong·slttVe 1tylt1 in col~
fuJ sollds and stripes. Ma~ of 100% cot.-
ton, nylon or poJ.yeater, 4-14. OW'ge Jl
CORDUROY SLACKS
'""' t7.D)
.l$ ~ JoumrmMri ... ... "" ..
ll11n "·"
. u
1/1/72 "·*
. u
11un
•• ...
~ A colorful selection of slacks in
1 f a variety of styl•s. Acrylic bond-
11d to nylon or reyon •cefete.
Si1es 8· 18.
Our .... 1.37
l Days °"" 111
Alkotton slactc1 wlttoi chill-chasing fltnnll
linil\g. Full 1nd halt-boxer styling wit~
back pocket: 5Pofty colo'I. 3·6X °"1rlll it
COSTA MESA
2200 HARIOR BLVD. lComer·of WlllOll)
"It' 1
•
HUNTINGTON BEACH
19101 MAc;NOUA lCorMr of Ga1fllld)
\
" I.
SW
A
part
their
Th
"A
who
ing
1960s
wock
Jler
Beac
Pha
men
bou
wind
~~g
di
Fi
mid
llwl
loci! tlon.
" a
for
l
Lag1111a eh Today's Final
N.Y. Steeks
VOL. 65, NO. 269, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1972 TEN CENT'S
DAILY "'-01' 1'9ff .......
Policeman's
Killer Still
'At Large'
By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL
Of .. DaffY ~llft Steff
The manhunt for suspected police killer
llerman L. Clouston, who bas literally
come and gone around two counties for
fi ve days, continued today with an appeal
for his guaranteed-safety surrender.
So far, the man sought in connection
with the shooting death of Buena Part
Police Detective Darrel D. "Bud." Cate
last Thursday ha! managed to e.scape
several potential police traps.
Gunfire ha! erupted each ll!ne, the last
--one-Involving-a burst-ol -20-obots whicb -
peppei'ed a fleeing car carrying a scared
car salesman mistaken for Clouston.
He tried to speed away to avoid encUy
f :t..: gunfire resulting -as be fled with
two terrified girls in the car -which be
feared wou1d come after Clouston was
reported at the car lot.
Somehow the terrified trio escaped
without injury.
Buena Part Police Chief Dudley D.
Gourley today appealed to Clouston, an
ex-convict who claims be won't ~ taken
alive, to surrender with someon!' as an
escort.
He suggested It be done in company
with a newspaper reporter, a minister, a
priest, or s>meone as a third party.
"I urge him to surrender before other
lanooc;nt.JIOOP)o .,. • ....,.,y"""' IQ.
llll!'d ... killed," Chief GctUrley ~-
The Illa! wbli:h bu nnced fJom the Buena hrti:·.AMhelm area up to IOUth
Los Anleiel County twi<le DOW bu Jn..
volved 8bootiog lnddeDts on four oo-
caslons.
SWEDISH TELEVISION CREW USES LAGUNA BEACH AS BACKDROP
Unconcerned Beach V11ltor S-1 In F-round
"We have bad several near-tragedies,"
Chief Gourley Slld Sunday.
"We want to avoid any more of these
situations," be continued. '
Laguna OD Fil111
Swedish Crew Shoot,s TV Series
A Swedish television film crew is using
Laguna Beach as the backdrop for a five-
part series they are shooting now for
tbelr country's viewers.
The story being shot ill from the book,
"A Time on Earth" by Wilhelm Moberg,
who apparently wrote the novel while liv-
ing in Laguna Beach .during the early
1960s.
1be film crew, several of whom have
worked on pictures with I n g m a r
Bergman, ha! been filming on tbe Main
Beach, and Sunday at the Park Forest
Pharmacy.
"It i9 a story of a 90litary man and hi!
memories," Per Sjostrand, film crew
director, said.
Much of lhe action takes place in the
Hotel Laguna, which ha! been sporting a
new sign along one wall declaring "Eden
Hotel," the name of the hostel in the
Moberg's book.
The central character is a man in his
70s who has come to the United States
in 1920, following the d e a t h of hi!
brother In Swoden.
He comes to Laguna Beach, and after
working in real estate, retires to the
hotel.
There bne day, he receives a
newspaper from his home, and It sets orf
a series of memories depicted in the film
by flashbacks.
The program will be broadcast in
March in five parts of 50 minutes each on
Swodil!b TV.
While Eiler Larsen, Laguna Beach's
l8JDOU3 Greater, dld appear in the book
as a character, he will not be portrayed
In the film.
The company WU.bes to bolate the cen-
tral character and concentrate on bis Im-
pressions as be feels death approaching,
said Rolf Nyqvist, production manager.
While commenting favorably o n
Laguna Bench In general, tbe crew down-
ed tall gl..,.. of 90ft drlnU and noted
(See FllM, Ps1e Z)
"He may tblnt he ClllllOI give himself
up safely beca111e be killed a police of-
ficer," Cblef Gourley added, proaimlng
Clouston ill indeed the slayer of Detective
Czte, who left five children.
Clouston bu escaped a narrowing
police dragnet several thne>, the most
recent case being one in which he fled on
foot via a flood (ll)lltro} channel after an
ei:challge of """"'· He bad been recognbed from news
photoa, according to investigators, when
he allegedly tried to trade bis .12 caliber
pistol for a used car at an agency.
The frightened salesman talked the
suspect into going out for a cup of coffee
while he considered tl'e deal and called
police after the man kleotified as
Clouston left.
And when officers arrived, the car
salesman tried to get away hinuelf to
avoid the confrontatioQ, but was mistaken
(See SUSPECT, Page ZJ
Julia C. Morris
Service Tuesday
Rosary will be recited In McCormick
Laguna Beach Ciapel at 7 o'clock Ibis
evening for Julia C. Morris, 281 Cypress
Drive, who died Friday at the age of 90.
Wind, New Firebreak Cut
Hold Laguna Brush Blaze
Requiem Mass will be celebrated at 9
a.m. Tuesday in St. Gatberine of Siena
Catholic Church, with burial following at
Calvary Cemetery, LDs Angeles.
A native of Canada, Mrs. Morris, a
retired librarian, had lived in California
for 48 years and in Laguna Beach for the
past 30 years.
Sbe is survived by a son, Anthony Mor-
ris of West LDs Angeles, and by nine
grandchildren.
A brush lire !hit blackened 1.~cres ol
land near the proposed Alta Laguna
BouleVard• extenslbn In Laguna Beacb
Saturday .nm-was hold bock by a
favonible •ind and it new firebreak co.t
by the coulity, dty !iremen said toc111.
Three Laguna Beach fire units, man-
ned by .14 men, lnoludln( off-duty
firemen, and three county unlts with , II
llllll batUed the fire 10< almost ' two
hours, aaslsted by an unusual BOutbeut
wind which dlrected names away from
Top of the World and Arch Beach
Heights homes, about ore-third of a mile
distant on either side.
Finl (lremen to reach tbe _ ..,.,
midway lietween the ·end of .Uts ~
Boulefard and Del Mar A venue, r&ni (IQ
foot from the Top of the World lltt .afa.
!Ion.
A r.w-wheel drive vehicle wu 1011t
1head over a dirt road to ·lucl the 1111
for dty snd county pumpen that Ion.;.
l
ed. Firemen who were unable to
determine the cause of the blaze, tod1y
pratsecl d~ who a!Slsted In averting
what they·nld could ba .. been a m1jor
fire.
pollpg that the fire ori(lnated In the
r1gi>t<>f·WIJ reserved for the con-
bo•e;nlal Alta Lquna Boulevlrd e1-
tensloa, whiclt bu -_.i by en-vironrneotallila, a Laguna Beach Fire
Department ..,._ commented thill
morning, ••we a1te need that road !"
CAR AD CLICKS
ON FIRST CALL
The ,,...ce WP" ri"hf and so was th 1
0 ••• ., Jt f ••l• I ·~I ,..,,. "' ,.., " " ·•,,.
sale after this ad appeared in tbe DAILY
·.:;; f\."lor.1n ·.vagon, new ,
bat!. I"'.", oti"". t>\vntr, 4~,UIO
ml. ~ ~. nx-:ocxx. Tiie Fire llepertmeot • and SdJool
Dlolrlcl have bad:ed the 1illllop e1-"'°""'l• which would join tho 'l'op'ol tho · • Yes. the firs' c•ll•x ""''""'!he~Wc\rld and Arch ~.Ueltlhtl areao but , .... blG't~ and lellor ,._iocl.111'1.-
' ltiJ ~gn. lnvolvlo( .u...r.e cot...a.llll lolfpJ. 'Lei ui -,... """'1• tilo:: 'We
opetotioos, bas boon sbarpl,y crtUcbed can find buyers, oellen,o fen t e rs,
and the·projec\ now is be!nl revlowed. whatever yoo'ro looltq for. ,Dfal .the
A•llllaller Jnob ore !bit btolce out on direct line ID results. ~ 142 !1678,
Doana !Jrl!e, near Uguna's Park DAILY PILOT Claaslfled Advertising
A-flllndoj Ille..-. WU douled bJ Dept.
llremen In a mstter of minutes. -----------
• a1n
•
OAIL.Y ,IL.OT S!1tf ~ ....
PROPOSITION 20 BACKERS PAUSE IN FASHION ISLAND DURING LONG BIKE RIDE
State Sen. James Mills (With Mustache), Leads Group of About 80 Toward San Diego
Mills' Prop. 20 ~icycle
Team Pedals Into Laguna
'lcalifornia, Alabama and s 0 u t h
Carolina are the only states which have
no plans governing coastal management
and planning. Every other state blessed
with this kin« or precious natural
resource has taken some action to
preserve and enhance it," Sen. James R.
Mills CD-San Diego), '\t!'.lld a_crowd of
Laguoans Sunday as he6lcycled into
town to boost Proposition 20, the
Coastline Protection Initiative on the
November ballot.
Mills and bill fellow cyclists stopped at
Laguna's Main Beach for lunch as they
neared the end of their 500-mile "coastal
protection" bike ride from San Francisco
to San Diego.
They were greeted by Mayor Charlton
Boyd, Vice Mayor Roy Holm and con-
servaUonist William Wilcoxen, all of
whom spoke in support of the Coastline
Initiative.
After the lunch stop, the cyclists pedal-
ed off to San Clemente to spend the night
at the State Park In that city before pro-
ceeding to San Diego.
"'You may not think there ts much
drama in the spectacle of a middle-aged,
balding legislator huffing and puffing bis
way down the coast highway," Mills told
the crowd ... But you are not looking at it
from my perspective. There a r e
moments when I feel an acute sense of
drama -not to say alarm -as I try to
keep up with the rest of our party."
Stressing the seriousness of the tour.
Mills added, "A wide awareness that
there is a problem is almost a solution in
itself. This has been the pattern In other
states. Coastline controls have been im-
posed only after some demonstration by
the public that they want their beaches
unspoiled, that they want aCCHS to their
own beaches. and that they wUI no longer
tolerate unrestricted, haphazard develop-
ment of thei r coasUine."
With twe>-thirds of California's 1,100-
(See CYCLIST, Page %)
$5.Million Haul Reported
In Laguna Niguel Heist
By FREDERICK SCROEMEBL
Of "" Dallr Plltr' Sl~I
An eight-member ga.Dg that burglarir
ed the Lagwla Niguel branch of United
CaJlfomla Bank took $5 million in cash,
jewelry and securities, an Ohio man in-
dicted in the case allegedly confided to a
friend.
1be statement assertedly was made by
Charles Albert Mulligan. 38, of Youngs·
town, Ohio to Earl Dawson of Tustin.
Mulligan, authorities asserted, told
Dawson that eight men broke into the
bank's vault in March and collected $5
millioo In loot. The gang then sold the
securiUes for 18 percent of their fact
value and kept the cash a n d jewels,
Mulligan ,.portedly told Dawson.
The· ststemeni., which .defense at· tome.ya for Mulligan have attempted to
bar Jrom ccw:I,. wlll ·be admitted when
the trial opens Tuesday, U.S. District
Courl Judge Matt Byrne ruled Friday.
Mulll~an, •long with Nt\IJ Dlnsio. 36. of
Beardman, OhiO and Pbilip Christopher,
29, of Cleveland faco charges of bank
bu~l1ry, conspiracy and bank J3rceny.
Two brothers, Ronald and Harry Barber,
have been indleled but remain at lll'fl".
Judge Byrne ai.o denied a motion by
ottomey Anthony Glauman , reprc,.<lt· Intl ~. to 111ppress as evl· """'°' $30,lltltl • In <11h Hized by FBI •«eats at the time of Chrtstopher's ar~ .. st. Two ti blils, authOlties ny, can be
traced to the Laguna Niguel bank.
Byrne also denttd a motion by
Mlllllpn)_ atthrneys to exclude li'om
cowt '!ltlJnl torchel and ol!)er evidence
IOllled iti.Un the !lUnk·of a getaway car,
•••
allegedly discovered in Dawson 's garage.
Mulligan was arrested June 2 in Tustin.
apparently on his way to Dawson's to
(See LOOT. Pa1e Zl
Laguna Cyclist
Hurt in Accident
On Hairpin Curve
A 12-year-old Laguna Beach boy was
injured Saturday wben he lost control of
his IO.speed bike while desoending
Temple Hills Drive and was hurtled into
a guard rail on the halrpin curve.
Kyle Douglas Franaon, 3059 Zell Drive.
was taken to SOUth Coast Community
Hospital by ambulance after the noon ac-
cident, and released after treatment for
facial injuries.
Minor lnjuries also were sufrered by an
18-year-old El Toro Marine Saturday
when the cu in whJch he was rtding
slammed Into the rear or another vehicle
on S. Coast Hlghway.
Poltce sald driver Thomas Michael
Mcintosh, 281 of La Mirada, had stopped
In the southoound traffic lane behind a
car making a left tum at Brooks Street,
when his car was struck from behind by a car driven by Marine Daniel Ray
Lightfoot, I!, or El Toro. Winford J.
Bushl, a pa11enger In the Lightfoot car,
was talten to the base hospital for treat·
ment·of a fadal laceration •
Poll Says Nixo1t
Gai11ing in Lead,
Naw Alwad 39%
NEW YORK (AP) -A new poll _.
ducted jointly for Time magazine and the
Ne\v York Times shows President Nix-
on leading Democratic presidential
candidate George McGovern by 39 points
-62 to 23 percent.
l\.1oreover, the President has overtaken
l\.fcGovern even among r e g i s t e re d
Democrats, 43 to 40 percent , according to
the su rvey released Sunday. It was con·
ducted ,by Daniel Yankclovich, Inc.,
bet ween Aug. 25 and Sept. 12.
The 39-point margin represents M 1 l
percentage point increase over a parallel
Yankelovich survey taken a month
earlier ..
Meanwhile, McGovern aides disclosed
the results or a private national poll
showing the Democratic contender whit·
tied the Nixon lead from 34 to 22 points in
recent weeks.
McGovern campaign director Frank
Mankiewicz said Sunday that the poll
was based on telephone conversations
with 1,500 persons nationwide. all oC
whom had been interviewed in depth
earlier.
The Times said there was nn indication
in the Yankelovich survey th a t
Mc:Govern may have narrowel:I Nixon's
lead during early September but the shift
was so small that it could have been ac-
cowited for by sampling error.
Mrs. Skelton Better
PALM DESERT (APl -Georgia
Skelton, the estranged wife of co median
Red Skelton, is reported in satisfactory
condition at Eisenhower Medical Center
where she is being treated for a blood in-
f~tion. The 51-year-old Mrs. Skelton has
been at the center for about 10 days and
was on the crilical list before showing
improvement over the weekend .
Orange Coast
Weather
Sunny ski•• throug!i Wednesday.
with highs In the 70s, both Inland
and along the beaches. Lows to-
night around 58, according to the
weatberlady.
INSIDE TODAY
A lont gunman fired on the
r oothilt Ditmion police 1tati<m
early this morning wllh such in·
temity that policemen tmicU
thought thty Wtre 1'nder attack
by a gang of men arm.td with
machine oum. See storv on
Page 5. '
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From Page I
CYCLIST ...
mile coutllnt alrtady pn\•1\ely o"'Tled
and only 250 mUH of what 11 left usablt
a.s recrea!ion beaches by 20 nHJllo:i
Cal ilarlliam, "there is not much left lo
preJetVe," aid the Rnltor.
Prof)O.sition 20. he stud, 1s not oHl'red
as the ul!1mate solution to 1hc coastline
c·rislS, but ..s a method of gaining 11n1e lO
develop plans for the cOASI.
II calls for lhe crcalLon of a Coastal
7,onc Commi.'5ion and !iii regional com-
n11ssion11 to plan the best use of the
coastline. The com n1Ls.slons would be
madt' up half by rcprcscntal!vl'~ of local
governmenls and baJ; by public members
t:1ppolnted by the (;ovcrnor ti n d
LA.<gl!lature.
The co mmission \1•ould be required lo
su bmit a plan to the Legislature by 1975,
and in the meantime. no coastal develop-
ment could take place within 1,000 yards
of the shorellnc without a special pcnn1L
"Opposition to 1.:oastlinc prote<>tion is
formidable. and the L<>gislatu re has been
unable overcome it." 1'-1ills said. "An
alliance ol both big business and
se ents of organ ized labor opposed
c stline protection legislation Ulla year.
T oil interests are afrai dof losing prof-
it and some of our largest unions are
af aid of losing construction jobs.
If we can learn anything from the
legilllative defeat of coastline protection,
it is that the opponcnll of Proposition 20
are wealthy, well organized and
powerful. We can expect a very slick,
professional campaign against thi.s air
proach to coastline protection in the
""'eeks ahead."
Referring to coastline p r o t e c t i o n
legil!llation in other states, Mills took an
indirect swipe at Governor Reagan. Jn
these states, he said, "There was another
form of pressure that is misl!ling in
caJifornia -strong leadership by the
governor."
Delaware, which has one of the
strongest coastline protection laws in the
nalion, said Mill.!, "also has a courageous
Republican Governor, Russell Peterson,
who stood up to opposition not only from
the special interests but from Secretary
of C.Ommeree Maurice Stans and the Nis:-
on Administration to get its law enact-
ed."
The-California coastline, he-said, now
faU. under the overlapping jurisdiction of
1 S county governments, 43 c i t y
governments and dozens of special
di!trlct boards , .. even asswn ing all
these local governments have nothing but
.the best interests of their citizens at
heart. It is unreali.stlc indeed to believe
that all of them can agree on a uniform
coastline plan or even what the best use
of the coastline is."
Former Lagunan
Mrs. Neher Dies
Funeral services will be held in Salt
Lake City. Utah, this week for Mary M.
Neher, a former Laguna Beach resident
who died in Pomona.
Mrs. Naber, widow of the late Dr. E.
M. Neher, lived in Laguna Beach from
1943 to 1965 and was active in the Com-
munity Presbyterian Church.
She ls survived by a daughter, Mrs . C.
Sidney Johnston, Jr., of Laguna Niguel:
three grandchildren, and six ·great-
grandchlldren.
A nat.ive of Awasco, Indiana , Mrs.
Neher move.d to Laguna Beach from Salt
Lake City. In 1965, she moved to
Pomona, where she died this week.
New Zone Plans
Aired :ll1 La guna
Formation of a new agricultural and
recreational zone will be discussed in a
Planning Commission meeting at 7:30
tonight in the Laguna Beach City Hall.
If zone were enacted. il would likely be
placed on undeveloped lands wit hin the
ci ty Jin1its suc h as Sycamore Hills or
new lands take n into th e city by an-
ricxalion .
'Al so up for discussion is the proposal
15y Mayor Charlton Boyd for the isolation
di the office of Planning Director from
the office or Cily i\1<1nagcr , m:ikin~ the
dlanner responsible instead to the citizen fllllnnin~ Com mission. •
OIAN81 COAST LI
DAILY PILOT
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I ce Cr e a11i Slaop Hit
Sacramento Jet
Crash Kills 22
SACRAMENTO CUPll -A vintage jet
ighter taking off at an air sho~ smashed
into a packed shopping center ice cream
parlor here, killing 22 persons, man~ of
them youngsters attending a Llttle
League football celebration.
Anoth er 16 persons were injured Sun·
da y when the privately-owned F86 Sabre-
)et barrelled across a higbway , struck
three vehicles and bounced in a "ball of
fire" into Farrell's lee Cream Parlor.
"I'm sorry .. _ I'm sorry. Get tbe pea--
pie out," groaned Richard Bingham, 36,
or Richmond, Calif., pilot of the plane.
lie was pulled from the wreckage while
200 screaming children and adults fought
to escape flarne.s that turned the Gay-905
style shop into an inferno.
Blngham escaped with some broken
bones and a cut face.
ln Wehington, the Nat Ion a 1
plane, one ol Ameri ca's first fighter jets
being displayed across the street al
Sacramento's Executive Airport, smash-
ed into the parlor's Howard Hug he s
Room.
A party "'as being held in the room for
2(1 youngsters from the Sacramento 49ers
Lillie League football team. .
Don lt1cCluskey. an emptoye, was fi ll-
ing salt shakers in the roo1n when the
plane hit.
"After I picked myselr up, I grabbed
five kids and broke a window and got
them out," he said. "But by the n, the
smoke and Dames were too intense and l
couldn't get back in." .
Linda Fourby, 11, Sacramento, was in
a car which the plane missed by 100 f~t.
She said she ran toward the screammg
and breaking glass" at Farr<ll's.
''Portal'' Lingers On
Transportation Safety Board said the
crash was the worst in U.S. history in
terms of ground deaths.
FromPqel
LOOT .•. The Sawdust Festival -is gone from Laguna Beach
but this lingers on. Small wonder. It weighs a ton.
ft is the creation of and served as the lx>oth of Hal
Pastorius, sculptor. Called "Portal," the work is
made of Carten, a weathering steel that is sup-
posed to become rusty_ Despite this characteristic,
it has a life expectancy of more than 100 years.
The sculpture seems something of an anomaly to
motorists along rustic Laguna Canyon Road.
He said the next worst occured in
Flagler, Colo., on Sept. 15, 1951, when the
pilot of an experimental plane crashed
"·bile attempting a roll. Nineteen were
killed and 10 seriously injured.
Sacramento County C.Oroner George L.
pick up thf! car. .
Byrne was expected to rule thl.! af-
ternt"On on whether a ~ bill found in
Dinsio's home may be accepted as
evidence in the trial. The bill '"'as round ,
authorities said, in the purse or Mrs.
Mary Mulligan, the mother of lll.arl.es
h-fulligan and mother-in-law or Dms10. ,
'l'he money has been traced to the
Adult Education
Expansion Gets
Laguna Blessing
The Laguna Beach Board of Education
has given its b l essing to an ex-
panded adult education school, including
a diploma-granting program for p;ersom
·who have not completed high school.
Classes in arts and crafts, business
education, driver education, foreign
language, home economics, humanities
and industrial and vocational education
started this week .
Registration for the courses will con-
tinue through next week. Information on
courses and registration may be obtai ned
by calling the school di strict. 494-8546.
Only elective courses leading toward a
diploma will be orrered duriog the first
trimester. Basic requirements will be ad-
ded to the program du ring the second
trimester, beginning in January.
There is a $5 tuition fee ($10 for driver
education) charged to each adult who
takes classes on a non-credit basis.
Pcnons who elect the classes !Of" credit
toward a diploma are not required to pay
the tee.
In a related action, the board approved
a stipend of $150 to Walter Lawson for
counseling of adults registered in the
diploma granting program.
Happy Children
Oass Scl1eduled
''How to Have Happy, Responsible
Children" is the name of a new class of-
fered for the first time this year through
the Laguna Beach Adult Education pro-
gram.
Classes. under the instruction of Helen
Tracy. student of Dr. Tom Gordon's
Parent Effectiveness Training, will be
held on Mondays at 7:30 p.m. in Room
32, Laguna Beach High School. Registra-
tion may be made at the class, beginning
J\1onday. Fee for the trimester is $5.
During the course, qualified speakers
"'ill disc uss parent-child problem sol ving.
·•getting through" to children and
methods proven elfective in building
family harmony.
Nixon Sees Copy
Of Lagu1ia Book
''\Ve are ah ... ays pleased to be
remrmbered by friends from Orange
County:• notrs President Richard Nixon
in a letter thanking Laguna Beach
\1-ri\cr-pholographer John Hardy ror a
co1>y or his nc11· book. '·only in Laguna ."
Hurdy and his '"'ire, Peg, co-editor of
lht• illust rated overview of life in the Art
('olon ,1·, dispa1ched a copy to San
Clcn1cnlc neig hbor Nixon and his wife,
sho rtly aft rr its publication.
This \l't'ck they rrccived the personal
lrfler or thanks from "Mrs. Nixon and
rn(','' signed by the President, who a lso
expressed appreciation for the Hardys'
inscription of their first edition.
F rom Page I
FILM ...
""·e ·are not used to your heat. it seems
very hol to us."
But Nyqvist atided ""·e are on
~chedule," The crew will lenve on Satur-
day.
'fhc main character Is played by
S"·edish actor Georg Funkqvist w ho
nlong with came raman (;unnar Fisher
worked with Bergman.
Other members of the vislllng crew
arc Borje Erickson, sound engineer; and
J\lary Anne Johnson , contlnulty.
Nielsen said 12 of the victims were
youngsters, five bo)'I and seven girls.
Five women and five men were also kill-
ed. More Charges .Considered
In Clemente Auto Deaths
He said at least two complete families
were among the dead.
The nose of the Korean conflict-era
Laguna Niguel bank. . ,
In a separate ruling Friday, Byrne said
Christopher, Dinslo and . Mulligan shall
stand trial together, denying defense mo-
tio:is to separate th«: trial of the three
l!'"!n .
By JOHN VALTERZA Workmen have been preparing the
or "" D•111 Pi:.t s11tt area for the installation of center-strip
-·The District Attorney's office will protection for tbe past several months.
Flag Football
Tryouts Slat.ed ·-" ---
"l'm "'"11sf'd wit'-tti• 1111ings, 110 far,"
U.S. Attorney Jack Walters said this
morning. "Otherwise, l have no comment
on .... .., <'"'~."
determine this week if new charges will Fences are due to be installed there in Tryouts for Boys Club Dag football in
be filed against the driver of a car which a matter of days. Lagwia Beach will begin at 7 p.m. Tues-
swerved across the center divider of a day and run through Sept. 30 at the Boys' freeway in San Clemente Friday and Highway patrol investigators said t~re Club.
:--~ ·v caused a gri11uing crash w'..ich was no indication that the marijuana
d. ti I ted t th h The Little Conference nag Cootba1l pr~
Jury selection is scheduled for 9:30
a.m. Tuesday, with opening statements
and motions to be made on Wednesday,
Wallets said. The trial is expected to run
two to three weeks.
From Page 1
SUSPECT •..
for the suspect due to his actions.
killed three persons. 1rec y was re a o e eras .
The weed was found in a man's sock in gram is for boys from 8 to 13 yean of '1;1e driver "' ""e car and his ty.•o cn m-"d age. !'layers must be members of the lhe car , officials sa1 • pan ions -all sailors station in San The discovery prompted the arrest of Boys Club. Dues are $1.50 a year.
Diego -already face charges or all three men _ Walker, Nikolai Pen-Team play will start Oct. 15. All games
possession of marijuana. d John' J 21 will be played at 11 a.m. Sundays at
th nington, 22, an ensen, .
Leo \Va Iker. 19, was the driv~r of e All three men also suffered injuries in Laguna Beach High School field. Prac-
1965 sport-modrl car which went out of the crash and remain under care in the tices may be held at any of. four fields,
..
control at sunset Friday, r.rossed the Orange County Medical Center jail ward. Lagwia HJgb, Thunton Intermediate,
unguarded strip of freeway north of Investigators quoted Walker as saying Top oC the World, or Boys Club.
Avenir11 Pi,.~. thPn "l-nirned headon into he was cut off by another car, swerved to The Little Conference i3 strictly a local
a small foreign station wagon . avoid a collision, then left the northbound program said Neal Hopkins, Boys Club
Three of four occupants of the car lanes and crossed the ceoter strip, col-executive director.
were killed instantly. liding with Pratte's southbound vehicle. Rules call for a weight Jim.it of US
CUrrenUy,. more than 200 officers
operating from two command posts in
Orange and Los Angeles counties are in-
volved in the search for Clouston.
A fourth , Long Beach schoolteacher The ensuing traffic snlrl blocked all pounds, and DO tackling. A ballcarrU!F.-11,,
tetty Morr:tt, 35, was critically hurt. lanes of the freeway for nearlf an hour. considered tackled when one of his ftl&i
He is rJportedly the man who fled over
a fence after Detective Cate wu tilled
by two bullets during an attempt to ar-
rest a suspect -presumably Clouston -?\frs. Moffitt was treated first at San The route was blocked beyond San Juan are pulled from his be.It and throlfti,
Clemente General Hospital, then later Capistrano, patrolmen said. the ground. ---:;e-, on a sex crime charge.
fr:insferred to Mission Commun l t y j-p;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;-Hospital where nurses this morning said
s!~c \vas .-,aklng "very slight im-
provement.''
The Jr'lne su rvivor in the car suffered
severe head, internal and hip injuries as
well as multiple cuts and bruises.
Her companions were the driver,
Robert Marvin Pratte, 35 ; his wife,
Brigitte. 32, both of Long Beach, and
Laura Jo Washle, 34, La Palma.
TI1e four were described by highway
patrolmen as "innocent victims" in the
crash which took place in a stretch ma r-
red by the most seriou~ local aceidents
experienced in San Clemente for the past
several years.
La guna Rej ec ts
Carpenter Bill
The reorganized Lagu na Beach City
Council has voted to w i t h d r a w sup-
port of Sen . Dennis Carpenter's coastal
protection bill, which connlcts with
Proposition 20. the st ricter coastal con-
trol legislation supported by the new
council.
The Carpenter bill ""'On the support of
the previous council which, since the July
recall of Councilman Edward Lorr and
resignation or Mayor Richard Goldberg,
now has a new makeup.
Since the new council has voted sup-
port or Proposition 20, councilman Roy
Holm pointed out, the earlier Carpenter
bill support no longer is valid.
Coast Unit Eye d
By Councilmen
The Laguna Beach City Council has
been advised to g i v e careful con-
sideration to the value of continued
pRrticipation in the Orange County Coast
Association.
Councilman Roy Holm, who sa id he
had attended a number of the Associa·
lion's meetings, told lhe council he (ound
them "O'linimally -productive."
He .suggested the city save $30 Ip dues
by maintaining a membership for the
city only this year, instead of for the city
and each of the five councilmen as well,
and that activities of the AS80Ciation be
r losely observed in the coming fi scal
yea r to decide if continuing participation
is warranted.
Ae1·0 Strike Averted
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A strike W8S
nverted by acceptance of 1 27-cent hourly
"'age increase Sunday, retroactive to July
12, by machinists at the Solar Division of
lnt .... tlonal llMvester Co. The pay
under the old contract ranaed between
$4 .07 and $4.54 an hour.
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Saddlehaek Today's Fbud
EDIJIOH
• ' VOL. 65, NO. 269, 2 S6CTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOllNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBEll 25, 1972 TEN CENTS
Cyclists
"California, Alabama and South
Carolina are the only states which have
no plans governing coastal management
and planning. Every other state blessed
with this kioo o: precious natural
resource has taken some action to
preserve and en~e it," Sen. James R.
Mills (D-San Diego), told a crowd of
Lagunans Sunday as be bicycled into
town to boost Proposition 20, the
Coastline Protection Initiative on the
November ballot.
Mills and his fellow cyclists stopped at
Laguna's Main Beach for lunch as they
neared the end of their 500-mile "coastal
protection" bike ride from San Francisco
to San Diego.
They were greeted by Mayor Charlton
Boyd, Vice Mayor Roy Holm and con-
servationist William Wilcoxen, all,,....of
whom 'spoke in support of the Coastline
Initiative.
Alter the lunch otop, the cyclists pedol·
ed off to San Clemente to spend the night
Prop.
.
at the State Park in that city before pro-
ceeding to San Diego.
"You may not think there ls much
drama in the spectacle of a middle-aged,
balding legislator huffing and puffing his
way down the coast highway," Mills to1d
the crowd. "But you are not lookiog at it
from my perspective. There a r e
moments when I feel an acute sense of
drama -not to say alarm -as I try to
keep up with the rest of our party."
Stressing the seriousness of the tour,
CAILY PILOT Staff IJtlll9
PROPOSITION 20 BACKERS PA'USE IN FASHION ISLAND DURING LONG BIKE RIDE
Slale Sen. James Mills (Wit~ ~ullache)" Leads Group.of About 80 Toward San pi.,.
• I ' I I , (\I
Hoag Directors
Meet to Study
Center Closing
By L PETER KRIEG
Of fflt IHllY P'lllf Stiff
The men and women who run Hoag
Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach
were scheduled to meet behind closed
doors today to act on a recommendation
by the medical staff that the ~ital's
three-year-old Family Practice Center be
closed as of next June 30.
Under pressure from doctors to shut it
down and from the community to keep it
open, directors were to meet at 4 p.m. to
review scaled-down budgets prepared by
Dr. J. Blair Pace, program director, that
niay allow the program to be salvaged.
A. Vincent Jorgensen, president of the
hospital board, this morning again
declined to speculate on the outcome of
the meeting. He did promise a deci.slon,
however.
He said he does not yet know whether
efforts to find new sources of revenue
from the private sector of the community
to help defray the costs of the program
wiJ be successful or not.
They were dealt a blow Sunday,
however I when the man work.i.rtg on
search for funds , Hospital Treasurer
Charles J. Fishback, sufiered che:St pains
.., and was •'UShed to the hospital where be
is now in good condition.
Jorgensen said be does remain op-
timistic· about the future of the program.
"I support it. It want it continued. I
(See HOSPITAL, Page Z)
'John Doe' HebJ,
After Nude Pose . '
Shocks Resident
Orange County Sherill's officen 6fl4 I
bet/ildered Santa Ana Heights resident
J!bq<e 1 l v I a g room resembled · a
eoomopolltan gazlne layout !or a fe\ir
mlllltes· during the weekend h•ve pne
lhlng in common today., .
They just don't know tbe idebllfy of the
·nocturnal nude who did a Burl Reynolds
ict on t h e couch of the astonlshed
homeowner who found the lnlMlder ln his
living room in the early hours of Sunday.
Deputies who omsted the ungarbed In-
vader on burglary cllargr.i booked him
Jnto the county jail as John Dot; And
Oiat"s the name the s!I·foot , delendanl
loeJ by today In the menlal l)Ullh
division 11 Oranc• County· Midlcal
Center. lleplitle! who 'titre Cllltd to-BNtol
Street to IDJ1ke lb• amst are abD ·In·
vesligatlng a bceakln at abcJul, U.. lime
lime al H21 Bristol R*.
F¥m Seeks 2-week Delay
OnRezoningNear El Toro
Rinker Developmont Corporation has
asked Irvin< city councilmen to delay for
another two -weeks the 1flnal decision on
the firm's rezoning or 70 acres of land
near the U.S. Marine Corps Air Station at
El Toro.
Walter Frome, secretary-treasurer of
Harker Development Corporation - a
Rinker firm affiliate -wrote councilmen
asking for the delay.
Frome said he had an "out-of-town
commitment" which makes it impossible
to attend Tuesday's council session at
which the final decision on the zoning
was expected.
Mayor Willlam Fischbach today said
he would not oppose the continuance. It
will take a vote of the council to delay
the decision since the publlc hearing on
the residential zoning is closed, the
mayor noted.
Two weeks ago, after hearing more
than three hours of new testimony, coun-
cilmen voted to wait two weeks before
voting on the zoning.
Despite the closing of the bearing,
Frome asked and was granted, the op-
portunity to discuss the matter further as
councilmen weighed their positions prior
to voting.
UCI Session Under Way;
7,695 Student,s Expected
UC Irvine's Anteater stirred much like
an awakened hibernating bear today as
the first of an expected 7,695 students
returned to begin fall quarter 1tudies.
Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. ad·
dressed the opening session ol orientation
and registration week this morning in
Crawford Hall.
Lines begin to form at various Ioca--
tlons around campus as students signed
up fQr.cJasses which begin at 8 a.m. next
Monday.
Mesa Court dormitory parking lots
abandoned their vacant look as the 1.200
single 1tud<11ts lucky etl0"8h .to lease a
n>01J1 began moving in.
Married or graduote student! fortunate
eooogb to find room ln"the 350 Verono
Place student apartments -breathed.more
IUe !Dto the campus which hu been dor-
m1nt the past four weeks following the enll '<!I the llOC<in<I of two smnmer
Tt'Dew and retufning Mudent.11 •
caml'"" spokesman sold, will be checking
bOU8iDg office walling lillJ or prowling
Orqe Q>ast conununltles from Tutin
l<>.Lquna Btacll ln hopes of flndlag ,....
!al units.
Despite the addition 'of no new compus
lMn& ualt. tit cla-buildings, UCI
t. expecled to .moo nearl)' 800 more
otudenls Ibis yur lllln it did laot year,
·the spokeimail noted.
Signlllcant, changes In transpOrtatlon
links to the ..... "°-· ...... peeled to brooden ibe nrfety al Wl)'t oommuunc -ts>¢ I<> .JJCI. Studen!\...T ind stall now an! II· fonled ., llll'IY·bat·flnl<lnJ-the campus
to commmitlea between Santa Ana and
beadl c!ltliS.
Onnp CcxmlY Tmsit Di.strict -'
poss through the campus on Bridge Road
stopping near the medical school,
hlologlcol 1elences buildings, Crawford
Hall, Fine Arts Village and Mesa Court
dorms,
And, the new-city of Irvine has com-
pleted a 3.knile pilot bikeway system
linking UCI with University High School
and University Park.
The painted eight-foot wide trail nms
along the south side of campus Drive a
lane long popular with commuting
students who seek to avoid the on-cam-
pus parking fees.
Irvine police have been ticketing
vehicles· which park bl the bikeway to
keep them open for cyclists using the
new route to the campus and 1nrine
Town Center.
CA.R A.D CLICKS
ON FIRST CA.LL
The price wu rigltl and ao was the
buyer. It took juot one call to make the
sale afler tbls ad appeored In the DAIL V
PILO'I':
'65 Dataun wapi, new t~~:-:s,
batt. etc. orig, owner, 46,000
ml $46(), XXX•lCcoc.'
Yes, the llnt caner, boucbl the wagon.
-biO'ir...,, itJl<r .. porled they ..... hal'W-I,at .. Diab ;ou "*l>l>Y. too. w. can f1nd 1bd:yen, aePetl) renters, whatever ,.. .... looliolr ,,... Dial the
d1*t llne_to ltSO!!fl.. Piione 61Ut171,
DAILY PILOT CliAilied Mvtrtlomc
Dept.
20 at s. Coast Stops
Mills added, HA wide awareness that
there i.s a problem is almost a solution in
itself. This has been the pattern in other
states. Coastline controls have been im-
posed only after some demonstration by
the public that they want their beaches
unspoiled, lhat they want access to their
own beaches, and that they will no longer
tolerate unrestricted. haphazard develop-
ment of their coastline."
With two-thirds of CAlifornla'1 1,100.
mile coulline already privately owned.
and only 250 miles of what is left usable
as recreation beaches by 20 million
Calilorn.ian.s, "there is not much left to
preserve," said the senator.
Proposition 20, he· sai d, is not offered
as the ultim:?.te solution to the constline
crisis, but .:.s a method or gaining time to
develop plans for the coast.
It calls for the creation of a Coastal
7.one Commission and six regional com·
missions to plan the best use or the
coastline. The CQmmls.sions "'"ould be
made up half by representatives of local
governments and hat. by public memben
appointed by the Governor a n d
Le:-!islature.
The commission would be required to
submit a plan to the Legislature by 1975,
and in the 1neantime, no coastal develop.
ment could take place within 1,000 yarda
or the shoreline without a special permit.
"Opposition to CO{lstline protection ts
formidable, and the Legislature has been
(See CYCLIST, Page %)
Killer Slips Traps
·.Gunfire Crackles in County Hunt
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1M o.llY Plllt ltaff·
The monbunt for suspected pollce killer
Herman. L. Clouston, who bas literally
come and gone around two counties for
five d:'.ys, continued today with an appeal
for bjs: guaranteed-safety surrender.
So far, the man sought in connection
with the shooting death of Buena Park
Pollce ·Detective Darrel D. "Bud" Cate
Jast Thursday has managed to escape
several potential police traps.
Gtmfire has erupted each time, the last
one involving a burst of 20 shots which
peppered a fleeing car carrying a scared
car salesman mistaken for Clouston.
He tried to speed away to avoid exacUy
C1c gunfire resulting -as he fled with
two terrified girls in the car -which he
feared would come afler Clouston was
reported at the car lot.
Somehow the terrified trio escaped
without injury.
Buena .Park l'oll<:e Chlel Dudley D.
G!Airi., loda1 --I<> Claustoa, an ••....,vie$ who clBJms he won't be taken.
a11Ye. w•lllrnnder 1l1tb .............. es<ort.•
He ~ It be done la company
with a new.spa.per reporter, a minlster, a
priest, or aomeone aa a third party.
"I urge him to surrender before other
lanocent people are needlessly hurt, in-
jured or kiUed," Chief Gourley declared.
'lbe hunt which hU ranged from the
Buena Park·Anahei.m area up to .south
L:>s Angeles ColUlty twice now has in·
voJved shooting illcldcnts on four oc-
casions.
"We have had several near-tragedies,"
Chief Gourley said Sunday.
"We want to avoid any more of these
situations," he continued.
"He may ~ he cannot give himself "l' safely becaust he killed a police of·
New Sadd"leback
District Office
In Model Home
A Mission Viejo model home complex,
already doubling as a primary school,
has assumed a third function: the first
office of the new Saddleback Valley
Unified School District.
Saddleback Superintendent William
Zogg last week moved into an office at
the El Dorado model homes, 24618
Chrisonla Drive, Mloslon Viejo,
He ls oharlng the sales home wltb the
main offlco and one claosroom ol the El
Dorado Primary School, which ts housing
150 first through third-graders for a year.
Zogg, who is still without an official
secretary, ls also platming a ye~'s stay
in the El Dorado site. A permanent
office for the new school district has not
been detennined.
'The Saddleback Valley School District
office pbooe number ia 586-1234.
Irvine Boy Held
On Drug Charge
A )'OUth from Irvine WU arrested
Satunlay· durtilg a conlrontaUon in Rac-
quet Club Park by • policeman U!lgned
to Investigate' reports of narcoUco deal·
ing at that location.
Officer Bill Bechtel said the 17-year-old
suspect was arrested on suspicion of
J>O""sslon ol marijuana following a
.. arch which reportedly produced three
marijuana cigarettes.
lnv..ilgaton added that the boy told
them he M1l been worklni •ml staying
with friends ln Ontario titer being
ordered I<> leave his family home in
Irvine.
The aearch for pooolble wtapon1 after
he wu lnlUally detained for appea"ing
under the 1nn.-. of an lntoxlcont was
conducted wltb his father preoent, Of•
lli:er Bechtel Aid.
fleer," Chief Gourley added, presuming
Clouston is indeed the slayer of Detective
Cele, who left five children.
Clouston has escaped a narrowing
police dragnet several times, the most
reeent case being one in which he fled on
foot via a flood control channel after an
--.exchange of shots.
He had been recognized from news
photos, according to investigators, when
he allegedly tried lo trade his .22 caliber
pistol for a used car at an agency.
The frightened salesman talked the
suspect into going out for a cup of coffee
while he considered the deal and caUed
SCHOOL DAY EXTENDED
A11i1t•nt Principil Ames
New Saddlehack
Board Will Be
Handed Problem
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of !ht Oa!IY P'Uot ll•ll
One or the problems trustees and ad4
ministrators of the new Saddleback
· Valley Unified School District wlll lnherit
in July, 1973 is the nine-period day at
overcrowded Mission Viejo High School.
Meanwhile, students and teachen at
the high school are making do with the
new system and meeting problems as
they come, according to one ad.
ministrator.
Only one other high school on the
Orange Coast -Fountain Valley High -
is running on lhe extended day.
About 2,900 students attend Mission
Viejo High School. Its copadty ls listed
at 2,500.
Tustin Union High School District of·
llclah adopted the 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
day for this year as an alternative to
double sessions. Last year, school days ran to about 2,30 p.m.
How long lt will continue ls W>Cerlain,
Mission Viejo 88Sistant principal Don
Ames said. A Jot depends on what Sad·
dleback trustees do when they take over
OP<'ratlon ol the ochool In 11!73.
Teachers criticized the plan before its
adoption because it calls for almost all
2,900 students to be on campus at mid-
day.
Under the new schedule, about one-
thlrd of the students begin at 7:30 1.m .
and are out by 1,40 p.m., lf they cal'1'}'
the nonna1 load of six classes.
A second group, also about one-third of
the students, begins school al 8:25 a.m.
They get out around 3 p.m.
Ames said all school alhletei, drill
team members, drama and mu.sic
•lud"11s are scheduled at that Ume to
allow for practice before ochool slarts.
The final third of students come at t :IO
(See t PERIOD8, Pa1e I)
,}
police after the man identlfied as
Clouston left,
And when officers arrived, the car
salesman tried to get away himself to
avoid the confrontation, but wu mls:taken
for the suspect due to hi! actions.
OlrrenUy, more than 200 officert
• oper::.ting from two command postJ in
Orange and Los Angeles counties art: in-
volve · in the search for Clouston.
I:e is rer'lorterllv the man who fled over
a fence after Detective Cate was killed
by two bullets during an attempt lo er.
rest a su~ -presumably Clouston -
on a sex crime charge.
Drive to Speed
Corona del Mar
Freeway St,alls
Efforts to speed up construction of the
Conloa del Mar Freew;y have -fem.
porartly ltalltd 111 tho Slate llllhn1
Commission, Costa Mesa Mllyor Jact
J{ammett said today.
The deloy lnvolv.. the ohort Hnt
between the San Diego Freeway and the
Newport Freeway interchange, a Wlit
which C.osta Mesa city officials have
been pushing as a means to reduce
surface traffic on the city's northwest
1iC:c.
The commission is expected to take
final action on the proposal in Sacra-
mento Oct. J.
Hammett said he and other Costa
Mesa leaden will attend the Sacramento
session to persuade commissioners that
the 1975-76 construction timetable should
be advanced. It is believed JocaUy that
construction could begin as early as 1973-
74,
CUrrent state plaM place priority oo
the other segment of the Corona del Mar
Freeway which is scheduled to connect
the Newport Freeway with MacArthur
Boulevard in Corono del Mar.
Costa Mesa officials are attempting W
reverse the construction sequence to pro-
vide traffic relief in an area they believe
the need is urgent.
Traffic on Bristol Street, Mayor Ham-
mett pointed out earlier, has increased 68
percent over the 1967 figure. Accidentl
on the northwest side of Costa Mesa have
bee;; up nearly 300 percent over the same
period.
Troop Strength Cut
SAIGON (AP) -U.S. troop strenglh
In Vic~"'f\m rlropped by 400 to 36,100 last
week. the U.S. C.Ommand announctd to-
day. The Armv cut its forct by 200 men
and the Air Force by 300, but Marine
stren ... th increa!ed by JOO, according to
off;,,1.,1 fi"Ures as of Thursday.
Orange Cout
Weather
Sunny skies through Wednesday.
with hlgha ln the 71lo, both Inland
and along the beaches. Lows i...
night around ~, according to the
Wentherlady.
INSmE TODAY
A lone gunman jired an the
Foothill DtWion police ttation
early &hi.t morning with avch in-
tensity th.at policemen tnsid.t
thought they wert 101dtr a&tack:
by a gang of mtn armed with
machine guru. See .stor., on.
Pag• 5.
L.M. hYf t ... !Int ,,
C:111fontla ' •
(Mlltll... ,,.14 c:""'" 11 (,......,.. lt
O.al'fl Ntllfft. J
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•
• )
.,
Z OAJLY PILO! IS
I ce Crea1n Shop Hit
Sacrament o J et
Crash Kills 22
SACRAM ENTO (UPI) -A vintage JCl
1ghter laking orf at an air show sn\ashed
rnto a packed shopping center ice crea1n
parlor here, killing 22 pe rsons, many or
them younpters attending a Llttle
League footbaJ I celebration.
Another 16 persons were Injured Sun·
day ~·hen tne privately-owned F86 Sabre-
jet barrelled across a highway. struck
three vehicles and bounced in a "ball ()f
fire" into Farrell's Ice Cream Parlor.
"I'm sorry ... I'm sorry. Get the peo-
ple out," groaned Richard Bing.ham, 36,
or Richmond, Calif., pilot of the plane.
He was pulled from the wreckage while
?00 screaming children and ad ults fought
10 escape names that turned the Gay-90s
style shop Into an inferno.
Bingham escaped with some broken
bone.s and a cut face.
In Washington, the N a t Io n a I
Transpartation Safety Board said the
crash was the worst In U.S. history in
tenns of ground deaths.
He said the next worst occu red in
Flagler, Colo., on Sept . 15, 1951, when Ole
pilot of an experimental plane crashed
Y:hile attempting a roll. Nineteen were
killed and IO seriously injured.
Sacramento County Corone r George L.
Nielsen said 12 of the victims were
youngsters, five boys and seven girls.
Five women and five men were also kill-
ed.
He said at least two complete families
were among the dead.
The N>M" of the Kortan conflict-era
plane, one or America's first filbter jets
being d!Jplayed across the street at
Sacramento's Executive Airport, smash-
ed into the parlor's Howard Hughes
Room .
A party wu being held In the room for
-20 youngsters from the Sacramento 49ers
Llttle League football team.
Don McCluskey, an employe, was fill-
ing aal t shakers in the room when the
plane hit.
"After I picked myselr up, I grabbed
five kids and broke a window and got
them out," he said. "But by then, the
smoke and flames were too intense and J
couldn't get back in."
. Linda Fourby, 17, Sacramento, was ta
a car which the plalle missed by 100 feet.
* * * Coroner Issues
List of Dead
In P"lane Crash
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The following
is a list of the 22 persons killed ln the
crash or a Kortan conflict-vintage jet
fighter Sunday. released todey by
Sacramento County coroner George
Nielsen.
t, 2. 3. 4. Walter Warren Krier, 8700
1'-1el"ribrook: Dr., Sacramento, his wi fe,
Sandra Ann. 28, their daughter Jennifer
A .. 8, and son, Brandon, 2.
., 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. Tony R. Martin, 29, 7329
Idlewild St., Sacramento, bis wife, Susan.
and their children, Greg, Jeanene, and
Sean.
10. Jeff l'l;lsh, 5, 3361 51th St.,
Sacramen to.
J I. Gary Nash, 2, same address.
12, 13. Louis J . Ju gum, 43, 5«0 Shelley
Way, Carmichael, and his daughter,
Elaine.
14., 15. Gene LaVine, 44 Manley Ct.,
Sacramento. and his wile, Margaret, 46.
. 16, 17. Leon C. Warram, 49, 5638 San
Vicente Way, North Highland, and his
wife, Ellen R .. 50.
18. Sall y Keys, 14, 1701 LaDino Rd .,
SacramenLO.
119. Nancy Keys, II, same address.
20. Nancy Rodriques, 8, 8727 F'allbrook
\Yay, Sacramenlo .
.!21. Kristin 0 . Francis, 4, 9003 i'\orU1
Eldorado. Stockton.
·22. Joa n Bacci, 46. 739 Los Fclis \\'ny ,
S1ocklon.
I
OlAN•I COAST rs
DAILY PILOT
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Sht sa.id she ran toward the S<:reamlng
and breaking glass" at Farrell's.
•·People were saying 'g£1t me out. gel
me out 1 Where's my kids?· Everybody
was trying to help everybody."
Chairs were used to break windoY:! and
people poured from the doorways.
o~ girl, Ch ristie Kiehn, 12, Slockton.
~aid she helJ)f!d a friend get ou t safely and
tried to return but couldn 't.
"I climbed oVer all sorts of stuff,
maybt somt ot it WllS boches ," said lhe
girl. whose mother, Joan Bacci, 29, was
among !hose killed.
One JG-year-old boy, Sieve Ma rtin.
Sacramento, was later found safely
crouched under a table in the party
room.
The plane, owned by Spectrum Air
Services, which belongs to millionaire
cosmetics manufacturer William Penn
Patrick, bit one car on a highway and
two in a parking lot and dragged them
into the parlor.
Roger Lindberg. a newscaster for
Sacramento stalion KXTV, said he
witnessed the crash when he v•as leaving
the air show.
"There was a power failure." he said .
··The pilot dro pped back to the runway .
bit his brakes . then flipped up like a
catapUit onto Freepo rt Boulevard where
the pla ne exploded into a ball of fire and
cartwheeled into Farrell's."
* * * Girl, 12, Hea rd
Cra sh-Believe d
It Was Gimmick
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Twelve-year.
old Christie Kiehn and her ramily were
digging into an exotic, mounlainous ice
cream treat called a "Zoo" when
"something crashed right behind us and
people began screaming.
·•1 thought it was just another gim·
mick," Christie said, referring to the fan-
fare and frills that accompany the nl any
swnptuous dishes served at Farrell's Ice
Cream Parlor, nicknamed "The Happy
Place."
Instead, it wu a jet fighter which
slammed into the parlor, turning it into
an 1nlemo and killing 22 per.ions.
"The wood poles started breaking and
everything started floating all over the
place," Cbri!Ue said. 0'All the tables
went oo everybody. 'The whole place
came Jn."
She grabbed Kerri Francis, a 3-year·
old youngst<r traveling with the famlly,
and crawled through the burning rubble
to safety. She tried to return for KerrPs
twin, Kristi, but couldn't.
"1 climbed over all sorts or stuff,
maybe some of It was bodles," the girl
said.
It was a cloudless Sunday afternoon
and many famili es had gone to the ice
cream parlor for birthday celebrations.
The Sacramento 49ers, a Littl e Lea gue
football team , was having a party at the
time.
For Christie the mishap was a family
tragedy.
Her mother, Joan, 291 was killed , along
with the second twin.
Her stepfather, Rubin Bacci, ·37, of
Stockton, and the rest of the family -
three boys and a girl -were either
hospitalized or given emergen cy treat-
ment for their injuries and released.
Water Dis trict
Sponsors Clinic
0 11 Waste Outfa ll
The Los Alisos Waler District will
sponsor a fact-finding clinic Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at the Lake Forest Community
Association Clubhouse on the proposed
co nstruction or new \\'aste outfalls and
their impact on the environment.
The clubhouse is at 22921 Ridge Route
Drive. El Toro .
The projects, a new phase of an e:i1:-
istJng water rec lamation plant, wou ld be
constructed under the Aliso Water
Management Agency.
Exact cosl and location of the projects
have not been disclosed yet by E. T.
Tv1cFadden. general manager or the Los
Alisos \Valer District.
All Saddleback area residents arc in-
\'itt.d to get more infonnation at
Tuesday's 1.!linic.
A forma l public hearing on proposals
will be he.Id by !he Aliso Water Manage-
ment District Oct . 11, al a time and place
yet to be announced.
Crui ser Burns
Off Catalina
AVALON (AP) -Fin' deSlmyed a 42·
root cabin cruiser In Emerald Bay off
Santa Catalina Island early Sunday but
1wo persons escaped unhurt In a rubber
Clinghy, offic-iA IS Aaid.
The "Aqunr\us" burned to t h t
.,.,.,.,terllnc and washed up on a beach on
the weiit end of the Island, s11\d a
spa kesman for the island Cove and Cam p
A~ncy which administers the area.
· l lle vessel was owned by l..arry C.
Lingensolttr of Win ton, the Coast Guard
s.1id
•
DAILY 1"11.0T Sl9ft ..,_.
IRVI NE SCHOOLS AIDE
.M<:ret1ry Pim Connelly
I rv ine Unified
Scliool District
In New Office
The Irvine Unified School District now
has a desk, telephone, filing cabinet and
part·time secretary, all or which today
settled down to busine!S in Irvine City
11atl.
Irvine city council last week approved
the use of city hall space for the new
:school district, with one stipulation: it
musl pay its own phone bill.
Secretary Pam Connelly has been
working for the school district since Sept.
9, taking notes at meetings and gett ing
out agendas.
Miss Connelly, who worked for the
Orange County Department of Education
in attendance accounting for four years,
quit that job Sept. 5. She's going back to
school mornings a ! , approprlate.ly
enough, an elementary education major.
But she was enl isted four days later as
lrvine's first employe and until today
carried out her 1 to 5 p.m. duties, in the
county education office in Sant.a Ana.
She still attends elasse:s at Santa Ana
College. Any school district business can
be directed to her afternoons at the
regular ci ty hall phone number.
Solon Pushing
Burial of Man
Dead 61 Years
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Stale Alty.
Gen. Robert Morgan says his department
will do everything legally possible to see
that the mummified body of an Italian-
American carnival worker, which untU
recently had bttn on public view at a
funeral home fOf' 61 years, "receives a
decent burial at the earliest possib1e
date."
Rep. Mario Biaggi of New York and
other Italian-American! have prolested
the displa y and the nickname "Spaghet-
ti" given locally to the corpse of Forenzlo
Concippio.
Concippio died when bis carnival pass·
ed through Laurinburg early in the cen-
tury. His preserved body had been on
view at the McDougald Funeral Home,
which said it never could make ar-
rangements with his Jam.Hy for fu neral
and burial expenses.
The body was removed from public
view last month after newspaper ac-
counts and the Biaggi protest.
Tom Earnhardl, an associate in
"1organ's office, said, "We think there
are provisions in English common law
that necessitate the burial or a body." He
added that in lhe absence of statuto ry
law, English common law applied in
North Carolina.
F rom Pagel
HOSPITAL ...
believe in it. It"s a good program,''
Jorgensen said.
"We're going to go ove r the budget
again and see if we can make a redu~
program work." he said.
An aide to Pace said this morning that
the revised budget trims lhe program lo
12 doctor!. There are now 13.
But Dr. Taylor Jepson, one of the
residents obtain ing his general practice
training In the program. said that under
the revised program the doctors would
have exp!lilded duties and would serve
not just at Hoag but wou ld rotate through
olhcr hospitals and various physicians'
offices.
The protest against the medical start
vote continued to fl ood the hospita l 10-
d;iy.
Hospital administrator Lou Kaa said
there were more than ISO lelters from
residents throughout soul.hem Orana:e
County on hl5 desk this mo mllli.
Mo.st of lhem were !onn letters
clroulai.d by the ruidentl through their
patlent.s.
About 1.200 pef80na a mon th art
treai.d by the doctors Jn the resldeney
training program.
The residents have al.90 hired Santa
Ana attorney Barry Michaelson who lhis
m~tining said he is preparing a Jell.er for
the dbctors to sign requesting that the
directors do act deflnlUvely today.
"I{ they're going to IUJlain the vote
they· (lhP. doctors) have all got to make
arrangements as aoon u poulble to get
into other programa," Michaelson sald.
He ailo said he la ltylnc lo lalk with
officials or the Untvenlty ol C.Womla
Irvine medical school tq enlist their 1up-
pon in cooUnuauon of the: program.
\
i\'lpe l Ban·k H eist ,,,..,,..-Pflfle J
CYCLIST .. ·
Tustin Man Set unable to overcome Jt," MUJs aid. •·An
unusual alliance or both bii bu.Jineu and
....,...11 ol orpn1'ed labor oppoood
CMltlJne pnitectioo Jllitlatloo thll yeor.
The oil interests are afral dof loslng prof·
its, and some of our largest unions are
afraid or losing construction jobs. As Case Witness
"ll we can ltarn anythisig from lhe
JtgislaUve defeat of coastline protection,
it is that the opp:>nents oI Pr~lUon 20
are wealthy, well organu:ed A n d
powerful. We can upect ~ very slick,
proressional campaign agains t lhls ap-
proach to coaslline protection in the
weeka ahead."
By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL
Of IJ\1 Dlllf l"IMf Sl•lf
An eight-member gang that burglarir
ed the Laguna Niguel branch of United
Ca!Uornia Bank took $5 million in cash,
jewelry and securities, an Ohio man in·
dieted in the case allegedJy confided to a
friend .
The statement assertedly was made by
Charle.11 Albert Mulligan, 38, of Youngs-
town, Ohio to Earl Dawson of Tustin.
P..1ulligan, authorities asserted. told
Dawson that eight men broke into the
bank's vault in March and collected $5
million in loot. The gang then sold the
securities for IS percent of their face
value and kept the cash a n d jewels,
Mulligan reportedly told Dawson.
The statements, which defense at-
torneys tor Mulligan have attempted to
bar from co urt, will be admitted when
the trial opens Tuesday, U.S. District
Court Judge Matt Byrne ruled Friday.
Mull igan, along with Amil Dinsio, 36, of
Beardman, Ohio and Philip Christopher,
29, of Cleveland face charges of bank
burglary. conspiracy and bank larceny.
Two brothers, Ronald and Harry Barber,
have been in dicted but remain at large.
Judge Byrne also denied a motion by
attorney Ant hony Glassman, represent-
ing Christopher, to suppress as evi·
dence $30,000 in cash seized by FBI
agents at the time of Christopher's ar·
rest. Two SS bills, authoilies say, can be
traced lo the Laguna Niguel bank.
Byrne also denied a motion by
Mulligan's attorneys to exclude from
court cutting torches and other evidence
seized from the trunk of a getaway car,
allegedly discovered in Dawson's garage.
Mulli&"an was arrested June 2 in Tustin,
apparently on his way to Daw.son's to
pick up the c-ar.
Volle yball Play
Set for October
Three City of Irvine adult volleyball
leagues for men and women are being
formed with league play set to begin the
week of Oct. 9.
Men's and women's teams of 10 each
and mi:s:ed teams of 12 may join the city
league with payment of a $15 entry fee.
city human enhancement director Paul
Brad y said.
Adult s interested in joining teams
s~uld contact their community associa-
tion. Teams fro m the homeowners'
groups will compete in the city le,ague
play.
Team rosters are du e to be filed with
the city recreation department by Fri-
day. Brady said.
Byrne was exoect.ed to rule this .. af.
ternron on whether a l21l bill found in
Dlnsio's Nlnie mny be accept~ as
ev idence in tJ-n tri'l l. The bill 'vas found,
1111thn .. 1i:,.11 said, In the purse of Mrs.
Mary Mulligan. the moUler of Charles
i\1uWgan and mothe r-in-law of Dinsio.
1 he money has been traced to the
Laguna Niguel bank.
In a separate ruling Friday, Byrne said
Christopher. Dinsio and Mulligan shall
stand trial together. denying defense m~
lions to separate the trial or the three
men.
"l 'm r1e11sed wlr.., the rulings, so far,"
U.S. Attorney Jack Walters said this
morning. "Otherwise, J have no comment
on p ... c11se." 1
Jury selection is scheduled for 9:30
a. m. Tuesday, with opening st<!tements
and motions to be made on Wednesday,
Walters said. The £rial is ei:pected to run
two to three weeks.
Ecolo gy Group
To Hold Meeting
At Airporter Inn
The second meeting of ecology-minded
groups con templating formation of an en-
vironmental coalition will be beld at 7:30
p.m. 1'1esday at the Alrporter Inn by the
Oran&• County Jrport.
Reports on organization and goal> from
two commlttees set up at the last
meetinl will be presented for con-
sideratfon by i4epresentaUves of variouS
environmental bi-ganlzatioos.
The Goals tommittee will issue a
statement on the proposed targets for ac-
tion ly lhe coalition, as well as methods
of implementing the goals and priorities
for action.
The Organization Committee will
present a framewo rk for the banding
together of the groups.
Among priorities set by the Goals
Committee are passage of PropositJon 20,
a moratorium on the Laguna Greenbelt
area, the South Laguna Development
moratorium, and the La Canada develop-
ment.
Aero Strike Averted
Referring to coastline pr~ t e C" t 1 on
legislation in other states, Mills took an
indirect swipe at Governor Reagan. In
these states, he said , "There \Ya.s ~no~r
form of pressure that is m1ss1ng m
California -strong leadership by lhe
governor."
Delaware which bas one of the
strongest ~stline protection laws in the
nation, said Mills, "also has a courageous
Republican Governor, Russell Peterson.
who atood up to opp!).'ltion not only from
the 11pecial interests but from secretary
of Commerce Maurice Stans and the NII·
on Administration to get its law enact-
ed." . The California coast line, he said, now
falls under the overlapping jurisdiction or
15 county governments, 46 c i t Y
governments and dozens of special
district boards . . . even assuming all
these local governments have ll<_lthing but
the beSt interests of their c1tizem at
heart, it is unrealistic indeed to believe
that all of them can agree on a uniform
coastline plan or even what the best use
of the coastline is."
· Urging a Yes vote on Proposition 20, be
asked bis listeners to remember "the one
critical fact -that there are only 250
miles of public beaches left -for 20
million of us."
FromP .. el
9 PERIODS. • •
a.m. and 10:30 a.m. and attend cluses
until 3:44 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.
There are only seven classes held until
4:30 p.m., said Ames.
The main problem so tar is the extra
supervision needed wit h students coming
at different times.
Ames believes problem! of the crowd-
ed conditions and split 9Cbedullng an
offset by the system's benefit to
student!:.
"The m a i n advantage of t b e nine-
period day," Ames said, "Is the student
gets six 50-minute periods, almost a
nonnal day."
Under double sessions, he added. class
SAN DIEGO {AP) - A strike wai. time would have to be cut and students
averted by acceptance of a 27-cent hourly wouldn't be able to take as many elec-
wage increue Sunda~retroactive ao Jul,r' ~.Ji.Tes.
It; by mad\tnisl.t at lbe SOiar Dlvillon at · Tbe larger student body, although hav-
International Harvester Co. ~. PllJ ing adverse errects ln som e areas, also
under the old contraCt ranged ~· allowed an increase in the electives of·
$4.07 and $4.54 an hour. fered, he. said.
ALL
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Huntington: Beaeh
TodaY'• Fl.al
N.Y. Steeks
' F ountain Valley
VOL 65, NO. 269, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN1:4 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1972 TEN CENTS
Huntington Trustees Plan New Crack at Bond
By JOHN ZALLER
Of .. 0.lly t'lllt '''"
The Huntington Beach Union lllgb
School District board will try to pull !be
pieces together Tuesday when it meets
for the first time since la.st week's elec-
tion de.feat of a $15 million bond WI.le.
The board la expected to COMlder:
-How IOOD and aft.er how much study
tt should return to the people wilb a new
bond proposal.
-Whether the bond measure should
Gum Bark
In Search
For Killer
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of flM DlllY Pim Stiff
The manhunt for suspected police ltiller
Herman L. Clouston, who bas litera1ly
come and gone around two coUnties for
five d_ys, continued today wiui an appeal
fl,. his guaranteed-safety surrender.
So far, the man sought in connection
with the shooting death of Buena Park
Police Detective Darrel D. "Bud" Cate
last Thursday has managed to escape
aeveral potent(a) Police traps.
Gunfire has erupted each time, the last
one involving a burst of 20 shots which
peppered a fleeing car carrying a scared
car salesman mistaken for Clouston.
He tried to speed away to avoid exactly
Cl" gwilire resultiog -as be fied with
two terrified girls in !be car -which be
feared would come all<r Clouston was
reported at !be car loL
Somehow Ibo terrified trio escaped
without Injury.
Buena Parlt Police CUtl Dudley D.
Gourley today oppeaied to Clouatoo, ao
u<Ollvid who cliilms be ....,, be taken
alive, to aurmidet with oomeone u Ill
tJa>rt.
He 111ggeated it be done In compallJ
with a newspaper reporter, a minister, a
priest, or eomeone aa a third party.
"I urge him le> surrender before other
tnnocent people are needlesaly hurt, in-
jured or killed," Chief Gourley declared.
The bunt which has ranged from the
Buena Park·Anabeim area up to south
Los Angeles Cowity twice now has m.
volved shooting incidents on four oc-
casions. ., "We have had several near-tragedies,
Cllel Gourley said Sunday.
''We want to avoid any more of these
attuaticns,'' he continued.
••He may lhlnk be cannot give blmull
up safely becaille be ltilled a police of.
!leer," Chief Gourley added, presuming
Clouston is indeed the slayer of Detective
Cate, who left live children.
Clouston ha.I escaped a narrowing
police dragnet several thnes, the most
(See SUSPECI', Page Z)
contain !Unds to build one blP IChoel, u
the most recent one did. or two.
-Whether, in light ol the lour con-
secuttve bond 1asues that hive been
defeated, oome other alternative ml&ht
be better.
TbeJe alternatives mlgbt Include an at-
tempt to change Ibo law requlrlng a two-
thirds voter approval (last week's bond
did get 52 percent), or a decision to use
nlgbt classes, all.year school>, and ex·
tended. day scheduling as an alternate to
BHmpBumpl'
The Goodyear blimp actually
i.s '700 feet away from San
Francisco's Transamerica Pyra·
mid, although this photo by
San ·Francisco Chronicle ph<r
tographer Art Frisch makes it
look as if moored to the build-
ing.
County Officia"h StUdy
Forming Single Council
A general assembly ol Orange County
city councilmen and superv\lon has been
called for Oct . SO in ea.ta Mesa to
fUrther the formation of • propoeed in-
tergovernmental council (ltlG).
The proposed organlr.atkln w on
unanimous endorsement of the county'•
mayors and supervtson Saturday at a
Harbor Dislricl oUices meeUna In
Newport Beoch.
Under the propoood joint powers agree-
111t11t approved tn principle Saturday,
JCG will be. a voluntary agency to deal
with local government proble1113 that cut
across poUtical bollndarl••·
Before JOO becomes a legal organiza·
lion, at least 14 ol. the COWJty's 28 cities
CA R A.D CLICKS
ON-FIRST CA.LL
Tbe price wu right ond '° was the
buyer. II toot jull "'" call 10 llllR Ibo sale oiler lhlJ od·appeared In ... DAILY
P!LOT: .
'6'5 Ott.sun wqon. new Urcs.
batt. etc. oril. owmr, 46,CO>
ml $460. XXX·UXX..
Yes, the lint taller bought tho wagon.
Both buyer and llOller reported they were
happy. Let 111 make fO\I haPPf, !<JO. We
can find ~rt, oellers, r e n t e r .I.
whatever )'O\l're looldn( for. Dial ti.
dlrecl line to resulla. Phone fO.Wlt,
DAILY PIWI' Claalfled Ad9'ftlalnc
Dept.
and .tile Board ol Supervlaors mun vote
their approval. Wha tever combination o[
cities voluntarily decided to :loin their
total populati111 and lhal of Ibo unln-
corpor'attd area must reach more than
ball of Orange County's total.
The decision to join will be made by
e9ch city council sometime alter the Oct.
JO general assembly which baa been ten-
taUvely eel for 7:30 p.m. In the Coota
M ... City Clouncil .chambers.
Membmhip w<iuld be limited to
elected represent.otiVes from the ciUes
and the' Board of SUpervlaors. Each of
them would have a single vote on JCG '1 '°"""""'' board. · To finance the pro~ new orpnlu.-
tion e9ch oily and the county and the
county would pay dues based on both
U8eSHCl1 valuation and popuJatloo.. '
Under the pn>pooed agreement ICG
woWd...-be empowered to • n t e r
agreements. Incur del>ia , own properly
and applJ' for ledenl and state l"&nta.
~ lnt.......,.,,,..tal counctl ....
been d1acusoed for 10Venil y .. ra and wu
pr"*"'! 11 moatht b)' Ibo lormatkil of
SAM!Xl, ---111penlaon and ~1"!1 ?>Ul1cil I f Sabirdly'a meetfntl found II c ty o -
!lcioll and three eounty 1Upervtoors
agreelnc. on Ille generel organhatlon of
the propboed ll'OUP with detalla left to
later lMttinp. Rober! Tbomn, -1Y admlnlllratlve
ol.flcer, told thole prelent of pttlaU1 ..,.
eOuntend In the llnl yes ol a 1lmllar
couni:Jl 1n v-. Olunty.
'"""' -a tmden<y, 'lllomu 11\d,
• .J)lltlclP.llln ....,ie. to dump all
lhelr ... Jll'Ol""'M • !ht COlll<ll.
--.. 'lbere'll be dozens ol cilium lined up
lelllng UI just Whal ft did -Ibo last lime," said Dennis Mau&ers, president of
trmtees, lhlJ morning.
0 We'll lilten. to all of them, receive the
Input of our staff, and I thlnt that by Ibo
end of Ibo meeting, .we'll be proceedb!(
forward with IODle new ldeu."
Mangers and Trustees Jolin Bentley
and Ralph Bauer all aay they favor
returning to the people with a new bond
1aue u .000 u pofisi ble.
1hutee George Logan, however, sa)'1
that mcb a move would be "both ar·
"'!!anl and ftuJUess."
'We've gone to !be people and while I
penonally thlnt a new high school needs
to be built, the electorate does noL It
would be both arrogant and lrultiess to
return to tbem again at tbls time with a
..... proi>osal.
"We need to analyu why the la st
measure failed and proceed from there,"
Logan said.
One of the elements In this anaJysis
must be conskieratlon of the position o[
the Fountain Valley elementary district,
high school officials admit. Last week
Fountain Valley trustees said they
thought no bond issue would ever pass in
the high school district, and tha t Foun-
tain Va1ley's best course of action for
building a new high school v.·ould be to
withdraw from the district.
All four high school trustees available
for comment this morning Indicated
"sympalhy" with this position , but 11ld
they did not think it wouJd be
economically feasible.
"I would not su pport the unilateral
secession from the union high school
district by any elementary board unl it we
are in a posltlon lo unify all of the
elementary districts." said Mangers.
If Fountain Valley maintained this
wit hdrawal position. however, It might
(S.. DISASTER, Page %)
Newport Mulls Lawsuit?
Edison Expa-nsion OK'd Witho ut Ecolog y Study
Newport &ach Councilman Paul
Ryckolf wants bis city to sue Orange
County because the· county's Air Pollu-
tion Control District approved !be ex-
Pl!lllion of Ibo Southern Calllornla EdllOll
plant in Huntington Beach . without ob-
taining an evironinental impact state-
ment.
Freshman Councilman R)'CkoU said
atate law requires sucll LStatenwit.
Newport Beach Mayor Donald A.
Mclnnla has already written both the
county and the city of Huntington Beach
strongly urging that Ibey obtain the r ..
quired report.
RyctoU said be will ask City Attorney
Dennis O'Neil il i~is legal for Newport
Beach to get invo1ved.
He said be will also propose at th1a
afternoon'• coo.ncl,lmanlC study aession
that Newport Beach sue Huntington
Beach il that city larues a building
penntt without requlrlng I b e en-
vironmental impact study.
The utility obtained.the APCD approval
la.st week but has not yet applied for any
permits fro m Huntington Beach for the
$250 million addition.
However, Huntlnglon Beach Coun-
cilman Henry Duke has cautiously warn.
ed that an aspects of the plant's effects
on the local environment must be ltudied
"beCause it involves more than just the
air."
Ryckoff said It ls the air that concerns
him most.
He said the plant already violatf'.S
pollution standards and the proposed ex-
pansion would double the present output
of ox ides of n I t r o g en in to the ll·
mosphere.
He accused the Edison Company of
''twisting the law" in Jts current pro-
posal.
.He old that the company wants 10
build 12 fossil fuel burners tha t would
each barely meet the slate standard of
1.67 tons per day of nitrous oxide
emir-:ions.
"They requested three years ago to
build two additional units," Ryckoff said.
(See EDISON, Page %)
Security Unit
Okays Travel
Ban ProP°.sal
'Just Call Me
David, Folks'
HONOLULU (AP) -Kekoa
Keapu, a candidate for mayor here,
might have problems getting voters
Hoag Directors Set Secret
Mee.ting on Family Center
-•!: ..
WMHJNGTON (AP) - A bill lo
outlaw IDDlhorlJed tripo by AmertClllll
lo natlool mcli u North Vietnam wblcb
are In armed eonlllcl with Ibo United
Slates ,... approved today by lbe House
Internal Security Commltt.e.
The leglalatkm, making it a felony
punlabable by up to 10 Ye&'J In prison
and a $10,000 fine for Americam to make
such a trtp without pretidential
permiaslm, wu approved 5 to O alter a
45-minute bearing.
Rep. Richan! H. !chord (D-Mo. ), corn-
mitt.. cbalnnan, said the legtslation la
aimed at actions such as those of actres.!
Jane Fonda who ttcentty made arltlwar
bn>adcut.s over Hanoi radio dmn, a
visit to North Vietnam.
'Ibere WBI no Oppos.iUon to the bW dur ..
Ing Ibo hearing on leglalaton which
lchord introduced last week. Joining
Icbord in the vote approving the bill were
Reps. Claude Pepper ( D • F I a . ) ,
Rlchardaon Preyer (J).N.C.), Mendel J.
Davis (D-S .C.), and Roger IL Zion (R-
ind.).
After the vote, committee aources said,
Rep. Robert F. Drlnan ()).Mass.). com-
plained be was blocl:ed from acting cm
the bill because the committee moved
awiltly In making ila decision.
But, Ibo sources added, lcbord told
Drtnan there wu more than usual notice
given concerning lbe committee's plans
for a aesslon on the bill. Drlnan did nol
attend !be hearing ond was not present
for the vote.
!chord said the lelialallon would be a
roadblock for lamllles of prtsonen of'
war, who, under the bill. would have to
obtain the approval of the president for a
trip to North Vlelnam.
~ ~~ hln\)f be ":"41/ls luJI -Hla lull name la Kekoalauliion-apallba•~hlllotelmolau David Kaa·
puawaolWDellamella.
'the first name meanr ·"the fine-.
leafed Koa tree on the verdant
cWfs of the Koolau Mountains,"
-and lhe la.st name meem "the awa-
cup bearer of Kamehameha The
Great."
Two-week Delay
Set in Trial
Of Gig Peters
A two-week delay Wip ordered today in
the oecond Orange County Superior Court
murder trial of Gig Peters of Huntington
Beach.
Judge Kenneth Williams deferred the
trtal of tbe former Huntington Beach
High School honor student to Oct. 11
when prosecutor Pat Brian explained
that he expects to be involved in the
murder trial of Bert Lebbar and Teresa
Jo Strange unUI at least that date.
Peters, 1porting a bushy black beard
and apparenUy in good spirits, w a I
wheeled into the courtroom this morning
llanked · by defense attorney Barry
Tarlow.
Peten, 23, Is held in the prison ward of
Orange County Medical Center. He still
receivea daily physical therapy for the
paraplegic coodltlon resulting from a
bullet wound received in t.he aame
courtroom last Nov. 3.
lly I. PETSR lUIUCG
Of .. Dliltr PMM ltllfl
'l1ie men and women .,,.. Hoag
Memortal Hospital In Newport·~
wert scheduled to meet behind closed
dOOrs today to act on a recommendation
by the medical Slaff that the hoapltal'1
three-year-old Famlly Pr1ctice Center be
closed as of next June 30.
Under preasure from doctors to shut it
down and from the community to keep It
open, directors were to meet at 4 p.m. to
review scaled-Oown budgets prepared by
Dr. J. Blair Pace, program director, that
may allow the program to be salvaged.
A. Vincent Jorgensen, president of the
hoapilal board, this morning again
declined to speculate oo. the outcome of
the meeting. He did promise a deci!lon,
however.
He said he does not yet know whether
e!forts to find new sources of revenue
from the private sector of the conununlty
to help defray the costs of the program
will be successful or not.
They were dealt a blow SW'lday.
however, when the man working oa
search for funds, Hospital Treasurer
Charles J. Fishback. suffered chest pains
and was fUshed to the hospital where he
is now in good condition.
Jorgensen said be doea remain op-
timistic about the future of the irogram.
"I support it. It want It continued. I
believe in it. It's a a:ood program,"
Jorgensen said.
"We're going to go over the budget
again and see if we can make a reduced
program work," he said.
An aide to Pace said tll13 morning thar
the revised budget trima the program to
12 doctors. There are now 13.
But Dr. Taylc:r Jepson, one of the
resi dents obtaining his general practice
training in the program, said that under
the revi:i:ed program the doctors would
have expaaded duties and would serve
Drugs Called Top Concern
Parents in Fountain Valley R espo nd to Survey
Long hair, aloppy Hhlrts and laded
blue jeam apparently don'I upset lbe __ c COlllCl...:e ol Fountain Valley
poreola u Ibey mlgbt bav• In Ibo past.
The threat of oam>tlcs, however, 11
otW tbe -one """""" Fountain Volley parents have !<Jr their teenlie
~ One ..Sult, answvlng tbe -ly
nltaaed Community Servklfo IUM/e)',
suggllla:~"W• -to ttart taoch1ng
chlldnn 1n 1111 -;iii a '*"· v..s .. about~ •
•Tell them file irulh. llbow-of ··-!rt•-In holpllall: ' If -r ....... tben lnlo ilpl Qin(
drop." Aduit. atUWdet al>Out the ooaimunlty'1
youth Wa. ..,. -of .. 4111Mlome survey ooaducted am....._.
A filll 7' ....,1 ol U.. poUod roted
... ~ poliiem'•·the c!O'• ~ ,,.
thrHt. And 13 percent of !be ad!Jlia fa vor
crtation of a citywide drog abuse pro-
grem. -
lo contrast, the outward appearance ol
today's youth -rated a major problem
by only !I percent ol the -le.
The oommunlty 1Urvey wu a
coopenu.., effort between the city and
county. It's alm 11 to compile tnfonnatlon
on community atUtudes about a wide
varleQ' ol aubJ«U.
From It, city ofllclala are learning how
tile adult community feels about Its own
yoongaten. Special programs, designed
to meet commun ity ooncerm1, will
develop once all the lnfonnation ~ ls
thoroughly analyzed.
Some other attltud<a eipressed In the
ourvey Include:
-Tbe CIOl1Ullimcauon gap -n
parenta•tnd ofl'lprliW .Ull rates u i ma-p ........... ., petctot of Ibo a<lultl.
-Parents ought io spend more time
with thelr children, according to 6' per-
cent of tb>se polled, while ~ percent of
!be adulia also support stricter dlacipllne,
-At least 41 pe.runt of the Fountain
Valley adulia don't believe )'O\lths find
eoougb beneflclal thiop to do with their
time.
-Part of the loo-mucJ>.~lime prob-
lem was blamed oo Ibo lack ot op.
portunltles for the yooth to do anything.
according to Iii perc:ent ol the adults.
Many parents suggest lhe creation of
more part-time jobs such as washln&
dl>hes, pumping gas and baby sitting.
They also want expanded recreational
a¢iviUes and more coun.ellng aervlcea
!or youth.
Home chores altll rank high on !be list
of acllvltle1 compiled by the survey. Fil·
11.....,, percent of those surveyed feel a
(See SURVEY, Pap I)
'
nol juat at Hoag but nuld r<Aate tllrougli
other bolpillla and varioua physiclsns'
offices.
. Tba protest aplnat Ibo medical ota!I
vole continued tO flood the. boopltal to-
day.
Hospital administrator Lou Kaa aaJd
there were more than JSO letters from
residents throughout southern Orange
County on his des k this morning.
Most of them ""·ere fonn letter•
circulated by the residents through their
patients.
About 1,200 persons a month are
treated by the doctors in the resideDC)'
train'11£ program.
State to Detail
Bolsa Bay Plans
For Beach Group
Sta te plans to re-create a natural aalt
water marsh in Bolsa Chica Bay wlU be
outlined in detail for the Huntington
Beach Environmental Council Tuesday
night.
SPokesmen from the state Fish and
Game Department and the 1tate Lands
Division, will discuss the marsh project
at 7:30 p.m., in the Murdy Park com-
munity center. The meeting is open to
the public.
Fi!h and Game authorities rtvealed
negotiations th is week wi th Signal Ga s
and OU Company, owner of most of lhe
marsh , to work out a land swap.
If succe55ful, Flsh and Game will have
s.33 acres of manb land parallel to Bolsa
Chica State Beach. The marsh will be
turned into a wildlife pr'eServe and a
public marina.
Orange
We alller
Sunny ski.., through Wednesday.
with highs In tbe ros. both Inland
and along the beaches. Lows to-
night around 58, according to the
wea therlady.
INSW E TODAY
A tOM gunman fired cm tht
Foothill Division poli.et sMticm
t arlv this morning with ruch in-
Umity tMt policemen\ tnstdc
thought the y wert under attack
by a gong of m"' arm<d with
machl~ gum. Set atoT)I cm
Page S.
l .M. • ..,. • AH LI .... M
•uH111 " """i.t • C1ll..,.,.l1 • ......... .._ • ClattlllM 1 .. 1, Ot-t C•llft ' Comk o " SYl'lll PW1w .. c ....... .,. 11 ·-, .. 1,
Dlltfl 1"1ktl ' Si.ct~ ... , .. ,,
141.l""'-I , ... • Tl""' .... • ••twt11 ....... • ..... .... I ...... 1 .. 11 ·-• ,., .,.. ••n ' •-·• .._ ,._M ~11ru1 " -·-•
2 DAILY_ PILOl "
Health Planning
2 Hospital Bids
Heard by Panel
Hecommendat!ons of th<> f1:1c1l1t1es
f('\'Je\1' comrnHll'C. 1Jn construction <ip·
plications from tht· proposed r,ouodations
Jlospital and the Fountain Vall ey Com·
muni ty I lospital will be heard tonight in
San!a Ana by the full Orange Lounty
llealth Planning Council.
The commiucc narrov•ly approved thr
Foundations fa cility Sept. 14 by a vote o!
8 lo 7. overturning !he st<iff rCt'Qm·
n1endation to deny the application due to
hospital overbedding in the county.
The 162-bed community hospital, if ap-
proved by co unt y and state health plan·
ners, would be the first of several
medical buildings built on a JSl}acre site
adjacent to the UC Irvine medical school
campus near !he intersection of
MacArthur Boulevard and Universily
Drive in 1rvine.
several special Sf'rvices was denied in <1:
c:ornmiuee hearing Sept. 12.
Tonlg hl's meeling will be held at 7:30
o'clock in the jury assembly room of the
Orange County Courthouse, Civic Center
Drive West, in Santa Ana .
Th e 74-member council will also review
three reco mmendations by the ad hoc
Heg1onal f\<ledicaJ Program committee.on
these subjects: coordination of nursi1:g
ca re in Orange County, improvcmen~ In
the quality or medica l care for ~ed.1cal
assistants and health ca re education in a
proposed "Minl·Barrio" in Orang e Coun·
ly.
DAILY PILOT Sllff ,,hole
v alwy Unit
Maps Drive
On Policy
The Fountain Valley School Di.strlcl
has opened a campaign to reve~e a slate
policy ~·hich the district says_ w11l lead to
permanent local busing of children. .
Trustees Thursday night authonzed
district officials to approach lhe stalel
the state Department o Legislature, h stale Allocation Education, and t e I
Board in an all·out effort to repea
present state potlih·c.ies. "Cohort survival Known as 'f System," the policy make s. It. rnor~ ~1 ·
ficult to qualify for state aid tn building
new schools. · ·11 Fountain Valley claims . thl5. wi
ultimately mean the district will be
. overcrowded, and also need to re.ly on
pennanent busing to transport childre~
from new housing developments where it
"'on't be able to build new sc~ools. The Fountain Valley Co m m uni t y
Hospital applicat ion to complcto-it.~
mast('r plan of 214 beds and expand
Huntington .
Councilmen PROPOSITION 20 BACKERS PAUSE IN FASHION ISLAND DURING LONG BIKE . RIDE
State Sen. James Mills (With Mustache), Leads Group of About 80 Toward San Diego
Keep Hopping M .ll . L R
The Cohort Survival System JS, es~n·
ti ally, a different way of .count mg
children. Since how many children a
district has affects how many class~ms
it can build. the new, tighter JXllicy of
calculating enrollment has the effect ?f
restricting new construction, Fountain
Valley claims.
John W. Heaston
Dies-Pioneer HunlinglOn Beach City Councilmen had l . s lll agu1111, aps
a busy schedule set for them _t~ay wi th ,_.-
a 5 pm tour of the new c1v1c center ·
From Pagel
EDISON ... The district has the se objections to the
Co hort Survival Syste m: . .
-Space for federal projects. whi~h
provide about .10 percen~ of F~untam
Valley income, is not provided for. 111 Huntingto11
When John W. Heaston was a child of 5
he walked an old dirt road from Escon·
dido to Huntington Beach. The Heaston
,fa mily traveled that old road with their
cows and chickens.
:~:;;::::10~;1~ ~/0~~~e~n~yn: ~~! Lack of Coastline Law
missioners.
"and now they've broken that down lo 12
units because two would just not cut the
mustard.
-It counts average daily attenda~ce,
not total enrollment. The district. claui:is
this is unfair beeause a sick child sh!I
needs desk spa ce, whether he uses it
That was in 1900.
Mr. Heaston died Saturday at the age
of TT, after spending a lifetime in the
Hunlinglon Beach oil fields.
Councilmen also are expected to de cide
!oday what to do about a Superior Court
order commanding the city to allow con·
struction of a tract of homes next to
Meadowlark Airport.
Last week. Mayor Al COen indicated he
might like to see the city appeal the
court order, but action on that was
delayed until tonight for additional in·
formation.
"California , Alabama and South
Carolina are the only states which have
no plans governing coastal management
and planning. Every other state blessed
with this kina or preeious natural
resource has taken some action to
preserve and enhance it," Sen. James R.
Mills (D-San Diego), told a crowd of
Lagunans Sunday as he bicycled into
town to boost Propnsitlon 20, the
Coastli11e Protection Initiative on the
November ballot.
l!is dad had helped build the first
church in town. Young John had gone lo
Blythe to build a railroad, then he en·
tered World War I service. The joint study session'" with planners
was scheduled to review the city's plan·
ned development ordinance.
When he came back, John opened a
machine shop at the start of the oil
boom. He worked on the early whipstock
wells and invented several machine parts
to ease the heavy burden on oil drills.
A serious auto accident severely crip-
pled him in 1934, but he returned to his
machine shop and ran it from a wheel
chair, until he could walk with the aid of
canes.
He retired in 1950, but continued to live
in Huntington Beach, at 19112 Huntington ·st.
Funeral services will be conducted at
10 a.m., Tuesday, ln St. Bonaventure's
Church. Burial will follow in the Good
Shepherd Cemetery, Huntington Beacti .
Mr. Heaston is surlived by bis wife,
Margaret; two daughters, Mrs. Joanne
Bosworth of Mission Viejo and Mrs.
Shirley Alderson of Huntington Beach; a
son, John Jr .• of Huntington Beach, and
five grandchlldren.
Progress Seen
On Huntington
Teacl1er Salaries
Pay negotiations between teachers and
the Huntington Beach Ci ty (elementary)
School Board are expected to progress
slightly when trustees mee t Tuesday
night.
Superintendent S. A. Moffett said the
trustees may approve some changes in
v.•ording -but not in amount of money
offered -from their original proposal in
an effort to come to terms with teachers.
The board has offered teachers either a
flat fou r percent pa y raise. or a 2.75 per·
cent raise and elim inatior_ of the
master's degree requirement for ad·
vancing to colun1n fou r of tlie salary
schedule.
Since no new sal ary agreement has
been reached. teache rs are currently
n•orking under last year's co ntract.
Tru stees wi!l meet at 8:30 p.m. in the
library of D•\·ycr School.
OUNGI COAST ••
DAILY PILOT
T he 0..111'191! C0.51 0All '( Pl LOT Wllll Whldl
I• comblnrd Ille Nrw1.J>rr ... I~ nub!lsf\!'d by
tf\e Or11n<1r Co11t Publi~hinq Compe11y. S~
rile cdllillfis ••t IWl>lt•/\ec:I. Morldly lhroUQ"
Fr+dfy, for (~I• Mn11, N-PO•I 8e1dt.
HV"tlnolol'I /le11ell/Fount•ln \l»ll11v. l~gun•
l'le""1, l rvln1IS11dllttblc~ 11<1<1 Siln Cl em...,11t/
S•11 J1,1111 C.p;$1r1no. A .,n91e rt{l!On1I
t'dlltoft 1$ llUOUslMd S11h,1n:l11y1 llnd Sund•~
lhr princlpO pWll&hlng P1'nl 11 111 JXI Wt.<I
S.y SI""'-Cosl1 Mn1, C:11llfor11l1. '261t.
Robert N. W1•d
Prffkl1n1 •nd Pul>li\l!M" J•c• A, Cur/11y
VI('• Prnidenl •nd Gtner•I M•roeoer
lhom•1 Keewil
Edllor
Thom •• A. Mu rphi11e
Milnllglng Edl!O•
Ch•rl1s H. Loo• R1ch•rd P. Nill
Nfllt1u•11 MlllllOll'IO Editor~
T ••rv CoYiHe
Wa,I Or•t1t1 C<iutltr Edi!or
H••r.,1 ... IMcll Offke
17175 •••e:h lo111 ..... rc1
M1ilint Adche11: P.O. 10111 790, 92MI
0..... Offic• l•11u111 lltac:h· 2'22 For"f A~
Codi MIMI ; U0 W•st l•Y Slrwt
M-port 8•1c:l'I: 3JU N~wlJOrl l'lo\!11.,..r•
S.11 c1-.n11: 3G$ NOf!h Et Cllmil'>o ,_ .. ,
r .. .,._. r11•1 ,.2.4121
Cl .. SflM A"-tltt.., 642·1 171
llrell'I Hentt Or""" c-1, Clml!Mll"'* 540·122t
CllP)"f ... I, lt12, Orer'ltlt Collf ~llllllrle ~ny, No newt il0•'-1, llM1r1llofla.
.. 1ior111 ll'l•tt" °' eaver1111meritt. ""'lft tl\ty bl rtcl'l'Otluc:ld ¥rll"°"'f i.p«l.tl Hr· """'°" et upy•IOl'll .....,..,.,
$ec.end Cl•• """""' p,tlll '' Co1t1 ,,._ C•l"-'nl .. •&ublc,tlptlofl ~ urrlet U.6'
ll'IOl\ ... ,..J ~ m.11 t.1.IS llVIAtMWI mlllrtn *''"'-'""' QM rnon1111w.
A moratorium ls currently in effect,
prohibiting the start of any new planne~
communities in Huntington Beach until
councilmen decide if they want t<>
eliminate or limit such projects in the
future.
The planned community generally
features homes on smaller lots. with the
excess land area pooled into community
green belts and open space.
Some councilmen have complained that
the planned development simply in·
creases density, creating instant ghet·
toes. Other councilmen say planned com-
munitie1 improve tbl!: en Yi r on men t
because of a greater concentration of
open space and 'the tighter controls on
eati.u.._ , ·
' From Page 1
DISASTER ...
scutUe any future high school bond elec-
tion hopes.
Thus high sc hool trustees must con·
sider some way of wooing Fountain
Valley.
One way might be lo propose the con·
struction or two high schools in a $25
rnillion bond issue. one of which would be
built in Fountain Vall ey.
Trustees Bentley and Bauer said this
seemed reasonable, "not only for Foun·
tain Valley." according to Bentley. "but
for the whole high school district. Our
master plan says we'll need two high
schools before the first one can even be
built. So it woul d make sense to go for
two high schools."
Mangers, warned that "We must not
allow the concerns of one area to in·
fl uence us too much ."
But, he added , "If we came up with a
bond that Fountain Valley and Ocean
View school districts really liked, they
could produce a high enough turnout to
pass it by themselves."
l1idian Guides,
Maidens Seek
Neiv Mem.bers
Thr Yt\.fCA Indian Guides and lndian
r.hiidens will be meeting to recruit new
1nembers in Huntington Beach and FoWl·
tain Valley beginning Tuesday.
llere is the schedule by area of
rrsidencc for the Tndian Guides.
-Huntington Beach School District
!Elementary !: ~1ect from 7 p.m. to 9
p.1n. Tuesday in the Edison High School
audi torium .
-Ocean View School District north of
Jleit Avenue plus Springdale. Cook.
Clegg. Gill and Robinu·ood Schools: meet
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday in the
;\\aru1a J-iigh School ca.fetor~a .
-Ocean View School District, south or
Heit Avenue and north of Yorktown
Avenue : meet from 7 p.m. to 9 p.'m.
ThursdAy in the Huntington BeaC'h High
Sc hool auditorium.
J!untington Beach Indian Maidens 'viii
rneet from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday In
the Huntington Beoch Hi gh School
auditorium.
J<"ountain Valley Indian Maidens and
Indian Guides wHI gather from 7 p.m. to
9 p.m. Tuesda~ in the Fountain Valley
~ligh School amphitheater.
Mills and his fellow cycW:ts stopped at
Laguna's Main Beach for lunch as they
neared the end of their 500-mile "coastal
protection" bike ride from San Francisco
to San Diego.
They were greeted by Mayor Charlton
·Boyd, Vice Mayor Roy Holm and con-
servationist William Wilcoxen, all of
whom spoke in support of the Coastline
Initiative.
After the lunch stop, the cyclists pedal·
ed off to San Clemente to spend the night
at the State Park in that city before pro-
ceediiig to San Diego.
"You may not trunk there b much
drama in the spectacle of a middlHged,
balding legislator huffing and puffing his
way ·down the coast·btcbw11,11 MWa: told
the crowd. "But you are not looking at. lt
from my perspective. There a ~ e
moments when I feel an acute sense of
drama -not to say alarm -as I try to
keep up with 'the rest of our party."
Stressing the seriousness of the tour,
Mills added, "A wide awarene.v that
there is a problem is almost a solution In
itselr. This has been the pattern in other
states. Coastline controls have been im-
posed only after some demonstration by
the public that they wa nt their beaches
unspoiled . that they want access to their
own beaches, and that they will no longer
tolera te unrestricted, haphazard develop-
ment of their coastline."
With two-thirds of California's I ,100-
n1ile coastline already privately owned
and only 250 miles of what is Jeft usable
as reereation beaches by 20 millio!l
Californians, "there is not much left to
preserve," said the senator.
Proposition 20, he said. is not offered
as the ultimate solution to the coastline
crisis, but o.s a method of gaining time to
devel op plans for the coast .
It calls for the creation of a Coastal
Zone Commission and si:t regional com·
missions to plan the best use of the
coastline. The commissions would be
made up half by representatives or local
governments and hal: by public members
appointed by the Governor and
Legislature.
The commission would be required to
submit a plan to the Legislature by 1975,
and in the meantime, no coastal develop.
n1ent could take place within 1,000 yarda
of the shoreline without a special permit.
"Oppasition to coastline protection is
formidable, and the Legislature has been
unable to overcome it," Mills said. "An
unusual alliance or both big business and
segments of organized labor opposed
coastline protection legislation this year.
The oil interests are afrai dof losing prof·
its, and some of our largest unJona are
afraid of losing construction jobs,
"If we can learn anything from the
legislative defeat of coastline protection,
it is !hat the opponents of Proposition 20
are wealthy, well organized and
powerful. We can expect a very slick,
professional campaign against this t11p.
proach to coastline protection in the
\\'eeks ahead."
From Pagel
SURVEY ...
"·eekJy allowance ls the best way to
reward youngsten.
Tl!e going pay rate seems to be •boul
$4 to $$ R wtek, though ...,. only pay 12
to $3 weekly.
The survey itself doem 't offer sot1.1-
tions, though a Jot of the perenta do.
111e Indian Guides is a program based
oo Indian lore which see k! to strtngthen
the rel11tionship between fathers and
their sons between the ages of 5 and 8.
Ind ian Maidcru is a similar program
de!liigned for mothers and I h e I r
driughtcrs. '· ' .......
One aduJl writes: "We need to err
courage ptOple not to cater to lbe
chlldn>n, but to be lntemled and loving
whUe establishing rules at an early aFe
which will govern their teenage years.'
The primary purpose of the survey Is
to inform civic leaden on what the com-
munlty fools are ii• greatut needs. How
10 solve those needs ls the ne.tt st.p' Jn
the Com1nunily Services project.
' .
'
Referring to coastline pro t e c ti o n
legislation in other states, Mills took an
indirect swipe at Governor Reagan. In
these states, he said, "There was another
form of pressure that is misslng in
California -strong leadership by the
governor."
De1aware, which has one of the
strongest coasUlne protection laws in the
nation, said Mills, "also has a courageous
Republican Governor, Russell Peterson,
who stood up to opposition not only from
the special interests but from Secretary
of Commerce 11-faurice Stans and the Nix·
on Administration t:J get its law enact·
ed."
The California coastline, he said, now
falls under the overlapping jurisdiction of
15 county governments, 46 city
governments and dozens of ~pecial
district boards • • • even assummg all
these local governments have nothing but
the best interests of their citizens at
heart it is unrealistic indeed to believe
that ~II of them can agree on a wliform
coastline plan or even what the best use
of the coastline is."
Urging a Yes vote on Proposition~ he
aaked bia listeners to remember "the one
critlcaJ fact -that there are only 250
miles of public beaches left -for 20
million of us ." ·
"They're now just twisting l he law,"
he said.
Originally Edison wanted to build two
units that would have produced 19.1 tons
each or nitrous oxide per day.
The 12 smaller units now sought would
each produce the allowable amount, 1.67
tons per day.
The Edison Company defends the new
proposal by pointing out that the units do
meet the law and the fact that the
nitrous oxide emisslons proposed have
be<n cut almost Jn ball.
They say that the redesign«! fossil fuel
burners are the best they can be ex-
pected to be.
Sunset Beach Store
Loses Gear, Watches
Scuba gear and divers watches valued
at more than $450 were stolen during the
weekend by intruders who forced their
way through the front door oI a scuba
specialty company in Sunset Beach.
Orange County Sheriff's offi«rs ... i<i
air tank regulators and divers watch!'
were taken from a glass· abowcot 'It
New England Divers, 1"31 Pad!ic Coast
Highway, ComP3!)y officials valued the
equipment at $458.27.
every day or not. . . . .
-It leaves little flex1b1hly for creative
school districts. Foootain Valley suggests
that the state instead allow extra space
as an incentive for Jnnovation.
-Although the state seems to be mov-
ing steadily in the direction of public
preschool, new classroof!l space cannot
be justified on the basis of preschool
enrollments.
From Pagel
SUSPECT ...
recent case being one In which he ned on
foot vla a flood control channel after an
exchange of shots.
He had been recogniied from news.
photos, according to investi~ators, when
he allegedly tried to trade his .ti caliber
pistol for a used car at an agency.
The frightened salesman talked the
suspect tnto going out for a cup of coffee
while he considered the deal and called
poUee, after the man identified as
Clouston le/!.
And when officers arrived, the car
sa1esman tried to get away hlmself to
avoid the con.frootation) but was mistaken
rOr the suspect due to his actions.
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H DJJLV PILOT 3
et Crashe·s • Ill Sacramento, l{ills 22
* * * * * * Vieti-11-•·s Listed
Ice Cream Parlor Crash Dead Tol,d
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The following
b a Im of the 22 pel'SOlll killed ln the
crash of a Korean conflicl·vintage jet
fighter Sunday, released lodey by
Sacramento County coroner George
Nielsen.
1, 2. 3, 4. Walter Warren Krier l'100
Merribrook Dr., Sacramento, bis' wife,
Sandra Ann, 28, their daughter Jennifer
A., 8, and 80n, Brandon, 2.
5, I, 7, 8, 9. Tony R. Martin, 29, 7329
ldlewild St., Sacramento, his wife, Susan,
and their childre.o, Grej, Jeanene, and
Sean.
10. Jeff Nash, 5, 3661 57th St.,
Sacramento.
l l. Gary Nash, 2, same address.
Vintage Craft
1%, 13. Louis J, JUIUlll, 43, M40 Sbelley
Way, Clrmlchael, and bis daughlor,
Elaine.
·II, !$, Gene LaVlne, 44 Manley Ct.,
Sacramento, and his wU•, Margan!, 46.
16, 17. Leon C. Warram, 49, 5Q8 San
Vicente Way, North lligbland, and his
wife, Ellen R., 50.
18. S8Jly Keys, II, 1701 LaDloo Rd.,
Sacramento.
19. Nancy Keya, 11, same address.
211. Nancy Rodriques, 8, rrrn Fallbrook
Way, Sacnmenlo.
11. Kr1Bt1n D. Francis, ~. 9003 North
Eldorado, Stockton.
22. Joan Baa:I, 46, 739 Im Fells Way,
Stockton.
•
Death Airplane Owned
By Millionaire's Firm
SAN RAFAEL (UPI) -The blue and
gold Fill Sabre jet that cruhed inlo a
Sacnunento loo cream parlor here bore
the name "William Penn Patrick" on its nose ..
The plane belongs lo Spectrum Air
Services Inc., one of many enterprises of
mlllionalre Patrick of !his city jw!t north
* * * Girl, 12, Heard
Crash-Believed
It Was Gimmick
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Twelve-year-
old Christle Klehn and her family were
digging into an eiotic, mountainous lee
cream treat called a "1.oo" when
"90mething cruhed right behind us and
people began screaming.
"I thought it was just another gnn..
mick," Christle said, referring to the fan-
fare and ffllls that accompony the 111111y
8Ul11ptuous dishes se~ at Farrell's Ice
Cream Parlor, nicl<named "'Ibo Happy
Place."
Instead, It was a jet fighter which
slanuned lnlo the parlor, Iurnlng lt Into
an lnfemo and killing 22 persons.
.. The wood Poles started breaking and
everything started floating all over the
place," Christle aald. "All the tabl03
went on everybody. The whole place
came in."
Sbe grabbed Kerri Francls, a 3-year-
old youngster traveling with the family,
and cnwled through the burning rubble
to safety. She tried to return for Kerri's
twin, Kristi, but couldn't.
"I climbed over all sorts of stuff,
maybe some of it was ~s." the glrl
aald
It was a cloudless Sunday afternoon
and maey families had gone lo _the tee
cream parlor for birthday celebratkns.
The Sacramento 49ers, a Little League
football team, was having a party at the
time.
For Christle the mishap was a family
tragedy.
Hee mother, Joan, 29, was k.llled, along
with the second twin.
Her stepfather, Rubin Baccl, 37, of
Stockton, and the rest of the family -
three boys and a girl -were either
hospitalized or given emergency treat-
ment for their injuries and released.
of San Francisco.
Patrick, a 42-year-old Air Force
veteran, occasionally takes a spin in his
Stearman biplane, one of several vintage
aircraft he's bought with the profits from
his Hofulay Magic cosmetic manufac-
turing concern and other businesses.
He aometimes ubibits the planes at
aviation llbowa, u was lhe case with the
Ko!'WI conftlct era jet which was taking
oil to return home wben It cruhed.
-Spectrum Air Is headquartered at
Novato, near Patrick's San Itafael home.
The widow and 10n of a lawyer killed in
a light plane won an $865,000 judgment
last week from Spectrum and one of Its
mechanics for alleged failure to repair a
defective tall control devtce.
Patrick, ultra.conservative in his
polities, ran unsuccessfully against
California Gov. Ronald Reagan for the
gubernalorial oomination in 1966.
Richan! Bingham, the pUot of the
plane, said in a recent interview that be
flew the plane under Federal Aviation
Admlolstration visual filght rules for
"experimental aircraft."
Bingham, geoeral manager of Spec-
trum Air Services Inc:., lives In Novato, a
ama1I COtDlltllltity north of San Francl!co.
He said In the alory that he directed
the rocomtructlon of the plane alier it
had been stored in crates in C&nada for
eight yean.
'!'lie pilot aald he new the plane about
12 hours in Auguat and this month under
the FAA rules.
A ,.,...an ielepboned the San Francisco
Cllrtlbk!le Sunday night and ideotified
henelf u Bingham's mother, Mrs.
Robert Kincaid of Palo Alto.
The woman, who wanted lo know what
bospllal the flyer ·had been taken lo, said
be was born In Fresno and quit higb
school wheo he was 17. He joined the Air
Force during the Korun roollict bul ..,
far as Mrs. Kincaid knew he never went
overseas.
Author in Hospital
BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) -Author
Pearl 'Buck has been admitted to Ver-
mont Medical Center after her doctor
reported she developed abdominal di,s..
comfort while recuperating from pleurisy
at her home in Danby. A hospital spokes-
man said Miss Buck, 80, was undergoing
tests and was restlng comfortably. The
pleurisy attack caused her to be hospital-
ized in Rutland last July.
'
• ,
••
..
UPI T ... plletos
KOREAN WAR VINTAGE JET S0ITS IN FRONT OF TRAGIC SACRAMENTO SITE
Plane Was Extracted From Ice Cream Parlor After Crash Which Took Heavy Toll of Young Lives
Witness Viewed
Ball of Fire,
Feared Worst
By BARBARA FINE
Wr1"911 fW IN AuK .. tM '°r.u
SACRAMENTO -11 happened in what
was just a few split seconds.
I noticed a piece of what looked like a
plane's wing. It evidently deflected off
the roof of Fa?Tell's. At first, I thought it
was going to hit the wind.ow of the fabric
store where I work.
Then there was an explosion with a ball
of Dames. It was just huge. It wu brtgbt
orqe and yellow with black smoke
around it.
My first thought WllS that an airplane
had crashed, and I knew that FaJTell's
was packed with children. I ran out to
see it I cou1d help. Everybody was run·
ning out of Farrell's.
Right alter I saw the ball of fire, I
went right to the phone and dialed "O"
for the operator. I told her to send as
many ambulances as she ·couid. She told
me she already .knew there had been a
disaster.
I got several bolts of muslin and I cut
them into strips. I went outside and I
bandaged anybody I could. People
weren't crying and screaming -it
wasn't hysteria. People were in shock.
They were just pa]e and standing
around like they couldn't believe what
had happened. others were looking for
their children and try~ lo reunite
famllleS".
Some people were bleeding. One child I
was comforting was burned verry badly
on her feet and her legs. She was quite
frightened so I tried to stay wiUt her as
long as I could.
The only shOuting was from people call-
ing for each other, and al90 from people
saying to clear the area in case there
was more fire and beCause tbe fire lrucks
wer. pulling inlo the parking lot.
FIREMEN LINE BODIES UP OUTSIOE GUTTED ICE CREAM PARLOR
Vintage Air Show Jet Killed 22 Persons in Sacramento Eatery
Crash Kills Countian
James C. Kirkpatrick of 7590 Silver St.,
Bueha Park, was killed early this morn-
ing when the car in which he was a
passenger went out of control and crash-
ed in Anaheim.
The car driven by Michael Sides, 31, of
Anaheim, slammed into a utility pole on
a traffic island on Euclid A venue near
Lincoln Boulevard.
Kirkpatrick was dead at the scene, the
Orange C.Ounty Coroner's office reported.
Sides ls in critical condition today in
Anaheim Memorial Hospital.
Edison Meets Demands
Hu11tingwn Swam PUint Produci_ng Less Pollution
By JACK BROBACK
Of .. ri.1t1 ,..... ....
The newly approved addltlona lo
Southern C&lilomia EdJ.Son'i HunUncton
Beach steam plant will procltice only a
fraction of the alr pollutants lhat would
have belched out of two unlls proposed In
1969.
The lower polluUon powor ....,.ting
units have been approved by the Orana:e
County Air Pollution Control District.
Wllllam Fltchen, alt pollutlm control of-
llcer, llald Friday the combined cyt!le
unlia would comply with all of tbe
district's rulea and the rullnp of the
Slate Suprem• Court.
"To dony this (construction)," Ille
pollution control dlllrtet lllted, "woold
oerioual1 curtail the ~ of ld-
ded i.dl!UM and W!'llid ....it In
art>lt?llry and ..,_ble taktni of the
appllcaat'I pniperty without benefit lo
tbe people of the county."
Jn d<nylnc Edison'• appllcatlCOI two
years aao to add two conventklllal unlia,
tbe court ruled that Edison mtllt not anty
meet e I e c I rl ca I _...iemand 1111>-
darda oet by the Stal< Pohllc Utilltlea
Commlsalon (PUC) but muat also comply
with county air pollutloo rules.
Tbe PUC had approved Iha plant afi.r
the air pollution dlstTlct denied I~ Tbe
district and the CGUDIY appealed
In a letler to the Boin! of 8'Qla •law1,
Fltchen said, "I am sure Iha! with the
authortz.aUon of this construction, I will
be accuaed by many of pulling a copout
llld adllni out lo the Edloon Comiiany.
"I a<:c.pt this as part of the price of
dolnc buslneaa as your air pollution con-
trol officer .u I have pledged the support
of ibe district lo Edison to assist them In
MY way possible to furnish needed
energy llld help them reduce their
ernissicm to the lowest level.''
F1tcht.n added, 111 have advised Edl!on
of the demands for action that our
district wUI rqulre in the event of
elll0(10D<Y smog alerb and they have
~ to cut1llll operations i f
Deeessazy ...
•...-iu. nri&ht inconvenieace !Omf: of our
800if dtlzena, but I am """ those people -~ mind doing their part, particularly thole -..... emtronmentallsta who
want ,.,.. pollutton; but are not willing to ·Jlli ibe ptlce lo 1•t It," the air pollution
ol1lcer aald.
H~ lllil he 'tlu excited over the new
~·111 F.dlltJo u 1 ""Y of m .. t!ni
the eiedrical .,.'1Y crisis that "Is 1tar-
lng ua In the face and stlll be able to
meet air [!O~utloo requirements wllh a
l!ilnlqtttM of contaminant•.
Ftlebin aald · E d I 1 o n promla<d
P!'rfonnanca llhows that the new com-
blned,eycle unu. niduce emlsalool by 73
pen:mt 'over the two tmlia pn>l'O"'d In
11119.
"The most significant reduction is ob-
tained in .sulphur diozide and with the
available supply of natural gas becoming
more critical these levels are increasing
in the old units and will continue to do
ao," ~ atr officer stated.
Fltchen said emlsaions from the
present facilities at Huntington Beach
had been reduced to the poinf that they
are twc>-thirils less today than they were
in 1969 when they were denied authority
to construct two new units.
In a letter to Edison, Fitchen warned
that the permit to construct "docs not
constitute a pennit to operate."
Ke then attached a long li!t of require-
meni. and test& that will be mandatory
before the planls cao be put lnlo actual
operation.
· Tbe air pollution officer said the unlta
planned are quite alntllar lo those which
have recently been appn>ved by the Loi
Ang•les Air 'Pollution Control District for
construction In I.mg Beach.
lie urged the Board of Supervisors Io
support the proposed uplltllon of the
Huntlncton Beach plsnt ., approved by
the district and added lhRI he had
teatllled In aupport of ezpanded nuclear
power producing facUlilea a San Onofre
alJo.
11te recommonclallon w111 appeBr on
the board'• Oct. 3 agenda unless a member brings It up "oil agenda
Tuesday.
673-5051
Open Wed. thru Mon.
9:30 to 5:30, closed Tu.a.
I '4-'cd ·M•terC ....
• •
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Ice Cream
Pa1·lo1· Hit
By Wreck
SACRAl\1ENTO ( t.:1'1 ) -A vintage jet
1,::hter takini; off at ;1n air show smashed
into a packed shoppin g center ice cream
parlor here, killing Z2 per;ons. many of
the1n ~·ou11gsters attending a Little
League footba ll celebration.
Another 16 persons .,.,·ere injured Sun·
day .... ·hen the private ly-owned F86 Sabre-
jct barrelled across a highway, struck
thr~ vehicles and bounred in a "ball or
firr '' into F'::irrell 's Ice Crcan1 Parlor.
"l'tn sorry ... l'nl sorry. Get the peo-
ple out," groaned Richa rd Bingham, 36.
of Richn1ond, Calif., pilnt or the planr.
lfc was pulled fron1 the \1'rcckagc wh ile
200 scrcnm ing childrr n and adults fought
to escape flames that turned the Gay-90s
style shop into an inferno.
Bingham escaped wit h sorne broken
bones and a cut fa ct.
In \Vashington, the N J t i o n a 1
Transportation Safety Board said the
crash was the worst in U.S. h1$tory in
terms of ground deaths.
l~e said the next worst occurcd in
Flagler, Colo., on Sept. 15 , 1951, when th e
pilot of an ezperimental plane crashed
.,.,,hile attempting a roll. Nineteen were
killed and 10 seriously injured.
Sacramento County Coroner George L .
Nielsen said 12 of the vietimB were
youngsters, five boys and seven girls.
Five women and five men were also kill-.
ed . r
1-fe said at least two complete families
were among the dead.
The nose of the Korean conflict-era
plane. one of America's first fighter jets
being displayed across the street at
Sacramento's Exetutive Airport, smash-
ed in.lo the parlor's Ho.,.,·ard Hughes
Room.
A party was being held in the room for
20 youngsten from the Sacramento 49ers ·
Li ttle League footbal\ tea1n.
Don McCluskey, an employe, "'as fill -
ing salt shakers in the room when the
plane hit.
"After I picked myselt up, I grabbed
five kids and broke a window and gol
them out," he said. "But by then, the
smoke and names were too intense and I
couldn't get back in."
Linda Fourby, 17, Sacramento, was In
a ca r which the plane missed by 100 feet.
She said she ran toward the screaming
and breaking glass" at Farrell's.
"People were saying 'get me out, gel
me out! Where's nty kids?' Everybody
.,.,.as trying to help everybody."
Chai rs were used to break windows and
people poured from the doorways.
One girl, Christie Kiehn, 12, Stockton.
said she helped a fri end get out safely and
tried to return but couldn't.
'·I climbed O\•e r all sort! of stuff.
mayOO some of it was bodies." said the
girl. whose mother, Joan Bacci. 29, was
among those killed.
One 10.year-old boy, Steve Martin.
Sacramento, was later found safel y
crou ched under a table in the party
room.
The plane , owned by Spectrum Air
Services, which belongs to millionaire
cosmetics manufacturer William Penn
Patrick, hit one car on a highway and
two in a parking lot and dragged them
into the parlor.
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\
4 DAILY PILOT Monday, Stpttmbtr 25, 1 ~72
Just •
/'. "~
Japan, Chinese Open Historic Talks
with
Tom
urphine
~ '.:::.,.,
How to Play
Taps for Flag
OLD GLORIES DEPT. -You may
think that most of the troubles that have
developed over mis-use of the U.S. Flag
involve shaggy-haired types who have
converted our national banner into cur·
lains, table clothes or tee-shirts. \Ve 'vc
had a number of arrests for these in·
fractions in our region.
Some of the offenders. v.·hcn ap-
prehended doing violence lo the colors,
simply pleaded ignorance. That is prob-
ably appropriate.
It develops, however. that a lot of folks
don 't know precisely what the rules and
regu1ations demand when dealing with
the U.S. Flag. This is particularly true
when the colors get old, faded, soiled or
raggedy around the edges.
AN JNTERESTNIG study has been
conducted by Exchange Clubs right here
in Orange County to determine v.•hat peo-
ple do wit h old Flags. The Exchange out
in Irvine recently published some of the
findings in its club bulletin called, "Wind
Sock."
The Exchange folks determined that a
fair number of corporations, banks, civic
and service organizations and individuals
had old Flags that they recognized were
no longer in condition to be flown .
Bul mind.lul of the emphasis vn ar·
resting people who desecrate the Flag.
many of these folks vowed, by golly, that
they weren't going to get caught doing
sotnething wrong with an old Flag. So
they just kept them in storage.
Others, the Exchange study showed.
already knew that old Flags should be
properly destroyed by burning. So one
gentleman flung his old Flag on the
barbecue coals just after he had remov·
ed the hot dogs and hamburgers.
JN ANOTHER INSTANCE, the citizen
destroyed a tattered ensign by placing it
on the garbage conveyor belt. along with
the garbage, and gave it a snappy salute
as it moved on down toward the furnace.
Well, you might giggle over these Flag
retirement efforts but at least these folk s
were getting close.
Destruction of an old U.S. Flag is
governed under Public Law 829 which
recites, "when the Flag is no long a fit-
ting emblem for display, it should be
destroyed in a dignified way, preferably
by burning."
Exchange Club members who did the
research note that no further details are
given on how the chore should be ac·
complished. So you could say that the
fellow with the barbecue fire and the
chap with his conveyor belt likely met
the letter of the law even if their
methods were a touch bizarre.
Anyway, because Public Law 829 is a
bit obscure as to precise methods of
destroying and old Old Glory, the Ex·
change Club has established a model
ceremony by which colors may be laid to
rest. They have a regular format that
can be used by clubs or civic organiza·
lions. The rites take about 40 minutes.
Details should be available at your local
Exchange Club.
* THINGS YOU ALWAYS needed to
know are now available through the
latest U.S. government publications.
Prime examples of booklets include:
subterranean Termites, 20 cents : Dental
Floss, 15 cents; Upper Wind Code (no
doubt for politicians) $2; Homosexuality
in Prisons, 35 cents; and Canceled
Careers, two bits.
1'-Iaybe I'll spend a quarter just to find
out if the government has canceled my
career while J wasn't looking.
Congresswoman Falls
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Rep. Edith
Green (D-Ore .. , v.•ill be hospitalized for
about t\VO u·ceks for treatment of a
cracked pelvis, her family and staff
said. The congressv.·oman slipped and
fell at her Portland apanment Sunday,
they said.
PEKJNG (AP) -The Japanese flag
flew in Peking today for the first time tn
27 years as Prime P.1inister Kakuei
Tanaka began talks with Chou En-lai on
establishment or diplomatic relations
between a new JaJ)Qn and a new China.
The vis iting Japanese de s c r i bed
Tanaka 's opening session with the
Chinese premier as "surprisingly fra nk
and very useful."
At a banquet later Chou said the slx·
day visit cpens a new page in relatlonis
be tween the two fonner enemies. The
Chinese leader touched briefly on what
ht called the ··serious damage" China
had suHertd at the hand! of Japan
between JJ94 and 1945 and expressed a
hope that the past would serve as a good
lesson for future friendJy relations.
Tanaka then expreSl5ed to Chou and
other Chinese al the banquet a "deep
sense of self·reflecUon over the great
troubles" of the pa.st. This was con--
sidered to be lbe first fonnal Japanese
apology to China for previous militarism.
"The time has come for both countries
lo have talks for the benefit o( tomor·
row," Tanaka said. "Our frank talks will
FISH POPS UP OUT OF WATER ON McGOVERN CAMPAIGN TRAIL
New York Resident Holds Up Catch at 'Environmental Pageant'
McGovern Slashes Away ·
At Nixon, Big Business
BrLLINGS, Mont. (AP) -Sen. George
McGovern, describing President Nixon's
administration as one "bought lock, stock
and barrel by the special interests," is
drumming a demand that t h e
Republicans name the donors of what he
calls a $10-million secret campaign slush
fund.
The assertion that big business and
special interests dominate the Nixon
government has become a central one in
( CAMPAIGN '72 )
McGovern's Democratic presidential
campaign. He made it his text again to.
day.
"If there was ever an administration
that was bought lock, stock and barrel by
the special interests of this country, it·s
the Nixon · Agn ew administration ."
McGovern told more than 700 persons at
a $50 fund -raising luncheon in New York.
At ho1nc in Sioux Falls. S.D ..
McGoven1 called that the princ~pal issue
of the 1972 campaign. He addressed an
Scli1nitz Assails
Trade With Russ
TUCSON. Ariz . lAP \ -Cal iforn ia
Congressn1an John Schmitz, the Ameri·
can Party candidate for president, has
laid the blame for the American difficul ·
ty in Vietnam to trade agreements uith
the Soviet Union.
Schmitz said here Sa turday the U.S.
and NATO nations provided Russia with
90 to 95 percent of its technology which
is being used to construct antiaircraft
missiles and other weapons for the North
Vietnamese.
He said J~residcnt Nixon was "pursuing
a treasonous fo reign policy by negotiat-
ing \Vilh the Soviets \\'hile Soviet technol·
ogy is being used l.o shoot down Ameri-
can pi/ors."
airport rally where, police said, 2,500
persons showed up. Aides sold 1,500
tickets to a $$-a-plate dinner.
Day after campaign day, McGovern is
rec iting his litany of charges against the
administration on that point: the ITT
case; the Lockheed Aircraft Corp. loan
guarantee, approved by Congress at ad-
ministration urging; the alleged advance
tip-off to grain exporters about U.S.
\vheat sales to the Soviet Union -which
he called "the foulest deed or all."
In Billings. today, McGovern said in a
speech prepared for the Western State
Water and Power Conference:
"Under the administration or Richard
Nixon, the banks, the conglomerate
giants, the oil and utility corporations
and their coal subsidiaries have received
the tender, loving care of our govern-
ment, and the little fellow has had benign
neglect."
McGovern said no administration since
that of Warren G. Harding has been so
beholden to big business as Nixon's.
He said the Interior Department and
the Federal Power Commission ha ve
been "loaded With friends Of the utilities
and big oil companies •.. "
'You're watching too much
football!'
North Half of U.S. Cold
Freeze Warnings iii Effect; So1ne Snow Falls
Te1nperatures
"'Ith l•• ,,., AllMnv, cfdy " Alltnlt, tll cl<lv " a 011on, DI tidy ..
Bulltlo, r1!n ..
(fl•tlnfOll, dNI' .. (fl~•· cl••• .. Ch • llhowtrs " ~~nttl, l~howe•i " Ind, IM'low1n. " ':.':I•· pt cldv .. I I, r1!11 " 11~1 CHY, DI tidy " lq i•iclffr " rr.i· (IC rn11wn ~ I le, rt l'I M",,,I, rtln Ml wtllk"' 11/tw'rl M::t Paul, r~ll> " N..,.. t.aM 11 wr• ..
t.11w ork. lifi" " Ol(l•l!Omt II', Cld'\I .. ~"'·,... ,,,,.,.,, • •Im ~not. c-.r " Pl!lltde It/II•, Pc' Cid\' ..
l'm:I•, Pl (d'( ., f !It~ r•ln " rc:"· . bi ... er; ddy " (l)~,~d\' ,.
~"'"" • II,.-. Cll\I. <j••r .. '" r•ndtco. c Hr ?. llffl, c!Mr •J.tllno1"'1. !If ddv
~ " " " " " .. .. .,
" " "' " .. .I I " " n '" .. •• " -· fl " ... " " ll ..
u "' ... . .. " ii :ii .. IJf'I Wl.t.11411 fOfOIUlt •
,,
C'outal Weather
P"rlly llltl"'Y todt\I. Ll(llll vtrl.tilt
""11'111• n!GM 111\d morn1.,.g houri tiKom-
l"IJ 110U!tlwe1t to -II 10 to ll Anoll
rn 111ernoont l«ley and Tu11(1ay, Hlol'I llld•'" ,. to "· Coell•I l1rnpe!'~ture1 '"''" lror'!'I il •o 11. !nlar>d hmper11ur11 r•l'llil• trom
64 to 71. W11tr lttnper11ur. i1.
Sun, Moon, Tide•
MO,.D4Y
!iKOr>d Pll1tll • 1!:00 •.m. l,)
S.Cond low . S:d P·"" -0.t
TUllOAY
,lrJt l'llttt .. , .. , , ... II :'1 a,m, '~
l'lnt low .. . ...... S:ll 1:m. 1.•
Sacolld io.... • . . 6:4 p.m. •·I
5!.HI ., ... •:.Q •·"'-Ifft i :&S .. ,,..
Moon •1-t:li o,m. lll't t 1• 1.111.
conlribul.e to peace in Mita and ~
world."
In moat respect.I lhe welcome atven
Tanaka at the airport wu similar to that
giwn President Nixon when he arrived
1 iiere In the chill ol a February day, The
airport ceremony was sparsely attended
and the Chinese honor guard contained
the same number of soldiers that lined
up for Ni.Ion.
Pe.king'• weather was wann and clear
Jn contrast to the weal.her at the time of
Nixon 's visit.
The conversations between OK>U and
53 Leading
Filipinos
Put Away
MANILA (UPI) -Information
Secretary Francisco S. Tatad said today
that 53 persons including senators, con-
gressmen, governors and publishers had
been arrested since Presldell!JFerdinand
E. Marcos put the Philippines under
martial I~.
Tatad told a news conference the ar·
rests were carried out under Miµ-cos '
proclamation 8aturday announcing a na -
tional emergency as part of what the
government called a crackdown against
Communist conspirators, gun runners,
smugglers and "other criminal ac·
tivities." Marcos was to make a speech
later today.
Those arrested include opposition party
Sens. Benigno S. Aquino Jr .. ·and Ramon
l\fitra and independent Sen.· Jose W.
Diokno. Others were C.Ongressmen Roque
Ablan, Rafael Aquino and David Puzon,
all of them members of the ruling
Nacionalista Party, Govs. Lino Bocalan
and Rolando Puzon, both Nacionalista
party members and Manila Times
Publisher Joaquin P. Roces Jr. and Free
Press magazine Publisher Teodoro
Locson.
T II R E E C()NSTITUTIONAL Con-
vention delegates including covention
Vice President Napoleon Rama, at least
six newsmen and five other persons also
were arrested, Talad said.
Of those under detention, Sen. Aquino,
Congressman Ablan and publisher Roces
lire the best known internationally.
Aquino has been a leading Marcos
critic. Ablan, reg a rd e d as a Mar-
cos friend. is t h e chairman of the
Philippine Tourist and Travel Association
and past president of the Pacific Area
Travel Association (PATA). Ro c es
publishes the Philippines' I a r g e s t
newspaper and has been active in·
ternationally in the international press
institute, a watchdog on press freedom .
All but four of the 53 remained under
deten tion today. They are living in "com-
fortable quarters" and permitted to be
visited by relatives, Tatad said.
American Planes
Blast Big Guns
Near Quang Tri
SAIGON (UPI) -American jets
caught North Vietnamese units trying to
move heavy 130mm artillery pieces to
high ground in an altempt to shelt reoc·
cupied Quang Tri City and destroyed at
least six of the big guns, U.S. military
sources said today.
The American air crews had advance
\vord of the Communist move from
prisoner interrogation and "other in·
formation," one source said.
"\Ve were waiting for them," he said.
THE U.S. JETS struck Sunday as the
Communists were moving to\V'ard high
ground north of the Ba Long Valley
bet\veen Quang Tri City, 404 miles north
of Saigon, and the former U.S. Marine
base at Khe Sanh to the west.
The 130mm guns are the heaviest in
the North Vietnamese arsenel and can
fire a 73-pound sbell 17 miles. They re.
quire a six-man crew and can fire five to
six rounds per minute.
To the south, government forces Sun-
day turned back a stepped.up Communist
drive that ranged into three adjoining
provinces of the north-central coast, field
reports and military spokesmen said.
In the heaviest attack, hundreds: vf
Commurusts with amphibious tanks and
130 mrn guns, assaulted a hill near Tien
Phuoc, 330 miles north of Saigon.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
OtllW<Y of tht Dally Pl~t
Is vu•antetd
Monlttf"flrllft'fl " """ .. 11C1t M\lt' ~
""'' 1rt 11• p,11'1., c.n '"' "°"" """' "''" lie brWotlt IO "'°"' '•II• 1111 tlkM l#llN l i.-0 P.ln.
llN,...y I 'll klnlllYI It YOU do M NCttYI'
!'OU' COPY Dy • •.rn. s.tumr. or • '·"" Svnclty, uu 11'd 1 coov wm 111 "'°"""' ft. YOll, C1llt ,,.. M.M until 10 1.1'1\.
Ttlepttonn
Tanaka be&l.D two hours aftu Tanaka
arrived.
jectJ, . I The establishmenl of relations s ex·
pected to precJpitate a break in Japan's
ties with the Nationalist Chinese govetn·
meat of CbiaDg Kal-shek on Tal~an. .
The description of the talks was alven
by Japanese delegation source• IOOO
after they w<JUnd ,up. Tbo ucbanget, in
!he Great Hall of the People, began with
40 minutes ol polite amall talk, ~ went
Into a t~r working tession wbJch
wound up al 4:40 p.m.
Neither side disclosed what had been
discussed but the ahape and nature of
future r<lationl, lncb1dlng a new peace
treaty and a commercial pact, were
believed to have been the central sub-
Tima'ta is here with 51 aides, mclud111g
Foreign Minister Masayoshi Ohira .
The Chinese raised the present d~y
Japanese nag of 1 big red sun on a while
field at the airport about a haU ho~r
before Tanaka's jet landed. The old r1r
ing sun nag of imperial Japan of World ,
War JI was hauled down in surrender m • •, Peking In 1941. ,•, .
., .
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5 FAMILY AWAITS REUNION WITH RUNAWAY DAUGHTER
·-•,
,, P1ren11 Ml1t1kenly Identified Girl 11 Murder Victim fn Park
·i Daughter'BornAgain' ~:
'-Not Killed Afwr All • • j •
~
fl CHICAGO (AP) -·ll wa! "like having a new daughter born," said the t
~ father of a runaway girl who contacted police after her parents mistakenly i;
identified her as one of two teenagers found slain in a park. e
j Rosemarie Pilewicz, 17, said she read a newspaper res:x>rt of her death ~ and thought, "How can the world say this? I'm breathing."
Her panmts hlld reported her misalng Aug. 10. i
.. Her return left police with the bodies of two nameless girls, each shot
• once in the back of the head with a .32-caliber pistol and left lying face up In , f~ Washington Park on the city's South Side. They were follhd early 8aturday by
f a j~:-~ were no signs of a struggle and neither girl had been sexually i
..-molested, police said. l.. Six other women and an Infant girl have been found dead in unsolved ' · · IJ homicides in Chicago and its surburbs ~ince June. . 1
Asked how she mistakenly identified one of the dead girls as her daugfl.. ~ :
ter. Violet Pilewicz said, "The girl was just like a twin. Even the earring.s ·'
were the same." · ~
Richard Pilewicz, who had viewed the body after his wife had come out or ~
the morgue weeping, told reporters, "l went in and my eyes were foggy and J
was shaking and it looked euct.Jy like her."
\l A family friend, Sigmun Rataj, theoriud that when police called and said Ii
they ~d a body that might be Rosemarie's, the mother "went to the morgue ~
expec~mg to. see her da~ter dead , .. it was an emotional thing." ~· The family made funeral arrang~ments and spent a gMef-strtcken sleep-
less night before Rosemarie read that she bad been identified as a vict'im and
then contacted police. Rosemarie said she had been living with female friends.
\,1 After the reunion, police held her overnight at a juvenile home. ··:-
Asked why his daughter had·nm away, Pilewicz said, "I don't know ••.
Maybe my type of life is different from hers." Mrs. Pilewlcz said the girl left ~ primarily because of differences over her social hours.
) Rataj, -said he had once lived In tile neighborhood and had returned I'!~ to offer his condolences upon hearing the report of Rosemarie's death, wa'\ed ~ ~i an arm at the tiny backyard and a narrow street lined tighUy with rows of ~
' three-stcry apartment buildings. ~
!11· . ·;:tte wa:i trying to break ou.t of this neighborhood. You can see what Jt'•
like. He pomted to the tav.m next door, where singing blared from the juk ..
box ' N . ~
C.ncu.---... xz a .
Nixon Proposes Thorougl1
Reform of Money System
•
W ASlilNGTON (AP) -Preaident Nix·
on called today for "thorcu81>8olng
refonn of the world monetary l)'ltem to
clear the path f0< the healthy com·
petitlm of the fUlure, ..
Jn an unusual appearance before the
annual meeting of the World Bank and
the Interantlooal l\!onelmy Fund, Nim>
pledged that the United States would
"not turn inward and lso1at1onisl"
He asked a similar pledge from other
nttlons as he said that monetary rtlonn
must embrace international economlc af.
fairs, including trade and investment ~
portunily u wen.
• C'UillO l.oot .f'Ollnd
RENO, Nev. (AP) -F e-d-o r a I
authorttlet hive ....... ....i flJUllO ol·the
ft78,500 llolm In the robbely 'l'llMday at
Harrah'• Callno In Lota Tahoe -the
1arg .. t casino n>bbeey Jn Nevada bllt«y,
Vern Loetterle, llfeClal FBI agent In
charge, aald &u)day ~Ube, money wu
found ';tn.tbe Llkt Tahoe area." HedJd.
not reveal lwiw tile .......,,. wu· IOade
lllld aald the rest of the money had ljol '
been loca!t41.
Four men .ware cbarfled ih tile .,..
Saturday by fed<ral and Douglu County
1uthorlU...
• c.-c-tlo• 11r;e11
OAK RJOOE. Tenn. (AP) -SjMnUats
at Oak Ridge National Laboratory cau·
tion that a potential breakthrougb in the
treatment of cancer cannot yet be
reganled as the discovery of a complete cure.
The wamln~ was is..ed during the :;
weekend e a barrage of telephone call& ·~
came to the laboratory a£ter it In· ~
nounced that the bacterial agent BCG ~
( IN SHORT... ) l
had been found ''100 percent effective" Jn :l ~atlng,,canc:tr in animals. 'l'I
Dr. Michael Hanna Jr., an ORNL
aclentlat ~ ailmunced the flndlnis l"rl· •
day, aald BCG cannot be regarded u 1 ~
definitive cure for cancer. :·
I •' e M141Nat w ..... ,. Beld ;
UNIOil' SPRINGS, Ala, (AP) :... A •
telephone Up from a camlv1l owner led !
to the llmlt Sohlrday nltht of a migrant •
wcman charged with trading her infant t
aon for a ulOd car In Florida last •
Wedneoday, Union Sprlnp PQllce said •
J<Mi(er Sharon Sima, aUu Jennifer Ft~, about IS, WU lrrelted II she work·, !
ed 11 a •aml•al ·-oulaida thls omall town IO mu.. aouth 0 1 I
MOD11Clllllr1. police IPOkeaman Joe a-t
froe aaid. ·I , • '
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Today's Flllal
N.Y. Stocks
VOL 65, NO. 269, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1972 N TEN CENTS
· Bi1'e ActJidents llp 4090/o
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
,.. Of fhe Dalty Pilot ll•ff
Bicycle accidents on Newport Beach
streets have increased more than 400
percent over the past five years and
Traffic Engineer Bob Jaffe says that is
eoough reason to make alt possible h¥te
in completing the bicycle trail system.
"During the past fiscal year there were
U2 bicycle accklenta in Newport Beach.
In almost two-thirds of these accidents
the cyclist was at fault,1• Jaffe said. 1
• •
He said the lncruse In accidents la!!
year was more lhan 50 per<enl above lbe
priO!' year. He also said tbe Increase In
accidents bu been malted by an up-
swln~ In the ages of bicycle riders.
"Five Yel!I ago, 18 ~t of the
bicycle acctdents Involved cyc1jsta IJOm 8
to 15 years old," JaHe Aid. "in I.be past
year, ~ percent Involved the 1>-20 age
group.
Jaffe said 'IT of the 122 l')'C1J!ls ;,,.
\'Olved in mishaps were injured to some
degreehlaDd lour basic traffic altuatlona resul · most of the aecldents and the
Injuries.
The four ude: .
-Failure to stop at cootn>lled tn.
teraectlona and meeting a veblcle with
the right of way, 3t percent.
-Riding on a sidewalk and eolJidlng
with vehlcles exiting drivewayt, U per·
cent.
-Approaching an intersection, riding
to the rlsht of a vehlcle about to · turn
right and collldlng with it, 18 percent.
-Riding ont be wrong side of the
street and colliding with a vehicle turn·
ing right at a street or driveway, 12 per-
cent.
Jaffe said the figures he is using are
only reported accidents.
"There is , no way of estimating the
number of unreported incidents," he
said.
Jaffe said the ooly possible way of cut-
. (See BIKES, Page !)
Newport Mulls Lawsuit?
Edison Expansion OK'd Without Ecology Study
Newport Beach Councilman Paul
Ryckoff wants his city to sue Orange
County became the county's Air Pollu-
tion Control District approVed the ex-
P3nslo11 of the ,Southern Callfomia Ertison
plant lo Huntington Beach without ob-
taining an eviromnental impact state-
menl
Freshman Councilman Ryckoff said
atate law requires such a statement.
Newp!>rt Beach Mayor Donald A.
Mcinnis has already written both the
county and the city of Huntington Beach
strongly urging that they obtain the re-
quired report, .
Ryekoff said he will ask City Attorney
lJennJs O'Neil If It is legal for Newport
Beach to get Involved. ·
He said he will alao propose at this
afternoon's councllmanic study session
that Newport Beach sue Huntington
Beach if that city is.'lues a building
permit without requiring t b e en-
vironmental impact study.
The utility ob1-ined the APCD approval
last week but has not yet applied for any
pennlis IJOm Huntington Beacb for the
$150 milllon addition.
However, Huntington Beach Coun-
cilman Henry Duke.bas.'cautiously warn-
ed that all aspects of the plant's effects
on the local environmeot must be studied
"because it involves more than ·just the
air."
Rycltoff said It is the air that concerns
him most.
He said the plant already violates
pollution standards and the proposed e:r:-
pansion would double the present out~ut
~Hoag Directors to Meet
To Act on Recommendation to Close Family Center
By L. PETER XRIEG
,. .. Deir .......
'l)o -.~ -""'° nm .llooa NelilotW lbpltal lo NOWP!ll'I lleacli
............ ,,,.,.' to ... ·bllliad clole4 doOn today to ICI on a i.commeadatlco
by the medical llaff that tbe hooplU!f1
-year-old Family Practice Center lie
cl-u of next June 30.
Under pressure fJOm dnclbrs to shut it
down and lrom the ~unit7 to.·keep it
open, dbeetun were lo meet at t p.m. to
.....,. ~ .. bud(ell prepored by
Dr."1.lilolrPllce, ... fa\ dlrll:lilr. lhat zi>l1 lllew tbe promm fo .he alvaged.
A. Vloc<ol J01s-, pt'Olldeot of the
Mlpltal board, lhll m«ning again
clecllnfd lo speculate on tbe out<Ome ol
Congress Approves 5-year
U.S.-Soviet Arms Accord
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe hlstorlc
11v .. year U.S.-sov!et fneze on intercon-
tinental nuclear missiles and missile-fir4
Ing submarines was approved today by
Congress.
A Senate 1'!90lutlon approving the May
28 Moscow arm! accord but urging the
President to seek equal, not inferior,
U.S. nuclear forces in any pennanen~
anru limitation treaty was accepted by
the House and sent to President Nixon.
The vote waa :.16 to !.
Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman
"rhomaa E. Morgan (0-Pa.), told the
House he coosidered some of the Senate
atrlctures unnecessary and redundant,
but urged the House to accept them to
speed the way for further U.S.-Sov!et
talks this fall.
Morgan said "there is little prospect
for the talks getting on next month/' as
the White Hoose once hoped, noting Con·
greas' approval came 2S days after Presi-
dent Nixon's deadline.
the meeting. He d.!'d promise a decision,
bo;;".:';d he c!Oes :not'-,.l't;now ~
efforts to. find -aourees of .......,.
1rom the pr1v&1e sector e1 the "°'""1•11117
to llelp defray tbe costs ·of the prvgram
will be IUCC8lllUI ... QOI.
They were ·dealt a blow Sunday,
however, when the man working on
search for fundl, Hospital Treaaurer
Charles J, Flsbbact, suffered chest pains
and was tuSbed lo the boopltal where he
ls now in good condition.
Jorgensen aald he does remain op.
tlmistic about the future of the program.
"I support it. II want it continued. I
believe in Jt. It's a good program, ..
Jorgensen said.
"We're going to go over the budget
again and see if we can make a reduced
program work," be said.
An aide to Pace said this morning that
the revised budget trims the program to
12 doctors. There are now 13.
But Dr. Taylor Jepson, ope of tbe
residents obtaining bis general practice
training in the program, said that under
the Tevised program the doctors would
have expan.ded duties and would serve
not just at Hoag but would rotate through
other hospitals and various physicians'
offices.
The protest against the medical stall
(See HOSPITAL, Page !) '
of oxides of n i t r o g e n into the at4
mosphere.
He accused the Edison Company of
Htwtsttng the law" in its current pro-
posal.
He said that the compaoy wants to
build 12 fossil fuel bumen that would
each barely meet the state standard of
167 tons per day of nitrous oxide
emission!.
"They requested three years ago to
build two additional units," Ryckoff said,
(See EDISON, Page !)
Guns Crackle
As Officer's
Killer Sought
I': l '1r.~!'Jt ~"=JI,. .
'!be "ln-t fonmpec:tef Polloe killer
a..Ui.,i..·Cloalloil •. who baa literally
come and ...,. around two counties fo r
five~' continued today with an appeal
fo, hli juatanle«kafety snrrender.
So far, the man 50Ulbt In conoectlon
with the shooting death of Buena Park
~ce Detective Darrel D. "Bud" Cate
laat Tburaday ba.s managed to escape
several potential pollce traps.
Gunfire has erupted each Ume, the last
one involving a burst of 20 shots whleh
peppered a fleeing ear carrying a scared
car salesman mistaken for Clouston.
He tried to speed away to avoid exactly
r,_ gunfire resulting -aa he fled with
two terrified girls in the car -which be
feared would come after Clouston was
reported at the car lot.
Somehow the lm'ified trio escaped
without injury.
Buena Park Police Chief Dudley D.
Gourley today appealed to Clouston, an
ex-convict who cl&.ms he won't be taken
alive, to surrender with someone as an
escort.
He suggested it be done in company
with a newspaper reporter, a minister, a
priest, or someone as a third party.
"I urge him to surrender before other
innocent people are needles!ly hurt, in·
jured or killed,'' Chief Gourley declared.
The bunt which has ranged from the
Buena Park-Anaheim area up to south
Los Angeles Co1.mty twice now has in·
volved shooting incidents on four oc-
casions.
"We have bad several near-tragedies,"
Chief Gourley said Sunday.
"We want to avoid any more of these
situations," be continued.
"He may think be cannot give himself
up safely because be .killed a police of·
fleer/' Chief Gourley added, presuming
Clouston ls indeed the slayer of Detective
Cate, who left five children.
Clouston has escaped a narrowing
police dragnet several times, the most
recent case being one in which he fled on
foot via a flood control channel after an
exchange of shots.
He had been recognized from news
photos, according to investl,ators, when
he allegedly tried to trade hls .22 caliber
pistol for a used car at an agency.
CA.R A.D CLICKS
ON FIRST CA.LL
The pri<e WU risJit and '° WBI the
buyer. It took just one call to make the
sale after this ad appesred lo the DAILY
PILOT:
'iG n11tsun wagon, new 1 · 1,
)atl ttc, ori"; owner, 46,000 nu. $it:ll. x:xx-xxxx..
~
} """ JM fli:st miler bougbt the wagan. ' Bodi~ aDd seller reported they were
happy. Lei m ma!i,. you happy, too. We
can find ~,,~ert, renters. wha~r_l10U're .,.kinl lot. Dial the
dlrec( u.., to Rl!llts. Pl!aaO llW67S. g::r l,'ILOT Classified Advertising
'Last One in is a •••• .
Young Eric Je~ son of Newport Harbor mgh
S<bool swim co~ llfil Jewel, ca pa •dedlcallo!l cere-
monies for new Olympic pool on the Harbor mgh
campus by doing the n11UnJ thlng. New llO-mef>!r
t
pool was dedicated Sunday. It will b1rused in both.,
com'lllunity recreation and Newport-Mesa school dis-.
tri<t swim programs. Pool cost '318,700. '
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DAILY JllLOT SllH ,.._
GREG TAUBE, 17, USES CLIFF DRIVE BIKE LANE
The Aim is to Cut Accidents by Separating Cars and Bikes
County Officials Study
For.ming S.ingle Council
A general asoembty or Ormip ,County cJtY. councilmen and superv!son bas 'been
called for Oct. 30 in Costa Mesa-to
further the formation of a proposed in~
tergovernm~ntal council (ICG).
The propMed o!'g'.anization w o n
unanimous endorsement of the county's
mayors and supervisors Saturday at a
Harbor District offices meeting in
Newport 8.!ach.
Under the proposed joinl powers agree-
Newport Council
Agenda Topped
By Three Items
The threat or a $12.7 million suit, a ma-
jor hike in the building excise tax and a
condominium project in Corona del Mar
are the three major items facing
Newport Beach councilmen at their
meeting tonight at 7:30 o'clock in City
Hall.
Developers of the VersaillJ:s on the
Bluffs apartments in West Newport have
filed a $12.7 million claim against the city
contending t h a t would be the 8:f110~t
of their loss if Its present zorung ts
changed, aa proposed by the planning
commission.
Planners want the density cut from 35
to 18 dwelling units per acre on the sec-
ond phase of the project.
The city's action bas spurred protests
from the building and real estate in-
dustry. The Newport Harbor-O>sta Mesa
Board of Realtor! first criUcized the
move Jast week. Today, the Orange
County Chapter of the Building Industry
Association of California spoke out ''in
shoc k and deep concern" against the pro-
posal.
The proposed hike in the building ex-
cise tax, charged on all new construction
to pay for new parks, libraries and fire
stations, bas drawn opposition from only
one major source -the Irvine Company.
The Newj>ort Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce, after an extensive review, has
taken no stand on the hike.
Propoeed ts an increase IJOm tine
cents to 15 cent3 per square foot for com-
mercial .. d Industrial buildings and
from a flat fee of $150 per unit to 15 cents
per square foot for residential units.
Other business before the council in·
eludes:
-An ordinance cracking down on de-
bris floating lo and around private and
public dOcks and marinas.
-A proposal to delete requirement ·~f
posting public notices in post offices.
-Action formally 5Ched ullng a public
hearing for Oct. 10 on the p!aMlng com·
mission density recommendation for the
Versailles project.
-Di5Cussion of the problem of notlous
gas odors In the Balboa Covea area.
-Adoption of the BMUBI weed abate-
ll)ent program requested by the fire
chieL
,)
ment approved In principle Saturdly,
• !00-will be a voluntary agency to deal
with local government problems that cut
across political boundaries.
Before ICC becomes a legal organiza-
tion, at least 14 of the county's 26 cities
and the Board or Supervisors must vote
their approval. Whatever combination of
cities voluntarily decided to join their
total ~population and that of the unin.
corporated area must reach more than
half of Orange County's total.
The decision to join will be made by
each city council sometime after tbe Oct.
30 general assembly which has been ten4
tatively set for 7: 30 p.m. in the Costa
Mesa City Council chambers.
Membership would be limited to
elected representatives from the cities
and the Board of Supervisors. Each of
them would have a single vote on ICG 'a
governing board.
To finance the pro)>08ed new organiza-
tion eacb city and the county and the
coun ty would pay dues based on both
assessed valuation and population.
Under the proposed agreeme nt TCG
would be empowered -to e n t e r
agreements, incur debts, own property
and apply for federal and state grants.
The intergovernmental council has
been discussed for several years and was
preceded 18 months by the formation of
SAMCO, representing supervisors and
mayors council.
Saturday's meeting found 18 city of-
ficials and three cowity supervisors
agreeing on the general organization of
the proposed group with delails left to
later meetings.
Robert Thomas, county administrative
officer, told those present of pitfalls en-
countered in the fil'!t year of a similar
(S.e COUNCIL, Page !)
Orange Ceast
Weather
Sunny skies through Wednesday,
with hlgh,, in the 70s, both inland
and along the beaches. Lows to-
night around 581 actarding to the
weatherlady.
INSIDE TODAY
A lone gunman fired on the
Foothill Division police .station
eo.,-111 thi,, morning with such in-
tensity that policemen tmide
thought they weJ"t under attack
by a gang of men armed with
machhte gu n.t. Se e story on
Page 5.
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I '
·-2 DAILY PILOT N
DEAD AT 45
Princlpal Vrtb.tlovich
Presidio
Principal
Dies at 4.5
Carl A. Vrebalovich, principal of Costa
1'1esa's Presidio School since 1965, died
Saturday of an apparent ki dney faJlure .
Funeral services for Mr. Vrebalovich,
45, have been set for 3 p.m. Wednesday
at Pacific View Chapel in Corona del
Mar, with the Rev. Bruce Kurrie of the
Presbyterian Church of the Covenant of-
ficiating. Interment will follow at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
Officials at the Newport-Mesa Unified
&boo! Di!lrfct said Mr. Vrebalovlcb bad
been atifferlng from kidney problems off
and on during the month of August. He
was receiving treatment at St. Joseph's
Ho,,pital, Orange, shortly before his
death.
Born in 1927, Mr. Vrebalovich was
educated at Franklin High School, Los
AngeJes, and at John Muir College. He
obtained his B.A. degree from the
University of California, Berkeley in 1951
and his M.A. degree from Cal State, Los
Angeles in 1957.
He entered the teaching proression in
1952 at University High School in Los
Angeles. Later assignments included
Beverly Hills High School, Paramount
High School, an d the Paramount, Collins
and Gaines elementary schools in the
City of Paramount.
Mr. Vrebalov.icb came to the Newport-
Mesa Unified School District in 1964 to
take over as principal (If the Bay View
Elementary &boo!. In 1965, he became
principal or the ~pupil Presidio
Elementary School, a post he held for
seven years.
Mrs. Jeanine MacKinnon has been
named acting assistant principa l of the
school until a permanent replacement
can be found.
Survivors include Mr. Vrebalovich's
wife, Betty, and sons, Steven and Daniel,
who shared his home at 2737 San Lucas
Lane , Costa fl.1esa.
Harbor Trustees
Ask U.S. Grant
Newport-Mesa Unified School District
trustees ha ve applied ror an $80,826 grant
to be used for a social and ecological
environment projcrt at Newport Harbor
High School.
The application is being submitted to
the National Science Foundation as a
follow-up to a request \\•hich \\'BS not
funded last year, but encouraged by the
foundation .
If app roved. grant funds \\'ill be uSC'd
to study the upper Newport Bay environ-
ment and the social cnviron1nent of dis-
trict schools.
Results from both studies ·will be ana·
Jyzed by a c.omputcr at titassachussetts
Institute of Technology.
OIANGI COAST N
DAILY PILOT
711e ~ COQI OAIL'I' PILOT. wilt! wtlidl
k mmbllld Tiit! Newi.-Pr.,,,~. is publlW!ed by
fl'le 0!'1np Coast f>wllll1llil'!ll (ornpel\y, $-
r•11 ft!tlonl •rr pub!lsl>ed, MOnd•Y 1hrouol'o
Frldl)'', 1w C:0.11 Mn., N-PO•I 811ch.
1-;...,.tt,.gton 8•11:h/Foun•'"'" VM1ry, l•!lun•
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rtie prlnclpel JM,1b11.n1..., 111•"' 11 •t JJO we,1
8 •y S!rMt, (11$1• MIM, C•Utorm1, t2t2'.
Robert N. Weed
Prnldenl end Publil""I
J atk R. Curl1y Yb P,.iclent 11rid c;......,.,, ~
Thom•• Ke•vll
~Clltor
'fltom11 A. Mur,hift•
M1t11glng Editor
l. l"•+•r KTie9
lfewi-t ••9dt '"" i'dlMr N..,.... IMclt Offle9
lllJ N•w,.rt loule<r•rd
M.;n., At!Jrt111 P.O •••• 1175, t7Ul
°'"' Off1cot COllt M1JI' 310 Wi!tl 8ay $tl"'1 ,
Lff-811ch: 2'1 l"Ol'h l ... ,,..,.,.
Hu.itln;IOI\ 81fCh: 11t1J 8toteh l!.oultYtrW
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fdllO!"lll ""'""' Of" advtrl lt-tl fl«olf'I _., ll>t tljll'Olllll(l'(I wilt.out ..,.-111 ...,.,
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ITllll'lllllYI b)t l'Mll » 1$ ~J mlltlwv ._tlNU•rflJ 12.u mon111rr.
Boost Initiative From Pagel
Mills' Prop. 20
BIKES.··
tin do°"'11 on .the numMr of accidents ~
"' Sget lhe trail system romplet~. . I nnc..,tblt. we "To put it as s1mp Y as r--ba to bWld u many trails as we can.
as ":tten u we can and 11 wide II we • Team ID Laguna can," he said. . ·1
11te latest development in the bike tra1
system is Huntingtol\ Beach'~ approval of
a trail aloag Pacific Coast H_lghway from
the Santa Ana River bridge to ~~
Brookbunt Street entrance to the s "California, Alabama and S o u t h
Ca rolina are the only states which have
110 plans governing C()asta l management
and planning. Every other sta le blessed
with this kina or precious natural
resource has taken some action to
preserve and enhance It.'' Sen. James R.
Mills (D-San Diego ). Ulld a crowd of
Lagunans Sunday as he bi cycled lntu
I.own to boost Proposition 20. the
Coastline Protection Initiative on the
November ballot.
Mills and his fellow cyclists stopped at
Laguna's Main Beach for lunch u they
neartd the end of lhelr 50().mUe "coastal
protection" bike ride from San Francisco
to San Diego.
They were greeted by Mayor Charlton
Tloyd, Vice Mayor Roy Holm and con-
servationist William WUcoxen, all of
whom spoke In support of the Coastline
Init.latlve.
After the lun<h stop, the cyclillla pedal-
ed off to San Clemente to spend the nlght
at the State Park in that city before pro-
ceeding to San Diego.
"You may not think there Is much
drama in the spectacle of a middle-aged,
balding legislator huffing and puffing his
way down the coast highway," Mills told
the crowd. "But you are not looking at it
from my perspective. There a r e
moments when I feel an acute sense of
drama -not to say alarm -as I try to
keep up with the rest of our party."
Stressing the seriousness of the tour,
Mills added, "A wide awareness that
there is a problem is almost a solution in
itself. This has been the pattern in other
states. Coastline controls have been im-
posed only after some demonstration by
the public that they want their beaches
unspoiled, that they want access to their
own beaches, and that thJ!y will no longer
tolerate unrestricted, haj>hazard develop-
* * * Proposition 20
Enemies Form
Defeat Campagin
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A group op-
posed to Prop. 20, the coastal initiative,
announced the fonnation of 11 statewide
campaign today to defeat the measure
oo tbe Nov. 7 election ballot.
Spokesmen for Citizens Against t h e
Coastal JnJtiatlve said the proposal is
looMIJ; and a&nbigoously drawn, a n d
would require lengthy court lnleri>;f<ta·
lion.
Loog Beach Mayor Edwin W. w.a. Is
president of the drive. State co-ehalnnen
are Los Angeles attorney A. L. Hamil·
ton 8nd J o h n F. Crowley. secretary-
treasurer of the San Francisco L a b o r
Council (AFL-CJO).
1be inJUative provides for the develop-
ment of a master plan for C811fornia's
coastal zone for what spocsors say will
preserve and enhance the area's ecology.
The citizens' group contends the mea-
sure would benefit a favored few and
have a "chJIUng effect" on public access
and employment in coastal areas.
Officials Hail
Lobster Event
For Balboa Bay
Labeling it a "big success," officials of
lhe Balboa Bay Lion 's Clu b estimated to-
day they served more than 2,000 dinners
at the 23rd annual Lobster Bake this
weekend.
Mario Pacini, chairman of the organiz·
ing committee, said the turnout for the
annual event at Fashion Island was good
despite the sometimes.cold weather.
Donna Cason, 18, of Tustlr. reigned
over festivities as the 1972 Miss Lobster
Bake. She was selected from a field of
nine contestants Friday night.
Miss Cason and her court led the two.-
hour parade Saturday morning which
circled the lobste r bake and carnival on
Neu']>Ort Center Drive.
Judy Buterbaugh of 410 Park Newpo rt
w11s announced as the ~'inner of a color
television set following a drawing held
Sundav. An An aheim man. J. W. Verholtz
of 3I 4i Ascot Place . won the 1973 Pinto in
the grand prize drawing .
ment or their coastline."
With lwo-thirds of Ca!Uornla'I 1,100-
mlle coastline already privately owned.
and only 150 mllet ol wltal b left usable
as recreation beacbea by 20 mUlloD
Galifomlans, "there i1 not much left to
preserve," said the senator,
Proposition 20, be said, is not offered
as the ultimate aolutkm to the coastline
crisis, but •• a method ol galnln.r time to
deve lop plans for the C08Sl
l t calls for the creatJoa of a Couta1
Zone Comm!AS!on and llx t'tCkmI com-
missions lo plan the best .... or the
coastllne. The comm!IBkN would be
made up ball by representatives or local
governments and 11a1; by pabllc-.
appointed by the Governor 1 n d
Legislature.
The commission wou1d be required to
sulxnlt a plan to the Legillature by 19'15,
and ln the meantime, no couta1 develop-
ment could take place withJn. 1,000 yarU
of the shoreline without a special permit.
"Opposition to coastline protectioo is
formidable, and the Legislature has been
unable to overcome it," MUI! said. "An
unusual alliance of both big business and
segments of organlted labor opposed
coastline protection leg.lslation this year.
The Oil interests are afral dof losing prof-
its, and some of our largest unions are
afraid of losing coDStrucllon jobs.
"If we can learn anything from the
legislative defeat d coutllne protect1on,
it is that the opponents ol Propooltlon 20
are wealthy, well organized 1 n d
powerfu1. We can expect a very •lick,
professional campaign agllnlt tbla ap-
proacH lo coaatline protection. In lb~
weeks ahead."
Referring to coastline protect lo n
legislation In other atatel, Milli took an
indirect awipe at Governor Rea1an. In
these stales, he said, 'tlJ'here wu another
form of pressure that is missing in
California -strong leadership by the
governor."
FrontPogeJ
HOSPITAL ...
DAILY PILOT Stiff P"hoM
Stuck in llpper Bay
Unidentified weekend yachtsman found himself stranded on mudflats
of Upper Newport Bay Sunday afternoon when tide went out. Har-
bor Department spokesman said high tide was 11above average" in
Back Bay Sunday and may have misled the boarer and his crew. They
apparently waited until next high tide at 11:05 Sunday night to re-float their boat.
Services Slated Tuesday
For Walter S. Spicer, 80
beach. JaUe said. . "This connects with our trad along the
h. h Y that has been cut. through t_he f~~nd onto Seashore Drive," he said.
"The bridge has been posted to .. tell
riders to walk their bikes across.
Jaffe said a new trail along the south
side or Ford Road between Jamboree and
l\-1acArthur Boulevard was completed
recently.
"It runs across 11-1acArthur and con·
nects with a trail running through Buf·
falo Hills Park in Harbor View Homes.
through the tract then out the bottom and
onto new MacArthur Boulevard," he
said.
From Page J
COUNCIL •..
council in Ventura County.
1 l
There was a tendency, TMmas said,
for particJpatlng agencies to dump all
their difficult problems onto the council.
Robert Finnell, president of th~ Orange
County League of Cities, said this coun_ty
should be better suited for an in-
tergovernmental agency . than most
others because it is not dominated by one
city like Los Angeles, San Diego or
Fresno counties.
A budget of $17,200 was tenatively set.
It was decided that decisions made by
the council on any subject would be ad-
vioory only. &boo!.> and other •peclal
districts would be permllled to join later
but as nonvoting members.
'Mx>mas said that state government In
Sacramenlo Is strong for this type o1
organization and said it wu possible that
matching funds would be granted lo ald
the organization in getting started.
Police Workshop
Set in Newport
The Coordinaitng Council of the Harbor Funeral services for Harbor area Spicer moved to Santa Ana in 1921 and in Area has scheduled a workshop session
pioneer Walter SCOtt Spicer will be con-1930, he came to Newport Beach where on "Police and You as a Team" Oct. 11
ducted at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the C.Om-he opened his lumber yard on Pacific al the Newporter Inn in Newport Beach.
Coast Hlgbway. It was the f1r1t com-Appearing at the noon luncheon will be vole continued to fiood the hospital ~ munlty Congregational Church of Corona mercial establishment in the city. B. James Glavas, Newport Beach chief of
day. del Mar by the pastor, the Rev. Philip Mr. Spicer, an active businessman. poli<:i?, and Roger Neth, Costa Mesa chief
Hospital adminlltrator Lou Kaa said Murray. was also a director and vice president of of police.
there were more U.., 1IO letters from Mr. Spicer, a long-time area resident the old . N~wport.Balboa ~vin,P, and ~~entalives from local clubs.
residents throushOut soutbeim. Orange and civic leader died in his sleep Friday Loan AssoClation,'' president ()f the organir.atioos.1 schools. service agencies
County on "''· deslr: ... i. __.,,,. night ·at Hoag Memorial'-HospltaJ. He was NeW?Jrt Harbor. Chamber of. eo. mm_erce. and members Of the public are invited to
MOot of~ them ;:... -,;;;;;· letters 80 yeart old. in l!ISf, and a membu of the ~ of littend. For additional information con-
ctrcuJated by the realdentl tbrouP t\.jr A native of Nebraska who was directors of the Sailta Ana Community tact program chalmlan Lou Yantom.
patients. """"'-~gr~ad~uijiatedijii;;;f;"":;';;' jj;Wb;;;jlttler~;;;iColl;;;;eg~e,=· Mr;;;;.;;;;;;H;;;os;;;p;;;ita;;;I;;;. ;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:~';;:;;:;:612:;:;8312;;::' :::::::::::::::::; About I.., -I month are l · ---treated by the doctors In the reaidency
tralnlng procram.
The resldents have alao hlrod Santa
Ana altomey BarT)l l\flcbelson who tbla
morning said be ts preparing 1 letter for
the doctors to alp "'I~ tl\lt the
directors do act deflnlUvely !Oday.
"If they'ro going to llUllaln the vote
they (the doctors) have all got to make
arrangemenll aa soon a1 posa:lble to cet
into other prognrna, 11 Micbaelaon uld.
He alao said be 11 trying to talk wllh
officials of the Unlvenlty of Ca!Uornla
Irvine medical school to enllll their sup-
port In continuation of the program.
In the leller to the hospital board, sign-
ed by each of the resldenta requesting an
immediate decillon, they say:
"A crisis of confidence now exists in
the family practice resklency program.
If the financial support exists for only
one year, then the program ls of no real
value to either the medical residents or
the recipients of services under ii. The
program mull be continued as a vital
part of Ulls hospital on a continuing
basis.
"An Immediate deci!lon ii urgently re-
quested. Many of the undenlcned must
accept or reject altematlve residency
programs lmmedialely ti their currtnt
residency lnilnlng Is not to be waated.
"The current hJgh level of patient care
and residency training must be con-
tinued."
Earlier in the letter, the nsldents say
they all 0 relied upon the statements both
oral and written of authorized hospital
personnel, to the effect that the program
was and is vitally Important to the
medical staff, to the admlnJstrat.ion of
t:,I! hospi tal and to over 1,250 persons
who are treated at the funlly practice
center each month.
"Jn reliance on these understandings,
each of the tmderslgned m e d i c a I
residents ts participating in this pro-
gram."
SUPER SIZE 24 CU. Fop IHCLUDINe
1,AUTOMATIC
ICEMAKER
Ad111lral
Giant Size 20.3 Cu. Ft.
Admlrol. ,,,,,..,,.,
3·Door Ouplex.
NO-DE,,.OSTINQ
FAEEZER/REFRIOEAATOR
,..,.. PND ion
5448
one-of-a-kind Admiral Floor Samples Lobster Bake officials said it \viii be a
fe\\I days before they can tally their
receipts from the three-day event. All
proceeds will be donated to the Orange
Cou nty Services for the Blind.
From Pqe J
Rotary Garage
' Sale Scheduled
IMPERIAL 3-0001 DUPlfXe NO-ODWOSTINC '
flfUEIJIEFllCWTOl-24.tCU.fT. M..iot IND Mn
UPPll flllDI ....... A•••lttc lceMabr ....... ·1or1ac--ew.a..011 .. u.1-
lOWll RllDI ........ ,, ....... " J: .........
:\tfJJ11•t1Dew ........ GIJlt0.111111111
SIDE by SIDE
15 :c '328"
18 =c: '3384'
20 =c: '36811
EDISON ...
":nid now they've broken that down to 12
units because two would just not cut the
mustard .
"They're now just tw istln1 the law,'"
he said.
Originally Edison wanted to build two
units that would have produced 19.l tons
each of nitrous oxide per day.
The 12 smaller units now sought would
1)Rch produc<' the allowable amount, 1.67
tons per day.
The Edison Com pany defends the new
proposal by pointlnR out that the units do
meet the Jaw and the ract that the
nitrous oxid e emlsslons proposed have
been cut almost in hair.
A communlly'll'lde prafe ule to ralle
funds for youth pro)Octa In the Harbor
area and In Mexico bat been ICbeduled
for Saturday, Oct. H, by the Cotta !deal
Rotary Club.
Appropriately, Ibo (artp 11!1 wlll be
held on the pmnltes ol 1 commen:lal
garage , Meaa Center Automotive, 16th
Street and Orange Avenue, eo,,ta Mesa ,
starting 1t a a.m.
Sale llelNI will mclude furniture, ap-
pliances, flztures, sportln( I o e d 1 ,
household gooda and clothing. Pvttons
wishing to clooate lternt to the Ille may
call M&-01111 durln( buli.... bonn, or
546-103f evenlnp, In ba.e their llcnl
picked up. ltelNJ may be dellnred to the
.. ie site after I p.m. J!'rido)o, OalalMtt l
IUllGllATOl ........... , ....... cm. ....... ~ l'llpl/oloat._,._~,Otlior-r t ii!
-"'·-~··· •COIMl<lwl '588
I I,
2 Deol' ''"' ''" Rl,RIOlltAT9R 112 =c '248"
DELUXE 17.S c::,c '268"
AND MANY MORI I ---------------.J ,,
Member of .--------.,
AUTHO!tlZID
Admlrel.
MASTl!t
MAINT Al NANCI
SlltVICE
CINTElt '·
-Phone 548· 7781 I
.,1
" r
I
I
I
/,
' I
Orange Coast
' E.DITION
Today's Flaal
N.Y. Steeb
VOL. 65, NO. 269, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1972 c TEN CENTS
County Assembly Meeting Scheduled for Mesa
. A a:ener~l iwembly of Orange Comity
city councilmen and supervi.!ors baa been
called for Oct. 30 in Costa Mesa to
further the fonnalion of a propoted in·
tergovernmen!Jll council (!CG).
The prOposecl organization w o n
unanimous endorsement of the county's
mayors and supervisors Saturday at a
Harbor District offices meeting in Newport Beach.
Under the proposed joint powers agree.
ment ~pproved in principle Saturday,
!CG will be a voluntary agency to deal
:;.year Treaty
with local government problems that cul
across pollUcal boondariea.
Belon! !CG beoomet a legal cqanir.a-
llon, at least II of tbe coqnty'1 le C!lliel
and the Board ol SUpervlloi'I must vol<
tbeJr approval. Wbal<ver oomblnaUon ol
cities vohm\arilY decided to loin their
total population and !hat of the unln-
corponl<d area must reach more lhlln
ball of Orange Oluoty's total.
The decilion to join will be made by
each city couocil aometlme after the Oct.
30 general assembly which baa been ten-
Congress Okays
Arms Limitations
W ASllINGTON (AP) -The historic
five.year U.S . .so.tet ln!ae On ~
!lnental nuclear milllles and mlsalle-llr·
1111 lllbmarlnes WH approved today by
c:ongr..,..
A Senate reoollllion approving the May
le Moooow amis accord but urging the
President to seek equal, not inferior,
U.S. nuclear forces in any permanent
arma lbnitation treaty waa accepted by
the &use and eent to l!residenl NU.on.
'!be vote WU 3iie to 4.
Foreign Alfa1n Commln.. Oialrman
'll>cimaa E. Morgan (0.Pa.), told t be
lfouoe he <Olllidaed oame of the Senate .
•tricture:t •DJMCemary 1114 redundant,
bqt· ..,.a the ilaUle to accept them to
opeec1 111o wa1 for fmlller u.s..sm.i
lalb tlU faD. -'
llerpn. said "tbon .. llttlo pr_.t
fl)6 !lie lalb l'ltin( "" 11111 IDllldhf •
the White llouoe once boped, ~ Col>-
.,.... approval came Z5 dQI alter Pr9I-
dent NW>n's 4e8dHne.
Rep. H. Allen Siiittli (M!allf.), said be
undontood th a t the Sovteta were not
willlna to resmne talb for 1 broader
1111D&11mitatton agreement until U.S. a1>
proval of the interim M""'°"' occord bad
been complel<d.
Senate approval was delayed for weeks
amid controversy over the amet;Khnent
by Sen. Henry M. Jact.on (0.Wasb.),
urging equality of the U.S.-Soviet offen-
sive nuclear forces in a treaty. .
The interim agreement limits the S<>-
viets to 1,118 land-fired missiles and the
Unlled States to 1,054. It limits the S<>-
viell to up to a submarines with up to
950 mllsiles ud the Unil<d States to 44
.. ~with up to 950 mllsiles.
The Jae--t notes that the
U.s..&wlol ,defalw .IDl!mlsaile tru!Y •'!!! :r;: ia!*.I._ . ...,. 1111111 each
coublrJ. ....... ~.~::r allt .u .. . ' · .... .rr Y"ntw· r •ts the ~y ,,.. to iiilt a lnilty i h a I ---Illa Uqlted-to lev.la
·ol :•---"""' -... terlir to the Jlmlll provided for the So< ri<4 llniGll. ~
Killer Suspeet Evades
Law Again Hi-Manhunt
B1 ARTlllJll R. VINSEL
Of .. °"" .........
Tbr. manhunt for ouspectod polico llfller
Harman L. Cioull4a, who baa lilor*Jly
come and gone around two coun!jel for
fiva d,,ys, continued today with an,-.J
for his guaranteedalety Mrendir.
So far, the man ~ in a8leClion
with the shooting deatli of Buena Park
Police Detective Dami D. ''Bud" Cite
l11t 'l'llursday baa managed to escape
aeveral potential polloe traps.
Gunfire baa enipted each time, tbe last
ona involving a bunt ol 20 lhota whlcb
peppered a fleein( car eanylna a acared
Cir salesman mixtaken for cio..m.
He tried to speed away to a\'Old aactl,y
f :. gunfiro resulting -a be fled with
two terrified girls in the car -which be
fe&Nd would oome llfter Clouston was "= II the car loL _,.,, tbe terrified trio escaped
wl-lajury.
Buena Park Police Oilel Dudley D.
Gourley today appealed to Clouston, an
•>«C<lllYlct who cl8Jms be won't be taken
alive, to surrender with someone as an
esoort.
He ouggested It be done In oompany
with 1 newspaper reporter, a mfnlster, a
prt:st, or someone as a third party.
"I urge him to surrender before other Innocent people are needlesaly burl. In-
jured or killed," Clllef Gourley declared.
Tbe bunt which bas rqed Imm the
Buena Parlr:·Anabelnl aroa up to IOUth
Loo Aqeles Oluoty twice "°" bas ... (See SUllPECr, Pqe I) ·
tatively set for 7:30 p.m. in the Costa
Mesa C:ty Council chambers.
Membership woald be limil<d to
elec!Od representatives lnim the clllea
and the Boan! ol SUpervisors. Each of
them would bava a single vote on ICG's
governing board.
To finance the proposed new organiza.
tion each city . and· the county and tbe oouncy would pay dues based on both
assessed yaluation and populallon.
Under the proposed agreement !CG
would be empowered to e n t e r
U'fT ........ ........ ,,.
The· Goodyear blimp· actually
is 700 feet away from San ,
FJ:ancisco's Trans~erica Pyr•
mid, although this photo by
San Francisco Chronicle pho-
tographer Art Frueh makes it
look as if moored to the build-
ing.
General Promoted
WASHINGTON (AP) -Lt. Gen. Paul
K. Clriton has beon nominated by Presi·
dent Nixon for ~otlon to general and
assignment as commander of the
Mllilal}' Airlift Command.
Suit Urged Agai~st County
Newport Councilman Asks Action On Edison, Ruling
Newport Beach Councilman Paul
Ryckoff wants hll ctty to sue Orange
County because the county's Air Pollu·
tion Control District approved the e1-
pansion ol the Southern C&lilornla Edbon
plant In Huntington Beach wtthoat ob-
taining an evtromnental Impact &tit..
ment. Freabman Councilman RyckDff aaid
CAR AD CLICKS
ON FIRST CALL
The prlCI W11 rtgbl and 10 -· tbe ""1er. 1t took just one call to ,..... lbe
sale alter lhil Id appeared ID the D~Y
PILOT:
'65 DAttun Wfl.IOl1, new ttres.
batt. ~tc. oril-owner, 411,000
mJ. ~' lOO«lOOIX.
Yes, the flnl eallet boupt tbe .......
Both buyer and aeller repo""'1 they wve
happy. Let us nllb "'11 119ppy, IM. We
-flnil hu)'on, ae11en, re D h r a, whatever you're looUol .... Dial Illa
dine! line to results. l'l!me' Iii NII,
DAiLY PILOT Claalf1ed ~ llt'pt. '
I r
slate law requlm such a statement.
Newport Beach Mayor llorulld A.
Mcinnis bas already written both the
oounty and the city of Huntington Beach
llrongly uriini that Ibey oblaln the ~
quired report.
Rydtolf uld be will ask City Attorney
llemll O'NeU If H is legal for Newport
Beach lo pt Involved.
lie la14 he will also -at lhil aJlornocia•a <OllllCllmanic atuoly -ion
that Newport lltlcb sue HunUngton
8aocb If that dfy issues a bu1ldlng
permit -roquir1"I t b e en-
vb;,:;= =.i-:-APCDapprvval
lailt ..._.but ... not 1tl •pp!W for 11\Y
pennlte from llllntlapn Bacb for the '* mlll1oe addltla& However, lla.mdnltoa BMch Coun-
cllman llemy Dub bit oautloully warn-
ed tllat all ~ ol Iba plant'• effecta
... !ht llCll •·~-1111111 be~ "bec:aw It ~ more tbaa Jiii! the air" -Jiim« ll1d It le the air thal concerna w;. -:.~ ...., .tolatea
pollotlon ml tbe pr_.t es-
panoloa ,,.,. dlltible Iba 1*eamt output
ol Olldla Ii! •llr.011,a'lllto the II· ~ ..
•
He accused the Edison Company of
0 twisting the law" in its ca.rent pro-
posal.
He sald that the company wants to
build 12 fossil fuel burners that would
each barely meet the slate standard of
1.67 tons per day of nitrous oxide
emls!lons.
"Tiier nque>ted three years ago to
build two additional units," Ryckolf said,
"and now they've broken that dawn to 12
un!U beeau>e two would Just not Cut the
mUl!anl.
•ihey•re now just twisting the law,"
be said,
OriglnaUy Edison wanted to build two
units that would have produced II.I tons
.. ch of niU.US oxide per day.
Tile 1J smaller unita now sooghl would
each pniduce the allowable-amount, 1.67
""" per .ia,. • Ti¥i E;dilcl\ Com""'1: defeida the MW propoAl·bf PQl>ui,,' 1111 \!II! tl\o '*>:ta dO
meet ,tllt,_ 1"" aod ' llW . fie( 1#111 the
nllraua Ollde em~ ,,-.pooed have
-cul aJmoat In 111!1-~;
'l'loey 111 that tbe n ra..s fOai1 tu.I bal•• .. the~ .... be··-
pect.d to be. ,
Rycl<o!l 1a11, ~.that 1£•anybody
made the co m p •.ll'J>' <!'lain tbe on-
(flee ED~, ..... 1)
aareementa. incur debls, own property
and apply for federal and state grants.
The intergovernmental council has
been dlscus..ed for several years and was
preceded 18 months by the fonnaUon of
SAM(X), representing supervisors and
mayors council.
Saturday's meeting found 18 city of·
ficials and three county supervisors
agreeing or, the general organization of
ths-»"'posed group with detaila left to
irn~ .... ~eetings. Robert Thomas, county administrative
officer. told those present of pitfalls en-
countered in the first year of a similar
evuncll in Ventura County.
There was a tendency. Thomas said,
for participating agencies to dump all
their difficult problems onto the council.
Robert FiMell. president of the Orange
County League of Cities, said thi! county
should be better suited for an in·
tergovemmental agency than most
others because it is not dominated by one
city like Los Angeles. San Diego or
Fresno counties.
A budget "' $17,200 wa! t.enativelJ set.
It was decided that decl!lons made bJ
the council on any subject would be ad-
visory only. Schoola and other speclal
distrit"lJ would be permitted to join liter
but as nonvoting members.
Thomas said that state government in
Sacramento 11 strong for tbis type of.
organization and &aid It wu pos!ible that
matching funds would be granted to aid
the organiz.atioo ln getting started.
Hospital Decision
Hoag Directors to Rule on Center
By L PETER KRIEG
Of ffMi DIMl'f '°lttt lletf
The men and women who run Hoag
Memorial Hospifa.J in Newport Beach
were sCbeduled to meet · behin,-t closed
doors today to act on a recommendation
by the medical staff that the hospital's
three-year-old Family Practice Center be
closed as of neit June 30.
Under pressure from doctors to shut it
down and from the community to keep it
open, directors were to meet at 4 p.m. to
Security Unit
Okays Travel
B1'11 -P.roposal ·
~ WASlll#9T0N (AP) -A 'bW to
outlaw ~ trl(l.' by Anierlcanl
to nations IUCb as Norlll Vietnam which
are Jn armed oonflid with the United ;
S!Jltea wu approved today by the House
Internal Security Convnlttee.
Tile legislation, maJdng It a felony
punishable by up to 10 years in prison
at;d a $10,000 fme for Americans to make
such a trip without presidential
permis.slon, was approved 5 to o after a
45-minute bearing.
Rep. Richard H. Jchord (0.Mo.), com-
mittee chairman, said the legislation is
aimed at actlOM such as those of actress
Jane Fonda who recently made antiwar
broadcasts over ifanoi radio during a
visit to North Vietnam.
There was no opposition to the bill dur·
Ing the hearing on leglslaton which
Icbord introc.luced last week. Joining
IcOOrd in the vote approving the bill were
II<!('.'. Claude Pepper ( D • F I a . ) ,
Richardson Preyer (J>.N.C.), Mendel J.
Davls (l).S.C.), and Roger H. Zion (R·
Ind.). .,
Mesa Motel Fire
Injures Arizona
Man Critically
A visiting Arizona man suffered
critical bums this morning in a $5,000
blaze which gutted his Costa Mesa motel
room before be w8! rescued by firemen.
Richard A. Blackie, Cl, of Sun City,
was treated initially at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital and then transferred
to the Orange County Medical Center
bum unit for further treatment.
The victim suffered second and third
degree burns on his face and lower legs,
according to fire d e p a r t m e n t in-
vestigators who suspect smoking in bed
as the cause of the fire.
"Evidence points in that direction,"
said Ballailoo Chief Bob Beauchamp.
He said the fire at the Kon Tiki Motel,
22115 Harllor Blvd., wu reported at about
5 -a.m., and virtually d~yed Apt. 14,
also causing exterior ~ke damage.
l':fesa City Clerk
Visits Germany
Mra. Eileen Phinney, city clerk of
Costa Mesan ii mixing buJiness with
pleasure during her cum:nl vacatkln ln
~idelb<rg, Weet Germany.
'l'l1e Heidelberg newapsper recently
tarried 1 photo of Mn. Phinney meeting
Dr. Hans Georg Gerken, mayot of
Heidelberg,
Mrs. Phinney says she plans to attend
aome meellnp of the Heidtlberg City
Coimcil during her 1tay, "just to keep In
jntll~" ..
review scaled-down budget! prepared by
Dr. J. Blair Pace, program "irector, that
may allow the program to be salvaged.
A Vincent Jorgensen, president of the
hospital board, this morning again
declined to speculate on the outcome of
the meeting. He did promise a decision,
however.
He said he does not yet know whether
efforts to find new sources of revenue
from the private sector of the com munity
to help defray the costs of th e progran1
.DEAD AT 45
Princip1I Vrebalovlch
Mesa Principal
C.A. Vrebalovicli
Succumbs at 45
Carl A. Vrebalovich, principal 0£ Costa
Mesa 's Presidio School since 1965, died
Saturday of an apparent kidney failure.
Funeral services for Mr. Vrebalovicb,
45, have been set for 3 p.m. Wednesday
at Pacific, View Chapel ln Corona del
Mar, with the Rev. Bruce Kurrie of the
Presbyterian Church of the Covenant of~
ficiating . Intennent will follow at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
Officials at the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District sa id Mr. Vrebalovich had
been suffering from kidney problems off
and on during the month of August. He
was receiving treatment at St. Joseph 's
Hospital, Orange, shJrtly before his
death.
Born In 1927, Mr. Vrebalovich was
educated at Franklin Hlgh School, Los
Angeles, and at John Muir College. He
obtained his B.A. degree from the
University of C&Wornla, Berkeley in 1951
and his M.A. degree from Cal state, Los
Angeles in 1957.
He entered the' teacti.lng profession in
19S2 at University High School Jn Loe
Angeles. Later Hllgmnenta included
Beverly Hills High School, Paramount
High School, and the Paramount, Collina
and Gaines elementary school&: ln the
City of Paramounl
Mr. Vrebalovich came to t.be Newport~
Mesa Unilied School District Jn 11164 to
take over as principal of the Bay View
Elementary School. In 1965, he became
principal of the :JOO.pupil Presidio
Element•ry School. a pool he beld for
seven years.
Mrs. Jeanine MacKinnon has been
named acting asslstant principal of the
school until a pcnnanent replacement
can be found.
Survivors Include Mr. Vrebl1ovlch's
wife, Betty, and sons, Steven and Danltl,
who ·shared his borne at 'lT1I San Lucas
l.ane, Costa Mw.
will be succeuful or not.
'Ibey were dealt a blow SUnday, howev.r; when the man w«klq m
searoh for flmds, Hospital Tr<Ui'r!r
Charles J. Flshbaclr:, suffered chest pUna
and was o-UShed to the hospital when be
is now in good condition.
Jorgensen said be does remabt o~
limistic about the future of the srogram.
"I support it. It want It continued. I
believe in it. It's a good program,"
!See HOSPITAL, Paf' I )
Drive Stalls
To Speed Up
Freeway Unit
E!IDrta to spaef up~ " .. Corona de! Mar Frteoay ba'" heed telft.
porarily stalled by the S!Jlte ~
Commission, Cata Mesa *1or Jacl:
Hammett said today.
Tile delay Involves the •bort linlt
between the San Diego Freeway and &ae
Newport Freeway interchange, a unit
which Costa Mesa city olflelals hive
been pushing u a mew to recNee
surface traffic on the city'• nortb'tflll
side. .
Tile commission ls expected to tab
final action on the proposal in Sacra·
mento Oct. 1.
Hammett said be and other Costa
Mesa leaders will attend the SacrlJ'Dlllto
session to persuade commissJonera that
the 197>-71 CO!Ullruction timetable ll>ou1d
he advanced. It is belleftd locally that
constructioo couJd begin as early u lt7S-
74.
Current elate plana place priority on
the other -t of the Corona de! Kar Freeway wblcb 11 acbeduled to ocmnect
the Newport Fr<ewoy with l\laCArlilur
Boulevard in Corona del Mar.
Costa Mesa officials are attemptinc to
reverse the construction sequence to pro-
vide traffic relief in an area they believe
the need Is urgent.
Traffic on Bristol Street, Mayor Ham-
mett pointed out earlier, has increMed es
percent over the 1967 figure. Accidents
on the northwest side of Costa Mesa have
bee.. up nearly 300 percent over the same
period.
Wheel Injures Foor
•
MONTEREY PARK (UPI) -A large
wheel burst into a building and injured
four men 'lblll'9day. 'n>e four-foot·hl1h
wheel came loose from an earthmover,
roiled downhill gathering speed, struck
an obstacle and rebounded an estimated
500 feet Into the alr, wilntsses aakt 1
Orange
Weadler
Sunny lkies lhnluib w-..i.,,
wilh bllhs In the 'ms, both Inland
and along the beachel. Laws-to.
night around 58, acoordblg to tbe
weathtrlady.
INSIDE TODAY
A lone gunman firtd °" tM
Foothill Dtt>lslon polic• stallo!<
tarl11 thb morning wiC1' twch fn.
tan.sit~ that poilc.,,,.n Inside
thouaht the11 were undir attack
by a gang o/ men anntd with
mochin< gutt.a. Ste S&OT\I on
Par;e S.
• ...
•
M• LllJlftn ,. -. --. °" ... ~ ' l,..,U ,.... "
'""' w.1r ''"'..,..... •n Te""1Mefl t • _.., I ·-. ....... ,... ..... ........... . .
' ' '
' '
' '
' ••
• •
l . ..
I
I'
% DAILY PILOT c
Pilots Seen
Held Until
.War's End
HANOI fA Pl -North Vietnamese
Prime Minister Pham Van Dong
reasserted to a delegation of Americans
rn Hanoi to escort home three released
fl iers that remaining pilots in captivity
"''ill be freed only when an agreement i.a
reached to settle the war.
In a 90-minute infonnal discussion,
Dong told antiwar activist-; Cora Weiss.
David Dellinger. the Rev. William Sloane
Coffin and Prof. Richard Falk that a
.frame?.·ork for negotiat ing a settlement
to the war has long been available.
That was the seven-point proposal put
forward by the Provlaional Revolutionary
Government. the Vil!t Cong, that calls for
the total withdrawal of American forces
and the fonnation of a coalition govern-
ment.
Dong said be wanted to slresll the lm-
Porlnnce of the Sept. II clarilicatlon
statement put forward in Parl! by the
Viet Cong delegatloo bead. Madame
Nguyen Thi Blnh, on a three-party coa li·
tlon government for South Vietnam . DAILY JlllLOT Stiff ......,.
'Last Otte i1a is a ••••
Boost l•ltiatlve
Mills' Prop. 20
• Team Ill Laguna
"California, Alabama and So u t h
Carolina are the only states which have
no plans governing coastal management
and plaM ing . Every other state blessed
with this i.lno or precious natura1
resource has taken aome action to
preserve and enhance it," Sen. James R.
Mills (O.San Dtego), told a crowd or
Lagunans Sunday as he bicycled into
town to boost Proposition 20, the
Coaslline Protection Initiative on the
November ballot.
Mills and his fellow cycllsta stopped at
Laguna's Main Beach !or lunch aa they
neared the end of their 500-mlle ueoastal
protection" bike ride from San F'rancllco
to San Diego.
'!'bey were greeted by Mayor Charlton
Boyd, Vke Mayor Roy Holm and con-
FromP .. el
SUSPECT ..•
servationist William Wilcoxen, all ?1
whom spoke in support of the Coastlme
Initiative.
Arter the lunch stop. the cyclists pe~al
ed off to San Clemente lo spend the night
at the State Park in that city berore pro-
ceeding to San Diego. .
"You may not think there is much
drama in the spectacle of a middle-ag~,
balding legislator huffing and puffing his
way down the coast highway." Mills to!~
the crowd. "But you are not looking at it
from my perspective. There a re
moments when I feel an acute sense of
drama -not to say alarm -as I try to
keep up with the rest ol our party."
Pre,,ident Nguyen Van Thieu of Soutb
Vietnam would be excluded under this
formula, but Saigon would be allowed to
name anyone else to one-third of the
governmen t. the Viet Cong another third.
The final third wou1d be comprised of
Catholics. Buddhists , exiled South Viet·
namese in Paris and others.
Young Eric Jewel, son of Newport Harbor Hi gh
School swim coach Bill Jewel, caps dedication cere·
monies for new Olympic pool on the Harbor High
campus by doing the natural thing, New 50-meter
pool was dedicated Sunday. It will be used in both
community recreation and Newport-Mesa school dis·
trict swim programs. Pool cost $318,700.
volved shOQti.ng incidents on four OC·
casions. 1
"We have had several near-tragedies."
Chief ,.Pourley said Sunday.
Stressing the aeriousneu of the tour,
Mills added, "A wide awareness. ~t
there Ls a problem Ls aJmast a aoluuon m
itself. This has been the pattern in o~er
states. Coastline controls have ~n 1m~
posed only after some demonstration by
the pubUc that they want the ir beach~s
unspoiled that they want access to thei r
own beach~. and that they wiU no longer
tolerate unreslriqted, haphazard develop-
ment of their coibtline."
With two-thirds of California's 1,100-
rnile coastline already privately owned
and only 250 miles of what is left u~a~le
as recreatio,n beaches by 20 million.
Californlans, •1there is not much left to ,
preserve," said the senator.
The graying, wiry North Vietnamese
leader told the delegation that the pilots
should be released and that it would be a
good act.
He asserted that President Nixon was
awani or the necessity for a setUement
fir st before their freedom and that there
was no misunderstanding.
The premier said he !ell that despite
this Nixon was following a Polley that
,delivered pilot• into North Vietnamese
handl and the number waa Increasing.
$5 Million Haul Reported
In Laguna. Niguel Heist
By FREDERICK SCROEMEHL
Of "" D1ll't ~llol ll•lf
Dong insisted that North Vietnam An eight-member gang that burglarJz.
want.. to release all captured pilots and ed the Laguna Niguel branch of Uni ted
that moment would come when there was California Bank took $5 million in cash,
Positive reaponse to the proposals jewelry and securities, an Ohio man in·
already tabled for a settlement. ' dieted in the ca se all egedly confided to a Mrs. Weiss, cochalrman of the com. friend.
mlttee of liaison with the families of tht The statement assertedly was made by
servicemen detained in North Vietnam Charles Albert Mulligan, 38, of Youngs·
said Sunday tbat the prospect of a town, Ohio to Earl Dawson of Tustin.
meeting with the premier was one NJason Mulligan, authorities asserted, told
for the delay in leaving Halloi for the Dawsoo that eight men broke into the
United States with the three released bank's vault in March and collected $5
Pilots. mtlU.. In loot. The gang then oold the Another reoaon !or !be delay, she said,· se<ur!Uea for 18 percent of their lace
was that the delegation had a value and kept the cash a n d jewels,
mpomtbilUy In make contact with other Mulligan "'portedly told Dawson.
pilots •till detained. \. Thi at&-11. whlch delense a~
~· tomey1 'for Mulligan have attempted to
· bar from ~ wW be admitted when Mesa Planners ' 1.•:{ the tita1 o()iN 1.11lelday, U.S. District
' "" • Court Judge Mott Byrne ruled Friday.
Mul!Jaan, along with Amil Dinslo, 38, of C "l s hed 1-Beardlrian, Ohio and Pbillp Chrlstopier, ounci C Uic 29, or Clevelap!! face cbargea of bank
bUJllary, conaplracy and bank larceny.
Meetings Tonight
Calta Mesa city hall watchers will
have the option toolght of attending
either the planning commission meeting
or a specially convened study aesslon of
the Coot& Mesa City Council.
The planning commission meets at 8:30
p.m. in city council chamben: and the ci-
ty cooncll at 7:30 p.m. In the first floor
C"onference room, both at Costa Mesa
City Hall, T1 Fair Drive.
Plllllling commission !tema lntlude
tine advertising sign applications.
IrorUcally, advertising signs and their
associated problems is the main Item
slated for discussion by the city council.
A new ordinance regulating the size
and placement of signs was ordered
drafted by councilmen a week ago to
replace loopholes in the existing sign
policy. The ordinance Is expected to be
ready for tonight's meeting.
Other items on the council agenda con·
sist of new ordinances regulating city
council procedures and street trees. and
discussion of widening on Victoria
Street, apartment zoning. and tighter
zone control of Harbor Bciulevard.
No official action n·ill be taken by the
council on any of tonight 's agenda items.
Two brothers, Ronald and Harry Barber,
have been Indicted but remain at large.
Judge Byrne also denied a motion by
attorney Antban,y Glassman, represent·
ing Christopher, to suppresa as evi·
dence '301000 in cash seized by FBI
agents at the time of Christopher's ar·
rest Two S5 bills, authoJtles say, can be
traced to the Laguna Niguel bank.
Byrne also denied a motion by
Mu!U,an's attorneys to exclude from
court cutting torches and other evidence
se ized from the trunk of a getaway car,
allegedly discovered in Dawson's garage.
Mulligan was arrested June 2 in Tustin.
apparently on his way to Dawson's to
pi ck up the car.
Byrne was exoected to rule this ar-
ternnon on whether a $21) bill found in
Dinsio's home may be accepted as
evidence in th~ trkd. The bill \Vas found,
authnrltiP:~ said, in the purse of Mrs.
Mary Mulligan, the mother or Charles
Mulligan and mother-in-law of Dinsio.
'J'he money has been traced to the
Laguna Niguel bank.
rn 11 separate ruling Friday. Byrne said
Christopher. Dinsio and 1'.1ulligan shall
stand trial together, denying defense mer
lions to separate the trial of the three
n'~n.
"J'n1 "'P.ased with the rulings, so rar,"
U.S. Attorney Jack Walters sald this
morning. "Otherwiae , I have no comment
on t~e case."
Jury selection Is scheduled for 9:30
a.m. Tuesday, with opening statements
and motions to be made on Wedne!day,
Walters said. The trial is e.zpected to run
tn'o to three weeks.
From Pagel
HOSPITAL •. ·.
Jorgensen said.
"We're going to go over the budget
again and see if \Ve can make a reduced
program work," he said.
An aide IQ Pace said thla l!1llllllng lblt
the revised budget trim! the program to
12 doctors. There are now 13.
Bµt Dr. Tayler Jepoon, one o! the
residents obtaining bia: general practice
training in the program, 1a.id that under
the revised program tbe doctors 1 wou1d
have e.zpat1ded duties and would aerve
not just at Hoag but would rotate through
other hospitals and various physicians'
offices.
The protest against the medical sin!!
vote continued to flood the hospital tcr
day. I
Hospital administrator Lou Kaa said
there were more than 150 letters from
residents throughout southern Orange
County on his desk this morning.
Most of them were form letters.
circulated by the residents through their
patients.
About 1,200 persons a month are
treated by the doctora in the resJdency
training program.
The residents have also hired Santa
Ana attorney Barry Mlcbae19on who this
morning said be is preparing a Jetter for
the doctors to sign requesting that the
directors do act definitively today.
"If they're going to sustain the vote
they (the doctors) h~ve all got to make
arrangements as soon as possible to get
into other programs," Michaelson said.
He also said he is trying to talk with
offlci81s of the University or Callrornia
Irvine medical school to enlist their sup-
port in continuation of the program.
Jn the letter to the hospital board, sign·
ed by each of the residents reques ting an
immediate decision, they say:
DAILY PILOT
TM ar....,. c-t CIAIL.Y ~ILOT, ~ 'llMdl
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,.,,. "'I"°"' ire •n~ Mond•r ~
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"""" ..... fl..-ctlf~-,.;,, Vl ller. L-OUl'lil
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t he Pf'IMIMl """btlll'I .... llbnt J1 II lJO w ...
a.y Stl'ftf, 0.M M .. , C1lll•nl1, tltM.
UCI Session Under Way;
7,695 Students Expected
ll:olt.rt N. W•t4
ll>rttldtftf .,.,. ""'111"'-
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LC Ir\'ine·s Anteater sti rred much like
an awakenf:'d hlbemAting bea r today as
lhl' first of an expected 7,695 st udents
returned to begin fall quarter studies.
Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. ad·
dressed the opening session of orientation
and reg istration week th is morning in
Cra1vford lia/l.
Lines began to rorm at various Joca·
lions around campus as students signed
up for classes which begin at 8 a.m. next
1'.Ionday.
Mesa Court donnitory parking lots
abanck>ne<l their vacant look as the 1,200
sing le students lucky enough to lease a
room began moving in.
Married or gradua te students rortunate
enough to find room In the 350 Verano
Place student apartments breethcd,.more
life Into the campu s which has been dor·
mant the past four weeks following lhc
end of the second of two summer
sessions.
1'.f05t new and returning students, a
c .. mpus spokesman said, wil l be checking
housing ornce waiting llsts or prowling
011.nge Coaat communities from Tustin
to Laguna Beach in hopes of finding ren·
ta l units.
is expected to enroll nearly 800 more
st udents this year than it did last year,
tJ1e spokesman noted.
Significant changes in transportation
links to the campu s, however, are ex·
pected to broaden the variety of ways
commuting students get to UCI.
Students, faculty and staff now are al·
fo rded an hourly bus linking the campus
to comrnunlUes between Santa Ana and
beach cities.
Orange Ciounty Tran!iilt District buses P""' through the campus on Bridle Road
stopping near the medical school,
biological sciences buildings. Crawford
Hall, Fine Arts Villaee and Mesa Court
donns.
And, the new city or Irvine has com·
pieled a 3.8-mtle pilot blkeway eystem
linking UC! with Unlwrslty High S<hool
and University Park.
Th: painted eight-root wide trail nmsj
along the south side of Campus Drfve a
lone long popular with commuting
studcnt.s who seek to avoid the on~am
pus parking fees.
Ecology Group
To Hold Meeting
At Airporter Inn
The sccoiid meeting of ecology·rillnded.
groups contemplating formation of an en·
vironmental coalition will be held at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Airport.er Inn by the
Orange County Airport. ,
Reports on organization and goals from
two committees set up at the last
meeting will be presented for con·
sideration by representatives of various
environmental organizations.
The Goals Committee will issue a
statement on the proposed targets for ac-
tion l.y the coalition, as well as methods
of implemen!tng the goal> and priorities
for action.
The Organization C.Ommi!tee will
present a framework for the banding
together of the groups.
Among priorities ~ by , the G~als
Commlttee are passage of Prdpostttotl·20:
a moratorium on the Laguna Gret;nbelt
area, the South Laguna Development
moratorium, and tne La Canada develqp-
ment. '
"We want to avoid any more of these
situations," he contJnued.
"He may think he cannot give himself
up safely because he killi!d a police of·
fleer," Chief Gourley added, presuming
Clouston is indeed lhe slayer of Del.ective
Cate, who lert five children.
Clouaton haa escaped a narrowiJ>g
police dragnet aeveral lim<I, the moot
recent case being one in which he fled on
foot via a flood control channel after an
e.zclumge of shots.
. !le bad. been recognlzed from news
photos, according to inveatlptors, when
be allegedly trted to trade hls .ti caliber
pistol for a used car at an qency.
Front Pagel
. EDISON •..
vironmental impact statement the results
would be so ovel"ll'helmingly against the
plan that nobody would let It be built.
"Rule rn o! the Air Pollution C.Ontrol
District regulaUons say the muimum
emJsslons from any one aource ls 1.87
tons per day," RyckoH said. "Now
they're trying to lump together a bunch
or litlle uni!J whlch Individually meet the
requlremeni., but the way I see It tbey
are all' one souroe."
"The way tlley're·leyin&le'get hy thla
is ridiculous," Ryclo)I! said.
He also aald be may ut councllmen to
adopt a resolution opposing the tt•
panslon.
Proposition 20, he said, is not o£fe~ed
as the ultimate solution to the coaatline
crlsll, but t.a a method ol galning time to
1 develop plans !or the coast. .-
It calls for the creation or a Coastal :
Zone Corrun.ission and six regional com-•
missions to plan the best use of the
coastline. 'Ille commtaatons, wouJd..,IJe
made up hall by "'Pmenlntiv,. of local
governmen!J and ha~ by public membera
appointed by the Governor and
Legislature.
The commission would be required to
submit a plan to the Legtslatur. by 1975,
and in the ~neanUme, no coastal develop-
ment couJd take place within 1,000 yarda
of the shoreline without a special permit.
"Opposition to coa!lllne protection is
formidable, and the Legislature has been
unable to overcome it," Mills said. "An 1 unusual alliance or both big business and
segments of organized labor oppoaed
coastline protection legislation this year. t'
The oU interests are afrai dof losing prof. ,
its, and ~me of our large!t uniona are :
afraid of loalng construction jobs. (
"If we can learn anything from the ,
leglllljUve deleat of coastline protection,
it Is that the ~polknta of Proposttion llO
3fe wealthy, . well orglnlzed a D "d
powufw. We can expect a very lllclt,
profmlollal campaign against tllll ap-
proach to coastline protection In the
weeks ahead."
ALL
REMAINING
STOCK •••
••• 1972 Adn1lral REFRIGERATO.RS
INCLUDING FLOOR SAMPLES AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS!
INCLUDINe
SUPER SIZE 24 CU. FT.fc1lt~~:~c
Ad111lral
IMPERIAL 3·DOOR DUPLEX9 NO-DEFllOSTING
FREfZDl/IEfllCEllATOl-24.tCU.FT., M-IND JOI
UPPEI FIHZRf.elM93 ......... clcitM&kw ••• ,,...
lor Ice 0..111, Jeek:e CIM, OdterOflrM.UMll ...._.
LOWEIFlfmlhMl1•111....._WWA111IA• ........ MJmaW. Door ......... Cl• o.t....... .
l l FIKift.\TOl .. Mf1•tMlaT ; a .. C ...........
fftpd---,-otopw,Otllw-P I Ml
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Giant Size 20.3 Cu. Ft.
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lmperlol
3•Door OtlpM'l'C.
M .. I PND JOJI
NO.OEFAOSTiNO
FREEZEA/REFFUGERATOR
ane-af ·a·kind Admiral Floor Samples
SIDI by SIDE
15 ~:;c '32800
18 :c 'llr
%0 · :c '368"
2 eo0r· Frost FrM REFRIG!RATOlt
1U ~e '248"
DELUXE 17.5 c:.;.c '2W'
AND MANY MORE I
AUTHORIZlD
~r:-'· MAil!lfAINANCE
SIRVICI
CINTIR
Despite t.hc addition of no new campus
ll¥ing unils or classroom buildings. ucr
Irvine police have been ttclte!tn1
vehicles whlch park In the bllteway to
keep them open for cyclbta uolnf tho
new route to the campus and frvlne !\, _________________________________________ ,.
Town Center. 11
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