Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-09-27 - Orange Coast Pilot• --. • • • ID e1m a1 ; Bound o.,er to Court WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 27, 1972 VOL. ... NO. 271,. ' SICTIOIU, N PAGU • I • • .. • • • • •• • • • Beach Apartments Destroyed by Fire ~ . College Crew ~MQ$cot ~kips _ . ,•' · "Buster.'' a mix~· Corne and ·German shepherd dog :as one of the me.Scots r t -Orange Coast College rowing team, is misalng. Pete Carolan, his owner, said Buster has beeo gone alnce early Saturday when he was allowed to run free at Bolsa Chica State Bead!. Anyone with infonnation about the dog should call Carolan at 539- lfm. Clouston In Jail ; Bail At $500,000 Herman Lee Clouston. aceused killer or a Buena Park police ofricer and subject or a six-day manhunt, is being held in Anaheim City Jail today in lieu of $509,000 bail. Lt. Norm Cook or the Anaheim police hamicide detail said the eluSl.ve Clouston, captured in Lynwood Tuesday night, was scheduJed for arraignment on a formal murder charge at Orange County M"unicipal Court this afternoon. Cook refilsed any further comment on tbe 38-yeaMld ex-eonvict accused of grin- ning down Detective Darrel D. "Bud" Cate last Tbursday while the officer was trying to interview Clouston on a sexual perversion assault. Clouston surrendered to Lynwood patrolmen ¥ike Patterson and Tom Romash without resistance late Tuesday. "'!Don't .shoot," the officers said ciOuston told them. "I am Herman la qc>uston that the Anahetm Police are looking for •.. I'm glad it's over .... I hiyen't been able to sleep fOr days." ""The oUicers said the, dirty 3Dd uoshaveo Clouston, wearing a dark blue T-shirt and olive pants, was hiding in a, tcash bin behind a tavern near a home that had been burglarized. He was holding a loaded and cocked .22 (See CAPl'URED, Page Z) Coast Rape • • • Case Bound ForCoUH By JACK CHAPPELL Of .. o.llr PlaM 1tllft Steve H. Bronson, suspect in the icepick kidnap and rape of a 19-year-old Laguna Beach girl, has been ordered to arraignment in Orange County Superior Court following a preliminary hearing Tuesday in Laguna Niguel Municipal Court. Judge H. Warren Knight refused to reduce Brmson's $25,000 bail and ordered the suspect in the bizarre case held to answer charges at 9 a.m. Oct. 10 in Division 5 of the Superior Court in Santa Ana. Bronson, 24, is married and is an employe at a Fontana chicken ranch. Judge Knight's action came after a lengthy hearing during which the alleged victim of the kidpap, rape and acts of sexual perversion testified before the court. Asked by Stuart Grant. deputy district attorney, if she recognized the person who picked her up, the young hitchhiking Laguna teen pointed to Bronson, shack· led and tn prison togs. 1be lJ..year-old girl said she had been thumbing a ride from the area of Den· ny't Restaurant at 1600 S. Coast Highway at about I p.m. on Sept. 14. She said that as she got in the car, she notit"ed the driver wearing women's clothing and later she mentioned the driver wore lipstick. After reaching the intersection of 1balia and Coast Highway, she said she told tbt; driver, "this Is fine, anyplace along here." The driver, she said, turned the comer onto Thalia Street. "l felt something at my ear and started to brush it away and I looked over and saw Jt was an ice pick," the young woman said. "He said 'get on the floorboard," the girl said. She told the driver of the car " 'll it's money your're (See RAPE, Page Z) Plane Muzzled • • I ·Noise Cut on Jet Vsed by Wayne The pilot "ho ru., a twll>englne execuUve lot plane used by a-John Wayne o1 ·11ewpor1 llMdi, was slagled out for special pralae Tuesday by Oranre Coonty aupervbors at the ~ of Director ol Aviation llobert BrCl!l8han. . "')11'18 PILOT, Dean Carrier, wbo onee lleW the 'noisiest jel out' of Orange County Airport has applied noloe t!Uppraslon measures In the past few monthJ and reduced the roar by more than lO pment," Bmnahan said. Carrier is a pilot with ll!recuu.. Air Servl<e wbkh sems Wayne and othert. . BRESNAB!N SAID thlt •• the mutt ol Clrrler's application of noise • alratemont procedureo be -rues "the quietM pi,.. at the airport." ' :1 " I ' .-• • • \ . • • ·. ~ Seh~l Mishap Seene . ,, DAILY l"llOT Steff l"llt• RESCUERS CARE FOR INJURED WORKER AT SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION SITE IN IRVINE Roof Fr1mirn9 Glv11W1y1t El Cimino Real Elementary School in C11ifornl1 Homes Ar11 Bordello Given $500 in Urban Renewal Money HELENA, Mont. (UPI ) -"Big Dorothy" has a ISOO city urban renewal grant to renovate her establishment, but critics say her house is no home and "Dorothy's Rooma" should get the wrecJdni ball. . , Red-faced city fathers m Montana's capital city, stuog by acc:uaatlon.s that they are helping to pay klr the ronova- Uon of the local house of Ill repute, aren't saylnl mucli at all. Buffdlnp have been falling to the wrecking ball around "Big Dorothy 's" houae and the well-beaten path up the alley behind her rooms was blocked by d•bria. But at a recent city commission meeting officials approved an urban ......,al plan that allowed 1500 to l)Qrothy ~ o se ph I ne Beker l<t< refurbishing her. place pf bu~ines.!. Mayor Steve Klem said, "I was out of town during that meeting, but l un. (See GRANT, P1tge Z) ~ Roof at Irvine School Collapses; Three Injured By CANDACE PEARSON Of Hit Dally PMM Sl"4" Botll the causes aod the effects of the collapse Tuesday of roof trusses being in· stalled at the construction site ol El Camino Real School in Irvine remained a mystery today as state inspectors in- vtstl.gated damage to see if a lhree- month delay in the school's opening is necessary. Three workmen were injured Tuesday before noon when a 7 ,000 square foot· area of roof trusses fell at the site at Walnut Avenue and Karen Ann Lane. A dozen olher workmen escaped aertous injury when they ran from the building as about 20 prefabricated beams dropt><d like dominoes. The more than fl million facility was acheduled to open In April. Dave King, lacllities planner f<t< the San Joaquin School Dlslrlcl, said today • • ' • • that state inspectors from the school architecture and construction offices must determine if the beams are salvageable. ' If they can be salvaged or repaired, King said, the accident will mean only a delay of a week or two. But if the state detennines there is too much damage to allow snfe construction with the beams, they will have to be reordered from their closest manufac- turer -In Boise, Idaho. That will take at least 12 weeks, King said. Three different versions of the accident wer.: still clrculftlng today. Irvine police 'aald they would not be charged with determining the cause. 'Ibat will be up to ln1t1rance companies or to the st.ate Industrial accident com- mission, police aakl. • ' None Hurt; Origin Unknown By JOHN ZALLER a Of 1fle Olllty PSllt 1fliff Flames shot 10 feet into the night sky Tuesday as a two story partially com· plete apartment building in Huntington Beach caught fire, collapsed, and burned to the ground. No firemen or others were injured, ac· co rding to the Huntington Beach Fire Department, but when the structure col- lapsed, intense heat was generated and flames shot to their peak height. Firemen said the cause of the blaz.e is undetermined. An arson investigation squad this morning combed the charred timber for clues of the fire's origin. Firemen also questioned at least two witnesses who said they saw two boys (See FIRE, Page%) SOFA'S SOLD IN FIRST CALL "Fabulous results. J could have sold 20 sofas. The firsl caller bought it" That's the story or results from this ad: Sofa siet'l)C'r . pd $250, Seu for $85. * XXX·XXXX * It appeared once In the classified ad· vertising section of the DAILY PILOT- and. obviously, did its job. Why not see it we can build an ad to fit your needs. Just dial the direct line to results, 642-5678, and ask a DAILY PILOT ad· visor to advise you. Orange Coast Weadaer ' According to the NaUon.al Weath- er Service, considerable cloudiness is in store for the Orange Coasl Thursday. with the sun breaking through in the afternoon. Hilh temperature should be in the low 70s. INSIDE TODAY South Coast Repertory launch· es it! 'ninth season of th£ater on tht Orangt Cocut this wtekflad with a revival of thf A.tntric(Ul comtdy c l o s s j e "The Torch· beartrs." Ste Entertainment, Poge 30. L.M. lt¥cl U IMltM 14 C•IHtnlll I c • .._ c.r... ,, Cl•1lllltllll ..... t-k• SC t Cr.u_..i Kt DMlll N .. k.. It lllii.ti.I ..... ' '"*'•"""*'' .,l 'IMM• V•ft 1'1r tM ll:taN 11 ""'-'" IS A• Lltalcllt't )4 • \Vedrie\day September (7 1 ~72 ~-pows Arrive • Ill Moscow Peace Advocates, Embassy Aides Engage in Struggl.e. ~10SCO\V I AP 1 -Thrt>e llheratcd Amertcan airnlen reached ~ioSCOI\' on their "'ay home today frorn North Viet· nam , arid round themselves in the center or a struggle between Am e r ic a n Embassy officials and U.S. peace ad - vocates v.•ho escorted the pilots. £has of the Air Forcf' arrived on a night from Peking. They arc expe<:tetl to ar· rive in New York Thursday night. the mffi back to the. L:nited State! before they come under U.S. military jurisdlc· lion again. American diplomat lb1t bis &""'I' prom· ised ao escort Ille plloU home safely, and a meeting w!llL elllbaMy officl81s WU nol planned. Lt Mark (iartley and l~L r\orr1s Charles of 1he r-iavy and ~laj, Edward U.S Charge D'Affaires Adolph Dubs at· lempted 10 approach the pilots in the customs area of the .:iirport but v.•as stop- ~d by the 1:scort1ng delegat100 of an· 11v.·ar ac-livists. t:nder military law, tbt men are re· quired to prtSent themselve5 to the first l.'..S. officlal they encounterr. Prof. Richard Falk. a tall, gaunt man \1·ith a beard. barred Dubs' way as heap-- proaehed the men. Falk told the Gortley, Oiarles and Elias buddied in a comer behind Cora Weiss as Dubs and other embassy officials tried to approach them. There wa:; a crunch camed by cor~ respondents aUemptiDg to overbear 1he exchange. The :ictivists \~ere attf'mpung to get Red Carpet Out .41igela Davis Arrives in Havcuia J\·llA,\ll, Flu. 1AJ>J -Black militant Angela Davis has arrived Jn Cuba to take part in a mass rally marking the 12th anniversary or the Olmmittees for the Defense or the Revolution, Radio lfavana said today. In a broadcast monitored in MiamL Radio Havana said fif iss Davis wa s expected to spend a weelr. in Cuba and then travel to Chile before returning to the United States. A1iss Davis was greeted by Havana Mayor Jesus tifontane and other mem· bers of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist party when she ar- rived at Havana Airport from Czechoslovakia early today. the broadcast said. Radio llavana said Miss Davis would take part tn the rally to be held Thursday in Havana·s Plaza de la Revolution. The rally will commemorate the forming of defense committees v.·hich operate in each Cuban neighbor· hoods to re,x>rt to ~Jties on any antigovemment activities. _ Fro•n Pqe 1 cAM'ulIBi>. •• calitter automatic pistol which he reportedly aimed but "just couldn't fire." according to the officers. Police SgL Kenneth Jewell told neWsmen that Clouston said he v.:ould have shot it out with police but changed · his mind because he could not "keep run· ning and hiding." Clouston managed to elude police of- ficers from Los Angeles and Orange Counties throughout the manhunt that sa\¥ Clouston take four hostages :•nd release them unharmed as he hid from officers. Lynwood police disclosed that Clouston ""'as arrested about 45 minutes after of· ficers closed in on a commercial area in hunt of a suspected burglar. The man matched Clouston's description. Officers had been put on alert by a resident in the area who identified a photograph of Clouston as the man seen leaving a burglarized home. Apparently nothing w,as taken from the house. About fl,000 in reward money had been po!ted for information leading to ClouitQo.'s arrest. Most of it ha4 ~ cfonated by police officers, a Los Al;l&eles TV station and a Long Beach newspaper. A Lynwood police spokesman said of· ficcrs Romash and Patterson would not be eligible for the reward ~ce "they were just doing what we get ~aid to do." Sgt. JeweU said Clouston told him !bat he had neither eaten nor slept thr<miJ19J.1.l his six-<lay fligbL ,. " · 1 Clouston reportedly said o f f i c e r s "almost stepped on me'' during the search of downtown Lynwood. Meanwhile, a memorial fund has been created for Cate's widow and children. The ri rst donor was Citizens Crime Com· mission or Orange with a $1 ,000 check. From Pagel GRANT ..• derstand she wants to use it to establish some sort of retail busines." ~talia1i Corpse To Get Burial After 61 Years LAURINBU RG, N.C. (UPI\ -Morli· cian Hewitt ·McDougald says he will bury lhe body of Forenzio Conclppio within 25 years. The corpse already has been in the casket tor 61 years~ ' Actually, McDougald may v.'ell bury the body much sooner than that - maybe within days or weeks. But he doesn't want anyone to know when. or who is paying for the funeral except that the source is in North Carolina. McDougald met with two represen· tativcs from the state attorney general's office f\.fond ay and promised he would bury Concippio. an immigrant Crom Italy killed in 1911 during a fight with a fellow carniva l worker. In a telephone interview Tuesday, McDougald declined to say when he would conduct a funeral. "'Well, I told the men from the at· torney general's office here yesterday that .it w.ou.ld be under 2S years," he said. "They said a reasonable length ol time." Until just a few weeks ago, the body of Concippio had been on display in a glass· covered coffin in the garage of McDougald's fune{al home. The cOrpse hB'C.t been nicknamed "Spaghetti" ~y the locals. . l When 11"! lifu.a!ffi f<as PUJlllQ!Jell;. tJ l tahi&~eiictui coogressmanitonr Ne'W York, the consul general of Italy and others protested to State Atty. Gen. R-Obert Morgan. Under pressure from the State Funeral Home Board, McDougald removed the glass front from the coffin and boxed the body. But he was steadfastly rerusing to conduct a burial until someone paid the cost. ·· Concippio's body was not buried in the first place because the dead man's father made a down payment on the funeral to McDougald's father and never returned \Vith the balance. · War Crime ' Quiz TolJ By Army "stand beck! Stand beck," Cora W•iss shouted. "Give U! 90llle room." Among the American officials at the airport were Brig. Geo. Samuel V. \Vilson, the military attache, and Air 'Force Maj. Ronald Walker, the embassy doctor. North Vietnamese officiab: in Moscow also went to the airport for the arrival of the pilota. Ton Quang 0>, o North Viet· namese diplomat, said be was on band "to observe." Asked where the airmen would stay in Y.'ASHINGTON (AP) -The Anny said Moscow before leaving for Copenhagen - on Thursday, O> replied, "Our Soviet today it completed an investigation of comrades will give them a place to allegations of war crimes committed by stay," an infantry company in the same general A few momeoQ later, the pilots, their area as the 1968 My Lai massacre, but a escort and the American diplomats year earlier. retreated into a glassed-in office oU the In a statement, the Army said results customs concourse to confer. of the investigation by its Criminal Earlier today, the el"ftbassy said there DAILY ,ILOT ,floto ~HM 1.119" Jnvestiga tion Di vision "concerning would be men on barwl"lo..offer the freed 11llegations against Capt: James W. Lan· prisoners "'any help they" mia\it need." :. ning have been forwarded to the com· Lt. Gartley told newiimeu, "I am tired Fl)lEMEN IN SNORKEL UNIT POUR WATER ON BLAZE Huntington Beach Fire Damages Apartments Under Construction mander having court·martial jurisdiction but in good health. We want to get to over the s ubject of this investigation." New York as soon u possible and spend Anny spokesmen relused to provide a few days with our relatives." details of the alleged in cident. The delegation learned that U.S. But an Oklahoma City newspaper, the Embassy represent atives v.wld be Daily Oklahoman, said the toll in meeting them in Moscow when the murdered civilians and exec u t e d Aeroflot flight they join~ earlier in prisoners as a result of the alleged in· Irkuts~ made an unscheduled stopover in running from the building just after it cident was estimated by forme r Novosibirsk. "suddenly" burst into flames. members of Lanning 's unit from "80 to An lotourist guide told Cora Weiss that 'Ibe blaze was first reported at 5: 16 hundreds." · · From Pqe 1 FIRE ... Officer Charged . With Attempting To Brand Y oiit1i the Moscow office phoned to say p.m. at the construction site of an 80-un1t The newspaper revealed that an in· American officials would be meeting the apartment complex at the intersection of TOMS RIVER. N.J . (UPI J -A vestigation was under way and in plane and to advise the delegation of 1·t. Magnolia and Heil avenues. ed · • th A 'd ·1 h d hee suspended state trooper charg wit., response e rmy sa1 1 a n oom· Dubs said he offered the pilots the use First units of the Huntington Beach pleted Aug. 18 with the result forwarded of a U.S. Air Force medical evacuation and Fountain Valley Fire departments assaulting a long-haired youth has told a to Lt. Gen. John Hay, commander of the plane from C-openhagen. responded three minutes later, joining jury that he ordered the l~year~ld io 18th Airborne Corps at Ft. Bragg, N.C. But Dubs added that they turned him workers on the scene who were already drop hls pants and approached him with It will be up to 1-lay to detennine if down, saying they preferred to continue fighting the fire. a paper clip heated over a candle. thfre ls sufficient evidence to bring thei·r trip by commercra· I p'--·. "Firemen were endangered when the H 'd ~-· G bo ki -h · t La · · ed t th Ulm: owever, sa1 J , ...... u~s ra ws , -· c arges agams nrung, assign o e Dubs said, "I urged them to cono;ider struct'ure collapsed shortly after the Civil Affairs School or the U.S. Army the use of the medivac plane very alann was given." according to a Hun· the clip. "inadvertently" bent into the Institute for Military Assistance at Ft. seriously indeed." tington Beach Fire Departmen t shape or a triangle -the state police irt=. Bragg. Dubs said in answer to a question that spokesman. signia -had cooled by the time he At the time of the alleged incident, he made "no demarids" on the pilots 00• "But there were no reported injuries:· touched Earl Harris or Brick Townsbii,l La nning commanded Company C, .lnd ding that the primary concern of the U.S. The blaze , described as .. rapid with it. Battalion, 35th Infantry. 3rd Brigade of government is the weUare of the pilots. spreading" completely destroyed a 12· the 25th Infantry Division. uni't bull"'""·· .. "d caused minor dam .. ae He said his intention was to frightea Falk, the delegation lawyer, advised ~ •• ..., According to the Daily Oklahoman, the men that in his opinion they were not to several others. ' • the youth, not to brand him. Lanning's unit was attached to the 4th legally bound by a direct order from 3 nie rire wa& cootrolled at 5:40 p.m. Grabowski and fonner trooper·.J>ennit Infantry Division and was operating in superior officer, mt 1herefo~ woul4 mt with damage esW:nat:ed at ~.000. Weiglein are' 'Ott trial 'for allegedl9 Qwmg ' •Ngai· Province ·when the llilegtd blv.· to·follow 1l!rectlom of embusy of· . · A cro-id o[ seve"'1 'htin!IJ'¢' youngstei's be•ltllg-and b-andlnl!' Hlrrls Feb. 20 atrocities were committed in the spring f. ·-i~ if th did not wish to gathered at the scene, apparently at. alter taking him to the Laurelton bar; of 1967. ict~ ey · tracted by flames that were clearly visi· Th M La• bl b --·-• Dubs said that be offer«! to p.it the racks. Gra-ski is charged wllh e y 1 massacre, w e uu..'Ul1cu pilots and their eaoorts up for the night ble for moi:e than one mile away. atrocious aSSltult and both are charged the following spring after the 4th.Division 1 the ~~ lli'ith ~~ in office. was relieved by the America! pivisioo, a He J{f he , 5 e toi · ~ ;.u. f ',_j 1 f l f L "l,,wanlm!.~.inilUliSOllle.lear .. -.,blm, ·~.;k:~~~.Qll$~ ~~ "greet !hem wilcome them on ~r 11dow to Enter Rnc m~~e.lil"rn.lllf'llid," ,said GW>owski_, by the unlt of 1he 35tb Infantry octurrM of .•. all our country." • Harris Je sUlied earlier that Grabow$! during a search-and-destroy operation D.Jbs said be relayed to . the tflots _NEW VGRK; {UPI) -4. The widow of branded hlm three times and said be waS between March 18-23, 1967, the Dally personal . messiges fnlm tfMir .. families Rep, William Fitts Byan alll10Unc«i fo.. beaten by both men. . . Oklahoman said. and bad given#tem U.S. ~Which day she will seek the nomination for the Last Friday, Harris lay across h court It added that investigations by the the pilots signed. seat vacated by her husband's recent room table before the jury. exJX)Sing tile Anny Criminal Investigation Division Dubs and other embassy officials left death. Mrs. Priscilla Ryan said she portion of his buttocks where he wa.s (CID) of separate incklents led to a the airport while the pilots and their woold try tor the 20th Congressional <illegedly branded. broader probe of ether alleged tncidents escorts continued to confer. District nomination previously won by Grabowski said he was taught at the attributed to the same unit over an ex· Gartley's mother snd Clw'Jes' wife her late husband in June's Democratic State Police training academy to make · ••· pr1·mary wit nesses uncomlortable. tended period. ·~w~e~re~in~-~~~group;;;~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;i=]~;;;~·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;.::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; The ~es of alleged atrocities involves I allegations of burning villages and crops, mutilating dead bodies and executing unanned civilians and captured enemy troops, the paper said. GEM TALK Al Aybman, urban renewal project director, added: "Whenever a property ov.·ner can restore a building we try to be or assistance. Dorothy ~as the cash and the know.how to do it." From Pqe l The money is to pay for .. the tola l facade. renovation and a re&r exit from the ground floor ,'' said Larry Gallagher. urban· renewal director. Sonic J()..years ag:o. Montana Supreme Court .Justice J ohn Harrison. then a c·rusading Le1vis and Clark County at- !f)rnl',\'. hroq'2ht leg:.il action fn s!up ··Big Doro1J1~··s" thriving business. ,'oUNfJE CO.tiST ST DAILY PILOT 'T11• Qr•nq11 CNt l OAtL Y P1LOT. w it II whotlt 11 c.nmt11nld lht N•,..1-Prtt1. 11 P<10U1lltd b\I' tr.I' Or•nq• Co111t P\lll!llhlnQ (onopany, S•~· r~t• 1'<1 11'°"11 .,.. ll'Vb!O,lle<t, Mond•Y lll•ovolt Ft~•Y. lor 0.111 M~I. Nl'Wl!Of"I 8 t 1cll. Hvni.ng1on 8e9Cl'll~n1••t1 \l•ll•y. L•~""'a llMdl, lrvln•lt.dd'le.blY •l'IO !o•n Clelt>en!•/ $11t1 Ju~n OpltfrWlt.. A 1l,.9te •t<;l•ClNll ftl••ion IS P<lbliilled $4111,1rc11y1 1nd Sur.01v1. Th .. prlt>Cli»I P11b!lih!r19 pl11n1 11 M JXI ""'' 8 ,oy !>T<t rl. CMI• Mnl, C1ll!orn,1, Jltl•. Robtrl N. w,.J Preildllf'll •l'ld P1JDIOSl'ltr J•t ' R. C11rl11v \"t• rr.1iQent Ind Gl!ne••I M1new Tho"'"' K111wH Edih>< lf.om •• A, M11rphin 11 M•t\1191"9 fdil-01 Ch1 d11s H. Looi Richttd P. Nell AMl1!11'\I Mt~lnO EOllOr1 Offkn C1»!1 MHI: 3» W•1I S.y S!t1tl NfWPtrl llt•cll: J»J N1"'11(1f1 llOVl•v•rd 1.-oune 8Ndl: m Fer-tu A...,.llt' HW'!llf"IOI°" 8e•Cll : 11t7S 811(11 80..llwltd $an c~ JO~ Morfll El Omlno Jtur Tll.,.._ 1714, &4J""J21 Cl.ulflff A•-.rthMt '42·Si71 '"""' ~.,, .. , .,.. Slll1'11 Of UllllN •••d• 4f2-442t ,.,._ .. .,. Ck"-C..,.ly CIMll-~llft U0.12%t c.trloltif. ltl!, ':&.:...-.a..., rw1:.111t1t ~;-to lfJi!Wf 110tJ;s. lllUW•t~­ --.. f,;;Jll)I,.., ., .... i...,..b-4 INf'lfrt ""' --............. -'"!W! ,,.... pet( '"~ ...!!.. 'pllPYl'JIWll • ..-.. • • - ..... Diilii .0.1._ uld ,"j • IMAf C11fl~,....._,.lll'flon W ~ tJ.~ l'llOfUltfYr bJ !NII J).IJ "Mll1JIV)':mrllfltY t1t.r1M11Dii1; n.M montnw. •• ~ RAPE SUSPECT ... afler, I don't have any,' and he kind of grinned." The icepick was aUegedly pulled on the young victim between c.oast Highway and Glenneyre Street while the car was on Thalia. .The car went up Temple Hills Drive. and nothing happened, the young "'itness testified. As they came down Temple ltills Drive, the driver told his passenger to remove her slacks and underpants. .. Everytime I asked him something, he told rne to ·shut up'," she said. The honey-blonde girl told the court !h:.it after this. the car headed out Laguna Canyon and sotne\vhere between l.:iguna and Westminster. stopped and shC' was tied \\•ith the strap! from a purse. Al the Chi no area, the girl was told to slrip off her remaining clothlng, a nd assertedlv forced to submit to an un· natural sex act. Then the girl was taken from the car ;ind ordered to a mattress that lay in an isolated area. There an act of intercourse 1:-; illlC'gl.'d to have taken place. The nervous v.·1tness described another sf•x11al al.'l nnd v.•hen asked by Grant Ir she fcnrcd for her own health and salety, lh(' \\'llllCSS said j'CS, she did. llnder tough cross e:tamlnation by Anthotiy Kies. public defender represen.- ting Bronson. the wltn~s admitted that although unnu1rricd. she had given birth tn tv.·in chi ldren about a year end a half ago. Both children died in the hospitJI shortl y after birth, she saJd. The teenager said her first sexual en· rount er had occurred when s he wa~ 14 years or age and that she had dropped ou t of Laguna Beach l-ligh School wilhout graduallng. The witness admirted that she had liv· ed: with her boy friend to whoni she waM not married for a time this sammer in La,l!una Beach. SM also lestlfi<d under oath tha t she had· h&d sexual ro!atiqns ... 1111 him et Ille Ortef!• Hot Spri111• in n •Car. Sh. ,,.id that sho had betn hitcbl\lklitT 11ince shr wa s 14 and on one other oc· casion was forced to perform a sex act by an "old m·an" who "hit me in the eye" when she balked at his demands. She said other times she had been able to ·~alt her way out" of advances made by men with wlxlm she bad been riding. Under questioning, the witness told the court she had n'ot screamed, called for help or fought back against the abductor, nor did she attempt to jump out of the car. Asked il the man had ever threatened to kill her, beat her or hurt her fan1ily. the girl replied, "no." ft was revealed that on the trip back from the Chino area, the driver stopped the car at a small market and the girl was left eJooe in the car. Although there were people in the market, the witness said she did not at· tempt to flee or seek help. Queried by the public defender if Bronson had at that lime asked her if she wanted a ooda pop, the girl said yes, that he had. Bronson was a rrested by Laguna Beach Oet. Gene Brook! ofter the girl went to the Laguna Pollce station earl y Jn the morning of Sept. 15. a fter havtng been with her abductor for about four bours. She supplied offlctr& with a description or the car and license number, she said In court. Bronson was arrested shortly aC· terward in Fontana. lie has been held in Jail In lieu of bail since his arrest. Sailor Put in Jail LOS ANGELES (AP) -An 18-year-<>ld aailor. •ccuied of lhreal_enin.a. "~.Uni\~ Air Llilel sfewarae" wlt11..l.'lmlle In ~lit· .Jack · .~1t"l"pt WM t\DOked Wt.; fl> Y~tltl!Wn :of assault "1111-.. dU41y _ll'Qpon. ~ Cotll't' o•4 !.'!'"'d ~Id IMtl 'l\le9dav ,.,_.......,. ~ -i!Jltloiid boe"iiljj; uss 'Edson i.·rto~ Buch. ~ TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRIES ELECTRONIC WATCHES BASICALLY SIMPLE "Electronic" implies to many h people a mysterious system which fi m ight introduce expensive repair ,1 problems. ' Actually, electric and electronic ~ w~tches are simple, reliable and easy to service and repair. All such watches have a small battery which looks almost exacUy like a hearing aid cell, but Is built to put out less current but over a longer period or time. These batter- ies also differ in that the watch will not be seriously harmed should leakage occur. All these watches have some kind of mechanical oscillator governed by a balance wheel, tuning fork or other pul sating or vibrating device which carries either ti coll or a per- manent magnet. When curre~t pass- es through coil or magnet It pro- vides power to move the other sim- ple devices in the system. You can buy electric or electronic watches with conlldence. They are very trouble-free, with adjustments and repairs easily accompllshed by JOU• local Independent jeweler •. • .JAm,WlI~· QyNl>AR WATJ.CLOCK Tl1erewas •time when all fine clocks were built like this ••• wtth a hand fur the minutes •• , a hand for the hours ••• and • hand for the days Of the .-th! The pine case in Olde Colony fin ish is hand- somely accented by the black numerals. hour and second hands on the entique white dial. The co.-.•rY,stal, ~rass pe~dulum and ~ calendar hand complete the authentlcityoftfiis flrie Barwick reproduc;!ion by the Howard Mlllor <llocl< Company. H. 24 " w. !6V2" D. <+Vi" $110 J.C. fiumphrie~ /)eu1t>lrJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVlNIENT TUMS 2l YlAAS IN THI SA.Ml LOCATION IANlAMERICARl>-MASTll CHAR~I PHONE 141·1401 . . I • .I • I I I ·' I ~tv·~- Got a problem? Thtn write Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red taJ>f!, get the ari&wers and ac- tion !101' need to solve rnequitits in, , uovernment and bus1ne1s. Milil 11our questions to Pat Dunn/ At Your Srrvice, Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa I' ~.:. Me&a., Ca., 92626. Inclw:U your l'l telephone number. DEAR PAT, { ordered a photo plaque from Golde n Gate Pbotocraft of San Francisco in ~tober, 1971 , The firm wrote to me in ~vember stating a problem had arisen and that my money and slide would be ~t beck U this probleDJ: couldn 't be cor- rected. My certified letter of inquiry in ... ply ....., WJCialmed and I haven't rtceived either the merchand ise or a ~urn ol my money order and slide. A.W., Colla Mesa -:'Your certified letter wa1 unclaimed btcause Golden Gate Pbotocraft cor- rected Us "problem" by going ,out of bu:sl0tss. Send your money order recdpt and all correspondence to lbe Postal Impector ln Charge, San Francisco, Ca. 94101. DEAR PAT: l ordered a decorative Beethoven ~roJI from World Art Group in Westport, 'Conn. last November. Eaeh time I write lo request the merchandise or a refwid, all I receive is a post card claiming a "four lo six week delay due to unavoidable production difficulties." I've gotten absolutely lh>where and am utterly exasperated! M.D., Huutiagtoa Beach In this case, "lllUlvoldable prodaction dlflk:altles" means out of stock. Your re- fuad ls being malled. ~ DEAR PAT ' I'm working on my Christmas card mailing list early this year and want to include iiji codes on all the addr'es.ses. "I'd like to know where I can get a zip code map for the whol e country, I don 't want ~o bother the Post Office by calling to re- quest zip codes for various ci ties. L.J., Laguna Rills A national zip code dlrtctory, available for reference at tacb Post Office branch, caa be ordered from your maJn Post Of- fice. Tlte $10 tbarge lncllMles a free u~ ~led version each year. A Up code reference for Orange Counly cities is Printed la the YeUow Pages of the telephone directory. ~ DEAR PAT' I'd like to find a chess t lub affiliated .Mth the United States Chess Federation. ~lY in Ille Newport Beach -.,..,~. Mesa area. I am mo trying to find a chess clock. The stores I've called don 't ,have any and don't know where to get p'ne. Maybe you can help •me out. J.1"J..Clotta ..... eo-Mli'k1 ,~I" ;lbllill ~ tbe UC Irvine ai,st Qab, 1'"1 Vi,11 St., ,\pl. JJ, Taatln 9Zlltl. In .acldlttOa to !lot VCI 'club, Hoyt ls active lD the Orange Chess Club, whlcb meets eac.11 Tuesday and Frl- Gay from I to 11 p.m. and Saturdays from lt to 5 p.m. at 153 S. Olive, Orange. I,\. Banner Is attempting lo organhe a cbes11 club in tbe South Coast area. He uk1 you and other tbess enthusiasts to call bim. at 17J..5312, or write to 3ilt Afarcus Ave., Newport Beach, t!MO. A eatalope of chess eqlllpment, lnclodlng clocks, cu be ordered by seodlag a post card request to Chess Ufe and ReTiew, U.S. Cbe111 Federation, 471 BrNdw8', Newberg, N. Y. 1%581, or by writing to Cbea Digest, Editor Kea Sm.Id!, P .0. Box %1U5, Dallas, Tex. 7SZ1l. ~ DEAR PAT' I was stopped by a Costa Mesa police petrolman who thought I was going too fast. He admitted he dido~ .have a clear reading on my speed and gave me a warning, stating that the next time I would be cited. I happen to believe I wasn't speeding, but that is not the point. Isn't his action of putting my name on the "must cite" list a breach of my right to be judged on the circumstances of the moment? R.J .C., Costa Meu You were jodged on the circumstances of tbe momut when tbe patrolman warned you instead of cUlng you. V~ waralags are given on poulble mOvllg: violations, bat tllere la no ACb ddag u 1 "'must cite next time" Utt, accordlal to tbe Cotta Me61: PoUce Department. However, there's ao guarantee that partJcular patrolman doetn't have Ida Own mental list ol borderlhle speeden, "' don't pasb your luck., ~ DEAR PAT ' . My friends and I all wear POW 'bracelets. Is il true that the location of the small hole in these bracelets bas a meaning? We have heard that if the bole ~ before the se rviceman's name, It In· dicates he is a prisoner-of-war . If the "hole is after the name, it means be is missing-In-act ion. M.B.,MlalaoVlejo \llVA ud POW-MIA ,.,..._.,. aold (bey· tbolt&lrl dley'd -• ....., wtld .lfloey ......... wttb -bnakts, bit 1-~ Ill•• IM cob. 'fttie llale la a ~ rw-lel la ....... ..w .. -lei ...... It la belq dipped ... oldtolplallfll :llOlldlon. lta ltcallorr lrM• • ....,.,._ v .. ud yoor friuG -~ -t ~ the liahl• of tM tcntcemn umed oo your 1JraCefet1 by coaladlrrl VIV A « POW-MIA. If you -..& to W!1te to tk · tervlctmen'• famlUa, teDd lettm la ·cart of the org1akldta. fnMD wltlell. yva tbtahrtd the bracelet. • Ont problt m Pot Dunn co·n't tolve ii answtrinQ a.ll lettcrt, Each lette1" " r<od and conrid<,..d oore/ul!y, but . ttmt does not pennit Pat to answtr I ~all que1tillns. • DAILY P IL.DT Phoi. •Y Rld\11'11 K .... lfl'" Pedaling Pai1• When Elmer Corrigan of Newp ort Beach takes a spin on .his bicycle, IJi,l' ~·~·;,~pn\p'al\l~n ".Bob<>" goes along for the ri de. t;~;T,,Q~Q,~e~~bQr.s' }low . Quelled Witli Injunction An Orange County Superior Court judge has used a permanent injunction to cool down a bitter dispute between neighbors in the La ke Forest section of El Toro pending trial or a $151,000 law- suit. Judge J ames F. J udge ordered Paul J. and Etbel Mill er, 22795 Islamare Lane, to retrain under court order from many of Friday Deadline Set for Irvine Flag Football Friday is the deadline for fil ing Irvine flag fOGtball team rosters in preparation for the Oct. 7 beginning of city league play." · At a recent organizational meeting representatives rrom the R a n c h , University Park. the Willows and the Freeway Football Assoc iation indicated their interest in forming t.eams. Other homeowners associations In the city of Irvine are in vited to enter teams in the three boys' team divisions and/or the adult fl ag footba11 league. Teams of men ove r 18 have been form- ed in Culverdale, Turtle Rock, University Park Villages I and 11 , the Ranch and the Racquet Club. Otheni are welcome and the. adult leagu_J' team fee is from $35 to $50 depending on the number of teams joining tn • Boys aged 8 to ll, 12 U> 14 and 15 U> 17 will compete· in the three divisions with games to be scheduled on Saturdays on playing fields yet to be announced. For informaUon about the city football or other fall recreation programs, call Paul Brady, Irvine director of human enhancement, at ~. Mission Viejo Site Rifled . by Burglars . Barglan who may have been ln- tttruptecl at thtlr task hauled away heaVJ electrical equipment valued at $815 flooi a Mission Viejo construction site Mondi.y night. Orange · County Sheriff'! olllcers said lntruderl at the Tra buco Road-Puerto de Luz 11te took .one electric alternator from earth moving equlpmtnl and had cut · eloctrlc wtri., and unbolted two more when they .,..... apP,Orenll y dlsturt>ed. General contractors Les McCoy and Sons reported tile the ft to sherifl's deputies. the practices complained of in the lawsuit filed by Wallace H. and Joanna Shapero, 22785 lslamare Lane. The Shaperos accused the Millers of using chemicals that have destroyed much of their garden, of playing loud music night and day and of keeping a dog that annoys the Shaperos by repeatedly yelping and barking. It was also alleged before Judge Judge issued the injunction against the Millers that the couple built a brick column that encroaches in the lake recreation area and that they planted da ngerous yucca plants the pointed leaves or which injured the Shaperos' two young sons. It was also alleged that the Millers dumped "alkaline slop" !rom a wheelbarrow into the Shaperos' garden, permitted water from the sprinkler system to dama ge the Shape~' prop- erty and were responsible for nume rous and frequent dog droppings found by the Shaperos on lheir land. Judge Judge made it clear In enjoining the 1.fillcrs that the permanent injunction diC not apply to the Lake Forest Com- munity Association, co-defendants in lhe action. Defense Witness To Face Jury In Perjury Case A Dana Point man, who wa s the key defense witness in the Orange' C.Ounty Superior Court trial of his roommate, has been Indicted by the Grand Jury on pe r- jury charges. Larry Howard lt1ansut, 37, has been ordered to appear Friday to answer charges stemming from testimony he of· fered earlier this year in the trial of Gary James Fol&ner, 31, also of Dana Point. FollJler Is charged In tile Ind ictment with offering false evidenct. He Is cur- rently serving a ant-year term in county Jafl following his conviction on drug cbuger tn Judge JI. Walter Steiner's courtroom. Deputy District Altorne.y Alicemarie Stotler said Mansur testified In F'olgncr'5 trial that Folgner had been with him ln northtrn California on the date a qu:in· tlty of marijuana was dellv'ered to a Dana Point motel. She aakt it was later learned tMt docUmt.nt.a of(ercd by the defense in !up- port of that statement had bctn backdated. In any event, she aaid, lhc stste supplied several witncascs who refuted ~tAnsur's testimony. Wtdnesda)', Stptember 27 1q72 S Pendleton •over 3 ' Marine Base Still Emphasizing Training Camp Joseph Pendleton-the nation's lnrge!Jt ~1arine base -becamt' 30 years old lhi.s week a.s it entered a hiatus in lls function as oombal !raining ground to thousands of servicemen. 1'he 196-square-mile military reserva- tion now is geari~ for a new battle- fight against oonhnued dt>mands for more concessions of land to civilian con· trol. The latest skirmish is the renewal of demands by the County of Orange and other government entities for enough land lo house a civilian jetport. \Vhile that battl e heats up, the e!fects fro1n tbe previous one have subsided. Last year six miles of the base's best beaches and 2,300 inland acres of San Matl'O Canyon were ordered by President Nixon to be taken lrom Marines' control and placed into the hands oJ the California Department of Parks Mnd Recreation. The transition, however. "-'SS not <IS smooth as expected, and involved public- ly aired criticism by the then com- manding gen'eral against legislatOrs pushing for the beach opening. But since the criticism of the givca,vay Prop~ 20 Foes Raise Total Of $435,000 From Wire Services Opponents of the coastline initiati\"e, Prop. 20, have raised $435,000 so far with much of the money coming from public utilities and land companies. Secretary of State Edmund Brown Jr. said Tuesday. 'The Irvine Company is one of the main contributors against the proposition. at $50.000 AVCO Community Develo pers. Inc .. headquartered in La Jolla and active in developrhent in Laguna Nigut>I, has con- tributed $25,000. Another $50,000 contribution \Vas listed in the report filed by Citizens Against the Coastal Initiative from Deane and Deane Inc. of Half Moon Bay. Brown said the Prop. 20 opponents have spen t about half of the amount with the greatest single expenditure -$50,000 -going to Kennedy Outdoor Advertising, a Lo!J Angeles billboard company . Other major contributors included the Standard Oil C.Ompany of Cali fornia at $30.00l ; Bechtel C.Orp. of San Francisco and Pacific Ges &: Electric Co. at $15.~ each;· Del Monte Properties lnc. ol Peb- ble Beach, ns:ooo; Bixby RanCh Co. of Los Angeles, $30,000 and Southern Pacific Land Co., San Francisco, $20,000. A second report listing additional con- tri~~tions and .expenditures js to .be filed a~vQn .. ~atfS ,~pr., the 1Nof,,17 tleoUon, Brown said. in .a net.vs releaaej Prop. 20 would impose a permit system on coastal development administered by six regional agencies and one statewide agency. Liquor Uncontrolled? MERCER ISLAND, Wash . {UPI) - Don Eldridge, 52. a member of the Washington Liquor C.Ontrol Board, has been ord ered to court for an Aug. 12 ar- rest on charges of drunken dri\'ing. by Maf. Gen. George Bowman. the issue has subsided. The official opinion by Base Com- mander Gen. Herman Poggemtyer this \\1eek is that the Corps '"is pleased lo have been a part" of the leasing of the recreation lands. Poggc1neyer emphasized !hat n somewhllt hidden role of Pendleton should be underscored-the hold ing in lrust of vast sections of shoreline and unspoiled uplands. '"When we accepted the land to trh in our 1\.1arines," he said, "\\'c also :iss1u;.•1•d n very gri;_at respons.ibilit~ Ul holding that land iq,..trust for the pubhc. lie added that the Corps' fulfillfl\(>n! or that trust "lies in its attention and tm- provemcnls made to mainlain !hf' ecological balance and the environnient:' f\1orc tangible improvements, ho\1'rvrr. ha\'e bt.'fn acco mplished at the bRse 111 the past months as well. Responding to housing needs cf serv ice1ncn in an inflated civilian hou~ing market. the Department of Defense h:-s begun construction of several hundred nel'o' housi ng un its in the San Onofre sec· lor of the base. Those \viii be mndl~ Near Airport available for Junior enlisted mm m>d tht>ir dept_ndents Holpital A new $18·plus million NavaJ is half completed. That t!lgh1-story faclllly will t.= n1edica l care servi ces to patltntl ' the boundaries of Pendleton. ---~..-.... The base as well Is a 51rong ~-·.-. ' factor In con1munlt ies lying on ill 1 . frtngcs . A tot :il or 2.2 1n11lion in federal fundS"" !!O 10 ltK'HI schools as the gove~t's I :;h;1rl· tach ) car in the costs of educating ~·h1l<lrt•n of l>ase personnel. 1'hc base's ann ual civilian ernploye I pa~rull t'XC:l'cd;,, $20 mJllion. l l)tinn~ tht' ll<'lCI fi\'(' yc:lrs ma~~ <.'0!1-t strur1 1on prOJl'C't~ will yield $51 million tn \\!lgt>s to t'Onstrurtion \\Orkcrs from co1nn1u11ll1t•s su rroun ding lhe "base. of- f1 t·1als t't•port. In !>pltl' of ;111 the fttnC"tions, hov .. ever, r•oggcn1t'yt'r 1hls wct·k strrs$1>tl tha1 ~e ron1b1H 1r:11n1ng function or the base 1s rorrmosL ''Tht·rt· 1~ no finer 1raining area in the 111111011 th;H allo11·s our f.1'1rinl's to perfect 1hc1r skill s 1n such \'tJl'Jcd t}pt"'S of lcr- rain." he ~;lid. Officials Take Stand On Two Developments By CAN l)ACE PE1\RSON 01 tit• D&oly Piiat Slit! Orange County airport con1n1issioners Tuesday night recommended approval by the county planning commission of an ad- dition to Leisure World in Laguna Hills and repeated" ffieir objcc"liOns lo a pro- posed 2,924-acrc planned community in El 1'oro. The projects \o,rer e rC"fcrre<:I to the airport commission for comment becau.;e both are adjace111 to the ~:! Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Rossmoor Corporation is asking for a conditiooal use permit to cons truct 311 condominium units ln tv10 1~-story to\vers and a two-story central con- necting buildin g at the Laguna Hills s<'nior citizens comn1 u11 ity . Part of the project ~'ould be less than a mile away from a f\farioe Corps run\\·ay. Airport noise abaterr.ent specialist Norm Ewers said t.he racket would be less than the 6.5 dba {decibels ! level which is judged its the maximum to Niguel Burglars Grah ·Fumitdl'e Bu rglars who may have had a duplica te key to the res ide nce carried off brand new furniture valued at $550 from a model home in Laguna Niguel Tuesday night, Orange County Sheriff's officers said. · Deputies said intruders at 29522 Via San Sebastian took four chairs, t>A·o tables and a lamp from the unoccupied home. They said there ~·as no evidence of a breakin. 1\·hich re~idences should bt subjected. Con1missioners okay~ 1he idea after ~tarine Corps Col. Frank \\'i!son S3id the marines had no objection to it from the standpoint of night safely. The 2,9'l4 acre Canada Foothills project in E l Toro would call for a zone change 1r0ril agr!Cultural tOplanneO a'ii'hmtinity. Commissioners originally called for denial of the project Aug. 22 :ind Ewers said Tuesday night that little had chang- ed in U1e plans since then. Project engineer H.ugh 11aldcrma n said that two more seclions of homes than al ready designated would be sound attenuated. 1'he project. planned for 11 ,700 dwelling units and a population of niore than 30,000. begins onl y two milts sou th of the main runway of the Marine base. The planning comn1ission will conduct a public hearing on the project Oct. 2. Airport commissioners, led by E. R. Ab}olt , said the wne change would en· danger the continuance of the air rose and would tnflict unwanted noise on residents. Halderman argued that F ifth District Superviaor Ronald Caspen haa proposed that major airport operations be moved to Camp Pendleton and El Toro be phas- ed Ol.lt· h '' . "II Super'lllor tupels hW• 1Mli Yiay." lfaldetman aald, "lt (the noi.se) "-'ill cease to be a problem." Ablott said the area is "not a good place for what you propose" and labeled Caspers' ideas ''unrealistic.·· Commissioners Ablotl. ll.oger Sla tes and chairman Roger Clark voted against th e proposal. Commissione rs Ja1nes Cfilmore and Richard Bertea were absent. Clark and Bcrtea favored the zone change the first time around . YOUR WICKER CENTER IN ORANGE COUNTY THI NIWIST LOOK IN WfCKIR •THE IUR/t/ fJ/tOUfl•by Pacific Rattan SALi NICI "" $2to.oo $1 9950 1 ... 1 ... lott Cwllitoot 4 PIECE SIATING GROUP • Sett.• • 1 Chow Ci'toir1 • Coffee Tobie Indoors Dr out, lhi1 new hold look in rotten is sure to mDke your family room, den or polio th• tol li: of the town s PIECE CHOW S£T SAU ... 1(1 s199so • tALI l"WICI ·~ "'' 1210.00 • 1 09'5 1 ......... '"""'- THE TRADrrlONAl LOOK IN WfCKIR "THE NANTllCKET• by 0 -osian design Decorote wil h the light -airy design thot this white wick•r grouping brings into your home o r apartment. 4 PIECE GROUPING SALi NtCI "" ..,,,_,. s249ts -- -·· ' 'Builder, Spare Those Trees GREEN THUMBS DEPT . Newspaper people are expected to retain a large degree-of aild objectivity as they go about the chore of gathering facts on daily events. One or my big problems in this area develops when people start chopping down trees. Somebody along this best of all possible coasts always seems ready to uproot something that has grown to leafy ma- jesty in 30 or so years. We .rip out three Old Master eucalyptus to make room for some all-night market , erected in the glory of glass and asphalt. We c~ down a grove for some monolithic subdtvislbn . TREES ARE BOTHERSOME to the UP'IT.......,. MRS. ELEANOR McGOVERN, RIGHT, STUMPS IN BAYONNE, N.J. Received Red, White and Blue Bra From Mrs. Plerina Rio 1t M1ldenform McGovern Winds Up LA . .. . ~ Nix~P · Raising Funds S /!Ef'~· .. ~~ JVY, D~ in Califor.n~_:.'f pd~y NEW YORK .(AP) -President Nixon. November &.1 helping to eD!Ure that "the i )'"".4. making his biggest CJ1mp.algn--1eaaon world wll1 be safer in the years ahead." , tour. IBY> he ...U net limply. victory but "a victory fas: America -that'• what we're working f«.~.. , , N!llon, appeaflnl at a 11,GOh-plate Republican fund.nilling dinner in New York. argued thal he mllll havo the op- portunity to "ftntab !be job" that was begun wtth overture. to Moac:Ow and Peking. A spot check of 15 of the c!H<I whefe Republican fund-ralllna · dfnneiw were held Tuesday nlifrt ...,.eel, thaf about SU mlJJlon waa ra!Jed forlhe 'GOP pre,. identlal campaign lo those c!tlel. 111E PRESIDENT also held out to voter• the prospect th&t in a second tenn he would achieve in the domeaitic arena the triumphs which he cia!Jned ror his first 3'f.r years in the field in foreign policy. Nixon's remarka were plped by closed· circuit television to GOP. dinner au· dlences in 'll other cttt.a. In talking about "a victory for America," Nixon saicf.. he bellevea bis ap- peal croo.., regional, party and genera· tional lines. He went on: "We've only begun and there'• so much left to do." He pictured a Ni.on victory In * * * Nine AFL-CIO Union Presidents LOOKING To the past, and partlcular- 1)' to his ventures into personal diplomacy in China and the Soviet Union, tie asserted. "We have changed tbe world." ... c :AIGN '72 • -Nixon, • ' . ed by wife Pat, W3$ bound today ~ Callfomta, to address a money·railing'GOP luncheon and to in- spect the new.rapid·transit system in San Francisco, and to attend a "Victory '12'' dinner in Los Angeles. Nixon met in New York Tuesday with Jewish leaders from 13 states as well as with the Republican faithful a n d Oemocrat.!I for Ni.Ion, and today released a statement renewing hil stand against Arab terrorilm against larsel. '1Tbe time baa come for civilized peo- ple to act in concert to remove the threat of terrorlam from the world," be .. 1d. SA YING SOME argue that "terror is the lut rerort of the weak and the op- pressed" who seek only pollUcaJ jusUce, Nixon said. ''Th.ts is nonsense." He argued that justice must be achiev- ed ihrougb negotiation. "Let us not be dilrupted or turned away by thooe who would loose anarchy upon the world; Jet us seek no accommodations with savagery, but rather act to eliminate it." Nixon, who is making a concerted ef- advance of our chrome-plated culture. ·They spread roots that disrupt sidewalk5 <\nd the c.hewing gum thereori. They drop leaves ·Jfiat hide tb.e aesthetics of pave- ruent and concrete: They throw shadows on somebody's sign that's pushing 78-cent underwear. Tour; Humphrey Stumps Endorse NIX• on fort to win the votes of Jewilb voters, . was quoted by Press Secretary Ronald L. ..d LOS ANGELES (APJ -Sen. George After a 14-hour day of vote-hunting In . ~iegler as having told the Jewish leaders, , ".' ,j McGovern has vowed to force the moral California, the state he said is bis top-WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Declanng lll .effect, that . there should~ a ca~-·' There are lots of excuses for putting issue of war upon the American con-priority target in the presidential cam-Democrat George S. McGovern "wholly pa1gn moratorium on d~tng Soviet u~• T.,....j the ax to trees. . science, and If he wins the White House, pa1gn, McGovern spent the night flying unaccFptable," presidents of nine levies of exit fees agamst Jews who IN NEW YORK -President · Under t~ese . CU'cumstances, I . ha~e. a to end "this mur~erous ~m~ing" within back t~ Was~lngton, ending an ll·state building trades unions of the AF.lrCIO woul~migrate to Israel. Nixon appeared Tuesday . in · strong inclination to. losuny _o?Jechvity _ five .minuteulf.h.is inauguration. . ~-campaign swing. ----·-·-fiiV!" eDdorsed President ·Nii:On . for f;-wNb'"ilEDSOF penom moet of 'fhem---rront""of'"tlt'e-'Statute ·Olftiberty . and kick the tra"'1 bucket here in the of· He s.aid he did not expe~ the normal His final speech was in stark contrast election. schoolcblldren and almost' all represen. Island, where he dedicated the flee. campaign applause for his account of to the exuberance of hls rallies with Tb step Tuesd N. hi ost ting ethnic groups were fenied to Lib-Ami?rican Museum of lmmigra .. "'My motto is, "If It's In the Way of a casualties and of "the most !ncredible Humphrey at his side. prestigious labor a~:em:: 1~ he erty Island for mllseum dedication cere: tion . •, Tree, It's Got to Go ." a~d murderous .bombardment 1n all the Humphrey told a labor rally: won the support several weekl ago of the monieJ, .In other words, if the tree.is buckling a history of mankind. . . "What thil campaign needs is a good Teamsters union, the nation'• largest m.. At least a handful heckled Nixon, sidewalk, tough. Move the sidewalk. If It ~as a solemn windup to a campa~gn dose of believing, of emotion, of en· dependent union, however, a~d were h~led away by Americans lry to dianipt a meeting lii:e trees endanger utility lines, then put the Tu~~ay that had featured the whoop1.ng thusiasm. or spirit, of optimism. We're The AFL-CIO executive council voted federal pohce, who, 1n some cases. this." • .i damn things underground or out of the ~ht1cs of Sen. Hu~rt ~· H~mphrey, b_1d-never going to win anything if we go to stay neutral in the campaign, but clam~ .~Jsts over tbe11mouths of those ~ way. Let them build taco stands around ding for Democratic sohdarit_y at the side around with a hang-dog look ... " more than 30 individual unions _ in-shouting end the war. . HE SAID "IT i.9 bigger news in my opi· ~ the trees, not over their dead bodies. or the man who beat him £or the eluding such giants as the United Auto About 200 protesters showed up outaide nion, when millions of young Americans :! presidential nomination. PERIODICALLY, McGovern drew a \Vorkers -have endorsed McGovern. the Americana Hotel where Nixon ad-are doing what they are doing this year.~ SOME YEARS BACK, for example. shout of "give them hell" as he cam-The presidents of nine of the 17 dressed the party fund.raiser. But they peacefully supportlng the candidate of ~ Newport Beach wasn 't very concerned "I'M GOING to do everything within paigned in California. building trades unions said in a state· "'ere gone before he arrived, moving to their choice in a presidential election." . ~ about the fact that it was a mudflat with my power between now and Nov. 7 to It was Humphrey who gave them hell. ment that they felt Nixon was offering .. th«\ nearby . local headquarters of his He added : •. few trees. Fortune ..• !low.ever, ble.ased force the American people to examine "It' time ~ ei . ligbti.ag mood . the American people "an honorebl'e end earppaign committee where five were ar-"I say, Jet's make it the biggest new~~ Newport with a lady ~babel Peaie the ser:IOUJlDOrat questions that are con· trut. 11 g,, J: ~d. ••w , Md -t~.~;· . in South Vietnam" and a rested by police after a few windows in of all by having a majority of '®ng: l trees in Newport and:, et~ha~been-.. ._._~e • ·~:e ~ ·~· < ,.,<,.r security for the .AJne*.!ln ... ·~O; ~is ~rkana audit~ •. Nixon Americ~.in.'.inninga11re'1tvic\qQ'for ~ who got on a camp~ttr.pla~~Jit?! frontiog us because of tbi1 barbaric ~~ ' . -e v~f ... stzw:; ·nal defense that ~Ou.Id "af.. . the :llfighborbood were broken. Americanf join a majorit)'I of okler the city had. • · ; ~,.~ told"1i&OutTiOof.'..,...., Uilif~ '8f.a'; in • , iMt lillevtl · . ...,.. -, .. , ... said: It , u n~ws when a few young · America this NOvember.<r. ~ They kidded her a lot about it and call-people at a $250-a-plate fund-raising din· me, you dese?ve what happena." ~ ed. her "Big Trees Pease." She didn't ner Tuesday night. 8 · Mi:Gov the ~ · · "' .. ~ care. She . got trees planted faster ~t I~ that ~tu:>' Plaza Hotel ballroom beef. comparison, em gav. m L ~ other parties could c • . t>net~· tomgjJt,. D !(,.to addressi.il,000.a-. .. .. h • ,.;; _.,, J THE wa-· ~. QI!:! 181 WHI .... • l She managed to ~ e tick m~ . .....,__. Prey a tw ·~· , .. ...... ' . •ml' -~- machine to many I . : . . eai!ler . ---:: ed the of F -,;.:?.i.iiiiiill!! -~THE wo•···--. ··o·-11!! -. l Largely as a resul ol ~ conu-.i.:. R~ :a!lDlil the:t>ric<ttag: ~:We'te : •• 4nlllla;. into in.:,"' J :lrea,w:tos .--:r..-SEN li9 . • ...,,. .US • -: • • effort, Newport ind .' h~ aome:.~"'· ~.lhat'be's-~nally.'come ottt ~ m~ r11~1-. .. ~ sort~ bf ; rea#ONSve -' · · · • · · -;, 5 t Trees and appears t~ be ij1ead of tlie the people, e•OI! though he's charging ,,-... ., .'.J;", • ' game. ' tbein fl,000 to g~t in, that we wouldn't . F~ ~or.e .. years, that's .what they AH, AUTUMN. AH, FOOTBALL! I BET i You may have noted by the news that think .~r doing anything to dilcourage his '":~ '".~iatru, Humphrey cried. • YOU n41NK THE MOST SIGNIFICANT THING '· : Costa Mesa la considering a new tree law rally. . . . No, the crowd roared back. il-IAT EVER HAPPENED TO FOOTBALL that would tell people what they can or _Turning to the issue that rtrst propelled "Let me hear you again," said WAS THE WEAK-SIDE SAFETY BLITZ.? can't plant out by their sidewalks. his ,residential candidacy, McGovern Humphrey. ~-....- . drew applause with his pledges to end the "No " T THE NEW DICTUM was apparently w~r and gain freedom for American "YOU'RE SO right," Humphrey said. prompted by the fact that tbe city wants pr1SDners. But when one tentative round to uproot some ash trees out on Illinois of applause rippled through the ballroom and Indiana streets and the neighbors arter he spoke of civilian casualties, are fighting it. McGovern said : It seems that the trees are threatening to uproot the sidewalks. Isn't that ter- rible? "I KNOW these things are hard to clap about and I don't expect applause on descriptions or that kind." McGovern plaMed a break from the campaign until Saturday. except" for one appearance Thursday before a group or Democratic mayors in Washington. He is due to..._campaJgn Saturday in BalUmore. Atlantic City and New York. One announced purpose of the break" It So all that needs be decided is what the city needs the most -cracked cement or some ash trees? , r------------~' to give him time to prepare for a pr<r jected series of national television broad- Well, you know the Costa Mesa city aut horities can knocjt down 20..year-old trees a whole Jot faster than it took for them to grow there. '! J It was the poet JOyce KJJmer who \\Tote : , "Poc1ns are made.l>y fool! like me, ''But 011111 God can nuike a tree." Oh v.·eH. that's" just a bunch of syrupy sen timen talism. Trees aren't really good: {QT anything, And the Maker wasn't very efficient . Look how long it takes Him to grow one to maturity. Just compare that io how faat man can pour a sidewalk. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of tht Dally Pilot rs guarantffd MM11i.y..F,Jdt'f1 n you do not ,._,,.. your P&Dtr 0V .StJI 11.171., c•IF •rid ~°'" CGD'I' w ill l>f ~I to \'OU. l"•lls tr• t•kotn untrl 1r:JO p.rn. Stlunl'W •I'd fl.Nlda'l't tt VOii oo "°' recelv. • ~ OIPY .., • •.rn. S1!11rd•Y,. or I I .IT\, 1....-_y, ctll •rid • CO.,Y Wl!I bf breugllt t11 vou, Cj:flll ,,. •tr.•l'I unlll 111 1.rn. Teltphones MOit Or•ntt Ceunt'I' Ar .. , ....... ..,.,,,1 Nortllwttt H1.111llnll0r> BNcll •nd wetlmllltter ....•.•.•••••• ...,l!H" S." C...,.,..,., C•olltr•l'MI aHcfl, Sffl JUlll Gtp~lf•no, °""' Point, l«lfh .....,_, 1...-Nlfl.ltl .... 9'Ht2G casts on major issues. "Our strategy is very simple," he said. "To start with the biggest state, which iJ California, and they get mori attention than anybody else . ., Business Index Up WASHINGTON (UPll The government's index of leading business indicators jumped 2.2 percent last month biggest rise in the closely watched economic nport since last spring, the Commerce Department said today. The Auglllt rise in the composite index of leading ect1nomJc indicatora compared with an average monthly tncreue of 1.3 percent since the tnde1 began moving up about two years ago. Cooler North, Warm South ' Stor1ns Develop iii Northwest, East, Gulf Coast California ... ,,, \:,S; tocanv hHyy. .Mor• tll•n ',.' "N •,. 1,r•ltt '-'I 11 VfttOl'lf, T .... , • • v •.T-. Temg:ir~tu,... llwfol'• flWfl r•l'lflel;I ~= ~ C~ .. hfWt.., Mor\!., to II •I coutal w-ttaer P•rlty •unny todty. llgl!t v•l"ftble w!ndt J\fOlll tl'ld ITIOnllftf llout-t ~­Inf westerly 10 te to kroolt 11"1 ~ttr• "00!"11 !Odl'f Ind Ttw ..... y. Hl91t to-d1y, ... (Ntlll l•ITIPff"tlUrff rt• f'11m A IG 70. lnltnd ttmptrtlurn rt• fl'O!n ff to 14. Wttt~1f\I,. ''· S1111, M00tt, Tidet WIDNftOAY Stconc1111t11 ........... 12:2211·"'· •.o a.cw 1ow ..... , ...... 1ioi,.m. 0.1 n.unoaY ,,,.., l'lltf\ ......... ' •••• 2:t1 .. Mo l.• ll'lrst low , .•.....•.• •r• e.tn. t.t Stcond lllrf'I .......... 1tl1•"'· '·' ~low , ...•.• ,,,. .11•-.m. O.J SIWI •llff •:41 •.m, ltf• fJ'-l p.m. ' Cl..OSE, BUT WRONG. IT WAS THE TAil.GATE ON THE STATION-WAGON. IT ENABLED PEOPLE 10 REL.AX FROM Al.l. THAT ACTION WITH A MOUTH- WATERING SPREAD AND A LIGHT, SMOOTH BUSHMILl.8 ! AH, BUSMMILLS. SO SMOOTH, SO LIGHT, SO I THINK rLL MOSEY OVER 'TO TI-IE TAILGATE! MOOtl RIMll 10;001>,r!'I,_ S•lt 12:03 11.171.---------------------------------------------- . • • • " ' ·I ., " " ,, ·; .. " ! •, l • ' WtdntSda~. September 27, 1972 DAil Y PILOT $ Sacrame11to Crash Pilot Refused Longer· Runway SACRAMENTO !AP) -The pilot of the Jet which crashed on tak.ooff Into a crowded ice cream parlor and killed 22 ~ re)ected use ol another runway which pointed into open~ fields in-veatlgaton: say. 1 Pilot Richard Bingham plc~ed the sbort runway at Sacramento's EJeeutive AIJ1>0rl -one pointlog directly at Far- rell's Jee Cream Parlor -in order to save fuel , said William Haley, a member of the National TtansPortation Safety Board. Hal~ said a recording of the con- ven&tKID Sunday between Bingham and the airport control tower shortly before Bingham's unsucces.WI takeoff revealed that the control tower offered Bingham a choice of a 6,000.foot runway pointing toward a golf course and open fields. lslewn Picking Jt,self Up ISLETON (AP) -Now lb.It muddy floodwaters have receded. residents of this tioy de1ta town have started moving heck home. Othen find lbe"' 11 nothing left to come home to. Wblle some move fumlture, televilion sets and kids back into houses that w~ J~t bjgb ~ dry, others come just lo stare at muddy piles or rubble that used lO be home. 1\lesday v.·as the first day IsletoD'1 17'00 residents v.·ere permitted to retum since tbe 'rainy night June 21 'then the levee burst and floodwaters up to 10 feet high rushed across the downhill ball of IOwn. "[ ·can't believe it's gone. It just noated away," said one man , staring Ill an empty lot where his 8l·year~ld moth· er had lived tn a house his father buUt. ACROSS THE slreet, a duck paddled Jury Chosen Fo Trial Of Corona FAJRFlELO (AP) -A jury of lb men and tv.·o wotnen has been chosen for Juan Corona's mus murder trlnJ, but pros· pccts are slim that opeotng arguments will be heard until next week. (.__I_N_S_H_OR_T_ .. _. ~) Selection of four alternate jurors con· tinu ed today to hear evidence coneerning the hacking deaths of 25 iti nerants \\•hose bodies \\'ere found buried in Sutt er Coun· ly in the spring of 1971. Estimates of the trial's length range all the "'ay up to six months. CALIFORNIA past a rusty meta] bed and an old station BUT RALEY AND other federal of· wagon was lmbedded in the 'Sllldge.. h-iONTERE!Y tAP) _ GQv. l{onald fici1:ls at a news conference Tuesday did Much of "Isleton looks like a mllcf.eaked Reaga11 Cl1ldes Bar < • UPIT ...... not criticize the pilot's coneem about fuel gho6t town on the banks of the San Joa· ~ri!'I ~I•• Reagan today gently chided the Staie and his choice of the shorter 5,000.foot quin River, where the water has --::~ Bar's endorsernent of legali:zed mari· run reassorted odd ob1'ects A sw1'vel chair -,, San Fraiicisco Mayor Joseph 1·uana , \\"hich he ca lled ·'a substance way. . there would be a short delay in switching · They said they --"'d not comment on upside down next to a baseball mitt and Alioto lea~ federal building which can lead 10 tragedy and death." the CAUi& of the ~b until after com-airport traffic to allow a takeoff on the a rusty sewing machine. Tiny lakea of in his city, where his $12.5 and asked for support for his o\vn com- leUon longer strip and that the pilot responded water· still need to be pumped.• million libel suit against now-prehensive drug abuse treatment. pr~ P of 1 sll.-pronged investigation. he didn't want to expend fuel waiting for In all, 3,000 were left homeless and defunct Look magazine began gram. !'~~~!" look at the data in-the switchover. more than 45 houses, mobile homes, Monday this week. The article Reagan spoke at the annual meeting of ~ • 5~oot runway is safe''. for fanm and marinas were destroyed. The linked 1tim t() Mafia J:llembers. the State Bar onl y 111·0 days •after FM to bite oil, said C. O.· Miller, F~eral Av i at i 0 n Administration state bas estimated total loss .at $%4 ·delegates recommended legal\zirrg mari- difector of the Bw"eau of Aviation ·safety. spokesman Ed Slattery said the tower million, but there were no deaths or ma· juana sales under state licensing. Cra1iston ·Backl I ProJ10sition_ 20 S A C RAME N TO (API - Dcm\ocratic Sen. Alan Cranston bll endorsed Prop. IO, calling <Ill coastline in!tla!IVI!: "tht bt:st mt.aaS of making sure ~I our ~ harbors and wlldhfe ak>ng t.be coast are preserved for aU our people. 1' Cranston . the senior seoator froin Cal ifornia, said in a statemmt released here Tuesday Iha! Pioi>. 20 would insure re s pon s lble development and environmental protection for the coastline. L---------~.I •' 5 SF Women Sue ; For Full Status In Press Ouh SA:'\ F'RAf',;CfSCO (AP) -Five v.nmen rrporters are charging the all -male Press Club of San Francisco relegates \\'Omen "lo second class status.'' A su it, filed in Superior Court here Tuesday . set•ks a court order prohibiting lht' press club from continuing to bar \\'omen from full membership. It contends that women in the media and pu blic relations fields are admitted to a special category of membership but are prohibited from using the M-year~ld· club 's rt.>creational facilities or the sec- ond noor ba r except on certain oc- casions. As a result. the plaintiffs said, they "cannot meet other ne\llS persons on a Questioned about Bingham's coocem acts in an advisory capacity for pilots jor injuries. 1r approved by the Bar's board or iltiut COl!ltrvlng fuel ,' Miller said there but lhat the decision of which runway to TRIB DELTA area is a lacework of Gr. eyhou1id Give1i governors. !he recommendalion WO\lld 111E ACTION was filed by the "•as nothing unusual in that at~all: You use "is always left up to the pUot." waterways "35 miles east of San Fran· become part of lhe legislative program American Civil Liberties Union on behalf ll•ays wony"about it (fuel) in a ]et." Haley also said Bingham, 36, of cisco, where Northern California water fol which the JX>"'erfu l I a 'v Yer s ' of ~tarilyn Baker, reporter for KQED- level of equality." 8ingbam sul-vived the crash with frac-Novato, "commented that he experienced drains into San Francisco Bay. Of the Fare Hike 0 kay organizati on "'Ollld lobby in the state TV; Georgia Hesse. travel editor of the tuies. Twelve children and eight adults vibrations during the takeoff" and that 12,000 acres flooded, most was farmed in Capitol next year. San Francisco Examiner; and Paula were killed in the ice cream pat1c)I' and Bingham thought the plane "was not BC· oom, barley, aHalla, pears, asparagus, SAN FRANCISCO Trcntacost. Alleen Campbell and Roberta two others were killed in an auto struck celerating the way he thought it should sunflowers and saffiower. (AP J -The Pay Raise Req11ested \Varel , starr writers tor the catholic by the Korean War.vintage jet as it be." "I had put every nickel I made into California Public Utilities Commission Monitor. Feeched in flames 150 yards off the end this place," Jamented James Mallamace, has granted an 11.8 percent increase in LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 7.5 percent A special election will be held Oct. 5 on o~ the runway and across a four-lane HE SAID THE pilot spoke of the vibra-66, a. ~tired motel keeper who J~t passenger fa~s and expr~ss rates to across-the-board faculty pay raise was whether to delete the word "male" from highway!ftitcrtbe;ront of'1be store.-----tioDS""w'lttrtnvesttgator s bt mi Jnte1 view in-· __ e.veryth!ng 1be sm11!, wGOd f~-Greyhetmd-iines-Ine~g--the bus recem~by-€haneello1 ~hCCffiti's quiilflcAUOhs. - the hospital and that he had no com-he had JUst remodeled was a dirty, emi;>-~i:npany is "in immediate need of ad· Glenn Dumke of the California State A majority voted at a previous election Mil..LER. SAID the seldom-used shorter runway was in use by planes taking off from a just-completed air show because of the direction of the wind. munications with the control tower dur-ty hulk. A row boat was perched on his d1t1onal revenues." Colleges and University system . to re tain the male only provision. . Haley said the tower told COME TlY ON THE MOST COMFORTABLE , SHIRT IN THE WORLD Slip into • Don lop•r knit Jhirt .. we'v• got every color i111d style i1nd sixe. Ch o o s • from solids, strip•s, · Io n g Or ~hort sleeves ••• $13. to $11. • • • be cornforti1ble. 3467 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-4510 Read the Daily Pilot ing the attempted takeoff front lawn, next to his muddy furniture . The Tuesday action by the PUC covers Dumke also recommended fringe The National Jlress Club in " . · . "I don't know what I'm going to do company main line and commuter opera· benefit improvements totaling 5 perce nt. \Vashington. D.C .• and Press clubs in I think he was try_ing to Dy tt · · · now. I'm too old to star,t over. I've just lions within the state. Dumke's proposal came at the first day Atlantic City and Milwaukee have chang· trying to take off, until he llterally ran been sick since it bappehed " he said. Minjmum fares will increase from 45 of a two-day meeting of lhe 19--campus ed their policies within the past year and Bingham out of runway," Haley said. "Let's get out of here, It smells rotten." to 50 cents a ride. system's board of trustees. adm itted women membe rs. )-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * * * * * * Shopping Area Near Airport Was Opposed SACRAMENTO (AP) -The toke off and plunged in flames f,ermer ... m•ana.ge·r ,•of .. across a four-lane highway ,Sacramento's ·Ex e•c o t'I v e and ihto the !lhopping center Airport says he urged city of· building . flcial.s in 1964 not to allow a The 5,000..foot runway points shopping center to be built on directly into Farrell's Ice .,,~ruai.ao-~.-o ef!:' ~~~°"1~1'.11':~~-~~~-~ ,~ s also opposed co~:"~u;: who managed Ex- struction in the area of the ecutive from 1931 until 1967, crash. said he urged the city in 1964 And ~ spokesman for the to reject a variance allowing Administration says his agen· construction of the original cy warned of the possible part of the fashionable shop- hazards of the site, across a ping center. busy street from the airport. And in the 1950s, be urged But the FAA filed no formal city officials to buy the then- objecUon to the project. added vacant land to provide a clear spokesmin Gerry B a r b e r , space at the end of the shorter because there were no viola-of the airport'a two runways, tions of its rules. Smith said. The Korean War-vintage jet "The FFA requires such roared down the short runway clear zones now. They didn't at Executive Airport, failed to at the time," Smith said . • ris " ' I • •I Th• Sept•~ 29th Dolly Pilot will have o qupon which, wht11 ~ltHd. entl~es yi;u to tfle ~t 4 gloJMs "" with a purchase elf 8 gallch or -· of gasoline. Don't 111iss it S.pte111ber 29th. Clip It! ' . • • • . ' I ... J ,, I • "I ' 8 DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Crisis • Ill Capo Unified The crisis had been loo ming over the next bill for several years. Now It has swept down the •lope Joto the Capistrano Unified S<hool District. Hundreds of new houses -and 600 new children in the past year -have spawned a critical shortage o! clasarooms in the district. San Clemente High School started th is week with double sessions and junior high students at Marco For- ster School now have portable classrooms on thelr campu s. Tr ustees -whUe they do not like to admit 11 - are already doing a selling job on the all-year-school idea and have promised to mak e a formal deeision in December. Yet that stopgap plan is only a temporary measure. They already acknowledge that several new schools wUl have to be built and the bond money is rapidly dY.'in· dling. Since January, trustees have scanned tract maps showing a total o! 8.500 propcsed residences. Hope for accommodating children in these homes rests in the prospect that thousands of new voters might approve another school construction bond iss ue. Adapt to Actual Needs Ri!sidents of Laguna's Woodland Drive area, who have been oomplainlng !or years about rezoning of their picturesque neighborhood for industrial use, should be happy about the city's decision to restore their residen· Ual zone. · Now they will have the oppcrtunity they have sought l-0 fix up their homes -which no longer will be listed as "nonconforming" uses. Although a couple o! councU members were doubt· ful about the planning comml!sion's recommendation to confirm Woodland's residential status -maintain· ing it was a piecemeal solution to Canyon problems - It's Quality, Not_Qyan@y__ That Counts Dear Gloomy_ Gus ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ (Durfnli' l\fr. Harris ' vacation, we are reprinting some of the most re· queattd ~olum1is from ~is forthcom· ing boo~ "For the: Ti~ Bei,Q," to bt publilhed thil fall.) If "" .,.. goinc to cul down serlcuaiy on our population growth -and I think it is an absolute necessity -lben we will first have to change our simple-minded attitude toward the parents of I a r g e families. Most people v.'ho meet me for the first ttme ask about my family, and when they find I have five children they emit little munners of ad· mlration a n d re-- spect, as if I had done something notable. Now I am pleased and proud to have these chUdren, but there was nothing especially meritorious about their con· ceptlon. Their existence does not testify to my virility, or even to any exceptional rertillty, and certainly ls no evidence that l am suited for parenthood. ANYBODY Wlm the nominal equip- ment can have children; It ls no great achievement. Indeed, tn most cases it happens during a fit of absend-mln- demleM. No dllld ahould ever lie •lied a ''mistake," but some are certainly miJcalculaUOM. Pamits with four ehildren are not twice as llood or twice u loving en' twice as intelligent as parents with only two children. True, they have more ex· perience, but as Bismarck said of his donkey, "He has been tbrocJab nlne cam· l! the people !Mng in Bill Peyton's El Morro Trailer Park were to vote to form a new city, would lhcy call it "Peyton Place?" -B.Q.Q. n.11 lt•h1r1 r.flKfl r1Her'1 "lfw.. """ lllCH•lrllr 1111M '' 1111 ".,...,.,., SMt ""' "' ........ lo GllomY OU1, O.Hr f'llift, paign1 with me, and lmowl no mon than be did alter the first." APART FROM our population prob- lem, I am convlnced that · an tmmeme number of people who have children should not have them, and do DOI particularly want them, excep! as •.,,.._ bola" of family life. What they want .,. ldtal children, not real ones; and u aooo as the real ones show no intention of oon- formlng to the ldtal In the parent's mind. they are treated as burdefls, shipped away to achoo!, or otberwlse neglected. Somebody once said that if many peo- ple had not read about romantic love and seen It on the screen, they would never look for it themselves. I believe thia, and along with ii I believe that If many peo- ple were not ashamed to be lhlUibt deft· cient In "family feeling" they would never have cb.lldren. NOR BA VE I noticed that the parents of large families exhibit any more pro- ficiency In bringfng them up, eicept In terms of establl.!hing a barracks-room regimen whlch Is necessary for simple aurvivaJ. Some studies have indicated, in fact , that children coming from large families suffer from a Jack of sharply defined personality and lack a sense of individual identity. At any rate, we have to begin to r<eognl7.e that It ii the quality of parenthood that i3 more essential than the quantity, Rousseau, be It remem· bered, wrote a masterly book on educa- tion -and then sent his five children to a foundling home. He was more honest than most. An Old Welfare Lesson Collfanta Femre ~ The Poignant problem of seelog that every lndl>tdual hu the _.iuntty to achieve his just shanl ol the ...,...!ties of life will not be solved In our lifetime. Unhappily, many of the cur.. proposed !or poverty -however wcll lntenUoned -are wone than the dlsoase. There Is a closslc example of this that goes back to the tum of the 19th century in England. Writing In the Santa Barbara News p,.., ,....Uy, Kevin P. Phllllps attributed what he sees as "a major shift of White House oplnJon" since President Nixon formulated h1I Family Assistance PJan in 1969 to a new mxlentandlna of what 1-ned to rural Speenbamland mcft llllD a bundred yean ago. IN 1711 A WELFARE PLAN was eatabllabed . tllere giving poor people wblldles in aid of wages, with a scale dependeal upon the price of bread. The Q11otes A. L. llear1, Ortllda -"The fact that the Communiatl: intend to take over and oootrol Soutll Vietnam CllllllOI be Ignored. AmerlcMI (~lly the Fulbrlghts, McClookeys lllCl Mc:Govoml) would do well to rememloet Munlch and the otlllng out of ~ that did nol bring peace." Jdea wu to assure the poor a minimum income regardless of their eamlngs. Naturally the l)'8lem sprue!, untll ~o ~ later It collapoed Jn disaster. Sbortly after, the Fmlch phllo6opber de Tociquevllle, pointing to Speenhom· land, declared that such pobllc aaat .. lance nourlahes ruperism becall5e most men-~ wor unltM ~must do "" to live. More recoaUy Karl Polyanl, r<ferred In hla book "The Great Transfonnatlon" to lhe experiment, which nearly wrecked the ecooomy of early 19th Century England, u leading to "the pauperlzaUon of the Dll&W, who almoot lost their human sbape lo the proo. ess." SPEENRAMLAND evidently w a s brought to the attention of Nixon weUare planru!rs In 1969, but nol taken too sertoosly. Its Import now seems to have been better understood. One WhHe House aide is quoted as saying "we want to come back with a totally different philosophy (than thnt of FAP) , . , one that the National Welfare Rights Organization won't like." If that new phtlooophy eventually !<ads to a realistic, humane and effective way to -human welfare and human · dignity, the poor people of long ago Speenhamland will have, rather pain!uJly to be sure, done· a good tum for their counterparts In a later century. the move seems justified. Anticipated industrial me J1lst didn't m.otetialize in the area. , • Now·!be councU bu asked ·for a restudy o( the ~st of the IDduJtrlal zoning between Woodland and the city proper, not with a view to imposing resldenUal use, as erroneonaly reported. but wllh the idea that some var- iallon in :ionilig, aueb as ·the propooed 111-18 (aru and ' cralta) mlllht be more appropJillte In view of the uses that have developed in the area. It's a wbe city that endeavors to adapt its zoning l-0 school needs and uses. Courtesy Needed The Orange County Board o! SupenoiM>rs bas been searching desperately for an airport site for oommercial jet3 -someplace where airliners can take oft and set down with a minimum o! disrupUon. HunUngton Beach successfully !ought oll a pro- pooal l-0 construct an o!fsbore airport in that city. At least three other propo<als have had the same fate. Finally, the supenoiM>rs -led by Chairman Ronald Caspers 0£ Newport Beach -seemed to be setUing on Camp Pendleton as the best available location for a jef airport. Caspers, whose district includes San Clemente, \Vas instrumental in launching an all-out campaign for the Pendleton site. Caapers may or may not have understood the poten· tial impact his propo<al oould have on San Clemente. Whatever the case, he certainly should have let San Clemente people know what be had in mind before rom- milt!ng bimsel! so oompletely to the Pendleton proposal. Caapers has been asked rather stiffly to defend his plan be!ore the San Clemente City CouncU Oct. 4. The hanging chill might well have been avoided with a courteous explanation of the proposal before he an· nounced il s 'It's amazing how you've grown since your nomination, George.' •• Benefits Bank and Employer!J Not Employe 'Checkless-Society'--Idea-~-l;hills-H-im__., To tbe Editor: J note with horror the latest flim·flam the computer expert! are about to rorce upon state employes, the "checkJess society." The benefits accrue to bank and employer, not the employe. The most obvious disadvantage is if there is no check there is no check stub. This little piece of paper conta ins all your deductions, overtime, etc. Com· puters can and do make errors. Without a stub the employe cannot check these Items. If be ts paid overtime his check will vary from pay perlod to AY period and lie will ~ve no jdta bow. 1'uch bas been ctediteil to blJ -UbUI be gets his moatbly statement. I, for one, do not care to be ftnenc:lally blind for 30 day1 at a time. M . FO!\ <XIMPIJ'l'li'IS paying my ·reeur'rlng bW., this-ldtt · really sends cbllls ap ·and down rn_y spine. The maln reason I even have a cbectblg account is that it pn;vldes me with a validated receipt. Can you Imagine trying to tell the fellow repossessing your car, or the electric company chap shutting oU your power, "but the bank paid you automatically." Ha, Ha. I can only urge all employes to resist this Jatest "improvement" or risk finan- cial chaos. D. V. PICKER Help tor the Elderlv To the Editor: While much i.! being written In thi.! election year about the impact of "Senior Power," I would like all older persons in the area to know that the American Association of Retired Persons believes that the true power of "seniors" lies in their continued contribution to the health and well·belng of our nation. A DOD-profit, oon-partisan organization of more than 4 million members, AARP spons:irs many community--service ac- tivities through wlti<:h older citlzem con- tinue to apply their experience and wbdom in service to others. ( __ MAIL_Bo_x __ ) Letters from rea ders are welcome. Normally writers shou·ld convey their m.essoges in 300 words or less . The right to condense letters to fit space or elimtnate libel is resen)td, All letters must include signature and moiling address, but. names may be tDi~~ on requelt if nffideT\t .._... u.oppartnt. Poelrfl !DUL not bl' p•bU.htd. year, covering both bwiband and wife. MembeN receive the hancbome hl- montl!ly>...,,.g-and · 1beo Di6nthly • AARP News Bulletin, both providing Jn. splratlooal and;·lnfonnatlve news and features about alder Amerltans. Through I'-' chapter programs, members serve their communities in many ways, in- cluding Defensive Driving Courses. Imtltutes of Lifetime larnlng and health education and consumer in-formation progrmns. . I will be p)eased to direct interested penoos to the MRP chapten In this area. Complete htfcmiation is also available from MRP, 1225 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Washington, D. c. 2003&. MRS. ISABELLE KJRCllOFF President Huntington Beach O!apter 1.9361 Brookhurst Street, Space 50 Huntington Beach, CA 92M6 WMt Cmt Be Done? To the F.dltor: In a news bulletin from Sen. Alan Cranston it says: "I am glad to ,.. the Calllomla Legi>lature passed a bill thal uys: 'll«>ds off of the Social Security in- .....,. fir the blgber coot of living for the afed, disabled and blind.' .. I am II and dissbled and slnoe I wrote my tint Jetter, I have bad an interview wlill my medical visitor and foe all ber double-i.Ik made no sense to me, a h e came up with 12116. Also. I di.!oovered that after promising me $15 frtr owning and operating a car (because I cannot rr PROVIDES members many - stretching servi""' -such as special in- surance programs, mall-order pharmacy services and group travel programs. Through its national and state llcislatlve programs, tt seeks to Improve Social Security and Medicare programs bous-wallt very far and have to go to the doc- ing and transportation ..mc.. ;..i to tor), lhe was allowing me only $10 ~11!1 obtain tax reforms to benefit the elderly. · obe llad forgotten all about the $5 reun- A major curren1 leglslative goal la the bursemmt on my garage bills. removal of the earntncs llmltatlon under I HAVE FIGURED and figured and Social Security, whlch unfairly ponallus always I get $236. So where is the re- older persons w!lO need to work to sup-ma1n1ng llO? I was d<pendlng on the fn. plement meager ~ cnue to climb out of Ille bole and stay MEMBEIISillP DUES ""' only 12 per °"~ llO)'l In His Word for us to owe no Dear George: My boyfriend named hi• Pli after me. Is tbls a dellherate Insult? NANCY Dear Nancy: Oh, fa< aoociness sake • • • of c:ourae, it'• not an lnlultl What'• wrong with a nice name like Nan- cy? Dear George: My husband hu the Idea that mentholated cigarettes are actually good for you. He bases it on the tact that his mother used to rub hJ1 chest with mtntbol salve when he had a cold ., a thlld . Is there pos· slble validity to Ibis? WONDERING Dear Wondering: Oh, boy, another customer for the cigarette I've invented! It not oply is mtntbolated, but the !Ill« la full ol nose dropl. ma"1 but bow can we pay 0tr billil when there ls lnsufficlent income? I am very Scotcby about making bills and do not have IOllle things that I need. Since I moved into this bou8e Jan. 3, I972, the Edison, gas and telephone have had two raises and now the lelephone compeny wants another. Not only are we oldsters=• trouble, but the wortlng clou la with aucll hlgh taxes. Who b po their poclrots? A n d what can be clone? NAME W1TllRELD Be AICCl"fl •nd BelOal'f!! To the Editor: The following statl1tict1 quoted In a re- cent newaletter from Assemblyman Robert Bur1ce sre worth passing along : t. Democrats have controlled our federll Coniress for 38 of the past 40 y~n. 2. During the post 50 years at the fedenl left!, Democrats havo ra!sed tax· •s 15 Umea and cut them lbree titneA. During the 11me ilO yean, Republicans reduced taxes nine times and raised them only once. 3. DURING THE PAST 40 years, the Democratically"<Dntrolled Congress [or 38 of those years , with four Democralic Presidents, failed to attempt any change in tax structure. Some people appear not to be aware that our Galifomia Legislature and our federll legislature are NOW controlled by Democrats. The uninfonned complain about the wrong people; they are easily duped by a wolf iD s,heep's clothing mak· Ina promises, pn>mlSes, prunlses. Let us be awai;e~ and .beware, of ob- vious tmtrutbs. ~· • " ' r (MISS) RENE SMITH FaNr• Selamlt% To the Editor: • · ' " · Mr. Milt Basha~ iS lo be coogratulated for his letter in your ' edltiori 'Of Sept. 20. Our present "leader" in Washington may be an astute politician but he cer· tainly is not a statesman. At the present moment, his Democratic opponent does not seem to be gifted with the attributes of Benjamin Franklin or F.D.R., but possibly he may acquire them before November. 'BOTH Ci\NDIDATES put me In mind of a remark made by a cab driver in Mexico City when many years ago he was transporting my late wife and myself to the "Hlppodromo de Los Americas" (rare-track). For no apparent reason, be said In perfect English: "Politicians are the same all over the world : they promise slillshine and comes the rain. They promise rain and comes the smishine." My vote will go to Mr. Schmitz . He may not be a second Winston ChurcbUI, but be will do until one comes along. EDGAR O'GRADY PHELPS Needs $8.7 BIUlon To the FAitor: Last week, on a sleeplesa night in Helslnkt trying to adjust my body-clock to a nine-hour time change, I spent my otherwise frulUess time de.slRnlng a com· plete rapid transit system for fa r.away Southern Caltfomia. There are Car too many details to divulge In the sbort space allotted herein, ...,t suffice It to say that it Is patterned somewhat on Biil Mason's engineering "egg" approach as JJUbliabed bi the DAI· LY PILO')' -r.· -though as an architect I prefer a ess embryOnJc, more techtonic modular unit concept. IT WOULD BE Immodest to say that I solved the whole future of manklnd's transit problems In one nlgbl, but It was better than counting sheei>. U there Is anyone out there listening, I have aome Isn't It the Truth! By CAIIL JUllLET 'JR. ' The Republicans have sent forth a call for the New Majority. What about the Old Majority? There can't be two ma- jorities and 11 the old .... beco-the new one then there ts DDlbin& -about It. Somebody In polltlcs Is ·alw1y1 teylng to swab UJ. "Swob. s;nonum for pulling the tDOOI owr uour,q .11 .. .a Pf~ wcol !Ool pf tM "°" ........ -biclluna111 of Opiniom Neither plstool rior jt!ts nor praise of sell nor bright ol day moves these lag- ganls to the swift accomplishment of their •ppoi11ted niutesr which Is to 1&y - what are we gonaa·do a&ot the mall? ''Moll. Noun. Somd1'iftg we ntt• """' that "'°"s fri>m cocrt to co '7t ·~ day1 Mao."' -Dlctionorv of Opitlioftl . serious ideas, but need $6.7 billion as seed money for a start. Thls revelation might be attributed to a beautiful day, the FinrHrots, or a slug of mesimarja (try it, you'll like it), but for the record, soroeane had better get me out of my Coast Highway office driveway pretty soon or I'll .... HERB BROWNELL (?¥tailed from Bergen, Norway, Sept. 19) A Compromise To the Editor: Regarding Mr. Jacj< Curley'• Pilot Logbook (Sept'. 18) .. porting .. the Brown Berets' occupation of ca!allna and claim to the Cbannel Islands. . I may be wroog, but these islands wero probably Spanilh land grants to early ••OaJtfomtanoa''· ....... among··'. them my wife's fbrebeata, the :Aviltt, • .Rlmpaus and Sepulvedas. If ao; linder.tJie. 1'-eaty of GuadclujlHlldatio of March 101 1848, these lands should be returned to the original grantees, or their heirs. A.3 a compromise, I am sure that these heirs would donate San Clemente Island to the Brown Berets if the United States would donate to them a 10 cents per missile or shell {fired) royaJty on said Defense Department target. R. C. HADDEN Slunneful, Outrageous To the Editor: The Foreign Aid , United Nations. World Bank, H.E.W. and other "giveaway" schemes have pushed the U.S. public debt to a point $87,000 million dollars (yes, $87 billion), higher than the combined debts of all other nations of the world! 'l1l1t h 11lamefal and outrageous .. Why should we continue to give away money which we do not reaUy possess? Any funds we give now must be borrowed, and this will (an inflation and increase our taxes . Spendthrift Congressmeo must be put on notice! C. C. MOSELfi.Y lane FO!Mfa'• l'ietlls To the Editor : '!bank you for the editorial (Sept. f9 l expl~ your reason for printing the interviews with Jane Fonda. However, in tDY opinion, this is "back· log her" because this is exactly what she is working !or-<111 the publicity she can get to expose her views favoring Hanoi and downgrading her own country to as many people as possible, hop"'¥. to in- fluence tbeJn to her way of tllinktng. In my <>Pinion, she is a radical and a traitor and It's too bad she didn't stay In Hanoi. MRS. WlL!JAM CAMP ORANOI COAST DAILY PILOT llobat N. W•ed, Pwb!IMlr 'l'llolim rff.u, 8dilor Albor! W. Baus l'ditorial Pao< l'dltor Tho edltortai J.>011" Of the DalJT Pilot steka to lntl'ln'n and •timu· late N'den: by pruenUng lhll news:peper'• oplnlonl and ~om· mentary on toptoi of lntf'rftl aod •hmtflcance, b;y Jl'l"OYtdlng a rorum tor th~ ~ion of our reeders' oplntona, and by ~urur thtJ dlw.rte vkwpolntll ol Informed ol>-• Hn'tn and 1pokesmci.n on to""-of tbeday. - Wedneecby, SepL 37, 1972 Indians Hot ' Jolin. Wayne Go Hon;a.e. WI NDOW llOCK, Ariz. (AP) -lnvitoti«>s lo -~b ~~Y~ and Mickey .Mouae to ahend the tm Navajo . a I' :ur have been criticized by Indian ltudent.s attend· ing coUeaes and universities in the Southw.. .. Wayne shouldn't be honored because oj his many of' pearances as an Indian lighter in movJes Jdearam.stfrOfta the studento said. ' . The Wall Disney cartoon charact..-,.as qitief··Ar bemg unrelated to the problems of ~· re1trvati0n1 ~r~ Im:& ;iii#~ l • UPIT ....... School Joy SandL Shakleton of Charlotte, N.C,, shows elation ----.np.niiig'Of F'Wrida liiternil1onarlJfilversiey, the newest institution of higher learning in the state. Sandy is a junior majoring in elementary educa~ tion. Clergymen Slap Smut Crackdown HOLLYWOOD (AP ) -Two complete nudity in Playboy clergyrnef\ ,say that John and in the moviea would be Wayne and Shakespeare could pennitted under the propou.l. both be in \roub)e under a pr<>-The oppoolt;on lo Prop. IS posed state obscenity law, but was announced at a news con- a sponsor says neilJwW has ference by the Unilarjan ~nylhing to worry ~boul. minisler, flanked by Los Tbe op~ts a s s e r t-e d·:,; Angeles attorney Frederick Tuesday the proposal, Prop. 18· Dockweil.r, Father Charles on the November ballot, could Dollen of San DJ.ego and Rabbi mean the cljpping of words or Bernard Cohen of Lo s scenes front even such family Angeles. They said their group movie fare as Wayne's "True will be known as "Californians Grit" and Playboy Magazine. Against Prop. 18.'' "If somebody decides he doesn't like 'True Grit' ... John Wayne might come down the street and some nut would arrest him ," said the Rev. Robert Kaufman of t h e Emerson Unitarian Church. A SPONSOR, Ernest Schulzke, an aide to State Sen. John Hanner. (R-Gl endale), replied that "the only thing that wou\d be hil would be the ·hard core pa'perback pornography. True Grit and Love Story would be safe. We're not after the Bible or Shakespeare -we're not even after FaMy Hill or Lady Chat- terly's Lover." Schulzke, a fonner te!lcher of constitutional law, also said "l CAN EASU..Y see some prosecuting attorney w h o wants to make a name for himself taking ... Shakespeare to court" if the proposal becomes law, stated Father Dollen, library director at t h e Catholic-supported University of San Diego. He added that parts of the Bible would also be in trouble. The oppooents of the prop. osition asserted. they don't like hard-core pornography but termed the proposal as "overkill." 11te supporters a s s e r t pornography rulings are too vague and don't do the job. Both sides claim subt!tanUal groups of supporters. What~s 1Jp Doe? Rabbit Plot Charged PHNOM PENH (AP \ - . president l..<Jll Nol has warned . 'cambodians against a Com· · .munlst plot to kill them with . rabbits. Xn a message to the nation issUed by the president'& ex- ·' ecutlve cabinet. and publlBhed in the official news agency ,-bulletin, Marshal Lon Nol call· ed on all citizens to arrest any penon who off..-ed lo buy rab- bits at high pr!~. "IF O\JI\ """'jlltttola see them buyinfrabbltl llley must . arrest t h e lil lnulledlttely I becauoe the are -.,.. .. · declared the marohal. He .. Id eommun1lt apnto were paylnl fllli IO <f\'IS for rabblto. He dldn'I opeclly whether that ,... loi each rabbit or tor how many. • . "'tber ..... lll8lnu&ted that lhtlr doclMI need rabbit blood to lnjecl inlo wounded men," tho rnarsl\81 sold. HE WARNED, however, thst the real motive ol Ille Com- munlsla ts to uae rabbits u Uve bombs by o t t a-c hrn if' plastic explosive chlrges lo I them and then relwtng them • near Cambodlan a r m y defeNiV~ position.s. "The lights attract the ra~ bits and thty thus explode the plastic," the marshal stated. He added that the Cam· boWan government w o u 1 d reward any penon who ar· rested rabbit buyers. Conviction Affirmed LOS ANGELES (AP) -'11le state C4olit of Appeal hU upbeld Ille tlll eomlction of H. F. ~ I former Vet>- tun County ..... •hlor found guilty of eceeptlng • 13,051 bribe In~ llonlAg ..... The conv!Cl!on was handed down by a Supetlor C4olit fllrY Dec. 22, If/I). 'llOblmm I.I to serve ., ... i.ce ol 1, lo 14 yean. ROOl!llOl11 IO, -ecnvlcted or occepting tht bribe from CollllOlidaled l!ock Producla Co. to lnfluMCe hla vot,e on • zoning pannl& '"" qll&iey operations In µ Rio, Dell' Ox· nar<I. He.hoarepeatedlJ denied any gullt. ' . Reg. 3.17.IOx 24••. 'Gourmet' kitchen prints on Kodel® polyester/Avril® rayon. Penn·Prest for easy care. Gold or Green. 80 x 30" Reg. 3.20 Sale 2.72 80 x 36" Reg. 3.35 Sale 2.84 86 x 11" Reg. 2. 76 Sale 2.34 Sale 299 · Reg. 3.49-. 72 x 24''. 'Elaine' sheer pplyester·nim>«l'w111i·~oakod daisy. pattern, 4u·rutttes::· ·"1 ,r.·!~r.1.1 70 x 30" Rag. 3.lll Sal• 3'13· 70 x 36" R<ijj. 3..11Sal•3,80 64x11"Valanc&Reg.2.51Sale 2.20 Sale 219 Reg. 3.29.10 x 24". 'Royal' sheer polyester ninon in rich fashion colors. Little or no ironing. 5" bottom hem. 80 x 30", 36" Rog. 3.49 Sale 2.96 72 x 11 " valance Reg. 2.69 Sile 2.28 Sale 229 Reg. 2.70. 69 x 24", 30". 'Pamela' solid color curtains-of Penn-Prest spun rayon sharkskin. With cotton ball fringe. 68 x 36" Reg. 2.86 Sale 2.43 68x11" Valance Reg. 1.90 Sale 1.61 Sale 254 Reg, 2.99. 70 x 24". 'Sutton' floral prints on polyester/cotton. Penn- Prest. 5" bottom hem. 70 x 30" Reg. 3.09 Sole 2.62 70 x 36" Reg. 3.11Sole2.14 70 x 11" Valance Reg. 2.35 Sal• 1.91 Sale 288 Reg. 3.39. 80 x 24 ".'Mercury II' extra-wide curtains of Dacron• polyester ninon. Flocked dots over decorator colors. 80 x 30" Reg. 3.80 Sole 3.06 80 x 36" Reg. 3.79 Sole 3.22 80x11" Valance Reg. 2.42 Sole 2.05 DAILY PILOT 7 • ... ' •.. ~ ' Sale 313 Reg. 3.69. 'Mayan' natural color novelty weave curtains with fringed trim . Penn·Prest cotton. 68 x 11" Valance Rog. 2.69 Sale 2.28 60 x 30" Reg. 3.89 Sale 3.30 fiO x 36" Reg. 4.29 Sale 3.64 Sale 296 Reg. 3.41. 18 x 24". 'Mod Mushroom' combines contemporacy de~Jgn arfcf.:tlftQy'" .,,, colors. Penn•·PreMKodel ® · polyester/ Avri 1 ® r1Yon. " 68 x 30", 36" Rog. 3.19 Sale 3.30 · 68 x 11 : Valance Reg. 2.49 Sale 2.11 Last 3 days. Made-to-measure draperies.15% off. Lnt 3 days. Drapery fabrics In hundreds of styles and colors. With tiebacks or valances. Some with matching bedspreads. All tallored with weighted comers, 4" "'~---------------------------_-_-__ -_-----.-'~~-. " : .. -.. -. . ' ' ' : . ------- hems and headers. Follow these Instructions. bring us lhe measurements and we'll have y our draperies made-to·lit. To meMu,,.: WldJh;....measure from (Gl to (H) or simply the wldtt) you want to cover. LenQth: For ceiling to floor length, measure (A) to (8). For regular 11oor length measure (C) to (D). For •111 iongth meuuro from (El to (fl. ~ 3" II you want below~ill length. Sol• prtceo eHecUve lhrough SUndoy. 588 OllD~tJJD OOLJ I .J.Jl]I EEB 1----'- 'EEBEEB .. '· ' ' . ' . ' • ' ' ' .f-: I , ' t I I ======m!::~t-r- JC Penney , The values are here every day. Shop Sunday noon tq.5 P.M. at the following stores: FASHION ISlAND. Newport ~ch (714) 6'44-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington e .. ch (714) 892-7771. •HAR&0R CENTER, Cost• Mesa (714) b4b-502 I (•Closed Sund1y). • lt DAILY PILOT Wednesday, Septtmbtr n , 1972 ' • •• •' Little kids ·through arJkDt of stlir s ~.and ' " • • . $<' . ""1" oitb~ GIVES POll'fTE~f TO. NEW QUEEN f.T•!~ MO.I~;:..,; 1i:o1t) Is cur,;enr.'1!11•1 America ' I ' ' ' ' • ' ' i' ~69 1 Miss An1erica ' "('. . 'Not Exploited' By GAY PAULEY because I was able to transfer NEW YORK (UPI) -They to a larger sohool. 'pants~. At :15% off, ' :yot1 .. ean keep up . , ' I I crop up every time there's a "lF A GIRL doesn't want to . • "Miss Somebody" or other pageant ... those crilics who enter a pageant, she doesn't caU pageants pure exploitation have t.o. I resent people say. Sale prlcea alfacll•• through Sunday • of youth and beauty. ing you're being used. -.... :. Judi Ford, who reigned for a "l feel others have. no ri ght year as Mi~ Ame rica, says if to tell you what to do with such persons want to Yell your life." "foul ," let them. But she has Miss Ford. 22 and a se nior h~ rebuttal . scheduled to graduate in "I didn 't feel exploited at January from the University .n • d th of Illinois, was Miss America IT• ' sai e beautiful blonde in 1969 trpm Belvidere, Ill. "That ·I ~ . . Part of the travel of whic h Sale 1°6 Sale 255 '-,,, • l ~ • J) \ t~ •• ~· ~ ,~e WBJ·A p;J to Viet-'#' tr•• ·eta~ ·,p pfe;: .~am ~n -.a;tlso ;to~~,..here she • .. n ;, fi~ ·· ···"11\~ :llVQ' "aif.''~ shows a M\'ft~~\Jsi '~/If "da!. P4tt:q~it : 'FYuring the Reg. 1.as. Infants cotton cor-. , duroy p8nts have boxer waist, r, _,._..;. .. fla re leg1' 1 to 4. f J' : . I R•11· $3. Girls' cotton denim 'lf!!j;r·leg boxer jeans with box-f.·~-~aist. 2T ·to 4T in prints11nd ~ . i~ 11t \ v .,S.A! tot, ~.yeclt' cfi1 behalf of 11se '' page30t sponsor!. AND NOW SIQl;'S. traveling wi · l~l~~~ 71~ !il!l1i ~ !~ , W~i~e w~I "t ;.~ tiSiltge. ~th~~'Jtidi1 ' i~ Council. lit ~t,":'11 ..,_~;~o file . heedquaiter · .iA'lras hinglon. I f.:Veied. r.M~eyf-Oi · I've ;-o:c. / ~' d since has ·~'. ~ ected , She makes personal ap- by it. I met my husband pearances and is ·interviewed Truck Rule 'Unlawf11l' ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -A federal judge has f o u n d "arbitrall)', ca p r i c i o u s , unreasonable and unlawful" a n:gulation barring t r u c k drivers from their occupation after being convicted of driv- ing a private automobile while drunk. by newspapers, radio and television, talking up bowlin g as an ideal individual or family-participation sport. She also talks about -and sometimes gives demonstra- tions of -exercises you can do at home using a bowling ball for stress to help take off the pounds and trim the figure. Miss Ford is the only woman member of th e President' s C o u n c i I on Physical Fitness and Sports. She also is on the coaching staff of Special Olympics. Inc., an international p r o g r a m sponsored by the Kennedy Foundation for p r o m o t i n g athletic competition f o r thousands of mentall y retard- ed children. U.6. District Court Judge Miles Lord ruled on a U.S. De~! of, 'l;ransportation · ,..,piiauon 11iei;lu,i :t\loµsaoda ofb:lq :<IJ1ven iJJ the Vniled Statef.( ' I,: ' s•l/.f#,p ~fii ,Jamf& p : Miley ,' SPORTS ARE AN integral ..,t ~ Jl:U ' argjllng against the part of the Ford family life. rule-, tpld the cQurt no such • . r~tion apOlied to airline ~ 1 ~The wh?le.fam1ly bowls. Her pilt)ts or steanlShip cant~ms· father, V1rg11, plaved football -:--.,. • 1and basketball. Her mother coached tennis. Her brother, Dqq, excels at baseball and f6m4fti.;;ir1g i iEgypt .. . wreytling. IP_..."" !f81ent counts 50 -Percent in ~ t \•. . ~pensive ~ (Af')•.-In Egypt, a low wolf'whisl!e can quickly bring the power of law on sidewalk playboys and women chasers. The Iraqi Ne11•s A g en c y quoted a census publ ished in Cairo saying that women chasers are arrested at the rate of 100 a day. Anests on charges o f woman chasiJ:Jg. by whistling or by uttering jnd e c en t phrases: have" ftsen sixfold slnce 1970, said the agency, the Miss America competition. ~ Ahd it was Judi Ford's skill on J--.._\V the 'trampoline that helped cinch the title for the 5-7, 125- pound beauty. Jil 1968, Miss Ford placed first in the AAU National Jwtior Women's trampoline championships and second in the women's seniors. SHE'S A MAJOR in physical education. having transferred from Southwestern Louisiana Un iversity after her freshman year and her year out of school as Miss Ame rica. It was at Illinois that she met Ed Johnson. a graduate student whom she married in Augu~l , 1971._ • . .... Sale 211 ft r ........... ·.: .. • ft "· ' ''t·,·-r-. Hlt4pes. ' " .. I " • ·l i ,\ ·+-.. " • . ' . • l' ' .. Sale 174 Reg. 2.05. Long sleeve turtl .. necks of Penn·Prest® polyester/cotton. Snap shoul- ders. 1·3. Sale 152 Reg. 1.71. Girls' cotton denim flare leg.boxer Jeana. Prints in sizes 2T, 3T and 4T. ' I. Sale 130 Reg. 1.53. Penn-Prest® polyester/cotton crew neck pofos. L.ong sleeves with snap shoulder. Assorted colors. Sizes i; to 3. Sale 152 Reg. 1.79.Bays· Penn-Prest~ polyester/cotton lier• leg, boxer jeans. Reinforced knee. :~o4~ colors. sir 2T, ST . . 'ntJs year. the a gen c y reported, 12,000 s i de w a I k woman chasers were con· demned to prison sentences ranging from one week to t\\'O years and fined from $46 10 $230. depending on the gravity Miss Ford feels strongly that pageants. especially with s c hol arsh ip s , are benericial-"many a g i r 1 might not be able to continue her education otherwise." Rag. 3.18.,Toddler girls' body shlrll In print and solid combi- nations. StretohiJIYJon. 2T-4T. JCPenney ... The values are here every day. of the offense. ~ . • -Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following stores: .._ C" ' J • Daytime 149 Toddletime dis- posabl& diapers. Thirty pinless diapers per bag. N•wbom 129 Toddletime. dis- posable diapers keep your baby dry all day. Thirty per bag. Overnight 79c • • The d isposable diaper that lasts all night. Pinless, twelve to bag. , I ' In ultra-conservati e Upper E g Y'P ti a n .B!"'emorates, woman cha~--~ often ar- rested and had llielt heads shaven clean ln public. They were also co~ or sent lo~ laborcaDIJ>O· She feels strongly also that bath ing suits should• continue as part of the competition, aJthough the currffU Mi ss Amerfca. Terry Anne M1;.-euwsen, would lik e to see it ployei! down. "To me. a one-piece bathing su it is not all that reve~ling anyway, when the workl ii wearing bikinis." FASHION ISLAND, NeW)>ort BNch ,(714) 6+4-2l'l 3. . . . HUNTINGTON CENTE,R. Hunting!® Be~ch (714) .892,m I. •HARBOR CENTER, Cost• Mas• {714) 646-5021 (•Closed Sund•"fl· ·i , ... '. • I I .. Top Radio Star Andy's V CfUCAGO I AP I -"Howdy Amos ... llowd y Andy" _ for 32 years those familiar words opened a radio &how that captivated millions of Americans. For addicts of the "Amos and Andy Show," there were also the KJngfish, and Sap-.~ phire and Mad am Queen. And ·· there were the Beauty Parlor and the Fresh Air Taxica b Co. .... I . -.•. • ·1 . .. ., "Haf11y A a A,mo''J ~ new name ended." :rnE SRO C9t1st on Aug. ~and ,,t>ecame the country.'" ... . -. .· But it was the Negro dialect or two white men , Charles ~ Correll and 1'"'reeman Godsen which drew Americans t~ their sets week in and week out after the show went on network radio in 1929. Restaurants r re q u en t I y boosted 1he volume of their ·, radio p;ets whe~ the shoW yame on, to satisfy their customers. Motion pictures orteo were cut at midreel so audiences could tune in on the doings of Amos and Andy. ON TUESDAY, the deep Uf't T.._.i. voice of Correll, who played OF AMOS AND ANDY Andy, wa s silenced by death. t-... Four days after he enteJ:"1 Chlrl I 't°r:rell Chic~go'~ Wesley Me~r · : ... · Hospital 1n t_he wake or a beii't:: ·~. South, sometimes 3~ attack, he dted . He was a;.;,;~ . du'"t" ' Born in Peoria. Ill., c&t.U Tl. ;. retired in 1960 and lived~fb lJl..-.1~ Correll and qosdeo Beverly Hills. a few blOf;!Js'. ,str~· ~~~ack!ace-. ~rel from Gosden now 6? , ~ · ~~Y(,,oµ l-TµC ago s WGN "f!Dlch ' · • ,. tliey call"<\ \'S.m 'n• Henry." Correll and Gosden met r #"'When they' changed ~tatiom 1919 as fellow !"embers of ao"·::i,fp~y ~d to find a new ~mateur theatrical group tour-i·~ tor their act because of 1ng the South. 'the WGN contract. · They formed a two-man On an elevator ride to thetr team and toured tent shows in first broadcast they ov~rheard In 1960, with television tak· Ing more and more or the au· dience. Amos and Andy left the air. Correll and Gosden ap- pear~ in one movie. The 1930 film was "Check and Double Check.''. It was a flop. Their rendition of the black dialect was true to their radio characterizations, but the blackface they wore left au- diences cold. Negro actors were chosen in 1950 to portray Amos and Andy in the televisi~ version or the radio show. Correll is survived by his widQW. Alyce. and r our children. • 'lJ'ro1a9 B1atton' Australia Hijacl{ Was False Alarm Diploma( ; .. · Escapes Killers SrNGAPORE (UPI ) -The Airport when it landed at 4:02 Singapore government said an · a.m. PDT and taxied to a stop Olympic Airways pilot touched about 100 yards from the main off a false alarm today \vhen terminal building. Security of· he "pushed the wrong button" ficials kept newsmen from ap- and triggered <in emergency proaching the disembarking signal that indicated his plane passengers and prevented in- \Vas being hijacked soon after terviews. jt left Sydney with 42 persons aboard. FIR~_ REPORTS of a hi- :--'·The whole Wng is a false jacking c3me-3t 9: 12 p.m. alarm." the spokesman said. tPDTJ when Royal Australian adding that..,if¥ti~ reports in-Air Force tRAAF ) com- dicatecl "the-"'tli11 pushed the munications pe:'J>Onnel a l wrong button." \Vi\Jiamtown . _.jn 1New South m a;; ~ •. a Boeing 707 mes.5age on an e~rgency fre- •. Lt._...J1 ~ ;I '"...i u ~ Wales. eicktd" up-& brief radio en ro e to, At.pens from qo.ency. An RAAF spokesman Syj1ney 'lia . Sin&apore, was said apparently the pilot of the r-ePorted ' hi)Atked by a lone aircraft had triggered the gunman sh>rtly after it took secret ~m, sigr-,1 when his off from Australia:"""-..A. .. ~ aircraft1V~:aboul 30 minutes spokesm<ftil"'i#hV "'tne airline~. Out of.--Sy.driey. THe Singapore owned by :>.Greek sl\ipping ··!llp0ke.$man ~pfirrhecl as much magnate .viMolte duassiS,"' '-but a~ the false alarm had said "we will meet any · t\\'ist. , · '. demands" the hijacker might In caJ,ber'ra e;rly in the make. mixup:·' civil av iati o n Newsmen "'ere prevented authorities said they \\'ere. from approaching the aircraft treating the incident as a hi· at Singapore International jack -Australia's first. U.S. Pounds North; Reth Shell Da Nang SAIGON iUPJI -OJm- munist gunners shelled the big Allied air base at Da Nang .at dusk tonight for the second time in less than a week; 00~ the seven heavy rockets fell harmlessly into an open field, a U.S. command spokesman said. 'lbe Soviet-built 1 2 2 m m /, rockets hil near a taxi runway , . .r at 6:45 p.m ., the spokesman I l said. There were no casualties I or damage to the base 370 miles north of Saig9n." Several OOndred· American · servicemen are stat.loned at \tbe O.lflang,1-se. 3J9 ·miles . north Of Sljfgqn. tr.s •. -F4 jet • fighter bonlliei-s staUoned in •-1 Thailand use the base to refuel .,~Bnd Joed .,.riew weapons for ,,. !trikes against the North Viet· ,.~~ ~mese panhandle region and " Commufll!t· troops in· northern have been predicting terrorist and rocket attacks against Saigon and other American bases in South ,Vietnam during the weeks before the U.S. presidential election . Earlier, the U .$. command in Saigon reported American warplanes knocked out two MlG2l jet fighters on Uie ground in r;t!ds by hundreds or planes on a North Vietnamese air base between Hanoi and the China border 11.nd attacked anny install3.tl0'!\s near the country's fWo biggest cities. North Vietnam . reported to- !day .htavy air atta'.cks and ship bombardments· by A I I i e d forces ~ting; in "several hundr~"· pi'llliad casualties. the Vietnitm Nfws Agency (VNA) laid in a broadcast from noi. . Sluth Vietnam.·. ..., ..... IN A BR OADCAST }, ').· .. JNftLLIGENCE '<, mol!ltored in Tokjlo, VNA said -·--y ~ \J.S. aircraft attacked heavily '·'-'"r'".,...._-:----------, .-j,opulated areas ranging the ' • • 1 ' entire"· length of the country. N; n-:J.n ~ ''GiVUian casualties totaled 'P r r:. ,,.. ·;everal·. hundred and many ~ . 1hJuse;1'~nd economic and :v0 r .J 91:'.9 _ 1'111-.' establishments. in-r ~.... ~ Cfuding-the Song Boi school .H;..;g~imo~e "'~t~ Tra 'OtUciOI ~ and i dllre In Xlllll.fllm· village ... were PHNOM PENH (APJ -· A powerful terrorist bomb set ablaze the armored limousine carrying the ranking U.S. diplomat in Cambodia to work this morning. but the envoy escaped unhurt, authorities reported. I Police at first reprted t"wo I 1n o t o r c y c I e policemen escorting the limousine an4.a civilian \ijf!re killed in the blast and four Cambodians wound-.... -'" ... ~ . ed . But U.S; ~t)b lO~ said later si11trpeijcemaii 1Wa·• , killed and that the other was critically injured. They .. said. doctors offered. little hope or f', saving him . / Thomas o. Enders, I 40, the U.S. charge d'a!faires,\emerg- ' I . IN sl'l,oR'r. ~. cd unscathed from the bat- tered "'reckage o( the car. He was on his way ti>. the Aznerican Emba$sy, where he is in charge while Am~ssador Emory C. Swank is on home leave in the United States. e Abratns Probe WASlllNGTON (API -A Senate committee ,today meets in closed-door session on the nomination of Gen. Creighton Abrams as Army chief of· Staff and the related question of unauthorized air raids against North Vietnam. The Senate Armed Serv~ Committee. has c~le.d Adm. Thomas Moo'rtr; cllaifrnan of the Joint cruefS "-Of •Slaff, to answer further q u e.A ti o n"s about the raids. whtch lf:d to the firing of Gen . Johil D. La ve lle, former 7th Air Force commander. e Ban Rejecte d WASHINGTO!l (UPI) While Sen. George S . McGovern campa.Jgned i n California for a quick end to the lndiochlna• ""ft the Senate has nafrowly scrlppei;l .a plan lo _<lp .just that. . ~ proposal, JWlce ap- p(Oved by the senate earlier thi~ Year, wo'uld h&ve. cut off all funds for the Indochina conruct wilbln four months if American prisoners of war were relel$!d~ and ao ac· courif1ng nfa~ of lemt:emen still mbslng. • ·sut. ln a tnl}or vk:tory for President Nlxm, 1he proposal ~ost on a ~ v.ote. • v .s. w tiltlf!ff -· • ' WASHINGTON (AP) ·~Al/riiaged ." Ille '• ·• n..·:.i.. '.llloi\, . · day. according Wll1' 111 bold ~'for ' lo _ st, bombers .,..._ping <1ho wor~~ Jj bed number of s9'tem on tlie , tJfe plaejl! lnh Province ti.hied States ts settling_ back and 'tf.S.. . bani~ V ti' .Walt olljcJa) rOleip ~": ma ..flamleb and Uon to lU plan. . •illaces ~IJl~-~f\·1 lll!l"t 91.-the· •Htta,n ~~ Ngbe Ai(.' <i I ')1 , • mlllt>tcrS' arid centnl bankelt VNA said a spokesman for attending the International the North Vietnamese Foreign Monet a r y Fund's ann ual Mln1'try ~·..i. a. !Ule"l':l'fH ~Una fillth<ld .tubolanti"' which said the bom6ings 'Were commtllt after T r e a s u r y "lnsolenlll! ,11r.9voldna .. i b e ~lley a.or.. P. ,Shull' poace and )8111& to•ln~ l>Ol>llo s~etched the ·u.s. plan 1\Je in tlie world." · day. · • • r ; t ' . '· .. Wtd nesday, Septtml>tr Z7 1972 DAIL y PILOT 9 I • • • I -.•• ~,. t ~..,. ,.. •.. ., ~rl .. flares . •· .... . ~Avr ;sport ~$hirts . .-.. Clotb.es for th·e man. Towncraft Plus1.Mi heavy wei g ht pl aid sport shirt. Tw o bias flap pockets. perm anent stays. Rep"rocessed wooli'hylon . Sizes S·M·L·XL. • Mon'•'defrim look" sockaof cottonipolyftar/nylon tlet tllenl In g...i color& One -Illa aL ..., ~ . 3sa Cotton/ polyester flannel sport shirt. Plaid patterned two pocket style with permanent collar stays. Penn-Prest<.N S·M·L·XL. ' . ' .... ' Special 3ss Pin or mid wale cordufoy jeans. Solt cotton in great looking deep tones. Selections are widest right now. so hurryin. Waist sizes 29 to 36. Inseam s ize 29· 33. See our entire line of men's bold fashion belts. JCPenney The values are here every day • Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following stores: .. 'll'ASHION ISLANb ;-Ne;.p~:-' • ··'-1714) M~-2313 . ' HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (7 (4J 892·777 1, ' (71 ~) b~b-5021 (*Closed Sunday). • .£3,\, :-lG ~bor Center ' -". • . , • Jf DAii. Y PILOT • For The Record Marriage Licenses Death Notice• · WESTCLIFF MORTUARY ARBUCKLE & SON 12'1 E. 17tll St, Costa Mesa -• BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME c.r-del Illar -c:.ota Mell 811 UU • BELL BROADWAY llOlmJARY 118 Broadway, Costa Meta LI 1-143i • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1705 Laguna Canyon Rd. 04-1415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel -Pacllle View -Newport Beedl, Callfonla lll4·t'IOO • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME 7801 &lsa Ave. Westminster Sf3..a5%5 • • SMJTll'S MORTUARY m Main St Rantiol(loa Btadl Ill- 'Scruffies' to Hear Speech by Badham By O. C. BUMlNGS Of ... o.lr ,, .. lhlft The Irvine and Seddlebeck valley "ICUfflel" as the memberw ol the South Coost Republlcan Forum Uu to be known, will hell!" none other than s t a t e Assemblyman Robert Badhlµn CR-Newport Beach \ Friday night. Badham, wM l! seeking his aiith tenn in Sacramento, will be on bend et a 7:30 p.m. reception and ! p.m. dinner at the Airporter Inn. Tickets, at $5 each, may be reaerved by calling 552-7797. * * * THE GOP W001en's ·Club Federated of Hunt ington Beach plans a "Bob Burke Night" Saturday at the Lake Park Clutilouse. Club President Pat Benson says the,. 7oth. District Assemblyman and his !amlly will be honored at a potluck dinner sdleduled for 6:30 p.m. Burke also will speak. Everyone Is asked to bring table servke and a salad or a hot dlah. Drinks and dessert wlll be provided. * * * WBILE Burke 1s taking potluck In Huntington Beach, hiJ opponent, lawyer Terry Moollenko of Los Alamitos, will be presi~ al the open- ing of his cmnpalgn head- quarters In F'ountAl!n Valley. 'Ibo party starts at e p.m. 'lbe Fountain Valley M""1enlw office Is located near Brookhnt Slreet and Talbert A~enue. just off the San Dleio Freeway. * * * MOSHENKO, by tbe way, vows be and hlJ W<rkers will knock on two-thirds of the doors in the '10th District in their drive io take Burke's seat away from b1m Nov. 7, * * * STATE~ Senator James Whetmore (R-Garden Grove) CS1Tiee: his campaign for re- election In the 3Sth District to Orange 'lhndly llWnoon. He'll meet then wltll the Orange County Aa9ociation of School LibrariaM. That evening Whetrnore will po'"'1l oo to Fullert.oo !or the 5:30 p.m. opening of Republican headquar- ters there. * * * MRS. LOIS HART is in charge of the Huntington Beach· Fountain Valley Democratic Club campaign headquarters, 18718 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. V o I u n t e e r assignments, precinct work and v o t e r registration information may be obtained by calling 963--4444. * * * THE FIVE-MAN Long Beach Harbor Commission is opposing Proposition 20, the coastline initiaUve. Sierra Oub Sanctuary Lecture Set SANTA ~NA -"The San Joaquin Marsh -A Living Laboratory" will be discussed and slides of. Australia's Great Barrier Reef will be shown to Sierra Club members on Oct. 3. Dr. Gordon Marsh of UC Irvine will speak about the wildJJ(e sanctuary, one of 12 in Southern California now held by the Universi ty of California's Natural Land and Water Reserve System. The fresh-water marsh Is used for study of plant and animal life. The public is invited for the 7:30 p.m. meeting at the Valley High School Auditorium at 1801 S. Greenville St., Santa Ana. At these special low prices we expect to develop a lot of new frtena·s. How about you? Special for the weekend! 9-28 thru 10-2 Prints from . ' slides. • ours I season ear an save. ., ' JCPenney Th~ values are here every day. ' ' Ski p•rk•• for men and women. Pick your style, pick your color. Shell and lining of 100"/o nylon, batting of polyester. 1999 Men •nd women'• unl1ex w1rmup1 for that added warmth and protection from damp'ness. 5-M-L-XL. 13ss Penney1 wlll help you on your woy with thl1 greet 'Storter Ski Pock1ge'. Package includes: Red, white and blue striped skis with stars and 1tripes poles.adjustable step In bindings. 3999~ Bindings expertly mounted at no charge when purchased from Penneys . • Shop Sunday noon to r; P .M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, H untin9ton Beach (714j 892-7771. ' . • • • • • w~. StptmNt 21, im DAILY P!LDr JJ• I "Barriers to Fall' Minority, Hiring Policy Approved Sale! a paint. Any Paint . • By JACK BROBACK 01 ~ 0.11\1 "1111 Sleff SANTA ANA An Affirmative Action policy bas been adopted by Orange Co~ ty supervisors that hopefully win achieve equal employment opportunities ror m i n o r i t y groups and women. But parts of the program were ripped by minority representative.11. and recommend changes . •JµJIT, WHO HAD proposed n+onty hiring pr o gr a ma more than a year ago, said there bas been a 59 percent in. crease in employment of minority workers in th e past year. Save 20% on our entire line. Symposium On Cancer Saturday ORANGE -Discussions about cancer of the breast and colon will be conducted at a half-day symposium for physi· cians, medical students. den- tists and nu~ses: at the Orangc County Medical Association on Saturday. Beginning at 8:30 a.m. in lhe Banquet Room at 300 S. Flower St., the symJX!Sium will be headed by a panel of four physicians recognized as authorities on detection and treatment of these forms or cancer. They are: Edward F'. Lewison, M.D., from Johns Hopkins Hospital. Anthony H. Curreri, M.D.. from the University o( W isconsin Medical Center, Gerald Dodd. M.D., from the University of Texas' Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute, and Justin J. Stein, M.D .. from the UCLA Center for Health Sciences. For more infonnation. call the American Cancer Society at 838-0510. Preregistration is requi red . Pulmki Day Darice Set SANTA ANA -A Pulaski Day Dance with two bands will be held from 8 p.m. t'J I a.m. Saturday at the Embassy Room of the Disneyland Hotel. The event is sponsored by Santa Ana chapter of the Polish national alliance. a non· profit fraternal organ izalion. Food, refreshments and door prizes will be included. For more information, call Carl Kobzi at 557-6926. A $2.50 donation per person is. re- quired. Photo Club W ill Meet County Personnel Director William C. Hart presented a proposed policy , whlch was e~entually adopted Tuesday with amendments, as it had been developed by a task rorce named by the board several \VeekS ago. Tbe program, as presented by Hart, would ~t $36,142 for the balance of the curreot fiscal ye ar and '9)3,414 in 1973-74. MEXICAN-AMERICAN groups led by Adelante, a county employes organization, and LULAC, a Mexican- American citizens g r o u p , wanted control of the new program taken from t h e Personnel Department and put in the County Administrative Office headed by an Equal Op- portunities Officer. CAO Robert Thomas air proved this: "The responsi- hility rests with all depart- ments and so ~Could be better guided by my office." But John Sawyer, gmeral mana· ger of the OJunty Employes Association, strongly opposed the shift. Sawyer sa.Jd the COWlty's merit system, in force for years_, was the best in California and to put control of hiring practices i'tl the CAO's office would fragment penon- nel responsibilities and create dualism, '·a waste of effort.'' HA RT'S PROPOSED pro- gram. which he said was necessary to "remove barriers and open opportunities in equal employment," was ap- proved. on moti o n of Supervisor David L. Baker after a one-hour debate. The Affirmative A c t I o n policy includes: -Recognition that the mere prohibition of discriminatory practices will not assure equal opportunity in employment. -Lodging of responsibility for the program to the Person- nel Director. -Calling for intensified ef- fons to recruit minoritiea and )Vomert for CQunty serviee. -Mandating the structure of . oareee ladders so that mlDcltiti"'~ aiid Women will have the chance to achieve promotions. He said PEP ~Pu bli c Employment Program, a federally.funded project) has been given credit (or most of minority hiring, but h e disagreed noting that of 346 new minority hi res in 12 months, 104 were in PEP and 242 were not . "We now have 8,955 county employes, up 41 percent over a year ago and there arc 936 minority workers, up 113 per- cent in the same period ," Hart revealed. HE SAID AT the present rate of progress in October of 1973 the minority represen- tation in county jobs would equal their ratio in the general population, or about 2 O percent. Hart was adamant against ''quota hiring." "We must have employment of qualified people to meet the needs of the cowity. Minority groups can be helped by revis· ing our system of hiring, not by establishing fixed quotas," he argued. The personnel director call- ed. for "goals-not quotas." "If there are so me quotas necessary they must b e realistic and not based on 'x' amounts of women o r minorities," he said. THE ACCELERATION of the minority and female hiring programs was spurred by changes in the federal Civil Rights Act to include ap- plication to public employers as well as private, and a state Fair Employment Practices Commission investigation of the county's employment practices. The latter probe w a s fostered by LULAC, Ad elante and other grou~. Hart pointed 'Old., r however, that no complaiDll~jled bylbe minorut 9rganizaUona . or. bY. indiv idailf ag~t the county had ever been sustained by higher autborities. \ "THE¥ JS JjQ .•mployer fn : , ~ . .. ., the U.S. Po ClfilfllQw.Prlli>t'¢ 1 , ;/:. '• the validity of ~ bffl-i:!'o;. { 1 gram as · determined by the ~ · ., .. , E q u a I pPportunltles com,. mission,'' 'Hart charged. "All ' selection p-ocesses can be questioned if the F.OC's rigid -A PLAN TO DEVEWP gw delines of p<oportiooale SANTA ANA -The Orange valid job related standards for hiring to representation in the Empire Association of Camera selection th.at will remove general P o p u I at ion and Clubs will air a recorded Jee-artificial barr ie r s to availability are sustained.'' Re • 7.49 2.49 1.99 • One Coat Lalex iGal.) 5.99 4.79 Colorfast Interior Latex (Gal.) 3.99 3.19 Par Excellence Interior (Gal.) 8.99 7.19 2.99 6.99 2.29 1.83 Accent Latex (Gal.) 7.99 6.39 Accent Latex (Qt.) 2.69 2.15 . Celling Latex (Gal.) 7.49 5.99 Latex Texture Finish (Gal.) 3.99 3.19 Latex Prime Quick (Gal.) 5.99 4.79 One Coat Plus Latex Semi-Gloss (Gal.) 8.99 7.19 One Coat Plus Latex Semi-Oloss (Qt.) 2.99 2.39 Non-Yellowing White Latex Seml-Ok>sl (Gal.) 5.99 4.79 1'1on·Y80owing While Latex·semi-GIOss (Qt.) 1.99"" . Decorator Latex Semi-Gloss (Gal.) 7.99 Decorator l atex Semi·Gloss (01.) 2 69 2.15 Accent Latex Semi-Gloss (Gal.) 8.99 7.19 Accent Latex Semi-Gloss (Qt.) 2.99 2.39 One Coat Plus Exterior Latex (Gal.) 8.99 7.19 One Coat Plus Exterior Latex (Qt.) 2.99 2.39 749 5.99 9.99' ~.:~:()ne· :C,,_o_"_._eo~·-t_E_n_._,,_o,_L_•_1·~·-1_aa~1._>~~~~~~~~-1~~~~t-~5-.9-•--1 {! . Self Prfming Latex White (Gal.) 4.79 3.39 . -r.' f, ,• ,. •II - : !..! ' . • tore entitled "First Stepe to employment. Hart said the Affirmative Slide Improvements" during -Provision of training and Action policy is necessary to its public meeting Thursday counseling for minor It y remove barriers and open op.- night in the Spurgeon Room members and women so that portunities and satisfy the of !he Santa Ana Public Li-they may gain the skills and demands of the federal and brary. knowledge to qualify for ad-state agencies. Save on power tools, too. Slide mounting, cropping vancement in county work. ,-----------1 and color correction tech-An AfflMnative Action com- nlques will be explained in the mittee will be named lo hear lecture. The 7:30 meeting will complaints of discrimination be at 505 Civic Center Drive and recommend action, advise West. Hart on interpretation of For lnfonnation ab ou l goals, set procedures for at- camera clubs in Orange laining goals and timetables, County, call Robert M. chavezri•nd~pe~r~iodi~·ca~ll~y~re~v~ie~w~re~su~lts~~~~~~~~~~~" at 774-5935. W ilderness Park Set ANAHEIM -The city of Anaheim will open its first "ecology park" next month, parks director John J. Collier has announced. The park will be on a 33- acre 1ite in Oak Canyon. It will be adjacent to the new Anaheim Hills golf course within a 4,200-acre subdivision. "It will be different from most other Orange County parks in that it will have no baseball damonds, swings, slides or sand boxes." Collier said. "Instead. it will be the city's intent to preserve the • park as a wilderness area." Woman H eld In Slaying FULLERTON -A woman accuaed of the killing of a man with whom alt< shared her F\dlerton homci has been onlettd to 1ppoar Oct. ! In Orange COW!ty ~perlor Courl on manslau1hter chargea. Ladonna Jean Poner. 23, was emoted by Fullerton police last Sept. IS shortly after she allegedlr. used a tl>- Jnch hunting knl e lo Inflict multiple and lalal wounds on Gonion Androw Johnston , Z2 • FIND OF TH E WEEK Pour your heart out ... into a shimmering Bacchui champagne.glass. Make ~ a "thinking of you• occasion. Just a little something to make a heart happy. Do something beautiful. Bacchus beautiful. Baechua champagne gt-. •4,60 each. Do Something Beautiful.,. CM,,_ Ac-ft 111'11 ... -A"""1c•111 I~,,... .. MIAl!WlftUN .... ,,,,_ .. ., CMftt, .... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644°1380 Op•n Mon. '"d Fri. 10 1.m. fo 9:10 p.m. Wlrtl loctlloM If! TWTl llCt, Ofl•llO•, LI Ctrrltes, Lt H1br1. Ate.1 $411\ Ditto fl'lll I.It v .. s. • Sale2499 Reg. '9.H . 5" sander/pol!sher has ','. HP motor .that delivers 2000 RPM. Sale2499 Reg. 29.99. 1/3 HP router has callbtlltlon depth adjustment and ball bearing construction. 25000 RPM . Sale2499 R~. 29.99. 2 speed sabre saw iS double insulated. Has tilting loot, sawdust blower. Sale2499 A91. 21.tt %"variable reversible speed drlll wilh SJ)eed·L.oc. Double insulated. Sale2499 . Reg. :zi.91. 7V." cl1"9Ular saw hal 1.7 HP motor. Includes blade and rip guide. Sale4499 Rqi. St.ff. 1 HP router has 100'4 seeled ball bearing construction. Produces 23,000 RPM. Sale3499 Reg. 39.99. Belt &ander has ball bearing construction and sell tensioning pulley. JC Penney The values are here every day. Shop Sun~ay noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport BHch (714) 644-2313 . ' .. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 892·7771 . •• I . ... • • • . . J:I DAllV P!lOT Wfdftfsd.ly, Stpttmbtt 27, 1972 A,ctor Bob Cummings' Firm Named in Suit by Younger Mermaid and Friends SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -State Atty.' Gen. EveJle J. Younger bas filed suit against the vitamins and food au~ plements firm of Bob Cununings. Inc. He accused it Tuesday of bolting ln fonnallon from investors and "making numerous false and m i s I ea d i n g statements regarding i n v e s t m e n t returns." The su.it said the firm . headed by acto Robert Cummings and businessman William Penn Patrick, uses a marketingl program in which investors-distributors pay for the chance to receive com-l missions by introducing other investors-I distributors into the program. I "THIS JS AN endless chain scheme which is unlawful· under California law," Younger said . On receiving the complaint. Superior Court Judge Victor M. Campilongo issued a temporary restraining order (1) halting lhe firm from recruiting distributors and (2) ordering the defendants to show cause why all further recruitment should not be stopped pending trial. A hearing was set for Oct. 5. Younger's suit seeks to terminate the alleged chain system and asks a $2,500 fine -for each false statement allegedly made by the firm's promoters. YOUNGER SAID the firm used prom- ises that investors could easily earn $40,000 a year to "lure gullible investors to participate, but few investors ever earn anything approaching that amount." The suit was joined by · Corporations Commissioner Ryan Vancamp who said the company failed to register with the commission and withheld from investors information it was required to convey un- ·dei:.the franchise investment Jaw. Pretty l7·year-oid Macy Applesetli of Hemet graces dolpJiin-entrance sign at Marineland of the Pacific in.Palos Verdes. Patrick also is associated with St.ay- Power Industries. Inc., and Alexander- Taylor, Jnc., two other~ comp{Ulies against which Younger has brought similar civil suits. Key Environment Test Surfacing SAN FRANqISC() (AP I - Cl.llinC it "one of the most aignifitant environmental cues )>ending in this s!!le," Atty. Ctn. Evelle J. Yo1ihler has asked the California Supreme C.ourt to intervene in a suit seeking to block a pajr pr 1 high rise li!Jll'Y apart!llents Jiere. ~ suit by a number of in· tfivi dual!i .arutgrot!P) ag'alnst tbe city and 1\1rious bQards alleges that planners or the pro n'o s ~cl ! \'.'in -to1\·,.r a~rtmf'1'11 "' ('fl Russian flill net?1f'c+p4 to nrpnnr,. a11 rn· .. ;. . .. ·~ " ( ECOLOGY) ·~1t!nt a~ required b.•· s!al" / ·v•. The rourt 1 ~ier o,.d,,r('d ;i temporary halt to the proj· ect . THAT'S RIGHT! Guardian "Pour-On". pool cover. Pour it on and it spreods across the pool evenly; then dries on the .J the-toneh- of suede Soft matte suede and glossy. crinkle patent, a dazzling texture duo for a great low heeled . - silhouette. In block , brown , or novy. By Deliso. Deb , 25.00 Fosh;on Shoes 8 I 00% pure.dry, . stabilized chlorine. • Contoins no cyOnuric: a cid. Completely solul>le. Enough to last 18 weeks in 9n overage size pool. "At issue." Younger said. "is the question of whether c.ha.rtered cities -such as San Francisco and L o s Angeles -must comply with the California Environmental Quality Act of 1970, and therefore consider the en- vironmental l m p a c t of private projects before ap- proving them. e Da1nqe Suit AUBURN (AP) -A $4S. water to a cleor, "vinyl-like", strong, flexible film that floats on the water ond $ticks to the sides of the pool to seal it off completely. It is not effected by freezing or pool chemicals. It will not affect pool water chemistry and is completely harmless to the poot Simple to put on ond simple to toke off! ~ ,, •• · 1 Texas Bars Homosexual Marriages AUSTIN. Tex. IUPll -At· torney General C r a w f o r d Martin aays hom06exual mar- riages are permissible if the couple obtain a marriage Jioenae. The only problem. he says. is that under Texas statute. they can't do that. "At first blush, it might ap- pear that the county clerk is authorized to issue a marriage license to persons of the st1n1e sex." Martin said in a ruling. "But Texas la wma kc rs permealed the Family Code with ierm.s 'husband,' 'wife' and 'marriage' and-' lfnce the lecfllalure mW!t be prt8Umed to know the definlllooa and usage of these words, it is esniMGUy clear that under 'l'eus law only penons of the ~ stx may be granted a Jk:imte to n)Arty in Texas," he 111d. Travil County Attorney Ned Granger asked Mat'tln .II> rule on the matter alter two women applied for a marriage llC<filt from County Clerk OorJs Shropohlr.. M r s . ShropshJre turned them down. e Sign He-Ing SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The California S u p r e m e Court has granted a hearing in a suit asking interpretation of state statutes on billboard . placement. The city of E sco ndido brought the suit in San Diego County Superior C o u r t to remove a billbOOrd adjoining a freeway . The city contended the billboard violated a city ordinance. The billboard company argued that the ordinance was i n v a 1 i d because it was not ena cteB properly. ~ ·. I CLEAR POOL COVER IUST POUR IT 011! P•t. P•nd. •• ALSO· IDEAL FOR ABOVE GROUND POOLS ~---~ ... -~ ---_ .. __ _ -... _-.. SAVEii 12' ROUND SIZE •• 4,ft SAYll 1.30 11' ROUND SIZE •• 'J,79 . 'SAY112.00 16'x32' $1ZI •••• 13 •. t.91 SAY.12.SO GUARDIA• POOLlllAT '. ~ . I Cut-pool heotil\!I costs by 50%.! Increase wOter temperotu<e. Completely · safe. Ao.,. month supply for ovorog, size pooli. • ' ' .. .. •' ' I •' '• 5.. PILOf·ADVERTtSEA • ,' . By JOHN ~R ffhl'Ul14# S~ ~ Servi« DIEGO -'lbe Wes! CoaSl ~-e fi!hlQg 'fleet, a ~ring of 1n- kkial free enterprise · 1n I.his con· rate age. 15" sponJbrllii: a ·1,aroung am of industry re!earrlt of ~ kind r!!f~~~ated ~Ith gover~er\i and ~gh ~n t orga~izatlon called th<' erlcan FISHenneq s Researth F't>Wl· , the fleet has been dendlng ered boats over wide ranges ief the rn Pacific to ex plore for new 'tisbing ds and to expand opportun.itlee for .. crowing segment of the tuna·fis'h ing uslry. foundation is the brainchild of lnslnger, onetime coast an, an etperiented rommerclal , and a founder of the Western t Owners Association, first !UC· l attempt of the aJbacgre fleet to ~anllie for higher prices and a more :jl&le market • ' :Meeting· t , •• ?Protocol • ~Offe~ed How to run ·an efficient \mettln& -something a good ·'Many -Orga~ leaders ;._ could stand to iOOrn -will hie \ ooe of the majOr topics at ·a . : day-long leadership lnstltutf' al Golden w .. t College Satur· day, Sept. 30. Co-sponsored by the Na· tional Auoclation of Parlia- mentarians and Golden West'1 auoclated students, the Institute la planned u a community experience open to all, according to college of- ficials, but will be aimed particularly at civic, pro- fess1onal. s e r v i c e , and women'• organlzatlons. Some of the lectures in- clude: "Preside with Con- fidence," on how to expedite a meetlng; "Whal ,Motion '\Voulj i You tJie'!' A>f ':ITT V: t 1 1 1 m em b V'~/-;j. at t'icl L "You've ~ -~ec /'On how lo -be.Qll ef(icient secretary or treuurer; and "Wu the Election Legal?" · All speakers will be ~ro-. I~. regjst.er4 P!idl<unen· f ·~']iii " """' -· ~-pw. ~~,. I \ Reglstratiol\' 8 , a.m. lri Foru l , a ' generol sessl ~:II: &.1)1. •., ''. I• Ea<b of th miln subjeot· areu will be repeated three ~ 4imes In various locations on ,;,amp.,, ....,,~,~ at 9 ~.m. Admlia!O-;-"';tn be , 5 eneral, 11.so lo studenta. eeenattons may be ipade by . ,""'111ng Mrs. Katbr)tt Cliy, ~ Bair: 530!, Santa Ana. • ~Boulevard :· f f .. ; .Discussion . . ' . ·,-To .Continue • . Lqima Beach p1 an nl n g ~ torNnluloners will continue : 'discusalons on the p~ l extension of Alta Laguna ·,l!owevard al a study seaslDn ~ ~'m.ifP& Jui ~ .aiW · lo review lrilomiatlon on tlie ·1fproJecl as well 'al .aUnd out :.Cllillft, op.lnlon on the a· "tension .... J.,ocal en· v-tallats have !nu : llrOll( attacka on the proj~ l Following the study session, !eornmlssloners will act Oct. 1f ~.on whether to recommend-the cily continue to seek the extension. The recommenda· ;lion will be considered by the lty council in late October or early No'1mber. 1_ The pretent alignment r~ould estend Alta Laguna l!rom Top of the World to Arch ~ach llei;hls. l -~leadership • ~~eet Set 0 • ~=-···.... to ilal\eftl civic :"wt11ftd se 1.°,.; U r.'~rlf.W'~uur.-·• ~.\W'!~JI on :· ~~Ir.!" ·=~ndawt~ ::!_" ' ~ .. 1ri11 •'be ellrll te ' u<IA!<t hr .... rtttflflf • ' embers lncludlrit' 1M r c .MI !Chard A. Wllaon, presldimt · •t•• ¥ the C.llfomla Asloclatlon of ,~tarlan&. --. "" man lal~.Alll -1191-7711. \ ' ' .. ..... \ .(jr1t~<l)'. Stpttmbtr 27 1972 I thing, addiQa: to the mdustry's now- sparse knowledge of the migratory habits of this bnportant food fish, moot prized of 5radients, and other fishery blolog\sl. l"OOCtl1lS Qf the of tuna before and after tho albacore run. . •, . . • ' " l • • ' i " • :1r' all the lWlas. CULTURID MARaLI ATHYANIT . . - 2S"x19'~ COMPLRILT FINllMD AND AISIMBLIDI One-pi ece cultured mqrble top and bowl in white/gold finish. 2.f"xl 8" white /gold cabinet complete with a ll hardware. Faucet extra. • Jfi·m ti·>· . " 29 __ .... .. ~ MiN••·i D LA9111" ·- 3·SPl•D (BICYCLES Dual.speed switch. Detachable safely grille. You r choice of women's or men's 3-speed, lightweight tou~ing bike. Kickstand, chainguard, front and bock hand brakes, light touring saddle and touring style hcindlebars. Retractable 'carrying handle. LIMITED TO QUANTITY ON HAND! ., 4999 . ~DiTIOlllA,A1YLI ·. ip.JIAWER 'PULLS . ),\)( COLUM91NI SPRAY PAINT ,., 13 0%. · Beautiful.hammered finish. Yo~r choice of antique copper • • or jet block. Quality spray finishes. Fast drying. An assortment of colors .to choose from. ln the last rew years, the fl eet has been mod811U.1ing and eapandlna. wllh CM ad- dition of new st.eel boatJ, mo1t ol them built, in part at least, by their O't\ntrl. • Fonner General . ' Falls Over Dead PICK UP TOUR FREE SALE BOOKLET AT TOUR LOCAL B.E. STORE '' '°I ' I '"' V, 26'' LAWN sw1•PER All steel construction ·with heavy duty, lifetime oiled bearings. 7 bushel capacity. Sweeps leaves, gras' cUpplnga and sidewalks. Cu1s cl eanup time in half! ' • CHAutltllT All' BACK ·Rlpt~CIMINT SET h-· ! Popular colors. ASTRO OILFILTIR 19'' GABLE TOP T.OOLaOX Equipp<td with padlock hosp 3'' x 3'' x 7' CIDARl!'OIT • " '•· .,. • .:_ Covered 0 in wiPe..cleon, durab(e ;., ' vinyl fabrics. rflstalls in mir;iutes. • Will fit chairs with screw-on or ~lip.on backs • -~ Oil FILTER --• • co •••• • Fits all Ford cart and trucks, Mercury Cougars, Plymouths and monY other American cars~ • #1000 and tubular lift-out tray. 2'' • ' Pecky cedar to give o rustic look. Use o1 fen ce posts or will mO~ ... fa lse beoms .. loO~ks· great antiqued! 77! • • f I DAILY PILOT . - Fire-safe Materials Explained A new 18--page booklet that explains the facts and dispels the "mythology" or flre.retar- c!ant fiberglass for recrea- tional boats has been issued bv lhe Durez divisio n or the Hooker Chemical Corp. The booklet is available free of charge through marine dealers. boat builders, naval architects. survevors and in· surance underwriters as well as the company at its Stam- ford , OJnn. headquarters. Citi~ tests by Underwriters l.aboratories that show £iberglass hulls made with stand ard polyester resins bum three to five times fa ster than re<I oak and about twice as fas t as marine plywood, the booklet explains that the ffiode rn fire-retard ant resins produce fiberglass hulls that are self-extinguishi n,g. It also notes that these lire- retardant laminates, when forced to burn, do so at a rate one-thir:d: to one -fifth as fast as slandar,d resin fiberglass \l'hich is not self extinguishing and ~Innes to burn briskly once .~~ted. Titled !Fire Retardancy and Fiberglass Boats". the booklet cont;i lns a chapter on the U.S. Navy's use for n1ore than 10 years of fire r ct a r d a n t fiber~lass in boats'"from 14 to 52 feet. These include the famed PBR 31-foot river patrol boats used in Vietnam since the 196-0s. Wtdnnday, September 27, 1972 FAST CROSSING -Tony Miller ~eft), Val Valen- tine and Pappy Hannan wave a final farewell as they begin their 1712 day voyage from Los Angeles to Honolulu. The trio made the crossing in a 24-foot Cal-T/4 sloop built by Jensen Marine in Costa Mesa. Aloha Sailors Mesans Cruise to Hawaii Three Costa Mesa sailors recently sailed a 24-foot Cal Tl 4 sailboat on a shakedown cruise from Los Angeles to Honolulu. radio, radio receiver, sextant, hand-bearing compass and chronometer. The boat had no engine. The sail inventory included three spinnakers, two genoas Louf ek Captures Hobie Cat Race Qoe.-bundred and twenty Hobie Cats swarmed over Dana Point Harbor Saturday and Sunday in the first regatta sponsored by the Quiet Cannon Restaurant. Overall winner with the 1owest score under the reverse scoring system was veteran Hobie Cat sailor Richard Loofek ol Costa ¥esa In the Hobie-14 .. A" Fleel Loufek's score was 81/, points. BOATING Boat Saf el)' • Chief Quits The perpetual trophy for the '---------' annual event will be placed in State Post the Quiet Cannon Restaurant at Dana Point. Trophy winners by class: HOBIE CAT ·l4A-(1 ) Richard .Loufek ; (2) Wayne Schaefer ; (3) John Golden. George A. Askelund, former HOBIE CAT-148-(1) John chief of boating safety for the Cockrell ; (2) Tom McDonald; state of California, has resign-(3) Jerry Stowell. od from his post as of Sept. 9, HOBIE CAT-14C-(1) Rick a~t.ly because of some Andres ; (2) Paul Collins; (3) conflict 1n the Department of Ken Crispin. Navigation and 0 c ea n ' HOBIE CAT-16A-(l) Ted Development. Hendrick.son ; (2) Jared Piety; Jn a news release filed (3) Danny Lenahan. under Askelund's name, he stated that his decision to leave state i;ervice was made reluctantly "in view of the critical need foc improvement of the slnte boating salety pro- gram. Askelund said he could not continue "in the face of in- creasingly intolerable work conditions" imposed on him during the past two years. He did not elaborate on the obvious conflict with DNOD. Askelund joined the agency -then known as the Division or Small Craft Hartors -in 1960 under the then director Laohlan M. "Lock" Richards. He started as boating regula- tions supervisor and advanced progressively within the Civil Service system to Chief· of Boating Safety under Ned Sprow, retired Coast Guard admiral, who re p l a c e d Richards. - Swiss Boaters Top Fireballs WRIGHTSVTU.E BEACH, N.C. (AP) -The Swiss team of skipper Jean-C laµde Vuit.hier and crewman Pierre Walt finished first Tuesday in the third day of racing in the World Fireball Sailboat Cham- plomhip Regatta. Start•· Saturda!I 6·o Yachts Read~ ::i , I For Bay ArgosYi f: Sixty selling yachts are five-minute Intervals It 1 prepared to answer the PHRF, OR and ORCA. starling slgnal Saturday at The Argo&J ' ,.., I b • J>O(IO In the 15th annual brainchild of , cli.rt . Sweet, ~too Bay Argosy. Newport Beach marine ln- 'Jbe boats will race from surance broket. The spirit ot Newport to Alamitos Bay the ovornlglit race-crµlse Is to Saturday where they will be give sailing families 'and guests ol Long Beach Yacht guesls an opportunity to Club al a gala dinner and participate In racing and pl dance. together for a p I e a a a D t On Sunday the neet will sail -;:w=eek=en=d=.====::;;:~ from Long Beach to Newport. 1 The fleet will be divided into four divisions -Qcean Rac- ing, Pacific Handicap, Midget Ocean Racing Fleet and Ocean Racing C@,tamarans. The fifst. group to start wlll . be MORF .Jl noon, followed at It also discusses in detail the Un derwriters' Laboratories (UL) testing, classification and labelin.'! of fiberglass boats for lire safety and laminate strength. At present. only one cruiser manufacturer is authorized to display the UL label because its products have been tested and meet UL standardS. However. the UL Labeling prog ram is open to all boat bullders. Skipper and navigator Val Valentine, Tony Miller and Byron "Pappy" Hannan made the 2,530-mile voyage from Los Angeles to Al a Wai Yacht Harbor at Waikiki in 17 days, 14 hours and 25 minutes . and a high cut jib. The T/4 is 24 ·--------------'= Some of the "rumors" about fire ret3rdant fiber~\ass that are dispelled in the booklet in- clude: "Noxious fume s wh en they bum ; poor weathering qualities ; the neert for ex- pensive special equipment on the assembly line. and toxicity to production line worke rs. Single copies of the pocket- sized "Fire Retarrlancy and Fiberglass B o a I s · are available from rrnrn Hookett Chemical Corp., 1515 Summer St., Stamford. Conn. 06905. \V ith the intention of making the crossing in Jess than 20 days. the trio pu shed the Lapworth-designed sloop an average of 140 miles per day for an average speed of 5.8 knots. The Cal Tl4 Highlife was equipped with auch standard opt.ions ca' )ifelines, gim balled stove;•tife raft, flares, life prCservers. 'tllan overboard equipment , barometer, time feet l lh inches length overall, 21 feet on the waterline with an eight-Coot beam and four- foot draft. According to the three, several days of light air and the almost total absence of the customary tradewinds hampered their voyage at times. The boat handled w e 11 enough that it cou ld be sailed with only one man on de(:k even with a spinnaker flying. When making m i n o r ad-justment&,~ the helm could be safely I ~ unattended, ac- cording to Valentine. PigS~n Picliers' Tip: The cal T/4 is produced by Jensen Marine and rates under the quarter-ton category ot· the International Offshore Rule. Use Official Entries Iss ue Backed Players of the D A r LY Thc.v are Westcliff Plaza, PJLOT's pick-the-wid'n~r mot; Harbor View Center, Bayside ball contest, the Pigskin and Eastbluff -all in Pickeroo, may find then1selves Newpo rt Beach and thrown out of the ga me U they Univetsity Park in Irvine . MODESTO (AP) -Voters in the Empire School District five miles east of here have approved a $1.5-million school building bond issue -but a $500,000 school bond issue was rejected by voters in the Denair Unified School District, 10 miles to the south. don't follow the rules. The sponsors put up $50 per The "red flag" was thrown week in m e r c h a n d i s e this week "'hen judges noted certifica tes as prizes. that some of the contest's;11-r=-.:-:....:==================; players are "off sides" in their defi nition of \\•hat con- stitutes a facsimile . One of the game's rules slates that entries can be sent I in on the offici11l entry blank : as it is printed in the j newspaper I sports p a g e s , I t>very Monday. Tuesday and \Vednesday) or can be sub- mitted on "a reasonable facsimile." WHEN ENTRIES began coming in on ruled school notebook paper. handwritten on one sheet with multiple carbon copies and many other forms. judges scurried to the dictionary to find out where to draw lbe line. The smallest dictionary to be found In the DAILY PILOT offices -not one Of these big, three.volume • job6, mind yoo -stales: "F'acsimile (fac-sim '-ile) n. exact duplica te.·· A larger di ct i onary amplifies the definition to in- clude the words, "an exact and detailed copy ... " SIZE AND SHAPE are what's important to Pickeroo l judges. To facilitate judging of ' litera11y hundreds of entries each week. they say they're going to demand that entries be uniform in size and shape . Entries not submitted on a form fhe same size and shape as they entry blank that a p- pean1 'In the DAILY PILOT will tie automali~ally thrown out. + Judges also cautioned en- lranll' to pay attention to the "ont ·entry per person per v.•ec•'' rule· They said mu lt i· pie €""8 op1lnallng from thr same street address. bul ' \\'Ith~ ·"susplclo'bslf similar''1 p11 mes could be subject to ! <·lose inspection before the nC''l:t announcement of win-I ners. INVITATION TO FACT CLINIC WITH RELATIONSHIP TO PROPOSED PROJECT ON ALISO WATER MANAGEMENT AGENCY At 4:00 P.M., WEDNESDAY, October 4, 1972 At the Moulton-Niguel Water District Office 27281 Allso Creek Road, Laguna Niguel The Moulton-Niguel Water District will sponsor a Fact Clinic in order that the residents of the 1"1oul- tol!. Niguel Water District and other interested par~ ties may review and obtain information relative to the proposed Project, as well as the_Environmental Impact Study of the Ali so Water Management Agency0 On October 11 , 1972, the Aliso Water Management Agency will hold a public hearing. This is one of the several informed fact-finding meetings to be held in various locations. Copies of the Project and Environmental Reporls are available for examination at the Office of the Moulton-Niguel Water District, 27281 Aliso Creek Road, Laguna Niguel, and at the Public Librarl~s of Mission Viejo, Laguna Beach, and South Laguna. Addlllonal Information may be obtained by con- tactl11g tho Manogor of the Moulton-Niguel Wator District, end' Al!x Bowle, S.Cretary .. ! District Offico, Tr liphone 11 (7141 131-2500 MOULTON.fl~UEl. WA JEi DISTRICT Alox BOwi., Secretary 111E CONTEST -ts c o . soonaored by n.v• Orange C'(uH1t 1rea sllOpJ>&nl cem.p .. ____________ ...;...; _______ ~, -, " (Earn '61.80 on each $1,0ob) ·, 1 ..• /You can earn this b.igb. intereston$5,000minimum twoyearcertiBcates.'rliefirstyearyour$5,<m certi#i?te will earn $809.15, and more for each consecutive year ~intercstis added'to the account. You can earn $5917 on $1,(XX) minimumoneyearcertiftcates, and as much as $51.26 on aregulat passbook savings account of $~000. . , More inte:reR than b~ ... m.ore .. -.. ; ... th•n ll'toeka , ---' Plus£reeser~9 ... safedepositboxes,notary Plus _persouf sepice .• •• service, travelers ,cheques, trust deed and note experienced and-competent s~v".;~ collections,andmanymorefreeservicesareavail-ings -counselors in e¥h office , able when you have.the required minimum to assist' you in pla&hing ' balance in your account at TIIE BIG M. -your saVings prbg~. " I I ~-• ..... ' . Robert D. Astoto, 11..,... ' M .•. i . .nc1IOll'f•aiiiwi .... CoronadelMar: 2.867.EaatCout~~ Otherom ... 1n Covina, Wcst~csclla,Pwdua, Cl~ cd Ctn• Puli.-Cbouwonh . ' : • " • ' . . \ 15 PILOT-ADVERTISER •' ,• -~ • Cr11m 2 DZ. ,1 , • Li!Uld 1 DI. 2 49 ' • SU1l 3 tz. I 11(.3.00 • °'· . LAND al4ERA All pu rpose cob' camera Wit1I electric tfi' & elec- tronic shutter. Sliarp 3.- e~ment lens. fast. pack film loading. Off!r •pplie1 to ~ade-<n of A/IY ca11<r1. • i ~. !:39' 3~99c .~ LOW l'IKI • I , ~1111111111''''''\~S · . ' • "Count Vasya" EXTRA DRY 80 Proof 6 59 VODKA Reg. 7.49 • "MacKinnon's" so Proof mu LIGHT BLINDED 8 89 = SCOTCH Reg. I.II , • - "Grenada Bay'~MPORTED 7 09 ' LIGHT or GOLD 80 Proof RUM 1eg.1.11 • "Old Barstow" 9or~:oo1 7 39 DISTIWD LOllDOll DRY GIN Ref.U9 • 9 oz. SIZE ''Wizard '' AIR FRESHENER The "natural w1y" to freshen your home . Deligblful fragrances ! I TOPPS : Wrist Watch ' BANDS , "PnlTE" -l!':ilhr1 r· Of Yinyl in mod cok11$ • to mix or matrh with your fall out11t~. I ~ Rti· 1.50 99c ·' " -·----•• --l.ll!'lil'~!ll, ___ 11~- ~ Radio & Cassette ; AM TAPE RECORDER f br REALTONE ••• Ideal for ~ stude11ts, business. lr:1vel.or just funf Records anywhere .:: on battery or AC. 'Rer.Jl.95 #17 18 . t 33.88 . : i:------1 1 J cs.I; Place To Shop~ · Infants' -Needs - . - • . .. • r DAIL V PILOT J $ ;, . , ' ' • ' ' I "Andy Williams" ALBUM • • "Alone Again" (Naturally) COLUMBIA -~omantic ~:e1~:~~g.~1:::u3re for 37 ever been in love! 5.98Yalue • -· "elS _,,, ------ It ,.,t, Pit~. Wrdllttdly, Stptembtr 27, 197l trtOT-AOVERTISER 8 ~Nader--B.omhshell on California Fizzles Out • '. J . ' By ARNOLD FlUEDMAN 111141 THOMAS D. ltUA8 ' • Jlememl1er the .ocathln& npqoe llolpln I Nader's Ralderl sprung oo • caJllonl!a last year? tt raiJed such a statewide commouon that critics and supporters W-e\W.re :!l!:f for an tnv .. tlgatioo .c{1 chafi~ in the CCllSllllfr advbcliie'I l,20q- 'Jl11Be npon, omlnoUsly labeled "Power and tLand in California." Nader'• Calilomill <ask force coocluded its yeal'loog·lltudy by ac<USl!jg ll!J• cor- porate .land inlereol>, many In !!<>uthem California , of having "looted" the i;tate's • ..treasury and envirooment 1be "looting" via tu subsidies and '·'enor;mous" amounts oC "corporate welfare" occurred, the task force charged, by "buying, intimidating and ' comproml.aing key officials In atate and local _ govemmtnt" -Democrats and Republjcans allke. M!NY POLITICIANS 8CCUl<d of theae all~ improprieties, Southern Califor- nWis 1Dcluded1 reacted by angrily demanding a probe of their accuaus on grounds the report ooatalned numerous lnac.f\IJ'acies. ' Wbst's happened In the 13 moothB slnce ,re\t.Ue of tbe bomb8hell? · ln a word, very little. Alter the flood of lnltlal reaction, the air creoreci and not much bas been done. It lpokeiJ for awhile llke a full-scale .llgislativi! inve1tigation would be launch- ed by tbe Allsembly Planning and Land \Jae Committee, whose domain ~vers the main thrust of the report. Conunlttee Chalrinan Pau.I Priolo, a Republican from West Los Ang eles, said last Oecem- QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandi , \. WISHlllG illl. PARK ,. l16H7' liWllS llOMITTN6 ' --------..\'.Do -you-get the feeling ~jifeTre doing more atxf more wishing these days?" Recreatioi1 Jobs Varied, Plentiful By JOYCE L KENNEDY ing are showing signs of •· ' . rtl.atjve rtt.aiurlty In tenns of '• ~IDJGj!b~••joltliorl1 )~" 0(\ pi?ulat ion ·\igh\ICY°-dd w6dld Hke'il participating. Howeve~, the e.ater"a field of recreaUon. Bat ~otal '\ ·vitY-<ic\Pa-for each I d°"\ !mow wllo\ ~b of r "¥~ than tbe "'· •• -tti -~ Mi .. atS!fll . m. lir participants. so careers, or what• req,alrtd ot that markets for boating. me. Could you give ~ 11)., fishing , and h\ulting equ~pment fomiatioll abam tterUtion. -and ~· rem a iln at- "' . ,. 'lttAi•'119wUlll•-1Ba! ,. ., I ., ' ' _, traie, ''"'¥i!'"'"'·fQ1, '"·' ·'·'''" · .•.. J _ . · 'F.•B:JS ,#, fUlll·gl'Ow:u\1 'IT" e tflV~e . ~rqerican ·~11 • ·~try.!', 'arid ' Jhere ·ire l4m'.11¥ ,~. tAkes .2.8 va~alions man opportunities. U .• S . each year, plus 4.6 wtekeod Consumers Sj>ent • about $58 trips. away from home. About billion for a wide variety of haU thf weekend trippers stay with friends alXI relatives. ( ) -Sightseeing rates I i r s t Career ,. = I wr -.among v ~ c a t 1 o n ~ctlvities. '-UI ftiiill followed 1n descendmg order of popularity by swimming, fishing, relax.if@:, shopping, leisure-recreation goods and walking and boating. serv_ioes in 1970, and, in a con--Camping vehicles aCC0W1l- tlnu1ng upward cycle. are ex· ed for tw~thirds as many pected to sper_xt $100 billion by total vacation-travel-passenger 1971, according to a new miles as the airlines. Many study. ~he study was made by major oil companies end hotel· the . Midwest Res ear c ~ motel chains are developing Institute (MRI ), a nonprofit facilities to serve this large organization headquartered in and rapidly growing travel Kansas City, Mo. The MRI market. study Is thought to be tbe }argest and 11\0&t com-RECREATION is not a t prthenstve prtvate-!ector ro-regular type of "indw;try," search program ever directed but a collection of many to~the ·subject df ieisure aixt dlsa lm.ilar type& of activities. TecnJatitJn.. . ' -1 ll>ere is, as yet, no uniform ,. . .. , d .;l • , i,greement on , the precise " A.11.1.0 N T Jl,E: M" I , soope , of lelsure/recreatioo snIDY'S KEY .FINDJNGS :. . ..... ~ .. bUI jobs In "parks :-Qrlving ,fer pleasure ii and ' ncreat.ioo" and "travel .5til,i.1 the nqmber 1: outdoq; _., ~nd.. lourism.'' are gcqerally , 0fecteation acUvit,y ill, the U.:;_ ·COr~ pad of this field . · 1n.-terms of .par~cil>'nts; 1lQ e 10( the plac'5 of million AmWoans,,-.l2 yeBJ1. ..em1)1P~eht a.nd activities apd Qlder, , went driving fdt Wlil~h can ~ considered Pleasure at Jealt .once in 19101 wtlhln the bOunda'ries of compared with 75 million' in "lelltite and reci-eation• are: 1960. wU.~illciilc areas, dlmps, -Picnicking remains in 2n4 iOosl iquar1Urtts, · r ~Io r t s , place .~ outdoor recrea~· 'hOte s, skj 'or marlria facl~l~ies , lion •d.i.vhies, with l05 miU}Qa )'OUUf agencies, ~or cit~ participants in 1970 as corn-centers, chu~ recreaUon. pared with 70 pillllon In 1960. busiltess employe recroaUon, , -Activities showing t he ~tion for th e han-~t rates of growth , in d1capped, threate!"• amuse- • p percentage terms, between ment parks. p~ys1cal culture • 1980 aOO 1970, were camping ?J>UltlOOS,, leg1Uma.te gan;ibl- .-and bicycling ~mg openrtions, bowhng, swim- " . ·. . ming popls, skating rinks. golf .. " -Boating, f1sh111g, and hunt-and tennis clubs, Armed I --- Fortes .recrea1'on, museums and libraries, sports and athletics. travel agencies, and disoothequ... Pn!paratlon ranges from no formal educa- tional requirementa , to ad- vanced college degrees. Phone 642-4321 ·For w~ekender ~dvertising , SOUTHERN ·CAUFORNIA FOCUS ber he expected Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti soon would direct his panel to make an extensive issue-by-issue review of the report. Priolo's committee bad the political makeup for reasonably bipartisan in- vestigation -fou r Democrats and three Republicans, including the chairman. BUT THE DEMOCRATIC Assembly chief from North Hollywood didn't follow through -at least. be hasn't yet. "We were never charged with that responsibility by the speaker," Priolo said. A Mo .. u1 aide conllmted that the speaker failed in Ulil!> Ute task but said It shou.Jdn't have prevented Priolo's com- mittee from taking the lnillaUve. "That conunltteo bas the prerogative of takinl '!I' Ute wltalo queotloo without us directbii • them to do I~" said R. William Hauck, alllltant to the speaker. "I have no in~Uon of USWJJinl the reopoosibility without the speaker re- quiring us to do it," Priolo sald. Moretti'• aide opeculated U..t a probe of the Nader report may have been postpooed. out of concern it would have required. too much time when "ao many olher problems this year are more im· mediately pressing oo us." 'Jbe higher priority issues, be said, included ta1 reform and school ftnanclng -neither of which has been resolved. and ao extensive there was no way to look Into all ol It," Mo,.tti'• spok8DWI said. Although conceding that tbe speaker "hasn't given it any thought in 1 loog time," his aide sald It's 0011C<lvable Moretti may reopen the explosive issue after the November electim. "To some extent," be added, "we'Te already begun looking at pieces of U." He said the segment of t!!o report at- tacking the state water project ;,will be of continued concern." Nader's task force was eJVemely critical of the $2.11-bllllon water project, calling It possibly "the largest t!pCCial interest booodoggle In history." THE METROPOLITAN WATER District o1 southern caJllornia, wblcb is absorbing 70 pereent ol Ute water pro~ ect's COii and buYlll& about ball t h , water dlwrted ftoCll Northern Cllllomla riven, was accuted tk "breathtaking in- competence" for allegedly overeatlmat- lng tbe ,..ton's needs and ttly'ing oo -property tu:es to pay for the water. AJ.8o receiving critJclsm for roles in developing the water project were former IJemoerlllc Gov. Edmund G. Brown, i..,. 11emocratlc Atty. Gen. Thomas C. Linch: and the director of lhe State Water -Department, Will iam R. GiaoW, a Republlcan appolnte< of Gov. Rtinald Reagan. nie). ~rhelted!Y denied charges of im- proper actloos which. tbe report claimed, benefited large landhlld<n In Ute path of the huge project aod contended the report was replete with 01inaccuracies and mlalnf~Uoo." • ,MUST Mm, NOWb • MORE AR DAILY \'-------! OZITE DO-IT-YOURSELF SALE! LOWEST PRICES EYER!! . ' I ~ LAWISCAPE Sy11thetJc Turi S YI.Ill NON·fADI GUARANTEE YOUR CHOICE BATHRO"M ·CARPET •10z11e ~ Petal Puff Natural green synthetic turf designed for patios, pools, putting green<, and sund~ks~ ~~~er,JDildew...Dnd _ - ChemiCols-:-·-- "S s· .I u ,, Decoratlw• New unny lae p Turf New, exciting, colorful stripes for indoor outdoor use to brig hten patios, porches and family rooms. This carpet re- sists sunshine, weather and comes in three beoutiful color combinations. ' Carp.et Your ·l!NtflRE M, TOUR CHOICE! • DU 'ONT NTlON $ • POPCOIN DESIGN • HIRCUlON IASED ON .0 SQUA•I YAIDS COMPLETELY INSTALLED OVER LUXURIOUS FOAM PADDING . , KODEL PLUSH 100" KOD£l POL'IESTER. PllE. WO-COlOR TWIED. THREE· llVEL RANDOM SHEARED STYLE ACCENTS ANY HOMf. CHOOSE FROM MAKV DECOR· ATOR COLORS. NOW SAi.i PlltCID 99 M. TD. SAVI $S.OO NEW, BEAUTfruL SHAG. smro TO ADO llAUT~ TO ANY HOM'-O<CotA'lllfi'.OlO.S. NOW SAU l'llKIO /IT 99 lushl003"'nyfondeip'j>ile cafpet oadsmnnth lin~·-- .... YI. color to your both or bedroom decorating. Built-in cushion back construction, plus dirt and stoin-resis~ ton! quality makes this on ideol carpet for ony horn; SAVE $3.00 NOW SALE PRICED AT •••• COMPARABLE RETAIL .... 10.11 SQ. YD. 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. DEEP, RICH, DORABLE SHAG. BEAUTIFUL, NEW THREE COLOR DESIGNS. NOW SALE PRICED COMPARABLE REATIL ........... $4.99 DACRON® SHAG ~ 100% DACRON POLYESTER PILE. BEAU- TIFUL NEW DEEP SHAG WITH A FULL DEEP PILE. MANY NEW DECORATOR COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. NOW SALE PRICED COMPARABLE RETAIL 100 % KODEL POLYESTER PILE. RICH, DEEP, LUX- URIOUSLY THICK PILE. MANY NEW HI STYLE DECORA TOA THREE COLOR SH AG TD SELECT FROM. RESISTS DIRT AND SOIL STAINS. NOW SALE PRICED COMPARABLI RETAIL ........... $1.99 99 It. D. SAVI $'-00 100% DACRON POLYESTER PU. W.UTIFUL. IEw._ OEIP SHAG. EASY ro fM!KfMi MANY NEW DEC•OlATOl COi.ORS TO CttOOSE FROM. -SAi.i PllCIO M.n. SAVI P,00 : COlO.S, SQ. ; TD. .:l AVB \ J.;.ooo ~ «IMPAUll.l •ITAll .............. $7.H COM,AUIU llTAIL .... .-....... $7.ff COMl'A•Alll HTAJL ............. .$1. .. NEW, HEAVY, DEEP SHAG. STYLED TO ADO 8EAl1TY TO ANY HOME. DECORA.~R .. ·-IAl.IPI COMPAUIU tn •••••• KODEL SCULPTURED JOO'!I KODIL POLY!STER PILL RICH, LUXURIOUSLY THICK Pill NEW DECORA- TOR C~ NOW SAU n1c1D AT •••• 99 so. YO. SAVI $3.00 'COMPAIAIU IPAN;.;.: ••.•.• ~··"·" ' 30-60·90 DAYS NO INTEREST '*llllllllT Clll!I ~ &llllllllllS-ltlffMmllM IWIJYJllllllUf . ' Mlllltrae 11111-..1111 !'ti) W.2151 SAii FRANCISCO AA1A -Ce109e Perlt • ltl31_.., ,. 147·2114 Vtnturo fretWOy to Conaoo Avt.. orth to Shttmon Woy, then --rlgtt) 2 ~ .. n: - t I I W. Los .A111elff ni.iilli.tirollol. ,11.WS Son Diogo f'""")' to Wibhirt W".'.-. Turn-off 6 blocks W31 on Wilsfttire: ~. A11t1holM • $4l41..focl;, II. ' "-". 131-1114 2' blocks North of Sonto Ano r,_.,.., EUclid. Acros s from Colif. Ftcl ' . ' Wfff CowlN llll'lhl•frt. + •441t ' Soni hmordif'lo frwy, to CUrus. St. 3 Ilka. No 1n Citrus to Work· mon. R 8 t "'"~ th . s ' .. • J -· -·-- 'I •• .. ,,,. .. ,,' - 8 PILOT-A ERTISER Wtd"6d1y, ~Pltmbtri 21, 1972 F-11 ClrCIU I • Ecology Groups Pit Votes Against Labor on Prop. 20 By FRED W. KLINE ~ N-.1.mce; SACRAMENTO -Memhet-s or the Legislature are taking notice of a statewide ballot proposition which pits two pressure groups again.st each other in the November elec- tion. Proposition 20 is called the California Coastline Initiative and is causing a head-knock- ing between organized labor and the many ecology groups in the state. organimtions which claim that passage of the initiative will stifle California's already soft eoonomy. Ecologists started their own political campaign organi7A· tion this year and have been quick to flex mu!Cles. Con- frontation with labor this year promises to be interesting. grou p dkl show an ability to mobilize people and money. In lbe 40th As se mbl y district, the new group sup- ported Democratic candidate Art Torres again s t Assemblyman Alex Garcia. and came within 600 votes of upsetting the Incumbent. The league Is looking for some other test case in "·hich to prove its ability -thus its su pport of the California Coastline Initiative. New Sewing Oa~ Scheduled A five-wetk clus entitled "Power Sewing" will teach the use of the straigbWtitch com· m•~· I 1ewlng machine beg today at Orange Coast ollege. The 1 lk.unlt course l 1 designed to train students for immediate em p I o y men t . Registration will be held in the classroom at the OCC Skill Center and classes will meet from 1 to 4 p.m. A.1ondays through Thursdays. "1 con tell which iJ my right han4 ond which is my leh oven w~h my eyes CLOSED!" Labor expects substantial --~fi:!!na~nd~al support fro m NAME OF mE new group is the ConservatiOJl League for Political Education (CLPE) and it had something of a "dry run" in June's primary elec- tion. No major victory was claimed by the league, but the This is the second major fight for organized labor th.is year. The class will meet Mon- days through Ftldays at the Skill Center and registration will be at the nm class on Oct 30 and dUring that first week. ARP ET OPED KITCHEN TILES SUNDAYS _,_AR~EJ.S_ --AND--¥E$$$ . 'EVENINGS NAME BRANDS - T-YOU•SELF FINEST QUALITY F !LS LIKI VUYIT · NAME BRANDS. NEW DE-IDEAL FOR FAMILY • SIGNER DESIGNS . HI-·OUT AIS OTHll CARPIT ROOMS, PLAY ROOMS, SY TO INSTALL BUY DENSITY FOAM BACK. GREAT FOR KITCHENS , DENS • 00 3 NYLON PILE PATIOS, POOL DECKS, ETC. • TAIN RESISTANT DOW! 99 99 0 ~c SQ. YD. SQ. Y~. • ~VE 81GGIST $400 \ltd~. Stpttmbtr 27, 1972 DA1I.., •• "'' Ji* Aeddenp Prevent• I N Defensive Driver Training A Must By DR. STEINCROHN DEAR DR. STEINCROHN ' I keep hearing and reading that these days it's important to learn how to drive dafensively. Believe it or not. you're !he first one I've had the courage to ask what this meaiu -MR. K. COMMENT: Never actually having seen a defin i ti on myself, 111 have to make up my own. I believe that many of. the hundreds of thousands of accidents on the road are pre"'entable. J?eficiency in t~ cars themselves may contri- bute, but t believe that chancter def'iciency in the dilver IS' tTiostly at fault. So, to drive defensive ly. you have to take a good. long. honest look at yourself when you gel behind the wheel. and allO maintain c o n s t a n t awareness cl the charac· teristlcs of other drivers. aalely .. yoo con, conalde- that every other driver on the rood moy be ettller unin- telligent, psychotic, stupefied by alcohol or drup. ln a murderom rage, physically or emotionally lncapldtated In some other way, or ipeed crazy. Thankfully , most are not. However, to drive defenalvely, consider these poelbiliUes. If you do, the odds are that you and yours wUl be ab&e to get out of your car in one DOCTOR IN THI! HOUSE piece. Tn stay healthy and alive, mi!trust every driver on the road -lncludlng yourseU. That i9 my definition of "drlv· ing 'defensively." What 'I youn? As for yourself, it is im-DEAR DR. STEINCRORN: portapt that you do not take Is having frequent black ~tools al(Ohol be¥ore driving, that an hldlcation of cancer? One you do not drive long di.stances wbo died of this gave me this without resting with a few information. -MRS. T. breaks, that you do not take COMllBNI': Jt Is TV\<lc:ible, strong tranquill!en or an-_........ ......,., tihlslllnlnes that wlll make but """' • ~..,.U is only a you drowsy, that you always guess an•• dodbr has put be aJert. that you don't you througts' 'xt.enlw tests to over.peed, that you don't find Ille • ._ tailgate, that you try to put off Of cdne: IOmetimes black driving (if possible) when in a stools may be doe to medica- !it of anger or resentment. tion -11.ke takJnl lron tablets. These are some of tbe in-But there are tests t o trospective thoughLs a n d determine whether there ls specmc actions you muat talte blood Ill Ille 11001. U prosen~ It penonalll'__ io cl{!" delemlve-indiCJ11"' bl~Jdi)ler up In ·1y."'1'00 ~I miily-tll0ti1>ftrot a rom-a ch~ more. T h ere fo r e X-ra)'I a n d Now, how about the other slgmoldoscopi c examinations fellow? You should always are ln order. Black stools may keep him in mind as he comes ~ave many causes. Complete behind you, or toward you on inventory will d I a c l o s e the road. How can you be sure whether they are due to an he has taken the precautions I ulcer or growth in. the stomach have just suggested? How do or intestines, to Uver trouble, you koow he won't nm through to IOme blood condition, or to a red light or a stop sign? 30llleth1ng else. To drive defeMively, aJways Like pain, black stools are a consider It ls possible someone wamlng to investigate the will break a ru1e. To drive as source of trouble . Redwood, Industry . Hit , '' ' C '· I ~ · 'hl ·r~•~· · · · By · €onservation·· COl-ps 00'1. A n Polyfsler Pile. 8 eoul ilul eov y ShoQ. New SQ. YD. colon 10 Itel !rom. H SALi PllCI D SAVE W o• '"''Co•• $2.00 . Amallll!I new 100'.' nylon pile. This corptt has m:tllent soil- hiding thoroettristits that makes your carpet look dtoMr longer. lo119 \llleGr, eos~ corirlg, static. control yam come1 ill many be®- tiful dlcorotor coloi;s. . Ill HTAIL ........... $6-99 COMPARABLE RETAIL .... $11,99 i-'••n••• J'p~LYISDR 100% Anlron nylon pile. Lu11:- urious, re~lieol, deni.. pile thot is ITIOt't duroblt than otlllr nylon or noturol fibtfs. Th is corpet i1 eosy to cort tor Ond reloins its l'ltW look even· under heavy usogt, Mony rich and txcilillQ colors avoilablt. tot\ALVl"~POLYE TElt Pill EXTIIA HEAVY, T ICK, P.\TTEll:ENf O OE GM. RUGGED.Mf-:UAH EASY TO MAIKT IN . • . ADE WITM ti CONTI OLIS ·Fil.AMENT AVLINllPO STER -s•u PllCID ••••••••••• ··••••••. · C-AIARll All ••• $L99 ' AVLIN@ Is a TM of FMC Corp. 99 SQ. YD. SAYE $3.DO 99 SCI. YD. SAVE $5.00 COMPARABLE RETAIL .... $11.99 AllTION II 100% Antmn II pile. Un- beU1vobly rkh, resili1nt. dins. pile ••• rrh ond tn.ity dllicott colors. Antrnn H IOok• cit on ond frt1h longtt-than ony other fibtf". tt· retoin1 h1 -look twn l.lnder heovy llsogt. NOW MU Pl:ICd , SHOAL SALE . .1 ~ r.-· CUSTOM DRAl>ERIES · · " , , ' • l>rofessionolly Mode Custom · , SPECIALS $ ~ ~ • , $3.Se-$4.SO P~RICS .SWEii WOlllMANSNIP 77 • Yen nt lltl t llllo SL . " W -"41 3 8/oc:ks 1"t of· fivo Poiolf Moln. ' No. Hollywood 7N7 llrrtl Cl!IJf• llwt 111-1211 Hollywood Freeway to Stlfrmon Woy. Eost to lour.I Conyon M . ; ' ' 100% CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. PQPU lAg NYLON HI- LOW THAT CO~INES BEAUTY ANI> DURABILITY. MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. -NOW SALE PRICED COMPARAILE.RIJAIL ••• $4.99 ·1000s OF REMNANTS .LARGE I I 0 SMALL ' SAVINGS ~SAVINGS 8· UP TO... UP TO ••• living Room, Dining Room, Bedrooms. · Hallways, Ba ths. Cars. Etc. BRING YOUR.ROOM MEASUREMENTS BRAIDED RUG ·~-9x 12 co':t':'lE s2·995 • 589.95 '.. • 'l ' · Hollywood ., 11l5 ... ¥11111111 •••• ' -111·1111 2 81ks. north of Holly wood Bhtd. on Ver, mont. · 5-'!I CARLOS nollc.-..... t' •. 1•••> f t2.U11 SNI fRANclSCO AREA (HID~.J 1114 w-lt'lhi. 11141 IU-lllt -' Htwport 81\ld. at 'l111) it. " SACRAMENTO -Charges are being made in Washington ar1C:I elsewhere that Caftfomia's fl.~ billion timber Industry is hard at work eJiminating all the coast redwoods. Sierra Clubbers and other conservationists call it a ••rape of the land." which will lead to the "cutting o{ the last redwood." Nothing could be farther from the truth, aay timber producers In redwood country. Now, Sen. John V. Twmey (!){;allf. ) Is getting ln!o the act. IN A SPEECH on the Senate floor, Tunney accuses the Nix· on administration of delaying development of a buffer zone to "protect" Redwood Na- tional Parle on California's north coast. "For four years, we have watched the park logged right up to its oUter boundaries," ~ Tunney sald: demanding that action be taken Immediately to half the """'""· Interior ~tary Rogers C. B. Morton·has called the prob- lem "complex" because ol the cost of reimbursing timber owners. "lt seems to me that far from being complex the mat- ter Is very 1imple. Should log- ging activities be allowed to destroy the redwoods?" Tun- ney asked. •1Tbe answer ls clearly no." AcnJAIJ.. Y THE three ma- jor timber prodtre0rs along Redwood Creek -Georgia Paelllc. Arcata Redwood and Simpson Timber -have voluntarily agreed to an *llJ.. foot buffer zone beyond which none of them trill log unJess they have specific agreement with Ille Natlonal P o r k Service. Attempta. are being made to make thb btlffer 10ne ' pennanenl The too-foot buffer r.one was r<COmmended In a study by three University of California pt'OI~ !Id by Dr. Edwin Stone. AD are noted con- oeryatlonlJll. 'lbtre w11 never An agree- ?Mnt that Umber cutting would be prohibited in the buf· fer woe, and if the major firms Involved aod the govern- ment l!!"tt tdgether. timber.cut· ting still will he pennllted Wlder rlf.!d ufe"'8rds. · Park Superintendent Jack Davis bas declared lllat no Umber producers have ca....i ,.J the park any trouble. He tells !ouritta,11n•Mato-partlu th.at there haa been no damage iO' the' 151.~ 'ii,rk lnm adJacel'lt timber ~ion. WHAT l\ANXLES Tunney and the Sierra Club ill that all of the Redwood C re e k dralnlge was not included In Redwood National Park. Davts believes there are el!OUlh redwoods in the park. Besides, the federal goverrt- ment didn't have enough money to purchase any more acreage jutt a• It didn't have an 1pproprtaUon to acquife the 800-foot buffer s t r t p around the park's boundaries. Hunt Made By Edison Southern California Edison Co. has begun a search for the area 'a top young scientist - bUt not for recruit i ng purpooeol. M a local sponsor of the 14th Artnual National Youth Cooferenct on Science and the Environment to be held in November In Chicago, the company is urging all Orange County publle, private and parochial schools to oominate one student u a possible ca~ didat<. The oompeny will 121 ... select one student for the thre&<lay conference !or the aoutheoatern division, which 19 comprised ol orange County and a part ol Whittler. Nominations m u 1 t be forwarded lo mmpaoy olllcu in Santa Ana by Oct. e. Malpractice T o Get Stu~y c.,u.i --SACRAMENTO ..,-The liability ol 11 Ce n I e d pn>- lessiooslt for molpractk:e wtll 1>o t11o aibJoct o1 hoorlnc b1 the A&sembb' Oomallttee on the Judiciary Nov. II and 17 ot the ' Slale Capl!OI. Commlltee Ch1lrm1n Charlol Warren C.D·Loa Angeles) aald the hearll)CJ were prompted by IOlrlnl professional !!ability lbaur.- l'lltcs, alleged "'•atlon.ol S]lllrloua sulta agalllll' li.-1 (l«>lwionala, am c!rllldltn of unnecetaary and unf1vor1bM publicity attactJns defendanta. 0 . ' J UP'I T ........ 19 ON TRAIL -Canadian Jlrime Minister Pierre Trudeau sniffs tomato bleed8r.l in Windsor while ri. on campaign tour ~Ontario and wester Canada. Feder- al el ns have been sc hed ' Oct 30. .• , He?sBeen ,O; Ori' Other .. : _side, T.oo From Wire Services Rep. ~ete McCloskey was questioned about calling a news QQPference at the San Francisco Press Club, which bars women members. The California Republican who unsuccessfully challenged l'resident Nixon for t h l' non1ina.Uon said he disagreed PEOPLE licy, "But I've been in a I of places where I dis af 'ed with the n\anagement, such as the llouse of Repre11entativcs and lhe Re Ucan Party." * * WIJll · F. Bucklty Jr., editor dt•ti e conservative Na- tional Mview, received a $115,000 1ettlement of a libel suit against novelist Gore Vidal and Esquire magazine. Buckley, noting that a libel suil filed against him by Vidal had been dropped, said he was dropping his suit to avoid the time and expense of a trial. " .. J have learned that Vidal's opinions of me are of little conce rn to the public . . . . Let his own unreimbursed legal expenses, estimated at $75,000. teach him to obse rve the laws of libel. I hope it will not prove necessary to renew t h e discipline in future years. 1'hcre are limits even to my charily." * * * Actor Brian Kelly , 4 I , former star ot the television series 1,lFlipper,'' and actress Anne S,mero, 24, have ob- tained a marriage license at Santa Monica. The couple did oot reveal lheir wedding plam after gel· ling the" license. II would be the second marriage for Kelly and the' Drst for Miss Romero. * * * Chancellor \\'Illy Brandt was awarded the first annual Reinhold Niebuhr prize for \\'Ork for freedom and peace as chancellor and former West Berlin lnayor. The '5,000 prize was handed to Brandl by Christorpher Neibuhi. son of the famed Am c r)can Prote stant theologian who died last year. ·* * * F:ntertainer Dean ~1artin \\'On Superior Court permission lo complete purchase of U1e $530,000 Bel Air home he has leased since February. l\.1artin already bought half· interest in the house from Ivan Towsend Smith, 37. Smith. conservator of the $3.S-million estate of h I s grandmother, coffee heiress Eugenia Oair Smith. 89, need · ed coUrt pennisslon to sell her lntcroo! In the house. * * * JlmmJ Durante is in a San- ta Moillca hospital suffering rrom what hL1> wife Marg1e describes as fatigue. She aid ii Is a ,..ult of a L•s V<P4 nightclub 1f!11!1!. severatr,,.televlsl ! pea ranees. The ~year-old entertainer's doctor said he Is "doing fine" but there Is no lndlc1tion of ¥i hen he will be teleased. ·maier Diagnosed a~· Psyeopatb~ r lndust1ies SAHASOTA, Fla 1API -A Freudian scholar asslgntd a World War II task of cum· piling a top secrcl study of the• mind of Adolf 1-lltler concluded in 1943 that the German die· L'ltor was "in all probability a neurotic psychopath.'' Hitler was intrigued by wolves but feared horses, moonlight and microbes. Dr. Walter C. Langer told the Allied High Command in his "The Hitler Source Book." The German dictator wept over tbe death of his canarv an d pondered the mo s.t humane way to cook a lobster. In moments of agitatioo, he sucked his little finger ·Bod was given to tem~r tantrum,,, sometimes roll~ oo the floor and chewing the carpet. the study said. ~fASOClllSM WAS"tlle basis of his sex life. Langer con· eluded. ' -'· After 29 vcars as classi fied matericll . Lan ge r's psychological study of Hitler has been placed in the Na- t10MI Arch1vt.-s and publtshed as lhe m~un part of a new book. ··The ~!Ind of Adolph llJtler.'' I.anger. 73-year-old retired TWston psychoana lys t who has been Jiving in Sara!JOta since 1961. was comm1ss1oncd by the page! lat.er, he tumed over the source book to ~ chief Col. William (Wild Bill) Donovan. Langer had been chosen for the job after he wrote Donovan a letter citing tJ1e need for such a study. In the introduction to his had seen him severtl times derived a vicarious pleasure a supennan image to the and heard many of his fron\ the suffering of others in Gtrman people . speeches and I coWdn't have whom he can see himself " / "It ~·as this ability to con- been I~~ impreued with -The fact that four of 1118 vince others that he is what he anyooe. fi ve olher children ln his falJll,. is not that kept him from ''Bocause Hitler ·hated Jews ly died in their infancy !UY going insane." he wrote in his and analysts with e qua I have contributed to Hltltf'a J943 analysis. fervor," Langer said, he was fantasies u a "~1essiah1 ... .-t1h "One is a very soft, sen· ' among those who persuaded a divine mission. timental and inderisive in-~ ~ 1 the Freuds to leave Austria ,1 dlvidual who has very little le:::J and he accompanied ~tl)e IM)... LANGER SAW Hiller .as an drive and wants nothing quite Good Willy Se1: Oisabil· )~ • He MHrked on hb H"le lfn11er-and rolled 011 the floor and ehewed the car· pet, MalJ• a stud11 of Hitler. year-old genius Md his farhlly inse<:ure we a k I in g w~ so mix:h as to be amused, Hk-lty i1 the problem • • • 1 on the train trip to the border. 30ffiebow managed to convey ed"and )loked after." Community t uAXJrt i1 Langer v.·as an Amerlcan --~---::__...,,;. _ _:_ ___ _,_ ________ II the answer ,,. And total ,. citizen· rth1billtation is tht r• ~~ • d tult. Support th~ work ~ Off!~ ot Strategic Services (OSS) in 1943 lo probe Hitler's psyche. Using Sigmund F r c u d ' s psychuanalytic techniques of rxploring behaviOr patterns, L1ngrr talked to available persons who had koown the German leader more or less int1n1atcly. sifted throu g h newspaper and magazine reports, and read and reread "!\f('in Kampf" for clues to his su!Jject's 1ubconscious. EIGHT MO~AND 1,200 s i n g I e-spaced typewritten new book, Langer wrote : "Psychological warfare, ll seemed to me, should be much more than a cons tant repeti· lion of fabricated atrocity storie.s designed to ~ve that the enemy were Ali bad guys' who had to be eli ininated so v.·e 'good guys' could live in peace. JN 11-IE COURSE of his re- search fer the OSS, Langer also concluded : Ilda ..• llide of non·prollt Goodwill In· ) U du1trles. ) -Hitler 's sex ual perversions were partly in· fluenced by his toilet training as a child and the shock of seeing his parents engage in intercourse on one occasion. At the end of a Jong herd day -A Bald.,,.in 11lnterlude" Or- gan ean offer yarf the oltim1te in relaxation , •. and the price ·' is a ,refreshing $995.00 -Hts anti·Semitism could be expla ined in part by his own internal struggle. ~ '. .. HOME Of fHf tAlDWIN MUSIC LAI .. LANGER STUDCEO under Freud's daught«, Dr. Anna Freud, in VieDDI from 1937·39 and saw Hitler t,flke over Austria. He said: "The Jew became a symbol of everything Hitler bated U. himseU-sex, disease a n perversion," Langer said. ''As the masochist he really is, he I Only Authorir.ed Baldwin Dc.deJ_ in Orenge C.0RatJ WOODWORTH '' ' .. l.t.110 AND DltG.t.11 SALfS 515 NOITH MAIH, SANTA ANA • '547.SISl "I had never met him but • OUlllG ''·" ~'·',.,,44 ·· -:;; EA. ,~·· ···~ ' "· "' ~ st·j " LAWN 6. UAF BAG •7BUIHIL ·~"''Q NICI PR . out n. ~ HG. I.If EA UM INCl5 .. Cll-Wl11- c.M• w.m en ' "" COMP.UI Af ... -~n .· ~· ,.. . : ,-IA. · Ullf 0 Jl'90IS·llnl-~· WWI 0(1', f. lf1t o.i. .of JO" • n-· ,._, ........ .... _ .... .............. f;t ~-­.. 1-. ,_... ---· OUI lfG. 2•.•• ......... ...,_,_ ... • •• ..._., -o •• ro. .~~ • '""o"".,....... l\ll100 ... ''°·"" -· ~-=•·" OVER 100,000 DO-IT-YOURSELF ITEMS IN STOCKI -nao1n '"..-..!!:" ··-• GAnot GIOVI IJMtCHAPMAHAvt, Ml"'"" -·~ • llVCISIDl .. • POMOMA ... NO.MU --· --•MUMfllGfOM llACM 1to0 IOIHOft ----· .. _ ... • sa• IR•AllHIO • llOIWAll * ................ ,...tofll.VO, _,.,, ... ·---__ .. __ ., ·-UOlllUS, • SA•TA AMA tJMtYiaOn •YI». l .. IO,IMllTOl ----..:;.,.-:,r.-,::.. • WMITTlll 590 W. 19t• St. Costa Mesa Open.Mon. thru Sat. 9-9 Sund1y, Noon to 5. 146-2479 Yo r Dollar B Y$ More At The h l l' ' j ' GOODWILL STORE ' I -------•·1 r ., SPECIAL! MATIRESS or1 BOX SPRING I $1ft95 7ea. FOAM & FllTHElt PILLOWS 2 ... $,49 $1.7~ .... MEN'S DRESS PANTS 2.39 WOMEN'S DRESSES ¢ UP Call ~2479 For Pk:k"I' S..lct - • l ) ' ,·, .. ' ' \ \ I I ; . - ' I .. . I • I _, I I ••• . I • i . , ~~1 I. ' . ... . _ ............ •= , .... 1 -· ;.~11ANA Edinger Ave I~ ~ ·~ ~ •i ;ii MacA1111ur I :Jvd. ----i--, I \ • ' ,,) ;: ___ ... ;f_ Baker Street I ~ ORANGE I 'i :. ·s.,.--1 --, Joaq --- ' • U/11 HI/ta llo 7 CORON,t; Id I DEL MAR I ' .. ' ·--StopAt'All118Jorllll...-llans ~Rntu s-... • . . • • • • I .< :I, 1 , dne~y. Seplembtt 27, 1972 • • • • ... ' ' • That's us; the Orange County Transit District, also known as The :rwo-Bit Bus Line. We're called that because a one.way fare on any of our buses costs only a quarter. J;6 you it means comfortable, convenient and economical service. It roeafls you can go shopping in downtown Santa Ana or Laguna Beach for only 25¢, It means you. can go to any of the 3 major colleges on our route for only 25¢. It mean& you can go to South Coast Plaza or Fashion Island for only·25¢. It means you can go to Newport Beach or Ba)boa Pier for oply 25¢. It means you can go anywhere on our map for only 25¢. All of our·coaches are air conditioned for your comfort and the bus stops are·carefully'located for your convenience. If you're beginning to see that O.C.T.D has you in mind, you're getti~g the message. , For information or route maps· and schedules call The:fwO'Bit Bus Line at (714) 547-6004 or write us at 1126 E. Washington Ave., Santa Ana, Calif. LINE 53 ---------SANT A ANA-BALBOA VIA COSTA MESA LINE57 ~ SANTAANA-LAGUNA BEACH ·VJA' COSTA MESA LINE 65 SOUTH COAST Pl.AV.-llAL.BOA VIA IRVIN& ' uw .... OOUNt'Y 'rRAN9IT ...... DAILY PI LOT ID ·~.l \ \, • • • ·4 Dramas Scheduled On Family "Before you know it, your "'hildren are grown up and on t heir own " ' This fAmiliar lament of 'lirents. iind how one mother ·eacts 't.6 the situation, is the 'ubjed !II-t...3D·ml11ute · ninidrama·, ';·:rnere W11:s a Llt- . \e Boy," al Golden \V est 1...:0llege Oct. 3. · The play is ·the first in a '>U r-week dra ~ . di scussion :eries. "Crises in tht)amily," ~resented by the Gol~ West :venlng College and c o - • pon!IOred by the Orange 'ounty Mental H e a 1th ··'lepartment, a n d Family \ssociatlon, Orange County. ; EACH OF THE four plays ---"-:ill dramatize ·a fatnily crisis, · 1islng questions, but offering J advice. This comes after '1e play when the audience ~ reak.s into small groups to · iscUS31 how the problem '.>ould be handled. Started by the Evening i ·allege five years ago. the ~ries has grown steadily in ~tendance ahd audience in- . olvement. according to col- _,ge officials. · The pla ys are performed by : lays for the Living, a pro- • ::ssiooll Theater group from Los Angeles. t Offered to the public free, ;1>e series will be presented in ·~:le neW community theater at ·,:30 p.m Other titles and topics are •"ct. 10, "Lady on the Rocks," } bout a wife and mother who !~ ecomes an alcoholic·, Oct.,.Jt, 1 'Quiet .Crles," about telislons l } 'hlch ilollnt toward suicide: ,, od OdJ 24, "Ever)' Hour of ~de Day/' on venereal disease. ' ' ''Outreach' Sets Sale On Clothes A large collection o r !othing, both old and new. in ,yles and sizes for men, • ·omen and children. will be laced on sale Friday and ;:aturday by Laguna Outreach > raise funds for operation of :ie group's home for young eople, the Koinonia House. The sale will be held at the · oose, 586 Canyo n Acres >rive, from 9 a.n1. to 7 p.m. oth days and will include 1any other usnble Items in ddition to clothing. Proceeds will be used to "'Jpport the work or the .?Jfuelp youth organization J)Onsored by Outre ach . 'ersons wishing to contribute rticles for the sale may bring hem to the Canyon Acres ad· rt'SS. Further information 'lay be obtained by calllng M-TALK or 494-0195. Seminar Scheduled The Apartment Association ,f Orange County is tcan1ing 1p with lhr Golden \Vest ~vrning College to present a nanagement seminar, "t.1::ix- ~ n1 f zing Apart me nt ?rofitabllily,'' officials at !he ;tuntington Beach c a 111 p u s itave announced. The program will run from ri:30 a.m. to noon, Sept. 30 in Forwn J. Five major top1c!I wUI be covered : cost effect 1\"c manaP:ment. lax s be I tr r mlscooetplions, cost effecllve- lnsuf'l1>Ce, increasing rents, and tftanager 5election and comPlflMUon. RePtratlon is $5 and may be completed at the door. Pledge Told Michael Wynne of Newport Beach, .son of Mrs. Elennor Wynne. hu pledged Beta Theta Pi 111 Whitman Cclllege In \\'alla W111ln , Washintgon . • l PILOT·ADVERTl~ER 3 Wtdntsd1y, Septem.btr 27, 1'112 WtdM1day, Sfpttmbtt 27, 1'172 NUflfTAfN YAU.ff -,_,... ..... ll .. nai.t •ouHT4tM V4L.L.IT -loftfl ................ •flll ,...,., ... w•o -•1 T-.-• .., ..... .., COSTA MEU. -UM ................ lit W1-It. COl'T A Ml.IA-isl I. tM st.. l.t.NTA ...,_A -1• W ................ I t. WltTMlllSt•• -6IU Wftf......, If ....... ... llUlftllleTOH aa.t.CM -_, W-M .. , tf NUMTIN•TOM •IACH -tllll .... ....._•I An.tt HUHTll•l•TOll allACK -tt ........ C1111W HUllTIHOTOll llllCH -Jiil .,...,_. All Stores Celebrate Grand Openin9 -of Our New $tore, 3325 Bristol, at MacArthur Blvd.. S.ssnta Ana $f Value! Women's Long ·: -~ ' • . I Fleeced Robes ·1' . ' i : ' . ~; ·. • r·~ 99 Choice of Four Beautiful Styles Mdln ' f11H 1.ngth fl-.c! ....,.. 111 M911tifwl foll Ii. tlolrday c•l•ra. (lloo.,. fro111 4 Lovl1hly lflfll'llod 11ylo .. AU ill • toft, """" li9lotw.i9h1 bl"41 of '°"' ttfPll• and 20% 11rl•'-· Or••t c•l•r chol.c• t..-4 IMS-10.11. · ·.and much much more\ HOUSEWARES , Flllfastic Savings On Household Needs At Thrifty DiscORt Prices! PRKIS IOOD THR~ TUESDAY 1'..f' THRllTY"S OWN PRICE SPECTAGlllAR' ' . ... •; (. ~ ' ... ~le of RIJ. '7.99 to 't4' Sa•• of Reg. $6'' to $J77 llectrl~dl Appliances Wall & Door Mirrors v .. ra.la YourCllelce 99 44 $9.95 r,.,,,. 4-1 o Cop Ptrk • $9.41 feitorla loa1tu • $7.99 La4y V1olty Mlxtr • $1.11 La4y V1olty Can Opener Thrifty prig Koop to -d all" y.w wotry ..,., old &. ..-op. .. -... 79c to $299 Metal Photo f ..,.. .... • • Sx7" f. lxlO" •I t . .• h1'""9 .. ,...,. ,,... ......... ••lltM ....... • rna1,... ... ,. .... ,,.... • Pl•rllenl .A.ort~llt .1 .. 1M1wc1 .. 11""4p .... t9fl' fro-In odofon..,....-*• -i.ttop.s. $JO" Y•lue 16-lnch , .... ,., '•••e• •6" Yaiue h•lt•r Paneas T••let" •. Sn -"'wtt look"' tfi•rMOp'- lk. Youn 111 • grMt "'"8• of $49 J -.C.rat.r colon. fot offlc• « '-· . •1 00 v.1 .. , SlmulateCI Pearl Jewelry Ch-f,.,. ..qulllle -4· loco1,1 &2,.wchoken,1&2 69C ,_ lfte>ill!Ool, 10119 fOPft I. -rrillf•'-· TOlilrChoin. H•lf Gallon Jalta Vodka A Ttlrfffr 011.dwr.lwt & bm 11•Uor. N-pri< .. d •••1t 1-r tho" our ... ,rydoy ·•-f'i~t ftr a li111i11d !tit ~IJ. Stock "Pl II OlYlRA EQUILA ':' ""'· ~ported from $349 Fl,.~H GALLON • BOHEMIAN BEER 12 OZ. CANS -6 FOR ·79¢ ~= ~~~~~; DRY GIN FIFTH GALLON s4 39 • • $1.44-14i54" Oral Fra ... llmr • s1.n-141W·r • ....,._.rrrw • $lll-11Mr MIMl1m11H a. ..... • $7.44-22131~ l1ct1111t W.11 lllmw • $7.44-211rll·-w.11M1mr Ha,,._ i 1 H ..... MlrNn 9t Ip«• tanilor -.! .... 0-llfJ' Pltt.b11rgh ,.,___,.._all..,,., bod.cl • 1'..f' THRllTY"S OWN PRICf SPfCTACUlAR! ii $19~! .. Ceramic le Lamps 97 Thltlly Mted, 1Pill l 1tGi" Pf'oof "'91 id-I fw •M ,.,..,. ot ovtdoenl f•· tvrw 011!'09•11 ••Id rniJtant nbber -'· flo bodil119, H"tly MrVed oil oro1111d .... hxef40l11 .... s.,.r 99c $J•7 I( t SAlllTAllY • ex NAPKINS •••••••.•••••• ltttl•9f24 -$.11 ·~· DICOHHTAllT 1 , 1 dn ,an TAllns •••••••••••• ..O..c•~·· i. $JS9 Tri' ····" DK-ISTAllT amlnlcn-••••••••••• Jhttl• et too Y.Wllh erll °"'' u .. 14 $ J 33 $J1' Dl'Gel Antacid ••••.•••• All ~::U.., ........ . hll.t4 .......... Fac. lt!!.Hr.1 --.au:Mr 59c .., .................... . - ~ /4 -/. .A $19'' Value ...... EXTRA HEAVY l'ftUW FRAME-VINYL COYDlllll Samso11lte ·· lncloor-Outcloor Chai I r fcn1ktttic 1p.ioll ~ Sa-ite '"" door/Ovtdoor foldifLll ·ct.Dir f.ot111,.. Y11iq .... c-1•111porary d.tlg11 for -•I· mu111 co111fort, Ho• hilly chro.-d ttvrdy "''-'"'lar 11MI f,._ •Ml ~ ''""n.grll ¥ift)'t .11119 which COii IM N-4-U .. ....,. t111rwh•r• •.• -1y .to •I-too. Y•"''' '" ;r•11ch L•""'"• 1011g•rlow, fNm:h li .. , Votwt 1-or Whl"9, .moo. ~ THRllTY":i OWN PRIGf SPfCTACUlAR! Reg. $1411 Spanish Style Record & Utility Cabinet 19 $49.95<Wlu1-6 Ft. $2995 Spanish Llb"'ry Uoit Ho...t.o.. record ot utility cobinllt feotr.1'" (Q,...d look front doon. Huncty & beallti· f11I 1toro11• lf>GC• p erfKt for li..;"9 l'OOlll or d•11. In yo11r choic• of dork Spa11i~ Oak or A1•ocodo graiMd Kralc.h pr90f fi11i1hn. ~ HOUSEWARES SPECIALS Reg. $12" Folding Bed &Mattress f•ahlra 11011·1lnk U·1hapMI tvbular .... 1 199., '•rf.O fOI' $666 pia.ia, ca .. in;, 111 ~de or Hot 01"1:111111• c.olon. $1 2' Decorator Tray Tables 22x16.?\.:y 1urf-'" brllll•"' 71 C pott•l'rll 1,, bak.d-011 --· fi11itl!, "":....-1 our $1 11 Household Plastlcware c ~ •.• Pc. UtRlty a.wt Set Choice .. •I Pc. .... ,... l•••••Je Plodicwa,.. fetJOW""""'•TMfty " • 44 _., Wnt1M1ket dkcouflf pl'lc-. 1.,. 't" hlr S1Jl1r-l1ter $699 - ,, " I Wtdnt'Sd.ly , Stptembtr 27, }q72 L. 1'1. liOfd Ri ibgto Top .. ~ ~y Sitt~g Still ' -'~ . cMttanW~)d this tale years ago: "I It.now one .AellO\ri e .a person of large doings be- e use M a day:_t:i\'4'0'91!~ accident the wrong pair of trousers. (They ~1.,.ery ill with his upper gear. C-Onse- qi,iently (hat day, instead of trotting all about the office 8J usual he remained assiduous at his desk wit.h lhe in- congruent pan~if!orls l\'•11 h~. He summooed lo him all tljpse from whom he required infor· mation, even asking the head of the "1m by telephone to step in \l.'hen next he went by. He strongly impressed valuable customers by not ris ing from jhis ·4-'bair. Bashfully, he remained unlil /all flis colleagues had gone home, and so happened to get an important Jong j distance <:all. By the end of the day, he had ~atched more business than he usually-did in a w~k . Therea ft er he sta yed at his desk. By sitting s1ill, he rose to th e lop. It .was l(1e sheer1 hazard~!f the wrong pair of trousers." BA~ -)l4bie;, ~t down on their stomachs rest better.1tboze of( (ls~tr•t~leep deeper. Oh, you'v.e brought up eno~ YOUJ'gtfer' ·tcp· know that already? Thought as much. SUll, rescarchert"·at Georgetown University con· firmed the fact in a. ·.r~ent study \Vherein they checked out numerous snoozin~ Vtfants with brainwave machines. FROM whence. pr<if did we get the word "yummy"? '. IF IT doesn't weigh in at least 35 percent beef, don't c~ll It comfd beef hash. The federal fellows so decree. DOES your doctor care about you personally? Deepl y.? 111 reply to this query, exactly 70 pe rcent of an enormous sampling 6f citizenry na tionwide said oh ves. ves indeed . c~rtatnly. -- QUdttES -Q. "As to blood types. what's the com- monest? The rarest?" · A. Commonest, 0 . Rarest. AB. Q., "D~ you say a hpr se has 44 teeth ." · A~ ~'s:'a mar~-A' male horse has 46. - Two Gain Degrees DaVJa o.n. Hilgbt. ronne.- ly of Costa Mesa. and Bob R. Sletptr of Fountain Valley hllYe recelv,td bachelor ol sclence degrees with bmors from Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles. Sleeper alla>dod Orojip' Coast eou_,;1md Long ~ ~~~e ~nd ~1~. in ~ H~J:it, a resident Qt- Oranie. attended Costa Mesa ~ligh School, Orange Coast College and Fullerton Junior Co llege. He majored t n packaging design at the art college. Wtdntsday, Stpttmbtr 27, \q12 . Property Tax Opponent Ba ~~ By FRED W. lDlNE Capitol N .. 1 S...lee SACRAM ENTO -No one In c.ru.Ql'llla hu 1"""11 border and more consiltenUy to r eJ ®ca or eliminate !!"'l*'IY tu- ... IJial) Howard JaJ!io. st&\6• chalrplan el Uni~ <qan!Ja. tio~of TaxpJiyers,,nc. in Los Angeles. ' Now he anoounet?d he will support the property taK ~· itiative -Propositioo 14 -Of Los Angeles County .Assessor Philip Watson. Jarvis admits: he doesn't think Watson·s amendrpent ii • !he "liest, lhaf <OUJa b • pre.ten ted, ''but It's the only ,_ "' lowt!." lit saiAI. - J""il hid been attempting to qaallfy a ballot .......,.. blmsell bui<dldn't malte it. R.EAC R.WQN for ttis sup- port of Wat.a'I amendn!~. he said, is ~e "the state l.A!iislatute t*i refused to consider ~y t a x rel9rm . They just won'l. do " they bave promised the voters they wUI do. "Through p ass a ge of Proposition "14 ih0°Legisl1turt ~·ill find out that the people an operate tbtir own gov1ro-- ment and force a con- ltitulional -\ down the throll of Ille J;qlsl•ture any time they want ," Jarvis , ded1red. Jarvis bellevts \h.al propert_y tax reductior\S will ~good for the whole economy of · the state. SpeciUcally he pointed to the copstrucOon business. ..THERE ARE enough ~ pie in California Y.'ho want to rtbW\d or'•• remodtl their homes to keep contractors ""'y all the ....... Bu\ they won't puild or r:emod~l 1f it is go~ to .meaiti an ~se in ttielr a.sselsrnent ~Ith i con- ~uent meruse in thei r prop- erty tUes. '' Jarvis ~a~. Son1e estimates arc tl)<lt the Watson anlend.n1enl w o u I d save taxpayers $1.5 bill~n the first year and a lillle less eat'h of the following years. But opponents d i s p ll 1 ~· these figures. "Th<' need is so 1t·1-ri tu· rnr --. the people lo blYe la\ fl!ld I.hit l COIJ)drl't al ""'"' take • position," he ,, JARVIS ISN"I' ~n· 0 tbe me~Ure will h"•vt Jll 0 14 (fCI °"' dall~eni of .~ ~in ~al:ifodU•. .. -:. · "Plants are not 00111 Will hero i>!!c11i1e <if tlie, ~Y tax .. '· thl!t Jffet:ts thkn( tpo. "The c:onstruc llon lnd\lstry is no1v second to agricullut e in California but it is slowl y ~t surely being replaced by .Jhe tax exen1pt f o u n d a t i o n bu!l1nc.!IS." Jarvis sa id. scile d.,..: thurs., sept. 28-sat., sept. 30 • • l . ~ , ~ ~'WHAT'S tl)e' average weekly wage in Great Bri-" tain tbese'.days?" . . A. Men, aboUl,J60: Women, about $30. .CAN YOU explain why the New York lawmakers some- time back saw flt lo prohibit any gentleman there from putting a newspaper W1C)er his posterior when sitting on a park bench? VACATION -Before you quit your job. mister, take one week's vacation to give it some ·thought. Such be the adv ice of a Rockefeller Foundation scholar who has made a study of wh y men resign from one position to accept another. ''More money" is not so popular an explana- tion, after all. "Fed up" is just as commoo . This authority contends many if not most men wouldn't quit, if they v.a- cati,ofted to st first . . A,d<lr~s mail t-0 L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New· po rt BeacH., Calif. 92660. ' ~~~1Tlin~ 'f~J; F 011' Ser¥iceinen-"""""_ . .,.,..l . '\ I , ,, ' (" ., All~ 1erv1d!min .TJtuniini tO ~ civilian life 'riiust obsef-ve severcil defdli.nts set by the Veterans AtimlnistratiOn (VA1 and Selective Service offices. The local VA office is at 700 W. 8th St .. Santa Ana. 834-2020. The Selective Service office in Santa Ana. 836-%578. and service or1anizations such as the American Legion , Veterans of Foreigh Wars and Disabled American Vettrans can also offer advice. Here a~e some · immediate deadlines, according to of· ficials oft.he Ve terans Benefits Assistance Division of the VA o l veterans have one year to ap- ply to a VA office for life in-$ura~ based on service<Of\. nected· disabillt.ies. This one- year interval begins on the date veterans receive notice from the VA 0£ their disabi lity ratings. Also within one year, all veterans can apply to any VA o£fice for dental care. There is no time limit for applying for a G.I . loan for the purchase of a home, mobile home or condominium. The Veterans Assistance Of- fice recommends veterans with s e r v i ce-ronnected disabilities or diseases take their Department of Defense No. 214 fonns to a VA hospital and apply for hos pital care compensation for service-con· nected disabilities or diseases. r • ' -Prev 'sly sold for 19.97 SAVE 33% SAVE 50% don futura • racing set H.0 . streamlined experimental cars of the futu re race on 14' banked c"rve track; includes lap counter an~ chickane section. 999 ideals bing bang bolng sklll 1et toy with the bing SAVE 20% ® coleco's command control touchdown football SAVE 75% game Make the &:randstand roar. You 're the coach Of quarter· t}ack. Professionalism in every way -A'cfioh qlJarter· 'L .._ !Sack.-Aetion!'Ae:tlonl• n. ·-N I' . '·I ( ' . ,.;~.99 . ~ Reg. 12.84 mattel's. hot birds air race set ... ~ . ·~-~. '==~~-'<L..JILI""-.~~~--' soldfor Wine to wing action along 30 feet of skyline to a flying finish. A real c ap. Ia in's competition. Within 10 days after [elease or as soon a1 diseharge papers are receiyed, veterans who have not served at least six months in active duty mus t register and report ·their , ad· dress to I.he Selectivt,·Service througtl their k>cel board ~ in person or by mail. UC I Seminar ~~'~ ~ri~~~=~~ 3 9 9 a roony sound. · Reg, 5.99 ~~ • .,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,..A.s.se•e•n•o•n•T•.v··.,...,...,...,...,...,...,..~ SAVE 1.00 unislam Previously 2 9 7 11 .97 I ego diplomat set • Veterans who want to return to their fonntr jot. must aJr ply wiUllil 1'1 da,1 lo their former em6foyer1 for re- employment .. Ort Systems Arialy$is Set As '°""f.' as p o s s i b I e , \'eterans t reglsttr 'fith lhe local umari lf.HOdrces Application of s y s t e m s D e v ~ Jopment empl~ment analysis and p r o g r a m service dnce to 11 &ee'l-V e management to local and state unemptoyment compensation, govennnent ls the topic of a a wefkly income which ,pro-. onMay seminar 86 part of the vid .. f~ theb")la& aee.i, for • . . II 'I 1-... • • ... • UC l r v 1 n e Extension pro-a m1 1 • .......,i .-· •• .. • . They miiil=': Wii'i<tili 1 t .gram. Depa~entil>efirilR lftnn . ·The seminar will be wh~ ~sta . ' '<'Jlwi ·.*'P,~#.! )lfesented from 9:30 a.m. to se~r ion • 11~~ ., , 4.:30 p.m. Sept. 30 at Roo n1 269 AU eteranst'"1ltW''One ~ HumaniUes Hall on the UCI to Jl~ly for ooemployment campus. conlponsatlon, but appUcatlons Fee Is l40 which includea !lied flier a Ion&. porlod. ol . . unemP.Joyment f oti•W--l• c · l:uncb. The-....una~·11-<1pen to release coulcl,,ault i\'4 lower '°'"the ,public, bOt, attendance \s rate ol com~~Uon. llrnittd :to 70 ~ II l(IUr"'ttd In• ~ · 'l;agu.;. Beach M a y o r benefl,., .""!«NII · slici<ltd ""al Ch~\elon ~ .. ~. urged IOOll_ II -1111~~ with 1 re1ldenb i n I er e I t e d In VAtatece .Mr ~Uon. Ci .I. governmental activiOea to at· edue.tlon or tr•ln!n&, must be tend the Pf'Oll'am. , ~ cotnl'ltled:'Wl\hln ,'!f,b• years i, 'Ibo ...ilon is taqht tiy oJ ·~ ... :~-·-• 1-ph fl' r e1 I a f ,' MBA, 1~~~~ ' ,~at Hifvirdluain.,s tratril.QI..,._..• •' zrW )ool.-.. 1114... 1tc:t&ar •' • by tht ·~~~ r. Unlveol\)'.. _.of_ ~o,u,)•h e-r n for e111plojontlit'UIWid. • Cellfolmi. · OO!iA, an<t llllttior Ari ~·1-G(llllp1J(e '°' aevoral books. !nwrance POl1c1ei mutt ' be . Appllcatfon for \he aemlnar ~ lo prjy~ ·...,,. lM!/ be 11>.¥1tJo \he UC! ex• m~~ oles wlthla 120 t-. room 1125, I n dayi, • . ~ 1 ci'awfoi\I Hall. Protram ts A6~ lo~ Jl y-.U..b!Od .lllftd ... A~nl60. ' • • •• • ' ' SAVE 70% JOlota ' •••• · •Motor av•. " •• IMrnerdino 1011 •• 2t•t. .,,.., .. I -- SAVE $8.00 • . table tennis , game M exciting game for the whole family. pr::~~. 494 11 .94 •atte;l's. shopping sheryl · · ·•'¥' 11.•r mini .. rket Walk Shoppin' Sheryl t hrouah the market>Sbt,.Pi~~·' up bot· tlt!s & boxef Q( &rocerles. Great tor children of all ages. Pteviously sold for 13.97 .,~7· $ DOWN HOLDS TcptlR PURCHAa1 ' ~ .. C.5 • I•' en tr•Ytl hunlfn9lon bot ch nertttrldt•r t 2 t 00 harbor blvd. 9812 ·~·.•· •tr••t 88811 billlo• blvd. • •••*" ..... ... , ... 11; long b•1oh 1700 rtrooUM blw<I. t t 100 a,•""''! blvd. 2 2,70 bollflowor blvd. , ____ .., • . Giant size, 630 pcs. An array ol mo st w~nted parts. Prev iously sold for 14.97 97 alhalft6r:• · m•nh•tt•n be•oh 21 ao w. rn•ln ,,, ••• 1200 n. 1eputw•d• blvd. ' •••t 101 •na•I•• • culwer oltr 1100 o. wh!llf0< blvd. , t 0120 Joflwroo1t blv<L ' -· . ' ' ' . - WORLD LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMP SOB FOSTER (RIGHT! UNLOADS A RIGHT TO CHRIS FINNEGAN IN 14TH ROUND. I Foster Retains Sports Clipped Short -Wo1·Id Crown, Oakland. May Trojans Hit By Injuries To Starters I. I I KOs Finnegan I LONDON (AP ) -Bob Foster knocked oot Chris Finnegan with a smashing left and right to the head in the 1-tlh round or 11 slugging match for Foster'!!! world light Swim to Title heavyweight championship Tue s'd a y OAKLAND -Four more days of rain after only two matches were completed night. and the Oakland A's may win the Tuesday in the Redwood Bank Intema· I 1be 33-year-old Americ3n had begun to Ameri can League West baseball cham· tional Tennis Championships. look tired when he suddenly ended the pionship. The A's reduced their magic Nikki Pilich oC Yugoslavia defeated number lo rour without even playing an fight at 55 3eCOflds of the nei:t.-to-18" ortjcial game Tuesday night. Brian Fairley of. New Zealand, 7-6, 6--4, round. They were ,rained out of II scheduled , and Mark ~ of .England downed Rob FillJl!Pll wont down on hll b!lck. and QllublO-.r '#lib the Mloi>eoota Twins . Maud of -,Afnca, f>-Z, f>-1. · · ilitt g1lned m !lie Clliclgo White Sox Mio ) The ~'baited a 1)1Btch bet~ lhe BrUain never looked m.e he would lost 2-1 to the Kansas City Royals Tom Leonard of Chicago and lmllll El beat the 10-count. Any combinatkln of Oakland victories \ Shafei of. Egypt in the fir.it set wtth I "Finnegan is the toughest boxer I have or Chicago defeats which adds up lo four • Leonard Jeading <t·2. met since r. bec.ame champion," said ·~ will~e tHe A's the title. t Also delayett-Was the serood. se' of a , Foster, who hves in Albuquerque, N.M. . "l dllll't care lf we"bacik tnto ft/' A's ~: match betweeri Charlie Pasarell ot Los I Foster weighed 1741/, pound& to 173'4 ~ captain Sal Bando said. "l want to win i. Angeles and John A!exander of Australia. tor Finnegan. The class fimiflt 175. any way we can. 11 .( Alexander ~. the first set M , and the ~ Finnegan wa~ more than holding hi! j... ,,,,, two were hed m the second. DWn with the 6-foot-3 champlon for tht • 1 MOSCOW -Paul Hender90fl scored a IJlll' first nine rounds and seemed 1o be laking ~ goal with 2:06 left to give Team Canada a i'" PHILAD.ELPHIA -John McKenzie, command. 4.3 victory over the Soviet Union Tuesday i who ~as. Jum~ to t.he World Hockey I But 1n the toth round, Foster struck night and even in the eight-game hockey AsSOCJatton Philadelphia Blazers, flied an with a straight !ight.-hand punch lo the series. antitrust wit agai~st the N.aUonal jaw that knockecT Finnegan down for the Each team now has won three gemes H~k~y League and its 14 clubs m U.S. first time in 27 pro fights. and Jost three. One game was tied. District Court here Tuesday. 1 F innegan jumped to his feet, took a """ The suit asks the court to end the tnandatory eight count and moved to the LOS ANGELE'S -Offensive left "monopoly" practices of the NHL and to attack as the crowd roared "Finnegan, halfback James McAlister has had '"'O stop alleged "harassment" against the Finnegan." good practices this week, and UCLA foot· Blazers .and .other member~ or the :w"HA. The Englishman hurt Foster with a ball coach Pepper Rodgers says his ~ action is the n.ewest 1n a sen~ of t ight to the jaw in the J2Ul. but the player is "going to get nothing but bet~ suits and countersu11s between the rival champion boxed his way out of trouble ter." leagues. end took the 13th when he repeatedly McAlister has been plagued by a series landed with right-hand counters. of small but nagging injuries this year. 1 Then in the 14th with FIMegan looking Defensive right tackle Tom Waddell the fresher of tru; two, Foster suddenly returned to .Practice with the Bruins ended it with a left.right combination to Tuesday In bis usual fim string slot. He the head. had missed Saturday's 26-9 UCLA defeat I by Michigan, suffering from a knee in· jury received in a match with Pittsburgh Dodgers End th~;~~r~· Conference's leading punter for the last two years. Bruce ! Barnes, averaged more than 60 yards in H S each or six punts made during Tuesday's ome eason practi ce. The ki cking was even. better than his game record so far this year. His punting average for three gan1es I I.OS ANG ELES (AP ) -Rookies Ron <:"y and Joe Ferguson slammed tw~run homers and Mike Strabler !licked up his first complete game in the n1ajor leagues Tuesday night as the Los Angeles Dodgers defeated San Diego, 7-3. The Dodgers play their final home game of the season at 7:30 tonight with Don Sutt on, 17-9, starting against San Diego's Steve Arlin, 9-20. Cey's first·inning homer, his first in the majOl"'S, put thl.' Dodgers ahead J.I. Tom iPaciorek had singled for Los Angeles' first run. The Padres. "'ho had g o t l e n an unearned run in the first. tied it in the sf'c·ond on sacrifice flies by loser Mike Cald well and Enzo Hernandez. Hut Ferguson's First hon1er of the Na- 1l iona r League se<'tson. and Bill Buckner's run-scoring single, put the Dodgers ahead to stay in tht bottom of the sec- ond. Dave Lope~ singled for their final run Jn the eighth. lk• DI.,. UI lei A ..... fTI stands at <t2.7 yards. "" ALBANY , Calif. -First round results Tuesday in the Pacific Coast Jntema· tional Tennis Championships: Frew McMillan, South Africa, beat Dan Blechinger, of El Cerrito, Calif. 6-4. 6-1. Ross Case, Australia beat Sherwood Stewart, England, M, 6-2. Bob Hewitt. South Africa, beat Tom Edler.on, Loo Angeles, f>-2, Hl. Jim Connors, Belleview, tll.1 beat Bob Siska, San Francisco, 6-3, 6-1 . Ian Fletcher. Australia, beat Steven Warboys, Great Britain, 6-4, &-<t. Roscoe Tanner, Lookout Mountain. TeM., beat 0. Shepherd. England, f>-3. 7-6. David Mitchell, New Zealand beat Pan- cho Gonzalez, Las Vegas, &-0, 2-6. 6-3. Marcello l..ara. Los Angeles, beat KE"il h Bardellini, Berkeley, 6-l, 6-2. "" ALAMO, Cllil. -Rain )!ailed oction Messersmith ~ Fires 3-hitter ARLINGTON (AP! -Rookie thinl baseman Billy Parker slammed a home run and righthander Andy Messersmith fi red a three-hitter as the California Angels downed the Texas Rangers, 2·1. Parker's homer came ofr Texas starter l\1ike Paul, 7-9, with one out in the sec- ond . The Angels added an Wlearned run in the sixth when Lee Stanton scored on third baaeman Jim Mason 's throwing er- ror. The Rangers scored in the eighth on a walk to Toby Harrah, Bill Fahey's ground out and Vic Harris' single. C.1llfoml• (I) Ttllll 111 •llrlll~ ••rfl,.. .-.iom.r, 2b J o 1 o O.N11-, ct a o I 1 B•rry,d JOOIM•t0tl,3b Jiii How•l'd, If ' O I O &llttllft', lb 4 O O I 11111.,.,, If 1 o o o Foro. rl' ' o o I R.OU~fl'. lb ' 0 2 O Gr!1Y1, lf 3 0 I I Sttnton, rt ' l 1 O H•rr•ll, '' 2 I I 0 Pll'llfl', lb J I 1 1 F•llc'f, ( J 0 0 0 C1rlltn11, fl ' 0 1 0 H•rrl1, ,b 3 O I It Tllf'bor9.c 'O'IO P•ul,p 7 000 M"'trsmltll, p ' O o o O,J.,.K, Ph 1 o O O Pll'Wl,D 0 000 Tol•ll )1 2 t 1 TOllll 11 l J 0 C•Ulot'nl.I 010 001 000 -2 "Tf!C•t 000 000 010 -I E -F•l'tt)'. M11on. OP C•lltoml• 1. LOB -C•lll'Onll8 ID, TtllH J, 18 -C•rc:ltntt, Hlrr•ll. HR -i-1rttr 12), SI -0. N•ISOll. ''°"••1taaso MHMl'll'Jllth {W ... lO J ' 3 I I J I P•ul (l.7·11 I t 2 1 Z 2 PIM 10 0111 Tl"" -J:OS. AtftfM!fl'ICf -(,022. LOS ANGELES (AP ~ -The Southern California Trojans, top-ranked collEige football team, may have trouble winning thei r conference much less the national championship if injuries persist, says coach John McKay. First-string offensive tackle Allen Gallaher underwent knee surgery Tues- day and probably is lost for the season. McKay said safety Artimus Parker bas a pulled hamstring muscle and "it look! like" he won't play Saturday night qaimt Michigan State. "If we have any more injuries,'' McKay said, "we'll have a difficult time playing the good schools in our league. One more injury in the offensive line and we might have lo go with a freshman." Steve Riley, a junior, will start at strong side tackle against the Spartans. He p)ayed well, McKay said, after Gallaher was hurt Saturday at Dlinois. Parker also was hurt against the Illini and if he can't play. comerba.ck Charles Phillips will move to safety and senlor Ed Johnson will play cornt'f'back, McKay said. "Now we're awfully thin with si~ defensive backs for foW" positions," said McKay. The fullback spot also worries McKay if anything should happen to Sam Cun- ningham. •·we could not afford an injury at fullback at all," he !laid. Sopmmore Bill Fudge bad been ex· peeled to back up Cunningham but he surrered a broken collarbone before the sea!OO started and McKay said, "I don't think we can count OD him. We'd play him if we could." James Govehand, a sophomore defensive end, has a strained knee and may be sidelined two weeks, leaving another sophomore, Ed Powell, as primary backup for starting defensive ends James Sims and Dale Mitchell . Red Sox Bow; Lead Cut to 1;2 BOSTON (AP ) -Winning is the name of the game in baseball as irl other sports and the Boston Red Sox had a grim reminder today while nursing a one-half game lead with a week left in the American League Eafu.. The Red Sox led with an ace in Marty Pattin. then made a couple of costly mistakes and were trumped by discard George Scott Tuesday night in dropping a 6-4 decision to the Milwaukee Brewers. leadlng candidates for "spoilers" of the year. The Brewers scored three unearned J"\IRS, two on a two-out homer by Scott, in the eighth Inning and trimmed the Red Sox lead over the idle Detroit ngen, who have lost one more came. I .1•~h.-i •r•"' E H~&, 11 1 I 1 1 i.ofift, 1t1 J 1 I I POOlfm, ~ l 0 I 0 8udtllef', rf J O 2 1 0 Triom.1,, a 1 0 0 0 "•<lotft, If S I I 1 l1f,lt 4 000Ct'flll J lt2 COIWI. l b 4 O I I Mc6W"IO'lt, lb J O • O 1'111 lnnoeeni, Pleads Payne G•t!On, cf • 0 1 I) W.P•ritw, lb I 0 •• r u;ot, rf • I I 0 \llllll'lllllf, (I • 0 • 0 Ktndtlt, c 1 I I 0 lllAJlll, ti 4 I I I (ott.llq , C 1 0 0 0 f'fl'l1UllOfl , C • 1 J 1 •it•~·~· 111'1 1 o 0 o $!••~!..-. p I l I f'. ji,n'-'v, Jb 3 0 I 0 ''~~l. 111'1 I O 0 0 (lldwtll. p 0 0 0 I G•rtl•, D 0 0 0 0 J~!•r, ph I 0 0 0 Atosi., 11 0 0 0 8 .1~1•.ctt, pl! l 0 0 0 Qr.II, 11 II 0 0 0 k~""'--· ft 0 0 0 0 $+ml'Mf', 11 0 0 0 0 I fot1• » J I a Tot•lt » 7 11 t "'" °'"° ,,., 000 000 -3 I L• ......,lt!I 3'0 000 011 -r l11N -2.34, .. ,,.,,..11(, -llAJ;2. ATLANTA (AP ) -"I'm lnnoc<nt," Atlanta Hawks' basketball player Tom P1ync told the jury Tuesday at the trial in which he is charged with three counts or rape. After closing arguments, the case went to the jury shortly before 6 p.m .. The jurors began immediate deliberations. 11t'm going to remain innocent no mat- ler wbal you decide here today," Payne told the Jory In a trembling vole<.' "l don't have any knowledge of those thtnas, oo I can't explain these things ," he s1J.a In a lenJthy unswom statement. Then Payne, a 7·foot·2 center with the National Basketball Association club . stepped from the witness box, saying, 1'1 just can't go on." He was on the stand nearly 25 minutes. Payne i~ on trial in FultCf1 C:OUOly Superior Court. charged wllh three rapes In May. • TM: prosecution rested its case Mon· day. Payne. drarted by Atlanta from the University of Kentucky, played with the Hawks last season. Ho reported{y signed a rnultlyear contract for more than $SOOLOllO. • Aner Payne's 1latement the defense rtsted Its .. ,. In the 1even<lay.old trial. McKay Duo G .. a1n1ng Popularity LOS ANGELES (AP) -Belore the seuon coach John McKay Pid ht was worTled about the comments his wife would hear ~tchfng games from her seat in the stands. . "He'll drop a ball and she'll heir someone say, 'That idiot McKay is play- 1.ag hl.s idJot son.' " 1bat was before the tm cone,e root· ball season began, berore the Uruversity of Southern California became the na- tion's t~ranked team with a leading receiver named J. K. McKay. Now if McKay doesn't play McKay, the rans will gel on him. The son bas 12 catches and three touchdowns in three games. The Trojans are loaded with receivers, and l\.1cKay won't call McKay the best. In fact. he's playing behind senior Edesel Garrison on one side. Lynn SwaM and Dave Boulware are on the other side. "I'm behind Garrison -he's a senior and he's much faster -but l 'm just hap- py to be playing," says J . K., who has had to prove himself all along -that he 'd be good enough to play if his name were Smith or Jones. "I think I've taken a little bit of the pressure off me now," the 175-pound, 5· foot-l l'h: receiver says. "I had to prove myself, and the players had to know I'm good enough." Coach McKay: "I don't think I treat him any harder because he 's my son. If I see something l don 't like, l tell him. l told him something last week." Young McKay says, however, "Maybe he's a little bit tougher on me. I know I have to perrorm and when I embarrass myself. I embarrass him. "I dropped my first pass against Illinois on Saturday and l felt pretty bad about that. But he told me, 'Don 't worry about it. O II Head coach McKay has the final say but Willie Brown, assistant coach in chyge of receivers, initially d~des who plays. McKay spends most or his time with running backs and "as head coach I may see him catch only two passes in practice." .. , don't know what dad thinks or me as a player," says J.K. Senior McKay says. "I think he can catch, and so can the others and they iill play. He's a lot faster than people think and he has big hands. 11 J. K. lives in an orr-campus apartment and when he goes home for a visit on Sundays, dad is at the office viewing films. They see each other less than some fathers and sons. GENE LITTLER Littler Starts Over Again SAN DIEGO (AP) -Gene Littler. with 18 years of professional experience. is golf's fifth all·time money winner and 11 former U.S. Open champion. But when he returns to the pro circuit next week, he says, "It will be like starting all over again" "I think it wiU be hard to play for a lit· lie while. I'll be nervous," the winner of 25 pro tournaments says. "People will ~ watching me to see if I can play, and 1t will be difficult answering all the ques· tions." The stares and the queries all will deal with the same sub~: how someone returns to professional golf after wt- dergoing two operations aix months ago for removal of a malignant cancer tumor under the left arm. At lhe time of surgery, doctors refused to speculate on whether the <tl·year-old athlete would ever swing a golf club again -much less play professionally. He beat the tumor but for a while af· terwards was unable to raise his left arm above his waist. But Littler worked fulllime at building up the weakened muscles and started playing a few holes in June. Now be Jays be'• rtady to rtjoln his fellow pn>s at the $3GO,OllO P1clllc Club muten toumament In Tolcyo In October. "Everybody tell• me my 1111DJ loob tbe ume," ho said In on lbtervtew 'nles- day. "I'm gettlog al-11powerful11 1 u!ed to be --not lhll I WIS .... rery powerful. Thal WIS the bod. part -L couldn'l afford to 1ooe ant yiirda1e1• LlttlC!:r can laugh now after his bruSh wilh the polenllally f.iaJ di8Ule, Ind ,,. says this frame of m1od -thts new outlook on Ille -will inf1ue11ce·hts·game: "I am detennlned to go back with • different attitude than I bid lbe past cou· pie ol. year1. I waa becOmlna very lnistrated wllh my iJ1e1>1DeS1. I was very Intense about the whOle thin1." -·Wilt May ~Leave LA SAN DIEGO (AP) -Superstar Wilt Chamberlain is considering leaving the NBA champion Los ~ Angeles Lakers to sign with th~ e, new San Diego Conquistadors of the American Basketball Assoelation, a newspaper reported here today. Leonard Bloom, owner of the Conquistadors, has visited the 7~ foot-I center and discussed the ~ move with him, the San Diego Union said . Neither Bloom f'lor . j • • " l ' I ~ general manager Alex Graza would · J 3 deny that negotiations are under ::J way, the paper said. Chamberlain has not yet signed to play for the Lakers this year and the Union said his attorney "is trying to find a loophole in bis coo-r. tract." The veteran player bas been: missing from Lakers practice sessions., reportedly because ol a dispute over his salary. The newspaper quoted a source as saying Cbamberla1n may :sit out .. !he mning season and do radio commentary and public relatior~ fol-the ·Conquistadors ·ir-he Bloom can reach agreement. The Conq uistadors are the · ABA franchise and thi s 1 i their first season . 1 They play their first~ver b tonight in Denver. The Lakers. meanwhile, open ~ their exhibition season tonight by I~ ·playing the Golden State WarTiors ,4 in Santa Barbara. I • .,,..~..,,. ........... :El,.,, ..... .i Terry Returns To County, To Lead BYU Dave Terry is coming back to Orange County. 1 The former Corona del Mar lngh quarterback will be playing at Anaheim Stadium Oct. 7 when he field senenls Brigham Young in its football encounter with Cal State (Long Beach). Terry red-shirted a year at BYU then came on to start for the Cougars u 1 sophomore. In his varsity opener thil year he passed for one touchdown and ran fo r tv.·o others in a 32-9 blitz of Kan- sas State. One bf his touchdown jaunts was a 45- WHITE WASH yarder and be wound up the game with 62 percent completion of bis p.a.aes. Jn the 42-19 loss to Utah State Teny hit 12 of 24 passes for 151 yards, including a 55-yarder. A3 a prep he scored seven touchdowns and booted 13 extra points. His big night came in CdM 's 31~ pasting of Estancia when he hit 10 ol 20 aerials. * * * Elsewhere in sports: Promoters ol the LA Swim lnvilatloQal I are tired of holding the annual claMic 1t lhe Coliseum and are searching fa< now waters. IMlde sources say Newport Beach is one of their leading choicea: for the big meet -if detaila can be worked out and if the new 5Ckneter pool is available. Two Lorain, Ohio foo&ball players were !!tabbed recently by a spectator wll.en hundttds of fans stormed onto tbe fie1d after Lorain C1tbolle edj:ecl Clearview, tt.U. One pl1yer from e1c~ 1&de .wa• wOWICled aDd tbe suspected uldut escaped lD eoolu1ion. Olympic multi·medallst Shane Gould says she ts llrt<I, IooU forward to ICbool and wants to be on ordinary teenqer . artu bavln& """' throe told medall, 1 lllver ind a bronze In swim compelition at Mllnlcll. lArl7 u.-. ~ .... c:ruW hi> .. ~ ......, ....... Ill *" oceaa after balllq Ht, W'H tl•t11 I .. llfet1 •""l!'1 ~-(II. I ....... ...., 1lfJ!i11e) dtirllll 1 reCflll pt!ierhlc OI !tie New,.rt IMii llillr)' Cliiti. Jim Hogan: formerly ol. Golden Wut College, batted .23'1 la< Stock!Orl ol the eauromta Ui'jue ind 1111 'l2f l<ir C!ilo4 au .. of tile Mldwelt Leque. I .•l . " • .. I "' It Ii -·-··-----------~--------..!!_ __ _ EDISON'S FRED HERNANDEZ (33), JOE DEMETRAKOS (30), JACK HAYNES (24) MAKE OFFENSE CLICK. Veteran Orange Team We'll .Piny It Straight With _ Edison--D'!v~ney Coach Vince Deveney and his Orange High football staff generaJly sit down and" discuss their upcoming battle with emphasis geared on finding an opening in the opponent's armor. Then they concentrat<? on exploiting the weakness. But Deveney says he's scrapping his usual system with Edison High's Chargers on tap Friday night at El Modena High. "There just is no basic weakness ap- Mari.Ila, Tars, FV Favored Football rivalries that will de~lop along traditional'lines as the)'ears go by take over in three instances this weekend with Marina favored ovet" Estancia by four Points, Fountain Valley picked over Huntington Beach by ooe and Newport Harbor over C.Ost.a Mesa by 11. parent with Edison, so we figure to play a pretty straight game," says the 11-year taskmaster at Orange. "'We'll just go into the game with our regular attack and try to make it work," he adds. Deveney's team scrimmaged Los Alamitos and worked over Magnolia, 21- 0. Deveney's Panlbers are potentially as good as either Utle team (1966 and 1970) that he's bad and the maln reason is three returning starters in the bacidleld. Leading that trio is quarterback Steve Walker, a S.9, JSS.pounder who l1lD.! the option sweep effectively out or the Panthers' multiple set I-formation. . ~ I "Steve's ;'_.mle to M I k ~, Churehward, ihaybe even a mue better in the passing phase," says Deveney. Churchwanl was namj!d Orange Cow>- ty back of the year in 1970 after leading tile Panthers to the Crestview League crown. • '"' ......... .. They lost fn the first round of lhe playoffs to Eatancia, 111-14. Bactin& up Walker are running back Clint Skaggs and slotback-receiver Kevin HoweJL "We lilre to think we play a balanced game,',. says Deveney, "we threw 18 times against Magnolia and ran twice out of the sprintouL" Prime receivers for Walker other than Howell are split ends Dan Timmons and Wayne Griffiths (who alternate) and tight end Mike Slattery (S.2. lllS sr.). 'Shortcomings in the Orange attack are in the line_0UX:'Ording to Deveney. The Panthers .secondary, however, ls an area that he's somewhat happier with. "Our experience on defense is in the secondary. If Edison throws well on us you'll know they have a good passing at- tack," he adds. Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L x-Pittsburgh 93 56 Chicago 82 66 New York n 10 St Louis 71 79 Montreal 67 80 Philadelphia 56 93 West Dlvbiou r--CinclnnaU 91 S7 -8166 Dodgen 81 811 Atlanta 89 79 San Francisco 64 85 San Diego S7 90 x-Cllncbed Division Pennant ,......,.., .. """"' Pltf'lbllrgh S, PJ11ttd•ll'lll1 1 CPllatO ,, Monlre•t 0 A.1111111 TO. Cl11etnn1t1 ' ~ "'"'ftdsco s, Hou•ton ' N-Yon lo St. L.oul• 1 LM .utelt1 7, S.n 0'99o ' T....,..1 OIMft Pct. GB .6211 .554 11 .524 151> .473 23 .456 251> .372 38 .615 .561 91> .54-4 101> .te& 22 .430 271> .388 331> Plthbllrtth 11111• 1 .. 7 or Kl-•71, 11 Phll.0.1- l>flla (ltt'P'llllkls 2·UI c111c-. (lll:tVS<fl•! Ml 1t Mont~t (ltff'lko 14 ! Att.1111 (NIMr111 li-11) 11 Cl11ClnA1ll CGrlm111Y ,..,, lift 1"r1Mllco (Wlltowhbyt UI If HoJlton (WU- IOl'I 14-t) Ntw Yolf'll: fMcAndnW 11~ I' St. I.Milt I~ twfnl 1·101 *-'I 1:>11• IAtlln "101 11 l.11 ... ...._ Ckmon ,, .. , AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Boston 80 67 Detroit 80 66 Baltimore 78 70 New York n 10 Cleveland 68 83 Milwaukee 62 87 West Dlvlllon Oakland 87 00 Chicago 83 64 Minnesota 75 70 Kansas City 73 74 Angels 71 711 Tesas 52 96 Tuttd1r'1 1t1111tt1 Clfwl911d '· e11tlmor1 2 MllWlull:H I, lot.ton • Call,.,_111 2. TtlC•• 1 1(111H• City 2, Cfllcloo 1 Mlnneeolt " O&kl1nd, 2, r1!n Only 1111"1'1 ..::htduled, T•r1 0MnH Pct. .5-H .Sil .S27 .527 .450 .416 .592 .56S .$17 .497 .In .351 GB I> 21> 21> 14 19 4 11 14 17 351> Mllwaullft t8~11 '-111 tt Boll'tln !MCOIOtllltt HI Ciev.!1nd f,lf"r"I' tt·l•I 11 S1ttl~ (M!:Nl llY lloll) c1nfllnll (Wrflthl 16-11' 1t '"'" IKMd 1t-1SI ~ Yori: fl(!lnt IHl .t Dttl"llt ICM!mltl \I-ISi ICI Nll CITY INllMlll MJ It CPl!uel (WOod ~151 ~I (llYllWn IS.I& end Certlln Ml 1t Olli:land (Hollamtn 11-11 .,... Hwnfw 94) DEAN LEWIS tt66 HAii.OR BLVD., COSTA MESA -s.1111t1 ind ,..,.,. for All Imported Cars Modern Body Shop for All Car1 646·9303 Oranre County's wrest snd JdosLModern Toyota and Volvo Dealer • OVDllAI DILIVUY IPICJALllTS Tars, Western Equal in Sire, Says Sweazy Costa. Mesa High footbali.-=lch John. Sweazy doesn't feel his Mustangs are going from the frying pan into the fite this week against Newport Harbor, but he does admit tbe Mesans are facing a similar situation. "Western was just too physical for us,'' says the Mesa coach when disctlssing last week's 34--0 setback, "and Newport is probably equal in size." That's the biggest wony Sweazy bas as be prepares his club for the Friday night lilt at Newport Harbor. "We fear their siz.e the most. They're just too pbys:lcal for us. We rely on quickness and being aggressive. We were very slow and non-aggressive last Satur- day night. "Newport doesn't have the quickness that Western bas," says Sweazy in com· paring the two teams, "but they're going to be a good football team and they're probably angry after that 21-0 Joss. to Corona del Mar. "We're going to fmd out which of the two teams has character this week." Sweazy feels the Mustangs are no where near reaching their potential. "We made some mental mistakes against Western, but mo.st of the errors were physical We were just not con- sistent. Our guys were so keyed up they tried too hard. We're a little inore capable than what we showed SaturdR.y night. .. Sweazy felt that club should have be<>n more successful with its passing against Western -and that's what he's working on the most this week. "We thought we could throw the ball against Western. but our quarterbacks were a little hasty. We should have com- pleted five or six more passes. U we could have completed more passes we could have extended our drives. DEAN LEWIS SAYINGS!!! ON All '72 TOYOTAS & VOLVOS DEMONSTRATORS UAMl'l.n '72 STATION WAGON COROLLA 1600 CC ENGINE , AUTO., RADIO, AIR COND. 239400 #T021·0106505 '72 VOLVO 2 DR., 4 SPD., RADIO HEAT., RAD. TIRES 349400 (#262710) _OYI• 1H NIW l USID CAIS •IADY JOI IMMIDJATI DIUYHY I ----·----·---·---· ----·" ----.---- J Chaffey Faces Uphill Battle Against MD ONTARIO -Ray Starlc fee Is BOmewbat like the guy who ~vers from multiple injuries in a train wreck just in time to·step in front of an oncl'.>1n· 1ng tnJck. His Outffey l!ij[h Tigers fell under the steamroller from Anaheim 25-0 in their opening game last week. and the pros- pect of tangling with Mater Dei's of- fensive machine looms Friday. It's not an encouraging thought, and it's understandable that Stark doem't relish the task for his team. .. We're still shell shocked frorn the Anaheim game, and r.1ater Dei is just as good a team,·• Slark says. "Their quarterback threw very well against San- ta Ana, and we thought the backs looked extremely tough too." or his own team, however, it's a sad. sad story, according to Stark. "We're small and slow, and as the score indicates, we didn't show too much against Anaheim," Stark said. The Tigers backfield does generally fall into the "pony" category with quarterback Mike Scanlon and halfback George Belin at 160 pounds the "heavyweights." The other backs include Joe ~1cKellar, a 155--pounder, and 147-pound Amador Sagasta. Despite the lack of size, the Tigers are running out of a wishbone offensive setup, which is all the more Wlusual since the line, according to Stark, averages 160 from tackle to tackle. DAILY ~ILOf Z3 Santa Ana Hungry Sain1,s ·Must St.op Tosti To Defeat Sea Kings santa Ana coach Tom Baldwin has reviewed films of his team:.S loss to Mater Det last v.1eek and can't fmd too much wrong with the performance. He hns -also revie\\"Cd his team's schedule, and can •t find too much right with it. "We've got a good team, but it's not going to mean anything if \\'C lose our first five games," Baldwin says. "By that time our kids will be demoralized. \\'e need to get a win or two. and then v.·e'll be tough against anybody.'' Finding a soft touch on the Saints· schedule is no easy matter, ho\vever. and Baldwin figures that !his week's gamc against Corona dcl ~1Rr is no exception. ··1 thought that \\'as the best Mater Dei learn I've seen. and from the films. l"d judge this is th<-bes! tean1 Corona del 1i-1ar has had,'' Bal di-'.· in stales. Baldwin gave special consideration to Joe Tosti. Sea Kings qu'1rterback who sparked his lcan1's 21-0 victory over Newport }~arbor in the season opener. "lberc's no doubt he's the key to the team, he's more in1portant to the Corona de! Mar off('n5<.' than Mater Dci's quarterback is to their o£fense." Baldwin says. "H.! accounted (or the majority or their offense, so he's definitely the man to stop." Considering S.1nta Ana's o ff ens c , Baldwin says h<' 1vas pleased overall with the wishbone attack, and will continue to use Jt. "\Ve bave the personnel to run it, ~ we did • good job moot ol the time against Mater Del ," Baldwin said, '"The wishbone's wtakne!S is that ft isn't aa good when you have bad field position or arc behind, and that's how we found ourselves a great deal of the time last week." Santa Ana got a good running game last v.·£'c k \\'ith halfbacks Demi Scott and Judson Parker the workhorses. Scott pic ked up 56 yards in lO carries, and Parkrr i8 yards 1n nine carries for the Saint~ Polo Pairings Pairings for Saturday's Pirate Invita- tional \\'lllt>r polo tournament at Orange Coast College have been announced .. flcre nrc the pairings : 9 -Orange Coast vs. Chaf(ey. 10 -C.rossmont vs. Santa Barbara. 11 -Orange Coast vs. LA Harbor. 12 -Chaffl'y vs. Santa Barbara. I -Orange Coast vs. G rossmont. 2 -LA Harbor vs. Chaffey. 3 -Orange Coast vs. Santa Barbara. 4 -LA llarbor vs. Grossmont. • Four Ml bias plles of Potyester, ~us two strong Fiberglass belts, plus u~" tread depth. •A wlde,Jow serkts .. 78"profile,wilh the newest styte 0.85 Inch white sidewall.• Our newest ad- dition to our selection of Atlas Tires designed to fit every driving need and pocketbook. :.::; _.._ ,,_ _ ... ~ -·o.--·-1lS I.I I S~l S i;i'f .............. _, .. , ... ~&)"'-l...'.I~-" -•'-''-"U'I..._ ................ ~-._, .... __ ,._a.-... -l·-c.ot -~ c-. ....,, ad. • -Qllo9' c-. -----. ,. Standard Stations Chevron and al most all Chevron Dealers The economy drive is on ... -.Along the Chevron~ --- • . : • 1 ' . , . • • ' r'· • ~ • • " • • DAILY PILOT Wtdnrsday, Septrmbtr 27. JQ72 Saddleback's Fee - Owls Very Short On. Experience AZUSA -Last season when SaddJeback and Citrus clasht.'<i ln the next-to-last game of the season It w:.s. 111 eSS(>nce . for the conference championship. FlltST UCJ GRID G A~t l<: Saturday's game \Viii be the first football ult ('ver played on the llC Irvine field . It's set to begin at 2 o'l'IOl'.'k with adults ::.dmilled for $1.50, students $1 and children under 12, 50 ccnts. Parking is located in lots 7 and !J. The tv.·o leJms are squaring off n1uch t;arlier this season. Saturday afternoon at UC Irvine 12 o'clock) to be exact, Mistakes Haunting \ ~ompton . ' ' .Pu.t.Ung two halves together to make a whole game is the ~IJ..'..,}lroblem facing Com pton College , football coaCh Chalk Raintey'tlUs week. .. l ~ Tnrtars tangle \1•ith coach It a y Shackleford's Golden West Rustlers F'ridav night on the Orange Co;i~! stadium Held in their first night ga'me of the season . Kickoff is at 7: 30. but Citrus coach John Strycula figures the stakes may be just as high. When asked whether this game is for the championship Strycala replies, "It could be." but admits he isn't rul· ing out three other teams from the league race. In two other confron tations "'ith the Gauchos, Strycul;i's te;ims have \von once and tied once, la st year as a result of the win they wrapped up the M is s ion Conference chan1- pionship. Jn thal game, the matchup pitted Saddlehack's freshmen against Citrus' t"I:· perience. Tbis season the shoe is on the other foot . and experience is on the side of the Gauchos. C i t "f u s • youth shows <'specially 'on defensC, where they start nine freshmen, and have no returning starters frnm last year's team . On defense the OWls start freshman quarterback Grady Hopkins. but the 8--0, 193- pounder worlta·behind a huge and experienced offensive line and has .two ·capable ~phomore backs to w.ork with. , Citrus' chief of£ensive threat is tailback Kenny Williams. a 5-8, 155-pound speedster who. was an All ·C.Onrerence selec· tion last season. Williams, a !l.8 sprinter in the 100-yard dash, picked up 175 yards in the conference opener against Palomar last week. ' , Alemany Standout Injured Veer Next Obstacle for Barons I F'ountain Vallty HIJh'!I root-Secondly. looming 1 wed. Mar Usts, .It's nothing we Rancho Alamitos. ball fQrtunes are rtd,lng high later ls the em0$iona1 lnhle baven'l eeen before. But of Bu' Pi.ckford'1-OOL entirely um woek with a--CQnviocing 39-LeaRUe opener with . rival course 1t l$ the tint Ume satiafled. ?J> triumph over Ra n ch o 1'::.CUson. And ll's P)c;kfqrd's job As for the Oilers. Pickford's also aware ol. running backs Paul Fillkntss aod-Kyle Van Amersfort. Alamilo.s ln hand and llun-to keep hbi gridder.s uilnd.ful or 1'•"Vt seen it this year,'' says "We.'re •iU too slow. We ~tlSSlON HJLLS _ The tlngton Beach next in non-the next blockade -Hun-~k!ord. bav~ lO g t faster. You don't league hostilities Friday night. tington Beach: " •~And I'd say th e i r play this game in a t~fool "They'll be firtd up for us, I'm sure that wln over Millikan was a boost ln the arm for them," be •dds. outcome of the San Clemente But <..-oach Bruce Pickford is "It's going to be the same quart e rb ack (Greg square, it's a 100.yard,Deld. 1-llgb School-Alemany football a bl t wary -and the reason is type of problem, ~ YW Jong Nitzkowski) did an . outstan· "But I was ha ppy ~th our game could very well depend two-fold. in that aspect,}' Ntif l.lit'kford. dltlg Job for a sopbo~-The ' passing game a~ the running upon the health of one burly First, Huntington Beach's ··we 've got tO. .Dold up veer puts a lot of pressure on game looked ok. OUr defense running back. rejuvenated Oilers are fresh physically aq~ emQ{lonal!y." the quarterback," he adds. let down a little and let . Grid Results ' ' from a 26-14 upset win over Hls team's taa\.:..'Frlday at Fountain Valley'i Barons Rancho have a couple of cheap F,..., ..... " '"11M111 Daryl ~1oorc. a 205-pound Long Beach Millikan and will Huntiugton BeacH 'wiU be in chalked up the highest total touchdowns early. And it's out ~::1"'"'" 1 : : : t3: halfback, suffered a shoulder be seeking a second straight trying to stop the Oilers' (39 points) ever for an opener defense that might prove to be wn1m1~1.,,. tou O.nn11 ao1-'1 1• separation ln Alemany's 21..0 win over Fountain Valley in Houston Veer offense. "It's and it was the fifth high~st in our strong suit." says the ~v.:;.r;11.w~!;;r"eo!::. .Z0~-::!. ~~~~ loss to Antelope Valley last --;,.'h_e;;ir;;.sh;;"-;,rt·se~r;ie~s.,;;;~;;;;;;;;;;';he;;s~a;m;e;;of;len;;"';;;Co~ro;n;•;;de~l;:;;;his;;' ;to:ry;;;;in;;;~pu;;sh;i•;;g~·;;·•;ro;;u;nd;;;;B;;a;;r~o;ns;;m;;•;;nl;o~r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;'"~'·;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;., week and is doubtful this I week . SALE SPECIALS FOR TODAY' THRU SATURDAY ONLY! ............. . "He's a big part or our of- fense." says Alemany C<.ach WESTMINSTER SANTA ANA FULLERTON Robert Mead. Alemany will host San Clemente F'riday HOW TO OET Tt+IWE Dlret;!I-to ""m111r Hltft l•k~ H1t S111 Dl"llO Free..,..y norlh to tn~ Sari F11rnwido v1Uev E•ll ~I R ln~!di. turn r(gnt 111d aO 1bc!IT \'1 blOCW lo II>~ hjql> ll<:hool. Allow IWO l><><lf~ frilY~Hlng ti,,.,... ...c.. __ _ night at 8 o'clock. ~1ead. in his firs~ year as coach of th e Indians, calls ~1oore an outstanding football carrier. "He's a big l>oy and strong." he says of Moore, who stands only 5·11. "~le's got great quickness for his size and I ex· pect him to be at Stanford next year." But at the moment Moore'is nothing more than a big ques-' tion mark. If he should be unable to play, most of the b<Jll carrying duUes will fal! to Jim F'airbanks, a 5-9. 175-pound letter1nan who has Moore's speed but Jacks his strength. Moore's importance to 15221 BEACH BLVD. e PHONE 893-8544 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY . , .•..• 1:00 A.M .• 9 P.M. SATU RDAY • , •.••..•.••••• , ••• 1:00 A.M •• 6 P.Joi,. SUNDAY •••..•• , ••.•••••••••• t :pO A.M •• 4 .lrlt 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE S47-74n MONDAY THRU FllDAY ••••••• 8:00 A.M .• 9 P.M. SATlilRDAY ••••••• ••• ••• , •. , •• 1:00 A.M .• 6 P.M. SUNDAY , ••••• ,, ••••• , •••• , •• 9:00 A.M .. 4 P.M. 4PLY • 11YLOll CORD! 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. e PHONE 870.0700 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY ••••••• 1:00 A.M. • 9 P.M. SA TU ROA Y , . , • , , , , , , •...••••• 1:00 A,M. • 6 P.M, SUNDAY ••.••.•..•••••••• j •• , 9:00 A.H,. -"P.,.,.. .BRAND NEW llRST QUALITY 4 PLY NYLON CORD At halftime las! w ee k _ against Los Angeles Cily '-COirege, fhe T<ii-ta-rs · 1el( tfie field tied, 7-7. But oh that sec- ond half. LACC won . 44--7 and Pasadena d e f eat e d the Tartars earlier, 31--0. John Polack, a Jetter winner three years ago who just returned-~ from· a hitch in milita!:Y service has stepped in at ful lback. The 6-1, 195· pounder has 10.2 speed and rushed for 75 yards against Palomar. Alemany's team is ac- centuated by the lack of a de- cent passing game. "We -don't h 11 v-e ··-a quarterback who can throw and we don't llavE. one who can run, either,'' laments Mead. Mead hasn't been impressed \Vith either his offensive or defensive line play but looks for improvement this week. "Ou r kids learned a lot at Antelope Valley," he says. 1088 nl/1'0> If 'nll•ffl•U - CUlfOM N M .... -~ "We weren't the same team in the second half." Ramsev says in the understatement Or the early season. "We didn't make a n y mistakes in the first half," he sa.v s. Wha t type of mistakes? "Things like j u m p i n g offsides, letting pass receivers get behind our secondary and t hings like that." "We have to stop lhal boy Rick Rice at Golden West ahd I'm sure they will do more throwing thi.s· wee\>.' The •other two teams we have played have thrown a lot against us a nd ~,11t.1~8f def~e haS been lous~,)t ... ,-. ,_ . \-'lha:t 1s ~· strength of the Codlpt0)1 tdmn? "Right now I would have lo .s"'y it is our defense. We are \·ery 'W'eak on offense. But I think we are improving \1•it h each game," llamsey adds. The Tartars 'will have a team composed largely of freshmen and will operate out of a Veer-T formation. One player with experience is quarterback S y I vester Collins who will share the s ignal-calling berth Yt'lth the (;olden West coach's brother. Kent Shackleford. The offensive line includes bcheamoths like tackle Cleo Phelps, a sophomore let- terman who tips the scales at 290. gunrd Tim Pickett (240 ) and center J im Trail <225J . Eddie Shaw. \v hose brother Dennis quart erbacks the Buf - fa lo Bills professional team. is the other offensive tackle. <• 2Q5.pounder, Mead does have one other !'tandout player to call upon. 6- :1. l~·pound tight. end !lick DeScime. Like Moore. he was an All-Camino Real League choice last year. Coach Expects Lobos Tp~o,im~ Back Fri~~:· 1 Los Amigos comes into hs found some bright spots and game with University High expects his tfam to bounce Friday with something lo back against University, a. prove and hopes to do so at the . , Trojans' expense. tcain which doesn t look w be "\Ve feel we're a good foot· as strong as SA Valley High. ha ll team, but we don't have _Though the score might in· a win to show for it;>-Los dicate otherwise, Johnson says Amigos coach Bob Johnson he was pleased with his says. team's defensive showing in The Lobos. a team with 14 the opener, but was worried lettermen (eight of them were about a slugglsh offense. starters from last season). The 4 bos' two touchdowns lost to Santa Ana Valley 22-13 \vere both authored by junior in their opener last week. quarterback Rich Shrout, a !)~spite the loss. J ohnson 6·0, 175, pounder \Vho started at Oefensive back last season. Backfield Duo Heads Shrout raced 60 yards :irnund end on a keeper for the fi rst Los Amigos scOre, and passc<t 35 yards to flanker Rich f\1artin for the other. Ar1ny-Nuvy Gridders Other than those two plays, ho\veve r, the Lobos had trou· ble getting untracked. CARLSBAD _ Two 111~\v runner. netted 128 yards 011 "Our main problem was a faces ha\·e nu1de the Artnv· just 17 carries, most of his breakdown in the offensive N A d · li ne," Johnson recalls, "we avy ca emy a te.1m to be yardage coming on en d k d · h · II ho had to play without two senior rec ·one . \1•11 1n sma sc ol sweeps. Dycos had runs of JO. r tc-fl ·1· in1ards, something We ., don't . oo lkl co1n~t1 ion. 14. 12, II , 13, 18, 35 and 12 t • ,, Senior fullback !\·like Davis yards against Dana ~!ill s. want 0 l,lo. .. ... : ,1.:;;;. ! :ind sophomore halfback !\fark Maffucci was content \Vi th One pf those . .senioi ...&f(ard$,' !)ycus pace a ground ntt:ick lh" w•·n O"er Ilana H1'lls. Mark S~'J"ers t~,~19,?}~is. e,x-" • pect....a· fl; !'Murn ~ ltctit>n or 1l1at crunched Dana Hills 11ill"h :illhou"h the 'Dol phins \Y<'rc ~ S I I f 27, d I 1 k f>'' this Wee k'<:. game, a.nd J ohnson · • l' ino or \J yar s as \vec rlayini1i their fi rst ever varsity t' Y as tht' \\1arr1ors v.·on. 28·22. foo!llll lf game. 9e1ie'Vf' tbe nuilljng ~Wilt or bertifir, -. .. " ~ -'I ',· .~.; • • · Arn1y-Navy will go after it s "Our offense moved the ball st•cond v.·in Friday nighl. "\'le . should be able j(> · visi ting L:iguna Be a ch. s very well, particularly on the establish' our n1nning ga~ I Artists for an 8 o'clock game. ground," he says. someUUhg we didn't do libt ,; Davis c:1n1e !o 1hc academy "l thought our linemen week;~' Johnson said. "And,.& at the se1nestcr break last blocked very well, especially should bo,able Jo ac;or~ ;a 1•' year and didn't play football to the right side where we got mOre.potnti,~JJd·tieyeryaJ6·p. • fo r the Warriors until this most or our yan:b. Our center. pointed if we don't." season. Kelly Smith, did a particularly The Lobos' backfield in· "He's 195 pounds and built good job and has been our clud~~ r"eM'lling lettennen in solidly," s av s Armv-N avv most consistent blocker ." Mike P owell (5-10, 165 ) and coach John M0affucci. ,;lie·s a The Warriors have made a pair of two-way starters. Dari heek uva weight lifter Hnd has reputation for themselves as a Morton, a 195--pounder who a Jot of speed to go \Vil.h ii ," s1nall school power in the San runs the 40 jt'ard ~Sh in 4.9 is Dycos is a mid get in con1-Diego area fo r the past thrC'e the starting rullback and a parison. going at 133 pounds if yea 1·s. defensive linebacker. that much. ''Sul he's well put In those three years, they've The Lobos operate out or a logclhcr." Maffucci ~a y s . wo11 the Southern League pro-type oUenslve alignment, "1-fe 's stocky and not thin <t i charnpionship three times and a nd like to mix .thei11 passing all. Jie's jus t now learning to each year finished as run· and running. 'Martin'1 ap~er . follow his bklck.ors.. '' nersup in the San Diego single returning ~ lett~n.t, ... !$: • th~, ', Against Dana Hills. Davls =;oA;,,;;;d1;;;·v;;;is;;;io;;;n;;;f;;;in;;;a;;;ls;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mos~l~.a~a~ng~""'i,i;i·us;;;pa.uii~nilcl~;i;;i"'~'~· • tot<'d the ball 28 times for 1151'- yards. Al t95 pounds, he was LEASE DIR C bigger than llll but one Dan$1 HHls playec And his strength' 1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX began to tell during the second s1 0 848 Im If. • Dycus. a skil!cring, dancing ·PER MARINE -HO~DING-TANKS- Nt w SYSTI MI Olt \ISi I JUSTINO MIAO THf HOLDIJ<G COM'l'~Y !l1Jott. J{,., ldl • ...,_7,Si MO. OltD~R NOW ,OR EARLll6T DlllVllllY ASK FOR FRED DORA,N DAYE ROSS PONTIAC YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZID DEALER 2480 Harbor llvd. at Folr Dr., c...., M ... 546-8017 ~ Collper·type hond brokeo, 3 speed r,a,., chratne wkee o and ..,,,,.,.1 f;"lo~. Comeo in original «>rlo". HIGH l'llfSSUflf TIRE PUMP A r•ol p(eoo erl 6 OR 12 VOLT STOP AND TAIL LAMPS SIJ:f '70, If (7.ocur ·'° ... ) fA(M 'llCI 25 00 IE SURE TO CHICK WITH US If YOUR TIRE SIIE IS NOT SHOWN ... .. ·---"-•~-···------·---_.,. ------tr. -. ' • -----·-' " 1 ~. I ,. I r • ' ' ! ! • t • • ! ti ' : l I"'. • I L .. r. ~ •' • • " • ~ •' f. • :' ' ' • ' l ' • • • • CHRIS ULLOM Laguna Beach FRANK KALIN Marina \1edntsdaw, Stpttmber 27, 1972 DAILY PILOT 2$ Bucs Rated 5th in State Sea Kings, Saints Tie \ Con>na de! Mar and Sarta Ano roced to a •• tie ..tiile i..-whipped F.llbon in "1'Uf vanity crou COW\try Tuooday. Doug Knopp led the Sea King runners ogalnsl Santa Ana, clocking 11:03 lor the two mile course at Corona de.I Mar. MJke Messenger and Mike Austin finished lnurth and filth, only one second apart and Dee Guy came in seventh for the Sea Kings in 11 :43. At Centinela Park in J""'°'" \l•nltv ·~•,little .... Si Paramount Sports • G11er1Jfhin'J ::Jennij tn NATUllM• AU TO• llANDS TllETORN TENNIS SHOES Tiit Mill Ctonf911tMt MH• Canvan S14.t5 lNth•r $20.95 HOURS: MOH, & FRI. t TO t TUIS~ w•o., TMURS. A SAT. 'Tit..' 5UHDA"I' f TO HOON. 333 E. 17th ST., Costa (Behlnd The International I.Jou!le of Pancakes) PHONE 642°6886 e EXPERT STRINGING & PROMPT REPAIR SllVICI e Inglewood, Edison's Dennis Wilson came home a winner with a 10:52 docking, but Inglewood still prevailed. Edi-. runM<"a: 2. Cole Mc:C°""911, 1!;13; 1. Rtltlh Narcer.ill; 4. Jell e1oun11 J.. Itri GrMn, 6. Frink • ''*" 1 ' 4 ply polyester with a ·33 month guarantee. Ride on it for ·only1695 plus \.86 F .E.T. and old tire. A78-13 (600-13) blackwan tubeless. • Mileagemaker" GP. 4 tough plies of palyester cord for strength and durability. The 78 series wide profile for better traction and longer tire life. And our own 33 month guarantee! BlacQniH tubeleu Ti.:-11&9 F.E.T. A78--13 1.M 878-13 1.81 Cl&-13 1.95 C7B·14 2.08 E78-14 2.2• F78-14 2.39 078-15 2.56 H7&-14 2.75 SS0.15 1.73 s78-1s 2.ea H7a-15 2.81 WMC ..... ..,.,..,.~ ................... ti:,. -Piiie Fed. ta _aid are -11.IS 11.15 ..... 21.15 23.15 25.15 27.tS ..... 20.IS -..... . •• F-mou Prot1cUon Gu1r1nl11. Your FOl'em°'t. U•• protection gM¥antee cover1 .:in Foremou ~s~n'Jllf Ur11 (eJCcePt our sP<!cl1I ;ippllcatlon ll<es witn ~par.111e 9u,1r10111s1 .119;1lnsl .111 10<1d h11.nr1 o r defect f.allure$. You arfl protected for 11'11 •nllr-11111<1 rnon1n~ o l guar.intee. ll vour Ure l.illt dtlrlng 1M 111anontfl period, return I! 10 i.n and -will, •I our option , r1p1lr your lire, Of m1ke 1n allow•nc• b.~d on the orl{llnal purch.1ui_·pr1ce, exc.ludlng I PDUc'abte F.Oer11 Excise T 1x, toward Hoe purcn.ne o l J. 11ew '11re. We wll l allow l 00% ol tl1e'CJ1"1Vffi1I purctoase puce, r•clu!liU<I 111>pllc111Jle Federal E'.x coso Tax, d uring the 100~• Jllow.111ce 11c11•Jd. l lle•<!Jl!er, we will allow ~0% o • 25~ o l the o rl!llna! Ptuc11.1;e p11 Cf!, exct11C11ng ,1pp!lc.1b!11 t-cOerdl El«:ISlll Tix. IOWol!'CI Ill(! l)U1U>.1>C ,,, ~ !lf!W ll1e. (5ee c11.11! below). Fe<1er1! Excise 1 ax ,11J just111~11t ,1ll~wJncc w ilt lie n1~de (,Ill the bll51S u f lh• percent ol the orl9.,1.1I 1rr,1rt rc1n.unl11<1. fl'OREMOST PROTECTION GUARANTEE CHART HEA~'S HOW YOUR GUARANTEE WORKS: Enttre1u1r•nt•• period ••...•••.... , •••••..•••••.• , •.. ll monll". I OO"!li .1Uow.1nc• p1riod .............................. 1· I 0 monllu ~K1Uo-nce p1rlod •..•••.••.•.••••••••••••••••• 11 -1' monllu 2s,.111ow1nce P1riod • . . • • • . . . . . . . . • • • • • . • . • . . • • • • 20·ll monttn Treld Life "'°tectio n. w~ tnnl<I 1111<1 ev~1 y f '"r1nn•I lire""'" lractlnn lndlc•to~ ThlY '<<I"·'' w11rr1 '""" ,,,., ~hnul<I he rop!,1cfld. II your lore -..rs out texcept lor 1ncorrlll"t -111 '''""'"t i wewlll f'lllll<fl an allowance bil§ed on thol orlqonal puu:na1111 P 1n~. exctudonq <U•PIH'..ible Fedeu1l E.xci!i• Tax, toward the ot1rc111~ 'Jf .1 new tire. We will •llOw 1/3 dunn11 ttte Orsi h11f <1< 1/4 dur1n<1 th ·second half ol 111111t.1t11d n1ontni of.gu.r.1nt•. Fe<1nr~1 E1<ci'e lJx ao mton.it .111owa11ce will bfl m1de ""' the b;iPI of the perc.ol ol tilt oti9i1111 tread remaining. Til'is gu.11r.1ntee 11 not 1r1rnfer.1ble. It i!i only for QflVate l)U~n<Jll' ~ • pasenger , .. 1100 Will<JQO~ • 1 l . sma11;tue1<tirE!!: I " Small ~Penney · price. l<'l •'-J 27~F.E.T.670-15/6tubelype-•. TM...., c.gow..,. XTD. Our small truck tire with nyton cord and 5 rib tread design. For pick-ups, panels, campers and vans. ,_.,,. ,,,. .... 700-1516 lili0-1.6/6 750-16/8 ,...._ lm>-1516 700-1418 100-1618 800-18,511 'i0-18.818 12•16,5/8 ,._..._Tn 138,f!.~ excna19 RlllMt 12. A 12 volt battery for the economy mtnded motorist. F.E.T. 2.84 2.61 3.69 2.69 ,2.64 3.22 3.29 4.29 5.85 Reliant 12-six volt battery ... 10.aa with exchange. ,..._. 12 Month Gki11w• Should _, Fortn'!Olt Rew.rn battery 1111 !""' -dilduirg•) wttnln llO days from the dat• o Plftlha1e. "'tum It to Peofiep and It • be ~ frM of c:hlirg•. Alter 90 dlVI "°"' pr1or to the eicl)hlkln dale of lhe guatranlM, J. C. p__, Co. wff ~ the blttety charging onty for the' p.rfod Of owneBhlp. baaed on th9 a.mint pf1c4I .i: tM tlml ol l'llhll'n. pto ,... 0¥9f' the ltlled gulltanl .. JnOntha. ' -33.95 29.95 40.94 29.95 29.95 37.95 34.95 48.95 15.95 Chevy 283-327 (t957·19&n Ford 292 (195f.18112) • Brand new valves, guides., lifters, valve rock- ers, push rods • Brand new pistons, rings and wrist pins • Blocks are magnafluxed and pressure tested to assure protection •Blocks re-bored to precision factory toler- ances •All new main and rod bearings and bushings • Ctallk shaft -and camshaft n•·ground to precl· slontoleranees • Many more engines to choose from at Ylrlous prices. Expert Installation available. JC Penney The values are here every day. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following Auto Centers: -~ - FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (7T 4) 1>4<1-2313. HUNTING TON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 892-7771. • I ~ I • • • 2f DAIL V PILOT Wtdl\Hday, Stpt!!Tlbtr 27, 1972 Westminster ro Face Prep Polo T y pical Wilson Teani R es ults LONG BEAfll Westminster High SC' ho n I laces Its ii;econd Long Beach football team in a row Friday night, and Wilson's Bruins promise to be in a mean mood. Wilson, picktd second in the :t.foore League b e h i n d Lakewood, was shocked by Bay League doormat We st Torrance 14·13 last week . At the same t i m e . Westminster was sli pplng by Lakewood 19·17, its only win over the Lancers in five years. Wilson is big -typically - but not particulilrly fast with the exception of tailback Robin Holmes, all.city as a junior. Holmes and Bruins tackle Richard l~illiard were the only juniors selected to the Long Beach all-city team I as t season. ~lilliard, a ~. 240-pounder, was one of the few Wilson players to earn coach Owen Dixon's praise. "Yes, he's good," says Dix- on. "He's very good. He's bet· ter than James Cordell was for us last year, and Cordell has played In a couple of USC games now as a freshman." Holme&, Hilliard and guard Richard llrlzendiene are the only \Vilson players who ""'ere on the varsity last season. Brizendienc Is a 215-pound guard. "\Ve'll be all right later on ." Dixon says. "We 've got some pretty good football players but we're inaperitneed and right now we're down a bit. "Against West Torrance we had seven turnovers. and it's hard to .,~rin on that." The Bruins don't have their usual top-caliber quarterback- ing this season and don't have as many bullies on the defensive line as in past cam- paigns. Quarterback Craig Johnson. up from the junior varsity team, has only an average arm and average speed, says Dixon, "but he's a smart kid with a good head on him." Johnson does have good receivers, led by 5-8. l~pound split end John Green. Defensively. the Bruins are weak up front but strong in the secondary, "just the oP... posite or last year," Dixon says. Safety Carl Mortonson has been the best defensive player. Hilliard plays some defense, "but only in criticaJ situa- tions," says Dixon. 'tln•llY Unl~••,llV 1 l 1 S-I l o"'t+I ] I l G-11 Unlvl•MIV KOd'11: t lH Oll.illtf /1 ), Al••~ T~•\ (ll ~II•• M((.Otmocll (I!, Ci tnltllf'I CotQrovt ltl, 1(1vl11 PllllUpt (I) J~111w v1,.111 U11over\ity t ' 1 1-H Lowell 0'12-1 Vlll••••lty Storl"': 01vt 1(11rn1Y 111, o.Mlt trotlWf\ fll. Cn•lt 1<1ll<n1n 11 1, J9'1f 80rl"~ (1), Mtrly lltllfent l?J, 81\ICI Cl1•~ (1). l"rOtll•So,11 Unl..,&lly J ' 6 ~-1S LOW*il 2 l 2 ~-S ~Otlno : P•I lyont ,,L G'11t,t 510l!!fl"t>ltg (61. 01n M<-Clut•tV 0), Jttl Hllt'fll (!], L1rry (itnPl>lll (1), J()(\11 Plc1rd (•). V1ntty Fov1111\11 V1!11y 0 1 7 3-6 Lot Amlg.ot I I 2 1-5 Fo..n11ln VtlltY l!otlno: 01...., ~unter (1), Ml,11.111 Elcll (2), Clay Srvard (11. Dlfl l111tr11l (I) M!~t Hll~fy ( 1). J11111or V1rtlty Foonitln V1llfY 7 l J 1-f lo~ Amigot ! 1 I 1-• Fo11111aln Vtlley tcori!'l1;1: M1r.,ln Mer<HI !l), 1111rh1n McAdamt n>. Brvc:-e Mor5e (1). G1rv J0tdafl !1), Jttl WK1111tr ( 1). Paul W!!!mt<1 11 l. Bill B1llqvet!t !ll. F r01P1·5~11 Fount.tin V1llty O 1 ? :i-. Lo1 Amlg0$ 1 3 l 3--4 Fountain Vll!ltY KMlntl: Scott Nelwn 121. Te<•V Jl l~• Ill. 1>1111 liollaufel (1J, 80b Pvll (0. V1ri1ty M1dn11 0011-3 G1rden Grove ' I I 4-11 Marina 1col"ln11: F11bl1ri !1), 81Xkrier 01, L1rl0n {l). Juniot V1t1!ty MarlN 0 3 1 !-i G1rdtn Grovf' I 0 ( 1-13 M1rlna ''orlng: Wenoer <•!, (Oflkliri 11; f'roU!·SOPll Mir!,.. Gird.., Grove M1rln1 K 0t!r>11: 111. 0 I 1 1-3 0 " 1 7-1 Ekberg (?), W1hh OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. 1, I FISK WHl,TEWALL PRESIDENT 4 Pl Y NYLON CORD 1213r' TREAD DEPTH 2ND TIRE ONLY 16 fl&0.13Whi_,.n T..W. Plut fad. Elf. T1• of $1.75 H<! tr ltd .. in teqoi1..t WHEN YOU BUY FIRST TIRE AT 15.95 All p•io<• plu• ftd. E~. T•J<. No 1radt·in required. •w11,,,...•l110nly. FA El Tl Rf. MOUNTING AHOAOTA· BLACKWALLS $2.00 LESS TION WITH llfl[ PURCHASL WHEEL ALIGNMENT ·~ AMlllCAN CAU HERE'S wtlAT WE DO: e Adjust c••t•r •nd c•mber e Set To• e Check st••ring e Final ro•d teJt Any 1dditio111I p1rl1 or ttrvic-;• .... O.d bvt not li1ted, will ''''Y 1 u,1ppl1m111t1I c-;h1rg1, A/C $2.00 1111or1. Rim of the World's Attack meet the $10,000 panther* • • • ~ Powered by Running Game LAKE ARROWHEAD - Rim ol tile World Hlg!l School establlahed !t&<lf as King ol the ),lounlain in its fll"St foot· ball game ol !be 1972 .....,., · Friday night the Oe Anza League kingpins will hoot neopllyte Oana Hilla In this resort. hamlet with no tiUe at stake. Kickoff is at 8. Rim of the World's Scots toppled Big Bear High. 22--6, last Saturday afternoon to establish themselves as kings of the mountain. Coach Ben Stindt, beginning his fourth sea.son at the helm, appears to have another championship contender and the Scots will be favored by a substantial m a r g i n Friday night. Rim of the World is rated fourth in the class A division of the CJF this season and there is little reason to doubt that ranking. It operates out of a slot-1 formation, splitting an end and putting a slot back between guard and tackle in the backfield. "We don't do a lot of passing but have three pretty good power runners," he says. Bob Ardis, a 5-10, 155-pound toilback. ls the leading ground gainer for the Scotl. Agalnst Big Bear he gained l2e yards with an average ol 5.l per tey. "\Ve have two other nuvllng backs u·ho alternate," Stindt says. "Tony Gradillas starts at fullback and alternates with Grid Results Jwnlctr Vl"'IY l"OOlbtll WettMm O 4 o G-6 CO.I• MtM 0 6 o 1)-6 CO.I•,_,.. TO: Jo.qu\n CMmberl1!n {11).y•rd nm). ,.,....._.. f'llO!btll NtWpOrl HI"°". 0 1 7 0-t Cor-dtl Mir 0 0 14 2-ltt k•WPOr'I ..:orlng: Randle. Con· ve1.ion: L1mer1on. Safety ; Team. CdM TO.: Fwt1ro 1. PAT -F1rr1ro. Est1ncl1 O o .7 H--2\ Tu1ttn O 6 o !J-1~ Estancl1 touchdown" Phil S~ver; Alan Liddle; Co15ey Sftveris pan lo l(evln Langdale. PAT: Lafll,ldl!t, Foonl1ln Vtll•Y 0 0 I• 14-78 01n1 Hl\11 0 0 0 0-O Founl1ln V1lley KOrlng: Ros.\ l, 01/d,_.,, SCMndtl. Founllln V•lllY ' 0 0 11-11 R1ncho Al1mltM 0 0 I 0-6 FV Kori~: J1ck1011, McOtrmott, 8r1ckellbur11. Ardis at tailback. He is more of a power type," the coach adds. Then he bas last year's starting fullback: on hand as a reserve end a defenstve starter. Rod Grotewold is 17S and in Stindt'• words, "a pret- ty good power runner him!el/. "Between these three guys, we have two pretty good run- ning backs in the game at all tlmes.'' While the coach is high in his praise of the triple-threat combination, he also feels the team's strength is the front line. Here's a sampling or the starting offensive line : f\.tike Ten')', a junior at center, 230; Tim Quinn (185) and Bob Shafer (210) at guard: Cal Barnhill (206) and Dave Smith <205) at tackle; and Mike Severin ( 180) at tight end. Shafer is ooseman o n defense with Barnhill and Per- ry Moore (220) at tackle. The Scots were 9-2 last year with a ~ league record. They went to the semirinals of the CIF Class A playoffs, losing In tile game on a last minute field goal. They are out to rec- tify that situation this season. by deT6m&SO' •.. Imported for Llnroln·*~ry. ttall~ coachwork created by th~ brillianl Ghl_a Stud100 of Turin. Ford designed the 351 CID iV V·8 C'nf:lllt', Four v1hecl In· dependent suspension and mid.ship l'.'nglhe plaet"ment. Five speed gear box, tully synchronized ... PANTERA •Pantera .•. Italian tor Panther ... a,.,.,. CN•ITJ •f••il1 of fi'11t C•11• ohnson& son l-$1=•1 For Advertising In OUT 'N ABOUT Phone Norm Stanley 642-4321 SUN. 10 A.M. TO 1 P.M. PRICES GOOD WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. AC CHAMPION and AUTO LITE SPARK PLUGS SELF· ADJ. BRAKES FISK 18.86 8.09 E78·14173!] 28:95 20.26 8.69 F7&-1c1n&1 29.95 20.96 8.99 G78·141125) 30.95 21.66 9.29 G78-15(126j H7S.14(8551 H78·1511561 · 31.95 22.36 9.59 J78-14(885) 32.95 23.06 9.89 J78-15(18SI HEAVY DUTY.....,,,.. .... FISK SEALER FISK FAST FLUSH FISK ANTI RUST ' Repl1ee linings--all 4 e Inspect gr•••• retein- j wheel• •rs end front whetl STP OIL ~itN I TREATMENT FILTER 69c. 17 !.AGEITI 33E~H BUENA PARK -~ llYd. at Loitweller UOl -~llYd. 523"3040 • e Cheek c;omplete brek• be•rings system • Roed test tht cir A•y 1dd!t!on1I p1rh ot itrvic• ne•dtd l.ut\ not II•••-'• will c11ry 1 t11ppltni1"t1I c-;h1r9•. BUENA PARK L-.. Valley Ylew 5115 LI-Awe. 826-5800 . ,\ l • COSTA MESA H...,,-. .. w111 .. UDOH--. 5412082 li .• OUNCES • Oil Pllttt' Wrtnch ••• , , •• , , 'J7J. Tl4 SANTA ·ANA ... ..... St. at lrlotol 1400 •••• 546-7132 - 12 Ounc;tt • • ~ ... ·• WESTMINSTER 1ll440 ....... 4. IHdiltM . .tMcF!ldd1• 192-2011 - l I I l ! l • • ' • ! ' l I I I I l ' I ! l ' l ' • • • ' , , I ' I I I • t ' • • l l l I I .. Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Co-Sponsored this week by HARBOR VIEW CENTER San Jo•quin Hiiis Road & MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach And The DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT Top Weekly Prize in M,rchandise Certificates For Weekly Second Place Winner Each for Third, Fourth and Fifth Place Winners Plus Bonus Prize Game Tickets from the DAILY PILOT Be • pigskin prophet for profit. Play the Pilot Pigskin PICkEROO g•mfi for weekly prizes. Top winner eech week receives $25 9ift certific ate from the sponsorin9 shopping center. SecQnd place winn~r gets $10 car· tific•te end third, fourth i1nd fifth pl1ce winners each get $5 certificate. Each ctrtificate is spendable, just like money, at any store in the sponsoring shopping center. Sponsorship rotates with • different c::enter sponsor· ing each week's contest. Partici patin9 cen'ters •re: Westcliff Ple1•, 17th •nd Irvine, Newport Be•ch; Harbor View Center, S•n Joaquin Hills Road i1nd MacArthur Boulevard, Newport Beach; Eastbluff Villi19a Canter, Eastbluff Drive, Newport Beach; Bey. side Center, Bayside Drive and Jamboree Road, New- port B•ach; end University Park Shoppin9 Center, Culver and Mi chelson, Irvine. Watch for this player's form ••ch week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section. Circle the team you think will win in ••~.h r.•irin9 in the list of 30 9i1mas and sand in ihe pl1yar 1 orm entry blank or a ree1on1bla fecsimile. Then w•lch the DAILY PILOT sports pe9H for Heh week's list of five winners, Rm.ES 1 SW II 111 PILOT PIGSKIN PICKlltOO COKTIJT, SPlff O.,lrflMftl, P.O. llit 1WI, Cntl Mtw, CA. '206, •. •fttTlft must be ,..,,,..,..'°" "' 1•1'1' tflfft l'l'IWl'ltlll Wtdlllld•T 1r ••ll'tlHWI ft Ille DAILY PltOT lffkl ~ J p.fll. Tllvnd•T· S. Plrtklf'lllflt IMf'dlllfth Mil DAIL V PILOT 1mp10JMI 11111 their lmiM> •left l1mHlft ,.., efltlllle le •1'1'. £. Tll a1tlAkl• eL.ANIC MUST ti Pit.LEO IN Olt ll!NTltV IS VOID. •••••••••••••••••••• • EN'l'RY BLANK • • Circlet.-YM ..... wAI ft tMI ...... , ..-. • • ........... NCM4 ... lhfed) • • Rams vs. Atlanta • • San Diego vs. Oakland • • • • Cincinnati vs. Cleveland • • Miami vs. Minnesota • • Oregon vs. UCLA • • Midiigan State vs. use • • • • Purdue vs. Notre Dame • • Tennessee vs. Auburn • • Minnesota vs. Nebraska • • Noi lhwestern vs. Pitt • • Cal vs. Missouri • • IDinols vs. WashillCJton • • • • Wisconsin vs. LSU • • Rice vs. Georgia Tech • • Maryland vs. Syracuse • • Compton vs. Golden West • • Rio Hondo vs. Orange Coast • • • • Citrus vs. Saddlebadl • • Marina vs. Estanda • • Pacifica YI. Mission Viejo • • U Wilson vs. W,stmlnster • • San Clement• vs Alemany • • • • Army-Navy vs. \atiina • • Edison vs. Orange • • Costo Mna vs. N~ • • Mater Del vs. C · • • Los Amt,os vs. !i'nlversity • • • • FY YI. HuntllMJl'Oft 'lead!:. • • CdM vso' S•ahl Ana ;· " • Dana Htlll vs. lhft of WOifd • • • • Tlla•l.t.M:l•-MT .... llltMtt'91_.., .................. • II II ... "* lllttll ..,...,. II • • ·-• • • ·-• • • • City :a, • • ...... la • • • •••••••••••••••••••• .. ' -·- VJtOnt~aay, 5tpttmbtr 21, 1972 DAILY PH.Or Z GM Pleads for Time Auto Firm Can Meet Smog Standards-If PEBBLE BEACH IAPl -r-------, mitmenta today witbaut know- ing the ground rules that will IX' applltd to us later." ht said A third pr1ori1y. Cole 58id. .. - C.eneral ~1 o t o r s President F.dward C.O~ say!I his com- pany has been able to mttt federal smog control slan· dards ror 1975 and t97• automobiles "bot only \\'i1h prototype systems in ex· peMmental cars at Jo,.,. mileage.'' in\'Ol\'eS de velo pment of - WITH MINICOMPUTER, DELIVERY TRUCK CAN'T POSSIBLY MISS Irvine Firm's System Uses Visual Comm1nd1 In Vehicle Naked Mini Brentwood S&LBreaks New Ground 'Computerized' Trucks Delivering Newspapers Ground has been broken for deliveries. It does not require construction of t~ tenth special transponders or elec-SoutJiem CaUfomia branch of tronic signaling devices to be Brentwood Savings and Loan Association . installed at strategic locations along the route. The Los Angeles h e a d ~ He told a meeting of the American Petroleum Institute here Tuesday that GM will be able to meet the (."fllission con- trol standards only if it ha! more time, a clarification of federal ~lations and new fuels. COLE SAID TIIE top priori- ty was "more time" to develop and test the new smog control system. "Much more progress is re- qu ired to get from these carefully tuned experimental systems to mass-produced hardware that not ooly meets the federal requirements but also functions properly in the hands of our CU3lo1r.ers," he 'said. ... Jn the speech, Cole did not specify how much extra time the company wanted but he told the Los Angeles Times FINANCE i\londav that tilt• ~:nvirnn. n1cnt:il Prot('('t1on Ag e 111· \ \\'OUld have lo 111V~'I,' th(' \11 fcclive dat e back 10 19i6 111· 1977 Cole sa id " Sl·rond pnor11.v involve~ prornpt <'lnr1fif'ali(l11 nnd interpretnlion of th1' \!lj5- ill clean air st;;ind:ird:' by tilt' EPA . "Y.'E ARE EXPECTEn to meel extremely severe regu!a- 1 i o n s. . . and make in- \'t.'St1ncnts and technical coin- * * * * * * Ford Bronco,· Maverick 'Buck' Pollution Test Using a little editorial license, a Fort Worth newspaper could easily carry a front page story telling its subscribers that "this news-- paper i!I brought to your home via a minicomputer system.'' While that may not be 1 literally true, a minicomputer js certainly at the heart or a new Automated Newspaper Delivery System (ANDS) thal unerringly directs the delivery of the paper to many of its readers every day of the ..... k. quartered firm , with assets 'JN EFFECI', the system near $300 million, will occupy WASHINGTON (AP) -The to correct the engine's defi- continuously measures the a 5.300 square foot building at Environment.al Protoction ricncy, but that any new at- vehicle's location in relation to 1640 Adams Blvd., Costa Mesa Agency says th al on or tempt to certify it would re-~ pre-p~ed rou~e. th.en in January, 1973, accon:llng to• Ford Motor Company's 1973 quire a complete nf'W 50,00- lSSUeS audio and visual in-David C Grimes president auto engines has failed its mile performance test. stnacli_ons . which guide the _ and dW~ of the board. 50,000-mile anUpollution test The spokesman said Ford driver_ and flie P8J>f;f throwers The new building w 111 and canmt be sold. informed EPA that "foreign on their appointed rounds. replace temporary cftlces oow At the same time, however. material" got into a test DEVELOPED AND pr<> duced by .AVCON. Inc., of Forth Worth, the ANDS guides a delivery truck along a com· plex route and tells two men mounted on either side or a specially designed v e h i c l e when to throw their papers. The IY~ even ac~vates mailmined at 1565 Adams, 'EPA saJd Tuesday it had engine at the 38,()()().mile mark the vehicles turn signal!I east of the constnx:Uon site. certified all eleven of Ford's and may have caused test shortly before 11 Is scheduled Roger Blab' Phelps Is branch othel' 1973 engines as meeting readings which failed t o to. m_ake 8 tum, to give ~ manager of the Coe.ta Mesa of-antipollution standard!. represent the engine's normal driver added advance warnmg fice He is director of the West performance. of the impending maneuver. • Ora~e C'.ounty United ~ENGINE that failed to llE SAID FORD h 0 d For good measure, the Crusade and 8 member of the qualify, an EPA spokesman system also. detects d;iver er· Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-~id, ~as ~ord's 200 cub.ic-manufac tured about 22.000 of rors and i mm e d 1ate1 y inch, six.cylinder model in-th<' "nunked" engines so far . prescribes appropriate cor-merce. tended for use in its Bronco. had equipped about 9,000 cars rective actions. The branch is the second Maverick and Comet "·ilh then\ and had shipped , opened in Orange County by automobiles, nboul J.200 of these to dealers. And they never miss. ac· conling lo the AVCON people. ~ECAUSE O~ .~e syst~m s Brentwood Savi~s. A ~year The EPA spokesman said Udner federal c I ea n. air guidance capabilities, neither 1M.W! fer the tJnli>erly is~ · I be Id Incorporating a Naked Mini 16 mlolcompultt built by Computer Autmiation, Inc., « l ·rvlne, the AVCON syll8n eflectively demon- llrale8 the bnJad areas opened by the advOJlt of IOlclt parcel. sized computing devices. the driver nor the throwers . the Stgencrom ...... n.. r however, that approved a\•,.s. cars . may not so need ·to be ~ed. with IOQi_ by . f.....__,, 0 engines could be substituted in "'llh uncertified engines. ~·rou~~ ~~~"fi;&~h.il#ltrv. ·~ ~=··= ~r onc1 .~!'to;'.', · · ~t <~j':\t.~· ~. --.i; ,,Ebrd's """"'·'•• • n d ~~-"'~ . ,. !liilin' ~ .,,a-.1 . -. . 'Dlety ~ uptiJle4 l'e&1<1 All .u;oi llylllenl· lwdwue b ~-~ ' f J. nr' Gold at the government decision. mOanled )Jr a lll>eClal IJ>o • . ,._ UIO of glul Will be ·~ S " . • • .._ M•~1· ~· ~t~ ... ' •, ~..A,.j~ .l>l the'!:~t:.~P=ei:b'! ~iw_0·~~\'!!~1~'!1t~ ~flli/t ~'"1ii--:W1y 1m. In Dem nt.1,ls ".mmi..1onscen1rtcat1oo~no•" Tbe AVCON IJ)'Stem Is a completely self-<011tained, on- board system which directs the operation of the newspaper truck and controls i t s the~ in front of the Brent\tOOd Savirp wlll, be 200 c.i.d. en~~ncs. ·. · · \\e 'Y'll dri .. ..._, h. ·d · 1 open saturda~ as wen as .·-Not Profi•t provide addl!1onal mrornwhon . _ver wmc prov1 cs v1sua "y to the EPA aitned at certifica- mstructions. weekdays. tion and \\'iii initiate a ne\v * Farmer Uses Computer In Vineyard Sady -has been named manager of teasing for LODI (AP) -In past years, Aztmulll Equlltes, Inc., Cali!orrlla fanners used hoes, Newport Beach real estate prayers and crossed lingers to developmen~ firm. keep 'their wine g r a p e s Miss Roberts was healthy. Dick Hughes uses a prop e r t y computer, a helicopter and manager for thousands or gallons of water. Ketch u m , Protection is important. Peck: and- Hughes' vineyard Is a $3.5 Tooley. A lie-. million investment and it has ensed real yet to produce its first crop. estate aales- man...she-ls -HUGHES IS AN electrical also boot and engineer who grew up on a modera&or ot. fann where bl! father raised a dally, bus-aOH•n Tokayt grapes. After several inesa-oriented news and inter· yeers as 8J.1 electronics expert view television show which or- In lndusly, he went back lo iginates Crom Orange COUnty. formlug -but with space-age * knowledge. "E bod Is •· dr. k Gmtld A. Gute<, Pb.D. hu very Y wan ..., m been named director of ad· wine these days," he says, vanced technology for Boyle "and evorybody wani. lo grow E•"'-lng In Santa Ana. grapes." '16 .. ~~ Dr. Guter bolds a degree Viticulturists -farmers from Iowa State. He will con. who rai5e grapes -commonly tinue in research and develop. use fog-like sprays of water to ment for the engineering firm. prolec:t their crop from frool Prior to joining Boyle, Dr. damage during the w!nt<r· and Guw wu manager of en. from sbrlvellng in the sum-vlromnental products for lllt- mer. co . Btrr IN HUGHES' 900-acre He and his wife reside in San Clemente. supervised the coostn>ctioo of eight major projects for the firm. * Ernest R. Out, Jr. pre.si· den~ and chairman of Baker Oil Tools, Inc., has been elected to the board of direc- tors of Beckman loslramenta, Inc. The DowneY executive join- ed Baker 0!1 'l'ools In 1947 as a projed engineer and served In -a series of management posi- Uom. He was named president and '°neral manager of the !lnn 1n 1962 and chairman of the board In 1969. * Flnt A merlcaa T I t I e Insurance Company has ap- pointed Davk1 Davies as business development representative in S o u t h Orange County • Prior to hla · appointment, Davies spent several yean in real eatale In Cor· ona dll Mar and Hunting· ton Beach\' before join-. SACRAMENTO (APl 50,000-milc test." he said. There's still Jots of gold left in He added . "Ill the rncan- the hills or California's Mother time, our dealers have 1973 Lode, say the experts, and if Mavericks and Comets equii>- the pMce of gold rises high ped with other o p t i o n a I enough there could be another engine!, such as the 250 c.i.d. Gold Rush. and the 302 V-3." These have rrs JUST A question or how much it com to get the nug. gets out Versu5 the price of gold . There is Uttle large«ale gold mining now in the: hills and gullies east of Sacramento where the Forty·Niners dug and dreamed. The few mines that survived into the 1930s were shut down during World War U because miners "'ere desperately needed to mine copper ond other minerals needed !or war . --.-rsome ot -the mines never r.opened; others did. Those that opened have pretty much iihut down agatn by now," says Henry Jones, a. mining engineer for the U.S. Forest Service. "IT'S NOT that they ran out of gold -there's plenty of gold. It's just that the wages and eveeythtllg ebe went up to the point that the l3S gold wasn't worth what it was cot- ting to take lt out," he says. "If the price gels up lo triple tho old $35 price -f I 05 - you'll ,.. a real change." been approved by the EPA. Ford said that about 1,200 o( the 9.000 cars built with the di.spute.d engine were in dealer hands but none has been sold. Bentley Set At CompZex Bentley Laboratories, Inc., manufacturers of medical in· 1trumentation for blood handl· Thg a n d carifiO.pulmonary bypass, will expand their facUIUes for the third time since moving to lhe 4,000 acre Irvine Industrial Complex . Constructk>n of the new 76.000 square foot, two story building to house the com· pany'ii research and develop- ment group, mark e tin g department and additional "clean" room and warehous- ing facilltie,,, will be handlrd by Berney Brothers C.Onstruc- tlon of Santa Ana. Horse ~asollt')(!S with ei:tttmely low con tc111 s of lead . sulphur aJK1 phosphonis to meet I.ht: r~ quirernents or !he new ex:h;iust t'Ontrol systems. lie said (fellt.'f:tl ~folors has n:irrov•ed its develop~ to 11~·0 dual catalytic converter s~·stC'nls, "-hieh chem.ically f'O tll'l'rt poUutants into h;1r rn!C'ss vapors a.s the car's 1'xha11st sases are passed rhroug h ii. "CEllTAIN LOSG lead time produclion I o o I in~ and f;icilities art' now being ordC'red which would be ap- rh<_.able 10 ron1ponents com - 111011 to both.·· Cole s:ud, •·but 11 e 1nust delay our final choice of svstems until n1 or r dt•f1 nit"i ve performance data al'r available." n o I h catalytic co nverter ·s~·s1en1s under developn1ent requi re dual catalysts !or 1976, he said. In 1!175, G'-1 cars will use an oxidizing catalyst to ('fintrol hydrocarbons a nd ca rbon monoxide emissions nnd in 1976, he said. it wUI add ;i reducing catalyst to meet stricter standards for con- trolling oxides of nitrogen. COLE SAID o~ or the two svstems under considecalion piaces separate oxidizing and reducing coov~ts under tbto vehicle's floor, mounted in the exhaust pipe. The other, he said, combines both catalyst..5 in a convert.er urut located along with • manllold ..,._ in the engine's • x h a u a• manift>kl. 1 Finance Briefs e OH.,es Sink FRESNO -Callfornla's 19'12 olive crop is estimated at between 23.000 :ind 25,000 tons, leM than half the sire of laJt year's harvest. Bob Gros.s, manager of tbe Olive Administrative Com· mittee in Fresno, says 1m ts an off year in the alternate bearing cycle of lives, but ad- ded !roots last October and March ~re a !actor ln further reducing the slr.e of !be crop. e Airbus Order LOS ANGELES -Coo· tincntal Airlines has ~ four McDonnell Douglas OC.10 alrbllleS at an estimated totll price of $80 million. McDonnell l)ouglas w i 11 buiid the alrcraft as con-- vertibleii. meaning they can carry either passengers or air freight. eNew Exec SAN DIEGO -Hudson B. Drake, a fonner assistant secretary of commerte in the Nixon Admlnlstrallon, ha~ gone to work at Teledyne Ryan Aeronautical. a company spokesman said. Drake, 37, was named vice presldenl and g e n e r a I manager for electronic and space l)'ltems. Cenis vineyard, booster pump slR· * lions are activated by a cen-tral computer console to PhUco Ford Corporation'• deliver 8 potmds per iiquare Aeronutronic Division ba s inch of preuure for normal named Worth W. Frederick 83 lnlgatlon _ or 12 pcunds for director of operations support. the protective SJ'l'IY. Prior to h15 appointmtnt, ing the First "' o.t.v111 American staff. He has been a member of the Newport-Co1Jta Mesa and Huntington Beach ~ or Realton. He and his wife reside ln Santa Ana . The lnternatlona.1 J)rlce or gold now hovers around fro an ounce -roughly twice the l3S an ounce pegged by the fecferal government as gold's official price from the early 1930s until 1968. Until 1968, miners could only sell their gold to the government. Now they're Ire< to ,.1111 on the ln- temaUonal marteL He Runs a Stable Mot.el Frederick WU plant m&na&er Hughes designed what be of Aeronutronic's Newport callJ a .. _,...,., wale< ap-Missile Plan~ He joined the plication sylllem" to dellvtr division In oo. Ille bigh-preuuro spray to a He and his wile live In Slnla two or three-acre s:ectlon of An the vtney•r<I ror 10 lo 15 •· * ..-.. ollttn&llng betft<n Two Corona del Mar tx· S&L Tells Dividend aec:tlons. lie ,.ys he can Uvu have been .,,,,00 clellwr e.ooo galloos P • r , :'. preoldents at c. L. Peck The Board of Directors or mlnute. c.otro-In Los Angeles" . Mtrrury Sav!np, and IA>an "'1111S REQIJlllES on I y Jock E. F•brofl•• andJ. L. A-tatlon In Huntington about on•nlnlh the amount of WW1 are both veterans ln the Beach bas declared a six peI'- water we would use If al-field of c 0 n s t r u c' Ion . cent stock dlvldel'.ld payable to tempting to protect the enllre Pabreglas has !JlOnt more 1tockholdero nl record August Vineyard at once," he says. than 25 years In the fleld of 18, 1972 . HusJ>u u.1.. o t w O • dooiiD .of lndusirW and CIOIDo as _, thereafter as prac- pauenger hellcopltt to keep mmial.'lacllltl ... WW. oerwd The •tock dividend I 1 an eye on weed and water 14 years u a project manager payable on Au.gust 31 ,11972, or problem& lor C. L. Peck. lie has tlcable. . --·- IN NORTHERN Ca1Uomia's Nevada COUnty, there Is a gold depoolt '"" than two mll .. long and about a quarter of a mile wide that cootalns an estimated 570,000 ounces or gold, says a circular of the U.S. G<ologlcal Survey. 'llull'• worth about f4ll mlllloo at f!O an ounce. Trouble ls, th~ner would have to proceiii; ore than 1 ~ mllllon cubic ya of gravel as much as 400 feet deep to 1et the gold out, Ute circular estimates. 'llult would -1oO much to make mlnlng feasible with present techniques. FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) -Tom Raptl.s Isn't I COW· boy, but his idea, he thinks, makes plain horoe ...... The Scottsdale businessman has opened the first of what he hopes turns into a natlonwide chain of motels for horses. , THE FIRST ooe, which occommodates 30 overnight guesta, is a forest-brown. steel barn localed 4 milc.s nortb of· beevlly traveled lntenlat. 40. Raptis gald he bu been considering the Idea since 1969. h "After noticing all the horJeS being trailered on t e highway!, 1 began wondering "1lere their owners put !hem up for the night while the owner11 were &Jeepi ng comfort· ably in nice motel rooms," he said. AFTER TAI.KING with M!vtral horesmen, Raptis says, he found out they had trOl.lble finding accammodallons for their rour·legged companklns. Raptis says the hotie "'°tel here II a pilot projed. He char&" f7 a night for each horse . . . ) \ • • ' J. I " ' •! . ' DAILY PI LOT • FINANCE s Numhe1· of Small Banks on Rise SACRAMENTO (APl -In California 'thl! year 1 t~e'1 an unaOCU.Jtomed bustle in t~ gr!y ·fklnnel business' Of bank· ing. Alreedy tbt •\Ille. Bpnl<lng Department ha! rettived 27 applications foi-srilall, new banks, as many as It received In all of 1970. Eleven 1 lJiave been approved. The nu. of jippllcatlons for l¥ full year, said one banking offlcla.I, could be as high .. !JI). ' SoME sAv ALL this ' ac· tivltr is a normal fuDC'llon of lndll!iry sniwth. Others oay a few of ·the wouJd-be bankers may be out to sell their banks for a profll. On the grOwth itself all authorities agreed It is the liveliest year for new banks since the high-flying early 19603, maybe even as lively as the '209. . California already bas 151 chartered banks, including 'Several huge branch networks .enc' the Bank of America world's largest commerciai bank. How will the youngsters cpmpete on Goliath's home !Uri? The potential bankers say they can offer m o r e personalized service, m o r e 16971 Folrflold ci.ci., Hu•tl..,... •-• '2'4t . H4146-Ud . ORDER . ·:t . ~· I YOURS ~- TODAY! • "Effldeet Order For Yourself or a Friend· May be used on envelopes ts return •ddre11 le.bels. Alto very h•ndy •S id•ntification l•bels for m•r•ing personal items such as books, rec~~J., phot_?s, etc, labels stick on 9S.11 ind rni1y be used for marking home ~nnecl f~ ·11em1. All l•b•I• ••• prirrlod with stylish Vogu• type on fine quality whit• 9•-·' p•ptr • • I ...,---~-------~ r r(. 1-0 Is•~,,... dlllo .. INlll wt" tl.U .. I , .f , ,., ... ......,._ ...., Olli' .. r.o. ••• u .. . 1 , !'"•,...... c..,.~ . r-1 · · I : 1 . I J.. .. ' J.'"I .,.,. ,, ' I ·~ ,,1 :{ ____ ~tL~!-~~.lJM_~_:_J . -..., __ • • t • . ' , l •• • Tuesday's 'Closing Prices Compl~te New Yoi:k Stock · ~clia\tge List I l ,Im s • Complete Closing Prices-American· Stock Exchange List ' • • / •• DAILY PILOT S•lft HI• IW1.t Mitll ltw C191• tltl ) \ \ I I I 1 ! l I I ) I -. .-- 30 DAILV PILOT WtOMsdAy Septtmbrr 27, l<J72 ~ ..... TONIGHT'S TV HIGIDJGHTS KHJ l'J 7:30 -"Cry Terror." Rod Steiger and In ger Stevens head the cast of lhis 1958 movie drama . • ABC 0 8:30 -'"Say Goodbye, Maggie Cole." • !\ recently \ridowed research doctor faces nc\v heartbreak as she returns to practice. Susan 1-lay· \Vard, Darren l\fcGavin, Michael Constantin~. KCET ED 8:30 -"Spies." Fritz Lang's 1928 chil- ler follo\vs a master criminal as he masquerades as a famous banker to steal government secrets on Film Odyssey. NBC 0 10:00 -··search." Doug l\fcCJu re stars .in this new &erics. tonight battling a seientific gen· 1us bent on destroying the n1ission control center he helped tonstruct. ABC 0 10:00 -•·Julie Andrews I-four." A mus· ical salute to two golden eras in the history of shO\Y business. Guests are Ken Berry, Jack Cassidy, Rich Little and Alice Ghostlcy · TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening SEPT£MBER rt ,,0000011>mm• .. • CIJ ®J •-0 l'lclclerou "Desert Justiet" Ci) Cet S.1rt 0 '#!Id Wild Wut m TIM FWl!btontl (!) Conler Pylo tJSMC t1iJ F11lldl Chef EE Ros.11 Par• Vft'CH1lt1 fl) Hoda:1pod1t Lodp 13) Movie: (C) "Gh1 Cln1 Htlp Ir a;) LI St1und1 £1pos1 Ef) Throe Stooa:11 6:30 @ Mor••• Httoe• 0 Mo\lit: .... hold 1 Pale HorH" C:OOcl. (d11) '64 -G111ory Peck, Anthony Quinn, Oma1 Sharif. (() CIS Ntws ®) Mm liriffin Dow m-•--m •tc111r SWll9rttt•1 (j]) Firinr U.. fl!) Slltll•n el ltll ... kt (R) m_...__ a:> Ml'kl1fwt.• 11 tc.""""~lijoj~ GJDol:-l l<>OO CIJ Ol!ll- 9 lowlln1 lff Dol"'1 00 Trvtlt or~­ ()) Untalllld W111d o Whit's Mr u111r m I Lovt Luer (£) I Dr11m ot Jt1nftie EE)Clpullna flI) Sol.It! "Gl1dys Kn i1ht" (R) e> El Amor Tlene Cm de Muit1 7:30 O Th• Ciolddluers Dionne Warwic~e guests. 0 Walt Till Your F1thtr Stll Ho1111 "The Hippie" Harr} allempt:s to d1spl1y lhe hypocrisy ol one of Chet's friends who refuses lo IC· know!tdae m1teri1lism. 0 Mowl1: (211r) "Tiit N11111(' (dial •utomob~t prototype, en route non· .slop to Boston, v;mishts and Bani· tek 1s asMd to llnd how and why ii l11ppent4. 0 ~ (j) fiD ABC Wtdn1sdar Mo· vit: (C') <9CJ) "Say 'oodbye, Maul• Colt" (dr1) '72 -Susan Hayward, Darien McGavin. llli<:h;1el Constan· line. Michele fl ichols. A 1ecenUy- widowed research doctor, intent on 1ebu•lding her lite, 1eturns to 1en· trill prlCl.ice only to face new heart· break. ID MtlY Griffin Show EID fll.l rilm OdyiH)' "Spies" Th• friU Lana: chiller follows 1 mister criminal as he masiiuer1de1 11 1 lamous banker in order lo steal flOY· ernment secrets. (Germany, 1928). 9:00 O (J) Mtdit1I Cente1 Guesl Lola A!bri11:hl plays a jel set moth1r whose ailing delinouent son le1rns new v&l uts from !ht critically ill boy who is his hospilJI roomm1ti but t1nds his own recovery h1m- pered by his mother's seUishMu. Sara Marshall, Karl Held and Au- drff To1te1 co·star. tE Un Verano Para flecordar a;) U Collwntida de P1111 t:30BT..., PJotiro Show om-11_,,,.... ' 10:008~ tlnnontomes toth1 aid' of lft 1ppealln1 Yolffll Vi!tu- mese. bride (lr1M Tsu) wtlo i,; about lo bt deported because she Is 11n1ble td loeatl her ~1ic1n husband. 0 IJI a;, SCAICH Doug McClure mikes his debut as 1 star of this series when he must stop 1 scientllic 11en1us from destroying the missi1>11 cont1ol cente1 whl<:h he helped con- struct. OmNnis 0 rn ({) CD Julie Andrt•I Houf Two Golden e1as in the history of show busineu rteein 1 music1I ~lute. Julie 1ets some high st~le ass istuic1 hom Ken Berry and JKk Cassidy. Rich l1111e and A!ite GhostleJ also guest. . • O Boris Karloff P11stnb Th1i ller (£) Blll Co1b1 Show '65-Btltt Da~is, WtndJ Cl1!1. (@Soul! @ To Tell the Truth ED Cou. J1111ada (jJ You AKtd tor It E0 M11lefl1iet1 Th11t11 0 STEIGER'S m Lucia Sombr1 * EXPLOSIVE IN ail'""' "CRY TERROR'' EE Klnrdom ol the Se• 0 Milllon $ Movit: (Zllf) "'Cly Ttr· rot'' (dr•) 'SS-Rod St•lrn, lnaer lO:lO 0 T1lll Back S!evens. IB Tn1t Adftnlurt QQ) l'we Got a Sleret em ll Satanic• ID Ko11n'1 Htrt11 9 Moyie: '1ht River's Ed1e" m CIJ orain•t m •2 P1u1 Uil City &1111 9J Outi&oor Spertsman EE Loi Pttlv«a Et) Younr D1. lllW.11 (iD This Is You1 Uto Ef) Acld1ms familr 1:00 O (} Clr1I Bu1Mtt Comedian u,oo ooom mm•• .. rn@49l flewi O Orie Step Beyond Ct} M1nhal Dillon 0 .Movit: (C) "Movil Murdett(' (mys) '70--Atthur Kennedy. m Truth or Consequtncn aJ Hi(h Ch1111fTll (]]) H1tharo11 EB liamer ltd M111lron1 Andy G·11r.:h aun!s as • pe1m1s· s1vt pris. n wd1den and nirhtclub recording ~1u Helen R1ddy tuchts Clfol to s,n;i: "Australian:· I O [QI ~ Adam 12 '0Air Dfop" A youn1 girl le1ds olhcerJ M1!\ey and/ Rted lo a 'uspicious pllne 1nd leep In the mount1in1. 111:15 dl Ctnetnl 34 0 I]]@ CD Th• P1ul L111d111:3010 (IJ CBS lilt Movie: (C) "Yen· S)Jow '1ht Landloid'' P11ll Simms! paJM<t Yallty" (R) Butt Lanc1ster. Ines lo recondl• Howlo's estr1nged B If§! m Johnny C11SOn parents, hopinr thlJ'I!. lf!Yite Howir 0 Movie: "Double or Nothln(' and Ba1b1r1 lo II~• with them. (mu~) 'JJ-Bing Crosby. m Thal Gir1 0 r3 [6) ffi Dick Cal'ffl IF) T1l1lun/P11ry M1i0n m To Tell lllt Truth ffi ffeffllanos Coltil fD [Sl Eltctlon '72 12:00 m Movi&: "Scene ot lht C1ime~ FI> Lucht Libre (£) WlftOe(llJJt cti lutblU P1d1es 'II. Doda•n . CE Esllden C.11tr1I 12:30 m Ctuntry Muuc m-'c"~..,,..,.,.. 1,oo @oom• ... ~JD o ®J m "" _,..., ""'"' -lauctll "Pfolttf f'tlOenU:" A rall- r01d tit' c1rryln1 1n t1PtJim1nl1l Thursday bl rf1ME M00Hfs 1:00 ID "fury at '",,..... CMt•" <•ts> '48-Vlclor M1tur1. C..11 Gr11. l:JOO"~ to the Cltf '(rom) 'SG- Cl1r~ Ctblt. Lortttt t'OlllC. 10:00 (II "TIM ,rillCt Wk WM A Jhltf" (•dv) '~I -Tony Curtl1. II !'l u11 Ftr di• Hilla" (com) '53 -$onny Tutts, Rtrbtrl P'71on. 12:00 8 "Iii< ""' .....,. C*•I 'IZ- l:JO IJMl'tlt: "Son or ruiy" (6r1) 't2 3:00 lJ MMe: "tolPltJ fai,.. Rieh•rd Rob11, Brue• Cabot. 1:00 ID "'Stlrm Ctnltr'' (drl) '56 Blttt 0.vls. 811.Jn Keith. 1:30 Q "1llly W111 S. Ye1111(' (dr•l 1 '55 -R1ymor1d Burr. Scott 8r1dy. 1 O CC) "A TkkAsh AH1I(' (1omJ I '63-Gi1 Young. Shuley Jones. 3:00 CV ~·1 Lttt11 Acie" Concl. (dr1J '5S-Tiri,a Louise, Robert R~1n. tfij .. Mldnfrht Story" (dra) '57- Tony Curtis. M1111• Pav'n 4:001J (CJ ''T1rz1n'1 Thrtt Ch1U1t1at1." (adv) '63-Joe~ Mahoney. 4:JO (}) S.1111 '' lOAM U.tinr • DAILY "ILOT St•lf !'Mio LOVERS -Bruce Campbell and Barbara Van 1-folt are involved in a May · December romance in the Costa Mesa Civic Play house comedy "Fo.rty Carats." 1111(1·1111 KAIDAUI 0'JMUMI Jl.,f'IMli" II ) "•"C•I•• "JNE SllA~ll0' Ill Ill 11 ..... 17 M•tl lot wit~ '•.-t It\ lAlfWrtlll "ltOD,ATMll"{I) .. .,,. ....... ····~ "MANMll U.UlDll" 00 (11119+•11 ... rt .. •i••·-· 114111l WllCll ' 0fUil" ("GI ... DtCIVAMIYll ~COLD TUIKIY" (rli S~n L." I' I ~\ Hl !lo I~ ,. ' !$~·7•1T Dlff Wlfl Olflll "2001 : A Sit•<• D"y•wy" (GI 'l•.JCM•t "al.ti WA lit. Wlllff DIATW"l(GI h1'b~rfl1Yd I ~·1 ~:~,don ,31 1711 11~ .. ,~ 61•<1. , r><I o! (;M<l•n (;"H'l·ro"I')' Sl4·6~&7 WOODY IUIN •·1•1tfTllllG JOU ALWAfi WAITID TO llOW AIOllT HI lllT Wiil AflAIO TO All" (I) "•• f 'ltD IUN" l''J Ir~< ":. ,, 1 ~· :· .. ·'n , , !'• HC .. lti~d ' ' ' A H~·t. 1 !llvd, 171.1957 111'11 IPY•fNllLlll I "SAlZIUIG COlflllCTIOll" Cf'G) '"'"<•,... "CO ... UlST Of Tiii "lANIT Of fMI Af'lS" ~PG) l•r·~in ,...,.. ., '· ~1 ~ •<11: ,17.71;1 00 10 Olll llllDll 11 IJJ 'lllGlt'l lACl r "TMl AIDU CTOIS" Ot} "" "MOW TD 11/CCHI AT SIJ"'tll •'. ,., ~ o.,., ... vr•u l•·~1 ro ~.e 551-7021 (lMITllY TMUUllt '11tlltGMT IYllllfCAMl OllTOf lltllliYI" (I) ~ "IOIMAC ltltll" Ill ........... I "' .,,,y n~.r (.h,.1 P /OM "'"· 5'1-t011 1•11.0 •• u .. ~ •• 11 111 "CLOCllWORll OltANGf " (X) r1., .. lMI fOX" ~· t ' • •?. S•~ JJIJ 1°.)tr ... r 1'.vt. .~,· 01 ! t II t.> i'd, ••1.Jlt1 ( llOAO ··111n:11-1t111 KAllDillt .. ,,.., .... ,,,,,., .. (~ ... "STIAMIH II) I •• 11 ... , ... WH'lf P.-.11111 ... .-fl'L 6P~.Akoo.ltll- Theater Notes • , SCR Opens With 'Torchbearers~ -• evenings. Reservations (213) .. By TOM TlTUS OS M o.ll'f "lt.f 51•" Sou lh C o a s t Repertory . which has lackled BOme weighty subjects In its eight years of t heatrical predominance in 0 r a n g e County, will be out strictl y for laughs wh en the Costa 1'.1csa resident company launches its ni nth season Friday night. Performances are g l v t n directing !he pla}'. which 1s t"ridays and Saturdays at the s1aged Friday and Saturday playhop5e.2110MainSt.,HW1l·J':-~=========-=-=======; 438-05.16. Leading off the n e w schedu le for SCR will be George Kelly's c I ass i c American comedy ' 'T h e Torchbearers." v"hich docu- ments lhe trials and tribula- tions Of a group or amateurs trying their hand at theater. The SCR production will be the only new show on a heavy county agenda which sees fiv e other theaters winding up !heir initial offerings fo r 1972- 73. Taking their curtain calls "·it! be "Forty Carats" at both the Laguna P.1oullon Playhouse and the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. "Lovers and Other Strangers·· at the Sa n Clemente Community Theater, "You Kno\v I Can't •!ear You \Vhcn the Water 's Running·• for the Santa Ana Community Players and lhe Ana-Modjeska Players' revival of "The Drunkard." Bfl~L BLACK., an SCR com- pany member and a student of ENTERTAIN MOO !\lesa are Barbara Bruce Campbell, Engman. Bernard Neen Ash and Flanegin. Van Holt , Robert Si m on, J ackie Final performances of the Jay Allen comedy will be given tonight through Satur- day al the Laguna Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road , Laguna Beach, and Friday and Saturday at the Com· munity Cen ter auditorium on the Orange Co unt y Fairgrounds. Costa Mesa . Reservations are 494-0743 for Laguna and 834-5303 !or Costa Mesa. Americnn comedy. is directing CONTINUJ['>;G AS t h e ··The Torchbearers" for the Je11doff attraction at !he Hunt- Costa Mesa group. •lis cast jngton Beach Playhouse is 1vitl be headed by Cherie "~•lary. t\1 ary" under the Patch. Bill Brady and Ellen direction of Jean Koba. Nancy Elliott. Wells and Ron Long head the Completing the large cast cast. backed up by Alex Koba , for the Kelly comedy wiU be Rita Licdags and James E. •1. J . Parks, Ron Boussotn, Smith. Anne Sienna. Louray Rodec·.-=======+==== ker, John Ellington, Steve [)e..I· Naut, Janis J8mison, Larry ~&a:••• ....., saa:a¥1 ?""" Kulp and Rochelle Savitt. ~ .. The Torchbearers" \viii j\m: .... ..,.. play Wednesdays t hr o u g h ' · · Saturdays following its initial ''ISLAND weekend at !he Third Step , Theater. 1827 Newport Blvd.. I Costa. Mesa. "'ilh .an 8 o'clock MAGIC" curtain. Reservations 64&-1363. lngtoo Be8Ch. Reservations 5<11--4443. ''Lo vers and Othtr Strangers'' close~ out It! three-weekend run ror the san Clemente Community Theater wilh performances Thursday, Friday and Saturday. John Ferzacca directs the quartet of one-act comedies . J\1arcia Bertholf. Ron Christie, Jay Theodore and Tom Talifcrfo are included in the evening of ron1antic satire a t the Cabrillo Pla\'house, 202 Avenida Cab r i 11 o, San C I e m e n t e . Reservations 494--0743. ELSE'i\1llERE AROUND the 11,,m~sa l : .. . ,, \ Ml\YPOHI !. HA~BG~ (Q~l~ MIU E~-Show 1toth 7 P.M • CoMISIUOll'J M!ow Sot. o•d S•• fr-2 P.M. ,,lcn U•tll 4 S9t. & S••· Ad11lr. oltd Jual•" 1.50 lortola M9tl ... l•JlfY WM. I P.M. NOMINATIO llOR I ACADEMY AWAIOS ALSO -ONLY OHi ANIMAt. lllLLS fOlt THE SPOlT OF IT -GUESS WHICH "BLESS THE BEASTS ,;ND CHILDREN" area, "You KnO\V I Can't }!ear You \Vhen the Water's Run· ning'' gives its c 1 o s i n ll: performances Friday a n d Saturday for the Santa Ana Commuii ity Players. directcd l1iiiiiiiiii::~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ by Lee Ho\vington. Curtain is ll - 3,30 at !he Players Theatec. NOWI 530 N. !loss St.. Santa Ana . • Reservations 531·9738. UNCUT! "The Drunkard·' will be on INTACT! stage Thursday and Friday only for the Ana-Modjeska Players at the Garden Grove Women's Civic Club. Chapman and Gilbert in GBrdcn Grove. Curtain is 8:30 follo"'ing a 7 o'clock tlinncr. Reservations 116-2046. I !leading :nto its second1 \veekend is the comedy "J21nuary Thaw" at the Long Beach Communit y Playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim St.. Long Beach. James Brittain · I 2nd Hll "THU "Olt" s:i-1 At .... l'l'AMLr.Y ICllBIUCK'I ~ Hit ''THa S'Ol(,. ON!! w.t.·TilllrL 6;1J ,.,l 5:45 s111 .. su11. 1:11 '. •: . ' • • " • •" !': •" Comfortably Air Conditioned·: DUSTIN HOFFMAN ANNE IANClOFT "THE GRADUATE" -ALSO - LIZA MINNELLI "THE STERILE CUCKOO" NATIONAL GENERAL WKDAYS6·1 ~ SAl.&~UN.2 -4 -6-a . JO \ Woody Allen's "Evel"}'.thing ®}Uualways wanted to know about * Plus SHORT SUBJECT ' & IOAD RUNNER CAITOON 111 WKDAYS 6:45 SAT.&SUN.12,45 A(ADfMY AWARO WINNllt GENE HACKMAN Kl "FRENCH CONNECTION" BRING THE WHOLE FAMIL Yl ---CtNEDDME 20 ','.. .. • =~.:I_ -:T"..i --· CINIDDME 21 ,, .... =T . .-•·._~ ---.c:. STADIUM I '/; '_..., .... .-::..~ ---.:~. STADIUM 2 .. .. _..~~.,..,.·_ ~ -- -.. ~~ SIADIUM >J ·. ' ~:!".Jt:.•~"""C:-----.-~· STADIUM ·I .·,;~ '-....i....~~ • ... unEltFLtES AW:E (lrltE•" '"GI O.kli. Ml'Wll .. Ellw1ni A111•n a!M "THE GRADUATE" E•clo1IY• En11gtme111 Nvw No "'"•nrld Stats Wlllntr tS ! At•llt"'l' Aw•nl• "(lrlOOLElf ON THE llOO(lr" ''THE HOUSEWIVES RE,.ORT" • "SEVEN MINUTES" (II) '0THE SALllUllG CONNECTION" IPO) ''THE CONOUEST OF THE "LANET 0(1r THE A"ES" l l"G ) "SLAUGHTER" flt} • "I OX CA!t BERTHA" \R) • "THli HEW CENTURIONS" 1111 Wiit! GMrte (.. Sell! phtl ""LAY MISTY 1'011: ME•' Ill! £mo NEWPOR1 S(ftCo.i · n r •hi" entron<e to lhc labulou\ Lido l\I•• OR J 8J50 . . ................................. . 5 ~£~~.EMY AW ARD NOMINATIONS! BEST ACTRESS VANESSA REDGRAVE A Hal 'Wallis ' Production y.,, .... Repgra ve · c1 • ..o, Jack son \f,u·!J. QlH'l'll of S('OfS J-;;;:;::;;:.::::.. -=j A t:SIVttiAl •Ctf.AJI;• llCM.\ll;OUJr.l'AliA\'fS!Ol'i' iJl!.4» NOW PLA YIN!il A.LSO H llCHAllLIUlfOH----GfNIVllYI 1u..qLo "ANNE OF THE THOUSAND "DAYS" Jim '"""' • 'St.AUOMT&a• -tlUI -• ··~·· Henht>y "IOX CAR BERTHA" tRI lolh lft Ctlor • Jim .,._,.,,.ii. ,...,_ • ''SLAUOHTEJt'" "IOX c.Alt ll:llTHA'" lolll Wt c.tw (R:) A<~my AWlrd WIMffl "GAR:OIEfd OJI' FJHll-COfdTlfdlS" IRJ ''TAKE THE MONEY & dtUN" ("GI a.th 111 c ..... 1 lt ..... Wtkll A "KANSAS c1n aoM111t• V '"THa RUH SUfd" hlh ill C*r1 IN) A DOOZEY, . ~\ HALLELUJAH! ! TJlis surprising movie really swings. A ·· spelllinder. -Cll.JO#es Cll~mo/•11 l0$ ~.its f •r>C!' .. HRLSTROM ,C MATIN££ TODAY kM'ltaln Vollty '.blS •• • 01 rm ·: ,• ,. ·: ·: '. • 1 . • .• .• ·: ,. ~ , , \ ~-· d 0 r a I d Lascoe Dancers Perform at OCC Orange Coat College will hos! the nm public perfonnance of the new Matti Lascoe Dance TbeBter Com· paqy, Oct. 6-8. The appearance of the modern dance troupe from Santa Ana is SPonsored by the OCC D a n c e Department. Performances are scheduled for 11:30 p.m. in lhe CX::C Dance Studio. Members of the M a t t i La8coe trou pe i n c I u d e ~ Catherine Miller, CI n d y McRobem, Sbeila Hameion. Richaril ~-Bmm, Stepblnle Lockwood, Laird Rodet; John ~-Polter and Don '·Sdiwell' ,nesen. , " ' ~'i . Tickets !or the OCC j!OllCel'\ are priced at $2.50 ror yadult! and $I.SO for stude nts. Reservations are being made by mail only. Checks must be made out and sent to the OCC Dence Ilepartmeot, alol{l "1th DANCE LEADER a self·addressed st a DI p e d Mltti Lascoe envelope. · ---------- Blasts Black Exploitation CORE Demands Film Voice HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The Congress of Racial Equality has;i:lemanded that Hollywood stu4ios stop maJW:ia: black fiitri'J unless they have the COllE seal of !'l'Protal. Rey Innis. CORE'a national dir8ctor says that if ·tne orglnizaUon's tlemands are refllsed , "CORE ••. will take all :action necessary to 1>top th~se film from ·befng 'pro- duqd." He mentioned the J>OlflbiUty of boycott.'! and legal suits. . lnnis said his group will join wiLh . others· who have pro- tested unrealistic portrayal of blacks in recent box-office hits, including • 'Sh aft . ' ' "Superfly," and "Come Back, Charleston Blue." "We are Sick and tired of these bad films being made, destroying .the black image andproductng. the wrong kind or symbol for black youth," he said. CORE is demanding that movie studios submit to CORE review boards the scripts or all planned films involving blacks and produce the movies only if the boards approve, he said. Tbe review boards also would have the right to "pre- edit" all black movies before they reach theaters, 1nnis said. ---Innis denied that his pro- posal COMtitutes censorship. -------'-- .U-1.&Y ICUlllRICK'I COLOR @ ................. ,....._ --~~-... 1u1s: ...... ...._ tl.llo-.fto ll"O'w< • PJ:'tli V-•.lrllit<n Co-; •• the ultimate trip 2QOl:ASA&CE ODYSSEY . ,. '-'"' ~ ~~ -~~itllb<r TtCMM:OlOR ig]O (PGJ • • r • ,. CBS Bunning Third· First Ratings Sliow NBC Out Fro11t By JAY SllARBl11T CBS five. Among the real vieY'lng patterns won't be newcomers in the top 20 "-ere clear unUl mid-October. At NEW YORK (AP) -Initial "Maude" illlhJ and '·Bridget that point, the ratings really ratings for the first week of Loves Bernie·' (sixth) both oo mean something on Broadcast the new television season show CBS. Row ln Manbatlan. NBC in first place overaU, Perhaps lhe biggest surprise Then there will be sincere was ABC's "Paul Lynde woe and whoopee in the cor~ ABC a close•seeond and CBS Show.'' It opened to a chorus porate chambC!:n. A month trailing the Pack amid vows of of critical boos, yet ranked later. the networks start a strong comeback in sue-14th. another ra11 ritual-deciding iJ a ceeding weeks. But network analysts say show is a bomb, needs a new A. c. Nielsen Company the early returns don't really lime slot or will survive until portend how many will watch it's time to start "'Orrying reports that, from 8 p.m. toll what in the long run. They say about rerunning the thing. p.m. between Sept. 11 and _=:::._::::_:::.:___,,::..:::.:___:_...:.._ _____ .::_ __ ...:..__I Sept. 17, NBC had an average rating of 20.6 -meaning that an estimated 13.4 million households were watching its program,s. "It's our best start in over five years,'' an NBC spokesman raved. At ABC. the Nielsen ratings a veraged out to 19.2, or some 12.6 million households. An ABC spokesman was cautious- ly optimistic: "It's very en· couraging." At CBS, the week's average rating came to 17.0, or an estimated 11.1 mi 11 ion households. "We definitely feel we're going to win this one when the blockbusters are out of the way," a source at CBS insisted. The "blockbu ers" 8re the proven theatrical film suc- cesses and spare-~xpense entertainment specials that dotted the opening round of television's fall season. They can't go on forever -there isn't that much good material -but they make a network loo!t good in the e a r I y ratings." Among .individual shows and assorted mo.vie s, ''Gold· movie thriller, gave AB C much joy on premier week. It smote the regular series op- posite it with a 31.f rating, which me.ant that Nielsen finger," lhe James B o n d than 20 million households the night or Sept. 17. Among the week's top-rated 20 shows, ';Goldfinger" was second only to a regul~ ABC estimates it was seen in more which made its fourth season debut in an estimated 20.2 rrii~~ ho~~,, . ~·· ·Nu~ otNBC"a shOws were m. the · UJ11 '20 ; ABC pad six· an!! ' ''\ •. ,· .. '/,_ u. .t.I "-T ~~' l t ..!I'U .Jessica Back JP;i.\wooo <im).f~ · J~cWalter relul'llll to *<>ft after •• ~lr)h of a daughter.to c.,..µr wltli RDberl FOllworth in an e"piilode ol '!Medical Center." · e best·selling novel of international .espionage and intrigue becomes the suspense adventure of the year! ./ -~~- ~'.. • -:--"'1 ) • I ~1!11 llARRY Nf'MMIC ·A~~ ilAlll"A ·Co ~.,..'"!':JO( ICIAAOS$· KN!Ef'C 1("5{,N ~ 91'l'GJ PR!:lo!INGHI • l!"teled ~ 11 E KAllll'I • Scteto"lpby &,OSCAll lill\li\RO ~on11,. NorM By tlflfl'l "'"l"ll'l(S · COLC»I BV:"°'""'°'";:"=====,....., IPG! ... li--1!0·1:"\ 2ND a1c;---··-· .. - AnRACTIOll AT AU NOW EXCLUSIVELY .. • • ........................ . -STMltoilSt•• ATGOl.O•N W• T •nniH .. o::.~·~m...._, OF PWllT APES" IMAVllJD '· VIEJO .130-6990 MICHAEL SACKS VA LElltI:: PERlllHE ,/ SUU&WllOUSE·RYE A--~­Tf~• A Alss • Georr;ie P-ward · ' I ... .. . ATIENTION following this special eogogenienl ot the Newport Cinemo Thtotre "A Clockwork Orange'' will be withdrawn from rt-- le<ise ond certain conrrovers10! ~enes will be elim1na1ed; it will not be shown again uni ii Christmos Hol1doys. . . This engagement of "A Clockwork Orange" i~ the orig u1ol and uncut version and i$ roted X. "A Clockwork Oronge" was nomino1ed by the Academy of Motion Piclure Aris ~lld S.ci- erKes os the best picture of the year; n10~1 people will ento.Y seeing "A Clockwork Orof19C ·. ~ome will llOI. Roted X. Posr tively no one under 18 con be odmi11ed. Being the adventures of a young man whose principal interests ore rope, ultra-violence and Beethoven. RATED "X" POSITIVELY NOONE UNDER 18 CAN BE ADMITTED . BES! fllM Of THE YEAR BISI DIRECTOR Of THI YEAR ' '-.~ "' "' ITMll&Y' ICUllRICK'I '~(.~--:.-..~~ A S...,.llo ...... Pr..,,,,,.,."AC'.IXJ\,......."'C'•~..c.(·~·.,,..,l -~··•'cl. l,logto " ..... C.n .,_..,-~., ,. ,,. .• ,.,. ·"~•-r•""'•"l"<-.,.t..!""f lhQO"'r'-• ~~!,..,,..,,., .......... ~ .. ~-....... -...... ,,_ ,,, .. ,.,, ....... ... O•·~·oal 10 .. J• ot\ G•Oll•bl• a" V.'11<••• Ire• ""' 2ND TOP ATTRACTION BARBARA HERSHEY ROBERT F. LYONS PANAVISIOM-lECMHICOlOlt DtAUnG: Oft'llM---LOIT·llllGllWU SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT ""'""''' "J NIYI• SANli fOI MY fAfMll" wi1b MElVIN DOUGLAS " 11'1 "'GA•11rl1t•r C••••it11cr'" •••• • •• : ••· •ow.a"os ••• · NOW THRU TUES. 10/3 l1' a ion rs land Newport Beach FR 'STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR I 1 -- .., ___ _ • I \ • I I • I I I DAILY PILOT s He Dives Into Sea Hard Way Dean Westgaard, the Orange Coast College~teacher who ls one of the feft ~ to have jumped out of·an airp~ with a scuba ta* on )\ls back, survived and enjoyed It, ls hoping to 11tUrn on" others to his sport. The 42-year-old L a g u n a Beach resident will deliver a presentation on para-scuba jumping during the fourth an- nual Jnternational Conference on Underwpter Educa tion this weekend Jn ~fiami Beach. What. you ask , is para- scuba? "PUT SIMPLY, it's jumping from a plane into water," e:s:- plains Westga3rd, who teaches skin and scuba diving. "It's one of the most fantastic ex- periences you could ever im- agine." A Laguna Beach lifeguard for 17 years, he developed an interest In sky diving three years ago. "Every year we gave a lifeguard rescue demonstra-tion that included various water rescues and c I i ff rescues. In 1969 we decided to do something-different.'' Westgaard and his col- leagues put together a para.. scuba rescue. He jumped from 3,500 feet into the water ofI. Laguna Beach. Refl<;ollog on t h a t ad. vent~ Wmtgaard .DOW ~ mJts, 2118• a dtDUb. lbing do. I l!ilf'bever ~-*Y dlY ~ ing before end 1 wu com- pounding the cJa""1" bl' jump- ing lnf<I Cbe -I """"" ed, tholl(h. Mil l •doclded It was something I was ioing to have to do apln." • SINCE THEN, Westgaard has made 630 jumps, most of them oolo dry land, bul also several into the ocean. "I'd be kidding you tt I said that para-scuba is or any prac- tical use," he says. "ln a rescue mission a helicopter is of much more value, but I don't know of anything that is more thrilling or challenging." In Miami, Westgaard hopes to stir Interest in his newly- di!ICOvered sport. ''My presen- tati on will be heard by several hundred underwater educators from around the world. I hope I can turn a few of them on ." }low does para-scuba differ from skydiving? "IT'S AS DIFFERENT as football a n d • ba.s'ketball," Westgaard sayl. "In para- scuba you .are dropping free fall in fl)ll iCUba Jea!'. Believe me, that's a lot dl.ttertnl than going oul ol a plane· in a jump suit. "You've got a tank on your back plus a. reguJator, weight beJt, fin s, snork el and life ves t, so you're falling much raster than normal and you have less control. Your ce nter or gravity is different and it's more difficu lt to maintain your face-to-earth contact.'' Parachute rigging must be packed perfectly to prevent It from becoming entangled in the diving gear. When he hits the water, the para.gruba dJver must be careful not to become en.snared by shrouds or chute. ''llE COULD DROWN if he doesn't know what h e 's doing," says Westgaard. When he hits the water, the para scuba diver removes the chute and begins his dive inlo ~water. "Tbe whole eiperience , 1$ a11ly remarkable. You go t :om free-fall in gaseous space i. free fall In Uquld space," he f"Cplalns. Westpard, who makes moot of his pora llCUba Jumps off catallna bland, recently shot 80rtle footage olf the b land He baa edll<d It !or a U. minute nJm he plans to 1how al 1he Miami Beac~ cori- ference. • WtdnndaJ, Stpltmbtr 27, 1972 PILOT ·ADVERTISER 7; JC Penney NEWPORT B~CH ONLY! ·1 , I STARTS1 THURS. 10:00 A.M •••• SORRY ••• NO PH.ONE OR MAIL ORDERS! I MAIN LEVEL \ I lllDAL GOWNs.-NIWl'OlT llACH I I ~ENS FUtN14!1Hcos-HEWPORT HACH 1'-s-·, •• --------------=""""=~ ' 70 Socks-Smell Si ... Orig .• 50 _ ... -.................. NOW .33 . ID, O ng. 110.00 -·--.. _,_NOW HM 37 Men• Tio1. Orig. 5.0Q ...................................... NOW 3.11 2 Siu 12. Ong. 220.00 ..... -·-----· .. ·-·-··NOW II.II 60 Jeans. Ori9'. 2.50 ·------------:------------·-···-·-·---···NOW 1.11 11 Pre5chool Seti. Ori9. "6.98 ----·--.-----------·-··-----NOW J.11 22 Woven Pa jame1. Orig. 5.00 ........................... NOW 2.11 1 Si u ID. Ong. 140.00 _ ........ ·-····-·-·-·--·NOW 6t.ll 12 Knit Sport•hirh. Orig. 5.98 ........................... NOW 2.11 2 Siu ID. Orig. 90.00 ---·· .. --.. -... ·-····· .... -.NOW 3'.11 12 Ten-Wey Suih. !)ri9. 15.98 ..... ~---............ NOW. 7.11 36 Short Sloe•• Sport•hirt•. Or;g. 5.98 ................ NOW 1.11 1 Siu 10. Orig. 95.00 ··----....... ____ .. ___ .NOW 49.18 16 Short Sleeve Sweet1hirt1. Orig. 4.98 --·····-·-·-··NOW 1.11 15 Lt. Weight J•cJ<oh. Orig. 7.98 _____ ._,, .......... NOW 5.81 20 Boys Ties. Orif:. 1.44 -··-·--·----··-----··--·-·--·-·-·----NOW .18 12 lon9 Sleeve Sweat1hirts. Orig. 4.98 .............. NOW 2..81 24 Two-Tone Sweatshirts. Ori9. 2.49 .................. NOW 1.11 12 Tank Top•. Orig. 3.98 .................................... NOW 2.81 10 Rib Knit lon9 Sleeve Sportshirts. Orig. 4.98 .. NOW 1.11 11 Gag Shirt1. Orig. 3.98 ................................... NOW 1.88 16 lon9 Sleeve Crepe Sportshirts. Ori9. 6.98 .... NOW 2.11 20 long Sleeve knit Dress Shirts. Orig. 4.99 ........ NOW 3.50 MENS CLOTHING-NEWPORT IE.ACH 27 Men1 Suit•. Ori9. 60.00 ------··-··-·--·······-·-·--·NOW 29.00 M Mens Suits. Ori9. 70.00-80.00 .................... NOW 50.00 300 Dres5 Slacks . Ori9. 6.98-8.98 ·············--··---NOW 2.50 200 Casual Slacks. Orig. 5.98 -······-·-·--···-···-··--·NOW 2.50 240 Dress Slaclcs. Orig. 8.98-15.00 ................... NOW 5.00 164 Polyester Golf Slacks. Orig. I l .00 ........... NOW 8.88 100 Me ns Knit Jeans ....................................... NOW 6.99 50 Split Cowhide J ackets ................................. NOW 33.00 SHOE DEPARTMENT 13 Infants Shoes. Ori9. 4.99 -5.99 -------·-··-----NOW 1.88-3.88 24 G irls Dre11 & Ca5ual. Orig. '4.99-8.99 ____ NOW 2.88-4.88 30 Boys Dres 1 & CasueL Orig. 7.99-9.99 .... NOW 5.88-7.88 15 Womens Heels. Ori9. 10.99 ·--·-·-·-···-·-·--··NOW 6.88 14 Womei:ts Better Sandals. Orig. 9.99 •... NOW 7.88 23 Mens Oxfords. Orig. 12.99 -·-·---------··---NOW 9.88 46 Mens Fun Casu•ls. Ori9. I 0.99-12 .99 .... NOW 6.88-8.81 14 Mens Western Boots. Orig. 12.88-20.88 NOW 9.18-13.88 24 FamiJy Boat Casuals ....................... ______ NOW 2 ..... 3.88 60 Womens Sandals. Ori9. 2.00-3.99 -·-·--··NOW M WOMENS ACCESSORIES-NEWPORT HACH WOMINS DRESSES-NEWPORT HACH Group l-Misse1, Juniors, H•lf Sizes. Orig. 12.00 .... -.................................................. NOW 7.88 Group ll-Mi1ses, Juniors, Half Sizes. Orig. 14.00 ...................................................... NOW t .88 Group lll--Misse1, Juniors, Half Sizes. Orig. 16.00 .............................. -........... _. ___ .. NOW 12.81 Group IV-Mis1es; Juniors, H•lf Size5. Orig. 20.00 _ ........... -........... -..... ___ ,, ............ NOW 14.11 GAID£N SHOl'-NEWPOIT llACH 1 Cu1t.m Concrete l ift A fire B.B.Q, complete Orig, 236.95 ....................................... -... NOW 133.00 1 Custom Concrete Broiler B-B·0 1 complete. Orig. 173,95 ........................ -... --··-· .. _NOW ft.DD 26.88 16.18 7.88 5 Aluminum Smoker. Orig. 3'4-.99 -----·--·---·-NOW 6 BBQ Brazier w/oven. Ori9_: 19.99 -·--··---NOW 10 B-8-Q Br•1ier. Ori9. 10.b~ -····-----·---------NOW 16 Asst. Ed9er & Mower Blades. Orig. 1.19-3.99 ....... -............................... NOW .66-2.44 6 Blitz Insect Fogger. Ori9. 29 .99 ·-··---·----·NOW 22.11 380 As1t. Sprinkler System Parts. -----·--·-·------NOW .10 4 Wood Plenten. Orig. 15.99-19.99 -·-·NOW 1.88 51 Ant. Wind Bo lls. Orig. 2.99-l.49 ...... -.... NOW .H 8 Pebble Poh. Orig. 1 l.99 .. : ..................... NOW · 8.88 7 Redwood Well Pocket. Orig. 4.50 .......... NOW 2.11 6 I Gel. l iquid Fertilizer. Orig. l .50 ........ NOW 1.44 AUTO CENTER I t • -' CREATIVl -~HERY D~EWPOIT IE'ACH 1 o-6x6 N .. dlepoi# Kits. Orig. 6.00. .................... NOW 2.88 18 Hot Pants CroQ!iet Kit. Ori9. 1.9. ··-·-·-··-·-.. --,.NOW .25 12 .. Faltciall Kit1: Qrig. l .98 ......... _ ..................... NOW .18 JD Aog & fl'•m• ~its. Orig. l.99 ................ __ .... !'IOW ·.25 PIECE GOODS DEPT-N .. POlT IEA~ 60 yd1. Poly 'Pblknit Prinh. Orig,; 5.44 ....... ..:.:.NOW 3.44 30 yds. oenst•r Sportcloth. Orig. 1.09 ···-·--·---:~VI .so 120 yds. Asst. Synthetic Bend Prinf1 . Orrg. 1.98 NQ.W .88 40 yds. Re.d/white/blue Vote All Cotton. . .. Orig. 1.79 ............................................... ~ .... NOW 1.22 40 ycls. All Acrylic Safari Prints •. Orig. 3.99 ', ___ NOW 2.81 ' . I TOWEL DEPT.-EWPORT. IEACH I 120 Buch Towel•. Orig. 1.44.2.00 ...................... NOW .99 40 Ter r)' Beach Coverup. Orig. 12.00 ------·---·-·--NOW _5.88 40 Matchin9 Terry B19s. Ori9, -5.00 -·------·---------NO 2.88 \ ' LOWER LEVEL \ ._I __ H __ o_M_E_•LE_cT_•_o_N_1c_s-11 __ EWP __ o_rt_111A_c_'H~_Jt 6 Mini Ce1sett-. Recorders, mike. Ori9. 79.95 NOW •• 18 47 AM Cessette RecordeN. Orig. ll.88 --------NOW ~.88 2 AM-FM/ AM Stere.o, 2 Spkrt. Or;g, 299 .. 95 NOW 21'.DD 3 Cassette Automatic Ch•n9er. Or.19. 179.95 NOW 124.00 10 Deluxo Hi-Boy TV Cart. Ong. 21.95 .......... NOW 16.00 12 Rubber Floor Mah. Or;g, 0.0-0 .................... NOW J.tt 10 AM-FM Stereo Radio. Orig. 59.95 ............ NOW J~.00 4 Dre51er Trays. Ori9. 4.88 .................... NOW 1.88 120 Coolite Safety Torche1. Orig .. 99 ·--·-·------NOW 3/1.00 15 AM Clock R•dio. Ori9. 19.95 ----------·---------NOW 1.88 36 Umbrelles. Orig. 4.00 to 6.50 ··-···-··---NOW 2.88 72 Lum• Jet Fl•shlight5• Orig .. 99 ·-------·---------NOW .SO 8 Sewing M•~ine., Orig. I 59.95 ---------·--------NOW ff.00 9 Dreiser Sets. Orig. 5.98 -·······-·······-·-·NOW 2.88 10 8 Track Porteble Tape Deck. Oriq. 79.95 __ NOW J0.00 J Delu ice ,Modjm D•lr. ,O_r~9. 96.po ··------------NOW 6J.88 5 lin9erie Ca5e-Ori9. 7.00 .................... NOW 3.88 I Alum inum Mag Wheel5. Orig. 32 .95 .... __ .. NOW io.oe ; ' I l -• -~ ,-I 5 Mirror Tray. Orig. 5.00 ................ -.... : ..... NOW 1.18 14 AFX Safety Holmeh. Orig. 19.18 _ .......... NOW IZ.H CAIPETIH-.NEWl'Oif llACH I Mirror Tray. Orig. 7.00-9.00 , ___________ .... NOW 3.U 2 Bennelli Mil i-Bi kes. Ori9. 299.00 __________ ,.NOW 1$0.00 · . .. _, .. 7 Strew 11endbeg•. Orig. 6.00 ,_ ............. NOW 3,18 12 Aut. s .. 1 Coveri. Orig. 31 .95 ..... _, __ ,NOW 1.... 4 Coreord Rug• 8Val 1 V,. OrJt .. "J9.99.'.-.,N.9'f" Jf.H 12 Sliovldor kgs. Orig. 5.00 ..... --......... t>(QW J .11 I . U Volt Auto S.tteriu. Ong. II.II ___ .NOW 12.11 2 6r...,c.f.Jlug• 6d Royal. \Orig. 34,P NQW .U 20 ~ppliqM Purio•. Orig. 4.00 ................ N.Q}'.>'1 2.11 lZ .~711~U -Glan Bolled Tira•. Orig. 32.00 ...cNOW II.DO 3 Su tenle (\i(t• 9~!2• ~Id., -~ ........ ~NOW .~.18 52 ~Ip ~el Ha,dbag. Orig. 7.00 N "W·-'.' · 5.lt ,, I· . I\. l \ '!7 Gl!o!va:f H ... •g•. Orig. I 0.00 ............ 1• " ' ·I.~ ,. . ..:..O. •. ' . ~ 1: · ~ H 1f.~ollli!i!Jtmanl Handbeg. f,,, · •· ~!91 ' I ~ ,...,;.;i,:i.,. ;; ~.;:·~t;.~·o;i9'.:-Z.iiii : :::: : ::Now • 2:: . DltAlollT '& CUITAINs-HlWPOIT ~at .. < I Sw!••I Ch•!;., i:!t~~t~;~~·o.;g: ... p~'.~ -·-~g~ \n:: ,. 2' ,j\sjk. """'!'··· Orog. 1.25 ................ " . ,a,; .. t ' ' . ~l .;.. • l '· 5 {i/•'(l!l ·CJi~ir·~· err::~ affli~hit~?.'1~.·0,09 .--.... NNOOW 66.DO ,JIN{~ W,1de Loether Belh. , , o4ff ~ , vr•t ,22-3.99 ·-······ ....... , > f.i ~ , •~"" .DO 25 ·~!~.~i'-?;;~~·d'L;;ih~; .. 9~·1+;:" mmm N~. ~ r J.ll I . '-~ le~s.11• -o.~·~"~:,8'il'~ .. :36~i~9 i;/;.'oo··~gw ''ft.:"' . '.f.1£~ : ' :;1:!~~. ·"·':.~:.9.5.:.« -~o :: Orig. 5.00 ............ i ............................. NOW 3.11 1 Ant.' Sat;n Dupo 120'1xlT' •. Orig. 64.00 NOW 50.00 .w..·-f1 .. Cllair. Orog. 209.00 ............. '. ..... NOW,'f .OD 20 Women1 Vinyl Belts1 1 Ori9. 2.50 ._ ...... NOW .II 2 Open Weave Drape 16'2"x81". ' ' ' ' >G 14 Beech Umbrelles. O!~ig . I 0.00 ............ NOW 8.18 Orig. 81 .60 ........ m .... -.......... _ ............... NOW 55.88 .CAlilDAS ' N iT llACH • ,, 35 Pierced & Mini Clip E rrin95. 1 Open We•v• Dr•p• 52"x81". · Orig. 2.00 ............................................ NOW .88 Orig. 34.40 _ ..... -.----·-"·----· .. --.-..NOW 22.88 1 Pen~c,.s) i-1 ;z..lii ~o•i• Camara. 20 Poerl Earring1. Orig. .OD .................... NOW .88 Orig. 1~~1~5 ·-··--·-........ -............ -.......... NOW tot.ts 3 Mu•k•I Jewelry B •• , •. Orig .. 18.00 .... NOW 12.88 LAMP DEPT.-EWPOlt\' llACH I 5 Pennc~a,t'Wn•t Str•p. Orig. 1.50 ..... ; .. ,, ___ NOW .. M 56 Asst. Boxed Pins. Orl:g . 5.00 ................ NOW J,88 10 Po la ro id Development Tim•r. Ori9. 3.88 .... NOW ... 1.81 22 Bike Totes. Orig. 3.2$ ---··-.. ··--··-·-··-···-··NOW 1.88 5 P h d I' L' h B Or < ' 1 Bell & Howell Super I Movie Outfit. 226 w w· o · 1 19 00 NOW syc • e 1c 19 t oxes. i9. 14.98 ___________ NOW 6.81 o · 199 95 omen• •g•. rog. . ................ 7.88·10.88 3 T bl '. 0 . 21 98 26 91 NOW 12.11 rog. . ... -.......... _,, ___ ,, ............. -.. -... NOW Ul.DO 23 Wig Spray Or'g 2 01> NOW 88 • 0 ~mp•. rog. · . · ·····-· .. ·---··· r---::--:---------------.:..:. · ' · · .................... _.. • 8 Teblo & Swag Lamp•. Orig. 29.98·39.98 .. -.... NOW 18.88 . STATIONARY 'DEPT.-EWPOIT llACH WOMINS HOSIERY & INTIMATE APPAREL-3 Teblo Lampi. Ong. 36,98-39.98 -·--....... ___ NOW 24.11 NEWP,ORT HACH 21 lace Body Suit. Ori9. 5.00 .. ,_ ..................... __ NOW 3.88 18 Button Front Body Suit. Orig, 6.00 --··-···-·---.NOW 4.88 250 Knee High•. Orig. 1.00-1.25 ...................... NOW .66 105 Knee High s. Orig .. bb ·-··-···········-·····-···-······-NOW .JJ 229 Ti9hfs-A5st. ·colors. Orig. 3.00 .................. NOW 1.88 24 Rayon Panties IPinkl. Orig. 1.00 --··-·····----··NOW .66 WOMENS SLEEPWEAR & LOUNCOEWEAR- NEWPOIT BEACH S lodjackeh. Orig. 7.00 .. -............. : ............. NOW 5.18 41 Sc.u f1-L•die1 Sizes. Orig. 3.00 ·------·--------·NOW 1.11 26 Junior Loung• Shilh. Qrlg. 12.75 ... ____ .. _NOW 9.11 13 Polyester lou·ngewear. brig. 8.00 ··-··-····---···NOW S.88 22 Ceftans-Mis5es Size5. Orig. 13.00 .............. NOW 7.88 25 Sleepwe•r Gowns. Ori9. 7 .00 .................. __ , __ NOW 5,88 23 Hostess Gowns-Misse5 Sizes. Ori9. 18.00 .. NOW 15.88 6 Nylon Short Gowns. Orig. 5.00 ---------·--·----··-NOW 2.88 16 Polyester Shifts-Misses Sizes. Orig. 11 .00-13 .00 .......................................... NOW 7.88 4 Polyester Dusters. Orig. 12.00-13.00 ............ NOW 7.88 5 Dotted Swi51 Robe1. Ori9. 12.00 --·---------------NOW 7.88 S Junior Robes. o ·ri9 . 9.bo · ............................. _.NOW 7.18 5 Terry Caltan1. Orig. 1l.00 1 ............... : ........... NOW 7.18 I JUNIOR SPOtTSWU.i'.0-J!EWPORT HACH I 45 Valour Topi. Orig. 7.00-9.00 ............. _ ... NOW 4.88-6.88 26 Body Shirt•. Orig. 9.00 .......................... NOW . 6.88 60 Jean• & Penh. Orig. 8.00.11.00 ............ NOW 5.81-6.88 12 Tennis Dre11e5. Q:ri9. 15 .00 -----·-··-·--···---·NOW 11.11 60 Halter Shift•. Orig. 4.88·6.99 ; ........ , ....... NOW 1.H 30 Applique Tank Top• ............... ! ................. NOW .11-1.H Swimwear. Orig. 6.99-8.99 .................... NOW 2.tt-4.H 80 Womens Blou1es. -·----···-·-·······--· .. ····-····--NOW 1.H WOMENS SPOl1SWIAR-;NIWPORT llACH I 15 Cep••· Orig. I I .DO __ _.__'.__,,.,_ ..... NOW ' 6.IL 70 Miuu A"kl•p•nh. Or;g, I .DO.I I.DO ... _.NOW 4 .... 7.11 20 M;•us SIH•alHs Topt. Ori9. 2.50 ......... .NOW .11 60 M;ue1 Pent Top•. Orig. 9.00-1 1.00 ...... _NOW 6....._18 . 5 Mate,,itylop•. Orig. 6.00-7.00 _ ........ _NOW .18 . ,., WOMENS COATS & JACUTS-NIWPOIT ~CH I 4 Swoetar Coeh. White, only. Orig. 12 .00 .. -..NOW 6.11 12 Sw .. tor Coah-Plaid•. Orig. 21.0D ............ NOW 14.11 9 Viny l Jac~ah. Orig. 12.00 ............................ NOW 7.18 9 Boot Length Jacket. Or;g. 16.00 .................. NOW t .81 8 Biko Jeckat. Orig. 13.00 ............................... NOW t.11 6 Pant Length Jacket. Orig. 20.00 ...... -............ NOW 14.11 . . . HOME DECOltAT0~1\: DEPT~RT !'JACH ·.1 60 Herb Plaque•. Ong. 2.98 ,._,,_ __ .:.:. .... _,_.NOW 1.22 20 l•r9e love h Plaques. Orig. 4.00 .:------~-·-NOW 1.88 .f 24x48" Mount•in ScenM. Qri9. 21 .88 ---·-NOW 10.18 1 6 Ft. Grandlathor Clock: Ori9. 425.00 ..... :NOW 344.DO 1 6 Ft. Grandl•ther Clock .. Orig. 250.00 ...... NOW 166.00 4 Wall Clock•. Orig. 14.~0-25.00 ........... -..... NOW 9.88 IEDDING DEPT.-EWPORT UACH 1 Velvet ledspread, Queen Siz•. Orig. 125.00 •. NOW i5.00 I Solid Blue Qu;lt Spr .. d, Qu .. n Si .. , Orig. 45.DO .......................... --.................... -.. NOVf 24.88 1 Textured Velvet Spread, Full Si:ie, Orig. 60.00 NOW 29.tl 2 Rod QuOt Spread•. Full s;u. Orig. 17.00 ........ NOW t .81 3 Red-Orange Spreads, Twin Si1e. Orig. 15.00 NOW 8.18 GIRLS DEPT .-EWl'ORT HACH ·50 Girl1 3 pc. Sleepwe•r. Orig. l.98 ---····--···NOW I M•xi Sleepwear Gown1. Orig. 2.98 •....... NOW 40 Girl1 Swe•f1hir+1. Ori9. 2.49 -··-·---------NOW 10 Sportswear Coordinate Sets. (7.141 Orig. 6.00 ................................................ NOW 20 Shor+ "Sleeve Polyester knit ToP:'· Orig, 3. 59 ................................ : .............. NOW 8 Mexi Skirt• 17-141 Orig. 6.00 .............. NOW 10 Print Short• 17-141. Orig. 2.59 ................ NOW 120 Two-Piece Bikini Swimwear (7-141 · Ort l.6~ .............................................. NOW 60 Giro °'""°' 17-141 ............................. NOW 120 Vinyl R•inco1h. ------·-··-···-·--·-----·--·-···----NOW 15 Nylon Short Sah l3-6xl. Orig. 2.50 .... NOW 30 Aul. Short• ll-6xl . Orig .. 77 ................ NOW 15 Stretch Terry Jumr,suif1. Orig. 5.00 ___ NOW 20 Jr. High JHn•. Or g. 6.DO · ............. : ...... _NOW 12 Jr. High Mui Dra11••· Orig, 15.00 - ... NOW INFANTS ,_,....-wPol'r llACH -· .II .88 1.11 3.81 2.81 4.11 ... .81 1.88 1.44 .11 .44 3.18 3.18 1.88 5 CLottar Opanor. Orig'. 1.81 ....... -............ -... NQ.W .II 6 eramjc Desk Ashtray. Orig. 2.88 --------J ... NOW'l'•,j.18 2 !,rc· .Desk Sat. Or;g. 4.88 .................. -... -.Now ·~lt.11 J '"'ck Motel Bookond•. Orig, 14.88 ................ NOW f0.88 3: japb Mal•· Pen. Gold. Orig, 2.81 ................ NOW "1.88 Cu~ o Pen refill. Orig •. 44 ···------·----··-·--·-···-·NOW . • .22 85 lip On Gaucho String1. Ori 9 •. 88 -·----.-~-·----NOW :, .44 ~' ~irir Patche•. Orig .. 44 ................... -._ .. , .. _NOW · .22 4 ce,tod Ro••~ Orig. 1.88 ... -....................... No\'(, .88 40 Name Note Siation•ry. Orig •. ll __________ : ____ .NOW .\ .1 O 200 Aut. School Supplio•. Orig .. 88.10.00 .... NOW ~5 DO 1 18 1 ~ndex Cud,,.· Orig .• 35 ............................ NOW , 0 15 •real Pod Lobel•. Orig •. 17 .................... NOW · 10 14 Clairol Eleclfic Shev.r. Orig. 1/.88 ........ NOW (ii 1:11 t . HoU~ARIS NIWPORT ~'" I 21 Dool-A-Coo~•• Mahr. Orig. 3.98 ................ NOW 1.11 250 Assorted Kitchen Gadgets. Ori9 .• II ........ NOW M 77 Ro•ster Pans. or l•gs. Orig .. 99 ·----------··---NOW .66 40 Seh ol 4 8Hr.61au ... Orig. 1.33 .............. NOW 3/1.DO 30 N.•••lty Cookoe Jen. Orig. 2.99 ........... NOW 111 45 Pint Si:i• Thermos Bottles. Orig. 1.44 ___ :::::Now :a8 1 6 Rropl~ce :::~:.A~:;=:~ .. ~::: .. NOW 17.J 6 Ele.ctr1c Solder1nn Gun. Orig. 15.98 NQW 7 18 1 L th S d 0 • ......... _. 5 T~ll.~y tlrghl ~~~~~·~i9.'.49:oo·::::::::::::::::~g~ ::::: 2 Cont•.mporery .Light fixture. Orig. 39.00 ... -NOW 27:tl 4 El~ctr1c S~lder1n9 Gun. Orig. 11 .99 ----------.NOW Ill 14 16 .E>~an.,on Leddar. Orig. 19.88 ................ NOW 12·81 1 S Ant1qu1n9 kit1. Orig 4 49 • 3 3" 18" 8 It S d • : ... -...... " ............... NOW IM 6 S b S • •n. er, Orog. 39.99 .................... NOW 2th • re aw1. Orig. 14.99 NOW f 6 !-< " Electric Drill•. Orig. 9'.99··=::~::::::=::::::::::NOW ,::: I TOY DRT.-EWPOtr !-'CH ' I 4 Aip, Wil•on Dollt. Orig. 6.H -.... -............ NOW rei 4 7 WhL orlouts 6Qr·~ ... Orig. J.H .. -....... _ .. ,_.,,,,,NOW 1:. o9u• •· "I· J.66 NOW IM 12 Dop w Dan. Ori , 5. H ____ -, ......... _ .. 10 Welting Lotter S~. Orig. 4,29:.--~.:_::::· .. _..fl,NOOWW ~ 10 Toddler Three-pieco Sleepweer. Orig. 2.91 .... NOW .11 -.__ 7 Acrylic Ovanl .. p•r. Orl9: 3.98 ···-'-'---..!fOW I.II . , • IPOITINI ~ 15 Aut. lnlenh Pley1uln . 0r19. 3.69 ...... ____ NOW .II --------· ,,.~ llACH ', • JO Ankle P•,h. Ori9. I.DO -·--.. -··-·--......... NOW M 51 Pkg. 'Durei.. oil/I Goij 811!,0rlf' J 1.99 NOW l/\.21 35 Toddler fHh~/•nh. Orig. 3.00 .................... NOW M 7 l•omatrlc .. oreist Kit. Orlt:l".4f ............. NOW 1.11 50 Polo Shirts. r of.' 2.00 ................................. :_.'.HOW .88 1 JI A••!:1flthin9 Accos!orlK. Orft. .4f.l.7t .... NOW ,10 60 Stretch Tfrry Pey•u;h, Orig. 2.50 ................. NOW• .18 3 A.,H•M<loJl°loDO R .. I. Orig. 31 .n ... _ ...... NOW II.II 6 Crib R•d•. Orig. 1.19 ..................................... NOW .44 z, 11 x13' Lo.i., Pola Tant. Orig. 149.91 ...... _NOW ' tf.00 2 5 5 ::sstn:!t llnw•'•· Orig. 3.98 -·····-·····-··...-······--NOW .II 31 ~·n• Tennl1 O..e111_1 ................... -.• -.-i...:Now " I.II ys rancy alerprool Pe nh, Or;g •• 1.43 ·;--NOW• .Ill ,A mectrlc BOit Meueger. Orig. 79.95 .... -...... NOW UM As his hobby, Westgaard now teachcs lky ljlvlnc at Per- ris Valley Airport. lie has pul more lhan llOO poople oul ol alrplanet without once ·en, countering an accldent. ' Shop Penneys Newport Beach -Monday, & Fri. 10-9:30..:.. Tues~Wed.·Durs.. 10.,9-Sat. 10-6. -Sun.· 12 to s • . ------• i • i I ' • . • ! ' I 1 • -t 1 •• l! • ;~ ' l . ,,'(" . '\ . (I '~···~ ' .· I l And for the next 10 days, through October 8, your visits to the Plaza will be as richly exciting for the Bri- tish goods you'll find, as for the pa- geantry and spectacle. You'll see many colorful personalities, British craftsmen and artisans at work in our various stores 1 ·~nd 'Cfa fly events, in- cl ud'i ng Punch' and Judy . shows, bands and music, pric~less museum ' . ~ -··-· • displays, and a chance at one of five free trips to England via BOAC and party cruises on the "Spirit of Lon- don". Entry blanks available at all stores. It's the best of Britain for al - mosttwo simply smashing weeks. You could say, "there's never been a British invasion of such magnitude since 1776": Opening ceremonies .start-at l1 a.m. Thursday. ' , ' ~ . ..... . ....... . S. C. Plou Wednesdoy, September 27, 1972 P19e . • • I South Coast ?Iua -STOL AT llAN DIEQO l'Al!£WAY, COSTA MIESA ---------' OVl£R 8!5. FINt STG>RES· A~O ·sERV!Oes ••• DEPARTMENt STORES ••• May Co. •Sears t WOMEN'S APPAREL ••. Albert's Hosiery• Alroe •Martin Beren'a •Chris' Fashions • Finn'•• Gen,·s • 11oµse ·of Nine , Hub~b •Judy'••. Lane Bryant ··Lillian's• Joseph Magnih" Marlene. Fabrique • Mio Hawaii• Sabrina •The Wet Seel •Young· Maternity• Zelig's Caaua( _f.aahldns • ~S •l\'f'~~·· .. Car~t'a • Chaafo'•" Gentryi Ltd. ~Grodin 's• Harris~ Frank'• Prep'Shop •Rebel Shop• Tie Rack• CHILDREN'S APPAREL ... Beriisti'om's Baby Ne~s • f-'MIL '( SHO~ , "'. Gucle•·Barnett • lnnes,Shoes • Thom McAn • WOMEN:~ SHOES ... C. H. Baker• Cameo • Field's • Joyce Shoe Tree • Leed's ~ CHIL.i:>REN'S SHOD .. : Cabot's • HOMl!·.fURNISffiNQS ... Golder) ('leec;lle : H(ll!se of Fabric~ .. Knit Wit• Siflger ··lJdoff's •VARIETY-DRUGS .... South Coast Drug • F. W. Woolworth • Jl!WE.RY.Qll'TS •.. Chi¢ Accessories Galleon •Jewels by Jolilph • Koven·Jewelers • Georae Mu.rray •Pace Setter• Raj of Jndia •Raj International• Sunset House• Weiafleld'• • •..aq1>:9ANDY .,. Hick!*Yfa~•Llii<fbe.rl!_Nutritlon•See's •RESTAURANTS ..• Harveat.House •Kaplan's• King's• LePetit Cafe• Rivier.a •SPECIALTY SHOPS •.. A La Card• Cline's• De<:orator Line" HcitJse of Terry• P\cl<wlck Bookthop • Ro<>ten's Luuage "Sports Plaza • ;rinder Box• Toy Center• Watti chs •Winstead Cameras• SERVICES ••• Bak Portrslt.st!Jdlo , ~f ~d:ie':* • C~ownlfli Glory Beauty Salon •.House o~ Tailorina • C?n the .Go Travel • Opto!1"etrist • Peter Pan Beauty Salon• FINANCIAL ... Avco 5avlna• & Loan • Bar\k of Arii4irlca • Crocker Bank• FlrSt Western Bank" Househqld Finance» Pacific. Slnilngs • U .S. Nation.al Bani<" THEATRES .•. South Coast Plaza I & 11 Theatres • . . J I , • .. , • P•tl' 2 Wednood•y. September 27, 1972 S. C. Pl•u Here's the Complete Programme of Events or British Expo .,7~ Thursday, September 28 IJ :OO AM 12 Noon 2:00 PM 10:00 AM lo 4:00 PM 7:30 PM ' ~ .. • • 10!45 AM. 12'30 PM aa4 2:30 PM BRITISH EXPO OPENING CEREMONY Miss Sally Ann Howes, Britl."1,star of "The Sound of Music," British officiaJ visitors and local civic leaders. A Lockheed LIOU aircraft with Rolls-Royce RB211 engines will fly overheacj. BRITISH EXPO CIVIC LUNCHEON Her Brit.annlc Majesty's Consul General and Mrs. Andrew Franklin open THE TWO EUZABETHS uhibit tn the Mall and BRITISH WATERCOLORS exhib!Uon during tour of Plaza. Friday, Se ptember 29 "BRITISH FILM MATINEE"_,,ontlnu- ous showi ngs of short British fllms at South Coast Plaza fl Cinema sponso(ed by P&O,<BQAC, British Rill "1tei'111tlonal and Br!llil) Tourist Authority. (Free admission le public). llJll'nSi':rm'SMOKlNG CO~ at the Tinder Box, Try a pipeful of British ~1111 tl7•for a prize. urdtiy, Se'ftember 30 / \ I •' . SCOTTISH.DAY Talk to fellow Scots and listen to the pipers. (In association with BRITISl-1 CALEDONl!l.N AIRWAYS). Performances by pipers of BRITISH CALEDONIAN AlRWA YS PIPE BAND. Daily Events Several ft Elpo'I .~ ...... will be CODlinuow and w1ll be pretealed every day. Here's a rundown on what'g bt,ppentna every daY. at South Coast Plaza, Weekdays from 9i. LDL lot p.m. and Slinday (Oct. I) from noon lo 5-p.m.: · ;pRmBll EXIUBITS -They're on display throughout the Plaia Mall ar.1. BRITISH CRAFTSMEN -See them at W<l'k at various stores in the Pllza, especially those featuring apecial mer· chlndlae imported from England for Eipo. DARTS TOURNAMENT -It's at the Hungry Tiger Res- latll'lllll Dally prizes offered In lhll traditional BrlU1b game of Kill. AinE HOWARD-Loodcn'1 fllllOUI town crier wtD "cry out" tbt news each day In all areu ol. the Plaza. 11:00 AM Performances in Carousel Court by snd 2:00 PM ROYAL SCOTTISH COUNTRY DANCE TEAM. 12 Noon Performances in Carousel Court by and 3:00 PM members of SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA HIGHLAND DANCING ASSOCIATION. 11:30 AM Openi ng of "POR CELAIN OF PRINCES" exhibit at Pace Setter store by Her BritanniC' r.1ajesty's Consul-G eneral and Mrs. Andrew Franklin. S1111day. Oct ob er I Concours D'Elegance 10:00 A~f A snow of distinguished British cars, in to 4:00 PM association with the Rolls-Royce Owners Clubs and the Bentley Drivers Club in the Plaza parking area off Bristol Street. Parade and judging will be held in the morning. Display and prizes awarded in the afternoon . (Free adm ission to view the ca rs). 12 Noon 1\1 onday, October 2 JUNIOR LEAGUE OF NEWPORT HARBOR BRITISH FASH ION SHOW AND LUNCHEON at Balboa Bay Club in association \Vith htAY COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA AND JAEGER OF LONDON. !For tickets apply: Mrs. Norman Lawson (714) 642-4888). Tuesday. October 3 12 Noon THE BRITISH AMERICAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE LUNCHEON FOR EXPO '72. Speeches b.v Mr. Russell J. Clark <Nationa l We~tminste r Bank, Lon don) and Her ~1aiestv's Consul- General. <For ticket in foi-mation cal l Mr. James Musgrove (213) 622-71 24). 2:00 PM FIND THE MYSTERY MAN- to 4:00 PM SHERLO CK HOLMES CONTEST Your chance to play the great detective and challenge the mystery man who is lurkinll in th e Plazrt . Clue s announced over the public address system and valuable prizes. 2:0'l PM · .f '\EGEll Oli' LONDON ,..,;11 nre"P"t t heir to 3:00 PM f'al1 Collection in a FA Sf'IO N SH OWING :i t the Mav Comnanv in th e Forecast Deoartment, street level. 8:00 PM "-fr. A. A . C11mminl?'. Director of the Plvmouth M•1seums. will '°ve a soecial Ht~11rlr Gnided T,,11r of the TWO F.WZAB11!THS exhibit. (Reserv•lioos r96uired fn alivarire. Apply t o the Expo 11\!ormatlpn Stand). Blll'nEH BOBBY -P. C. Weedcm, a reot·London Bobby and, Pollcewoman w.-bolb wm po1ro1 llie ma11 1n uru'. f--day. They'll -q--Eqlsnd. ~O ELIZABETllS'-A. A. Omtmlitg; !ftrector o1 Plym. City museums and an galleries, ·wru be on hand to >., d!li6lll the eihlbtt. ·, -..;. _ e _,(t j, Oct9b,,e 1 r 1, , f~ AND BJSCUr.l'S -Tradltlooal Brllisb refreshment """' • will be ter11ed free ol charge 11 >the Terrace Room of the 2:00 'PM JAEGER OF LONDON will present their 9:30 AM to 9:00 PM 7:30 PM 9:30 AM to 9:00 PM 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM 10:00 AM to 9:00 PM 4:00 PM to 7:00 PM ment, !be RL Hon. Peter W M.B.E., M.P., plans to visit the Thnrsday, October 5 BRITISll CRAFl'SMEN'S DA BRITISll CRAFl'SMEN IViU be glvlri special demonstrations today. Mr. Jark Melnick, well-known Hatton Garden diamond cutter, can be seen at Jewels by Joseph. Mr-Elwyn James, Potter and Designer for Josiah Wedgwood & Sons, Inc., will be at the Pace Setter shop. BRITISll PIPE SMOKING CONTEST at the Tinder Box. Try a plpeful of Brltlsb tobacco and try for a prize. Fridtiy, October 6 WINNIE THE POOH CHILDREN'S DAY WINNIE THE POOH, accompanied by EEYORE and TIGGER, will roam the Plaza and give away free balloons. oourtesy of Seara. Visit the HISTORIC TOYS and CHILDREN'S BOOK DISPLAY tn the BRITISH EXHIBITS today. Professor t Codman will be on hand. to Informally talk of Punch & Judy Shows. SJJeCW toun of exblbits for school cblldren, BRITISH MATINEE-A program of Britlsb travel films at South Cout Plaza II Cinema. Sponsored by BOAC and the British Tourlst Authority. (Free admis- sion. Continuous performances). BRITISH LUCKY DIP-Try your luck for special prizes tn the Brlti."1 Candy Contest at Woolworths. FIND CHRISTOPHER ROBIN~test for under 12 year olds and parents. 7:30 PM :00 AM 2:00 PM 1:30,.PM and 3:00 PM 12:30 PM and 2:30 PM 1:00 PM and 4:00 PM 4:30 PM Somewhere tn the Plua is a young - Christopher Robin-challenge blm oor· recUy IJld will a priJe. Clues anno~ o•u;tll• i>Ublic address ayatem. • WINNIE THE FOOH FASIUON SHO ;; Seara Cblldteil's Deparfmenl :?:: :·:· •....: .. ; Saturday, _October 7 .·.:· . !='!-: SPORTS AND POP DAY ~::i ROYAL RACING SILKS-The~: display of Racing Silks and Racm~g ..,. ·~ Mementoes will be visited by I . itlea from the racing world. (Royal gracloUJly lent by Her Majesty :l-ci The Queen). :.'%:: ' BRITISH POP ENTERTAINMENT~t: • '!be Dave Clark Expedition wUI mak!r;!,:; pv-sonal appearance at an a1:1togral>Jti.: pal\y tn the Walllcbs Music Ct ty slo~?: ·!::: Stinday, October 8 WEI.SH DAY A cbsnce to meet other Welsh people and raise !be roof in song. THE WELSH CHOIR OF SOUTHERN. CALIFORNIA tn tradlUonal ~ostume '!'iJI perform a Program of eongs m Welsh :.: and English cc.rouse! Court). . :: : NATIONAL WEiml HARPIST, Ma~~ Tayloe, will entertain tn !be Carouse!;:· Court ::: Final PUNCH AND IUDY shows by :::: . Professor Cod.man. :·:~ CLOSING CEREMONY OF BRITISH EXPO with pomp and t'\rcumstance. Mr._ Allie Howard will lead I.II, parade and • the Welsh Choir will pe . (Public invited). ···-· WATCH FOR MISTER ELLIOT'S EARLY OCTOBER OPENING ·• .. ·- "Our Specialty: Better Dresses, Sportswe1r, Accessories" • we're what you've been waiting for! so w•it •few more days Lower Leval . . • " Mat 0.. and II Le Soupoon of Jooeph Mlgnin'1 each <jay to 3:00 ~M ,FAii Ct! .. liJn in a FASffiON SHOWING f 3 to 4:IO p.m. anhe qompany in the'1'otecast UNCH AND JUDY• -Proles..,. Codman's famous Depa nt.i street level. l MISTER ~will be pretMted three times ~ill (except on "! South Coast Plaza -Costa: M'esa -Low•r L9V~ ELLIOT1S Mfl"Y· Oct. 2) at 3:30, f;JO .Ud 7 •p.m. al~-· iiiiii~Co~urt~.~~~~=~:~~ENVIR~~~O~N~MENT~~D~A~Y~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiii~~iiiiii~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, ~ 4:00 PM Britian's first Minister for the Environ- ·loath Coast ?tua , South C~est Plaza 3333l·Bristdl St., Costa M ... · plion1 5'4().3333 • ' . ..r I • TremeildOllll Vala1!9o• Fbte Brltlsll . Merellaallheb( Tllef-Jl..U.lf Depu!Ca-u: eW•--' • Mtu liw 'rtbp • • Olf'N,.W .. - • -"""'i!t . ,.;:, . ~ . • e8Mlla~ • St11'rsm,, .. ' I ' • 1:"'1 ...... hi ' ----' \ " • \ • • • -·· BR , Bri : Coas : prom . Thur ; Oci. : Bu ; --: doun ; pOop! •: alnpl :~ :~r \: IJ!i~g • IJru • t • • :~o ·coast ~ . 1 :: ' • .. ' . ' . ' . ! : f j I ~ ' : . I : ' ' ' • . • ~ • l - • ; ·-• A• -.. . ~ ....... S. C. PlaH Woclnesd•y, S.pl•m_bo• 27, 1972 Pag• 3 South ·Co·ast Plaza To Become 'Mini Britain' ~-OOKS l• "' ... • furniture and an llllOs ··slum traditional costumes. .. i 11 number of special eontests BOOKS doll" made from scraps of old perform on the closing day. and prizes. Perhap! the most BOOKS material. Another graph i c More contemPorary music will exciting will be 1~ Visit Bri· display will be of popular be played on British Pop Day, tain Travel SweepstAkes. ar· British children's books -A. to celebrate Britain's pre· ranged in association wtth the BOOKS A. Mi In e 's "Christopher eminence in popular music. BRITISH Tourist Authotity . Robin," Louil! Carroll's "Alice "Winnie The Pooh Day· Is Oriti.sh Overseas A i rway s ----------- in Wonderland," Anna Sewell's the day for children. There Corporation. British Ra i I to'•1 .. 1. , ... -. ' , ~ "Black Beauty." will be special too" of the ex· International. Pacific and '~CO·K: .. H· ~iS _ .· For the prospective traveler hibits for schoolteachers. a Orient Lines and Trust HOUSE'S _ · there will be The Grand Tour, childrens fashion show and -Forte Hotels. The prizes in 1 a sightseeing giiide to the spttial contests and prizes, in· this simple swecpslake. for TH( c11'f' t United Kingdom via the eluding a "Find Christopher "'hich anyone over 18 is o. ... ,. • c11•1 ,,,.1100 ~ phol h. l'b f the R b' " I SOUTH COASI 'lAlA o...~ ograp 1c 1 rary o o 1n con est. el~ible. will include free 1n· ,0,,0 M•••. r71 ., ""°11,, , ......... British Tourist Authority : and Indeed there are to be a temational flights to Britain. The Streets of London -1---::;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitmill.tiiit ••• -........... -;;:----famous London streets. such as Regent Street and Carnaby Street -illustrated in gigantic blGWUps. There also will be a collec- tion of OresJ through the Ages with mOOels going back as far as the reign of King Henry \1111. recently popularized in the BBC television series. ' 'l'JIE JIUl 'l'ISJI opening ceremonies Sept. 28 at 11 1.m. 5ouflt (oasf ?tau Every day will bring a dif-1 ___________ _ ferent s p ec i a I eve n t • demonstrating some aspect of Britain or British life in ac· lion. For instance there will be a Concours d'Elegance on Sun- day, Ck:t. 1. arranged jointly by the Brisith Consulate- general in association with the Rolls Royce Owners Club and the Bentley Drivers Club. Sleek luxury cars a n d f asc inat i n g vintage automobiles will be on di11play to the public iand will be judgell by their peers for a of valuable prizes. Nearly 100 car!! itre expected. From the world of fashion . BRITISH CONSUL-GENERAL ANDREW FRANKLIN SHOWS EXPO •72 PLANS TO FAMED BRITON Movie Stir Peter Sellers Gett Preview of South Cont Pl1z1 Event at Con1ul-Gener1l'1 Home Jae11:er of London wiU show Fashion Spectacular lunch ar- ranited in association with the Junior League of Newoort Harbor at the Balboa Bay Club. These exciting new fas hions from London also will be on display to the public • • • during the Expo . 1 Expo: Unique Good Will Mission •On lively lines will be Scot- tish Day and Welsh Dav. The Scots performinJ?" will include members of the Roval Scottish Country Dance Team. The Highland DR.nee As~ociation . British Expo ·72 at South : Coast Plaza is a n1ajor British : promotion running from , Thursday through Sunday. : Oct. 8. : But it is much more than • tW. It-... brings to Orange : ~unty the good will ~of the : r'leoJ>le of Britain with ex- •: *1ples of their ll'AmttMls-DTtct-: their heritage in the form of 15 : Ebits 11nd events which are :: ing brought over -iron! '"" • 1 ; nited Kingdom for this OC· • sion. '-'?or thise 11 da)rS: South -coast Plaza will be completely -"'M!'tforme:d into 'a mir11 Bri- tain'. f ifty •·union Jack'' nags will flutter over B r i s t o I Avenue and the front en- trances wiJ be guarded by replicas of the Trafalgar Square Lions. Inside, a blaze of color from pennants, banner.s, shields and coats-of-arms will greet the eye! of Expo visitors. A replica of the famous Ero.s atatue from Piccadilly Circus stands over the South Court. Overhead, a vast mural of London's skyline will rorm the gigantic background a n d of over 750 monun1ents which be a display of hi sloric toys and Scottish Dipe b a n k s overall will be heard th e attract over 12 million visitors through the cooperation of the demonstrating th e S\Virl nf lhe sounds of London -tradi· annually. These range fron1 !\luseum of Childhood in Edin-bRgpipe and the twirl of the tional Cockney ~ songs, the prehistoric and Roman re· burgh. It includes a 1920s doll kilt. chimes of Big Ben and the 1nains to abbeys and priories, house with over 200_ pieces of A Welsh choir, dressed in cries of street-traders. palaces and mansions. J,....;-iiOiiiOiii0iii0iOioioioii0iii0iiiOiii0iii0imiii0iii0iii0ioi.;;;;;i;i;;;;;;io; .. I To .show Britain's con-Linking the past and the necli~.s with California, which present will be a collection of date tiack to lhe reign 01 the £~ reliel and memoral;!ili.a first-Queen,; Ehlabtth a JrGii, the Royal and Ancient number of relics from the age Golf Club or St. Andrews. The of Sir Francis Drake -the f1rll n:iention of gold in firs& Briton to.. &e.t. foot in £!)~and soes back to 1457 and 1<la.Kfornia In 1579 -will be on b'!'.rtoi'j 1'ecofds that Mary ixhlbit. Queen of Scots was known to ' . .Wools Available Now at Golden 'needle SO UTH COAST PLAZA OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAYS Another impressive an d have played golf al SL traditional exhibit will be a Andrews in the 16th century. collection of replicaa of the Another sporting, but con· Crown Jewels used in the cor-temporary exhibit will be a onation of Brilish monarchs. collection of famous British Two of the m 0 st in-racing .silks, including those ternationally famous jewels in specially loaned for the Expo the collection are the Koh·i· by Her Majesty Que e n noor diamood (the oldest ~E=l~lui~be~lh~ll~.~~~~~~======================~I known diamond in the world) t-For the children there will and the Cullinan diamond, the largest ever known. In 'Order to View', an ex- hibit of famou.s British houses and 'mOnuments, the story of the nation'! heritage o f famous homes is told in graphic panels, with examples Wotlt! ramouo :BUTTEB.NIP.. THE :S:E:EF STICK' CHEESE WELCOME MAT IS OUT TO BRITISH EXPO '72 VISITORS .. .. • • suwm SADSAGt Try 1 IMnpk of f\ts. 1.58 lb. CUT Reg. 2.D8 lb. th•a•mv.... 1 S91Ji •NY l.89lll. 19'1tfwf~. • • SIZE ..,..._II', .. ._... ....... \lllhol1 BEEF STICK .... ,, ~·....,-•"•Mm_. t.79 lb .... SWIET·MOT MtrSTABD 5-mP• WW. ...,,iquf, nsty lpf•d ,,..._ from'" okt G.• """ recipe, >41%'EL!, WTCE'E14 SESIMI Siil • PIZZI STICIS UIOI STICIS • llCON CHJ1$ • CiESAIJ CHll'S• ANY Z FOR 99e•~ flitkdr7 t•r!r ® &oath Coast ?tan COSTA MESA l - -- • ... OPllDAILT M*p1Afltr(lllrdt 11 S f'M --· ,._ •. ~(j ~stfJir i South Coast Plaza British Expo '72 EXHIBITS Watch Elwyn James Decorate Wedgwood's Famous Jasperware Di rect front England, /\1r. Janu:~ \viii den1nnst ratc Wcdg· "'·ou<l fi~urf' n1ak ing and hand orni11ncn1in~ in tht..• score thi' \\'C<.'k. lla \c you rWcdgwnnd purt..·ha''-'" pcr.,onally sianed, in(·luding annual plates and Ja~pt'r,varc in 1he newest Port· lllnd Blue. M r. John D ermer "'·i ll he· rn 11t1<.·ndancc n.cxt -week. First Southern California Showing of Royal Doulton's Large Prestige Figures On display will be "The Palio," "In<l i· a n Brave'' (Shown), "Matador and Bull" and others. Included in the ex- hibit "'il l be r-x amples of the antique a~ well a.s modern pieces. Win a Royal Doulton Figurine A spec ial 1roup of Roy1I Doulton fi1tu · rints .,.ill hi1hliJht a conte11 whereby you mily cas1 your vote for 1he one you t·oosi der best in color and design. lit, l nd and 3rd pri:r:es of Royal Doulton fi surines will ht: a,.,.ardcd "Porcelains for Princes" by Royal Worceste r On Sa1urdi1y at 10:~ At.I, lirr Brit· taoic Majesty's Con~ul·Gt·n4.'r1 l and Mr.,. Andrew Fr11.nklin v.·111 fonnally open tl'ti1 extensive exhibi1. ·rhr Colltttion of t0me 50 museum piet·c\ v.·ill include plates from the Qurt'n's dinoer ~rvicesas well uo1hers m11Jc for Roy1lty and variou~ iovernment.1 around the ..-orld . In it \lditio n a nun1her of recent limited ed ition porcelains will be •ho""·n. • Special Cl.'eats each day Watch for announcements of vi.1iui by reprettntatives of major Enslish china and cry51al manufacturers. Special exhibits al.so include: S1ua.rt C rystal Denby Stone"''are Minton China Royal Crown CXrby China Antique English Silver Spode C hina Coalport China SPECIAL SAV INGS ON MANY PATTERNS OF ENGLISH BONE CHINA DURING BRITISH EXPO '72 See the Finest of British Craftsmanship at ~BSBttxJr SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTAM$.A ' K ·-- • • •. '. ·. ·. ; . ( ~ , P ... 4 Wedn11day, S1ptemlw 'l7, 1972 S. C. P1111 Royalweve Preview Slated for Shoppers Hatching Crane Apple;; mumL. England (UPI) -ID e(I. . _,. .;.,. •l A crano named Ciani •I ~-...., Btlstol lllO has been aittlni on Ille apple 1'IO lier nost an apple for five -u und!!r tj>eY iemovedbe """ d !he _,1 ~ u ra ..,. to, le<tlon. Emery Mand, president ol Royalweve, h.u been a gr .. 1 Innovator in the lndustry, and has peraooally l~i.d many of the ch.angel thal have enabled t be budget.aware woman to have top quality floor coverintis. His high stan- dards ol qualHy hlvo mode Royalweve an important name in floor coverings acrou the Unii.d Slllles. Top decorator-utennen wilt May Co. South Coast PJ.aza ii ~ling. spoctal.Jll'••iew showing ol RDyalweve Carpel Milla' en.tire f a a h l o n broadloom colledlon during Brililh Expo. Royahffve. lhe West's largest manufacturer of fashion carpeting, haJ!I literal ly brought tt3 sho•t oouu into the store now tbn>\lgh Oct. I, with special r<duc.d prices on the entire collection. Thia ra the lint U!ne in the hi.story o( the eorpet Industry that tbi& has been done. 1'etempha.$ts ls on color- 1 n d texture-ocltement throughout the Royalweve col- be available ln the South Coast ,- Plaza stoce to help the cuttomer select from 23 styles and over 300 colors in the Royahreve eollectlon dW'ing the preview showing. f .I ::cLOGS Mode In Encjlancl , . " ' s:u..i..: •lock, gold, plum, H9ht blue, oltv• gr••n. Sl1•1: 6 to IO. • ......... SHOETREE .. . Sll'T. 21·0CT. I $14 .. ' SOUTH COAST PLUA-C:OSTA MBA Ul'Pll LIYIL-54M7'1 CHECKING BRITISH EXPO SHIPMENTS AT DOCKSIDE IN LOS ANGELES HARBOR John Brown (left}, British Viet Consul/Commercial; and George Miison, Terminal Island Dock Superintendent _SpS?,~ts Exhibits ~i~~ .. ~o . Arrive ~W, ~~ •. British Iarrfuii)n~,Californi~ Go\f1 Cl 1'4~/r.~...i .. e'fS -Circus and of the lions in i !MdlE'ri"gUM. '1-§d'-~lhOhg'\fie" ! by Sir Francis Drat~ In 1S79. an&:strat: me~j; game. Trafalgar Square together first consign.men~~ arrive at Amo~g tbe prieelesa_re1ics a~e The fir!t"ntentlon of ~olf in with flags and banners will 'tMsih~a..1i .P1~~~w.~J ~~r~e~~~-ll.~ ~ ;f10t'=' :;~ fs45~~~ ~,~:~~et~~~ i~:f:~ tr:: ~~: month. 1581. A .. '1~~!iil ~"ji>i~v;jiiyoc1 ..-;:lhe c00rse' next. ll days al the S"b u th They form the nucleus of the it shoWS a map of · >then 1et ~-AndreWs. Coast Plaza . 15 displays around which known,world. 1 ' • ' AMthJ ii.spect' of history Britisfi ~xpo opens tomor· DUNLOP 99c L;m;1 ENGtlSH Jtt g, 3 Cans MAD E $2.39 percoupon Open Sunday, Noon to 5 p.m. 1().9 Monday tbru Friday; lo.6 Saturday British Expo '72 bps been ~It A coconut brought back will be on view tn the replicas row and continues through at the shopping center m from their voyage arourld the of the Crown Jewels used in.~Oc;;l.;8;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;~ North Costa Mesa. world forms tbe centbr of the coronation of a Britishj1 Valued at over half a million another silver cup giVen to monarch. Two of the in· dollars are the treasures from Drake by his crew . ternationally known jewels in the age of Sir Francis Drake There are paintings, models the regalia are the largest dia· in "The Two Elizabeths." and old documents from the mond ever known -the This display traces the links court of Queen Elizabeth I Cullinan (weighing 3, 1 0 6 .,. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~be~t~w~ee~n~lhe~U~n~i~ted~K~i~n~gdo~mj, with names familiar to ~e carats) and the Kohinoor, the and califomia since the first watching the Emmy Award-oldest known diamond in the winning TV series "Eliftbeth world. R." For the children there is a ---- SAY!I $92 -•~trst· .......... 1111tlillll-.d M .wintt.I,,,,_ ~,,.... b:Aloll i.-.. tor..,.._..,, 1"'ldlllll. son ~ ...,,. -.. .,,.._, ................ ......., .... wdle,IMli~-...-..n ,....,.. Dilda, plul -................ 0..-. .. u..._.. ............... ~~ SAUi $64 ....... ,.,,Mt ... z.t ............ A_.. .... ...,,._ Ph .. • ·~ l ,._....,. ___ .. ___ _ ...... °"""' ... Uri tMtW. ... 20fo _._ ........... Mrrtlt llllttt ..... " w. 1.n . · - .... t.tt ........ """" """"' "' ""'<lllnt watlll~f ctry1ll41 IDO'll. ~ tl1111t• '"'"· w ""ti---0 1.n .... 1.ts ,.,. ,..... Ptrttm l/1'19KTI Mff,lllM •Mllb~ d ..... b~ ll:K IU'p11c. 44/r " Widt. Her !\-t a j e s t y Queen display of historic toys from Elizabeth II has graciously the Museum of Childhood in consented to lend her own rac-Edinburgh, Scotland, and a ing silks to form the center of collection of illustrations from a racing exhibit organized by the most popular of children's the Hollywood Turf Club and books, such as Peter Rabbit, the International R a c i n g Alice in Wonderland and Win- Bureau. Well known horse nie-the-Pooh. trophies and paintings are Rolls Royce car balanced on being flown over for the show. four cups is part of the exhibit Another "sporting fixture" or contemporary British cars includes golfing history items and boats. Replk:as of the lent by the Royal and Ancient statue of Eros from Piccadilly · The. I London Look! ·A smashing new look l'ect from LQllllon, s.art~ casuat with siift mlrea curls: London look cut . . . 5.00 ' . Body p~rm. 'pec,al . 15.00 5tyU,!t Pritts $JIQl'llly HIQlltr i f i Peggers" Bush Jeans ~GD . ) ·. lcHfi pock•tt. '9tch bock !*klk, nor.ct ••• ._ fltl _ .. luth 1-..... colors 111 o t""4td cotto!t. ~ n ~! • I r1.~,I". -.::!! __ i •SO ~IT PLUA : ........ llt"""' ............ _,... -.. . .) ...... c...-............... 0 ~.i! BEAUTY SALONS IL~ -. AND WIG BOUTIQ UE .. ............... ; .. leS IWT. ot ,._a.,_ CINllol ' . ' I I I . .:..:... , -~~R _,,~ .. ..,..,.. ' COSTA lilllA '. . 12100 ubor tfl~ or~er Cantor lrlslol & Sunflower-South Co .. t Pino Kl 9. H5 S>IG·2Ul • COSTA MESA CT.141 --Cll>lllM• South C...tt P,~ , 540-8888 ' I ~ 00 mj.s ,,_ clll• Moy Cd. I • ·~i:. .... Oii ...... . APPOINTMENTS NOt ALWAY NECESSARY •111o1r11.111 ....... a.,11.111 .. ,__ --- --- •• ... _ e • .. .. . ~f-:: ' DRAKE'S DRUM ON DISPLAY IN PLYMOUTH,° ENGLAND ' -:·~, Replica is P8rt of Sir Francis Exhibit at Expo ~ i f U.S.-Soviet ~ ~:Deal Spar*s lgf Speculatio n . , -; -;:-would have thought it? Sov1et 1 :..::.J\ussia is on the point of doing ' ·~.,.,..a huge trade deal with the ! _E.Jhampion of capitalism. the :::;ff]nited States," the fA:lnserva- ·ve Daily Express comment· od." . It was just ooe of the Brit· :.;;J.sh newspapers editorializi~g -·:'.lln Ille pondini.s. · Soviet ~~1,!:ailo ilj¥\l, ii "!~•· o( the p.!)•t~"" .111--• qer. rre:iK:lent oN :.:i~a. ~U£- • Ill~;,~·· ,...,t. !!llh, ,_..,'·JC lif leaders tO"' diScuss'lhe ' ..... exc ante. . ' "After 55 years o( commu- nism," the Daily Express con- "' tinued, "the Soviet Union is 1 • .. so short of wheat it has' to im· ;;· port-Jarge amounts from the ! ; immense oil resources, she is SLEEP FASHION Ask for Loli pop Stretch Terry, Footed Sleeper COLORS: "' ood Wh;1, Sldpo, $9 l!!ua ind Whit• Strip1, Qr,hid, ll1d, Aqu1, Y1llow 11o1'1d Pink 1olid. SIZES: p1til1, 1m11 ll, m1diurn. l•rge. THE HOUSE OF I: : also calling upon U.S. petrol-I -eum expertise ... "Karl Mar:ii: ;; ;.: .mµs& be spirming in his grave. I t .. ~: For when the Russian peo\>le • •: "\ get a taste for free enterpI'lSe ~ • • .: and choice they will ask for : . : "" more. And more. And more. f : ~ ~ The proletariat will want to I I : .:. -berom" ~e class, 'Nev-er I ~~.;:mind ihe r"t9olution . Jet 's k~p LOWER LfYIL, ...... SOUTH COAST PLAZA END OF MAU. .•. DIRECTLY ~~~Ls~::~.: Costa Mesa 546.2066 • • ~4 up with· the Joneskis." I ~. . I · ~ I [.': ;" Ir::;;: . '(\' ! "\ .. , ·~ ;•-J ~ 1' '(\ • 1 ~\~" .... • • .. ! • . THE BRITISH ARE COMING l I •M we 're celebrating by offering G~TS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD e HAlf IJ.CARYED IVORY ff9M •. , , lftdla e: BEAUTIFUL WOODS fro• . '' , h1dia • ,OUTstANDING BRASS e ·PAIT mREADS ~ tr.111.~ ....... 9; O,llEITILrlCENSE *· 8£Al8l11£KLACES ·: '""' ....... ~ •·. 'INTllOY BOXES ......... ._.lio ..... •rwtltm· ..... 9:'il'llO".CCOTHING 'I ......... ~ ...... • A~O ..... '0 •~ 1 I 'l§\JJi.1 · CJ · ~a/oP(J~' mm~ c..v. Motl. -54f 1• ______ ...;;;;,;; e HAND-CUT CRYSTAL ,,..,.. . . . °'°"'""" • FANCY CRYSTAL ,,.... • . . C..U..lonltla e ALABASTER & WINE SETS • • • from ••• INiy DISTINCTIVE woo~s fro111 ••• S,.lo UNUSUAL VASES fTom ••• -.,,. ... , TEA SETS "ioaTm'"riAs I ftoM , . • hlllllo e· CANDLES ,, ...... '"''-" RUGS ...... . '• . w,1 ... EMBROOIERED TABLE CLOTHS ~ • • , l-..i~Mc Of ClillM M-Ull' ~·· ITIM'S NOT LISTIO qA;llJl.LI ft' IOTM STOll:U d?a/ of (JnJia 1~.1.....it.n.l I SO. CUST PWA Cotl1 M..1 -s..o:.a4 , .. , , ,. S. C. 1'1111 WodMldey, S.ptombtr 27, 19n 16th Century British Relics Shown Priceless 16th century relics and works of art representing highlights ol lh< reign ol Elizabeth I (155&-1603), will be seen at South Coast Plaza dur- ing British Expo '72. The exhibits, worth at least balf·a·'rnilllon pounds and most of them irreplaceable, revolve around Sir Francis Drake, one of the greatest of the early Eliz.abethans with paticular links with California. He was responsible for setting up the first British settlement in No rth America. near San Francisco. Drake was from the \Vest Country in England and had the same feeling for his birthplace as Californians have for the west of the --' 400 machine ctelephone " . y Mtwers vour telephone g r recorded message to the s incoming calls word for word you know who's calling ¥iithout uching the phone Solid state, electronics • No installation necessary • Plugs into an ordinary 4-prong telephone jack • Completely portable •Operates from self-contained batteries • Wot1ts with any telephone systb, •Y telephone instnm1ent 'G•I one today, m~ littl• Chickade•!" • •l .. PHEJTI E. maTE ~l·~· c::raAI c::; 3212 STEREO SYSTEM " ' • Phono input for rtc<>rd player or changer • Separa11·.w1~ balance • bass & c.ebl• r • Auto &: MMu•I pmgrmn change e. Front-p.W.1 It~ jadl • Stereo indicator I e.'AM/fM FM: Stereo r 10 I .95 • • mam1ya SOO DTL CAMERA • Dual thru the lena meters • One tot "apot" one for "averege' • Universal threed mount for oompl1t1 len1 lnterch1ngeebUlty I Shutter tpeedS 1 MC IO VIOO Ste plua 8 • 1.21 ... 9S . . leumig· VIENNETTE S MOVIE CAMERA • VARIO·VIENNAA ZOOM LENS, f/1.1, • 1:4-0mm, focus11 to 4 fl, • Eumit M1ero 1!11ch1Nnl fM ,1-.... ol • 21 • 21mm wher1by lull 1oom ''"" un be utiliirt • R•tl•• wiewtindll' with 1Phl·•m.• ''"" finct.J • Powll' 1oom or INnwil 1oom • CdS bolhind t¥o~ e M•nu1I ow~j;:· :::ili,Qhl~;;.,i lo OM luW It., e Ot._n,,tm Loc:k , e W•r"int -'"* In •iliw t~ for~ Ufhli"ll c.twtitioM • S.ttiwy ,...., --J • .,,. ~ • Filn. tpffd autom'1iulty .. , 26-150 ASA • S.ib::UwcofM~:fi.lt.tt; '\ '" !,0 :) Ht"UO! e Focu1in1 •Y• p11e1, plu1 or rrunut 3 diopttn • SpMds18•ritl24f•i ·1·~ ·.::t~ e Sintl• fr•"'• e C•blt rlilM• llOCktt e Foot.,. c~ntll' Mtl Mitom•lit•llY to 111"0 • Run• en • ~litht MlllfMS . 9.5 LIST PRICE 239 .95 .. This camt1r• will brirrg tM outli•I into the infi•ldl" [eui61g· MARK SOI M&VIE .· PROJf CTOR .:1 I VARIO EUfRONET 11.6, 17·30m1"-l1no e 8V 60W·e1Npsoid r9fl.ctor bulb · .. , ~· • Fully iutom1tfCthrndin9 on to .l•kt:Qd ,.,, : ": •• Spfocketttn fifm1rMtpc>!t ... ' ... • 400 ft. '"' caPecity • 9rJ ,, • 18 fps. forw.Jd ~ • stow motion • f11t rewind • Singte control knob Vivitar 2s1 . AUTOJt1AJIC SlROlt • Automatic flash control op1r1t11 from 2to 131oet • C)per1te1 on 2 AA alkaline bat- teries or ••.:td•rd.AC cunent • field tostid Qlllilo _, ol 33 with Kod1chiume ti 95 P ... 6 Wodne ... •y, S•pt•"'bor 21, 1972 S. C. PIH• Committee Closes Atlantic 'Gap' ... A disUngu1shed tomm1tltt of local c1t1uns and Br111sh or- fieials was formed as a result of Brittsh Expo '72. 1-ieaded by His Excellency, the Earl or Cromer , the British Ambassador to the Uni ted States, who agreed to act at ~lonorary Patron of Ex- po '72, the committee was pledged to bringin~ about a closer comm unity relatfonship between Britain and Southern California . Se rv ing on the panel. which has come to be called The Select. Commiltce of llonour, ~·ere: BOOKS BOOKS B00XS BOOJ(S His Elcellency, The Earl of Mr. James C. K.i.lllnpworth, <.:romer. British Ambassador Publisher and Editor, 'Orange 10 the United States of County Illustrated'; Mr . Carl America : Mr. Andrew Kymla, Chairman of the Franklln, C.V.-0.., C.B.E .. Her Board. Orange Co un I y Britannic Majesty's Consul-Chamber of Commerce : Mr. General (Chairman); Dr . Albert O. Lind, President, Daniel G. Aldrich J r . . British American Chamber or Chancellor, Univentty of Commerce; The Hon . Donald C a Ii f o r n I a , I r v i n e : Mcinnis, Mayor of Newport Assemblyman Robert 1'~. Beach; Mr. Joseph Metcalf, Badbam, 71st District, State of President. Costa Mes a California: '"1e Hon. Charlton Chamber of Commerce ; The P. Boyd, Mayor of Laguna Hon. Clifton C. Miller, Mayor Beach; Assemblyman Robert of Tustin: Dr Robert B. H. Burke, 70th District, Stale Moori!, President. 0 range of California: Senator Dennis Coast College ; Mrs . Carl r;. Carpenter, 34th District, Neisser. Newport Beach ; Dr. State of California; M r . John Nicoll , Superintendent, Ronald Caspers. Chainnan, Newport Meaa Unified School Board of Supervisors, Orange District ; Mr. Laurence County; The Hon Alv in r..1 . Prics ack, M.8.E., Chairman, Coen, Mayor of Huntington Britlsll Travel Committee ; Beach; Mr. Leslie N. Duryea . Col. Gene Robens, General ~sident, World Affair s Manager. South Coast Plaza; Cooncil, Orange County; The Mr. John Sch inner er, Hon. Jack C. Dutton. Ma yor-of Chairman of the 8 oa r d , Anaheim : Mr. Roy Evans, ~1erchanl3 Association. South Southern Cali fornia District Coast Plaza ; '11\e Hon. John Manager, United Artists: The G. Schmitz, 35th District, U.S. Hon. William M. fischbach., House of Represe.ntatives; Mr. Mayor of Irvine: The Hon . Harold Segerstrom Sr., 11le Lorin Grisel, t.fayor of Santa Segerstrom Family ; Mr . Bill Ana : The Hon . Jack Ham-Sorenson, Southern California mett, Mayor of Costa Mesa; District Manager, National The Hon. Richard T~ Hanna , General Corporation: Mr . 34.th District, U.S. Houae of James Stewart, Executive Representatives: Mr. J*J)h Vice President and General 1. Hartstein, Chai-rm-an . Manager, Hollywood Park; British Expo '72, South Coast and Dr . Nonnan E. Watson, Plaza ; The Hon. Al Mollinden, Chancell or, Coast Community MayO!' <ir 'P'Ollntal'rl Valley.-: College District. ~-- it's family special time at Bak Studio ;. ~=i:;: $19 95 : ~ INCLUDES DIRECT COLOR SITIING OF 4 POSIS. l 'l.xS PERMANENT , r, COLOR PROOFS ARE YOURS TO KEEP. BAK ~tudio so. ;::~~1~~AZA ' ' <!Fales of ~hcf ficlb Silverplate SPECIAL FOR BRITISH EXPO '72 , ' SJ~ each • " VOYAGE TRACEO -Membe rs of Select Commit- mittee of Honour of British Expo '72 discuss route taken by P&O Lines' SS Arcadia when she brought displa ys for Expo from England to Los Angeles Har- bor. Around globe are (from left), UCI Chancellor ai:id Mrs. Dan Aldrich ; Arcadia's Capt. A. Dallas; and Mrs. Andrew Franklin, \vife of British Consul General. Punch and Judy Shows At South Coast Plaza Performances by Professor Coclman's famous Punch and Judy shows, a tradition of the Cadman famil y for over a cen· tury, will be a daily oc- currence at South Coast Plaza. Sho~1s \viii be staged in the Carousel Court at 3:30 p.m .. 4:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. daily throughout British Expo 'i2. The Codman famil\' has been ramous for PunCh and J u d y puppet shows in Liverpool. The appearance at ExIXJ is one of the few times that this show has left' \he city of Liverpool. The fi rst "Professor" Cad- man carved puppet heads in wood and many masklike characters which are still in the family 's possession and. headed by the senior Cadman of th e da y, the show has always been carried on in the famil y. Toda y the Codmari~ have speeded up the show and ad- ed characters such as Bat- man and Popeye. They have always had a Jive dog but, un- fortunately, quarantine rules will prevent his coming to America. Punchinello was introduced into the English puppe\ show about 1600 by Senor Bologna, an Italian. as a marionette j and was recorded in Samuel Pepys' famous diary. Punch, the English c\o\vn. was later seen in the fair- g'rounds. His popularity spread ·and, about the year 1800 he -Wa.s converted into a glove Jkfppet : hi! wife's name was Origina lly Joan, later to ~ come Judy, and a family of characters were built around Punch. The o r I g i n a I characters were Punch, his wife Judy, the baby, Devil . clown, doc tor. constable and ha n gm a n . Later, a live dog, "Toby." Silverploted Coffee (Qddie '' ' ' Si lverplated Breakfast Set \ Jo., or Mayonoise Server with ladle • .. J ·' I ' . • Butter Dish .With server an(j insert' • ,. • S()UTH COAST'PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET, COSTA MESA · PHONE 546-4510 . \ • (', .. " ;s I ll :~·:-~~-'. , ,;;:,i,"j -l~l 1 -. --I -- ' • l ./--- British Air ;] ., Srewardes.s Has Record :2i. LONDON I AP ) -British ., air !tewardess Shella san.. ; . ' dersoo elaima she haJ broken,"-.· the world record for th&" ·1 ·, fastest round-the-world trip '·• •.;: for any woman using schedul· ed airlines fl ights. Blonde Sheila, 36, arrived at '· •·. London Airport Sunday just 58 "·. ~ hours. 30 minutes after !eav· 7 ·~ ' ing it and flying 24,400 ~es ~: around the globe. She said she beat the previous record sel in 1953 ~y the American, Pamela Mart.in. :,. by more than 31 houn. She • ~ flew via Athens, Bangkok, : Singapore, Sydney, Fiji , :! Honolulu, OUcago and New ~ ork. . ~~ Miss Sanderson u1d she ! sPent most of the time looking ·1 .:. at airline movies and seelng only white clouds. A group of B r it i s h :;&'_ ~~~i.nessmen sponsoted the ·~~ •• :~ RITISH VALUE DA VS:~ l l~ MATCH BOX SPECIAL Numbers I thru 7S Rog. 79c 44c . • BR ITISH BUILT CONSTRUCTION SET DINKY ANO CORGY CARS 545-6383 Free Gift Wrapping frorn $1.50 .. $10.00 00< >00 TOY CENTER 3333 So. Bristol South Coast Plazza (_<ista Mesa, Ca. USe Your Mastercharge or BankAmericard ' the TINDER BOX offers an early ROYAL C/irialmaa for ·the LADIES ONLY it's our way of saying ''HELLO'' to BRITISH EXPO VISITORS ' . ( f be "" ' British Researchers ' ldOitify Sufferers? NE1l'CAS'IU:,-E. &I• D d (AP) -PolmtJal .....,. llllf. ferers may be ldeatlfled Jona before ~cal iymploms ap- pear, a BHtlah research team has reporiad. Thia ~very. Ibey sald, may point the way to an evtm- tual brtal<through In trea~ ment based on allmulaUng the body's own natural defenses. The report came from Pro!. E. J. Field and a medical ~ team working at Newcastle Geoeral Hospital. The team ii aponsol<d by tbe Brttisb. government's Medical Research Council. Writms In Ille I r It h • Medics! J.......i, Field forecut Illa! by the end ol Ille century DlBll lfcreenlng for cancer will be standard prac- tice. He uplaJJ1'd that I h e dlagnooUc t-Involved .,. expensive and oompllcsled and must be radically •ln\Plified before lDISll screen· Ing could be&ln. The team's wort ii based OD It. dllcovtry that the wblto blood cells of _,. wllb cancer develop a specla1 reac- tion to a lH)>lein pment In mallgaant tumors. . Tenffic short hairdo · ' ·: neat-small-brushed back. ;~ A great look to get into ::. after a day in the sun. 1~ Mon.-Tues.-Wed. savings ;;. . ~asic cut $2.00 , Shampoo set $3.45 ·~ ~· . .. , Alk.eic.11 .. '*dfltPfbe ... [j Sun Streaking Special ... $14.95 ~ Compltte With To11•r :: ~ Welcome Aboard Arriving aboard SS Arcadia for meeting of British Expo Committee of Hooour are Mr. and Mrs. Harold Segerstllom . He's bead of pioneer Orange County family which is owner/developer of South Coast Plaza and other commercial and industrial develop- ments. ~Crowmng Glory ~ beauty salo~ .. ~ i ·' + ,, •1 • • ..~ i :t sou'rH cbArlftt.Avt 267 E. 17th ST., 'tfoins of R~at~ · ·~ '°••r 1,,,,1-11,xt to 5,,,, COSTA MESA .,';, phon• 546-71116 phoM, ii41·9919 1 , John Toal, regional vice pftsident of Southern Cali· fornia First National Bank, uses former l<>ndon doubledecker bus, .approp~y. to deliver 2~0 l!ri!· ish crowns to Peter Turney, Hungry Tiger s ;tesi· dent beefeater. Restauranl1 will use the corns as prizes in daily dart tourjia!nents during Expo. 41oPE~ EYmlt4,GI '.Ti l 1 ' OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 ::: UNOAYS 't't-5 J 1 SUNDAYS 10-4 .,. ·, Appolntmenll not alnyJl nec1111ry ' •. ' ' Udoff's SPIRIT OF '72 • REVOLUTIONARY BUYS 3a-le .-nmJA Wash a blt;l·Quilted Bedroom Enlembles SPREADS -- FULL R111. $30 MATCHINCO TIPF.AHY LAMP MATCHING FAHIC ~":.,~:S ~-~~-~: ............ _._!3995 :~. ~:~ .................•.•...•.• '25:c1. W.U"iui:iQUft.T1a TO flLOOtt UN9UILTID CIUSHID · llDSNIADS YILYIT llDSl'llAD Di1continutd bed1pr•tds. M•11y ,..,..:·11;.t1 · ·Sole $14.95 TMHAITOCWHISNTY•U•1W1N~IH p•tt•t••, J61o•t ,,, p•rftc+. I ill9 • So'"• d•ilfqed, •Orn• Jhopworn, "'..,. ,w;;;·· Sole $1f.t5 1H% WASHA•LI R t I tll t rt t•rrific b11y1. •IJU t ry -·~··. Salt $23.'5 ,.., tu.ff flllft •.•. ··"'· Sale $1f.95 prlc td FIOM $24.tl te S49.t5 "";:,:·m:;;·· Sale $13.95 "'· SU.II ' ••. SALi PllCID FIOM St.ts ... ' "'!.."',.' -.:.:.· ..... _ ,-.ts "m_:;;· Sole $21.fS ..... "" ~ .,,. to Slt.tJ. ~ fTem lllut. ftcl. gow. ,lrtl time 1ver offend ' """' • ., ,,_ Pl"ica - READY·M~E OMPJ:RIES. CHl\)OSE FROM SHEERS, PRINTS, ANTIQUE SATINS. b~SKS, BOUCLES IM.L SAU PllCID AT A IHIAT SA""5 ' OF 20•1. C•llr , .. -4 ..... ••IWfY) SOUTH COIT J?LAZ4 u~~f"'~.~~::Pw¥· . ...:t'146-611Z - Opell ....... 'Ill ' p.m.-Sat. 'Ill 6 p.m..-..Slnl. 'Ill 5 ...... • . ' f • t• • .... "'+ S. C. Pl11• Wedn.,d1y, September 27, 1972 P1gt 1 Sweepstakes Winners Take Tours ·. Six lrtPI -two lulllry ..... el Britain i.. two, -lo-...,..a1 lllght to En&Wld i.. two and lhttie Brltllb puty ..,._ on Ibo new 11.-al!lltt "Spirit of Loodoa" for ~· -... offerod In Ibo Brilmti Expo "II s-potakei. ~ blanks are available at ~ So!llll Coast ~ •~ ...t can be used by anyone 18 years old or older, escept for Plua mercl>ants and tbelr employel, South Cout PLua 35 Schools Get Visits Students in 35 Orange Coun-. • ty schools will have a little bit or England brought to them during British Expo '72. Personalities of the Expo have agreed to appear in school assemblies. Expected to m a k e ap- pearances are Alfie Howard, the United Kfnidom's oldest town crier; P. C. Weedon, a London bobby: Policewoman W. P. C. Weedon; and Professor Codman w b o s e family has had a Punch and Judy show operating i n Liverpool for more than 100 years. ·' Mana(emonl or members of One couple wine trip to Lon-Edinburgh. This prize ollel<d Ille British Consola!&Generll don lboar<I Britllb CaJedonlan only to those Mlering Ille Alrwaya Inaugural Oight in Sweepstakes durln1 the first lltlf er their flmllles. April, 1m, with llde trip to lbree days of Expo. • No purchue is necessary loJ ....'.:~:...::===.:::.......::_ ___ __:_ _ ____: __ _ win. The winners wlll be determined at the end of Ex- po. Here's a nmdown on the six trips: GRAND LUXURY TOUR OF BRITAIN -One couple gets two economy tickets to London via BOAC VC-tO a:s guests of Soulb Coast Plaza plus two-week coach tour of Britain provided by British Touri.m Authority. LONDON -EDINBURG GRAND TOUR -Includes economy tickets to London for two on BOAC VC-10 as guest! of South Coast Plaza. This couple also gets flight from London to Edinburgh o n British European Airways, first class rail passes for eight days of unlimitec! travel on British Rail anywhere in England, ~and and Wales . provided 9 BritRail Travel InternaUonal; and two weeks deluxe aceomroodations at Trust Houses, Forte Hotels. BRITISH PARTY CRUISES (3 winners) -Each couple wins a four-day British Party Cruise aboard P&O Line's new 17,000-ton "Spirit of London.'' INAUGURAL FLIGHT - Complete Selection ~ ~ IMPORTED ~ ~ ~ ~ FINE -QUALITY ~ ~ ENGLISH LEATHERS • Passport Cases • Manacure Sets • Billfolds • Travel Items for Your Next Trip to England MONOGRAMMING AND GIFT WRAPPING FREE OF CHARGE • SOUTH COAST PLAZA San DI .. a Fwy. at lrhtol IANNAMr-ICAllD j Cosr.. Mfta 540-3110 I MoR. thr111 Fri. 10 011'1•9 p-Sot. 10 all'l-4 pm ------- AN r/\nil.-:, COMPANY .mEPll llGllN HAU B11T1S11mo12 AT som·COIST PWA SIPllmblr 28 IO aclllllr 8 I I •• 1 • ' . ·- • • .. •' •' .. . ; ~ • -· '• .. ' . • P190 I Wtdnfld•y, Soptember 27, 1972 S. C. Plue Expa Exhibits Br1t1sh Expo '72 offers Or1nge Coast residents a unique opportunlly to see severa.I facets of Bri- tain {past and present) in one place at one time. Amo ng exhibits that il lustrate various aspects of th e Empire during Expo at South Coast Plaza are the follow1ng: THE TWO EUZABETHS: The age of Queen Eli za beth I is brought ba ck to life by a collection of treasures belongin~ to Sir Francis Drake-the first Briton to set foot 1n California. The new Eli zabeth· an Age is illustrated in the fields of science and technology. RA CING SILKS: Famous Britis h racing me- mentos and silks jn cluding those graciously le nt by lier l\tajesly for Expo . (In association 'vith l~olly­ wo od Park and the International Racing Bureau). TllE CROWN JEWELS: Repl icas of the price· less Cro,vn Jewels used in the coronation of British monarchs. ORDER TO VJE\V : Famous British houses and n1onumcnts. The story of the nation's heritage from prehistoric times is told 111 graphic panels. GOLFING REL fCS: His torical relics of the game on Joan from the R-0ya l and 1\ncient Golf Clu b of St. An drev.•s-thc home or golf. DRESS THROUG H THE AGES: A collec li on of models dressed in detailed reproductions of period cos tumes. lllSTORIC TO\'S: /I. \ride ranging display of toys or all shapes and sizes fro1n the Museum of Childhood in Edinburgh. CHILDREN'S BOOKS: Graphic panels and ii· lustrations from popular Britisti children's books. THE GRAND TOUR:. A photographic tour of the Un ited Kin gdom from the li brary of the Brit ish Tourist Authority. THE STREETS OF LONDON: Photo panels de- picting famous Lond on streets. LONDO N LIFE: Trafalgar lions. Eros-replicas of famous London landmarks and a n1ural or the city. BRITISH CARS. BIKES AND BOATS: Ex hibits of the latest in Brit ish cars. motorcycles and boats. in cluding a Rolls Royce bala nced on four Wedg,vood cups. .,...._~ r41,.-,_,....., -~ ' . .';.. .1:-"Y GIFT FROM DRAKE'S CREW Coconut Cup Mounted in Silver ' ENGLAND'S CROWN JEWELS ~ ~-. . __ ~~~~~~~~~~~- It took vo•t engineering abil ity to rebuild the dismantled ·London Br idge al its new in America ... Well, here at Decorator line, we await the opportunity to display our en- gineering knowledge in wall furniture for your home . _ . Visit us during the British Expo "12" and discover the space saving advantage that our wall furniture offers . . . t Available in b popular colors and -t accomo4'· ting wood tones _ .. let one of our space t· ~ 9ineers design that very special unit for you . r our array of combinations are able io suit evety ieed and style design. UNIT AS SHOWN $339.50 WALL •nd SECTIONAL FURNITURE SOUTH COAST PLAZA Lower M•ll Level 540-7777 - Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You , I 1 ' ' j ; . - 1 •• Ex:po Oiiplay Feature5 Replica ,,~-..::...~-===========================================~ DOLL WITH UMBRELLA, CIRCA 1880 Part of Historic Toys E11:hibit FINE LEATHER by BANDOL!NOS BOOTS "The Bella" in suede and let11 th er 'Life' Kiss --Dea dl y? LONDON tAP) -A parrot· Jover who gave his pet the kiss : of li fe almost killed himse lf. a learn of scientists ha v e reported. ~le was taken to hos pital v.•il h severe stomach pains and C'Omplaining he had eaten soinf' bad food. lhc Public ll callh Laborator~' Scr\'ice reported in the Br i Ii s h1 ~1cdical Journal. I Doctors \\"l'fC baffled when . their trt'almcnt produced nol results. The m<in -who was not identified -grew wo rse, developing heart and Jung trouble. Then his vdfc remembered that just before his illness her husband .had tried to revive his dying parrot by giving it Fl•eld'S mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. I 1'he parrot died. SO. COA5 T P LAZA f SHOES r.o sTA M l!"SA-s~s-2111 ' he phys icians treated him $29 OPPos1TE MAY co. for •·parrot disease'' -psit- UPPER LEVEL ~~~~~~~~.,,...;..~~~~~~~---~~~.I __ 1nr:_~s-is_. ~lc_r_cc_ove1~cd.:__ __ ,-spe_cia_lizi .... ng_in.:..plu_s-s:::iz_e::;fa~sh.-.ion __ LANE BRYANT I I I • FOOL-THE-EYE LAYERING To •U th• world, thi• 1oft. ee1y·1win9 of polka dot• with the 11ew look of 1we•ler rib1 •PP•••• lo be two. l ut in trutloi, it'1 on•·perl pcJlye1ter k"itr WI"•/ bone with ne•y. $38 SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA 11p,..-....,__.,,., .. ., '4i• o~. ,,.. •• ., ,h .... 540°7717 O'IN DAILY 10 to 9 P.M.: SAT. IOt•''·M.,SUJrt llteS P.M . ' • DIAMOND 'EXTRA VA GA N ZI\ l0r BRIT!Sr-l EX l)O September 28 rh ru October 8 Only Special Diamond Purch~sd-E~ordinary values never offered before on--10ose diamonds. An outstanding purchase o f hundred s o f diamonds in all shapes, siz.es and ciualitics arc bein g o ffered for sale at our lowest pr ices ever. ROUNDS -MARQUISES -PEARS -OVALS - EMERALD CUT DIAMONDS • One half carat froii\ $200.00. One carac from S~0.00 . l 'wo carats from $I 800.00. ::: Three carats fr on1 53000.00. :;: Four Carats from $4000.00 AMERICAN EXPRESS PERSONALIZED TERMS A wide sc lcccion of uniq ue and stylish diamond n1u untlngs o ffe red at special reduced prices. Dia- monds purchased will be set while you watch and wai t in the store. JUST FOR BR IJ'I SH EXPO A d ia1nond cutter on t he premises. Minor repairs to bro ken diam onds dotie while you wait. Old dia- n1onds rrcu c to mode rn cu t in the store. Come in and sec this unusual display and demonstration . {)nly fron1 Se ptember 28 thru October 8. 'IN l/"lill'J qH.Ull 1/ it"J. BANKAMERfCARD MASTER CHARGE 5""'h Coe« P1ota • lllJ Btlttol • Cotl• -. CONlomlo llflf • 540-IOM . , 1 I • 1 ' I l • l .. ' • • l ' • • i l l I I ' I , -. . -• •. i: • ;:_· .. • • .. • • • . . • • l • • • • • • • • • c • • . ' " • • : - ' " ' l " ' • . ·, 1 '• •, ·, ' ., ~ I . • , ·i • ·, ' ·: -; .• . ,• ' • • . I ·: • ·' • • • • e : • • • • • • • • ' . . • • • • • • • I . • • I • D 1 • " " " 16 " " "' 21 23 ,. " 28 30 31 32 J6 " 38 J9 " " 17 0 . ....... -- : ~UM,L!WEEDS • ... FURnleRMORe, FELLOW C/1llENS • ~ " I AM FOR A SOUl'W FISCAi. POLICY AND : ~~ . VOW 10 PO MY U1MOS1"10 MING Al1(X)f : ~::-·:A MORA!. Aflp CULllJRAL R~~IRTH 10 : .., _ OUR fl~VC:D 6RIMY GOLCH ! . - . ·-. . -. : ~ .. ; . .,,,, .. MUTI AND JEFF . . . . HERE--WE ALL.GOT NEW ?IL.LOWS! NANCY oH.t-tow NICE AND SOFT!MUTT, WHAT DO "!'HEY STUFF PILLOWS WrTH? DAILY CR~~WORD ,~!.~~~ .. !ower ACROSS 4i1<ind of • i;.:.:._ . . 1 Be rt1dy fOI'" br\dg1 8 Tu1kish )ud(19 48 H.lving • 10 AbMflCI OI f.OOUM motion 49 Gtee• ...._ 14 Cletning 50 Not d .. d Implement ri1 W190" 15 Beth'• river 62 N.w't Bolring 16 Ar1bl1n Aaoclttion: governor Abbt. 17 Re1dltybent 65 tceplnc:f9C2 18 Exptin.jo;e wo1d1 g1rment;2 M Onellf1din9a words htnd 2-0"WW n zone: eo o;n htr'b Abbr. 11 Muni ot 21 ln1pl•ed '''napoflttlon 12 Aotot Miiton rt~ence 12 MOfe • • .,,. -~ 23 J111! CIUll of .Opeoery 04 f woody poWJtlion Sl Moistt-111 n11 24 Toorist1' &I S1ench 19 Unemotionel .iooping pt1c1 2fJ ······-two: 2 words 28 Scr11ned from lighl JO Lil1ing de"Jc.t 31 Ruuien C11r J2 Ci•cle of mu1hroom1: 2 word1 36 Should1r: Prtlix 37 Old-f1shiontd J8 Vthiclt 39 Oy.itlg mentht 44 S1qutne• of dling1 ' '&\ " " " " " " .. 65 o .. th: P'9fi1t 22 Join In DOWN • m11rimony 1 Showing 11lent 2 Court order 3 M1th1nical 25 Vt•le form 26 Allempts 27 L1rge ho1p1t1! 1oom men 28 Situ11e 4 Som-h11: pr11<:isely Su Iii~ 5 Mineu of aCIOll 6 Ship ol tht d•••rt 7 E1g1r 8 Aiv1r of Sco1llnd 9 Wrilln; fluid 10 Ont r11>1Klfl11 a floor 11 E•Ptl!IS 1mollon ' J1 29 Hell: Preli• 30 Providll wi1h ·~' 32 Mad1ou1 well 33 Olar> All1r>tk: t•PUb~c 34 D11i9n11ion 35 ---Cup; Can1dl1n Football trophy 37 KiN! of r1t1ch 40 Llglltly 1rmtd warlhiva 41 CkyotWtlt .. _, ..,,._, otr1Cet 43 Tear apart roughly 45 S1loon 46 Tropic.I Ameticln PlflQI 47 Solit1ry '8 M1t1l f111en1r 49 Fiber 51 D1lnty 63 Pub p1od!,!ct 54 lrilh 1•ci.m11ion 56 Organ of n .. 11n11 Pi? C1u11dby 59 Ctk1 lr091lflg 11 12 !l " " ,. " Nearly Everyone Listens_ to Landers I ' , I ,.,.; . ? by Al Smith by Dole Htlle ANP AU 71fJS TTMF I 7Hot1611'r COUNrtNG G.4VE /11"1 "THE /./ICCUP.S/ • • DOOLEY'S WORLD ,,., SAU Y BANANAS 'qllLy/ S!llLY! qi,saLLY! GORDO MOON MUWNS HELLO, .JONES··'~...._ How's "THE M/>.RKfT DOING "TODAY? by Emie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS I DON'T ;SEE ANY .· TRASH BASKETS PEANUTS --.......... ....... ,. JUDGE PARl(ER MJAAf 1S WRO/J<;;, L4LE? I'M \llOIZRIED TAAT I'M l.()61/J6 MU MeMO~CJ ! ... by Charles M. Schub THIEF!ROBBER!! rz:=:::=~:;:i~~O:::N:or'AT'ALILJl r--;r;,=~H"E-'.s"A""rD::":T::'.H-::AT:-TI MEANWHILE .•• WAS'J'HERE AAY· THIN(; 'WRONG IN MY CONTACTING YOU AT SPENCER FARMS, MR. BORGSON ? MISS PEACH I i IR:A 1-!AS CHANGED HIS NllNO Af'OUT 8ECOM1NG A OOCTOR" ~ f. I ••• TANYA TOLD HIM WHERE I WAS ••• BUT HOW WOULD HE KNOW THAT TANYA AND I L.IVE AT THE MOTEL? WHEN 'YOUR HUSBAND GETS IN, YOU HAVE HIM PHONE ME, MRS. BORG SON •.• AND I DON 'T CARE HOW lATE IT IS! UNDERSTAND? by Mell 'yes, M'rss PEACH. r FRANKLY ,---:;::::===::::::::---, •CAN'T SEE SPENOIN& · YEA!l.'S OF TOIL ANO 5TUOY JUST TO GET A FANC.Y·LOOKIN(, DIPLOMA IN A f01l.'IE6N LANGUAGE THAT I CAN'T EVE.N ~EAO! 50 fOR:A FEW DoLLAR:S EXTRA, LET THE.M . "TEACH YOU l-ATIN ••• by John Miles G~~~~= .. ,~,,.,~·=·~-·=··,=·=·"~"·~···='·'="~"'~"'~"=··=··="~"'J' ~~~=~""="J' ~·~'"]1111 L"_'"_"_"_'"_''_'''_'"_'"_"_'''_"'_'"_"_'"_'"_"_"' ______ ::_ __ _J -. . . by Roger Bradfield u ii • I '"1 It.\ THE GIRIS "I think I've boqght eooap sroeerfts tor a week but the very next day I'm back qalA -J dou't know where •••rydlllf ....... DENNIS THE MENACE • I • P111 10 Wednttd1y, S.pttmbtr 27, 1972 S. C. Pl•u '' Kidiiaper Would Be 'Alarmed ' > • UNITED NATIONS, NY (AP) -i!/ U<rorllto ever try bamr:Sor rrom his •48,000 • ritish Rolls-Royce. a baltery of • • " ' • ; ' ·--. -• ' • t • f t •. -- . ,.,, ' "'' I r ! .... ,. r to tldnaF-BrUain's U.N. am·l---------------~-==~~~~l[:~~=:~---~-~===~~ opecfaf horn> wllf alert people I f ., ' "l'.\:!',~,!qu•~:~"' b•• __________ _:~;::::j[::::;;;~ _ _:S~e:p~te:m~b~e~r_:2~81o~.0~FE'tgo~ .. P~"·~e~r~8~· _ .. __ ~.:_'·-~~~:.:...-become the name or the ~ ~ dlpkimalic game ln many ... . ... , r '' puls of the -Id. Sir COIJn' 'I Ctowe'11 dark green limousine ' '.i..~-~ , f ~~lu~tedbe;;::i~.~~ A festival of fashion and exciteme tat May.·C0.;, N~:.v·~~:~1;, .. ~~g·~nd South Coast Plaza September 30 .·to O.; ctobe_r 8 unflappable. is not a diplomat preoccupil'CI with p e r l'I o n a I security. Other British of- ncials ~ke charge of these _ ..matters. TIIE NEW CAR is the riUb in a series of elegant vehic les provided U>e • British aip- bauadon lo 27 years or the -United Nlllons. Secret -.wt~ within its Juxurlioua lilterlor p r o v I d e what mUit be the loudest --.---------~-----•.• · ~eeret •llNleflJ,!• .,ltlll• lu J •.rur'• ' 1t.c-1o;. · .....,,1t1e • .Chat .... t ......... , , .. .,, •• ,, alar1n t. -tlae~ _:_ ·:._ £ ~.w.r~~ banahee alarm in the city. This equipment is among a number of security In- novations on DPL7, the official automobile. It all fits in with the rise or terrorism, a top issue on the agenda or this n~w session of the General Assembly, Sir Colin, 59, is retiring next yea r after 38 years in the world's oldest diplomatic ser· vice. SIR COLIN lea rned the foreign service business early in life. His father was 25 years in the British consular service in Japan, where Sir Colin was born. Sir Ullin. ¥:ith gray hair, twinkling eyes and casually v.·om clothes. now looks more like an English country doctor than one of Queen Elizabeth 's forelgn service stars. For a man who enjoys the high reapect-0r diJ>l.oQ>Alic col- lcague.t and 8rit1st>staff alike. his manner Is Cleccptlve . He has a finn gras~ or the ramifications of U.N. ac- tivities. Sir Colin's first ac· qualntance with the organiui- tion began In 1961 when he was sent for two years as his country's deputy permanent representative. DURING HIS last GenerRI Assembly as chief of mission. he is presiding over a staff of nearly 100 Britons. Unlike the other Big Five nations, which have installed their U.N. missions in government-owned building~ in New York City , the British occupy several floors of an office building in J\lanhattan. The United States. China, France and the Soviet Uunlon have separately main- tained facilities. Sir Colin has close personal tics to the United States, since on h.is first diplomatic assign- ment In Peking in 1938 he met and married an American girl. Petlna Lum of Minneapolis . Minn.. wa!l li ving in the Chinese capital with an aunt and her mother. a collector or Japanese and Chinese art. The couple lived i n Washington during World War I I \\'hile Sir Colin served in the British Emba ssy. Lady Crowe has written chlld ren's stories and about China . HlS KNOWLEDGE o f Chinese -he spent five years in Shanghai and Pekin~ - enabled him to g re et Ambassador lluang llua fit- tingly y.•hen the mainland delegation arrived here last Noveinbcr. Colin also speaks French, Spanish and Latin . Sir Colin's o\vn oralnry is Jo1Y l<'yed . Yastl y different from the aggressive. strident delivery of his predecessor. 1..<lrd Caradon. \\'ho left after the Lab6r party's defea t in the June 1970 elections. Bride Likes Btttterf lies W ARLINGHAM, England CUPI ) -The bride had a case o( butterflies all right -but not in her stomach. 1 nslead. 22-year-olC: Corinne Hicks wore them, all 2.000 of them , fluttering abt'lut when sbe married childhood sweetheart Paul Smith. "My father raises them ." sakt Corinne. '"the church doem't allow C<Jl'lfeitl, ao we decided on the butterfllH u a subltitute. It was lovely." ·~· The British are coming! The British are coming! And we 101n the entire S~uth Co~st Plaza complex in welcoming , them for o fortnight of merriment. See the world fomous J••ger 14~ . .,-foshion coUection j modeled in our store October 5. ·' · Well-bred men's foshions and accessorie" And o whole worm English libroty/drawin!J l'OQm ,~ .our Furni- ture Floor. With outhentic antiques. The finest English china ... Wedgewi>od, Doulfon._ ·Royal 'Worches- ter. Furniture, curtains, tablecloths from Her Mojesty's realm. A touch of levity supplied by reJltrl<!uctions of' pub •igns. Toke teo with us from 3 to 4:30 p.m. daily, courtesy of our t~om monogemenf. I"' ..... -,,..· •• - A classic .-..,..... - • ,. -..; . ...: ' " v ' " '. . ........ I; "l- .,_ .-,. t -• 'Cr-.... .. .... /.;fl<. ' . ~,,, ... • ! .-,, ... " ,. "~·1 ""/'.; '5 ,,, ·~ ...... ' ~" ,;, . . SHOP MONDAY TO FRIDAY4'0:00 TO 9:30 • SUNDAYS NOON TO 5 Sa turday hours 10 !O 6 • may CO SOUth coast plaza, san diego freeway at bristol, COS!a ml!Sa, 546·9321 ' . ' • ' ' • • n -" • ,, ~ '" , ' ' , r . - • '· ' ,. ·~~·'l I • • I" ~, ·} l -~ ~ ':t'"i~. \ l~Jo l'f~,· .,~)' ' Breaking Bread • D>ay A "Day of Breed" bu bom designated as the t1-!or man to plUJ< to give -lt'~1r.f6r 1111 )'le14 lrorp~ .1Jt¥l...~ - 'l'hls yeu.lhe observance la planned for Tuesday;i lcl. 3, during Harvest Festival Week and •It baa been proclaimed by Pmldenl Nixon, 1ovemors and mayors ~llll! country. • " Rejoicll)g• durin1 the harvest ...... is an age-<>111" custom, but Is relaUvely new in lbe Unlled States. It WU revived in West Gsmany lo the eorly 5Q1, spreed to other palia ol the world and arrived here lo 1918. As -of -le lrouod the globe jcU lo • tribute to the ll)'IDbol ol all food. ev~ ls asked to re-f:nact the ritual. -Pick OJ> a loaf of bread, break it and share lt with a neighbor who carries on the """'"2l until it hat 8000 full circle. Dry ' bread crumbs also dress up a parfait. BIJTl'l!l\ CRUNCH I> cup llutter 'It C111>1loe dry enriched bread crumbs 2 tabletpoooo lllbt brown SUllf I> cup chopped nuts Ice cream WblppOd cream, optional In Jtillet melt butter over low heat. Blend iii bread cnunbl, sugar and nuts. Q>ot. stirring occasionally, until deep pdeo brown. Remove from heat and apread oo bakinc sheet to cool. Breslt in- to crumbs. Layer wltb ;.,. cream lo parfait glasses.. Top wltb wblppod ~and mori Butter crUnch, if desired"' wve lmmediiitely. Or, ..... IJl .• fftrier, covereij, ontll ready to ose, Maus 2 eups. \ .Main Dis.h Simmering ~ . ' I New~11.1a,~,~ °"'"I upod .. '.!rme, ~ ' 'WU ., ·' avalable only . lo ~.~ . . ~ns cru;ne oUt at ~-atth:iuiii• pumpkin.a •re -~ , ·, danti . i. the filll, ·~ You caft : gen SJX:lnl ilamb the \ year rouna. ---I. Foc·e unu$uttlly flavorful meal, cdjk a -lamb .u!w In a pumpldn abelL Wblt makes l g:e,oine tprinl lamb available all yeaf around is the fact lbat 11 1a-llilpped to us rltnen from tbe In -' llllncls of ~ew :lea land ~ tmdel:;· :--ien1 meat l.s the · duct. Lambi llew coolred Ill, a P""'Kln & trul)"j Inspired dish, often. I . fl•--when ae r,.d loob .. .., 1111 pl good :t ~ Pl,JllPllN: ., I LAMB ,8TE1' . ·. ' I=· pumptlo or ......... : New ,.,..,and bohelessi lcmb 11 aboUWer, c:ubed ,. , • v.$ rl ··, II> • ..11 ¥• pepper . :~·i:r· i aman, llloed 1-,,._,cut ....... I cup lnlll or boal1oa ' Ort ~Pnni*'" illll llft. lllard aeeds. ' --plllllllkln, leavlJI( I tncb ibe1l. Cube j!unipkln meal J · Sb&ke lamt cubeo In • "°""' bu lo -"'~' and ......... Jleat oil lo .• aldJlet and --cubes. Add st -llld rjd plllper ood coolt untU stlclltly ~ Add cr'*1" cubei\, and beef ~ Bdllc to TUm -~otlllol '"" <hollowed DUIDlllllD ibell. . wt111.111.-.11c1. Set lilied pa.. ·.a baki1W d_llli with I Inell ' bot water. 'liab In ~led · ilO de(ree F. oven • !or 2 boon or ontll ~ sbell Is• tender wbon pierced wttb i fort<, but 11111 holds ' Ila shape. Makea I ael'Ylnl•· NEWZIWAND~ LAMB~' I • -• 1ng "A loaf of bread, A jug of wine and thou . . " A perfect combination for a "Day of Bread" observance. BEA ANDERSON, Editor w ....... .,, """"""" u, 1m '"''' :sa Spring l•mb ·becomes e meat. for all seasons when it is suc;.culently stewed in a pumpkin shell from autumn's harvest. , ------- .. Bititer·1facts So.u·r Ad's Sweet Claims By DOROTHY WENCK or...-c-" MMM AfVi..r Sugar Is sweet and good to eat -but is it good for U!? We do need energy and sugar is one of the basic nutrients which prOvldes us with energy. We also get energy from starch, fat and protein. 1lle energy value of food is measured in terms of caJories. We need energy foods as fuel for our activities and for keeping our bodies functior1'lng and also for growth and repair of body tissue. 11le more active we are, or the faster we are growing, the greater our need for energy. Sugar is found naturally in many foods -for example, in milk there is lactose -milk sugar; in fruit there is fructose -fruit augar. Nutritionally we can get a 1 o n g perfectly wen without adding sue~ - white sugar -or other fonns of sugar such as lxmey or com syrup to our foods. We can get plenty or calories from other foods in our diets. MISLEADING A recent ad for sugar gave one the im- pression that sugar wii:s okay for dieters with the headline, "If sugar is so fat· tenlng, how come so many kids are thin?" The ad continued, "Kids eat and drink more things made with 1ugar than anybody, but how many fat ones do you see?" This ad is blatantly misleading. The reason for thinness in children, of course, is that they are growing so fast, and are so very much more active than adults. Therefore they use up their calorics and don't get fat when they eat many sweet foods. •rowever, most nutritionists believe that children would be better off eating fewer foods high in sugar. Sugar, we know. plays an important part in deve1opment of tooth decay. And the habit of enjoying sweet foods is a dif· flcult one to break in later years. HARMFUL? Some researchers believe that sugar is actually harmful. Professor John Yudkin, an Englishman, claims that sugar is the moat harmlut ol the foods mtln has learned to eat over the ages. He says that sugar is Involved In causing not only overweight and dental decay but also heart disease1 ulcers and diabetes. Yudkln and some other researchers believe sugar. rather than saturated fats, cause cholesterol to form In the blood. This theory Is supPorted by research at Brookhaven National Laboratory where ~tient1 were fed diets of alternately Home News and Views high sugar and high starch content. They found that the percentage of sugar converted lo blood fat on the sugar diet v.·as two to five times greater than the percentage converted to fa t on the starch diet. Effects of the su11ar were further exaggerated in women taking oral contraceptives. QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED Q. My husband insists that I buy and use only raw sugar. He claims raw sugar is more nutritious and therefore better for you than white sugar. Is It true? A. The nutrition claims for raw sugar are very misleading. Advocates of raw sugar argue that valuable nutrients are lost in the conversion of raw sugar tn refined supr and that raw sugar is a significant source of Iron. This is misleading because raw sugar has very little nutrient value other than calories so the claimed nutrient toss is insignificant. The little bit of iron and other nutrients that you get from raw sugar are not worth what you pay for them in money and in calories. For example, yoo.~8 have to eat aix pounds or raw sugar to get your day's need for thlamin -that's 10,200 calories! You'd have to eat a cup or raw 31.lgar (770 calories) to get the aame amount of iron as you get in 2/3 ounce of liver ( 44 caloriesJ or 1/.a cup bro\\11 sugar (190 calories). In £act, one pound of brown sugar con- tains four tilnea the amount of minerals found in one pound or riw sugar. Q. My sister-in-Jaw has stopped ush1g v.·hite sugar and is using honey In its place. She says l hat '-1 II more nutritious and also is lower In calortes than sugar. IJ thiJ really true! A. Honey has tiny amd.lnts ol mitrienll which are not found In white sugar. However, the amount Is so small that you would have to eat a lot of honty fo r it to give you worthwhile amounts of these nutrients. And honey Is liquid su11r -you ac. tuall y get more calorics In a tablespoon of honey (6SJ thun In a tablespoon of sugar (40) because you get more In the spoon when you measure a llqUJd. Eat honey ror Its g~ flavor, but don't kid yourself aboot tt!i calorics or Ill food value. • ) I l I I . I 34 OAILY PILOT Fitness • S1n1H1tion it Mrles ofpotes used to firm ind ...... body. Her One-track Record ' Needs to Be Broken DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a woman Jn my 508 so this letter is not the complaint of a sensitive young girl. I have·a niece who is 30 years ot age -- and she just loves to latch oli to me at family parties, especWly when others are within bearina dlatance, and tell me how her mother <my younger sister) always used me as the example of the "bad girl" in the family during her growing-up years. Her favorite quote is, "Mom w6uld always say to us, 'You don't want to grow up to be llke your Aunt Betty, do you?'" I have been deeply hurt by thCse references to the past and cannot for the lite of me figure out why her mother would do this to me. I was not the perfect girl, but then I was no tramp and f Re no justirication for such vilification. I would never permit a child of mine to treat any of my sisters in this manner. Another family party Is coming up and I dread it. Can you think of a tact[ul way to head ofr my niece's inevitable com· ments? -DEEPLY HURT DEAR D.H.: There ta no tactful way to head off a bubblebead wUh a mouth that runs on a trolley. Your best approach is lo stop her dead In her tracks. The minute she starts to spln tbe broken record, let btr bave It. Tell her you are bored with that piece of history and If she can't think of anythln.g else to say to you, silence would bt a welcome Improvement.. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You said in a column not long ago that it is in poor taste to make reference to gifts on a printed invitation. What ts your opinion of an invitation that suggests to guests that they bring their own liquor to a 25th wedding anniversary party? Thank you. -MGB New Members Wooed DEAR MGB : "Bring Your Own Bot· tie" parties aren't my cup of tea, although they serve a purpose for some -people and some-occasl6n11.-A 25th an- nlvenary wltll. written tnvltadons is a apecl.al event, however, and tradJ1ion saya the host 1hoald furnJsb the refresbmenta -whatever they are. DEAR ANN LANDERS: t am 16 years old and tired of people telling me that my generation is the worst ever. Why don't they understand that every generation of parents and grandparents were horrified by "the younger generation" and believ- ed they were going straight to the dogs! Will you please do teenagers everywhere a favor and print the folloWing paragraph? "Children of today love luxury. They have bad manners, contempt for authori- ty, and they show disrespect for !heir elders. They no longer rise when elders enter the room. They contradict their parents, chatter in company, gobble up the dainties on the table, cross their legs and tyrannize their teachers." Those Jines sound as if they were writ· ten by someone who bas forgotten his yout h. Actually they are a paraphrase or \\'hat was written by Soc r a t es , somc1-11here between 469 and 399 B.C. So you see, Ann. we are not so different after all. -flELLCAT 1972 MODEL DEAR CAT: I've said it before and I'll say it again. A generation that is against war, loiertfiied ID social justice, deplores hypocri!ly and racism and Is determined to save the envlronmeut can't be all bad. I see a great deal to admire in this present generation of young people. l\1oreover, I predict many of the 19i2 Hellcats wUI be the ultrao(!onservative pussycats by the tJme they have cbJldren or their owu. Arc your parents too strict? llard to reach? Ann Landers' booklet, "Bugged hy Parent!? How to Get Mor~ Freedom." cou ld help you bMdge the generation\ap. Send 50 cents in coin with your request and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to the DAILY PILOT. Club Programs Varied OCMA AAUW Tennis by the Dose will 1hen1e !he luncheon planned by the Woman's Auxiliary to the Orange County Medical Associ1tion in the Balboa Bay C1ub Tueaday, Oct. 3, at 11 a.m. potential volunteers with the volunteer opportunities and proJ?rain services in mental health in the county is scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 4, Crom JO a.m. to 3 p.m. in Suite 100, 2110 East First St , Santa Ana. by the Mental Health Association of Orange County. Bruce \V. Sumner. presiding judge. Superior Court of Orange Counrv. will discuss Laws. WomCn and the Constitution ~uring the Thurs· day. Ocl. 5, meeting or thr Laguna Beach Branch of American Association o f University Women at 7:4" p.m. in th<' ('om 111 u n i t ' Pr<'sbyterian Church. Lagunci George f\fcCall and Dr. Norman E. Rudy, form<'r Davis Cup team members. and Pancho Gonzales. will speak. Scholarship funds will benefit. Interfaith Mrs. Daniel G. Aldrich will open her Newport Beach home for the fifth annual autumn membership coffee of the Women Associates of the lnterfaitb Foundation at UCI. The Tuesday. Oct. 3 cofft•(' from 10 a .m. until noon will feature a talk by l\tiss Florence . Boosey on why women become involved in the group. Newcomen Yearof"0!.111d Schoo I will be the topic under discus.slon at Ille Wodne9day. Oct. 4 . meeting of the Fountain Valley Newcomers Club in Lonmo's restaurant, Santa Ana, starting at It :30 a.m. Mental Health J An open house to acquaint • .• .. La Paloma Grand !loyal Matron Irene Turley will make an official visit to the La Paloma Court 147 Order of t.he An1aranth of Laguna Beach Th u rs cl a y , October 5, at 8 p.rn. in the 1'1Asonic Templl'. Keynotes Mrs. Gerald Silsbee of Santa Ana fl eights \\'ill open her home Sunday. Oct. 1. for !he a n nu a I rn ot hcr-<lau ghtcr- membership tea of Keynotes, Junior Auxiliary of the Child GuidallCt" Center of Orange County. Greeting guests will be Mias Crlna Sebring, Key· '}Otes president: Panh ellenic Laguna Beach PAnhellenic y.·111 begin its year with a cof- fee in lhe home of Mrs. l\1ildred SilJstrop Wednesday. Oct. 4. Plans for the year will be di3cussed during the 10:30 a.m. event. . . Guests arr lnvi!C'd to the meeting. \\'hich \\'ill be follow - C'<I by a socii!l ho11r and recep- tion . Junior Ebell .Junior E!x·ll Club o Ne~'llOft Beach \\'ill greet pro spcclivc n1cmbers Tuesda• Oct . 3. fro1n I to 3 p.m, in !h Ne\\•port Beach hon1c of Mrs DnniC'l McSwcenc v. M rs Hichard Cannon 'is mem· bership chairman. LB Women Organist Bob Ralston who is featured on the "Lawrenet \V~lk Show" y.•ill be guest nt the rirst tau meeting of the Woinnn 's Club of Laguna Beach Friday, Oct. 6, al 2 p.m. in the clubhouse. A luncheon for club mcn1bers will prect>de the p u b I i c prrformnncc>. ' - Red ·uced to • •• ' Simple :Pre9r~m By AU.lllON DEERR Of ..... "" lftff she explained, .M\ deYdopecl her JlfOll'ltD o/ exa'Cises hued on J1f01181118 dooe liY the Gract Jane 'l'rebel-surveys Hunzas. caucuian1 natiYeS of your 11..,. wUIJ a crUical eye the HJmala,.s. and then 4•ribes how you She expla"':~t there ls can allm ~ and firm up never any ao or strain w1lbOut. ev'I' .-;ng your when the poaes ~...,done cor- balr -wllhjut dieting. rectly. "You can klee weight H er p '1• 0 , c a 11 e d wllhout dieting," sio' added. "because the sessi~ burn up · .. ~ .... ......t.... '' 1-a ·-Jes of f t .,.._...,,.. "' ....,. cak>ries and super uous a poses dtsiped "to exercise buj do oot increase petite." almost all of the ~lus With her speci'1 ea! plan voluntMy and involuntary (UiJI) calories for ~· 1600 muscles of Ille body wit.bout f0tt men) chosen ti'om the basic strenuous JllO'Vement." fiff food groups, weight l.o6.! is Sltoptlcal! I f11ter. Drinkers are' allowed Miss Trmer, a Conner ~occasional cocktai~ model, iJ five-foot-six, weighs 0 The Sanasession program 120 pounds and wears dress ts not yoga, not calisthenics aif.e eight. She once weighed in and not isometrics. All of my at 190 pounds aod filled a size exercises are done silting or 20. lying on the floor. No pills. 'Mle slim blonde developed drugs, special equipment are Sanasession after she was im-required," Miss Treber added. mobilized by an auto accident for six months. Her weigjlt \REACHES MUSCLES climbed from US to 190. She "It works because each pose tried every known exercise reaches muscles that normal and diet but nothing worked. actlv'ity and e1ercise & ~t. Each pose is held for only six RESEARCH seconcis followed by three After five years of research, seconds of relaxation." Author Grace J~ •• .. z., .· Trfber Is perfect siie , 8 through program. Once the eight JlOS'S are 1learned, she said, the session takes only four minutes. The program can be accelerated or teamed with the meal plan for faster results. Benerits, she explained in· elude keeping muscles toned and fit, renewing eoergy. trimming stomach bulge, tak- ing off unwanted inches. help- ing one relax and in<.Teasing endurance. Miss Treber, who resides in Manhattan in an 150-year-<>ld townhouse, explained tha• just dieting to lose weight is the WiOng iaPproa"ch.Jf yocf&-not - exercise along with diet, there wit be sagging. dimples and stretch marks, she claimed. ADAPTABLE Her program is designed for both men and women, takes little time from a busy schedule and can be increased or decreased to meet in- dividual needs. The program is described in Miss Treber's book ' ' Sana.session: Four-Minute Effortless Inches Off and Slimming Program for Men and Women" fitst poblisbed.in 1969. ~ 'The author will offer free exercise classes to dem- onstrate h e r program' in the book department of the Broadway stores in Hunt- ingtoo Beach, Tuesday, Oct. 3, and Nev.·port Be a ch Wednesday, Oct. 11, ir01111.i to 9 p.m. Slacks are recom- mended for those interested in participating. ARTIST AT WO.RK - Watching author-artist Taro Yashima personalize his book is Ian Van HQven, 4, son of the Gerard Van Hov~ns of Corona del Mar. The Los Angeles author accompanies his signature w i th colorful watercolor drawings and a spec ial signature stamp. Taro Yashima Claims 'Books __ Offer Pre'(i_ew'._ By JO OLSON Of tllt ~11'1' PUii St11f If a person loves children. has a 1nessage for thein and has the talents to write and paint, what is the natural thing to do~ Write books jusl r o r children. of course. Taro Yashima has been doing just that sine! 1953 when his first book. "The Village Trtt," was published. A native of J apan, the Los Angeles author-artist started v.Titing books to satisfy his daughter, Momo, who was curious about hff' father's boyhood in J apan. "'rhe Village Tree" tells the story of the large lree which wa!' the center of1social life in Yashima's home town. 11is other books." including "Cro1v Tap 'n T oe Botttiq11e 1 DANCE SUP l'l,Y I 441 Wf ll lttll SlrHI 0 9111 1nd H•rtlor) Co1t1 M.w -'•IS-4$11 Boy," ''Umb r el l a'' ancl "Seashore Story" tell both J apanese and Am c r i ca n legends. Yashima attended th c Imperial Art Academy in Tokyo for three years and came to the Unite<i States in 1937. joining the U.S Ar my .. when America entered \Vorld War II. His art ..... ork has been in Vogue. Fortune, Harper's and other magazines, and he has illustrated three children's books besides the rive he has written. Yasbima's wife Mitsu also is a painter and il- lustrator, assisting him in the administration of the Yashima Art Institute in Los Angeles. "Children are pretty. They have special beauty," says the quiet author. ''Their beal_:!IY is a very important thing.'' fl is writing and t h e personalized touch he gives each book he signs arc in- dicative of hi s special feeling for children. pletes each drawing. Yashima's signature stamp, a representation of "eight islands" which his name n1eans in Japanese. is ex- ecuted with a special carved stone and is a definite part of the painting. the author ex- plained. A decorative rigure is then stamped to take attention away from the art i st · s signature, Yashlma ·added. Harmony is very important in his work, with the red signature stamp playing an important role in producing the physical balance essential in a harmoruous.'Work"~of ia.r€ The s ignature ·stamp is the final key element in every Japanese work of art, he stressed. Yashima continues to write children's books because they are. he feels, a preview or life for youngsters. "That's the way they gro\V. Through a story they can learn the wonder(ulness of Jiv. ing. They can go where boats cannot go. Their mind is open- ed up to the truth. Gradually they can learn to fa ce the hec· ,, . •' . . -' .,_ ... _., .. ,,_,,..,,.. ' . WPdnt!.d.ty, Stpltmber 2 ~7 ._1:_9_7.;.2 ______ ..cD:..A:..IL:.Y...c..P-'IL.,.O_T_,3,,,.c_ Horoscope: Scene Change for Pisces THURSDA Y SEPTEMBER 28 By SYDNEY OMARR Sagittarius is an advocate of fair play. Natives of t h is l.Odiacal sign generaUy are loyal. fond of learning, do plenty of traveling and can faU in love on a foreign shore. Sagittarius makes money wi th Capricorn, is physically drawn to Aries and often marries Gemini. Sagittarius should ex· ercise caution in dealing with Pisces and Virgo, should be encouraged in contacts \.\'ith Aries, Leo, Aquarius and Libra. The planet associated \vith Sagittarius is J upiter. !he number is 3. Sagittarius is the ninth sign . ARIES (!\l arch 21-April 19 •: Where you were footloose and fancy-free. you no\.\' have responsibility. Take care with what you say and v.•rite. Your words are apt to be analyzed, perhaps misinterpreted. Don't make promises unless you can deliver. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Money situation could depend on condition which is not close to home. Means you will have to write. to open lines of com- munication. Expand horizons. Don 't be petty in any sense. Scorpio and Leo are in picture. GEMl1''1 (i May 21-June 20 ): Your ability to make quick changes. adjustments co mes to fore. Cycle is high. l\1ature judgment is a requisite. You handle mo re responsibility. Mate. partner confides money problem. You can win. Stick to Eye to Holidays plan that is or1g1nal CANCER (JUl'll 21.Jul'' 22 f Some restrictions are to( your ()WO benefit. Know it aod don't fight the inevitable. Ride \\'ith the tide. Taurus and Libra play prominent roles. Area of movement is smaller than usu.al. Use material at hand. ~ (July 2.3-Aug . 221: Some friends apply heavy-handed methods. Sec beneath surfaee indications. Avoit1 f o o ! i n g yourself. ltefuse to be pressed into emotional corner. G1\'c )'<lurself breathing room . Basic 'l'.'ish can be fulfilled. vmco (A ug. 23-Sept. 22 1: 0t.'<' 21 l Lit! kl\.\' l'rrmll matl', partner to selZe 1nl· ti1ttive. AC<'ent 1s on public relatt<>ns. f 1nun<:1 al ar· rangemen1s, llunch pay s d1\'1de11ds. One "'·ho t:lught you in past <'ould make reap· pearanc-e. Be receptive. CAPRJCORN IDec'. 22-Jan. 19 1: Guard health. Avo id ex· tremes. St u d y Sa~htarlqs message. Bu ild on solid foun· dation. E schew shortcut s. Pa- tience now p.1ys dividends. Element of tuning is 111 your fa\'or . You are due for pleasant surprise AQUA RI US I Jnn. 20.Fl•b 18 1 · \\'hat you desire 41nd \.\'h<"\t is necessary -thC'Se n1ay co1t- flict. Key is \\'iilingness to make changes Don't feel you are v.·eddcd to s talus quo. \'ou ng person has prohll'tll I F-\·-1 ~11=:1:!:,., SJI!?c Sleigh H UNTINGTON HARBOUR C ONTINUOUS CHRISTMAS WORKSHOP EVERY DAY Ours A1on• ""PAK·EnES" C11ntll11 & Y11rns THE UNUSU4L IN CHRISTM.-.S OHLY 19 OAYS \.IHTI~ ln1111e Tiit l o•ro .. atk §~opp1nq CM!fr HUNTINGTON BE4CH 161~1 Al.GONOUIN al W411N E.11 ... "" : P e r s ia n RUGS Au+ti111tic: H•11d Mtd•. linpotttd -Nfw •"d wl1>t•9• 11!1c:lio111. THIS WHK ONLY SHIRAZ S'S" x 7' $335 R09. $4SO. KERMAN Peril.an Rug1 & Imports 2165 E. COAST HW Y. tAI H11191,..._.I CORONA DEL MAR 67.S-7340 You are i::iven opportunity to channel creative for l' e ~. Professional s u p e r i o r in· tervenes in your b e h a I f . Capricorn plays important role. Outline a1nbitions. goals. \'ou can achieve if you koow "'here you're going. Koow ii and be \\'1lling 101_1'_...,..;;;;;;.;o;:;;;;;;;:;;;,;;;_-;:;-;:;;-;;...;;.;;;;;;;;;;_..,..;._...;;;-;;-;;;-;-~ di scuss it. I' LIBRA , (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): Philosophical concepts come to fore. You are able to spread influence. Write, publicize and advertise. Add to knowledge. Share aspira tions: learn by tearhing . What appears to be opposition may actually aid your cause. SCORPIO \Oct. 2.3-Nov. 21t : Admiration and envy n1ay at· company each other. Helati1·f' could be involved . C lose neighbors play roles. ioo. Fresh view is necessar~·. especially where money and legal documents enter picture. Act accordingly. PISCES ( fo~eb. 19·'.\lareh 201 Quesl for securil y rou\d be dreary. You require change of! scenery. Probe deep f o r answers. Be an a l y ti cal . Gemini and Virj!o indi\'iduals could be helpful. F'ix electrical appliances. B r i g h I c n stu··i roundings. IF' TODA\' IS \'(It! H BlllTllL>AY ~nu :1:·t• ;11•[1\1'. ch·n:un1e . or1g111 .d. :1 11.11ur:d JC:;ider In 0 l'l11l1t•r ,\tlll 111.1) travel You v.·1!1 h;11l· ;!t'l'.1t1•r l opportunity for 't• 11 l' \:· pression. S:1i.:1tl.1ri;111 1·1111111 play nnporlunt n1lt• H1·t·1·111 e1not1onal bruise 1\·111 ht .. 11 SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Ir===--;;;...._ TURN A LEMON INTO LEMONADE 'JlrJci /h e ~ /or lhe N-E-W LQQK HAND TIED ELURA WIGS REG. $70 NOW $35 .Som< wloh Not11ral Skill Top f,cell1nce 1n workm<tn\h<o -C omloriebl1 c~p• 1n THE •YPC"or COOL-CAPLESS WIGS -- Ribbo11itd or Webborll S"tch Co,n for li9ht, bn~err co...fott. in ELURA by MONSANTO TtH1 n~w mor•cte /,b~r dc e•n I lri1z, 1t•~• curled. but c~n be '"'"' lor dill1rcnl styles, look,, f11lt end •Ch Ii~• hum 1 n ti •• ,. ELU RA WIGS & HAIRPIECES from ................ . We Helff • rm.te ,,,.. .. •oo• t---·---FOR'MINONLTI -- Workshops Scheduled e CLEANING ._P.Alf.o!I1ttY.--e PLUMBING • WALi. WA SHING • CAllPET SHAMPOOING e WINDOW WASHING We Cl.an & Point Homes Ask about our new cool, li9htwti1Jht c:1pl111 n•lu1 1I looking lcupee1. fo r the craft classes and may be made "''ith ~1rs. \Veston Walker of Santa Ana. ex- ecutive di rector. & Re11tals For Mo,,e-111 RENTAL READIER 64S4 820 569 W. 19th St. 250-D East 17th Costa Mesa WIG and BEAUTY SALON St. -Hillgre n Square 548-3446 Demonstrations on the art of preserving flowers and olher plant materials will be offered at 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m . 1\1orxiay .. Oct.. 2. in the Memorial Garden Center al .. ___________ , . ._....._....._.~ the Or ange Co u nty•-------- Fairgrounds. A craft t;lass will follow the demonstrations with e a c h participant l Ci"eilti~ a design with p~ plant material Instructions will ·be giveo on skeletmizlng, cryslaui'.ting, ,..nng an41'f<S'ing fiowero·. ' Also offered will be ~ant and food &ables, National "Cooncil; .fiower arrangetne;it calendars and give-away plant material. A second workshop Monday. Oct. 30, will focus on hand- crafted flowers of cones and pods. The annual holiday bazaar will take place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the 1'tfemorial Garden Center. Reservations arc necessary Introducing our own Cootinental watches. Swiss excellence at a Penney price. 19 95 DANCE TIGHTS \\'hen he autographs a book, he puts his signature opposite a watercolor drawing v.•hich he executes instantaneously to fit lh!j mood of the book he is Sir#ling. A black outline of "lig- uid smoke" accents t h e bright figures, and a special sig!)l:lture stamp in red com- lie world.'' -----------1 SALE DANCE ~~~~T' ,2 WHILE ITOCk LAST ElfC ... 1¥1 Ort"'" CM111ty dHlft of ...,.If .,,.. D1wi.s. T" ShOft ~I fnm E119~~-~"-~-~~~~i Yashima 's visit to Orange County \'.'as sponsored by the Children's Bookshop~. Corona dcl l\1ar. SAM°OAN l,!)~P~t~~ $Uf"j/JtU Ii · .:-' · .> 1 _... 'P/W,,_, 'l'o avoid d1sappo1nt1nent. p ros pective brides are reminded to bave their wedd ing: stories with black and wh ite ~loSsy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women 's !J .. partment one week before the wedding. !:U~tawtlm DINNEtlg s2.9!i . f soup -entree -beverabe 1 (Served until 7:301 I 3901 E. COAST HWY. CO RONA OEL MAR 675 ·09\X! ' ._ ___ _ Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompa nied by a black li)ld white glossy picture. be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. II dead&ne iJ not met, only a story wil l be used. ' To help fill r equirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are a vailable in all ol the DAILY P ILOT o!lices. Further questions will be a nswered by Women's Section staff members at 6424321. .t. tllrv FF Cup1 UCI E. 17111 St., l'llll11rtn 54 . ._.,.s~l' Coil• Mtw . . . ' ~· i . ' ;ii'\ ( > Men's sport, digital and day/dale watches in silver or gold fones. Selection includes some w1th catendar, swriep second hand. luminous dial, elapsed liming bozel. Water and dust resistant· ·As long as case. crystal, c rown are intact. JC Penney 1495 1695 Ladies' silvertone sport watch with calendar, expansion band. 1995 ladles' gold-tone and brown sport watch. Dust resistant. ladles' sllvertone calendar watch with blue dial, sweep second hand. The values are here every day. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following .stores: ~AS HION ISLA ND, Nowp port Beach 1714) 644-231 3. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunlingto n Beach 171 4) 892·7771. Festivities Open -Year • The Race Is on at Marine View Marine View l'TO is planning to feature a I-l ot Wheel Race in the Aqua- ti c {'arnival Sa tu rday, Oct. 7, at th e school. Signaling the start of the race is Rc rnadel!C' Davison and raring is Slac:ey l...ewis . T,he_me~ Vary • Unit Drives r E:.'ditor's Note: A colum1i devoted to f'ou11tain VaL- ley, 1-lunti11gton Be a c 11, Ocean View and Se al Beach School District par - ent-teacher organizations will appear ill the DAILY PILOT each wel!'k. l11for- mation must be rf'ceived by Mrs. t.ilbcrl 1'11r11bull, 5671 J.fangrum Drive. /-l 1111 t- i11gtan Beach by 5 p.nL 1'/1ursdaJ1 for p u/J/icufion l\lfd.u"'4y.J the Ocean View School District board of trustees Monday. Oct. 2, at 7 p.m. in the aclivity roorn. REPORTS: Guest speaker at unit meeting was James Carvell. superint endent of Ocean View School District. Special guests were Monte McMurray. zone coordin111nr ~nd Woodis Chaddick. £Jssis- tant superintendent. Dwyer PTA \\·ork in , the recla mation center at Five Points Shop- ping Ce n t e r , Huntington Beach. Volunteers may Ccin:- tacl 1\lrs. Robert Rooney at 962-3863. FY High PTSA J\1rs. Hog er Bclgen President C0~1 1 NG UP: t.:nit ..,,. i l 1 Marin e Vw. PTO J\.1rs. Earl i\1orrison President REPORTS: Unit has donated $100 loward the purchase or a calculator-computer .ind unit will continue to budget $100 each year until the total purchase price of the com- puter has been pa id. Unit also contributed $250 fo r the purchase of equipment for the primary learning center. EDITOR'S NOTf • .': A column ~ devoted to Newport Beacll, Costa Mesa, Lagu11a Bea'clt and M1ss1u11 Viejo pare,1t- teucher organiaztioru will appear i11 !he DAILY Pl- l .OT each week. Informa- tion must be received by rite wome11's departm.e11t or /,Jrs. Cared Smith. 1746 ~ Gentelia Place. Newport Beach by 5 p.1n . Thursday f or publication \Ved·nesday. • Balearic PTA i\1rs. Richard Danielson President COMING UP: Rubella and measles vaccinalion clinic at I p.m. tomorrow. REPORTS : John Case. prin- cipal was honored guest at back-tcrschool luncheon . Mrs. Robert Behnke and Mrs. Ra y Carsley. hos pita li- ty chairmen served coffrc ;;nd greeted parents the day school opened. California PT A Mrs. William Clapet President COMING UP: Family picnic and association meeting at 5:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 29, at school ... Pt1embership drive will continL~e through Friday. Oct. 6 . . . Or. Helen Trotter w i 11 ad- minister the free rubella vaccine from 8 to 10 e.n1 . tomorrow Paper drive Wednesday, Oct. 4. in the school parking lot. CdM El e. PTA Mrs. Stey,•art Carpenter President CO MING UP: Mrs. Stewart Car penter. president will host a get-acquainted patio barbecue £or parents new to the school at 7 p.m. tomor- row. at.hoc home- Ea stbluff PFO Mrs. Eugene Kovach President COMING UP : Bicycle rodeo sponsored by the Newporl Beach Police Department will take place \Vednesda~·. Oct. 12. Girl Scout Troop 123 under the leadership of ~1r!'. James A. Douglass wi\I assist General 1neeting: al 7:30 1>.nl. \\'ednesdav. Oct. 4. Bylaws will be discussed ... Rubella and rubeol a immunization clinic at 1 p.m. tomorrO'I'.'. s·· e . ht ndent Par en t Council ~1rs. Paul Dugmore 'President ' ' sponsor a perforrnance or the Neil Simon play "Plaza Suite" Tuesday. Oct. 3. in the cafeteria. Filling star- ring roles .are students Lin- da Burge and Tonl" Hunt. Mrs. Lorin La mm~s and Mark \Vood, who also serves as dran1a coach. McDow.ell P.TO . Mrs. :witlliam Collie< President , Lindbergh PTA .• "L"', Mrs. Paul B,.milton ; . ·~ · "-President' chai rn1an is in charge . , . Rubella clinic sponsored by the PTA and the March (lf Dimes will take place at JU a.m. Friday, Se pt. 29. ~\lrs .. lames ACklrv President · CO.\IJ:\'t; UP: Coun<.'il will meet a! 9:30 a .111. \Ved- ncl'day. Ort. 4, in Fountai n Valley School. P r o gr a m topic Js the Sc hool Psychologist. Spea kers wilt be ~ti\o Bibelhcimer, direc- tor of special services for Fountain Valley Schoo I Dist ric l, and representat iv es from the di strict psychology staff. Hosti ng the meeting 'l'.'ill be Fountn in Valley PTO a11d Newland PTO . HEPORTS· Sate of calendars. council's sole fund-raisini: project. is undcr ,,. a ~· Procrcds \\'ill he usrd tu pro\'idr J'l'.'ards for s1udent contcs!s College Vw. PTO Bur ton J\.1arsh President C0'-11NG UP : F: x cc u ti\' t' board \~·ill host a n1eeting ol BEPOR'T'S: Executive board hosted a back-to-school lufich&0n • for f a c u I ! y members. f\·lrs. Ho be r t Syn de r is hospitality chairn1an. Eader PTA l\Trs. Arthur ~1el\•in President C0~1JNG UP : Bo1vling league will 1ncct at 9 a.111. Monday, Oct. 2. 1n l\ona Lanes. Cos!a Mes<.1 Officers will b r f'lectecl and <I practice sc~ion \1·11[ follow I he 111ceting. Le ague C'om- prlition \1·ill beglf) Monda y, (~rt !J. al ~~ a.m. Further in- fonn alion ('an be obtained by con tacting Mrs. Robert Arthur at 968-3035 ... Unit rncrting is scheduled in con- junction with back-to-school 11ight Tuesday, Oct . 3. at 7.30 p.m .... Ecology drive \l'ill take place throughout October. Unit meinbers will '~ ~.>!t ··~-··'""""'; Tea Parties for Little Ones, Too Lak e View PFG ~1rs. Dick Backstrom President CO.\llNG UP: l\lembership drive 'l'.•i!l be launched at ba ck-to-school nighl Mon- d;iy, Oct. !I, ;it 7:30 p.m. and will conti nue until {'.·Jon- dav. Oct. 23. BE:PonTs : Unil hosted a lea for mothers u f kin - derga·rtners. La mb PTO J\.1rs. l\1ichael Slaton President REPORTS: Set the Pace to Win the Race is the theme of the rnembership drive currently under way. J\.lrs. John Drake is membership chairman. \Vh~e their mothers arrange to alt~nd the room mothers tea at J·larper Scho0l •.t 3.30 1 f..m. Th~1 rsday. OcL 5_. Michelle Meyers, Meli~sa M11rrh 11nd tath~rlne Crosby I efl to r1,l(hll have their own tea partv . G0~11 NG UP o W'W! WoiY Roundup is the theme of the membership drive scheduled fron1 Monday, Oct. 2, through Friday, Oct. 13. Mrs. Charles Bolin i s membership chairman. REPORTS : Executive board hosted a potluck luncheon for faculty members. Jn charge of the event was Mrs. David Siino, hospitality chairman, assisted by Mr~. Don Lewis. co-chairman. Meadow Vw . PT A Pttrs. Mary Zangger President REPORTS : Unit sponsored a tea for klndergartners and their parents. Mrs. Paul Bridgman, hosp i tal ity chairman, hosted the even t. Newland PTO Mrs. James Bay President COMING UP: Unit will host :;i meeting of parent volunteers Tuesday. Oct. 3, at 9:30 a.m. in hal l B of the Fountain Valley Civic Center . Information will be given co ncerning s p ecific volunteer assignfuents and PTO goaJs for the year. Further lnfonnation can be obtained by contacting Mrs. Wade Smithson. chairman. at 968-1528 . St . Francis PFA l\1rs. Julian Judd President REPORTS : At unit meeting, plans were outlined for up- coming peper d r i v e s , potlu"ck dinners, a n n u n l fiesta and Christmas tree sales. Use of fund s raised also was discussed . Aiming For Fun One of the attractions at Arevalos School's PTO C~rnival will be a bean bag toss which captures the attention of Jeff HIU and Jenni· fer Cram, The event will start at 10:30 1.m. Saturday, Sepl. 30. COMlNG UP : Rubella clinic Monday, Oct I .•. Ride the Cwl is the· theme -of the membership dr;te 'th'at will continue through Monda y, Oct. 2. Mrs. Jack Ortberg is chairman. Harper PTA Mrs. Roy Pfeiffer President COMING UP: Rubella and red measles cli nic at 9 a.m. tomorrow. Monte Vista PT A ft1rs. Thomas E. llerndon President COMING UP: Board meeting at 9:30 a.m. tomorro\V ... Combined rubella and red n1easles clinic from 9 to JO a.n1. Tuesday. Oct. 3. Newport Hts . PT A Mrs. James G. Blain President COMING UP: Bicycle rodeo at 9:15 a.m. tomorrow. ?o.1rs. Ralph E. Stevens ... juvenile pro tection and s a f e t y fiH High PTA J\lrs. Earl De \\'olf President JlEPORTS: Plans for lhc up- con1 ing membership drive were discussed at today ';; board rheeting. Proceeds help provide st u de n t scho larships. Pa ularino PTA J\.1rs. Paul Dumuin Presidenl C0i'.11NG UP: Exec u Ii v c board meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday. Oct. 3. in the faculty room . . . Rubella and measles in1n1unization clinic at I p.m. Thursday. Oct. ~ Volunteers for !he teacher 11id progran1 arc needed to help students in reading. \Vorkers who can donate three hours a \1·eek are needed from 9 lo JO a.m . for fourth and fifth grade and from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. for first , second end thi rd grades. __ ..,_ --~ , Facts Bared Ch rista Ballinger and \Vally Joe Grant \\'on't be it all surprised to find their bea r frienclr e,:iting ice cream at the Bear St. ice crean1 social Thursday, Oct. 5. The 5:30·8:30 p .111. get-acquainted event 'l'.'\ll take place at the school. And those arc the "bear" fac ts. Pr esidio PT A ft1rs. flugh Thompson President COMING UP : Get-acquainted dessert social from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. \Vcdnesday, Sfp!. 27. in room sL"t: Studerhs. staff, family and friends arc invited for home m a d t' desserts, coffee and punch. Rea PTA Mrs. Vern 1\101\an President COMING UP: Back-to-sC'hoo! night and PTA meeting ha\'e been cancelled du e to the constructi on -at sch o o I . Meetings will resume in December. St. Joachim PG Mrs. John Stoneman President C0!\1JNG UP: Fathers y,·i!I discuss the annual carnival at 8 p.m. tomorrow ln the home of Mrs. Raymond Jorgensen ... Meeting for parents of boys interested in scou ting at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the parilh hall. REPORTS : i Contribution of new or used book earls o~ ' I castors for l tables are need - ed for the! leernisig ·center. Openi ng s &f.¥' JlVailable for n1en and ,C: El'n~lunteers 111 !he cenf . i ·' St. Jo~n A~1c. ~1rs. ffitloJI :ftinsen President HEPORTS: ., l1 Jphn's 350·· 111embership ~nlest started la~hur9d y, as 101 nie~rs an ,guests at- tended tbe fitst general n1eeting. Grade 48 won the attendance a~ard. Sister M. Annunciata Introduced the faculty and l\1rs. Harold Hansen, p res i dent in- troduced her slate of of- ficers. ~-lrs. A nth on v Becker. past pres id en.l presented the Rev. Anthony McGowan 'l'.'ith a '$8.397 check from auxiliary fund raislng activities of last year. Sonora PTA 1\trs. Thomas Elitker President COM!Nf' UPo B °3f i q u e ·i wor~bop at 9: a . m . ~­ Wednesday, Oct. , In tJ\<''.- home of M"'. William Jordan. ~· REPORTS: Membership dri~" with a bowling the m't ,. started Mo nday ..• -~ Members serving on I~ '1 board arc the Mme !t'.·~ Thomas Elicker. president:' t William Jordan. H a rot dl Newbern and John Kiskamp. · vice presidents: Richard 1 Jtimison and John Prickett,1 secretaries: Richard' Riley,i treasurer; Leonard Holt, . historian : \}urch Pickett,:~ parUamentarian, and Miss. ~ Nancy Heiman, auditor. , 'f. 'Victoria PT A Mrs. Tem LuU:avisb President COMING UPo Board meeting at 9:30 e.m. Friday, Oct. 6,,. in the borne of Mrs. To~. Lutcavish ... Back -to .. school dig'ht for parents at17 · I tonighi.1 Mn. Hans Weyer. • membership chairman will ' cpllect dues . . . Paper drive • from 19:30 to noon Saturda,1~. Se~t. 30, In the !Chool perti . lot . • lO • I R!lPORTSo Tea fa< mothers pf preschool studentl wu - given to enable parents -to ; learn about the new pl!O-· ' J grim and meet Mrs. Lor>j" Finch, Teacher. • • \V'pPdlend, f'FO ":.. J"'I'.~ .. 111 .. ~-COMINt UP: • 'l'h\ld annual Westehi napJ~~ breakl10t' at I olih. 84jiday, !lii!J IJ, wU! be IOllowed a carni~al . ut~at.' p _ m ~ ~Jt11~ -~·-~ ~--.. _ ---' ' •• . ' .. • Pe_ars Appealing I FFut 1nd ch11M "!'Ired In 1 tempting low-:calorle .. 1.d. Geltlnc richl lo Ibo heart ol the matler Is I dtllriooJS pn>o- ... when I b e heOlt Ill a creamy core of pimento cream cheese, onions and olives, and lbe "matter" ii a carefully peeled and cored fresh Bartlett pear. . The combination comes to the table looidnl Ukt I simple pared -· and mull Its tnte ltlf only a.a It Se eaten. Cbilled 8li<es ol pear, with an assortment of cheeses mab I aood light lunch. IP' peUzer tray or endint: for a complete meal. Baked pears are a navorful beginning for .~i~ IGshermen Knew Secret of Brew • Enhance your child's poise and posture. A planned program of lessons with the exclusive Ice Cepades' easy leamlng methdd gives you or your chlld healthy exerclee In pleasant supervised surroundings. Ir you want to know how to cook fi.m, ask a fisherman. They love to eat the product of their labors and know the many species of fish and the advantages of various cooking methods for the different types. sauces have been added, fish cookery is very simple. For one thing, fish cooks quickly and should never be overdone. For another, the delicate Oavor of many fish would be lost if other more powerful flavors are added. NEW Except w h e r e elaborate Oriental Touch Goes Nuts Some fish can dry out wbile cooking and , for thest. beer is a perfect marinade 'ell by itself. HADDOCK WITH CREAM SAUCE 1-16-0unce package fillet of haddock (thawed) 1 plnt heavy whipping cream 7 scallions cut up (including greens) I teaspoon butter Sall and Pepper lo taste 1/4 cup beer OPENING SOON The old American chestnut of an easy to fix, economical meal e a s i l y applies to casseroles. Marinate thawed fl.Sh in beer for 'h hour before cook- ing. Remove fish fro m marinade and place in baking pan. MESA VERDE DRIVE However, any cheese. chicken or tuna casserole needn't taste like an old chestnut. 1w.,t of H•rbor Blvd.) Just swing Oriental by ad- ding slices of water chestnuts. Pour heavy cream over fish and then cover with scaJlions, adding I teaspoon butter and salt and pepper to taste. Cook in a 350 degree oven for ap- proximately lS.20 minutes or until done. Yields 2 to 3 serv- in'gs. COSTA MESA Tel: 979-8880 They have a delicate and easily blended flavor that can mean exciting tastes and tex- ture for casseroles, soups and salads -and even souffles and quiche. MONDAY THRU SATU RDAY OF COSTA MESA PRICE LIST MONDAY THRU THURSDAY fRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER Shampoo end Set · $2.50 Permanent Wave 7.50 Tint ' / 5.50 Bleach Touch-up ( 10.50 Frosting 14.00 Manicure' 2.00 Pedicure' 5.00 'haircu~ $1.50 1695 •·lt-vuie Ave. -Costa Mesa CORNER o~ wi:· 17th ST. -ABOVE LA CAVE RESTAURANT 645-1050 548-9986 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK And MOST EVENINGS l'BE Elil:VATOR" ' ... -,, ___ ....,, ,....--..... -• __ ..... _ - SURPRISE PEAR SALAD 2 (3 ounces) packages Philadelphia Brand cream cheese with pimentos. 2 tablespoons chopped green onion 2 tablespoons chopped ripe olives 1h teaspoon celery salt 4 fresh Bartlett pears Lemon juice Western iceberg lettuce Real mayonnaise .. ..-... -.. . · . • •• 4 "' • . -. . . . . .. .... Wtdnnday, Stpltmbff 27, 1qn D}IL y PILOT II • lh Surprise Salad I -. --. -. -·····- SHCIAU THUlSDAT, fllDAT, SATURDAY, SlPTlMlll JI, 29, JO RUSSET NUCOA MARGARINE ---1° lb. tubs c 111 c H o,.. t •·•· t• 6:30 p.m. -7 Doys a Week We rnen-e the rl9ht to limit q11a11tlti1t1. Now you can get 101: off on Walter Kendalr Fives• Dog Biscuits or Fives Kibbled Dog Food. There's Meat. Vegetable. Cheese. Charcoal. And Ginger. All in the same package. All made to make his mouth water. And let him eat hearty. Walter Kendall Fives Biscuits. In the morning to break the long night fast or as a treat any time of day. Walter Kendall Fives Kibbled Dog Food. For a nutritionally balanced meal. NEW KOLD-KIST Frozen Soups YOUR CHOICE 00 0,..11 9 a .111. ta 6:10 11.-. -7 Doys • W..t: • •• • • • " ' • --~-----____ ..,_ -------- . . - :Ja DAILY PILOT Wtdltftdar, Sf9tffl\btr 27, l · •. - Hens Fai~ Game for Elegant Evening . ,... far dlnnu? .Borv• Rock Bniah ,.,,era! llmel dunni lit 1.upoon 1omon Juice Dash ol nutmoc I about 5 minutes). Add pan Cort)lsh same -with a baking with reme,illlng BUl!ng ComblM 1U inll'dienw. Va ·Pan dripplnp drippinp. delloakbl 0.-.ond IWll1ng SaLICt. Serve with ROM Sauce well . Yl<lds II cup. Ill teaspoon comatarcb c.mblne eomstar<h and J'-1 and a debdous sauce. (below) Roat Sauce l lfl teaspoon water teaspoona water. Add aiowly SUie lbe.m as they roast · Baad8c Saace ''i cup red currant jelly Combine jelly, v~ cup water, lo sauce. C.ook over low beat, wttb abDtber sauce, 1o help v4 cup rose wine or chicken 1 t cup water butter, lemon Julee a n d stlrrin& constantly, u n t I I them g!tr.e and brown. Add a broth 2 teaspoon butter or nutmeg in smail saucepan. slightly thickened and dear green vegetable, a crisp salad 3 tabl..........,.. butler o r margarine Heat over low heat until jelly (about 3 minutes). Yields 213 NS d ~-pie d ,..~ and --~--WINE SAUCE GL 09ES CORNISH HE an a sun e u -~~rnarg~~ar~1~·ne~·~·m~e~l~Jed<l_~~~-'~ll~le~a~spoo~n~le~m~o~n~ju~ice~~~m~e~ll~•~a~n~d~m~l~x~lu~re:...."b~sm~oo~th~~cup~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.::...:.:::_:::_:::::::_::.:"":::::.::....::::.:.:.:.::.:::..:...:..::.:.:.:.....,.-~~~~~~-l'°"'ve Sot It Ill together. ,_ The ltufflng and the two sauces are mad.e with rose wine but the stuffing contains an ingredient that adds nutlike flavor. interesting texture and health -wheat germ . Eeclt tiny goldtn flake con- tains food valun all out of proportion lo its size and weight -more than JO nutritive essenUah such as protein fl good quallty, a great many miner als feiipeclally lron) and a !orig list of vilamiN including the entire B-complex. So. with a delighUul dish , you are eervtng health to your guest! lncideolally. the recipes can eaally b e multiplied to &erve four or six . RdCK CORNIBH GAME HEN~ ROSE 2 Rock Comlab game hen• 2 cups small drf bread cubes II cup wh<al germ \i: cup rose wine or cblcken broth II teaspoon sugar ~ teaspoon salt \\--pepper i,s teaspoon allapioe 2 tableet>OO" butter o r margarine, molted 2 tablespoon chopped roasted almonds Wash henl In cold water. Pat dry witb paper toweling. Sprinkle cavities witb salt and pepper. Combine bread cubes, wheal germ, wine, sugar, salt, pep- per and allspice. Let otand 10 minutes. Stir ln. butt.er __ elld __ almonds. If not mol.llt enough r add t-2 tablespoons hot water. Stuff body and neck cavities. Place wings and neck akin under body. Secure body cavi- ty and tie legs together. Pl~ce on rack in shallow roasting pan. Brush with BasUng Sauc~ (below). Bake at 425 degreeS for 60-70 minutes or until doM. Parfaits Per~:· E·nding ·:· .. ' Whn )'OU look 1t a lulcious dessert, what do you see? A perfectly lnnoamt meal-ending -·or a teemlnl lllUI of calories just wa!Ung lo pounce on you in an unguarded moment? For most calorie watchers, the first Item on their list of forbidden foods is desserts. Yet tasty, attractive desserts can be included in their menu. · Take Citrus-Berry Parfaits. Served tn tall glasses and garnished with lime slices , these chilled desserts are as easy to make as they are pret· ty. To cut down on calories, the packaged dessert mix Is pre~ with water Instead of milk aDd beaten egg whites and 'tow calorie detsert top- ping are added for extra nuf· finess. . The ...Ull II I lllll'vlni that has oniy 112 ~rlOs. :· CITRUS-BERl!\' <J1AJIF AITS 1 teaspoon unfl••ored gelatin 1 to-otmce package frozen raspberries, thawed I Skmce package lemon whipped dessert mix 2 tablespoons lime juice 1,-1: tea.spoon grated lime pe<I 2 stiffly beaten egg \.•:hites 1 cup whipped lo"'·ca\orie dessert topping Soften gelatin in 1'! cup cold water; stir over low heat till gelalin dissolves. Stir i n raspberries; chill till partially set. U1lng water in place of milk, prepare dessert mix flt· cording to package dircclions. Stir in lime juice and ~\. F'old in egg whites and tor~­ plng. Chill JIU partial ly sel Jn parfait glas.se'J alternate whipped mixture and berries. Chill. Trim with lime slices, if desired. Serves 8. Batter Up Here's a sandwich that goes great wllh the World Series. Cut sesame seed bun In lhree parta. On bottom slice, spread butter, sour cream and mustard, edd lettuce, liver saUJage and Cheddar. t On second buttered slice put crisp bacon, Cheddar end slic· ed green onion. Top with but· tered bun slice. and enjoy a $Wlngln' BnscbRll Cluh. --. . . . . . ~ PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., SEPT. 27 THRU TUES., OCT, 3, 1972 '4>0D AT ALL MAlln BASIET M.B. DISCOUNT FOODS STORES , . .. ' U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF CHUCK ROAST USDA CHOICE BETTY CROCKER LAYER ' I ASSORTED FLAVORS llJLLCREST ' ' • • CAKE MIXES SODA POP 18 1'2-0Z. · 12·0Z. PKG. CAN • ' . . '"'""·"'" ...... . "~'"" '""-·~ . ~~.~~.~.'..~,~~RK~~!~~~~.~~~· D~se:..~~~.:~~~-~~~~~~~:.!'~ .. ~ . .:~:~~ • .. _ ""'-·~ • Ul•tl•, l lll I 1.w..-11., • t ll .. Hllllll U•ll 11¥1•., I ll • 111Ul11fl. tU.,j (.,.-..... ~1 ... o 1-•-. .. Jf)fl.a-.... • lnlMltilll(l,11 ......... tl.4, • 11, ..... ,.............. • JM ..... .-~-.U, I 1 ..... llff,llllt'-MI • 1""'1"· 11 1 ~ 1 .. iw1° • ! .. ~, ... 11H • 1 ........... ,. • UlfflUOYl. 1IM1 ... " •••. • tt•11HI, HUI.•-.. • ..,. .. u, ..... UtJlf•t-So •• = ... ,......... . Uillf,1,AN,lu•. ,,. .. ; .,... .... ,.,. ........ ...... .......... lffl1.1 .... ,.._ ... ,_ • 11111 .. U 1'11••·•"""" • Uttt•UOJl, 1Jtlt (~... • ••n•1• ...... -~ ... ,. • -"·· , .. , ••. _.... • ""' ,.,. .......... _ • J&IUU .. 011 ........... • mn-.aMllC_ ... • """' '''"' 111'''' • IOfttu .•1i1 .... ~.1.. • ••Cltlll .. IC.1111,11111 .. , • .,.-.• lllllKllU. n11--....... • MT...-................... . ...... &(II,, .. ,..__ ...... *""""'""""' ,,, ........... WllCl,Mlt-~ • llllllO•!I, 111111 1'""'•"f1•1 • CGfllll tllw \ .. t .... •-11 • 11111111'1Mlll Cll. '"''-o llll!Ktlll.lllf"""°"llM. • •11 .. lltttn lhtl 1.,.. tit I "ftt\111,Hll ~. • )1111._l, 111 .. .......,... • .. "ft,JIHll.INlt"' ... f. • : ... ·~··u ... ,,....... • (IOlJlf llll, ltllt ..... ,..... • 111111'111, ,............ .• ... utl.JUtt•ooltiol-•ht-el'MM"91C\Htlt ................ ,.1••1101 .. ••l-........ -.-~1. ,,,,,,........... • w.tllft,JMlll."""'lto""'- • 1 '"' ll,IJlt,-H •Ill.I-.. t/IW "-'ht , o U .. lfl, 11111& , ... ,wi.. o .... ¥1&, IHw.--....... tl,U.U .. l,IHIW.Niolt<. • MWi1•-.r1, 11 .. l_W • *Hll.lflt4.lltl ....... a.,.;l •---IHI.a-...... • •••U"H ltflth•looot<. • fOVSll!tuun,141 • ..,,,,.,..._,, • l•IU\llf.11•1•.•·-I" ... l!lfflfl",tJlll.,_.,....,,.,1119"A, l l,l....,.llo4. • 111......-,tttW...,..,.,... •Mlfl~..-,t»kltW•..,.. • WATCH YOUR MAit. IOI... ' :=-::ilf.;.:;; ;:.~ • .._.., .. ,.a,..•ftll Wffll H ... w1 wl _ ... _ ............. -.. ..... hht1 .............. ... .. ........... .. --· " ... • I ' ' ' • ' DRINKS Rlf~shin1 .-c~· 49c Frvlf.Flawon ... • :~!· ·\. BREAD ' Pit.CU irna1v1 IM - LOS ANCfELES & ORANGf> COUNTY • CdtlP1 CATAUllAI __..: • • R1&1lar tr Diet 12-oz. Can SKYLARK BREAD. e Fmhly Bokod 3 s 1 Choice of Crushed,· Wheot, Homestyle 24·Dl. or 1rolion loaves -. . . . , . . . --. . . . . . . . . . @ I @ BEECH-NUT BABY FOOD Strai••• Yarieties -Fr1its or Vere tables each Joe:k&n. ....... 111 fuU of Buttery Sunshine. Creom Style or Wholt Ktmel c " li-IL 19( C11 3 4-Roll $1 P"ks 54.oz.49c Size 1&-oz. 27c c .. 40·0!. $100 Pk1. 27·DL $129 Size ~ LUCERNE c.on~Gl CHEESE Hit~ 11 Prtt1ia-l1w In Calories! c BREA·KFAST lie~ 11 Ft•• And Energy Values! 6-Env. Pack LIQUOR AND WINES DAIRY-DELI. DISCOUNT PRICED! DAILY PILOT 39 PAPER NAPKINS Colortex 8 Stock-Up! Package C of 60 BISCUITS _, 8-oz. Pkg. Fr1z11 Ctnttntnte • 6-0L Can ~ Schnee ken ::::-. ~~:::: .... 39' 9 Pudding cake w':J.., ·~ 63< ~ , . \ \·_ .. lb. \· ,• ' Blode Cuts ldeolTo Borb«:ue! ·usoA Grade 'A' Safeway Q .. lity Under14 lb• Average Weight . UsDACholce 'lrldtlamb Shoulder Blode Cul American Lomb Beef Rib Steaks .... , ..... _ $109 Lorvt Meoty Cut!IOBroil I~. T B S k USDAOo\u.... $ 9 • one tea s ~:::':.:;';' lb. 14 Ground Beef Pork Steaks ............. 69c USDA l111pec1ed 111 2 .. 3-lb. Pk91. ''· f'"*"L-.a.ttC9'1 aac r "*r n Meoty I' fa~ttm Crain-red Por~ •· T Si I i S k USOlOoko $178 op r o n tea s "C:~· lb. C cl B • k t "'"""''" 99c orne r1s e if':c::~:.-;,'•: 11. Spencer Steaks U:.J§::1:;i 11. $2 18 Cut-Up Fryers 11.38c STERUMG;MD BACON FRAN ulf'11m!J$Mbl Fla""'I ~':: 79c """' 68< HI. l'q. BIEF Ill "FIESN"IH1 ROASTS BRISm Halibut Steaks /':,';';:= ~:'P' Cooked & Peel'ill.Shrimp '" '2" C0oked Salmon Cakes .. $p• Safeway Sliced Bacon ·~r :;:: 87' lamb Rib Chops u~'r.;.:'. $1" Shoulder Clod Roast ~~ • $1°' PORK SAUSAGE JlmmyOeonPtff• 99c !2-11. ok• $1.76l II. HAM STEAKS Oscor 1-11. $198 Moyer P~&. BONELESS ROAST USOA tho;ct Beef Ch"'k Rolled & l •ed "9ac FULLY COOKED HAM Former John Quality Brand Shonk Portion ~58c PIECE BACON. Hickory Smoked 1.64c • 1 ' • · • 111111 .tiysi•1 lk., 11iwpert 8eacll • 211 E. )7111 St, Costa Mesa • 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Laguna • 636 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach • • • • • 111 E. D Clnillo Real, San Clemente • Santa Ana Freeway at La-Paz, Mission Viejo • • Wilson & Fa1rv1ew, Costa Mesa . .. . . I • -- 4f DAIL V PILOT Wtdntsdl.y, ~pttmbff 27, 1qn PILOT-AIMRTISER f Cuisine FavoreQ ~ by 1bJ In a JiJJ'.All bowl comblno soy marinade; llir fry I _,_.J t I \0 po• ~ d a 8111 (c,o , caslooollJ ~apanese , 1an • ., JOllNA Ill.INN BURB~K, Col~. -"'111ey "Y I( ,... lake l re1h grapernau with yow m..i.. you don'lbave to worry ·~ weight-adding," Norwegian actress Uv Ullman said, ordering a .. dieter's lunch" here at the studio com- missary. There was no indication that Liv looking cool and refresh- ed 'in a beige, form-fitllng knitted dress. had been work- ing since early that morning. filming outdoors in h u m I d, too-degree weather. Liv, pronounced "Leave," looks even better in person than she does on the screen . She's blonde w; th beautiful clear-b lue eyes. A big food Jover, ~ never a dieter - she ha!>lt\lally welts off her rood ID htt home city o1 Oslo. Liv 19 an escelle'Dt cook with a cosr:aopolite's palate, not a startling . clttumltance since she was· born In Tokyo. lived briefly lD Torooto and New Yott before her parents returned Ut Norway whe.n she was six years old. "Let me tell you about my favorite meal for company." Liv Ullman habituolly wolk1 off her food . she ea.id eagerly. "It's not NftecJan tiut a beautiful beef so~ m.tt! with Japanese vegf!tablet -i "It's my favorite way or cooking: you just p o u r everylhing into it, starting with d•ctDus meat I martu'tec:t oftmight and ad· din(':'the ~an sprows an<l. bamboo shoots. "The real secret is in marinating the meat. I use soy sauce, wine, and. what do you call It. Terra-Cotta sauce?" I suggested she might mean teriyaki sauce. "Yes: ~hat:s my way, my pronounc1atton 1s not all that easy," she laugh- ed . "I made the soup the other night for 30 people and it wa s very successfu1. It was a big surprise because my guests didn't expect anything like .soup. They all went aro~nd each with a soup bowl, serving themselves." She makes a seafood version of the sou p, using lobster and shrimp. Liv's idea of "heaven'' is eating in "any good Chinese restaurant ,'' but she particularly praised Le Man- darin. She seemed happ~. t.oo. about returning home. looking fo~ard to h<'r fa voritf' Norwegian d e s s e r t or cloodberries with cream. , "11le actress bas f o u n d Americans to be v e ry warmhearted. I "\Vhen I went into the sh_oJl looking !or these strange in- gredients for n1y ~!Up, l!lt' woman bv the <'ashier said . •what 8re you going t_o m11;ke?' She \vanted to hear 1t all and pleaded. 'Please co1ne in' with the recipe. I \vould make it. "I think that's so beautiful. Jf 1 were ever lonely here. I would go into a 'hop because. when you go out, the people sa'y, •Ha ve a nice dav or h~~e 3 nice weekend.' Perhaps 1t s only meant as a nice phra~e. but t fee1 the people m~~n It. I so I take it to my heart . Liv Ullman is fYJ\11 bl'1ng · 1001ed as the new etts:man nr Garbo. Predi<:t.ably. !tht ,,.,·1!1 make it on her own talent. her natural ho nesty and stra1f,lhl· forward manner. She shun~ becoming a Holl~ood star "l ant to be 'lhe same persoft here as when I go home.'to my bedroom . Because 1 have a feeling, what does Elizabeth Taylor do a f t e r such a day? She goes home i1Jto her bedroom . I me a n 1hl must be like us, a human being. "You no longtr have time for your friends and for the people at home. Melley ll nice when you have It. And I'm afraid that suddenly t would want it. "And the Joy of Uollywoo<j ~~ofall>etlln a · . pr • ""fl' amua- ucltiog '!'orld toaetbcr with -I~ and ,..., mother: tnd yw can ~ways be Gii ib.i side lookmg 81 it I" to diagonal Jlltpl I pound rresh mushrooml or 2 cans ( 6 to I ounces) slic· ed mushrooms sa""", water. supr, minced Add bean aprouu, 0::.il.1. ~> U>at !onqs reroove ICll!h 'top. Strain, .... and ground &inger. Let stand stir tty 5 mlnutes Jonger. t blly lear lf any meal ttmains·ln ntal• onion, vinegar, garlic powder ahootl artd •ater chestnU~· r 2 quart nrater ror IOIJP. \ l Clljl milt Silt, _ .. tuk. Heat Ila& ~ Rub acr-~buUer lflO llour, mix ~ 1toct and • to boil until thickened. Stir well, then add cream, chives and heated fish balls (or fish pieces from stock). lJY's rec.i~ for favorite ~ Jap,an est and Norwegian follow. Vt cup butter or magartne 2 cups finely shredded cab- bate 10 milw&es. ~ IUft in 8 · 12 peppeia:nDI l~kioi ~es, remove and Place beef in a aoug fitting wit~ ~-. ... , 2 teupoooa Nit UJe hl soup In place of fish UV ULLMAN"S BEEF bowl. Add soy sauce mixture Liv s ter1ya_ki '-' ~PY hs ~ cup celUJ leeves ball.5. . AND ~fUSHROO)I TEltl YAKI 'la cup soy sauce I can 'I poundJ bean sprouts, drained 3:4 tea~poon garlic powder a, .. teasroon ground gin~cr Cover and refrigerate 2 hours. texture, but l.J1 reality m(ft. 3 sp~1gs frtsh Plrstey For the _fish soup: flin,,e; pat dry and slice closely . resem~les a s~. 2 onions, quuijred g cups fish stock fresh. mushrooms or drain Serye with a dulled ~ed wlle, Make fish stock of hea~. 2 tablespoons butter • 1 1 cup water 2 tablespoons s h c r r y or sugar to taste 2 tablespoons instant rninecd onion 1 tablespoon vinegar 2 pounds round steak. cut in- I can 1fl1 • ounces} bamboo shoot s. 1'ra1ned l can 1 ~ oullt('S 1 water clles1nut.), drained and sliced canned mushroom..~. Cahf~ml~ or an imported bones and meat of small f_i.sh \': cup all purpose Oour In a large wok or 12-inch Beau1ola1S . of any kind. Place fish in 2-3 cup sweet or sour cream skillet. heat butter. Add FJSKESUPPE ~IED water Jn large stock pot with 1 tablespoon choppe<_I chiv~s mushrooms and saute 3 FISK.EBOLLER remaining ingredients. I can fish ball5 (available in minutes. Add cabbage and 1Fl1h Soup with Flsb Balli) Bring to sk>w simmer, cook Scandinavian food Import saute 2 minutes. Add beef and For the fish stock: slowly... tini hours . Skim oc-hou.sff) Liv's main dish soup Is hearty, !iRing but s t i I I delicately .flavored. Gefllte fish cut into large pieces is an !'celleril suhslitute for canned '°"'eglan flSb balls. ---·--------- PHS, TH Over 80,000 families switched to lasty~ar: • 1nct.pendtnl Swvey Conduct•d Ameitg Ralphs Cintomet'I. USDA GRADE A-SOUTHERN WHOLE FRYERS MORRELL-FULLY COOKED SPICES & WATER ADDED Avg. WL 2·2Y:z lbs. LB.• MEAT MASTER BEEF EXTRA FANCY WASHINGTON-New Crop GOLDEN DRICIOUS AP Pl ES DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT PRODUCE DEPARTMENT BO~l:tlESS HAM 11 9 BONRESS 99 lb • CHUCK ROAST lb • . ' Ge1ber1 -Sl11lned -4-0l:. tin oldprlc• 08 .... ~·c~Cheese ,..1.15 •All.-"'p"~mposE ft:t'l.'B'EEF"F'FiANKs .... 85 llllCI •s""PEARS Oac1rM.,•r-lf'l•rS•111egew l -oi. ~ IKLI SANDWICH SPREAD c••• .ll't rlWfft, n.v0t1111 lb .15 lb .05 .... 05 ••. 10 ... 10 BABY JUICE Arm0<ir S11r-llp TOfl CASABA MELONS AU Grlnd1-l ·lb. c111 SANKA COFFEE •"•"'• 1 08 MEAT MASTER BEEF BEEF SHOULDER CLOD CANNED HAM >lb 3.49 BANANA UASH Tlllck Yello" M1~od. 1.ot • Pr.elo111-Low Fil PEARHALVES i oldprlc:• 49 .51 • COc••n Spr•y-qu1t1 ~ltt• old prlc• 53 ranapple Jwce ·" • BONELESS TOP 1 88 FAMILY s1r101n Steak lb • STEAKS lb l.09 RICOTTA CHEESE A99ul1r Of J1l1p1no SUNSET BEAN DIP Sun11t -Non-Di lry • .• 71 ·~~~ .41 PEPPERS n••• U.S. No. 1 A111111 POTATOES B•lty C'ock•r-fu~e old . 89 BROWNIE MIX 2J-01. pk9. P•~,~ •. ., MEAT MASTBI MEATS CHIVO DRESSING iial'b'i:'nc1 Dressing 11·01 •• 47 11-0I. 89 botlle • II r~ froW6ff5 Bfllll! 11_nd ColOrtul 11111 Sllould1r-Blade CHUCK STEAK L11n. Tend1r Cub•• lb .89 lb .. 98 ~.1 :49 lb 1.89 lb 2.29 lb 2.89 C1Hlornl1 -G'1d1 A-01y1 F1111\1r FRYERS Whole 3·31-2 !b1. 1vg. C1lllornl1 fry1r1-01r1 Fr11h1r lb .37 " .-75 Frlskies -Dial• Oln11tr old price 18 CAT FOOD •~-01.c•n .11 • ALPO~ooo·Fooo 016 '"~~ .28 INSTAN+''coFFEE old p;~; 1.28 DAIRY DEPARTMENT REODt"'WH1PTOnPPING l -01. ,59 KIWAN DAISIES ... ~ •• 79 fre1h 11'td l11ut1M bunch .89 MIXED BOUQUETS HOUSEHOLD VALUES STEWING BEEF Fry.-Legs & Thighs FR;R~s·· lief Loin Cul London Grill Steak Beel Loin Cut 01Uclou1 -Nutritious Bottom Sirloin Steak GROUND TURKEY Bell Rib Morrill-Sple11 & W111r ..t.ddtd SPENCER STEAK Boneless Ham Slice R1gul1r or Hol -l·lb. roll -39 long Gra1n-21·01.pk9. 84 lb.' 1 MINUTE RICE old pr~~; • lb •• 69 SPAG'HETii1SAliCE oldor~,: .45 in. 1, 79 CAMPB0ELL·S'.$1QlJp old o·~~; .1 6 Ju11 Squee11d F"lsh.Orange Juice ••·or. 79 Acrylic-M1nr Pop..il1r Coto11 ""'' • KNITTING YARN Vfnyl-L11th11-llke -ZO..p191 PHOTO ALBUMS •·o~ 99 1k~n • •• 1.89 BAKERY DEPARTMENT LIQUOR DEPARTMENT B~etT1nd1rloln Sl~ed or F11et Mignon ,, ,~. 'l•t• fJlfl L11n Grind-fr11h Jimmy Dean Sausage ••.• 89 Banquet -A1)0r11q-l ·o1.pkg.· ''' · 19 Bulltrrnllk Htrde•• Cr•ck1dWh111 4 MEAT PIES i P''.~~ • . . " .49 RfGHr''(i(JAi\'o'.'::·~. """:: .91 RBALPREAHDS I 35 8.69 GROUND BEEF F1e1h-B11I FLANK STE.AK BEEF'MEAT.loAF MiR'A"t::·crifE' BACON JOfl••-l·lb. pkg. SLICED BACON lb .98 lb 1.79 ,..89 ,. .73 .. 1.09 Rid "n Gr11n BURRITOS Ou:•r M•r•r-1-lb. pkg. LINK SAUSAGE f:a1i.m Pork Shoukle1 PORK STEAK Fr411ll-Nor1hern ROCKFISH FILLET i>.llc:lou1 Weetern Style COOKED SHRIMP ••· 1, 14 Liquid Anti1eptlc;-11·01. bolll• old 0,.ce 1 09 21i!:J • MICRIN 1.21 • R1lph1-f,e1h Bek•d ~I 39 89 H11d&Shoukler1-•.l -or.tub1 '' . 1 32 CINNAMON ROLLS oli • lb. I SHAMPOO ' ..... ·,·, • 1 09 R•!f:h1-HOFMrnldtGoodne•1 l "i lre 79 Re9ul1r lMlnt-f•or.lube 87 APPLE PIES ••·I lb. ' C t" 11\P ""'"" res i00 . aste· 69 1 R1lph1-Dellclou1 89 2 49 . MOCHA TORTE CAKE •K• • lb. • ...._ _____ ...... .,,_, ... Hew Ev1ryd1y Low Price LAKESHIRE GIN Si ndy MHcAlll1t1r .SCOTCH (S••• 1.00) 1Anl;!tnt A91 BOURBON lS••• 1.001 ••.• 8.99 •.•• 9.98 ..... .10.98 Ralphs combinaiion of SUPER BUYS and EVERYDAY LOW PRICES is the best way we know to keep your grocery bill down. R1lph1 OLD FASHIONED ,,.,.,_.,, , •.• ,, .. ICE CREAM "1~~.59 iffifAroES ·~::.25 HEA LTH & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOOD R1lph1 Eiclu1lv1 ioo-et. 31 Ml1t11t• Miid-PlrM FEDTEST ASPIRINS "'" • LEMONADE Ml•• Brt clt HAIR SPRAY 81r>Cl•Ald Br11'td SHEER STRIPS EW1 Strenglh formwi. VANQUISH TABLETS IJ-or. 71 ''" . ,, .... 74 pll;g .• ...... 74 botll• • Breek 811lc-Un1c1nl1d 6 Sc:•nttd. 13 97 HAIR SPRAV ~!~ , Ory look-Uquld HAIR CONTROL ·~· 75 bottlf • Solt I Or~-Spr1y ANTI·PERSPIRANT ..... 1 24 c1n • V!llJnt EYE DROPS ...... 110 botlfl • OrMn Ol1nt-Mldkl111 P111 or NIBL.ETS CORN Ro11ri~ BEEF TACOS Tr•e1we1t-Fi0rld1 ORANGE JUICE Pl1d I Very Btrry HAWAIIAN PUNCH Don the Be1chco111blr COCKTAIL MIXES Sntuck1r1 -Chocol111 FUDGE CAKES ROUNDSHRiMP l2·0< 27 Cln 1 10~:;: .33 l2·••· 45 pltg •• 11·Dr. 53 c1n • ..... 21 c1n • .... 23 c1n 1 "~·· 1 09 pkg. I """· 145 pkg. I Palmolive r fl ' ;;.;~~~;~.11 • -Deterge ~:.2 s , ,,. PANTR'fFILLERS Llpfolt-Soup Ml1u ·~.35 HOUSEHOLD NEEDS CUP·A'SOUP -· ... --.69 ll"ee...-t-un ... •ltned ..... 51 GRANULATED SQAP tiff GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .... Hindi Wr1P I 2:.46 F111tto -Gold1n i-Ht. 83 PLASTIC WRAP SHORTENING Cl fl I 1.0.S.-Alltollllk 1 Hllnl'1-Specl11 -Dishwasher~ ...... 69 Witt! H9l'tl OI" To111.to I ll• .. .. TOMATO SAUCE ..... 25 ':t" Clfl • C OROX BLEACH 91L 58 Aftdefl0fl-Po11to« ...... , .... 25 GL10~·e1AGS ...,, ,. SPUT PEA SOUP c1n 1 1%-ct. 89 -¥" GRAPEh~ P.111. 1 ..... 33 AMDrlff Colors ··~ 20 c1n 1 DIAL BAR SOAP Canladlu · .., .. 21~ 28 WiNOOW'CLEANER T~porary ledured Prire. TOMATO PUREE c1n • ...... 42 C1••111 ol M111NctOM-....... M1nuterturers Special Allow•ct. Cre1111 ol Onlorl ..... 37 WAJEh SOFTENER , .... 89 ' µPTON SOUP MIXES Clrfotl I .... -GfkD E~ER YDAY. lOW PRICES HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOODS PANTRY FILLEAS PANTRY FILLERS PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLO NEEDS ...... 0•• ~.82 ~ ... ~·-'-·~~~ .22 DANDRUF F SHAMPOO ORA NGE JUICE .,.,._.,o_, ' --''.;::: .58 ...... _ ..... ~-----~ COFFEE ~:~ 1.09 TOTAL CEREAL ' COFFEE ·: 2.1_3 FACIAL TISSUE ... ,:.30 , .. 1••"'"•" .. , ... .:: 1.21 ......... ,_, .... , ' ANACIN TABLETS CUT COAN ··~~ •• 43 ll:lllllltot"• ·-. ._....-i:.~ 1.43 CHli:ICO'NCAFiNE ":.41 ....,,_,_~ ::: ... OROUNO CINNAMON ...... 39 NOH FAT MILK LtoUIO DETERGENT '""'"""' '!·'i 1.21 -··-·•11• ..... ..,.,,~.~--•• DENTURE TABL-ETS APPLE PIES ..... 77 -····"'"'"-... '::.ao , ... ~ .... "',:; .22 LISTERINE SPR AY TINY PEAS .......... ..:.:.: 1.03 . .... _.,, ... ,, ... •;:;: .• Texturitlng Shampoo MEAT PIES DRi'Sri:N CAPSULES :.: .71 .... 1.. .. ·-· 71 POUND CAKES ..... O'OGFOOo , .. .: .09 ..... ,_,._ ··~ 1.21 d-':.ot l., __ "rlii°""" -;: .• ~.ea EE TOMATO SAUCE f J'OILETT UE ~--c.-1..:M 1';.1 0 :/tj)';'NIEMIX ·=:.11 ,..,..._,"""' :;.47 TOTAL CEREAL ONl~UPMIX ALUMINUM FOIL ,.., ....... _, ,.._, ,,_,,, .. --'':,.4'5 sT'LAO DRESSl:l ..: ... 1 ..... ,,_ °"""" -=.a GELATIN DESSERTS CHILI CpN CARNE ~~ ......... o-. l .. ,....._°" . ... S'miN'i?AAC RS ·.:.-._ ..:.21 COl'l'E£ • CAT'JICIOO .... E ' ' ,.. • , .. \ ., ' . .,_ ..... -- ). - \\: " I>' Ill hi ,r, "' of : ' ,, , : I f Win""""" with lo~b ! ~1 I 'a~I Masson Yin Rose .............. ., ........... ' lJ ....... ,, 1.79 Bright flavor, fres h and frui1y! .5th •; Paul Masson Emtrald Dry ........................ J.: ....... l'.99 Delectably dry ... golden color! 5th '' ·· WtdntSday, Stptembtt 27, 1972 E l Rancho lays it on t h e line ! Compare quality -compare valu e -compare variety - and see t,hat you n ever com e off seco nd best when y our first choice is El Rancho! FRESH! ' ' Ch •.-kL-i B1-1·1· . 1• . "69~ .... , en u 0 .1ne...... ... \Vestern grown U.S.D .A. Choice lamb ... compare -and see that there really is a difference'. loin of Lani:b Roast U.S.D.A. CHOICE .......... · .. : . . $1 5!. Boneless leg \vith Rice and Mushrooms, or Apple-Almond dressing. Net wt. 8 oz. each An epicurean's delight! Here"s a lamb roast tn \vin plaudits at the table' Me.at LoQf ~····:·· .• 9~. Por,ll :Sausage .~ .69~1 Fres hlt madet-an~ completely oven ready. El Rane.ho's own ... Old FashiooedStyle! '\ Ha111 LC.of ....... 9~ .• Ground BeefLowFu.\ $1°~ .. Just shape.an<\bake -truly fresh~ Beef as fat-free as it can be! ..;:::~-ii~~.&.:: I I I Turkey~ Loaf .•.... 79.~. Chili Grind ,. ..•• , ~19~. · 1 1 • . . . . -' ~ Looking fo r the difference? A good place to start is wit-Ii gmund. meat. ·' . ~. . Fresh .. , from El Ranc~o's own turkey! Coarsely ground beef, always fresh! ~ . I ' : \, Sand ·o·C.bs .............. 89! Small, lean salt water fis~, wit~ a delicate subtle flavor you'll appreciate! Hptibut Fill,,s • ~ •• \~.8'" .CPAlled Shri 1 " p • • • • • $ J '' .. Af\Y&.ys a favorite ~Jfe?J:riehU!Northern Fisq . S~u Francisco style, for c fails. -· l p ~ ").,..'.)I l("\1011~, .... ' \~ .. ! , 1 1 I ~• ' • ",( ·, 1 ~ t. ' .,,h I 1 -,,, • - . ' l a~ { • -:~·.\ . ·~~iA:' ... }.· S.~P~~ d·ro cery Values~· · .. ·,H. 'l . . ' [qlfli!Ill;l!!ll!.f..~.: ... . . . 4 ,,,,, ' ·I I Mlllll·PilJS ;TOUFFER'S ••••• 411 What more can be said kbobt quality 8.fter "Stouffer's ""? Beef, Chicken, Turkey, IO oz. Frozen. · /llJIJB:OPCOPR emosEYE ••• Ir.I/ Garden goodness lockecfin as only Bird~eye knows how -sweet peas, golden com! 10 oz. Frozen. ...... 5,,,1, Yollllfli NEl'l:'.sPRINGF;ELD Eight ounce cartons of-creamy goodness, i~$,vored "fruit-on-the-bottom" flavors! Tomato Sciµp .' ... ioc ij 'lce Cream ....... 79c Heinz ... in regular 101/'! oz. can ' Royal Host .. half gallon rounds! Pineapple Jd)ce ... 29c ' Jello ........... 5 ,., s1 Dole's Hawaiian goodness! 46 oz . Swanson Breakfasts 39c • Froze.n ... simply heat and eat! S.nackwic~'~ .. 3 '" s 1 Frozen by the Green,G1ant! 4 oz. S ghetti SaUCe 2 , .. 39c pa . '. Lawry'• mix -1-1> ~• ~3<iz : •. 39') Globe A-1 ,~~les 39c. Cb008e your widthf i2 oz pkg • Dog fo'Ddt ". "l •• 4 .... s1 CamatiOll'• llt!ifl'.ml'Llvely-14 oz Royal 'Towels .... ~gc Focell e"em'ooft, /Wfy~Jlig Jtl. Save on the big 6 oz. packages! Seven-LI p ........ g5c Carton of six 12 oz. cans! I Cheerios ......... 43c Breakfast favorite in IOoz hkg. . ' \ M · s109· ax1m . I • I I ••••• I Freeze dtied -4 oz (8 oz-Sl.i9) Hijls Bros Coffee . g3c One pound can (3 lb. can ... 2.39) liquid Ivory .... _.4,~. So kind to your hands! 22, • · Cascade ......... 1$ · ' For automatic dishwuhers -50 o.;. • I '\ ' Compare color, texture, flav or -·you'll Choose El Rahcho every tiine! 1 i -. 1~; ' ' ' Bulk or Patties ~~Avs FRESH! •• 69! For economy, use it so many ways -and be so pleased with the quality and the pri cC'~ Lean Grind VALUE TRIMMED! •• ~ .... 79b~ . ..... 89~ Try this for flavor and tenderness ... choose goodness in bulk or patties '. •• Extre)Lean, BULK oR PATTIES !. ? lean anci'testy 7. P..P''\:~~~ fw-w iL88i,yays freshly ~rol.ind beef at El Ra neho~ Sup·ei.,1£e«;n TEND~~' I~ .-••••••• ~ ·9C!~ ~' '-r ... , ' ~ o lean, you'll wqllder how'i.t can be sq da:verful! •.• CHOPPED STEAKS ... 99' lb . ---......•. -------------~----.. --~·~----· ···-- Super-Fresh Produ ce! P&BiBBB p~~ ~~g 451 U.S. NO. 1 Russets ... the all purpose potato for any mettl! Cnn1pare thr qualit y! Red Grapes ••• 29 1• Cabbage •••••••• 9'"' Red Emperor variety ... sweet and juicy! Solid heeds! ... serve a slaw this week~• Delicatessen Specials ! Wieners oscAR MAYER! ••••••• Everybody loves Oscar Mayer! All Beef or All Meat! ! lb. pkg Bologna ..... . 891 Pickles •••••••• Oscar Mayer -All Beef or All Meat 12 oz Pulaski's Polish style! 32 ounce jAr Shrimp Cocktail 331 Pen & Quill Dips 351 Lascco· in 4 oz serving glass! Eight ounce carton (New Benn Dii> ... 45') ---CHEESE OF THE WEEK--- French ''B011l_Sin'' . Seventy percent butterfat gives it~ soft buttery texture. 99• Herbs added. Have a chee8e and wine party! 5·oz. • • • • • •• • - Liquor Dep 't , Valu es ! EL RANCHO'SWh•iskey SAVE $1.00 $869 BLENDED HALF-GAL Only the bottle is new! The spirit is still El Rancho's 86 proof! T ·1 s4•• equ1 q """ •... Vinya Rose M1w1 s 1 •1 El Rancho's own I QUART ... 5.89 Delicious Portuguese wine! 5th Purex ·B~ach' ...... 33c For whiter wtii!¥111.\Jilljl.g.llion I ( ;·· .,. Prices in d(ect Thur. through Suni &'8;!28, 2~l .1t\ Oct 1. No•ala• tode~lers da l:Y g:to 9 • '. . Sunday 10 to 7 ' .. Scotch Qu11r ••••• s4•• Weibel Verrnouth s1 29 Holiday Times , . , a.great value! Extra dry, extra !lpecial! Qt. I ~ fl ' ' ' . r -. ' - • DAILY PILOT Wtdntsdaf. Stottmbtr 27. 1 '172 • @ Plentiful Foods WE'VE-CUT HUNDREDS > • OCTOBER 1 972 Features FRESH APPLES Other Plen lifuls RICE ORY BEANS BROILER-FRYERS CANNED APPLESAUCE & APPLE JUICE WHEAT PRODUCTS TURKEYS UNITED STATES OEPA•TMENl OF AGllllCULTUllE Plt ntlful FOOc11 PrOQr•m Let Kids Get Hands On These DEAR NAN : llere ls a • r e c I p e for no-cook can- dy tbat appun la a second-grade reader "More Power" (Open ff lgbw a y 1 Readers, Scott, Fore1m1a and Company). We made these fa our 1ummer program and tbey are easy and dellclou1. This one for Peanut Balter' Creams. They are supposed to be chlUed before forming, but It 11 not absolutely nece111ary. You Mil need a large mixing bowl, mixing spoon, measur· Ing cup, spatula or knife and a LET'S ASK THE COOK by I Nan WHy sheet or waxed paper. Mix 1f.r cup coafecUoaer'a sugar, 2 cups c.bocolate chips. l cup 1Weetelled condensed milk (not evaporated) and 2 cups peanut butler. Stir well, roll Into 1mall balls, place on waxed paper. CbJll In the refrigerator for a abort time, then eat your candy! Leah Jones, Enid, Okla. liere is another one from Joy Behling, Kaysville. Utah. Mix 'Ai cup peanut butter, lf.r: eup honey, as much powdered mllk as it takes to make finn. Jt may take as much as 2 cups. Stir untl: not too sticky, then turn out on a breadboard coated with powdered milk. Knea d until firm just as you would bread. Then divide into balls, ror m into 2 long rolls and roll each one in chopped nuts. Refrigerate and . slice. J ust watch it, because one piece ca lls for another. She says she's a "health nut " too so. instead of refined sugar, s he brings to a boil 1/.& cup honey, 1 cup molasses an d 1 tablespoon butter. When it reaches 270 on a candy thennometer, pour over 3 to 4 quarts puffed rice or \Yhea l cereal. li e sure to rub hand s \\'ilh butter. DEAR NAN: \Vould you he able to give o recipe ror Jady-fingett1 like the ones sold in stores? There are so many desserts calling for them. Dar- h•ne Koons, Lebanon, Pa. Beat 3 egg wh ites until sti ff hut not dry. Gra dually beat in ~~ cu p si fted confectionel"S sugar. Beat 3 egg yolks until thick. F'old into egg whltes , then fold in 1 ~ cup sifted cakt> flour ;.ind I teaspoon salt pl us ~:, teaspoon vani lla. no•• MOUU1 MOM .• rRI. 10 A.M. TO 9 ~Ji. SAT. Ii SUN. 10 A.lit. TO 7 P.lit Wedne1day, Octoller 4, b Sd1oal Nii!rt for ScotJting. Hne YCM Children Get Det>ils From Th~r SChool YOUR AtPKA SITA N£1GH80Rtt000 BUTCHER PROUDLY DllUS / SUTCHE!t'S P!IDE MEATS MEATS YOU'LL IE PROUD TO SERVE BllTCHEa'S PllnE ECONO PAK• 3 LBS. OR OVER MORRELL PRIDE SLAB BACON • QUALITY AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED • DISCOUNT PRICED FRESH "DEPENDABLE "FIRST QUALITY" c '-~••<• ffi@~ FRESH ~ FROZEN NEW ZEALAND LAMB Double D iscount SHOULDER ROAST QUALITY" GROUND BEEF LB. "GENUINE SPRING LAMB" LI. FARMER JOHN • SMOKED Polish Style 88c 1AUSAGE : LB. PUR£ PORK • 1 LB, ROU 89' JlllllY DEAN SAUSAGE c LB. BONELESS RIB -ST-EAK- 13! T·BONE STEAK I'~. 2 POU NO ROll 1.75 I ALPHA BETA s11rcn£a·s Pains BEEF FRESH FROZEN <8 109 SOLE FILLOS ~ LB. SELF BASTING • Jennie o ' FRESH 109 Turkey Breast FROZEN La. 8-0Z. PKG. • FROZEN DD--. 4 FiSHERMEN · 'K''"j48c FISH STICKS LARGE ENO STANDING RIB ROAST BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST BONELESS 111 10! TOP SIRLOIN STEAK LB. . BONELESS I.~ FAMILY STUKS 61:. CHUCK BLADE 73~ STUK CUT THESE MEAT PR ICES EFFECTIVE 11-IURSDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28. OCT. 4 ' FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS £V£RY DAY 10 Sho<M• •Complete Kot ALPtlA IOA OISCOUNT "IUCf BRUNffiES ONLY ~ HAIR COLOR KIT ~ 143 ----------- ------------ 7.0unce • Regular Of Un.cenlt!d FDS UNDERARM rp.._~ 641 DEODORANT ~ ---------- 15.0 unce. Botti• VASELINE INTENSIVE ~. -l 04 CARE LOTION ~ &lilGHf slo[ @ 103 SHAMPOO 1-0Ul\C• A.,osol •Ho• G<-" ~::r:i: 29 @ 891 )"•-°'-""''"Tube COLGATE TOOTHPASTE 65 Courot 8011 D-- Q.TJPS •····· COTTON BALLS • -· 30-C~t ;R.,ou!o• or S<4* PLAYTEX TAMPONS 571 FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS £V£RY DAY IQ.Ounce Bottle VICKS NYQUIL :o;.eou.it Bo>C ALKA-SELTZER IOO·Couoit ~~ ONE-A-DAY ....._ VITAMINS 100-Count • W/lr"'1 bO-Count BUGS BUNNY VITAMINS 00-Co.,,,t • W/lron 60.Counl PALS VITAMINS 60-COUflt • W/lron ..,,,. ) -~ 'faJi 9~ <J-cf' :O-Gol. Heovy Dul) 7rom Con .. ;Lid ALPHA 8£TA DISCOUNT ,IUC[ 1s• 491 1'4 l .01 1•2 '·'' 24J 'Ill-Qt. WoSle Son • 36-Qt. !>pon Top Watte Co" JO.Qt f l11<ol llll·lop Wo•le 8 •n HSCO PLASTIC 1F7f ASSORTMENT lllu !~·t !\' l . c';li,~, .. 1'' ----------- 100.count floUle FANTASTIC DISCO UNTS f VERY DAY AlPHA BETA DLSCOU"T P!l lCE It's more than a toothbrush! ORAL B protects rums as well as Jeeth! oJdren'• TqoTHBRUSH Of' '"""°' TOOTHBRUSH Actult-Medium« Hord TOOTHBRUSH 551 781 Oral-B· ---1-------- FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY 8-0...-.U•~ or UnKented ULTRA BAN 5000 DEODORANT Al.PKA flETA DISCOUNT N ICE ------------ I 1'2 ·Our\c.• Botti• ' == Reo1.1lor « Untanlt!d BAN ROLL ON DEODORANT ~ KRAFT ~MAC & CHEESE · · 1Ac R11, y •h. 11,.,CJU Nl PRt1 ! 1'' I OO·Ceunt llo• BUFFfRIN J.Ounc. Tl.lbe 9oc VITALIS 921 DRY TEXTURE \\'ith pastry bag and plain hole tube shape into l x 4 ~~ inch fi ngers on a bHking sheet covered with heavy un greased paper Bake at 350 for 10 to 12 min utes. Sprinkle with mo rel confeelio ner'11 sui;;ar. Press MfCRW together in pairs. ~1akes about ' II--~ 12. EXCEDRIN TABLETS 12• J( you don 't own a pastry tube, you can shHpe them wi th a teaspoon using about 2 te.!1- spoons baiter, but it is hard to get them evl!n. LiUle folks will need help and supervision when they 're learning to coo k. but the younger they start the more at homt they will be in the kitchen in later years. Nan \Vllcy is offerlnlit her "Kids in me Kll chen -Tots o~eens " f booklet to her reoders. f you would like a co py s 25 cent4 and a long , r11d· dreued, stamped envel6pe with >"Ur r<quest to her In care of the Dally Pilot. Pleose au..r thrte weeka for delivery. /G> • '"'°""'. c~•-~ SCHICK • SUPER II BLADES __ 69 1 -~ w ... ""'"'-rl .._. SCHICK @ SUPER II SllAVER 1 '' •• -----------· '!!O·Cavnt totti. EXCEDRIN P.M. -111 " BffCi•e·ASiCar · Ul'IC•"'M HAIR SPRAY 106 ~, .... WIUlllSOll BONDED BLADES WIUINSON• i RAZOR SET 9,0c I 11• WI HMM flll llMf ft ICrnt IAl.11" otMMllCIU. MM.W • ~ ............ OOUILI DISC UNTS MIAN DOUILI SAVINGS• AT ALl'HA UTA o..i. .. Dl-.11.m .,. .Kt,. ..-.411 .. 1'1 ed~tl-.... , ,.,, .. , t.w ._ ... ,,. ... ni., ., .... ...-w. ..., .... Wi' ........ .,.. ..... ,,..... ~ ,_..._""' wtth ..... ....,. ........ ;..-1 ..... ytollt ---:--:-:r-.. ---- ..... MEXICAN STRAW HAMPERS 1 ff Med!W!I SI• I! J." ....,. S:t• J.tt h • -. • --- ' 49·0UNCE BOX DASH DETERGEIT 82' 52-0Z. BOX• FOR AUTO. DISHWASHERS PALMOLIVE i CRYSTAL CLf,AR 72c DISH DETERGENT 6<1-0UNCE BOTTI.E ~IMPERIAL 'i"if' LIQUID DISH DETERGENT 64C ------------- ~ tMPERiii ~ · DETERGENT 97c ------------· 57-0UNC! 80X WHITE KING WATER SOFTENER 45c ------------ · '49-0.UNCf 80)( WHITE KING DETERGENT t8 Gold Seo* • ~~·~I '°" 'jiOiiif. SN WY l~H t ' • I .......... CAL BON WATER CONOmONER 57' 621 79c lJ-OZ. lox Glont •hit~ DllhwW.1 ' flECTRASOL DISH DETtRCOO 5 2c 1 O-Oa. f'ot Autoltlotlc Dhi.l1wwt•1 BLASS IJIAQIC SPOJ IWIOVER 46 ~ lbiM1~ FlDOR SHINE 9 71 lloOwnce loltltt , ... ' . ' "•I ·~ ' I < l. • -----~· ... 't .• • • I. • • • ·. . . ' ~ .... . . Wtdntsday, Stplrmbtr 27, 1CJ72 OF PRICES EVEN MORE ~ fd • I -- 3s.-OUNCE BO~ • GL\f(l CASCADE AUTOl~TIC DISH • t 68 DETERGEIT c \ 1 I 46'0UNCE BOX • GIANT SALVO DETERIEIT 79c TAIUTS \ . 13-0UNCE AEROSOL CAN CLlllG FREE AllTI $TATIC FABRIC SOFTEllER ii.OUNCE BOffiE • GIANT JOY LIQUID 56C DETERGEllT I 22-0UNCE, BOTTlE • ;iANT IVORY ' Ll\UID ' DE ERIEIT 56C I 20-0UNCE BOX • lAIUlt TIDE 37c DETERIEIT I ii ' fA kfASTIC OISCO UNTI EVERY DAY Al.,.. l[T ... ... ,.,,,, nice 1.SJ 23c ... 100 56C ~iPHA'BirA'lc[cREAM 65' ~ iR"Rlv[oEiCi'Pifil=·· 62c \SJ 19-0%. Box • Jt~ror1I •.t• "8-0z:. Pko. • "Troy Poe\. .. • Froren BRIDGFORD 81\EAD 6 t:. C\11'1 •"F'ro:i:M l I UTE MAIO UM DI: @ ''-"'-"' . .KENOALL 5'$ KIBBLE ©FRlnitcir' roiiii' @FRlSKIECAr'roo'ir 10-PCIU'd let; • f 1Vt C~tC't CAT FOOD'' @&oiDfM•iliitwiitE @c~tM'Wii @ """""'~ SAffOtA MA 8AllllE @s'Dt'Uiil'E itfsra "'lllX 01cor M:J • f.OIM<t TW,. MAM SALAD SPREAD 115-0unc:• C..talnlr • LemQl'I • O'l«alot• or IUtt•Jccrtdl •LPINI IOI PUDOINQ ' 57c 15c 34c 13' a9c 1.t• 1oc 37c 42c 36c 4oc s2c FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY """'"'' °"""'NT ""' 13c 11• proof!-- In an ongoing teat, we've asked other market shoppers to buy exactly the same items, on the very same day, at their market and at ·Alpha Beta. Without exception, these shop- · pers have saved from $2 to $6 with us!" And these are people who regularly shop other discount markets aa well as people who ahop conventional stamp.giving stores. Try your own comparison shopping test. You'll find wherever you're shopping now- ~8tut Riee'ON' ""'"""" 'jjiiCi' APPLE SAUCE 44~ 32~ YDU'll LIKE THE TOTAL BETTER AT ALPHA BETA COtrU.tock • 20-<>un<::e Can Pit SLICED APPUS .. .ou..,J c... TREESWEO REAL ORANGE JUICE @HOT'cocoi iiX"' ©i.ttrsr'iiir I 0-0vnee Jor • Co,_ MAXWELL llOUSE INSTANT •0ocumentation ol these results on file at Alphn Be k•. 73' FA NTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY AllM 1£TA ""°"" Pl1Ct: FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY 61' t;F:\i/l"M"CAilliY'",_ 57c ~ cHlrfiiN ... · ~ ,...,,_,,,. ..... ,.....,.. ,.. ~FACIAL TISSUE 1H ''?~ s.;,--;-M••rw•sor1.7..cn. 71 D.. . BUT RUTH BAR . · D._°':: t 1 "6 su'Ns'H1NE'KRISPYCRACKERS 29c <§ SARGE~TO BLEUCHEESE 4 71 . ' <§ AMER1i:i"li'cil£is't'" 27' lll'"I lfTA • Mlkl 99c WISCONSIN Cheddar Cheese •• © KLiEiiu rowuS''"" • AU'MA l (T.l. OISCOONT PRlC[ 49c QUH IT Y BAKERY AT OISCOU NT PR ICES VINE RIPE e SWEET CANTALOUPE GOLDEN • RIPE BANANAS SWEET • JUICY RED DE·LICIOUS LB. BAG APPLES • CASABA MELONS I Se lb HONEYDEW MELONS WINTER NELIS PEARS "' rt I,., '. ' • , r ! ' '.' '<_1.· rJ ~ ...... 4' DRY FALL FLOWERS ~ AT DISC UNT PRICES! ~'!" MIXED IOUQU 98!.~. STlAW FlOW!RS ANO ALSO ARTICHOKE PUFFS. MINI STRAW, FLOWERS BUDS AND BOUQUETS, CASPI"-STANCE, sr ... ~ AND YARROW! •tUUTlfUL FALL FLDWlR AKAAIHllEITI" COSTA M•SA -'41 a. 111'1 St, COSfA M•J.\ -121t Mt.-II~•. H~HJIMOTOH l•AtM -ffO All•"" •UN j .. T ... HACN -11•11 N, Molo S>. MUH Me-T'OW II.I.CM -t ntl IP'M611111nt ,OUNTAIH 'IAU.IY -lat W.mw LA•UNA MtLU -UM1 Ctllt Ille .. Lilts IA"ftN• -1-~!~1 U111Y.,1llf P•rti: SOU'TM l-•OUllll • _.,. I t~'"' M.-rr c BUNCH RADISHES GREEN CABBAGE EUROPEAN & BANANA SQUASH "SMALL BRITE" APRICOT 5 ~· 5UNDlllO ITALIAN SQUASH FRESH CELERY a~ a~ 47c__ 25~ 25~. SOUTHERN GOLD • 1 QUART• PUAE GllAPIRUIT OR 45' ""'""''"SIU ORANGI NICI "' • DAJLY PILOT Pasta Passed Italian Flavor Lasts JJy BARBAR.·\ GIBBONS ''ou 'rc eating b ro I I e d chitk<'n, but \Vhat you really \1ant is pizza! \\'hy not add :i u Italian ac- rl'nl to }1Jur s i mple-but- slendcr n1a1n <·our-.e by serv- ing Zuel·hini Pn11olone on the side•: 11 ':-. .111 l1alia11 ,1·g~tablc dish that buUblcs .... uh 1on1atocs, sp1ct·s and pung1.1nt fhecsc .. - per(u1111ng 1h1• ;ur 111!h a fat- tening rragr;:ncl' ;is it bake s. lt ~ren1s s11 r1r h 1·ou 11·on't fh·I 1l1i: least bit 0 dl1pr11·cd , even if your n1ain <.'Ourse ls something spartan, 11 k e chicken, fish or b r o i I e d burgers. For all its rich flavor, Zuc- chini Provolone is a skimpy 52 calories a half-cup serving, slin1mer than rnost frozen prepared vegetables! And If the rabulous flnvor and low caloric count aren't enough to rccon11nend it. here 's the biggest plus: it's easy! You si n1ply assemble lhL' ingredients in a casserole and bake it in the oven. Yet, the result is gala enough to serve "special" guests. To make this di sh you need lt<1lian zucchini -the dark- green striped summer squash. Most supermarket zucchini 11rc about the size of cucumbers: ·~ In my area, however. the \ ro~side..stand farmers have a competition going, siiewise. My last zucchini squaah mun ha vc come from the Jolly Green Giant. If you 're using a :;upersquash, dice It into bite- size cubes for this recipe. Zucchini [Jrovolone is one of those wife-saver vegetable dishes (bat can be made in ex- tra quantity. The leftovers can be frozen and reheated (or yet another meal. BAKED ZUCCllENI PROVOLONE :I cups green z u cc hin i squash. sliced or diced t onion , chopped 2 cups cnnned I l a 11 a n tomatoes in puree J cup water 2 tablespoons bread crumbs 2 teaspoons oregano 2 ounces sharp imported provolone cheese. sliced or chopped 1 teaspoon garlic salt l/4 teaspoon pepper Spread half of the zucchini on lhe bottom of a bnking dish or ovenproof casserole. Combine the o n i o n!, tomatoes and water. Pour t..alf of the tomnto mix- ture over the z u cc h i n I . Sprinkle with half of !he pro- volone. seasonings and bread crumbs. Make a second layer or zuc- chini and tomatoes. Sprinkle w i t h remaining provolone, seasonin gs and bread crumbs. Bake in a preheated 350- degrec oven for 25 to 3S minutes. until zucchini ··1s tender and top is well brown- ed. Make s 10 servings, 52 calories each. ITALEAN·STYLE CHIC KEN Jo'or an easy ItaJian-Jtyle chicken dinner. sprin kle spilt chi cken breasts with garlic salt and oregano and bake In a 350-degree oven until tender. Bake your Zucchi ni Provolone at the san1e time. Add a big salad. t.o.Med wilh low-caloric Italian dressing and a gl1ss or white Chianti wine. Finish dinner with a demi tasse of espresso. It all adds up to only 375 caloriee. 1 Slin1 down with sca (oodl Striped Bass. Curried Shrimp, Baked BlueClsh, Lobster Can-- tonese ::--for these and more, plua diet tips . send • 5tamped, ~lf~addreSAC<l envelope and 25 cents to SL IM GOURMET FISH DESHES, In oaro ol the Dally Pllo~ lO West Shore Troll, Sparta, N.J. 47'71.) •, I I 1 • • • • • • . . 44 DAii. Y Pl LOT Wfdntsdlt, SttUmbtr 27 , 1CJ72 School Lunches ' Meet Dail;y. Requirem.e~ts More than two m1lhon CJr 3 tablespoons caL~up Bake in a 350 degree oven one 1, pound Swiss cheese and onion through mediwn '1 B R-0 W N BAGG .t: K sautt ma y o n n a 19 e to Jlllb' ~bird or lhts state's school 2 tabl e1 p oon s hou r. Very good served hot, 4 ~ggs -hard cooked blade of meat grinder. Afld ... SPEX:IAL" 2 tabLSpoons mayonnaise spreadable. Add Worcester.. children do not eat adequate Worcatershire sauce and excellenl a~ a sandwich I 1:mall onion mayonnaise, lobasco 11 d t (:S ounce) package. cream (approximately/ shire sauce and ltlMDinp to meals at lunch time, ac· I teupoon salt d v .. tup mayonnaise . M' 11 cbet.se, room temperature Salt and pepper taste. cording to recent research by 1 ~ tea1paon pepper filling the next ay. Fe1v drops tabasco seasonings. ix we · J qp. bard cOOted Soften f:ream ~se. QlOJ) Spread gene~Y on but· the Dairy Co u n c 1 I of Combine a 11 ingredients LIVERWURST.CHEESE Sa.Jt and pepper to taste Spread on weU buttettd ~e " cup.cuffed oliftl egp, stad!ed ollves a nd tered slices of danned brown Cali(ornia. thoroughly. Shape into loaf or 'N EGG SANDWICHES Rye .bread bread. Makes M eener,us ~cupch:Jppr4wUwts walnuLs. 'Stir into softened bread. Top with uodw lllce "Mothers should ta ke pack into a 11:4 inch loaf pan. ~ powxi liverwurst Put liverwurst, cheese, eggs sandwiches. 1 leUpoon Worcett.enblre cram ~· Add enough of the buttered lj"ad. another look at what lhe1r·1-~~~~~~~.....:..~~~.;,__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.C:.::.~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=--~~~--'-'~~~~--',__~~~~-=-~~~~~-~~~-~~.~ children are eating for lunch.•· said Douglas C. Fisk, Dairy Council manager. "especially since a child's behavior and ability to learn is directly related to what he eats." California public schools are seeking to close this nutrition gap by serving meals in 83 percent of the approximately 7,000 scbooJs. Of these schools, 5500 are participating in the National School L u n c h Program. Those involved in the nalion- 8f program provide nutritious meals at a low cost for children who can a fford it and free or reduced expense for those who are unable to pay the lull price. 'nlis is done ·without iden- tUying o r discriminating between children. Schools are reimbUned with funds from the federal government. 1bese lunches must include ooHhlrd of the National Research C o u n c 11 s recom- meoded dally dietary aJ. lowanetl for boys llnd girls. 11* meani at 1east two ounces, of riieat or alternate, th~(ourths cup or vegetable or lruit high in vi tamin A and C a slice of enriched bread a~d· a half-pint or milk. The program attem pts to place an em phasis on nutrit ion education by teaching the children the basic principles of good nutrition and Its im· portance lo health. According to the Daify Council, mothers who .prepare · lunch for their children to brlng to school should be guid· ed by the Four F ood Group plan (meat, milk, vegetables and fruits. and breads and cereals) similar to 1hat used by the schools. "A packed lunch for a chi ld often contains a sandwich or two," said F isk. "So with meat, cheese, egg salad, or some such food as the sandwich fJ..lling, the meat and breads and cereals groups are covered. 0 To help complete the meal, the child may be gi ven some. kind of fruit, and/or celery o"t · carrot sticks or vegetable soup tn a thermos. Milk can be purchased for a few "Cents throu g h t h e f ede r a l government's Special Milk Program." said Fisk. CRUNCHY PEANUT- CARROT SANDWICHES J large carrots. shr~ed %: cup sailed peanuts, chop-- peel v .. cup salad dressing Crisp lettuce 8 slices bread, buttered Combine a 11 ingredients. Spread on well buttered bread. Cover fllling with lettuce and top with a nother slice of but· tered bread. BEST-EVER MEAT LOAF 2 pounds ground beef J small onion, chopped 2 eggs l cup shredded Cheddar cheese Cookout's ·Oriental l An Oriental Cookout -the taste treat of the outdoor sea.son -looks curiously Jike an All • American barbecue. , Only the humbu rger's urxler- pirulings and hors d'oeuvres have been changed. •· Chinese Cheeseburgers" are flavor explosions. replete with chunks or Cheddar cheese I Coll 579.1400 for locotioft of .... __, you. Coll col'9ct ff toll Chuck Steaks USDA CHOICE USDA CHOICE USDA RAVOl!Rl 1111 CHO ICE ,':,';,, • Family Steaks USDA 10NB£SS 1111 CHOICE ~ ~ CENTB1 arr "" 7-IOtE I Chuck Roast I Rolled Roast ~ I Boneless Chuck I Boneless Rump 69~ $1~? FLAV~FUL ROAST Oii R()tffj ROAST 98~ $11,? • r.1 d B f BUlK PAO< • ,roun ee Oft~ 67~ GERBER Baby Food STRANED 4V2 oz. JAR Yocurt Boka1 .::=::.;::,,2!29' Or11n Giant Cob Corn ·~ 49' Snackwlch1s -:.;,:»~ 33• Patio Enohllldas "":,l'l ~ 33• Patio Beef Tamales ';.":-69 • MILD LIQUID IVORY I 22 oz. !TL LARGE EGGS Cake Ml11s -::::~ 37' Parkay Marrarlne :.,,. 47' Vons Book~tches ~ 2!3&• Refried Beans :,,:. 45• Sparh•ttl Sauce Ml1 ~--;:.,, 25• GREEN BEANS RAVClml. TI;p.()ER l~ OR RBOJTS GRAPEFRUrr JUICE TREESWffT Pln11ppl1 D•lsh = 39' Vons Fresh Cake ":'::=" 19' __, .. Vons Frt .. Dontlts = A• Fruit Drop Cookies ~::: 39' Waron Trlil Brtatl .. ~ 45' PAPER TOWELS ~VIVA ·TOP SIRLOIN •. ~·1·· ""'" . " ~· • -RIB STEAKS """' OtOQ ..... Bo11ll11 RI• Stllks :.:: 11': Spencer St•aks ":' 'I': WILSON BACON SUCB>. 1-LB. PKG. ... First Grade BE 11 f CROCKER Bisquick llUllBIMIJC WN; MIX hrflla Dor Chow --81• ..... Qaakir 01ts ""'""~ 63" 4"'-- ~Cnokers -29' ~-..... Skippy Peanut Butter ~ 11• Caoa•r Chips -n· ...... TOMATO SAUCE • I ' I The Roal McCoy Bltf Bacon \ Bltf Sau1111 =.:.. llttf Saasap RoR ~ llfDO .. 'MAYO/ilN'XISE ~-:59c .lmeJlllld Batter -~ 81• ~"" Je~eyllllld Shat .:::.. Ill> Euo Wlffl1s ---39' ·~-Vons Baked Buns =:.. 21" BbVEy1 0--41' ........ --- BANQUET Meal Pies HIOZEN, ASST'D. V AfllE1ES . ~! ' !\PKG. . and water chestnuts. and such ,···vigorous seasonings as chili -:..~ sauce, soy sauce and bottled !'-Chinese hot mustard. STRAIGHT KY. BOURBON U ...._ TYLlll $')119 '• -·ca._, . ' Jn addition to Chinese hot ~--mustard, try serving egg rolls .. with 30 -second sweet-sour ~auce : Combine one part soy sauce \.1dth two pnrt s bott led rl'd sweet and sour .~;iucc. Serve cool. or :;ct sa ucc11an on grill to warni. CHINESE CHEESE BURG ERS 1 pound ground rnund or chuck * cup chopped w H l e r chestnuts ~I '4 cup cubed Ch eddar chees< t 1 smaJ.l onion, finel y chopped 2 tablespoons chil i sauce 1 '11 teaspoons Chinese hot -. mustard 2 teaspoons soy sauce I hamburger buns, toasted aod b-1ed Combine au Ingredients el(· cept b1ms ; shape lnlo 6 pat- lle1. Grill over medium heat !tr 5 mlnui<s oo aide for rare, 1011 l JO mlrttlll!s IOI' medium and II __ :;;.in::. !or well-done. Serve 34ll& I • FRESH PICXID • mc>a»Cf LARGE EARS 19~ ......... s --10:. Rm MOCCOU .::..""::n It: 'VA'IWI~ •ARID Ctl' fllll CIT IAISlll :: ... • SA VE 40' ~ '1 -ClllSTAL I BIER Dry Gin Ancient Ace '=~ 87 111. ICY llOlllCN $] ftfl .. _, ICI< I =· ..... , ... ~--UAO: ••••••• LEO'S SUCED MEATS : ~~~···39· • Sour en. ...... ~".a.. 27' PINT CTN...,. \ Adams Ave., at BnlHburst ffuntioEtDD Beach Doheny Park Drift, •ano Beach 5922 Edinger Ave., at ~.-Hlllltington Beacll J.apna Hls _Plw, D Tn_. \. ' --:---------.··!14 --r' • ... -~-....... -......... • ... .. _j .. \ r I I r g • ' -. WtdnttdaJ, Stptttnbtt 27, 1972 DAILY PILOT 4$ Hamming It Up Meatballs Offer Germ of Nutrition One di£lettnce Is In the flavor ot the tiny meat balls: another is the fact that these meat balls are baked, not fried or sauteed. You may choose either of two sauces lhat offer real distinction and a f o u r t h distinction ls that the meat balls are packed with food value in the fonn of wheat germ. ' In thb era wbm "natural" foods are the thing, wheat germ should really head the list. It is the heart or the wheat grain, naked and lightly t<MUted to bring out flavor and what could be more "natural" than that? ' These tiny golden flakes '' have a nut-like flavor and in- ~ teresting texture, and each ~, • contains over 30 food ·; •essentials. , Mineral elements a r e , f present in variety, too, with " elusive iron prominent among them. When you use wheat \rerm in your cooking -and 1 re are so many ways to use 1 l -you are adding health and vilality to your family diet. APPETIZER WHEAT GERM HAM BALLS I pound prou nd ham· J pound ground pork 34 cup wheat germ Jh cup milk 'l.i cup finely chopped onion 2 eggs I ~ !.ea.spoon Ja.Jt 11 teaspoon dry mustard Combine all ingredients. Mix ~·ell. Shape into 6 dozen balls. using about a tablespoon of mixture for each. Place in lightly greased shallow baking pan. Bake at 400 degrees for 25-30 minutes. Serve with either sauce (below ). Y~ 10-12 appetizer serviog1. SOUR CREAM DILL SAUCE 2 tablespoons butter or margarinll 2 tablespoons all·purpose floor l table.spoon sugar 1 ~ teaspoon salt 11 teaspoon paprika t cup milk 1 cup commercial sour cream 1 teaspoon dill weed Melt butter in saucepan. Add floor, sugar. salt and paprika. Stir well to blend. Add milk. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly uatil llDOOth and thlckentd. Sttr in eour cream and dill weed. Heat thoroughly. Spoon over meatballs or uae as a dip. Yields about I~ CUf>.'. PINEAPPLE ·ORANGE SAUCE I can (13 ¥, ounces) plneap. pie tidbits 1h cup vinegar l tea:spoon soy sauce 'ii cup fl11Jlly packed brown sugar 2 tablespoons cornstarch '.l cup orange niarmalade 1 cup cherry tomato halves, optional Drain pineapple, reserving syrup. Add enough water to syrup to make 1 cup. combine syrup, vinegar, !tJ'f aauce. brown sugar and cornstarch in medium saucepan. Mix well. Heat over medium heat, sitrring constantly until clear and thickened. Add pineapple and marmalade. Heat thoroughly. Pour over meat- balls and tomato halves. Yields 21h cups. CLUE FOR A GOURMET HEROINE Something Different Afra.11k cussion .abdut the li1nitations of toilet paper. Cocktail Fare Mixed Cock ta J I party hors gourmet heroine. ~~ teaspoon ground cloves ....... _ab!Jprobl"I' KAHLUA CO.CXT.l1L '4cup~ ' today's sin~ ~~SS w~ I , BAUS • ~rind bam,1~ple 8nd onioo i a n d s 'IO!"~g dd· 1 4 cups tooted ham.cbbet l~;fi>od Cb-OJlllOr. ~d e1111s; . , "'~l~om~ti\in,c 1 medium apple ed and Kahlua, bread crurn~ and ing I eryt . ' ' • 1 • "~'l>alls . < iwf." \ , ~ . t' ·ut Into · 't , tr r ":love&. M'ut well. Ferm into l- ~ d'oeuvres •;:.sO:I bee , . .,, ,,.-11 C>alo,n-~t ·~~ M'.elt biittedn Ial(e skillet. dine before, 'the versatile Co • chunks ' Saute ham ballS ovet IO\V heat feel liquer comes to the rescue 2 eggs, slightly beaten until brown: ·then drain. If with its new version of ¥.i: cup Kahlua desired, place in chafing dish ec¥:ktai1 balls. Try them for 2/3 cup fine dl'1t bread to keep warm. your next party. and be a • crumbs ~ !\takes about 50 meat balls. ~L ' • Olives 'Enrich iPastas cooking pot. Add butt.er: toss until butter melts: add cheese, olives and parsJey and toss again. Serve at once. Makes 3 to 4 servings. Note: If you like garlic flavor, crush a clove of garlic and add it with the butter. fl • P. ITALIAN DELI e BAKERY ol..ucct eli RESTAURANT 8911 Adami at Magnolia, Huntington Beach, OM 91' tM .. ,,... ~~Atltft& Ill< (aM!Omla. SUll If! 0.ltMM ·-!I .,..,, Deity I ... : '1' 10.fr S... '1~ Cl.-d Moa.; '""""" Ifs HAWTHORNe ~~~~~:;~ ~~~~~.~f~ Kinderprten ttuu 8th Grade • All·day dasses Eni:oll N oW- Fff ONLY $10• RNaon•ble Tulilan ' . I ..,. __ ..... ..._ Bw ...... -Clilld"' ti II,-.,. '""'I •loom• -hifh ff $11ndlllt'-tudiiflf ftlt • ' Ira: f'Mdflll (wtth , ), Wl'itifl&, 1rlthmltic, r11dl11111 F~UNT AIN VAL EY • 16835 Brookhurst ' • )ult north df Warner · ·~ 114•962-3312' "A PrMte School ol Dislinclion Founded In 1!421' • I Toilet paper is basic to our personal cleanliness. Yet it does have its limitations-because it is dry. And anything that's dry just can't cleanse as well as something that's wet. . Which is why WET ONES'"take per~onal cleanliness a step fufther: " · · ~ WET ONES are designed for use after you use toilet paper to cleanse the rectal and vaginal areas. They cleanse thoroughly and effectively because ,. each towelette i:s pr~moistened with a mild, freshly.scented cleansing solution. They are gentle enough for a baby and have been / clinically tested for mildness. WET ONES are strong and completely flushable, too. Keep WET ONES in your bathroom right along with the toilet paper as a final step iri personal cleanliness. Men will find them helpful in keeping themselves as clean as · they would like to be. They're ideal for young children who may not be as careful as they should be. Older people with rectal problems will find them helpful, too. One final point, for you women and your daughters, WET ONES have a pleasant, fresh scent. So they not only make you feel clean. They make you feel fresh. WET ONES. The fmal step to personal cleanlines&' • ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~--·------------------------------------------~-~~ ______________ :J I ·-'""·-·"'" -• 1 - •. . .. .. ~ • PILQT.ADVERTJS(t N WtdntSdilY, Stpttmber 27, 1972 -- DAILY PILOT CARRIERS ~ ' b lt,s een I ,, ) ,_;,· .,, TIJ.e ~1PILOT C. proud of its corps of tpMng tc.1lesmen who ctthvtr the newJpa.per to yaur door. Thtse t vou",\i;"' a;, the crtam of thr corr1mu,111 ty •• Eacl1 111u}1t!1. tltt best uJ llu!1n w•IL be setected for listing on the 1-lo~rtJlt. J<f*">t caTTitr /1s1erl l1cre ho.~ obtained at leaJI fuur ntw custo':iers durhig th e past .month, had no mqr~.i~~ one cukt'QTMr complai'i1 t for the month <Jnd 1nust have paid his bftl for the newspaper he bought summer ··w/~ ~·time. Numeral in front of star (•) preceding his name i ndicates numbtT of c01Uec1,livt 111onth.! 1 :, that ClmMr-w been on the liancr Roll . '~ ll j ••wid Mill•r I • a long, busy for these ~a i9 Chambtor leif'I ~on Jo19•n1en ~ff Dillon !fol11 Clo 0 plo• .. t11ie QuitilUJ 1•;~. Arli;iU,. ~•la Sliwa•! M1rty Gr11n Ckrii Fopi1no K111nv .._d1m1 St•~• Co"•V J1ck 0 11111 01v1 P1rtrid91 Gerry W1rd Miki W1 rd Ron Ruu o 1' lri1n Ch1p1111 n 1· To111 l1M1nn 1 1' J 1rrv Munyer 2' J1clt i1 Fr1nco 2' Scott l1r111 rd 2' Scott Hirt 1' Pele J1r1ti1 2' Scott l1tcl.er 2' Mike ll1 ltr 3• 01rr,U.-Sh1eh J' Rojl1t S""ilh 3' 01111 J etter l' S+11te Di n'"' )' Roqer Mont111e1 ·)" Vincent To.,e1 1· Eddi1 Stoyl e '.i'best of the bunch' Kin B1h111 Riclr Burdqoe H1rry K1td11dorl1n Ke1tin K11ne l obby Roper Jil'lll K111pp 1' l rllc• Ro,..,e9nfno 2· M1rk WoHf 2' Lyle Fletch1r 2' N11I Mol'hit1 1· Mitt loyd 2' l ill loyd I ' Bry1n ~rron 5' Jim DeD1 nolo 5' Tom Hol!1nd 6' D11111i1 St11on1 •• Jodi J11lr 'l' Kurt Miiier • f • ' •, " I •..Jnti .. St11r•tt rC.....Mtt111lclri l1hh ler111ett "l•1ticl Jol.11ton I Jch 1rd Coolr D•1111y Go9/111i•11 ,lri1 11 Rich1rd1011 i"Jil1rlr lop•t 1lt l1rn1rd ' hn M.C1rty b1rt Shecf111olcl T1ll1v Mice Vic.tor M1r1 Scott ~1wton 2' J•ff Thlbodo 2' Frink l1pour 2' A11dy Mo11t1n•1 2' Mik• l111bv 'l' 011tid Slocli:t1 12" D1 1ticl Diro11 14' Fr111lr She11g I 4' Freel S1nch•1 14' Tony S1nch11' 15' Milt1 Diro11 10" Greg D1vfflo n 20' Scott Wilt1im1 14' Bob Holl1nd iDAIL Y PILOT carriers ... . i , 1 ;I I' I ~ It ,. ! .. , • John Alrl11 T llt1 t4••• bir'"b•+. ff •••• .c:;.,, ' ., " Jim kop1nHeffen9er PP1ul Rymer 0111 Oeloqe C h1d Sl!lith • 2• Chri1 l oult1r J' Mik• S•ie l' M1rk Ch1pm1,., J' P111I Smith Carrier of the Month •I ' ' Bruce Romagnano N e'vport Beach Bruce Rom1gn1no son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank X. Romagnano of 1800 Port Charles Place Newport Beach, is an eighth grader at Lincoln Junior High School. He lists the flying of model airplanes and fishing as his hObbies. The honor carrier is saving profits from his DAILY PILOT route for college and for buying fishifil gear • ' ·;They've all honors won ... I !over rhe past three months J --· .. .:..a:.a::anz;--">~'Th"f'CC"' ;_:::01Cil!.:>;>:J:~~~~;:::~;::.:---;;-"'"'"""""'"""""'1:111!\"""""""""""'""'""""""'"""'""' .. """"""""""""'""""'•""•""'a::ammmmC1••m""""•• .. ""'""'""""""•""•'I ... • DAILY PILOT CARRIERS •• The DAILY PILOT is proud of its corps of young salcsntcn who de liver tllf! 11ewspa.per to your door. These 11ou·ng nien are the cream of the commtority. Each n101tf /i, t/te best of tl~em will be selected for listing oii the 1 j Ilo110P roll. Each carrier listed here has obtained at least fou r tiew customers during the past month, had no 11tore tJion ot1e cus tomer complaint for the month and must have paid his bill for the 11ewspaper he boug1lt ~ "wholesale" Oil ti111e. NMmeral in front of stn r (•) prccedina his 11ar11c illdicates number of consecutive nwntlts '"j 1/tat carrier 11as bec11 on the Honor Roll. '' f ' J ohn McCoy Robert Sw•n1011 Vi11Cent Ber+h~ofer P1ter H1•d Roc.kv D•n";' Chi pp er l ibb¥ Clint l'Ecu11 P1!11 Spur S1t1n Tho"''' D¥ov111 R·cleth JiOft Sthindler Jifl't Wri9ht John W1l1h Ric.k V•n Cle ~.,, 51 1ve M11rco M1t McGr1w Roe•n l<~h" John H~r1hon M,.11 0 1qnod P1t1r E•,,.n 1 T;rn l amb 8y,on l ong Tim G reen Chrit fopi1no Eric Moe ller Biii f,,,ith Da1tid Go11rlev Don Ob.rt Joe Hincfm1n Don Bo11h1m D1vid Slobo Wevne H1!11r Ed91r Go1111!er Jiff D11ticf Din Bour9 Eric Youn 9 Don Miele 2 uln1v k1mr 1n¥ D•nnii H19ie Milte Cerr1l lri1n Andet1on 1' Don J or9•n11n 2· Jeff Dillon 2' M1~1 Artiqtl o 2· K1vi n Minnich 1' Brett B1rn1rd 2" Robert Sh1bo!d 1· Kenny Ad1ml 2' St1v1 C.:.fley 1· J 1c.k 01l1n 2' Ron Ruu o 2" Ken Behm 2• H1rv K1t1dori1n 2' P1 ul "v"er )' P1 ul Smith · l' J1c.k Franco ]' Scoll B1rn1rd l' Mi•• Belh ]' Rod Blenton l' Oa1te l 11n11e ll l' M1 rlr: Bi1by ) ' P1ul Birbv ]' Jim Fihq1r1ld ] • l i11lon Wei11 Carriers of tlie Mon.tit l' Lvle Fl•fc~er 3• Neil Mofhih 3' Bi!! Bovd 1· J,.n Thibodo 3' Mike Bu1bv 3' Chri1 Boull•r 4' P•ul Smith 4' O•v• Fletcher 4• 01n1 Jetter 6' Tom H1>ll1ncf 7• Byron S!1lon1 q• Jodi J1 rek 9' C1rl Sl1cltt1 10" Kurt Mitl1r I J' Oe1tid Oi,on rs• Frink Sheng 15' Fred S1 11ch11 IS' Tony S1nthe1 16" Miki Oi1on 21 ' Gr1q Davm on 35' Bob Holl1ncl HOBERT SWENSON, COSTA MESA PETER llEA D, SANTA ANA HEIGHTS Two c•rriers 1haracl the top honors this ~nth. Honor c1rrier1 •r• Robert Swenson, son of Mr. and Mn. Losier Swinton of 170 W. 19ttP. t., c .. 11 'Mou; ind Peter Held, eon of WIUiem J, HHd, 20121 Kllne· Drive, Santa Ana fw&ahta. Swentoft Is 1 fr~thm1n 1t E1t1nci1 High School, lfke;t 111 sports and 11 HYl"I money lo buy hl1{own ur, Held •ll•nds l\OY•i1w School likes model pl•-1nd molorcycl .. and is NY• Ing to buy 1 new motorcycle. < !' ' •' • l " I ' J I DAILY PILOT CARRIERS The DAILY PILOT is proud of its corps of young salesme11 who deliver the newspaper to your door. These you-11g me1t are the cream of the community. Each month, the best of them will be sclect-ed for listing on the llonor roll. Eac/i carrier listed here has obtained at leas t four new customers during the pmt month, had 110 more tha1t one customer complaint for the month and must have paid his bill for the newspaper he bought "wholcsal-e" 01t time. Numeral i n front of star (1) preceding his name i1tdicates number of cu11se cu tive months that carrier has bee n on the Honor Roll. Ro9• K•nc.hel K•ith Dulap J in'I Hammon• 01vtcl John101'1 St1v•11 St1rr EdJy Cono1t1r lud Ki119 Joh11 Oono1t1n John McC1rty Tom Roqeri Mik• 6•1 Tom Elliot Robin K1•h K1ilh Dobbi111 M1rk Wolff Chrii Mill1r Jeff E1h1lm11'1 Andy Her11•nd11 Tom Bremen Jo~v Ru110 • ltobbi• Voorh111 Chrii Joh111on St11t• 1.~m John W illercl D•1t• Skinner Gary 6etlenm1y1r Freel P111lk lobby Kuper Chris Ro11 l rv•11 H111ch Ron Mcleroy l,uce Nichol1 ltob1rt l1 e1c• Ste1te Pell•ttier1 M1rli: W1llr•r l rien W1lk•r 2' John McCoy 2• lob Sw•111on 2' Do11ov1n Rle;k1lh 2• Jim Wrl91'1t 2' Robin Kehn 2' Joh!'! W1l1h 2• Tim limb 2' 8yro11 lo119 2' Er ic Mo•ll1r 2• l ill Feith 2• Oe1tid Gourley • 2• Zoln•y K1111re'( 2' Mi•• C•rr111 l ' Jeff Dillon J l ' 5f•1t1 Cosey ]' J,.cli: 01l1n ]" P111I R.yn1r 4° J eff Mu11y1r 4" Milr1 81 lt1 4• Roel l l•nlo11 4• o ..... l11n11•ll 4' Merk Ii.by 4• P1ul l i1.lty 4° Jim flh9•r1ld - Carrier of the Month DONOVAN RICKEITS Corona del Mar 4' Linton W1i11 4° lvl• Fletcher 4• Bill loyd 4' Jeff Thib•do 4• ~ff 01 .. td 4' Milr• lusbv 4' Chri1 Boul te• 5" Oe1te Fletcher s· Jiff Wei11 s• Vincent Torre1 7' Tom Hol1 1ncl I " D1nni1 5t1lon1 1 o• c .rr Slockt• I 6• Fr1cf Sench11 ,,. Tony S1nch11 17° Milr• Oi1.on 21° 8yro111 St1lon1 22' 'Gre9 Oeymon 16° l oltHollend .. ' ) . Th<! rno11th's hoftor ca,rrl'r Is, Donov•n Ricketts, ton of Mr. end Mrt. J-M. Rlck1tto .,. ~I , S-1"1 Canyon Ori .. , Corona clel Mar. H1 lo In th<! 10th grlde et Corona del Mar Hlfl '-I'.""'• like 1iodY surfing incl basketball and It putllnt awoy pmlt1 from hi• DAILY PILOT route to putChm • ur. I \ I ..... ... --·· . • f ' \ ' ·! . • I •' "[ D JERSEYMAID FRESH YOGURT.:~~~::.:~ .• 59< D JERSEYMAID BUTTER •••••••••••• ;~:~81' D ALUMINUM FOIL •••••••••••••• :r:~~.23• CHUBBY DOG FOOD ! AJAX CLEANSER 1~~: gc l ,.oL 14c I I , DARMOUR VIENNA SAUSAGES ••.•.. ~~·.27' D SEVE• SEAS DRESSINGS ••••.••• ~}·!~':25' DAPPIAN WAY PIZZA •••••••••••• G'~; .39' , . GOLD MEDAL FLOUR i CRISCO SHORTENING H I. 59c: ~ I 3-LI. age <.1'f:-. IAG 'C:5' I TIN 'e:5I D NABISCO RITZ CRACKERS ••••••• .'!~·,47' DDINTY MOORE BEEF STEW •••••••• ':'!~71· DFANTASTIK CLEANER •••••••••••• ~~~69' INSTAlff MAXiM I fRESH SOUR I.OZ. JAl $195 .1 JUSEY~4 c INST~COffff . I PINT ~TON lt~ ?ii' ' 1 ' . D FOLGER'S INSTANT COFFEE ~·~1.1~:.;~$111 D ORANGE JUICE BLEND • ".":""m~.;·; ':". ~ .. 69' D BIROS EYE ORANGE PLUS •••••• ::~:,".59' ~ . Guarantee Everything We Sell KARASOV VODKA 80 PROOF s3•• QUART . D BOONE'S FARM WINE ••• :-.;.:·:: •••• 1105 D SPRING BEER-QUARTS '."."~: .... 3P1 00 . ,.YEAJl OLD SCOTS MJIT ... ~~ •SCOTCH ,.TEAR OLD SPRING JOST K1 •Light 'Mtisky y:::ces3.ss ~--~" !:t'" ·~ .~r ,·~· .~ .. '1 RI.I 'll 1'1111~ \"At'ATllJ:\"~ ~11-~1'!*·~·· ·, ... .. i.... ... ~ CA&,&. *!l1':.:··· ,l 61l W. W 9t"6. .... __ .,. ,.,_ .... ' • ' ' .,. ' ~ • • • r ' • -.. . ' ... . ,_,. - Jerseymald Mountain Grown Fruit Drinks Liquid Bleach SHERBET FOLGER'S 46-0z. Ri·C PUREX ~::~~::N 49c • OllANGf • AASPllElllY ~ • "NfAPl'lf HALF z9c GALLON PLASTIC ~ :~~~~G[ Z9 •CHERRY e • fLO R!DA PUNCH • WILD BERRY' • CITRUS COOlER ~ • APPLE AMERICA'S No. l COOKING OIL BE'ITY CROCKER WESSON OIL HAMBURGER HELPERS 2~-0Z. 49c BOTTLE -~ REG. PKG. 49e ''Fine Quality· At Low Prices!'' U.S.D.A. INSPECTED j FRYING CHICKEN1 ~LEGS I I I e· Fine Quality • Folly Cooked - ''TENDER LEE'' RAMS ~!?.~'-.. , . ' ~~ LB;. LB ----I"'-...;: • . . SLICED BEEF BACON~-:~~ ••••••• ·:~11· l ci' eurr PORTIO~-~AM ,;:,::~: ••••••••••• 67f. D BEEF SAUSAGE ~:'!':' .... .-........ ~49• 1 D HAM SLICES '."':':'. .................. 11~ D BEEF LINK SAUSAGE :'-:'':".": ••••••• ~~.33' I D WHOLE HAMS ,;~.,. '...' ~ • ., • , , •••• &r.. · BONELESS FRES& ., ., l FRESHLY MADE PORK LEGS l GROUND BEEF ARMOUR EA.STERK I VRGER HELPERS SPECIAL "VERY BEST" I EXTRALEAN•ROLlID-TIEO s· 10• I -WHOLE OR PART FRESH PORK ,149 LEG STEAKS..... lb. LB. I ECONOPACK 3.LBS. OR MORE • ~ • tJ~ ~ 5J.., • • ~ ( 1 •l titt•l9:& ii ;I•>1 $:1: i §!;\ f1 D FRESH FILLET OF ROCK coo .":":"!'::' .89f. l 0 BREADED VEAL '.":'!":":'! ......... ~·~::98: •. D FRESH FILLET OF OCEAN PERCH ••• 981. 1 D BROWN 'N SERVE SAUSAGE ;~~::., •. 69:. D FRESH FIUET OF DOVER SOLE. ••• 11~ l D CORN DOG~~~Ef' ............... .791, D FRESH FILLET OF BLACK COO •••• .79f. 1 D BURRITOS. '.u:•:: ••..••••••••.••.• 591 .. D NORTHERN HALIBUT STEAKS .. ~::. .. 11~1 l D VEAL f'ARMAGIANA :.i'·!·L ..... '.~1'.98' QUAIL BRAND APPLE SAUCE l~Z 6~1 I I D ENCHILADA DINNERS .. ;.::;;~~:7"~! .. 57• • HIW (1,.HAMOH SWiil\ IM)lft<I D AUNT JEMIMA FRENCH TOAST~!':':'. ·~~·,49" l.UIQUll ,IOllN . I-Lt. •. ninn ..... SftW,CMl(lfM6 D BUFFET SUPPERS •• -:-~~~':':"'._. •• $1• BIROS EYE FROZEN I ORANGE lllCE 'lfGfTA!lfS IO.OZ. I SUNSHINE SlATl INT!•N•TtoNAL 45c' CONCfNTIATID . 39c All 'IAllEHfS PKO. I flOZfN. 12-0Z. D FISH & CHIPS v";,.:,:~11:i::~~IC 7Yt 01.48< ..................... NC PllOll,.-CONCllollU.110" 35• D DELA WARE PU H •.. -:-:·: :--:'! : ·.>-<:•, .... D BIROS EYE STRAWBERRIES ;:F ... .':-:•,63' BEST FOODS I A-1 SAUCE IMYONNAISI 63c I 10-0Z. sgc QUART JAR 1 I OTTll . I CASINO CHEESE i GARLAND HAM 12-01. .... 7gc l 3-LB. $339 • JO(I . C•l.lW•Y I CAN • ""'IHS!lf' IOOu.HUA I KRAFT LONGHORN ·---CHEDDAR ~ ·sc ~"!'..-LB. D PILLSBURY BISCUITS ~::;_ •••.... :?·:111' ,.,.__ h Fl Arri a ... D II D QWIP PUDDINGS ::":~~~•I;."~.:::... ~,.111c _ .. a-.::s owers v.... a y ............. · .. ·· ~· BEAUTIFUL ASSORTED . D $151 MAALOX LIQUID ........... .'!':~'1°' D DANOLA SLICED HAM ........ ~:.~;;;;_ 119' . · , ~Tl':&~ ......... ~;~s~ .~ 3 2 9 8; i~~~}:N:: ·:.-.-.·:::: .'.'.'.'.'.'..: .~:·1~~: ;~~~~~;;=:: Fresh Fruits & Vegetables, At Discount ::~Jonathan j Fancy Red· APPLES ! YAMS C I' . I , . I ; I e LB,l LB. o rnRiTANcv''AP'P(cs .... 4::. 69' • o VALENCIA oRANGEs ~.: ... 8::. 98· D U.S. Na. 1 ONIONS :?:": ... 3 ::. 39' D TOMATOES SLICING SIZE •.. :::\ 29' STUFFING SIZE Bell Peppers ..... 2~ 29c WID,. llPT. 27 TMaU TUii., OCT. 3 hri::..J OL'VIRGINIATENDER&JUICV FRANKS e REG. 69c 2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROV E e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGtON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO. EL TORO I -/- , --- .~. I . i • ; • I l l -- . . . ' ' • ' ' I ' ' l l ·- ' . .-~ I " I' ' ' .~ I I t, • ,. ~ }e \ • .. \~ .. ~ :"'· I .~ { ?I • : - ' I . ~ ) • •, .. l. '· FROZEN FOODS .._ UilllY'S PASTiA°MI SANDWICH' ........ 69• . I.IMP "''._..,, ... 89• IRllD SH • . • • • • • · '""' .fuccou Sl'fARS •.•••• 10"::il 32• llDSEfl COB CORN ; • • • • •;:: 52• '· · 1Nllff,J1AID JUICE •• , .. =74 • JOtlffS)'ON .,lS ...... ~~ 75' .,-.PIZZA SNACK TRAY. m ~i 85' GfNO~PIZlA ...... !~":=89' • \JO! 46 EG(;O AFFUS • ---• -••• .,. ' TREE .TOP ~PPU JUICE _ .•• til22' PET FOODS .,.-cNl,.KI: CAT FOOD ."':'.::::: 13• ,, ~ ' J\IAI .,-.RrCIPE OG FOOD •• ·"""'"'27• .,-.LITTER GREEN •• , •• W~"::l .55 • • , LAD TRllSil BA 1DiXIE PAPER CUPS •••• ·~cr'~47• ~ANDWICH BAGS ••• ,~~".:l 47• .... PLASTIC WRAP •.••• ,..~28• . . . . ,..,..... .,...WHITE KING SOAP •• m,,.,,59• .,.+WATER sonENER ••. ".",~':1 85• JfflQWTA· BAlllAS HOUSEHOLD ITEMS .,.-EAST Off CLEANER ...• oo"!::69 • .,.-AJAX CLEANER ...... ,':J':,:11• o"'4ROYA1 TREND .... u;ai~0~r.~;39 . .,.-CLOROi 2 BLEACH .. '::'i':i~99 • DAIR.Y' PRODUCTS .,.-NUCOA MARGARINE ... ,,~34 • VELVEETA CHIEsE •• '."~~.\l::l.)5 COTIAGE CHEESf, • ~7a~~~~~68c SOFT MARGARINE •••• !"',:'r.'1::29 • FOREMOST SHERBET .•.• "~6$• CANNED FOODS . BEECHNUT BAIT FOOD .•• ~~: 7" BEECHNUT JUICE ....• , .~:~::: 7• JUNIOR BABY FOOD .•• ,~~\'.'.: 11 • ' .. -· ... FOLGIRS COFFEE •.•• ·~;as•. ~t,, HGuu.•. fllf., ll.!(Tl lC l'IU .,.+FOLGIRS COFFll 'l.::2.37 DlllP, ~!CULi.i, UKTllC PEtl INSTANT COFFIE •• ~.~~1.07 INSTANT COFFIE • .,"i\~:i l.46 KAVA COFFEE ..••• ':"~~:JJ~l.75 o-"'APPlE JUICE ••• !"':~~~~1~1i'~~39 • o"VITA P~KT ......• ~~:':~36• o"APRICOT NECTAR . ,.,.,,,'~SS• .,-.PRUNE JUICE .•.... ~T,lfc 57• .,.-BAKED BEANS .••...• ~~ 27• LIGHT MEAT TUNA .• ~'::r./.:41 '. .,.+LAWRY'S SEASONED SA~T','\: 31• .,1~BLACK PIPPER , •• ~·.~lt~ 39• ffANUt BUTTER ,.:,:~':\',':1 93• ,, ,~llsT~NT TIA •••• ~ •• ~"\:1.~5 ' ............ w -HI Z PICKLES •••. -"'"~J'!:-:t: I • ' f" ,_., .. · U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET NICE SELECTION OPSIUS . YALEICIA ORllGES 4 .~G EMPEROR RED GRAPES ·~~G,EQ ZA."A.DI DATES \~'2 LOW DISCOUNT PR ICES ON HEALT H ANO BEAUTY AI OS (). •···4.8.rl . ()' d_ ... J:;y.8.yl. I-~ BIBYJPOWDEI "~~ YO 11~:.,\~\., ~Super.fine powder .7,C • " ,16 $143 · . .-telds agalntt w•f· 0% . ness. 14 OZ. · J .. J aaaj· OIL e· /oEllJ" p\~f&f ·Protects and helps $ I / ..., heol boby·s tender J 1 °' . 1.S 1 ·1 C ,.f;i skin. 1 O OL 07.. "· JOHNSON'S ~ .Kiy&f/ 10 IORE TlllGLES · SllE-llD _· . Creme rinse smooth1 •• ' $1 44lowoy ·toiigles like ..__,. Reheves cOngestion 6 3 C cout.d by sinuses, _. : moglc:. 12 0%. cold1, etc .. ,24'•· . 30.WT. OT. 43c . ~·:}~~.~:::r ,·!11(tc~f ~~J[~~I!1 6.7 oz J 7 Reg. or Mint · TABLETS 1 --- IJEJ IPllY ,oz $164JERGEISLOTI01f4c Hl·C DRlllS ,,._. .. ., 2:9 II 46-0UJK( "" ON . -' . . . CANNED FOODS SEGO DIET FOOD ..... , ... ,,.t~30• MAZOLA SALAD Oil •.••. ",':[63• ('c;~:OS:.5 • Gladly Accepted lUllJJ 1111 ~Van de Kamp's oo AN OUTSTANDING VARIITT ·of FRESH BAKfRT GOODS W Avt•l•blt fl our 110<~1 wilh VtitcM· K1mp·1·· • BEVERAGE • SPIRITS COORS BIER •..••.• ,.,,c..\'.l l.69 WHISKEY.: .. ".""."'."'."!~'.m:.?:7.69 BURGUNDY WINI •••• ~10,:1.99 CANADA DRY •.•••• ~~ 11• 15"Rlf5 A\IAll.Allf AT WR STOltfS WITH llQOOR Dfl'T.) 'EIPllDED BREAD HAIVUTDAT2i' o~ 16-0UNCf " . LOAF · . -• PACKAGED GOODS ·"UY lln'S" .. ntfl.tnill(S .... ,.uatl q un1f1tl111rl' 11.,.,.,, ,,...lltul al- l1WNUs. 1"111 !'IET IUY" It••• llstH M j111t 1 ltw 11 tltt •••J 1rtr1 r1l•1 it illrw . for '" ... Wt SIUtll JOI sttck.., •• tlllJI "IEY IUY" 111111 Jtl llOfllllllJ IH aH tt.ftJ . UlATfR tvtRTUAY SAYIMb! . ' I.EE· OIL FILTER ltjitoll It ILfl your .. 11: IOVO. ... Al .. DllCOUNTIO lllClf'TOft PAll·nAOIO D HVllNMI NT CONT.OLl.IOlflMt • COW>ARE dlJS1" A ffw ,, . · flsaxtlr,PflCES IN rel :R LOW EVERYDAY CH -~NEATS ..... ,P.!g ... @-AST _ 63c FRESH FDEH .................................... u .. u .•. o ......... o.""2~1u,. .... .._ RS J9c STAID111 · ~IODYC>O«••• ....•. " u ......... co .... , ..... y .. ~f!IB ROAST tic IROUID IEE ... .. .. . . · " ~ "" '"•••• · ••CO••m•••L< v • F 6 7 C ,,t; ·cur ·UP -······ ···· " 1 ~ •<uM,.••n•ouc"""f~.JERS .34c ··~ft.@§§".ftlcol .. ~ ROAST ......... "91 c 118,, . HDITIONALLY IOHDIO ................ LI RIB···"'··""' .. ;.L~.@ ... PJ,~~·~············ .. 79c STEAK · ""0••m••ALLYso•oso ... "sSJ If; SLICED BACON 94 c T-BONE STEAK TAILS •. IHO•M•L ·OAUIYlllAHO .. tLIPICG ••-.. , ..... "•-••• 0"S J 59 RATH BACON .... LI SLl(IEO 94 C CHUCK ROAST CIHr111 · ········· •·~UHo PACKAGE uwco"'°''•oH•LLY10,,.010 ... ~~;J3c ~LICED BACON ,,,,°.::;: CH'UCK STEAK c11111111: •F11trH1N, i1oz,1c.1 •.. 1L1,1eo f Jc • ·~"'~OHo•T•o111•LLY•~HD•o ••• ~~:7 5c GAME HENS C01t:H1•~7a· U.J.J)A, Olt:AOI A, H Ot AVG. WT. •A C, STANDING RIB ROAST . UHCOND1T10~,,llY1o"o•o ..•.•• ~~~~~~:s 111 ROUND STEAK c."'~:::~; PORTERHOUSE STEAK "'" U•<•••moo•LLno•••• ................ ;, 93• UNCO•••"•••LLYODN .................. ~::$1 '' STEWING BEEF s fUl(Y COOKED HAM OHcoN01T10HALLv·~oM010 •.•• ~····~-~~~~Ls:99c . '"'"" .. """ .. """'"-•• ........ u67• PORK SPARE RIBS YOUNG H FAOMU"YLI 89• EN TURKEY ... ··········· ...... , ··" u.s.o.a..011:ao1 ... ·,.1.uM,Ju1c., ............. L145c PORK ROAST Lo1H YOUNG T lLISAV•iAOIW•t lflfO •• C OM TURKEY -OHT ·••·••••• ........... u u .............. 'LUM•·'""Y ............ u'39• JIMMY· DEAN SAUSAGE TURKEY HINMUARTER ····-":HO•••uo .............. "••LL89• ............ ,. ~'I 33• JIM"y D"•N . . ······-····················" • -.,, SAUSAGE s PERSONl<LIZED MEAT SE RV IC~ Any cut of meat PUlt:lol'Ol;JC.lltuU. . ' J 77 .; . • "''';"""'·•ILlll:DLL .,. . ,...,. • ., I , ' .. '' ' !JI' 0 All WAT-1ialQtilA "• ':~ . .i~ Pn.l BURY BISCUITS 9, 1101rua 11• IOlOGIM•1c) •• toz P«G5# . •um TASTIN .. , •••••• , ••• t.JOl1'1G J COTTO SALAMI osw "1~~ · • .,.+SWISS CHEESE 53; (MAOllAOI SAU.Ml I OZ PIG 7k) ... n.G·7 2 11Aii(ia.KID, NATUlll •••• • •. 6 OZ PIG silOKIE LllKS c .,.. ~ERICAN CHEESE RICl~ $ 7f OKAI MAYll •••.•. •••• ,,,', 1201PIG91 IUIT 01 IOIOlNS, "1>CIS$ED ... 3h:G 2 CHOP!EO HAM . , HARVEST DAY BISCUITS • OKAIMAYEI .•...•.•••.•••• IOZ PIGIJ lllmlMlll OISWUTMlll ..... IOZ l'IG I prepared to your own specifications,., .,-.BIAUISCHWIEGER _ , .,.+BOB'S DRESSING . s 15 OKAIMATllSUCID ......... IOZl'lG., ROQUFOtf ................. 160ZJAI I PACKAGED GOODS . POTATOES lfTTTCIDCl!aMIGUTlll43• .,.. . . . . . . . '"""' DU"CAN HINES MIXES •.•• .,':139' M & M CANDY .••. , . ":"~~'=59• ... the f~w ltam1 ll1ted on this poga constitute lust a small sampling of the t~Ou1and1 of low, diKount price, In store for you ,. PAITY llD LOW EVERYDAY PRICE CIGIRETIES KING SIZE fllTlllD CAITON 320 WIKllPOUI, SHELVES· STOCklO WITH' THE FAMOUS· llANDS YOU KNOW AND TRUST ·~eofaterlan type · . ., •. whitijnac mugs. ' BAii . UE ASSORTM~IT ' •• ITJ A, ~· Ill• ossortmenl' ol hoovy~oty bak ' '9 to fill most every bQklng need, 111111011 ·11o · r simple or loncy. IUlA 3-TIER CAKI PAN He i , 2-l'C. COQK11 PAN sn 1 ·11·5/11' x ~6"' ROASTING PAN s1•' 11 11 x 16" ROILING PAN. 9" 8AKI lo SHAPI PAN .2ic. .fLAN .PAN HT VllNNlll CAKI ,PAN ·FASHIOI SWUTERS BLUETIES llDBBEll ILOYES YOUR sac ~!~!rh·.!~,s ~,!~' . c101cE IACH . r:Or rellef ft rtiuscular pain · 1/3 more -13.3 OZ. .1!a''~· f~!1!!!l'"'JE59 C ~.~~!~.~!!,!. porm $1 31 ILISTEI TUBE~~~;: Pe~orollon .for treatment 01.34 C ~· Fall's indispens.ahlel our , new swaottrl feotur• tha i. loye .. d•lool<t•lhe .U ne<:k·· _, Hne, the keyhole neck. . 100% .ocryUcs In autumn color'·· SII•s S·M·L, yellow b( ovocodo •• 2 1lros. HEAVY IUY.f LA11G18Jc sMA,u.48~ ·PIZZI . PAI ••mim•-------------------------~ .::, .. ·. ~vy!~~~·~~~g~~:: .. ~;,~; .. ,.~ 4 65 ' ,, . ~UJ, LIQUID .· ,207. aoc bl1h •hlng llqu1a with special · ITL · ,-tkJn~tlonlng· formula,. •••••••••••••••• ····•···· ----•• -- YC>Ua'$393' -CltOla . NOTAVA&':\'LI ~TIANTAMOJlllCA Pl~Zl cunEI, 27C llOTAI~ TTPI 411---t~~~~~~~ 5~c ~ &MWM*W· ...... ,,.,. .. le .. ~::Jl9L~.... 11-.. ........ ._ ... , .. ... .. ~ .. --::...: .......... _ . -·---•lolk 1.118rl I 8 . near 1.•.• .. ' ... ,_ •. "'.... ..... ... II , ..... --... wwww1• .... -.... 'fj UftN&l • 14411 k. M LSA•O..a·t•l,"'-tT-IW. : WB1'M_,. • l•I lpt;1t' ... AUNllM • 11• ,., , .... <.tie.. .... GMt• ..... 1M7S .... It. U..I • , ........ AH. SM "E:l' .. ,,.. •,, .. Ei:'iii:-. 1 I 7 ANANUM -12t w. LI,.. A,.. °""" ttovt . llf71 ...... ,,, ~ffto:..c..'"21 •tt.tte•Aff. ..,, .. ·-~,..,.... M· . ·• • ...... .... AZUSA · 271 (, O"*t.1 '""' GUJeiif.. 11'5 W. 0 ....... 11.,, lOH i tl!S f, s,.tlt It; Wiii '• MO ~ .. • Ii L .... N IAll.WIN PAii • IJttO ltMM Ifft MIWMI , I• S.. C.""91 Ate. I. l• -· • >tOS I • .....,. a, .. SOITW IATI • Jtfl w..t.iii M .... "91. 1111 .. .... C~OA PAii • 1224 Mtttll "''· Jftiilll-PA ... lJJ W, Att. 4S MOMlafU , UI W. thi1f!•'" Drtt1 HW MADI • !Ill ..... H. '•111'1• ... JM "-t 1W. W. COVIMA • IMllM!ll si..,,i.., Ct11, NUNTIMGTON NACM • tOSI litt.tlt ;.., MONTIMUt • IN .... ....... =.p· ·~ ........ c.t .... f OOWNIY • IJ• Aftt!'" llt4. MVttfHtGTOfl llAC" • 1 ... W. (Wee St. NOIWlill • 11ftt ........ M. • ~·· ·-:-lhll/ 4 • • ...._, --·· ' ' . ·-~---- if u Favorite • Fortified .. spices. ln a large mixing bowl bea t together until sn1ooth lhe sugar, corn oil, eg~ and vanilla ; slowly beat m the flour mixture; stir in apples and nuts. POTATOES U.S. NO. I RUS$ETT 10ci~~0 59¢ ONIONS .3: 29¢ APPLES CRISP 5 L EXTRA FANCY B DELICIOUS S SQUASH FRESH LOCAL ITALIAN 19~B. 10MATO·ES L. ·~ OLE SQUTH .COBBLERS e APPLE e PE'ACH e BLACKBERRY REG. \99< SPRINGFIELD ORANGE JUICE ' oz. CAN$ 2 LB. .. ______ _ FOREMOST \'2 GAL. SQUARE "FLAVOR OF THE MONTH" ICE CREAM Turn into prepared pan. Bake in a preheated 35().. 5914 degree oven until a cake teste~ JI inserted in center · e<1mes out cleao -about 11/• hours. , l\.. __ ....,..., _ _..._.-~....,.....,-_..._._...J e VANILLA-VANILLA · e LITTLE RED CABOOSE e STRAWBERRY BLONDE -. . . . . .. . WHOLE KERNAL CORN OR CREAM STYLE CORN '303 CANS 6/$1 FOLGERS JLICAN ••••••••••..•• COFFEE 1 LI. CAN ••••• , •••• , ••• • DIET IMPERIAL MARGARINE BETTY CROCKER READY TO SPREAD -16 OZ. CAN FROSTING REGULAR 59c JACK & THE BEANSTALK CUT GREEN BEANS INSTANT SLENDER DIET ARY IOXOP4 •••. UG.. It; "' CAN5 69¢ Cool on a wire rack to minutes then tum oot of pan. --------------------------- ... ' -........ DAILY PILOT 4 LADY SCOTT ' TOILET TISSUE llltjlQl.ji!Qilij!1}1-- PRELL $\IAMPOO' 16 FLUID OZ. IMPERIAL " ' SIZE BOTTLE , REG. 2. 5 AT· OTHER ST<ORE MAC LEANS TOOTHPASTE 6~ OZ. TUBE REG., $1.09 AT OTHER STORES ---t!C"IIIel.•l:t;jJ.-- WHILE THEY LAST PARTY-TYME MIXES ASSOITID YAllETllS-24 ••· 1Mitt'9 aEG-. 91¢ AT SOMl STORES SCOTS LION .------- SCOTCH WHISKEY DIST1LLID & ILIHDlD IN SCOTLAND Cool comp1e1e1y belore slicing . FRESH DRESSED ~------'---------=-- • • I Seasoning Adds Z~st It slices well. SAVORY MEAT LOAF --~-··---.._ ' --- USDA CHOICE . • f RYl NG RABBITS WHOLE OR CUT-UP U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BRISKET FRESH LIAN C GROUND BEEF • ROUND BONE BEEF ROAST FRESH SLICED BEEF LIVER. IAR M BULK STYLE WIENERS •• CHEESE OR REGULAR ' 6/99c 'oz .. ' ..... $1.09 10 oz ......... $1.49 MJB LONG GRAIN RICE -!Ilg ~ oz. box Rog. 65c • 59~ I WE GIYI ILUE CHIP STAMPS COSTA MESA PLACENTIA •• ,,. GIYE ILUI CHI~ • STAMPS 19th 311 Nacentia no W. ~11113n Prices Effectives Thinclay tflna SunClay SEPT. 28, 2, 30, OCT. 1 Prl<ft •wllle<t to stock .. ....... WI GLADLY ACCIPt U.S.D.A. FOOD C:OUl'ONS -- • • ' ·- DAILY PILOT Wrd11tt<Uy, Stoteltibtr 27, 1972 ' 1 ' t·SPINACH .. U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET · E VA·LENCIA ORANGES SUNKIST SWEET AND JUICY •••• ' . l B s WESTERN GROWN-lCEBER_G_ .,l·~' ·~ . ' GARDElffRESH ••••••••••••••••••••••• IU. LETTUCE BAGI ~ EA. CHI.QUIT A BRAND , . -". . l B s RED POTATOES ALL PURPOSE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LI. $ MAXWELL HOUSE FOR COFFEE l ... CAI ~~.~~ .. ~~~~~~.~~ ........... '. 4 3 c ~o~·lor~~~.!~ .. ~~.! ~~~ ........ 3 3 C . . . !!'1~!,:!. 4 P.c\IP!!tF~ .......... 5 3 c I . !!1~;~;.'!! T,•!».~. ~ ~; .......... ~ .1 6 9 Build a ca" .... ti!• item each week STOIE\YARE VALENCIA PATTERN • • C l ~ ...... ,..· cov ... , ·99 SUWIOW • CUUl•' ' ••••l . 4ce 'Wm< J#,00 I ~ " 1 I ~ . '. GROUND BEEF· ' WITH '.1· PELVIC • ATTACHED FRESsH111DFtHR,,!!~n~c~!!D~-••••.••• ~. 5 4 C DRUMSTICK lb. . TURKE; DRUMSTICKS YOUNG TOM DRUMSTICKS ' BAKI OR BAIBECUE YOUNG HEN WINGS • lb.28~ SEAFOOD SPECIALS !t~L!! ~fvo~!~E ......... ! ..... ~.1.29 ~-~~~ -~~~. Fl_L~E.!5. .......... : ....... 1b.98~ ~ i~.~~~ .rz~.!.... .. .. . . ~ 1.2s· ' •' I. • 11/.4 SLICED EllDCUtS AND CllltlRS PORK LOIN.1•1:!~.c~~~~-lb. 1 ' ~!.~R~ .~~~~'..~~ ........... 1b,S 9c !(;o~!!~.~~·~, "· ......... "· 8 8 C ' ' r,~E~~H~~~-~5... ...84' r.~T~~cu~,!~~OP ...... '"" I~ 11 a ' ' mJU i , . ORANGE JUICE CAL FAME 6-0Z. CANS : $' .fOR FROZ. VEGETABLES 'Riii Glllll II llUYtll SAUCE 3· $1 PEAS, MIX.'VEGEfi.B[ES . - NIBLETS CORN. SPINACH, 10 01. FRENCH OR SLICED GREEN BEANS 9 oz . FOR !!!~f!'! ,~~~!~.~ 43c CHEESE OR 8EiF ENCHILADA 12 or .•.. -- mauliirl1 113!t!;\1$JJ~ll MANHATTAN, TASTY-TENDER WIENERS 'H 01. PKG. BUDDIGS CHIPPED MEATS ASSORTED 39 3~::.·::,. . . . . . . . . . . . . c ~~!~!!.~Yi.IS~ C~E.SE ...... 55C· ~!~!'~~~.~~~~SE .......... ~298 -·-' ~-HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS ' LYSOL DISlllFECTAllt SPRAY 1~l110 $ 1 • 2 7 RIGHT GUARD SPRAY DlODORllT 4 01. ~.... Sill 76C , ~:!~~~ !!~t~~.E.J£~\~~i~ •.. ~ 120 ~.,~~1~Al.D. SHE~~ .. 5.!~I'.~ 84C -. ' ' ·····.~ --:.,. . ' DAIL v PILOT SI , GIANT RINSO GIANT SIU DmJJGENT ·59~ UMITONf 2·5~ COUPONH• .. OO~T CU STQMfl Sll'1•.18·0CT • SAVI SOcwmtTHISCQWOH FABRIC SOnENTER RAIN IAlllft>'-4101. SIZE """""' ,' : ' . ~ COU "DN Pt• ADUtT CU STOMt~ SE,L 78-0C T. • ' ROYAL OCCASION VODKA CHARCOAL FILTERED ·• 80-PROOF . ea , ----~ .n-. -- ( ! • • • . . . -. " ' I I •• • • . - J • • • . ' 51 DAILY PILOT " ALL MEAT WIENERS MANHA TT AN 1-LI. PKG. OSCAllMAYBl.U.lllGUl.All Ol 11-0I. TlllN Sl.ICID. 93< SLICB» BACQI _,.,. · ITATlll B•OI. MONIY BACll GUMANTll ON OUAUTY •ATI fVllY '1ICI OF MIAT IS UNCONDfTtONAUY GUAIANTRD TOl'llASIYOU . , .OIYOUI MOHIT WW. II CHIHfUU Y llFUNOID FRESH • DELICIOUS ANY SIZE PACKAGE 7-BONE ROASI STA 1'81 llOS. C8111FllD 119 • GUARANTIB> c LI. FRYING CHICKEN USDA • A • GRADE WHOl.EIODY c LB. CUT-UP FRYERS .. -...... LB. 3Tc • . ·CHUCK -ROAST ST A TR llOS. C111111B> IEEF • IONE IN ROUND STEAK STATERl~~·CRTIFIED llEf • IONE IN c LI BONELESS ROUN1l STEAK .. LI. SI.DJ ~-j f t • , ' • • ' • / . ' ' • ,, i ' . . ' ' f . f ' . --• 69« SELF SLICED BACON .... -·.. . BAITING STAmllOS.QRTIFIEDlllF•GUAaAHTEED 93 STATBUOS.CB11FlEDl&F•GUAaAHT&D 98' n • • RUMP ROAST ..................... La. ' RIB STEAKS ._ ........................... La. · '. ·-· ........... ,.,. •. , -79c TURKEY ILICID BOLOGNA ....... . OICAIMAYULMS 98 , POIKIAUJAGE--u. c ~~~~~ earmm1&FIH-•GUAAANTEED 9nc W.NANDTIHDBGUMANllED $ J 29 ! ROLLED ROAST ................ LB. ..,-STEAKS ~o:.:. ...................... LI. . • STATBllOS.Qlrl'IFllDIHF•GUAAANTHD 7· 5' 1-STTlllUS-TllrtraS.. La.SI.Of 89' i ROUND BONE ROAIT .......... LI. . RIB ROAST&-TH&T-THRIBS ....... LB. _.,_;. . ' ' . iii0K1&Ll•l --·-''·~L 79c ~s· 3 .. 10 S.QUNCIPACXAGI 59c \.[} ( DPPI CORN DOGI ..... _ llDOIClt-15.S.C)t,ltCI 59c ....,. ... CINIUcvr • 12• OSCAIMAYROUWWI •3•• NOTMS•WRJ.TltMM8>•GU•........ • 16s I HAMSLICES ._. _,. CANNED HAM ................ PORIERHOUIElfWI ia. ! ' MOllllW..... 59' ....... ,_ . ...,.,.,_., ............. I'' STATBllOl.cRJ--• 1791 llPPIBURRllOI.......... ia. • STEMS AND PllCD S.S. PIERCE MUS HR OOMS .. -. ., ASSORTID FLA VOllS· BU RRY . !SCOOTER PIE ......... 1~~· , TYSON PllDE • FIOZ .. :·coRNISH I 20-. GAME HENS _ .............. _oz. DUNCAN. HIND ASSOITID .rLAYER . ·!CAKE MIX ... _ .. ____ ._1~~~· ' !SUNSHINE HYDRO I .. ,COOKIES -..................... -... 2::G~: !KLEENEX• AUOllTB> COLOllS I FACIAL : TISSUES .. -.................... _ .... _. 200· COUNT BOXES $ WIEJl--5 ........ , -··· -••.OL_ '-BONE STU..K --.-· .. --.. -LL JOP llRLOIN -· ...... La. APPLESAUCE ,,_,.,.-!..,~.&.:,,..'?::r::?::f Ateu. i-• "".:...'"::"" · 39' JOHNSTON PIES ._ ......... _ .... oz. 71 c DIUCIOUS ,\Pl'LE • CHflSf • '<lT .. TO 69' ~ROS O f 57' ,. ....... ,.. MRS. K1 BLINTZES_ .... ,. ORANGE PLUS _ .... __ , . .,. CAT FOOD ( ~Jo 233c URTSIUS CANS .____ MllS.. FlllOAY"S IFl~ADlD $_i SJ .IOHNSTOH CAllllOT • OIUJtGE 73' ROUND SHRIMP .... _ ""' 1 NATURE CAKES ---"·"' MllS FRIO .. Y"S lllf AOfO s• llU,~111' s133 GOU11METSHRIMP _...,, 1.·· FISHSTICKS--.--.. •• ASSOATE O 4 11 TllE(SWHT1:l-ot. ,~Sia ;ftGe RASH BURRITOS ---'°' ORANGE' _.__.~, ... U1 MDSIYEDIUllT~ :+: ( COOL WHIP .-.. ·· J ...... __ ._,t«,S6c GREEN GIAHT Wt•VTI"Er ·A~ 3 11 UllY AS$0flU O • jtUTfiJij) fNk ROLL 'ISSUE. NIBLmCORN --· .. ·-••<>< VEQETABLES . • ·-· .. ••""'""° WITH I UTTEll SAUCE 3 11 MINU'IE 811EAkf.Ul -QQc GREENGIANTPW .. "·"'-.IONESUUS .. :_ .. ,. ... oo w1n+avm11u.uc1 3 11 llOLOK1sr · s1il SLICED GREEll BEAlll ... , BEEf STEAKS ~~--'" ... , · -su~ius112..oz. .11c 26C ai11D1rve ' Ant ' ORANGE,UICE -···-.. ·"" CORN OllTHE 8 -· .. u 'tlf """"'" 3 s I UL TU IV 4-IOLl AIJ._0'0:0 · PIUIL ( CASABA MELONS ' ·LARGE SWEET VINE RIPE le LB. RID.YAMS....... .2 , ... 3~ LAaGISWUT YI,_"" ' DEAL PACKAGE 'TIDE-XK . DETERGENT ........................ ~:~: $ 05 CANTALOUPE ...... _ ... 3-5 1 LAIGI RtUH TINDEi CllSP CARROTS .-............. 2 !~~~I Sc YOU UV£ MOIEY Wltll YOU UV£ ILUECHIPSTIMn VETS DOG FOOD ...... 1 35-0UNCE PACKAGE ·,DISHWASHER .ALL 49 LEA & PERRINS SAUCE ...• IOZ 41' ( ALLSWEET MARGARINE . ---" 31' HUNTS TOMATO PASTE _ 12oz 31 ' HUNTS TOMATO SAUCE .... "oz 21' NABISCO RITZ CRACKERS ,.., 46' SLICED AMERICAN KRAn __ "'' 12.79 ROYAL PUDDINGS .................. :2'i',~.· 31' POTATO PANCAKE ::.:~.".' ........ •oz. 41' AU-GRATIN POTATOES l.':'s:J~. 49' PUDDINGS ~m'«:il'f~~---· 4 •·oz 63' STEAK SAUCE DAWNf .. SH ...... 1.1•oz 12' PRUNE~UICE su•swur .......... 4'>0Z 63'' DRY MILK 5'NALAC NON·fAT 11 43 INSTANT __ ,,., ......... n_ 1G-0UAAT • BISCUITS "LlSOURY REGUl.AR • 3 -OR eunERMl~K ..... _ .... , .... ". •·OZ. I.tr KRAFT CHEESE DlLUKUl lCfD ..... AMtRtCAN .......... ~. 12.()l. •• - CUCUMBER CHIPS :~~~i ···---~ 89' DIAMOND.A BEANS GMINCUTOI SLICID AIBILD UQUIDWAX 1 il'OUNCI IOTnl 73' MACARONI GOLOEN GRA'" • 17' WITH CHEOOAR .... "''"' 1.25-0Z. ... lllCI I!! 5' LOllG GRAIN .• -...... o.o~ GRAHAM CRACKERS '""'"'" .. LI. 39' 7-SEAS DRE$SING me .. _,. __ o oz 45' CORN MUFFIN MIX JIFFY .......... uoz 12' BOKAE YOGURT JOHNSTON FROZEN 26' WITH FllUIT ""''""-e-oz. COFFEE CRYSTALS FOlGlRS .• .oz 11.09 DINNERS GOLDEN GRAINl.ASAGNA 53' SPAGHml•IEEFy RICE .......... 1-0Z. YELLOWZONKERS -··~···-······--••·ilL 3&' VERMONT MAIQ SYRUP ·-,,.oz. 41 • CHEESE W.ll.~~ ••• ~ ,_ , ... , ·11.04 FEMlll• 3 s1 IAPlllS PKG. OF its PKOS. =:.COFFEE ~: 83' :: srJ " .... ~v ... ( , ....... CAT FOOD •TTYOUEEN CHOPPED CHICIC!N 211-0z. 31 '&~~Sa~ CREST BRECK · BLADES , ... , IWIC WIL ... TOOTIIPASTI .. SPIAY SW• 78~ lii 11~ i l I I I : l ' l ' • • . ' . . ' ' I l I I • • • • l ' • l , . • • ' . l ' • ! ' t I ' • • ! • I -J ~ I I I Personalized • Stylish I • Efficient Order For YourMJlf or a Friend I May be used on envelopes as return .,ddress I' la bels. A lso vory handy as identification l•bels for marking personal items such as ~·books, records, photos, •tc. labels stick on glass dnd mGy be used for marking home c~nned ~oc.d items. All label$ are printed ~ with stylish Vogue type on f ine q uality white· 9ummed pc1p er. PUWC NOTICE STARS Sydney Omarr is onl' of ti1e W'>rld's great astrolo· Cl'rs. f-lis column Is one or the DAILY PILOT'S great fl!aturcs. Mau ldin's Own Favorite • • • • J • I ' • l / • Still ·Relevant { • • ;Two wars later, Bill Mau/din's cartoons still say it all for 1h• guys who are ' ''up front '' doing the dirty work. Mauldin once select,d the cartoon,ebove ' ias one of his own favorites from World War ll's _1{Jp Front" se rifs. He said: "O"co I thought I did • very funny ~ortoon (about) an old-time . ~avalryman shooting his jeep ••. It has simplicity; it tells a story; it ' 1 oesn't need words. It 1s, I believe, the very best kind of cartoon.'' • • ~auldin if still doing some of the world's "very best kind of cartoons." low strokes of his talented pen can make soma of the most biting ' ~ditorial comments to be iound on today's is,ues.. If you're looking for t }elevoncy, look at Mauldin two w,ars later (frequently laotLred in tho Doily • i)ot). I l I ~Loo k at the /Editorial Page of th e I I I : I , ;· DAILY PILOT • . . DAILY PILOT 5:J PUBUC NOTICE --l'l!BUC NOT1c•·--/---------- L PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBllC NOTICE • • ff OAILY PILOT •• • W"\nesdir• Sept-27, 1972 . \ You can 't vote uoJ• you're registered . Oki yOu change your name, address, or party alfiliation'! Re- register D e adline is October !. Do It at Ricbanl'o Lido or Harbor View or any other supennarket or city hall. DOES ANYBODY EVER BUY PLAIN YOGURT ANYMORE? Farmer's Market dip mlJ: got the whole yogurt thing going. "Add three table- 1poons to cream cheese, ,llJUr cream, cottage cbeeise- 91' plain YOIUrt "Three table ~of ~t1 ·mue~. toutl!d onkin, line -· cheese ..ttb 'bacon lllld cl\JV.s, spring garden, or Guacamole ..• The spring garden ls a mustardy· .hor"'8disbY laste .• , The Pacamole, cSf course, demands a couple of mash- ed avocadoes f i rst . Fanner's market dip mJxes come in little 2 ounce jars. Th:ey're concentrated, po- tent and powdery. The plain yogurt for the base was a twist. Yogurt lovers have probably been d I p pi n g yogurt for years. YES PEOPLE DO BUY PLAIN YOGURT Top of the plain yogurt "J>OpU1a.ttty ~ "'is ~.,COfi:­ :.tinenial Low Fat Yogia:t, llavored with wUd -,. .· . . all completely natural in a plain glass jar. Sometimes you wonder as you preamble through the lineup 0 r boysenbelT)' I pineapple, plum, French Apple, peach, black cherry, and raspberry that make up Continental's repertoire ol navors ... To which Arden adds spiced apple and strawberry ..• Johnston's tacit on blueberry, prune and mandarin orange ••• Knudsen flips in w 11 h ~ blackberry, lline, itid'. nspberry, c o n co l'i'd ~ g r a p e , &Rrjcot-· cherry ancJ plain va to be~ with ... ' nOttiing •dtleCI. DIPPING r. AND DUNKING How about a portable disposable cheese fondue, :.complete .wilh .ca:n.of .stem>,. bufflet holder ta heat tile gay yellow, orange, and cerise can of fondue, with bamboo dippln sticks even. This is a gay affair. Take It skiing, camping, saJlng, picnicking, partying . Enough for 4 to have dunk· ing run. Then throw It away And don't stop at French bread. Give the English muffins, appJes, p e a r s , green onions, zucchini, caullnower . . . Even raw turnips, raw ruttabaps, and jikima a slosh In melt«I cbeele. Don't forget tile hot ~. cltunu of h1 m, ·iblimp, crab legs or French Frt0.. The Swiss who ant tile hJrentnnen of .u lhll GemuWchkelt which standa for friendly coov\Viallty loved lit Potato Dab •.• or dunking your own baked potato, speared on the end of a fork. What doesn't go with cheese. UNLESS IT WOULD BE BANANAS Why not, when they're ac- companied with chocolate chips and made into a dark, heavy, bread . . . Heavy bread? Heavy, loaded with good things, Newman's breads from Milwaukee •.• Banana~bocolate c b I p , apricot, orange-date, apple- date, raisin brown • , • ~· little round loaf about I inches across you can bOkl in your hand. Slice it your. self or cut it in dunking chunks or strips. Ra ison Brown ... Ahl slice and spread with May. bud"s new cheeses for spreadi ng. The contai ners are th e news and every kitchen should have one or a dozen. Th e one with lhe purple daisies shows you the cheese is flavored with port • wine. The orange daisies say "I'm cheddar." Richard's, the P e o p I e Stores, L i d o and Harbor View, where the Dellcat'8· 1e11 ls ~IW8¥' 10 IOOl:led with ,,.,.. idOu. RICHARD'S HARBOR VIEW MARKET end RICHARD'S UDO MARKET INVITE YOU TO • , , AIR. CALIFORNIA G~~li~I YOU CAN WIN • ONE OF 4 TRIPS F0R 2 RICHARD'S end AIR CALIFORNIA join to give yo11 e febuloJ. exciting GETAWAY WEEKEND FREE. leave the kids and jet away to glittering San Francisco. Stay two nights at one of San Francisco's luxury hotels . We planned all this for our GETAWAY WEEKEND so you can getaway to it all in Sen Francisco. How do you win? ' I. Print your n•m•, eddress end phone numb•r in the sign up book. 2. Winners will be chosen by dr•wing • pege number end • line number. 3, Winners will be notified and winning nemes will be posted here. 4. All trips must be taken before December 12, 1972. (No •x .. change or refund on trips. I S. Winners must be 18 or older to be eligible to win • ht DRAWING FRIDAY, SEPT. 2t, 4 P.M. I . -· . • c~~r.r,~g~~b.7eh1 or!~.tsn'Bolt!~· OL 39' 'Spencer Steaks Roquefort D•n•l•g -s OL 49'-· 2.39 ~. Spencer Roast 2.29~,,.. Seufe steaks in butter, season with salt Bernstein's make one of the best. Stud roast with thin slivers of garlic. Rub with ;. salt, pepper •nd tabesco. Marinate in: I C. Ki•komai:t, Vi C. olive oil, I C. port, I tsp. thyme, and I l;a;y Jeer. ! Roast in 325° oven till don• to your fast•. 59' Jb. Gr~~~~m,~i~.k •nd ... y. •nd pepper. Top with Fresh T ometo Saufe: Peel, chop and strain -4 tometoes, simmer in 3 T. b11H•r with J minced garlic clove & I Vz tsp. tarrt9on. Serve with green beans and sauted S I 69' pot······ ~ .. !~ .. !i~~,b~.:~·~:k:r: •. h d·y •• ,;.,. Beef \Short Ribs 87"' A negle'cted cut that provides lot5 of Yuban Coffee ,.. delicious eating. 1 lb. Swift's Brown and Serve Links , oz. 69c ea. Yuban Coffee 2 lB. 1.73 Yuban Coffee ] ll. 2.49 Yuban Instant Coffee • oz. 1.29 Knudsen First Quality Butter I ll, 86c Sunshine Krispy Crackers I ll. 37c Crisco Shortening ) ll. 89c ............................................ .. ...... .... ........ . .......... Schilling Ground Black Pepper '4 oz. 39c Red Pack Stewed Tomatoes 16 oz. 5 for $1 Red Pack Tomatoes in Puree 16 oz. 5 for $1 Big Roll Chiffon Towe ls 3 for $1 Chiffon Bathroom Tissue 2.PK. 4 for $1 Cat Food Kitty 9.... , OL 8 '°' 51 Choose Chicken or Chicken Liver •nd s•ve 7c e can! ~RD~~M Eggo Waffles 13 OL, 8 ct. 39' Sunkist Orange Juice , oz. 5 10r Sl Sunkist Orange Juice 12 oz. 39c Spinach Souff le 12 oz. 49c Stouffers m•kes this gr••t supper dish. Stouffers Macaroni & Cheese ,, 9v.- Stouffers Potatoes au Gratin 12 oz. ' Stouffers Corn Souffle 12 oz. C&W Chinese Pea Pods 'oz. Choo11 thttt pl1h1 or wltli Wtltr Cht1fnuh Kerns Strawberry Halves 16 oz. Smirnoff Vodka 'II GAL. A savings of 1.20 49c 49c 49c 3 for $1 49c 10.69 • This price good thru Sat, Sept: 30. Swift's Bacon and Sausage a .. w •• '"" , oz. 69c ea. Salisbury Steak Onion, celery, bell pepper and 1 whif of 91rlic:: mike th i1 "'ry 1p1ci1I. 89c lb. Stuffed Callbage Rolls ........... · ·· ·· ··· 98c lb. .:o~­ Apples sc•oo1 '°' J.-.. 5LbL51 ,97c1•. Mushrooms Hot House Grown Buttons Cucumbers Crispy Long Green Oranges SWEET JUICY VALENCIA • 3 For29' 8LbL51 PRICE . EFFECTIVE SEPl;, 21-0CT. I Swifts Brown & Serve Patties I OZ. Swifts Brown & Serve Smoked I OZ. See our Fresh Fish Market at Harbor View • Swordfish Steaks 1.98 lb . Try th111 bon1l111 b.1utf11 Oft tfie 9rill. CocRtail Shrimp Try thern for Shrimp l i1qu1, too. 2.39 lb. ~llJ•lim 69c ea. 69c ea. Stoned Wheat Thins 10 oz. ·,A9c Weston makes this very delicious cri1cker- especielly good with cheeses. Oscar Mayer Sliced Braunschweiger I OZ. Cotto or Machaieh Salami • oz. 01c1r M1y1r 11ic.d Sunset Chivo • toppin9 for pot1to11 16 OL DAK Sliced Danish Ham • oz. Dutch Crunch ·Bread 59c 69c 3Sc 53c Slc ' ' Rye Rolls ~\ . ~.11,htl;J wHt. .... h 6 for45!: Sugar Raised D hnuts ' 6'' Pumpkin Pie REG. 1190 BUNCH ,l,49 • . ' ' . 6 f!X'159c 1.25 BUNCH 01' 25 HARBOR VIEW 1660 Mac Arthur, Newport Bead1 OPEN DAILY9-8, SUN. 9 -6 673·2155 ~~ LIDO CENTER :Ji3ll Via lidO, Newport Beach OPEN DAILY9 -7, ~UN. 9-6 • .... ••• .. -4<JV ...... ------,,-.... ----------~ -• -• S' ·'~'Jii'ilLOiiT-.•.DiVEiRiTISiiiEiRiiiiiiiiiiWitdi-iii'i5tii"i'i"IOeii;r i27i,ili•in __________________________________________ WfdH::W.J, Stpttmbtr .27, 1972 NO 1C?ft~. OFFERS MORE! DAILY PILOT 5a • I -. INCOME WHILE VALUE Increeses -Your opJ)OrtllJllty to own these tine triplexes in Blue Ribbon Corona del Mar. Two bedrooms . each, private be.lconies, quality con- l!itrucllon, wall-to-wall carpets and drapes .. Your money invested in this lncome property will ft* t urn you a substantial dividend. Call now for details and showing, 673-8550. Only $77,500. R·2 SOUTH ~ . INT ' 4 ~EDROOM N<'w England charm, walking dlltance to Ocean and Bay Beaches. A .ape.cioul 2,500 sq. fl. fam.il,y homE" with 4 large bedrooms. .including a huge master suite with Ocean View ' and Sun Deck. Family Soom. Sbeltered Patio, Big Country Kitche n and a weU done "no care" astro-turf front lawn. Sell thf lawn mcw•r r and go sailing. $87,500 -call 673-&">50. UNITS. • • TWO NOW TWO TO GO! This property bas two separate homes - a one bedroom and a three bedroom. Zoned R-2. Lot \viii host an additional Duplex, In an excellent Costa Mesa rental location. Investors -Builders -or a family with In-La\\•S -this property makes Scn$e. Q\vner will help finance. Priced at $39,850. Call 646-7171. • I No. 1 ~T &:RS No. 1 • ... ~k· -..,.,.. •1111 •ftw .... ..... .. train!. ... ~ .... ,,, "' ' •ffkel ....... ...,.. '" Mtfec"'1n1 c•,.•• ~......., .., . 1 lo ..... lo tt1o """" A,.. ,._, ,..,.,,,_ ~ Thi• It ..,..... -n.. Adi.,. I•." MESA VElDE TRANSFll-$47,000 Ov.·ner moving to ~lppi. \Vell -b1s woe can be your joy ! 4 be.di;ooms., beautiful mature landscaping, ~racious doublt door entry with Terrazo tile, large wlndO\\•s and fireplace in living room, king-sized semi-rormal dinl"ng area. bar kitchen,• den and n\astcr suite all down- stairs. Boat gate for waler enthusiasts. Call 546--2313. OCEAN VIEW & NEW CUSTOM $56,000 4 bedroom, 2~ batb. 1«ra:e tacµUy' i:_oom. ,home \vith formal dining.' Camper O'I' bot.t storage. Great view of Catalina and \\'ater area. Built-in stereo, self-cleaning oven and all the finest touches a custom home has, Buyer has choice of color of carpeting. Call 646-7171. LUXURY TOWNHOUSE ECONOMY TERMS LIAltO ROOM PWS Don't pus u newty decoratl'.'d shar~ 4 })rd. room home wltlta finished 27 x 24 "extra room."' Nirely landlia'ped )'ttd wj th a brand ne'A' dout.:h· boy pool. Jbls home ls I close to shop1>in~ and schools. I~ a gt'l"at buy at only $36,000. Pilon·· us no\\' at 646-7171. I "GROOVY CORNER" $36,5,00 From tbe.sup9rb h.ni~.11plng \ValPr<'d br a utu· ~tic sprlhklen t~ freshly pi1.lntl'd 1nt<'rior teituring custom c\rapes + W/\V Karaston cp1s, t.his 3 Br; 2 bathjhome on a co1,1r r Jot is thP Sharpest you'll see! It even has BBQ in kitchr11, AM/FM intercom, gar. dr. of.J('ncr + much n1ore. Priced to liCe at $36.500. Call no\v 842-2535. LA CUESTA ' $45,500 . ....__...,,. CORONA DEL MAR 3 BDRM. OCEAN VIEW n ,\·npr ~uccd t h£' prk.>e $10,:100 on this c hoice honH' 1n top n€'1ghbol'hood \\"llh )'OUr O\\'fl prhra l~ h,•a ch. 4300 sq. rt. ur livin~ s1..ac'1• in this custom :i bi-<l.roon1, 3 l>Rlh home 011 f (·l' land. 1-lany rx- 11·a fea111rl'S thfl.I n1ake h\ 1ni..: morP E"nJoyable. !"J>arkhng kil eh1•n \\'ith built-in OV<'n &. ran~<'". llEA\'Y .~hnk•• r1ll1f. Texas sl8tl' fireplace, call til:l-8550 NO\\. PRICE REDUCE.I $30,500 OF THE HIGHWAY Room to build on this extra large lot. Excep- tional South of the High\\•ay Corona del f.lar location. Channing 4 bedroom den house on rear of lot. Great potential for investors, build- ers or hold for even greater appreciation. Ideal for summer-winter rentals as is. Motivated sell- er. Asking $56,500, Appointment only. can now to see, 673-8550. CAPE COD MOYIELAND TYPE STREET If you've-been saving: for tha t dO\\'n paynicnt \Vhile "·atching property prices soar. \Ve have the solulion. A spotll$s Juxury to\vnhouse \\'ilh 3 bedrooms -2 baths, fo1m al dining. flawless grounds '''ith swimm\nJ:' pool, shufn1•board, vol- IPyball. Plus walkin't distance to the fabulous Back Bay YMCA. Like having a Country Club next door. Lease option, low down, rent or lease. $44,500. Call 673-8550. SN' thtl nc\\' units pril:t'd lit $·12.000. th1'n con1 - Jl8.re this bt.•eulirully 111 11-:rn d~·d h ,1111{' \\"ilh in1- provPmC'nts valued at ill)!>1T1.'.. ~.1;,00. Ft•Alurf'S 3 bedrooms. family roo1n a nd fnrn111 l dininl! 11rea + 1300 sq. ft. ups tairs sui tablr> fclr addit ional bedrooms, rumpus room, or ?. f or ndditiona l info pl('Q.St! phone 546-2313. OWNER WILL HELP YOU U\\llt'r \\l.1111~ t•lll or this fn111t1stic 3 bcdfnu1n 2 bath lrl'P slHHlrd home. lll'8.lll iful land><("i\]ltn;.:- \1·i1h n\aturr 1t·1.·c and plauu~-Lo,·eb' Ilal io \1·i th \l'atctrfa!l. Onr nf l[r,ull~ton Bcach'I bt~,;t neigh- borhoods -..-lose to beach and so near to 1he shopping nrC6s. Cu ll now -8'12-2535. I I ' I ' SUPER OLDER • $33,500 EYE CATCHING $34,950 IJeautifUlly deeorited 4 bedroom. home wlth a taml.br room that overlooks a nice yard with trult ttftes and a covered ·patio with flagstone Md &· built-in BBQ. Children can waJk to schools and a big shopping centPr is close by. Don't miss .Udl lovely home. c.alJ 646-7171. HARBOR VIEW MONACO $55,900 Perfection perfect describes this superb 3 bed· room or 2 bedroom + din debght. Wade through deep plush carpctin1. dine In the formal dining room, snack in the eat-in kitchen, or play tto- quet in the huge yard. No need to lift a fin~r, juat move in! Call 546-2313 for appointment '1fE HOUSE YOU BUY TODAY DOESN'T HA VE TO BE FOREVER Packed with emotional and practlcal appeal Shingles, sh1.1tters, wainscoting and d ormer win- dows, a W&fJ'Q "fireplace, dlhlng rooin., .large kitch- en and ti. ~ fafTlilY .famll.Yroom. 3 bedrooms. This home ·and the entire neighbcirhood sparkles with pride of ~rship, Don't tell anyone, just see it, only $39,95<>. 646-7171. MEDITERRANEAN PLEASURE Imagine yourself living In itus beautiful specious 4 bedroom home In NC\vport Beach with lovely Spanish decor, beamed ceilings and ieparate din· ing room and family room. Utility room, dark· room and over 2700 square feet of living spece and only 3 years old. Only $69,500. 646-7171. MUST SELL OWNER'S B.EHIND in payments. Must sell NOW. Jmmaculate 3 bed- . rooms, 1 % bath, garden horfiC in area with all sorts or recreational faciUtles, including two pools. T\vo private, secluded patlOl'I with sh1de trees and lush gr ass. Vacant and ready for ~ou lo move. lntu for only $,29,950. Cali 847-6010. PRICED FOR Cj)UICK SALE This 3 bedroom home features a larga family room and a doub1f.car aarage. Owner bought a ~w home and he to sell within 30 days, The Home is located o a quiet cul-de-sac street with lots of fruit trees and flowers. If you want a !!ood buy for only $28.500, then call now. 847-6010. 42x88x138x 149! $42,500 You've just read the dimensions of p. fantastic ALOHA ALOHA lot on a quiet Cul-de-Sac. The home on It fea- is: lovely 4 bedroom home lo ~ewport tw-es 4 .~s, !amlJy ~ with fireplace, d you'll feel lik~p·~c i . ~Ow~r ~~al dinlrqt .nd 3 bathli. teful=y l¢corated. feet _ sepe.rlJ.e {i)y -~ ...... \_nt.-w ~hai ~~Ne~neat . ~ ~through· • beautiful bacl{ya$1,..-411\.tte ha ~Ru~l:'ov~~~W~g sp ea;. system. ound --doullle gi\e for.}bcie.t arta. n s42, · -- '!nl. 646-7171. ,-,-) WESTCLIFF AREA-$40,950 LARGE RUMPUS ROOM-POOl J ust begins tv tell the story about this Newport Beach home. An exciting poolside atmosphere that flows through the .Jarge rumpus room with fireplace and step down wet bar. Three bed· rooms. 646-7171. FOR RENJ A LARGE HbME 3 Bedroom ~ 20' family room with fireplace plU!i a 20 x 20 rumpus roo~. Excellent East side ( Cost.a Mesa locatiolL $29$ per ntfmtb, first and last plus a security deP.1$1ft. For· more informa- tion and appointment to"\iec please call 646-7171. l > i 4 BEDROOM, POOL ONLY $34,500 Swimming allowed so avoid the Cf'O\\.'d. There Is room in this 4 bedroom pool home for the wholl! family. You will enjoy the deep shag carpeting and the Spanish Oak paneling. Move into your own vacation playground for only $1700 down. Please call 546-2313 for more information and appointment to sec. ' RANCHO MISA-,,..-$31,500 NO DOWN-TO VETS - FASt;HO~i1.SHORES $3~,yOO · This 4 bodroom home features 2 baths, 2 fire- places a nd an add on family room, for 2000 sq. ft. of sheer luxury. It bas that fantastic wood effect, wood 1binglea in family room with large wood beams and a wood paneled bath. Located on a comer lot, this one won't last. Call 842-2535. " -iiiE'Eir*t -MOlfE -,. - SALESPERSON Our S•l•s T eafn het b~en selected end is nearly compl•te. Thank you for referring your fri•nd s to us •. , W• b•li•v• w• hav• 'one of the 9rande1t 9toups .of 1pffple. They'r• sp•cial. Thanks, , Randy , P.S. W• r• always evailabl• to ch•f about your car9er in Real Estate , , ~ Wh.ther obtainiiw • license, sol,in9 • r•al •stat• pro6J•m or sel•ctfn' an •r •· . ' OUT Stut with this adorable 3 bedroom In one of Hunttncton Beech'• finest areaa. Walkln1 d1a. Located In pride-of-ov."lien~ nelghbortlood. This fantastic 3 bedrtlom.~ 2 b&th home features tance to beautllul Lake, Pai;,~ equestrian 8J"¥S near schools le South Cout -BJaza. on great a large living room that •hu a built~in bar. Pro. MEL.Pt OWNER WANTS aDd. wide open spaces. Can~ tiloUeve all -tllls 1treet for children. 3 bedroorlll, 2 baths, family fessionally ~-~ted'1'lt.b wallpaper and 1parkl. for only $28,9:IO. BuDt{ltf. 'jlreplace, "ll,l&h land} room and paneled den tha~ be uJ:Ci.1 as 4th Ing clean .. ~ _,enloy. the peace and quiet in tcapln& and tn ~ oC ¥ it'--.t. ~" ~ lAYe.ly landlcapha(. 1Prlftk.Mil'" system, thll charm ngJl••c street Super large. pie .chool 'dlltnc.ts. H'1MY .._jMJ ~tone -why Mt heavy &hake roof and decora:&eit t.hrouebcn1&.-For &hai>R 1·oi: AJr;-tor only $32,~ Call now ....... cell NOW, 842.253!t). --' ,. lhformaUon phone 546-2313. • ~.GOJ.O. 11 WITH THE COSTS Owner wants out ot this 3 bedroom ·2 bath ~ .. , 4 It's a cozy warm home with a fireplace, fantastic location near schools, parks, .!!parkli ng lake . equestrian trails and beach. $24 00 n1ovi-s you in • -$28,950 total price. C&JI right nO\V 842-2535. MESA VERDE $32,999 This 11harp 3 bedroom. 1 ~ bath hon1e Is jui;t 7 months young, everythin1: has l.x·C'n dorw - landscaping, sprinklers and patio, a ll you ha11e to do is move in. Assume 7% VA loo n "·ith pey- 1nents of only $219 per n1onth. Call now for an appolntrrent 546-2313. IT WAS $33,900 IT STILL IS S33.900. It's one of the best valul.'5 in Huntinj'.!1011 Park. Pride of ownership neighborhood. 3 bed- room 2 bath home with sunkt'n Jivh}£ fl')()1u. separate family room and beautiful landscapinc:. Room for boat 01· tra iler In rea;r;;.):'ard. A. trulY mlilstic price at ~AtXX lleftllt.; aiO 1 ~1 847-6010. ,·•1·1H ~1 '"' RELP! i' '' -I .. GRAB T~E P!10NE thjs Instant and.call WI about t hlt home. 0\11nl'r.~ \Viii help pay buyers costs, he'll do anything to sell thiK 3 bedroom 2 bath home n~ar schools and shopping. If you want a home you should see this one. $28,950. cau now 847-6010. PRESTIGE HOME $36,500 . • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths • • custom carpets A drapes • • Custom Kit with BBQ • • AM/FM Intercom • " Superb Landscaping • • cau 847-6010 Now • "SURF AND SAND" $26,950 Have you ever seen a great "little" pJace wtth all the conveniences, includtng 11~ dl1t.ance to the •Beach? This is a smaJJ 4 bedroom, 2 both home, 3 blocks from the beach. All built-ins. double car garage and very well" I~caped. When you see this one, ;rou'll want\it. Act by call to UI at 84,2-25,15;· r.i.. ". TRl·~EL ,. 7 BLOC~S ,TO '-THE ·E~C,ff Wow! Big 4 bedroom, 2% bath home 1i.as a separat e family room to enhanc1 this beauty. It has beep completely painted U.lde and .out. Great tor the 'family Whtl Medi the r69nl qct likes the ~ch -only T blocks awa,Y. Ynu trfay -. asswne the low Interest loan •• , onl7 $39,950. Call 847-6010. t WORKING MAN'S CASTLE Country Club home ln a pride of ownershi1, neighborhood. A spgcious 3 bedroom, 2 ~1.h home with sunken Uvl'nr room. seJ)arate famllY room and beauUful landscaping with boat 1ate. ~o~~"" .-e< 433.900. -coll ._,,,.,.. .... , .... ~. *"'·,~~ A HOUSE FOR ALL AGES Jf ynu hll \"t' an ''Age> Sprrnd '" in your family, this 1.."1.11.ild be the answc•1·. Localed not far from ~r8dt' school, high school nnd parochial schools, pa rks and ix-aches. This sha rp 3 llf'droom home is locatr d on a gulct cul-dl'-snr ~11,•l'I. $28,500. Call 847·6010. THE OCEAN IS YOUR BACK YARD \Vow! Bia 4 bedroom, 211' bath home has a sepa • rate family room to l!{lhaflCi) this beauty. It has been completely p&inttd inside and out. Great for the family who needs the room and lik<'S lhe beach -only 7 blocks &'A'l!l y. You may assun1c the low interest Joan , •• only $39.950. Call 842-25305. SPANISH · SPANISH $33,900 Thi• is a beautiful Spenlsh style home in Foun· tain Valley, It featur~s 3 bcdroollll, I* baths, PalOI Verde fi replace, formal dinin& and niucb, much more. The large side yard has roon1 enrnAgh for g\vim.ming pool or boat gate. You must see it. For more info call 842-.2535. " • • <t FAMILY SPLASH IN PRESTIGE HOME • 5 b<droom .. 2 bath • 18 x 38 pool -oni,. U«.950 A btauutully UPFRded home to ht lived In Mid enjoyed NQt anoth~r home on the market to compare. Call now 847'-.6010. ' · f-•, r • I / '1t··t, .................. ~~· .... ~.·.~.!!"l·A·Jt' .. S·,.,~· .... te .. "8 ... l'i.~ ... to,\~\,,e~eple" .............. ,~f.., .... ..,-i!'ll ................... .. , .. , ' ... - • B RBAL BS.TATBRS COSTA MESA ~790 !Wb,cir p lvd. '•546-2lll . °""" ·rn ' HUNTINGTON BEACH 1193) Baac.h ,,Blvd. 6014 Werner Ave. '842-2535 . 847'·60 I 0 - ..CORONA DEL MAR 332 Marguerite . ' INV ESTMENTS 2790 Harbor Blvd. Stilte 20 I ' 67-34 550 '"-·'' •••• f C'llst• Melt! ""'' 600 I ' ' I • ' " ' --' ' ' . . . . . ' .. . ....... • ' ' ' r ""'1lll Mlli;r,'9t;' ··1 ZI, 1'12 w , ,,.# Stpttmbrt 21. 1972 Everyone H.1 ' • Something That CLASSIFIED ADS You Ca n" Sell If, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad I ' Someo ne Else Wants : Th!?)Biggest MarketplCJ~e on the Orange Coast -Qial 642 -5678 for Fa'st Results • • f J, ' I _.f I t • & General t.-farU. • l ~I I ...... ..,.~ I , I 1~1 ~1 ;;-;;-~....1~~1 1;;-_._ .... ~,~~I Gent ral l~,IL--_ ... _-__,!~ .__I -_ ... _-~!~ --- Gener•I t\ U""IOOI: liCMI: HAVE LONG RANGE PLANS TO SELL? 111 i\1esa Verde, prime residential street. Im· maculate quality home. Unique Regency split level with great famiJy room,~allpatjlling kitchen, formal dining room an(li4 bedrooms. Priced at a low $47 ,500. with 'a Tequire111tnt of a mid Dece~er move in. ;r. ii; PNON I UN19UI HOM U. MIS.A YEUI. 546-lffl U~ IVUl liVMI:§ REAi. ESTATE General General 1-~-"-~~~~-1 NEWPORT TOWNHOUSES 2 Br. 2 Ba. Fee Lruid $28,/;Jl 3 Br. 2 Ba. Pool ..... • 31:909 3 Br. 2 Ba. Blu!l11 • .. 34,500 :i Br. 2 B<1. Vista Bahia ••.........•• '... .. • ::3,000 !I Br~ 2~~ Ba. Fee Lund • • • .. •• •• • ••• • ••• ••• 35,S(X) Call 675-7n; 1f U•MDIAl'f' Of fHI CCX.WILL CO. , ;'TAKE IT EASY NeW1'6'f Heights Repossessed $37,500-$900 Dn. \Vow! Totally NF.\V PAll\'T in and out! \Vhile brick n1anl<'lerl r i r e f1 1 a c· e FORMAL DINING ROOt-.1'! Leisure kitchen \Vith b ig pa,ntry. 24'x17' stepdown FAMILY ROOM! 11 u g e master suite , \Vith private entry. Large covered patio. Seelud~ yard. $900 down • approx Mo. pay only $327. Hurry call now 645--0303. I om' I I 01 ~I)\ •· l 4 , T Q • \ ESTATE BIRDS.EYE VIEW TO HONOLULU 1~his pro~erty is the '1\vhy" people come to Jive near the beach. ln· tunate ~1ew of the bay & beach. 3 bedroom, 3 bath, fireplace, for· mal d1n1ng room. 160" panorama. "ENORMOUS" tot. Patio and beautifully manicured landscaping. Fantastic financing available too ! Asking '100 ,000. ENTERTAIN OFTEN? h1o re than ~mple room for you and your guests in this roomy seven bedroom, six bath home. Your guests will certainly enjoy the lovely 22 by 48 party room, with kitchen facilities and fireplace which opens on a large sun deck. Oversized four car garage plu's room to park ten cars in th.e beautiful red tiled, walled courtyard which is e~anced by ~eautiful planting~. Many extras in this peninsula point estate: bulit on three Jots with bay and beach in view. Present owner has invested much more than this offering price $135,000. . · WALi( FROM KINDERGARTEN-COLLEGE -B_eauti.fut 3 bedroom.\ family room, 1 % bath. one owner, adult occu· pied, College Park home. Only asking $33,500. DUPLEXES, DUPLEXES & DUPLEXES! Many to c hoose from -ta ke advantage of the tax shelter-NEW ONES -Minimum Investment. SIX UNITS -COUNT 'EM! 5 Beautiful Deluxe apartments \\ri th one over the garage with a peek·a-boo view of the ocean and large sun deck. Only 1 short block to the bay. $175,000 with terms and owner will consider trades - submit all offers. Great tax shelter. MESA VERDE GOLF COURSE 4 Bedrooms Y" Large Living Room """" Formal Dinillg Room Iii' Family Room ,,., 2 Fireplaces Ill" 3 Bathrooms ,,., Many E xtras VI" Nothing is missing in this beautiful custom home $115,000. "REALTORS" SERVING GREATER NEWPORT HARBOR AREA MEMBER MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE In this :I bcdtm 2 bath with all huiltins, patio, double garagf', clubhouse &. pools. CONDO, for a low, low price or $20,950. CALL quick, "-on"t las!, net fast! Only one of !his plan 11.vailablt>. Approx. 21,r. acres 1.1.·itb a1~------------------·--------...ll 2600 sq. fl. 3 B«:lroon1, '1. Call 540-1151 COpc n Eve11.) · HERITAGE . . REA LTO RS Bath llome. Fi1't'plt1L'f'. ,_ .... ....;,;.,, Shakr Roof. Nf:'\11por1 llnr-'- IJor lligh School JJislrict. :: Offered for $2'25,000. Call •• .... TRIPLEX .•••••.•••• ...• HUNTINGTON BEACH ALWAYS rented because ol the location. This t riplex has 1·2 Bedroom and 2-1 Bedroom. For the s'mart investor at ........... $38,950. VACANT ..•.•••.•••.• • •..• READY AND WAITING JUST REDUCED -This 3 bedroom, 2 ba th, family room plus a convertible den, 2 used brick fireplaces, builtins in kitchen and B-B-Q \vith PRIVATE guest room & ba th. Entertain around your own POOL. Open Thursday and Friday 1-5 .......................... $72,500. SUNRISE , SUN SET ....• ...• VI EW Just remodeled 3 bedroom, 2 bath, dining room (or famil y room), fireplace, cheerful built·in kitchen with inviting SUNDECK for your entertaining pleasure, overlooking the canyon & view of the ocean. One-of-a-kind in CAME O HIGHLANDS ............ $69,500. START SMART •..•.•...... . , • , , •....••. IN THIS CONDO IN BACK BAY AREA -2 Story, 3 Bedroom, 21> bath, builtin kitchen, stone fireplace, FAMILY ROOM, community pool & REC. ROOMS including billia rds. Fee land and close lo everything .................. $34,500. HARBOR AND OCEAN .•.. ..... , ••. VIEW Enjoy it all from this ~bedroom, 2 bath home with 2 fireplaces ( 1 in living room, 1 in dining room), buiJtin kitchen. See harbor lights at night from your own garden patio .... $64,950. /1"4tt#-Stldti ~ •"1<Wa REALTORS 644-7270 2121 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. General BUILDERS SPECIAL S HOME SITES SO. PASADENA ... 4 View Sites, Exclusl\'e Arca, Own- er P.fay Finance. E a c h SU,500. JUST TURN t HE KEY ... to a new way of life! A niaintenance crew takes care of the greenbelt, a lso the exterior of your home ... moreover, a security crew keeps close check on the property while you're traveling. Here are a few transactions handled thru our office during recent months .... where we ·have been the Jistor and/or the selling agent: 434 VISTA GRAND E 1949 VISTA CAUDAL 2004 VISTA CAJON 2107 VISTA ENTRADA 2166 VISTA ENTRADA 425 VISTA FLORA 419 VISTA ROMA 2010 BAJA 2037 VISTA CA.JO N 2433 VISTA HOGAR 538 VISTA GRANDE 429 VISTA FLORA 2150 VISTA DORADO 2130 VISTA LAR EDO 2117 VISTA LAREDO 2601 VISTA ORNADA 2168 VISTA ENTRADA 509 AVENIDA LADERA Are YOU ready to sell ?? ... Or buy?? Please call us at - Convenient parklng~asy to be a "DROP-IN'' at Bay & Beach Realty 675-3000 Genera l General ** ** *~' * TAYLOR CO. * " ' Gene ral General ELSINORE . . . Lakeside ~~;;;~~~~~~ Village, Owner may 1',1-II nance. S2.500. WE ARE LOOKING FOR SOMEONE I I NEW LISTINGI VIEWI Beauliful Burlin~e -5 BR., 3 baths; family rm. Prof. decor. & landscaping - 38' pool W/P9"1 sweep. $114,950 'Includes land . C4roi Tai.um • NEW LIST ING Channing Corona Del Mar duplex. $79,500 To see the plans, call : Mary Lou Marion CUSTOM 4 BR-J BA-FAM. RM. In Huntington Harbour w/formal dining rm., laundry rm.j ocrupied by origina l own- ers. <l,t $65,000 '.;i.N<m will like this! 1 Blk. to~· ~lflp~ '' HAR.BOR V IEW HILLS Lovely "Lusk" built -4 BR, 2¥.i baths, family rm. w/fireplace & wet bar. ~ maintenance yard. $69,500. ~thcyn Tehnl)le LI OO ISLE-NEW LISTING iO' Lot. St. to St.; 3 BR. -lanta!lic p<>ten· tial~ Hurry! For details call us ! $91,500. Eugene Vreeland LUS K 3 BR . 3 BATH HOME In Harbor View Hills -dramatic cathedral ccil's., 2 brick frplcs., fl2,500. For lease - Lusk 3 BR. home,• decorator perfect. $500 Per month. La Vera Bums . SHOREC LIFFS BY THE SEA Finest nrea adjacent to ocean. Traditional f1 BR. hon1e w/den, family rm. & gourmet kitchen. Lovely gardens & workshop off garngc. $1l0 ,000 . M. Harvey ON THE BEACH IN IRV IN E COVE lst TIME OFFERED -this 3 BR, 3 ba. & den home has a magnificent view -over- looking priv. beach, in excl. Irvine Cove. All the com forts for happy luxury living! $195,000. Edie Olson ' LIDO ISLE A "MUST SELL" OPPORTUNITY! Love- 1,y 3 B<lnn .. 3 bath, !am. rm. home on 2 lge. lots. Steps to private beaches & club. $129,500. Kathryn Raulston · 833.0700 ~ 644-2430 Coldwell,Bankar . .......... •,SJO N9WPORT CENTllt DR., N.B. I 11111\I I. 01 ~O\ A, I ,./ ' [1 /? 1 PARTY POOL HOME J~ugc fill cred &: Jienled pool surrounded by yard.<1 or decking, waleor!al! nnd built· in BBQ. 4 bedrooms "'ith added bonus room. carpeh; and built-ins. No down to Vets. &e this SeptetnbC'r special nl only $36,750. C WALl<ER &'l f~ Realtors 646-ml 204.'l Westcl!ff Drive Open 'till 9 P t.I BLUFFS PLAZA 3 BR. l'h Ba, V•cant F roshly painted Walk to Market $36,500 ,·~ &rsr ~'y tl.Julf' i/ .~y ...., 2414 Visla del Oro Newport Bee.di 64-~U1'l ANYTIME Home or Income Eastslde (:k)s(: lo ~hopping • Home on R.·2 lot cM ~ oon- \l!'r1t'il to Income 11Uf'POIK's. Any rea.~nnhle offer con· lridm-d. Call for fl.Jl!'Jf. CALL ANYTI ME 646-3921 or Evt . 839-9068 Lachenmyer RI.' ll t or For that ttem under J.10, &ir the Penny Pincher. General "U"-FIXER 2-STORY Pool $17,750! Buy this 2-story hargaln NO 00\\'N PA Yf\.fENT OR ONLY $200 -\\"hichcver "'RY YOU qualify! INCLUDES \VASl.JER, DRYER A:-l'D REFRIGERATOR. T 0 0 ! PLUS S\VIMMING POOL! Hurry to 51..•e call 645-0300. . . . . I 01!1 \I L Ol \O\ . " ""'ALTO!< HOW ABOUT A 4-PLEX? \\1hy not makC rhe hes! buy on a great Eiudside 4-plpx \vilh IUrJ?C' 2 bdrn1 units lo- C'atrd \\'ilhin \\'alkin~ dis· !:lnt•t• lo Ne\"port Blvd. & 171h SI. Sh<ipping area11. 0\.\11l'r WilJ help \Vifb rJnanc· ing and l\'llfll5 fut sale. Asking SS5.ln:l. Co..U 540·1J5I Open Evt;. -, HERITAGE . . REALT ORS If you wish lo buy, sell or trade a Home, Bulineas, In· come UnH1, Farm or !.And please cl\11 ua, RHI E1t•lf * 645-7344 * Free f:<><" ID c.a.t Catll)oo! iraMt l!llO welcome coast to "°""· 101!1\l .1. Ol\O\ ~'1 .-fl rl),<;, U.ener•I ROLLING HIW Bf'lluliful scf'ncry S\llTOU11ds this sharp 4 bcdroon1. 2 bath • 4 -UNITS EASTSIDE - family home. Covered patio, 2 Bedroom separate houses wall·to-wall Cazi>els, drapes on large lot. Owner will plus all the extras. JllSt trade up for 1ix or more $1500. clown, take over VA units. Equity of $1.0,000. Call loan and 2nd TD. Easy tor details. q"a!Uy;og. $63,500. ;c;,,,., COATS ~WALtce REALTORS --.l5i4'46M4141- (0pon Evon1"91) NEWPORT ISLAND Newport •• F•lrvlow 64Ul11 (•nytlmol 2 Bdrm. home plus l ·bdrm. ---·· - - mtit oo choico R·2 corner 5 BR • TRI LEVEL lot. Easy to show. call for a ppt, $68~500. Fantastic 2,500 sq ft home. Call : 673-3663 '13-8086 Eve~ Ideal for lhe large family. PENINSULA PT. F'~1ma! c11n1ng. f~mily room 3 Bdnna., 2 Baths: prlv. with \\"£'! bar, 2 \I baths & e n c) . pat J 0 . i., r p I c. much n1ore. 11ugc tree COV· c 0 m pletcly redecorated. ered .cul-de-sac Joi with Priced fl.I $61,SOO. plenty room for a pool. Truly Call: 673...-J 548--0715 ~vca:. a quality built homr, .owner associated r-ro..-.,, r r-:.if t1 • T" as ~(11~ \Ill tli!hoo ~rJ.J,,l RENTALS 3 Br. Fumlsbed. CdM transferred. A n x 1 o u s • $46,750. • . co:TS WALLACE UAL TORS Open .En nln91 • 962-4454 • " " " ..... "" "" 1425.0011..., .... "!'!!!~~!!!!!! .. l Br. Uoforn. NW!J< Ht. OWNER •. " .• " • " " •.• " " 14/J0,00 3 Br. Furn. PC'nlruiula. Mu.Ill aell VACANT 3 Bdrm ................... $375.00 ~ bl\lh$. crpts, drps, 11repl. Call G75-7%l5 Like new condJtion. Pr1ced at a,ppra.Jaal $30,500. All ttrms. Clote to South Coast PlUlL Xlnt btty. CX>LLINS A WA'!TS, INC. * ~&: \* I • I GLENDALE ..• View of Catalina, Plans lor 3 BR, 2% Bath Home Included. S9.350. Call 64&0555. llil IUI SlDIAIT Of tit[ (Ol.WIU CO. CALL UM LIKE WE SEE UM Genuine, for ~~a1, Mesa Verde fixer upper. Act now and have your choice of crpts, drps, pa.int,. etc. Great 3 BR, 2 BA & family room plan on quiet cul-Oe--aac. Of· fered at $31,950. See It now before owner returbbhes and raises price. VA terms available. ' Ca ti 540-1.151· (Open Eves.) • HERITAGE . . RE ALTORS A REAL CHALET The only one ot Ill kind in Newport Beach. Mountain atmc,.pherf with ~fl.uttfully done custom A·ftame sur· rounded by myTld tree• and shrubs. Huge bedrooms, 3 b11tM. park-like yard. Pric- ed at $52,950. 0 :1i1ll\ll. /i I ll Sell Idle llama -• COJ! --· MACNAB IRVJNE ·--~-·----· COSTA MESA SPECIAL In1maculate 3 bedrooms. 2 lfui::-e 2 story. 4 rlf'n+ or 5 bath home. Large yard. bedroon1 executive's home. Family room large eoougti Costa Mesa'~ best area. for pool table. $42,950. Cookie Near Balearic School. Very Allison 642-3235. (F13) ni('(.' back yard in a quiet HARBOR, ISLAND RD. area. No do....,•n tc. qualified Bayfront y,·/pler & slip. Eh~· veterans. CALL NO \V gant 2 bedroom & den home. BEFORE THIS ONE lS Sl:?i,000, Lois Miller 642-8235. GONE. Priced at $45,00'.l. ~~BOR VIEW HILLS @liiHIMiij MUST SELL ""'"°" s.s:-OiGli 1-Iandsomely appointed, 4 BR. •iiiiiiii.iOiipei.oi.iiEiivii"'-iiiim.I 2 bath, 3-car garage, Water- fall, view. Observation deek, palios, gas BBQ. self-clean- ing oven. Paneled F'R, bar. Cu1tom carpeting & drape11. RcduC'ed for QUrCK SALE . $89.00J rec. Dona Chichester 642-8235. (F23l EASTBLU FF 5 BR., 3 bath. step-down F'R. Beautifully land· scapec:i. ~k-built. Choice of two. Jack HoweU 644-6:!)() (F20) DING-A-LI NG Just one phone call will give you all the info on this smart, s h a r p Ba,ycreat home. $64,950. LoiB Miller PALM SPRINGS IN COSTA MESA Tha.rs the feeling you gel when you approach this ]O\'C'iy 3 bdrm., 2 bath ruston1 built home, com- plt'tely surrounded w J I h many palrn trees & block wall fence. Lovely patios, maximum privacy and low maintenance. Prieed to sell at $29,500. Call 54&-6880 (Open eves.) --~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS 642-8235. !F21l • I :=c::::=::: I liVllll J e;;i;:; i 901 °"""" DIM MZ • 12315 1144 ......,,.... tw•l200 --- 1111:1 \I 1 ··111,0\ . ' Golf Course Home • ' ' ' J 9 PILOT-ADVERTISER College Park Family-Pool Guest--Vac:ant ABANDONED C R E A M PUFF! FAST OCCU· PANC\'! F'RESll PAINT and NE\V CARPETS! Doublf' rais~ ht>arlh lire· plact', Vaulted <'eiling. Large FAMILY ROOr.1! Queen ~ize bedroon1s. Lf'isurc kit- eh<'n plus t'Xlra la~r DE- TACHED GUEST FACIL- ITY! Both home and gu~t opens to SPARKLING 31' POOL~ Easy <'81'•~ park like grounrts. C0J\1PLE.'TELY REMODELED! Barg a in pl'iced ar only $36.950. Call fast • 645-0303. IOHI \I I Ol\O\ Q E -< 'O ,« S SPYGLASS PLAN 74 3600 1>!us sq ft in this 5 bdrm. 4 ha. plus bonus rm home 011 a V.l.P. loeution. Central air eond., in!e1'con1 & built- in record player. NO·\Vfl\ vinyl. shug cru·pi<ting-, 1val· nut cabinets in kitchen, {XJOI· ~J:ted JOI & breath-laking vi e" of O<'('!lll & coastline. 'o:· <'lln o.:~'lt'hrate the holi- ,ta:y• on ;<.Ot11· fll'IV home. Call nn-..-si:ii1.ioo inrludtnJ: land. Qredhill 1 It EA I.TY Univ. Par!; C1•ntc1". l1·1•ine Call Any!i111c, h3::.o~:r1 Oflice hours S A~·I to s P~I GRACIOUS LIVING . is !hf' Iheme of this beautiful 5 bclnn .. 2 story hon1e. Ft-atures include 2 n1aslt>r hc\rnt s u i t C's , fonnal dining, ~tcp.do11·n Jiving rn1 ., brau1 iful l'l'flt•c- lion pool, cul-dc-s;.u· tot 311d room for bout or ll'uilcr. Only 2 yrs. old and in perfect rondition. F c I' further details .... Call 546-5880 iOpcn 1-::vt•s. 1 ~, .. ~~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS This Will Be The Last Home You Look At Eastside Beauty Super sharp 4 bedroom home, grarious living in 2991 sq. ft. 'Massive slf>p--do\1·n run1pus roon1 fron1 con1plctely 1nodcrn!z- <'d chan1bcrs. kit c hc n. separate family 100111, 2 fireplaces + HBQ & insidl' fish pond. This one \Viii dazzle you r bnagination. C WAI l(fR & LE E Realtors 54s--0465 Open Eves $25,950 "SECLUDED" !\love inlo this Jo v <' 1 y 3 bedroo1n home. Gracious living roon1 enhanced by hdl1dsomc fireplace, bullt-in dream kitchen, even a di.•h\\·ashcr. Beautiful' patio. Pool sized \vell landscaped grouods. Near all con· \"Cnlel'IC'Cs. Brk, 540-1720. TARBELL ' . ' • • --... .::,.._ WtdDtlday, Stpttmbtr 27, 1972 Wtdntsda7, Stptt1nbtr 27, 1972 DAJLY PILOT I N_VESTOR'S SPECIAL SE£ & SELL This ts nn exttllt'nt Newport Be"<h ...... commoccwii.Y YOURSELF SPEC. \'lt'1''. 3 Bft l f1un 1Tll ~1/frpl, 2 BA. $.'9.450. 3325.2 Mc~'\ \'1sta . 493-33;)9. zoned. There are two units \ · 1 home in I.ht' On a lot. 2 BR. fronl, l·BR. l.Jtrgc nni ly ~a with Fountain Valley 1var. Front unit can 1JP. con· Coronandi~el JI.tar a ...... 3'1 ~~::::;;:==::;;:;;::, ! • t d .... ~· oot11ta ng ocean vM!W. ll ~:i;:i1. ';;;;;o.lncss. Priced klng-ti2il!d bedroonUI wit~ 3 A PLACE IN THE SUN TR f pl EX full baths. Uving roo111 . "''.1th A supt>r 4. lie<troon1, 2 bath It's the Hnie 10 Uiwst Llvt> f!rt'l-plac<'. lormal d1n1_ng nt?'W Sol V1~tn v.·11h IQrgeQU~ ln onC' &. l'l"lll IVl'O, The-;,. are art•a 11·ith vi;,.,~·. den 11·1lh pool and prof e ~ s iv n a I two nit-e bdrms., a lll'ge bkrbeque. la1·i,:~. n1oderq landscaping. All YQU 111'l'ti Jivin).( rni. It has blt·ins in kitctwn v.·llh . eatn1g urea. for lannly lun. Or'lly S-l·l,T.-iO. the k!trhen & 8 dining area. large n.•creation room in Tllt'l-e is a Jge. piivale patio basen1cnl, privutc l~athcs, HAPPY HACIENDA & enclosed garagt's. Tv.·o fee Ui.ncl. Can yOU 1n1aglne Tile roor. bean1 et•Jl1ngs, blocks front nlliJOr shop. all this for $99,t.OO. Call coniplch.'ly 11allcd yard, ping 673-8550 to'i~ adobe I 1 rt' p I a e c , 4 FARl::L \VALKER, Realtors I i·s~·-bedrooms, !ainlly rooni. On 557-508t :wJ1_ -"--¥.:: ly S6300. Cash to cx1st111g · ~ l' Ii VA loan WHO'S THE CALL 51;--01:,S LUCKY ONE? IFIHAOOF ' •.. •. $280 is all you n~d to buy this Do1.1't C'utch thL'I disease. ~uy 1 4 b 'lh f 11 tlus ni.,•at dupl<'x today . 2 argc r 1v1 am Y room Bd 1,. 1'.!. ba honu', In one of Costa Mesa's rm.. c n, -· finest :!ireas. Anxious seller bc>anls. 111<'.•'ly t'<.in~tcd & l::i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i: will pay all your o1hcr'costs drapcf.I & llke 111'11' l·bdrn1.J1 at th<' price of $29,000. Cen. apt. S~1·500-. tral location near South Untvers1ty Realty MOTHER-IN-LAW APARTMENT . Coast P.laza and ideal for 3001 I'.:. Cst. lllvy. 671-6510 schools. Call IFIHAOOF This house has ii! Comhined Don't eatch this dist•asc! Buy bedroon1 silting roont, \Valk this lnri;:t> duplex today'. :l in elosct and lull bath Realto-540 .,91 Bdrni., 2 ba. honic, bl!ns, upstairs. Do\vnstairs has 4 "" ;r-.,.t bedrootns, ia. b:ilh and Open Eves nicely carpeted & draped, + brick !pie. Fresh paint in· C wA U<EH & 1u La.gun. a..ch 4 BR. l.1"£ ram RM, M\\·ly derorn.tt-d lnsW. t out! $35,900. 6912 Lenl1 Cin·le, J(.8 . ~nr. Jtell & Goldon \Vesl\. Uy Owner. ;\pp!. only, Sl7-5686, • BY O\YNER * 3 Br., 2 Ba., ni~ patio. Fncd )'d ., childl'!'ns area & equip, Ott Bushard In 11.B. $24.900. 5'16-5587. PRF.srtGE. It.arc· 2 ~ly. -t Br. lr111·n1 . dnrrn. $-tC),000/J S!y $31,0C(l. &ill trade. S.J2--8Ul ag1. • S~lOO 00\VN! * VERY SPECIAL HOME 3 Br., 2Ba ., 3 yr. old. Cpl, drps, bltti!I, sprklrs. $31,000. I NF LUE NC E 0 BY R E NOW NE 0 ARC H IT E CT, I .:"=":..· .:11::.°':..c..".:'.:.' .:".::12:.-23=":.· _ FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT A short trek to the beach. Glorious sunsets behind Catalina Island reflects it's splendor over the P acific fron1 this extremely private 3 bdrm. residence. nestled in nature's 'vonderland . .'\ Frank Lloyd Wright corner fl-pl. graces the hexagon Jiving rill. & also en- joyed from a split·level dining rill . Open bea1ns over r ich polished wood ceilings tops it all~ A massive clam shell fountai11 dra\VS the bath in an Oriental Garden setting. \.\'here? In beautiful Laguna Beach. $59,500 HILLIE McCORMACK , REALTOR & Assoc. LAGUNA BEACH (714) 494-·7SS1 lrvi~• JUST WAIT · 1'11 you src lh<' hon1e \\'•'I havf' fol' you \n b<'oulifu! I Uni\'e!'~ity Park~ ·I Brlrn1s .. 21 ~ baths; fan1ily rn1.: 2::.00 s<1. ft. or GH.E1\T laniily 111· ini;:. Shag carpeting, urg-rad· ('{! applian{'("s, n t' 11· l ~ rterorated lhruout. Offf'rf'd ~'OR $:;'.t,900. INCLUDING Tl-IE LAND: C'I ' I · 11 I 11 I I' 11 i!. COUNTRY KITCHEN roonty 3 BR, 2 ba. Apl. side and our. block \\'a.II Lo I ' . 1 . 11 1 Si4.500 fence encloses l\'Cll kc.'Pt ;H;;u;;n;;t•i;;n~g-tomn;;;;B;;emamc;;h;;;;:;;;;;;;;;; I tluntington B•ach ve a . a·s s1g 1 \\' _1en yo~ University Realty scp this ne1vly pa1ntrrt J 3001 E. Cst. lh''Y· 673·6510 back yard. Ncar nc1v Pclvin BEACH LIVING BAYSHORE Bdnn hon1r. Hu g<' bu il!in . . School. Priccd at only TOWNHOUSE . 'I 1 I -- -1.1•11 lur "SINCE 19-lli" Pre-Grand Opening Sale! CONDOMINIUMS Lo:1y Irving aw.111~ yow ' Act SW•'("{ 1<' <;elect yuu1 , 11111' Nl•wpcirt Beach co11101111ni111n. Vi::.•! H1'' 1t•mporarv ,ir:.ces r.! ~lie N1·.10, 'I C·,~s\ lnlu· ... 1''<)!\ (~o:l)t.•· "('1'1vr•n1ently I, r<ilt>C. 11 . :dn ~Ves1 CvH ~\ 1 l"F'""·1' .Suite B, Nf'WG.Jrt o.-.arl' Opt"!\ llr11ly 10 a ·1• k • .i1·· Pl (7 14 1 045-0141 kilch!'n. l I' fir<'place ivall, HARBOR View Hills 4 br, $36,700. AT ITS BEST Closrout.~ 2 baths. i·arpcted and (l(•t•an vic11'.. ln1n1<'rl .. oc-1, Sharp 3 bedroom, 21~ bath. LOI\' Pnl'e -a.--1-.....ca drapc.'<J, f'Ol't'l't'd palio + cupancy. Priva1f>. 6~1-1.l.W. nf>1v carpels, boat ~ate. 10111 Only [aj:==~ ... \\'()f'l"!IOI' 'II { · n1aintenancc yard. \Vhut 1st \Ve~trn1 Bank Blcl1:. Univt•rsi !y Pnrk, 11-..·in1' Days 552-7000 Nights •'.'-. " .,. Jtt . .i Costa Mesa 531-51011::::J 531-5800 $19,990 ''""'""""'" •21 J " -------tnort• t'Ould you <'.\/Jl'l'! f(•r ~ .. ,. c ........ ,o1 '"' ~ ·t.;~~NY J\lORRJSON.. G··o·.o·-D-AS GOLD ................................ only S3!1,j()(), J'lirsr 11r11• hOllll'S HI'•' 11.H:ulctl BEAUTY . -------=--------;:::::::::::;;:::::..., __ _ ALL OF THIS 10 n1i11ul1•s Jron1 lh<' beach I .- REALTO INSIDE & OUT 1 L•guna Beaeh I N11twoo rt Seaeh ** t--~ RS-J\olesu Del J\Iar. All built.ins, & .. tosi• lo n1njor shoppin;::, I ,.* •.., 1505 l'ofcsa fire1ilarc. i halhs. \Valk lo Over 2000 .-:q fl z slor)' BARGAIN DAYS & srhnols. Your •·hoil·t• ul ,\lui•~· l·.-.;!ras in lnb ! 1~11·111 .. I I h I 00 Tll GM "· 1 b r ARE HERE '"' ba. honio· lh·~ih·d 111 the Top o t e World 3 BEDR i\IS -'l .s. A, S • *'Vf'rde Or. East. SL John's and 0.C.C. $31,900 Ul·au Y l':t11 r yours or ("1l'pL·llng ·ilso i11('lullin" I Ci I •"7 ·~ -* I $'19 000 " B 2 n. .j Bcd~m. 2 bath. nood "arct ' ' ~ li'til"·. Sr"·i·J,·••"'''''' , , "' , 01 '•'l1tl 1·io•11·. H,·:111l11til\,1 lld-OSC' O OCt'an. ->-> ,........, ........ -.,, Co~lal\1csa alllC'l'lllS. Ony · • ·" l', 00,lrg. '"" ., " di.~hwa~;hrr & buil!in:;. :i'; ~ " 2 1 · Cn t ll n !! 833-222~ *•* i;;7 '130 r"t'l'<'a!i••n r111. Look ... • h"ll<·•· for onl,v $26,900. Sub1ni1 ,, lleautiful landst"a11111·.: S: 11's S•"ll\I. :: B!:. ·. 3a. L~~r lil'llH::; n re e:i Y -.,.., ...., ... " ., •· U.111·11 11·, payrncnts less !han ·-r I 1Upcn EvcillnRS 1 than a n1odel home. Seeing your lcrms 11-01~" S20(J nio. This is a nius\ Sl'e air·eonctlt 10nl'1I, A n1os1 pl'•!S-rni. I\' 1 n'a.ssivc slon~· _r1~ '" :s belic\'ing. CALL :145-0-l.'i~ f 1 1. 1 I Hgious hoine prl<.'C'd at !luge family tn1 . w ls!1d1ng _ or r 10s<' 1\•1111 ing ots U ,...lfls..." \\•all Jo priv. patio. Realtors 545-9491 COLLINS & \\'~\TIS h'I l f od $105 000 "' * 7 Unils. S·12.000/$;i60 n10. OPE'.IJ EVES. 962-5523 , •.. •. , Cu:..lui·.,v o: al n1 e_ratc. pric;c. ti' . d h Chf'ery kltchrn \\'/lgl", dining gl't' --------s~-* c & w a J OJ' Ill orn1at1on, . re ,·11 I ill'f'll, 01·r1• 2.l)fl() sq , 11 , of * 3 Bdr1n., dutch clean, TWO UNIT , * 962-5523 fnn1ily lh'i n~. lrllo<l nr1.c:h· S:!li.!-IOO. * EASTSIDE * 0 =----~"--· (}1• Stop By The &lies Orfirc horho'l!v!, o·lo.~,, 111 ~·hoo!,;. \VNER n1ust S<"I! 4 )T. * 4 Bdrn1 . bcaury .... $5-1.!lOO h b.k l.cu·atPd on Nf'1vla.nd, llf·· H.E:ALTY i\iio,;ions ,111 nei· :1 s k 111 b * 9.4 Acre, ocean/mt. vi<:\1'. 1-3 BEDR~'1. 1·2 BEDRi\1 ne\v-;; Ol'I 1 e to b<'ach~ 3 hinll ~latrr & TallX'rt bedroon1s, 2 balhs, den, ' · Uni\·. Park Ct'nlf·i-. l1'1'tll(' Sl\),:JOO. $I45.ooo. $30,000. elegant fireplace in fantily $19,500 C*OLLINS & \\'A'ITS, INC. Cal! Any1in1 •·. s:~:'.·ll:-i~U 11 49'J-2.~ '* Ontu Roy Mccardle Realtor """"' '°"""'"I' I" the Nowly ""'"'led 5 "''"I" ' c & w * om .. , hoo" s ·'" '" " p)I ~·.'H· ~~ llJ' 1810 •·.,,,,001" lllvd., C.M. bniJlin kit,.h cn I• a 01 d l' hnth, huiltins, FA 1ir111 , n1•1v R -'T, "' s.ia-'7729 d~<>h11·ashcr ... J . ..c:1·cly pil!iO. 11· w i:arrx·ts. \\'a lkin;.: 1!1.~· AMBLING TURTLEROCK !lills. I Kr .. ~ · ~~~~ Newport Heights NEAR NEW • IN C.M. 3 BR. 2 ba., 2 trple. + rormal din. r111. + + 20x1ll fan1. nn, $4\,900. Call for App'!. LIDO REALTY ? .. 177 Vi11 Lido, N.B. 67:1.7300 -----BY O\\'NER 3 BR. 2BA, r c 1n odi'IC'd, rcdrcoratrd. Open ho11s1• 12-3. Mon Ihm Fri, 1-·1 Sun. $311,!"1 00 . 673-16ti.~. !i7:r71.i16, &15-8684. ~21 loads of decking, healed &j tnnce lo shopping & school. \\'I::STE!{N RANCH /IOUS f:. FR, cxer. V1r\1·. n1·lu1r 1 ->00lltLA~CA.~N. r::r:::=-I f ENTER";"rAIN in hu;.:e yard filtered pool. Carre 1 i n~ Just list{'(I: Hurry~ 1 Cn111plelel.v !'US!on1iz1'd :: 1narket. Al.'>O le:iso"· 111 517:, ......... s-,,,c- REAL !-:STATE 6.ri-72'it \v/hcall'd POOL. wvcrcrt 1hruou! inrlurl in~ kitchen~ l CALL ~)(l:!.&~;11 h\'dnn, :.! hnlh. !u1·111:il din-I n10. 833-1710. ------, San Clement• ====""'==----patio, To\vering trcl's. Prof Brk, $30.000 .. ll.~:t--GGm. in~: ... 11n1·111ou" ftunily roon1, Laguna Niguel j ~ DESPERATE I . 10 '\ BR 2 BA F'1!TI o'l\'NER I . RC -ood :iul'l, i.::inL).!C' O!ll'IK'!', 1111'\',•'' Lagun11 Beach ----~-----~ ·-........._ SELL (~l.J.900) OI' trade '.l nusc1 · · · · ' 1 1 • caving. 1eh 11• h;u·k ,Y:u·d !l<llio, \\':1!!,· 1,, '''" j •• ___ ..,,.. •. :'\E\V COi\J)U on Ea~I ~l. Rn., 2 BA O«rfln vif'11· ho1ne TO SELL Hin, nu shag 1·rpt.~. n1an) pane I 1 n ~ . L' x p ensh•c G z O If xlras Spotless~ $.111.950. For ii·allpaf}l'I' acccnl"i' leni!s ~·o"Jun lry eluh. Cull DGX·l·l."ili. A A EL \'1f'11· i.:v {'()tn·se,:.: Br.~ Lia,) Sun ('lt•n11•11tc for N. Orange 01vncr 11111st niovf' lo d<'scrt appl. :,46-6~. pvr~onalitv a nd charni 10 I LOOKS "v.n1•r, ~il:r~iJI'\. I Co, ~1,T-1:m'1. for health reasons. 4'1 BR ----11-r . · . l'bf:> 1 2 •.. •. TO SEA Lido Isle •5-.-n-J_u_o_n_C_o_p_f_s_tr_•_no __ 21; BA, lrg. <"'u!ini::-area: J\1F.SA de! l\1ar 4. Br, 2 Ba, 1 is c 1st11icl1\t' .. r rno111, . BROKERS INC. Locnlcd in th(' h•'~~rl or r ..,_...;., ___ ...,_, ___ _ frpl. & xlra lrg. yd. Good ram rin, new~~~~ crBypt, ~a!h! honi~.l E:l ;·~t~-111 · Laguna's fn111erl Riv ier1t l *· REDUCED * <I BR, 21h BA. tam rm,~I r·ountain Valley loc1Hions. many extras. · · · 1.1'.t'p .acP». < e u~e. iui. u~s, VALUE MINDED? coai;llinf'. u 1 tr a r·()n-Spa1·1oos 4 AH. 4 balhs: fain· n n, lrplc, bl•·.· 1Dc:d Ari I P · nl 01vncr Of)C'n house Sun. d1sh11ai'hc1. cO\C'1erl p,1!10. ~'f't erms - ' rit'C o y · ..... , f k 1 SUPER •SHADD! wmpor~r;y style an:b.itec· ily rn1. 1~·1 th 11·et lJur. 1'"rplc. 1 mile Pane. Point Harbor. s:u.9;,o. Scpl. 2.1. By appt 1hcreafter .... car 11ture par· anc t1("1v ire t 1t ;al4 b!it ~, ins, N"' 1 M It -11,. ..,.,3 COLLINS & \\'A'ITS. INC. S:JS Sonora Rd. 54&-4·131. sc.hoo __ ,,, Brk. S 3 1 , 0 0 0 . 2 b ~ d d 2 BR, Jocat"ia on .,.._)!oh,. ,.,, ..... t\ITc,, W/OETAlLED t EX-n ma f:r 1'\l e. By Owner. 4...,....,,~ · . au1S, !' upg:ra c . '-shaf. , , ~.1"' "" ~.'.ltJ\tOR '*'OF S. TO lf E , NOW $89,500 962-5523 HY owner. ~astside 3 h1", 9£2-.l.lliG. f(\$• IJJock \\"all IenL'tti yard q1,1iet rul·ck·sac '~t. Di· WOOD, s Tu cc o. TN L--·--'"" I * C & W * rumpus rni. w/fi t'('p\tH:e, O\VNER saeri[iee. .J big and on child sale street, two chondra lawn~ & Sprinkler~. MODIFIED "}'LYING A" '.ruu.JIUIZO OU>90rJ Jrt. h:r~e lot on quiet Cul de Sac. bedroom;;, 2 baths, isolated blocks !o elen1rntary. 'Sharp-cxpen~lv<' ~Pt8 & dryu:, blln DFSIGN I -l<oa ll• • l Feeding Call 642~. rear !i\'lng 1"00n1 t'nhanrf'd cst hon1l' in area. only ~1ge I oven I dishwasher. Spaclou~ entry r 0 Y (' r ~116 \·1a Lido 6~:l-l:i62 Mabiit~ . BACK BAY 3 BR f by lireplacC'. Builtin kit-$2S.500. S-.500 To!al v.·/good ;is-1·/floors or BI A(' K I 'miiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;iiiii A Landlord ' · ant rni .. chcn, dish1vasher. Forced C1\LL S42-141S .~un1nblr loan. s't.ATE. Open•. 10 SU,NKEN Mh.sion Viejo I lrplc.. crptd lhruout. i1n· b " -Mesa Del Mar 4--plex. Roon1 maculale. 645-3809. air hca!ing. Striking largr Relia le Real Estate LIV. R~T. \VITtf FllEF~ FIRST HOME? Mobile 1-fom•s for n pool. Gr{'at financin"' _ __ fr1111ily hon1e~ Brk. S31.0IXI, ... ~,.--U(rrfr • • f'Vf'.'<: S42·6.321 days: 8'16-3:;91 FOR'! t'fREPLACE OF For Sale 125 10"'.ii do1vn. 2 bedrooms. 2 osta esa =·-'"'•1• •lM.•lTAn -IT SPARKL·E-S SLU'IPS'J'ONE ,, Bl.ACK · • C M ~' 8"' I ..,, ... " -1-101\' alxi11t a 2 H!lnn. :! hat h ·---------~ . " llOlll(' onl.1• 2 ,1·1·~ o!d, 1·ornc1· 24xClO \\'f'.~ll'rnf'r, likf' nev.'. 2 baths each. f"ul\ price THI; GREATEST BY 011·ner: 2 Br. Gardrn 17171 Beal'h Blvd .. 11.B. IRON STACK, REACHING lot. i·in lo<' I""'' .. 1.1,.,,., !iii. Br I t b · • ,62.~. 0<"tl"" ,,·111 .,,.,_ C d r 1 bl/· , T11is in1n1aculatc 3 Bdrn1. TO GH PE E CEI ~ " .. r1•n, \\'r ar, Air conu. PLUM FIREPLACE la 'h. · I / IJlS, uS lll'.<11', p .. " .~ u J.xr<I "'"' v "' " '•;r on o.. rp c. -in gas I HI • AJ..;: D L· · ·' I I I I " All Aero·. v· •.I 1,-,,1 bch. ·~ '876 2nrt T.D. This won't last. heating. lrg pool & rel'. 1 s evrry ing inc· iv iv ING OI" OPEN BEAMS & call us today! JN ALL OR1\NGE COUNTY . roon1. Sl8,7CQ. 645-17.i l OT IN i\IASSJVJ:-: Al ,\ STE r: crpts, drps. \vslu" dryr, GLA SS GABLES. Central rcnn.~ -S25.2j(). KATl·:LL/\ or 6'12-T.i23 .. ~-~-~- C w1\ll<lR & Ll l Realtors 54:>-9491 Open Eves FIXER-UPPER Cnn be n DOLL HOUSE! 2 BR. Near N'pt Heights Asking $22,:io<J ON BROADWAY 150,000 f'ars daily -slo\\' .l-16--07'.l,O. I SUITE ol 1his 5 bcdroon1. :-: rr•fri~ .. even srrinklers in B.EALl'Y. 1137-~. BARGAIN (!\)! 1\'ide v,i/baY ff. 2 ·11 h I 2 I «ardf'n·palio. Go-•c" 1111'• hall opens to J BDRMS. & B 0 ~R I I ' I' "I' I 2 Br tra 1c -appl'ox act'("s 1\'t 1 at i. story 1om<'. t"ornial ... ., "' DEN, serviced by 2 garden Y WN ove y •1 Br, 1% v1r11·. 1,:,,.1. A so ' improv<'ments • great dept Huntington Beaeh dining, rnonnous gan1e lJrand new listing nO\\', it type b a 1 h 5 . Artistically Ba on co ner lot. 2Cj(J sq ft. $2.995. Sm! down. 673-3817. stort' site. Never bPt">n fo1··1---'-------1wn1 11·ith pooltahlc, sprink· l\·on·t last at $23,900. designed kitchen ha 5 Nr school. all rice. bltn:/~~~~~~~~~~ sale before ....... $330,000. LIVE lrrs front and 1'<':11', cul.de-I' BUILT-lN RANGE & kitchen, air cond. Custom New Orleans i<:t(' stJ'E'C'L Clo~(· to (hf' 0 v EN' DISHWASHER, drps & crpt, frplc ¥1 LOTSA GO & STYLE beach. VACANT . Call 531·5l00 c-•J -ETC. spacious l iving r1n, NO DOUGH %8-4 456 _ '"" 531-5100 Sliding glass walls open to laodscapPCl. Xlnt ca n d . Bd 2 bl' t "1 p 1 OWNER anxious. Pride of IREP!T A •-rnl, 1• a ;xi ierpon n1al diluni!. idt'al maid's WITH F · t i,..., Re al Estate. G•neral Acruge for ••le SELL -V.A. appraisal • 4 ~jir~tl~.la~i!·,l;~·;;v.' ·;.~:;·~r°::,1~~ •.. •. rear grounds & PATIO -~$4~6~,500...:;._83_:_1 ·~26~21-'-. ___ _ !\lust be solcl, ov.,ner ju~t quartf'rs. Close to the oCC'8tl O\vncrship ho1nc 1\•ith 4 furthermost reach ot the NewDOrt Be•ch 3 Bdrms., fan1ily rm .. Lgc. took job as Police ChiC'f in in pi'C's!igC' art•o. Ca 11 spaciou.<; bed r ooms. 3 land is a n1assivE' GAZEBO rmiio. \V/BBQ. Dbl. garage \Vyoming. 968_4456. \\ll!!Tf:: \VOOD, h ca\' y gleatning pullman baths, WITll C 0 MP LET ELY • OPEN HOUSE e SAN MARCOS CALL '=" 646·2414 LJfn or "' , + l yr old pine tr<::t!. All AFJ.'O D -\Vesl sldf' of Ne1vport Bat'k n On fian{'ho Santa Fl" Rd. ~ Heady 10 111'\'l'lop 1\·Hh ;ill 111 t1111,.~ on alley. $31,500. ~ shakes, ancient usC"d brick deluxe bulltin kitchen op-GLASSED \VALLS THAT N•wport Riviera • t d •• 0 posite the family room with R S AN AWE IN ':I' gas appliances, brick fireplace. Completely in. SPIRING VIEW 01'~ 111E Bay . ]aJ'R'C' 3 & 4 BB 1 ~_. REALTY firrplacl". J\fo. P•ymts under siJ!atcd. Qua Ii t Y COil-OCEAN It THE VILJ..ACE 'CONDOS I s-•~ J MRE .. ALTMY._., Sine• 194' I 1· p 1· S . kl .. ron1 ~CJ.·""' o C M Do to C • M $2JO. J un1ps to ocean. BKR. s rue io1 "· 1 ~,,10· pcdprin ers, BELOW. Jn a village famed $3~1,900., up ro 1s:;o "<I rt. 29j5 Harbor, osta esa Nea r Ncwporl Post orrlce 1 11 wn wn 01 • ... 962-5511 ex]){'rt Y anusca · Brk, for Gazebos, this home is Big mstr brlrnt~. 2 cai· s;('ar, BELOW market at $29,950! THE BLUFFS • 4 BR. 71 642 2991 ~h~;~~r:s~P~~,t O\\"NER dl'spcralc. No doi\·n -~l1.9JO. 9GZ-l373. surely a prizewinner, for fml din & Hv r1n 1v lfpl; J !O 1ht~ fll'Op('r'ly S1 ·13,!"l(l0 }\ill Pril'<' Scvcl'tll lhousand below Bonus rn1., !an1ily rm .. for· HARBOR -1crrns-Out or Stale ow"" ... O\\'NE:R desperate, 3 bdrm. only hnlhs. huge rC't' fnl'ilil\es . . 1 Bn. 2 baths. $36,j()() '""' $SS,.,,, FULL PRICE n1arket allows for redecora-mal din. rm., bJf.in kitch. ANKLE DEEP $1,875. Doi\·n. $331 Mo. 1)rr1 cxtrcn1ely a n xi 0 u 5 ! ·I home. Built-in d re a n1 ,vvv Drivf' by Irv int• Blvd & lion. 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 Priv. garden patio. Green· NEW GREEN Authorized Broker bedrooms, 2 baths, lan:c k11che11, fan1lly room ad-TERMS OPEN TO Ol'"FER San1a lsahellc and follow lovelibaths, large fam. rm. belt vic\v, May trade. * 548.6570 * fan1ily rooin 1vilh flrcpla~. jaCC"111 v·i ch an inviting MISSION REALTY 11ii:n$, 10:30 am to 5 pm with fireplace, additional REAL ESTATE SHAG CARPETS 1,...,,.,....,.,.,...,...,....,.,.. buil!ins. rlishwashcr. Lovely fircplare, 16 :-: :bl ft. cnclos-98.'l So. Coasl llwy., Laguna daily, REALTORS fireplace in gracious living TREASURES J t . 1 d . 'de d 11'.--R-E.PO_S_S-ESSIONS pal io. Brk, $34,950. 842·2561. t'<I putio 1vilh raseading Phone (714) 494-0731 IT SINCE 1944 rtn. Summer parties in the 1831 \Vestcllff, NB 645-5770 us pai~ e tnsi an ou \\':1lf'rfnll. Honie freshly patio. Jr. Estate grounds, and asking $26.900 all t.erms for Information and locat ion GOV'T. OWNED p,iint<'d e.'\terior. Brk, WOODS COVE 673-4400 ~ park like landscaping. Near BY O~vi~crf-4 Bdrm.,.~~~· for this great beauty with _2 of lhf'se FrlA & VA homes, Rcpoi;sesscd homes. Lo1v $29.9j(J, 8-1&-00G·t Picturesque \\'OOdland set; 531·5111 (t=.J 531·~01 ~~~""!'~""!'""!'""!'""!'@4~11 1 libr"'""• bench, schools · & ~c <' 2anl. rm1·8• ui -in huge baths. Co\'el'f'd pRllO contact -clown. Government payv [ r · t A l co \l'.lition 3 ''""'!"'~~~'!!!!.,._"""" ' ~,, kitchen, story, x36 pool, s urround ed by lus h It's a breeze.· -.sell your ing. tn op -1 • • • ---Apartments shopping. Brk. 540-t720· lots or tropical landscaping, landscaping. Fenced !Jack KASABIAN closing cos ts. Call ~4~1. \tc.'!nS ~'Ith e~. u~ Dailv &inns., 3 baths: JUSI 2 BAYCREST LOT-For Sale l52 OWNEI{ u·ansferrcil, built-in d w •• * Crest Realty . . . ~ · blocks fron1 beach & shop-79 x 120 R-1: 1'0n1plcte \Vlth . excellent con . e \Vant lo yard. Double garage. Real Estate TV2-6644 Pilot Cla~sit1ed. 642-5678. po'ng. Po•at'ble 1·n-me o-I I r ~~ NEW S U AT BEAC•' stereo in living room in-sell! Pticed below n1arke! [.:O~-i~co~-~-====:z;:;,:....C,.;==========-============ " "v ,.-approve{ pans or "'V'.N sq " eluded. 3 bedrooms, 2 at $3.5,950. 557.4023. ?Ortunlfy. For n1ore in-ft 4 Br, home. $19.750. 8.162 Atlanta, HB. 539"6n9 sep'l.rate baths, secluded I ~"""~--~-~~-f o r n1 a t io n call Joe ---GE:IMlll--- livlng room with fireplaces. N~CE ;~~a~~~~ ~:gh~rs Realtors 545-0465 efi'ij-() ,i\ "'\.. A, -f) ~ ~Q. e Ton1kin80n. $58,:;oo. 1610 \\1. Coast Hwy., N.B. Business Property 1 Range, oven, washer in-011 s 0 e Open ·Evcs. \!:;) ~QU ~).. ~ J;,J(/• V ~ * M M k hi Int_, A $26.000. 3 Bdnn•. 'Bath• ' ~~,..c::~,::,,~==I '4 REALTORS 642-4623 oney, a er duded. Fn" Y pa =· CANTRELL REALTY COOL EVENINGS T/i P / 'f' f' B "/f / C/i k/ 0 ~ -quiet cul-d,,_.,..0 , 1, •, 1 • 833_~. e un e w1 n ne u1 -n UC e u-1 ~ * PIER & SLIP * ~11.500 Down 1210.000 F. Brk. $27,<150. 541)-1720. a..:·1 Enjoy th ii1 !ovi·ly :1 h<•t!roonl O R:earronge lerteis of !he REAL ESTATE ::ihopp1ng C1•ntcr 1' I IO 11 NEWPORT HEIGHTS home 1v!th 1louhle li!'t'Plitc(' 1 four .scromhl&d words bfl. ll!lO GlcnnC'yre St. tcnanls In J,:-rcat llrf'il, sho1 N Balboa Island Op!:'M to fan1ily roon1 t11u low 10 form four simple words . •I". I-"''·'• •• ~316 GO F'l .. 3 BdrniA .. 3 hnlhs tng a oolid IJ.7fl';'~ ra $900 D , _________ _..__ " ,,., ..-.:ru lmmnculalf!! $240,000 1 bl · 1 d • • 1• living-roon1. J.o;irls o[ <lf'1•p I I 11pc1ll u <' on Pl'OJt'C 1• NEED ent''"'!ellc licen.~ N I X G I F l'ltl I I 1 I VA LIDO REALTY t $'"' A".J\ JI ' , REPOSSESSION -.,. shag, Prlva(·y f1•nred find I' I I I' I . eve cu~ on 1on1e. <:0111e o ,...,,.,...,. A owan Real Estate Salt's J)f!r!l<ln for · --· · ----r· I ·1 • B I"'" 3377 Via J.ido, Npl Bca"h I 3 Bdrm, 2 bnth on fantastic on Jo1v nu1inlcnunrc ('OOll'r 1n11nc ng uva1 · ·' r.. ov .. or 111gn11.. reserve a t B t active l9ng established 01. lot Afl 1 1 1.1 .. 000 ocean vl~\1' * 673-7300 * vacancy of J3--J. figured tree shadcil i; rccr. cs rice. Sales & renlals. lsl11.nd , c1·n1s, on .I' . "· • • hu'~ on !his one!! CALL G W 11. l·lurry. 1h l~ v.'on't ln~t . $74,995 BJG'-CANYON 4 br, by Don't wait on this bargal .,, RPally. race e 1ngham · i "'-· · B · ta j r· J ""S424, SOUTH co AST CALL 842-1418 I B E W O R I ..,.;CHlg 1s uyini: O\\'rier. LancliicapitlJ!, patio~. Not ncy, 11111 pro1tab el .,..,,.. Rltr,.. 498 Park Ave, Balboa. • ' REALTORS. 1--,.-,-...,.~,__, l Ptirtafina L.1gu11n custom entry. crpt.,, U~hl * 9 Units * * V.A. No DOWN 673-UOO. •. ttA1fl • I I I J I I 714/494-9388 tbctures & some drps incl. WALKE• . _ . . Soli<t multJ.1enan1, lndu11tri' ~;:~1~:~ :1·;,,~ :,~~ Corona del Mar l71TI ~.~-:::i .. Jl .B. I I I• ~~Mvl~~mtnd~8~1~~~ H~:~~; llarbor Vie1v. 3 &, ~~~~~~~·2-~ ~ 3 BR. 2 baths. Lee walled * DUPLE?CES * FOR Rent/Option Sale. lDR, G A P N A . utllitlea. 3 Br., 2 ba. or & dt:n, DIR. 11pac pallo. 25~:, Down, yleJd5 pmjecl yard. ,27,000, Soon 10 be built • So. o~ 2BA. .Formal din. rm, f-T,-Tl-~l.~.;.,-i Now, they've got 0 1 n~ $69,995 Genie gar door opener. u ~~ cash return on $32, BALBOA BAY PROP. llwy. Approx. 3,cm 1!1(1. n. Sunken L'R. Beams S250 mo. cos~lic Vitamin 8 ipstic • At11um-Fountatn Bclow market. &U-41.Zl, 1'rlledult'!d Income . . * Mt.7491 * of quality construction. Take 2 4 7 8 orange, c M L-...J.....J'-...L._._. It's for girls with -boy Portafina l.agi1na 831~. Grubb & Ellis, Bkr u look at lhe plans ol chooso 540-0429/548-3S15. I c Y. p M o' L I frie nds. 9·11 Till/494-9388 DUPLEX (111 cul-d~Aac. By 557-1900 QUICK POSSESS. your coloni. ~-..:-..:..;....:....:;....::....-< A r --fef9 tf'I• chuckle qUOfed or:.ui -s lhf" l»ly & 11trp11 to lllchard's On this 3 Bdrm 1\1 balh MORGAN REALTY , LOVELY lnc :lsly <!BR, hon1 S I I' I I I V .......,'l' ..-,11 TIME FOR ' '• . . 2 b f pl 11 1 kl h by filling In the ,niuln; word Unlimited <>eean viciv. 2 Br., !\farkM. 2 !i<'J111rntl' houses, ~ hon'I~. in good Co!lta. Mesa 673-6642 675-6459 'Ii A, r <'. > 1 n ~JUI le . you d•velop from step No. 3 below. 2 1,.. Set> & Steal! 67~:.618. QUICK CASH • ·loc. Poolsitc Jot with room ==-=-="'=..,.------1 dah/wsh. Furn. HUie yard. ,. .. for boot or trailer. OJfel't.'d lMMAC 2 BR h&e W/111~ Sprinkler•. $38,500_ Own<·r, e PRINT NUMBERED LJJiEtS 1N Portafln• Laguna BACK &y-4 BR -Fa m THROU H tor !24,95!1. ed pl'tll< .~~2nd u 1 n 1 it. Ry ~ •• !"' 2 ...,. o,., c M . tHESE SQUARES 7141494-9381! ""'n 0e0w"· Ncw11~0 ~rorn11C<1930. G A f MORGAN REAL TY owner, ~.-rm' ~~ ' A UNSOAM!lf ...OVE lfllltS I I I I I I ] r .. , "'"'" •nt jWJt • Pho"" Y 0 " ~.~. DAILY PILOT • 67U6f2 67W459 675-4CM8. B_Y_ow_ne_r-.-,-ha-l'p_3_br--+-d-en V lO GET ~NSWER caU awa,y -642--5678. lrvlne. Open Sat-Sun. e DUPLEX excel Joe & + ·borlu& nn. Msny x:tt'lll~. Tbl faltnt d:rawlntheWe:tt. 2 Lg duplexes, ntxtdoor, \i WANT AD HOUSF. lluntlna1 Watcb ""' -· l Bi~ """'"·.COM· 18 Llo<WMI Sqr mTlO SCRAM LETS ANCWERS IN c• ACSIFICATION 700 ...• DtU, PUot ClurUied blk trom °"''" beoch. ~ ..... 5678 OPEN HOUSE oolwnn. PAM. Olrier. Gmt ,_~1_1~--·-----• ~n T r Ad. 612-1611. 1$,tro •a. Aft 67:456,1. .,.. . ' . • ••• 4 ....... DAILY PILOT Wedntsday, Stpttmbtr 27, lCJ7Z PILDT·ADVERTISER 2- 1.eo.~~:::::~d:::.~'~~r:-._:w:m'-1·=~~=t ... ~.~11·~'1:l~···s:1-= .. ~-~"~•l llto--Fu,..rn-1-L-•j~ I _,__ j~~.: ~:: -/~ ~1.-_ .. _ ... ;;;;:;ll~e~Jj _,...;_;._-;"'..,.~-~~~-[ •m-•-JltJ le --.• '---~=-="--'300:;.:; Houto• un1um. .., "~"' -o ,~up:..to_._•";.;...F;,.u;;;m.;,;;.. _....;;w.;; Apts. Fum. 3'0 F ·~ fw .. 1e 160 f0< sole 160 Opporhmity 200 • -lrvlna -Apts. urn. - 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1-::.::::::;Y~O:z;U;,R;-......;:;; I Costa MoM :c°'~'•;;;:M~e .. ~=-=:-::-1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; j BalbM lslond Cotto """° Nowport Boach OWN BUSINESS? ~EL~< B~ 8t'i..".,!: ~· 2 ::r'i:.. ':,; l BR, 2 baths ......... $325 l Br. Utll pd. Sl<O/mo. Quwt LRG. !um. 1 Br. apt. ltwnd. 1 BR, 2 bl w/frpk:, relt!g. STOP PAYING RENT!!! Take Advantage of . Our CLOSE-OUT SPECIAL On The Last 5 Condominiums IN PHASE TWO • Mlnlmum $950 Moves You In. • No Closing Costs. • Free Upgrade Carpet. • Immediate Possession. JN ADDITION, you get 2 & 3 bedrooms, l'/• & 2 baths, built-in range, oven, hood, dish· washer, disposal, individual laundry area, en· cJosed private garage, private entrances, choice of carpet color, cable TV, swimming pool, gas B-B-Q & park-like recreational area. All lhis for as little as $207 per monlh, eludes everything. Santa Ana Fwy. to Culver, right about '" mile to Walnut (1st road on left), left 1 mile to ''Walnut Square"; or San Diego Fwy. to Culver, lflli about 3 miles to Walnut, r ight to "Walnut Square" or call 714/832-9670. WBbr/dryer, dshwhr, 11'1 Meta Veroe. 2 ~. 2 BR.. 2 b;ltha . •·•• •••• $300 adult. Aho roc>ml it5 per gar., quiet. Nr. mkta:. IA-blk to beach. Partly1um. Vanda BeautY Cou1111elor, a yrd iprinkl dbl 916 Jamil din'"" I BR. 2 baths ••••••••• '350 wk. 67S-~. Woman lftt'd. SIJS f'\a'n. J2!iO mo. Mike &t<>-1500 e.x't dlvi.Aion of Dart Industries • us. gnr. Y er ,...,.: room. B•lbol Penihsul• $13.'>. tm Wallace, Apt. B. 2874 days; eves 673-3798. "'hictl Includes such famous Denver Ol'. CM. s.tG.2442. Adulta p~lened. No vet•. 8 red h·111 54H518. I _._ $285 per rno. Call 6~ 3 BR OCEANFRONT, lg 1 BR, apt nan1ei a.'l TupperwaR, Wnt .,.""t .,rtort 8eaa1 · 2 b&. yearly ACAPULCO Bend and Syroco 1!1 plftnnlng, ___ ...;.;,._c:.;c;____ or 5'-JG..3688. 2 ·BR, 1 ba, yearly oompl turn. $16.S. nlo. 2'l02 COOi ~--B -., 2 B Q · -[)(>Juxe l Br, $1'6 &. Up. t lti! W ~-·front 1-••t C a major ciq>1.111J1ion of Its ~ r.-.::.-. · r, • UAINT! l Br. Coetage :ll5 Cypress St. 675-11133 ' ...,.,.-.::..... · ""' 1 ..., • gar $13() Fncd Klda/...... REALTY pd. Pool, Pt'king. Adults, no aft 6·30 pm 675-M direct .11elll1\" co i; met i c • · · ....,.ii. Stove, refrie:. Nr stores. S90 )uplexos 'Jnfurn. 350 1 7•• w '"" S C · · • R·~ 'H 9-••-Uni" p ..... c 1 1 •-·· . pc s. ·111 • wu1 L, M. di.stributor~1ips, We lll'e ..., ... _ OUM ,.,_ ALA Rentals e 64S..3900 •· """ en wr, l"Vul\! **' K ru..ocK BEACH seeking t'()Uplcs 1ntett.ited Lido Isle Call Anytime, 8.13-0820 c;,ner•I Furn Bach & 1 Br, Ex· 3 BR, 2 BA rllx duplex in a business In which • lfARD to Find! 2 Br. Fncr Jrticc hours is Afi to 8 PM 1--"-;.;_------ceptlonal~ nlctl 2110 _..:AXl=....::m::o:... :..*;..;64.;c>-....::2964.c..:._ "blllty 2 'BR &: den Choice Lido J yrd encl gar, klds 1rcts. $150 NEW 2 BR & DEN -2 BA. N t I d C M " primary respon.. will • • oc. AL ewpor V , • • OCEANFRONT Bachelor be on the female aide. Sh£!' $600 mo. thru June, incl. A Rentals e 64.S.39001_.a-'g'-u_n_•_B..;e_•:..<:..h____ $295. Lara:e dlx. apt,' $90 & up. Nicely furni.8bed"i Apt. $90/per n10. Utll pd. 1>hould want to make gardener. Profess. deoor. & 4 Bdrm, Family Roon1, homf' LUXURY z Br condo surr private pa.tlo&. dbl gar. fpl. Br. Trailers. Adu It 8. Call 673-1241 a profll grow and direct completely furnished. for lease in N c w p o r 1 by trees fountains ' goll 1 child ok, no pets. 151 E. 645-4530 132 W \Vil CM other saies wo~en. H. Lawson, Realtor 675-4562 Heights area. Top Con course. B'argain $265: 31512 ~Bay-'-_s_t-'"-'C'--.M.=,;.6'H837;;....=.;.· --1 . . son, . *u:i ~.2 B~ tum=.: Each distributor Is a~lgned WINTER 2 BR, 2 ha, so. dtOon, $435 mo. Call Mr. West Nine. 493-9m. Huntington S.•Cft * Stunnlng 1 & 2 BR.. ..2 Ba. a protected area of con· patio, dbl gar, frplc, F.A. Bailey Agent 673-8550. L Gnardo w•n13apt. PooL 645-5530. 67J..«i7S. centration) heat. (2131 794-5683 day" ---YR Y lease. New 2 Br .. 2 IMMED OCCUPANCY · th St, CM. NE\V 2 BR, garage, $200 3 BR, 2 BA Condo. Crpts, ba on an\f • .,....._ N 2 • 3 B · Uni 2 BR ·~ Tiie ........ utb of the cosmeUcs (213) 793-7832 evl's; 675-2504 · e~ course . ....., mo. ~ • r apts BEAUT. FURN 2 BR $175 up wmter. um • ~..., to''"'' drps, bltns, f<'<' rm. & Call 675-2030 Dbl h ly °'~~ 1rulustry Is predicted to be wknd.s comm pool. S z 2 0 / m 0 . ---~;,·-----Co 11 •t."""'gt e,1Adsd Wlihr Ulil paid. lftd Pool. Ad1ts, no yr · V'tV""'"...,.,.,. z::,or,c duri""' 1i·e 70's. If Newport • ·och Lagun1 HiU1 r un m on ams, H.B. pets. Also 2 Br unf 642-95al. ~ block to oce~2 BR. new .... v. ;,.1&-1765. I--"---------5•• "188 you 1~·ould like I hear more :.:.::'°"':.:.:.;...;::::;::;,.____ -----------2 Br. 2 Ba. No pets. crpts & drps, garage. ln- about participa1ion in this \\'INTER rentals on heach, 2 ~ _2 Br, 1 8<). Tnivnhouse. NE\V 4 BR. Fam mi, 2 Ba. Newport Beach $15.5/n1o. Adult!'i 00 y, no . quire: 67Hi640. "'<'t"'n•, proltlable growth g, ho"°" $3311 1 n, apf ..... g. patio, g n r I Po o I . crpts, drps, bltns, frplc. $290 820 ... ,. '-' .. · """" · · · \V t " h k 20 pets. Center St. 642-5848. WINTER duplex avail • 3 oppar1unity, write $200. 646-929! C'Ves. 540-2846 as 1cr-uryl'r oo up. S :· per mo. Days ~7000 ext NE\VPORT Isle n e 1 u x PRESIDENT days. Child ok, 8.1:1-897,1. 7.j, Mrs. McDaniels; Eves & Waterfront w/pier, float, 3 1 Br. $14-0. Adults only. Bft, 2 bl'l, 2 BR. 1 bu. Nr. VERY t 4BR I wknds 545--0966 BR, 2 BA bll' fr' fr StPool. Ideal for Bachelors ocean. 67J.8563. VANDA BEAUTY EAST'BLUFF 4 Br LOVELY c ean . gar, rg · · • ins, 1g, plc, COUNSELOR HOME. Call fi44-7037 or fenC<'d yrd, crpt, drps, $235 Mesa Verde new crpting, & sund ck. ~~00 l993 Church St. 548-9633. NE\V Dix oet"anfront. 3 br, 2 8480 Be I Boul d mo Sax.I deposit, Family on· Yrly lease. Ad1ts only. $82.50. Small furn traHer y;/ ba, d-\.\·sht>r, k:e maker. , ,,_ •-ele'serCslily . .,.e.,.var"""•o 979-9ll!O. Jy no pets. 642-85TI. LOOKING for a Home? ~7672. canaba. Utils pd. Adlts, no $375. 6'IS--0884 • ......,,, ~.. • ............, W1rfmt Cabin $135. Sep. Gar Mesa Verde, near all • Just A 4 BR 2 Ba e""C Frpt CHANNELFRONT pets. 544--1539. e WINTER RENTALS e * RISK CAPIT l * Unit S125. Mob $90 ut! pd. • · ...... · " painted in and out .. Want 2/3/4 B AH 9 patio, Fairview·EI Camino. 3 BR., 2 Ba. Huge lanai 2BR, util paid, $170 mo. No R. Some on beach $5,0CJG.$250,000 Rent~ • ou1e 97 -8430 Ideal kids. $36(klffer. 714: mature responsible people. pets. 2'277 Maple St. ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 Mutli.Plant Orange Co. San Clement• 52J.-!l670. S265 mo. 1st & last. Refs. Yearly Lease 673-9187 Growth Co. Interested in Please. 548-7308 aft 5 pm. Du!)lexes, • Costa Mesa • 3 BR, winter, furn. drps, bus. oppt'ys. Seek owner· LOVELY 2 BR, 2Ba. nI""bch, 3 Br, ~190 Per Mo 3 br, 2 ba, fam rm. Fericetl Fum. -,r Ullfum. 355 LG 1 BR, nicely furn. with bltns, patio, lh blck fronl ship participation In bus. adults, no pets. $250. mo. Dcpos req d. 962-8131 alt 5 yd. Nr schls. No pets. $2301--....;..:...;.;....;,;:.:.;;;;;.::.....;::: pool. $139 mo. No pets. 1887 beach, $250. 6'1:>-5604 aft 7. responsive to dynamic mgm! 1407 Toledo, (TI4)526-4157. 3 BR 2 BA, fenced yard mo. 546--2826; 837-8508. General Monrovia #3, 548-5470. 4 BR, 2 BA on Beach. Avail & creative mC'rchandizing. Houses Unfurn. 305 nice area. near schools. Newport Beach l·BR. & den unr. Quaint BEAlIT. 2 Br. Upper duplex. now thru June 16, 1973. Call Frank. 546-8303 or write $23.i. * 548-7672 Im.mac. Pl·iv. gar & pa1io. 645-0245 or 547-972&-Bob. Bo 1225 C1'.1 Corona del Mar loc. 1 House x . · Gene ral Lnt old 1 Bl", $130. Bring • STEPS Bay & Beach! 1 Br, oU xlnt beach. $200. Nr. Westcliff. $205. 675-1849. DELUXE 1 BR. Apt. Steps Commercf•t ·· -· ~ Pr-rty , 158 kids & pcls. stv/refrig. Util inc Sl:li. 3 BR. 2 ba. furn , . Huntington &each to Ocean. $14{)/mo + Ulil. Income Property 166 • Bakery Rent-A -House 979-8430 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 unobstructed bayfront. $425.1 ;;;;;~;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. Vi'intcr rental. 673-2677. • Sn1oke shop 3 BR 2 b fro t 2 BR * 4-plex nr. So. Coast Plaza. e Gitt shop 2 BDRM & garagf', fenced, e NEWPORT J-IGTS! Older · a ocean n. un-LaQUINTA HERMOSA · Apts. OceanfronL Near Shopping Centers 16 Stores * * * ... Major market, bank -major franchise food. Long term leases, excdlent financing, . Jilgh return, selling price fl'l5,000. Del 3 clec. rang£", 1 child ok, no 3 Br, lrg fncd ynl, kids/pet furn. $325. Spanish Coun-· Estate Liv.. Beach. \Vintcr or Yearly. uxe Br owner's unit. • Bl'outy shop t 11~ 54,7596 11"" The Irwin Co. Rltrs. G4Hlll · & S ."" 646--0525 o' 61'7'''. Bkr. 545-2321. HOLLAND Bus. Sales pc s. ...,. .,... . l.OCI, Ulg pac1ous Apts. Ter-~==...C..-"'~'-'~"'----1 lndustrl•I Property 168 1TI6 Orange, c .r.1. 645-4170 SMALL 3 Br. nicl"ly decorat· ALA Renta ls e 64S..3900 raced pool: sunken gas 3 BDRMs., 2 Baths, 2 doors ·u ed Bl!~s. Crpt'g & drps. $225 FOR RENT Newport Island r : ''"I BBQ. Unbelievable Livlng -from ocean. Yearly. OC<.'an Moefey to L 240 n10. ut1I pd_ 837-9517. apt year 'round, 2 sm ~tsforRent . Only view. Sharp. 673-2825. M-1 LAND oan These A're Just A Few of IBR, stove. drapes, yrd, 110 bedrms, pier & float. $300 2 BR. STUDIO"' $240 YEARLY lse. 2 doors from BO~W TO. $25,000 on the Out MANY RENTALS • , • pels. $140 util paid. per mo. + util 8TI-70I3 aft 7 ---------.. 1 Ad~~ UTil.ITIES P:ID bch. 2 Br. pari_ furn. Cpts, 40,00'.l sq, ft. for long tenn eq ty in your house. Use * 673-7737 pm. ""Aptt. Furn. 360 o pets drps. $250/mo. 642-3443. I 'th ti •-b the money for any purpose. 195 • TREE Shaded. Bach SHARP 3 Bed A ease wt op on "' uy. Over SS,OOO on real estate 3 BDRM, 2 Ba, Jenced yd, Waterfront Home. 4 D-lboa I 1 nd 14 blks S. of San Ole,,... "ti-.... room pt. Prime we~! side Costa pad. Nr. C'Ve'""thing. Incl's s·~ BR lrg u· Doc go 1 a "'~ "'• ..,,, .,.......m Sept-June 00•s~• and personal property. Call ._, £.JV. per mo. New pa.int & • pa o, gar. kl--'-'...;..o.;;:;:.:;: ____ on Beach, l blk \V. on Holt r•" J.)O" '""' Annual gross, $53,950 stable Mesa. ED RlllDLE Real tor, AVCO util. Viono, ~916-J or 5-16-8640. avail. Winter or yearly. NEARLY new 3 BR, 2 BA. to 16211 Parkside Lane.) NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba. Dshwltr. tenants. sales price $421,000. '!!64&-!!!!88!!!!U!!. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! FINANCIAL SERVICES * BEAtJT. ne\v 3 BR, in S6 4 0 0 I S 4 5 0 . 6 7 3--0792, com.pl. furn. All elect kitch., fTI4) 847-5441 frplc. Ne\v furniture, \Vinter 17 Commercial Stores .; 500 N. Anahei:n Blvd., $120 . FAR Out! 1 Br. furn. ti·iplex, priv yard, patio, 73--0698. frpic. patio. BBQ. Lease """"""~~~'!""!!!!""" $300/mo. 548-5120 4 yeras old 11 unit industrial, AnahC'im 535-28l6 avail. Util pd. Ulng hair ok. gar. Good Joca·tion. 6Trl8.J9_ l'N"'O"R"IB~:,B"L°"UF=F"s~.~V-i-ew-.-4 Sept.·June, 638-8470/5.19-8831. $145 • $165 town of Orange. $~.OOJ. 240 S. Euclid St.. * br, 2~~ ba townhse. Fam PREF Students. 4 br, 2 ba, Bachelor & 1 BR, patios, Newport Heiahts Reali1nr. 6 4 2 -51 4 0 or Anaheim 7i6·5250 $145 .. DOLLl!OUSE! 2 Br. Dane Point rm. Pool. Cust features. Nr Avail now. $350 mo, utils frplc's, priv. garages · ;.;.;:.;;.;:.o;.;...:c:..:;:,:.:.:::. __ 6-'6-~10. 1879 Ilarhor Blvd., Encl go.r, ni ce yrd for child. ----------1 schls. $395. 644-0'J.7S pd. Set' 1$ lli.llns Ave. or Dlvided bath & Jots of CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adults, no klNIOl.UT 0 HI COlWl~L co L t f S Costa Mesa 642-3484 * LEASE. Beaut new 1. hr. 2 2 BR fepl bltn ; call Eves, (213) 289-8366. closet&. Rec hall, pool & pets. Lge kit. SlJS.$150. 2421 1 'T • o s or ale 170 617 \V, 17th St., $175 . RARE r'ind! 3 Br. in ba, viC'w. Nr heh. I-las • • s, e ec. gar. pool tables, sauna baths. E. 16th St., NB. 64&-1801. * LIDO lot fur ~e or trade Santa Ana 5474431 Npt Hgts. HugC' yrd for kids/ l -'-'-'IY.;...th_in-'g'-.-'1_32.i_·_. _96_2-_21_94-'-. ~~;·1~~~~~~ach. $250, B~~:~'g: 1~!ire~~ See for yourself! 17301 Apt. Unfurn. 365 one of the last lots avall. o~ S2017t S.AMain St., " pet. * Fountain Vanov NEWPORT C'l.-e' on water. S. Bayfront, #5. Keelson Ln. Cl blk W. <If Balboa Island .MOBILE HOME PARK ~!Jent waterfront location on the Colorado Rlwr ad· ihcent ,fQ Ho4day Shores development. Space tor 24 mobile homes plus a duplex. All uUlities are available lflld shopping is close for all your needs. Also includ<!d are t"'O boat docks and a !lunching ramp. Owner 1vill exchange for local property. Price $137,500. Call our Investment Division, 546-1000. Lido. Corner lot 40 • on an a na J49·3361 ~'"'' Beach, 1 blk N. ol Slater). Havre & Ithaca • 88• on 12091 Brookhurst Blvd., $245 • BIG 4 + Fam. 2 Ba. 3 BR, 2 BA, Fam Rm., Balbcui Peninsula 842-7848 "" G d G 5304300 $285 • 3. Bedroom sharp frplc, Lease 548-89)) ==~""':::..C="--:--:-~ILITT'LE Island. Yearly. $275. Lido Soud. Owner 543-8836 ar en rove Bltns, f.ncd yrd fur kids/ home, quiet street near all. W e $25 WK & Up-On Ocean FREE lltil's. Furn 1 & 2 l level 75' frontage. 1 BR. ,=;;:::,.~::::,~::;::c:.·.:::.::::=:::·1 6411 Westminster Blvd. pet, ,.,._place hug• 1,.,,·ng rm ALK to bcactl. l !Bdrms. lov l Bach 1 B bdrm ta be ch •Watcrfront..30' boat slip. Westminster 893.soos LANOLORDS I '" , ._ . . l&2 Sty $32iin$300 ey • r. • • ap near a .• Bltn kit., huge L/R, gar. Lot 7, Collins I sl and • 1 T FREE RENTAL SERVICE Lease. Vacant. Move 1n to-Caywood R. 548-1.ZKl Rooms, Mald Servlee-Pool 536-37'Tl or 53&-'1282. Some furn. tm-7178. 67&-mo. st D Loans BEACON RENTALS day. CALL 842-4466. 3 BR, 2 BA, rondo, E8"luff<. -u: ~~ii &75-a740 . Lagun• B•t.ch Balboa Peninsul• Mobile·H-ef -6,,,M, INTEREST * . 64S.0111 " ·* lnunac cooo. 1385 mo. Call 3 Br, 2 ba Dlx apt. Incl frplc, 3 balconiC's, din rm, & is 1 blk from bay & oceai:i: 1 yr lease .. Days, 644-4161; nites, 6'/a-2306. ..... "74 7' L'AA 1813 or s~!lOOO 2 BR, 1~ BA, patio, balcony, ROOMS $25 \\tk, $75 mo. Tr1il•r Perks 172 2 "d TD L Huntiligtoi:i Bt-lich area. <m-1.:,-• 315 E. Bay. $250 mo. on yrly Apts. from $14{). Heatctj f\1obi le home. 12x60, n oa ns. , ~~~';;n 3m,~d~~w °:~~; 4BR converted .. to 3 Newport Heights lse. Inq .. at Apt C 673-1521 pool, near beach. Laguna Rancho 'frler Prk, Palm Lowest rates Orange Co. carpets V.'ilh ·ma 1 chin g plus large family rm, NEWPORT H . h or 548-TITI. · Motqr Inn. 1575 N. Coast Springs, Comple1cly furn. "WE BUY TD'S" drapes Sparkling clean fpl., super sharp. $300 rnect ul~ eig I~ rare tree FURN Bachelor Apt. Yearly. "'H"•'Y:-·:.,I..a""gu~na~B::•::"'::"::.·-~ & decorated. &'14-2939 Rent i~ $230 per month. · per mo. X I n t , nbr· 1ard c hag.,...athruc, uge greel n $12.5/mo incl'dg uW. Call VILLAGE INN. Apts. and Sattl1r Mtg Co h d c II M S · Y 5• s out. m-675-5172 s1·ngles fro ,.., k 642 2171 •54• ~'ll 3 Bedroom, 2 bath Costa O O . a r . Ill-mac 2 Br 1 Ba for lse 377 ---·------m or-:> w or Mountain, Desert, • ;r-uv ME>Sa area. Double garage, der, 962-4471 or 963-2107 RMWna Way. s4s-oszo. · e 2 BR near beach & bay. $160/mo. Heated pool, maid Resort 174 Serving Harbor are;.i 21 yrs. covered patio, new paint, Agt. Carport, lndry. $215/mo. aervice, laundromat, t,.J blk NEW Custom Bayfront Apts. Frplc, gas BBQ, bltns, priv. beach & pier. 3 BR, 2 BA. $650/ffiO;. 2 BR, 2 BA. $6(Xl/mo. Yearly. 546--4353 . Coron1 del Mar ....;c;.:..:.;;;;.,.. ____ ..;;,.; * NEED MONEY? fenced yard. For rent or op-San Clemente yrly. 673-4526. to beach. 696 S. Coast Hwy. :PAL.'1 Sptings. Fairway 9_ \Ve represent several _private tion at $2'20 per month. Call Garden Grove 2 BR house, carport, redec· Coron. del ~r 4 94- 9436 - Duplexei/Unltl Thunderbif'd Country Club lenders. Borrow against the BEAUTIFUL 4 BR, frplc, ora!ed, neiv cptg, drps. $14{) mo. up. $45 wk. Col<1r iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Ille 162 Cu.stom 2 BR. Plus Maid'~ equity in your home. Call bltns, crpt'g, drps. N<1 pets. Patio,. enclos_ed yd, cl~ to ** OCEANFRONT 1 BR, TV nr beach. 1435 N. Coast. ...;:.::.;.:.,.. ___ ==.,..... quar!ers. Cherice lot. Guest for free appraisal. Realtors 545-9491 Pref non -9 mo k er s & shopp1~g, uhl pd, refrig & $250. CALL BETWEEN 8:30 Apt.s open to ~. 5:30 to 9 ...y ~ NEW DUPLEXES hous<.>. $225.00J. HaJ.lmark BALBOA BAY PROP. Open Eves. diinkC'rs 897-0606 stove in cl. No pets. 492-7888 & 5:30, 546-5441. p.m. BUILDER SELLI.NG NO\V, Realrors. * 642·7491 * LANDLORDS.I · after 6 PM, 492-5120 days, FURNISHED Apt $145 util CHOICE location. 2 Br., all $45,950 • 714-541·5656 e \VE arrange lst & 2nd RE Huntington Beach 3 BR. 2 BA, ocean view. paid. 1~ blk to ocean. No \.\'ooden ceiling. $200/mo. C.Or Huntington/Adams, lf.B. WT in famous Lake Havasu. loans. Also purchase TDs. \Ve Speclalb:e in Newporl e BEACH PAO! Furn Single. Adults only. s 2 7 5 / m 0 . pets, 2500 Seavie1v, CdJl.f. No pets. 538--2095 aft 5. ON TEN ACRES Apts. fum./unfurn. Lease Fireplaces I priv, patios. Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-26U l\lacArthur nr Coasl Hwy) 536-8188 home of the 1vorld famous Bkr. 492-8.332, 492·0·124. Beach e Corona del Mar • Al! util incl. $35. Avail. Oct. 10. 714:544-4294. Costa Mesa l Br, North end. Ocean view. London Bridge. Located Mortgages & Laguna. Our Rcn!a.l Ser· ALA Rentals e 645-3900 House! furn. or _W:....:,Ec;E;.,;.K:..L:..Y;;·:..M_O_N_T_H_L_Y_ Close to bcb & shopping. No Income property 1(..6 close to all schools &: city. T t D 'ed 260 vice ls FREE t<1 You! Try U f chldn, no pets, 494-7079. 1:.;;.:.:.;;:..;;.:.....;."'-'..;,;.---$9000 or wiU trade for Costa rus e s Nu· View! • OCEAN'S ROAR! 1 Br. n urn. 310 Executive Suite1 Newport Beach TAX SHELTER Mesa or Newpor1 Beach in-XLNT 1st TD's. $27,000. 25 NU-VIEW RENTALS 1S1•o25~.e, refrig, kids/pets ok. Lido Isle 2080 Newport Blvd. N cw ! J ! First owner come prop. 644-4687. years at 8r/o int. $14 ,000. 10 673-4030 or 494-3248 · Costa Mes• \Ve have Winter Rentals \\'ill Take Students 2 bedrooms each. Bltins, Fireplace, carpets & drapes, choice Io c a t l o n . Lease $200 pr month. Call 673-8550 RL TR. depreciation available. We BEAUTIFUL ocean view Years 8~0 Int. Big Bear * WHY RENT? we have ALA Renta ls • 645-3900 UNFURN. Yearly lea.se. 3 642·2611 have the best invaitory of lo!s, $18,7'50 &: up. Terms. lakelront property. Will dis-houses avail for nothing HUNT. Sch. area_ 1 yr new BR. 1% Ba. $375_ Month. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S Also oceanfronts avail. new apl!. in the county. For Underground utilities. count 6%. 213: 638--0258 down to vets & 51;'0 down to 4 Bdrm single story home. FURN. 4 BR. Wmtflr lease, e FREE Linens example: 22 units, $.125,000. 494-9388 betwn 8-5 pm. anyone. Call anytime, S 2 7 5 /mo. Lease & $300 Month. e FREE Utilities 4 BR. 2 BA ••• , •• , •• , • , $350 1 3 BR. 2 BA ............ $285 f2l 24 units, $564,500 & PORTAFINA LAGUNA SCO'IT REALTY, 5.16-753.1. references required, Bryant Wiest, ~ltr. 6Th-27'l3 e Full Kitchen $679.500. 29 unit!! (luxury) VIE\V lot. all ulil In Nr I I~ $375-Avail Oct 1. Spacious 5 families only -no big pets. Newport Beach e Heated Pool 1BR.,1 BA ............ $175 3 BR, home ............ $175 NEW 2 Br, 2 Sa, Vu apt. Frptc; 1 blk 1D ocean. Qn. vcnient to shopping 675-1327. $532,000. 36 units $532,00J. Running Sprgs, in excl~sivc HolwbRlnt 11! BR, 3 BA, din rm, Colonial. Av a i 1. 0 ct. 2 0-7 2. • Laundry Facilities <714> S33-0040. area. $1000 On & take overl '-iiiiiiiiiiiiiii·~~ Nr. S.A. Country Club. Owner/agt, Chuck Everett, OCEANFRONT new 3 Br, 2 e TV le maid serv avail CALL: 67J..3fi63 Investment Div pynlnls $530Cl full price, G';t fl 646-8.1~ 8.13-3.544. 546-4141 or 642-5TI9, ~j frplc, gar, all bltns. e Phone Service 2041 Business Center Drive lnt. s.1(}-6929 aft 6. Houses Furnished 300 r Y. $485/mo. 645--8908. * $30 WEEK & UP * associated TWO bdrm., 1~ bath, fireplace. $245 incl AU.. utilities. Phone ( 7 1 4 ) 644-8814 or 642-3073. Irvine, Callf PALf\.1 Desert for lease. 'J.BR General Balboa Island 3 BEDROOM 2 Bath OCEANFRONT ~wt e Studio & 1 BR Apts Decorator furn condo. $300 --------... ~ $200 per mo~th. Bltns,' GAR AGE · S 3 o o 0 · • TV A: Maid Service Ava.U BROKERS-REAL TORS l025 W 9olboo 67).)66] $88,000. Pride-of-ownership. 7 r y 10% dOwn. e 8000 FEET C·4 frontage on Beach Blvd , $500. per front fool. CALL THE REAL ESTATE FAIR, F R I S 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, dbl g11r. Yearly Call 645-8908 mo. 346-1~. ree enta ervices . d k 1 xlnt condition. 962-4471 · · • Phone Servlce--Htd Pool OCEANFRO private oc . Yr y $3:ia/l\1u. C d • NT corner dplx, PALM De rt b 2 TO Ph: 67:>-25R5. or 546-8103. Agt. On om1nl um1 • Children & Pet iteetion . 2 se Y owner, LANDLORDS '.ND Unfurn. 320 ..,76 N-rt Blvd, CM v:1nler; Br., lwr, !rplc; 4 BR decorator furn condo ' "~Ao .,.;;-....,0r ~A,.~ Br, 'Ja upr, bltn, kitchen, near pool. 644--0936_ TENANTS Corona del Mar C C ......,....,,.,.., ~' 5011 5 All prices and all areas HOI E llB Joe, 4 BR, 2 Ba, Huntington Be•ch This Ad Worth $5 on Rent ea shore' NB. Real Estate Wanted 114 675--7225 586-0222 UNIQUE Rustic 3 Br + loft. vacant, nice yrd. New crptg -213: 0012 or Z13: 696-mt -· 2 frplc's, 2 baths. Trees. thru-0ut, clean & neat as a 3 BR. 1% BA. Frplc. Pool. SHARE an apt. $17.50 to $25 SEACLIFF Manor A t * Quick Cash* Near ()C()an & schools. pin! $245/mo. Alao for sale. Washer/dryer. W/w ·crpts, wk. Util, phone, pool incl. Bachelor apt. util P pd~ LCE 3 Bn. 2 ba, view. frplc, bltns, beam ceil'g. So. bwy. $325. 675--4()48. HUGE Studio apt. Frplc. Private. $170 inclds util. Year Lease. Cail 644-8494. Co1t1 Me .. WW buy your property. All $450/mo. 846-5065. $1000/dn. same pymnts. drapes, Adults only,,oo pets. ~en or women. 2 316 n48,50• Pool. 1525 Placentia cash within 72 hrs. Call 2 Br. $145, CLEAN. filed. 833-1103, eves 839-7145. . $195/mo. !J62..9995, = Blvd., C. M, Ave., ask abciut our discount 2 BNEWL/Y DECfncdORAynlTED :f. Kids/pe(s ok. 2 br mobile home. Patio, 4 8:', crpts, drps, pool, R/0, • 548-2682 , r w gar-Wf " R t A H 97• ••30 !nod, familv pk. Pool. whr/dryr, retg, clubh!e, * $25· PER WEEK * 3 BR, 2 Ba u ~ patio. Wtr pd, Call btwn sussioiAtY °' tttl COlWnl <o. en • • ouse root Acros~ from~ ocean. $175, $225. 548-1405, 537-5384. & Up. Pool It maid service. Monthly. 202Y.a n4Znd crpSt: l It 5. 636-4120. 3ScBR 1 , 0 _2 BA, Harbor View 53&-6480. Mission V •··io Kitchens ava'I. Motel Tahiti $2'(5/mo Nr beach . Zl!:B Pla~ntla Ave • ••• $140 h 1Strict. Avail Oct lat. .. corner Harbor & VJctorla. ~7611• • 21:1,·D Placentia Ave •• $135 $300/mo. Lease. 963-4919. 2 hr, din rm, sep garage, RAN ' 2228-A Placentia A.vc f140 \VIN1'ER. 4 Br., nr. nl'lv, rncd yd, trplc. 430 Aliso. B D new 3 Br., 2 Ba .. * CLEAN 2 Br. Close to BAYFRONT Dix upp e r 548-C Bcmard •••••••••• $tJ5 buyfront. S.100 mn. \Ve hnvc Costa Mesa S2S5 !no. 642-1053. fully cptd & drpd. Bltin shops. Adulls only, no pets. duple.'C. 3 Br, 2 Ba. GARDEN SETTING Balboa fslend 962-88SJ others ba.yf1·011t or inside. Th1:;J;dr;_;m~·2·b~1h ivith 3 hr, 2 ba, ne\vly dee. Nr stove & d·wshr. Popular Inquire 179~ Rochester, Yrly-$400. Adlts. 233 19th .. NEW DUPLEX $48 950 ~~~~~~~~~~'.l~i;;·~SA~L~J~;'B~U~R~Y~R~E~A~LIT~Y~ sngl level floor P 1 an C.M. St-No. c. s= M 0 '. , -f 11 d 1 11 , . 315 M .. fireplace, built·lns, n c \1' beach. Frpcl, patio. $285 ~/palio area & gar. Pool ·· •.r"I""-"' rut run Y or n u t vlng. featuring 3 ~.rm/f 2 &b;) 2 l ar1oe Ave. 673-6900 shag c:arj")('ts & drapes. $230 mo. Refs. 968-7348. aeceS!. lmmed occupancy. * 1 BR. XTRA NICE 2 Br furn mobile home, 2-3 lo bed~ms. Oreplace, ''Ov.-ncr's unt 1v PL II •I' br. l ba, feplc, newly pe' monftl. F,... renW Irvine S<i-3B33 days; 675 •1235 Poot,cleao,ccpt,deps,tndry, adults only, no pets, pat. poo. Gren\locnlion. bdrm., 1 ba. jncome uni!. .. Fin•nclal r@modeled. \Vinter only. service. -..... eves. BBQ, nr &hopping & beach, $160/mo. Pool. 213;245-4763 THE VENDOME 536-2551 Xlnt location. Large artrac-Days, 673--0110: e v cs 3 BR 2 bath •••• N rt ., __ ... $149., adults. 646·2575. 6 pm, 586-6218. 1845 Anaheli:n, &c--·. Uve units. Qulet privacy, 675-3412. · • · • • • • • • • • .,_., ewpo u..C11 -. ., ~ 1 ~ sa1 167 950 3 4 BR., ,2~ ba., tam nn $390 CHRISTIAN lady, 40-lsh, no DELUXE waterfront 3 Br. e TOWNHOUSE 1uao u·•P ex ,..,,-e • · 11sine1s D-lboa Peninsula Reallo.... · BRAND new exec home 3 amoke-drink til' pd. SSS tlo D t -·; Stt 151 E Bay St CM o -... -..nu 4 BR., 2;s 00, tam nn •• S3SO · "'\I 1 gar, pa • 08 • ~ mo. 2 Br llh Ba. Crpts drps ~ • ·• · pportunity 200 ,,... • ., Westcllll -...__ 4 BR., 21.L -..... tam rm ••• ...,. br, l~ ba, The Bhdfs. $500 mo. ~1939 (12-4) or Lrg l Br patio dock prlvtl ..... .: prl tio ea' ' • .. WINTER oo BAY $300 3BR ~ ~,.. n -.. ...,. ht A tat $250 -·1 ~• -Ill . ' ' • ''""• v. pa · rport, NEW DUPLEXES BEAU'l'Y "'°"· equlp., ""'1: 2 BA, !epic, crv, WtD. 619 Open 'til 9 PM 4 BR., 2~ ba. tam"".. ::"'~now. ~ ~ .... t -.. ~ tr. l:BI mo. Winter. ~ ~dUlt .. no P<ts. 146 Melody BUILDER SEL!JNG NOW. Dryers, cbatrs, dlvlden, W. Bay, blk to ocean. at Cl!Il.DREN-PETS OK 8ML 1 Br. d~ i'tplc, WA~ Spee. 3 BR 'f., CM. $4S,tSO desk. n1an1cure table & Buena Vista with view. BD<E RIDE TO THE Ian JWlft Caplstr•no btam cell, patio, W/W, 1 A FIR., boat dock avL \'r.1's"'RAN0!="'=------2-8-R,--l-B-AI Cor Huntlflltlon/Adams, JJ,B. misc., goocj-cond. LaguM 6'73-M67 or 673-6050 BE:ACll LEASE, Caplltrano VWu adult only. Yearly $140. 187 lie. $325. 675-87'92 or spts. $185 mo. Call bttwn 2 5J6..8188 ~~iJ. Eve 49'1~3059, Day YEARLY LOWER ~UPLEX 3 br. 2 ba-!ltove, retrl.g. Best Joe, 3 BR. 2 BA, Nu E. 21at St., CM. 645-.131'1. + &C-3558. le 6 pm. ~ or 2 FOURPLEXES, buy one or both. Nffd aome work. lO UN IT 1noncy·1n3ke1'. $85.000 Sell or exchl\nge FORTIN. Rtallor 642-5000 tJNES'T'()RS 7% Down. Nc1v ii q,nit IJ'L WE!9tmin11:tcr & 'Hunlln&IOn Stach. 968-0407, 911&-2511B -., I am & l2 pm. ' 2 Bi', 2 Ba. S240 Carport. 320 Cpts, drps. Lge fncd rear yd. cobdo Free malnt, pool, F U RN I SH£ D 1tn1 le WINTER % bllt to ocean. 3 968-2586; after 6 pm • •"!U. Tim~/ Part t I me . Alvarado Place DBL CAR & boat/trlr gate. "SINCF.: <J.94G" ., crpts, drapery, $285 mo. day bedroom, no children or Br, pvt ~tlo $271S/mo. Call _543-0058.:,;;:,.:c;·"'-------- \\·nuld you hke to make $500 · Quiel street. $235 Jn(), 2JJ.-53l-2584 petl. 240!5% E. 16th St., NB. 642-9485 anytlmt wknd 01' lJQlJT &: Al 1 3 B n n10nth or more. Ideal ftlr 3 BB., 21!t Ba, nlOdemized. J.. •tUll.RY" Ag1 962-2421 bt WeMem Br1nk 1Bldt or eve. 646-4664 al 6 kdyl ry rg R husband or "'lfe. For appl: cur pe.rk'g. S350 mo. 305 GREA .. T FA,MILY UnlvorsttY Ptirk Irvine 213-351-9548. · t w · Studio Apt. Sep. din rm. call 77~2379 MoMom 1~1~5991 Days ,55¥000; .NJ:l:ft .r BR Apt., turn. 11,uill SUS, J'llLLY furn, $280 mo. tluu P•tio. Y•rd. ,fl!,'IJ/mo. 213: SP · , HOME = f t ~ You don't need 8 gun to nr 5.A. Cou!ltl"Y ~ J Bl\ June. Om.rt view TV lneo SS&-6255 morn I only. EL ECTRJCAL contractor AC. 3 Br., 2 & Day v1ew 3 Ddmig., 2 ba. Din. nn. Near "\Vhtte Elepho.nts" OW!r-n.io. "Draw Fut" whan you place h.&c!. furn $120, iml $110, ni ll°"3Cth St 61'--1818 an 3 2 Br nat ovtt iaraa:e. <In wtll Ile. corp. or tndlvldual ~use, S2lO or dlx 2 Br apt. Hl\rbor 1 n11:h. Largo ynrd, nlna 1'Wl' hoWle; 'hfr! •m an ad in the DAILY PILOT Utb 6 Ort.ri&e-14,....,. pm. t £'Iden st. Wllter A st<1w <RME). Must haw 80\lnd 75· 546-9574• 8Tl-9467. waler .l gllrelencr paid. Into '1•0lsh" _. • •, Id) tlem Wa,nt .Ad•! Call now .. -• The f.altlHt drf.w Jn the Wat. 1be tulltlt draw In lbe Wtlt furn, ChUd & pet ok. financial •tat em en t . Dally Pilot Want Ads have $250 Monfh. Ask' fOl'. thna a p,.u, Pllot OiaHhd &C-5671. •• .a oany PDot Qllslfied , . .a DaU.1 POot Cla"'fted 54Hlll. m.21.1'1. barialnt aalore. Clark Somers 61MOOO odl • Ad. SIU618. Ad. ~,. lleod a "Pod"f Pkco an odt t I I, J· .. • Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Hands See If You Have Any Of . These Things A DAILY PILOT WAN·T-AD Will Sell Fast! 1. Stove 2. Gullor 3. Beby Crib 4. Ehtctrlc Saw 5. C1mera 6. Washer 7. Outboord Motor I. Stereo Sot 9. Ceuch 10. Cl•rlnot 11 . Rofr1gerolor 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sowing Mochlno 14; Surfboord 15. Mlichlno Tools 16. Dlshwoshor 17. Puppy 11. Cabin Cruiser 19. Golf Cort 20. Barometer 21. Stomp Collection 22. Dlnotto Sot 23. Ploy Pon 24. Bowllng Boll 25. Woter Skis 26. F..-r 27. Suite•• 28. Clock 29. Bicyclo 30. Typewriter 31 . Ber Stools 32. Encyclopodla 33. Vacuum Cleaner 34. Tropical Fish 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 36. File Cabinet 37. Golf Clubl 31!1. Ster! Ing Sliver 39. Victorian Mirror 40. Bedroom Sot 41 . Slido Proloctor 42. lawn Mower 43. Pool T1blo 44. Tires 45. Pl•no 46. Fur Coat 47. Drapes 41. LiMn1 49. Hono 50. A,.,.. ••• 51. Ort•• 52. Exercycle 53. Roro Books S4. Ski Bootl SS. High Choir 56. Coins 57. Electric Troln 58. Kiiton 59. Cl111lc Auto 60. CoffM Toblo 61. Motorcycle 62. AccorClion 63. Skl1 64. TV Sot 65. Workbonch 66. Diomcind Wotch 67. Go-Kort 68. Ironer 69. Camping Trailer 70. Antique Furniture 71 . T•po Roconlor 72. S.llboot 73. Sports Cor 74. MA1tro11 Box SPIP 75. lnboord Spoodboot 76. Shofvun 77. Soddl• 78. Dort 0.mo 79. Punching Bog 80~ Boby Corrloge 81. Dnnm 82. Rlflo 83. Dolk 84. SCUBA Goor These or any other extra things around the house can be turned Into ca1h with a DAILY PILOT W·ANf·'A'D So • • • ·Don't Just Sit There! ' DIRECT DIAL DAJl.Y ,ILOT ...,A.;..pt_._UftfU....,.._m_. ___ » __ Ap..;.....1._u_n_ru_r•_. ____ »_ ~· Unfvrn. Gener•f Gener•• Huntington l!kadl Newpart 8e.ch 345 Apts., Fum. or Unfum.. 1'S Apt. U""'rn. VILLA MARSEILLES SPAC IOUS 1 .. 2 BEDROOM APT. Fumi1hod ,. Unfumlshed Adult Llvlnt Dishwasher color coordinated appliances Plush shag carpet .. mirrored wardrobe doors· indirect lighting in k.itchen -breakfast bar - huge private fenced patio • plush landscap- ing -brick Bar-be-Ques -large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioning. 3101 So. Bristol St., Soni• An• 557-1200 BEACHBLUFF Apt.. THI NEW-I Cost• MA•• _ ' 8 '·· ' a... "°"'· pall•. VERSAILLES ;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;.;;I dshwW. 8231 Elli• Av~. h BL FFS 8'1-mi. on 1 • U ** NEW ** •• NEWPORT I WALK TO BEACH Qce.an v1ev.· 24 hour hou!c 1 tt 2 Br. _Cpts. drps, ~ur11y, ~IM\rtmtnts de- dshwshr , 205 l :ilh; 308 161.h. signt>d wit h R MRslcr's i LA COSTA APTS. S.17-3957. 10111·h. r\i'lu.o;h <' -('lub \\'lll1 1 & 2 Bedroom 2 BR upstairs apl. Ne\v w/v.• un1que 1\quabl\r, fountains e Bullt-~ns e Shag carpets t'pt thruout. Drps, disposal, rind forn1al ii:ardt>I\.'"-. All e O,·apes • \\'alk ln c~ bltlns, Gnr. 962-4518 for part of 1hr South Col\St's e Sv,.im1n ln& Pool appt to see. fin<'~! Hpa1·tn1ent 1'l'lmn1un-e Bar-b-Qucs Z BR IO\\'nhousc w/frplc, 11>'· _ • F:ncloserl Carat;<' "'hr'.""· •""'· •""· ' """""'"' """'"' !"!"' s'"· I All Ut1'lit1'es Par'd . COLDWELL, BANKER .. CO. MANAGING AGENT $185. 962""6846 2 Bt•(hOOlll l1~1m $~. ~~----------="'=c-'-cc-'~~-~ --Dehl\<' :1 b('('!ruon1 365 EXTRA .1~ 2 b_r. utll.s pd. r.IO<lf'l!t Ol)('n ~ A.J\f. to 6 P .f\I Adult~. no prls \\'alk1ng d1:<tancf' !o Rhoppin~ cl"nler. ;,;Ap:::cl:: . .::U.::nfv=rn.;.;;... __ _;365c:;:, Apt. Unfum. Costa MeN Cost• Meu Cp"· d'P'· patw. "° J>e"· VERSAILLES Kleis OK. $165. 53&-0121 on the BLUFFS at NEWPORT 354 Avocado St., C.M. 642·9708 DELUXE APARTMENTS Alr Cond • Frplc's • 3 Swtm· mln&' Pools -Health Spa . Tennis c.ourts • Game and Billiard Room. 1 BR. From $160 1 BR. ~ Den From $180 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. ITI4) 567-8020 RENTAI. OFFICE OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM New ctur,lexes & trip exes e 2 BR . adults -$195. e 3 BR -1 child -$295. Beaut., new, spacious apts w/fncd yards, patios&: quiet privacy. No pets. 151 E. Bay St. (at Fullerton St.), C.M. PHONE: 642·4837 Perk·llke Surrounding QUIEi' DELUXE 1, 2 I: 3 BR APTS. ALSO FURN BACHELOR Pvt. Patios * Htd. Pools Nr Shop'g * Adillts Only Martinique Apts. Im Santa Ana Ave,, C.M. Mgr. Apt. 113 646-5542 * * $110 * * 3 Br. 2 ~ Ba, newly painted. Bltn.s, crpt/dTps, encl patio. Nr 1chl!1 I: llhop'g. Children ok. No pell. 880 Ctnttt St, CM. call Mon't, Wed's & Fri's 1-5 pm., Tues 10 11:30 am. All day Wknds. 642-83«> 3 BEDRM. 2 Bath. $255. Boout. New WHllNy 21 apts. Pool, SJN, tush ldscpg. Adults.no pets. 151 E. 21st., Cost a Mesa. 646 1666. EASTSIDE -2 Br. $165. Quiet -very clean -no pets. Cpts/drps.eocl. g a r a g e . ~B Santa Ana Ave., C.M. ~ bdr.Jl:am:·~3 :30 • • oJ --·· • pm. . UPPER, clean 2 Br. encl Laguna 0.-ch 2 BR, 2 BA, dfon w/Wf'I bar, Fron1 i\.f"'.\'llO!'I Rll·d .. turn at HARBOR GREENS Fumlshed & Unfurnished loll'! of slorttige, dis!11 .. ·asher. Hosp11;1! Hna<t t I hJr,.·k I ~ .... ~ ....... ,....,..,,...,, Sf'lf~IC'an 0\'1"11, 2-car gar, 2 atio1 •' l'.1• lfh' C\1a~t Ill\)' Ill •SHAD'' F:l;,-l!l-Pool & Garden blks lo beach, Heisler Pnrk Lido 1~11•1 ro r111ran1·t'. ' $140-$170 ChildrPn Ask & shopping. $250 mo. lsr. 900 Ca.g111•) ..;1nr. Nl'\l"porl ahoul frrl' luii1 .. pl11.n. \\l~ler, trash pickup & Bt·al·h, (';-. !l2tif..O. Trlephonr· 1;~2-364.'i gardeM>r i~I. 49-t-9597. i71 II 1~Jj.(XA~J -.--· -~-~-- Bocholors • 1 Bdrm• Laguno Niguel PARK N.EWPORT I Huntington Buch F•om $130 to $215 mo 2 Bdrm•• 3 Bdrm• LAGUNA NIGUEL APARTMENTS llliNTI,Gl'ON <>a' rl "" 1\fll..i. Heil fl1 Bo!sa Chica. lY2 or 2 Full Baths Apartments th ba I S46-J323. Con1pare .... Sf'e 1 Br., l Ba.: $185 e 2 81'. I Oft e Y \l'hat yot!"11• mt&Stng. t'r. Master size ~roorna w / Ba: sm. e 2 Br., 2 Ba.: Luxury aparllncnt Jiving ov· SIJ0.-$200. high beam ceilings, large $235 ~rlooking the \Valer Enjoy =~'=~~-----Uving room w/gas or .. 000 h :. . DEWXE Apt-pr1v . patio, \Vood burning fittplace. lncld Gas, TV Cahlr ,\, \\'lr .750. l'allh :'l~a, 1 !\Vim· 1 F J d · 1 I 7 I h d tnusk. 6 poo s, sauna. fC'n-Convenlent laundry llr!'a u ly crpt '"' drpd. R('(' ~ na poo 9• ig te ten· nis. $130. Spacious Poolside oft kitchen. Ellclosed pa· facil. Htd Pool. BBQ 11.rea. ms courts, plus miles of tlos. 2 swimming pools, 29041 Alonla Avl'. bicycle trails, pu!tlng, shuf· Bungalow SlSO. 846--0259. S;&-una. rec_reation faclll· 499-2277 ,1r 493-5274 ficboard, croquet. Junior l's ties. Security guard. No from $174.50 monthly: alllO l 1 .----'------ pets, Lido Isle and 2-bctdroom plans and l ltent• Models 0 n 'til 8 . 2-story town hou!ltls. Elec-'iiiiiiiiiiiii pe pm. e BA YFRON1-3 J~R. 2 ba. tric kitrhcns, private patios I 2700 Peterson Way, CM all bltns in1·l \\·ashcr/di'Yer or hah:onie!I, ca rpetin~. clra · Rooms 400 nr Hirbor Blvd & & freezer, frplc, gHr. S.)j(} per!es. Subl e11·11ncan park----------- Ad mo, yrly lse. Avail Oct. lst. ing with elevarnrs. Opllon11.I ROOMS $18 Yi'k. up w/kit. ams 6i~7687. maid service. Just north ol $30. ,,.,.k up Apts. l.olv 546-5025 Mesa Verde Fashion Island el Jamboree monthly rate!I 2376 Newport ----------1 and San Joaquin Hill!! Road. Blvd. CM. 548-9755. DELUXE 2 " 3 BR .. 2 Ba. Telephone 1n4J 6«-1900 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!!!!\ encl. i:Or. $155 up. Rental for tt:ntal WonnaHon CUTE 1 BR. E/side. For Ofc., 3095 Mace AVf! .. t--.E,-,A'°S'"T''B"L;;U,,:iF.;F::;•.::__ adults over 35. No pel.s. _546-_;_1:.:034.:..:_·~~----Gar. $110/mo. 548-W/'. Villa Granade .Apts. Newport Beach 9 TOWNHOUSE • Spaciou!I 4 1 & 2 BR. Adults, no pets. BR. 2'~ Ba,, balconies. BAY lr\1 EAOOWS AP'I'S. * 3 BR. 2BA. 1 blk lo beach. frplc., \vet bar, 11.Hached 2 387 W. Bay St. CM 646-0073 Yearly. car garage. lSOO sq. rt. DELUXE Bdrm .• pvt home, ' 1hare beth w/l tenant. ' $75/mo. Eves. wk n d • 64&-2042. \\'llL shat·1• n1y Newporl h o 111 P. buline11s lady, kit 646-661J. lovely \l"ilh priv. 2 BR. Shag crpt &. dl'pl!. Call 673-245.5. S375hno. Bltns. Encl gar. Nr. OCC. LUX. bayfront 3 Br 2 Ba, e f:XEClITIVF. · To"•nhou~ 1..RGpl furn room. Working Upstairs. $145. 552-9786. pier avail. $4:JO }Tly. 224 -Spacious J BR .. den, 3 Ba., :cu el or lady a Ione . Dana Point 20th SL 673-S.~78. frplc., 1\·r.c bar. attached 2 1 =mm--~·------car garage. ~ sq. tt. Room & Board 405 OCEAN view spac 2 BR 2 DELUXE Apt. 3 BR. Jol'plc. Sii0/n10. BA k •1 · d . .' Yearly. 215 33rd St. Call art . Pool F,,,.1,.1, .• , _ ROOM , board A: Jaundl7f for , !'lun en iv rm, tn1ng 6 pm, or wknds 67H223. " an>a. bltns, 1.'T"pls, drf"!, Nr. CclM Hig h School elderly, rr.lired gentleman. patio & yard. 837-3927 or 1 BR. Apl. Yearly. Sl"r."1t rno. 8:1!°> An1igos W11.y, NB 644-29!11 Refined private home in i 837-5178. no pets. LUXURY beach al't'a. Family con. NEW OCEAN vtE\V APT. Call 673-0957 eves Ir "'kt'nds OCEANFRONT 8Ultation re q u• s t e d , 2 BR, SUKI 1 Br, 1 ba apt, 1 blk to bay or Brand nrw. 3 <'Or prk1:. <I =m-_1_396~. ,..-----~~· 968-3563 C.Olleet it toll oc~. Yrly, S l 6 5 I m o. Bdrrn., dinin~ rm.. hui:I'. Guest Home • 415 , 6'5-4600. quality residf"nc<". S:-00 & *PRIVATE ·1t.OOM* ;_H~u~n~ll~na;;;ton;;::~Bo~•;ch;;;;;;;;CN~EW 3 Br., 2 Ba Nf'· ocean S600/mo. Yrly. 67'j...1972 or tor ambulatory la(ty, Cood • Gokl...,_, ~wshr, tel; U70 ~· food, nice cheeifut IUl'- ON BEACH '• lboa Blvd. & '3St. 644-<3'0 SPACIOUS 2 ••· 2 BA. roundln•~ 1 blk. to boy, 1 blk. to * Call 548·41SI * gar. Nr. 0CC & shop'g. 2 BR, 2 BA Unl. Fr. $2'51 Adults, no pets. 2984 Royal 2 BR. Furn Fr. $308 CLASSIFIED HOURS ocean. Yearly. $2SO/ COME..aee, Nve )'OUI' partnt ' ma. Bkr. 67~91f . cared~ u you would do,' Palm Dr. $152/mo , ADULTS ONLY &G-3515. 1 Furniture Available 3 BOR4\'J. 2 Ba upper tri-plex. C a r p ets.drapes-rllshwuher Carpeta, drapes. Q u i e t . heated pool-aunu-tennls Adults, no peta. 2 2 8 1 ttc toom-ooetlll views Fordham. O&ys 64&-1689; patlow.mple parldna: eve 646-4939. Secw1ty Guards. DELUXE 2 Br, 11> Ba Stud;o HUNTINGTON "" deaHnd street. CfJ>". PACIFIC drps, pool, bltns, prlv. patios. $155. 1 child ok. No pets. 548-TI54. 711 OCEAN AVE .• H.B. (714) 536-1487 Otc open 10 am.& pm DaUy Advt"rtii;crs may place 1heir ads by telephone i :OO a.m. tn 5:30 p.m. Munc&&y thru Fridll.y ~ to noon f'aturday COST A MESA OFFICE J..10 w. Ray 642-5678 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport Blvd. 642--5678 BA YF1tONT \Valk to beach Ume pejnlttJns. 6«2-92'18 , Lrg 3 BR, 2 BA, partly furn V•catlon Rentals 425 or unfurn. Util. pd, Crpted 1----------1 draped. dock a\"ail, Adlt.s. HA \VA I I -Lux . Exec. 615-6934. Bayfront home, 2 Ba, 2 Ba. SEACUIT Manor Apt1!. 2 $500/mo. Car a ·Y a I I. Br. $16( Pool, Crpts, drps. m-8886. bltns. garb. di~pl. 1523 Rentals ta Shara ' 4lO Placentia Av<'. Ask 11bou! our discount. 348-2682 * ROOf\.!MATE ltEfo,ERRALS * SPAC 2 A: 3 Br apt $140 up. WILLIAM WALTERS CO. HUNTINGTON BEACH BALBOA 1Bay Ck.lb. Luxury :.! Bl'. 2 b11, rncl lerTfl.C('. Waterfront. Lell8e S500 mo . Awil B.JW. 640--0060. Find The Ideal Roommalr Screef"l('d Clnt!I Shr &: Save \\'F. r·uRNISH: Pool, cpUdrp, bltns, kids !!!!!J!!!'!l"~~~'!"!!!!!!!!!'l l 17875 Beach Blvd. ok. Children Welcome 5~!220 2316 eon,.. No. 5 ... 642-11)35 • FAMILY AFFAIR • LAGUNA BEACH 1996 Maple No. 1 · · •• 642-3813 1, 2 & 3 BR'.11. $155 to $235 '..!22 Forest Ave. EASTBLUFF 2 br, 71,11 ha, all elec, quality C/D, fpl, dbl gar, comm pool, av! 10/12. 64-H405. 1 BR. Chlldrei:i O.K., pool, Tennis ct, pool, BBQ, child 494-9466 laurld. tac. $150 all ulil pd. play a?Ta. Day care center, S AN CLEMENTE 2 BR, 114 Ba., trplc., patio, I 645--0934, Apt 9, 3 O 7 3 story rec. bklg. lnC'I. IY"' 305 N. El Camino Real blk from ocean. $250 per Avocado, C.M. &. party rms. DESIGNED 492-4420 mo. 4915 River, 61~3906 -aft DELUXE 1 & 2 BR, 1 & 2 FOR THE GRO\VING 6p.n1. ba. $160 up. Pool. Adults. F A l\f IL 'i ·. SEE nJRN. ~~ttT::e C5~-~ NE\VPORT Pen i n s u I a Util pd 324 E ~th St MODELS. <n4> 842-0629, Y<'arly'~. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, "'>-<'fc-1 · · IN •• 6401 WARNER AVE. cL••s1FIED .,.. ,.,,. ,,_ $250. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, $775. ** B£AlJTIFUL 1 " 2 BR. VACANT-2 BR .. W/W DEADLINES ll;6;,1i;-~.::191=2:.,•::'..:'.::~c;::'=s=- c.ontemPorary Garden Apt. crpts. & drps., good lo-Deadline for copy A: killl 3BR, 2BA. yearly, S2i5 nw. Pa"--t I I cation -welk to mojor i& 5:30 p.m. the day be· Blllns. C"'ts, drapes. c1 ... ~. r P c • • poo · for publk:&tion, except • .. $155-$170. Call 54&-5163. shopping c • n t e r s • for Sunday A: 1.1nnda,y to bch. 673-2571 E·SIDE 2 BR, $150 Move today! $150. per Editions wtw!n detdllne NEWLY decor. upper 3 BR, mo. Call Mr. Snider, b Saturday, ~.2 noon. 2 ba., trptc. yrly lease. Nf'v.·· Bltns, w/w, relrig, Pool. Adults, no pets. 642-95ai. 962-4471 agt. CLASSIFIED port Shore~. 642·~. * Stunning 2 &: 3 BR., XTRA nice 2 BR, apt, gld REGULATIONS 2 BR. close lo beach. No 2 ba., pool, rec area. shg cpta, dps, bltns, ref, ERRORS: Advf'"rtiseni pel!I. $223. 645-5630. no W. 18th St, C.M. dshw11hr. Fncd yd., encl &ar s hould chl"Ck their 11.<b! Oto. Wil1lam110n RJtr 548-6570 le lndry. I child OK. 780'2 J!lllY &. report rrroni OLX 2 1 " 2 BR w/tum avail. Hid II ll S Be h Bl • Sa Immediately. THE · Br., 2 Ba !or quil"l pool. $130 &: up. Adults. 853 · 0 l. nr. ac · • n r ·AILY PILOT Assumes adult!!. Palk>, tndry, ne11• Center St 645-8965 D cgo Fwy. Sl7 m 0 · liability for the· fir1t In· paint & crpll. Sl.85. 642-ll76. ' ' 64V-U66/89H149. cor-t 1---•on only. Liie 'BR .. ~-114" 1~11 ''"'" Jqc::l"U 3 ~rooms. sm mo. 5104 · • wuwu. ;). "" IMMED OCCUPANCY Tulip I..arw, Cc.ta Mesa. • CANCELLATIONS: Neplune. "'98-fi7>17 after S Call for ~2106. New 2 & 3 Br apts When kUling an ad be pm. 64&-4984. Dbl rarare, dshwahr !lure to make " rt'Cord NEWLY dee. 2 Br., new Cor lluntl~on/Adam!I, H.B. ot the Kll.L NUMBER Newport Heights crpt.a:, drps, paint, incl bltna, 536-1188 1tlven you by your ad gar &: patio. $165. 54!r1693. ;-1 -;8;;R,..-,;;:;-;~o::::;:.::::c--:=: II taker L!I receipt of yt1ur * NICE 2 Br. Pool. 9.uldeck. Prl 1 vwnhouse-patlo, cancellatlon. This kill CID Adi • TROPICAL POOL • dbl gar, crptlng, drapea, number must be' prri-n .. 1' ear. ts.a no pets. 2 Br ltUIHo, 1"' ba. trpl. 145 bit.in kltch, trplc & pooJ. 5cntat by the advt"rtiser """et. $l70. 5 4--4 9 2 2 • Room1nalcs Who Want to Shr Roommates Who Need to Shr CALL lTI4 l 53.1--0302 Roommale Referral Service LADY share iny lovel,)' 4 Br ~ Ba. home. Frpl c . Dlahea, u~n1, wahl'/dryer, 8thwr. L1'g Yl'd. Nr. ?.1ay Co. $100/mo. Please no 1moker•. no drinkers . ~2442 . RMMATF.. male or feml , lo share 2 Br. fum apt w/aundeck. $100 -+ ·~ utils. Avail immcd. Cd K, 546-3472. SHARE hae w/grad. 2 I~. BR's mOO. kil, garde:n, $107/mo. &l.~1543 9-6 dys. M prcfd. WORKING &irl aver n Wre Hpt In Fountain Valley w /aame. 962~ ! G1rage1 for Rent 435 SINGLE t!nclo~ g a r , Wl•lde C.M. Auto o r atotage only S 2 0 I l'of o, ~1730 • 6'2-M22. WANTED: Carage to rent, turnlture ator~. Newport Area. 6T3-4$2>. Offlco Rontol E. 18th St., No. 15. 5'8-1168. Leue. $155 mo. Call collect in cue of a di::putt. 642-llOOl. PR.IV. Patio. 2 BR. Cl'ptl, 2ll-371Hl800, call eves, all CANCEU..A.TION OR $170-2 BR. 2 Sn Stud\o. Gar, 4000 Sq. ft. Qfnce space Adj drp11., bl.t·in.c, gar. No pets. _d_ay~wee_,o-c,"~"-:c:"''~· =~--·II CORRECTION OF NEW priv patio I: lndry. Bltr., 10 il OYttlooking Oranat $1«1/mo. 557-al!IO * MOVE IN TODAY * AD BEFORE RUNNING ~ l l·-°'-'-.ld'-l,_pe_t_cok_._6'-1l'->.J-"'108:::.... _ Cnunty Airport. Consi~ta I I LR.G, sunny 1 Br. upper Spac: 2 Ir 3 BR In 4-plex. All ~vr.ry eftort Is m11dr tn ff'('flptlon arc:i. 7 Individual nu crpta. drps, bl.tns. retrli. extru. Pool, ttic bldg, Kids klll or corttet a nrw ad Mn Ctemente ofll<:ft:, lg~ conft'tt~ room t.l\llt has been ordered. It 11ict'OUnllt11t area. 38c Pt'.r $140/mo. M5-5270, 833-3540. \W:ICOm~. From S139. See bul Wt' cannot guaran-OIARMING quiet Ocean & BAOIELOR a,pt, no cookln&. Mlf, 17311 Ktebon' "B". tee to do so until thr ad aarden view apt, 2 BR. Bar, ~"'=· ~!1~·~2_13;_:~63'-'-4-'-321-,-"1. __ _ 1 adult, no pell. $75/Jnl). ;'968-.;:;:..:75::1;,0 _;,°'c,..:-84-770-:-4=260=-·-,--~il hill! APllOlred in th. e prlv i'ar, blk to heh & shop-OFrtCE and/or d~k space UJ~,;.C..:;n.;;ler.;:...;:.St::. -64'-2-0848._.:.:;.. __ 12 BR, frplc, btlnll, shag Ir. papcT. pins. $165., 492-0492. avail . now. llandy to San ~ -V •·--~·-b Die&o 1'Wy. Located Ja 2 BDRM 1tudl•>.. "° pell. -~· <l'l' <-" f!!>ac-. J'.ME.A-UNE ADS: -a ..._ .,o: __... t.wn. Nr park It IOhM. "nMSO ad!l arc itricUy S•n Ju.ft Capistrano Laguna Nieuel. 831-1400. ;'.f.1.J:10. ........ ........ ........... <lll<tn!n welcome. No petl. cub In advance, by maJt $185 mo. New 2 br, C'pls, omCE-Stoft. 525 lq. n. oa I .:;;,i...c;;.:;-L'------1 $160. 9884J833. or l.t any on~ o our of· AP... tr pd _ _ St. pq. UUI. 2152 Nt•pcct J OC'fS. NO phOne ordm. ... "'" w ' .. ~070": Blvd., CM 1t1 1252 QUICK CASH 3 BR "°",,._· Cpt, rth11, THE DAtLY P ILOT re· 12lll43l-n&2 anytime. d'.7\.'C. Ol.Ydrrn. 2 inQn Kl'Vtl the 11&ht to clL'I· 4pt PWSH am&li 3-ofnce lldte, 'I pool•. Bulllhard It. Adami. 11fy, edit, ctntor or n-F~·~. or Unfurn. 370 Newport Ctrrter. 6ff.111• THROU"H A ,.._1486· ru ...... •dv•rtt .. m'"'· 642-J013 U 2 BR, 1% bA. trplc. patio, and 10 change Its r atr1 Cott• MeN 2 Adjolnln& o1ftces, busy DAILY PILOT ~ncl gar. Walk to beach. No & ~lat\ons \\'ilhout l~nteUOn C.M. $90. Utll'• dof<t. $195/mo. ~1050. p•lo' ootlce. 9fe8liJUIU 2() lnol. 114U'.60. LGt. 2 BR in quiet 4·ple:x . CLASSIFIED Splltkllrc New Adult Apt11. OROUNO lloor-pk&-nr hi? WANT AD $!!<!. Encl ..... patio, lllOd MAILING ADDRESS I BR. Fum. 1190. "'° ... n, IJOO. 'lbU•~ I yrd. No pell, 842--4$49. p, O. Box l"60, 2 BR, 2 BA furn '245 1738 Anaheim, CM ~Jl54 ••2 5671 LARGE 2 BR l BA, ~ A ~ Mesa Private patkls. lush for91I PROn:sstONAL SUttt .. • drapn, Ph: IC-ttlA/Eves. SD626 setunr. Carport$, gas paid. to p . 11eU at Bob& Chica 142~. u~ E. 20th St .• C.l\t. 54-0137 11.a. smfmor-IM6-u& ------ ' • r I I I • • t I , .. I~[ llSJ[ ....;..-1~ 1---1~1 ~[ ~~J[ll1~J11 Holo Wanroa.~·r. F 710 ASSEMBLER ror smaU f:lcc· Offlte 11.mol 440 Found tlrM edsl 550 Lo•t SSS Dri-Y1w•y1 !="-"-=---:-:-:-'.= O'-EK ipece avallablco $50 mo. 'MU provide fW'l"llfure ,, J5 mo. An5werin& 91!t'Vioe av&Uable. 222 Forest A\lt, Laauna Beed>, 494 9'68 DESK space aV£11able $50 mo. WW pron:le turntrur-. 11 $5 JDO, ~ 16ervl~ •va.ilable. 17875 Beach 8'Yd. Huntinaton Beaeb. 60-U2l BAY VIEW OFFICES Ot'IWie, Air-conditioned Redecorated. Udo area tealonomics, Bkr. 875-6100 CDRONA de! Mar. Dlx air cond. otfice11. Up to 2500 l!llJ. ft . Prer.tige bldg. Xlnt prll:g. 67>-6900. Bu1lne11 Rental 445 ' 'T H E FACTORY", con- irisling of 32 unique boutique shops, hu 2 opening!! in the mall ranaing from S80 ffiQ. Card, tob&cco Ii: yardage 1bopa esp, wanted. 425 l>lh SI., Newport Be a ch , 67:J....961li or 642-8520. 1136 ANAHEIM , CM Ground Door. pkg, nr fy,•y Toilet...$110-673-2654 PROF. aentlem.a.n. a d u I t FEMALE Irish &>Her, no teeth. R1verA~ C o u n l )' tag11. Vic Harbor V1t'W lllllS Cd M. 9·26. l)r. Stockton. 6n-tooo. FOUND: Small pt. Gt·rman Shepherd dog . FrnJ. Lt. brol-'.·n. i\hout 6 n1oi; old. Vic r.fonrovla St., C.M. ~~~\'). CHIH UAH UA type. Li.in~ hair . Black & 1·ream Crnr. Co!lrge & Baker. 546--01().1 . FOUN D. 2 yr old Samoyan. male. llunl Bch. Can'! krcp. 536-'..)')96. WHITE & gold J>"l'Sia n killl'!l in J-~Blufr. 640--0285 aft :\pm. ~tALf_: (small) Beaglt>. \'ir·: Harbor Shopping area. C111! 549-4390 aft 6. MALE-\\'hite w/tiger m;u·k- ingi;. 642-7257 r·nc1. vie: AJJS(I St. Newport 1-leight s. 'ftunUY of 3 need residential FOUND: Jou Jou 1um.. house from owner. Magnolia & \Varner vi t' 11 .B. 494--0737. Ex 632. 847-1993. ow==ER=_,.Jad>'-,,,-,.,wo-,.ul-.;d-li;ckc:e,-:a· 1 TIGER (par1 gro1vn 1 nice, Jrg 2 Br. apt. lat Ooor. Mesa Verde aN;>a. Gar. ti: atoraie rm. By Oct 546-1459 1 •oil . 15th. Call aft 5 pm, 548-6198. PUPPY, pl ('01\ie. mal<". Can· \VAHTEI> to ttnt, garage ln yon & W i I son . C.M. Dalla Point, San Clemente 54S-3187. Uft, Call 54&-123-1. Misc. Rentals FOR Rent oU street parking spaces 10x30, night lighting. $10/mo. 2"36-B Newport Blvd., ea.ta Mesa. 548-1322. .. ,. ]II) Pertonal1 530 PALM Ii CARD READINGS Past, pre!IE'nt &: tutltl"t. Irvint lndustnal Complexeg. 111• Ji 057-4299 after 5pm. '-;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiliiii~iiiiiil HALLORAN 'S la wn servil"e, lnstruc1i0tt • quo.lity\vorkmanshlp , Schools & instructions reliable, reasonable after 6 575 p.m., 962-9703. .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;.· -;;;;· ;;;;~JE X P E R T J a p a n e s e Gardener, know -how, upkeep, plant, Pf!llt. trim eleanup. 968-3486. AIRLINE & TRAVEL AGENCY CAREER TRAINING 610 E. 17th St. Santa Ana * LANDSCAPING * r-:cw lawns, S pr i ._ k I e rs , decks, cleanup. State He'd. 536-1225. DUTCH gardener, cmplt. ser.. call 5~2300 days or 213/6JG-5.463 p.m. exper., Cerrlt. Ar i e AL'S Landscaping. T r ee removal. Yard remodeling. Trash hauling, lot cleanup. Repair sprinklers, 673-ll66. EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. Complete gardening service Kama1anl, 646-4676. ?laater , P•tch, Rep•lr * PATCH PLASTERING All type!!. Free estimates Call 540--6825 Plumbing L.R. OTIS PLUMBING Remodels & Repairs. \\'a1er heate.~. disposals. furnaces, dshwshrs. m-3730 1tf/C & B/A. All Daily Pilot areas. Drains unclogged -$7.50 Sewer line to 100' -$15 * ~9-2502 * PLUMBING REPAIR No job too small * 642-3128 * COLE PLUMBING 24 ht. 6Cl'Vice. _ 645-1161 PLUMBING repairs and in- stallations, painting. Free Est. Call &: save. 839-0372. Remodel & Repair CUSTOM Home Remodeling Alterations. Kitchens. David Stewart AllSOC. 963--3131. Sewing/ Alter11i'lons Men/Women. Reas. Rates SlO min. Call 846-7450 Alteralions-642°5845 Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. Tile CERAMIC tile new & remodel. Free est. Small jobs welcome. 536-2426. Fixing -Bower -Pagan - Comply -ANEMIC 1ro mcch. manur. co. Nt"t:d \\'OO\ell w/icd vi5io n & dex· tcrity. llt'rrn & f/limc. Non- •n10ker req 'd. No 1•xper, ntc. Pleasan1 ·w o r k i n G t:onds. Send 111ro1mar.ion, Oassifi.J."d ad no. 522 c/o Daily f.>ilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. Assemblers tor clean room produclion Gf precision 1ncdical senso1'S &: Instrumentation. P!C'asant wkg cond . Som(' exp hrlptuJ. International Biophysics, 2700 Dupont Dr., Irvine. 833·:!300. ASSEMBLY SOLDERERS-WJitl:-: \\'RAP Experit>nced Irvlne 540-4450 NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Tempo Temporary 1-lelp ASSIST ANT to \VO mens ac- cessory manufactul"C'r. Must have gd. koowlerlge of sew· ing. 646-1910. ATTENTION Saleswomen & Men $25,000 to $50,000 Glamorous, excH ing, adven· turous sales career \\'ith Clubpaci!ica fly ing all of U.S. & Mexico. No age bar- riers. Earn as you learn. Mr. McDonald 557-4751 AUTOMOTIVE LOT BOY Mus~ be hard \\l()rker. Apply in person to Mr. T. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2480 I·larbor Blvd. Costa Mesa Auto Import car salesman. Orange! Countys most established dealers. Fritz Warren SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E. 1st, Santa Ana 547-0764 Automotive & Equipment Mechanic Salary S721-Vi64 Plus Fringe BcnC'fits Exper. on gasoline, diesel & propane maintcnanc!' & vehicle equipment. Final filing date 5 pm Oct. 6. Apply City 1-lall, 505 Forest Ave., Laguna Re a c h . 494-1124. Now, they've got a new cos-~~~~~""""""""" metic Vitamin B tipgtick. It's BABYSITTER, after school. tor girls with ANEMIC boy Must live vicin ity Newport friends. Island. 675-3976. HOUSEMAN-Driver, Chinese AVON CHRISTMAS EARN- gpeaking. Xl.nt refs. Avail INGS can help make the immed. (213) 387-5196. holidays happier for your Job W•nted, Female 702 entire lamily! It's easy sell-ing, fine Avon products for GOOD TYPIST our im!Sistible Christmas Will do your typing at Catalogue. Call No \V . hor homo, Wiii pickup 54t>-70<1. •nd clelJver loc•I H.B., BABYSITTER-Older or F V W I 7r-younge'I' \VOman needed 2 or • ., es , ~ per pt. I k b h 3 days a wt'('k for teacher. or wil wor Y our Prefer your home. Harbor call 147-3095. View School area. 6#-4976. P is for personality. publie BABYSITTER -J chi1d, my relations & pel'SE'rverence. ,home, J\fon. & Wed. eves. C is for clerical , eommon for 3 hrs. Prer. older sense & creative womaJ'I. 645-5184. background. Your co. needs Advice It help i n many nu1t- ter1. %13: 694-1350. Fully lie. La Kabra. can tor appt. EVERY BODY needs somMhUlg, try danctng! Call Ardet!e, 432-'1921 or 439-00. GREEN Parrot. very tame. Vic. D:h Street, N.B. Fami· ly pet. Reward! 212 30th St., N.B. BABYSITIER. my home. 3 Carpenter HOUSE OF CLEAN me! 673-545.l. children 9: 30 to 6:30 Tues. & -,..,.-..,-:-..,.,,_.,_,.,_,....,.-1 Floors, windows, crpt, walls. IMAGINATIVE, energetic Thurs. Ch\.'ll car. $10. day. HE1'GOM! I Miss You. '~M." A Ney:-li(e wilhoot dnlga! Sciertt.ol<lsY can handle your P~-can 4~ noW! AI.<X>HOLtCS Anonymous. p,,,.. ~721' '... wri\e p,o.,Hf1223, Oootl\ Men., I Clubs , W 1-n""' YOURSELF IN SOMEONE ELSE. DISCOVER DISCOVERY 114/835-6885 2131381·3393 REW ARD! White miniature poodle LA County-Reseda tags. Ans CoCo. 894-1973. GOLD pendant watch. Rose face. $50 Re"'-Wedding (ift. Please call 956--0287. PART Auss. Shep. lost vie. Back Bay. Call after 4 pm. "494-6606 LOST gray cat, unsexed n1ale in ~Bluff area. Reward. 640--0285 aft 3pm. "White Elepharits" over-run- ning your house? Turn them inlet "Cash" . _ . sell them thro a Daily Pilot Classified ad! LARGE OR SMALL 6 yrs. ln area. 642--6824. female, 30, M.A. English, 545-4197. All Types Work? Cut doors, LADY wants housecleaning & e e k s w o r t h w h i I e • BABYSITIER n e e d e d , panel, remodel, l i n i s h , wo rk, experienced. 0 w n re w a rding employment. 7.g 30 2 3 30 frame, repairs, etc. 962-1961. tran............tatiGn. Call 847-3637. S48-1635, 8 AM-2:30 PM. B ; · am,A t · ' C dpMm. """"" • ayv1ew p s. , MINOR home repairs. Plum-HOUSECLEANlNG, $ 2 . 5 O NEED help at home? We 644-4168. bing -carpentcy -painting . Hr. 0-wn trans. NB area. have Aides, Nurses. =B"'A~B~Y~s=rrr=E"R"°."""w~o-m-a-,-.~.ho~ roofing. Call 540......'i56ll. 673-2918. H 0 u sckprs, Companions. loves babies to care for our ---'-.,.-----Homemakers U p j o h n , • .0RPE1;ITRY • Rough & Janitorial 547-668!. two, our home, 4 days/wk. F1n1sh patio Tops & eement. ---------586-5790 aft 6 pm . 646--5971, 548-1594. Jeff's Cleaning Service SEC'TY, exp 'd .. l·girl offi ce BABYSIITER for 2 sml Carpet Service Residential -Commercial bkpg, pyrll, AP, etc. Call children Live in or out, San-* 64&-6384 * Marion, 894-2312. ta Ana. 557-0328. J~~~;~~ ~eu:1:~~~ L-.-.-d"s_c_•-p"'lng _____ Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 BABYSITIER, mature, my guard (Soil Retardants). LANDSCAPING Pr lime em pl oyme nt home. Occ'l weekdays. Htg Degreasers & all color for unique &: personalized w11nted. So, Calif. College, Bch. 963-3696. brighteners & 10 minute style in landscaping call Costa Mesa. Is now in BABYSITTER, my home, bleach for white carpets. James c. Elmer • Land· session. Many of our afternoons & eves. Save your money by saving sea.ping & Maintenunce Co. student~ would apprec pt Call 963-2695 * * * * * 1ne extta trips. Will clean "Renovating la.wn.'l, A ne· llme employ. P lease call BABYSITTER F o R 3 living rm., dining rm. & cessitr at this ttme ... Free 545--1178, e.xt 39, 9a.m-4pm. SMALL CH IL DRE N . hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, cit!. 646-722!' aft 5. ~elo Went•d. f.A & F 710 c6-;7'.:.>-.c~~c;AIT-..=50.PM0• ,· ,...--,,-* co"'h 110. Chair 15. I5 >'""I M'--:---------1 --------·• BARTENDER * Trader's Paradise 2~ ACRES No. Calif. Trtt1, close lo town & Jake. nooo. value. Tra(le for car, or 1? (7l4) 8.15"208 Cip,:NT h.u 4 BDRM 2 BA home in N, Costa Mesa - $10',tm. eq. Wiii trado ror 4·pln., CM. area. Phi MR. BLACK, ~U BKR. LOT in N LilJ<e Tahoe. In- cline Vlllage. UndefJP"oU.nd utU • Pavtd Streett. Trade ror bouM or duplex. 7lJ.<93.3502 REDECORATING. Trd Bui· -$800 .,,., biuearn " "'i<l1·foio brn wlwt "'°"" pillow IOfa of en val or add ca. 1'tl Olhr turn. f/5'11'1911 *' * * • ,J• • lines times dollars , 1 EXCllG. 2 hl'<'s, Big Bear Lakr. all or pt. of S9000 eq. fol' land, unl!s l1 mod. ca r. unliQue or cla~ic car . sub- 111 il. Bkr 646-3928/548-8651 Llke to trade? Our Trader'• Paradise column J1 for you! 5 IJne 5 days for 5 bucb. \VJLL trad~ '69 Pl:michc 90 T, 5 Sf.Id. :lS,000 mi. Xlnt conrl. Many rxlnla. S5000 value for Crui•r TS, F B Prd, 64.'Xi961. TRADE l5M eqty tn 4 Br, 3 Ba Nwpt Bch Eut Wulf condo. For eqty In hou~ ln tluntinaton Bch or Foonta.ln vo11., •• Me-3586 eve, * * * exp. is what counts, not _•_•_•_n_rv______ A Better Temporary Position Blue Beet Sl5 per shirt m<thod. I do work myself. BRICK, BLOCK & Ur9ently Needed BEAUTY operators, full or Good ref. 5.11-0101. Stone work. 645-8266 646-1903 Unskilled part time. Busy Huntington Pointing & • Clerks Beach Shop. 96IH080. Paperhanging • Packers • BEAUTICIAN W/NEAT Will Train APP E ARA NCE, FOR Ceiling• * SPARKLI NG WH ITE Ne\\' acoustical ceilings SEPT. sa.Je, big d I s c .. Any rime. 644-718.1 Rea.-.. 547-5846, wallpaper & hang- ing, 10,000. Sample! The Cement, Conc,.t• u ............ ---~~~~~1 7·~-~;;;.,"'ai"'""'--,"""""'""" FREE ideas. advice and * PAINTING -PAPERING estimates. All l charge for Interior Exterior is a beautirul job at a rcas. Lie. Insured Guaranteed price. 64~. Call Jlarris 642-4558 PATIOs-sIDEWALKS PROF. Painting, a.IM roofs. CEMENT CONTRACTOR accous. ~ii., lnter/extet. Call Max * * fi.4"-0087 Lic/In11. Free e.sl. 645-5191. • CUSTOM CEMENT V.10RK PAINTING • Hone1t, clean. Ortves, WALKS. 11atios. guaranteed llt'Ork, Uoemed pool decks. Don, 642-8514 &: insured. GT.:.-5740. PATIOS.PLANTERS PAINTING & PAPERING, AO Concrete work. Brick, l9 )'T'I in Harbor area. Uc & alumpstone wk. 894-3533.. bonded. Ref1 tum. 60--2358. PATIOS. walks, drives. Saw, PAINTING • Honest, clean, break, rmlOVe & replaoe guaranteed work. Llcenaed concrete. 54&-8668 for est. & Insured. 675--5740. Contractor PROF, painter, hone9t work, _,,,-,..,.------·I reas. Uc/Ins. lnt/u:t. free REMODEL or re no v a t e • est. Rl'!!s. 5484i'59. Gtll'll'!raJ contractor It: aons. FOR clean A: neat pa1ntfng; Uc. & bonded. 30 yn. exp. Interior, rea1. rate1. Cao Frtt est. 831·1109. Dick, ~ JACK TauJ a ne·Repalr PAINTING. Carpentry remod., addit. 20 yrs. exp. repaln. JB yrs i n ftl'f .. Sm. Ll<:'cl My Way Co, 547-0036. Jobe OK. Call Bob MHf46, Additions * Remodeling tt'a a br'tea ••• ..d )'Otlf Cetwlck & Son, Lle'd Items with eue. .. OallJ ~l * 519-2171) Pllol Oual1Ied. &CJ..'im. Nr.ver A Fee BUSY SHOP. 54S-9!J19. lnten•m Boat Manufacturing Cabinet Mlllmon Persannel Service Cabinet A11emblers 771 W. 20th, C.M. Exper, only. Will con~ider 642-7523 546-2.592 assembler trairn?e w/.som~ Interviewing 9-ll • 1-4 ex:per. ~().8(l(ll , Area Mgr. Tral,_ BOYS: FC'e Paid. Thl1 multi division r need two bO)'Jt to fill vacan- co. is seeitina; All exceptional cles on best newspaper boy aggreblve Individual growth crew. On I y experienced poa!Uon. Salary + romm + boys considered. Top pay bonus + insurance. Call JQ and bonus. Are you good Kelly; 133-2700. A!SO Fee enough to qualifY? U !IO Jobi. Dtnnls A ~is Per-cA.11: l sonnel A&ency of Irvine, 2082 ~3347 MJct>er ... 0r. --"B"'o"'Y;os'1"'2.•1•,-- ASSIMBLERS, PC Join Top Crew solllng Orange Ascemble ti: I01de' PC Cout'1 favot'lte Newspaper. boardt. MWtt be able to Work 2 evening11 and Satur· t'f!COfP'liie parts1 know mlor day. Generous Commission code, do hand aoklulng & And Bonu11. Ml'lka Money read schematics. Accepting and Keep up '"'Ith Sc:ho(IJ. applications for l e 1 t I n a ~'Ork, too. 5.57-{1;7~. t< dall>. IOYS ODETICS, INC. '•• 10-u 10 deuvo.~ .,..,... 1146 So. M111cbeltor • In the Dana Point Sll.11 Oe- J\nanelm mcnte are.u. Equal Oppor. Emp'°>"r DAILY PILOT M/F 492MlO Sell tdlt ...... _, Call 6C.lfll Now! Cl.A8SmED will ..U IU w di!~. Stpltmbtr 27, l9n -' PILOT·AD'IEj!TlSER JOIN THE 'SELLERS CIRCLE' • WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR YOU ••• . AIR CONDITIONING ~ ~ ~ ~ r-;;-1 If you sell a service and don 't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Service Directory (classifications 600-699 in the classified ad section daily) gives you an advantage you get through no other advertising medium. It reach- es customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell. If your service isn't listed, we'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone right now and reserve yuur space in the "Sellers Circle" •.. Your Direct Line to Directory Results ., 642-5678 I ; I DAILY PILOT 1 C'LASSIFIED AD, DEPARTMENT • .. _ -.. ,. ..... .. -~. .... ,,. .... -.. -,._.,, _, ,. .. ; .. • ,... ... ,. ... • "' •• ,, .... • .. t . . . ......... . .. •• ' ' ' ' " ' I . ' ' ' ' ' .. ' I I " , ' !W!!"'~'~...,.~'~·~Stp~~u~m~ ... ~~2~1,~1•~1~,~~~~~;·1~,~~~·;·~.,..~~~~·~,..,~~;-~""'~~~~~·~j!.._:~-."S~'ax~M!!M!!••~·--.......;··~--~·;·~'";c~-~-;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~llll!!!llf;-1!!!!! !fa c ~"-]flI) ! r....,,_ 1[11] .__[ _ .... .,_-__JlllIJ r L•-•>-ltfil[ L_ _L4*_»-__,)(fi]ll----' A W ~ u IF 710 u.1 W H I W ntod M • ~ 110 Hill» Wonted.MI.I' 711 l ·-------1~~!!')!~~~~~1 Hei,. W""tod, M-& F 710 DAILY PILOT f11 ...... I~ Help .,.,_, m ~ P •ntod, M & F 710 • P • , • r ~elp W•ntod, MI F 7ll HelpWented, M & F 710 Appllenc:eo Cet.t.rle Penonnel OELIV>JW or DA IL y IIAOI 0..-. l»llWtt. Help Wonted, MI F 710 l!.E. SALES s..r...,.,. YOUNG SECRETARY F-R'-E-. E_Z_E_R-,-,-,-,-,-.-h I Cuhiert, counter 1lrl11, elc. PJWT, SUNDAY ONL\', ro Uc'd. AStra.cUw. Ca I I ---------1 DO IT NOW! ROUTE SALES LEGAL TRNE TO $600 with expt>r, ~·antt'(i fOf' r.11ptd· Cold.llPQI, nt'tlr ~. frost \Voricl"&" hours, Mon thrt.1 newapaperboys, Requl.ns 66-5.!'m of 6't2-tli)I. \Ve're on thti move and n~ 1'°f'f' Pa.kl. l...oc-al otnce ol this OPllOl"tunity you can't A.fiord ly 8~'lf'tK ronlp&ny :'illi-;:t fttt, $130. or be$t otr. t~ri 7 am to 3 pan. AH holi· the use of a StaOon Wagon ~tl~O~us=ECLE=~AN=lN=G~~,-~da-y MANAGEMENT TRNE brlp! If you "''llnl a PrnfH> multl diYiskJn ro, s~ks 10 Pbfl up. J oin lhia e;oi;'-.-if· havf' xlnt lypini.: iJOJb • 541:7-4.<119 aft 5. days oU. Call 833-8666 aftu or Van. Contact Mr, Harry wk, 8 hnl, $18. References. Tht-equitable Uff' assurn.l'IC't' slonaJ Career . not ju.st a i!'3.gM" dependable-hv:tlvidu81 in& field & w11.teh yoor ~· ShOr thand fll't'f Call for ECO -.:_::::_:::__d-- 1 ---1 Seel 330 IV Ca !OC!e!y of the United States ill! ak for this fast grou·h'll: a.i.tt.. ~-k, double. ,.,11 L""' appt, Coast Cati1.111Aran, R · ND. Ir" e • n •P. l pm. ey, est Bay St., II aftt>t 61 644-8614. nu a salt's posilion Opt.•n. job· and are w ng tom t id ""''' ... , , 493.~. plilllitei & T\':c. Ounlap'a.. Ci\NVAS ~ • !\file, O>sta Me!l8 Hous Ml .... r-Sltter Sa.la.ry $7,200 pt'!' yr + n Suctt':u Commlttmenl I :Wary + romm, + ro._pe. Phillps, $33-1700. DcMis I 1~1~ Nt"~-port Blvd .• C.l\f. Kmwlcdgl! of boo.t8 l'll'C. To D~ELIV;;'ii';:'rn""vO:-~,~,-AN-, --~~~ For "''knds only, .Jve·in Sal comni. 4 yr. training pro-want to talk lo YOU! l...ook ~~;u~, ~fl 't~o ~el~, Dennis Pt>~Mrl All:f'nt'y of !">IS-Til!O. measure & fit boe.t coven&: ITl&J'ried. Early ~ da NA El al U1e bt!nelitai • expandin& • ·••w. A :'Wl ~ 0 · h-v\n1\ 2082 MlcheJ!IOn Or. ]~ ---~--------........ ~ .. per Y· "'1:· nploycr gran1 lending to sales ALL. Departments. PLUS Dennis & Dennis Pl!nntntl ...._._ _ __.,__ ~ 1-tAYTAG rr-P<)irman lui1 cush.\on5. 501 29th. St., P8.P'!r route. No coUectmns. pays tel'. mgn1t Rctail or dil"l'('t sales Agc>ncy of Irvine. 2082 SECflETARY .for 1 g1d ore. _.........__ V "'aSh{'rs $.'l."i. Id $100. Can Newport Beach.. C.ood pa)·. 5 4 6-I 7 8 o. UNKEL AGENC\' ~ •-·nd -~~ C Ne\\' I-Jomes Sales, four new A-·--typ• 1 m·-• 1 uu.c"-6 • ..,.... ·~._.,.., onr<H'I t.hchel!on Dr.. ,, ......... ,.. s a """' • I deliver wl .)1'. iWlrn. S46-6427 181" N B ad .. tracts? Some positions SaJ. IID1 E Sii 'd o c CA RPET cleaner or hclpcr.l'°~~~-c.,~~~~~~ ;.r o. ro way, ~\ Larry Cather .835-4.'>45, ext · \N", • f'{'Q • • • Antique's IOO I fi3!1-17i~_. ___ _ Exp pref. 1740 Superior, DE'NTAL A SS I S T ANT ~ 541 -3323 305, An equal 0 pp or . Bl)' + ConunWions, others SAIC'ii: Airport 111'-"'· }<'{'It' appt Cltll ·---- Guarantt>ed Draws high per-FRONT & CENTER :>.57-tlll I \\' AS 1-1 F. R ~. Dry r r :-: . c .M. Romaync or Sharyn. Grea~ opportunity for HOUSEKEEPER. 7:30-4: :ID, employer. C't'nt bonus, paid vacaHons. That'.-where yoo'll IK> in this S""DVtC L~ ·t· 1t,,, ·in * OLD STOVE * ri1sh\¥ashr·rs rr~·oncht Lollf'(t. CAR LOT MAN career. \Vil! train )'QU to 5 days wk, Santa Ana. Taki! MECHA.!lflC ~f--'ical and Ufe Insura....... I "· •-· . b I sh' <:+I'-.-~ s a ...,11 even g Smalll'.'r i•ld 111,ll"l hurn1rn;:: £ ll :i r n I),, It v r r c d teach preventive dentistry I: f 7 I ""' ,.,_..-a"'1""-'s JO 1\8 a a ion nl'"' & Sale.sn1an-lu~ man. 1 care o yr o d , ln n}Orn. \llith smog li<'f'nse. Ha1-e Olvt\ DJ it NO\V~ It's Your niove! show atlvisor. S-100 ~·arr.lrobf> .... ••• """· ~'"'• , __ 1,.,.. sto\"t>' '1 hr-lo·~ ,111 i.111, (1,1111 ."dt1-~121S/'1 \'I-j!i:'ll ~rust he experienced! Steady asmt &reat boss. ;at. Call Barbara Heffner !16-8756 tools. Call 546-1757 •· ,. • ..,. ,. ' " .,..,.._ "' doo '.\ t k ---job. Frln&e bt•11Cfils, pleas-1-1aen Hayes, s 4 0-605 5. . Call JOllN SE\'1'10UH. + 4 wks varation at this Ex f r ll I ti I', . ,.,.,i, Jnr .. •) \\Or · 1 Rent w~shers/ Ory1r5 ~ -I 2 aft 4:30 pm. AIRPORT TEXACO CALL n6-Wl spot. r7'>1lt\, Call Kim Clark, p pre • I u or p n\e bur l'OUht l•1 • rral n11•,. \\ hron ~·-• II ". ".,11 ,,, '''''· ant working L'Onditiollll. Ap-......:.ta Agency, 7 9 0 HOUSEKEEP~ Do 4678 Cam"'"" Dr. N.B. Y OU .,~., .....!..:......, "" 1 & ..... . avail. App y Shell Station, fin sl t 1 , , 1 1 -" ,. u ply in person only! St-e Mr. Harbor 'Bl, CM ~""· mt'Slic .. ~~ • SE M R ,,...,.£""-'· ......-nn s '"'",11115 171h & lrvnl(', N.B. i. 1.,( "a1 •'t sane 111~ I • 6."l!l 120.! • help needed by l\1other. 6 MEDICAL receptionist husy Prn'Onnel Agen<'y of lr.'lnl', 11, tM1f du1n't f111l .. h .,<, 11'-. ---------Nielsen, Teccy Buick, 5th &: DENTAL Assistant OrlOO. hrs day, 2 x week. $2.50 hr. Realty & Investment 21)!2 !\tichelson Dr. SERVICE Slat1011 Sa!<'sman qu11r 111~h·d \ SHI ' O\"l,<lt ~'00 i1asl!K'r", .1,1~<~. \Valnu!, 1-luntington Beach. dontii· <ha,·-,·d·. matu••, orthopedic offiice. Exp nec ....... ... ,.,,. 111 ,.,. 11"•'r 11<1rs n•11 1 ":N '" ~ '" \VestcliU 642-0239. e 847-7614 e n1n:ua'fnc. ~-xJ)('r. me. AAni , a.-.11Uj: 11ol1 ''H•il d 1a"" 1 ... · ·· · Christmas Money txprr only. 842-7775. Real Estate Sales SALESMAN Lie. pn:of'd. Nral in AP-l'iU"l' 01 Iha\. '11 11 011ld 11111kf' ."i l'~li'-ll HOUSEKEEPER, live in. I Start earning now. Full or DENTAL R__,tionist~xp. 5 MTST OPERATOR FREE Good rerord in watf't' treat-J"lt'RrllIX."e. App Y A;.'\!, l"J90 a c·ur" rilan•• 1 , .... 1..;: .t 1~111. 1ti-:~·1t1t ;~:RATOH 11 ~ f' ct . •~i· Cbri ---,. Very little cooking. Small N Bl " ~1 Part lime.,,... lt\g stmas days a Yi'ffk. $484 lo $S89 nien!. :.! Yr. chcn1ical dtgrt>e <"11'Jl0"1 \..,, ...... 1'f'1'Sa!1011 pu ·1·1 ,11 1 1•11d 1.1hlt' 11·nrk-. ,1;; look1 hke: ni·w SjO. f t. N 1. I fan1. 546-5441; 67l-9098. ~ I . I gifts or pres ige a aona 646-491.1 preferred. Lucratil·c tff-SERVICE Slal ion Allt'J\fl;1n! 11ilh n 111.1;:;i ·1111· 1,rti;:.-I 11.:11 \1·~!1111n~l1'r / "'' finn. _No Investment. Hi_gh DENTAL Assistant Wanted INSPECTOR. n1ature, Thf' Offil'e of Administraliv<' li~ense Training rilory, SI0,000 guararttced. pftlrll<' ei·es & ii·kncl~. 1-:x-paid s:;:, 1,,, 11 rn,iki· u!frr Cameras A pote~tial earnings. For in-Exp'd for 1 girl off'iee in El reliable. Apply In person, Servif'es. Xlnt e 1cr 11. a 1 Limited Time Only SUl,000 potential !"On1m. Call P•~r. Neat RPIX'IU'anl'f'. Ap-~1·12-17:1 11 •\1•-. .111d 111'«k•'11ds. 1 Equipment 80I terv1ew call 54&-1835. Toro. 830-50IO. MacGregor .Yacht Corp, backi;:round nf'<'ess. Aptilude Famous ti.cense course now Don Jackson, 5 " o -6 o 5 s , ply rnorn. 25!Xl NC'\Vpoi1 Bl., O.\I\ •!inin" riu "'''· M" rnd Clerical DENTAL Assistant, Expcr. & ability to perforn1 high ... ... oas a genl°'y, -C.~1 . 11•1th f, n1~1h·h111~ PhuiNI & 1\0 1~1·'\I,\ .121 S11[l('r l:t n1ovif' 1631 Placentia CM . availablo thru T""beU •·om· C t I A "790 -I SENJOR Only. llunl. Bch area. Call 7 am-3pm. levP! <'lerir1:1.I V.'otk of a Fm~~s:dp~~~~l~~:~ti: Harbor BL, C.l\l. SERVICE station attf'n<l1tn\s, h1tnfl i-:11·1,.d !..l"f' Jo:'l n! 1·11111<,·a, lnl!lnn1 f'artrlc1i;f' 846--0697. IN,;2!,LLERund !blc ~~r Ex:_~-specialized nature&.& quickly New or exnnrienced sales Sales e."\"p'd., pem1. position. Full t'Ot)(I. l!"JJ 1111·\ir•r n:i.:k<'I' & 1 l<>11di1 1~ PO\Vl't' t!'lr>pholo .... v • .... • lf'am the policic-s pro-.... Toy & Gi~ Parties & p11rt time OJX'llllli;:S. tAt)lf', 5.)1'-lSJ.;' I 11·1(!(' .ini;!c ]('11!1:, Ahnosl ACCOUNTING DENTAL Assistant. 18--30, desired. trainee cnnsidcre<l. -"' r h · ·1 & people. Openings avallabte. ----1-k 11 c~...,ul'\?S o t e un1vel's1 Y l-louSt'wlves, demonstrators Palisades Sh!'ll, I 5 I 2 i; LO\IF:LY nld (li'lrtital ru~..;: I n1•11• 1a or nia f' n er ~~~~'.ke children. Call =p~~~~A~~:~~: specific operations of thr ~~~;~et~::i~:;e~:-°=: earn to $2.000 by Dec. 1. ,s~'~'·~t~o~l/;P;al~""-'"'d;e~'·=';·'I~.--R· a fciv Pl<'~'i•i; f\f flllliquf' I .S.1:!-17'.":I cve~ & \\'f'<:kt>nrls. CLERK por. employer". ofc. Prefei· 1 yr_ or more tunities. call Mr Sloan at NO DELIVERIES, NO COL-STENO CLERK I 11r 11 · ~so:i• ":!I :;:,,~I Furnitu,. 110 DETAJL & polish men exper. training on MTST, accurate LECTIONS, FREE HOST· P""""""ssive insuranre f\r ni. l\IOJ:lVC'. I ___________ 1 Cele9CO Industries hu an openina in their Account- ing Department f-Ot an experienced Accounting Oerk. Good figure typing & ability to work under pres!>'Ure essential. necess. Apply in person . ....,...,__.~ spelling, correct gramn1ar 842-5581. · ve• ~ 1 Cm!ta Mesa Car Wash, 2059 & accurate mathematical TAR BELL ESS GIFTS. NP.t'!d car. Newport Beach location, \\I ANTED. 1 .... 11-gf' t· h 1 n u RU1 ;, .:enuine Ch Inf'.' s 4• , ~ PER.5{)NNa 9~307. Gifts 'N Gadget!!. Rood starting sall'lry, litic>ral t•[ihitlt'I. Rf' a .,, n 11 I, I c ,l\':110'. .Sohd hf·ige, P<'rl Hru-bor Blvd. CM. ~ c om Put at ions. Reefs. SALESLADY be net its . Cati !\tr:-;. c..11-IG-:7. ii l.,,nrl. $.Jj(I, G»-roll. EARN 500 Blue Chip SERYK:f5•AC,EJ\CY graduation from high school REALTORS Hamilton &i4-5600 -------- & 2 yrs. gen'! clerical ('X!K'r. Exf)('ri{'nt•e winecessary, f'/ 0c 'd, 1· 1 L"f 0,\[.;: h;,!I lrl't' 11•1fn1t·ro1· ,\ • 3-pc Maple Br sC'I, llkf' Stamps-Have a toy &. gill Cl en 11 1 e I Send resume & salary REAL ESTATE timf'. The Sholv Off, Z2. I St•a l $1 1~. t:1H c,1 r.tt•d 1M~11·. Magnavox lnpl TV party ln your h 0 me · hi~ory to Pt'rsonnel Office, PROFESSIONAL Fash LOn Island N.B. Insurance Company rrR n1c . Afr ~-30 .. \~).1-·11 16. "<11 11bo set. &1~7003. ,.,...,,,,_ UC I ""~· . Equal opportunity f'mp\OVC'r I -' -rvine, Irvine, Ca. 9~00'I. SALES Clerk, mature fem. TS 1:... -, Appliances 802 · C't ·:-.-mM ma'dr-floral linen 9' REP RO ELDERLY lady in Dana P1 Equal Oppor, Employer. F / l i m c . Advancement STUDEN opcn1~i:;i; o r 1 St'•"lional. S150. needs a live-i n housekeeprr, · b · 11 . A 1 yf'ar around rift1111r foo.I ! SG-3-lll uraent. Lighl hskpg, salarv, NATION'L Lum"·• C 0•. P 0.5 ~ ~ 1 1 1 es. PP Y h ·1 o.1 o ,, 1\1'1' size USt:o ST0\'1-_;s 1 • · • ·" ·" ..., ur: Wh1rhg1g Stores 801 Baker c /l on JO 5· • '-· • • ·, I · · non smoker, drive car, needs exper. cashiers. Pd. A CM Ask 1· Art Raecivay 838-1103 befor<' uprii;:hr. C.P. CLE ii. :'>l , \VAL.i'\UT buffet $50. Wlllnot TYPISTS .. ..., ~74. ve., · · or · ' 673-~. 1·ht"i;t of dray,.iers $50. Uph. ,.,.....,., vac., pd holidays, pd, mro noon El · A bl Free & 1--ee Positions ins .. pd dental, pd life ins. &. SALESWOMAN, mature• · G.E. washer & gru; dryer. 11v.1ivel chair$%). 541H)577. We have several open- ings in our Publications Department for ON-CALL fLEPRO 'IYPIST. Must be familiar with IBM Proportional Spacing tfpewriler. T y p e 60 WPM. Experience IBM Composer df'Sirable. Weekend & evening avail- ability. ectron1c ssem Y H . e. dress sh 0 P, • Telephone Clerk ""--tte ~. 2 t-·-. C.M. area. 642-4142 Secretary/Constr 10 S675 profit sharing. Apply at Both $125. Xlnt cond. un"' ....,., ....... .._ Sec'y Banking $4.">0+ 19122 Brookhurst, Hunt. dress/sptswr exp req d. PART-TIME * 646-{i995 * 6 cha!irs. Akno8t new •. Exec. Secretary General OUicc $4~ Bch. Mon, thru Fri, 9:3U-Stdaoya•d~~.!,',... Um. e incl Sun-POl~TABLE dishwasher S·l.'l. S:iO. 615-TI.19 aft 6 P.M, Fee Paid. A choice location 488 E. 17th (nt Irvine) 0.1 4·30 PM "'1"r'l>"""' & beautiful otti~ awaits · · \\lasher + 110 voll dryer S.15 :\TAPLE dbl lwrl, lf'!dian prov 642-1470 NEED t'ne....,,tic liCE'tlsed SALES: Orange County bas-Need girls lo \\'ork dur-1'£>1. 837-5732. rtin set, tab!e9 & ohll.irl!I, you. Very special CO. seeks '&~ d .. __ · ' hOU t I T .,,.,,.. ~ Real Estate Sales person for e company now ,....,. open-lng everung rg 0 sC' G" F .1 fl h J\li~ at~ 1 pm 8~ attractive individual. o........, R E SALES ,·"-. 10, 4 1,-~d rep••··-· •ppo•·-1me-I• by lf'I{'-'·"~-,r tf'r-. O\\' \\'as l.'1'. f'x-·-· --~-· ----JANITOR, full time, apply in active long established of-· · · """ · •. , ~" " " 11 , ~·r· 6 Tll'IN ~ -•--• Call Lee Philips, 833-ZTOO. Earnings of $1500 or more 1atives to call on retail phone with fortner cus-N.' en C'0•~•1 ion, )'f'ars """"" .. .._,.. A•·-F J bs. n--· .. person. Beverly Manor Con-fice. Sales & rentals. Island ld "'V\ ,_,._ ............ ir.ess 644-4687 .,,., ee 0 ....,.ui1s .,. per month is easy the trade. Draw plus comm. ton1ers of our company. 0 · .,,.,,. '"" ... IV()ol, I · • • n.. .... p~--• Ag f . valescent Hosp., 340 Vic· Realty. Grace Wellingham ....,n ... s ..... """'~ ency 0 toria st., c .M. rutr. 498 Park Ave., Balboa Larwin v.·ay. We furnish For appt, call Mr. 1-feick at NO SELLING IN-Sell Idle i1ems ..• 642-5678 Need a "Pad"7 Place an ad! Irvine, :nil Michelson Dr. 6U-I200. listings & selling tract !'('fer-997-13ll, Wed lhro Fri, 9AM VOLVED. Sa I a r y + EXPERIENCED d 0 u b I e JANITORIAL, adult couples, 1-----------ral lt'ads. His:h advf'rtistng to 11 AM. bonuSl"S for appointn1MJ1 " needle & blind stitch sewing locaJ, eves. $2.25 hr · * NURSES AIDE * budgct, Jots of floor tin1c, SALES: Some exp er . set. Potential Earnings machine operator. Spanish c9~7'-:.::39=23=.· -------1 ExP<'r. pn!f., all shifts. Bev-bonus program, monlhly Fashion & sportswear. Full $150-$250 Per Wttk. Must speakihg ok. Apply Sea Job Opportunities erly Manor ConvaJest'ent rnn!ests, n1l'd ical in i\ur. or p/lime. MI 2-2444, Mrs. have good ron1n1unica- SECRETARY Temporary opening exisls in our Engineering De- partment. Must lype 60 WPM. SH 80 WPM . Pre- SUits, 825 W. ~8th St, Costa Sales Hosp., 24452 Via Estrada, paid, Call for app't. Lou O'Malley. tive skills. \Vestminstcr f\fesa. Laguna Hills. 5angermano. SALESGIRL locaLion. I ;;i;;;illlii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Full time opening for ('xp<'r. I · I ' 1' Silver Sales person. Excel-NURSES. pvt duty, all types, a rwin rea ty inc. Expcr. in better high-fashion merchandise for new store vious experienet" in En- gineering Department de- sirable. Fee Paid Sl'. Accnt-CPA/Coiutr $15K lent benefits. all shifts. Lescoulie Nurse's 968-4405 125 Hours! Call Mrs . Shade --.-Registry, 351 HOspital Rd., Cashier /Hostess N.s.,,_9955 0, 54._9954 Part time opening for relit'f Interview 9-5 M/F Mech. Designer $825 Girt Friday sh to $700 Exec. 8ecretary S650 APPLY IN PERSON Payroll Cieri< t6SO cashier f o r Franciscan NlJRSES aides -exp'd reg, ~iy Personnf'l Oftit:e Day shift. Apply Dir. of BUffUMS N,..,1,g, IOJO W, Warner 3333 Horbor BIY<!,,.._, "II.. per ·v· S600S500 Costo1 Mesa, Cal. Stmo 1 t S450 LepJ &>c'Y $600 Ave., Santa Ana, 546-6450. CE LESCO INDUSTRIES Also Fee Positions NEWPORT Pe,...,...1¥ncy 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-3870 l ... N~o~. ~l~F~ash!!!!ion ... ~I~sl~n~nd~,~N!!!!B .. 1 O:RDERL Y, exper. p/time 7-3. Nurses aides exper. J OBS pref'd. 7-3. Mesa Verde URGENTI..Y NEEDED Conv. Hosp, 661 Center St, • Secretaries CM 548-558S. A Div. of !he Susquehanna Corp. .rEMALE help required, half An equal oppty empl M·F swing shift. Ligtil pre~ e Keypunch Operaton PART TIME • Industrial e Billing Clerk Typist GIRL Cl · 1 work on electronic parts. enC'a Xlnt c onditions wfex- Irvine 540-4450 Work with customer relations NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO manager in NC'\11 Car Dealer- Tabul~te Your Success panding company, w i 11 Fee Paid. Gre~l _spot! Won-train 642-1877. Tempo Temporary Help !!hip. Must have pleasing dt"liul RSS0C1ati0n seeks =~'"C..,=-~~----, sharp indiv;dual to process FEJMALE over :I>, graveyaTd data. Jnteresting w/lolB of shift, teleph:lne operator. variety. Call Tracy Martin, ~ Forest. Laguna Beach. 833-2700, Al90 fee Jobs. FRY COOK. C 0 TT A G E Dennis &: Dennis Perrtonnel COFFEE SHOP, 562 W. 19th Agency of lrvill<', 2082 St. C.M. 646-5304. ,M.,.i<~h~~iioi.i°'iii·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IFtJU. lime exp woman for • sportswear shop. 488 E. 17th CLERICAL s t, Corner of Irvine, CM. .Figure Clerk . GAL FRIDAY LOAN OFFICER Position available for indlvid· ual to join our start in Costa Mes.a. Real Estate lending or appraisal background helpful. Prefer individual w/ local exper. Xln't v.-orking conds & fri11ge benefits. Please Send Resume Or Letter ouUining exper &: salary history to the Per- sonnel Dept. Inlervtewing fo.r Vw'Ork 1n Los Sl-IARP Gal Friday needed Angeles until move to by busy Newport Beach ad Nf!wport end of SeptembeT. agency, Well.motivated self- FREE dally bus ~ransporta-starter with. excellent typing t;11ci~1(1 ~~T'U0Al & of~ce skills. Light book-Glendale Federal keeping. Savings Apply Mon. thru Fri. 9 am·12 To $500 401 No. Brand Blvd pm at our new building, 700 Call 10:00 AM to noon Glendale, C• 91203 Ne'WpOrt Center Drive. t.fiss Jonei; 557-lSTI """'"""""""""'""""""""' COOK GAL Friday, Exper. part· LVN's, FIT &. PIT, 3 to 11 1st Cla~ Dinner C 0 0 k time. Occa:s. full d~Y-CCall.M. shift. Gd. 8lart wage, Exp. w/great exper. In lrg. food area. Accurate t)'l)iSt. pref. Apply Director of operation. Cell Chef Fm:! for appt. 8Jl-<Xl37, Nurzing, 1030 W. Warner, <TI4\ 644-1700. . GIRL FRIDAY Santa Ana, 54&-MSO. COOK exper. Park Lido Puttha.<Jing installation needs LVN'S EXPER. C.Onv: J1ospital, 066 },lagship enthU8iastic,. seU-~arter to It Nurses Aldes. 549-3061 Rd .. N.B. 642-aK-l handle~ grrl office. '.fake MACHINIST iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil phone orders, type & i~u~ Top man. mills & profilerg, • DAY BUSBOY Full Time Apply In P•J- 71 F•thlon lllond Nowport 8Mc:h --------- purchase ordeN;, post & con-1tfakc own sci-ups. Thor- trol budget balances, prf'-oughly understand prints &: pare inYOicea for payment. Jost data. Top pity, Morril'IOn Bookkeeping or accounts Enginee.rlng Co. 17&42 Arm· . payable experience a niust. strong Ave, S.A-· SttrLine salary $575-$650, In· MAIDS Ior Laguna Bcat'h ~·paid vacation. Send resort hotel, year-round rofUme to M~. McCI~. \vork, vacations & bonus. P,0 . Box 1810. Newport Beach 92663. 494-119&. Girl Frldey Good Oyplll;. Sh C11J1 Lorraine WESTCLlIT $550 PtrlQr'lnel Ag('l"l('y 2043 Westclif'f Dr., NB 645-2770 MAIO Work In exchangt! for apl. Call 5C&-1l'IS.'i MAINTENANCE MAN Large Apartment complex. Mu1t be thoroughly exprr. lenced and hive good rtf· <'r'Mcel. S500 per month to Graveyard fry cook tntnatlonal .Jtowie or. If.a.rt. PM<Oioo, 329 E 17th SI. C>1 Phone ~502.S Guuct. MAlff. mu wanled for Newport Bteeb IU'N aencn.I reptlln, including COUNTER llhi !or donut 12 PER HR pl"mbtno"' el<c. Part o• .....,_ ne.taurant or coffee f2lJl 883-?9tt f'Ull time. Call 60-1998 for lbop uptt, ... rd. A&• 35 . lntttVlew. "' .,.,.., l'all; i>/tlniiO ~ :'°' ~ f:" llo1 MALE=or"d<-l'ly--a-nd_l_emal_• Sf·'I!! 1'4 Cll!anhW Pion!. Ex.., .., = In for.._";::'~:':,:" D~ ~~ ~ Me. It cap1b1e or 9Cll'De_sqp; ptt. pref. Call 4~ ~ In N.8. WOI-.., In -w~?.::., ~ ~ appl ID 1-. S ~ 8 AM. Mlllt haw'* Camino RtaJ San Clmtcnte. MA'Tt.IRE maJe, clcrleal &. - med ..... M ~ ,$!15 ,tp-.-' bicki>C. •Xf>'T.; """ ar full ==-"'-------1 Ume. C'on9trucUon induatr)'. ~"t sfw up the ih!pl Ukt to tndef Our Trader'• "I.Mt" tt 1n cluoUled Ship Puadlle "°'"""' 1a 1br yo1u to a.n 8'110llitt ~ & Ii-, 1 daJw tor S lnlcb., Col!IO«ll- Call fOr app't. 645"-782> A"I/ cloy la !be 8= DAY ID run an ad! Don'I dela)i ••• call ~· 6G(;61L personality, ability to mert public. Do some typing & phone. flours somewhat Oexibl€". For appointn1f'nt 541)..56.l) ask for Dick JOhn- '°"· PARKING Jot attendant for pvt country club, mature men. Must have refs. Apply ln person, Big Canyon Coun- try Club, 1 Big Canyon Dr, N.B. PHONE SOLICITOR 3 to 4 hrs per day. l-fourly or com- mission. Send qualifications, Write C1assified ad No. 442, Qaily Pilot, P . O. Box 1560 Costa Mesa, Calif. ~- PRESS OPERATORS Women 10 work for plastic molding plants. Sllt;.3371), PR Trainee to $9300 Fee Paid. This fabulous Unn is seeking an exceptional Individual. Must be \'('ry at- tractive w/good sales per- fiOflality. Suf){'r spol. Also Fl"e Jobs.. Call P.farion Mann, Dennis &. Dennis f-'ersonnel Agency of Irvine-, 2082 Michelson Dr. PUMP Island Sa I es man, CdM area. 5 Days. 50 hrs. Nite shit!. Top wages. Phone 673-88UI for appt. ..,,, .. , ~MAl'lf ~{tj,JU#t20 ...... ·- R.E. Trainee. Brkr & in So. Cst Plaza. Phone col· df'vclo!)l!r will treln & lect' (213) ~3442. 17141 833-3741 spon!IOr for lie. CAil betwe@n 1.SA:.:::LES:...::=LA=--o=Y::..c!or:.:.:~bak--•ry--&-I l08m-3pm. 5115-1124: sandwich snop, Attn & ewa. Equal Oppor. Employer RECEPTlONIST -T,YJl'itrt -Ba1boa IslanCI. PMWe call m..EPFIONE 8&18: Sell Join a fun loving, hard worit-' collect, (714) 49&-1574. Southern Oranae Count)i'1 iog crew In beautiful new SEAMSTRESS for f i n 1 sh Favorite Newspaper from offices. Pu b I· I c rel&tlons sewing. Full or p/t~. Call Yollr home. Make u much f I T m n e e d l!l s h a r P , &16-l9tO. as you need. Generous com. diplomatic. dependable, at-----------· I mission on each sale. Call tractive young fcn1ale who's SEAMSTRESS -Knowledge 557-ti739. over 21 & can type al least of boats helpful. 501 29th St., 1-'-'-'r-R"'A-V_E_L_l _8--2-3--50 wpm neatly & accurately. Newport Beach. 838-9360. Secretary GUYS le GALS RECEPT/SECRETARY EXEC. SUITE Must be !!'Ingle .i free to Medical office, Laguna area. Move up to this exciting spot travel entire U.S. w/Co-Ed State ~ &. qua!, Write iv/est.ab. firm that is ex-group, High earnings. Assist classified ad No 492 c/o paneling. InteUigent, frit'nd-n\lln8.ger In promotional & Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560 ly, attractive individual order depL No ex~r nee. Costa Mesa, Cit. 92626. sought. To $8100. Call Bar-We train yoo. Expenses ad- RECEPTIONIST _ SECRE-llara Mac. 8J3..2700, Dennis vanced. Start Immcd. Call TARY: Beautiful office & Dennis Personnel Agency (TI4) Tl~. 9-6 PM. located In Itvine complex. elf Irvine, 2082 Michel!!On Dr. liiiii;;;;;;;;;;;; ... ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;a I Use your secretarial skills SEXJRETARY: Fast paced TOP PAY! to land lhts plush spot. advertising agency need's For Top People Salary to $600. Fee 9herp gal to work for 10 MOLDERS PaidfAlso Fee Pos!Uons. mf>n. Nice otfice. Start $350 F.xper. Requirerl Call J ean Brown, 540-0055, +. Cail Nancy May, GELCOATER Constal Agency. 2 7 9 0 5f0-Ql'6, Coastal Agency, 1 Yr. experience Harbor Bl, CM. 2790 Harbor Bl .. C.M. ELECTRICIAN Receptionist Rise & shine each day a s yotl greet your friendly clients of !his intf're~ting finn. Call Marion ~1ann, 833-2700. Den- nis & Ornnis Per90nnel Ag1•ncy of Irvine, 2082 Mictiel!!On Dr. RECEIVJNCfstock clerk for growing drug store chain. Must be hardworking, am- bitious & ce.peble of "''Of'king w/customers &: en1ployes. Opportunity for advance- ment to manageN; position. Apply The Guild Drue. 1610 Nf'W MRcArthur Blvd., N.B. 644-7330. RELIEF COOK Good employ!.'<' benefill!I, cation & holid11y11. Bayview P.1anor Retirement Center 54G-7095 VR· Secrelary ADM ASSISTANT Marine exper. not re'q FINISH CARPENTERS You'll be the right hand to Marine exJ>('r. not req'd top exec. in this fabuJOUA ENGINE INSTALLER tirn1. h1ust be auractive, Experience ~uirut goor1 peI'90nality. Exciting ISLANDER YACHTS spot. $8400. Call Jo Kelly, 777 W, 17th St. 83J-Z700, Dennis & Dennl.s Cosla Mesa P£>rsonnel Agency of Irvine. le.!!!!.!!~"'"~'""~"""""""" 2082 MichelliDM Dr. TYPIST- • S<crelari"' $ol;G.$700 SECRETARIES e A/P Construlclon S625 NO FEI:S e F/C Bkkpr CPA Ex-p $T"JO Jrnmediale dee'.!_ing~ e Clerk Typm S315 For Short Ir: Lon~er1n As- F'fft'I Pad By O:mpany stgnments, Or Pemanent Llz Reinder'8 Agerry Placement•. 4.100 CampUs Dr. CALL US NO\\'! >l&-2118 Newport Beaeh P.P.S. You don't need a. gun to "Draw Fast" when you pit.Cit an ad in tbe DAILY PILOT Want Ads! Call now • • • 64:hl678 . * P•clfic Personnel S.rvic1s 112 No. Towe~ Union Bank Square Orange, Calif. 547-6446 Ask for Rachel Ml\y TYPISTS R~iAtr.r for a temport1ry job '""" fritervws : 9-12 '''" Need All Office Skillii * 1-~qual Oppor. Employ{'r ~tale I Fe.malr We1t1m Girt Inc. <1667 MacArthur Blvd Newport Stach 54!>0325 \VAITRESSES. Cottage Cof- Jtt Shop, 5S2 W. 19th St, C.M. 64&-Wt. WArm.ESS, pfttme. M1111t be OVtl' 21. Call after 5pm, ---\\'OMAN to wortt In Donut Shop aft:n11, No phone ('Ill!~ pleallt>. Wincf'lell't 2 \) •17 l111rbor Blvd, C.M. • YOUNG l'Mn lor coffee shop R:OO -4:00 Mon .-Sat , Porkway Dtll, L l r u n • Nlgucl. 131-22!1. Sr.II k11-Item. .•. &C-567'1 •••••••••••••••••••• For an ad In Wom•n'1 World Cell Mary Beth 642·5671, .. , ~ f'or ·Wortior.Play Patcllwortc ' T•I r. ' .. I 9330 SIZES lOIL -~ , --I I 1'rRvcl 'round the ct1rner or ~ -!ht" rourITTy wtth th.ls tott. I_. 41' · 1lf 4.\1t Toss ev~rythlng Into this "'( tll~1 '°'" ~ vii.Iron!. fashionable, fun-to- z· I t fl i,:k!i f·r 'nn1k<" patchwork I OI<' . . 1P . n ° 1l~ . · n 11 :c : Outline gay i;craps with ht"r-th1ng 1n th(' morning ltllft (CC'l . bo 1.1 h p 11 700:1 fresh all day! Save and M'W ring ne s .1 (' • a ern : MM"rnl in stay-lreth blends pattern pieces. j o I n I n ~ in chccl'y solids, printi;, diagranis. chttk:s. fiEVENTY·FTVP: Cl':~ Printed PallPrn !l'.f30: NEW fur each pattern • add 25 Half Siz<'s 10''.i. 121 ~. 14'-.. eentii ftn' eadi P.Atlem 1ot 161,i, 111':. ))If,, 211 :.1. Slze Air Ma.II and So-c:IRI l-fandl- 14•,i (bust ~71 taki•s 1114 yd1. Ing.: otber#lle. thtrd-clUll GO-In. delivery will take three srn:NTV nvr. CF.NTS weeks or men. Send to -' ' Alice Brooks the DAILY for each pattern -add 25 PU.OT ".05 Ncedlttraft oents for eti.ch pattem for · • Air Mail and Special Han-Dept., Box 163, Old Cbelaeti dhn1:: other.vi.Sc thltd-clasi Station. Ntw York, N.Y. d II ~ "" IR'-1 .. -... 10011. Print N&n'16, AddNID, e vt.,, \\·w "'i '"""' 7Jp, P•tiflnl )Ii' ...... weekll or mott. Send to T tally New lJ'JJ Needt& Mar1an Martin, the DAILY cr:rt Catakls crammed wit.II PILOT. 412. Pattern Dept.. knit, crochet ft1let. cra.tta. 23l We11t 18th SI,, N@w l5(1 deilgns.. l'REE patteow YMk. N.Y. tOOJt. Print NAME, ADDB.£88 with 7' cents. ZIP, ~ and STYLI'.: Nr.W1 lllilltaat MClllleJ' llOell. NUMBER. Leam to ma.kt ntra dollan 1~ Top Fall·Wintw Pal· tem1 in all-new fl'uhton11 to ~ OataJocl Plus Fabulout bonus -choose a FREE paltem, 75 ctr1!11, INSTANT SEWING BOOK !leW today, wear tomorrow. 11. INSTANT f ASH I ON BOOK Rundre!s o f ta1b.kln facts. n. trom )IOtlr craftl, ••••.•• ii. lntbult MacrlllM ..... n. 11 .. .,,.. _ -••• $1. lt1f(aat O'a.t ....... u. llll•lli•I Gift lleCI&; ........ $1:: Complelo ._ -... $1. tl~ilfy ............. !Qr: ll rrt .. A ..... 8oot •. .$oc Qultl -1-18 pett.ru* M1111flant Qdt ... 2 llOc " ......... ,..., -ID!! •••••••••••••••••••• ------~ ---... ' ' . ' ., • • • • ---. . • -~ .... ' • ! i I[§]!.__ _ .. d .. ;;;' ;;:;;l~~,1 .. d •• I~.__[ .. ;; ... ;;. ;;;:;l~~·I I ~! ~-~ .. _· v..~·~1 [1~~...::-~,.'f'~-·~~;1~[~, T--~~]i):rli1;1 ~,,,...~-~! ~ --3 Li-. 2 Tl-$2.00 ~I Mad•dl11 ... 2 ,., F um1twe 110 fURtnruRE. CJootrc apt~c:. •vinp for ync cples. Kap! br ret-tntiqu.e 5ect>' -v1br cbr'-tdrtc~U tbl & ead8-hnpe-1llnetw ltt. nffds l'd!n"'4#" ctn. but'· fet-'tV ' coli:ir-ottlee dnk 3'x6' mllt'-prot. AU day Fn-Sat. The Klltp, ""' Avo c ado , Apt 11 . C.\f-tween Colleg• & FaJ.r. viE"W • 1st come gets II! :>PC. 9'cliooal ~ frm .. _ ..... ) °""' ,.., tbl, 3 k avea. 6 dn • nd8 relinl.stdna' $00 t.rg •ml champagne colored carpet $35. .. ~. :<;1-14111. Hl-n COl*lle & recotd11. rlivan, cofftt tablff I end tables, kitchen tabtl!' le chain, cOlar TV, 4-~ bdrm J'ief, Staufter rouch, 2 lamps. ~73. MOVING Gd piano, $450 or best ofter. Bunk ~ llf't, romp. Record cabinet, othe:r misc ltrltl5. 9661 Durham Dr. lt.B. Go•-S.19 112 Mi-!lo.-• 111 M bcollo_,1 •II Planos/°'90n1 126 to. Gonenl 9CO Cyclu, Bllco1, Trvcb GARAGE SALE *OLD STOVE* STEREO 111'12 Ganud PIANOS -ORGA NS <;:'=~.~~ IPllY.~t: D1IN,.3."~;-~ .~~,·. ~-. Scooton 911 VANS ITEM S WANTED I Smalltt old wood t>umlna model, full tlze ctwiaer, 11\r Hammond, Wurlitzer, many ""-.,, .,_. "" '""'.., 41'" 4 Rail cycle trtuler witb •d- COlfla Mesa RolatY Club ls atove! 2 holes on top, fJ"Ont suapens\on • P e a II e r • , others. l>re-aeason s~ia.la, grateful for adult homt. 6-lrr118'9 aft 5: 30. justable a,.'(Je & tow bar • &eekinc 1 urn1 tu r e, a~ door. Needa lots of v.•ork AM/FM 1ter@O radk>. 1'ape model close.out&. Piano & 536-34M. Boat p 906 SID) fiml. fine !or club or 'y pllancff, household aooda. btJI l'OUld ht real nice when deck plug in jacks. Brand Organ rentals. l'lfoncy aav· PA 1 1Rhltof blac1 k k lpt t en.~ 1 ' o w•r large family. DTlE 250 cc AN CONVERSIONS iporttng goodl, ftxturea and finilhed. 1 8t&ned sandlna new. Guar. Was I e t t Ing bargains are here rldll w w e m tterw. o t t ,. 331 FIBERGLASS 1971 Yahama, 1tripped down MAN Y MOTOR clothlna f«" 1 communlQ' it, but didn't tinlsh, so it'a unclaimed. Orig, $289.95. now at: trained, ~aned. 6 wk.I okl TRAWLER tor dirt. New rear knobby raraac ule to be bdd 8 quiU! ruM.ed. A SlO Now S'95 Terms, COiiection Wallichs Music City M5-8893. 13> JIP Dsl, Teak decks &. tire, hooker expa nsio n HOMES a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, aandblutlng job would take dept. TI 4: 893--0501. South Coast Plaza S40-2830 Kt'ITEN, fem, lovabte. With trim, FlyfB . Dual CoptrolJi, chamber, hli:h rise fronl Lara;e ae1ection ol MW Oct. 14. for brnetit 9' youth care of that. 11 would make \VHITE naugahytlr. 8' 110f1' *PIANOS*ORGANS* all accessorie1. To good li&C Sho\\·er, Sleepii 5, Elec-• fe~r. Rtrt:ct equlpme~t F o RD s, CHEVROLETS, project.I In Harbor Area and a cute planter: or as a con-w/matchlng 5· Jove seat. home. 544-35913 aft 5:30. trle refr., many extra tint avail. $425. See at 712 Vic· GMC'S. DODGES. Wltb Mexico, Call 64&-0102 during venation piece·an end table .r>trf cond, $250_ P&tlo furn. Going Out For Buaineu * * * SWING SEI'-REMOVE features. Special price this tori.a, \\'est o( Jlarbor or l'ONTEl'!fPO, The West's bustnem houn <1r 546-1036 with a magazine ledge. I Glau top table, & chain, Best quality • pricn • serv. & IT IS YOURS. • * * '~·eek. May be inspecff'd now 548-0900. n'IOSl popular conversion.. evenings tlJ have your items paid S~ for It-make oller. S100, Blk .tc whl Motc.rola Kay,·al-Stcin11.·ay·Baldwln, etc 833-1467 al : DAVID L. FRASER SACRiflCE. 1'1C"ns 5 speed Also 1973 Pride-N·JO)'. !-11.Q,Y picked up. Or they may be 54.1-1734 eves and weekends. TV w/remote control, ~. Pla)'t?r Pianos & Rolls FREE fl.uJ!y all white 10" .. Ya.ch t Brokerage, 3424 bike 5 mont:N oid. Like ~-totor homes to choclle trom. Mlivered to the sale site, STEREO: o e J u x e 1972 Lrg coffee table, $10. GE Rentals · ···'····\Ve Buy-Sell hair kittens, 3 week; 0 Port o, N~. Bch. new. New rock. $ 4 5 · All tU huae tliscouDb MES A C E N T E R Garrard model, large pro-dry("J' $50. Twin bed $15. Dally 10-6 Sun lZ.S TI4/673 5252 838-1387 R ~.!'~M· 16th and fessional change'l', 8 speaker c.au 540-5215. COl!t~~~s rri1tr:J~32fj) C~OCK18-7~A:FOO Puppy-~. "~TI ~ R..\Y". '6S ~ 6.'>0cc 1-lornet, BILL BA RY ""'""'6"'• .....at& esa, alter 5 .air su.!pe.lllion 1 o u n d U ·~~ 455 Old P - P F~ .... Oct 6 * A CTION * •··" home-love• child"'" pound 1' acl<-a-jet, lll . -Needs worl<. $375. A M .m. ,......,, · · sys te m. 1 SO watt 6 Player Pianos, re.,.Wt & nexl sto~ 53G-l297 ,,.. Series, Equipped tor Water 494-4390 Lag Bch area. PONTI C·G C~FIAT FANTASTIC junk~: Mex-AM./FMIMPX radio with Fine Furniture re!lnished. $875 to $1175. ;;,=~=;,-::::,~.c·c__.,.,.I Skiing & fishing, tandem lJt St. at S.A. Frwy. ican Ir Guatemalan clothes, FET. Tape deck. SUI! new, &: AppUances New &. used rolls. Dupree COCK-A-Poo, 1~ yrs. old. trailer. Call alter l2:00 '72 YAltWM 360 ENDURO, 2CQ) E. lst St., S.A. $1000 uBCd & antique clothH, 27" wu left u n c I al med. Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. Player Pianos, 545-4650 or free to good home. 2:>98 noon. fTI4) ~-MUST 600 mil~~l~16.5 '70 INTERNATIONAL" ton RCA Color 1V, plants, Guaranteed. Orig. 1509.95. Windy's Auc tion Ba rn S.1&-6108. WUlo Ln, Costa Mesa. SELL! Travela.11 statiOn wqOn. lypewriten & '63 VW conv. Now $210. Tennlf. Collcctioo 207!'i~ NC'\vport, CM 646·8686 HAMMOND Ol'gan mode!\ M-FLY me to your hou~ •. l 'm ESI'ATE Sale. •72 F/Gl.5 RABBIT motor 9COClter. $21ll • .Automatic. power steerfne, $300. 31532 F.gan. South dept. 714: 893-0501. Behtnd Tony's Bldg •tat'l 111; walnut: Marie prcsct & fluffy black JO wk kitten 1'~or information c all · d R n La 4"" .,.,..,.. " · · F/W cool ChrySlers. Need ~,, i::~o• ~, air con ·· .,... camper guna. =-~-2 Oilne&e porcelain ging<'r CRYSTAL • Cut crystal OC· back grill. S900. Eves 5-16-4897. bids. u•~ -equ\,,ment. {bunacul&t Household Good1 814 jars with tops, blue and tangular boy,•I on legs, SXI; 673-Sl22. FREE KITTENS 38' Monk Y.JB cust Exp. MOTOR cyl trailer, eofu:et 3 (n7A$F) $3299 DAVE RO wh.itt", S75; French oil lamp cut lead crystal pilcher and \VANTED: Super Pump • 347.3002 * 225 Chrys!ers. FfW cooled, rail, new. A1ake olier, alter PONTIAC. 24&0 Harb 0 LEAVING area. Must It'll, 4 BENTWOOD JOcklnc chr., •·-It tch. 1111! rooms new a>,au 11re & ac- $70. Ml -· ...... . ••• _,. wired tor l'lect.ricity, $40; 6 cut lead crystal matching player piano in good cond. MUST part wtth my beaut. Aux. ten., $13,750 Broker 6, 646-5213. i Blvd., Coata Mesa 54&«lt pine antiquo wlih stand glasses, $75; crystal ron-644-8068 Calico Afn.nx cal, spayed, 2 714: 642-1719, 213 : 4J3...87'51. "T.I H.D. Sporbter, 1500 Prier e ffe c t Ive t with black marble t/Jp , $75. Jiment flet with pedestal, PRIVATE PARTY WANTS yrs old . 499-2625. 17 F'l'. Open bow with'S5 HP miles,. blue, extra.II, make "9~179::1:,:Tl;:..~==,.-::---. 644-4146. $40. 644-4146. TO BUY PIANO FOR MOVING: Must find home Evtnrude eng, c 0 mp ·. otter. Alter 6, 646-5%13. '65 EL CAMINO 4 spec<( KOBENA 421 SUper 8 movie 4 CORVETTE hull caps & CASH. 835-2278. for beautiful Siamese cat w/trlr., 'elec. starter. tt700. 1971 .SUZUKI 250 Savage. radio, heater. Over s2(d oak cottee ftt., $30. ti" col· 1 .,-'-'-..,.,"~e_s_. -~--~-·--= ., po<'\ iv_.~ ..... fl75. J .... lry 815 Alt 6. 54&-GJIS. . · RATTAN ~ ~ DIA. sU. ~· 1.ct. $295. pet. courW. --dm.ln, ~~k-':4 ~ '~7 clin ........ ,,,__ -........ --~""'=-------­.,;.,. AA,s·prn --Mochlnory 116 OORNEJ\•Jleep set w/Ctltne't DAVJS-Wells table sa w. table I: 2'"°1sb!N $1Z: Oak Phone 545-4935 weekends or imldent .. & chair 1$35. a.tter 5 pm, .,,._ ' ~:...c.:=--~= BLUE/~ q tie en a I 2 e Ml1cell.neous 818 sleeper ~ $25; Tan di· arua< Bent surfboard $10. nettc ·set, 4 chairs $30. White desk $'15, Rotery 552-97fl5. mcrwtt StS. &M-1875. NAUGHABYDE r.ota & 2 IBM e J e ctr i c typewriter, chn .. S25 ea. Mpl coffee tbl older model, 15inch return k end tbl1., $40 set. 7'8rrlll,..cc..·:.:ge"--$40'-"'.~':c73-<.c..:"°262;c_. __ ~. 16mm Sound Movie Projector DBL bed w/mattresa It box Excel rond. $450. sprlnga $15. Frenc:h provtn. 6#-0936 canopy dbl bed w/mattress N.B. Tennis Club Mem- lt box sprtngs. $40. 645--B069. benihip to Harbour View GAME tbl, 4 upho1 chn. 2 HUii borne owner. 673-5076. bar 1tooll w/ backs. 1 CHD'..D'S Great Fort, 6' x 8', velvet hi back chr. All like $65. camera. Iruitant cartridge beauty rims. Make ofhr BABY Grand, 5' Kohler & call alter 5 PM 545-53!4. 5.'l2-9766. Xlnt oond. 1300 miles, $600. motor, trans., carb!I. Mu4 loading. Power telepholo 542-1734, eves & wkndt1. Campbell, white, must sell. SJ0-21D6. see. (94500KJ Priced tb MUST find home for unusual 12' Wizard w/211'hp ,:.:.....~,--------! II DAVE ROSS ro~ wSde angte lens. Almost Miscellaneous UOO. 536-4300. Evinrude & dolley. $225. Motor Home• se · '". new, S75 or make offer W fed dog. Small mbc:ed female. TIAC, 2'180 ltarbor Blvd~ SO-l'l34 eves & w~kends. _;.;:..""c;.: ____ _;82;;,;0 Sporting Goods 830 good w/kids. 536-5094. 675-fi940 _:.S~a;;,lo~/-R.co;;,nt.;.,, ___ 940_ Costa Mesa. 546-80l7. ~ FOR l'Wle. Dinner for less SMAIL Piano, reasonable I----------SWEE91', healthy, trained kit. ·n 15' ilbergl.&M skitf. ~ 'S5 JeepWagoneer 4 girlish lookfna bunk beds BOYS Divers 'vetsuit, siz<' tens. 2 males. Call 644-7762 HP Johnson, fully equip. DRIVE RH A" Co than $2.50. Homemade soup ·~ 14 U d 3 "-p S550 6= ,808 . , . 1r & salad + entree at r e a a on ab I e, sola-bed · se wnes. hone after 5:30. · ,.,... · Sll.95 • '67 T 0 y 0 t llown.rd's Restaurant, Npl loveseat gize. Phon e ~535--40:.:...,...;,18~al-l._;5_o30:.:.... ----!LAB SETTER puppies , BOSI'ON. Whaler '67, 13', 40 Landcruiser HT, R, ~ Bch. 644-4687. Store, Restaurant, females, to loving homes hp EVUll'Ude, tlr. 11--tust J><ra.-er Wtnch, Warn ftu~ 4 FIRESTONE TIRES OIINA cabinet or hutch, an· Bar 832 only. 613--0891. sell/make offer. 540-2018. SAVE 645--fi644. & wttel.s. 9:50 X 16.5, Uque or ne1v. La r ge . FREE to good borne mixetl Baet1. Rent/Chart'r 908 'TI DODGE Piclrup, Campet 2500 MILES Reasonable. 644-4687. Chicken broaster, used Beagle/Terrier puppy . . S p ec ial,Adve nturJ· • ~ . "A" '818 da .... -It 6 CAL 30. Incl msur & berth. $250 OR MAKE OF'F1ER. WANTID Loveseat s.ue sofa Only $795. Value new· $2000. .,.,~ y, .,.,..-,)()OJ a . $317_50 mo. OPEN ROAD Package, Full Po\1-er, A _~ __ rrn __ ev_,._&_•_·_knds __ 1 hfde..a..bed. 644-4687. * 642--0590 * 6 Black adorable puppies. * 642-1403 * MOTOR HOMES Conct. 1m12Ll. S3595. dlt, MOVING bargains. Kenmore Musical lnst ruments 822 TV, Radio, H1Fi, Need a ni 6 c.; =e· Boats. Sail 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. c54c.7:..·:c582G=·~--~---1 washer & dryer, S20 <'a, or Stereo 136 ,.,.......,., 909 Garden Grove 894-4479 '67 CHEVROLET El Camino. $35 hoth. 3 bikes, S7 ea. \Vanted: Ba5S guitar. * Free Kittens * S A ILBOAT lovers-W~ Motor Home Rentals 4 speed, radio and heater. ~. REASONABLE. ZENITH & RCA TV 'S priced 847-6453 discount for yr ound fun . Available for dally, weekly fQ29509) $1099 DAVE ROSS "TTN· c"'""'l & Dr ...,,...., * 545-7616 * less than the discounters. 3 4 y,. old ~;~ n--Je, Brand ne\v 8' Sabo t or monthly b8s\s. 21', 23', PONTIAC, 2480 Harb 0 " . -...-. a.,.,.,, BUNDY ,..,_~......, -. Drum • ·-·--~ Blvd •-t M ·~ -1 ~-Nylon, tweed. ..oe ..,,...,.llo-~th·~ •ood" yr picture tube, l yr parts & fmtl. ~· Doghouse. W/aluminum masts &. sail and 25' 6ell contained Mo-n-: " Ira et':' ~':.'. shag $2.49 yd. Linen texture sct: "°"' g cond. setvice. All a v a l I a b I e Must have yd. 673-5811. S290, 979-8609 aft 5. tor Homes, a11 equlpt with .-'•Cl" e e c v e uicu draperies $1.&l. Floyd • 6 892-3004 models in stock. Cash 90 14' .,_""'-L ·1 generator, roof air, and -';,/'ZJ:;:;,/Tlo:.;-;;;::c:-;-,,-;-=-.J Adorable Puppies .:)tl..luu;s• type sat boat. $75. ~-Floor Covering, 53).-2901. Office Fumnurl/ plan or up to 36 mo. finan-6w d' h I .. --> many other ~xtras. All ** 1962 Chevy, 4 spd. Bia: 7 weeks * 897-8188 73 1ng Y g ass over wuuu new. 968-4634. SACRIF! I.e. Medit bar for comm or home, rultic table!'! & barrel c h r s . 64.Hl91. G D CLEAN DEL u E Equip 824 cing. Phone prices OK. ABC $25 537 3296 Coacbel!I are 1972 models. eng Excel w I c u 1 to siovE $45, 138 E. 18th "st: • Color TV, 9021 Atlanla, * PUPPIES * · · · We bave the all steel Amigo camper. UCB radio, A/C, SECRETARY desk, f i I e NE-,-,-w-al-oo~t-,-.. -.~·-:-:-::_ Huntington Beach 9S8-3l29. 7 Y.1cs old, small r-.tuST sell 20' Glas Slope, 22 also, Please call 839--9560. nu brakes. Body cond. &: Int. cablne't, lamp & chair. Copy C.M. ....,,.. ""' * ~ °'23 * hp inbrd mtr, ou pot. 12000. E I 1·d· /h at t * 54·-·485 * t. d ••• & hi ~ Motor Home Rentals X<e • • ' 0 ' "· ""° Machine supplies. 546-B92I. '--~-....:.c.~_:..:::...:...__ ecu 1ve e,.... mate ng HARMON Kardon 210-5.5 l ~~~~~~~~~~li6A~t~D~an~a!Pt;·.;•~94-~5834~.':-Pe<i I d k ··~ "" -• Ca11 54().-5215, • * * Sofa A matching love !!eat. 1'll'YU' UM!d. Both $150. Prlvalt· !168c19!0. Gar• .. Sale 112 chair. Sacrifice both for I ti S H t' d tape ec · $LJUU. ~. UTILITY trailer, 6X8' TV RAYNE wtr. condiOoncr. 1 , · , amp. armon ... ar on ~KITE No 791 w/lrlr . Perf yr old, $220. ($600 nc\\'), $600. Phone (n4l 644-8814 Cad-4 Cascttc d eck. I SALES & LEASING 4 FIRESTONE TIRES $29. bed dryer camper """3/l'I' ..., .., -cond. Make otter. Leaving & .... ~ 9 50 x 16 5 ' ' ' ' AS&t'd bed&. Swfog sel, or U"tV" • Quadrat:lex speakers. S323 • "'"""'s. · · pickup, all cheap, 548-359L state. New sail. 673-1775 full r;;ervice facility ., 500 MILES 642-0328. DP.AFTING bfach's $25, Ol" bcstoUer. 494-8467. ";mmmmmm~·~~I H • *PRIVATE tennis club $100 . storage cab $37 to $40.• __ *.;:;::P..:.Hc:UL'O;:,:.;,:...::ro..:.,-'.,°'1-e_oo_lo_r I. 21' Santana Sloop \\'/tr \r, Danmar Motor omes S250 OR MAKE OFFER. membenhip fee & only $10 ANTIQ .s: Gmndtather clock G I 850 sails, motor &-gear. S275<l. 542·1734 ~es Ir wtmds pe r mo. 673-57U. S400, lti needlepoint ot-Piel'Cf! 867 \V. ]9th C.flf. TV, 23". Walnut finish. $50. Peta, enera Best oHer. Sk;p, n 4: ,, .. ~ "'22 $DJ sell ~:ool. 642-2977. .....,..., 531 6800 '68 GMC ~~ T truck GARAGE ~e--Sept. 3), Oct CARPET FOR SALE toman, , il\1ust , , Bo t SI ' /Dock 910. • PS/PB. '/h, lumber rack 1 N."' ~·-go"-s, hit-~ 673-77'9t EXEC swvl chr $15 -23 Sec * * NE\" Ze "th 19" Col BOARDING <·-.. 12' 1···'de· a s, 1PI s • ~'ti. wu 1111 by Carpet Layer, Call • . . . '' rn or """" '""' '64 Tcavco 270 Dodge Z1' 11!de tool boxes, fact atr. made qWJls, '57 T Bird, '68 • 546-57'5 • 540-2086 NEW ~mpion 111tcer $125. ch r $8 • 18 desks files slls TV used one lllClnth $330. outside runsl Grooming. BOAT slip awil «ri' &st Motor Home. Loaded with elcc Ji.ydr tail gate, $1800 o Triom~ GT Fastback. Plus ==~=~'-~..,:,::;.;1 Automobile f'f'V'erberator $:11. 867 W Ll!th C11 642-3408. * 675-2536 * Poodle puppies, Sherry's, ~ter, D:rlboa. Up 1o $ clotbirw...4 bfisc. 336 Colton OLDER CAR MAGAZJNB A'.tter 5 4.%-6884 546-2848. 37• boat. $100. mo·. ,...._" xlras. 7000 · Any d " Y best. 54&-6380. ·---=-' * .. 2 •1734 + , . IBM Selectric typewriter Sony 230 Tape Recorder .......u ~7965. 1965 Ford SUper Van-Rbl Newpun 1 ~re1, NB, .,. ds. 15", xln't cond. Must see to & S'!)eakers + 8 reels of Cats 152 5Z>-1153 days, 1213) 697-lll6 642-9692. eves A wceken s CLASSIFIED wm !ell It! npprec. $395. ~1144. tape. $100. 673.33&1 eve Rent A Motor Home eng, stereo, paneling, mag Motor Homes Mot Home Mo u___ for your Vacation & \vheels. Make otter or s tor ~• Motor Home• Motor Homes FREE TO A LUCKY SLIP space evail. ~33· * 839-4301 * 548-3150. - .;.S.:;a.;.;lo"-/.;.;R;;co,;nt ___ ,;940.:.;__.;,Sa:;l.;:;o/'-'RC.:.o:;n~t---:.940:.: Solo/Ront 940 Salo/Rant 940 Salo/Ron! 940 HOME! HEALTHY. LOV· Sailboat. ,;;:~:;:,,c-=c-=-__.....,.t '---'--'----'-"'-..c.,;:;.:c:..;.;c:.:.;:,_ __ _;~-..:.;:.:;:~;,::;_ __ _;:;: ING, FUNNY KI'ITEN. e 673-li606 9 NE\V LIFETIMES-the works 'SI GMC 2% T. Dump truck 115p01S'' BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY TO SEE 'tK£ CLOWN· SATURDAY & SUNDAY FREE! Panasonie TV AND AM RADIO witlt I Trac It Tapt Deck WITH THIS BRANO NEW 1973 IXPLORfR 20 MOTOR HOME "111 Self.cor1toir>td S.r.No.16'>27 ~o ::: FREE REFRESHMENTS ONLY '°' 1!14 months. Oflty 1G~ ,....__ C.Olh price lntW1199 tox & lir:.,_ k Sll.395.31. Thi dtlerred llOY"*" pric1 it $11,279. TM onnuu1 ,_.. cwitou• rott Is 9..42 %. Onappr0¥tlll ttlldit" courst. FREE HtGMIST TRADl·IM$ 011 TOUR CAI, CAMPER, TIAILlll, TRUCK OR MOTOI MOMf --.~~--.""' CftUl\ITRIOONOEfRAIR Enjoy A New w.., of Life RfGISTER TODAY! U1U1 1\:l!f'n\ln"1J GRAND OPENING DRAWING UliDtU'!.Glt"' ffondas • lilces • 1Vs et t1-•' ,~rcll111ef All••• I• pl1!fr M•t•rll••• ($•t s YALMI). ._... .... .,...0,..1 .. w, ' I ~explorer & at fantastic rates. Pvt good rond. $350. 18 ?t!ale-Ota.nge Tiger stripe. Boat1 Speed A Ski 91 l ply. o1o-""' .......... ; .. , Rochester before 4P?d. He is looking for a special ' ~ ·1 u ...... , friend. Please help him.1 1 ·-,.-Speed----Skt--hoa--t-I *WINTER RATES* FORD % Ton stake Loves kids & dogs. 642-195.5. Cadillac e~, Tigl'!'r lrlr. 1'-1tr horn!! rentals. $165 wk + PX>. * ~:;ms * Dogs 854 Bargain $900. 54S-On6. mi Reserve now. ~ l--=~~:;:::=;::--- e HAPPINESS I• a blaok SACRIFICE •ki boat. Gd Tralfer1, Trave l M5 SHORT STUFF button nose, 2 big brown cond. 35H_P. $500 or best of· TRAVEL Trailer 'TI, ~. eyes and a furry littlel :~''~'~· ~55~7-~8'°~7~. ~~~~~ 1 Gas-elec. ref, 4 bmr range, body-all attached to a Silky lge. oven, !lhower-tub, tivin Tenier pup. Two adorable beds. Lots of storage, extra IS HERE !emaJes.A~~.Bestoffer\ TiaaportaticM . )[il ~.;·:.:~~ AIR.STREAM _ lS67. 22• '73 G~IC V~. coi:nplete Twin Safari. lmmac. Xtras p~eled intenor ~th $3750 oller. 645-1786. pchng, jce box, side .;....=..:,.:c....c:cc.:;,;,:..._~-1 and rear speaken:. Beau Auto Service~ Parts 949 ful dark blue metallic wi OBEDIENCE class lo start in the lrvine/Ne1vpo11 Campers, Sale/ Rent 920 Beach area, Wed., Oct. 4, 7:30 pm. Open to all dop 173 over 5 mos. 546-4928. _ HOME NEEDED ""· MOTOR HOME l\1EDIATELY. Loveable blk Brand new 1973 Pride & Joy Lab mix. Older chldn pref. motor home, fully fatrory Da)"S 542-7006; aft 4 , equipped including twin oFFrirnAuSER dual port, high rise manifold and 800 cfm Holley double pump 4 bbl. fits Chevy VS. 3 months matching interior. Imni 1ate deUvery. SeriaJ · TGY15346002l8. BILL BARRY 5+1-1400 beds, P.S., P .B., auto, trans., IRISH Setter, MaJe. AKC, 7 mo Hsebroken, Call aft 3:30 pm· AM·F~1 radio, dual wh eels plus much much more. Ser· ial •577524. .:.01::::··~· 1=75'°'· °'893-'490==-· ==-I PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT 4 FIRE5l'ONE TIRES llst St. at S.A, Frwy.) & \\'heels. 9:50 X 16.5 :Lim E. 1st St., Santa Ana $395 DOWN $132.49 2.500 'MJLES 558-1000 • 962-tl45 . $250 OR MAKE OFFER. AKC BLOOD HOUND shown once. 'M>n ht prize $250 * 8471888 SU.-1734 eves & vAmd!I Auto Leasing '68 -327 Chev. motor & DARLING PekePoO, 8 wffks, 135. ~ days, ~­ after 6. Yea, just $395 is the total down payment and only $132.49 is the total monlhly ~ent including tax, lic- ense and all fmance ctwves for ~ months on apJlnl'V"d credit. The cash price Is S8232. 75 including tax and license. Deferred payment trantt. Low mileage, new " 1973 Olds Toro cam & lifters-in '59 El Camino, running & li~nsed $300 or belt offer 531~. Factory F.qUipt, Full * CORVEM'E hub caps • $128 AA DARLING brown toy poodle, 6 ...... l50. 612-48JB days; 534-3885 after 6. beauty rims. Make offei-. .UV MIN Dachshunds, AKC reg., male & female-, 81,i wks. Call a fter 6, 673-1985. 542-1734 ewa &. wknd1. price Is $U5l4.16 wtilch in- cludt!fl all finance chargeir, [ ' AutotforS. J I ~\ sales lax and JicenS<'. An· I,~-;;;;;;;;;· ~~I nual perttntage nle is (i BILL BARRY Ouno Buggloo • Golden Retreivcr pups, AKC, 7 wka:, show & field, shot!, priv pf;>', 521).5687. GERMAN Sl>opllord female 4 mth•. Alleotlonat•. Loves PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT DUNE BU1KY ·Cream Putt. children. $10. 548-5177. ....v.!lEst ~~aStt S.A. Frwy.) St. Leg, Perfect body. top, F ww . ..... .. S.A 558-1000 tlreJ, wind wings, chrome ls h SSS FACTORY DIRECT wh!s .• aerlal 1895 or tr.de per~· + tax LEASING ALL MODELS AND MAKES '73'1 Southern ca 1st National Bali Leasilr AQUARIUM. 26 GAU.ON, Fully rum cabover campen, for splrtY car wife will ride SHOW $50. no down, $31. per mo. Camp-in Gl---7219. 2001 Miche&lon Drive * 830-Q)5 * er ahells. No down. 642-Mn. Sports, Rece, Roda 959 (~ of:~ur) Horn t 156 '00 lb ton Oil!vy PU l~e .. CJUt: 9M4 flORSE for 1eue. r-.1ugt have :~r·w=· t!: ~· ·~;~ ss;: American 7141833-8620 , %131627 s:u:r information call ure,. ~ · • ~..,er"~~ LEASE.' NDW . . VAN '61 . Doo!ae, , ,-bolCal _,,, ~·"' exb'la EA"l'RA Specta1 Pto•• Radial•. o..:.. nti'o. ,!:'-~· c.n-. ,7,f)IS Gelding. Parade Quam1. ~~ • ,.,.... ,.2 .,jt , $550. Call 89t-10'4. • "11 xi; ·~ ·"'! • . . . ~· ' j --~· ----Campe!' ........ [ ~ Jl~)cyc1 ... : I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;iiiii.;~~l .25<~c!<>~ot~or~•~:-:-=_!'25'.!: lZ1 ron1 P.11. ll Ton. V'8. Boo" 0.-I 9CO '61 UONDA.,lG> auto. Complete(y nbl~ I' __ ........ __ •___ 5000 mUeo. good cotld. bed. $GO. &31-5132, UASf AU MODELS '·~D MAKES Southern Calfwlil B t A t• i=. * 67J.rnt 1916FORDIOTONPICKllP. oa UC IOR SllZ!lta 185, '71. Xltlt -· -ooad. c..u 133-'. Stllled bids on(y. O.adlln• M""" .,..., ~ Aft 1?9:1. * }21,3 ' ,lstlfltiad Oclobu 2nd. s ..u boat•. 3;30pm, &U-7800 'll~DGE van. Excel corm< Brand new, all trallerable. "Mab Room ror Dadd;f" V-8 automatic. 21' A 23' HJahtst bid ovor ..• cl<olt out tlte -55l-lBJl2 lOOI Mlchclm Drtv• d<ol<r -on Taped boala ••• l1tm that jUnlc ln!O COlh '72 Otov. %. Cln\pel' Del-. (°"'1<r cf MlcArthut) onty. iioo w. eou1 High-!'I~• Doll1 Piiot o,.t"i'l' -._.11r, """'· J!'J..121· . lnlM, calll. 9lllM Wl/f, N...,... Bw:h. 1d. Call w:Mm; Al!'lpm,-• ......... 71~ -mll21 ' ~tep Up . ' . • " To Luxury • • ~xcellent selection of previously owned Mark Ill's and Continentals. 1970MARKID Exquisite Ebony black finish, black ,landau, and matching leather feature. Full power, cruise control, climate control, air cond., individual power front seats, power -door locks, tilt wheel. (644BIJ) SALE PRICED . r SALE! p utstanding Group Of.Choice Cars! . i" 1970 V.W. Bos ! l SIA.TS Red with black interior, rad.lo, bet.ta ~1f°ks &: drives like llt".V. (919-- .-, ' ,. , " $1975 1 1971 Comet . ' - : 2 DOOR SIDAN ~ new. 11.000 miles. Ught ivy 1old/gold Landau/matching interior. Automatic, RA:H, power 1teering, i<:onomy plus. (947DOX) $ALE PRICE • • " :.• • • . -• • J.970 Ford LTD COUPI Gold metallic w/matching tnterlor, )lack vinyl root. Aut.omatlc, radio, ~eater, power steerin& & brakes, tac- ¥>ry air. C540AEL) I $2475 1970 Opel GT SPORT COUPE Racing }'f'llow/black bucket sN.ts. radio. heater, radial ply tires, low miles. tuper clean. (262ASN) SALE PRICE 1969 Monterey 4 Dlt. H.T. IXCELLENT Ught tvy yeUow with black landau, matching interior, V-8. auto. tranll., radio. beater, power steering, power brakes, air cond. (YPS833) $1875 1967 Cadillac H.T. llDAN. 811T IUY Beige with parchment interior, full power, factory a1t cond. (TWP400) $1875 ALWAYS A GREAT SELECTION OF TOP QUALITY · CARS ..• ••Orang• County'• Fomilv of rtn1 Car• .. ohnson & son I 211211 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540830 l j Home 01 The J'ojew CM .• "6ellln rne•" REWARD WILlt PAY OVER Kely Blue Book For l•t• rnoclel, cle•n, low mllwgo domes- tics, lmportt, truck• or c•mper1 • Call and a.sk for Buyer DAVE ROSS PONTIAC * 67J.279'J * 24IO H•rbor Blvd. Coot• Me.. ~17 Yos, just 159.00 ts the toh!l __ R_E_N_A_U_L_T __ 1 down payment and only $59.82 is the total monthly '68 RENAULT '10. Io miles, 4 payment includin&' ta.'C, lie· spd., AM radio, rome quick. ense and all finance charges VHBI.9. Only $7'9S. WE PAY TOP CASH ... -'*" " truob, Juol call aa kc' tree •stimates. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA, for 36 months on approved 18881 Beech Blvd., llun- credit. The cash price is tlnP:>n Beach, 847-85j,j, $1.!m.75 including tax &1--=--:.;.;.'-',..:,;.,..:::.::..._1 , ... ...,. Det.......t poymen1 SUBARU price ls $2,212.52 which in· GROTH CHEVROLET cl"des all ~ charges, * SUBARU * sales tax A llcense. An· INSTANT CASH nua.I percentage rate is 10.25. BILL BARRY PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT (1st St. at S.A. Frwy.) 3lOO E. 1st St., Santa Ana 558·1000 As Low as $159!1 FRITZ WARREN'S Sport Car Center e ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST no E. !st St., S.A. 5-17-0764 TOYOTA We need your tmp:irt car. 8~ on duty 9 to 9 dally. B. I. Sportscar Center '70 Fiat 124 Coupe, 5 speed tt:ansm.Wion, radio and '70 TOYOTA Corona. Low heater. C874CQS) $14 9 9 miles, $95. O\'l"r ~·holesale DA VE ROSS PONTIAC, Blue Book. 673-6621. 2480 Harbor Blvd., Costa I ·,-10_TO_Y_M_ARK--II-,-p<-.-,-,,-I. Mesa 546-8017. Price ef. nu discs, r/h, sacril $1150. 2833 Harbor, Costa Mesa -fective thru 9/1S/72. 548-7819 aft 6 P.~I. WE buy all makes ot clean Uled ..,.,... can. paid fM or not Please drive in for tree 11.ppralsa.L HONDA TRIUMPH NEWPORT IMPORTS '72 Honda Custom coupe. Lo miles, Take over $38mo pymts, pri I pty J van. SJl.3231 eves 963-3210. JAGUAR !100 W. Cout Hwy.. '68 JAGUAR 2 + 2. Cordova Newport Beach brown. auto. trns., air ~9405 cond., wire v. h e e la . WE PAY TOP DOu.AR CAZV852) $3600. DAVE FUR TOP USED CARS ROSS PONTIAC. 2 4 8 0 U your car la extra clean, HarOOr Blvd., Costa Mesa see ua first. 546-8017 Price eUectlve thru BAUER BUICK 9/'JS/72 . 29'J5 Harbor Blvd. '69 JAGUAR XKE Coupe. 4 Costa Mesa 979-2500 speed, a i r conditioning, IMPORTS WANI'ED chrome wire wheels, lo Orone• Cowttieo mileage. (ZVE671) $3899 TOP J BUYER DAVE ROSS PONI'IAC, BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 2'80 Harbor IDvd., Co"8 11111 Beach mvd. Mesa, 54&--8017. Price ef- 1970 Triumph Spitfire, E-xccl cone!. All main! records. ROO w/tar. int. 22,001 ml. 714-846-1764.. VOLKSWAGEN I '67 VW $795, air cond. I '66 VW SQUAREBACK $695. 494-7198 H. Badl. l"I. 8'1-1515 .;;':;.ecti;o'c:."":..::lhnl~~9/~29:;/12.~-­ sroPI Don't junk it. Any car '64 Jaguar MK X. Show room that runs. Let U1 buy your a:ind. Xlnt mechanically. trouble. Up to $1,000 . Auto, air, leath, retin wood. 541-9075. New tires. Be5t offer. Ron, 524-8140; 833-J897 eves. '70 VW bus. Over size brks. _TOI;' DOLLAR FOR JUNK Xlnt com!. 8 track steN!O & Ott WRECKED CARS. •n Jaguar Conv. A/C, wires, ,, .,,,.,,.,. · c _, '" <SO tapes. $1950. 64Q"'(JIJIJO. 2300 Day 01' nite, 637-lm wme, onooura co ..... ....,, · H lid Rd Abo '69 Cpe. equal cond. o ay ' N.B. WILL pay more !or junk or $3850. Pvt. pty. 673-1232. 1959 VW double door bus. wrecked ~~!~291· ,59 Jag. New uphol & tires. 1972 engi ne, reblt trans .. .,....... R new brks. All n e \Y Autos, Imported 970 54~~~at. $TIS. 644-7216 : throughout, $950. 496--5687. ALFA llo .. EO c*:.:('=3:.:) ~MARK'="""Il~J~"""""--. =,60 '66 8"5, replacemeol eog. & ,.. &: 'GL Wire Wheela. Make trans. New battery. Xlnt. OH """"" Reduced $950 or best oHer. '60 Spider, 2 leader, reblt 5 a.. 557~. 548-7558 afte'r 6. spd., touring model. Xlnt MAZDA $695 auih, or wm consider ~=,....-----'59 VW w/'62 Body & eng. trad 968-:: Gd tires. New brks. Recent e. 3549. MAZDA 1 comD eng o-haul. $400. AUDI LEASE SPECIAL 5'1}-3Z18. New '72 RX3 ..:19c.:10-=-WESTP.c:.--H~AL~r~A----•• ·n. 1~. Sunroof, air, stereo, auto. 3,001 mi. Beaut cond. Still in warranty. Talce over low pymts. Pvt pty. 642-4127: 646-5375. $57 56 camper, Save $. Perfect • mech oond. Body damaged. s2000. 644-im. · AUSTIN HEALEY ** ·oo Austin H~ey 3000 Mark Ill. Xlnt cond. Must sell. 673--000). 1007 AUSTIN Healey 3000, $500. Consider trade, After 4 pm, 846-2059. BMW Visit our new bcimel $ ROY CARVER, Inc. 234 E. 11th st. Costa Mesa 546-4444 CAPRI '72 Capri, Decor group, 20)) cc eng., 4 spd, lo ml. Xlnt cond. an 6, 963-71S8 John. DATSUN Loaded ROTARY powered. 36 mo. + T &: L. For resp . pty, Trades cons. • 'n ROTARY'S "Demo Sale" 10 TO CHOOSE "BIGGEST 'SAVINGS" "Service la the· dillerence" HUNTINGTON BEACH MAZDA Mercedes JOO SEL, !ICdan, 6.3, while wi red In t. Excel cond, loadl.'d. 49.550 mi. special price, SL2,ro:l. C.OOtact J ack Gray or Dan Harber, 2501 E . Chapman, Orang., 633-1011. MGB '66 MGB Roodlter. '11 llallun pickup, 23,000 mi COb!L $800. -dt<r<lo ~. . 54&-1127 $16115. ssr-mr. -...,PIE~U,:;G;;IE;;O=T~- llrll DATSUN SID Sedon. low • mllea.ge, eood con d. ·.'-62----,-Sum>o--L-N_ew_ 536--1907. paint Ir: uphol. Cd tlrtl. Gd '69 DATSUN 1600 rd~lt/H, runnl.nr cond. RAH. Some new top, $900. Can alt 6pm, trarui work. $150. 60-lln. 83!H296. '70 DATSUN PICKUP, new lira, low mt, $13 9 5 . 49+-n98. um. Prugoot 5G4, 4dr, au.to trans, Sunroof 4 n e w Mlchelln Ure11, $ 2 3 5 O. 675-11343. Vacandel om mo..,1 Rent 1966 VW. Xlnt running cond. Radio, good tires, chrome extras. $700 or best orft-r . 1-871·3887 aft 5. '67 vw. Xlnt mech. cond. 600) mi. on new eng, $950 or best offer. 497-2548. WANTED Oki VWs running or not. 646-4716 aft 5 pm '68 VW Bus. Reblt. eng. Lug rack. new'belted tires, other extras $1600. 546-0341 aft 5. '67 VW Van. new paint, runs great. Mllllt Sac. Quick. $795. en.fl 536-2419 Eve. e 1965 VW Bug, Lo mi. Sunroof. Good cond. $600. 675-1934. '71 Squareback VW-Extra clean, AM/FM, lo mi. auto. S'l250-6'H233- '61 BUG, good meehanical cond. $300. * 962-4547 * •fl V\V Camper, body, eng & lnter1or xlnt cond. FM stereo. $2900. 673-aSSl. '61 VW Bus, runs good. $350. Call 543-1385 '58 VW, gd co nd. Also '50 Plymouth <runs). 673-5689; 675-2750 1970 VW Bus, new lire~. Good cond. $1900. 641H)!39 '65 VW BEETLE • Good cond, $5.15. 833-3221 '69 VW pop top' camper. Oean. Reblt eng. pm. G0-1716 '67 vw. mint cond., mnroof, n:blt erw, $800. 673-8423 alt 5. 1966 SQUAREBACK, new en- gine, radJo. $700. or o!fC'r. Aft 1 PM ~ or 49'l·mu •69 VW Fut.beck w/oolo trans, radio. A1ust sell. Prlvale party. 646-4133 '69 VW pop top camper. Many xtras. Best oUer . • 561-226' * oA;L v PllOT p : > .......... l§J .. " CALLUS Wll ..... ,,., •• 220 INSTANT CREDIT TCHl•HD&IOlnLL SAYIT .. -1 Jf ,.., ... MW in Colitornil l .• ,.. .. MW 1111 ,...... ~ 2. tf you twt ,,_.,.on yovr 4. It ''"' Mwe little tr no ,. ctMit UT•'llfNAIUllltm~MIT9mfW-M TUJ"9UI BRAND NEW Order yours today. DrM ..._ r..., •••",.. c.Mil.:111t ___ .. $2188FULL PRICE • Full Factory tqtJipped 519900WN $65 A MONTH '69 CHEV. '72 DODGE CHALLENGER 2 DOOR HARDTOP S 19'il ;~ hl"'I dti. Pi""L S6~ is IOtd 1111. ,.;ml. ltd. 111x, Ii- ,..,,. & nll corry1nq r""'1•' "" ....-. ntdot tor l6o mos. D•ltf<ed pyO•I. P'"'" S7~3,, Ind. 1'11.: & lc:..,I•. ANNUAi. 1~::~E~"· "" .... $2oss~k BRAND NEW '7i DODGI SPORTSMAN VAN ~ '70 FORD Power diK bnikfl., AM,. ... mirrors. 1111i11io11 cOntnil IV"""° t lettrit Ignition s~Jltm. Striol No. 81 2AB3V0028JS • fUll l'llCt '70 MAVERICK HOVA.6<!'1_. ............. ._. ~DOOR SEDAN. V·I , 1~10. tr1ft1. nidoo ft Miarw. ZlC407 power 1!1toin; ' ltr1k11, 1od;o, Mo!or(IJ5aEMJ $588 $888 2·DOOlt GUlto. lralK. ,... ...,., WMll Ct'llrl. D-'••1 chi' ... lllOld .. L S 17All $788 fUll Plt(I fULL 'llCI fUUPllCI '7 0 OLDS '71 PINTO '67 CADILLAC CllT\~SS Hortttc;, ~. v.a. IHI-2-~ ~· trafll. radio, ,.,...., COIMltT. f,,11 ,_..., oir too'ldi-""'"'11· rod!CI. "*'"'" llucUt IM1!1,. Whi!...al! "'"· 395CltG. i1io, twlh« in11t10<, Miltwflll tni.. ris.88 $1088 'sio88 FULL Pll(I J U PllCI FUll PllCl '67 CHEV $788 FULL Pll(f ' OPEN 9AMta 10 PM 7DAYS '70 DATSUN sro 4-l>OOA. Fully lotll:rf eqvf1 including rodio ' 1-lw. 472RT. $688 JUL1 PIKI '69 PLYM. $888 1UllPltCf '71 VEGA 2·000lt •• ·-ll'llnJ., ... '-' "GAii ""' whttl&. 297CPL $788 $1088 f r11 fULL rltCl Fat Prof11 tJ atta.lned when Yoll ..n lhrOUllb ftllll!'11'1· W. DlllY Pilot Ooqlfiod _,,~--------------------..... ---------J Mo.~MUm~---~~-' )'O'll' houlo, tpt. rton Tbe 1utett draw In the West bid& •• •le. -• D0111 Pllol •••• DlllY Pilot C1uaillcd o ....... M. -..:"":::..:· ~:::.;::;: ____ !c..::===============;:==~~~""' ... ____ ..... --·- ' I '· ,. 84 DAILY P1LOT Wf'dlk"Sday, Stptttnber 27, 1972 PILOT-ADVERTISER 28 CUTLASS SUPREME COLONADE HARDTOP COUPE • ' • OM!GA HATCHBACK COUPE WHAT'S NEW? W;e'll be glad to tell you ••• and slfow you! From the all-new Omega to the beautiful Toronado. Alt R_EMAINING '72 OLDSMOBILES DRASTICALLY REDUCED TO CLEAR 'EM OUT. DEMONSTRATORS TOO! 990 Autos, UHO 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos. Used 990 Autol\, UMd 990 Autos, Used --------BUICK .CADILLAC CADILLAC CHEVROLET CORY AIR FORD OLDSMOBILE .. , ., . .., . .., ·; ;<: :~ ·.• .• • ' ~ ' . . .... . . .. :: .. . , , .... ' ~-.... i : ;t • ,.i ::! • .. ~ .. ~ : ':~ 1960 V\V, f)('I\' l'flg, brakl'S, & '69 Buic·k nivirra. fully muller, ehromt' & niag <'Quipped, all p11T & air. Lo wttls f/G fenders, Body & niilca~r. HM117.C l11 mlor, int, good. No dents. ~1us ell blk int. $27:.cl. rl a y s . $40Cl. 675-6915. . •• , '46-2·186~!';. 64.'l--76-13. I '70 Bus 22,000· mOts. SCat . '11 BUICK Centurion -I Dr. '72 f_;I. DORADO J)El\lON- STRATOH. Fu·cmist 1min!, padrll'd vinyl rop1 rupi.·sr11· & lralhl'r intl'.'rior. Dual t-01n- fort seats. full po1•:rr. rac- tory oir. tilt 11h('{'I, Ai\1-FM slerl.'O 1rilh l•tPt' pJayf.'r, po\.\•rr door Jo1:ks. po~·cr trunk OPf'TIC'r, lTUISC control, hvilight scn!incl. srccl brl!ed rarllal tires. l.'...:lremcly low mill.'RgC'. {4247771. SALE PRICED. 1001 CORVAIR lakf'11ood sin 1\·ngon. Xlnt cond, r-ebll cne;inc & transmis..~ion, R&ll. $2119., 4.ll2·7762. ~~~~~~·l --:--:-~-:--~~1 -~~~~---y: '69 Della 88 <..'On\•. Good cond. 1 o"'rlt'r. Pri/pty $1600. l)f>nnill Moore 49-1-74&1 :115--0~87 {_".'( 30 fonytin1el. YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTl'IORIZED CADILLAC Tracs, &: sb~. 828-4913 Best hordtop. Full.v equipped. DEA1 ~ 1 C.dll ExC'f'lk> ncr · Largest 1e ec n o -offeT/take over pymts. nf rn ilton. lacs in Or a:e County. SEE This! '68 VW Bus. Rblt SJa.-2'172 aft 6 pni. A.sk fol' LI' SaJes-Leaslnc. ene. Goocl conct $1600. 1901 'iO Buick LC' R.-.brco 4 ch· lf.T. Glen...,·ood, NB 548-£237. 25.000 1nL Ltke new. $24~. ~ Nabers .• 19TI Volk!! Super Bcell<". 6-16-6.~7 Hrr 6:l> pni. U Cadillac AM·FM Slccoc>. many xlraJ. CADILLAC I 2600 HARBOR BL.. Like nC\\'. 644-6348. COSTA MESA * * '62 VW-Looks so-so, but 540-9100 Open Sunday runs perfect. '70 SEDAN DE VILLE. ~,a1'-•72 COUPE DE VILLE. Full $3%5 5.JG-8400 tn1y nir, \'inyt 1op, plush cklth & Jealher in1l'rior. rull Avtot, Used . ) 990 poo,vrt', till &: rrlr 11·hN't, -s~ mdfo, pn11·rr rloo1· 1 FL~iT }ALE 'IOck:;, )(r.v rnilt•ag(' & n<"ar 1 e '71 De.Mun P ickup, low· ntw lftt'\1-ou!, An l'Xcl'P1ion- milcs Sl5il. e '69 T-Bird.' al valu~ at !his JO\v 1'111<' 20)!", full pmver & air, S2475. prier. (JS5EOJ1 . $<1311. lrafh('l' i11trrior, full pcnver, faclory air, h1·ilight sentineL po11·cr rloor IOclcs, power , ll'ltnk opcnr r. A?i1-FM !'adio. ~ !rss than l,600 mile!!. l ~·n­ i'r sold & serviced by \IS. e '69 Ford Torino, 2 door. NABERS CADILLAC dean, air, $1450. • '69 Ford 2600 llarOOr Blv rf .. I ~?TEAF\. ssm. NABERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Bl\'d .. Cos1a i\l<'!la :">.W·!llOO LTD, 2 door. air, vinyl roof, Co!!la ~1esa 540-9100 ' .• ·68 , ..... _, To•·iJ>) Sia -~ '67 Cadill;ic El Dorado 45M u"' '69 f~L OORADO. F'"ll 9 . SJ27" • Original lllilCS ('V('fy possi-111, pa~~. air, :>. po1rcr, fncto .... , llir. bl 00k '61 F d s \\ o "" '" hit• oplion, this car is or 1a ·gn, " pass, r . ...: t f' r i o r / black vl"yl · 1~,.,.. " u n hr I i e v a b 1 y clenn. all' I.A!· ton/black leather intrrior. •-11 1 " Probably the cleanest wsed ,,._. or <"a:-:c F\ln nnu·er. faclo•~. ,,· •. uth Co "·· • --· I """ ·' ' ~:t Dorado in Or11nf.:e Co. So · as! ..._.... l.A:Ps1ng, nc. po11·t'r door JO(·ks, Ai\f/F~T 300 We!!t Coa!!t llwy, N.B. 1 -•· YNIV<J8 $ ·192-9034 or 492-9136. San s ct'f'O 1-.110 i l l.m Clrn1en!e $3000. 64S-2182, alter 5 pm 673-8269 DAVE ROSS JlQNTIAC, S$AV ... ,.,.,_, .... , NlW OR USED CAR (.ti• U .1 fter 8 p .m . 846.7368 "-----2 for~~ 11 1963 Mercury Par~ loaded. 1961 Old! f'85.Fiocti \c&hi 100k great! Scll '~ately, f.Tcrc SJOO, Old• ~r take both for $.140! :Att~4 pm. loo:> Park St.. , Htwllngton B c h . Pri/J~r · · BUICK ' ·71 RlVIERA. Twcc<lo blaek ' blaclt Interior/black vlnyl roolJ N~. factory air, AM-fl'-ller<O mdio, till w~ ...,.. -locb. crWlt control; chrome sport wh.,.., Extrem'IY low mile· a~ .. (887C'I'N). S ALE PRICED. NAIERS CADILLAC 2600 11a.rtlor Blvd .. Costa Ma ~9100 '611 BUICK' Electra · 2'15 conwrt. fo~~ power, factory t1lr, lo, lo m i l eage . •VGe'l87) $15!19 0 AVE R<J!!S PONTIAC. 34 8 0 llarilor Blvd., Costa MN 7. Price efJeclM thru.9/29m. 2480 l·larhor Blvd.. Cos1a Mesa 546-8017. Price l'f- fecliv<" thn1 9/'J!:J/72. '67 SEDAN DE VILLE. Full po11·cr, factory air, vinyl roof. power seala. lTYY045) $1599 DA VE ROSS PON- TIAC, USO llarOOr Blvd., Costa f\.1csa S46-8017. Price <'lfcctlvc tbru 9/'l!J/'12. '69 El Dorado, 43,tOO ml's.. Still In warranty. Lotidcd w/xtru. Pel'f cond thruout Book!! for $4585 Will S"ll for SolXXl. Pvt pty, Gr."l-461!1. '70 CD\r. 33,000 nil. New l'adial tires. Xlnt cond. t9:io Port Seabourne, N . B . Ulurbor Vit'\v Hom<"sl. '67 Cadillac Sal DeVllle, 1t, H. AT, Air Vinyl Roof, $1395 e 'M CtidlTiac Cpe DcVlllP. R, H, /IT, Vinyl Roof, Low f.fil<"s, $119j 645--6&1..I. '72 El IXirado, I 0 o c I o r 01rnffil, 4200 milr!, Jlke M('\\', SS700. Call 543-9511. '63 Cad. ~·uu p11T. $350 '65 Olds 88. Full pwr, ~100. or 11·IJI trade for pick-up. 543--9291. e 1968 EL OORJ\00 e Very Clean •• S3lXIO. ,92-13.18 • RlS-1104 J970 CPE OEVlLLE $3600. See 500 D)'<':r Rd. Sllnt1 Anl\ 196) CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE ltave aomethine you want to sell? 08..Wfltd ads do It \\"CU -call NOW ~. NABERS CADILLAC 2600 1-larbor Blvd., Costa ~1t'sa 540-9100 CORYmE '72 Corvette. Yello\V convL brov•n lcath Int. 1\1r, 4 spd. 5 n1os-6.cnJ n1i. $4800. Jcn- nif('r, 979-8147 cves. '60 Corvette, :o:tnt cond. 47.cnJ n1i. total. 494-6600 day, 49'Hi175 eve. COUGAR 1971 FORD LTD e 4·Door Bt'OU/?han1 ll::irtltop e 400 t'id. 2v. V-1! tlngine e Auto111a!ic trans1ni ssion e Power S!c<T in\; e Po11·rr Bral;r~. Disc Froni e Air C'onr!ilioniug e Tilt \\lh<"l'I '61 OLDS. t'\V llrl'S Brakrs, $200. 5~;1.;\(}.qJ PINTO . -- " . ., ' • • ,, ' • 0 FF1l:·1'AL 1~'72 MODEL ' .. ' 73' s IN·. ·!DEPTH! ' NOW! $EE ONE OF E M 0 i T COMPLEtfe SE· I J •, I LEC1'10NS OF NEW 1973 FORDS -ALL AT THEODORE ROBINS' YEAR~AROUND VOLUME DIS· COUNTS. YOU DoN'T HAYE TO WAIT TO SAYE. ENJOY YOUR NEW '73 ·MODEL NOW! EVERY. NEW '72 LOW MILEAGE 72 STAFF CAR AND 72 TRUCK . NOW AT RNAL CLEARANCE DISCOUNTS. HURRY FOR SELECTION! FORD's · PUNT • PASS and KICK SAT/, SEPT. 30 AT DAVIDSON FIELD, NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH . NEW '72 COURIER PICKUP WITH GEM TOP CAMPER L.EASE DIRECT ·FOR LESS ven lucky people can buy a new El Dorado camper for less than a dealer pays the manu- facturer. SPECIAL PURCHASE 1972 VANS. I ¢0 ETITION STARTS ' I' ~T 1 P.M. , J,: I BOY 8 THRU 12 " ' GIBLE. GET YOUR $23:79 COMPLrn . . . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON ALL . . _OrtLY _7_LEFT See our big selection of .EcOll· . ( . \ oline; vans and van icon•, I • , ~ ' '° ~ -'~· lmll\!dlate ~lve.ry ~ • oW~~ ~-wms AJ'oRo , : TODAYI • LIMITED-OFFER-HURRY (24f9i WE -WILL SHOW YOU THE INVOICE your choice! 1973 ··MODEl,S - . ' ., I f ' '' u·SED .. CARS . LOOK FOR THE . CARS. WITH THE • I,. • ~t I '.. . 1 ' Ni> NEW•t:AS OF '• . ... , . I ,,. SEPT.llth,1972 ... , ; 'bu'il' A • .l w '"RANn' . I. ".;.'~ _-f ~ .... IS ·~D Mi GOLD FROM;'. ,, .:K ... ~· l>A·~-"' , " •COAST•"'O COAST !.•"• I .. . .. . -.. • , .1 '/ •• ' wf.tn yo11 buy • u1td c•r wlt'tl the ntw A·I Wer· 1 r1nty, yo.11 ltt Yt yo11r worrie1 on your Ford o,,r. , • . i. ..-r'1 J oor1f•P• Htrt'1 wh y. f.Dr tht Ar1t )0 Jey1 or 2,000 mi1t1 yovr Ford , •O.t ltr 9 11er1ntt•1 to p•y I 00 '1. for eny mtjor '/ "'Ptir1. . For th, n•1tf 24 11'1onth1, yo11r ForJ Dt•ler 911•r•n· , t¥1 , 15 % J i11:011nf on rep1ir1 covtrtG unJer the · n-A·I Werr•11r.,, . /• ·.Y~u gtt A·J prot•ction when you"r• 011t of town ~! I~ ~ .... ry' Sta'tt of ftit Union vou'll fi11d pt rtici- p~int Ford O.tle r1 who will promptly •11J courit· ou1ly honor the 24 month provi1ion of your A·I Comt 1te our 11 l1cfion of A·I Werr1ftft1G v1t G c•r1 toJ 1y l Wt'r• A-1 Wt rr1nty ht•dquerftrt i11 thi1 •rte • , , th• cle•ltnhip wht rt you lt11ve your worri•1 on our Joor1f•P· . 1964 FORD FALCON SEDAN ' . f, ' .. I 1968 foRD · XL . . . I t . ~ ' 'l -.• ' ·,.·' '. -~. ~. ... "t . f ••• "t .. 1 ..... ~-"'I" ...... -. -•. . .": .. ., .. ~·~. ,,_ s·1 • I fie« ,._ .,_.,nQ, oood "): miles. fl7ICllll) Gold wUll !1 wtllt9 top. .-• ~I ·'.-: I ..... ....., ,. \l ,, •• ,(;'·-... 1969 FORD LTD 4 DOOR HARDTOP ' '1966 SHELBY I ".· . .'GT350 .• .' ; i J 1964 FORD GALAXIE 500 2 DOOR HARDTOP • \'t, 1ulomatk. rw:llo, lleat· llonln;, good mlleL f.ISS· ''" 1966 PLYMOUTH RJRY 2 DOOR • , ;, sio-r 11_,ng, IOw mlfn . (HCK 919) 1971 VEGA STATION WAGON A11t~tk, rldlo, ne.tier, r1111v eQ!flppecl. GODd miles. CUJB iMil $550 " 1969 FORD GALAXIE BY 500 CONVERTIBLE / ' Cyllndtr, f1c11Dry t11ulp- , 'Pld. Good °\nUtt. IOIS ZO "'· r'41o, llMMr, 1v1om.. tk, powtr 1TMrl!lg, good miles. I'" EOHI $155 • spMd, good miles, rMllD, Meter, h1rd to Und. (llD ASGI GT I $/'196 ! , ,, I 1 FORQ I · M•YUICK>; , , Redlo, ~ .. ,.,., ' cyllnde-r, ODtll mlltt. (l ~-'J611 • JI',...., I I 1971 FORD PINTO RldlD, heetltl", • 11)Md, vinyl roof, apprnln'\ltel~ 10.000 11'111". (I XA 97•1 l TO CHOOSE FROM '69 FORD GALAXIES "'. "" "·'·'•· '" .,,,,.. $1 9 P.S., •Ir, low mile. Wiit! _ .. Wllholl! vlnyt '°"'· (YPS. ~ 71\) CXJV 111) (Y RK llOl '65 FORD GALAXIE 500 4 DOOR \I'll, eurvm•llc, r.i1o, ,..,. tr, 1lr cllf'ld., good mll"- (Hl(Y ).!1) ~ ______ ., ,.._.,. -IAllKAllll~ICARI - PAm • l ftYICI HOUIS 1 .... ,. .. ... 7 -•• ,... , .... ,,t . .... . .... .. .... _. -... -.... ------. • 1, ' • GRAN. TORINO.SPORT 2-Dr. 11.-dtop ,, 7 • . I ClEARANCE PRICED \ I ::"0 '72 LTD WGN ·. I I COUNTRY SQUIRE 400 Cl) ve. beltld whii.wults, 4ICll foc:ing mt seots, factory air, AJMM st.rto l'adio, mted gloss, ,_.. 6oar hcb, H.D. s..,..;... (2176514930<) ;I SAVE $ .I :I '70 .... ~~~.~~t:.~~;.,, $17 88 ,ower stetrmg, Licen1t No. 6 lUW • . '70 HORNET $138'8, -,.,._-. ...... .-..... ... . . . . • • 1· • • • • • • THUNDERBIRD 2-Dr. Hardtop PINTO ·WACJON , . • • 17 San. Cle•••enie Cap~irano VOL. 65, NO. 271, 6 SECTIONS, 8'4 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY., CAUFORNrA .. ' Today's Fbull N.Y. Steekta WEDNESDAY, SEPTI:MBER 27, 1972 TEN CENTS 'All-year' School Could Save $25 Million? sqpt. Truman Benedict said today that all-year elementary school. could save the Capistrano Unified School District $25 million ln construction costs over the next two decades. The superintendent, launching the first v; ~ek of an intensive information cam- paign in the community over the all-year concept, gave those projections to members of the San Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce. Benedict dwelt on the pending pupil housing crisis in most areas of the • I Roof Falls sprawling school district, and said that since the end of school last spring more than 600 new pupils had enroUed in the district That should require ooe entire elemen- tary school to house them. And Benedict added that the recent soaring figures were only the beginning in tbe district, "which is tbe last in Southern California due for explosive population growth.'' Benedict beard few negative comments about the concept which calls for setting elementary school puplls on an annual cycle of nine school weeks in class and th.rff weeks of vacation. 1be superintendent told several dozen chamber members at a breakfast meeting that San Clemente's elementary schools would not be subject to initial proposals W trustee! approved of the pro- gram in a decision due this December. He said that the elementary population in the city of San Clemente is "rather static, and no beayY growth is expected in the immeidate futm." • e1s Border Crackdown -~-r:-·-ln irvine; -. -·Huge Marijuana Haul Confiscated Probe Set By CANDACE PEARSON Of tM o.ur ,,.., ltaff · Both the causes and the effects of the collapse Tuesday of roof trusses being in· stalled at the construction site of El Camino Real School in Irvine remained a mystery today as state inspectors in- vestigated damage to see if a tbree.o month delay in the .lcbool'f opening is necessary. . ~ -., ..... , . Three workmen were Injured Tuesday before noon when a 7 ,000 square foot· ai:ea of rool trusse•r fell ' at tbe site al Walnut Avenuo and ~a Ann Lane. A dolen othe< Wodmeb escaped serious injury when the:{ ~an' from tbe building as about 20 ~caled bea1111 dropped llke dominoes. 'Ille more than $1 milllon facillty was scheduled to open in April. Dave King, facilities ptilnner for the San Joaquin School District, said loday that state inspectors from the school architecture and construction offices must determine if the beams are salvageable. If they can be salvaged or repaired, King said, the accident will mean only a delay of a week or two. But if the state determines there is too much damage to allow safe construction with the beams, they will have to be reordered from their cloeeat manufac· turer -in Boise, Idaho. , That will take at leut 1J weeks, King said. Three different versions of the accident wer.:: still circulating today. Irvine police said they wookl not be charged with detennining the cause. That will be. up to insurance companies or to the state industrial accident com- mission, police said. One witness said that a crane hoisting an arched beam onto the struc:tl.lre knocked one support against another and they began falling. ,Another worl<man fold school dlllrlct oflicials that a carpenter sitting on one beam while attempting to place another caused the imbalance with undue pressure. King said be was fold still another v"8ion of the accident by a witness who S{lld the crane bounded erratically against a beam and vibrated the others lo the ground. · Five county fire department units , Irvine police and the Irvine Company ranch patrol truck responded to the call wllile the COsli Mesa helicopter landed on the school site itself. .i The school is bellli built by J. Ray CGostructlon Company. St81Qbrugge and Moon •e structural · ongbleefl oo the pi:oject. The school •w!U, _.,. the r0sidentl of California Hotnes tract. King said tbe company was already (See ROOF; hie I) SOFA'S SOtD 1N FIRST CALL ; ;,Fabulous .....ii.. I q>uld have 10ld 110 oo1u. Tbe first caller bought It." .!lbal's the 1tory of ruuiu from this 14, SOia steeper • pd $250. .. sen tor 185. ........... ~ It appeared on<!e lb the clMllDed ad- vertlsfng secllon of the DAILY PILOT- and, obvlousl!, did 111,libl 11111..JIOi ,.. it .... CID build ID ad fo P• your needs. Just dlal lbO direct Die to _,II, d4Nm, and ask a DAILY Pllp1' acl- vifor .to t14•111) ,.... , . ' ' . • • ' " By JOHN VAL TERZA Of Ille u.ll't Pllll Stiff Border patrolmen disclosed Tuesday a series of weekend seizures or large quan- tities of marijuana at the San Onofre check point which may have set all tJme records in their office. In all, more than • half ton ol marl· Jua"' ~ (Ive ~ ...,.. Jqvolved in u;,.. ~ inC~ over ·'the weekend. 'Ille llrst of the three seizures resulted in the ams! of Douglas D. Sut- t,f, 21, ,of ~ wbo was detained after a rootlDe stw all~ yielded !IS pounds of the weei hidden in his cir. niat in- cident occtitred e.rtf Friday .oJternooil. The second maj.., amst look place Friday night when, ~tiolmen stopped a car for a check of citbenship and said they could smell a strong odor coming from tile ~ They allege that 440 pounds of the weed created the aroma. Paul N. Dellazoppa and Patrick J. Sullivan, both 25 and both from Ventura, were arrested on !ederal charges. On Sunday night, officers stopped a tow truck to check the car attached behind and in the trunk they allege they found 124 pounds of marijuana. They ar· rested the truck driver, William Justus , :n, of Oceanside. The asserted owner of the car, Miree Oemente Woman Sues Over Arrest A San Clemente woman who claims she was falsely accused by her former employers and a state narcotics agent of forging a prescription for narcotics has sued bOtb parties for $50,000 in damages. Mrs. ·Jacqueline Pohl lllingworth nama the Alpha Beta market of San ~lo, Its seeurlty guard John Snider, the state and state agent DeMis J. Fox u defendants in her Orange County Superior ·Court action. , Mrs. 'Dllngworth states the accusations ·were made against her Dec. 16 while she was employed by Alpha Beta. She notes that she was cleared in municipal court on Feb. 22 of drug charges when the district attoraey's ·office moved for dismissal. Tolbert, 29, of Long Beach also was taken into custody. Patrol spokesman said the use of tow trucks has been extren;iely common in recent marijuana smuggling cases whlch they have discovered. Late last month two other tow truck ind.dents resulted in major .seizures of tlie Weed. All th4 ~~ "111'. ~ federal cbarga·of 'linllgiing ~ Daria Residents ' Meet Candidates For Capo Board A small but keenly interested group or Dana Point residents met their three candidates fo11 the board of trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District Tuesday night. The appeal'llJl<e by the three aspirants to the District Four board position up for election next Tuesday· appeared in the only candidate's night scheduled before the special election called to fill a board post which has been vacant all swnmer. And all three candidates expreased tbe same basic points of view on the main issues in the election. The candidates, Robert Greco, Stephen Smith and Antboqy Stevens all agreed "in principle" with'1he theory of all-year elementary school, yet all agreed that the concept should be explored cautiously before trustees make a decision to latlllch a pilot program. Each of the three gave a two-minute statement, then accepted questions from moderator Wilma Bloom and members of the audience. Smith, a lawyer with a backgrowld in juvenile law and in criminal Jaw, said in his campaign he bad Compiled a list of positive and negative comments by the electorate toward the school district. Smith added that the prime areas of voter coccem he noted in hi! campaign contacts were the overcrowded con· diUons at Marco Forster Jwiior High School, the shortage of textbooks in rome classes; the segregation of students ac- (See CANDIDATES, .J>I• Z) Food Trial Set Vegetarian Appears in Courtr9tfm James Douglas Roberts, ·operator of the Laguna ~h vegetarian eatery, Love Animals, Don't Eat Them, ap- peared in Laguna Niguel municip81 court for jury trial while ooliide the (.'OUfl· hoose, A knot of his supporters held a trial of lhell> OTIJ1. , llobeila1 p. la accused of allowing a ca~\, a' f90SW' and several dogs in the reatautanl at 782 S. Coast Hlgbwoy dur· Ing the cafe•s opening July 4. Roberta 81"1 atltlr!'"l' Sany Simona of Laguna Jleoch were uilgn<d lo the courtn>om .. rMunlclpatJuage H. Wmen Knight where Jury aelecllon got under Wl!Y thJs, 111111'1tinc, RobelU, wt!ll'l,. a crlap new white T· shirt with Love Anbo6lo,.llorl't Eat Them and a picture of a lamb1 a chlld and a cow tdlk ...-on ti, Aid lie wu co1>- fldent. that the ju;y woulil flnd blin in- t ·' I ' ' But in other school attendance areas. notably San Juan, Mission Viejo, Dana Point and Laguna Nigue], soaring enroll- ment reinforces the theory that all-year school would be a solution. Members of the chamber remained somewhat neutral, yet keenly interested in tbe Idea •. Several ~embers brought up new aspects to tuning problems. One member pointed out that the tradi- tional summer Bible schools sponsored by local churches (his church instructed • more than 500 youngsters this past sum - mer) would be affected because their pupils would be attending school during summer months. Benedict stressed hoy.·ever. that the flexibility of the all-yea r program t..'Ould bridge the problem. but he conceded that several community service groups keyed to youth would probably have to resturcture schedules along with schools. "There are many things that will come up that we haven't anticipated," hr said, "but I honestly believe that the r1a ' Bike Rider Burt ' Lori K. Leppla, 14, of 30844 Calle Cbueca,, San Juan :Capistrano, is assisted by' San Clemente firemen. Police said i(er bike struClr the side of a car on El Camino Real al Palizada ·Tu~sday afternoon. The car, turning left, was driven by Laurie Jan Wilcox, 23, of 2333 Ridge RoutO' Drlve, El Toro. She was not cited. Miss Leppla is in satisfactory condltion'at San Clemente General Hospital. · I Specter of S~t Creek , Surfaces µI Capo ·issue . The ghost of Salt Creek fl~ through the Orange County Board 1)f Supervisors hearing room Tuesd~"and may return soon. ,," The occasio_» .-Was a proposed aban-- donm=nt o .....-short roadway ln county terri Capistrano Beach. The street had · n unused and is called Via Verde. ll "1reliels the San Diego Freewoy oU· . rimp to Pacinc Coast Highway. SUpervisor David L. Baker said tile 00- fool by 000-foot long street mlgbl be a fine p1ace for a vista polnt. "It is located on a bluff overlooking Doheny Beach State Par!< and possibly could be used for a vlewpohlt mlnipark," said the supervisor. Listeners were reminded that ooce- controversial Salt Creek Road was also a short unused street which the county abandoned without ceremony in 1988 in an action which returned to haunt them, especially Conner supervisor Alton Allen, who look tbe brunt of the blame for giv· Ing up access to Salt Creek Beach. Thal Issue wu finally reoolved after n\onths of wrangling and negotiations thnlu~h tbe purchase of tile beaeh at a "bargain price" by the county from the developer. The Via Verde abandonment upon wblcb a public hearing must be held in about four w .. ks bas other 1ng1 .. : The street was approved for aban-- cionment by the plaMing commission at tbe requ,_i of • developer, Balboa Pacific JJic. of Irvine. Tbe fll'll'l pfans to litllid a ~nit condoininitim project on ·t I 15 acres on both sides of arid including Via Verde. Planning department officials who studied the project point out that there is no possible access to Pacific Coast Highway from the tract. Its access ii by Camino Capistrano whk:b rurui southea!t toward San Clemente. Trial Ordered For Councilman San Juan Capistrano City Councilman James Keith Weathers was ordered Tuesday to face tria1 Nov. 20 in Orange County Supcrlor Court on mault charges filed afler he allegedly leveled a loaded shotgun at l'lheriff's offlctrs. Judge William Murray sat the trial date for the civic official and ordered him to return to hl.s courtroom Nov. 10 for ~ pretrial hf>11rlng. Weathen ls free on bis pledge lo appear. Weathers was arrested July 27 by sheriff's deputies who disarmed · the angry councilman at a Mi.sslq'i Viejo borne where bis wife, Ellen, had sought ttluge. Weathers allegedly had earlier been in- volved in a gun-waving incident at Dana Marina in which his wife and a male ac- quaintance said tlley wero thrtatened by use counclltn«n. " ' ' I schedules are so fle1lble that the prob- lems can be overcome." Benedict emp~ized that the all-year concept u·hic~i·has proven suixessfu l in other schooV aistricts means max imum use of school facilities. "\Vhen you really examine it, tradi· tional summer vacation came aOOut u•hen our society Y.'as almost wholly agricultural. ,;A lot has changed since then ," he ~d­ ded . ens Joh Planned lnL~wood __ _ -Attorney By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL ot .. o.ur .. u .. ,,.,, LOS ANGELES -Plans for the 1$ million burglary of the Laguna Niguel branch of United California Bank were first made hi a Lynwood motel room in early February, U.S. Attorney Jack Walters 'alleged before a federal cow1 here today. · Wallen made the statement as tbe trial opens in whlch three men are charged with oonopirlcy, ba!lk llw'glary and bank Jarceoy. . Facing ch811e1 are Philip Bruea •. ~rt Pl>itr. A.Jll-<:leYeland;_,Cbar\elt nioe MulllglD, 31, of Yoanptown, Ohfoi and Amil Alfred Dlnelo, 31, o( Boardman, Ohio. --The proaeQ,ilOl'i 9-oPenJng remarks - only 15 minuteo Jn l.,,,U. -traced ao •ll•gecl ..n11 of events wblcb began when defendants Mulligan and Dinslo allegedly traveled to California in February and rented a room at the Jubilee Motor Inn, Lynwood. Theo men, Walters asserted, ostensibly were in catifomla to visit relatives but in reality, he added, they were laying the preliminary groundwork for the massive break-in. Using the motel room as a base, the Laguna Niguel branch was selected and certain arrangements made. These arrangements, the prosecutor contends, included purchase of a 1961 Oldsmobile sedan with a false bottom outfitted in the trunk and lease of a fashionable townhouse at 31381 West Nine, Laguna Niguel. 'Ille condominlwil was rented Walters said on March 8 b1 Ronald and Henry Barber, two brothers indicted in the crime but still at large. Walters asserts the proseuction will show that the Tustin home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dawson was used for secret meetings between the burglars and that tools and some stolen property were stored in the Oldsmobile which was park· ed In Dawson's garage. Dawson Is a long-time friend of Mulligan and who is apparently not in- volved in· the crime. Later in March, each of the five men indicted returned to the Cleveland area, Waiters said, then ,.turned lo Laguna Niguel on March 15, nine Clays prior to (See TRIAL, Pap I) Orange Weatller According lo the Nallol141 Weati.. er Service, considerable cloudlnell is in store for the Orange COUt Thursday, with the 81D1 breaking through in the afternoon. High temperature should be in the low 7011. INSIDE TODAY South Coast R<p<r!OP'll launch- ts ita 11inth 1emon of theater on the Orange Coast this weekend 1 , wi!h a revival of the Ammcan comedy cl a 1 • i c "The Torch--' beortr.s. •• See Enurtcm'l?tfftt. PaQe SO. ...,_ . ,...... ~ --. .............. ,. --" :::.. .: .. .. -.. , .............. =-=-· .: =-....: .......... , ' • ' " • 2 l¥fi ,.JILO, SC ~ Hottlne's Finances Dwindling San Clemente's botUnt will Ix-l\\'O years old this week but an empty bank <iecount , n1ounting bills and a growing l1't of persons in need have scotched the ceteSl'ation. Spokesmen fo r the service, \vhich st::irted 'Ailh a handful of volunteers two years ago and has grown steadily since. S<JY that donations from the communily have dwindled to almos'. nothing. Yet the need for the counseling. self-help. rap sessions and personal assistance is grO\\'- ing in the city. The organization, known aJ "Listening Ears" has two full-time directors who spl it one county salary. Gary Levan of San Clemente and Bill A,ngennan of Monarch Bay head the dai- ly operatlons·out of a three.room o{fice group which once was provided at S80 a month, but recent hikes in the fee to $125 monthly have eaten away at finances. "We've had more activity than ever before ." said Arthu r R. "Bud" Scheele. a founder of the program. "But the community support ... the funds we once received from service clubs, are almost nil ." he added. 'nle center's August phone bill renta ins unpaid. The rent Js overdue. 'l'hi:re ii $10 in the bank. Yet the calls -day and night. from the young the very young to the elderly are growing in number. • "What makes it very grim is to look at o*her hotlines along the coast tbat are extremely healthy financially. Levan lamented. "The hotline in Costa Mesa recently, got f18.000 from a benefit sponsored by John Wayne. Colorful Offering Artist Louise Leyden holds her landscape painting that is one of the offerings in the Carnival of Color this w~kend in the Ca"pistrano Beach Plaza. It \Viii include dozens of artists booths. The event is span- Fro11a Page J FOOD ... DAILY l"ILOT Sltfl ~r. sored by the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Com· merce. Also standing is Joyce Goforth. Seated, r&- serving a booth, is Chloe Goforth. ~ ........ we~on1y-w1S?r he'd-tHrow one ·ror ils. ~ so we could have a future too,·• he added . about our beliefs. We believe it will bring 41.ltention to our .cause. j1Pe0ple flave t ome to-the Tes.taurant and given up their leather, just thrown it away," the young man said of his efforts to co nvert others to his vegetarian way of life. Leaping Victim in Laguna Praised by His Superior : Both Levan and Angerman have con- templated seeking help from city coun- cilmen. but are doubtful about the ability of the city to help. County Delays ~ction on Two Niguel Projects , Or~ge County planpi11g commissioners delayed action on two tract maps ln the Laguna NilJUel area Tuesday pendlhg further information on a state Supreme Court decision. The justices voted 6-1 last week that envinlnmnetal impact statements must be provided before cities or counties may issue buildina: pennits .~ pr i ya 't e developers. ' The deci!ion was on a Mono O.Unty ,..,. brought by an ecotogy' group; the · !Friend& or Mammoth, which has 'tern· porarily held up construction of a 1arge apartment project at Mammoth Lakes. . County Planning Director Forest Dickason said today that the requirement of impact statements should not seriously hold up private developments in the county. He said many large developers had anticipated the ruling and had in· eluded environmental reports in their plans. The county and all other governmental agencies are required to file en· vironmental impact reports on all pubilc projects under a 1970 state law. Previously. thl! 'ruie had not been applied to private construction but Dickason stated .week• ago ·that it would be in time. , The Laguna Niguel project held up by the planners were Avco CommWJily Development plans for three light in· dustrial Jots ·on"38 acres south of Crown \1alley Partway and west or the San Diego Freeway, and 49 acres on the north side of Pacific Coast Highway to be developed to 13 large single family borne lots. DAILY PILOT lite Or•nte C••t DAILY' PILOT, wl!., wMcl1 ·~ combirw;(I llte H•""'·"'••tt, ;, PllllU\l'old 11¥ lite O<•noe C0.1! P11bH11tln9 Co"""""Y· S1rie ••t~ oedllil>ns •r• l'Ubli•llecl, MON11y llt•o1191! Frld1v. lor COii• M•1•, Nt"110rl lie.ell, H11nrr1191on 8ekll/Foi.inl•in v1u11, L1;v11• 8ffdt, ll'YIMt l.odlebkl( end Sin Clemen"/ S•n J111n C..lslrlf!O. A •111911 reglonel edition Is '*"""*' S.Jvrd•Y1 end $11nd1~. Tltt prlnclNI Pllltlllhir. Pllf\1 11 .tt llO Wr•I a1y StrNI, Coal• Mtw, C•lllornl1. fH24. Rob1rt N. We1d Ptet.0 ... 1 Ind Pvollthff J1clc R. C\lrl1v Vk• Pr•kltt1t Mel GtMtel ,_,.llltlt lhom•• K., .. a EdlfOr lho1P11• A. Mvrphine M111<19fft9 Ellitor Cherie• H. loot Rich.trd P. Nill "'•lllletlt Men.tgll'l{I Edolort s.. c1 ...... Offke lOS North f:I C•mi110 Reil, ,l,72 °"'"'"""" c1111 MtM: J>O wnr l•y $1•ett Hl'WJloOrt llHCll1 l3)) Nt'W'lltft ilovl<llYlfO Hwi1lnotM l1tec11 : 11111 8eet11 n.1.11 .... •"9 ._,._ IN<tu m F""' ,., .. _ ,.,.,.._ cnc1 64J-4JJt Cl..tflH A'"'1hlttt '41·1'71 Sn C ........ Al n.,.,.._9'1: T•l•P••• 4tl-44JI CWrflfl'lt, 1f'2. Or•nte Coe11 ~lftll""' ~""· No MW1 ''°''" u111,1r11lcwla. ...... let mlt!tr .,. .....,.I~ ,..kt fMY M ,....,1,1(911 •14tl0ft • NllMi.I W · flliltl" .... $QPll!flffll • .. • -<~"' .. Mtt MW .. If Cll•• .-.,..._ Cefllenli.,•, . . tN' _,.,.,, 11.U fM~l\l'fl N lf .f,l,1J ~ l'l\!Mirv ........ ~ .. ;6$ mon!fllr. : ••• Roberts said that he would attempt to submit into evidence leaflets decrying the eatinj of animal flesh and promoting the vegetarian way. He said the law under which he is ac- cused has no real value as far as health and safety is concerned. Restaurants in other countries allow animals on the premises and private citizens will share their meals with pets In their homes, he claimed. "This country is bogged with these kind of laws," the restaurate~ noted and he indicated he alms to change them if possible. , I. Ro~~s fir!{t Came to Laguna Beach from CJitCigo ~in April. He u1s nOw ~t 256( p,. ll'J!·: •.• .. • • • • . • He· !Siii!t be · opened his restaurant because he says "a whole bunch of possibllities of wtiat I could do" in pro- moting the vegetarian philosophy. * {;{ * A1iimal Prowst Cro ·wd Watched By Riot Squad As the protest crowd for the trial of James Douglas Roberts swelled outside the courtroo1n anQ cou rthouse a specially trained crowd control squad of 10 helmeted Orange County n1arshals stood by. Dillard \Vilkirson. Orange County marshal. said his office had antiC'ipated that perhaps 300 persons would show up. The sperial\y trained deputy n1arshals were at the court for protection of U1e county facility, he said . The n1arslu1 ls \\'e1·e ou tfitted \vith three-foot long night sticks and were dressed In khaki "combat.. sty I c unifornls. Wilkirson said his officers would not overlook infractions of law that might be committed by the co lorful and ragtag crowd. •le said his office antic ipa ted that any protes l v.•ould be peacelul but that they had to be ready just in case. The marshals were tucked awav 111 an office off to one side of the cou'rthouse lobby. Fro1n Page J ROOF ... onr monlh behind schedule when the in· cident took place. Studenls who will attend the 4:,.1 5, year-round facility. are rlO\\' housed in U1t for1ncr Rancho San J o a q u i n Intermediate school building on Sand Canyon Avenue in East Irvine. Injured in the accident when th e beams, weighing almost a hair ton each, (ell \\•ere Sivert Thompson, of Placentia: Jim Sanders. of Anaheim, and Herve Binette, of Santa Ana. All were taken to Tustin Community l~ospltal. TusUn Community Hospital. Police said Thompson suffered severe ilClld Injuries. .Sandilrl reporledly sullered broken tlbs and a fractured pelvis and Binette had ciUi on his head . HO..pn.I olliclal s listed all three men's r ~.1ditlon3 as stitlsfactory. By BARBARA KREIBICH OI Ille O•llY l"llol Stiff Stephen Winget, 25-year-old hospital administrative aide who leaped to his death in front of a Laguna Beach school bus early Tuesday, was "a very capable, sincere young man with a bright future and no apparent problems.'' This was the evaluation of his superior. Pomona Valley Hospital administrator Ro)>ert Burwell, who hired Winget as his administrative assistant in mid·June. Tbe Orange County Coroner's office listed Winget's death as an apparent suicide, but will proceed with routine tox- icological teats, a de~ty said this morn-ing. . . -. ' ... The young mari. whO llved in La Veme with his wife, Barbara, was killed in- stantly at 7:30 .a .m. Tuesday when he leaped from the South Coast Highway sidewalk near the entry to Ben Brown 's Motel into the patb o( the '6ncoming bus. which was load~ w.it~ atu~Cnta bound for Thurston Intermediate School.· From Pagel CANDIDATE ••• cording to learning abilities. ''ft seemed that there were two segments of people with differing vie\v- points," Smith ex plained. "The older segment with no children in school had the belief that there were too many frUls in the program "The parents, on the other hand, said there were not enough classrooms, ' he said. Smith said tha t because of the intense study period a candidate needs to inform himself on the district he had · not yet ex· amined the district's antl-drug..abuse Pro· gram. He added. however. that his philosophy holds that a 16-year-old student "stiould be held accountable for his actions." "There is a strong need among the counseling staff." he added "to honestly understand the stud ents.'' . Greco. who lists among his community service credits two vears' service on the board of the local Girl Scout Council, em- phasized that his experience in the aerospace field and in business ~vould qualify him for a board post. ~le also devoted c on s id\ra h l e discussion to the all-year school concept <is being one way to cope with rapid growth in the diitrict, but emphasized t:,at the problems· ol individual !an11 ly scheduling and other drawbacks should ~em~l~~:~led if the idea.._ ~ere im- Asked by trustees Presldent"'~.nooert Hurst if he approved of a statewide J>NJP- erty tax, Greco insisted that he would endorse such a plan "only if the taxpayer pa id for what he used." Stevens, a reading specialist and C'On- sultant. emphasized that the district must stress communications and the teaching of those skills to its pupils. He said that because of the gto\vlng rrisis in growth in the di11trict "it looks like another bond Issue will com~ before the voters." He said that before the district in· stitutes radical chanf es, the resi~ents ;n the area should at understMd tbo5e changes. He said he advocated a shift from the graded method of student perfonnance to the levels approach which allows a stu- dent to work at his own pace. He added tlmt the all-year concept wo11ld help in acblevinc that goal bec•use the traditional structure of a school v~3r has been sln!tched out anJ divided tnto four cycles. instead of one1 1 • "Tiiat mean8 tbat if~ ot~t.tis ·r..tlile problallslio-can "'1!<•.t tbe'.l"t !ourth•ot hi! acbOOI fNr ~ ol tlle).ellllre. blllt motlllli," ll,e uf'lllri!il. ~) · ··:Double -~t! ~· insil , ''WoU!ll dil>nij>I ·• lamlly 'liruCh warie · •ll' ye11r &ehool,11 " , Bus driver Marty Lucking and the hor· rifled students who witnessed the tragedy told California Highway Patrol officers Winget apparently saw the bus ap- proaching. crouched and leaped in front of it. striking the right headlamp and windshield. He was hurled 60 feet by the impact. It was revealed tha't Winget bad been attending a two-day seminar at Ben Brown's for alumni of the UC Los Angeles hospital administration program, in which he received i1is master's degree. He also served a tw~year a~ ministrative residency at Va 11 e y Presbyterian Hospital in Van Nuys before joining the Pomona Valley staff, Burwell said. Winget was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, and will be buried in City Cemetery in that city, aecordi/lg ~o a spokesman for Saddleback 'Mor't4ary, Tustin, which is handling local ar· rangements. He and his wile had no children. Sul'VtvQr~ in iid<IU!on.to tlldtwklow;are · his parents~ Dr. and' MrS. Fr&nk Wmget of Salt Lake City: two brothers, Douglas or Menlo Park and Gary of Salt Lake City: and three sisters, Mrs. Jo An D'lott of Santa Cruz, Mrs. Judy Keyser of Ohio and Mrs. Colleen Nood of Salt Lake ~Uy. I GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIES ELECTRONIC WATCHES BASICALLY SIMPLE ''Electronic" implies to many people a m ysterious system which might introduce expensive repair problems. Actually, electric and electronic watches are 'simple, reliable and easy lo service and repair. All such watches have a small battery which looks almost exacUy like a bearing aid cell , but is built to put out less current but o'9er a longer period of lime. These batter- ies also.differ in that the watch will not be seriously harmed should leakage occur. All these watches have some kind of mechani~al oscillator governed by a balance wheal. tuning fork or other pulsating or vibraUng device which carries either a coll or a pel' manent magnet. Wlien current pu .. es through coll ori magnet It p~ •ides power to m-the other iJm. pie dev\ces in the iystem. You can buy eleelrfc or·eledronlc watches with confiBence. They are very trouble-free, with adJumn•nt. and repairs easily accompliahetl by your local independpt jeweler. Bee~!t:1·.1Hfpate • • .. -~ r • • 'Irustee Wtin't • • ' ' ~ ltesigµ Positi-on --.. " By GEORGE LEIDAL • Of .. ~ Pill S_., O!ficials of the Coast Community College District today recalled an in- ctden$ similar to 9fte facing a Saddleback: Comlnunity Coll• tn..tee in Which a member who moved out of ttle dlstdct wae removed trom the board. A Coasti, distpct spokesman said the removal of J . O'Hara Smith from the tw~year collea:e • district board In February, 1969 Involved a mistaken Clouston In Jail; Bail ' At $500,000 purcliaso of a bome Ill tha ,.... Newport Beach tract, into which Saddleback boar<! member Michael ColUns has moved. Because Smith inadvertenUy purdwed a home in that portion of the llarl>or View Hornet -Bren tract -which re- mained in the Saddleback College district, fellow Coast trustees declared 1 Smith,'.s seat va~t. Attorney George 1 • Rodda Jr. w" appointed posthaste to succeed Smith. Sioce that incident in 111611, Saddleback district trustees have refuaed to cooaidei' a reallgruneot of the con!U&ing boundary which besecta many homes in the ex.· pensive Newport Beacb neighborhood. Then, on Aug. 12, Collins moved from Laguna Hills to IHI Port Shellleld Place, in the Bren tract. Collins has said be bought the home after confirming with county officials it lvas indeed withln the Saddlebae'k district. Herman Lee Clouston, accused killer or However, Dewey Hillman, of the coun· a BUena ('ark police officer and subject ty schools office, dLscovered the tract o! a :slx..Qay manhunt. is being held in map used to pinpoint Collins' purchase 11 AnaJielm : City Jail today in lieu of conhlsing. Alie< close scrullny ot ofllcial ·~,am blll. ma!!" in the past several daY1 , Hillman .,......, r bas ooncluded Collins' new borne iJ Li. Norm Cook of the Anaheim police bise<ted by the two districts' boondary. homkide detail said the elusive Clouston, One third of lbe lot -the front yard -ls captflred in Lynwood Tuesday night, was in the Saddleback district and tw~tblrd.s scheduled for arraignment on a formal -the house and rear yard _ are in the murder charge at Orange County Coast Community College District. Municipal' Court this afternoon. That means that while Collins con-(.()()k re'fused any further comment on t~ 38-year~ld ex-convict accused of gtin· tinues to serve on the Saddleback district nP.t& down Detective Darrel D. "Bud" board, he will vote and pay two-third:!: of cate. last Thursday while the officer was his college property taxes to the Cioast ·-· · Cl xual Community College dJstrict. u,-,aqg to )11terview ouston on 8 se DespJte these facts, Collins said Tues-pe~rsion assault. Clouston surrendered to Lynwood da>'., ~ has had "no thoughts'' about patrOlmen Mike Patter90D and Tom resi~1ng. . . Ro1¥§h without resistance late Tue~ay. Hillman said a verbal opinlon of the "Doo't -sfiOO[••-the O ffi'CerS""'iaid -Orange Co~ty Council indJcated it woukl Clouston told them. "I am Herman Lee take Collins resignation or an action to Clouston that lhe Anaheim Police are declare a vacancy by SaddlebaCk lookiilg for ... I'm glad it's over .•. I trustees to prompt county schools chitf haven't been able to sleep for days." Dr. Robert Peterson to call an election. The officers said the dirty :md unshaven· Clouston, wearing a dark blue T-shirt and olive pants, was hiding in a trash bin behind a tavern near a home that had been burglarized. He was holding a loaded and cocked .22 caliber automatic pistol which he reportedly aimed but ''just couldn't fire," according to tbe officers. Police Slit:' l\enneth Jewell ·to1d newsmen that Clouston said he would have shot it out with police but changed his mind because ~could not ''keep~ Ding and hiding." Clouston managed to elude police of- ficers from Los Angeles and Orange Counties throughout the manhllPl tbat saw CIOllton .!"~:ifour bosta~ lild r•Jease Jllern "l"F ~·~ as!be iilti fiim '(l!lcers .. • LynwOO<j wfice disc!~ that Clouston was arrested Ft 45,.. rolnutes a(ter ~of· flc<!rs clo~ m <II ·~ at.alln hwlt of a susPeCted burglar. ''lbe' man matched Clouston's description. ~ Officers had been put on alert by a resident in the area who Identified a photograph of Clouston as the man seen leaving a burglarized home. Apparently nothing was taken from the house. From Pfffle J TRIAL ... the burglary. During the nine day period, the alleged team engaged in final inparatlons Jn. eluding the purchue of toola and cutting ton:be<. The break in, Walters '8id, took. p1ae,:. bemen FridBJ alQbt Mardi u ,an11.&m- day night, Morell 31. " On Monday, March 'II, Mulligan aloni: with Dinslo and Dinsio'a brother James, left the Ips ~geles area. On Wednes- day Hepry Barber lei! . Ibo. Los AnJ.1ea ,•H !' LA~ ti.ill .. sQt~ 'lt.elc Ronald Batliel'ftluniiMI to·tilltd;'tolling • ~:.'"""hid' been ~bf, J!!'"';' The only piece of ·evidence. Willers said, that r<malned in the Los AngtJes area was the 1962 Oldamoblle. According to the prosec\ltor, Dawson was Ured of having the cat in his gorag• and made aeveral calls to Ohlo asking that it be removed. 'IfiB JAmWlICOllt" CAJ·'ENDAR wu.t. CLOCK t ,,,.,. """ a time when all flne c!Oclts..,. built like this ..• with 1 hand lot the mllMll •• , a hand forthe hours ••. and 1 """" far tho -.,. Of tho~ The pint case in Olde C91ony flnlslt Is """"" somef)t accented by the black numei.11, hOllt ind second hands on the antlqut .. Whlto dill,. The con,.x crystal, brn• pendulum and'rfcf calendar hand ccmpltl9 the outhentJC!IY !if this flnt Barwick roproductlon by tlie HoWird Mlliu Clock Competl)" ' 'H. 24"· w. 161/l" o. 4~2" .. 0 $110 . - .. J.C. JJumphrieJ J_,,~,fir&". ··:· 1823 NEWPORT ILVO., COSTA MUA . CONVINllNT TIAMS 11 YIAtS IN THI SAlll LOCATION IAIO(AMUl~~o-MASTU CHAlf l nioNi ..... .,, l • J ' I Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Co-Sponsored tllis week by HARBOR VIEW CENTER S•n Jo.ciuin Hilb R .. d & MocArthur Blvd. Newport S.ach 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 Fifth Place Winners Plus Bonus Prize Game Tickets from the DAILY PILOT B• 1 pigskin prophet for profit. Play tha Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO g1me for waekly priz.es. Top winner ••ch waek r•ceives $25 gift certificate from the sponsoring shopping cent•r. Second pli1ce winner CJ•ts ,10 c•r· tificate andJ h.ird, fourth_•nd_fif.tb_plau..winn.ars each get $5 certificate. Each certificate is spendable, just lik• money, at a ny store in the sponsoring shopping centar. Sponsorship ioti1tes with 1 different center sponsor- ing each weak's contest. Participating centers are: Westcliff Plaza, 17th and Irvine, Newport Be1ch : H1rbor View Center, Sin Joaquin Hills Road •nd MacArthur Boulevard, Nawport Beach; E1stbluff Village Center, Eastbluff Drive, Newport Beach; Bay• sida Canter, B•yside Drive and Jamboree Ro•d, New- port Ba•ch; and University Pa rle Shopping Center, Culvtr •nd Michelson, Irvine. W•tch for this pl1yer's form ••ch week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section, Circla the team you think -will win in ••ch p1iring in tha list of 30 91mts •nd send in the playar's form entry blink or• re•son•ble fac1imile. Thtn -witch the .DAILY PILOT sports pages for ••ch waek11 list of five winn•rs, Rm.ES '· s"""" Ille ...,,. .......... ., • ,........,. f8afltllle .. It " ..... , 1'111 COii ... ,, l SM l'I t.1 f'ILOT l'IGlllCIN ,lcte.11:00 CONTEST, Sflrt DtJoirtlMllt. ,.0. hll UM, Cntl MtM, CA. fUU.. I. °""' -.. ,,.,. ..,. .,.,._ -11 .... 4. l!fl111n "*'f .. ,.,,_,..., llllt ,,,,.,. "'... "*'"'""' W.OMICley ... ,_II.,.... f'I .... DAILY l'ILOT fffk1 by J , ...... ThrldlY. I . 1'1rtkl,..""9 ll*'CMllh 11111 OAILY PILOT "1 ..... T .. I eM !Mir Imm. 11111•1'1 ........ "'' .... llM "' "''''· • .. Tll! •11•.uc1:• •LANIC MUST ae l"ILLl!O lfll Olt ENTllY IS VCID. •••••••••••••••••••• • EN'l'Rlr' BLANK • • Circle ,_ '" tWM wfn w111 tWs ..... , t•'"*' • • (~ ..._ k MOOff ... llllNI • • Rams vs. Atlanta • • San Dl990 vs. Oakland • • • • Cincinnati vs. Cleveland • • Miami vs. Minnesota • • Ort!tJon vs. UCLA • • Midtigan State vs. USC • • • • Purdue vs. Notre Dame • • Tennessee vs. Auburn • • Minnesota vs. Nebraska • • Northwestern vs. Pitt • • Cal vs. Missouri • • IHinois vs. Washington • • • • Wisconsin vs. LSU • • Rice vs. Georgia Tech • • Maryland vs. Syracuse • • Compton vs. Golden West • • Rio Hondo vs. Orange Coast • • • • Citrus vs. Saddktback • • Marina vs. Estancia • • Pacifica vs. Mission Viejo • • U Wiison vs. Westminster • • San C'-nente vs Alemany • • • • Anny-Navy vs. la9JlllCI • • EdlsoR vs. Ota• • • CostO Mesa vs. ~~ • • ft'li!er Del vs. C . • • I.Os Aili., vs. Unhersi!l • • •• • FY vs. Hllltlntton ~ • • CdM vs. ~ Ana Jc. • • 0-._. ft. Rhii of W. • • Tll llllAltl• -Mr ..,_ • .. ...., -ti ..... ..,.,. • • • .................... • ·-• • • ·-• • • • Qy zro • • • .-Sa • •••••••••••••••••••• •• -· ..... ' WITH MINICOMPUTER, DELIVERY TRUCK CAN'T POSSIBLY MISS Irvine Firm's Syttem u.., Vl1u1I Comm11nd1 in Vehicle ~~~~~~~~ Naked Mini ~· DAIL Y 1-i..u r • - GM Pleads for Time. Auto Firm Cari Meet Smog Sta1ulards-lf PEBBLE BEACH (API ---------, General M o t o r s l>residtnt Edward Cole says his com- pany hAJ been able to meet ftderal smog control ~an­ dards for 1975 and 1976 automobiles "but only with prototype systems In e11:- perimtntal cars at I o w mileage." He told a meeting ol the American Petroleum Institute heNl Tuesday that GM wilt be able to meet the emission con- trol standards only ir It ha.'I more time, a clarification o( federal regulations and new fuels. FINANCE COLE SAID THE top priori-"--------.-/ ty was "more lime" to develop and test the ne"°· smog control system. "11-fuch more progress is re- quired to get from these carefully tuned experimenta l systems t o mass-productd hardware that not oo.ty meets the federal requirements but also functions properly In the hands of our customers," he said. 1'.lond:iy that the En\ iron- 1nental l,ro!t•el1Un ,\ g l' n c ·" '"ould have io 1no\·e !he t'f· feclh·e date bark I\) 1976 or 19'17 Cole !l:11d :1 :-r(·ond priori!.\' in\'ot1·r:o; proini:t c-lar1fic.1lion ;utd in!l.'rprrt:i lion of lhC' lfli:) 7G <'lean air ~tand:i rds Uy th{' !~PA. .: mitmtnls today without know- ing IM lfGlUld rules lb.at wiJI •' be applied to u5 lattt," he ' said. A third priority, Cole said. 1 invoh't'S drvelopment o ( ,• gasolltit! with extremely low- rontenls of lead, i;ulphur and,, phosphorus to meet the re- quirements of the new exh:1ust l'Ontrol systerns. I-le said Cener:il ~1otors ha~ narTOwed its development to 111·0 dunl calalr tic C'Onverter sysl<'m'i. 1\'hich chemically 1·on1·('rt pollu!an ts 1 n t o harmless 1·apor.; as the car's t>xhaust gases are p.1.ssed 1h1oog h il. "CERTAI~ LONG lead time production 1 o o I 1 n g and faci lities are no~· being ordered \i1h1C'h 11oold be ap- pl ir3ble to component." ron1· nlQn to bolh." Cole said , "but \\'C 1nust delay our f1nul C'holcr of system~ unt il n1 o r f' d1,finitive j)('rfor1n:1nce dala · art' availablr." Brentwood S&L Breaks New Ground 'Computerized' Trucks Delivering Newspapers Ground has been broken for deliveries. It does not require construction of the tenth special transponders or elec-Southern California branch o! tronic signa1ing devices to be Brentwood Savings and Loan In the speech, Cole did not specify bow much extra ti1ne the company wanted but he told tho Los Angeles Tunes * * * "\\.'E AHE EXPECTEI> to n1('('! extrC'1ncly severe rt"guln- 1 ion s. . . a n d nHike in· \'estrncnts and tcchnit'al coin- ·:.r Ford Bronco, Maverick Bo th cat:1lvtic converter s.vstcn1s undrr; 1levclopmcn! rt-qui re dual C'alaly~ts for 1976. he said. ln 1975, G ~·I cars ~'ill use an ox..idiz.ing catalyst to C'Ontrol hvdrocarbons a n d C'oirbon mOnoxide E"missior1$ and Jn 1976, he said. it v.·ill add a reducing catalyst to meet stricter standards for con- trolling oxides or nitrogen. Using a little editorial license, a Fort W o r t h newspaper could easily carry a front page story telling its subscribers that "this news- paper Is brought to your home via a m.Jnicomputer system." While that may not be literally true, a minicomputer is certainly at the heart or a new Automated Newspaper Delivery Syst.m (ANDS! that unerringly directs the delivery of the paper to many of its readers every day or the week. DEVELOPED AND pro- duced by AVCON. Inc., ol Forth Worth, the ANDS guides a delivery truck along a com· plex route and teUs two men mounted on either side or a !peClally designed v e h i c J e when to throw their papers. And they never miss. ac- con:ling to the AVCON people. Incorporating a Naked Mini 16 mink:omputer built by Computer Autanation, Inc., ol Irvine, tbe AVCON system effectively demon- strates the broad areas opened by the advent of such par<el· sized computing devices. The AVCON system Is a completely sell-contained, on-- board system which directs the operation of the newspaper truck and controls i t s * * Farmer Uses Computer In Vineyard LODI (AP) -In past years, California rarmers used hoes, prayers and crossed fingers to keep their wine g r a p e s healthy. Dick Hughes uses a computer, a helicopter and thousands of gallons of water. Protection i s important. Hughes' vineyard is a $.1.5 million investment and it bas yet to produce its first crop . HUGHES IS AN electrical engineer who grew up on a farm where his father raised Tokay grapes. After several years as an electronics expert In bxlusty, he went back to ranning -but with space-Jtge ·tnow1'dge. "Everybody wants to drink wine these days ," he says, 0 and everybody wants to grow grapes." Viticulturi11ts -!anners who raJ.se grapes -commonly use fog-like sprays or water to protect their crop from frpst damag~ during the wint.,,-and from shriveling In the Sum· mer. BUT IN HUGHES' 900-acre vineyard, booster pump 11ta- Uona are activated by a cm- tral computer console to • deliver 8 pounds per !Qua.re inch of Pre!Sllf'e for normal lrril•tlon -« 12 pound,, for the protective S;pray. I' Hughe• designed what he calls a "sequence water ap- plication 11)'stem" to deJlver the hlgh-prtSSUTe spray to a two or three-acre section of the vineyard for 10 lo IS le<Ollds, allemat!ng belwttn teetions. He llYJ he tan deliver 1,000 gallons p e r mlrrut.e. , "Tiil! ~BS on I y about on.ninth the amount o( water we would use U at-. tempting to protect the entire vineyard at once," he say11 . Hugbes URll a 1 w o • j>usengor hellcoptlr to keep an eye on weed and water proble~ ' I . . Association. installed at strategic locations along the route. The Los Angeles h e a d -'Buck' Pollution Test COLE SAID one of the l\\'O systems under consideration places separate oxidizing end reducing converts under ~ vehicle's floor, mounted in tbe exhaust pipe. The other. he said, combines both catalysts in a converter unlt b:ated along with a manifold readOr in the engtne.'s . • x h • u S.• quartered finn, with assets IN EFFECT, tbe system near $300 million, wilt occupy WASHINGTON (AP I -The conlfnuously measures the a 5,300 square foot building at E n vi ronmental Protection vehicle's location in relation to 1640 Adams Blvd., Costa Mesa Agency says that on o( a pre-planned route, then in January, 1973, according to Ford Motor Company's 1973 issues audio and visual in· David c G · 'de ha f 'led tructi hlch 'd the . runes, pres!. nt auto engines s ai its s . ons , w guJ e and chairman of the blenl. 50 000-mile anUpollutlon test driver and the paper throwers . anc1· ' -·-• be td Oiitlle" -!n""1 iOund5. --The new building w i I I -~~ so ~ on ir appo • replace temporary oUices now At the same time, however, The ~ even activates maintrained at lSa5 Adams, EPA said 'Tuesday it had the vehicles . turn signals east of the ~ site. certlfled all eleven of Ford·s shortly before it ls se~eduled Roger Blair Phelps is brandJ other 1973 engines as meeting to. make a turn, to give ~e manager of the Costa Mesa of. antipollution standards. driver !ldded advance warnmg flee. He is director of the west ' of the impending maneuver. Orange Count U 1 t e d mE ENGINE that (ailed to For good measure, the Y n qualify, an EPA spokesman system also detects driver er-Crusade and a member of the said, was Ford's 200 cubic- rors and i m m e d I a t e 1 y Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-inch, six~linder model io- prescribes appropriate cor· merce. tended for use in its Bronco, rective actions. The branch is the second M a v e r i c k and Comet opened in Orange Coonty by aJJtomoblles· BECAUSE OF the trustem's 0 -ntwood SaVI·~ A -y··· ~, IJll"C ·~---.. The EPA spokesman said. guidance capabilities, neither leue fc;r the property UI held IKnYever, that a ppr 0 v e d the driver nor the throwers by tile SegentroCn family ol ~ could be substituted in n6'd ~ ~ Af!lled with maps, · ~'.~· , tbese Cars. IRlhlcriber . lists, or · ~r . J'letlpellof<het1ntkt~are · ' · -ledge·<itthe roote._lt•all ~ ~.!of Qilona If• a/1!<l ~ia Ford mlaht try ~·· and ' ~,..., 'di! ,,..._ ~ l\lill>« fj'an>o (• " All u.; system llardm " inl! • ., wood miog1e _rooL and Thar's Go1 J mriuoted Jn a special In-exlawil.., use c1 glai8 WUI be U£ ~lioG, above the trUek's ~ · · ' · ~.except for a dil•ta• 1'!1ea. tile -.i -Jn · De. m 'H.:z1 -~Y "°""''• mounted atop of&Oe opem In early 19'/3, 1' U§ !hi! 'dilshl»al'd In front ol the Brentwood S.Vlnp will ' be driver which provides visual open Saturdays u well as instnlctions. Weekdays. Sandy lloberil has been named manager of leasing for Azbntb Eqaitles, I a c . , Newport Beacb real estate development firm. Mias Roberta wa1 previouoly property manager foe Ketchum Peck and- Tooiey. A llo- ensed rea t estate sate&- man,~ i& aiao """' and modetalor of a daily, bus-1toa1:11:n Jnes.wriented news and inter- view television show which or- iginates from Orange County. * Genld A. Guler, Pb.D. has been named director of ad- vanced technology for Boyle Engineering in Santa Ana. Dr. Guter holds a degree from Iowa State. lie will con- tinue in research and develop- ment for the engineering firm . !'riof to jolnlng Boy le, Dr. Guter was manager of en- vironmental products for Hit- co. He and hla wife reside in San Clemente. * PbUoo Ford Corporation'• Aeronutronic Division h a s named Worth W. Frederick u · director or operations support. Prior to his appoinlment, Frederick wai plant manager or Aeronutron1c's Newport Missile Plant. He joined the divlsioo in 11111 . He and his wife live in Santa Ana. * Two Corona ·de! Mar ... ecutivca have been oamed vice presidenta al C. I. Poet C.W.-In Loo Angeles.' . Jack E. Fabttgla1 andJ. I. wm. are botb veteran! ln the field or ccfti1tructlon • Fobr<glas haJ spent more than 25 yean In the field of desip of lr\ClllllrilJ ml COlll• mert:lal lacwu .. : WW. aerved 1• yem as a project manager ror C, L. Peck. He 6as supervised the coostructlon of eight majo< projects for the firm. * Ernest H. Clarl:, Jr. presi- dent and chairman of Baker Oil Tools, Inc., has been elected to the board of direc- tors of Beckman lmtnunents, Inc. The Downey executive join- ed Baker OU Tools in 1947 as a project engineer and served In a series or management posi- tions. He was named president and general DWU1ger of the firm In 1962 and chairman of the board In 1969. * Fini Amerlcu T i t I e hsaruce Compuy has ap- Pointed David Davies as business development representative in S o u l h Orange County. Prior to his appointment,>< Davies spent ~ several years in real ~ estate In Cor-. ona del Mar and Hunting· ton Beach before join- ing the First American staff, DAVlll He has been a member of the Newport-Cost• Me.!!a and Huntington Beach Board of Realtors. lfe and hls wife reside in Santa Ana . S&L Tells Dividend The Board of Dlroctors ol Mercury S:a•h181 and Loan Aaoclatlon I n Huntington Beach ha1 declared a six per- conl stock dividend payable to stockholders o( record August II, 1972. u · IOOll therealter 1\5 prao- The stock dividend I s payable on August 31 , ten , or ti ca bit. --Not Profit SACRAMENTO (AP\ There's 11till lots of gold left in the hills of Callfomla's Mother Lode, say the experts, and if the price or gold riae! high enough there could be another Gold RllSh . IT'S JUST A question of how much It costs to get the nug- gets out versus the price of gold. There is little large-scale gold mining now In the hills and gullies east of Sacramento where the Forty-Ntnen dug and dreamed. The few mines that survived into the 1930s were shut down during World War n because miners were despeni:tely needed to mine copper and other minerals needed for war. "Some of the mines never reopened; others did . Those that opened have pretty much shut down again by now," says Henry Jones, a mlnlng engineer for the U.S. Forest ServJce. "IT'S NOT that they ran out of gold -there'll plenty of gold. It's just that the wages and eveeything else went up to the point that the 135 gold wasn't worth what It was cos- ting to take it out," he says. "If the prlce gets up to triple the old 135 prteo -1105 - you'll see a real change." The lntematloMI price ol gold now hoven,aroUJ'ld S70 an ounce -rougltly twice the 135 an ounce pegged by the federal government as gold's ornctal price from the early 1930s untu 1968. Until 1968, miners could only sell their gold to the covemment. Now they're fret to sell it on the in- ternational market. JN NORTHERN California's Nevada County, there Ii; a gold deposit lea than two miles lofli and about a quarter of a mite wide that contains en eslimated ~10.000 OU11CH or gold, says a clr<ular of tho U.S. GeoJocical Suriey. "nult's worth aboul fl) million ot flO an ounce. Trouble II, the miner would have lo process more than 145 mltllon cubic yanll ol gravel as much as 400 feet deep to get the gold out. the circular estimates. Thal would cost too much to make mining fea1ible with present techniques. to corrret the engine·s defi- ciency, but that any ne'v at· tempt to certify it woul d re· quire a complete new 50,(11}. mile performance test. The spokesman. said Ford informed EPA·-that "foreign material" got into a test engine at the 38,IJOO.mile mark and may have caused test readings which !ailed to represent the engine·s normal performance. manlfotd. --- ! l" I ff i&SjQ S>;! s;; ;£ • I~ HE SAID FORD h ad n1anulactured about 22,000 of 1·• the "flunked" engines so f11r , Finance Briefs had equipped about 9,000 ca r~ \\'ith them and had shipped about 1.200 of these to deal1•rs. Udner federal clean· a ir laws, cars may not be so ld with uncertified englnes. In Detroit, Herbert L Mlsich, vice president o f Ford's envtronmental a n d sa.fety staff, expttSsed regret at the government decision. "WE ARE disappointed that the EPA dJd not approve the emmissionscertificatlon on our 200 c.i.d. engines .... We will provide additional information to the EPA aimed at certifica- tion and will initiate 1l new 50,000-mile test." he said. 11e added, "In the mc;in- time, our dealers ha ve 1973 Mavericks and Comets equip. ped with other optio nal enginea, such as the 250 c.i.d. and the 302 V-8." These ha\"C been approved by the EPA. Ford said that about 1,200 of the 9,000 cars built with the disputed engine were in dealer hands but none has been sold. Bentley Set At Complex BenUey Laboratories, lnc., manufacturers or medical in· atrumentation for blood handl· ing and card.to-pulmonary bypass, will expand their facilities for the third time since moving to the 4,000 acre Irvine lnduatrial complex. Construdion of the new 76,000 square foot, two story building to house the com- pany's research and develop- ment group, mark e ting department and additional "clean" room and warehou s- ing facilities, will be handled by Berney Brothers Construe· tion of Santa Ana. Horse eBanana.t 'i SAN FRANCISCO Dtl 1 Monte Corp. has agreed In · princtple to acquire Untied ~ ~ J,jo.'1 G~aiao ~ banb .,...uona. ·j llciall 'IJ'i Yeit>y, l)ell""""' ~ vice chairman, Aid !ill ...,.. pany would pay Jn excaaEi l2fl mllIIon Jn .... fer erlies thal -~ than J2 million borN ti bananas a year. • OllH• Sink FRESNO-Califomia's 1972 ollve crop is estimated at between 23,000 nnd 25,000 tons, less than half the size of last year's harvest. Bob Gross, manager of the Otive Administrative Com- ·mlttee in Fresno, says 1972 J~ an off year in the alternate bearing cycle of lives, but ad- ded. frosts last October and March were a factor in further reducing the size of the crop. e Airbus Order LOS ANGELES -COn- tlnental Airlines has ordued four McOoMell Douglas 0010 airbuses at an estlm.e.ted total price of $80 1nillion. McDonnell Douglas w i 11 build the aircrafl as con- vertlble!'i. n1eaning lllCy can ca!Ty either passengers or air lrelght . e 1"em Exec SAN DIEGO -Hudson D. Drake, a former assistant secretary of commerce in the Nlxon Adminl!tl1ltlon, has gone to work at Teledyne Ryan Aeronautic1l1 a company spokesman said. Drake, 37, was named vi~ president and g e n e r a I manager for electronic and space sy11tems. Cents He Runs a Stab'le Motel FLAGSTAFF. Ariz. (AP) -Tom RapUs Isn't 1 cow· boy, but his idea. he thlnkl. makes plalo horse !14!nse • The SCottsdale busintssman has openC!d the first or what he hopes turns Into a natlonwlde cha.Jn or motels for horses. TIIE FIRST one, which occommodates 3l> ovemlghl guests, is a rorf!st-brown. stttl bam located '4 miles north ol heavily traveled Intmtate 40. Rapt1S said he has been consider!ns the idea stnce 1969. •1 After. noticing all the horses helng trailered on Ute highways, I began wondering where their owne.n put them up for the night while the owners were aleeplng comfort- ably In nice motel rooms.'' he said. AFTto;R TALKING with SC\'ernl hore&men, Raptis A)'I. he found out they had trouble finding accomn10dJ;tion.I for their four.J.egged companions. . Rapli• says ' the horse motel here Is a pUot proJect. 1111 charges f7 a night for each horse . :a~--~-·-·--_...,.,,_.,~....,-- I , U DAILY '!LOT SC Wfdnndo. Septembor 27. 1772 OVER · THE COUNTER ANANCE Numbe1· of Small SACRAMENTO (AP) -In California tbis year there's an unaccustomed bustle ln the gray flannel busine5S of bank· mg. Already the state Banking Department bas received 27 applications for small, new banks. as many as it received Jn all of 1970. Eleven have been approved. The number of applications for the full year, said one banking official, could be as ~igh as SO. SOME SAY ALL this ac· tiv ity is a normal function or industry grbwth. others say a few of the woold·be bankers may ~ out to s.ell their banks for a profit. On the growth itself all authorities agreed it ls the liveliest year for new -··banks since the high-flying early 1960s, maybe even as lively as the '20s. California already has 151 chartered banks, including _ J ever!l huge. branch netwotks a~ the Bank of America, \vorld's largest commercial bank. How wW the youngsters compete on Goliath's home turf? The potential bankers say they can offer m o r e personalized service, m o r e Greater future Income. con be the goal al a SS,000 to 850,000 porCloHo placed nnder management now. \Vhether you are lnvestlng in common stocks for retire- ment incon1e. children's education or freedom from finan- cial worry, you want your capital working continually to achieve your goals. Yet you may find that you are actual· Jy losing p;round due to Inflation, taxes or lack of time tor investment decision!'!. To help solve this problem, \Ve and our clients use The Managed Securities Account Investment Program. The professional supervision Jt offers can. we believe, \Vork to balance the risks of stock market Investments and help you better achieve your capital goals. You can start your portfolio under this plan with as little as $5,000. The cost iEi modest. Call or \\Ti le for a com· pllhlentary copy of our descriptive booklet alorig with our "performance record." ' I 1'971 Richard Fabian Fairfield Circle, Huntlntton leach 9264' 714 846-1245 MUTUAL FUNDS CO¥f:Wr£ :NEW YOlg{ ST~ UST • ' \ ' • I I l I 'I I I ) Wedn es da y's CJo~ing Prices-Compfe\~ New York Stock Exchange List 'Good News,' Talks , Spur Wall Street NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices shot up Wednesday, based on good economic news and peace ltoJ>OJ and rllJllon arislng from presidential adviser Henrr A. Kissinger's latest talks lo Paris. '"The basic feeling is that something is going to \ pop from Paris/' said Charles M. Lewis of Treves & Co. Analysts called by The Associated Press gen- erally 'iaid they ·bad heard some sort of peace-rCo. lated rum.or, though the forms varied , and informa- tion wu indefinite . The good economic news was a 2.2 percent rise In August. the best rise since fl1arch, according to the Commerce Department. ,... --Sl lff Net tlllfl.I tlltll U w Cine Chi. ..... ...~~~~~~~~~~~·· "!ft.I ._, ..._ OM a,. SC DAILY PILOT 29 ..... . . ..... J ..... Llfllll ""' a.. r If' If>' , it;: ,mt • ~ •l:: ~ .~ mt 1lil "' ,, ~ ~ ... , 11 :n.. 1'1 +•.). ' It& tn>: I~ '• ., 11 ith " ..... -)IYl-~ 1u U1!i '~"" .. !"' ... '• .. ,. l• 2"r 1~ \o ?I 311.~ if: ~· 1, tl ,,.... ''• '1 ""· • '• ,~ '• 1• '°' ')"1 ,ii +I lJ ll\o JH o W14+ >o e Ridde n Valle" OAKLAND -Clorox Co. said it has reachtd agrttment in principle lo acquire Htdden Vnllf\' Ranch Jo""ood Products lnr Or Sparks, NfV .. and tX· l)('C'l!I to close the dtal next 1nonth. lllddcn Vall£'y Ranch , which n1.'.lkfs salad dressin~ and par· 1 .~· dip products. \\'111 oper11:le a<: " \I holely o\1·ned subsidiary or Cloro:.: under the proposed sal(' fnr atxr...it 100.00CI share:; or Cloro\'. i:tock. no11· srlhn~ ar(lund $87.50 a ~hart'. Co111plete Closing Prices-A 'nerican Stock Exchange List ) S•+•5 N<!, !AGI,) Hogh Lew ti.1r Cn9 "" H1th Ltw (.t.w Cl\t. )1 .. 11, ,., ' ' " 1·o--'• 1·-i.. •• J1•of '• ·~··-'• " u .. '• ,, , .. . n• ...... , , , .. ei.. 1, 11\\-•• lQI •T '• KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Seturdey1 , in The DAIL 't PILOT • I ' ' I ! • I ' J J ' I J ! I i i ·I t I ; , • • TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS KHJ CJ 7:30 -"Cry Terror.'' Rod Steiger and Inger Stevens head the casl of this 1958 movie dran1a . ABC 0 8:30 -"Say Goodbye , Maggie Cole." ~ A recentl y widowed research doctor fa ces new ~ heartbreak as she returns to practice. Susan Hay-~ ward, Darren AfcGavin, Michael Constantine. KCET ii) 8:30 -"Spies." Fritz Lan g's 1928 chi!· ler foll ows a ma ster criminal as he masquerades as a famous ban ker to sleaJ government secrets on t'il m Odysse y. NBC 0 10:00 -"Search." Doug McClure stars in this new series. tonighl battling a scientific gen- ius bent on destroyin g the mission control cen ter he helped construct. ABC 0 10:00 -"Jul ie Andre\vs Hour." A mus· ical salute to two golden eras in the history of show bu siness. Guests are Ken Berry, Jack Cassidy1 Rict\.. Little and Alice Ghost ley. . , .. TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening SEPTEMBER 27 '"° U 0 0 ID l!Ol lill •"' (I}®)Nrn O PM111rou "DISert Justlc.I" @ Sit S.art 0 Wiid Wild Wu1 m Thi FNnhton11 m Cotler "1t USMC (fj) Frtndl Chef EB 11111 1'1r1 YtfOlllta ED HH11ped11 Lodrt IHI Motle: (C) ''Cilrl Can't H1!p It" (ID LI S.p11d1 [lpo11 lE T11rH Stlloftl 5:50 Cil Ho11111 Hlftltl O Mtvlt: .. .,hoW • hie Hone" CMct. (d11) '64 -Greaory Peck, Anthony Quinn, Omer S111rtf. Cl) C1S Nnos di MlfW Crttfl1 SMw m""'"""' Q) RK1n1 5wte11stalln (lj) Flrill1 U.. f!l SM1loWI of tM .._. SM (R) m ... Car1lll ~ a!) AtfidlltdOI di .. C.nliM fil)Ool" 1:00u mom-o ... 11111 fof Dllllfl @ Tnrl~ tr Cofrstq1111C11 C!J U11llmed WorW 0 WJi.t's My U11t1 m I Lovt LlllCJ aJ I Dl"um of J11n11il EE Cap11Hn1 £ID Soul! "Gl1dJ1 )(ni1llt" (R) fD El A1111r n.t Clrl ii Mu)tr J:JO 1J Th11illddl11tn Olonnt Wuwickel r uests. 0 Wail Till four F1titr litb Home ~111e Hippia" Hury attempts to d1spla1 th1 hypocrisy ol one ol C~el's triend1 who 11fuses to 1c· ~nowledg1 mater ialism. O Morvl1: (Zlt1) ''Thi "•rl!lf' (dra) automobile pfototype, 1n routt no,.. stot1 to Boston, vanishts and 81111- c~k ~ tsked to find how and wh1 it happened. 0 Ci} {I) tl) AIC Wldntsd1r M .. wi1: (C) C'O) '°SIJ 'oodbr•, Maui• Colt" (dril) '1l -Susan H1yw11d, Darien Mcs.¥in, Michatl l:onstan· tine, Michele Nicllols. A ret1nU1· 'll'1dowed resurc.h doc!OJ, intent on rebuildin1 her hie. returns 1o 1en- er1.I p11t1iet only to face new heart- bruk. m MtfY Gritfi~ Show ED (H; film Odpsey "Spies'' The ffilz L1n1 chiller follows 1 mas!•r criminal as he ml5Qutr.des as. 1 famous ban kei in 01der to steal 1ov- trnment secre!s. (Germany, 1928). !:00 IJ (!) Medical Ctnter Guest Loli Albright plays 1 jet set molhtr "host aihna: delinquent son learnt new values from the crilic1lly Ill boy who is his hospltll roomm1t1 but finds his own IK<l'ltry ham· pered by his mother's selllshneu. Sara Marshall, Kut Held and Au- drpY Totter CG·Star. f1.) Un Vtrano Pa11 Record1r ai) LI CcN111ntida de Papa t:30 a r .. .., l'fotll11 sllo9 0111.•-m Noclltl TIJlltiu 10:00 • (l).Cln11111 Cannon comes to the lkf OJ lft 1ppe1!in1 younr Vletna• mtH bride (Irene Tsu) who b 1bou1 to be deported l>acausc sh• is unable to lot1tt lier Americ an husb1nd. 0 l1Ql m SEARCH Doua: McClure makes his debul I! a stff ol !his series when he must slop 1 scie ntific genius from de stroyina: th• mission con!rol tenter "hich he he lped con- st1uc1. em• ... 0 iJ) 00 G) Julie ABdre:n Hour Two Coldtn eras in the history ol show bu~ineu recei" 1 musical s.alult. Julie a:ets some hith style assistance t1om llen Berry and J1ek Cassidy. Rich t1nle and Alice GhosUey 1!3o 1ue1!. D Boris K•rlotf P11mh Ttlrilltr ID Bill Co1bJ Show ·65--11111 Divis, WendJ Cralc. (IS" Soul! (!)Te Tell tM Tnrth fl) CClu J1.ll&ld1 ([)TIMI AaMd t0< II ED M1st1qiiece Ttlt1\r1 0 STEIGER'S €D Lutia Sombr1 * EXPLOSIVE IN CE Drama "CRY TERROR" EE Kln1dom ol 1111 Sta 0 Milliol $ Movlt: (Zltf) "CrJ T11· rot' (dr1) '58--Rod $111111, Inge/ lO:JO 8 Talk B•c• Stnens. Ill T1ut AdYenturt ~ l'wt Got 1 Steffi fE L1 S.tanlcl «0 Ko1tn'I HtlMI 9 Mowie: "Thi Riffr'I Eda:e" m rn l>rlllftfl Q) 4% ,lus (ilJ Cltr S..1111a al Olftdoor Sporbll11" El) Los Pollwocn a;) lounc Dr. Kitdlrt CD Tttls II Your Lilt u,oou 00 III Ill m •••• LV (i) ®l News 0 Orte Step Beyond r •' Marsh1J Oillc.11 1:00 I) fj Carol Burnttt Comtcl11n D Mo.le: (C) "Mwit Murd1t1r" Andy G1,hah 1ues11 IS 1 pennis· (myt) '70--Arlhur Kennedy. s1ve pus.in w"1den a!ld ni1htclub m Truth er ConJtqUlllCH 1ecordu1g star Helen Rtddy ttaches ,._ Q) Hi&ll Chtp1ri1I ..... rol lo ~1ng Au:111a!i1n." Q tO m Adam ll "Air Drop" A Q, HathaJOll youn1 £1rl leads o!t1c1rs MlllOJ ind m G1rrM!I ltd Armstrtnc Reed to 1 5usp1tious p\1n1 1Bd jeep . ,... 111 Ille mounl1i115. 11.15 iD ""Mml 34 0 (lJ 00 G) Tiie P1•I l11d•·ll:l0 IJ ({)CBS Lila Movie: (C) ''\'tn- ShOtl '"The Landlord" Paul Slmmsl puce 'f11i.,~ (R) Burt Lancasttr, lnts to reconcile Howit"1 1stran11d D (iDJ m )ohnny Car1011 parenrs. lloplnt tllty'll Invite Howit ,. , and Barbara to livt with ihem. 0 Mo~lt: Doublt ., tlothln( m Th .. (mus) 37-Bmg Crosby. 1llih1 o r [lfTl ft'I.. c IQ Ttl I /P M ' ,3 i.J.1 w Dick Ivett ~ e 1111 trry alQll m To Tell !ht Truth £L1 Herm1n111 Cor•i• ED I]} EIKtion '72 12:00 m Movie: "Sctn41 ol !hi Crim•" €IJ Luch1 LJbrt Q) W111d11lu1t ~ l•Mlllll Padres n . Dod1en . a!) Utacio11 Ctnt11I IZ:JO (8 Country Mu11c W Morie: 121!() "llld: FlfJ" 1:00 (]) D fJ Cl' Ntws 1:31J o ~ m Nit w1dllnhJ .. )'rlt,, -Bauce• "P!Ojld Pllolnl1 .. A rait· r01 d ctr e1rrylnJ a11 upe1lmtntal Thursday uArnM£ Mov1ts 1:00 m "fwy II FIOllCI Cr"•" (Wes) '43-YrclOf Maturi, Colttn G1ay, 9:)0 0 "KeJ It Ult a.,.-(rom) ·~ C11111 C1bt1, Lontl• Youns. JO:GO (JJ "Tiit hiMt WM W1t A Ttlltt" r (adY) '51-Tont Curtla. 0 "1tu11 F• tit Hltlt" (tom) ·53 -Sonny lulls, 81rb1ra l'trlon 1%,00 u "I" --<•1> . .,_ • 1:30 8 Mevie: '°SOii tf fwy" (du) '42 J:OD I) MMI: "CotmtJ Fiii" Ridllrd RolMt, Bruca Cibol 1:00 OJ....._ t.n11f" tdr1J '56 Bltte ll1v1s, 81i1n Ke1lh. l:J08"flltJ Ww1 S. Y1un(' (dr•) ·55 -Raymolld Bu", Scott 811d1. 0 (t) ~A Tkk!is.lr All.fr" (rom) '63-G/1 Y011n1. Slll1l1J .lnnn. l :OO (J.) ""'4'1 Uttlt Attt" Conct. (d11) '5S-Ti111 Lou!H , Robert Ry111. ~ "Midn lcllt StOfY" (dra) '57- 10111 Curlis. Mu is1 P1v1n. 4:0D IJ (C) "T1run'1 ThrH Ch1llen11'" (1dw) '63-kld: Mahoney. •:JO !]) SIMI 11 JOAN l1tf~ DAILY ,.tl..DT St•lf '""°19 LOVERS -Bruc.. Ca mpbell and Barbara Van liolt are invol ved 111 a May. December romance in the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse comedy "Forty Carats." IMTUl-11111 KAllOAUJ "TMUMI TllPl'ING" (I) l>l•oJ(elt< "THf STfl.Glf" fl) !llllMlff17 ,..nMwttliP•rwtfln ~·n~~•~ .o.-.. .,,,.~,.1 nr '~C:1! 111.•oro USTWNll "'fOOFATlltr'(I) t>l•l/l ... •tl Wtl<a. "'llAIOtll (AUlDll" (It 11)11-".,.17"'9111• Wltkt>wwt(ll '>•~.D14"go F .. r C~l)!"l••no Oll·•~mp ll7·0lt 5 S~n Jeno r~·I' h: o.~~J..lfu .. : !<;o I 112-2(f1 0111w11••n "XIOt: A S,1c• Ollly11ty" (OJ Pl•a/C ..... "IWIWAtll. w11n1 llUTil"'Hll !l••t<>t 81•d. ' •at ~I '~.,~~" 531 .1111 lm;,·n~I t r :" n , • ' ll•a<~ IJl>C, . . 'IJ 1·!; '01.~ 371· 19t2 IUPll ffT·lllllUl•t ''SALJ:IUll COWltf(TIOll" 0'5-) Pl•l/Ct !ff "'(ONO:UISf OF TMl PlAMfT 0, JM( A.PIS" !'GI u .. ~01 ........ we· t <>I 1'~<>11 511·1,ll IXlltO Oil •1101• 11 (l j l tll'lll'S IACWI '"!'NI AIDUCfOIS"IXI •1·• ""OW JO t•CCHD ATHX-411 .. ~ . ' ., .. ~ . ,_, ' .... "' ~ .. 5~· /0]1 • ·•"'-i..n' I .,~"'~',,.~, C1'•<'1n•o Ave S41·1011 iXl II• OH Ud•• 11 II) "CLOCS:WORIC ORANGl" IX) ""' "THlfOll" '·• ... '' . \' ' • •!. )U'll WY Tllll\1111 '°IAlllU•C. COllllUCJIOM'" (PG) r ..• u-· ..,,~ .. ' b•,.;r. I •;<: ••1-lSt1 , • CallO•o t. "CA1'tll tr i11 t. "WllflMPOt>,A-!II J, ..,..,OMT ...... • TOWll-\Pll ntl •MHlfllliol i. Wit~ Pe• .... fJ) "1111(11-!Ulf K-111.t.UI '"T"UMI TllPPINl" 11) ... ,,,.Ill" ll) 111 ...... ,, ................. 1(1') ........... Jt.Jt.l.& ..... 1JhN f Theater Notes SCR Opens With 'Torchbearers; By 't;OM Tm:S Of 1M Dallr ,.lltt SIMI ANNI IANCROFT "THE GRAOUA IE" -ALSO - LIZA MINNELLI "THE STERILE CUCKOO" NATIONAL GENERAL WKOAYS•-11 -10 SAT. l SI.IN. 2 · 4 • •-i -10 Woody Allen's "Evel)'.thing @you always wanted to know about * ""' SHORT SUIJICT & IOAD IUNNER CAITOON 111 WKOAYS 6:45 SAT. & SUN. 12:45 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER GENE HACKMAN m "FRENCH CONNECTION" Al!O "MASH" • ---CtN!ODME 20; . .... =.::.i....J• • ~ ---=.:;= STADIUM . I .w .. ~·•1-=~ - -. __ ::;ir~ STADIUM , 2 :;· .. .-:0:-""""!"T" •• ~ -- --·~~ STADIUM '3 ·,•, .. · .... ~~ --. _: .... -. STADIUM •I ,;',, .. ·-.~ "ILITTEll.FLIES ARE FREE" 1"01 GolClll HIWll .. Edw•nl Albin alM ''THE GllADLIATE" E1c:k111v1 Entlllrnei!I N.w No RltMned Stati Wln.,.r ot ! Ac1,.my ""'"'• HflDOLER ON TNE •OOF'" "TH• HOUSEWIVES 11.EPO•T" • "SIEVIEN MINUJl!S" C•l ''THE SALZ5UltG CONNECTION" t"OI ''THE CONOUEST OF THE ,.l.ANET OF THE A,.ES" f"Gl "5LAUGHTE•" !It) • "10)( CA• BEltTHA" l•I '"THE NEW ceNTUll.IONSN 1•1 Wilt! o .. ,... c. Sc•ll "~ NPl.AY MISTY FOR ME" CAI £,,d.,o NEWPOPT ijlf1(t• -(ll •I,, e ntroncc 10 tht> fc::ibulou\ l 1dQ 1~1.-OR 3 8J~O • • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 ' I • ' o o 0 o 0 0 • 0 0 ' 0 0 • ' ' ' • o 5 ~£~~.EMY AWARD NOMINATIONS! BEST ACTRESS VANESSA REDGRAVE MA.R Y, OUl'.:EN Uf SCOTS, who n1lrcl wnh 111t-l!n.r1 A . Hal Walli 0 ProductiO!' •-.Redgrave · c"""' Jackson \1 ;11·~·· Qt1('('1l of S('Of!ii F.-:::e;:#t'..t#?J A l'Sl\'f.UAL •tLlASl. fW,"IJO.IUil'llr.:l\'IU(lf(' Ill! 0 NOW PLA YINGI ' ALSO ,. ltlCHA•D IUltTOH GINIYlm IUJOLD "ANNE OF THE THOUSAND DAYS" 1 ..... s ... 1r.M. c~•· Sot. MCll S1• tr ... 2 P.M. l'Tk" u .. 11 4 s.t. A 1111. Ad•tn .... J .. 1.r1 1.50 ._...,. Matl ... l""Y WH.. 1 P.M. NOMINATID FOi I ACADEMY AWAltDS "A MASTERPIECE!" -PAUL 0. lltlAIEltM.Nf, NI I I ALSO -ONLY ONE ANIMAL KILLS FOR THE SPOIT OF n -GUESS WHICH "BLESS THE BEASTS AND CHILDREN" NOW! UNCUT! INTAcn I 2n<I Mii -nt• FOX• s'hows Al - HANl&Y KUBRICK'S " . . • .. ,I • 'I "• "' .. , :;1 ,,. " " ' " ',, . " Comfortably Air Conditioned:· Acadtmy Aw1nl Win-I "OAltDEN 0,. FINZl<ONTINIS" (It) ''TAKIE THE MOHE'r & ltUHH Cl'"OI a.tlllftCMwl • ..... .....,, __ "S&.Au•MT-.•" "SOX CA.It ll•TIIA" 11.nt 111 c...,. nu ......... .,. • "KANSAI CTTY IOMl•lt" "THI ltLIM IUM'" &1111 Ill CMlr1 1N1 A DOOZEY, ~. HALLELUJAH! t ~ -Bob Salm~ggi. We~1ingl'loose Radio ~ J; Tiiis surprislng movie reaAylWlllp. A s,.lllinder. -Cl'l.lflll!.J Champ1"' lOS~/'tS Tor>e.!i Watch Ille large SCJllll burst into glitte A striking ex intelHgent c ma vertte. It ii llOW,__,,,.,,, M1rjoe is both electrifying pop art'and savage sociologv. A I razzle-dazzl~ fem --Bruce w,i1,ams0tt. Pl•r One of tile most extr1onlinary l1JJL-/ compelll19 -flcti•• moviaMI' .. co HIT . "HRLSTROM c .. • I ~ ~ r ,, ~ • • • . ' ~ . J f. < I n ,, • I ---· \ ~-Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's Fbual N.Y. Stoeks • VOL. 65, NO. 271, 6 SECTIONS, 84 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1972 TEN CENTS 1 Suspect in Laguna Rape Bound Over to Court ---· I By JACK CHAPPELL Of tlHI DAiiy Plllt Sllff Steve H. Bronson, suspect in the icepick kidnap and rape of a 19-year-old Laguna Beach girl, has been ordered to arraignment ln Orange County Superior Court following a preliminary bearing Tuesday in Laguna Niguel Municipal Court. Judge H. Warren Knight refused to reduce Bronson's $25,000 bail and ordered the suspect in the bizarre case held to • I Bus Suicide answer cbarges at 9 a.m. Oct. 10 in Division 5 of the Superior Court in Santa Ana. Bronson, 24 , is married and is 11.n employe at a Fontana chicken ranch. Judge Knight's action came after a lengthy hearing during which the alleged victim of the kidnap, rape and acts of sexual pervers.ion testified before the court. Asked by Stuart Grant, deputy district attorney, if she recognized the person Laguna Victim - Termed 'Sincere' By BARBARA KREIBICH Of a. Oally Pl~ Staff Stephen Winget, 25-year-old hospital administrative aide who leaped to his dealb ln front of a Laguna Beach school bus early Tuesday, was "a very ca°pable, ' Proposition 20 Backi1ig Nixed By Laguna AUle Laguna Beach Councllman Peter Ostrander this week retracted his sup- port of ProposiUon Ill, the Coas1a1 Protection Initiative, atleglng Its passage could delay development of the Main Beach Park "for up to two years." In a memorandum to feUow coun- cilmen, later amplified in a statement before the Chamber of Commerce Board of Directon, Ostrander said be bad undertaken a detailed study of the entire Proposition and now feels compelled to withdraw the sup,art he had voted earlier with the _µrt Clf the City Council. "Although I agree with the Intent of this proposition to control development," IS.. OSTIUNDER, Page I) llungry Butglars • Strike 2 Times In Laguna Beach Two hamburgers -which were taken by fora! -an9 a 15-pound chunk of un- Q'.>Oked corned beef were listed as miss-· iniJ Tuesday from a pair of Laguna Beach eating establishments. Counter g~l Deborah Kay Spellum, 11, of 1435 S. Coast Higllway, told police a young man who drove up to the Jack-hr the-Box eatery, 1201 S. Coast Highway, at 9:25 p.m. reached through the order win- dow and struck her on the head with his fists as sht! stepped up to take his order. He then walked lnto the kitchen area, grabbed two prepared hamburgers and Oedt accor'dlng to police. Another · hangry burglar broke a win- dow to gain entry to Benton's Restaurant during the night, police said, removed the corned beef from a walk-in refrigerator but left about 100 pounds o! 11<aks. Officers aald a trail of blood In the restaurant )ndicated the' burgler mual have been cut badly ln the process of smashing the window. SOFA,S SOLD IN FIRST CALL -__ , : "Fabulool. results. I coold have sold \ 111,oolaa. '11>e' lint caller bought It" 'lllaf• the itocy of results from this ad : Sofa ~ ...... pd $2!0. Sell IW 18$. \I aJll"'...: .::·:"'tile *dulilfed ICl- frtlsinl 1CC11cm o! the DAILY PIL<Yl'- ' obviously, did ill job. Wb1 not ... we can build an ad to fit ,.... needs. It dial the -Une to ...Wis, and aak: a DAILY PILOT ad- to advbe you. sincere young man with a bright future and no apparent problems." This was the evaluation of his superior, Pomona Valley Hospital admi.nlstrator Robert Burwell, who hired Winget as his administrative assistant in mid.June. 'The Orange County Coroner's ol'fice liste4 Winget's death aa an apparent suicide, l>u! will proceed ~th routine 10.- icologieal tests, a depoity aald 'this morn- ing. Sheriffs fpalilnent investigators also ai'e Working on Ute case. Authorities received i.$nnatlon today that Winget dressed and left the motel lrturu!diately artet teileMng a phone call from an unidentified person at 7 a.m. Tuesday. The young man, who lived In La Verne with bis wife, Barbara, was killed in· stantly at 7:30 a.m. Tuesday when he leeped from the South Coast Highway sidewalk near the entry to Ben Brown's Motel into the path of the oncoming bus, which was !oade:i wilh students bound for Thurston Intermediate School. Bus driver Marty Lucking and the hor- rified studenls who witnessed the tragedy told California Highway Patrol officers Winget apparently saw the bus ap- proaching:, crouched and leaped in front of it, str1king the right headlamp and wiDdshield He was hurled 60 feet by the impact. It was revealed that Winget had been attending a two-41.y seminar at Ben Brown's for alumni of the UC Los Angeles hospital administration program, in which he received bis master's degree. He also -served a two-year ad- ministrative resldeucy at V a 11 e y Presbyterian Hospital In Van Nuys before joining the Pomona Valley staff, Burwell aald. Winget wu born in Salt Lake City, Utah, and will be buried in City Cemetery in that city, according to a spokesman for Saddle back Mortuary, TUstin, which is handling local ar- rangements. He and bis wife had no children. SUrviYOl'I, in addlt.'.on to the widow. are his parentl, Dr.-and Mrs. Frank Winget of Salt Late City; two brothers, Douglas of Menlo Park and Gary of Salt Lake City; and three sisters, Mrs. Jo An D'lott of Santa Cruz, Mrs. Judy Keyser of Ohio and Mrs. Colleen Nood. of Salt Lake City. A number of the shocked students on the bus that struck Winget were taken Mme on aootber tchool district bus that was dispatched to the scene. Several of those who elected to go on to '11lurston School were shaken and crying wheo they arrived, principal David Lloyd said, and were cared for by teachers before joining their classes. NAACP Protests Natne in Booklet OXNARD (AP) -The namo "Nigger Canyon" to detcrtbe a h 11 t o r I C a I landmart in Ventura County is "very de- meaning".to the area's blac~ and should he stricken from historical brochurt1 on the area, the local NAACP chapter says. The name appears In a booklet pro- duc<d by the Ventura County lllstorlcal Society to · "8l'k Ventura'• IOOlh an· nlvvaary of IOparaUon from Santa Barbara County. • Frederlct J'Obeo, ptelldont of Ille Ox- nard NAACP chapt.r, Tuesday deman<l- ed that all s,ooo printed cop1 .. he recall· ed becaUJe o! the use or "Nlcier C.n· yon.,, who picked her up, the }'OUlll bitchhlking Laguna teen pointed to Bronson, shack· led and in prison toga. The 19-year-old girl said s~ bad been" thumbing a ride from the area of Oen· ny's Restaurant at 1600 S. Coast Highway at about 9 p.m. on Sept. 14. She said that as she got in the car, she noticed the driver wearing women's clothing and later she piontlolled the driver wore lipstick. After reaching the intersection of • e1s Thalia and Coast Highway, she said she told the driver, "this is rme, anyplace along here." The driver, she said, turned lhe comer onto Thalia StreeL "I felt something at my ear and started to brush it away and I looked over and saw It was an Ice pick," the young woman said. "He said 'get on the floorboard," the girl sajd. She told the driver of the car " 'U it's money your're after, I don't have any,' and he kind of grinned." The Icepick was allegedly pulled on the yot.mg victim between Coast High ... ;ay and Glenneyre Street while the car was on Thalia. The car went up Temple Hills Drive, and nothing happened. the young wit.neu testified. As they came down Temple llills Drive, the driver told his passenger to remove her slacks and.µoderpants. "E\>eryUme t asked him something, he told me to '&hut up'," she sa id. The honey-blonde girl told the court !hat after this. the car headed out Laguna Canyon and .90mewhere between Laguna and Westminster. stopped and she \\"as tied with the straps fro m a purse. At the Chino area. the girl was told lo s1r1p of! her remaining clothing. and assertedly forced to subm it to an un- natural sex act. Then the gi rl was taken from the car and ordered lo a mattress that lay in an (Stt RAPE, Page %) ens Job Planned ~-Lpm.Qo_d ·---1 . ,,... · / ' IM.H.i'·PtLOT .... ~·...._.. ""*"' BONEY BANANA (CAMEL) AND C()L. SAND'ERS (ROOSTEll llDE .AGAIN-TO T81AL The Pair Wero Part of the Trappl1191 Thia ~Inv 11 the Trio( of Vegetarian Food Store 0.- •' Food Trial Set ,• V egetaria1i Appetirs iii Courtroom James Douglas Roberts, o tor of the Laguna ~ch veg an eatery, Love Animals, Don't 'Ibem, ap-- peared in· Laguna Ni mWlldpal court for jury trial while outside U1e court- house, a knot ot his supporters held a trial of their own. Roberts, "22, is accused of allowing a camel, a rooster and several dogs in the restaurant at 782 S. Coast Highway dur· ing the cafe's opening July 4. Roberts and attorney Barry Simons of Laguna Beach were assigned to the courtroom of Municipal Judge H. Warren Knight where jury selection got under way this~· Roberts, wearing a crisp new white T- shirt with Love Animals, Doo't Eat Them and a picture of a lamb, a child and a cow silk screened on it, said he was con- fident that the jury would find him in- nocont. "We don't care whom we are judged by because we know what we say is true," Roberts said. Boney Banana, a camel who has been a frequent visitor during Roberts' court appearances in Laguna Niguel, attended the mock trial outside the courthouse. Boney, who arrived in a clanking black, 1954 Cadillac limousine, was ac- companied by Col. Sanden, a rooster. In the incense laden air, a crowd Sjlng, played guitars and prOmoted their vege!Arlan phllo!ophy as im-sby gawked. Robert! said from the beginning of his (See FOOD, Pap I) . Laguna CofC Opposing County Boulevard Design Laguna Beach Cbamber of Commerce officials are not oPPOSed to the o:tenaion or Alt.a Laguna Boulevard from Top of the World lo Arch Beach Heigbts, but . they take a dim view of. the county'• design for the road. • These views were erpres.sed Tuesday al the monthly m<etlng or the Chamber directors by Chari .. Jollnoon of the land ""' and zoning commlti.e and Bill Milne of the traffic and droulallon committee. Proa and oon.s of the Alla t..Jlw>a proj- ect will he liven a further alrln( ,.,..,... d•Y night at a meetlnc tp0noored by the Top ol the World Neighbor-Aloocla- tion. _,,_ PlaMlng Director Wayne Moody "1ll be guest speUer at the 7131 p.m . .-ion Ir. Top of the World Scbool ~,.. t.a\IVOI of the Arch Beac!b Heights Homeownen Astocjatlot)i i 1so are ••· pectod to give their vim of the pr_..i road extension. • Johnlon told U.. Chamber group that the Citiubs' Town Plannlni Commisaion and Vlllag1 t..guna are IO!k!na to block COlllCnlctloo of the JOad, .wblCh WU to have atarted next monfll, while the Fire Department, Sdlool Dlltrlct and. Wattt Diltrtct favor .it. "W• ..,. a moral ... legal reopomlblffty to ~.,fly ...-.lcet to people In ~ ~ ... he llOld, "but I am not haPI'!' about the -align- ment that devlal,. from tho orJc!rial plan, falla It loU... tbe -of tbe bnd a~ l'tq1lirol cut and fill that d~llle-." )S1ine aid hla committee recoJIU!l'lldl Ajeetloo of Ille l"opooed alignment wblcli ... not ~ for buffer llripo of flrtland llld trails for lllklllc and bicycuns to set off the :'Oad. "Wo feel JI should tie In With the J,._ terlrn open 11p1ce olemenl of the G.,,.,.af Pian," he said, "W• al80 fetl that 1 ... creued development could put_lddltlonal llreaa on esistlng acceu roods. The cull and fill• are very extenslvo and ... Itel the road lhould not be four lanel." .. • Two Pedestrians Hurt in Separate Laguna Accidents Two pedestrians suffered minor In- juries ln separate accldenta on Laguna Beach's South C.OUt Highway Tuesday . Victoria Rhea Grisham, 11, of 1133 Glenneyre St., suff~ multiple con- tl18ions of the left foot when she was struck while attempting to ,....cio!1 the highway in the Oak Street ~~alt at 1:48 p.m. _ \ Pollet! hav e recommended that driver William Kellogg Colver, 59, of Los Angeles, he charJed for !allure to yield lo a pedestrian. At I: II p.. In the 100 block of South Coast Highway Gabriel Mesaad, SI, of mil Cannelil.a SI. WU bit when he allegedly lltpped out from behind a parted car. Police said Messad was tlruck hy the min..-o! a car driven by Donald Rlcbard Sandell, 13, of lelll Estancieria, Mlstlon Viejo, and knocked Into the side of the porked vehicle. He tulftred mulU- pia facial lacerations. Both pedestriaM was talren to South Coast Communlly Hospital and released after treatment. Irvine School Roof Collapses; Came Probed By CANDACE PEARSON ot .. °"" ......... Both the ...... llld Ille elfecta ol the coliapoe Tuesday of roof -being Jn. ltall<d at Ille -Itta ol El C.mlno R...i Scbool In !Mlle remained a DIJllerr loda:y u llata lnopecton Jn. ..U,.tad dOmap 'to ... II a lhree- IDOl!th delay In Ille school'• oponlng is ~-Three workmen ware Injured Tuesday before noon when a 7,000 oquare fool· area of roof lrtmtt fell at Ille site at Wallllt Avenue and Karen Ann Lane. A dozen other workmen ...,aped 1s.. aoor, rap s) -Attorney By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of IM °'1111'1' 1'1111 Sl•ft LOS ANGELES -Plans for ~ Ill million burglary of the Laguna Niguel branch of United California Bank were• first made ln a Lynwood motel room in ea rly February, U.S. Attorney Jack \V allers alleged before a federal court here today. Walters rnade the statement as the trial opened In whldl three men are charged with OOlllplracy, bank burilary and bank laioeny, Fadllf chlllf.. ""' Phllfp Bntce Christopher, 29, of Clev.land; Chari.. Albert Mulligan, sa, of YOW>Bstown, Ohlo, and Amil Allred Dlnsio, 31, of Board.man, Ohio. The prosecuUon'1 opening remarks - only 15 nUnutes in length -traced an alleged series of events which began when defendants Mulligan and OhlSio allegedly tnveled to Callfornla in February and rented a room at the Jubilee Motor Inn, Lynwood. Then men, Walters asserted, osten5lbly were in California to visit relatives but in reality, he added, they were Jaylng the preliminary groundwork for the maaaive break-in. Using the motel room as a base, the Laguna Niguel branch was selected and certain arrangements made. These arrangements, the prosecutor contends, included purchase of a 1982 Oldsmobile sedan with a false bottom outfitted in the trunk and lease of a fashionable townhouse at 313111 West Nine, Laguna Niguel. The condomlnlum was rented Walters said on March 8 by Ronald and Henry Barber, two brothers indicted In the crime but still at large. Walters asserts the proseuctlon wUl show that the Tustin home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dawson was used for secret meetings between the burglars and lhat tools and aome stolen property were stored in the Oldsmobile which was park· ed in DawlOll's garage. Dawson is a long-time friend of Mulligan and who is apparently not in- volved in lhe crime. Later 1n March, each of the five men lndJcted returned to the ~eveland area, Walteni 11.ld, then returned to Laguna Niguel on Mardi 15, nine dlya prior to lllee TRIAL, Pap I) We•dler According to the National Weotl>- er Service, cionaiderable ckiMfr •· is in store for tbe Or~lt Thwsday. with the smt through in the altm>ooo. temperature lbould be In Ille '"" \'Os. INSIDE TGDA'Y South C0061 R<pertory ~ t :r its ntnth ltGIOft of thfa&tr a. tht Orange c ... 1 thll '°"-with o r<llfval of Ille A.......,, comtd., c I o I I I c 'T1'c ~ beartr1.-Str Enlnledttua......c. PaQt JO. L.M • ..,,_ n ...,.... " CttlfiM'lll f carw c..-'' CIMllW ..... Cewtkt SCt Cr--" IC' -. ........... ,. . ............. . •• ..... IL:c•I ~ ,,_. J14t , ............. lltll 11 Cl'Pt • A• '--""" M • ·~ . . . \ . ' DAil' "1-01 . LB ' . l'N•P .. eI OSTRANDER • • • 08tnnder wrote ln a memo to the c::otm- cU, "I believe ttiat !he Implementation aspects will not only be a detri~ to the construc'Uon lndu.stry but al.9o to the financial st.ability or our community. "In addition . Propositioo 20, in my opin- ion \Viii delay thC development Of the ~lain Beach Park for at least two years." The initiative proposition calls for establishn1cnt of regiona l commissions to prepare a statewide plan for coastal U!>e hy J 975. In the llllerin1 no development would be allowed within 1,001 yards of the shore with special permits issued by the commission. Ostrander totd Chamber directors he realized. on examining the initiative, that it contains a clause that would com- pletely haJt all construction in Laguna. "All permil! back to April t. im aOO up through Nov. 20 would become null anc1 void:' said Oslrander, "and all con- struction would cease on these and other buildings till lbe special pennits can be obtained. Th.is would apply to everything except single family residential remodel- ing up to $7.500 in value and the entire area or the city woulc' be arrected." The city, Ostrander added, "would tend to lose $400,000 the first year if this passes ." He suggested the Chamber go on record as opposing the inl liative. Ostrander's stalcmeots were disputed by Chamber Ditector James Dilley who maintained, "the moratorium angle of the proposition has been greatly ex- aggerated -these are modest delays. "We con make great gains with this legislation," said Dilley. "We can get state and regional cooperation with local gove rnment in behalf or good planning that will help us preserve our beaches." A1iimal Protest Crowd W atche<l By Riot Squad As the protest crowd for the trial of James Douglas Roberts swelled outside the courtroom and courthouse a specially ~ained crowd control squad of JO helmeted Orange County marshals stood by. -Dillard WJJkirson, Orange County marshal, sa.id his office had anticipated that perhaps 300 persons would show up. The specially trained deputy marshals were et the court for protection of the cotmty facility, he said. The marshals were outfitted With three-foot long night sticks and were dr:esse<t ,in .. khaki "combat'·'· s ty 1 e uiilfonns . Wtlkirson !aid his officers would not 011erlook infractions of law that might be committed by the colorful and ragtag crowd. He said his office anticipated that any protest would be peaceful but that thQy h~d to be ready just In case. The marshals were tucked away ~ an otnce oil to one side of the courthouse lobby. From Page I TRIAL ... !he burglary. During the nine day period, the alleged team engaged In final preparations in- cluding the purchase of toots and cutting lorthes. The break in, Walters said, took piece between Friday night March 24 and Sun- day nigh!, March 26. ' On Mondoy, Marob %7, Mulllg1n along with Din.slo and Dlnsio's brother James, left the 141.An«eles area. On Weclnes- :lay, Henry Batf>er left the Loi AngeJP.!1; area. Lat.er that same week l{()nald Barber returned to Ohio, towing a boal which had been purchased by James Dinsio. . The only piece of evidence, Walters s:.iid. that remained in the Los Angeles area ~·as th e 1962 Oldsmcblle. Aocordftlg to the prosecutor, Da"'•son was tired of h.1 ving lhe car in his gnrag1: and n1adc Sf'veral calls to Ohio asking that it be removed. OU.N61 COAST La DAILY PILOT Tl'll OT•nve c-1 DAILY PIL.OT, Wiit! -mkh .. '"-!blllld ,,... ,._,., .... ,. pUll/lliled .., "'' Or•FIQC co.111 Pl.lbl!Plll'IO CornPMv. s~ r1t .. ..:li!Jotii .,., pulllls"9<1, Mond•'f lhrovot'I Frlo1v. for Cost• ""'"'"• Newparl Be.acl't, 11un1inolc•n Britell/F-Nln Valley, 1..111- Be!di, 1 r~•llC/Stddl•Cll ind $J,. 0.mmle/ Stn Ju•n C1p1t1r1,.., A ,1111111 reglon1I ..iu1o11 Is Pllf)Jlsllelf Saturd1v• 1116 Su11C11yi. 1"111 prlnclpal pullJltl'llll!I pt1nt II •I JJO W.I 11'1' $tr11I, C:0.11 Mftl, C1lllorrlll, '2'Jf. kob1rt N. W1.d Pralcl-ll'ld PvtolW.W J1r~ It. Curl1y Vk• ,.,_1c1 .. 1 •!'Id Gotnlnl ,,_,..., Thom•• K .. .-il ..... l).omit A. M11rphi11t M1n19lng Editor Ch1r111 H. L••• ltirh1H r. Nill I N1l1&1nt MlnlQlrlg 15.dllor• i..., ... lffc• OfRce 122 f:.or••t A•1n111 M1illi1 Mtlr•1•: r.o. 10:11 .,.., t2•12 --"" ..... aa. w-..,. s'""' H Ndt~ ,.,, flttW!JOM lo!,i .... 9f'f 11111'1 8Htfl ~ l111J f!•tfl ~,,. i.n j la: JO$ Norltl I t C.mlno R .. I , .. ,,., •• tn41 64MJJ1 <.........., MM1t*1 '42-N7t ~ .... A.._.••P.•••w•llr ... T•l•t1±1 iM M6' ·· . ' 1 OAn.Y ...uw Ttlff ,.... Dttiftell Cited 1 • ' • .... -• • • Planners D • -. ay ' . • Nigu~ .. Tracts t . ' Orange O>unty planning commlatiooers delayed action on two tract ma(ll in the Laguna Niguel "'ea Tuesday pendJnc further WonnaUOn on • state supreme Coorl deciJlon. The justlcos wted f.1 last -t lbol enYinmmeol.tl Impact statements must be provided before dtita or t'OWUJes may issue buildin& permlta to pr Iv ate developers. The deci!loo wu oo a Mono Coynty case brought by an ecology group, the Friends of Mammoijl, wbicll haa tear porarily be1d up con.!lnEUao of a large apartment project at Mammoth Lakes. County Planning Director Fore!! Dickason said today that the requirement or impact statementa: tbouJd not seriously hold op private developments in the county. He said many large developen had an!lclpated the ruling and had In- cluded envlronm·ental reports in their plans. The county and all other governmental agencle! ate required to file en- virooment.al impact reports on all public projects under a 1170 11.ate law. Previously, this rule had not been applied to private construction but Dickason stated weeks ago that It would be in · time. The Laguna Niguel project helcf up by. the planners were Avco Community O.Velopmen! plans for lj>ree light in- dustrial lots on 38 .. cm JOUth of Crown· Valley Parkway and west of the San Diego Freeway, and 49 acres on the north side of PacUlc Coast Highway to be developed to 13 large single family home lots. * * * Court Ruling Stumps Board: At Meeting RESCUERS CARE FOR INJURED WORKER AT SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION SITE IN IRVINE Roof Framing Gives Way at El ~mlno Real Element11ry School in California Homes Aru p...,_r8gel RAPE ... Business before the Orange County Board of Supervl.!ors almost ground to .. halt this morning because or a recent California supreme Court ruling. From Page I ROOF ... serious injury when they ran Crom the building as about 20 pre!abricated beams dropped like dominoes. -The more than $1 million facility was scheduled to open in April. Dave King, facilities planner for the San Joaquin School District, said today that state Inspectors from the school architecture and construction Offices must determine if the beams are salvageable. If they can be salvaged or res>iired, King said, the accident will mean only a delay of a week or two. But if the state determines there is too much damage to allow safe construction with the beams, they will have to be reordered from their closest manufac- turer -in Boise, Idaho. That Will take at teas!' 12 .... 1cs. King said. Three different versions of the accident wer..? still cim.llating today. Irvine police said ttiey would not be charged with, detertrilning the cause. That will be up to lnsurJnce companies or to the atatf lnduab'lal a~nt com- mission, pol1cf aaid. / One WJtnda .. al!.ld' tluff a crane hoisting an arched beam onto the structure knocked one support against another and !hey began falling. Another workman told school district officials that a carpenter sitting oo one beam while attempting to place another caused the imbalance with undue pressure. King said he vlas told still another version of the accident by a witness who said the crane bounded erratically against a beam and vibrated the others to the ground . Five county fire department units. Irvine police and tbe Irvine Company ranch patrol truck responded to the call while the Costa Mesa helicopter landed on the school site itself. The school is being built by J. Ray Construction Company. Steinbrugg;e and Moon are structural engineers on the prbject. The school will serve the residents of California Homes tract. King said the C-Ompany was already one month beh.ind schedule when the jn- cident took place. Specter of Salt Creek isolated area. 1bert an act of intercourse County CounSel Adrian Kuyper advised ' is alleged to have taken place. board memben on his lnterpetation of The nervous witness described anolher the court's ruling of la11t Thursday calling sexual act and when asked by Grant if for environmental impact statements: ~ she feared for her own health and safety, au zoning changes, tract maps and other· the Wit county land use business. ness said yes, she did. Kuyper said the court's finding covers, Undef" tough cross examination by "all projects the county intends to carry· Anthony Kies, public defender repres~ out" in the wording ot the decision but ·-_ = li~J!....!!!:OJP-,. -"lt witness admll~_!hat added that the justices ruled that a fin- Surf aces in Capo Issue --..._ . . ~-- The ghost of Salt Creek floated through the Orange County Board of Supervisors hearing room Tuesday and may return soon. The occasion was a proposed aban- donment of a short roadway in county territory in Capistrano Beach. The street had been unused and is called Via Verde. It parrellels the San Diego Freeway .off. ramp lo Pacific Coast Highway. Supervisor David L. Baker said the 60- foot by 800-foot long street might be a fine place for a vista point. From Pagel FOOD •.. " It is located on a bluff overlooking although unmarried. she i;d given birth ding must be made that ·the projects are ' "nontrivial." Doheny Beach State Park and possibly to twin children about a year and a half "I assume they mean significant," the could be used for a viewpoint minipark,'' ago. Both children died in the hospit.al attorney said. "So if you find projects on said the supervisor. shortly after birth, she said. today's. agenda will have no significant- Listeners were reminded that once--The teenager saJd her fint se1UaJ en-=~ on the environment )'OU may pro- controversial Salt Creek Road was also a counter had occurred when she was 14 Kuyper said he had studied the Seven · horl ed I "•h the t years of age and that she had dropped s unus s reet WU11.: croun Y out ol Laguna Beach High School without items on the agenda and had.determined' abandoned without ceremony iq__ 1988 in graduating. that all but two were not "non-trivial."· an acUon which returned to ba'tm'Nhem, The "·-· admitted that ~-ha 'lbe two he ruled out concerned· WJw>e;>;J ait: d Uv-amendments to the ui .. i ..... code OD sand · especially former supervisor AIUm. "'"Alleo., ed with her boytriend to whom ahe was and gravel extraction dis'tiicts. who took the brunt or the blame for glv-not mln'led fOI' 1 time Ut1.s summer in · Supervisor Ronald w. easpea: of , ing up access to Salt Creek Beach. Laguna Beach. She also testified under Newport Beach asked Kuyper, "Isn't the f I ed f oath that she, had had seJUal ,relaUoQs court g~ltina into tbe fi'eld of le-'·•-. That issue was inally reso v a ter ··"' hl '811be 0r~ llo" •-'-in -~ •-Whu Th ~• ~ "'i"LU6s • tion?'' Justice Stanley Mosk. Did recent-months of wrangling 8nd negotiations car 1 in through !he purchase of the beach at a she said that 8be had been hltdllllking ~! ~'(" :! 08i'·, ·.~!.~~ u.;. "bargain price" by the county lrOm the since ........ J6 .... on -·-... have ever wiiike.d"Qi>'." 0 e ,,.,, : d el caslon was eo.ced lo perform a sez act Later, Supe""-"'f David L. Baur can-· citation for the health code violation, ev oper. by an "old man" who "hit me in the eye" ed for one we"ekTs-delay on a use permtt·: The Via Verde abandonment upon h sbe ba!ked t hl d ands peof;le lhougbt lb.I his ac!lon' Were he! w en a s em . appeal in hls: diltrict' c0nce .... 1 .. ~ a com: Pub 1'cl!y stun•~ for the restaurant. gl e 88 .,........ es IN-IC ' n 8 e mercial stable. •11 which a public hearing must be 1:.'n Sh Id N.._ Um -• had bee bl · ·-.. ' ~ about lour weeks bas other ao as. \a;'i·,.•• wherl w' ay Mt" U· incn'!?. H _,, •--~"d ha II "But It's not. We are ~ery serious t " tl'&rt 4 • NA Nlth ~~~ !r e _,•-a "'.-.u ve to persona Y about our belle!J,. lfe bejleve It wW bring The slit<! "' PP~n1niiJ. • · ""'; vi~t 1, Ibo ,p~ ·•projeot ·in ·the at'-tltm to our c•use. donmenf' tfJ the I Ing Ion at ··'"l.lnaer ques , witness told e northwe1t CypreU· ~8 befan be couJd: ""' ,.., the request of a developer, Balboa court she had not screamed, caUed for sta•· "·111 •·u nf no .n-•1-·-as f•• ''People have come to the restaurant uc: ~ ". ·_,. _ ... """' ...---and given up their leather, just thrown it Paclflc Inc. of IrvJne. The firm pl~ to be~p or fought ~ck a1afbst the abd~tot,. as environmentl(;impact is coocernec1 •• · away," the young man said of his efforts build a JU.unit condornJniwJJ project:on ~r did she attempt to ~jump out o( the After further questioning of Kuyper on' 15 acreli on both sides ·of and including car the •-g r•••e •-pact of the -·~·s rul · lo COnvert Others to bls vegetarian way · 1UU -... ,, '"""'• • Via Verde. Asked if the man had ever threatened ing the boanl ............., with •··-'·-· ~~ ' ~~ -~-Roberts said that be would attempt to Planning department officials who thk,eklglllrlherre,pllbeeda,t '~no' .• ~ hurt her family, on the other four items. studied the pro1·ect point out that there is Kuyper warned lhal h'· slalf was mal:· submJt into evidence leaflets decrying ~ no possible access to Pacific Coast It was revealed that on thE trip back ing a thofOUlb study of the court ruling the eating or animal flesh and promoting ~Jighway from the tract. Its acei!Ss is by from the Chino area, the driver ,toppe<! and it might be found that most subjects the vegeta rian way. Camino Capistrano which run.s southeast the car at a small market and the girl on the board's qenda concerning laad. fie said the law under which he is ac-toward San Clem ente. was left alone in the car. use would require impact statements. cused has no real va1ue as far as health I I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·-·-----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;; and safety is concerned. Restaurants in other countries allow animals on the premises and private citizens will share their meals with pets in their homes. he claimed. "This country is bogged wtth these kind of laws," the restaurateur noted and he indicated he 'aims to change them if possible. Roberts first came to Laguna Beach from Chicago in April. He lives now at 2564 Pala Way. He said · he opened his restaurant because he says "a whole bunch of possibilities of what I could do" in pro- moting the vegetarian philosophy. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIES ELECTRONIC WATCHES BASICALLY SIMPLE 11Electronic" implies to many people a mysterious system which might introduce expensive repair problems. Actually, electric and electronic watches are simple, reliable and easy to service and repair. All such Watches have a small battery which looks almost exactly like a hearing aid cell, but is built to put out Jess current but over a longer period of time. These batter- ies also differ In that the walch will no! be seriously harmed should leakage occur. All thes• watches have same kind ol mechanical asclllator governed by a balance wheel, tuning fork or other pulsating at vibrating device which corrlee either a coU or a per- manent magnet. Wben cwTeltt pa .. •• thcouah coll or 111111l* It pro-, vlde1 power io move the otbor alm- p~ devices In the 1yatem. .JA,mWIIt0m.• C!L'!f¥R WAJ.y; CLOCK 'lllera wu a !Imo -all ftne clccb,,.. built Ilka 11111 ••• "1111 • hand for the mlllltll ••• a hand for Ille hcun ••• and a -far the ..,. of Ille .-Jllll The pine taM In Oldt Colony flniah Is h1ftd. S01Mly occamcr bt the blllek IMl10rlll. hour and se<ond hands on the antique ""l{e .._ Tht -·~ bf'ISS pendul11111'...-l'id colfild1t hand eomplele the llllhentlcl\Y.ilf tllla. flne.Barwlcl< ~ bylhe H-.d Mlllor Clotlt CCmpany. · H. 24" W. 161/z" D. 4\lz" $-110 .. -· " ,. -T ......... • 046'. ,l\.QT l!f!l.,.~ -· >ll!l "'-"* ........ ~J'-,_. ..... if.ifliii ~•Jr:= "'" a r.-~~1 J"!'" ~-'""*'• ' .§"en-sees All ,. -·= : ~ ~ : . ~:-._ --• ·:.:;.--.t .......... . "'~ f~ftsee a are~! canilvll ai :To~ of Iii• Y'IJ'I ~bQCiil" 8'1elr'llld •• You can buy electric or electronlc watches with confidence. Tiiey 1111'1 very trouble-lr;ee, with 'adju1tmenu and repairs easily occompllshed by JOlll' locol lndapendent jeweler. 182l NSWPORT BLVD •• COSTA MESA ~~!Ht~---~ ·'~tt~ ;;r 9't ~"!".ljs. ""'"'""' fl'll'"'" ... ,~ ,, .. ,..."""· · Le•I~ PaM"llth !ells Cullen Bllt ss"'D. ll1'~ event will tilM 11in<1s:tor-plllygrofllld equipmeq•·•~a Jibnri;boat'-' It w1U be_ &om 2 to 7 p.m: and wm Include booths. iamu ot: CliiAce and ot coune • look into the future: Supper wlll be served alter 5 p.m. CONVeWtlNT n•Ms !I Y~IS IN THf SAMI LOCATION \ " IANOV.lllUICARO-MASTll (IHA R•I PHONE 141•1401 I 1 I I I I ,. j I :7 -• · Saddlehaek Today's Ft.al ED ITION N. Y. St.eeks VOL 65, NO. 271 , 6 S~CTIONS, 84 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1972 TEN CENTS . El, Camino Real School Roof Collapse Probed By CANDACE PEARSON Of .. Otll)' '""' '''" Both the cau9es and the effects of the collapse Tuesday of roof trusses being in- stalled at the Construction site of El Camino Real School In Irvine remained a mystery today as state inspectors in- vestigated damage to see if a three- mont& delay in the school's opening is necessary. Three workmen were injured Tuesday before noon when a 7 ,000 square foot- , area of roof trusses fell at the site at Walnut Avenue and Karen Ann Lane. A dozen other workmen escaped serious lnjUry when they ran from the building as about 2fl prefabr icated beams dropped like dominoes. The more than $1 million facility was scheduled to open in April. Dave Jmig, fa cilities planner for the San JoaquJn School District, said today that state inspectors from the school architecture and construction oCllces must determine if the beams are salvageable. If they can be salvaged or repaired, King said, the accident will mean only a delay of a week or two. But If the state detennine.s there is too much damage to aJJow safe canstructlon with the beams, they wiH have to be reordered from their ,closest manufao- turer -in Boise, Idaho. That will take at leaat 12 weeQ, King said. Three different versions or the 1cc:ident wer ... still circulatlng today. Irvine police aaJd Ibey would not be charged with determining the cause. That will be up to insurance companies or to the st.ate industrial accident com- mission, police said. One witness said that a crane hoisting an arched beam onto the structure knocl<ed one support against anothe< and they began falling. Another w<d;man told school district offlclals that a carpenter sitting on one beam while attempting to place another caused the imbalance with undue ~-King said he was told still another version of the accident by a witness who said the crane bounded erratically against a beam and ribrated the others to the ground , Five county fire department units, Irvine police and the Irvine COmpany ranch patrol truck responded to the call while the C:O.ta Meso helicopter landed on the ocbool slle ltaell. 1be school Is being built by J. Ray Construction Company. Steinbrugge and Moon are structural engineers on lhe project. The school wlU serve the residents of California Homes tract. King said the company was already one month behind schedule when the in- cident took place. Students who will attend the 45-15, year-round facil it y. are no w housed i11 the former Rancho Sa n Jo a q u i n Intermediate school bu ilding on Sand Canyon A venue in East Irvine. Injured In the accident when the beanu1, weighing almost a half ton each, fell were Sivert Thompson. of Placentia; Jim Sanders. of Anaheim. and l-Jerve Binette. of Santa Ana . All were taken to Tusti n Community Hospital. Tustin Community Hospital. Police said Thompson sufferect ~severe head injuries. Sanders reportedly suffered broken ribs and a fractured pelvis and Binette lu:id cuts on his head. lfospital officials listed all lhrce Olen's conllition's as satisfactory. Hunt ers Silenced Irvine OKs Urgent Law Banning Guns By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. Dl'tr Pl .. ltefll Irvine city councilmen Tuesday night silehced the gwis which r a n k I e d University Park homeowners at the opening of dove season Sept. 1. Following complaints from a citizen whose home was peppered by the then legal dq>i'--'!uaters shooting birds In Rancho ~oaquin Golf Course, Mayor William Filchbach said he urged preparation of the urgency ordinance. The law, adopted on a unanimou.I vote with Councilman John Burton opJ)OSed only to its extension to similarly ban use of bb guns, prohibits the firing of any weapon in the city. Exempted from the ban are [iring ranges and hunt clubs which have receiv- ed planning commis'sion approval of use permits -required when oUch clubl oo- cupy. ·~for a~uoe. -~~'8'"Uet GaJlrleUe Pl'JW 'wllo ~ 1111 been recaaltd 111 Ille' ....,mdl'• moot Wql op- poneal 'of urblntzaµoo of the new cily. DAtLY PILOT ft~,,._ RESCUERS CARE FOR INJURED \VORKER AT SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION SITE IN IRVINE' Roof Fnmlng Glvos Wey 11 El Ce!llino Rul Efe..,.ntary School In Colllorni• Homes A,1M "It'1. time to cli.IJbu,. ourselvea ~ the notlol thet ljiiii. wfU be ii nira1 'eount!'1 hunl!nl area ,,_ and recocnlze the fict that Irvlne will become an urban area," Mn. Pryor 48-id. "We will need an ordinance e-lually to prolect citizens Crom those who want to fire guns,.. she said, supporting soooer, not later, a~ proval. Supervisors Talk In Secret About J et Litigation Orange C',ounty SuperviJorl were to huddle behind closed doon today to discuss ramifications of lawsuits filed by 959 Newport Beach, Com Mesa and S.... ta Ana Heights property .owners against the county over jet operations at the county airport Chiel Deputy County Counsel Clayton Parker said the county supervisors were expected to discuss, among other tblngs, the hiring of an appraiser to allber d!t- taUed information for the county's de. fense against the lawsuits , wbidl, to- gelber seek almost 128 million In dam- ages. ,PlainUHs in the suits, which were filed ori41Dally iD December 1968, coulend tbell' property values have been damaged to that extent as a result jet flights from the county airport Parker said the suit filed on hebaH of Barba1'a Aune of 1830 Mariners Drive in tbe WeslclHf sectloo of Newport Beach has been selected by attorneys for the p~Ufis aS the first suit to go to trial. The. trial date has been set for mid- October. The Aune suit alleges t195,000 in dazrn1ies. Parker also said his ofiioe wlll ask for a cont{QUMOO ln order to allow the coun- ty to gel-Its apprai,.i"• l'<port. "!be deputy county eounsel Nld county supervilorl have before tbdm a proposal to hire the appraisal firm of Whittlesey Allocleles of LagUDa Hills. Porker aaJd (Set lP:r SVIT1 hp II SOF A.'S SOLD IN FIRST CALL • "Fabulous results. f could h&v• sold 20. solu. 1be Ont caller boucht IL " Thet'• the-story Ol-ruulll from this Id: s.!!a'. lietper • pd $350. Sell ... 185. * xd:-aoaoc * Jt appeared once In ' the d .. llied ad- vertlslni eeclJ!XI QI tha DAILY PILOT- , IDd. obVfously, did Ila job. W1-r DOI ""' If, we can build an ad to nt ywr aoedL Jlllt dial the ~ Una to ,_,ts, -· end ask a DAILY PILOT ad-... IO' edvloe )'OU. El Toro Park Planned Qluncllman Burton along with E. Ray Quigley ·Jr. regretted the fact It Is not possJble to allow hunting in open areas of the city. Thoug h. Funds Lacking Cty Attorney James Erickson said It was dllficult to draft an ordinance which discriminated geograpbicallY within the city. By FRRDERICK SCHOElllEHL Of ... D91ty f"llet SC.ff A 31-acre p8rt will blossom near the El Toro intersection or Muirlands and Los Alisos Boulevards, despite the fact the county is $100,000 short in money needed for land acquisition. The agreement to move ahead with the project was reached between cou nty of- ficials and area residents Tuesday night, in an informal meeting at county offices In Santa Ana. ''We .. e been talking about this park for two ye.an:,'' .pid Bart Spendlove, presi- dent ot lbe Sa.ddleback Area Coordinating Co.mciL "From my readout of the com- Dltllllty, tbere Is a great desire for it." 0 El ~ is park deficient," declared Susan Nilsen of the Aliso Valley Homeowners Association. "l suggest we acquire as much land as possible." 1be acreage, said Richard Kelly, 2 Private Eyes Draw Jail Terms On Bilking Rap Jail tennl have i.o ordered ror two private lnvestigat.on accused on arrest of bi.lking an Irvine woman out of more than l',000 while supposedly working on her divorce action. Orange County superior Court Judge William Murray occepled the guil ty plea of Robert F. Sluder, 2.6, of Pasadena. to charge& of gral'ld theft. He suspendert Iha state priloo term that could have been applied ln favor or a four-month county JaU term and three years probation. ~t Sand•rs, 26, of Santa Ana , got• seven-day jaU tenn and two years pro- bation ofter pleading guilty to lesser charges of petty theft In the defrauding ol Mrs. Gerl Colfm, 3$, of 4525 Sandl>Url Way, Irvine.. Both mon, omph>yu of the American Bureau.of Inve.Ugatloh, were arrested id April, lt wu alleaed lhet they fal sified their records ID 1 bid' to prove that the money wu ll80d for actual lnv<Stlg1Uve servloes. ' Special Districts Director for the cotmty, will cost $515,000. Originally, he said, the co.st was to be split three ways. The Parka Department, through its. special districts, would raise $325.000, the Flood Control Department would chip in sgs,000, and the Road Department would pay the remaining $85,000. Recently, however, flood control decid- ed to not participate in the acquisition, Kelly noted. To raise the needed $95,000, Kelly said, fi ve acres of the .land would be placed (See PARK, Page Z) Mayor Wllltam Fischbach noled the proposed Jaw did provide places iD the city -iD dubs -where guns mlihl be fired. He added tbat the oi>en spaces of the city are for all citizens to enjoy, not just those whc. want to fire weapon1. "Open &paces of the city belong to everybody," he said. "People ought to he able to go oul and enjoy their open space and greenbelt.! without the fear of being picked off by some bunter," Fischbach said. Publicly, the mayor admitted be is a shooting fan (skeet) ·and be said be did not mind being restricted to {X11'8111t of bis interest at a recognized firing range Irvine Council Action Here, In capsule form, ar1> lbe major actions taken Toetday night by lhe Irvine. City Council: ' ' RINKER ZONING -Continued for another two weeks action on the pro. pased rezoning of a 70-acre parcel near El Toro Marine corps Air Station from agricultlf"al to residential use. UNDERGROUND WIRES-Delayed, pending a ruling by the city attorney, consideration of the Southern caJitomia Edison Company's appeal of a planning commission requirement to place tmderground all electrical transm.IJ&loo lloes serving two industrial complex paroela. AYRES ZONING -Set Nov. 14 as the date for hearing on Aym Construc- tion Company zone change requ<St for a n4rth Irvine par<:el. Action require• planning comml8Slon to complete policy and land use plans by that date. EDUCATION SURVEY -Withheld action Oil a 12.lllO request to pay for tabulating public educaUon commJttee survey until after eow>cilmen meet with Irvine school trustees OCt. J. SHOOTING IN CffY -Banned any discharge ol firearms, including BB guns, anywhere ln the city except in hunt clubs or flr'8 ranges. CITY FEES -Set schedule of fees for verlow city planning consldera· tiODJ ranging ll'om 115 for a resld<nt oeeklng approval of a permit for • patio cover to moro than 11JOO for a daveloper'1 planned community. • PQUl'ICAL llEAJ)QUARTDIS -Gev/'Dnal epproval to zonlnl law a~ lowing cbarltable or polJllcal' hea<lquartars to leue l!iOCe lempororily Jn tha commercial areas of Irvine lndustrlal Complel. ' FLAG '\>OOTBALL -'Supported clty staff ncommendatlon !bit city pro- vide ooly ldminlltratltt cools for boys' loolball IHgllH, wltb partlclpenta to pay feeJ covering other COits oucb u lnlutance, lhlrts, tropbltl end relereea. ,, " or club. Councthnan Ray Quigley recalled the da)'3 of his youth "when I went out three blocks from my home and shot at an old tin can. I didn 't always hit it ... but it's an experience I'd hate lo see us deny to youth of Irvine." However, since councilmen agreed one aim of the Jaw is l<> end shooting of bb guns in private greenbelt areas, a motion by Councilman Burton lo delete the bb gun firing ban failed. Mrs. Pryor said she knew of three chlldren in University Park who have been hll by air gun pellets -bbs -Ill recent months. As an urgency ordinance, Tuesday's council action becomes cit y law im- rr.ecliately. Violation s of the new law may result In arrest by Irvine police o!ficers who. on Sept. 1, could do nothing about the University Park area dove hunters. Barass1nent Charged School District 'Threats' Eyed by Su,perintendent ..... Oiarps that a Mo -11nlo!I HJgb SchooJ. District official madt threats' that t6'1Cbert UIOCiation leaders would not be ertibioyed longer than two years ln new unJ/Jed districts are being lnv01tlgated by acting superintendent J.E. Schumaker. Jim Weban, president of the Tustin Secondary Teaoben Aseoclatlon, told district tnJstees about en alleied Incident which he cbatacterhed u barassment. Wltbout naming IUIDle!I, Weban, a math Panel Won't Rule On Homeowners' Patio Cooers lrvlne's proi-cf panel of building design experts will not rule on the 'taste" -or lack of It -evidenced by individual homeowners' plans for patio covers or other structural improvements to homes they occupy, COWlcilmen decid- ed Tuesday. The decision came after a two-hour diJtcusslon iD which Councilman Henry Quigley urged the city to regulate through its design review committee matters now covered by community association "codes, covenants a o d restrictions" -"CC and Rs". The various CC It Rs In lrvlne restrict purchasers to observance of a variety of rules regarding changing the appearance of their property. Community aasoclatlon review com- mittees generally must approve a pro- posed improvement. ViolaUona are dealt with by civil court actions which provide a broader latitude for enforcement by the private associa· lion than any public agency could re- quire, City Attorney James Erickson told councilmen. Henry Quigley 18ld be felt city I en- forc<ment of the standards of the CC & Rs was necessary slnce there are com- munity association! with boards which "are afraid" of strict enforotment. "That means ln some communJUH In Irvine then! are for all practic1d purposea no ''l'ndards being applled," Quijley contended. He cited an example iD the Ranch where a court decision favored a group of 10 homeowners and ended a vl.olalion of the deed restrictions. 0 8ut since those people spent their money to take one case to court there are 10 other examples of otben doing the samo thing," Quigley said. Four other coundlmen, however. had different ldaas ol why the clty ,.,. in- 1titutlog • dear review committee. Councilman , Ray Quigley Jr. daemed deslp .revlew committee approval of such things as patio co•ers """Id hinder the panel of experts from eccompllsbinJI more important control& of the visual ~ty of futUI'< de""lopments. By maklng the design revi<w p111<l the arbltm of matlen of ~ste, Ray Quigley (Set RIME1I', hp Z) • tocber at Mlslton Viejo Hlgb School, said that a district official told 111 auoclation representaUve that teachers active ln the aroup would be phued out or new distr!cts within two years after July or 197S. Under tenns of a successful unlllcation election ln June, the· Tustin Union High School District will be dissolved as or Ju- ly, 1973, and three K-12 districts will take over operation. They are Irvine, Saddleback Valley and Tustin unUied. All certified employes are guaranteed initial employment in the districts under uniticatlon. 1be idea of the alleged threat, Dan Sal- ing, Callforina Teachers Association representative said today . is that "people active now would not be around to be ac- tive later." Saling and Wehan said the "rumor" wu passed from the association leader to other members and two repre.seu- tatives re&igned from their posts out of ff'ar. Trustees, led by their new President Dickran Boranlan, asked Schumacker to investigate and report back. ''Whatever they (the leachers) want to do i.!1 their business," Schumaker said Tuesday about the association mem- bership, "Board policy says that employes will not be harassed," he added. So far he ha& not found the charges of ad- ministration coercion to be true, he sa id, but wUI continue to investigate. Wehan Monday night also repeated the teachers UIOclation objections to salary schedules, overcrowded working con. ditlons and lack of adequate nursJnc llaU. Orange C.u1 Weadler According to the NaUonal W..U.. er Service, cons.ldtrable ckou"n 111 ts In storo for the ~­Thursday, with the SIDI through Jn the """"'°""' temperature should be In Ibo low 70s, INSIDE TODAY Sou th CO<UI Rtp0r!Of11 ,.,.,..._ ' ts Its nfnih seaion of thNtn °" ~ the Orange Coast thfi witted " with o revfva:l of ihe A"""'°"" comtdtt c la •sic ~ ~ btarcr1." Sec Ent~ Page 30. ' I DAILY PILOT IS Delay Set 011 Tracts h1 Niguel Orange C.Ounly planning commissioners dc!1Jycd action on t\VO lract maps in the L.iguna Niguel drea Tuesday pending further information on a state Supreme C.ourt decision. Tbe justices voted g.1 Inst week that C'n~·ironmental impact slatements must be provided before cities or counties may is.sue buildlng permits to pr i vat e developers. The decision was on a Mono county i:ase brought by an tCCJlogy group, the friends of Mammoth, which has tern· porarily held up const ruction of a large apartment project at Mammoth Lakes. DAILY PILOT ...... ., ltJcMnl ~ • ••• Food, Animals in Question -.... JllJlles Doug1u ~ ~to,< of the Laguoa Beacll veg<tadan. attry, Love Animals, Don't Eat Tbelll, .ap- peattd in Laguna N\guel m1mlclpal court for jury trial-whlle outside the court· house, a knot of hls supporters held a trial of their own. • Roberlll, 2%, b oecused of allowing a camel, a roostor ml several doll• jn the restaurant at '181 s. Coast Hlglnoay dur· ing the eale'a opeOlllg July 4. Roberts and atl•mey Barry Simons of Laguna Beach were assigned to the courtrnom of Municipal Judge H. Wmen Kntgbt where jlU)' aelocllon got under way this morning. Roberts, wearing a crisp new white T- shirt with Love Anlmak, Don'I Eat Them and a picture of a tamb, a child and a cow silk .screened on I~ said he waa co~ fideot lhat the jury Would find him in- nocent. "We don't care whom we are judged by. because we know what we say ls true," Robe!'b said. "But it's not. We are ffrf serious about our be.Lieft. Wt believt tt will bring 8Ut ntlon to our cau.e. "People have co me to the restaurant and glven up thetr leather, Just thrown i~ away," the young man said of his efforts to convert others to his vegetarian way of life. Roberts said that he would attempt to submit into evidence leaflets decrying the ealinj( of animal flesh and promoling the vegetaiian way. He said the law under which he ls ac- cused has no real yalue as far as health and safety is concerned. Restaurants in other countries allow animals on the premises and priva te citil.eDS will share their meals with pets in their homes, be claimed. "Thb country is bogged with these kind of laws," the restaurateur noted and he indicated be alms to change them if possible. , Roberts first came to Laguna Beach. from ChicagQ in April. He lives now at. 2564 Pala Way. . County Planning Director. Forest Dickason said today that the requirement of impact statements should not seriously hold up priv ate developmen ts in the county. He said many large developers had anlicipated the rullng and had in· eluded environmen tal reports in their plans. The county and all ot her governmental agencies are required to fi le en- BONEY BANANA (CAMELI AND COL. SANDERS (ROOSTER) RIDE AGAIN-TO TRIAL The Pair Were Pa"rt of the Trappings This Morning 1t the Trl1I af Veget1ri1n Food Store Owner Boney Banana, a camel who bas been a frequent visitor during Roberts' court appears~ Laguna Niguel, attended the mock , out.side the courthouse. He said he opened his restaurant because he says "a whole bunch ~ possibilities of what J could do" in pro- moting the vegetarian philosophy. vironmental impact reports on all pubiic projec ts under a 1970 state law. J->revio~ly, this rule had not been applied lo private construction but Dickason stated weeks ago that it would be in time. The Laguna Niguel project held up by the planners were Avco Com munity Development plans !or three li ght in- dustrial lots on 38 acres south o( Crown Laguna Niguel Bank Robbery Trial Under Way Valley Parkway and west of the San By FREDERICK SCHO El\1EllL Otego Freeway, and 49 acres on the 01 111. 0111t r n•t s1111 rn1rth side of Pacific Coast Highway to be LOS ANGELES -Plans ftlr the $5 developed to 13 large single famU :r home million burglary of the Laguna Niguel J~. branch of United California Bank were The court ruling may also delay a long first made in a Lynwood motel room in Trustee Controversy Not First One for Area Boney, arrived in a clanking black, 1954.. c.dillac limousine, was ac- companied :tay C.01. Sanders, a rooster. In the lDoebse laden air, a crowd sang, played .. suJ.tars and promoted their vegetarian philosophy as passersby gawked. Roberts said from the beginning of his citation for the health code violaUon. peoole thoucht that bia actior1.1 were publicity stunts for the mitaurant. * * Animal Prowst Crowd Watched By Riot Sqund By GEORGE LEIDAL malned in the Saddleback C.Uege 01 1t1e P111t1 f'li.t 111tt district, fellow Coast trustees d"eclared As the protest crowd for the trial ol Officials of the Coast Community Smith's seat va.:ant. Attorney George Frota Pqe 1 James Douglas Roberts swelled outside College District today recalled an in-Rodda Jr. was apPointed. PQStbaste to PARK the courtroom and CCJurthouse a speciany'. cident similar to one facing a Saddleback succeed Smith. • • • trained crowd control squad of 10 Community College trustee in which a Since that incident in 1989, 8addleback helmeted Orange County marshals stood- I \l c!_f>!>at~Cana~a ~Ills pr.oject i~ t~ El e_arJL Febru_MY L u .S. Attorney Jack Toro area wh1cfl IS ilaTed fOi' studyty-Walters-alleged before 8redefal -COuft the planning commission next Monday. here today. 1nember-..whod-fR10¥ed .out-ofrd .the distticL distftd-trvatee&-Mve..refuaed to.conaldc--under ID uoPf.ion to buy"-for-«te--yeer,--by;--_ , --_ .....,.._4 _ -·-• was remove rom the boa . a realignment of the conlusfnC boundary thu.s allowing time for the· county to Dillard Wilkirson, Orange Co"""' Chief assistant ~unty counsel Clayt~n Walters nladc the statemen,t as the Parker told supervisors Tues~y that his tria l opened in wh ich three hlcn arc office was planning to meet with county charged wit h conspiracy bank burglary founsels from neighboring counties to and bank larceny. ' study the impact of the court ruli~g. Faci ng cha rges are Philip Bruce "The court decision _could possibly er-Christopher, 29, of Cleveland ; Charles ~ect all building, plann11~g and fl~ con-Albert Mull igan , 38. of Youngstown. Ohio, trol approved pro1ects, Parker said. and Amil Alfred Dinsio 36, of Boardman, Ron Yeo, Fifth District planning com· Ohio. ' ~issioner, told supervisors that the pl~n-The prosecution's opening remarks - ru!lg department has been conferring only 15 minutes in length -traced an with flood control , the road department alleged series of events which began and the county c~n~l':s o!lice for tt0m e when de!endants Mull igan and Dinsio weeks on apphcat1on oE the eir allegedly travel ed to California in vironmenlal statements lo pr i vat e February and rented a room al the ~velopers. Jubilee Motor Inn, Lyn wood. Ptirker explained that the ,court Then men. Wal ters asserted , ostensibly decision, at lirst reading, simply requires were in Ca\Uornia to visit relatives but in t.he filing of environrncnta_I im~ct rea lity. he added, they were laying the statements but does not prohibit counties preliminary groundwork for the massive Or cities from issuing permits if such break·i n. : \' Statements are filed . . . Using the motel room as a ba se, the Dickason pointed out that the prlDClpal Lagun4 ri-jgusl brancll was selected a!'ll roadblock was planning. staff time re· certalrtirtirtidientilhade. 1 r 1 f • ~ quired to evaluate the Impa c t These arrangements, the prosecutor statements. lie said his departm.ent did contends, included purchase or a 1962 oot have tbe staff to do the job qui ckly. Oldsmobile sedan with a fal se bottom Ft'omPagel JET SUIT ... the estimated cost of the appraisals is $3<),000. eauromia 's anti-secrecy in government law. the Ralph M. Brown Act, allows public officials to meet in private to discuss pending litigation. Parker noted that damages in the lawsuits,. if any, must be determined througb reaJ estate appraisals. Charges Requested 'DENVER (AP)· -Denver District Al· ty. Jarvis Seccombe was asked to place evidence concerning mult i-level. pyramid s<:tles companies before the "Denver grand jury for possi ble crinlinal indictments. l'hc request 1~·as made b~, lhc Colorildo Division of Securities in the wake of an investigation of an alh.>g-t<l pyran1id sales con1pany. GlcM IA'. Turner Enterprises. " DAILY PILOT Th~ Or1noe COnl DAILY P1LOl , whh Whit'll "' Combl'led rl>e N"*'"Prns. i., llVbli"*I Oy ~ Or•~ Ca.\! P\lblblllng (omp.911y. s~ rate edl11011\ •rt ouoll~. Mond1y rrr.roUQ1' f-1rd1p, mr Casi• Mew. NtwllO<I l!lc•ch. H1111111111ron 8e1cP11il"ovn1~,,. v~111y, l•1iun• ••td\, lrvl ... 1510d!1bKl •r.d s~n c1-~1 ~"" Ju•11 C1oi1lr•no. A li11111e r911lcrwl edition ;, Pllb!IAl!ed 51turdl"f'I And Sulld!y\, I lle P•..,,.fl"81 Pllbl!sPlll'IQ pl.on! 11 11t lJO "°'"'' l ef S!1ert, CCKtl M1111. C•IUotni1, fitl•. Rolt•ri N. w • ..J f'rr•id.m Ind Publls.hel' J1 c~ R. c.,.,1,1 Vin P rftldtt1• ~nd GeMr•I "'-ftr Tl>om11 IC .... a E.allor ll>o ... •1 A. Murphi111 Ml11'11•11Q IEO•IO• Ck•il•s H. Looi Ric h•rd P. N•ll A••lr.l ... 1 M•~inQ Edlklfs Offkn (OJfa ,,.,.,,.: JJ0 Wtll 811y Sl•HI Newpor! ludl: lllJ tf"'"'1 81111ll•1rd L~ llMch; m F0tftl AWOl\Ut Hwllifto!on llt f<PI: 1111S 8fftll &oute<.1rd S.11 (letftffllt; .IO) Nort11 El (1mlno. 11...r Tel.,.._. f714t 642 ... J21 CIMIHM4 Ahertll'-1 '42·S6n ... c. ............ , ••••• : '''"'' 111 ........... . ~ """ °' ... C.-t ~ ' ............ ,....,.u ... •la:;-~ -. .. i ..... = ....... ~..-.~ .... ~ . ' .. t\'r'"...;,.,~ ... "'t • .= "!'!s ...,..,.,,, \oi -fn.ltl ll.IS ~I tNm:;;.. *"'"'""" a..s "'°"'ltlf'· outfitted in the trunk and lease of a fashionable townhouse at 31386 West Nine, Laguna Niguel. The condominium was rented Walters said on March 8 by llonald and Henry Barber. two brothers indicted in the crime but still at large. Walters asserts the proseuction wiU show that the Tustin home of Mr. and ~frs. Earl Dawson was used !or secret meetings between the burglars and that tools and some . stolen property were stored in the Oldsmobile '-''hich was park· ed ln Dawsoo·s garage .. Dawson ls a Jong.time friend of ~1 u\\igan and .is apparentl~' not in- volved in the crlnle. Harbor Campaigri For U11ited Wa)· Officially Open More than l .O()(f residents a n d businessmen in the Harbor Area of Newport Beach. Costa ~tesa and Irvine today began looking for half a million dollars. 1 They want it so they can give it away lo help people. They cell it the United Way. More than 300 persons filled the Ba lboa Bay l.lub dining room th is morning in Newport Beach for the kickoff of the $504.000 flarbor Area Campaign of the Sn•1thern Orange County Un ited Way . They heard former Ne\vport Beach ~1ayoi-Ed Hirth. lhis year's campaign chairn1an. say It is the 1,000 or more volunteers who are working on the cam· pah~n "'ho "will do the work ." They heard \Valier Gerken, president of the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Com pany, say it will take the people of the Harbor Area "ftt.llng empathy" lo 1nake it work . Gerken. whose firm is the newest ma· jor business in the area. also called for D commitment from business and industry ti' their community. "The conscience of n corporation is manifested in its community relations," Gerken said. He talked about b.is own firm's com· mitment and conscience. explaining tha t it believes In Involvement as a means or mak ing a community strong and viable. •(P1clfic Mutual will carry Ila share of the burden, and that Is juat 8 nrst step to our~mmltmcnt. to the community," he aa1d: • . Gtrktn also lall<ed about Ille Unlted W'JI 11.l.means of r•l!llli money. ''G"roUpslnd corporl tlons are reluctant \Q give to groups that splinter a com· .... ;,v~" he said A Coast district .spokesman said the -which besects many homes m the ex· come 'up with the money through .special ....... ,. removal of J . O'Hara Smi!h from the pensive Newport Beach neighborhood . district funds. marshal, said his office had anUclpated" two-year college district lx>arcl in Then, on Aug. 12, Colllm moved from ThoH attending the meeting also that perhaps 300 persons would show up. • February, 1969 involved a mistaken Laguna Hills to 174.1 POrt Sbeffleld Place, agreed that lhe colmty Parks l>epart-The specially trained deputy marshals purchase or a home in the same Newport in the Bren tract. ment l!lbould continue to explore the pos-were at the court for protecUon of the_ Beach tract into which Saddleback board Collins bas said he bought the home slbility of receiving $102,000 in federal county facility, he said. member Michael Collins has moved. after' confirming with COWlty officials it grant money to be used toward the cost Because Smith inadvertently purchased was indeed within the Sadd1eback of acquisition. The marshals were outfitted. with a hom e in that portion of the Harbor district. · The grant money, Kelly pointed out, is three-foot · long night sticks and were View Homes -Bren tract -which re· However, Dewey Hillman, of the cowr . planned 8J part of the $325,000 Parks dressed in khaki "combat" sty It! ty schools office, discovered the tract Department share. uniforms. ·. Ft'o1n r.,,e l REVIEW ... said, the council would be placinl the five-man committee "on the pathway to violation of personal' rights a n d responsibilities of iadividual citizens." Mayor William Fischbach agreed the design review panel of architects, landscape and buildiQg de.'!Jgn esperts should not rule on such matters. He sup- ported a motion by Councilman John Burton to delete considerations by the panel of any change involving an oc· cupi ed home But, prior to the vote on that issue. Mayor Fischbach suggested the colUlcil should look for some other means of con· trolling "singular outrages . . . the abominations and particular manifesta· tions of bad taste which destroy the value of others' property." Among examples band ied about by councilmen Tuesday night were a pa tio cove r in a Ranch backyard that is made from an old parachute . ,Most agreed the individual einp!oying such a temporary cover would. probably not be required to get a building permit and hence design rev iew committee approval, even if the la w dealt with patios. Councilman Gabrielle .Pryor supported 11en ry Quigley's bid tq have the city "pick up the failures of the community associations" noting "most Violators \VOr. 't come in for the required permits anyway." After approvmg-M:rs:" Pryor's amend· ment to limit the tenns of office lo two- yea r tenns and incorporalinJ chainnan George Molina's changes m. the re- qui rements for appointees, councilmen voted to initiate the ordinance adoption procedure. That process calls for a review of the draft by the planning commission. As presently suggested by the council, that final law will provide for appeals of design review dec isions to both the com· mission and CCJuncil. \\ilh payment of a $50 filing fee. Councilmen, however, may appeal a design panel decision at no cost. Trustees Slate 1'ax Rate Report Irvine Unified School District trustees tonig ht al 7:30 o'clock at University High School will hear a report tha t. a tax rate of 9.87--eents will be needed in 1974-7~ to finance a proposed $50 million bond Issue. Trustees have called the ~ million bond election £or Nov. 7 and have earmarked the monies for building new schools. · Based on district assessed ''DiURlion figure! available now. Orange County Associate Superintendent Fred Koch estimated the tax rate or 9.87·ccnts per $100 of assessed valuation. 1974-75 will be t}ie first fiscal year following the first sale or the bonds if the ls:i ue ~s. The Irvine Unified district ts ®I opera- tional uolli July of 1!173 under lml1! of a 1uccessfUl dnlfic8Uon elect.Ion In June. Trustees tonight also will go tnto ex· e<ullvt ieulon; presul'!ably lo dl..,... lhe 90~1Gn of a superioleiident. BOerd P .. 1ldeiit Gherle1 Boulanger hu said !he district chief will probably bt named by Ocl. I, map used to pinpoint Collins' purchase is . ~lie acquisition _of the land ~ppears Wilkirson said his officers would not confusing. After close scrutiny of official unnunent, a question mark stlll sur-overlook infracti ons of Jaw that mieht be: nlaps in the past several days, Hillman ro:unds how tbe ltnd, ooce ~sed. has concluded Collins' new lxlme is will be developed. CCJnunitted by the colorful and ragtag bisected by the two districts' boundary. "The re~idents w~t benches and crowd. One third of the lot_ the trOnt yard -ls bar~~ pits -not slides and teeter-tot-He said his office anticipated that any in the Saddlebact di!trlct and two-thirds ten , said Mn. NUR:'1-~ ~ she ad-protest woutd be peaceful but that they _ the house and rear yard _ are in the ded, should be re~ed m its natural had to be ready turt ln case. . Coast Conununity College District. state as much as posSlble. . . 'I'he marshals were tucked away in ah That m1:ans that while ~llins£ Spendlov~ warned against J•viog office off to one• side1 of the courthouse . --T • • enough money to purclaale the l d, but I bby hnues to eerve on the Saddle ck~ls ict no funds for developmtiit!of the park. He o . b?ard, )le will vote and pay t~thl s of suggested a bond issue for development his OOlle~e property t_a:rE'.8 to the Coast costs be placed before the voters within . ~ . .. . .. . CommllD.lty College distr1~t. :: the 15pecla ldistt}ct as a;.nrethod of raising De!Plte theiie faC!',S, Collws sat~ Tttes-.rOv~ue (or park amellltles. ~ 4 ~ Aide Gets Job Back day, he has had no thoOgbtS' a&ut 'Ibe park, when developed, will lie resigning. along Los Alisos between Muirl ands and FRESNQ (AP) -Fre900 County supervisors, on a 4-1 vote, have restored Dr. Heyward Moore Jr. to the Planntn.g Commission. ending a controversy which lasted more than a year. The board voted to restore Moore Tuesday rather thaD appeal a Superior Court order that he be returned to the post. • Hillman sa id a verbal opinion of the the AT &: SF Railroa d tracks. To the Orange County Council indicated it would west. across Muirlands will lie an ex· take Collins' resignation or an action to tension o( the park, which will double as declare a vacancy by Saddleback a flood control drainage easement. To trustees to prompt county schools chief the east. across the railroad tracks, will Dr. Robert Peterson to call an election. sit two nood control drainage basins. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIES ELECTRONIC WATCHES BASICALLY SIMPLE "Electronic" implies to many peopl e a mysterious system which might introdiice expell&ive repair problems. Actually, electric and electronic watches are s imple, reliable and easy to service and repair. All such watches have a small battery which looks almost exactly like a hearing aid cell, but is built to put out less current but over a longe r period of time. These batter- ies also differ in that the wntch wtll not be seriou sly banned &bould lea kage occur. All the9" watches have some kind of mechanical oscillator governed by a balance wheel, tuning fort or other pulsating or vibrating device which carries either a coll or a per- manent magnet. When current pas .. es through coll or magnet it pn>- vldes power to mova th• other sim- ple devices in the system. You can buy electric or eleclionlc "'atches with confidence. ,they are very tzoubl.,.f....,, with adjustmenta and repairs easily accompl!shtd by )'l>llr local lndepend111t jeweler • ~. "Itilt: c;;:~=· I WAI·'· CLOCK There was 1 lime when all. fine clockS"""' built like this ••• with a hand for the mlnuies ••• a band torthe-hoors ... and 1 hand lorthtda\'I of Ille month! .___ Thi pine case in Okie Colony finish is htncJ. >0mely accented by the black numerals, hour and second hands on the antique whit• dial , The COIMIX crystal, brass pendulum and ;.... calendar band c!":"piete the autHehtlclty of t)lls fine Barwick ,.praductlon by the Howard Mlller Cioclc Company, H. 24" W. J61f2 " D. 4Vz" $110 J.C. fiumphrieJ Js1ut?lu:J 1823 NEWPO~T BL VD., COSTA M.E:SA CONVINllNr TllljS 11 YlAll IN Tiii SAMI l()(:ATIOM IAHKAfolillCAlD-MAslll CHAlCll '"ON& 5'S.J4GI I '1 •I I '1 ( I I t I l l I I I I I ! • Pito Refused Long~r =Runway SACRAMENro (AP) -The pllot ol the jet whldl eraahed on lakeolf Into a crowded kle cream parlor aad tilled 22 peraona rejected .,. of another runway which pointed Into open flelda, ln- vestlgatcn aay. Pilot Rlcban! ~ picked the short runway at ~t.o·s E.iecutive Airport -one poilli!ioJ directly at Far- rell's Ice Crum Pliler -Ill order to save fuel, said Wllleiun "-tey, a member of the National ~ Safely Board. '"" .:!t. .... ' Haley Ald a recordijls fl the con- versation Sunday betwtm .. B.lngbam and the airport cootrol low llhorllj before Bingham's unsuccesaful takeoff reve~led Illa! the control lower ott...i.Blllgham a choice ol a 8,00IHoot rupway Pointing toward a golf coone and open flelda. •• BUT BALEY AND otb& federal of· ficiala: at a news conference Tufildi.7 did not criticize the pilot's coi\bem about fuel and bis choice..of tbt shorter 5,fm.foot runway. They said they Would ·tkt comment on the C8119eS of;;ibe chsb until after com- pletlOlp ,of •afl-proaged investigalion, "A ~ IOok at lhe data Ill· dicates, a l;l!IO-foot nmny is iale" for .... to t4're off, lild c. o.,l\liller, dlftetar of the llofreau rf. Av~"""'°'ely. • QnesUmed aboUt Blngbam '1 :concern aii!ut coil9irvlng ftlel.'Miller salii 'there ".tu llOlblni:WIUBUtlf!n that at ill. You ahiayo,worry ,l>out It (!ueJ) in a jet." Blncbam llll!'Yived the crash wilii frac- tures. Twelve children and eighi; adults wefe tilled In the ice cream parlor and two others were killed in an auto struck by the Korean War-vintage jet as it ~eecbed in flames 150 yards off the end of the runway and ~ across a four-Jane highway Into the front of I.he store. . . MD.LER SAID the seldom-used shorter runway was in use by planes taking off from a just-completed air show because of the direction of the wind. Haley said the1 towe~!d_ Bingham CALIFORNIA there would be a short delay in switching airport traf[ic to allow a takeoff on the longer strip and that the pl!ot responded he didn't want to expend fuel waiting for the switchover. Federal A v i a t i o o Admlni.stration spokesman Ed Slattery said the tower acts in an advisory capacity for pilots but that the decision of which runway lo use "is always left up to the pilot." Haley also said Bingham, 36, of Novato, "commented tha t be experie~ vibrations during the takeoff" and that Bingham thought the plane "was not ac- celerating the way he thought it should be." HE SAID 11IE pilot spoke of the vibra- . tion.s with Investigators In an inter-View in the hospital and that he had no com- munications with the control tower dur- ing the attempted takeoff. "I think he was trying to Oy it ... trying to take off, until he literally ran out of runway," Haley said, Isleton Picking lt,sell Up ISi.ETON (AP) -Now that muddy floodwaters have receded, rutdents of this tiny delta town have started moving back borne. Other> find there la nothing left to come home to. While a::rne move furniture, televlsioo sets and Jc.ids back into houses that were left bJgb and dry, others come just lo it.are at muddy piles of rubble that used lo be home. Tuesday was the fint day Isletoo's 1,300 residents were permitted lo return since the rainy night June 11 when the levee burst and floodwaters up to 10 feet bJgb rushed across the downhill hall of town. "I can't believe it's gone. It just floated away," said one man, staring &t an empty Jot where his 81-year-old moth· er had lived in a house his fatlier built . ACR~ THE stree t, a duck r.ddled past a rusty metal bed and an ol station wagon was imbedded•in the sJudge. Much of Isleton looks like a muckiked ghost lown on the banks of the San Joa- quin River, where the water. has reassorted odd objects. A swivel chair is upside down next to a baseball mitt and a rusty sewing machine. Tiny lakes of water still need to be pumped. In all, 3,000 were left homeless and more than 45 houses, mobile homes, farms and marinas were destroyed. The state bas estimated total loss at "24 million, but there were no deaths or ma- jor injuries. nus DELTA area is a lacework of waterways 85 miles east of San Fran· cisco, where Northern California water drains into San Francisco Bay~ Of the 12,000 acres flooded , most was fanned in com, barley, aUaHa, pears, asparagus, sunflowers and safflower. "I bad put every nickel I made into this place," lamented James Mallamace, 66, a retired motel keeper who lost everything. 1be small, wood frame home he had just remodeled was a dJrty, em~ ty hulk, A row boat was perched on his front lawn, next to his muddy furniture. "I don't .know what I'm going to do now. I'm too old to start over. I've just been sick since it happened," he said. "Let's get out of here, it smells rotten." COME TRY ON THE MOST COMFORTAlll.E . SHIRT IN THE WORLD * * * * * * Shopping Area Near Slip into • Don loper knit shirt .. we've 9o_t every color and style end sixe . Choo 1 • from solids, stripes, Io n 9 or short sleeves ... $13. to $11. . . . be comforto1ble. Airport Was Opposed ! SACRAMENTO (AP) -The take off and plunged in flames f o r m e r m a n a ·g e r o f across a four-lane highway Sacramento's ·Exec at Iv e and into the shopping center Airport say> be urged city of-building . ficials in 1964 not to allow a The 5,000-foot runway paints shopping center to be built on directly into Farrell's Ice l~J!lJIJ1"here 21 ""90l1S'dled !:loam Parlor In the copie_r;of b ~-~ • .: t1.J: i..i. U.-... Cliim~..&Mif~' ~ + v-~ ~::.!~th-¥ J'!;~, iuat . ~ !nllJl r-__ ~E·:)· 'l'.1. • ~. f Dell!Jt1~l~ jnd of the ~t ~. -.... •·, ' Aeronautics also opposei:I con-Sffiith, who managed Ex- 3467 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-4510 Read the Daily Pilot struction in lhe area of the ecutlve from 1931 until 1967, crash. said be urged the city In 196' And a .SPokesman for the to reject a variance allowing Administration says his agen-construction of the original cy warned of Jbe possible part of the fashionable sho~ hazards of the site, across a ping center. busy street from the airport. Aod in the lll50s, he urged But the FAA filed no formal city official! to buy the then- objection to the project, added vacant land to provide a clear spo kesman Gerry B a r b e r , space at the end of the shorter because there were no viola-of the airport's two runways, tions of its rules. Smith said. The Korean· War-vi,nlage jet "The FF A requires such roared down the short runway clear zones now. They didn't at Execuiive Airport, failed to at the time,'' Smith said. eat • IS .. . • • 1... .. The Sept•••r -29th .. Daily Pilot will have a coupon· which,·"'~ ~. eiillf!es .p~to ~--fjn! 4 glasses ffte with a plll'Cha~ '* 8' CJClllOiil 111 mon of gasoline. '· Don't miss It S.pte111ber 29th. Clip it! · • ' • . . . · . • • • • ur1TtlffMtt '.ft:t-l •"'9ll!• Sa n Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto leav-es federal building in his city, where his $12.5 million libel suit against now- defunct Look magazine began Monday this week. The article !illked hill\ to Mafia members. Gr:~y1iou1id Give1i Fare Hike Oka.y SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The California Public Utilities Comm ission has granted an l l.8 percent increase in passenger fa res and express rates to Greyhound Lines Inc .. saying the bus company is "in immediate need of ad- ditional revenues." The Tuesday action by the PUC covers company main line and commuter opera- tions-within the state. Minimum fares will increase fro m 45 to 50 cents a ride. Jury Chosen For Trial Of Corona FAIRFIELD (AP) -A Jury of 10 men Bind two women haS been chosen for Juan O:irooa's riiass murder lrial, but proe- pects are slim I.hat opening arguments wUI be heard until next \\-eek. .(..__I_N_S_H_OR_T_ .. _· ~J Select ion of four alternate jurors con- tinued today to hear evidence concerning the hacking deaths of 15 ilifl('ranls \\"hose bodies were found buried in Sutter Coun- ly ln the spring of 1971. Estimates of the trial's length range all the ,v.·ay up 10 six months. Reagan Chides Bar Pt.10NTEREY (AP) -Go\'. Ronald Reagan today gently chided the Stale Bar's endorsement of legalized mari- juana. which he called "a substanc<' which can lead to trag{.-dy an d death:· and asked for support fo r his 01111 com- prehensive drug abuse treatment pro- gram . Reagan spoke at the annual mee ting of the State Bar only 111·0 days anrr delegates recommended legalizing mari- juana sales Wldcr state lict!nsing. If appro,•ed by the Bar's board of governors . the recommendation would become part of the legislative program ror whit'h the pol\"Crful I a \\'ye rs . organization \1·ould lobby in the state Capitol n('XI year. DAILY PILOT S Cra1uton BaeJu ·, I Pro-position 20 _ 1 SACRAr,!ENTO IAP) - DemocnitJc Se!. Alan Cranstoo bu endorsed Prop. 20. calllnc the coasUine initiative "the belt means of making .fUre that our boadies, , harbors and wilcUlfe along lbe C'Oaat t are preserved for aJl ou r ~·" _1 Cr~ .Chi lenlor senator from ""' California, said lo a statement • released here Tueaday that Prop. 0 20 would lnsllre r e1 pon sl b1 e • development and environmental protection for the coastline. In Press Club SAN FRANCtSCO (AP \ -Fh·e .,..·omen reporters arc charging the all-male Press Cl ub of San Francisco relegates ,,·omen "lo S('cond class status." A suit, filed in Superior Court here Tuesday, seeks a court order prohibiling the press club from continuing to bar "'omen from full membership. ·1 It cont('nds that women in the media nnd public relations fields are nd1nitttd ro a special ca tegory of membership bu t an> prohibiled from using the &I-year-old· club's recreational facilit ies or the sec-- ond floor bar excep t on ce rtain oc- casions. As a result, tlJe plaintiffs said, they "caMot meet other ne.,..·s persons on a level of equality." TllE AC110N v.·as filed by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf or l\1arilyn Baker, reporter for KQ EO. TV: Georgia Hesse. travel editor of the Snn Francisco Examine r: and Paula , Trenlacost. Aileen Campbell and Roberta Pay Raise Req11ested \\'ard, staff writers for 1he Catholic 1\-lonitor. LOS ANGELES (AP ) - A 7.5 percent A special election will be held Oct. 5 on across-the-board facult y pay raise was whether to delete the word "male" froin recommended Tuesday by Chancellor the club's quallftcatlons. · • Glenn Dumke of the California State A majority voted at a previous election Colleges and University system. to retain the male only provlsioo. Dumke also recommended fringe The Nalional Press Club In benefit improven1ents totaling 5 percent. \Vashington, D.C .. and press club& in Dumke 's proposal came at the first day Atlantic City and Milwa uk ee have chang· of a two-day meeting of the 19-campus ed thei r policies within the pa.st year and system's boa rd of truslees. admitted "'omen members. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • • Wells FllfQO Bani< Ilea -280 ofllces throughout Callfomla. Costa Mesa Oflice: 462 East 17th Street, 92627 / Aasets °""' S7 bOllonfM111 lllr ,_..._ C. . ' ' • 8 DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • • Saving Waste Water It may be two y.aMi before the practical results of a current Irvine Ranch Water Dlstrlcl experiment in pres- sure pipe reclamation of wJler Crom sewage y,tiU be em· ployed. Nevertheless, the four miles of six·inch plastic pipe now being installed at IRWD'a San Diego Creek plaot hint an exciting ecological breakthrough for the public agency serving the new city of Irvine and the bulk of the Irvine ltanch. By next Au gust, it is hoped the pressure pipe treat- ment experiment will prove massive amounts of sew- age from residential areas can be treated underground in a pipe more economically than it could be in the tra· ditio nal, sprawling, above ground, smelly treatment plant. The IRWD, which is committed to a total water management system, already has tested the PPT system and found it to work on a small scale. Now, by placing agency reso urces amounting to $100,000 toward proving the worth of the unique treat- ment system on a large scale, IRWD staff and directors are betting PPT will be lx>th ecologically and eco nomi· cally sound. The expected economy involves the comparatively lesser cost of constructing the PPT system. By treating in the same pipe which carries the nearly clear reclaim· ed water to a reservoir, costs of constructing the sys- tem are lowered. Further, federal funds would help pay for transportin~ the valuable, reusable water to the res- ervoir from which it may be distributed economically. R~laimed water from the IRWD already is used to jrrigate crops by the Irvine Company. Future city parks and ¥1:eenbelts, tl1'e UC Irvine campus and other public facilities may well be ~reened by the reclaimed water if greater amounts of 1t are made available. Therein lies the ecological advantage of the PPT reclamation system. Instead of dumping treated sewage into the ocean, It's Quality, • Not Quantity That Counts (SYDNEY J.HARRISJ (During Mr. 1-Iarris' vacation, we are repriltting s0111e of tlie 1nost re- quested colum·11s from his forthcom· iig book, "For the Time Be ingo," to be published this fall.) 1f we are golng to cut down seriously on our population growth-and I think.it is an absolute neccs.sity -then we will first have to change our simple-minded altitude toward the parents of I a r g e lam Illes. h1ost people who mee t me for the first time ask about my family, and when they find I have five children they emit tittle rnurmers of ad- mlratlon and re- spect, as if I had dooe somethin g notable. Dear Gloomy Gus Isn 't it nice that Newport Beach's llarbor View Homes has its own re presentative on the Saddleback College board? -S.A.C. Tl'lh l1•tvrt r1!1Klt r.-dtr'1 vi.w.. Mt lllCMllrt1f ttlt11 If .... -Hf. S.- VOUP HI ... VI to GloomV Olli, 0.llY 1"1111. paigna with me, and knows no more than he did after the first." APART FROM our populalion prob- lem, I am convinced that an immense number of people who have children should not have them. and do not particularly want them, except as "1ym- bc>ls" of family lire. What they want are Ideal children, not real ones; and as BOOn as the real ones show no intention of con-- ronnin,g lo tbe ideal ln the parent's mind, they are treated as burdens, shipped away to school, or otherwise neglected. Somebody once saJd that if many peo- ple had not read about romantic love and seen it on the screen, they would never look for it themselves. I believe this, and along with it I believe that if many peo- ple were not ashamed to be thought defi-Now I am pleased and proud to h~ve cient in "family reeling" they would these children., but there was i:ioth1ng never have children. especially mentorlous about their con-). ception. 'M>eir existence does not testifY-.....N.uR HA VE I noticed that the parents to my vlrility, or even to any exceptional of large families exhibit any more pr~ fertility, and certainly Is no evidence that £iclency in bringing them up, except in I am :suited for parenthood. terms of establishing a barracks-room ANYBODY wrm the nominal equip- ment can have children ; it is no great achievement. Indeed , in most cases il happens during a nt of absend-min- dedness. No child should ever be called a "mistake," but some are certainly miscalculations. Parenb: with four children are not twice as good or twice as loving or twice as intelligent as parents with only two chtldren. True, they have more ex- perience. but as Bismarck said of his donkey, "'He has been through nine cam- regimen which is necessary for simple survival. Some studies have tndJcated, in fact, that children coming from large families suffer from a lack o{ sharply defined personality and Jack a sense of individual Identity. At any rate, we have to begin to recognlte that it l:s the quality of parenthood that is more essential than the quantity. Rousseau, be It remem- bered, wrote a masterly book on educa- tion - and then sent his nve children to a foundling home. He was more honest than most. An Old Welfare Lesson Callfomia Fe1ture Senice The poignant problem of seeing that every individual has lhe opportunity to achieve his just shani of the necessities of life will not be solved in our lifetime. Unhappily, many of the cures proposed for poverty -however well Intentioned -are worse than the disease. There is· a classic: example of this that goes back to the tu m of the 19th century in England. Writing ln the santa Barbara News Press· recen tly, Kevin P. Phillips attributed what he M!CS as "a major shift or White House opinion" since President Nixon fonnulated his Family Assistance Plan In 1969 to a new understanding of what happened to rural Speenhamland more than a hundred years ago. IN 1715 A WELFARE PLAN was established there giving poor people suhlidies lo ald of wages, with a scale dependent upoo the price of bread. The Quotes A. L Henry, OriJMla -"Tbe fact that the Communists intend to take over and control South Vietnam caonot be !inored. Amtrlcans (especially the Fulbrlahll, McClo&key1 and McGovems ) woula do well to remember Munich arxt the aelllng out or Czechoslovakia that did not bring peace." Idea was to assure the poor a minimum lacome regardless ol their earnings. Naturally the system apread, until 40 years later it collapeed 1n disaster. Shorily afltr, the French philosopher de Tocqueville, pointing to Speenham· land, declared that such public assis- tance nourishes pauperism because most men won 't work W'llesa they must do so to live. More recently Karl Polyani, referred in his book 11'I'he Great Transfonnation" to the experiment, which nearl y wrecked the economy of early 19th Century England, as leading to "the pauperiz.atlon or the ma sses, who almoot lost their human shape In the proc- oss." SPEENJlAf!fLAND evidently w n !!: broughl to the attention or Nixon welfare planne rs in 1969, but not taken too serioualy. Its Import now seem.!i to have been better understood. one White tlouse aide ls quoted as saying "we want to come back with a totall y d!Uerent philosophy (than that of FAP) ... one that the National Welfare fl ights Organization won't like." II that new philosophy eventually leads to a reaUsllc, humane and eUectlve l'ay to enhance human wetrare and human dignity, the poor people of long ago Speenhamland will have, rather paln!ully to be sure, dooe 1 good tum for lbeir counterpart& In a later century. 'I- waya muat be found l<l sl<>re reclaimed wator economl· cally. U present treatment l>lanll lo which sewage nows by grnlty are proliferated, the mwn or any other dJs. trict ends up with great amounts of reusable water at a locatloo aear aea leyet With the hoped·for succe .. of the PP!' proce" and inspittd acUon of Irvine citizenry who realize the poten· tial for recreational use of this otherwise wasted ~ source, IRWD's experiment and comm.itm~nt.s may make a valued contribution l<l the quality of the Irvine environment. Urgently Needed Road About 900 students will attend the new Los Allsos Intermediate School Jn El Toro when Jt opens i)\ Novem~ her. Getting them there, although most live within walk· ing distance, will cost the San Joaquin School District more than $26,000. There isn't a safe road across AJiso Creek to con· nect the school site with the El Toro housing tracts. The only existing one is private, too narrow for buses and t.oo dangerous for chifdren. Truatees or the San Joaquia aad the Saddleback Valley districts have asked the Board of Supervisor. to build a temporary road across the creek, but super- visors have thus far declined. The county has major plans for a $450,000 exten- sion of Muirlands Boulevard into four Janes from El Toro Road to Los Alisos Boulevard with a bridge cross- ing the creek. Unfortunately, the development of an en· vironm ental impact statement and coordination with the flood control district have delayed the project and co mpl etion isn't expected until March. The county's reluctance to spend more money on temporary access is understandable. But it's to0 bad students who should be walking to school have to be bused by way of the San Diego Freeway. SB 'It's amazing how you've grown ~your nomination, George.' Benefits Bank and Employer, Not Employe 'Checkless Society' Idea Chills Him ' To the Editor: I note with horror the latest flim-flem the computer experts are about to force upon state em ployes, the "check.less society." The benefits acc ru e to bank and employer, not the employe. The most obvious disadvantage is if there is no check there is no check stub. This little piece of paper contains all your deductions, overtin1e, etc. Com· puters can and do make errors. Without a stub the employe cannot check these 1 items. If be is paid overtime his check will vary from pay period to pay period and he will have no idea bow much bas been credited to bis account untll he gels his monthly statement. 1, for one, do not care to be financially blind for 30 days at a time. AS FOR COMPUTERS paying my recurring bills, this idea ref.Uy sends chills up and down my spine. The main reason I even have a checking account is that It provides me with a validated receipt. Can yoo imagine trying to tell the fellow reposse.s.!ing your car, or the electric company chap shutting off your power, "but the bank paid you automatically." Ha, Ha. I can only urge all employes to resist 'his latest "improvement" or risk finan- cial chaos. D. Y. PICKER Help for the Elderlg To lhe Editor: While much is being written in this election yea r about the impact or "Senior Power," I would Hke all older persons in the area to know that the American Association of Retired Persons believes that the true power of "seniors" lies in their continued contribution to the health and well -being of our nation. A non-profit, non-partisan organization or more than 4 million members, AARP sponsors many community-service ac- tivities through which older citizens' con- tinue to apply their experience and wisdom in service to others. IT PROVIDES members many income- stretcblng services -such u special ln· surance programs, mail-order pharmacy services and group trave l programs. Through its national and state legislative programs, it seeks to improve Social Securily an<t, Medicare programs, hous· ing and transportation services and to obtain tax reforms to benefit the elderly. A major current legislative goal is the removal of the earnings limitation under Social Security, which unfairly penalizes older peNOn.S who need to work to sup- plement meager incomes. MEMBERSHIP DUES are only 12 per B11 George --~ Dear Gt<lrgt: My boyfriend named his pig after me. ls t.hls a deliberate insult? NANCY Dear Nancy : Oh, for goodness sake . . . of course, It's not an insult! What's wrong with a nice name lite Nan- cy? Dear George : 1 My husband has the idea that mentholated cigarettes are actually good for you. J1e bases It on the fact that his mother used to rub his chest with menthol salve when he had a cold as a chlld. la there pot- slble validity to th.la? WONDERING Dear Wondering: Oh, boy, another customer 10< tho cigarette I've Invented! lt not only Is mentholated, but the filter ii IUD of nose drops. ( MAILBOX J Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or etimi'nate libel is .,.eserved. All letters must include sig1tature and mailing address. but names mau be 1fithMld on request if !Utficien.t rmson is appare11t. Poetry uriU not bi published. year, covering both husband and wife. Members recei ve the handsome) bi· monthly magazine and the monthly _ AARP News Bulletin, both Jll'Qvlding ~ splrational and lnformaUve news and features about older Americans. Through its chapter programs, members serve their communities in many ways, ~ eluding Defensive Driving Colrses, Institutes of Lifetime Learning and health education and consumer in- formatlon programs. I will be pleased to direct interested per.!005 to the AARP chapten in this ma. Complete information is also available from AARP, 1225 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Washington, D. C. 20036. MRS. JSABELLE KIRCHOFF President Huntington Beach Chapter 19361 Brookhurst Street, Space SO Huntington Beach, CA 92646 What Caa Be Done:> To the Editor: ln a news bulletin from Sen. Alan Ctanston it says : "l am glad to see the CalUomla Legislature pasoed a bill that saya: 'Hands oil of the Social Security i~ creases fer the higher cost of living for the aged, diaabled and blind.' .. I am 63 and disabled and since I wrote my first letter, I have had an interview with my medical visitor and for all her double-talk made no sense to me, s h e came up with $206. Also. I discovettd that after promising me $15 for owning and operating a car (because I cannot walk very far and have to go to the doc· tor), she was allowing me only $10 and she had forgotten all about the $5 reim- bursement on my garage bill!. I HA VE FIGURED and figured and alwa13 I get $238. So where Is the re- maining $30? I wu depending on the in- crtue to climb out of the hole and stay out. God says In His Word for us to owe no man, but how can we pay our bills YJhen there ls inmlfficlent income? I am very Scold1y about making bills and do not have some things that I ne<!d. Since I moved Into this house Jan. 3, im, tbe Edison, gas and telephone have had two ral!ea and now the telephooe company wants another. Not only are we oldstera having trouble,' but the working cW. Is 1tn1ggllntl with such high ll1cs. Who b padding their pockets! A n d what can be done? NAME WITIIllELD .. Be AIODre and Betc•re To tbe Editor: The following st1llstlcs quoted In a re- cent newAleltar from Assemblyman Robert Burke .,. worth passing along: J. Democrats have controlled our !eden! Coogresa !or 38 or the past 4-0 years. 3. During the past llO years et the federal levtl, Democrats hav• raised tax- es JS times aod cut Uv!rn three times. During the same llO years, Republicans reduced taxes nine times and raised them only once. 3. DURING 111.E PAST 40 years, the Democratically-controlled Congress for 38 of those years, with four Democratic Presidents, failed to attempt any change in tax structure. Some people appear not to be aware that our California Legislature and our federal legislature are NOW controlled by Democrats. The Wlinformed complain about the wrong ~pie; they are easily duped by a wolf in sheep's clothing mak· ing promises, promises, promises. Let us be aware, and beware, of ob- vious untruths. (MISS) RENE SMlnI Favors Schmitz To the Editor: Mr. Milt Basham is'to be congratulated for his letter ln your edition of Sept. 20, Our present "leader" in Washington may be an astute politician but be cer- t.ainJy is not a statesman. At the pres«1t moment, his Democratic opponent does not seem to be gifted with the attributes of Benjamin Franklin or F.D.R., but possibly he may acquire them before November. BOTH CANDIDATES put me in mind of a remark made by a cab driver in MexlOO City when many years ago be was traJUpOrtlng my late wife and myself lo the "Hippodromo de Los Americas" (race-track). For no apparent r<ason, he said In perfect Engllab: "Politicians are the same all over the world ; they promise sunshine and comes the rain. They promise rain and comes the sunshine." My vote will go to lr1r. Schmitz. He may not be a second Winston Oiun:hill, but be will do until <11e comes along. EDGAR O'GRADY PHELPS Needs $8.1 BUHoa To the Editor: Last week, on a sleepless night in Hebinki trying to,adjust my body-clock to a nine-hour time cbfnce, l spent my oth;rwise fruitless time destplng • com· plete rapid transit system for far-away Southe rn Ca lifornia. There are far too many details to divulge In the short apace allotted herelll, but suffice It to say that It Is potterned somewhat on Bill Mason's en~ "egg" approacl> es publlahed in tbO DAI· LY PILOT recently -though as an architect I prefer a less embryonic, more techtonic modular unit concept. IT WOULD BE Immodest to uy that I solved the whole future or mankind's transit problems In one nish~ but It wu helter than counting abeep. IC there b anyone out there listening, J have IOme Isn't It the Truth! By CAllL RIBLET JR. The Republlcana have sent forth a call ror the New Majority. What obout the Old Majority? There can't be two ma- jorlUts and U the old -bec:omea the new one then there ts nothinll new •bout It. Somebody In poUUca is always trying to swab us. "Swab. SJ11101111"' for pulllllQ IM wool over 119ur qe1 ... a per1ua.sive vocol luol of till """ """'· • -Dktiona'l/ of Oplnlo111 Nellbcr pistons oor jets nor praise of sell nor bright or day move1 -lag· ganll to the awlfl a~lsbmeot ol their •ppoinled routes;~ ls to 18)' - what are ft lonlla do abou1 lilt mall! "McU. NoKJL Somelhf!IQ w ftt' now thac move1 frOm COOJt to COGlt fl\ ""1'J daft Of' IO." ~o/Oplnl.., • serious ideas, but need $6. 7 billion as seed money for a start. This revelation might be attributed to a beautiful day, the Finn-troUi, or a slue of mesimarja (try it, you 'll like it), but for the record, someone bad better get me out o( my Coast Highway office driveway pretty soon or I'll .... HERB BROWNELL (Mailed from Bergen, Norway, Sept. 19) A Compromise To the Editor : Regarding Mr. Jack O!rley'a Pilot Logbook (Sept. 18) reporting on the Brown Berets' occupation of Catalina and claim to the Channel Islands . I may be wrong , but these l!Jancb were probably Spanish Jaad grant.. to early "Oalifomianos" -among them my wire's fonobean, the Avllas, Rlmpaus aod Sepulvodu. If ao, under the Treaty of Guadelup0ollldalgo of March 10, 1'13, these lands ahould be returnod to the original grantees, or their beln. As a compromise, I am sure that these heln would donate san Clemente Island to the Brown Bereb: if the United States would donate to them a 10 cent8 per mi.ssile or shell (fired) royalty on said Defense Department target R. C. HADDEN Shcmeful, Outrageous To the Editor: 'lbe Foreign Aid, United Natioos, World Bank, H.E. W. and o t b e r "glveawa)I" schemes have pushed lbe U.S. public debt to a point 187.000 million dollars (yes, 187 billloo), hlper !baa Lile combined debtl of all eUter ut&oa of the world! 11111 It 1bameful and oatrageous .. Why sboold we c:ontinue to give away money which we do not really possess? Arty funds we give now must be · bomnred, and this will fan inllatioo and increase our taxes. Spendthri!t Coogmomen must be put on noUce! C. C. MOSELEY la-FotMla's l'letcs To the Editor : Thank y"'1 !or the ed itorial (Sept. 19) explaining yotr reason far printing the Interviews with Jane Fonda. However, in my opinion, this ~ "back-Intl be<" because this is exactly what she Is working for-411 the publicity she can get to expose her views favoring Hanoi and downgrading ber own country to as many people as possible, hoping to in· fiuence tbtm to her way ol thinking. In my oplnlon, she ls 1 ndical and· a trallo< and It'• too bad she didn't stoy in Hanoi. MRS. WILLIAM CAMP OllAHOS tOUT DAILY PILOT l l I I I I j J ! I I • I ' I I I I I' I 1 \ j I J I • ) I • ! I I I ' I I I I 11 ' 1, ' I 17 I · • Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley • • Teday's Fl•al N. Y. Steeb • • VOL. 65, NO. 271, 6 SECTIONS, 84 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1972 TEN CENTS New Huntington Bond Try Seen for February· By MICHAEL GOODRICH Of .... Dliltr ......... Huntington Beacb Union ffigh SChool District Trustees. frustr{lted by the failure of a $15 million bond proposal earlier this month, may go back to the voters in February with a $27 million measure designed to tale the pressure off their ov~wded campuses. District Superintendent Jack Roper Tuesday night presented a financial package to trustees as they met in the * * * Huntington Beach High S c h o o I auditorium. IWPI'~ Ml<.~. ll>i\1 .'1\ _el«;tion be called for Feb. rt on a $27 million bond issue which would pay for two new high schools. He also asked that a secood. measure be included on the ballot to con· tinue the $2.08 per assessed $100 tax rate for an lndelinlte period. 1be eleCtioo prOposal received en· thusiastic support from Trustees Dennis Mt:ngen, Ralph Bauer and John Bentley. Although they supported the coocept of two new scbooh, Trw:tees George Logan and Ray Schmitt said they are afraid Feb. %7 is too early to go back to the voters. The trustees decided to hold a study session next week to discuss their next move. Also included in Roper's package was a propsal lo sell the district's Midway City property for •u mlllloo to Jleip flnlllCe the planned $2. 7 mllllon ixpanslolf of • ·-. Westminsler Hijh School. The rest of tbe money would come from the $2.08 w . Roper also asked that the district's tt). cent earthquake tax be renewed to con- tinue the renovalion of Huntington Beach High School. "We're ooly requesting adequate hous- ing for our students and buildings that are safe from earthquakes We want to make learning conditions tolerable not extravagant," Roper said. The $2.08 tu: rate is due to expire in June 1974 and, 1r It ls not reappro\'ed before then, It will diminish to the state· allowed maximum of 85 cents per $100. In the face of an immediate housing crlsls, the trustees also ordered the high school principals to meet with residents to consider changlng the school boun· daries, possibly this year. "This Is an emergency siiuation_ I think someone should be working day and night to come up with a feasible plan to change the boundaries," said Trustee Ralph Bauer. The principals will report at the ne1t' board meeting. Tuesday's board meeti ng also turned out to be a post-mortem of the Sept. 19 bond election as parents from throughout the district expressed concern over the dereat. Mrs. Bart!etta Suter, a bood cam· paigner in \Vestminstcr, said people -in (St!e 'J°ND, Page !) State Hit By Mangers Over Aid Apartments ·Burn Beach Complex Lost; Cause Unknown Orange C.oonty legislators were ac- cused Tuesday night of ducking their responsibilities in the battle to help finance local education. ' Denni8 Mangers, president of the Hun- tingron Beach Union High School District's Board of Trustees, aeeused the state of dolng "a criminally poor job in tneneli:rOf!i:lilCAtlon'~ and"·etiarged locat · · · · legislators with draggjng their feet. "I have strong feelings that the district has taken the responsibility f o r overcrowding in Its classroom far too Jont," Mangers said, during a board meeting in the Hlmlinglon Beach ffigh School auditorium. state legislators whoSe districts fall within the higb school distrlct are Assemblymen Robert Burke (R·Hunt- ngton Beach) and Kenneth Cory (!). Garden Grove) and !iellator'· Denoia Carpenl4t (R-Nt'WpOl't Beocb). Trustees YOled unanimoully ti> propose a meeting with the three state represen- taUvu. • "And it won't hurt to remlnll them that Nov. 7 ii an election day," Mangers ad- decl. _L .• ; By JOHN ZALLER Of ftle Ollly Pi.t Sl•ff • Flames shot 10 feet into the night sky Tuesday as a two story partially com- plete. apartment building in Huntington Beach caught !ire, collapsed, and burned to the ground. No firemen or others were injured, ac- cording to the Huntington Beach Fire Department, but when the structure col- lapsed, Intense heat was generated and flames shot to their peak height. Firemen said the cause of the blaze is undetermined. An arson investigation squad this morning combed the charred Prop. 20 Foes Raise Total Of $435;600 .. -~ \ ""' • rom Wire Stnice1 "The state Legislature 1D0100 late the lead to have the two-thirds approval for a bond election aholllbed1'.'_ Mangen said. . ' ~-.. ,.{ft'""""•,... ...... <>ppqnents of tbe coasUine initiative, Prop. llO, have ralsed ft,15,000 IO far with much of the money coming fJom public uUlllles and land "companies. Secrellry of State Edmund llrOwn Jr. oaid TuOlday. Mangers was referrmg &O the recent defeat of 1 '15 million ~ proposal ID build 1 new achoo! !or the district. It received 52 percent voter support, short ol lhe fl percent needed I« approval. ' "IR~N IN SNdRKEL UNIT POUi. WAHR ON 11..UE Hunt""'°" llMch Fire Demages Aporfrilenh Uft!ler Conlfrucllon The Irvine Company is one of the main • contributors against the proposition, at 15ll,OOO ' The board president charged that one local state legislator had recently voted against changing lhe bond approval ma· jority to 60 peroenl. Mangen said today he was re!ering to Assemblyman Burke. Police-killer Suspect AVCO Community Developen, Inc., headquartered ID La Jolla and active In development in Laguna S!guel, hu con- tributed $15,000. "So people continue to vote down bonds because the property rate is so hlgb ~ they have no other way to exprea tbell' frustration," Mangers added. H~ld on $500,00Q Bail Another 15ll,OOO contribution was listed in the report filed by Citluns Against the Coastal Initiative from Deane and Deane Inc. of Hall Moon Bay. Mangers called on the state legislators to oome to a board meeting and discuss the problems facing the diatricl. "We just want an evening of your time " said Mangers. "We've been taking a be~tlng for far too k>nC and It's time some action was taken." County W onian · Kil)s 2 Children, Then Suicides A youni Fullerton mother killed ber two children and then fatally wounded herself early today, police reported. Officers said they were called .to a home at 3130 Puentt: St., about 1:30 a.m. )>y a neighbor who reported bearing gm>- lire. Herman Loe Qouston, accused kiLier ol a Buei>a Put: police officer and subjeet; of a m.<fq-mMlnmt. is being held in Anahelni Cltj. Jail today in lieu of $500,000 ball Lt. Norm Coot of lhe Anaheim police homicide. d8tan ealci the elusive Clouston, capturod ID'~ Tuesday night, was schedu1ed for ertalgnment ·on a formal munkr ~· at Orange County Munkiur' ~this afternoon. Coot :ttahd any further comment on the •)'ell'Old ex-<0nvlct accused of J!'iD-ninc do"1I Detective Darrel D. "Bud" Cate lut; Thursday while the officer was trytnc to Interview Clouston on a sexual perftl1im> assault. Cioomm ~r<d lo Lynwood patrobnm Mike Patterson and Tom Romaib without resistance late Tuesday . -'Dwf't shoot," the officers said Clomton told them. "I am Herman Lee Clouston that the Anaheim Police are looking for .•. I'm glad it',1 over ••• I haven't been able to sleep for days." The officers said the dirt, :md unshaWD Cloitston, ...aring a dl!1!· blue T-shirt an~ oHve paats, was hidlni in a trash bin behind a tavern near a , home that had been burglarized. He was holding a loaded and cocked .22 caliber automatic pistol which he reportedly aimed but "just couldn't fire ," according to the officers. Police Sgt. Kenneth Jewell told newsmen ttiat Clouston said~ he would have shot it out with police but changed his mind because be could DOt "keep run- .Ding and hiding." Clouston managed to elude police ol· firers from \"" Angeles and Orange Counties lhroiJ&houl the manhunt that saw Clouston Ulke four boStages end release them unbanned u be hid from officers. Brown said the Prop. 20 opponents have spent about half of the amount with the greatest aingle expenditutt -15ll.OOO -going ID Kennedy Outdoor Advertising, a L-Os Angeles billboard company. other major contributors included the Standard Oil Company of California at '30,000: Bechtel Corp. of San Francisco and Pacific Gas & Electric C.O. at $25,300 each; Del Monte Properties Inc. of Peb- ble BeaCh, $25,000; Bixby Ranch Co. of Los Angeles, ~.000 and Southern Pacific Land Co., San Francisco, $20,000. A secood report listing additional con- lribullons and expenditures ls to J>e med seven days before the Nov. 7 election, Brown aa.id in a news release. Prop. 20 -Id Impose 1 permit system on coastal development administered by six regional agencies and one etatewide agency. They folllld the two children, Dana Miller, 5, and Darren, 2, dead on a bed allot through the head and the mother's body lying on the floor. She was. Iden· tllied as Kitty Miller, 31. The grief stricken husband and father, Hoag Doctors Will Wait ' Walter Mlller. 30, had left for his job as• -puter ulesman In Downey. He told police he could not thlnlt of any reuon 11hY his wife would do IUCb a thing. No Mass Resignations Seen in -Hospitnl Dispute Poilce aald the family had lived in .tlillertoo •l the Puente Street address n.:e J1111uary. .SOFA'S SOLD IN FlRSTCAU "Fabulous resulls. I coul4 bave iold 20 sofu. The flnt e1ller bouaht lt.11 '11lat'1 the story of ...Wis from this ·..i: -·-• pd $2!0. ,s.n .., $111. lfr XXX•DXX * lly L. PETER KRIEG . ot ... .,..,, ""' ,,.,. There will be no ,,_ resisnations of the noldent pl!yslclam In the Hoag Memorlal Horpllll Family Practice P,..nm before dlreetors of lhe Newport 8eodl hospital dfann1ne the fate of their tralnq priCram. 'Ille 13 '°""' cloclDn met Tuesday and agreed to wait out the week as dlreclonl aeatth for prl.ote fllndl to offset losset of the prtJll'IM tbot alao provides low· coel INlkal .......... pationla !tom °'""" o-t· dtln. ' 11 ·~ ooco ID the ~ Id-"We wtJf wait until tlitn! ls iomething ...,rtll sect1cn ol the DAILY PUm--·~·-" Dr -ylor J~ ~ -~·~·-•· dld. Ill w. ..._ not more """"-··• ' '" · -·~" -· _._,, ,.... """ --of the mldeltts, said this morning. II .. CMI bulld an Id to Ill 100t ~ 11oop11o1 dllectm Monday n 11 ht -4alt dial !Ill direct Ille lo _.., ~ a declllon 00 u. future of the ea .... md llllt a DAILY PII.01' Id-, _...., will1e 11111 p to private low> .. lo -,... clatfool .... othr -a*hc for up < " ,I to '300,000 to cover the I-. Incurred hy ding that the residents feel :!:ls a the nalionally·promlnenl Family Practice rusooable lime to wait. They had urller demanded 1 on Center. by the board at tbelr meeting Monday ao The. future oC ·the pt'O(l'llll wu bleak they could be8in to look for other all lall week lollowtng a vote by the resldtney programs If this one Is to be hospital's otaff doctors to -it clown. tennlnated. The recommendatlon oparted a public The residents' Initial reactlon to the outcry. howewr, and -the bosnt delay wu bltltt but they cooled off llCl'llllbling for wa)"I to aalvqo lhe shortly. ceoi.r. "We reoll!e they can't find !Wida just Official <.'Omment about the fund.rai... , ofI the cuff," be said, "and people have Ing ellorts Is beb!g wllhheld. and Mn to have time to consider lf they want to Dr. Jeppeon said M dldn"t know whether contrlbute to the program," he &aid. to l!e o~ or not. The Family Practice Cenlel' has a "I """"' feel -way or the o\ber unto budget or nearly '1!CIG,GCIO this flloal Y'llr J k,_ for ture,'I be uld. and will operate at a loa of about lie Aid be ls -!need the' bolrd .ls $184,000. Tiils ls what the m6llcal llaff doln( mirytldn( II can to lalso the ukl concerned ~m. monoy la 1 borT1 bowe'8'., Howovor, the hoapltal dlrectors a,..,. ·~ told ua i/.; will be able to cive • op bod budae!Od tor a \oll o1 tlM,000 us • aolld --Oil the -·-prob-and doclDn pi>lnt out tbot "any ~ ably by Friday," Dr. JepplOll lllld, 16-. progtam II go!na to coat._!' • • timber for clues of the fire 's origin. Firemen also questioned at least two wltoeues who said they saw two boys running from the building just alter It "suddenly" burst into flames. The b!aze was first reported at 5:16 p.m. at the construction site of an 80-unit apartment complex at the intersertion of Magnolia and lfeil avenues. First units of the Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley Fire departments responded three minutes later, joining workers on the sce ne who were already fighting the fire . "Firemen were endangered when the .Jetty Proposal structure collapsed shortly after the alarm was given," according to a Hun- tington Beach Fire D e p a r t m e n t spokesman. "But there were no reported lnjurles." The bl82e, described .. "rapid spreading" completely destroyed a 12- unit building, and caused minor damage to several others. The fire was controlled at 5:40 p.m. with damage estimated at $40,000. A crowd of several hundred youngsters gathered at the scene, apparently at- tracted by Oames that were clearly vlsi- ble for more than one mite away. Sunset Beach Residents Express Erosion Fears By TERRY COVILLE Of 1111 o.tlr Plltt ,,_., fiUnoet Beach mldents are afraid the constructk>n of an ocean channel to the Bolsa Bay might erode the sandy strand Jn front of lheir homes. Paul Bradley, a civic leader from the small community, ~ this fear Tueaday night during a lffllon of the Huntington Beach Envlronmental Coun- cil. "We're concerned about the con- struction of a jetty out there," Bradley said. "WW we get a full environmental impact report on tl1il project?" "Certainly. It's required by law," replied Gregory Teylor. a deputy state attorney general "We expect such a jetty to stablll2e your' beach and Bolsa Cltlco State Beach," Taylor upJalned. uRIPt now, boll> beacbu are oerloualy depleted. The U.S. Armjl Oorpt of Enilnem has to pump sand onto those beaches on a regular buis." Taylor, and a team ol experts from the state department of Fish and Game, spent two hours Tuesday explaining state plans for recreation of a natural salt water marsh In the Bolsa Bay, plus cor>- struction of a public marina. The environmental council meeting drew nearly 100 interested resldent8. which surprl.sed state officials who ex- pected a amall crowd. Taylor empllasiied that the propolled ocean cut to the marsh is an optional (S.0 SUNSET, Page !) Planners Reject Report On Bolsa Island Project Orange County planning commissioners have put another nail ln the coffin that may cany the Metropolitan Water District's $76S million Bolsa Island proj- ect to the ocean bottom off the Hun- tington Beach shoreline. Commissioners unanimously rejected MWD's environmental impact report Tuesday on lhe proposed purchase ol 88 acres In the Bolsa Chka marsh. The county rejection followed similar rejections by the Huntington Beach Plan- rllng Commission and City Council. COunty Planning Director Forest Dickason had asked for a 50-day delay in conalderation of the document, because his staff had not had !11lfflclenl lime to study it and staff members had several questlons. MWD wants the acreage for an el"'" trtcal power switchyard and a corridor for power and water utility lines. The land Iles parily in Huntington Beach, Partly In the county. One of the chief reuons city ofllclals turned down the impact report WU Its !act of refmnce lo the propooed Island project. MWD once proposed construction of a 41).acr., man-made offsbort Island lo houH 1 waler desalUng plant and 1 noclear powerplant. Officials 11 MWD say the Island pro} ect has not really been revived -It died In 1968 when the cost rose above f1SO million -but they want to have tbe Bolsa land now. while It ls cheaper, In ca,. the project II revived. County pl11D1illll officials did ' not directly object to the laland proposal. Dlckuon ukt their main concun waa the !act of tln\e to otudy tbe Impact report. M\VD ofllclall, ho.....,. uy Ille In- formation on tbe island ls not Included In ) ' this report because the report only con· cems the purchase or land. Besides rejecting the impact report, both Huntington Beach bodies passed resolutions urging the state leglslaturt to revoke MWD's tidelands grant. I!. the grant were revoked, MWD would have to rejustify its need for the island and subm!t a total envirorumntal impa<:t report. Orange C:Oast Weather According lo the National WeatJ>. er Service, considerable cloudloeu Is In store for the Oranat Coast Thursdoy. with the 111n breakmg through In the afternoon. llJsh temperature should be in tho low ros. INSmE TODAY South Cocut Repertory Eav"M:fa.. ti it& ninth 1tcuon of thtatcf' °" <h• Orono• Coast thb 10Ctk"'4 with a rtoiool of <ht Ammc:.m comtdJI c I a I I i c "TM Tore~ bearert." See En~""""'· Page 30. \..M. ..... ti ...11111 ,. C1ff"9inlle S C....., CMMf' If C'-91Mf ... "'"" K ' ,,.._.. IC' DMJll IMtbl It --. ---:: . ....... ...... -. ,,.. . -.. Dr. ···-" =--=-:: ~. i'r' • ........ , ,... ' .....,,,1tu111ot INI ,...... IJ• ,., ,.. . ...,. " ......... . ---.. ::...·'lr.":"'" '' • ' DAILY '°ILOT Sl9ff ,...._ ltESCUERS CARE POR INJURED WORKER AT SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION SITE IN IRVINE Roof Fr1mif'l9 Gives W1y 1t El Cimino Reil Elementary School in C11ifornia Homes Ar•• Roof at Irvine School Collapses; Three Injured By CANIYACE PEARSON . Of 11141 o.itv '"''-' ''"' &th the causes and the effecta of the coPapse Tuesday of roof trus!el being in· stalled at the construction site of El Gamino Real School In Irvine remained a mxstety today as state Inspectors In· ve~lgated damaee to see If a three- ITlOlllh delay in the school's opening is necessary. Three workmen were injured Tuesday before noon when a 7,000 square foot· acea of roof trusses fell at the site at W.Jlnut Avenue and Karen Ann Lane. A dozen other workmen eteaped serious injury when they rsn from the building as about 20 prefabricated beams dirl~ped lll<e domlMes. · · 'The more than $1 million facility was siheduled to open in AprU. l>ave King, facllltles planner for the sin Joaquin School District, said today t/Sat state inspectors from the school a 'lecture 1 and construction ofOces st determine tr the hems are s vagenble. I they can be salvaged or 'ttl>"lred, said, ate acCldent will mean only a d lay of a week or two. ut if the state detennines there ls too eh damage to allow safe construction th the beams, they will have to be r«j>rrlered from their closest manufac- hVer -In Bol..se, Idaho. 'Mlat will take at least 12 w~ks. King '·d .., . Valley Jaycees Seek Beauties The Fountain Valley Jaycees are ac. cepling appUcalions for their 1973 Jwtlor M iss Contest. The Fountain Valley Junior Mlss is selected on the basis of her academic achievement, personality, beauty and talent She is 1warded a $250 scholarship by the Fountain Valley Jaycees and Is eligl· ble to compete in the stale Junior J\tiss fina ls. Interested gi rls must be high school seniors y,•ho \1 ill graduate In the sprlng. Appllc11tions arc available at the high schools and frcn1 Bill Frye ut 968-9006. DAILY PILOT The Or•• Cont DAILY ,.ILOT wrift Wfltcti 11 comblnrd tfl• H..-1.Pt ..... 11 Mii.shed Ir( the Of•,..e Co•sl Publllhlft9 tom1Mny. ~ r"I• edlllon1 lrl PUblb"9d, MOfldt'I' llW'tutft Frio.y, for C•l1 Ma., N-1 BeKh, Huntlr.vlon 81Kll/l'..,ni.1n V•llly. L•11- .. ICll. tr11Jne/Sldilllebtcll l!lnd S.n CletM!IM:I s.>n Ju•n C.pl1tr•no. A 11nQI• rtu1DNI _,dl!lln i. ...,_,1111\td S.lvn*I.,. lll'ld Sund1ys. T~e "rlN:llHll p;ibllll'l!ng plan! II •I :llO Wt d B•'I' Strut. Co1,1 MtU, C1t!fomr•. tM1'. Robort N, WeH t"r111C1tnt •rid P11bllll'llr J•ck R. Cwrl•y Yk• ,,.,..,.,, "li'ld o...r11 • .....,. lliom•' k••Yil ··-Th•m•l A. Mlll'pfrliit• M-tlnO E41tor Ot•rl• H. L..01 Ridi•r4 P. N•ll ~Mt"""" EMq 1.,,., C.11111. w..t Or .... C9un!y ldn.r .............. Office 11171 ..... t. 1.111 .... ,.. MetU1t1 ,_.4re111 P.O. lew 7tO, t2•4f °""' Olfkft LOIUl'll htefl• nt f'MMI A,,.._. 1c.,.,. Mm1,. w"' ""~ ''"'' N.-porl l"d'I: au N""PO" Bol/l•vtiif St., Ci.mtfolt; .. Nor111 El C•.,..IM lllN$ T.t.,.._ (7141 642-4l21 ClwlfW .w ••• 11 .... '424671 ,,_ Nwflll Of .... C-C-llllMt!M I ..... 1111, HI .... .--. ttliow.tr.i., =. ""' .... C..t l'Wbl119 _,.,. ':i:'i:r.'"''" -::;-"Q-. ~' ... ._lnf.= ~ •':.:: ":: rl'IClll!IWI IW IN ••. ii ~I "'11.,. ., ...................... • • Three different versiOna of the accident ll-'el'.J still circulating today. Irvine police said they would not be charged with determining the cause. That will be up to insurance companies or to the state industrial accident COlll-' mWloo, police Mid. One witness said that a crane hoisting an arched beam onto the structure knocked one support against another and they began falling. Anolller ,....kman told school dlllrlct officials that a carpenter sitting on one beam while attempting to place another caused the imbalance with undue preuure. Kin( lllld he wu told still 1110ther veraloli of lhe accldenl by a wl~ who said the crane bounded emtioall~ agaiMt a beam and vibrated thf. others to the ground. Five counly fire department units, Irvine police and the Irvine Company ranch patrol truck responded to the call while the Co1ta Mesa helicopter landed on !11• ichool lllt lttolf. 'nie ocliOol II being built by J. Ray construction company. Sltlnbrugge and Moon are structural engineers on the project. The school will serve the residents of California Homu tract. King u.Jd the companr, was already one month behind schedu e when the in- cident took place. Students who will attend the 45-15, year-round facility , are now hGUSed in the former Rancho San J o a q u i n JntermedJate school building on Sand Canyon A venue in East Irvine. Injured in the accident when the beams, weighing almost a half ton each, fell were Sivert Thompson, of Placentia ; J im Sanders, of Anaheim, and Herve Binette. of Santa Ana. All were taken to Tustin Community Hospital. Anthony Named To Take Reins In Westminster Veteran Westminster Co u n c 11 m a n Philip L. Anthony was elected mayor Tuesda y night, replacing Derek McWhln· ney ll-·ho resigned two weeks ago after he Y.'as lndlCted on bribery charges in con· nection \vith the Mile Square Park leas· in g controversy. The 37-year-old Anthony, former mayor pro-tern. w11s given a unanimous en· dorsement from his colleagues, Including McWhinney. McWhlnney resigned Sept. 12, lhree days before he and city PlaMing Com· missioner Tad Fujita were set to enter court pleas on Identical Grand Jury in· dlctments charging them with grand theft, conspiracy, and attempted bribery. McWhinney remains as a councilman. The indictments \Vere Issued after an extensive Grand Jury investieatlon that was prompted when Fountain Valley farmer George Mural wtnt to the District Attorney, alleging the pair had !lo!iclted a $10.00l bribe to pave the way for renewal of his lease ot county.owned land at Mile Square Park. Monday, Murai '• S14.700 bid for two of 1he three parcel• was accepted by the coonty Department or RaaI Property Services and forwarded to the county Supervl90rs for Hnat approval. The alleged bribe, ln the form of two $$,000 contribut1on11 was alleged to ha ve paved the w1y for the lease extension tn. m 1uperviSQt!. Mural and his brother, Motoi, bid 17.100 for 1 62.6-acre plot and $7.600 for 11nother 87.4 &cret near the park in Foun. tab. Valll!y. The third parcel of 13 acre! went· to George Tanaka for ft,400. He has worked that plot for three ycan on a 111bl-from tilt Murali. S11pervl10r8, who have bickered over lhe e"'enJion of the farm leue, ire ex- pected to cooalder the l'flCOlllll1endalionl ror approval of the bids on Oct. 3. From Page l SUNSET ... Item, and if it does not take place, the Fish and Game Department 1Ull wlDU to re-create the marsh. He· outlined details of a pending land s\Wlp with Signal Properties, Inc., a divllion of Signal Gas and Oil Co.: -Signal will give the state ~00 acres of . Qrlm~. oceanfront marsh, wlllch parallels Bolsa Chi<:• State Beach: -8ignal will also give the state use or another 2SO acres of manh for 14 years. Under.an option clause, if an ocean chan. nel is built anytime within those 14 years, the additional 230 acres becomes state property at nO cost. -For Its part, the state wW clear its easement rights over inland parts of the 1,900 actt man!h, '° Signal can proceed with pri1'-)e .dev.lopment plane. One pQtii!'Taylor emphasized, WU that ti,. ... at\ .cul proposal WU DOI mode.by Signal, but by the llalt. "Signal had abandoned piano for an ocean cut , and was considering a smaller channel from Huntington H a r b o u r , across Warner Avenue," TJylor said. State tif!lclals 'want il\e ocean' cul to create proper tidal action to help rev!~ the manh. " Jamea McCormick, chief planner for Fish and Game, said, ii there Is no ocean cut, the Warner channel could be used, but the marsh would not be as good. McCcrnilct spent most ot his time outlining previOusly announced delalll of the marahland proposal wbicb involves the re-creation of roughly 400 acres of salt marsh, construction of a public mar- ina and fiahing facilltles on another 130 acres and the potential ocean channel. He said the exchange bas not yet been signed by Signal, but be expects the package swap to go before the state Lands Commission in October or Novem· ber. McCormick · said aalt water marshes were ·once plentiful in Callfornia, with 21,000 acna ln Los Angeles and Orange County alone. "But these areas now have less than 1,500 acres. u "Estuaries are especlaDy vaJuabte to· fish and wUdlile. They are the heartbeat of the ocean," he said. "But the Bolsa Bay ii now essentially a degraded area, not at all natural." One man asked if the state thought it was getting eoough from Signal, and If It couldn't hold out for mott land. Ocean View Post Remains Unfilled n.e Ocean View School District is ac- cepting applications for an open seat on the dist rict Personnel C o m m i s s i o n through this Friday. Each of the three commissioners serves without pay, 1lle panel Is respoqsl ble for establlshment ol pro- cedures and policies for the nonteachlng employes of the district. The term of o!£ice Uegins Dec. I and runs three years. Any re1lstered voter In the district ts eligible. pplicatlons are available in district orrices. Beach Schedules 'Crat,e' Derby The Ht111lniton lloach Onni• crato Derby wlll be held Sept. 30 on Slater Street between Golden West Avenue and Gothard Sa.et. All Orll1(0 County boys betw .. n the ages of 8 and 15 are eJiMlble to enter the downhill campeUtlon wlil<h II spoNOrtd by the lluntlngton llolCh Jayceos. Oran,. cratu and IOOP box racers will compete ln 8'pei:ltte division• with trophlff ·bel!>c 11..n to Ute top flnllhm in each ol llie 11t ... qe aroupe In '.1111 contaa:t . .. . . • • • ApplloollOu ano av.U.ble 'Uuoqll .ii ed>oots, u.. YMCA, various llOjr ~· lroo\ls and. hobby obopo In HIDlltrp Belich . Trial B~gi11s Food, A nimau in Qiiestion Jamea Dou&1u Roberts, operator of lbe Lasuna llucb vegttarlan eatery, 1.Dve Anlmals, Don~ Eat Them, ap- peaf!d in Laguna Niauel munlcJpal oourt for jiiry trtal wblle oublde die court- howle, a knot of bis supporten held a trial cf their own. Roberts, 22, Is accused of allowing a camel, a rooster and several dogs in the restaurant at 782 s. coast Highway dur- ing lbe cal•'• ope!llllg July 4. Roberta and attorney 1laJTy Simons of Laguna Beach were assigned to the courtroom of Municipal Judge H. Warren Knight where Jury selection got under way this morning. Robert!I , wearing a crisp new white T· shirt with Love Animals, Doo't E.at Them and a picture of a lamb, a child and a cow slllc screened on it, said he was co~ fident that the jury would find him I~ nocent. Environment 'Coalition' Views Goals An organ!Jational lramework and goab for an environmental coelltion were thruhed out during a second meeting of environmentalists from across the county Tuesday nij:ht at the Alrporter Inn in Irvine. More than 120 penons met to discuss point-by-polnt t h e recommendations made by commJttees tet up at a previou1 meeting to hammer out the structure and dil'9Ction for Che proposed coalJUon. Where the first meeting of the en· vi rorsnentallata was marked by t.'On. cerned, but witty rhetoric, the meeting Tuesday indicated concern over precise wording of tile group's reports on organization and alms. Speclal mention was made that the persons at the meeu/ig were representing only their own opinioos, and not necesurtly thooe of groups with wbicb they may be al!Uia!td. The environmentalists agreed on oet- tin( up a Steering Committee compoeed of 11 penona, one penon from each of the five oupervlllOrlal districts tn the county and the cbolrman ol each of lbe siJ: atand.in& comrnlltlel: · 1 • ·.' ;1,· •• n-etmllng commltt... are: the Political Action Com m i t t e e , Com- munication and Information (:ommlttee, Legal Advisory conunl#ee Plfit and Project Ev1~uaUOf1 """'ii.'~ 'l'll!Pl!"" COl!lml~~ ~COlbn>lllMf ,, . ' , · 11 .. ,. ·OiJnnmiiee''ITw a a tstibll I to recomlriebd e&ndid8teS for 1 the five supervisorial district reprnen- tatlves on the Steerlrtg Commlttee. Goall presented for consideration by the group were -to coordinate action in order to achieve improved environmental quality for all citizens In Orange County. -To in nuence and eocoorage the governmental processes which create and implement growth policies and land use regu\atklns. ' GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHRIES ELECTRONIC WATCHES BASICALLY SIMPLE "Electronic" Implies to many penple a mysterious system which might Introduce expenslve repair problems. Actually, electric and electronic watches are simple, reliable and easy to service and repair. All such walches have a small battery which looks almost exactly like a hearing aid ceU, but is built to put out less current but over a longer period of time. TheH batter- ies also differ in that the watch will not be seriously banned shoU!d leakage occur. All these watches have some kind of mechanical oscillator governed by a balance wheal, tuning fork or otber puliatlng or vibrating device which carries either a coll or a per- man•nl magnet. When current pass- es lhrou~h coil or magnet It pr<>- vldes power to move the other sim- ple devices In the system. You can buy electric or ele~tronlc watches with confidence. Tbey are very trouble-free, with adjuatmenu and repairs easily aceompllshed by roor local Independent Jeweler. f • . ... ,_ "We don't care whom we are JUU&ed by because we-knoW what we say i$ true ," Roberta aald. Boney Jlanana, a camel who bu been a lrequellt vllltor durinc RobeJU' court appearatle<S In Laguna Ntcuel, attended the mock lrlal ooblde the courthoose. Boney, who arrived in a clanking black, 1954 Cadillac limoUIUle, was ac- !»mpanied by CO!. ~ a ....,.,. In the lncwe laden air, a crowd sang, played gultan and iromoted their vegttarlan philosophy as passenby gawked. Roberts saia from the beginnihg of his citation for the health code violation, people thought that his actions were publicity stwtts for lhe rest1urant. "But lt'1. not. We are very serious about oar beliefs. We believ.? tt will bring attention to our cause. "People have come to the restaurant and given up their leather, just thrown it away." the young man said of his efforts to convert others to his vegetarian way of life. Roberti said thst he would attempt to submit Into • evidence Jeafleta decrying the eating or· animal flesh and promotlng the vegetarian way. He said the law und.er which he II ac- cused hu no real value a1 far u health and safety Js concerned. Restaurants in other counttiea: allow animlll on the premises and private cltiuns will aha.re their meals with peb In their bome1, he claimed. ''This country Is bogged with these kind of Jaws," the restaurateur noted and he Indicated he alms to change them If possible. Roberti Drat came to Laguna lloacb from Chicago in April. He livu now at 2564 Pala Woy. He aald he opened his restaurant because he saya "a whole bunch of poaalhllltlel of what I could do" In pro- moting the ve1etartan phlloaopby. Christine Says Men in Need Of Liberation DULUTH, Minn. (AP) -C!JriJtlne Jorg..,.n of Laguna Niguel, who bu llv· ed both u a man and a woman, says lbe doesn't undentand WQIDen'• lib, but Ille suggests that men may need llberatIOn more.' ~•J dDn't l:now"Vll'f Jnlft1''1I01MI\ i\tbo · aren't llberaltd, • Ibo" told llUdeDtl at the Unlverllty of Mlnneaota-Dulutlt Tueoday. She sal~ ~ ~lit~ IMled u~, "MI~ i:eaureta·· ern,Ul;' ·1 l II; Ofltpaen ~!!"' \ I ' ' ~~~u!t.~.. ~tioa ~' ,· tlons in Denmark.· · 1 She sa id Jhal at first she considered. the publicity connected with her sex change to be an invasion of privacy. But later, she said, she concluded that the ' publicity led to an "open attitude" on sex in the United States. "J made up my mind J bad to face it," she recalled. "Only 20 years later, I can look back and see this was the beginning of a sexual revolution." . NetcEqle Curt Scott Lawrence, a 16-year- old junior at Huntington lloach H i i h School, has achleved scouting's hlghest honor~e­ vatlon to lhe level of Eagle Scout. Lawrence, of 6532 Se- govia Circle, is a member of Troop 450 and a former DAILY PILOT carrier boy. From Page I BOND ..• her community are afraid of tax IP.. creases. "Westminster has the second hlghes! · tax rate in the county and people are struggling just to get by," she reported. ·.: "They want you (trustees) to try other . alternatives to building scMols and rat.· ing taxes. U you set Feb. Tl for the elec- tion date you're looklni at defeat, .. Mrs .. Suter added. ' Fome< Fountain Valley Clly COun-.: cilman Roo Shenkman called on the district to unilt llseil and volunteered to form a committee oC bustneumen to, raise money !or another bond campalp. , ~ "Its very obvious that there are people · here who consider them s elve it autonomous. I think it ls time We start'' thinking Uke the Huntington Beach Unio~. High School District," Sbenkm1rt said. Edison Officials WU} ~kj.p M~t Southern California Edison companY. - officials wtll not be pment at tontgbl'•. • Hwiuna:ion ,~IJJelah liOME c 0 u D c lil ' meetlni to pplaln their propooed .,.,. pana\Q!> ~~r,'~ power p~nl. t > ,L:' Br[Q -tr , n, ~i:lent . pf ., p:ie • HOMll: , WI 1 aald today Edlion ~I;· flcials w e scheduled to appear, but.. they asked !Or a delay on their ~ • talion untll the oet. 25 meeting. · • The HOME COtlncU meeia al 8 p.m, la . the city hall annex. Reportl 90 'IUcb . topics u a "City hlrh rise law, a poUco . permit ordinance, plaMed communJUu: and Meadowlsrk Airport, will "": pre,..ted tonight. , : Parkinson said the publlc II Invited ti/· au HOME COUncll meetlnp. · ··. '·· • • There was 1 tlma when all flno clocks WllW built Ilka this ••• with a hand !or tht mlnutas, •• a hand for the hours ... and 1 hand for tho dlJs oflht-hl • : Thi pine Clst in Olde Colony finish 11 hln6- ....,.1y ~ by the block numentls, hcUt and MCOnd hand& on th• anilquo whn. dloL The -ayml, bnss pendulum Md l9CI co-r hand~· th• authenticity of tllla fine Barwick ..production by the HaMtd Mlllw Clod< Company. H. 24" W. 16'/2 " D. 4V2" $110 . ' • . ' \_. J.C. .J./umphried Je1v11fer6 ' ' . . . l 1123 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA . -' . " CON¥11CllNT THiii 11 YIAlS IN THI L\IU LOCATIOJo IANl<AMIRJ<:,t.10-llASRI ~l&I PHONI IU·t40t • • J ! \Vednnday, Stpttmbtr 27, 1972 H DAILY PILOT :J . pact Report Law Stumps Boar~ Plotting Toki .At Your service 11. s.a.i..; ilol w-1 r...n Ollie DAILY PILOT • Got a problem7 Then unit< Pat Dunn. Pat will e1i1t f'ed tape. get the att.11Ders and ac- llO!> ~ Mtd lo •Ohle ln<Q1dtU$ .;,. . g~ and b..i .. ;.. JI ail ;our q'ueslion.t lo P4' Dti"iil ~t Your Seroice. ~" Codlt llaily Pilot, P.O. Bo; 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca., 92626. Incl~ your telephone number. Niguel Bank Joh Trial Under Way DEAR PAT ' I ordered a photo plaque rrom Golden Gate Photocraft of San FraDcisco in October, 1971. 'Ibe firm wrote to me in November stating a problem had arisen and that my money and slide would be sent back if this problem couldn't be cor·11 rected. My certified letter of inquiry in reply was unclaimed and I haven't received either the merchandise or a return of my money order and slide. A.W., Costa Mesa Your certified letter was UDClaJmed beeauoe Goldea Gale Pbotecralt cor- rected HI ••Problem" by going out of bualneu. Sead your money order receipt and all correspond"""' to Ille l'llstal Inspector hi Cbarge, San Franclsco, Ca. lllU. DEAR PAT' I ordered a decorative Beethoven Scro!\ from World Art Group in Wellport, Conn. last November. Each time I write to request the merchandise • or a refuDd, all 1 receive is a post card claiming a "four to si1 week delay due to urlavoldable p1'9duction difficulties." I've gotten absolutely Th>wbere and am utterly By FREDERICK SCBOEMEBL Of Mt o.ity l'lttt Staff ' LOS ANGELES -Plano for the IS million burglary of the Laguna Niguel branch of United California Bank were first made in a Lynwood motel room in early February, U.S. Attorney Jack Walters alleged before a federal court here today. Walters made the statement as the trial opened in which three men are Laguna Suicide Victim Described As Sincere Man By BARBARA KREIBICH 0t nie ~ltr Plitt s..rt Stephen Winget, 25-year-old hospital administrative aide who leaped to his death in front of a Laguna Beach school bus early Tuesday, was "a very capable, sincere young man with a bright future and no apparent problems." This was the evaluation of his superior, Pomona Valle:Y Hospital administrator Robert Burwell, who hired Winget as his administrative assist.ant in mid.June. The Orange County Coroner's office listed Winget's death as an apparent exasperated! M.D., Huntington Beach suicide, but will proceed with routine tox- in tbli case, "unavoidable pf9dactlon icological tests, a deputy said this morn- dlfflcaltles" means oat of stock. Your re-ing. lllDd is beiq; malled. Sherifrs dpartment investigators also ~ are working on lhe case. Authorities DEAR PAT: received infonnation today that Winget l'.d like to find a cheM club affiliated dressed and left the motel immediately after receiving a phone call from an with the United States Chess Federation, unidentified person at 7 a.m. Tuesday. hopefully In the Newport Beach or Costa Mesa area. I am also trying tO fmd a The young man, who lived in La Verne with his wife, Barbara, was killed in-cbess clock. The stores I've called don't stantly at 7:30 a.m. Tuesday when he have any and doo'I know where to gel lezped from the South Coast Highway one. Maybe you can help me out. sidewalk near the entry to Ben Brown's Coatact I Mart Boyl, J;!;1~ or:: Motel into the path of the oncoming bus, UC lrvfDe Clleu Club Im V'"'' SI., Apt. which WU loaded with -.. howld for ... Tbur>ton lntennediate School. II;. 'l'llltlll -· h -lo Ille UCI tub Boyt ii acll •-1•· ~ ~-Bus drives Marty Lucking and the hor· ' ' ve w -~Ule ~ rlfied -"'•·n•· who wi·~····• ... -·edy Cab, wldell meeU eacll ..._..,. Frf. 1:1~uue "° ... ~ we: w.u.g day from 1 to 11 p.m. w Slltanlayi told Califorll;la Highway Patrol officers f...,_11_1o I p;m. 11 IU s, ..... ,,11r1mge. Pw~~~1nl-. '-"--~~. andaaw lea°!i. bwilll ~~t R. ...... r ii •HetbJll!is 'jf··~ • .....,,.,.. .... ll~ cbeu clob In Ille Sooall Ciilt'·int: He ' of I, •trikllii uie right headlamp and llU yea ... otller dlelli eDlliliuls lo windshield, He WU hurled 90 feel by the caD blm al flWSlJ, or -11 -Impact. Morcm .\tt., Newport llelCl, -· A II was revealed that Winget bad been calalope ol clleu eqalpmelft, locladlng attending a lw<><lay sem!Mr at Ben c&octl, eu be ordered by aenamg a po1t Brown's for alumni of the UC Los card reqaett to a.en lJfe and Review, Angeles hospital administration program, U.S. Qess Federation, 471 Broadway, in which be received his master's degree. Nfwber&, N.Y. useo, or by wrlt:lng to He al8o served a two-year ad- Cbeu Dlptt, Editor Ken Smith, P.O. mlnJstraUye resid~ . at Va 11 e y llox um Dallas Tex 7Ull Preobytenan Hospital m Van Nuys ' ' V" · · before joining the Pomona Valley staff, DEAR PAT : Burwell said. I was stopped by a Costa Mesa police ' ~Winget was born in Salt Lake City, petrolman who tboogbt 1 was gol!>i loo ~ • . ~d will be buried _In City fast He admitted he didn't bav&'.i'Clear · : . ~ •:.,.la that city, according to a ..,ding on my speed and gjive me a ~ •\1or . Saddleback Mortuary, warning, stating that the. ·oexi time I 'nlstm, Wll!Ch. IS bandling local ar· woold be cited. I bal>Pf!l ·II> believe I rangemenla. , · wasn't B)>Oeding, but thads.DOI tbt point. He and b1a Wlle·ba_d no cbUdren. Isn't his action of putting i:Dy name on· . SUrvivors, in tddit:on to the widow! are the "must cite" list a breadl of my right bis parents, ~ .. ~~ Mrs. Frank Winget to he judged on the c~ ol lbe of Salt Lake CitY:•lwo brothers, Douglas moment? • of Menlo Park and Gary of Salt Laite · R.J:e':'"~ Mesa City; and three sjsters, Mrs. Jo An D'l~t You ,. ... judged on Ille ~1 , of Santa Cru., Mrs. Judy Keyoer of Ohio of the moment wbea tile: ·[llitnlmu and Mrs. Colleea Nood of Salt Lake City. WU'lled you lmlead of cllfDJ ,. _v.rt>ol charged with conspiracy, bank burg!My and bank lar<eny. Facing charges are Philip Bruce Christopher, 29, of Cleveland; Charles Albert Mulligan, 38, of Youngstown, Ohio, and Amil Alfred Dinsio, 36, of Boardman, Ohio. The prosecution's opening remarks - only 15 minutes in length -tJ'aced an alleged series of events which began when defendants Mulligan and Dinsio allegedly traveled lo California In February and rented a room at the Jubilee Motor Inn, Lynwood. Then men, Walters asserted, ostensibly were in California to visit relatives but in reality, he added, they were laying the p-ellminary groundwork for the massive break-in. Using the motel room as a base, the Laguna Niguel branch was selected and certain arrangements made. These arrangements, the prosecutor contends, included purchase of a 1962 Oldsmobile sedan with a false bottom outfitted in the trunk and lease of a fashionable townhouse at 31386 West Nine, Laguna NigueL The condominium was rented Walters said on March 8 by Ronald and Henry Barber, two brothers indicted in the «ime but still at large. Walters asserts the proseuction wilt show that the Tustin borne of ' Mr. and Mrs. Earl, Dawson was used for secret meetings between the burglars and that tools and some stolen property were stored in the Oldsmobile which was parK- ed in Dawson's garage. Dawson is a long-time friend of Mulligan and is apparently not in- volved in the crtme. Later in March, each of the five men indicted returned to the (:leveland area, Walters said, then returned to Laguna Niguel on March 15, nine days prior to the burg!My. During the nine day peiod, the alleged team engaged in final preparations in- cluding the purchase of tools and cutting torches. The break in, Walters said, took place between Friday night March 2• and Sun- day night, March 1.8. ' On Monday, March 27, Mulligan along with Din.sio and Dinsio's brother James, left the. Los AngeJes area. On Wednes- day, Henry Barber left the Los Angeles.,'":"". Lat.< !bat oame waelt Ronald aarner ...iurn_ed~~· loW!ng!a lJc1:ll wb!~ had im ~by James Dli>slo. The o!'IY piece of evidence, Walt"' said, that rm>ained In the Los Angeles area was the 1962 Oldsmobile. According to the prosecutor, Dawson was tired bf having the car in his garagti and made several calla ~ Ohio asking that it be removed. Bar Unit Backs 'No-fatilt' Plan MONTEREY (AP) -The State Bar Association's Conference of Delegates has endorsed a statewide, compulsory "n~fault" auto insurance plan which would guaram.e Injured persons up lo $7.200 In benefits. The 468 delegates debated for .nearly an OOur he9! Tuesday before aidopting the proposal, sponsored by the Century City Bar Association of Los Angeles . wmdags are given on po1slb&e iiiG.v&c violations, bat tbere la no sucb ~ as a "mut cite next Ume" list, ·~ St - Ille Cosio Mesa PoUce ~' Howtver, there'• no paraatet -pudculor patrolman doeln'I hive 1111 on meatal lilt of borderHne ~. .0 don, puob yous luck. · ,,, J·mpact Deci,sion Cited In Niguel Tract Delay D1!AR PAT: '.My lrt"1ds and I an weer POW bracelell. Is II true that the location of tlio small hole In -braoelela bas· a _,.u,g1 We have heard that U the bole ""before tile serviceman's naroe, it 111- dlcales he is a prlooneN)f·wa; . .If tlie hole is after the name, ll .,...,.. i,. 1' llllsslng-ln-actlon. . , . , • , M.8., Mia .. "Vlll!JO 'VIVA aud POW·MIA spokesmen 10id li!OY tbollJlll lbey'd .. an! every wlkl ttory eoenecled wllb dlele braoelell, bet your lboor)' tal<el Ille coke. Tbe llole la a POW -11ued11 llold lbe m-lel w\Jle It ii llellf dflped ht•= .... llOD. Iii 1aca11oe !lat .. . • v.a ·aod ,.... trtt.q ... . ~' lie 1talu ti Ille ~~Z\O ........ yOa< lnoeltti ~ •• ,......~ .. .,, POW-MIA. · U 'ya -II !iiljO It IAle Hl'\'iCDea'• ..... ...; ......... & ..re ., Ille .,........;.i ,,. ....... ,.. *'"'"Ille .......... ' 01I< problem Pal Du•n con'I 1.olO. ft a....mng aU lttt<TI. Each utter ii r<ad and comfdt,..d ca,./111lu, 111il «mt doe& 11ot pttmlt Pat to answer all q .. lli..... . l I · Liquor Uneontro~ed? MERCER ISLAND, Wilb. (UPIJ - Don Eldrldce, SS, a ._._,ol Iba Wlliqlon tlquor Con""1 Jloald, !las IJten «*red to court fer ., Aug. U ar- rtll on dlarlel ol dnml<e11 drlvlna. ' I ~ Orange County planning cornmi!Biooera dela,y8/d action on two tract maps in the ··:i..c-N"oguel ..,.. Tuesdoy pending ~ber bllormatJon on a atate Supreme Coort clacWon. t 1.b&"juaUces voted S-1 last week that enVU'onmental impact atatements must ~ Pi;<\Y~ Wofe clUes or counties may ltsue bUllcflDI permit• to p r 1 v a t e developen. The decision was on a Mono County ca,. brought by an ecology group, the Friends of MWnmoth, wbicb hal tem· porarlly held a; -Ion of a lari• 8J>Arlmn>I project at Mmunoth Lakes. ' County Plarinlllg Director Forti! j)letuoo aald today that the requirement of lmpoct M-lheuld DOI oertouoly bold up prtVate developments Ill lbe • COl.lll)I. Ht aaid many lari• cleff1opert !\Iii ullcl)Jlted the ruling and half In- cluded envlronmenlal reports In their planl. The county and all other governmental agenolol m required lo file en- •)nmmtnlal lmpect reporta on all publlc projecta under a 19'(0 state ilw. Prevlously1 this rule bad not been applied IO .. privile · coostructlon but Dlclwon 1tated we<kl ago that II would be In tlme. The Llguna Nlguel proJecl held up by lbe pl&-. -• Avco oommunJty Dev<lcpment plaos for three Ugbl ln- cluotrtal 10ts on 31 aero ooutb of crown Vall<!y1'army-and well of the San Diego Freeway, and 49 acres on the north aide of Pacific Coast Highway to be developed lo 13 large single Janilly home Iola. 1be court ruling may also delay a long debeled Canada Hills project In the El 'Toro area which is slated for study by the planning commission next Monday. Ch1er assistant county coWJsel Clayton Parktt told supervisors 'l\!esday that his office was planning to meet with county coun1els from neighboring counties to study the Impact of the court rulinc. "The court dec~ion could possibly ef- fect all building, planning and flood COO· lrol approwd projects," Par~er said. Roo Yeo, Fifth District planning com- m-. told supervisors that the plan· nine departm"11 bas been conferring with flood control, tbe road department and the county coun1el'.) office for tome week.I on application of the en- Ylronmental ~tements to p r I v a t e developen. ~arler explained that the court decllk>n. at lint rea'dlng, slmply requires th~ filing of environmental Jmpact atatments but dot1 not prohibit counti es or cities from issulng perm1ta If 1Uch otatemenla are filod. Dlc:boon pointed oul that the principal roadblock was pilrmi111 11811 time re- quired to evaluate lhe I m p a c I statemenla. He oaid hlo department did not bav• lhe stall to do the job quickly. ,''. I '-DAILY PILOT Phjtf9 br#JldJ.W'lf ~tr P~ .... li,ag PfJir · · f. j ! ! ! ' t • ' '! When Elnier Cottlgan of Newport Beach takes a spin on his blcyclei nis canine companion uBobo'' goes along for the ride. 4 Men Indicted In Casino Theft LAS VEGAS (AP) -A federal grand jury bas indicted four men on a variety of charges in connection with the $178,SOO robbery of Harrah's Tahoe casino Sept. 19. The indictments returned Tuesday charge the men with interstate transportation o[ stolen property, con· spiracy and aiding and abetting, said Joseph Ward, U.S. attorney for Nevada . In the robbery, the largest ever in- volving a Nevada casino, an armed man surprised five Harrah's employes, took the money and escaped on a motorcycle driven by a second man. Court Rule • . •' ' • _, • • , .. --.. Slows Up Si1pe1·visors :~· . ·. Business before the Orange County Board of Supervisors almost ground lo ' halt this morning because of a rectnt California Supreme Court ruling. C.OWlty Counsel Adrian Kuyper advised board members oo his interpetation of the court's ruling of last Thursday calling for environmental impact statenlcnts on all zoning changes, tract m;1ps <ind other county land use business. Kuyper said the court's fin ding covers, "all projects the county intends to carry out " in the wordi ng or the decision but added that the justices ruled that a fin- ding must be made that lhe projects are .. nontrivial." "l assume they mean significant," the · atlomey said. "So if you find projects on tod ay's agenda will have no significant impact on the environment you may pro- ceed." Kuyper sa id he had $\udied the seven items on the agenda and h::id determined !hat all but two were not "'non-tri vi al.'" The t "'O he rul ed out concerned nmendments to the zoning code on sand and ~ravel extraction districts. . Supervisor Ronald \V. caspers of.: Newport Beach asked Kuyper. "Isn't tfle:. court getting tnto the field of legisla-J 1ion?'' Justice Stanley Mosk said recent- ly in commenting on a case. 'This is the 1nost important piece of legislation C,_ have ever worked on'.'' :~ Later, Supervisor David L. Baker call-• ed for one week's delay on a use pennit appeal in his district concerning a com· 1ncrcial stable. He said he would have to personally \'isit the proposed project in lhe northwest Cypress area before he could state that it was of no significance as far · as environmental impact is concerned. After further questioning of Kuyper on the long range impact of the court 's rul- ing, the board proceeded with hearing's· on the other four items. Kuyper wamed that his staff was mak- ing a thorough study or the court ruling and it might be found that most subjectJ , on the board1s agenda concerning land · use would require impact statements. ., Colle8e Crew Mascot Skips " I "Busl.I\'' f ' '*1ffd ..:lb.! 1and German llflePlerd dog who "'"es as one of the mascots for the Orange Coot College rowing team, is missing. Pete carolan. his owner, said Buster has been gC1ne since early Saturday when he was allowed to run free at Bo\sa Chica State Beach. Anyone with information about the dog should call Carolan at 539- 1977. ·' YOUR WICKER CENTER IN ORANGE COUNTY THE NEWfST LOOK IN WICKfR "THI lfJltlt/ filtOfJP"by Pacific Rotton 4 PIECE SEATING GROUP ...... • 2 Cllow Clialr1 • Coff .. Tobi. SAU PllCl un -... s199 5o ............ ~ Litt $270.00 CHAIR SAll NKl •109'1 1 ... 1...i.1 cwml.., OPEN 7 OAYS Dolly 9.30.9 S.turdly 9:30+-Suo. 10.S Indoors or out, thi1 new bold look in rattan is sure to make your family room, d.en or patio the to1k of the town 5 PIECE CHOW SET SALi 1'11tCl s199so TH£ TRADtrlONAL LOOK IN WICKIR "THE llAllTfJCKET" by O-a1ian design Decorate with the llght-oiry desig n that this white wicker grouping brings into your home or oportment. l/td11d•t • t ch1b tlloltt • s.11 •• • lOtllp Toltl• 4 PIECE GROUPING IAU ,.tel UST fJ77.IO 524995 ·-- OPEN 7 DAYS Dally 9:30-6 Friday 'Ill 9-SuMly lo.J . • -"' .OAILV PILOT Quilder, Spare Those Trees GREEN 11n.JMBS DEPT . Newspaper people are expected to retain a large dtgtee of Ci)ld objectivity u they go about the chore of gathering facts on daily events. One of my big problems In this area develops when people start chopping down trees. 1 ~rnebody along this best or all possible ~ always seems ready to uproot .om.thing that has grown lo leafy ma· jesty in 30 or ao years. :.'fVe riP,Ol!-t three Old Master eucalyptus t~. lna.ke room for some all-night market, erocled In the glory of glass and asphalt. We chop down a grove for some rrionolilbiC subdivision. TREES . ARE BOTHERSOME lo the • advance of our chrome-plated culture. ·They spread roots that disrupt sidewalks am! the chewing gum thereon. They drop t~Ves that hide the aesthetics of pave- rq.~t and concrete. They throw shadows op;some~y·s 1ign that's pusll.ing 78-cent undenmr. ~·nere are lots of excuses for putting the ax to trees. ; .. .Jinder. these circumstances, I have a strong inclination to lose my objectivity ~ kick the trash bucket here in the of- fice. • -iMy motto is, "If It's In the Way of a 'Ilri!e, It's Got 10 Go." -,tn other' words, if the tree is buckling a s1.ctewalk, tough. Move the sidewa1k. If trees endanger utility ltnes, then put the damn things underground or out of the way. Let them build taco stands around the trees, not over their dead bodies. • • • Raisi.ng Fun --· S peafuj i!' NY, D~e in C.alif orriia Today iii • : NEW YORK (AP) -President Nixon , November us helping to ensure that "the -<!' ... mu.Jdng hi! biggest campaign-season world wlJJ be safer in the years ahead." .,,,_ MRS. ELEANOR McGOVERN, RIGHT, STUMPS IN BAYONNE, N.J. Rocolved Rod, White ond Blue Bro From Mn. Plorlno Rio •I Moldonform McGovern Winds Up LA Tour; Humphrey Stumps ·tour~ s1y1 he ,.ii. not ;Simply 1victory , but •.a victory for America-tbat.4 ,Wbat we're wurtiDI for." , Noon, appearing at a 11,000.a·plate Republican fund-raising dinner ih New York, argued tba&_ be ,mu.st have the op- portunity lo "flllllb !he job" \bat was begun with overtures to MOICOW and Peidlli. A apot check of 15 of the ciUes where Republican fund-raising dinnen were held Tuesday ni1ht ahowed that about $4.6 million was raised for the GOP pres- idential campaign in those citiel. THE PRESIDEm' also held out to voters the prospect that in a second term he would achieve in the domestic arena the triumphs which be claimed for hie first ain years in the field in foreign Policy. Nixon's remarks were piped by closed- circuit television to GOP dinner au· iliences in 'l1 other cities . Irl talking about "a vict«y for America," Nixon said he believes his a~ peal crosses regional, party and genera- tional Unes. He went on: "We've only begun and there's IO much left to do." He pictured a, Nixon victory in * * * Nine AFL-CIO Union Presidents Endorse Nixon l>OOK!NG 1V'l!Je put, ind pertfcular· Jy to his ventures Into pef"IOnal diplomacy in China and the Soviet Union, he asserted , "We have changed the world." ;... (. ~Atf.PA.lGN '72 ) Nixon; a~ by wife Pat, was · bound tbd.ay 'tor California, to addres.s a money-raisifli GOP luncheon and to in- spect the neV(rapid·transit 1Ystem in San Francisco. alid. to attend a "Victory '72" dinner in Los Angeles, Nixon met in New York Tuesday with Jewish leaders from 13 states as well as with the Republican faithful and Democrats for Nixon, and today released a statement freqewing bis stand against Arab terrorisrh against Israel. "Tbe time. has come for civilized peo- ple to act in concert to remove the thre.at of terrorism from the world," he said . SA YING SOME argue that "terror .is the last resort of the weak and the op- pressed" wbo seek only political justice Nixon said. ''Tb.is is nonsense." ' He argued that justice must be achiev- ed through negotiation. "Let us not be disrupted or turned away by tbose who would loose anarchy: upon the world; Jet us seek no accommodations with savagery, but rather act to eliminate it." Nixon, who is making a concerted ef- fort to win ·the votes of Jewilh voters, was quoted by Press secretary Ronald L. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sen. George After a 14-hour day of vote-bunting In Ziegler as having told the Jewish leaders, McGovern has vowed to force the moral California, the state he said is his top-WASHINGTON (UPI·) -Declaring in effect, that tbere should be a eam- issue of war upon the American con-priority target in the presidentlal cam· Democrat ~rge S. McGovern "Wholly paign moratorium on discusllng Soviet science, and if he wins the White House, paign, McGovern spent the night flying unacc(ptable,'' ~eaidents of nine levies of exit fees against Jews who to end "this murderous bombing" within back to Washington, ending an'11-state building trades unions of the AFL-CIO would emigrate lo Israel. five minutes of his inauguration. camp~ign swing. have endorsed President Nixon for re-HUNDREDS OF persons, most of them He said he did not expect the normal His final speech was in stark contrast election. schoolchildren and almost all represen- campaign applause for his account of to the exuberance of his rallies with Th ting ethnic groups, were ferried to Lib-casualties and of "the most incredible Humphrey at his side. e step Tuesday gave Nixon his most erty Island for museum dedication cere- and murderous bombardment in all the prestigious labor ehdorsemerit since he . h Humphrey told a labor rally: won the support several weekS ago of the morues. istory of mankind. "What this campaign needs is a good Teamsters union, the riation':ilargest in-At least 8 handful heckled Nixon, It wu a solemn windup to a campaign dose of believing, of emotion, of en-dependent union, · however, and were hustled away by Tuesday that had featured the whooping thusiasm . Of spirit, of optimism. We're The AFlrCIO eteCutive council VOted federal police, who, in some cases, U~I\,..._ ·~ IN NEW YORK -Presldent .~ . , Nixon appeared Tue~=~ 'in front of the statute on · rty ,_ Island, where he dedicated the American Museum of Immigra· tion. , , Americans try to disrupt a meeting like 4 this." politics of Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, bid· never going to win anything if we go to stay neutral in the campaign, but clamped fists over lbe mouths of those ding for Democratic solidarity at the side around with a hang-dog look ... " more than 30 individual unions _ in- shouting "end the war." HE SAID "IT is bigger ne}\:S in 1llY opi· of the man who beat him for the eluding such giants as the United Auto About 200 protesters showed up outside nion, whe.n millions of young Americans presidential nomination. PERIODICALLY, McGovern drew a Workers -have endorsed McGovern:. the Americana Hotel where NJron ad-are doing what they are doing tfilS tear., SOME YEARS BACK, for example, shout of "give them hell" as he cam-The presidents of nine of th' 17 dresse4 the party fund-raiser. But they peacefully· supporting the cBndJdate' Of ~ Newport Beach wasn't very concerned ur•M GOING to do everything within paigned in California. building trades un.ioru:. said in a state-\Vere gone before he arrived, moving to their choice in a presidential election." about the fact that it was a mudflat with my power between now and Nov. 7 to It was Humphre hog th h 11 ment that they felt Nixon was offering the nearby local headquarters of his He added: few trees. Fortune, however, blessed force the American people to examine "It's time to get rn w fig:~e ~ e. . the American people "an honoraf:>le &xi. caqi~jgn committee where five were ar-"I say, let's make it the biggest news I Newport with a lady naliiil':;liabet Piih1 the terklu&~ questions that,are coo-tlliS campaign," ~ aaa:d !?i ,~ .~.,.~'Mar, in South Vietnam" and a rested by police after a few windows in of all by having . a majority of )'OUBI who got on a campafgii~. tO pl'aht more fronting UI' bfcause ot· this barbaric gh of being . to ~ e v~f ¥'st • ' • _ • al de~ense that would :•at-the neighborhood were broken. Americans join a majority. of older , trees in Newport and .preserve the ones behavi~r !!18t has been going on in ::~ are foollsbm:rugh to ·id" ihls ~ f 1~ security for the American To his Americana audience, Nixon Americans in wlnhing a great victory foi' the city had. lnd.oc~ •.. .)4cQayern told a~~t 1,~ .,JUi4istration stay in power, ~o ~ve 1 _P'!>P,_.7~_. _____________ sa_l_d,_"_lt_i•.....:.n_ew_s_w:...h:...en::....:a.....:.fe:...w....::!-1':...oun:l',::5lllini..:...Am::::e:...ri::ca:_:;tbic:·•;,.No;:::.•::e::m::be::r:.:..'_' __ ~--·' They kidded her a Jot about .Jt apd"811· peop1e a~·'f: WO-'f>late fund-ra.tSmg ctm; .• me, you deserve w118t~' :if• ., ~ , ~ 'f I :a ' ' • j ed her "Big Trees Peue."·~~it ner Tu~y ·Jiight. . . · ... . ~ .. care. She got trees g(apted~r '~ I1 that~ Pla~lloteh;ballroom 1 • J~ comp8J'l.50n, ~c D gav ~ .. · :~ ' · .. ;:. other parties could cil9P •Iii~• ·. · ton""il;Niq• ••to adilm• 1"•1.000:-.:• -.. ::-.. ,·.' •• THE 11u_ 1ri•_ tD. ,._· a· , • .ii.•--:........ , , .,.mv_ . , ·--~ She managed lo iiut .illf:: ~ tlcke!Rtjlubll<:ihtampilgndinner. " ·ftwasHumphreywhoturnedatwrught , •WVft---lillilSttl Wn -JI. , machine to many locattotia.i , v • ' McGoi'eni. baa" earller needled the rally that fill~ the ~ard of Fairfar S TH WQRI • •9 OLD Largely as a result of her cooumibig Republicans about the price lag' "We're High School, '" the Jewisb area 01 Loo . EN I E d f . ~ effort, Newport indeed hat ibme ~ so glad that he's µnany ·come oqt to meet ~~~· into 8 sort of re!P.OfJS1ve ti~ · 1 • ~···:-•: Trees and appears to be altead of·tM. the people, even though he's Charging .. • , .. , -11., ( game. • ~ them $1,000 to tet in, that w~ wouldn't .. F~ mor.e,,years, that's ~hat they , AH; AUTUMN. AH, FOOTBALL! I BET j·.:;t:,'. ''t·.~ • You may have noted by the new. lb.al lhWt ,?f ~ aaythini to dlSC<lUl'llgl! bis '8:~ "'.~lami, Humphrey crkd. ' , yOU 1'HINK THE· MOST SIGNIFICANT THING ... ;;:..2-• ~ Costa Mesa is considering a new tree law rally. . No, the crowd roared back. THAT EVER HAPPENED 10 FOOTBALL j that would tell people what they can or _Turning to·the 1SSue that first propelled "Let me hear you again," said WAS THE WEAK-SIDE SAFETY BLITZ? can't plant out by their sidewalks. his presidential .' candidacy, McGovern Humphrey. ·---"' THE NE\Y DICTUM was apparently prompted by the fact thai the city wants to uproot some ash trees out on Illinois and Indiana streets and the neighbors are righting it. ' lt seems that the trees are threatening to uproot the sidewa!b. Isn't that ter· rible? So all that needs beliecided is what the city needs the most -cracktd cement or some ash trees? .... Well, you know the Costa Mesa city authorities can knock down 20-year-old trees a whole Jot faster than it took for th em to grow there. It was the poet Joyce Kilmer who wrote : "Poems are made by fools Like 1ne. .. But only God can n1ake a tTet." Oh well , that's just a bunch or syrupy sentimentalism. Trees aren't really good for anything. And the Maker wasn't very efficient. Look how long it takea Hirn to grow one to maturity. Just compare that to how fast man'can pou r a sidewalk. drew applause with his pledges to end the "No " war and gain freedom for American "YOU'RE SO right,'' Humphrey said. prisoners. But when one tentative round of applause rippled through the ballroom after he spoke of civilian casualties McGovern said: ' 0 1 KNOW these things are hard to clap about and I don't expect applause on descriptions o1 that kind.'' DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of the Darty Piiot Is guarantttd MOndly·l'"rlOl'l'I " you 00 1101 hlVI 'l'O'll• e>•~r t>y s::io 11>.m •• c111 1nd vour copy wilt oe O•Ol,lllhl to VGu. r 1111t .,., teken Uf'tll l :XI p,m . ~hlrdl'f tf!CI S11N11v: II vou !kl nol recer~ YOUr ~Oll'f' Dy ' 1.m. Slh.ll'Ay, er 1 •·"'-Sundty, Cllll Ind t COllY Wiii bt lll'Wl!hl to vov. Ctlb 1rt •~en untU 10 1.rn. Ttltpho"'s Molt Or•• COlllltY ... ,.. ......... 6Q.4Ut Nortt1-1 Hll!lttt'lg!Of\ e..m Incl Wtl~llllt.r •.•• .,,.,,. • ., ... tnt '-" Ct~i.. Ctol•tr1no llMd'I, 11111 J~11 C..pl11r•no. O.nt "°'"" lovth l.Hlml, Ug!JN Nlfwl .. , . ..,....,_ McGovern planned a break from the campaign until Saturday, except for one appearance Thuraday before a group of Democratic mayors in Washington. He is due to campaign Saturday In Baltimore, Atlantic City and New York. One announced purpose of the break ls to give him time to prepare for a pro- jected series of national television broad· casts on major issues. "Our strategy is very simple," he said. "To start with the biggest state, wbtch is California, and they get more attention than anybody else." Business Index Up WASHINGTON (UPI) The government's index of leading business Indicators jumped 2.2 percent last moiith blggest rise in the closely watched economic report since last spring, the COmmerce Department said today. The August rise in the composite inder of leading economlc lndlcalor. compm.d with an average monthly increaae of 1.3 percent since the Index began moving up about two years ago. --CLOSE, BUT WRONG. IT WAS THE' TAILGATE ON THE STATION-WAGON. IT ENABLED PEOPLE 10 RELAX FROM ALL THAT ACTION WITH A MOUTH- WATERING SPREAD L°i.':i A LIGHT, : SMOOTH 0 8U ... MI ! .. ----~------~-:-------..::::::--, I WONDER IF THEY KNEW BACK IN 16o8 THAT EfY MAKING AH, BUSMMIU.S. . 8U8HMILLS LIGHT AND SMOOTH, THEY WOULD BE MAKING 08USMMl&..LS THE IDEAL ' STADIUM COMF!'<NION ! SO SMOOTI-lt:.SO LIGHT, SO I THINK .i:LL MOSEY ' OVER."TO:THE TAILGATE! ! • : I Cooler North, Warln South '1 ' Storms Develop in Nortlt:west, East, Gulf Coast California P1r1ty tunny tod1y. l'Ollt vMt1tlh winds 11f(lflt 11\d m.rnlllf f1our1 ~ lfltl Wltl•rly 10 to 10 ~~ In •ft• l'IOOl\I IOdly end Thufldly, HIClll .. dfy, ... CNtl•I lirllHr•lw.t ,.. from .. to 10. lnlind l•mP1r11UfW rll!OI ,,_,, Jt le ''" w ..... fMlptf•h.11'9 .,, Suu, M-, Tides WIDMllDAY S.COl'ld l'll!lh •••....•.•. tt:n ... "'. '"' S9cOtld -... " ....... •1~ """ t.1 fMUllO.'f ' *t' Fh'lt l'llOfl •...•.••••• ,,. t:Sf .. tn. U ,,,.., leW " ........... •1111.M. u *°""' llltll .......... l:t7•rft. u licolld tow ............ f !.,.Mo 1.2 •• + • S1111 • ._ •1U1."" ltft •:O,,fll. Moon •1..., 111000.lfl. htt 1J1o:J,.m .. :...----------------------------------------- \ • ' I I I I I I Sacr•111e11to Crash . Ref~sed · r• Pilot Longer Run~ay SACRAMENT() (AP) -The pilot of the jet whlcll cruhed on tat.off lpto a cnwded lee c....,,. parlor and killed ZI ptl'IOl1I rejected use of another-runway which pointed Into open field$, Jn. vealigaton aay. ' Pilot Rlcbard Bln&bam picked the abort runway at Sacnmenlo'1 Executive Airport -one poinllnc ~y at Far. roll'• Ice er.am Parlor -in order to aave fuel. a.aid William Haley, a member of the National TransPortatlon Safety Board. .- Haley said a ~Ina of the ...,. venation Sunday bet-Binlham and the airJ>ort ccotrol tower a1¥1rtly before B!ngbam '1 UDIUC<eSSlu1 takeoff "'vealed that the control to...,. offmd BJnabam a cl10ice ol a l,llOIMoot nmway pointing toward a coll coune and OP<;" fields. BUT BALEY ~ other federal of· ficial! at a n<)!I con{.,.nce Tuesday did not criUclze the pilot'ato.ncem about fuel and bis cllOice of tho shorter 5,000.foot runway. They said they would not comment on the ~,the crash until after com-pletloit':/!f a alx-pronced investigatioo. •4 [lnlla)nary look at the data Jn. dic:a&M. a .:.l,Ol)O.foot runway is safe" for an ,J'8I tO -off, Slid C. 0. Miller. ~'Of·the Bureau al Aviation.Safety. ~ ·about·.Bingham's coocern &bdol ~ faej, Miller sald)bere .""'" ... unusual in that al iiD. you ~...,,.WM)' about It (fuel) In. jet." ·. l6pm IUl'VtVed tbe crash with frac- t....S, 'l'ftl,. cbllclmi and eigbl adults were killed Jn the ice cream parlor and' two others were ki11ed in an auto struck by the Korean War-vintage jet as it ecreeched in flames 150 yards off the end of the runway end across a four-lane Jllibway Into the front of the store. MILLER SAID the seldom-used shorter runway was in use by planes taking off from a just-eompleted air show because of the direction of the wind. Haley ~id the tower told Bingham • • CAUFOJNIA tbere:would be a short delay in switching airport tralfJc to allow a takeoff on the longer strip and that the pilot respooded he dldh't want to expend fuel waltJna for the switchover. Federal A v l a t l on Administration spokesman Ed Slattery said the tower acts in an advisory capacity for pilots but that the deci&lon of which nmway to use "is always left up to the pilot." Haley al!o said Bingham, 31, of Novato, "commented that be es:perieoced vibrations during the takeoff" and that Bingham thought the plane "was Doi IC· celeratlng the way he thought it should be." HE SAID THE pilot spoke of the vibra· tions with investigators 1n an interview in lbe ho,Pitsl and thAI be hod no com· municatlons with the control tower dur· .ing the attempted takeoff. "1 lhink be was trying to Dy It ... trying to, take off, until he literally ran out of runway," Haley said. ls"lewn Pick~ng lt,self ·Up ISLETON (AP) -Now that muddy floodwllers have rteeded1 relktents of this tiny delta town hav• lllrted movln1 back home. Othen Dnd there Is nothing left to come home to. .. Whlle nne move fUmtture, televllton -and kids back Into -that we.. left hlcJ> and dry, '"hers come just to slal'e at muddy piles of rubble that uaed to be home. Tuesday was the first day btetGn'1 1,300 residents were pennitted to retum sinco the rainy nlgbt June 11,wben the levee burst and floodwaters up to 10 feet hiJ:h rushed across the downblll ball of to'Wn. "I can't believe it's gone. It just Ooated away," said one man, staring at an empty lot where bis ll·yeal'<lld moth- er bad lived in a house his Cather built. ACROSS THE street, a duck paddled past a rustY metal bed and an old station wagon was lmbedded in the. sluda;f. Much of Weton looks like , moo-caked ghost town Oil the banks of the san Joa· quin River. w~ the •&ter has reassorted odd objects. A swlvd'chalr Is upside down next to a baseball mitt and a rusty stwing machine. Tiny lakes of water st1D need to be r,umped. In all, 3,000 were eft bon1e1W and more lhlD 45 houses, mobile homes, farms and marinas were destroyed. Tho state has estimated total lots at $24 mill.ion, but there were no deaths or ma· jor injuries. THIS DELTA area is a lacewort of waterways 85 miles east ol Sain Fran- clsco, where Northern California wate~ drains into san l'ranclsco Bay. or the 12,000 acres Oooded, most was farmed in com, barley, alfalfa, pears, aspararus. sunflowers and aafOower. · "I had put every nickel I made into this place," lamented James Mallamace, 66, a retired motel keeper who lost everything. The small, wood frame home he had ju8I r.modeled was a dirty, emp. ty hulk. A row boat was perched on his front lawn, next to his muddy furniture . "I don't know what I'm going to do now. I'm too old to start over. I've just been sick since it happened." he said. ..Let's get out of here, it smells rotten." COMI. TlY ON THE MOsT COMFORTAILE SHllT IN THE WORLD * * * * * *\ Shopping Area Near \ Slip info • Don lop•r knit 1hirt •• w•'ve 9ot •very color •nd styl• •nd site. Ch o o s • from solids, stripes, ·Ion g or short slHvH , , . $13. lo $11. . . . be comfort•bl•. 3467 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-4510 Airport Was Opposed SAC'RAMEN'l'o (AP) -The take off and plunged in Dames f o rm e r m a n a g e r of across a four-lane highway Sacramento's_ E :1: e c u t i v e and Into the shopping center Airport says be urged cllJI Of· building . ficials in 1964 not to allow a The 5,<m-foot runway 'points shopp!J)g ~tei;,.to be built on directly Into Farroll'a l~e •>Ille st!il;oien!';. plftoiis i!lOd ~ cream Parlor tn the ~·•f ' ' Sundaf'. "<' I . ''' ~ . • the Crossroads S h o p p fn k Dooal\I Smllh ,~Tlle!day :teenter. just 150· yards from ·· 1the .State ~De'partment of the end of the ruri'way. · Aeronautics also opposed con-Smith, who managed Es:· struction in the area of the ecuti~ from 1931 until 1987, crash. said be urged the city in 11184 ~.a SJ'.IOkesman for the to reject a variance ·allowfng Adm1rustrat10n say1· bis agen-construction of the original cy warned of the possible part of . the fuhlonable mop, hazards of the Site, across a ping center. busy street from the airport. And In the 1950s, be urged _ aut.t)le FM filed oo.f.ormal . cily official! to buy the tben- ~'!"!"''!"!"''!"!"''!"!"''!"!"''!"!"''!"!"'~~I objection to the project; added vacant land to provide a clear spokesman Gerry B a r b e r , space at the end of the shorter <t Read the Daily Pilot because there were no viola· of the airport'• two runways, tions of iti rules. Smith said. The Korean War-vintage jet "The FF A nquires sudl roared down the short runway clear zones now. 'Ibey didn't at Execu.Uve Airport, failed to al the lime," Smith said. ""· f ~ ... ' ' •. ni. ·~._,, 29111 •Db.ff~ Pilot wlH have a, coupon ~ch,' · ' Slfjlfed, ,~ntitles ~· t9 the tl'Jf 4 _,lanes he whh,a purcha9'"' 8 fjii&i or ftiOiitof rnoi1ne. : Don't miss It Septe~lier 29th. ~lip it! • ~ • I. ,. • J f :' 't:itl'I • . . ~-u n 1•n 1 ~ -· ' . -~ ·,-~ .. ~~1-.... , ~ . 1 ,; .... • • • •1 c--'.::-1 "' •r , ... _ • '· ( ... ~.,. •• ..-.. .. ~ -. .... s~:::·:::i~·~ • ,, 2 •• . I D·~ ' ' ' • ~ 1 .. • ~··~· •. 11~.+t' l ~ • .. •)JI< f' ' .... , con\lng from un~ n S.p,1,.,,i,., lf'h, p.,. -:n·e1~ti119 · Union .. ~.. wiU h•v• beautiful ~•ndin•:.l.-...io'19n, 'al-purpc>M cryst•I stem· W•• for just 39c a· 9'Hi. with a pure he,. of ·• 9•.0..1 or a'°'9 ·~ UaJon 7~ .Jl•soll!M. ci-.. .• juice '*1J & 91lfi1et.~ ~·rt, gl.u, or • 14- ounc• aummer cooler. ... •. ,, • • ' ' • ' • • Trial' Begilu San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto leaves federal building in his city, where· his $12.5 million libel s uit against now- defunct Look magazine began Monday this week. The article linked him to Mafia members. Greyhound Given, Fare Hike Okay SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The California Public Utilities Commission has granted an 11.8 percent increase in passenger fai-es and express, rates to Greyhound Lines Inc., saying the bus company is "in immediate need of ad- ditional revenues." 'I11e Tuesday action by the PUC covers company main line and commuter opera· tions within the state. Minimum fares will increase from 45 to SO cents a ride . Jury Chosen F-0r Trial Of Corona FAIBFIELD (AP) -A jury of to men and two women has been chosen for Juan Corona's mass murder trial, but pros- pects are SllDJ that opening arguments will be heard until nert week. (..__I_N_S_H_OR_T_ •• _. ~) Selection of rour alternate jurors con- tinued today to hear evidence concerning the hacking deaths of 25 itinerants whose bodies were found buried in Sutter C.oun- ty in the spring of 1971. Estintates of the trial's length range all the way up to six months. Rea9ata Chides Bar MONTEREY (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan today gently chided the State Bar's endorsement of legalized mari- juana, "'hich he called "a substance which can lead to tragedy and death." and asked for support for his own com· prehensive drug abuse treatment pro- gram. Reagan spoke at the annual 1neeting of the State Bar only two days after delegates reco:nmended legalizing mari· juana sales under state licensing. If approved by the Bar's boa.rd of governors. the recommendation would become part of the legislative program for which the powerful I a w ye rs ' organization "·ould lobby in the state Capitol next year. Po11 Raise Requestetl LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 7.5 percent across-the-board fa culty pay raise was recommended Tuesday by Chancellor Glenn Dumke or the California State Colleges and Unlversi ly system. Dumke also recommended fringe benefit improvements totaling 5 pertent. Dumke's proposal came at the first day of a two-day meeting of the 19-campus system's board of trustees. DAILY PILDT $ Cranston Backs ' Proposition 29 SACRAMENTO IAPJ -; Democratk: Seo. AJan Cranston haf t• endorsed Prop. 20, calling lhf ' coastline lnitiallve "the but means of mating lurt that our beaches11!' harbors and wildlife along the coas~.,. are presenred {or all our i>eo1>le.." ~:- Cranston. the lcnior senator from · CalUomia, said in a statemenC •l released here Tuesday that Prop._· 20 woold insurt r espo nsible ·· development and environmental protection for the coastline. .. 5 SF Women Sue -1 For Full Status In P1·ess Club SAN FRANCISCO (API -Five \vomen · reporters are charging the all-male Press Club of San Frandsco relegates women "to second class stat us." A suit , filed in Superior C.oun her" Tuesday . seeks a court order prohibiting the press club from continuing to bar women from full membe rship. It contends that v.·on1en in the media and public relations fields are adm itted to a special category o( membership but are prohibited from using the 84-year-old · club's recreational facilities or the sec- ond noor bar except. on certain oc-- casions. As a re sult, the plaintiffs said, thty "cannot meet other ne\\'s persons on a level of equality." TIIE AcnON "'as filed by the American Civil Uberties Union on behall or ~tarilyn Baker. reporter for KQED- TV; Georgia Hesse, travel editor of the san Francisco Examiner ; and Paula Trentacost, All~ Campbell and Roberta.. Ward, staff writers for the catholic Monitor. .jt A •peclal eleetioo will be held Oct. 5 on whether to delete the word "male" from th.e club's qualifications. ' A majority voted at a previous el~tloft !o retain the male only provision. ' The National Press Club in Washington, D.C., and press dabs Jn Atlantic City and Milwaukee have chang· ed their policies within the past year an4 admitted women members. • ' .. . ' • • ' DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Lights, Median Saved Let's hear a cheer for grass-filled street me dians and applause for ornate lamp posts. There is reason tor a small celebra tion this week in old Huntington Beach. The city council, rushing in at the last possible momen t. saved the old Main Street Ughla and the 35· foot n•ide median strip from sure destruction. Both \vere doomed to give way to a new, widened six-lane !ilreet running between the new $11 million civic center and the tluntington Beach Hlgh School campus. The six Janes "'ould have stretched two blocks, re · ducing the city's prettiest street median to a mere 16 feet in width , and at some points as slim as eight feet. The eight-foot sections would feature stamped and col· ored cement. . .\t first glance. ci ty councilmen appear to wear heroic robes for haJling the destruction. Of course, it must be pointed out, the same councilmen a year ago approved the street plans which would have destroyed the same median. It was primarily a matter of lhe'ir not studying the plans sufficiently lo know what they were approving. City staff members must share the blame too, for not being sensitive to the possible controversy created by their proposal. Now, however, councilmen have at least declared their intention to preserve the est.belie value of Main Street. Several more key, well·thought~ut decisions \vill be necessary. The council must decide if it wants fl.Iain Street to carry the primary burden of civic center traffic, or transfer the cars to Lake Street. II Main Street must carry a burden, how far down? Should the rest of Main Street. from the civic cen· ter to Beach Boulevard, be developed in a beautiful manner, as sugguted by civic c:..nter arcblte<I Kurt Meyers? One simple guideline is thb: Main Street wUl pa!S by the clvk: center and u one of the oldest and pret· tiest streets in town, It ougllt to be best kept. Careful consideration for all future acUona is a necessity. There may not be time for anolher lut·minule reversal of a hasty action. Outstanding Jaycees Fountain Valley Jaycees have been &jngled out a.< the outstanding chapter of their organitati<>n along the Orange Coast. In competition with 13 other Jaycee groups from Huntington Beach to San Clemente, the young entre- preneurs from Fountain Valley were judged number oae on the basis of their membership gain and contributions to their local community. The award brings into the limelight some of the outstanding services the Jaycees provide for their city. The group has been a strong financial supporter of the Fountain Valley Boys' Club -helping to bring recreation programs and counseling programs to young boys in the community. The Jaycees also award a $250 scholanbip lio the high school coed who is selected as the Fountain Valley Junior Miss. Their other activities include sponsorship of th• annual Halloween Parade, the Orange Crate Derby, a bicycle safety program and selection of the outstanding 'Fountain Valley educator. The Jaycees are to be congratulated on their award and high standard of service to Fountain Valley. H • 'It's amazing how you've gr<>}VJl s#lce your nomination, George.' It's Quality, Not Quantity That Count,s Benefits Bank and Employer, Not Employe ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ (During Mr. Harris' vacation, we are reprinting some Qf the most re· 1/u.t.!ted columm /Tom l1is fOTthcom- inu· book, "FO't' the ThM Being/' to he published this fall.) · If we are going lo cut down seriously on our population growth -and I thlnk it is an absolute necessity -then we wtll first have to change our simple-minded attitude towa rd !he parents of I a r g e families. Most people who meet me for the first lime ask about my ramily, and v.·hen they find I have five children they emit little munners or ad- miration a n d re- spect, as if I had done something notable. Now I am pleased and proud to have these children, but there was nothing especially meritorious about their con- ceplion . Their existence does not te.stify to my virility, or even to any exceptional fertility, and certain ly l!I no evidence that I am suited ror parenthood. ANYBODY WrrH the nominal equip. n1cnt can have children; it is no great aQlievement. Indeed, in most cases it h@pens during a fit of absend-min· dednes9. No child should ever be called a "mistake ," but some are certainly miscalcul atioM. Parenls with four C!hild~n are not l\vice as good or twice as loving or twice ri~ intelligent as parents with only two chil dren. True. they have more ex- perience, but as Bismarck said of his donkey, "He has been through nilfe cam- Dear -- Gloomy Gus Some Fountain Valley residents are calling the town a little Pey- ton Place. It always has been a bedroom city. - -R.T. TI!lt "II"'' rtf11c" '"Hr'' vllwt, Ml lltCltM•ltJ llloff ti 'Ill --r. klK rffr "' -v• te OIMmr GUI. .,_.IY ruei. paigns wlth me, and knows DO more than he did after the lint. " APART FROM our~ prob- lem, I am convinced that an tmmeue number of people who haw children should not have them, and do not par1icularly want them, etcept aa "synt· bob" of family life. What they want are Ideal children, not real """'' and as llOOll as the real ones thow no intention of con. Conning i-0 the Ideal in the parent's mind. they are tnated u burdens, shipped away to school. or otherwise neglected. Somebody once said that if many peo- ple had not reed -.t romanUc love and seen It on the screen, they would never look for It tbemselvt!.S. I believe this, and along with It I believe that if many peo- ple were not ashamed to be thought defi· cient in "family feeling" they would never have children. NOR HA VE I noticed that the parents of large families exhibit any more pro- ficiency in brlnglng them up, except in terms ot establiahing a barracks-room regimen which is necessary for simple survival. Some studies have .indicated, in fact, that children comlng from large familles suffer from a lack of sharply defined penonality and lack a sense of individual Identity. At any rate, we have to ~in to recognize that It is the quality of parenthood that l!I more essenUal than the quantity. Rousseau, be it remem - bered, wrote a masterly book on educa· lion -and then sent his five children to a foundling home. He was more honest than most. An Old Welfare Lesson California Fe1t... Service The poignant . problem of seeing that every individual has the opportunity to :achieve his just share of the necessi ties of life will not be solved in OUT lifetime. llnhappily. many of the cures proposed for poverty -however wen intentioned -are worse than the disease. There is a ch1ssic example of this that g0t.•s back to the tum of the 19tb century in England. Writing in the Santa Barbara NcY.·s Press recently, Kevin P. Phillips attributed what he sees as "a major shift of White House: opinion" since President Nixon fonnulated his Family Asslstance PWt In 11169 to a new understanding of ' what happened to rural Spoenhamland more than a hundred years ago. IN 1195 A WELi' ARE PLAN wns established there giving poor people sublklics ln aid of wages, with a scale 1 dependent upon the price of bread. The Quotes • A. L. llenry, Orlnda -"The faC!t that the CommuniltJ intend to take over and eontrol South Vietnam cannot be Ignored. Americans (dl>OdaJly the FulbMghts. McClnstey1 mi McGovems) would do wen to rtmtmber Munlcb and the ,.mng out ol c..cboslovakla Jhat dld not br ing pcatt." • idea was to assure the poor a minimum ' inoome regard.leas ol their earnings. Naturally the system spread, until lO year• later ~ collapoed In disaster. Shortly after, the French philosopher de Tocqueville, polntqr to Speenhom· laod, declared that such public 'assis- tance nourl5he1 pauperilm because most men won't work unlesl they must do so to live. 1'.1ore N!C!!ntly Karl Polyanl, referred in hb book 1'1'he Great Transformation" to the experiment, which nearly wrecked the economy of eaMy 19th Century Enaland, 85 leading to '"the pauporizatlon ol the muses, wbo -JOSI their human shape In the proc. ess." SPEENILOILAND evidently w • s brought to t~ attention ol Nlxon ,welfare planners in 1969, but not ta ken too seriously. It:!! Import now seems to have been better understood. One While House aide is quoted as saying "we want to come back with n totally different philosophy (than that of fAP) ... one that the National Welfare Rights Organization won't like." If that new phHosophy eventually lends to a reall.Uc, lNmane and effective way to enhance human welfare and humaft dignily. tho poor poople of loog agn Speenhamland will have , rather painful ly lo be sure, done n good tum lor their Munterparts In a h1ter C!tntury. ·· 'Checkless Society'-Idea Chills H.im To the Editor: I note with horror the latest nim-flam the computer experts are about to force upon state employes, the "check.less society." The benefits accrue to bank and employer, not the employe. ... The most obvious disadvantage is if there is no check there is no check stub. This little piece of paper contains all your deductions, overtime, etc. Com· puters can and do make errors. Without a stub the employe cannot cbe<:k these ite.rm. U he is paid overUme hla: check will vary from pay period to pay period and be will have DO idea bow much baa been crecUted to bis account until be gets his monthly statement. I. for one, do not car. to be financially blind far 30 days at a time. AS FOR COMPUTERS paying my recurring bills. this Idea really sends chills up and down my spine. The main reason I even have a checking account is that it provides me with a validated receipt. Can you imagine trying to tell tbe fellow repossessing your car, or the electric company chap shutting oft your power, "but the banlt paid you automatically," Ha, Ha. I can only urge all employes to mist this latest "improvement" or risk finan- cial chaos. D. V. PICKER Be A"'are anti Be.care To the Editor: The following statistics quoted in a re- cent newsletter from Assemblyman Robert Burke are worth passing along: 1. Democrats have controlled our federal Congress for 38 of the past 40 years. 2. During the past so years at the federal level, Democrat:!! have raised tax· es 15 times and cut them three Um.es. During Uie same SO yelrll, Republicans reduced taxes nine times and raised them only once. 3. DURING mE PAST lQ years, the Democratically-controlled Congress for 38 or those years, with four Democratic Presidents. failed to attempt any change in tax structure. Some people appear not to be aware that our Callfomla Legislature and our federal legislature are NOW conln>Ued by Democrats. The uninformed complain about the wroog -le; they are easily duped by a woU in sheep's clothing mak- ing promises, promises, promises. Let us be aware, and beware, of ob- vious Wllruths. (MISS) RENE SM1111 Sllcmeful, Outrageous To the Editor : The Foreign Aid , United Nations, World Bank, H.E.W. And otbe r "giveaway" schemes have pushed the U.S. public debt to a point 187,000 rnlllloo dollan (yes. 187 billion). b1per IMa Ille comblned debtl of 10 .U.... -ti IM world! Tblt la lllamefal ud --.. Why should we continue to s!ve away money which we do not really possess? Any funds we give now must be borrow«j. and this will Ian inOatlon and increase our taxe.s. Spendthrift Congresmien must be put on notice! C. C. MOSELEY Faoor• Schmit: To the Editor: Mr. Milt Basham is to be con11ratulated for his letter In your edition ol liepl. 20. Our present '"leadet" In Washington may be an astute politician but ho cer- talniy ls not a statesnan. At tbe inoent rnorn<nt. his Demomtlc -t does n°t •-em to be gifted with the attributes ' [ MAILBOX ) Letters f rom reader! are welcome. Normally writer! &hould convey their message! in 300 word& or lt1s. The right to condeme letters to fit q>aee or eliminate libel ii reserwd. All lettcn tnU!t include lignature and ma4tng addres&, but names ma11 be witllll<ld on Tequ<sl if iuffici<Tll reason i.r appaTent. PoetTf/ will not be publilhed. of Benlamln Franklin or F.D.R .• but possibly he may acquire them before November. BOTH CANDIDATES put me In mlnd of a remark made by a cab driver in Mexico City when many years ago be was transporting my late wife and ~ to the "lfippodromo de Los Americu'• (race-tract). For no apparent ......... be said in perfe<t Enallsb: .-•Poltticians are the same all over the Worldi they promise sunshine and comes the rain. they promise rain and comes tb6 IUDSblne." M)' vote will go to Mr. Schmitz. He may not be a second Winston Cburchlll, bot be will do untU one comes along. EDGAR O"GRADY PHELPS Help tor the Elderl11 To the Editor : Wbilo llOICb is being written in this election year about the impact of "Senior POWJr," I would like all older persons in the weo to know tllat the Amaican ~atlon of Retired Persooa believes that the true power of "seniors" lies ln their cootlmed -to the bealth and "ell-l>eing of our nation. A llOl>jlnlfit, JlOOojl8rtisan organization of more than 4 million members, AARP spon9:>rS many community-service ac- tiviUea through which older citir.ens con- tinue to apply their experience and wisdom in service tq others. IT PROVIDES members many income-1 stretching llUYic.. -such .. special ln- aurance programs, mail--Order phannecy -and group Q-avel -am& "lbnllJgh Ill national and stale JocislaUve programs, It seeks to improve Social Security and Medicare programs, bouo- iq! and transportatloo &en1ce:s and to B11 George --- Dear George: My boyfMend named bis pig after me. Is this a deliberate insult? NANCY Dear Nnncy: Oh, for goodness sake . . . of courtt, lt'1 not an insult! What's wrong with a nice name llke Nan- cy? lleOf Gear&•: Mi' bulbond haa the Idea that mentholalld dgaretloo are aclualJy fOOCf for you. Ho -II on the fact that his mother med to rub h1s cheal with menthol aa!Ve wben ho had a cold aa a child. lJ ~ poo- slble validity to thisl WONDERING Dear Wondering: Oh. boy. another customer for the cigarette I've invented! lt not only is mentholated, but the filter Is full of llO.'le drops. (Have 10Vf pawlolUttle- elirnlnai..d b1 Oeorre'• P<SQ War· ry Service. Ile Just pull a little t<nt OVl!T your hood and sprays.) obtain tax reforms to benefit tbe elderly. A major current legislative goal is the removal of the earning.! UnlltaUon under Social Securily, which unfairly ponallzes older persons who need to work to SUJ>" plement meager incomes. MEMBERSHIP DUES are only fl par year, covering both husband and wife. Members receive the handsome bi- monlllly magazine and the monthly AARP Nem Bulletin, both providing in- splratiooal and infonnaUve news and features about older Amutcans. 'lbraugb Its chapter programs, members ll<!rVe their communities in many we.ya, jn.. eluding Defemi"" · Driving eour-. Instltutes ol Liletime 1.-mng and health education ond comumer In- formation programl. I will be plwe4 to direct Interested penoos to the AARP chapten in this aru. Complete lnfomuitlon ls also available from AARP, 1225 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Washingtcn, D. C. 20036. MRS. ISABELLE KIROIOFF President Huntington Beach O>apter 111361 Brookbunt Street, Space SO Huntington Beach. CA 92846 '1'1"w Seem RWletdotu To the Edilor: Work m roads ls necessary, and 6cepl for a few gnunbles I suppose most motorists accept it as a way of life. I am puzzled, however, by reuonlng that is associated with It. For example, Brookhurst, • major north-IOllth artery, is now undergoing ex· tensive work. Signs suggest the use of an al~te route, and they designate &Shard .. the -.to take. BUlbord, too, ii UJl\ler eomtruetion- Wblle tbt work Is llmlted to a mucb smalHr area, thus creatJna lesa ol a bot· tieneck. tt Is restricted In lanes, plus water and mud are like permanent [ix. lures 1n the wtrl:: zone. NOW I READ THAT widening ol Main In the area ol llUotington Beocb lllgh School is conurumclng. Why waa that not done during the IRU!l· mer wben the street is uaed llchlly? Now that approllmately UOO studenla will be adding to ooog-ln the momlnp ...i afternoons, the dllnipt1on ._.. a1mo1t intentional. Perbapa then ~ lacla ol which I am not aware that tm:e oondlllona aucb u the two lncldenti mentlmed, but both seem to be rather~~. HOPPER 'Big BrotlMr' COlmdl To the Editor: Thank you for your ed!Wrial, t•caution is Indicated," (Sept. 18) reiardintl 11ftlng tbe ban 00 -plloo o( alcobol1c beverages In pm. ond .., pobllc beaches. Your "llikTidoal" lacla ...,.. well put, and bopel1illy tllo -ol Supervilors will cClllllder them canfully. A legitimate function ol '11!'-omeot is the reluJatim "' ..U"\!lllo!i ..Ill Jl\lllllc .... le.-the -.,, all, .. ,.. edllorlal def!MsthlaClllO .... ..u_ Ill Olllltrut. It Nil 11\J Amll1ca - of freedom and relJIOClllbllll7 tbt - way wi>en 1111 arm ol ~ - to rqulate actlvttlel m ;rtrito-11· i'M REFERlllNG to tbt H~ Beach City °"""°'' COOllderatlan ol llmltltlonl 00 tbl ....... of ~ to be allowed on private ....,,.i. It ... time. Thll II lley;o.t !M llclilm* *"' tlan ol IOYll'lll?Uil1I. ~ the prnr ol llmltlni tbt nwaber el. ..,_.. ID a home 11 taUn tnto t1'olt blDdl, the - step -to ncuJate Ille -el. _.. allowed In • --It .., -t1rile iw any purpose, such as for parties, or for meetings, can be easily instigated. Do we In America need, or want, even this small taste of a "Big Brother" dic- tatorship? • Let's preserve what freedoms we lm.ve left ! PAULINE E. MOEN J\'euis cmd Opi"iott To the Editor: Editorials are a vital part ol a newspaper. But, so is news. The two ahoold alWBiJ be kept apart. The September la edition o1 the DAIL"Y PILOr conlalned the editorla~ "An H"1<11" '!bat Schools Can Get Along Without." on the front page. This violates one of the foremost rules of journalism. To say tho least, tt II very un- prof...tonal. The Pilot ti present ls the ..most oulstanding newspaper in Orange County. If this trend continues, tt wilt bocome just another rag. CHRIS BRODERICK Mr. Broderick apparently over· looked the fact the front page edi- torial on the schooi bond electiml was indentified iii type above the headline as "An Editorial." Th e DAILY PILOT ag rees that news and editorial.! should be clearly separated, as was done in this inst.once. -Editor /\'eris $8.7 Billiott To the Editor: Last week, on a sleepless night in Helsinki trying to adjust my body-clock to a nJne.bour time change, I spent my othonrlae fnl!Ueaa time designing a com- plete rapid tranalt system for flll'aW11y Soutbenl California. There are far too many details to clivulge in the short space allotted bertln. but suffice it to say that It ii patterned somewhat on BUI Mason'• engineering '"egg" approach astislled ID the DAI· LY -PILOT recen -u.gh 11 an architect I prefer a ea embr7onic, more techtoolc modul•r unit concept. IT WOULD BE Immodest to .. y that I IOl•ed tbe whole fulllre ol mankind"s tramlt probloma In ooe ni&b~ but it was better tbaa counting sheep. If there Is -oat there llstmlng, I have aome -Idea, bat need $1.7 billion .. -lllOOe1 for • start. This .....iat1on might be attributed to • beeutUul day, the Flni>lrotl, 0< a alug ol mealmarja (try t~ you'll like It), but for tbe record, IOllleOOO had better get me out of my Cout lllabway office driveway pt'ttly aooo or l'U: ... HERB BROWNELL (Malled from Bergen, NOTW)Y, Sept. 19) oaAllORCDAST DAILY PllOT llo&m N. W""' ~er ,,,_ru..,...., Ail>fnW.- ldilorlal ,.,. .rdlloP ,,,. - -ol l1IO Dally Pllot _... tit ll'lt«m Mil Jlllliiu· .... -tor -tine this -· ......... and ..... mentary on ~ of lnter9t •nd .t~, b; pt0\'tdin1 a forum tor the eP•• or ·..,~ ~::. :=. ..... ~ .r1'lft ""' " ... , .. CD ~ ., ........ WedlleltlaY, Sept. 21, tm • • I 7 J • r Ora:11ge Coast N.Y. Stocks VOL 65, NO. 271, 6 SECTIONS, 84 PAGES ORANGE cou~. CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1972 N TEN CENTS Youilg Doctors to Seek Family Unit Support By L. PETER KRIEG Of ... o.ity ....., Se.ff Thero will be no mast resignations of the ... 1dent pbyliclans In the Hoas Memorial Hoopltal Family Practice Program before directors of the Newport Beach hospital determine the fate of their training program. · The 13 young doctors met Tuesday and agreed to wait out the wee.t as directors se_arcb for private funds to offset losses Bobby Seale Case Ending? CHICAGO (AP) -The govern- mtnt announced ~ay it will ask the U.S. District Court to dismiss contempt charges against Bobby Seale, the Black Panther leader who waa an original defendant in Ute Chicago Seven conspiracy trial. Seale, 35, wa1 severed [rom the other defendants midway in the trial and Judge Julius J. Hollman sentenced him to four years in prison on 16 separate counts of con- .·tempt. AD appeals court ruled, in onler· ing a new trial, that the oontempt proceeding• must be dropped unlea the gonrnmenl perml~ Seale aod 1111 low)'Ol'I to 1--* transcrlpls ol tlectlUli~ survelf. lance introduced in Hoffman's chamberl during the trial of the program that a1ao provide:s tow- cost medical care to 5,0llO patients !rom Orange Coast dtles. "We will wait until there ls something more conclusive," Dr. Taylor Jeppson, one of the mldeota. oaid this morning. Hospital directors Mooday n I g h t delayed a decision on the future of the program while they go to private f~ dations and otbet IOlQl:eS asking for up to $300,000 to cover the !oases incurred by Two Schools -Pinpointed -Over Size By RUDI NIED~ ...... Dtlltr ..... ,, ... Corona del Mar's Spy Glass Rill area and Ccma Mesa'• Davis Middle School zone appear to be the only attas for ma· jor concern oo student enrollments in tbe immediate fllture, Superintendent John Nicoll told Ne1!l'O'l-¥esa Unified School District ~ '11....ia, nlgbl. ~ llpJ 4'-11111 pnjl!ml lnvotv .. Newpoi:t i!el!cll "'"1dintl who DOW live in other llCbool diltrlcta. , ~1'dlnlJI the: Plll*I• at.Mela's DllVll icllol>L -• !.;.-----------' (lverall, ho-er, a jletalled report Supervisors To Consider Airport Suits Orange County Supervlson were to huddle behind closed doon today to diSCuss ramlflcatlons of lawsultl ftled by llS9 Newport Beach, Coata Mesa and San-ti Ana HelgbU property ownen agllinlt the county over jet operations at the county aJrporl giv• -dqesnl Iftdiot .. Y . iiraliMrilc erlrolllDent -~ the nut tlir,e ICbool yww. District enrollment !or the present 19'n-7311Cbool year &tandl al 25,911 studeqta. By the 1'75-76 school year ii is ezpected to increase to only 26,035 alter siighl gailll In the yean bet ...... In detalllng enrollment problems, Nicoll llkl C<>rona de! Mar's Spy Glass • ($ee ENROLL, Page l) Burned-out Firm Seeks Bui'1ling ' In Westminster '• Qtlef Deputy C<>unty Coumel C!ay!Oll Pt~r said the county supenoison were eiikted to discuss, aJDOb( other things, The lO tmpl<>'n"1 ol Magnetic Metals of tie~ hirinl of an apprailer to gather de--Newport Beach, wtio&e plant was gutted tABed lnlonnaUoo for the county's de-by a $500,000 fin Monday, will have a feMe against ttie lawsuibi:, wb1ch. to-new home by 'lburada)'t company of- getber seek almoat f28 m1llloo In claJn. ficlals said todly. agilii. , "Wt lft looklag at a number of PlalnUHs In the sulta, whlCb wve flied build!JICI pa!I! -along the San Diego ~Uy In December 1.., oontmd Freeway ~ hope to have one by tonight the properly valuesesulhavtej-t O~ . or 1Qinoi1ow,'I said Plant Manager Carl to tbat extent as a r e .... -"'_... ~ 1'ftie most likely one is a the cowity airport. " .. 000 fool bu"di . · Parter said the sull llled on belall ol ;~.re " ng 1 n Barbara Aune of 1&30 Marlnen Drift. In lie ._· that the new plant will the Westcliff sectlOll of Newport Beach · , ball been ltlected Ht attorneys for the ";,•• Ill 8nn s permanent borne. plalntllfs 11 the first suit to go to lrllL •• I I '-· temporary offices for the no lrlll date has been set !or -<......... lltve been oet up 8CT'06S the ()dober The Aune iuil alleges fl!IS OllO lo --the ravaged building In two damaa:ei ' ~ beck rooms of Newport Orgam, 840 Parier. also said his office wUl ult for ~ Place. a oontlnuance In order to allow the COW>-'Ille firm'• 10,000 square fool fadllty at ty to get lU: appraiser's report. M7 Production Place wu almost conr TIJe deputy county counsel said county pleCdy deltroyed by a ftre that started JUPUViaon have before them i. proposal .wben . a paint curing oven filled with to illre the appraisal firm of Wbltuesey • painted tl0c1romognet perta overheated AllOdates of Laguna Hills. Parker said and elipioded. the estimated cost bl the appralsail It Tiro plant tmployes were sllg!Jtly ln- $30,000. jured and a Fire Department batlallon Callfomla's anU·secrecy In government chitl wu hit by a flying aeroaol can dur- law, the Ralph M. Brown Act. allowt Ing the ftre. puhlle offldall to meet Jn. pdvate to 'Ille olher employes eocaped the in-olltc:uss pending UtlgatlGD. femo that bumod tllrough the building In forker noted that damoges lit the 1eo1 tiien a minute. la'IM!litl, lf aoy, mUlt ba detennlnecl lilaquonll aid Dobody will be laid o!I lhroliP rut mate appralNIL 11 • .-ill of the nra. • SOFA'S SOf.D !N FIRST CA.I,.L • •P1buloul ruultl. I could have IOld ....... ,,,. flrtl Clllor 1Joachl It." • .'11lllt'1 the story of ....Wtl from this ad: • !Illa sleeper • pd $250. s.u ... 185. .. • • m-llXIX * ii lppured ..... Ille .. <1111111_,,led.., .... vorum, Mdlon ol lbe DAILY PILOT- 1,i!d. olMouilY, did Ila Joi>. 1'IV' LOI .. Ii ... -lJllDd ..... {o 'flt -....... Jall ~ .. ' -... lo r11lllil, -· ..i .. .a DAILY PILOT ad-fil\lr to -,.... • , , • ''W• ire keep\DI everyone on the payroll ud tUJng ~ol all our pee> pie," be said. 11We Jfope to be ln full ~ at oor -bulldlllC within four or flft weea." , MICll-said onlm are 1till belnl ftlled becluM llmolt Ill of the com- pany'& Dnllhed electn>magnetlc com were saved. "We lc>ot all the curinC material• and poJnta bul we obould get back In lltoc:k real IOOD," he aakl. "-"" aloo said -ol lhe files and -u•Aintel °"""•-were u...i lnml lbe Domes eo ... -can ---u -I from lbe two 0•1;11 olllc9 ol Newpoi~rt Orgw. Bo .... ..,.., Gcvln, a flee of .. por81i <llllDiiOllJ, Metals of ._, N.J., will -the dlmqed facllll1 """ ,miew -,,,...,, . I the nationally-prominent Family Practice Center. The future or the program was bleak all last week following a vote by the hospital's staff doctors to shut It down. The recommendation sparked a public Outcry, however, and sent the board scrambling for ways to salvage the center. Offlclal comment about the fund-rais- ing efforts is being withheld, and even Dr. Jeppson said he didn't know whether to be optimistic or oot. "I never feel one way or the other until J know for sure," be said. He said be is convinced the board is doing everything it can to raii;e the money in a hurry, however. "They told us they will be able to give us a solid answer on the program, prob- ably by Friday," Dr. Jeppson said, ad· ding that the residents feel that Is a reasonable time to wait . They had earlier demanded A decision by the board at their mee1ing l\londay so they could begin to look for other residency programs if th.is one is to be terminated. The residents' inil ial reaction to the delay was bitter but they cooled off shortly. "We renlize they can't find funds just off the cuff," he said, "and people have r ' / ~ DAILY ,ILOT lttff ,,_.. THIS JS SANDY'S DILUXE TRAll1R PA K'NEAlt NEWPORT llACH POST OFFICE City, St1t1 or L--Who 11 to 111""'9 fw. °""'llGlll (J~ht to Llfiht by Trollor .0-lltr? ·Trailer Park Condition Coast Initiative Opponents Raise $435,000 So Far Ciwd at Council Meet Newporl Beacll building officials 1 ... t May told the owner of Sandy'• Deluxe Trailer Park H was a death trap for cbiJ.. dren and a health hazanl to all of ita resl· dents, it was learned today. But tbe owner, the Stlte of California, bas clOOe nothing about it. Newport Beach building Officer Bobby Fowler today released a copy of a build- ing inspector's report tent to the state May 16 that lists II dlffereot violations, amoog tbein the fact that electrical ser- vice panels were accessible and raw sewage was running under trailers. State officials this morning olfered no explanation for their inactton.. "1 don't know why nothing was done," said Paul Gerard, a C8lifomia Division of Highways property II18(ijlgement of. Iida!. "I'm new oo the job. I took over July 6. I'll haVe to check the llleo," he said. The slate booght the properly for ~ way rigbt-of·way more than ' year ago. qulrements, but weren't about to flx them unUI told to do so. , Frlm Wh lltrvtca ~~, Oppcnents of the coastline inltfative, Prop. zo, have raised fUS,000 so1ar with ''We'll do everything we can to cet this much of the money coming~ public straight," he saJd, "but tlie lessee's like uUIJUes and land campam.; Secretary of lll)'body else, he's not going to spend State Edmund Brown Jr,!aid Tuesday. money untll he bas to." The Irvine Company fs one of the main Bilka said 1many of . the· viOl1Uons are contributors agains~" the proposition, at the responllbility ot the Individual trail· 15(),000 / .,_ er owners to repair. AVCO Conunllnltx,/Developers, Inc., It was one of the trailer owners, James headquarter¢ in)a'·Jolla and active in A. Campolo, who raised a furor over developmt;nt 11\"Laguna Niguel, has con· conditions at the trailer park in an ap-tribu=,000. pearance before city councilmen Monday Anoth ,000 contribution was listed night. in t port filed by Citizens Against .the He told about alleged use of drugs by ~Stal Initiative from Deane and Deane people there and charged luJless on the ,·tn c. of Half Moon Bay. part of .about every enforcement ag~T" Brown said the Prop. 20 opponents m the city and Orange County to do.efly-have spent about half of the amount with thing about that or the health p~lems. the greatest single expenditure -$50,000 ~uncllmen ordered a C0!9p!Ete mvesU. -going to Kennedy Outdoor Advertising, gation. , . . a Los Angeles billboard co'l'lpany. ~owler started that ,investigation and Other major contributor,s included the satd he would have his report on City Standard Oil Company of California at (See.)'l(AILERS, Pqe l) $30,000; Bechtel C<>rp. of San Francisco / and Pacific Gas & Electric C<>. at 125,:>00 The trailer park l3 at 2911 W. Cout , ' lllghway. , ' HE WON VOTES- each; Del Monte Propertiea Inc. of Pel>- ble Beach, IZS.000: Bixby Ranch C<>. or Loi Angeles, $30,000 and Southern Pacific Land Co., San Francisco, $20,000. Anllur l!Uka, manager of the park,pli! um mommg neither be nor the leaeee of the land were ever told aboyt~ttie viola- tions. "11tey never got to ·tis," Bilka said, 0 We certainly woultl have done some- thing but we _le*ler knew about them." FLUNKED EXAM MOSCOW, Idaho (UPI) -Patrick Monaghan, who won this year's primary nomination for prosecuting attorney of Lat ab County, bas withdrawn from the ra ce. A 1ecood report listing additional con- tributions and expenditures Ls to-be filed seven days before the Nov. 7 election, Brown said in a news release. Bilka said-they'd au be laken care of u soon,111ie gets the Usl. lit! said be and the IeoSee, Alex Chapple "'of BOron, Callf., were aware that a lot of tblnp didn't meet exilling code .-.. He withdrew Tuesday upon learning lhat he railed to pass the Idaho State Bar examination. Trial Ordered For Councilman I~ Plane Muzzled Noise Cut on Jet Used by Wayne The pilot who flJes a twfn.englne executive Jet plane llled by actor John Wayne of Newport Beach, wu llngled out !or IJlOCtal praise T\leaday by Orange County supervilora at the ouggestlon of Dlrtetor o( Aviation Robert -. "'11111.l'D.DI', Diian earner, who once new the noisiest. let out of Orange Comly ,\lrport baa applied nollO 1Ul!l>ft98lon meaJUm In the pall few months . ,and •ed\l<lod lho roar by tlloro than 59 pen:ent," Brernaban said. Clrtllr lo I pllol Wltb Executive Air Service which aerv .. Wayne and otllln. ,llMlrWWf 8.&JD that U lbe result of C.rrter'I oppllcatloo of nollt aba-~ be DOW 6les "lbe quletolt plane at Ill& alrpoit." I ' ( San Juan Cafilstrano City Councllman Jame• Keith Weathers was ordered Tuesday to face trial Nov. 20 In Orange Coonty Superior Court on aaault charge1 llled alter he allegedly leveled a loaded shotgun at 1heriff'1 officers. Judie William Murray set the trial dct& lor the civic official and ordered him to return to his courtroom Nov. 10 tor o pretrial hearing. Weathers ls free on his pledge to appear. Weathel'I wu arrested July 27 by 1herlfl's deputies who dt.armed the angry councllm>n at a Mllslon Viejo home where his wUe, Ellen, had sought refuge. Wuthef• alle&edl1 had earlier been In· volved In a gun-wiving lnddenl at Dana Marina ln wbicb ht• wile and· a male ac- qualntaneo said they ....,. thn>atened by the COUDdllnan. ) to have time lo consider if they want to con tribute 10 the pro1ram." he said . The Family Practice Center has a budget of nearly tbQ(..000 Ibis fiscal yt•ar nnd "'Lil operate at a loss of 11bou1 $28~.ooo. This is what the medical stnff said concerned them.. However, the hospital directors a year ago had budgeted for a loss of S26il.OOO and doctors point out that ··:.iny teaching program is going to cost money." ere Ruling Sets Moratorium On Bt1ilding Ne\vport Beach City Allomey Denn is O'Neil today ordered a halt to all ne\V construction in the city. O'Neil said the city cannot issue build· ing pennits even on minor construction until he detennines the efrccts or a re- cent state Supreme Court decision won by the Fr~ of ~fanunoth to block coll.'!ltruction of a condominium in Mono County becaU!e no environmental impact statement had been prepared~ The order cornea at a Ume when the city has more conatrucUon -valued at more than $25 mlllloo -pendillg than at rrry ume In tu history. "No building permlta which would have a s11111ncaJi1 elfecl oo the envlrmwent can be tuued," O'Neil safd. "Unfortunately the case is vaeue. 'nJere \vere no deftnlte guldelinel from the court as to what projectl muat have a state- ment and what do not. "Until I can get some clear direction , perhap1 there will be a rehearing to clarlf~ it, the only thing 1 can do now in light of the cue is to stop all construe· lion," O'NeU said . He said he will meet this afternoon with Cily Manager Robert L. Wynn and Commtmily Development Director Ricbard V. Hogan to see If a determination can be made as to what type of cons(ructjon might be considered exempt from the freeze. "I run declaring a moratorium until I can detennlne a way to determine what might be considered trivial therefore not under the court order," O'Neil said. The press for new construction in this city is so great today that city council· men only Monday night had authorized overtime for the men in the community development department who check build- ing plans. Building official Bobhy Fow ler specu- lated that the sudden upswing in con· struction was sparked by two factors: 'l'he city's pending height limitation or- dinance and the pending ballot initiative to give the state control over coastline development. O'Neil sakl he \Vaited unti l no\v lo issue the order beeaU!e he had wanted to con- sult with the county counsel's office. He said the county counse l's advice was to stop lhe construction indicating that Newport Beach may nol be the only communJty in the area to come under a construction moratorium in the irnmecli· ate futitre. Orange Cout Weather According to the National Wealh· er Service, considerable cloudiness is in store for the Orange Coast Thursday, with the sun breaking through In the lfternoon. High temperatUrt should be 1n the low ros. INSmE TODAY South Coa.!t ReptrtorJI launch· ti iu ninth .sea.son of theater on the Orange Coaat thi.t weekend with a revival of the Amerfccn comedy c I a .s .s i c "The Torch· btorer1." Ste E11ttrt.ainm.ent, Page 30. l .M. ...,., " ... ,_ • ... "" " -.. ... C:•llfotnll• • ... ... -• c • ..., c-" ......... _.... ... ' CllJtlftl' ..... .. __ " C"'ICJ " . .,. ...: c,. ....... "' .... OMtll fllttit.t " Dr.,,,......... " 111""161 ..... • ~=--...... -: lltltfD..,.._I ..., ,..,_ ..... --, ... "" ....... ,. -• ..... IUtPI • ---... ..-. ~ --4 , I ( ' • • 2 OAJL Y PILOT 1 United Way Kicked Off Toward $504,000 Goal i ~torr lhun l.000 resldenla 1 n d UuslnessmC!n In tile Harbor Area of i\'cwporl Benrh. Costa ~tesa and lrvine 100ay hf·R<i n looking ror hull a million dullars 111ey y,·ant it w they c1:1 n give 11 <tway 111 help people. They call it the United \\'ay ~lore than 300 persons tilled the Bulboa Hay Club d1n1 ng l'OO'll) thi s 1norning in Ni.!\\'port Beach (Clr the kickoff of the 550~.000 Harbor Area Campaign of the Southern~ Cciw11y Unllod W11· Tiiey hnnl -Nowpart -Mayor Ed Hlrlll. 11111 year'• ~ chatrinan, llY li II tbo l,llllO of lilih voluntetts who are worting on the cam· palgn who "~ill do the work." They heard Walter Gerten, ptt1ldenl of !he Pacific Mutual Life lnwraoce Company, say it will take the people of the Harbor Area "fetlinj empathy" to make it work. Gerken, whose firm ia the newest ma· Newpo1't's Parks Board Frustrated With Council By L. PETER KRIEG Of 11111 o.itr ,llllf Ila" THERE ARE signs of mutiny in Newport Beach's ship of state. Frustrated and disgruntled members of the city's Parks, Beaches and Rec· reation Commission gave !air wamlng of that fact to city councilm~ Monday afternoon . C.Ommissioners said they are sick and ti red of spending a lot of lime study- ing a Jot of different things only to have their reports and reconunendations wind up on • dusty shelf, totally ignored. Commissioner David Ting]er did most of the lalking dur ing a low key showdown around a conference table in city council chambers. OUR RECOMMENDATIONS are not laid GUI on the spur of the moment," he began, "they are atvm a great deal of thought. "We know y?U are busy, that's why you delegate • 110 aulhority. But we feel our recommendaUOna are not taken seriously. They're ignored or tossed aside. - "It makes us feel Jlke we 're wasting our time on community affairs," Ting- ler said. "Especially," he said, when we are hasllly overruled, or our feelinp are put aside. "WE FEEL that when we make a recommendation, we are fairly close to what should be done and it should be followed unless thert ii a clear cut reason not to." he said. He talked about one major issue at hand right now -the comrnilaion's study and recommendation to coovert Marinapark, the ·city-owned traHer park on Balboa Peninsula, to a city park when current lease1 run out in a year. Councilmen lately have been listening to residents of the park who've been pressuring them for longer leases, Tingler noted. ."I'm sure the council has been appr-mt.:IJ7;-mldenll, indivi<!B," 1 Tingler Aald. -. ~ · ·-· • • -... COUNCILMEN two weeks ago took a quick loOk at the Marlnapark and immediately told commlssi011ers to look at the plan the retident.a of the park had come up with . Tingler's point is that PBR coartrl5Sioners Ustened to the residents during a series of the commission's own public hearings. "We feel our recommenda~ abould bear substantial weight ," Tingler said. , He asked councllmen If theY. wanted commissioners to personally appear at councll lneeUnga to ~ke their polnt!-tronger. ' . ' ; COUNCILMEN lruii1ted that'won't be necessary. They asked commissioners to start spelling out the tel50IS f<r their actions more clearly in their written reports, though. "Give them to us, one, two, three, four." said Cowlcllman Milan Dostal. Tingler said they would do jult that, and try to keep the ship afloat. Population Discussion Get,s Official,s N ~ere C.OUncilmen ind p I an n i n g com-used to keep ing late hours but l don 't missioners 1ot together Tuesday night to think the council la and I know I'm not. tal k about ways to cope "·ith a predicted "! think the staff has some idea of boom in Newport Beach population but wllat you want so we will give this back got nowhere. lo them and add to it for your con- After more th an two hours of aimless sideration al another meeting," he ad- discussion on densities and acreage ded. figures, City Pt1anager Robe11 Wynn Discussion had centered on a fin all y interruptf'd the proceedings. He preliminary report by the city planning JUSI stood up and said: staff on projected housin g densities and ··1 realize the planning com mission is population In various areas of the city !hough t990. o•ANGI COAST DAILY PILOT ' The report broke the city down into 14 areas and listed different ways the city could lessen both Population and densit y projections. "I \\·ant to stress that these densit y figures \\·e are dealing with are the basis for the entire general plan," said Com- n1unity Development Director RJchanl llogan. "All the figures have a bearing on anything the city will do ln the future." • l« t.i~-In Iba ana, allo calllll lor a """""im.ot lr<m bu~-and JidUltr1 • to ~It CO""!!"!iilY· 1•inli ~ iii a lilpntlF II roanllftte!I In Ill community nllllnnl." Gerken sa!d. He talked about his own finn's com· mltment and t'!Onscient.'f:, uplaining tlllt it believes in involvement as a means of making a community strong and viable. "Pacific Mutual will carry Its lhare or Uw: burden, aod that is juat a nnt step to Irvine School Roof Collapse Probe Slated Both the causes and the effects of the collapse Tuesday of roof trusses being in· stalled at the construction site of El Camino Real School in Irvine remained a mystery today as state inspectors in· vestigated damage to see if a lhree- montP delay in the school's opening ii necessary. Tiree workmen were injured Tuesday before noon when a 7 ,000 square foot- area of roof trusses fell at the site at Walnut Avenue and Karen Ann Lane . A dozen other workmen escaped serious injury when they ran from the building as about 20 prefabricated be.ams dropped like dominoes. The mere than •1 ,million facility was llCheduled to open In April: Dave KJns, lacillUes planner for the San Joequln Sc:bool Diltrid, said today Iba! stale lnspeclon from the ICllool arcilltecfure and coo.tructlon olficea must determine U the ·beams are salvageable. U they can -be aalvaged or repaired, Kirig ~id, the accident will mean only a delay of a week or two. Balboa Island's Smelly Mystery Due to Vandals? N~~ !"'lice loday are tr)'ing to !Ind OOflt v@idals ~ Ille -terfolll,.-Pf lllal ~ ....... •ioc! 1\11"1 ' ... llozen, --~-llltle Balboa bland early Tueaday mo~. "We uked the police to lnv ate this because vandalism is our eadin speculation al tin. point," said ~ Services Director, Jake ~<J.erse, '"l'he Oran1e Countr' Bialdl Depart- ment >ta• balll!!d ~Y ii too, but Uley are plannlnt to' t.ll~e 90me paint JICrlpping• for chemical anajysls, .. he added. Residents in • two-block area of the little island were awakened at 1 a.m. Tuesday by the smell which one resident sa.id was like an open sewer. After about an hour , residents report- ed, the smell went away. But when the sun came up, many people !OWld that paint on their exterior walls had been discolored or b1istered off. Mynderse said his crews could find no sign of sewer trouble so the health department was called in. "They have also notified the gas rom- parzy to inspect its lines and have asked the Air foOution Control District to in· vestigate as well," he said. A numb<r of people, inclD<lins consult· ing K<Dlogist George Zebal an<! city Building Officer Bobby Fowler, have speculated that a bubble of swamp ga1 was released from the ground nearby and waited over the area. "Whatever was the cause, it appears that it was hydrogen sulfide gas," Myn· derse said. "You can make that w1th a home chemistry set and that is the rea- son we have asked the police to study it." Hydrogen sulfide, when released into the air, smells like rotten eggs. When the gas iondemes onto a hard surface it forms potent sulfuric acid. Mynderse sa\d the paint was not dam· aged on all the houses, however, which leads him to believe it may have been vandal i.!m. ''It seemed to have hit some houses and skipped others-some of them right next door to each other," he said. Mynderse said he hopes th3 health ~ partment analysis and police investiga- tion will yield more .answers. But untU then. the source of tittle Balboa Island's mystery gas is still in the realm of spec- ulation. "nit Or1r.voe C°'"'I OAILY PllOT, wlltt wNc:" I• C,,..,tllntd 1r.e Ne"" P•O!t•, ll publl.,.._. bl' ll>e O•uige (OAH P11olhlll119 C~"Y· s..,.. •~I • ~•l.ons are ""'o•i•"<!d. Mortel.IV lllnwo;ill Fru:ll't'. lor Cotti M-. ~twPOrl &Mtll, Hunli1>910n 8e-c111Fovn1,1.n Ylll•'t', LI~ Bt•(ll, h•l,.,..1S10dlr!Ht k ~nil 11n Cllrnen!e/ S•n J11•" Ca11+.ir1no A 1lngl1 riig•Ol'Wll ~lh1ion k puGli•llfld $~!11<0•y• 1nrt SUIKll'l'lo. f11e P"nC•Pfll wbll•~l"9 1111nt b •• JJO wt\! 1111' Slftt!, C.oi.I• Mt>•, C~lotorni•, f)l,1'. Rob.rl N. W11d Pr"ld""' 1no P11olkllet J1c• R. C11rl1v Vici l"rt:J.,..,I i nd &enet1I ~ Th0Jr11\ K11vil EG110f Thom•• A, M11rphi111 MIN9iltll 1Et1110t 11-day British Expo '72 o ·pe11s at S. Coast Plaza L. P1t1r Kri19 N..-pwt ..._,, Cl1y Edlt.r H...,.,t a.-~ Offlce Jll) N1w,ort lo11l1¥1rd M1ili119 Addr•11: P.O. l o!{ lt1S, tl66J ..__ Co••• M.w: ,,. w .. 1 B•Y S1r1rt l,1011111 11..Cll: 1:11 FOl'-.,1 A¥'""" Hunl!Mton 8a1dl: 1"7$ 1 .. c11 l'I0\11.:oiarll $1n Cltmentt: • Norltl 11!1 C•mlro It.al , .. .,.... (7141 '4J-4JJ1 Cte.m.4 Ahertte ... MZ.1671 °"~'· !tit, Ortntt Cont ......... -... ,,., No -ffWM'I, ~ltll .... .;tkwll mertw .,-.,......,.....,. ,.. ~ M ,....,~ .. WlllliUt ........ ~ °' <otwrlifll .... . ""-I 0-. .... ..... ., °"""· ..... c.llf9nlle. 'lllllS ""'le;; W' c.;w IUS lflDll•1,1 "',JMlt u .11 ....._,_..... • ..., *''""""" a.u "*'"""'· . British film star Sallv Ann Howt11 of· ficlally opened tho 11.day Brlfllh Expo '72 th is morning at Cotta Mesa's South Coast Plaza. ~1is.s Howes, curTently stanin& In 11The Sound of ~1usic" at lhe I..o1 Angeles Music Center. was su1TOUnded by a "mini • Britain" of flap. rostumea and decorations. Overhead a L o c k h e e d ai rcra ft with Rolls Royce engines new In salute. She was Introduced by Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Fraoklln, her Brllannic ma· Jei:ty's consul·general. and uslsted ln the openilli ceremonlea by J1ck Hammell, mayor nl . OOllta Mesa. and Rmald c_.,pero, cholrinan of tho 0ronae·COW>17 Boenl oC Supervlaoro. , • Allie Howerd, London's oUiclal town Mer who new over tor the celebration with a boll of Brltlsb poroonallliea, started the proc<edings with the fradl· Uonal call for order and peace. Scottish pipers from British Clledonlan A1rway11 led the offi cial party and ac- companied the m on a grand tour of the exhlblll at the pla1.a . One of these is the historic "two Ellzabeth s Exhibit'' which t'Ol'llalns valuable artifacts. brought 10 Cotta Mesa under heavy guard, from the. Brill.sh M.,.um at Plymouth, Enllland. 'llte itell\S •re reportedly insurotl for ....... than fr dllllllm'. ~ 11\c!Ude luhlon preoenla\lon( Jiy J .. pi., ~ i OOllOOln•d~ of it.Ila Ro),ii>a bl ¥tley~. Drllllb crilllmeo 1i..work, and -Scolllah 100 Wellll d17. OUT aimm.iuntnl lo the NMnmllnlty," be 111d. GerU• alao WUd about !ht unHict Way u a me1111 of ralltog money. '1Groupe: and ecrpotatlona are. reluctant to give to groups that splinter a com. munlty," be said. : The 1,000 people w)lo have volunteered for this year's campaign will be under the gu ida nce of some of the most im· portant ~pie in tbelr conununlties. Working under the leadership of Hirth will ba Gen. 'lbom&l Rllq, (Ul!MC Rel.), -swnJ me•pr el 8-. lae., u Newport ~·qi 1wi1111r'ditt-• Streeter King, Pacllic 'l'elepbih! Com- pany execuUve, 11 Colla Meu com- muntty chalnnan. Mrs. John Burton, ..U. of Ille ltvine councilman. is dlalrm.an ln .,. com- munity. Mrs. Fred Howser and Mrs. William Carling are chairmen of the Newport Beach mldenllal ~paign. James F.elton, vloe Jltt!!jlent of Avco • • - F'°UWICllJSenioeo,li __ _ :=.-lllei-. -·of 'D·1 __ lo,.., ·· bland, Ii a retall-wllt'le~je division cbalrmall. ' " ,. • Don KoU. pret~.i<ll tile Don !toll ConotructlOn Coml!iny, ll chalrm8"' of• the de..,iopoQ!, di~ lju&h 11\>:n&"i' ' man&Rr al .Rlche!d;a.J.fdO )llariiOI, Ii , Service Division cfialrman aftd Dr . .tohn Nicoll, 1upertntendenl of the. Newport· Mesa Unilled School Olslrlct, Is govero- ment aQd Education Division chairman. • • . Nabbed In Lynwood .f'ronePqeJ TRAILERS ... Manager Robert L. Wynn 's deak lllil afternoon. .. Police-killer Suspect ~eld on $500,000 Bail He uncovered the eerller list of viol• tioruJ Tueaday morning and sent chief -, · Inspector J!ob Whlte!Gnf back out lo aeo . if tbey'd been corrected. . : • "They haven't,'' he aa1cl. Number 11 on tbe lilt says "several · Herman Le~ Clouston, accused killer of licers Roma&h and Pattel'IOl'I would not electrical aervice penela are not ra!D-.. a Buena Park police officer and subject be eligible for the reward slnce "they tight." or a si x-day manhunt, is being held in were just doing what we get paid t.o do.'' ''And eome of them are in the area : ... Anaheim City Jail today in lieu of Sgt, Jewell said Clouston told him that where children play," Fowler added. "If . he iiad neither eaten nor slept lhrou,tbout they were to touch one, they'd be elec-· . $500.000 bail. his six-day Olght. • trocuted." . , Lt. Norm Cook of the Anaheim police Clouston reportedly said o f f I c e r A Number 5 calls for a whole new seWer • homicide detail said the elusive Clbouston, "almOlt stepped on me" during the system. . captured in Lynwood Tuesday nig t, was search of downtown Lynwood. "Mobile home Jot drains to sewer on ... scheduled for arraignment on a formal Meanwhlle, a memorial fund bas been many trailers are in very eertous corull· , " murder charge at Orange County created for Cate's widow and children. tion due to belna: inadequate to carrf , · Municipal Court this afternoon. The first donor was Citiie:IUI Crime Com· discharge. A new sewer syste.m needs ta ~· Cook refused any further comment on mission of Orange with a $1 ,CKXI check. be installed because present system 1s. - the 33-year~ld ex-convict accused of l!:lin· designed for trailers without toilets." ', ning down Detective Darrel D. "Bud'' Mobile homes with toilets have nm Cate last Thursday while the officer was FroM Pate 1 three-inch drain Jines to the drum traps trying to interview Clouston on a sexual at the rear of the Jot . This drum trap 11 ; perversion assault. ENROLL drained by a two-inch line with the ~It Clouston surrendered to Lynwood • • • "-'•• h I ed and · patrolmen Mike Patterson and Tom ~'6 t at some are P ugg nwune over." .. Roma~h without resistance late Tuesday. Hill is of major concern. Bnka ~1..:_ morning raid the defecUve "Don't shoot," the officers said H • ·~ Clouston told them. "I am Herman Lee omes currently under construcUoo in drum traps were replecect. Clouston that the Anaheim Police are the Spy Glass Hill, Harbor View Hills aod Fowler aald there ii raw .sewage nm-. I kin f I' lad ·t• I Bren tract areas currenti ... lie .m._ .. 1 .. the ning and ltandJng under eome trailers. · , oo g or . . . m g 1 s over . • . &J "W-UU Som of ••-ctual u •·· haven 't been able to sleep for day!." San Joaquin Elementary and the Tustin ~ un:: a v .. ,..areaa were · . The officers said the dirty ~d Union High School District boundaries. built without pennits, Fowler allO said. .· unshaven Clouston, wearing a dark blue "Several cabanaa are not constructed T·shirt and olive pants, was hiding in a Unless thc!e developments are an-to code and there ls no bulldinjl penfiit. trash bin behind a tavern near a home ·nexed by the Newport-Mesa district, they record. Some cabanas were orglnallv •. ~· that had been burglarized. will fall witbJn the boundaries of the new a\vnings that were Illegally enclosed/' .. •· He was holding a loaded and cocked .22 I . u ·1· -• Sc:h I o· t ·ct I says Number 3 on the report. . rvme n1 lcu. oo 1s r1 nex year. Some of ••-gu --~ions ·-ill-I .. caliber automatic pistol which he Dr N. II ,_. ed ••-t be .1: ... -.:. ~ o..·vuua;~ -~ .. 11 .. reportedly aimed but "just couldn't fire," · ico eipialn UW1 t .W,uict is and unacceptable, Fowler said. according to the office.rs. not necessarily "after" annexation of the "They could leak and gas could pocket Police Sgt. Kenneth Jewell told 262-acre area, but said that trustees may under one of tbo&e trailen and cause an '· ne'!1'Slllen that Clouston said he would wish to conslder this to male school explosion," he said. have shot U out with police but changed d. · bound The list goes on. his mind because he could not "ketp nm-1str1ct aries congruent with city But why was it allDWed to go Cl1! n~g and hiding." boundaries. Bilka said if the city really tried to ·· ctoua.too managed to eJude pc>llce of-(n that event, the district would gain stop it .or .make him lil 'everytblRg tfiey· Ileen from Los · Anielea and onmce !5& new sludenll, acconfinc to llf"' could ba.,. done ao very easily. CounUea throughout Ibo maaliunt;<lllat. ieo~. ~ """ Nor!il "...O..""' "The state -.. 'a licmle _.,. saw CIOUJloo take four bOStages and both u!t.., ol Ille~;. JrVtn7iiriiil!i y.,.,,• ~ .Jawf •iiicf.-.! h"• to"" u :: releaae lllem unharmed as he hid from hoo . . d -·--• annual l>uline9l llceme from tbo city. · officers. Sc l District, sal JUCKIAY night that ''So wboevet l illut!I tbeee llc::emlll to-. ·Lynwood police disc!~ that .Clouston •ber .W<f! oot Yet, prtpared to,!1"¥•°"' operat~w .flW'.loepecl, why dlcfn'I t11ey : • was arrested about 45 ro.tnutell after of-declSJOI\.~ aDow the aunexatton. do An~iol 10 years ago," BUka ui:ed . .:." ficers c1.,..i in"!'~ ~ti>pi·~! area In u~~g pollll~lbal , I/lit lrljno He,.l:J!'I ~ llW1 lie bad "°""~I ·· ::t~~ "a:si:i:1~':'10n~ man million s~in ';t'~v~t: · ~~r~Mf'ii ll'~· 1111, ,pimthl II• 111'1 . • OfllcerS had beei1 ·pi11 on alert by a and that his board in19' bO '11$uetanl I'! "Ont '<ounblll\\an (Carl Kymla o1 o\>.·. resident in the area who identified a give up more of Its tax bue." trict 3) 8dinttted he's driven through•. photograph of Clouston as the man seen The dlfficµlty in the D~vis Middle there before. If he didn't Uke what be".: leaving a burglarized home . Apparently School area ts cauaed. by the district's saw why didn't be do uyUUng" Bilka•· nothJng was taken from the house. Policy of convertlng lhele facilitJes to said: ' ... ~ About $7,000 in reward money had been sixth through eighth grade campu1e1. It was alio learned today that the cijy's .. posted for Information leading to AdcUtional sixth graders are beinJ sent Community~ Deyelopm~t Department : Clouston's arrest. Most of it had been to Davis by 111 feeder schools. The had asked city councilmen for an·addltion-•. • donated by police officers, a Los Angeles transfer has been made With the ex· al buikllng lbspector speclftcaUy for trail-. • TV station and a Long Beach newspaper. ceptlon or children from the College Park er parks ill' the current bucWet. ~· A L'YJlwood police spokesman said of· Elementary School in Costa Mesa . The request was denied. • ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;~-~ ~~~;;"· GEM TALK ] TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRIES ELECTRONIC WATCHES BASICALLY SIMPLE 1'Electronic" implies to many people a mysterious system which might introduce expensive repair problems. Actually, electric and electronic watches are simple, reliable and easy to service and repair. All such w&tches have a small battery which looks almost exactly like a hearing aid ce(J, but is built to put out less current but over a longer period of time. These batter- ies also differ in that the watch will not be seriously harmed should leakage occur. AJJ these watches have some kind of mechanical oscillator governed by a balance wheel, tuning fork or other pulsating or vibrating device which carries ell!ler a coil or a per- manent magnet. \Vhen current pass- •• throu gh coil or magnet II pro- v ides power to move the other sim- ple devices In the system. You can buy electric or electronic "'atches with confidence. Tbey an very troubl&-free, with adjustments and repairs easily accomplished by · ,..,r local Independent jeweler. • • 'J+ae ·.-'==· QtN,j. ci.oca: There wos 1 limo -all fine ctoCJ<s..,. built Ill• this •.•• with 1 ho/Id for lho ml-.•• • hond for the hours ••• Md • hllnd far Ille c11J1 of Ille IMl!lhl . Tho pl • -In. Olde Colony .,,, ... " ... ~ ~ tir the bllclc .......... hour •nd ..., ... ,,.,.. an . .,. intlquo wllllt cML Thi ~}ij~ 111111 pondulurn ljtd red' ca"""8r lllind ~ llie ltlthentlCllJ of VIia fine Barwlcll ... Kf!M by tho Kowolil MllW' Cloclt Com'*". . H. 24" W. 16\12" O. 41,12" $110 .- J.C. .J./"'!!p~rie~ Jew"4~ 1123 NEWPOR~ .IL Y,O., COS'T A MESA {'- •• . . .·. ··. .. .. '../ • .. .•. .- . •. . . •• '· • . • ;: ., " ., .: .. ~ • ... • • "' ·' I ·: I -.~ ... " CONVIHtlNT n~· IAHL<Ml•U:A~o...MAITll c~··· . ti YlAH iN,1'11~ &A~l lQCATIQll ; l'HONI .... 140! ~: . ...,., ___ ... I • Sacramento Crash • ·Pilot Refused Lo:nger R'tlnway t SACIWIENTQ (AP) -The pUoi o1 the jel which cruhed on takeoff Int<> a crowded Ice cream parlor and killed 22 penona reject~ ale ol another runway which pointed In!<> open fields, In- vestigators aay. Pilot Richard Bjngllam picked the short runway at SaC(alDtdto'a Executive Airport -one J>Oin!lni directly at Far- "11'1 Ice cream Portor -In order to aave fuel, said William Haley, a member of the National Transportation Safety Boan!. Haley aafd a recording of the COO· v .... tloo Sunday belweon Bingham and the airport control tower alw:lrtJy, before Bingham's unsucceafUJ takeoff.revealed that the control tower offered Bingham a choice of. a 6,000-foot r;unway pointing toward a golf coune and open fields . ' Bur HALEY AND other fe<!erel' ol· llclals at a news ~noe 'J.\iesday did not criticiJ:e the pllot's concern about fuel and bla cbolce ol'the -1borter 5,000-foot runway. They said they would not comment on the Cl.Ulel ·ot the crash until after com- pleJb! el a llix-pronced Investigation. . "A·, wellminary look at the data Jn. dica\el a ll,OOll!oot l'1lllWllY Is sale" for ID ,._to like o/f, .said C. 0. Miller, 4ir'<tor A>I the Bureau ol Aviation Safety. , Qoeoti!llod abc\111 Bingham's .CO!lcern aboul -.lllg liiel,• Miller said ll>ere .. _ notbinl unusual In that at· all: You alwaya worry about.It (fuel) In a jel. • i Bincham -..i the crash with fnic- bna..-Twelvt chtldren and eight adulis were kUled in the ice cream parlor and two others were killed in an auto struck by the Korean War-vintage jet as it screeched in flames 150 yards off the end -of the runway --and-across · a -four-lane highway int<> the front of the store. MILLER SAID the seldom.used shorter runway was in use by planes taking off from a just-completed air show because ef the direction of the wind. ' . . Haley said the tower told Bingham CALIFORNIA there 'WOUid be a short delay jn switching airport traffic to allow a takeoff on the longer strip ,and that the pilot responded be didn't want to expend fuel waiting for the switchover. Federal Av I at Ion Admlnis1Tat1on spokesman Ed Slattery said the tower acts iii> an advisory capacity for pilots but that the decision of which runway I<> use "is always left up to the pilot." Haley · alsO said Bingham, 36, or Nova!<>, "commenied that he experienced vibration! during the takeoff" and that Bingham thought the plane "was not ac· celeratlng the way be thought It should be." HE SAID THE pilot spc)te of the vibra- tion,, wtlh investigator! in an interview in the hospital and that he had no com- munications with the conlroJ tower dur· ing the attempted takeoff. "I think he was trying to fly it ... trying to take orf. until he literally ran out (If runway," Haley said. Iswton Picking l~elf Up ISLETON (AP) -Now that muddy Ooodwaten have receded. realdenla of this tiny delta l<>wn bavt started moving back home. Olhen find there Is nothing left I<> "°""' home to. While tome move furniture, televbloo sets and kids back Into boules that were left high and dry, olhen come Just to stare at muddy piles of rubble that used I<> be home. Tuesday was the first day Isleton'• 1,300 residents were pennitted to return since the rainy night June 21 when the levee burst and Ooodwattrs up to 10 feet high rushed across the downhill half of l<>wn. "I can't believe it's gone. It just floated away," said one man, staring at an empty lot where his &l·)'W'<lld moth- er had lived iD a house his father buJlt. A~ THE street, a duck paddled past a nllty metal bed and an old statlOO wagon was imbedded in the sludge. Much of lslel<>n looks lite a mud'caked ghost l<>wn on the banks of the Sao Joa- quin River, where the water has reassorted odd objects. A swivel chair is upside down next to a baseball mitt and a rusty sewing machine. Tiny lakes or water stlll need I<> be pWnped. In all, 3,000 were left homeless and more than f5 bousea, mobile homes, farms and marinas were destroyed. 1be state bu estimated total Joss at $!4 million, but there were no dealh.! or ma- jor injuries. TIDS DD.TA area is a lacework of waterway• 85 miles east ol San Fran- cisco, 11-·bere Northern California water drains int<> San Frandaco Bay. Of the 12,000 acres flooded, most Wll! farmed in oom, barley, altalfa1 pean, "5PUBIUS. sunflowers and safflower. "I had put every nickel I made into this place," lamented James Mallamace, 66, a retired motel keeP,ef who lost everytbiitg. The small, wood frame Mme he had juSt remodeled was a dirty, emp- ty bulk. A row boat was perched on his front lawn, next lo hfs muddy furniture. "! don't ~w what I'm go"!lf I<> do now. I'm too old lo start over. Ive just been sick alnce it happened " he said. "Let's get out of here, ft smeJiS rotten." COME TRY ON THE MOST COMFOITAILE SHIRT IN THE WORLD * * * * * * Shopping Area Near Slip into e Don Loper knit shirt .. we've got every color end style end size. Choo s t from solids, stripts, I o n g or sbort sleeves ... $13. to $11; • . . be comforteble. 3467 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-4510 Read the Daily Pilot Airport Was Opposed SACllAMENTO (AP) -The take off and plunged In flames f o rm e r m a n a g e r o f across a four.Jane bi.gbway Sacramenta'a _ E :r. e c u t i v e arx:I. into the shopping center Airport says he urged city of-building . ficials in 1964 not to allow a The 5,000-foot runway points •il!>PPiK.,~nter 19.. be built on cJir:ectly Into Farrell's Ic.e ' •lj ll'Jt.!Jiere~ ~ d1'cf: ~111.Parl91' In ttie ~·. · ' · Sdixlay. · -Ille Crossroads Sb o pp t n ~ Donald Smith .... ~ c.nter, just 150 fords frvm the State Department of .the end of the riinwiy. Aeronautics also ()ppoaed con-Smith, who managed Ex- struction in the area of the ecuttve from 1931 unW 1967, crash. said he urged the city In lt64 And a spokesman for the to reject a variance allowing Administration says bis agen-construction of the original cy warned of,. !be possible port ol the fasblonable hazards of the iii<, across a ping center. busy street from the airport. And In the llllOs, be urged Bµt the FAA'med no. formal ctty officials to buy the then- objection I<> the project. added vacant land to provide a cie.r stiokesman Gerry B a r b e r , space Jt the end ol the shorter because tbert were no viola-of the airport'• two runways, lions of its rules . Smith said. The Korean War-vintage jet ''The FF A requires sucll roared down the short runway clear zones now. 'Ibey didn't at Executive Airport, faUed I<> al the Ume," Smith said. l. at e· • IS < • ' Jlt • The $9pteiiiber. 29111 .~ily Pilot win h.av• .~ coupon which, wll-' slfiMc(. .;.t!tles ;av t~ the ~ 4 9laues ffff with· Cl purchaS. Df 8 9011ons'0r ~...-Of,CJCllOllne. Don't miss it Sept•IJlber ~9th. Clip It! · ·• I .t. ' ;~ .' , .. -. · ;. 1beSp'9i Oi1'J _/' . ~ . fl : ' I •~.I!• : "! • \~ --. F" • 1 "' ... I ... t ... • • -~ 1·. j~-c -. • ' .- T j, t' J w:> ~ "' lt'S:l°ot\lfiig from U..lorr ~~ptember 29tl.. p.,. JiciftilMJ UniQn ,76. deele11 will h•v• be•utlful Scendin•viil esign; 111-purpos_e cryst•I 11-m- .,.,. for just. l9c e gleu, with "• purche1t of 8 "'Jdons. or more of Unlo.rt. 70 gaoollne • .Ct-sa • jul · ~ 1•liJ, .:oli~lllf·gl.u, or • 14- ounct su-r cooler. > .... t j .. ' . • ••• U~IT..._.. Trial Begiots San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto leaV<!s federal building in his city, where his $12'.5 million libel suit against now· defunct Look magazine began Monday this week. The article linked him to Mafia members. Greyhound Given, Fare Hike Okay SAN FRANCISCO IAPI -The California Public Utilities Commission has granted an I t.8 percent increase in passenger fares and express rates to Greyhound Lines Inc., saying the bus company is "in immediate need of ad· ditional revenues." The Tuesday action by the PUC covers company main line and commuter opera· tions within the state. Minimum fares will increase from 45 to 50 cents a ride. w .......... -27 , 1972 DAIL V PILOT 5 Jury Chosen For Trial Of Corona FAIRFIELD (AP) -A jury ol 10 men and two "'ixnen has been chosen for Juan Corona's mass murder trial, but pros- pects are slim that oPeJl.ing arguments will be heard until next week. ( IN SHORT ... ) Selection or four alternate jurors con- tinued today lo hear evidence concerning the hacking deaths of 25 itinerants v•hose bodies were found buried in Sutler C.oun- ly in the spring or 1971. Estlmates or the trial 's length range all the way up to six months. Reagan Chides Bar MONT EREY (APl -C'.ov. Ronald Reagan today genlly chided the State Bar's endorsement of legalized mari· Juana . which he called "a substance which ca n lead to tragedy and death." and asked for support for his own com- prehensi ve drug abuse treatment pro- gram. Reagan spoke at !he annual meeting of the State Bar on ly two days after del egates recommended legalizing mari· juana sales under state licensing. If approved by !he Bar's board or governors. the recommend ation v.·ould become part of the legislative program for which the pov•errul I a v.· ye rs ' organization v.·oold lobby in the state Capitol next yea r. Pa11 Rabe Requeatecl LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 7.5 peroent acros~the-board faculty pay raise v.•as recommended Tuesday by Chancellor Glenn Dumke or the California State Colleges and University system. Dumke also recommended fringe benefit improvements totaling 5 percent. Dumke's proposal came at the first day of a two-day meeting of the 1g.campus system's board of trustee s. CraJ1,Bwn Backl Proposition 20 S ACl\All•B NTO (API -, Oemocr16c Seo. Alan Cranston hae -Prop. 20, •alllni the coastline initiative ''the best means or making 1ure that our beeches. harbors and wildlife along the coast are preserved ror all our people." Cran11ton, lhe acnk>r senator from California, said tn a statement released here Tuesday that Prop. • 20 would insure re s pon si ble • development and environmental protection for tht coastline. 5 SF Women Sue -; For Full Status 111 Press Ouh SAN FRANCISCO (AP\ -Five women reporters are charging the all-male Press Club or San Francisco relegates women "to second class status." A suit , fi led in Superior Court here Tuesday. seeks a court order prohibiting th~ press club rrom continuing lo bar women rrom run membership. It contends that vromcn in the media ' and pu blic relations fields are admitted to a specin l category or membership but nre prohibited from using the 84-year--0ld· club's recreatlooal facilities or the sec- ond floor bar except on certain oc- casions. As a result, lhe plaint iffs said. thty "cannot meet other news persons on a \e\'el of equality." TIIE AC110N v.•as filed by thft Am erican Civil Liberties Union on behalf of ~1arilyn Baker, reporter !or KQED- TV; Georgia Hesse. travel editor of the San Francisco Examiner; and Paula Trentacost. Aileen Campbell and Roberta. Ward, staff writers for the CathoUc Monitor. A speelal electioo wUI be held Oct. 5 on whether to delete the word "male" from the club's qualifications. A majority Voted at a previous electioir to retain !he male only provision. ' The NatJonal Press C1ub J n \Vashington, D.C., and press clubs In. Atlantic City and Milwaukee have chang· ed their policies within the past year And admitted women members . v, e DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Communication Needed Newport Beach has a lot of people wondering. The lrvine Co1npany, the city of Irvine and even 56.000 Newport Beach residents probably are wonder· ing what Newport Beach councilmen really think about an nexing th e undeveloped coastal sector south of Corona del ?ttar. Counci lmen officially have put the issue -lo annelt Qf not to annex -on the back burner for a year or so pending completion of their new general plan. Irvine city officials will have to look at that actio11 \vil h so me skepticism. They remember what happen~d the last time 1\'e\\'· port Beach put an annexation on the back burner. Some· body turned up the heat an d Newport annexed the Col· ins Radio property al.most overnight. That valuable tax base land acquisition by Ne,vport Beach perhaps more than any other incident hurried the incorporation movement in Irvine. Privately, Newport Beach councilmen do have doubts. Tbey are feeling pressure not to let the city gro\v any more at all. But there is pressure in Irvine to grow. Irvine residents and officials show tew signs of fear· ing growth. Many, in fact, see long-range advantages in controlling large areas of land to protect the concept of a ci ty committed to urbanization while preserving the open space. The Irvine general plan calls ror a lot of open space in that downcoast sector. And Irvine would relish deal ing from a position of strength with Newport Beach. · It may be doing just that righ t now out around Orange Co unty Airport. "\Vith their commercial zonings of the Collin s It's Quality, Not Quantity That Counts ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ (During /.fr. llarris' vacation, we are reprinting some of the most re· quested colum'tls from his forthcom· 1ng book, "For ti~ Timt Being.'' to be published tltis fall.) If we are going to cut down seriously on our population growth -and J think it is an absolute necessity -then we will first have to change our simple-minded altitude toward the parents or J a r g e fcirt1ilies. !11ost people who meet me for the first lime ask about n1y ramily , and when I hey find J have flvo children they emit little murmers of ad- mir3tion a n d re- spect, as if I had done someth ing notable. Now I am pleased and proud to have these children. but there was nothing especially meritorious about their con· ce ption. Their existence does not testify to my virility, or even to any exceptional fertility, and certainly ls no evidence that I am suited for parenthood . ANYBODY wrm the nominal equip- ment can have children; it is no great achi evement. Indeed, in most cases it happens during a flt or absend-min- dedness. No child should ever be called a "mistake ," but some are certalnly misca1culallons. Parents with four children are not twice as good or twice u loving or twice as intelligent as parents with only tv•o children. True, they have more ex· pcrience. but as Bismarck said of his donkey, ''He has been through nine cam· Dear Gloomy Gus Isn 't It nice that Newport Beach 's Harbor View Homes has its own represent.ative on the Saddleback College board? -S.A.C. Tiii• fe1llw• mi.c.11 r1Mltl"1 \oi.wt,. ... , -flMrHy "'9M .t 1h• -5'11Hr. S- JMr "' --· II OIMn'lp 0111. Cllllf l"iltt. paigns with me, and knows no more than Ii< did alter the first." APART FROM our population prob- lem, J• am convinced tha.t an bnmense number of people wbo have children should not have them, and do not particularly want them, e1cept u "sym- bols" of family life. What they want are ideal children, not real ones; and as soon as the rea1 ones show no intenUon of con- forming to th< Ideal in the parent's mind, they are treated as burdens, shipped away to school, or otherwise neglected. Somebody once said that if many peo- ple had not read about romantlc love and seen it on the screen, they would never look for it themselves. I believe lhiJ, and along with it I believe that if many peo- ple were not ashamed to be thought de.fl. cient In "family feeling" they would never have children. NOR HAVE I noticed that the parents of large families exhibit any more pro- ficiency in bringing them up, except in terms of establisbi,ng a barracks-room regimen which is necessary for simple survival. Some studies have indicated, in fact, that children coming from large families suffer from a lack of sharply defined personality and lack a sense of indivldual identity~ At any rate, we have to begin to recognize that it Is the quality of parenthood that is more essential than the quantity. RouSM:au, be it rem em· bered, wrote a masterly book on educa- tion -and then sent his five children to a foundling home. He was more honest than most. An OM Welfare Lesson California Feature Servtce The poignant problem of aeelng that every individual has the opportunity to achieve his just share of the necessities of li re will not be solved in our lifetime. Unhappily, many of the cures proposed for poverty -however well intentioned -are worse than the disease. There is a classic example o( this that gots back to the tum of the 19th century In England. Writing in the Santa Barbara Nev.•s Press recently, Kevin P. Phillips attributed what he sees as "a major shift of White Hou se opinion" since President Nixon fonnulated his Family Assistance Plan in 1961 to a new undentandlng of what happened to rural Spttnbamland more tbaD a hundred years ago. IN l"lt5 A WELFARE PLA N was established there . giving poor peopli: subsidies 1n aid o( wages, with a scn lc dependent upon ihe pric.e of bread . The Quotes A. L. Henry, Orinda -"The fact Lhllt the Communists intend to take over and conllol South Vietnam cannot be Ignored. Americans (especially the ~'ulbrlghts, McCloskeys and M<Governs ) would do well to remember Munich and the selling OUI Of CUcbosJovakJ.; tb>t did DOI brllli peace." Idea was to u.nire the poor a minimum income regardless of. their earnings. Naturally Ille sysi.tn apread, until 40 years later It collapsed in disaster. Shortly alter, the French phllosoph<r de Tocqueville, pointing to Speenham- Jand. declared that such public assi,s.. lance nourishes pauperbm because most men "'·on 't work waleu they must do so to live. More recenUy Karl Polyanl, referred in his book "The Great Transfonnation '' lo the experiment, wh ich nearly wrecked the economy ot early 19th Century England, u leading to "the paupertzallon of the tn1sses, who almost loot their hwnan shape to the proc:. (!65." SPEENHAMLAND evidently w a s brought to the attenUon or Nixon weUare planners In 1969, but not tAken too seriously. Its import now seems to have been better understood. One White House aide Is quoted as saying "we want to come back with a totally dlfferenl philosophy (lhan that of fo'AP \ ... one that the National Welfare Right& Organization won't Ukt." If thal new philosophy eventually leads to a reallaUc, humanj aod el!ectlve way to l!llhanee bumao welfare and hUn\an dignity, the poor people of long ago Speenlwnland will II>,., nitber polnfully to be sure, done a goOd turn for their counterparta: .ln._a later century. R4dlo and Emkay propertier, it ·if evident the city of Newport Bea<h b not particularly interested In our problems," commented Irvine Councilman John Burton. What be meant ill why should Irvine show concern for Newport Beach'• problems, lllte the noi>e that growth of Orange County Airport would cause? Both Burton and Councill!Wl Henry Quigley pointed out that the zoninf moves by Newport Beach may ln the long run be good or the people of Irvine, however. They obser'l'ed that the present airport is ideal for serving Irvine residents. It is convenient. and flil!hts do not plague Irvine homes with noi>e and air polluhon. Whatever happens with the latest Camp Pendleton Jetport proposal, Irvine would utilize facilities available at the co unty airport. With technological improvements in regulating jet noise or development of vertical takeoff planes for short range flights, the present airport might well continue to serve Orange County. Further, Irvine councilmen might well consider the impact of mass transportation links which lean heavily on the changing nature of the airport area land uses. A high ~ tie to shopping centers in neighboring communities and/or Pendleton jetport might well en- hance the areas' economic contribution to Irvine -and send shivers up and down the spines of Newport Beach people. In the cold, hard light of real life cohabitation of the area, however, both Irvine and Newport Beach would do well to begin to open some honest lines of communi- cation between themselves, and with neighboring Costa f\1esa . Common understandings are rare, and seldom achieved without strong desire and eCfort. But they make life a lot more pleasant for all concerned. N 1t's a.mazing bow you've grown since your nomination, George.' • • Benefits Bank and Employer, Not Employe .. Checkless Society' Idea Chills .-Him To the Editor: I note v.·ith horror the latest Oim-Oam the computer experts are about to fo~e upon state employes. the "checkless society." The benefits accrue to bank and employer, not the employe. The most obvious disadvantage is if there is no check there is no check stub. This little piece of paper contains all your deductions, overtime. etc. Com- puters can and do make errors. Without a stub the employe cannot check these Items. Jf he ls paid overtime his check will vary from pay period to pay period and be will have no Idea how much bas been credited to his account until he gets his monthly statement. l , for one, do not catt to be financially blind for 30 days at a time. AS FOR COMPIJTERS paying my recurring bills, this Jdea rea.Uy sends chills up and down my spine. The main rel900 I even have a checfdng account is that It provides me with a validated receipt. Can you imagine trying to tell lhe fellow repossessing your car, or the electric company chap shutting off your power, "but the bank paid you automaUcally." Ha, Ha. I can only urge all employes to resist this latest "improvement" or risk Cinan· cial chaos. D. V. PICKER Be Aware and Beware To the Editor: The following statistics quoted in a re- cent newsletter from Assemblyman Robert Burke are worth passing a1ong : 1. Democrats have controlled our federal Q)ngress for 38 of the past 40 ye ars. 2. During the past 50 years at the federal level, Democrats have raised tax- es 15 Umes and cut them three times. During the same 50 years, Republicam reduced taxes nine times and raised them only once. 3. DURING TIIE PAST 40 years, the Democratlcally-contro!Jed Congress for 38 of those years, with four Democratic Presidents, !ailed to attempt any change in tax structure. Some people appear not to be aware that our Calilornia Legialatur. and our federal leglslature ""' NOW CIXllrolled by Democrats. The lDlint'onned complain about tbe wronf people ; they are easily duped by a wol to sheep's clothing mak· Ing promises, promises, promises. Let us be aware, and beware, of ob- vious untruths. (MISS) RENE SMml Shameful, Outrageous To the F.dltor : The Foreign Aid, United Nations. World Bank, H.E.W. and other "giveaway" schemes have pushed the U.S. public debt to a point 187,000 million dollars (yea, 187 billion), higher llwl Ille combhled clebll ol oil oilier natlou ol Ille world! nts II oba0>efal net --·· Why lhouJd \VI CIXIUnue to gt"' 1"*1 money which we do not really pc&1e11? Any funds we give now must be borrowed, and this will fan ln.flation and increase ou r tax es. Spendthrift Congre55men must be put on notice! C. C. MOSEi.EV Favor• Sehmltz To the Editor: Mr. Milt Ba•h>m Is to Ii< congratulated for his letter In yoor edition of Sept. 20. Our present 'jleader'' In Wuhfntton may be an astute politician but he cer- talnly Is not a stattoman. At the pmMI moment, hls Democratic opponent does: not seem to be gUted with the attributes ( MAILBOX ) Letters from Teaders are welcome. Normall11 writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or elimtnate libel i.s reserwd. All letters mwt include signature and mailing addres!, but names mau be withheld on request if BUfjident reason U apparent. Poetry toiU n.ot be publi&hed. of Benjamin Franklin or F.D.R.. but possibly be may acquire them before November. BOTH CANDIDATES put me In mind of 1 remark made by a cab driver in Mexico City when many years ago he was transporting my late wife and myself to th< "Hippodromo de Los Americas" (race-track). For no apparmt reason, be said in perfect English : "Politician& are the same all ewer the world; they promise sunshine and comes the rain. They promise rain and comes the sunshine." My vore will go to Mr. Schmitz. He may not be a second Winston Orurdlill, but be will do unW one comes along. EDGAR O'GRADY PHELPS Help for the Elderly To the Editor : While JW<h Is being written in this election year about the impact ol "Senior Power," I would 11.te all older' penons in the area to know that the American AsaoclaUon of Retired Persons believes that the true JlOW'EI' of UaenkJrs" lies in their continued -to the heallll and wtll-being of our nation. A noo-profit, non-partisan organization of more than 4 million members, AARP sponsors many community-service ac- tivities through which older citizens con- tinue to apply their experience and wisdom in ...-vi<e to others. IT PROVIDF.S members many income- atretdllng servlca -sud! as special In- "'""""' programs, mall-«der pbarmocy services and group travel programs. 11rouah Its nallo'"'1 and •tale legislative program1, It ...U to Improve Social Security and Medicare programs, boo!· Ing and transportation ...-vices and to obtain tu reforms to benefit the elderly. A maj« current legislative goal Is the removal of the earnings limitatk>n under Social Security, which unfairly penalizes By George ---, Dear George: My boyfriend named his pig alter me. Is Ibis a deliberate Insult? NANCY Dear Nancy: Oh, for goodness sakt • • • or coune, Jt11 not an insult! What'• wron1 with a nJce DAmfl lite Nlll'r cy? Dear George: My husbond has the Idea that mentholated dga.rettes are actually good for you. lie boses It on the !act that his mother ulled to rub his chest with menthol salve wh<n he bad a cold as a child. Is there poo. sible validity to lllls! WONDERING Dear Wondering: Ob, boy, another ..-.r for the cigarette I've lnventedl It not only Is mentholated, but the filter Is lull or nose drops. older persons who need to work to sup- plem~ meager incomes. 1t1EMBERSHIP DUES are only $2 per year, covering both husband and wife. Members receive the handsome bi- monthly magazine and the monthly AARP News Bulletin, both providing In- spirational and infonnative news and features about older Americans. Through its chapter programs, members serve their communities in many ways, in- cluding Defensive Driving Courses, Instllutts ol Lifetime 1-ning and health education and consumer In- formation programs. I will be pleased to direct biteml'ed persons to the AARP cbapten to thla atta. Complete Information Is Ibo available lrom ~. · U25 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Wohtngton, D. C. 2ll038. MRS. ISABELLE KIRCHOFF President Huntlllgtoo Beach Chapter 19351 Brookbum street, Spece 50 Huntington Beach, CA 92646 AComprombe To the Editor: Jleial'dlni Mr. Jack Oirley's l>llol Logbool< (Sept. 18) reporting on the Brown Be"its' occupalioo ol ·Catalina and claim to the Channel Islands I may be wroog, but the!e Islands were probably Spanish land grants to early "Oalilomlanos" -amootl them my wile's for<l>eara, the Avllal, Rimpaus and Sepulved8'. U so, under the Treaty ol Guadelupe.llldalgo ol Man:h 10, ™8. these lands should be returned to the orlginaJ grantees, or their heirs. Al a compromiSe,,I am sure that these heirs would donate San Clemente Island to the Bmm Berets If Iba United State< would donate to them a 10 centa per mi..UO or shell (fired) royolty on aid Defense Deportment tarret. R. C. HADDEN Llfe-S•tilllfJ Serriee To the Editor: I would lll<e to publldy _. my ap- preciation and p,..i.e for the llne response by the Newport Beach Fire and Police Departments to a cardiac emergency in our home. We attribute the •vlnC of. Mr. Frei'• life to the speed and ellldeney ol their rescue oquad. Our sJnoere lhanb to oil conoemed for such rme llft-u.Ybtr ltt'V1ce. M!IS. FRANlt X. FREI Voetll MIROritv To the Editor: I hove been disturbed for '°""' Ume by what Is taking place ln our local govern- ment. to wit : several pel"llml who have taken It upon u.e-Jveo to acl as spokesmen for 0<r local dllll!nr1· ,_ 8011-<lppotnted ·~ --''"""' minority and not jbO ~ ~ Moroover, I 1111 certain thole In- dividuals led Ibey att ...n· tnteDIJicwl, bu~ In my aplnloa, .... .,,.. m1lplded. The locol a..,.. Ollll e ]' M IO P«J for erron ol Jlidlmial ol'IW few !me alter they ha .. "'°"" on:,,, lbe7 -t to acl responslbij, 1beJ ihoald motivate the enUnt cltilelJJ11 to I u ••ti o a democrallcally lnstMd ol a c ll n 1 autocratlcaUy. IN TRIS 1lllGAllD, I am lardler disturbed by Iha npro1notlooo ol one or two ofltcUI or...-iier. ol • loco! -.. ...clalloa ,itii 5 before ~~llacllol llld that tbo1 have the __ ol tllolt membenldp. II ....id M tM dl1 coundl to ~.. ol --~... Wbal -llld by whit •utborilJ die ....,..lhlp lbe7 are entitled to speak for the association. I am certain that you will find in many instances that no action was taken by the membership. Instead, a decisi.90 was Al'- rtved at by a self-elected group of of· ficers. WE DO NOT NEED a patriachy or a matriarchy to advise our city council. The council has ways and means of detenninlog the wishes ol 1114 cilizells. Lastly, J have been still more disturbed by the autocratic viewpoint oC these residents wbo may or may not own prop- erty, but who dictate what, how and where large investors can build. I hav. the oonfideoee that If this amaD gmip atops brhiifng pressures on the COllleil and stops illctating to all the dtlz<m that their views are best for the city, that oar local governmental bodies can and will decide what is best m the lorll run for our city. IF NEWPORT BEACH Is to move ahead and not be eventually suffocottd by mushrooming neigbbortlood dU.. "e should hold to a prograin of studied and progressive development and give these lnveston whatever assistance we can. Growth pressures in Newport Beach are Inevitable. Belter a planned growth. or the pressures will ultimately grind us in- to the sand. I siroogly urge that our fine city COW> ell emancipate it.self from the influence of these individuals who have a saviour complex. TIIOMAS H. BI.ANDI Needs 88.7 Biiiiott To the Editor: Last week, on a aJeeplesa night in Helsinki Uylng to adjust my body-clock to a nlne-hour time change, 1 spent my otherwise fruitless time designing a com- plete npid transit system for far-away Southern Calilomla. There are far too many details to divulge in the short space allotted herein, but suffice it to say that it is patterned somewhat on Bill Mason's engineering "ep" approach as published to lbe D.\I· LY PILOT recenUy -t!J\l\llb es 'in ordlite<t I pftfer o'lea ernbOOoic, more tecbtonlc modular unit c:oocept. IT WOUU> BE Immodest to say that I solved the whole future of mankind's ltanlll problems to ooe nigh~ but it was bettor thal1 counting sheep. If there Is anyone out there listening, I have some oerlous Idea, but need 16. 7 billion as seed money for a start. Thi! revelation might be attributed to a beauUful day, the Finn-trots, or a slug ol meslmarjo (try It, you'll like it), bot for the record; IOTneone had better get m~ out ol my Coast Hld>way olllce driveway pretty soon or 1•1[ .•• HERB BROWNELL (MaUed from Bergen, Norway, Sept. 19) DAILY PILOT --~ - I i 'I J I ! ! ·I I I I 7 I ' l I ' I \ ~range Coast EDITION Today's l'bud N.Y. Stoeks VOL 651 NO. 27 1, 7 SECTIONS, 88 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1972 c TEN CENTS Police-killer Suspect Held on $500,000 Bail Herman Lee Clouston, accused killer of a Buena Part police officer and subject of a sis-<lay manhuo~ is being held In Anaheim City Jail today In lieu of $500,000 ball. · Lt. Norm Cook of the Anaheim police homicide detail said the tluaive Clouston, c;aptured In Lynwood Tuesday nigWt. was scheduled for arraignment on a fOrmal murder charge at Orange County Municipal C.Ourt t.bis afternoon. pook refused any fyrlher comment oo the 31--year-old ex--eon•lct accused of gr;n- n!ng down Detective Darrel D. "Bud" Cate WI Thunday while tbe oflicer was trying lo Interview Clou5tGa oo a sexual pervenloo usault Clollalon lurrendered lo Lynwood patrolmen Mike Patterson and Tom Romash without ...istance late Tuesday. "Doo1 ~" tbe officers said Clouston told them. "I ·am Herman !...ee Cloustoo that tbe Anabelm Police are lookin! for .•. I'm glad it's over ..... I haveo I been able lo sleep for days." The officers said the dirty :md • Ill l' egas Murder Suspect Police Awaiting Extradite Order An extradition order from Nevada is bei.ng await.ed by Costa Mesa police of· ficers today for Douglas W. Webb, who surrendered Monday afternoon on a Las Vegas murder charge. co.ta Mesa Det. Capt. Ed Glasgow said today that Webb, who may also be implicated in a lm Anceles area double ~. wUI pi:obo!il1 be tramlerred lo SupervisofS to Consider Airport 8qits Orange County Supervisors were to huddle behind closed cloon today to di.scuss ramificaUon.s of lawsuits filed by ~9 Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and San- ta -Ana Helgbls property owners against the county over jet operations at the coanty aiiport .Clllef Deputy County Counsel Clayton Parlter said the county supervloors were expected lo discuss, amoog other lblngs, tlie; hiring of an appraiser to gather de- tajled information for the ooanty's de- leti8e against the lawsuits, which, to- g&iher seek almost $28 mlllloo in dam· aif!s. _flaintiffs in the suits, which were filed orlglnally In December !Iii, contend their property values have been damaged to that extenl as a resull Je.t l!lgbta from the county airport. Parker said the suit filed on behaU of a.rt>ara Aune of 1630 Mariners Drive in the WestcliH section of Newport Beach has been selected by attorneys for the plalDtiffs a1 the first suit lo go to trial. Tbe trial date lw been set f., mid- October. The AlUle suil alleges $195,000 Jn damages. Parker al.lo said his office will ut for a Continuance in order to allow the couo- t/ lo get ift appraiser's report. The deputy county coansel sald-C!JWllY superviscirs bav~ before them a~l'CllpOUI to hlre the appralaal firm of WbltllMey Aaoclatea of Laguna Hilla. Parker aaid the estimated cost of tbe appralaals II $30,000. ' CaWomla's antHecrecy in government lalO, the '!;!\'!' M. Brown Act, allowl pubUc ofO lo meet in prlvata to dlocuss ponding litigation. 'Parker noted tliat damakes ID the lawsulls," If any, must be detenn!ned through real eatate appralaall. \ SOFA.'S SOLD IN FIRST CA.LL ,\ • • Clark County authorities on Wednesday. Webb is reportedly wanted in con- nection with the murder of fonner Las Vegas motel manager Abraham Schwarz last May 15. "We're not much involved in this case," said capt. Glasgow who added that W.ebl> is also being questioned for the allegod atabbinemd flllllabol mun!er of a Lbs Angeles couple. 1 '!I can't make any statements on this " die bat the ft&Jlle of &be people wu Rosen,11 Glaagc9'J disclOMd. ~ lloclly ~ent who llllm!ndered tbioulfl an In~ wa1 being ID· teMileWed todat by Sg\. Chick Gultlerez of the to. Aoaeies Police Department homicide detail. Guitterez could not be contacted toda1 for information about the alleged Los Angeles murder. Capt. Glaagow aaid Webb turned himself in at the Costa Mesa police sta- tion after tal.ldng lo a local friend w00 assured him that "Costa Mesa will treat you OK." . Webb, who was reportedly tired of ruir Ding from police, wu afraid Iha\ be inight be mist?<ated ooce talteo IDto Cllllody, according lo Capt. Glasgow. Bordello Given $5QO in Urban RenewaJ Money HELENA, Mont. (UPI) -"Big Dorothy" bM a '600 city urban renewal grant to remvatll her establishment, but crltlcl A1 her house is no home and '1Dorothy'1 .Rooms" should get the wnctlng ball. . Red-faced city fathers in Montana's captlol city, atung by accusations that ·they are helping lo pay for the reoova- tioQ "the local house of ill repute, aren't ..,._ mll<h at all. B!rildinp have been falling to the wrteking ball around "Big Dorothy's" -and the well-beaten path up the alley behind her rooma was blocked by debrll. · But at a recenl city commlsalon meellng oflldals approved an urban -1 plan thal allowed l5CIO to Dorothy J o a e p b I n e Baker for refurl>lsllirlg her placo of bus!neu. Mayor Steve Kltm oald0 "I ..U out of town during lbat meeti.'JI• but I llll- clerltand·llhe wanl/J to uae II to etlabllah aome .,rt of ret&U )aaiaes." Al Ayhman, urban renewal project director, ~: ''Wbeaever a property ........... ·-. bulldini .. try to be of --. Dorodly bu the cub and tho a-.mw to do tt.• The .-y 11 lo pay for "tbe total laoade, ...... llllon and I rear ail from tbe ..-floor," oaid Lorry Gallagher, --al-. Carrier Heads Home . BONOWLU (AP) -The aln:nft car- rier USS 11ancoct II tn route to Ill borne palt In A'-h Iller -nib dltJloy- -"1111 tbe 'Ith Fleet, Pacific Fle<t .Heodqaarleri aa1d 'llleldoy. unshaven Cloustoo, wearing a dark blue T ..rurt and olive pant., was hiding ID a trash bin behind a tavern near a borne that had been burglariud. He WU holding a loaded and oocked .22 caliber automatic pistol which he reportedly aimed but "Just ....Wdn't fire," according lo the officers. Police Sgt. Keoneth Jewell lold nev;smen that CloUJton said be would have shot it out with police but changed hJ.s mind because be could not "keep run· • n!ng and blding ... Clou.sloll managed to elude police of- ficers from Lm: Angeles and Orange Couottes throughout the manhunt that saw CIOW1too 1iil"-four hostages end release them unharmed as be hid from officers. Lynwood police disclosed that Clouston was arrested about 4.5 minutes after of· ficers closed in on a commercial area in hunt of a suspected burglar. The man matched Clouston'• ~tion. Of[lcers had been put on alert by a resident ln the area who identified a photograph of Clouston as the man ~n leaving a burglarized home. Apparently nothing was taken from the house. About $7 ,000 in reward money had bt>rn posted for information leading to Clouston's arrest. ?.1ost of it had been donated by police officers, a Los Angeles TV station and a Long Beach newspaper. A Lynwood police spokesman said of· ficers Romash and Patterson would not oscow I Hotel Towers Hiring This is an artist's conception of the new $1.5 mil· lion, 50().room hotel to be operated by the Hyatt Corporation at the F o u r Seasons Village, Costa Mesa. The 10.story facility, designe4 by William L. Per<oira Associates, ls scheduled for construction next year near South Coast Pla!I. Air Resources Board Del.ays '73 Dev ice Deadline SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -"n1e _state Air Resources Board voted . today to delay at least one year a requirement that most pre-1971 cars in California be equipped with .new anti.smog dev1ces. 'lbe board acted alter state officials and manufacturers said they could mt meet the February, 1973 deadline. The board unanimously approved the delay after State Registrar ol Vehicles John McLaughlin testified that it would be "almost impossible" to meet the deadline set by the board when it adopled the requirement Aug. 23 . "n1e equipment, which Ls lo be installed on some four million 1968 to 1971 model veblct.s at a cost oet by the atate at not more than $35 each, Ls d .. lgned lo reduce osidea of nllrotlen in ezhauat by 40 to iiO percent. The board ordfl'ed that the equipment be Installed before the vehlclea could be reglmred for 1971, although tu engiDeer· ing staff warned that many can might suffer overheating problems because of the equipment. McJ.augblln lold lbe board thal the stata Departmtnl of Motor Vehicles Ls well lnlo preparationa to register veblclea nexl year, and chang .. lo notify owners of the new requirement couJd cause prol>lema. 0 We Re eome real aerloas dlLfk:ulUel fn compllanoe en a onH1me buis. '' be said. "We • don~ just malle a utt1e mistake. Wheu we make 1 Ullle mlatake, 11 lnvolvea 12 mlliloo 'fthlclel." The board a1ao -lalllmony from .. ~ ... of the llnDI certll1od lo manullClure Ibo antlsmog devlca. David Mm!tt of tbe l!:chlln Corp. Ind Mic Mc<:uJJougb of Ibo Dana Corp. both said !llty could nol·Jl'Odl>!>e tbe devices In·-numbers by F!bruary. Marcb aald b1a llr'm could: ready by Febnwy, 1'11 .. McCu-- mended • ...--In w111cb 1tatewide lnslallaUon would be required by April, 1971. \ I 11 .. day British Expo '72 Opens at S. Coast Plaza British film star Sally Arm Howes of. ficlally opened the 11-day British Expo '72 this mOrning at Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza. Miss Howes, currently starring in "The Sound of Music" at the Los Angeles Music Center, was surrounded by a ''mini • Britain" of flags, costumes and decorations. Overhead a L o c k h e e d aircraft with Rolls Royce engines new in salute. Sile was introduced by Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Franklin, her Britannic ma· Jesty's consuJ.general, and IS!Lsted In the opening ceremonies by Jack Hammett, Jaeger of l.oodon, a conoours d'elegance o( Rolls Royce and Bentley automobiles, British craftsmen at work, and Scottish and Welsh day. County Woman Kills Children, Self Witli Gun mayor of Costa Meu, and Ronald A young Fullerton mother killed her Caapera, cbalnnan of tbe Oruge County 1wo chlldren and lbeo fatally wounded Board of Supervisors. Alfie Howard, London's offlclal town herself early today. police reported. crier who Dew over for the ctlebratlon Offlcen Wd they were calted to a wilh a bost of British penonaliUes, home at 3130 Puenlt St., about 1:30 a.m. started the proceedings with the tradi-by a oelghbor who reported hearing gun- Uonal call for order and peace. fire. SCOtllab pipers from British Caledonlan They found the two children, Dana Airway• ·Jed the official party and ac-Miller, 5, 6lld Damn. 2, dead oo a bed companied them on a grand tour of the abot through the bead and the mother'• exhlbita at the plaza. bod I the o She d One of these is the historic "two "I ytng on oor. wu i en- Ellzabetha Exhibit" which conta!na / tlfied aa Kiity Miller, 31. valuable artifacts, brought to Costa Mesa 'I1>e grief 11.ricken husband and father, under heavy guard, from the Brltlah Walter Miller, 30, had left for hit job aa • Museum at Plymouth, England. 'nle computer salesmttn in Downey He told Items •re reportedly Insured for more · than It million . police he .....id not think of any !'eMO!I Othen Include fashion presentatlo111 by why h11 wife would do such a thing. Swcks Spurt By 10 1h Points NEW YORK (AP) -Prices IJ>Urted upward oo the atock market today, P"" pelled by favorable economlc ...., and both 1-s and rumort'1lboul pn!lldenl· lal aide llenry A. K11$1nger'• latest peace talb In Paris. Alter beJog ID the doldrumJ 11nce L&- bor Day, the marltet IWled IDOUlb .. ralle the Dow JOOM awrqe of ii ln- dultrlal llocb to.ell polnll lo MT.2$. t Police oald the family had lived In FulJerlon II the Puente Street addresa 1lnce January. Sailor Put in Jail IAlS ANGELES (AP) -An 19-year-<>ld aallor aC<Uaed of threatenlns a United Air Linea atewardeal with a lr:nlle In a hi- jack attempt waa booked for ln- vestigallon of assault with 1 deadly weapon Municipal Coor! o r d e r e d ~hlatrlc lelll Tuea<lay for Thoma• Cllarles Emeraon, atatlooed aboard the USS Edaon al Long Beach. ' ' • • • be eligible for the rev.·ard since "they "·e re jusl doing whal we get paid to do." Sgt. Jewell said Clouston told him that he had neither eaten nor slept throughoul his six-<lay night. Clouston reportedly said o r r i c e r s •·aJmosl stepped on me" during the search of downtown Lynwood. l\.1eanwhile. a memoriel fund has been rreated for Cate's widow and children. The first donor was Citizens Crime Con1· mission of Orange with a $1.000 check. U.S. Peace Grol!p _Halts Delegation l\.iOSCO\Y (AP) Three liberated American airmen reached Moscow on lheir way home today from North Viet- nam, and found themselves in the center of a struggle bet,veen A mer I can Embassy officials and U.S. peace ad· vocates who escorted the pilots. Lt. Mark Gartley and Lt. Norris Charles of the Navy and Maj. Edward Elias or the Air Force arrived on a Dight from Pekin&. They are expected to ar- rive In New YCO"k Thuraday nllhl· U.S. Chart• D'Alfalres Adolph Dubl at- tempted to approach tbe pllols ID tbe CUSIOma .... ot tbe alrpOrt but WU atop. ped by the eacorl!ng delepllmt of .... tlw1r acUvl.all. The actlvllts were attempting to aet the men beet lo the United Statea before they come under U.S. mWtary jurtadic- tion again. · Under military law, the m~n are re- quired to praent themselves to the first U.S. official lbey encounter. Prof. Richard Falk, a tall, gaunt man \Vilh a beard, barred Dubs' way as heap- proached the men. Falk told the American diplomat that his group prom· ised lo escort the pilots home safely, and a meeting with embas.!y olriclal.s \See PRISONERS, Page Z) * * * Near Agreement For Truce Told NEW. YORK (AP) -WOR-Radlo'a. White House correspondent reported t~ day that Henry Kissinger and represen-1 tatlves of North Vietnam reached agree- ment in Paris on nearly all points for a cease-fire In the Indochinese war. Jn San Francisco, where ?resident Nix· on ls campaigning, presidential press secretary Ronald Ziegler said . "I cannot comment at all on the substance of the discussions." WOR's Clifford Evans said the remain· ing point at issue ls the future of South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu and "that is expected to be resolved by the resignation of Thieu who will be re- placed by a three-party coalition govern- ment." AJ a result, Evans sa.id, a cease- fire ts expected next month. Orange Cou t Weat.ber According lo the National Weatl> er Service, considerable cloudiness Is in atore for the Orange Coast 11'IW'sday, with the sun breaking through In the afternoon. High temperature should be In the low ros. INSIDE TODAY South Coo.st Rtpcrtoru launch- '' itl nlnih season of theater cm th< Orange COOll this weekmd with a r<Vlval of the AmefiC<m comedy e l a 1 1 f e 'Tlte Tore~ btarers." S11c Entertainmtm, Pcg1 30. LM. ~ t1 -.. C•H~ I c...-(«Mr ,. c-........ ... .. C91111tf SC t .,,,_ Kt !>Ml' Netlc•I II .. ...,.. .,... ' •~INMM IHI ,fMMt; """ ,., .. ltftl'll ,. ..... Utlll ii AM leMln M • -·· .. . Z~AILY PILOt c I (• WrdneM11), Sef.t....., 11, itn • United Way Kicked Off Toward $504,000 fl.1ore than 1.,000 residents a n d huslnolsmon In the Harbor · Area ol Newport Beach. Costa Men and Irvine today began looking lor half a mil lion dollars. They want ii so they can give \t away to help people. They call it the United Way. ~1ore than 300 persons filled the Balboa Bay Club dining room thi s morning in Newport Beach ror the kickoff of the $Ml4,@ Harbor Area Campaign of the Davis, Spy Glass Soulhom Orange County United Way. They heard former Newport Beldl Mayor Ed Hirth, lhll year'• caml"lin cha.lnnaa. say it lJ the l,OXI or more volu.ntetrs who are working on the cam· paign who ''will do the work." They heard Walter Gerken, president of the Pacific Mutual Life lmurance Company, say it will take the people of the Harbor Area "feeling empathy" to make It work. Gerken, whose firm is the newest ma~ District Probes School C·rowding By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of tfill Dalty ...... lt•fl Corona dcl Mar's Spy Glalis Hill area ahd C.OSta Mesa'• Davis Middle School zt>ne appear to be the only areaa for ma- jor concern on student enrollmenta in the im'mediate future. Superintendent John Ni~otl told Newport-Mesa Unified School Young Doctors Seek Family Upit Support By L. PETER KRI EG 01 tM 0111'1' ,Utt itlll ·'There will be no man resignations or tlie resident physl~lans in the Hoag Memorial Hospital Family Practice Pfogram before directors ot the Newport 8-ch hospital determine the fate of t~_elr training program. 1be L'l young doctor> met Tuesday and agreed to wait out the week as directors search for private funds to off~t I~ of the program that also provides low· C96t medical care to 5,000 paUenls !rom Orange Coast cities. "We will watt until there ts something mo're conclusive ," Dr. Taylor Jeppson, one of the rest dents, said this f1¥1rnin¥· Hospital direct&-1 Mondat \ n i g1h t delayed a dociJ!on on the future of the program while they go to private foun- dations and other sources asking for up to $300,000 to cover the losses Incurred by . ~rt:naUonally-prominent Family Practice futuni of lhe rorrarn bleak; ju st ""k f~ a vo:r'by lhe· : •oapital's staff doctors to lhut 'tt down. . The ' recommendation sparked a public outcry, however, and sent the board '.scrambling for ways to salvage the :center. ' Official comment about the fund..rais- : ing ef!orts is being withheld, and even : Dr. ;Jeppson said he didn't know whether ·to be optimistic or not. ''fnever feel one way or the other until : I know for sure," be said. · . He said be is convinced the board is doing everything it can to raise lhe n1oney in a hurry, however. "They told us tbeJ will be able to give us a solid wwer on the program,/rob- ably by Friday," Dr. Jeppson sal , ad· ding that the residents feel that is a reaq:iable time to wait. The&-' had earlier demanded a decision by the board at their meeting Monday !O lhey could begin to look for other resldcllcy programs if this one is to be terminated. The residents' lnilial reactioo lo the de lay was bitter but they cooled off shortl y. "We realize they can't find funds just off the cuff," he said, "and people have to ha ve li1ne lo consider if they want to contribute Lo the program." he said. OU.Mal COAST CM DAILY PILOT TM o~ ... Co.ti DAILY ,ILOT, 111'1111 wNdll •• cornbl!w:d lt'f' N...,.·Prett, 11 Plllllllflttl - Ill• 0r1,... cout Pllbl11111119 ComQl!''I'· s_.. r•~ edition!; er. pllbll1Md. Mondl'I' fllf'llUlllt Ftld•Y. 'fOI" OM!• Mn-. N-.iort leech, ttun11091on BNdt/,._111" v.u..,, ue- B..cl\. l""lnei's.«fi..Q. Ind 5111 0.-IV 51~ Jlll ll C.1J11h"tfl0. A Jl"91e fW9klflel . .Olllllrl 15 JIUllll""' Stlvnt•Y. .,,. 511nd1,.. 11\t p.1nc!Oolll pUbllll'llno pl1nl h ft! lJll Wft.t l•'I' 51rtel, Co.11 Ma1. C1t1111n1i., fMM. Rolt•rt N. w.,d Prwld_,. eM Publl- J•c:• R. Cvrlt'I' Viet ~I t11d 0.-el ......,...,. Tilorn11 Keevil 1Edlt0r Tliio1P1•1 A. Murphrftt M1"«i0"'9 editor Ch 1rle1 H. Looi Ric:liierJ r. Ntll Aulthnt MMWtlille ElllW. c .... M.-OMM ))0 Weit l•y Stttet M•aiftf ~d,..11: ,.0. le• IS•t. tJlJ6 .. °""'° Offlew .._,_., 9wdt1 nn "...,..., lkMl!ftwtt Ll9-lltli:ti1 m irornr A-Hllfllltltton lt1cl'I: 111TS IHt,, l!Ovlt'ftrd sen CltrNntr. as Ncwll'I e1 c.'"1"' ""' let.,.._ f114J 642--4121 ClwlfW ..... , ..... "2·'671 ·c....,._,.,. '"'· ~ C•O ""*n"""' , ~_y, NO _, Uorlft, llklllrllltM. ,..,..,..t'lftfll"" or iMvwtl....-" ...,... • ::::... ~-wll"Wt .,. .. , ,.... ' .. I'" t cepyl'lfllt """'· !I~ ,_..... HW .. c.11 --. ..Meer""*" .., c:.MH: a.a , .. ""' U.lt _,.,,, -~.... . 11.6' ...........,._ District trustees Tuesday nighl. The Spy Glass Hill problem involves Newport Beach resident.a who now live in other acbool district&. Overcrowding ls the problem at Mesa's Davis School. Overall, however, a detailed report given trustees doesn't predict any dramatic enrollment increases over the next three school. years. District enrollment for the present 1972-73 school year stands at ~.tu students. By the 1~76 school year it Is · expected to increase to ooly 26,035 after slight gain! in the years between. In detailing enrollment problems, Nicoll said Corona del Mar's Spy Glass l!ill is of major concern. Homes currently under construction in the Spy Glass Hill , Harbor View Hilla and Bren tract areas currently lie within the San Joaquin Elementary and the Tustin Union HJgh School District boundaries. Unles.5 these developments are an· nexed by the Newport-Mesa dlltr1ct, they will fall within the boundaries of the new Irvine Unified School District out year. Dr. Nicoll explained that the dlJtrtct is not neoesaarily "after" anneutlon ol the 262-acre area, but said that truBtea may wish to comider this to make school district boundaries congruent wltb cJty boundaries. In that .... t. tbe dlltrlct would gain 156 new llttdettll, aoccrdlnl to pr .. jectlolll. CharlOll -····-· -· Honn ~ .... ~-IUN AJ('I, both trust ... of Ibo new 1rviJle Untiled School District, said Tueoday nJiht that they were not yet prepared to make a decision to allow the annexaUon. Ginsburg :iolnted out that the Irvine Unllled Scbool l>lllr!ct came out 14 million llhorl In 'lta .......i valu1tton and that bit board may be "reluctant to give up more of Its tax .base." The difficulty in the Davis Middle School area is caused by the district's policy of converting these facilities to sixth through eighth grade campuses . Additional sixth graders are belng senl to Davis by si1 feeder schools. The transfer has been made with tbe ex· ception of children from the College Park Elementary School ln Costa Mesa. 750 Protesters Gather at Hotel l1i Nixo1i 's Visit SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -In what organizers termed a "disappointing'' turnout, some 750 antiwar protesters demonstrated outside a downtown hotel today where President Nixon was to dine at a $1 ,000-a-plate campaign rund·raislng luncheon . There were 300 policemen and dozens of Sec ret Service agents on hand at the Sheraton Palace llotel to keep the pro- testors from disrupting the luncheon. T~·enty mounted patrolmen lined the front of the hotel . I Earlier story. page 4). Some 600 protesters r a I I i e d at F.rn barcadero Plaza and then marched the fe\v bloc ks through the financial district to the Palace where they were jnlned by another 100 demonstrators. Tbe demonstrators heeded police in- structions to stay across the street from the hotel and they chanted: "Nixon , Nix- on, you can't win . 'Show your face. we'll do you in." Nixon arrived at Oakland International Airport about the time the demonstrators reached the hotel. The President was greeted by some :l.000 cheering supporters carrying signs .~aying: "Nixon's the One" and ''Oakland . . . Hayward . . . San Leandro ... \Velcomes you." In a statement issued a1 he arrived, Ni:fon an nounced the a:overnmrnt has ~ranted An addlHonal f3f.l mUUon to lhe Bay Area Rapid Tranltt District to help complete the newly-opened San Fran- cisco area commuter netwqrt. Nixon then left for a ride on the only BART leg now open, a 28-mlle stretch rro m llayward to Oakland. Ann Wcills. spoJl:e3man ror the Berkeley April 22 Coalition which or~anized the protest told the San Fran· ri:.co rally. "We're all disappointed in the t'Jrnout. '' She snld the rainy went her and n~emon.s1ratlon publ\rJty whlch ''made tlTls out lo be a riot" were pa'f-IY to _, bt~me. ..._ rn addition to the antiwar protestora • a.bout two dozen demonstrators marched •er°" fl'l!m the hotel 11alnat the Ruulan T"'t!,tment of Soviet Jews. • jar buJlnou In the .,.., .... ca1ltd for • commitment fnml 1"-IDd inlllllly to their comm\Qll!y. "Tlie ~ ;( • oiirporallon Ii monlfeated in lta communlly r<lallonl;• Gerten said. He talked about his own firm'1 com- mitment and conscience, explaining that it believes in involvement as a means of making a community strong and viable. ''Pacific Mutual will carry its share of the burden, and that is just a lint llap to our commitmenl to the coaunllJ1ily... be aakL Clerl:en also talked about the United Way u a means of. ralsing money . "Groups and corporations are reluctant to give to gr-oops that splinter a com· munlty," he &aid. The 1,000 people who have volunteenid for this year's campaign will be under !he guidance of some of the most im· IlOrtant ~pie in their communities. Working under the leadership of Hirth wW be Gen. Tbomu lllley, lUSMC !let.), -....,.. _,. ol 8-11, Inc., • Newport Booch oommunll1 cftalnna>-• Streeter King, Paclfte Telephone Com-' pe.ny executive, ls Costa Mesa com- munity chairman. • Mrs. John Burton. wile or tbe. lrvlne councilman, ii ebalrma.o in bJ1r com- munity. Mrs. Fred Howser and Mrs.. William Carling are chairmen of the Newport Beach ~C:enUal campaign. . Jamea Felton, vice preiident of Avco DAILY ,ILOT Plitftl IW lkhllnl K ..... Flunclal 1itn1cos. It l"lnllo DI-• dlU'mln. aldllnt •1k1 en, J! I[! of.._u/D ts 'St;ia I ~-la • maJl·'!bolesal ... dl~ . o:"':"o11. ~ \! the t.I\ l{olJ • Conatruct;,aeo · , 11 ~ or m&llllllf iii , ¥1' . . the4er •· ·J!~ Service Dlvlslon •dlab'man aixr'ilr. · · Nicoll, auporlnl<nden!,..,"!.,~ Newport··· Mesa Unified School ~ ls govern- ment and Educjlllon l>lvlllon chalrmon. j Irvine School Roof Collapse Probe Slated ' Botll the cauaea and the ef!eclJI of ..... · collapse Tumay of roof tzu-being in-·· stalled at the construction lite of El .. Camino Real School in Irvine remained a: · my9lery today as stat• Inspectors In-: vesUgated damage to eee if a three--. month delay in the school'• opening ls DOCOSlllll')'. Three workmen were .iQJured Tuesdly" :· before noon when a 7,006 9<JU8fe root-"". area of roof trusRs fell at the site at .. , Walnut Avenue and KAttn Ann Lane. .. , A dozen other workmen escaped:" serious injury when they ran from the·' building as about 20 prefabricated beail\3 : dropped like dominoes. ·: The more than Sl million facility was scheduled to open in ·April. · ' Dave Klng, faclUU.. planner !or 111o-: Widening For Safety's Sa~_ San Joaquin School Dlslrlc~ aald today · ~ that state inspecton from the achoo\ .. architecture and conatrueUon offtces, · must determine if the beam.a ... ..:'. salvageable. . If they can be salvaged or repalfed,., : Road crews are busy widening Estancia Drive be· tween Estancia High School and Swan Drive to four Janes. The $143,000 project, financed joinUy by the city and county, consists of two extra lanes and a center divider. Alternate routes are suggt!sted to motorists for the 60-day construction period. King said, the accident will mean only a delay of a week or two. .But U the state ~etermines there la too;; much damage to allow aafe construcUon .. with the beams, tbey will have lo be reordered from their close!t manufac- turer -in Boise, Idaho. That will take at least 12 week!, King · From Page l Coast Firm in New Home PRISONERS. • • said. · 'Ibree dlfftrent veralons of the accident · , Soon After $500,000 Fire "'as not planned . Gartley, Charles and Elia! buddied in a corntr behind Cora Weiss as Dubs and other embassy ofilcials tried to approach them. There wa~ a crunch caused by cor- respondents attempting to overbear the exchange. wer.! still circulating today. · Irvine police said tbey -Id not be· charged with determining the cauee.'.-. That will be up to imuranee compani• or to the state industrial accident com-' mission,. poUce laid.·· . The 50 omployea ol MaJl!lelic Metall of Newport Buel!. wllose ~nt ~ IU)teil by a l!00,000 fire Monday, "1l1 bOve a new home by Thursday, company of· ficJals said today. . 1 "We are looking , at a number qt buildings right now along tbe s.n Diegf) Freeway and hope to have one by tonight or totnofrow," said Plant Manager Carl Maquanlt. "The most likely one is a 20,000 square foot building i n Westminster." He added that the new plant will become Uie firm 's permanent home. Coast Initiative Opponents Raise $435,000 So Far From Witt Servlcel Opponents of the coa!tline initiative, Prop. 20, have raised $435,000 90 far with much of the m<lney C1Jming from public utilities and land ~mpanies, Secretary of State Edmund Brown Jr. !aid Tuesday. The Irvine Company is one of the main contributors against the proposition, at $50,000 AVCO Community Developers, Inc., headquartered in La JoUa and active in development in Laguna :Slguel, bas con- tributed 125.000. Another $50,000 contribution was listed in the report filed by Citizens Aga inst the Coastal Initiative from Deane and Deane Inc. of Half Moon Bay. · Brown said the Prop. 20 opponent5 have spent about half of the amount with lhe greatest single expenditure -$50,000 -going to Kennedy Outdoor Advertising, a Lo.s Angeles billboard company. Other major contributors included lhe Standard Oil Company of California at $30,000; Bechtel Corp. of San Francisco and Pacific Gas & Electric Co. at $25,000 each: Del Monte Properties Jnc. of Peb- ble Beach, $25,000; Bixby Ranch Co. of Los Angeles, $30,000 and Southern Pacl!lc Land Co., San Francisco, $2G,000. A second report listing additional con- tributions and expenditures ls to be filed seven days before the Nov. 7 elecUon, Brown said in a news release. Wallace Gohn Rites Thursday Funeral services will be held Thurlday morning for long-time Costa Mesan Wallace E. Gohn, who died Sunday after a lengthy Ulnes!. He was 71!1. ~fr. Gohn, was a rttlrcd house painter who had Jived in Costa Mesa for 32 years. He was an Anny veteran of World War 1 and an active member of the Seafaring Masonic Lodge No. 708. MM>l>ei1 of the lodge will omclate at !he aarvicei which will be held at JI i .m. al S,11 Broadway OlapoL H• wlll be en- iombod lq the Abbey. a Maec?leum In Oraos<' J.ir. Gohn lea•es a broU>er, Waldo and a sister, Minnie, both of PenMylva.nla . Meanwhile, temporary offices for the cornpanY. ha.VO bee!) ~ up acrqes the otreet fi\)m Ille ravagtd building In IWo back rooms of Newport Organs, 840 ProducUon Place. The firm's 10,000 square foot facility at 347 Production Place was almost q>m- p)etely doatrvyed by a . lire that Sltu\led wbOJI a pain! CUl!il'I oven fllle!l with painted electromagnet parts ov~ted and exploded. Two plant employes were slightly in- jured and a Fire Department battalion chief was hit by a flying aerosol can dur· ing the fire. The other employes escaped the in- rerno that burned through the building in less than a minute. Maquardt said nobody will be laid off as a result of the fire. I. GEM TALK I ~ ~ ' ~ ~ ~ TODAY r. . ~ ' by ,. ~ • ~ t J. C. HUMPHRIES ~ ' ! - ELECTRONIC WATCHES BASICA,LL Y SIMPLE "Electronic" implies to many people a m ysterious system which might introduce expensive repair problems. l 11 ' .. ~ •' .. Stand back! Stand back," Cora Weiss shouted. "Give us some room." Among the Amerlcan officials at the · airport were Btig. Gen:.. samue\ V. Wilson, the .milltarr Je'f1le, IUlll Air. Force Maj. l\onalti w · • Ibo eml>WY doctor. North Vietnamese officials in Moscow also went to the airport for the arrtval of the pilots. Ton Quang C.O, a North Viet- namese diplomat, said be was on band "lo observe." Asked where the airmen would stay in 1'>1os~w before leaving for Copenhagen on Thursday. Co replied, "OJ.r Soviet co mrades will give them a place to stay." • - One wllleM aaid that a crane bolllinC · an arched beiln' onto the atrudbre • knocked one support· against another and · !hoy, \legan falling. . . : · ~ _..,...qlold IChool dll!rlcl ' oflicia4 .that a "'1'Ptnter 1it1Jni Ill! _ .. "'am ll'hlltl tl)lempt1oa I<> place anotboir· caused' .U., . imbair.ce with tllld1lf pressure .. \ :· King aai<I he wa~ told still another version of the accident by a witness who : said the crane lloundod erraUcallr- against a beam and vibrated the ~ to the 1round. · Five county fire department units, :. Irvine police and the Irv1ne company· ranch patrol truck ruponded to the call : while the Costa Mtlfl bellcopter landod · on the school site itaeU. -' 'I , ' . ' • I ·I Actually, electric and electr onic watches are simple, reliable and " easy to service and repair. ~ All such watches have a small ~ \ battery which looks almost exacUy ' 'I like a hearing aid cell, but is built to put out less current but over a lo nger period of time. These batter-' ies also differ in that the watch will not be seriously harmed should leakage occur. • All these watches have some kind f of mechanical oscillator governed by a balance wheel. tuning fort or otber pulsating or vibrating device which carries elt!>er a coll or a per- manent magnet. When current pass- es through coil or magnet II pro- vides power to move the other aim· pie devices In the system. You can buy electric or electronic watches with confidence. They are very trouble-free, with adjustments , and repairs easily accomplished by your local independent jeweler. There was a time wMll ell ~ne1'1ocb -ball llkt th is .•. with a hand for the mlnut• ••• a hand for the hOurs ••. and a llantl far the daJil of Iha t'IOllllll ™ pine ca• in Olde Colony finish lo -. ~ly aocented by.the blaclt numenlo, '- and second ttsnds on the antique wltlt9" dial The COO>U cty1lal, brass ·pendulum llld .-I celendlt hand ~plete the authenticft)' ~ thll fine Ba!Wiclt reproduc:tlon by the tlowlnl Mllor Clod! Ootnpeily. H. 24" W. 161f2" D. 41f2" $110 J. {~ ,.lJumph~":! Je1vPfer:! 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA . 21 YEARS IN THI SAME LOCATION Pl-+ONf "41·1401 1. ' Sttcr•naeteto eras.It ··Pilot Refused Longer Runway SACRAMENTO (AP) -The pilot of the jet whlcb cruhed on takeoff Into a on>wded Ice cream parlor and killed 22 ..,_,. ,.jectod uae ol another runway wblcb pointed lnlo open fields, in- vestlpl«s aay. Pilot Ricbanl BJnallam picked tbe short nmway at ~·s Executive Airport -one po!nlliMI dlrodly at Far-rell'• tee Cream Nr'IOr -in order to save fuel, said WlllllaJ. Hiley, a member of the National TrallsportaUon Safety Board. Haley lllid a .......U.g of the ciio- venatloa Sunday bet,,... BJnaham and the airport conJrol,-r ~ before Bingham's llDIUCCelllful takecllf :novealed Illa! the cootrol tower Off~ Bingham a·. cbol<e ol a 1,000-f"'ll runway pointing towanl a &oll coorae "ind open fields. -. BUT HALEY AND other federal of, flcials at a news conference Tuesda,y did not criticize the. pilot~ concern about fuel and bi. choice of the ~borter 5,000-foot runway. 11ley said they would not comment on the ~-ol,tbe ctbh until after com- pl~f' ~ 5"'·Jll"004ed Investigation. "A .l!l'elllqinary lool: at the cl;lta Jn. di...,_, a.~oot i:unway is sale" for an .!II lo.,tab off, aald C. O. Miller, diredor 01 the Bl!reau of Aviation Safety. , QllllJI~ ......_ Blngharn'a QODCem ~bou(cum;c11pg fail. M111er . aald'""11>ero •'w8<Dol)llJiWwiln lllat ·at ol). You aln~ -.y' about I( (fuel) in a jet,•. 1. Bhia!»m llrVivod ihe crash with frac- tureo. ,.,,.Ive cbildno and eight adults """ l:l1led In !be ice cream parlor and t,wo others were killed In an auto struck by the Korean War-vintage jet as it screeched in Dames lM yards oU the end of the runWay and across a four-lane -hls0way Into !be front of the slore. MILLER SAID the seldom-used shorter runway was in use by planes taking off from a just-completed air show because ol the direction of the wind. 1 Haley said the tower told BinghaJp. • · tAllfORNIA . there would be a short delay in switching airport traffic to allow a takeoff on the longer strip and that the pilot responded he didn't want fo upend fuel waiting for the switchover. Ft'!deral A v l a t i on Administration spokesman Ed Slattery. aaid tbe tow.r acts in an advisory capacity for pilots but that !be decision ol whlcb runway to use "Is afways left up Jo !be pilot." Haley al!o oaid Bingham, 36, of Novato, "commented that he experienced vibrations during the takeotr• and lllat Bingham thought the plane "was oot ac- celerating !be way be thought it abould be." HE SAID THE pilot spoke of the vibra· tions with inv(!ltlgaton in an interview in the hospital and that he had no com- muritcationa with the control tower dur- ing the attempted takeoff. "I think be was trying to fly it .. _ trying lo talre off, until he liter.Uy ran out of runway," Haley said. lsletnn Picking lt,self Up ISLETON (AP) -Now that muddy lloodwaJen have receded. ruldents ol this tiny delta Jown have started moving back home. Otben find t11e .. ',1s nothing Iell 19 come bOme Jo. Wblle acme move fumltllre, television sell and ltlds back inlo bou!el. lhot ,.. .. left high and dry, olhen ..... just Jo stare at muddy pUea of rubble that u9fld Jo be home. -Tuesday was the ftnt day Isletoo's 1,300 ...-.. were pennltled, Jo .. 1um s!Me the rainy nigbl June II when the levee bursl and floodwalen up to JO feet blgb rushed acroos the downhill ball of towo. "I can't believe it's gone'. It just Ooated away /' said one man, ataring at an empty lot wbero his 11-yeaHICI motlr er bad lived ln a house his lather built. ACROllS THE street, a duct paddled pa.I a rusty metal bed and an'old.'18tioo wagon was imbedded in the sludge. Much of Isleton looks like a muc!'oaked ghost Jown oa the banks of the San Joa· quin River, where the water has reworted odd objects. A swivel chair i.s upside down next to a baseball Mitt and a rusty aewlng machlne. Tiey 10.. of water still need to be pumped. In all, 3,000 Were left hoineless and moro than 45 houses, mobile homes. farms and marinas were destroyed. 11te stale has estimated total Joos at $24 million, but ~re were no deaths or. ma- jor injuries. THIS DELTA area is a lacework of waterways 85 miles east of San Fran- cisco, where Northem California water drains into San Franciaco Bay. Of the 12,000 acres .Dooded, most wis farmed in com, barley, alfaHa, pears, asparagus, sunflowers and saff!ower. "[ bad put every nickel I made lnta this place," lamented James Mallamace. 66, a retired motel keeper who lost everytbiog. Tbe llllall, wood frame home he had jll.¢ remodeled was a dirty, emp-. ty hulk. A row boat was perched on his front lawn, next to his muddy fufn.iture . COME TlY ON THE MOST COMFORTAILE . SHIRT IN THE WORLD "I don't know what I'm going to do now. I'm too Old to start over. I've just bOen sick since it happened," be said. "Let's get out of here, it smells rotten.'' '* • * * * * Shopping Area Near . I Slip into • Oort lop1r knit lhirt .. we've got every color and style •nd size. Cho o 1-e from solids, stripes, I o n 9 . or short ,1 .. .,es •.. $13. to $18. • • • b1 ·comfortable. Airport W a,S Opposed SACRAMENTO (AP) -The take off and plunged In flames former manager af across a four.!lane highway Sacramento's E x e c u t i v e and into the shopping center Airport says be urged city of-building • ficia1s in 1964 not to allow a The 5,800-foot runway points shopping center Jo be bull! on directly Into Farroil's Jee, l~~.lil@!rol• *--• ,cream Plrlor'tn ~· • r sdritl~f\i\'' 'i ·:.;. ~· 1.7'! ~tblf Cros'sroada s:lto'p)Slt1'f· ·-~~llmith~ry, c..r. just 110,.,..... from , ""'·' ..i. , Depoi:t · ·ur· •, be :•nd ol the rwl't!Jy. •. , Aeronau ·cs also opposed con-Smith, who managed Ex- struction in the area of the ecutive from 1931 unW 1967, crash. lllid he urged the cltf In 1914 3467 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-4510 And a spokesman fGr the to reject a variance allowing Administration ~ys his agen-construction of tht original • cy warned of the possible part of the fasblodable abop- hat.ards of the ·lite, across a ping center. busy street from the aitport. And in the lllllOs, be urged But the FAA ftled no formal city officiala to buy the tben- objedion to, the project, added vacaot land to provide a clear spolesman Gtrry B a t ~ e r , space at the end of the sbol1e beeluse there were no viola-of the alrport'1 two runways, tions of 1ta i;ules. Sm.Ith said. Read the Daily Pilot The KorNn War-vintage jet "The FFA requim llUCb roared down the_ s~rt runway clear zones now. 'Ibey didn't at Execajlve Alrpi>rt, Jlilred ·1o at !be Ume," Smith said. · " e. at • ris , . • ) ' ·, ~ Septe111 · 29tfi ,Dally Pilot will have a .~ · wJllth, · · , .-11tltlff yciu ·to the flnt 4 9'•••. ,,.. e purclia.~ of'i ga.;.p; more ~ "'°'lne. . hll't m1s1~t Septen!ber· 29tti. Clip 1t1 ·. ,., ... I l .. un1•n '. a 1 " •••• _1 • "' ... ". ,._... . ' ~. :;_,,,.·$dalfCi'5JM:l·atun1oaoo -,· - . . . , . .. . .. ,.,;.~·r. ,1:-·: ·~r-·1 · -I I•• *' 1 ' 'I ....... •' lt'f Uftlln9 frOt'llJJftion '7.6 S.pttl,l'lb.r 29th.,.,._ ti~i-"9 Uni~n 11,;· ci;.i:,. wiU hove beoutiful Sc1ndin1vi.~, ii.purpose cry.tol stem· ",J \ ' I' ' . ' '.,1. Trii.I B,e!Jlns UPIT...,.._ San Francisco Mayor J ose ph Alioto leaves federal building in ·bis. city, where his $12.5 million libel suit against now- defUnct Look magazine began Monday this week. The article linked him to Mafia members. Greyhound Given · Fare Hike Okay SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The California Public Utilities Commission has granted an 11.8 percent increase in passeDger-fares and express rates to Greyhound Lines Int:?., saying the bus company is "in immedi1te need of ad- ditional revenues." The Tuesday actian by the PUC covers company main line and commuter opera- tions within the state. Minimum fares will increase from 45 to 50 cents a ride . •.. Jury Chosen For Trial .Of Corona FAIRFIELD (AP\ -A jury ol 10 men and two women has been chosen for Juan Ciorona's mau murder trial, but pros- pects are slim that opening arguments wtll be beard until next week. ( IN SHORT ... ) Selection of four alternate jurors con- tinued today to hear evidence concerning the hacking deaths ol 25 itinerants whose bodies were fowid buried Jn Sutter Coun- ty In the spring or 1971. Estimates of the tria l's length range all the way up to six months. Reagan Chldes Bar ~IONTEREY (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan today gently chlded the State Bar's endorsement af legalized mari- juana, which he called "a substance which can lead ta tragedy and deatll." and asked for support far his own com- prehensive drug abuse trea tment pro- gram. Reagan spoke <it !he annual meeting of the State Bar only t"'O days after delegates recom mended legalizing mari- juana sales under state licensing. If approv~ by the Bar's board af governors, the recom mendation would become part or the legislative program for which the powerful I a w ye rs ' organization "·ould lobby in the state Capitol next year. Pa11 Raise Requested LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 7.5 pereent across-the-board faculty pay raise was recommended Tuesday by ChancellGr Glenn Dumke of th e California State Colleges and Unive rsity system. Dumke also recommended fringe benefit improvements totaling 5 percent. ~ 's proposal came at the lint day o o-day meeting of the 19-campus yste board of trustees. DAILY PILOT 5 Cramton Bacb Proposition 20. ' 5 SF Women Sue i1 For Full Status ' . In Press Ouh SAN nlANCISCO (API -fi\·e won1en reporters are charging the all-male Press. Club of San Francisco relegates women "to second class status." A suit . filed ln Superior O>urt llert Tuesday, seeks a court order prohibiting the press club from continuing to bar . women from full membership. It contends that women in the media ' and public relations fields are admitted ta a special category of membership bu~ nre prohJblted from using the 84-year-old club's recreaUonal facilities or the sec. and floor bar except on certain GCo casions. As a result, the plaintiffs said, they "cannot meet othe r news persons on a level of equality." 111E AC110N "'BS filed by the American Civil Llberties Union on behalf of Marilyn Baker, reporter far KQEI).'. TV: Georgia Hesse, travel editor of the" San Francisco Examiner; and Paula Trentacost. Aileen Campbell and Robeft.i\ Ward , staff writers for lhe Catbqlic Monitor. . A special eiectioo wUI be held Oct. I db whether to delete the word 11male" frOm the club's qualifications. • A majarlty voted at a previowl electkn to retain the male only provision. The NaUonal Press Club .i n Washington, D.C., and press club&. in , Atlantic City and Miiwaukee have ~1· ed their policies wi thin the paat year and . admitted women memben. . ' ' ' •, • t • w1r1 for i"'t 39c 1 ..... with 1 purcho11 Of l. 91llons or more of -u..ian 76 ·911ollne .. ChOose i julco'~, 1~1 1'•b.1t.9loss, or 1 14- ounce sumll)er 'cooler. W.. Fwgo.8tlnk""8 a¥flf 280 olllces tl'lroughout Califomi1. C09tll Mesa Office: 462Eaat171h S1nlet. 92627/Assets.--$7~.a.,;C. • • .,.. . ., 1 I • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE 'Nudie' Image Costa ?\1esa munci pal leaders suggested at th eir last ci ty council session th~t they have no Jeg~J me~ns of ro ntroling local bars which offer nude dancing girls a~ entertainment for patrons. The issue \Vas raised by a ci tizen complaint from a college student who objected to a pair of beer taverns. One is located on Ne\.vport Boulevard and the other nearby on 17th Street. Both places employ ga rish exterior colors and car- nival-like signs to shout to the world the unclad status of female dancers who await the ~rospective patron inside. Mayor Jack flammett. while admitting he was dis- turbed by th is face that Costa Mesa turn5 toward the rest o! Orange County, declared that municipal govern- ment is "legally handcuffed" in any effort to disall ow the oudie entertainment. l·le was supported in this con· tention by other members of the city admini strative and legal stall. Thus it does indeed become somewhat interesting as to the business enterprises that are legal or illegal in Costa Mesa. Costa Mesa's city license department will tell you, for example, that you cannot set up shop here and start telling fortunes. You cannot legally read palms. You cannot openly practice phrenology -the art of analyl· ing the bumps on a person's head. You would be out- side the Jaw to operate as a medium and suggest you can bridge the gap between the living and those in the hereafter. U you want to open a massage parlor, first you must be investigated by the police department to assure that you won't traffic in prostitution, and then must pay a $35 business license fee plus $15 for each mas- seuse. But on the other hand, ii you want to open a beer bar and let girls dance naked in the place, that is ap- parently within the law. Little wonder that n1any good citizens become con- fused by legalities these days when the la\v apparently It's Quality, Not Quantity That Counts FNEY J.HARRI~ (During Mr. llarris' vacat·ion. we are reprititing some of the most re· q~stcd colum·ns from his forthcom· i.ii.g book, "F'or the Time Being.'' to IJe published tlli:S fall.) Jf we arc going to cut down seriously on our population growth -and I think U is an absolute necessity -then we will tlfS:t ha ve to change our alm~le-mtpded attitude to11•ard the parents of I a r g e families. Aiost people who meet me for the first time ask about my family , and \vhen they find I have five children they en1lt little murmers of ad- miration an d re- spect, as if J had done so met h Ing notable. Now I am pleased and proud to have these children. but there was nothing especially meritorious about their con- ception. Their existence does not teatify to my virility, or even to any exceptional rertllity, and certainly Is no evidence that I am suited for parenthood. ANYBODY WITH the nominal equip. ment can have children: it is no great achievement. Indeed, in most. cases it happens during a fit of absend-min- Cledness. No child should ever be called a '''mistake,'' but some are certainly miscalculations. Parents "rith four children are not twice as good or twice as.loving or twice as Intelligent as parents with only two children. True . they have more ex- perience. but as Bismarck said of his donkey, "He has been through nine cam- Dear Glo&ny--· Gus "Mim>r Magic," a state series school book, carriea a notice, "If pupil should ... damage book, he may be required to pay for . . . damage." Problem : Entire book caUs for text cutouts from the same book! -B.C. TI!l1 lfflur• All<Mlt rMfer'f vMw., Mt ftKHUrll'I ,,..._ .. 11141 -•Hr, Sffl( JIMolr "' -v• i. ottomv ou., O.llV ~1101. palgns with me, and knows no more than he did after tbe flrst." . APART "ROM oor population prob- lem, I an! convinced that an Immense number or people who have children shduld not have them, and do DOI particularly want them, except as .. ,ym. bob" of family life. What they want att idtal children, not real ones: and as 800ll as the real ones show no lntenUon of con- lonnlng to the Ideal In the parent's mind, Ibey are treated as bunlens, shipped away to school, or otherwise neglected. Somebody once said that if many peo- ple had not read about romantic love and seen It on the screen, they would never look (or it tbelll5elves. I believe this, and along with it I believe that if many peo- ple were not ashamed to be thought deft· cient in "famUy feeling" they would never have children. NOR HA VE I noticed that the parenls of large families exhibit any more pr~ ficieocy in bringing them up, except in lenns of establishing a barracks-room regimen which ls necessary for simple survival. Some studies have indicated, in fact, that children coming from large families suffer from a Jack of sharply defined personality and Jack a sense of individual Identity. At any rate, we have to begin to recognize that it is the quality of parenthood that is more essential than the quantity. Rousseau, be it remem· bered, wrote a masterly book on educa- tion -and then sent his fi\.e children to a foundling home. He was more honest than most. An Old Welfare Lesson C11llfornla Feature Service The poignant problem of seeing that every individual has the opportunity to achieve his just share of the necessiUes of life will not be solved In our lifetime. Unhappily, many of the cures proposed for )>overty -however well intentioned -are worse than the disease, There is a classic example of this that goes back to the tum of the 19th century in England. Wri ting in the Santa Barbara News Press recently, Kevin P. Phillips attributed "'hat he sees as "a major shift of While House opinion" slnce President Nixoo fonnulat cd his Family Assistance Plan in 1989 to a new understanding of what happened to rural Speenhamfa.nd more than a hundr~ years ago. tN 1795 A WELFARE PL.\N "'a~ established there giving poor people 1ubsl~e1 in aid of wa ges, with a scale dcpondent upon the price of bread. The Quot~ A. L. Henry, Orinda -"The fact that the Communisl.s intend to take over and contn>l South Vietnam cannot be Ignored. American• (esptelally the Fulbright•, McCloskeys and McGovema) would do well to remember Munich and lhc selling out of Czedloslovalda that dld not bring peace." idea was to assure the poor a minimum income regardless of their earnings. Naturally the system spread, until 40 years later it collapsed in disaster. Shortly alter. the French philosopher de Tocqueville, polntlng to Speenhom- land, declared that such public assis- tance nourishes pauperism because ~t men wun 't work unleu they must do IK> to live,. More recenUy Karl Polyanl, referred 1n his book '"The Great Transfonnation " to the experiment, which nearly wrecked the economy of early 19th C.Cnlury ~gland, as leading to "the pauperiz.ation of the masses, who almost Jost their bwnan shape in the proc-es.s ... SPF.ENllA~tLAND evidently IV R s brought to lhe attention o! Nb::on wellare plannen: in 1969, but not taken too se riously. Its import now secm.<i to have brcn better understood. Ont Whi~ House ~idc ls quoted its saying "we wanl to come back with a totally different philosophy (than that of F'AP) ... one that !he National Welfare Rights Organization won 't like." If that n~w philosophy eventually leads to a realistic, humane and effective way to enhan~ human welfare and human dignity, the poor people or lonf, ago Speenhamland will have, ·rather pa nfully to be sure. done a aooct tum for their counterparts in a later century. considers it more sinful and wicked to get Ibo bumps on your bead analYJed lban it does to get your eyes pop- pecs out by nudle dancing gWJ. Monl bsuea aalde, many Cosa Mesa civic . leaders who have devoted time to deanup and beautl!icati<>n campaigns and dty improvement proje<:ts must be bof- flod as to why Costa Mesa II afflicted with lbe naked tavern syndrome while other Orange Coast communllies seem to have eluded Ibis type of urban blight. These civic leaders must find it curious that no nude entertainment is found in such communities as Newport Beach, Huntington Beach, San Clemente, Fountain Valley or Laguna Beach . Yet it exists here with apparent immunity from municipal control. Perhaps therein lies the answer for Costa Mesa city aulborltles who believe they are "handcuffed" 1n con- trolling the kind of entertainment offered In local tav- erns. City officials might confer wilb the leaders in olber coastal towns to determine what legal ways they have found to escape the handcuffs. Bergeron Takes Over The Costa Mesa Chamber ol Commerce should be on its way to another year of accomplishment with Eugene Bergeron at the presidential helm. Bergeron, a member or the Chamber for lbe past eight years and a director for four yea.I"St enjoys the reputation of being both witty and a man of action. He has proven the latter attribute bf playing a key role in the annual Lions Club Fish Fry. ~ite this, he has found time to give to other organizations, among them the American Legion, lbe Knights of Columbus, and the Elks Lodge. More contributions -to Costa Mesa -seem to be in store. The DAILY PILOT wishes him a successful year. c 'It's amazing bow you've grown since your .nomination, George.' Benefits Bank and Employer, Not Enaploye 'Check!ess Society' Idea Chills Him To the Editor: I note with horror the latest llim-nam the computer experts are about to force upon state employes, the "checkless society." The benefits accrue to bank and employer, not the employe. The most obvious disadvantage is if there is no check there is no check stub. This little piece or paper contains all your deductions, overtime, etc. Com- puters can and do make errors. Without a stub the employe cannot check these items. If he is paid overtime his check wUJ vuy from pay period to pay period and he WUJ. have no idea bow much has been credited to bis a<X<l!Jllt unlll be gets ' his monthly statement. J, for one, do not care to be financially blind for 30 days at a Ume. AS FOR COMPllTBRS paying my recurring bills, thls Idea really sends cbllls up and down my spine. Tbe main reason I even have a checking account is that It provides me with a validated receipt. Can you imagine trying to tell the fellow repossessing your car, or the electric company chap shutting ·off your power, "but the bank: paid you automatically." Ha, Ha. I can only urge au employes to resist this latest ''improvement" or risk fman· cial chaos. D. V. PICKER Be Aware and Bewllt'e To the E<Utor: The following statistics quoted in a re- cent newsletter from Assemblyman Robert Burke are worth passing along : 1. Democrats have controlled our federal Congress for 38 of the past 40 years. 2. During the past 50 years at the federal level, Democrats have raised tax- es 15 times and cut them three times. During the same so years, Republicans reduced taxes nine times and raised them only once. 3. DURING THE PAST 40 yean, tbe Democratically-controlled Congress for 38 of those years, with four Democnti(: Presldenis, failed to attempt any change in tax structure. Some people appear not to be aware that our California Legislature and our federal legislature are NOW c:ontrolled by Democrats. Tbe uninformed complain about the wn'.lng people; they are easily duped by a wolf in sheep's clothing mak- ing promises, promises, promises. Let us be aware, and beware, of ob- vious untruths. (MISS) RENE SMITII Shameftd, Outrageous To the Editor: The Foreign Aid, United Nation•, World Bank, H.E.W. and other "giveaway" schemes have pushed the U.S. public debt to a point 187,000 million dollan (yes, $87 bUllon), lfPe< lllu tlle combined debll of all olilu utloo• al tlle world I Tbll 11 obmelal ud .. ~ .. Why should we continue ID give away money which we do not really possess! Any funds we glve now must be borrowed, and this wlll Ian Jnllatloo and increase our taxes. SpendthrUt COngressmen must be put on notice! C. C. MOSELEY Neeu 88.7 BWio11 To the Editor: Last week, on a sleeple11 nJa:ht in Helslnld trying to adjust my bocly-dock to a nine-hour Ulne change, I opent my otherwlM fruitless time designing a com· p1ete l'lpld transit system for far-away Southern Calllomla. There are far too many details to MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 wards or less. The 1'ight to condense letters to fit space or eUmi'nate libel is reserved. All letters must include signature and maum~ .... Oddres&, but name a may be wi~!d on request if BUffici<nt ·f:faion U apparent. PoetTJJ wilt not be published. ' diWlge in the short space allotted tieftin~ but sidilce It to say that It Is ·pattirned somewhat on Bill Mason'• engineering "egg" apPf03ch as published in the DAI· LY PILOT recently -though as an arcbltect I prefer a Jess embryonic, more ttchtonic modular unit concept. IT WOULD BE immodest to say that I solved the who)~ future of mankind's transit pfoblems in one night, but it was better than counting sheep. lf there j& anyone out there listening, I have some serJoua Ideas, but need 16.7 blllioo as seed mOney for a start. Tb.ls revelation might be attributed to a beautUul day, the Finn-trots, or a slug of mesimarja (try It, you'll like It), but for the record, someone had better get me out of my Coast Highwiy office driveway pretty soon or I'll .... HERB BROWNELL (Mailed from Bergen, Norway, Sept. 19) Help #Of' the EWerl11 To the Editor; While much is being written in this election year about the impact of "Senior Power," I would like all older persons in tho ..... to know that the Am«Jcan A'80Clailon of R<tired Persons believes that the true power of "seniors" lies ln their coottnued cootributlon to tbe health and well-being of our nation. A noo-profit, non-partisan organization of. more than 4 million members. AARP ~ many community"9ervice ac- UvlUes through which olde< citizens con-t-ID apply thoi< uperJ.ence and wlsdom in service to olher3. IT PROVIDES memberl many Jncome- stretching services -such as special in- surance programs, mail-order phannacy services and group travel programs. nnugil tis natlonal and stata legislative _....,., it seeks to Improve Social Security and Medleare prosrams, bolls· B9 George ----. Dear George: My boyfriend named hi• pig alter me. la Ibis a deUberata insult? NANCY Dear Nancy: Ob, for goodness sake . . . of coune, it'a not an insult! Wbat'a wrong with a nice name lite Nan- cy? Dew G<orJe: . My husband has tbe Idea that mentholated ctgarett. are actual'1 l!ood for you. He balea It on tho fact that bis mother uaed ID rub his chest wtth menthol salve when be had a cold aa a child. Ia there poo- alble valldlcy to tbill! WONDERING Dear Wondering : Oh, boy, another cuatomer for the cigarette I'vt Jnventadl It not only Is mentholated, but Ibo !iUor It-lull of 0011 drops. ing and transportation services and to obtain tax refonns to benefit the elderly, A major current legislative goal is the removal of the earnings limitation under Social Security, which unfairly penalizes older persons who need to work to su~ plemeot meager incomes. MEMBERSHIP DUES are only $2 per year, covering both husband and wife. Members receive the hand.1ome bi- monthly magazine and the monthly AARP News Bulletin, OOth providing in- spirational and infonnative news and features about older Americans. 'lbrough it& chapter programs, memben lef'Ve their comm.mities in ~ ways, in- cluding Defensive Drivtng Courses, Institutes of Ufetlme Leam!ng and health educaUo'1 and comumer iJl.. formation programs. I will be pleased ID direct Interested persons to tbe AARP chapters In !hill area. Complete information is also available from AARP, 1225 Connecticut Avenue , N.W .. Washington, D. C. 20036. MRS. ISABELLE KIRCHOFF President Huntlngtoo Beach Chapter I9361 Brookhunt Street, Space 50 Hunlingtoo Beach, CA 92646 lflaat Can Be Done'/' To the Editor: In a news bulletin !nm Sen. Alan Q-Bllllon it says: "I am glad to see the California Legislature. puaed • bUJ that says: 'Bands olf of the Social Security iJ>. creases for the higher cost of living for the aged, dlsabled and blind.' " I mn 63 and disabled and since I wrote my first letter, I have bad en intenriew wltb my medlcal visitor and for oil ber double-talk made no sense to me, s h e came up with $206. Abo, · I dillcovtted that alter promising me ·fl5 for owning and operating a cw (because I cannot walk very far and have ID llO to the cfoo. tor), sha was allowing me Giily ftO and sbi. had lorgotlen all a!ioot' the '5 relm- bunrement on my gantge bills. I HAVE FIGUl\Ep" ond ftiNnid and always I get $236. So wblre is the re- mainihg $30? I 11:as depending on tbe in- crease to climb out of the bole and stay O\ll. God says in Ilia Word for us· to owe no man, but 1-C"'1 wa pay oor bUll wllen th•"' II lmt111lc!eot kl...,..! I om very Scotdiy about making blllo and do not have some thinp that I need. Since I moved inlo thil bouae Jan. 3, Im, the Ed1-1(93 ond lel<ipbone btve hid two --now the tel~ company wanl3 amther. Not onI:r are"" old8ten having trouble, but Ille ~ cl•ss ill struggling wtth IUch hill>· ta .. s. Who Is padding their pockels? A n d what can be done? · NAME WJTllllELD Help Thent Rei.e.i. To tbe Editor: In my origiMI letter, headed "Traner COurl8 Do Have a -· (MallllOJ:, Feb. lS) whlcll was aenl to Ille l!der'al govenunent by the slata DivJslwJ of Hlgbways, and reeulled Ill a new law beJne passed on M., IS, under the Utle of "Hard!blp to tbt Eld!Jrl1," 'lhlcb meana any family dllplaced b)' a freeway, foro- ed to move, llOlild ""'"1n' aid lioln the. state RelocaUon ,Depertmeat kl flndlll& a new location arid coven cmnnt eipeme tnvolv~. - At that Ume Ille aale ol UDURd land near tbe FalrYleir llolpltal wu made av1lllble. The dly dtCoota Mia bid on It and DOW OraJil8 eoUnty baa a bid, but It must be Ull!! for •· r.g!onal part, However, """" put of it -IUQl!lled I • to be purchased by the present trailer park owners interested in making a trailer city for 2,000 people eventually being displaced by freeways in Costa Mesa. TIIESE PEOPLE who paid taxes all their lives are now faced with no place to go when displaced , and with limited in- comes no choice of 1vhere. Part of this Fairview land could be used for this purpose, and it is vital that somewhere these people wiU find a place to live. The last section on Newport Boulevard i to be notified to move above Wilson Street down to Bay Avenue has causeCI • mtkh coocem to the people living there. 1._ NO available place to move exists in this area. I have talked with Frink Hoyt, Orange County representative of the state Highway commission, and be has been most cooperattve Jn giving me nee4ed Jn- fonnalion and ll doing a ten'll1c job trying to relocate the people having ID move on account of the freeways. He told me any discussion of buying ~irview land would have to be taken up with the General Services Division at Sacramento direct. IT IS HOPED..,_,. Interested, prob- ably the present owners of the.se trailer parks, can finally solve this problem by 1 buying new land to relocate these dJsplaced trailers and occupants. The amwer to most of these intricate problems is that all freewaya should go inland; we haven't room for the people living here nor allowance for a gruesome freeway to destroy our area. Irvine land is still not affected nor concerned "ith this problem. These trailer OWl1€rs need our interest and help, the,. need secw-ity, safety and to allay their fears for the future. Land in this area is at a premium, more tcarce each year, so it see.ms there isn't any answer. They need this Fairview land to start living again during their few remaining years in the future. VIONA BURDICK RADNEY 1-Fonfla'• VMIVs To the Editor: ~ you for the editorial <Sept. 19) e~ning )'OUr reason for printing !he interviews with Jane Fonda. However, in my opinion, this is "back· ~ her" because this is exactly what she lS working for-all the publicity she can get to e:rpose her views favoring Hanoi and downgrading her own country to us many people as possible, hoping to in· Ouence them. to her way of thinking. In my oplruon, she Is a radical and a tra!Uir and H's too bed she didn't stay in Hanoi. MRS. WILLIAM CAMP OltANOI COAST DAILY PILOT 17 t p t