HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-02 - Orange Coast Pilot7
S,.otgun Blasts in Abdonaen
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' Mountain Lions Valley Poliee
Pay ~nsoli~ited Baffled by Murder
Visits to Irvine At Gas · Station
DAILY PILOT -. -,,-. ----~.. --------·-~---...
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MONDAY AFTERNOON , OCTOBER 2, 1972
VOL. 6$. NO. 216, 1 11.CTtONS, 2' f'AGES
Sight Restored ,, ·' ' . .. ' 11e Sees Afwr 24 fears' Darkness
LONDON (UPI) -When Nino Fettel emerged from the airliner, he saw
the woman he had Jived with for more than 20 years but had never seen.
"I had a mental picture of you, but you are much lovelier than I lmag.
lned " Fette! 48 said as he gazed at his wife, Ena, 41.
Fettel blinded 24 years ago by acid thrown at him, returned Sunday from
Rome wh~e-at surgeon, Dr. Bemedetto Strampelli, resto~ his sight.
At Lohdott's Heathrow Airport, he saw his wife of 20 years and his sons,
Pau1, 16 and Adrian , 15, for the first time. · · ''Y~ never told me what beautilul eyes you had," he said. "Don't let them
mist over with tears."
"And look at my .sons!" he ·exulted to onlookers. "What strapping chaps
they are." _ _ .-. . _
The Fettels met shortly after his accident in 1948 at a hospital in Engl~d
where be was a patient and she was a nurse. Five years later, they marned.
'Vigilante' Shoots Two
Mesa BMrtlflar Sus pects
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By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .... D.w'f """ ,,.,, A vending machine man on his own an-
U-burglar vigilante patrol opened ffre on
two brolhert at a Costa Mesa bar this
morning , wounding both and h1tting ooe
headiln in the groin wtlh a shotgun blast.
The agonized man -his lower ab-
dolilen ehrecl!ltd by. bucklbot -. WU
droi'!?"" off ali lloag fdelDOrlal HOlpltal
shOH!y aftet 111@.5 a.m. incident. •
Hi5 brother was arrested moments
Jatt:r on N~ Boulevard at Via Lido,
when Newport Beach Police Officer Jim-
my Donaldson atopped the getaway car.
Luigi Corona, 25, was still undergoing
iurgery at Hoag Memorial Hospital dur-
ing mid-morning hours ror his abdominal
-and medical penonnel 11id his coodltloo wu not establJJbed.
He wll dellnlWy golnc IO be admitted,
however, they noted.
His brother, Sleven Corona, wu held
by Newport Beach police brieOy, then
A.D MAKES SHORT
WORK OF BEETLE
If you're looklng for en .. ample of how
to sell whatever It ls you have for sale,,
lry thil :
* '67 vw °""· orlalnaJ
OWDll"I', Vt!f"Y sood condlt'°".
$750, DX·XXXJI',
It woold bl bani IO belt the
oorlormence record ol thol mJcjlty mite. '!be three-line ad oold tho eer !M-flnt
~ It 1t>ll<ll'td In the DAILY PILOT.
Direct lliie to clwlfltd advtrtilinl
multi at the DAILY PILOT ii MWm.
Try It.
taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital for ex·
amination befnre being shipped to
Orange Q:lunty Medical Centet-.
Costa Mesa Police Detective Wayne
~Harber said the second Corona brother
appears to have been wounded more
seriously than first believed.
He was hit by several 20 gauge shotgun
pellets, one of •htc;h X--rays indicate
lod.Jed Iii or neat hill heart liOtectlve Norm ltulch, 1llo assigned
to the case: said the second burglary
suspect was still lying on a stretcher at
the county facility at 9 a.m., four houn
after he was wounded.
Investigators said vending machine
. route. operator Henry B. Stegmann, 34.
fired a total of four blasts at the Corona
brolhen during a pr..tawn confrontation
at the Pier 11 night club.
Stegmann -who has a chain of coln-
operated vending and a m u s e m e n t
machlnee Including pool tables -bas
suffered a aelitt of burglary losses. ooe a
l!OO loss 11 Pier II just a month ego.
"He WU looking after hit Interests,"
Detectlvellarber remarked today. saying
Steg>naM lhowed up II lflf Newport
Blvd., to m1ke IUI'! the premllet were
JecUre .
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He fwnd evidence that It wasn't Ind
apparenUy hwd the Coronal loslde.
"He called them out of the bu.Udtnc."
Ott«tlve HIJ1>er -1nued, 11ytniJ at
that point Stepann thought -of the
1111pecti had 1 pn and openod fin with
hil llnll• abot .........
Polfce Nld Stqmann r<loaded and nr.i opln u the wounded men fled ta
their car, putting two more bluts lntb
tM vthlcliB before It was out of r•ngt.
ln\'esUg1tor1 liJd they doubt wh6htr
any crllnillll chorgn ere likely IO bl fil.
ed llfllntl SltjlllllM, Who Wll lrmled
hl....U -l'l'll """" llfO for alloged ll!f< 'viGU.. J!oCe II
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ares om,
Lions Seen
Near Irvine
Area Homes ·
Irvine residents aren't sleeping so
soundly these nighls, after sighting of
three mountain lions prowling Inhabited
areas or the city over the weekend, with
two big cats spotted by a policeman.
One of the tawny predators - a third
-was lounging across the concrete block
wall of a home in Turtle Rock about 1
a.m. Saturday, the occupants told Irvine
Police Officer Bob Kredel.
He anived within three minutes of
Mn. Sheryl Hanfield's call and found
solid evidence of a nocturnal visitor at
5685 Sierra Clelo Road.
One large, wet paw print, about three
lnche5 across, wu found on the waU,
while numerous deep claw scratcbe!
were etched into the wooden fence.
Offleoer Kredel said 1U1plcioos aounds
in the backyard - a continuing probl:em
in recent months -led Mrs. Hanfield's
husband and aon to go out and in·
vesUgate.
They tald they found a large, tan,
green-eyed cat about al!: feet long and
2~ feet high on the waU, addJng that
their appearance didn't frighten the
anlmal at all.
They 11id It stood up. stretched, hop-
ped down and ambled off across adjacent
Turtle Rock Drive end dilappeared In the
President Homa tract.
Officer BUI Bechtel, retJ)Olldlng as a
foUo'lt'up lo P1trolman Kndel.'1 dllpatch
to confront the mountain Uon, arrived
after It was gone but aakl be aaw two
more of them wblle en route.
He said they were Wumlllated 90me
distance away by bia patrol car llghll,
loping up 1 hillside, adding that he could
see their eye1 ahine u they dllappeared
over the top.
1"1ne Company officials today ~med
perturbed by the report of preda tort amonc the poputtce o1 the ""' com-munity belna carved out of the Orange
Qlunty wlldomw.
"U It ....... ~ for the copo -Inc It I
could Wldentand I~" be quipped with a
chuclde.
He addod lbal 1 chedl wttll Irvine Com-agricultural department of.
fldal Bob Eldtt m1ka It 1ppeu llfoclc>I
tbat -nca1n lionl ....,Id be comln&
clcnm from the hllil Into town.
.. Ins people are out In the boonies 111
the lime •nd be sakl they've lfitfl no •ten
11 all of bll cttl tlJll year, the ""'PIRY
offidel 111d.
lie Mid E1dw couldn't even f'!Clll 1ny
IS.. LIONS, P11e II·
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OAl\.Y PILOT ltafl ......
It's Thelr Bag
G<Orge Grainger Oe!t) and Bob Richardson (right) demonslr1te their
skllls on traditional Scottish bagplpe.s for brothers Jesse, 7, Oe!ll ind
Davyd Arend, 6, Santa Ana. Pipers, both from Glascow, Scotland,
played al Co1ta Mesa's South Coast PIUI during Ille we•lr•nd 11
British Expo '72. Expo continues through Sund1y .
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Murder of Valley Station
Attendant Baf fies Police
Fountain Valley poUce uld t.oday they
.,,, llUI boffied by the knlllnc·murder of
I ICU llaOon proprietor lut 'll'et:k.
"What we rtally need Is 1 load brok."
llld Lt. John -this momlnc.
Police ore stUt ~oln,; on tho 11-y thll
Louis J. l.tl•lo. 51, pruprl<tar rl the Shell
lltlllon 11 lbe comer ol &shard Street
nnd T1lb<rt Avmur, -killed w1"" ho
aurprlaed two tlllMt b)' l'Ol!MtniJ their
altempll to rob him.
Elrly ducrtpllonl of the 1U1"""8
at1ted 1hlt both were •t e ~I can·
Americans. Pollet thil momlnc -•
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new compmlle drawlnc of onre l\lfPttt
and Indicated ho ...., prob1bly
CaUClllln. He 11 belltved IO be 1-foo<·I.
210 pounds, with blond holr.
The .-Rd IUlpect ii reponed to be ~
foot-len, 119 pounds. with blac.t hllr.
Rollf)' for Lovlo wtU be tonltht 11 I
o'rloct In .be Smith and Tu1hl~I Mortuory
tlllf"'I In Senti Ana. llorrlca Will be
""-lly 11 JO 1.m., 1flo In tbe chlpel.
l.ovllo, of till FJ ,._. Ordt. r...,_
taln V11lty, Is 1urvhed by hit wtle Jean .
his -her Sopl)ll : 1 dlupttt. Alma
Kec.ll r: two llltm and 1bre1
gntnd<hlldrta.
. our,
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Txio Watch
Victims Die
h1 Flo r ida
BRANDON. Fla. tAP I - A young
dlvorctt and her two chlldrtn watched
helplessly as a gunman kll1ed four
penons lncludlng her parents and
brothtt In a Brandon farmhouse, poUce
say.
Police aakl. the anallant nred one shot
through a screen window early Sunda)',
killing one perlOll, and then bursl Into the
farmhod\e and .shot three othtt1
Evelyn Sanden Johmoo ind htt l•·o
children 1err spared.
The vicUms w~re ldentlfLed 11 John T
Sanden, 50; hla wife, Catherine. J7; lht1r
15-yeir~kf 10n, Earl, and a friffli of the
famUy, James Rk:hard Brid11Cea, 21. who
WA! •hot u he Jay In bed. police llkl.
Another brother, 2 .. year~ John
Sanden, WU II wort ln lhf dairy behind
the houle, about 10 mUes east ol TamJ>A
Pollce ukt I.hey armited TbomaJ
Turner 011r•bon. :a, ol Gldlden. Ala .•
and 21.ye:ar-old Robert Harrb: of Largo,
after a h.llb lpeed car chaw. Both 1ftte
charted wtth bnt.-,ree murder.
C1111nben and Harris ,..,.. ti.Inc held
In JUllshorouiJr County Jail In Tampa
without bond.
A neighbor, Mn. &t.ry Davis, 111d
Mrs. Johns;in came runnlng from tht
tSee WATCH. P11e II
<: .....
We•lliler
1111 be cool« "" ~y. the
WHlhetildy predlc:U. wltli hfPt
of 75 lnilnd. -tempo -
bl 1"1Und " with hlP -thnluchout the dly. Lon i..Jpt
18-111
l.NSmE TODAY
F.1!~ I/ Prt1Min1 N I• o 11
1hould carrv California bw •
landtlklf, obletWf'I ..., Mt p>-
lltfatl coottalll di nor J1fOWde
"""~ pulllllfl -'"' 01,,., r.op candldo1<1. lft lfor\I, l'Qfl<
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; . 'M•~s1;g · Gil4 D"ad
'S I~ W a1ited to Be a Hippie'-Father
MIAMI BEACH (U PI ) In a
Stt!pbanic Welner, 20, pretty and naive,
kissed her father goodbye Sept. I, climb-
ed in the family van and head north for
~lontreal. She wanted to be a hlppie.
"f gave her some old shirt~ so she
could be like the others," Milton \\'c1ner
said.
Weiner said she drove off \\"ith a young
man nan1cd "Hank" who \vanted a ride
1 north. tic was broke , he told Inn . and his
wife was critically ill in New Jersey.
Ina promised to call her father when
she reached New Jersey. Sbe didn'l -
and Milton Welner v.·orried.
"She was such an innocent girl," be
said. "So niiive for a ~year-old. She
Nuptial Party
Cost $100,000
CLEVELA I\D (UP! I -Dominic
Visconsi. :1 shopping cent e r
developer, spared no expense for
his daughter Nicole 's wedding dur·
Ing the weekend.
The reception cost an estimated
$100,000.
The 2,000 guests nibbled 18,000
hors d'oeuvres, 20,000 pieces or
shrimp and crab fingers, finished
off a seven·tier cake and consumed
50 cases of liquor.
"It v.·as the biggest extravaganza
J've seen in 22 years," said chef
~like f.1orabito , who grllled steaks.
couldn't have kno~·n a hippie from a
drug addict."
N.. the days wo~ on without a phone
call , Welner decided to flnd out about
''Hank." With the sometimes reluctant
help of police, Welner fin.ally learned
.. Hank" was 25-year--old Henty King, a
fonvicted user of narcotics.
\Veiner then lraccii Kins to Paterson,
N.J . Police there found KlnJ!: two week s
ago anrl asked him to call Weiner. King
rnade the call and Welner said King told
bhn. "Ina arrivecr. safely, then took off on
a n1otorcycle for Brooklyn.
"Then he got rattled and said he left
Ina off in North Carolina, or maybe
Florida. 11e stsld Ile still had the van and
all of lna's possessiom, but told me he
had paid her $500."
King vanished.
Wist week, polke In Maryland found
tht decomposed body 01 a girl stuffed in
a sleeping bag at a roadside park near
Baltimore.
The body went unidentified for several
days.
\Vcint'r heard about lt. contacted
Bultlmorc police and dental records were
checked.
Friday, ~lllton \Veiner's worst Ie<1rs
came true. The girl in the sleeping bag
was lna.
King, meanwhile, had been picked up
Jn lodianapolis and is being held t.htre on
a lethnical charge of "larceny after
trust."
Europe Reductions
U.S., Soviets Prepar e
For Troop Negotiations
\VASHINGTON I UP I i -Preside;1t
Nixon met today with Soviet r~oreign
f..1Inister Andrei Gromyko. and American
sources said the United States is ready to
start preliminary negotiations with the
Soviet Union on troop reductions in
Europe.
Nixon and Gromyko sat side by side on
gold colored chairs in the President's
oval office.
scheduled for the White ~louse but Nixon,
\Yho spent the weekend at Camp David,
ordered the change of location.
"We have a good day to go to Camp
David today ... the leaves are beginning
to turn rto fall colors )," he told the
Soviet official.
P f H I l ~y will get together again tonight, i·o esso1· e ( probably ror longer discussions, at ii
U.S. sources said Nixon was likely to
givl' Gromyko informal \\'Ord Iha\ the
United States is ready to talk about troop
recluctions and a Soviet proposal for a
"E:uropean security conferen<:t.."
The word \\'OUld not be formal. the
sou rces said. because the United Stales
and its Allies have not completed COl'l--
su !tations on the proposal to reduce the
U.S. troop commitment in Europe.
v:orking '"dinner the President is giving In Crutch Death ~~~,~~omyko al his Camp David (Md.)
Dur.illg their 1norning session Tasting an
C\C 'W• £ • NM._ hour and 10 minutes, "a!I outstanding --ur-IC m , I .I .----'matters. 'bCtween tbe tv.·o na!ions-..·\fcre
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NEW YORK (UPI) -A college pro·
fessor was held today on charges of
bludgeoning his wife to death with a
crutch.
Authorilics said the body of Mrs.
Bharatti Dobba, 27, was found on a cOuch
in the couple's apartinent Sunday. They
said the crutch Y:as found nearby.
Rao Bobba, 37, an associate professor
al Staten Island Community College, was
accused of using the crutch lo beat his
wife to death.
Her head, police said, y,·as haltered
beyond recogni tion. ~
Sobba uses crutches because of a
broken leg.
Officers v.·ent to lhe couple's 18th floor
apartment after neighbors heard the
woman screaming.
Sobba was ordered held without bail
pending a hearing Thursday.
'S pirit' Seized;
Ciistomer's $20
Bill Disappenrs
MATTOON, Ill. (AP) -Coles County
law enforcement officials must not
believe in ghosts.
Katherine Fanton, 20. of Mattoon, who
operates a "spiritual adviser'' buslness in
her home. was arrested and charged with
thert after a patron's S20 bill disap-
peared. .
Mary Caine told police she visited.
"Sister Katherine," 8S Miss Fanton calls
her~lf. for sp!ritual advice.
She said lttiss Fanton asked her lo put
a $20 bill 011 the table and v.·as told that it
\li'ould disappear.
It did.
When the patron 11sked S i 5 t e r
Katherine to give her the bill back after
the aession was over, Sister Katherine
wns reported lo l1111·c said "The spirits
took It."
Miss f<~anton posted bond and was
(reed.
OU.M61 COAST ST
DAILY PILOT
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discussed. Press Secretary Ronald L,
Ziegler said.
Nixon and Gromyko both will spend the
night at Camp David and return to the
White House Tuesday In time for a mom·
ing ceremony to ratify formally Rnd
finally the strategic arms limitation
agreements \Vhich Nixon and Soviet
leaders signed lasl l\·!ay in l\1oscow.
Police Probing
$10,000 Fisli
Po isoning Cnse
Silting in on the While !louse session Neii'port Beach police arc investigat ing v.·ere Secreatary of Slati: 'V illiam P, ltogers, Nixon's nat ional security ad vise r the apparent po1soning or $10,000 worth of
Henry ,\. Kissinger and Sovie l rare tropical fi sh in the backyard pond of
Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin . a \Vestcliff brick layer.
Newsmen were admitted for only the Richard c. llentges, 45, of 2218 Fran·
first minute or so of the session, and heard Nixon and Gromyko exchange cisco Drive, told police he discovered 28
comments about the effectiveness of the Koi, a type of Japanese carp, dead and
United Nations. dying in their pool early Sunday morning,
"There is always work lo do in t~ He told police there was an ordor of in·
U.N. organizalion," Gromyko said secticide lingering in the air.
through an interpreter. "It is not ah .. ·ays . p ·oductive but there is always work to be Hentges told officers at the scene that
tkme." Koi are extremely susceptible to poisons
•·J agree with both sentences" Nixon of any type.
responded. ' P~li~e said Hentges told them the in-
Gromyko spoke at the United Nations sectic1de could haye blown over the pond
last week. So did Rogers. Rogers told from somewhere 1n the neighborhood by
Nixon "He gave a good speech." accident and that other Kol breeders Gro~yko responded. "We closely have had similar p~oblems.
rollowed with interest the speech of the . Hentges. valued his fish at up to $400 a
secretary of state. It was an interesting piece, police said.
speech." , Detectives. said tod~y they would con·
Nixon observed, ''1bars diplomatic t1nue the 1nvestlga1Jon to determine
language." whether or not foul play was involved.
Gromyko replied, ".t's saying a great
deal."
Tonight's dinner originally had been Killer, 63, Must
From Pagel Cut Down Booze
LIONS ... MONTREAL I UPI) - A 63-year-old
Russian immigrant who pleaded guilty to
time in recent years when mountain lions manslaughter in the ax killing of a 6()...
have ranged down out of their rugged year-old friend was ordered to limit his
habitat in the Santa Ana ~fountains on drinking to thfee pints a day and stay
the other side of the San Diego Freeway. away from political arguments.
Game ls extremely abundant in the Justice Claude Bisson of the Court of
hills this year and Elder was al a loss to Queen's Bench also handed out a tv.·o.
erplaln why the cats wt>uld roam sub-year suspended sentence to I I j a
divisions, although nearby Bommer Can· Woroblow. after taking into account the
yon and surround ings offcr them brush five months Woroblow spent in jnil
cover and water supplies. awaiting trial.
;'There are some detr n1nnlng nround. Woroblow admitting killing his long·
but they don't have claws," he remarked time friend, Nicolas Sherko, when a
in rea:ard to telltale scratchmarks on the palltical argument broke up thelr drink·
Hanfleld family's fence . lni bout.
Drugs Overboard
40 Passe11ge1·s A1·rested
On Yacl1t for Narcotics
Sr\N t•~RANCISCO (AP \ -Somr 40
prrsQllS on a chartered rnotor yacht v.•t1rc
booked on norcotlcs chnrgc~ nfter 1 wlld
scene In Y.'hlch passcni;:rris !icrnmblcd for
the s1dcrails lo 'dump lhe drug! before
arrt>stlng officers canlt! n b o a r cl ,
r1uthorilies i;ey.
Inspector Don Danltl1 said there were
mOI'(' than 300 pa~nMers and six un·
clercovrr narcotics 1n:spcc1ors aboard tl>c
Harbor Emperor, a thrte-dccker hny
Cnilst.r. when ll tied up at Flsh4!rman'1'
\\'hnrf following n three-hour p,lrty late
Sunday.
~tore than 1~·0 daitn uniformed of-
ficers l!ltrct11ntd o"°"rd !he vt!M!I 10
rnttke lhe Arrests amid cries of "lt'a ll
bust !" llnd a pell mell 1Ct1mble as
passenaers tried to act rid of the drua;s,
l.l11nlels Yid .
Cocaine and a vaMety of olhe.r druR.\
lalcr were found aboRrd the veMel, he
1aJd.
01nlth1 saht those 1rrestcd "5"Cnl book·
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rd ror in\'cstlgntion of u "myriad" of
narcollcs charges, nto!lt in v o 1 v l n g
po8~ssion of marijuanA .
He said San r~ranclscc and San ~tateo
authQ.rlt!('S ('arllcr v.·ere alerted thnt A
San 1i1ateo County n11rcotics dealer hnd
chArtcrl'<I lhe Harbor Emperor. Rftrr
selling tlcicets (Or the p.3rty cruise ln
MJVt!ral nearby communities.
Undercnvcr narcotic.'! in!lpecton. sonic
dres.scd as deckhands. mingled v.·lth lhe
crowd. \\·hlch enjoyed rock muilc nnd
alcoholic ~,·erages in addition to drt1gs.
Daniels said.
The officers vtel'f! fumllhfd \\Ith
nnmitics but It w11:s de<:ld«I to delay the
arrests W'ltil police reinforcements could
be summon'ed when the vesM!I docked, he
Slid.
All aboard "·cire brleny detained until
pollec could !JOr.t o.u.t_the pel"IONI even·
hudly chnrgtd. he said.
There were no 5erious Incidents.
Daniels said. Names of those arrested
were not lmmedinto.ly available..
•
H11el<1
·sure I'm agen violencB, and
anyonB tMt ~ diffBrent
'ill get blastsd!
Frem Pqe J
VIGIL •..
gambling violations.
Vice offit..-ers claimed at that time he
was financing his way through Orange
Coast College by running a casino in his
ho1ne.
Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow cited the
California Penal Code today, explaining
It allows private eitirens to use
reasonable force in apprehending a
person suspected of committing a public
offense in his presence.
Due to the extent of thcir injuries.
neither Corona brother. both reportedly
from Los Angeles, had been formally
booked on suspicion of burglary as of
mid·morning. ,.
Detectives had advised both or their
conslitulional rights, however. adding
they were definitely being detained and
would be charged.
All machines inside had been ~en
into. police sai.d. ·
Officials at Hoag Memorial Hospital
announced later this morning that Luigi
Corona's surgery was completed and he
was listed in satisfactory condition.
F romPagel -
WATCH •.•
house, crying hysterically and yelling,
"They're all dead, They're all dead,"
Police said she told the Davis family
the gunn1an spared her, saying, "I'm not
going lo kill you, just. the ones you love
1nost."
Hillsborough County sheriff's officials
said the young divorcee had been seeing
Chambers for three years but left him
about three weeks ago in Texas.
Chambers reportedly followed her to
Clearwater and "threatened the family if
she wouldn't go back with him." Maj .
John Sala of the Hil lsborough sheriff's
department said.
Hitchhiking Couple
So~ght in Robbery
A young Santa Ana motorist has a good
mental picture of the male and female
hitchhiker she picked up and dropped off
in Costa Mesa over .the weekend .
Police are using the description it pr<>-
vided Jn an effort to apprehend the pair
of grartd theft suspect& to whom Kenneth
J . Gaskins, 18, of 9485 f<~irebird Ave.,
Santa Ana , gave a lift.
Gaskins told police the couple, about 18
to 22, apparently took his $350 camera
and telephoto lens when he let them out
at Newport Boulevard and Del Mar
Avenue.
S11pervl1ors Jtleet.
3 County Leases
--.
To Be Discussed
Three Orange County fasea -at MUe
Square Park, at the OrartJe County
Airport and at Dana Harbor -are ex·
pected to generate some fireworks v.·hen
1he Board of Supervisors meets Tuesday.
The Mile Square lease in F'ountaln
Valley ls ror 213 acres or fannland ad ·
jt:icent to the park -land that has been
the subject of Crand Jury indictments of
two Westm.!neter city officials on bribery
and extortion charges.
Tha alrport lease is for the parking lot.
Willard said the proposal or that firm of·
rered a diversified operation which had
the best chance of success during the
first few years.
Senate Y ote Set
01i Liberalized
Welfare Reform The matter was first brought to the
board in April when all six bids were re-
jected as unsatisfactory.
The third lease is ror the boat sales \VASmNGTON CAP) - A Senate vote
and repai r facility at Dana Harbor. The on a liberalized welfare reform plan was
county !~arbor Commission has recom· assured today as Sen. Abraham A.
mended supervisors award the bid to tbe Ribicoff (D-Conn.), called up bis proposal
finn which came in $2{1,000 below the for debate.
highest bidder. The r<>ll call, however. will not come
All three leases have been the subject until Tuesday or Wednesday.
cf heflted debate in the past, and Ribicoff offered his proposal as a
Tuesday's meeting is not likely to be an substitute for a pending amendment
exception. · which would provide for a test of all the
The Mile Square bids are for a one--various reform plans to deal with prob-
ycar extension of the lease that has been Jems of welfare families.
held since 1967 by Fountain Valley This procedure guaranteed that his
farmer George Murai. substitute would get the first vote.
Al the suggestion of Supervisor Robert Jn the end, however, the Senate is ex·
Battin of Santa Ana, the lease this year peeled to resolve the controversy by
has Deen broken into three paf'Cf:ls. deciding for a tw<>-year test of the plans
J\.1urai has bid $14,700 for two parcels before anything substantive is done.
totaling 130 and George Tanka, a The test amendment first was offered
sublessee of Mural's has bid $9,400 for the Saturday by Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr.
remaining 83 acres. The only other bid is (lnd.·Va.).
from Norden Fruit Company at $2.1,962 However, today Byrd withdrew his P""
for the entire 213 acres. Controversy surrounding the property posal in favor of a slightly dlfferent.Jest
surfaced when former mayor Derek amendment spon30red by Sen. Willlam V. Roth Jr. lR·Del.). 1i1c\Vhinney and Planning Commissioner Ribicoff's substitute is liberallied Tad Fujita , were indicted for allegedly trying to shake dowii i 1ural for $lO,OOO· version of President Nixon's Family
to get his bia approved ~y the supervis· Assistance Plan which passed the House •"'-·~-,.:-.,.-,-.,----;.,--·--:-"'""~~~,..,-~1-•~,._;,year. " 1t provkle84or-a~anteed }UJOU•l i.D: The .airport parking-lot lease, which come for Welfare-famities ·on a naUonat calts for the ope.rator to return a high percentage of his gross inC9me to the basis but fixes the payment level at
county, will be returned to supervisors $2,600 for a family of four, $200 more
with the recommendation that the lease than the Nixon proposaJ. be awarded to a new operator. It would provide subsidies for the
The parking lot has been run by the working poor, as does the President's
Redman Parking C.OrporatiOn, whlch is plan..J but would ~Ive more fiscal relief to
submitting a new bid of $503,781. The lhf'~lesis~ ~m°!~rs~f tnitb for
hig!lest bid comes from P a r k i n g welfare reform," sald Riblcoff 11 be call· Corporation of America at $509,MS. Jn the debate on the lease in April, ed. up his substitute. "But I sense there is
PCA also submitted the highest bid, but very little interest in tilt Senate or in the
Real Property Services Director Stanley Administration any longer in this issue."
Krause recommended the lease go back Nixon proposed his family.assistance
to Redman because of problems other plan in 1969, to the 9lst Congress. It
Jeasors had had with PCA. Krause is ex· passed the House in that C.Ongress, too,
d r but died in ijle Senate. pecte to recommend or PCA on Tues--In its first week of consideration of the
day because of the higher bid and some big bill, the Senate added more than $5
safeguards written into the lease agree--billion worth of Social Security and ment. The competition for the boat repair and MMicare benefits, taking the total cost
sales tease at Dana Harbor will be up to about $20 billion.
between Willard Boat Works ·of Costa But mO!t floor amendments are ex·
Mesa and Dana Point Anchor Marine. peeled to be dropped in the conference
Harbor Commissioners in a 4 to 2 vote with the House.
tChairn1an Martin Usab abstained)
recommended the lease go to Willard
v.·hich submitted a bid with a $10,070
bonus for the county. Anchor Marine's
bid had a $30,500 bonus.
Commissioners said they voted for the
Costa Mesa firm because Anchor Marine
is part of Dana Point Marina Company,
the present master leasee for a boat
berthing facility at the harbor and
Anchor P.1ariae Repair, which operates at
Newport Dunes in Newpcrt Beach.
The four commissioners favoring
.
Murdere1· Gets Life
BOSTON (UPI) -Alan M. Lussier, 24,
Boston, was sentenced to life In prison
for the Halloween costume party slaying
of a Rochester, N.Y. area nurslng iitu·
dent. Lussier screamed when pronounced
guilty of first-degree murder in the death
of Christine M. Ross, 20, of Irondequoit,
N.Y. She had gone to the party dressed
as a marijuana plant.
New/General Beclric's l co-;;;plet;-:
1 Installation I
20.a CU. FT. NO-FROSf
RfFRIQERMOR-FREEZER
Only ~y,• WW., 611 Hip •••
'369''
• Jtt ,w ... C91'1P&1bi•lf
• kit'" l!llf ~(et, Nd ... ~"*""'"*'·-'•llMttal .. ,, . ....,
"mlGIMfOflt PUTU"ll; ·==:.r:A::r...
•GMllll&ll ............
•IWlleiiMllt ......
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Pholll! 548-1788
r
• ,_
1 Included I
I General Electric I
I "Best Buy" I
I Dishwasher I
I I
I I
I · I
I . I
I I
I I : 19995 :
I Modol SOISON I
b1ch1det; choit'f: ot color on
front ... ne.1 and mnovll ot I I old diahv.·ubtr.
• ------
w ........... ltw4
GINUAL WCTllC
--
--
•
, 1,000 J¥ew Homes
Bad News Viewed
By Capo District
By JOUN VALTERZA
Of ""' 0•111' ~li.t •••If
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified
School District will con!ront more grim
news in their agendas tonight -the pros-
pects of more than 1,000 new houses in a
portion of Mission Viejo where t h e
district has no vacant land and no funds
to build new schools.
New tract maps being filed at the
county level are commonplace on
trustees' agendas.
But the volume of the tract maps is in-
creasing almost by the week.
Each tract map sparks a letter of C<lm-
plaint from school officials to the cOunty
Capo Studies
Christmas
Decorations
planning department. Those letters insist
the district would be hard-pressed to
hou.se the oew students if the projects
were built.
Of particular concern tonlght will be
these projects:
-A 137 .S..acre tract in the southerly
area ol Mission Viejo proposed to contain
428 houses and enough cblldttn to fill
eight classrooms that as yet do not ei:i.st.
-Another southern Mission Viejo tract
encompassing in acres and creating 703
new houses. That project would require
13 more elementary classrooms.
-A 197-unit development on 9'l acre! in
the Alto Capistrano area of. San Juan
Capistrano generating 100 new elemen·
tary pupils. That project, administered
by tbe city, 'a will --require four new
classrooms.
-A 20-acre project involving 140 units,
in the Golf Course Hill portion of Laguna
Niguel. That project is expected to
generate enough youngsters to fill one
classroom.
With bond funds dwindling, the district
is reaching the point where a new
The San Juan Capistrano city staff is -revenue issue might be contemplated to
. studying a request by local residents that help cope with the growth.
the ctty buy its first set of Christmas One grave problem exists, however -
decorations for a sum of about $1 ,5000. the length of time required to plan and
The concept, first presented to coun-build a school.
cilmen this week by Robert J. Sheahan, U many of the projects being proposed
involves the purchase of the items from this month are occupied within the next
the Valley Decorating Company of two years the district wou1d hardly be
' Pasadena. able to build schools fast enough -even
October, councilmen learned, would be if the funds existed.
the last month that the decorations could One temporary measure being con-
be ordered in time for this Yule season. templated by trustees-is all-year school
The advocates of the decorations insist which r(!portedly can increase the use of
that San Juan should join the ranks of schools by one fourth.
many other coastal cities which have ~ut even if that were launched on a
They Didta't Get Away
In the process of moving his office from one part
of Washington to another, James Garson (third
from left} and his stall all but stopped traffic. Gor-
•
M~, Ott.obtr 2, 1972
son didn't want to trust the movers to transfer his
mounted fish, so he and his aides did the job them-
selves.
5 DAILY PILOT :J
MacGr eg or:
Democrats
To Return
Thousands or Democratic "party
regulars" will return ' to the Georgt-
McGovem camp by election day -nol
because of fi.1cGovem, but to sa\'e
themselves -the national director or
President Nl.lon 's campaign said in
Anaheim.
Th.at movement will cul Nixon's lead.
which now stands at 30 to 35 percent ln
major national polls , to about l~ to 20
pertent. Clark MacGregor pttdicted at a
weekend meeting of the Republican Stall·
Central Committee cf California at the
Disney land •lotel.
In an earlier speech, Gov. Reagan told
th'. party leaders that he expects a big
part of the "'undecided" vote in recent
polls ~·ill go to 1'1cGovem and narrow thr
gap between the candidates.
The Republi can governor said t~
undecided column is "the tlme bOmb" in
the polls ~ause. Reagan said. so many
of those undecided voters are Democrats
~·ho are oot really satisfied with the ir
candidate and are "waiting for any ci-
cu.'\e to vote for their man.''
MacGregor, national director of th<·
Corltrnitttt to RH:lect the President. said
movement back to l\fcGovem is already
apparent among Democratic pa rt y
leaders and what 1.1.acGre.gor called
''hard core Democratic voten."
1.IacGregor said P.1ayor Richard Daley
is an example o( Democrats around 1he
country .,.,.ho v.·ere "turned ofr' by the
l\lcGovem campaign but will be: "coming
b<J.ck to the fold " and reducing the
President's margtn before the electk>n. ·
"Do you know wby ... Daley ls working
hard now to bring McGovern up" in
C~ ·.;ago MacGregor asked the California ,
Republican leaders. ''Because the kind of
their own items for public streets. total elementary scale next summer,
. •· ... Those proposed for-the -Missi00--com..----dtstr-tct officiakr-flay-~y &l'e->COO¥ince8 ·--
defeat that George "fcGovem deterves
could destroy his (Daley's) party
tha'rge~"Dropped -m;c!·~~;'~!=1::~1~ · ~.,~~ fll'· , · munity would renect the Spanish in-there still will be a pupil housing crisis.
Ouence. • Other Items included in a lengthy but
Councilmen decided to allow the city somewhat routine agenda for trustees
. be ordered in time for this Yule season. tonight include ·
":; milted to see if the items could be easily -Considerati~n of formal recognition
-, installed on street lights downtown. of two separate employe groups as of-
. One severe drawhB;ck, several · coun-ficial representatives of d i s t r i c t
,. cilmen have agreed, 1s the lack of suf· employes. Certificated employes are pro--
, ficlenl . storage . space for . the bulky posed to be represented by the
d~rahons during the period between Capistrano Unified Federation o f hoh~ays. . . . . Teachers. Classified personnel seek
City fac1ht1es at present are in te~-recognition through the California School
, P?rary quarters and warehouse space is Employes Association.
nil. . -Consideration of the appointment of a
The_ staff has pro~sed a re~rt for citizen's advisory commitlee to evaluate
councilmen before tbetr next meeting. early childhood education programs of-
:. Story Hour Signups
Slated in Oemcnte·
Signups are being accepted at the San
Clemente branch library for Thursday
morning story hours for preschool
youngsters, aides said today.
The year-long program is open to all
preschool youngsters and is conducted by
·children's librarian Mrs. Lois Wellman.
:. Jnterested parents can contact Mrs.
Wellman at 492-3493 .
. • .
.. . .
.. • .
• •
Poster Girl
fered in some district elementary
schools.
-Considering a revised structure for
ihe citizen's advisory committee on the
· mentally gifted minor program.
South Koreans Shorn
SEOUL (AP) -More than 9.000 South
Korean youths had their long hair cut at
police barber shops across the country
Sunday and today in a nationwide police
crackdown against what authorities call-
ed "immoral and decadent" elements.
Peula Pfeifer, tile 1973 March of Dimes National Poster Child, take•
a spin on her tricycle tn her horne!Alwn of Tulu. Paula, 5, represenu
250,000 American children stricken each year with birth defecu.
She has had nine operations for three de/ects, but with tlle use of
partial brnc~!I on her legs. she can walk well-and even run.
•
· as an es:ample of self-preservation
I W I • politics he said will narrow tile gap n a s nne:to11 between the presidential candidates in
· v the coming five weeks.
Call Girl Case , Sa1i Juan Pay Rais_e Finds Hitch
San Juan City councilmen had ex·
peeled their self-approved raise in month-
ly pay to start today.
But Mrs. Rose Corrigan, a housewife in
the Mission C1mmunity, has put a stop to
that.
Checks by the city staf£ of the state
codes after last Monday's formal ap-
proval of the raise by the council found
the hitch in the plans.
The search was launched by Mrs. Cor-
rigan wOO asked tbe council iI members
were av.:are or a specific section of the
codes.
Councilmen said no.
They asked the city staff to check.
But in the meantime they had ap-
proved the raise from $75 to $1:10
monthly, effective Oct. 1.
The code states, however. that the
raise could not start until after the next
general election in the city.
That will take place next April.
So the monthy checks will stay at $75.
WASlllNGTON !UPI) -Philip M.
Bailley, charged with operating a pros-
lilution ring that involved ~'Omen who
worked on Capitol Hiii and at the White
llouse, has pleaded guilty to one count of
traru:p<rting women for i m m o r a I
purposes.
In rell.U'll for the plea, the U.S. At.
tomcy's office dropped a mullicounl in-
dictment against Bailley that purported
he operated a prostitution ring.
Parents' Nights
At Capo District
Scliools Slated
The South Coast ThfCA "'ill sponsor
school infonnation nights starting this
week ln tile Caplstrano Unified School
Di5trlc1 to tnronn parenll and chUdttn
about parent-child ranaUona.I actlvlUts.
Laguna Niguel Prepares
When Ballley wu arrested in June.
police conliscated photographs that they
said showed persons Involved In sexual
act!. Ballley allegedly took t h e
pholOgraphs.
According to the charges dlsmiMed,
BaiUey, 2!:1, dated attractive young
women who hnd just been divorced or
had other recent romantic letdowns arid
used drugs and alcohol to seduce and
photograph them. •le then allegedly
showed the photos to men who would
date the women.
Doys and girls l'.rom lhe firtl, 3eC:Ond
and third grad.. from sc1""b in the
di!trict are welcome with their parent.s
at the infonnaliort llC5.'l0nl cent.ertng en
the Y-lndian Gulde.s, Y-lndlan Maidens
11nd Y-lndlan Princess program•.
For Indian Summer Fete The progriuT'll blend comp6nioolhlp with
fun for parcnl• and their chlldrtn.
l\teetlngs generally are held ln private
homes and !ht yur's schedule call1 for
campout.s , kite flying events, wlnt.er
camps and parent-child hobby actlvtt"•· Indian Sununer will arrive promptly on
Saturday in Laguna Nigeul.
This is no weather prediction, but a
forecas' of a day long community ac-
tivity complete with real American In-
dians. a benefit breakfast, a parade.
carnival and rock band.
The second Anoual Indian Summer
Day Is cosponsored by lhe Laguna Niguel
Homeowners A.Mociation and AVCO
Commwtity Developen.
The day. st.arts with a panca ke
breakfast from 8 e.m. to noon in the
Alpha Beta parking Jot at the mall on
Crown Valley Parkway .
Tickets are Sl.25 for adults and 75
cents for children. They may be purchas-
ed at the site. The activity is the work of
the Crown Valley Exchange Club and
proceeds will be used for youth projeclS
in Laguna Niguel.
The Indian Summer Day parade will
step off at 11 a.m. from Country Club
drive and end at Town C'.enter on the
parkway.
'Ibe parade will be led by Grand
?o.tarshal Les Hand, an authentic Pawnltt
Indian. Accompanying him will be Lynn
Roubedeaux. 1972-73 princess or I.ht
Orange county Indian Center. She i!1 a
full-blooded Otoe Mlsswrl I r o m
Oklahoma .
More than 1$0 units are antlclpeted to
march in the parade including 1ehool
bands, majorettes, Ooel!, equestrian
unit.I, beauty queens and Indian group!.
Trophies for parade wlnnera will be In
the rorm of small "cigar-store" lridlans
provided by local buslneasmen .
_,. The camlvat trom noon to 7 p.m, will
he held in tho Alpha Bt,. parking lot
wllh food , game booths. bttr and
sar1aparllla all proYkted by local scrvice
groups.
Brothels Raid ed
Near Arm y P ost
WAYNESVILLE. Mo. (UPI\ -Stole
pallet eoodu«ed -k•nd nlds on bowdy
ho<.-llOllnd Ft. Leonard Wood Ind 11' ,_ a -Tho _,ion ol .thnt
nicI>tdubo were darted Sunday with
oponllllc bowdr -·· ' About 13,000 IOldlert are 1talloned at
the etnltal Ml.uouri Arm y potl, but the
commander pnviou•ly plactd the tine
nlghtclubl raldtd orr llmlt.s to military
penonntl. I
~10lt of the 20 women ind IS mf'n ,.,.
rt'lt~ -.·en characcd with v11gr1VK'\"
)
The Niguel Art Association will share
an exhibition tent v.'ith Nancy North of El
Toro, an lndian..artlfact collector.
Prizes from $10 to $2.:i att to be given
to groups best decorating their booths to
the Indian theme.
The Indian Village of the Order of the
Arrow scout group will be open for tours
Board Discusses
Student Seating
froin noon to 3 p.m. and from 3 to 6 p.m.. Sttting policy on the aeatlng of a stu--
the Orange and Indian Dance Exhi~Oon dtnt representative to IM board will be
will be held under the direction er disa.l!sed by trustttl of the SaddJebark
Aochew hdson, president of tbe Orange Valley Unified School Dls1rict tonight at
Counly Indian Center. 7:30 o'clock al La Paz Intermediate
Indian Summer Day wilt end v.·\tn School.
street dancing from 6 lO 9 p.m. to the The board has alttady aakt It plans lo
music of Spring Canyon Rock Group seat a iJtudent on the board and is e1-
Programs alllo e113t 11:1 UM! oldH levtl
with Gra-Y and Trl-Cny·Y actlvttlff
uvallable for students ln fourth-lhrough-
s1xth grades.
All the progmma will be explained 11
the lnfonnatlon night prognnu.
Tht schedule of a p.m. the actlYiUcs i!
as follows:
Oct. 3, Ole 11onl00 School; Oct. 4.
Crown V;'lllcy School ; Oct s. l>an.a
School ; Oct. 9, San Juan School and
Capist rano School; Oct. 10 Plllsadt's
School: Oct. JI . Las Pnlmas; Oct.. 12.
Concordia School.
Each information night ~·Ill bt htld In
the school cafctortum. from Corona del Mar. peeled to \'Ole on the luue Monday. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
673-5051
Opon Wed. lhN Mon.
9:30 lo 5:30, cloMd T-. 1-*A..,...,. . "·-~
I
' ..-f(.
' ,.
this full line features
10 SPEEDS Prl<" $11'196 Start
From
a nd includes
PROFESSIONAL MODELS
l'ric•d to S4 50.
EXPERT
REPAIR
SERVIC-1'
!\.'============ . ---··-I ._ --,, __ -· • --·· ·-· .,.,.
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4 Dl!LV '::.":.:o_r _________ M::_.00.,='-' _:_O<:_:t-=_2::·::_1_:_.qn . .
.Just 19\. (;easting,~ J
-~ ~~
Pilot Says Hanoi War Camp Humane
)
wida
Tom
arphine
.'•-·· ..... .,
By T\e .\JMdoled Pms
Navy bt. Mark L. Gartley, tbe flrst of
the three t««1Uy releutd American
pilots to b:>ld . a news t0nfere:nce in the
United States, Si)'S his treatment in a
North Vietnamese prisooers of war camp
was "humane."
Gartley told newsmen Sunday Uwt con-
ditions in the camp had improved and
'vere "much better now" than they were
when be was first imprl50ned after being
shot down in 1.968.
·•My treatment during capture has
bttn humane," he said.
"I have not been mistreated. Prilons
anywhere in the world are no bed of
roses. This was no excepOon,
"But when you take into account the
standard Of living In the country In which
v.•c were confined and examined the con·
dilions. you'd have to say we we re
treated very well ," Gartley said.
Gartley spoke for about 25 minutes In a
conference at St. Albans NaYal Hospital
In New York Clty. Then he left for
Jacksonville, Fla.. where he entered
anotbtt Naval holpltll I« further tall.
Navy olllc:iala dtcllned to aay how long
Gartley woold relllllin at lhe hc<pltaL
The other two releued pUots, Navy Lt .
(J.1.) Norris Charles and Air force Maj.
Edward K. Ellas, hao,:e allO been un-
dereolng testa since their return home in
the company or antiwar activists.
Offlctals at the Balboa Naval Hospital
tn San Diego said Char1's would be
released today and continue seelng doc·
ton as an outpatient.
Ellaa was In a hosJ!iW at Maxwell Air
I
Nixon Hit
F'orce Base near Montgomery, A.la .
At his ne.w1 conference, Gartley nid
the fint UUna: he wanted to do was to
contact the ramllie1 of men who were
prisoners with hlm to rea.ssutt them that
their loved ones were not being
mistreated .
His only regret to far, he. aald, was
that he was not allowed ''to meet the
families or other prlsooers who had come
to talk to me" at KMnedy Airport.
lie stressed that he had not been held
Incommunicado at the hospital. He said
Mostly Minor
he bad full viJlll1>1 priVilege1 and "f'V•
been allowed to mek• all the poo,it ealls
1 wanted."
When be arrived at Kennedy· Airport
Thursday night , hb mother clashed with
military offlcla!J, Insisting that she had
an agreement with them that the family
would have two days alone together.
Gartley said SUnday that t h e
"millunderstandi.ng'' had been cleared up
and that "military orficials altorded
myself and my family the seclusion
which I ,_o desired."
•
But Don't Bring
It to Laguna
ONCE AROUND -THE BEAT: So now
"'e b.a\·e learned that a ch.8p named Tom
Merrick ol Laguna Beach ''oold like to
buy lhe Colosseum for $1 million. Not the
one in LA . The older one, in Rome , Italy.
As Bully Reds Launch 100
~1errick. it develops, would pay out the
one million bucks and restore the am-
phitheater of the ancien1s as a tourist at·
traction. It is also reported that he once
tried to buy Alcatraz Island, the former
federal lockup floating out in San Fran·
cisco Bay.
" Of Press, Attacks in South
The Lagunan apparently has no grand
plans lo transport the Colosseum to the
Art Co!Ony stone-by-stone and rebuild it.
say, on the Main Beach. He would keep
the thing in-Rome.
TlllS MAY COME as somewhat of a
surprise since we . have experience here
in the U.S. in rec.ent times of Americans
"'ho buy some European landmark and
shift it to our region. Look . for example,
,,·hat happened out at Lake Havasu
v.·here they bought off London Bridge and
shipptd it over here for reconstruction
a into a span across an artificial pond ..
~'at>hPne~nr;e.,act that some of OYr coun-
h'Ymen carried off London Bridge stooc-
by-stone, the British have demonstrated
with their Expo at South Coast Plaza in
Costa Mesa that they still have plenty
left.
Why, they even got ~1esa Police Chief
Roger Neth to don one of those Bril ish
Bobby hats the other day for the
photographers 2.nd I want you to know
lhat Roger looked real natural. lie ma y
set a new stateside police fashion.
THUS TIIE BRITISll may get the last
laugh over losing London Bridge. Chief
Neth may set a new police style here
whereupon the British can unload all of
thooe old copper headpieces on us.
They've probably been trying to figure a
v.'ay to get out from under them for
~ears.
Belter yet, the British may end up so
enchanted with their Expo stand at South
Coast Plaza that they'll offer to buy the
'vhole shopping center, disassemble it
:i nd ship ll home to London.
Now . I'd be the last person to put the
knock on London Bridge but somehow I
suspect oor shopping center i.s worth a
!ouch more to us than that old stone span
\Vas to them.
ANY\\' A Y, l'~t SURE the British are
real happy to be here in the Colonies at
thls time so they can get a first-hand
look at how American politics work dur-
ing a pmidential~lection year.
'They must have been somewhat shock-
ed to hear Democratic Congressman
Emanuel Celler get up on nationwide
leevee yesterday and declare his party is
"a shambles." This might seem poor lac·
lica to our Brilish visitors.
Well, you have to remember that
Celler, at 84. was whipped In his New
York primary re-election bid by a 30-
year-old lady named Elizabeth Holtzman.
This may haVc colored his view or
Democratic Party efficiency.
TllAT ASIDE, you still have to keep in
mind that the Republican Party always
comes at you looking like a well-oiled
machine hitting on all eight cylinders.
The Democrats, on the other hand.
always approach looking like the
Nearecrow from the Wlurd of Oz, doing
pratfalls and 11pr11ylng hay everywhere.
Someho¥i'. however, the Democnit11
uiually manage lo get themselves pulled
together and uprl&ht at the last posslble
mnment.
Not this time. you say? l\1aybe not. But
look out for next time.
ui-1 T ... ,.
BOBBY FISCHER GOES BEFORE CAMERAS-ANO SMILES
Chess Chempion T1pe1 Episode for Bob Hope Show Oct. 5
Bobby Fischer Shines
"With Television Jokes
HOLLY\VOOD -Bobby Fischer. comedian?
It happened in beautiful do11.'1llown Burbank Sunday night as lhe world 's
chess champion matched one-line gags with Bob Hope for the comedian's Oct.
5 NBC special.
Fischer. who W1>n the title from l{ussian Boris Spassky in Iceland last
n100th, earned $10,000 roir about 10 minutes or air time and proved himself an
able comic.
Among 1he gags :
Hope : "Bobby, I heard that all through your match. you were given advice '
from Henry Kissinger. Is that truC'?"
Fischer: "That's right "
Rope : ''Did it help?"
"It will if 1 ever meet Jill St. John .'' said Fischer in reference to lhe 'ac·
... tress who haa been one of the presidential adviser's frequenV dates.
The 29-year-old Fischer showed few of the COllC'ems for dfrangements !hat tr
he displayed during his championship match with. Spassky. ~
Rehearsing a comedy match. with Hope, he turned the chess table around ~
and adjusted the time clock. but expressed no concern over the lighting and
televisioo cameras. two problem areas that highlighted his match with Spassky.
''We didn't know until Friday whether Bobby was really coming," Hope
.remarked. "American Airlines called m<' lo say that he had missed two
planes and then finally they reported that the door had closed on a plane and
he was inside it."
-f'". •
Bible Sales111an Admits He
l(illed Mothe1·, Baby, Girl
(,"HtCAGO !UPI) -A 29-ycar-old
unemployed Bible salesman. who has
spent much of the pa.st 10 years in prison
or in mental institutions. has confessed
lo the murders of a Chicago mother and
her infant daughter. police said.
Lee C. Jennings Sunday admitted
slaying Mrs. Barbara Flanagan, 27, and
her 18-month-old daughter. Renee. in car·
Jy September and dumping the ir nudt'
bodies in the parking lot of the Com·
munlty Pmbytcrtan Church ln suburban
Mt. Prospect.
The bodies were found there Sept. 11.
Police said Jennings told them he took
the bodies to the church lot because "I
v.•antcd to take them to a church or thei r
ov.-11 denomination ." It "'as not un
1nt'd iately known how Jennings kne\V
lhry v.·ere Presbytcrinns
In his statement to pohce. Jennings, <1
native of Jackson, 1'-1ich... m a de
references to murders committed in and
around that city. A homicide detective
said plans were under way lo question
Jennings about unsolved murder cases 1n
.lackson and also other recent slayings in
th<' Chicago area.
Jennings was scheduled to appear in
North Felony Court today for a
preliminary hearing on the murder
charges.
Jennlng!i was arrested Saturday et the
Marriott Motor Hotel, near Chicago's
O'Hare Airport, on charges of theft
Detectives noted Jennings' resemblance
to a police composite drawing of the
J<:laycr and that his car was the type
described by witnesses as having dri\•cn
off with the Flanagans when ~frs.
Flanagan accepted a babysitting job
from an unknown caller Sept 9
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Democratic
presidential nominee George S .
McGovern charged today the Nixon ad-
ministration had launched a deliberate
and sustained campaign to discredit
newspapers and broadcasters and was
seeking to replace the press COl1p5 "with
a cheering section."
He told the ope~ session of the an-
nual UPI Editors and Publishers Con-
ference that "this administration bas
tried to bully the press into docile sub-
mission."
"It has launched a deliberate, sus-
tained campaign lo discredit newspapers
and broadcasters," McGovern sald. "It
SA.fGON (AP) -The Saigon command
reported today 100 North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong rocket, mortar and sabotage
attacks across South Vietnam.
It was the highest number of enemy
assaults in a single_ day in more than two
months, although moM or them were
small, a spokesman said.
Jn Thailand. terrorists fired about 36
mortars into the U.S. air base al Udom,
300 miles northeast of Bangkok, from
where air strikes against North Vietnam
are laUnched. A U.S. Embassy
spokesman said a radio tower was slight-
ly damaged but U.S. planes and person-
nel were · untouched.
( . CAMPAIGN '72 -) THE U.S. CRUISER Newport News
left the Vietnam war zone and steamed
to the Philippines with the bodies or ·19
h.is misused federal law enforce-men! of-· --s~llors-kill.ed in the worst U.S. naval
fictrs to investigate the personal lives of disaster this year.
reporters. -Ten other men in the crew of 1,300
"And for the first time in our history were injured by the explosion in an eight·
we have seen the government attempt t~ inch gun turret that rocked the 21,IJOO.ton
prevent -and then to punish -the warship early Sunday as it shelled the
publication of critical facts -not northern coast of South Vietnam.
because it harmed the country but The. Navy was investlga~ing the bll!St,
because it embarrassed the govern-described as an accldent. Jt was the
ment." worst disaster aboard a 7th Fleet
HE REFERRED to l he ad·
rni,nistration 's attempt to pre v e n t
publicalion of the Pentagon Papers in
legal moves lhat went all the \\'ay to the
Supreme Court.
warship since Jan. 14, 1969, when a series
of explosions killed 27 men aboard the
carrier Enterprise during training ex-
ercises en route from Hawaii to
Indochina.
The Newport News was expected
sometime Tuesday at the Subic Bay
naval base in the Philippines. "Tbis administration seeks to replace a
press corps with a cheering section -
with a propaganda machine that is in league wilh the govenunent. to be used !\tAJ. GEN. ALEXANDER 1\1. HAIG.
by the government, to tell the people a special representative of President
what the .government wants them to Nixon, confer~ with South Vietnamese
hear," l\lcGovem charged in his hard-hit-President N~yen V_an Thi~u for 21,i,
ting speech to the editors and publishers. holl!:' today tn a wide rev1ew of the
He said President Nixon-has eomipted-QQ!1t1c.@.l and military situation in
the political process "to turn the national lnd~hlna,
electiori into 3 guessing game, where the A ~pokesman for the U.S. embassy said
people are '°sked to elect a President he dJd not know the s~bstan:ce of the
without knowing what he would do if he talks, but sources had said Haig planned
won."
McGOVERN ALSO CHARGED today
that the Nix.on administration is the moSt
corrupt in the nation's history. Not only
that, the Democratic pre sidential
nominee said, it has corrupted America.
McGovern also assailed the ad-
ministration for continuing "an unjust
war." He said, "Now we know the war
could end al any mornerrt if we would on-
ly break free from the brutal regime in
Saigon.''
"Our sacred honor," the senator ad-
ded. "b laid at the feet of dictators, dope
runners and gangsters in Saigon - a
government that subverts our ideals just
as eagerly as it steals our aid.''
But McGovern targeted chiefly on what
he called domestic corruption by the Nix-
on admlnislration.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery of the Dally Pilot
Is 911arantttd
Mond1y.Frld1y1 It 'l'OU 110 llOI 111119 ~ Dllptr by .11.10 p.m., c•!I ,...., Voll1' o;OPY will
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Kidney Transplant
Shelly Kern. 6. Waukesha, Wis .. heads for hospital al Unl•mlty of
San Francl~co for kidney transplant. She sits on lap of he r father.
Anlnon y. who wlll donate lh• kidney_ Mother Marl1 ln •Ill at right
l'niled Airlines omployes collected money for the family's Olghl
to give Thieu a full report on the secret
negotiations in Paris between Presiden·
tial adviser Henry A. Kissinger and
North Vietnamese diplomats.
Haig is due to return to Washington
Wednesday to repo'rt to Kissinger and
Nixon on his conference with Thieu, 1
sources: said. North Vletname3e in·
sistence on ousting 'lbieu from a future
coalition government in South Vietnam is
one of the stwnbllng blocks at the Paris
talks.
Pilots Approve
New Pact, Halt
95-day Strike
MINNEAPOLIS, . Minn. (UPI)
Northwest Airlines and its 1,619 striking
pilots reached agreement today on a new
contract, bringing an end to a 9f>.day-o1d
_ strike which idled air service in much of
· tne ?i-fidwest and Northwest.
The company, seventh largest among
the nation 's lrunk air carriers, said it
v.·ill be five to seven days before full
service is restored.
e Salt Lake Rattled
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI ) -A mild
earthquake has shaken the Salt Lake·
Summit County area in northern Utah ,
( IN SHORT ... )
the University of Utah seismographic
station reported, but no major damage
resulted from the tremor.
Officials at the station said the quak&
measured 4.0 on the Richter scale and
\Vas reported at 1:4S p.m. Sunday.
e Wayne Donates 8500
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Actor John
Wayne, who \\-'On a bout with cancer, has
donated $500 to the University of
Arizona's cancer-detection fund.
Wayne made his donation during a
brief trip to Tucson last week where he
watched a friend , Chic Iverson, reeeive a
masonic degree.
Wayne's gift will be used for the
purchase of ultrasonic cancer detection
equipment, the university announced
over the weekend.
e Pal1111 Threatened
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -South Florida's
stately coconut palms, a state symbol to
tourists and natives alike, are being
threatened with extinction by a
mysterious plant disease which turns
palm fronds to a jaundiced yellow
"almost overnight."
Tile highly contqiou11 disease, called
"lethal yellowing" by plant expert.I, was
first detected on Florida's mainland in
September 1971 when trees in fashionable
C.Oral Gables began turning yellow.
Newswoman, 24,
Salesman Slain;
Reward Offered
RALEiGH, N.C. (UPI) -Authorities
hoped today th8t a 15.000 reward pooled
in the slaying of a newswoman and a real
estate salesman would provide a bretk ln
the case.
The vlctlms, Tricia Grimes, 24, and
Peter Williams Jr., 25, were found shot
to death Saturday at a picnic •rta :\ear
the Neuse River eut of here. MIM
Grime• wu women'• editor of the
Ralel&h Times.
~ night, Frank Daniels Jr., presi-
dent ol the Nw and Obotrvcr Publllblng
Co.. which publllba the Times. 1n-
nounced the company ls offertna 1 15.000
reward to 111)1 penon !urnlsliln1 the
Wake County lherlll with lnlormatioo
Jeadini to lm!St and conviction of the
klller or killers.
Offlclala Sllnd17 said they did not know -t llJOtlvat<d the kill~I. llobbe17 WIS
ruled OUI llnce WUll1ms had $30 In bis
wallet and both vtcUml Wtl'9 1Ull wear-
ing wrlstwatcbes. Miss Grimes had not
been 1txually auaulted.
There WU opeculaUoo that Mill
Grimes ml)' have known the killer or
klllen. One ol the four bullets that 1tnlc:k
her left powder bums, lndlcallna a 1hot
flrtd at close range. WUJiamJ '4'11 lbol
three times.
The bullets were apparently from a n.-
cn.Uber rifle. •
•
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Emergeiiey Landing
Rescue rrsonnel and passengers dot the field in this air view of a United Air·
lines 72 jet, which veered off the runway Sunday in San Francisco when a
landing gear collapsed. Six of the 99 passengers aboard were treated for minor
injuries.
Navy Officer's Wife
Held in Murder Plot
Santa Cruz
Girl's Head
Identified SAN DIEGO (UPI) -A 35·
year'~ld woman has pleaded
innocent to charges s h e
plotted the assassination of
her estrqed blsband, a
Navy petty officer, to collect
$150,000 in insurance money.
Donna E. Wood , Coronado.
charged with solicitation of
murder, entered t h e plea
before Municipal Court Judge
Robert J . Cooney who set a
preliminary hearing for Oct.
16. She was held on $$0,000
bai l.
ACCORDING TO p o I i c e ,
Reagan Set
For Nixori
Campaign
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Gov. Ronald Reagan begins a
two-day campaign swing oo
behalf of President Nixon and
other Republicans today with
stops scheduled in Houston,
Tulsa and Oklahoma City.
1be govemcr was scheduled
for a reception and meeting
with newsmen today in Hous-
ton. -
Mrs. \Vood and her husband,
PO LC. Charles D. Wood , SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A
separated last spring. In mid· girl's head found six weeks
1971 she took out an insurance policy on him that would pay ago In a remote mountain
triple indemnity of $150,000 for area in Santa Cruz <Aunty bas
his death by a c c i d e n t , been identiifed as that or Mary
authorities said. Ann Pesce, J9, of Camarillo.
But the plot backfired, The body has not been found.
police said, when she ap-The Santa Cruz County
proached a p r o s p e c t l v e sheriff's office said Saturday
"assassin" who turned out to identification was made by
be a friend oE an investigator comparing the dental work of
for the Alameda Co u n t Y the head with the charts of
district attorney's office. Miss Pesce, who was last seen
The man told investigator in May in Berkeley with a girl
Ted Hilliard about the scheme _ friend, Anita M· _Luchessa who
and he a r r a n g e d tape also is reported nllssing.
recordings of four telepOOne The Pesce dental charts
calls between Mrs. Wood and were checked with the sher·
the infonnant, the 1 a s l iff's department by a Modesto
Wednesday night. private detective, Bob Heit-
man, who had been hired to
find Miss Pesce. She was a
student at Fresno S t a t e
College when she vanished.
POLICE SAID Mrs. Wood
offered to pay the man $17,000
for "a nice clean job'' that
would allay any insurance in-
vestigation.
Long Beach
Oil Refiner)-
Fire Quelled
'l1le head had been severed
from the body as if with a
!mite, it was reported at the
time. The head lay al the
scene for weeks before it was
found, officers determined. -
Babysitter
Found Dead (
LONG BEACH (AP) -A "
power failure sparked a frre at Jrt Bathtub ~'-.......__.,.. an oil refinery and knocked
out a cooling system at a
On Tuesday, he will meet
newsmen again, then deliver a
speech at a rally for U.S.
Senate candidate D e w e y
Bartlett In the Tulsa Civic
Center Auditorium . Reagan is
also schedu1ed to make ap-
pearances at the Cowboy Hall
of fame and the University of
Oklahoma at Oklahoma City.
plastics plant where tern-SACRAMENTO (AP) -A '
perature-sensitive chemicals 12-yea r-0\d babysitter has /,r ~$-.,,;;.>-....~
are stored, authorities said. been found dead ln a bathtub ·~ , .. -
A fire at the Edgington in suburban Rancho Cordova.
When he returns t o
Catilomia Wednesday, Reagan
will addresa the Federated.
Republican Women, Southern
Division at a luncheon in the
Los Angeles Civic Center.
He will speak to a Colltge of
Surgeons meeting In San
Francisco's Civic Auditorium
Thursday a n d make. a
campaign appearance Friday
in Eureka at a fund raising
dinner on behalf of Lawrence
Antolini, a GOP cardidate for
the Assembly.
Schmitz Hits
GOP Politics
BALTIMORE ( AP I
Refinery, apparently caused apparently the victim of a
by sparks set off as a result of strangler.
the power failure Sunday, was Sheriff's deputies said SUn-
quickly extinguished, said day that Shannon Ritter,
firemen. daughter or Mr. and Mrs. John
About the same t i m e Ritter, was found in the home
firemen were called to the of 't.1argarita Diaz OoPorto.
nearby Diamond Plastics Co. Mrs. OoPorto's four children,
to keep watch on a volatile aged 3 to 7, were sleeping
chemical mixture which was ·unharmed in adjolning rooms.
rising in temperature because Mn. DoPorto said she
the power failure had knocked returned home early Saturday
out the cooling system. to find water streaming down
A fire d e p a r t m e n t the stairs from the second
spokesman said there was no~r. The bathtub water was
hatard at the plant, howevir, on. William Miller, sberiJf's
became company officials had spokesman, said the gir!'s
backup equipment to insure jeans and shirt had been np-
safety. ped off.
_i\ttorney May Request
Corona Case Mistrial Saying that President Nlxon
has destroyed the RepubUcan
Party as a conservative en-
tity. American Party
presidential candidate John G. FAIRFIELD (AP }
Schmitz says he has "burned Richard E. Hawk. defense at-
my bridges with t h e tomey in the mass murder
Republican Party because I trial of Juan Corona. says he
believe that this is the way to wUI seek "sanctions" against
go." the prosecution and might ask
driver reported the bus lighU:
went out. then came back on
after the accident, offioer1
said.
The California congressman for a mistrial.
The children had spent the
day at a Los Angeles area
amusement park. 'Ole bua wu
returning them to Pa Im
Springs.
told some 300 persons at-Hawk said Sunda y the pros-
tendlng a $11).a-ptate dinner in ecution has not furnished the
Baltimore County SWlday tbat defense with certain evidence
the Am<rtcan Party offers the requ~ed by ccurt orders. e Y aclater Beu
only true choice tn the Novem-When these items are In-LOS ANGELES (AP ) _ A
ber general election. troduced, he said, he will seek
Schmit• arrived two hours ed ..-osary l5 set for tonight for ., to have them suppress or a k M 1 .... •--after the fund-raiser had mistrial declared. He didn't Fran u \er, a UUllUIEUman
begun coming directly from elaborate. who played host to Pruldent
an ~ppearance on ABC 's Nixon and others aboard bis
•·issues and Ans we r s'' ( ) iuxury yacht, Mcjo.
televt.lon program in BRIEFS Muller, • bachelor. died
Washington. '-----------Sllturday at Ho 11 y wood -
Prosecutor Bart Wllllams Pmibyttrian Hofplt.al. He wu
Committee
Group Folds
SAN FRANCISCO IAPI -
Tht Commlttet. performing
nonm>p ad lib satlro omoog
the 1b1p dent of g1udy North
Beach for 11mo1C a decade bu
announced It will fold over
financial troubles.
. when 77. Burial will be Tu<td.ay. contmues court resumes
today to oulline the Slate's
case agalMt the 38-year<>ld
farm labor contractor who is
charged with killing ard bury·
ing 25 men In shaUow graves
near Yuba City in the spring
ol 1171.
...... c .... ,.
PALM SPRINGS (AP )
Thirty-tight children on an ouUnc were ahlke.n up when
the~ bus veered Into th< !$-
root culvert that d I v l d e 1
Ca.llfomla 111 near here.
er~··•• .. ,
WHITTIER I AP I -An CZ·
p1"'1on lw rlppod a topl ...
bottomless bar here c•t11ln& an
estimated $-t.000 d • m • I e •
authorWg report.ed.
A ohe<iff'• apokaman aald
1n unknown type o( expiollve
devlco bl"' o 3-foot by :1-roo1
hole In a nar wall or the Ten
Actta Bu Saturday. No· ltrt
resulted, h< said.
Bar man11er Dlvid H.
T,
ANAH(IM
444 N. f1cli4 1114) IJJ.llZI
NfWJOIT
"'' ,, ... , .. 111.~ (7141 ..... ,,,,
Mond1r. Octoatr 2, iq12 DAILY PILOT
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HUNTIN6TON tlACH
1111 u1.,.., ........
1714) lf1·11ll
1)t0 -.... t ..... '""' 100 l" c,.,,,,., Milt 12111 ~I I
,,,., .... 1111
Darrin& • mlrack. it WIS
announced, the Commlttte
wlll shut down at m ~
WJY Oct. IS wtth • Sallnthon
-a marathon ullrlcal out-
poorlng that coukt last a day
and 11 night.
The Hl~hway Patrol said the
Saturday nf&ht accident oc·
currtd after a .~mporary
power failure on the bus. The
Gomtr, 40. told euthorlU..
thal he hod r<ttl•ed • -
thrut over tht phone SelM-21 oot did no1 ttport 11 bocauoe
he thoucht It WIS I Ji'1nk. SHO' 10 A.M, t1 t 1lO ,.M. MONDAY THIOUSH •llDA'f. 1.ATUlDAY II A.M. t1 I P.M. lUNDAT 12 NOOtl 11 l P,M
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•
• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE
to .Minorities !'IE FlGUREll OUT THE WATERGATE
AFFAIR! IT WAS REM.LY A SETUP
SOMEONE W!lHIN THAT Ii~
ARRANGED IT so THEY wolID
TO EMBARRASS THE REPUBLICAN GET CAUGHT!
PARTY!
...
Orange County government has been under attack
on charges of discrimination. against minority groups
and women in its hiring practices. Investigations by
higher authorities have Called to sustain the charges .
Minority and female hiring programs have been
accelerated in the county since public as well as private
employers were brought under the federal Civil Righ ts
A ct.
County Personnel Director \Villiam C. Hart pro-.
posed programs to increase employment of minority
workers and \Vomen since then.
fragment personnel responsibilities, adversely affecting
the county's merit system, described as "the best in Cal·
ifornia." 1
Administrative details aside, Orange County ~o~
meat appears t-0 be a\vare or the need to end discrim1n
tion on any basis but merit -in brief, to be complete1
fair in its hiring and promoting practices. \
\
Last Week to Register 1
Hart said the Public Employment Program (PEP),
a federally.funded project. has been incorrectly credited
\\'ilh most of the mi nority hiring. Of 346 new minority
employes i.n 12 1nonths: 104 were in PEP and 242 were
not.
Voting in free America is a voluntary matter. In
some countries, failure to vote can send the non-voter
to jail, All the more reason why United States citizens
should show the rest of the world that we can do our
civic duty without government compulsion, Ill BET 11 WAS MARTHA MITCHELL! NOW THAT THEORY DOE SN I MAKE MY
SENSE AT ALL! Hart told the Board of Super visor s that at the pres·
ent rate of progress, rninority representation in county
jobs will equal their ratio in the general population -
about 20 percent -by October, 1973.
The personnel director is against "quota hiring."
Calling for "goals, not quotas," Hart prese nted an
affirmative action policy to the supervisors last week.
It recognizes lhat mere prohibition of discriminatory
practices will not assure equal opportunity in employ-
ment: calls for intensified efforts to recruit minorities
and women; mandates the structure of career ladders
so that minorities and women will have the chance to
achieve promotions; provides for developing standards
to remove attificiaJ barriers to employment, and pro-
vides for training and counseling of minority members
and women to help them advance.
Mexican-American groups \vanted control of the
new program transferred from the Pe rsonnel Depart·
ment to the Co unty Adminstrative Office. The County
Employes Association opposed this on grounds it would
. !tegistration deadline for the Nov. 7 general elec·
t1on 15 9 p.m. next Sunday, Oct. 8. Citizens must register
or re-register under these conditions:
-U they have moved since their last registration.
-If they !ailed to vote In the last general election.
(Failure to vote in the June primary doesn't matter.)
-If they're newcomers who have lived at least 30
days in the state, county and precinct.
Orange County. has nearly 1,300 registrars. They're t? be found at all city balls, the county courthouse, poli·
t1cal party headquarters, shopping centers, supermark·
els and other stores with h eavy traffic. They're paid
25 cents pe~ registration, so they'll be eager to ,help.
The office of the registrar of voters at 1119 E.
Chestnut, Santa Ana, is open daily -and will be open
until 9 p.rn . on Oct. 8, later if need be.
More than 760,000 residents h ave registered, about
90 percent of those who quaJify. Registering that other
10 percent would make it a banner year for citizenship
in Orange County.
IVE HEARD WORSE.
B econies Claa1•ac terist i c Dotible • Ill The Supreme Priorities
-·McGovern,_s -conlraclictions -c ourt-is rn ---
\VASHINGTON -The longer lhe
Presidential ca mpaign goes on. the more
perplexing and incomprehensible is Sen.
McGovern's stand on ma}or issues.
Take the Viclnam \var. Everyone
presumably knows be is against it. But
'vhen it gets down lo important details .
such as the retun1 of
U.S. POWs, nail ing
dO\\TI just what he
does advocate is like
trying to find a nee-
dle in a haystack.
FoUowing is his
tortuous record on
th.i! crucial mailer;
Initially, the South
Dakota radi ca l
declared he would v.•ilhdraw a ll U.S.
forces from Southeast Asia within 90
days after his inauguration. But .,..·hen
this produced a storm or outraged
charges tha t he proposed lo abandon U.S.
PO Ws to the mercy or their Corrununist
captors, McGovern qui ckly backtracked.
~le S\\•itched. saying that within 90 day s
after he entered the White House "every
American prisoner and every American
soldier would be home.''
This glib Olp-flop caught him on a new
hook.
NEWSl\1EN "''8nted to know how he
could guarantee that all POWs would be
(ROB ERT S.ALLEN)
relc;ised as he so fl ally ciaimcd; also
\vhether he would v.•ithdraw all L.S.
troops '"before the prisoners \\'ere freed
by Hanoi.''
Again McGovern resorted lo y,·hat has
become characteristic double-talk.
First he averred that all U.S. troops
would be withdrawn "only if we had ah
understanding the prisone rs would be
released."
"Does that mean," a repo rter asked,
"that you arc backtracking on your
previous declaration of uncond it ional
withdrawal; that you voould pull out all
U.S. troops within 90 days after inaugur-
ation regardless of the POWs'!"
"Absolutely not." asserted McGovern.
"I'm standing flatly by what I said."
"TllERE SEE1\1S to be so1nc con-
tradiction there," pointed out ::i
newsman. "How do you explain it?"
"There is no contradiction," snapped
~1cGovern. "I would take care of the pro-
blem by announcing a definite timetable
for withdrawal of troops.''
"Would that include the POWs? Would
the re be an agreement on their release?"
"I would try to get such an agreement
worked out ,'' asserted McGovern. "I
don't. think it serves any purpose to state
exaclly what procedure."
"Arc you saying you have a secret plan
of some kind?·'
"Oh. no,'' exclaimC'd 1'-1cGovern. "I'm
not saying or inferring anything like
I hat."
l\10RE QUESTIONS were asked by the
baffled pressmen as to just how
McGovern. would go about \vithdrawing
all U.S. troops within 90 days without
some understanding on the liberation of
the POWs. To all queries, the South
Dakota leftist blandly insisted he was
"confident ii could be \vorked out
satisfactorily."
"But you admit you have no assurance
of doing that."
l\.1cGovern nodded his head.
"And you say you are still standing by
your original declaration to withdraw all
U.S. troops Crom Southeast Asia in 90
days -prisoners or no prisoners," said a
patently skeptical reporter.
"That's correct," replied McGovern
sl raight-Caced.
At that point, the newsmen gave up.
Obviously, the candidate was talking out
of all sides of his mouth and it 1vas futil e
to try to pin him down.
Th~ Irish and 'The Pledge'
No one who has ever lived in an Irish·
American hou!rehold (May c;oo hnve
mercy on his 50ul ! 1 has to be told v.'hnl
taking the pledge is.
Thi s is n solemn vow l<•kcn by the sin-
ner to abstain from the use or fe rmented
spirits ond even from the fruit of the
bops. For life, baby. Some kids take the
pledge before a drop
of alcohol p asses ,~ their 11 p s. Others ,,. -
lake It like Mark ~;;J-Twaln's smoktr, 2U f;,, ~
times a day or M . ~Some t.nke It friv ol-
ously. Some take 11
aerlously.
t took my f I rs t
plt'<lge at 14, when I
rtetfved my first communion. So d1d
about 70 other boys, at the same time.
Most of that communion clnss became
either cops or criminals of one kind or
another. If any of them ever stuck to the
pledge, It never came to 1ny attention .
But It pleased our mother~. They wept at
tllt beauty of It nll.
THE YOUNG IRJSll arc encournged ,
and often forct.od, to t.a kc tills vow against
l
I
OllANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
Robtrt N. Wc~d. rublf1her
Thom41 K "'"Z. Editor
Albert lV. Bor~.s
• Editorial Page Editor
n. f'd ltoM•1 r-.~ or the 0.111
Pilot vo·lu 10·1nrorm And aUmu·
late N'IUlt'l'S hy 1.ir~ntlnic thl1
Moa"P'P".r'• optrdom alld com-mentary un topics of 1nttral 1u'ld llpUiM~ by provldlnst a f l'lf"Utn tot t1'e eJQ>ttlllk>n of oor ttr11ders' ODln1onl. and by ~Un.it l he dMtrM ~potnr. or ln(ormcd ob-snwrs al'!d apokf!lml'n on lO{dca or lMdQ.
Monday, October 2. 197l
(cHARLES McCABE)
booze because of a deepset recognition
that the effects of $amc nre highly in-
legrated Jnto the Irish cha racter. and in
a "·ay not altogether favora ble. There is
the somewtuu eccentric Marxist view of
lrlsh drinking held by my fri('nd Seon
Mooney, of 111ooney 's Irish Pub on Grant
Avenue in San 1'~rancisco.
He quotes a rectntly published letter to
Lady Gregory from George Jkrnarcl
Shaw, ""ho surely knew the Irish like the
bllck or his speckled fist. "Let this sordid
truth be your golden rule through llfr,"
Shaw told her Ladyship. "1'he real
superiority of the English to the Irish lies
In the fact lhnt an Engllshmon will do
:inything for money and an lrl~hmnn wUI
do nothing for it ."
This, argues Mr. Mooney. is profoundly
lruc. There Is nothing rnore an tipathetic
to rnnk lng money than drinking spirits.
WhC'n you nrc under tho Lethcttn in-
nucnce or a hollle or Paddy, the.re Is
nothing more remote than getting a cor·
ner on Lhc Stutz Bearcat market, or put·
ting together a dizzying conglomerate of
rubber goods, radio stations , and Holy
Bible. ?iial! and money do not mb:,
saycth the Prophet.
Tins IS WllERE the Irish molbe:r.
th.at !rue frtend of IOC1l abltlnenct!. comtlS
In. As l-1ooney pointa out, 1he'1 alwayt
V.'Orrying abou t where he:r next dollar Is
coming from , and the one nfter that , ad
nauscam. ln her sltep, she talkJ about
wolves and dool'l. and ktt:plng one nway
lrom the other. Thus ht!r hatred for the
bolllo. Thul, i.o. heT klve ol the print,
who Is htr ally In the nKht agnln!lt the
bottle, since it Is he who odmlnlslel'I the
lioly Pl<dgo.
There ii no doubt you ean Increase the
gross annual Income or an lrlshmnn by
cutting the unblllcal <.'Ord between him
and the bottle. He \\'Ill make money, 1r
only 001 or boredom. Tht: fif!'t way he
\viii make. money, more than likely, is to
open a saloon the day after he takes the
µledge. and capitalize on the weaknesees
of his kind.
110\V Tll E IIELL do you think the
great Fitzgerald and Kennedy dynasties
in Boston got their start? By staying
stark, staring sober while the yobs from
South Boston PoUred their earnings into
lht'1r bellies. in the form of firewater bot-
tled by the English and by the canny and
abstemious Cabots and Lodges. Ah, yes,
there arc Irishmen who out-English the
Engli'ih, and Joe Kennedy was one of
them -wb.ich Is the chief reason he
never got along as our Ambassador to
London. Takes ant to know one.
The real trouble about pledges was
v.·ell·k.nO\.\'TI , from hard-won experience.
by Sam Cleml'ns of J1ann.ibal. In his last
traveJ book be observed that "to make n
-PLEDGE Clf any kind I~ to declare war
ag11in9l nature, for a pledge is a chain
lhat is al\\·ays clanking and reminding
the wearer or it that he is nol a fr ee
man." And. again, in a letter to Henry
Ward Beecher: "How I do hate those
enen1ies or the human race who go
around enslaving God'a fr(!e people with
pledges -lo qu it drinti.ng lnAtead or to
quit wonting to drink.''
Dear
Gloo111y
Gus
The next limo someone cut& In
lront of me ln bls automobllc while
I'm on my motorcycle, I'm golne
tn come aloo,slde and kick hit
door In. At little more c•rtt and
courtesy. you motorists!
-T. R.
Tiile ""'"'-ttlf~ '"'4W'I ........ tltf
llf("tl""ll' ,,.... ,, "" -·-· ._..
,...,, "' -" ,. oi.-. °"" 0111Y ''"'·
Transition
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
• · 1 reel at the present time that the
Court is as balanced as I have had an op-
portunity to make it. I have been in·
terested to note that there have been
several S.-to-4 decisions." That was Presi·
dent Nixon's as.'iC!sment of the Supreme
Court last June 29, a day when the high
bench had ruled, S to 4, to bar the death
penalty under existing U.S. criminal laws.
On a nine man tribunal, 5 to 4 is as close
to balance as you can get.
But close court decisions, like close
ball games. give rise to second guessing.
Analyzing the President's June 29 com-
ment, National Review mused : "This
Nixonism is worth savoring; i.e .. a single
term in the presidency has not been
enough for me to give the Court the final
touch of balance, to bring lt to the very
acme of balance, or. if you press me on
the point, 6 to 3 or 7 to 2 \vould be even
more balanced, in a sense. than 5 to 4,
however superior the first Nixon Court
was to its unlamented predecessor."
If it is known as the Nixon rather than
the Burger Court. that is because the
President nominated the present chief
justice and three associate justices in his
first tcr1n or office. And, as he hoped.
they have so far fonned a remarkably
cohesive bloc. In 54 of the 67 cases in
which all fou r Nixon appointees
participated. Chief Justice Burger and
Justices Blnckmun, Powell and Rehn·
quist voted together.
ONE f\.10RE NIXO N appointment
might v.•cll lip !he Court toward the
President's ··s tri c t constructionist"
philosophy for years to come. In some
ways, the situation is reminiscent of that
which raced President Franklin D.
Roosevelt in the mid·l930s. In FDR's
first term. with its burst or New Deal
legislation. not a single vacancy occurred
on the Supreme Court. And the only ma·
jor statute to survive C.Ourt scrutiny in
that period was the Tennessee Valley
Authority Act.
Acl'O rdingly, Roosevelt in early 1937
proposed his "Court-packing" plan.
which would have added as many as six
new justices to the incwnbent nine. The
plan failed , but the Court got the
message; New Deal legislation thereatter
received a more sympathetic hearing.
P.1ore important, Roosevelt shortly had
the opportunity to !ill a number or vacant
Court seats. Between Auaust 1!137 and
February 1943, he appointed tight
Justices -a areater number thM any
other President except \Vashlngton, who
starttd with an empty bench.
IT IS BY NO MEANS assured:
however. that R Supreme C o u r t
domlnated by Nixon appointees would set
about to reverse, one by one, the con·
lroveniel decisions or the Court headed
by Earl Warren. History shows that zuch
a count: tends to bring the Court into
dlsrnpute.
Consider the curious rate of the Legal
Tender Act, a Civil War st8lute. Jn 1970.
It was tw.ld uncoosUtuUonal by a vote or 4
lo 3. Shortly afterward, two new justices
joined lbe Court and the case was ·
... f'l\ltd. '11111 time the dodJlon -t tllt
oU"r way, 5 to 4, with the newcomers '1ll!nll with the maJo<ilJ'.
Charles Evans llughet. chief justice
from 1930 to l!MI . doscrlbed tht Court's
turnabout In the Le11al Tender case a11\a
"self·lnfllcltd wound." He added that
"Stablllty In judlelal opinions ll"'of 110 lit·
tic lmportance in mJlnt.alning respect for
the Court's work." The pre.sent Court no
doubt is aware of that admonition as It
prcp11res for a bUBy new term. •
--------........ -·
Are a Disgrace
(During Mr. flarris' vacation, we
ore rep~inting some of the most re·
quested columns front liis forthcorn-
ing book, "For the Time Being.'' to be
published this fall.)
Whal the bulk of society re.ally wants is
for unpleasant people to go away and not
bother anybody. "Unpleasant people'' are
the poor, the convict-
ed. the mentally ill,
the old and the troub-
lesome young·
So · called poverty
programs keep the
poor just where they
are, barely hanging
on and discretely out
of sig ht. "Urban re·
deve lopment" means
putting· the poor where out-of-town visitors
can't see them.
·OUR JAILS AND prisons are devoted
to keeping unpleasant characters out of
circulation as long as possible, providing
minimum opportunities for their
rehabilitation and then throwing them
back into cells as fast as they get out and
demonstrate thei r inability to break the
law again successfully .
Our mental hospitals are grossly
understaffed. relying on drugs to keep
patients tranquil instead of positive
therapy to make them well. We will
spend millions for new buildings to put
these palicnls in, but we won't pay
enough for doctors, nurses and orderlies
to establish a system in which hope, and
not despair, is the chief climate.
OUR OLD PEOPLE are simply a drag.
Most have no place to live, no income to
live on, and little to live for. We scarcely
even pretend to be concerned about th is
socia l problem, embarrassing though it
is.
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
The troublesome young are told to cut
their hair, brush their teeth, keep going
to school (no matter how rotten school
may beJ and (ace the deligb.tful pl'05pect
or being drafted at 18.
IF TIIEY GET into real trouble with
the law. they are either put on probation
and allowed to keep doing the same.
things until the boom is dropped, or else
Ibey arc stuck into a "training school"
where they are trained to be professional
criminals in a short time.
Despite our massive programs, and our
appropriations , and our public and
private welfare agencies, the plain fac t
of the matter is that the average
American doesn't give a damn about
anyone outside the mainstream ol our
society -and everybody outside the
mainstream knows it. So do the few
dedicated people who work with them.
IF WE REALLY cared, wou ld \\'e
tolerate our Congress spending billions
and billions for highways (with no relief
of traffic congestion), and a mere dribble
for decent, human-scale housing? Or a
fifth or our national budget to put a man
on the moon (wholly for reasons of
pride), while our wt'ole school system is
falling apart?
We ought to stop congratulating "
ourselves on our Gross National Product, '
and start reflecting on our gross at·
titudes toward the disinhe rited, the fee·
ble, the troubled and the tom. They won't
go away , and we can't build stockades
big enoug h to hold them all.
DDT and th e Pelican
By MIKE ABRAMSON
Or. J. Gordon Edwards of San Jose
Slate Univer.iity is a sometimes lonely
man In his cause but very dedicated and
very tcnaclous.
A nationally dis Ii n g u is b e d en·
tomologist, Dr. Edwards has been in the
middle of the DDT controversy for years
and unlike some members ol the scien-
tific community believes that the claims
need to be fully proven before important
public policy decisions are made.
One espect of his career has been to
constnnlly challenge the charge9 made
by various environmentalists aeatnst
DDT.
''TllE OPPONENTS or pestlcldts have
ctmen the relatively innocuous DOT as
lhelr major target despite !ti rtmarkable
re<.'Ol"d or safety,'" he onct told a l.'00-
gre.Wonal committee.
In flghll111 tllt cluirg" against the
ehemical Dr. Edwards has also become
an e~pert in bird We and 11.t least with
regard to one controversial argwnent in
California, the brown pelican. it looks as
if his ret'utatlon of cha rgt'9 against DDT
have been sustained.
JN 1968 environmentalists charged that
DDT was responsible ror vlrtually wtplng
out California'• brown pelican popUlatlon.
Or. Edwa rds countcrpunched that in
their zeal to get at DDT the so-called ex-
perts had overtooked many other factors
bearing on pelican nesting success.
The pelican populatloot, especially on
the famed Channel Islands olC Southern
California's coast, were down , but Dr.
Edwards insltted that helicopter In·
speclion.s or breeding areas and en·
vtronment"allsts tramping through lheir
habitat probably waa as ttaponsible u
any other factor fOf" the birds' dccllne.
Caillornl1 Featve Sttvlct
By George-----
Dt1r Gecqe:
1 1m ti yean old and have fallen
In !Oft with an older m•n. lle"a 38
and I'm mad 11bout him, but so far
I've re/Wied to date him ~use J
don't want lo get Involved with a
bachelor 10 old ht mu.st be set In
his WIJ'I. What do you advlsr~
TORN Pe4r Tom:
Oh, give the old codger a break
-he pl'()bably j1111 wants to hear
tht t weet laughter of youth once
more btfore he lhurrles olf thls
mort•I eOll. Just keep him out of
drafll and ketp his ahawl 1round
hls &boulders. Remember, you n\11)'
be old and fttblo yau....U ...,,oc1oy,
Otar Gtorge:
Could 10t1 tell me the main ad·
vantages of a young m11n attending
a coeducational tollege?
SAMS.
Deer Sam :
Nol here. •
..
=.•
"· ~. :m
ll"
...
"'' -Mo
w r
-
' . ----EE:IDICl
Record
Births
IOllfM COi.iT COMMUNITY
HOl,ITAL
s.itt•mller 1• Mr. otno:t Mrs.. Fredtlcll LAAor E••lon.
U'Hl L•\llcle, L.9<1UM Nl!lu.I, bov.
S.1"""91' _u Mr. itnd Mr1. Ml~l'IM( JC19 H•rll1v. nlll Yt<hl DI' .. D•M J!olnt, qlrl.
Mr. •nd Mrs. 'W'~":. f6UN'lllo, lt1S2
Colebrol*., LllOUnl Hlgull, lllrl.
S..!tmllft" 17 M•. •nd Mn. Henri HolMl•I l'-"26 P•-C.rmel, S.n JIHll Ciial&tr1PIO, olrl. ,..,_.,. 1•
Mr. MCI Mn. "°°'rt IC. SVllr"-!t, 2'°
Cent91' St .. 1.MIVN BPCl'I. olrt.
ST. JOSE,H MOS,ITAL
~"'""'. IN. Ind Mrs. onv ROM$. 11697 Al•l•• Ave .. Fount v.ii.v. bov. ="" M•, iatld Mn.. 1 E. lar1a11, 10.11 "~"· w .. 1 ..... bov.
Mr. and Mrt. 5Tf~r~ Mlll1r. ns.2 ... ~··· "'""""l"' ""· Dr. Mn. RONlld Rolh•Tlln. 1131 Ne Clrcia. C•I• Mft.li, 1;1lrl. -· Mr tnd Mt'S. Id H Antt\onv. "41 C1ruln1I Av 11lmfnt1er. bov.
Swlemller t Mr . .and Mrs, Dun A. Nixon, 710 W,
ietnaio,,33. Coll• MirM bov. M{_\.~ "'"'· G1t'I .E. ri..::::.oson. '!kl c,,.. re AYW .. Wettml"Riiir, girl.
S.et1m"r 11 Mr. Ind Mr1. Milrold J. Cro~bv. lnA
Investment
Firm Named
In Lawsuit
SANTA ANA -An in-
vestment company and two of
its employes have been named
as defendants in an Orange
County Superior Court lawsuit
which seeks more than $25
mllllon in damages on multi·
pie causes of action .
Investors Ann Q. Gilman
and Wilma Q. Patton blame
Walston and C:Ompany, Inc·,
500 Ne~rt Center, and
employes Fred Nord and Kae
Ewing for what they claim
were substantial· losses on
stocks recommended by the
derendants.
The plaintiffs state they
were assured that the Erie
Railroad Company shares they
purchased June 19 were sound
and would provide a 17.5 per.
cent profit a year.
Stamp Exhibit
Set in County
BUENA PAR ·K
.. , ...
.Dot.IL Y P'ILOT Sl11! P'11111
•
OAILV PILOT 1
Group Recruits
SeniOr Citize·ns
Volunteers fO years old and
over will bt recnJited and
placed in non-profit agencles
in Newport Beach and Santa
Ana because of a $27 .955 grant
to the Vohmteer Bureau of
the orsanlzation whlr.b In-.
eludes VISTA, Peace Corpf
and other n1tlonwlcfe
volunteer program1.
For more informaUon, call -· South Orange County. ,-----------
The funds will be used to ln-·lm"!'"""'
itiate a Retired Se n i o r
Volunteer Program (RSVP)
which will coordinate up to 250
volunteen and may reimburse
them for lran.!porlation, meals
or other expenses.
Ally retired person more
than 60 yean old can become
a volunteer. There are no
'educatk>n, income or ex·
perience requirements.
1l\e bureau is a private. non-
profit organization located at
32$ No. Newport Blvd. Since
195e, IUI staff has placed older
volunteers as aides in schoots,
hospitals clinics and in pn;.
grams for the physically and
mentally handicapped.
'lln Av1 .. Cll't~ Ml••· f,"· Mr. nd Mr1. Or~ Ill Ii. Ina. 11:ns P >lo Hut1vo, M Ilion V e(o, boy. Mr. tnd Mrs. David A Newcomer. 75~•1 VI• Del ~Mt1. Min ion Vl1lo. ....
ORCOPEX '7S, a stamp ex-
hibition sposored by t h e
Orange co u n t y Phuatelic
Society. wm be held Jan. 2().21. Promontory Chatatiel Cut
197.3 at the Communi t y
The grant is a resu It of
President Nixon request to
Congress to expand volunteer
opportunities for r e l i r e d
citizens following the White
flouse Conference on the Ag·
lng in 1971.
S~l"""r 12 Mr. Ind Mrs. Slfl>!'len 0 . Wrlollf, 9111 O!cken1 Circle. Wntmlns1tr. !JOY.
Recreation Cente~ in Bu~na Construction workers have cleared part of the chan-~ark. For ln<>!'e ... information net that eventually will be cut through from New·
space to pour concrete bulkhead pads to line the
channel· and the bay. Construction tiinetable indi·
cates channel will be cut through to rna1n harbor
near the end of the year.
HSVP was started in 1969 bv
the U.S. Department o·r
llealth. Educalion and Welfare Snl1mbtr 1s M•. fnd Mrs. J<Mepll J. F•rrls. 2«151 . C11 1 E1tllo. J••!on Vie Ii, olrl. Mr. Ind Mrs. IVmor!d M~Oll uon Nr#l1 No. I. Htmll\Ster'. ....
abo~t the ~xhib1t10n, contact port Harbor to the Irvine Company's manmade ~r~b~~~1~· o . Box 26• Promont.Ory Bay. rught now, they are using the and is now a part of ACTION .I '-------------'
Death Notiees
Al.•l!"ltTSf N Wenke Charges Battin With 'Neglect'
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Of Th 0.Hp "1'91 Stiff
81nt Albertwn. 611 Mellou-. Apt A.
Ceroni dll Mir. D1te of dt•111, s.t11lember JO, ltn. SutVfYld bY d'"uollter, Bolelrl Mllltr1...,, of l.IOunl 8ffcll: Plftfill Mr. Ind MrL Em 11 e Albert .....
a.-unit Bff<:ll1 brotlwr, John. of Cosll lllfll. SMvlcls, TlllSd1v. Oclobe-r 3. ,
f1M. 81111-CQr"Qfll del M•r cnapel. Pr1~111> l~l<l!•menl. Pacltlc Vltw MtmO<'lll P•r-. ~·:~·BT1:it~. F1111&ra1 HQnlt', Corooa IHI Challenger Bill Wenke has
1usH fired another salvo at in-
!ems and needs of lhe county
Medical Center which cares
for so many people in the first
district."
Champagne . and goodies will
be served on stage after the
performance and theatergoers
can mingle with the actors
and Burke.
28282 Camino Capistrano.
infonnation. Call 49~00 .
* * *
For
1111\'llltl
DllC\\' £nr1 Jtenne EH111b4llt'I ausn. RHldent ol Mu11· cumbent First Distr•'ct Count tinoton 8Ndi 1 D11t1 of d~'"·-~~tember Y
30;· 1m:--suN!'ltr11T 11usbi'r.r.l'Fill1Pi-SUj5ervlSOr JfooerrBattin · "'"° aons. Mlehffl P. Ind Stl'Vl!TI J.: . d-l'ller, I.Ind• 8u5h1 lelller. Junes E. Characterizing the central
Hllllha1 1!1ter1. Mllrv Willer, Pet111Y
TtlP!) l!rld K1111v Arlneer; 11r1ndmot11Ms. COWlty supervisorial district as
kftl• Mllh1rrv Ind S1ratl H\l!lhe1. Mrs.
&llSll w1s • memb&r of Cierdtn Grove "the Forgotten First," Wenke
Community Cllu.rcll 1nd Pl!O Slllerhood
Instead, Wenke .charges.
Battin -.!'has aided his ltg
financial backer, Dr. Louis
CeUa, who has established
hospitals in other parts of the
county."
Reservations can be made
by calling 842-1494, or 842-8900.
* * * MRS. JUDY Anne Headlee
will be the hostess SUnday for
a voter registration coffee
klatch sponsored by the Sad-
dleback Va 11 e y Young
TitE COl\11\fU!\'lTV Action
Progran1 Councn of the United
Auto and Aerospace Wol'kers
has endorsed Democrat Terry
Moshenko in the 7 O t h
Assembly District, according
to Jerry Whipple, the pro-
gram's director.
,...,...._.v --An Auto Loan at First National Bink
gives you 3 big advantages:
1. Low Cost
2. Fast Approval .tunfOr Ebe1t1. Memor111 wv1c.e1 wer1 charges that Battin has failed
Mid today, Mendity, Ci1rden Cirov1 com. lo k 'lh 'ts 'd 'I monll'I' c11un:11, 11 11 AM. Pr1v111 11riv• war WI J res1 ents ' o
diSt .....,lcH 11 GGOd Slle~rd Ceme. · ih •' '( £ th ' ...... Drtd1y 8rottier1 Hunllrt11ton Betel! Improve e QUc:ul Y 0 e1r
~tuirv. otrectora. life In recreation, health care
l!MHI L. c11o1a~~~L11: r11ldent o1 Lo~ and housing. ~"-Dill ol cleltn, ~tember 2't Th h"'I 1m. SurvJYld bv niece, M1r11 Nlc~ou, ol e C cu enger says the =:,~nci~~"=~. n~1~-, 8~l115'beec~fd "Forgotten First" suffers from
TlJesOl!.t 1! AM. Smllnt Cllalll!I. !nit•· a Shortage of parks and Open
"""'· bOCIO" Stwollerd C1mei.rv. Smltn1 Mor1U1rv. Dlrecton. space. Battin, he claims. has
c•ANOAL1. done nothing about it. l!"ftnl.,,. L Cr1~H. Aol 70: ""Iden! of Munttnoton Buch. 01i. of dQlfl, October Wenke also contends the ~t~. sxr..i.~oi!'" M=~· s.R,.t'Fc~ former chairman of the county
w111 t>e held WldnesdaY. 11 AM. sm1111l Board of ~ .......... visors has Cl'lllll!I. lnt&nnent, Rose Hiiis Mtmorl1 ..,...,.... P.an. smr1t11 Mor1v1ry, 01rectCN'1. "completely ignored the prob-.
Finally, Wenke claims Bat-
tin's backing of the creation or
a county housing authority is
an empty gesture because no
city in the first district has
joined !he authority·
* * *
* * * Republicans. The place: 26892 A DINNER-DANCE for
Preciados Drive, Mission Vie-GOP candidates is planned
jo. Friday The Thirteenth al El
Any Rep u b I i ca n or Niguel Country Club by the
3. Helps build your credit
Fiii out an auto loan application at
any branch of First National Bank.
You'll be that much closer to driving
the new car you've been thinking about.
BACKERS or Assemblyman Democrat-for-Nixon is invited Laguna Niguel Repu blican
Robert Burke's bid ror r~lec-to register to vote and partake Women~s Club Federated. Ft" rst N t . 1 B nk
tion io West Orange Coonly's of !he rr,. coif,. and donuts. Tickets for the fund rniser a 10 n. a a
10th District can attend a thea-The open house will last all day are going for $35 per couple.
ter J)arty with Burke Thursday -up until the registration on Reservations are being ac-0 ,.. O" AN Q E c ou NT Y
night· deadline at midrugtx . ceptcd by the COP ladies at ·1•cma:11111P1mil..._O.
Bobbie Murphy, chairman or * * * 32451 Adriatic Dri ve, Laguna N =~~c...a....a"""'
the event, says it is selfor the Niguel. AIRllDl:llln:l'l'ril&Mwa
Huntington Beach Playhouse, LAGUNA NIGUEL, GOP The festivities gel under SllftlMI: 17a & Tnt.
2110 Main St. The play is headquarters also will be open way at 7:30 p.m .. according to B ::..:n:=!:-
"Mary, Mary.·• · until midnight Sunday to Mrs. James Watson, dinner-Disneyland
Service
Curt ' t' · 8 30 · · t The I d h · ~-•r .... .c. l'i''' i• 1'1rttM•l IJ1"li111 S •rllk• Bi11«1 11114 --;;;~aP.•~n-;:cun=-e:;;•~s.-'n;;;;op.im.; .. ;;;-•• ~;;rei!,.~";meiiriiiviiotiie~rs;;.;;;;;;c;;;;:p;-•~ce:;';;:::;a~nc~e~c~a-•_n_n_a_n_. -;;::;;~~-;,..;::-:-.:.:::==:--.:-:=_:_:_-~~:~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~i ,..._......__ IPO:~ :;... "'· •
·~ r=
-
ARBUCKLE 4 SON l
WESTCL!FF MORTUARY
U1 E. 171h St., Costa Mesa
1411-4881 • BAL 'J'Z.BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del Mar 1'7U4SO
Costa Mesa lfl.W:.f • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Cotti Mesa u ~433 • McCORmCK LAGUNA
BEACll MORTUARY
1705 Laguna Cuyoa Rd.
DM415 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Ctmelery Monaary
Cbapel
3500 PactHe View Drive
Newport Beacb, CallforDI • -• PEEK FAMJL Y
COLONIAL YUNERAL
ROME
7181 Bella A\'e.
Westmlmter llSJ;S'S • SMJTll8' MORTUARY
lt7 Main St.
Rimtlnctnn Beac• -
Read the
Daily Pilot
F ete Begi1is
An y comO)tlnity s e r v i c e
group in Orange County is
eligible to compete for up to
$10.000 in the 1972 Community
Service Awards Program
sponsored by Disneyland.
F'ounde<f ·10·-hel p Piiiriiote
service lo all county com-
munities. the competition of·
£ers 40 awards for $1,000 and
one a"·ard of $10,000 for the ~
most outstanding service dur-
ing the past year. 1
Awards will be presented 1 early in 1973.
Application categories are: '
cultural, educational, service
for youth, accomplishments by
youth groups. health facilities,
special health services, civic
and general co mmunity
service, environment and
ecolOgy, social community
service and accomplishm ents
by support groups.
For application information,
contact $33-4456, ext. 538.
SA Attorney
In Lawsuit
SANTA ANA -Santa Ana
attorney Patrick Duggan has
been sued for $26.300 by a
Garden Grove auto dealer who
claims the lawyer failed to
honor a contract to purchase a
$6.500 1972 Porsche auto.
Lawyers for Dan Bums
Prestige Porsche Audi Ltd.
claim that Duggan bought the
car May 17 but hit check for
!he 11.1188.78 later bounced .
They demand Sl.lOO 'as the
alleged loss su!fered in the
transadion and 125.000 In
pun itive damage1.
LIT'S BE FRIHlll. Y
If )'OU havr nt\l' ~lahbon
or know of anyone movtni::
to 0Ut U"('a, plcaAc 1~11 UI
10 thtt ""'" m.y ctxWnd a
f'Hrndly Wl'lcome and hf'lp
them to ~ acquainted
In their ~w aurTOUndinp.
s.. Ceast rn
~ 4M-"61
11art1or rlSitar
64Ml74
•
........... i
A.DMllMflll.S.._<.ii ....... ,..... .... u.M ....... ~ ......... ...-... ~
DAILY 10 · IO, SUNDAY 10 ·7
MON.-TUES.-WED. ONLY!
'
USI YOUI
K MART CHARGE-IANKAMERICAID
OR MASTER CHARGE
GIRLS
WESTERN JEANS
R'"J.
Z.96 2c00
Cotton print &
jeans in 1s1orted
solids-west•rn styl•
colors. Sir•l 4-14.
GIRLS
SWEAT SHIRTS
~-44• .... 1.47
1.22
, ... 7·14
.... l.l7
1.44
Cotton short & lan9 sle•v• sw••t,hirts
in •n ••sortm•nt of colors.
LADIES
CORD SLACKS sloo
Hl·F•1llie11 1tyl14 cer4urey 1!1c•1 le
tOPr1pllm111I Owf IM•H fop1 . .Ane1l1d f•lt ~
EOl11r1, Si111 t lo ti.
LONG SLEEVE
TOPS . ...
2.H 2022
SPr11rt ,.1,,, .. , ,, "'""'" ,,,rt 1,,, i11
111 111eflMeet ef '•Pvl1, olyl11 I c•l•rt .
Sl11t S.114.L
·COSTA MESA
2200 HARBOR BLVD. !Comer of Wiison)
•
j
•
~~,...,,, ..... ....,,,,.,,."""""""'""""""'"'"""'"""' ..........
'
' t .,\ '-...
I.~. ~·/
LADIES PAJAMAS ....
J.11 3o22
Popul•r m•n·tailor•d p•l•tn•t I" clu·
Po,..t ,..ntron Ill "'ylott. Anti d1119 f•biic.
Notc.h•cl coll•r I pipl~ trim. Ph••. bluf,
lil•c or p••ch p••t•I•. Si t•• JJ.JI.
FLATTERING
BODYSUm
22
.... J.71·
'·'' Pot tels tn nylon, ocelot•°' polr
.-1 ... /nylon. Snap crotch. S-M-L
-HUNTINGTON BEACH
19101 MAGNOLIA (Corner of Gfl!lfleldl
I
I
8 DAILY "LOT MOllday, OttObtr 2, 1972
SF to Newport I
Nemesis Coas1'1 Winner
-
...
Tom To b In 's EriC$0n-39
Nemesis was the overall cor-
rected time winner ot the 36$.
mile California Coastal race
from San Francisco Io
Newpo rt Beach.
This was the secrtnd year of
the annual event co-sponsored
by Newport !!arbo r Yacht
Club and St. Francis Yacht
Club.
The race started last Tues-
day at IO a.m. from St. Fran-
cis Yachl Club near the
Golden Gate Bridge. Strong
southeast headwinds slowed
the race from the beginnlng, A
light westerly developed in the
latter stages or the race.
First to finish was Al
Cassel's 50 · foot Brittain
Chance-designed sloop Warrior
from NHYC in 73 hours and 58
minutes. Warrior was unable
to save her handicap time
over the lower rated boat3 and
wound u~nth overall and third In A.
Nemeab finished with an
elapsed mr., ol. 79 hours and
18 minutes,\ corrected to 70
hours and Ol:ninutes. Her co.r·
rected Ume 'advantage over
Warrior was t hours and 16 mlnutes.
1bere were starters In
the race but RObert O'Brien's
Spirit from Calltomia Yacht
Club was out of \be race early
with a broken baqkstay in the
heavy goln& of! the Golden
Gale. ·SUmmary :
OVERALL -(I) Nemesis;
(2) GaunUet, E. I. Woodland ,
SMYC; (3) Moon Day, C. A.
Wolfard, KHYC; (4) Lucy
Pull, Rlrjiard Foxx, BYC; (51
Xanalyn, Bud Shank, CYC; (6 )
lmprobable, David A 11 e n ,
SFYC; (7) Blue streak. Gary
Myers, NJIYC; (8) Sally Dog,
E<l CWhman, GSSC; (9) War-
rior, Al Casul, NllYC; (10)
Outrage, John Calley, CYC.
Drumbeat, Counterpoint \
CLASS A -(1) Improbable;
(2) Sally Dog ; (3) Warrior.
• CLASS B -(1) Moon Day;
(2) Lucky Puff; (l) Xanalyn. I
, Two Boats Divide Argosy CLASS C -(1) Nemesis;
(2) GaunUel; (3) Wlldicrall,
Arthur Biehl, St. FYC.
•a-l"tlo .. HANDICAP WINNER -Tom Tobin's Ericson-39
Nemesis, a San Diego Yacht Club entry, captured
overall honors in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Cal-
ifornia Coastal Race from San Francisco. Tobin's
prize for the victory \V as the Baldwin M. Bald\vin
Perpetual Trophy.
Collegiate Teams Ready
For Douglas Cup Regatta
Sailing teams from the tion of Long Beach \'acht
United States Naval Academy, Club. Cal·25 sloops will be
University of Notre Dame and fUinished by the Alan1itos Bay
the University of Ha'>'•aii join-Fleet of the · National Cal-25
ed co-host Cal State Long Association.
Don Ayres Jr.'s Drumbeat
from Newport llarbor Yacht
Club and Dick Deavcr's
Counterpoint , Balboa Yacht
Club. split hoTl(lrs in the Ocean
Racing Division of Newport
Ocean Sililin;.: Association·s
Ala1nitos Bay Argosy Satur·
day and Sunday.
Drumbeat was the overall
11·inner in 1he Saturday race
rrurn Newport to Alamitos
Bay ;ind Counterpoint \\'3S the
winner of the return race on
Sunday.
\Vinners in the P lI RF
division were Sand<>rling. co-
skippered by Bob Poole and 1-1.
Hope of Bahia Corinthian
Vatch Club Saturday and
(:raham Gibbons' Sunda,
Balboa Yacht Club, Sunday.
Phil Doane's Serena from Beach Thursdav as entrants in Defending champion USC
intercollegia te Sailing's an nual will bid for the right to reta in
ll}Blch racing <'Vent -the its title in an upecnning series
Long . Beach l.>o~!~s C~p ..J.bat_\\'ill .. ~it t.he._ Troj~1s _ 'f -y -}i Re~atta Oct. 27-28. . against UCLA, UC lrv1ne. op 3C {S !'our n1orc teams re1na1n to Orange Coast College :ind
be namt.'CI for the seven race several other contenders. ,
series of tea~ again.st tean1 A Pacific N 0 rt h w cs t Jn Lido-14~ races to be sailed outside Long .
Beach Harbor under the dircc-representative -expected lo
be either the University of Races Told
Newport Harbor Yacht Cltfb
was a double winner in the
J\10RF division.
In the Ocean Racing
Catamaran Division V i c
Stem's lmi Loa from Seal
Beach Yacht Club was the
winner of Sa turday's race and
John Pursell's Patty Cat If
v.·as the winner of Sunday's
race.
Ne~·port to Alamitos Bay
OCEAN RACING -11)
Drumbeat. Don Ayres Jr.,
NHYC; (2) Tri but e ,
t.1acDonald, Lawhorn, Blat-
terman, BYC; (3) Trend, Jim
Linderman, BYC.
PHRF -(1) Sanderling,
Alcoholic Unit
Offers Talks
Poole, Hope, BC'(C; ( 2 ) Members of A I coho I i cs
Serapis II, Bill Barry, BCYC; Anonymous are available to
(31 Bonita, Goldie Joseph, speak lo any school or
LIYC. organization interested in
~10RF -(1) Serena, Phil knowing more about
Doane. NliYC: (2 ) Big Mag-alcoholism.
.gU! ... Mike Hattey"' £.M'ic.:.J.3L-~.Spea~ wi!LbfLmembe!'i De Core, Cal Preston, NHYC. Qf the Orange Co u n t y
ORCA -(1) Ima Loa, Vic lntergroilp association of
Stern. St BYC ; (2) Imua, Alcoholics Anonymous.
Ronald Bobinsky, LYC ; (3) ~~~~~=~~~ Polynesian Concept, Buddy 11
Ebsen, BYC.
Alamitos Bay to Newport
OCEAN RACING -(I)
LCKVA 'tC ea.
N O MINIMUM
KINKO'S
CFly Our Legs)
... 9
British Columbia or t h c
University of Washington -
"':ill also be named. Two more
entrants are expected from
the East Coast.
· t C.ounterpoint, Deaver & Head· Fifty-two boats turned ou de BYC · (2) D beat Don I 4'?1 Campu~ Or
,,,.;"" 0:11 .. llQl
CAUFOaNIA
from 0Dnnp Counly
resernlions (714) 540-4550 Saturday and Sunday for n, • rum •
Alamitos Bay Yacht Club's Ayree~s'._J~r::_ .• ~N~H~Y~C~;_l(~3~1 ~La~l.,..~<l_!~~~~~~~~~~!!.':==========~11
eighth annual Lido-14 lnvila· -
PUBLIC NOTICE ......
SUPEltlOR COUaT 01" THE
STATIE OJ< CALlilOllHIA
THE COUNTY Oil OllAHGI!
Ho. A·7"'2
NOT ICE Of' HEAJllNO 011' l"IETITION
1"011 OJlOER A UTHOll:IZIHG
TJIAN5,1Ell 01" l"EllSOfllAL PROP·
Ell:TY PUlllUANT TO CONTRACT
AND """llOVING l"AltTIAL COM· l"OllTIOH OF Cl.AIMI
E1l1hl of GEOAGE L. RAGER.
Oectlwd. NOTICE rs HERESY GIVEN Ill.If
Donald It. R.-......, •S 1•KV!Dr' Of Ille w\U
of the 1bo\'Hlefm0 d.eMwcl, t>91 flll'd
her1ln 1 ~titian fer 111 Orcttr autfl<l!'lllng
lt!t 1>11Uloner to coompi.t. fflt '"'"" of I NIYll AD.I.IN thet IJdc ........ (Otll•ICI m..:11 by 1i,. dKildent In hls ....,. .,.., ..U.t ewtlew1 ll'-11m1 to Mil 1tock 111 lrflle, fbrvr11 •nd
X: .,;iul11m111I •nd fr6d1 n1m1 01 l~I TOILAFLI $ bu1lnM1 know11 as "Th1 Nnt" and -"m" '"-" n ··r~ '"'~.,·· w-..11-~ Plu-lout«! In the cllv o! Anaheim, C~lltornl• IUl191' ~ rll1t1nc1 lo which 11 m6dt tor !~r!her
lJnlib ontina-pl11nccn, ThH•ftei pertlcul1'1, I nd Iha! !Ill Hme '"'" Pllce ., of he8rlt>Q the .. ,,,. has bftTl 111 10<' .. not prrmlt eompr.wd 1lt or OctObtr 1,, Hn. •I ''DO 1.m. In lh•
_,-w•ter to 1pl•h b.-k Of' eoce~ '°"'''_,, of Oeperlmenl No. 3 ol lll"
WltbToiltiffr• the fWI ~"'""'pl.,._ court, 11 JOO Civic C9!1~ Ortv1 Wnt, In
tbrou1h the elo11ln1 m••• and the CllV of S1nl~ Alll, Cal!lornl1. ..Wia It down. 0.1911 Slpltm• :II, 1"1 WILLIAM E. ST JOHN,
• ~tlf STO"-S"-AIH-e.\Clll County Clittk
1 UNtt1tl ITU:Lf, CAJlf'1' MIO AflOIJNO OttSON~ DI.INN • t•UTCHI•
•lAPIJllD TAILOtVl.t Alll·T~r1T t y1 Wllllll'll A.~
..... -~-....... .. "..,..., , .. ,.,. 0!1¥1 __..... • N..,.,t Midi. c.11,...,..,. '1141
•-· ··-w•u -·u •"-n •: """-._.,..;•.._--"•'-'--..;..· ___ .. _-_,., 1 Pvbll.i.d °'"""' coa11
Octoblf 1. l. '· lt71
1ional Rcgatt<.1.
The fleet \\'as divided into
three classes with three races
being sailed on Saturday and
Lwo on Sunday. Trophy win·
ncrs in each class were:
CLASS A (16 entries) -<ll
Viva. Gib Marshall, ABYC :
(2) Ditto, Bill McCord, BYC;
(3) Captain's Fancy, Pete Jef·
ferson, J\lBYC; (4) Pheemers.
Merlin Gayman, ABYC: (S)
Woodwind, llarry Wood ,
ABYC .
CLASS B (23) -1 ll llool
Mon. Ed Mkenzie, ABYC: (21
Schuss, liarry llutch.inson,
ABYC: (3) Red Baron, Walt
Bowker, AijYC; (4) But-
tercup, Jack flallaU, ABYC;
tSJ Too Grand, Bob Ucciferri,
SI BYC .
CLASS C 113) (I )
Response, Robert D o e z i e ,
BCYC; (2) American Woman,
Ken Johnson, BYC; (3) Get
Smart, Don Hill, PVSA.
PHARMACY
WE QUOTE PRICES
OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME
-CHECI THISI SU,11 SAU Sl'(CIALS-'""· ••t. ,ovr 11"· Ptlf.tl
EXCEDRIN, t: 100 •••••••••••••••••.•••••••••• Sl.77 Sl .41
Jl lG HT GUARD "N•lur•I Sct11f' •nli·p•r1pir•nl, I oi. $1.7' SJ.4'
ULTR~ llllTE Toolhp•sl•, 6 1/, o• ••.•••••••••••••• $1.0., ltt
CUJllTY conoN I.A.LL!., # JOO •••.•••••••••••••• ••f ••t
2700 E. Coast Hi!bwav. at Femleaf. Corona del Mar
$1.1 s
$1 .19
7Sc
39c
• AMPU ,AlllN• IN WU.I
H••r&-t 1JD • 6100 Delly
a .... ~ -4 tww.y.
644-7575
TRY OUR RED OR
GREEN BURRITOl 45c
Made with DEUclout flour
tonllle1, smothered wilh our
apeclal rtfrled b'8na and lopped
with a mild Red meat 11uce,
or Hot Green Chlll 11uce and
grated nitural cheddar chMH.
NEWPORT BEACH
Bristol (P•llndff) at C1mpu1
SANTA ANA
4th St. and Nowport Fwy.
TUSTIN
Red Hill near Santa Ana Fwy .
... and other Oran9e County locatlon1
INVITATION TO FACT CLINIC WITH
RELATIONSHIP TO PROPOSED PROJECT OF
ALISO WATER MANAGEMENT AGENCY
Al 4 P.M., Wodnnd•y, October 4, 1972
At the Moulton·Nlguel Water District Office
27281 AlilO Crffk Road, Laguna Niguel
The Moulton-Niguel Water District will sponsor a
Fact Clinic in order that the residents of the Moul·
ton Niguel Water District and other intereste~ par·
ties may review and obtain information relative to
the proPosed Project, as well as the Environmental
Impact Study of the Aliso Waler Management
Agency.
On October 11, 1972, the Aliso Water Management
Agency will hold a public hearing. This is one of the
several informal fact-finding meetings to be held
in various locations.
Copies of the Project and Environmental Reports
are available for examination at the Office of the
Moulton-Niguel Water District, 27281 Aliso Creek
Road, Laguna Niguel, and at the Public Libraries
of Mission Viejo, Laguna Beach, and South Laguna.
Additional lnformi1tion may bo obtained by con·
tacting the Manager of the Moulton-Niguel W•ter
District, and Al•x Bowie, Secretary.
District Office TelephOM is (714) 831-2500
MOULTON-NIGUEL WATER DISTRICT
Alex Bowie, Secretary
---,..,....~ ---•.11:1.·~ -
INVITATION TO FACT CLINIC WITH
RELATIONSHIP TO PROPOSED PROJECT OP
ALISO WATER MANAGEMENT AGENCY
AT 5 P.M., Tuesday, October 3, 1972
at tha Royal Savings & Loan Building
23161 El Toro Road, El Toro
IMtnanine Floor Room)
The Aliso Water Management Agency will
sponsor a Fact Clinic in order that the resi-
dents of the Aliso Water Management Agency
and other interested parties may review and
obtain information to the proposed Project, as
well as the Environmental Impact Study of tbe
Aliso Water Management Agency.
On October 11, 1972, the Aliso Water Manage-
ment Agency will hold a public hearing. This
is one of several informal fact.-tinding meetings
to be held in various locations.
Copies of the Project and Environmental Re-
ports are available for examination at the
Office of the Aliso Waler Management Agency,
27281 Aliso Creek Road, Laguna Niguel.
Additional Information m•v be obtalMd by co~
tactlng the Secretary of the Aliso Water Man-
agement Office, (714) 831·2500.
ALISO WATER MANAGEMENT AGENCY
William F. Wolfson, Si!cretary
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
FROM Fashion Island
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
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QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
''I' don 't like to be picky, but there's something I don't
like about this place." -
:J.,. M. Boyd
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LA Gals Shave
Heads of Rapists
The crime boys now report that metropolis with the
highest incidence of rape, be it known, is Los Angeles. ·Mu~t
mention certain outraged ladies thereabouts accept th.is
circumstance not at all. 'M>ey've teamed up in a vigilante
squad. To-lraclLdown unprosecuted culprits. When they lo-
cate same. they expect to shave the fiends'"' heads, then
post photos all over town. They're qiute .m-ious, under-
..-ndebly.-----------A ST ANDA RD ski in Scandinavia a few fiundred years
ago was two inches thick, five inches
wide and 71h: feet long.
CAN YOU document any instance
when a healthy wolf ever attacked a
human being Jn North America ? Doubt
it.
THAT ATHLETE most apt to
come from the largest of families is
the boxer. From the smallest, the ten-
nis player.
SAY WHAT you °"'ill about tattoos.
in that scientific psychological examination known as the
masculinity test, tattooed men as a rule rate far higher
than untattooed men. So do tattooed women, might men-
tion .
OLD SONGS -Q. "Sonny, are you old enough to re-
member that classic ditty of yesteryear called 'I Love to
Dunk a tlunk of Sponge Cake'?"
A. No, sir. but clearly recall "When It's Nighttime in
Italy, It's .Wednesday Over Here." Now are you ol~ enough
to remember "I'm Wild About Horns on Automobiles that
Go Ta-Ta-Ta-Ta"?
Q. WHICH end of the hen 's egg is laid first. the big
end or the little end?"
A. Big end, always. Now if this fact is im~rtant to
you. jot it down. It will not be reported here again.
THE RECORD shows almost but nol quite every su-
perior girl sprinter on championship track teams comes
from a broken home.
LOVE AND WAR -Our Love and War man has re-
ported the most effective line a single girl can' deliver . to
capture the devout interest of an eligible bachelor 1s:
"I'm going to have to be careful of you. You're danger-
ous." A lady in Great Falls. Mont., says she tried that
No. I line. Didn't work. Inquires as to what's next best.
No. 2 is: "You 're so different." No. 3: "I can't get you
out or my mind."
BIG MONTH for the common cold, October. For some
mysterious reason, the incidence of that ailment peaks
thrice yearly. Early autumn, mid-winter and spring. The
early autumn peak -now -is highest, usually.
CO ME ON. you don't believe fish is brain food. do
you? Neither do I. But surveys show one out of every six
grownups Hereabouts still does so believe. And half the high
school students likewise think that, it's said.
FEDERAL LAWS that govern military pay are so out
of sync with federal laws that govern poverty payments,
It's reported, that approximately 15,000 enlisted men cur-
rently also draw welfare checks.
Addre3s mail to L. ltf. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875. New-
port Beach , Calif. 92860 .
•
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e SLU~fBER S\VEETLY on
n Sln1mon~ hide · 111\l'KY
:<0(A. Decorator fabrie of
ycllO\\' ir: 1•,.hllc!
e LET THE "Good l 'imtl
Roll" ~1uslcRlly with a
Grand Plano 6' Ebony.
Just tuned Is recon-
ditioned,
e NEEDS l.O'T'S ol rom~y
& a friend for )'OU, too!
~falt pop with Bee&Je
f'Arl! ! !
e DINNER \\'ITll ,\ looch
Qf rle;nnce on a SOiid
;\lciplt' d1nif1i M'I "'Ith 6
\Vlnd"°r rhalni, huffcl A:
te• cart .
• r1T IN ANY\\"lll::RE In
lhil 'U V\V Bue.
For AdverflslnCJ In
OUT 'N ABOUT
Phone
Norm Stanley
6'42-4321
I '
Monday Oclobtr 2 lt/72 DAil V PILOT f). -·
HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!
3 lb. Dupont Dacron 88 filled .~XTRA-lONG
-~~!~~·~~ .. !~~
• Completely washable-nylon outerShell, rayon lini ng .
• Zips from inside or outside. f l OBJXN-5.
MADE TO SEll FOR $19.95 $895
WOWI SAVE $11.001
-BUY ONE FOR EACH
MEMBER Of THE FAMILY
SAVE $3.SO EA.
TUES. & WED. ONL YI
·u.s. Armr Surplus 50 Caliber
AMMO CANS
''Built Like A Bottleshlpl''
• Every home con u1e 1everol of the1e
water-light, a ir-tight all 1leel
ammo boJ1.e1 .
• t id closes oYer a durable rubber ga1ke1 ,
--... making a moi1lure-proof seal.
• For 1tQring clothing,
!ooh, gun1, valuable
poper.1, coin collection1.
• 8ig 12" long JI. 6''
wide JI. 7" high.
E~slly worth $4.99
WOWI
Vinyl Upholstered
S PC. BRIDGE SET
''Gorgeous, Highly Decorative Sets
Wiii Compliment Your Gamel''
• Many styles & colors to choose from.
• All steel sets have vinyl upholstered seats & replacement table insert.
•Also great for extra dining space, games, lhe kid's room .
MADE TO SELL FOR $49.95
WOW! SAVE $20.001
Adjustable -6 Position
FQLDING COT
• ~•avy duty ,,.:~:~:;,':;,hL::: or Camping!"
on~ we~ring blue canvas sling . y, : ~~:fe 'tdr1m with sharp nouticnl emblem
wi •JC 76" Ion · . · g-six locking positionsf
REG. SI0.95
WOW!
SAVE$
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DINmE CHAIR Suction las•
DINETTE CHAIR
REPLACEMENTS
e Long wearing, heavy weight vinyl is
easy to clean & scuff proof.
• Fits choirs with screw-on backs &
slip-on bocks. .
• Jiffy installation -Renew your choirs
in minutes -Choice of colors.
• Set includes seat & back.
$4~?
~u ·:~·v:*"
~ I ,,. · $0.001
REG. $6.99
~
BENCH VISE
• Unique bo1e holds 1ecwre on any 1moo1h
1wrloce.
• Head 1wivf!'l1 -iu1! what 1very ham•
hondymoo r'leed1.
TUii. & WID. ONlTI
YOU SAVE $1.001
Set of 3
CAST -IRON SKILLETS
• Set of 3 groduoted 1it•t -orie for
every need.
• Good, hegvy co" iron reloin1 heal
& brown1 better.
REG. $4.99
fUll. & Wll-OMTI
I
JET TORCH
• Handy-carry kit contoin1 oil you need
for big or small fob1 .
• Complete with blow-torch hea d,
1oldering head, 1por~0 l i1er,
utility head, tonk & co1e
REG. $9.9S
fUlJ. & Wft, OHlfl
Easy-To-Use
ELECTRIC GLUE GUN
• 60 1e<o~ bonding on all rt0n-porovt mote,iah.
• Awtomatk feed I trigger--complete ""Ith 9vn,
v!ue a. 1eole1
I TUU. & W ... OM.YI
I
•
e Tradh117 Slop
LOS ANGELES -Trading
in Flrst Leisure Corp. stock
has bee.n halted unul Oct. 7 by
the Securit ies & 1':xchange
Commission Y:hich SJys the iil'/llll!i~
rirm has nol fill'd a proper I
registration statement for its
securities. The compa ny
denied this and other ac-~
cusations. \1$'"'"''°'"W->
In announcing its decision, '"'
the SEC said there are also ~·
questions about the accuracy '$: ..
be built, according to the c.-om-(·:""f' ;.;>
pany's financial reports. "?\ :.· .. r·· .... ,,..""" ...
LOS ANGELES -Com-
missioners of the Los Angeles "'
Department of Water and
Power have approved ac-
quisition of the Riverwood Sleeft: New Model
Ranch f\futual Water Co. of The latest lines of campers and ca1nper trucks will be among the display at the
Sunland, a 25--year--0\d private 9th Annual Orange County Jnternational Auto Show Oct. 10-15 at the Anaheim
utility firm . Convention Center. The event will be the first major show in Southern Ca lif · beAbu~~~i~ifolit'.:! ~;,~~ nia th is year. The latest 1973 model cars and other vehicles \Viii be under one
missioners and proper t y _ roof·----------------------------------!! owners assessed for the rost,
estimated a t $114 ,400.
Keep on 'W angeling'
U.S. Auto Compcuiies Eye Rotary Engine
Fine Cusloru T11i/oring
w .. tcllff ,,cmr, 1112 '"'"• .f.y•.
Newport hoc.II, Cc:ilifornla
PHONf: 645·1 072
WASH!NGTO~ 1 UP!l
The A m c r i c :i n :iuton1obilc
oi,•:ncr. u•ho has been litilated
by car n1akers with C\'crything
from push bulton windows to
bucket seals. is now about to
be "\Va11kelcd ...
And it n1ay be the biggest
--boon 1~ the buyer since the
Den t ure Invention
For People with
••Uppen'' and ••Lowen''
'The nc:ual thing to havinr your
own teeth 11 posslble now wilh a
pla9til;: cream rl111COvery that actu·
ally hold• bulb .. uppers " a ud
"'IO"er•" II!!. ~ver l>l!fore pl'.lAAlblc.
Jt'Ja diacovery called flXflll l'NT•
for daily hon1e use (U.S. Pal.
(.J,003,9881 and il ha ~ rrvulu-
llOniieddenlute welD"l.n&. FIXOOl::NT
fotm'I :in da.~ti<; memhr;inc th:it
htlps absnfb lhc r.llocks of bilJng
and cht11·u1ic
\\'uh F1xnot:NT m:iny denture
•c;1n:ni may cal, ..pcak. li1ugh, wirh
hltlt" worry uC tlenlUTC!ICQlfling [Ol.l!le.
O ne a11plitalioo may l a~t fnr
hours. l)cn1ure11 thnl fit arc C11S1;:1l-
t 1;11 In hc:il th. St•e your Uenll>t
ro:,i:ul;Jrty Gt•ltilSY· I o-usc F' xoo~;ST
l)cntun: /ullH:sive Cr1:am.
n1eet tlic SI0,000 panther* ...
hy drT01nrt~n . imporTrd fon· L1ntX1ln-~f('!'f'llt')'. J!nlinn
coach\1 otrk 1·n·al<'rl hv 111,. hnllinnl Ghia Studios nf Turin.
f'urd desli.:n•·d ltlC' :jj1 CIP -1\' \/.lj l'n~in1" f"1,u1· 11·h1 ·f•I in-
dc1.11•11dt•111 1-ll~p•·n.~i<>n ru1d 1111d-sh11• •·n);!inl' placl'nlcn1. F'i\'c
SpCl'd J.:l'lll' box, rull.1' .~yllt'h1"(1C)ll.l'd
PANTERA
l'ant••rri ... ltnllan fQr Panth"r ..
ohnson & son
2626 HARBOR Bl VO .. COST A MESA. • 540·5630
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
Phone
6424321
For
Weekender
Advl'rli sin ~
creation of the assembly line
production t e c h n i q u e . ac·
cording to sonic auto industry
experts.
SJJ\frL V PUT. the \Vnnkel is
a new type of auton1obile
engine. but one wh ich is
radically. different from the
old inlernal combustine engine
used in 100 million cars and
trucks t r a v e I i n g U.S.
hiRhWRys.
Instead of pistons moving up
and down in cyclinders, the
\Vanke! engine uses triangular
rotors that revolve in an ellip-
tica l cha mber to power the
car.
Just "'hat would that mean
:1s far ns the average driver is
concemcd? Quite a !ot. F'or
example. the \Vankct engine
-Is practically free of
vibration. which v.·ould mean a
quie ter car.
-/·las fewer moving pa rts,
and therefore should require
cheapt>r rnaintcnance .
-Is sma ll and lighter.
about half the size and weight
of a piston engine of com·
par<1hle power.
-C:in use !cad-free . low oc·
lane gasoline without loss of
pcnrer.
The \Van kcl-takes Its--name -
frorn Or. 1''e lix Wankel , its
German inventor who built the
fi rst \Vanke! engine in 1954.
The 'Vankel's rotor revolves
on a shaft inside a chamber.
The chamber itself is shaped
like a figure eight.
TI:IE U.S. AUTO industry
has Jagged behind foreigii
competitors in marketing the
Wan kel. 1 The Japanese arc the first in
the American market with it .
They have a Wankel engine in
a car ca lled the Mazda. With
75dealerships in the United
States, Mazda is predicting it
will sell 60,000 rotary powered
cars thi s year.
!Jloriey's lt'orth
Ea se Bill Paying Chore
With New Alternatives
Hy SYLV IA PORTER
Jl"s October, a new 1nonth,
I.he bills are slarting to roll in,
and within the next 10 days I'll
write checks on the household
account to the grocery store,
meat market, cleaner. lallll-
dry. drug store, telephone
con1pany, flori st. at least two
or three depa rtn1ent sto res,
etc.
Simultaneously, my hus-
band will write chl><:ks on a
scpar.11\e ac·
count !o !he
1 a n d lord.
telephone
company. g!l·
r;igc. liquor
store, nev.·s-
papcr deliv·
ery agmc:-y,
at least 1wo
1to11rt:1t or three test·
n11 ran ts, perhaps snme clC'p:irt-
rn1·nt sror"!' and an 1nsura nrc
N'ln1p;iny too
1N Tl~lf:. \\'E !!P<'nd a r-011·
pie of hours rr1ch n1onth do111~
this In money. stan1ps alone
:1\'('raf!r ,2 a monlh -often
111ore. rarelv lt•Ss -nn!I c\'t•n
lhe envelope~ we ha ve to sup-
ply cost money.
1\l."O, it's a bore and a chorr
-a!'! millions of you surely
1vlll agree.
Arc there altem;itivc'i~ Yi·s
And incrtasing nun1bcr<; ,,f
theln llre emerging.
If you know how to u~c yn(1r
credit or bank cl11.1rgc cnrcl
1vilh prudence, you can quick-
ly cut this time-consurning.
rhcc.k • f'Oll$Uming, stamp-
consuming burden. Simply use
lhe cArO wherever you cnn :
f:lll!J !lt11tion, i;tore, re~tnur;1nt,
etc. lnl'tt•ad of rt'<'elvlng in-
dlvklual bills rrom rach of
thtse bwlincgse11. you reec1vc
one monthly charge cnrd bill
which you can pay wllh one
<'heck nod one !Clamp -nnd nt
no lntcre•l provided you M'Ltle
the account within the bllltn ii:
period. This qulclt settlement
bi thfl rnuat.
service banks alone offer this
paying serv ice for s u c h
regular bills as quarterly in-
surance premiums -o(ten al
no charge. All you need do is
let your institution know how
much to debit your account,
how often and the address.
Outside of noticing lhat your
arcount has been debited, you
won't even feel the regular
transactions.
Coruider buying and using
the Supcrchec k -an ov ersiz·
ed check which you ca n use to
pa~· as m:iny as 45 regular
n1onthly bills. Some 500 banks
from coast to coasl offer this
SPrvi ce, usually for 50 cents a
su pcrchcck -which amounts
lo a substan tia l saving con·
sidering the number of in-
dividual checks and stamps
you'd use otherwise. On that
one check, you w r i t e the
fl~ures you want the bank to
pay each of seve r a I
merchants, up to 45, :ittach
the bill stubs, send !he "'hole
thing lo the bank lo handle.
OR LOOK FOil :in in·
stitution ofrcrlnr: s p e c i a I
C.'ht:'c ks !called by the trick
n:i me Date n· Sign checks) for
\'a riablc monthlv bills
machine prodU cel! and
nlachinc processible, already
stamped lo the creditor.
Now !he newes t. m os t
rir11mnlic bill -paying crutch -
annthcr major step toward an
Cl'Cntual checkless society -
i!'I the electronics fund 11
tran!'lfer. City National Uank
in Ohio ran 11 lest of 1his In
Uppe r Arlington . Ohio, and
sevt>ral other banks -ln-
cludln~ Hempstead Bank on
[.()ng Island -arc nlso field
t($tinp: sirnllnr projects. The
way it work11 is this :
Vou go Into a department
store, A ptlarmacy or 11lmilar
Wall Street· • () f
Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today
We couldn't prove it, of course,. but
own stock.
seems likely
the
it
here that the percentage , is even greater . 1n Or-
Coast area every day. and it's . growing ange
That's why the DAILY PILOT
to be the first newsptrper . in
proud, was ago,
Orange County. to bring
years
its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high
speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home-
delivered edition and the service gets better all the time.
Wall Street's computers "tcdk to" computers 1n
DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate
more than 1,000 words per minute. It takes only
the
of
12
• minutes to move the entire New
the Stock
Street
right
,.
Exchange reports from
to the typesetting machines
here on the Orange Coast.
York and American
canyons of Wall
of the DAILY PILOT
And when
the
technology finds a way to beat that speed
record,
first to
When
DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the
use it to bring
it comes
readers "today's action today."
to financial news, the one that means
business is the
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CHECK A~O ,.. whtthcr
your own bank or savlng!I In·
slltutlon -or others In your
nC'ighb o rhoGd -~'111
nuromotlcnlly JlllY y nu r
f!'JtUIAr bll1!1 oul uf vour
checking or &avinlj:!I at'<..Ount
o\n csllmRted 2.SOO I u I I
place, mnll:e a purchns.e and
have the 1tore c:allect throu gh
your bank. You have a •peclal
cu:stomer c a r d (electronic
run<ls tran&fer) which you clve
lo the store clerk. The clerk In
tum wrltts up a saltt ticket
and puta lhfl card In an clec·
tronlc card reAder . Computcr11
link!n~ the !lore to the bank
nrronRC lo transfer the h1n1l'I
f rorn your I !Ill.' custorn<'r 1 nc·i
count to the store \lhe seller)
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Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts!
I
Here's here's hel"l't
CHARLIE BROWN ••• end LUCY ••• end UNUS ••• end
her.'•
SCHROEDER •• , lfld
... but oot -~ .......
SNOOPY
Phone 642-4321 (C:lrculntlon Department) to have the
whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally.
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J% DAILY PILOT
Super Bus
Program
Under Way
'
WASlllNGTON (API -The
Urban Mass Transportation
Adm in is t rn l i o nhas in-
augurated Project Super Bus
-a program to analyze the
feaslbllity of using h i g h •
capacity buses such a s
doubledeckers in American
ci1ies.
UMTA awarded a ~.000
grant 10 the National Trans-
portation C(.>flter Pittsburgh.,
Monday, Ottobtf', 2, lCJ72
f'ca111H1r Clreu
I !
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r,. Bil Kecau
® ( ECOLOGY )
for a study in cooperation u·ith
transit agencies in seven cities
-ChlC'ago, Dallas. Detroit,
"Mommy pretends she's looking at the size, but she's
really loo~ing ot the price."
Los Ange.Jes. New York,
Oakland, and Pittsburgh.
Representatives of the cities
will take part also in a visit to
European communities t o
gather data on their operation
of three types of buses -
double-deckers, buses
operated in tandem, and in-
tegrated buses in Which riders
can move from one section to
another as in a train.
Neighbors Angry
Singer's 9 Dogs
e Pact Projected
Bark Up Storm
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
judge has ruled invalid e 1968
agreement whereby the state
Resources Agency promised
not to oppose a Pacific Gas &
Electric Co. application for a
nuclear power plant on the
1t1endocino coast.
1be Sierra Club. which
sought the ruling. called it "a
major concession" in its fight
to block the $8 million plant
near Point Arena.
From Wire Services
The barking of ex-Beatie
Patll McCartney's E n g I i s h
sh<epdog and her eight pups
has his neighbors in an
uproar.
Neighbors in the exclusive
St. John's Wood district in
London at first a s k e d
McCartney by letter to keep
the dogs quiet, then they filed .
( . PEOPLE I J -J \~ said the ruling. whiC'Jl
came on a motion by its own
attorney, was merely a
routine clarification w h i c h
"formally restates our posi· a formal complaint with police
tion that the agreement colild over the day-and-night yap.
not prevent the Resources ping.
Agency from opposing the A neighbor said a note sent
plant should It desire." to the fonner Beatie had been
returned to the sender with a e Landing S hilt crudely scrawled, four-letler
LOS ANGELES !AP) word replay.
Would a shift in landing pat· "lt was ineX~ble," said
terns at busy Los Angeles the neigbtxr.
International Airport merely M c C a rtney commented.
switch dense jet noise from "They're all mad around here.
already-bombarded i n 1 a n d They're a load of colonels -I
arti.S to seaside communities? don't care what they say."
That's one quest.ion the *
Fed e r al Avia tion Marianne Fallhlcd, the
treatment for heroin ad-
diction.
A leading London
psychiatrist who is treating
Miss Faithful , Dr. James
Willis, said. however, that "it
is irnpo6Sible to talk about a
cure at the moment."
* Elion aark of Woodburn,
Ore. walked into the city
hospital there to pay a $262
bill for the July 18 birth of his
first child.
He ca1Ted 26,200 pennies in
a five-gallon jug, which he
dropped and broke in the lob-
by.
Hospital employcs said they
retrieved all the pennies but
are faced with a massive
counting job.
Clark and his wife saved the
pennies over a three·year
period.
* ts.rael's High Court Justice
has given a virtual stamp of
approval to the 12·year-old
marriage of American movie
JX")ducer Otto Preminger.
The tribunal on!ered a
religious court in Haifa to
drop its tnvestigation of Prem·
Inger'• w"1dlng to the former
Hope Bryee during the filming
of ''Exodus" in lMO.
Administration, airport of· singer..actress who once was
ficlals and airlines hope to the girlfriend ol the Rolling answer through a test stooes' Mick Jqger, i s
under way where e Umited reported making good prog.
number of jetliners are mak· ress aft.er vohmtarily seeking
ing west-to-east over-ocean ap-1-;=:::::==================:::;
proaches between the hours of
midnight and 7 a.m.
Fifteen planes used the
over-ocean approach during
the firs\ dny of eva1uations.
The flights were interspersed
safely with 46 arrivals and 55
departures in the normal
east-west pattern, officials
•
said.
e Tal10e La11d
WASHINGTON (AP\
Rep. Harold T. Johnson, (D-
CallL. I said he will introduce
special legislation to aUow the
U.S. Forest Service to buy
35.000 acres in fhe Lake Tahoe
Basin for pollutlon control.
Johnson said the original
proposal. part of the Water
l'ollutlon Act of 1972, was ap-
proved by the House but
Senate conferees rejected it.
The initial cost would be $15
million to buy some of the !
land but the entire acquisition
would run as high as $500 ·
million or more, Johnlon said
e D111t Probe
SACRAMENTO !AP\ -A
teem of englnetrs and law en-
forcement officm1 will look In-
to methods to avoid another
dust storm such as the one
Aug. 27 that sparked a Kem
County traffic accident killing
seven perlOm, a state official
reports.
THE REMEMBER RING
She11 remembor the romantic dinner by
candlelight. The feeling of being completely
olone with you In a roomful of people.
Din.-ring of 1 B karat yellow gold with
diamonds Ill In platinum. G595.
~ .. --.
Do Something Beautiful.,..
, .... ,... ACC-h lllVllM -"""'rlC•n ••Pf•H lt!lllA!Mti'f~nl an• M.•1ler Clla~. tot.
SLAVICK'S
Jewelers Since 1917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -644.1 380
Optn Mon. end Fr i. 10 f ,m, to 9:30 p.m.
Wllll loc•llo1i. ef: TO<flllCI, Or ..... , LI Ctttlll:Wi, LI HtllrL
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new-life color®-portralt pawel
3 dramatically different mood portraits
A 9reat gift id•• and et en irr11i1tlbly pre-••ll .. y low prt-holiday price. Not 1nap1hot1 . , •
but 3 diff•r•nt mood portreita-fn qtee:lal ..iy glorious Life Color-taken by our
profe11ionel photo9raphtr1 who cepture -$CJ 95 th IN• p•noo•lity ud buuty of you or your child.
It's t po11es1ion yo11 and your1 will
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mttftd. S1ti1ftction 9uerent1tdl
,, --
H1111th19te11 k•c.h-ttl.JJ)l
'llote StMlle-t•t 1..,.1
• Miner,
77, Keeps
Plugging
Nixon Ahead Ill State
But Political Coattails Appear Fragi"le
By GEORGE SKEL'OON
RUBY. Ar~. (AP) -An old miner sms through three lono SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Even H
Of ore daily near this &00them President Nixon should carry C&lifornla
Arizona ghost town, hoping to by a Jand!llde. both parties agree bis
succeed som.e day where political coattails will not provide much
others failed at the turn oC the pulling power for Republican con.
century. gresslonal candidates.
Jerry Delgado, 77, has been Democrats are likely to retain their
working his Saint Cbristophcr dominance of the House delegation from
gold mine for eight y.ears and the President's home state.
says he's digging his way In fact, Nixon's coattails are having a
toward what he hopes ls a big, reverse effect on one tight congressional
gold-bearing vein . race, where maverick RepubLican Rep.
"I'VE BEEN around mines Paul N. McClolkey is fighting for his
all my life and it It is very political life.
fascinating," says the retired McClos key's refusal to endorse. Nill:on
machinist. over Sen. George McGovern has prompted
Twelve years ago, Delgado many Republicans to support the antiwar
retired, but after a few years congressman's Democratic opponent, at-
he decided retirement wasn't torney Jim Stewart.
for him. "PEOPLE ARE tired Leaving his home ln Tucson , . of McCloskey Delgado moved to 1 h ~ taking pot stM_>ts at Nixon all ~ time,"
Atascosa ~1ountains the site says Kent Kai.Ser, a San FranC1SC0 stock
· of the rich gold find in the late bf?ker and ~ of long~ GOP fund 1800s raiser Lee K&ser.
Deigado says he fourd a With five weeks remaining before the
vein of gold-bearing 0 r e election, the political situation in the na-
several years ago but admits tion's most populous state -which has
frankly 111t's nothing to write both the biggest bloc of electoral votes
home ~bout." ~~ t~~gest congressi@lal delegation
EACH DAY, Delgado hauls -Nixon is . ahead, _both sides ~-
three tons of ore out o{ the 100.. Republican State Chainnan--PUtnam
loot shaft, making six tr::lps into Livermore places the lead at "a
the tunnel to fill a half-~ minimum of 10 percent," Democratic
bucket. State Chairman Charles T. Manatt at "5
He g~ down. fills the or 6 percent." But Manatt, recently nam-
bucket, cJ:1mbs a ladder, turns ed McGovern 's state campaign
on the winch, dwnps the ore chairman, flatly prerticts ultimate vic-
and starts over. tory for the senator.
His day begins at 4:30 a.m. -McGovern still has organizational
and he's proud of his many pains, but Frank Mankiewicz, his na.
hours of bard labor. tional .political director, contends the
South Oakoten la "probably better off" in
Callfornla Utan anywhere else.
-DEMOCRATS, WHO outnumber
Republicans S to 2,are outregist.ering the
GOP but stj.11 are only half way toward
• their goal of sJgnlng up a million new
voters by the Oct. 8 deadline.
-With no gubernatorial or Senate con-
test, there is extraordinary emphasis on
California 's 43 congressional and 100
state legislative races, plus 22 ballot prop-
ositions. Included are -controversial in·
itiatives to legalize smoking but not .sell-
ing marijuana, reinstate tl:ie death
penalty. forbid forced busing for school
integration and restrict farm worker
strikes. ·
~~--J,i.a.
'Now hear this, America!'
The prtsldenlial contest Is not Jn.
nuenclng congressional racts as much as
Republicans bad hoped eartler when they
optlmbtlcally talked or a COP sweep
that could produce the biggest political
upheaval aln<:e the New Deal.
"TO DEPEND ON the President run-
ning well to help oUier candldate1 ls not
realistic. In California, people look at the
candidates more than_almost any other
state," says state GOP chairman
Llvennore.
Howard Adler, an alde to Rep: Richard
Hanna, who is coordinating Democratic
House races in California, says, "All our
!>Oils show there doesn't seem to be any
falloff from M<:Govern at the. con-
gressional level."
Democrats hold a 20-18 advantage in
California's House delegation, which
gained five seal! because of the 1970
census. Democrats Oi!fe to win at least
two, a Republican one. The other two are
rated tossups.
IN ONE CLOSE race, dovish former
Rep. George Brown Jr., who gave up his
House seat in 1970 to unsuccessfuUy &eek
a Senate nQmlnatioo, is attempting a
comebali:k in a new district populated by
conservative Democrats in Riverside,
San Bernardino and Los Angeles coun-
ties.
McCloskey, who brieny challenged Nix·
on in the Republican primaries, has
refused to endorse the President •·so Jong
as he continues the bombing throu gh
Indochina and re(uses to disclose either
his secret contributions or the details of
the Watergate affair."
He is running in a new reapportioned
district in San Mateo and Santa Clara
counties south of San Francisco.
WHAT NEWP.ORT BEACH IS SAYING
ABOUT GUARANTEED REDUCING
THE GLORIA MARSHALL WAY!
• • •
\
"l"m g1ttin9 my doctor't
d19rtt ind can't b11r to
b 1 1 fit doctor[ My first
"'111ur1m1nl r1v11l1d •
6" 1011 ind to d•t1 1
5 pound w•i9ht 1011. I
•m in to • 1il1 14 now
(w11 16) ind wtlght i1
droppin9 vtry •Hortl111·
ly. R11lly lov1 +ht m1·
,hin11. I f11I f1nt111i'!
Not lo9gy lik1 b1for1.
. f~tr.v~~P.'('! noti,td !ht
diff1r1n,1."
"'I 1m 1 54 y11r old wif1
wl.011 li111b1"d 11 dt·
lighttd. I 1!1v1 lost 61
in,h11 ind 55 ~ lb1. lh
gr11t lo b1 b1low 100
lb1 for th1 fin! tim1 in
31 v••n. Mv bodv f11l1
10 1trong ind f11ll of 1n·
•rgy, rnov11 with io
fftM,h fftOfl t lll."
"I fi111lly foulld IOfll••
tllin9 th1t work1. I •M
,...,. th111 pt.11.4'." -w-
"I find th1t b1in9 in ffi•
O"tt thirty 9roup n•ctl·
1ilot11 1pot r•ducin9.
Glori• M1nh1ll h11 It•
compli1h.d th1t for me.
Within th1 'omfort1bl111
ttl1x1d i urro11ndin 91 of
th1 11lon. I h1v1 b1tn
1bl1 to 101• 1 totol of
17 lb1. 24" •.• whir•
th1y w1r• most n•1dttl'.
1 h1vo b11n, 1rtd will
'onlin111 to 1~oy ind
profit witll G1ori1 Mir·
1h1U."
kh1t Parker
"Ju1t 1t imporl1nt to
w1ight 1011, ii th1 firm·
ing ind mu1tl1 tonin9
which th111 r19ul1r.
pl1nn1~ ht1lmtnt1 pro·
.,,111. I h,.,, b11n 11ti1-
fi1d with my 1•p1ri1nct
1t Glori1 M1r1h1ll'1 1nd
r1comm1nd ii to oth1r1."
"TYE NEVER MET A WOMAN
WHOSE FIGURE I COULDN'T
IMPROVE."
e Written Guarantee
e Semi-private Facilities
e Personal Attention
e Reducing Without
Tiring E:11erci1e1
e Take T reatment1 Without
Changing Clothes
e Come In On Your lunch
Hour, After Work,
Anytime
e 30 to bO Minute
Treatments
I Depending on individuals
nf'~d· and desires)
"I om 1m111d th1 1tim·
ulttion of good 'ircul1-
tion I h11v1 1njoy1d from
th1 c;on1iit1nt tr1•tmtnl1
ov•r • p1 riod of ffir11
"I h••• trl1d 11v•r1I
w1v1 of lo1ing w1ight but
nothing h•1 work.d until
I ,1m1 to Glorl1 Mir·
1h1ll. I h1v1 lo1t ll
pound1, 20 'h inch11.
Mv hu1b1nd '1n'f woit
to 1i9n rn1 up for th1
11•11! ••11ion."
-----Guarantee----"""'
YOU CAN BE AT . LEAST ONE DRESS
SIZE SMALLER BY NEXT MONTH
Every patron receives a written guarantee that she will reach
her predetermined dress size within a specified period of time,
or Gloria Marshall will furnish additional treatments until the
guarantee is fulfilled at no further cost or obligation.
$450
ONLY I PER TREATMENT
ON ANY PROGRAM
"I Im Vlty pl111•d with
th1 rt111lt1 I h1v1 hid 1t
Glori1 M1r1h1ll'1. from
tt1ch1d rny go1I in th1
numbtr of tr1•lmtnt1
9iv1n m•."
Miidred GorhaM
"Sin'' I 1tll vit1min
produ,h, I h1v1 lo loolr
friftl I t will 11 f•1I
trim •nd Glori1 Mtnk1ll
h11 h1lp1cl '"' 9•••ily
bv lo1ing t 5 lln. •nd
15 lili inch1t."
ratrk~ Mcklbbo11
"'!'"' $ ft, till 1itd wh111
I c1flll• hi WIOt'l1 M•t•
1h1ll I w•ltht4 1 • t lb1,
l'vt l•tt 1 tott l •f 41 \4
i11, 1"'4 41 Yr. llt1. ..........
WORLD'S L~DING FIGURE
CONTROL SYSTEM. .l_FNl~,'/JlaMkit 430
FIGURE CONTROL SAWNS
PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH
• IANllAMBIC;llD
MAsn• CHAlH
AMHICAN Dl'llSS Open dally 9 to 9, Saturday 9 lo 4
c Copy1i9ht lt1t
(J 11.0CU I.UT Of IAUOA UT CLUll
PHONE 642·3630
..
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Fun ' o New Game: No Two the_Same
'His and her' cars have 'his and her'
license -p'la tes -;-n -tire -Jl:lhn--Udall 'family;' -h
as Audrey shows (above). At right •.
Sandra Gibilisco's poo<lle Giby has
a claim to fame on his mistress1 car.
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Mol'lcl1y, October 2. 1"1 f'lll lJ
Circumstance Dims
Graduation's Pomp
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I bave been
sitting here reflecting on my education -
having just graduated from college -
and I must say it was sadly inadequate.
For exa mple, neither in my standard
high school biology course nor in my 12
hours of college biology was I ever
taught the difference between a king
snake and a coppe'rhead. However, in the
10th grade I had to memorize verbatim
the 17 steps to the conjugation of the
Paramecium.
Never once ln a classroom or a text.
either in high school or college, was I
told what I might expect in the way of
job application blanks or interviews. I
never knew what a split infinitive was
until last week when a Criend informed
me I had used one.
Although I took a course in typing t
was never taught how to change a
typewriter ribbon. The list goes on and
on. And yet we are told that our educa-
tion la "high quality."
The absence of classroom relevancy LI
a traumatic shock to one emerging lrom
school and entering the real world. Whal
g1ves? Don't the educaton see this? Or
do I have my gla.pea; on crooked? -
EDUCATION GAPPED
DEAR ED: You've 1tnack a niw lltf'\!t.
nts U1 bee1I Me et -my faftttle it81"1
for t.llt last It ytllt. U ,.. Wik tdoca-
Uon la trrtlevut ... )'M .....W. Mve
--lllllellludlll.
I Mpt &Miii rt1p 1111We fer p1·=191
can1co111t 111 ,_,. lewl, i-L• ....... ., .......... , ...... , ... .... ,......,,_, ........... bl
tlllnl time, Y"'VI Ilk ~ II I
-•tcWJ ~ """
DEAR ANN I.ANDERS: Our dauceiig;
Julie, •&• 19, bas been "'thrtlled
'°"P opetll tdnco the Ill" of I&. Her tlllO-
tlonal 1n .. 1vment with tbc cbanc:ters
u!ed to be r1ther 1mus1nc.-.1 II'• -
beyond the funny stage and we are con-
cerned.
A few months ago Julie changed shifts
in order to stay home and watch a couple
of soap operas that had switched to
afternoon time. She is now working from
4 'til midnight.
Two weeks ago, one of the story lines
began an episode that closely paralleled
a tragic happening in her life. Since that
time she has stopped eating and has sunk
into a depression. 1be girl b living on
potato chips and candy bars.
What can we do? Don 't suggest pro-
fessional help. She ls c on v I n c e d
psychiatry is phony and all medical doc-
tors are actors. -WORRIED PARENTS
DEAR WORRIED: I am not surprised
your daagbter tMDU aU docton art ac-
ton -IO mail)' o( UM: IOap opttU take
place II botpbllt •
Yea lmow yow dnPltt It •-lollllly
Wudllleohoohl-•~U
11te refalel, yea cu.t feree lter to de
so. Pc:ttaaps one of ber frteadt can ~et
&Motg)I to ber. Oftea lite ume advlce
from a person not related wUI carry
some wt11bt. Do try, ud pod IDCL
DEAR ANN : The supcrvllor at tbc
loading dock asked me If I'd 1it with his
infant son whUe he and his wife went 10 a
receplion. Their baby-sitter conked out. t
agreed, although I had very little •lccP
the night before and wu dead Ured.
The kid llarted to cry oo I dtcided to
entertain him by plmina: a bath towel
around myaelf Uke a diaper. I put an hit
bib Ind bonntl Ind stud< hll boltlt u1 my
mouth Ind p.......i.d to drink it. Whrn
Uio -anil lili iifft ritumtd the kid waa ......W.C Ind I wu ul«p on tht
coucb In lhll stupid ouUlt. How do I gtl
my Job bock? -CAlqlED
DEAR CANNED: l'ltld ....... • t ._ .....,,
Even U drinking It tbe "In" lhinl In
your cnnnl, II D<tdll't cnnnl you OOL
t..1m tbe facll trom Am Londtn'
bookltt, "Booze and You -,or
''TOODlllUS Only." Send • C<lllt In coin
and I lmlg, aelf"'1dtfftt<I, ttamt><d
onvtlope to the DAILY PIWl' with rout
requtSt.
0
By JO OLSON
Ot .... O.ll"f ~IMI lllH
Freeway drlving has ahoost become
fun in Callfomla , thanks to a new game
invented by the slate Legislature and P~
proved by Gov. Ronald Reagan on Aug.
21, 1970.
ft 's the personalized license plate game
-a motorist's ego trip that offers
humor , speculation and a break fro.m
monotony for the dri\•er in a traffic jam.
How could any driver, bored or
otherwise. not "'onder about the meaning
of such combinations as Y PREGO, GOD
1st, Sllo1PLE, JOCO and TOTOK?
And one wonders what kind of egotists
are the people who chose AUDREY,
CARIN, PATSY or MERLE, or i( they
are egotists at all?
California 's 1970 legislation was the
first in the nalion to link personalized
license plates to a specific cause or
purpose, and this is beginning to be
emulated by other states, according to
Erwin Cooper, a llepaMment of Motor
Vehicles information officer.
EIGHT PROJECTS
The 1970 b lll was enacted for the
purpose of fooding anti-pollution efforts,
and to date the program has un-
derwritten at least eight studies and
school ecology projt.'Cts. Nearly $2 million
has been allocated during the 1972-'/3
fiscal year for various ecology programs.
including three new ones. and others 1,vill
be added as !unds come in, OMV officials
say.
Monies from the $25 sale price and ~10
annual renewal ree are deposited in lhe
Environmental Protection Fund, which
was established by the Marks-BaJham
Environmental Protection and Research
Act of 1970, and from there are dispensed
to various boards, commissions ;;nd
schools.
A sampling of the last disbursements
shov.•s $165.000 lo the Air Resoul"('('s
Board lo "identify air quality problems
in all basins and contract with local
boards to prevent duplication of erfort .. :
$44,500 to the Los Angeles-Ventura
Regional Study ComrniMiocl to "develop
the Santa MonlCa MOWltains Regional
Park Plan," and M0,000 to the Depart-
ment of Aeronautics to "study noise
pc>Uution and related problems at
selected airports."
TWO STATES
According to In!onnalion Officer
Cooper, washington is contem~laling set-
ting up a fund Crom personalized pl ates
and he reports that .. there is a thrtt-way
tug-of-war going on as to who gets the
money -environment, fish and game or
juvenile delinquency prevention."
A wmnan reporter from Springfield,
Ill. is lobbying for personalized plates in
her state, he added, but she is not
meeting with success and has called upon
California for "ammunition."
OMV olflclals alao point oot that the
plates, whlcb are cua&om-made at \he
Folsom PriJOn stamping plant, are goOO
insurance against car theft and a good
way lO advertise one's bu!inesa.
Who are some of the people behind the
rlb-llckllng and mysterious plate.a?
Audrey Udall of Newport Beach WAI
ooe of the lint to have a penooallzed
plate. She is concerned about tbe en-
vironment and knew the bill wu comlng
up, '° she watched Its progress and sent
for her plates immediately after its a~
proval. ("Not mentiming It had anything
to do with ego/' she smiled.)
Audrey'• Casablanca yellow c.d!Uac
says AUDREY, her husband'• white
euo ... Sayo UDALL, and htt daughter'•
F~blrd soon will have Its own name tag ,
LYN U.
Audrey said she enjoys the reactions to
her plates. ''There's a common bond
among owners,'' she explalncd. "l\·len
hook, wave and smile, like we v•erc
really good friends. My husband won't
drive my car with my plates because he
gets all lbe same reactions."
Three men, she added, have gone to
the trouble of calling lhe OMV to ·>btain
her name and addteu. "They give me a
personal call." she revealed. "and say,
'Remember I saw you in the parking
lot?'
··It's k.ind of a riot. You could get mnd
about it. One man accused me or ad-
vertising for prortituUon."
Bernard Simor\, a Cost.a l\fesa op-
tometrist. picked Sll\fPLE because he
thought it "went well with Simon."
J UST FOR KICK
''J did it just for a kick." he said.
"We 're all looking for ways of being
more of an individual. 'Simple Slmon' at.
least is humorous to me. People are
more friendly along the road, especially
in st.at ion ""'agons with people facing the
rear."
"GOD 1st" was the first choice or }.tax-
ine \Vise of Santa Ana , a bookkeeper for
Penn Van and Storage. "It's what t
believe." she said. ··1 thought about it for
a year."
Most comments come when she is stop-
ped, such as in a service stat ion, but
fellow believers honk as she drives dov.-n
1he road.
GIBY is the name of Frank and Sandra
Gibi lisco's v.·hite poodle and '71 was lhe
}"ear that Frank gave Sandra a sky blue
Jaguar for their 10th aMiversary, so the
Costa ~fesans decided to combine the lwo
for a special plate.
lotrs. Gibillsco, a teacher, said she get_.
many comments , such as . "How clever
-you named it after yoorseU!"
GIFf FOR WIFE
Jerry Sonken , president of Hollywood
Refrigeration Sales Co., Los Angeles,
selected ITS/BEA to go on his wife's
sand-colored Rolls Royce as a gift.
The plate with her name has "drawn a
lot or attentk>n," he said. "A lot of people
wave and holler 'Iii Bea ~'"
The Sonkens of\en commWllcate by
telephone as lhey drive along, she in her
car and he In his maroon Rolls.
Carin Gustafsson. a native ol Sweden
who resides in Dana Point and iA
employed in Corona del Mar, eelected
her name just because •he thought it
"oold be fun.
John Kaylor of Fullerton hM his fifth
choice, JEK 2 on his car. lie wanted Just
his inilials becaLtSe they would "look very
clean" on his silver Mercedel, but found
lhey were already taan.
He onf...cl fll<Clal pi.a llecauoe "115
kind of dnb to ..ee the same old pJales
and it's a good reason -ecol.OI)'."
ALL FUN
J\aylor admits that he does get razzed
by his friends, but It'• ''all done ln fun.·•
Y PREGO, the ltc.llte pl1te of Dr.
Pett!r Eastman of Corona dtl Mar, LI apt
to bring p<mled lookt !rom -paulng
motorists.
(See LICENSE TAGGED, Pip 141
Diiiy Pilot Pholos
By Richonl Koehler
Dr. Peter Eastman hes two rib.tickling
aspects to his driving -his personalized
plate and the misspelling on his red
cer. 'Y PREGO' 7 'One of three words
you need to get by in Italy.'
I
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•
CAJL. V PILOT • .. Monday, Octobrr 2, 1q7z
.
" -.
Time Won't Dull Silver Service
" 'It's a Tough Act
lo follow' -
Mrs. Wallace Gerrie
' "
'We used to make our
own decorations' -
Mrs. Joseph Riggs
'The first Hearts and
Flowers Ball
Mrs. Harold Christler
By BEA ANDERSON
OI .. o.lff' ~UM ll11ff
Past presldoot1 of Newport
Harbor Au>iliary ol CJ>ildren'1
Home Society proved history
needn 1 be dull.
As tho honored gueets at lhe
organization's s I Iver an-
niversary luncheon In the
Dover ~ home of Mrs.
Robert Andrews, tihey review-
ed highlights ol their terms In
office.
Looking back over the
hislory. the leaden recalled
the triaJs of organizing and
gett~ things done, but it was
the errors that empbasiz.ed
their seMe of humor and
ability Ix> laugh at themselves.
Like Mrs. William C •
Adams.
She explained how she got lo
be known as "Wrong Wall
Adams."
EXPANSION
In 1968 when she was presi-
dent , the CHS district head·
quarters in Santa Ana w·as due
for expansion. An addition was
planned, and for publicity
p1..1poses it was decided that
she would use a sledge ham~
mer to start knocking down an
existing wall.
Photographers had arrived,
but some of the key personnel
hadn't -namely the architect
and the executive director.
Ph>tograpben; wanted lo
shoot their pictures and leave.
So a bole was knocked in the
wall, but it was the wrong one.
"Although a little l!iter the
correct wall was practically
demolished., Mrs. Adams said,
"pi<'tures of the hole in the
\lrT'Oflg wall wett the ones
published ...
Diocu,.;!ng 0110 or the llrst
ways and means event, the
Hoorts and Flowtn bell which
wa1 the prec1ecossor or the
Clll'nlll debutante bell, Mn.
Harold Qristler said It was
htld in the &!boa Bay Club
which was not nearly ns ex·
panslve as it is today.
Canvasses wete draped ovtt
a patio-type area for the par-
ty.
"came tile night of Ute ball
and the heavens fell in", she
said. "l never saw such a rain
and wind storm. Party.goers
sat with their r..t up on rungs
or Ille chair.I so Ibey wouldn't
get wet,
"But, we all had e. good
time," she added_, ''and we
made a quite a bit of mooey."
J)().IT-YOURSELFERS
TI1'fl Mn. Jooeph Riggs
reminisced a b o u t how
members fashioned their own
deccnt.iom for the b9.lls. "We
made 1>3per ilowers end mine
were so bad they w()l\ldn't let
me do eny."
Th.is brought some groans
Crom members who
remembered those • • a w f u 1
tulle things.''
"One year we were working
on all pink decorations."
recalled Mrs. William D.
Clark. "That yeor the Bay
Club decided to redecorate
. . . in brown and orange.
"Of course, pink: and cnmge
were not fashionable together
at that time, ro w.e just t.urned·
tbe lights down real low and
• prayed everytlUail would look
fine."
She also r<mlnded Ute group
thllt It wu the next yrar that
a pro(euJonai deoonilor was
enalll!'d.
,,,. group -Clfll•nlzed In 1947 primarily lo coont<n>ct
llto black market o! babies.
Mrs. WendeU Calldr.r was the
charter president and
membership was limited to 25.
Later this was changed to 35.
COUNTY LEADER
The auxiliary was the first
in Orange c.unty and the ...
cmd in the otate. It IODll
polnled the way lo ~ and
willtln llte fir.It two yean the
group helped form auxiliaries
in Santa Ana and Chtla Vista.
Und« Ute guidance of Mrs.
Ch1stler, bylaws were written
and Ibey have become Ute
model l<I< all auxiliaries.
1be finlt debut8ote ball was
introduced in 1954 and in 1957
the group decided to expand
fwxkaising endeavors and
Jaunobed the biennial art
soirees.
In 1964, when Mrs. Clark
was president, the district of·
fioes in Santa Ana were open-
ed, and by 1970 the auxiliary
had 19 sister ~ in the
oounty.
Duf'.ing the quarter or cen·
lW'y ol. service, more than
$230,000 has been raised for
Ute state's largest and oldest
private edoptlon agency .
~irs. Wallace Gerrie,
current. insident, summed it
up ..• "lt's a tough act lo
follow."
Your Horoscope Tomorrow ~
Scorpio: Pleasant Surprise • Store
TUESDAY
OCTOBER 3
By SYDNEY OMARR
The Taurus man can ac-
cumulate a fortune, but
nothing is handed him on
silver platter. The Taurus
woman can be jealous, but she
also is generous and af-
fectionate. Man or woman, the
Taurus person is aware of
money, basic v'alues and is a
natural collector. Taurus is
the second sign of the zodiac,
is associated with number 6
and the planet V eru.tS.
endeavors, show of arrection.
Pisces could f i g u r e pro-
minently. Avoid acting only on
impulse. Give logic equal
time. Young person can show
the way.
GEMINI {May 2l.June 20):
Basic is.sues dominate. Be.
frank . Express yourself in
forthright manner. Get cards
on table -face up. Build on
soljd foundation. D on ' t
overlook apparent minor mat-
ters. What is small could
eventually loom large.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Accent now is on being
versatile without wasting your
Change, v11riety are featured.
You are recognized by those
who previously \\'ere skeptical
or disinterested. A c c e p t
assignment. You have more to
do, but rewards also can be
greater.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Favorable lunar aspect
now coincides with ability to
learn, to gain through cor-
respondence and travel. Keep
lines of communication open·
Develp philosophical concepts.
Include family member in
special activity.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb.
18): 1ntrigue indicated in
unorthodox: areas. You may
contest one who is a supposed
authority. Adhere to prirr
ciples. You need not take back
seat. Mate, partner may not
have required finances. There
are other means.
PISCES (Feb. l~March 20):
Lie low. Bide your time.
Refuse to be rushed. Take
special care in legal, public
relations areas. M a r r i a g e
question is highlighted. Look
to future. Become aware of
potential. Prepare. 0 Ider
person is ally.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BmTHDAY December will
be one of most significant
months or 1972' for you. For
hint of what is to occur, look
back to last March. You have
delightful sense oC humor, ap-
preciate art and can display
talent as writer.
Discover ywr tow• •nd mon.ev
1119!nl Send blrlhdlll Ind 7S ~n•• ID Om.aorr Asirology Seccr•ls, ,,.. DAILY
PILOT, !.OJI 32.CO, Gr11nd Clfllrlll Sl1·
!Jon, Mew York, N,Y, 10011, You'll !Ind llnSWl!'r$ In 5ydMY Om11rr'1 t>OOk~,
"~ere! Hints fw Meri •llll wom..i."
ARJES (March 21·April 19):
energies. Finish what you~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Pare may seem slow, But you
get where you want to go
through steady progress .
Avoid the sensational. Keep
diet, health resolutions. Don 't
go to extremes in work or
play. Key is to find balance.
start. Restless relatives should ,..---------~-------------------"t not be pennitted to dominate.
Benefit Show Fashioned
\ benefit lu ncheon and fashion show is being planned by the Anaheim Kiwi
'u b Saturday, Oct. 14-, in the Disneyland l-lotel. Fall styles fro1n.county shops
•rill be modeled along with a retrospective of stewardess uniforms that date
;iack Lo 1934, \vhich are. sho~·n by Mrs. ~1ichael Johns (left) and Mrs. Lee Rein·
1 ke. The club. comprised of former American Airlines stewardesses. raise funds
ir the Services for the Blind.
=rom Page 13
• • • License Tagged
"Prego ii an Italian, word,
one of the three words you
~to get by in Italy," he cx-
J'lllned. ''Prego co v t: r s
everything else besides hello
nnd good bye." (Y means
"and" In lteUan.)
on the back arc transposed
and hit car rtadJ "Ople" in
stead of "Opel."
"Driving around with your
name on your car is no bother
at all but it is very easy to be
nollced If you are doing
anything illegal,·• he says.
"A'-'o. the plates have bei:ome
a conversation piece.··
TAURUS (April 21).May 20):
Good lunar aspect now coin-
cides with romance, creative
Fabric Care
Instructed
Instructions on fabric care
now go into yard goods every
half yard. One or the nation's
largest manufacttlf'ers, Burl-
ington -Klopman, is printing
permanent care instructions
for each fabric, p I u s
guarantee, plus sewing Ups in-
to each half yard of bolt
goods.
And once every yard or
tape, the care instructions are
printed o n permanentized
tape, washable and d r y
cleanable, so the seamstress
can cut these out and sew into
the garment. The tape also
provides the seamstress with
an accurate measurement of
yardage.
Do your own thinking. Short
trip is on agenda.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): New
idea makes you more secure.
Follow through in independent
manner. Stress indlv.iduality.
Don 'l follow crowd. Stick to
con\•ictions. Another Leo fig-
ures prominently. Utilize nat-
unl sense of showman,,hip.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Cycle is high, your intuitklo.
judgment are on target. You
make new starts. Fresh op-
portunity appears. Make the
most of it. Aquarian figures
prominently. Make personal
appearances. E x u d e co~
fidence.
LIBRA (S.pt. 23-0cl. 22):
Emphasis on group, organiza·
lion -you work behind
scenes. Social activity evolves
into constructive, s p e c i a I
servlre. Reach beyond present
horizons. Feeling of restriction
is but temporary.
SCORPIO (Clcl. 2J.Nov. 21):
Yoo are due for surprise -of
pleasant variety. Some of your
fondest wishes can be fulfilled.
Key is to n1ove with con-
fidence. One you admire will
return the compliment .
Tauru1 !!I in picture.
SAGmARIUS iNov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): Prestige rises.
His red Opel. he adds, also
is unusual becail.!f: the letters
Regan Tully's car, spotted hi
the Southland. sports his last
name. TULLY. The King City
resident received his as a
Chrilltmas gift from his fam i-
ly, which is ecology-minded. And so the stori<'S could go. jiiiiiiii!i!i:iii!ii!ij!!~~-~~~~~~~--on and on. as each owner ls lj
contacted, but lime does not ONE WEEK SPECIALS'
'fo avoid d1s!:1ppo1nll11t:nt. pruspecuvt
brides are reminded to nave their weddln~
stortes with black and while a Jossy phot~
g raphs to the IJAILY Pll.01 Womon s o ..
parlment one week before the wedding.
Picltlrel ~elved after that time will no•
be uoed.
For engagement announcements 1t 1s
tmperaUve that the It.or)'. aJao accompanied
by a black and white glouy picture. be out>
m.Jlted 1i1 weeks or more before the wedding
dale. U deadline Is not .net. only a 1ton· will
be used.
To belp IW requtremento on ooth wed·
dins and enfia1emen1 stories. forms are
avwllble In 1 of the OAILY PILOT otllcu.
Further qu11Uon1 will be anowered by
Women'• SecUon stal! memben at 842-4321.
ft
. .
permit •o one Is l<fl to wonder " •
•boul SASCQ 2, AL ADO. 7 ONI Wiii ONLY! OCT. Z lo OCT. 7
Kl/M 11 . DALI. 3. USF CO,
LADMYR. TOTOK. BUD/BEA
and YORBA.
Wilh Washinatonlans and
folkll from 1111 no I 1 con·
templatlng joining the craze,
Aimrlca may become a land
with a Hctnse plate lore all Its
own if other su1te1 folio" 11utt.
One therefore must agree
with Erwin COoper when he
said, "We may have started
something In C..Ufom!a."
Jlf all~• •lltNA•IJI
(IMl:L IOWAIOI
• Ollll!AIC" -.,,. ,L VIII .. U I ttlUS
~ WMr .,. Dtllllllfl li!:'lt o.ric:, ~ c.nwr1.... ,.,. Clll•,.i
lit L 17" It, c ... M ... • 1414171
I
COASTLINI ALl'ALl'A TAIUTS
17v. :~~.::".::"'•" SPICIAL 69c
INQGY PLU~·UP MIX
1~:;1~; ~ SPICIAL 3.98
VITA-STRESS I VITAMINS WITH C
~~.~:~·~ SPECIAL 1.99
VITAMIN 1-0'AU'HA
100 1.U.
:.::"" .. ';; SPECIAL 4.99
Coastline Health Foods
TUmN
tDM tl"riM I~.
NNr la...0..
144-.7114
COSTA MISA
HUit,..,. ltluaN
270 L 17th It. _.,,,.
October Sale
Frigidaire Flowing Heat Gas Dryer
BIG 18-LB. CAPACITY
COSTA MESA
HAllOI All.A
411 I. S.• .. INat• St •
htlyi ,.,, s.t. , ..
646·1684
' •
. EL TORO
SADDLllACI YALU1'
II T ... Ill.•"'"-~
fNnt t9 '""-1
hi"! JO-f: s.t, 10.,
837-3830
. '
Does a large load of klng..elz:e
sheets, yet ifs dnly 2:r wide.
Easy to load and unload
through huge door opening..
Provides thorough, genue ''opm
air" drying. Cool~own perlod
and Cycle-end Signal help keep
laundry wrinkles from setting.
Air bedding, fluff pl1low1 on No
Heal cycle. No pilot to llght;
automaUcelecU1c JgniUon.
• HUNTINGTON BEACH
H>UNTAIN 'AlUT ............ -..w
fNnt,.. LMq M .... I
Dmly1 I0.61 M. 10.9
962-~528
•
. . . . . . ...
•
•
Consumer Role Asserted
. .
Mo11d.\)' Octobtr 2, 1'172 DAILY PILOT IS
1
Woman .Cast as Sig · Spender ·
By ALLISON DEERR
Of 1M O.lty P'llfl $1•1f
There are three major
tht.'Orics ort the fate of the
world .
Everything will take.care of
itself; we must make drastic
changes to survi ve, and don't
worry, you v.·on't be alive to
v.·orry about it.
Phillis Basile agrees with
the second. She feels there is
something that can be done
and that women are the ones
who must do it.
Speaking at the .second lee·
ture of the Orange C.oast
College series, W i d e n i n g
Concerts
Get Vote
\Vorlds of Women, &he discus.s-
ed the powerful role of women
as consumers.
Mrs. Basile, an economics
instructor at OCC and lonner
representath•e for the 11
western states for th c
Women's Bureau, U.S. Depart·
ment or I.Albor. explained tl)at
consumer eoonom.ics is a kind
of "illegitimate child of home
economics a n d traditional
economics, which a I w a y s
seem to be going in opposite
directions.,,
What they have in common,
however, is the wise use of
time and energy, she ex·
plai~.
"But we're using up energy,
air, water and land for things
we haven't really sat down
and decided if we really need
or want," she asserted. "Now
we'll ha ve to give up some of
these things if we reallf want
to survive·"'
Laguna's Irvine Bowl will be
filled with' red, white and blue IRONY
vertl!lng, we are told what we
should want, whether v.•e need
lt or not. she assm.ed.
EXPENDITURES
About hal f of the median in-
come is spent on basic hun1an
~ -food, clothing.
~helter. The other half 1s sptnt
on discretionary needs. iterns
which the buyer must evaluate
for his own needs n n d
preferences.
"We, the buyers. dictate
v.·ha t lS being produced. If .,.,e
don't buy, they won't sell, and
they"ll stop making tlungs ~·e
don 'l need.
"'We have to begin to make
choices on the basis of "'·ha t
will be best, overall , in the
long run. It iSll 't easy. But one
good aspect. o! the \Vomt•n's
Lib movement is I.bat 1l en·
courages us to a.'~! the roll's
y,·e·ve always played -as
doc1~ion.-makers.
"\\'e must insist to oursc!ve~
tha t "'e think as we spend ··
New Furniture Doesn't Fit the Mo/cl
ribbons as members of the 33 . She added that cars and
women's committees of the • freeways aren't wo rth n1uch if
Orange County Philharmonic the air is so polluted we can't
Society assemble for the aft. go outside. Air conditioners
nual Put-togel.ber Wednesday, and appliances aren't of much
Oet. 4. . use if we have no power lo
To be a be tter consumer .
she added. "'omen should drop
the apathetic. helpl ess imai::t:
"'omen have had for rent ur1e~.
Plastic and fantastic are the adjectives used to de-
scribe the award-winning plastic furniture molded
by designer Marc Held. Here he works on a collec-
tion of plastic, molded rockers in his Paris studio. Mrs. Richard H. Lee will tum on.
"You have to !earn 10 corn-
ptain, but in a non·shrey,· rnan·
ner. \'ou must be pleasant
And you n1ust have reasons to
back up your complaints. And
then. you must kno"· "hat
remedies arc available.·· Autumn Greeted With Parties
preside during the 9:30 a.m. "'Women." she said. ''spend
festivities where each board most ol the money and pas.s
member will wear patriotic on social standards to the next
ribbons as she votes for generation. What "''e women
"another year or music ex· spend goes a lot farther than
cellence." our own homes. What we do
J. Donald Fergu so n . afft!Cts how the "'hol~
Philharmonic Society presi-economy goes."
AGENCIES
~1rs. Basile offered 1i.·on1en a
source list of agencies and
organir.aUons that can aid 1he
consu mer or provide her v.·11h
needed buyi ng informfltion.
Interfaith
Junior Hostesses of the
Interfaith Ser \f"ic emen 's
Center, San Clemente have
three parties scheduled for
this month.
A fwt and game night will
begin at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
7; a pr&-Halloween Party will
be staged at 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 21, and a
llalloween party will take
place at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
Voters
A series of public meetings
to study the state's role in
public education has been
scheduled by the League of
Women Voters of the Orange
Coast. .
The schedule includes:·
Monday, Oct. 9, 10 a.m.,
Mrs. Kit Drollinger's El Toro
home; Tuesday, Oct. 10, 7:30
p.m., Newport Beach offices
of Virtue and Scheck;
Wednesday, Oct. II , 9:15 a.m.
University United Melhodist
Church, Irvine, and 12:15
p.m., the Newport Beach
home of Mrs. A. M. Mood.
Thursday, Oct. 12, Mrs. Lar·
ry Little, Costa Mesa, and
Mrs. Keilh Swayne, Laguna
Beach.
Christian Women
A Peek Into Grandma's
Parlor is the title or the prir
gram to be presented by
Goodwill Industries for the
Soulh Coast Christian
Women's Club.
The group will meet al 12 : 15
p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 10, in Ben
Brown 's restaurant.
Voter League
Capistrano Bay Area League
of Women Voten will meet
Tuesday, Oct. 10. in the San
Clemente home of Ms. Vella
Nutt. New members are irr
vited.
dent, will discuss plans for '1'tle first n1lo of being a
this year's subscription series sou nd decision-maker. she ex·
and youth concerts, and en-plained, is "know thyself." A
tertainment will be provided woman must kno w who she is.
by the Peace Ringers. The v.·hat she wants. "'hat satisfies
Ringers, a hand bell choir of her before she can nlake ra-
hlgh school and co I I e g e lional decisions. She must also
students, is sponsored by the be aware of what 1notivat es
First United Methodist Church her to buy.
of Orange and directed by The consumer is influenced,
Mrs. Wesley Marquart. she said, by need for approval.
Following the meeting, box social standards and today by
lunches will be served on the radio, television, !he press and
patio. magazines. Thro u g h ad-
She noted a series or 4~ half-
hour programs on consun1er
subjects produced by herselr
and a member of the OCC
home ee department bCing
previewed now on Tuesday
and Thursday mornings et 7
a.m. by Olannel 7. In the
spl'"ing it will be repealed for
college credit.
Subscribing to "consumer
u. 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Alum ni
Alumni of the University of
Missouri will meet at 6 p.m.
Saturdiy. Oct. T. in ti>! Loog
Beach Yacht Club.
DZs
Delta Zetas are asked to
bring Christmas decorating
ideas to the next meeting,
planned at 7:30"p.m. Monday,
Oct. 9, in the Costa Mesa
home of Mrs. John Waller.·
Gardeners
Landscaping With Native
Plants will be the topic of
James H. Seaman or the
'Ibeodore Payne Fowtdation
for Wild Flowers and Native
Plants, Inc.
He will speak at 2 p.m.Wed--
nesday, Oct. It, at the meeting
of the South Coat Garden Club
in the Three Arch Bay
Clubhouse.
DAR
Mrs. John R. Wing will host
the meeting of San Clemente
Oi:apter, Daughters of the
American Revolution at 1 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. It. Plans for
the year will be outlined and a
report wil I be given on the
Southern C.Ouncil meeting.
KARIN MALMQUIST
Volunteer
Honored
Karin MaJmqullt. dau&bter ct Mr. lllld Ml'1. John Malm·
qvisl o( Costa Mesa, WU ,.r..,,.ct ., tho ·nnt ea...
<lystrlpeM>f·lhe-yW' by Colla N'"' Memorial Hoopttat.
lt71 pruldent of the group
She voluntff:red ovtr 2eo houn
ln her year and 1 half of
membtrahlp. ·
·• . JO.ID us
for
~ourtesy
• •/~hour exere1se elasses
for
•slimming
• losing stomach bulge
• trimming lnehes off hips, thighs
• toning and firming
waist
proven 4-m.lnute method
Grace Jane Treber discovered a simple 4-minute effortless program
that helped her lose 40 pounds in 2 months without dieting trim
8" off he~ hips and 3" off her upper thighs. She went from a
dreu size 20 to a dress size 8 without flabbiness and has never
regained the weight. In just a few minutes you can discover
this simple 4-minute program. No aches. No stroining. No
pills. No dieting.
eome learn the secrets
We invite you to meet this charming young woman
and see how she does the 8 simple turning and
stretching poses that give you most of the benefits of
jogging for miles, playing 3 sets of tennis or
exercising for half an hou r.
for men and '"01nen
Wear slacks, try the entire program ... get all the
benefits ... in just 4 minutes . Let Grace Jane Trebcr
introduce you to Sana1ession 4 miTwt e effortless
inches-off slimming program for men and womon.
There is no cost or obligation . •
• every hour eontlnuously • • "·ear slaeks •
•
1 hedule of
elasses:
Tue.dey, Oct. l. The Broadway, Hunlinqton Boach, re•taurant. •treet floor. b-9 p.m.
Tue.day, Oct. l. The Broadway, Lon9 Beach, lrd floor , carpet dept. 12-5 p.m.
Wodnesdey, Oct. 4. The Broadway Oran9e, restauronl, •!r u t lloor . b-9 p.m.
Sahlrdey, Oct. 7. The Broodw1y Anaheim, lrd floor , drapery dept. 9-1 2 o.m.
Wedne.dey, Oct. 11. The Broadway Newport, cerpet dept. 4-6:10 p.m.
Wedne.day, Oct. 11. The Broodway, Cerritos, carpet dept. 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Repon," ~·s.s suggested a.r-a
way to keep up with consum«
issues .
Orange County II o m t
Advlser Dorothy Weock, will•
lhe UC Agriculturat Extens!Ofl
Service. t.'8n prov Ide ln-
fonnation on lale5t researcb
into the consumer field .
The Orangr: County Office ~
Consumer Affa1rt is one local
ageocy that can act as .a
mediator bet'\il.'eeo bu yer 8ftll
seller in dispute3. They can bt
contacted at 834-6100.
''You al.!IO can ,toin (.on..
cernt'd Consumers of Orangt
Count\', a rclatn·cty 1'"
or~an1z.ation forrm.>d I a al
~lan:h." she added . It metN
the th ird f.1ond3y of ed
lllOllth Ill the COITimt1nity roon\
of " Tu.st1n savings and loa ri. •
OCC will offer a series 'DI
loctures on consunlt'r lopics
begiun111g t"rlda y. Oct . 20, u1
tht" SC'ience lecture hall frortl
7 30 to 9 JO p.m.
Lining Lines
The clloice bt'!wetn hnt.'d
and unlined draperies 1 s
dependent on the fabric, the
use and on pcorsonal choice.
But lutings give more privaC'y,
more protection for t h c
dr;1pery fabric against sun
darnagc. more i n s u I a t I o n
against ht>al and cold and :i
n1ore p I ca s in g appearant't
frun1 the outside
Match Test
Since penrls rarely are
bought singly (except in the:
Cnse of a ring !, matchlng ii
another factor lo consider la
selection. l.ook for uniformity
of size. color and luster amona:
alt the pearls in a neck.I.act'.
A ttnlor at Newport Harbor
Rlgh Sch>ol, Ille i. 111 honor
atudttU. member of student
congrtll and was Key Ctub
Swttihtart In her· Junior year.
ANAHllM NIW'Olf HUHTIN~TOH llACH OlAHGl. MAll OF O•AN'(
JJOON t.1ti• lh•tt 1714) ttl.IJll
CIUlfOJ
«4 N. E11cli4 171 41 SJl·•l11 41 F•1hi•11 l1l•lld 17 14 1 l44·1211 1111 £4i11t•' A"''"'• l114J ltJ.JJJI 100 l" c-.••• ... n 111J1 , .. ,....,,
5HO' 10 4.M, I• •110 'M.. litONOAV THll:OU~H ~lt.104Y SAfUlOAY tO A.N. •• 6, M. S!JHDAY 1J HOOH t• I 'M.
' • • • -~
\
T
\
I
Mondiy, October 2, 1972
••
, . .,
l>I"
JO<! L
'"' . ' ~11' . (
' rif
Vt
•. '/tit .... /
LEON WAGNER
former Halo
']leaten Up
ho" LOS ANCELl::S !AP) -Two
,,rmed n1en bc<1t former Angels
1 seball star Leon \Vagner and shot
is \Vi{e during an apparent rob-~r)'-kidnap atte1npt at an apart-
d1nent house. police said .
. ; Wagner, 38, said he was sum-~ftlooed tG an apart1ncnt near his by -a' friend Sunday and \'.'as pistol-~ whipped by two intruders who were
• ~'Waiting for him . J .. r Poli~ said the gunmen told the
•'Jn.an they we.re ho lding hostage to
i -tbU .. someone !hat's got more
·tnoney" when he could produce on-
tty $175 during the robbery.
Wagner was forced to call his
bwife Phyllis, 24. but the woman
.t-efused to enter the apartment J
bt.i"hen she saw her husband's head
trbleeding from the beating .
b• Officers said the former baseball
player then ran from the apart-
rirnent and tried to push his \vife out
of danger when she was struck in
the thighs by two shots from a
small-caliber pistol .
~ Both were reported in satisfac-
tory condition at West Adams Com-' munily Hospital. The unidentified
1
t
friend was not immediately iden· ~1 1 "ttfied. The armed men \'.'ere being y
I sought. .
' A power hitter on the Angels
before they moved from Los
~Angeles to Anaheim . \\'agner also
Played baseball in S1tn Fr<incisco
'and St. Loui 5 • ,. ,,
arsplittit1g
hoosh Means . "
notner Recorcl -·-
VENDOVER. U!ah 1AP 1 An
rsplltting \'.'hoo..;h blasted across the
t waste of the Bonne\'illc Sall Flat s.
so did the rocket-powered dragraccr
ollution Packer .•· selling its 12th world
speed record 111 two days.
ave Anderson and lhe Tony Team ,
. of Minneapolis took their 300 guests
d a lhousand spectators and let the
ndinti: white expanse settle down to its
nnal primeval silence Sunday af·
hey also took \Y1lh them the in·
ational :ind national rocket-powered
international and national unlimited
rds for ~the standing quarter-mile.
standing 500 meters and the standing
O?JWler.
derson, 34, broke old records in the
mlted clas~. but not the rocket-
ered classes. because there have
n no standing start records for
els or ]els.
nderson logged the standing quarter·
le in the hydrogen pero:.:ide-furlcd crir
an average speed' of 158.IW2 miles per
r in an elapsed time or 5.509 seconds.
time and speed were :ivcrag~d In
run in each direction within one h(\ur
each other. as rcquirt•d for 111-
atlonal reconh
n Andert00 fired the 20-foot-lon~.
·-po<m'd machine down the sail and
again lo set a standing 500-incll'r
of 173.918 m.p h 111 6.431 srcond.~.
~ trouble delayed nny further runs
lurday, so the tean1 ;111d 1ls JOO ;urs1s
umed to the salt flats as 1he "unrist•
eel the while salt rrd Sunday morn·
or Sunday's runs. the fuel "·as rhanji:·
from tO ptr ctn! hydrogen pt'rox1de
10 pet" ~nt water to 9SI per 1·1·nt
rogen peruxkie <ind 2 percent ""ntt~r.
in a thrust cttlmnled at nearly J,W)
••
.S. Warms Up
ith 12-3 'Victor"-
ARIS -Stan Smllh and Erik \/:in
Jen be"' Patrick Protsy and Pn1r1cf>
lnguez &-3, &-2 10 the flnlll doubles
tcll Sund11y, completlnR a 12-3 victory
the United States Davis Cup te:im
r the· trench Davis CUp team 1n a
•Y e.thlbllioo seriea. :
th and Van Diiien may hold th<': kpy
the United Sta1e1' chancts ln 1hc
v11 Cl.Ip rinal a1aln11 Romania Oct. 13-
n single• matches Sunday, Smith bcot
lay U , M , M : Tom (;orm.an bent
111inguez l-'. 8-3. 6-2: Eddy Dlbbs bc01
e1 G<iven J-t, W ; Fr&ncols Jauf·
t beat Harold Solomon, 6-2. 6-7 . &-2:
aro NRodrella beat Van Diiien 7-6. fl·
and Brian Gottfried of F o r t
l rdalc. Pia., beat ,Jpen-Buptistf>
,..l'1nfreau U . 6-3. 7-5
..
Atlanta's 7-year Jinx Ends
ATLANTA I AP \ -Th r tloubts of
Dave Hampton have vanisbed and with
thtnl the fortunes of the Atlanta Falcons
have brightened.
liampton showed his explosiveness
Sunday in teaming with running mate
Art Malone for 264 rushing yards as the
Falcons destroyed Los Angeles 31·3
before a National Football League crowd
of 57.122 in Allanta's home opener.
TI1e victory gave the Falcons a 2-1 Cen-
tral Division mark and sna pped a seven-
year jinx with Los Ang eles, giving Atlan-
ta its first triumph ever over the Rams.
after being 0-9-2.
The Falcons did 1t with Hampton
rushing for a club record 161 yards on 29
carries. scoring touchowns on runs of
50 and I yards : Malone barrelling for 103
yards; the defense con1ing up with six in-
terceptions, including a 2 9-ya rd
touchdown run with a theft by 1'ommy
Nobis : and a Bob Berry to Ken Burrow
Sox, Tigers
In Showdown
For AL East
DETROIT (AP l -•An American
League
sequences
Stadium.
tnini-playolf with
begins tonight
n1axi-con-
at Tiger
All the "ifs" bandied about concerning
the former four-team East Division title
chase have boiled down to one simple
fact :
-If either Boston or hostftlroil wins
t"·o of three games in the season-en-
ding series beginning tonight. it becomes
champion and earns the right to face the
Athletics in the real playoffs starting
Saturday in Oakland.
Mickey Lolich, 21·14, is ·rig er s
m11nager Billy Merlin's choice to pitch
tonight against fellow leflhander John
Cu~. 11-7.
If the Tigers had lost or the Red SGx
won Sunday, Detroit would have faced
the task of S\vecping the series to \Vin the
1it1t'.
But Baltimore nipped Bos!on 2-1 and
th(' Bengals zapped flo1ilwaukc('~bch1nd
t1omers by Aurelio Rodrigu('z, Dick
1\lcAuliffe and Al Kalinc. plus the superb
pitching of gutsy John Hiller, \1•ho "-'On
his first game since recovering fro1n <1
beart attack.
"We don't have to look at th11
sroreboard any more," Martin said in his
clubhouse office, crows' feet spreading
from his glistening eyes as he broke into
a broad grin .
38-yard iu..'Orlng bomb.
"I always wondered if I tould carry
Ule ball 20-25 times a game,'' said
Hampton, who came to the Falcons dur-
ing the training camp season from Green
Bay .
"Now I know. With Green Bay I never
got the chance. Coach Norm Van
Brocklin gave it to me and today It paid
off. I'm happy we won and glad I had a
fine day. I'm glad to be in Atlanta ," the
fourlh year man from Wyoming said.
And Malone won 't be accused of being
unhappy either. For the first lime in his
career he went over the magic 100-yard
mark.
"I'd been thinking about it and thinking
about it Now I just feel proud," Malone
said as he popped a cigar in his mouth .
"It's really something when two backs
go over 100 yards in one game. Dave is
something else and our line gave us 200
per cent ."
Another admirer wu Van Brocklin,
whose club is now tied with San Fran-
cisco for the top spot tn lhe division.
"They were aometblng, weren't they,"
Van Brocklln said of hlJ Mr. wide ond
1'1r. Outside duo.
"The whole club played great and I
think thls victory matured us Into a foot-
ball club. When you play that well, it's a
sign of maturity."
The runnlng was !IO destructive that it
didn't matter that Berry only completed
two of nine passes, wu intercepted once
and fumbled twice. Jt didn't hurt aa 1he
defense he1d off the Ra.ms.
Ringleader of the defense was end John
7.ook, who sacked Ram quarterbacks
Pete Beathard and Roman Gabriel three
times and rorced two interceptions.
"'The offense got ahead quickly 17-4.
That makea our job easier," said Zook.
Beathard opened at Quarterback for
the Rams but Gabriel, bothem:I by ten-
dlonil!J In 111' throwing arm, C1111e In
midway In the aecond period but gave
way to Beathard again In th& final
perlod.
The Rams' only score came on a U..
yard field goal by David Ray.
,.,k.,,.
" t1•2t1 .. "' ,_.,
·~ ••• ....
In the corner of the boisterou s dressing
room stood Kaline, one of the lasl
players out of the shower. If he 1-1·as
savoring the day·s outcomes he didn·1
show it. for he dressed hurriedly. ATLANTA'S CLAUDE HUMPHREY (87), MATES, PRESSURE THE RAMS' ROMAN GABRIEL
The 37-year.old outfi~dcr seems to bl'
al his best in pressure S'nttm.ions and !us
bat was a major factor in Detroit's
sweep of Milwaukee. The Tigers se<ired
30 runs in three games. banging out 3
hits. Kaline got seven of them. scor('d
five runs and drove in three.
"[ think most of us felt 1-1·e had to "111
three," he said, referring to the do-or-d1t'
series with Boston. "We just figured
Boston would win today. II came as <•
pleasant surprise when they lost.··
There was a 1-1 count on Oll ie Bro\1·n.
leadoff batter In the Brewers' seventh.
when the Baltimore·Boston score went up
on the scoreboard. 'fhere was an im-
mediate roar from the crowd of 17,429 -
an attendance limited partly due to cold
and rainy weather, which"fop:ed a delay
of 33 minutes at the start of the game.
Martin said the jubilation in t h e
dugout then "wasn't that much, but when
it came up I tried to squelch it and get
their minds back on the game becaus<'
!he important thing was U.!I winning."
------
Chargers Tie,17·17
Back Gets Off Hook
After Crucial Gamble
OAKLAND (AP ) -Cid Ed\vards of the
San Diego Chargers was a star in spite of
himself in his team's 17·17 tie with the
favored Oakland Raiders.
"I gambled. It could have cost u~ the
ga1ne." the new San Diego run ning back
said Sunday of the play he tried with l\1•0
minutes left, surprising his O\\'ll coach
but not the Raiders.
'fhc former St. Louis Cardinal lined up
as a blocke r on a fourth down punt play.
ca lled for a fake punt and ran the ball
from the Chargers' Jo-yard line. He went
28 yards on the same play in the second
quarter to set up a touchdown.
"You only get fooled once on a play
like that." snid Raiders coach John Mad·
den. "We reminded our players."
Clemente Glad It's Over
Linebacker Dan Conners stopped
Edwards at the 34. short of a first down.
and 4>year.old George Blanda had a
chance to win the game with a 37-yard
field goal.
But Blanda 's kick with a minute left
went wide to th' right. in a situation
which seemed tailor-made for the
celebrated game-saver.
After Getting 3000th Hit
PITTSBURGH ~AP I Pittsburgh
Pirate rightfielder Roberto Clemente 1~
taking oil the res! of the regular season
after bceomlng the I Ith player in lh1•
history or 1najor league basebilll to col-
lect 3,000 career hits.
"I'm glad It's over," snid Clemente
after reaching the i;oa.I Snturdny In lhe
Pirates' S-0 victory ovor the New York
""1cts. "Now I can gel some re~t "
Clemente's 3.000th hit -:i rin~inR dou·
blc 10 le.fl-center -cnmc In the fourth
inning eff rookie John r-.1a1larlt. The lend·
off blast sparked n 1hrl-c-n1n 1nnini,: that
pi1.$hed the Pirates 10 victor)'
After lcnvlng the coott•11t 111 th~ f1flh 111
ning. Clemente !IDld he y,·ould not play 111
the Pirnie/ii' ltts l three reguler !W!Dtotl
l!'.nme$, re!lting, ins1c8d. for the Natlon:il
l..caguc p{ayoCfs neit weekend
Askt'd It he was glad the! hit WllS a hoc
drive, he said: "I WllJ just gl'!d to set lht
hll . period."
The l'lrates 1uperstar iilmost reached
the milestone A clny earlier against New
York whtn he beat out a chopper for
what •ppeared to be ~sehit . But of·
flclat scorer Luke Quoy, rts writer for
the McKtesport Dllily ·s. called an
1;rror against the 1'1Cl!I' second b311ema11
Ken Boswell.
Clemente said he though! the cull wa.~
a bad one "All 1ny life they hn\•e been
staslin• hils fm1n rnt." hr ~ulcl nl Int
tlm('
lloy,·evcr. it was different 11fter h1.•
fourth-inning blast Saturday.
"I was happy to get a hit lhut wn sn'I
doubtful ," Clemente said .
"[ give this hit to the fans of
Pittsburgh and to the people of Puerto
Hice," he continued .
When the hit seemed sure to lnll in
center fit'ld. the crov.•d of 13,117 rose in
unison . Tb<: gnme 1Yas i;toppcd nnd
l'lcmentc wa!I handed the ball.
Clemente ~1d following the ga1ne he
"''at a bit embnrrAsscd by th(' stAnding
ovation
"I f~l -ba:1hlut v.·hcn I J:l'I a big uva-
11011." he sn1cl "I am really 11hy :ind J10 l!i
my lamlly. I never ••a111 a big shot nnd I
never will bf-a b1R shol."
Clemcntc !8id \V\llic Slargell -""ho
was on deck -picked out the bat for the
historic hit.
•· 1 told Stargell to pick out a bat for
me, and he plcktd out 1 heavy one." said
Clemente. "lie handed me \he bat and
ll{J.Jd 'Go gel it.' I hit :i curve ball ... the .
snme pitch ~lallack struck me out with
in the first iMlng."
\Vhtn Clcmentr jogged to the fifth in·
ning, he was greated by the Met!' \\ lllic
~1ays, another playe r with 3.000 or 1nore
hits
"flo1ays told mt he "-'O! hnppl' for 1ne
and lhal II "-"illi wondcrfu , ·• -1nld
Cltmrnle n<klinjl th-.t "1'13Y11 Is thf' b.·~l
11lri\1•r J'vr l'\"Cr ~t'rn"
"I missed it. no alibis," said Blanda.
1-1·ho tied lhe score with a 4~yard field
goal 4:28 from the end.
Edwards ran for 97 yards and caught
six of John Hadl's passes for 100 yards.
The tie left both teams at l·L-1 and tied
for second place in the American Foot·
hall Conference \Vest.
"I saw something I didn't set." said
Edwards, e1phllnlng his late gamble. ''I
lllOUght they lined up the same way they
did the fiMlt lime we tried It."
But Chargf!rs roach Harland Svare
revealed later !hat Edwards, playing his
first game for the Chargers. wasn 't even
supposed to have the option to call lht•
running play,
"Wt crossed signals." the coach said
;u\d ridded, "Under trie circumstances.
we did a 11reat job Just to come out Wllh
111 tic ..
The ft.alder• deft:nst: got the hall al
m1d.flcld twice In the lint quarter. w~n
tackle Art Thoms blocked a field goal
11nd comerback Willie Brov.ii recovered a
1-ladl fumble , and Oak.land scortd
touchdowns for a 14-0 lead.
\
' • . " . ' " "
Angels Bow
To Minnesota;
Dodgers Fall
The California Angels rell to Minnesota
3·2 and the Dodgers were shut out 1-0 to
start the final week of major league
baseball action for the two clubs Sunday.
At Cincinnati, lefl.handcr Don Gullett
held the Dodgers hitle ss until Bill Rus-
sell's single witb one out in the eighth in-
ning and relief ace Clay Carroll picked
up his 36th save of the season, a major
league record.
Meanwhile in Anaheim . Bert Blyleven
and former Cincinnati reliever Wayne
Granger combined to hold the Angels to
nine hits as the Twins handed Andy Mes-
sersmith his 11th loss of the season.
Cincinnati scored its only run off
Dodger lefty Doug Rau in the eighth in -
ning when Pete Rose singled , moved to
second on a sacrifice, took third on a
passed ball and came home on Johnny
Bench's sacrifice fly.
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OUCH -Yvon DuHamel of
Canada f a 11 s in motorcycle
heat at Ontario Speedway. He
got up and continued later,. but
finished 37\h.
Arizona
Juggling
For UCLA
TUCSON -University of Ariwna foot-
ball coach Bob Weber has juggled his
lineup in hopes of finding a winning com-
bination against UCLA Saturday.
Last year's leading team rusher, Bob
McCall, has been moved from fullback to
tailback after seeing limited action as
fullback during-the first three games.
Jim Upchurch has been moved from
bis tailback slot to No. 2 fullback,
Willie Hamilton has been :epla~d as
No. 2 tailback by Greg Boyd. who. has
seen himself shifted from defense to of-
fense to· defense and now back again to
!he offensive squad. Hamilton will now
be listed as third-string tailback.
Weber said the only other positions
likely to be changed before Arizona's
game with the Bruins is at flanker .where
freshman Theopolis Bell is battling Mark
Neal for the starting spot. ,,.,
ONTARIO. Calif. -Veteran Paul
Smart of London bla1.cd to a course
record and captured the $100.000 Cham-
pion 1\'lotorcycle Classic Sunday , taking
the l"'o-heat. 250-mile course by coming
from behind in the second heat.
The 3J...year-0ld, driving a Kawasaki
750, was fifth in the first heat, then
battled leader Cliff Carr of Arlington.
Mass.. in the second heat before Carr
was forced out with gearbox troubles.
Smart was clocked al: 86.926 milea per
hour. eclipsing the Ontario Motor
Speedway course mark of 86.456 by John
Cooper of Derby, England, last year.
Cooper \Vas fifth over-all thi s time .
Smart earned $30,400.
Second to Smart wlls Geoff Perry of
Auck land, New Zealand, riding a Suzuki
750. Perry was fourth in the first heat
11nd second by only five seconds in the
second heat. Perry won $7,150. ,,.,
YORK , England -Swedish driver
Arnold Sundquist suffered a cut le& after
his jet-powered car crashed al 2.00 miles
per hour Sunday while attempting a
\l"Orld speed record.
Flis car. a 25.000-horsepower U.S. Air
Force Starfighter jet engine on whee ls.
snaked and veered sharply, demolished a
barrier and careened across a field. He
released his braking parachute as the
vehicle shot into the field and it stopped.
badly damaged, after a quarter mile.
"The needle was right off the clock
\~·hen the car started to swing," the 26-
year-old driver from Goteborg told
newsmen . ....
HOCKENHEIM , Gennany -Mike
Hailwood or Britain clinched the 1972
Formula Two World Championship Sun-
day when he finished second behind
Australia's Tim Sc.henken on West
Germany's Hockenheimring Race Track.
Schenken drove his Brabham over the
finish line way ahead of his competitors
after one hour, seven minutes, %3.4
seconds. Hallwood was second In a
Surtees in 1:07 :40.6.
Beman Grabs
Golf Classic
BETTENDORF', Iowa IAP) -Deane
Beman came from four strokes off the
pace "''ith a final 87 Sunday ind won the
Quad Cities Open Golf Tournament for
the second slral.g:ht ycor
Bcman's 7l·holc Iola! of 279 was flve-
under·P<1r on the 6,501 yard Crow Valley
Golf Club coorse and one stroke ahead of
rookil' Tom Wat son. who rk>sed wllh a
66
lit' v:on SS.000 Inst season 1vl'lcn he took
the title in lhis evrnt, which was !hen
being played 11s a Nlclllte toumamtnt,
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DALLAS' WALT GARRISON IS BROUGHT TO EARTH AFTER A 4-Y.llRD GAIN AGAINST GREEN BAY.
Dolphins Still Undefeated;
TV Tonight--Giants, Eagles
In the topsy-turvy world of
pro football, one thing is cer·
tain about tonight's nationally
televised football game be·
tween the New• York Giants
and the Philadefphia Eagles.
One teain will move out of
the cellar of the NFL Eastern
O"ivision with a \'ictory after
both have lost a pair or-early
games. The contest will be
televised in the Southland on
Channel 7 beginning at 6
o'clock.
Elsewhere in the world or
pro football , only one team re-
malhs undefeated after three
weekends of the r e g u I a r
Con11ors,
Newcombe,
King Win
' ALBANY, Calif. -Second
seeded Jimmy Conners or Los
Angeles has won the cham-
pionship in the Pacific Coast
tennis classic here. defeating
unseeded Roscoe Tanner of
Lookout Mountain, Tenn., 6-2,
7.,;,
The 20-year~ld Connors
displayed consistency and a
varied court game Sunday in
the first all-left-handed final in
the tournament's 8 3 ·ye a r
history.
season have been completed.
The Miami Dolphins emerg-
ed Sunday as the' only unscath--
ed team in the circuit as the
New England Patriots and the
Houston Oilers pulled off ma-
jor upsets.
OOLP~S.VIKINGS -The
f\.1iami DOiphins, 3-0 and un-
disputed leader in t h e
American Conference East,
got three second half field
goals from Garo YepremiH;n
and a last-ditch touchdown
pass from Bob Griese to turn
back the Minnesota Vikings.
16-14. .
Griese's three-yard
touchdown strike to Jim Man·
dich came with 98 seconds re-
maining to play to turn the
tide in favor of the Dolphins.
The Vikings had held the lead
from Frank Tarkenton's 56-
yard touchdown pass to John
Gilliam in the first quarter.
PATRIOTS -REDSKINS -
For the second straight week
a missed field goal gave the
New England Patriots a \'iC·
tory.
This time the Patriots beat
George Allen's Washington
Redskins, 24-2.1, in a bizarre
finish.
The Pats took a 24-21 lead
with minutes left to play. The
Redskins drove back and ap-
parently tied the game on Curt
Knight's 11-yard field goal
with 1: 39 left.
yards in the second half to
gain the victory.
Joe Namath threw fo r two
touchdowns and B o b b y
Howfield kicked two field
goals for the Jets.
CHIEFS-BRONCOS -Mike
Livingston came off the bench
Sunday to lead !be Kan sas
City Chiefs to a 45-24 \'ictory
over the Denver BrorlC{)s.
Livingston replaced the in·
jured Len Dawson in the third
quarter with t he score tied .
H)-10. and fired three
~ouchdown passes.
Jim Kearney put t h e
finishing touches on the vic-
tory by returning a pair of in-
terceptions f o r ·touchdowns
late in the game.
STEELERS -CARDINALS
-Terry Bradshaw completed.
25 or 40 passes for 229 yards
including a 38·yarder to Frank
Lewis to give the Pittsburgh
Steelers a 25-19 victory over
the St Louis Cardinals.
Bradshaw's pass to Lewis
came with I :06 ·1 e ft in the
game.
49ERS-SAINTS -The San
Francisco 49ers trampled the
New Orleans Saints Sunday.
37-2. to keep pace with Atlanta
as the leaders in the NFL
Western Division race.
John Brodie coml?leted 18 of
26 passes for 156 yards and
two touchdowns and Vic
Washington moved 75 yards in
18 rushes for the 49ers.
John Brockington churned
out 91 yards -two of them on
a touchdown run -and
Chester Marco! kicked three
fields goals to pace the Pack.
BROWNS-BENGALS -The
Cleveland Browns made the
big plays when they counted
and former coach P a u I
Brown's CinciMBti Bengals
dropped a 27-6 decision Son-
day.
After Cincinnati had trim·
med the lead lo 14-8 ,
Cleveland's Mike P h i pp s
teamed with Frank Pitts on a
68-yard scoring bomb to ice
the de<:ision.
COLTS.BILLS T h e
Baltimore Colts picked up
their first victory of the
season by defeating the Buf-
falo Bills Sonday, 17-0 with all
the.scoring coming in the first
hair.
A 27-ya rd Johnny Unitas-to-
Tom fl1itchell touchdo\\'n pass,
a :ID-yard field goal by Jim
O'Brien and a 12-yard scoring
dash by Sam Havrilak was all
the scoring the Colts needed.
Pickeroo
Violators
Beware
Mond.iy , Oc1obcr 2, 1(}72 DAILY PILOT 1
Grid Ref Chafe Enjoys Task~1
As Unpaid Assistant . Not · One
Of Guys By DENNIS CA~IPBEU.
Of tll• o.u, ...... 11111
To most. going from head
F'LINT. h-1ich. -Football football coach al Long Beach orfic~al J. S. l\.tagee isn't ex~ City College to an unp3id
actJy1.one of the guys. In fact , ass 1st 11 n t c 0 11 ch a l
she's a lilhesome, pretty, \Vestminster H1Rh Schoo I
seemingly shy. dar.k.eyed 19-would be a big step downward. year~d named Janice and Paul Chafe would argue the
she's the only state-registered point.
female football official in Following his football rare-er
Michigan. at Orange Coast and \\'tuttier
When football players blasl colleges. Chafe v.·as hired ci1
each other all over the field, LBCC in 19~ after coaching
they listen to her whistle for · with George Allen at Whittier.
law and order in the midst of He became Long Beach's
chaos. After they listen they head coach in 1965, the year
look-twice. following lhe Vikings' Junior
Some of them whistle back Rose Bo"•I win and national
and a few wonder what is hap-championship.
pening to one of America's Replacing Jim Stangeland,
great games. v•ho went to USC and later Cal
That doesn't seem to bother State t Long Beach). Cha[e
Miss Magee. guided LBCC to a 7·2-1 recnrd PAUL CHA FE
"Sure there's been some op-his first season and stayed on
position to my being an of-for another three years. le:iv-He refers to unpleasantries
fi<;ial, but they can't stop me." ing in 1969. such as gelt ing athletes nut of
she said. "I'm qualified. I'm \\lhy did he lea\'e? jail, find in~ the1n job s .
more qualJfied than some of "I'd been in it about 15 mediating disputes and acting
the males who officiate." years." he recalls. ''I was at as a buffer bel"'een coacht's
Vern Norris, assistant state the point where I still enjoyed on the fie ld and outside
athletic director, said there coaching. but as a head coach elements.
are 4,400 state-registered of-you don 't do much coaching. "It's an interesting feetiqg
I . rt 'th ''You're an administrator al here because J'\·e n eve r ficials or vanous spo s '"'1 that level and it's a 12-month Afiss Atagee the only female coached on this lev.el." Chafe 'stered for football job. almost 24 hours a day. I says.
regi · . thought it '"'as lime to go off "The e's no ag1'tatio. n as far .. Now I'm able to work "·ith r on another tangent carcer-as we're concerned," said wise. and 1 figured that if 1 principles l'\'e alv.·ays felt kids
N rrl. """""-real problem 1·n were able to do on this level. o s. 1•.:-were going to go back 10
essigning her is some of the school I'd better get going. Last year v.·as satisfying in
schools are afraid she is going .. 1 also have tv.·o young that respect because, at least
to get hurt." children (a girl, JO. a boy, 71 . in my own judgment. the
Miss Magee is five feet tall. and 1 thought it v.·ould be nice lhings l'\'e always thought to
She admits to having been a k f be true were taught dov.·n here football nut since shildhood. to get bac 10 my amily for v.•ith success."
short of being tho coDqe
insklenl."
Administration b the field
Chafe expects to end up in, not
v.·ithout 8 touch or regret.
"I enjoy ttachlng and I'll
stay with It until I reach a
point where It's financWly
hurting me. SomeUme ln a
profe~ion you have to get ID
the h!goot paying part o1 ~ u
)"OU wanl to retire with any
securlly, and that• s -9·
ministration."
lie isn't aiming for any ltvtl
higher than junior colltje,
however. because ••1 ~~
it's the best !eve.I ot ltachiftg
in the country.
''Vou don't have to publ9h
:lnd research. lt'a leachlll-
orlented aod the lids are
1notivated. II has all the rood
lhings about teaching.
"I have no desire to ltach •t
the high school level beca•
so many kkls don't want to )>e
in school. and 1 take my h•t
off lo any man who can teech
four or rive periods tn hJ&h
school and I.hen go out and
coach."
Now Chafe Is "free whefJ-
ing ·• four days a week v.•ilh the
\\'estminster football team. r
teaching his specialty -pus
offense -"and it's f.l·
hilarating not to Mve all thole
other problems to IOlve.
"Basically, it's a hobby, and
a \•ery enjoyable one for me.
l"m doing ~mettuna; I Ute, and
by teaching and ~rm
doing something phjslcal and
mr.ntal at the same time. awhile.
She took a course in of-"I'd reached the top le\"el of The s it u at ion a t worlds ...
ficiating et Genesee Com-junior college coaching. and Y.'estminster. says Chafe. is
munily College, where she is a the next le\'el would be the unique because of the attitude
"I have tht'. best ot both
student. She was certified in NCAA: packing up my family of head coach Bill Boswell.
July, after scoring better than and mo\'ing all over the coun-"You're not likely to v.·alk Ca!!C Scot•es
90 percent on a state-issued t into a typicaJ high school u
written examination. r::':·That part of coaching co-,ching starr and impose 1_1.,.. 11_."
She said she got a mixed dicin·t interest me at all. and your thoughts on another o.1uw.vi." NIA n1. w..,.tuUt ""'
reception at a meeting of foot-rm basically a homebody. For man," he reminds. ioo , • .......,.. • ....,.
ball officials from Genesee me, being a head coach ~'as "Bill is !he type of man you ""..,'• NIA 1-.. cwo1111o1 .., • .., ''*
County earlier this month. like taking a fellow who likes ran do it v.·ith. It 's a rare :::;::, ",.~",, 1~~ ~;.=~:...~··
\\'hen one grumpy-voiced. to teach ou t of the classroom. situation here. Bill is open-M•1411""" "1" ,.,, c~ ,,...., " belued ' lball I ...... YOO"' .... ,.,, o.tr.11 NIA " pol-ex-aoo Payer "fl was either die 1n minded and everyone work.., '"'°""'°"' "1" "'· v+.., AlA 111
now an official said she didn't coaching or gel out... on his own area. and tht're's <..,,ll(ky 1o11o 110. ,~. NIA 0 1 h h pe 'ence ·-· .... AIA 111. IC-. Clfr"'°"'9'W ave en o u g ex ri · So Chafe got oot lie enroll not a Jot of hard·OOSE:d direc-NIA •~ •nother official backed her up , · · -... cd as a graduate student :it Hon from him. .,~ l 1•1• "llA 11L ~ NM
saying, "How can she get ex-use and is just si11: unit~ short '"lie ("()C)rdinates the v.·hole LOOI • ._. .. , "'" 11L ... ,,.. NM.
perience if you won't let her of his doctorate in higher thing and we all put it ~J o{Ciclate~" eduoation. toi;iether on game night." ;:::.;::;iiiir:;:;;~:iliiiiiii
Miss Magee put on her foot· p ti h . t h. t Tht problems Chafe tn-11 ball ~-·ts, N•lled back her resen y. e 1s eac 1ng a 1 •~ ~ Lo Be h C't Coll R..t countered as a head coach dkt hair and went to her rirst ng ac 1 Y ege 311\l coaching at Westmin~ter for not catch him unaware. scrimmage v.1tere "some of the second year on a voluntary "I knew whtn I took lhf job
the guys made remarks." She basis. "'hat I'd have 10 go through ,"
said, "They thought it was "f have a lot or motivation he says. "But I think everyone
funny at first." be h " h "The • n·-..t-that Ol'W' shot. and It wss 1 Snickering was r e p I a c e d to ere. e says. re s ~
th' .ltracll·on of the sport a very, very \'Pluable lrslning with admiration. One hulking ·
Player smiled at her and said, coaching, working "'ith kids. experienct.
ff. · 1., coaching in your o~·n :;pee:lal ··1 dorl't think !here i~ a bet-
"Hey are you an o 1c1a · ler training experience for an •tan. you've got guts." are .. •1,· " has none of I h c administrator than being a She's on the schedule to of· . -... bJ fic"iate 8 ever a 1 intramural unplea~ant things you do as a head coach. 11J11;" pro emll you [
games at Genesee Community, p;;;,;""a;;c;,h . .;;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;d;;ea;;l;;w;;l;;lh;;,;y;;ou;;,;oo;;n;;';;' .'""°".,;;;;,,;;nt;;er
College. !1
She said some or the !acuity LEASE DIRECT
members gave her a hard 1973 PONTIAC GIA.ND PRIX time about officiating in-
tram u r a I games . s10848 Administrators said l he Y PER won't permit her ID be the
target of discriminatJon. MO.
J•rn0-~""·'4 I lfttl • '• ,,,.,.. ~ ... ¥'"fl
'GO r ... .HJ. ''" •-1 on~• ....,,, ~ .,.,>"4••""
•n¥1ifnf
The young Vr-oman. who said
she will fight for her right to
officiate football g a mes .
doesn't consider herself a
OltDf,lt NOW 1'011 lARLllST DELIVERY
A5K FOl FUD DORAN
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
women's liberationist. YOUR fACTORY AUTHOltlZID DIALIR
CFlyOurlegs)
AIR-
In the third place match,
Andrew Pattison or Rhodesia
defeated tournament top seed
Bob Hewitt of South Africa, ~
7, 7-6,. retired, in an ab-
breviated match. H e w i t t
retired with a sore ankle.
But New England was called
for roughing the kicker and
the Redskins decided to take
the first down. reject the field
goal and try for victory.
Three plays netted just one
ya rd and Knight's 27-yard ef-
fort sailed wide of the
uprights.
Bruce Gossett. the former
Rams place kicker, establish·
ed a 49ers record with three
field goals to give him fUC·
C1?Ssful eftorts in 21 straight
games.
''I've never felt I was being 2410 H..ttor lh'd. at Fair Dr., Cotf'tl w ... ~17
Players of the Pilot Pigskin \~"'.!P~lo~il~ed~, "~she~~'"1''1'.'d':_. ---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;~ PICKER()() game today were
cautioned to take a close look
at the "facsimile rule."
CAUFOR•IA
-~c:...,
'""''"'"' 014) 54tlS9
....
ALAMO, Calif. -South
Africa's Cliff Drysdale. who
had earlier beaten the tourna·
ment favorite. fell victim to a
near-perfe<:l perfonnance by
John Newcombe of Australia
in the men's singles chain.
pion.ship of the S 1 O , 0 0 0
Redwood Bank International
tennis tournament here.
Newcombe bested his op-
ponent &-1, 6-1 and 7-5 in the
best three-of-nve match. On
Saturday Drysdale upset top-
seeded Arthur Ashe of the
United Stales in a semifinal
round. ....
PHOEl'IJX -Top-•eeded
Biiiie Jean King of Palm-
Alre. F1a., 1uccessfull y
defended her Virginia Slims
Phoenix Thunderbird tourna-
ment champloMhlp Sunday
with 1 7.t, 6.-3 victory over
~1argaret Court of Prrth,
Australia.
The win In the $25.000 event
\vas worth fa,000 to Jl.trs. King,
raising her 1'12 earnings to
more than SUM.GOO. Last year
In this event, ihe: became the
first woman athlete to reach
1100.DOO. winding up the year
wllh 1117.lltlO.
BllU. Jean had to rally &Jn.
day to capture her 10th Utle ol
the ytar. She lnilled 34 in the
fU"ll Kl, but came bACk to M
and 11 9-pofnt tle-breaktt
whim she won $-1. In the Jtt-
ond 9'1. Jl.!rs. Court led 6-2
btfore Billie Jean won fcrur
straighl &amt3, Including two
atrvice breaks.
Then in the final minute, the
Patriots were forced to punt.
Washington blocked It and got
a two-point safety when the
ball rolled out of the end zone.
OD,ERS-JF:J'S D a n
Pastorini and Sklp Butler led
the Houston Oilers to their
first victory of the season over
the M!w York Jets Sunday, 26-
20.
Pastorini connected on a 52·
yard touchdown bomb with
Ken Burrough, then directed a
drive that ended with Willie
Rodgers ' one-yard s co r i n g
dive in the nm half.
Butler then connected on
field goals or 12 20, 20 and 12
LIONS.BEARS Th e
Detroit Lions scored virtually
every time they had the b·au
Sunday to hand the Chicago
Bears a 38-24 defeat.
The show or offen s ive
strength ·shows in the punting
!tatistics. One ·punt was made
durlng the game when lhe
Lions kicked late in the fourth
quarter. This ties a National
Football League record set in
1961. '
COWBOYS.PACKERS -An
Inspired defense foreed five
turnovers and s a c k t d
quarterback Craig M o r t <tn
four times to lead the Green
Bay Packers to a 1~13 victory
over the deftndlng SUper Bowl
champion Da1l1s Cowboys.
Pro Grid Standings
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First rule or the contest,
now in its fourth year ln the
DAILY PILOT's sports pages.
always has been that entries
can be submitted either on the
official entry blank printed In
the newspaper or on a
reasonable facsimile.
New wording has been io-
serted in the rule this week,
making it r.ead ;
" 'Reasonable fascimile' Is
defined as an •e xact
duplicate: Entries must be
Llniform In size and shaP41 to
facilitate judging. Those which
don't conlorm will be dis-
qualified."
Tightening of the rule came
about because of too growing
number of entries in the
popular .conies! whl~ were
JrubmiUed In the form of
handwritten lisl.3 on all kind!!
paper. Effective with th!'
week's entries, judget Nl\'t
decided, all "fae11lmlles" must
be rt!asonable copies of !he
newspaper's offi<'lal r n t r y
blank or t.My w11l bl> dl1-
qunlified fmm Judging
$50 per -.eek In mer handiac:
ctrtincatrs arr offen'd J.J
prizt!s In I.ht ptclt-UW>-wlnnen
Baseball Standings
NAT fOSAL l.EAGUE
Ea1l Dtvlsku1
x-PUtsburgh
Chicago
New York
St. Loula
~tontre11I
Phlladefpbia
w I.
9$ 58
.. 18
79 n
71 80
69 82
S7 96
West otvlslon
x-Cincinnatl 93 "
ltouston 8-4 67
Ooctcttt 13 70
Atlanta 10 u
San F'rancisco '1 16
San Dtego 58 93
x~l.nched Dlvi~lon Title
~·-"· N-Y•I ,, ,I~)
C,,lc._ l. St. Loo.i•t e _,_ If, ~ • ....,,_, ••
C~ll 1. lM ,,,__ •
""'OMtct .. ....._ 1
I.wt Jr-ltU 6. Al\MM J
T.....,.t ·-
Pei: GR
.621
.5.S.3 101'1'
.$21 I~
.431 21 1,
.457 2S
.3i3 311
.612
.566 ,.,
.542 101.-i
.4&1 23
..... 2'1'>
.JIM ).4 1'
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A~tt:RICAS Lt:AGt,;t-;
t:aal Oh l~ion
l~lon
Ilf>tro1t
Haiti~
/'\cw York
Cln-eland
~tlh,·au~
w I. .... " .. 79"
" T.l 11 13
62 II
"'est t>h·blo"
¥-Oakland t2 II
OliC'ARO IS G6
~llnneM>iA 76 75
KanJ.11 i City 71 77
""•~" 74 i9 TeIU 5.1 99
1-()1nchcd Dlvlslon Title
,,_..., .......
PC1 . GU
·"" .$49 1l
·""' ' ·""' ' .411 1-4
405 22 11
.601
.561 •
.lGI ll
.4f.l J•·~
.-t14 JI
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(-~ k -.,.,... l.l. hi -II ..._.
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,....,., ·-... _ •t ..... 1 " " .. ~· 11.-rt ,, ,,,
••-. .,. , .. ..., .. 1U .. -v..,, ti-IM1
-·~Ml •l ltl~l.,.,..._
l•"I ---
contnt The pr I z c r 11re '1"-----------------------------.i furnished by flY< ohoppln1 II
centers -Wl!llteliff Pl.ua.
Unlvcl"llty Park. 8 a y 1 Ide
Cent<r, Eastblull VU!age and
Harbor vr ... Cenltt.
Top prlu C'.ch weet tJ as
Wflh """""' pt11<e taklnf f!O
•nd third. fourth and fifth
plAt."Wt wl:nnt!.rs taeh 1tt1tnc ~
C'tf110eatH
The DAILY PILOT 1loo wlll
~iVt bonUJI football game
tick.ell to lbe lop wimttt in
!ht IO·"'"'ttk t"Ofllest
DEAN LEWIS •
1966 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA ME.SA
Mrvltl and P•rt1 for All l"'f'Ortlld Can
Mo6erft lody Shop for All C1r1
646-9303
r1nge C'o11nl)'0S Largest :;.nd AIOll )fodrm ToyolJ and Vnlro Oea.ltr
OYllll.AI OILIVllt'f' 1,1.CIALllTI
••
DUN LIWIS
SAYINGS!!!
OH ALL
'72
TOYOTAS
&
VOLVOS
DEMONSTRATORS
DAlllPUJ
'72 STATllll WAD
COlllW
1100 CC ENGINE, AUTO.,
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239400
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IMMIOtAn HU"IY
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'
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DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
-I r
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wn "nMNCi TO BREA.I(
Al.L l-115 OLD MA.BIT$,
•
by Chester Gould
by Tom K. Ryan
(' 1~.I~
Mun AND JEFF
RGMENTS
n" MIGllT BE.
WO~MORE
"ll-IAN $3.75 IF
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ANDF1NDoUT
Wl1"'1"5 IN '--..~ERE
~E'S NCJr TOO 6RE AT WITT! HI~ RIES ITT. ..
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'ii.it -
NANCY by Emie Bushmiller
THAT'S
THE'
BOOK
l WANT'
·COME BACK, MISS·-
YOU DIDN'T HAVE
THAT BOOK
CHE'CKED OUT
JDAILY CROSSWORD ••• by •. >.. POWE• I
ACROSS Q Putir'11-S..tu•d1y'1 Puule Solved;
1 si;,,111 """''' •1'0•'•1'<>1! ''• ~ho•honetn
!°> Po1I le.< I lr<lhln
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10 l ! ... ,IOCi. !D Wotogln 01.,
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double-: !:>Z R~t
A•ch (~"'-''"
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21 v~'"""'ed ,_. s11..,1<1 or 1] P;on (ll(1 dQOI !J'IW
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23 O•-d °"41" 66 Notic;t"t 11 Man'&tliflll •9 WtntMI
p>GCI 68 Mt~room 1:> Clorh uroenrl'(
0 .. l"IM1 KCAioo•v troa.,nlN ~1 Uselo!b5 by·
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Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
•
.
'
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
RUS!<ING e>.o<.
TO THE M QT[L
AFlER TANYA'$
PH ONE CALL,
LEE FINDS HER
PACKING TO
1..E.A.VE!
/{~RO;O 'II "Po"'< y.# 10-:·
MISS PEACH
PERKINS
lllD ANYONE
1U~N IN MY
M1SS1N& s-.u..
BOl< OF'
CANDY 7
J: ~Sl<EP IF' ANYONE'
l<AS TU~NEP IN MY
MISSIN& >·ii.. l!IOl'
OF CANDY !?
DAJL V PILOT • •
DOOLEY'S WORLD by Roger Bradfield
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKEllS
. '• : , . ' .. . •••
' .
IS IT HARP?
by Charles M. Schulz
I .1151' UAIJOiD O!llT ~
''lal ~ i,tJU 00.Mlll!'
by Harold Le Doux
SWEETHEART, YOU
SHOU l..OH'T 6E
SAYING THINGS
:;_ tlli'"T LIKE THAl !
lll,A, ~
POl'l'T 'IOU
ANSWElt ;.r'?ll '"" ...
bv Mell
l'r'S .JUST
11-lAT IT'5 HARD TO TAU<:
Wl'fHAN
uPSl!T
S'l'OMllCl-4
by John Mlle1
by Gus Arriola .. -
by Ferd Johnson
., t ' -_,I
by Roger Bollen .
~ i.tU~T ~AVE •
\OOl1~D F~OM ,,., Ii
OUl PIOOO~AP~. '•~ fi
. . ~ ·".·· .... · .. ·. ·.··-:··.:·If ' '. "· ..... ·. ' . . . ~
THE GIRLS .
''Now· Just pretend they're guests who drop la on you when
your house Is a wreck.''
DENNIS THE MENACE
I ,I
..__ -
.r....--?'>
' UECJ( ! Mas. WIL~ AAS GOH£ AWAY To VISIT AJ(
LEFT NP.. WIL~ 80fS OF lMEIR HOOSE !·
----
-•
I
•
' DAILY PILOT •
TONIGHT'S
TV IDGHLIGHTS
. 'The Torchbearer~
SCR Revives
KTl..A U 7:00 -''An American Dream." Stuart
Whitman Ls a sensation-.seekiog TV commentator
wb,o finds hlmseU the target o( bolh gangsters and
police. Janet Leigh also stars in this 1966 movie.
KCET till 8:00 -"Another Part of the Forest."
-
I/
Comedy Hit
Ulllan Hellman's drama about a reactionary South·
em family lacing ruin in the decline ol the Old
South stars Dorothy ~icGuire and Barry Sullivan.
CBS D 9:00 -·'Here's Lucy." Still recuperating
froni her '"real life" skiing accident, Lucy finds her
em ployment agency moved into her h()me. Gale
Gordon. :
NBC 0 9:00 -"The Beguiled.'' A Southern
schoolteacher aids a Union soldier in the final days
of !he Civil War. Clint Eastwood. Geraldine Page.
Elilabe\h Hartman.
ABC D 9:00-"Tbe Rookies." Willis is shot in th e
back at a playground. refreshment stand by a hold·
up man hung up on spook movies.
TV DAILY LOG
Monday
Evening
OCTOBER 2
'"'ooo mm-0 PMlltrMI "Thunderhead Sw!n·
ii•"
(•d'¥) 'J~P1t O'Brien, Humpf'l"J'
Boc1rt.
l:lO m Mm Cimtin Show
1:00 I) (J) Mere's luq Uncle Hury,
unable to find 1 :urtishctory subsli•
tule Matl•ry durin1 Lucy's ab·
Hftct, decides to like drastic
me1sures: he moves the UniQllt
(mp~yrnen! Age ncy inlo l llty's 0 (I) CIJ aJ PVC· UOllday Ni11tl home. Tht slill·tonvi1es.cinR Lucy,
FtotNll New Yort Glints 11 Phil•· who is confined to 1 wheelcha n,
dc1phia bales. brinp in her vocal a;roup loi rt-
0 Wild Wild Wut hearsifs in h<iptS 1hal lhe ¥Ofume
CD The flillbtortn will drivt Hairy out.
OJ lit111tr Pyle USMC B OJ m NBC Mo.it: CC) "8•·
ruiltd" (dra) '71-Clint £1stWOOd,
[j) U1. Smith and other NonMllM Gar1Jdina Pait, Elizabtth H.Jrtm111,
EE ltosq r1r1 Veronlu 10· Ann H•nis. A union 10ldier in-
flfl Hodppodit Lod11 juted d~1in1 the final days ol !he
Qf; Marberry ltfD civil war Is 1ided by I southern
xhooll1achet, with disastrous It · Q1) i.. Sepod• [lpoa runs.
UJ Thrt1 SIMia 0 Fo1um lo1ifl1 Ray .. Windmill"
1:31 CJ) CIS i W1lte1 Cron~ill White vs. R1t11I Cutltrrez 1n 1 bout
Qj: Mirv rtttlll Sllow 101 the C•hlornia li&ht·He1~JWei1hl
ID w., Ii lfttll S11ow litle. OJ liilll1111'1 llbH CJ) Thi Mw11turt1
(J)J CAE 0 @ aJ The Rcrotin ID ... ~n1 Tllilp Cilo• m Un ,.,.,., Para lttc11d• a;, JN11111 CaDH ct Tlie Vir1ini11 a ,, .. ""'' mo.. .... a;>"""'• P.iidal t..10 fJ 00 Dtris Dar SM
Q) Dtt 42 1'111 (I) Jtilll w~ The1tre m Uttlt 111e11t " m /lkft 1:aa 11 0 m """ (jj) llclk .. a, 8 .... : (C) (1111) "All Mlric.111 t.45 fl) Su CotM'dit F1...ftJ
Dru11" (jr1) ·~1u111 Wllttm1n, •
Jl111t ltf1ll. A sens;ifklfl·Utkin& 10:00'8 @ TH New 1111 c.lbr Siio.
TV tommenl1tor finds hlmselr !ht 1J m Ne.a ..
t1111t of .boll! ianiiltn •nd !JM ~ ,DIPtrtlMnl S ~ath Gn Rellec-Plllce 1!0fl ' An antique !Tlltror cuts mys-((} wiwilfi n..tre 1eriout rel1ections 111hen It sills lor
I Miit's u, UM? four limes l!s valu~ at an auction
I Len lllcy and the buyer is then murder.ed.
I°""" t i Jeannie 0 Cri!M FJ1frlter1 LAPO Ch1d f d
(ii) lalk't 72 Oavis, Ci!Y Attorney Roiu f.rne· g Fray Dliltlillt flt1111. l 4 C-Ounry Attorney John m Debllt Wllttls, llllll •IMI air Howard 1uesL Jte:k Rourke hast.s.
"Whit Is Ceramics1" Crldit c:ourte t!) '" Qu1rterbad1: A Ch11111nr
lrom USC Utenslon b1&111S 111ilh 1n ~~~...... · n. 1 OYtrview of ur~mics. ~ .... IJlllu •ntl rt
I!) £1 Alltor Tltflt Cara IM Mljef ii) Llld1 S.Mbll a Morlt: (t) ''Wllltl WitQ O.C· m Y•ritihll tor" (!) lll&dttl tf tlM St1
ail ht. J111 Pin1n1 IO:lO (f' AM the .•. Sdl!Mllt
DAILY PILOT SIAll fllloi. 'LIKE THIS' -Cherie Patch {right) gives an acting lesson to an uncertain
Louray Rodecker, while H. J. Parks busies himself with a joke book in a scene
fro m "The Torchbearers" at Soilt h Coast Repertory.
l'tledla Campaign Begins
Candidates 'Invading' TV
By JAY SJIARB V11'
NEW YORK (AP I -The
opening round in the time-
buyi ng presid.,tial campaign
on netw<>rk tele vision began at
NBC the night of Sept. II. ft
fc-atured a five--minute paid
announcement for Sen . George
McGovern.
Sunday night, the South
Dakota Democrat 's television
campaign moved into the 30-
minu te category on CBS with
;i film biograph y of him. The
lin1e was purchased by his
cflmpaign co mmittee.
Republicans with a fine
sc11.'.;e of irony launch their
firs! 30-minutC' sal vo for Presi-
denl Nixon Wednesday night
at ABC. Network officials say
the time was bought by
"Democrats ror Ni xon.''
RegardlesS of who buys
what. it makes an escalation
in the election-year barrage or·
paid polliical ads. After Nov.
7, the usual blandishments for
soap, beer and cars may ac-
tually appear soothing.
A SPOT check of NBC. CBS
and ABC last wee k showed
that the Democra ts a n d
Republicans already ha d
bought or committed
the ntselves to buying more
than seven hours or netv.:ork
tin1e by election day.
ll may oot sound like much,
but most of the ads are fi \'e·
minute spots - 38 for the
COP. 37 for the Democrats -
and have been l i be r a 11 y
sprinkled throughout .day and
evening viewing schedu les. .,
You can't miss t hem
regardless o( which way you
turn. Tonight. for example,
those tuned into NBC's ·Mon-
~ay night movie will see a
fi ve-minute McGovern ad
v.•hcn the show is over.
It'll happen again Tuesday
v.'ith a five-minute Nixon ad
after CBS' Tuesday night
n1ov1e and a McGovern spot or
equal duration after NBC's
"f'irst Tuesday.''
If you miss that. \Vcdnesday
offers Nixon's 30-minute paid
carppaign on ABC at J p.m ..
backed up by the GOP's
purchase of five minu tes on
CBS after "Cannon."
JI goes on and the ad-
vertising tin1e fi gures com-
piled in a spot check of the
ne t wor k s are onl y
prelimina ry; they'll grow like
Topsy.
Johnny Carson Wed s,
Marks 10th TV Year
RIGHT NOW the figures
show the Oen1ocra1.s neck and
neck with the we a I~ h, e r
R epubli{":tn.~ in paid netv.:ork
ads -thrr.e hours. 45 minutes
for lhr GOP and only fw o
n1inutes less for the
D:'..!moera ts. llOLLYWOOD (UPI )
.h1hnny Carson. at a loth an-
niversary party of hi s
"Tonight Show" an nounced he
'vas married Saturday ;if-
ternoon to Joanna Holland in
nearby Santa Monica.
ev<.'n his clo 'icS( friends by an-
nouncing the private cerc-
mon ". It \\'as the ·fi rst ma r-
brunette llliss
Both sides <lllPC'fl~ to hciv<'
ill \'ested the heav iest at CBS:
the GOP has bought two hours
riar:e !or the and 10 minutes there so far
ll'llland. and ·the Dernoa-ats two hours
Among his friends at the and 45 minutes, including
party along with several hun-f\1cGovem's Sunday show.
dred lumin aries were: Jack ABC is in secorxl place with
...
By TOM. TITUS
Of tM O.lt't' '°'llt S1aH
Almost since the dawn or
20th century comedy, any
particularly hilarious acene in
the modem theater has been
likened to the second act or
"The Torchbearers." Such
c o mparison Wlderstandably
whets one's appetite for the
original standard by which
today's comedy i!: measured.
Wonder no more. South
Coast Repertory ha.s unearth-
ed ancf unwrapped George
Kelly's classic face, preserv·
ing it in its original 1920s
form, as its opening pro-
duction of the 1972-73 season.
It may well be the most
hilarious production on the
SCR stage since "Tartuffe."
"The Torchbearers" is a
pointed lampoon of "little
theater" -which must be
distinguished from community
theater as practiced pro-
lifically in Orange County; for
there is quite a difference.
Kelly's prime targets a r e
those rank 11mateurs who have
no idea what they're doing but
1vbo. in Albee's words, carry
on as though they did.
\\'ILLIAf\1 BLACK, in his
first directorial asiignment
for SCR. has mounted a ster-
ling production rich in
ensemble excellence. It is
vir tually impossible tr:i absorb
all the comi c subleties on a
single viewing of this farcial
smorgasboro. a f3ct which
may motivate many return
visits to the Costa MCsa
theater.
Of all the deli cious
portrayals, the m o s t in-
teresting (mind·boggling, if
you prefer) is that of little
theater group's gntnde -dam&
directreSS:. pla yed by perhaps
the company's pr cm i ere
dramatic actress, C h e r i e
Patch. Miss Patch. whose flut-
tering hand movement s so
fl~riched her Blanche in "A
J)iisuey Role
HOLLYWOOD !UPI)
Earl Holliman will star in
Disney's "Big Enough." an
1890s drama for the 197'2:·7!
"Wonderful \Vorfd of Disney''
television series. (f) S,.t4 Ract1 0 Tai' lldi m '"" Adn1tturr 7-.Jt fJ .lollrMJ Man1t'1 Stttt4 Up •n4 (f~ San Ditto UntHn11tiolle1 ti tr
CllMt' &b Cr1111 111e111. fD Flflfll LlM
It was the third ma rriav.c
for the late-night talk show
personality who was ·bc in;:::
honored on the 10th ::in·
rivrrsarv of his sh l\V \l'ilh
Benny, Lucille Ball, George 61 GOP and 37 Democratic !-,:==========
Burns, Don Rickles. Jerry minu tes. NBC is th ird . 'vith
Q Tiie New Price /1 llPt f_~ UM: 'Tll• Dtstft lib" (dr1)
CJ) Tltt r1r111t '•• ·~-IHdurd Burton, .limes Muon, t\BC.
t'='t UlHlon $ M!Wit: "Tilt NUtd P) Sli Sc.IN Uuring his :ic·knowl'..'dri:in~ -d"'R (t' .. , '61 -Ctry CooPtl, t1:'I 0 d s b I !'eboll~ ;;u, ~ 111 ftOI poi man I rema~ks:_ Carson surprised
Foxx, Don Adams. Ca r 11 Rein<'r. Bob N('v.·hart and hislr ========"-'==
sidekick on the show, Ed
Street.car N a m e d Desiffl,"
prove.s henelf a mistress of
the exaggerated gesture, il· -
hntratlng her every word with
a sweep of the anru -
sometimes Hilariously out of
sync and punctuated on OC·
casiort tiy tbe inhabitant of a
cuckoo clock.
Ellen Elliott enacts the
heroine of the show, an
average housewife who suc-
cumhs to theater fever when
brought into the play to fill the
role vacated by a recently
widowed actress. Miss Elli-
ott's approach is honestly
refreshing ; she finds the
whole thing llilarious and
breaks periodically into an at-
tack of the giggles.
HER SKEPTICAL husband,
who bursts her balloon with
sardonic delight, is played
glibly by William Brady.
Brady takes the role of a ·
devil's advocate, preventing
the opening night atmosphere
from becoming loo heady. and
he is an effective counterpoint.
IN THEA TIE #4
CADEMYAWARD
INN£R Ronald Boussom, that young
master of physical comedr. is
a comp4ete ana total riot as
tl1e bumbling prop man who
creates most of the com ic
rrustrations of that incredib ly
fuMy second act. H. J. Parks
turns in a fine performance as
the leading man, th ough a bit
~re irriability mi::!ht deepen
his character somewhat.
b.emas presa its
Tile inevitable loud-mouthed
prompter with an overnat-
tering opinion of her O\vn im·
portaDCe is well done by Ann
Sie n fl • Sch\vartz. Louray
Rodecker is a beautifully inePt
ingenue. while John Ellington
and I..au rence Kulp flesh out
the ir nii nor roles. Rochelle
Savitt as the widow. Janis
Jamison as the maid and
Steven DeNa ut as the harried
he Garden
the
inzH:ontlnl
~·•'-" ~ OY.l.MCAMl«llfioo ·~
"SUEH GOOD FRi,ENDS"
~EDWARDS
THEATRES
stage manager cnmplcte the 1 ···. · • comn<>n • COAS W#Y. liT •AC 11 11..::i • ,,.. y. tfEWPOftT BEACH • 644·0160
Tll,\T NOTORIOUS second
act is, as might be imagined ,
the open ing night of the pro-
duction \\•hen everything that
could possibly go wrong does.
Viewed from backlit.age.-as ,1n1uu11i•1111t'
Miss Patch vainly attempts to :!::::;:::::::;!;'";.,.;...,..:;:;;::;::;:
orchestrate her actors whil~ lfll flAHO• ~ c1
du.aster strikes from all sides.
it is a continual circus, a com-
ic master\\·ork fla1\•lessly pcr-
fonned.
Emerson A d a m s ' c::in·
vertible drawing roo1n set is
skillfully constructed, th~ugh
the necessity of completely
dismantling it for the second
act escapes the viewer. Period
costuming by Magg i (no
surname listed) is rich in
musty elegance.
the ultimate trip
200f: A SAi\CE
ODYSSEY
"Tile Torchbearers" is a
land ma rk comedy that re-
mains one of t h e de finitive
plays of its century. Its pro-
duction at South Co a s t
Repertory may send other
thea ter groups scurrying: to
the library to rediscover ot~e~
works of George Kell y. It O"fl·I
ti nues Wednesdays through
Sundays for four more v.·eeko; 1 i ,..,,
(JIWlliJtlnfdORi Jl:OO~QIJJ· Oai>m(DNm. ·~. -. ,_j"U™"'·[ m 1toa•'• "'*• r~, ®'Ke.. _
I 0r1rntt O Ocie ~, llJOfli
CIMspirila (J) Mtnll1I Offltli
Lewis. Rowan and J1,1artin, Jill the GOP committed for 34 ~°'
Pt .. John \\·n f:·~hcr. Re<ld ~~n~~~s and the Democrats .·' l
0 Mc~1ahon.
Carson was presented with
an II -laye r cake, and a wag
s::olrl . "this is one way to make
NBC Coot the wedding reCep.
lion ~nd put it on the tat)."
MIWl'Otf MACll -.... -,. r,~.lw•• u~. hlo .. 01. ,_.,,, ~wport Blvd .. Costa r..~~~.:___ I ma. _ at the Third Step Thea\'2r, 1';27 t MIM'. J I II
NATIONALGENERAL i ~~';:':!' OCIUT T'°'I CHI CH'UAN C•I f:.J litw.e: fC) "Wt Jo!nld tltt
Arb PfOl•sJOf Mirshall Ho'o leteh· "~Y'f" icom) '&2-Ktnftelh More.
H Jl week! ol fund1mtntils of !ht m Trutll " Ctn11q11tncei
I I m""• ncren "''Y POPul1r Chln1u eJef· Ii •~ Ma"'-ol• dse/IPO(I mon111tnl. ~J """' m Tiit Adnnl~ltt' m '-'mtr ltd Arrn1t1u1
ti1i11 Ml11111Jto Vllfa $Mw 11:15 El) lllltt Cla111t1 1
llM&e1111 F111111y ll:JO fJ (j)CIS Lttt Mowlt: (C) "Pow· :J:•ew · ,,,., ... , .. 1._ Judi· ..,..,. <11r1) ·10 -RDd 1•11o1,
Mtnt" MutlfOW fl•lllOll Bltri) Dennis Cole, Mld11et M1111.
11M irilb 1 dtep llUdCI, IOH iun~ f'il. t'ffl m JtillllJ CIMI C.!if°'.".
111"1 fOt 1 llmple Pio& flll!lfll 1 1 n11 • Goift™!f Ron1 ld R1111n 111111 ~•tt 1wm11rn Windom) · a~d join show bniMS1 llOl•b!e1 In a
lf!OllllCh rtttui and Htwty ~llo lrt uhdl to Johllty 011 lib 10th tnnl.
"ISLAND
MAGIC"
FANTASTIC NIW SU IFING
FILM lty L. Joti11 Hltckec•
7:JO & ':JO lACH lYlNING
Tht '111 Ceor11 Butns, St1t1111f Oavi1 Jr. Je1fJ , .......
Ttlrf•I'"" lilaJe• l..U. Doll Rldlles. Dan Rowen an' ' •
Carson was granted *1 un-
cont es ted divorce from his 8el'-
ond \v ifc. Joanne Carson, in
New York last June.
ANNI IANCIOn
flftt111 111 lot 1bten1 Mirsht1 Oil1ol wn1ry Uiow. Cuestt include Ca1ol w.·
I ili m u.._11 · """'· JO """· jDfy Blsf'toll, 67J""J''f
• ...,.._. c ...... Dick M1rtln. I
1111 "·: n Wilt «. hrllH ... ms .... C••tt M...,., I HWO. TV TH .. ATRE ''1Mtvl. "Tttt ltwlw I .. ~ COJIC»tA OIL~ .. -* Liiiian Hrl' ·7 ~,'~ Pow· ig MM:; "As the Su·=~"" I Jc1aph E. Lt1vi11a Prtt•11h "THE GRADUATE"
trluf dr11r.~ CTtiE R ta11v1 ·&0-e11n Ro11ei150n, M1111 ''Thumb Trirplng" PART Of TW. FOREST ""'"·
ID Q'1 HcltYWll " T•'ITld•• Tiit· mT•Tllltlll huth lt9fff fl
-ALSO -
LIZA MINNILll ... '"-h P t ot t•· J ,....,, Shwtt""' 7:00 & 1 O:ZO
... """' er II 8 ,,. °'~" 1:00 D (JJ """ olllf McG~i" any SUlllvtn AIM
111e1 ""'"' 1o1~Aa lllf '" 11crri tz:JO A Hirw., Pltfll ''The Steagle '' PflChicllol Of LHll11 Mll:r1111n'1 hi! II) C.urmy Musk Tln11
•f'Ndw11 "'7. Or11111 eq11tort1 1ht U:OO m Mwki: "tt't 1 Ill Ctu11tr(' Wtt\
"THE STERILE
CUCKOO" HuOblria. • l'ttdbtny ~llNNI (dr•) ·sz -Gtry Cooptr, Jlntt lkliletd 1Hfet11i•
f1MJty ltdni rulfl 111 ltlt d«UM o1 lti&h. [lh11 hfry111ctr1. 1·~ •• ~;~·~,,~,~~~~ii:: lht "Oli Soutll." J:)O 8 lilfwk: .. ., .... Jilftlf hi ate.•"
8' JIN(llt *.. (mlll) ''1-tred bl111t, R••1 lby Cl L4 kW'... llOl'lli. I m-..: C2'wl ''Ctllu C1iW1" o ,......
Monday
DAYT1111£ MOVIES
•
lZMD "lreltle N w, ..... 1~"'1
''1-R., Ml!l111d, T1rt11 Wrllhl
l:te···--· l"'l .,,._ '111in1 MIJ'dt111. .io,. Plitt.
l:Jll 8 "1111 .... ... _.
(ii'•) 'Jt..-Giof&t ltlf'I. (Jltll °'"'· ........... _, ... , ...
.. --. S14DIUM f '-· .... •, ----.. St4D!UM ,' ' . -· .... . --- -~· StAD/UM·J .
' •.ne 1u · • ---.. StADIUM ·d . -........... -
"THI HOUSIWrYll lll~llt'" • "Stvt• MlltUTIS'' !Ill
"IU.UOHTllt" Ull • "IOk (411 lliltTHI." IJll
ALSO N
"BLESS THE BEASTS
AND CHILDREN"
VANESSA llDGIAYI
GLENDA JACKSON
"MARY QUEEN
OF SCOTS"
RICH.AID IUlfON
GENEVIEVE IUJOLD
"ANNE OF THE
THOUSAND DAYS"
Dane b" Dunn
Pat Dunn l!CIS :hings done .
Throw her your challenge
11nd see how she h0n''ies It in
Sundav's "Al Your Service"
column.
Comfortably Air Conditioned
I I
''"' lrftlll/tttlll .,..,_ ""IUU•HTlll"
"IOX CA• llllUIA"
.... "' C...., ti: I
WlD.lf56 -l -10
~.t.l &SUN.1·4·6·1 ·10
Woody Allen's
"Evel'}'.thing ®>Vual~ wanted to know about
* Plos SHOtT SUIJECT
&IOAD IUNNH
CAtTOON 111
' •!O J "•·-·· .• ,. .... • '3S..7I01
WKDAYS 6:'5
S4T & SUN. 1'2,AS
ACAOiMY AW.lll:O Wtffl
GUf:HA(KMAN ln
'"FRENCH
CONNECTION"
Also
•-'---"='-"'--==-Plvl I•'" McP•-U I•
"(OlltUISt 0' lMl PlAlllt
0, '"' "''S" ALIO SMOWINI Al IDWAIDS
ClllEMA WIST I 2·WflfMtNStfl
Af liOlDUIWlSl. llt-tttt
ACAOlllT AWMD WllNl911 8ui ilir1 one. .... CWtulM OMifl ·---·---····Nlc1101a ...
AJexanllr•
. • • • .. • I •••••••••• ....... ¢"' . "••l•• . . •IT C .... , -9.'9 ......... ..
••r·•lo09 "-"VNf'IN•tON ••kH
..
l
'
• .
Everyone Has
Somethinq That
Someone Else Wants
DAILY ·Pll 01 CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With 11 Want Ad
·The Biggest Marketplace on the Or.ange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results . '
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
A 8 Bdrm. & family rm. home with that
"much desired feature " . , . a sit.down view
o! the entire h.arbor. , ............... $59,000.
8ROADMOOR· ESTATES
Spectacular ocean & bay view home. 4 Bel·
rrhs., formal dining rm., family rm. & lovely
patio. 3 Car garage ... one w /overhead door
to rear yard. Property vacant, ready for new
buyer. . . . . . ........ .' ......... $78,500.
Conveni<'nt parking -easy to be
!I. ''DROP-IN" at Bay It; Belich Realty 675-3li00
MACNAB
IRVINE
BAYFRONT
CONDOMINIUM
Beautitul 2 BR.. u n I l .
Magniflcent Harbor It
Ocean view. 'deal for a
couple. Boat alipe available.
Clotle to jelly. $84.500. Tom
Queen 6+HD). (Gl3).
COSTA MESA
~OYFUL LIVING
Charming 3 BR. -2 bath
home. CClnverti.ble den .
Near schools. Won't last!
$33.950. (Gl4l.
DING·A·LING
Just one pbone call Will give
you all the info · on this
smart. Sharp Baycre at
home, $64,950. Loia Miller
642-8235 < G21).
HARBOR VIEW
HOMES
General
JUST REDUCED ...
••• CAMEO HIGHLANDS
Just remodeled 3 bedroom, 2 bath. dining
room (or family room), fireplace, cheerful
bullt·ln kitchen with Inviting SUNQF.cK fo.r
your en~rtaining pleaslln!, overlooking the
canyon & view of lhe ocean. One-of..a~ldnd
in CAMEO IDGHLANDS . . . . . . . . $67,950.
TRIPLEX •••
• • • DANA POINT
View the ocean from this BRAND NEW tri·
plex in ever·growing Dana Point. Two · 2 BR,
2 BA; One · 3 BR, 2 BA. Very good RENT AL
UNITS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $75,00Q.
v. ~-Slltid,
~ JllllASSOCllTIS
REALTORS
21:11EAST~
COllONA DB. MAR, CALIF.
644·7270
l~I -~-I~ I
li.aMral
4 -UNITS
• EASTSIDE ·
2 Bedroom &eparate hou5es
on large lot. OWner will
trade up for a.ix 01' more
units. Equity of f.l),{Q), Call
fot details.
$63,500 •
New pert
ot
···lrvlow 64Ul11
'"""""''
$28,500
6°/o LOAN
General
RARE APPEAL
Ea.stidde channlng J Bdrm.,
f.amily room, ffl)lc., Laric
patio "'ilh hti~·k l:kt.r-B-Q •
great for o utdoo r r n-
tert11lnin&; plua a.lll'y ai..,'t'u.
Only Sll.500.
FIXER-UPPER
Can Be A DOU... HOUSI!:~
2 BR. Near N'pt Hei&hta
Aakif1': $22,5(,'(I
CALL 0 '"'·2414 91•'*" llALTY Nt•r N•w,•rl Pe1t Offlt t
GREEN THUMB
SPECIAL
You c1tn O\Yn the wlleSI p1oc
rrtt in Meu clel r.lar, sur-
rounded \\'ilh lui;.h land.!!CaJ)-
ing: :uid your o \\' n
greenhouse i\l!IO inC"ludc1 a
1·ha rmtng J Hdnn homt>.
Priced rtght nt $32,500.
CALL ANYTIME Msume 6S~ VA apr loan now
on property and 1 our
monthly paymentt: are leas ~or Eve. 541-9'16
South of Hiqhway
Duplex CDM
EsN.>llent location. \\'alk 10
beach and s h o pp i n i,'..
PreRnUy onr 2 hellroon1
UIUI and " bad\l'lor unit,
•'ront C'OUld be 3 brdroom
a nd gsragl'. 18 aJt"l'ady
strellSt'd for garage spar!·
n1cnt. Be$! pr1r:e for thia
location at $65,000. S'Tl-8560.
1-0)' T HE REAL \"-'. EST ATERS ' . . . '
Golf Course Home
Largt a BJt, J !)3th.'(: fiirn1 Jy
nn. \\•/frpl., fom111l din. 1111
Vk"N of ~1esa Verile ('oun·
try ('lull. O\\•nt'r huild 1•11<t
ni.'"' honu•, \\Ill t'011s1d•'r '
long "~' or ll'aiie/back
fron1 purcha.!it!t. Call us for
detail& & a ppl. 10 Stt.
Gener el
UP FOR GRABS
3 bedrootn, 2 bath, MW !thl:ll;
carpet anrl fl"f'!ih J)ll lnl.
An)'one can lake over thr
VA )Of.n and Sl.58 fK'T nl(ln!h
p.'l,)'• au. Grab rtilt Wa..lktr
& L1'f' f'Xd11&1vc "°"'. at tht'
pri<-r of DJ. 950.
C:::::,:.11tr,,'. 'l!
Open Evrs
.~--0\\'SER mu11t ll'll sewnl
thllusand be1ow m a r k e t
allo11.·l' for redecoratlna;. J
~p;ICIOO!I bl'dmom• + dcm,
lart."-' family room w!U1 1
l1replaCt', a d di t ional ,
llreplatt ln Rracious llvlng
room. Sumnier p&rt ir11 In
the pnt}o. Jr. ~•t a I r
.::rnunds -pa r k-hk1•
l•ncl~nplng. Nt"er library.
beach, 11ehools ' shopping
BRK, $29,950, }4&-112:>.
Bayfront COildo
% BAY & BEACW Hf ALTY
NEWPORT BEACH
Excellent upgraded 3 BR.
home! Oversized krt. J6 1G-,.,.-.-.-l--------,-.,-.-,------
trees, roee garden. Next to liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
than rent and include taxes,
interekt, in~ and prin-
ciple. Lovely home with 3
SJIQ.CiouS bedrooms, 2 be.thl,
l'legant firepla~ in gracious
Lachenmyer
CORBIN-
MARTIN
3 Br, 2 Ba, pool, ,1er I all p.
Delightful 179.500
6 EMERALD IA Y
""~' _, ~··· ..... ' .. greenbelt! Priced for quick
Gen1ral ~------t aale! Laszlo Sharkany General ~<HM!OO. CG18).
oflnJa Jj/e
PRESTIGE WATE~fRONT HOMES
53 Linda Isle Drive
Elegant 5 bdrm., 4'h baths ; on lagoon. New
carpets, dra pes & wallpaper. Lovely garden
& large slip . . . . . . . ............... $212,000.
For Complete Information
SPYGLASS PLAN 74
3600 plus sq fl in thia 5 bdnn,
4 ba, plus bonus rm home
on 11. V.J.P. location. Cenl:l'al
air cond., intercom &: built·
In record player, No-wax
vinyl, shag carpeting, Wal·
On All Homes & lots, Please Call : -ntU cabinets ln kitchen, pool·
11zed lot &: l>reath-takina: BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR ..... ol ocean .. """'"""'· 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 6754161 io: can c~ebrate the holl--l"!""""'""""""""""""~""""""""'""'""""'"""I .la.. in your new home. Call G.neral General ry,·, 1'L"ifl.OOO i.ncludlng land.
REAL
ESTATE * SEVEN UNITS -at $42,000. $560.
J_ross income. X~t-lever age.
mo.
e LICENSED SALESMEN e
interested in working the Newport
please contact Vic Jashinski .
area,
* 3 BDRM. near ocean .. * 4 RDRM . near ocean .
. .. $26,900.
. ... $54,900.
\ ~~~-Westcliff Dr., N.8 . 6'S.7221
I General General
PRICED TO SELL
Sec this really sha rp 4 BR., 3 ba. home in
WESTCLIF F AREA. Enjoy 2 frplcs .. &
large fam . rm. Lovely poolsize yard. You
O\V~ the land . $72,500 . Bud Austin
LUSK-HARBOR VIEW
5 Bedroom 2-story, view, poo_l. Profession~
ally landscaped & decorated. Better hurry
on this -it's a beauty ~ Jim Muller
DO YOU NEED 5 BEDROOMS?
lh Corona del !\1ar High area, 'vitb 3 ba's.,
fa ni. rm. & din rm ? We have it at !66.000.
For· app't. call lloward Well s
JUST LISTED -VIEW
Turtle Rock '1Pres.", former model. Has the
look you've been waiting for; 4 BR., fam.
rm. Super kitch. 2 Patios. Prof. lndscpg.
$82,500 -Fee. Paul Quick
COZY COTTAGE -Corona del Mir
Under $40,000. Walk lo the beach. Mini·
mum up k e e p. Good 2nd home. Cbarm
galore. Brick rrplc. 2 Bedrms. Triona Bergin
FROM LAGUNA TO NEWPORT
~ Arch Bay-2 llR., D.R .. ocean view S64,500
big Canyon-fabulou~ home site . $69.SOO
Monarch Ba~ Terrace. 4 BR., F.R., · pool,
view. Cathedral ceilings . 3 Car gar. '89,750.
Coll Bob Yorke
BAYSHORES CAPE COO
Great area & home for best family llvln~.
Roomy 4 Bdrm. w/den & form. din. rm .
Just steps from private bay beach. $69,500. Mary Harvey
LIDO ISLE -ON WAZIERS
Flexible n oor plan - can be 3 BR., study
& den or 5 BR. lmmac. & well maintained;
beams, r harm, lovely patio. $85,000. Char·
lene Whyte
LINDA ISLE LAGOON
Exciting new 5 BR. home on Unda Isle. 3
Frplcs .. 2 wet bars, electronic °""n. Totally
upgraded In all areu . Eileen Hudson
--Coldl;.sel, ....
~
SSD NEWl'ORT CINTIR DR.. N.I.
or Action •.• Call
REALTY
Univ. Parle Center, Ixvlne
Cail Anytime, 833-0820
OU\ce hour• 8 AM to 8 PM
CORONA DEL MAR
Just listed!
Spacious J bedroom home
With downst.a.irs
family room and
upstairs living room
Just 2 blocks from
the ocean
Vuco nt & ready tor
$72.500 -10% Down
' .
IN J~',''.'1 ·.·
. .
REALTORS
SINCE 1944
673-4400
-EXECU11VES-
RENT TILL •
YOU BUY
Owner v.111 rent Ulil huge 2
years youn& 2 story, 4
bedroom. pool home and
~i\'4? credit towards the
down payment with each
month'• rent. Owner must
aacrlflce fur p fl r 11 o n a l
tte80ns. If you are 8hort on
dov.'ll payment, don't mW
thls one in a mUUon chance
to own your home.
~·· ·1· 11 ''ll ..........
Realton 646-T111
2043 WHtclJff Dri\'fl
Open till 9 PM
· HERITAG E
Hf /\lf()RS
•
.. '
> .. ' -•
1·•1 ,..,_ ....
_,
A. uNICJUI: tl{)MI:
BUY BY THI; B.l;AUTIFUL BEACH
Just roll one block . down Orchid, past In-
spiration Point and onto the sandy shores
of Big Corona Beach from this cu~ three
bedroom, two bath used brick charmer.
There's room for your ideas in this one and
the owner-builder-seller will help you im·
plement them. Asking $67,500.
CONTACT UHl9UI MOMU el COIONA DIL MAI, 6714 ...
~ .. i ltor REALTORS 644-7662
uv;ng room. G 0 u 'm • t • • ;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~ Exclusive Address
pride bu\ltin appliances in-TRAVEL BUG BIT
lmmaC\l.lal• 3 Br + lam nn
Vit'u· Redueed to $129,500.
Tod Hubert A Aa-.
3411 Vla Udo &Th-850 •
elude dW.wu ..... Beautiful '" "'""'"'" Bal c ' .. t *JUST LISTED* thick padded shag carpeting Owner arudous to t11kr of! in ™'ighborhood. •·1m rime of· lmmac. 4 Bedroom, 2 balh
thruou t . A'ttracti~ hil nev.· molor hon1t' and fl'TC(I. Custom 3 bfKlroom hlinli.' on qulrl t-orner lot.
landscap('d yard and patio. wanls h~I 1111per sharp J "'ilh 21 ~ ha.th!!. ImnUlculatl' cozy kltrh Ir family rooni,
BRK S«rlntl. · ~room famUy roon1 hon1r l'Ond!tion fn And out. At-ti.>ani ('f'lllngi and ct11.ckli u ·
&Old fast Shake rool. bl()('I\'. lrar tlvc slale e"lrv. Chan n-uM!if brick fi~plRtt . \\'1d k
v.·all fence, firt'place and ln1:; dffOr v.·ith t~ Interior to ~·~. subn1l1 all tt·r1r TARBELL lots of rxtrtts. ~ this 011(' ht-11utifully V.'l'lllptt)>f't't'd, All • $33.0Cl'.l. CALL !'>L>-8121
293S Harbor. Cost& Mesa fir'!lt ll.I $31,950. rlf.'<.:tri{' buil t-in kit1·h.>n. SOUTH COAST HF:Al.l'(IH '
Call ·~1·•1 (Open· Eves l 111111 pla-"A'On•t l··t. at on· "U"-FIXER ~ ~ . " -THE BLUFFS • 4 BR . ly S58.COJ. Call 673-8550. I nonus rm.. .smoy 1 n1 . ,11 2-STORY n1al din. rm., blt ·!n l>t!•
Pool $17 7501 Prlv. rare!"" pal io. Grr ' • ========= [ "'" ,.,~ .. May '"'""· Bey this 2-story ba!'1'ain """~~~~""""'"-I REAL ESTATE NO DOWN PAYMENT OR -ESTATE
ONLY S!m. v.·hicheve.r \\'flY * WATERFRONT * Ap prox. 212 Acres with • TREASURES PIER & FLOAT IKJI \\'"'"lllf. Nk •i L"1 YOU quali fy! INCLUDES . I 2liOl1 Ml, ft. 3 Bedroon1, 2 ~
\rASllEP., DRYER AND :ilodf:>rn, inimaculnlr. l-lt'Vt' Bath I ~. FI r e pl n l· c . * * DUPLEX * * U ~l"'U-" li()US:~ f!E•~ItlGEll..\TOR, T OO ~ homl' on R-2 Joi. Jo'rplr., SMkr Roof. N c w pnrt 3 n n . i' dl'n. rl1n. 1
1"1111111 ..,, L IT'L~ PLUS S\Vl~I,\fING POOi.~ .... A. ll('al. Quiet l'UI rte !Ult' Harbor High School 1 ll\\'nrr'1 wul. L 0 \'!'.:I.
REAL l!STAJE flurry lo 11ee call 645-0300. street near Lidu xl1Uf>!i. Im· Oistrici. Offer~d lor l \'ARD. Al11'1 l-Bll. ninul
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ili!i!!ii!!iii!!i!i!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I m('f\. oc1.:upan1:y. S'l'l.~. sn>.cm. Call 646-0:i.15. ki'f'p )'OOt ()i\}lt-1.,
G•ner•I 1_ ,.•r1tl Abiientff owr11•r • :i )' ~ • 1 E S.l1.7SO •• ,.,,,..,. 11" BALBOA BAY PROP
Call rn.3663 ,,,__ E.... • (!1 'tilll * * 641-7491 * * * * * * * * -------=J~ ~~u~~';~ ~; * TAYLOR co. * -~· DESPERA~(O<W1U<O. :i::1~:~·~
CllOICE BA YCRESI' COR· TO SELL NEf.0 ......... 1, ,,.,._,
NER T full •-I TAKE IT EASY Chvtll'.r mulit move to ck>Jlf'rl Hf'a l &Intl' RlllMI pt.l"IOn tor -aste y....._vr•tcx 11ctlvr lo1w t'Sllblllhtd ol· . LIDO ISLE
A summer haven -large south patio. Bright
and cheerful throughout. 3 BR, 2 baths. 35'
Lot. Ask $'76,500. Would consider lease/option.
J bedroom home with l11rge in this 3 bl'<lrn1 2 ha th \I Ith frw henHh reallOftll. ~ Hit , flrt. Salt"• & ttntall. llial'lfl
fonnal dinlne room and 1111 huillln!li, Jllllin. <1ooh1t• I 2'~ HA, l11e. Cll tlllfl n1-e11, Rrulty. l";rac:c "'rllll\;kfi•n
family room. Be a u ti f u I gnraft'r, <'lubhou!k' It pool11 f frpl. le xtru lrt:. )'I.I. Good Flltr. 8 P•Ml Aw, 8albo;1..
\1'11.llpo.pen, carpeting 1ind CONDO. for 8 lou', 10\\' I i 'oonta.Jn Vt11ley locatlon.1. 673-l:l'.lO. ''Our 21th Veer'' custom draperies. Slate en-priCf" of S20.!2$o. CAU~ All lt'nn1 • Prict only ~-,,...-;:-..,----
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors lry -designed for ton-Qul<'k, v.vn't huit , a1:1 raal! '31.9:.0. B•lboe Penlntul•
ll'rtain;.,,. "ttia le Her" 0 .. 1 ........... of thl• plan avail COU.lNS k WATTS, lNC. 1111 Son J-ln Hiiia Rood
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
~... UV ........ ..,,2 ss-• "1ATERt'"ft0:00.'"l' 46 ti. Plt"f \\'Ork~ho~ $72,500 Call 54G--l l.U !Open E\'H. I 79 • t..• ,.., _,,
* C & W * • no.1. !),mo tq. n. s1 ..........
Gener•I
GRECIAN
SPUN DOR
"Pride Of Ownenhlp" sur·
rounds thil newly listed
rlch.ly de<:on.ted 3 bedroom
2 bath beavty. Warm th&&
carpets covet' the rich
--.. walnut pa..nellng, fireplace stve•
you that wann hamey at·
moaphere YoU'w alweys
wanted. Outdo·or1 , a
beautiful POOL wlth cabana
aurrounded by oranre tree..
shade trees and I u s h
Iand9eaplng. AU of thll and
only Sl.800. down will mow
you ln. HURRY!
G•nerel . PETE BARRETI °""'" • • s "'· m.""
REALTOR :\la,.,lvdl Rl'•l1)' frQ-'llJOO
THE HOUSE -442.5100 -WHOSE THE OCEA.'rnoNT. • nn. ; "" .
'"""""""""'""""'-""" LUCKY ONE? hun nn' V.l'I Mr. rlritanl ,I YOU BUY TODAY ------"" t ~
DOESN'T HA VE ~®s-M~~:G::~E 0;,:;'m': ~~"' ;;~:~ i;-;;., ... "' 11
"'
1
' • ,
TO IE FOREVER LIVING brflmom nntl ft1 mily rrinm Start with lhll adorable 3 When CONlnlCUon "!lj h<>t· 1 n4"1t1r SOOth Cout lllua. 11W' BAYSHOIES -
.... 11 the thcn1c at th\1 ter, lhC! equ lpmt'nl "'°"' 1-• bo 1 ., h 0 -GREAT BUY bedroom In one of llun-"'.. Y n ••Mt \,Q3ta bcauttf\J\ 5 bdm\ .. :! 11.--. INrdv, tht' twt'nt'r will M r II .-R-on · Besche• r I n e a t "''" ... 1 t"M, u pr~ SZi.500. u.o,., home. FratUrt'I lneludc 2 coo;ienat(' :o UPWJ!nl' bl! ON' ~115
&re&L Walking distance to ...... , ---In. Walk to · 1 Open £\'n. ma.ct1>r bdm1 II u I I e •, ;-• ...... ,.. beautiful Lake, Pa T' k 1. 1 1 d. 1 R .t--evf'""thlng. ThrM! A n d orrn• in ni , 1111'1""'"'"" '" equeltrian area1 and widr 11,,1~ rm., f)(>·Hililul tefll"I"· F11n1lly, $31,9;;0. C a 11
open a:peioeL Can you lion pool, c1tl-1le:·11!lr ,,.. 11n1! 564--2113.
beliew aU this for only room for boat or 1rn1Lcr.
$28,950. Bullt...ina, fl~plare, Only 2 )Tl. olll llllll In
lush landa:aplnr and in one pt"rlcct {'Onditlon. f' o r
of tM moat progreulv~ tunher rlt-talls . , ..
school dl1Crict1. llurry .,n Ct1 1l 54&-1\~ <()ptn Evr.-:. l
tbiJ one -111hy not t'a11
N"OW, ~
. THr: Rf:AL iZ rsTATERS
• HERITAGE
REAIT ORS
o ·Tl!E REAL
""' L:STATERS
"N!EO SPACE FOR.
BOAT A TRAILER"
TARBELL
· . '·. HERITAGE
RE Ai.TO RS
---~ M&I IDMllntih&rp 1 ~ • 11> VA loao 1tw t:o.>Jldp J lllt l &\. le.
...,,., l8R + dton. 1 Aof7, l hld p;ol. Aoi. w,_ rrpb, °"""' -HKR d -•• Uf-41». '1IJ _, OWIW. -....
I
. . Dill Y PILOT MOfK!ar. Oetobtr 2. 1972
THE GREATEST A PLACE IN THE SUN PLUM .
BAYSHORE
TOWNHOUSE IN Al.L ORANGl-: COl"J'\TY . A suJ'lf'r .i . llfldroom. 2 be.th 1
• .. • ,1 ti ,.1,111 JK•w Sol Vista with ~ Ck~Ulll
Luw f-'ri1·1•
(>n\y
$19,990
150.000 1a11 ! l' · rool andprotL·~11l •1n.1I tt·a.Uk. approx 1 1111\"I \\•1th landscaping. AU you M'\I
lmprovt.'nu'nlli i::r•'111 l!• Pl for lamily fun. Only S44,7jl}, storr• 11hr". N1•v1·r lot.,•n 11)1'
iinll' bcro..,. ....... \.t.~ilOJ • HAPPY HACIENDA TI1C'11t' nl·1v horn!'s ::Jl'l' l1i.,·u r1·11
10 rnlnu1 1·~ !nun 111•' lk~1·h
& 1·l\}lll' !11 fl\.iJPr c.hn111uni,;
& JO;t•hOOl'I. Y11ur cllntlT of
carprting nli;o in<'ludtnK
1!1;.h1\'a~h•T ,ri:, hul]lu1i;, 5'.:..
[I.JI\ n 11 ptiyrnrn r ~ h·~s lhn n
.11:..000 11\V, Th u. 1 ... a 111u"l !>l'C
111r tho"t.' \\"Rll!l11g l<il" uf
lu'l:Ury fur ;1 rnodrr;1!(• ["ltH'C.
Call (or u1!orn1ar1011,
LOTSA GO &
NO DOUGH
SELL • V 1\, :1pp1n1 ... d •1
Bd11n, 2 t,IJ1, :;1 J_,I /'i('rp11nr.
li.fui;t be ~"Iii. "" 1 ·r 1t1~1
look joli us 11.Jtl! ,. 1 l11rr 111
\Vyon11ni:.
~~!~~ard
Since 1M6
Downt.wn COlr. M ...
1171
HAlllOR 642-2991
WE ARE
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE
SPECIAL
Hui;C 2 slDry, ~ den+ or ;,
bt.-dlwm e.-.;ecul1ve's hon1c.
Costa ?.lcsa·· best orca.
Near BatcaJ·lc School. Very
nice b.1c1< yard 111 11 qlli{•!
art•a. :'\o lki11 n tc. qun.lif1N.1
veterans. CALL N 0 \V
BErORE TillS 01'\E IS
GONE. Priced nt $13,000.
Rcalton 545--9-lfll
0p<"n r:\"es
BARE FACTS
Tile root, bl.'<1111 f.'{>J11r11;s.
i;,'0111p!l'.'t('ly '"t1H<"<I yard.
1v1C1br fir,.placc. '1
bt.>tlroon1s, r1u111ly roon1. On·
Iv S6300. Ct1sh lO rx1sU11~
VJ\ loan.
C,\LL ~~.;.)S
•• 962-5523
Clr Sto11 iiy The> sale>~ Orflrt'
LJ)rato•d tlll Nc>"'liUKI, lk·
hind SlatC'l' & ·raltX"n NEW ORLEANS tlll.LJNS & \\'ATTS, ll\C'
MANSION * C & W * 4 RN1room, 2':. bath, spiral--'-'--~~~~~==~
sta1rca.se, largt> kJtchcn, eu1· SPANISH HACIENDA
tlf'·sac lot with large pool "OL ' E ! ! "
only wr.soo. ~ lk'dnn. fantily tnl, only 2
POOL HOME yr s new. rully i1npruvt•d &
.i Bedroom, 'J ba th family upgradC'd-many decorator
room, dining room, ht">al<"tl 111.'tns. Low! \ov.·~ n1a1n-
and filten:.'fl pool. plush l<-nru1ee gruuo(ls w/h18h
:i;har;. xtra large yard. honl ld.~epg. Till• \l'arn1th ol the>
i;atc, GI approx S3a.OOO. buo·k y.~rd \v1!h 1f11 rntios
CALL THE REAL nnd l>C'n1.:hc>s \111! .:ivt· you
ESTATE FAIR, 1111· ft•rling ol CJhl J\1l'xleo.
536-2551 Only ~ n11ll· I!) ix•at•h. F'ull EXECU'~T~l~V~E~-llr1~·r $115,000. C'ALL ~ffi'.t.xS:1t
LIVING
In th1~ 4 be<lroon1 2.!ef ha1h
lo\\·nhoUS<", firepla('(', family
roont, dining room )Jlu:c
secluded courtyard, s"·inl·
ming pool, ~rroul'lrled by 21 BROKERS INC. at•re park Only
s;;J ,!fil)-namr your ll"rms. I --------~-
about this property; Sc.·llcrs CALL THE REAL FAMILY
are moving to horS(" ran1'h ESTATE FAIR, SPLASH IN
and \\'lll help bu,y{'r "ith SU.2551 "°'"· GI buycc $100 tol•I PRESTIGE HOME
costs. Lovely 3 lxlrm In OWNER ~ust scll. !>._lost * 5 Bedroom
print\! C.M. ;u~a. only breathtaking landscaping,
2
Bi: !h
$32.000 lill 1i•i;nis. OPEN unique IIT"CS, colorful shru_bs : 18 Jo~ p 1 _ Onl SI-I !;15()
SUNDA':i" 1 ln j 11n1 . 20th and 110\vel':'I. Large fanuty x. OO YI I h
St. & Tu~IHl Av., f .fll. l'OOm, 4 Bedrooms w ith in-A l)t'aut~lu!ly _upgrn( C( . l)ffi{'
CALL 812-1·118 viting Hr~pla~. di ri j n g lo Ix· lived 111 :ind C'llJoycd.
• ::t:: ••
•LUtllUI
17171 Bench Blvd .. 11.B.
Feeding
A Landlord
roon1 for banqu\IS or Jn. Nut 11110\hcr hon1e on ~hf'
timate can<lleli~ht nirals. 1n~1rkt"'t 10 L'Otnpurt• Call
()(>luxl" huiltin k '1 ch e n • NO \\' .'11\7-6010.
d1shwal)hcr. Jiandoon1e har.
Hobby room. Patio, BRK.
p),500. 962-886J.
GREAT POOL BUY FIREPLACE f\Te~ Del Mar 4-plex. Room Ik'nutiful Prcse!y P 0 0 L JN i\lASSl\'1:0: f\I ASTER
fur.a pool. Grt'at financinE;; -home, p r o t e ssion.nlly SU!Tf. or !his 5 llf'droon1, 3
lO'i'a do\l.·n. 2 bedrooms, 2 lanrlscaped, upgraded shag, tw.th, 2 story hOnll'. }o~(11mal
baths each. Full price 2 Ji1rge fireplaecs and \\'el dlning, enorn1ous !!lln~·
$62.500. 0\\'ll<'r will can-y bar. This home has ovl'r rooin 1v1!h rooltahlt', s111·ink-
2nd T.0. This \\'On't 11;1.st, 2700 sq. It. Hurry. Call lers front and rear, 1·ul·clr-
call us today! Sa(' sll'f.'l'I. Cln~1· lo !tu· C:::\\All<ER & llE hl'nrh. \' 1\ C 1\ N 1' Call
~~'(-14;~;. C::: .\A lliER & I H
Reallon 545-9491
Realtors ~5-046.'l Open Ev<'s •. ~· Open Ell('.!
OWNER transferred. Ligh1 FDR SALE and airy homt, 3 8J:)a('ious
RGE HOME bedrooms, 2 baths. F.legant1--------TE--D--A LA flrepla<e in family area ad· JUST LIS
3 BOOroom -:ll' Family jacent the buillin dreatn kJf. FASHION
Room \Vilh fircph1.t't' i>lus a chen, even a dishwasher. S
2Qi2IJ n1mpu!'I room . r:x-Lovrly p11rio. Tntmedlalt' SHORE
ccllent F.aKt~ldc Coslt1 1'1esn pogsl'SSion. No do1vn G.t. * 4 Slxiroom11, 2 Baths
location. First lime .-icT· 1erms !.,; lnw dO\\'n non-vcls, * 1-"an1ily & Dinln~ Areas
verlillCd at $35,950. 646-1171. BRK, $30,800, 8-12-2561. * Kids Cau \\lnlk lo ll<'al'h
1c ::::::.::c...::;:;;;:.:;__;_;__:_ __ * Assun1nhle r,~~'j; lJlan
,,G~·~rd:•~n::.;G:::.:_ro:v~•:_ ____ 1 * Bring All Offers $36,~
I· * Ct11l 847-0010 WHITE ELEPHANT l.!!"""P"'R"'E"'T"'T"'Y=B"'A~B~Y="'l3 tiMroom 1 bath homP,
Sharp 4 Bil le ran1 m1. Quiel i;harp neighborhood, nc«Js
11trf'<'I , nr sC'hools. !Ul()I~ & pain!. S.iOO. moves y(lu in.
ehurch. $1650 down. Only S2·1,500. Assun1e 7r: Gil iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
-GEMM~-~rALL THE REAL $19,600.
ESTATE FAIR, 2BR. lrl! 50· x 100· fncd lo!.
clce: bltn lt/O, plenty ol
1610 \\'. Coasl ll\\·y .. N.H.
rtr:ALTOJtS &12-'16'.n
534-255l eupbourd11, eulln~ bur. din SAVE! Huntington Beach rtn, ttnl Jiv rn1, 1\'/\\I sh11g
" "R ., b· ~-·n1um 1·rnts f.t. •lrfnt, fA hi, .. a .. ~ 11 co""'""1 BEACH LIVING from owner. A.'l!lumc our T S BEST uv1•rJiiZeil 1lhl ~ur.
loan lo\\' tlo\\•n nr• lfian A IT 1 '
ff'l'!I: Incl wlltl'; snltrnrr. Sh3tp 3 bNtroom. 2 2 bnth, I
V11rant, $22.~00 : .. 11'~176.1 or ""'v cafP('t$. bnat 1?<1tC', low
!>-l!H82!1. u1alntf'nance y1n•tl. \Vh111 962-4471 ( ;::) 546-1103
lllOl'e l'\JUld )'IJU <'Xf)('t'l fnr1 ......................... . ~fESA del J\hir '1 Iii'. 2 liA. only $39,500. (l\l/NER (lf'S IM'rall'. NO' 1lo\111
faun rn1 ., new plu~h crr11, G.f. 11•1.111s. l.il\\'-lo1v dow11
m11ny '''"1ri1~-S.1:;,000. f~y BARGAIN DAYS no11-v1·1 s: 1·;:.a·i11ni.; hotn•'
owner. Open hou:.e Sal. .'It. ARE HERE \Vlth a beautiful OOVt!l'l'<l nnd
Sun. By ft llfll thl'l't•itftl'r, ~ BNJroom., 2 bnlh, gocxl yard l"l'll'IOfled l)(tlin for y1':11'
fi5SSonn ru ll1I, j•ll1·1•131. l<ir iinly $26,900. St1lu1\lt round [)lr11~11rc . 3
LOVE'LY LRG 2 11ly -:mR. your i.•rms ll(W.'. Be<lroom~. rl<'n, all elrclri1·
hontC', 21\, ha, lrpl<', bl tin <.:ALL ;,.1:-r<.,t;iS "Aw"n1" hulltirl kllChl'11,
ICM kilCh di!h/Mth. ,.'urn. tllsh\Vll'i.ht•r. •I M'n.o;on p1t11n.
Hugt" yard. Sp r I n k I e r i; ••• ll rlni:: boat :1nd lrn!h·r-
$43,000. OwnC'r, ~7 OC'nver there·~ 11 1 ~lXG0 ft c;1•n1i •nl
Or., C.M. 541>-2442.:_ ___ 1 p.111 on .!lidr ynnl. llltK,
r"OR Rent/Opll1>n &ilt', 3BR.J .,.., ................. ~!""!!!•J S.'tl500, 962-137:!._ -~~-
2BA. >·o,mnl '""· "°'· NEW PAINT S UPER SHARP! Sunke"ll LR. Beam~ $2:"70 mn. 2 Bf! . II oo 11 o o · i\1 · v.a \\'II cnr1X' 5• 2 Bil l0o.·nlt•c1 on lflt)lr• lo r 1u1 2 .. 7K r ft n&•·, < 1 bu1l11nl'i lArac 1-orncr lol , ' 1 ' I" 540-0429/a43-351!'\. · quirt •·u l-1 r·Mt' Ii rN'!
l':'i!'Ulll'Y for QUll"k OC· t'hOnd1·11 I t\\ll,, l:. ~r1rlnkh•1'?o, BACK BAY, l RR. f:11n
trplc., crptd 1hruou1.
macul11IC". 64:-r-3809
nn · 1·upancy. Only Sl.IK>O cll)1\1l, expt'n111ve crpl11 & drpi;, li11n
ln1· full rrk'C $19.!l~.c). (;,\J.1. rnnl(t' / ovc-n / d!!lhw1~h· r.
!lL:i2-.%1 S:!S.~ Trilal 11 i::urlfl ,,,.
SPEC. vll"IV, 3 J3ft & lam rr11
\\'llrpL. 2 BA s:m ... 50. 332:'12
t.tl:!M Vi11ta, 4!n-J3.'l9
E.t•t Bluff
~11n1nl 1l(• lot1n.
Reliable Re•I Estate
~ rv1~: ~4?:~21D~;;;Mi-3:rl l
..__........ PLUS FAMILY ROOM BROKERS INC. <t lilt. J BA , 2·1((1 sq fl . Lr:;:
f1in1 nn, ~1111g crp1J1 1ht'1'!111:h • Tttfo: nLurrs • ADDED ON lllJI, :I t•11r jllll', c·~nnplC'll'!y
Dy Ow11t·r. :i Br, 11
'. Ba, lnd~•'llf"'oi 11• ti1c11:k \\ 11 11
lo maint Al'l'f. $33.900 LARGE HOME fe11r1•. ~;.; l' r I !IM!IC'l!l\j
&io--0100 • 1')4fHm7 2 ""I I I • •I ~!room s n•nol, 1,,, ~\!)1'11'1.'<' "'nro,
El Toro • :'I IJ..lth.oi JIB ~)6.il 4Q2i'. $16,000 f'nn1·
LAK.1-~ l"Olt•~-r Jo:>:mA • ~n~, Room Ottl)'.
SUARP 4 B•::DROO,\t 'fe'll1111 * "n.lklni;; Dl~hu11·(' In lsVACANT HOMES
J.itt reo.r )'llf'!1 . ~Tlt'r 11ruc-Ikon< h :: i, -« ht-1lroom"I In toOlf
lriu"I 11nd "111 vii RI nr> • Only S-11 ,930 Al'l'IJJ;, J;Om,. wllh pmlJ..
pml•l/$3116.'IO. All tt>mls. * Citll Ml-~ fll,\ tttlfl f:J fhu.nrlng SM)'.)
KATELLA REALTY ru Sl!XXI 1u1111 ~awn nnot n·111 o Tl!!.: Rl:AL
"-ESTATERS 'Iii t'M'row <'ioti;c-., C.i ll tl(l11t'
HJo.'.R !"162-'.l."11 1 ---OWNER acrlfk:t-. S'.4'} l'l!"lr U\' Ownl'r· N., quA1ifyi~
VA '°'" now nn ...,.,..,. Top "'uality Buy Tak• """ f llA. $llOtl "" ~ly 4 bedroom horTw', T , Jo:::dJl'R pymnlt ~. J Br, :l ~ ftreplllCCI tn 1tndou• Appralml IK In nl l28.!IKI. Un. nlCl' J, neat. crpl• t
llvU. rmm, pk hll'l' win-ivld wh11I "' buyt Sharp 4 rtrp11 thru-our. ~1103, "Vf""
dowt OW!fiookl a pretty ll'r't! I~ bdrm .• 2 bnth and f;4 24XU2..
Unt'd .tttet. EhlrY hall, l>'lJ'k-llkA! yard, :z bf(J('Ju; to,1 ..:;.::...:;•:.::n._Y_O_\_\,-N-l:R--.--I
receptlon mom formnl din-t:lemefttary, nawl)t Jlalt.J
inft' room. t1fctrlc puah bu!· Jilin')'! l Br., 2 Ra., nlN" pnl\o, ,.'nNI
Ion i....ll"n k I I C1 h «' n , Call 842~1.CIR .Y!I., rhlldtt>n!t lll'l'A SI l'q11Jp,
•N u Off 1i111thatrl in ILFJ. S:U,llOO. dillhwuhtt. Pallo. Jr. • Mm • 54&-:{JfJ?. estate ~ltuw:fscapcd WAI.KR
lo pk-tum pnoft<!t perfPC-lllMHtMI HOUSE lhtnlln&! Wt.tc:h lht
Ul>nl BRK, $34,.!iOO. 962-5566. 17)71 8t'"'11'h D!\'d., 111! OPEN lfotJSE ~lumn.
•
ONLY ONE
$33,250
l'hl:c fs 111 fAntastk::
1-."'tlroon1, ·• bnth hornf'.
Supt·r Murp rloU house with
lovely ltu'ltlSCAp!Olie. There. 11
nnl.v llFK' Hstt•d in llW"
11righbi1rhood. ALL tcmts.
Cult NU\\' $-17-tiO!U.
to1THEREAL \':'.! ESTATERS
'-. ""'-'"''l'l'M
O\\'NER anxious. 51A% VA
loan and yoor montbly 1n•
"tnlln1ents are low,
I lo1urnU\ker'11 pride built-In
a ppliances, even a
tll:.hw:W!cr! 011(! day old
\\'all'l' heater! Free S\Yirn
pool. Lush kiw n1aintc>nance
landscaping an<.l an inviting
IJ:"1llO. ·I lk'tJroom, hug('
(aniily room, BRK, $!9,500.
IH2-fi691.
NEARLY rK'11' 2Bn & [)('n.
block to lll':«:h. C\1.f.Jtorn
dt>t.'(lt'!l1ed. l'arpets, drapes .
etc. Lovely patio. Gourmet
kltchl'n/gas or clc. blt-im,
your choice. Optional
$1vcdish fireplace. Frotit
yard needs shru~. your
savings at-SZ'i.000. l'itust SC'{'
ln ... id{' l.Q appre('iate!
::J.':6-?£.15.
O\VNER extremely M.'<ious.
S\lbmlt no do"·n G.I. terms
1 ry !i';O down non-vc>ts. 3
bedrooms, 2 separate baths,
hun1{'n1akc.r's drt'am builtin
kitchC'n. Delightful patio.
BRI\, SZ7,000. 846--06().t
4 BR. Lrg Fam R~1. newly
1lccoratcd inside & oul !
$35,9$, 6912 Lenis Circle,
11.B. (nr. Heil & Golden
'Vesl). By Owner. Appt .
only, 84i-J686.
REPOSSESSIONS
Fo r 'Information and loca.Uon
ol these FllA & VA bomes,
contact -
KASABIAN
~R~·~·~l ~E~s~t•~l~•~-"~2-6644 * JUST LISTED * :i BR, 2 ba., family rm.. in
:->J1orC'crt'st \Vest. Comple te-
ly walled, 11haded rear yard.
Assume 6% o/~ loan. $38,500.
George Williamson
Realtor 548-6570
4 BR. ram rm, x!J'a Jrg pride
or o\1·ncrship home, ccrr
!rally located. 'Vill i::t>
VA/FtlA 5-;;, larwin roalty
inc. 968--440.i
VJo:RY n1er oltlc>r 3 Br honie
+ 4 good ne"'l'l' r e n t a I
units. Close to bch. $63,000.
Xlnt tmns. Bkr. 547~1.
FAMED Tiburon condo, 2, J
& 4 BR. priced to sell,
VA/FJ{A 5% larwin realty
In('. 9fiS.4405.
I BP.. 2BA, luxurious interior.
s,'W,50:) VA, IBA, 5'1(.
llll'\\·i n realty inc. 968-4-tal.
Irvine
UNIVERSITY PARK
ll e 11. u t i t u l MC<literrancan
slyll'd 4 BR., family nn.
homC", under red 1il(' roof.
Ideal separation or
adult-child areas. Walking
distant-e to parks, pool.5,
scho ol 5. r:xtra lg<'.
1,•alled-in corner Int \\'hich
you 01vn!
'"l 111!1'I11,lld
---'l L'11llor
"SINCE 1946"
ls.t \V,.s!cm Bank Bldg:.
Un1l'Crsily Park, l.rvine
Day• 552-7000 Night,
TURTLE ROCK
PLAN 6
()nly :1 b.lnn., 2 hn. + ran11ly
roiu11, hul supcr location
n111kr~ It S<'{'nl n1uch 11\rg('I".
l 11~irll' t~1rn1•r IQ! nrtonl" lot!
nl pr\vnry. Move YoW' t11n1i-
I)' In for only $43,950.
i)recl hill
RF.ALTY
Univ J•nrk C{'nlrr, lrvint.'
Call llnylnnl', S33--0R20
Ofllt'f' h<'M.tr:!I ~ Ai\1 10 R P~1
·ru1rru:nOCK 11u1:s, 4 Br,
FR. l'>:r('. Vlei''· lkk>w
11111rkrt, Al.;o l1:11ict 1\1 $17j
1f!O 11:;:i~tilO.
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Marketplace
WANT
TO
CLEAN
UP
ON
YOUR
CLEAN
OUT?
FOR
FAST!
FAST!
ACTION!
CALL
DAILY
PILOT
CLASS·
IFIED
DEPT.
D
I
A
L
D
I
R
E c
T
--
6
4
2 -5
6
7
8
PUBIJC NOTICE
"l(TtTIOUt 8 US IN•St NA.M• STAT~IL!NT
TM lollowl119 Pff')()l'll •r~ doillQ
lllnlflHI &I~
ROTH YOUNG P ERSONNEL
SERVICE OF ANAHEIM, 1360 S.O..ltl
...,,.,,.Im, A~Mlm, C.Ulornl1 921111
Roff! Younv P1rl0fl!!ti Sffvlc1 of LO$
Anuelff, Incorporated IA c1111ornl1
Corpor1tl0f\) Jf60 W\t.i"i1~ eoutev.trd,
LH Anoel6. ca111orn11 ~5.
Tlll1 DvSl,..t.t It btlnt c-..cied b'f I
C«POtlllM.
Roll! YOUflll P~11el Setvlces or Lo.I All9tle$. Inc,
Jamts J. 8r'91it, Prtlidenl
Tlll'i. 1111-1 lllfd w1111 ,,,. coun!'r
Cl..-k of Or•r.ve Coun!y M Stp!emoer 13.
1''1. Sy 8evtr1y J, MeddOll, OC'PUl'r
C.ounty Cltrk.
Pi.rbllthed :s.Jirtmoer "n
.. l« f ·tml
Oranot co.ti Dally Pilo•, 11, 15, 100 OclOber 2, t,
200·'12
PUBIJC NOTI CE
Rl!.50LUTION NO. Si\
R•soLUTION ()fl THI! •OARD Of OlltECTORt 01" THI! MOUL TON
JOOU•L WAT•R DISTRICT DECU.11:·
INO ~TS INTENTION TO l'ORM AN
IMl"ROYEMlfNT 015TRICT WfTNIJol
SAIO DISTRICT ANO TO ISSUE
GlfNER AL oaLIOATION 80N05 Oft
aEHJ.LP: 01" SAIO IMPROYEMEHT
DlSTllCT ANO FIXING TIME ANO
PLACI! O" HEARING.
PUBLIC NO'llCE PUBIJC N<YrlCE
• 1 Monda~ October 2, l'in OAJLY PILOT
I ........... !~._I __ ,,, .. _!~ [ I~ I ~~~~~~~~1 1111111111~~~~~~~~~~~~~· l ~ [-·~~:'" I ~I [ ,_"'"... I~~[---iiiiill•iiiiiiiiij•,..~]~~;11~[ ---·---~1~~1-""'.;;;'m;,,.;'"';_..,.;;;----_..,;;,;:__~·-
Newport lleoch
~re-Grand Opening Sale!
CONDOMINIUMS
l ofty IMng awaits you!
Act swiftly
lo select your own
Newport Beach condominium.
Visit the temporary offices of the
Newport Crest Information Center,
conveniently located at
2400 West Coast Highway
Suite B, Newport..--Beach ,
Open Daily 10 a.m. to sunse1.
(714) 645.6141
_.,_..._._
BUILDER'S
'DREAM
Build your dream home on
this gently sloping hillside
lot. Excellent ocean viell', in
prime :residential area. Sit'
back & watch the sun set
behind Catalina. Contact
Bryan Mace for further
details. Only $13,001.
..A-Olan
REAL liSTATE
1190 Glt>nneyrl'.' St.
494-8473 549-o:n6
---SPANISH VIL LA
0"'.erlooklng city & beach. 2
Sty. stucco \l'/rcd tile roof 4
· BR .. 3 Ba .. :l frplcs., lgc din
,r., fam rins., bea1n cell's.,
lots of charm, plus 1 BR.
guest apt. B eautifull y
lndscpd, lge. lot $89,500. * 499-2800 *
m~2·· ~IOOllfll ~(;Mlr;
............... c..-
CUSTO?.·I home. Beautiful
ocean vle\v, Undl'.'rground
utilities. 3 Br., 2 ba,
$69,995
Newport Beach
WHERE ELSE
Park Lido townhouse. \Vhere
in Nc1~·port can you get-a 2
Bdrm., 2 bath, dbl., garage
& carefree POOL for only
$29,995.
PICTURESQUE
Peach Tree Lane pern1its
purchase o! 21.00 square
foot, 4 Bdrm., 2~11 bath plus
easy living & lounging next
to a .~pru·kling POOL-All [or
$53.000.
CALL 0 646·?414 ~A~
Nr.11r Nrwporl Pell orrltr
lneome Proptirty 166 Mount•.,., o ... rt. HOUSH Furnished 300 Hous.s Unfurn.. 305 Hou••• Unfurn. 305 Apt .. Furn. 360 Mobil, ti0tne1
For Sal• lts 11 UNRS Re10rt ~ lido Isle Costa Mesa !Newport Shores Costa Mes•
:Nx60 \Vrstcrner, like new, 2 Dellixc l yea1· ne11· 1-on(· ACREAGE 1100 fSI r 1 f Cl ar., den, v.~1 bnr, air cond. i • •· •. >l'::lul urn llLOHE'N·PE'J'S C'IK :-.1::,\1PORT Show~ on 1~111t>r. WEEKLY-MONTHLY
Acl"'05S st froni bch. 536-4816 bt•droon\ 10-t"''O brdroom. :'lit'ar YOS<'mitr, 40 <t<'ff'!l and houst', 3 BR. 2 BA, Ii.; pauo. Hlkb ltl[JI:'. ·n1 T 11 t-:• J HI~.'! RA, ~'"m l~m, trplr E>Cecutive Suitt•
or &12-7523. located 111 lrec I ! n t' 1! up, gri'al ll>nns. lllj:t:h\\·ay :11·1u&s l!ll'f'l>I fr~un Bay. I BEACJl l;·:IM' 7>1S-&100 '2080 N•wport Blvd.
'68 Great Lakes 20x55 2 br, .2 t1rcas & patios, D/\V uir Pl'arblo1>.'!()111, 20 11t·11·~ nr utU/gardt'll<'r. 0<-1 1~1 lo Cp1s. Jrjli;. L~<' lnt'!I rc11r \'ll , _•n • na 01 • eia
resldcntiul area, )!'.Urden frontage $!IOO per acno. Pnv clubhOUll<' i n r I d ~I :; hr, 2 h.1-...1ov~'. r»f1 it.;. S-t-A ~ --C I M
ba, !et up Dana Point Park. t'Oodhtoning, sh11g ra1·pc1lni;: J1~11a1Jer •• g~I
0
! or· at Ion' I June lj, $150.~u._!73-4~1 ·1. 1 IJl.lL l:1\lt ~ brn~.'/~rlr i.:~1r . i.1.u; \'l)rurr :: llr, 2 h,. 64'2·'2611
$8,950. 10~;. down. 557-9390. $160.000 (fR.ro8l. $3,000 pi;r uc1\'. 67>7225. t BR. & ilt·n. Chulel:' Lido loc ' Quu..•t i;\H.'•-'I. S:l.1.'.1 rno. f rp•~. •!rp~. hhn• :"..r STUDIOS & l BR'S
BARGAIN dbl wide \\'/bay 48 UNITS ~ I $600 1110, 111111 Jull!', 111{'1, llURR\'~' Ai;t, !~'.!·:!121 ~·~;·1;.~n,1 11.; s ~-: 'I Ill:, •• ~::i;~~.: u'-',",.,',.n,.~.
vie w. $7,!>95. Al!IO 2 B1· ,,_ t i Iii~~ !~ii ~. p f d & e --C C ....,..,"' -" ' SZ.99:i. Sntl do\vn. 673_3817. ..,..·luxe ' two IX.'drl)0111. 16 I i;:an,._•nrr · ru l'<5" rror · ozy utla~c I Br, • Full Kitchen
ttn-ee bedroon1 , $ f 0 u r 'iJO;jl~I ' Nlmplett'ly turnished. ~h·/1i:.-fl', n1._ i.tur•'S. S~(). Houae1 Furn:Gr I
bedroom all I~ or 2 baths. S:f}; f} II , l.Jliil!ll.lu, l{t>altor 6i5-4.i62 ALA Rentals e 64.S.3900 Unfurn. 310: :~~~~~ ~clHtll!s
Re.al Est.t•. !Ml fireplaces, some split level -----· \VJNTEl't 2 BR, 2 ha, so. , •TV & niald sen: <.t\•ail Gerteral patios & 11undccks, Vacancy ",.111~101••r a' tKt (OlWlll co, put!o, dhl gar, frplc, F.A. • CJIAHMI NG! I Br furn, "nr 4 IJ('rtroon1, 2 bnth hornf's • Pl Serv' 'Jiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;,~~~I histol'y less than 4';}. 3 Real Estate WantfHI 184 heat. (213\ 194-5683 days; frrl. "'<llk stn:·s. Util in{' f.,r n·nl, SZ2:i tr.i $2;;0. )l)tw • ice ~ pools. Excellent financing. __ .,;__·_....,,.. (2131 193-7832 eves: GT.>-250-I Sl 25. Av:i!lfthlt· 1~·. :~16-lij.,I. * $30 WEEK & UP *
Apartments 15"/o down. Selling prlC!' * "uick Cash * \i·knds ALA Rentals • 645-3900 • Studio &: J Bil Apts For Sale 152 S690.000. tIROl5l call 7 day' ,. GREAT FAMIL_Y_ e 'JV & 1-tnld Servi~ AvaD (7141 833-0040. \Viii buy your property. AJI Newoort Beach • J1hone Service-Jlld Pool
NEW S U AT BEACH
8362 Atlanta, HB. 539-6779
Bu1iness Prop8rty 154
C-1
Exe. corner loc, approx 1~
acrt', beer bru·-newly dee,
make fine cocktail lounge. S
yr lease w/a-yr option +
service station & detail
shop. Call Mr. Harrison,
Bkr/Agt. 557-4130,
Duplexes/Units
salt 162
TWO DUPLEXES
COSTA MESA
4 UNITS-2 BR each, bltins,
furnishf'd. Separate patios.
laundry facilities. 5
garages, 2 carpcirts. Lo\v
maintenance. • ·
TRIPLEXES
$41 ,500
TAKE YOUR PICJ( * '.1-2 BR uni1s, N. Cos1a
l\lcsa * 2 ER, duplex +
bachelor, E-side. C.1\1.
CALL 6-12-1771
9 UN ITS + :; Br. 9wnf'r's
ho1nl', E. Co~ta J\1esa. l.£:c.
lo!, individual yart1s
13 UNITS nr. shopping. Sell
or exchange for C.1\1 .
THREE 2-BR, wiits on on('
lot. Enclosed garagt>s
• cash \\'ilhln 72 hrs. Call ~ HOM~ e Children k Pt-t lle(!Jotl Jnvestn1ent Division Sll5-Oceanfront l Or. util .• Bdrn1~ .. '!.bu > D111. rrn . NC'ar 2376 Ne¥.•port Blvd CM
2041 Bu!!.incs.s CcntC't Ori\''" pd. \\'inter. Ha.t·bor Jligh. L'ln:<· yarrl . Balboa Island S4S-9rX. or ~
lrv!nf'. Caltf. S23>. 2 Br. 50' fron1 \Valer, '~~ll'r .t· i.-nrt!rn,,r i><i1d. • • \'E,\nt.Y. 'l lrg Udrrn~. This Ad \Vorth S5 on Rent 1
£
patio, gH r. or S300 ~nrly. S250 J\lonth. A:-.k for . 1. 1 • 1 1 L
. I• $32:>.New3 Br.2Ba.F...-.lt.'., Clok <• ,--4 q it·. f*lll).' urn. R:ar>'-SHARF.n.napl 11750 10 "" J ' 1 t 'l iJ .,, . 'r ...... nu•r:o; r.1-000 fJ I $~" C II '7'.l 7'1" . . , -. ~ I Gar .. patio. 01\ld \\.'t')con1c! --. , . ~-_ 11 Y_,_···~.:'___'. · · • \\'k , t:lil, Jihonl', pool lncL j · ~. NU-VIEW RENTALS ~10Dl-~llN, "attractl\'c ..... Condominiums ~!t·n 11r 11·omen. 23 16 \· 1t: .4. . .1·8 BROKERS INC. li7J-4030 or 49-1-3248 bedroon1. -bnth housc> in U I 320 N1•11·pnr1 Bh·d 1 l\t r :iT• l\1esa Vf·1'tJe. 2 hrt>placc.s, n urn. · ·
962 ... 51 \\'INTEl't rentals on hc>ach, 2 f ·1 !' -54>3967.
lnd1-1ttrial Property 168
Choice R-4 level • 36,540 Sq.
Ft. 01( for 24 units. $94.290
Wesley N. Taylar Co.
REALTORS
Pili/ply \\'ants v11cant lot ur
older honle N e \I' p o rt ,
Corona dcl Mar. 675-7297.
am1 y or 'uung roon1.1 Huntington ~ach Lit<; tun-,-,-B-,-. -,-~-.-,-.,-...
Br: house S'.l.30. 1 Br. apt. Artults prl'fen'('d, No pt't!I. -·---------~
S200. &16-9291 f'ves. 540-2846 $28.) JX'I' 1110. Cnll b'73-6.l6S 3 Bit 11.,. BA. 1-'rplr:. Pool. gnr., quiet. Nr . mkt.•.
days.-or 5-Ki-3688. \\'<1sh<'r/1!ryl'r. \\)\\' Cl'fll!I, \\'on1nn Jln'l'd. $!2j F'urn.
EASTBLUFI-, 4 Br LOVELY * 3 BR_ Sl&t. r-16.--.-rlraf)('s. Adults only, TIO p._.1 ~. $l:t:i. 1922 \\.'allat~. Apl. 8 .
[iJ HOl\1E'. Call 6-1.}.7037 or LenSC' "'it h op1io11 to buy $1~/mo. 962-999:-i_. -----;ris-6.)~-='-'·==~==~~
Fin.ancill I • 979-9090. CoV('rcd put io. B·H-Q, fn111 CRl"TS, Urps, pool, Jl/O, * $25 PER WEEK * '-;;j;j;j;j;j;j;;,;;;; =11-.,-,1-m-1-c=,-h_;_n_$_1'=;-. ~,,..-1-,.-c=,-r h't'es, Jrg ft'nt·f'rl yd, gar11g1'. \\hrdryr, 1'f'fli:, t'lbh.w. ] Br 1-l'JJ-l'ool & maid tiervl~-(
1 Unit $125. l\lob S90 u\I pd. u.lun1. siding. 642-22'21 \l\tsi::. $200, 4 Br t.?23. 54S-140Cl. Kilch<'n s a\'a ·1. l'olotf'I Tahiti 1
Rent·A-Hou1e 979.-8430 iGii·l6-.,;9666;;-;lc;. ;;;;;;;;;f;;;;;;;-;;;;~il~D::u'.!p'.'.l!ex::•:::•:_::F~u::,rn~. _ _:34.S~ l'Qrnf'r llarbor & Victoria. f
'200 Houses Unfurn. 305 4 Bdr1n, Family Jloom, ho1nc * 1 BR. XTRA NICE i _...-.;....._._..;..____ for lease in i..;;; "'po r 1 Balboa l1land Pnol. t'lr11.n, mt. drps, lndry, ~
REAL ESTATE
1st TD Loans
6% % INTEREST
2nd TD Loans
Lo1,·cst rates Orange Co.
General
""""'* Aplt. * 145·0111 *
Thl'.'se Are .!u~I A Fr11· uf
Our l\1ANY fl ENTALS ...
Heights area. Top Con-1 B. Ur 1 1 Sl40 \\' BBQ. nr shopping Ir btach,
dltlon $39;) 1110, Call l\l1·. 1, '·Q .' 1 ~1· 11 11
1110-111' $14!t , arlul l.<. 646-?>i!.i. . • .. r. UJ(' .,, u .. ,<;0 roon1s Bailey Agt>nt li7'.l·S550. !I" . , 67' 001~ 1-· URN I S II ED •I ng I• -.1 pr•1 'I"· .,r,,., "·
0 \YNER. I Br. 1!}' J'l.<I L~ ~ lSO twdroo111, no r hlldttn or J
r..-ncrd y n r rl. Cul.dc·l'ae Duplexes Unfurn. pets, 2~1, 1-.:. 16th St .. NB.
1 "trCi•1. Chilrln•n/fX'L" ok . General 646--46&1.
C!r.<11 S27 j , TllO. s-15.7359_ 1---A~c=A~P=u~L~c-o~--
~f's. Avail 11/1. ~t:\y 2 Bl? S: DEN -2 RA. [k•I U.\l' J Ur. SlJO & Up. ULil
) $~... Llu')tt' dlx. a fl 1 -· pd, J.,0o1 I. Prk1nl{, ArluH1. no
il'BCDHOQ,\I, 1 RATH, (;AR-pr1\':1t " 1ir11lo.'I, 1lhl gar. f11l. IK'ls. 1\) \\', 1.11tli St. Cl>l. \:\·ci::. 1-'ENCED \'ARL>. $191J. I l'IHl!I ok. no pc!A. Jjl E. '
CALL !'148-7720. B;1y St .. C.!\t. 6'12-4831. 3 !looms, $82.JO I adult owr
Roy McCardle, Realtor Coita Mesa :::i, no p1·t.t, :.n17 \\'~lllmln-
1-·urn 1810 Nc\\·port Bh•d., C.l\l. l'llt'r A\'1'., Cl\1. lnq: 240
__________ L\Ju :f; '.l BR .. C'a r p ., :~i('rk ~. C.7\1. • * S8frJOG 10 Bt>ach~
Baci1. All ul ii 11CJ.
* $12~>-STUDIO 11•/ r r p I c: !
ldf'al for single. Incl urll.
* Sl 40-COZY 1 Br. Collage!
Stove/re!rig. Pct ok.
*
* $19J...r RU IT Trees: J Br, all
furn. family snels/J)l.'t.
LANDLORDS!
FREE RENTAL SERVICE
BEACON RENTALS * 64S.0111 *
HunHnglon Beach a re a .
Sharp 3 bl'.'droom Dutch
Haven home. New l'lhag
carpets \\'ilh ma I chi n ~
drapes. Sparkling \"Iran.
Rr111 !s $2."IO per 1nonth.
Huntinqton Beach rl11\pes. Ft•J)(.·t'<I y a r ti . $90 & up. Nicely rurniahed 1 !
----'--------1 ~·•u11 1ll<'!I only. Avail . no""" 1~1'. Trailer11. Adu It•,
CHOJCE HB loc. 4 Br .. 2 C:1ll ~i-tS-21:13 64!),..4530. 132 \\'. \Vll80n. CM.
Bn., vacan1, nic-e yrd. Ne\\' UNFURN 2 DR d I S crptg lhru-out C!t'an ~ ne 1 ' · · · up ex-* runn ing 1 It. 2 Bit. 2 Ba.
as a pin! $2~/nio. )tJ.1-ltO~. 11~11a ll Y~· 2170 Pa('~fic A\'f', Ganil'-n apt. Pool. &~5.µ0. •
<'i·es 839-7145. L.\1. $ll • tno. 644--0519 710 \V. 18th St. Crt1. -)
3 B0H.\ts 2 ha!h '. h!tn~. Huntington Beach H~~UT. l"URN 2 BH S175 up
Ch1ldr1•n .e.: Pl.'l" OK . Sn:i IMMED OCCUPANCY U t pa.Id. illd Pool. Adlt1, no
" • 962 •·171 pt'tL A.li10 2 Br unf &t2-9.l3J. 1K1 nHJ. "i;:ent. -• . -!\r11· 2 & 3 Br a p1 11 ~,-,6"""-,,,-.,,--~---
:: BH & rlcn, 11, ba, $?la rnu. !)111 i::1.1ra~1·, 1lshw:-;hr r , :? H1t. No pl'ls. 1 ~1 & In~!. Ch!lrtrrn & p<'I ('nr Hun11n1tt1111 'Arl11 111~. II 1; Slfii/ino. r\rlultlll only, no
•Jk. 968-444~). S,..111 J.1•-•!11. '® Co•n1"r St. M2--:M8.
lrv''ne '\~"\\. 2 B ~· d I-Br. Sl~~luhA oni)'. "' r. 1·.:1\'. ynr _ S/Ponl _._ ;;,;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I 08h\\r. <'T"f>l"/df'P!I •·a.r • · · llK'a.l for Baehtlon
3 BR. 2 b&th . , , ....••• S? .. 'lO S\7~i/1nn. :, 3 6 -7 u'3 3 .. ~ _:_993 C'hurrh ~I . ~1.
4 BR., 24i ba, fain rni .. $:;50 :~'1'1-~iZ LG I BR, nlctly furn, with
4 BR., 2~11 bu. r11n1 nn , • S42S Newport S.ach --pool. SI39 mo. No ~ts. 1887 1:.:::.::..::.:;.o_.::.;.::.;:.:_ ___ I f\tonrovla •3, 548-5470.
C-1 l I -, I • I' ' I II ii .
---·1:l'lllii1 r
"SINCJ-: 1!»6"
1 ~1 \\'r~ll"l'n Rank BldJ:
Unh'l'l'l'lll)' Park, lrvu1r
Days 552-7000 Nights
NE'\\'PORT l<,le De I u x BBAl!f. 2 Br. Upper dupl•x.
\\1:l!1•rfn)lt1 1\·/p1el', float, 3 hnmnc. Prlv. R&r I pt1bo.
OH. :! !IA , hltln.J. Iris::, rrplr, !'l:r. \VMtdiff. $3)), ~1849.
nr11 t·rpt111;:. & i;undclc. $·MXI. \'rh· l~~t'. Adlts. only. Furn. Bach. & 1 Br. E>C· 1;-1:;1rn. ceptionally nice! 2110
CHANNELFRONT~ Newport Blvd., C.M.
;; l\R., 2 H;1, llugt> la11;11 BACHO.Oil :ipl. $00 ll'IO
~·f'u rly Lr11,.•· f.13-'lllii U1Ul11 ~A 111!. Oifk'r rnan.
246 \\'aJnut St, 54&--0!m
Duolellea, Atrium·t~ountain
Portatina Laguna
714/494--9388 -BACK BAY 16 APTS. G.G .• 2-BR, 8-1
BR. Sell or exchange for
2111 San Joaquin Hills Rd.
NC\l'porl Center 6"4-4910
Laguna Beach R-2 Lot
Clo.se to Beach. Ready 10
build including plans ror
Deluxe Duplex. $22JKJO.
01vnt>r, <114 ) 797·3926.
"WE BUY TD'S"
Sattler Mtg. Co.
642·2171 545-0611
St>rving llarOOr <ire.1 21 yrs.
3 Bcdroon1, 2 bath Cosla
l\lt>~a ar<'•L Ooublt' garu~.
rovcn-'d palin, nrw pninl.
fl'llt:l'rl yi1.M. f ol' rt:'nl or Of>'
tion nt $220 per mon1h. Call
'.\ UR. 2 balh~ ........ .
'l Bil. 2 h;111i~ ....... ..
S.'!J!~, Furn. "I r U•fum. 3S5 HAOff:LOR apt•. partiall)' furn. $110 11VJ. incltt. n.U utU . ~:: Q.eneral .~2-.\.00 MrNAah Rrl\lry TRI·lewl ctistom home. VA
financing avail. '.I B1·., 180"
ocean view.
OPEN DAILY San Diego Co. * LIOO lot fur salf" or trade,
one ol the last Jots avail. on
L ldo. Corner lot 40' on
Havre & Ithaca & 88' on
Lido Soud. Owner. 54.S-S836.
• J\10NEY to loan on real C WAll<IR /\Ill 4 Hf{ '.;! UJll11o ........ ,
.. ,.,, ._, "· I I 2 Bil, Util rMll1 . $110 mo. No 1930 IRVINE NEED 40-60 Units, Or. Coun-
1'.'slalc. ReasonahlC' rates, nr i ed h II ·' • "ut 1~· urn... l"'t' z:m f\laplr St BY Owner-4 Bdrm -Fa n1 ty -NO\V ! !
\\'ill huy your T.D. _"_'·-~tl~To-"~· ~-'=~==54=54~16-Co r ·, uno~trur h'<I hi1yf~nl. $tt'1 . e ~ll • $74,995
Seeing is Buying
Portarina LagUna
714/494-9388
rm.-Den. RedeC<1rated in· Fortin, Realtor 642-5000
/out. 546-1431, fi48..fi237. i;;i;iiio;i.;.iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii.iiii: I + BROKER ti42-7491 * Open Eves. .1 Bit :.! Ila . occanfn;inl -
OCEAN VIEW GAZEBO
3 BR .• den, 2 bath!i. Slate en·
try, sunken !iv. rm .• fpl. Hi
peaked ceil, open beams,
glass gables. Bltn kitchen.
A prize winner a t $55.«Xl.
i\iission Realty 494--07n
$64,995 .
Unlimited ocean vic\V. 2 Br ..
2 ba.
Portafina Lagun1
714/494--9388
Laguna Ntgu•I
NE\V CONDO on East 9,
view golf course, 3 Br. 2 Ba,
owner, 675-003.1.
Lido Isle * REDUCED * Spacious 4 BR. 4 baths; ram·
iJy rm. \\'i th \\·et bar_ Frplr:.
in mast('r suHc.
NO\V ~.j()()
l~·-·--Ja. .... co-
'.'..116 Vin Lido
* PIER & SLIP *
60 Ft., l Bdrms., 3 baths
Immaculate! $240,000
LIDO REALTY
3377 Via Lido, Npt Beach * 673-7300 *
IN Wl'stcliff-By o w n e r .
Modern 3 BR. 2 BA home,
\Valk to Mariners &hl,
\VestclHf Plaza. $51,500.
Submit offer. 642-1979. ,
BIG CANYON <I br. by
o"'·ner. Landscaping, patios,
custont entry, crpts, light
fixtuf"ell & sonic drps incl.
644-2'38.
2 Lg duplcxe&, next door, 1,)
blk from ocean beach.
$8.l.(Kkl "'· Agt tm-S563.
Newport Helihtl
UPPER BAY
Spacious 6BR 3BA, fonnnJ
ttlnlng rm, music rm, 2
lireplaces, 3 huge patios,
lnrgt! kllchcn, bca.ut ifully
ldscpd, all nn 1/3 rd acre
OPEN llOUSE SUN 1·4
\\IAi\'T Lido Isle 2 or 3 BR :t17 P('ach Tr"" Lont" 1orr
up to S.'G.000. I lave l11t equi· Rcd\and!i a l Sun!a. Isabel I
1y nr Country Club. 'Viii ex· -larwln rtafty Inc.
<'hnnge or l"t"fin. Cnll i\1r. 9AA-4405 CM Hour!ll
l\tontgomcry, Realtor (2.\31
96>-7!71. NEAR NEW -IN C.M. 1.:::::_::.:.c:._-----I l BR. 2 ba., 2 [tplc. +
f11ion Vielo formal dtn, rm. + + 20x20
flO'n. rm. $41.906.
OWNER kwt!ly 4 Br. l~
Ba on comer lot. ~ 111; ft.
Nr achoo'. all t!lee. blln
ldtchim. air cond. Custom
drps & crpt, frplr: In
!lpadous 11 vi n a rm .
land1Coped . Xl nt c Q n d.
$46.500. 8J1·26n.
BEAUTIFUL MiMion Vlt'~
;rolf course v)ew. 5 Rr, 21-1
Bl. family rm & l\btBry. air
r.ond . & prof. 1and~pl'd.
44' pool. 50' ba l co n y
w/stll.in. Extn'IA & uPVUd·
td. 8.1Hl347.
3BR. 2BA. F'am Jtrn
w/frplc, Alr rond I Vu, By
........ 138.llOO • !37-8'!91<1
• Newport &.•Ch
can tor App't.
LIDO REALTY
3377 Via Udo, N.B. 673-'nOO
BY OWNER 3 BR. 2BA .
r I' m ock1cri. n:df'('('JT'Jtlt'lt,
Open house u.-3. fltoii thru
Fri, 1-t Sun. $38,500.
67:1-16."ill, 675. 7616. &C>-~I
S.nt" An•
Lovely 3 and Den
$29,500.
Jtt•t .. real lh&rp ~.
clun N 11. pin. upenadrtl
crpta. dT'po. and appl'~
Dt!UghtfUl nbrhood nr 1Chlt
Ir stiopptng. mlnlmum S.1ti00.
Tin and """""'"" 1-than RBR VU hMnt P&Jmno 4 Br rent. Call today, you•JI Ul<h
cam rm I~ tot w/ipact for wMl >'OU ttt.
campeo. Ownr. 64().()(IOS, lllllllllllDl~I
Lib'° trade' 0.tr Traditr'• ~l'l!!pjP•I
P1'11dt. <Olunvo ''for""'' 5J1·5UI ( =i Pf'SHI ~ u~~. $days for 5 but'kl.
R·2 LOT
187'x190' at 417 YorktO\vn,
I-1.B. Good corner house
rents for $12:J .. can build 11
units.
l' 531·5111 I :::1 Pl·SIOD
6 UNITS
Furnished 1 bedroo1n 11n1!s ,ven locaterl. 1 block froin
ocrnn. Huntington Bearh.
$69.000 -12% do\\•n.
WALKER & LEE
545-7131
NEW DUPL E=x~$41=,,=so=.
featuring 3 bdrm.. 2 ba,
"Ownt'r's unit" w/(pl, & 2
bdrm., 1 ha. Income unit.
Xlnt lCK'atlon. largl'.' atlrnc·
live unils. Quiel privacy.
Al!IO triplex ft'lr sale $67,950.
Stt l:ll E, Bay SL , Cl\l.
&12-4837.
NEW DUPLEXES
BUILDER SELLlNC NO\\'
Cor llunl\n~~~~~l;1m!l, l_r 11. I
lJl>.8181
t lnf11rnh1hed. S.12."1 Dane Point
NE\VPORT Beach 90· rron-\\'E a1Tan1:l' !st & 2n<l n r; LANDLORDS' I tage. view of orl'.'an & loans. Also purC'l11111e TDi;. • rtl'.:,\t~·ry TI~· Jr11:hl Co. Rltrt. GI-Hill 1..AJ.tC;f: n!Odrrn 1 eoru.1.
hnrhor. $65,000. 646-3613 i•Bikci.i<ii9'ii·ilT:l:i1ii2.i 4iOi2-ilJ.1i2i<i. iiiit \~r ·;JW'f'laClb.e In__,_ NI 'f'wpor1 ~I l:n,\ l'.i r·l.: f '1•f!l<'r, !i·v111r IJl)OI, BDQ. 1>4l)o, Nrxt to
644-6262. ,\·'l •'l • orona "" P.Iar • (':111 ,\n}11n1••, !Ui0~20 1 · -~19 ~lul'IN.l, Sl7tt. lntlud. ultl
& l.:11n111a . Our Ren taJ Sfor. Orrlr<• J1r.11r~ ~,\:>I ~o ~ l':\l Ap•11menu torRtn1 4'.l'.J21\l.), 496-07l\9.
•Wat!'rlront. j(l' ooat slip. [ ~ vice i!I FnEE lo You~ Tl')' ... ..,,.. ____ .., __ •
Lnt 7 -Coll in.> 1 s J a n c! . ..... fcW Rent I e NIL. Vlf'\v ! Laa un I Bea th I '='~~~:'.':~-----·i:: I ;H;;•;;·~•;;i;;":;"':;"":;;; ... :;;;;;-;;;;;' ;;;;~I
61>-7770. c. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO.:·iiiiii~ NU· VIEW RENTALS 1: BEAUTIFUL VIE\\I LOT I 67'.1-4030 ()t 49'4·l24.q Sl!H-Lrr.:. 2 Hr, No rrwl Apti. Fum. MO L•OUINTA HERMOSA
iu En1erald Bay S.10.000 Hou1es Furnl1hed 300 VF.RY-CLF:AN-:-1Bn. ~ 21 N•;\\ i·i·pti:. dr(»I . .:ur, '-1nl Balboa ltl•nd ~p.1 nt•h Country FAtale IJv.
• 67:r-2030 * I story hon1r rlof:I' ro hf>nr h ~ . In:: l.o Siwu;lout A.pl.a. Trt
LARGE building lot in Co~111 Balboa Island I 527;,/1no ln1n1N! nrl'llfl: S.'f•l-r 1nv 1~111«<» ht11o:i· yru·d. ~l::AHLY ...,.....,. 'J Hit, '2 llA, mttd 1JQOI; Nnkcn lilt
l\lf'Sa 6.q:.202.5. Call !'Jil.11-44-IB \\'JN,'T'".I!. 1 Af'T· ~~lli-1 111 i·hHnn & prlvuey• c\n11pl. turn. All Cit'\! k11eh .. lU\(). Unbel'"°"W. Uvtna. ! 1 Br . r11·. 1w11, , ' · ~ ; _ _ _ I ~:~z-, 2 • •11·11 • 1\01 k"h"I' fq11,. 1,..1111 HHQ, Lra~r (Jn:)' I
;tit 6pm eve&. t>nyfront. S3f-,O r110. \\(' h11v.-:--:\1Al.I., 1·1!·1111 Z P.lt . H<'lll-"'' lqlh". i,:oric•"(11111, \' 1 r v. .I S.•p! -.l un<> r~">l ,.170 ~~1'.}.~11 2 BR. STUDIO . '$240 Mobile Hame/ , orh••r11 hnyfrun1 nr Jn:-;nil• ,\dull~ onl1 l~il t'11U1•Ml)n, I rhili1/fll'I ----__ ....._ ~
Trailer Parks 112 I SAL I SRL'I~\' It[.\[.'['\' I l'h ;,4.")-01;~ 1111 fj p ill NU.VIEW RENTALS i{A\'~'H!>ST. 1 llH, frpl.·. ALl. ll rlUTI.ES r~ID
_;_;._::;c;;.;...;...;:.;_;:;:. __ :.:_: 1 -~15 ~!arloe Av" 67?,4;9()(1 co;o-;;;-del M•7 ·-~i7l-IOYI or •lfl.1·:l'l·l'i 1~1110, p.:1rk i: •• lnquuT -100 1\il11lt• 1-iu prl1
MOBILE HOME CllARJ\llNC 3 Rrt, 2 BA, din . • 1 •t lilt. 11, -·~· -h~-drrk :-; ~~:·~11.::'..''1 ·-.i ., 1 I blk• ~ of~" O\t!ro f"rv<~ !I
PARK rni frplc "-"tios "iii' e""S 2 Br $1 •1..>. CLEA~ J-r1<·d I I ''"' · \\IS1,..Jl "" tht• Uf'11.•·h • r•-I "'k \" llol. ' • .... • • " · ...,...., • IX'l'Hn vu ,.... ru;: :..ill P"t "" ..--11rr1. .,. Y, on 1 Mo. Nil lrlW'. 2o:i Coral, Kul• J>r'lll fl~. I nm. l.(':t.~ 1Clll.'l Oro S1 lllt flpl, 1\el·k. 206 As-Jlerm 10 16:211 PJUir.aide ~.)
F.xccl!t>nt waterfront locfllion ~112Ll: •15-1-:-itGI: 673-6!Ql. Rent·A·Hou1e 979-14~ 96.1-tS2.t.' ' ' r.;:i.f>W or Zl1 ·15~. f71tl tf74"1
?11 the Colollolraci? Ri~r nd· fbr.1 1~. fcpll", -nrwly 3 BR, 2 SA. llarbor View B•lbo• Penlntul• __ · --t to d S..,,_ L-un.-H-1'llt ~· Ja._._.. 1 ay • uvre11 rt-moclcl~I. '\'intrr only. &ht di•l'rict. A\'a1I Oc-t Jst. -• _..._ Sl.U • $116
devt>b llopmhoent. s,pacc ror 2" Day~. 61:1--0110: (' v,. s S:lOO/nw, Lrall'f'. 96."l .. 191Q, NL"\\'~ l.\Jl. ,. .• ,n rrn, 2 I~ •, '?',,WK!'-khUp-Onl °"',,, 1.n Bariwt<>r II I BR. l*Uol.. inn 1 c me!I p u~ n 1luplr.,,., 1;7;,_3-1\:? .1•\l' "'' • • fl"l)lt"' 1'11V' All utililit'S nn-nv"llable Co1t11 Me1ll crp111. 1lrpt1, hl1n11. lrplr, ~ Hf'll'•m~. ~l:iid 51'1'1.1<-~ _ l*ool · J'll'I\'. P 11
a nd !lliopplng 1~ i·k\si• fnr ull Balbo• P•nlnaul• pt"r rno. 1)11.y~ 0>-700) ,.~1 . 'd D1vltk<I hn1h '1. ~ ol J flH, :;: BA Cundo, Crp1:1, 7:1. ~!no, J\h·ri~n~rl~ E~·•'ll t. • l Ill I . 1·W-l' ft,.e Mil, ponl .,
your ne('(I!>. Al :tlll includ.:•11 \\'JNTl-:lt on HA y $300 3BH ilrp~. hit~. ,,,.,. nn & I v.·krwls. :\l.'.Hl'Oi • Diii 61.>-l'itO • f1001 1ablt"-., Muna b1dM.. a~ ty,'I) t10111 d111:•k<i. nnd 11 1 'z -2 u,\ rrplf', rrv, \V r>. til!! mmn' pnn s . o / 11 111 _' -1 1:1t 11, H.\, 1•'-'· b11.ll'l'_•n)'. ........ l•1r Y"lni>Plf' 17)01
lnunC'l11n11:: rfl1llfl, O\•l\('r \\111 , 11 • 1•1-1·-lagune N t9uel ! \\ ll)', hlk It\ oet'an . ·"I ~"': 1.:_1.:___ _ ___ 1 .1:, I' BAy SZ'll 111<1 nn )rl) l\N"l vin l..n fl hlk \\' ul <'.\•'111\nj::t• fllr !rM."111 fll'<l fH·r1y. 11 1 --_ • .,.1 Prlr•e S\37,rio'l ('rilJ 1te11A V !>la \\l!h \'IC\\' S.\IALI. ·; Br n 11• 1• I) l.l'Xl'HY '!. Hr 1..:.,-,.-lo,, ~!ur 1 .... 111.-1 11! A11t ,. "'J·-1 •ZI l .... 11ch, I hlk ~ of 1> 11!rr • l nvto~lmf'ill IJ~ \' 1_,.i 11''1
1
1".' i fi7:'1-f~lli7 or 673-f.o50. 1h•(..:1n1lj'lt Bltn~. Cr111 ·i ~I I•\ "'' r .. u11111
0
1n; .• ti;•ltl •11_ :L'--m~-~ ----_ ~12•71-C-~
!.>t&-lEiOO. J BR. 2•;,1 Ba, 1norlf'rn\zl'd . l-1 lrp~ $21.1 nw• u!ll pd "~11"' ltnr1t:i 111 .S:.'f' .. , .ii .11 e 2 flH rw_,r lw·•<"h " ti<u. f '!IF?. rrn1 rurn1V.-.t ap1
4 uniL<t, 2 dup l t'X"!I . Cl•r park'!(. $.t i(! mo. JO.i X:!7~J.i17. \\"-' \:uw lli-'Y/f. (',1u100M. lndry. S'?l:i110:l f ~· •)f tv.v "lc'°"rl) prnoru
sirff>.-by-sidc. 'Ea51Jide. Vf'ry l.l()ntrro. 1.maro1 \'tit\' clcun -tUrt, unr, lri \'llJ,Y 1"~" ''"" 1 11r ·i \rl>· GTJ-C:wi;.. 17"1 It m P.h 5.l&-1717.
(']MT!. Pride I'll O\\'tw>nhlp. Prine only. 360 & 36" 161h Coron• !•I Mllr lt'11t.'('<I yrd, crpl, ~rpa. t .. i . nn~:..:nlf '"IU""' UL llll'l I• lJtcrJ8R. apt. (]o..,. lo 1-'ltl-:f':-uur .. t"urn. I • 2 Pia~. C.M. 46$-5~. ~===""====;==.1 .. BR I !Q!I(' bf' h fill} sm dt'f?!i!;.••mUy on-'4 Jl r;, r-'J'l"tl N"nC'h " lhoflplrc. Sl::ll n'M) bdrm ltl1'.• nr-.r bffch, Mountain. 0...rt, ' ' . turn. t' t1> "" , ly no f.*I•. ~11. N.wporfS.•<h 111111 pd. fi75..M10. '..Y .. nn or m.-1117.
FOURPLEX, unturn. Eftst PM1rc1 for roupll'. No ~ls. 3 ""f ,1 z ,,_ I -------------1 a:-ta 1'.t $6.1360 S6Q'.l Resort 114 ov t. ' Oil, fl'-i'K"f'l'I yd., -I ll<lnn AJIC rro.n s r p 1 l.agvn• Ber.ch et11t, , , · 1--"-;_ _____ .c.;,~ Yt'arly. S.'\25 ~lonth. ~. prr 100• N"9' l•l.nt & Slt'1. 1 1\H, 1 1~1 . IUU'. firrll. J uur IOU "' Bafhoo. Rl:wl 1--"'---------1
pt!r mo. ifl('Omtll, C 11111 l.OT ln famoua Lake Ravuu. nnn l-'rnnklln, RJ1r. 67.J.2722 crpc, Ch\nt>r / Ai:L Pte•·r ••llli... rMtu"" '1U~I t"'llfll.r Su 3 Call ~ 'l!tO n'lf\, up S-0 ~ Q>kw-
Ownt!n, 54&-2t06 or 543-MJI. homt< of tht world famowi Coste Mea. Vtotto, ~164 °" ~ S21'1-"i,.,,. 1 Iii-, 11, Ito.. 11 : • ,· ' , TV nr tit.rt\. 1m H. Cout
• 4-plt!X tll'. So. ~I Phu..a . l.o~ Brid~. 1 .oeat~ Sll/t.ftP• I HJ -l<!I( •W''•Hl 'lulrt , .. , rill "il-:AI. '"""""' r urn 7111, Apl• flfll'n In-~. :t;JO lo'
fltoluxf' l Br 0W11rt'1 unll. I <'k'l:w 10 All achool• A C'lty. l.OVJ:14\' •I BR. 21.,. iU. Nr. · 1 1t rrpt A-<frp., s::r. ... f\1 '11111, bl1n,, '"""""' 1•nn<,.r S:OO lrc•I 1.1111 C;iU P IT'!
Bkr. $.1>-2321. SOOOO or will tI'11totle fnr ~la ~fray Co . l)l«hr•. llfll"n!I. _.'11',. >11" a.-! '' f'tultl <tit 1 f\<oc• In~\ !(.':'',<•~I f\le~ M Nt'WJIOl'I 01.•af'h In. 1o1·1hrJ'1--. d'-'iwhr, 1111: •"1('r)1hJn:i,;. i 2 2"' m" I NU .. VI EW RENTALS c -1----=: 1 llr ~"'11'1 ""1 Ornn ~
1 • T" • ~)IH).1(8 , / orOt"I• d• ~' n...-111 trrti " ~qiplrc. Ho it'• n brr<'.t.r . • sell yn1Jr 1".ln1t< ptOp. ~-ynJ. 11pnnkJrrl', '1bl ttnr m ----~ ---1 "1-4rO ,,.. e 11-:r:.u ) 11 -
11 ·1n "-11 I -l ~ -.~z1ot l.ric tiltl : Ht 1111 lin.rt• ·\ 'I \\ l 11.Mlf'Y)tt'I .' IL!tk ""'"· "''Jlr"I• et-"'"'" C1n." Wl r:a-"f', uv-..,... YI RF.AUTIF1JL Ol.'t.'11i1 ,.i;,.,,,. H-n\'i•r Or ~. ~! .....,. .. 1 • '>I ,\HJ• \~'1111..-1r..m1 llumi· ~ • ---
p\lf)t C1anlrlNI. t»mTI_ Wll$, llA,i~ It "P· Tl'nn' ktu.t A p••l1> llft I i ~-k • k•.,. l•l l,,.•l l n ~ 1 f)H 11lll\lni Ill" ~llhltt" .. H.unfi~ &..-ch Rent·A-HouM •7f...14JO I 'n.;.,ilf't'~'-i:111 . "_:: I ii'r>-i'7Z" i~ .. t. J-.mpl .9611 r..nl) SLJ> l !ndrf11T(!Und 11lil1h~ 1----..;... ______ --=---__ _ Jl\41 n llll"r "" )'l'lllT•Y ---ll'<r'i u tll'I f!J').311fi.t
TIME FOR .. M-9'.l.~ (' .. 11 f)i· .. o.n UN"1"11·11 2 Ur. Ul-:All nt!W J Uft, 1n,\I UOf \,.n 1,~J-Oi:'-l2.Co1t•Me•• ----1
PORTAFINA LAGUNA l(llr, 1110 f·nt'rt. Kills i111 1 tn.pln. l>tl\< >•nl. JM''" IIT.\.-<mS Newpor1 Beach
Rent·A·HovM '7J.MJO pr C'.or.id JoeallM G1l-1Jt9 ---r :! Hit f);.,.nit,.ln--11«> --'"--------VIEW lot. aU util In, Nr ,-,,,,--=---,,,-·--,.,~-NOrtTII 111.l t"l"S • \'•'"•· 4 ~C ,.111/drp., tihna, m rort• Vt1P..,,.:n 1Jup.:t. av•U • l QUICK CASH rtunntna Sprp. In ~clwii~ :L::•:.i:~::•::;•::•_::"::"::"':::.---1 •1r. erplll, ""'9. k1lrhM\. Lr. '11J ti.a lownl~. J'am Nr tl.ul.,.. ('rni...,-!Al""'"'-1 Ult.: lllll, 2 Oil, I i.. Sr. .,...&, $1000 Dn • lllke """' i1UI, rum. :12 no. ..... C.M nn ,~.,. (.ti.t fr-Al\Uft :.e·r °'""" ~ pymnta SD.:I tllU prtm, 6'"( $11~ UIU Pd. Ki~ BaC'h. lmtr aptl. tddt SR &M-orni Nier. 1 ' 2 on TtllUt'I' ~ ,·_;_:_:;;::_ ___ _ THROUGH A int 540-t9'29 att 6 \1etarii& Btsrti. F'T'lv. r-11o.3 ~"'e"11._,~c.,--,-1 -~--• · •Up, M•t._,,_ ..iult.. ll.1 K. OCF.A.S~-ROST l Br .. J \la, C • . $141). lJTTL Pd. 1 Or .. So. ~~tra l"I ywint. frplr.. WA.lJC lo brM:h-J Rllrma. ll;fh f:1 r M MJ--11& "'Pf.t, ctri-. r."1al 1"'1\. 1
PALM Oellim't for ~-tnR Lqi.ina. 81.tna. peUo, cat ok. 2 car 1u. OJt, DO llft' mo. I • 2 Sty. sm ID SX'O -• • • • "r pr 1¥.(1 mo. N)-J4U.
llK'Ontor f\trn Cbnikl. P1J $300-Oa><lnftOint ' Dr, l "J Wat« wt. &e-«m. ~ Roil)' · M&--18 m.!rJ, &nalJ Un lrallrr w -""' DAILY PILOT ="'~0· ~"""~"~'-. ----ii.. frpl, p r. dtdl. ll4!1lut "Mab Room For o.ddy'' i BR, rrp1. hllm. ~!«. pr. =~~pd.. ;''du: .~ ",!:· ~.!" Jwwn..: ~~
P,\l.A1 DNtt1 by ~·ni'f', '2 vu • , • dean oal' U. ..,... de«. Walk 16 belld\. t:m. -• -f.U..Olt) M Wl-f1111 • 8ob.
WANT AD RR"""°"'"" """ rooJn NU-VIEW RENTALS ... 1uiwlhetlm*I'*_,, '11)' IN,-· SJI;-°""' t/l'lt VI' tho ' '1111'! WATDU'RONTDM.X.ctbl ne.r p:wlll. 6tt--0036. ~ or ~DU with • Dail7 Hoc O••etDtd leD le& Jttmt Wffl CID "'l..WI" II In dtie"led: br, or. kot'ld. Wt dk.
CLA.SSnED wlb 1e1l .!-Sell klle IteJn& ••• MJ.n Call ~. ~} "°"' '°..,...,.....I 6Q.3QI GtKL or t 1 Ill...._
I , / I
I
I
1-'
.. ,
,,
DAILV PILO'T Moodiy1 OctobH 2, lq72 'j~~~~~~~=I ~~~~~~ ~
( ,. •• !Jllr-lrtl l -•IMR ... J~l --··M-1~ ( ,..-.. --J~ ~[ _ ... _. -'~ ;;.( _ ... _. ~'~~"" [ ....... _ l[S]1j -.--ll5l1;;;' ;;;;;;;;;·ffil;;iiJ
415 Bu1lnoS1 Rofttol 445 Lost 555 Gonlenlnt Job Want.cl, !Mio '1111 Apt. Unlurn. 36S Apt. Unlurn. JI.I Apt. Unlum.
\\te have \\'lntrr Jtentals
\\'ill Take Stud1..•nts
Al~o f..IC'Cn.nlro nts av1ul.
~ Bil. 2 BA ............ S350
il BR. 2 B,\, ........... $285
l BR., 1 BA ••••••••.••• $l75
3 BR, hon1e ............ $215
CA.Lt: 673-36ti3
associated
BROK ER 5-AEAL TORS
l02~ W Dotboo 67l·l6•l
SEACLIJ."'}' l\1anor A pt s
R:1rtw>!or :ip1. uhl prl.
SI-48.j(), Pool. 132j PlnC('ntin
A\'e,, ask about our d1S{'Ql.lnt
• G~o~no-,-.1~~~---~Go:-"-no-ro-l~--·-~~ Ne wport &each
• VILLA MARSEILLES
SPACIOUS 1 & l BEDROOM APT.
Furniihed & Unfurnished
Adull Living
Dishwasher color coordinated appliances ·
Plush shag carpet. mirrored wardrobe doo rs·
indirect . lighting in ki tchen • breakfast bar ~
huge private fenced patio ~ plush landscap-
ing • brick Bar~be-Ques • large heated pools
& lanai. Air conditioning.
3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 557.1200
COLDWELL, BANKER & CO.
MANAGING AGENT
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
on the bay
='O'."-:----.,..... ' 'THE PACl'ORY", COi>-YOUNG dopmdoble PRJV. Hoom, men Io r WILL anyone who hu tetn a BOB'S GARDENING ..i-...... women. Loving carr. Dok si1Ung of S2 unique boutique ,63 Impala, aold 2 door, A LANDSCAPING nceda fUll time em._,,,,,_nt.
to park, llbr & shops. shops, has 2 opelling1l In lhe UcenlCl #UBX ™ which Irvine lnduatrial Hu ~xptrlel'N:.'e la pa.lttt~
• ~ ··~·. n1aU tonging from S80 mo. Compl••es and a o m c construction, ;J"lll'"~ d1 ....... =d vk. .ol MC""'" • Card, tobacco & yardage ._ ~-557-4299' aft Sp &tt-OJ22. COlo.fE it'C, l1ave yow· par<.-'nt
cartd for as you \\'OUld do,
lln1e pern1i1tlng. 642-9Z78
Rentals to Share 430
• .ROOMMATI':
flE1' .. ERllALS *
' J.'lnd The Ideal Roommate
Screened Clnlll Shr & Sav<'
\\'E FURNISJi:
sl'lops e11p. wllnted. 425 30th Sr Cl\t between Victoria & er m.
SI., 1~""-'JXlrt 8 each, \Vil.8on, night Of St!pt 24, * LANDSCAPING * Y 0 UNG man 1 en~ k~
673-9606 or ~2-8520. pleuc caJI MS--0341. New lawna S pr i n k I e r a , fuU/jit..tlme employme
SliOP in Laguna· Beach, 206 LOST 9/25. Fem a I e dl!Ckl, cl~anup. State llc'd. :dsc:.:~l ~ aardcnln&,
No. Coast Hwy, w/ocean Cockapoo. 10 14•k11 old. Black Sl.6-1225. P· ·
· 4>1 i:"/V\ w/small palch or white on Exp ER T J a p • n e se Job Wanted, Female 701 VIC\V. $3()(1 mo. -...,.,..... ,
lndus t rl•I Rental 450 chin, Vic of Harbor & Gardener. k n ° w • h 0 w' GOOD TYPIST
81'kf'r, C.M. Ansv.'trs to upkeep, plant, pest, bim I do ty I t
Tosha. Reward! Pleue call cleanup 968-3486 Wll your P "I •
531-3885 aft s pm. · . her home, Will rlckup
LOST in h-lesa Verde Tiger DUTCli ga.rdenercall, expe:·· and dellver loca H.B., . cm pit. ser., Gerr1t, F y W t 75c striped cat, ma.le wearing 536-2300 days or A r I e • ., • es • per P9·
flea collar.. Answers to 2131630-5463 p.m. or will work by hour --Coldwell.Banker
5-l!l-~ I Apt. Un turn.
BA \'F'RONT Dix up pc r
dupk!x, 3 Br. 2 Ba . Coi ta Mesa
365 I Apt. Unlum.
Costa Mese
Luxury apartmmt living ov·
erlookinJ:: the waler". Enjoy
$750,000 health spa, 7 swim·
ming pools, 7 li&hted ten·
nl11 courts, plus miles of
bicycle trails, putting, shuf·
Deboard, croquet. Junior 1'1
from $174.50 monthly: also 1
and 2-bedroom plans and
·2·story tov.·n houses, Elec-
tric kitchens, private patlos
or ba.lconles, car,,eting, dra·
peries, Subterranean park·
Ing with elevaton. Optional
maid service. Just north of
Fashion Island at Jamboree
and San Joaquin HWs Road.
Telephone CTI4l 64~1900
for rental lnlonnarion
Roo1nn111tc11 \Vho \\'anl to Sh r
Roommates \\'ho Need to Shr
CALL (71.Jl 533--0302
Roon1n1atf' Referral Service
CAUCASIAN middle aged
lady tstralght) will ~hare
her home -.v/sanie.
References. Laundry & kit.
pvgs. C.l'l-1, $18. \v k.
~
LEASING
Tigre (tee-gray). He may AL'S , --• . T call 147-3095.
h I. ~· i 1 L.oCUiuscap1ng. reer,,=:-.,-,--:-;-;-::=:-:--;-;~I ave c lfTh•••u no a camper al yA-> _ __._,. NEED help at home! Wo ., Call 5'l!>-4075 remov • ......, ttuNUC.Llllg. or · · Trash hauling, lot cleanup. ha\•c Aides, N u r s e 1 ,
TRADE 5 Rcres corner ol ~ir sprinklers, 673-1166. 11 o u sekpr.i, Com~ions,
~lion. Roa~ on 3 sides, EXPERT J apanei1e lfomcmakcrs , UpJohn,
near Victorville for Orange Ga rd e n e r , c 0 mplete 54.7~1.
Yrl~IOO. Adlt:i. 233 19th I jjjjiijjiijjiijjiijjiijjiijjiijjiiiiij SI., No. C, 6/a-0'136.
2 Br furn 1nob1lc ho1ne,
adults only, no p e I s ,
$160/mo. Pool. 213:245-4763
6 pm, 58G-521l'l.
\VATERFRONT Spnc. 3
& FIR. boat dock avl.
lse. $325. 67;>-8792
64Z..3559.
BR
Yr. .,
\\'INTER 1 ~ blk ro flt:ran. ~
Br, pvt pal\o $275/1110. Call
642-9485 anytirnl' v.•knd or
alt 6 'vkdys.
2 BR. 2 ba w/frplc. rrfrig.
1-.: blk to IX'nch. Pa11\y furn.
$250 1no. l\fike &m-1500 ext
2874 days: l'ves 673-3798.
<I Br, 3 Ba. w/[rplc, dshwhr,
palio, gar. Yeal'ly $42.';/mo
or 11•inrer S340 +. \\'ill rcnr
to students. 673-6.110.
HARBOR GREENS
Fur niihed &
Unfurnished
F'om $130 to $215 mo
Bachelors.• I Bdrms
2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrms
11/2 or 2 Full Baths
?>faster size bedrooms \VI
h.igh beam ceilings, large
living room w/eas or
wood burning fireplace.
Convenient ·laundry area
oft kitchen. Enclosed pa-
tios. 2 swimming ;x:iols,
sauna, recreation facili·
ties. Security guard. No
pets.
NE\VLi" DECORATED
2 Br ,,. gar fncd yrd w/
pa.lio. \\'tr pd. Call bh1n I &
.'.i. 636--<I 120.
2176·B Plal•entia Ave ... $140
2192·0 Plac.•1.'nlia A\'P ... $135
2'.l.1-"·A Placentia Ave ... $140
2566-,\ Orange Ave .•••. $1<10
5-iS·C Bl'rnard , ...•.... , $135
ONE BEDROOM
ONE·DERFUL
On<'--Of-a-kinct garden apt. in
populnr location. S 14 6
n1onthly includes
refrigerator.
THE VENDOJ\.fE
1845 Anahcin1
Call l\lrs. Phillips 64Z..2824
rAS-4436.
EASTBLUFF COMPANION to share n{'W
Villa Granada Apts. mobile hon1e in nice area.
1,000 FT. & UP
Jn1provemt-nls lo suit. Major
street identilication, Knoll
Ave. off ramp of Garden
Grove Frwy.
Richard Acker (n4) 892-8374 e TOWNHOUSE -Spacious 4 JiB. Likes to cook & has ~~~~ ......... ~ ... ~
BR. 21J Ba., balconies, car. \VlelderlY \\'Oman. Art MODERN s p r ink I e r e d
frplc., wet bar, attached 2 4-84&-4TI2 warehouse space, 3152 sq ft
car garage, 1800 sq. ft. ~11~, AN~1=.E=0-, ~Lad~~Y-,-,,~,h~,-.-, .,-10 & 3280 sq ft at 13c per ft.
$375/mo. 8 1 b.I 2001 Crace Lane, Costa • EXECUTIVE -Townhouse share LAguna e{lc i mo I e
_Spacious 5 BR., den, 3 Ba., home with same. 494-7972 or :~l.8 am to 4 pm
County property. Gardenil'€ Service. NB, C\1 cy,-.-,-,.-,t"il;-e-;;P"o-s."W"a:-n-:t"od'1
544-4294. area 546--1894. Exec -Adm. sec'ly, 25-30
FEM blk & w h t COMPLETE L a w n & hrs/11·k. CaU after 6 pm.
Fox Tenicr. Vic. Gardening service. Hauling 557·5967.
]{arbor opplng Center, &: clean-up. Jim 5-18--0405. -,-.~ln~w~.-n-te-d~.-M-,-~&c-:F~7~l'"O"
C.M. Sat. eve. Reward. I ~===~-,,.,.,,-,.-=-:..,.-~ 1·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 545--0739 JAPANESE Gard ene r ·I'
· . Complete Yard Work and Accounting Clerlcal
ALTERED male SJ.amese Clean-up. Free est. 642-3102. Fee Paid
cat, vie BolM Chica & Hell, EXP H !Ian G---' Sec'y Legal to SQ)4) H B Generous re w a r d i • awa ..,..,.enel'. · · · Complete gardening service. Bookkeeper $600 460 846-3113. Kan1alani, 64&-4676. Keypunch Opr $548 ----------o-LOST drk bnvn Burmese cat . Applicant Pays Fee
frp!c., wet bar, attached 2 78'11)-=="'.,.7~"=· -......,----.,-car garage. 2660 sq. ft. MATURE n1ate roommate Rentals Wanted
WANTED to rent, garage in Upper Sandcastle a re a , tiauhng Receptionist to $450
Dana Point. San Clemente CdM Reward. 644-1814. YARD & Garage Cleanup. Bookkeeper $600
area. Call 546-1234. GOLD pendant watch. Rose Free est. 7 days. Call Gen'! OUice (lile sh) to $450
$550/mo. wanted to share 2 Br. apl.
-Pool Facilities. Pool. $80. 547-6791.
Nr. CdM High School Garages for Rent 4l5 835 Amigos Way, NB 64+-2991 * * $180 * * NE\V channeltront Vil'W 3 Br, 1 •~ Ba, n('Wly painted. apt. 4 BR., 3 ba. or 3 Br.
Bllns, crpt/drps, encl patio. plus den. Side tie avatl. $425
Ni· schls & shop'g. Children lo.to. Yearly, Owner.
FOR rent large garage
storage $25.
Ph. ~1717
for Misc. Rentals 465 face. $50 Rew, Wedding gift. anytime, 54g....riost. Exec. Secretary S650
Please call 95&--0287. G~. Hauling. Tree/shrub ~c.:;~n~~~fceSec'y :~::
LOST gray cat, unscxed trim. Gar• & yd cleanup, 1 G. 1 ou· $500
ok. No pets. 880 Center St, 6'5-1972 675-4073
I BR -furn. O~ block !O Models Open 'til I pm. Cl\1. Call aft 3 pn1 \vkdays. BAYFRONT \Valk to beich
o(:ean. S111all vie\v, Sl~JO. 2700 P eterson Way, CM All day \Vknd~. 642-Pl:WO. Lrg 3 BR, 2 BA, pertly furn
\VANTED: Garage to l't"nt,
furniture storage, Ne\\-port
Arca. 673-463}.
FOR Rent off street parking
spaces 10x30, night lighting.
$10/mo. 2436-B Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa, 543-1322.
n1ale in E-Bluff area. Est. 839-230.1, 5.':7...6904. 1;.ree ~ce Fee Positions
Reward. 640--0285 aft 3pm. SKIPLOADER & dump truck RUTH RYAN AGENCY
LOST IN EASTBLUFF. ALL y,·ork. Concrete, asphalt, 17931 Beach Jl.8. 847-9617
)Tl)'. 67"'--"!JOO·, 6" 6 -2 6 9 6 I ., Uni"-Util pd ~.-~ 1 nr Harbor B vd & o.o:::•::-n•""'P"o"'tnt::-":':'.--::-=:-...... · • '-"'ll = eves. draped, dock avail. Adlts.
Wanted: for Storage
Call 673-8801 aft 5 pn1 -. JI•) GRAY ~s!4-~E~. Y:~~· =~· :-;~~.! ·193~N~'ew'!· '!po~rt,, . .,c,..•,.1.~646-4854""~", --------~·;.~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill Remove trees, dirt, ivy. At'COUNTS payable clerk, • Drivewys, grading. 847-2006. exp rec'd. Apply in persQJ
• STUDENT.S :-:o F'EI::: • Adams l\10DERN Sparkling 2 BR. 6T::Hi934. Office Rental 440
S<-ach ren!als. 3 & 4 Br. $21j 546-5025 din rn1, 11_, BA, Nr r.1arina, SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 2
Up. Abbl'y Rlty 6-12-38;j) pool, patio, BBQ, drps/rptrl, Br. $164, Pool, Crpts, drps, toOO Sq. ft . office space adj
to & overlooking Orange
Counly Airport. Consists ol
t<'ception area, 7 individual
officC!s, lgr l"Onferent'e roont
& accounting are11. 38c Per
sq, I!. 213: 6.~4-3211.
Personals SlfJ I lnstructkln Jl J•) Housecleaning only. Lido Shipyard, 001 e \VINTER -YEARLY e bl!ins. F'rom S175., 499·2055, b.!tns, garll. displ. 1525
ON Bay, Split lcvrl, 3 BR, 2 I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!"!'!'!!'!!'!!!!!!!!!!! I 496-07~. Placentia Ave. Ask about
. . Lid() Park Or .. N.B. FREDDIE ;;mmmiliiiiiii;:,:;o;;;;: MESA Clea,ing, '"''""•· AIR ""°''"""'· 22 ., ove,,
Ba.. frple.. drk. pi I" r, DE(UXE oc ~°"E~A~N7--v~,,-"-.,-,-po-,~2,.-;B~R~.-,2 our discount. 543-~
panially furn. Sl.'lO yrly. 22-1 APARTMENTS BA, sunken !iv rn1, dining 'B~AUl=~o~A~Ba~y~Clu:-cb-.~u,-,-,..,,-2
'vi~ws. ,floors, etc · typing req'd v.'/some exper.
Schoots & Res1d-comm I. 557-6742, Gd ""rsonality a n1ust. 40
201h St., ST.l-;)878 l'V('s. Air Cond -Frplc's -3 S\vlm· 1H't'a, hltns, c:rpts, drps, Br, 2 ba, encl teJTace.
BEAC'IF.RONT 2 RR 1 ming Pools -Health Spa · f}<itin & yard. $190/mo. \Vaterfront. Lease ;soo mo. I ;;D~E~SKo;-~,=,=a=.,.:-a=v=a~u=a~bl=c--;$.111,;
Plr-ase get in touch v.·ilh lnstr:u.;t(ons 575 548-1ill .,.. Karen and. Richard. \Vr-________ _........;_ · llr \Vk, Mon-Fri. Salary
know where you can find PIANO 01· voice, n1y home or Prof. Carpet Cleaning open. Call 534-6890 !'.Ion-Fri
work if you still need it and yours. 20 Yrs. exp. ~1aster AlSCI windows & Cloor care Sam-5pn1. ~ r 1
• ·' co or Tennis Couns • Game and 837·3927 or 837-5178. Avail oow.-A'" """'". TV, stereo. d sh \I'.~ h, '«l'IV-\.Ul!J n10. \\'ill provide furn.iture Billiard Room. WE 11ISS YOU TOO!! in music. 833-2320. Call Dutch 537-1508, 8an1-6pni A~R=c-H~D~R~A~F~r=s~M~A~N~,·· bl1ins. y,·sh/rl ryr-r, patio. Nl::\V OCEAN VTE\V APT. ON Bay, Split level 3 BR, 2 at S5 mo. Answering service 1 BR. From $160 i!abl 222 F S260. inc·l. util. 6-l&-123-1 Ron. 2 BR, $190 BA, frplc, dck, pier, $450 yr-ava e. orest Ave, JOHN-All is forgiven. \\!ill
be at 11oward's Restaurant
"Very eve at 6:30 pm. \Vc'll
have a delicious Weight
\Vatchcrs dinner & talk it
out. E. K.
Expert Housecleaning Capable of doing drawing,
I BR. pa rt furn. Gar. ("loS<'
lo bch. Yrly. $1 60. Uli l JKI.
No chlcirn., no pt'I.~. 67:;...29:\0
1 BR. & Den From StRO 968--3:363 Collect If toll Jy, 224, 20th St., 673-5878 Laguna Beach, 494--9466
MEDITERRANEAN 1\PT 3 Br. 2l2 ba, frplc, ,~';;"".-~-.;;-;--;-;;=-=cc-I DESK spa<.-e avdlable $50
By Day. Refs. 836--0648 style lettering, electrical l ' I~ oomputa1ions, p I um b Ing s.rvac.n ~ HOUS~ OF CLEAN spool lengths for reRldenUal '-liiiliiimmliiiliiim~·;;om; Floors, windm1:s, crpt, walls. design. Start $900. Call
I 6 yrs. in area. 642-6824. Helen J{ayes, 5 4 0-6 D 5 5,
VILLAGE pnlio, i::nr. san. 2AR 2BA, 4--Plex, erpts. mo. Will provide furniture
•191Hl9.<8 d' b11· N H H at S5 n10. Answe..-.. .. service "" 6. ** $230. 2 Br furnlsht'fl, all
util pd. 3700 -""nshon>
673-6578.
2400 Harbor Blvd., C.!\1, P5, ins. r oag osp. • -
(714) 557-8020 Huntinator. Beach No pets. mature adults only. available, 17875 Beach Blvd.
,175 "'" •387 Huntington Beach. 642-4321 RENT Al. OFFICE Imo. vu-. .
OPEN JO AM to 6 P'-1 Children Welcome EASTBLUF'F 2 Br, 2!) Ba, BAY VIEW OFFICES
PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-
fident, sympathetic
pregnancy counseling. Abor-
tion & Adoptions ref. AP·
CARE. 642-44.16.
"l 1ysittlng Dedicated Cleaning Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 O
•IOTI' . 'I I * \VE DO EVERYTIIING * Harbor St, 01. 1 ~ER. l'xp. ,. e a s . R f Fret> e t 646--28.39
1.., block to e>ttRn-2 BR. 11('\\I
erpts &: c/rps, g:iragc, In·
quire: 673~10.
Newport Heights
CLEAN I or 2 BR . Arlulrs. no
prts. Lgc kit. Sl3J·$1JO. 2-121
t-:. 16th St., NB. 646-1801.
Sa n Clemente
,1 HH. Ol.'l'ttnfmnT r>rntllou~ ..
apt \\'h1 le 11·;,11•t' \'ll'\\', slt'ps
10 br11ch, r l'lv pa110. S:ll'IO.
111.1. O!'l·July 1"1. 492·807.I.
AD•. Unturn. 365 1
New duplexes &
triplexes
• 2 BR . actul!s . 5195. e 3 BR . 1 1..•hild . $295.
Beaut., Ill'\\', spacious apts
w/fncd yards, patios & quiet
privacy. No pets, 151 E. Bay
St. fat f'uller!on St.), C.!lf.
PllONE: 642-4837
Park-Like Surrounding
QUI£'J' DELW\'E
.1, 2 & 3 BR APTS.
Al.SO FURN BACHELOH
Pvt. Pntios * Htd. Pools
Nr Shop'g * Adults Only
Balboa Ponln1ul• I Martinique Apts.
3 Br. 2 ba Dlx ap1. Incl (rpk" I 1777 Santa. Ana Ave .. C.1\1.
:: balron\r§, 11in rn1, & ls 1 j ;\!gr. Apt. 113 646-.'i542
blk fron1 bay & OC'('Oll. I ~·r EASTSIDE . 2 Br. $16:;.
Jca'i<'. Day!!, S.1 1-1161 ; nlh.•s, Quiet -vt>ry clean -no pets.
6'i.r2306. Cpr~/drps-encl. gar a g c.
\'EARLY . Lo\\cr 2 Br. 1 B.1. 2-l.30-B Santa Ana Ave., C.M.
$200/mo. Garagf'. t blk to 5-IS-S.:,7~ OC-lr 11 am·oft 3:30
occnn or hny. 67:7-0892. 620 pm.
\\'. Balboa Blvd. U'0P""P"'E~R,-, ~LA-;-;R~G~P.~.~2;-;;B-,.-. -,.-,.~.,
Capi1trano Beach gar. Nr. OCC & shop',;:.
Adults. no prts. 291!>1 Royal
Palm Dr. $152/mo. 64,:-,...3515
or 5.'17-3372.
LARGE upprr duplrx. 2 BR,
2 BA sep din & lndry, ·gar,
nr Gran111. PN'f adult~ only,
no pets, $J!l0 .. 496-4961.
Corona del Mar
ON TEN ACR£S DELUXE I & 2 BR, l & 2
Apts. furn./unfurn. L<>a:..e 1 Im, $160 up. Pool. AdulU.
Flrepl,.ces I priv. pauos, , Util pd. 324 E. 20th St.,
Pool& Tmnl1 Qintnl'l f1kfst. 64:>-4761
900 Sea Lane, Cdl\I IH·1·261 I •. -• .,-,B"E'":A'°UT=1"'ru=L-cl,-&,....,2,..B~rt.
MacArthur nr Qia,I I h\•y I Co•J• 0 _ Gard-A t .. ..,mpor ... J "'" p .
Patio!l. I r p I c . , pool.
$la.;..s110. Call 546-516.l. 2 bcdroom11 cnch. Rllillll.
11replact', t" n r pr I 11 &
drapes, rhO\cc I n r ;i ! i 0 n . LIGHT & Airy lrg 3 Rlt
Leue $2n pr month. Co11l ~turl)(I Apt_ Sep. din nn,
673-8.i.50 JU.Tll. Pntio, Yard. S200/mo. 213:
J8S..J2.\5 morn 's only.
DELUXE Townhouw ~ e 2 BR. 1.0\\'ER Sl40 e Bdrm, 21 ~ ha, r r rlr . Shlli;f l'pl dq>, hl1ns. no pr!s
d!!hw1hr, V.'/\ll "1'111~· 11 ~ Nr llnrbor Cen1er. 5'!0-44.~. l)lk11 to IX"11ch. YP11r IM'.
~ l'.'Ye11 & '-''knrl~. I Ir. 2 BR . Adults. no pels.
B.A \' ;\I EA DOWS APTS. TWO bdrm., 11 1 hn r h,
fll'f'placc. 121 j Incl ALL 387 \V. Bay SI . 0.I &l6--00'i3
uWltl«. PholW' ( 7 \ '1 ) EN€LOSJ.-:O y11nJ, 2 BR. 2 ba
644-881'1 or &12.;~073. lfl\\'f't. Crpf11, drps, bltns.
2 B
'
,,_ 1 I S180, M&-0469. r .. un., ups ti NJ,
down5taln. AUrart. npl. CLEAN. lrg, 3 DR, 1'4 BA.
Swedish frpll'. G 4 4 -4 6 l O SJ6.<1/mo. Dl'pmil &. ""''
dl)'!ll: 67:\..464'17 Aft 6 pm. rrq'cl. Chldrn ok. !l49-'42'lj,
LGF. l BR. 2 bn. vtew, lrplc, E·SIDE 2 BR. $150
bltn1, heam cell'g. So. hv.'Y. Bl!n!I, I\ I\. l'\'frli;:. Pool.
$3%>. 67~8. Arlult11. nn pt•ls. 642·9520.
Cost• Meu 1 I 2 BR w/h1m ... A\'ltil. Hid
pool. $130 & up. Arlull11. 853
$PAC. 1 UR. adlts, no pet.!. Center SI, 645-8966.
Quiet &f'l'it.. Nr •howlnir. Jl40. AGT. 540--llSl NEWLY det-2 Br .. nrw
uptJ, drps.. paint. Incl bltna, mR. 11~ ha, 1t1udio, 11Ma car• patio. siss. S.i§..1693.
crpt, pt1.tlo, ellt'I pr, adlts, I I G I B trJ pen. $163. &1&-8303 LR , sunny r. u~r
nu c:rptJI, drpt, bltn•; n!trla.
**1 BR. Stow It lttlriR. 1140/rnn , 545-5210, 833..3540. 11.35/mo. Adults, trJ pet1.
13) Cot:nltt St. 64J...5MS 2 BOru.f 1tudlo, no petA.
Crptit &: d~. $135. month. PR.JV, ~Ho. 2 BR. frpl.B, M741J70.
drps. blf.tn., pr. No pelj;.
J140/mo. 561...al80 2 hr triplex. Cpt, gar.
2 BR. eoi...... ~I &: drps. eneJ yd. A\1(111 ()cl I. °',... * 11.!J. M).o5829 It Ultn1. Enal K•r-Nr. OCC.
Up!JfAln. t l4l. &t>:J..97811. CLF.AN l, 2 BR.. l"aol,
~----------1 ple•Mnt, nr AhOJ)I. Adu.1111.
You'U 11nt1 II In cr....lllod Utll pd. 113S up. lJ43.-0:l:it\.
,•
e FAMILY AFFAIR e aJI l'lec. cpts/d'l!s. f(lJlc. Deluxe, Air-conditiol\('d Fenced yd. 2-5 yr. olds. Nr e s. s · Assembl
Npt Hghts J<:lem. school DA ¥\\TORK $3) day. Gen. y I, 2 & 3 BR's. s1:-15 to $235 dbl gar, pool nr •. by. J{edecorateJ. Lido area
Tennis rt, pool, BBQ, child Sl4-M05. Rcalonon1icK, Bkr. 675-6700 6'&6547. cleaning . experienced. ASSEMBLERS
I' ACKERS
. 558-1840, ~-J:fil. PALM & CARD READINGS D=A,-cY~N-,-..,..~..,,~.~b~a7b7io-,~to,--,S1 -.,~~,--,,--~--,~~-::-·!
yrs $l8 per ,vk. ~5788 or Expert Housecleaning
645-43()2. By Day. Refs. 836--0648
play art'a. Day care center, ==-,;--;--,.,----,-,=·I CORONA de! 1'.1ar. Dlx air 3 story I'('(, bldg. incl. gym NE\VLY decor. upper 3 BR, Past, present &: future. 2 ba f I yrl I N cond. oflices. Up to 2500 sq. t & party rms. DESIGNED ·· rp c. Y ease. ew-Advice & help in many ma -
FOR THE GR 0 WING port Shores, 642-8520. ft. Pn:.'Stige bldg. Xlnt prkg, ters. 213: 694-1350. Fully He. Builders
FA l\1 I L Y. SEE FUR..i.'l. 01.X. 2 Br .. 2 Ba for quiet 675-£900. La J-labra. Call for appt. -----------Janitorial
MODELS. (714) 842-0629, adul!s. Patio, lndry, tlC\Y 01'71CE and/or desk space * EUROPEAN PSYOllC * KITCHEN & bath ren1odel· -~Je~f~l'~•~C~l-ean_,U!~g-:S.-:--rv~i-,,.-
6401 \VARNER AVE. paint & crpts. $18."i. 642-1276. avail. now. Handy to San S2S. ing & room additions. A & M Residential _ Commercial
Diego Fwy. Lncatal .in Contractors. 497·1~. IMMEO. OCCUPANCY YEARLY. Canal front 3 hr, Laguna Niguel. 831 _1400. Appts. avail. thru 01't. & No\'. * ~ *
New 2 & 3 Br apts llC\\'ly decor. Sundeck. Im-(714) 523-'1.156 Business Service [ 11 ,300 670 2124 GROUND floor-pkg-nr fy,•y L d I I J gat·agc, dshwshr mac. . ,,. . TERI LIBRA OFFICE SERVICES an scap ng C JI · / d .9(1() sq. fl, $100. Toilet, rte
or un 115°•3'~018• 1A38anis, 11·8 · San Juen Capistrano 173R Anaheim, CM 673--2654. \Ve love you IB:\·I Typing. 2588 Suite B, LANDSCAPING
.,... PIE>ase con1e home I d c
* MOVE IN TODAY $185 mo. New 2 br. cpts. 2 Adjoining offices, busy in· ~~~~~~~~~~:I Ne1vpo11 B v ., osta J\1esa, F'or unique & personalized * d pd tersectlon C.M. S90. Util's r 645-8850. style in landscaping cal!
Immediate placement
101· Inexperienced Ol'"
l.ite expel'. assen1bly people
CALL US NO\V!
P.P.S.
Pacific
Personn•I Services
11.2 No. Tower
Union Bank Square
Orange, Calif. Spac 2 &p3 BIR In 4b-lpdlcx. All f~si431~~ an~tin~; Incl. 642-6560. I J[g] Ca rpenter James C. Elmer -Land·
extras. oo, rec g. Kids Lolt and f<Mlll scaping & Ma.i ntent. '1Cc Co.
welcome. r·rom $139. See Apts., PLUSH small ~ffice suite, LARGE OR SMALL "Renovating lawns, A nc· Ask for Rachel l\1ay
l\1gr, l73TI Keclson "B". Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Newport Center. 64~4 or All Types \Vork? Cut doors, cessily at thls time." Free """"~~~~~~~""'[
547-6446
968-7510 or S.17-4260. ,,64_2-30__.-"--=----,-:---..-..5 Found (frH ads) 550 panel, remodel, f In is h, est. 646-7229 aft 5. ASSEMBLERS
2 BR, frpl c, bltns, .shag & B•lboa Island Business Rental -......_....... frame, repairs, etc. 962-1961. Painting & PJrime. Assembly & purging
drps. VPry clean, Bpacious. BALBOA Island, altr. 2or 3 1736 ANAflEii\f. Ci\1 FOuND .male cat 6 to 7 •CARPENTRY • Rougll & Paperhanging of smell pressure in-L..a...,·n. J'o;r pork & schls. n1onths. vicinity Bayshores, Fini~i.. patio To-& cement. strun1ents. Ct .1d 1 , 1tr. 1, blk to water. \Vinlrr Ground noor. pkg, nr fy,y ... _,~ h. & ~· ,.,
II rvn \\'e COm<'. No (l('t~. S225 $2.10 y I $300 $325 Tollet-$110-673--2654 I N.B. Long ......... , ..... lie 646--.'l971, 548-1594. No Wa.mng Please Apply
s1110. !M)_~~13. r1J 87l-8324. r y ' . grey. 645-1410. I,,-......,-'=-~.----* WALLPAPER * Gulton lndustrir~
BEACH BLUFF Aph. r::o.:o..,,:=------· I A"y day is the BEST DAY to GRA \" tiger kitten (approx 2 Carpet Service When l'O'J call "Mac·· 1644 \Vhittier Ave. Cost• Mesa ~ Cos M 2 Br.. 2 Ba., pool, patio, ----------run an ad~ Don't delay .. , mo old) vie: 16th & Orange. JOHN'S Cari>et & Upholstery 54 1444 646-1711 ta. esa.
dsh1\·shr. 8231 Ellis ,\vc. LA MANCHA call today 642-5678. . 382 16th St., C,Os!a Mesa. D1:i-Shampoo free Sootch-INT & E>..'T painting, pape:l' ASSEMBLY
S-17-222(;. Brand New Deluxe Units guard (Soil Retardants). hanging, natural \Vo o d SOLDERERS· WIRE WRAP
WALK TO BEACH Ren! now for your ron· Degreasers &: all color fi nishing. 5 4 8-7 9 O 5 or Experienced
1 & 2 Br. Cpts, clrps, struclion allowance of 1 * * * * * * brighteners & 10 minute 548-2759. Irvine 540--4450
ds1tw5hr, 2Qj 1Jth; 308 16th. 111o·s h'f'e rent. lBR, lBR & bleach for white C8J1>4:1S. PAINTING & PAPERING, NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO
847-39J7. •!t"n, 2 BR's & 3 BR's. f"'ron1 Save your m?ney by s!i:v1ng 19 yrs in Harbor area. Lie & Tempo Temporary Help
Sl:l5. Di'lhwshr. encl gor, rn. •, extra trips. \Vil! clean bonded. Ref's furn. 642-23.56. ASSEMBLERS, PC LRG. 2 tklrn1s. unrurn apl . I di-' &
Ad J 1 sv.·im'g pool. BBQ's T d ! Pa d • iv.ng rm., "'ng rm. PAINTING • l·lo-t cle"" Assemble & solder PC ""· ''° 1"'
1
'· :I I 642-2007 778 Sro" PL, CM ra er S ra 1se hall $15, Aoy nn. $7.50, --~ ..... L.. d' boa<d• M"st be abl• I<> Alaba11111 S1., Huntington h $IO Chai ., 15 guarant=u wor . 1cense · ..
Beach. couc · r ...,, · yrs. & i ured 675-5740 recognize parts, know ooJop MlealiBJllJ 20 1 · exp. Is \Yhat counts, not ns , . codf!, do hand soldering i:
2 BR. 11
J bf•, rrplc, ria1io. Sparkllfll Ne\v Adult Apts. Ines method. I do work myself. PAJN:rtNG, c ~ r pe nt r y read 11ehemalics. Acceptina
l'llt'I gar. \9'alk to he11.rh. No 1 BR. Fum. Sl!lO. Good ~f. 5.11-0101. ;epaJrs. 18 yrs. 1n area. Sm. applications for t e 8 t 1 n g
dogs. $!!.lj/1110. 002-lOJO. 2 BR, 2 BA furn S243 t • I Ceilings JOI>$ OK. Call Bob 646-6446. daily. .
LARGE 2 BR t BA. rrpls & Private pallos. lush forest 1mes ----------1PROF. pa.inter, hone11t work. OOETICS, INC.
<irapcs. Pb: ~M2·1'11S/F:vc'l!. setting. 9arJ>orts. gas paid. * SPARKLlNG WlilTE rcas. lie/ins. Int/ut, free 1845 So. Manchester,
842"'10':>. U4 E. 3hh St., C.~. 548--0137 d 11 New acoostical ceilings est. Refs. 548-Z759. Anaheim 0 ars Arty lim<-, &~1183 Reati. E I O E 1oy 2 BR AJ>ls. Clo!IM i;;arngc. SHADY Elms-Pool & Gat"rll'n FOR clean & neat painting, qua ppor. mp er
Crpts, drp!I, chllrl & 11mall Sl<tG-$170. Chilrlren. A!lk Cement, Concrete-Interior, reas. rates. Call M/F.
pt'I ok. $140/mo. 817-1'149 about ff('(' furn. plan. -. CUSTOPtf CE r..I ENT Dick, 961H065. A$STT. l\1GR TRNE
E."XTfL\ lge 2 br, u1 ll11 pd. 642-3645. HAVE: Ll'aM.'d comm 'I hJdg 2\-, ACRES No. Calif. WORK PROF. Painting, also roof5, PART.TIME
C rt I N.-.---.,-n;;-_-,-,,----·11..geC·lflot.SanOin1as.F Tl't('Jl, close lo tcwa1 & ac ·1 ·m / t pl!!, rp.~. put o, no pets. ewport u.r•ch am 1 T d Dri\>et1, \VALKS, potlmi, _cous.. ce1 · 1 er ex er. 6-9·30 EVES
Kids OK. Sls:>. 5.16-0lzt Ir C. $65.500. \VAr"T : ll~l'. 1<'~{'. s . va ue. ra e pool deck11. Don. 642-8514 Lie/Ins. Frtt est. 615-5191 . D.IVISION. r f • l RR., 2 ba .. all bhns. Steps dur)l~x ltrlple!t. or ~~? C.l\l.1 for l'at, or ?? 1 o manu . ro. hos 2 BR, 1 -"ly, 4-plcx, {'tpflJ, to IX'ach . \Vlnter 1250 nlO. N.B. Ov.·ncr ·Bkr. 673-6756. 17141 ~ PATIOs-sIDEWALKS Pl•tter. Patch, Rep•lr lmmed. openings -for young
drps, fflCfl. gar. Chlld ok. furn. Al.SO upper l BR. 2 16 STORE !!hopping c:entC'r, 1 i\cre C8.liloniia Pines, CEMENT CONTRACI'OR * PATCH PLASTERING men over 21 who need a
$L10. 828-5-117. txi ., nll bltns, lrplc. Yearly La11abra. \VIII accept smal· Unlt 1. $2395 vaJue. Trade Call l\tax ** Ma-0687 All types. Frtt estimates pf'rm. 2nd job to supplen1t"t1t
l•gun• Be•ch sm 1\10· unfum. &12--0177 ler properties, lo split up for C{'m~ work, .auto, or? PATIOS-PLANTERS CaU 540-6825 Prt'M!nt income.
BE.AUTIFUL 2 l:Jr furn, Utll 3 & 4 tin. F"on1. or Unfurn. rnulllple ownership. Roy J , llf comparable va1uc. All Concrete work. Brick, ?lumblng $4.75 HR
I I blk ~1 N 1 H•• Nt\\'. Elmorn Co. Reid An1tJ10n, Reallor, 49'-7260. * 545-4965 * slumP11lone wk. 894-~\1. For lntervw: S47-091S · JX . ,,.. i. , ... ..,.una. lk drl ,,._ L.R. OTIS PLUMBING ; $2fi5, 494--5704 111n. r;.~1atc Division. 645-4040. llAVE: 2Brcottagc ll·2 1o«, WANT: Small commercial PATfOS, Wll a, ves. <)11.w, R model A Re ..... , W ASSfSTANT to 'NOTl'K'nJJ ac· ,-----;.,,--<~·~---redevt'lop, area, Eq, $7,700. w/Uving quarter. btwn llB brrak, remove & replace e 1 . ..-rs. atcr ffiJllOf)' manufllcturw. Must
L•guna Niguel Wiii 01ld Tl)'1 &/or (·1u1h. & Long Beach. HAVE: Cir concr.:te. ~for est. heAters. daix>sala:, furnace•, hil.vt ad. knowlet1ae of sew~
LAGUNA NIGUEL I~ i I C'I NB l uni!,, c......,-In ~fontrose. dshwzbn. 979-3130 MIC & Ing '~1910 Ra'lt• & \\'Mt dplx, h P ic. "· """-' Child C•re BIA. All Dally Pilot areas. .,_,·;;;-=;--·.,,-,.,,,--,,-~I Ap•rfments ,,-or cnr or ? Own/Uk 673·6T"6 Bkr. Englund 673-044. PLUMBING REPAlR ASSISTANT l"ood Mgn.:
1 1ir., 1 Un.: $1tG • 2 Hr ., I 1970 V\\' 1-"AsrBACK, new S2.~ f!qlllty on $11,<XX> • CHILD CARE • No job 100 smllll pt"rm p/tlmc ""knda. $2.50 I~: m;,, • 2 l:Jr .. 2 Ila.: Rooms 400 Uret, e1)A'.h~ A-bralce11, lor 1· ho! r l' Arrov.:ht.-ad lot . Dc.-pt'ndablf' * 642-3128 * hr. ~1103 bcfOl"f' noon.
$23r> ----------vnn or J>lt'k·uri. Tr.adt-lor lalt' JnOCk-1 au10 llllrhor/Rakrr AIT'a. ATTENTION 11K'ld Ga11, TV Cnhlr & \\·1r •-URNISllEO room In 54.\1 .. 1517 or or ??? S 4 6 _ 4 l 4 S Drains u~Joued ~ S7.50
f"'ulty rrplrt l drpd. Rtt private ho~. with or 64&63M 5.~12 Slov.w llne to 100' • $15
lactl. ltlcf Pool. 11BQ flt'f'll. without kitchen prlviJCW'!I. .39 CJIEVY, SSOO VAl .• Ut.:. llAVE: Jo'lm TD s;nm al Contr•ctor * 549-2502 +
:zro.11 Aloma ,\vr. \Vorklnlll: lady J>ttf~t'l'ed. 1----------COLE PLUMBING ,_ TRADE •"On PICJ\·UI' $400/mo, 9',~ int. Dl.lt" JO Yl'I Adtll"--• * R•~·1 1-ol.'&-22'77 (II' '4!r>-5.27'4 Mlqk>n Vlt!'jO attft SS&-29111. urnE ......... .... .. h ,__ •oo M
TRUCK JN GOOD COND. 2nd TO SlOm nt SIOOrmo. Cicrwtck &: Son. Llc'd r, mt:IVKl'I!', .,._JJvo
ROOMS $18 wk. up W/kit. Call 9'"k Int. Due 10 yn, For hllf', 67J....60'4l '* 549-'21'10 PWMBlNG repa\rt and tn. Mese Verde
DELUXE 2 If 3 BR .. 2 Ba.
encl. a.,r. $15.\ up. RentaJ
Ore.. m.i J\.lace Ave.,
SJO. wk up Apts. Low ~10'11 dp~ltrptx CM/NB 673-6n6. ttallaflons, 119lnttna. F'tH
monlhly Mlle• %J76 Newport :-=:--;;:=:01=--·-=-PACKARD .... st. r ••. J Ac K Taulant -Repair E"..o ,.An .. UVI --Blvd. CM MS-9755. !i BR. Execul. VI' 11U1111'. Olnl remod., •ddlt. ~ yn.. n:p, r..a1-._..,,. • , -.i••·
Saleswomen & Men
$15,000 to $50.000
Cl11.morou1, exclt.lt\Q:, .adv,.n~
turotl# Plf'I catNr with
Clu~Uica tlylna all of
U.S. It tt1t'Xk'O. No 11e ~r~
ritta. Earn u yo". lrun.
~l®I. DELUXE ffdmi., pvt ho!Tll",
~hllrel' hlllh wfl t~t.
NewPort Beach $7!ilmo. Ewa, wk n d 1
ENt~ldC! O>er. Me• a. Danish mod cab, AM/rM Uc'd. My Wa:y a,, ~l-()03:6. ..~ .. 10 1•er•ilon• Mr. Mctlona.ld
~7-4751 rRAl1E $2'J,!IOO, t.qUlty far •tttl.'Ct • Gllt'l'af'd chanaer. -•• --. A lo
lncosne unit•. J>Nfer ~or Sl•v• arkr Incl, V-.J. S75. • 'Clenlng SEWINO..OESIGNING Im~ car aaleaman. 0rJ
&46-2042. r<o'E\'' dupl<"x l & 3 OR. -:-;~o::-::o-<;;; S2W$.11l yrly. Nt'ar ocean ~oom I Board 405
& bay. G.rol~. -IR-00----~-.-1-~-.-., ;\!, bofl,u • auJ,.,., r * 3 B.R. 2UA. I blk to bl'ach. eldr-r!y, l"l'li.rl"d .rtntkm,an.
Ycnrly. Refined prlva1c homo In
moff', m.ms A.l\I. tor 10 •pd bike. ~ HANDYl\tAN -All kindt of Mtn/Women. Re-a.a. Rat" Counl)'I rrmt ur.bU.1hed
HAVE : '69 lf1Jml ltoedrun· Ukt lb trade? our l'Rdt'I''• work, lllU&ll J;>ba a S10 min. c.!1_ 845-7450 dealo1'.
n~. C!\lerythlng nt>W, WMh P1.M1dlse ~tumn Is fctt' yOU! s!)f!<"lalty. 9."J6..93'7ol: MG-9723. Aihratlons-642·Sl4S F"rllt \VaJTrn
SM>, TR.ADE for t6rly S ilne OAMENING SERVICE Ne111. ncnini.tP, 20 Yi'll" exp. SPORT CAR CENTER
Corvr-tt1• + :;; 5 d:tyt RmlOnlllblr _ ReUablc rilt TIO E. l1t,-Sltt1t• Ann ~l.o764
Call !JG.8017 for 5 bucks. .., &~ •
Call 67J..24l.'l ~.eh arce. rAmtly r.bn-
Cl&!l!llflt!d Ad.1 ••. 112-56i1. .111HAtlon r (I q u e I I e d . * * * * * ----------1CER.AMJC lite new • Tht '"''l'fl llr11w In lhe \Veil. * Dl.ily Pilot wam Ad• h.ave l"C!modl'I. floce ~. 'Small ... s. 1>au1 Pilot O..ilM!d
\\'i.nt Old ~ul!• . S..2-Q678 !)7'9..7:\96. ••••••••••••••••••••• be.nwlr11 i:all;'lm. Jo~ .,,'Clromt:. S.16-U~. "" ''" A•
'
DAILY l'fl OJ M~r. Ocl.Obtr 2, 19n ~~~1 ~~~~1 ~,~~~~~~·1 ~~1~~~~~~~~~~~ t.._I _ ..... _ .... __,][II] 1 ...,..,_ JfIIJ [ ...... •• l[lJ I "'1
''"""' l[Il] [ "-''"""' J[Il] I ...... .... l[fi) [ .... p=• J(Il] ! ·-· · l~I .___ p-~JI~'~
··B ;;;;;;;;;;1 ;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii~iii Holp w ... Md, M & F 710 Help Wantod, M & F 110 u .1 w -• M & r 710 u I w -M 1 I' 711 M!!~ 11 111 '• , .. •n•••. M 6 F 71 0 Help Wanted. M & P 710 ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Help Wonted, M & F 71 0 ""P ant-. ~ ~e P a • Mlocellanoou1 111 ••co ,.._,
AUTOMOTI VE
LOT BOY
Ml.lit bt hard worker. Appl)'
in pen10n to Mr. ·r.
DENTAL Aaaistant, li-30,
must like chlldren. Call
847-2566.
E.Allli 500 Blue c b l p
Stampt-Have a toy & gift
parcy in your h ome . 971H:m.
JANl'rORS. w ...... 4 NCR OPERATOR PUMPllland Sa luman , SAi.ES' Some <x per . YOUNG,-''''-rnpl<tly *OLD STOVE* ISfPJ<H I 1972 '""'"I =~~~me 4 hn CdM Itta. ~ [Mys, ~ hrs. Yuh.ion It aportswear. t'Ull Kf'Owlng ~a.I f!!lta te t"t'Mn· Smaller old 11o·ou.J burnlnJ; Jr)O{k.'I. S:)'.>lf'n11.A~I full 111.w
Newport Beach Nite lhl.U. Top wap-. °". p/~. Ml 2-2414, Alra. PM>' hu need for an ad· ictove? 2 hol«'!I 00 top, froni I 1·tuu1ti!t'r A \t/t \l slt'n'O
JOBS Phone 6'B-88U tor appt. 0 Malley. minlltn.liw aulltaot. tttu11 door. N•'f'lbi kits nl 11.otlc ~. ltC'r\ 1a11r rk'rir plui
URGENTLY NEEDED 'Need expe.rlenct;d NCR Rt.t.I Eat.t• Sales SEAMSTRESS for f I n t • h hlYt" excetl~nl lt'CretUial bur i'fltlld hf-real rui•,., .... tu·n "' l)J.11-· J.i1 k., Ai t
• &..'Cl"Olarita openi.tor who can tyJ)c ~ .ewtna:. Jo""uU or p/tlme-. Call lkilll and bookkttping ex-liniMf'd. 1 .~ar•i·ol s.'tNhn~ i;ui.po nio1011 i,,r,,.;i.l(o r• SOii
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2:iSO llarbor Blvd.
Costa lt1Cll.ll
•Keypunch Opera.ton ~~& C:~~r~~1: fRE£ 6Vi--1910. -perience. Top pey and~! ll, but d!fln I lint.'>h, "'' II s I '"'" on l•i\. & ii:u,11 \\lij It·!~ e lndU1trlal I 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiii•I trlnae btntfll•. r or appt quUf' ru.lilL'fl ,, SlO u1\cla1111<'d ()rijl111~lly S7ln
EMPLOYMENT offe r e d .' e BlllingClerkTyplst lion involves heavy mat'h!nc LlcenM Tr.1lnl~ SECRETARY call bet. '.l & 5, Nolan l't.eftl s:ind blasi in1it yib .,.,uuld •akr :--11,.... ~> C'nsh ·~r J\llr1T11•n1 ~
Male, sml Ui:ht M9J1Ublic. Irvine 540-4450 bookkeeping & P 0 st 111 i LI i•-• Tl On ~It.le, Laguna. ll t• n i' h , i·an· ol that. It "'~'l<I ,,, .... ~ . t..aya ... 11) l)rpt 71 ~ ~.~l-1.(..'l l 1 w·~ Qi., Nc.Ws reliable NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO journal entry to the general m ·~ me y FOR PLANSINC DEPT. 494--9473. "" ..,.,. ·
A UT O MOTI VE o!flce
manager. beuch IOCMUon.
'Call 842-4435 for appl.
lull time emp\<lyee. Op.. Tempo Temporary Help ... ~ ........ us ..... •· I~~,,.. f •-Ileen,. CO"-• now \;iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil a !•uh• "lt\lltt•r; ur ttli a •'IJO· I SCRAM LETS
portunity to grow w/com· J D I / rom1al education in ac· avaHa ble thru 'J'ubeU c.;om. nie Irvine Compwiy htt.'f vrt"58.t1on pit>t·<.•·11n t·nd 11i1bl(' I •
}\VON CHRISTMAS EARN-
INGS can help make the
OOildays happier tor your
entire family! It's easy sell.
log, line Avon products for
our in"e5istible Christmas
Catalogue. Call No \V •
54G-7Ml.
pany. ~11n. exp req. 979-2'290 r. es 9n•r counting required. ExccUenl pany. Applicants fully tt--opening ror !Jeen•lary In the I I~ V.lth ii nia.g.vinc 1.~1~1• r s s
J im Cline wkdays. EllC)fneer t"O. benefiu. lmburaed uponqu&Wication. plannil1& department w/ .,.., I ~ paid S.\; tor u.uuJ..:c vHt•i . I AN WER
New or experienced sales min. 3 yn expt>r. Typing 70 . . 547.1734 ""''If kl1'1 v.·1"1•1n'TKk 1
FACTORY Wanted to tiU penn. position Call people. Openlnp a vailable. w.p.m. Sh ~ w.p.m. Expe1., , DF'.C.'O RATOf{'S UE Ul.;Jrr _ Ha1nn.-1 ~1u .. ,r -1'.ludt· -
in desl1P1 & mtmg fJ bergls Betwn a .1m &. 12 noon Future management oppor· depart rn en t a I libntt')' * OLD STOVE * s&l; v.\X\Ck>n ll'rn Sf1tf'll, llt~·hJ.I'J:"'I l'IQ'(p1111I 1~1 in engineerlna dept. Exper. 644--3319 Complele tralnlng Pl'OIJ'am· establ.lsh.ing & maintaining Anttqut'I IOO f>ld rnelal 6nd hr.i• l'il!'lll'" I ~JOlho• -t.st-;\1,\.'i
diesel powered yachts req'd. Only ttmltles. Call Mr Sklaa at helpful. Excel.lent v.uitlng _ D.m:ipr.tn, 4 n . WI., flOO: hC"nf ' "Yi"A.h. I d1d11 t ha\1• * * * Advancement oppor. + xln'! l ::!i!:=z:liz:li~====='l 842-5581. c:onditionl It co. benelits. Sm&ll~t old wood burnln& old nK"tal ~per miU, 1111y !nt•1wi., 111 !ha t hu<spltnl
ro benefits, Send resume to TARBELL slOYl'. 2 hole1 on lop, tronl Spanish. t-1\: P:•11" UJJl.qtk" hul I ... ur.• lwd pk•nl)' of
R.E.J . Poole, NEW FACTORY · Call 644 mt door. Nttds lols of ~rk ptm_'t'lain •·n-och " 1 n t' lo;..'l t:~IAS
Announcing
BABYSITTER I housekf'<"p-
-er -live-in, P\1 rm, C<L\l. j
or 6 days, $1 2/day start.
l:ves: ~150: \Vkdays:
MS-1121.
BABYSITI"ER. refined, 11.1:te ~%5-50, 5 day!I "'eek. 7::0.:1::«1
·Girl 1%, boy JO. Exp. r~f.
-Ovon trans. Lite h.'\Ckeeping.
1 Start $50 per wk 6-16--0616.
BABYSITTER n l' c d (' d ,
7-!l::lO an1. 2-:l.:IO pn1.
Bayview Apts, C d 1\1 .
644-4168.
BABYSl'ITER r 0 R 3
; m.1ALL C H I LD.tJ.EN.
• -6T:>-5830 AF1' 5Pi\1.
BABYSITTER alter school
·on Peninsula. 2 Boys, ti!
5:45. 6Ta-1161 eve/1vknds. * BARTENDER *
• Blue Beel $3.5 per shirt
BEAlITY Operator . Busy
,C.M, shop. Musi be exp.
. _Blower dry & iron. Top sal
+ comm. 54&-3361.
BEAUTY operato~. full or
paI1 tin1c. Busy llunlington
Beach Shop. 968-8080.
• * BEAUTICIAN \V/NE/\T
• AP PE A RANCF:, F'OR
' "BUSY SHOP, 54S:9919.
·" BOAT REPAIR MEN
:-~1ust hl:tvc e xper i ence
, 1vatrrfront boa! re1>.1ir ,varrl .
• 1-laukruts , hull & n1ccha nlcal
:;repairs. Good jobs for top
, ;men. ll!ackie's Boat 'l'ard,
,2.J14 Newpo11 Blvd., N.B.
. ,673-6834.
·BODY Shop -expcr-cl. n1a n to
fill exrellcnl position \1•ilh
established business. i n
: Laguna Beach. 494-1155.
BOYS: I
Nr11• Lite lrtduslr1al
Division .1-'or \\'omen
e l\1any assignments in the
Newport Beach, lroine, San-
ta Ana & Costa Mesa areas e Experienced & trainee
Positions. Exccll('nf earn·
ings. \Veekly paychecks
NO FEE
Taking applicatiions
9AM-12 noon Only
2061 Business Ctr. Dr.
Irvine 833-1441
F'Act'ORY help -1.1achine
Opr, E.."<per. helpful. Will
train. Youn~ mature woman
pref'd. Ce.II Doris Hope,
'45-0ltll .
FEMALE ovt'r 30, graveyard
s~t . telephone operalor.
228 Forest, Laguna Beach.
Fee Paid
Sr . Accnl-CPA/Constr
J\1ech. Dc:-signcr
$15K
~2.'i
Girl f'rirl ay sh to $700
Exec. Secretary
Payroll Clt'rk
AP Bookkeeper
Typist
Steno
$60ll
1650
$600
'""' ''"" Esi:·row Tt'ainee $400
f,/C Bkkpr/Constr $800
Also FN! Positions
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
833 Dover Or., N.B.
642-3170
• I need hi:o boys to fill vacan-1 ... ~~~.., ... ~~!!!!\'!!!!~
ciea .on best newspaper boy FOOD Mgr .. basically "'knds
crew. 0 n 1 !' cxpt'rlenc:ed at s nack stand. $3 hr.
• boys o:inri!dered. Top pay 838-1103 before noon.
• and bonus. Ar<! you good FRY COOK. C O T T A G E
, enough to qualify? If 80 COFFEE SHOP, 562 W.19th
call: Sl, C.M. 646-5.304.
54>-334! GIRL FRIDAY
BOYS 11·16 Purchasing installation needs
Join Top Crew selling Orange t'nthusiastic, self-starter to
Coast's favorite Newspaper. handle Oil<' girl off ice, Take
Work 2 evenings and Satur-phone oi-dt>l'S, type & issue
day, Generous Con1mission purchase orders, post &ron-
and Bonus. l\lakc r.·tonry trul !Judget !Jalances, pl't'-
and Keep up 1vi!h School· pare invoices for payment.
work. too. 557-6739. Bookk('{'ping or accounts
BOYS pttyahle experience a mus!.
Age 10-14 to df'hVt.'t 11 .. pcrs Star ling salary $575-$650, ln·
ln the Dana Pol:it. Sa1, Cle-suranec. paid vacation. Send
~mente areas. 1-csun1e to 1.lrs. P.1cC!ure,
DAILY PILOT P.O. Box 1810, Ne\.\•port
492-4470 Beach 92663.
CARPENTERS GIRL Friday, 51h: daYs per
1-2 yn exper. req'd 1n cab-\1'k. \\'ith some bkk pg exp.
inet shop or boa.1 manuf. Salary open. McNash Reali)'
ISLANDER YACHTS 2.tl6 N•wport Blvd. 642_,,.,,.
m \\'. 171 h Sl, GRANDMOTllERLY·type -
Costa J\IC'sa w a n I "' d for occasional
CLERICAL babysitting on Balhoa Pen.
ii75-50:i5.
• Interviewing for \.\'Ork in Los <-H-A-!R~~0-..,,-,"""--·-·-,.~~-1 .. -1.
'Angeles unlil rnove to Lic'd. Attraclive. Ca 11 Nc\~rl end of Scplc mber. . EE d .1 b 645-5370 or 6-12~. ,IR a.1 y us transporta-
tion provided until n1ove.
·PACIFIC MUTUAL
' .Apply Tues. thn1 1-li. 9 am-12
pm at our new bulldlng, 700
N<.'W{!Ort Cenler Drive.
llANDYMAN over 50, can be
Si'ffi i·r<!tired, !O V.'Ol'k: i.n Dry
Cl enning plant, Expcr not
llL'<'. if ('apable of some SUP-
f'tVision. \l/ork somC' nights
6-10 Pl\!. Apply 120 S. El
Christmas ?1-foney Caminn Ttcal, San Clemente.
Slar t earning now . f'~un or 4!1'2-5424.
Part time Sc-11ing Christmas 1"1E=L~P~-.-.,-.~"-,.,~. -.-,-.-,-,-,-,
gifts for prestlgt" National woman p a rt tim(!-{iays,
, fim1. No lnvt'Slment. Hls:h 1 counter help. Apply in
potenlial earnings. For 1n-person, P.fr. Swis.!i, 18959
' tcrvicw call !'>46-1.835. ?llagnolia, Foun1ain Valley.
•COOK, cxper. Pnnc Lido l-IOST~xper. helpful but
Conv. llospltal, 466 l-'lagship nof nl'Cl'SS. Apply in person,
Rd., N.B. 642-8044. l.o\i"s Re s tau r an t ,
COOK . llOUSEKEEPErt, Brookhur.-t & Ada ms, H.B.
t'xp'd. lor wo1na 11 aloo('. lfOUSEKEEPER, 7:3().4 :30,
Live-in, S:m. 673·1879. 5 d:lys "·k, SAnta Ana. Take
O•ytime Busboy <'8.l'e nl 7 )T old. In morn.
Prl!kir nllt' 11ludenl. ~ d-iy B:\rh:ira llcffncr. 545-8756
wk. S<'f" ~I r. 11 t' r· kl' r . l\ft ·1.30 pm.
relil'iano·~. 1617 \\'('~lc:Jlff cll~07UcS~El<=·g=E=,p=g=n=-. ~f~vl71-17im-,,
{)i·.1 N.B. rnttlUrt. Good c om p a n y
DISPLAY h1·111•f1 1~. Beverly ?-.1aMr
Conva.h.•SCf'nl II o I p i I It I ,
t.a.1:una Hilla, 8.17-800'.l. P t"nn. 40 hours. 8-4 ::!0
Experlt'lll't' Pref(•rrf'd
lnti•n·1(•w h~ 2-4 pin
('<'l'*}n nel Ort!('('
THE BROADWAY
1777 l::tlln~cr. llunt. Bl'h.
EquN ()ppUr . Employ1•r
DELIVERY of 0 A I L 'l'
PILOT, SVNDi\ Y ONLY . IQ
ntwspaprrboy•. ll~111ll'f'a
the llMl ot • SlltUon \\"nst0n
: or Van. Cbntact ~Ir. llarry
Sttif"y, 130 Wes! fl.a,y SI ,
~I• Men
OENTAL A11a11rnn1 Orlt~1-
dorlllc Cha.lntdr, 1na1utf',
expPr only. 8"2· m 5
HousekHper, Liv•ln :1 eta)"! S.nl ramll)' EneliAh
ip1'nk\n£. P IO mo. 646-12tl .
~ l'ER$O\i'NEl
SERYICES•AGflo.CY
G. Ofc/Hostess Open
l'\'entn1 I .,.,'tt'ki!'nd """1t
G eneral Office to $475
10 Kl'Y Addtna M1'chllW'
Prod. Control Cl k $500
£xJM"riC'r'W'f: A ~htsl
Gener•I Office $475
--~ 1.Jte booldteeplna: 3 EJl'.K. 5Kret.1 ry to USO
Atl'Nlettvt A w"f'IJ lfnn!'n~
L99al Secretary to $600
2 Yf*rti Cflllf. LAw
DENT AI. R~C'Cp!ionbt~icp d..,,.. ll>'ffk. -t DOrt'At. Alllllt tanl \\'llnlf'fi
E!t'p'd ftn' J girt oftllt In 1-:I
Tom. 8."l)-M.10. 4S! E. 17th fat Jrvtne) 0.f
642"1470
OENT1\l. Au 111ant, F.;.;pt·r. ~
Only, Hun!. Fk·h AN'>1. C1lll
1(16-ffi97, t1111.!ltlf~ All• -• ~
Columbia Yachlt EXPANSION Botwn. I & 11 Only ~' ""'Jd he "'"'""' when "''"''""'"· 2 f<. ""· """" -* AU_C_T_l-ON * A Div of WhiJlaker Corp. $458. $640 Per Mo. REAL TORS hnished. t startM &aneing for tnble .le mp11 er oor Still
275 rt1cConnlck Ave. REAL ESTATE -ll, but didn't finiAh, IO It's &rH146 , . l-1(1(' 1-"uml\uro
Cost 'I Calif ~ SECRETARY quite rusted. A SlO . le A""'l111/'k"t's a "esa, · "'....,...., Al Per Written !lllndbluli""' Job "~"Id i-"e 2 Gret'n N'<'h nrr f'h1tir!I S'?1 ,.,. ~-"•I Op-Employe• '1 /F PROFESSIONAL ·• .. .,.. ""' Aucl!on., 1-'r u.l•y. 7 :;o p.m. ""i'"' """' " Agrument care o( that. It ll>'OUld makr •·Hrh. TV·lh·ll ·~rnt.o, (TI'('
Salesmen A broken! 1be op. The 1rvine ~ seelui a cute planter : or as 11 con-\\'oo lrn ye.rtl funu!u r,., <1 1 Wind y's Auct ion Barn LUHRS BOAT CO.
Now Hiring
Finish Carpenters
Rough C•rpenters &
Expe:r. Assemblers
Apply in Person
849 w. 18th St.,
Costa Mesa
L VN'S EXPER.
& Nurses Aides. 549-3061
MACHINISTS
Engine Lathe
General
Machinists .c'\/
Steady \Vork -Days
YARD
NEWPORT
3324 W. W.1rner Ave.
Santa Ana 545-7154
Equal Oppor, E'mployer
l\.1AO:IINE operator position
open in small mfg. firm.
Good "'Qrking conds. ro.
benefi ts. Tapmatic Corp, 845
\V. 16th St., N.B. 548-34-04
MAIDS \V ANTED
Apply In person. Jamaica
Jnn, 2101 E. Coast Hwy,
CdM. 673-8120.
MAIO Work in exc~ tor
ape
Call 548-9755
MATURE cpl to manage
apts on ocean. Must be ex-
per. 4~53 Ch a 1 m e r · s
Apts., 364 Clllt Dr., Lag
&h.
MBA'1 ......... CPA'1
Construction background a
must. 2-3 yrs exper. $18K
)'our Resume Only Plen::ie
Liz Reinder's Agency
4500 Campus Or.
546-2118 Newport Beach
MEDICAL Assdtant wanted:
beck office exp. w/la b, X·
ray, KG. 3 days per wk.
Age 25-35. Send Resume.
\\'rite ClassWed Ad No. 413.
Daily Pilot, P.O. Box J560,
Costa Mesa, Calif. 9a>26.
l\IEDICAL Secrctary-Recep-
lionisl. Must be mat~. ex-
perienced, personable. For
interview phone. 644-1173.
M.EDICA.L Assistant. Xlnt
typist. To $600. Lakewood.
213: 531-7420.
*
We e re now •ccepting
applic•tlons for -
HOSTESS
Evenings & W"kends
must be Over 21
PIC'a!le Apply
B<'1 1v11 !I & ll an\ A: 2 & 5 pn1
111542 MacArthur
11\cross ftonl O.C. AltJl(lrt )
N e"ll>'pOrt Btac.:h
Equal Oppor. Employl'r
NEED energeUc I~
Real E11t1le SAIM penonJor
Rctivr ~ HtAbllthN:i Of·
n~. Se.let " ft'ntaJ11. 1s1anri
ft111 lly, GraC'fl Wellln1ham
Rltr. 4911 Park Aw ., Balboll
en-1.mo.
TIME FOR
OUICll CASH
HROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
.WANT AD
64'--5678
Full Timt portwilty lt here! You are 9C'Cretary w/rnin. 2 yrs ex-verutioo piece-an l'nd table P W'\.'PS, I 1111'.'IBI rou1w 1 pat1r1 ~U, Nt~·1~. C~1 ~
Young men _ mtt:hanlcal needed lmmedta.tely for our Pe r . B a c kgroun d with a maaaxlne IPdge. I ta ble, al~ $15. \\llel:I lllOJ'TI)11 Brn'l\jl Tony's Bldt: r.1,,1·1
aptitude helpful, but not rapidly expandln& Rea I \.\'/~tenance o r ~ paid $l5 to .. lt-n1ake oUer. S2. 5.'U-7i.a.5 FREDDIE required. Must be 19 or Estate dlvialon, Potltive op. s70truction CO,,;_ he"'lpful. ~Ex 542-1734 ~es and \.\'ttkf'lld~. etrr"";-:oo.=,70-,-,,-,~1,7h7< -,,7,.-00-.-17,c11. I
Ov-Able to ---··-rk Im portuni"" tor advancement. • w.p.m. ""'' w.p.m. • k t··--• II I I .,.. ;,uu• ... v -Phone.·~ ccUent (.'(1, benefils. FRIG. Auto. WIUlher, Olp-ry ...,..,._., 8 i; ii.<1.~ 1''111 l'l ... 1.u 1•1·! 111 hiurh \111h tnediately, If accepted. F or pertont"-$8). Hotpolnt auto. Alr.o Hi t'u. f! 2 Dr 11.,
Job Information. ~ r ·If K-1n 11 .u~l H1,·h11.rd C.11 u•3••9 Waaher, \Yhlle $40. Nn""'e rt' nl( rt't'l<'r. l~!li \In! C II T d --~,. kH>•I\ "t~·l'f' \~JU o'-;'Ul ftrwf a ftl ay n. & Onl Electr:lc Dryer $50 Reconcl. ron<I. B o th n..•n.,.nmbl,·
lo .-U9twn. I 12 y •.d ,..,. ""·""' ~1841 .,..,"'· .,"'!.....,... ""rk ti )"u <..1111 11'~"'!1 II ,111d a.m, .... p.m. I.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'""'""""' a: vuar. J'fU""QO'" ....,,..,_ ""'...,, .... ,..,. \\ t; \fl:'." Y(•L' 'f{J(J•
n'-1551 I i I i I • Secretarit>s $t51}$660 OAK dining rm aet, 60" nxf . FOJt QUICK SALF'..-C1J1h h !----------
• AJP Construction $625 wilh 5 matching deln It. w/fold-<>ut bet! S.'IO; 1lf'fr 1}( i Miscellaneous
NJTE Clerk-Exper-graveyard RE. Sales, All new concept. e F/C Bkkpr CPA Exp Si;.iO hand carved but>, l::xlnt $25; Kilchen lab!~· $10: ! Wanted
.h'.ft llpm Tam Call B<'ll Women only. Work llB.. cond •~ . k k • ' -110 Book 120
' • · F v c M R · • Legal Secy Corp exp $650 • ...,_, wie er roe er • ~mp ; ·ca.'>I.' s.J ----------Sc h n e kier, 9am-12noon. · ·, · ·area, eceive up All Fees Paid By Company table. 5.16-4812.. ~. S~1A lL l'u1110. l't'ru.onabll·
Newporter Inn, N. B . to !X:l';Q comm. Gd. ad pro-Li Reimer' Age 6 old 0 . ~lrllsh ko..lkinb bunk brd~ 644-l700. gram. Leads provided. No z 1 ncy LOVELY nental MlV!I KORENA 421 Su!X"r 8 111()\'ll' r ,. 11 ~0 n 11 11 1,.. ,qifa-bed
broker compelition. Gd. up 4500 campus Dr. & a frw piecfi of antique cam~ra-Ins:1«nt 1·1n1rt1!1{f', lo\'rroc>al .Oil". p h 0 n t'
NURSES, pvt duty, all types, time. Xlnt training, Reim-~2118 Newport Beach furn . (!!051 824-2389 I l°:'"11nJ(". Pmt.'t'r 1t'lrphotll ) &-14--Qi.
all ibilta. Leseoulie Nunie'9 bune school for Uiose not SECRETARY -R'°'.'eptionist Pt.Jojave. wtde .11ngle-len!I. 1\!111<111 -~ --------
Registry, 351 Hospital Rd., lie. Xlnl lypist. To $&'.XI, Xlnt 1936 FORD 1 1~ ton Truck. Mw, ST.1 or makl' off~ 11 C1llS1\ C'!t bi"''' or h,1h·h. an
N.B. STANDARD R. E. opportunity. Lak~. 713: Dealtt demon&traUon 39 000 542-1734 f'~ & WR"kt>ntl~ IUIUl' or llf'w. I.• r &' • ~=:r ~ Call Mary 963-5538 531-7420. orig. miles. A -1 ~Ing FUR aalt'. l)lnnt•r for 1,.~, 1 ~·~...-i~ihl •• fil...._,IQ!7
or Lee 833-8700 SERVICE Station Salelm!!.ll cood. <TI41 644-8136. than $2.51), Homern~dt• llOUl1 \\ , ... T,.,> LmT~I !!LCo' !!nf."I * NURSES AIDE * R.E. Trainee. Brkr & ma:::hank', expt'1'. F/tlrne. WANTED. Lara:e c h L n a le salad + enll't'e 111 h1tl1• :1-bt·1I i.1 t--k;.ir.
E:icper. pref., all shifts. Bev-dt'vcloper will train & Llc. pret'd. Neat in AP" cabintt. Re a a on a b I e , llo....·ard'!I ncstaur.uit, ?\'r 1 t Off F -
erly 1-.fanor Convalescent sponsor tor lie. Call between pevance. ApPly Ai.VJ', 2500 644-4687. Bch. ~ce l urnffUr11/ . 114 llosp., 24452 Via Estrada, 10am-3pm. 5-15-112t Newport Blvd, CM Appll•nct• I02 4 FlllF.~N'E 1'JHES • t qu p. _...... _
Laguna Hills. RECEIVING/stock clerk for SllTER wanted, my home, & Whot>riJ, 9;~ X 16a '.\F:\\' \\i1lr•t1I l l"x~·· ''·'
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I growing drug store chain. 11>·eek of Oct. 23 only. 4 day! \VASH ER S, Dr)' er 1, 2.500 MILES. 1•cu11ve •lt·~ll: >.. 1n11teh1n..:
OUice Temporary Must be hardworking, a m-3 hnt ea. + 1 full day. $35. Dilhwuhen "-"t'Ol1d1Uoned, $2'"10 OR ?ltAKE o.-·Jo"EH. t•h.'\1r . fu.t cr1lui· 1.lf!Hi fur
bilious & capable of worldng Must have license. &' u a r n , D e 11 v e re d 542-l T:H f'V('!I & \.\'kJ1(bi $600 Ptiorw fi l I! (H I-Ml 1 WOULD A
CALLEDYA
But you're not registered
with us. ••
We have immediate tem-
porary assignments I n
Irvine area for:
e Typists
• Secretaries
• Gen'I Ofc Clerks e Receptionists
• All Ole Skills
CAU.. US NOW!
P.P.S.
Pacific
Personnel Services
112 No. Tower
Union Bank Square
Orange, Calif.
547-6446
Nik for Rachel ?tfay
ORDERLY, exper, p/time
7-3, Nurses aides exper.
prcf'd, 7-3. ~1esa Verde
Conv. H08P, 661 Center St,
0 1 548-5585.
PART-TIME
SECURITY
OFFICERS
\Ve need alert intelligr-nt wlf·
motivated &ecurity· offict>n
to "'Ork at our Jan::c garden
apnrtn1ent complex.
Apply In Person
OAKWOOD GARDEN
APARTMENTS
88) Irvine Ave.
Ncv.-port Beach, Calif.
Equal Oppor. Emplo y ~r
i\f/F
PICTURE Framer needed,
lx'ltch area. Must have 80tllt"
Pxp. Selling, &eleding, mat.
v.'Ork. Call TI4: 494-8105 for
Interview.
Personnel Cieri!
The lrvtne Company wekl 11
~nonfW'I citric w/plraalnK
pel'80nallty A :icln 't clcrk:al
skills.
Tnrt, dlplnm11.cy. & J10Und
judKment ln dealing v.•/~
ple I~ a must. Typlna: 61)-70
\.\',p.n1. XJn't oo bencllta.
Call 644-3319
llotwn. I & 11 Only
PIZZA Coot!:, woman. No f'X·
per "'-."('t'D. Hn 4-t2pm. 2214
Nev.l)Ort Bl. 0 1
PRESS OPERATORS
\!.'omen to •'Orie for J>(llltiC'
mokllnic ptants. ~.
rllODUCTJON TRIJ.,."'fo:E
Rf>ctlvtrw A 1n 1 p~c t o r
tnd,... far ~ corn.
pont'nl !ettf.rw. )Im., Jrw:.
1Tll3 ClUrtt~ S.A. ~"16it
PR T•al-lo snoo
•·ee Pa.kt. nu. fabuN firm
11 tt'f'klrw an t'.X('f'pUonal
lndivktual. Mwit bt ffl")' •I·
lradlve w/IO(ld Mia J)l'f·
l'>N.llty, Super 1pot. A!9')
f'ft' Joha. C'all Mu1on MaM.
X.U.2700, Dmnll • o.onnit
rrf'IOl'lntl .\amt)' °' hvtnf,
l®Mlcbdooo O..
u~ m tNdtt Our 'l"rlder'• p~ Ootuntn la ... ~!
w/customen &: employes. * 541)..5022 • M6-5%1.81839-763}. '1 CORVE'ITE huh c.aps 1,, nr 642-3V11.
0 pp o r tun I t y for ad· STUDENTS openings f 0 r RECONO. t ra d e -1 n ap-beau1y rim.s. Make offer t.:~X~,~.,.,--.,-,-,1,--,,-,-011~,-~,,,.,,,..,-.
vancement to managel'S year around p/time food pllances &: TVs. Dunla p'1, !>ll-1734, eves & wknd11. rhr $1\ • 111 •l•·ick-• 1!1•'11 ,11,
po1ition. Apply The Guild help on Sabi. O. C , 1815 Newport Blvd,. C.M. Clualti«I Ads ti42-567ll 1167 \V 1901 f'~I ft11-:wtl'I
Drug 1610 New MocArthur Rne•way 838-lllll hefore '43-77l<l. • •••••••• ••••• Blvd., N.B. 644-7330. ""°"· ' MAYTAG ,..palnnan hu •••••••••
RECEPTION!~ • Mecllcal. snJDENT P/tirne JOI" li te wuhen $35.. to $100. C.an I~-Xlnt typist. To sro'.l. Lake-boat maintenance. Apply dellwr •fl )T. ruarn. ,
\.\'ood 713: 531·7420. Sat, Sun, MA:>n. 2iw. W, 839-tm. . · .IJ}lj~Abl . /JJJJ_,...l/J
Coe..ll Hwy, NB. REFRIGERATOR u 1 e d .r 71/,J,,~.,/U~
RN , ~t.EO-SURG fl oor, ~1 .• -a.... •-•-•·-like ' .,,.., • • STYLIST WANTED ...... ~ •....,... new $50. .. •OONVfNtrN'T SttOPPINC AN shlft. pt-time to lull-time. Exper. in \1dglet11, e&S('adeS 71ll Westminster Ave. t-,-c 8fWIHG CUIOl fOlt H1r
RN exp' d in ER & central Ill ~ CAI.. OH t
supply, da)' stUrt. le synlhetic wigs. Sale1 OJ>-APT size USED STOVES. l ::::..:;:.::•~< ~G0::.!!!!!111,;.i~,
BEAClt C 0 MM UN I T Y portunlty, Call C he r >' I upright. C.P. CLE AN . ...
HOSPITAL 57(2 B e a ch M§..3M6. 673-8088. -
Blvd., Buena Park. TECH ILLUSTRATOR · ex· O"'VER=~Dl~--~--.,.,.,...--.I
pklded v1f"A'S A lnldn1. reJrt1entors tn>m $39.9l.
ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT e
BEACH
!las opening for
MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
Part Time, Experienced
Excellt'nl Benefit•
Apply in person 10-S pm
#2 Fuhion Jti., NB
Equal Oppor. Employet'
SALES STEEL: R&pldly
growing steel co. 9ttkina
agg ress i v e !laleanen
wfrlienlele for CR, HR.
gaJ v. &: t-oil aales. Sales +
c'Ommlsslon + bf>n.efits. CAii
Don Jack10n, 5 40 -6 055 ,
Couts.I AgelX'Y, 2 7 fl O
Harbor BJ, C~I .
SALES: Or8lli:e County ba11-
ed eompany now ha• op.-n·
ings for 4 field re~en
tatlves lo call on ~hill
trade. Draw plus co1nm.
1''or appt, e&ll ~1r. ll~kk at
9!17-1l ll, Wed thfu Frt, 9AM
to llAM.
SALESMAN
NIW PRODUCT
Balfe!')' optnl.UX! COlltrof fOr
'8\1.'n lprlnkJn-1)"11Ctm4.
Comml.uloN O\'el' $500 per
\.\'k. &l+-7T:A. Ask !or Don
SUllirw:.
SALESMAN
Good Potential
Call Aini. Schmidt
"'ESTCU • '1'
Pt1reonnt>I Arcmcy
XltJ \\'f'Slt"ll!t Dr., NB
&IHTlll
SALESWOMAN. aN.11t mv .
1etll 11hopl, NnlpOl't & C.M.
Exp'd, maturt. lntervlewa
Turi, Oct 3rd, S-7 pm,
Ga.lit.on Glfl•. ~. Cnut
Pt&r.a, C.M .. or call S:.!11•
aft Spm.
SALE.WAN WANT'F.0. S.11
PfO\lt'l'I lntlwitrlal cleaner to
bw.lntU lndullfry & IOY'I.
Opp!)' tor 1ubltantlal ln-
l"Jml' ,. penonAI irowth-
Car JX'C, CaU for lntcrv\tw
... appt. TI.C:so-M9:i.
SAL!SLAOY
Eqwonmno ~-r 1
ti'™'· The SMw otf, 22
Jo'uhkJn laland. N.n.
SALESClRL. !\Ill I I m ~ •
Bavar1an DabTy. QI El
Camino RAJ, Tldl.ln.
TIMI FOil
9UICIC CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5671
' .
roML llLUSTR.ATO R • ~
brodlure design, type spec, Ca~---6-----t
pUl:eup &: a.uembly, Call mer•• 61>-7'tl0. Eqvlp:Mnt
• ' ..
IOI
For an M In Wom an'• World
Call M..-y Both 641·S671, u t 330
Easy Princ.u
...
vi '
Rotten All Sizes
.,,.
•
' '·
7205
.~/. "' . . . ·~ .• .. ~· ~~ ..
-~~-": -.r ""i.'
" . I
\ \
•
•
•
\
• .
I DAil V PILOT
*PIANOS*°RGANS*
Going Out f'or Business
Best qualily . prices . serv.
' Ka\\·ai-Stein\\"ay-Baldwin, ere
Player Pianos & Rolls
•
OBEDIENCE class to ~tart
In I he lrvinc/N1;1\\ll(lr1
Beach arra. \Vcd.. Oct. 4,
7:30 pm. Opt'n to all dogs
o\'er ?'1 1nos. ~16-4928.
Horses
OUTS'rANOLNG ~tu s I an g
Cycles, Bfk",
Scooter•
Dirt only-'70 llonda SL. 100.
Bored sir. pipe, Akront TP
~; m.1tny more dirt ex·
tras. OFFER. $2·'7997.
'68 RIVERSIDE r-.1 o j a v e
350cc J400 ml, $250. Prl/
pty.
Jlllan.-(;enlle but splrited. e96241.329e
Only $225. 646-6.122· 'GS BSA 650cc; l·lornet.
Jo:NGL!Sll saddle. 1-'ol'\r<ir\"l N<'eds work, $375.
scut Top Taoi, Like new. 4~390 Lag Bch area.
67J..,!l157 ~~~~~~~~~~I '68 Triumph 250cc, $250 2'l14 Apt C, Di'lawarc , Hunt·
]
, .. :Jf l lna:ton Beach. 536-0180. Bolt• and --
Boats, General
lf. '69 HONDA Scrambler 350
900
!>lust see to apprec! Many
xtra access. $400. 642-9646
1972 HONDA CS-100, less
-BO_A_T--,,-,-il,-,-. _ca_pa_b-le-or than 1(0} miles. Call aft 6
handling 26' bonl. Localed pm. 642-1762.
Motor Homes
.......... l§l I --l§J [ .......... l§J ! -· .. 1§11
Tnicl<a K2 Autot, lmporttd 970
'7G .DlllERNATIONAl. ~ Ion Tr•""•" '""'"' """'"· ALFA ROMEO Autoruatic, power steering.
air cond., Jf. O. cnn1p(tl'
e q u lpmer\t. ImmaCulale,
(717ASF) $3299 DAVE; H.OSS
PONTIAC, 2480 It arbor
'tiO Spld~r. 2 liter. rt'blt 5
spd .• ~ tourllll; mndel: Xln1
$695 c1u1h, or will con.sid~
trade. 968-3549.
rnw .. Costa Me11& M6-80t7. AUSTIN HEALEY l'1ieo rl!ectlve thru IOJ2/7'
'70 Chevy l/4 Ton
J>ick·up. Custom cab, V8,
auto, trans., factoty air,
power steering, radio. heal·
er ,step bun1per. mirror~.
lo\V miles. (37693F). $3195
dlr. Call 836-6.535.
Auto Leasing
1957 AUSTIN Healey 300(),
$5(1(). Consider lrade. Altt'r ·1
pn1, 846--2059.
• • '66 Austin llealey 3000
l\lark III. Excel cond, Must
sell! 673--0085.
MAZDA
MAZDA
LEASE SPECIAL
New '72 RX3
$57.56
tires, body, '69
clean interior, new motor, power, factory air, black
% ca1n. remote oil cooler, exterior t black vinyl
1§1
Rentali ......... \\'e Buy-Sell
Daily 10-S Sun 12-~1
FIELD'S PIANOS
Costa Mesa {71 41 &45-32:ill
6 Player Pianos. rebuilt &
refinished, $875 to $1 17:>.
New & used roll.~. Dupree
Player Pi.unos, 545-4650 or
S.16-GlOS.
Baysi\"le r.1arina. parking lot
92. Call 673--4720 or go see.
NE\V Avon RM crest Dinghy
S300. (Llsis for $375).
_s_•1_•t_R•_•t-~940-1973 Olds Toronado
pwr. pulley, dist. carb, ex-top/black leather lnterior.1-'---=~-=°'"°'-o----1
haust, et~. $650. 5.11---0380. Full powt'r, factory air, .
t.IUST sell Now! '69 V\V power dC>?r locks, Al\f/Fri.t '69 ~lark III. white leather !
\Vcstphalia Camper ,vith stereo radio iYNW438) $339!1 · · 0 · · 1 N · DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 1ntenor. r1g1na. "'"'tires. , pop-top. Tent. etc. Loaded ' new b1·akcs, tune up. bat.
with extras. Come see, then 2480 Harbor Blvd ... Costa tery. $4 ,250. Will consider
HAr>fMOND organ mod~ M·
Ill; \\-alnur; 1\farlc preSE"t &
back grill. $900. Eves
673-5122.
PRIVATE P1\RTY \VANTS
TO BUY PlANO FOR
CASH. 8:15-2278.
TV, Radio, tiifi,
Stereo 836
ZENITll & RCA color tv
specials. 18" color from
$289., 19" Chron1ocolor or
Malrix $375. 21'' Solid Slate
$479. 23" RCA tahle models
S.."99. 23" Chromocolor from
1475. 3 yr pieture tube, 1 yr
parts & service on all sets.
ABC Color TV, 9021 Atlanla,
tluntlngton Beach, 968-3.129
F~to Yo~li
3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00
548--0119
Boats/ Marln.e
Equip.
19' HEAVY·Duty tilt boat or
util trailer $250. See at 2706
Bayside Dr .. CdM
Bo<'l t s. Pow•r
33' FIBERGLASS
TRAWLER
120 !·IP Dsl. Teak decks &
rrim, F'ly/B. Dual Controls.
H&C Sho\lo'er, Sleeps 5, Elec·
Irie rc>[r .. many c-xtra fill('
feaiurcs. Special price thls
\1•eek. May be insp('Cted nov.•
at: DAVID L FRASER
Ya r-h 1 Brokf'rage, 3·124
Oporto, Npt. Bch.
714 /673·5252.
OPEN ROAD
MOTOR HOMES
8081 Garden Grove Blvd.
Garden Grove 894-4479
Motor Home Rentals
Available for daUy, weekly
or monlhly basis. 21', 23·,
and 25' self contained Mo..
tor Homes, nil equipt with
generator, roof air, and
many other extra&r AU
Coaches are 1972 me>aels.
\\1e have the all sreel Amigo
also. Please call 8J9.9560.
"1971 SEA~RA~Y~ .. -i Motor Home Rentals
45.'i Olds, Pack-a-jet, 20', 200
Series, Equipped for Water SALES & LEASING
Skiing & fishing, tandem (ull service facility
""""'· cau •tt•r "'oo Danmar Motor Homes noon. (714) 83()..&i82 .• t1UST
SELL!
15' F/G '"1 hp elec. <ompl. 531-6800
overhauled. Tllt trlr $475. .64 Travco 270 Dodge 27,
Ready 10 go. l5'x61h F IG Motor Home. Loaded v.r:ith Cat, unsinkable. S75. 673·9411
all day Sun & wk\"lays af1. 5. ;~;..~ S7000. Any cl .i Y
FREE 10 good honHl mixed c--r S 1-;.~' ATE ALE. '72 F /Gli>, "'" MONK f'/8 CUST EXP. Beagle/Terrier p u r p y, UN!f ~
2 •a ., •. ~, "LITE F/8 tri-cabin, """ Cl,~,1·-. F/\V i~I·". 64 • ..,,Jg days; 534-.>M.1 af· F "'"" •.J '"" ·"" ~ ll'r 6. /\V cool Chrysler.>. Need Aux. gen. $1.1750. Broker
bids. · 714 :642-1719, 213:433-8751. MOVING: l\.1ust find home .. ~ 12' \Vizard w/2~::hp f·n··E TV w/2 wk' -ntat. for uo:au1iful Siaml'sc cat. c.. • ..
Call after 5 pr,.1 545-5.114. Evinrudc ~cg" S22S. · ~r & 23' motor homes. Pvt
F'rec kiH i>ns. To good horncs. ply. wlnler rates; Wk & dai-BOST'ON WhHler '67, 1:r. 41) ly rates also. 96&--0563. Hsebrokcn. Ucly bur eutt•!
• 539·5616 • hp Envinrude, Ur, Must Rent A Motor Home sell/make offer. 540-2018. 4 kittens \Vitb room in lhcir for your Vecatlon
hearts. If ':JOU have same! 38' CHRJS. Tri cabin, Const. * 839-4301 * '63 loaded, s 2 1 I 0 0 0 o aft 6pm~75-ffi72. 213-6 3 6 -015 7 ' eves NEW LIFETIMES-th<! work.'!
ft1ITTHER cat. 2 older ones, 7 11•1-675-:'1399. & at fantastic rates. Pvt
young kittens 2 mos old. I~~~~=~~-=-pty. 838-0533 Tustin.
T·" · k' 83• _.3 14' Nylox 45HP. Mer e. Elec. ...,.,e your Jlle · ~ · Lrg ...,,heel Trlr. Nu bear-ftfotor home for rent.
BLACK Lab puppies. 9 wks ings. Boat cover, canopy. '72 \VINNEBAGO. 27'.
old. Call ah 3. 673-2233 or Like ncv,. Eng. $600 67.r6933. Sleeps 6. 640-04.82
673--0507 and leave message. 17 FT. Open bow with 55 HP * \VINTER RATES *·
Evinrudl' l'ng. C 0 m p . !\l!r home rentals. $165 wk +
\i•llrlr., clec. starter. $1700. mi. Reserve. now. 546-0291.
552-97ii6. '66 Beechwood 22'. Air, pwr e~.-.-,-,-.. ~R~e-n.,.t(.,.C~h-a-r~l'.,.r-908=' I plant. Immaculate cond.
....... _
Cats 8.52
\VAN'r Siami•.<;(> frn\. unreg
to brt'f>{I w/like male for
pick of liHl'r. 646-0169 ..
LEASE: 26' Sail w(lD HP
aux to exp sailor. 40 days
yr!y $400. Pvt pty. 542-5020.
22' Dutch racing sloop & 13'
Bay 11\oop, reduced for im·
med. sale, 1~· / I 1· I rs .
646-5669.
14' Hobi!' Cat. Yum a
ycllow/whltt'. 2 sails, $850.
675-6940 PEltSIAN Kl1TEN
CF' A -SllOTS
a.46-996.'i $35 KITE NO. 423 \\'lth trailer.
Good condition. S4.i0. Call
Dogs 8S4 6J8..-7427 nit 5 p.m.
l·SH-'o"w_CL_A_S!_s_n_i_. N-,-.,.-,-,-,30-I Boats, Slips/Docks 910
pm. fnlercstPd? Ca 11
Mat1incre111 !-\en n e Is,
54&-0989.
GERr-.lAN shorlhair pups.
AKC. $100. or make offc-r.
r-.1a.rt incrr.st Kl' n n e Is, -·
BOAT i<lip av11ll. -Kl7 East
F,dge\\'lller. Balhoa. Up to
37' bo<ll. $100. mo. Call
'."izj..\153 days, t2Ul 697-1336
SLIP space avail.
Sailboat.
Sue. 968-1170, 968-3965.
Trailers, Travel 945
2 \Vh('('I trailer. H's a 1~ ton
pick-up bed & chassis. $130.
979-4575.
Auto Service, Parts 949
4 FTRESJ'ONE TIRES
& wheels. 9: 50 X 16.5
2,500 MILES
$250 OR MAKE OFFER.
5'12-1734 eves & wknds * CORVE'JTE hub caps &:
beauty rims, Make offer.
542-1734 eves & wknd11.
OF'F'ENHAUSER dual port.
high rise manifold and F.00
c(m Holley double pump 4
bbl, tits Chevy VS. 3 months
old. $75. 893-6460.
AKC HJ.000 l.JOUNIJ
shown one•'. v:on ls1 rJrtze
$250 . 847~
• 67:u.&'.!G . 1§1 Auto' for Salt r:r.. * Near Lido, ac1-omn1odatli'J1 ~
up lo 40' boat. Dock power I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;; MIN Dachshund!!, AKC rt'g.,
male & ft•1nal<', K~J \\'ks. Call
after 6, 673-1985.
& water. 548--00SS. It
Boats, SPtiMI 11 Ski 911 Antlqu•si Cla11lc1 953
DARUNG aprtcol P1•kepoo, 17' Spttd or Ski boo t -p ( mi New engine.
g \\'~k8 $.15. 642-48111 t!ttyi1, Cadillat eng, Tlgttr trlr. m~7~ co 0~ 772""5lO fttr.
5.'\4-3AA5 after 6. Bargain $900. !'148-0RlG. Davis. '
195!) l\.1ERCEOF;S 300 Sl-
DARLING bro...,·n toy poodh.• I ~~~~~~~:~~ ii 'T~ru;u;c~k;;s::-::~----969'22
6 weeks $5. 642-4Rl8 daytt. I ·-~·-. ,~ 5.14-3885 arter 6 pn1. . 11 ....... • ~
HORSE Boartllng. Bu<'k Buy
art'a. Reu!IOnable.
.. 557.f>.14:l •
WlRE Fox terrier pupple~
AHC, 01amp ~11"('11. Ri•al
Bcflulic!ll 547~17,
OALMATION puppit!s, AKC,
'l"errn&. Stud 11 e r v I c e .
636-3214. * Golden Retrt'iVCT pups,
AKC, 1 wks, 8how le field.
thol•, prlv ply, $26.;Q7.
9CHNAUZEh. pups, Jttl1d
~. groomlnJ[, tl!to1s,
cn41 m-&es.
TOY Poodlt'tl: 2 silvc•r, 1
Wack. Femah~s. AKC show.
$100 e&. 89.1-<ti.71 aft 6.
Camper•, S•I•/ Rent 920 --FACTORY DIRECT
Fully furn rul)l')vl"r c.11n1 P1'tll,
110 dmvn. $.11. f)('r rno. Camp·
1·r 11h1•lh1. Nn rlov.·n. M2-Mn.
1.971 GMC ~ Ton P/U 1\'/12'
\\.'cckendtr C111npoo. ll,000
mi. All xtr1u1! $ 4 9 9 5.
!m-3513.
e 'it XL T Fo1·d lit ·~ ~
Ct.imJl('r Call f'\Tnings
893--<;329
Cycles, BrK11,
Scooters
'70 Suzuk1 250, low 1nJ',1:.
M~ny xtn.s, Sllck, $465. Call
DnM.\19. AKC Champagne &: Allricot
mini PoodJea. 646-0142 or
15411-1022. 1970 HONDA SL 3.~. dirt &
sbttt, k1w mlle!ll. $;100. or
"Make Room For Oadd,y"' otter. ~
··-1·"'10,....,H"o"'N°"O"A.,.-=r..o",-,-,.,.,,,,..,.,.,.'<1' • • • cltan out u~ 18.fftlt' r ,_ h XI otN1, c rom,., xtrrui, • nl
• • • tum lhat Junk into Cllllh cond. 206 Vin A1CK1'C. SC.
wttb o Dail)' Pilot ClulUltd 00 CC Surulci, perll'ct am:I, eruh hrlmet Incl. $100. CaU
ad. C.11 &Q...56'l8. SuS.lo, 67J.-6:Mit.
'55 Ch!'vy J'lckup ...,·1'71
1•n11;lnc 350 Cu Jn V-H Power
Glide. Runs Uke n<'W •
·52 Ford V-8 1 Ton Stake $.195
IAIC n1odcl V-8 Engll'll\
Dual \Vhei!l1
2014 Harbor 61:Hi&l4
4 FTHE~NE TIRES
& \.\'h('f'I!!, 9.50 X 16.S
2.ri00 ~11t.F:s
$2JO OH ,\tAKf; OFFER.
542-173-1 l'\'e11 & wknd11
':Jt c:~IC 6 C'yl., ~ ton New
eni.::lne k tron!\., l'll!w Urt11.
alurn. l'tlmJK'r w/dbl hM.
&•r to appree. $ 1 ~ 0 .
~!Jl.)..Xi.13.
'68 G~1C ~ T truck t:iOO.
J'S/PB. r/h. lumbtr rut'k,
ski<' tool boxes. fact n.lr.
ti~ hydr tnll gate. $1800 or
brAt. 54~.
SUPER VM '69 Ford Cu11to1n
200. Air, autb. windo\\·s.
epi, Jttra Iona. s i 12 s .
8~. * "11) t>odMf' l>\J. Only 15,00>
ml • Fot'C<'d to lll'.U. Call aft 6
pm. 979-1446.
Sell Idle !terrs OOW1 Call
642...s678 Now!
Factory Equip!, Full Power
$128.00
per mo. + tax
LEASING
ALL MODELS
AND MAKES
'73's
Southern California
1st National
Bank Leasing
2001 Michelson Drive
(Corner of J\'IacA11hurJ
Irvine, Calif. 92664
714 /833-8620 213 /627.0367
Visit our new home!
0
ROY CARVER, Inc.
234 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa 5464#1
CAPRI
'72 Cllpri, Decor group, 2000
cc eng .. 4 spd, lo mi. Xlnl
cond. aft 6. 968-7158 John.
CORTINA
inake offer! 536-3645. 1'1es.a 546-8017. Price cf· trade 557-9390.
1959 V\V double door bus. fective thru 1012172· --·-~--~---•
1972 engine, reblt trans., CHOICE OF 3. 'GS CAl\·1-MERCURY ,
new brks. All new AR 0 S. V·S, automatic, , . 1
throughout, $950. 4~ vinyl top -V-8 auto· 71.J\ferc r.tarquJs \vgtl. 22,~ I
1 -mafic, air <'ond., special m1.. New shocks. batt, brkS, : 66 YW CAMPER \vhrels _ V·S, autontatic, n1rl.ials. Immac. $3650.:
4 speed, Sharp! (SBM814l. air cond., vlnyl roof. As low 540-327&. l
$1295 dlr. Call 836-6535. as f124378N467755l $1•199 1965, 4 dr sedan, ps, pb. rth ; MG ,71 Squareback V:W-Extra DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2480 hest offer over $450. after 6 • ----------1 elean, AM/FM, lo nii. auto. Harbor Blvd., Cos ta Mesa, pm, 842-5082. ;
'69 MG MIDGET, low mi. $2250. 642-8233. 54&-8017. Price eifective '69 MONTEGO, p/s, p/b, 4 1
IMMACULATE. $1400. Pvt. * •. 70 VW Squareback. 1 thru 1012/72. dr, am/fm_. $~. Lo mi's~ :
ply. 499-3897. 0,~Ticr. Factory auto i'fliche· '65 EL CAMINO 4 speed, (714) 639-1569 aft 4 wkdys. ;
MGB Jin tires. $1450. 675-.2954. radio, heater. Over $2000 MUSTANG r
~~~-~-~--·I motor, trans., carbs. \\lust
'69 MGB, hard' & soft tops, 062 V\V-Looks O.K. but ~~ see. (94500K) Priced tol·N-E-W--.-,,-M-u,-t-an-g-.-,-.500-I'
Am-:-1-"'m, chrome \Vi rc super. sell. DAVE ROSS PON· mi's, $1800 as ls. 351 eng .. '
1vheels, pverdrive, original * 536-!WOO * TIAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., air p/b auto 644-1869
owner, $1700. Ph. 842-8676. 1971 VW Bus. Trailer hltch. Costa Mesa, 54&-8017. ' ' · ·
A1nt cond. Lo1v miles. $2250. 1970 Ch C E t t '67 Mustang Fresh eng, 390. PORSCHE Call 675-1700 days. 8 n.. ev. sta'""'wul"S s..:_~· AM/fM, Slick! Steal for
Autos Wanted 963 1----------..-.. ss. • gn .......... $899 545-8978 ---------FORD Cortina '68. 25,000 mi. Q SC '65 VW Sqbck, Good cond. Lo Steering & brakes. AM-FM · •
Immac. l600cc. Auto. R/l·I. '70 P R HE 91 IT miles. $600/ make offer. Sterro radio, tilt steer. whl. OLDSMOBILE REWARD $77S. 962-5859 aft 6PM. 0c~~m~n!;';;ec~·~Mnti~t1 1.=:=;-".,vw="~"-·=8"'-u!-:5-956-.,,-°,-,~li-..,-s,I ::t~~esA~.~~::s~e P:n~:l ·.-71-0_L_D_S_T_O_R_O_N_ADO __ Go_Jd·I
DATSUN ra(:lii;.>. L!c._No. ~f840. _ Good..rond-Sl9QO. ing. Asking $2725. 5.57-4861. with black vinyl top/gold
WILL PAY OVER $5699 640--0439. ·67 CHEVROLET El CaminoC matdting intcrioc. F u I I
1971 DATSUN 510 Sedan, low ~-~-~--~-f t • AM FM CREVIE BMW ~ 4 speed, racbo and heater. po1ver, ac ory air, I
Kelly Blue Book ~~e7a90ge7.• good con d, R 1971 Yolks Super Beetle. CQ29:H.1) $1099 DAVE ROSS r396571M701882) $4799 DAVE
J.;llr AM/FM stereo, m a n ':/ ROSS PONTIAC 2•~ H PONTIAC, 24= H a r b o r , ...,., ar· xtras. Like new. 644-6348. "" For late model, clean, 208 'V. 1st St. Santa Ana Blvd., Costa Mesa 54£HW17. bor Blvd., Costa Mesa, 546-
low mileage domes-1----------____ =_·_-_31_71 ____ 'TI Karn1ann Ghia Fae/Air, Price effective thru 1012112. 8017. Price effective thru FIAT
fies, imports, trucks or '70 Fiat 124 Coupe. 5 speed '71 Porsche 914-Xlnt <:d Immac. 401\.1. $1550. -~=~~~==--1 10/2/72.
transmission, radio and 0 • ,953.2539 • '71 MALIBU ~.~~ctrr=~LAS=s~SUP=R~E~ME=-2" campers. range/br n\v iot. Pri/pty '"
Call and ask for Bu,yer heater. 1874CQS) $1 4 9 9 \\lust sell. $3500. 548-4056 aft Autos, Used 990 2 Dr ha.rotop. 4 speed, ~ac-dr HT, vinyl to P'
DAVE Ross DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, 6 ivk rlays. ---------tory au', po11'Cl' steering, Goodyears, bucket seats.
2480 1-larbor Blvd., Costa --~------BUICK radlo. i #210708) $2475 dlr. 53&-4117. · Mesa 54&-8017. Price er-RARE-'66 911-S. European Call 8.~·6535.
PONTIAC feclive thru 10/2/72. model, xln't cond. $3300. ---------·I '68 DELTA 88, hrdtop. Top
Jean, 548-3446 or 675-6564. '68 BUICK Electra 225 con· ~72 MALIBU cond. New tires & brake!!;
'69 FIAT 850 Spider. radio, RENAULT vl'rl. Full power, factory POl'o'C'l' steering. po v: er Many xtras. $1100.· 545-747~
24IO Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 54M017
WE PAY TOP CASH
... -.... ·-"·""' call Us for ffte eltimatet.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Aak for Sales Manager
18211 Beach Blvd.
Huntin&ton Beach ur.am KI 9-3331
INSTANT
CASH
We need your import ear.
Buyer on duty 9 to 9 daily.
B. I. Sportscar Center
2833 Harbor, Costa r-.fesa
540.4491
WE buy all makes of clean
used sports cars, paid for
or not Please drive In for
free Appraisal.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 W. Coast Hwy.,
Newport Beach
642-9405
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USF.0 CARS
If your car Is extra clean,
see UI first.
BAUER BUICK
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 979-2500
IMPORTS WANTED-
Orange Counties
l'OP i BUYER
BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blvd,
H. h eh. P~. 847~
TOP OOLLAR FOR JUNK
OR WRECKED CARS.
Day or nltc. 637·3720
'
heater, 4 speed, 1 01vner. air, lo, lo mi I ea g e. brakes, AM/Fl\1 radio. PINTO '.I
Removable hard top, low 1----------(VGZ787l $1599 DA v E $2600. 97'94130 or 6'10-1546 •:
miles, Xlnt cond. Perfect '68 RENAULT 40, lo miles, 4 ROSS PONTIAC 2 4 8 O & v k nd for hi school or cnllege s\u. spd., AM radio, rome quick. . ' eves 1 ee c s. '72 Pinto 2000 cc, 4 spd, go~
1 Harbor Bl~d., Cost~ Mesa 1967 ss Impala, 327 engine, 3 dr, 5200 miles. $2lOO. ·
dent $990. 557-3386. VHB19. On Y $7$. 546-8017. Price effective thru fu.ll 0.,,, one owner . Xlnt s~ ,~2. •
1
• BILL MAA'EY TOYcYrA, 10/2/72 ,,,..,..11 HONDA 1S881 Beach Blvd., Hun-' cond. $1300. or best otter.1 ---====~~~ij --------'72 Honda Custom coupe. Lo
miles, Take over $3Smo
pymts. pr! I ply Ivan.
833-3231 eves 96J.3210.
JAGUAR
'69 JAGUAR XKE Coupe, 4
speed. air conditioning,
chrom,e \loire wheels, lo
mileage (ZVEGTI l $3899
DA VE ROSS PONTIAC,
2480 Harbor Blvd.. Costa
Mesa, 546-8017. Price ef.
fective thru 10/2/72.
'69 XKE Coupe, Immae. LD\V
mileage, local car. Xlnt
care. $3400/offer. Pri/pty.
:>57-9494 eves~73-5268.
'71 J o.gUar Conv. AIC. wires,
\\'inc, Concours cond. SS.450.
Also '69 Cpe. equnl cond.
$3850. Pvt. ply. 673-1232.
1961 JAGUAR sedan. 3.8
meters Mint cond. Must see
to appreciate. 592-2264.
KARMANN GHIA
1971 KARMANN Ghia coupe,
low mileage, xlnt condltion,
$1995., 493-4151.
MAZDA
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
l)AIL Y PILOT
WANT AD
tington Beach, 847-8555. '69 Buick Riviera, fully 492-2482 or 492-5324. PONTIAC -:"·
SUBARU eq_uipped, all pwr ~air. Lo '69 Chev. 1h T. Motor!J~li!il'-1ir.iiii~ mile.age. Bronze In color, recently overhauled, !I
blk int. $2500 days, 646-2486, blue book. 530-2901. * SUBARU * .7~v~:~~~~bre 4 w H T. CHRYSLER Pontia~?
We hAve c lean cars .:.d
cash discount. J
We Can
Fino nce You
ankrupt OK, Repo OK,
No Credit OK
As Lo\V as $1599
FRITZ \VARREN'S
Sport Car Center
"• ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST no E. 1st SL,·S.A. 547-0764
TOYOTA
'72 Toyota Corolla 1600 parts
or complete. Drive it! 7-72
Corona parts. R e a s .
67J..,1784.
'71 Toyota 1600 Corolla, air
cond sta. wag,
Call 830-8256
'71 MARK II, 2dr lIT, 4Rpd,
Radio/healer, A/C, $2200.
962-8329 pri/pty'.
'70 Toyota Corolla, 22.000
miles. l owner. Very good
cond. $1095. 548-4142.
TRIUMPH
1970 Triumph Spitfire, E'.'Cc~l
f'Orttt..,.4>.11 maint t('(_'Qrds.
Red w/tar. int. 22,000 mi.
$1600. 714-846--1764.
VOLKSWA GEN
'66 SQUAREBACK, Clean,
Nu paint & tires. Must sell.
34~3598.
WANTED Old VWs running
or not.
&l&-4716 nfl 5 pn1
'71 VW Camper, body, eng &
inlerlor :c:lnt <.'Ond, Fr-it
stereo. $2900. 6'T.H!6.11.
Any day is the BEST DAY to
run an ft.(!! Don't delay , ..
call today 642-5678.
25.000 mL Like new. $2450.1-Y-O_R_K_E_R-.-P-/B-.-P-/-S-. -P-1•-·i-n·
646-6887 aft 6: :rJ pm. dows. electric seat, Pl ant. CADILLAC Air, radial steel tires $2700.
----------1 531·7255. -~c~o=R=v""AC7.IR=---I YOUR ONLY
FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
CADl~LAC
* '65 Monza convert, auto,
good ronrl. $395 or best offer
536-4259.
COMPACT CITY
]~1J~1):.,;.'1 !i<.
847-6559
DEALER
Largest selection o! Cadll· COUGAR '63 GRAND PRIX. o
lacs In Orange County. y.,~ owner & excellent ""ndo·1,.· n'. Sales-Leasing. '67 COUGAR XR7. '-V
pl)\\'cr steering, factory air: 0 n l Y . 6 6, 0 0 D '!1 i I es ..
vinyl top, (YCV569l $Hl99 Auto1nahc trans., air cond ..
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, com!ort?ble bucket seats,
Z..180 Harbor Blvd Costa Magnesium wheels. AM-FM
Mesa, 54&-8017. Price ef. radio. S550 for quick saJe.
fective thra 10/2/12. 548-3036. '
~Nabers
U Cadillac
~~~=,g.~~~~1---ollc5ru6~·--'70 B 0 N NE v I LLE 9 _____ D _____ 1 passenger waiwn. Factory
air. roof rack, Power steer -'68 DODGE GTS Coupe, V-8. (2G2460Rl300l7) $2999 DAVE
automatic. radio, heater, ex· ROSS PONTIAC, 2 4 8
eellt'nt t'Ondition. 1\.\'XF738) H =· $1399 DAVE ROSS PON-l!r~r Blvd ... Costa Me.sa. 546-8017. Price eUective TlAC, 248D Harbor Blvd., lhru 1012112 Costa 1Jcsa. 546-8017 Price --==~·~0-~~~
ertcctive thru 101211i '62 PONTIAC Grand Prix. ---=~~-.:.· --1 This one's an award winner FORD at cusiom car shows. 24. 1----------1 original miles. Automatic,
'&I Ford Wagon 20 Pass, V-8. J)O\\'e r steering, ra d l o •
A.T., R. H, P .S., P.B., looks heater. IGBT315) Priced to
and runs like new. sell. DAVE ROSS PON·
'66 Ford Fair!ane Squire TIAC, 2480 Harbol" Blvd .•
'67 SEDAN DE VILLE. Full Wa~on V-8, AT, P.S., R.H. Costa Mesa 546-8017.
$495. '66 p . pov."er, factory air, vinyl .67 1''ord Sq . lD p onlrac Ventura, 4 dr. v.
roor, j}O'lvcr seats. (TYY045J Wagon Air uu;T R 11;! 8, PS. Piit, RH, Air Cond.
$1599 DAVE ROSS PON· p W ffoo r Ra k ' ' ' GOOd cond. Low mileage
TIAC, 2480 1-farbor Blvd ... 68·C~t S<>da~ Wa n A' I-i:elly Blut' Book Ref. $980.
Costa Mesa 546-8011. Price AT, R, If, $!195. gu ir. Sacl'ifice for ~ Private
e!ftttlve thru 1D/2m. 2014 Harbor 64.fHl644 Part~, 847-3095 aft 6:30,
1963 CADILLAC anyhmc on weekl'nd.
COUPE DE VIL~E '71 COUNTRY SQUIRE CHOICE OF 4, ·ss Ftrebirds.
Extra 10\\' mileage. All po11'er. VS & G cyl., autom atics, air
Whirl' \\'/rt'<I !C<ttlhl'r, Air. Sta!lon \\'agon, Vs, au!o t'Ond!tionlng, vinyl lops. Ag
SEE TO BELIEVE! tran11. factory air. po1vrr low as (VlB3Tll $1599
can 675-2547 windoWJJ. power st~ring, DAVE ROSS PONTIAC,
e l96.lt EL OORADQ • PQ\ver brakes, \·1hite v.•o.JI r-.1c~. 546-8011. Price t!f.
Very Clean $300:). tires. f73?CAI<J. $3395 dlr. ff'("t1ve thru 10/2/72. ,,,_,338 ••• 83;-1t&1 ,c•" "':653'-. . '67 BONNEVIW CAMARO 97:1 Tonno \~gn. 29,000 mi. Automatic, faclory air, powr:r
Air, P\\-r. SletW cnutttc stl'l'rinK. power brakM
'69 CAMARO. \VHJTE. deck. $2500: S-IOO under rndlu. heater. \\'hit11 ~·aV
LoY.· mi. $1-695 n'hlll ~· Or lf'u!IE' lK mo lircit, l\n!cd itlau <WltE082) * 673-.9447 * Bl $8;,_ n10. John Taylor. $!195 dlr. 8.'!6-65.35 494-4945 da.>•s or 49'.._8992 · ---C-H-·EVE"L°'°LE-:---I rvt't. LB ·~ Pontiac Le Mitns Sprint 4
-_ _;::.::.::::::: __ .l'·mroitii;t::ro;-;;;;;;;;;:--u ,pc1, ortg 0 .... ·ncr. Exce1 10 F'O"RO Lro v.'8.gon, 10 t.'Onc1. $1250. Call art 6 pm '67 coowlle, SS 396, 4 •Ptl. pai.s A/C, lug rack, n1any 837~ .. ·
,rlw/blk. VllUJCe~. mll.JrS. Xtnl..!. l\flnl rond. Price --_,· o;:~::-.=--1
radials, Goodyean. exel l'l!duced fr.r ·qukk !IA.It RAMBLER
cond. SUOO/ot!er &l&-4l674. $2175. 847..63.ST '1:::--:-'.':'.'..:-'...,--:::::--"°',..:I
'63 Mnllhu Oit.'Vt'Uo. Xlnt. 'TI FORD Chateau \\'ag, 1 ·70 An1beSMdor SSl' 4 Dr,;.
C'Oft(l. Good Uf It out $800 pus V-11 tilr P/ll p/h Air, P/S. TAke o v
11r brlt off1~r. &49-JSlt, Slti9S. 171fJ ~1569' tt.ft .f paym<'nts. C111 6f&.77W, ..
CHEVROLET wkdy•. T ·llRD
·72 Ford Country SPd "'KD· .'65 Chevy Van. rt"blt ena. S3.!i00. Socrttlet'. ~ 1962 T-nino. oow m•
Exctl cond. f1l00 w ~l of· ~ afLS pm water pump le vJllve -Joitt
f('r, 673-9474. • '64 FORD Wagon W'/IA[l(I b:xN ly good cond, inl dtQ. k H'd1 (lnJI:. 'A1>rk. $200. ·10, Klnp.'Md °""'· Station ~ Nfi"d-' !IOme "'Ork 1Jcs1 orr. 675-TI98 .
\.'iagon. Air, P!S·P/B $LOO.~. CL.A.~i;1c '57 T·Blrd, very
S2500. P\1 Pt>'. Kt--7761. A gooo want 1d a • lood IJ>. ~l,·nn. Alu"1 .ICO.
Nt'<ld a "Pad"T PUI~ 11.n ad: v~tmenl. Cidl GU--i.iRl'
i
•
San Cle111ent-e T eday's F hial -Ca istrano EDITION N.Y. Stoeu'-
·voe. 65, NO. 276, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1972 TEN <:;ENTS
~ .;; ,,., . .,.
Clemente Policeman on Trial in · Crash Death .. ·~-;...: ~, .....
By JOUN VALTERZA
Of IM 0.llY ,li.t Sl•lf
San Clementi!! police patrolman Gary
Adams will go on tria1 this week on
charges ot misdemeanor manslaughter
stemming from a Memorial Day
weekend crash which killed a Long
Belich youth and injured several of his
compatllclm.
Adams, who bas entered a plea of in--
nocent to the charges, will appear in
South Orange C.ounty Municipal Court
•
\Vednesday morning .
Since the incident, the young San
Clemente officer has performed in-sta-
tion duties working as a desk officer, 1be
transfer is a routine department policy in
such cases, his superiors said.
The crash occurred May 26 on El
Camino Real near the Western White
House during the asserted punu.it of a
drunken driver.
Adams, who bad assertedly sighted an
1ens
Sight Restored
He Sees Aft,er 24 Years' Darkness
LONDON (UPI} -When Nino Fettel emerged from the airliner, he saw
the woman he had lived with for more than 20 years but had never seen.
_'._'I had a mental picture of you, but you are much lovelier than I imag-
ined," Fette! 48, said as be gazed at his wife, Ena, 41. u
Fettel, blinded 24 years ago by acid thrown at him~ returned Sunday from
Rome where a surgeon, Dr. Bemedetto Strampelll, restored his sight.
At London's Heathrow Airport, be saw bis wife of 20 years and hi! sons,
Paul, 16, and Adrian, 15, for the first time.
"You never told me what bea utiful eyes you had," he said. "Don't let them
mist over with tears." -
"And look a·t my sons!" he exulted to onlookers. "What strapping chaps
they are."
1be Fettel.s met shortly after his accident In 1948 at a hospital In England
where be was a patient and she was a nurse. Five years later, they married.
·'South &ast Vot-tts Pick
School Trustee Tuesday
Voten of the Capistrano Unified School
District, Area 4, will select their area
school board representative Tuesday in a
aPecial election called to fill tbe vacant
seat left by lbe stormy departure of
trustee Robert Dahlberg this spring.
Polls are located at Richard Henry
Dana School, 24242 La Cresta Drive,
Dana Point and will be open frdm 7 a.m.
to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Although five names will appear on the
ballot in alphabetical order, only Robert
Greco, Stepeben Smith and Anti19ny
Stevens are running for the Trustee spot.
The trustee area nicludes all of Dana
·Point, part of Dana Knolls, the Broad-
moor tract, and Niguel Sbore.s.
Two candidates who have withdrawn
are Leila Stockett and Frederick Taylor.
Greco, 35, is a six-year resident of
Dana Point and works as an aerospace
supervisor at the McDonnell-Douglas
Huntlngton Beach facility.
Smith, 33, is an attorney and Jives in
Dana Point. He bas worked as a juvenie
probation officer and iJ a past county
deputy district attorney. He maintains a
private practice in Mission Viejo.
Stevens, 31, is a reading .specialist and
educational consultant. He lives in Dana
Point. Stevens has a masters degree ffi
education and has authored books oo
educational aid!.
'
·Lagunan' s Off er to Buy
'
Colosseum Stirs News
•
By BARBARA KREmlCH
Of Mt DellY Pl ... Slefll
Thomas Menick, the wealthy Lagunan
who has oUered In buy the Colosseum lot
'1 million and restore it as a mecca for
Rome sight-., today found hlmsell the
ta<get of ,,.,..men, photognphers and
televbkm crews who descended on the
Art Colony to learn more about hla am-
b!Uous plan.
He thought of It last week, Merrick
· said, when he read In the papers that the
ItalJan government bad been rorced to
close the 2,000-yeaMlld ruin because of
the hazard [rom stones falling Crom its
upper levels.
The government. accordll1( In the
reports, cannot afford the '2 mllllon
mtotatlon job -ry to make the
A.D MAKES SHORT
WORK OF BEETLE
U JOU're looking for an example of how
tD lell wbatever it ii you bav1 for tale.
lry thll:
* '67 VW Bq, ori.tnaJ
D'M'lf'r, ~rood «lndltJon.
$7!i0. llXX•XJOOI.
II -.Id be -:bard In beat the
oerfonnanoo r....-.1 ol that mlthtJ mite.
'Ille three-line ad IOld Iba -the Ont dq It appeared· In tbo DAILY PDDT.
Direct llne to daalllled ~
rtlltlll at the DAILY PILOT la tcHm.
T!y IL
Colosaeum safe for public viewing once
more.
Menick, who I! of Italian descent and
attended school in Rome u a teenager,
offered to buy the internaUonal landmark
for fl million of his own money, and
ralae the llecelS8fJI fUndt for It mtorl·
tion.
In return, be propoees that an ad·
mission lee be charged to future visllnrl,
which he ..,..Id shaft with the llallan
government to help recover his in-
vestment.
Memck and the Reel Realty ofllce.
which la handling hil offer, today report-
ed phonea ringing of! the hook as U.S.
and European news and televl.!km crews
sought Interviews.
Feueta VltalJ, ltaJian-bom ttal est.ate
woman who la servtnr .. Merrick '• I<!>'
resentaUve to Italian 1uthoritiet, uid
she ha1 o II I c la 11 y tranamltted
hla o I f e r to Rome via the llallan
which la handling hla o!llclllly lnnlmlt-
ted hll of!or to Rome via the llallan
Conaulate In Loo ""'""' 111111 alao baa &;ked tho New Yotk-eot 1_..i.nt of the
Italian newspoper Onrriort della Sera to
aipply hor wltll tho name ol 111 ol!Jda] In
tho liallla MlnlatlJ of llounuments and
Fine Ar1a '.-abe con ""1lad wbea
she !IJa to Rome laiar thll week.
• The MJnlatrj la oha'l'CI wllll the _....11on and Pl'GIAl<llon ol mtloaal
-and ..Wb "'art In !Illy.
erralically-<lriven car, reportedly began
accelerating IOUthbound without ac-
tivating tho police car's red lights and
siren.
As the accelerating police unit ap-
proached Avenida San Lui! Rey a smaU
domestic pickup truck filled with Long
Be,ach youths and their camping gear
pulled into the patrolman'• path.
At that point, reporla said, the truck
faltered for a moment then suddenly
sped Into the path of the patrol car.
a
'Vigilante'
Wounds2
In Tavern
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. ~ Plitt St9ff •
A vending machine man on his own an-
ti-burglar vigilante patrol' opened fire on
two brothers at a Costa Mesa bar this
morning, wounding both and bitting one
headon in the groin with a shotgun blast.
•
The agonized man -bis Jower ab-· ·
domen shredded by .budl:ihot -wn
dropped off al H0011 .la! Romital , ~ alter tbO 5 iun. nt . ..........-i;=-
Hil "brotber~ WU UT'lltld--mommltl
later on N4!rflort Boulevaid al Via Lido.
when 'Newport Beach Pollce Officer Jim-
my Domldaon atoppod the aetawaY C81',
Luigi Con>oa, 2$, was still undergoing
(See VIGILANn!i. Pap Z)
I
Delay Orderoo
In Sex Trial
Of S. Lagunan
An eleven-week delay was ordered to-
day in tbe Orange County Superior QJurt
rape-sex perversion ~!al of South Lquna
trash executive Thomas Trulls and
codefendant Eugene Imondi Jr.
Judge Cbarles Bauer ordered Tntll.s,
38, and I;riondl, 11$, to return Dec. II to
presidint Judge Bruce S u m n e r ' a
courtroom for trial on charges filed
lo!lowll1( thetr arrest In January by
Newporj Beach police.
Trulls, who is the owner of tho South
Laguna Disposal Company, and Imondi,
known in auto sales clrcles as Gene Mon-
day, are accused of sexual offenses
against a Fountain Valley girl who 11.ld
they told her they were movie produeen.
The 17-year-old blonde told police that
she was perauaded by Trulil and Imondi
t. join them in tbe be<k of a car parked
at Fuhlon Island in Newport Beach..
Police said tbe Kirt told them abe wu
auur<d by both men that her ructlonl
to their sexual overturet were vital If abe
wished to obtain a contract to movie and
modeling roles.
'rrulls and lmondJ are free on ball.
Trustees to Act
On Science -Math
Building Bids
"I llllDt JI la I ~ ldoa and I
!lDllltlc ~ for tho llallan (O'JiWlolll.~ Mis ¥llalJ, Who la I
Mll\'t of illlml. "Of ..... Uilt Is juat
tho Orsi poO()Olll -tho dfao-
undou!Mdly ~ .... -. Jost
(iloe ""'" •
... ' /
Jefltey Britt, IS. of 1-Beach wu
sitting in the bed of the truck and was
thrown from the wreckage during the
rear~ :.npact.
'Ibree youths riding in the cab were
seriously injured, but recovered.
Adams.suffered eye cuts and bruises 1n
the collision.
His patrol car was destroyed.
Britt, wbo received emergency first aid
at the ecene from a passing physician,
died tho lollowln& SUnday in Mis!lon Com-
munity Hoe:pltal from maulve head and
ioternaJ injuries.
Adairu was booked on the charges fol-
lowing several week! inveltJ.gatJoa by the
Calllomla Hl<bway Patrol
He entered a plea of lnnoctnt to the
charges in the south county court and
has been free on his own recognizance
slnce the booking.
It is expected that tbe District At-
torney's Office will allege that the patrol
car wu traveling too fast for J.he con-
ditioos on the highway whlcb la poatrf at
35 miles per hour.
Patrol repcrta placed Adams' speed in
excess of 50 miles per hour at the time of
lbe c.ra.sh.
AdamJ' lawyers are expected to use
videotape made after the crash showing
a reenactment or the c r a s h
circuJJU1tances.
The city ha.s been named In a cla1m for
wroniful death damaaea stemming from
the mishap. Btitt'.s stn'Vlvon are a1kinr
for $133,000 as compem.&lloD lot the
youth's death.
ixon's
DAILY Pi LOT 11.W ......
It's Tlaeir-Bag
Gwtet.Grainger 0.~l Al)d Bob Riclwdson (right) demonllrate their
sl<ills on tradlllonal Soottlsb 'bagpipes for broOiers Jesse. 7, 0.efl) and
Davyd Arend, 6, Santa .Ana. Pipers, both from Glucow, SooUand,
played al Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza during the weekend at
British Expo '72. Expo continues through Sunday.
Welfare Reform Plan
Vote on Senate Agenda
WASHINGTON !AP) -A Senate vote
on a liberalized nUare reform plan was
usured tod&Y as Sen. Abrabun A.
Rlhklol! (ll-O>nn.), called op hla propoaaJ
for debate.
The roll uU, boweYtt, will noc come
until T\lnday or Wedneaday.
RJblc:o!f offtred hiJ propOa.tl U I
substitute for a pending amendment
which would provide for a test ot 111 the
varioul reform plans to deal with p~
lems ot welfare fam1Uet.
Thia procedure guaranteed tllat hla
IUblUtute would aet the first vote.
tn lhe end, however. the Senate l.I e1·
pttted to resolve the controversy by
dtcktlng for 1 two-year test ol the plans
before anythlna substantive lt done.
The test amendment nm wu oUerM
Satuiday by Sen. HllTl' Y. Byrd Jr.
(tnd .. Va.).
However, today Byrd withdrew bla pro-
posal In !nor of 1 allChtly different tat
amendment -1aored by Sen. William
V. Rolh Jr. (ft·Det.).
Rlblcoff'a 1Ubftitute ls libe,.Jlted
ver1Son of Prtsldtnt Nlion'1 FamUy
Aaliltanoe Plan wlltcb paned tho H..,..
Jut yetr.
It provideJ for 1 guaranteed. annual in-
come for welfare famJlln on a naUon.al
IS.. WEU' AR£. Pa1t 2)
3 Controversial Lea sing
Proposals Aired Tuesday
• •
1be tlilnl -lo r.r the boot -and r.polr !adlltJ at Dana fr..llar. 1be
"""'" -Oommlllloa bu -meoded a1pt1 '1w1 1ward the Wd to 1he nnn wbldl came In lll.Olll below tbl
hJchest blddtt.
All tkft ---the lub)o<I ot booted -lo tbl plll. ond _, .. _ ....... _, .. bl. .........
1be alle 6qulro bicls .... for I -
,_ ....... ol the -tllal bu .. lltJd -11•7 by '""'ttla Yallty IS. UlASllS, hp I)
Foreigners
Run Afoul
Of 'System'
The Western White lloust hosted •
number of very surprised rorelgn villton
early Sunday -the "visitor1" are now
on lheir way back home after bumblJ.na
onto the high lle<Urity grooncla.
The U.S. Bonier Patrol took custody
of the aliens after the mm we-e ap-
prebended by White Hooae Secret Service
penonntl and San Clemenle police ol·
Ileen in I predawn chue In tho cloaod· - . ccmpound.
Four •liens were ceupt by the com-
blned force of Secret Service mm and
San, Clemente pollce u the .u.na· nort1>
'!Ord journey took thorn Into the lleatmt
1llllte House grounds, where Iqllly
oopblatlcated anti-lntrullon alarm lyltem
alerted oecurlty penonnd.
ltle1al aliens attempllng to enter the
country commonly aneak up the beach
area put lhe Western White HouM and
then walk alone the railroad trlcb, of. nc.n aald today.
It appeared tn th!> cue that the band
of mea climbed a chali>tlnk fence an>UOCI
the com,>OUnd and we:e crouln& tt when
their presence waa noted by security
pcraonnel.
1be al~ns apprehended were· In the
area aet up for permanent pmaoid11tl
housin(. Off1«n uld when aecurtty of.
ficen called out for the men to bait, they
IClltered. ft i. believed that aevenl may
have aotten awty.
Funeral SI.a.red
For Opera Swr
PORTOLA VAIJ.EY IAP l -F\ment
11e.rvtcn art teheduled Tutatly for
oper-1tic ttoor RJcbard Ctooka, who for
n.1ny yean waa htard by radio au-
d)ences 11 I.he Voice or YlrtStone.
Crook.I, who died ol caneer al hil homt
here Friday, WU 72.. He retired in 1ttl
after • career that tpanned 9C'Vtrll cm-
lintnta and Nw him~ one • Olie
!Int Amerlcln stnc'" to ..., II Now
York'a MtlnJplilton Opon -
Dor1q the -blo --... famWar to lllWcn al -wllo t"ned In -1111 lo tho VGlce al ,,__
rodlo procram, oo wlilcb ba -ltalured al.flier for 14 )'Hn,
Or••lte
-• ---.. == • -• -,: -• ---• -:I --• =......--' --• • • -• -,.,I =-·ii' .. ........ .. --
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• Gun111an Kills4
Mother, 2 Kids lJlatcli in Horror
BRANDOH, F'Ja, (AP) -A '°""'
-divoreee and her two chlldten watched
helplessly as a gunman killed four
persons IncludJng her parents and
brother in a Brandon farmhouse, police
say.
PoUce sakl the a!!!nltant fired one shot
through a screen window early Sunday,
+killing one per$0n, and then burst lnto the
farmhouse and shot three others.
' Evelyn Sanders Johru!on and her two
children .. ,err spared.
The victims were identified as John T.
Sanders, 50; his Y;ife. Catherine. 37: thelr
15--year-old so n, Earl, and a rriend of the
family, James Richard Bridges, 28. "'ho
• was shot as he lay in ~. police said.
Another brother. 24-year-old J ohn
Sanders. was at work ln the dairy behind
the house, about JO miles east of Tampa.
Police said they arrested Thomas
Turner Chamber-3, 32, of Gadsden, Ala ..
'
and ~Id JloOer\ Han1I of Lars<>.
~car ~boo!. Both wtre _
~wltl!~~ Olamben ...i llarris •~ tiObi& held
In llillsborougb County Jail In Tampa
without bond.
A neighbor. Mrs. Mary Davis, sald
Mrs. Johnson came running from the
house. cry ing hysterically and yelling,
"They're all dead. They're all dead."
Polit.-e said she told the Davis family
the gunman spared ber, 3aying , "I'm not
golng to kUl you , just the ones you love
most."
Hillsborough County sheri ff's officials
said the young divorcee had been seeing
Chambers ror three years but left him
about ·three Wttks ago in Texas.
Chambers reportedly followed her tn
Clearwater and "threatened the family if
she wouldn't go back with him, •1.. Maj.
John Sala of the HW..borougb shcriU's
department tald.
Diabetes Discussion Set
At South Coa st Hospital
A round table discussion on lhe
symptoms, ca use , detection and treat·
ment of diabetes mell!tus will be
presented at 7:30 ~.m. Wednesday in the
auditorium or Sou th coast Community
Hospifal.
A panel of physicians will attempt to
give simple and understandable ex-
planations ()f the disease in the first ()f a
series of such discussions offered as a
free public service by the hospital.
Diabetes, a hereditary disease, affects
an estimated S percent of the population.
but about hall the viCtims are unaware of
its presence.
Although the disease cannot be cured,
it can be controlled by diet, medication
and exercise prescribed on an' Ind ividual
basis, according to Dr. Peter Bramwell.
South Laguna internist and direetor of
the continuing education program at
South Coast Community.
Diabetes results from the body's in·
ability to use food properly and is caused
by an insufficient supply o( insulin or in·
terference with the action of insulin in
lhe body.
Symptoms Include an I n c re a s e d
amount of sugar ln the blood and loss of
l!lugar in lbe urine; weakenss, feeling of
faUgue, generalized itching, p a I n ,
F romPqel
WELFARE ...
basis but ffl:e• t~ payment level . at
$2.600 (or 1a f,amily .of four, l200 more
than the N0<on proposal. " · ·
It would pro'fide subsidies for the
working poor, as does the President's
plan, but would gl\te more fiscal relief to
the states lhan Nixon oilers.
"This ts the ID()menl or truth for
welfare refonn.11 said Rlblcoff as he call·
ed up his subst.itute. "But I sense there Is
very litUe interest in the Senate or in the
Administration any tonger in this issue."
Nixon proposed his family-assi.stance
plan in 1969. to the 91st COngress. It
passed the House in that Congress, too,
but died in the Senate.
In Its first week of consideration or the
big bUI, the Senate added more than S5
billion worth of Social St<:urlty and
Medlcart benefits. taking the total cost
up to about $20 bill ion.
But most noor amendments are ex·
pected to be dropped in the conference
:-with the House.
"Ban):'.on' Creator Dies
H HOLLYWOOD (AP1 -Ed Adamson.
creator and producer of television's
•1Banyoo" aeries, Is dead at the age of
t61. 'Ibe writer-producer was hospitaliud
I for tr•tmenl or a h!art ailment and died
16unday. Adamaon had written 11eript1 for
•tucb televlak>n shows e1 "Bonanza."
1t•'Jhe Untouchables" Md "The Virgin-. han."
! • : • I
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•
numbness or tingling ir the hands and
feet, disturbances in vision, irritability
and "nervousness.
The disease can develop at any age.
with highest incidence occurring between
40 and 60 years of age.
F'urther sessions on diabetes are
scheduled for bQth patients and thei r
fami lies. on Wednesdays Oct. 18, Nov. I
and Nov. 15.
FromPqel
VIGILANTE. • •
surgery at Hoag Memorial Hospital dur-
ing mid-morning hours for his abdominal
wounds and medical personnel sald his
condition was not establilhed.
He was def\nltely going to be admitted,
however, they noted.
Hia brother, Steven Corona, was held
by Newport Beach police briefly, then
taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital for ex-
amination before being shipped to
Orange County Medical Center.
Costa Mesa· Police Detective Wayne
Harber said the second Corona brother
appears to have been wounded more
seriously than first believed.
He W81 bH by several 20 gauge shotgun
pelleta, ooe of wbjcb X·l1!JI• indloale
lodged In or nw hil hearl · ·
Detective Norm Kutch, also assigned
to the case, said the second burglary
•U!Jl'CI w11 9111l lylng o~ a ltr.tcher al
the ooanty·facWty .at 9 a.m.,.,fou~ biJurs
aner be 'lfa1 wounded .
· Invettlgators said vending · machine
route operator Henry B. Stegmann, 34,
flred a total of four blasts at the Corona
brothers during a predawn confrontation
at the Pier 11 night club.
Stegmann -who has a chain or coin-
operated vending and a m u .1 e m,e A t
machlne5 including pool tab)es -has
suffered a l!ries of burglary losses, one a
$300 loss at P1¢r 11 jll5t a month ago.
"He was looking after hi s Interests."
Detective Harber remarked 1oday, saying
Stegmann showed up at 1976 Newpo rt
Blvd .. to make sure the premises were
secure.
lie found evidence that it wam't and
apparently heard the Coronas lo.side.
"He called them out or the building,"
Detective Harber continued, saying at
that point StegmaM thought ()De of the
suspects had a gun and opened lire with
his si ngle shot weapon.
Police said Stegmann reloaded and
fired again as the wounded men Oed to
their car. putting two 1nore bla!lts into
the vehicle before it was out of range.
Investigators said they doubt whether
any criminal chariles ore likely to be (I].
l'd agalnat StegmaM, who was arre1t@d
himself several years ago for alleged
gambling vlolt•llons.
Vice officers claimed at that lime he
was ttnanclng hlJ way through Orange
Coast C4llege by running a casino In tus
home.
[)(>tectlve Capt Ed Glssgow cited the
Callfonlia Penal Cod(! today, explalnlng
It 111lows private c!Utens 10 use
reasonable force In apprehending 11
person !lu~ed of commJttlng 11 public
oftense in his presence.
Fr om Page J
LEASES ...
f,,rmcr George Murai
At 1hr !llgge!itfon of Superv1sor-ltobcrt
Battin of SAnta Ana. the lease thill year
ha s been broken Into three ~reels.
~loral ha.!I bid $14,700 for lwo parctlll
totaling 130 and (;rorgc Tank.a. n
subleNH of Mural's has bid $9,400 for the
rcmatnine 113 acrcll. The only other bid ill
from Norden Fruit Company Rt S23,962
for the entire 213 a~s.
Controversy surround ing the property
surfaetod whtn formt'r mayor Dtrl'k
~fcWhlnney Ind Plann ing Commlsslonrr
Tad Fujita. w<re Indicted for allegedly
trying lo sh~ke down Mur1J for 11 0.000
to get hia bid approved by the superviJ.
o ....
The olrport parking lot least. which
calls for the OJ>'rator to rclum 11 high
percentage ()f hla groa Income to the
coun1y. wJU be returned to 1Upervtsori
wtth tbe recommtnd.GOan that tbe lea.te:
be awttrded lo a new operator.
The parking lol has bet!n nm by the
Redman Parklna Corpor1llon1 which ii
1ubmhtlng a new bid of $503,m . 1bC!
hhthest bid come1 rrom P R r k 1 n 8
Cor.,or11Uo11 of America at SS-09.34S.
Nuptial Party
Cost 100,0QO
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Dominic
Vllconai, I lhoppina: c • D l e r
devtloj>er, spared llD -!or !!!l ~\lflll•l'!fle$'1 tlddtlle ..... inl the weekm"
The reception cost an estimated
$100,000.
The 2,000 guests nibbled 18,000
hon d'oouvres. 20,000 pieces ()f
shrimp and crab fingers, finished
off a seven-tier cake and consumed
SO cases of liquor.
"Jt wu the biggest extravaganza
l 've seen ln 22 years," said chef
Mike Morabito, v .. ho grilled steaks.
Wat er Age ncy
Sets 2 Sewage
'Fact' Clinics
Two fact clinics ()fl a proposed regional
sewage disposal system for the aouth
coast will be held this week by the -Aliso
Water Management Agency (AWMA),
'!'he first meeting will be held ai 5 p.m.
Tuesdav in the f\.1ezzanine Floor Room of
Roye! Savings and Loan, 23861 El Toro
Road, El Toro.
The second session will be held at 4
p.m. \\'eJnesday at the Moulton Niguel
Water District Office, 27281 Aliso Creek
Road, Laguna Niguel.
Undt"r the proposal, sewage from the
many communities would be treated and
used , v.;herc possible. for irrigation.
During times of winter -rains, when the
demand for water for irrigation slackens,
the treated sewage would be discharged
In the Pacific Ocean through two ootfalla
-one near Dana Point, the other off
AHso Beach.
The San Diego Regional Water Quality
Control BQard has looked favorably upon
the AWMA project. AWMA ls made up of
the Moulton Niguel, South Cout, Laguna
Beach, El Toro, Los Alisos and Irvine
Ranch Water Districts. ·
The fact clinics precede a public hear·
ing Oct. l 1 on the environmental Impact
statement for the sewage treatment proj·
ect. This hearing will be held at Aliso
Elementary School, 21542 Wesley Drive
at 7:30 p.m. Interested persons are en·
couraged to attend the bearing.
Following the local public bearings, the
project will be submitted to the state and
federal environmental agencies for ap-
proval.
The system ls . expected to begin
operating In !ale 11!'14.
l'romPagel
MERRICK ...
as it does Jn any real estate11grHment."
Merrick, whose family halls from
Locamo in the Italian lake country, was
born in the United States and was sent
back to Italy to attend the Selaslone
College for boys when he wa.s 14.
Now 57, be has lived in Laguna Beach
for the past IO years, making his home at·
1280 Anacapa Way. He formerly owned
and lived In Pyne Castle, an Art Colony
landmark once touted as a possible site
for President Nixon's Western \Yhite
ltouse.
He last visited Rome, he said today, Jn
1950.
"I know you can't appraise something
llke the Colosseum in actual dollars," he
said, "but t thought they might want an
engel to fix it up and It would be
rea90nable to charge an entry fee -
right now I'm just thinking out loud.
We'll ha ve to wait till we get some
response from the Italian government to
discuss more details."
Late Start Set
Fo r Rec Progra1n
Thi.! fall edijion of the Capl!trano
Unllied School District's adult recreation
l?f'OCl'&m '!rill begin a week later than
9Chedu1ed. ·school offlctala said today1
because of laSt·minutc \\"Ork on the San
Clemente High School gym floor.
The progrBm, originally set to start
J\.1onday, wlll be launched Oct. 9. Instead.
The cmnaslum will be open to athletic
actlvltiC. three nights a week.
The Bdult-only progrsms are offered
free ()f charge and no formal registration
Is required .
On Mondays durlng thl! prorram,
starting at 7:30 p.m .• women wlll have
full use nf the gym and activities ()ffcred
wlll be volleyball and a physical fitnCS.<J
program.
On Wednesday 1t1nd Thursday nights
men will ust the gym from 7 lo 1:30
o'clock. Bnskctbnll will be the prime MC.
livity ()n Wcdntsdays and volleyball on
Tt.ursdays .
Youth recreationfll u.ctlvl!1e1 are of-
ftred at the gym on weekemb. Qraaniied
projilrams are offered as well as frec·play
activil ies.
School officials said a similar program
\llill be Instit uted !Arly next year at Dana
lfllil lllgh SChool
l\Iw·dcrer Gets Life
BOSTON tUPI J -Alan ~I . Lussier, 24,
Bo111on. was sentenced to life In p~
for the H1llowttn eostume party •Jayinl
of a Rochester, N.Y. area nunlnr .1tu-
dent. l.Als."ier IK:rt:amed wbon. pronounced
aullty or flrst~egree murder ln lhe death
of Christine M. Ross, 7.0, of Irondequoit,
N Y. Sh< had gone lo the parcy d.....00
IHi a marijuana plant.
•
Trial Delay Refused
LQ,guna Hi lu Broker, 5 Others in Cou rt
By Tl,lM BARLEY
GI .. °""',., l!tH
A last·mlnute move to further delay
the "Taj Mahal" trial of Laguna Hills
stockbroker Joseph Dulaney and five
codefendsnts was rejected today with the
d1spatch of the sJX to the courtroom ()f
Orange County Superior Court Judge
James Turner.
A lawyer who told acting presiding
Judge Charles Bauer that be bas only
just recovered faint vision afteT' a k>ng
spell of blindness pleaded that handicap
in asking Judge Bauer for a 60-day delay.
plex In l.aguna llills and from a plush of·
fice suite in Seal Beach.
He took over the IJJ.fated enterprise
after Dulaney took his wife and famiJy to
West Gennany In November, 1969.
Shipley remained at the helm~ to
become Involved ln the mowit.ain of (.'()M·
plaint.s flied with the District Attorney's'
Office -many of them fUed by residents
()f retirement communities in Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
Shipley also represented the World
Drugs Ov erboard
Trends enlefl)rise while the tan&IOO sf..
fairs of its multiple corporatloM were
wound up in bankruptcy court pro-
ceedings lhal led to ~..re of the La·
guna Hilb and Seal Beach buildings.
A long search for Dulaney and his wife
ended with the arrest of the globe trot·
ting stockbroker in the Dutch C&ribbean
i.sland of Curacao.
Mrs. 'Dulaney was returned to Orange
County to face trial after she was located
In a hospital bed In the British Colony of
Bennuda.
But Judge Bauer turned down attorney
Roger Foyers plea after Deputy District
Attorney Stu Grant pointed out that
ullegations against the Dulaney group
stemmed from 1968 and 1969 and bad
been repeatedly delayed since the 1970
indictment of seven defendants.
Tbe number of defendants waa eut to
six Friday with the dis!llUsal of all
i::harge• against Fred Riley. .S, o!
Norfolk, Va.
40 Pass engers Arrested
Judge Bauer seat the group to trial and
apparenlly re)ecled the poaslbllity aired
today tbal a ll00,000 loan au.,.dly false-
ly obtained rrom a San Bernardino
Catholic hospital by the Dulaney group
will be repaid within the next 60 days. ,
On Yacht for Narcotics
Attorney Darrell Johnson, acting for
J ames E. Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Cir·
cle, }luntington Beach. told Judge Bauer
he had documents in his possession which
would confirm proposed repayment or
the loan to the St. Bernardine Hospital.
Johnson later commented that the
$500,000 unpaid Joan was one of two
issue s that will be dealt with in turn dur·
ing the trial before Judge Turner. He
predicted a total trial time of six weeks.
Johnson said the first issue will inv2Ive
all six defendants -Dulaney, 38, and his
wife, Marlene, 32, both of 2631 Via
CascadJta , San Clemente, ShlpJey, Daniel
Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird Drive, Hun-
tington Beach. Robert G. a.fachan. 40, of
San Bernardino and Wendell Warren
Austin, 38, of Riverside.
That phase of the trial, Johnson ex·
plained, will be devoted to charges that
the Dulaney group defrauded investors in
lhe \Vorld Financial Trends operation he
controlled of an amount that may exceed
$3 million.
Johnson said the St. Bernardine issue
and the alleged defrauding by the of·
fcring of false collateral to the con·
!rollers of the Roman catholic facility
will only involve Dulaney and Shipley.
Shipley ii the former vice president of
tbe World Treods organization that was
administered from its "Taj Mahal" com·
Cyclist :{{illed
On El Toro Road
Dangerous, cw-ving El Toro Road was
the scene of the second fatal vehicle ac-
cident within a week Sunday when a
motorcyclist was killed and his woman
companion i::ritically injured.
The California Highway Patrol said
Charles Howard, 36, of U>s Angeles, was
dead on arrival at Mlasion Community
Hospital , Mission Viej<l. His passenger
Antonia Suarez, 31, also of Los Angeles,
is listed in very critical condition in the
same hospi tal today.
Patrolmen said Howard was traveling
north ()fl El Toro and collided headon
with a van when he attempted to pass a
car. The van driver. Paul Jamison, 21, of
Orange, escaped with minor injuries.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -some 40
persons on a chartered motor yacht were
booked oo narcotics charges alter a wild
scene in which passengers sc ran1bled for
the slderails to dump the drugs before
arresting ()fficcrs came a b o a r d ,
autborities say.
Inspector Don Daniels said there were
more than 300 passengers and six un·
dercover narcotics inspectors aboard ttie
Harbor Emperor. a three-decker bay
cruiser, when it tied up at Fisherman's
Wharf following a three-hour party late
Sunday,
Philip Morris
Viejo Purchase
Made Complete
Philip Morris Inc. today ann()unced
that it has purchased 100 percent ()f the
stock of the Mission Viej<l Company.
The price tag on the acquisition is $48.5
million, of which $25 miUion will be paid
to the shareholders irutlally with the
balance based on the company's earnings
over the next five years, according to a
Philip Morris spokesman.
The cigarette manufacturing finn,
which is a parent company for an in-
ternational conglom~rate which markets
the cigarettes, razor blades, beer and
chewing gum, has operated with Mj~ion
Viejo since 1970 under an ()etit>n agree-
ment. The spokesman said the present
Mission Viejo board of directon wi11 ccin-
tinue and there will be no chaiige in
management.
In addition to the large planned C:Olfl·
munity in the Saddleback Valley. the
Mission Viejo Company has a.I so
developed residential properties i n
Denver and Phoenix.
Man Guilty in Deaths
CHEBOYGAN, Mich. (UPI) - A jury
found Wayne E. Gilbert, 18, West Allis,
Wis .. guilty of two counts of firs't~egree
murder in the fatal shootings of a preg·
nant girl and her mother witnessed by
the ()Ider woman's 4-year~ld son.
'36995
PMiiiil PIAW1 .... _ ... __ _
...... .., ...... c ...... . ... .. , ... ........_, ........ .. --~&WTCIR f'IAT\IMl.i
............... ~ ~
.... ,.-.... ,..a t.•t• 1•ttC1 • •I:_ ... ...,... ...............
.. Dtm(ap , .
! . ·~ .. . ' . . . .
r
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Dewntown COsta Mesa -Phon-i 548·7788
• • '
I
More than two dozen uniformed ol·
ricers streamed aboard the vessel to
make the arrests amid cries ot "It's a
bust!" and a pell mell scramble 1as
passengers tried to get rid of the drugs,
Daniels said.
Cocaine and a variety of other drugs
1ater were found aboard the vessel, be
said.
Daniels said those arrested were book·
ed for investigation of a "myriad" ()f
narcotics charges. mos t i rr v o I v i n g
possession of marijuana.
He said San Francisco and San Mateo
authorities earlier were alerted that a
San Mateo COUnly narcotlca dealer had
chartered the Harbor Emperor, alter
selling tickets for the party crul.se in
several nearby communities.
Undercover narcotics inspectors, some
dressed as deckhands, mingled with the
crowd, which enjoyed rock music and
alcoholic beverages in addition to drugs,
Daniels said.
The ()fflcers were furnished wiJh
narcotics but it was decided to delay the
arrests untU police reinforcements could
be summoned when the vessel docked, he
said.
All aboard were briefly detained Wltil
police could sort out the persons even-
tually charged , he said.
There were no serious incidents,
Daniels said. Names of those arrested
were not immediately available.
Orange Man Held
After Home Bunls
' A tamily row in Orange Sunday ended
with one man jailed on suspicion of arson
and attempted murder alter his mother
and brother were re!ICUed from t.helr
burning home.
Police arrested Manuel Gortarez, 49. ()f
268 N. Lemon St., who they allege set fire
to his own home after a day long argu-
ment with his mother, Mrs. Josephine
Gortarez, 75, and his brother Joseph, 42.
The elderly woman and het son were
rescued from the fiercely burning home
by firemen who estimated damage to the
structure at $5,000.
Manual Gortarez was arrested near the
home about 45 minutes after the fire
started.
General Electric
"Best Buy"
Dishwasher
19995
Modol SD2SON
lncludef C:hobt of eoJOP on
front panel and rtmovaJ of
old ~httr, ------
w ..... ....._lud
GINUAI. W CTllC
QUEENIE
. ,
;,,r --'\
~0-.2.
•• don't like to be Picky, but there's something I don't
e about this place."
• M. Bo
LA Gal s Shave
Heads of Rapist s
The crime boys now report that metropolis with the
highest incidence of rape, be it known, is Los Angeles. Must
mention certain outraged ladies thereabouts accept this
circumstance---wt at all. They've teamed up in a vigilante
squad. To track down unprosecuted culprits. \Vhen they lo-
c:ate same, they expect to shave the fiends' heads, then
,. post photos all over town. They're qlute serious, under·
otandably.
ST ANDA RD ski in Scandinavia a few hundred years
ago wu two inches thick, five inches
\\'ide and 71/a feet long.
CAN YOU document any instance
when a healthy wolf ever attacked a
human being in North America? Doubt
it.
THAT ATHLETE most apt to
come from the largest of families is
the boxer. From the smallest. the ten~
nis player.
SAY WHAT you will about tattoos,
in th.at scienti!ic psychological examination known as the
masculinity test, tattooed men aS a rule rate far higher
than untattooed men. So do tattooed women, might men-
tion.
~ OLD SONGS -Q. "Sonny, are you old enough to re-
ilember that classic ditty of yesteryear called 'I Love to
bunk a Hunk of Sponge Cake'?"
A. No, sir, but clearly recall "When It's Nighttime In
Italy. It's Wednesda y Over Here." Now are you old enough
to remember "I'm Wild About Horns on Automobiles that
Go Ta-Ta-Ta-Ta"?
Q. WIUCH end of the hen's egg is laid first, the big
end or the little end?"
A. Big end, always. Now if this fact is lm~rtant to
you, jot it down . It will not be reported here agam.
THE RECORD shows almost but not quite every su-
P.tMor girl sprinter on championship track teams comes
from a broken home.
WVE AND WAR -Our Love and War man has re-
ported the most effective line a single g_irl can deliver . to
capture the devout interest of an eligible bachelor ts :
11J'm going to have to be careful of you. You 're danger-
OU!." A lady in Great Falls, Mont., says she tried that
No. 1 Hne. Didn't work. lnquir~ as to what's next best.
No. 2 Is: "You're so different." No. 3: "l can't get you
out of my mind."
BIG MONTH for the common cold, October. Fo.r JOme
mysterious rea900 , the incidence of that ailment peaks
Uvice yearly. Early autumn, mid...wlnter and spring. The
early autumn peak -now -is highest, usually.
COME ON, you don't believe fish is brain food , do
you? Neither do I. But surveys: show one out of every six
~wnups hereabouts still does so believe. And half the high ~
lchool students Ukewise think that, it's: said.
FEDERAL LAWS that govern military pay are so out
of sync with federal laws that govern poverty payments,
lt's: reported, that approximately 15,000 enlisted men cw-
renUy also draw welfare cbecka.
Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New·
port Btach, Calif. 92660.
•
! See by Today's
Want Ads.
e SLUMBER SWEE7LY oa
• S1mmoru hide • away
90la, Decorator fabric of
yellow &: .. 1,.hlte~
• LET ntE "Good Time•
Ron·· Mdalcally ""Ith a
Grand Plano 6' Ebon)o.
Just tune.d 6-n!OC>n·
ditlonrd.
e NEEDS LOTS of tompf.1\)'
" • fri•nd tor )'OU, too!
~it.le pup with Beacle
ean! ! ~
e 01.NNER WITll A toudl
ol eltpnee on a SoUd
Mapte dinlnc IW!t with t
Wlndlor chain, bun.t A
... can.
e TTT IN ANYWHERE Jn
tht. '68 VW Bus.
For Advertising In
OUT 'N AIOUT
PIMtne
N~nn Stanley
64"2·4-311
•
Mond•Y Oclobtf" 2, 1972 · DA.ILY PI LOT 9 .
l/N·IROOK
HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!
3 lb. Dupont Dacron 88 Filled EXTRA-LONG
-~L,~~~~~~ ... ~~~
•Completely wa shable-nylon outershe\1 , rayon lining .
•Zips from inside or outside. :# 1083XN-5.
MADE TO SELL FOR $19.95 $895
WOW! SAVE $1 I .001
BUY ONE FOR EACH
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY
SAVE $3.50 EA .
TUES. 1. WED. ONLYI
U.S . Army Surplus .50 Caliber
AMMO CANS
"Built like A lottle shlpl"
• Every home can u1e seYerat of th•••
water-tight, aii'-tig)lt oll lte•I
ammo boxes. .
• lid clo1e1 OYer O durobl• rubber go1kel,
--.., making a moisture.proof seal.
• For storing clothing,
tools, guns, valuable
papers, coin collections.
• Big 12" long x 6"
widt x 7" high.
Easlly worth $4.99
WOW!
99~ ..
Vinyl Upholstered
5 PC. BRIDGE SET
''Oor9 e ou1, Hig hly Decorative Sets
W iii Compliment Your Gamel''
•Many styles & colors to choose from .
•All steel ~ets hove vinyl upholstered seats & replacement toble insert •
• Also greot for e.11:tro dining space, gomes, the kid's room.
MADE TO SELL FOR $49.95 $2995
WOW! SAVE $20.001
TUES . I. WED. ONL YI
Adjustable -6 Position
~.~~!L~g COT
• ~~ovy dut.y steel tubing, with sturd amping/'' .. r-=i~T.
0 wearing blue canvas I' y, • Whit . . s ing.
• 24'' •,'dr1m with sharp nautical emblem
w i ex76"1on · . ' . 0 -six locking pOtitionsl
REG. $10.95
WOW/
SAVE $
DINmE CHAIR ' Suction 1o ..
DINEnE CHAIR
REPLACEMENTS
• Long wearing, heavy weight vinyl is
easy to ·clean & scuff proof·
• fits chairs with screw-on bocks &
slip-on backs. .
• Jiffy installation -Renew your choirs
in minutes-Choice of colors .
• Set includes seat & back.
REG. $6.99 $4t9
SAVE
$0.001
BENCH VISE
• Un ique bait holds ••curt o,, ony 1mooth
1urfoct.
• H•od 1wiY•h -ju1t what •Y•ry home
handyman n••d1.
'RIG. $249 $3.49
fUU, t. WID. ota Tf
YOU SAVE $1.001
Set of 3
CAST -IRON SKILLOS
• Set of 3 groduol.ci 1i1es -on• fot
.,.,..,.., n•ed,
• Good, heovy coil iron r•toint heat
& brown1 betttr .
·RIG. $4.99
NIL & WW, OM.fl
..
JET TORCH
• Hondy-corry Iii! (Ontoi"• oil you n•ed
for big or •moll fobl.
• Compl•tt with blow-torch heod,
told•ring head, 1porli-Hter,
utility head, tonk I cot•.
RIG. $9 .95
NIL I wtl. OM n
llCl1y-Te.U ..
ELECTRIC GLUE GUN
• dO •kOftd bondlnt on 0M•..on-po1011t motwrlolt.
• AutoMOtic fw•d l 1rig9•,~omp4.ie with gun,
glut I '"'•'·
• tue. ...... -"
• • •
.
' ' • ' .
'
• ' '
-
\
J
DAil Y PILOT SC
Finance
Briefs
Keep on
U.S . Auto Companies Eye Rouiry Engin.e
Fiue Custo1n Tailoring
Wettcltff "-· 11 JZ ltvl•• Ave.
N.-,.rt leech, C1llfonilo
PHONE: •45·1072
\VASHINGTON (UPI J
The A n1 er i can automoblle
owner, who has been titilated
by car makers with everything
rrom push button windows to
bucket seats, is now about to
be "\Vankeled.''
And il mav be the biggest
OOon to the· buyer since the
Denture Invention
For People with
''Uppers'' and ''Lowen''
The nearer.I thing to having your
own ~th 1s poss1hlc "'"" with a plu tic trcam. di:irovery that actu·
all y holda both "uppcr1'' and
''lo•eR"' as never t:irierore poy11ble.
It'• a diKoYery ca[l.cd FixooF.NT•
for daily hQme use 1U.S. P:it.
f3,003.988) tl.nd 11 has revolu• tiooiled dtnl,Urt wearins;. F1:l00£NT
lnrm!t an elutic membrane that
help!! ahsoft> the ~hocks or lnting
an•\ chew1111,
\\1th F1xor1":NT many denture
v.·rarrrt m:IY ~t. &P"ak, luuj}l, wilh
ht tie worry~ derlturescomin& locee. One :ipplica,limi m1y la11l for
houD. Dentures that fit are ~-
1t;1t Lo health. Sec your denli!l
rtgularl y. Get caay· to-use F1 KootiNT
OeutW'e i\dbcsh'e O cnm.
meet the $10,000 panther* .•.
by deTomaso ... lmporlrd for Linooln-?-.tercury. l tnh~n
coach\.\ork crcalf'd by \h(' hril\i:ln1 Chin Studios of Tur_in.
f'ord designed the 3."J l CJD 4\1\'-~1•ngin••. Four \1'h<'<'I 111-
dept•ndcnt $USpt.:nsi11n and 111id -:.hip o'nginr plaCl'mcnt. Jo·lvc
spet'd gear box. [ully synchron1zr·d .. ,
PANTERA
"Psnlera ., ltulian for Pantht•r ..
PUBLIC NOTICE
.... ..,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Phone
6424321
For
Weekender
Adverti in" ...
creation of the assembly line
production te chnique, ac-
cording to some auto industry
experts.
SU.lPLY PUT, the Wankel is
a new type -0f automobile
engine, but -One .... •hi ch is
radicall y different from the
old internal c-0mbustine engine
used in JOO million cars and
trucks tr a v e I in g U.S.
highways.
Instead of pistons moving up
and down in cyclinders. the
\Vanke! engine uses triangular
rotors that revolve in an ellip-
tical chamber to power lbe
car.
Just what would that mean
as far as the average driver is
concerned ? Quite a Jot. For
example, the Wankel engine
-Ii; practi call y free of
vibration , v.•hich would mean a
quieter car.
-Has fewer moving parts,
and therefore should require
JH011ey's Worth
Ease Bill Paying Chore .
With New Alternatives
separate ac-
count to the
l and lord ,
1eleph-One
company, ga-
rage . liquor
i1torl'. news-
pt.1pl'r deliv·
cry agency _
al least two
,.01tra1: or three rest-
au ra nts. perhaps some depart·
ment stores nnd :"ll insu rance
com pany too·
IN Ttri.ft-:, WE spend a cou-
ple of houri; t"At h 1nonth dolng
this. In money , sta1np!I alone
average $2 n nionth -oft en
more. rarely lrSJ -and evt:n
thr tr1\1elopcs we have to sup-
ply cost n1oncy.
Al ro. It's a bore nnd n chore
-ri~ n1illlons of you surely
\I 111 a~rec.
Are the:.e nltrrnritlvcs' Yr~
And 1ncreaslng 11urnher1t t·f
lh1•n1 art ctneri;l n>:
If rou know hov.· to use your
rn.'dit or bank cha rRe c•rd
with prudcrn:c. you ('kft quick·
ly cut this tl1n1.'-<.'0nsuming.
chtc~ -('()OJUmlni:. stt1mp-
consumlng burden. Simply UJe
the card "''herever you can;
gas station. 5tore , restaunnt,
t tc. lnstt>lld or r<!Celvlng in-
dividual bills rrnm each of
these bulineues. you receive
one monthly charge card bW
which you can pay with 01)('
check and one stamp -and 1t
no lntertst pro\•lded yoo aettle
the account within tht bllllng
period. This quick 8tUltmtnt
i5 the must.
CllECK ANO see. whtlh('r
your own b.1nk or 1nvlng~ in·
stitutJon -or olher.s In your
neig hborh ood -will
autom11tlct11ly J»IY )' u u r
rtgular bill• out of your
checklng or &Avlngs account.
An estimated 2,500 f u 11
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST
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Mond17, Oct.obtr 2, 1'972 SC DAILY PILOT J J
Monday's Closing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Wall Stroot Slow;
• ~Bulls' Concerned •
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" •t:•
J 2 DAILY PILOT
Super Bus
Program
Under Way
Mood•!, O<tobe< 2, 1972
btf BU Kesne
WASHINGTON (API -The
Urban ~1ass Transportation
Adm lnls t r at io n has in-
augurated Project Super Bus
-a program to analyze the
reasibility of using h i g h -~
capacity buses such a s
doubledeckers in Amer\can
cities.
U~tTA awarded a $226.000
grant to the Nationa l Trans-
portation Center Pittsburgh,
( EC OLOGY)
for a study in cooperation \Vith
transit agencies in seven cities
-Oiicago, Dallas, Detroit,
Los Angeles. New York,
Oakland, and Pitt.bUrgh.
Representatives of the citits
will take part also in a visit fo
European communities t o
gather data on thetr operation
of three types of buses -
d ou b I e -decker s, buses
operated in tandem, and in-
tegrated buses in which riders
can move from one section to
another as in a train.
e Pact Projecled
:~:_ :,_~~
---® ~
"tp/mmy pretends she's looking ot the size, but she's
/ really looking ot the p rice."
Neighbors Angry
Singer-'s 9-Dogs
Bark Up Storm
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -A From Wire Servieff treatment for heroin ad-
judge has ruled invalid a 1968 The barking of ex-Beatie diction.
agreement whereby the state Paul ii.tcCartney's Eng Ii 5 h A I ea ding London
Resources Agency promised sheepdog and her eight pups psychiatrist who Is treating
not to oppose a Pacific Gas & has his neighbors in an Miss Faithful, Dr. James
Electric Co. application for a uproar. Willis, said, however, that "it
nuclear poweor plant on the Neighbors in the exclusive is impossible to talk about a
hlendocino coast. St. John's Wood district in cure at the moment.;•
The Sierra Club, which Londoo at first a' s k e d *
sought the ruling, called it "a McCartney by Jetter to keep
ma w ,............,.,;on" ,·0 1"• fight . •• lh 'iled Elton Cark or \Voodbum, ,_ .................... ""' the dogs quiet, "''~ ey. 11 alked · the ·1 to bk>ck the $8 million plant Ore. w mto c1 Y ne;:cf~i':ai;Uin:·ruling. which ( J· ~~~~~y~ab1th2ot':
came on a motion by ii> own J>EOPLE first child.
a ttorney, was merely a '---------""' He.carred 2ti,200 pennies in routi ne clarification which a five-gallon jug, wtllch he
"formally restates our posi-a forma l complaint with police dropped and broke In the lob-
Lion that the agreement could over the day-and-night yap-by.
not prevent the Resources ping. Hospital employes said they
Agency from opposing the A neighbor said a note sent retrieved all the pennies but
plant should it desire." to the fonner Beatie had been are faced with a massive
returned to the sender with a counting job. e Landing Shift crudely scrawled, four-letter Clack and his wile saved the
LOS ANGELES (AP) word replay. pennies over a three-year
Would a shift in landing pat-"It was inexcusable,'' said period.
terns 13t busy Los Angeles the neighbor. *
International Airport merely McCartney commented, Israel's High Court Justice
switch denc;e jet noise from "They're all mad around here. has given a virtual stamp of
already-bombarded j n t a n d They're a load of colonels -I approval to the 12.-year-Old
areas to seaside communities? don't care \lo'hat they say." marriage of American movie
Th8.l's one question the ·* }X'Oducer Olto Premlncer.
Fe der a I Av i at Ion Marianne FaU.bful. l he 'lbe tribunal . ordered a
Miner,
77, Keeps
Plugging
RUBY, Adz. (AP ) -An old
miner sifts through three tons
Of ore dail y near this 900thern
Arizona ghost town. hoping to
succeed some day where
others failed at the tum ol the
century.
Jerry Delgado, 77. has been
wocking his Saint Cluist<>pher
gold mine for eiJht )!ear! and
says he's digging his way
Iowan! what he hopes is a big,
gold-bearing vein.
'"I'VE BEEN around mines
aU my life· and it it i3 very
fascinating," says the retired
machinist.
Twelve years ago, Delgado
retired, but after a few years
he decided retirement wasn't
for him.
Lea~ h~ home in Tucson.
Delgado moved to t b e
Atascosa Mountains, the site or the rich gold find in the late
1800s.
Delgado says he found a
vein of gold-bearing o r e
several years ago, but admits
frankly, "It's nothing to write
home about.11
EACH DAY, Delgado hauls
three tone; of ore out of the 100..
foot shalt, making six trips into
the ttmnel to fill a half-ton
bucket.
He goes doWn, fills the
bucket, climbs a ladder. turns
on the winch, dumps Uie ore
and starts over.
His day begins at 4:30 a.m.
and he's proud of his many
hours of hard labor.
•
• Nixon Ahead ID State
--But Political Coattails App-earFrcigi-1,e --
By GEORGE SKELTON
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Even ii
Pres ident Nixon should carry California
by a landslide, both parties agree his
politicaJ coattail! wlll not provide much
pulling power ror Republican con-
gressional candidates.
Democrats are likely to retain their
dominance of the llouse delegation from
the President's home state.
In fact, Nixon'Lcoattails are having a
reverse effect on one tight coc;gressional
race, where maverick Republican Rq>.
Paul N. McCloskey Ls fighting for his
political life.
McCloskey1s refusal to endorse Nixon
over Sen. George McGovern has prompted
many Republicans to support the antiwar
congressman's Democratic opponent, at-
torney Jim Stewart.
"PEOPLE ARE tired ol McC!oskey
taking pot shots at Nixon all the time,"
says Kent Kaiser, a San Francisco stock
broker and BOD of long-time GOP fund
raiser Lee Kaiser.
With five weeks remaining before the
election, the political situation in the na-
tion's most popuJous state -which has
both the biggest bloc of electoral votes
and the largest ooogressional delegation
-is this:
-Nixon is ahead, both sides agree.
Republican State Chairman Putnam
Livermore places the lead at "a
minimum of 10 percent," Democratic
State Chairman Charles T. Manatt at "5
or 6 percent." But Manatt, recenUy nam-
ed McGovern's state campaign
chairman, . flatly predicts uJtimate vic-
tory for the senator.
-McGovern still has organizational
pains, but Frank Mankiewicz, his na-
tional JX>litical Qirector, contends the
SOUlh l>Uotan IJ "probably better oH" In
CalUom!a than anywhere elle.
-DEMOCRATS, WHO outnumber
RA>publlcans 3 Jo %,are oulregJ.slering the
OOP but still are only half way low&rd
their goal of ligning up a million new
voters by the Ocl. 8 deadline.
-Wltb no gubematorlal or Senate con-
test, there Ls exlracwdinary emphasis on
Ca!Uornia's 43 <Ongr<SS!ooal and 11111
state legislative races, plus 22 ballot prop-
ositions. Included are controversial i,a-
itiatives to legalize smoking but not sell-
ing marijuana, reinstate the death
penally, forbid forced busing 10( school
integration and restric't fann Worker
strikes. ·
<;;).-..:=:::::::: ,..,,....;>.-....,,)'l.ll'J
'Now hear this, America!'
The presidential contell b DOI ln-
Ouencing congressional races u much as
Republleans bad hoped earlier when they
opllmhtJcally talked ol a GOP sweep
that could produce the biggest poUllcal
upheaval lince the New Deal .
111'0 DEPEND ON the President run-
ning well to help other candidates is not
realistic. In callfomia, people look at the
canctidates more Lb.an almost any other
state," says state GOP chairman
Livennore.
Howard Adler, an ~de to Rep. Richard
Hanna, ·who is coordinating Democratic
House races in California, says, "All our
polls show there does1t't seem to be any
falloff from McGovern at the con-
gressional level."
Democrats hold a 2G-18 advantage in
~allfornia's House delegation, which
gajned five seats because of the 1970
census. Democrats figure to win at IMst
two,.._ Republican one. The other two are
rated tosiups.
IN ONE 'cLosE race, dovish fanner
Rep. George ~Jr,, who gave up his
House seat ln 1970 to unsucce~fully seek
a Senate nominaljon, is attempting a
comeback in a oeW'~trict populated by
conservaUve Democt;ats in Riverside,
San Bernardino and OOs Angeles coun-
ties.
McCloskey, who briefly challenged Nix-
on in the Republican primaries, bas
refused to endorse the President "so long
as he continues the bombing through
Indochina and refuses to disclose either
his secret contributions or the details of
the Watergate affair."
He Is running in a new reapportioned
district in San Mateo and SanLa Clara
counties south ol San Francisco.
-· .
WHAT NEWPORT BEACH IS SAYING
'
ABOUT GUARANTEED REDUCING • • •
THE GLORIA MARSHALL WAY!
Administration. airport of-singer-actress who once was religious · court in 1tiifl. to
ficia.ls and airlines hope to the girlfriend ol the Rolling drop its investi&atjon of Prem-
answer .f.br(lugb a test Stones' Mick Jauer, is tnger's wedding to the.fanntr
uncle< way wbece a limited repornd making good prog-Hope llry<e during the fibning
number of-jetliners are mak· ress after.voluntarily seeking of "Exodus" in 1960.
ing west-to-east over-ocean ap-1-.:~~====:::~~~::;;:;::::;::::;:::;::::;:::;:::::;::::;::::==:i JI proaches between the boors of
midnight and 7 a.m.
Fifteen planes used the
over-ocean approach during
the first day of. evaluations.
The flights were interspersed
safely with 46 arrivals and 55
departures in the normal
rast-west pattern, officials
said.
e Tal1oe J,and
WASHINGTON IAPl
Rep. Harold T. Johnson, (I).
Calif..) said he will introduce
special legislation to allow the
U.S. Forest Service to buy
35.000 acres in the lake Tahoe
Basin for pollution cootrol.
Johnson said the original
proposal, part of the Water
Pollution Act of 1972. was ap-
proved by the •louse but
Senate conferees rejected il.
The initial cost would be $15
milBon to buy some of the
land but the entire acquisition
would run as high as $500
million or more. Johnson said.
eDust Probe
SACRAMENTO (AP l -A
team of engineers and law en-
forcement officers will loo k In-
to methods to avoid another
dull ttorm such as the one
AUg. f1 that sparked a Kem Oow!IJ tnffk acclder< kill\~
aevea penons, a state offlcial
... ports.
THE REMEMBER RING
She'll remember the romantic dinner by
candlelight. The feeling of b9ing completely
alone with you in a roomful of people.
Dinner cing of 1 B karat yelJow gold with
diamonds set In platinum, $695.
Ento<god 10 --·
Do Something Beautiful,~
Clll ..... Acc"""lt lllYllM -AnMf'kl" l•"'"' a1n11.t.ma,lc1nl 1MI Ma111r Cllll'9f, I'll.
SLAVICK 'S
Jewelers Since 1917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -b44-1 l80
Opttn Mon. end Fr1. 10 a.m. to 9 :10 p.rn.
Wiii! loc.111ont .t: TOO"r-. OrMIOI. LI (1rrltot., LI H1br•
.t.100: ''"' Oltw 1'N1 L •1 Vt911
new-IUe eolor$-po..-tralt panel
3 dramatically different mood portraits
A greet 9lft idea 1nd et an lrre1T1tlbly
...._.ollday low pre-holidey pric e. Not 1napU!ot1 ...
r• -, but l different mood portreiti--ln 11peelal ealy gilorlous Life Colo,.._f1ktn by our
• profttslon•I photo9rtphtrs who ctpturt
95 the true ptr1on11ity and beauty oj you
or your child.
It's a r.o••••sfOn you and youn will
the
broad way • cherish or • lifetlmt. Hendsomely
rnetttd. S~ti1fectlon 9u•r1nt11dl , Hu11tl11ft•• ... ct.-lf2·JlJI
rh•t• Sf'lt4lo-l1t 11.,.1
' -
I ·
I
"I'm g•tting my doctor's
d1gr1• and can't b1ar to
b1 a fit doctor! My fir1I
m1•1ur1m1nt r1Y1al1d a
6" 1011 ind to d1ta •
5 pound w•ight 1011. I
am into 1 1i11 14 now
lw11 16 ) •nd w1i9ht i1
dropping vary 1Hortl•u·
ly. R11lty loY1 th• m1 -
chin•1. I f11t f1 nt•1tic!
Not lo9gv lik1 before.
Ev1rvbodv'1 noticed th1
dilf1r1ne1."
"I ''" • 54 y11r old wif•
who11 hu1bend it di·
li9ht•d. I h1"1 lo1t 61
inch•• ind 55 % lbs. th
o;r1•I to b1 b1low 200
lb1 for t+i1 firit ti1111 in
J I y11,., My body f11l1
10 1trong ind full of •n·
•rgy, "'OYll with 10
much mor1 ••t•.'"
•
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"I fl11 •llv f•ull4 1om•·
ft!J119 th1t 'fUtf'kl. I am
mer• th111 pl1a11d."
H-tW....._
"I find thet b9ing in fl.•
ov1r thirty group n1c1s-
1it1te1 spot r1ducing.
Gtori1 M1,.he1I h11 IC•
compli1hed th1t for 1111.
Within thl-----COmforteble
rele11d 1u1Toundi11g1 of
th1 11lon. I hev1 b11n
eble lo 1011 1 tot1I of
17 lb1 . 24" , , • wh 1r1
th•y w1r1 most n11d1d.
I hav1 b1en. and will
continue to 1niov and
profit with Glori1 Mir·
sh•ll."
"J u1t at i1nport1nt to
w1ight 1011, i1 th1 fir1n-
i11g and 1nu1cl1 t<inin9
which th111 r1911l1r,
plennl<! fr11t1n111t1 pro-
vid1. I h1v1 b•tn 11tit·
fitd with iny ·••ptri1nc•
1t Glod • M1,.hatl'1 and
r1co1nm1nd It to oth1rt.''
M•Jf.,.. M. Waffdn
''!'VE NEVER MET A WOMAN
WHOSE FIGURE I COULDN'T
IMPROVE."
e Written Guerenteo
e Semi-private Fecili ties
e Personal Attention
e Roducinq Without
Tiring Exerci1e1
e T eke Treatments Without
Changing Clothes
e Com• In On Your lunch
Hour, After Work,
Anytime
e 30 to 60 Minute
Treatments
(Depending on individuels ,, ...... n-""d dttsire~)
uletion of good cireul1·
tio11 I h1va anjoyld from
th1 con1i1t1nt tr11tma11t1
ov1r • p1riod of thre1
ya1r1."
Ello I.ff wm.
"I h1v1 tri1d s1v1r1J
wev1 of losing w1ight but
nothint 1111 work.d until
I c11n• to Glori• M.1.r·
th1U. I h1"• Iott 21
pounch , 20'/i ineha1.
My hu1b1nd c•n't weit
to 1ign m1 up for 'ftl•
n11t 11nion.'' -M ....
-----Guarantee----...
YOU CAN BE AT LEAST ONE DRESS
SIZE SMALLER BY NEXT MONTH
Every patron receive( a written guarantee that she will reach
her predetermined dress size within a specified period of time,
oc Glorio Marshall will furnish additional treatments until tho
guaca';;toe is fulfilled at no lurthec cost or obogation,
$150 ONLY PER TREATMENT
• ON ANY PROGRAM
"I 1m v1ry pl111td with
th1 r11ult1 I li1v1 h•d 1t
Gloria M1t1lialt'1. From
• 1i11 1" to 1i11 to. I
rt1ch1d iny 9oel In th1
number of tr1atm1nh
Mlldrod Gorho111
"Sinc1 I 1111 Yit11ni11
produch, I hev1 to look
fr iin •I will al f1•l
trim 111d Glori• M1,.h1ll
ht1 helJ>ld 1'111 gr11tlv
bv lo1in9 I 5 lb1. 111d
IS% i11ch.1."
Patricio McKlbbff
1
"I'll'! 5 ft. till e..4 wt.."
I c1rn1 .. Glorl1 M•r·
shill I w1i1h14 161 lb..
l'v• lot! • tot1I ef 411Jt
!ti. end "' \4 1bt. ..... k ...
WORLD'S LEADING FIGURE
CONTROL SYSTEM, PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH
IAHllAMOJCAaD
MASTll. CHAalH
AMHICAH IXPHSS
12 llOCIS UST OP IAUOA IAY C.LUIJ -
PHONE 642.3630
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Lag1111a Be~eh
EDITION
T oday's F laal
N.Y. Steeb
VOL 65, NO. 276, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY: CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1972 TEN CENTS
Bonae Oller Ha8 L~gunan in Spotlight
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of 1t19 Dall' Plitt llltff
Thomas Merrick, the weaithy Lagunan
wQq has offered to buy the Colosseum for
$..I million and restore It as a mecca for
Rome sightseers, today found himself the
~et of newsmen, photographers and
tele'{isk>n crews who descended on the A.r:t Colony to learn more aboul hLs am-
bitious plan.
H.e thought of it last week, Merrick
sai(, when he read ln the papers that the
ltal.ian government had been forced to
clOM the 2,000-year-old ruin because of
•
the huard from stones falling r:rom its
upper levels.
The government, according to the
reports, cannot afford the $2: million
restoration job necessary to make the
Colosseum safe for public viewing once
more.
Merrick, who is of Italian descent and
attended school in Rome as a teenager,
offered to buy the international landmark
for Sl millk>n of his own money, and
raise the necessary funds for it:.. restora-
tion.
In return, he proposes that an ad-
• esa ' I
)
Sight Restored
He See s A fter 24 Y ears' Darkness
~
LONDON (UPI) -When N'mo Fette! emerged from tbe airliner, he saw
the woman he had lived with Cor more than 20 years but had never seen.
"I had a mental picture of you, but you are much lovelier than I imag-
ined," Fette! 48, said as he gazed at his wife, Ena, 41.
Fette!, blinded 24 years ago by acid thrown at him, returned Sunday from
Rome where a surgeon, Dr. Bemedetto Strampelli, restored his sight.
At London's Heathrow Airport, he saw his wife of 20 years and his sons,
Paul, 16, and Adrian , 15, for the first tiine.
"You never told me what beautiful eyes you had," he said. '1Don 't let them
mist over with tears."
"And look at my sons!" he exulted to onlookers. "What strapping chaps
tbey are."
• • The Fettels met shortly after his accident in 1948 at a hospital in England
where be was a patient and she was a nurse. Five years later, they married.
Bid ~ails to Delay Trial
Of Dulaney,"5 Defendants
By TOM BARLEY
Of tlle D.111Y ,Itel StMf
A last-minute move to further delay
the "Taj Mahal" trial of Laguna Hills
stockbroker Joseph Dulaney and five
codefendants was rejected today with the
dispatch of the six to the courtroom of
Mrs. Whitaker
In Board Race;
Sag ar to Eri ter
Documents allowing Lucille Whitaker
Of i..eguna Beach tu run as a candidate in
the Dec. 5 school board recall election
Wete filed this morning with the Orange
c01.1nty Registrar of Voters Office.
Expected to file papers late today ls
attorney Michael Sagar, also of Laguna
Be8ch.
Tbe two announced candidates hope to
replace trustees Patricia Gillette and
Gerald Linke, targets of the recall by the
group Concerned Citizens for Schools.
Both Mrs. Whitaker and Sagar have
received endorsement from Concerned
CiUzen.s, president Thomas Cassiday said
thi• morning.
"l will ei:erelse my free agency in
making decision on tbe school board and
wW not answer to any group," Mrs.
Whitaker, 46, said in a brief statement.
Sagar, 974 Van O)'ke Drive, waa not
immediately available for comment. He
and bi.s wil'e, Sharon, have two children
enrolled at Aliso ElementMy School.
Mrs. Whitaker and her husband,
Dep~ reside at 1597 Skyline Drive and
have a son enrolled at Top of the World
Elementary School. An elder aon was
graduated from Laguna Beach Hlih
Scliool in t971.
.AD MAKES SHORT
W.OR K OF BEETLE
U you're looking for an example of bow
to atll whatever It Is you have (or Wt,
tr)' thil;
* '61 VW Bur, oriSlnaJ
owner, very sood con<llllon.
ST';iO, XXX·XXXL
11 would be hard to beat the
perfonnance record of that mlcbty mitt.
The lbroe-line Id aold the ar the 11nt
da7 It 1IJl)W'ed In tbe DAILY Pll.(YI'. ,
Direct 110. to clulllled _,
l'tlU!tJ at the DAILY PILOT 11 IC-6m.
Try ft. •
' ·-
Orange County Superior Court Judge
James Turner.
A lawyer who told acting presiding
Judge Charles Bauer that he bas only
just recovered faint vision after a long
spell of blindness pleaded that handicap
in asking Judge Bauer for a 60-<lay delay.
But Judge Bauer tume<I down attorney
Roger Foyet's plea after Deputy District
Attorney Stu Grant pointed out that
allegations against the Dulaney group
stemmed Crom 1968 and 1969 and had
been repeatedly delayed since the 1970
indictment of seven defendants.
The number of defendants was cut to
.&ix Friday with the dismis.sal of all
charges against Fred Riley, 45, of
Norfolk, Va.
Judge Bauer sent the group to trial and
apparently rejected the possibility aired
today that a $500,000 loan allegedly false--
ly obtained from a San Bernardino
Catholic hospital by the Dulaney group
will be repaid within the neit 60 days.
Attorney Darrell Johnson , acting for
James E. Shipley, 38, of 16951 IAwell Cir·
cle, Htmtington Beach, told Judge Bauer
he had documents in bis possession wh.ich
would confinn proposed repayment of
I.be loan to the. St. Bernardine Hospital.
Johnson later commented that the
$500,000 unpaid loan was one of two
issues tbat will be dealt with in tum dur·
ing the trial before Judge Turner. He
predicted a total trial time of six weeks.
Johnson said the first issue will involve
(See DULANEY, Page ZI
Trustees to Act
On Science-Matl1
Building Bids
Trustm oC ~ddleback Colle11e are ex-
pected to take action al their reguldr
board me.ttlng tonight on bids received
for construction· of the science-math
building that will be<om• the l«Ol1d
permanent structure on the Mission Viejo
campus.
Nine bidl including 17 alternates have
been received on lhe f4.5 million, S2.~
square-root bulldlnc that will -the
c:onea•'• bloloeJ<al and p11y1Jc11 ad.,,.,..,
matbemaU... eoa1nttrtn1 and dtllltlng
tecllnolOI)' ..ctlons.
Truatffa a.1Jo In! upected to lft I
bolrd policy. u rtqulttd by atate 11 ....
rqmlln1 dllotmlnatlon or lnlonnotlon, lnclucUnc hmlbllll and the like, oo the
collfp C1111f"ll.
An """'"'""nt "port With 1 brukdown
on curmtt clasl 1lte1 and other route
maU•rt c:ompl«e the agenda roe the a
p.m. meeting In lhe boerd room of the
college ldmlnls1r11lon bOlildlnc.
misaion fee be charged to futurt vi.sitars,
which he would share with the Italian
government to beJp recover bis in-
vestment.
Merrick and the Reef Realty office.
which is handling bis offer, today report·
ed phones ringing off tbe hook as U.S.
and European news and television crews
soogbt interviews.
Feueta Vitali, Italian-born real estate
woman who is sert"ing as Merrick's rep-
resentative to Italian authorities, said
she 'bas off i c i a 11 y transmitted
his' of re r to Rome via the Jtalian
Thief Gets
Dune Ca,.
In Laguna
Burglars had a b.u s y weekend in
Laguna Beach, with four victims
repprting losses ranging frorp .a dune
buggy to imitation Persian rugs.
Courtney Jahnz, 475 St. Ann's Drive,
told police he returned home Sunday
night and discovered bis $'700 diamond
ring, $50 in cash and bis car key missing.
Further investigation revealed that the
car apparently had been used to remove
Jabnz' dune buggy, which was added to
the list of missing items.
·At 5 p.m. Sunday James Kaey, 137 ea...
which ls handling his officially transmlt·
led his offer to Rome via the Italian
Consulate In Los Angeles and also has
asked the New York correspondent of lhe
lt.allan newspaper Corriere della Sera to
supply her with the name of an official ln
the Italian Ministry of Mounuments and
Fine Arts wbom she can contact when
she rues to Rome later this week.
'Ille Ministry is charged with the
preservation and protection of national
monuments and worts of art in Italy.
"I think. it is a wonderful idea and a
fantastic opportunity for the Italian
government," said Misa Vlllll, who is a
n£1ive of Rome. "Of courM: thi3 Is just
lhe lint propoaal -the di3cus!ioo
undoubted!y will go back aM. forth, ju&t
as it does in any real estate agreement."
~fenid:, whose family hal1.a from
Locamo in the Italian lake COUDtry, was
born in lhe United statt'I and was sent
back to Italy to attend the Selaaione
College for boys when he WI.! 14.
Now 57, he has lived in Laguna Beach
for the past JO years, making his home at
1280 Anacapa Way. He formerly owned
and lived in Pyne Castle, an Art Coktlly
. oun
Y<a Aael ilmoo •tqM,,..n• ~--,.... .... throe men run Jrom•llie.ilc!oi\al his....., anq depart' fn a car. ~ ~ ·
Missing from the home, Kady told
police, were a blanket, two imitation ~
Persian rugs and a handmade bronze box
al : valued at $80.
On Saturday, Daniel Brahm, 245 Oak
St. reported the loss of his $256 stereo
recorder and tape collection, which ap-
parently were taken by a burglar who
entered his apartment through a window
opening onto an alley.
The fourth victim, Roger Duerr or 1285
Bluebird Canyon Drive. reported the loss
of $175 in cash from a jewelry box in his
home.
Kille r Cuts Dowrt
Four; Mother,
Cliil.dreri Spared
BRANDON, Fla. (AP) -A young
divorcee and her two children watched
helplessly as a gunman killed four
persons including her parents and
brother in a Brandon farmhouse. police
say.
Police said the assailant fired one shot
through a screen window early Sunday,
killing one person, and then bunt into the
farmhouse and shot three others.
Evelyn Sanders Johnson and her two
children ""1err spared.
The victims were Identified as John T.
Sanden, 50; bis wife, Catherine, 37; their
JS.year-old son, Earl, and a friend or the
family, James Richard Bridges, za. who
was ahot u he lay In bed. police a.akl.
Another brother, 24-year~ld John
Sanden, was at work ln the dairy beblnd
the house, about 10 miles eaal of Tampa.
Police said they an-ested ThomAs
Turner Chambers. S1. o( Gadlde.n, Ala.,
and 21·year~ld Robert HarTls of Largo,
arte.r a high speed car chase. Both wt.re
cllarced with firtt«gree murder.
Chamben and HllTll ,..,.. being held
In Hillsborough County Jail in T1mp1
without bond. .
A neighbor, Mn. Mary Divis, uld
Mn. Johnlon came runnJna !rom the
houJe, cryJnc hy11mat1y and i<lllng,
"Tbey're au cltlcl. Tbey're all cl<ld ...
-said oha told Ibo Divis runlly
the 1unn11n Jpand her. 11yina, "I'm not
going to ltlll 700, just tbl .... you love
molt."
llllltbotcup Counly -· ollldal.a Aid the 70Ul'I di-bid been lttlng
Chlmbert l<r thrte 1'811 bu1 1<11 him
lboUI thr .. woeb ... In Texas.
Chambert reportedly follow<d her ·lo
Clearwlter Incl "lhrultn<d the r1mll7 II
Iha wouldn~ &• hick •Ith him." ll1J,
John Sal• or the llllbborouah 1hel'lrr1
cltputmenl 111d.
t
It's Their Bag
G<!orge Grainger Oe!t) and Bob Richardson (right) demon!lrale their
skllls on tradilional Scottish bagpipes for brothen Jesae, 7, Oeft) ind
Davyd Arend, 6, Santa Ana. Pipers, both from Glascow, Scotland.
played at Costa A1esa's South Coast Plaza during the weekend at
British Expo '72. Expo continues through Sunday.
'Brotherhood' S us pect,s
R eport for Dru.~ Tria ls
Fourteen defendant! linked by the pros-
ecution 10 tM so-call~ "Brotherhood or
Etem1l Love " drug conspiracy that pro-
ducccl an lndJctment or 29 persons by the
Orange County Grand Jury apptared for
trial today In Superlot Court.
All 14 were asaigntd to the courtroom
of Judge Kenntth Lae. But it lef.T'Md
<'ertaln at noon that 1ever11I of the dtfen.
danll w h o jammed lhe jury bo1 In 3
crowdC!d rourtroom W(IUld be held ror
trial at a tater date.
Chief Deputy District Attorney James
Enflgllt expt1ln<d that there moy be
sever1l Superior Court trials btfore
charga are rully 11ttd 1g1inat •II 21
dtf~ndanl~.
And OiJtrict Altomey Ctttl lllcks'
chief aidt prtd/cted this morning thet 11
wUI take six months to a year 10 gtt
court vttdlcts of guilt or l.mwxtnct
against all 21.
"P~M.lmlng," F.nrighl sald. ''that ",.e
eventually tlav~ all 29 In cw:t.ody."
Seven of the Z9 ire still e\ladlng
lawmen 1«11:.ina them In a nationwide
aeardl.
Among their number 11 Rob«1 "Fat
Bobby" Andrllt. 29. or l..aguna Beach.
identified by the protea1Uon N the key
Ogure ln an allt&ed drug dmtribulk>n
• • (Ste CVLT, ra1e !I
Alien Visitors
4 A rrested at Weste rri W liite House
The Westtm Y1hite Jlouse bolted 1
number of \let}' surprtJed forelfJ vlaltcn
early SUnday -the "viaHon' •rt now
.., !heir ••Y back home 1fltT bumbllng
ooto the bJab oecurily .....,is.
The U.S. Bonler Pllnll took ""'10cly or the 11~111 afttt the men wtre •P"
Pftbruded b7 White Hoose 5<cnl Sen/Jee
........ 1 ll1ld San a.mrnte police of.
rJcert In I prodlwn chue In tbl doled·
...... mmpound.
f'vur 1ri.n. ...,. """'t by the "'°'" bined , .... ol Secrd-..... 11111
San Clemelto pollco 11 the alJeM' _,,_
word '""""'' took them lnlo the Wmrm Whlll UCl<Jll! ..,....,., ~ Iqllly
llOphillliclled 1ntl·lntnuiaa 1tann l)'ll<tn
·4
J
alet'U!d S«Urity ptrlCIMtl.
lllepl 1llenl llttm(Jllnc to mttr the
cwnuy """""'™' ..,..k up lho beoch
Utt Piii the Wntem Wlltle -ad
1b::n walk •lone the niltold IJ'llcb, ol· n..n laid loda7.
It 1ppea...t In thlt ClUf lhlt the -of men dlmbed I dllln-lillk rmce llOUild
the -..,...i and ~• cnmlnc l when
their PftlOllCO wu no1ed by -7
penomtl.
,,,. •liftll w-._. In the .,... 111 up pmnlllClll pawl
houllnl. Ollicm uld -llCUrit7 GI· no... collod WI for the mm lo 11111. ii.I,
IClltared. It .. bll ...... thlt -1111111
hove &O'll'rl •••Y·
landmark once tooted as a po19lble site
for President Nlxon's Western White
House.
He last vlsited Rome, he said today , in
1!1511.
"I know )'OU can't appra.Jge something
like the Colo.sseum in actual dollars," he
said, "but I thought they might want an
angel to fix it up 1ndf it would be
reason.able to charg~ an entry fee -
right now I'm just thinking out loud.
We'll have to wait !ill we get some
response from the Italian government to
discuss more details."
Shot s Hit
One Man
In Grom
By ARTRUR R. l'TNSEL
A vending machine man on his own an-
tl·burglar vigilante patrol openrd fire. ori
t'Ao·o brothers at a Costa J\.1csn bar this
morning. wounding both and hitting Ont:
headon in the groin ""'Ith a shotgun bla!l .
The agonized man -his lower •b-
domen shredded by buckshot -was
dropped oil at Hoag f\femorlal liospltal
shortly aflf:r the 5 a.m. incident
His brotMr was arresled momerlt•
later on Newport Boulevard at Vla Lklo,
when Newport Be.1eh Police Olflttt Jim·
P\Y DonaldlOO ltOpped tbe g,et.aw1y car.
Lula\ Coron1, 25, w111 11111 underaolna
aurgtry at Hoag \1emor\al HOlpltll dur·
lng mld·mornlng hours for hll 1bdomlnal
woundt and m<dlcnl pel'IOMtl uld hlJ
condition was not establiJhed.
He was definlttly going to be adm.ltlt!d,
however. they noted.
HU brother, Steven Corona. was held
by Newport Beach Poll« brlefiy, then
taken to Hoog J\.femorlal llospit.al for ex·
amlnalion before being shipped to
Orange County Medical Center.
Costa J\.tesa PoUce Detettlvt Wa)'Oe
lfarbe.r said the SttOnd Corona brother
appears to have bttn wounded more
se.rk>usly than first beUtved.
He w:ts hit by ~vt.ral 20 g1uge shocrun
pellets. one or whk'h X·nys lndkate
lod.ced In or near bll he.art.
Detective Norm Kutch. allo aasJgned
to the ~••. sakt the second burglary
surptd wu still lying on a stretcher 11
the county facility al 9 a.m., four houn
after be w11 wounded.
Invffllgators uld vending machine
route operator Henry D. SltgmaM, 34.
fired a total of four blasts at the Corona
brothers during 1 prtdawn confrontatk>n
at the Pter 11 night t:lub.
Stegmann -who ha1 a chllln of coin·
operated vending and • m u s e m ' n I
machlnt1 lncludlnfl pool tables -baJ
sulfertd •series of ~'Jlary IOS1t1, one a
O» lou at Pier 11 )Ult a month qo.
"!It wu loo«lng aftt.r hit lnteretll,"
Dtttt1lve ltarber mmirktd todly, •Jtnc
Sttgmann showed up at lf'TC Newport
Dlvd .• to make ain: the prtmlJes: were -... He found evkltnrt that tt wasni and
•PPllrtnUy burd the Coronu loaldo.
"Ho <allecl them oot or the bOlildq."
Dtttttlve H1rber l'Ontlnued, aytoc al
111" point ~n thou~ ono of the
1S.. VIGIJ.ANT)t. l'li1< 11
c. ....
we.alter
1111 hr: coo'er on n-taj, (he
wathtrl1dy predkts, wtch hlP•
or 1S Intend. llolcb -lhould
be lnlUnd " wtlh hlP -tlrougbout the clay. LoWI """"'t -· INSm E TODAV
Eont If p,.11fdnt1 N fl'. o"
•ho .. w a1rrr Call/onda b) o
to..r.Ud•, ob"""'" "'~ hit po-
lirical coalto.ft. toi'U "°' proeNtc
moch J>lllllltll JIW<' for OIAn
COP auwUdo.lt.1. St.1 rf.MW, p_,.
12 . -• ... ._ .. ._ • -• -... ·--• ,_ ft --" .. • " -... --I ............... , -·-• ·-: ...... JS ' .. i: ---. ,,.., ....... ' ...wt .... ,,.,:
"" " --
•
DAJLI PILOT
Sightings C·ited
Mountain Lions
---·Prowl in lrvin_e?-
•
Irvine residents arr.n'I :ileeping Mi
soundly theSl" n1c;h1". :iHer sighting of
three 1nountoi11 lions prowling inhabite<I
areas of the clty ovrr ti\\· v.cekend, \\'1th
tY.'U big cat11 spotted by a policernan.
One of the tawn y prtdators -a 1hlrd
-wo.s Jounglng across the concrete bl0<:k
w111l 0£ a ho.ine in Turtle Rock about I
n.m. Saturduy, lhe occu pants told lr\·lnc
Police Officer Bob Kredel
lie arrived vo'ithin thrct' mi nutes or
~trs. Sheryl lianfie\d'::; ca\1 :ind round
solid evidence of a nocturn al visitor at
56115 Sierra Cielo Road.
One large, wet paw print. about three
lnche.g across. was found on the wall,
whlle numerous deep eta\\' scratches
v.·ere etched into the wooden fence.
Officer Kredel said suspic ious sounds
1n the backyard -a continuing problem
in recent months -led Mrs. Henfield's
Police Probing
$10,000 Fisli
Poisoning Cas e
~e"'port Beach police are investigating
the apparent poisoning of SI0.000 worth of
rare tropical fish in the backyard pond of
n \Vestcliff brick layer.
Hichard C. flentges1 45, of 2218 Fran-
cisco Drive, told police he dlscovtred 28
J'oi, a type of Japanese carp, dead ~nd
dyi ng in their pool early Sunday morning.
I le told police there was an ordor of in·
sccticide lingering in the e;Jr.
Jlentges told officers at the scene that
Kol are extt~cly susceptible to poisons
of any type. •
Police said Hentges told them the in·
secticidc could have blown over the pond
lrom some"·herc in the neighborhood by
acc ident and that other Koi breeders
ha\'e had similar problems.
l·Jentges valued his fish at up to $400 a
piece. police said.
Detectives said today they would con·
11nue the investigation to determine
\\o·hether or not foul play was involved.
City Cleans Up
On Concessions
The city· ot Laguna Buch ' tiellod
atmoal '1.4.,tioo trom wmmer 'tm\als,
parlclng and food concessions on the Main
Reach, according to city manager
Lawrence Rose.
Three-month operation of th e
bcachfront. parking lots brought In $9.000
and the trailer food concession, whJch
operated for two months, paid the city
$2,500 of its revenue.
In addition, $4,400 was received in ren-
tal!!: from two vacant stores adjoining
Benton's Restaurant.
Gro!S yield to the city for the summer
period was $15,900, of which $2,000 went
for operating expenses, leaving a net
revenue of $13,900, Rose said.
Laguna Adult School
Has Class Openings
The Adul t Education Program .pf !he
Laguna Beach Un1rtt>d School O'istric t
still has open classes wh ich meet In the
t!vening at the high school.
Courses which are still open include
creati ve art. enameling, stocks 11nd
bonds, appreciation of I i t e r a t u r c .
crealive writing, parent-child obse rv a-
tion, macrame and rug hooking, estat.e
planning, auto shop and constructive ag·
gression. Further information on the
3dult education program is available
fro m the ri istrirt office.
DAILY PILOT
'nit Or•l'lf' CbtH ()All Y ~II.OT . •'"' Wit~
It ~ lflt H-.P ..... 1, 11 11Ullt!llttd 11¥
"'41 Ol'9ntt C:O.tl P'u&lltfllftl ~nr . .S..-.
,.~ tdll ........ PVOlltfttcl, "'""''" ""~
f'r"lfl f, for (;ott• Mn•, Ht_,1 8-.
t01111l11'9tM la..:11/F-tffl V•lley, ~·
Bttdl, l•vlM/~lllbKll ~ S•n (t•,.,.,.ni.I
tM J-C•1tll•-. A iinoie ri1111oNI
... !t!On I• ll\IDI~ llillllfd•V• •"Cl S-l'n.
TIM ,..111.c .. 1 P\llllltf\1"8 """"' I• 11 U1 Wwt
.. , It~. C..I• M ... , C1llfw11lt, ,,_,.,
le~e,t N. w ,,4
.. , .. ~ 11111 l"wlll"""'
J •c• II:. c\1,1,..,
\Ike """'\011\1 tnd ~•I Mtllttff n.,,..,, K•1vll
l•ltot
TheMt1 A. M.,rphJ11e
,,,_.i,.. E•lw
t••1l•1 H. Lt" l lch•,4 '· N•ll ~1lti..t M""fllle t clle<1
L..t .. ~ Offtc•
J1'J Fet•1t A¥tll!it•
M•ili11t ,y4,,,u P.O. ••• 111, tZllJ --C.I• M .. : 2JO W• It)', ..... ·-=~I ~ fil...,..-f ...,...,. H!Mt 1M IMdl1 11'11 I Mat lovl ... , ..
l,111 lit: ~J "Orlll II Cl~·W.•I
, ........ 17141 MZ-4111
C......W A"'9rth19i 642·1171
Let ... .._. Al ..,.,,....,...:
T•hJ' 494·94&1
a.rrltM. 1t11,, Or9fttt C..11 "llllflttl"" °""'""'· He _. ,..._, ll•vtlrelltola. ......-ttl """"' ., •••••• 0 .. .,,..... ,..,....
""" ..... ,.,.... wlfM'll ...... ,... Mlllt* • ..,.... .....,_ ....... -..... ;.., " , .... "'""'· '"'....... llllllrrWltfl .,. (,lfl\fr .....
"W'f!IMVI 11'1 !Mii t,J,IJ, "*"1111¥1 l'lllllf""
_.,IMtlo!'ll. Jl;!f f'f'IO{llfttV,
husband and .,n to go out nnd In·
1 t•st~a1e. nw,· sald they round a large, tan,
~H>~tod cat about six. feet long and
l*t-t feel hi&h on the wall, •ddinc that
their appearance didn 't frt&hteo the
.11\lm al itt au.
Tht>v said It stood up. stretched, ho~
ped d0\lo·n and an1bled off across adjacent
Turtle Rocle Ori\'e and disappeared in the
President Homes tract.
Officer Bill BKhtel. rtsponcUng as a
followup to 1>atrolrnan Kredel 's di!patch
to confront the mountain lion, arrtved
after it was gone but said he saw two
more of them "1llle en rou te.
He said they were iUuminated some
distance 1way by his patrol car lights,
loping up a hill.side, adding that ht could
see their eya shine as they disappeared
0\1~ the top. .
Jrvlne. Company ort'icials today seemed
perturbed by the report of predaton
:.nnong the populace of the new com·
munily being carved out (If the orange
Cotinty "'ildemess. . . ,
"'I f it "'eren't for the cops Set1ng 1t I
could un<lerst.and it,·' he quipped with a
chuckle. He added that a cheek with Irvine
Company agricultural department cf.
ficial Bob Ekler makes 11 appear illogic.al
that mountain lions "·ould be coming
down from the hills into to"--n.
'·His peopte are ou1 in the boonies all
the time and he said tht'r"'•t Sef!fl no sign
::it all or big cats this year: !ht comp.'lny
official said.
He said Elder couldn"t e\'en recall any
ti1ne in recent years wben mounlaln Uon.s
have ranged down out of their rugged
habitat in the Santa Ana ~tountains on
the other side of the San Diego Freeway.
Game is-extremely abundant in the
hills this year and Elder was at a loss 10
explain. why the cats ~ld_roam sub-
divisions, although nearby Bommer Can-
yon and surroundings offer them brush
cover and water supplies.
"There are some deer running around,
but they don't have claws," he remarked
in regard to telltale scratchmarks on the
llanfield fam ily's fence.
From Pagel
DULANEY •.•
all six defendants -Dulaney, 38, and his
wife , Marlene, 32, both of 2631 Via
Cascadlta, San Clemente, Shipley, Daniel
~layes, 40, ot 8211 Snowbird Drive, Hun·
tlniton Beach, Robert G. Machan, 40, of
San Bemarolno and Weod<ll Wmen
A~~~"~~. ·~otWlii U•
plained, wlll be devoted lo charges tha'
1he Du1111ey group defrauded lnves1on In
the World Flnand.11 Trends operaUon he ,
controlled of an amount that may uceed
$3 million.
Johnson said the St. Bemardlne Issue
and the alleged defrauding by the of.
ferlng of false collateral to the con·
trollers of the Roman Ca tholic facili ty
will only involve Dulaney and Shipley.
ShJpley is the former vice president of
the World Trends orgnnlz.ation that was _
administered from Its "Taj Mahal" com·
plex in Laguna Hills and from a plush of·
fice suite in Seal Beach.
fJe took over the ill·fated enterprise
after Dulaney t.ook his wife and family to
Wes t Gennany in November, 1969.
Ship ley remaln cd at the helm to
become invo lved in the mountain of com·
plaints filed with the District Attomcy"s
Office - many of them filed by residents
of ret irement communities in Laguna
llills and Seal Beach.
Shipley also represented the \Vorlct
Trends ente rp rise while the tangled <if·
fairs of its multiple corporations "'ere
"·ound up in bankruptcy court pro-
<.·eedings that led to the sale of the La·
i:una Hills and Seal Beach buildings.
A long sea rch for Dulaney and his wife
t·ndrd v.·ith the arrest of the globe trot·
ting :slockbroker in !he Dutch Caribbean
Island of CUr1cao.
~1rs. Dulaney was returned to Orange
r.ounty to faco trial after sbc was located
in a hospital b4d In the Brill.sh Colony of
13t•rmuda .
Winter Festival
Will Stay Alive
Laguna Beach's \Vlnter Festival will
1101 be cnnceled deiiplte lack of funds.
Chambi:r of CommC"rcc Presidenl Larry
llunt :said rece ntly, It "'ill contin ue as
an all-volun teer effort.
Hun! told Chamber directors that artist
Ton1 l.eslle, president of the Sawdust
1-'r~lival. hns offered lo lake over the job
uf ~oordinatlng a "strcarnllned " schedule
ot Winter f'H;llval eveu11.
"We will keep the events that had the
n1us1 part icipation and provided the rnoAt
hl1nt'fit lo busl nt!ssmcn and the artl!ts,''
!!iil1d ll unt ~
When the city's allocation to the Ch11m-
bfr for community promotion ind Rd·
vert!slng was cut ln htlf thl1 ye1r, rund11
for a ptld Wlnttor Fe11lvtl coordinator
and othfr F'l'Stlvn l promotion were
eliminated.
,\fan Guilty in Deaths
CllE80\'WJI, Mi ch. (UPI) -A Ju11
found Wa)'ne E. Ollberl , II, West Alflt,
Wis., guilty of lwo count~ of Orst-desree
rnur~cr In the fetal 1hoot1ns~ or • preg·
nan! -t!rl ind Mr mo1her wltntUed by
thi• (lfdf>r ""'orTIRn s 4·year-old ton. ·
•
•
-
Nuptial Party
Co t $1 00,000
CLEVELAND (\ll'I) -Damlnlo
Vltclmal. a~ center
dlveloper,1 -no~ I~
l'.!t \t.~tt~·· ~ dltr-"'!i: nceplloll-Cllll .an eatlmlte<l
••00.000.
The 2,000 guest> nibbled 18,000
hors d'oeuvrei, 20,IMX> pieces of
shrimp and crab flngers, finished
off a. seven·Uer cake and cousun\ed
50 tases of liquor.
''lt wu the biggest cxtravagania
I've seen. 1n 23 years," said chef
Mike Morabito, who grilled steaks.
Water Agency
Sets 2 Sewage
'Fact' Clinics
Two fad clinics on a proposed regional
sewage dlspcsal system for the south
coast will be held this week by the Aliso
Water Pt1anagement Agency (AWMA ).
'!be first meeting will be held at 5 p.m.
TUcsday in the Mezzani.e Floor Room of
Royal Savings and Loan, 23861 El Tore»
Road. El Toro.
The second session will be held at 4
p.m. \VeJnesday at the ?..1oulton Niguel
\\'alE'r District Office, 27281 Aliso Creek
Road. Laguna Niguel.
Cnde.r the proposal. sewage from the
man~· comm unities would be treated and
uSt---d. v.here possible. for irrigation.
During times of winter rains, when the
demand for water for irrigation slackens,
the treated sewage would be dJscbarged
in 1he Pacific Ocean through two outfalls
-one near Dana Point, the other off
Aliso Beach.
1be San Diego Regional Water Quality
Conlrol Board has looked favorably upon
the A WMA project. A WMA is made up of
the Moulton Niguel, South Coast, Laguna
Beach, El Toro, Los Ali.sos and Irvine
Ranch Water Districts.
The fact clinics precede a public hear·
ing Oct. 11 on the environmental impact
statement for the sewa ge treatment pro:f-
ect. nus bearing will be held at Aliso
F.lementary School, 21$42 Wesley Drive
at 7:30 p.m. Interested persons are en·
couraged to attend lbe hearing.
Following the local public hearings, the
project will be submitted to the state and
federal environmental agencies ror ap-
proval.
The system ls e1pected to begin
operating in late 1974.
,. I• •• T; I I I • t
l'PoM P .. e I
VIGILANTE · • • . . .
Perils Transit?
Field,ing Asks OppQSing of W atso~ Plan
J11 JAClt JlllOllACK
Of .. ~ "" ll•ff
VOler approV1r tn November of the
cootroVersial WallOll A m end men l
(Proposillon 10 for property tu relief
would practically put the Orange County
Transit District out or business, it's
manager t'Oll teoded today.
Dlstric1 Gelleral Manaeer Gordon
· "Pete" fieldlnJ Ioday propo.oed thal
directors go on record as opposing the
Watson measure. His suggestion won
unanimous approval of lhe board.
"It is estlmated that louea from the
sales tax on gaso11ne alone would be $10
million in the neJ:t fiscal year/' Fielding
wamed.
"It Is even worse than that when you
r~alize that most of the ~u tax money Is
used for capital expenditures which are
two-thirds federally funded.''
He exp lained that this meant the Joss
of $1 (from gas taxes) could mean the
practical Joss of $3.
The general manager al!o cautioned
that capital fund requirements of the
district to buy buses, maintmance equip-
ment and parking facilities over the next
eight years are estimated at $18.4
million.
"It is very doubtful that we could meet
these requirements if the Watson
Amendment Is passed," Fielding added.
Approval of the measure would a1so hit
the transit dlstrict squarely in the pocket
book from a property tu standpoint, the
general manager explained. 'Ibe· amend·
ment would place a 50-cent ceiling on the
Iota! property tax for all special districts.
''This would probably cut our fund s
gained from the district's tax rate in
half." Fielding warned. "This could
'Occupational'
Classes Still
Open in Laguna
Occupational classes at La~ Beach
High School will still accept Students.
both adult and teenaged, providing open·
ings exist in the specific courses.
Although classes in the Regional Qc.
cupationa1 Program started Monday,
students ma y still join.
Openings still exist at the clerical of.
fice training course and the pottery
design fabrication.
The clerical course is designed to train
students for entry level positions as
typists, file clerks, machine operators.
copy design clerks, billing and payroll
clerks. It meets from 1:15 to 3:10 p.m. in
room 70.
The pottery class will be taught from 6 to 10 p.m. Wednetday and '11tunday>.
Further lnformallon ls available from
Wa_ll Lawson at the Laguna Beach
UDifie4 School District ofl!ces. . -•
mean that even the MCOnd year or opera·
Uons planned would bt wiped OUL"
He also noted that one third of the
residents of Orange County •re renters
who will not re«lve any dlreci aid from
the proposed property lax reduction
tneasure.
.. ~1ost of our ll!&Uhtr bu11 riders are
from lower income families and the pro-
posed law would hll them especially bard
&lnce it 1ncrea&e1 their salea taxes
wllhout an adequate reduction 1n prop-
erty taxet," the genernl manaaer ad· -rteldlng concluded by saying that voter
approval of the measure woi.ld mean that
the transit district would have to con·
s!Jer Increasing fares, limiting e1panslon
of bus se rvice and abandoning plans ror
rapid transit <'Orridors.
Diabetes Discussion Set
At South Coast Hospital
A round table dl.scusalon on the
symptoms, cause, detection and treat·
ment of diabetes mellitWI will be
pusented at 7:30 :;i.m. W~sday in the
auditorium of South Coast Community
Hospital.
A panel of pbyslclans will attempt to
give simple and understandable ex·
planations of the di5ease in the first or a
series of such discussions offered as a
free public service by the hospital. ,
Diabetes, a beredJtary disease, affects
an estimated 5 percent of the population.
but about half the victims are unaware of
It.¥ presence.
Although the disease cannot be cured,
it can be controlled by diet, medication
and exercise prescribed on an individual
Laguna Trust,ees
To Study Goals
Of School Tests
Disoussion of goals for school district
testing programs will highlight Tuesday'a
7:30 p.m. meeting or the Laguna Beach
Board of Education.
The board will consider three testing
programs -with costs ranging from
$7,000 to $15,000 -for discussion
purposes only. No action will be taken to
adopt any of the proposals.
One of the programs places stress on
the development of local norms, while
the other two programs say the district
should be matched with national and
state testing norms.
The programs have been submitted, at
the request of the board, by Moreno
Educational Company, Pacific Leaming
Corporation aod Educational Eva1uation
Associates.
basis, according to Dr. Peter Bramwell ,
South Laguna internist and director of
the contlnuJng education program et
South Coast Communily.
Diabetes results from the body'• in-
ability to use food properly and is caused
by an insufficient supp l)' ol insulin or in·
terference with the action of insulin In
the body.
Symptoms Include an i n c r e a 1 e d
amount of sugar in the blood and Joss of
sugar in the urine; weakenss, feeling of
fatigue, generalized itching, p a i n ,
numbness or tingling ir the hands and
feet, disturbances in vision, irritability
and nervousness.
The disease can develop at any age,
with highest incidence occurring between
40 and 60 years of age.
Further sessions on diabetes are
scheduled for both patients and their
families, on Wednesdays Oct. 18, Nov. l
and Nov. 15.
Motorist Jailed
In Laguna Crash
A Chula Vista man was arrested on
suspicion of felony drunken driving in
Laguna Beach Saturday night foJlowlng a
collision in which a local resident sul·
fered a leg injury.
Police booked Evert J. Warren, 41.
after his car cbllided with a northbound 1 car driven by William Edson ChurchiJI,
58, of 559 Cypress Drive, at North Coast
Highway and Broadway shortly before 1 l
p.m.
ChurchiJI said he would seek treatment
for leg abrasions from his own physician.
Police reported moderate damage to the
Churchill vehicle and major front end
damage to Warren's car. In another matter, the board will be
asked ta approve th• expenditUre o{
$1,500 for implementation of an lnnova·
tive salary scale for. use at Thurston San Pedro Grr' I Intermediate School.
Under the plan, teachers would be paid
M d according to the amount of time they F d St } d suspects had a gun and opened fire wuh ur erer Gets Life spend worktns with students and th• oun rang e
hls single shot weapon. responsibilities they shoulder, regardless
PoJice sald Stegmann reloaded and BOSTON (UPI) -Alan M. Lussier, 24, of number or years as a teacher or col· IDAHO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) -
fired again as the wounded men Deel to Boston, wa s sentenced to life 1n prison Jege credits earned, Sheriff Jim Miller has identified an tS.
their car, putting two more blasts Into ror the Halloween costume party slaying The board also will be asked at the year-old girl whose body was found in a
the vehicle before it Wall out of range. of a Rochester, N.Y. area nursing stu· meeting to go on record as supporting motel room here Thursday.
Investigators said they doubt whether den t Lussier screamed when pronounced the Released Time Christian Education She was Monique LeDean or the San
any criminal charges arc likely to be fil-guilty of first-degree murdtr in the death program, offered to elementary school Pedro area, Miller said.
ed against Stegmann, who was arrested of Christine M. Ross, 20, of IrondequoJt, children on a voluntary ba!l.s by Her nude body was found on a bed
himself several years ago for alleged N.Y. She had gone to the party dressed representatives of eight Laguna Beach covered by a blanket. Her handa were
gambling violations, as a marijuana plant . churches. tied behind her back , according to Miller. Vice officers claimed at that time he ,-----'---'-----------=:::::::_ ___________ .:::.::_::::::::::=..;:.:.:::::.:.:::::::::~==~
was financing his way through Orange
Coast College by running a casino in his
home.
Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow cited the
California Penal Code today, explaining
it i)llO""'S private citizens to use
reasonable force in apprehending a
person suspected of committing a public
offense In his presence.
Due to the extent of their injuries.
ne ither Corona brother. both reportedly
from Los Angeles, had been formally
booked on suspicion of burglary as -0r
mid..mOrnlng,
Detet:lives had advised bolh of their
constitytional rights, l_lowever, adding
they were deflnlttly being detained and
would be charged.
All 'Tlich.lnes lnJlde had been broke.n
In to. poUCe said.
Ofrlcl1118 at Hoag Memoria l Hospital
announced later this morning that Luigi
Corona's su rgery was completed and he
was llsted in satisfectory condition.
FromPageJ
CULT ...
racket that also produced the Indictment
of Or, Timothy Leary.
Ocputy District Atlomey Pot R r i a n
said 1hc hunt for Andrtst hes s"·hched
from the Hawaiian Islands to "another
spot in the United State.."
Leary is ~HI! In Switzerland, nwattlng
execution of the Swiss i!Ovemmcnt's
order that the t.SD cultist who was con-
victed In Orange County on drug charges
should he expelled from the tiny Eun>
penn nation.
lloth sides predicted loday that !he
spate of pretrial motions coming before
Judge t..ae would take at lcqt a full day
of 11rgument.
And ii seemed certai n in com1nents
from the bench lhlll Judge Lee would
decline lo Immediately rule on several i•
itue1 alrcd by a baUtry of defe:nse
lawyrrt ln hla counroom.
Appearing today on multiple drua
charges contained In the Grand Jury tn·
dlctment were James Leroy Crtttendea,
29, ol Long Beach ; Undo Pohl Ooltze. ol
Llguna Beach : Jamct Henry CT1y1 H, of
South Llgur\JI : Frank 0 o m t n I c k
EsPoflto; and John Cha rle& Gale, of
l.11gun1 Betch
NeW/General Becl1ic's I co-;;;~t;-1
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1815 NEWPORT BLVD. DoWntown Costa Mesa -Phofll! 548·7788
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Saddlehaek Today's Fl•al
N.Y. SteetkM--
VOL:. 65, NO. 276, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1972 TEN CENTS
Irvine to Reveal Choice of Superintendent
lrvlne Unified School District trustees
will announce today their choice of an
administrator from two districts in the
Bay Area all five board members visited
Sept. 17 and 18.
Board President Charles Boulanger of
University Park said the superintendent
selection will be the only item on the
agenda for the 5:30 p.m. meeting in
University Park Elementary School, 4572
Sandburg Way, Irvine.
Boulanger confirmed that the man be-
ing given the new unified d~trlct's top
adininistrative pool was one of two ad· '
ministrators from difltricts in the San
Jose area.
In mid-September trustees flew at
district espense to San Jose to ot>,,erve
the quality of the districts in which . the
superintendent finalists work.
Irvine trustees met with community
leaders, talked with teacbeJts and prin·
cipals and visited both schools and
clussrooms in the two districts,
Boulanger said.
"I was impressed,'' the Jrvine board
president said.
Neither of the two districts visited was
currentJy experiencing rapid growth prob-
•
lems, Boulanger noted. He could not
recall if either was a Unified district, but
emphasized the San Jose district was not
one of the two Vi.filled.
The secrecy of the trip and the board's
selection process ends today with an-
nouncement of the choice and completion
of a salary and benefit package for the
nt:w superintendent.
It is not yet known where the Irvine
administrator will be officed, Boulanger
said.
However, the board's choice will begin
working for the Irvine Unified district on
a parttime basis "immediately. By
December, be will be spendln{ the ma-
jority of his time in Irvine," Boulanger
added.
The selection cap_, a three-month
search for the district's chief ei:ecutivt.
The Irvine boanl launched t b e
superintendent search by hiring a panel
of consultants to recommend appllc.ants.
The consultant ~ Included Berkeley
i!dlool wperintendent Richard FOiler;
C.lnrence Hall, U90C1ate state supeririten-
dc for iMtnlction: former Newport·
Mesa Unified S~perlntendent William
Cunningham, now executive director of
the Association of Calllomia School
Administrators; John Moore, assistant
~':tendent In the Sacr1mento County
office, aod Lamar Mayer, dJrec.
tor of curriculum In the Downey Unlfled
Sehool District.
• The COlllU!tanb listed H possible can-
dkl£tes ot. Which aeven were &a.id to be
interested Jn the lrvine post. •
Board members, teachers and others
intei'vliwed the 1even and by Wt 1burJ.
dl!Y Ibo final cboloe wu-made. On July I,· the new lrvllJe Unllled
Oilltrict take• over the admbtl.stration of
UolvenJty HJlh, Rancho San Joaquin
lntennedl.ate and Unlvenlcy-P a r k
esa ' I oun
DAILY PILOT Sl•ll PIM!t
TRYING FOR ORCHESTRA
Music Teacher Newman
Teacher Plays
Pied Piper Role
l1i Music Group
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of "" Deity PllM It•"
•
Terry Newman is trying to start an
orchestra at Mission Viejo High School
_but it's not easy. He has few students
and even fewer instruments.
But the young music teacher is forging
bravely ahead with eight string players,
one pianist and seven woodwind musi-
cians.
. The seven woodwind players, Newman
admltted, are basically there to "keep ~the class open" in its first year.
What he's really looking for are string
players and strings ror them to play.
Until last year, the San Joaquin School
District had no string program. Students
who wanted to play had to do it on their
,own.
Others who had started early music
careers gave them up when they mov2<1.
into the school district because there
'were no claues, Newman said.
f So the pickings are sparse and
'f.lewman may have to wait three or ·rour
yesrs for the "little kids" now stUdying
music in San Joaquin schools to reach
high i!dlool age. •
'n\ls semester he's trYing to get a
basketball player who's studied cello for
seven years 90mehow sprung from aink-
lng baskets at the ume time orchestra
meet.s.
And he's getting the class schedule of
(See ORCHESTRA, P11e ZI
A.D MAKES SHORT
WORK OF BEETLE
Jf you're looking for an example ol how
to aell wbltever It b )'OU have for ule,
try thl.s:
* '61 VW BUJ, original
owner, Vft)' ltOOd condUlon.
$750. XXX•JQCJCJC.
It -Id be hard to .,..,_ the
r ptrlonnanca """"" or that mJcbty mite. 1be three-line ad oold the car the Ont·
day It appeared In the DAILY Pil.01'.
DI-11ne to clUllfied ed...u.lng
rosulll ot the DAILY PILOT ii IMWl'll.
Try It.
'
•
In Mesa Field
Law· Officers'
Copter Crashes
One <lf Costa Mesa 's two police
helicopters sustained major damage this
morning when it crashed in a vacant
Move . to Stall
Dulaney's Stock
Trial Rejected
By TOM BARLEY
Of tllt DlllY Pile! 51.tf
A last-minute move to further delay
the "Taj Mahal" trial of Laguna 1-Iills
stockbroker Joseph Dulaney and fiv e
codefendants was rejected today with the
dispatch ol the six to the courtroom of
Orange County Superior Court Judge
James Turner.
A lawyer who told acting presiding
Judge Charles Bauer that he has only
just recovered faint vision after a long
spell of blindness pleaded that handicap
in asking Judge Bauer for a 00-day delay.
But Judge Bauer turned down attorney
Roger Foyet's plea after Deputy District
Attorney Stu Grant pointed out that
allegations against the Dulaney group
stemmed from 1968 and 1969 and had
been repeatedly delayed since the 1970
indictment of seven defendants.
The number of defendants was cut to
six Friday with the dismissal of all
charges against Fred Riley, 45, of
Norfolk, Va.
Judge Bauer sent the group to trial and
appareoUy relected the possibility aired
today that a $500,000 loan allegedly lalse-
Jy obtained from a San Bernardino
Catholic hospital by the Dulaney group
will be repaid within the next SO days.
Attorney Darrell Johnson, acting for
James E. Shipley, 38, of 161151 Lowell Cir·
cle, Huntington Beach, told Judge Bauer
he bad documents in his possession which
would confirm proposed repayment of
t~ loan to the St. Bernardine Hospital .
Johnson later commented that the
(See DULANEY, Pqe Z)
Philip Morris
Viejo Purchase
Made Complete
Philip Morris Inc. today announced
lhat U has purch.ued too percent of the
stock of the Mission VleJo Company.
The prite tag on the acqul.!lltkln b MS.5
million, of which Ill milll<>n will be paid
to the lharobolden lniUally with the
balance btsed on the company's eamlnp
over I.he nut nve yun, ICCOtdlng to •
Pltlllp Monil opolo!lman.
The cliarett• manutadurlni flnn.
""11cb i. 1 parmt cmlpany for an ill*
tem.atlaoal concJomu1te which martetJ
Ibo cf«arettu, raior blades, betr Ind
chowinl cum. 11u openoted wtth -
Viejo 1ln<o 1'111 under an optJan -
M<nl. The !JlOileJman oald the...-L Mliiliii Viejo bootU ol dlrecton wtll con-
tlmle aod there will be no chlo&e In
manapment.
In addl!Joa to lhe large planned com-
mtmlty ltt the Saddlebock Val!<y. tho
Mlasioo Vlold Company bu a II o
developed ,..ldenllll properties I n
Denvtr and Phoeolx.
' •
field just outside city limits, flopping
around like a beheaded bird with its rotor
blades whipping.
Neither the pilot nor his camerama~
observer was injured when the little bulr
ble-eanopied Bell chopper hit the ground,
about 100 yards oil !'!' 4lld of Canj'Oll
Drive. . ...
Detective Copl. Ed Glasgow was at the
controls and Detective Lt. Harold
Fischer was flying along to &hoot IOme
photographs in connection with a regular
assignment wh~n the craft went down.
Investigators for the Federal Aviation
Administration were called immediately
to interview Capt. Glasgow about
circumstances or the 9:45 a.m. crash.
FILLS KEY CITY POST
Admtn1trator Jim Harrlntton
o.All.Y·"'-OT .... ,_..
PLANNER STARTS WOllK
lntlne'1 Bruce H. Warren The helicopter was trucked away from
the site on flat, empty state-owned land
which will be part of Fairview Park il
the facility becomes a reality.
Police Chief Roger E. Neth -himself
a licensed helicopter pilot -said be isn't
sure just what happened and would
prefer to leave any comment at this time
to FAA experts.
Irvine Administrators
"All we know Is he hit the ground,"
Otief Neth remarked. Report; Space Problem
He did add that Capt. Glasgow wu
practicing autogyration landing at the
time somelhing apparenUy went wrong,
pointing out this practJce is required of
all department officen authorized to Oy
Eagle missions.
Chief Neth noted an autogyratlon lan-
ding -a simulated emergency setdown
without power -is actually simpler than
landing with the engine on because there
~ no torque imbalance to offset.
Normally what can go wrong In such a
landi;Jg is that the tall rotor dlpo low and
hlts the ground, flipping the chopper
forward onto its nose and upskte down.
Questioned at the scene, Capt Glasgow
referred all queries to Chief Neth but
was heard to say the tall was not down
when he hit.
Chief Neth also noted there wu no
point of lmpact to suggest this may hive
happened.
"My guess ~ no," said C.pt. Robert
Moody, wben asked If Ibo $44,000
bellcopter is beyond repair.
He ukt be bas 1ee11 lhrff otbtn. at
Long Belldt Atrport which suftered much
worse Cl'lsh damage and were Dying
again following repairs:.
"When they're tolaled, there Just Isn't
much left," ,.Id C.pt. Moody, who has
headed tho police bellcoptor PfOKram
(See COPTElt, Pase II
' . ' Irvine's city o{ficel became a bit more
crowded today as two n e w ad--
miniatrators reported for work.
City Plann1J11 Director Bruce H. War·
rm and Arminlstratlve sen-Ices Direc-
tor James R. Harrington moved In to the
nearly full city offices in Irvine Town
Center.
Warren, 37, formerly headed the pJa~
ning depirtment In Chula Vl!ta, a 19-
S<?uate mlle city nw San Otego. He •••
cholen Aug. 21 by 11te city council to nu
the $23,500 a year PolL
Harrington, 29, Anaheim, comes to the
city from the county Department of
Building and Slfety whero lte WU ad-
miniltraUYe 1ervku oUlcer for four
years. He wu chottn by the oouncll
Sept. 12 to fill the 111,000 a year poollloo
dlroctJn& city poyroll, penonnel , pur·
chasing, accounting aod opeclal mearch
1ctJvJUel.
Wamon lnherltJ a plannlnfl department
Ital! which lncludeo uaoctata planner
Mike Hanil and leCfttary Gert Wlllon.
While the ctty wu looklrw for • ptanntn1
dlroctor. the ':OU!ICll contradtd with Ed
Hawwth !0< COllltllllnc oer>lces which In·
eluded the lf'OUndwork for the ireneral
plan.
Sight Restored
He Sees After 24 Years' Darkness
LONDON !UPI) -Wiim Nino Ftlt<I tmlflOd flom the U11tter, be 11•
Ibo wom.on he had lived wttb for moni than :tll ,_. but had ....,. -.
"I had a meolal pidmo of ,...; but you an -loftllor -I Jmas· lned," Fetlff 41, llld 11 bt poed al ldo wtlt, lao, 4l .
Fet!OI, blbW JI JUn °"'by add Utnnrn at him. Mlu..t _, lnmi Romt. wltett a •-. Dr. Ben•tdetto Stnmpoll, l'llloncl ldo tlahl.
.....,,.,,,"'.., Lcndoa'1 lleothrow ~ bl AW ldo w~t ol :It )'Ull ~ ' • -,"18.,...rAdriln, tr,r« ihii !Int Ume. -
"You ...., lold me wblt betutlful •)'ti you hacl. •be ultl. "Don't Jot tllem
mist over wttb •a."
"And toolt al my ...,., .. he e:xulttd to 1111oobr>. "Wiili llnpploc chopt
they are.."
1be Feltels met lhortly Iller his aecldool In , .. at a holpttal ID !nCJllld
whero he Wll A plllent and Ibo Wll a l>llrll, Fl ... )Un lsiOt, lbey m&'1'led.
• -
The city bu not had anyone 11slgned
fullUme to cover the 1dministratlve
service• functlont. However, unsuc--
ceuful city t1ndidate Steve De Lipp or
Unlver11ty Park w11 hired by the city as
1n admlnlltratlve alt1t. UntU 1ut Thurs-
day. De Lapp handled purchasing aod
prets rtl1Uona. De Lapp, of University
Park, bi returnlni to C.l Site Long
Stach to pursue h1I bachelor'• de&rtt In
bullnta admln11lr1tlon.
Other duties Harrington will wume.
namely pmonel aod accountln1 mattm,
h.,e bee> bandied by Human Enhance-
ment Dlredor P1u.I .Brady and City
Manac~r Wlllllm Woollttt Jr.
The addilklnl of W11Ttn and Hlr· rtnaWn to the dty •tiff, lf1v1 onJy two
Vlcancitl in key depirunent poltl -
public ulety director aod public -"' director.·
Clly Councllm<n will lnt'"'lew ap.
pllc:onll for the publlc -111 llpoC II I
p.m. 'l\leaelay, prio< to a )olnl ttlfflinc
wtth !he memben DI the Irvine UnIDtd
t<hool boon!. 11le joint ..-, betilnl at
I p.m. 'l\leaelay In the city hall coun<:ll
chamben.
Christmas Card
Classes Carded
"I'll the -lor tho dt>~·)Olll'ltU
Chrlstmu card .... ornamtnl mabn ltt
ln'lnt to ...., up r .. tho di)' ........
deporlmmt c1 .. In Ame.
"""" Anni .!""'-' .. ._,
lo-.. ...,,.._ -In mUlnc
wdl, ....... ---Md
;,_ tell wall '"""'"" aid GChor ltoll-
daJ .. ..., tnfl.I.
~UI bt loeld frtm l ::tll to ll :JO
a.m. on Wldnndayo ifuiiUilj"N"ov. 'ii In
St. MllU-Lll1heran a.urch ol lrvtne,
Illa Cltlvtr llrlvt.
The .. "'&J.slntloo r.. ilcludta the
-ol moot materialo. Cail tM dty
-d<portm<nt 11 m•• tor ""
f..,,,. '
'
Elementary schools, all in University
Park; Turtle Rock Elementary, El
Camiw-Real Elementary in th e
Calilomia Homes tract : El Toro Marine
Ele,..;-ntary, 8t71 SE Trabuco Road. and
Irvine Elementary School at '14736 Sand
Canyoo Ave .. East Irvine.
The&e school s are run by the 'l\Jstin
Union High and San Joaquin Elementary
Dlst~ll. Those districts will diMOlve on
June 30, 1973 under terms of a successful
district reorganiuuion vole, last June,
creating three new unified districts one
each in Tustin, Irvine and 1'1ission Viejo.
Shots Hit
One Man
In G1·oin
By ARTHUR R. V~'SE.'L
Of ltlt INllY Pl:H •tin
A \'ending machine man an his own an-
ti-burglar vigilante patrol opened Ore on
two brothers al a Costa Mesa bar this
morning. wounding both and bitting ont
be.adon in the groin with a shotgun blut.
Tbe agonlud man -his lower a~
dome.a shredded by buckshot -WU
d"'Pl*I off at Hoag Memorlal Hospttal
-, aller Ibo I a.m. lncldtnl,
HI.I brother wat aJTe:l\td momtnt.I
lal<r on Newport Boulevanl al Via Udo,
when Newport Beach Polke Officer Jim·
my Donald3on llopped the g•tsway car.
Luigi Corona , 75. was 11111 unde.rgolng
surgery at Hoag Memorial Jlospital dur-
ing mid-morning hour.a lor his abdomln~l
wounds and medical pe:nonne:I aald his
condition was nol establi.Jhed.
lte WM definitel y going to be ldmltttd,
however. they nolt'd.
His brother. Steven Corona, wa1 htld
by Ne.wport Buch pol~ britfly, lhtn
taken to Hoag ~temorial Hosplt•I for ex·
amlnation before being stupped to
Orange County Medle1J Center.
Costa Mtsa Police Detective Wayne
flarber uid lht second Coron• brother
appears to hive been wounded more
seriously than flnt believed.
Re wu hit by .ever.I ZO gau1t shotgun
pelleU:, one of which X-r1y1 Indicate
lodged In or ne1r his hearl
Dettctlve Norm Kutch, 11.to 1ufgned
to the CllC, Pld the second burRlary
suspect •u It.Ill lying on 1 11retcher at
the county f1clllty 1l t 1 .m .. four hours
alter he was wounded.
Jnvestlaaton saJd vending machine
route operator llenry 8 . Sl~&mann, )4,
n~ • total of four bl11t1 at I.he Corona
brothers durlnc a p~wn contront.IUon
at the Pier It night c-lub.
Sttam•nn -who h.11 1 chatn of cotr>-
opre.r1t.ed vendln& and • m u 1 • m e n 1
madtlnes lncludl1t11 pool tablet -hu
IUfferf!d • •rict of buralary Joos. one •
$300 lou at Pier 11 just 1 month 1go.
'"ff• wu ioolllltll all<r his lntmsll."
Oeltdive Harl>e.r remarked loday, 11yb'l1
SleamtM abowtd up at 1171 Newport
Blvd., to tn1k1 aue the prmlbes wen
fOCUl'O.
He found fVidence that It ,...., and
opporonU y bun! the Con>aao loolck.
'"He called them out of the bulldlltll,"
IS.. \1GILANl'E, Pap 11
c ....
Wealaer
11"11 be oooler .., -1· the
wuthertady pndlctl, wltb hlflh•
of ~ Inland. Beath WnPJ &baQJd
be lround ft wltll hllfl cloudl
lhnxlKbout the day. I.owl toolcJ!t
IHI.
IN IDB TODAY
ft't'" I/ Prttfdt'flt NI z o ft
1ho•ld "'~ Caflfornla br o
1a..wld<. "",.,.... .. r llV po-
liUaJI CQOU4ill vfU not ~ '""'h poWng powr for ot/lv
Cl-OP <mldicfot<L S.• llory, Pogc
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t Z DA.ll r PILOl
, 7 ,695 Expected Th .ree View Lio11s Seen
UCI Commences M-<Msacrn-Near Irvine
Its Eighth Year Of Family Area Homes
nie eighth year ol classes ::it UC lrv111c
began uneventfully todny with Wlivers1ty
officials wondering if all the expected
7 ,695 student~ had enrolled.
It will be at least two weeks before the
computers 10rt out the data from last
week's registration period and spew out
an accurate student count, a spokesman
said.
h1eany,·hile, signs or life v;ere all aboul
the campus today as parking lots -in-
cluding two new ones paved during the
summer -rilled up, cafeterias bef(an
serving meals. posteni hawking thi s
Friday's film "hlidnight Cowboy" v.·cre
·Water Agency
Sets 2 Sewage
'Fact' Clinics
Ty,•o fact clinics on a proposed regional
sewage disposal system for the south
coast will be held this "'eek by the Aliso
\\'atcr h1anagement Agency (AWMA).
The first meeting \viii be held at 5 p.m.
Tuesday in the ~feu.anine Floor Room or
Royal Savings and Loan , 23861 El Toro
Hoad, El Toro.
Tile second session y,·i ll be held at 4
p.m. \VeJnesday at the J\.Joulton Niguel
\Yater District Office, 27281 Aliso Creek
Road, Laguna Niguel.
Under the proposal, sewage from the
many communities would be treated and
used, \Vhere possible, for irrigation.
During times o( winter ralris, when the
<lemand (or water for irrigation slackens.
.the lrt•ated scy,·age would be discharged
in the Pacific Ocean through two outfalls
-one near Dana Point, the other off
Aliso Beach.
The San Diego Regional \Valer Quality
Control Board has looked favorably upon
the A\VMA projec t. AWMA is made up of
the Moulton Niguel, Sout h Coast, Laguna
Beach, El Toro, Los Alisos and Irvine
Ranch Water Districts.
The fact clinics precede a public hear-
ing Oct. JI on the environmental impact
statement for the sewage treatment proj-
ect. ~ beating will be held at Aliso
F.lementary School, 21542 Wesley Drive
at 7:30 p.m. lnLerested persom are en-
'
cou.raged to attend the.hearing.
1'o\li>wln< the \oca! p.il)llc hearmo, lhe
'Proiec\ wll1 be subml\ted to the ata1e and
rederal environmental agencies for a~
prov al.
The system is expected ~ begin
operating in Late 197~.
From Pagel
COPTER ...
almost sin<:1! its inception.
No fire broke out when the helicopter
crashed and Capt. Moody noted the Bell
model -a second of wthch will continue
10 provide aerial patrol -has a low fire
danger.
Hundreds of children (rom nearby Can·
yon School raced to the scene, gathering
about the heJ,,icopter with its rotor blades
twisted inlO U-s hapes from pounding the
ground.
'J'1Je tail boom y,·as also severed and
tOSMd a few yards by the impact and the
helicopter came to rest partially on its
. side and nose.
"DC Teachers Se ttle
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Teachers ln
I the District or Columbla voted today to
•1end a nine-day strike and !et 141.{J()(l 11
1 Washington public school students go
I back to class . The teac~r& voted to &<'-
::cept ' tentative ugroen1en 1 v.•orkcd O\ll
11 sunday
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pasted in place ol faded, summer-tat-
tered leftover ud8 and cluste~ of young
people lound favored seating on the
grassy slopes of (.'nmpus Park.
Opening day activities included the
taw>ching ol library tours to acquaint
both faculty and students with the
servi<:1!s and collection! offered within
the five-story building.
BR.ANDON, Fla, (AP) -A young
divorcee and her two children watched
helplessly as a gunman killed four
persons including her parents and
brother in a Brandon farmhouse, police
say.
Police said the ru&ilant fired one shat
through a screen window early Sunday,
killing one person, and then burst into the
farmhouse and shot three others.
The Art Gallery tu Fine Arts Village
y,·as being readied for Tuesday's openlng
ot a showing ol the works or Los Angeles
artist Eric Orr. The display will feature Evelyn Sanders Johnson and her two
Orr's use of Jight, sound and tactile children ·-,ere spared.
sensation and can be seen from l to 5 The victims were identified as John T.
p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays un!il Sanders, 50; his wife, Catherine, 37; their
Oct. 29. The Anteater junior varsity ~·ater polo l~year-old .son, Earl, and a friend of the
team was in lbe swim on opening day family, James Richard Bridges, 28, who
meeting Cypress College 1n an away was !hot as he lay in bed, police said.
match. Another brothtt, 24-yearo(lld John Increasing numbers or students are e;:x-
pected to lake advantage of a rree bus to Sanders, was at work in the dairy behind
cam pus. For the time being buses from the house, about 10 miles east of Tampa.
Santa Ana to ana from Laguna Beach Police said they arrested Thomas
.,..,HI stop at the Gateway Pl aza flagpole, Turner Ch8mbers, 32, of Gadsden, Ala.,
the stop signs along North Circle Vie\'I Drive, at the Crawford llall area share-a-and 21-year-old R@ert Harris of Largo,
ride station and South Coast plaza-bound after a high speed car chase. Both were
buses y,·ill stop at the steam plant on charged with first-degree murder.
Bridge Road . Chambers and Harris were being held Buses passing near \'erano Place graduate and married student housing in Hillsborough County Jail in Tampa
complex will also stop when hailed. without bond.
The new service to the UCI campu~ A neighbor, Mrs. Mary Davis, said
provided by the Orange County Transit f\1rs. Johnson came running from the
District is free to students shoy,·ing stu-dc:nt identification cards. The Associaled house, crying hysterically and yelling.
Sti.dents of UCI pays the district BO-cents "They're all dead. They're all dead ."
~r academic quarter for the free Police said she told the Davis family
scr\·ice. . the gunman spared her, saying, "I'm not
Others usmg the buses musl pay 25 going to kill you, just the ones you love cents. • _ ,.
Other signs of life on campus lQday in· most. _
eluded the openiDg of the five-year 014 .,. Hills~t:Q.ugQ County sheriff's officials
faculty club Jn Us new trailer quarters said the young divorcee had been seeing
near Humanities Hall. Buffet lunches Chambers-for three years but left hini
11t:e served to members as they were ,
when the cl ub was headquartered in about three weeks ago m Texas.
Irvine Tow:o Center where the Irvine City Chambers reportedly followed her to
Council now meets. Clearwater and "threatened the family if
she wouldn't go back with him," Maj.
From Pagel
DULANEY ...
$500,000 unpaid loan was one or two
issues that will be dealt with in tum dur-
ing the trial before Judge Turner. He
predicted a total trial llme of six weeks.
John Sala of the Hillsborough sheriff's
department said.
From Page J
VIGILANTE • • •
Detective Harber continued, saying at
that point stegmann thought OQe of the
suspects bad a gun eni! opened fire with
\,ta alll&le --·-Police said Stegmann reloaded and
OAILY PILOT Sl•lf Photo
It's Their Ba~
George Grainger Oeft) and Bob Richardson (right) demonstrate their
skills on traditional Scottish bagpipes for brothers Jesse, 7, Oeft) and
Davyd Arend, 6, Santa Ana. Pipers, both from Glascow, Scotland,
played at Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza during the weekend at
British Expo '72. Expo continues through Sunday.
Alien Visitors·
4 Arrested at Western. White House
The \Vestern Vt11ite House hosted a
number of ve ry surprised foreign visitors
early Sunday -the "visitors" are now
on their y,·ay back home after bumbling
onto the high security grounds.
The U.S. Border Patrol took custody
of the aliens after the tnen were ap·
prehended by \Vhite House Secret Service
personnel and San Clemente police of-
ficers in a predawn chase in the closed-
access compound.
Four aliens were caught by the com-
bined force of Secret Service men and
Cyclist Killed
On El Toro Road
San Clemente police as the aliens' north-
ward joiJmey look them into the Western
White House grounds, where highl y
sophisticated anti-intrusion alarm system
alerted security personnel.
Illegal aliens attempting to enter the
cetuntry commonly sneak up the beach
area past the Western White House and
then walk along the railroad tracks, of-
ficers said today.
It appeared in this case that the band
of men climbed a chain·link fence around
the com;xiund and we:e crossing it when
their presence was noted by security
personnel.
The aliens apprenende<i were in the
area set up for-permanent personnel
housing. Officers said when security or-
ficers called out for the men to halt, they
scattered. It Is believed that several may
have gotten away.
Johnson said the ftrSt issue will involve
all six defendants -Dulaney, Jll, and his
wife, Marlene; ~ both of 1631 Via
CUcadila, 8"' .,_.., SbloloY, Doble\
Hayes, 40, of 11111 Snowbird ·Drive, Hun-
tington Beach, Robert G. Machan, 40, or
San Bernardino and Wendell Warren
Austin, 38, of ·Rlvenide.
fired again as the wounded men fled to Dangerous, curving El Toro Road was
their car, putting two more blasts into the sceoe of the second fatal vehicle ac-
Thal phase of the trial, Johnson ex-
plained, will be devoted to charges that
the Dulaney group defrauded investors in
the World Financial Trends ope111tion he
controlled of an amount that may exceed
$3 million .
• cident within a week Sunday when a Sa Ped Gu" J the veli}cle before it was out of range. · motorcyclist was killed and his woman 11 t•O
Investigators said they doubt whether companion critically injured.
any criminal charges are likely to be fil-The California Highway Patrol said F d S J d
cd against Stegmann, who was arrested Cha rles Howard, 36, of Los Angeles, ~·as Ollll trang e
himself several years ago for alleged dead on arrival at Mission Community
Irvine residents aren't sleeping ID
soundly these nights, after sighting of
three mountain lions prowling inhabited
areas of the city over the weekend, with
two big cats spotted by a policeman.
One of the tawny predators -a third
-was lounging acroas the concrete block
wall of a home in Turtle Rock about 1
a.m. Saturday, the occupants told Irvine
Police Officer Bob Kredel.
He arrived within three minutes of
Mrs. Sheryl Hanlield's call and found
.solid evidence of a nocturnal visitor at
5685 Sierra Cielo Road.
One large, wet paw print, about three
inches across, was found on the wall,
while numerous deep claw scratches
were etched into the wooden fence.
Officer Kredel said suspicious sounds
in the backyard - a continuing problem
in recent months -led Mrs. Hanfleld'a
husband and son to go out and in-
vestigate.
They said they found a large, tan,
green-eyed cat about six feet long and
21h feet high on the wall, adding that
their appearance didn't frighten the
animal at all.
They said it stood up, stretched, bop-
ped down and ambled off across adjacent
Turtle Rock Drive and disappeared in the
President Homes tract.
Officer Bill Bechtel, responding as a
followup to Patrolman Kredel's dispatch
to confront the mountain lion, arrived
after it was gone but said he saw two
more o{ them while en route.
He said they were illuminated some
distance away by his patrol car lights,
loping l.!P a hillside, adding that he could
see their eyes shine as they disappeared
over the top.
Irvine Company officials today seemed
perturbed by the. report of predators
among the populace of the new com4
munity being carved out of •the Orange
County wilderness.
"If it weren't for the cops seeing tt I
could understand It," be quipped with a
chuckle.
He added that a check with Irvine
Company agricultural department of-
ficial Bob Elder makes it appear Ulogtcal
that moun.tain lions would be coming
down from the hills into town.
"His people are out in the boonies all
the time and he said they've seen no sign
at all of big cats this year,,. the company
official said.
He said Elder couldn't even recall any
time in recent years when mountain lions
have ranged down out of their rugged
habitat in the Santa Ana Mountains on
the otbe: .side of the San Diego Freeway.
Game fi extremely abundant In the
hills this year and Elder was at a loss to
explain why the cats would roam sub-
divisions, although nearby Bommer Can·
yon and surroundings offer them brush
cover and water supplies.
"There are some deer running around,
but they don't have claws," he remarked
in regard to telltale scratchmarks on the
Hanfield family's fence.
Johnson said the St. Bernardine issue
and the alleged defrauding by the of-
fering of false collateral to the ron ·
!rollers of the Roman Catholic facility
will only involve Dulaney and Shipley.
gambling violations. H 't I M. · v· · H" IDAHO SPRINGS. Colo. (AP) -Vice officers claimed at that tim e he ospi a ' ission ieJo. is passenger M G i} • D th Antonia Suarez, 31, also of 1.-0s Angeles, Sheriff Jim Miller has Identified an 18-an U ty Ill ea 8
was financing his way through Orange is listed in very critical condition in the year-old girl y,•hose body was found in a
Shipley is the former vice president of
the World Trends organization that was
administered from its "Taj Mah al" com·
plcx in Laguna Hills and from a plush of·
fice suite in Seal Beach.
fie took over the ill-fated ente rprise
after Dulaney took his wife and family to
'Vest Germany in November. 1969.
Shipley remained at the helm to
become involved in the mountain of com·
plaints filed with the District Attorney's
Oflice -many of them filed by resident s
of retirement rommunities in Laguna
Hills and Seal Beach.
Shipley al50 represented the World
Trends enterprise while the tangled af-
fairs of its mult iple corporations were
y,·ound up in bankruptcy court pro-
ceedings that led to the sale of the La·
guna Hills and Seal Beach buUdlng.s,
A long search for Dulaney and hll \vile
ended with the arrest of the globe trot-
ting stoc kbroker tn the Dutch Caribbean
i!;Jand or CUracao.
Mrs. Dulaney was rt'lumed to Orange
County to fAce tria l afler she was located
1n :1 hospital hcd in the British Colony of
Hermudl'I
Pony Show Se t
For Handicapped
Co1u1ty Children
The D:il.sy Clippe r Pony Club v.•i\1 hold
illi s<'COnd annusl pony !;how from 8:30
ll m to S:30 p.m. Oct. 15 nt the Coto de
CitZll Equestrian Centrr lo brnC'flt tht
Orani;ie County ehApler nf lhP California
A~iaUon for Neurologically llan-
dlcapped Children.
The public Is Invited to all.end the
show. Youthl 10 to 17 years mt1y enter
be.fort Oct. I at a SI fee or after Ott 6 at
a S2 ptt-tntry ru .
Door priies will Include two round-trip
Ucket11 lo San Francisco. Trophle1 will be
awarded (or the U\f'ff I.it g:roupa : ID
ye1ni and under, 11 to 12 yNn and tl to
17 y't&rs.
Ti ckets (Or &dml~lon will cost $1 1uld
will be 11v1U11ble at the 1how or by call-
Ina IKll-IZU.
Coast College by running a casino in his same hospital today. motel room here Thursday. CHEBOYGAN, Mich. (UPI) - A jury
home. Patrolmen said Howard was traveling She was Monique LeDean of the San found Wayne E. Gilbert, 18, West ~is,
Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow cited the north on El Toro and collided headon Pedro area, Miller said. \Vis., guilty of two counts of fifst..degree
California Penal Code today, explaining with a van \vhen he attempted to pass a lier nude body was found on a bed murder in the fatal shootings or a preg-
it ~!lows private citizens to use car. The van driver. Paul Jamison, 21, or covered by a blanket. Her hands were nant girl and her mother witnessed by
reasonable force in apprehending a Orange, escaped with minor injuries. 1ied behind her back, according to Miller. the older woman's 4-year-old son.
person su.spected of committing a public 1---=--'---'-------'----------------------------------
offense in his presence.
Due to the extent of thei r injuries,
neither Corona brother, both reportedly
from Los Angeles, had been formall y
hooked on suspicion of burglary as of
mid-morning.
Detectives had advised both of their
constitutional rights, however, adding
they were definitely being detained and
would be charged.
All 'Tiachines inside had been broken
into, poltce said.
Officials at Hoag Memorial Hospital
announced later this morning that Luigi
Corona's surgery was completed and he
was listed in satisfactory condition.
From Pflfle 1
ORCHESTRA • • •
another string player changed to include
mu!liC.
To have a good string orchestra.
Newman said, he need.I seven to eight
violins, two to three ctJ!i (plural or
cello\, two violas, one to three bases,
three percussion instruments, two flutes,
two oboes, two clarinets. two t.rombonts,
a bassoon nnd two trumpets.
Many competing Interests I a k e
students awoy from music. the fonncr
Pasadena tC(IChcr cxplah~. adding
there is intett'st \n the orchestra.
11 the school ownt'd more instruments,
Newrnan feels there would be more
students enrolllnR Tht' ~hool only owns
11ne bass and iu1c C~tll) If a student
y,·nnt!I to pl(ly, h\• muiit buy or l't'nl nn
instrument, which can be cxpen11ivr:. ..
Newman ill hoplng lhat area residents
who have instn1n1cnts 110 longer being
played will donate them to the school.
There Is no money bud~eted to buy
prlv:ite Instruments now, he said.
Last year. AC:hool money-raising elforb
allowed l h l' purch11st of $2.500 In
recording equipment for mu11\c grou)'.11'.
Now the teacher i!i faced with two
1tud1tnl1 having to drot-the clan heftuH
they can't afford instruments and with
arranging full Orl'he'!ltro music for a
much smaller group.
~General Beclric's I -. I
-------Complete
Installation
Included
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1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa Phofllt 548·7788
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General Electric
"Bed Buy"
Dishwasher
19995
Modol SD250N I
lncludet choll"f or col°" on front JVlnCI and rtmovkl ot 1 old dlahwuhu. -------
w ............ ..
MllQAI. IUCTllC
•ttlfllU.. U-'5 "'°"'"~· II 11\.------------'
'rhc «Ater is at the rod or 1'r1buco
Cttnyon Road. off lhe El Toro Rold exit
t~cm tht San DIPgO Frttw11y.
llUt he 's not "'·llhout \n!lplrallnn.
~tlulon Viejo'" band program . Including
marcll\ng band. intermedlatr and bef(ln-
ning baod c\aJS(!s and lllllge bAnd, has
165 student11 lll'llYtly playing 11way.
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Huntington Qeaeh
Fountain Valley
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Today's Final
N. Y.-Stocks
VOL 65, NO. 276, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNfA MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1972 TEN CENTS
Bo111e Oller Has L~gunan
By BARB.A.RA KREIBICR
Dt Jiit O•llY Pllet St•H
Thomas MerricK, tlie weaithy Lagunan
who has offered to buy the Colosseum for
$1 million and restore it as a mecca ror
Rome sightseers, today found himself the
target of newsmen, photographers and
televi.sk>n crews who descended on the Ari C.Olony to learn more about his am-
bieoos plan. :
He thought of it Jast week, 'Merrick saJd, when be read in the papers that the
Italian government had been forced to
C)M& the 2,000.year-old ruin because of
the hazard from · stones falling from its
upper levels.
The government, according to the
reports, cannot afford the '2 million
restoration job necessary to mate the
Colosseum safe for public viewing once
more.
Merrick, who ts ol Italian descent and
attended school in Rome as a teenager,
offered to buy the international landmark
for $1 million of his own money, and
raise the necessary funds for it.. restora-
tion.
In return, he pr<>pOSes tlu!t an ad-
mission fee be charged to future visitors,
which he would share with the Italian
government to help recover his in-
vestment.
Merrick and the Reef Realty office.
which is handling his offer, today report-
ed phones ringing off the hook as U.S.
and European news and television crews
sought interviews.
Feueta Vitali, ItaUan-bom real estate
woman who is serving 89 Merrick's· re~
resentativ• to Italian authorities, said
she has o f f i c i a 11 y transmitted
his o ff e r to Rome via the Italian
whlch is handling hts officially transmit~
ted his offer to Rome via the Italian
Consulate in Los Angeles and aiao bas
asked the New York corresi)ondent of the
Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera to
supply her with the name of an official in
the Italian Ministry of Mounuments and
Fine Arts whom she can contact when
she flies to Rome lajer this week.
The Ministry Is charged with the
pre&erVation and protection of · national
monuments and .works of art in Italy.
·"I think it is a wonderful idea and a
fantastic opportunity for the Italian
in Spotlight
government," sakt Miss Vitali, who is a
ntUve of Rome. "Of course this iJ: just
the fjrst proposal -tbe discussion
undoubtedly will go beck and forth, just
as it does in any real estatt agreement."
Merrick, whose family hails from
Locamo in the Italian lake country, was
bom In the Uni~ States and wu sent
back to Italy to attend the s.tastone
College for boya when he wu 14.
.Now $7, he has lived In Laguna Beach
for the past 10 )'tars, making hiJ: home at
UM Anacapa Way. He formerly owned
and lived in Pyne Castle, an Art Colony
landmark once tooled as a possible site
for President Nixon's Western Whi te
House.
He last visited Rome. he sald today, in
1950.
"I know you can't appraise something
like the Colosseum i.D actual dollars," he
said. ''but I thought they might want an
angel to fix it up and it would be
reasonable to charge an 'nt.ry fee -
right now I'm just thinklng out loud.
We'll have to wait till we get aom'
response from the Italian govtrnmt.nt to
discuss more details."
Crisis Unit Set
Clinic Will Open in Hu1itington
DAILY ,ILOT l'IMt. .,-l.M I'-
One of Orange County's six crisis-
oriented psychiatric teams will ~te
from Huntington Beach in ~ near
future. servicing all of West Orange
County.
The Community Mental Se r v i c e s
Health Division will open a mental health
clinic In the small shopping center at
Warner Avenue and Newland Street.
"It's emphasis is crisis--0riented
psychiatric care," Dr. Robert Drury.
deputy director for the mental health
division's direct services, explained to-
day.
POLICE ,CAME!tAMEN SHOOT PICTU!!ES WHICH MAY HELP EXPLAIN PATROL COPTER CRASH
In Vacant Field, A Rovtlne Practice Mission Ended Rou~hly For Two Shaken Crewmen
"It is not methadone maintenance, nor
will it involve a drug·abuse ream ,"
Drury, a psychiatrist, cautioned. "Nor
will it treat mentally retarded or men-
tally deranged persons as a result of
drugs."
Ill! said the nlllln function otlllt olllce
Ja crlifl lntfl'lillllOll offering'.._......
-~•t foll ·Jiiiil!e<lia,.;<,liilii • .... -....
Cranston '.fells ·--~~ --
Orange Coast's
Share of Funds
The Orange Coast's share of federal
fuftas to be returned to local government
con,es to $1.75' million, according to
filijres from the office of Sen. Alan
<l'anston (J).Callf.).
:'11lose figures do not include the $9
?Qillion that is expected to go to the
~ty of Orange from the revenue shar-
iqg bill back by President Nilon.
, :-~ording to the figures from
Cn:Dston•s Los Angeles office, Orange
Q>ifSt cities will receive the following:
,-:CO.ta Mesa, $506,491.
0:.Fountaln Valley, 1116,845.
-Huntington Beach, $614,000.
-Newport Beach, 1183,612.
--San Clemente, 1128,825.
~n Juan C&pistrano, $18,934.
-Seal Beach, $90,803.
The spokesman for Cranston was
unable to provide a figure for Laguna
Bffch, but the city's Finance Director
Robert Green estimated their share
l"Ollld be about 191,000.
"' Most of the cities have received notices
that their checks ror the first half or 1972 ..-ig be mailed oi.lt later this month
.(o1lowing final congressional action on
. the bill tbh week.
. The $30 billion, five-year revenue shar~ JN.., bill will provide the first major
fe:diftl aid to cities that can be u.sed ·for
O~ating expenses In baiic services like Pc>Gct, fire, environmental protection,
;lublic-transporta.UOn, recreation and
91'.Pal aervJces for the poor and aged.
" 1'he State of California will receive
:t11l5.4. million, and a total of $370.7
million will be distributed to local
, gO.emments within the state.
Supervisor David Baker has suggested
~that the county's share be used for prop-
. ,erty . tax relief, but his board of
su·pervisora colteaguu have indicated
thoy would rather hold a public hearing
before making that decision.
AD MAKES SHOR'r
WORK OF BEETLE
II you're looking for en example of how
to sell whatever jt is you have for aal,,
trl' this:
* '61 VW BUI. arf.tlnal
owner. very aood cond.IUon.
1750. XXX·XXXX.
It woald be hard ta belt the
p¢omianco J'e<'Ord o! thal mlcbtY mil<!. 'l'lle thrff.Une ad sold the ear the nnt
dq II appeared ln "the DAILY PILOT.
Dlttd line ta claalllod· odvertblnc
ruulta at the DAILY Pnm la MH171,
T1J IL •
l
~~ -· -"' ... .,, ")ti "!.• •
Mesa Police Helwopter
Crashes in Empty Field
One of Costa Mesa's two police
helicopters sustained major damage thi9
morning when it crashed in a vacant
field just outside city limits, flopping
around like a beheaded bird with its rotor
blades whipping.
Neither the pilot nor bis cameraman..
obeerver~was injured when the little bub-
ble-canopied Bell chopper hit tbe ground,
about 100 yards off the end of Canyon
Drive.
Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow was at the
controls and Detective Lt. Harold
Fischer was flying along to shoot some
photographs In connection with a regular
..,1gnment when the craft went down.
Investigators for the Federal Aviation
Admlnlslratton were·called Immediately
to interview capt. Glasgow about
District Chief
File$ Complaint
The superlntend$nt ol the Fountain
valley Scllool llllt:lct Is going to court
over a borldng dog .
Mike Brick of !jJlla Carroltown Dr!Ve,
Hunt•• Beach, has llled a miade-
meutor complalnt agalnlt tu neighl>or,
RAllaell Smith, of •t Ftvo Har!Jor Lane,
chaJ'llng that Smlth'a borkin( dog Is In
vtolatl<ln-of the city's pOIDOiM ordlnonce.
The case goes to court Oct. 11 In the
Well Orange County Judicial Diltrlct.
circumstan<:ea of the ~45 a.m. crash.
The helicopter was trucked away from
the site on Oat, empty state-owned land
which will be part of Fairview Park 11
the facility becomes a reality.
Police Chief Roger E. Neth -himself
a licensed helicopter pilot -said be isn't
sure Just what happened and would
prefer to ),ave any comment at this tlme
to FAA experts.
.... "All we know is he hit the ground,"
Chief Neth remarked.
He did add that Capt. Glasgow was
practicing autogyration landing at the
time aomething apparently wen t wrong,
pointing oot this practi~ Is required of
all department officers authorized to Oy
Eagle mi41lons.
Chief Neth noted an autogyratlon lan-
ding -a limulated emergency setdown
without power -Ls actually simpler than
landing wilh the en.gine on because tllere
is no torque imbalance to ofi&eL
Normally what can go wrong in such a
landing is that the tall rotor dips low and
hits the ground, flipping the chopper
forward onto Its nose and upside down.
Questioned al the scene, Capt. Glasgow
refemd all queries to C21ief Neth but
was beard to say the tall was not down
w}len he hll
Chief Neth also noted there was no
polnt of impact to suggest Utls may hive
happened.
"My gum Is no," said Capt. Robert
Moody, when uked tf the ~.ooo
bellcopter Is beyond repair.
He said he has seen three others at
(See COPTER, Pace IJ
~~bl~hii,' ·~~·~'agitated -wth ..... ~ lor·llnmedlate belp,for
the first time in this area," Drury ~.
"Wltb our crtsb model, we rely on about
sh: visits over a one or two month 1pan
to solve the problem."
The mental health office will also in-
vestigate 81fegations made by lndividuals
against other individuals to determine if
a court ordel' should be sought to
determine the . mental health of an in·
dividual.
"And we will orfer family coun1ellng.
plus group or individual therapy," Drury
added.
County officlala have not set an ~
ing date for the office, pending further
study of tht site, Drury said,
When It does open. a six or seven man
team is expected to treat 25-50 out·
patient! a day, working Crom 8 a.m. to $
p.m.
Drury said the county would eventually
like to expand the hours to 9 p.m., as a
service to resident! who work out of
town.
The mental health clinic already baa
received the support ot the police depart·
ment and the Ocean View School
Trustees to Inspect
Remodeled School
Trustees of the Ocean View School
DiJtrict wUI make an Inspection tour or
the newly remodeled CoUqe View School
toolihi u part or their r'l111ar huslnels
111eeting.
The l(O(l,000 lacellhlng on what had
been one or Qc,an V"•'• ol~r school•
hatl now made It Ont of the dlstrtcf1
moot~advonced, •-.!lni to acbool of-
fitlal1. The monthly lrustttt meetlna
will be1in at 7:3> p.m. at College ~w.
6582 Lenno1 Drtve, Huntington Stach.
Panelist Raps Committee
Huntington Beach High Rise Vnit 'Ove rbalanced'
By TERRY OOVJLLE No construction over 35 lee! hl&b °'., - - -(Ihm storlelJ ii ollowed in HWltlncton
A six-man clU.... C0111111lttee, author-Beadl, except In IOme commer<lal -lud by the HlllJtinllon Beacll City Cota>-f ell to develop poalble blih rtoe 1a ... , Ins wbmo the height tlmlt ii IO eet.
hos i-. crttlclled by one commlltee At 1eaet two buildings wm allowed
mefnber' u btlnc "too overbalanced t°' obove the limit, but recent court clod. waro -•·" Siano batt nlled llOCb vorlancel lllepl,
Jerry Qnters has told city planning tml .. t ~ horcbhtp ii -. hlr
"""mlnlooera lhlt five ol the six mem-allowln1 the taller -bulldlna.
bero belong to the HOME c.ouncll, oqd "lfoaieowtlon dllol't ntlly -bl&b
!cur o! the six live In HWltingtoll Ila!' ' rlso,. bii\ ~ the7 do so for tt. the law
bour. wm lit iO i'lllrlcUVe ...... wtll btllld
The commfttet c:onotsts of two 1ndJ. blah'~ c.i-, • tlltotl>or moml>er, \'ldUl1*-•~ by t11e chanmeror -Aid 111 1n ..... : _,,....., two by the HOME Oouncll "I'd ptll:Viildlbt limit an high rill!
and two by the HWIUnJton Harbour beclUle t annlni oommla loe c.m
Proporty °"""" "-iaUOll. -oot proje<t I\ -., lll:t." Etch o( ~ _.11at1ou had ... Cmt.n nPlalned.
"""""' coooeo11 to the dty eouncU oV<r He said be -.i>t op !be 1-..,,...
the tack of bl&h r1.. laws. Issue for plaMlng COllllllla1oom be-
• I
•
,
'
District, according to City Administrator
David Rowlands .
Rowlands, in a memorandum to the'
city council for tonight's meeting, said
the shopping center meets all the legal
requirements for housing the clinic.
regional teams with four of tbein.
operating in Laguna Beach, Fullerton,
Santa Ana and Orange. The Huntington
Beach unit and a sixth team have not
had offices up to now.
"Everyone feels this is needed in the
community." Rowlands said in the
memorandum.
Drury said there are five other
Without the n!gional concept, in.iUated
in 1969, the onl y place ind ividuals could
go for crisis-oriented ppsychiatric help
'A'&S the Orange County Medical Center ,
Drury explained.
Sight Restored
He Sees After 24 Years' Darkness
LONDON (UPI) -When Nloo Ftttel emerged from the airliner, he saw
J.be '\WmlD be had liv4cL"'ll'ltb tGr"'1b"Ore than 20 years but had n'ver attn.
-a men~ but you are much lovelier than I lmag-
' -~\ •• • ...... rie, EN., 41. ......, '~"'· · , -11 "7 acid tlwwo 11 btm. retumed Sunday lrom
Rome wbere a surpon, Dr. _ Ito Strampelll, ....-cl bis 1(J(bl
· Al London'• Hathrow .ijijiort, be aaw h1a •ll• of J> years and bis IOlll,
Paul, II, and Adrian, 15, !or the flr>t time.
"You never told me what beautllul eyea you had," he 11ld. "Don't let them
mJst over with tears."
"And look at my IOWI!" he exulted to onlookers. "What •trapping chaps
they are."
The Fettels met ahortly after his accldemt In 1944 at a hospital In England
where he was a patient and ahe was a nurse. ~years later, I.hey married.
Murder of Valley Station
Attendant Baffles Police
Fountain Valley police said today they
are stUl ba!Oed by the knlflng·murder of
a gas station proprietor last week.
"What w' really need ls a good bruk,"
said Lt. John Bt'ddow thl.a morning.
PoUce are still goinJ on the theory that
Louis J. Luvko, 53, proprietor of the Shell
statkln at the corner of Bushard Slll!tl
and Talbert Avenue, wu killed when be
surprised two thieve• by resisting ~Ir
auernpu to rob him.
Early descriptions of the IWlped•
stated lbal both were M e x l c a n -
Americans. Police tbls momlnc tisoed a
new composlt' drawina or one IUIJ>«t
and Indicated be WU p r 0 b • b I y
Cauc.ulan. He Is believed to bt 1-looH,
210 pounds, wtth blood heir.
The oecond SUJpect Is rtpnrted to be $.
loot-t,n, 170 pounds, with black hair.
Rollllry for Lovko wlll bt tonight st I
o'clock in .he Smith and TuthUI Mortuary
chapel In Santo Ana. Services wUI be
1\ielday at 10 a.m., alJo ln the chaJ)'I.
IAvko. of 1178 El T'anlb Circle, fOlm·
taJn Valley, 11 surviv«I by hls wtf, Jun:
bit mother Sophia: a dauahter. Alma
Kotar ; two sil1en and I b r e e
grandchildren.
Valley Creates
Speaker Bureau
The FOW1taln Valley Youth S<roloo
(.enter hu inltituted a spuket'1 burt•u
to provide lnfannatlan and lnll&ht on
aewntl currtnl topk'I.
The bureau '• Mlb)t<ta loebla: .. ,,,.
Dllemmu ol Ptoblttn ~."
"Todl1'1 't'nndt In nn._ 0.. and
Abme," .. Symbolllm and Cu 11ur1 I
RmUYlsm," "Communtcahlo Dlteotes,"
"The f'ood . Tl>lllJ," "lJWt Confllcl ond
Outer Viol..,..," "Wortshopo In Sen-i'
Awa...,_" and "WotUllOpa In c.m.
rmnkatJon ...
11>t speaktn • t e lll'QI tooal1 .
11udenll Ind .-.luntttr llafl ..........
wboM talltl arc pared to )'OUlll and
adult-
To rtqUell a 1peall:er, can\.lct •la.I
Fnink al the Yaath 8erffl C•ruer, ~·
1000.
..
NEW DISCRll'TION ISSUID
Yaney Murdor Suopoct
c ....
WeaU1er
It'll bo cooler on Tuetd.IJ<, the
"'•th<rlady p<tdlcu, with ltlfhs
o1 n Inland. Bach tempo ~
be •round 'It -hlftb douda tbroughout tho day. Lows laalJht -· INSWI! TODAY
.i: ... I/ Pruld .. I N f s 0"
1h .. ld '""' CGll/ ..... to br • tondllklt , ob.tf'rNrt ICIW llJ.t Pl>'
Jlrfc:ol coatiatll v;tfJI "o' provld~
m11dl p1i1IUno PQ1ff' for 01-.tt
COP condklot.u. Su 11.orw, Poo•
12. • ~ J c-. • ·-. --I --. • ..., a • ...... """ .,.. .. ._. r
-M
'
' 1'
l
DAii. '1 PllOl H
Gymnastics
.Of Olympi~
Style Set
Olympic-style gy1nnastics training \\·ill
''be o[fcred 10 llun1ing1on Be a ch
youngsters for the first ti1nc this year by
the city RCC"rration Department.
Gary Black. on assistant recreation
superviso r, said the city is going to scrap
11s old "tumbling and balance'' progranl
10 start \VOrk1ng youngsters on such
equipment as the parallel bars. balance
board and rings.
r~arouk i\1ohamcd. an Egyptian gym·
.q,::st "·ho compc1cd in the 1960 Rome
Olympics. has designed the new city pro-
gram "'hich starts Oct. 10.
Under P.1 oh a m e d · s program.
)'OUngsters "'ill be introduced to basic
gymnastics and some simple equipme~t
in the first cight·v.·eek session. As their
skills grow, the oourse becomes more
compleI in each succeeding eight·\\·eek
session.
"The course is designrd to produce
true coinpeti!ors by the time they reach
high school." Black explained. "\\'e hope
the high inte rest u1 the recent Olyrnpics
\rill help the program flourish ."
The first rourse will be held Tuesday
:ind Thursday nights at t-.1arina High
School. Thret> separate sessions, dividing
}OUngsters into age groups from 7 years
to 12 years old. will be held those nights.
Cost of the C<>urse is $5 for an cight-
\1·eek. 1v.·ice-nightly session.
Black said ty.·o college gymnasts y.·ill
help supervise the program if there are
enough youngsters invoh·ed. If it works
thi s year. the souped-up gymnastics pro-
gram may be expanded to Huntington
Beach and Edison high schools.
Interested youngsters can sign up for
the course ti.1onday through Friday, from
2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., or 6 p.m .• to 9
p.m .. at the city gym, 16th Street and
Palm Ave.
For further infonnation phone !he
rec reation department.
Fro111 Page l
IIIGH RISE. • •
or Huntington Jiarbour.
"Despite my position. the overbalance
::lid concern me," Parkinson said. "But
I feel these are people who are not 100
~rcent opposed to high rise.
"Soontt or later we are going to get
high rise in this ctty. Our only concern
is that we have sufficient laws to pro-
vide foc its orderly deveiopmtnt.
"l 1 .. 1 the ,,,acedUre ol woRlfll ....
~ether (y.·ith the chamber) will obvlale
some disagreement and reach some
compromise."
Slates made rimitar comments. "There
11'as a time when there y.·es a feeling of
animosity between the chamber and the
f!OME Council. But under Parkinson's
leadership I don't !eel there is aay prob-
lem."
"I think Y.'e can work together for the
bettennent or the town." Slates said.
.. A good rxchangc v.·HJ develop a good
ordinance.''
Orange Man Held
After Home Burns
A ramily row in Orange Sunday ended
wltJt one man Jailed on suspicion of arson
and attempted murder after his mother
and brother were rescued from their
burnlna home.
Police arre11ted ~1anuel Gortarez. 49, uf
268 N. Lemon St.. y.·ho they allege set fire
to h\a own home after a day long ar11u-
ment Y.'lth his mother. ~1r11 . Josephine
Gortarez, 75, 11nd ht! brother Joseph, 42.
, '(be elderly woman and her son wert
1 rescued from the fiercely burning home
1 by flremen who estimated da1nage to the
1 l'tructure at '5.000.
1 t Manual Gortaret was arre~ted near the
I '10me about 45 minutes after the fire
1 lstarted. 11------------. II
II
II ,,
II
OUNM COi.if ••
DAILY PILOT
11 T"9 ONllit c-1 DAILY ~ILOl .,., ... •11.h
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11 $tt1 ./WOI C•pillflM. A •lllQle 1t01oo\1I
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OAIL Y PILOT ll•tf nett
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COPTER •.•
Loq B<aclt Airport which suffered much
f--,.,..;. .mllh dllllQO and were Oylnt!
again followlnj[ ..,,.in.
'1'ben they'n! tottlod, Ihm Jua\ I.In~
muclt lei~" uld cap1. Moody, who bas
headed the poUce belicoptu program
almoot since llA lncepllon.
No I.ire broke out when the helicopter
crashed and capt. Moody DOied tho BeU
model -a second of wh.cb will continue
to provide aerial patrol -has a low lire
danger.
Hundreds of children from nearby Can-.
yon School raced to the scene, gatherlng
about the helioopttr with Its rotor blades
twisted into U-shapes from J>Ol,Jnding the
ground.
The tail boom was also severed and
lo.md a lew iards by the impact and the
helicopter came to rest partially on its
side and nose.
Girls of Golden West
Police Probing
$10,000 Fish
Poisoning Case
Song leaders at Huntington Beach's Golden West Colle~e this fall in-
clude (bottom row from left) Marla Wheeler, Cindy Vickerman and
Cyndi Jones. Jn middle row (from left) are Gail Yarrington and
Wendy Western . At top is Robin DodJon.
U.S., Soviets Prepare
For Troop Negotiations
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Prulde1rt
Nixon met today with Soviet Foreign
~tinlster Andrei Gromyko, and American
sources said the United States is ready to
start preliminary negotiations with 1he
SoViet Union on troop reduction s in
Europe.
Nixon and Gromyko sat side by side on
gold colored chairs in the President's
oval office.
They will get together again tonight,
probably for longer-discussions, at a
working dinner the President ls giving
for Gromyko at his ~mp David (Md.)
retreat.
During their morning sestlon lasting an
boor and 10 minutes, "all ouW.anding
matten between the two nations" were
dilcuued. Pt.. Secro1arJ Ronald L.
Ziegler aaid.
Niion anil Gromyko both will spend the
night at Camp David and murn to the
White House. Tuesday In time for a morn-
ing ceremony-· to-ratify forinally and
flhally tl1' &\rateglc arma limitation
agreements which Nixon and Soviet
leaders signed last May in MOICOW.
Sitting in on the White House session
were Secreatary of Stale William P.
Rogers, Nixon's nationa l security Rdviser
Henry A. Kissinger and Sovie l
Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin.
Newsmen were admitted for only the
first minute or so of the .seuion, and
heard Nixon and Gromyko exchange
commenls about the effectiveness of the
United Nations.
''There Is always work to do in Ult
U.:ol. organlution," Gromyko a a Id
through an interpreter. "It Ls not always
productive but there is: always work to be
done."
"I agree with both sentencff, '' Nixon
responded.
Gromyko spoke at the United Nations
lasl y.·eek. So did Rogers. Rogers told
Nixon, "He gave a good S'pffCh."
Gromyko rf:sponded, "We closely
followed with interest the speech of the
~ecretary of state. It was an interesting
. <ipeeeh.''
Nixon ob.1erved, "That's diplomatic
language.''
Gromyko replied, "·rs saying a great
deal."
Tonight's dinf*' originally had been
scheduled for tho While House bul Nixon,
who spent the week.end iit Camp David,
ordered the change of location.
"\\'e have a good day to go to Camp
nrivid today ... the leave• are beglnning
to turn (to ran oolart)," he told the
Soviet official.
U.S. sources said Nlxon was llkely to
i;:ivc Gromyko informAl word that the
United Stat~s Is ready to talk about troop
Pl'ofessor Helcl
In Crutch Death
Of Wife in NY
NEW YORK iUPll -A college pr ..
ft'uor ~·as htld \Oday on charges M
b!udgeorung his wife to death with a
crutch.
Authont ie1 SDid the body of l\1rs .
Bh1raltl Bobba. 27. was found on a couch
in t~ couplr's apartment SUnday. 'Ibey
said the crutch "''"! found nearby .
Rao liobba. 37 . An anodate r,rote.uor
at Slaten Island Community Col fCe, Wal
accuSfld of uslni the C!l"Utch io btat h!J
wHt' to dtalh.
Her htad. polite s11ld, wu bittered
btiond rt<Ognltlon .
Bribb.11 uses crutchc$ because of ~
broken lt'e.
reduction.!! and a Soviet J>tOPOSll for a
"European security conferenct.."
The. word would not be formal , the
sources said,· because the United States
and its Allies have not completed con·
sultallons on the proposal to reduce the
U.S. troop commitment in Europe.
S. Coast Plaza's
'Two Elizaheths'
Tour on Tuesda)'
Or. Alex A. Cumming, director of the
Plymouth Museums in England, will give
a guided tour Tuesday night of tbe Two
Elizabetbs exbibllion at Brilish £.po 'Tl.
·Reservations for the ll p.m. tour may
be ipplied for at the Expo information
stand at South Coast Plaza .
The Two Eli.zabeths exhibiJion coptains
\'aluable items from the reigns or Queen
Elizabeth 1 end 'Queen Elizabeth ll.
Among them are navigational tools and.
personal properties of Sir Francis Drake,
the nm Briton to set foot in Callfornla.
Other British Expo attractions schedul-
ed for Tuesday inc1u4e a "Find the
Mystery Man" Sherlock· Holmes conleat
from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.; a fashion show by
Jiieger o( London from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.;
tea and biscuits from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
and performances of Profe850r Cod.man's
Punch and Judy Show at 3:30 p.m., 4:30
p.m., and 7 p.m.
Club in Nevada
Shut for Cheating
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -In its
first emergency closure order In at least
four years, the Nevada Gaming Board
announced it closed the EI Rancho Club
in Wells on charges of cheating in its 21
game .
Philip Hannifin , chainnan of the board,
said Tuesday undercover agents made et
least JS independent observations of al·
Jeged cheating at the club operated by
John Michell. The cuiDo has one 2J pme and 21 slol
machine•.
Hlnnlfln said £our dealers were in-
volved. but declined to release the names
tmtil a formal complaint is filed.
Managers Named
To State Panel
Denn is Mnngers has been named to a
p:111el drafting gu idt!lines for ea rly
childhood education legislation proposed
by Slate SChool Superintendent Wilton
Ril es.
Mangers. who is president or the llun·
tinglon Beach Union llli:h School District
tru:1t~. wlll terve as state chairman for
the curriculum andt Individualized ln-
s1n1ction group.
The ltuntlngton Beach educ 3 tor
prtoviously served on lhe original early
chUdhood education cammlttee which
wrote the pn1posal for JeglslaUon.
'Alcoholism Forum'
Planned in Valley
"The Forum on Alcoholism" ~,IM be
presented al 2 p.m. each Sunday durina
1he month of October at 1he Foun11ln
Valley Community Center.
Newport Beach police are investigating
the apparent poisoning of $10,000 worth of
rare tropical fish in the backyard pond of
a Westcliff brick layer.
Richard c . Hentges, 45, of 2218 Fran-
cisco Drive, told police he discovered 28
Koi , a type of Japanese carp, dead and
dying in their pool early Sunday morning.
He told police there was an ordor or in·
sectlcide lingering in the air.
llentges told offlcen at the scene that
Kol are extremely susceptible to poisons
of any type .
Police said Hentces lold th<m lhe In-
secticide could have blown over the pond
from somewhere in the ne.igbborbood by
accident and that other Kol breeden
r.ave had slmilar problems.
Hentges valued his fish at up to $KIO a
piece, police said.
Detectives said today they would con-
tinue the investigation to determine
whether or not foul play was involved.
'Spirit' Seized;
Customer's $20
Bill Disappears
MATI'OON, Ill. (AP) -Coles Counl1
law enforcement ~officials must not
believe in &hostl.
Katherine Fanton, 20, of Mattoon.,' who
operates a 0 splrltual adviser" business in
her borne, was arrested and charged with
theft after a patron's $20 bill disap-
peared.
Mary Caine told police she visited
"Sister Katherine," as Miss Fanton calls
herself, for spiritual advice.
She said Miss Fant.on asked her lo put
a $20 bill on the table and was told that It
would disappear.
It did .
Ylhen the patron asked S I s t e r
Katherine to give her the bW back after
the aess\on wa1 over, Sister Katherine
was reported to have said "The spirits
look. It."
Miss Fanton posted bond aod was
freed .
-
St!hool Shih
Ahout-f ace Set
.
In Westminster
By JOf\N ZALLER
Of ... °"" .. , .... , ...
Can a school dlAlrlct pick Itself up
after decades of cooaervaUam, Ulm 1tle1f
around, and practically overnlght head
oU in a vtaorous new dlrectlon?
Certainly, lll1Swers Bill Do Ip h •
superintendent of the Westminster School
District
;'But ir1 not ea11y," be adds. '"There
are always people who are going to ........
"At tVtq step of the way, your dedlca·
lion lo ldds has IOI lo 1blne through.
Becauae if people beatn to think you're
propooing change !or the oake ol change,
you're dead."
Open 1pace chmrooms, p a r e n t
voilmleers, specW federal !Unding, ln-
dlvidualtmUon of lnltruc:Uon -Uiete are
some ol the lhJnp lllunned In lhe put by
WeslmiMter, but now belng installed in
lbe ·third year ol Dolph's superin-
tendency.
And as he sees It, they are anything
but changes for tbe aake of change. But
convincing the siAU and lhe board of
trusteea of w}\at be 1111 waa "a sleepy,
slow-movinl acbool district" was a real
challenge.
"Bill (Dolph) bad lo move carefully al
first," says Rod Cruse, president of tbe
trustees and a resident of north Hun-
tington Beach, an area that provides
about 30 percent of the district's enroll-
ment.
"The first year be mootly felt out tbe
board and proved 1111 abill!y u an ad-
mlnislralor. The teeond year, the pro.
posals began coming."
Caution was neceuary, according to
~. becauae tho boan! bad two
members with 1*rly 20 }'el{I u
trustees, and a lhJnl with more than 2.1
years. "People were to u c by when
aomeone suggesled that IOll1fthbtg -mJiht
be wrong."
The key lo persuasion, Dolph says,
Fountain Valley
Weighs Boosted
Retirement Plan
A plan to erpand retirement beotfits
for all city employes will be considered
by Fountain Valley City Councilmen
when they meet at a p.m. Tuesday in the
Community Services Building.
The pr~. if adopted, woild con-
tinue retirement pemions: to the spouse
of a Fountain Valley employe.. after j.he
employe's death. The payments woDld be
50 percent of the normal pension.
Currently, a Fountain V.alley employe
must take a reduction In his pen!ion. If he
wants to pass the income on to his or her
spouse.
City councilmen gave tentative ap-
proval to the new pension plan in a con·
tract negoUated a year ago with the
California Public Employes Retirement
System.
The new plao, which Is slated to go lnto
eUect Dec. 2,will cost the city $1&,&54 for
the remaining seven months of the fiscal
year. according to city Flnaoclal Dlrec· ...
tor Howard Stephens.
'369''
'JlllllJR PUTUMI:.
..... ,,... ... , ....... µ ..... _, ...... ..., ....... ( ..... ... •ts l!lll ................... .. --
DAILY PILOT lltff """'9
PRESSES FOR EXCELLENCE
Sc1-I Chief Dolph
"wu a very profeMional approach. We
ouUlned systematically what we were
lrying lo do, how we expected lo get
there, and wby we wanted lo do it. The
board responded lo tbia In a poslUve way
and bas been very aupportive of new ap-
proaches."
Penuading the teaching staff, many of
whom were very secure with the old·
style lecture teaching fonnat, presented
a different problem.
"There were some teachers who had
always been anxious to per90nallze in-
s:tructlon and break oot of the old
methods," Dolph says. "But there were
others who argued that the old wais
were better.
"Everytime 10meone suggested this, ·
my response would be, 'Do the ,...arch
and prove you're right.' "
And oearly always, Dolph reports, the
staff found that there 'i\·ere IOWld, well·
authenticated reasons that the newer
teaching methods were more efiective.
Asking the staff to do research had ~
additional advantage, be 58)'1. "Teacbeis
became very aware of wha't tJie ne.w
'ideas were, and many of .them natural\Y
becatne eager to apply them."
For further stimulation of teachers, .
Dolph broughl In distinguished educalora
to offer his teachers retraining, be
purchased the most modern educallonal
material, and aJways, be contlnued to
press for excellence.
"It was amazing the Initiative some
teachers showed," he says. "I can take
you Into classrooms that are as fine as
you'll find anywhere.
"'But, of course, there are also aome
that haven 't changed at all," be adda.
Dolph remains confident, however,
"You're dealing with many different peo-
ple and a turnabout doesn't come
overnight," he says. "But I definitely feel
the district ill moving."
General Electric
"1•11 luy"
Dishwasher
19995
Model SD250N
Include. r.holoe of color on
front 1'*tlll and l't'nlOnl ot. Old dllihwuhtr. ------
~ w .... , .... ...,b.,,
GINIRAL rucn1c ~ • ...... .....,-. ....
• , ....,,.. ... ,......_ ,. ...... c..t• """"
I c:.11......... """""'""' .., • CM"lll' .,,., I fMlllfllYI "' IMI U,1 1 ~l)'I ffll6illtf
OfUcers wen1 to the couple's 18th floor
epartm nt· Rftcr neighbor• ;1,11rd the ,vn.,,nn scrt11mlng.
Robb.11 w11s ordertd held without ball
"~'ld1 ng a hearing Th11r!lday.
Th..: proJ(ranu will deal with all aspect•
of alcoholism and includt speakers rrom
the fields of medlclne. law cnforcemeni
mental htalth. social health and educa-
tion. Films on alcoholll!" wtll alto be
~ho"·ed durtng the forum \eennas.
••;Aaa;.,;;,;;.;;;._ 8
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mm -Phan-548-7788
t'~-.....,~-'-'""~n_ ... _..,~"-"-·~~~~~
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M-. Oct-2. 1972 H DAIL V PILOT 3
T ransit District _ _Opposes Watson Amendme~J
-.
By JACK BR08ACK
Of "'9 ~IJ ,. Stiff
Voter approval ln November ol I.be
controverslel Watson A m en d m e n t
(Proposition 14) for property tax reliet
would practlcally put the Orange County
Transit District out of business, It's
manager contended today.
District General Manager Gordon
"Pete" Fielding today pro-d that
dlreetors go on record as opposing the
Watsoo measure. His suggestion won
unanimous approval of tile board.
"It Is estimated !hat 1..,.. from the
sales tax on 1NOJ.ine alone "ould be $10
million in the next fiscal year," Fielding
warned.
"It i5 even ~ than that when you
realize that most of the gas tax money Is
used for capital expenditures which are
tw .. thlrd.s federally funded."
He explained that this meant the loss
of JI (from git! taxes) could mean the
pracUcaJ loss of S3.
1be general manager also e1utiooed
that capital lllnd r<qulrvnenls of the
district to buy busts, maintenance equip-
ment and parking facllJUef over the next
eight years are estimated at $18.4
milUon.
"It ls very doubtful that we could meet
these requirements if the Watson
I
Amendmalt Is passod," Fltldlng added.
Approval of the measure would alao bit
lhe !nm.sit district squattly In tile pocket
book from a property ta1 standpoint, the
general manager explained. The amend-
ment would place a 50-cent ceiling on lhe
total property t:q tor all special districts.
"This would probably cut our funds
gained from the district's tax rate ln
half,'' Fielding warned. "This could
mean that even the ateond year of opera·
tloo5 plonned would he wiped out.~
Re also noled !hat °"" third of lhe
residents or Orange County are renters
who wiU not receive any direct akt from
the proposed property tax reduction
measure.
"Most of our regubr bwl riden are
rron1 lower inrome tamllles ~ the PfO':
posed law would hlt thtm e1pec1a1ly hard
since fl lncreaiset their sales laxes
.,.·ilhoot an adequa~ ~uctio:n in_pro~
crty taxes," the general manager ad·
ded.
:"ielding conducted by saying that voter
approval of the measure wo1..ld mean that
the transit district would have to con·
s.Jcr increasing fares, limiting expansion
of bus service and 11bandoning plans for
rapid transit corridors.
Trial of 'Brotherhood' Under Way
Supervisors
'
To Consider
3 Leases
Three Orange County leases -at Mile
Square Park, at the Orange County
Airport and. at Dana Harbor -are ex·
pected to generate some fireworks when
Ute Board of Supervisors meets Tuesday.
The Mile Square lease in Fountain
Valley is for 213 acres of farmland ad-
jacent to the park -land that bas been
the subject of Grand Jury indictments of
two Westminster city officials on bribery
and e*rtion charges.
The airport lease is for the parking lot.
The matter was first brought to the
, board in April when all six bids were re-
jected as unsatisfactory.
The third lease is for the boat sales
and repair facility at Dana Harbor. The
county Harbor Commission has recom-
mended supervisors award the bid to the
finn which came in_ $20,000 below the
highest bidder.
All three leases have been the subject
of heated debate in the past, and
Tuesday's meeting is not likely to be an
exception.
The Mile Square bids are for a one-
.. Year extension of the lease that bas been
)leld since 1967 by Fountain Valley
farmer George Murai.
' At the suggestion of Supervisor Robert
Battin of Santa Ana, the lease this year
''has been broken into three parcels.
;M:ural bas bid"'$14,700 for· tWo parcels
'totaling 130. and _ GeQrge 'l'l!llka,, a
rublessee of Mural's has bid $9,400 tor the
remaining 83 acres. 'The only otbei" bid Is
from Norden Fruit Company at $23,962
for the entire 213 acres.~
Controversy surrounding the property
' surfaced when fonner mayor Qerek
· McWbinney and Planning Commissioner
Tad Fujita, were ir)dicted for allegedly
trying to shake down Murai for $10,000
·to get his bid approved by the supervis-
•ors.
The airport parking lot lease, which
·calls for the operator to return a high
percentage of his gross income to the
county, will be returned to supervisors
with the recommendaUon that the lease
be awarded to a new operator.
, The parking lot has been run by the
Redman Parking Corporation, which is
mbmitting a new bid 0£ $503,'167. The
higbeit bid comes from P a r k i n g
Corporation of America at $509,345.
In the debate on the lease in April,
PCA also submitted the highest bid, but
Real Property Services Director Stanley
}{rause recommended the lease go back
to Redman because of problems otber
lessors had had with PCA. Krause is ex-
Pected to recommend for PCA on Tues-
tlay because of the higher bid and some
iafeguards written into t.hc lease agree-
fnent.
The competition for the boat repair and
sales lease at Dana Harbor will be
between Willard Boat Work! of COsta
Mesa and Dana Point Anchor Marine.
: Harbor CommJssloners in a 4 to 2 vote
(Chairmon Martin Usab abstained) recommended the lease go to Willard
which submitted a bid with a $10,070
boot.I! for the comity. Anchor Marioe's
bid had a $30,500 bonus.
: 1be four commissioners favoring
Willard said the proposal of that firm of·
fered 1 diYeNJlfied operation which had
the best chance of aucce'8 during lhe
tint few years.
DAILY PILOT lletf Pllet.
Cold Snap?
Costa Mesans were a bit
startled to be driving to work
in 4o-degree w e a t b er this
morning. At least that's what
the Imperial Bank time and
temperature teller at Harbor
Boulevard and Fair Drive in-
sisted.
Oasses Begin
At 'UC Irvine;
7,695 Expected
The eighth year of classes at UC Irvine
began uneventfully today w:lth university
officials wondering if all the expected
7,695 students had enrolled.
It will be at least two weeks before the
computers sort out the data from last
week's registration period and spew'OOt
an accurate student count, a spokesman
said.
Meanwhile, signs of lile were all about
the camput1 today as parking lots -in-
cluding two new ones paved during the
summer -filled up, cafeterias began
sUvmg meah:, posters hawking this
Friday's fiJm "Midnight-Cowboy" were
pasted in place of faded, summer-tat-
tered leftover· ads and clusters or young
people found favored seating on the
grassy alopes of Catnpus Park.
Opening day adivlties included . the
laWJchtng of library tours to acquaint
both faculty and students wtth the
services and coIIOdloo.s offered willlin
lhe fiv..atory buildlllg.
The Art Gallery In Fine Ans Vil~
was being readied for Tuesday's opening
of • showing of tile woru of Lot Angelu
artist Eric Orr. 1be dlii>lay will feature
Orr's use of Ilgbt, llOWld and tactll&
sensation and coo he seen from 1 to !
p.m. Tuesda)'3 through Sunda)'3 untli
Oct. 29.
Tbe Anteater junior vanity water polo
team was In the swim on opening day
mettlng Cypttu College In on away
match.
Three View
Massacre
Of Family
BRANDON, Fla. CAP) -A young
divorcee and her two children watched
helplessly as a gunman killed four
persons including her parents and
brother in a Brandon farmhOuse, police
say.
Police said the assailant fired one shot
through a screen window early Sunday,
killing one persOn, and then burst into the
farmhouse and shot three others.
Evelyn Sanders Jchnson and her two
children --.ierr spared.
The victims were identifi~ as John T.
Sanders, 50; his wife, Catherine, 37; Uteir
lft-year-old son, Earl, and a friend of the
family, James Richard Bridges, 28, who
was shot as he lay in bed, police said.
Another brother, 24-year-old John
Sanders, was at work in the dairy behind
the house, about 10 miles east of Tampa.
Police said they arrested Thomas
Turner Chambers, 32. of Gadsden, Ala .,
and 21-year-old Robert Harris of Largo,
after a high speed car chase. Both were
charged with first-degree murder.
. Chambers and Harris were being held
in Hillsborough County Jail in Tampa
without bond.
A neighbor, Mrs. Mary Davis, said
Mrs. Johnson came running from the
house, crying hysterically and yelling,
"They're all dead. They're all dead."
Police· said sbe told &be Davis family
the gunman spared her, saying, "I'm nol
going to till you, just the ones you love
most.'~~ ,
Hillsborough· County 1heriff's officials
said the young divorcee had been seeing
Chambers for three years but left him
about three weeks ago in Texas.
Chambers reportedly followed her to
Clearwater and "threatened the family if
she wouldn't go back with him," Maj.
John Sala of the Hillsborough sheriff's
department said.
Philip Morris
Viejo Purchase
Made Complete
DAILY PILOT lblff ,_.,.
It's Their Bag
George Grainger (left) and Bob Richardson (right) demonstrate their
skills on traditional Scottish bagpipes for brothers Jesse, 7, (loll) and
Davyd Arend, 6, S~ta Ana. Pipe.rs! bjlth from Glascow, ScoUand,
played at Costa Mesa's South Coas Plan durin& the weekend al
British Expo '72. EXpo conUnues through Sunday.
Officers Round Up Aliens
At Nixon's Clemente Home
The Western Mtite Houae hosted a alerted 9tCUrity personnel.
number of very surprised foreign visitors Illegal aliens attempting to enter the
early Sunday -the "visitors" are now coontry commonly trteak up lhe beach
on their way back home after bumbling area past the Western Whitt Houst-and
D1·ug Ca se
Defendants
Face Court
Fourteen defendants linked by ltle prcs-
eculion to lhe so-called ''Brotherhood of
Eternal Love" drug conspiracy that pro-
duceci an hKUctmenl cf 29 persons by the
Orange County Grand Jury appeared for
trial today in Superk>r Court.
All 14 were assigned to the courtroom
of Judge Kenneth Lae. But it seemed
certain at noon that several of the defen-
dants w h o jammed the jury box in a
crowded courtroom would be held for
trial 11 a later date.
Chief Deputy District Attorney James
Enright uplalned that there may be
several Superior Court trials before
charges ani (ully aired against all 29
defendant~.
And District Attorney Cecil Hicks'
chief aide predicted this morning that it
will take six month! to a year to gel
court verdicts of gull! or innocence
against all 29.
"Presumlng." Enright snld. "that we
eventually have all 29 in cuslody."
Seven of the 29 are sllll evading
lawmtn seeking them in a nationwide
.search.
Among their number is Robert "Fat
Bobby" Andris!, 29, of Laguna Buch.
identified by the. pTI>'eCUlion as Uw key
figure in an alleged drug dlslrlbutlon
racket that alao produced the lndlc;t.ment
of Dr. Tirnotbx M=IIY·
Oepu\y O~ Attorney P1l B r \ a n
said the hunt for A.ndrist hQ switched
from I.he HSwallan Islands to "another
spnt In the United St.tu."
Leary Is •till In SWltwl1nd, 1w1Hlng
execution of lhe Swlu government's
order that the LSD culUst who wu con-
victed In Ora.nae Counly on drug charge.s
should be expelled from the tiny Euro-
pean n1t1on.
Cyclis t Killed
On EI Toro Road
onto the high security grounds. lhcn ~·alk along the railroad tracks. of-Oa~erOUJ, curving El Toro Road was
The U.S. Border Patrol look custody flcers said IOd.Q". the a«ne of the NCOnd fatal vehicle •c·
of lhe aliens after the men were ap-It appeared ln this case !Ml tbt. band cldent within a week SUnday when "
prehended. by White House Secret Service of men dimbed a chlln-link fence around motorcyclisl wa1 killed aod hiJ woman
personnel and San Clemente police cf-lhe com)Ollnd and we:e cros.11ng It whtn companion critically Injured.
Philip Morris lnc. today announced !icera in a predawn chase in the closed· their presence was noled by security 1be C.Urornla tllpway Patrol u.id
that it has purchased 100 percent of the access compound. personnel. Ololrles Howard, 36, ot Loll Anteelcs. w•' Four aliens were caught by the com-The aliens app~ndeci ~·c~ in the
stock of the M1Ssioo Viejo Company. bined force of Secret Service men and area set up for perrnantnt peraonnel dead on arrival II Mlsslon Qwnmunlly
The price htl en the acquisition is $48.5 San Clemente police as the aliens' nor~ housing. Oftlcer1 said when ltC\lrlty of· Hospital. Misaion Viejo. Il ls passen.gtr
millioli, of which $25 miJlion wui be paid ward journey took them into lhe Westem !leers called out for the mtn lo halt, lhry Antonia Suart:z, 31 , abo of lm An11elcs,
to the shareholders initially With lbe While House grounds, where hi&hl Y !K'Dllered. It Is btlltvtd that 1Cvcral may 1J listed in very crltkal condlOon in lht
balance based on lhe company's earnings sophiAticated anti-intrusion alann system have golten away. .u.me hospll.al today.
over tbe next five years, according to a I ,;~========~==~==~=~===;::==========~==~======~ Philip Morris spokesman. I j
1be cigarette manufacturing firm.
whlc.h· t.s a parent company for au in-
tern11t1onal cooglomente whJcb markets
the Cigarettes, r..., blades, beer and
dlewlng gum, bas operated with Miiiion
Vltjo _.... lf10 UDC1er 111 option -ment. The rpoknman II.id the prMerit
Mlaioo Vltlo board ol dJrectorl wtll ""°'
tLlue IOd !here wlll be DO cbanie In manoget'oenl
In -t!Gn to the large planned com·
mtmlty In the Slddltback Valley, tile
~ Vi<J<> CornPllJY has I I 1 0 oleveloped res1dmtlal propertlet I n
Denver and Phoenix.
Unweleoine Visitors this full line features
Mountain Lion.s Siglited Near Homes in Ir vine Areq
Jrvtne resi~enb artn'l &IMplng so grttiwyed ca\ about al1 feet long and
soundly these n"1!1s, after sighting of 2\1 feel hlgb on the will, adding !hat
th,.. 111-0unlaln lions ~wllnc Inhabited their appearance didn't frlgbton the
arou of the dty over the weekend, with animal at all.
(wo bli eota spoti.d by a pollctman. They said It stood qp, llntdtcd, bop-
One of the tawny predlton -a third ped clown and 1111blod on -"11ctnt -wu kJw1i1ni 1crou Ibo eoncttta block 'l'urtle Rock Drive and dlappeored In Ibo
wall of a borne In 'l'urtle Rock about 1 Presid..i H...,. Incl.
1.m. Saturday, the oocupanta told Irvine Offlcor Bill Bechlel, """'"""""'"""'"' u • Pollce Olflctr Bob Krtdel. followup to Patrolman Kndel'• dllplldt
He mlved within tbree mlnuta of to ...lroot tbo ·'mounllln !loo, orrived
Mn. Sheryl Honfleld'1 eoll ind found all« It wu -but uld Ito uw two .-al them wttilo en route. oolld evid<nce of a nocturnal visitor 1t He Aid ,.._ ...,.. Illuminlted ...,,. 1115 Sierrl Clelo Road. ·~, ~ large, wet paw print, •boul three dilllnce IWtY by h!J patrol w upu, ~~ loplotl llp I hlllllde, eddlng tbat be CIOllld Inches acrou. wu round on the wall, let lhtlr eftl lh1ne 81 they dlsajlpeared
,.bile nume~s dttp daw acratcbts_ cwertbe \Op.
were tU:bed Into the woodtn fenct:. Jnine Company officials tod17 teemed
OIOctr Krodel 11ld auspldout IOUnds per1\lrbed by the report of preda10r1
In tbe ba<lyml -1 oontlnulng problem amoo1 the -Ioce of the .. ,. com·
In recent montba -led Mr1. Ilan!leld'1 munlty belnc W'l<d out of the Orange
tiu•band and son to ao out and In-Cowuy wlld!"*1.
"'81Iiatt. "If It ........ , lo<' tbe copo ...inc It I
They 11ld they found 1 large. WI. oould undmiand It." he qulPl><d with 1
I
chuclllo.
He edded !hat I -Willi Irvine
Company qrleultural dtportmeftl of.
fidal Bob l!!Idtr -It 1ppHr UloclcaI
!hat -Dom ~ he ........ down from tbo ltIIII Into town.
"Hll people .... out In tbe boonMo Ill
the time and he Aid 1he7'fe ..., no otcn
at all Of bll eola Ibis yur; the eorn-
ollldal said.
' lie Aid Elillr _,., eva rec:all Ill)'
llml In ----..aln llOOI have nilled clown out ol lhdr ruufll
habilll In tbe Slhto Ari/> Mourllaino ..
tile otber llde ol tbs S.. Di<IO "'-•Y·
G-11.~abundlnt In Ibo bl!tl this Jf.ar WU at I loa I•
nplaln w Cltl WGtJJd to11m 1ub-
dM&lonl. oelllby Bommtr Can·
yon ill1d llll'iol.llilln• offer tltom brutl1
CO\'t'I' and Wlltr avppiltl .
'"lbtre &re IOIM-deer Nnnlag 1J11Und,
but they doo't hive claw1," he rtmarlrtd
In r<pnl to telltale ocnlehmltb on !he
llanO•ld f1mlly'1 ftn«
673-5051
0i-Wed. thrv Mon.
9:30 i. 5:30, cloMd T-.
....... k-4· ..__a.,..
10 SPEEDS 'f;;~ $119'6
and includn
PROFESSIONAL MODELS
P'rlced to S4 50.
EXPERT
ltlPAIR
5EltYIC'$
Balboa
Bieyeles 2120 West
Ocean Front ,
1 111<. w .. 1 o1 '"•""' Pie< '
I
DAILY PI LOI ' • Pilot Say.s Hanoi War Call!P_ Humane_~
By Tiie AtlO<lated Pmt
Navy Lt. Mark L. ·Gartley, the Drat of
1he three recently released American
pilots to hold a news conference in the
United States. says hls treatment in a
North Vletnamese prlsooers or war camp
was "hum ane."
Gartley told newsmen Sunday that con-
ditions in the camp had improved al'ld.
were "much bette:r now" than they were
when he was fint imprisoned after being
shot down in 1968.
''fl.1y treatment during capture has
been humane," he said.
j'l have not been mistreated. Prbom
anywhere in the world are no bed of
roses. Thlt was no excepUon.
"But when you take into account the
standard of Uvinj: in the country in which
we were conflned and e1amlned the c:on-
dltions, you'd have to say we were
treated very well," Gartley said.
Gartley spoke for about 25 minutes in a
conference at St. Albans Naval Hospital
in New York City. Then he left for
Jacksonville, Fla., where he entered
another Naval hoapltal for further teltl.
Novy o!ncials doclined to oay bow lool
G•rtley would remain at !be hospital.
'l1le other two releutd pllols, Navy Lt.
(j.g.) Norr~ Cbarlet and Air Fon:e Ma).
Edward K. Eliu, have alao been un-
dergoing tests &Ince their return borne in
the company of antiwar activists.
Ofricials at tbe Balboa Naval Hospital
in San Diego said Charles would bt
released today and continue seeing doc·
tors as an outpatient.
Elias was in a hospital at Maxwell Air
Nixon Hit
E'Of'Cfi Bue ne.ar Montaomery, Ala.
At h~ ..... ooo/ennce, ·Gartley said
the first thing he wanted lo do w., to
coru.ct the famllleo of men who were
prilooers wlth him to ttauure them that
their 1oved ones were not being
mistreated. .
His only regret so far, he said, w••
that he waa J101 allowed "IO meet the
famllles of other prilonen who had come
to talk lo me" at Kennedy Airport.
. He stressed that he had not been held
lnconununic1do 1t the hospital . He said
Mostly Mi~
-•
he had full vlo1t1n1 prlvllq• and "rvo I .
~~~~~.Id to 1Dake-al1-the plme calla •
~
When he arrived at Kennedy Airport ~ 'lburaday nlgbt, hll mother clashed wjth •
military offtciala, lns!Jtin( that ""' had ,
; an ::artern..,t with then,. !hat the fomily •'
woul heve I~ dl)'l alohe t ... ther. '.~ Gartley uld Sunday that t be
"mlsunderstandin_g" haa been clea.red up • and that "military offlctals allorded • myseU and my famlly the secluaioll • which I so desired." l
' • • • • .. •
But Don't Bring
It to Laguna
ONCE AROUND THE BEAT: So nO\V
V.'e have learned that a chap named Tom
~ferrick or Lagwia Beach wou1d like to
buy the Colosseum for $1 mill ion. Not the
one in LA. The older one. in Rome, Italy.
As Bully Reds Launch 100
Merrick, it develops, v•ould'pay out the l,-
()fle million bucks and restore the am-
phitheater of the ancients as a tourist at·
traction. It is also reported that he once
b"ied to buy Alcatraz Island, the former
federal lockup floating out in San Fran·
cisco Bay.
Of Press ·Attacks in South
The Lagunan apparently ha!! no grand
plans to transport the Col~um to the
Art Colony stone-by-stone and rebuild it,
say, on the Main Beach. He would keep
lhe thing in Rome.
THJS MAY COJ\tE as somewhat of a
surprise since we have experience here
in the U.S. in recent times or Americans
\.\'ho buy some European landm ark and
shift it to our region . Look. for example.
\\'hat happened out ~t Lake Havasu
·where they bought off LQndon Bridge and
shipped it over here for reconstruction
into a span across an artificial pond.
Despite the fact that some of our coun·
trymen carried off London Bridge stone-
by-stone. the British have demonstrated
\d th their Expo at South Coast Plaza in
Costa f\fesa that they still have plenty
left.
\\'hy, !hey evrn got f\fesa Police Chief
Roger Neth to don one of those British
Bobby hats the other day for the
photographers and I \Vant you to know
tha t Roger looked real natural. He may
set a new stateside JX>lice fashion.
TIIUS 111E BRITISH may get the last
laugh over losing London Bridge. Chief
Neth may set a new police style here
~·hereupon the British C&.Q_unload all of
those old copper headpleoes on us.
They've probably been lrYID& IO 11gu,. a
v.·ay to get out from under them for
years.
Better yet , the British may end up so
enchanted with their E1po stand at South
Coast P laza !hat lbey'll offer to buy the
whole shopping center, disassemble It
and ship it home to London.
Now, I'd be the last person to put the
knock on London Bridge but somehow I
suspect our shopping center is worth a
touch more to us than that old stone span
was to them .
ANYl\'AY, l'fl.f SURE the British are
real happy to be here in the Colonies at
this time so they can get a flrst·hand
look at how American politics work dur-
ing a presidential election year.
'111ey must have been somewhat shock·
Pd to hear Democratic Congressman
Emanuel Celler get up on nationwide
teevee yesterday and declare his party h1
"a shambles." Thia might seem poor tac-
tics to our British visitors.
Well, you have to remember that
Celler, at 84, was whipped in his New
York primary re-election bid by a 30-
year-old lady named Elizabeth Holtzman .
This may have colored his view of
Democratic Party efticlency.
THAT ASIDE, you s11ll have 10 keep in
mind !hat !be Ropubllcan Party alway1
comes at you looking like a well-ailed
machine hitting on all eight cylinders.
The Democrats, on the other hand.
always approach looking like the
scarecrow from the Wlzard or Oi, doing
pratralls and spraying hay everywhert.
Somehow, however, the Democrats
usually manage to get themselves pulled
topll>er and upright at the Wt po,.lble
m:ment.
Not this time, you say? May~ not. But
look out for next time.
Ul"IT ........
BOBBY FISCHER GOES BEFORE CAMERAS-AND SMILES
Chen Ch1mpion T1pes EpllOde for Bob Hope Show Oct. S
'.!Bobby Fischer Shines
' • • ' \1 With Television Jokes
HOLLY\VOOD -Bobby Fischer, comedian~
It happened in beautiful downtown Burbank Sunday night as the world 's
~ chess champion matched one-line gags with Bob Hope for the comedian's Oct.
.t 5 NBC special.
Fischer, who won the title from Russian Boris Spassky in Iceland last
month. earned $10,000 for about 10 minutes of air lime and proved himself an
able comic.
" Among the gags:
Hope: "Bobby, I heard that all through your match, you were given advice
from lJetu'y Kissinger. Is that true'!"
-• '.FkJd)er: 1'That's right." I;. . Hopt: "Diii it help?"
• "I\ -w \f 'lever meet JU\ St.. John," aald. Filchet' in uletence \o the 1ac.
"J tress who has been one of the presidential adviser's frequent dates.
' The 2t-.)'eet-Cld Fischer showed few of the concerns for arrangements that •
·" he displayed during his championship match with Spassky. u·
\., Rehearsing a comedy match with Hope, he turned the chess table around
and adjusted the time clock, but expressed no concern over the lighting and
television cameras, two problem areas that highlighted his match with Spassky.
"\Ve didn't know until Friday whether Bobby was really coming," Hope ~
cemarked. "American Airlines called me to say that he had missed two ~~
planes and then finally they reported that the door had closed on a plane and
he was Inside it."
f J.. -A , ...
Bible Salesman Admits He
l\.illed Mother, Baby, Girl
CH ICAGO CUPI) -A 2~year-old
unemployed Bible salesman. who has
spent much of the pas\ 10 years in prison
or in me.ntal institutions, has confessed
to the murders of a Chicago mother and
her infant daughter. police said.
Lee C. Jennings Sunday admitted
slaying Mrs. Barbara Flanagan, 27, and
her 18-monttH>ld daughter, Renee, In ear-
ly Scplember and dumping their nude
bodies in the parklng MK of the Com·
munity Presbyterian Cbureh in suburban
Mt. Proapect.
The bodies wore f~d there Sept. 11.
Police said Jennlnp told ll>em he took
the bodies to the church lot because "f
wanted to take them to a church of their
0~11 denomination." It was not im·
medialely known how JeMina;s knew
they "-'ere Presbyterians.
In his statement to police, Jennings. a
native of Jackson. Mich.. m 1 de
references to murders committed in and
around that city. A homicide det-1ve
said plans were under way to quettion
JeMings about unsolved murder cases in
Jackson and also other recent slayings in
the Chicago area.
Jennings was scheduled to appear in
North Felony Court today for a
prtliminary bearing on the murder
charges.
JeMing1 waa arrested Saturday at the
Marrlott Motor Hotel, near Chicago 's
O'Hare Airport, on charges of theft.
Detectives noted Jennlnp' resemblance
to a paliee composUe drawing of the
slayer and that lil.s car was tht type
described by witnesses as having driven
off with the n.nqans v.·hen Mrs.
Flanagan actepted a babysitting job
from an unknown caller Sept. 9.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Democratic
presidential nominee George S .
A1cC.overn charged today the Nixon ad-
ministration bad launched a deliberate
and sustained campaign to discredit
newspapers and broadcasters and was
seeking to replace !he press corps "with
a cheering section."
He told the opening session of the an·
nual UPJ E'Alitors and Publishers Con-
ference that "this administration has
tried to bully the press into docile sub-
mission."
"It has launched a deliberate, sus-
tained campaign to discredit newspapers
and broadcasters," McGovern said. "It
( __ cA_M_PA_I_G_N_'_1z ___ )
has misused federal law enforcement of-
ficers to investigate the personal lives of
reporters.
"And for the first time in our history,
we have seen the government attempt to
prevent -and then ·to punish -the
publication of aitical facts -not
~ause it hanned the country but
because it embarrassed the govern-
ment.''
HE· REFERRED to the ad-
ministration's attempt to prevent
publication of the Pentagon Papers in
legal moves that went all the wa y to the
Supreme Court.
"This administration seeks to replace a
press corps with a cheering 5tction -
v.•ith a propaganda machine that is in
league with the ' govemmerlt, to be used
by lhe government, to tell the people
'ol.'hat the government wants them to
hear." McGovern charged in his hard.lit·
iing speech to the editors and publishers.
He said President Nixon has corrupted
the palitical process "to turn the national
election into a guessing game, where the
people are asked to elect a President
without knowing what he v.wld do if he
won."
l\.1eGOVERN ALSO CHARGED today
that the Nixon administration is the most
corrupt in the nation's history. Not only
that, the Democratic pre s ident i a I
nominee said, it has com1pted America.
McGovern also assailed the ad-
ministcation for continuing "an unjust
\\'ar." He said, "Now we know the war
could end at any moment if we would on-
ly break free from the brutal re.gime in
Saigon."
"Our sacred honor," the senator ad-
ded, "ii laid at the feet ot dictators, dope
runnen and gangsters in Saigon -a
governmtnt that subverts our ideals just
as eagerly as it steals our aid.''
But McGovern targeted chiefly on what
•he called domestic corruption by tbe Nix·
Q11 administration.
SAIGON (AP) -The Saigon command
reported today 100 North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong rocket, mortar and sabotage
attacks across Soulh Vietnam.
It was the highest nwnber or enemy
assaults in a single day in more than two
months, although most of them were
small, a spokesman said.
In Thailand, terrorists fired about 36
nlortars into the U.S. air base at Udom.
300 miles northeast ot Bangkok, from
where air strike.s against North Vietnam
are launched. A U.S. Embassy
spokesman said a radio tower was slight-
ly damaged but U.S. planes and person-
nel were untouched.
11IE U.S. CRUISER Newport News
left the Vietnam war zone and steamed
to the Philippines with ·!be bodies of 19
sailors killed in. tlie wont U.S. naval
disaster thll year. · '
Ten other men in the crew of 1,300
were injured by the eiplosion in an eight-
inch gun turret that rocked the 21,000-ton
warahip early Sunday as it shelled the
northern coast of South Vietnam.
The Navy was investigating tbe blast,
described as an accident. It was the
worst disaster aboard a 7th Fleet
warship since Jan. 14, 1969, when a series
of explosions killed 27 men aboard the
ca rrier Enterprise during training ex-
ercises en route from Hawaii to
]ndochina.
The Newport News was expected
sometime Tuesday at the Subic Bay
naval base in the Philippines.
MAJ. GEN. ALEXANDER M. HAIG,
a . special represe~tative of Preside,nt
N11on, conferred with Soqth, Vietnamese·
President Nguyen Van 'Ibieu for 2'h
hours today in & wide review of the
political and military situation in
Indochina.
A spokesman ror the U.S. embassy said
he did not know the substance of the
talks, but·sources had said Haig planned
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Otllvery of tht Dally Piiot
Is guarantttd
Morldly·Frlcl1y1 tt YoU ao not ,.,..,. vour
,..,..., Oy J:XI p.m., CtH MCI Voll!' mpy Wiii
De brougl'lt to Y'DU. "•II• .,. ..~an unlU
1:30 ci.rn.
Slh,1nl1y •!Id IYl'lltl'l'r tt rt11 cro not recerw vour COOY Or • t .m. S•hm:liy. or I 1.m,
1.,na1y, ull '"° • COPY wur bl ~ to 'l'Oll. C1ll• 1r1 ,.,_.., u11lll lO 1.m.
TtltplKlnts
Motl Ore,... C-IY ... ,... ........ , M1·Ull
N,,..,.,._I tlUl'lll"llOfl ltfdl •nd W•tlnlrllltr ................ W.ltH
1111 Cltmtnte, C..11t1!T1110 I•~. ltt1 Ji.Nin C111htttno, 0.111 l"o!nl,
IDV!h l .. -. Ullunt Nlelu.I , .,, 4h•'42t
Autumn Weather Prevails
Except for Scattered R<iin, Day Nice, Fair
11•1.0.Aol W1•1111• \A..,ICl IO""C•'9 ,,. 1•• 111••·J •11 ,. ..
Flf•I flltpl ,,.,,. .... ......... _ ... flJltOA'I'
,..., ··-........ . M-•tttt t ·lt I ·"'
1-02 '""' ~· 1.13 .........
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t 1• """'' I)
.... l :ll ''"'' "" , . ., "·"'
... _
Kldnefl Transplant
Shelly Kern, o, Waukesha , Wll., h01clJ for hospital at Univonlty of
San trandsco for kidney transpl1nL She slu on lap of bu fatlier,
Antliony. who will donate !he kidney. Mother Marlaln alll •l rlabL
United Airlin., employes collected money for the lamlly'1 !Ugh[
'
'I
·i
to give 'Mlieu a full report on the secret .,
negoUationS in Paris between Presiden-
tial adviser Henry A. Kissinger and
North Vietnamese diplomats.
Haig is due to return to Washington
Wednesday lo report to Kissinger and
Nixon on his conference with Thieu,
sources said. North Vietnamese in·
sistence on ousting Thieu from a future
coalition government in South Vietnam is
one of the stumbling blocks at the Paris
talks.
Pilot,s Approve
New Pact, Halt
95-day Strike
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI)
Northwest Alrlines and Its 1,619 striking
pilots reached agreement today on a new
contract, bringing an end to a 95-day~d
strike which Idled 11ir service in much of
the Midwest and Northwest.
The company. seventh largest among
the nation's trunk air carriers, said it
will be five to seven days before full
service is restored.
e Salt Lake Rattled
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -A mild
earthquake has shaken the Salt Lake-
Swnmit County area in northern Utah,
.( IN·SHORT.;. · }
the University of Utah seismograpblc
station reported, but no major damage
resulted from the tremor.
Officials at the station said the quake
meuured 4.0 on the Richter scale and
was reported at 1:43 p.m. Sunday.
e Wayne Donates $500
TUCSON, Ariz. IAP) -Actor Jobn
Wayne, who won a bout with canc6, bas
donated $500 to the University of
Arizona's cancer-detection futid .
Wayne made his donation during a 1
brief trip to Tucson last week where be
watched a friend, Chic Iverson, receive a
masonic degree.
Wayne's gift will be used for the ..
purchase of ultrasonic cancer detection
equipment, the university aMounced
over the weekend.
e Palms Thre.tetu!d
MIAMI, Fla. IAP) -South Florida'•
stately coconut palms, a state ll)'lnbol to
tourists and natives alike, are being
threatened with extinction by a
mysterious plant disease which t\Il'IUI
palm fronds to a jaundiced yellow
''almost overnight."
'!'be hl&bly contagious dioease, called
"lethal yellowing'' by plant experts, was
first detected on Florida's malnland in
September 1971 whtn trees in fashionable
Coral Gables bea:an turning yellow.
Newswoman, 24,
Salesman Slain;
Reward Offered
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) -Aulhorities
hoped l*Y that a $5.000 reward posted
in the slayltlg of. a newswoman and a real
esi.te salesman would provide a break in
the case.
'Mle vlcllms, Trlcla Grlmes, 24, and
Peter Williams Jr .. 2$, were found shot
to death Saturday at 1 picnic area :1e1r
the N~ }Uver tHt ol here. lollss
Grimta WH wtmtn's edJtor of the
Raltllh Times.
SUnday ntabt, Frank Daniela Jr., pml·
deot of the Rw and Obstrvu Publllllllnti
Co., which publishet !be Tlmeo, on-
nounced lhe -la olferln( • $$,000 rtWard lo any pe_. fllrnlllllllla the
Wike C.0.ty lbtr1ll with lnlonnotlon
ludlnti IO arrat and comlctloft al the
klller or t1lltr1. Offlclall SUnday said they did not know
what;notlvatod the killinp. Robbery wu
ruled oot since WtlUamt had ~ in hll
wallet and both 'lctlnu were ttW "'ear-
in( WTlstwatches. Miu Grimes bid not -_ .. u, .... 111tec1 •
'11lere ,.., lpe<lliatlon that Mlal
Orlmtt may have known the kllltr or
kllieri. One of the four bullets that struck
her len powder burnt lndleatinl 1 ahol
fired 1t cloM roo1•. WUU1ms was lhOt thtte Umti . no bullets were appamilly from a .n.
caliber rme.
) I
I
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I
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I
ll 7 ' .\
I
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Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 65, NO. 276. 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1972 N TEN CENTS
l,lonae Oller Has. L,.gunan
By BARBARA KREIBICH
0t IN C1lly Plitt Sll'tf
Thomas Merrick, the wealthy Lagunan
who has offered to buy the Colosseum for
$1 million and restore it .as a mecca ror
Rome sightseers, today found himself the
target of newsmen, photographers and
television crews who descended on the
Art Colony to learn more about his am-
bitious plan.
He thought or it last wee.k, Merrick
said, when be read in the papers that the
Italian government had been forcP.d to
close the 2,000.year-0ld ruil2 because of
the tw.ard from stones falling from its
upper levels.
The government. according to the
repart5, cannot afford the $2 million
restoration job necessary to make the
Colosseum safe for public viewing oooe
more ..
Merrick, who is of Italian descent and
attended school in Rome as a teenager,
offered to buy the international lanctmark
for $1 million of his own money, and
raise the necessary funds for it:. restora-
tion.
In return, he proposes that an ad-
mission fee be charged to future visitors,
which he would share with the Italian
government to help recover ltiJ in-
vestment
Merrick arld the Reef Realty office.
which is handling bis offer, today report-
ed phones ringing off lhe hook u U.S.
and European news and television crews
sought interviews.
Feueta Vitali, Italian-born real estate
woman who is serving as Merrick's rep-
resentative to Italian authorities, said
she has of fl c i a 1 I y transinitted
his of f e r to Rome via the Italian
which is handling his officially transmit-
ted hL! offer to Rome via the Italian
Consul.lie In Los Angeles and also bas
asked the New York correspondent of the
Italian newspaper Corriere de.Ha Sera to
supply her with the name of an officia! in
the Italian M1nistry of Mounuments and
Fine Arts whom she can contact when
she rues to Rome later thi.9 week.
Tiie Ministry Is charged wilh lbe
preservation and protection of national
monuments and works of art in Italy.
"I think lt is 1 wonderful idea and a
fantastic opJ>Ortun.ity for the Italian
in Spotlight
government," sakl Mias Vitali. who is a
nc.tlve of Rome. "Of course this ls just
the first proposa.1 -the di9cu.ssk>n
undoobledly will go back and forth, just
as It does in any real estlte agreement."
Merrick. whose family balls from
Locamo Jn the Italian lake OlUlltry, was
born in the United States and was sent
back to Italy to attend the Sel.lslone
College for boys when he wu 14.
Now $7, he bas lived In Laguna Beach
for the past 10 years, making hiJ home at
12S> Anae1pa Wa)(. He formerly owned
and lived in Pyne Castle, an Art Colony
landmark once touted as a possible site
for President Nizon's Western White
House.
He last visited Rome, he said today , in
1950.
"I know you can't appralee 10mething
like the Colosseum in actual dollln." he
said, "bul I thought they might want an
angel to fix it up and It would be
rea!OOable to charge an entry fee -
right now I'm just thlnk:lng out loud.
We'll have to wait till we get aome
response from the Italian government to
dlscuss more details."
Reports Ordered
Newport Asks Environment Data
DAil Y l"llOT ...... ll'r LM I"-
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of ... D.i1r l"ief Sl.tf
Newport Beach today told developers
of sir. major projects, including the
Irvine Company and the firm that wants
to build condominiums on the site of
Balboa's Fun Zone, that they must file
environmental <impact statement! before
lhe> will get building permits.
The order involves construction valued
at more than $37 million and will likely
be extended to a hall-dozen more proj-
ects that race planning commission
review Thursday night.
POLICE CAMERAMEN SHOOT PICTURES WHICH MAY HELP EXPLAIN PATROL COPTER CRASH
In V•c•nt Field, A Routine Practice Mission Ended Rou;hly For Two Shaken Crewmen
City Manager Robert L. Wynn said this
morning that the Irvine Company's $15
million Promontory Point apartments
and the Robert H. Grant Company's $16
million Newport Crest condominiums are
two of the projects that will need the
special reports.
Wynn said the city will also require Im-
pact statements from the JAK Construc-
tion Company for its 47-unlt, fl.2 million
condominilDnl oo Palm Stree1 In Balboa,
in 11:m11, -... Udll'·Pal!< Drive, a "lkllll singlo-family lract In Big
Canyon vllue<f 1114 mlllloo llJd II units
in Nori!! Blal!'to be tiuilt by G<orge Doi·
stein at a total cost of $800,000.
Cranston TeDs ··
Orange Coast's
Share of Funds
The Orange Coast's share of federal
funds to be returned to local government
comes to $1.75 million, according to
figures from the office of Sen. Alan
Cranston (D-Calil.).
Those figures do not include lhe $9
million that is expected to go to the
county of Orange Crom the revenue shar-
ing blll ba<:k by President Nixon.
According to the figures f r o m
Cranston's Los Angeles office, Orange
Coast cities will receive the following :
-Costa Mesa, '506,491-
-Fountain \'.alley, $116,845.
-Huntington Beach, $614,000.
-Newport Beach, 1183,612.
-San Clemente, $128,125.
-San Juan C8pistrano, $18,934.
-Seal Beach, $90,803.
The spokesman for Cranston was
1blable to provide a figure for Laguna
Beach, but the city's Finance Director
Robert Green estimated their share
would be about $91,000.
Most of the cities have received noUces
!hat !heir checks for !be first hall o( 19}2
wlll be mailed out later thiJ month
fOU.owing final congressional action on
the bill this week.
The $30 billion, Ove-year revenue shar·
ing bill will provide, the first major
federal aid lo cilles that can be used for
OJ'6'atlng expemea ln basic aervleta like
police, nre, envlronuwltal protection.
public tr11U1portaUon, --Y.ecreation and
aoclal services ror lhe 1'00' and aged.
Tbe State of California will receive
f18S.4 million. and a total of S370.7
nillllon wlll be distributed lo local
governments within the m:i.te.
SW>ervisor David Baker has suggested
thal -the county's share be used for prop-
erly tax ttllel. bul his board of
supervisors colleagutt have Indicated
they would rat.her bold 1 public hearing
before making lhat declaion.
AD MAKES SHORT
WORK OF BEETLE '
U yoa'r< looklnl for an ... mple of how
to R.11 wbatevt.r It b you have tor ule,
lry lhls:
* "l!l VIV Bua. ar1alnal ~. Vtr)I rood oonditk>n.
S1!IO. UX•XXXX. '
11 WOllld be bard to -!be
perfonnance ""'°"' of that mJibly mite. The 1h,...11ne Id 10ld the car lbe nnt
day It -,.,,.....i In the DAILY Pl!,OT.
Dlr<et liiie to cluellled ldwrllslog
ttl!Ultl al the DAILY PILOT II -
Try.It
Mesci Police HelicoiJter
Crashes in Empty Field
One of Costa Mesa's two police
helicopten: sustalned major damage lhis
morning when it crashed in a vacant
field just outside city limits, flopping
around like a beheaded bird-with it.a rotor
blades whipping.
Neither the pilot oor his cameraman-
observer was injured when the little bub-
ble-<:anopied Bell chopper hil the ground.
about 100 yards off lbe end of Canyon
Drive.
Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow was at the
Last Rites Set
For Lela Haskell
Memorial services ire scheduled for 1
p.m. Tuesday at Pacific View Memorial
Park for Lela Haskell of Bay Island tn
Newport Beacb who died Salw1lay at lhe
age of 73.
The wife of Earl W. Haskell, vice
president of the M. H. Sherman Company
of Newport Beach, she was a nalive of
Nebra!ta and later 1 resident of Los
Angeles. Sbe wu active with the
A.uistance League of Loo Angeles and
moved to Newport Beach in 1955.
She Is ourvil'ed by her ~band. Earl,
of lbe family home 11 U Bay Island; two
""""· Dr. Wllllam HukoD of Lido Isle.
Dr. llolWd lluUJI of eo .... del Mar:
two dauiJ>ttrJ. Vlr(lnla Mae lllskell of
Hunllnglon Beach and Mn. Carolyn
Brown of Garden Grove; . and li:t
grandchlldrtn.
controls and Detective Lt Harold
Fischer was flying along to shoot some
photographs in COMecUon with a regular
assigmnent when the craft went down.
InVestigators for the Federal Aviation
Administratk>D were called immediately
to interview Capt. Glasgow about
clrcum!tances of the 9:45 a.m. crash.
The ~r was trucked away from
the site on flat. empty !tate-<>wned land
which will be part of Fairview Park If
the facility becomes a reality,
Police Chief Roger E. Neth -himself
a licensed belioopt<r pilol -said he lsn"I
sure jus& what happened and would
prefer to leave any comment at thl1 Ume
to FAA ezperts.
"All we koow Is he hit lbe ground,"
Chief Neth remarked.
He did add that Capt. Gla.sgow was
practicing autogyration landing at the
time something apparenUy went wrong,
pointing out this practlce is required of
all department officers aulhoril.ed to fly
Eagle missions.
Otief Neth noted an autogyraHon l&.~
ding -a simulated emergency 1etdown
without power -is actually simpler than
landing wtth the engine on because there
la no lon!ue Imbalance to offset
Nonnally what can go wronc. in IUCh a
landing la U..t !he I.Ill rotor dlpo low ind
hill lhe croun<I, nipping lhe chopper
forward onto Its -and upside dcnm. ~lon<d at the ..,..., Capt. Gl111ow
refemcl all querlea to Otler Neth bul
W&J beard to &ay I.he tall W&J not down
wb<n he bit.
Chief Neth al3o noted there was no
(Set COM"ER. P1ge II
Community Development D I rector
Richan! V. Hogan also dlsclOMO<! this
morning that his staff is recommending
that the planning commission require en-
vironmental Impact statements on rive
project! up for approval Thursday night
They are the Irvine Company's •acre
N o r t h -F o r d commercial-industrial
development abo\te P h I I c o • F o rd ' s
Aeronutronic plant and an apartment
complex proposed. by Irvine on a 5.7-acre
bayfront tract on Bayside Drive west of
Marine Avenue.
The apartments are proposed on part
of the site of what was once going to be a
commercial development known as
Balboa Wharf that drew strong ob-
jections from Balboa Island residents.
Hogan sakl he also ls recommending
that plannert require impact statements
Burglars Enter
Dunes Trailer
A Lido Jsle man's home av;ay from
home, parked in the storage Jot at
Newport 0u!lff, was broken Into over the
weekend by thieves who took a 10Uveni""
pistol ind a ham radio 9't.
1be $.'00 lou wa.s dlscovtrtd Sund11y
momlng by William Novick . 126 Via
Lorca, when he went to check hlJ Ltrge
motor home.
Polite aald Nov1ck found one door of
the vehicle pried open. a '250 radio set
taken from Its mounting.I on the dash and
a .45 caliber automaUc pistol and
shoo& holster worth SIOO removed
from a 1helf ovtt the steering wheel
Novick told pollce I>< had last cllecked
the motor borne Sept. 24 and found all In
order.
Newport Losing on You?
Services i11 Some Areas Ou tru11 Tax R eve riues
By WIUU..V SCllRlllllEll °' .. ...,........ .
Unlesl )"OU '"'~ rostdml of Udo Isle,
Linda tale or Harbor Ille, cbmca ire tt
COii.i Newparl Beacb more lo provide
H<Vt<tt to i-.,.. ol town than It 1e11 (n$ntuml. speakinc, acoordlnl to I
repo<t by !he CommllnllY
Del~ lloportmoal. raldenli.l
and lndtlllrJal ..... -tlle dlJ' • Joi
mo<e lo"""' than It (<II bl<:k lo -whUe botolo, restauranta, of(lce bulldlnp
and v....i lllld 1how In !he munlclpal
profit column when -oro lft!~
•pins! tu return..
Tiie ._i, ...-Uod to tho elly .....
ell ltir lludJ, lo coiled Ille Cool-Re<enue
S)'lltm Incl will be med In dtl.nnlnlntl
....,.... of lctloo In the dty'a 1--1
plAn.
'"It abould be undentood tblt tbla -
poood l)'Sl<m ii I lenetlf llUide lhot will
1u:Icate lbe problbl• fltcll effecll of
•arloua ~ cate1ori• of land
dntlopment," .. w ~te P1lnner -eow.n. C-U llld Ille ""1lllon In net output
ol nrlous JJ11U of Ille city II duo
p<tmlrily lb Wide dllporlllea In -...i
Vllua-
Stlta l"GP<!'lf tu retuml an retldeo-
tlal and otber ~y Jn the Chy ... I
major IOUIU of m.nue IO ..._.. auch
teNlcet u police. fire and 1mt.rtl
-roUq. . "II la •fll'l""'l lhlt u-..... of hlah
land vlluea with hl&)>er valuo home&
hive the molt fa\'Ol'"lble Colt-8.nenue
relatlanlhlp." Cowtll said.
For eumple. C.W.U aid !be only
ll'tu lo lhow I per ICl'I profit •t lhe
lime the •udy na lll.tdo -. Udo Isle.
wb1ch aNwed 1115 In the p1 .. column
llld Undo and ""1lor lslel whldl .-
ed I prollt maraJn of men than II.ODO.
BJ allllnll, 1 .number at Mllltical
onu In tlle dty lhowed -of IUOO
"" more.
Moll of C..-dd -· West Newport, Newpst ll<llJU, Do Yer
Shom, WettcUll, J!u!Wf llld the
llorbo< Vie• Homea tncl -
"'Pll•• per ..... rtl.ttlonabl ... eo..u
uid.
a t, llanqor Robert Wynn •Id the
<S.O COST, Pl(e 11
• I
from the .Irvine Company on a proposed
zone change for part of the Castaways
property, that sectk>n fronting on Dover
Drive between 16th Streets and Westcllif.
Two small condominium project.!. one
for six units and the other nine units, on
Balboa Peninsula should also have
statements prepared that will tell their
impact on the environment, Hogan said.
He said he did not know how much of a
delay, if any, this would cause in the
start of construction of any of the proj·
ects.
Hogan said he will review the
statements on the projects that a~
awaiting bolldlng perm.its and If they artr1
completed and show no negati"' Impact ,
the delay would be minimal. ~
The planning commission will rtview
all Mure statements.· however , and he
indicated this could slow down approval
procedures.
Hogan did no! outline the criteria the
city has established for dcvelopen to
ineet in compiling their I mp act
statements.
He indicated that ii h• only tentallve
!Set PER.l\;11!5, Pagt tJ
Sight Restored
HeSees4.fteI 24 Years ' Darkness
,
LONDON (lll'll --1Clno !'«tel emerged from !he airliner, he llW
lhe woman be bad llYOd 'lritlr fc1·-more lllln Ill yura but had never Re\.
"I bad 1 o\eotOI ~ but you are much leveller !ban I 1mq.
lned," Fetlel 41. said u he 1....t II bll 1'111, Ena. 41.
Fettel, blinded 24 year1 ago by 1<ld thrown 1t him. ttlumed Sunday from
Rome where a surgeon, Dr. Bemedetto Strampelll, re~ his siaht.
At London'• Heathrow Airport, be saw his wife of 20 years and hls sons,
Paul. 16. and Adrian, 15, for the llrst time.
"You never told me what btautUul eyes you bad," he said. "Don't let them
mist over with tears."
"And look at my 10Ds!" he elUlled to onlooker•. "Whal stripping chlpa
they are."
The Fett.ls met ahortly after his acctdenl In 1941 al a hospital In Eocl.tnd
where he was a patleot and abe wu a nurse. Five years later, they married.
'Vigilante' Slwots Two
Mesa Burglar Suspects
By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL
Of "'9 PMl'r l"llft IMfl
A vendinR machine man on his own an-
ti-burglar vigilante patrol opened fire on
two brothers 111 A (Mt.a '-1Ha bar--thls
morning, wounding both and hitting one
headon In the groin wilh 1 lhotiun blast
The 1gonlzed man -his lower ab-
domen shredded by buckshot -WU
dropped off at JI01g Memorial llorpllal
shortly after the 5 1.m. lncidenl.
His brother wu arresttd moments
later on Newport Boulevard 1t Via Udo.
when Newport e..cb Police Office!" Jim-
my DonaJd.ton stopped the gtt.aw1y car.
Lui&! Corona , is. wai atlll undereotna
aurcery It Hotg Mttne>rill Hotpllll dur-
ing mkt-.moming hourt for hil 1bdomin1J
wounda and medical penoruw:I u)d his
condiUOO WAI not estAbliJhtd.
He w11 ddlnltt.ly golna to be admJttC!'d.
hovn~Yt:r, U)ty noted.
His brolber, Steven c.orona. wu ht.Id
by N ........ B<lch poll« briefly. !hen
takm to Jfole Mt:mor111 JI01pltal for fit·
1ml111tlon btl.... btlng lhlppod IO
Cringe County Mtclicll ~-
eoat. Meu Police llelt<llYO Wl)'IW
Jlar1>er Aid lhe l<COnd °""""' -1ppean to hive bHn wounded more
_, lhln lint btlil!Hd.
If< .... hit by -211 g--....
ptlleU. ono of ""1dl X-ny1 lndlc>l.I
lod(od In or ,,.... bil bolrt.
D«ectl ... l'iclrm Katdl, llao ualgned
to the ..... uld tho -burwJary
""""' W11 atllJ I,.. on I tU"etcbor It
thl county l1dllty 11 t a m., four boun
after bt w wounded.
lomotlpton aid "'"'11ng -"'"11 operator llnwy B. 11-. M.
fired I to11J al four blalta II tba eor-
btod:e 1 danft(""a pr'4aWH COilbonllUon
1t tho Plt1" II n1111t club.
lilqmaM -who bu I cbaln of coJn.
opented ftndlnt ind 1 m 11 1 t m e " t m-lndudlng pool l.lblel -bu
aulf..-.cl 1 -of burslor7 -..,. • PIO Jou lrt Plor 11 jult 1 moot.lo ....
'11e .... ~ •ft<r 1111 ~·
Delective Harber mnarked today, uyfng
SltgmaM ahowed up at 1'71 Newport
Blvd., to make sure the prtmlles wtf'I!
secure.
!le found evidence that It wun't and
appartntly heard the Coronal lnsidt:.
"lie calltd them out of the buUdlna."'
Detective Harber continued, uylnc •l
that point SkpaM thought one of the
susptdl had a tun and opened f1re with
hlJI single JtXJt weapon.
Poli« aald &l<emaM reloodod and
fired apln u the wounded men Bed co
lheir car, puUlni: two more bluu into
the vehk:M before k wu oul of rqe.
lnvestl11ton 11-'d they doubt whtthtr
any crlmln1I chat1ea •~ llke:l1 IO bt fil-
ed 1111nst Stegmarm. who wu UT'flted
hlmalf HV'eral yran 110 ror •llt&C!d
1ambUt11 v)ol1Uom.
We•dle r
11"11 be <oOl<r on TU<lday. tho
... lhe<l•d' pndlc:ta. •hh blciia
of 7S Inland. -1._ lhouJd
be around 1t w11h hJch ....,.
lhr<ucJ>out the di)'. Lows lcialCJit
!Mii.
I NSIDE TODA "Y
£0f"ft 1/ P'rrfidnt N f z o •
s~otdd m~ C.ZJ/orw.ia bf e
imldlll<U. obtrn'"' ..., 1111 po-
1.JtJtoJ coott.alll "'"' "°' provfdf
"'""" p"'11og -· /or o!Mr GOP con<Udo"" S« ttarJ. hqc 12.
' '
-'f DAILY PILOT •
1:
Gleo11ai1ag Co1·, Glea11ai119 Eyes
f\Tarcus Gartner. 11 . of /\nah-eim, joins Balboa Island
classic car buff Alan Blun1 for a look under the bon·
net of a 1925 Rolls Royce during Sunday's concours
d'elegance. About 75 of the classic and antllJue Brit-
ish automobiles were entered in the British Expo
'72 showing.
Newport Lawman Takes
Wild Ride in Car Caper
One NeY.TJOrt Beach narcotics detective
had a y,·ild ride in La Habra Sunday
aboard a speeding getav.'ay car, before
his partner shot out a rea r lift'. causing
S. Coast Plaza's
'T,vo Elizabcths'
Tour on Tuesday
Dr. Alex A. Cumming, director of the
Plymouth Museums in England. wiU give
a guided tour Tuesday night of the Two
Elizabeths exhibition at British Expo '72.
Reservations for the 8 p.m. lour may
be applied for at the Expo information
itand at South Coast Plaza.
1'bt Two Eli7.abeths exhibition conlains
valuable items from the reigns ot: Quttn
Elizabeth I and Queen Elizabeth 11.
Amoog them are navigatkmal tools and
personal properties of Sir Francis Drake.
the first Briton to set foot In California.
Other British ExPo attractions sc hedul·
ed for Tuesday include a "Find the
ft1 ystery Man" Sherlock Holmes contest
from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.; a fashion show by
Jaeger of London from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.:
tea and biscuits from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
end performances of Professor Codman's
Punch and Judy Show at 3:30 p.m .. 4:30
p.m .. and 7 p,m
Orange Man Held
After Home Burns
A fam ily row in Orange Sunday cndrd
with one man jailed on suspicion of arso n
and attempted murder after his mother
and brother ""'etc rescued from their
burning honit~.
Police arrested Manul:'l (iortarez. 49. llf
268 N. Lemon St, who the)' allt·ge set lire
to his own home after a da y Jong argu-
me nt with his mother. ;\irs. Jo~ephine
Gorta rer,, 75. and his hrother Jost'ph, 42.
The elderly woman And hrr son were
rescued from the fier('Cl.Y burning home
by firemen who f>stimHled damage to the
structure al SS .000.
Manual Gortarez wa~ arre~tPd near the
home abou t 45 minutes ahcr the nre
started.
OlANGI COAST N
DAILY PILOT
TM°""""' Cont DAILY PILOf, wlllt WhoCfl
h ~ ,,... N"""·"•••, 11 llUOli-'-"1'
1M Df"H99 C ... t Pwll1llM C°"lllot~Y S.... ••'* dlllllftt ••t P'llCI'-'*', M-•"I' ll'l"'Vl!lll
Ftld.t"I'. W Col;16 M"•· H~I fl••r.,,
~ •Mdl/F-1.,,.. V•lln", ltQUll.t
&ffch, 1nri...1~1,o.icl •"II ~•n C"'-1•1
SM! JIOM C••l••...O A l•"lll! t9Q!Ofl•I
Olldllr.n 11 puG!lslted ~•l\l'fO"Yl '""" !urt1IAV\,
,.,. llflo'lc.IMI ,..,...l.,,.lnQ pl•n• 11 •! JJJ w"''
lt"I' Stf<MI, C.I• MH•, Ctl•liM-"10, t1'1'.
:l•~tt N. W1ff '°'"""''°" al\lll P'uDIUl'l(f"
J1cli "· c ... r1 • ., \lb ,.,.._..,.,,, alld Gt_.&1 ,,,.,._,.,
Th•l'fl•• ic.,.a ·-,..._,, A . Mvr~ln.
M ..... lfl9 Etll!Or
L P1t1r 1Cri19 ........,,.. 8-.1'1 Clly i:dllor
N..,_. IHcll Offk1
JJJJ Newport loul1¥11d
Mtll!Jtt ,U4r•••1 l'.O. l oc 1115, ,7.~J .,,....,_
OMll Nini: D W''9f Stf Sir"' .......,.._ e.oi m ,..,.., "-""81~*' SU<J11 1nts 11'1(111 ao.,i..,,,.
11111 CIMIMll1: JU *°"" II C1,,._ ... 1
Tt1.,•1• C714J HMJl1
C'rnlflM Al•erth ... "42·1671
~1. l17!. OrltlOt Ct••' ~n~ ~r. ,,.._ _, tlelrlbt 1Hv.tr11....._
•IW'-1 Nftw Of' lllfVf'1~1 ,.., ...
m.y M ·~-~ •P«lit flff' 1111i..-o1~1......, ••
-,,_~_, 60t •If II Ctff• ~. c~~ 1rf wrltf" GM =~~".:: ,.,:;~~.~' ,,.,,.~
the vehlcle to crash into two others.
The driver was dragged from the
wreckage and liook"ed'On a~ mulfitude ot
charges, in addition to an arrest warrant
charging him with conspiracy, a felony
offense.
Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel and Detec·
11ve ~like Hiet.ala narrowly escaped in·
jury in the Sunday afternoon episode,
\1'hich left Hank D. Kuykendall, 22. in jail
today.
The suspect is charged \\·ith assault on
a police officer with a deadly weaJ)On,
poiSeSSion of dangerous drugs for sale.
and J)Osses.sion of dangerous drugs.
La Habra police officers had ar-
companied Konkel and Hietala to
Kuykendall's home at 851 N. Citrus St.,
in connection with a speclfic case.
"Affirmative," Sgt. Konkel said with a
grin when asked if It turned out to be an
exciting afternoon in the inland city.
He said Kuykendall emerged as the
contingent ot lawmen appt'Oaebed and
jumped lnto his car upon remgnizing the
. beach city detectives.
"He hung it into reverse and tried to
wipe us both out," Sgt. Konkel charged.
claiming Kuykendall dcliberateJy tried lo
crush his v.·ould·be captors agaiiist a
parked car with his vehicle's bumper,
Konkel jumped onto Kuykendall's car
and grabbed for a hold, while Hiet.ala
nimbly leaped over tbe hood of the park·
ed car, spun around and blew out the
fleeing car's back tire at 50 feet.
His partner, Sgt. Konkel. jumped off
and Kuykendall , swerving out of control
with. the tire blown out, smashed into a
parked car, ramm ing it into a La Habra
police car.
ln\·estigators claim they found 45
narcolic pills in the suspect's possession
and - after obtaining a search warrant
-found 120,000 more worth $30,000 in
st reet sales inside his home.
54 Area Agencies
To Benefit From
United Way Goal
About 54 community S<'tvice agencies
\\"ill benefit from a $1 .315.000 United Way
g<.1al during 1973, according to Charles
Gi\bt'rt, president of the Southern Orange
County United Wa y.
The 54 redpients Include suCh agencies
as the Boy Scouls. Girl Scouts, Boys
Clubs and th e American Red Cross.
c;i]bert believes the $1.31 mill ion goal
11i\I cover nea rl y 100 percent of the
human needs of 800,000 persons livina in
NewpQrt Be11ch, Costa ~1esa, Laguna
Beach. l.fl~na Niguel. Dana Point , Sin
Junn Capistrano, San Clemente. Trvine.
El Toro. ~1 1s.sion Viejo, C3pistrano
Hcarh. Or<in~<'. V\1111 Park . Santa Ana,
und Tustin.
"Wr have movcrl into auother era in
the 1970"!," says Giibert . "We are an
t>nll~ht ened C'it1zenry because we ha ve
hr,;1lly corne 10 grips .... ·Ith and recognlied
lh.'lt there are probltms -people out ol
lu('k and hurt ing.··
Pa~·1~n1s to those ""ho are hurting will
1tH·rr:1s" hy $200,000 over 1m If the a;oal
1s rea('hed, accord1na to Gilbert .
CJ•1t cf the $1.31 million gGAI. nearly 40
ll('rcent \viii co to yout h services, about
24 pcrcPnl lo child and romlly servlett.
eight peorcent for health services in-
cluding Orange County Ch 11 d re n ' s
Hospital
The rornmunlty M!rvice aaencies such
as thf' Volunteer 8ur'!au &nd others will
sh.i re about 16 ptrl'ent of the total . Cam-
PBiRn coats and year·round 1d~
n'llnlstr1tUve ecei. wUI t1ke about eilht
pt!rctnt llnd the 11gency budget depart•
mcnt about four pcrc.-ent.
The Sot.ilhern Orange Coun1y Unltfld
W~!>' lnch.tde11 the former S11n11 Ana-
Ttt!l'l lri Comm .. 1ty Chtst. llarbor Ara
I niled WAy , Soot h Coast United Fund
and tlw Laguna Btach Community Che.st.
I
FrfffnPage1
PERMITS ...
and will likely change when the city gets
clearer direclion from California Al·
tomey General Evelle Younger on what
criteria the statements must contain.
The impact statemellts were ordered
as a result of a Calilomia supreme Court
decision that blocked construction of a
condorrtlnium in Mono County because
Supervisors there had not required the
developer to prepare an impact state.
ment.
City Attorney Dennis O'NeilJl!!ld up all
construction in Newport Beach briefly
last week pending a clarification of the
court decision.
Hogan said this morning he is now
working on formal procedures and
guidelines for the city to use in requiring
impact statements in the future and ex·
peels to have that report ready for city
councilmen when they meet Oct. 10.
Bay Area Train
Smashes Barrier; .
5 Persons Hurt
FREMONT (AP) -A l!kO-Car San
Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit train
smashed through a track end barrier and
down an embankment today, Jnjuring at
least five 0£ its IS occupants.
Four pa!Sellgers and a train attendant
were treated at Washington towmhip
Hospital here for cuts and bruises.
A BART spokesman said the south·
boond lrain, traveling 37 miles per hour,
overshot the Fremont station at about 10
a.m.
The cars uncoupled and the lead car
crashed lhrough wooden pilings and a
wire fence and then down an em-
bankment to an asphalt parking loL
The lead car came to re.st upright at a
45-degree angle. The other car remained
on the track.
The accident was the first since the
Sl.4-billion electrified rail system began
passenger operations Sept. 1 l over its
first section. the 28·mile Oakland to Fre-
mont. route.
Dave Kelsey, the BART spokesman,
said the accident did not disrupt other
service and the derailed car would be
retrieved u !OOn as possible.
Ella Palmer, 36. of Oakland, the train
attendant, was being treated for cuts and
bruises and possible internal Injuries.
Injured passengers we:re identified as
Mike GutierTez, 13, Oakland, PMS!ble
right ann injury: Lezatta Mulliken, 66,
Oakland, 8houlder injtK)': Harry J, ·
Fleck, 22, Oakland, possible back Injury,
and Harry Ninneman, SO, San Leandro,
possible bacc injury.
President Nixon rode on the same
DART Une during a vtait to the San Fran-
cisco area last Wednesday.
From Page 1
COST ...
!ltudy v.•as of P8rlkular Interest to him
bttause of some of the areas which
showed ~ JtJlclt.
"When you sec areas like the Harbor
View Homes. Dover Shores. Westcllff
and Eastbluff in there. It is kind of
surpMslnR." be said . "Tho.le are fairly
expensive areas."
But Wynn said tbf' report ls only
preliminary and il is dangerous \o
ovtnlmpllfy thlnes Uke COit comparllons
before all the data Lt gathered .
C.Owell 's report sboWI that overaJI, the
t.~ acrts of resident ial land ln Newport
Beach will ~ tht city an e1tlmated
h ,150,000 this yea r and up to $3,I00,000
by 1995.
Hotels. restaurants, eotnmtrt.lal and
ofHct areas, on the other hRnd, wUI show
a profit of $3,195 .000 In sm and poten-
tlllly up to $$.2 million by llMIS.
"'What this means Is that while we •re
-close to the b~11k even mRrk L.. a IUtle
over -right now, we will be maklna a
h~rge profit by 1995 If development aocs
as ll is now." Wynn said.
;
Missi11g Girl Dead
'She Wanted to Be a Hippie'--Father
MIAMI BEACH (UPO In i
Stephanie Welner, JO, pretty and naive,
tiSsed btt father goodbye Sept. t, climb-
ed in the family van and head north for
A1onlreal. She wanled to be a hippie.
"l gave her some old shirts so she
could be llke the others," MUton Welner
said.
Weiner said s~ drove ofl with a youne
man named "•lank" who wanted a rldt
north. Ile wu broke, lie loldlna, one! hli
wllti was critically ill ln New Jersey.
Ina promised to call her father whtn
she reached New Jeraey. She didn't -
ond Milton Weiner worried.
"She was such an Innocent girl," he
said. "So naive for a 20-year~ld. She
couldl'l 't have known a hippie froai a
drug add.let."
A:. the days wore on without a pOOne
call, Weiner decided to find out about
Nixon, Gromyko
Hold Discussion
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Ni mn met ·today with Soviet Foreign
Jl.linister Andrei Gromyko, and American
sources said the United states is ready to
start preliminary negotiations with the
Soviet Union on troop reductions in
Europe.
Nixon and Gromyko sat side by side on
go ld colored chairs in the President's
o\•al office.
They will get together again tonight.
probably for longer discussions, at a
\\'Orking dinner the President is giving
fo r Gromyko at his Camp David (Md.)
retreat.
During their morning sess.ioa lasting an
hour and 10 minutes, "all outstanding
matters between the two nati!)DS" were
discussed, Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said.
Nixon and Gromyko both will spend the
ni ght at camp David and return to the
White House Tuesday in time for a rnorrr
ing ctremony to ratify formally and
finally the strategic arms limitation
agreements which Nixon and Soviet
leaders signed last May in Moscow.
Sitting ~n on the White House session
were Secreatary of State William P.
Rogers , Nlxon's national security adviser
Police Probing
$10,000 Fisli
Poiso11ing Case
Newport Beach police are investigating
the apparent poisoning of $10,000 worth of
rare tropical fish in the backyard poad. of
a Westclill brick layer.
Richard c. Hentgea, 45, or 2118 Fra~
cisco Drive, told police he discovered 28
Koi . a type of Jap~se carp, dead and
dying in their pool early Sunday morning.
l·{e told police there was an ordor of in-
secticide lingering in the air.
Hentges !old officers at the scene that
Koi are extremely susceptible to poisons
of any type .
Police said Hentges told them the in·
secticide could have blown over the pond
from somewhere in the neighborhood by
accide nt and that other Koi breeders
r.ave had similar problems.
Hentges valued his fish at up to $400 a
piece, police said.
Henry A. Kissinger and S o v i e t
Ambmad<lr Anatoly F. l.lolrynin.
Newsmen were admitted for only Ult
first minute or so of the sessiOn, aod
heard Nixon and Gromyko exchange
comments about the effectiveness of the
United Nations.
"There is always work to do ln tbe
U.N. organization," Gromyko s a id
through an interpreter. "It Is not always
productive but there is always work to be
done."
"l agree with both sentences," Ni.Jon
responded.
Gromyko spoke at the United Nations
last week. So did Rogers. Rogers told
Nixon, "He gave a good speech."
Gromyko r<Sponded, "We closely
loll'!l"ed wlih intuost the ei-11 ol the
secretary of state. lt was an interesting
speecll."
Nb:on observed, •"Jbat's diplomatic
language."
Gromyko replied,. ":.t's saying a great
deal."
Tonight's dinner originally had been
scheduled for the White House but Nixon,
who spent the weekend at Camp David,
ordl'fed the change of location.
F,rona P .. e l
COPTER .•.
point or impac~ to suggest this may have
happened.
"My guess is no," said Capt. Robert
Moody, when asked if the $44,000
helicopter is beyond repair.
lie said he has seen three others at
Long Beach AirJ)Ort which Suffered much
worse crash· damage and were °f.in£
again followiJl8-repairs. •
"When they're totaled, there just isn't
much left," said Capt. Moody, who has
headed the police helicopter program
almost since its inception.
No fire broke out when the helicopter
crashed and Capt. Moody noted the Bell
model -a second or wh.ch will continue
lo provide aerial patrol -has a low fire
danger.
Hundreds of children from nearby Can-
yon School raced to the scene, gathering
abou t the helicopter with its rotor blades
twisted into U-shapes from pounding the
ground.
The tail boom was also severed and
tossed a few yards b/ the impact and the
helicopter came to rest partially on its
''Hank." With the sometimes reluttant
help of police. We.lntr finally J~med
"Hank" was U-year-old Henry King. a
convicted user of narcotics.
Weiner then traced King to Paterson,
N.J. Police there found King two weeks
ago and asked hlm to call Welner. King
made the call and Welner said King told
him. "Ina arrive<. safely, then took off on
a motorcycle for Brooklyn.
"Then he got rattled and said be left
Ina off in North Carolina, <J maybe
Florida. He said he still had the van r,i.d
all of lna1s possessions , but tolo me he
bad paid her $fl00."
King vanished.
Last week, police in Maryland round
th<. decomPosed body oi a girl stuffed in
n sleeping bag at a roadside park near
Baltimore.
'lbe body went unidentified for several
days.
Weiner heard about it, contacted
&.ltlmore police aad dental records were
checked.
Friday, Milton Weiner's worst fears
came true. The girl in the sleeping bag
was Ina.
King, meanwhile, had been picked up
in Indianapolis and is being held there on
a technical charge of "larceny after
trust."
Lido Market's
Dick Richard
'Not Retiring'
Richard's Lido Markets or Newport
Beach. have hired a new man to share
management responsibUJties, but 0 . W.
"Dick" Richard, founder and former
owner of the store today denied rumors
that he is about to retire.
"Qoo't let anyone tell you Dick Richard .
is out on a limb," because he's mort
motivated now than ever before," said
Richard, who is~.
Richard said Robert Blythe, who has
come to Richard's from extensive mar-
ket management background in the East,
will share management responsibilities
with him and with Hugh MYnatt, store
supervisor.
"He is very excited and knowledgeable
and knows we want to preserve a hig!i
degree of quality and service here,''
Richard said.
"I'm not leaving, I'll be here every 11
day facing au the problems of big·time
management ," he said. "We're all ad·
justing to the new troika of management
and our new freedoms."
Mayfair Markets. Inc., wh.icb pur·
chased the nationally.famous store five
years ago, said they have not heard af
any plans for Richard's retirement or the
replacement of Mynatt. '
"This ls a great part of my life at the
market," Richard said. "Our new store
in Corona del Mar wUI be a year old In
November and we·re getting stronger·
every day.
"We still hold our own among the top
100 markets in the U.S.," Richard added.
The market near tbe entrance of Lido
Isle was founded by Richard in 1948.
Since then. it has catered to the tastes
of many famou s celebrities and prorw
inent businessmen.
"I would have to spend some time
making up a list of all the famous peo-
ple I have met here," Richard said . "I
sometimes close my eyes and think
about it but I still can't believe it."
Detectives said today they would con-
tinue the investigation to determine
whether or not foul play was involved. side and nose. ~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'36995
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•014114 ..... ...... .................
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Pho1111 548-7788
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Complete
Installation '
Included
General Electric
"Bed Buy"
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Model SD250N
Includes chol~ of color on
front panel and rttnovlJ of
old d'!hwash&r. ' ------
w ••• °" Ollthorind
GINIRAL IUCTRIC
•
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Orange Coast ~ Today's Fl••'
~~~~~-~~~~Dlil-V.-"'-.--
VOL. 65, NO. 276, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1972 C -TEN CENTS
'Vigilante ~ Shoots Two • Ill Mesa Bar
By ARTllUR R. VINSEL
Of "'-rMltf' Pl~ Stnt
A vending machine man on his own an-
ti-burglar vigilante patrol .opened fir~n
two brothers at a Costa Mesa bar this
morning, wounding both and hitting one
headon in the groin with a shotgun blast
Blasts Fell Brothers· suspect wa! still lying on 1 stretcher at
the county facility at SI a.m., four hours
after he was wounded,
Investigators said vending machine
route operalOr Henry B. Stegmann. '4,
fired a total of four blasts at the O>rona
brothers during a predawn coofrontaUon
at the Pier 11 night club. The agonized man -his lower ab-
domen shredded by buckshot -was
dropped off ·at Hoag Memorial Hospital
shortly alter the 5 a.m. Incident.
,.His brother was arrested moments
later on Newport Boulevard at Vta Lldo,
when Newport Beach Police Officer Jim-
my Donaldson stopped the getaway car.
Luigi Corona, 2.5, was still undergoing
surgery at Hoag Memorial Hospltaf dur-
ing mid-morning hours for his abdominal
wouqd.s and medical personnel said bis
condition was not establi.ibed.
He was definitely going to be admJtted,
however, they noted. ,
1l1s brother, steven Corona, was held
by Newport Beach police brieOy, then
taktn to Hoag Memorial Hospital for ex-
amination before being shipped to
Ol'ange Cauhty Medical CenlM-
Qi.ata Mesa Police Detective 'Wayne
Harber said the second Corona brother
appears to have been wounded more
seriously than first believed.
H8 wa1 hit by several 20 gauge shotgun
pellela, one of which X-rays illdlcale
lodged In or near bls heart.
Detective Norm Kutch, also asslpJd
to the case, said the second burglary
Stegmann -who ha1 a chain of eoin-
operated vending and a m u 1 e m e n t
machines Including pool table9 -has
' (Ste VIGILANTE, Pose t)
C70ST A MESA HELICOP_TER DOWN l -~ .
Sight Restored
HeSeesA fwr24 Ye ars' Darkness
LONDON (UPI) -When, NU10 Fettet emerged from the airliner, he saw
the woman be h"ad lived with for. more than 20 years but bad never seen,
"I had a mental picture of you, but you are much lovelier than I imag.
Jned," Fettel 48, said as be gazed at his wife, Ena, 41.
Fette!, blinded 24 years ago by acid thrown at him, returned Sunday frorii
Rome where a surgeon, Dr. Bemedetto Strampelli, restored his sight.
At London's Heathrow AJrport, he saw his wile of 20 years and his sons,
Paul', 18, and Adrian, 15, for the first time.
"You never told me what beautiful ey"es you bad," he said. "Don't Jet them
mist over with tears."
"And look at my sons!" he exulted to onlookers. "What strapping chaps
they are."
The Fettels met shorUy after his accident in 1948 at a hospital in England
where be was a paUent and she was a nurse. Five years tater, they married.
'
Father's Lament
None Hur t,
But Chopper
Loss High
One of Costa Mesa's two police
helicopters sustained major damage thi~
morning when it crashed in a vacant
field just outside city limits, flopping
around like a beheaded bird with its rotor
blades whipping.
Neither the pilot nor his cameraman-
observer was injured when the little bub-
ble-canopied Bell chopper hit the ground,
about 100 yards off the end of Canyon
Drive.
Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow was at the
control.. and Detective Lt. Harold
fucber was ftylng .along. lo -IOIJl&
Body of Girl Who wt~nteo~W:.,_,. . . .n ~ ~ ..... µlied 1JnmedWel1'
to interview Capt. Glasgow about
circumstances of the 9:45 a.rn. crash. To Become Hippie Found
'
The helicopter was trucked away from
the site on flat, empty state-owned land
whJch will be part of Fairview Park if
the facility becomes a reality.
MIAMI BEACH (UPI ) -In a
Stephanie Weiner, 20, pretty and naive,
kissed her father goodbye Sept. I, climb-
ed in the family van and bead north for
Montreal. She wanted to be a hippie.
"I gave her some old shirts so she
could be like the others," Milton Weiner
said.
Welner said she drove off with a young
man named "Hank" who wanted a ride
north. He was broke, he told Ina, and his
wife was critically ill in New Jersey.
Ina promised to call her father when
S. Coast Plaza's
•Two Elizaheths'
Tour on Tuesday
Dr. Alei: A. Cumming, director of the
Plymouth Museums in England, will give
a guided tour Tuesday night of the Two
Eliu.betbs exhJbltion at British Expo '72.
Reservations for the 8 p.m. tour may
be applied for at the Expo information
stand at South Coast Plaza.
The Two Elizaoeths exhibition contains
valuable Items from the-reigns ol Queen
Elizabeth f and Qu<en Elizabeth IL
Among them are "8vigatlonal tools and
personal properties of Sir Francis Drake,
the first Briton to set foot in California.
she reached New Jersey. She didn't -
and Milton Weiner worried.
"She was such an innocent girl," he
said. "So naive for a 20-year-old. She
couldn't have known a hippie from a
drug addict."
A:. the days wore on without a phone
call, Webtet decided to find out about
Police Chief Roger E. Neth -himself
a licensed helicopter pilot -said he isn't
sure just what happened and woul<f
prefer to leave any ·comment at this tlme
lo FAA uperis.
"All we know is he bit the ground,"
(Ste COPTER, Poge Z)
"Hank." With the sometime! reluctan~ '
belp of police, Weiner finally learned "'"London s T oivn
"Hank" was :>year-old lienry King, a
convicted user of narcoUca.. ..... C , R , J
Weiner then traced King lo Pateraon, rr,er to ing n
N.J. Police there found King two weeks . _
ago and asked him to call Weiner. K1ng 'Z •
made the caU and Welner said Klng told Counci Session him, 11lna amvec. safely, then toot off on
a motorcycle for Brooklyn.
"Then he got rattled and said he left
Ina off in North Carolina, or maybe
Florida. He said he sUl1 bad the van and
all of Ina's poaessloos, but told me be
bad paid her $500."
King vanlsheCL
Lut -·-police In Maryland found
th< -posed body O• a girl stuffed in
a sleeping bag at a roadaide park near
Baltimore. , The body went wddentlfied for sever
days.
Wcioer heard about it, contacted
&Itimore police and dental rec«ds were
checked.
Friday, Mlltoo Weiner's worst fears
came true. The lit! In the sleepfnl bac
was Ina.
Kfnl, IDWlwblle, had bem picked up
In Indianapolis and lo being held there oo
a technical cbuae ol "W-y after trust ...
Costa Mesa city councilmen, nonnally
c8'Ual In their approach lo bimiliithly
council sessions, have ·ordered aome
d_,,.,, for tonight's 6:30 p.m. meellng.
Mayor Jack Hammett said this morn-
ing that the meeting will be opened by
the big brass bell of Allie Howard. Lon-
don'• onJy remaining town crier, who is
currently doing a stint in Costa MeH
with British Expo '72.
In England, Howard calls out new
ordinances for the benefit of eight Lon-
don borougbo. An old law dating back to
the 17th centu.ry requires that all new
laws be snnounced by word of mouth.
Hammett 111d that llowonf will P">I>
ably not be required 1o call out 10Venl
new ordinances scheduled ror adoption
tonight. He bu, however, been invltad lo
a.bare a chicken dinner with councllmen
during the study sel&lon precedfac the
ofnctal meeting. .
, I DAJLY ,.K.O'T ...... M Lii ,_
~tttYC("e"xMIRAMi-N °Sitol:iT' PICi'U.lln WHICH MAY -lfltlt' tXl'LAIN PATROL COPTIR CRASH
In Vocont Fi.lcl,A Routine· Practice Mlulon E.-Rouvhfy For T-Shaken Crewmen
Bits .Barrier .
Bay A rea T ransit Ca r
I n ju res Five in Cras h
FREMONT (AP) - A tW<H:ar San
Franciaco Bay Area Rapid Tranlit train
smashed through a track end barrier and doWn an embanliilfeot t&lay. inf~ at
least five of lb 15 occupants.
Four paMeJJgers and a train attendant
were treated at Washington township
Hoepltal here for cull and bruises.
A BART spokesman said the south·
bwnd train, traveling 37 miles per hour,
overshot the Fremont station at about IO
a.m.
lbe cars unooupled and the !tad car
crashed through wooden pilings and a
wlr11 fence and then down an em·
bankment lo an asphalt parting lot.
The lead car came to reJt upright at 11
6-<legree angle. 'Ibe other car remained
on the track.
The ICCident WU the fint sinct tbe
'1.4-blllloo electrUled rail oy>lem began
p&AeDl8I' operaUons sept. 1 l ovtr lta nnt led.kin, tbe ZS.mile Oakland to F'r•
moot route.
Dove Kelley, the BART .,,.l<Mman,
-the oe<idtnt did not dlMupt other
.....ic. and the derailed car would bo
retritvfd as JOOR u poalbJ~.
Ella Palmer, 34, of Oakland, lbe train
attendant , ...., btlng !ruled for cuts ancl
bruises UI ]>OIS!ble -fnjurirt.
fnjured pes:sengen wt:re identltitd ••
f\ttke Gutiurez, 13, Oaktand. pcm.Ible
right arm Injury: Lezatta Mulliken. M.
Oakland, llhoulder Injury; HllfT)' J.
Fleck. 22, Oakland, poalblr back Injury ,
and Harry Nlnnuntn, SO, San Leandro,
posalble bacc Injury.
Fnsldtnt Nixon rode on the same
BART line during a vi< to tht San Fran-
cisco area lut Wednesday.
Garage Sale Set
To Aid Youths
A communltywkle Pf'll• alt t.o r1 ile
funds for youth pn>joc:la In the Harbor
area and In Merlc:o bu boon tcbeduted
for Oct. 11. by •he c..ta Mna Rotary
Club.
Longtime Mesan
Elsie Lew land
Services Slated
Funeral strVlcot for Mn. Elole a.-
Newland, I lon11·tlmt rHldent of Q)sta
Mesa and <>ranee County, have been 1rt
for 10 1.m. Wednesday 1t Quilt Church by the Sea. Newport Beoch_
Mrs. Newland, who ttlebrated her llst
birthday last April 27, died Saturday at
Costa A-ttsa Memorial ltospltal.
She It turvlvtd by her nephew, Maris
Edward Newland, TulUn , and teveral
nieces and nephewa.
Mni. Newland 1rew up in K1nsa1 and
tBught IChool for ti yeani In a small oot-
room .achoo! house. At one Ume abe wu
employed 11 1ovemea to Preddtnt
Heit>ert lf00Vtt'1 grandchild,....
She moved to Oranae County J7 )'tan
•ao lo help her b..lber with the book·
ktts>ln& ol a small iroc:ery •tore ne•t lo
lbe Newport Pier. ThrouahOUI her yeor1
in the Harbor Atta, Mn.. Newland wu
... ""' In the Olrilt OluTd1 hr the Seo.
Burial ot Watmlntler Memortal Pork
will follow Ibo llrflco.
l\lrs. Ahzug Selected
Orange Lagunan Hits Spotlight
ApproprLltrly, the Ill .. aalt wtll be
held on the premtlel ol 1 canmerc'411
te•rqe, M a Center AutomoUn. leth
Street ad Onnce Avenue, Colea McN.
1tanJn1 at I 1.m .
Sale 11.e:mt wlll lnchldt f\rmltura. ·~
pllancu. fli:tura. tpOrtinc 1 o o d 1 ,
houltbold 1ooc1t lll1d <lothlns. Pt.....,. wtsblnc to donlte ltm11 to the 11.te m1y
call Mf.0102 dur11111 bulWa bouJO. or
Ml-UXJlt evenlnp. to have ll11tlr lttm•
picked up. Items ma1 be dellvtttd to the
aal< "" alttr s p.m. Friday.
NEW YORK (API -!Wp, BtIJa AbaJc
lmbemJOtko<tadlo_UW ....
Rep. William I'. Ryan 11 Dtmoc:r11le
condldate for eon.,_ flemtlct111c
c:ounty commlHennm from the ah eon, ... 1ona1 lliltrlct ..iec1 11&3 1o m
Sundoy nl1ht for Mn. Abzuc ....,.
Prlocmo R)'Oll. wtclow of the con-
.......,,. who died of ..._ Sept. 17.
The flamboyont Mni. Almlf. U , IOlll her .,..11 disttlcl throuah reapportio11men~
Wea titer
It'll be cooler on TueJday, the
weatherlady predict.I, with highs
of 75 inland. Beach temps shouJd
be aroond 70 with high clooda
throughout the day. Lows tonight
SHS.
INSIDE TODA 'Y
E,,.,. l/ l'Ttm1<71t N l z o n
should "'"l' C.U/ondo bl/ a
landilide, ob1tTWT1 ia~ hLI po-
litical coottafl6 tofll not prooide
much. pulUna powtr Jor other
GOP candkfaU1. Ste .rtofll, Poot
12.
IMf"" j ~ . CIHll,._. 1>1' ·-" ·-. 0.•ftl~ ' ............. ' .. ..,..._. .
......... 1 .. 11 ,.., ,... .... ,
Hef11r#D It
,,_......-a 11 ' -. " ............ . i ...... ,_...., M """" , .. ,. , .............. 11 ·-. -. -. .__.. .... , •.. --.
Newsme11 Converge Aft,er Offer to Buy Colosseum
By BARBARA DElllfat
CN .. ~ ..........
'Mlomas Merrl<k, the WM!tby Lqunan
who hu olltttd 1o bQj' tbe ~m for
SI million and mton H u a 111tCCa for
Rome~ today f.....S himself the taraet ol .......,.., pbolocrlJlben and
lelevllton ...... who -00 the Art C4Joo1 lo lam more •boul hlo am-
hltiolll plu. '
He lboug!it o1 It lut weei; I M.md<
uld, """'_,"!Ill In ... ltali,a ~.,)1111 .. clooe"i&;t;tit ,.,oH!d
the llm1'I tr.a. -laliln& lrocn lta
1: =mueill, ....mini lo the
roporia, cannot alfO<d the # mfDlon
relt«IUon )ob nee r~1ry to mate tbe Co-... "' plOllc ~ -......
••
Mr!Tlck, who Is of ftallsn -lll1d
attended ICbooJ tn Rome 11 a tttn11er,
olftttd lo buJ the fnt«notlonal landmark
for fl mnlloo of hll °"" rmoey, and m. the _,, fllndl for It. 1'111«>
tloa.
In return, be Pl-that on ad-
-fell bo ~ed lo future vtJlton, ----.~ ... .-. --.. -•·lllo-• ..... ' .... . . *'""' "1 .. .., ...... .
....... h ~ .. ~'"'*'· M ll*Woi...,.-W6o .. v.a.
ad :": z I=-·-"""" llllUilll I L • 1 ,.~ Vlllll. ltaflan,bfm .... 1 ... le
woman ""6 it~ u)ltn1clt)..,.
-llw .. ltallai -u.. llld
Ibo 1llo ofJlcl•ll' braMfel
1"' offer le .....: -. Ille ~
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• •
Mesa Exwndi1&g
Rec Registratio11.
RttJolnt!oo hu bem tltendtd
UrooJP "14ay for tho ...,. ftD -•W ... 11ablo ot die Codo Mna Dlpatl·
menttfL<lonflconios . a-•P!lil<oUons will ht ....,,c«1
-I a.m. ands p.m. In Room• of tho C.. M-civic <111tw, 77 Fair
Drlff.
A"'°"' lht uallebfo -m 1r1 for
bolh chllllt<ft ... ---twlrtq.
lld\llf, ikll -· jm ill1tlmw ... '4'111, ,..., and. lnllnldlDo In mUlal
c:nfta his ...... matadaJa,
AD ~IAKES SHORT
WORK OF BEETLE
•
DAit. Y P1L.01 c
__ J_u r or Attacks Trial
,W oman B last,s Handli ng o f Lebhar -Cas~
By TO~f BARl.E\'
Of n. Dalty Pli.1 SHH
An angry 11·on,an juror today blasted
the Orang!'.! County Su~rior Court lys-
tem'a handling o( the Lebhar murder
trial and added a new note of dissensior'
to y.•hal is already regarded as the most
controversial trial ln superior court his--
I-Ory.
Mrs. JeaMe Broder stepped u1to I he
picture as Judae Ronald Cruickshank
delayed until Oct. 20 a court sessioq that
seems certain to produce a plea of guilty
to reduced charges from Bert Lebhar.
43. and Teresa Jo Strange, 24.
Coas t Share
Of R eve nue:
$1. 75 Million
The Orange Coast's share of federal
funds to be returned to local government
comes to $1.75 million, according to
figures from the office or Sen. Alan
Cranston (0-Catif. l.
Those figures do not include the $9
million that is expeclcd to go to the
County of Orange from the revenue shar-
ing bill back by President Nixon.
According to the figures f r o m
Cranston's Los Angeles office, Orange
Coast cllles will receive the following :
-Costa Mesa, $506,491.
-Fountain Valley, $118,845.
-Huntington Beach, '814,000.
-Newport Beach, $183,812.
-San Oemente, $128,825.
-San Juan Capistrano, $18,934.
-Seal Beach, $90,800.
The spokesman for Cranston was
unable to provide a figurfl for Laguna
Beach, but the city's Finance Director
Robert Green estimated their share
would be about $91,000.
Most of the cities have received notices
that their checks for the first half of 1972
wi ll be maUed out later this month
following final congteS!lon al action on
the bill lbil week.
The $30 billion, fiv~year revenue shar-
ing bill will provide the flnt major
federal aid to cltlea that can be used for
operalin& expenses in basic service1 like
police, fire, environmental protection ,
public ttansportatlon, ffinatlon and
social servlca: for the poor and aged.
The State of Calllorn1a will nctlve
$185.4 mUUon , and a total of $371).7
million will be distributed to local
govemmentl within ~ It.lite.
Supervisor David Bahr has 1ugge1ted
that the county's share be used for prop-
erty tax relief. but his board of
supervisors colleagues have indicated
they would rather hold a public hearing
before maklng that decision.
From Page l
VIGIL AN TE . • •
suffered a series of burglary losses, one a
$300 lost at Pier 11 just a month ago.
"He was looking after his Interests,"
Detective Harber remarked today. saying
Stegmann showed up at 1976 Newport
Blvd .. to make 11ure the premises were
se<Utt.
He found evidence that it \\'&sn't and
apparently hea rd the Coronas Inside .
"He called them out of the building,"
Detective Harber continued . .saying at
that point Stegmann thought one of the
suspects had a gun and opened flre wllh
hla single ahot weapon.
Police aald Stegmann reloaded and
ft.red 1a:a1n aa the wounded men nl'd to
thelr car, putting two more blaats Into
the vehicle before It wa~ out of range.
Jnvest111tor1 said they doubt whether
any criminal charge~ are likely to be fll·
ed acaln1t Stegm&nn, V.1htl ·v.·a!' arrested
hlmaelf Hveral yearA ago fur allell,ed
gamhllnll vlolPtlons .
OIAllllel CO.t.IT CM
DAILY PILOT
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"It •·aa a two-Wffk terle1 of blUhdel'l.1'
commented the 11ngry Mrit Broder. "The
obvious conclusion is tht1t the Distri<'t
Attorney. \\'ilh nothing rnorc than 11 aut
feeling 10 go on. ls free to charge nny·
onr with murder."
Judge Cruickshank could not be reached
for co mment on 1'.1rs. Broder·s observa-
SEPTEMBER'S OFflCIR
Detective W1yne Herber
Mesa ·Dewctive
Named September
Officer of Month.
Costa Mesa's Policeman for the Month
of September came to the community via
four cities, two colleges, the local parks
department and the U.S. Navy_
Detective Wayne Harber plans lo stay
put now.
The man who primarily handle• com-
mercial burglary investigation in the city
is alao continuing his education ln Orange
COast CoUe1e police science coursea.
Born in Spr!nifleld. Mo., his family
moved to Kan.au Ctty, Kan., when be
Wll 4 and be Wu flllecl theft untll cdJ.•
lege age.
Harber attended Southwest Baptist
College, Bolivar, Mo., then 1wltched to
Cedarvllle College, Cedarville, Ohio,
before coming west to California .
He went to work for lhe city parks
department in 1963, switching to police
the following year when he got a chance,
because he was qualified and also
already on the city payroll.
But after I 'n years in patro l duty,
Harber's career was interrupted with
orders for two years ' active duty Jn lhe
Navy, returning in 1968 to settle down.
Detective Harber and his wife Janel
have three children, Ricky, 7. Susan. 4.
Steven, 2. and the family enjoys fishing
and motorcycle riding outings.
Of(icers of the Month are chosen by the
Costa 1'.lesa Crime Prevention Com·
miltee and receive an autoaraphed cup
from the Mug Shop in Corona del fi.tar for
the department coffee room .
FroM Page l
MERRICK ...
Locarno ln the Hallan lake country, was
bOrn in the United Slates and was sent
back to Italy to attend the 8elaslone
College for boys when he was 14.
Now 57, he has lived in Laguna Beach
fo r !he past JO years, making hi• t.ome at
1280 An~lpa Way. He formerly owned,
11nd lived in Py~ Castle, an Ar, Colony
landmark once touted as a possible site
fqr Pr~ldent Nixon 's \Vestern White
•louse .
lie last vlsilcd llomt. he said today. in
1950.
"I know you can't appraise !Omethlng
llke the Colosscurn In octua: dollar1," he
said. ''but I thought they might wont an
11rittel to rill it up and it would be
rettsonflhle lo chArJ(e an entry fff -
rlt1ht now I'm ju~t thinking ou t loud.
jVe'll baYe to wait Ill\ we get aome
re9ponse from the Italian rovernment to
discuss·more detnil~.··
11 .. 11. JI WU Ml c.leit, In •• ., of Ibo ....
certain staius of the t.ebher jury, If she
could be cited for contempt of court.
"l•'rankly, it ~cared hell out of n1c,"
f\.1rs. Brflder observl'd in a \\·rilten state-
n1L'r1t handed to this newspaper.
Lebhar and ~1iss Strange were being
tried for the killing on De<_·. 23, 1969 of
Janet Louise Swnmerlin , 24, when the
trial was halted in an emotional sesalon
that produced the firina: of both defense
attorneys.
They will have new attorenys to repre-
sent them Oct . 20 and both de£endants
have made it clear that they \Vish to plead
guilty to reduced c h a r g e s of man-
slaua:hter.
It \\'ti.I alleged by former defense at-
torney t.awrence Buckley that the pair
would never had done so if the prosecu-
tion had not used ~1iss Strange's infant
son a1 a tool in applying pressure on the
couple.
Buc1tley said the prosecution deal was
that Lebllar and Miss Strenge would be
granted cUJtody of the month-old Child
if they offered the guilty plea and ended
the trial.
'Phe couple has been refused permission
to marry, by tllree Superior Court judges
tn the inonth preceding the child'• birth
in Orange County Medical Center'• prlson
ward.
Mn. Bi:oder today described the Leb·
her-Strange trial as a "~iasoo" In \yblch
medical witnesses were so unsure of the
cause or Miss Summerlin's death that
they refuaed to enter an opinion on the
medical certificate.
"I feel as though I've been had ," Mrs.
Broder commented in her written state-
ment. 1•1 am so disgusted wllh thla whole
bewllderln1 experience that I will never
allow myself to be sucked into jury duty
q:aln."
It wu alleged by the prosecution dur-
ing the trl1l that the defendantf .were re·
spon1lble for th e burning and beatlni thal
led to the death of Mw Summerlin. Her body, allegedly extenalvely burned
with an oxy·1cetylene torch and bearing
nwneroua bruises and wound1, wu found
on the w a J k w a y of a Garden Grove
church. ·
Senate Vote Set
On Liberalized
Welfare Reform
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate vote
on a Uberallzed welfare reform plan was
auured today u Sen. Abr1bam A.
Riblcoll (0-Conn.), called up h\s proposal
tor debate. The roll call, however, will not C<lmc
until Tuesday or Wednesday.
Rlblcoff offered his proposal as a
substitute for a pending amendment
which would provide for a test of all the
various reform plans to deal with prob--
lcms of welfare families . This procedure guara~teed that his
substitute would get the hrst vote.
In the end, however, the Senate ls ell·
pected to resolve the controver1y by
deciding £or a two-year ~est .of the plans
before anything substantive 1s done.
'Mle tell amendm ent first \·1as orfered
Saturday by Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr.
(Ind.· Ya.).
flowever. today Byrd withdrew his pro-
posal in favor of a slightly different test
amendment sponsored by Sen. Wllllam
V. Roth Jr. (R·Del.).
Rlblcoff'.s substitute is liberalized
version of t'resldent Nixon's Famll'
Assistance Plan which passed the House
last year.
It provides for a guaranteed annual In-
come for weUare ramllies on a national
ba1i1 but fl1ea the yayment level at
$2.600 for a tamlly o four, $200 more
th.An the Nixon propoaal.
It would provide subsidies for the
working poor, as does the President's
plan, but would 1lve more fiscal relief to
the states than Nl1on ofien.
0 Thl.a 11 the moment of tnUh for
wcUare reform," said Rlblcoff as he call·
eJ up h\11ub1Utute. "But r tense there ls
very little Interest In the Stnate or In the
Administ ration any longer in this issue."
Nixon proposed his fnmily·asslsLA nce
pla n In 1969, to the 91st Congre111. It
paSRd lhe 110~ in that Congreu, too,
but died In the Senate.
In its nrst week of consideration of the
big bill, the Senate added more than '5
bllllcm worth of Social Security and
Medicare benefit•, tak ing the total COit
up to about flO billion.
But mo1t noor amendments are ex·
pected to be dropped In the conrerence
\\•Ith the llousc.
S F Police Arres t 4 5
In Pot R a id in Water
SAN PRi\NClSCO (i\l'I -David H
~lor11n Qalled it en lnnoctn t "golnc 1w11.y
party '' on Sin Fr1nclaco Bay -but
poliL-e tenned It lhe larg est n1arljuana
party t\'er h~ld on local waters.
\\'hen the lhree-dtcked crultor llarbor
F.mperor docked at Fl1hcrman'1 Whtrf
Sunday night. police backed up the.Ir
word' by armtllla 11 pertQlll -JnclUd·
Joa Morgan.
~1organ . due for ll'<'n!cnclng nellt Tuell·
day for PoS1es.11lon and anle of marijuana,
uolalned that he chartered the b0111 to
u y ·16ocl.bye to friend• And tAls• fUnda
In pe,. his allon'l<!y, Gordon ROC!kl\111.
311. of Redwood City. Rockhtll also wa11
urr~sti:d .
The llarbor Emperor took orr for 11n
evenln1 1111 with 33 pauenccr1, 1 all·
man rock band and three undermver
n1rcot1cs in1pector1 dressed 11 deck at·
tcndant1.
A• the porty progressed. the th,.. In·
8'pctlort reported by walkle-lalklt radio
that lhtra ~en! bag! o! marijuana on
t.11bl11 avallable for the taking.
They said some guetta were amoklng
hft1hh1Jh ln pipes 11nd other1 were partek·
lnP, ot "n terrific VAr1cty" <if plll1.
'We cauld have made the 11rrut1 In
the middle of the bey," uld lnaptelor
Arthur Ocrr11ln.1, "but we 'l\'trt afrftld of
being thrown overbolird."
Gleaming Cnr, Glenmtng Eyes
Marcus Gartner, 11, of Anaheim, joins Balboa lsland
classic car buff Alan-Blum for a look under the bon-
ne t o! a 1926 Roll s Royce during Sund1y's concours
d'elegance. About 75 of the classic and antique Brit·
!sh automobiles were entered in the British Expo
'72 showing.
54 Agencies to Benef~t
From United Way, Drive
About M community service agencies
\viii benefit from a $1,315,000 United Way
goal during 1973, aCCording to Charles
Gilbert, president or the Southern Orange
County United Way.
The 54 recipients include such agencies
as the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Boys
Clubs and the American Red Cross.
Gilbert believes the $1.31 million goal
\Viii cover nearly 100 perCent of the
human needs of 800,000 persons living ln
Ne wpart Beach, Costa Mesa , Laguna
Beach, Laguna Niguel, Dana Point, San
Juan Capistrano, San Clemente, Irvine,
El Toro, Mia.slon Viejo, Capistrano
Beach, Orange, VIiia Park, Santa Ana ,
and Tustin.
Cyclist..Injured
Avoiding Crash
A Santa An1 motorcyclist is recovering
from painful pavement bums and cuts
suffered Saturday In Costa Meaa when he
dumped It to avoid slamming Into four
glrls who pulled out in his path on
bicycles.
Elbert J . Davis Jr., 25, of 2S21 W.
Sunnower Ave .. wa1 northbound on Bear
Street near Sunflower Avenue , ridlna
along beside a friend.
He told police he swerved when the
youngsters rode Into view, hit a
chuckhole and was spilled. to the pave-
ment, causing major lacerations and
abrasions of the legs, hands and feet.
Davia was treated at Hoag Memorial
Hvspital and released.
....... ,...., ...
"\Ve have moved Jnto another era In
the t970's," says Gilbert. "We are an
enlightened citizenry because we have
finally come to grips wlth and recognlied
that there are problem• -people out of
luck and hurting."
PaymenUI to those who are hu,rtlng will
ir1cre ase by $200,000 over 1972 if the goel
is reached, accordlnJ to Gilbert.
Out or the $1.31 million goal , nearly 40
percent will go to youth 1ervices, about
24 percent to child a.nd family services,
eight percent for health 1ervicea in-
cluding Orange County C h i I d r e n ' s
Hospital.
The community 11ervlct agencies such
as the Volwiteer Bureau and others will
sha re about 16 percent of the total. Cam-
paign costS and year-rou nd ad-
ministrative costs will lake about eight
percent and. the agency budget depart·
mcnt about four percent.
Hitchhik ing Couple
Sough t in Theft
A young Santa Ana motor11t has A good
mental picture of the male and female
hitchhiker she picked up and dropped off
in Costa Mesa over the weekend.
Police are u1lng the deecrlptlon It pro-
vided In an effort to apprehend the pair
of grand theft auspect.a to whom Kenneth
J . Guklns, 18, of 9485 Flreblrd. Ave .,
Santa Ana, gave a. !in.
Ga1kln.s told police the couple, about 18
to 22. apparently took his '350 camera
and telephoto Jens when he let them out
at Newport Boulevard and Del Mar
Avenue.
J_ l..L•· •
'3699 5
FRllZIJll nATUllll: ..... ,,_._, .• ,.nw•
• lw 'nb.,NMet(er,Mlf•
AUto!Mtlc kletMIC•, ....U-* M .... ctft}
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'·''· ~ . .. . ' " . •' '
From Page l
COPTER . • •
Chief Neth remarked.
He did add that Capt. Gla1gow wa:s
practicing autogyratlon landing at the
1
,
time something apparently went wrong.
pointlng out this practice is required of
all department officers authoriled to fly-·"'
Eagle '"m.iasioM. -~ ~
Cl!le! Netb-noted \n alllog7fatlon Ian-·
ding -a simulated emergancy "tdown
without power -i1 actually altnpler than
landing with the engine on becalllfl there
is no torque imbalance to offHt.
Normally what can 10 wrong In 1uch a
londlng 11 that th< tall rotor dlpo low and
hits the ground, flipping the chopper
forward onto lta noae and upside down.
Questioned at the teene, Capt. Gl1sgow
referred all queries to Chief Neth but
was heard to say the tail waa not down
when he hit. .
Chief Neth also noted there was no :
point of impact to suggest Utis may have
happened.
"My guess is oo," said Capt. Robert
Moody, when asked if the $44,000
helicopter Is beyond repair.
He said he has seen Uree others at
Long B11ch Airport whlcluuffered muc~
worse crash damage and wert flying
l(&ln following repairs.
"When they're totaled, there just isn't
much left," said Capt. Moody, who ha8
headed the police helicopter program
almost 1lnce lt& Inception.
No flre broke out when the helicopter
crashed and Capt. Moody noted the Bell
model -a second of wh.ch will continue
to provide aerial petrol -bu a low flre
dangtr.
Hwidreds of children from nearby C&n·
yon School raced to the scene, 1atherin1
about the helicopter with its rotor blade•
twisted Into U·shapes from pounding tM
ground.
'n!.e tail boom was also severed and
tossed. a few yard1 by the impact and the
heUcopter came to rest partially on its
side ahd nose. ___ _..
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Medel SDZION I lht:1udft choi~ ot colOll" nn
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M•lor ,.....,..,
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Som10
Cooitor
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa Phon• 548-7788
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