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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-05 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • ·-• 1 XO Il ·om ----, I DAILY PILOT Star.,ing Donlaey~ Dogs * * * 10c * * * Found {n Coast Yard THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCT0BER S, 1972 WK.. ... .,_ tn, J 18c:noetl, • PAOCI ' • • • • • • :• • • • • Caspers Flayed on 'Banditos' •More Bedla1n!' Is · Your Ballot Here? .His Nine; Her Nine Will Combine . .,4 ·~ ·I. r 1 ' BROOKLYN PARK, Mi1!D. (AP) -Pew 1-and. Dick Colier "" gettlDJ IDlrrled Satmda1 md u wwly :: .......... mcrre Jato their new 10- bedrobm house-with 18 of tbeir chlldren. i Cotter, a production '"'~"r for lloneywoll, Inc.; bu II dtlldrm, bf only one daughter Is married. Mri. Lamon, a -. ball nloe mi-. "I think I may bave peld my ¥federal -tax," Cotter llalcl. Cotter, 45, and Mrs. ·Lataoo,-42.-tiave Uved Joor bloCks apart In lhi Min- neapolis subuib of Brooklyn·Park and attend-the same church, but met only in April through a mutual friend. Mrs. Lauzon'a husband a.ied about a year aeo and Cotter's wUe died six months ago. Both Cotter and Mrs. Lauzon take the doubling of thelr_plready largelaJD. illes serenely. "You get to a po.int where, whether you've got 9 klda or 19, tt's just the dU!erence between the second and third poWfJ'I of bedlam," Cotter llid. No Cessation Seen Nixon Believe LBJ Erred in Bombing Halt WASHINGTON -President Nixon to- day ruled out any halt to the bombing of North Vietnam lie.fore the Nov. 7 elee- Uon, saying former President Johnson made a "very, very great mistake" when be did so just before the 1968 election. Nixon told a news conference in tus oval office the war could be aettled before Nov. 1 -U the right ltind of sel· tiement could be made. But be added that the balloting "will not in any way tnfluence what we do at the negotiating tabJe." • Mesan, in Jail On Drugs, Named In Duel Slnying The Johmon admlnlstratlon, he said, though well intentioned, "made a very, vi!ry great mistake ln stopplni the bomb- ing wltboot adequate qreoments !run the other side." He referred to J-·· Nov. I, 1111, anoouncemeot of a boonblng bait just days belo"' Nixon defeated Hubert H. Humphrey for the pt<lldency. StWe Smith, an aide at the oounty Registrar of Voters office in Santa Ana, checks off some of 1,900 boxes of ba\1o!s being prepared for shipment to Orange County preclnets on election day, Nov. 7. tr you don't regtnerto vole by midnight Sunday, yolll' )>allot won 't be In one of these boxes, "We are not going to make that mistake now," Niuo declared. .. Owtter Charged On other toplca ln the wlde-raqing r.ews conference: -NW:n aald ''there will be no presidential tu lncttue" In tm but ; . By ARTHUR R. VINSEL • ~ ,,!"~:·~ · ovenpend-°' 111e DMt¥ ...... ..... -. m,.... ~ one nece1NJ1. JaDed almdy oo a drug charge In-Nixon, Jn dl>a'lllnc Ida tu policy, said ddental to a door-to-door lnvestlgatlCll of t.e will rarely vlllt the campolp trail un- an alley ambush sloylng behind hla tJ: Googrea ldjouma --he wanta house a Colla Mesa man was confronted tt. mnaln in Wubingtao to "fi&bt the In bl; jail "'" Wednesday night and battle aplnst rilloc :::::t;' charged with the murder. He pn>mJaed 1 of vtto Starving, Diseased Dogs, Donkey Found o~ .c+ast Sick and miserable with symptoms messaga aimed at lat-minute Iealal•· BJ MJQIAP.L GOODRICH police said were similar \o heroln tioo that elCMd hll budcet pl.I. ot .. ...., ""' .. .., withdrawal, Joseph w. Buffalo, :a, bare-He said be -so on nationwide A donkey and elaltt clop, 1111 aU.,edly ly ,.acted to the possiblll17 ol Coins back rldlo 00 SablrdaJ to uplaln Ida tu aufferinS fn1m malnutrltlCll and "'lkd. to stale prison for life. policy. . Detective ()apt. Ed Gluaow 1 11id a He allo promi.t """"=' tu roltel were tatr.n Into CUllodj' Wedn<lday by formal complaint cblrglna t b • ®nor a -tenn and aal top f"'lotl-the Hlmtlnrton Beadl Hwnane Society ..,.mployed landsctper With the murder • l;y -id So lo eotilllc tho tu burcl<G o1 ad their owntt charaed with mielly to of u-convlct Marion D. "'"1 -be the nation'•...,_, c1-. anintalJ. aouaht this morntni. from the Otlfti• ~ --Sen. Geors• S. HllotJnPla Bud> Polle< ' •rrest<d CounlY DiSlrlct Attomei. MCGovem·1 ....,... ol comptlclll "1 b•• J.-o. a.a., n , ol t'lm Bolla C\lca Rll arrest by Dellellve Norm Kuteh admlnlatrltlan, md pndidC It .,Jd Rood alter !Iodine aome ol the clop wltb came I..., than 4Utoun alter"'"'· 27, "tunl o1r: the-.. bltedlD& ...., *lot dloel• and rlbl ,.81 cut down In i'liaU ol rllle bulleta at Staadl~ beWold Ida -llld apeaklna chowtntl lhroulb their alnl. 2$7 Either St., al'l'l!""tl1 U be lefl.. In llioes ID loW llley -· cllfllcult t0 'Ille Clonby WU allo "found to be lllf· ' BLtsted th,.. Umet -once In the back bear, Nixon too1i note ol JolcG<Mrn'i cor-ferln( !ram a Alo -due to ny and fl'Olltalty In the ne<k ood abdomen -n1ptlon dlltpa ml accuutlonl that blta, pollce llicl perry spun around. a .38 caliber"'"°'"" U.S. poUey In Vietnam wu "the worat . Humane Society olfleen bad be<n call· (!l<t SUSPECT, Pap I ) (fleo lll*mMO, Pap I) Id to.Qiue'a lane alltr -Mn& com- ... ' • plainta fn>m nel&Jlbon o!Jou1 the con- dition of the clop and the pcmive not.e they wro makJn&, poUoe aald. Whal the ofl1<on, Ted Holboa< Stove McNall, •rrlved, llley -l\IOl\lrc --a... hid --wtlb a aU· fenoo. and ille ..... link a-MUied to allow them tnttt ... llr.med~: l}'in& ~ to 1-. lo Holflnan. 1'llt hulnane c<lled who arrived at the -11\ortly '°" the ........ ol the propetty John WbllA •f H111~ 8-11 lrrived. \ •• White ,nnt..i permlaalon for the "'I"" and -ollbn to fl\ttt the P!'P" (fleo CIWEl.TY, l'afJ• ll Devil W orksliop Suspect iri Fire At Ikrly Chapel TURIN. Italy I AP I -Police 11id today a ~mYtterk>ut rlre ln t~ lloly Shnlud Chapel hrre mlaht M\·e been pan ol a Blad< Mus hdd In f""" ol what Roman ClthoUc:a venerate as lbe burl.II cloth ol a.rill. ,,,.,, 111<1 the n .. which dam11ed the chapel altar Lui -.ekend ,... the tat..i In I -of llrange lncfdentl ln Turtn'1 cburcbel and cemetttia. N ice orl(lnally thought -"11\dal mlaltl have cauted the fin In an •ttompl 10 dlma11:e M .-~I Uw Unen. ,,,.. Rlmn burned a IArt• bole In the altar cloth but lilt lllrotid .... undamqed lft tu flttproof -... ID Turin'• cothedral. f"urtbtt ~··~Im. holltftr' pro.- -" -polD and prlatl cl<lcrlbed .. a Black -· • (Sol Dmt., Poe• JI Chairman's Talk Called 'Racial Slur' By JACK llROBAO: -.. ...., ........ Orange County Board of Supervlaors' Chairman Ronald W. Cupert' de- meaning remark to fellow supervl.Jors Wednesday ccneemlng "Adelante ban- dltO!I" drew plenty of reactioo from hl5 tarietJ and othtn today. Adelante President Milt.on Read caDed a press confe~ce for later todiy and sakl, "W!:'ll do .omelhlng vrry atrong about that racial alur." Caspers, sugaeatlng that there CQU)d be a better place in Oran&e County for the counly seat than Santa Ana. hold uked County Counsel Adrian Kuyper lf sucb a move was legaJl y po155lble. "Santa Ana is not a good place became It does not have ethnic ba lance ." said the board chairman from Udo Isle. "~ mJnoritiet have the ear o( too many supervllon. ·• '!be Adclante bandlto remark wu In tt1ttenee to an Affirmative Action f'roarom (AAP) approved tut -by I.he aupervtJOrs wllb Carpers on the lhort end of. I 4 to I YCM. The AAP 11 deslped to aJve mlnort1y group memben rmre jobs ln counly governmtnt and to provide l.htm with lnllnlng to pln promock>ns. Adelante. • Mexican-American 1roup of county emp&oyes aHJn& wtth LULAC, a Chicano polltl<al aroup. backed the ... lion pnlll'am u p._.r by penonnel diredor Wiiliam Hart. Ca1pen Wedneaday put It thlJ w1y: "The A~tetWiiff&ol took U1 lut wao:k for about Q00,000 and ..,.. ol the ,...... IS.. CAIPl!RS, ..... 11 Wea Iller A wann Md amr wetRnd II In 1tore for Orlnfe c.o.lt ,....,ti with tempentwu It tbt hNctm e•pteted to be •round n l"rklly. lflalo< Inland .,...,., •. ...... to- nlghl a::z. INSIDE TODAY l:ln>tti Vffrt °"° Jf ,,,..,.,., abandoMd N'w Y ort. Jlldglao If Wru4/f fn f/t4 """' Of I q. rl.-ar amr. They a:rme mnJMJto •t~lt to a north-ot•tral CaU· fontfo "°'""'11t1ll11. WAerc IN tlitll "°"'~ Ste flOt'J, Prloe 11. ~--...... ,. ...... .. (........ . ....... ,... . <" ........................ . ~ • .,_e..... " ~ ..... .. ~...,.. II .......... ~ •""""" ,.... . ~ . LitFI ? 9 ..... ~ -,..,... " .. " ...... . ........... u --. ... _JM! ,.,_ . --. Am ......... II --_2 -DAILY PILOl s • • T.h'~· Octob<r 5, l~l2 ... Kidnap~r Says Fre~do111 Bought CASPERS ... was that we art In an ma whlcll doe1 not have the normal ethnic balance." -suptl"lloor wttttanr -Philll,. of - Fullerton needled "Where do you want It, --At'l..ANTA CUPll -Ruth Eisenmann Schier de H.andatzo, convlctl'd In tht stmat'4>N1l kidnaplng ()( Florida heiress Barbara Jane MACkle, cbarg~ that she bought her rreedom front pr iso n by paying a 1ninister $10,000. The m in1sler l'allcd the allegation ''totally ridicu lous." Gov. J immy Carter. infom'led of the charges in a letter fro nt fi.1rs. de Ran· dazzo, said the St ~te lJlv1sion of Investigation would louk into the 1na1t er. ~trs. de llanda1..zo y,·a~ fret.'(! last spring after serving three years of a se vrn-ycar Sotatla Swell tenn for Utt 1968 kidncping of Mias ~tackle, an E~ry Universlt y coed, and deported to her native ltonduras. She has since married. t.fi ss ~1:1ckle had been buried for 83 hours In a cor!i.o-slzed box: In nearby C:w1nnett COunty until her father paid a $500,000 ransom !or her release. Gary Stephen Krist also was convicted in the ease and Ls servtns a life tet m. Jn her letter to Carter, Mrs. de Ran· dttzzo charged thnt Rev. n. Jloward Gardner of Jonesboro paid to secure her release but did not say \\'ho had been pa;d by Mr. Gardner. ~1r. Gardner said lbe story wU "totally ridiculous." I He !l8id the woman bad 11!1llen In Jove with me. Jt had gmt further thaq1 the minister bit. Tbls wat broken oU. J can ljtf! uow that She is wanting to hurt1me." Mrs. de Rand~ &itso aent to Caner a chec.k for $2,000 w:torsed by 11 Mrs. Margaret Gardner and cople! of Wto let· ters Mr. Gardner admitted t;rltlng <ilthough he claimed she falsely rtportcd whnt actually happened. One letter said in part, "Ruth is want· Tropical Storm Stirs Up Waves By STEVE l\11TCllELL Of tM D•llr Piiot It•" Although hurricane season officially ended last week. Tropical Storm Joanne, who evidently didn't get the word , is fill· ing her lungs for a br ief march up the. coa st of Baja. Ca lifornia. The storm, generating 55-knots winds a t its center, is also generating swells (ln all south facing beaches along the Orange Coast, according to lifeguards. Located 180 miles south southwest of Point San Eugenia , Joanne is moving northward , with decreasing winds as she approaches Punta, San Pueblo. Five to seven foot waves arc pouring in at HUNTINGTON BEACH according to Lifeguard Mark Bodenbender. "A lateral cur re nt is making it diffi cult for surfl'rs Frotn Pagel BOMBING ... crime since the Nazi extermination of the Jews." "Some of my more partisan support ers have said I should respond in kind ," Nix- on said. "But J"m not going to dignify such comments with a reply." -Insisting the U.S. has not been •·schnookered." Nixon said th a t McGovern 's charges of scandal in the sale or wheat to the Soviet Union were being thoroughly investigated. Nixon also said the sale was "a good deal" for America. "f\1y reply is to have such allegations investigated." Nixon said . "Now, if there was any impropriety. If there was any ii· legality. we want lo know it. The way to find out is to put the best investigative agency in the world to work at findin g out." -He said he would support a con· stitutional amendment against busing in the next Congress, but would prefer the legislative TOUle. If Congress railed "lo provide relief from excessive busing orders, then I in- tend to find another way." -At one point, Nixon became a bit philosophical about his role a s acknowledged front-runner in th e presidential ca mpaign. FromPageJ CRUELTY ... crt y and the anim als v.·ere taken int o CU.!itody. Chaise admitted to police that none of Lhe dogs had ever see11 n \'eterinarian or received rabies shots. Chase lived in a trailer on the enclosed property which he leases from \\'bite, ac· cording to police. Police described the area as lacking cleanliness and the humane officers .wld there was excessive dog leavings on the grounds. Chase was freed on a $250 OOnd later 1n the day. OU.N6i COAST I DAILY PILOT ,... OnflOI' c-t DAILY ttlLOT. wltll ""'ld'I k (Offlblned tht ........ ~. i. oubll.ntci 11r ""' Or-a• CNJI htlllllll'"f ~. S.,... ,..,, tdlflam .,.. l'VOlltlw«. ~ .... "'~ Friday, tor CO.I• Mn•, H_,t l tt<ll, Hunllnglon llHCllll"wn1•1n \11lt.1, l.HllNI 11.adl. lr1tln1/S.ddl<tltldl •"4 Slfl C ........ 1t/ ,.." ~ ("1pl.ir1.,., A 1lt19!• roololwl .. ]!loo\ k Pllblllllfd Slhtrda~\ • ...-'.,,.clAV .. fht Pfltlc11MI -111111<11 p11nl 11 •I UO Wt'I 9.Y SlrHI, (0.11 M .... , C1Hter~i.. t1'1'. Robert N. W11d Prnldenl arid PWllll'IW J1clr It. C1nl•Y Vitt "'"kl"11 ...ct Qlftlf•I Ml!Wlttf Thon11• Ktt'l"ll E.dilw 'JJ.om•• A. Mvrtthln1 IM•lnt IMIW Ch1rfe, H. l•ot Rlct.1•• P. Nill AMltllWll M9"o'tlril ~dl~ -c..te M .. 1 Sit Wnt 1.., Slrttt ,....,..... ""°'! JJJJ N.....,..n IClllrlirttnf W""'9 lllKfl: m ,..,.., ..,......,. H""'.,..... -..ai1 1ms IM<ll IOIMY•rll 1..-i (...,_.., _, ..... ,. 11 Cam1M JilNI T• .. •111 C714J '41 ... llt a.-.._. .U.Uftt1h1 .U.UJI ,,.. c...-. """ ...... """"' .... 4fM4Jt ,,.. .,.,.. ~ C'""'Y c.-.lflel _, ... ~, 1'7t. 0rMM CMtl .......... ~. ... ..... ..,.... lll111lr•lllN. --"· -"" tr "-1..._,. ....... ~ .. ~ wl1'IWI ...... ,.. """""' . ~-· ........ . ~ ti•• ~ ....... at c .... ,,_.... CallMrnl1. lu"9c:r._.IOrl .., urrltr UM "'°"'""'' .., Miii Q ,11 IMAHll "'111ttn" ... , .. ,;_ "·" montlllr. to get at the waves," Boden bender said. "But with these conditions. the pier area is crowded \vith board surfers this mom· ing." NEWPORT BEACll reports surf in lhe nine to 10 foot range. with good shape and no \\'ind in the morn ing. Capt. Bud Belshc says about a dozen surfers are oul at 19th Street, and more down toward the SURFING Fall '72 groin and rive r jetty. "I'm sure many more \\'ill be coming down when they hear about the sout h s\vcll," he said. LAGUNA BEACll is sho\ving some 6 foot sets with excellent shape. Brooks Street waves arc holding up about a half ' dozen riders in 66 clegrce water. SAN CLE!\1ENTE lifeguards also report 4 to 6 foot swells with good shape. Trafalgar Street and San Clemente pier have a few surfers ouL The \vater temperature there is 68. For those who woo 't ditch school or call in sick Friday, the prospects for good surf this weekend are slim. Joanne is expected to dissipate by Saturday morning. The tide chart for Friday looks like this: First low tide at 2:59 a.m. at 0.8 fret : first high at 9:09 a.m. at 5.7 feet ; lllet'Ond low al 3:35 p.m., 0.4 feet; second high o.t 10: 14 p.m. at 4.5 feet. From Page J DEVIL ... HELD IN SLAYING Su5ped Buffalo Fron• Page l SUS PECT ... blNing, and sprayed five shots into a house, fence and cars. ~le missed his 1tiller and died in a pool of blood beside a Kansas·register~ used c<.r which bad been loaned out by a Santa Ana dealer. A team of six detectives assigned to different angles of the murder duel aP" parently developed information Wed· nesday pointing to Bu!falo as the suspect. "1-fe took it pretty coolly,'' Capt. Glasgow said in announcing Buffalo had been charged. Investigators said both victim and suspect have served time in prison in COIUlection with narcoUcs involvement. One strong tbeocy from the outset had been animosity over some dispute over drugs that triggered violence. So far, Buffalo has refused to make any statement to police abou~ the case. "We don't need one," Ca{I. Glasgow remarked. A Spanish-made rifle, apparently of 7.62 millimeter bore tossed aside at the rituail involving worship of the devil and scene i& beipg eJCBmined by the Sheriff's defiling syrr:bols of Christianity. Crime Lab along.with Perry's .38 caliber It often includes bones, skulls and' cof· reTvohelve~n-h d be 1-d 1 1-d fins. .... rt e ~ en . ire our lllles an Participants sometimes engage in sex· all four cartridge casmgs were recovered ual acti\·ity at the scene. ifsgr. Jo~ Cotti no reported that the Perry e~ptied his own gun in a futile vandal , or vandals, arranged the effort to hit ~is 12:20 a.m. attacker as he candlesticks in a pattern . poured unguents :;rawled beside the car, mortally woWld-- over the altar. then spread oil and set · • fire to it. He said ii seemed that special e>i:ie slug smashed into the house oc- c-are had bee lak t k lh n cup1ed by Randolf Glaese, who was away n en ° etp e ames from home at the time. from burning beyond certain marks on During investigation in tbe aftermath th~S~lo~. 1 . of the gun duel, Officer Steve Na.sh • 1~1 ar Y mystenous a~ts have be~n knocked al the unit shared by Buffalo occ':-'f1~g fa irly frequ entl y 1n churches 1n and his wife Sherri, 28, to ask if they saw Turin, he added. or heard anything. Last yea~, someo~e stole the skull or He claimed he smelled marijuana St .. Domeruco Savio: ~ 19th century smoke and saw a bag of the illicit weed Itali an, from his ~ffln In the Church of lying in plain sight but failed to take ac. St. Ma~y. Mass~ve gold .and silver tion at that point. candlesticks and Jewel offerings around Narcotics Detectives Dick DeFranclsco the coffin were not taken. and Don Casey returned to the Buffalo More recently, several tombs in the home and arrested the couple on suspl· Cef!letery of St. Peter were deflled. cion of possession of marijuana about 3 Neighbors to!~ police they saw men and a.m. Tuesday. women roaming around the tombs with Buffalo was booked into city jail where torches. he was re--arrested on the murder Charge I ~ isolat.ed churches in the hills near Wednesday night, while-hi! wife SberTI is Turin, pc;iltce have found empty coffins, In Orange County Jail, facing only the black veils and some ritual books. possession of marijuana charge. Bloody Cerettaotay Ex-cult Member Testifies 111 Mu1·der of 'Follower' ROCHf.STF:R , N.Y, (UPI )...., A fnnner Tilt'mbe.r of 11 bitUtre rellglous cult has tcstUled that she saw cult le.ader Robert Strong plunJi:e a knife Into enothr:r member's chest during o rellgkxls ctrcmony. Strong. 56, or Roc.Mstcr. al &0 known as Omar All Sbertlff. iii tharit'd with second-dl'grtt manslnughler In the dtath of Kenneth Goings. 25 . ...,.hose body was fouod In 1n Icy stream Feb. 25 ill lM Buff.1110 suburb of Cheektowaga: MI'S. Maerory R.oblmon of Rochuter tutlfted sht had brleny betn a member nf Stton1's Sudan ~1usllm rtllglon. One tvenlng, sht said, she SIW Strong put Golngs on the Ooor of the lf'O'.IP'• Lex1ngton COurt htodquar1crs and "take I\ knife O'Jl and slab him in the che st. ''I saw aome blood," she said. ''I don't know how tllr II \\'t nl In " Before he was stabbed , -!he 11::1id, Gofng:r at up and .. Id, "No, fnthcr." She SOid Strooa replied . "You'll be all ri ght , son.•· 1 Arter the certmony, she said, Going.! "walked ur*nd" but J,as growing weaker when she lar;t sa.J him the nut dnv. 1 J ~1rs. Robir$nn said slfe went through the cert"m once herself but had no recnllectkm hein( '1abhed. She said \hf$1 had lf'tn the cerrmony Ortn on othen who IOJt "mnybe i of ood." Siron& Mid • ctd his followers in a "slate nf smr.nsion" during the ctre11101Y. lhut •lopping their heartbeat and prf\'tntlnC tnjury, she sa\d. Anolltcr witness, detoctlve Lou~ Tn>t· to. 11nid Strona told police that the last time \Jo hod .,.. Golnp "" durtoa the c-erefl1lny when ht placed two knives and a hatlhet ln hiJ body. sti1na aald the hatchet and one knlfe werd rvnoved from Golnp' body without bloocl:t.hed. but that a wound from the re- mu iall'lg knife bled several plnls, Trotto 1e8tlfled, tng '° buy btr freedom and return to HondmJ . . • Rulh lo ln need ol a~ pro1.lmately $10,000.00 ... Plea.st advise me by relUm mail u lo the possibilities of getting Ibis amount of mooty for Ruth and bringing i{ b<lck at that time." He sa id 1he check was In payment of travel expenses for trips to Honduras. Gardner, fonner presJdent of Samaritan HOtl!e, Inc., a minlstry to "derelicts," Indicated he felt Mrs. de Randou.o had written the governor in an effort to break a contract with Gardner ror a book and movie rights about the kidnaping. 'Commerrialistta' '?be minister said the contract had been dnwn up at Rwlli•s ~uest to pay him back for k~ to her during her lime In prbon. JORpb G. Maddox, a member of the 11ato Pardooa and Parolts Board when Mrs. de Randuzo wu rtleased, said there we.re no lrregulartlles Involved. Maddox added, however, he had been worried and Immigration olflclals were also worried about the Jllllllbillty ol Rulh marrying Gardner because they would then °have a bell of a time gettlng her out of the cowitry." 2 Child Graves Trigger Dispute DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI ) -The James and Christa Ann Frederick both father of a young mother who labored 100 o.f whom died hours after birth 1of Hya· hours making headstones for the graves hne membrane disease. of her two infant children believes "pure However, cemetery employes removed . . ,, . . the markers because a city ordinance commerc1alism 1s responsible for a allows only grani't b h . e or ronze eadstones. dispute that threatens to leave the graves The cemetery committee of the Des unmarked. Moines Park ~ard refu.sed Tuesday to City officials maintain that Glenda1e grant an «;X~tlon to Its Policy. Cemetery here is a "showplace" and that Des Moines Mayor Richard Olson said han . 1 be expects the matttr to come before the dmade gravestones will detract rom City Council Friday. He called for a the overa11 appearance. "humanitarian approach'' to the situa~ However, George H. Griffin said tion. in Newport Beach?" Cupers laltr said hO thought Lqlaui Hills or even Dana Point would be a bet. ter location for lhe ce.nter of county government. Other members of the board were understandably cautioUI today in aase,q.. ing Caspers' remarks. Ralph Clark, Ille Fourth Dillrlct' supervisor from Anaheim aald , 111 don't·· think anything ltke that could be done without tremendOUJ cost to the tax~ payers. I'm satisfied With the facility being where It is.'' SUpervisor Robert Battin, whose First District includes the county seat and more than half of the MexJ~A.merican population ol the county, was out cam- paigning today. But one of his aides said, ·~ boss just thought it was a bad joke. He (Caspers) has a peculiar sense of hum« at times." Not so reticent was Dick Ruiz, long- time aide to Supervisor David Baker and one of those who assisted in the orgeniza- tion of Adelante. He dispatched a letter to the boerd'a chairman whlch read in part, "ethnic slurs bring you no honor. I am filled with disgust and anger that you would make anti·Mexican-American statements in a public meeting.'' Ruiz continued . "lt is incredible to me that any rational, responsible public of. ficial could utter such intemperate remarks -remark! which · can only serve but to inflame emotions and foster unrest." Caspers, in his three years on the . board has been somewhat famous for his' off the cuff remarks. Wednesday that his daughter, Cynthia Frederick, 1J' the victim of "big business" monument companies. ''They don't want people building their own simple little stones," Griffin said. "That's it plain and simple. We're ..• cutting into their business, and they don't like it." • NY Piano Odyssey: Mrs. Frederick, 21, and Griffin placed the markers on the graves of Benjamin TERM PAPERS 'HAZARDOUS' TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) -Rider College officials agreed \Vednesday to allow distributors of "Ready Made" term papers to advertise in the college newspaper, with one stipulation. The ads must carry the warning that any student who turns in a "used" term paper will be thrown out of school. Stolen Instrument Sparks Party NEW YORK (AP) - A woman in the neighbor~ said she wanted one, so a group of teenagers lilted a 300 • poWld upright piano from the secolJd..Ooor auditorium of a Harlem school early to. day. But three policemen foiled the delivery or the bulky gift wher. they saw the youths wheeling it across Lenox A venue from the school on West !17th Street. The thleves fled m· all directions but one, a IS.year-old who hid under a stairwell in a nearby tenement, was nal>- bed. Police said he had five previous ar· rests. While officers welted for a police van to remove the piano from the street, a passing pianist pulled up a wooden crate, sat down and began playing "I Left My ' Heart in San Francisco" and other tunes. The music sparked ar. impromptu par-- ty that attracted about 100 neighbors who casually danced, drank and sang in the ' street until the van arrived and took the piano away. Police said JO youth.!! got into Public School 149 after one crawled through a trapdoor on the roof. 'Ibey said it took 10 policemen to lift the piano into the van. Officers took the piano to the West 129th Street station house whe.fe it re- mained, pending claim by school authorities. The lieutenant on duty said he did not play the piano. • Superb Luxury in Pure Wool .Pile byKarastan kahlllun calls this carpot Spoctacvlar. Sa will yMwhonyw-und hot the ~Clllnifl~nt luxury of its thick, tlMp pure wool pll•. lh amazing priceef lu .. $00.00a •quar• yard lsdu• to a major breakthrough In wool tech"°'°"!· ~araata.~ ~~v•• •ach flb•r a tpeclal bulldng tNatm•nt so tbeywn11 'fatterr and more rMllient. A truly remarluabl.valu•. ' The 17 colon are spectaculer too. Your favorite int•rior de1i9ner will be h•ppy to a11i1t you, H.J.GARRF[T fURNl"fURE - PROFESSIONAL INTUIO~ DISl6N!kS Op•n Mo11,, Th.in. l Fri. Eve.._ llll ~ARIOR ILVO.' --COSTA MESA, CALIF. I oper Mul onlo ... cars Mull Unjl lold Holl w cab J e<Jllc wee juni the D c Po in 'J:/ - chor Virg near Ju date Drlv c1en; p ding sbo I ,,,, ... ~. .. ... .. . . • . . Cahhie Takes Stand -Niguel Suspect Called Very .Neroous . By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL OI .. Diiiy Pllt '"" LOS ANGELES -Just belore his ar- rest by FBI agents In connection with the Laguna Niguel bank burglary, Chari" Mulligan was "very nervous" and "paranoid" as he took a wild taxi ride from Los Angeles International Airport to a Tustin bar, it was stated in federal court here Wednesday. At one point during the trip, taxi operator P.aul DeSantiago testified, Mulligan ordered hlm to pull the vehicle onto a dark Los Angeles street and wait several minutes to make sure no other cars were following them. DeSantiago told the coort he picked up f\.1ulligan at 9:Z3 p~. June 2 at tbe United Airlines tenninal and was first told to go to the intersection o( Hollywood and Vlh'e. While on La Cienega Boulevard, the cab driver asserted, a second cab began to tailgate. "I asked tho paaenger If he thought We were being followed. He wu very nervous and said his wile'• boyfriend was following him lrom Chicago," DeSanllago slated. "He said he'd pay me ll1l ei:tra $10 U I ditched tbe guy. So ! told him I'd diteh." DeSantiago testified. After maneuvering at high speeda in tho West Los Angel" area, DeSantiago said, the other cab wu Jost. At this point Mulligan allegedly ordered the c.ab driver to park along a residential street. . After several m.Inute.I, QeSantiago stated, they continued toward Hollywood. "Mr. Mulligan wu very paranoid the whole trip. He kept lookl.ng back, but as long as tbe meter's running, l don't care." Fina Uy, Mulligan told the driver to forget about Hollywood and Vine and go to South Gate, then said to forget about South Gale and go to 11.stin, DeSanllago * * * * * * Judge Outlines Trial To Visiting Students LOS ANGELES -Law gave way to eaUcation in a federal court here this week, when 50 students from an area junior high school dropped in to watch the Laguna Niguel bank burglary trial. Dana Man Faces Court in Slaying Thomas Bradford McCutcben of Dana Point has been ordered to face trial NoV'. 27 in Orange County Superior Court on charges that he shot and killed Mrs. Virginia Lee Hammett of Laguna Beach near her Art Colony home last Sept. 5. Judge William Murray set the trial date for McCutchen, 50, or 33821 Olinda · Drive. He is held in county jail with bail denied . Police said they found McCutchen stan- ding over the bcxl.y of Mrs. Hammett sbortly after neighbors reported hearing screams followed by shots coming from the 45-year-old victim's home at 1218 Wave St. Investigators said Mrs. Hammett W&S st.ruck in the back of the neCk and face by bulleU fl.red from an automatic pistol found at the scene of the slaying. U. S. District COOrt Judge William Mall Byrne, ·usually irritated when pro- e<edings are delayed, smiled broadly al the group and recessed. court for 20 minutes so he could explain the trial to the students. Byrne found himself on something akin to the witness stand, fielding a score ()f questions from the seventh and eighth grade students of Audubon Junior High School, Los Angeles. · "Obs" and "abs" came from the crowd when Byrne said that between $3 million and $5 million was taken from United Caliromia's Bank's Laguna N lg u el branch in late March. One stu~ent wanted to know why a United Airlines representative testified about airplane tickets. Byrne explained that the prosecution claims that the three defendants in the case came from Ohio t() "cast" the bank, then flew home and allegedly returned in late March to com- mite the crime. Other students questioned Byrne oo the massive amoupt of exhibits introduced by the government as evidence, including tools, an electric fan, auto and apartment leases. gloves and photographs. The judge expalined it is normal in criminal procedures for evidence to be admitted as a means ol determining the guilt or innocence of the defendents. uoorled. "U1Umetel1; we arrived in Tuatio at IO:lli'' the driver told the court. "and Mr. "tuJllgan told me to drop blm oil at 1 bar." . "He asked me If I wanted a drink. I told him l didn't drink, which I don,, bul for some reuon, I did that night.'' DeSantiago stated, caosing smiles in the courtroom. OeSantiago testified that Mlllgan met a short, stocky midd!eaged man in the bar, and finally left around midnight. It WU shortly befm;e 1 a.m. Jllle 3, testified FBI agent ~ Call•y that Mulllgan and one Earl Dawson ()f Tustin lert the Walnut Room bar. Four FBI agents, who bad a stake-out at the bar closed in and arrested Mulligan. The agent told the coort that he had been waiting at Dawson's borne, 15672 Pacific Av!·• practically all of June 2. * * * 58 Items Found In Tustin Car Jjuked to Heist LOS ANGELES - A 1962 Oldsmobile sedan found in a Tustin gar~ge was load· ed with 58 items believed to have been used in the $5 million Laguna Niguel bank burglary, an FBI agent told a £ederal court here Wednesday. The vehicle, asserted U.S. Attorney Jack Walter in earlier statements, was the getaway car used by an alleged team of burglars who blasted their way into the vault of the Monarch Bay branch or United Calilornia Banks. Among the items prese~ted. to the court were three gold coins, one of them considered quite rare by collectors. Walter intends in later testimony to present Dennis Fargber of Laguna Niguel ta testify he owned the three coins and that they were taken from his safe deposit box during the March burglary. The vehicle, found by the FBI at the home of Earl Dawson, a longtime friend of defendant Charles Mulligan, was out· fitted with a false bottom. agent Roger Goldsberry testified. Under the false bottom, he s~ted. several overnight traveling bags were found. They were loaded with miniature cutting torches, drill bllll, Oashll8hls, batteries, oxygen and acetylene gas boJ. Ues, torch Ups, pilers and bammen1. DitA Y Pll..OT 111'9 ~ MUL Tl-PURPOSE ROOM CLASSES KEEP IRV!NE SCHOOL Ol'I' DOUBLE SESSIONS Unlvonity Pork Thlrd11rodo TH<hor Crolg Rlttor Roods to Cl .. Oii Auditorium F'- Irvine School Changes Grade Distinctions Fade By CANDACE PEARSON 01 JM rt.lfy PllM lttff An eff()rt to combat double sessions 111 one Irvine school has led t() a tcntalive slep towards doing away with grade le.vets. University Park School principal :1uart CllMingham stres.¥1 the tenta11ve as he surveys the four cllJIU uslng lbe multl- purpose room because parent.I must t>e· assunllated to the apProacb. To kttp oll <)ouble ......,., lour teachen -on< fint !fade. one lint and ......i rrade and two t h Ir d P.ade-Vorunteertd to take tbelr dasx1 mto the auditorium. • tape """'nlers and other audio-·riwal materi3b. It's mainly used by tho thlnJ.gniden supervis<d by 11deo, although """"' second-gniden bav• gone up lo the enrichment aru whtn able. '"n»e districl asked us to make every e1rort to stay of! cloublt ..-..." CUn· nineham said. • .,,,.1·1 the pr1nWJ rtalOll we're bert. '1 A _.i IUIOlt la tho idel'I !lu· lbllllJ. "We·d !Ike to wort with pM!tlls who havo lludenb In lhla and, u ..,...hie, move them to their •P- propriate tev.I " · 'l\ia meana li 1 seaJllCl.crldtr 11 oead7 ror thJrd.cnde math or • ~r can read oa 1 aecood-gnde levcf, theJ are moved to ~ lev<lt ot their own pace. number ol kids, DOI lfldel," he said. Some children •ro being 1llowed now to wotk It levels higher than thetr eallblllhed grldea. 'Die -""' 000 wort ln reverse and allow 1 llowtr reader to he helped by 1 lelcber or :>Ide In that Intl Moro and more -II '" lolol to Ulla lilP<oocl', ,,_.,..,..,. said, but the -II slow ""'-1t11111 """'" .._..,. wbm theJ ulc wbll I'*'" tbl1J' cliDd II In...,, the1'ft ~ "le .. 111. H Ewn -· -tbtlr ttlf-uined d• !I, ...... , ate lfOUl'IBd D'/ Alli -...S ""' ,. lor mn help to teacbm or tnlned aldet ... lo llped lealoal«t ...... - U~I Tt'-t .. 1r·s OLD AND RUN DOWN, BUT SHE .LL BUY IT F1ust1 Vltali, L1"~1n's Agent, Sits Outside Coloss.eum Colosseu111 Deal Lagu1ian's Offer Called Reasonable By ODl!.'TrE MENGIN ROME (AP ) -The daughter or Benito Mussolini's secretary, who is in Rome trying to buy the Colosseum for a Laguna Ceach businessman, said Wednesday the $1 million purchase offer Is not a joke but a "very reasonable and feasible" prop- osition. "Of coorse," Fauata Vitall said, "any sum would be ridicuJous. There is no price ()n the Colosseum." Miss Vitali. whose father. Dario , work · ~d for the Italian dictator between 1918 and 1930, arrived with a $10,tXKI check for a down payment aod a contract already signed by Thomas Merrick. Miss Vitali, a Rome--bom real estate broker. shrugged at fean expressed by the Italian press that Merrick would in· stall a baseball diamond, a supermarket or souvenir lbops la a Coloaaeum glowing with ~ tighla. · "Mr. Merrick would not ollend II;-or alter It," Miss Vitali said. "ije's only trying to buy the right to do what some. one . should have done years ago - restore the Colosseum and make the publi c pay an entrance fee . Had lhl' Rome administrators done this 20 years ago they would not be In this mess OO'o\'." Rome 's superintendent ()f antiquities protested that J\1errick's offer cou ld not be taken into consideration and that no (e t would ever be cha rged for odmi ssion Into the great amplUtheater. The Colos.seum was closed to visitors last week because of the'danger of fa lling masonry and officials said 11 might take years to make it safe. t.1erri ck has said he would put up another JI million for repairs on the Colosseum and share 50-50 with Rome the profits· he hoped to make. He plans to let Rome direct the restoration of the 1,900-year~ld arena. P.flss Vitali asid M e r r I c k is an Jtallan·American who ha11 made a fortune buytng and selling property, Two Joh Courses 011tli11ed Spokesmen for the Capistrano-Laguna Regional Oceupat.ional Program this week outlined two new vocational traininc courses which could yield ex· tremely high-paying employment to suc- cessful students. The courses -one in r e t a i I supermarket trades ; the other in reJrigeration and air conditioning in· stallation -have experienced extreme growth in the South Coa!t area. ROP spokesman Gerald Copeland said the supennarket trades have increased in jobs avaUable by 50 percent in the J>aSt t~ years and growth is c11:pected to continue as populaUon increases. Employe benefits in the tr&de have in· creased In that period from $4 an hour 10 a ss.an-OOur celling, with full med ical and dental benefits available as well. Other fringe benefltJ include three week.~' annual paid \'Scntion and ~ week's sick leave each year. Anoth<'r growing occupation in lhl' arr:i is the re(rigeration and air cond1uontng field where a wagt.'-bencflt proi;ram valued at 112.35 11n hour Y>'llS n:nooonl~I last week. That package Is guo r::intt't.'CI under a new one-year contract. The industry throughout the count)' h:is increased by 500 percen1 in !be pasl ~tr1 . Copeland said. The ROP cl&SSt'!I. "'h1ch U romph•tNI successfully quality a s1oden1 to cntrr the field, meet on Tuc.sd'\I'~ ;ind ThursdD)'S from 7 10 10 p.m at ~:m Clemente lligh School. Adult 111udl'lll~ ~re w~lcome. Registration in e1lhrr cour~ or two dor.cn other e<>ursts -1.~ sti ll available and specific lnfonnat1on l·itn bP obtained by caJHng 496-1215 S DAIL V PILOT :J Arwther Offer for Col osseum. ... PF.SCARA. ttaly fUPI) -Thomas ~ferric!c has round competition. Italian hotel owner Antonio Zimei wanls to buy the Colosseum, too. And he says his terms are bettl.or. "If they take his ofre-r seriously. v.·hy sh()uldn 'I thfy consider mine?" 7Jme1 asked ;,~her aMOW'lcing his bid to lhl· press . "After all , I'm offerinl three Jif1)('S as mueh." Zimei. 42. entered the Colosseum ra<:c afler P.1errick, a Lo!S An~elcs industrl:\I ist. announced he was willing to buy the crumbling Roman arena for $1 millton. restore it and reopen 1t 10 the pubhl' for a fee .• '1.tiss Fausla Vitali. a renl estate agent from Laguna Beach. ar· rived in Rome 9.'ednesda.y lo contaC't c:ity ofricial11 in ~lerrick's behalf dcspllc the ltaJ ians' at1i1 ude that it was all 11 jokr. Zimei , y,•h() made a for1une during l'l vcit rs of work in Caracas, said he could 'not ra ise as much cash as t.1errlck .• '\11 h<• ('OU ld pay right aY.'ay. he said, was St00.000. hut he was readv lo l.hro\v his llOtf'I 1n nl'arby ~1ontelsilvano into the dt>nl. And thal. he said. is worth $2.58 1nillion and could br used as a school or ror poor childrens' vacations. Like Merrick. Zimei said he was ready to repair the l.892·year-old arcn3 . which was cl()sed to the public for four day5 !est week for fear of crumbling stones and pillars. And he bested the Cali· r imian on another point. Pacific-Air Cal Me rger Might Save SI Million SA'\ fRA1\:CISC'O ~API -An rsti ni:1 tt'd S!.5 1ni\lion in operating CX· ~ penses could be trimm('d by the merger • of Pacific Southv.·est Airlines and Air California, a savlugs that rould enable PSA to defer fu111rf' f:arl' lncr('a se re· que,.ts, say'\ a PSA official. Paul c . Barklt'y, v1t'e president of flnance for thf> airllne . told the Pub!\(' l"t illtle~ Crimmisslon Wedflf'~ay that lh" puhlic could AA\C S2 million If IM RC'· qu i!i1l1on of Al C' Cahforn1a by PSA IS ap- pro\'ed. PSA is seeking approval of i1s offer to purdlose Air Callfom13 r or a~ proximutely S20 mllHon. Barkley said the saving11 to his firm \.\'ould "add to PSA '!I overall f1nanc1i'I 11.rtngth and •blllt)' to compete. as well as to enable PSA to deftr from future fare increases." ''lf the acqulslllon iJ approved," he eon. linued, "PSA will be able to k1wtr fare:s in some markets multin1 in a S2 m!Ulon savings for the nylng public or CalUomj1." J' ote to Sty1nie Filibuster Faiu \\"ASlllNGTON 1AP l -The Senate 10- day. for ttw third time. rt'fUJed to end the filibuster ul(ainsl a bill to utabllsh • Consumer Prott't'li(ln Agency . In tffect, 11 k1lled lhe measure lor the )'l'llr. 11ccord1ng t.o 1t.s backer11 . • The vote for ck>i ure to limit drbate • WM S2 to 30. thrte votes short of the two- th1rds of .'ienators prf.ltnt needed to in· \Oke ckitur r. The blll. already passed by thr: llousf. will tcchn1cally remnln on the Senate calendar and could be broug:ht up a~ In the remalninR few daya Rut I cmed htllc chance that would be thr t.:8k. Wav down deep inslde,eveiy woman dreams of a carpet like thl1f \f ~ ~1 1 Ul(})"' -CARPET BOUTIQUE A thick. lush carpet made with new, improved Dacron g1ve1 lols of body, bounce. and stamina with these 1mportan1 performance features: Resi lient underfoo1 because ol lh• compact denH, conttructlon and• new. permnnont crimp in the fiber. The phod yams ere g~voo a 14)41Cl&J conditio ning undor hfon rempetature ana preuure 1or maximum 1extura ratenuon. NeN. 1mpro~ed Dacron i1a hlghty durable fiber ptovkUng excellent $13 50 WHtabftlty. SQUARE YAllD IN\t&t\fD W1fM P•O 1438 SO MAIN at Edinger·SANTAANA·547-8993 PartlUOOJJ at.parate lhe cluses on tht 3uditorium Ooor. bul thcfe Is movtmtnt bet_,, the groups. The stage has bo<n c:onvcrtea Into an "lnteresi center'• with lndlvklual s1udy tables, library. gamc.t, '11 you IU. IWIO)' the 1rade delliZll> tk>M. it wtn be four teachers with ·x· 'l1lo four to<lten, Robin Sindorf, J1ne Pttmm, Cral1 Rlt!Or and Zllnllr• Wlt.t, pool tbttr retourttt and tt1m- Leadl la t•'OI •heft appropriate. 11•1 •• \ 4 D"1LY PILOT T-. Oct'°" 5, 1972 Reds Missed Chance? U.S. Urges 'Real Negotiations' at Paris PARIS (API -The Viel Cong d<clared today th8t the wide gap between con- Oicting Jmihon.s at the Vietnam peace talks "makes tbe solution to any 1ubst:antial questlom Impossible." Mrs. Nguyen Thi Blnh, chief delegate of the Viet Cong's provisional revolu· lionary govemmeel, told the 1112nd session of lbe deadloclced talu that u .s. peace proposal.a are • ' u t t e r l y unreasonable and groundleu." HER ST A TEMElll' followed a declara· lion by the No<tlt Vlelname&e chief * * * l'iUcgers Attacked Red s Hit Viet Civilians In Try to Cut Highway 4 SAIGON (UPI) -Communl!I u.op. trying to cut Htghway 4 near Saigon wounded three chUdren, an elderly man and an amputee Army veteran today in an attadr: on a village that wu repulsed by South Vietnamese militiamen and tanks, field reports said. The reports saJd a band of Viet Cong firing B40 rocket-propelled grenades and AK47 rilles Invaded the village of Dong My Tay on Highway 4 Jtbout so miles southwest of Saigon. The highway con- nects the capl"1 wilh ~ regiom of the Mekong Delta. A SMAIL IJNIT ol national guardsmen fought off the Communists until militia units with about 10 tanks reached the village and stopped the attack. The only reported casualties were those of the civilians In the village-, field reports said. The attack lent further credence to allied lntelllgence predicllom that lhe Communi.a would try lo block key roads leading lnlo Saigon lo l.solale the clty and ii• three million residents prior lo at- tack> timed lo coincide wllh tho U.S. presidential elecllon Nov. T. To blunt the threatened communist at· tack on the capital, U.S. spokesmen said today llS1 bombers blasted targets near Saigon with nearly 1,000 tons of ex- plosives in the second consecutive day of punishing air strikes In lhe area. COMMAND SPOKESMEN a 1 s o reported the remnants of Typboon Lorna for the second day sharply limited U.S. bombing missions over North Vietnam despite the return to combat duty of all· weather Fill bombers. 1be CXlmmand said the controversial swlngwlng jets returned to the air war Wedne9day for the first time since an early momlng strike Friday, a day after one of the $15 million planes crashed from "unlmown" Ca URS. Military spokesmen said the five day lull in Fill missions was attributed to bad weather and a fear more ol. the sophisticaled planes might crash. 'New Internationalism' Promised by McGovern NEW YORK (AP) -Democratic presldfs1tlal nominee George McGovern aid today Pr<sldenl NIIOO'S forolgn policy la one cl '"'-'cloi" laola- Uonllln" and pl<dced II elected to sup- plllll tt wllh whit be called ..... ln- lemallonalimn. The Soulh Dakota oenalor said be would aa president eatend dtplomaUc ( CAMPAIGN '72 J recognition to 1be People's RepubUc of China, a step Nlxoo has said ls not in prospect in the roreseeabLe future, despite h1J: own summit diplomacy 'in Peking. AS ALWAYS, McGovt.ni vowed to withdraw lmmedlately fn7n the war In Indochina. ool lbe apeecb be prepared for tbe City Cub ol Cleveland was his firsl detailed -ol Ida ltftlgn pol· icy lntectlons toward the rest ol the world. " ... In many ways," he said, "the foreign policies ol the present ad- mln15tratlon are l!lolallng ua." AfcGovem aaki the United State. Is laolated from alll .. and tndJng porlnenl by "alx l\D1 d.Jph>enaey and taUure to con- ault," and from the developing nations by attJ.t.udes lbat favor bi.g busJ.nea there. "We are Isolated ttom reality by the lnalatence lhal tough talk and big Pen- tagon budceta ... aomebow aynooymous wlLh national manhood," McGovern aaid. • , • I SUGGEST that "" muat r.ject th.ii UflCOMCious laolatk>aism tn favor of a New Internationalimn hued not only upon our vital lnteresu, but 1l10 upon the tlnd of MUon we can and abould be," he aaid. McGovern lhua ~ to take the rormsn pobey offenalve a I a I n a t Republican8 who ban cbarJed thal bla pr-11 IOI' def.... CUii, withdraW81 fNJ<D Indochina and U.S. troop reductlons WhM I was fifty-nine It -• wry good ~ ••• in Europe add up to a ne.w Ltol.ationism. He aald "America's New Interna- tionalism In the urros" muat be supported by a strong natlcnal defenae, but one free of waste. But he rejected as "a naive delusion" the concept of a balance of. power to preserve peace. "LET US HA VE I.be defense we need," McGo"""1 said. "Bui lei us not permit the insatiable appetite of our military to replace our good sense, and tmdermJne the prospects for reduction In the balance of nuclear terror." lie said under NWin "we are be<omlng a second-rate nation in the terms that will really coon! In lhe 19'1Dll," In Jn. tematJ.onal eoonomica, and cooperative aid for the developing nallo111. McGovern luJed bla IS.page for.Jin policy manileslo as he campaigned In New York and Qeveland. He btpn 1t with an appearance before Democratk naUooallUea: groups tn New York Qty, saytnc u II lhe Democr1ts, not Nb.on or the Republ.icana. who have historically mcouraged oi-In U.S. lmmlgrallon pollclcs. negotlattr, Xuan Thuy, that "up lo now the posltlona are fllr aper\ on poUUcal and military questions." Mn. Blob lold the U.S. dolegallnn ' "Ollr negotiating position 15 correct and just, while yours la unreuonable and un- i"-''-It la lhla antagonlam which baa created the wide gap which makes the 80lution to any substantial question im- poaslble." U.S. Ambaaador William J. Porter sale! the No<tlt Vletnameoe and Viet Cong have m1l8ed opportuniUes to make peace and urged that "real negollaUons -001 mere ratatemeo1 of your demands" begin loday. HE ADDED TllAT ii lher. bad been a positive response to President Nixon's May a cease-tire offer, "the cease-fire, prisoner ret.wn and complete American withdrawal couJd have taken place by now." "Yet another opJ)Oriunlty tor a peaceful settJement which you have spurned but whlcb remains open to you,'' ·he went on. is the Saigon government's oiler '"to discuss political questions with you." Porter said the Viet Cong's Sept. 11 declaration on its plan for a tripartite regime ln Saigon is an ''arbitrary, il- logical formula" and added· "your side bas been unable to explain or interpret these proposa15." MRS. BINH declared that the Vietnam situation haa two aspects: "The fact is this: the United States has waged a war of aggression against Vietnam, while the Vietnamese people are carrying oot a patriotic resistance war to win back in- dependence and l?<edom." She said tbe second ract is "There are two administrations -the provisional revolutionary government and the Saigon administration, two armies -the people's liberatioo armed forces ~ the Saigon army, a1ld other politic.al forces In Soulh Vlelnam. "The U.S. aide baa lried Its best lo deny the aforesaid realities. It constantly resorted to fabricated allegations of an 'invulon by North Vietnam of South Vietnam' and denied the U.S. aggression in spite of its being admitted by tbe Pen· tagon papers. AT THE END of lhe meeting, all delegates agreed that il bad been fruitless and also agreed to meet again ne.tl 'nlursday. Schmitz Claims U.S. Aids Hanoi NEW HAVEN Cann. (UPI) -Rey. John G. SChm.ltz, of Tustin, the American Party candidate for president, ha!!: told Yale University students the Vietnam war ls "immoral'' because the United States is indirectly supplying weapons to Hanoi. The California congressman said Wednesday nlgbt lhe "mllitary·lndustrial complez ol tbe Soviet Union is virtually completely dependent upon the United States or its ellies for its technological SUPJ>Ort," 'lbe Soviet Unioo, he sald, "fum.i!:be!I 80 percent of lhe war-making potential for North Vietnam. "So what you have, In effect, is the United States and JU NATO allies, via the Soviet Union, fumisbing the lion's share ol lhe wannaklng potential of North Vietnam,'' Schmitz said. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otllvery of the Dally Piiot ls guaranlttd ........,..,.,..,.,, " '!'OU ... ftOf Nivt ~ ,...,.,. b¥ I I.JO P.l'rl .. ~" 1<111 VOUf C011Y Wiii °" tlnuoltl • '"""' ........ ,. '"'" 111'111 l ia p.m. 1"'twlle'I' .... lllfw:l..,1 " '!'OU do "°' •trtlvt '1'1¥' C"OOt" tty t '·"" $.ll\lrUty, or t • m. """""'' (.911 ff'll • ClllOY wOI toe b<OUOlll 1~ """' tin. .,. ..... Ulltll ta • "" Telephonts "'°" °"'"" c_., ""'-'• .. . . . MJ-4n1 l+Ottll-1 HUM.,.-. '-di Hf -tlftlNIW .. . . . . .. •. . ...u~ ...,_ c..,...,.... ~ hKtl. laf! ,..,.,. ~. ~ Potm, """" ......... U.-H ..... t . ~ Cities Share Heat Lead Blytlie, McAllen> Texas, Show 93 Degree Readings 2'e•,.,..,.re• -... " .. ,. " n " n " .... " n " .. :I II ll ~ ' ........... ~. c: ... ,., Weeeher .. • """'· UtfW ... Mo*rt """"' """" .,.. ........... ~ ....._."' -">eclll...., I .. \J '1IOtl lll trt.r· -...., *"" ,,....,, -......,, " .... C...• "°"""'''""'"' ,....... .._ '1 .. Tl '"'"""' ....._."""" ,....,. '"""' ti .. .. W•"" ...,,_,...... '6. Sicic, /floo11, We• Til\ltttOAY 5«'tNI 11191'1 J1 •·'"· • ' SttiMld low l •·""' ... 1'1"11 Mf11 I.I 1"11'51 10w l,I _...,. ... "'*"' low •• 4:W.. t.J $1111 Ill-l :.!11) '·"" ,.II •: I ... m. ""-111-J:••·l'ft. kn: $;1'1 •.m, specio.15 iY) 12.y~r!J da,pt" -fumoJL) -lop mo.lte fefi~ ~-:\>lo $5qg 5-J~ ~5 long ~ -:ihorl;pol~esW1 dac.rons, pn"nk. 4 wl~ 1 t~ o.tt<J ~15 • HARBOR CENTER, COSTA MESA 13th ANNIVERSARY SALE Come. hnv~ d. ball o.nd o~ve o.. whole butlch ot n1on4';jf • •. ~ I. • -• • -l . • ' • ' ' • :; • • • -~ • ' ~ so~~~.~~ ~~~:r~:~~~~H~ME~~~OHN~~I'.:.:.T~~E:~~.'::0~~:!!1T~~~o~~R:i!~~.E~=~~D ~ aomm MDALICS Gt! nailJ for lllt11 hlle11 , ... tL lllle ctltfl, •" wlft 11e ti •llL It% aofll II" ICIJllL $2 99 YD. ....... "''"" ft••tl ... ., for wn wll!tr tit.,••· fll% ·""· ............. ,,,, ......... •••11• ••dla. ZIPPER PULLS Tiit 11Wtl1 fHlllH Ofllt. Yllr thfH If lltrf Hllrte •fllltt •l•ll lll1poa, •ll.,1 pie ''ttt•, tr Jtwlfu lllL Tiit l11llllhl11t1•. FABRIC CENTERS NOT ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES PllClS GOOD THUi\$., OCT. Ith THRIJ TUES •• OCT, 10th STAllTOI( . 111ft •.-ell llW. •I C-.- pth: n7·SOll IUENA PAIK '9a11t1 lt ... •IYc...,YW ,,.: 126-lttt ORA NCH tst lol, TIOlllft If Ollllftl pth: Sl2-26S.S ASSORTED BUnONS Y11r dl1Je1 1t 111111 Jla11f1 a WllL Tft l •orl llDttlll ,., en Y1lu1110 19J 1 card. 5cCD. TRIPLE KNIT •ERSEYS Al -dill HllClfln If kllfl It 1111111 frt•• A"'ll IC .. tllltl •d 111111. Dtll(lltr 1••&111• 11 •lld "''''' Itri, •• , •• pri11•·77c YD. SIWmG NOTIGlll U11t11trd at l1w Jf)Cll ti ,,... 111111, 1111 cu1~l1a11 tftha,1111 ttc. Stltct frtM tylf IO ltml It I fllCtltl If td&llll •et, Y1l1t11019( Tit-. 11, GARDEN GIOvt LA MllADA \ .. I CM.-It MMltr ltltl II_,.. &t L• M.,... pth: .,..~ pth1 $J:Z..fJJO FULU!RTON HUNTINGTON ICH ,,.. .,... llW, •I lt&lllflt """ \titfl Mclll ut •""61 llM. ....... ,,,.~~ pth1 S2'-l2'2 pth: M2·1fl1 PLACENTIA NOW Ol'rs 1r•1 Y..._t L .... t •M. ti ..... COSTA M SA !Ml ... ''"' 11, pth: 5~1171 Vl5T4 CINTl9t pth1 MS-71lt . . • • • ! - •• -' . • • : • • • i • . t f • ! 't ; • l •• \ Pr to all An w ml sa ( au lhe br an the fro ing of • ~ (U Eli lhe "pl ' Japan Internees Get Mo11ey Back WASllJNGTON IUPI ) - Pres1denl Nixon has sig ned In- to h1w leg islation that w1U allow nearl y 2,000 Japo.ncae- Americans in terned during \1/orld War II to <:ollect $4.S 1n\11ion on confiscated bank savings. Clain1ants can petition the negotiated "government lo government and not by a diverse bunch or individuals ... Currently unde r goin g medical checkups and debrief- ing 0t Maxwell Air Force Base, Elias thanked the an- tiwar act ivists who secured his release from Hanoi last • . . . .. . . ' . ' . -. ' WORLD & NATION Tycoon Jailed By Judge r hur\dtr Octo~ '>:-1972 September Wholesale Prices Take Spurt on B1·oa(l Range WASllINGTON CAP ) 120.2 of its 1967 base of JOO. 1>erunl from a }'ea r ago: CLEARWATER. Fla. (AP) Prices of a broad range or Thi! mtans It cost wholesalers meats. poultry nnd rish drop-1 -A1illionairo businessman wDolesale food . industrial raw $120.20 last month on the ped five-ttnlhs of ont percent materials and manufactured Glenn W. Turner was jailed products rose an average of average for goods worth $100 for the month and were up l for fi ve hours after a three-tenths or one percent five years ago. t2 I percent over the past I demonstration by a group or last month. the government The index was up 5 per~nt yea r. esg prices shot up 15.71 600 women supporters sparked reported today. in the past year, the bureau J)<'rtent in Scpl<'n,ber and1 10AJLV PILO T -5 TIME TO THINK KENZO SWEATERS Jt<11n tntd (IN SHORT ... ) month. But he refused to "---------"' make any other contment about them. e B11n Ordered WASH INGTON (AP) -U.S. Girl Killed By Mother the wrath of a circuit court The report by the Bureau of said. v.·cre 6 6 percent nbove a year' judge. LaOOr Statistics said the in-tn food . the report said. earlier, milk increases seven-I The 38-year-old Turner was crease included a rise of sil-fruits and vetetables declined tenths of one percent for the Westcliff Pl11a 17th a nd Irvine Newport Beech tenths of one percent for farm six-tenths of one ""rcent in monlh and was 3 ~r-ntl bailed out of the Pinellas ....M" t -------• foods nd r r " ~=====:::-:==~--' attorney general ror return of the money taken fron1 U.S. branches of Japanese banks and held without interest by the Justice Department Several years ago Congress passed leg islation providing repayn1ent for at least part of the value of confiscated prop- District Court Judge John J. Sirica has prohibited anymore stateme n ts about the Watergate break.in and bug- ging case by those connected with it. .,. ..... uc s, PnJ\,~ a Sept.ember but were up 33.3 above a year ago. County Jail by n I g ht fa 11 feeds, while industrial com·i------------·--------- Wednesday after his lawyers modlties increased two-tenths CAMDEN, N.IL (UPI) -A ~~t:ic~·~u~ndo~t :;~: of:i:: :::~T SAID that intr---:=:----------.,,R=-e-a-lo---$-1~. p-p~i-n-'~W--h~iS~k:-e-y~ Judge Joseph McNulty. the past three month s, young mother whose children His temporary rep r i e v e wholesale prices rose al an were taken away two year.; I comes up for review today .in annua rate of 6.7 percent , erty. Howe\1er, those interned after the outbreak of war with Japan and later paroled as "enemy aliens" were barred from making claims for sav- ings taken from U.S. branches of Japanese banks. Sen. George ~tcGovern said he doesn't think the ban ap- plies to him, but he would speak out anyway. "I will not allow myself to be muuJed or intimidated by any politically motivated directions f r o m Richard Nixon," be said. e W11fer Bill OK WASllINGTON (UPI) - ago .but were later returned Lakeland when the judge will compared with 4.9 percent has been charged with tortur-hear arguments on whether rate in the first and second ing to death .one of them and the bond should be mlide quarters of the year, and that severely beating ano~r. permanent. food and reeds soared at an The mother, Rosanne Louise "I'm not going to preside in aMual rate of 17.4 percent in a zoo," Circuit Judge William the third quarter. Jankins, 26, Camden, is cbarg· A. Patterson said as he issued In the 13 months so far of ed in the death of her 5-yea r· the contempt citation that President Nixon's wag~price old daughter Toya. She also is would ha ve confined Turner controls, wholesale prices , e POW Spe11l<s M 0 N 1'G 0 l\1 ER Y, Ala. (UPI) -Maj. E<hvard K. Elias says he made it clear to the North Vietnamese that he "plans to be a military man the rest of my life" before they released him from a prisoner of war camp. Elias, 34, of Valdosta. Ga., one of three POWs released to an antiwar group, also said prisoner release should be Congress has sent President Nixon another veto challenge -this time in the form of a $24.6 billion clean water bill he already has said the nation can't afford. The most costly and strin- gent water pollution bill ever passed by Congress was sent to the White House late Wedoe.sday on I.he 366-ll vote of the House and the 74.-0 ap- proval of the Senate. accused of beating 8·year-old behind bars for 150 days. have risen at an annual rate or Rosanne. Patterson claimed the 4.3 percent, compared with a Toya was dead on arrival al detoonslration by wives of rate of 5.?. percent in the nine Cooper Hospital T u e s d a Y Turner company salesmen _months prior to the controls. night. Her sister was listed in resulted in a "circus-like at-The September i n c r e a s e II ,;;;,;;~~"""""°',-,""'"""::_~::,.~:_,,,;:.::::::,:=~~~~~"J fair condition today. mosphere" that made a brought the government'slL Police said the two girls, mockery of his' court. Wholesale Price tndei: up to K[HTUCKY s RAlGHr BOU BON WHI SKEY • 86 PROOr • l llA B KS KY. both "quite thin," were ap-1--------------------'--'---------------------------------parently hit with a hammer, whipped with ropes and then burned with cigarettes. Both appeared to have marks from previous beatings, police said. HOME OWNERS SPECIALS FOR YOU- Fer quality, convenience, and economy, you can't bat your local hardware merchant with national chain buyi111 power! Yaar home is your castle -dan't ne- 111ct it! T1k1 care of your hame-owner needs ritht now. LATEX PAINT SPECIALS .-;;:.. ~ INTERIOR l EXTER>OR ~SUPREME LATEX PAINT 1A1ll J Str-N-Rvt HOUSE PAINT Ii.tr llllER!OR urrJ. l6~97~ 5.97w. HOUSE PAINT-Forwood and masonry. Protects and wears like quality o11·base! lets moisture escape without blistering; usually covers in one coat Re· sists mildew, stains, etc. White or Jamestown colors. FLIT INTERIOR-Full-bodied, non-drip lah!x covers most surfaces in one coat , •. dries In 30 min. leaves a flat, scrubbable, fade-resistant fin ish. I ffieQp stamp out sobt C!lackellg • ' I ~ • --'• . / I ~ i • ' lri. I \ I. ' ' Grea1 new appliancr--only OrK' of it,.-ltind-krcPt> CR1\CKF.RS • PQ. TATO CHIPS • COOKIFS • PRET· ZELS • CEREALS • NUTS •nd SNACXS ~rfr-clly dry, (runchy •nd ft•vo,..f~Ni illdr{i,,;1,/1----<t.vrn un· dcr 1hc rnost IOSJlY •1motphcric condi tions. Koe~ sail! dry •nd fttt· ftowing. Modrb for homr, ho.at or ('•m~r. Aurani ... r rolishcd rnc1al 6nid1. ""' 4S.PC. 9.86 STAINLESS Stainless steel for years of service, Choose Oxford Rose or Lagos scroll pattern With eight 5·pc. place settinp plus 5 serwina pieces. Outdoor lighting you never thought you could afford! A quality system you In- stall yourself ••• 1n min· utes, with complete safety. Ho permtta. eondult Of' dlalnt '**-IY. ;. llllt pkq; In! • UL ap. JH'O't9d 12 volt mt.m •blolutalr ·~. cfllld .. ,., • n.... ..,.. YOltapMtl ll19compl*wttn I ... , .. 1_, bfl9m l!Jtita. color hn- (•mbtr, 119«1, ciNt, pink aM blue), ... tMrpruof, ahoc:tcploof ~ ~ With M-o4'I' IW'ltd'I OI' •utMleUa tim•, ltOllnllll nu. •nd .. n tncketa • use thlt lllle!Un1 new llltrtlnc from LJtue GMlnt In a-f1f w.)'I throuatiout tM ,..., fOf MCUrH:1 and Ol.ltdoOI' bNut)'. FOi.ir HPttfltrl Hts to cllooM fl'Orll, Prices start at $49.95 3J.Yl 5Kuri\y S'19teme INTRUDER ALARM Emits silent, harmless hlef>.frequency sound waves in cone·shaped pattern coverina up to 300 sq. ft My motion m this 1r11 will switch on bedside radio Of llmp etinnected to alarm unit and, seconds liter, will sound Inter nal 1ltrm. Uses household current 451 .................... 19.50 Aa:1111ry llllru!Atam Hano 70 ................ lt.lO MON .• FRI. 9 A.M. • 9 P.M. SAT. 9 A.M •• 6 P.M. SUN. 10 A.M. -4 P.M. YOUR LOCAL HAROWARE WITH .NATIONAL CHAIN BUYING POWER • Veqa. has biq, fade-resistant 10.fnch front diac brakes and rear drum brakes for steady 1top1. And two It.eel roola-not Juat one. For quiet, the inner red acts like a oouatlcol tile. A PQW11' venU(atlon aystem keepe outaide oJr movlnq throuoh the oar, even wtth the wtndowt clcll«I. (Joo Bucket seal! that ore full loom cushioned ond contour molded lo lit your leqs and back. Under normol driving oondltlon1 you con qo 50.0XJ miles beloro Vieqo's enqine a ir filter needs reploclnq . TrPfcal ol Veqa quality. battery blrmtno.lt a,.. 800led on 1he 1ido, and i.. likely to oomide. ,l ~ / = " A 1tt""l sidP ouorrl bF>nm In each door for oJ d p!"O!t"dlCJn A powrrful "'"Qlne helps make Veqa [C'.Spon.11I VI!, tun to dMVl". The baae price of the V09a Notcbbaclc Coupe la $2060.• Which mak• V09a hlqhly competitive with other economy can-<11 you probably alieady know if you've priced economy con lately. and in 1972. ln competition with can from all over tho world. · And when J'Oll oonok!.r all you qet with V09a, It ha1 lo be about the Q?•ai..t Utile bcil'Qa.in QOinQ. The rea<l.n of Carcind Drive1ma9a.U.. thinlt oo. They voted V09a ''beet economy Mdan" In 1971, vrGA We cordlaUy invite you to test drivo the 1973 V09a. Today? Tomorrow? Soon, al your Chevy dealer'•. •Wo•~·,.,.• •uoo n1 '' .....a ..,tot t.c19'!111 d•i..t -• ..uct. ,,. .,.~ di••· o...l.a •• ..,.,., .,....1 .ic;lllj:.ut, ...... ll.lld loolal .. ,.,, or• add1Doe11L • 4d JUST BECAUSE ITS BETIER DOESN'T. MEAN ITS MORE. • .. -. i • DAU.. Y .PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Federal Court Needed Any Orange County resident who bas bad business \Yith the federal courts knows the frustrations of Jost time and near non-exi!:tent parkin& involved in going to the L<>s Angeles federal building. No'v-Orange County will soon have a federal build· in g of its O\\'ll in Santa Ana -and prospects of also having a federal court are brightening. The Orange County Bar A!soclation, making the loca tion of a federal court in the county its No. 1 prior· 1ty. has won the backing of bar associations in River· side, San Bernardino and Long Beach. plus the support of Sena tors Alan Cranston and John Tunney. The next drive \vill be to gain the backing of every California congressman of a bill to accomplish the goal. Rep . Charles E. Wiggins (R-EI Monte) has introduced the measure in Congress. Fed eral dis trict judges who now commute from the Orange Coast and who might be assigned lo Santa Ana will v.·elcome the new court as much as the other freeway.wear y la\ltyers and their clients. The county's present population fully warrants having a federal court close at hand. Obtuseness in Hanoi Now that some of the emotion and furor surround· ing the ~lease of three American POWs by Hanoi has died down, it appears that Hanoi's clumsy effort to use the men as pawns in. a propaganda game has to be sell·defeating. Of the many unanswered and probably unanswer· able questions surrounding the propaganda ploy, the one asking why these three prisoners were chosen from more than 400 is the key to Hanoi's dilemma. also their famllies at home, would make the 11right" kind of 1ntiwar speeches once the pr!5oners reaChed the United States. In any event, the three released men will be wise if they maintain total silence now. U Ibey speak out · against Iianoi, It could worsen the situation of the p~ oners left behind. And i! they speak for Hano~ they v.ill clearly i n vi t e the same question: "Why these three?" This would. fairly or unfairly, affect the puJ>. Jic's acceptance of their statements. Allowing the International Red Cross w inspect prison camps would both reassure prison~rs' families and score a propaganda coup far Hanoi. Why the Reds don't realize It is a mystery. Living Past 100 ··• Soon? "John J. John, 107, died Friday alter serving 30 years as a school administrator, 27 years as an insur- ance broker, 15 years as a eommercial airline pilot and 14 years as a U.S. Marine." That eould be the way a typical obituary would read withln 25 years, aeeording w Dr. Harvey Wheeler of the Center tor the Study of Democratic Institutions at Santa Barbara. Dr. Wheeler, an expert in the field of future life, says normal span will be increased lio 105 w llO years and that Americans will have several different occupa- tions. People in their 70s and 80s will operate with the vigor of people in their 50s Wday, be predicts. · People will need formal education throughout their lives., he says, and thus our next boom will be in the fiel d of education. • /'I" --~~ ...... An ine~apable conclusion is that they w~re hand~ picked for release because the North V1eJ.namese thought, for v.•hatever reasons, that they, and perhaps Living past a hundred years may be far short of Methuselah's 969 years but it offers tantalizing pros- pects -and forebodes future problems undreamed of today. , •HENRY, YOU'RE iHE SMARTESI SOMB I KNOW.'' Beginning to Understand Our World ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ (During J\fr. llorris' vacation.· we are reprinting some of tlie mo1t rt· quested colurrtn.1 from liis fcrrthcom· iug boo k, "Por the Time Bei11g," to be published lids fall.) How to Begin to Understand What 's Happening in the World Today in 10 Not· So-Easy-Lessons : L Start by taking a long. hard look at younielf. to determine whether you have signifi cantly altcrt.>d your vjews or your sta nee in the I ast 20 years, or even in the last decade. 2. Ask younJOlf what you have done personally and prac- tically, to he I p change what needs to be changed, and t.o help preserve what needs to be pre- served -and on what philosophical or moral basis you distinguish between the Lv•o. 3. LOOK AROUND at your ro-worken. friend~ and neighbors, and assess .,.,.hl'thcr they are engaged in anythirtg but the pursuit or arnuence 1 and if the y an: enjoying It), and the pursuit of pleasure (a nd it they are enjoying It ). 4. Recall when you last . U ever, had n S(!rious talk with a person under 20. with a poor person, with a Negro, with a foreigner. with 8 radical -with anyone whose life-(>Ol!Hion Is sharply different from yours. 5. LIST ANO evaluate the kind of things you are rC'ading now that you weren't reading 20 years ago. or a decade ago -are you aware of what'~ going on in the behavioral sciences, In education, ln tccMology, in psychologica l Dear Gloomy Gus Since the trvine Company says mountain lions don't exist, resi· dents of the area must be seeing Frasier's ghost. -0.G .. "nib hl!UA ret'Mch ,MCltr'• Vie..... Mt llKHMl'll~ tfl-.. of llM llfW'H-. ~ YWt HI .-W M G......,,., Oltl. o.ltr f"liltf. research, or are you still reading the familiar and comfortable publications that tell you only what you like to hear or want to hear? 6. Are you reacting to new questions with new insight.II, or with answers that were beginning to be ol;>solete a genera- tion ago -and are you able to dif· fcrentiate between those principles and maxims that have permanent value and those that merely reflect the "received wisdom'' of you r father's lime but are in· creasingly irrelevant today? 7. TRY TfilS Imaginative process on yourself : Take a social or political posi- tion that is at the opposite pole from your own, and formulate it so that its p~ ponents would be satisl'ied with the fair way you have stated it -and then, and only then, try to refute it with reason. logic and facts . not with rhetoric, emo- tion or name-calling. 8. Ask yourself (A) what are your prox- imate goals in life, then (8) what 11re your ultimate goals in life and then (C) are your proximate goals leading toward, or away from, your ultimate goals? 9. CONSIDER. Bernard Sh aw' s :iphorism: "It Is impossible for the smoker and the nonsmoker to be equaJJy frt-e in the same railway car,'' and renect on how society can arrange op- timum freedom for all . 10. Whenever some act reported in the ne.,.;s particularly outrages you , threatens you, or appalls you, ask yourseU un~r what possible conditions your reaction might be exactly the op- posite. Putting a Value on Lile Calllorula Feature Service ll ~ to be nid that the human body "'as worth, u a oollecUon of chemicals. about 80 ctnll. At today's Inflationary ngures that would be considerably higher, of course. But 1Ull not much. What is a human life worth ? That ls a question 90 Involved In ph\lo!IC)phy, moral prece pll, emotion that man can never 1nswt'I" lt ln dolle.rs and Cf:ntl. But IOme- one bu tried . and for a rather in· teresting reason. WRITING IN SCIENCE magatlne . journal o{ the American A.uocta llon for the Adv1ncement of Science, Dr. Leonlrd A. Sagan suggcsu n figure: of $300,000. 1be auoclate director of the dcpertment of environmental medicine at the Palo Alto Mcdlcal Clinic admits hil cala.ilaUon 11 juat "a flnt cut" nt Quotes -Mc&id!f llomlllAln. LA., oe A,.....,IUPio -"Oxlllntment no Jonacr ti Ille Onlir of Ille daJ, u man rt.clin ""1!1rd llld .,..,,, towlrd Ille 1~ llmlilbk." t establishlng a reasonable nnd usablt economic standard of llfe's value. He and many other 1eicntists feel lhal 1uch a standard is Increasingly necessary In our lt:ehnologicol society. For one '"ample, he cites the problem In setting the values for differtnt kinds or death . especially nccldental. His speciol intt:rrs t Is In the field of nuclear power, in whic h there is. he says. nn "ovcremotlonol" fl\lblic response to radiatk>n dat141 crs. "Peoplt," he says . "are much more 1ppitiled by a ma.n kllltd. 1n 1 radlation accident than by falling off 1 ladder In a uranium proctssing plant" Both mtn, however. ere equally deod. ls It the man- ner or death that sets lhe value of the lo.!t life? DR. SAGAN SOUGHT on -1can1 more relevant method of evaluaUon. Ut- lng nepamiient or Labor 11at11t1cs that wbcntvtr " pcrlOll dies, about 20 yean ol productive labor are Iott to socletf, and $50 u the 1verage dally w1ge. ht mulllplled -(20 y•m· wonh or work· 1111 daylJ by ~ aod arrtved at h1J $300,000. Another otudy, or the -or a me Jolt In • plane craoh, ..... up with tm,000 tncludina 1-1 10 r11mily, -loyer, Md <..mmunlty. There no doubt f.11 a rtll need for IOmll IUCh --"' ov1h1.0Uon or m •• but u ICl<nlilta 1Dd """"'"I"' mdlly Iii" !ta true value lln In quite · a dlncrent plo« thin the eub rq!Jt.r. Sifting Claims and Counterclaitns Lettuce and the EMK-Chavez Axis Wuhingtoa, D.C., Star-Nen If you are ooe of the Concerned People, which is to say one of those who believe that the police spend their time gunning down innocent Black Panlhers and that Miss Jane Fonda should be Secretary of State, you bave, no doubt, banned Lac- tuca sativa from your dinner table. such a prohibition makes sense if: You do nol like lettuce. You do oot like the Teamsters Union. You do like Cesar Chavez. But It does not make much sense if you simply believe in bettering lbe lot of the wretched of the earth and feel lettuce plckers should be allowed to join onlons. IN TifE FIRST PLACE lettuce workers are POt the wretched ·of tbe ea rth. Acrontlng to C. B. Christensen, dlrector of California's Department of Agriculture, lettuce workers rective "earnings ranging from $5.70 to $'7.4J per hour." Pickers tn California, the target of Chavez's secondary boycott, receive, according to Christensen, "the bigbest wages of any farm workers in the United States and are also protected by nine of ten recommended labor laws, more than any other state." Even Leroy F. Aarons of the Washington Post, a journal not generally regarded as a spokesman r o r agribusiness, admita that the lettuce worker "is in tbe economic elite among agricultural laborers" and "can make up to $12,000 in a good year." But, sniff the Concerned People, how can life be sweet if the benighted lettuce picker is not allowed to unionize? To which the answer is that nearly !IO per· cent ol. the lettuce harvested in California is picked by union workers, according to that state's offidal atatistics. WHAT 11IEN IS TIIE RUB? Wby does New York proclaim its aversion for the lowly vegetable before casting its 268 Democratic National Convention votes for McGovern; who has endorsed the boycott? Wby does Teddy Kennedy greet the same delegates with the fearsome battle cry, "Greetings, fellow lettuce boycotters!" Why does Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle, sainted a r c h b i s h op of Washington, support the boycott in his Labor Day message? Would it be too cynical to suggest that the Kennedy clan and their wing ol the Democratic party have been closely allied with Chavez since the Great Grape War of 1967-70, that 75 percent of Calilomia's lettuce workers are covered by Teamsters contracts (a union which has endorsed Nixon) and that about 25 percent of U.S. catholics have Spanish surnames? IN OTHER WORDS American housewives are being told that they are helping the ooderdog when in fact they are being dragooned into a jurisdictional dispute between two competing unions, the independent Teamsters and Chavez's United Farm Workers, which is an af- filiate of ~e Meany's AFL-CIO. Chavez claims, of course. that the Teamsters have "sweetheart" contracts with the 170 growers who deal with them (only four growers have UF.W contracts). In economic tenns, however, there is virtually no difference between a Teamsters cootract and a UFW contract. The one big difference is that the mili- tant UFW's contracts would give Chavez the right to say who works where and when in the !ields. This is important to Chavez because lt would shift power to UFW hiring halls, cementing his political cootrol over California's Chicanos. WHE"l'HER TIDS MEANS as much to the pickers is an open question. But his deplb of concern for the workers is at least suspect when one realizes that the lettuce boycott, were it to become ef· (ective, wou1d not only damage tha growers but inflict severe hardships on the pickers -non-union, Teamsters and members of his own UFW. Nor is Chavez's leadership of Mexican· Americans and other Spanish-surnamed people beyond dispute : Chavez did not address the first nationa l convention of La Raza Unida party in El Paso the other day after its organizers indicated they disapproved. of his ties with McGovern. NONE OF Tms IS to imply that the Teamsters Union is a better and more responsible custodian of the fortunes of lettuce workers than the UFW. But it is to suggest that the issUe ts a complex one with rights and wrongs, almost cer· lainly on both sides, one 'which will not .be solved when perceived through a haze of Steinbeckian romanliclsm. But then the Concerned People seldom 4 have the patience to sift through the ii claims and counterclaims, to try to , separate appearance from reality, to dissect myth from fact. It is so much simpler and viscerally more satisfying l·ust to shout "Boycott lettuce!" while eaving it to Cesar Chavez, Archbishop O'Boyle and Teddy Kennedy to do your thinking for you, St. George Vowed to Slay Dragon i Once upon a time, there was a shining knight named St. George who vowed to slay The Dragon. The Dragon'11 name wa.s Dick. At first , The People just laughed. No ooe had ever heard o( St. George. Besides, lots of fa. tnowJ old knights were vying like all get out to take on The Dragon. But St. George hnd a magic sword named "Decency." A n d a gleaming shield named "Pur- ity." And a beauti· lul white hone Mmed, "Old-Fashioned Honesty." A1oreover, he was a very nice guy. Yet. de>pll• these handicaps, he earned a 11hot at The Dragon by btstlng all the famous old knlihts In hone1t combat. "When l have slain n.., Dragon," cried St. Grorgc, triwnphantly nvtn, his magic svoord . •·1 w!U take from tbt rich and give to the poor, end all wan forever and eve r and cut the price of chopped chicken liver." The People cbeercd. "Verlly," said some, "maybe he can do tt. After all, who '• The Dragon ever Ucked?" UNFORTUNATELY, The Dragon llved • long WIY off •cross The Evil Swamp or Muclcenmltt. And wbtn St. Ccorgo lasued his challenge -11Hola1 thtt'e, Oregon, come out •Dd fl&ht?" -The Drip mer<ly Dear 0""1!•: "11 lhe truth I Don·\ yoo ma• up l1108t or the lettm In your column! t KNOW yoo must -aDd I can prow Ill If you don't make up lht Jetttn how come mmt of the people In the letters· 1&1 tbq lblDk yoo don't get any mall? CURIOUs Dear CUrloos : Jtta.ke up the &c-llers In my col· • wnn ! r don't .... UNDERSTAND Utt letters In "'1 column. (You are rorlous. aren't yoo?) ( ART HOPPE ) . smiled and remained ln its lair, issuing press releases implying St. George was some kind of hare-brained nut with ..cap- ped teeth. So there was nothing for it: St. George \\'OUld have to cross The EvU Swamp of Muckenmire, But lint, he needed a Squire. Being a nice guy and not wishing to hurt anyone's feelings, he asked just about everybody to t.ake the job. But odd· ly enough, nobody seemed to want it - except for Sergeant Shriven, who had nothing to lose, being unemployed at the time. Next, he needed directions through The Evil Swamp. Some advisers said this way, some that way. Being a nice guy and not wishing to hurt anyone's feelings. St. George went both ways at once. Which caused him to keep falling off his horse. And every time he tried to clamber back in the saddle, the Sootmayers would Elegantly Edwardian Qirloalty Piece: Oscar Wilde once said that I.he gods had bestowed on Mex Beerbohm tbe &111 ol perpetual old age. Sir Mai, who died at 14 in 1956, would have been 100 this month. To note the centennial, Stephen Greene Press of Ver- monl has imported for American ad4 mtrtn ct Mai (and admirert of S.N. Btbrman'• tbulli"1t biography or the aplendld old lion, "The lncomprobable Mu") • collectlon of 28 little known. rorgottt:n, and In one case unpubllsbtd ll«rbobm essays. TlUad 0 A hep Into Use Put aDd Otber "'-~.· -were c:ollec:ted by tho rellred Engl!Jh publlJher and col- lector ol Mu. Rupert Hart-Davll. fl i. all elepr>Uy Edw1nllan E111lilh •ulf. a!thoup the -b-<Ntt ma., ......,., the mld-111111 lo Ille mld- ll30L ANYONE WHO musl uk who Mu -.... eertainly will nol bo in-tomled ID 11* dllplay ol wit and enidJ. tlon bi' an uncluslllable CISl)'lll, c:rltl<, gtftff · eo-.111, oaricaturllt a• d parodlol who, In h1J yooth, wu an tn- dUllriolll joumst!Jt In lit• Victorian Loo- dm. Sir Mu, knliblcd In t131, w11 once dexrlbed u "a IOr1 of lmtltutlcio, an emblem llld epitomo or the lmlprealble, the llcht " toucll, the Inimitable and Ille (THE BOOKMAN J Impertinent." A master of wicked brilliance, he wn!I literary kin to e generation of giants, Wilde to G. B. Shaw. Althoogh &he collection at hand d<a not rtprtH11t the cream of hlJ out- put, 1t ls represtnlatlve ol his shorter observations, and jU1t aboUl all or lt II the fMliliar flashing Mu. • A 'R.ETUJlN TO Olfonl, (or example, Ille llCene of ltll 191 t novel, "ZUlelk.I Doblon": a rundown on oae Clemmt Scott wbo. in lllt. was ''tho mm populu of our modm poets :" t.be novtlllt Marie eor.llJ: UJouchta 00 tJpiilna . ("llmply I form ol blac:kmall"), Otliei lbou&flla oo laJtauaie, oo the ctttlc Wllllom An:her, a Hries of opinlonl on polnUOll. The Ulle pl...,, cm Olcar Wilde and written wllen ....... 21, -nol poblllhed bocallMI Wilde, It the tllne, was Ill the docil, dlJcractd. - '!'be collectlon repments an eacunlon Into anothtt. literary age, 1 m11;1eum tour. but thci KUlde ls 1t1•• the lta~. whooe .,._ was 1tway1 of a bJi)l ILlnd- anl. All uneJ<poctcd birtbdaJI ~ on the old 1en1leman·1 one-hundredth 1111. WU!lua noau gather around to clobber him with tbclr poles. And when be nicely asked strong friends like The Old Meanie for help, lhe Old Meanie said, "Who cares who wins?" And went off to play golf with The · Dragon. AND WHEN St. George saw he'd hurt the rich's feelings, be said, g06b, he wouldn't take very much of their money. And when he saw he'd hurt the feelings of those who liked wars in the East, be. said, gosh, he only hated wars in the West. And if the poor chicken liver chop- pers needed to charge more. , . But by now The People were talking mostly about who looked good thiJ year in the Nat.Iona! League. So there was St. George, floundering around In the Muckenmlre, looking for bis sword end shield and wondering where bis horse had got to. 11.Dori't wor- ry . Sarge,'' he said to his faithful gquire, managing a brave smile. "J'm still the same nice guy l always was." "I slnce:rely, Sire," sald the 1quire, "bope not." MORAL : lf you're nice, pat yourself on the bead. J( you'd slay a dragon, rub your atOCMch in anticipation. What 's really tough ti trying to do both at Ille same timt. OllAMH COAST DAILY PILOT llDl>m N. W .... MliiW ThomuK-U,.J'ditor AlbmW.llolu EdUoriaJ Page lldllor '""' tdllo<laJ -or the -PUt>l llflf'kl lo lnfcnn "114 ~ lailO tC!ldftl by l•$it.... thil ne•IPtPlft oPtatanr anl ~­mml&l7 on topb tJI lnblwt ... .... , ....... "" -·. '"""" rnr t.hft airl"Sllora at 11ul' ~ ®fnlont1, and bf ~!Inc the d!VttR ,·i.iwpaiota of lnformed ob- •T'Ytft 11nd •Pokmncn on toCJka ut ltlC! d!LI • Thursday. October 5, 1972 T •• lhe wb or a J un TOI in we and whl It w >Ir M J pas to hea ve hos pie bo hos " Sin Iha im stu Su sti tie Att SU Ma as • M wh for re . ... . . . . " . . . . . . • .. • Kidnaped Boy, 4, Found l twrsday, Oc.tobtr 5, 1972 DAI LY PtCOT 7 Corona Lawye1~ Blasts Maps FAIRFIELD (AP) -No of· e&n you chock anybody t!se's elfort .. mark all ficia.1 records were made on work wht.n you don't even gravesiles with red arrows on the locations of seven or tilt 25 know which direction i s two maps -an aer ial OAKLAND (UPI) -Park filed in SuperM?r Court against without a license and without Tuesday ordered f 0 r m er gravesites found near Yuba sou1h'?" defense a tt or ne y photograph map and large ranger Donald Jones was jog· the Diners Cub and Its meeting standards required Newman Judicial n i 5 tr I ct City berore deputies arrested Richard Hawk asked. wall mock-up of the Feather Ranger Hears WhimperingTot in Oakland Vnderbrush ling along a deserted road In subsidiary DQM Club over for a license. Court Judge LoweU Jensen Juan Corona last year and llawk's questions came as ruver area whert the graves lbe Oakland hills Wednesday failure to develop restaurants and his partner Robert Grif-charged him wllh the slaylngs. Cartoscelli was winding up hls were found. when he heard lhe whimper ing and hotel facilities eboard the • Pair Guilty fiths to Vacaville. They wi ll be an undersheriff has testified. lr'o;..-...;;;;;_,;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;_,;;;;;;.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; or a email child. Queen Mary docked in Long SAN JOSI\ (AP ) - Two Los sentenced after Gook receives Sutter Coun ty Underaherlff e Lto"ty I ••V111•ll P•lhh ...... --.Ml 91ft Items. hKl11dhlt ,,_. reek'" ..,...,. ~•P'­. ..,. Jones peered Into the dense &a.ch. Anilgteles1mcn halve been fordund the results of the tests, whic h CALIFORNIA Frank Cartoscelli testified u. nderbrush at the side of the The It f led Wed sda b gu Y 0 consp racy, inu er take up to 90 days. under c r oss-examlnation e O•·•f·•4lltd d.coreter ltto!M ,, ... •••11411 tM workl. su 1 ne Y Y and possession of !irebombs in road and saw a bOy standing Sky Chefs-Wrather Qu e en e Cleared Wednesday that he marked in an almost-dry creek bed Mary Co. contends that ,., lost the execution slaying of .James he I . Ed REDWOOD CITY (AP ) R I • S t grav ts' ocauons on two • wearing blue-ehecked pants ward Carr, former Black -e at1ons er g and a tear-stained , soiled $27.77 million inerpeoses and Panther and cellmate of Charges against ousted Stan. c o urt ro om maps from llllOUllCIR hit t h . t ford Unive~ty --'-~ H HE' •n =1 (AP) _ F·mland memor,· because he had HOW OPIN It a R.a nd L 4 •e Bruce Franklin and his wife of and East Germany have visited the locations many K R U GE R 'S w • • S H 0 P PE w e ee s 1r · ( ) "Soledad Brother" Geo""e ,-:w )"IV~~ · '••>.1.1, ... w s ymo uce, , BRJE'E'S Jackson. in rf · who had been kidnaped from a r, te ermg with a Police ol-agreed to establ ish diplomatic times. Imported Hmtd Croft street corner near his home ..._ _______ _, Alter deliberating leM than ficer have been dropped, San relations, the FiMish govern-"Do you have. any idea what JJSS YI• LU., N•wpet"t ...._, -6JJ-IJ40 h1onday. three hours, a Superior Court , _:M:::a::teo::...Cou=:::n:;IY_:•::u::lhori::::·:::tie<:::_:sa::y.:... _::me_:::n'._t ::announ=::'.'.'.:'~ed:_-----~d".'.il1!ct~'.'.ions:'.'.'.'....'.a'.'.:re:.".all"....'.a'.'.bo~u"..t ''_· ~H'.'.ow~~~~~·~"~"~'"~·~·~·~·~·~,·~·~00~"~·~··~11~"~·~·~,.~·~·~1 ~~~~ anticipated profits When OQ~t 1-Jones immediately flagged a jury of eight women and rour P · t · t d t h backed out of its 25-year lease assmg mo or1s an sen er men refiched its ve rd ic t to the Redwood Regional ,Park agreement with the city or Wednesday in the trial of headquarters for help. A park Long Beach on July 1, 1970. Lamar Lloyd Mims, 21, and vehicle took Raymond to a Richard Rodriquez, 22. hospital while Oakland poUce e Telopfa .. e picked up his parents at their SAN DIEGo (AP) -An in-e Code Violators home and sped them to the jundion against. a low-cost MODESOO (AP) - A hospital for a tearful reunion. cremation service in San former judge and his business "Raymond s€ems to be in DI h the --~·er who each pleaded ood h " ·d f ego is soug t by State of Y'"'-' ... fl" s ape, sa1 his ather, guilty to 12 felony viol ations of Ralph Luce, 29, a truck driver, California. the st.ate Corporations Code after seeing his son. A suit was filed Wednesday have been sent to the state in San Diego Superior Court Department of Corrections by Deputy Atty. Gen. Alvin J. testing and guidance center in Korobkin against Telophase Vacaville for a pre-sentenci ng e Dh•oree Bld HOLLYWOOD (AP) Singer Dean Martin's request that his marriage be dissolved immediately was taken under study Wednesday by a Superior Court jud~e. Maritn 54, ftled for divuree last Valentine's Day from his wile, Jeanne, «. aft.er 22 years of maniage. His wife is contesting the split. The singer requested the im- mediate dissolution with the stipu]atlon that property set· tlement could be made later. Attorneys have thre~ days t.o submit briefs on the request. Hollywood circles expect Martin to marry again as soon as he is free. e Myster11 .Jolts LOS ANG ELES (AP ) Mvst.erious sharp, Quick .lolts which have plagued San'Diego for three days have now been reported in the Los Angele1 area. ·The California TechnologicaJ Institute Se i s mo l ogic a I Laboratory said the shock! first felt Wednesday in Los 1dlgeles definitely were not earthquakes. The Navy ln San· Diego would neither admit nor deny that the jolts were created by supersonic aircraft breaking tbe sound barrier. e Diners Sult LOS ANGELES (AP) - A $55.5 million lawsuit has been Society and its officers. diagnostic study. The suit claims Telophase Alpine County S u p e r i o r operates as a funeral director Court Judge Hilary C'ook LAST 3 DAYS FRIDAY. SATURDAY . SUNDAY fl(C., t•!!f· ANNIVERSARY SALE BEEF STICK ..... , .... t .. $48L9•· SUMMll SAUSAGI ONLY I BUTIERNIP CHEESE ..... SI.St LI. SWHT, HOt _ 45' Mu ST A~D' oz. JU ...... _ ff itt•T fd~S 0 WESTCUFF PLAZA 17tti I llYINl-fllWPOIT IU.CH TOWN I COUNTIT SHOPPlff CINTll Acrw ,..._ s..ta A• ...... s.... OUNal 62 PASHIOJ{ $9_UAll-LA HAllA for ih• man who c•r•s • SOUTH COAST PLAZA • Sa11 DJ.to ffwy. at lrktel St., Cede M ... -IMO·l 501 ~ ~ BRITISH EXPO '72 • WI ARE CILllRATING THI ltJZ IRITISH EXPO WITH THIS GIGANTIC MONIY SAYING RENT ON TOP QUALITY MIN'S SUITS AND SPORT COATS SELECT GROUP OF SUITS and SPORT COATS FOR THE PRICE OF .OPEH DAILY 10 • 9 SUNDAY 12 • 5 • Ull 'fOUI UllllAMl .. c:AlO MA.mt CM.Al .. MWrln CHMll PIOTlCT lOUI INGINI MOST MODELS $ 29 ''NEW'' COSTA MESA STORE AT 1995 HARBOR BLVD. Between Bay '& Ford Sts. OPEN 9:00 TO 9:00EVERY DAY &SUNDAY 9:00 TO 6:00 SALE ENDS WEDNESDAY, OCT. 11 POP SLOGAN LICENSE FRAMES f1IU fOI .W THI UMI BEAUTIFUi. HAWAIIAN VANDA ORO«>S 12 VOLT SYSTEM Chev. 49-54. All; Dodge 49·55. All exc. 6 cyl w/pow1rtlite; Rambler 51 ~. All. Chev S5·70 mo st models : Dodge 56·70: Plymouth ~-70; A1mbler Sfl-fl7 ; Ford 56-fl4; Mercury S&-64. '6!~ ~:-n '9?~. PENNZOIL QUAKER PARAFIELD TMfllCllHDGt STATE '""~·~·---STP ~-.::..-S.A.L Je JO w 100' pw•P'•-... Mi• Ct .... M.Mttl•CM-1-r ... t_ .. DOMll AcTiol SHOCK AISORBUS l n11 11 11 n ow •hoc 11 1 no•I Get tn•I n•• c:ar ride Pric.M t.- 2!! JO •~. _,,.., MEClllON llAOWE> SOCKU SET 21 PC. COMBINATION 311" & 1 1~" DA/VE SET 0••• ••••••· ll••~J •~•r c,.,,_ •L•le ..... ..., _, --""'"" , _.....,.,.,,..~ . ' - -,..._ -· , ... ..,., '•""''" f ""•'' GM t:•t' lf6l ·6f .••• , ,,-t411cl' lf6J·•'· , .. ~., "'"'""'' ,,,, .. , I • ' DAILY PILOT • Summer O ver Penguiri Ends Vacation . . Sun Hazard In Tucson? SACll.AMDlfO ll'Pll -'t\'1th a little help from ~ ~. a peo(UlD spme an idyllic four months at Dell°b)' Folsom La.kt. bul oow us summer fun ls over. "~ bad ~ million acres of water all IO himself and all I.he fisb ~ could pcmib!y eat,'' $Ud Folsom state park emp&oye Terry Alton. ··He must haw wesg.bed 1J) pounds_ 'Ibat'.s pretty good for an lJ inch penguin.'• 'nlCSON, Ari~ CAP ) - 1\Joon's sunny days are not as bealthful as they are made out lo be, say nve ioca1 doc-...._ In a report prinUld in the October issue of the Pima County P.1ecUcal Soc i ety publication, the d o c t o r .s reported that Tucson haJ one of the highest incideoc.s of 1be pengwn. one ol t"'ll at the William Land park ~ zoo. ... -as saolcn four months ago by pranksters. Jt was tpOO.ed durmg me mmmer at the lake by fishermen . ··But be"d llle a di\e as soon as anyone got close," Alu.. .an skin cancer in the world. 1be doclOn say part of the reason i!I because Tucson bas more 11Unlight, more clear days and less daytime cloudiness than anywhere in the country. Part rangers aod zoo employes captured the penguin O\'tt tM seekmd, and apparently . the penguin knew •'here it was gouig. The study shows that skin cancer cases run 4 per 100,000 4"" persons ii) southern Arizona . ALL TtESE MACHINES ON SAi E! ,, , I l : ' '., SAVE95°0 on .. G.~I GOLDEN TOUCH I St:W• sew1og milcll•n.-N :• :;;.c· •ne1 Excluaove pusl'l·Dunon. drop-In l•onl Dot.oil ··. i t ~1 r e1cri·shlch•1 ou•ll -111 tiu11onl'loler, 1.c.•:-:oi.c11 1•Dric lffd 1y5ttm f 1l'!IClf'I! c:on1t>mp(..•a·r E:e•t·t· loe:ld t ilO+nt l SALE13500 SALE 5900 R9ig.1•·· Aeg.148'· l!!JJII: ~"'" • .• ,,t<, "'"'"'G '"••<"'"' E•I'••"• O•oo-·~ ''"N O<.flo ..... o .. tio·••u .,,.,.'" ,. ... , ~ ... o .. ~'°'"· O• •· '• ·"<'0'• '"' ,pwoni. l c~'"' ,... •••"''" •"' 1...0, fA~10N MA Tl• :·~·:;mg ~ew•i.v macl'I•~ ~ D\lftOflo- tt. °"' flU'llOf•t . rf•f!f.Cl~··-~11 ""ti'>0<.11 lltt8Cl'lm9nll. E•t•111,.·t c:•c.o-1n l·on~ t>o00•" •"Cl 10..0 P•.-1 08' CV•l•Ot 't f O •~'~" OI I.Of°' ••!jjfll• Prisoner Docrors? MONTGOMERY, A I a . CAP) -Condllloos .,.. eo bad in Alabama pri{lon hoopitals, a federal jlldge said, that convicts perfonn ""'BtrY ond rags are used as aubltitutet for bandages. U.S. District Court Judge Frank M. Jobnoon Jr. ordered prison authorities Wednesday to take immediate steps to provide adequate medical care for all inmates and to put rigid oonlnlls on narcotico to stop "drug abuse" within the peniten- Li.ary walls. Pasadena's Tax Burden Gets Stud y PASADENA (AP) ~ From peanut -to teJevlsion networks, huge and fast pro- fits have been earned while_ci- ty taipayen are assesoed wtth the bill for the aMllal Tourne- ment <:i Roses, organizers say. Mayor Donald Yoliaitis and othor city officials agreed Tuesday n!gk lo try to alleviate the tax burden on city resident.! by fiying to New York City to discuss the situa- tion with network executives who televise the annual New Year's Day par;ide and foot· ball game. Yokaitls said ooe avenue the city may pu1'Sle is the licens-- lng ol tel<Yision cameras used in teleY!sing the ........ Asked 'Whether t a z: t n g networks for fLlming a parade dowll a public street would be legal. Yokaitis said. "You ought I<> ........ to what • • Killer Turns' Witness' MORTON GROVE, 111 . match Saumnon's. ed oround ond bO<h aid, 'Ila's SH.KAY &UJ>.pollce had not CUPl)-A motorist drove Into Che Pl'·"' quostlooed S.uennan's sl<p' Dave's Slandan1 -Ila· Wl'l1I HACC and Romaoo S.uennan •as arrested. but unlU the meeCJni In the • tlon the nJ&hl of Sept. 17, asll· oul of the hoopital, poll<e ar· deftied he was the gunman. lion. ed ror ''lube'' job; then drew a ranged for ~ and He was charged •Ith "He was our wttnns," pistol and announced a Sauerman to come 1o the Ila-murder, attempted llUD'du, Sheay said. "He had not beeD stickup. lion to clear up the disa<pu-armed robbery • n d ag· shot. Ht'd DOI bad to look The gunman took $400 from cy. ~.~~~ ba._:~.:.., ":.Cer w~ down the buslne» end of ·a lbe ca.h register while al· "When they came face Co ,.....,_' ~ "'" gun lllte the ~..._ """. • tendant James Potts. 20, of r.ace in the room,'1 Shely said sent to c.ook. eounty Jail ~ -"r. Skokie, looked on helplessly. -=um=· _:w::ee::k:...· '...:'the=..:"'°:::::.::boys:;..::..t:::•rn-:.::.__w:_ithc.b<J_t_hond __ . ______ "H_e_w_a_s_our_belt __ .. 1_1n_e_os_." Then be herded Polls and two young customers, Robert Romano, 17, and Michael Hack. 19. bO<h of Morton Grove, into a storage room at the rear of lbe station. fed/ 'l'JIB BRITISJI ARB.Ail8Mll'CGI mE GUNMAN on!ered the ~H ClAFTSMEN HUI AU. DAY three to lie on the floor while ~ fll r, ast ..... he ned. He walked ool bill c:10U ,e_ .J.UU.I stepped back to the door of thei -~~~~~~~~~11!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~---room moments later and fired!_ five shots at them . Pots, shot three times in he head, was killed. Hack and Romano, each wruoded oooe, were hospitalbed. While police We re in- vestigating th e shootings, Mkhael E. Sauennan, 25, Morton Grove. a telephone in- staller, drove into the station. "BE TOW officer.i he had been in earlier, was told to leave by someone and fel t 90llltthing was wrong," Po~ Capt. Larry Sheay said. . Investigators h a d an artist"s sketch made from Sauerman's desoiptk>n ol the 'susp~ious-l09king" man who be said ordered him away from the station. When Hack and Romano recovered sufficienUy to be questioned, 1-!iey, too, provided police witf) deecrtptlom of the gunman. Hack's description tall ied witb Romano's, but the two youths' description did not Favorite Uncle Everyone's favorite uncle, Uncle Len, offers a page full of fun, prires and in(eresting columns, articles and pic- tures every Saturday in the DAILY PILOT. Someooe you know would probably enjoy~ it. f;If[IJ ~ . . . Sliced pickle chOoried onions. • mustard and field-fresh tomato wedges on a suoor-<lelicious hot dog. Hungryi · Bite into man's best friend. SNAPP\'. . SUPER.Du.ic1ous -SUPERDOG ~ Rqularty·354 · B l Just brin~ this colJllOn GET 1 to Der Wienerschmtzel~ One coupon per custom . Offer ends · October 15, I 9n FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON FALL FABRICS equitable and fair grounds rather than what I e g a I grounds are involved. They're reaping the benefits selllng:1'========~ commercials nn prime time." 1696 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 1951 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ' .......... c,_._......., ... ,_......._ Si.t!9_§R ---- COSTA MESA Bristol •nd Sunflower South Coast Pt•x• 5~0-2633 Hci-lla• c,.,-Prim GMI AcryUc Cltotll1 Prh1t1. P•inh of 100 1. Screen Print•d Cotton •nd Fl•1hy Little 100,., Acrylic Ch•lli, Prinh, 44/45" wid•. R.g. $1.'19/yd . SALE $1 .33/yd. Polyester Do•blo K11lt1 oJHI Acrylic Do .. bte X1dts. I 00 '' Polyt.+tr Ooub!t Kttih, Crtpt StiteJ,•1 tnd J•cqu••di in • r1 inbow of colo,., 60" wid•, I 00 " Acrylic Oo ub11 Knih tJ,.t tr•v•I in •*vlt 1811011 •fttr •@•n1on. 51/60" wid•. M1cJ,in• w .1 .. /0ry, Rt9 . SJ.'l'l/"d. SALE $2. 77 j yd . .... ..c.·--· •A,,__,, ollHl Sl~A CClll'N«. COSTA MESA 2300 Harbor Blvd. Harbor Cent•r Kl 9-1195 INVEST NOW! Other suggestions brought out at a joint mee~ of. city direcl<rS a n d tournament committee members iftcluded an additional $1 ._.,,..,. attached to the admi!Bion da'ge to the' football game; a U parking fee for the -.Roee Bowl on New Years Day; and an entrance fee to the post parade exhibit ol floats . City Administrative Analyst John Barney said the direct out.of1>0Cke< cost to the city for the event lam. year was 19.753. Administrative support costs including police work last New Year's Dey, he aa1d, emounted to $58.146. IN LAGUNA FE DERAL'S EXCLUSIVE BICENTENNI AL SAV INGS PROGRAM • .. • * .. PATlUaf !l\4,., Savinp Certi6c:at.t S'OO Mini.mum CONTINENT At CONGRESS !l\.11 9' Savlnp C.rtillcate St.000 Mlnimum ?z; • * • MJNUTB MEN !1%" Savinp Ccrtibte S2JOO Minimum • * .. COMMON SBNSB !115-PUlboot Aocount Day-UHo-day.out ...-=-..:.compoundad iatlRlt • INDBPENDENCB 6'1' Savinll cmiftca1' SS,000 M.i.nilnWD Get Yo ur Bicentennial Era Portfolio • Yours for the asking is this handsome Blu<>and-gold portfolio outlining the purpo5e1 and goals of our nation's Bicentennial. and designed to serve as a pennanent file for documents and bulletins. See Ou r Current Bicentennial Exh ibits TbclC include Ille 1772 California/Colonial Time Linc Displays, and -at the Holll6 Office -Laguna Beach Stamp Club's "lfutory of Stamps" Collection and the Freedom Sbrino ol Orea! Documents. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGE.SI'. FIRST AND STRONOESl' INDBPBNDBNT FEDERAL NOW HAS 4 CONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE YOU San Cemente Branch Home Oflke :260 Oce•n A venue 601 Nonh El Camino Real Loguna Beoch, Caf~omio l.quoo Niauel Brandi Lo~ Hllll Brandl_ 3 Montrch Boy Plw , 2'4038 Callo do la Plot& •SHAGS • DUPONT 501 • Hl-LO'S • SOLIDS •TWEEDS • ANTRON •NYLON e COMMERCIAL CARPET lOOO's OF YARDS TO CHOOSE FROM ~ ALL LEADING BRAND NAMES ' •SHAGS e KODEL Hl-LO'S • POLYESTER ~ PLUSH SHAG S • TONE-ON-TONE • SCULPTURES • TRI-COLOR SHAGS • S9. YARD VALUES TO '12~. Every Style & Color -Every Roll -No Pressure or 11Come-Ons11 • Bring In Your Room Measurwnts • Pad r. Labar Available at Additional Cost Many Terms Lay A-ys Na nit Styles Available lank Available Brands -.. Fl11C111ch19 Colan • lllHI• STOlll --i ........... HOURS: ............ I S-.1W CARPET WAREHOUSE 124 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA TEL 645-4330 ( ! • t • r M ri Ii h a . rt l SI I M • B • • ~ d t • e t : e t I I • ~· ' r . f . ~ ' .. .. Thurldly, Octobtf 5, 19n DAILY PILOT 9 Police * Families Settle Simi • Ill ********************* : MERCURY SAVINGS anclloan assoc~lion * Dal .. Thltag Jloy beggar goes walk- lhg on hands in Manila which is unde< martial law under orders of. President Ferdinand . Marcos. Boy is within • rights u n l e· s s· tr'lf(lc light turns .lo red' and · _ he doesn't stop, tha'I is. Religion Assault ' Pressed MOSCOW (AP) -The COm- ntUnlst Party organ Pravada called fott renewed efforts to stamp out religious beliefs !D the Soviet Union and said oome party members_ are tak· in& part in rel1gloua ceremonies. The lead editorial ln ~ paper said "every r.ommunist should be a fighting atheist." But it said some C9mmunlsts and members of the young ( ;.·--------. ~( RELIGION ) • r Communist League engage in •. religious activity in regions ln Slberia, near C?ttl south of I Moseow, ,..r. Nikolaev on the "' Black Sea. 1 S!MI (AP) -There att only S4 working policemen In this Loi .Angeles suburb of 67,000, but there's plenty of spare.- time protection. An estimated 1,400 Jaw officers live here. The officers say Siml's _popularity Is mostly a natural nuke, as when engineers; teachers or executives wind up in lhe same neighborhood. "It's just a very nice area," !8.fS sp>kesman Sgt. Robert &>J~ a member of the cijy's police force. Apparently word got around l'f: Tho editorial. "8llod n!iglon •·"'"'one of the strolll~ left,ove f cot;the past" and-said "a total . . ~tinl'' of religious belief• ~ 1.1aeniands mor~ educat.!-on--~ r ~paga~aa work among t~ ' masses. . .. } e .M0t0k• Elect ' J NORTB PALM BEACll. Fla. , (AP) _ Breaking 251 Y~ o.f .. tradition, the Passion 1s t j Fathers elected the man they want . to run their monastery • ....J. 8· 54-year-old man who has been a priest for 26 ye.an. f ''We've fina!IY b e c o m Et • democratic:" said the Rev. r Colman Haggerty after be was r elected "father rector" of the t monastery on the fifth ballot. Father Haggerty said the t er~ of monastic leaders in 1l~u of-appojlltment b Y r~llgious supenors :mark~ "~rt of the movement in the J. c*1rch to decentralize." t fTne Passionist Fathers were founded in Italy in 1'121 by St. Jiaul of the Cross. e Mormon Site of the new hou1lng developmenta that younger, married ollloo'I coold aHord. AT ANY llATE, SO)ka says, "We have 1,400 families who are more or 1eaa tn tune with the policeman's problems ..• OUr crime rate ls rather low." Barely on the map 10 years ago, the booming Ventura COunty community 50 miles oorlhweJI· of Los Angelts diiln't even get a full·tllne police force Wltll about a ~ear ago. Theo, the department came Into being ovemlght, drawing officers from all over the state. The new department. with an average age of about 35, stresses community relations, modern police techoology and is looking for its first women patrol officer. AN ESTIMATED 1,000 of the officers who make their hoole here are members of the 5,000.member Los Angeles Police Department, officials said. The other 400 are from vean with the Pasadena the Loo An&•tes County lher-i>otice Department. lff's office, the California "We have bad several in- Highway Patrol and the Ven-stanceJ wbeb oU-duty officen tura County sherill's office. from other departments have "It's nice, u a Jaw en· apprehended criminals in forcement officer, to know jf cases bere,11 Sojka said . ,... ... 119 ~~!!PW yoo roll into a block on any ===:=;:::;;:=;;:::::;::;:~J crime that when you knock on ------ -* MIA PARI Menuy ~Bldg., Yaney Vltw It UlatA maybe every oecond or U1ir;d I STARS * HUWlllllT,. llEAClt MemJ1YSa•ro•BldV-Eding«at- door, you'll find an officer a 5 cine 0ma.rr 11 on~ 01 * * family - and they are good · the Y woltd'• great 11trolo-* TUml Mert\lfYSl'MOS Bldg., ltVlne Blvd. ill Newport AV&. * wltnessea ,'' said SOjka, 33. gen. His column Is one of I LA WM-fUU.Emll MemlrySa'lfnOI Bldg., lmpW!Hwy.ltklrtllw He came here with hia wife the DA11.Y Pll.OTS ereat * * and three boys "to get out of features. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * the smog." He spent nine ----- Dodge Dodge Colt Sport Special. t ~1' LAKE CITY (AP) - Tho Reogranized Cbureh of JO.U. Christ of Latter-day Slints plans to built a temple to Independence, Mo., tile , church'• leader satd·llere. ' .President W. Wallace Smith aald the proposed temple may ~ partially located on the temple site In ~Sml~ ~led by J-... The-thrifty little saver that gives Jt., founder of tl>e Olurch of · Jeous Cbrlst ol I:.atterodaY Saints (Mormon) head- qaartered in Satt 1.ate c~y. \Independence ii the head- qdari.n for the ft0rganl1.ed church fonned alter the death of Jooeph Smith In 1144. e Tie• Bq11n VATICAN CITY (UPI) -;- The vaucanJw announced it established dlptomatlc rela· tk>ns with Bangladesh at an ~level. J . "The Hoty See and tl>e · RtpubllcofBangladesb , deaJroUS to promote mutual lrlendly r<fatloCI. decided to · eltend diplomatic role~." Ille ....,....,..... said. Bangladesh will ...i .,._ · -dor to the VaUean end the Holy See an AtJ(lltollc Nuncio to Docca. tt aalll. ' ....... Off NEW YORK (AP) -At- tendance et SoncloY Dl8JI ill Ille /,rchdloceM ol New York waned by Ii pot<ent lletween 1116 and tm, according to • .. udy' publlabed by t h • putoral ~ office ol the 'U<hdloe<oe. I The ·-<Ollert to , coutles. you a new canopy vinyl roof and tape smpes free: 'When you buy the Dodge Colt Sport Speei1 I equipped with an automatic 1ransmission, your Oodge D1altf e1n offer you the vinyl roof and tape 1ttipes at no charge becau5e Oodgedoesn·1 ch•rge him fOf 1htm, And you get all th- great standard feetures: • Overhead cam Heml engine • Adjustable steering column • Flow-through ventilation • Front disc brak• • Reclining bucket seats • 4-speed fully aynchromesh tranamlnlon • Dual headlight• • Glov.e box • Variable retlo steering • Tool kit • Unlbody construction <• 6-maln-bearing crenk1haft •Antifreeze • Adjustable head restraints • Fresh air heater/defroster • 3-poaition dome light • Reversible keye • Front •rmrests •-3-point Nfety belts in front • Steering column lock • 2-apeed electric w inllahield wipera O CHRVSLER M0T0M CORflQllATION • Inside hood release • Electric windshield wuher e Padded dash • Vinyl Interior • Deep-dish steering wheel • Trip.odometer e' Frontnhtr8Y- -· ' . - J f DlJLV PILOT Thundly, O<tobtr 5, 197Z 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6 SUNDAY 9 TO 5 Friday The 13th. Is Your LUCKY Day! That's the day we'll de- liver. dig the hol e, add pl anting mix AND plant a tree for you. '{ ou select the tree and \ve'JI save it for you WI· ti! planting day. Ver1•tile c ........... : e STCAMO•E e ILUE FLOWEllNG JACARANDA • SILk OAK e WEEl'ING WILLOW e DOLLAR LEAFED EUCALYPTUS ... ·.. 998 YolN HERB GARDENS DECORA JIVE BARK , Ui;c "·here you "oant to dis· cou1·agc \\'<:'eds, as a mulch 01· just because it looks s11 ~ood! 3 1.98 ..... ..... $4.98 SWOP By "PW9\1E . Have an Herb Garden right at your flngcrtlps. Several planters to choose frllm. fOOM 1.79 ta 11.95 l]ii5. m~~· PANSIES For \\·inter color and excellent bulb cover. ROSE BUSHES \Ve need the space so here's a real BARGAIN! You'll surely find your favorites from reds to whites. Some in bl oo 1n. Some were $5.95 WINTER BLOOMING SWEET PEAS / E njoy their del ightful frag rance all winter. ;f~J .. 79 3 PACKS 1.19 6 PACKS 3.99 1.981ACH SPEC IAL PRICES GOOD THRU OCT. llTH. Our Courlco11~ FLOWER SHOP FWFFY "IUFPLID" FERNS \VonderruJ houlf!' p11nt Brlihl addlUon lO )'our ·=· Florllll \VUI ll<lp You \Vllh JILL You r Florlal Ntedll .......... 1.98 PHONE 546-5525 • Work ijalf Done On Union Federal The Union Federal Savings Building, soon to be the largest comrnedal edifice in FMJt.ain Valley, is nearly half completed. The steel fram ing for the three story structure has been finished and the final con· struction is scheduled (or car. ly 1973. Known as the Union Federal Plaza, the $1.6 million buildini;: \\-'ill have 36,000 square feet of office space. Union Federal Savilllls will occ upy 10,400 square feet of offi ce space on the ground floor and the remaining area will be leased to other businesses. There will also be 1.500 square feet of parking sur· rounding the plaza. The Vnion Bulldin&. is being built by Real Est.ate Investors of Newport Beach. When completed, the office C<1mplex will be the third com· mercial enterprise operating in the Fountain Valley Civic Center. The Bank of America and Lin-Brook Hardware also ha ve offices ln the civic center area . wli!ch Is bounded by Warner Avenue, Sla ter Street, Brookhurst A venue and San Mateo Street. A Taxing Question CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -The Nevada Tu Commission ii studying whelher It should pul a Jax on th e sale of !liver d ol l ars, known I.is "cartwheels." Commission m e m be r Howard Winn said Jhe dollars that caslnoa and coin shops sell for $2 and $3 each makes th e cartwheels "penonal ~ perty" and shoWd be tax. ed. 'l'l!O -volad lo a.sk the Attorney Gene1e1l"s Gffice for a legal opinjon. . " ~ VW Won't Atwnd Two Auto Slwws DETROIT (AP) Volk!wagen of America has coollrmed It will not lake part in lhe Detroit or New York auto shows In November but said Jhe decision had nothing to do with a drop in the com· pany's new sales pace. A spokesman al VW's U.S. headquarters at Englewood Cliffs, N. J., said the decision wa.s made by the firm 's regional distributors. He said vw -dlstrlbutors in other parta: of the country had approved taking part in auto shows in Boston, Chicago and Los Angeles and in a state fair in Dallas. Using Jhe Detroit show Nov. 11-28 as an example, he uld Jhe tpace would renl for 1boul 114,000 and that Jhe d~ W<IU!d coal aboot 170,000 In such cases, he explained, Jho regional VW group loo~ over the show potential and decides whether to comm.Jt such a large amount. An offlclal of Import ltJotora: of Grand Rapid.!, the midweat distributor for VW, said, "Costs have been going up ev.ery year ... it gets outlan-- dish when you want to lilt a pencil and have to have a union guy do tt for you ." ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR • FUlL YEAR WARRANTY ·POCKET SIZE WI TH DESK TOP PERFORMANCE •WE.IGHS 12 1/2 OZ. INCt. R/llTERllS ii~·" ,l'w• :• ·'~ ~, \.~··· •Compensating Loudness Control -,' ..,,. •Separate Bass and Treble Controls •Separate AFC and Power S"'itches •Lighted SHde Rule Dial Schales • Heldphone Jack Up Front •-Separate Phone/ Aux., Tape In and • Tape Out Jacks • Built·ln FM and AM Antennas •External FM Antenna Terminals •lighted 8-Track Channel Indicators •Pushbutton 8-Track Channel Selectiort ' vt-11 n•v•r h••rel ll 10 aoocte TC 55 CASSETTE CORDER -ADOS •Ml.lllPl:JES •SIJBTRACKS •DIVIDES .1 .. "'CONSTANT MEMORY" FOR MUlTJPLICATI ON & DIVISION COMPl.£TE WITH CARHYING CASE Iii \Jl APPl\OVEO ltECHARGEfl 11 9S .~,.' SUNSET ,. ,BINOCULARS ' ' ' 95 OUR IH • 249 .95 S(JN\ 1[:;1 ··:~ TC-60 A SONY RECORDER CASSETTE • fflY•,...,.,tlt a!IMttl 1)'5flln WI!~ wtll llWfttll t ... 1.-1• • Sony·m11tlc, wtmMlk rec:wnlln1 llvtl ~I •Yllfll'I • AC·DC ttitrlllM • Mk,..JlllMt "'ltll -tllltnt ... rnei. con1 ... 1 1wlldl • Conllll!IOlll fllne mrllrel • 50ltly lnlfl'ledf tt "9'11111 KCl-Hnlol llpo .... ,.,.. • Elrplt"'' lllOlll'9r j~ll: ·--- 7X35 zcf 83 WIJH CASE 7X35 bwcf YORK K-50 WITH CASE 7XSO zcf WITH CU£ CASSETIE RECORDER • Microphone Jack • Remote Control Jack • Solid State • Either AC or DC 11 relco CA.~SETTE 110 RECORDER pushbutton du1l-molor 95 DUI IEI. 25.95 DUI IEG. 24.15 .._,, l NY r::,·1 · ·-::J! FM STEREO/FM-AM RADIO CASSETTE RECORDER unique two motor drive •r•lem-10 your macl'line 11111 longer •nd' 1ound• btt11r. And '" Mllomatic record l1v1I so )'(l•lll ntYtr Qool up your volume. Th• No111co 1320 comoa With remote con!rol mill• •lld tin be u•td .,..\In an op. · 1101111 AC 1d1p11r lor ptu;· In op1r1llon anywhere tt11r1·1 en oull1t. DUI HS. 34 .15 AUDIO MAGNETIC C-60 CASSETTE TAPE CF -550 19 •1 HI. J/1.71 w H .. For The Record Death l'Wotlt!es C .. 1 M.. e_,,J._JKI;.L •t. ot lot2 l'. ,_.In St" Tuttln. Dllte of $ttl. October 3.· )Jn . ;)wvlwd lw .,, Fr1n~ lirvu1_11f 5-ttt•;. dl_llll':::,'ihe,Mn. i..w.4~ c;1111 ..... C•li ,......,; , Ette ceodHr, c.111111 MeH; four Rr111dch rc1r-.-i:., ~~~,,.,1owt~~. ~ J, Bllsdl«ll:.,. offldjlJ~, lnft'f· llWll, El TDrO c.nwt.ry. Vl.tt.tlO!to ... lll'Mdw•Y Chlpet, '-'IOl'lt \lflftl t ::ID ll'M. Fl'tdlly AM unlll 11 AM. !"amity IUlftlh rnMTICll'l•I C011fributlon1 ~v bl INde '° .,. MtmOrl•I Fund. Rid wn1 L~ ~~Ullin. hit llrOfd'W•v Morfwry, HAltDllSTY Rm H. Hird"~ ,,, ot 300 ;; ::l' &:~ N•j:"'1'7l'f!'.:V1~~ d-hlel', B1rbar1 J . Llllv. of N two •l1ten. Mn. Erm11 Funt, Mrs. SVd!MV C1sl'l9. ~ ROHl'Y• tolllohl, T~YI R .. Miu, Frld1v. ·lo AM. ~ 11 OW MOllr!t C1rmel C1fllolk a.u.dl. !, Hoh Stovl(llw ~. 1111 -.., Morfu.ry,_ Dlrtdora. -1--MYOI · · Financial 'Airing' Gets Okay Court Backs Chancellor On Concert FULLERTON -Ciancellor Dooald Shields' decision to cancel a rock ~ schedul- ed lor Solurday by< Cal State Fullerton Stude nts for ~ """ upbe l~ W.m-lay byan~ County SUp<rior Couit judge. Judge Raymond 'l1lompoon r<Jected arguments lb a I Shields acted unlawfully when he revoked the permission granted earlier by a !a<Ulty member. His ruling also re-~ the llludents' ctalms Iha! the mancellor's action violated their rights under tile First end Fourteenth amendments of tile U . S . Conotilution. Four rock groupo had been engaged by the sludent group in a bid to rai9e funds for McGovern's presidential drive. tields told wth students and faculcy memben shortly before the -group filed Its wrtl ~ tile ec:llool that the MCGOvem concert amollll"'f to-en improper use of -·i.ctlities. Nine Servite Students ·Get Honors W.W. 0 . tfYde. Alie n, of I~ ""' IM-,_,,, O.• ~ 1tn. Svn'lved ~-11;::r'~J':t ::=,.~-ANAHEIM -Nine Orange rL __ or1nc1c111(d;..,, -"AA_. vnu•~ att".v1;...,. Servile ~ s.Mc.,. S1tu~~r· ..,.,._, .1 --u..r::t ..........,~ i;!!t1'"M, e11 11 ,.,_,. 1..n111 c11ur~ HJgh Sdx>ol, a pr Iv ate ~::'l:on1~t1:;...zi~=-.., ' Catbolie boys s c h o o 1 1n Anaheim, have been honored ~~~MO"a~~ ay !or ocholastlc adllevement. --~ Al a Sept. 21 banquel at tile ., E. l'ltll SI., Colla Mea Dlmeyland Hotel, a total of t• •• 157 boys wm recagniud by e par<nta and teachers for al- BAL'l"t-BERGERON laining tile honor roll during FUNERAL HOME tile pa5I !ldiool year. Qwena del Mar 173M5t Seniors: are: Thoma• Reed ·e.c. Mesa 111-%4%4 of Newport Beach and Qoalg e Valehrach of Lagwia Niguel . BELL BROADWAY Junlor-clus membon on.: MORTtJARY Michatl Th omasa o n of "' Broadway, CO.II Mea Newport Beach and Paul r" 1J woa Tr<vlno of Laguna Beach. e And ...,,oomu. .. are: Frank McCORMICK LAGUNA Hunmond of Hunt Inf ton BEACll MORnJARY = G~ ~ l;tm ~ ~ 114. H~ 8-b, Kml<UJ e Poolinl of Laguna Beacb and PACIFIC VIEW Edward Sonclm of Colla MEMORIAL PARlt M;;:;.. b oyt esmed a J.O ~ Cemet"1 Mertml'7 av.raae or above and no • Cllapd an;se'iow.r than o "C" for at -Padllc View llrl¥e !Wt tJno quartm of tho wport -· catUwolo put -,..,. ~ 11-'--~~'--~~~~I ~· FEiii ~,um Y COLONIAL FllNEIW-llO!od 1'tt -Aft. w-1oner•1111 e I Dll'l'RS' -'ltJARY II!'/ -•• ffaatlocteo-- ' For Weekender Advertising Phone 6424321 ' . - E•78114"1""' JUI 14) ••• '32"' J9SfJ4 fttuz P'IS/14)':.,,. ':U- HSIJ4 <~ G7a/14)... •••• ·~ 21s114 ,,.,., nl/J4) ..... •sr 21s11s ,,,.., .,.,Js) ..... •sr u1a11s '''"' aas11s) ... '""' -+ ....... UJ• .-. ~ Joo • ~ .... Tlla ELESll lrlflTEll'.4£1-4 1178/14 f3J95 G78/J5 r. .. :(ll.i/141 01.•(2'1.Vl&J •3s-• F78/l4 •:J3•s 1178/IS ,3 _5 ru:Clt51141 r.h:f~IJ'.llSI • - 678114 •3..e•s L78/JIS f..eo>e s n1r.1:w.-o1 1•1 ~ n .. l1:1111st ~ ~7~114 '3'195 & 70 sm.s ~~ ... •"m-.. r.-a•wA'U ·=~~=2295 01wu 28'" 1'71!(1S _ ......... -............ -... Thursdly, October 5, 1CJ72 DAILY PILOT l l - New Group Opposes 'Eco-extremist,s' [(<4J UN IROYAL Sa1'e Now ••• moderate-priced houllng but It ill nol by .stoprlng all buUdJnc ln the name o ecology." TIME TO THINK JO NES LEASE DIRECT 1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX s1oa1~R MO. ,, -· -.-Id "'-T, &-L. IMI. 1lr, AM FM, vltlyt 1op, P , Nina, lilt *""I. Oller ,,,.V tie wl!hclr .. wn •nyu ..... ORDIE.R NOW FOR EA.LIEST DELIVERY ASll l'QI J!RED DORAN DAVE ROSS PONTIAC YOUR FACTORY AUTHOR IZED DIALER 2480 H-.. d. at Fair Dr., Cotta Mata 546-1017 Choose From These LotD Profile Si.:es ... H7B/14178/14 678/15 C:.0--_ .. cc-, ........ ·-11141 117- • CHEVIES •FORD --·-•• Ct • -·· Wl:dsA: Aa ........... ITI4J -- That ..,uJ flt tttGfttl • • • • MERCURY • PONTIAC •'BUICK • FORU • PLYMOUTH • ETC. (F78/14) (G78/L4) (H 78/l 4) (J 78/14) BEST PRICES IN TOWN! ... Brand New ••• (E78/1 5) (F78/l5)' (G78/J5) DOMESTIC & FOREIGN T IJBEl..ESS 6TllaEr •T.11•1141'11/I a ) ....... , (•1&111) ~ ...... :S.2•••-4 1.aex1a ·12~. .r..owra1ca1 DISC 81UIUIOa .~ ....... .. _ ....... ,_ ~ ...... _, _. t._,A41_,__ -a.i.--~ _:_ ..... ,.. .. ...... _ ........ c...ftlll -............ _. ----~ ___ ,.. .... ... .... f\,91 ... ltt i•• ,....,_._ ••• #Jlf$.1•1 .,..., _.,..., ..... , I WW'IU.._ ....,,. , • ._ .. ._._ ..... ... •• I f 1 9"-Gf _____ _ CW0-19'4• _ ....... .,,,,.__., .... .... " UUlf .... ..... •. • -11:1.1 .. Wllt 1t-1t.U 111~lh 29 ••. 39, •. s ·---· :::::: ·---·-·--·--··-··-----·--* .... AU. t'trU. IU C , C.AU. ··--...., ................ ""1 -. .. twt ..... \I_ ...,.,...... __ ._ ... li>INl"•MI- , ' •• • . fJ DMLY PILOT Thundu. October 5, l97J. She's 29, Over Dill Playboy Bu1uiy Takes New Role Pl-IOENIX. Ariz. (AP) -with us, but there have bef'n "I soppoee I am l'flll)OO.\ible You might not think so lo loot several >M-bo have gont on for their morals, In a wrf, ~ her. But al 29, Clierie from Phoenix:• Any modeling OI' photography Graham is O\'er the hill. . Tl-IE APPROXU.IATE age Job the-y accept has lo be She' foll ed the ~th r cleared b)' me, to be sure it's s ow ,.... o of bunnies is about 24, she th Pi bo b I h the kind of thing that presents o er ay Y unn es. w 0 says. "but that's probablv. ed he I l r a good image for Playboy. But matur l mse ves oo o a going to become lo14·er now job these girls are business ~ , that 19-year-olds can \\-'Ork. scious. They're coming up ''\\lhnt happens. happened to \\'e have two under 2l now." here to ,vork, not to play." me," she savs. "Bunnies are ll's her job now to keep an consistently · rated on a rye on the 15 younger bunnies ONE RULE SUE says which nwnerlcal SC'3le, based on at Arizona's only Playboy has to be enforced is weight appearance. They have to Club. control. Costwnes are fitted so keep a fresh, young look. \Ve •·1t 's something Uke being ck>sely there's ro room f'Ot ha\·e to let a bunny know \\'hE!n housemothu in a dormitory," gaining more lhan a pound. she's maturing and ask her to the says, "only not so strict. Cherie says she keep weight keep an eye oot for another The girls don't Jive here, like charts and makes spot checks position.·· some people think. 'Ihey have \\'hen least expected. An When she grew too old, she their own lives and I don't try overweight bunny can be turned in her couontail lhis 10 tell them how to run them. suspended. summer to become what's.---------....C--------1 called buMy mother for the local hutch. ''f KNEW IT y,i\en the time came for me," she says. "I think it was my attitude that was really changing - 1 was moving away from the happy- go-lucky attitude we're sup- pos:ed to portrair. Maybe I was JUSl getting bored. INCOME FOR YOU from a Gift... "Anyway, it was about this time they asked me to be bun- ny mother. And I like the work rm doing. the career op- portunities. the w ho I e Playboy thing." •You can receive a life iocoma and immediate tax benefits by participating in one of Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian'• four diflerent Life Income Gift Plans. Write ar u ll today for information: She isn't the only bunny to stay with the PI a y boy organization once the young- look is gone. Mr. Thomas K. Stadllngor HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPfTAl PRESBYTERIA N 301 Newport Boulevard Newport Beach. CA 92660 "We have a kit of OOtels where women can go into other fields such as secretarial work." she says. ''I don't have Telephone: 543-06!SO-ExtenaJon tOIS records on bow many stay f, Orange County's Largest Selection of C ontemporary Furniture open Sunday 12 -5 entire inventory reduced! 1 OO's of Values! Brown & Saltman 2300 Bedrooua Group Specl.all11 Priced During Our S ALE .... SALE 9' 50fa Loose cushions -bl.ck & white check ............ _....... . ......... $449 '299 Z swivel chairs Atmle11 -tufted -clirom• base -brown velvet ....... ea. $179 '119 .ACH 102" sofa loose cuhion1 -oran9a & brown fur -stripe ··--······-····-·· $3H '299 9' sofo loose cushions -black, brown & white H1rculon stripe -erlra deep seat ···-··········-···-···················---············· $489 I Z J round swivel chairs Lime/ avocado Herculon stripe, tufted back .................... ••· $249 '369 '159 llACH 9Z" sofa Brown Nau9ahyde -wood trim -tufted se•t and tufted attached pillow b•ck ............ ···-·--·--···············-....... $458 '299 5' loveseat l ooc• c ushions -•voc•do velvet .......................................... $299 '199 100" sofa Loose cushions -walnut trim -h••vy terlure f•bric -ol ive 9reen .............................................................. $449 '249 Glenn bedroom sets, 5 pcs. Dresser, 2 nite ste nds, lc in9 he•dbo•rd, mirror, oak finish, 4 only ·······-····-···-·················-·-······--··-··-· ...... -... $795 '395 I 2 J round swivel chairs '139 Tufted b•clc, black Nau9ahyde ........................................ ••· $249 llACM I lamps, pictures and accessories, up to 30% off during sale • size •s shown i• I 0':11 8' -_ ............ ! ......... ---·---·--· ,.., ..... i-....... -........... _ --..... ·-···-. R99. $749 SALE$549 chalc• of colors & fabrics daily 11·9/ .. t. 11-6/sundiy 1·5 •phone 548-5518 • toD free 540-1 262 I . moms-to-be separates 6.99 ' Brushed nylon top in e cheery multi-hue floral in sizes 6 to 16, 6.9'1. Knit pants in Orlon® acrylic or acetate 1n navy~ red, purpl e, block. W ashoble, sizes 6 to 16, f6.9'1. Moternity Shop, 68 ANAHEI M 444 N. E11,l1' 17141 SJl·ll21 NEWl'ORT 47 F•ehio" hi•"' 171'41 64.t-IJ ll lady·ln·waltlng longprlnt 19.99 Reg. $26. Multi<olor on block bockground in• matte jersey of acetate. Sizes 5 to 15. Moil ond phone orders invited. Motemi!y Shop,.°68 (not ot Grossmont or Wilshire) ( 1 ' ~amel~s hair ~oat s~oop 59.99 Como sove 20.00 on the oll-occosion coot thot .,;u be the bodbono of your foll ward- robe. It's 100 % comel's heir in that wear- with-overyth ing comel color • • , bock- belted, double breasted, beoutifully body· shoped . Misses' Coats, 25. I HUHllN~TON llACH 7777 f41"9•' A•tl'l11e 17141 19J0JJJI ORANGE, MAll 0, OlAN4iiE JJOO N. T1utl11 Stre•t 17141 tt~·IJll CEllUTOS 100 L" C•,,lt•• M•ll IJIJI 160·0411 SHOfl 10 A.M. to 9:10 ,.,M. MONDAY THROUGH FIUDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. le • P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to I P.M. nu m sty set nu pl ch th c ce ar lo in w ec er w a D ye ha B pr 0 d B br l ro n is Ci g s c h ,, p • T • I " • Nuclear Refugees Stay Put · CHICO (AP) -Eleven years ago when fallout shelters were popular, a group or New Yorkers abandoned their careers and fled what they thought would be a nuclear catastrophe. There were 34 of them - men, women and children - including four bigtime trumpet players, a television soap opera star, a painter; a sculptor, an economist, an engineer, a wood carver, a social worker and a wealthy concert pianist. They headed west, caravan- style, in October, 1961. They settled in this community in Gro11p left New York i n 1961; Where are They t«HD? north--central C a I i f o r n I a because its weather, they said, would ease the hardships of fallout survival. WHERE ARE they now? Many are alive and doing well in Northern California. Two have died. Only one has defected to the East Coast, so far as members of the group know. The informal leader was Albin Bauman, then 43, a con- cert pianist end member of the music faculties of Colum- bia University and Queens College. Today, Bauman lives with his wife, Nina, and two teen- age daughters in a converted paint factory in San Fran- cisco's Potrro Hill district. There, he presides o v e r Synanon, a pioneer drug ad- dict and alcoholic rehabilita- tion program. THERE HAS BEEN . no nuclear attack. And in the meantime, ex- plains Bauman, "We've just changed w1Ut the times. "Things were different then" Bauman says. "They've changed. That was a real con- cern in those days, but people are directing their energies toward other things today." Bauman said the deceased include William Salant, a w ea I thy Harvard-educated economist killed in an auto crash. His widow, Dorothy, went to work with Synanon, and later married its attormy, Dan Garrett. Lou Oles also died about five years ago, said Bauman. He had been a trumpeter with Benny Goodman. He became president of the G e o r g e Ohsawa Macrobiotic Foun- dation in San Francisco. IT WAS OHSAWA, a Zen Buddhist philosopher, who brought the group together in the first place. They shared a belief in his teachings,a yen for health foods, and a fear of nuclear disaster. The only one who returned is Irv Hirsh, now of AUant.ic City. On arrival in Chico, the group chipped In and formed a small organic food operation, Chico San. now known in the health food busin~. Its president is Robert Ken- nedy, once a trumpeter ln a studio orchestra. The vice president Is Richard Smith, another trumpet player. ANOTHER REFUGEE , Teal Ames, was written up in a soap opera fan magazine last year under ihe headline, "Solved; The Mystery of the Missing Teal Ames," star of the daytime serial "Edge of Nigbl" . She 11l!rTled a Ch I co muchont, 18 bringjng up Im. children, and 18-lludyl"ll to become a family counselor. 1be pe.jnter, Jane Andrews, llvtt In B<rkeley and teachts reading at :1 juolor hig'h achoo! In nearby Richmond . Tiie adjustment 1u1 .. ·1 beM euy, said Smllh. whose wlf• Flartnee WIS 8 halcll«k girl ot ~ndy's. " ~ t -.. • • ~ • , tnuway, OctOl>tr S. l9n DAILY PILOT J 3 · polyester knit longsklrt 14.99 A super longskirt in dark Foll colors of block. navy. burgundy. Washoble. Sizes 10-16. Moil and phone ordres invited. Mi sses Sportswear, 89 rlhhy polyesier tops 4.99-5.99 Orig. $J 0-$11 . Snown one from o group of styles. Polos. laced fronts .. cop sleeves. S-M·L. Assorted colors include block. red, white, novy. beige, blue. yellow. Soiry no moil or phono orders. Street Floor Sportsweor. 65 ' yoqng juniors' pants, tortleneeks 4.99-5.99 Reg.$?. Turtleneck in ocrylic kn it, S.M-L. White, brown , gold, novy, red , green, 5199. Assorted ponts. reg. $?-$10. Shown. brushed cotton den im in assorted colors. Junior sizes 5-13. 4.99. Hi Deb Shop. 52 nifty, new knit pants 14.99 Reg. $18. Polyester-wool blend ponts beoutifully toilo rod. Hond woshoble colors of wine, rose, liloc, pooch. Assorted colors, Sizes 8 to 16. Active Sportswear, 78 . ANAHEIM NEWPOOT HUNT IN$TON llACH ~L '°"LL Qt -I 47 F••t. hl•"4 1714) 644-IJIJ 1111 E'111t~ A"•M• 171~1 lt2•JJJI J)OO M.1•"9 S..,... J7141 ttt.1)11 444 N. E.vcll4 17141 11"-1121 SHOP 10 A.M. t, •:JO P.M. MONDAY THkOUQH F•tDAY, SATUlbAY 10 .ut. 1, • P.M. SUNDA't' IJ M00H tt I P.M • • i .. - body-hogg ing knit tops 5.99 Rog. $8-$9. Assorted knits in prints and solids. G reat beginnings for today's layering. Or dress them up wit h a scarf or pin . Sorry no moil or phone ord~rs. Street Floor Blouses. Shirts. 66 starts. M>OD? good looks- goodllfe ·· semJnar For girl s age 14 to 18. 6 leS1ons II 1/i hours &&ch) in hoir. fashion, moke up, basic modeling .•. on exciting new course concept. budding beauty For girl1 oge I 0 to 13. 6 lessons 11'/i hrs. e~ch) 1n postu re, ski n core, model turns. hoir. each course $15 Includes notebools. clip- boords, samples. Fa shion presentatio n concludes eoth course. Sign up now in Jun ior World or H; Deb Shop ot ony Broo dwo y. famous make pants, shirts 6.99 • . .• ! Sta·press@ famou s label jeans in cotton 1 homespun. Brown or navy, 5-13. b.99. ! Assorted tailored shirts in petterns, otri pes. 5.1 J. 6.9'1. Jun ior SportsweGr, 97 favorite acrylic knit cover-op 13.99 Rog. SI 8. Terrific over everything Sizes 36 lo ~2. Cozy pocleted cardigan in white, red . navy , beige. M is~s· Sporl swear, 40 ' - • J ;j OAIL Y PJLOl QUEENIE B Phil lnterlandl SPEED CHECKED BY RADAA ''I guess I was going too fast to read the signs ... or ma)'be I lbouldn't have said that ... " Asks $10 Millio11 Audie Murphy's : Widow Files Suit From Wlre Services The widow and l\\'O children of former film star Audie Murphy have filed a $1~ million lawsuit against the owners of an airplane that carried the actor to his death in a Virginia mountain crash. Mrs . Pamela Opal Lee Murphy flied the suit in Denver against Colorado Avla· tion Co., Inc.; American Western Plastics Corp . ; Tele.star, Inc., the holding c11mpany that controlled both the university's James Weldon Johnson "-1emorial Collection of Negro Arts and Letters. * The Rev. Timothy Hottel. pastor of the Glendale Baptist church in Spartanburg County. S.C.. is happy that Sooth Carolinians arc now able tcr buy new license tags. For the past year, the Bap- tist minister has had license plates with I.he first three let- ters "SIN." * . World chess champion ( ) Bobby Fischer has praised the PEOPLE Russian from whom he won the t-iUa,...&ris Spassky, as polite ._ _______ _, and a "real gentleman." firms : Michael Filzgcrald. Fischer told students and pre5ident o( the plastics firn1 faculty at the \Vorldwlde and Telstar. and the estate of Church or God's Ambaasador the plane's pilot, Herman College in Pasadena that he Butler. learned only recenUy that Butler, s e c r e ta r l Spassky refrained from smok· Colorado Aviation, was one or ing during the championship six men killed when the tournament out of courtesy lo Beecher aft Aero Commander the A m e r i c a n challenger. craahed May 28, 1971, on a Fischer is a nonsmoker. Oigbt from AUanla, Ga., to MarUnsvllle, Va . James Al. Roche, retired chairman of General Moton, caJled for an all.out com- munity effort to f I g h I alcoholism. * Duke EUlngwn, the jazi great, plans to donate his col- lection of original com- positions and arrangements to Yale University. 1ndustry can help identify alcoholics, he said, "but we are not equipped for the ex· tensive treatment of alcoholism.·· WjJlie Rurr. an associate pro"-ssor in ensemble playing. said the gift will be n1ade to j ·--- We'll stake you to a bonus breakfast. Sambo'1 for steaks? You bet! Sambo's has steak din· ners for all appetites .•. all budgets ... at all times. And there's no gambhng on quality either. All our.....- steaks are made from hefty, choM:e cuts, tender I juicy -!he way you llke 'em. And righl now. we've made them even mcn tempting. We"11 give you 2 breakfastSfor the prtce of 1 -just for en}oying one of these great steaks. The New York Steak Dinner-with french fries 21nd salad, just $2.95. The Top Slrloln Steak Dinner-with 111 tht trim- mings. only $2.55. The Deluxe N. Y. Steak Sandwk.h:-wlth aolden fries and garnish, $2.25. To win your bonus breakfast, $Imply mention this Id when you order -any one "of thest &ttak1. Your waitress will give you a coupon aood for 2 breakfasts for the price of l . Thars 2 Sambo Specials for fust 95, -you can't beat this deal anywhere. Treat yourself to a steak today. Get a 2-for·l bonus breakfast for yourself and a suest tomorrow. How can you lo"°7 At all Sambo's Restaurants in Southem Celifomla (from Thou11nd Oaks to San DltlO), Offer aood thra<Jgh October 31, 1972. ! -. ' ' ' " ritish ' • ~ ... A collection of accessories for · that special man in your life Handsome gifts with o British occent. We show lour. The collection includes robes, goblets, music boxes ond more. o. Byford fashion hosiery, rust, blue or green (127) 2.50 b. handmade pewter mug, one of five sty les (80) '40.00 c. handfinished walnut bo" cedar-lined (80) 18.50 d. Poter Klinger tie, novy , wine . brn ., coco/wht. (b) 6.50 ~ien 's furnishings b, men's hosiery 127, men 's occessories 80 '" . ortnight to October 8 Turtle ne c ks and swea ter vests for men with new patte rn intere st Men 's sweaters for foll. Wit h the newest bold polterns. And the natural feeling of pure wool. We show a u·neck sweater ves.t in rich jacquard print. And a soft turtleneck done in bicycle stripes. All S-M-L. From o British collection. o. honey/navy, white /brown or yellow/novy 12.00 I. novy/tan /wine, wine/tan /yel., brn ./wht./orange 17.00 moch ton shop 83 SHOP MONDAY· TO FRIDAY 10:00 TO 9:3 0 • SUNDAYS NOON TO 5 . ' ":• saturday hours 10 to 6 • may co south coast plaza, san diego freeway at bristol, costa mesa , SMr-9321 MAY-CO • • AN ' s s B Arc in hav dan and wi • s "~i Iha dri ing fer dri car ca tio mis sai • r mo Ru lad sa ye 72 ing or Iha Sal Joi ma Gil v • • Da in av fy Ev sit ... .. w d . . ANIMAL ':?zti.,..., Disease Strikes Students BERKELEY (UPI) Archeology students working in Calirornia's Central Valley have been warned ()[ the dangers or coccidloidomycosis -the technical name ror what residents call Valley fever. The state Department of Public Health said 350 colleges and universities had been ad· (MEDICINE J vised of the dangers of the flu- like disease caused by a soil fungus. Millions of residents o( the Central Valley devt!lop the in- fection and lifelong immunity. But when students and pro- fessors from outside areas dig for artifacts in the con- taminated soil they come down with the ailment. eMmnCited SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 16 -year -old girl Joki a congressional committee 'ooo- cernfng itseU with c r l m e problems in the suburbs that h<r -intmiced her Jo marijuana when.Me was 12 or 13 years old.'· "I first got involved with grass with my mother," Laura Mayer told the House Select Committee on Crime. "After that I went io hash, speed, mescaline and acfd." Later, Laura told newsmen how she stopped taking drugs: "What I really needed was. a good swift boot, and that was getting busted." - She said she was arresfed and sent to a hospital for , withdrawal. e f 'lne l..lne SACRAMENTO (UPI) "~isruptions" of the heart that occur in some persogs driving at high speed or tllfir ing sharply may be the dif- ference between good and bad drivers, according to the California Hi ghway Patrol. The CHP reported the preliminary finding of tes~ of selected patrolmen in stress driving conditions conducted by the patrol and the splice biology laboratory or the UCLA Brain Research JnsUtute. "Cardiac disruptions were noted in some driven as they proceeded through s b a r p turns, producing s t T o n g gravitational forces which caused mechanical detonna· tion of the heart," CHP Com· missioner Walter Pudinskl said. e Researrh Aid SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Cancer research will get part of the money left by Lu c il le Rutshaw. San Diego's "flower lady" who sold corsages to sailors and their dates for 20 years until her death. A widow, Mrs· Rutshaw was 72 when she died in 1961 , leav· ing an estate of more than $.100,000 ln trust for charity. G. M. Glllean, vice president or the Bank of America, saJd that $19,600 had been given the Salk Institute. The gift will help the La Jolla-based researeh institute match $200.000 from t h e Glldred Foundation ror various projects, a Sa I k spokesman said. e Public Dofa SACRAMENTO (AP) Data on abortions performed In California hospitals comes under the sta te's pub 11 c records law and must be made avaUable to the public In ne .... ly every case, says Atty. Gen. Evelle J . Younger. "In rare instancel.. factual sltuationll milhl arlle whett the dala could be wllhhtkl," Younger said, in a formal oPtzUm requested by J'redertcit B. Bodi"", mi. direct« ol public heallh. S.idel lntorm1tion wbldl would allow ldentlllcatlon or IPICitlc penons who have had abilttions, Yourcer ~kl. tht onlr time data mijht bt wt!Mleld would be In cH•• """" the public inlereJI ii "cllilrl 9et'Yfd'' more by wlth~oldlnf lhlll by dlli:k>lure. I ... . . • Thursday, October 5, 1972 DAILY PILOT J;) Finl-nm mom., too. You still see first-run in-flight movies, as well. Full-length feature films . And then it"s kick-off time! The NFL Game of the Week. Another exclus ive on the Great Wide Way to New York. ' • '\ Pay for it all on Arntrkan Express. You can pay for your United Game of the Week fli ght with th e American Express Money Card. And if you wi sh. you ca n extend • See them knock heads from LA. to New York. ,Only Uniled brings you 26 aclion-packed llliinutes of an NFL battle while you Dy. (Headsets on movie flights fr ee in First Class. $2 charge in <:;oach.) Cheer. holler. boo and hiss 30,000 feet up. When you leave for Newark at 1 p.m .• or on 1he noon flight Jo JFK. you'll sec a ' full.ac1ion . full.screen film of the roughest, toughest football ever played . Not just highlighb. We don! mean two-minute · , highlights from a dozen different ' games. Unitcd's made an exclusive ! '1 arrangement with Jhe National ' Football League to bring you an entire Game of the Weck. every week. Only the time-0uts, half-time and huddles arc eliminated. A new film produced each Sunday. Aboard our New Yorker flights by Wcdocsday . ' • \ \ your payments with the ,... ...--lilllll•I American Express Card sign & fty•plan. If you don't have a card jusl call (800) AE 8-5000, toll free . Or pick up an application wherever the Money Card is honored. The Money Card also comes in handy at hotels. restaurants, and shops along the rest of the trip. ; r ' AMIERICAN The Money Card Flythe friendlys~~ of United. · · Enjoy our Friend Ship SerVice. • • . • . . . . ' ... .. • L./tf. Boyd E11emy's Death Cost $170,000 In the days of Julius Caesar, it cost about 75 cents to kill an enemy soldier. By Napoleon's time, It oost ~000. During \\'or\d War l. the U.S. paid $21,000 per hostile d. By World War II, that was multiplied considerably ost recently in Vietnam , the official estimate n.uu $170,000 for the lire of each bad guen-illa. And still. that figure could be lov•. There are those who believe enemy casualty esU. mates are 1nfiated. JN U.ER ADVICE to single girls in search of matri- monial mates, that expert on matters romantic Madame Dartaui: said: "Be- ware of men with damp hand.!. 'Ibey indicate a hypemervous individual filled with complexes. Beware also of hands that are never removed from their pockets by shy men. And of gesticulating hands ci braggarti." QUERIES - Q. "Does the cheetah hunt at night?" , A. Only if the moon is full . Sound: Squeaking door. Voice over : Now another spine-chilling thriller In our series of fantastic tales. ''The Cheetah Hunts at Night." Never mind. I miss the old radio days sometimes, though. Q. "HASN'T one of the simplest venereal diseases now come lo be the commonest communicable ailment in this country?" A. Almost right, only the cold remains more popular. WHAT you and I call a "raccoon" the old Algonquian Indians called an "arahkun," whence cometh our word. THAT PIZZA now outsells bamburgen has been widely reported. Less well circulated is the fact that tacos now outsell hot dogs. REASON women generally take about five Umes as many days off work as do men are too various to enumer. ate here. LOVE AND WAR -Three out oC 10 engaged couples wait no more than three months before they marry. Aver· age Ienglh of engagements remains six months, however. Our Love and War man continues to recommend that aver- age. The year-long engagement, be feels, is suspect. Some- body isn't interested enough. WHO BURNS up the more calories, a fast swimmer or a fast boxer? You're right, the swimmer. For that matter, the science boys say a boxer is apt to roast away fewer calories than some sport who rows a boat at an exceed· ingly rapid cli p. IF EVERY man, woman and child on earth put $56 into the kiuy, it would just about cover the worldwide ~ of armaments now. Or so reports the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmamen t Agency. HALF THE "·orld's mosquitos attack only plants. Con· soling, no? DID YOU get sunburned this: summer? If so, were you on some soct of pill? No, my dear, I mean like a tran-- quilizer. The rnedlca1 boys now say certain tranquiUiers tend to create a skin sensitivity which can leave the takers ol said drug> particularly susceptible te bad sunburn. Thal'• not good. Address mail to L . M. Boyd, P. 0 . Boz 1875, Nell> port Beoch, Calf/. 92660. Wards LeGant® • DIAMONDS 150/o OFF! ONLY AT WAROS HU NTI NGTON BEACH SALE ENOS OCT. I Gr.at 1•vin91 NOW! S•l•d at one• for Christmas! The brilliant c;/•rity, full·f•ceted cut •nd p•rfect color of LeGant® diamonds. Mounted in 1 '4K 9old. IAI $395 1/2-CARAT -brilliant, Swiss-cut stont in ettr1ctivo 4-pron9 ••ttln9 .................. $335 181 $222 1 /3-CAIAT -9r•ceful twist mountln9 ac- cent• diamoncfl1 naturel fir• ········-·····-··· $111 ' (CJ $1M 1/4-CAIAT-••qui1itely shaped di1mond 1p1rkl11 in b•autiful mod•rn ••tting ...... $1Jt tDJ $160 1/5-CAIAT -sleek, sophisticet•d mod1rn ••ttlng cotnplem•nt1 diamond .. . .. ... ... $136 I E;J $120 3/4.CAIAT -uniqu• cont•mp1rory setting •mph•1h:e1 quality ol 1ton• •..................• $697 fF) $1100 1.CAlt.A.T -4.prong mounting in white or y•llow 9old. Classical 1tylin9. -··---$93& IGl $1t00 1·1/1-CAUT -~·proo9 10ouo1;09 lo whit• Of yellow 9olcf, 0.11iul 1tylin9. $1611 ONLY AT WAllDS HUNTINIH ON llACH UOOH• ..... C•lor PhHm-un • • Starvey of 1'len1fJertlalp Sierra Cluhbers Joined Up to Fight SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -TOPPING TllE list in Most new mtmbers of the con-popularity was the club'• servaUooist Siena Club joined stand against the proposed loss to tramp t hr o u g h Disney Mineral King develop- wildem<SS than they did to ment, lollowod by O!JPOOltion fight projects they believe «>-te the supenoolc transport danger the environment, a project, the Alaska pipeline survey of the club's 140,000 and efforts to save Oalifornia's members reveals. redwood trees. The survey clted ques-· The club's apparent o~ tionnaires in which members position to nuclear power was rated club actions on the basis least popular, with 5 percent of whether they consldered of the members declaring it them favorable or unwise. The survey , conducted late in 11171, lndlcatod that about ball the memben belonged te the club for two years or ltd. Only 9 -t bad been mem-ben more than u years. .,MOST OF TOE club11 long· tenn memben originally join- ed te partlcipate in outdoor activities," the magulne said. •'Most of the more recent members joined to support or participate in conservaUon ac- tivities." RIMA DRILLS Members occupaUons as Jlsted ln the survey were 19 pereent students; 18 percent teachers : 12 percent homemakers, 11 percent e>· ecuUves : s percent lawyers, doctora and dentists; 7 percept other prolessions and 7 per- cent blue collar workers. A majority completed some graduate studies, 18 percent hold PhD's and 21 percent have mast.rs degrees, the llUl'Vey said. Dog Ta~s High Road, Get.s Looks SACRAMENTO (AP) - Everybody watchea w h e n Diane Ttepper, 11, and her friend ride down a street on one bicycle. Two on a bike may be com· mon. but when the l!e<Olld rider ls on Diane's shoulders and barking al nelgbborllood kids, il attracts some aC-- tentioo. Diane's pas senge r ts Samantha, her poodle, who learned the riding trick and now gets a dally excursion. HOLES IN HIGH PRICES Appliance Rollers Deluxe Craft Canvas Boards Toilet Float Kotte Kit Handy Rustproof Home • Cont1Jn1 1n Pr•·•h•kh•d • Puh wh••l1 on h••vv 1ppli111c11 JOOO-lb. lo1d tested 139 Your Choice Of 3 Hand Gardening Tools e Cu1tivetor, MoG1I No. 74Jl e Trowel, Mod1I No. 742 2 e D1...d11ion W11d1r, Mod1I No. 7426 e l mo1t·n•.01d s+11I 91rd1nl11t tool1 with 1turdy, 1t1y-cool h1r>dl11 Turner Propane Tanks e R,plece111111• tenk for your prop&ll• torch. SolG••• or 1ofttn1. Lamp Cord Wire Your c.hoic:t of e11ort•d colort ldtel for Go-It· vo11r1elftrt S1fetv·mtd1 11·2 3c ... • Budg•t pric•d r1p1ir pi1c1 • St1yt fr1th 1110 11nit1ry • k11p severe/ on he11cl for replif'I 15' Black & Decker Versatile %~Inch Drill e Drills all materials fast, 4Cc urately e Well.balanced, comfortable e General purpose Model 7000 7" rrtc .. t-4 "'" Oct. •tti Jumbo-Size Spray Paint e Choos1 frotn •nem•l• t!td l•cquen e All th1 mott popular 1heclts • E••Y to u11· le11 m111 i nd fu11 Big Roi Of Masking Tape • JJ. inch 11 60 ye1d1 • U11 It for J111t ebout t¥try· thin9 29' Conveniently locoled ••• EoJy Jo Reocht 2666 HARBOR BLVD. -IN t osr A MESA PHONE 546-7010 HOURS, WEEKDAYS 9 TO 9 SATURDAY AND SUND.AY.9 TO 6PM ••1orht'l•nt of ' ltniv11 1N b11G" plut hon~ 1ton•. Eve !n9 ~ tobbl•1t n•ecl .. 388 3-lnch Clamp-On Wot11benclt Vise e luilt·ln pl!N \1w1 e Pr•cidon 1ur• fac1cl jew e Double b1 r 911id11 e A 9r••f gift for 01d e MoGel No, T-121 'Glidden' Spretl Antique Kits • R11tor•1 tho1• di1ctrdt • E11he11c:• 1111· fin i1hed wooclt • Alkytl for 2 • 1tap 1ppllc1• ti Oft 28!. - • c1nv11 • Artitl qu11i ty r · 149 x 10" 1110 "'' Green Up With 'Super Turf Builder' Hi9h9r•1ning power f•rtili1er e R1l11111 nuhi•nh ov1r prolonged p1riod1 e S111 Prii:1dt c:..... .... SCI· ~. 495 ................ ft. 8.95 Black & Decker Single Blade Mower e I l-i11ch Jin9l1 blede mow•r c:1rri•• the qu11itv n•m• of Bleck l D•c•1r. Sinql• bl.di •ttion i1 ,,,,, 1fficl1nt. Mocl,I 1000, 49'9 Practkal 4-Drawer Unfinished Desk e ld11I for . -. _... ho1111worli: or for de11 •• A WtlJ· ". cle1l911•G l2"x 16"129" ••• c:omptc.f y1t roomy • Mocl•i K·4Jl-D 1388 (Oil& 1111& l I • 4 • • • • ' . . . . . . ' ' . . ·-.... Activities -Help Erase Loneliness By LAURIE KASPER Of .. Del!Y Pllet lllff Everyone has been lonely sometime , ~urtng Ille. ll's probably the worst depression, 1 ~ defined in contrast to this socia l world by rucb terms as solitary •.. Isolated ••• Sesolate • . . bleak, . . . dejected •.. remote ... unwanted ..• unJoved . Single people especially s e e n1 ?eriodlcally pained with it. Jt might occur when they want to share iappiness. But, most often, it erupts when a person bas a problem -eveo so nlnor as a hot, tedious freeway drive borne, from work -and no one to talk to tbout it. Jt's worse for one who ts reeent1y llvorced from what be thought was a ! long, happy marriage relaUonship. • Fonner friendly couples forget him, • ICIO, not wanting a third or afraid of the ~petition of the new single. So, added o this new loneliness Is perhaps a bit- 1erness and even lack of self-confidence. , ' ,; ~· G; • • • l •• •' ~ il: ••• .,, , . . • , . . , ' •, ,. • • IITl'El\ DIVORCE One O!"ange Coi.mty tradesman says !rankly that he w~ "real bitter"' after bis divorce. The fa~ of six said be was 'happily married for 30 years" but "all DAILY PILOT PHOTOS llY DICK DRAKE' Reader DEAR ANN LANDERS: My 4-yeaN>ld 1istq lovea your colu..,in. No, lhe doeln't • read It. She eatl It.. And thll IJ what I am wr!Ung about. The lltlie rucaJ deVCIW'I not only chunkl of newspoper, bu\ dirt from the houleplonts, art.awn ...-. and table ~llonl. MJ grandmother llYI to lave btt alone -lbat U1ll ...,. btt bocly - certain .i. ...... "" 11 not rettln& In ber tllet 1nd lt 11 nature'• ·~ o1 pnwldlng 'nutritional balance. My motbtt doeltl 'I agree with her and OW' pedlatrlclan 11 out of town. What at>ourthls! ll 11 bormtuJ or bencficlal!-CONCERNED 513 DEAR SIS: V-.. lldra -"" bo ,. ... -.... t IWol• IMJ...,,.. .. llDCI b'lq """'-lo flld, ._, -loo • or a sudden the whole thing blew up in my face." A while after his separation1 a real estate woman told him of a group whole members seem to soothe such feelings. ll's called RESCU, Research and Educa- tional Society of California Unmarrieds, and said to be simply a group for friendship among others who have been in similar circumstances and have overcome similar feelings. He became a member and at the runc- tioos found "they let me go ahead and spout off •.• as time goes on, I'm losing rily bitterness.'' ' REOCiU 's stated objectives are "to at- tempt to ease the loneliness and give help where possible to the newly divorced person, or any single. individual ..• to promote fellowship ·with others in similar circumstances . . . to provide social activities for the interests of everyone ..• to plan education stimula- tion and .form study groups." NOT SWINGERS Although it is a singles group, members, who are In their 40s and 50s, w.ill q~ caution anyone who's in- terested,. "We're not a swinging singles group." In fact, getting away from "that bar bit" Ls one reason Mary Cirkot, one of the orie,inal members, feels the club has been 1$Ucce11Sful. "Bars are okay, but seven nlghts a week is too much." The club was started by about 10 ~ pie in the fall of 1966. Nooe cf the 10 really knew each other. But they had met at anather meeting for divorced people being fonned in Ule area by a woman . By the second meeting, she was asking for money and the RESCU founders decided it was just a commercial ven· tu.re. Yet they knew such a groop was need· ed both because of their own feelings and the number who showed up for the other meetings. A letter was sent out to sme single people in the county and a general meetlng was called. Eighty peoiile ollow- ed up. Membership has varied from around 100 people to its current number of about 30. Once just for divorced peogle, the club has since opened to widowed and never~rried persons as well. EXPENSES ONLY Members oote that they have kept their fees down. 'The only monies asked are $2 for registration and $5 a year for expenses, which is mostly for the print- ing and postage on a monthly newslet- ter. In addition, participants are asked to donate 25 cents at their discussiom to offset the host'• cost of refreshments. Of the original group, Mrs. Cirkot is the only one left. Others have moved away or remarried. Two are what she calls "retreads," both remarried and redivoreed. Members come to the grou p after hearing or It from another member or rea ding the personal ad they . oc- cassionally place. Lately, Mrs. Cirkot said, UM!y have been getting an in· creasing number of calls from sing)es in their late 20s and early 30s. To her it is testimony that "They're through with thi s sex bit.'' • The group sometimes attracts "kooks" and "real old people," said Ivy Papp, but they usually eliminate themselves. "They don't ask to join and we don't pusb the isSuc." MONTHLY MEETINGS They meet the first Friday of each month in the Mercury Savings and Loan Building in Tustin. Sometimes they relax and play bingo or go to one of the members' homes for a party after the business portion of the meeting. Other t1mes, they have films, demonstrations or speakerii on a variety of sub- jects. A doctor from the County Health Department spoke to them on VD during their August meeting. Informal diS«..'USSlons are held several tlmes during the nlonth in members' home.s. Although the conversation is open, a topic is usually chosen in ad- vance. 'These vary from "Are me n really men anymore?" to "What have I to of- fe r?" and even to capital puniahment. But there arc other, more 10C!a1 ac- tivities. During August, ror ex1mple, club members scheduled an overn ight camp- iqg lrip, dancing, a barbecue and a ''dine-out." LIKE A FAMILY Since many do n t ha ve a famil y, they get together for 1hc holidays as wel l. ''We're like a family to each other," J\1rs. Clrkot explained. !See RF.SCU, Page Ill BEA ANDERSON, Editor ThurMer, OClllttr J, 1tn '""* U Fun, as in a skit put on by, le~ to right, Sam Cannon, Cindy Fleming, Pat Howley and Andy Fisher, is shared by RESCU members. Friendship and ability to talk over problems is offered by RESCU. • , ,, ' .. ~ . •. ! • With the baby came laughs shared and remembered by members of RESCU, a social, but not swinging, group for singles. Di ·gests Too Many Peppery Articles t:IUCbl 1\ aa u rty age \e keep fortlp ob- jedl .... ~ Mt " .... ~ .. -.,,,. bod)' -K" tMe<y 11 ao tlll- wlm tale aod Ml If ldHdflc validity. ,....,, .... of ~ ... ""' 'fUI htca•• *' ale Mde ••t•ctl Jlldt M dllpl·lf polo~ -...its IM I wbeie '"*If ••••t•1tll t&eau &bl tllolld .._ve -Mp<--~ .... t..i-..-. l oa &lid ,_ IUU. 111l<r loveo my -loot pltue keep K 1W11Y I-M< -•cu rtiM h. ll'110t ror ntl•c. DEAR ANN LANDERS: our doughttt movtd to Callfomla two ynn1 110 to i-11 In on tl<molUry llchool. SM t..pi hm In Connecllcut for three yem "!"' ber ..iudeoll really loved bu. ' MY hulband ·ond our )'OUlll oon vtslted Reoet In CaU!omia Jut yur and wr want t.o do eo •caln lhll lalL But 1 Jll'lt IMmed that Renee bu a new roomm1le -1 )'llUDI man. I feel II wwld not bo the pt"OPfr envtronment for htr IJ..year~ld brother. F'ur11>mnoro, II my husba nd knew about lhil Uvtnc amnaeme:nl he'd bo very upod. Wh<n I ~ -to t<ll her obolll my mltgfvlnp, tho llld It w noboey'• butinfJI who .. !fv• -but ... - 1st her boytrierid to mov' OUI while we Wtft in town If J ftlt it would Uptd btf' fathtt . lAlrt year her little brothtr .uayed on with Rente • wee-t alter my hliJband and I returned home. I'm turt tw'd W111nt to 1to a.,, 11aJn but t'm •fnld RtTiiee'I boyfriend mlaJ>t ._ bodt W(th h ... I'd bate frw Dtn" ton ta • IUt:h 1Dinpon flente Uo 2' Ind a ni<t SIM, but tile - mortdlly ll IOl'Mlhtnc I'm Mt rtady for, Pleuo tell whit I ol1ould do Ill ~ • 10 our upccmlni pbm -OUl .~A.SllJ ON•:1> J.t£ OIWI O.f ., 111 -.._ U..t fM, your •bud •llCI .,. •Ill be "mln1 ta -ud tUI 1" lppndoie lltt oUlo( tllo i.o,trl<od .. u.. __ ...,. ..... ,.., ...... Ttll Iott H w..W M oko V 11tr Y""•< .,..., (."ll9Jd ...., -,_ .. "'41t""'•' •ftl, kt Jttll "91kl llfC I ~ Uw boyfrittd rt1n9hh Atll M< 1o kt >"" .._ ... ..,_ • - Or.All ANN LANDERS Ste whit fOU ran rlo to chan1-t lhe old, Uruome prac- 11« of println1 only the bride-l<>-bt'• pl<· turt 6n the Pli>tt . So of&.m whfn the •"ll•ged 1lrl'1 picture •Pl"'A'"1_ 1he q .... Uon that pop1 Into my mb.:t Dt "'WhJ'd ' ' .. ... ' .. "\ • •• •, .+"'.f8 OAILY PILOT • • " • ' ' .. ' ~ lhurWay, Octobtr 5, 1972 This Advice for the ' ) •. . ' By JO OL.'lON OI fht O&lly Plitt Si.It If your mother.In-law l5 a fussy Virgo, don't get upset if .:he empties the ash trays before the guests are lhrough witb them. If you want to live happil y with a Libra, keep up with fashion and be courteous, and if you want to tango with a Taurus, don't hurry him and wake him genUy, quietly and late. These are but a few hints (or happy nesting from Jean- nette Glenn's new book, "Astrology Is StricUy for 'the Birds," or '"nle Astrological (Unofficial) Aw\ubon Society.'' 'Ibe lime-Jacketed book will. teach its readers with car- toons adding to the hu mor , "how to attract a variety of birds and successfully room with them." After reacting her book, "people can laugh about all the little quirks they used to .IM,,.,_Glenn .. ys 1st_rology is ''strictly for the birds." Her new book proves it. pick at," Mn. Glenn said. FILLER MATERIAL The C..ta Mesa mother ol five grown children and baby- sitter for a white Pisces cat which prefers the • • o u t ' 1 basket to the "in basket'' ror sleeping, wrote the book In pieces as fill er material for her a s t r o I o g y newsletter. When it caught on. she col- lected it in manuscript form. A Leo who grew up in San Francisco, she was a coocert harpist at the age of 9 and had a varied career in radio, television and probation work before turning to atsrology full-time. "The last thing I wanted to be was an astrologer." she said, "but I was born into it. My mother was the first presi- dent of the A s t rol o gi ea I Brotherhood o f California when I was 15. "Norma lla mmond, the next president, did my chart and said, 'You will be an astrologer.' TESTED IT "I studied by myself for awh ile, then went into what 1 thought was a different field . I went into astrology with an open mind because it intrigued me, and I starttid testing it.'' Astrology. !he explained, is a mathemitical acience of cycles. "No astrologer can predict what ano!her person would do. It is like a road map." What she .fmd.! amazing in her study of astrology, she confided, is "the potentials people have that they don~ use." Astrology is useful , she says, in vocational counseling, in gaining insight into some- one's personality and pro- moting smoother family s:itua· lions. Through astrology s b e Birds "understood her children's qulrl<s, expOSed them to the right profession as children and knew her twin daugtJtera would eventually enter the medical profess.ion. 11 NO ADVICE Her children are wise to her ways, though., and she says "they'd never ask f()r any astrological advice, I'll tell you." When people ask her why she makes mistakes she readi- ly answers, "Why do you have problems? Astrologers have lessons to learn. the .same as .. preview opening sale ! ! T he M oment Is Here The M o ment b Nom The Moment ... a delightfully different ladies boutique featuring: Clothe~ to work in ... to play in . , . and to party in .. , tftls IJ tfte Moment 512 30th Jt., n.wport beach 1~111 f>•rl• lnnl 673·2777 anyone else." 11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Here are some tidbits from the section or her book entitled ---- "'Birds of a Feather Room Together": "Your Libra bird is I~ w:ithout a partner and makes more mistakes than most because of this trait. Rooming Delaney Bros. Seafoods w:ith such a bird can be a Mer- ry-Go-Round (more or les3) socially. . "Your roomate dotes on the '~ right atmo s phere for everything, from the dining room to a foyer. "If you like casual living, comfortable clothes and sleep- ing in late, room with a Scorpio bird." "The nest will be furnished in all sorts of luxuries, from exotic perfume, incense, color- fumiture, to a water beet. "There's one hint on how to get along with any Scorpio birtlo DON'T MOVE HIS PERSONAL GEAR! "If you're serious about ' BASS AU YIN BLANC C11t 2#" ban Into 1 ·liteh c111Hts. Sprl11lde wlttr. salt and ,.,,w. Place cubes I" a weU·b11tteNd cetnafole In a IJ1t9S. klrlf"· Sprllllle wftft 1 T. eqclt parsley, citMty ond 9'ffll 01do111. Po11r 1111 l/J c. dry white win&. Top wttr. l/4 c. b11rt.red breod crumbs. Boke, UMO•eritd 350 detJrns fOf 20 minutes. Serves 4. FJlESH NO.THERM SEA BASS FILLETS $1.39 lb. DELANEY'S a rcOMMENDS WENTE llOS. Gi n llESLING TO ACCOMPANY THIS DISH Ad GoM Tll1-Oct. l?ltl. 2800, L•fayet+e -Newport Beach ----nesting pennanently, owning 671·1450 or 545.1zt 1 • Ope11: t·• Mo•.-Sot.; lt-S:JO 51111. property to keep and a goodl ~~===============:--::=~ address, find a Capricorn bird.!- "Don't spring the trap too soon, however. This bird's wi- ly and wants to ch~k you.out first. Show him your credit card along with your bank ac~ count." Your Horoscope Tomorrow ,. ~· :c: • .. : Pisces: Make Conciliatory Gest-ure :.:: e-;. FRI DAY OCTOBER 6 ••• ~= By SYDNEY OMA.RR ~;Never C()Unt out a ~aprioom. The6e p e rs on a ~vercome obstacles, strive (or ~lf·improvement, are willing ·~ learn and have aome ~ns or their own to ~­~'Capricorn can be the center of ~~troveny, can be admired : 11nd reviled. but -;g. -• ~nored. Some famous peNIOO! bom under th.is iocttacal sign inc lude Howard llughea, Mary Tyler Moore and James Earl Jones. AR IES (Mardi 21-April 11): Activi ty ceflters around public react.K>n to your efforts. Hold off on definite egreements. Contracts are due to be revised. Mate. partner could be re5tless and aggressive. Ride out storm. Don't com- pound error. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Feverish activity Indicated as new course provides challenge. There will be upa, downs -be ready and e<pn!SS yourself in indiv idual style. U )'OU don't know, ask. Put aside false pride. Key is to get job done. Gl!:MlNJ (May 21 -June. 20 ): Path of love may not be smooth. Emotional bumpa are order of day. Your inW ition is accurale. But circumstancts may make it irnpossib" to take di rect action. Look for side paths. Take necessnry dOOlurs. CANCER 1J une 21·July 22 ): What appears to be the end o( a mat~ may, in actuallty, be ju!lt bcginnlfl8. Know this and refuse to be d\shcnrtcned. Jiome, family afftt it'!I oont\nue to domlna.te. But what w31 hidden COOles into Ol)en '#hefe TIME TO THINK GEIST WHl<llff Pl1u 17th i nd Irvine Newport S..Ch you can cope. LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22 )o Ideas are not yet ready to use. Give yourself time. Take special care 1q .traffic. Don 't argue with neighbors . relaUves. Aquuian Is in pic- ture.and l'JO, too, is U bra. Plen- ·ty of actlon end confusion are featured. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se!i1. 2210 Not so good foc buyjng, sell- ing. Much bettet' for ""'ltlng inquiries. Do some personal investigating. Protect assets. Ask questions. Gemini in- dividual bas partia.J. amwer to quandary. Welcome chance (or change. SCORPIO (Oct. 2J..Nov. 21): 18 ): ~vel plan! may be Skeletons C'OUid rattle. Means disrupted. Check long-range this is no t ime for keeping plans. Those at e distance secrets. Frank appraisal of may overlook details, such as what you want, can deliver is arrival t.i.me end reservations. required. What you wanl is , Be a sell-starter. Not wise clooe at hand lbougb temp. now to de!Jend on promises. orarlly out-of-view. Pt 1 e es Leo is involved. plays significant role. SAGmARrus (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Friends argue among themselves. A w i d being caught in middle. Hold fast to your own p06ltion. Older individual wiJJ aid. Welcome chance to learn from PISCES (Feb. !!>March 20)o Cbeclt budget. Take !nvenlory. Review legal document s . Protect capital. F a m i I y member has infonnation you need. ·Make conciliatory gesture. 'Ibere will be experience. Hold off on in-------- vesbnent. You don't have all the facts. favorable response. Promote mutual interests. IF TODAY IS YOUR---:::;;;;;;;;:--- BffiTHDAY yoo ere musical, diplomatic, sensuous. In November, there will be new starts i.n new directions. Re- cmt projed will pay dividends. You have more respomlbility but you also will be happier. L .. m ··~ Tn.ith Aboul .a..trologY." ~ blrlhdo91e •nd 7.S jltflb fO Oo'>err Booltlllt "9 OAtLY PlC:OT, Bolt 32«1, G••nc:I CW!lr•I S11lkln, Noe"" Yoi1c, N. v . 100!7. You'll opll'I "°"'" lo f1scln1Hng •luctv 1nd •11-tfYt!itlonl ' i @!..1!11! ~Ni w ..... .,,... .... • Norman Wi•tt e Bleylt Al•o Golf WNr 2711 E-.t C.-t Hwr. c ............ 67Ml4t Menter Cl.erg• F1thlofl lsllilld, N1WpOrt C~11hlr. Newport Btlch Or11111 Pllll SC, G1rden Gn1vt H1rbclr SC, c111t1 Mesa S1l Pl ... I.Ye., Long BttCh Thi City, J Sh1rintn EtU, Ort nOI ~H "' Oran<JI, Or11n9t LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl 22)o Some may find you ~rly ag- greas.i.ve. Stick to principles but leave room for intelligent concession. Refuse to rush headlong into any situation. Heed counsel of Taurus, Ubra individuals. Make domestic adjustment. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19Jo Those ,.ro sbould know better act in confused manner. Key Is to strive for greater recognition. Accept a d d e d 1111111 responsibility. But be sure Giant Fall SEALY SLEEP SALE your worth is acknowledged. l\.1essage will become clear. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Large -· .~ Sires 40 to 52 Swecttw-tlm. 11 here ot lad a!Mi Half.Size Shop 11 ready! Orton UOH to h.yond your from hip tot beyond your fhtter ti ps. Come, dip Into yours. '"'"' $15.00 Su nday ShopjMr? fvll•rtoft & Hwith.9ton lhoc!. OpH 12 fe s I k Sizes .\ E!;{fa ~••a=•••.,.. Nor's HALF-SIZE SHOP HUHTIN•TON IUCH 14 H""1 ... CM.., 0..., ........ ,, .. . tNnrt. .......... } COSTA MISA 1105 N.,.,.,, lkod. I 'h bloc• ltOftfl of l ltt. St. I •ULUITON-224 Or•t•ltlt Moll, et o,.....n_,,. & Hwbor u .. ,_, ....... ...nc..nr or Mnflt C .... With sa11ae firm innerspring found in Queen sets selling at •20 to'40 more! You'd expect to pay much more for this kind of deep-down, firm support. Hundreds of specially tempered Dur• Flex coil~ Plus Sealy's exclusive Du,. Garcf'foundation-extra fJnn from tor· sion bars.And talk aboutcomfonl This ·modem 6())(80" Queen Size ls 20% bill" ~than lho old f\111 sizo. Try I~ 1865 HARBOR BLVD. • Downtown Costa Mesa Phone 541-5131 KING SlZE 76 x80" 3·pc. set $249.95 TWIN OR FULL SI ZE ea. pc. $59.95 1 " l I • I I " • . . . . . . . . . . - ' Thurlday, O'lobtr 5, 1972 Jaeger Collectiori Menswear Fabrics Feminized B1 CAROL MOORE Of tlle Dallr l'i.tf Slltt Women who go &·hunting for rail rashions will find the Jaeger collection to their lik- ing for daytime strolling or even.Ing solrees. chains femini:.e the look or _signature scarves accent attract attention to the gaping, blazers that are shorter this swashbuckler's neckline1 or year, cut close with lean cocktail Ulouses. sleeves. They come in Prince Sportswear blouses a r e or Wa1es plaids, d I s t r I c t mosUy ivory. 1lley blend with checks, Donegal tweeds or harxl-loomed, grospoint o r overplalds. checkerboard tweeds In the brown -black -beige -butter-SHORT CHANGE The haberdasher look ex· emplifies their attentioa to full details. 1be walking outfits are properly accessorized with umbrellas, riding c a p s . derbies or wide, uplifted berets. JACKETS BOOKED Camel coats of all lengths were frequenUy paired with name-stitch pants while a BrlJish would call "super." But the footwear was another matter. Although the colors "'ere in vogue, they looked I i k e grandma's orthopedic specials "'ith slightly slimmer heels. Or as one oti>erver com· mented, "The shoe market must have a surplus now that nuns don't have to wear them any more." VA""1rJH 181.AND ~l':\\.l"UtlT llF AMI ~ 8WuaU. i'll(JN;: ... :a°"' ' • .f11J tt'l((le ,Pjt 9ktMiltjlc ~~:J11ie&l/,?Y' The British firm uses hunt detail and colors to tW'n menswear fabrics into softly tailored blazers, ha c k i n·g jackets, panl!I, trench coats, skirts, weskits and hostess outfits. Strands of pearls and gold scotch -oatmeal spectrum Sweaters, too are short; that otherwise takes "at least sometimes abbreviated into four" knit tops for the coordi-wesklts and often copying the nate<I look. little boy look with argyle Snooty fox buttons o r fronts. They go with pants of gray flannel outfit from the, ----------117 e invite )'Oii 10 join gray narmel, hunter green lf>~~;>....,"'C'~~-t'i,','. :_J!l"~ ~ wool or blaok double knit that have cuffs, tailor stitching and boUday collection featured a bullfighter jacket and pink Qiana shirt. An all-white basic pants with tunnel shirt jacket admittOO:ly was "more apprvpriate for California than L o n d o n ' s To avoid d.isappolntment, prospective brides are reminded to bave their wedding stories with black and white glossy phof.o. graphs to the_ DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements lt is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture. be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-4321 . ·---------------· . - From Page 17 • • RESCU When Mrs· Papp's husband . Little dating goes on among died a few years ago, she was members although, said Mrs. living in an Anaheim trailer Cirkot, "Nature being what it park. She soon found that the is, tltings !Jappen. ,,-A former couples she and her husband pre.skfent met and married an- associated wilh dropped her other member in the group. and only the okler residents M e m b ~ r s lose their we~t to the ~ecrealion hall for membership if they get mar- lhelJ' good limes.-red. They are however still "I thought, 'Oh my God, I'm welcome at th~ social aff~irs. living in a tunn~l;, I've got to "I can't say enough for ii as get out or here, She rented being helpful " said Cecelia a duplex but even the fact. that Burns, a member for six years she now ha~ walls, her private who has been divorced 10 duty . n';IJ'51ng w~k, me~-years. "It seems no matter bershrp in the.srursmg associa-what we do I've had ' fun" she Uon and church group and said. "I've' never been 1bored volunteer wo~k. for the B~ood at anything." Bank and pc>htical campaigns didn't fill her Jife. Although there. are more women than men 1n the group, she said of the men, "They seem to be kind or lost when they find themselves divorc- ed." She answered the group's ad, went to a meeting nnd discovered that "It was a nice bunch or people." The club "gets everybody thinklhg I'm not ·alone. I just thought I was. There's friends ," she exp I a in e d "you've just got to reach out and get them." Peering Around ·-~-"' PLEDGING Kappa Kappa Gamma at the University of Southern Califomla were the Misses Sandra Lee Barker and Jody Lynn Cellbaml. Sarx1ra .is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Barker and Jody is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Ceithaml, all of Newport Beach. VALUABLE PERSON "\Ve accept him as a valuable person. We give him back his self-respect and self. esteem. We give him back the ego he needs," she said. "But," said Mrs. Papp, "We really don't burden each other with our problems either." There are the good times members want to share, as the member who was happy as a grandmother for the first time. Ifs this "feeling of friendship" which Sam Cannon Cites as Uie best asset of the group. He was one of the Galloping Jesters who performed in a vaudeville-type skit for the other members recently. A year ago, he said. "You w0t1ld never have gotten me out In front of an audience. "But the club has almost made a dUferent person of me." HURRY-SALE.ENDS OCt. 8th suede belts. ''I"9r·o red and gieen plaid ensembles -one a skirt and bla:zer with turtle neck, the other sweater and pants with a long jacket -got the most applau.se when modeled at a Balb!>a Bay Club luncheon spomored by the J u n i o r League ol Newport Harbor. soot." 'Itle finale v.•as fit for a queen with velvet skirts, lame jackets, moire coats arxl crepe pants. Their "drop dead look" was a fitting climax to a show the Andrew Franklin, British ·-;=========::;I consul-general, referred to I 1 aaamant queens while com- menting that English women "know their minds" and aren't distracted by advertising when it comes to buying clothes. Felt Remnants Assorted colors and sizes Reg. $1.19 99~ Fun Time Patama-Bags Choice of 4 ;a $1.98 Value 99v Save 50% Each ' 20" Long Jolly Santa Mobile s111~ You'll find what you need to know about the election ' in depth, in your newspaper To llllii ""' ..... I x I dis eloction ""' 9" Heavyweight Felt Squares Asst. Colors Pkg .of14 Reg. $1.69 Now $149 · the 111orld's 111ost pro1ni11ent and be1111ti/11l i1101nen as 11iembers of Dr . Ern o Lazlo's exclusive be.;11ty society ZaJz/(;. Q1.&:?i ~(MlfJ Ojfa11y'todttP11tJ will be held OCT . 9th Tl-IRV 12th-JI TO 1&2'30 TO 4:30 To 11tf!ke your 11ppoint11te11t call 644-2252 Try Saturday's News Quiz Heavyweighl Virgin wool-rayon mixture, 2 assortmenl $ 99 of colors Regular $3.29 YD: 48" Stand Out Ornament ·Xmas Tree-Ski,,_..___ • Worth $20 m.-.up s KIT ·e98 . AullAle In White, Red ot OrMn ' S. Had Ornaments 12 3-lnch Santas, illeludift9 cords Colorful Xmas Stockings Your choice NOW 4.50 V•lue •159 •34' ~· Ii 14K GOLD WEDDING BANDS R~utar 19.99 to 119.99 ................ -20MO 9f"Y •• ...._,Le .... ~-~ 7• .............. _..... OFF Mii °"'-'"--- Mly • HUNTlffTON MACH 2200 HUNTINGTON CENTER "'-192"611 I Reversible Santa Seat Cover $7.50 Value •249 KIT sorry, no phone or mail or~'" p+eue, ~ ~... ·--....... ~ ~ ~-· - KIT -Snlflll' 9"hlgh, 2-32-oz. Cljlacily $ •• Wortl! S1 -· .. ICIT Jeweled Starburst Ornaments 6 d1tlcron1 de1lgn1 Reg. $10.74 •2~ .... _ ......... .... ................ """' Makn 6 Beautiful Snowflake Omamenl• et Only 50¢ Each . • • ' • • ' • -' • ' ' ' ' . . ' . ' ' ' • • ' • • I • . •• ·1~ " %0 DAILY PILOl lhursd1y, October 5, l'i7 t. ( I· • • • ' t Coast Couples Exchange Nuptial Pledges • • • • • PALMER-BROWN Carol Ann Bnh"·n of Costa M'sa became the bride of C'1'0rge Allan Palmer of South Laguna during rites perform- ed by the Rev. Or. Charles Oierenfield in St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. WIEBEL-ZAGRODZKY Marine Corps Chapel. El Toro was the setting for the marriage of Che ryl Zagrodzky and John Robert Wiebe!. Parents of the bridal couple are P..1r. and Mrs. Joseph •1. 1 Brown of Phoenix and Mr. and 11-1rs. George M. Palmer in Santa Ana. Their parents are A1r. and !\\rs. lloward Zagrodzky of Laguna Beach and !\tr, and l\.frs. Edwin \Vicbcl. Costa Mesa . Offici.'.1nl was the Rev. llonald Roberson. Mrs. Arthur Conde was the matron of honor. w b Ile bridesmaids v•ere !\1rs. Wayne Chri!liansen. A·lrs. Randy Smith, Miss Jane ltubble and !\1iss Jill Ohlhaver. Attendants were the !\t~s Michele Palmer and Sylvia Jones. Ronald B. Palmer. Richard Williams and Ronald Dulin. The bride earned her BA from Ca I i for n i a State University at Long Beach where she is currently work- ing on her elementary teaching credential. Her hus- band is a graduate of CSU, Fullerton where he earned an MBA. They will reside in South Laguna. Ronald ~tanning was the best man. and ushers were Daniel Wiebel. J a m e s Zagrodzky, Chris Ohlhaver and Joe Sitarski. The bride graduated \\'ilh honors fr on1 Costa Mcsri High School and also is a graduate of a business college. Her hus. band is a Corona de\ Mar liigh School graduate. They will reside Jn Fountain Valley. CASPER-HORN The beach at San Onofre "o1.·as the setting for the mar- riage of Kenneth G. Casper and Par.i.ela Ann Horn. Their parents are t.1r. and JOCHEMS-GIBBS Vic.ki Suzanne G i b b s , daughter of Mr. and Pi-1rs. Carl B. Gibbs Jr. of Fountain Valley, became the bride of Donald Gerard Jochems in Community UnitOO l\1ethodist Church. }luntington Beach. The Rev. Donald Inlay of- ficiated at the ceremony for which the Misses Denise Cavalla . Barbara Gibbs and Sharon Buffington were nl3id of honor and bridesmaids; J . Dooglas Burfington was best man and Carl B. Gibbs III and Fiftieth Marked Mrs. Kip Horn of Encinitas -----------1 A quiet evening with frienlb and Mr. and Mrs. Bud Casper And relatives marked the 50lh of San Clemente. wedding anniversary of Dr. Attendants were Liz Horn. and Mrs. Clarence R. Forbes Jennifer Casper, Dennis of Newport Beach. Casper, Kurt Horn end Brit The couple have been resi-Hom. j. dents_ of the beach city sinct The bride is a graduate of .• 1 "Doc" retired from his op-Fullerton Union High School, WOMIM'S WIAI Slltt 6i.:zt 1SlJ I . C..11 Mwy, Certol9 clel Mar '1).'lftt ~ tometric practice. which he Mira Costa College and now is had for 35 years, in El Monte a student at San Diego Stale • 10 years ago. The couple is ac-University. live in the Methodist Church 1-ler husband is a graduate and Voyagers Club. In ad-of San Clemente High School Do1t~r for d ollar -th• fin•'1t ""Om•n'1 w••r •veilabl•. dition, they teach defensive and Saddleback College and Your ch•'l• •cco11t1t w•lcom•. driving for senior citir.ens. cwirk•t1t1 tMtoi..ci 1iore. They have two sons, Robert, -,;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;:;;:: ::;;;::::;;;:::=~= a Visalia high school teacher, I · and Lyle, an optometrist at Big Bear Lake, and six grandchildren, all of whom visited the couple for the celebration. YOU CAN FIND IT AT Orange County's Largest & Finest 9Yll IJ,OIO The couple celebrated their anniversary simply with a large cake and ice cream. Heat Fanned :~.:'"'" "" y~E "m'"' NOTIOtlS TO CMOOSI ROM 0"111411.T ~'::::.'" SHOP ge A beater which can serve al!JO as a fan is one or the ::.:~' ,.. H60 lMH Ave. lat Uiteolt) MOOll tOI M IUIHA PAO • 12J.U20 several new appliances com-~-.-·~~~~~·············~~/ ing to market. The appliance ' Is designed primarily as a tabletop, shelf or desk unit but al9o can be hung-on-the wall. A3 a heater, It oUen two Ml· lings for high and low. The fan portion operates without heat so the unJt can serve as an air cittuJator. Interlude Al the end of a long bard day -A Baldwin "Jnterlude" Or- gan can offer you the ultimate in relaxation •.. and the price it a refreshing Start at Top Lie a coat, a dress has to fit first at the top. look for close armholes In b o t h sleeveless and s I e e v e d dresses. NEWPORT STRETCH & SEW FABRICS CHANGES ITS NAME TO NEWPORT FABRIC SHOWCASE EVERYONE BENERTS! Now, LOW, LOW pricM. Tre· mendous diversity of febrics. WIDER scope of classes. WIDER scope of pelterns HOWEVER: THE place to find the most unique knit febrics for home sewers. SAME SKILLED, CORDIAL STAFF SAME PERSONAL ATIENTION SAME LOCATION & HOURS t A.W.-11 P.M. 6 P.W. NI. I SAT. CORNER 17th & IRVINE BY COCO'S NEWPORT BEACH 645-5120 \ Robert Bates ushered. Gary Buffin&ton and Dawn Hen- derson were ring bearer and nower glrl. by the Rev . Timothy MacCarthy ln Our Lady Queen of Angels Church, Newport Bead\. The bride Is the daughter or Patricia Farrell, Willlam Butera ilnd George a n d Donald Folgner. The bride is a graduate ol Kimberle.y SchooJ , Montclair, N.J., Pme Manor Jun!or College, Chestnut Hills, Mass. and the Univenity of Southern California where ebe pledged Alpha Gamma Della. Her hus- band J s a graduate of Lelchester Junior Ccllege. The bride graduated from Fountain Valley High School and her husband attended Mootana !tt'hools . They will res ide in Fountain Valley. Mr_. rfnd Mn. Herman A.1 -------------------------------Folg11m' of Newport Beach. 1- lter husband's parent.! are Mr. aOO Mrs. Chr1stopher Farrell of BrleUe. N.J. FARRELL-FOLGNER Marilyn Folgner became the bride of Stephen T. Farrell of River Edge, N.J. during an afternoon ceremony conducted Miss jean Harkness was the maid of honor. Best man was Donald Farrell. Other at- tendents were the Misses Gwynne .Jenkins, Reid Reilly. JacqueliBC Folgner and 12995 ' Reg. $1 99.95 Great quality! Terrilic savings! ScroU-Ouilted cover. Tempered- Steel Innerspring. Low price includes: Maltren PLUI 2 Box Springs PLUS Ortho-Pak PLUS Double Bonus. s199a5 p Reg. $299.95 A truly me/estlc king! With gorgeous cover Mu ltl-Oullted to V• • loam over extra~" loam padding. Includes: Mattres& PLUS 2 Box SPflnga PLUS Ortho-Pak PLUS Doubla Bonua. FULLS!118 Beautiful! Comlort1bla by day or night, Eary. Tllt·to-Clean b1ck. Also comes Jn SuperOuHn Size & Love Seat. Maleh Ing Chair available. E•rty American styllng wttn IO'#SweethMft beck & Wings. Fabric Scotd'tgvd" protected. AllO In Super Queen 911.e 6 Love Seat. Matching Ch1lr evallable. ' ~! 'l'JIB DllITISJI AllB ."'10MIJCGI 1an1sH CllAmMEN Hiii ALL DA y s59a5 A great quality Ot1ho ma1t1eu sat -now at blg sa'f'logtl Scroll- OuUted cover. Tempered-Steel lnflJr- aprlng, Low price Includes: Mattress PLUS Box Spring PLUS Double Bonus. S1 099 Reg. $179.95 Now you can afford a great Ortho quality queen. Crown Flex center tor extra support to back & hips. Includes: Mattress PLUS Box Spring PLUS Or1~4>Pl,k PLUS Double Bonus. s179a5 Reg. $249.95 Lo1ded wllh supreme Ortho features like: Multl-OuUted cover, ~" extra foam padding, tough slaal Insulator. lncludet: Mattrea PLUS Box Sprtng PLUS Ortho-Pak PWI Double Bonus. GROUPS ........ s11a Handsome modem atyllng In a complete 9-plece set. Wllh 2 Mattresses, 2 Box Sprlng1, 2 Bolttel'I, 2 Quitted Coverlats PLUS CQrner Table. Reg. $211 Top Ortl'IO quality In 10 ~ent t~ece comtf group. 2 Matti ..... 2 Box Springs, S Botlt.,., 2 Ouil~ CoYttlets AHO a grN1 ComerTlble. T ~iE N A T ION'S LARGEST CHAIN O F MATTRESS SPEC IALI STS ORANGE SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM LAKEWOOD 48 Stores 2«S No. Tu1tln Ave. FOUNTAIN VALLEY till West Lincoln Avenue 4433 C•ndlewood Avenue to Sel'Y• Y 011 leiw••t1 i11clld .nd lroo•hunl C•ndl•wood Shops LOS ANOILIS MO .. ITO 16UI Harbor Blvd IA .. "a~CIKO ..... "° l•croiJ fiom Ota119e M•lll A•1t1111e1 OA.CU. .. O IAN Ollto I••'"•' of ldl119etl H•ri •• Zocl'I''• Jw1l ••ti •f Fed M•rl lecro11 lto1t1 l•••woo4 C•lll•tl SAN JOIO f'WOINlll "'•ft• 611·0111 ,._ .... , llt-4170 ,.. .... , •l•-• 1 J4 uc•AMINTO TUCSON Pllo11•• 11•·15•0 tTOUT'Ofl ATLANTA OPEN DAILY 10·9 ·SAT. 10·6 •SUN . 12·6 ·FREE DELIVERY· CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE· 8ANKAMERICARO ·MASTER CHA RGE '· • . • "' .. -t .. • p Ne even her F.H Mi and the Berk Alph He l\rfrs. Full Univ Calif dent F • DAILY PILOT ZI CID®1tCIDilD®rr specials Wedding Plans Told A Feb. 10 wedding in the Lulheran Church of t b e Master, Corona del Mar is being planned by Linda Head and Frank D. Stiefel Of Newport Beach. Ne ws of the forthcoming event has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe F. Head of Lltt1e Rock. Miss Head earned her BA and teaching credential from the University of California, Berkeley where she pledged Alpha Delta PL Her fiance, son of Mr. and f\;1rs. Val C. Stiefel of eordUl"Oy neek pillows 1.99 Reg. 2.50. Complete rel oxotion while motoring, televiewing or. rend ing in bed. Woshoble zip-off cover. Red, Green, Yellow , Toupe. Notions. 4 Fullerton, is a graduate of the•I••••••••••••••••• University of Southern California where he was presi- dent Of Phi Kappa Psi. He earned his law degree from Hastings College of Law. TERRI SILK February Date Set Mr. and Mn. John A. Silk of Whittier have announced the engagement of their daughter, Terri LoW.se Silk to Steven stereo combo from.denon 189.99 ~g . 239.95. FM /AM-FM stereo receiver with buil t-in del uxe 4-speed automatic turntable, separate ocous- ticolly motched speakers. Stereos, Ro dios, 88 gaf dual 8 movie proj~tor 48.48 Reg. 69 .99. The GAF 13 882 pro- jects both super 8 ond regulor 8 films. -400 ft. copocity. Zoom lens, self·threod;ng . Compoct styling. Cameras, Shavers, 13 i eolumbia mlnerva om.h~yarn 1.49 Reg. 1.79. Whip up • smashing Foll and Winter wardrobe with this bright ~nd beout;ful yorn. ldeol for sweaters, ponchos, scarfs. Yorns , tJeedlecrofts. 29 unitrex 1200 calculator 88.88 Reg. 129.99. Performs oil 4 func- tions. Clear, eosy to read 12 digit disploy boord. Advanced I-chip mos/lsi solid.state design. Cameras. Shavers, 13 springbok doll craft kits 2.49 each 6.00 volues. Chorm;ng little dolls. Katrina from Holland , Heidi from Switzerland , Ro sita from Mexico. Everything included except stuffing in these kits. Stationery. 15 Alexander Shedd, son of Mr.,1,.••••••••••••••••l-•••••••••••••••-t~--------------­and Mrs . Milton C. Shedd of1• Newport Beach. Miss Silk is a graduate of \Vhittier High School and UCLA and currently is work- ing toward her teaching credential at the University of Southern California. Her fiance is a graduate of Newport ~rbor High School and UCLA and ls studying for his masters in business admfn... istration at use. They are planning a Feb. 3 wedding in St. Angela l\~erici Calbolic Church, Brea. Size No Sign Size is not always a mea.!lu~ of quality in fruits. Large sit- ed ones may appear to be bargains but may be errtirely unsuited for the ll!e you had in mind. MUSIC BOXES -flf 0r..,... c-rv·• "'°'' -~ COll«flOM • • • Gt1wlM H\lfMMlll , • • llillff ll'IW'I' 00.:ft . . . llanclg,.... $'#1q -u ef •rt (~ 58" To 5125 A SPICIALTY AT ••• sa'bfna's CAID I .. ,.. SHOP (AllCl'*t ~ ........... .... ,...,,, .... (OIS-~. "'" AtlHll Aft. at ........ """',.._ aMdl -....... ,, • ...,.-'Uni -Melt9f" c-. cou•TllY 91"1' _...,. • • rea XLIOOeonsole solid-state 599.88 679.95 volue. 25·· d;og. meos . Accu- cotor® sc reen. Instant warm-up. Ac· cumatic® color monitor. home se rvice included. Televisions, 72 yr. 1n. • zenith wlde-s<!reen chromaeolor' 539.88 25" diag. meas. screen. Advonced ChromocolorOO syse'fm locks in color. Custom i1ed tuning, automatic tin t guard. Walnut fini$h cabi net . Televisions, 72 men's zippered shaving kit 6.99 Sove 30°/ .. ! Genuine top-gro in cow hide trave ler terrier\ oU your \h av. inq ecce~i;o•ie \. Wafel'Oroof ... iny l l;nin1. He,,vv·duty 1ipQ(!• Luggogo, 33 NlWPOlT HUNTINeTON llACH OlA~l. MAlL Of OlAHQl ANAHEIM 444 N. E,clW CJ l41 l)S..-111 47 F-•.W.. l•l•M 171 41 644-1111 1777 l41.,., A~t•M 171 41 tn.1111 1100 H. '••••• $tt .. 1 171 4t "1·111 1 IHO, It A.Ill. le •1JI P.M. MONDAY fHlouaH JllDAT, s.-.TVlDAY 10 .\.1111 ... • P Ill. SUNOA't' IJ MOOH k I '-"· lloyd's digital cloekradlo 29.99 AM/FM rod io wake s you to music or alarm. 60-minute sleep switch , Full pu sh-button funct ;o n. Eo sy-to- re.od numbers. Stereos, Rodios, 88 hotline~ great freight• set 6.99 Reg. 16.94. Includes speed ch;ef engine, freight crate, rocking roller. ta il wegqin, juice moc hine. Better;es extra. Mattel. Toys . 28 westlnghouse 2-speed washer 189.95 Sove 20.00! Hoovy·duty copo6 ty wc \her wi'h permcnc nt press cycle . ,...ofer le..,IJI aritl torroere fure t.on· trols. NcPf"""I~ e,,<J q ent l~ speed,. t.Aa 1or Aop!1orKes. 80 • ClUITOS MGLMC...,1._.1111.te i J IJl l ..... 11 . ' • • • • I I l ' i ' • . . . . • ' . . • ' • . . • ' . ' I DAILY PILDT Lively Bidding Thund<I. Oct-5, 1972 Rancho Capistrano will be the setting for the annual I.unche<>n and Dress Auction at 11 :30 a.m. Tuesda y, Oct. 17. Sponsoring the event will be Las Damas de la Villa and proceeds will benefit The Villa, a facil· ity devoted to the rehabilitation of alcoholic wom- en. Wondering how mu ch to bid are Mrs. Joseph fl .. lcCormick {left) and fllrs. Arthur Graves. Casual Style Matches Don't Strike Her Fancy By ERi\IA HO~IBECK I wish to hcaYcns Amy Vanderbilt or Emily Post would spe ll out what "come casual" to a party means. Casua l ill my dictionary reads, "A thing that is ac- cidental. Not planned o r sought." When I go to a party casual. lhars exactly what I am ... an unplanned. unsought accident. l\fy husband's idea of "casual" is going to bed without a ne<:kt ir. 11 he "·ould back me up in "·hatC\'Cr style I cho"ic. it "·ouldn't be so bad . But it never fails . We never match. I emerge from the closet "'here i am dressing and look al him for the (irst lin1e. "What are you doing?" I shout. "You look like the AT WIT 'S END "I got it. You change to a sport shirt and I'll put on slacks." ··rve got a better idea . You wear a dress and I 'II wear a SJXlrl coat." I retire to the closet again and come out a few minutes later in a sleeveless basic black and heels. In the meantime, he ha!i changed to a pair of baggy pants and n sweatshi rt. "She said 'casual,' not destitute,'' I said . "Then why are you dressed up like a dining room hostess? I am going back and change." After several trips lo the closet, I finally decide on my original outril and he goes back to his original selection. At the party it becomes ob- vious that no one knew what "casual " meant. All of the \\'Omen nrc fonnally attired as are all the men. As I pass by a group. I hear my dapper hu sba nd explain, "I just picked Erma up al the j gym and she didn 't have lime1 to change:· I Boy . is he going to ge t a "casunl" punch in the 1nouth on the \Yay home. groom on top of a weddlngl)ljiiijiiijjiiijjiiiiijiiijiiijjiiijjiiiiiiijiiijjiiijjijjijiiijiiijjiiijjj c1:1 ke." I~ ··\Yhnt are you supposed to be'!" he grimaces. "Hansel or Gretel ?" "Look." I said. "The hootess made a big point of telling me to 'Come super casual.''' "That doesn't mean v.•ear- ing a gym suit w1th a 1Yhisth.• around your neck." "This is not a g~·m suit. \\'hy don 't you at least take off your lie." "I'll lake off my tir if you wear a skirt." NOW OPEN -11:00 A.M. · 9:00 P.M. Dai~ Hickory Pit Bar-B-Q Dining Room Service Genuine Hickory Smoked Meat RIBS. BEEF, HAM & CHICKEN LUNCHES & DINNERS Try Our Homemade Strawberry Chet•• Pie Orders Also Neatly Packaged To Go 494-9026 180 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach Events Help City of Hope Several social events hava1=:====~~===~===:===1 been !let to ~park Interest In the Fifth Forum lnlcrnolional Horse Show. which runs from Oct. 11 lo 15, to benerit the City or Hope. The tradltional \\'hite-tie bull on Tuesd ay, Oct. ID. in the Beverly Wiishire Hotel staru the week and it wlll hooor spansors of the show, the Dia· mond Horse Shoe members. I One of the round of paMle11 will be a pre-ball cocktail par· ty hosted by Mr. and Mrs. ~l Keith Gaede of Laguna Be~ch. Exclusive • IMldo tho DAILY PILOT la another great newspaper - the Chrl!Jtian S c I e n c c Monitor. In-depth features and commtnta riel fT'O m Chrl1U1ri Science r.1onltor New• S<rvlce are published exdustvety In Orange County by the DAIL¥ PILOT. - GARAGE· SIDEWALK SALE! Saturday, October 7 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. CORNER OF 16th & ORANGE COSTA MESA BARGAINS GALORE ! -Furniture, Clothing, Appliances, Books, Sporting Goods, Toys, You-Mame-It ! Proceeds to Harbor Area Youth and Comm1nity Activity Projects Spontortd by the COSTA MESA ROTARY CLUB •• .. . ~ . ' . ; ,~. ,,, ALL KINDS OF TILE . Shop COLOR TILE for floor tile, wall tile, ceiling tile a!'d ac- cessories ... all in beautiful, Shop and compare --COLOR TILE' s prices beat all competition! More than SO stores across the country give us the volume to buy and sell at the lowest pric•s possible! Here's everything you need to do it yourself and save! flO/[f Easy·tc>-follow r"~ instruction lheeh. ~ COLOR TILE shows you how to tackle any job with confidence. f /llt la.;:.:~~=:: ~ COLOR TILE's professional quality tools save expense and lime. fl0£! Counselling from r~ store personnel. ~e experls will be glad to help you plan your project. coLoR eO "'"o' TILE .: CINTH "-•io WILSON ~ .. _. • • HAS THE BEST TILE SELECTIONS- IT'S COLOR TILE! Come in and look around -you' II find lots of ways to make your home more beautiful and save money too! BA TH ACCESSORIES . . . AND MORE! exclusive colors and designs. See them installed in our room- like settings. , . then take your choice home with you from our big stocks. You can be sure it's. the finest qua.lity.anywhere! ~(,~~; M°:s;i;Tiie ~~ Exciting colon and patt....,1 for floors, walls and countertopt! ......... 1n1toll. "• AS 5 9 mounted theets, C apprex. 1 sq. ft. LOW mch. AS Tile for a 4x4 ft. entry as low en $9.44 Nylon l'ilo Shag Carpet Tile Install-It younolf In 2 houn for a Ham-free look without waste! ~f:.'!n;'·thi: .. .::: 5 7c so. podding, luxuriovtly FT. lt.kkshag p;Je. Tile for an 8x 10 ft. room •. , ...... ,. $45.60 '\.:. ~~· PrefinitMd Ti.In ~ Ocmk Parquet Q.~ Genuine wood til" 9ive floors a warm, mellow look! Ught and anHquo tonos. =~~ ~nch!~":w'~ 1 4· J. fvll 5/16 ln. thi<k. ,. EACH Tile for an IX10 ft. area onoy .••.••.. $38.24 ·~·~ sond"vi~;line .. ~ The finest flooring mode-gives o life- time of wear without waxing! Jumlto 12x12 Inch til•: luxuriovtly sup- ple and ••y to instoll. J1c Tiloforan8x10ft.room •.••.....• so. FT. ~~4-~" Cer;~i~11Tile ~ ~ Bright glaze tiles are permanent, ,-waterproof and eo&y to install! •·•1•·•·•1•;"'h'"" J 9c with eosy wl,..dean &Q. glat• finish. FT. . . . $15.60 Ti.lo for a tub area, 411. high ........ · 1cOME IN AND GET ACQUAINTED! 1 STORE HOURS: · paily I to 5:30; Mon. •ml Fri. I to 9 OPEN SUNDAY 11 ·5 COSTA MESA 2221 Harbor Blvd. Ph: 645-1146 BELLFLOWER 16315 Lakewood Blvd. Ph: 531·3605 . . . Challenge the New~ Qui~ ..• on Saturday's Family Page Nearly Everyone Li stens to Landers •• I i . • I I • rel IJ.sl wi ti lo ha thi lo me on Uni deg pa wh thei uni to me of mu IO< 13 Pt 41 ill University Approach Stuck • Mold BY DUSTON HARVEY STANFORD (UPI) -It's relaUvel:asy to make up a list of 1 that are wrong training.'. lie cited medical 1od llw acboola, tbtn Wed: "What JJ more specialized and career ,..tented then a PhD in En&Jbh?" wilh Amer hJ&her educa- tion. Frank Newman and his taak force did that last year. Now they';e working on the hard part -ways of changing th~~i--· Newman, director of universJty relations at Stan- ford Unlvonity, and eight fellow educators issued a report In eaFly urn urging sweeping changes ln the basic structure or higher education. 'nM* theme was that the system was becoming more "homogenized," more bureau- cratized and less rele - vant at the same time that students and their needs were becoming more diverse. The second task force plans to make a series of recom- mendations sometime this fall on ways the federal govenr ment can bring about changes which will make higher-educa- tion more responsive to the needs of holh 80Clety and students. PROPOSALS Newman said the proposals will includ e: -A GI Bill for public service in which students who drop out of school in order to work on federally-approved community projects will ac- crue $100 oC future educational benefits for each month they work, up to two years. -Regional Exam I ni n g Universities, whlch will grant degrees to individuals who pass achievement t es t s , whether they have gained their knowledge at school, at work or on their own. -Incentives for innovative teaching styles and foc in- stitution,,, which seek to break out of the "homogenized" mold of academlcally«iented, Hberal arts schools modeled after the great research universities. -"Portable" ftnanclal aJd to individual students, ratbez: CAPACOLA .... 1.15 Inell.Ide$ 1id9 order QI 1oa1;1~f!ll, I ITINI bill, .. lad, gAtil( IOl•I. Llmll l ,. Coupe" R ... 1.M Lb. -by !he plti;e IXl'lrft Ocl. 11 5INOL£ LAYE• CAICI GERfllAfll CHOC. I R99, l.H E•plrt1 Ocl. II SOUTH COAST PLAZA-COSTA MESA 33Jl HISTOL STREET Rurnmage Sales Most Popular offers an 8X10 COLOR Portrait NO SLIDES ! VIEW FINISH PORTRAITS AF Moms Unit.cl ~ Air Force Mothers wtll m e t e u~ breakable <bistmas tr e e decorations fnr 'lbule Air Force Base, Greenland during ti,.;,-meeting at 7,30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 1%, in Hyde Park Mobile Estates, Santa Ana. secretary, and Roy Owen, Petty Land and John Larsen, board members. SC Juniors MONDAY,.,. SATURDAY OCT. 2nd ltiru 7th HOUIS: 10 •·•· • 6 p.•. Dalff SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA 3333 BRISTOL STREET LIMITED OFFER: On• 1p ... c:i1I p1r f•rtH ly. 011• c:hild illdi¥icl1.11lly ot 9ro11p1 phD· fogt•ph.d If 111' •dditiol'l•I 99¢ p it 11.1bi•c:t, A911 J. m111. to 12 v••r1 olJ. Photo- 9r•pfi1 t•k•n in our 1tor•. J No 1ppoi11tm111t •111c.•11•ry. [ ~LUI -,.011 "J\..'A AND HANDllllfO SOUTH COAST PLAZA -COSTA MESA The South Coast Junior Woman's <lub is collectlng United States commemorative stamps and foreign isale stamps for patients in the pulmonary disease ward of ORT Long Beach Vete<an's Representatives of t h e _H_os_:pc_i_tal_. ______ _ League of Women Voters will present the pr'OI and cons of propos)tions on the November ballot for t'1e Orsnge County West Oiapter, Women • s American ORT (Organization for Rehabilitation t h r o u g h Training) at 11:30 a.m . Fri· day, Oct. 13. in the Mercury Savings and Loan building, thmtifigton Beach. N o n - members are invited. Luau Orange Coast Area Alurmae or Al}i>a <ld Omega have schedqled a Hawallan luau for their armual hust>ands' night party at 7 p.m . Friday, Oct. 13, In the Park Newport Apartmen". Newport Beach. Rumm11ge S11le A rummage aale to help sup- port the San Clemente Com- munity Theater l9 9Cheduled foc Friday and S.tun!ay, Oct. 13 aOO 14, In the Cabrillo Playix..ie. Caneer Society Clotbini. l!lmall furniture and appliances will be sold during the first a n n u a I American Cancer Soc i e t y Rummage Sale on Friday and Safurday, Oct. 13 and 14, at 4l~W. Fool'th St., Santa Ana. Sea Circle 1be Sea Circle Junior Aux· lllary ol Flottoce Crktenton Sorvk:es will begin It• fall 11<- tivltles with a <J'Ui8e Aboard the Pavilion Queen tt 7 p.m. Friday, ()ct. 11. Thrift Sale The ennual tlrift 1 a I t ·~ by tho Oona Polnl Communlly llousc ii achedul· cd for Friday and Saturdly, Oct. 13 and t4. A bot ~ ·•llo will be ....,,ed both days from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Arllcl<s for the sale l!llY be t<ft at Ille houle on Thoncloy. Ocl. 12. Sr. Citizen1 -17 tlecCod alficon for the -Stnlar Cltlf<!ll Club ,,. W•ll« MUl<I', prwl· dent: Mn. Clrl Xo .. n, vtc:. pruldont; Mrs. Alex J. Colin. PRINTED FLANNEL H•w fill A11orlwltftf -Full lolJ1 -"15"' W id1. RfG. 7tc YD. 36" DECORATOR BURLAP R ... 2 '"" 1 DO 6te fw y<I. ShirtillC) Cit' BIC!UM Fabric ~:3r:1 00 .... ". SUPEll • PLUFF 100'/o ,..,_ 100 _Fil-#_ ... ,...,_., T.,.,.... • HG. l.4t ... For Hem• or Cl••• A.•om. ~•l> A ....... dtw.t •' s ... ;,.,,, lt9. to Ste TRI COT 1000/o Ny!M 71".101" WW. .... 100 1." rtL BRUSHED NnON Dnl11• ....... 100 · 2e_ COMM!RCIAL ELASTIC 4~100 FELT SQUARES 10fer1 00 Reo. 12.c H . T-I ,... of hMllfol ""f9ria -... ..,I -•lk Mloctiooo ......... '-'• .... •111• ...... c... ......... ,.._ .... y ............... 1 • ...... .,, .. ,.,, 1'111 ........ . ,_,. v...,, w ..... ..... P.M. MON ..... Pll. SAT. IM (C--Of) • ~ TOMGIIT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS . . DAILY PILOT ,23 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTfTI0\11 llllHfltl ...... lTATllMUrT ,,.. followiftl ~ .,. "*" --·· MA•A•AlHA COM1l11UCTK*, zm L•lrd '"wf .... ,,,. AN, C• ft1QI W•li.c-. I C"-l. mt ... Lailnlll St<-..-, ~I• .I.Ml, C• ft1W ""°"'" i... CIDl.of, Mft HI ....... Orlw•. Hu111t~ hokfl. C• nM6 Eldoll G Cloud • ..i CW• L#. * oi-. c1 nuo J•,.,,.. G 51\11.,.... !lit • C o.n.. CBS fJ 8:00 -The \Valtons. When John Boy ;:rw~,,;:. '.':°''*119 a.4Uc1e111 t¥ • becomes old enough to hunt with the men Grand· L1"'11911 ... .,,..,,,,,"· . • • • ' T-t l" Cloud pa gives him hlS ~nzed gun -but then J oh n Boy I TMt 1••1 .... ""' "*' wttt1 ttw C-'Y ' af 'd •-uil · (l•rt QI O."r.oe CO\lflly ""' ~It, lS rru. w p t e trigger. , 1•n. 1h e.~.,1r J. ~-DtcMnv I c-IY c1 .. t NBC 0 9:00 -Bob Hope Special Olympi c •Ullll"*f 0,1 co.st o.i1y '::: gold medalist A1ark Spitz turns entertainer tonight s-• .... """ u, ;r "· .11111 oetet. i: as he guests, along with Alexis "Follies" Smith, itn uu-n David Cassidy and the Carpenters musical duo. PUBLIC NOTICE KCET Em 9:00 -International Performance. Igo r Stravinsky's colorful ballet ''The Firebird" opens this new music·dance series hosted by opera star Robert Merrill. ABC O 10:00 -Owen Marshall. Marshall's friend is a swpect ln the death of a mill ionaire 's fin ancial secretary who opposed a generous gifl to a hospital. Paul Burke guests. tl'ICTITIOVI Slltl .. ftl JIAM• IT.t.T•M•WT Ti.. lol'lo•lnv _..,, •r• *""' *'"'"' ., FLEETWOOD OIE I. TOOLIHG CO. J2S1 Colortdo ~. c Ii. ,,,,_,... c..i11. mu J~ w. O.C.rto. m1 CGWrlMlo L•""· Coo•• !HY. C•llf. '1f)t J•,.,... °""'•"· M605 ~. Drtw, Et Toro. C•lll. na r,,. Dvtl""'' 11 llotlflO ~ try • c;.,.,., ,.,'1,..,,,..o JOWl'll O.C1rlo •• ,_ Tftl' ,,,,.....,., "I.tel ...tlh nw. C°""''Y C14'•k QI Or1rqe Coun•¥ ""' S•P""-n . lt'2 WIUIAM I , IT JOHN, COVWTY' CLl!ltl(, Dy a.w .. r~ J . M.loN<u', ~y. TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening OCT08ER 5 ,.,UOOlllDID-(l)®J •.., o -(])c.t SMlrt QW'ild W'MWtll m,..,,.,_ 1!1-f)lo .. (jjJ Soccea "1dic•s EE bus '"' .,.,..k• fEI Hlll&•Ptdtl Lid,. Q!J M.,..., RF> Em LI S.11111d1 £spoM mn,.. Stoores J:JO IJ Ytunr Dlcilf IUNN "1"111 H1ndlin1 II" 1Uld111 ls rudruitld bJ' I JOUlll lldJ doctor Wflo II ~ to ou1dist1nct 11coholisnl. 0 n. Ad•111hlflf Gtftt ltldlty mimed to ht!p 1 t11PNd ldltrtisl 'fllho is ll)1n1 to Olftd lo IN Wiit. 0 """' (tJ ..., ... -Dtt••" fdr1) '66-St111rt Whltt11an, J1ntt L•lch. (j) Tt Tltl lie Tmtl (JJ (!J,_ ... _ G HARRISON-MAC LAIN .• Thunday m--mu11111W1We m Mft1e: {Dir) "Slit" (tdvJ .,, --HlfVJ rondL u m __ _ Ul 0 (JI CIS """" """' t<l (211r20tll) "TM U ........... (MN) 'U-Jotm W1yn1, Roe:' H~dsolt Al O Ford Division Prnents * The Bob Hope Special o o m11a<oo;1 '"' ''" KoPt S,.Cltl Olyrnpa 'flllnntf Mii' Spill, In hl1 11111 th11triall IPPtlt· Illa!, I UIS\$ 1\on1 'filth Al11!t Sml!h, Rich11d 1nd K.trtn C.upen- ltr, D~ C.1sldy. ind Bobby r1tth· '" D SEE "THE MEN ," * A NEW SERIES BROUGHT TO YOU BY CHEVROLET. 0 l1J l1J GJ TIM ..._ ... h> .. I lin11 "fht Dtldl1 Littlt [!. 1alld Project" S.ial 111nt GLtnn Ctrth Capy, mil'Md tq dtliffi ttlt r1ntom tor 111 l~t Red Cl!IMM, btco!MJ invotwtd ifl 1 Hf· lft of alfwnhll'H dimu.e0 by I UPff &ft MGunl Kood In Or.CM- UUl'tnc.11 l11ek1nbill, M111 kllflet t\U. EE U1 v..... '"• haltdat fJl) t1J DDUT II~ ,,_,. fenMIKt "Tht nr1bltd" Ip SUI • vlfl&b'• tolortul billet OOfM !hit MW mutlc/dan« llMI. l'INttd by OPfll IAlf llobfrt Merril!. rf'lndt p11tr11 bt!ltrl"• C11l1 Motte makn htr Amtrlun TV dtbllt Jn !flt till• role. OJ RI Yfrtlnitll GI:> 0ni .. tJOO b .. ktlM T°"' Ktllr 1oob at liltn IAM'll !ht lllM llthrttn 1111 Atma 111111 AU1nt1 r11cot1a pl.,.. Sundty, Ott. I. " .... __ .... __ a -,_. ··~ .,. ...... .. •1'1 l>uDflollad Or•~ Cont D•llV l"llot. s-1 ..... """ u. 71. ,., Md o.:ioc. '· 1m J-..n PUBl.IC NOTICE NOTICI TO CtlDITOe1 IUPl!a1oa COU•T c, TM• ST•TI! OF CALl~NIA "0• TH• CQU .. T'Y OF O•AlllG• • •. o\•1117' E•••t• of V1CTOA E' TONNIEll!N. •~• ~C lOA Eow .. 110 TONNIEll!N, O.C...•· ... OTICE IS HEAE8Y O!E'VN to ftlf' 1'.<'tol!Wl o! '"' •tio ...... med ...,..,, ,,.., •II -•0•11 l>•wlflO dllm, IOflfMll ltw Y id dee:'°"'! ·~ •MIUlrH "9 Ille ""'"' wl•~ '"" ......... ,..., ,,__.._ lft '"" Of'll."~ o• '"' c~k ol Ir,. •bcl-.ol """"-' coun. or to,...,..,,, -· wltro ""_, -.c:.-l'W•~ IO l"9 ....... ~ •I JOI !kluth Maphf Sl•H•, Eoc:Ofldldo, c .1tto...i. '101S """•h II '"' piano o! DWI .... , o! tM -••I-1,, •II ""'""'' _,.,,.. 10 1'N ''''" ot wicl O«oldtflt, '*1...,.it "'°"' ::::::~ '" ... !tie fftlt Plltlll~Koft °' ,,,., 0.1~ ~"""' n, ''" JI UTH II. lOl'fNESEN Ea10Nl-t~ o! tPW Wlll QI tt.. ·-· ... ......., o.c.ttftf AllLllE W. ••to•.111 ,.. ,_" ~ ''"'"' I'......._, C•lll. tllPJ T ........... : 71t-741-IM1 AttwMy fer la1<wtru PUbtl-Or•"" COi\! O•ltf Pllol. $oiptlffll~r '"-11, 11 '"" Ol:tobH' I. itn i.-.n PUBIJC NOTICE '""' l"ICTITIOVI aUSINlll 11.t.M I ITAT•MtllT T"' followl"ll Pt!'to11 11 Oolnv buW"'1• ••: S•N JUAN .t.P.t.llTMENTS. UJ3 '#Mt Co.o! Ml\lltwly, N t ., ,. Or I IMal, C:all~lt THI; (;11EENWICH OltOU,., IN- COllPQll:o\TEO, nn Wnt (O l •I t1 1Ql'l••Y, N..-1 8•6cil, l:•tlfOl'fli. HUNT 8UIL01NG COal"O'l;Al lON • INC, •J7 Nonl'I l't-rkl Strwl. •I Ptt0. T•o•1 T11" 0..0111n1 11 "'""9 c-.... -Dr a L!tnll«I p.,!-Wp THE G•EENWICH c;.111ou ... l"Ko.l~Al[O TM, ot•l-1 111«1 wllfl ""' C-'V C .. ,. of o...., C-¥.,, ~ I", 1171. 1, 111ny J ••''"-'· ~ c-•• '"" C.t.l,-.t.!, CALl'I.$ a. Wlll.IAMI An-.1 11 l .... M4t w11 ........... w .... 1•1'111 -·· Call..-... .... , 11-lftl) ,.,ltlll"*I 0r..... c.... 0.!ly ""°' St,>1...,_ 21. 11 ""'° Or'-s. lt. 1tn un-n PL'RLIC NOTICE "°1'1CI TO C•IOITCMtt 1u,.11to• covaT 011 Tift ITAT• Oii CALlllOll•IA "Otl n.• COUNTY Otl' CMlA•OI JIO. o\•1Uf1 Et!•I• o! I ENNIE COYIT HOOL.ANO Do<M ... NOTICE IJ UIE•EIY OIVl!N I'll '"' (•td'ltor• .. "" ·-... -Ill«-• """' ,n --r....i,,. cl•''"' ... ,,.., ""' "icl ~I •t• •-•r"' lo rile """'"· ""'"' , ... "-C.•• ... ,., .._ ...... "' '"-O'lik • ot .... ,, ... , "' ""' ...... 1"1111 ... ~ .... ... Pf•-'' -. with -..... .._... --·· " "" _..,....., ,, 1•11 w .. ••11" 0r1 .... wi. ,.., ~ ~"-C•n•"'•· wN<fl It ,,.. .-C:. 01 -'-... -.-.. • ...-,,, ... -T191"·1 ,.... •11111"0 "' -... ,.,. t4 ...... -..-..i. '""""'~ -,,_,.,. •n.t n. t.r.i ~ """' o! ,.,.,, -k• D•lod ~ou1a -lJ., 1m. °"""'' w .,.._ ll-lftl1I••• ... -Wi. ... ""' -_....II«_. tl•O•L. ca•IL .. 11aa1111 1•11 ""'"'" °"'-f .... .. • ..,.., ...--. l;IM ...... nMI T .. , ,,,,, ....... .......... ,.,............, ..... ,,,,.,11....,.. a.-c-' o-uv "'111, s.o-r 21. •· -"" (l{I'*"' ), It. ttn 1n1 n PUBLIC NOTICE . ...... ,. 1v,.1a1oa couaT o,. TNt ST•'FI 01' CALl,.OlllUA COVllTY 011 OllA•O• c-..... , •• o•o•• TO '"°" CAUll •I CMA ... I Of' •4MI •Dllll<111Go1 01 JollN.t. JO ~ITM W ,,,..,.... "" ...... >NMllllJI.), N!-le ~Ill. ,..n~. ,.., ",,.,,. • ,..,,,..,., ...... """ c ..... -... ""' ,...,,.., ... ·~ .. -c-....... "".._... ...... tr..., ... llWI J• ''"""' It Nt-.>. -·~ If !\ OltOllllllD ltwf •II --b•· ....... .., ... -·----"-"" Mt -· "'""". ""'' c:-t •• ' • " ~ .. Oc•-• II 1•n. lft .... ·--.. 0..,.,1.._1 N• J. •' -C-"-"t IOC•IM •I 1WI Cl<tk (_.., Ori,.. W..• i.-i• AM. C.tl"'""•· -,,_ r-. t• '"' __ ..... _ .... ,,_ .. _ __ lllt,,.ft ... •T " ru"'"r• oeoe11:10 "'-1 • c.-r .. ""' 0.-.. ...... ,_ .. ••••11-"' "-D•llr ""°"' • .. ...,..., r1'(vl•"""" ...,....,.. i.. "'9 c-.., .. o-..... (..ol· ... ~· -·. -... -_ ......... _, ...... --..... ... '°" ""•'""-...... -""""' O.•.i ""'• .. f, ''" H4·~ G KOVILLI J ..... """" '-W C--' •ot••no•. M0W1•• 1. Mdtu.#0 CHf C_...._. •....-n ._, ( ........ ftWJ , ............. ...... c..n4 ...,.,....,,.. ....... ~ ............ Qt ..... C:MW Dollll" ~. S.-•-H, ;1 • ... ~ I "h ...... l'U8UC NO'rlCP.; / ,. . . ti DAILY PILOT St•t1ding Tall Prince Juan Carlos de Bourbon, future king of Spain, stands in tur- ret of Leopard tank of West German army during troop inspect- ion. Later, -he drove one of the vehicles. Pollutants Threaten Lake Mead TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - A Un iversity of Arizona scientist says Las Vegas, Nev. pollution is contaminating Lake Mead on the Colorado River to the point of destroying the lake for recreaticnal use . Lorene Everett. assistant professor with the Department of Hydrology and W a t e r ( ECOLOGY) Hcsources, who compiled a study on the pollution, said the phosphate and n I t r a t e pollutants c o u I d encourage algae growth. With ex tensive a I g a c growth. Everett said, rccrea- tiooal use Of the lake would be out of the question, and the ef- ficiency of a drinking water 1reatment plant for Las Vegas would be hampered. e Unit Slated SAN FRANCISCO (API Pacific Gas and Electric Co. has been granted authority to construct generating unit 1 l at the Geyse rs Power Planl between Cloverdale and 1'1id· dletown in northeast Sonoma County. Scheduled for operation in August. 1974, the unit will cost a b o u t $3.383 ,000 . including substation and transmission rocilities. It Yl'ill have a capa- city of 106.000 kilowatts and hring the plant's total operat- ing capacity to SO'l,000 kilo- watts. The Public Utilities Com- mi ssion held that the project "does not compete with, or limit or prevent generation by" other agencies. e Lellee Urged SACRAMENTO IAP \ California s chief water of- ficial said a mollter levee system for the Sacrumento delta should be built to prt•-vent new levee break..'I similar to the disastrous Isleton flood last June. Until that master lcvrc system is built, there should be limits on new construction within the delta i s I ands , Wllllam Gianelli, directo r of the Department of Waler Resources told a legislative committee. Gianelli also proposed a system or levee Inspections by interim measure. e Del•" OK'd CARSON CfTY. Nev . I AP \ -The Nevada Board of Health has adopttd rults that will allow Lak<! Tahoe pro)> crt y owners in Nevada to get a one-year exten!lion of u December deadline for banning septic tanks at the mountain lake. Under the rules adopted by the board. residenll can get the u-lool If they live In areu where sewage ~lltctlon 1y1temJ are ln the plaMln& sta1e or If ln IJolated areas when! holding tan.kl '"' not proctlcal and wber< planned -••• llnel do im reach. Nev•da J'fftdenta 1t the lake have the alternative. of con-- ve.rtJng to sewage hOICIInf( tanu or linking up In • aewage~collectlon 1y1tem. , . ThundQ, Oc:tobef 5, 1972 WHOM 2144 W, UNCOl.N AVI, (too TAUi IAIT Of llOOUl.UTJ -77•-aioo FOUllTAIN YAWY 11100 1. -sr. CM YMll IOU'fM or w..-) ,_.,,,4in • ·l/N·8/iOOK • Low Voltage-Outdoor LIGHTING • Colorful lighting instatl1 in minutei- toke it wilh you when you move t • Protec:tive--lighls area around home lo discourage prow!er1. • Complete with lraniformer, lights, cable, brackets ond stoke1. Kellogg's" NITROHUMUS • The perfect humus for planting and transplanting. • l 00°/o natural humus of the highest quality. • A rich organic compost that improves soil immediately. Famous Pincor REEL MOWER • 2 h.p. Briggs & Stratton 4 cycle engine with recoil starter. e Cutting height is adjustable from 3/1" to 3". • 18" wide--heavy duty steel & cost iron chassis. REG. $89.95 $6500 SAVE $24.951 • Rip, scroll, cross· cut ond notch eas· ily & accurately. • 1/, h.p. motor- outomotic blower keeps line clear. • Makes its own starting hole for pocket cutsl $1999 REG. $39.95 SAVI $I 0.001 SENSATIONAL SAVllfGS ON A 3 PC. SINK SET·UPI ,. Genuine Amerlca11 ·standard STAINLESS $·TEEL SINK • Gleaming nic~el finished Double Compartment sink is 33".x22". •Salin finished-self rimming. • Sound dampener undercoat- eosy to install . Gleaming Nickel-Plated 8" REG. PRICE KITCHEN FAUCET SET .. • Complete with spra}-·dishwasher attachment. • Decorative, long· lasting Lucite handles. • Extra long wearing nic~el finish. Gourmet CUTTING BOARD • Additional space for choRPing and preparing food s. • Fits over sink with opening ot corner for disposal. • %"thick laminaled hard maple with smooth edges. REG. PRICE REG. PRICE TOTAL REGULAR VALUE $568~ ALL 3 PCS. COMPLEn AS SHOWN WHILE THEY LASTl SAVE OVER $25.001 I ' ' . t' ' '' 8 Jllfi ~'\fl' 11.111.1 1Ji1~._, ':,J,; '~ h>J ~MI ' lil;•l ' i<1 ,., 'Ill J 1 1< ~ II•;, ,, :. " ' ' ' \Iii•' l~'~· · ~J, ,,, UtttJI t ' ,,,;, I ·1 \O• I ,,... 1tJn1-10: 111~ ,. .. ., . ·= •; .... : :i.1 : ·:· i~ ., I, ' .;~i b'. '\ c"'t (''°1.l ;1~· .t.:il J • .... ~ 11' l"!T •{J.. ; 6~1.;"·· .o,w r:~ i 1 .iei.~ J,i'.' ':l'<'J'(I ---~~~---'!-.!'l~---~~----F···., 50 Ft. Coll ·, Suction lase I 0 Ft. x 18" Wire "' TY LEAD·IN WIRE BENCH VISE BORDER FENCE •Top quality wire to help cleor up the snow. • 300 ohm capacity. REG. 99c All PurpaH STEP STOOL • Perfect for hard-to·reach spots at home & in the shop, •All metal construction with non -slip top. uo. $2.69 • Unique base holds secure on any smooth surface. • Head s'1¥fvels for extra convenience and easy use. REG. $249 $3.49 SAVf $1.001 ........ s....,, AllTIQUING KIT • Beautify your possessions in 2 easy steps. • Just spray on base, spray on glaze&wipel UG. ftftc $l.6977 : ~~~.:::::.:~:~fl:wS~ bftc bted galvanized $1.49 7s.c. fence. • • IBNZOllAlll ,...., •• o.Mafk" TOR.CH KIT • All brat• burner with clog; proof gos filter & propane ton It. e Up to 1.S hn. burning tlm._ great for an haot- Modl119 fob<. Reg. $4.ff SAVE $1 .001 • • • • ' "t-11.,..ll~ ,,. ·.&"' n! p,,,.. ntu"t' ~ B LOS truclt ball .... ander' each In will Tom ' Thutsdl 1, Octohtr 5, 1972 DAIL, 1'11..UI 25 here's No Such T~~_as Blackout, Says NFL TON (AP) -Tbe Nollooal i....,.. -thin II no such a teleYlllao bloclmut, then went ., ..,.,.,.., a bUJ that would for pro footboll fans. ..... tenl!91'ies are no longer out on i.levlllon on Stmday even when lhe home team is a ,...., at home," NFL com· inbaJill''' Pete .Rore!J& !old a Senate sub-~ WechwMy. A ... \,lllillnatlD( local bl.ackoulo of home piMI>'"" "does not deal with ~:i~'~Rooelle oaliL "It Is .. effort lo ..,._-which NFL came • 1i11iams, Blll1!Wllllams of the Qilcago Cuba was ooal Leagut'1 1e8di.ng batter with verage and R<ll Carew of the Twins pace4 the American ~ with .311, fiaal regular season statistb revealed W-y. caulier Johnny Bench of the ClnclnnaU Rem \eel the major leagues in homers with • and runs batted In wilh 125. 'Did Allen, pla,ying la< the nm time In the All; topped.the league In homers with 31 and',RBI with 107. Jim ''Cat.fisb" Hunter of the Oakland A's .... the 1op pitcher ln·the,AL with a 21-7 ri<onl and .750 peroeo!age while Gary !!olmi of Cincinnati led NL hurlers with 15-6 record and .750 percentage. "" HS .· . ll:;:~ch ~~u= ~ ~ Capistrano !WJhed second in their !Pt races In Iha World Surfing con- * Wednesdar to move to the · in the men s Open competition. Sur 1 from Hawall, competing on a separalO team from the mainland u .s .. won ~Wednesday's seven elimina- tion ts and placed second In another. Dale• of San Diego and recent U.S. clllmpioo at Huntington Beach, lac- ed blsJfirsl test this mmitng In ooe of lwo li*'1 beat races. • • ! LOS : ANGELES -In 1968, a truck ~ was hit In the temple by a ~ new off tlie Lakewood Golf A> •t"""I~ be bu been tmable to worlt since.· Jury this week awarded the driver $100,000. It held the county respo.ble because the player who hit tbe shl was never tdenUfied. The county supervisors Wednesday or<1er"4 higher r.nces erected around all courses. "We don't hive Arnold Palmer playd oo our golf counes," said S~ Kenneth Hahn. "We've got a lot of knew type players." • ; "" TU~N -The Los Angeles Lakers built ~ an 11-polnt balltlme lead and then <J"Sted to a 142-123 victory Wed- nesda!: night over the Phoenix Suns 1n a Natio!ft Baaketball AsooctaUon ex- hibitio' game. ~ers bad three playin with 2() or points, led by Jim McMlllian with ' .t "" IN~, Japan -Phil Rodgers of the United'-States shot a fiV&Under-par 66 Thursfiy to late a ooe-strOke lead In the first !J>und of the $300,000 Taiheiyo PacilldMUten goil toununnenL TO~ -Ausir:;:. John Neweombe and Stolle volleyed their "'Y to vlo- lorles the first round ol Iha '33.m World lduunpionship tennis toununnent w y nlgbt. N be held bis own servle< with ease managed to break John Alex· ander rocket R:rVice the llrst time in each t. He wodi. ~. 5-J. ln semJflnalJ Friday, Newcombe will I Stolle, who edged Holland's Tom er M, W, M . ' .,., LOIC BEACH -Los Angeles Rama quarta\back Roman Gabriel says that bis sore ,.,,t arm ''lel~prelty good" alter a passtJC woitout. Gablel threw during a Rama wortoot w~ and aald afterwards he was "ve~ ... " ann is not very .,re,11 aaid Gabri who ls undergoing ICllptmciure trea ta on hls right. elbow. "It lelt pnolty~ood" during practice, be said. • I must be telecast In what area on what ~ions." Roo:elle pointed out that NFL borne ter- ritories, even when the borne team is playing at borne, get two1 or three NFL 81ll'l"' ea~h Sunday alt«lloon. "The r ... in each NFL home terrltcry have acceM not only to all of the away games of their home team, but, as an average, a total of 74 NFL game telecasts," Rooelle testilied. Two witnesses, both J dent If y 1 n g themselves as football fans, supported the bill that would ano.. home games to be televised locally il tll!y are sold out 48 hours before the ......... is to begin. The three-day bearing ends today with several wltllellel, Jndudlng BaoObaR Conunissiooer Bowie Kulm : Dean Burth, Federal Communications C om I s s ion chairman; Roone Arledge, president of ABC Sporu; John A. Schnelder, pn!SI· dent of CBS Broadcast Group. and David Foster, president ot the Natiooal Cable Television AMociatioos Inc. "We think the supporlers of this bill are operating with some . , . significant misconceptions as to the predictable er· fects of this bill and as to the cJrcumstsnces uisllllg In this particular form of enterta1nment," Rozelle testified. NOLAN RYAN FIRES FASTBALL ON THE WAY TO A RECORD • Fielding Improves " Acquisition, of Menke -- Big Break for Reds CINCINNATI (AP) -His bat's been in col.d st.or~. but Dfmis Menk.e's glove is a much-Over-looted reason the Cincinnati Reds are In the Naliooal League playoffs. "He's made our infield, '1 says second baseman Joe Morgan, who played with Menke, the Reds' third baseman, while the two were in Houston. Menke was a short!top then, but !!'Witched to tt}ird base when he, Morgan and three others came to Cincinnati in a controversial .trade last winter. Menke•s presenCe allowed Cincinnati manager ·Sp>rky Anderson to shift Tony Perez back to first base, his natural posi- Four Managers Get New Pacts Four American Leogue b a s e b a I I managers received coolractl to CCl'Unue their duties In the future 1111 the tut day of the regular season W-y. Detroit manager Billy Matlin WU given 1 one-year e1.tenstOo, contrary to bis or1i1m1 "'!ue&t of a mulU-year pact. "I got the money I wanted, 10 I'm very happy." His CX111tracl·-runs thnluCI> the 1974 campatsi. Bostan.11 Edd5e Kuco was rehired for iwo more yun with a ulary lncttue whUe Min.nelota's FraJIJc Quillcl was aho given • ...., -year pod.. And Cleftland'1 Km Alpnimonte baa been hired for two more yean al1er the lnd.lans finished 12 games better than ln li71. Hon, and the Reds became a tighter delensive unil Anderson has cited the Reds' defense as a key factor in the playoffs whicti begin Saturday in Pittsburgh. A little-pubtici2'.ed player who labors in the shadow of Johnny Bench, Bobby Tolan, Pete Rose and Morgan, Menke was a .300 hitter two seasons ago, but never found the batting eye Utis year. He enters the playoffs with a .233 average, with 104 hits, 9 home runs and 50 runs batted in in 140 games. "Naturally I'm disappointed with my hitting this year," says the 32-year-old Menke, who entered pro baseball as a $100,000 bonus baby with the former Milwaukee -now Atlanta -Braves. "But as far as OO'"the field," he addl, "I'm satisfied with what I've done 1t third base. It would have been a bonus if I'd bit well. "Playing on this turf," he says, point- ing to Riverfront Stadium's artificial surface. "l can't leg out some hit.!1 Bobby (Tolan) or Joe (Morgan) migbi get. "Then there Jros the lnjW)'," be &ays, noting a late season leg problem, "and 1 just never put that bot streak ~ther." Menke bad II errors, oecond blgbeot for the Reds thb seuon, but Morg1n contends that total is a refltdlon, in part, of Menke'1 good moblllty. 0 Most of the em:n he's Dllde hive been on balls where be made ,....i llope, then maybe made a hulTied throw that wu bad," said Morgan. "He's a fine third baseman,'' Morgan adds. lhruain& off talk ol Mellile'1 low hitting 1ve:r1ge. "He'a got the reOeus; he'a Jua1 a oolld pl1yer, a stead)' pllyer. Defensively, he '• made our JnUeld." Tbe !act la that there ... ool1 • limited number ol NFL dllta where "ticketl •re no klnger obtainable. •111 moot NFL cltiel, tlcl<eta for NFL games are available to the (lllbllc up to the time of ~toll." be said • "Fllt7'tWO NFL games In the It'll seMOn were not sellout.!1," he said. There are 182 regular te8JOO games~ ''Only rive, including the Super Bowl, or elgbt post-season games sold out, .. Renelle said. "And, In no cue did the pub11c anticipate the poulbQlty of local TV and many of thele we~ acbievod by ticket sales taking place right up to the moment of kickoff." Tbe NFL Ollll'Ulllsslontt Aid oo1y nine teams -the Cincinnati Bengato, Cblclao Bears, Green Bay Packen Mlnneoota Viking!:, New York Gianlll, New Yorlr: Jet&, Pblladelphia Eagles, Washington Redskins and Denver Broncos -art sold out for their nmalning games of the 1912 season. The Bl"OnCO! still have 600 tickets available ror their game with the New F.ngland Patriots while a lOtti team, the Kansas City Chiefs, nonnally withhold a small number of tickets for sale the d<l.y ol the game. Robin Ficker of Silver Spring, Md., who ldenUlled himself .. preaide!ll of • Redskins Ian dub, Aid the Sknl' 53,00 ...... tickets .,.. pun:hased by only 13,MI penons or corporations. "'!'be ......, tlckell are fully sold out years 1n advlnCf," Ficker said ot the Washington team. .. There Is a waltlng list of tboulands even though only 23 season ticket holders turned down the chanct to renew last year." Ficker askf!d the iubcommlttee to ameod the bill to allow no ooe &o purcha!e moni than two oeuon Uckell "until everyone who want! two seuon ticket.!I bas them.. .. Ryan Gained Confidence - And Strikeouts Came Easy "" It was a night of disappointment for Nolan Ryan -but It capped a season of remarkable accomplishment. The Calilornia Angels piicl>er hurled a five-bitter, struck out 10 Oakland A's but wound up a 2-1 loser Wednesday night at Anaheim Stadium and was tbus denied bis illth victory 00 the fmal nlgbt ol the season. "Sure I'm disappointed," Ryan ad- mitted, "but I really wasn't shooting at 20 wins at the start ol the seasoo so I Can't complain." Ryan finished at 19-16. "1'lls year I proved to myselr that I can be a consistent pitcher and that I beloog in this game. I never bad any confidence in myself until this year." A3 Ryan's confidence improved, 'so did his strikeout total, He finished with a ma~-league leading total of 329. Only Sandy Koufax, Rube Waddell and Bob Feller ever fanned more In ooe season. Hi s 10 strikeouts Wednesday marked the 17th time thls year that he equaled or exceeded ttiat figure, tying Sam Mc- DowelCs-AmericM League record. The Angels, meanwhile, !inished fifth in the American League West at 75-80, 18 games behind the pennant winning A's and their attendance dipped to 744.· 190, low-est since the club moved to Or· ange County in 1966. 'Ibe A's open the American League playoffs at Oakland Saturday against Detroit. It is reported the Angel5 will !lllfer a linancial setback In the $!00.~.- 000 range. "We'll tighten some deparlmeat belts · O.lllaM OJ CAlllMN O> .. ,,,... ......... KllMM,. a 4 ' • t .....,.,., a 2 • 0 0 M.ngvaJ, If 4 0 0 0 19ffY, cf 4 I 0 t M.Aloli, rt 4 O 0 0 Pi.-. If 4 • t 0 R.J•elllOl'I, ct I 0 1 0 lt.Onwr, ltl " • 1 • C•m~-11, II" O I 0 I MCMUllM, lb 4 0 t 0 H.ndrkk, cl 2 O o o Si.nlO!!, rf • 1 2 o M.11rqu1, 10 • 0 1 I Riven, Pl" 0 0 0 0 Ounc.1<1, e 2 0 0 I C"°"'"'I, '' ' I I 0 Hiney, c 1 O 0 .1 Tortl0r$, c 2 0 1 t M<:Hutty,31t 201os._..,-.,,1001 L-11,pr OIOON,Ryn,p :1000 D.Gr99ft, 2b o o o o MPvttl,M JOJO Odon'!, p ' 0 0 • 8""9, p 0 ••• Mlnefler, 111'1 1 O I 1 Hor..,,p Otto H1mHIOn, p O O O O Flfl0«1, JI 0 0 0 0 Tol•lt 30211 T_ .. '21•1 o.kltnd .. 100 Kit -2 C1lllwnl9 000 ODO 100 - 1 E -Mltwr, N. Rr-n ........,. 0.--Otll:l-' I, Loe -Otlcllnd <&. ~111.Ni11 4 29 -It. Jld.· -· SIM-. SI -N, lty1"' c.m..i. 2. '1Mr· ........... ......... so OOom (W,IMI J l I 0 2 2 '"" 110010 HOrlen 111101 Hlmllton 1 • • • • • F......,1 I I t I t t N.1ty1n (L.19-1&) t & 2 I l lO SIVI -F~ (2\l .... -Durltlfl, lim. -2:11. A~nc• -1,m . 30,000 Expected but we're still going to spend money to build a winner," general man8ger Har- ry Dalton promised. Dalton admitted his disappojntment, too, in the fact that the Angell were not a .500 ball club but said no deciaioo on the future of manager Del Rice Vo"OU!d be made f<r tho next "four or flve days." "We'll have an announcement before Nahs Win No. 20 the World Serles," DaHM promised. Former Angel Don Mincher drove In what proved to be the winning nm for the A's in the seventh Inning -an un· earned nm because o( Ilyan's throwing emir. Alter Bill McNulty drew a walk, Allan Lewis ran and Ryan tried to P'ck blm off but threw the b a 11 away. Lewia wound up on second, stole third and acored on Alincber 's hlt. LA's Osteen Calls '7 2 Best Year in Majors A11.ANTA CAP) -aaude Osteen call- ed it was his best year In the major leagues. Osteen tamed Atlanta's Braves on eight hits Wednesday night in becoming a 2().game winner ror the second time in his JI.year career as the l.44 Angeles Dodgers whipped the Bnves, 4-1 In the final game o( the sea50l'I ror both clubs. "This bad to be my be!t year In the ~ig leagues," a beaming Osteen aid ar- terwant "You get ao close. you want it real bad.'' Osteen got support from a pair of rookie!, batterymate Steve Yeager who belted a pair ol home runs. driving In three runs, and Tom Paciorek, who bit anolbet. The onJy nm ol.t Olteen, 33, came In the eighth on Rico carty's pinch single, a single by Hank Aaron and Earl WIU!ams' run-producing bit. "I'm happy to see Steve hH IO well,'' Osteen aid of bis young cal<ber. "He'• caught me in my last rive or 11x games and we work real well toptber." Man.ager Walt Allton uld It was a typical Osteen trlwnph. "He didn't do it with luck. Anybody that wins 20 11ame1 is a pretty good pitcher." C>steen alJO won 20 In tte9 with the Dodgers. "l think this year was better though," Osteen said. "I wu nine pme1 over .500 20-11 and my earned run averqe was aroond 110 and I did It with only 31 starts. Moet other yean I started about 40 games. Atlanta tnlillllltr Eddie Mllthewl WU fnutrated <Ner boslc mistakes ol the Braves, who dropped lhelr fifth stnlgbt to end the year with a 70-M mark, fourth in lbe West Division. The Dodgers were third at 8>70. "We gotta go back to school. The whole aprlng will be spenl on fundamentals," l\tathews said. ··Tonight was a perfect eumple. Lit ........ 141 At\W• 111 .. , .. ,... ... , .. ,.,. • • • • •lff*1. ,. .. • • • "'''°'·•-.rtlllt .i ttOH.Aalwl. l!J ''1 0 ' I 2 I f WllllafM, »' t 1 I ,,, ........ cf ,,,. 0 I I • ~. II ' t -1 t 7 01tM . .._r,llt '''' 4 t lt0i01«,c '''' 2 1 1 1 JltW, p I I t I 400llE-.111! ltll ._. . . ... Uf't\', Jlft I I I I (S-Pf' •••• J ~In, .. • ••• ''-"-• Jlft I t t I fot11$ # 4 I ' T"'" l'.I I I I Lot ~ 001 IOI tn -' Alltnll -OID tit -I t; -Rvt .. 11. Of> -lM ...,..._ I, All6nl1 t. LO• -Loo. ........,.. J, A11tn11 I. t• -P.c .... lk. MOii, Hit -YM9"" 1 I•). PIC!ol"• ii ), a.a - Gtorf. S -Ffl".ll/Mlft. Tl,,,. -l:M. All..-...C. -t.Ot.. Baseball's Playoff Games Set for Tube NEW YORK (AP) -The N1tlonal Broadeutlng Comp&11y wUJ klev!M virtually all ol the American and Na- tional League hu<ball playoff 1amea bqiMlng Saturctay. Oakland Sends Hunter An NBC apokesman ASd Wednetdly night that the rm NL playoff pme, Cin- cinnati •t Plttshllrlh Satunlay, would ha natlonllly televiled at JO 1.m. PDT, lollowod II I p.m. by the opening AL game bet..... OUland and lletn>lt .. Oakland. Against Tigers' Lolich OAKLAND (AP) -Tbe llelrolt Tlgln. who t:llnched their division title before 50,000 txclted bueba1I lana 1t Tiit" Sladlwn, will open the Amtrle&n League playoll• ag11nst the OU!lnd A '1 In relaUvtly quiet Oakland Colbeum Satur· day. crowdl of about lO.ooo-npected far the Saturday and Sunday -hero. Tbe 11adlum oeata 50.000 for baO'blO. '!'be third gama In the besWl.flve ....... will be ~ In the 1lllr<il1 ballpark. delcr1hed .. ;•· diluter .,.,, alter the 'll&m' 1-1 vlclory ,,_ -.., Tbeaday nlgltt "1llch cllllcbed the 1!a11 Dlvlllon race. Fans 10JO ,tad trom the Dcld. rlppectthe battlnc cqe, llo1e the baaeo Ind t>ltebln& rubber and -· chair• In the grlndllanda 11 ,,.., Stadlwn. 1bere were aevtral arrau and JD. Jurla Involving fans "'-e<lebroUng got out of hand It the p..-k and In &Mntown lletrolt. 1be A's hid 1 calm final wttt of the -They cllnclied their second strllght Wm Dl\llskln tTOWn lul n.u,.. d.a)', Ind manager Dick Willi•ms wu able to rat hll rqulan whUe waJUftl to find out wblch team would be the playoff _.. '"lbe dub .. ·u ptly bu been my =:ace·" ukl WUJi.mt •ft« u. -the Eut Utle. "That's molnly becluat n have hid belt.er IUCCal .. -them." Tbe A'• were M IN• teuon aaaWt the n..,., :H 111tnot the R..t Sox, the tum wtuch Rrtcf Wllllatn1 In 1•, two yean 11ter be managed them to a ~ nant. Swlday. only the lletrolt at Oakland game will ha tel<vlled. llarllns &t I p.m. On Monday, Wltb the AL tarn1 Idle. II'"" No. 3 In the NL IUlet will be t<levlled from Cincinnati, lt&rllng 11 I pm. Tuesday, the AL pme at °'"roH will be tde\lised at 11.30 • m , and If the bt:st~·flve NL terie1 ii not ytt Jttl~. came four will be televlled al J p.m. llowever , the 1polaman Nkl that only portloos of the NL game would be ohewn until the AL -Is completed , then the rest of the P•talJurgb.Qnctnnti pme will be shown. The oame procedure wlll be followed W-y -II both -ha .. not been decided. And U a fillh AL pn>e Is llHdfd.. It wUI be ttJe-vtled al II :• Lm. 'lllunclay In lle<n>lt . BOOK~IA.KERS TA.B OAK.LA.ND, PIRATES &osing Streak No Laughing Matter Jlm "Clllflsh'' JllM\lt'r. tt·7. win n art for the A'1 In S&turday'1 ......... Mlckty Lollch. 11-14, will pttcll for lleUolt. "1bil 1U' 1 pllChtd beUtt 1pinll lletrolt than &plnll Balton. but K "'°"'t -tbal -In the post. The ooly fill. v&lllap I -Is that we· .. llll"'lliC lo --~"Aldtfllril«,:H..-N, Maine (AP) -Bala ... EncJand'• loolncest loolbaJI thlntlng for the talla of Tic:l«y. '"l'hli isn't I bopelell litu&tlon. JUll about ivery time wa 10 out on the llo1d, we. feel we can wtn." aays C01Cb Robert Jlaldi,, .__ Bobcala bavo lool eetr lut Jig ...... "ft'a llU poYCholctdc:al r!gbt DOW," AYI co-a~ra wlklman. ''Whit .. need Ii Juat l one victor)'. II will ool"' a lot ol .. W1 t lft oNtmfTe.i tnd,, WU I I In 1111 when Bala ...,...,,,. 1 ' I • 11-4 first qtllrler dtllclt llld -Trinity llWl far Ill last "1c:loey. Bala' IG-7 loll last S&Ulrday lo Ttdla bnib • New Eqland .-'II far ,_ oecul1ff -Tbe NCAA m1jor <ollefe -Is • ahared bl' K•-Stala ..i V1rpilL 'lllo coUqe div~ nwt II II, bl' SI. Paul'• ol Vlqlnla. "Wm pennn1a1 und<rdop becMoe of our &ba, • aayo Hatch. WC1h an em>l1mrnt of llll&htly more than 1,11111, Bates Is 1 Uber&! an. college with hlgll ac&dml1c llandanll llld oll<n no •th1etlc lcllolanhlpo or pelaentlal lr<ltmeot. "We lake quite I bit ol rlbblne. but ..... of the guys le1111 to lake It In llrlde." aid CS><lplaln SU.. Eldrldp. "We go OUt-•llil have run and play. It Isn't all that earl!Hhaltertq 11 1"U looo • Jamt." Waktm11t 11)'8 male ttudtntl are g....-ally oympathetlc to the lnm'1 pllgltL "Gir~ on the other hand," he ukt, • .. _ ralllar ... Balal wtn ..-..,. .., ..wna • -loolos -"Before 1111 latwdoy'I ...... lor U• ample, 1"U'd bear lllrV I07inl 'doll' -'l\jfia. pt the New ~ ._... .... The -..... -bepn -the bat yon In Balta loothaJ! b!Mory. ... ,,,. mily time that ........ -put loptlier """ -w1mlns -... n1 1-..." uld If.Itch. "We wmt. "' to win the l1nl threo -In 1•. But .ol <Ollfle; h'• '" been -tn llnct."' the ,,..,. tbll -- IMI -· ONI .... IDll ._ 111..,,i -lo the Bait--. ~ lo the ~ ...... llCfil ... -·· do the job ..... """"" rwc:ol1od. M.., ol the Dottott p1a,.... .,.. .... .,_ ol the team 's I .. World 5<rieo .-,, lnoludlJic Lolldl. Tbe - pltc:hor -o.I .. -the A'I thll yur. On P'rtdlJ, lhl A'a hive I mGlnillC prt<tlce -In the OilillNm. The ,,..,. wUt ... t out 11 the ·- ' ' D"1lY PILOT Warriors &~plosive Pirates to Face Stiffest Test Ever Wben two high powered of. tensive football teams ge t together there's bound to be plenly of excitement. And such will be the case Friday night when Orange Coast and £1 Camino rolleges. two of the top JC teams in the state, collide at L e B a r d Stadium (7:30), F'or those of you that enjoy stan!'J cs. check out these: -OCC has totaled t,173 yards already th is season. in- Two More MV Stars Sidelined The injury jinx apparently hasn't run its course at Mission Viejo, but B ob Hivner's team has an ap. parent break in the schedule at least. The Diablos. who have five potential starters out with in- juries, face Tustin Friday at Tustin. It's only the fact that the Tillers have a 16 game los- ing streak going that brings C{)nsolation to lHvner. "We 'd like to see that streak continue." Hivner says. ti.1ission Viejo gets one player off the injured list this v.'cek. but loses two starters rrom last week. &b Henry. a &.2. 205-pound who was an All- state selection in Aril.ona last season will make his debut ror the Diablos after sitting out the first two games with an ankle injury. But two-way starter "fartin Gover is sidelined with a knee injury and Dave Schultz, a starting~cker, is also out with an injury. The injuries haven't made the Diablos consider any changes in their style of play, but they have caused prob- lems, Hivner says. eluding 728 passing -t.b.at's an average or 391 per game. -El Camino's Warriors have n1shed for 590 and pass- ed for 375 -an average of 321 per tilt. And both teams have scored 82 poU1ts -a 27.3 average per game. Despite all those impressive numbers, the ty,·o tca1ns' defenses are equally as strong. So it's anyone's guess as to just what type of game it will be. One thing is certain -it v.·on't be dull . "El Camino is an extremely tough tea1n." says Tucker. "in fact I would say it's one of the toughest teams we've played since I've been here ( 11 years L I'd compare E I Ca mino to the Fullerlon clubs of '66 and '67" says the OCC coach. Tucker adds !hat the \Var· riors present a balanced at- tack. "They throw the ball good and they run good , bot I think they probably run the ball bet· ter than anyl.hing else. "And they have probably the best lineman in the state in Jim Obradovich (6-2,2'20 ) and one of the best running hacks around in Dave J)arden 15-9. 180). "El Camino is a tough club to defense. They throw a n1illion different things at you. They do everything t h a t you've ever heard of on of· fense." sa\'S Tucker. "To beat a club like this a team has to throw. And v.•e've got lo hang onto the ball as long as we can," adds the OCC head man. Orange Coast comes inlo the game ranked second in the state's large division ratings. El Camino, after its 23-23 tie with Cerritos last week, fell from first to fifth. ...The Warriors are the defen· ding state champions and have not lost a game since Phoenix beat them in the second week or the '71 campaign. Since then El Camino has gone 13 straight games without a loss. And the Warriors have only lost eight times in the past five years. Meanwhile, Tucker w i 11 make two changes in his of- fensive lineup this week, niov- ing Scolt Schaefer into the starting center spot and Mike Barth Into the No. t left tackle position. Sea Kings Balanced -Brown There's nothing li ke taking on the defending chan1plon in the first game ou t of the pits in league pray. f'..oach Phil Brown's hiirhly regarded Estancia High foot- ball team will have that osr portunity Friday night when the Eagles entertain Corona de! ~far's Sea Klnl{s on the Nt>wport Harbor High field with kickoff at 8 in opening Irv ine League action. Coming off a convincing 42-7 victory over ~1arina. the Eagles will enter Friday night's game as seven point favorites. Brov.'ll wos pleased with his team's showing and S3\'s : "\'Ve hope they will play like that every week. We could tell in the warmup they were really sharp. We could just sense it." How doe! he look at the defending league champs from Corona del Mar? "They haven't changed their offense much the past three years. They have a top auarterback in this boy Joe Tosti and they have some fine running backs again. "The big thing a b o u t Corona, I think, is that they are a balanced team." Brown didn't check the statistics on his own club for the fi rst two victories but In- dications are that the Eagles boast a devastating running game and a stout derense. Dan Princeotto is the key to the running ganle and the 155- pound speedster is one of the top ground gainers in the Orange Coast area. In the two victories posted by the Eagles. Princeotto has i;:ained 385 yards in 46 carries for an average gain of S.4. He has scored four touchdowns and n two-point conversion. While Princeotto is the wide man in the Estancia attack. Scott Gayner gives the team power up the middle and has gained 127 yards in 26 carries. Quarterback Mike l\1agner hasn't had to throw con- sistently but Brown feels he is capable of keeping the defense honest. Against Marina he com· pleted two of six but had two · others intercepted. The two completions were for touch- downs. "He didn't throw well ," Brown says. "He got confused but this is only his second game in a new system. He's going to make mistakes. "But al the same time. he's doing some mighty tUce things also." ''We'll be trying to do the same things, but we have to switch people lnto new posJ. tions, and of course it really hurts our depth," lUvner says. "You try to cover up by switching people around from nne position to another, but it's always better to have someone learn a position and know he's going to play it week alter week." The Diablos have been plagued by mistakes in their first two losses, but Hivner has seen some bright spots. Pirates Ranked No~ 2 "Dave Caldwell's ruMing. the blocking of center Jerf Chlll'Chill and Kevin Eaton's play ln the defe115ive backfield have been ~ood." 11ivner says. "We have just made too many mistakes." llivner's main concern th is week is in preparing his deferu:ive secondary for an ex- pected Tustin pas.sing game. "Their junior quarterback did a fine jnb last week, and coruiidering the way we played pass defense, it scares me." Orange Coast College has vaulted three places to the No. 2 position in this week's state JC large division football ratings. The top-rated team is Reedley (J.-0) which \\'OS sixth last week. El Camino. OCC 's opponent Friday night, fell from Urst to fifth after a 2..1·23 ite wllh ninth-rated Cerritos (\.{)-2), College of the Redv.·oods (3--0 ) tops the small school rankings. HAL AKINS Lagunans Face Title Favorite Mustangs, Falcons Collide Agal11st Anahelan Tars Must Play Errorless Game Monarc Mix Wit Lancers llow good Is Santa Ana LONG BEACH -3alxth Valley High School's football game In wbtt Is · a team. and how bad is COsta Coach Don Leot of Newport dozen tri,. In the 21--0 I08s to cluslc -tatlon of SS Mesa's? That quea:tlon should Harbor lligh Ls of the opinion c.orona del Mar, despite put- be answered. In port, when that his team must play ting the ball squarely In his A.AAA football po 'on the two teams play t.onliht at errorle football in order to receJvtrs' hands 80 percent of tap hfre at Veterans &.llum Newport Harbor ~llgh (7:30) whip invading Anaheim Satur-the time. bet VI e en Mater IJi'i in the Jrvine League Qpencr. day night in Sunset League Aside from worrying about Monarchs and 's Dick Hill thinks he has a battle. proper execution, Lent also Lancers. good team at Santa Ana Perhaps he was recalling frets over A n a h ·e I m ' s It begins toolght at 7:' VAiiey and Costa Mesa's John last year's firlil confrontation defeme-an item lhat exploits Mater Dei 's undefeated, Sweazy thinks his outfit is betM w i t h c 0 a c h c I a r e the oppo&itlon with its con-la a slim two-point terthanitsrecordi.ndicates. VanHoorebeke and hii, stant shfnlng and stunting keep t.he Moore Le While the Falcoos are Colonists. Jn that one it was before the snap. powemouse Lancers unbeaten. the caliber of their an Anaheim defensive back winless column. opponents is questionable (Los who fell down on the last play Leading coach Bob Woods' Amigos and Paramount), of the game and Lent's Sailors s d Monerch8 i • Junior while Sweazy's I).~ Mustangs coonected 00 ~ 52-yard econ ary quarterback Sieve Martindale. have met two strong teams in touchdown pass to whip • who has connected on 10 of 19 Western and Newport Harbor. Anaheim, 20-14. · passes in the two Matei-De i One thing is certain -it Lent says his underdog. Um"'s B1·g vic!Mies with his ardiless isn't likely that Costa Mesa Sailora have their hands full bullets. will meet a faster team than thJs time, and they must play And he has plenty ot ~ In Valley, nor one with bigger an errorless game to stay with c the running deplrtment.TJ111.b football players. the Colony'. ' oncern junior hallbacks Jim Sill'd•a "I understand they have 15 "The ma.in thing we've been and Dave Najera avabble !·low does it feel to be kids who run the 100 under working on this week has been along with senior ·~ck undefeated? "Great. it's a 10.5," says Sweazy. "I think our own ezecutton. A mistake University High foot b a 11 Mark stanbrf.. tremendous feeling, it's been a we have one in school ." and Anaheim will talce ad-coach J,.rrv Redman is look-It's a complete atta~'with But it's not Santa Ana tag f " Le t -., f hol B t Lak """'I t Jong lime." says lla1 Akins. van e o you, says n. ing to shore up his pass ew es. u ew~ i a. Valley's offense that is of "One mistake and you can tack presents a f~ble Akins' Laguna Beach High particular concern to Sweazy. figure touchdown. J saw defense this week, and if one obstacle with qu~ck School football team is 2.Q this It's his own. The Mustangs Anaheim play Chaffey and = tbe~j~,n~~~ Pete Tereschuk firing aw.ay to year and has won twice as have failed to score in their convert two blocked punts into ··--.:. a corps or fme receivefl: many contests in two weeks as two games this year. touchdowns. ~~t~nent, Brea, has Woods has opiPed his '\Mm's last year's team did all Of Santa Ana Valley, he "And in their Redlands game pMSibly the Orange League's biggest task 13 ...,ntain~the says, "they run a balanced al· their offensive line seemed to top passing ccmbination, and passing game ot the ~· season. tack, they run the sprint out come inte> its own,•• adds Lent. when the Trojam travel to Tereschuk's targets indude Now Akins must ready his and their quarterback goes Newport's arsenal h.s.s been Brea they'll have the task oC Ed Gillies (S-10, 160), Dale squad for unbeaten El Dorado pretty well. And they have two cut into with the possible loss stc:Jppirw quarterback Corey Adams (6-0, 190) and Vince Friday night at Laguna Beach. big ends. We're going to have of Gavin Hedrick, the Sailors' Leyton and end st eve Tl'OJ'l(..'()5() (5-9, 165). Gillies is to scrap like hell." punter, starting end and cor-Can'lPnter as their main ob-the younger brother of former The Golden Hawks a re Costa Me!la's lack of scrap nerback. jec-tf;e. All-CIF stand9t1t Rick GID.les. favored for the Orange League has Sweazy concerned. "I Hedrick is nursing an ankle "They were the ones wh> Bqt the running ~of title this year and Laguna thought we'd be battling injury and is on Lent's beet us last year," Redman i:.uback Dale Walters •. and harder than we have," he doubtful list. rtealls. "We got ahead a cou-fullback Dave ~wart hlln't Beach promises to be a major says. Counterback and linebacker pie of times, but they always really come into focus ~1'-17 threat. SanLa Ana Valley has some Jim Swick is hampered by a came right back, and and 18-3 losses to West ' er "Our defense was pretty real s Peed in sophomore bruised hand and several Carpenter finally beat us 00 a and Gardena. : sound last week," says Akins. tailback Myron White and two other Sailors are operating un-pretty long pass late in the And that's the major n "Of course, we were on giant ends in wide receiver der less than too perceot. game." for Mater Dei's favorite );ole defense a great deal because Rick Walker (6-3, 210) and The Sailors' passing game 1be Trojans are inserting with Gardea's four too we turned the ball over so tight end Wayne Moore (6-4, has been a sore spot. through some new personnel in their nwi leading the pack. many times. 220). two games, although it wasn't defensive backfield, and ..... .,.. Offllnlo "\Ve fumbled six times and c"'' ,_. OHMM really a factor in the Costa switcbi.ng some others this t~ ~~·~oi•n lost four, two in our own ter· ~f fi'~'\~r,IVflP l~ Mesa game which Newport week, but Redman says it's ~G 11:.",!~hen ritory, and had two passes in-l"G ~~~, J=-i'~ w~W;1.o~rked hard on a special conceMion for Brea' =~ i~ ~~. tercepted in our territory. Yet :¥ 6:.rvJ~ns:n· it11 1 bl' hln d passing combination. :J c~'k~~;J the 0 I SC red On e ., RE em v11tn11n1 1i.o es a 1s g a groun game "We're doing the switching at si.ve Mertlnd••• Y n Y 0 c · ~g ~~1,St>r;f;1~"" l'l against Cost.a Mesa, but because we did so poorly on LH Jim G•"'" "They" are the Warriors or HB Sl9Y• Ttrevh lSO against Anaheim we're going pass defense last week," Red-~~ ~,: ri:~~~. the Army-Navy Academy. The se Rod FIQll•tt ,'° to have to throw the ball. man says. "Our pass Artists rallied for a 14-8 win LE Frei!':~-.:;· DIMM 110 "I think all our receivers defensive backfield is sup-~ Mnr.1~~ o.i DtttllM 11s behind the running of Dave ~1 J~~ ~f:"' /~g have the ability to catch and posed to be a Strong point, and T ~~~rel ru Marriner. RT 11m 01v11 110 we've spent a lot of time this we think we've got eight E" ~:~ ~'li:, 1~ But Akins still isn't satisfied ~~ c=tnG~~btrl•ln /;~ week in throwing," says Lent . players good enough to start. tG ~~~~~1110 ·1.J wilh the triple tho([~ the tg ~r~y J~:'IOll a~ Quarterback steve Bukich It's just a matter of trying to ~f Ji:'"P=tn 1~ ~~~~~~t~ er with the_g_:_,':o_'"'_,_~~·-~_"' _____ ,': __ co_m~p-le!A!d ___ onl_Y_on_e_o_r_o __ find __ the __ ri.::gh_t_co_mh_ina_t_ion_." _ _:~_·...::g:;-:;;":..::'lt::J~:::':r::-::' ____ cl:. "'What can you say about fumbles ?" he asks. "l just don't know why we Cumbie so much. One time a back ran in- to his own man and hit him so hard the ball bounced out. "Another time the back didn't make a good pocket for the ball. I think it's discipline to a certain extent, and we aren't disciplined enough yet." Turnovers, he says, "are something we just can't afford against El Dorado. That's too good a football team. "We've got to get our or- rense working, but we'd be making a lot more yards if we weren't constantly fumbling. I'm not too happy with our qu3rterbacks and our in- experience there is still show- ing." Akins cited his offensive line for blocking well against Army-Navy, "particularly on our one long drive, but it's still been a little spotty." i , " I Baseball Standings DEAN LEWIS 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE FINAL East Division w L 1'1tt&burgh .. 59 tblcago 85 70 ~ew York 83 7l SL Louis 75 81 :O.lonlreal 70 66 Philadelphia 59 97 Wt1t Dtvl1loa ClnelnnaU Houmn Dodl:er1 AU an ta 95 59 84 69 85 70 70 84 San Francisco San Die&O 69 86 53 1111 .,,.........,.._ ..... u .. iatll!Mt...,,11 J, CnKlte I lolfl fltff>C leot •· SI"' Ditto 4 It. ~Is 4, I'll!'°""" I °"'""" 4, .i.n .. 11 t Clftctrwwlll 4. Hwllllll J Hft Yff\ I, ~"4 1 Pel .619 .548 .532 .481 .449 .3711 .617 .549 .548 .455 .445 .379 GR - 11 13" 21 V, 26\t 371> - 10 ~~ IO I\ 25 26'.\ 36"> AMERICAN LEAGUE FINAL East Dlvt1loa w L 86 70 85 70 60 74 7' 76 72 St 65 91 Wes& Division Oakland 93 62 Chicago 87 67 Minnesota 77 77 Kansas C!ty 76 711 1'n1eh1 'IS !O Texu 54 100 w......,.,.,•-•• Mlnntt011 U, Cf'llcffot t aotlOll .. O.tt91f 1 Mllwlllllw 1, ..... Yort I ltlMI• (It¥ f, Tt•11 t OAlend l. ~If. I O'>IY•I ........ ~. DEAN LEWIS .600 - .!Qi 51\ .illlO I!\; .491 16 \1 .434 18 .311 38\\ 1966 HARBOR ILYD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 s.rtfc• 1.nd P1rt1 for All Imported C1n Modern ll«ly Shop I<>< All Cort Orini• County's urgell snd Moll Modorn Toyota and Volvo O...ler OYIUIAI DILIVIRY IPICIALllTI SAVINGS!!! ON All '72 TOYOTAS & VOLVOS DEMONSTRATORS WM PUS '72 STATION WAGON COROUA 1600 CC ENGINE, AUTO., RADIO, AIR COND. 239400 &1'021°0$0650' '72 VOLVO 2 DR ., 4 SPD., RADIO HEAT., RAD. TIRES 349400 I 1:2627101 on11M MIW. UUD CA.IS IUDT fOI IM llllOIA fl DfLIVllY No:86° llelgbl: lf' Welgbl: 2802. Ro11111own: Louisvill~Ky. ro.111on: Crowdplem • • ' • I ' • rep Defensive S t ars ... • ,, LAllRY GRADY w-.- KEVIN EATON Mlulon Vlejo STEVE SPEER Elllancla_ BRAD NELSON Corona dtl Mar DON BENTON uat.,•*1 LOU BACCA Mator Del HUGlllE ROBERTS Hunttagloo Beach MARK FOSTER Daoa Hilb DAN WINCHELL - Baseball's Top 10 P:INAL NATIOMAL l,.UOl,la l"llYff C• 0 Al I M ~. 1-WlUl•WI Clll 150 S:U t5 !fl .m Off~ All l:M H<I 17 llD .iJS t.ut All 1'7 .... '2 10 .. Jll CecNno Hll't llt SJf '"' 11' .J20 A. Otlver Pgll 1.llCI US • 176 .Jlt W•i-!'On U1 Sit 11 111 Jll lroc-sit. Ul 6n u 1n ,310 It-Cln 15' ..S 107 ltl .307 Sll'l'lmort• SIL 1J2 ,... 10 Ill .>0$ $.Into Clll 131 ..U .. 140 .)01 H_I_. ltflctt, CIN:l..,..11, «11 Colbttf, Stl'I D4et0, •1 I . WltllfrM, Cl!lcifo, 111 H, A.rofl, AHellt•, Ml 11.,,,.n, P'ltt> ......... llllM l•lfM t11 '41w:h. Clnitlf'MH, 12St I . Wltlt.m~, Cllk.Ho. 1221 II•"""'' ~tt•IM'Ol'I. 11ti Colbert, hon oi.to. 111 1 L. Mfy, Hwtton .... PUIAL Nllllllt(AM L•...U• ,_..,..,.. t• e Al I M I'd, Cl ...... Ml11 U2 Uf '1 170 Jlf """'41 KC UI llf U 11' JU D, Al"" CM 1• * tCI U• » c. IWl'f Oii 1• m a i.1 » •VIII a.it ID m H 111 .. kl*..._, ICC 1)1 .SO .. IJI » M""'"" ICC lfP Ml M Ut -"" ,IW; l tft IJI <OJ ,. l:M .1't) Otl• ICC IQ ,... n ,. .m MUl'Ull' J('( lJl SU la In .Jn -·-0.A ...... Chic .... 111 ~. fMW v--. .Di 11!1.,._, .w.w..or.. •• .......... ()9111-d. ., JA"fWrrt• ·- ZEROX 4c ea . Ni •,>1•,1,....l.'~ ~INKO'S ·1) 'I Camp t.1' Or lrv1ro r q)].]19 7 Ml City, 'DI It. JKkton, o.li;tlftd, 25. ... ........ O. Atltn, Cflk-eo.. Ua, Ml'flMtT'1, ICMUI City, 1901 /ltllt"rM, ,.... Yort. K; SCotl, Mnw ...... , •1 J. l'owtft, ••Ulmor•. 11. Plklll"I ns ~1 Hun*, o.kllftCI, tl·7 •. J5'1 Tit"!' loshlrl, l.M, .11•1 C>ilortl, o.111•"'3. IS.. .71'1 Palmotr, l.rJI-., 21·1•, .m t It. Ntltoll, KMIM1 City, 114, ."11 .ilmmJa1arn.tu. Fini Cj.ljtom T•ilorm1 w ........ ,.... 11JJ .,..... ...... N..,_. ...... c ....... PHONl t MS.1 tn ERIK ESCllEJ\ Newport llar!Jor SCOT!' WILDERMAN Marina DALE PETERSON Fountain Valley FRANK FREGOSI Cosla Mesa Ski School The first session of the Dryland Ski School (Oct. 14), sponsored by the &!boa Ski Club, has been switched from Costa Mesa Park to TeWinkl e Park in Costa l\tesa. Checking Area GoH For Gals I,, .•• ~ Off the Greens Sl1teen -... at the Beml<e Koll ; Doo and Wilma Freeman over Merle and Aline -ol govemon from Sh!Yely def. Jim ml Mart• Boyle. Irvine O>Ut Counlry Club Ol<eel•; Pat and Rolalle Hart Seml/inol round maldles """" gueou ol Fomt and de/. Bud and Kaye Youku; will be played this weel<ml Woody Smith over t h e and Roy and Marptt( O"tmk with the finals the followtna 1n7 1• ,,........, 11• 27 Big Can)'O!I Coontry Chm or Newport Beach womm'1 club ataged a member~est low gnm-low net lounnament tills week with Mrs. Eldon F.del of Santa Ana CC winning the guest division in gross oonr petition with an 80. weekend at Pebble Be-adJ and def. Howard and B et t e weekend. ............ c.t. .._. Fl.J.J..-... 1114 J 716-lllt Spyglaas eoontry Club courses -~. In the second night, John!~~~~~~~~~. on the Monterey penin!llla. In the flrst flight, lt was and NeU Grab.am def. Jerryt: This Is an annual event Tom end Mary Crossen win-and Carol Ann Ruoff: John 1 .,.,,.... the IWO country club nlng over Frank and Evel yn and Phoebe Conley def. C<ne STARS ownen joln wlth the other lot Wilson; John Rutan and Alice and ~tarion '\'allBce : Jack and Sydney Oman-ls one o1 In low nel or A night, Mra1 George FrehJing (Santa AM CC) and Mrs. Bess Major (Irvine Coast CCI tied with 75. membera of the board to play Rall over Ed and !Jreezy Bev Rin1el def. John and • the world'• great aatrole>- tbe excluaive coastal OOUf'ICS Elko; Paul and 1t1arle Lenk lilargarel Neal: and Barney ~rs. His colwnn It one of I 81 guests ol. the Smith!. over Roy and La Ve 11 e and Edith Roblnioo def. Harry e DAll..Y Pil.CI"S ~at Dick Myers ta eummJy inl_:Spl:.::.":'ZZO=;:..:and=:..:M::::Dl:_:and:::::_:M:::y:_:rna::__::•:nd:._:.:An:n::_::":.:'a:_:rd'.:.. ____ ~=r=ta=t=ura.======== In the B flight compeUtlon, it was Mrs. Tom Henderson of Irvine Coast as the winner with '¥1. Mrs. Ede Gow of Mesa Venle CC wm low net with 75. For Big Canyon C C m<mbera, Mrs. Mareo Anich was ihe A Oight gross winner with 79 and Mr>. Cla)'lon Booe the-net victor with i9. .. °;"" In B Oight, Mr>. Willlelli Whitlow had a 94 for gross honors and Mrs. Robe r t Yordley had a 70 lo win net. SeacllN Membe"8 or Ille Hunlin8too 1Sea<:llff women's club staged a ringers tournament recently. Kay Mosier and Marilyn Jones tied for firSt in a fUght with a net of 63 followed by Helen Cowden with 64. In the second flight ii W3! Hazel Mollica first with 65 followed by Helen Hodges and stu Dudley with 65!h. Virgfiala ~and Pier· -rette Croft tied for ftr!t in the third flight will! 62 followed by Lenor Wahreubcock with 64. Members also participated in a nassau tnurnament with Ev Rice gaining first place in the A flight for tbe be<! lrnnl nine. Mae Ftnkle had the best back nine and Joan Weaver the best 18 with Virginia Lambert second. In the second night it was June Clallin the first nine vie· tor, Vi .Q'Gara the back side winner and Helen Hodges and Pat Hood trying for top honors for 18. Cess Galvia had the best front nine In the third flight with Irene Pare the best back side and Roberta Andrews the best 18. Norma Pant was sec- ond for lbe·IB. ltfead0tlllark tbe proce.w ol defending bis presklent's club champkmtrlp at Irvine Coast CC with actloo DOW In the second round. 1n a 1ra.. 1ow balls or founome tournament on the weekend, first place went to a team compooed or Henry 1'1baek. Roy Davls, J o e Bushard and John Parle with 194. In aeoond place ...... Art Daugherty, Nelson nike, Jim Ward and Dr. William Cowan with 198 .. Third place went to Bob Hankey, Gordon Walker, Bob Nattress and Joe Ordway wtth • 204. Jtfeaa Verde In a (>llT'ln<r's bet1<r ball tournament at ?t1esa Verde CowUy Club, low g r o s s honor> -lo Jmy Hayes and Bob Kinder wtth a 72. Low net was won by Bob Kitson and Jack Berfurttl. with 61. In a jack and jill event Sun- day, first place went to Marcy and Bob Buckenhizer with Del and Bette Hamre with 130. Don Crowell, a scratch southpaw golfer, started a 73 round in sensational fdlion over the weekend. After getting birdies on the first two holes, Crowell aced the third using a six iron to cover the 161 yards . Jtll•alon Viejo Head pro Roger Belanger is taking a group or club members to Jamaica and Mexico City £or e. goUing vacaUon with departure slated Oct. 28. Ten couples will join Roger on the excusion that wiU see the entourage spending five The women's club at daYJ in Jamaica and tlree in Meadowlark Golf Course stag. Mexico City wtth golf at many ed a three best balls or or the plush courses at ead> foorsome tolrnamenl t h l s location. we<!< wtth two t..ms trying for fin! place with scores or S•nta Ana 2200. one equad were Corinne-Santau Ana Country! Club 11, Richardson,· Diana Hooper currtn y staging 1 s annua ~fable Christianson and Laei Guys and Dolls tou~ent Murray On ..._ ....... i._ with action in the quarteM1nal • un:: 11111R:r were round completed. • Poll~ Myers.. Fran Crea.ger, Re!ults of quarterfinals ~ie Mulligan and Kelly m a t c hes included : cham- Geiger. piomhip night -Eldon and Laguna Beach Lois FAes deleated Mike and Laguna Beach women's golf club staged a four pars tournament this week with the A flight winner G r a c i a Johnson with a 381>. Second place went to Evelyn Hurlbut with 40 and third to Ida-May Schomaker with 421h. Jn B flight, HeJen Drexelius was the winner with 43 fol· by ShirieY H~ ( 4 3 1,~ ) • Thelma Toomey (441h). Lillian Marks and Vangie Cluis- tiaruKln (4SJ. Alice Brabyn won the C flight with a 40. Fam.otu Name Suits e Sportcoats Sl•cks e Fumi1hlng1 121I.1M St. C.... w ... ......_ w-r 1. TiltttlY Dr9I •• ..... c......u .. 2JtJ •..U.~ -MHIW (Ill,.. TEllS -. ATlll11C CIUS P•E qs.1919 REMEMBER DUCK SEASON OJIENS OCTOBER 7TH. FOR GUNS, EQUIPMENT AND LOWER PRICES, SHOP L6 G. REMINGTON 1100 MAG AUTOMATIC SHOTGUN Vent rib. recoil pMf. &hoots 3" mags. 1 6991 Choicti cl Full or Mod. choke. 12 gauge. RE0.229.K SAVE I0.00 REMINGTON 1100 AUTO, VENT Rl8, 15710 CHOICE Of 1Z, 11, 20 p . , ....... . • .. ·---~-~-....... ALCANSHOT ITALIAN DUCK DECOYS Pint.Iii Of Mallard full tire, plastic. .. .. ---- SHELLS . t2ga.,311·111-GC 2'' · 4710 Boxof2~RtQ,3 .39. : •••• NoW CttlofSOO REMINGTON PUMP 4 1621 870 SHOTGUN, Vent ,,b, 12. 1s. 20ga. ...... .I _.-wtNCHESTER°'101 -24991 SHOTGUN s"""eT,;g.12ga.;moct oo tuu -· • MOSSBERG PUMP. . as•• SHOTGUN IOO AV vent Nb, 12 ge..Jt"ld or"'"",. REMINGTON 870 M~G ~~::: 1· 29•1 PUMP SHOTOUN t211L1•,_ .. _,..,, ... ., • WINCHESTER 12GA.1«JO • 1 4 -.S4 41. -AUTO. SHOTGUN 21•moc1.rlO"'tu11c!1ob·I ~ - GOOSE DECOYS C.nad11 or Snows. DELUXE CHEST HIGH WADERS Rubberired Cloth 30~! 14911 . 1"' PLASTIC RAIN IUIT si-S-M-L·XL LOHMAN DUCK CALL REG. 2.39 NOW1 11 VICTOR GUN SATCHEL Holds aholguna Of riflH 46" length. P111tk: 1h•ll with fOlm llning. 1996 MECllOOJR. RELOADING PRESS Comolet•-10-.... 3995 :::i~~ DUCK HUNTER•& CAMOUFLAGE HAT BRASIL DECK #110 BAR SPORT SHOES gtl "-313 ~ cowiwo. W/nlbt>et' llOfee. =~1411 I!-' STOfll HOURS: MON. TMRU FRl.10 A.M, TO t ,.M. • IAT.aSUllJ. 10.A.M. TOl,.M. LA MIRADA IHOft'rl#G Ct lfTr ill ...._ __ .__.c- .........ut .. 11t ORANG E ·-.. ru11111 .......... ,,.,.,. TU ITI N SANTA ANA tfnrrt'Oltf .AVr , JHJ I •JlllfO\ If, .. PIMT ll•ltf .. ...._,,illtttU• ""-'1-eQ..... ...... KJ-»1J NOW, 4 8TORU IN ORANG I COUNTY 2 ---DAIL y PILOT What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC ll looked llke marlln fishing was going to really get going last week, but the expected good bite did not last very long, Last week 19 marlin were checked in at Balboa Angling Club with the hot day s being Wednesday and Thursday. Only a couple of blllflsh were weighed 1n over the u·eekend though as the fish seemed to disappear. Two junior members of the BAC, Baron Birtcher and Doug Canoo., both cf the Harlx>r area, each caught their first marlin ol the year. Birtcher's fish weighed 165 pounds wh.ile young Car- son's hit the scales al 139 pounds. Both fish were caught on Phyachobead lures. Currently the best marlin action is between the cast end of Catalina and the 267 Spot. Lures such as the Physcbobead, flying fish and live mackerel are all working equally well. To date the area angling club ha! checked 6.1 marlin and t 1 broad· Jo blll. Prep Polo Results Pro Cage ..... ...-........ .,.. ••Miii• Cerol!Ola lA•Al U4, ao.ton ·~ ' -·--... --- . ·~ • The Fob\ilous XRI with the dynamic feaM•s of the master. LIST PRICE $46.00 SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER 10 DAYS OHL Y TENNIS SHOES We carry Adida s -Converse Swiss K and Ken Rosewall Shoes. SOFTBALL TEAMS Remember our big equipment show COME AND SEE THE 1973 COMPLETE SOfTIAl.l LINE FREE BIER • MANUFACTURER RIPS OCT. 7th • 6 to 10 PM 4 SUPER SPORT STORES ,I 5)600 SAVE 5100° Cl.ISIDM Strlnglnt Inducted TENNIS BALLS ALWAYS AT DISCOUNT PRICES All Mojo< S..nd• *I" c.. Only "' J SKIERS N-Ski goodies fust arrived. Volkl txploslv skis • Hochland Ski Boots • Nordica Sld Boots • longe Ski Boots • Bogner Ski Oothing • Knelssl Skis New glm short skis . • BRING YOUR SKllS IN FOR A llNDING CHECK Bindings choclced on OIK big !AS approved machine • • PUBUC NOTICll PUBIJC NOTICE -<---------~..;.·--------·-- PUBLIC NcrrlCE P\JBUC NOTICE • • • or Le lta Pl pr Vil Sc In ti tig ba v m bi Ti or R se H Lo an •• th s w in el s f p • ,l ,t -~-- Crestview Clreult Orang e District Tops Grm Picks Everything is coming up orange in the Crestview League this football season. At least that's what the DAILY PJLOT's foolball writers predict. El Modena, Orange and Villa Park, the Orange Unified School District's three entries in the league are picked to finish 1-2-3 this season in a tight race by the predictors. Behind the leaders it11 be Foothill, San Clemente, Katella, and Mission Viejo with Tustin finishing In the ce1lar again this season. A team by team look follows with the non-league record in parenthesis. : I. El Modena (1·1) -With last year's league title tn their possession and nine starters ~ck from that team. the Vanguards appear capable or making it two in a row . Their biggest assets are quarterback Tim Tivenan, a rine runner and passer, full back Tracy Smith and all-league lineman Randy Harris. 4. Footbill (l.0-1) -Tailback Sam Peek. An All-leaguer and Andy Kolnik, a 185 pound linebacker, center are the only returning starters from last season but they are good ones. The Knights have a tough defense which held Kennedy to '""'tie in non-league , and if the offense can overcome in- experience they'll be tough to stop. 5. San Clemente (%-4) -The Tritom have quatily players like quarterbacks Bill Kenney, receiver Charlie Dargan and linebacker Lonnie Hutts, but have depth problems. New coach Allie Schaff is instilling a . winning attitude, however and they might even be title threats if injuries don't become a problem. I. Katella (6-11 -Knights came within a game of the ti· tie in '71, but lost a great deal from that team and have been shut out twice in non-league play. Standout Bill Marshall ls the key man in the line and 200-pouod { u 11 b a c k Bob Sanchez should produce some offense. Z. Orange (%-OJ -Never very far from the' top in the league, the Panthers are ~trong challengers this season. Returning quarterback Steve Walker and running back Clint Skaggs have paced a 21-0 win oveiMagnolia and 7-7 tie with Edison to serve warning to the rest of.the league. .7. Mission Viejo (6-%1 -The hard-luck team of the league, the Diablos have been hit first by graduation and then by in-KYLE VAN AMERSFORT (44), PAUL FISKNESS LEAD HUNTINGTON OFFENSE. juries. Tailback Dave Caldwell -----------'----------- and fullback Mark Moffitt are 3. VOla Park (%-4) -'['he Spartans have won six games in a row since losing five straight in the opening weeks of 1971. Quarterback Kirk Reidinger, an A I I -Le a~ u e selection, slotback B r i a n Hester and halfback Tony LoPiccolo give the Spartans possibly the best backfield in the league, and All-League Jinebacker Tony K i n c a i d anchors the defense. tough runners, but k e y linemen Bill Henry. Martin Gover and others are nursing injuries. Loara Attack Hurts 8. Tustin (0-2) -The Tillers have lost 16 straight ball games over the course of three seasons and new coach John Murio isn't about to see an overnight change. Junior quarterback Jim Debord may be the man to build around. with backs Jim Long and Brent Partridge to handle the running chores. Because of Injuries . !lard times have fallen upon Loara High School's football program. Once the scourge of the Cllt~'s triple A division, Herb Jlill's Saxons have declined in prominence since making the move from the Irvine League No Turkeys in Loop, Says Tritons' Schaff to the talent-rich Sun.sell League. Loara is 1·1 t.his yea r as it prepares for Saturday's Sunset League g am e with Westminster. Last week , \.\'ilhout injured quarterback Max Bacon. the Saxons were blanked by Servile 21-0. For the first time in the school's history, San Clemente High's football team has won ·its ftrst tv.11 games. And now it.'s into the Crestview League race this week for AlUe Schafr's Tritons when they take on dangerous Foothill ·Friday at the Santa Ana Bowl. And Schaff, when queried says "1'lere are no turkeys in the league that I can see." ·The Tritons, . whose best start previous to this season was a 1-0-1 mark in 1967, have 1'iiipped Bolsa Grando 27·7 and Alemany 22-7 in non- ·league action be.hind the pass-- lng of quarterback Bill Ken- ."fl'Y· · In Foothill, ™"''ever, the Tritons expect to face a tougher foe. a team they have managed to deteat only twice in seven games over the past eight seasons. "1bey're a very strong team, Kennedy was lucky to tie them last week ." Schaff _says. "I was impressed with REFLECTIONS ..., Sheffer Reyn their running game, especially Sam Peek, and they've got an excellent passer." "We've improved in the first two games, bot we've still got a I~ way to go. I've been pleased with our passing ga me, but you don't win with just one phase of the game, aod you've got to have a sound running game as weil." The Trilons have prospe<ed by their passing game in the first two oontests, with Ken- ney throwing to C h a r l i e Dargan and Jerry Key for over 150 yards a game. The Tritons' rushlng attack has not topped the 75 yard mark in their first l\\'O games, but has 'been adequate ac- cording lo Schaff. "We don't have real size or speed at the running backs, but we 've managed to pop off a 20-yard gain at least once in each or the games we 've played," Schaff said. "We're not going to overrun anybody. but if we can make them respect our running it'll keep them honest." The Tritrua will have to ad- just somewhat on offeru;e this week, since Key, the offensive player of the week off last week's game. has been nurs- ing an ankle injury and is not expected to start against Foothill. Hard times. indeed. have fallen upon Loara. When Hill talks about his outstanding players, he talks about a punter. "Really, J'n1 not kidding," says Hill about Randy Gosselt. "He's really good and he kicks our extra points and fle ld goals.'' Gossett (no relation to San Francisco 49ers kicker Bruce Gossett) may be the best punter tn the oounly. He averaged 42 yards on !our kicks in the opening g3me and last week booted three for a 45-yard average. Other than Go,,sett, Loara is hurting. "I'm not pleased with anything we do ," Hill says, although he may make an ex- ception for Gossett 's kicking . "Our defense didn't look very good last week. we didn't score any points and we don't ha ve much experience. "We started well against Warren (17-0) but losing Bacon didn't help our offense any, and I really don't know who will replace him. "Kent Beck quarterbacked against Servile, but with tum in there we didn't move lhe ball very well." Although 170.pound line- backer Roger Abercrombie has played well on defense. it takes II to pla y, reminds Hill "We got hurt nmnin' and we got hurt passin'. \Ve just didn't Corky Fisher and Ron play very inspired football . !,'NII.-that thl ,,..._int Sanchez will allemate in Key's Maybe we aren't capable of •6' Utefvl Mr1k• 1, the cem· 11 _r_ighl __ end_poso'--_·u_on. ____ _;pl;..a,cylng-''--i-nsp!red.;_-__ f_oo_t_ba_l_l._l Pecple c( 7Ae _...,. llllty of m.nklftCI and C1 II I . COLOR 90-M,." rTC" "MOTION ,,...,., icr thot 00ty tn tho p11rtfyl01 I r "'""--'"" t "-r-"' t """- ... ,. .t MCrlflc• 11 the 4,... .I ... fWtneta ceMu"*' aftd 'tM 1,...,... of the tium.n MUI pt frw . . ." John o . Rockefeller we seldom think of the fO\lnder or lh<> ~n·al StM· da.rd Oll empire a.'I A. philOM>- phtt, but ft0t'k<'ff'l\f'r'11 ob· 1ervation contains a boslc t:tf'!Jth that merita "'ficction. We 1lrt all happil't' wtirn •~g a. uaeful service, "'° matter how n,._1t1nc. When our work Is done for the ~flt of olhl'~ · · · u 'ihe CPe or mott porrnt., for eomple ..• lt o.lmort. al· ',\Vt.YI t11volvrs MllTI" it.11cr1f\ce. )Ve_ do many thine• we would not du If our own ~it v.·as thr 111le c:rt- '.terla. and M?:Ulshneu pla.yt _. very minor 1•rl, If Al\)'. tn nur Mil.)' HvM.. Our eXJ)eritl'IC(' and dc!ep un- dttttandln1t of human nf"f'd ~bltti 1.1• Ill l<'rve trff!C. •ttM.ly and well. a.'I "11! have rstnce our foundln1t In 182'7. :. C.:HBFFBR. (Jf;J mo&TV.\KY I LAGUNA tlACH )'1t SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY r 494-llJI SAN CLEMENTE ,l,JJ HOllH El CAMINO If.AL 492-0100 ~J~i'AN t:. ......... _ EVERY~ ASff:CT a'"LFE N ~ l 51..tDW·OCIOEER 8-'2pm S.C.Ccmm.Wtoou9e Aud. I~ Soallored by SCl"IC. GardenCU> don't know," Hill says· Hill m u s t be having nightmares preparing f o r Westminster, the county 's No. 2 rated team, and he admits that "if we don't get up for the game it 's going to b e disastrous. "They beat us 27-16 last year but it y,•as 20-16 in the fourth quarter. This year there·s no way to predict. but if we played like we did last week it's liable tCI be 100-0." While Hill is impressed with Westminster's runner.i, he notes that "anybody else they want to give the ball to behind that line will loolc good. - They've got good slu! and quickness and are very ac· tive." Leon Lauds Valencia Dana Hills coach Tony Leon Is looking for some diversity from his offense this week as the Dolphins prepare to open Orange League competition against Valencia Friday at Valencia. "Our kids have been depen - cling too much oo Bill Spring· man and Mark Eljenholm,' Leon states. "We've got to get a running game established, and use our other receivers more." The Dolphins, who were defeated ~ last week by Rim Of The World. will be up against an even better team In Valencia, according to Leon. "I think Valencia is at least two touchdowns better than Rim or The World . and they are by far the best of the three teams we v.ill have faced after Friday nlglt,"' Leon says. "Thty aN! a tough team physically with a brulsln& ru~ ning attack. They \ell you wnere they're going aod defy you .. """' them. w. rullze they've got a passing game. but if We're gt>l~ to do anything at all we h.ivc to stop their power rurmina. '1 The Oolph!ns. wUh an all junlor and sophomore team, have made a number of lineup changes this week. the most imporl:int being the tW'lt~hlng of Rusty CoUlns f.rom guard to fullback. Collins, a 17Sopoonder ahoold be a more 110lld bk>cker for Springman and ~Uy pro- vide an Inside nJMlng tbreot. VOICE OI TONI Pa1en N ... '• TIM Pl"' TllM C-AltOf LAGUNA. SO. LAGUNA. DANA POINT. SAN Cl.DllNTI lu Woll lu "" "' -,_,., ... _., .... ..,,,_ O.t ,. c •• ,,. ·········~··· Serwlc.t loc. 411 ... IMta ''-....... ,.,.. -..mi Tlll't ,.,.. HB Trio Impresses With Stats If Huntington Beach High School is not unbeaten in foot· ball , H Isn't due to any lack of ability In the offensive backfield. Oilers coach Roy Brummett thinks he has one ol the coun- ty's best backfields in sophomore quarterback Greg Nitzkowski, senior running backs Paul FlskneH and Kyle Van Amersfort. To date Fiskness has car- ried the ball 34. times for 315 yards and a whopping 9.2 yards per c.an-y. Van Amersfort has nm 27 times ror 155 yard$ am a !i.7 average. But It's Nitzkowski, -who has pas.w.d just to times this season, who draws most of Brummett's praise. "for a 90phomore only IS years old, he 's performed tremendously," says Bnun- mett about the chap who will lead the Oilers against Marina Friday in the first &mlet League game for both schools. It will be at HunUng- too Beach. Continues Brummett : "fountain Valley really stuck him last week and he came out """ and beat ""· hut he hung right In there. "I'm really pleased with his effort. Hc'a one of the reaJOn1 we were able to come back in the aecond half." 1be Barons trimmed Brum- mett's team 37·23 and he blames the Joas on mental mJ.stakes and a good FOU11taln Valley team. "We ju.rt can't go out against a good football tum nnd make the mistakes Y.'e did the first haU." he explains. "We turned the boll over two or three Umes and -this was really emblrT&sln& -we had an orHides klck run back for • touchdown. "We had a lot ol penaltles. and In one ol the -"Ill dri-they W<llt SS yanll, IO ol th<m In pena!U ... 1•we m.ttde-• k)t of mistakM and I hope 'Wt've 1ot them out ot our ayatem." In addltlon to laudinll his bocl<Oekf. Btummelt found time to praise iuard Oa\'id ~1c:Btth. tackle Roter \\'alte and defensive linemen Bucky Bond and El6wMh Ealley. "Bond has -' • lot ol -bJe te.mns." Brummett says. "'Other teanw are doublin( up ... him and --triple i..rntnc h!m, a n d con- IOQllfllU1 FMey " ,...,.,. • lol " onMlfHJne lftuationl and he"a • sood f-11 pla,..r." Trout Plant • " ~-;;;;.,, oe1--:-,-,r.. -19-it-;;:.-_----·- Barons Missing Two Stai.-ters For Edison Collision Friday Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pickford has • good point when he d-the merit of playing rival EdillOO in the -""ti lrvlne League football game or the current campaign. 'lbe two collide at Westminster Hlgb in an 8 o'clock issue that may go a lq way In deciding the ....,_ tual loop championship. Dul thtte are a kit of other items OOllt into the game - most obv1ou> the fiercest rivalry ol any two teams in the Irvine circuit or the Jfun- tlngton Beach School Di.rtrict. "It's the aftermath ol the game that rnay prove to be a problem. Win or looe, you have to come back the nelt wetlc. I look at our schedule and Jt just about gives me a heaTt attack," aay5 Pickford. 1be Baron.' mentor Ucks of( the U.t and It starts with Edison, then EstBncla. then Lo! AJamllld ... Surprising LACC Menaces Rustlers "'Rlght OOwll the line ll's the same tbJng," be •ys. "But everybody Is pre<ty much In the same boat.'' The Barons wlll be tryicg to knock off the rival Chlrgen for the first time in their short history after klsing UU'tt straight -and two oC !hose setbacks 'cost Fountain Valley a ~ ol the loop cham-- ptomhlp and a ctrtaln spot in the CIF AAAA playoffs. LOS ANGELES -Variety may be the spice of life but Los Angeles City College coach Hal Baldock isn't cer- tain he is in favor of so much spice. Baldock is serving his first term as head football coach for the Cubs. who will race Golden West College Saturday night at Orange Coast College In the opening Southern California Q>nfcrence game of the season. "We have a very young team this season," he says. "PractieaUy all of them are freshmen. "'This means every game is a different one and with a dil- ferent Uneup. We are switch- ing them around a Int and right now I couldn't tell you the names of any certain starters." For the record, his leading ground gainer is a lflO.pound fu1Iback from Tei:as, Von Robinson. Robi.n:.on has carried the ball on 23 occasions for 115 yards while running mate Guy San Diego Offense In Limbo SAN DIEGO -II San Diego City College ever gets ill of. lense goi1"4!. the Knights could be one of the toughest teams in the Mission Conference football race. That's the opl-ul SDCC Askins ot tailback has carried 37 limes for 84 yards. Whal Baldock doesn't add is lhal the CUbs' passing game has at.so been impressive this season. Darryl C1ark, the probable starting quarterback, h a s thrown 48 passes and con- nected on 26 for 344 yards. proving he can connect v.'hen necessary. His leading target is James llubbard, a 6-Z wide receiver y,•ho has taken 15 for 280 yards and a pair of touchdowns. The CUM have won a pair of games and dropped a 23-16 verdict at Phoenix l a s t weekend. BaJdock says he doesn't believe In comparative scores -and perhaps with justifies· tion. At any rate, the Cuti. would be substantial favorites if auch were the case. LACC defeated Compton 44- 7 while lhe Rustlers barely won a ~24 decision from Compton last Frklly night with a last second fleld goal . l..ACC defeated Fullerton 16-9 in its opener. How does Baldock rate Golden West? "It looks like they art as good as anyone else around the league," the former San Diego State assistant says, "They have a very good run· ning and passlna: game and are v.·ell balanced. And their defense loolu tough. "They run the power series well, the option well. the drop back pass and the play action pass. We have our work: cut out for us on defeme ... Fountain Valley's slkt of- fense is hampered with the loss of starters Ben Dod.w1 and Dan Maltby. Dodson was involved in an automobile accident r o u r hours prklr to the Huntington Beach game and missed the entire tilt. lfe's available for action Friday, but Bill Ogden vdll start in his usual ~llback spot on offense and Jay Kruts:ingtt tai... his oomert>ack "'°' on de!ense. Maltby pulled a groin In the opener with Rancho Alamitos and Pickford has penciled ln Mike Goodson lo start at ol· tensive tackle. The Fountain V.U.y oll.,.,.. has stonned lo a dozen touchdov.m in its vktories over Rancho Alam.it.a.. and Huntlng1on Bead\. And Pickford discount• the 47 points given up on defense. saying, "oor first team def"""" i'11"t allowing any point>. Jl"s a depCh problem. And. you have I tendency to let up a Uttle .,,'hen you're scoring so many polnl:.s. "As for Edl9M. you have to stop Frtd Hemandet. on the power aod blast ltritl. The big fullbodt (Joe ll<metrakoll runs up inside you, too. That's their billSc ollenw end that'• tbe Ont thiJC wt have to """:· Ai·ea Sports Calendar coo.di Harry West as he 'rtltlY fOCt. •I "!._. ,.. . ICt~"fi!W prepares his club fer the in-sJ!."':f''~"'ti.~~Edt~''i'it lk'\}.t:~~:· • ·~·.:11 vasion of Saddleback Saturday &::.:!:". v111t? ~.c\"~J'!l::.W.,i; ~'T.,•i.:=rrr,:~\1. :'1-i 1 .. afternoon (1 :30) al Balboa "' ,,~~t,~, ~. o...,_. -1-11111 ~·Q~11, 1M ti ~.....,~,,.tool Stadium. ~:r,;;,.,"':.""a.,;' "I ~' .. ~•&1 ":.~. -; ~~;:~~"':"':! "We haven't done much of. ~~-J'...~-i;.t!!'.~ ':Jell. ''· L."" . "' '.¥:1 " fensively agaimt anyone-this df~~ ~~mcdfi·J::t r~ ' ,_ct ·. 1 • •• t::.; ' llki~ ,, ier>I• ' : " ,;;r""' lt: . season,' says West. "It's ali";;;i;;;i;ii;i;;ii;~;,i;;;;~~~;;;;;;~i;,io~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Oi matl<r of -ng a little BOUTIQUE more consistency. If we do we oould have a fine team. The defense is more than ade-qu~"' Knigbts, .. ), w..i. CLEANERS have a ltfolC" lt!C.'Olldary and ALTUAnONI I llSTTLIH are wry toogtl up front, but POR PAITICULAI LAIHll ~-·~-up<rience 0 1 Warner-Dale Center ~~.. Cornor of Worner & Sprl ..... lo, Huntington llMdl Unemen Jinvny Barber. • 842-2050 6-t. 240-pound !S-yeM oldli~~~~~~~~~~iiii freshman. CTalg fulw. 6-1, ~ and David Grech 1M. m> .,. the wt 1111 rrwx whlle Roclr;y l.o).Ut t6-I, 110) leado the ""°""MY- Off en!IV<ly, the Knlg!M are led by ldlchael Smith. 1 IU. pound -~·· Jlt.'t a t.a 100-yard duh man who ran for 76 yardJ and 1 toucbdoWn last wetk in 1 17 .. setboc!: to Riverside. San Diego ai..o hu • talel'Md qu1rlerba c k in iOphomore Ctne WoUdUef who West ">'' hu not ruched his potenllal u yet. Wolfc:llld ..,.,ti«! fOI" the ~ ...., -ago, but -• thumb before the aeuon 11.arted Jut yur and had to alt tt out. Ke'• a t-0, 116 poundor. 'fbe Knight.I also ha\'9 IUf• fered 3S-O and 10.0 .tetba(:Q to San Ditan ~Ima a n d ~m. runri,_ their wirMls atre.ak to 26 g.:amet. The ll$t Ume they won wu mkf way Chrough the lltll --they .,., .. ""' Sonta Ano. 7~. In the nm to Int 1arne ol the .. ._1gn Son Dl<C• Ued °"""' C4ott. 7·7. •nd tbal'I the cloMlt lt'a bMn to I ......,, In tho :it plll<S. IEST MOYE °' YOUR UFE CALL 494-1025 0 0 Drivers who don't smoke may save as nu1ch as 25% . with Fmners Non-Smoker Auto Policy. CHUCK SPlfUlAIZO -HENRY EKIZIAN NIAMOft JOSEPH I 7911 1Mgnoll1, Fout1in Valley 962-24U e 545-1401 °' 11 Ttl ......... ,. '"""" ,,,,. ,. ............. ,....., 9'1.JA.11 w 14f.14f1 '411 ..... ,H.I. ltJ4UI --• . • I • .. • • ~ r i I I I • • ' ' . • • ' ! ' • • • • • I • • Industrial -lilc."Cll411oi9«.--4 fr!l!!I llli,~~·11\llC. .... ~_..rl1MI e M•tt.f tll•tt• 7 f • .Aii.• hl•11I. •••••ti 1•111t1r "4·l010 OVER THE COUNTER I I • ...,,., - COMPLETE NEW JORK S1'0q{ LIST -I' ( I ... • •' " , Oe~ , 1972 I Wednesday's CfoSiiig Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Rally by Market Runs Out of Gas s. D.<JLY PILOT TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ We Dare You ... Every Saturday I ' • .. t • '• . • I • 1 ' I 1 l ' • ' I ' I ' ' ' • ' ' c ' ' I ' ' ' • . ' ! ' I I • ~ . ' • • I • I • ' ... .. , • • • • ' . I . IWl.Y PILOT -Thunday, Octobtt 5, 1972 TUMBLEWEEDS 11 . , ii n '• " • J ! j I .. . -- ""'" Mun AND JEFF by Chester Gould EfJCW IT ~I.I' 'IQ.I c:AH, . IT Will ff '>'OUR I.AST. by Tom K. Ryan ~ v .. --·· .. .. -#!#w by Al Smith ,, ... --=-- DOOLEY'S WORLD. SAU Y BANANAS GORDO ---AND THIS WILL GET )'OU ATTENTION/ 'THERE'S ONLY ONE PROBLEM/ ~TI~ I Bl.CM''T'HE IST ENGINE STOPS/ GRAc.IAS, JOSEF Ar 60~Je'110 , ~'«ltl :r. ~~e.or· FIGMENTS NANCY I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS 1 01 • noblatnlll I Fool• 11 Oppolfttt of: Pr.t•• ,,. :·0ntv--·• 15 P091tler h- equ.-fu"' ~ 16 Cou111iv of C1.11op41: Abbr, 11 Countv of E"gland 19 Common COn1f•OllOfl 70 Nl(:•n•me !Of NlllhM 21 Spit! op ... 22 wom.,.., 2• H11,....1i1 ..... 26 o.,.r•tes • -· 27Asontt d11Mn JO 'lanl wi1h lh•Uolflw 11ow ... 32 D"'pge l3 u ---: F0t,,_ UN See•et.,y-o-• 34 llllml(ihtis '""' ..... ·-· l7 O•nv- JI An~rtd ''""'-' JtMr.C~ 40 AdiwNe 9Utfl• 41 Notti-' 42 J.eksttv 43 Become llYident •5 l"!lagtd for I ~l0<meno;1 «; Roof ol the m~h '8 Look --•g Tvpe~ilt 50 UnconcHled 62 Hi1V1 <oom '" 5$ Place of conllnerntlllt1 Sl•ng 61 R111 btliln-llrM 00 B1111de1 111 Anempted 62 c lfboolltltd l"9V0•11ge1 63 Sp3n,.h lltl>Cle 64 Sow• 65 Ht•dvwhell ot f u•l>P" DOWN 1 D»ybteek 2 ComPQUnd UMdwir•Ylt "-"' S1t•·~IPtd ligu<• IM- Vt!hocllt, tor ""'' 6 Aweogh 7 Or1e·•ow• we11.,. I S 111 IOfllr'f? ...... I Wrill .. talMd Yetlel'Uy'I Pu.uW SoN'ed: 11111eegi. 10 Mos! deploftlbllt 11 o .. n• rHC!f'l9 ll S11ilcingly unv1ua1 13 lodtol • worn1n'1 hair 18 Stl'lool t•..-rt 23 Cooling O<iolt 25 5~·-- 26 OlviJlofl of w ...... Z1 RNIUUltt '"' ,.,_ ,.~ ,_.. 30 Pklr1l of .. !hit" 31 FtcilMtt 33 Chil'llN lr11emtty 315 .. He't'°""" 1hing-·I" ,..._..., 38 SmaM IMW!d 39 Hl'fdW- 11~ Al Ol1C11Y11111 42 Cul!IYllling '""' '4 Wr11tlers' m~itU 46 Brew-. P!Odlftt 48 lt.MIHO,IM ·-47 Terfltil--c '""" lturtthlng of "" '8 G-r;,o Ci.-of f•tnc. 51 Mirnlc•H 53 NNp, IOI" one ... _ 56 . --o .. mtnv 51 MIM P<oclUCC u a'"' o1 burden Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers I M KJlt.I/ 'MOON MUWNS '----·' '" -· by Emie Bushmlller ANIMAL CRACKERS -=-::x::::::::i::..::..-c =·--- I ' PEANUTS c JUDGE PARKER WELL, I'M NOT MRS. BORGSON? !'AS YOUR JUST A GOING TO LIE! IF HUSBAND RETURNED YET? MINUTE ... THEY WANT TO TALK THIS IS LIEUTEMAHT .I'U .SEE, •• · TO YOU, I'M 11.ARQATE ~ MISS PEACH TELLING THE,\\ YOU'RE HERE1 ' ,..,, I I • PERKINS C· ..Tl.!!:. t"r'· , • ., J.~ by Harold Le Dou1 ' LOOK, IF HE'S NOT R~DILY AVAILABLE ... GIVE HIM A MESSAGE! I'M SORRY 10 HAVE BOTHERED YOU! IT LOOKS AS THOU6H WE'VE FINALLY HAD A BREAK IN THE 6EVERLY 6AR5TOW M URDER! • by Mell • ,, " - ,, bY Gas Arriola 1, JfU.0'11 i '1111 IJIC Mit er HA1it lMal OIJ ~OUit ~~ ~ae.15/ . . . . . by Ferd ...... by ROIJeflolen .~, \ ~ ... fi'f!~.5 "Pe....Uy, I wlsb '!0--1d II<)' QUI °lrllllcl - 1ovennneat ii all we've pt left to blame .., mea." DENNIS THE MENACE\ Q • I -I ( I • r ' ' ' ' I I r- i ' \ ., '· . . ' .. - ltvine Readings Called for Drama· An bonot)!d ltl•vlsion drama ltanslonl!"!I lo the sloge will be the nM production ol the Irvine Community Theater, With aud~lono 8llllO\l!ICed for Monday, Oct. 11. "Dear Friends," Reglnald Roae's 198'1 teleplay !or CBS 1'11yho<JBe, 1Whlch won an Em- !l'Y !or lis director, Paul Jlol8rt. wlD be pment..i in December u the second pro- duction ol !lie Irvine IP'OOP· The play · centers around Ui<M clooely.knit couples who attempt lo prevent the im-pending dlvoi'te ol a fourth J>iir,. and discover the Ne:wSea~n In Oia:mher Music Set ' . , The 1m73 season of the Uiguna Beach Chamber Music Elely will open oo Friday, 10, with a concert by the arian pianist lJll Kraus. t:ecuded by many as lhe ( CALLBOA.RD) weaknesses in their kwn marital lives in the process. Readings for ' ' I>e a r Friends" will be conducted at 7:30 p.m. tn St. Matthew IA.itheran Cburch, Cu I v e r Drive at Sandburg Way in Irvine. The play requires a strong, evenly balanctid cast of four men and four women In an age range ol. from late 20s to early 40s. There are no "minor" roles· Directing· "Dear Friends" will be Tom Titus, who also ls staging the season opening play for lrvine, Moss Hart's "Light Up the Sl<y.'I The latler show opens Ocl 1S for four weekends. Performances ol the Rose drama will be given for three weekends, Dec. 1-2, M and 15- 16 in the Humanities Hall Playhouse on the UC Irvine campus. Infonhation a n d reservations for both p.IJys may be obtaintd by calling • DAILY ,ILOT Slefl ....... So TlaereZ Nancy Wells g1..,. Alex Koba a_ pi"°" of her mind in this scene .from the comedy 11Mary, Maryl" which closes a five-weekend run with final performances Friday and Saturday at the Huntington Beadu'i~y­ house. !most living interpreter of keyboard masterpieces oC Viennese classic school. t ' • ' • ' Mliie Kraus will play Haydn, QUrt. • ~. Chopin and 64&-31711. : I 'S~er,Sllloke'atLaguna = - Black Opinion Divided Can Qu~i nn Portray Negro? B1 llOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Can • white actor portray a black hero ln today's race-eonscious WO(ld! Anthony Quinn thinks ao. Bui loqg be~ he has filmed U. blqirapby ol Haitian emperor Henry Cbristopbe, he bu encountered a fiWT)' of opposition. Quinn recently anoounced hla Intention lo fUlli!l a long- planned prnject: to lilm. the lile of Oiristnpbe, who ruled Halli tn tho lut century. The result waa prot.eab from black writa's, directors and actors who argued that only a black should play Christophe. Director-actor Ossie Davis wrote the l'jew York Tunes: "My blaclt children need black heroes On which to model their behavior .•• Tony, few all my admiration of him as a man and as a talent, will do himself and my ch.lldren a great dis.service if he encourages them to believe that only a white man .. _ Is capable of portraying a black hero." M EXICAN·IRISH QUINN has never been known to duck controversy, and he insists that he is going ahead with the Clvislophe film biogniphy. · QulM ropeat..i hil argu- ment that he has.not objected to noD-Lltloa playing Latin heroes: Wallace Berry u Pancho VIiia, Marlon Brando as Zapat.a, Peter O'Toole as Don Quixote. ' ' "I 'MYSELF HAVE played Greeks, Italians, Eskimos , Fn!nchmen," be said. "Why should I be excluded from playing a black? Racism ls not in my lex.icon. 1 will be playing a humari being, not a black man." QulM said he bad invested $210,000 in the Christophe script, titled ''Black Majesty,'' and he plans to make it next year for his own company. ded. "Why have111 Sidney Poitier or Harry Belafonte taken on the story! I'd &e delighl<d I! they did." Quinn i.s partner with Hall Bartlett lo a n o t b tr con- troversial subject, • 'T.h « Children of .$anchez:" The book about p0verty In MeJ.Jco City was banned In Mexico un- til recently, Quinn said, and there was doubt that lbe film could be made ·tMf'e. . "BUT THE NEW govern- ment is more liberal," he said, "A play version of "The Children of Sanchez" bas been approved, and we have 90 per- cent approval for our movie script. 1 think we'll be able to make It in Mexico." Next month Anlhony Quinn may be 1t.irrlnc up mort talk wllh publlcaUon of h 1 s memoir, "The Original Sin." The boOt promises to be es.- ceedingly trlllk. e.pec11Uy about Anthony Quinn. ''[could either Ue or tell the lrulh," the new author remarked.. "I-figured the only value in such a book would be to describe my life u 1 lived it. "~fy main conctm •·a~ whether my children could v~w me objectively. When l started to prepare them ror what was in the book, they said, 'Aw, Pop, we know all about you.' I said, 'The dames !' They said, 'Sure, we know about that, toO.' '' "Granted, there are other actors wtKJ are black and could play Christophe," he ad-J-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ AY 6' S SAT.&SU .12,45 Woody Allen's ' ''FftrJ.thing ®:1n~~ know about * ---CtlllDDME 20 .·,. .... ~.:::ir-•-.:ll'":'I .... --CtlllDOME 21 ' ' ' .-_ .. , •• '..11'..t.::. ---... -. SIAD/UM I :,' .. -~~-.·--- - ---·Ir• STADIUM·2.: "' --··,~·W L' ------·· STADIUM ·3 ' .. .... ,. .. _ •I .. '"1'LAT rr AGAIN, '-'M" .. , ........... ..,,_, Ntw PM._,...... Mlh ··-ef ) -~......., ,. .. ,... "l'IODL91t Off TWI lt00il"" M1rllfl ar1 ..... "TM• GOOf.lTM81t" Cltl • "TM• WILO aUNCM., Cit) •Ill CMby • lttillen C.., "'MICl(ET .. •DOGS"' lil"GI • "'ltllTUltH 01" U..ATA'" IP'G) lW M!Mtll "('AaAltflT" CP'GI • •1 :hobe'rt ~t the Laguna Beach f · School · nudilorlum, 625 Plii-k A•o. at S:30 p.m. -!Fenoessee f.i1Ua'ms• roman- tic ~ t "~mer and Smoke" will •be the next pro- duction of the Laguna Mou1ton Playhouse, opening Oct. 24 loc a three-weelt engagement. "Thia rontroversy has split blacks down the middle," be remarked. "CORE has given Paul Wilson, who has starred at 8:30 through Nov. tl 1n the me carte blanche to do the film. So luts NAACP. The in "Tbe Subject .was Roses" playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon trouble has come from pockets and "Long Day's Journey Into Road, Laguna Beach. The cur-of isolated groups who are "I.AST SUMMS:lt" {ltl ---.. SIAD/UM -!. " 1 '1 / '_ I • On Thursday, Jan. 15, the thjlmber mll!ic groop will present the Bartol< Quartet jlilylng Haydn's D Major, Opus 71115 and two quartet. b)' Beethoven. the E Minor, Opus 5912 and tho F Majoc, Opus 135. The Czech Nonet w 11 l · ocm the works ol Leopold ' uh, Jlrl JaniC:li, Louis and Anton Dvorak on undoy, March 29. ~ lour and five wind i)l8yers, artist> !roll\ the • CUch illhallitmlc, ·'PISY as a nonet lihd tn other combinatlOflS !or a '!'icfe nnge of.Bound color. ____ ......_ W.....~·l'IMll W.•MlllN!'=" Aho -IARIAllA HERSHEY IN"DEAUNG" Hap Graham, man a g Ing director al the playhouse, who is staging the Williams play, calls it "'a poignant and mov- ing dr!\D'IB that Is destined to take a }lermanent place in the classic repertory of American theatr;<:al works." Heading the cast are Denise Clements, former South Coast Repertory actress, as i puritanical ~ girl and Night" at Laguna, as the Iml'e rent Laguna attract1on is agaJnst the idea . worldly young doctor she ·Dylan Thomas' '1 Under "There l.s al.so a split adores. Milkwood," which is being between black actors of New Also featured will be Gene staged in the Forum Theater Yort, who are against my playing Christophe. and the Benedict, Annabelle Quigley, on the adjacent Festival of black ~ctors of Hollywood, Richard Stepp, S t a n I e y Arts grounds. who are for: il 1 think the ones Wlasick, Michael G i b so n , Reservations for both pro-in Hollywood are more pro. Louise MaroC, John Corona, ductiom may be obtained by fesslonal They see that th1s is Jacqueline n~~ntt, Mary Mer calling the playhouse box of-a professional question, not a i""'"' fice at 4'94-0743. racial one." diano, Sharon Harwood and1----------------------1 Bill Harris. "Summer and Smoke" will be presented Tuesdays through Saturdays ·~;~:r :.~"" IOtn.Y .. 'a T• .,l1 1p•n" llH c..ar, _, 191Mrt C•I, I• "HICKEY AND BOGGS" WlDAYS 6:45 SAT.&SUN. 12...tS t lCUD wtOMAllC "WMPfMI UHIMOll"(P.I .) ... "TMI tUlPIPPD U TTU COWAMT"(P.I.) (·~ U.I NAmltuJIO \\ ., ....... "' "WU.T'S UP DOC?" ti) .,., .. , ·~"'' T•1 11voll· ,.~.,..er•) '. "<;I~ .. •• -.t (l) . ~ .. ' "SLl,llllUAD" ; elNA IOWLANDS ''MINNIE •nd ,MOSCOWITZ" . .. ~._"""-. ...... .....," 7:t0 AND 10:11 ......, ' . All NEWAND llAUTlfUL IN THEATRE #4 i ACAOlllY AWAllD W1NNIRI .. , Art Dhetiin • lesl C.lurlll Dll9I ·----·--··· .. Nlchola •• Alexandra IN THEATRE #2 Lia ~ Michael 'fir~ ~Y. EXCLUSIVE INGAGIMINT IN TMIATHS I 1 AND #3 GllOllGS C. ICOTT llUCTDMJI DVITIM HOfllllit4M AHMI MMe.on '~E ·GRADUATE'' ' . • C1.tla1111 .... w:a.1s...,...z •· ... ,__ ''TAKING OFF'' M11lni ira~ij! " ~ti~n ~m~ ~!~ !i~ira ~~t111~n 1n1~1 ~mll tillil* lllloilll \~! ®° ~~ -iND TO, AnUCTIOll .... --(llp . _...,.. .......... ~oo= SHOW RATED (ii) "RETUR R OF SABATA" 9:00 c .. 11 •• s..-, .. ..._ · 2:ot "HICKEY & BOf~" COLOR PlUS ·LEE VAN CLEEF "llTUIN Of SA I ATA" Pater Sellers ivtmDoes Hllurt7' 8flr Whit 111 ..... JO AHN Pftllll • RICK WU ......... ...., ....... ,_,,_ c '11' -• • • • . • •••• •••••• •••••••••••••••••• .. ...c .. •I.Ill• .. , .......... . "'".._,_..._ ... , .. ..... ••?·-• ... v,.tu1oto,. ·~ '-·~·~11 .. ·-- Comfombly Air Conditioned ... __ _ .r.e....,, A~ • .._.. JM •• ,.. "'T11U• •1t"" ~AUfT TOVlt WAOOH"' .. "' •• c.191" 11"•1 BIL.LY PILGRIM LIVES FltOM TIME TO TIME TO Tllto!E ..• ,,, .. MJCHAl!L SACk.S of the <n-t"r.-' • Aid Hot • .....,......,..ctim• aDWAll08 HARBOR0::.1 RON WIMAN SHARON CANS YALDlll: JltftllJNJ: FROM Fashion Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR - ~ ----·~ OAILV PILOT Thursday, Octobtr S, 1 CJ72 ·;Julie Wins Reprieve I - :l Politicians Change Minds About Plug ' I .I\ By JAY SHARBUTT IT'S HAPPENING tonight .• NEW YOftl\. (A P) at 9 p.m. on ABC. where the : \ 'Because of a sinus uifection, first half of "The Men" will be •I 1'X>f! planning. vr both. the replaced by what a COP • ~: nrst 30 mtnute-s of ABC'~ spokes1nan calls "a f i Im : "Julle A,ndre\\·s Show,. wasn·t d oc uni en t n ry of the :• taken up Wedn1.·sct1y rught by President's reco rd , b o th • a pnid Den1ocrat1t· nd for foreign and domestic." President Nix.on. The spokesman said no lnstead, 1~ eritirr Andre\\'S decision has been ma de yet on sho\\1 schedulNI for \Vednesday further time purctulses for 30- ' night was 1nctef'd Sho\\·n. even minute sho\\'S abou t Nixoo. though this par11cular pro-This appa rent lack. of firm 4• gram had be<'n rC'$Cheduled to decision on \\'hen and where appear the night <>r Oct 11. hali·hour campaign spots will If this is confusing. in1agine £NJ[RJAIMM£NT be shown isn't limited to the what it is ror the guys at the m Nixon forces. three telc\•ision n L'1\\·orks v•ho The fin;t ~minute ad for have to rlcnr tlmr slots Sen. George ti.1cGovern (D- purchased by the Dernocratic S.D.,) aired Sunday ni ght on and Republican prcs1dcnual CBS. But only after his cam· campaign comntittces. said they weren't able to pul paign corrunittee made a last· Wednesday night may prove the program together i n minute time change to avoid to be just an isolated l'ase. but lime," said an ABC official. pitting it against "Love Story " ' it ''','lS the kind or situation "Mr. CoMally has a bad on ABC. that'll g·ive nel\vorks the sinus infection,'1 said a The uncertainty of it all is \\'iliies right up until the day spokeswoman for the com-making life extremely hectic the next president is elected. mittee the first 30-minute for n e tw o rk programming ·· Young Love Triangle • • It 1\'0rked this wai·o mine De ) nd be · I I pro nt mocrat, form er peo p e a t spec1a sa es The ··Democrats for Nixon" Treasury Secretary John B. units all three networks have The "DemOl'.'rats for Nixoo" Connally. set up to handle political time committee ordered a half· She explained that th'? purchases until Nov. 7. hour of ABC Ume, from 10 to former Texas g1:1vemor had Are th e sales units dealing 10:30 p.m., for the year's first planned to tape the special with coldly c al cu I at in g JO..minule paid televisioo com-half·hour program for politicoes who have wel1<00- mercial for the re-election of Wednesday night until he was ceived television ad cam. Nixon. laid low by illness and forced paJgns to "sell" their can- ABC CLE.\RED the time to cancel out. didate? No way, says one and shi fted the scheduled Julie The cancellatlon gives the network veteran who declined Pat Shimpock Oeft) tickles the fancy o! Pamela Krumb as Andrew Yelusich simmers in a scene from "January Thaw." The comedy is being presented Fri· days and Saturdays at the Long Beach Community Playhouse. More Blacks Win Chances At Video Series This Season Andrl'\\'S show which had regular GOP campaign com-to be identified. Robl'rt Goulet as its guest star mittee the first ZJO-minute "They just seem lo buy as By BOB TR0~1AS fighters in "Rookies." as history teacher Pete Dixon -lo next \Vednesday night. television salvo on behalf of the spirit moves them," be HOLLYWOOD (AP) AJ\.10NG 11IE other new on : "Room 222,'' with Denise Then early tttis week, th e the President. said. Black performers, rare in a shows featuring black actors; Nicholas as his love-interest •·Democrats for Nixon" com-t I · · · fi "MASH" _ Timothy Brown costar. n1ittee canceled its half-hour A ..A.. ..A. .A. ..A. .A. e eviSlon series ive years and Odessa c I eve I and ·. Redd Fon: and Demond Order. W""--upon .~.hl...•--::::''"'"'---!:.'"':!..-.--''"'~---:.>-<::._ __ u'::_ __ .':.'"':'._ __ ago will be more in evidence 1 k th '"""'" no"' 1u•"'".l' •'-A-.... ,R "Maude" -Esth-Rolle·. Wison are bac as e bat--tored 1•· •-•·e··-r-·•et B l 0 R Wl:41t-e-v.er-w~scasan. ..... '"" u..;: l'\.llW w3"'UVl.U tt "Emergeney" -Ron Pinkard tling "Sanford and Son." 11 ., · ·na1 b d a e 'Ver eruns As the 1972-73 season begins. seg men o 1 s or1g1 roa • television viewers will be and Lillian Lehman; "Search" "The Dean Martin Show" cast date of Oct. 4. -Albert "Poppy" Popwell; for the first time will feature \"hy was the o~·r can-seeing more blakcs. This is l 1U'<:: "Bridget Loves Bernie" - a black regular -comedian ccled?Two viewspreVail. Sh • u f TV true even though the number Otis Foster; "The New Bill Ni ....... y Russell. Also Martin's ··The committee officials aping p or of series has shrunk with the ~ FCC's ruling de pr Iv in g Cosby Show'' -Lola Falana, beauteous Dingalings wUI be networks of a half-hour of singer-dancer, comedian integrated for the first time prime time. Oscar DeGruy and musical with ttie addition of Jayne .. ,_~.,, '~ • ·oo••' •1 l•"· "';!, Sl,·l~X A.DOOZIY, MAUILUJAM MAI JOI !P&I P\ftl(OlOl.(Olh '"tftUSTIOM (lllOIKU"' 15) I •"t~'" A,• .,e,. or ~ftO!! 111·•070 • IOttlTC•I' '"llKllT & tot•S'" t•I ,l•IJUt .-u nu• "llfUlfll 0, SA•ArAu IP') •,•n 0,.-' I •1 C.•D••l•a~o o ..... ,.,., •lT·Ol•~ AU <OiOt 'oUUl~ SltOWI ClflUlll•• ... I I! •111 "'S#OCWJ, COMI ltOMI .. (f) •••• "llUI WA1'fl, Wllll'I OlAl'W" (II 0111 wt1• ll .... , ..... s "ITAWS DAUlllflt .. (Pl) P\ltl:/ NllO TllC*.U "Jl•llT" (PG) C.ro•~ 1 •••••1 !l•·l111 WOOOl AUlll PITll'llllllG '0" AIWA,1 WAllTIO 701llOW•IOYIHll•TWlll ., •• 1010111 .. 111 •111111u11s110 11111 ''lff "'Wlltll DOii IT llUlt" ~I) P1•1i(ll0. "iOMIOflll llNIJIO TIU DOor cr•1 NEW YORK (AP ) -::-In two pronounced instances, t h e merry month of May has brought only gloom to the three U.S. television networks. Each time the woe has come from the Federa l Com· municatioru1 Commission. Eleven years ago, the month brought a declaration by then-FCC chainnan Newton Minow that commercial television was "a v a s t wasteland." 1n May nine ye an later, the FCC adopted the conlroversial prime-Ume access rule. For a year oow, the rule in effect ha! stripped each network or 31/z hours of highly profitable time each week and returned it to local staUons. But this year's month of network gloom h a s been changed to September. HOLLYWOOD craft and talent unions have demanded quantity-more new programs and far fewer prime-time network reruns -as a means of reducing wide spread unemployment among their members. The networks estimate they now spend 45 pereent of their prime time -8 p.m. to 11 p.m. -broadcast.5 on reruns. A study of Hollywood unions says the national average is closer to 60 percent. They're asking the FCC to limit reruns to 13 weeks a year and require networks to present an ad· ditional 12 weeks or first-run programming. The networks insist that production costs already are so hi gh that they'd suffer heavy rinancial losses if forced to buy more new programs than they now do . The real network agony officially got under way last 'Thursday because of a Jetter President Nixon sent John Gavin, head or the Screen Actors Guild. JN rr' Nil.on said he agreed. increased prime-time network reruns constituted an "economic threat" to film in- dustry members. And he pn:>m· ised to look into Pemedial action by the government i1 necessary. FCC chalnnan Dean Burch would comment only that he believed the FCC had the authority to limit prime-time network reruns. The three networks were asked ii they felt tile FCC had that power and whether they'd go to court to fight any rerun limitation the FCC might order, if it ever did. CBS said its lawyers are 0 still studying lhe issue," and had no other comment. ABC had oo comment beyond its Sept. 14 statement in which it said it opposed "the concept of government intervening ln the programming proc.ss -an exercise which violates the spirit, if not the letter, o{ the First Amendment to the Constitution.'' NBC had no comment other than the question wu "novel" and that "our legal counsel is looldng into the issue." The reason for the increase director Quincy Jones. Kennedy. is pressure from the govern-Five or the re'.turning series GAIL FISHER continues her ment and Negro organizations spoUlght black stars. Jong-running role as secretary and concerned whites who The winner and still di.am-believe that black represen-pion of tfle television variety to Mike Connors on "Mannix,'' tation on television is long sweepsta kes is NBC's Flip and Don Mitchell returns as overdue. A I s o, advertisers Wilson. Greg Morris remains Raymond Burr's aide In consider it good se nse; blacks a regular on '•Mission : "Ironside." Mike Evam will buy their products, too. Impossible," and Clarence again be bugging Archie Blacks star i/I three of the Williams Ill on ''The Mod Bunker on HAfJ in the Faml· new shows. am Cosby has Squad." Lloyd Raynes returns ly." returned to television wit h a --'----''--'------'---------- Monday nighl CBS variety show (be also presents a f.O:!:::!:::!:::i~~;="!'.:'.!:::!~;:=~C![!::!:el children's show on Saturday • morning). Cleevon Little, who won a Tony for his Broadway performance in "Purlie," is costarring with James Whit· more in A B C ' s "Tem- perature's Rising," a hospital comedy. Georg Stanford Brown plays one of the crime- Dance Show Adds Date The Orange Coosl College Dance Department has an- nounced a special matinee performance by the new Matti Lascoe Dance Theater Com- pany Sunday at 2 p.m. in lhe OCC Dance SWdio. The maUnee was scheduled after the company's three evening perfonnances, Friday throogh Sunday at 8030 p.m .• were completely sold oot . Tickets for the OCC concert will be available at the door at $2.50 for adults and $1.50 for students. Seating i.!l Umlted. • • • • • :· ..... ;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;:::::::::,:::::~ . ~. ' .......... ' ' .•• p -••• e TM mo'llt9 Mght9 up LIZA MINHID• • • ' ' • j· . I ~~· 1011 ... .11 ... Hl .. "'WtltltMUn•tf"'(I) .., • ., •• 1 & nttl , ...... "'..,., 1 r lli11 NWUti ,_ fl! • " STAllTS WED. OCT. 12 al SAME 3 THEATllES "DOCTOll ZHIVAGO" • tM ekyl AN ARTISTIC MK.HA.El 'l'Of!K ~~~~!!'[ ............................ • • • • • • • NOW IN THEATRE # 4 ACADEMY A.WARD WINNER! JAllT SUlMA• MKMAR .t.&TltOI : ........ Nicholas • =~"IOU'"'. and • • • Alexandra (GP ) •••••••••••••••• .. .-..... ~ ... - 1 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ---I~ I -... ~ J~ Gen•r•I Gener•I ~;;;;;;.;;;;;;;:=!~~~~' Golf Course Home DOUBLE "'P Large J bednn home w/fil'f'- Lari::e 5 BR, 3 baths; famUy . place, on front of lol, and a nn. w/frpl., formal din. rm cute 1 bcdrm rental on rear View of Mesa Verde Qlun-of k>t. Present tncome from try Club. Owner building both is $345/mo. F'ull price . "'w home, will considec $29,500 long escrow or lease/back from purchaser. Call us tor details A appt. to 11ee. CORBIN- MARTIN WHO'S THE LUCKY ONE? Howport •• RARE APPEAL East.s ide charming 3 Bdrm., fa1nily room, frplc., Lari:e patio with brick Bar·B-Q • great for outdoor en- tertaining plus alley access. Only $31,!KXI. FIXER·UPPER Can Be a OOU. HOUSE! Owner has moved to Ala.ska and must sell this sharp 3 bedroom and family room near South Coast Plaza. The best buy in North Costa itesa. Full price $29,500. CALL 540-ll51. Open 1:ves. . '· HERITAGE 2 BR. Near N'pt Hel&hts •' Asking $22,500 REALTORS -NEWPORT BEACH- VA REPOSSESSION Just released • 3 Bedrm 2 bath home on a large lot with room for boat or trlr. Everyone is elegible t>r new VA loan with only $750. down. At $30,750. in Newpt. Bch it won't la.st! CALL 540-llSl. Open Ev~. --: . HERITAGE REALTORS TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD CALL Ci) '''·J•1• ~ RIAL TY Near Ne-..rt P••I Offl~• * WATERFRONT * PIER & FLOAT ti.lodern, immaculite 1-level home on R-2 lot. Frplc., F.A. heat. Quiet cul de 1&.c street near Lido &bops. Im· med, occupancy. $TI,500. Absentee owner s a y a , "seU ! ., associated BR OKERS-REALTORS 2025 W 8olboo 6'J.Jb~) FORECLOSURE $24,650 One man's loss can be your galn. 3 Bedrooms 2 baths, overaized double garaa:e, brick fireplace and good carpets. Large )of. with com· plell? privacy. Low down payment. HURRY! &46-5880 (Open Eves.) ,. < :. HERITAGE . REALTORS I ' " [ =~nglfllEX] 1 "'!'!'UP-FO~R '""G!'!l'RA!!!!!!!!!!B~S 3 bedroom, 2 be.th, new sha& carpet and fresh ,paint. l~ An)'.Ol\1? can take over the ---II! VA \>an and $158 per morrtJl; -pays aU. Grab thia Wallttt" Classification I 00-124 & Lee exdu&i.ve now at the lf;;;J price of $3'.i,950. -•Homos~ Cl•sslfication 125-149 I lteME1Uite, ....... , I~ Classification IS0-184 I FNnc:ltl I~ Cl•ssification 200.260 -...... ]~ Cl•ssification 300-3;)5 1-... -l[t) Classific•tion 360-370 ! w .. ~ I~ Clas5ification 400-.:465 I -.. I~ Classific:•tion 500-510 I -.. ~. I~ Classification 52S.5li ...... _ ,~ Cl•1sification 550 .r,55 R.ealtcn ~ I ---=Ope=n,.;Ev=es,_ __ 1 OWNER ~1ust sell VACANT J Bdrmrf' 2 baths,· crpts, drps, firepl. Llke new condition. Priced; at appraisal $30,500. All terms. Close to South Cou Plaza. Xlnt buy, ~ COU.INS &: WAITS, INC. 961-5513 .. * C&W * ''TWO LITTLE HOMES" on a hllklde clean &. fresh as a daisy. Good eu:tslde area. Live in one and rent tho other. A re.re find e.t $31,500. AJI terms. Realton ~1 Open Eves. * OWNER SAYS, * 1 * "SELL NOWI" * 4 Bdrm., 2 bath, bll: famUy rm., 1D'x24' worbhop, 1o..J malntenAnee yard. Good CoSta Meaa location. Full price $30.900. wft0% down, *FULLER REAL TY*' I ~ 546-CMJl.4. Anytimo Wtrvctlon I ~ Barn-Style Home · · Earth lovrr's klnd of Jlvln'! Cl•ssificatien 575-580 \Vann rircplnce. Kids rooms.' I S.W. llnd-,..1~ ~~~tch<'n. SJ0,900. Dawt . -~ REAL ESTATE Classification 600-699 TREASURES I 1[1 • 11831 WnitctiU, NB 64.5-6770 1 .....,,,_ ? ~ -· * GOV. REPOS. + Cl•11iflc:ation 700.710 3 s.droom1. 2 B1thl I I~ N'pt 6'acll $30.~0. $~ On. .. ...._ ~ Cos!ft MrM. $24.650 $1450 On. . Authorlud Brolc1t ~ Q111ific1tlon 100-8}6 * S41-6.570 * I -• -JI ~J 1 'Sho'""n"!s~.u~.~~t!l",o"!t!!!!!J!~!~.~"!oe"'R..,..1, Ct.1siflc1tion 150-858 DA, kit bltns. la ram m1l frplc, new gold lt\q ~ l . ...,,.,. 11·-.ll' I lhruoul. Dbl• aar wl<'ixri _ _._ ~ _ .. o~ner, ~ pall6, privacy Oa11ific1tion '00·912 fnt-'d. Bkr ~7850. [ 1-l•IMn ]~ Clas1ific•tion 915-,49 -..""''"" l[~] Cla1sific•tion 950 .. 990 • • Walk to !leach l·Sty. A·i'ran\e. 3 BR .• I ba, Beam11, bltns. Tonnllf ponl' l'H!flfby. S'.12.900 Fl CAYWOOO REAL TY 1 * 548-1290 * Need • .. P1td'"' Pttice an .S! -j -· -· -~· ..... Everyone Has Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY ·PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial '642-5678 for Fast Results I _ ,,,_ I~ ~' -_ ....... ~I~ l~I --.. _ ....... I~ [ _ ..... _,,. _ I~ ._I _-_ ... _ .. _.JI~ I -· .. I l~I --.. Fount•tn Valley ]~ l~I G•neral Generftl 4 Ul'lillCllJI' li()Mf' HIGH ON TOP OF THE HILL AND -thru a private gateway into-a secluded patio, then on to a sharp 4 bedroom, family room ho]lle with a rim of the ocean view. Mirrored fire- place in living room and another in the mas- ter bedroom makes this a very Unique home in Cameo Highlands. Offered at $67,500. Colorful! CONTACT UNl9UI HOMES of CORONA DEL MAI, 675-6000 U~l()UI: tl()Ml:S G~neral General DO YOU LIKE A VIEW? This lovely 3 bdrm. & family rm. home has a "sit-Oown" view of the entire harbor. Yot.i will enjoy the sparkling harbor lights right from your own easy chair. $59,500. CAMEO HIGHLANDS Illness in the family prompts the owners to sell their lovely 3 bdrm. & family rm. home. quickly . . . and, at a bargain price o( $62,500. General General HUNTINGTON BEACH , •.•• •... TRIPLEX ALWAYS rented because ot the Jocation. This triplex has 1-2 Bedroom and i-1 Bedroom. For the smart investor at . . . . . $38,950. HARBOR AND OCEAN •.•• . . . . . . VIEW Enjoy it all from this 3-bedroom, 2 bath home with 2 fireplaces ( 1 in living room, 1 in dining room), buillin kitchen. See harbor lights at night from your own garden patio .. $64 ,950. l4"4tiM-Slllitl, ~ All>ASSOCIATIS REALTORS 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR.CALIF. 644·7270 Gener•I Costa M••• 1-;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;;I OWNER transferred. Ligh1 Builders Speci•ls I• and airy home, 3 spa.ciou~ Hom• SitH FIVE BEDROOMS bedroom" 2 bath" Eleg•"' SO. PASADENA .•• A View 3 BA, GI no nionr)' doo•n. Ureplt.ce In family area ad· Sites, Exclus1\ c At e a, La11:e hv rtn w/huge ltont' jacent ~ built.In dream kit- Owner P.fay f'1nanct'. Ell.ch fln>plac_·t'. " '"' upgraded chf'n, e~n a dishwaaht:-r. $12,500. . crpu. & drps, all hllln appl'i, Lovely pallo. lrnmedia11• E LS I N 0 H 1: •.•• Lakeside irg kitt·h, Nilllig area, l'lc-pouealon. No down G.l. Villagt', ~ "' n er may ganl enuy. lrg masler iuilr t~mtS Ir: low down non-vct'i, f inance. $2,j(l(). w1pvt ba!h. ,\ n1us1 to !ie'e. BRK, $30,llOO, 8'12-2561.. C LE.ND ALE ... View of $39.950. G•rcMn Grove Catahnn, Plans for :\ BR. 21 ~ Bath Hornt' Jncludrd .• , WHITE ELEPHANT $9,350. Call 61tH>:u5. 3 bedroom l bath home, f'1-4471 ( =J 546-llOJ: sharp nelJi;hborhood, needtt C ii . pal"t. ISOO. """"' "'" '"· I~ I~ BARE FACTS Oru, $24,500. """me 77. GI :: :* aix>ut thi~ proprrty: Sellt'rs ~ALL THE REAL ,;,[_li_·: are n~Vlng to horw rant"h ESTATE FAIR and \\'Ill help buyer wilh ; iu&sootAltY 01 11H (OiWIU co. oosls. GI boy<'r $JOO total SJ6..2551 POOL PLUS "°''" Lowly 3 bdrn> in Huntington llMch prime C.Jl.f. area, only ----------1 Enjoy thr sun1mC'r In 011·n huge pcX>I, vlu~ • 4 Bc!droon1s • I larthvoocl Floors )'OUl' 1.12.000 all 1f'rtns. 20th SL & NO 00\VN Tust111 A\'., C.~f. NO CLOSING COSTS JUST YOUR GOOD CREDIT CALL 812-1418 REAL ESTATE Convenient parklng~asy to be a "DROP~IN" at Bay &: Beach Realty General G'!neral 675-30001;;;G;;;on;;;or;;;al;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;";;;"";;;";;;al;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;; * Low t\111.Ull('fHlllCI' • $.14,500 * Please Coll ~2313 •t£~• A tw.y, 111·ann home for UI<' holidays can be youn. THINK ABOUT IT \\'hat could be a nlct>r &:ift for !tu.• Ont'I )'OU love, they de!lf'rvr It and ao do )'OU. 3 Bedroon1~ an<I I a r g 1• fnnulyh,hnlng rootn, ll'/1% baths. Jo'ully builtln kitchen, 2 car i;aruge and to add to Illar 11i·n.nn !ouch a I Christmu, a fireplace fOf" Thi· kids to hang U1C1r stock· ill&'ll on. \'ou 1111.l.I love llM' l"lt'lghbors, thf'y're o u r frit•od.i. Don't wait, lt<I ~fc\'ny sho\\• you the way. CAl..L~1. ** ** ** * TAYLOR CO. * NEWPORT HEIGHTS -$97,000 Spectacular view of city lights, bay & ocean. Exotic oriental decor. 3 Bedrooms, formal dining & 3 baths. Convenient location. ''Our 27th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 l.f •neral General BAY & BEACW REALTY ' '"·-~ ~· R••O ;i •II• ,_,I ... REAL ESTATE * 3 BDRM, Aegean Hills model, Mission Viejo. . ....................... · ... $38,900. * 3 BDRM. near ocean ............ $26,900. * 4 BDRM. near ocean ............ $54,900. e LICENSED SALESMEN e General $24,500! I WESTCUFF AREA Want to talk about a real opportunity in Real Estate sales in the Newport Coastal area? NO DOWN -$40,950 Please drop in or call LARGE RUMPUS i .. '.,1.,JJ.,w,,.. .. .,1c.,n.,11.,D.,'.,··.,N., • .,s.,. ,,..,,..,,..,,..64.,>.,1.,22.,1., 3 generous sV.ed bedrooms, 2 gleaming bat.hi'; built-in dream kitchen. I s o I a t e d rear living room -charm enhance<l hy inv iting fireplace. Enclosed front yard. Delightful covered patio. One mile to beach! BRK 540-lnlJ. ROOM -POOL ""nora1 "•necei J ust begins to tcll the slory I;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;;;; about this Ne"1>0rt Bea.ch CORONA DEL MAR $28,500 6°/o LOAN home, an exciting poolside Just listed! TARBELL atmosphere that f I o w s through the large rumpUS room with fireplace and stepdown wet bar. Three bedrooms. 646-TI7L 2955 Harbor. Costa Ml!ll& i A good ~ant ad IS a good m. vesnnent. j CLASSrFIED will setl tt! General . General BEAUTIFUL LAGUNA CONDO . This is the last word in relaxed ocean side living. Pools. tennis, volleyball J>r:'ivate, w/ guards. 2 BR., 2 ba., 2 car. Some view. Spot· less. G. Grupe. PRICED TO SELL See this really sharp 4 BR ., 3 ba. home in WESTCLIFF AREA. Enjoy 2 frplcs., & la rge (am. rm. Lovely poolsize yard. You own the land. $72,500. Bud Austin LUSK-HARBOR VIEW 5 Bedroom 2-story, view, pool . Profession· ally landscaped & decorated. Better hurry on this -it's a beauty! Jim Muller DO YOU NEED 5 BEDROOMS? ln Corona del 1'1ar I·Iigh area, 'vith 3 ba1s., faro . rm. & din. rm? We have it at $66,000. For app't. call Howard Well s JUST LISTED -VIEW Turtle Rock "Pres.", former model. Has the look you've been waiting for: 4 BR., tam. rm'. Super kitch. 2 Patios. Prof. lndscpg. $82,500 -Fee. Paul Quick COZY COTT AGE -Coron• dol '°"'' Under $40.000. Walk to the beach. Mini· mum u p k e e p. Good 2nd_ home. Charm galore. Brick frpl c. 2 Bedrms. Triona Bergin FROM LAGUNA TO NEWPORT 3 Arch Ba.Y·2 BR .. D.R .. ocean view $64,500 Big Canyon-fabulous home site . . $69.500 Monarch Bay Terrace. 4 BR., F.R .. pool, view. Cathedral ceilings. 3 Car gar. $89,750. Call Bob Yorke 114YSHORES CAPE COO Great area & home for best !amfly living. Roomy 4 Bdrm. w/den & form . ;Un. rm. Just steps from private bay beach. $69,500. Mary Harvey LIDO ISLE -ON W4Z1ERS Flexibl e floor pion -con be 3 BR., study & den or 5 BR. lmmac. It. well maintained: beomo, cllarm, lovely patio. $85,000. Cl>&I' lene Whyte LINDA ISLE LAGOON Exciting new 5 BR. home on Unda !Jle. 3 Frplct., 2 wet ban, eledroni~ oven. Totally upgraded In ill areas. Eileen Hadson l334700. -- Coldv.Jwl.Banker ~ 644-1430 550 N!WPORT CINTIR DR., N.11. Spacious 3 bedroom home \Vilh do"·nstairs family room and upstairs living room Just 2 blocks from !!>< O<eM - VllCMt &: ready for $7'2.500 -10% Down REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 TRAVEL BUG BIT Ov.•ner anxious to take off in his new motor home and wants his super sharp 3 bedroom family room home i;old fast. Shake roof. bloc-k \\·all fence. tlreplace and lots of extras. See this one first at $31.950 Call 5'40-ll51 (Open Eves.) • .. HERITAGE . . REALTORS DESPERATE TO SELL Owner must move to desert Assume 6~ VA apr loan now Gn property and y o u r n1onthly payments are less than rent and include truces, interest. insurance and prin· ciple. Lovely borne with 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 baths, elegant fireplace to gracious living room.Gourm e t ' s pride builtin appliances in· elude dishwasher. Beautiful thick padded shag carpeting th r .uou t . At tractive landscaped yard and patio. BRK 540-1720. TARBELL 29S5 Harbor, C.OSta Mesa SPYGLASS PLAN 74 3600 plus sq ft in this 5 bdrm, 4 ba, plus bonus rm home on a V.I.P. location. Central air oond., intercom &: built· In record pl ayl'r. No-wax vinyl, shag carpetlng, \\"al- out cab.inets in kitchrn, pool- SIZl'd lot & breatb-takin&: vie11> ot ocean & coastline. Yo:· can celebrate the hol i· da.yt in your new hOmc. Call now SlS0,000 Including land. for hca.Jth reasons. 4 BR, REAL TY 2\.1: BA. 1.rg. roting area. Univ. Park Centl'r. Irvine 6)redhill frpL &: xtra lrg. yd. Good CalJ An)1ime, 833-0S2.0 Fountain Valley locations. Office hours 8 AM to 8 PP.1 All tenna • Price only ~;:::;;:;:;:::;:::;;:;:;::::;:;;:;:;::: $31,950. ~ -----COLUNS &: WATI'S, INC • .,,__~-- 962.552J INVEST IN * C&W * FAMILY "NEED SPACE FOR HAPPINESS BOAT .. TRAILER" RAl.CON!ED BAYCREST Thia hie four bedrOOm on a. Room for nerythinR; and huge 1..wner lot hlu room ~er)Ol'k'. 4 Bc-dl"l)(lnl•, din· ror all tl'lese things plull 3 irig room, family room, dt>n, hethr and " hcRutlful atOl"lf! llll'Jle lll'Wina or hobby t'C'll'Jnl fireplace. Jt'1 vacant &: and pool! Radlant ht-t.l\na, ready. Drellm u.i1 your ov.•n 2 flt('flllW."et, l car 1111'11.gl". termt 111nd ii;ubmll, but hur· • •• .. •• ........ · · •·• $98,500 ry! 129,400. Pm BARRm = '.'. 11 11 ,>, I I I ftl:o:alt.on ~ Optn ~- U•eable Home Likeable l'ric• 3 bedroom. xi· family room with fir~ph1<"r plus a 2) x XI rumJ11.1" mom. DIN'lllf'nt Eutaklr CJlllfa ;\IHA loc'a· Uon. tr• full Gf ch.um. t~lnd !Im~ •th'f"rllltd al Ui,ZCI. c.u 6*-71TI. . ~EALTOR-- 6<Ul00 OWNER must It'll IM!Yt'nll thOusand brk>w m • r k et al~ for redeeonllna. 3 •pacious bfdrooma + <kn, ta~ tan'llly room wtth fin:plftcP. add It I on• I firepl.M..'t" ln ~riowl lMnc room. SUmmtt p.1rtlt-t In tll<' patio. J r ~1!11lr rrout1df-pa.rk -ltlcr larwilcaplniri:. N~a.r library, beach. ICbools A. Mopplnr. BRK. 129.950, ~172>. io ·THEREAL "\.'. ESTATERS c.2 ~-i-~_._~Ol;;;nt;;:=c~-;;&clo~ I HOME A Bl!SINESS lo< ""' -rn 1nrniou. couple o-10 l Br, 2 Ba, pool, -,1n-Ir all~ 17th Ir Orancr. C.M. S.1.\150. Dell&hllul m.:m fumbihed. 6 EMERALD IA Y lmmacul•I• J llr + fam nn, VM R«IOttd lo Jm.m Tod Hubort " 4111oc. Mn vi. woo m.s&00 ~ • "Pad"1 F"-('lt an adr olin~a Jt>le PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT IOI Lind• Isle Drive 111n Beach Blvd .• 11.s. LOVELY LRG 2 1ty 4BR, hOmt', 21 J ba, fr,>lc, hltin OWNER ~as lcltch 1lsh/1.11ih. tUrn. SACRIFICING llugl' ya.rd. SP r i nk le r s Lovely 5 BR .. 4 ba. home with do,vnstairs waterfront mstr. suite & lge. game rm. or study .fvlexican tile floors, beam ceilings, quality construction, s lip. $155,000 e Largt', near new Duplr~. S-ll OCKI. CM·n!'r, 976 Ot'n\tcr Jl.llOO iorll. $7S,500. OPEN 1-D_'_c··_C_._M.:.. -'"""-'-""'=.:.· --- I loose 126 45th SL, ~.B. Dane Point e Approx. S lllTf's San Juan SPEC. YW'Y.'. 3 BR & fam rm Capo. 2 nil lo S.U. Fn\',Y "'/frpl., 2 BA $39,450, 3325:.! For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: $56,500. titesa Vist11. 493--3359. CaU 642·85:m Nl'::'\V DUPLEX ...... SIS,950, .E:;•:;•:;t_B::;:luff:::, ____ _ BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 81y1ide Dr., Suite l, N.B. 675-6161 l-2BR & l-3BR apr, Jjl [.I · Bny, C05 lfl t-.1eM. 6"2~837. • 'MiE BLUFFS * By Owner, 3 Br. l~ Ha, lo main! are1. $33.900 6"Hl100 • &JO.-Om 4 Y ean Old ~ • \VATE~Ol\'T 46 ft. _pie r UY CM·ner. LtWc ~UR , J liA , $28 950 ~ EXECUTIVES-& fk>tit. ;,,OCKI *I· lt. $\95,00J ror din Rm, cul-Oe--sa<' S1. . 1 "' MACNAB RENT TILL o,p1,. < ,, 3 Be. 192.""1 Xlnt .,,.,1. $7'l.OOO . ........,.. Th• " lh< """ for you. Ydli '.\ianihl:lil Jh•nlty 6T:i--t600 n1u!ll !W'f' thl11 :\ bc!droom, 2 IRVINE YOU BUY OCEANIBONT. 4 BR,;& .. Fountain vanlY ""'" ...... "'""""' "' ....... •----~----"io1.1n<'r \viii rent this huge 2 f11n1 nn., \l't'f bar. elt•gant 2 nrlW.borhootl on• I•~-~ LIDO ISLE Ph 1 6"r]~ 11M 1'1)flWn~nt to ..... -.._.._ BAY FRONT years young 'l ~tory , 4 -!!.tory. . or app1. •.rv<>..... MARK SPITZ 11nd llMWirt1t:. t'ttn1ut1t- ULTIMATE IN b(><lrooni, .pool home and 1Capistreno Beech GREW UP WITH 111nHI)' aree. for your lovtld give credit IO"'llrds The A POOL IKM'll $'1 Mwn or nlA/V,\ LUXURY do"'n payment "·ith each t'OR Sale by own I' r . . · Don' ., CALL Price reduced for immediate n1onth's rent. Owner must Capit11ra1~ Beach Bl u 11 · · · anti "° clln your 1 hll· t~m~•· t ll'a.I • salr! Exqui!lite lx>yond rum· ·1· I I vlcw comer lot 2 i>IO"' 4 df'l'n. ~ !hl~ :rupt<r 4 bed· NO KC-~. sat"T\l("(' or person 11 · • ·;· room "·ith htmil)' mom and part'. 4;.· hca('h frontage. reasons. If you arc s.nort ?n br. 21~ ~·· formal dln1ng, rov~·rt"'ll pauo Sol VU1l1t for Elegant private master suite clo..\'n payment, don t miss den "'"'el bar, drps, 1·p111, nl $44 750 1o •THE REAL "\,: f:STATERS wf.p. Addilional 2 BR's. this one in a million chance lnt('l'(.'()nl. Com PI ctr I Y 0 Y BE 'A WINNER provide view of bay. Grae-to own )'OUl' home. fenced, pello. Acrou from \ous: handcratled stairway. park. Approxlmall'ly 2,600 EJ~I 4 bedroom 2 i;M:llh Top Q....U... •- n _ & 2" b lh ~-I I 5 . & I \\'Ith tam Uy room ('(IVrrrd -..-• f -J ....,n 7J a s ........ urme sq. 1. n11n. !o shpg "'Y· 1 . · AppralMJ I• In al 1211.son. kitchen. Unbelirvahly pric.:-d $62 500 nnc rncloAwt ptlhO, lu.•h car-nd whA bu ~ .. -• at sm.ooo. (G221 Realtors 646-ml B ~ Pl on! '196-502(} f)l)tx and d111i---... ncv.· gpnr1d· 11 1 • YI .. ,_, ... 4 S 0 S 204.1 Westt"lltf Drlve Y P · Y ' Ing pool. Nt>IU' t-vt'ryth~n.;. la~ bdrm.. 2 Mlh •'Id DOVER H RE Open till 9 P~f Coron• del M•,. Only S46.~. 1)11rk·llkl' yanl. 2 ~kl' t., 4600 SQ. FT. WIDE OPEN SPACES •·l~mt!ntary, new ly lla1ed ... Superbly built , immaculnll' ---------* NEW LISTING * llurry! 5 BR., DR., FR. ~tarble PALM SPRINGS So. ol Hw y. 01annlni: 2 L.nl;I ot Kllltl5 11i•alb, l"l\l~lrnl Call s.12-1418 entry & halls. Pool w/ja-txlnn, horne 1,ju1; 116.Chek>r"• i:•: inp, !lunn~ kllPhfn. Mm cuzzi. Irrepiacnblc quali1y IN COSTA MESA uni!. Xlnt cond. & \'l"I")' good ~ ;:7::-~·,'t 1 1."°''~ :! !:Minn, • --~ ... , coruitruclion. $198.500 fer locutlon. 111 JiM· S51)"1 · 111• n 8 nlITlt"f .._ ...... , That's the fcelinr. you O'l'I '-, JOO' -•I" ·-!IOO land.Barba.raAull('642·8235. •-& •·· *RENTALS* "' c'""-:'' t ' when you apPf'OQ<'h lh1s l BR, & •-. s~ •,to. .\l.J~ ~ 17171 Ben.l·h Blvd ., I.BS, !Gl2) IOVf'ly 3 bdrm., 2 halh "~" .. ..., ·• •• O\\'NElt aru:low,, SI0'1i V)l TURTLE ROCK HILLS nislom built honil', rom· 3 Bil., 2 belh1 . $300 ~10. \tf . qn irwl yoo r mottthly in. One of the lov.·t>St priced pletely surrounded w 11 h MORGAN REAL TY • 1aIImen11 are 'aw, homes in the art'a. Lo\'t<ly many palm trffA & b1Clf'k 6 _7_3'15664jj2ij;jlj~';6'jj7ji5~~i"'59_1 !~~~-,...,..;,,,...,.1 11nm1'MAlc.Pr'" µt1dr built-in 3 BR., 2 bath. Vaulted ~am "'all len<'t'. Lovely Jl8fioe. OPEN HOUSE a pp Ii an c "' 1 , rwn ;.. l'l"Hlngs & prof. det'flr. m~lrnun1 privnry IU'll'I low OWNER mwit .ell. Molt dWtW&Aher! OrW' day ~ $61,500 fee land. Jant" F'ra1.c-e maintrnenC"f'. Pl°k't'<I 10 8Cll DAILY hn!athlaklng land1'Cftplna. a"at6 ~.,,.,.. F'rtr tw~ &t2·lm5. tG l51 a1 $29.500. ni~" lovely ~ ~'<!mom 110011' uniqUil! lnit'5, colorful lhrut. pool. LA.ah low malntena"'P' DOVER SHORES Cttll 54tr58'1AJ 10prn t.:\'n:,J ",111 srll thi, 'A'l"(•k! ~!ORI a.nt1 nOWt'ni. l.af'I~ lam1ly llnd1eaplflK and an lnv1~ ONLY $79;S00 populo.r Lusk one itory in mum, 4 Beftroom11 v.11h in-patio. 4 Brdrwm, h\trl• Lovt<l.y 3-4 BR fion1r. rn & lfarbor Vll'W. Bral'll'l nr1.1·! viii!'$. ttnfp.lact, d In I n I fnmlly mom. WU<. $29.soD fom1a\ DR. A 11ultc-fur tet'J\8 room kr banquMJI or 1n-1142-6691. or privacy for molh<"r·in-rt.kl". &Th--722'1. Um.alt• candlt'llJ:.111 rm-11111. I 0-WN--E-It-... --.. -,..-,-,-. ~No--~-1 Jaw! Fire pit . pool . \'IE'\V "'"'"'""'""'"""'"'""'""""" a DUPl.f;X · t'"~-el loc.· Ii Deluxt> bulltln k 1 t t' hr n , G.I. IMTnL Low-low do'Wn • 0081 ~IWl.Ct'. Sp6("10Ull ya/"IJ. ('Otlrf. 2 fir--) b6 t'll. ('0.\1. dlAhwa."hf'r. JlArwtlOlnf' bar. f'll.H-'f•ll' £xcJtlJ1R hor&o- Wa ltt>r King 644-6200. IG 3fH OWNER MUST SELL PAltF.. {)l.lrwor. 675.-100.1. llobb)' room. Palto, BRK . "'il.h a ~aulltul ~ .,..1 "U"-FIXER 2-STORY Pool $17,750! Buy th l1 2°1tory l>ArgB ln NO OOWN PA Y1'1E:NT Olt ONtY $200 . ._-h!t·hlf'~r "•Y YOU quallfy~ INCI..Ullt :.'i \YASl-LER , DRY!'..~ A.~D RE~1tlCERA TOil. T 0 fl ! Pt.US SWIMMING POOL~ llurry lo kt' c•ll &4UJOl. . IOHl\I I Ol\11\ • I • . ' • Nit·t> family hon1t' "'1111 :1 °''· I HAROOlt VT~" 1111 • •. 136 ~ --"'" ~ •"""'· ..v~l. 1•nt·lowd pjtllo for Y"•r rr1111., 1 1 ~ hlllh11: carporl \\ ~anvlew ' hr, 2 hit.. en1ran('(' for hoot M 1rnllf'r. Xlnl cond. Sl<l-l!'ll·I GREAT POOL BUY rou.nd PI e • • u rr • l Con..-t•nlt•n1 loC'atlon: '11'1..,.I~ _ __::::::.:..:::=..:.::....::::..:. __ [<>--tflul •"-1 POO lkdrooms, dt.n, all elikt:dr C t u._ pnoU ... ,~,Iii! Y "Award" buUUn ldtchltl. '°"''" work. Ownrr mu.oil hr OS • """"' h () m r , pro It! .. Qnally t.. in Tu1·N>n b)' lht> l1l & n«'fla I lanchcapf'<i, uptp'llde<d al\lla:, d~. -I ~ ptit.,. 11.n oiler! WE ARE 2 laf'Jlf' flrq>I•"'" 111nd Y•rl Brtrc boa.I am 1.nlt.ir- DUPLEX LOOKING FOR "'" Th~ "°""' i.u owr ::::;-·.:., • ,:"' ,.'.:;,. "'= Xlnt IOt·f!ttlon. Eul111dt-C01t11 SOMEONE 7100 iiq. fl. lhttty, Call W . .lOO, ga..ll'Tl. 1'11'5A. 2 Rdrm11. l'a1·h. Grll11I 1...,,.,,., Qui "' "'*" .....,.., Sl'ECIAL 4 BEDROOMj wtinl11 10 ..,11. PLUS ••~!LY R llLl21! 2 1ioty, 4 dt'n+ nr S R.nltrn 56-lftl rlV't"I MORGAN REAL TY "'1 1 . "--I RR, l DA, -oq n. 67• •~ 67' u59 "r'O('Jnl ~).t'('Ul ve I ...,.,"'· <>IW'n Eww "' --·th ,....., -\~11 ~I .,· but att• m ""· ""'&I•• ...... ~NCOME $345. I Nt-ar ~ ir Schuol. V.,ey O""Nt:n MC.Tll\ol'. ra ... •pr out. l rar ;car, Com_.idy MONTHLY I nk'I" litti-~ ".'an! In 1 q\Uir::I VA lo&n now on P"JPt!rt>'. 1~ ... P"fl wtblolic w a 11 JUNITSclotelo•illlhoppl1111:. krTit. No a.n~n IC. qu.Afmrd l.ovt'ly" bMrvnm Mrnr. lf'nt'f', t:XC!PI 1'nMdnc · Priced riaht •I $32.~. \'t'l,.rant CA IJ.. NOW rlq;anl ftttplaee In~ •vall. 71l7l Ptnt1ni. ~· CAii fOf' appt. to """· nt:t'1)fU~ TIIJS ONF. IS hvillf( rrom, pk1ul'I' y,•\n-118 B«IJ'f • .._DOO f"riet C"LL •uYTIME r.oNE. ~at J4S.tXll. ~ .. IM"...,.._• lfttlY lrft onb" ""'" llnrd IUWI. l:nll')' IWJ.,, ..... _______ ~ ~or Eve. 541-1651 rt'Ol'P"°n room. ltJr?MI din· ...... I ~···•II~·, I + Inc l'Olfl\, t>l«trk pu.h bul· r«-al!onsu.Nl t11n ~ll!ln lllt c hPn , 11~ nw• pei)» •II on lhla $22,500. ho... ..__ rt~•hwulw'r. PaUo. Jr . betlul fn-MI)' PAlntld, nkt(y HUGE YARD ",,.." ··~ ""'' --.......... '"""''""· • ......._ ....... ,. I-"========! A."-""!MF. 4r; "'61'1 an llhlrp 10 JIW"tUn! pttff'd llifl'tffoc' 1,. bntnn mNtn tn' I 1* Lochenmye k" 111".I• 4 •DRM 2 BA TH u &RIOR ""'"'"" l BR, !'Ii DA. lw. uoo• RRK. S3UOO, .,.._, ld<•iiiii'""' Min.,..,, d "" hl1I r.-.,.i Al>::K. w/w erpUi. 1, Noot u • •'" am Af< '"" HIGHLANDS .,,,,. 1>t :00, Ry -· -EXECUTtVE-Ole It'd& • •h11 horn~ la ~. LIVING located on an c-x1""""1y Olok? N-,ion Deach tarnily -· In u11-.f tx<dsoona 7'~ bliith 5Si.• ( IRJ Ut-• ~. 1•-y Mlahbortiood Cnnwn1iron1 to RY owrrr. 5fH91tt. s nr. rfM ,.,..4n1 , .... fir'l'M , ou r ~1111~ ~ awt p11rt (IH"'lt:J' 1111 I&;"!" 2 toe. IM 10.~. ~. l&mU1'i. .............. "" ramlly will rn)'I\• thf' C"Om· ~nd "'l1dl"bU 1 h 0 PP '", I "•·II• l'l S2t.CM ~·._. ttlnl.nr n>0rn p1u1 ARnSTS BF.AOt I for\ab!C noor jlllln and ltW --K'l"l!Jl...-U ~' .-Im-mllf' fmn'I Ol'Mft. wktt optn AJl&«A. $17,mtl. 0uum1,_ lhr""• bto.tnYom, HY ,,.,...r bNul 4 BR ~ rinlr ptd. tutnlUndtd b)' 21 bl!oitmom-., .tY.!y 1 •ml Call Sf&-2313. l•o L.&a ••Uh IAfl:" 'I Mr.I rf'Tlflf. d,.,.. &< bllM. UJ -aT paril: Onl)' ..,._1 d!Nnr hlmtly ,,.,._,, y,flh fin·~·~ •rr T!4 CAmrll\a lA JO-t:ill. lll.ISO-M.me ,._,.Imm =· 1..., 0.,_. w*lw lioo«f ,~THEREAL · ESTATERS . .. Ila"""'°" fttwn, ""ti..., CALL THE RIAL ~ An'• • e ·" rron1 aJU'1.)•rJ J*tiu qu1t1 11CJ ESTATE ll!AIR ; ....,,.. miattw-t IL• t = ,._,, ,,,, "''""" A Londlord SJ6.US1 --· llKJ\ -IL sEA!~!.,!,... , C. F. Coleswo11~y 1 ":. ~ ~~., !~=.1~"'~. t,..llR.,,..~"",.; ':!" bedroom. J bath, 2 odQf')' & Compaey =--~ ~l'h..2 ~":"'""' 2 4 un dllu'rner, ~ ~: 1tw:i1 W.ttd. wW t.Jmfl In'"""' b'tllhl. 640.0020 11.1..!Gt Ow""' .,1u:::; ~ l•"d•t'•pln1, ~·~:a.. l&twtn Cbuntf')' ldx. tnlrlw:", bYN.I ~ tm T 0 Ttu• 'l Wit ~ .-..w:: ..... I p • 1 Io . ,...,;,.,· :i:i:·.;i;;i:;:;--;:::::'::'"-,i:; I 111n1,.. l•rwt' )1'rd Md * HOME I I NCOMe et1tl • ~1 'Miii • OlmmUlltJ twim porJI 6 •t~'OTOH Oftt. 'l'IV'trllttd JlObt.. lta,,S..k> J Bil., tam ""· 1-I 8J\. ... OW" p!N'b. l. vll 11 r Io I• lilr\1't, 4 br, 2~ be. O..•r~ nflti I IJl\l,y , Cl.U tom.It Wiit 1"op °*"i Mt'M P n 1~111....... 0.m,.._,.,. lklow nvkt t I 1 , t 0 t . &421. ~I COAST IOr. rlcM to l'\'tt")thlnr; llvtnc tt a ttttr podp:1 ... J.\\\ ftL\l.mlt' o....,....r .,...... INl1 .,..,.,. ft.Nltoft prw.. ~ M 11w to. P'A.\4·;;r.o""'"-::::::-=..,::-.,::--:;t,,+•! ttl:s UNfl"K, ,...r tihopl. Kl,~. ()pM fl\"91 ..,... 6 .. 8R.. pttr'fld to tilll. ~ m..>ai Mn-di\. at BALBOA BAY PROP. h.'f rwuitt an JU.ft a ph.inr Rell•ble Reil E1t•te V,\JntA )#ft i.rwtn t11irllaf'411!! di\, ~ ~ * ..,,.,.,, * f1lll • .....,. 6Cl.a7I. M6-.Dn "''"'· ~ ... ~. ~~~. ____ .J • -----· -. ~--I . :a i,_•_._oAJ_'~v-1~_:_T ~'?-\e~J ~I ~-~~~~~-~· oa~~~sj~,9~:..~,.~ .... ~~ll~e~l~l~l ~-=-= .... ~~~~l ~I ~ .. .!.-~.~ .... ~ .. ~l ~~~i ~I ~":,!..~ .. ~-~~!~~~I~ iiii-iiiiiiiiiiiii"'iiii-..:1;.l e~Jll~iiliii-;;m .. l!l-iiiiiiii~]le~~l l~ --~ ... ~--;Jlei!!_~jl Loh for Sole 17' Hou... Funtlthod 300 HoulM Unfum, 305 Hou101 Unfum. Jll lluntlnglon -Newport 8Mctt Newport Boo<h Aporlmontl For Solo 152 I=;:._;.;.;...;;.;"""--- I AYSHORE TOWNHOUSE Clostout~ l,.ow f'rLl'<' Only ' $19,990 I Ti'lcal' nc'v homi-s ;1r1· l•"l\'il "'•l 10 1ninu1t·~ fron1 111~· f~ '" !1 & rlo~· lo 1na.JOr ~11 .. 1111111~ A ~hoo!11. Your ct10l\'!' ol cnrpt•l1ni.: 1tlll0 u11·J11dt11~ ,!ts;l\11..i~h<'r l: hud1uii., '.•1 • l)rl'ol 11 \\ p;1yllll'tll'i I!•:-:-!li,Hl $.'00 111•1, ·r1us IS a IUU!>I !>\'• l1PL' 11h>..._• WR111il1I! JOIS uf lu"'ury lvr ~ n1odcr.•!<' pr11't'· Call lur informal Miil. 962-5523 (Jr Slop Uy The S.alrs OH1rC' 1.A·11lt'<I un Nt·"'letnd, Be- hind Slr11cr & Talbrn. COLLIN~ & \VA TIS, INC. * c & w * SPANISH HACIENDA "OL'E!!" 4 l.tedrrll. f1un1ly nn, 011.ly :! yr:i rll'.'w. Fully ir11pro1·ed & 111'1--'l'adcd-nl!tny de1-ora tor itt•n1s. l.£JW! low~ mai11- 1t•11:u11'<' ground!'> V.'/lush ld<;e·p~. Thl' \\'flrmth of the bal'k yord 11·ith i1°s patios ;ind bcnC'hes \v1 ll give yo u 1h<' ff'f·li ng o r Old t.1e:-;u •o, I 011ly 'z niilc 10 l)f'llC'h. Full pric.:' W;i,000. CALL 962-~I I BROKERS INC. Lots of Beams Cathedrol Ceilin~ A fanra.~tic upgrndt'l l I\ bctl roon1. 2 bnth, 2 story ho111•·. Bfoautiful hcamC'd rl'ilini:: \Vith halcony 11vrrlookini.: lnfbr li11ng ronn1 nt'f'n. A vc·ry forn1al rlin\ni:: arC'a :1nrt I rarnily area ror cntr·r1ain1n~. l J-fuge master bedroo111. loo. You must st•c this cfh' for only $42,950. Call 842-2.",,1:1. PARK THE BOAT tight beside lhls imnuu.:ult£1t' 2 story 3 bedroon1. 21 ~ bath bl:auty. \Vall< to heat h a.nd park. 1''ull pric.."t' only $39,950. NEW LA QUESTA SAM MIGUEL Corner lot. possible boat a1 ·- ceM. 4 bdrm. 3 bath. 3 cur garage, sharp. clean anti upgraded thruou1 . Only $43.900 ... llURftY' C,\Ll~ :>'l."l·lll."~'I •• Pre-Grand Opening Sale I CONDOMINIUMS ·~· $48,995 Etcm!l-1 (tflYtt'llle~•I fl~IAClflt Lolly livlng awaits you! Act swiftly to se!ecl your own Newport Beach condominium _ Visi t the temporary oHices of the Newport Crest lnforrna11on Center. conveniently located at 2400 West Coast Highway Suile B. Newpon Beach Open Daily 10 a m.10 sun!:e: --j;'-~~""-~ ,, ......... .,,s .. to ..... c-.l"'lo<I· !ot Huntinaton Beam NEW PAINT 2 BR. wall to \\'all cnrpC'ls. huilt ins. l..;irgc <'Orncr lot, vaeartl'Y for quick 01,;. l'upancy. Only $1.000 rJ0\1·11, full price ~19,950. CAI.!. !lti2-R!!51. . BROKERS INC. --- Laguna Beach STUNNING . homr 11·i!h I\ hdrn1s .. p!u<; :: ha1hs: 2 1·i1r ~n 1•:tg('. l'a·turi'Sflu<• \\'OC>dland st>t ting. ~·anlastil· •r('1,;u1 .~ roon1 for 1·l11ldt-,.11. frzenrlly. 1·111\)·1111 v1P111 fn11n l111iru..: Jika!Jll' 111•iKhhorhoort. Pll'llS•' !'all Earl \\'nh'rhtll)' for lll<•n' d••lall.~. $$:1,~J:;o ~Ian REAL ESTATE BY O\\'nl'r: No qual!fyin~ 1 l~JO Gl(·nnf.'yrl' Take 11v<'t FHA. $!XIO tin. 494·9-li '.\ 516·0316 Exisl'g pymnts S2:i9. 3 Br, 2 TRl·ICvC'I ..:us101u hon1c. \·,\ Ba.. niC'c &. neat, crpts .~ fin.1n('ing avail. '.l Br .. 180 drps lhM.HJut. 833-1103. c~s I ()('Can vlt•\\'. 612-2312. $74,995 O\\'NETt c-xtl't.•tnt>ly an:.;1ous.1 ~ring is Buyin~ Submit no down G.1. tenns Portafinil La~una ti")' 5'/o do1A·n no~vcts. J 714/49-1-9'.l.'l.~ HARBOR VIEW HOSPITAUl'Y 111111 beautiful two story homt' has ii n.ll! 4 Bedroom. 3 &th, Fo.nnal Dining Room. Sunken livi~ room. l'oonnous kitchen v.·ilh In· fom1al i:aling area, fllfll:t" lan1lly 1'\10111. Vcrsalik-den or 5th bt'droom. Large yard "'ith 11001, patios. decking, anti 1,rofess1on11J landscu1>- uig. 67~m. MACNAB IRVINE Harbor View Hills Make Offer I landson11•ly nppointNI ·I BR -2 bath. 3-i~ar g:iragr. View! Ohs<'rvution cl<'L'k, !l.'.1- lios. f;:8S BBQ. Scll--cl;:an1ng U\'l'l\. PanC'l!l'fl FR. bar. Cu~· 101)1 l'Ul'IX'tioi; & dral)t'i>. l )11 nC'r hought ano1her. l\1ust SC'l l~ S>m.900, fee l;uuJ. [)l)na Chi,·hrslt'r. 642-!!2.'il. (Gil 1 NEW 5 U AT BEACH 8362 Allnnta, HB. 53!Hi719 Commercial p,_r1y 151 Commercial Bldg . For Lea•• 2"240 l«J, fl. frl'<' ~tnnrting bhlg. for IC'a.~. Ex1•f'llr11t parking, busy 11trl'el. Owner "'ill lf'a.~e fully furniBhcd, a• is, beauly !!hop or \1•!thout f1Xll!N-S. ThilJ t1lrlg. also 1<l1•nl ror 1!octor/dentist of· fu:t·. For furthl·r lnformalion rall ;,46.lfoOO, INVE~'T!'l1ENT OIVI'SION. 10THEREAL \~ESTATERS ' , ··r·. ·. , , Duplexes/Units sale 162 NEW OUPLEXES UUIWER SELi.ING NO\V. $45,950 Cor lluntirn;ton/Ad:im~. 11.B. 5J4.818ll Income Property 166 DIVIDEND PAYING Tv.·o T1·1plcxc .... Ells 1 ll id c Cos1a i\1csn. Esccllenl Hen· tal An•a. \Valk to Shopping. l.,11\\' f.1nintcnancc. Offered !or $110,000. Call 64&-«>55. start Your Balboa ls1Md Cost• Mes• Llguna Hill• Investment Program! Allttc. 'I.a acre view k1tJ WINTER. 4 Br .. nr. new, e BELIEVE! 1 Br, Cottaat. NEW 4 BR. ram nn, 2 8&. v.•/city water, within J mile ~t. S3Q) nM>. We haw St~. Tefrig. £/side. Sito. crpts, d11>1. bUn11. lrplc. $290 or inulti-miJUon sh>pp'g othcl"I ba,yfr'Ont or ll'\illt.le. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 per nKJ. Duy• ~7000 ext Ct"ntcr, golf COUf'Se & $Al.JSBURY REAL 'fY 15, Mn. McDanlel1; Eves I! frc-L-way. $500 Do\1.-n, $50 per 315 Marine Ave. 613-6900 e NO ClNCF.RBREAO! 2 wlulda. 545-096&. •-i•-d d 0 Br. lncd yrd. Encl gar. ~do"'"-~1~1 ------r.10. to'ull prlre $4995, .x-mni NEWl.Y , econi.le n>am Klds/pets. $l40. LI s • need tax break. will trad<' C.Ottage. 2 Br., Ba. frplc, ALA R t I • 64$..3900 for local income property. Patio. Ony1 G'13--0UO. eves •n a I McNASH REAL TY 6'1!'MW12 or 61J..0053. e CllASJI PAD! Spac furn 642-8400 Balbcwi Penrniule Bnch. All util incl. $75. ---,----.,0---:--1---------ALA Rontols e 645-3900 Mountain,. Desert, WINTER on BAY $300 3BR • Resort 174 2 BA frplc Cl'V \V/D G19 e NEED lifort' Room. l Br .. -'=""-"-------\V. Bay, b0lk to' occai;. :it nr schls, kids/pct ok. $175. Buy As A G~p Buena VI.ta with v~w. ALA Rontols e 645-3900 • Br. 2 BA, rrplc, crph1. drpa, rurn. Aval/ tn Jane 1st, 67:\-91~. Newport Beach EASTBLUFF \\11y not get some fril'nds to-67J..G467 or 613-6l50. DELUXE 4 BDRM. 4 BR./ FAM RM /VU geth<'r and make an otter on BALBOA PENINSULA Tu'O 810~ t.feu Verde home Unfumlid1cri 11.1 S52a per this nrot desert hideaway? Q\armlng 3 Bedroom. quiet nr. Santa Ana River. Large month. A prime p1'0perty in Large lot, Fruit trees, Heat· strttt. juit rtmodel~. Bkr. family room with fr'P:lc· ~P-oulstanding area. Nrarby ed Pool, Sleeping Porch for G7~1Z25. arnte dining nn. Swunm1na: school.~. parW, n1arkt"I. Va- Kids. 2 Large Bedrooms, 2 pool and Jacuzz.i. For leue cant , <"lean A "'Etllini:. C11ll - Baths, Good Bat and Family 3 BR, 2~-Ba, moderniud. 3. or lcaS@'/option. $475 mo. ,µ P.oom Arrangement for En. i:a.i:, park•g. $350 mo. 3C6 incl. pool care &. water. :"i~~ tC'rtaining, 4 Car garage~, r..tontero. 1.s79-5991. Vogel Realtor~. ~-9346. C'_ ~!?if 4 Car carport. T~ low ~a~i I Corona d•I M.lir 9 3 BR -$1~ mo lse/opt. (,«Sf ~::~ ti 2 BR, turn. close to beach. Freedom hOme • garage. 1 Perfect for couple. No !»els. Large fenced yard w/covd ~~} r ea f Yearly. $325 Month. patio & B-&Q. 642-222l. 2414 Vista del Oro Don Franklin, RJtr. 673-22'22'1 ;64&-~~96662-0:...· ~o;-:-,.;--;;::-o: Ne"•port Beach 0\VNER. 4 Br. 1~ Ba. Lrg 644-1133 ANYTI~1E: Laguna Beach fer\CM yard. Cul-de-sac =~_,.--,07.,-;c;o;::---:::-.:-:· 1 I I k $22."; -Lrg_• 2 Br. 2 Ba. redcc, $125 -Util Pd. Nice Bach. No. 11trect. 01i dttn pets o . end. Private patio. Quiet . Clean. $275/mo. 545-7~. Child, sml pct ol;. ·1 11 1 $2fill -3 Br 2 Ba. Blt.ns, deck. $150 -Util pd. New 1 Br. So. Jtef'.oi. Avai I . 2 hses fron1 bay. Laguna patio. Cat ok. * 3 BORr..f. 2 Ba, fenced yd, t -:i"" E · -• 3 n 'B 3 .,.,...., -xceptiOutu r. -a. $300-Oceanfront! Br, frplc. $250. per mo. New paint & BUns. frplc, 1:ar. Patio. lrg deck. gar. Beaut Vu ! crpL Owner/Agt. Peter NU-VIEW RENTALS NU-VIEW RENTALS Vlotto, 546-9164 or 546-8640 6'73-4030 91' 494-3.248 673-4030 or 494•3248 * 2 Br., l Ba. Townhouse, SHARP \Vaterfront Home. 4 Lido late washr /dry hoo kup. BR, lrg patio, gar. Dock ....,..,.....,..~~_,-...,--,1-I Patio/gar/pool. $225. Child avail. Winter or yearly. LIOO ISLE, beaut ~ olc. 833-8974. S 4 O O I $ 4 5 0 -6 7 3--0792, * * * * house, 3 BR. 2 BA. I& pe.tio, R · Terry Fergu50n across street Irom Bay. BEAUT. ne"' 3 B • .1" 673-0698. • 226 Crest Priv clubhouse inc I d g triplex. priv ranJ• _patio, NORTII BLUFFS -View, .f Huntington Beach W ~• 184 utll/gardener. Oct 15 to gar. Good location. G7a-l849. br, 21Ai ba tO\vnhse. }"am . r TRIPLEXES Real Estate amwu June IS, f150. mo. 673-4414. 3 BR. extra lrg yard, fl"plc ., rm. Pool. Cusl features. Nr ~ ar(' !hr winner o """" 2 tickets to the $41 ,500 * Quick Cash * 2 BR. 2 BA. FURN. CLEAN 2 car gar. crpt, .,... ..... per mo. schls. $395. 644-0275. 9,h Annual Orange Co. All & CHEERFUL.. THRU \Vater incl. 549-02'23. Vo"a"I 2 BR + Den. l'la1 TAIU: YOUR PICK \\'ill buy your property. ... " International * 3-2 BR units. N. Costa cash ,vithin 72 hrs. Call J UNE. S'TS-2.504 Sngls or epic. Vacant 2 Br. everything. Fncd ror kids & Auto Show l\1esa * 2 BR, duplex + gar. Bring kids/pets. pets. at th!'." hacll(·lor, E·sidl'. C.M. Newport Beach Rent-A-House 979-8430 Rent-A-House 979-1430 ANAHEIM CALL &12-Jm l-11-50:-_-0-:,'.'.H-P<:"l.'.'.h:-.,.-,-,,-:-u-d:",0-.I 3 BR. 2 B~ .. Mesa Verde WALl( to beach. 3 Bcinns. CONVENTION ()mu beaut rurn. Right on pi-iv. area. Bit-ins, lncd yrd. I & 2 Sty. $325 to $350 CENTER II/' pool. Sm/mo. 557-8000 eves. Caywood Realty a.tS-1290 October 11th lhru 1.lth Y°'"1 $180. Cd'.\1. 1 Br. Frplc. Gar Fountain Yaney l'l<'.1s1: C'tttl 642:5673. ext. 31 4 ~ ,£.• BROKERS INC. apt Gar & deck. Newport Heights l)l•h\'C'~nk9 and15Npm,htocclain11 ~ I I 962-88Sl $275 . _ 3 Br. 2 Ba. ~~rplc, dbl 4B R convert 1 ed . 1 to 3 1 '-'2 -8~R-.---rp-t-/drp~-,.-N-ew-ly· I vo11r t1C· et.'l, or oun Y 1 ~==-==""'"''""""'" gar. oceaniront! plus lar ge am1 Y rm, ... ioll·lret."nu111bcrisS40-J2201. NEW DUPLEX$48,950. PRI/pty,vantsvacant lot or NU-VIEW RENTALS fp l., super sharp. $300 rcdcc. Clean. Nice yard.I • * * * * featuring 3 bdrm., 2 ha. older home Newport, 6734030 or 494_324g per mo. X I n t . nbr-Emply'd mature cpl. $115 "Oi\llC'r's unit" \V /fpl, & 2 Corona del r.far. 675-7297. b d C tl Mr Sni' mo. No childttn/pet5. CONDOS BACK BAY \Valk to wtr. Bach $95. ?.toblc O O . a · -...,..,.. bdrn1 .• I ha. incontc uniL Sl05. Dplx Sl>IO. Util pd. der, 962-4471 or963-2107 642-iJ;JJ. \'.ll1l location. Large attrac-1 ~ Rent-A-House 979.UlO Agt. Newport Shores tive units. Quiet privaC'y. ~ • _..'..:"-"~..,.--~-::--=:;:--- Also triplPx for sale S67,9'".i0. * 2 BR furn house. on Huntinaton &each NEWPORT Shotts on ..... awr. ~<.' 151 E. Hay Sr., Cl\1, beach, to June 1 !! t ff' I R En I 3 BR. 2 BA, Fam Rm, !rplc. &12-48.17. $.'lOO/mo. &16-9291 or S.10-e DREAJ\1 S!E....:_ r. c Lease. !'d8-8!m E ES Busin•s• J... 2846. ~ar. Child/pct. Nr bch South Laguna FOURPL x Opportuni,. 2DD H u fu ••5 $12J. brdrooms, 2 separate hath!!, OCt.:AN VIEW GAZEB<> ho1nemaker's dl't'am builtin 3 BR .. den. 'J baths. Slate en. kil chcn. ~lightlul patio. try, sunkrn liv. rm ., fpl. Iii RRI<, $27,000. 846-0004. µraked t'l'll, np('n brams. REPOSSESSIONS )\!ra nic·e. xrra large. xtra 1·•'f'l'1'ation lacilitirs anl\ xtra i.:nor! Jrt.'>f·pg. 3 a nrl 4 hedn11s 11 J haths. up to 1:-GO sq rt. l'l·1('rs fro111 S28.'.l00 to s1·1.!XXI. \\1t"St siile of Ne11·- por1 Bnt k Bay. driv<' by lrvi111• Blvd & Santa lsa- hc ll(•. arid fol!O\V sign11. 10:30 A:\1 lo 5:00 Pl'.!. daily. Costa l\1 C"Sll. Under ronstn.ic· --"-~-~-:::---:::""" ousa1 n rn, ""' ALA Rentals • 645-3900 1 BR, trpl, ocean view, ~· tion. Bargain. l\11lkc money * * * * * encld patio, garage. Util pd. on apprecia1ion~asy tem1s. Ronald Cull I Genera=! •,,,~1AR,.?', 'k\d'•/Bper.i.f~:i·· $200. 4»-2133. Act quick. sn .. ""'. 26651 Vuelta Rica .._ ""' F R I ALA R nt I • ,,__. .. -.... Houses urn. or Phi! Sullivan, ca ior Capistrano Beach • a 1 ~"'"" For inlonnalion and location or these fl lA & VA homes, contact - i,:Jn.'1..~ ~ah/es. B!tn kitehcn. A prizl' \\·Jnncr r1! $.).),000. If ~1iiision Really 49.i--0731 Laguna Niguel 531·5111 ( ::.1 511-5111 548-6761 You arc th<' winner or WALK to beach, 3 ht', 2 ba, __ U_nf_um_,.· _____ 3_l~O• I EASl'·sidc C.l\f. house & 2 tickets to the all elec kitch, d-wsher, ept. duplex. Income $J95, pay-9th Annual Orange Co, Houle•* Apta. drps, Sep din rm, Fncd yd, mcnt on 1st TD $235. $10.000 International * 1•5·0111 * tee. $275 mo. Cll3l 697-0042. 3 or 4 bedroom, 2 bath homes for ren!, $2'15 to $250 . Available no\v. 546-1154. !""""'!~~~~~~"I Roal Estate JUST LISTED IMMAC 4 "'" '" Adorn• & KASABIAN 962""44 Nt.:\V CONDO on Eai;t 9. Hnrbor View ll om cs \'ICW golf course, 3 Br, 2 Ba. MONACO. 2 br & den. Im· O\vner, 6T..,..:il33. med. Oet.'Up. By Owner. ----------) 644-6249 Daily l·S. cash to loan. Total price Auto Show 433 w.111h COSTA MESA DRIVE By 84Zl Indianapolis. $.13,950. 0 w n er I bk r · n.t the $97.SO _ INCREDIBLE! 2 Br. 3 Br, 2 ba home. Bltns. $225 636-<MO. ANAHEIM mo + $75 de-· 12131 Priv hon1e. Gar. ~laturc .....,. o :.ALlllH ,-; ill FASHION ~lagnolia. Nrw w/w cpl. Lido 111• ~---- NEW OUPLEXES CONVENTION epl. 59&-294-0. BUILDER SELLING NO\V. CENTER * l;Clj=o"I°'CE;;---;;H;;;B;-;:loe::-. -;4;tB;;;r-.. ""i2 Condominlum1 (ho.'llC'r must sell. $30.500 or SHORES make olt<r. 96&-1454. * REDUCEO * Newport Heights Sparioua 4 BH. ·1 bn1hs; fam-l~!i~~i!!i~;;!~~~~ $45,9SO Oclober 11th thru 15th $125 _ STEPS to Bny! t Br. Ba., vacant, nice yard. New Unfurn. Cor llw1tington/Adams, 11.B. Please call 642-5678, c:<t. 314 rurn. Utll pd. Child ok. crptg thru-out. Clean & neat '."'."-.,---""°-..,---320 • ~ Bedrooms, 2 Bath.~ * Family & Dining Areas + KKls Can Walk lo &ach + Assumable 5%% Loan * Bring All Ofrers S:l6.500 * Call 84l-fi010 lf'vine ~ly rrn. "'ith 11•c1 bar. Frplc. TWO BEDROOM 536-8188 betwcen 9 and:> pm to claim * as a pin! $235/mo. 833-1103. Huntington Beach your tickets. {Nor1h County $155 -NEAR Beach! 2 Br. J BR., 2 Ba., bltns, 3 yrs. Cii?rs. drps, pool, RIO, 111 llllUifC'I' SUlh'. COUNTRY STYLE NO\V S.'C'J.300 ·1 uni1s. 2 duplexr.1, OLDER ll<}ME \l'ith lovely, .!lide--by--!ride. Easl.!lide. Very well maniC'Uf'('(] la1vns and clean. Pride of O'\Ynership. t:l·fre~ nunl~ is ;w-lz;o). Stove, CID. lncd I o r old. Clean, vacant! $285/pcr 11•hnlryr. rcfg, clbhse, 3 Br kids/pet. mo. Will sell $900 dn. $200, 4 Br $225. 548-1405. LIVING Ahno.oit rll'W 1 brl11n .. ~ tia. hon1r-readv 10 "'t'lromr you & your 1ft.mll:-·. A !ovcly h<>1111• !or vnly S:\7.500 & you 1\r11r Th" !t•rrnl'I' ~ lOU19CMJI Jsz. garagl'. for only Prtnc only. 360 !.:. 364 161.11 --$25 000 Place, C.M. 6'>-•'85 Liquor Stores * 833-1103. eves 642-2312. Laguna Niguel Dress ~p $175 -FRESH & Clean! 3 Br. 2 BR., frplc, bltns, condo.•-~---~----- '&. THEREAL ESTATERS 1416 ViM l.lrlo fi7:>-•1562 . 1 • FOURPLF.X, unfurn. East ·""=,-..,.=...,.-;:-.;-::::---;c-;;;;I Roy McCardle Realtor ~"-:i ...,,. "~-" \\',\N'r J~ldo fs k· :! or l BR 81 d C, Crnita J\1esa. ~.J<N. ,,.,.,.... Bakery N_ew crpts, drps, Yrd for $19:J. 19742 C 0 v en 1 r y. 3 BR, 21h BA In Sea Terrace, Beauty College kidsfpet. 83J.-U03 days. 546-975-1 eves. ocean vie \V, cpts/drps. r '• _.,-,, ' t>'I' VA NO DOWN ~BR 2 RA RallC'hc·r, silualt'(t on OV('l'Sll,l"ll IX'UUtifully lnnd.'ICitflN\ rC'nrerl lot \l'llh ,ciprinklrr.oi I knl'(' h1s.:h 8hN< crp1i;t & lov•·ly dtJ)fc. lt1'ft brirk flrl'pl. t1ltln 1{10, bnal aCL'l'l"I~. Xlnt loc. just $27.9".iO. 8redhill J{f.:Al.TY L:n11·. Park Ce11t('r, lrvinl' C11ll i\11ylln1~·. S:l;i~al Offi{'<' hours II A~·! to 6 Pi\1 111\0 Nl'\l.'port v .• .. 1. · c 11 up 10 $.'('1,000. J-lt1 vl' I~ equi· per n10. income-. a f) nr Country Club. \\'11J ex· 548-7719 Ownt>r.oi, 54.~-2106 or 54S.55Jl. 1·hangc or rcf\11. Call 1'<1r.l !'!!':~!!!!'!!'!!l!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!'!~ I * •l-pl1•x nr. So. Coast Plaza. J\;lont~on1ery. ltctt ltor f213l NEAR NEW· IN C.M. Deluxe 3 Br ov,.ncr's unit. !Jb."\-T.,7T. 3 BR. 2 . ba.. 2 trplc. .+ Bkr. :>45--2321. formal du1. rm. + + ~ :--;--,.-;-:-::---:-= Mi •1ion Vi1jo furn . rm. $41.!IOO. Industrial Propertv 161 BY O\\INER lovely 4 Br, 1·\ Call for App'!. NE\\I 7 uni! i nd u ~tr I a I Ra 011 col'ner lnL 20:XI sq fl. L.10~ REAL TY builrllng in prin1c location Nr school, all clC'c. hlln U77 Via L1flo. N.B. fi13-7300 In the city <>f Orange. f'ully kllchen. Air Con<I. \usto1n occupied. Gro111 income tlrpl"I & crpt, frplc In ~ $37,950. Price $275.COO. 111)11riou~ l 1 v Ing rn1, I Mobile Homes ] Jilll Contact: \Villiam Winton land11cal)('cl. Xlnt r on d . _ . Realtor GT.>-3331 S-18.500. 7141521-2071. Lota for Sale 170 HOLLAND Bus. Sales 1716 Orange, C.M. 6"'5-4170 Money to Lo.tin 240 1st TD Loans 6'11. % INTEREST 2nd TD Loans i.oo't'!Sl rates Orange Co. "WE BUY TD'S" Sottlar Mtg. Co. 4 BR + POOL Unlv•rslty Perk Ne"•ly d('('Orated in & ot1I Vucnnl, in1m('rl. po~.oi. :1 h<trn1~.. 2 bn1h~. huillln kile·h .• \\'f'I hnr & 1thl oJl('n !pl.. 1mrking fn1· 3 1·aN. 1\•alking dl~l1HK'c to Pftrk. M'hOOI &. shoppini,:. S.11,000. "'flO"I> clown. VACANT Mobila t+omes ...,. f•-n-Srrving Harlx>r are.1 21 yrs. 5r,, TOTAL. 00\\'N 125 NE\VPORT Beach "" ., For Sale ttt"C, vii'\\' of occun & * lt!ONEY to loan on real 642°2171 545-11611 $28,500 Pool home v.·ith lar~·· llui;t· 1lone: palk>. Pcrfrl'I fa mily enjoyment and ll\'1"i{ in this ~arp foot' bc1tl\10n1 hon11•. Brand ll('llo' wnll lu wn.JI car- pel -you mu11t 5('(' th!$ one. Call 847.fiOlO. Out Of area ownrr 111111! !K'll 1-----------" bl 2 Bdrm holnc lflC'atC'd in Contampo.Laguna Hiiis harbor. $65.0CKJ. S.16-3613 t'stnte. ReMOnn e rates, or (;INN\' f\IORRISON f"r-'n .. flll.,.,ion \1l1·J0· . Brick Only 8 ,pace' Jrft~ Actult 644-6262. will buy your T.D. ~ I I ... ._, * BROKER 6.t2--7491 * 0 THE: Rf.:AL · "'\.. ESTATERS .. • * * • ·RF.AL TORS-*W!) * 1505 Mesa • .v~ Dr. East • * O:is1a MCA& ' *•••* Sgf~ t Open EYcning11 t TUHTIJEllOCK !fills, 4 Br., FH. exec. Vic~·. Below fire~. eh-c t:>llins. Only 5 p11rk. Afljnccnl to Lei~llt'e Yl'5. old. Tofu.I prlt•e $~.900. World, ZUCll Rld&e Route Call 837·9400 Dr., (off Moultnn Pb')'.), KATELLA REAL TY Loguna HU~. 714/831>3'00. 23.131 E1 Toro Rd., El Toro HOUSF. Jluntin&! Watch UlC' Nawport Be•ch OPEN' l!OUSE column. * PIER & SLIP * •Waterfront. 30' 1.ot 7. Colhna 6i3-TI70. bO!l.t .!llip. Island . BEAUTIFUL VIE\V LOT in Emerald Bay $50.000 * 6T,,..21l.'ll * \VE UT&nge lst & 2nd RE loans. Alao pl.lrehase TDs. Bkr. 492-8332, 492-0424, -··ust" It ln classlfled. Ship io Shore Results? 642-5618. :l--1natkt·1. Al'110 lt:11!1e ·at $-1~ SPLIT RAll. FENCE rir<'lc11 rno. 1133-1710. 60 t't .. 3 Utlnn1 .. :t bftth.oi front of propt"rty. Pil'lr ar1d lmmacul11tc! $11(),00} hlltlging tit11.1flc 11't't'1 ncccnt _L_•~g~u_n_·•_B_•_•_<_h____ LIDO REAL TY S@\\.~}A-.!&£trs~ thr hcayy !!hi\J<" roof and FAMILY DREAM 337'1 Vlt1 Lido. Npt Beach <:rlAA-r..rou \\Jndow prull.'I. 4 * 673-7300 * or~ letter• of th• 1 Big bcdr'OOn111 + form11I din-Tl)p Or The World. Lgc. fOYt ~mbl.d WQtd1 b.- 1"8 room. An ohlcr propttty 2-sly. 5 l:klrma .• 2'~ hllths. ELEGANT CONDO low to forrt1 fOUf' simple words. n!'V&mf)l'd lh retnln chiinn. Fnmily " dinins m1~. Liv· C&iMe to ocean. l BR. 2 ti.., I K 0 8 M E R I t.nd add moctrm convcn-ina.:: rm. IU'ls beam C'l'il. & frple., pool 1-:M unll, aduH I' 1 I' 1 1 Jencct. wen 962-5511. lrplc. Lge. lcncOO Y•rd. community 10•;;, On. l'QmplCttly lnd.11epd. w/nlce GEM NEARLY new 281t It °"'1. pn tlo an.•rui. Asking $49.500. ;on---block to beHf·h. r u ... tom • -~ -• 1610 IV.~""' llwy,, N 11. I 11 d.._., ............. ""''""· -·~-REA1.roM G<Mtl23 ~-..ls,.,vl_w_,l,...o_Nrl -; i_ Mc. l.ovlf'ly p11tW>. C.oomwl ~-"'C04""' , • kltd>en/I., <W '~-1'Hro, __ ., BACK BAY I yoor chok'C. O p11.,nn.l llMM ~Clll• OPEN DAILY . Th• Pun/• with the Builf-ln Chuc/cf• ~ flf'{'Jlla«", 1-"mnt ...__ ...... o.-1930 IRVINE I T 0 I f r-rd need• ihTuh.oi. your C:Ul\T'O~I hOmf". lkllullful BY Ownt'r-4 K 11 r nt -t' a m t-~-~U~D~B-~_, Nivi"P at $25.!'0l. ~1ust •1· oct'nn vlf'w, UndeI')l;round nn.-Dtn. Rrderorated in-J I" I I A. c.omrort-foving bogyoge ~o •pprc cl,te ! ut\litl~•.lDr .. 2bl. /out. 54&-1431, 5'43-Q37. man: ~·He keeps •runnlng $69,"5 tfARBOR VJ.tow home , r,-..,...-.,---=-::--.,oround in his -· CABEL PEAKED ROOF Atrium-1''oun1Aln Palr:m>a, 4 Dr. ram rm. S 1 T P E C 10-1 / •hi lei. IlaMol and ~..-.-,-,..,,-.,.-,--t A C-loto 1M dtotdlo ..-1 ~rekl 1':cpaa.. 0( brlcic. 2 ~~ CID. landsc1ped. $87.0CKl I I J I' I I : ~J!"f!i !:._ ~"'": =. lldmut down. 2 bdnn• ·~1----r-,,.....----1 611).-01)1)8.-'-~·,-----.-,,,-~1 ·---·" Wood 1ldlnJ and outakle $64,H5 2 LJ,: dupltxH, nt!lrt dnor, \i: a P1:1,NHIEINIUMOISQU'•'tQISUltlR.S IN I' 11 Ii I' I' r )· shuttrn. Large rear yard. Unlimited occuin vi""1', 2 or., hik from ocoan beach. Q' . . _ _ _ _ _ Located o n ~.c. 2 M. $8l,OOO ttl. ~I 673-11.i&l. ( BKJt ~11. Port1fln1 Laguna t'1tt Profit 11 nualned when i) U~~·t~B~N~~~t: lfl lllS I I I J I J J 4 en 20.A. lwcurioul lntaior. 714/4!M-93S!I you sell lhrOugh rffil.lt11ct-. . " " - -• 130,000 ··vA. '™· Mt. ru1 ....ii. are'"''••"""' 11n" l><tUy "1'°1 Claallled SCRAM·Lm ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 lanvln reaUz Inc.~ call aw1tr. 64-2--:i611. Ad•. 642-ii611 1 _...=.=:::..:.:.::~=..:..:.....:.:=-.:.=-.:..:...:.:.:..::_ _____________ _ \ * Lease S400 mo. inc. Assn $2.15 _ !'AMI.LY \\'anted! 4 Alone 011 lot. Vacant. Fncd d 213 322 '""" --...i~ ues. : -""°"'· "'""'· Br .. 2 Ba .• gar, bltns. Avail $145. Crpl.5 ........ ";3o 213: 322-2202. no\i'. R•nt-A-House 979-8430 1 :c:---,-:-:-:;::---N•woort &each LANDLORDS I 3 BR & den, 1~~ ba, $235 mo. 1----------1 ffiEE RENTAL SERVICE tst &. last. Children & pet BEACON RENTALS ok. 96S-1445. * 645-4111 * L3;-;s"o"ru.=1sc--.2:-;:ba:;,;:h,:-.~b1;;;1n::,. l·luntlngton Be.ach are a. Oiilrlren & pct OK. $2'l5. Sharp 3 bedroom Dutch per mo. Agent. 962-4471. BRAND new exec. home. 3 Br., 21~ Ba. The Bluffa. $500/mo. 1st & la.<;l, $250 deposit. Aval! now. 833-86.15. Townhouse Unfurn. 335 Haven home. Nc1v ~hag Irvine carpets with match 1 n g -· __ Huntington Beach drapes. Sparkling clean. ., Rent Is $230 per month. 3 BR. 2 bath • · · .. ·• ••• $330 3 Bedroom, 2 bath Costa 4 BR., 2~ ba, fant rm •. $350 Mc11a area. Double gnr~. 4 BR., 21A, ha. fam rm •• $425 covered pallo, ne'v paint, fenced yard. Far rent or op- tion at $22() per month. Call a ·:Jid l<I RI\ 111 "! 111\i -1 'i·:lil. , . I -.. -I i 1·11 l11r Realtors ~ "SINCE UMG" Open Eves. l st \Vest.em Bank Bldg. 3 Br, sparkling n I! w , rrpt/drps, bltns. pool. Walk to goU course, schls, tenni.oi & shopfl. 5 ml'll to bch. $240/mo. Eves. < 2 l 3 ) 69&-3240. r..IATURE adults. 3 BR. 2\ •. ba. New carp, drp!', paint. gar. Poot $300, 54&-6966 rutr. LANDLORDS! Unlvors;ty Park, Irvin< Days 552-7000 Nltht1 Our,le••• Unfum. \Ve SpectaJlui In Newpor1 3 JJeaeh e Carona de! Mar • r ... ,t:i Me•• & Laguna. Our Renlal Sl!:r-'.t l~f(. 2 baths········· S:~ 1-----------1 vtce 18 FREE to You~ T!'y '.! llR. 2 baths ......... $300 Nu-View! I lilt. 2 b11th1' .. , .. • . S:i.iO NU.VIEW RENTALS 873...f030 or 494-3248 ired hill BE AC H RENTAL - Shorp 3 BR., pool, cluf>. houN. $295. yr-around ll EALTY Call STAN MEYER, Univ. Pk.rk Ccn1cr, lrvlne Rltr W..5ll0/549-13". CaH Anytime, 833-0820 • •--Office houn 8 i\A1 to 6 PM Laguna .... ch Lovt>ly olrl n11tnPon 4 Bed-laguna hech 2BR. blllns, rtfrhr. dr11pr..oi. crpl. t chllrl & 1 pel olt. $.HK> monthly. &lf;-2350, 2 BR, 11-' bn, crpt11, drp9. rrfrig, encl patki, RA.r, No Pl"r~. s100 mo. &1,._m1. Huntington Beactt J'l.'F.W 2 61'. Prlv. )VII. DfihV.T, crpll/dl'plf. pr. $175/mo. S3 6-7633 « ,,,..""' room. on ~luded arrt. NfiwDOrt Beach • all bl f rnl..o.-• 1,. $115 • 3 hlk.1 btach Allntc nV a_c u •1<:1.1 ff • 8". "-·•• VI-', B 6 1225 • '-"'..:.... ~.. NEWPORT l.~l,. D" I u x _ kr. •:t-• S2Z . Ll'E 2 Br. Nf'W C'rJll•. "·"1rrfront w/plcr. no.1, 3 Corona del Mar bllnt, dfrl:. No. ~. Rlt, 2 RA , bllha, rria, frl)te, 2 Ba •/ • hi $325 • Ciorl:'l'OUS VIL•v1. 2 R1l + 111'\l' ('t'Jlf1f1t. A: .indck. $400. l Br .. clf'n, • r " -.•h rk-,_, y n -'" lmmac. $3.')0/mo. 4 2 9 """ + wo • r • ..,.:, rly IN . ..,. A1 '-'· ... ...,. Or NU-VIEW RENTALS m.1U72 fff,llolrope: ~ ;;---.,--------) 615--:118'1. 6i3-4030 or 4!»-:t14.tl Duplexea, Coste MtH 2 BR, I ' bl., try. deric, Fum. 1r Ullfum. U5 , ----------1 OC1P:an vu, tttrfi. S2SO ~ ---.J LC 2 BR In court. encl llLI', 1 mo. Lout 1089 On> St. Cotta MIN child ok. no pees $145 mo. ~ 3 hr, ~ ti., blllna. 2 CM' ..,, 646-l'Tll/642-4422 ll:::MM=N:.=.~s '°'Bd=rmoo-. '°'2,...,-1to"1=-1'1, Nr lhopptnic, ~)1!1. '210 mo. SMl. 3 Br. nl~ly ~ted. Pltb. OrPat ••t Nr. 5-~12. BUm1, cri»a i: d r p 1 , town. 6iri't61 or .,.,.m 1 ~==,,,-_,c::,,,---- $22$/mo. utll pd. 8.17"'9317. ans. N•wportt h•ch Doll't a:t\ICI up lht ah.Ip! 1,SP;:AC.-:-;;--,:;-;B;;;R."1,.10".om="'timn=-. Ol'l..UXE 1 en. 2 hn., hllrur. "Ust'' II tn clftJlllfted, Ship r<r. bPach. Rent MlO mo. CJD. Nr OCf"IU\. !tn11:l1 Gk. 10 ~ JU.ult.! &U-0071. R(itp, put)'. e 131-<NI. Vrly 1%:i0 mo, 8f3.1STI. --,r -~~~::~~ [ 1.--uo Apt. Ultfiinr. General 1_A..:,p_11_ . ..;F..;u;;.m..;'"---..;"'::: Aptr , ___ - B•lbN ltl•nd Cost• Mes• 1---_..:., ___ , ' ' • DAIL Y PILOT :J7 i 1 l!:::~ l~ ~=:-I~ ~=:· .. l~ ~~ .. -I~ ~ndu •• :Ofl .. , 1~ ~~.•._;;~;;. ;;;;;!) ~~ <Mneral Costa Mesa Newport &.•ch BDRM v.·/kil vrfVi1 Jn bl-11.t l;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;::;;;;;;;[ SIC ' I lltj( 1-k'aeh arT!l, woml'n * * * * • only, S!JO mo. Ah!O lj:;t' lldnn ~ Elu H•wkins 11'/JJ\'I bnth !1Ultahk!: for 2 .............------........ 2121 President Place, wr111. rro l'ach. OOX-4!ll 1. r.J.&...-tl Bmlker' I Costa Mesa \VILL ----""9UWWVl-I, rau art' Che v.1111.• r of houllt' con1pl furn. 1 0 2 1lckt'I• 1n r:1•· renl port of n1y 3RR ~EALTORS ri·l!able pcnsQn, 812-7191 rnr 9'1h Annual Orange Co. ln1crvlew It appt a f 1 LEASING International 6:301110. 1,000 FT. & UP Auto Show LRC;. Bach, 2 bib from Ji ll. li11prove1nent~ to i.u1t. :O.liq(ir f:lt lht• pl<'r. Student prrf'U. no Jiff s .~lr!"f't 1<!i-n11hl·1HK111, K11u1t ANAH EIM !st &: tast 100'11 rent r •'ll u ,\v .. ,,11 r1u11p vi Gun.h·n CONVENTION $!"6&$75. {lltil ptt.I :>36--0.'.'.66. Gril\'I' ~·r'll)' CENTER ROOMS 118 k . B.il-h11.rd 1\rk•r (iJlt 11'9'2-~;.i 0(-tobcr 11th thrii 1.111 \\' ' UJ) W/k\t.1 .... --------~ Pll"ll.!lf' l"htl 642-567'1'i, •'\! ;;14 SXI. wk up AJll!; Lov.• P.1ANl'"f>"AC"J"lJRING 1200 511 IK'lwttn 9 ond:; pn1 t<•1·lau11 inonthly rates 231~ NC\vport ft ., xl11t location, $135 mo. yOOr U1•kt-tM l:o..'ur•h ("(111nty Blvd. Cr.f ~9'F.>.i. :t032-D l'tnCt"ntia ,\\"l'' c.~f. tUll-frt"f" numlxT I~ a40-112lll Room, Newport ~ch 646--7~112 nr 547-2•112. • • * • 11 Sll WF.F.K. UNIT-:-500 sr1. ft. ss:i. \V. 16th * JIINr>U SPIRIT\.:AUST * * 6-l5-31·13 • St., N.B. I f,1•1 llllS ad C'h.Htg"e your Guest Hom• 41S 646-1124 v.·holc outlook on l 1f(' fort~ ----PRIV m ~ n / 0 r Rentals Wanted 4'° bi>ui-r rroteu1onal arl\'IC<' •, Boom , nn hf!·. Lie. rtea1l1n;:.,"11 da1lv .,.,'OITlen. Loving care. Ck>se BUSINESS .,.,..,man dMi"" 10 ,\~1 -10 1'~1 -t!l'.?·91¥. to park, libr & !hops. lowly rum or unfum 3 or 4 ~!rl-90~·1, 312 No El t: • .11111n0 5*>-2J62. Br Eulblufl homt>, {Older Real, S:an Clement!'. COl\1'E see, have your paI"L'nt ~llonl. Le~ or hoy. llAVF.: TABt.1'.~'.-'--w-1-Ci. ~ared for u you would do, Prmclpals onJy. 979--9091; TRAVF.1. Forn)t'r pr o! lime permitting. 642-9778 979-9090. WT\'!Ui<"r now lftking apptt; Rental& to Sh.tr• 430 YO UNG mature Chri111ian for body 1nallllijlt'. Your couple wn child need 3 br IY.Jm(' or mlr"ll•. ('all 5.'17-9186 hse. $200 max. C.t.f .. N.R .• wkday" b1"·n ~:30 & 11 ::!0 * ROOf>.fMATJ:; H.Et-'EIUtALS * Last. area.. &16-1346 a .rn. ·=---,--.,,-~~ find The Ideal Roommate 2SouB~h-~.1vS.•11 llc'aryh 1or \\'ANTED an old upright Screened Onlll Shr & Save """""· in er or r y. JIOOVt'r llwt.'eJK'r in v.'Orklni; WE FURNISl-I: To-$200. 21.l-~.57-2008. 1'0nd. 537-15~7 aft. 6. Hoommates Who \\'ant to f.ihr Mi R 1 ... I Roommates Who Need to Shr sc. enta s ~I CAU. (714) 533-(l3(J'l FOR Rent ott street parking I Lo11 Md r..... Jlnl Roommale Rcfnral Service spacrs 10x30. nl.ght Jighl irn:. ~-------'L:iJ CAUCASIAN middle aged $10/mo. UJ6. B Ne..-port lady flfn.\ghtl wil l share Blvd., Coma ~teu. ~ll22. •rA her home w' "a m e . Found lfr .. ad1» ~ -Rl'ff'r<>nc{'s. Launttry I kit. [ J'l'VJ:'B. C.1'1. SIS. wk . ~ti "46-«36. I~ FNO. S<'pl. 23 • llunlington \VANTED; Lady v.•ilh car lo ah.are l..agu1Ul Beach mobil{' Announcements 500 home \\1th 53mf'. (94-7912 orl :;:::;:::;.::::::.::::;:::__~:: fkh . {bin"hll; & 8uAhard arcCI • Malt' COdtapoo • l'ifrd . Sr. \Yh•I~ on chest. I lll'i ol ch&racl~r ~riot rlt'l'd~ ~ood homt>. ~1088. f'OUNO· f\asN:>t Hound, 14" hlch hmwn & whitr-. Did htlf• frif'ndJy J'l'l~UBI fLntl u11·nt'r! Vic. Ul W. Coai;:I llwy, S{)ll~ J-11 , N JI. G·l2-K754. 830-5070. • • • • • LADY \\"anted to ~har"f' l'X• Ken Wiison pefllff In New Con· 1973 Newport Blvd. domlnlum at Ubure World. Costa Mei• Prtv. ba. 586-4499. You are !he w1nrH•r of GIRL to shan> 2 BR furn apl 2 t1r kl'lll lo Ult' on oceanfront w/a.ame. $100 9'th Annual Orang• Co. M. 673-6822, 6'7s-3l77. lnternatlonal Auto Show • • • • • * * FCIUND 11mall whit~ poodlro, Brookhunit Sl .• llunl. Bch. Call & llk·ntlly. 1'fr. Lesch 962.-13'11. COST A Mca.a. Park, ~tn' Pl11ct>ntil1 11hort·hall"Cl'I & blnck i;po!led fro~ pup.-' /lY 97!~281!1. SA LT & pr-pper ff'malt' Cockapoo fuund 10/2 M ~lf·AA Dr. bl.,.,'Tl Ellkn '1 """""· 646-57'1". -..,,.-- J-TIUNO )"'11r-ohl German Shiephl'n1, fin!. !Unck It BtiU roloM"l-no rollar. It B , 96._\-~ * * * Trader's Paradise * * * • lines times dollars """· r1o"l'f')l1h1rc l'W'W. t1U1h S?YYI ntAOt Inf Nrly -""fVf'lfl' .. • ... r .. 11 llft...W'llt TP.AllJ-: ~ •r-n-. ,_,....,. nf -1irwl Hi.-d "" i c~. ,,,,.., Vlrinn'1ilr kw On~ t """'>' P"Jll'Tt)' • ~l«M • UMll(;llT '""""""· ~ nl 11. Nn. blrM1, lo'U hNuf • ................... _ ~f'dJt .,... .,,_ A kitli SNL .... :IUll UA\Qt. dupa..., 0-. M@a U\l'f' M fWllt, rtl'Jt tJ'w> oftwr, w.,.. ~llllrt. N'pt, _. ""'' -· 11$.1111 """'1 IJol ... °"" ....... fU. 1-1 * * * 4'~:~.J~A< • DAILY PILOT ....... _ laJ ! --~ ll5J I li flj t ][Ill! .• , ... (&..., ..... l[Il] l.__ .. _ .... ,_ .... __,l[Il] I s ;ti)&•• 1[11]1 l[ll] I .. ... , I l[Il1 l;L~Olf""-~~~~~~SSJ;;;;I G~a~'~d~on~l~ng._~~~~ PURSE mllplaced 'iS'l<t AJ. BOB'S CiARO£NlNO Help W1ntecl, M • f 710 Help W•nltd. M. F710 Help W1ntocl, M. f' 710 Hele w-. M. F 711 Help W111tod, M & "11oiw. w-. Ma,. n1 Holp Wl!!fell. Ma" 710 * INSPECTOR * -RN supv. ll-T, .._.. rwq'd. Tho OAI LY Pl LOT 11 looking for DENTAL AM!.-, Exptt. Only. HUil!. 8ch treL Call 846--000T. 1·2 yn. ....... wlmadllne REAL ESTATE SALES Apply O~. of Nun!na, 10!ll b.mbra Dr.. 1111111. Bch. &. LANDSCAPING partS. Plut1cs expcr. btl~ w. \Varner Aw., S.A. ;Wbtl.ld partln flnct1nsi: pl~a• JrviM lnduitrial ~turn <.Wll~u1a. I< e e p Complexa. en experienced u lu fMnon for DISPLAY -M'" ot" Women, ful AflOiy In ,,......, IS THE BEST GOOD ENOUGH -. money. No qu1"llrlons asked. 551-4299 aJter 5pm. 't.eave tn m!i llho.,. or inlrlde mature It exp'd only oted Edlt'r Jnc,tustrlec, Ille. FOl YOU? * * * * * apply. Call 64S-OTSO. 2101 Olwe St. • • • • • • R~ Rhoffas ADVERTISING * LANDSCAPING * !l<"!"(!('n door, ron11•nl!( badJ.v New h1.wns. Sp r i 0 k 1 e ~ •. SALES Newport Be&ch EARN 500 Blue ch 1 P <Ac...., trom o.c. AirportJ We 11 HOME BROKERS INC, will olfor 11100 almotto Circle nt"'edM. Or ri1ll s..17-7403. declui, cleanup. State Uc"d. 'fop opportunity for right person who Stampe-Hl've a toy &: gift you th• followlng l I fount1ln V1U1y is familiar with outside Classified Ad· party ln your h 0 me· lNSPF.CTOR • TRAINEE. You u.re the Yll1u\e:r ot LOST 9/~. Univ. Pk. BOX-536-l225. 1::.R. ft>n1. 10 yl'll. old. Please SPENCER'S Lawn Sel"Vice. vertising sales techniques. Should be 979-430'1. lnproceg inspection, will • A real professional office 2 ticket• to the t'rec ('fit. Law n cart. able to handle autornotive, real estate ELDERLY lady in Dana Pt train. Apply 1" pcnGn btwn • The choicest location in Southeast Hunt-9th Annu•I Ore~• Co. ltt!lp. She'11 like lao1Uy. Ans. 1n "STAR" Hew u rd ! d II •-· k 9 & 3 at SAE Advanced 1_ cleanups. Reas. Xln't apl accounts and other classifications as nee 5 a ve-ln ,,..,..,se eepcr, Packaging, 2165 s. Gl<UXI u.1gton Beach. lntem1tlon1 1{'.t:l-2660 or G~:l-Z7Sli. LOST Mini. fcml. blk poodle, \\'ar'fl('r & P.1a~nolla al'ea. RM collar. ''Susll!.'' R1·ward $15. 839-3229: &.'\5-1449 alt 5 pm . ca.re. 548-5213. neeessary. A little creative ability cao urgent. Ught hskpg, salary, Ave, Santa Ana. An equal • Super working conditions Auto Show EXPERT Ja pan e ac only make you more money. Salary and :~597S:l0ker. drive car. opportunity employer. • Lush new ofiices NAHat °£0IM Gardene.r, know·bow , commission program based on enthu· ~~~~~~~--~ •The b&st Sales Manager in Huntington A upkeep, plant, pest, trim siasm and background. Good company E lectrical De1lgner ~ DCD.~rv..11L1n Beach (12 years experience in the area). CONVENTION ALTERED mllle Siamese cal, vie Bolsa Chi<'a & lleil, 11.B. Geoerous reward ! AA&-3113. cleanup. 96S-3486. employee program. flfUSf be reliable, Exp. Power, Illumination, 1 Ll\.}\.Jl"'ll"'IU. • Training program for new sales persoil.nel CENTER Dt.rl'Ot gardener. expcr.. dependable and capable. U you're inter-Cornmercial, Industrial, SERYK:f.S~ • Members of Huntington Beach, Fountain October Uth thru 15111 c'mplt. ser., call Gerrlt. ested , apply: \ :;ildings. Excel oppor., Free Ir. Fee ~iliona Valley and Newport Harbor, Costa Mesa Plaue call 642-5678, ext. 314 ~2lXI days or Ar I e PERSONNEL DEPT. neflts. Mr. Karjala Escrow Managt!r • , to $1200 Board of Realtors. between 9 and 5 pm to t:laim GRAY. spayed \\•caring red ltarbor Vv.• 644--5230. femal<' collar, II ilia, cat, 213/6.1)...5463 p.m. The DAILY PILOT Store, Matakozlch, \Voltberg Gen'! Ole Hosteu: •• to$900 •The two owners have 35 v.i.ars of feneral your tickets. (North County Corona del Mar 675-7131 Ex Sectt J "' toll·lree nwnber is 540-1220). AL'S Landscaping. Tre e 330 W. Bay St., Coit• Mesi ec. tary •••• to$650 real estate experience and know-ow in· .,, • * • * removal. Yard remodeling. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ELECTRONICS: Young man Sec'y/Receptionist •. to $600 eluding investments, exchanges, indust-Trash hauling, kit cleanup. ;: t-lelp Wanted, M & F 710 w Isome communication Girt Friday , •. ,, ...•. to S550 rial e{c SALES Girls for fabric shop. S · Repair sprinklers, 673-1Hi6. I I~ AVON etm.ISTMAS EARN work or hobby background Prod. Contri Qerk ••••• $5IX} ' • Apply in penion. COMPLETE L & s..-. .,,_ INGS "-I ak the. for technical checkoot. Pa1 Genera.I Ottice •••••• to $475 Here is your opportunity to be 1t C. Abbott's F•brlc1 awn can "'"Pm e Elet:tronlcs, 6391 Salesman Adhesives to ..,<)., ''HOME" I& &-of •---1 CdM Gardening service. Hauling holidays happier for your W . ..._.. W •n .... pr •ss-.. s. 2610 E. C.00.St Hwy., vie. LOST -!\!ale Irli;h Setter. Has \\'Ound on side. Need11 medication. Vi<' N . B, , cl . famil es t m 1 n st er Ave., 488 E. 17th (at·hvine) C.M. SAL~MuN WANTED Sell oi: ea~p. Jim 548-0-105. enure_ y! It's easy sell-\Yestmlnster. 642--14JO CALL MR. ED. SAMUELIAN ~ .. ~. · • JAPANESE Gardener . Plumbing ing, fine Avon products for E"M"P=LO=Y"M"=E"~.-,~,--d-..... ~-FOR APPOINTMENT proven industrial cleaner to our irTeslstlble Oiristma• •· • o e re . --- - -business indUS'--' & gov't. Complete Yard \York and L.R. OTIS PLUMBING Mal srn1 Light JANITORS. Waxers &: 962 8851 ., 1 mo. olrl 1iup. Oct. 3-Vlc. ClealM.lp. Free est. 64z_3t0'2. Re nio<lels & Repairs. Water Cata1ogue, Call Now . ' . e, Manutae-• Oppty for substantial in-Santa Ann & 23rd. Colden 540-7041 tunng Co •• Needs reliable Maids, exper. p/time 4 hrs come &. pel'80nal growth. 979-91:l!I. G I < I hcaH•n;, disposal,. furnaces, · f u ti' '--r..... e• .... , Call •u ••~ tan 2/identical <'Ye color. ~_•;.:";.:";_';:.•~,.:•;_rv~cc;:•;:.•___ u me i'm.p..,.,,.e. ..,..,... y"' • il'flr.io.1'1.i.. car nee. Call for interview -dsh\vshrs. 9'fS..3730 MIC & BABYSITTER -young rxirtunity to .........., w/com· Rry,.·arcl $IO. S46-47T3. 1-IANDYMAN • All kinds or BIA. All Dally Pilot areas. wo 16-tra .. -~·· J D • & appl .. n.f:S42-8895. C ffi!Jl, up, O\Vn ns. pany. Min. exp req. SlS-2290 r es19ner/ RE\\' ARD S25. olde n work, small jobs a PLUMBING REPAIR Jor steady pt-time work. Jim Cline wkde.yg. • SALESWOMAN. mature. ~.e, .. 1 .. ~.;.veNro. ,;:.. moo181. specialty. $6-9374: 546-9723. No job too small h2-6:00 PM Mon-,rri. infour EXP. Needle point t:anvas ErNJineer ·1 Hd .e., .• ~.rT"•'xp s~rd· !>na<.v .....,~ Hauling * 642-3128 * ome, ca r ng or wanted to fill perm.. po5\tion resssp .... " ·~., · Jruimine. Laguna. 837-3256. \o.'f!li--behaved 6 yr old son. painter. Must do needlepoint in engineering dept. Exper. Steady part tlme incl Sun. GEN. Hauling. -i-"-·b Sewing/ Alteratlon1 .,,.._ ....,... wl< Bal P•n. 64S-387ll or 64<Hm7. d•--· ~• LOST fem . Irish setter, 9/'ll. ••=-,,,...,u _.., .-..· · • area. in design & mfrng fibergls "'J~ ~· Vic: College Park. CM. 1 yr trim. Gar & yd cleanup, SE-WiNG-DESIGN1NG Contact Mr & Mrs Roy Ex PER JEN C E D con-diesel powered yat:hts req'd. SEAMSl'RESS to work ia old. \Vht spot on chest Est. 839-2303, X7-6904. l\fen/\Vomen. Reas. Rates KloU 675-7614, 979-Ql'10. &truction secretary. Advi&ncement oppor. + xJn't sail loft, Al90, woman for Reward! 557-7094. SKIPLOADER & dump truck $10 min. Call 846-7450 BABYSJTI'ER I housekeep-.... -...... !"'b<;;;i-;;ii;;in;;i9ii&i;i5-.1 co benefits. Send resume to patch cutting dept. E:qie:r. LOST: Gray female German y,.-ork. Concrete, asphalt, Alterations--642-5845 er. live-in, Pvt rm, CdM. 5 • R.E.J. Poole, BROKERS INC would help. Apply Hood Schnau,.,., •·Gretle" hlk sawing, breaking. 846-IDO. or 6 days, S12fday start. Fee Paid Columbia Yachts • Sailmakers, 861 \V.18th, Neat, accurale. 20 years exp. Sr. Accnt..cJ>A/Condr $15K CM nea collar. Vic. Paulo YA I Eves: 644-4150; ~: A Div of Whittaker Corp. -;;·::;:,· ==~~~=-· RD. garag(' c ee.nu~. file 548-U21 l\fet:h. Designer $825 275 cCo = OriYt'-in. :w;-614R aft 5. Remove trees. dirt, ivy. · Exec . ..,A_,.,,.., .. e::n M rmlck Ave. ~ --- -__ -~ ___ SECRETARY; Beautilill of· BABYSITTER, light ~-= ...... .)' .,.,.,., Costa l\1esa, Calif. 92626 _. _.. ._. ~--... tit:e k>cated In Irvine com· ~l~~"v1~7:~·&f~1~c~. ~~ ::~wy:, ~~":· ~~~:: C~m!:~ ~e es~wSma~ housekeeping. 7-4:30. 2 ~s!~:~r :: Equal Oppor. Employer M/F l-lelp W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 p\e.x, This firm oilers great 897-8119 or 8-12-9 7 6 5 Free <'SI. 7 da)'ll. Call jobs \\'f!lcome. 536-2426. boys, 3 & 5. Blulls area. Legal Sec'y/Laguna ~ KENNELMAN-M'EDICAL Secretary-Recep-ORDERLY, exper pref'd, ~nee to advance. Start Rl."A•ard. anytime, 548-5031. ~~~~~~~~~~16-10-1158 after 5 pm. General Ofc to $575 DRIVER tiontst. MUBt be mature, ex· Park Lido Conv. Center, $575. Call J an Page, Bl.ACK & \Vh ite miruaturc -"'--'------r BABYSITTER wanted ?>.fon, F/C Bkpr/Sec'y $700 For anima1 hell r Good perient.-ed, personable, For &12-8044. 546-6055, Coutnl Agency, fox terrier, !email', "Min-Hou1eclean1ng I El I • tfiili I Wed, Fri. My hOme. ()\l/n Sa\eg Rep/Adhesives $1.lK working~. XJ:•t fringe interview phone, 644-1775. PART-TIME 2790 Harbor mvd .. CM. nie ". ~5-071,. 1------=-----. os; Jl!!J 1ransp. Ca11 aft 6 pm, Tax Secretary !0;600 benefits. Valid Calif. driv· MENS wear salesman for LIQUOR CL.ERK SF.cRETARY-Recept, exper. S Prof. Carpet Cleaning 548-7592. Also Fee Positions er's lie. & gd ->-'ving -. part time, event"-. Contact 548-7311 for app't. Hl·pressure ofc. Stat typing MOSTLY lamcsr grey Al · dow & fl w·1 '"'-·-\\•/durk grey male vie N'pt Ca~ o::~h 53~·1508, :.~~~~ Job Wanted, Mal.i 700 BABYSITI'ER. p It i. m e ' P NEWPIOART rcq'd.CAppl,y at, 20612 La· ~ary O~S:ri BHl~~BMlvdens Parking Atteftdi1nt ~h 80, type 70. Ph: Bch pier. Rewan:I. 673-3838. Tues, Fri, Wkends. 1 infant. WIOllntl gency guna anyon Rd, Lag Bch. ear, ... .,.,. ., Top pay, Apply ln person, 1,,-,=-cc,,~· ==-~--I Expert Hou1ecleanlng YO u Na nt an seeks 673-5109 833 Dovar Dr., N .B. LEAD cook to supervise C.M. between W & 6. Wed, Thurs. Fri. betwn 6 &: SECYfRECEPT. Youn g By Day. Refs. 836-0648 full/pt-time employment ln BARMAID _ Personality a 642~3870 meal preparation & service MERCHANDISE handler, 7 pm. Hungry Tiger Restau-rapidly growing oo. in I 1 114') HOUSE OF CLEAN landscaping & gardening. must. Apply before 4PM, I ~~~~'!""!!!!!!!!!!!!!"' I in P.M.'s The Huntington. full time. Ask 0Jor mgr, Mr. rant, 353 E. Pacific Cst Hwy, Irvine complex needs attrac l~--lm-tn1ijotijloojjjjjjjj;;;;~~ Floors, windo\\'S, crpt. walls., _Ex-'..p._646-__ m_L_____ Knol1y Keg, 2125 Harbor FEMALE help wan ted . l8851 Florida, H.B. S42-7'/"88. Pavone, Beals Fu, mlture, N.B. Ask for Daphne. resp sec. Must have xlnt 1 -Bl d c M P/time. Kentucky Fried llOO Irvine Ave N pt Bch typing &: shrthd skills. Xlnt '.Schools & instruction• 575 6 yrs. In area. 642-6824. Job Wanted, Female 702 v , . . Chicken, 693 So. C&t. Hwy, LEGAL SECRETARY ' PRE-Sc~ Cteachers needed working cond. & co,' Dedicated Cleaning BEAUTY Operator. Busy Lag. Bch. Local/Corp exper desired now ll1 dM. Ea r ly benefil!. H1gh ea rn ln 11: * WE 00 EVERYTiilNG * GOOD TYPIS'T C.f\1. shop. Must be exp. t-==-=:::::..._____ Call Lorraine childhood education classes potential, 979-4500. Reis. F'rN! est. 646-2839 Wiii do your typing •t Blower dry & iron. Top sal FOOt D Mgrk., basandicallySlwknds WESTCLIFF &/or exper pref'd. Call .. _..~__.___... + comm. 54&-3361. a snac st . hr. Personnel Agency * 10am-2pm, 67"";,-402'l, •-;.·=tar-I••--;-::IV\_~ ---~---P IANO or voice, my home or yours. 20 Yrs. exp. Master • in music. 833-2320. Expert Housecleaning her home, Will rickup 838-1103 before noon. ,y,,., w m ~' ~-By Day. Refs. 836-0648 and deliver loca H.B., • BEAUTICIAN W/NEAT oW'$,) ~;l271iff0Dr., NB PURCHASING AGT. e FIC Bkpr/CPA exp f150 F V W 75c APPEARANCE, FOR F'RY Cook, f/time. $2.50 per .,...,.. OOn \Vil! ttain, e.'Cper. helpful. e Legal Secretary $lfiO EXP. HOUSEWORK 0 ; .;;111 ~~rk b~hC:; BUSY SHOP. 5@-9!1l9. hr to start. Chant:t? for ad-cLVN='"·,-. °"F~/T~&~P,.rr~~.3-1-0-u Long term assignment. Liz Reinder'1 Agency •.1 sitting ,C 0 S T A r>.1.ESA PR& SCHOOL, I/Ith & l\fonrovia. NE\V HOURS 6:30 am-6:30 pn1 . l\1usic, stories, art. Reas. Rat<'s. Llc'd. 642-1050. Eve5. 838-5ZJ7. l)AY Nursery, bahie11 lo 5 YNl $18 per \11k. 646--5788 or 645-4302. S4 hr. 642-TISO call 847-3095. BOAT REPAIR MEN vanccment. Cottage Coffee shill. Gd. start wage, Exp. ~ t Irvine 54G-44SO 4500 Campus Dr. DESIRE Day Work. Honest, Shop, 562 W. 19th St, CM. pret Apply Director of NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO 546-2118 Newport Betda FE"ALE 42 Id /! l\1ust have experience a €r neat. Call anytime. Mon. iu age see ng P Nursing, 1030 w. Warner, 1 Tern po Temporary Help ~............, tl F . 541 -•mp .. xp: 10 ........ med. of-waterfront boat repair yard. GEH£RAL •--ta Ana. ·~ «=. ·• iru n. ~· ~·~ Haukiuts, hull & mechanical ~' .N<>'"U'tJU R I E I •-t SERVICE Station Attendan. __ , H -'· rice fr & back Lite bk, type, el S ate -es p/tlme eves. &: wknds. Ex· Experie"'-"" ouM!WO•" file. WlllinJ;t to learn any In-repairs. Good jobs for top U\fE.IN housekeeper. Plain We ere now accepting FREE By the Job te~ting office H.B. area. men. Blaclde's Boat Yard, LABORERS cooking. No small children. applications for -'fy"· Neat ap:oo~· Ap-e 642-TI50 • \Vrite class. ad No. 516 c/o 2-114 Newport Blvd., N.B. 5 day wk-Sat & Sun free. P morns. eWpOrt J anitorial Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 673-6834. VOLT 675-8248. HOSTESS LicenH Trainlno =B=L", =c~.M=·-===~= C.OSta Mesa. Cal 92626. BOOKKEEPER -Sen 1 or. I nit ant Personnel LIVE-in housekeeper, 5 day Limited Time Only SERVICE SfATION AT- JeU's Cleaning Service NEED help At home? \Ve l'xp'd to trial balance. Temrv>rnrv Service wk, pvt rm & tv. Spanish F«.mous Ucense course now TENDANT. Airport Texaco, Residential -Commercial Salary open. Retail sales. ,...... -~ speaking ok. 546-1987 aft 6. available thru Tarbell t.:om· 4678 Campua Dr·· N.B. * 646-6384 * ha\•c Aides, Nu r a es , 1-I . 3848 Campus Dr., Sui1e 106 Evenlng1 & Wukend1 11 o u sekprs, Companions. .B. area. Submit resume Newport Beach 541H741 LVN'S EXPER. must L-Over 21 pany. Applicants fully re· SOLDERER Land1caplng 11omcmakcrs u P j 0 h n, to Classified Ad No. 512 c /o Equal Oppor. Employer & Nurses Aides. 549-3061 ~ im~ upon qualillcation. 1 Yr. Min. Mcetit exper, in LANDSCAPING 54'1-fi68t. ~~lty MPilot PCall.o:f ~ ..... 1500 N~ or experienced sales corthvood or fiat board ......,. a eBa, · ".o<>LV· GENERAL Ofc: Mature LUHRS BOAT CO. Please Apply people. Openinga avallable. module. Muat. read resistor For unique & personalized ..... ., W'lnted, r<A & F 710 Betwn 8 & U am Ir: 2 &: 5 pm cti I -slyle ln landscaping call BOYS: alert dependable -woman far Now Hiring mp ete traiJiing program. capacitor diode code. :arpenter Jam{'S C. Elmer • Land-Advertising Secretary t need two bo)tl to fill vacan· pcrrn. job. Will train to han-Flnl1h C•rpenter1 1854.2 l\lacArthur Future management oppor-Please Apply CARPENTRY-&.tALL JOBS 15eaping & Maintenance Co. Great oppor. for ambitious, cles on best newspaper boy die customers, a pleasant Rough C•rpenters & (Across from O.C. Airport) tuniti~ Call Mr Sloan at CULTON INDUsrruES REASONABLE RATES '"Renovating lawns, ~ ne-highly skilled girl. Brains. crnv. on I Y experienced phone manner. Typing etc. Exper. Assembler1 Newp:irt Beach 842-SML 1644 Whittier Ave., C.M. • 557~28 • c~ty at this time.'" ,Free inlt1ative 8~~6;Qlulrcd. and''"" 11on"°""u· de~. youTop goodpay ~:!~~1~:1 ~~.Se: Apply in Penon Equal Oppor. Employer JAR BELL STORE MANAGERS l.fTNOR home.........,.lrs ..P:lwn.b."-,,"";::::·_:"'6-:::::.::==.;:,af:;:t~S:;;·===l:;;:;:;;:;;-,o;;;;;'--i;;;;;--,o;:;: ~ ~" / U Ptl p 0 849 W. 18th St., Imme d I ate positions ·;~· . carpe~;;; _ .palntlng I M•sonry AL..ER.T ~+--"·-~·o.-h'"-'°"'-"" m-.,,,H·h. >'!'-'H"-"'°'l~.D~~ Ca_ ~x c.osta Mesa MT/ST Operator tor N.B. REAL TORS available 1n Cerritos I -roofina:. call ~-A-caslonal ~-ork. 11\gh pay, call: C~EN~ERAL~~;~~.--~k.':":":P~ln"'g.~no!::t""~MAID~!!'s""'w~ANTED~~!!!!!!..f'1-iilw.>"~ for REAL ESTATE South Coaat Plaza, Costa REPAIRS. planten, brick, short hrs. Expcr. helpful. MS-334'1 ·~ appt. f.1esa. Must have previous C•rpet ~rvlce block, stone. Quality v.'Ol'k. Gen'! he1~ maintenance. BOYS J2--l 6 .un children. Own transp. S Apply in penon, J amaica PROFESSIONAL v.-omen's apparel apeclalty Ken, Ph. Resld. 642-rno. f\1usl drive. Apply 2-3pm. Jo\u Top Crew selling Orange days/wk. 546-1775 aft 4:30. ~~ ~ Coast. Hwy, NCR OPERATOR Salesmen I: broken! The OJ> shop exp, with ta 11 JOHN'S carpet & Upholstery Moving Rental Readier, 569 W. 19th, Coast's favorite Newspaper. GRANDMOTI1ERLY-type _ · port\mity ii bere! You ue knowledge of han(llina: all Ori.shampoo free Scotcb-CM. \York 2 evenings and Satur. wanted for occasional N•wport Be•ch needed tmmedlately lor our manager details. Call Mr. p;uard \Soll Retardants). r.10VING ?? Ov.·ner. driver ASSISTANT Food Mgn .. day. Generous Commission babysitting on Balboa Pen. MANAGER Need experienced NCR rapidly ~g R ea l B. 213:.~T~'7~--05"'"'TI;;_. ____ I ==~ : 1g 11 mi~~; ::~~~~ ~~~-i!af: :~~/1~~~f~~~n~2·~ :~ :;;~s~P ~:;~ ~~i. 6T~=:YMAN, Over 40 ~~~& 7:: wra::ey~~ :::~:n~=:!":e: ~~ :!:;!n&~ hlcach for white carpets. ?? 5.19-1319. Auto .,,:ork, too, 557~739. Laguna Lido Apt&. Once In A machine or calculator. Posi· Phone. age children. Private room. Save your money by saving P•intlng & Import car sa1esn1an. Orange BOY~ 4!&-2835 Lifetime Opportunity tioo Involves heavy machine ~ bath, TV. Small 88lary. me extra trips. \Vlll clea.n Pan11rh1nglng Cou t mo t stab!' herl bookkeeplog • post Ing Emerald Bay. 494-9532. llvinr rm., dining rm. & r--n ys s e 11 Age 10·14 to deliver p11pen 11ANDYMAN l fELPER, $2 \V k tand' gaJ ~.11 dealers. I in the Dana Point, SaJi Cle-...,..r hour. Retiree ok. e see outs Ill&' ell journal entry to the general STIJDENTS openings f 0 r hall $t:l. Any rm. $7.5v, No Wunn1t Frttz Wamin niente atta1. r Call 540-5!;liO oriented lady to mMage ledger. ~ I j I year around p/time food couch SlO. Chair $:i. B yn. *WALLPAPER* SPORT CAR CENTER DAILY PILOT TEMPO'S newest office in Formal education m ac- 1 .., help on Sat&. o. c. exp. i.'1 what counts, nirt When yc:>•1 call "MHc"' no E. 1st, Santa Ana S47-0764 492-442l HELPI Irvine. Ideal for results or-counting required. Excellent R. E. SALF.S Raceway, 838-Ull3 before method. I do 'll>"Ork lll)'9e!.r. S4&-144-4 ~lnl Nef'd p1'0feMional R.E. aa.le1-iented, career minded, co. benefit<t.. Earn'A~, of 1Huot1 or more noon. Good ref. 531-0lOt. --APROPOS, 29 Fash IO n BOY-PART TIME people to help our clients ti al I hO Uk ·~ •~ -==~~===~-I INT & EXT painting, paper Island, N . B. lntelllgent SPRINKLING NURSERY crea ve g w e~· to per month is easy the STYLIST WANTED Cement, ConcNt• hanging. naturaJ wood v.-oman aware or hl-fuhion buy, sell or EXCHANGE. run her own sho\v). This 15 Call Uuwin way. We furnish llnl.Bhlng. S 4 8-7 9 0 5 or for aalet. Expcr. helpful. No • ~~·. LMds rum. Pleasant, I walk-a responsible position with 644 3389 listings & selling tract refer· Exper. In wiglets, cucades ~s~~~R 548-7159. telephone calls pleue. Busboy, 12.2am, ?.Ton thru ~V:~in EXOlANGORS So. Callfs fastest growing Betwn I •m & 12 noon raJ leads. lfi&b o.dvertilina; ~tt;tic ~· ~1 ~ call l\lax *'* ~~ PAINTING & PAPERING. ~Ac;S;;S~E;M;:;;;B,;L:;Y:;::.,TS:RA7.l'.-N"E=E Fri. $2 hr. 108 McFadden Pl. ~:~~P :-"::·,~f Only =:.@t, ~ Ooo~~ ----==·~· ==~~-'-Y-I PATIOS-PLANTERS 19 yn in llarbor area. Uc 6 For productton auembly of Dick Churches Rest. Newport Bea.di ~ benefil4. NURSES aides • ap'd req. contests. mectka.J tnsur. TECHNICIAN All Qlncrele work. Brkk, bonded. Ref'1 furn. 642--2356. •ma 11 electro-machanlcal 2698 N('WJ!Ort Bl, CM }IOME MainteMJ'ICe. Uve In, Day llhllt . \pply Dir. or paid. Call for aPJ)'l Lou Electro-Mechanlc:al Ir n e . 11;lumpetone wk . ~. PAIN'nNG • Honest, clean, pert1. CAR Int man. Pref<'r exp. Oppty for mllture 1tudent C•ll Be•, 533-2321 N11n1ing, 11r• w. \Vamer Sangennam. P.fust have mech. lkllll A: PATIOS, walks, dr\Vi!t. Saw. guaranteed "'Ork, Licensed Pleal!l' Apply Must be over 21 A have or penon wf.a~ lp&l'P For Confidentl1I A\.'f:., Sn.nt11 Ana, 546-6450. l•rwln realty lnc. ~I ~ of bUlc elec-& lnslln'd. 675-57«1. CULTON lNDU!ITRlES .. _. I t1rOC! &r.m Irvine .A--1 ~--t ,.,.,.. ,......., uvn cs break. remove I: replace I ==~~--'--'---~ I"" 1•~111le A C M w .vtts ~nse. Steady job. • ""f"t"'"" n,fn'WI NURSES pvt duty all !ypea i1UCl1'IW (2S llounl . PROF. peJnter, honest v.'Ork. '""' ·•11 r ~.. · · Frtnce benefita. Apply In H '."!""!"'!'!'~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I ' · ' P\ttl.M! Apply conot!tt. 548-6668 tor m . reas. lk'/lns. In1 IW1t. b-ee ATTENTION 1 ~--ostess MAN OR WOMAN to all ihHts. Leseoolle Nurae'1 R.E. Sales, All new~. GULTON lNOUSJ'RtES CU~l\l CEJ\ft:::NT \\'ORK penon on Y· """"' Mr . Oubhnt11e, then.lre focllltlt'S. , 0 n, u-n ... ,e .'.::i.plpgbly Registry, 351 Hospital Rd., w.omen only, Worlc . H.B., 1644 \VhlltM!r A·-.. C.M. Orivt'5. \VALl<S, patm, :c;~ ::~ s:-::· painting, s;~~;m.:n ~,::n ~:~~· ii::tn:~ckfte:h.& ~~~~ '';,'"u;:c:.1~ w~~~.~; Houachoid"' Produ;;. .. Can N.B64HOOS or M0-99M ~~V90"5·~attma.GdR~~ ~l'T"•"••'°'-,.---,C"°lcrt<--"---'--1 pool dN"k11. Don. ~Z-w.'114 1 • "'"rn •et1 week! """" tl .,., · · '"' ,,..,.. ntc.rKlr, reas.. rntt's. Call Glamorous, excltll\I, adven-CASHIER.5 "'anted p/llmr A wknct • aome eve hrs. Per· """ Y .,... .. •• me. Inlcrvklw 9-5 M/F gram Leads provided No .. h lld Cere Dick, fl63..4065. tu-·· sal•• career with wknds al _, WMh •--. n'll\ .... n1. --'lion. Pl•,.... $150 & up full time. Call h-'· · "llo Gd. ...... ..... JVl.09 ·~ ''''"" ... """ (l)'>]lect) (415l 444-'7833 m" NURSES Aides, exp er. . ...... er compeu n. , up PART·TIME • CHILD CARE • DcJM•ndQhll• Jlarbor/Bak~r Aren . 546·4145 Contr•ctor Addftionl • Remrxk'llnit Ge.rwkk lo Son, Llc'd 6l)-$')41 .. Si!t-2170 J AC R T•ulane -Rr113ir ttmod .• •ddlt. 21 yrs. t'"Xp. Ut'd. My Way Co. ~17.(l(M, EIOCironlcs OOMPLETE t.lectronlc 1erv. dr T.V. Hlft, auto. It!:~. Oii Uc. P.cinc Dec.tronlet1 Co.. °""" Pt. 496-!233. J;XPER.T Japanese O•rdent'!r, Complete coroont,_ -· NB, Oil U'Ol5*-1*. P"~·Pa~~~· 1~:/=~: ~.~~i:-c~~;:lco~~~ •11::11~~ tk>tut.. F'. Vly, Oro.nit~. S.A., app1t::i;' ~ii.o wrUt Rawlctgb Co., 306 prefd, Park lJdo Conv. time. XI.tit traJnlna:. Reim· Lie/Ins. Free est. 645-519L r1M'I, Earn u you li!tm. C.~I. Call Juanita, 64M460. t"'OUNDA110N Adeline St,,. Oalcl&nd Ca. Center, 60-3044. :ne ICbool for those not Mr. McDonald CLERICAL '3522 Pasoo .. Valtt>Cla M60!. omCE Clerl<·T•lepbono & STANDARD R . E. EXTER. Complete 2 ooats: '1 567-4'1?11 Admln Bkta: t .. _, .... llllll MAN or woman for week-end ca&h register exper. The "'-II M•~ -• "'" story S26ll. 2 story S32J. PACIPIC MUTUAL -.~-Earl' Plumb•-1nc WI ~ -· ~- Neat v.-ort.:. Ro)t, M7·"W& ATJ'RACTJVE GI r I , OC• Apply Tuel. thni "1, 9 tm·12 HOS'TESS-exper. helpful but ht'lp In Dana P 0 In I s .... • or Lee 8l3.f100 C'ulooal work. l!lgh J>AY, pm at our new buUdil\ll:, 700 not MttU. Apply In ptMIOf\, nel1hborhood beer b Cl r . Newport. Blvd, OL Pat ios short hn, ('.fon'I clc.anlnrt. NelW'pCl't Center Drtw. l..ove'• Re• 1 au r a n t, 49&-o45'lS after U noon. Op.r•t&on1 A.n1lyat1 R.:~lo~lit ':;.~ : GREEN Tl"t't' Conlltruct\on No h<'avy work. M~t drlw. Bt'IX'lkhunt I AdluN. 11.n. MASSEUSE Dyna.mle younc orpnb.ation Spon9CX' for He. Ca1J between Co. Srx'dalllCI In wood Apply l.1-1. Rents1 Readltt, CUSTODIANS HOUSEKEEPER.. m •tu re Good hours, xlnt S$. has OJl(':nlng for ldicdulc 6 10am-3pm. M!J--Jal, paUo rovt:n l fo-. , -·I 569 W. 19th, Coste Mesa. ...... 2 -•uJ•-r-1 ... ....,. 642.c>t50 10 am 1o 5 pm Qt)Cl"lltlons anatylst.1, Under ........ .,.._ \\'c need custodianl for nur -..... .... uo::i• Jt'lv••· ,,_,;,.,.,,,-,,'-'c;;.;c..;;_:.:::::_.1 dlrKOon of o pt r • \ Io n , REC£PTIONtST: G re a t re.I, Biii Fulton, !M7.Q46, APPLlCAnONS Aft! being excla,.lvt •Pl tom[\lec:. No COC>klng. no te'Vins· 5 Hrs MATl1RE !-fAID. 12.Z hour. mln&Jtt'r, plllA, klcAtt, A: chance to start ,vour CAf'tM' £vca. ~1407. fttttpl~ for ca f et,. r I a Apply in ptnOn ~· I dl,.VI wk. Aft lOam, lA.gWl& Lido Aptll. schedule routn. Oaart 1 in tht constnictioo field. A Platter• P•tch, R.-1r helpers to 11.1bl:Utute: in t.hr 01kwood G•rden Apts. ~l~. Come .ee aboUt can 49&-2835 adopt .,m •ch e du I,. s. lot of puhl1c nlallons.. St.n Lquna Bcic:h Schoo I 1'700 l&th St. 1,,--=i-job.=--:====-~ MATURE cpl to mMBge Aaal1C opcnUonl m&N\ger Jm. Call Jan p 1 Re · • PATOI PLASTER.INC Ot11J1ct. Apply at the Ncwpor1 Bffch II 0 USE KEEPER. live apta on ootan. l\1ust bl ex· tn dally acttvltiH. BA ot BS ~ Coutal Aatnc:Y. NI types. fm t!tdmatts District OHloe, ~ Blumont. Equal OppOt Employer !.t/F Ln w/gd ram11y . Pvt rm. per. 49&-4453 ch• Im et. 1 In 8uline.. Economics or mo Hu1ior Blvd, CY. CaO ~-AUTOMOTIVE Xlnt Wiii cond. Refs req"cl. Apts., 361 0111 Dr., Lor Tran1port•tlon. s.nd RN ·-M~r Need 11:\rls to work dur- ing ~lng houn to .et eppolntmtnt• by tele- phone w1th lonntt cu• tomt'rs of nur oompe.ny, NO SELLING JN. VOLVED. Sa lary + bonl!M't for appolnlmtntl ~. PottnUal Eamlnp $1M.S250 rt'r Week. Mwit hAv• KOOl'.1 communlea· tive lklU1. \Vtllmlnster locttOon. C.11 Mro. Shade 17141 833-3741 Plumbing LOT BOY DELIVERY Of DA I cy an-Bch. ""'"" Ind. salary .... . • ~~ o-. PM Orill'll unck>acd _ $7.50 l\ft11t be hard worker. Appl)o PILOT, stlNDAV ONLY. to JIOVSEKEEPER. cook. 12 MEO.tCAL Aulstanl wanttd: qulmnenla to CltMIOed Ad ~~dU.: ~ ful!t-':m F.q\IAI Oppo.o. Empk)rfr Sewer Uni11 tn lOO' • $1& In ptnon IO Mr. T. new1J>11perboy1. Rl!(JUIMI ,... • 1 pm, Mon-Thun. 150 blldt ot1ice exp. w/lab, X· No. 51~ c./o DAlly PU01. tupply, day shUt. m..EPffONX SiJeel! led * 5-&-ZSO'l • DAVI ROSS the uae ol a StaUOll Wqon week. l•~ne:J 11'1 fi pm. ray. KG. 3 d&)'I ptt wk. P.O. Box l:s'.l, Cotta M!u. BEAOI CO ?ti MUN 1 Ty Snuthflrn Ora,.. Olunt)''I COLE PLUMBING PONTIAC qr Von. Contact Mr. llalT)' llOUSEWORK. P•tt-tlm•. S Ale ~ Send ltnU!n41. CalU ~. D•adlln• HOSPITAL 57'2 B •••h '""'"'" N"""f'"plr ""'" 24 hr. tuYlet, 16-1181 2480 1tarbor Olvd. Seeley. 3.10 West ~ St.. da,v wl"Cfc. $eady Job, Own Write Clusltttd Ad No. 4l\ 1011.6172. DJ& Blvd.. ButM ~ )'VU:r home. Ma1lt u muc:tl Cotta fi:{fM car. CAii 64+-'™4. Dilly Pilat. P.O: Dmt 1500, OPlmtALl\tOLOOY IUlllJt· .. )'Oii need. C.ntn!UI a>m- GARDDllNG SERVICE llHlono.ble -Rdllble * ltltm ... PLUMBlNG rc.,.\l'I and ln-Colta Mesa ~s ... 1tU lbole baubles for -'-'--:.....-'---'-"'----I O>lta Mt111, Cl.hf. 92626. ant wanled. tlrll time, of· Doa't s've up the ahlpl mltlttm on nch tale. Ca11 1tallaflonl, paintlng. Free FA.Al rnult• •N just I phone "butks". Call CaalOed Stll Idle lterr• nawt Call HOUSE 1fUntlna:T Watch 1hl' Oce .. iQ,rtltal. W\U 11'1.ln "l..ht" It ln dudtitd. Ship I SSJ-"131. Est. C.ll I: aave. &l9-<Jj/2. CAil •waf • ~. 64J.$ll. &l)..Ul73 Now1 OPEN HOUSE COiumn. c•pehle cb1. ~. to Shl'Jre Rftultal ~ l:N:;:...,c::-i-,:.:;,,l'll""°'d""~T ~Plooo~-.. -odl--'' I - • • ' I • " • ., .. "'"""· 0c.-5. 1972 04ll Y PILOf -~ ' rs .... , ... "' l[II] [ ~.,_,,,_ 1 l[II] .__I _ .. _,. _ ... __,!~ I ...... l~I ll§J I lllwdwi ••• Jl§JI ....._ _•d·_· ·~l.~ :;.I -----~l!B~1~1 --""t.._r_ .... ·~l tt~ ;jelp Wonted, M I 'fl 710 Antlqu.1 Help Want..i M & f 71 0 Geroee S.le 112 Mlocelloneout Ill Planot/Orgfn1 126 Oogt 154 Boall, S.11 909 1C10 Gare,. S.le 112 Telephone Ho1fe1H1 No selling, Work for tap !Md company mll.klni dln11er ret- tl'\lallon.s by phone, No l'Xp nee. No age barrier. Top aalo.ry. Generous Uonuise1. Interview dall)t lron1 ~: 30 WAITRESS.NIT ES Ovtr 21. Apply ln penon t'OLONY KITCl-IF.N 3Zll Harbor Bl., CM WAITRESSES Skfs Bloo Beel 673--9004 pm. 892-734!S. 11~ I 8x'12 trlr for sale. Terma with lllrc:han6e V free 11pece rent in exchange I ~liiiliiiliiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiii;,;;;iiiiil for services. Oldl'r cpl call I I Aft 2 pm. 839-5266. Antiques IOO TRAINEE OPENINGS We will train you to become • branch manager or our 800 branches. A sc~uled tnalnlng program wUI give you training &: exp. In OtfJce Management. Budget Couiue.Ung, B u 11 i n e 1 a Promotion, P e rsonnel Supervi1\o·n. Exc:el. employc benefits & regular salary increaaes based on )'001' progress. Pacl!ic Finance 1778 Newport Blvd., Costa MeU:. 54&-2233. Equal 'Opportunity Employer TRAVEL 18·23 GUYS&: GALS Must be single & fn!e to trav<!l entire U.S. w/Co-Ed group. H igh earnings. Assist manager in promotional & order dept. No 1 ex per nee. . We train you. Dpense11 ad· vanced. Start Immed. Call rn•> 523--7580 9-6 PM. TRAVEL TRAINEE: Do you like to work withe public? Good typist can advance to full aKtnt. This is not just a job, but a career. Start $450. Call Nancy J.1ay, 54()-.6005, C08..$tal Agency, 2 7 9 0 Harbor Bl, CM. Typist /Secretaries SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Broken -Snowy -Doubt - Septic -TRUNKS A comfdrt-iovtng ba&:gage man: .. He keeps running around in h.is TRUNKS ... ESTATE SALE: Oct. 2-5, 9 am-3 pm. 229 16th Pl., C.M. 50 yr. collection of antique furn. Sml primitive organ. Cut glass. Heisey R.S. Prussia. I..cvely linen. Pic- tures. Books. S t e r l i n g flatware. Lo!S of oriental jewelry.jades, snulf bottles, Cloisonne. Wheeling Peach Blow cup. Lo.t s of other ilems. Helen Noland. OAK dining rm set, 60'' rnd 11.i tti 5 matching chair§ & hand carved base. Exlnt rond. 19:1) wicker rocker & table. 536-4812. ANTIQUE Chinese furniture, Persian rugs, R u s s I a n Samovol"S, many m o re artifacts_ (213) 4J9.8267 1936 FORD 1% ton Truck. Dealer demonstration, 39,000 orig. miles. A·l running cond. (TI4l 644·8136. \VANTED. Large c h I n a cabinet. Rea sonable . fi44-4687, BEAtITIFUL old trunk item!! Incl 40 yr old dolls, $120. 2202 Wallace, C.M. 645-3335. WHOLESALE GRANO R.E'TAlL OPENING OCT. 7 ROBBI'S ANTIQUES Wl'St Coust Gullet For $&ultbtU')' Antiqut>S of Mlnneoota ROUND & SQ, OAK TABLES PRESSBACK C11AIRS, LAMPS JIOOSIER CABINETS. ROCKERS ICE BOXES AND MORE llrs. 11·5 541 Center St. 642-5313 Costa Mt'lll, Ca. 847-4411> for appt One Block North o! l{arbor Blvd, &: Newport Blvd, In· fersectlon. * * * 11t PREMIUM A'M'S: Cnpet & Oraix.oni l'tA.~O. rxqul.llle O.an Griffith GARAGE SAL E sm,,....... Nylon. ···"""· * ~ ....... 152.6 Dorothy L•ne Oct 6 1 Ii 8. 323 Morning lbQ $2.4.9 yd. U.nun •exture Newport Beach s111r 'Lane, Oovt'r Shorl-.. droperies $1.*1, FI o yd' 1 Yvu are the winnl·r QC C1Ulll'rru11; clec cuok\/JK aµ-n oor Co\ll•rlng. ~2901. 2 tk:kCll to the pll.:U)l..'f.'11; dilihl'I: IHdies \\'OODEN yard furnltuni. 4 9th Annu•I Or•nve Co. clo!J1l'11."\lzt-9·17, ct(·.; new pitte1. metal round tJ&tlo lntem•tion•I 11ewlng n1achinc & "I~ or-~hit' Sl5. Car--top c11.1Tk'r Auto Show gan at lract!Ol1 of original r11ck $2. :ti.fotorcycle rack $5. KlmbtlU. beaut fn.Litwqod, Uke new. Orl1i SUOO Sacr1f! $69S. lfl 4 pm ~J..0076. Us.cl Or9ent Nff<lod Hla;bet:I SS J'IUd In CMh Call Collect 213: 814-6762 Sporting Gooda 130 at the 1:ost. 548·8531 or 540-141 9. ~U-72:l5. ANAHEIM Household Goods 8141 ~5-S~pd~. ~S~ting-,-,,-,-,,-,.-."h°":k-,o-WI N c HE s T t: R P.iorlcl CONVENT ION $30 Tl~Lr~r action r If 1.-, ROYAL OOULTON 12 plat't' wmA~15 CENTER 'H""' caHtx>r 3411. $250. \Vin . 11th th 15th !!fitting. lQ'J pc11. $400. •. .• '--··: -'!od•I l" mognun• Oclnber ru · ROYAL CROWN DERBY LRG cu11t hardwood L c,...,. e. " '" ,. • Please call 642-5678, ext. 31" 12 aervlce plalell, $400. shaped bnr. \Vfhatch covrr Duck gtin •»Ith new Wln- beM-een 9 and 5 pm toelaln1 App'x __ retail P\lt pty. top. $125 91)2..7633. chester wntilated r ib, XI "cke<s I No~ County .~.ria Inch full choke S 2 0 0. your "' · , ... , 956-7407 Misc•llaneous toll·free number is 540-1220>. ~. • * * * * Jewelry BIS _w_an_1_oc1 ______ 820_ BICYCLE exerciser "ith New. GARAGE·SIDEWALK DIA . Sol. approx. t ct. S350. CJ:IINA cabinet or hutt'h, an-timer, spttdometer. * * * SALE A JtU8.l; Sol. earrings 1 ct. t1que or new. Large . J:'lg,50 548-3025. Kenneth Busby Sat., Oct. 7 $295'. Seal Beach 12131 Reasonable. 644-4687. 1 "'TV~.'R"e"d°'l,_o-, -;H"'l'°F'°'i,---* * 30412 Via Chico 8:00 a.m. to ~:00 p.n1. 431-1924. OL.OER style Ha 1n l l ton St•reo 136 Lagun• Niguel CORNER OF Misc•llaMous 811 Beach mixer th.at wocks. i------,----- You a.re the winner of l6TH & ORANGE ----------1 675--1345 eves. ·n ZENITH & tlCA color TV 2 tickets to the COSTA MF.sA * OLD STOVE * OLDER lloover u pr i ~ht speclalt!. 18" color from 9th Annu•I Or•nge Co. BARGAINS GALORE I SmaUcr ol.d wood burning sv.·eeper in "·orking cond. f.!89. 19" Chromocolor or lntern•tion•I Funtlture, Clothing, slovc! 2 holes on top, front 537-4547 aft. 6. Matrix $375. 21 .. Solid Stale Auto Show Appliances. Books, Toys, door. Needs kits ot work WANTED LoveS<'at slze sofa $419. 23" H.CA tabl~ modl"ls at the Sporting Goods but co uld be real nice whC'n hkie-a-Oed 644-4687. S399. Zi .. Chromocolor tron1 YOU NAME IT!! finished. I started sanding• ~~.-.-.-·:c-;::oc::,-,.,.;c:-;;;;;; ANAHEIM Proceeds to Harbor Area it but didn't llnl-" "" 11·,1Musical Instruments 822 $4/J. 3 yr picture tube, 1 yr CONVENTION · ""'· ..., parts &: service on all &et!'!. CENTER Youth and Ct:>m.munlty quire. rt.I.'!~. A SlG sand-FENDER PORT. ORGAN. ABC Coloo: TV, OOll Atlnnta, October 11th ttiru 15th Activity Proj~ts blasting Job would take s200. Vox An1p. only. 7j lluntlngton Beach, 968-l'\29. Please call 642·56'18, ext, 314 SpottBOted by fhC' tare of that. Jl would make watt reverb fuzz $75. Gib!!On 1 =200"'°~w7A~rr=~H"•_rm_o_n--,Ka7'-n~lo-n lx>h\ICCn 9 and 5 pm to claim COSTA MESA a culc. planter; or as a ron· 40 v.·t amp. 2 10" spkr!l. n •cch'<'I" 930 A and 2 Fisher your tickets. !North County ROTARY CLUB v~rsalion piece-an l'nd tabll' $45.24761 Belgl't."en Pl. ['I speakeni. $400 or best offrr. II ,_ "-1 540-l220J uJ 1 famil \Vt!h a magazine ledge. I .,. aft 6 ti .... ...., nun1"''" s . FANTASTIC m I y paid S3S (or ll·make offer. .oro pm. 49-1-1257 aft 1 pm, * • * • • gar sale. Bunk beds, 542-1734 evc~ and weekends. UNIVOX guitar, 2 pickuj'1, ~· Stereo COMOle, 1'~ yn.. * OLD STOVE * dresser , chiffarobe. knee DECORATOR'S DELIGHT _ a~j brldge, $75, Inc ca.<'R. old. S200. Xlnt condition. Smaller old wood burning hole desk&: chr, beaut bur-old ta.I and brass seal Glbson amp, gd shape, Rvb Call 673-7737. stove! 2 holes on top, front KY <A·l cond), cradle, mpl me e, Tremolo ft pedal, S75. R hi .. _ """'· ....... -crib $60; v.'OOden tern stand, "AAJOSO' 23 INCll n.c.\ COLO TV. door. Needs lots of Y.'Ol'k c ...... , uo.u:1 ,,........,._, • European, 4 11. tall, $100; ......-e\'t's. $75. but could be real nice when IOlid redwood gym aet incl RMANOZ Cl.a IWll ft* WANTED: ~ndl)', , loving hOme for dlltling It ANGER 26. I a' I . ff'mA.11' Sllky Tf'rrlf'r pup. betu•Hhall)' 1~1nt. boa.I 110\IM.'brokl;'n. AJI sh 0 11 , 11.·/3 aalls. pU.1~1t .' lllellne. &-st offer owr $ 1 7 5. a>mJ*IS, ltDt , \.;! 9 hp out· 831'>-83.13 brd, 2 MehON. r'(IC! gear. · fabric cuahio111, 1 t o v r , OBEDIENCE. class to start niany otht'f" xtru. Tha In t b e tn.•1ne/Newport b'~t 111 in likr new <."'J~. Beach tU'C.I., \Vet!., Oct. 4. s.~. Pvt ply. ( 7 l I I 7:30 PM. Open to All dogs jjJ0-9K24 Ovt'r 5 mos. ~ loR~.,=T=.--. -~=·,-1.~.,-.,-w-,.-,,-,,..~,,-,,-.1 SILKY terrier pups. AKC Good rond1hon. Kil. Oilt chllmp qual.ily. Odorln.11, GJ.>1~7o&'l7 1111 !1 p rn. ;;..;:1· Pvt. ply. {Tl4 t INTER.fltATION,\J.--,-.. -1-ncl-·, gen. sp1nkr. &: roail tnitkr. Sl\fAU. mbt breed, 1 malft, 1 t'ti·. $.500. 67J.....5l'i0. feml $5 ea. Had 2 pupp)' ~---1 lhoti 6'73--0TXI, bC'twn ll & LIDO 14 "Llh !i.1.1l1t1£ i;:~ar. :-, • trailer. Coor! r<Jnrf • 61!}-2tr.9 r\'f' ... DAf..MATION puppi<'i>. AKC. -----Terms, Stud 1 e r v Ice . 1972 VENTURE 21. G hp 636-3214. o/hofLrt.J. T'rlPr, Cust Int. Pri pty. 968-t~<w> OCHNAUZER pt1pt1, l'(udl---'-'------- te~ice. grooml.n~. 1rnns, I TI4) 522-8366. 6o•ts, Slips/Docks 910 TOY f)(x>dl1?s : 2 sLlvPr. J Stlf' lpaC(• avail black. Frmalea. AKC show. Sailboat. $100 ell. 893-(.65.1 aft 6. • 673.fffli • BA~ pops, AKC. 6 wbii. * Nl'ar Lido. acc"On1n1t1d111"" $50 ea. up to CO' Mat. Dock JXN1•r 633-3337 or ~10-14 & 11.'&IM'. 54lHXJ58. M/\LE \\'hlppet pu11py. Show Boats, SPMd Ii Ski 911 qwilily. 16. Glulq'mr ~kl bl'.»ll, lOO hp • 826-9781 Jo:\llnn1rle molor & big whl DARLING brown toy poocll~. trlrr. $119j, or befit ofter. 7 v.·eeks old. &12-481B da)'l'i: 9f!3.-.296:l. ;",J.l-3885 after 6 pm. I lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I 1lt Golden Rt-t.riever J>Up!l,1,-------~[i] AKC. 8 ~·ks, ~, & field, I Ti•wpcwlliltlM . j rill • shols, pM\' P'Y. 526-5687. . . 5 While German Shephl'rd I puppies, 8 11.ttks. no. Camper11 Sale/Rent t20 ! S4'Hllf.6. slide, clothes • incl 2 coats old metal pepper 1nill, '60 HE , u. . e 64&-7032 e fini&ht'd. I startt'd sanding • sz )2, Typewriter, TV, Spanish. $55; pair unique '60 Antonio Lopez Flame-"" STF.REO S track recorder. * IRISH SE't'TER PUPS, it, but didn't finish, so it's po-loin ~nch w ,. n • -. nt.n Tues, Thun, Fri. aft AKC g g ...... ~ s~·· '73 MOTOR HOME quite !'Wiied. A $l0 sand-antique ice chest & more! ..... ••i: ... ""4:::-:".,.."'., nc•\ler u.st'd JlOO. &tHICt! "' · t.•<>~~ ,..,,,_ bl . job Id tak Fri & Sat, 1().3. 1848 Port dispensers, 2 ft. tall, great:~'~·~~=~~·--.,,,--...,..,. af1rr 2 P~f. ~ Branrl n"" 19n !>ride &t Jay ' asllng l "°" ake Kimberly, Harbor View for !Bble lamps or bnr, Stal. QUILTER Amplifit'·r y.· 'six RC' Colo• TV, --·•-w-·k HorMS 156 motor homr. lully f!U't,....., ' ca!'(' of Iha!. t v.•ould m e H NB 644-4146. 12 .. speakers & U:os Paul " • '"-''\ll "' -~:;ccc:.,; _______ ·I _, a cute planter: or as a con· •=~o~m~"'~· -·-·-~--~ Slj. -cqu1ppl'fl 1nt•lud1tlg tY.in · STEREO 1972 Garr a rd oopy guitar. 979--4199. HORSE 8c)e.rrling. Ba..·k Ba;)' I I p " p B trgru • versallon piece-an end table STEREO, sofa, fishing rod, 1 i ~ full 1 • 963·29&1 • area. Rea*lnable. )f'( s. .. ., ... l\Ulo. .. • \\/Ith a magazine ledge. I all 8'. z Blkfwht TVs, 2 mode• system z s ze Vox cambrldge Amp $65 RCA eolor 21 .. TV. ._ 557.o,142 * A~f·F~t rarho, du.111 >A'hM'k : paid S35 for it.make otter. elect razors, 2 elect blnkts, changer, AMIF?-.f stcreo Fender Telecaster Slin Table modPI w/lt>g:i. ~~~~~~~~~~~! J>lus mum mu<'"h more. &r- 542-1734 eves and weekends. Elect hair dryerfsetter, radio, RCA tape deck plug e 536-79'M • \\'or"-pc•I. I'""'· ,.,,...__,,.,,_ IA! •577524. in type jacks. A i r·l~~==---.,----.,-"'7 ~ ' LftJ ....,.,,...<J'tt).J ~ $ OWN Appliance• 802 vac, sew mach, Tons of bed-suspension spenken. Still WANTED to buy used flute, PORTABLE 1V set, ex-[ ........ , .. ~ 395 D No Fees. Immed. openlngs (or short & long term assignments Ol' permanent placements. Call us now! P.P,S. Pacllic Personnel S;ervice1, 112 No Tower Union Bank Square, Orange, Ca. 547"'6446, Ask For Rachel May. "Make Room For Daddy" \VAS H ERS, Dryers, Diahwasben reconditioned, ding/towels.. Womens & boys . $45 or under. ...._ E• ., ,_ 1' $132 49 clothing. Fri & Sat only. new 1n box & guar. Was l('ft Call 9&2-8793 cellent oondlt.ion, $."JO. • What you don't get Salva· unclalmed. Originally S270. · Call 642-1184 Prr Mo. tion Anny does. 3800 Now $75. Cash or payments. Off'ce Furniture/ Boets, Generel 900 Yt'll. jtat S.'\95 i5 the total , Any day ls the BFSI' DAY to nm an ad! Don't delay ... call today! 64.2-5678. .•. dean out the garage .gua r n. Delivered ... turn that jwtk into cash with a Daily Pilot Classllied '°'S4"1h1=2l8"'°"/ll3S-"'7_7620_,._.,__ Call 642-5678. RECOND. t r a d e • t n ap-•••••••••••••••••••• il: . A CONV(HJENT 910PPtNQ AND SfWING GUIDE FOR THE CAL ON TH£ CO. For •n ad in Wom•n's World Coll Muy Beth 642-5678, •,xt 330 To Size 48! 9u.ilt As You Sew STRIPE UP a gre&t match skimme.r, tun ic-, fn!lhionable f1an!d pa.nts -tor MW and 1972 doinQ:I! Note ,11nvnlng diagoral neddine, pockets. Printt'd Pattern mt: Nl~W Women'• Siu>t 34, 36, 38, 40, .f2, 44, 46. 48. Size 36 (bulrt 401 lakes 2 SIB ylll"dl ~Inch """1c. SEVD'ITY·F'IVE C£NT8 for each pattern • &dci 2$ cents tor each pattnn lot Air Mall and 59fdal Han. dllna: otberwlae thlrd-c!U9 delivery ..w talce 1luft wttkt or man. send to Marian MartJn. lhe DAILY PILOT. 442. Patttrn Drpt .. :m West 11th St., New Yoril:. N.Y. 10011. Print N' ,uu:. ADDI.al wttb 7JJ>, SIZE and ln'l'U:- """11EL 100 Top f'a.U·Wh1ter Pat• tcmt ill &U·MW ,.._..,,_ .. .. Oitalos! Pll.ll FabWout tionu. -chooM a FREE pattern. Th Cfflli, ll'IST AHi' SEWING BOOK • .,... bo<IQ, wea.r lll101A1ow. "· . I!<STAH1' FASHION BOOR • lfundNds of fublOn lactt. JI. \. ---- 7196 t, A6.e a.."' Sa\le steps! Discove this remarkable, new method. Dillerent. JfEW! Quilt u you sew Attic-Window quill - it's made in tn.'f' thickneMe1. No Interlining is nece911U'Y· You'U enjoy it?' Patt.em TI96: charts, patch patterns. 8EvmTY·FIVE CENTS for oach pattern -add 25 centa fOl' each pnttem for Air Moll and Special Hand!· tng: otberM&e lhinklua dellveey will take thrff week• or more.. Send to AIIOI B:roob. the DAU. Y PILOT, ll&. ~eedlecraft Dept.. Box 163. Old Chellea Station, New York. N.Y. 10011. Prtnt Name. &..,._._ ztp, l"lltttn NmnW. Totally JC«M 1'71 N~ ttafl CataJos cn.mmed wHb bllt, crochet st;yln, cntlL 1SO dedps. TR.EE palteml ,._.., !ff:WJ ......... ..., 9oek. Leam to make extra dollars """' -....ita ........ $1. a.tut M9cruae "-'·.SJ. ----.. 11 ...... CrMtlel .,.. .... 11 . -Glft-........ IL Cfl11••• ............ ti. .. llflt --· ..... !!Oc u.....,--... !lOc °"' ... 1-11 pallf'tftl Mic M--.. qdt IMllll 2 !Oc II Qirilla. fw 1'*1 lleok 50c ---- pliances & TVs. Dunlap's, 1815 Newport Blvd., C.?-.f. 5-18--7780. MAYTAG repairman has wuhers $35. to $100. Can deliver wfl yr. i'JUn. s:Jg,..1178. Rent Washers/Dryers $2. Wk. Full maint. • 639-llm • OVER 200 washers. dryers, retrigeraton from $39.~. 54>--0'180. REFRIGERATOR, new G.E. used 1 ~!I months, cop. pertone. $125. 840--'m& MAYTAG auto washer. Old, but \\!Orks fine. $25. 968-7327 Camer•s • Equlpm911t Rent•I D•rk Rooms Special student r a t e 1 , DAVE'S CA MERA EX· CHANGE, 474 E. 17th, C.M. 646-2136. FurnJture 110 NO JUNK llERE Knotty maple thick. solid coffee table wtmatch ends-Ideal for game nn or L.R. - lamps free! Also sngl bed. frame, w/no-gag box sprg & Inner sprg matt. Also J'x5. walnut bus. exec de11k, likr new! Call 54~737S for appt In AM or all day Sun. WALNUT dining set. Table w/1 leaf & 4 bentwood chn\l"S w/cane seats. $80 con1plctc or will 11 e 11 separately. 847-7804 altc<r 5 pm. DISTRESSED Oak ~!ahog end Ulla. hanging 11be.lves, Set, P.111e Items. ...... ;<S.s653 05 k . Wolnut Bistro Lamps. FRENOI Prov. pecan 11."00d triple dresser S30: Niqra CycJo.M.1.8118(e chair, black. 2 wka old · pAkt OV<'I" S500, aacrtrkt' for $400. MS-1290. OLD OAK -aectlonal blJOkcuc Wf1tlul doon, Sl'l!t; hlf;t'h d'8.lr wtr.ny, $.iO. 6'4-4146. BEAUTIFULLY grained Mahoe dlnlnc table, 42Jdi8 ovnl, \Vi l" 1&.tin 'A'OIKI border & 6 chain. 568-78911 YA1'!1LY Bn:uk up &ve:rythlng mWlt to llouteful of tu rnlturo. fi'75-?974. STAGE Coach bunk bed1, VCT')I U1llllwll New S25I). ~11 $1?;;. B,..m new oond. 673-12A4. •••Sofa • matchJn& b\"' IC!'a1, r'lf'Ytt UM!d. Uoth n=;o. Prtvllle. 961J.Tll0, SOFA SLEEP SET 6 t'Ol'tll!' ~. Wee new, ITI. "'"'51T. • G. E. pol'I aterro S'Zi. ~n~ •/ minor. 125. Ml--l'Dt. OOUBLE bRt:1 •I ....... PS. • Call ll)-5301 • ROCK map~ dlnl"C 1..iM, I chafr1. l'OQ(t c:ondltbl.. ... ~· * Parkv:iew Ln. Apt 21 B, Lo,yawl\y Dept. 714:893-0501. Equip. 124 ::.:;;:;.:;:...::.::.c.:c..;.;. ____ I ~·n l>ilYment nnd only Itvnne.s.52-8Wt. *AUCTION * V'ER..fEXcEiiOO--a~ FrMtoYou _J/S • * * • * Sll2.,9 11 nu• total monlhty 1 FANTASTIC garage 118.lt>. Fine Furniture walnut off. desk for atty., _ _ John Blngh•m paymmt 11\('ludlna' llUC, lk'-• Se~-----L In! blk 3 al st •~t.-.... _ -26611 c.11. Juenit• rrt'W' nnrl all nnM('t diar&N ""'& llln,C;ll, m e -&: Appliances re e " or uruume ........ 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 HP1 0 .8. mtr-3 HP, silver Aucuons Friday, 7:30 p.m. exec. -\Yhy pay new price? c,. apistr•,,no BeHa"chol .'~1",,, ""'"n·•t~-~~ •.~ tea set, drum set-Astro 7 d B Near-new cond. Cost ou arc ">A·1n,n:r ·~... • ~-• .,._"' .. pc, Unicycle. 1ll" 'IV, Win y's Auction arn $1'ro-sell for '~ price $85 FREE Kitten, Uutfy frlslcy, 2 tkkrts to thl" $112327!1 inrlud1,_ 1ax a.nd bicycles, puppet stage, 207!'I% Newport, CM ~ del'd or you pick up $75. ball of fur. Weant"d It 9th Annu•I Orang. Co. llrMl!olt'. l'll-·l~t ~I Buckle ski boots, guitar, Beh!nd Tony's Bldg Alat'I Good chair N/C. To see ph !rained. 548-4615. lnternetion•I pr\C"r l.!1 Sll~.16 which 1,,.. boating accessories, toys, (A.M.) 56--7376 for appt. or 11 GREYHOUND. FEMI.. Auto Show l·IU(f(.,i 11.Jl rinanc-e ~. misc. Fri.Sun, lo.ti. 1750 WELDING Supplies, Gases, all day Sun. LOVES KJOS. at the ""k>t tu and l\Cmlie. An- Miramar, Balboa Penin pt Fire Extingul!lhers, SaJety ANSAFONE. Will annrer * 893-l74S * ANAHEIM nual perc..>ntqe-rate la '54, '55 & '56 Austin Healeys equip, C02 & Dry your phone take meuage1 CONVENTION l2.9l~. . "--•·-r..111\ ..__., IN". Complete Welding Out· ,._ 1 back• to le--.. 11.; yr olt1 German Shepht-rd CENTER Bill BARRY ln a .......,,,,.,1, .,.,., Ol' """"' of. flls from $6'9. Oxygen "" pay remo ..u.• male fl'ff to good home. fer for basket. '31 "A" Ford Scrvlc<" Co 2072 Placentia trol 00\der ovtt any phone. 89J.-7fl9 aft 4. October 11th thru 1!.lh COUW w/Olds eng. tran& & CAt. ~. ' ms. 847..Q88. Plc.>aote call 00-567!. "'· lt4 PONTIAC~MC·FIAT rear/end, $500 or best offer. NEW walnut ~"x82" ex-FEAf. Labfstrpherd, 1 yr. belwC't'n 9 and 5 pm 10 1·JaJn1 {lit ~I. 81 S.A. J>'rwy.l •51 Chevy P.U. bed $35 or ~."':'!,..,,~R":Q~U~l~CK~SA~LE-O>o~~!!c~hl ecuUve desk & JIUltching h.sebroken, lhoU A JJc. )'Ol:lt' llcUta. !North County~ t:. 111 & .. S.A ~1000 best offer. Misc 1 Fri, Sat & w/fold-out bed S!JO; Refrlg chair. Sacrl11ce both tor Needs big yrd. 642-M:ZS. tolJ.(n_'t' numbf-r 11 540.1221 1. 1171 fORD F.: C'" n l'I 11 n ~ Sun, S4g,..2J69, $25; Kitchen 1able $10; $600. Phone CTI4) 6-M-8814 TO good homea -7 mo old * • • * * Camper Yllll. Oubblt' lop, FIVE family garage sale. !..amp $10; Bookcase $5. or 642-3072. fem Welmaraner &: )'Ill BOAT trailer, capable of aelf cont•lni~l $41CJO, Jo"irwt- 3907 Inlet Isle Dr. Cd:vJ. 496--0988. EXEC swvl chr Sl5 . 23 Sec ~ "'hi fem CHI. ~. handllrv 26' boal. lllC&led clnjf a"all!tblt" lW-«)36. Sat & Sun 9-5. Motorcycl£>s, FOR 8811?. Dinner for le1111 chr sg-. 18 desks file! lltl.!1 AOORABLE-bfond Cockal't'M' Bayside Marina, partdna kl! FACTORY DIRECT ,.,urn, lamps, appliances, thllll S2.50. Homemade soup 861 w 19th CM 642-340!. $40. Deya: 642-41D8. All. 6: 92. Call 673-4721 or IQ~. ruuy furn cabo\lr-r campers, C'hildreM clothes, toys, S:W-3885 G ... G • ~~ & salad + entree at PianOs/0-ans 826 · • Y~ ..,.. 1V.ou~ ... no down. Sll. l't'r mo. C.mp. patio tum, bicycles & misc • • • ION 1-TO !Iowan.rs Res1aurant, Np1 BLACK SlamMC killens, ('()l.LECT . ~..,, tT sht:lbi. No 1it•••n. 6U-Mll. treasures. Sch. PIANOS • ORGANS wk1 old, rN" to & good PRESENT. l9TI Gt.IC % Too P/U w/12" GAR sale, Sat only, 9-3. IRLESS Sp Com Hammond, Wurlitzer, many home. C!N-2115. e llS-Tdl e '"·-•· ,_ (' 1,000 Moving. Frost free I\ • .ray gun, : others. Pre-11euon lif>'!'C'lais. n~f'nt ... r •mpl!r. •· Pit-le '"'n, l1p11, ga.s mg. SO mod 1 •---_,,1 p•·-•-&o.h. Pow.r '°' ml, All xtrw.1: $ 4 9 9 ~. refrig-freezer, stcrt'O, ping .,-. e c..__....,,... s ........ "' poflJ: tbl. misc items. 1607 hcMc. S.'>50. f'rigidsire Re.>-Organ rentals, ~loney s.&\I· f ll"L,,l .. 1971 SEA RAY" 1 ~!162-:....JO_I~'--~---~. Kent Ln, N.B. (WeslcllU). frig, 675-lOOl. Ing bargainl ~here riPI ............ " 4.)5 Didi. Padc1·jot, Jl'. D> 10' le~k: McDonald 1 MUST gell 80ra, twin bl"ds, SECRE'T1\RY desk, f i I e now at: Se'riel.. Equipped for Water campt'I' 111 1!°'1'' rwtc. }adt, dresser sets. eOO tables. cabl~. lamp~ chair. Copy WaUichs Music City C•tt &52 Slrilng I fishlmi:. tandem elr, MOO. &G-0«1 lamps etc. 4612 Seashore P.1achine supplies.' S46-&9'2l. South Coast Plaza ~2830 1n1Ucr. Call Aflf'T 12:00 Cyc let, Bfkn, Dr .. Npt. lkh. Sal 10-4 pm. • PRIVATE 1cnnlll club SlOO I noon. 1714} IJ0....64,!:Z. MUST Scoote" t1S REPEAT GARAGE SALE membership f('C & only sto *PIANOS*ORGANS* CHAP.IP slrt'<I It r""I SELL! ---------1 Most Thi""" 4i Price--Sat. 10 per mo. 67l-5TII. Golng Out For Business lllmalayan kitten. Adtnbll'. , . ~ ·fil'ittt l!J'll Y•rna.ha trT-1 ~ ·~-CARPET FOR SALE Best quality. prtce. -serv. '.l moll old. $1Z. Alt 6, 27 Unthle 300 cc·i . Dlrt or ICrfilt. AM 1416 SandcasUe Dr.. L·-al ~-I "-'dwl 1 ~ll ('ond. 450 hrl. autQ pilot. 101 ---·-•· b Carpet La C:a.11 n.oW ·.xo;: n~:•y . ._, n, e c ' WAii SIS. 2-t channel en. l"ltrt• ' iarrvire IJMU--Cd~f. • ~745 .yer. 54G--~ Player Planoa: & Roll• \llAo''T Sl11.mt'1W' rt>m . unrrr rflth, Trim IAbl. aux f\Ktl e>iitm 1 p,. •dome I e r A PATIO Sale. 5 pc dinette set, Renlals •.••.•.•• We Buy-Srll 10 breed y.•flikll!' male tor .. _ _, fb.h 1 tw-lnwt. $6.il} JOTS EI BR t &r Misc hst'wti.re!'! NICE, CLEAN Bf.DR001't Daily lo.6 Sun U.5 lnnk. ,.h .. ·t ,,... •• ,. l!q'l.I p r.-1 Qi. ~t Sal -: Sun. 3051 Johnso~ SET. COMPLETE. $50. FIELD'S PIANOS plc•k of liller. M&-0169. Ball h1nk. oulnQtft, n11h ~;.~l, ta • ~I•. Ave, CM. 138 E. 18th ST CM 548-4'185 C.OSla Me.a cn'J 6'~ SEALPOINT Slame9e 1 )T, hlijt11, t'ti·. \'f'l"Y dll!'an. lit~ -httalthy. Vl'I')' 11Uf'rtionatc. f.rlft'r, 3~i7. 10 sP1-;r.n &.IAN'S lUl<E YARD Sale. 269 E, 20th St. CUST made steroo cabinet. PRIVATE PARTY WANTS s1.i;. !"'4--6706 afl -1:30. 311. OUt!S. Tri cabin. Curui l t.t.AN\' EXTIV\.S' CM. Washing Mach, Odds & Solid wood pecan J.l.rUsh. TO BUY PlANO J"Olt ISi .63 "'8d .. d , S 2 I , O 0 0 . LIKJ: N Jo.:'\l: Ends. Tues. \Ved, &: Thun. Beaut $1.50. 96&-'1327. C1\SH. R.15-2278. Oog-~-'-------· i IQ> • ~ 213 ·63G·0 1 ~7. l"'Wtl DAILY PILOT INVITES YOU ,., eAlLf "LOf ..... tr WI'· '-1# ..... • .. I .. ................................... -. ... ,... ,_ -...... tu.M7e. b i It ..,__ t ~ ... ',,........ .. ...... ,... ...... • _, woe ' • '4tlf "* ..... • l-IA~Do10NO Qrca.n, Lelley speAJl:er. 341-7143 C-J I J1AMMOND orpn model M· 1-11: >A'tllnut; Marie Pft'llel &- rrUJ. $900. Evt'\11 67'3-5121. SHONfNGER--~b1101 u;iriahl w/Klau tmnt. SliS. Call -Hammond M·3 Wfcust0tn Speaker. $M0 or bc61 Ofter. f#.l.A"5 1911 Nfl.c.i antiqu('. NrM• work. StOO. J'lfo l"t'1tllllMblf' oner re.ft1'1Nf. 497~16. rru~I SETTER PUPS. 714-67"3-4399. 70 HONDA 12S st~ ... .., $55 F'..AOt, FEMALES. 18' Gl.upllr Cabin O\.lllM'!T mUa UR rww. oncrr. • 641-1079 • ~ nhp F.v. W/lrlr.T. IJVl' '*":----· ------AFGHAN Rrv;. 10 me>. R.tu. ta.nit 1 00.1 rowr. Now ln e 1J'l'O F!SSO ~ '*"' oHcr. ftm.. All 1bol.a A Lk N--port tJ:lp. zu...m.1229. blkr. New CflC)ne, ll!lp &15-7'919 or 548-(llTI. OIRIS '9!. 31' Tri ...-h(n. lhaPf'. ~. * 1lt ShephmJ-QIU~ mb:cd Cuftom\Jit'd, XfTU. Jdr-a.I "i't Suzuki r.Q, kM" mt'L puppW.. S •kl. lh~brd S2t(JJ). r v 1 . 111any x1ra•. !\lk·k. le. t:a11 '61<-.1"1 ---:-: --..,...,.,:....,.,.cc.·=~~--~ I :•-;;Pol::;c,...::::,=,.r 1• c•1\lllfl up ht'r S..ta. S.11 ... Urn> llONDA SL Xtl, dlf'\ A mini Shnr"' J:. r-au·h· 1 -----::----::-::--:~ I stl"r'tt, low mUn. s:m. or ~1'00J. LUDEil~ JS, No. l\ Bandit oth!r, ~ AKC Sllnl·TlU J'\Jl.PI~. "''11 rllrt'. ~' taDa. CHl. '1U llONOA 150. ritrndf<wt SJZ\. Pnlla~·· ..Up.. SJIOO . forb. c:ht'OnW', !ijlnu. XJi1t 8»-11117 an 6 ' ... 11:""t1 ~~-mnd. D V1-Altrn'. MC • '1D SUZUKI 80, twd.. o-n • df.prrwi.JiM! fl.SD ... IJ'7-Mt'I 1172 llONDA (D..100. lf1111 than um m!lf'f.. Call an 6 Pf'I W.11'&2 '"' KAWA.~KI UJtr, rww f"'l)fYf l-OJ ml. seo. 64'"'2'47 -=~co --tm JIONDA n ... tn. X1.i'"T ('O'lll) 11"1 OHM". 5tM'.L'!M ~Ka-trm!kt -lt:orc. r.,M Mnt:t I;• ml"'-. J!n ~ """ Dfk'r lB· ru 7 -~izt-~Dtn-~l ... .,,.---1 m , .. maltr n1Urt C'•ll 116-St 1 ,l~IOND="A"""!IOD -f-Vf'fJ·-~--. i--~ l llC .. ~ ~ kW" ""11:. ·;., \\1S~J.:ltAC'Al, tr • ~""'" .. ~ * WlNTDl RATD * Mir hDnW NCKall.. PD ... + ml R....rw now, .... \. . 1 \ • TIMl...i.,, Ottobtf 5. 1"72 , Miiii' 1111 tll Trvdt1 '62 Trudt1 "2 Aulol W1- W./ltent MO .:..:..:='------'-·I '10 F'ord ~ TM ES40 &Iott 961 AulM, lmptM'ted 970 VANS Van. V-8, aulo ""'"' Put seat. tinttd '"·lrx\Bhlds, H/D radiator. gprings, etc. Xlnt. VAN CONVERSIONS ay owner, 12195. s.. at cor- M. ANY MOTOR "'" or v1cton• & C.nyon, CM. 835-1133 l day al HOM ES SG-6346 ''""'!· Lart:<' 111_•\l'('t\on of new '69 1-"0RD VAN ~, Q R D S . CHEVROLETS, Automatic I.rans., 15986C OPEN ROAD MOTOR HOJ\\ES Gl\1C'S, DODGES. \Vilh 116$ CON'l'El\1PO. The Wl$l's HOWARD Chevrolet 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. Gatden Grove 894-4479 Motor Home Rentals Available tor dally, ~·eekly or monthly basis. 21 '. 23'. and 25' seu CJ)ntaJned l\Je>- tor Homes_ all equlpt with generator, root nir, and m.Q1 other extras. All ~ are 1972 model.;. We bave the all steel Amigo al9o. Pleue call 839-9560. rno~t popular ronversion. Newport Beech Also 1973 Pride-N-Joy, l\tany l\tacArthur Blvd & Jamboree J\Totor homes to choose from, 833-0555 All at huge discounts ~.68~ro=R~D~%~' ~T~.""'•"11"·""'T"e-.,. BILL BARRY drop. Orig owner. $2900 or PONTIAC-GMC -FIAT lst St. at S.A. Frwy. 200'.l E. Isl St ., S.A, 558-lOOJ '70 Chevy 3/4 Ton Motor Home Rentals Pi<k-up. Cu.,om cab, V8, auto. trans., factory air, po\\·er sll'e.1"1ng, radio, heat· SALES & LEASING ('r ,step bun1per, ntlrmrs, f\llJ M!l'Ylce facility low mtles. (37693F). $31~ llal11iar Motor Homes ..:•:.:.1'·-=cal=-'-=836:.:-6535=· c..· -~ '72 Ctwvy van. Like flC'W. 3.)() 531-6800 V8 hydro, P.B. H"Y duty packa~e. $3.199. 67~9 FREE TV wf2 wks rcnt<1l. eves: 847-35.31 daya. fO' &: 23' motor homes. Pvt 1 ·,...:59,..:.:F:.,'OC,R'°o-=,"-, ~T='o'-n--,,U~ni-que pty. winter ratf'!I; \Vk & dai· ,vood camper. Runs well. ly retcK also. 968-0563. $295 846-7S45. Rent A Motor Home e 1950 GMC truck, good ruu- for your Vacation ning cond. Body needs * 839-4301 * "·ork. $175 or best oiler. NEW Llf"ETIJ\1ES-the \vorks ~~~*-646--0388~~~*-,-=oc:: & at fantastic rales.. P vt • '70 Dodge PU. Only 15,000 pty. 838-0033 'l'ustin. n1i. Forced to sell. Call alt 6 pm. 9'5-1446. Trailers, Travel 945 '72 Ford E-200 Supcrvan, '70 SfARCRAFT Tc n t 20,000 mi, $.1400. Very good b•c.t offer tn<I 846-7210, Auto Leasing 964 1973 Olds Toronado Factory Equip!, Full Powu $128.00 per mo. + tax 24 1no. Open End Lease LEASING ALL MODELS AND MAKES '73's · Southern CalHomia 1st National Bank Leasing 2001 1'1ichel!Dfl Drive \Corner of MacArthur) Irvine. Calit ~ n4/m.8620 213/627-0367 Autos Wanted 968 REWARD - WILL PAY OVER KeUy Blue Book For late model, cl11n, low mll•age dom•'"' tics, Imports, trucks or campers. Call and ask for Buyer DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 24'0 Harbor Blvd. CHI• Mou -17 WE PAY TOP CASH tor uRd can I trUCks, 1lwt call Ua; f(.C' free Htim&tes. GROTH CHEVROLET A4k tor Sales Manqer l82l1 Beacb Blvd. Hunt1qton Beach M'l-6081 IQ 9-3331 \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS It your car Is extra clean, see us fint BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979-2500 IMPORTS WANTED Orange Counties TOP i BUYER Bll.J.. MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Beach. ~ 847~ _1M'4L_ Villf. our 1-" bomel -o ROY CARVER, Inc. 234 E. 17th St. Co.tta Mesa 5'6-4444 CORTINA '68 Cortina GT, WOWI 546-:>Jltl9 DATSUN '£6 Datsun lSX) rdlt:r. Gd cond. Reblt eng. New batt & tires. $4'1'5. 839-7841; 646--<546. FIAT '72 FIAT Demonstrator with less than um mites. 1972 Fiat 128 4 dr. sedan, fully factory l'qUipped lncluding AM radio, Motor Trend maga· zine's "Ecooomy car or Ole year." Now on sale at Bill Barrys. Serial No. 128A086021E. $59.00 DOWN $59.82 PER MO. Yes. just S.59.00 ls the total down payment and only $59.82 ls the total monthly payment including tax, lic- ense and all Cinance charges for 36 months on approved credlt. The cash ~pn~ is $1,907.75 including tax & license. Deferred payment 1971 "KARMANN Ghia '°"""' low mileqe, xJot ooodltlon, S19115., 493-<lSl. MAZDA MAZDA LEASE SPECIAL New '72 RX3 $57.56 Loaded. ROTARY powered. 36 mo. + T A L. For res1>. ply. Trades cons. • 72 ROTARY'S "Demo Sale" 10 TO CHOOSE "BIGGEST SAVINGS" "Seiv\ce Is the difference'" HUNTINGTON BEACH MAZDA 17331 Beach Dlvd. 842-6666 Lease Mgr, Mr. Fry OLKSWAGEN·· CHEVROLET FORD- MUST sell Now! '69 VW '69 EL CAMINO '71 co1111nnt SQlllR£ W<11pbalta Camper wllh ~ •ull>maltc trans., un1a1 pop-top_ ~n~c. ~ power •~. lir' cood,. Station wagon, VI, auto wtth extru. 9">1!, with bcftutUul custom lop. lranl factory air powtt make oHer! 536-3645. tow miles, r:xtra clean. 384-wl~ws, power ~teerlnl, 'Tl VW, Front end darnapd, IIC. pawet brakes, White wall !JOCD m.l's. $1000. No Ins. for $229$ limJ (732CAK), $3395 dlr. repaln lorces aalc. '45-TIDl. HOWARtl ci..vrol1t cau --- betwn 8: 30 am-5 pm, ask Newport Beech 11 • .:97::1:.T::o:.ri.:oo:::::w-.,,-.-,,-.000--m-;. 1 for Tee. MacArthur Blvd & Jaroboree Air Pwr stereo eassette '68 VW Camper Pop top, Air 133..()555 dcc'k. $25oo: $400 under Cond, Immaculate Cond, 1970 Oiev. Conc:oun Estate, retall book. Or Jeaae 18 mo $1795 • '65 Jeep 4 Wheel g Pass. Sta. Wen. Pwr. at $85 mo. John Taylor. Drive Waaoncer, Stick, R, Steering & brakes AM-FM 494-4945 days or 494-8992 H, Air $995. ~· Steno nuilo. tilt sieez.. whl eves. lB * • ., vw BUS * Factory Air.-·-· .-.1..:::::::.=~J-E~E~P,,,_---I Xlnt cond. Incl 4 new new t1rea • brakes. PaMl·l---~..;..:::.;... ___ I belted tires. $1195 firm. Ing, Asking $2725. 557-4861. 1948 WlLLYS Jeep. Reblt Must go this wk n d · ·n NOVA · trans. Nu tires. $900 Firm. 673-8244. Automatic trans., pow c r 54&-4358 1959 VW double door bU&. steering, color is bronze. 1966 Jeep Wagoneer. New 1972 engine, reblt trans.. 15,COJ actual m~ Ol9CXX. everything $1295. 3 31o2 =ug~~ $950:"!1~. w HOWAR~hevr-olet ~abright Dr., Dana Point. .,, vw Camping e u a. Newport Be1ch MERCURY Pop-top. Like new. Best Of· MacArthur Blvd &: Jamboree fer. 1827 W. Balboa Blvd. 133-0555 '71 CAPRI Apt. 5 NB. "71 MALIBU ".:;, ~~p~~:,'r ;,;r~ LEAVING: Pretty iood '70 2 Dr hardtop. 4 speed, fac-ONE NOW! VW Westphllia c a m p er tory air ~er steering $1.495 w/Pop Top & tent. Best o(-radio c#210708) $2475 dir'. HOWARD Chevrolet fer 6'5-8683 eves.. Call 83s-6535. Newport B111ch '69 VW Sqba~k slat wgn ,72 MALIBU MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree AM/FM radio, average Power steering power 833-0555 ~l~ !~425• 642-6406l 644-0219 brakes, Mtl f-M radio. MUST sell '67 Mercury · $2600. 979-4130 or 640-1546 Colony Park 9 passenger. 1971 VW Bus. Trailer hitch. eves & weekends. Call &t2-7499 aft 6:~ pm. Xlnt cond. Low mile• $2250. '10 CHEVY Kmg5""'ld, 6 MUSTANG Call 675-1700 days. ..IV\ . V-8 to, ---------I -~~~-~=.--! pass. -...N cu, in. , au ,1~ Baja Bug, FAST air, pi s, p/b, clean, radial '65 Mustang R, H, AT, air BEST OFFER tires, 41,00l miles. $2,500. Cond. $395 e '67 Mustang ·Call ~s a.ft S 557-7592 53&1609. 3oo GT Runs Like New. Trailer. Sleeps 6-stove-ire i ...:'~c.'...:"'~-~•94-6696~~-~--­ box, clOS('I. AC/DC lii::hLo;, * 1965 }o'ord Pickup, ~-pare tire $1147. 531-7255 * 6Ta-".fil7 ·n Golchc·n Nugget Ill' tan-* 67:l-1460 aft 5 pm dem. S<'if·<-'()l'ltalnl-'fl. Ex{'('I. '71 Yamaha 250 Enduro. INSTANT CASH Autos, Imported 970 AUSTIN HEALEY '61 A.H. 3000. Reblt eng & trans. 0-D. w/w. Convt HT. J\.1ake oUer. 642-9490. price i5 $2.Z\2.52 \\'hich In-=-=o-=-...,,..--c--:-;-= eludes alt finance charges, '61 221'.r-S, 4-spd, AM/FM, sales ta.x & license. An-Runs perfect. $800/offer. nual perccn!age rate is 2195 Canyon Dr. C.M. bcf 3 10.25, pm; call 548-9655 aft 5pm. •n vw PoirTop camper, '56 CHEVY WAGON e '65 :r.1ustang 3 spd, R, H, 25,000 mi, New tires, Xl.nt Mags and chrome \\•heels. Nice 645-(;644, cond. S2700. 968-M7'l. V·B, auto, 8-track tape deck, '67 MUSTANG, Excel cond. '61 vw. Gd tires, brks. R&H. curtains. S350. Call 543-3691 Radio/heater, air. PIS, Nu Gd body. Runs beaut. S300. 1967 SS Impala, 327 engine, tires. Xlnt int. 545-6832 aft 5.16-8400. full pwr, one owner. Xlnt'l-'4". -~~~--~ '63 V\V camper. New 1500 cone!, $1300. or best oHer. NE\\/ ·72 ~1uslang, 3,500 eng. Seats, bed, !reezer. 492-2482 or 492-5324. mi's. $1800 as is. 351 eng, $2,400. OwTK'r. 6#-tR33. S550. 64&-178!1 Trailers, Utility 947 2 \Yhl~I trailer. H's a 1:: ton 11ick-up bed & chassis. $130. 979-4575. .......... I~ Antiques/Classics 953 1959 MERCEDES 300 SL Pcrf. l.-Ond. NC\\' l'ngine. 637-7556 or 772-6510 Mr. Davis. Dune Buggies 956 SHORT STUFF IS HERE '73 Gl\1C VAN, completely paneled in!crior with car- peting, ice box, side bunk and rt>ar speakers. Beauti- ful dark blue metallic \\•ith n1atching interior. Immt'd· iat<' delivery, Serial # TGY1S34500218. BILL BARRY PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT '68 V.W. Baja Bug. Just S F l completed. New 1700 cc (1st t. at S.A. rwy. & :nKl E. 1st SL, Santa Ana eng., new paint, mags 558 1000 tires. Must see. 2150/oUer.1 _____ · ---~ 6'll-51l)4. Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! Motor Homes Motor Homes Sale/Rent 940 Sale/Rent INTRODUCING THE ~NIP•VA#S ::~ND '72 DEL MAR ~-. On o l Ion Dodge cho,,i, with ronge. ood Jenien toHel I 7217'lS 19S '5795 ,;, \Ve need your import car. Buyer on duty 9 to 9 daily. B. J. Sportscar Center 2833 Harbor, Costa ~tesa * • '66 Austin Healey 3000 Mark 111. Excel cond. J\.1ust sell! 673-0085. BILL BARRY 540-«9! BMW \VE buy all makes ol clean ---------~~~~~~-~= usOO sports cars, pa.Id for ·-·· or not. Please drive ln for free 11.ppraisal. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Cout Hwy., Newport Beach 642.01~5 TOP OOLJ..AR FOR JUNK OR \VRECKED CARS. Day or nite. 637-3720 *CASH*· Wanted Cllrs needing \York. Private pa.rty, 548-7859 Motor Homes Sale/Rent 940 Llke to trade? Our Trader's Paradise column 15 for you! Motor-Ham•• Sale/ Rent 940 JAGUAR AT '72 PRICES ~1ASJiC BUYS YOUR CHOICE ' ! ;--: '73 explorer 20 fully self contained Ser. No. 26077 ONLY 124~~ fo-t I(-· 10"' OR. (1,Ji ,rk1 lllCI .... & lic.11 il4 SO 7S Del. , .. 1. '"'' i• $I 1.26tM, Ari h 9 41~•.Cli'lw--du• •• r- '73 explorer 24 Sfl,995 s91~.~ Mt ... -.11" .. c.-IM'lc• 'llod. tre r & lie. k .Ul20.7S. o.f. pmt. pr'.ic1 ls j8466J4 ut ii t .13 % Oil """'* crldil, PLAY NOW-PAY LATER 7 YEARS BANK FINANCING 73 explorer 26 '11,995 SU ti« "" lfOILUlllM ,.,..,. ""''" "°"'- AYAU&I Oii Ar,IOYID CllOfT ~explorer of HUNTINGTON BEACH 842-8803 1'111 llACM llYD. MUMTllHITOM llACM . ' • ' MG 1 -~~~~~~~ '69 MG MIDGET, low n1i. IMMACULATE. $1400. Pvt . pty. 4~3897. PORSCHE '69 BRITISH Land Rover Lols ol equipment. 837-2668 after 6 pm TOYOTA TOYOTA DEMO SALE NOW IN PROGRESS at ~lWJi& -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. 1971 Toyota Mark Il: 4 DR. Radio I heater. Air I eorat.. New ti.res. Sl!IOO. 962-14&1. '71 Toyota 1600 Corolla, air cond sta. wag. Call 830-8256 '70 Toyota Corolla. 22,000 Best offer. 536-2307. '70 Chev. El camino, ex· air, p/b, auto. ~1869. •n Karmann Ghia Fae/Air cellent running cond. rebuilt '67 Mustang V.S, a uto, PIS, ImmacuJatc! S1550. eng. Trans. $200, T.O.P. P/B, Good cond. $950. e 963-2539 • Call Steve, 879--3828 after 5. e !m-2741 • '69 Buick Riviera, fully equipped, all pwr & air. Lo CORVAIR OLDSMOBILE m.lleage. Bronze in color,1--------- blk int. $2500 days, 646-2486, CORVAffi '62, S175. Yes, ju!t $299.00 15 the total eves 645-7643. RUNS GOOD. down ~ent and only '70 Buick Custom Skylark Call 548-5124 $111.58 is the total monthly Wht. Blk vinyl top. P.S. COUGAR payment Including tax, Uc· P.B. R&H., fact. air. Under ense and all finance charges 30M. $425 under book . COUGAR '69. auto, pb/ps, for 48 months on approved 646-1252, 644-2228. rad. 1 owner, 29,000 mi. credit. The c8Ah price Is miles. l owner. Very good 19TI. Centurion, all extras U795, 673'-7375, 542-3583. $4549.97 including tax and license. Defen"ed payment priee is $5654.84 which In· eludes all finance chalpll, sales tax and license, an- nual percentage rate la ll.83. cond. $1095. 548-4142. Nu tires, Best offer over Cougar -1910, XR-7. Mint l969 TQYOta Corolla Wgn. $3500. • 557·7000. cond. 1 owner. Lo mileage. 1968 Renault R-10. ' dr. --=c'"'A"'o=1L"'LA-=-c:;;--1,•:::1::.1 •:.cPc::m=, --=t;73--1;613"-=':::-:· :-- Private party, 831-0060. DODGE '68 TQ)'Ola Corona. 51,<0J milM. $795. 897~• TRIUMPH BARGAIN • $695/otrer. 1967 Red Tr, MK n Spitfire ham A IOft top, R./H. 0 /dr'ift. N-mJno<mechanlcal. 847-621.S. 19'70 Triumph Spitfire, Excel cond. All maint record.s- Red w/tat. lnt. 22,000 mi. SIOOO. Pri/pty, Tl._....,1164 • '68 CT6. Radk>, htt, witt whls. S1200 or best offer. 640-<!692, '68 TR-6. 39,000 nti. White w/blk lnt. wen cared for. Sac. $1.575. 6454721. VOLKSWAGEN YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC ·~ulo~~ p~:.00;/b,~ BILL BARRY cond. Excel cond, low miles. $2.125. Call 5411->I>; PONTIAC-GMC·FIAT aft 7 pm tlst SI. at S.A_ Frwy.) DEALER ' 2000 E. lsl St., Santa Ana La.ra:est 1eJ~on of Cad11-'65 Dodge Van, V-8. S400 558-HXX> lacs ln Orana• County. Paneled. carpted, Nu tiresl =---"-:....:"---~-­Sa.l""Leutna. 644-8598. • '66 Pontiac Ventura, 4 dr. V· =-Nabers U Cadillac '64 Dart, radio, heater, runs xlnt. S250 or best otter. Must sell ... 497-0016. 8, PS, PB, RH, Air Cond. Good eond. l.Dw mileage Kelly Blue Book Rel. $980. Sacrifice for S650 Private 2600 HARBOR BL., FORD Party, 847-3095 alt 6,:11>, COST A MESA anytime on weekend. '40-9100 Opon Sun&, ,70 R h W , 19711 C1dlll1c anc agon 67 BONNEVILLE Cpe. O.Vllle VS, auto. trans., fac!ory air, Automatic, factory air, power Futl Power Cruise Control power steering, radio, wbltf' steering, power brakes, {222CCM) ' walls, wheel covers, luggage radio, heater, white wall ·$4150 r11.ek. C#718991} $2495. dlr. tires tinted glau (\VHE082) Southern California Call &16-«J.'lS. 1995 'dlr. 8:)6.6535. 1st N11tlon11I '10 LTD Country Squire 8 FOR Sftlt", 1963 Pontiac, $350. 811nk Le11slng passenger. Wagon. fo'acL Air/C'Ond, Radlo/ht, PIS WANTED Old VWI ?UMlhg JXll 1'llchcla<lll Ol'lvc Air. New tires, low mileage. 64j..{).115. or noL (Comtt of fl.1acArthur) Many extru 13295· 83&-U57. •. ~.,~Po~n~u.-,-G~,.....-=Pri~x-.-aood- 6tHTI6 a.ft S pm Irvi~, c.Jlt ~ RAN<l-IERO 1966, 6 cyl. cond. SlTh. '66 Camper. Low m.Uea. exttl 7141833-8621'1 213/Ur-0.167 Runa wdl, nu tires. 642-9214 oond. 11.295. O>nt1tltr tnde. e 1968 EL DORADO e 613-4280 MUST ..U qulclt • 1!!t 6&-812L Very Clean pX)O. ·n LTD Wag, 9 pus, pt/pb, Catalina 2-dr HT. Xlnt. '65 VW. Good trulp:lrtation &1331 •••' &15·1104 AM/FM at~reo. air, 22,000 cond. Lo ml. ~nn. att I ~ $575 or bnt oltu'. '67 Cpe, DeVUlt. S>,000 act. ml. Below book. 968-355.5. '67 Pontiac Tmipnt OftC I • Ml-1393 • miles. white/padded top. 1966 Ford Ranchm>. new cyl, ma shaJi). ... '&1 vw bug. &uDtOOt xlnt. SDXl/otttr ~. better>'. erv. and ttrn. V-3, Call MIH1l8 Gd ...... a.... ... CAMARO auto. r/h, 16SO, ~'-RAMBLER 1395. m-0642 'Tl Ranchm>. fully equipped. '61 VW BUG '!JI CA1'1ARO. WHITE. Xlnt ....... e.st Oller! .-:-62;. -. Good tnnl'p Gd tnmpl#WJ 89UtS4 Low mL Sla ~3612 allf':r 6 Pfll. PB/PS, Gd UrN. mi 19!0 VW bq. X1nt oond. * 6ll-&44'1 * '68 FOR!) Falrl.,,., Pull---=------AMIF~ radio. IHOO. ,CHEVROLET "°""· Mu'1 "'"· T BIRD ~ btwn B:l'.I I: 5:n 646-3591 aft s. • 1971 SUPER BEJo:rU: 'G.1 EL CAMrNO-V81 auto, '65 fo'ORD atatkm wgn -1r 'S7 TBll'd. Corveue btue, S1'700. Xlnt CondTUnn xlnl oond. $1000. RIH. auto, elec aeet A chrome whls, $1400 w ** «n-7'289 '** Call ~ windows. $350. 64).Ml otter. 6U-96'!12. \ • , • I ! ~ I 17 I I I I 17 San Clem~nie Capistrano • VOL 65, NO. 279, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES - EQITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • Today's Fl•al N.Y. St.oek8 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1972 TEN CENTS • Mexican-Americans As ·sail 'Slur' by Caspers By JACK BROBACK Of .. 0,..., Net Staff Orqe County Board of Supervisors' Chairman Ronald W. Caspen' d .. meaning remark to fellow supervisors Wednesday C<>nceming "Adelante ban- ditos" drew plenty of reaction from his targets and others today. Adelante President Milton Read called a press conference for later today and said, 0 we'll do something very strong about that racial slur." Caspers, suggesting that there could be e Nixon Rules Out Cease In Bombing From Wire Servlttl WASIUNGTON - President Ni:ron to- day ruJed out any halt to the bombing of North Vietnam before the Nov. 7 elec- tion, saying former President Johnson made a "very, very great mistake" when be cfi4 so Jost before tile 1968 election. Niml to1d a news c:onferenqe In bis oval -Ille -ooaW '* eoltled before Nov. 7 -ll tile right kind of set- tlement could be made. But be added that tile balloting "will not in any way influence what we do at the negotiating table." 1be Johnson administration, be said, though well intentioned, "made a very, very great mistake In stopping tile bomb- ing without adequate agreements from the other side." He referred to Johnson's Nov. 1, 1968, announcement of a bombing halt just days before Nixon defeated Hubert H. Humphrey for tile presidency. "We are not going to make that mistake now," Nl::ron declared. On other topics in the wide-ranging news conference: -Nixon said "there will be no presidential tax increase" in 1973 but argued that "coogreasional overspend- ing" nllgbt make one necessary. -Nixon, in discussing his ta:r policy, aald be will rarely visit the campaign trail until Congress adjoumes because he wants to remain in Washington to "fight the battle against rising spending." -He promlsed. a succession of veto messages aimed ai last-minute legisla- tion that eiceed his budget goala. -He said he would go on nationwide radio on Saturday to explaJn his tax policy. -He also promiaed property tax relief during a secood term and said tap priori- ty would go to eoalng tile tax burden of the naUon'a elderly citir.ens. , -He brushed uide Sen. George S. McGove:m'• charges of corruption by h•s admlnistration, and predicted It would "turn off' the voters. Oran re CA••• We•dter A warm and 1111111y --la In sl<ft for Orange Coaat r<lfdeotl with temperatwu at tile beaclla expected lo be aniund 73 Friday. Hlibs Inland al'OW!d 1111. Lowa I<> night a. INSmE TODAY ElcHn UfOTI ago 84 ptnmu abandoned New York, 1"'1¢11!1 ii uniofe na the event of a nu- clear IOQr, Thql cmnt oorat1Gn· 1tvle to o noTUt.<entral Calf.. fomiG community. WMr1 or• thtV ftOID1 s .. 1tory, Page 11. .......... .... '' = "' =:.. : ... """'" ti ......... , .. ,,........,. .... ~ ..... 1 .... ............ 11 ... I M .. .-. " ----. --. ...... -=--,, -... .............. ·-.. --·-. ._... .... ,,..., --. a better place In Onnge COOnty for the eowtty 1eat than Santa Ana, had aaked County Counoe1 Adrian Kuyper ll such a moVe was legally passlble. "Santa Ana Is not a good place because it does oot have ethnic balance," said the board chairman from Lido Isle. "The minorities have the ear of too many supervisors.'• The Adelante bandito remark was in reference to an Affinnative Action Program (AAP) approved last week by the supervisors with Caspers on the abort end of a 4 to 1 vote. The AAP la designed ta give minority group memben more jobs In coonty government and to provide them with training ta gain J>?!IDlotiom. Adelante, a Mexican-American group of county employes along with LULAC, a Chicano political group, backed the ac- tion program as proposed by personnel director William Hart. , Caapen Wednesday put It lhis way: "'lbe Ade1ante banditos took us last week for about $200,<M» and part of the reason was that .we l1J'e in an area which does not have the normal ethnic balance." Superviaor William Phillips o f Fullerton needled "Where do you want It, In Newport Beach!" Caapen later ..io he lbooght Laguna Hills or even Dana Point would be a bet- ter location for the center of county gOvemment. other members of the board were understandably cautious today in assess- ing Caspers' remark!. Ralph Clark, tile Fourth District supervisor from Anaheim said, "I don1 lhlnk anything like thet could be done without tremendowi cost to the ta:r- payers. I'm satisfied with the facillly being where it l.s." • Superv!Jor Robert Battin. whose Finl Dlstrict Includes the county seat and more than half of the Mexlcan-Amerkan population of the county, was out cam- paigning today . But one of his aides said, "The boss just thought It was a bad joke. He (Caspers) has a peculiar sense of humor at times." Not so reticent waa Dick Ruiz, long- time aide to Supervisor Davkl Baker and ooe of tho3e who assisted in the organiia- tion of Adelante. He dispatched a letter to the board's chairman which read in part, .. ethnic slurs bring you no honor. I am filled with disgust aod anger that you would make anti·Mexican-American statements in a public meeting. '1 Ruiz continued, "It is lncred..lble to me that any ratWnal, responsible public of. ficial could utter such ·Intemperate remarks -remarb which can only serve but to inflame emotions and foster unrest." Caspera, lo bis three yean on the board ha1 been 10mewbat fa.mou.a for his off the cuff remarks. -·ssue 1rs _..row MIL Y 'tLOT ltlff ,._.. MIKE KELLERMAN !TRUNKS) TELLS LIFEGUARD CAPT. BRUCE BAIRD ABOUT DROWNING Body of Skindiving Victim Steve Smith of Brei Lies Cover9Cl 1t ~lso Buch ~~~~~~~<--~~~ San Cwmente's Recycw Center Receives Blow ta,,-tban a month ago volunteers for San Clemente's unique recycling center ce lebrated one year of success in the conununity effort. Wednesday night they planned a wake for the center whlcb 1'81 dealt what lhey termed "• death blow" by San Clemente city councilmen. City lawmaten oteadlaJtly turned down requests by the center's founder and operator to Ille 3,000 aquare feet ol vacant land at the aanitaUon plant u a new borne. And be<aUBe Llooel Burt can And no other site for tile ...iam.tion center, be vowed bitterly alter tile .-Jog that one (See RECYCLE, P11e I) Woman Descrilies Oemente Attack A 21 .yeaMld Cypress woman told poll<e Wednesday sbe waa abducted from an alley In tile northerly oection ol San Cl<mento by' two mtn In 1 Cit, tbell foqbt free lllO!lllnll later 11 the auto wu stopped for a red llgJ>I. The woman uld lbe wu walklna at 7:!0 p.m. •Ione 111 alley tn Iha 1111111 blodt of Lu Bclu when the Incident occumct. Sile ........, "' llCrltcb .... ol her .. ducton bel.,. Ooelng tile car. Slit uld Iha lafHlodal Vehicle WU -blue at bladt dd Soonllh · •• and buds --......... lroai i::= rt.mew mirror. . 0oe ol Iha OCCOpll111 Wll delcrtbed II abort wttll dart hair. The other wu abotlt sbt feet tall with Ulht hair. Police uld Iha vlttfm WU not 11UU8ll1 17 , g!.ted tn the lnddmt. Coroner Says Drowning Cause of Diver's Death Preliminary coroner's findings point to drowning as the cause of death for a 23-year-old Brea diver pulled from the rocky shore of South Beach jUlt oU the Treasure Island community In South Laguna Wedne>day, Coroner's investigators lndfcated that water found in the man'a breathing paasagea lndlcated a death by dnJwnlnC. Jnvestigator John GllJ Hid more ti• tensive study would be done ta determine lf large gashes in the diver'• forehead OC· cumd before or after dttth. "U tile Injuries """ llUllalned prior to the drowning. It may have been a pr«lpli.atln( lllelor." CUI aald. The ~Iver wu klentflled u Steve Smith of S28 S. Pine st .. in B~I. Smith was married and the new father of a four-day-old baby girl at the tJme of hl1 death. Gill uid a search for the dead divert alt tank wotdd conttnue. DI v er 1 aeetthlng for the scuba gear have been hampered by murtcy water and buvy surf' today. Tbe tank was stripped off the llr1dlen diver by hiJ diving buddy, Marie Kellennan, alao 23, u he pulled the Brta man from the water. Tbe two men had been dfvtnc lor lobster a1oog the rocky outcropplnc. •• area popular with local divert, but mar\· ed Wednesday by rouch curnnll. •More Bedla11I~ His Nine, Her Nine Will Combine (' BROOKLYN PARK. llJM. !AP) -l'tf&Y ..._ and Diet C.U... .,. , pt11n1 married Slturday and u -~ -wtlf ..... tnto --a. btdroom boa11 w1lh UI of their dt.Udnm. Ootll!', 1 production eaau-lat ""°"'"'II. Ille., llM to dilldna, bat only one dalllbll!' II married. Mt1. 1-, I -bu olno dltJcfrm. "I tlilnt I may bave paid my fut fedaral tncoma tu." Olttar ..W. Cotter. 45, and Mr1. 1-.. - - --aput tn tho Mll- neapolil ~ ol -,,. l'llrlt * -., --. ""' mot ..., tn Apri) throlP I lllllulf - kra. Lo-'I ---• ,.., ....... -· .,,. died ... -Iha .... Both ~ llld lira. w-tab Iha daublJnti ol -llttadJ llrp ,_ Ulo Rrmely. "You 1et ta a point wbert, wbethor )Cll'W pt t tldo • IJ. K'a Juat ... dilf-bet-tho -and third -ol bedlam," -..... Oemente Council Cheered For Rebuffing Proposal By JORN VALTERZA Of ... Deltr ,.. Staff One of the largest city council au- diences in recent San Clemente history listened patiently and politely Wednesday to controvenlal JrOposala by Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers to in- stall a jetport at Camp Pendleton. Then the 1c1me crowd of more than 300 persons cheere:i as city councilmen formally opposed the idea and called for tests and dem>Mttation of jet nobe emanating from the spots propc>Rd for tile major tennlnal. Tiie meetln(, beld In Iha eommW>it1 e!U-to •COClllllllOdate tllo ... tlclpated crowd ol -t<lldenla, -• part ol a regular council -1on and ~ arrived during ,....1ar Pl"' ~ ta read I prepared Ill-, 11'.mtlnc that Iha prtated won! -ward aplmt mlaquotatioo. The superv!Jor plecfied that be woold never advocate "tile moving of the noiae pollution problem out of Newport Beo<h and OVt!r lnto another clty ln Orange County." But city councilme!l -laking action alter Caspers left to meet a Brttlah con- servation ofllclal -insllted that the Jet· port would bring 1uch probfema to San Clemente. They moved to OflPOll'! tile propoala "until such time that U can be proven that a jetport would have no detrimental effect on residenta of the city." Allied with that motk>n was • demand that the county offiaa:ls report back withln 45 days whether It la possible to bring jet transporU to the skies 1bove Pendleton where they would periorm a series of Uve terts rrom ttpante k>c•· tklns '° that local cltlzem can bear for themM:lves the noi.se level.I they mlgbt face if tbe jetport became a reality. While Caapers and Coonty Aviation Dlrector Robert Bresnahan rtllf:raled their poaltlon that specific Pendleton attn could not yet be pinpointed, Bremahan suuested that 1 prime loci· tlon m!&flt be a canyon lea than 1 mile from San Clemente'• aoutherly city limits. Other 11pot1 hinted al In CUpe_n' prestnl1tlon Included 01lllnd a&riculturaJ retenel on the bue •bout three mile& north ol Oceanllde. Olllclall In Son OLelO Comly have opumed th1a auqeation. Becaute of prior commltrnet1t1 11rt- flDUJIC:td by Cupen. the entire pr-· talion and enaulnc dilcuaion laated let1 than Ill hour. Counetlman '"1omu O'Keele took the bulk ol the plaudlta .. he hammered repiffttdlif 1t the OMd ror I.ha tnta. ""So often, when YUt 1mounta d funds .,. apent In 11udytn1 auch propo11la, before the publlc bu a dlanoe to llot> It the momentum ta jull too ,...,. " ha uld. O'Keel• lnabted that the live test> -"<! be _,tlal eetl before any -1y pvemment ltudlea could be undertaken. WbdJler Iha actual Ofthll can take pllll"e, honYCr, ta dr:blll.blt, Drttnahan uld. Beclu.e Ptrtdlflon la 1 military ........ 11on. hfp.ll!nl _...... -be noeded bef<n Iha privlt• jell could perfot 111 maneuvut IO libdlle Miual airport-· And tho» lar, -. uld, the ea,. haa been -plftdy apb)lt '"1 -ol Pendleton .. _ t1 for 1 cMllln ~ aftltlon :illldal added that he -lhat Iha -ollldola -at.. • _,,. to tile -" lhttr ..,_.,orthel<lla. c..ra hit hard It Ille -laclof the courlly -the -for a!llDdod alrDort laetlltko, ~ Ula ..... .... ,,.._,. tn Newport -....... Sii mlDloo tn -polk-- have been fUed ln the courts. The supervisor said he wu ''anr\oaa to describe ta you the """""' of my pro-posal that la gaJnini lmpttus each day." He Insisted that be propooa 1 joint civillaHR.llJllry complu with one atrlp for commercial craft and another for military airplanes. He said that ,., support fecilllies - commercial c o rr. p I e :r e 1 usually IS.. JETPORT, P11e 21 * * * Caspers RePort Criticized A~r His Apf)earance lronfcaUy, the man who holda all the card.a In the 1ame •htdl aeekt 1 jetPQrt at camp Pendleton is the penon wbo would five cloaest to IUCb 1 facility - President NllOf'I. Aod °"" propoaal praented W-y in San Clemente: call• for lanc1Jn1 atrips no more than a mile from LI CUI PAcJfica, where the Nl:1ooa wW live permaneiil1 wben the President ..... om ... Flftll Dlatrict Supervllor R o o 1 I d ea_. quoted and memd to the President lhrougbout bis p r e p • r e d staterMnlJ Wednocby. uilng quotatklnl by the Chief Execuilvo to rolnloroe l)Oinll of Ul'JeDcy. ''Thia proposal will requiro tho Ir> nuenc:o Ind wiadom o1 the -o1 tile United State&." Ca.pen a.-, Altliough President Niz. •pPll'ellil1 bu not been polled fOt' 1111 opinloll " tbe plan, hi• neighbor& W-y pve thelr own arawnenu. And tome were tomewhlt 1e1thlna. Prominellt San Ckmmte t.•PNP1nan Ray Campbell. wioc!tq up tbe brief otrlel ol questlona taken from tho floor. drew an avalancbe ol 1pplauae .nu llYin&: "We we:re all too kind to this man (Caapen. who by then bad lflt). "He said be won bia tlecdon by a .. , plurality In San Crmente, but 11f btt that ll he ran !or -...,...row be wooldn't "' 1117 p&nlh7. "Tbey ... ~ all tho ,,_,, they want In Wllhfn&1a> and do all tho lata they want, but the bat lat of all " for •fl ol "' lo Co ta Ntwport 8-tt and ltlttn for ounelva and then Ilk 0W1ttves If lhlt'1 whit we want here. "We know the ..U., the ""'leslioe and .. rrer1n« Ind .. bott to ._ t111a wltb t\'tr)' fCJf'Ce wt haft. 'Repairs' Made Outside Body I 2 OAILY PILO, SC T"-!1)1, Ottobtt S, 1972 Pros, Co1as Offered Prop. 20 Debate Attended by 200 By L. PETER KRlf.G or ~ 0..1., ~.111 s11H Proposition :!O -the con:.1a 1 inJ11[11:''' -"as alll'rn:Ht1!v l;1bc:l1·d .. 111 lh~ 101::1 public good" and ")>ubJt'Ct LO S('Vcral rat:.il dcft>Cts " by opposing ~ides 111 :1 debate on lls n1rnts sponsored by the Orange County t'u;1 ~: :\ s soc i a t 1 u n \\'C'dnesda\. About 2i)J person~ at the Balboa f:;:iy Club ~ard L.'iguna Beach Attorney \\'illiani \\'1IC'q.\l'l1, a prominent con· servat1onist. support the Nov('mber t:allv1 1neasure ~ause it \\'OU!d "gc1 d1sin· tereStect people to reviC\\' local decisions. with the end re:.ull in the total pnbl1c 1n· terest." But they also heard Los Angeles t' .. t- lornev Alfred J-la n1ilton decry the 1neas'ure because It -...·ould ghe local cou· tro l to •·another level of burcaucrauc hierarchy." Trial Dela y Be gi ns Wit l1, No Ruling A fh·e-<Jay br('ak in the ··r ai :\lahar· trial of f1nanc1rr Josrph OulJnry and fi,·e £·o-drfendants brgan lodny in Or:ingc County Superior Court \l'Llh still no ruhn~ on a defense motion that ('(IU\d, 1f granted, cripple the prosecution's case. . Judge James Tumer indicated before railing the long recess l~tc \Vednesdl'!y that he mav be able to rule Tuesday on !\\"O motions filed by five defense J;1\\·vers. Aitorneys for Du!Jney, 38 of 26.11 "Via Cascadita, San Clemente. James E. Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Hun· tington Beach, Danile Hayes. 40, of 8211 Snowbird Drive, Huntington Beach. \Vendell Warren Austin, 38, of Riverside and Robert ~1achan. 40, of San Bernardioo want separate trials for their clients. !\Jore importantly, they argue, they \\'ant what has been described as the "'illegally obtained fruits" of a tape reeording made in the District Attorney's Office barred from evidence at the up- coming trial. The first phase of that trial will be devoted to allegalions that the group defrauded the St. Bernardino Hospital in San Bernardino of $500,000. It is alleged that the Roman Calhol\c institution was persuaded to part with the loan through th (' offering of worthless (·ollateral by the defendants. The second phase of the !rial will be restricted to aHcgations stcmn1ing from the operations of the ncl\v-defunct World t'inancial Trends organization of Laguna Hills an d Seal Beach. It will bring Dulaney's wife Marlene. 32, to the courtroom for the first tlme to stand trial -if the motion for separate trials is denied -with her husba nd and Shipley . All were arrested after investon in the stock trading empire administered by Dulaney from his Laguna Hills "Taj !\.·lahal" romplex Inundated the District Attorney·s Office with allegations that led to the arrest of the Dulaneys and their vice preident Shipley . Many of the complaints th at led to a long investigation of the group were filed by residents of retirement communities in Laguna Hills and Seal Beach. District Atto rney's Investigator Ray ~Hiler underwent a long grilling on the \vitness stand Wednesday and v.·as carefully warned by defense attorney Darrell Johnson to coosider the im· mir.ence of criminal sction that might be taken against him it he lestificd. Miller smilingly assured Johnson that he was only too happy to discus.!! the details of a convt:!rsntion bct\\·een Johnson. former deputy district :ittorney Joe Dickerson and Shipley. OIAN•I COAST IC DAILY PILOT If p:i~5c-d by " m:i10ri1y of s1:ite vote~. l'n.1Po~it1on 20 \1·ould t'Sl:1bhsh n S!:1tc ('On1n11~sion and s1:1: rt~g1onnl t"1n1· 1ni~10ll:> th<JI \I OUIO 'l:l\'t' un1il 1976 to prt·parC' a 1nasttr pl:in for ~lhne dt'l"t'lopnll'nl. Durint-: th:i t perrod. 1hose bodies ~'OU)d h;i\'I' nuthorllaU\e conirol on \1h;it ~··ts built -:ind ~hat d01.•sn·1 ~t'l built - \11thm \1hat is unt•l('nrly l ~lx'!t>d lhl' t'Ollstal Ione. Hamilton said state con1rol is nn· net.'eSSSry. ~le argued that ··tocal rule does gel around to do mg I~ job." flt' cited changt•s in Los Angeles ('."'IUfl· ty the past h\'e years and lhen ri1ed :\e1,·port Harbor. "Look around ~eu·port Be a ch , '' 1: •• nuhon said. "the u·ater is blue. ''ou t·an St'i' the bottom, t~ u·ater's noc l'ruddy ." \\"i!C"Qxen stressed that caUfomia "·as onl\" on.:-of 111'0 t•oastal states "'Llhout co:i.st hue mana~ement legi:slat1on .?nd notNI th<it nun1crous st:i.te agencies, 1n- l·ll1thng one comn11ss1011 nppollllL'<i b~· Governor Reagan. h:1vr repeatl'dly urged !>lHte controls. \\'ilrox~n sUrtrd :i. d1rl:'Ct ronfrontat:on ,,·ilh one of the ma)O r cr111cisms of tt:e measure -that it. 1n effect. "'ould pl.:ice a moratorium on developmen1 until the n1as1er plan is done. u·nhout pro\'iding rompensallon to tht.' land av.oner v.·ho C"lln- 1111ut'S to pay ta.xes on his property . lie ~~ud the four·year planning proc»~ is neCTssar\" to allov.· .. critical. close a1l\I effective co'ntaet at !he local and regional level.•· He said it is impossible for small tov.'T\s on their O\\'TI to ··get enough data to understand the impact or \1·h<1t is going on around them·· because there 3re so many regional agencies c\·en now. Hamilton Countered the point by saying that two state studies. one the Com· prehensive Ocean Arca Plan \ COA P J and anot her b)" the California Parks and Recreation Commission both a r e available reference material for local gove rnments. lie also cited the recent Californ ia Supreme Court ruling that major private as \veil as public projects cannot be allo"·ed until they have filed cn- ,·iroruncntal impact slatcments. "These tools provide the essenti als neeessary to make sure the coastline is propert y developed," 1iamilton said. Hamilton also said the $5 million price tag on the initiative would in no way cover both the cost of preparing the new master plan or the cost of r'vicwing the thousands ol permit applications. Exterminator's Tent Hid Lagtma Burglary Team Shielded by an extenninator's sealed tent, Laguna Beach burglars took nea rly $20,000 v.·orth of property from the home of \\'ell-known civic leader J\.1rs. Slina Bergstrom Wolf. ~1rs. \Volf , president of the au xiliary of South Coast Community fl ospi ta l, told Laguna Beach police \\1ednesday of the crime which included the theft of a 3.3- ca rat diamond ring valued at $9.000. The burglary apparently occurred O\'cmjght when the home et 1258 Temple Hills Dri ve was enveloped in a huge ex- terminator's tent and was undergoing fumigation. Police Lt. Frank Dillon said today . Dillon said detectives ha ve not yet compl eted Investigation of the crime. It i~ not known i! toxic gas was present in tl1e house \\'hen the burglary occurred he said. "We investigate everything," Lt. Dillon said. It ls unknown if the burglars wore i::as masks or other breathing devices to enter the house, he said. Pollet believe the thieves entered the home through the sealed tent opening and after walking beside th' house. en tered through a tront window. Also taken in the crime u·ere lhrct: televi sion sets, an antique mirror, and othe r jewelry in addition to the diamond ring. The nuxili~ry which Mrs, Wolf heads is a voluntet'r organization which does fund- rais.inJt. performs community relations \\'Ork and aids in hospital duues, Fro•PIW•J RECYCLE ... men truckload ol bundled newspapen will be the center's lut. The center in Its year of u:istence had ,,_ mentioned by media lhrou&l>oUt the • nation and pr.......i about 20 -cl m&terial I week. Councilmen voted 4-1 on a motion for denial presented tiy Mayor Arthur Holmes. Two separate attempts to move ap- proval of the request for use or city prop-- erty -tries made by Councilman Tom O'Kee!e -railed lo v;in a second. The majority of tbe council agreed that because Burt's center was "private enterprise," government should not become directly involved. Burt repeatedly had insisted that the center was n'ver a private business run for profit. The materials came from donatioos: by residents of the area . The only funds gained through lbe ef. fort, his boon showed, was a 1125 """l<IY average salary whJcb Burt kept u pay· ment for operating the center almost single-handed. The former television SCl'ipt writer '" .. ~ visibly angry over the final rejecfi" - his bid. "I have tried and battled for twn to understand how the civic mind wy •. ., and I have failed," he said. ''In the same evening," he added , "they have rejected a jetport and a recycling center ••• now that's logic for you." Top of TrNek Peeled Burt insisted that the center can no longer surviv,. "I'll move one D)Ol'e load of newspap- ers oot and that wW be it,'' he said. ~u~ Smrth. 30 aidfo a1 tht> rounty R'gistrar or \·ott>n \.)'.fK't in Sa.nu :\na. <'ht"<'L otr son1e or l 9'.10 °'""" oi twloL> being p"'p.ut'd for shipment to Orange County precincts on election day, Nov. 7. If you don't register to vote by midnight Sunday, your ballot \Von 't be in one of the!re boxes. His lease of a small parcel lo the city's industrial section upired at the start of this month. The owner of the land plam lo develop income units immediately. 'S t,(tfes~ Ri.a:l1ts' Haniper P oll11tion Drive-Briton Frot11 Page 1 JETPORT ... associated with air terminals -would be contemplated, then repeated his suggest- ions made recently to Newport city coun- cilmen of a rapid transit system to move the thousands of passengers: Months of seeking a new spot for the center failed and Burt then proposed a lease arrangement with the city, insisting thaf'recycling had become a way of life in San Cemente and that the city benefits because of cheaper trash collection and landfill costs . But councilmen h e e d e d recom- mendations of City Manager Kenneth Carr who insisted that providing equip- ment at set tees to the center should bt as far as a city should go. By RUDI l<lEDZIEL.SKI Of .... o.itJ 1"1111 ... Brit~·s alk>ot war against pollution could never be duplicated in tbto United siates because of "a thing you call states' rights," according to Peter Walker, Brit- ish secretary of state £or the environment. Walker. in Costa Mesa Wednesday after· noon to tour British Expo 72, told news- men that a federal effort to clean up· the air and the rivers is likely to be blocked by lhe states. But he added, "Perhaps you could de- ve lop in certain states what we have done nationwide.'' The British eftort, which leads Walker to believe that Brilain is "ahead Of the \vorld In cleaning the air and water," involves an authoritarian approach. All the power is concentrated in the hands of Walker. 40, who with an annual budget of S9 billion and a staff of 78,000, believes the tide can be turned by the 1980s. His office has the authority to deny virtually any new project which would tend to have a detrimental effect on the environment, and to stop pollution from existing sources. ''It's easy for a politician to concen- trate on preserving the good environ- ment," he said. "But people who live In the bad areas are not so articulate and vocal." The big push, therefore 1s directed toward those areas, such as the industrial cities of London and Binningham, where air pollution is being eradicated. Britain's Clean Air Inspectorate has the authority to force industries to install ai r pollution equipment and to levy heavy fines if they do not. Interested in partic· ipating in the effort, most of them do, according to Walker. The automobile is not as big a source in Britain because they are fewer in number and because Britain, unlike the United States, has fully developOO mass transit systems. Even these are being expanded with assistance from Walker's department Funeral Rites Held For Esther Saunders funeral services were ronducted this afternoon for ~1rs. Esther R. Saunders, 89. of San Clemente. Mrs. Saunders died last Sunday. The rites. conducted by the Rev . C. I. 1.untJ of Lutheran Church of Our Savior, ,.,. ... re held In Lesneski Mortuary Chapel. Private burial followed the rites. Mrs. Saunder.Si.. wbo lived at 307 Avenida Santa""'Birfbara, leaves a cousin, Marion Beaupre of Nlagar1 F1ills. ' through geoerous government subventions which amount to 50 percent of the cost of new buses and 75 percent of the cost of new trains. But , Walker added, Britain shares with the United States the problem of the cilies. "We have some advantages be- cause not all of our city centers ha ve declined," be pointed out. Regional shopping centers, such as found in Orange County, are not practical in Britain and are, in fact discouraged, "to keep alive the downtown areas." Walker is currenUy on a campaign to wipe out all shmw; and to modernize be- tween two to three million Older houses within the next 10 years. He stressed that the jetport would adhere to the new concepts of assembling passengers and baggage at ()ther ground reception areas, then moving them with rapid transit systems to the jetport itself. Alternatives exist in his plans as to \Vhere transit and how the st.rips could be accommodated. One of those alternatives calls for a massive la,ndfill on to the coastline. creating a new section of land jutting seaward fr om the Pendleton bluffs to ac- commodate the strip. Although Caspers' proposal to fellow supervisors (which they nearly com- pletely endorsed) called for an en· virorunental impact study or the Pendleton idea, Caspers said that such a study Would be an intrusion into 8an Diego County. • Superb Luxury in Pure Wool Pile byKarastan "This is not a function that government should undertake," Carr told counclbnen. Councilman Clifton Myers attempted to mollify the recycling advocate before the motion for denial came up and launched into praise for Burt's efforts. Burt, however, cut the councilman short. ''Don't give me platitudes and praise. That's not why I gave up so much to prove that recycling can work," be said bitterly. "You can't praise what l'Ve done and then kill it," he added. Later, 'Burt said what disturbed him most about the eplsode "is all the falae oope I instilled · amoung tl!ousands oC residents.of San Clemente. Kuvastan mt.Tsthisearpet Sf)9dacular. Sowlll yev when Y'"'" and fHI the ma9nlficent luxury of its thick, d•1p pure wool pile. Its ammfng price of j111t $00.00 a square yard ls due to a major breakthrough Jn wool technology. Koraston gives each fiber a speclol ilutklng treatn"i9"f IO the yarn is"fatter,'' and more reslll•nt. A. truly rernarbblevolu•. The 17 c:olor1are1pectacular teo. Thfi Or ..... C..I 041lY l"llOT, wilt! wtllfh I' t.....olt'lff ll'le Nt-l'rtH, It PllO!l'1'1 .. h" ll'le Or .... c .. 11 l'ubllth1"9 C-11y, S.- rtll H lllllM ert ~lllMIO, M ...... 1y l~r0119h ,,,ldty, fet' (M!I Mttt, NtW110rl lfKh, t<ynll ... lofo lffCh/P'-111rt V11!ty, lt11...,.. INCh, lr ...... l .... lta.tl; ..... Stn Ci...,...111 Str• J.,-11 C.ititlrtno. A li"81t 'f9!0tltl Mil~ it ~!ltMO 5tt11•0I YI t nd 5..,..,I V\, fP>t prll'(INI P11Dl!tl'll"9 Dltnl It II lXI W•ll lty "'"'' CO\lt Mt1.t, Ctllfornlt, t)U,, Jtol>1rl N, W11d l'rtt1dto11I t l'IO P..otlthn J11lr: JI. c..,.,,, Headstones £01· Children Vkt ,.rnld ... I tnd OtMttl Mtt'IAOtt' Tho'"'' ktt•il IEOllO< T\0,..11 A. M11,phiR1 MtMtlflt EOirer Ch1rl11 H. L101 Jticli1r4 '· Ne ll Anllltn• ,,.,_,.,. ltiltn s.. c1 ....... OM1• JOI N1,th El C1111 \111 Jt11I, '1•71 .,,..._ Q.111 MtM: nt W';'!,!:l S!•MI N....,, lttUll UU N fMlli.-.ttt """' ........ l•edt~ 111/J l lff.h ao...i... ••• LteWM IMdll m Pwttl "''°"""' T .. 11••• 1114) MJ-4U1 Cl....W A"'11tlal"f Ml-1671 s. c .......... hpM .... : , ••• ,.,,. 4tJ..f421 C.,,'911•, tm. Or.._ Ctttl "1blllh"'9 ~. ,.. lltwt .,.,.. llllftlrll*"-. .. ,..... _".,. .... ...,._,,..,...,... 11w.i11 P!ttY M ~ wlmtv! tHC._I 1Mr "*''"" " "°""ltltt ..,,.,, ~ ""'• ,.., ....... " c.tl• ~. Ctl!""'lt. lcihc.ri.t• 11'1' c•rrltr 116' r11011t1'"' "' 1t11/I u ,11 '"°""'"' ~•W'" ctrllllMllllrlt a ,M IMftfllil'I'. Spur Heated Co11troversy DES l\tOINl!:S. Iowa (~Pl) -The fa ther of a young molher who labored 100 hours makln& heads tones for the ifAVts of her two infant childrt>n believes "puNI co~rclallsm " is rtsp()n_,ible for o dispute tha l th rentens to leave the a:ravts unmarked, City officials m11lntaln that Glendale Cemetery here Is o "shov.·place" end that handmade gravrstoncs wlll detract from the overnll appearance. However. George 11, Gr1rnn said Wednesday that hia daughter, Cyn thia F'rcderlck, Is the \1lcllm of "big b1JSlncss" mooumen1 compan le11. "They don't WMt people building their own !lmple Utllo 1tones ," Griffin snld. ''T'h.1t's ll plaln and si mple We're . culling into their businm. and they don 't likr it." l\Irs. Frederick. 21. and Grilftn p!Attd the markers on the itraves of Benjamin .JamH and Chrifll, AM Frtderick, both of v.·hom dled hour1 after birth ol Hya· Hnr membraM dbease. Jlowevrr, cemetery 'mployn removed tl'k! marken becauae 1 city ordinance nllows only granite or bronze htadatonea. The cemetery committee of the Des Molnts Park Board refused Tue$day lo grnnt An C:Jtetptlon to its policy. } ... Oi:s Moines Mayor ltichurd Olson !Old ~1;xpect.s the matttr to come be(ore lhe City Colmcll Friday. He called for • "h11mnni1arian approach'' to the sltua· lion. Your fevoritt interior d1sign1r will II• heppy to t 1111t you. H.J.GARl\ETf fURNljURE P~OFISSIONAL O " INTERIOR DES!wN!U P" mo,,, Thun. & frl, E.v1i. 2211 HAUOR ILVO.' COSTA MESA, CAUf. I I _, Crestview Clrealt Orange Dist ric t Tops Grid Picks Everything is coming up orange in the Crestview League this football season. At least that's what the DAILY PlLOT's football writers predict. El Modena, Orange and Villa Park, the Orange Unified School District's three entries in the league are picked to finish 1-2-3 this season in a tight race by the predlctors. Behind the leaders it 'II be Foothill, San Clemente, Katella, and Mission Viejo with Tustin finishing in the cellar again this season. A team by team look follows with the non-league record in parenthesl.s. l. El Modena (l·ll -With last year's league title in their possession and nine starters back from that team. the Vanguards appear capable or n1aking it two in a row . Their biggest assets are quarterback Tim Tivenan, a fine runner and passer, fullback Tracy Smith and all-league lineman Randy Harris. 4. t'oolhill 1141) -Tailback San1 Peek, An All-leaguer and Andy Katnik, a 185 pound linebacker, center are the only returning starters Crom last season but they are good onea. The Knights have a tough defense which held Kennedy to 6~ tie in non-league, and if the offense can overcome in- experience they'll be tough to stop. 5. San Clemente (2-(1) -The Tritons have quality players like quarterbacks Bill Kenney, receiver Charlie Dargan and linebacker Lonnie Hutts, but have depth problems. New coach Allie Schaf! is instilling a winning attitude, however and they might even be title threats if injuries don't become a problem. 6. Katetla {~%) -Knights came within a game of the ti· tie in '71. but Jost a great deal from that team and have been shut out twice in non·league play. Standout Bill Marshall is the key man in the line and 200-pound f u 11 b a c k Bob Sanchez should produce some offense. 7. Mission Viejo(~%) -The hard-luck team of lhe league, the Diablos have been hit first Z. Orange (Z·O) -Never very far from the top in lhe league, the Panthers are strong challengers this !leason. ~turning quarterback Steve Walker and running back Clint Skaggs have paced a 21-0 win over Magnolia and 7-7 tie wilb Edi.son to serve warning to the rest of the league. by graduaUon and then by In-KYLE VAN AMERSFORT (44), PAUL FISKNESS LEAD HUNTINGTON OFFENSE. juries. Tailback Dave Caldwell · and fullback Mark Moffitt are 3. Villa Park (%-Ol -'fhe Spartans have won six games in a row since losing five straight in the opening weeks of 1971. Quarterback Kirk Reidinger, an A 11 -L ea g u e selection, slotback Br i an Hester and halfback Tony LoPiccolo give the Spartans possibly the best backfield in the league, and AU-League linebacker Tony K i n ca id anchors the defense. tough runners, but k e y linemen Bill Henry. Martin Gover and others are nursing injuries. Loara Attack Hurts 8. Tustin (~Z) -The Tillers have lost 16 straight ball games over the course of three seasons and new coach John Murio isn't about to see an overnight change. Junior quarterback Jim Debord may be the man to build around , with backs Jim Long and Brent Partridge to handle the running chores. Because of Injuries No Turkeys in Loop, Says Tritons' Schaff For the first time in the school's history, San Clemente High's football team has won its first two games. And now it's into the Crestview League race th.is week for Allie Schalf's Tritons when they take on dangerous Foothill Friday at the Santa Ana Bowl. And Scharr, when queried says "There are no turkeys in the league that I can see." The Tritons. whose best start previous to this season was a 1-0-1 mark in 1967, have whipped Bolsa Grande 27-7 and Alemany 22-7 in non- league action behind the pass· ing of quarterback Bill Ken· ney. In Foothill, ~·ever, the Tritons e:<pect lo face a tougher foe, a team they have managed to defeat only twice in seven games over the past eight seasons. "They're a very sLrong team, Kennedy was lucky to tie them last week." Schaff says. "I was impressed with REFLECTIONS ., Sheffer Reyn a,:H€FF€R. ~ motlTUllY lA8UNA llACH '''SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY 4t4-llJI SAN C.t.fMENTE llJJ NORTH IL CAMINO ltlAL 4tl.0100 EVERY F.A5CtWN) ASPECT a" LIFE N JAPAN I 9.10\Y·OCTOBER 8 -2 pm SC.Cann.CWlclM ~. 1.75 Socnored 111 SmlC. GordenClub don't know," Hill says· Hill m u s t be having nightmares preparing 1 or Westminster, the county's No. 2 rated team, and he admits that "if we don't get up for the game it's going to b c disastrous. "They beat us 27-16 last year but it was 20-16 in the fourth quarter. Th.is year there's no wa y to predict, but if we played like we did last week it's liable to be 100-0." While Hill is impressed with Westminster's runners, h e notes that "anybody· else they want to give the ball to behind that line will look good. They've got good size and quickness and are very ac· tive." Leon Lauds Valencia VOICI O• TONI Pagers H .. ,.,. Tiie Plrtt TlrM C-AllOI LA4lUNA. SO. LA.UNA. DANA l'OINT, SAN CUMINTI -.w.n "' All of 0.-c--, .~~ .. &.... ....... ,., lf'lfwftlett.n Call 0...,. Cs••tr ........,.._s.... "''" 401 h '8ftt• Pt, .. ..,,. AM 4ff.4~ T .. I Pr .. HB Trio Impresses With Stats If J!untington Beach High School is not unbeaten in foot- ball, it isn't due to any lack of ability in the of£ensive backfield. Oilers coach Roy Brummett thinks he has one of the coun- ty's best backfields in sophomore quarterback Greg Nit1kowski, senM>r running bac~ Paul Fiskness and Kyle Van Amersfort. To date Fiskness ha! car· ried the ball 34 times for 315 yards and a whopping 9.2 yards per carry. Van Amersrort has nm 27 times for 155 yards and a 5.7 average. But it's Nitzkowski, who has pa~ just IO limes this season. who dravi,·s moat of Brummett'! praise. "For a sophomore only 15 years old, he's perfonned tremendously." says Brom· mett about the chap who will lead the Oilers against Marina Friday in the first Sunset League game for both schools. It will be at Hunting· ton Beach. ContiIIJes Brummett : '·Fountain Valley really stuck him last week and he came out 30re and beet up, but he hung right In then!. ''I'm really pleased with his e!fort. •re'• one of the reuons we were able to come back in the second half." The Barom trimmed Brum. mett's team 37-23 and he blames the )05! on mental mistakes and a good Fountain Valley team. "We just can't go out against a iood football 1e11m and make the mistakes we did the flrst half," he explains. "We turned the ball over two or three tlJnes and -this wu really embllrrasing -we had an orHkles kick run back for a touchdown. "We had a lot ol penalU... and In one ol the ""°""' drtves they """1t 56 yan:l1, 30 ol IJ>em In penalties. "We made a lot ol mistakes and 1 hope we've 11:ot them out c:A our l)'stem." In addiUon to lauding his backfltld, Bn.unmttt found time to in• guard Onvid 1'1cBtlh. Jackie ltoger Y.'alte and defen1ive linemen Bucky llood •nd t:i...orth Elkcy. "llood bu oeen a lot of dou- ble ~-" BnunmtU aays. "Other Jeams ""' doubl~ op "" him and -tlmeo lt!ple teaming him, • n d COQ.o "'luen!iY E&key ii llldn( a lot ol Ono<M><Wlt liluatlons and i..·1 a good '°'"ball play<r." Trout Plant The ronowJne California lallol and ........... lblod by C11NDty, ire llCMdu.k!d for re- •tcdln& tlUo -"11.b cotdl-lojtCe rafnbow trout: LOS ANGELES -Crystal Lake 1\fvt11SIDE -Yu I m o r Lott, .. .,,,.. Lau SA.'I BaNARDINO -lltc lltor Lake, G,_, V.U.y !Ake. o......., l.ake, Jenu Laltb. Lylle Qe<li Mlddle and llonn l'or'u, s.n1a Ana ni-. Colorado Rlvct f Needleol. ' ' D"ll Y PILOT ._ Bar.ons Missi.t1g Two Stai-t:ers ForEdiso11 Collision Friday Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pl<;Jdord ha• a good point when he dbcusses the merit of playing rival Edison In the Optfling Irvine Leagu• football game of tbe current campaign. 1be two co 111 de at Wtmminster Jllgh in an 8 o'clock issue that may go a long way in decid ing the even- tual loop championship. But there are a lot o( other lten\S built into I.he game - most obvious !he fierwt ri valry of any two teams in the Irvine circuit or the Jlun· lington Beach School District. "It's the aftermath of !he game that nuiy prove to be u problem. Win or lose, ycu have to oome back lhe nest week. t look at our schedule and It just about gives me a heart attack," says Plckford. The Barons mentor tick,, off the list and It star11 'llrith Edi.son, then Estancia, then Los Alamlloo ... Surprising L ACC Menaces Rustlers "Rlg!il down the line U's th< same thing," he says. "But everybody i.1: pretty much in the same boo.t." The Ban>M will be lrylng 10 knock off the rival Omrgers for the first time in their !hart history Bfter lasing three straight -and t"'O ol those setbacks cost Fountain Valley a share ol the loop cham- piomhlp and a certain spot in the CIF AAAA playoffs. LOS ANGELES -Variety may be the spice of life but Los Angeles Cily Collei;:e coach Hal Baldock isn't cer- tain he is In favor of so much spice. Baldock is serving his rirst term as head football coach for the CuM. who will face Golden West <Allege Saturday night et Orange Coast College in the opening Southern California Conference game of the sea.90n. "We have a very young team this season.'' he .says. "Practically all or them are freshmen. "This means every game is a different one and with a dif. ferent lineup. We are switch· ing them around a lot and right now I couldn't tell you the names of any certain starters." For the record, h.is leading ground gainer Is a 180-pound fullback from Tex-as. \'on Robinson. Robinson has carried the ball on 23 occasions for 115 yards while running mate Guy San Diego Offense · In Limbo SAN DIEGO -If San Diego City <Allege ever get. its or. fense goin@:. the Knigh~ oould be one of the toughest teams in the Mission COnferenct football race. That's the ~Inion of SDCC Askins at tailback has carried 37 limes for 84 yards. \\'hat Baldock doesn't add is that the Cubs' passing game has also been impressive this season. Darryl Clark. the probable starting quarterback, ha 11 thrown 48 passes and cor~ nectr.d on 26 for 344 yards. proving he can connect "'hen necessary. His leading target is James Jlubbard. a 6-2 wide receiver who has taken 15 for 280 yards and a pair of touchdo"ns. The CuM have won a pair of games and dropped a %3-16 verdict at Phoenix I a s t weeke nd . Baldock says he doesn't believe in comparative scores -and perhaps with justinca- tion. At any rate, the CU~ would be substantial ravoriles if such were the case. LACC de!eated Compton 44· 7 while the Rustlers barely \1·on a 26-24 decision from Compton last Friday night with a last second field goal. 1.ACC defeated Fullerton 16-9 in its opener. How does Baldock rate Golden West? "It looks like they are as good as anyone else around the league." the former San Ditgo State assist.ant says. ·'They have a very good run- ning and passing game and are y,·ell balanctd. And their defense looks tough . ·'They run the power series y,·ell, the option VI~!. the drop back JNW and the play actk>n pass . We have our work cut out for us on defeMe, •• Fountain Valley's slick of· fense i& hampered with the loss ol starters Ben Dod5on and Dan Maltby. Dodson v.·as involved in an automobile accident f o u r boors prior lo the Huntington Buch game and missed the entire till. He's available for action Friday, bot Biil Ogden will start in his usual-halfback spot on offense and Jay K~ lakes his come.-k spot on defense. ~laltby pulled 11 groin In the opener ... 1th Rancho Alamitoc and Plekford his penciled ln Mike GoodJOn to start at ol· feMi\'e tack.le. The Fountain Valley olfense has st«nl«I to a dozen touchdowns in its vict«ies over Rancho Alamitos Bnd Huntington Beech. And Piol;ford dbcoonls the 47 point.s given up on defense, saying, "our first team dt'fen,,e Isn't a1k>wlng any polnU. It's a dei>lh prd>km. And. you ha\~ a tendency to Jet up a litUe .,.'hen you're scoring so many point!. ·· M for Ediaoo, you have. to st.op rred llernandiM on the power ind blRS. aeries. The big fullbock (Joe lltmeltakoll runs up inside you, too. n..t'a their OOsic oUen:se ond that· 1 the flnt Udng we ha~ lo ........ Area Sports Calendar coach Harry West as he Pt&cYy 10ct. ,, Prcpare3 his club fOl' the in-Foo1~11 -,., _ _. M¥ .,. c ,,.,.. <I• •I N""1IOl'I Hltf. !"-P. vasion of Saddleback Saturday IF°''"'''" ~· 11v ~'''"' "'"'· Ofw't<IO 11 ~" Cit"""' t afternoon (1:30) at Balboa ~ FeotNll • kilt• 11a ....... o.~ -Hfll1 •I Y.r~••• Mtl•I ti 1411'111 ... loll Stadium •~1rri, Minion Y •Ja ar Tut.1111. tFoollNI~--~~•' l'f--1 . v~ ,,..,,11~ ., •••J' "1 ., ••. el Ht•-· , .,~,, .... lllOll\ II "\Ve haven't done much of. c1m1"° •'Or•.,.. ''!=i/' 1:::io1. ~· l01 "" w''i" C•011 C-l•Y -~· '•4· tl'l!lt r.ir. ' I. .-. fensively against anvnn.n this 0'1•'1-K• ti C.rMl'IWtll ()). W"I, llllKk rr C a &a - ,.... 'i"~··~·~"·~~~·~·~k~'~"~,..,.:;;;~·;'~";;;'·----~· .. ~··~iii;;~'~·------------season.'' says West. "It'~ a11 mailer or obtalni~ a litlle BOUTIQIJE more consistency. If we do we <X1Uld have .a fine team. The ~!.:~ is more than ade-• 1 LEA~ft~ The Knights, says West . ....... l ... ~ ~ have a strong secondary and 1.1.nunoNS 1 llSTT\.fNe are very tough up front, bot POI PAITICULAI L.Atnl have 00 experlenc< • I '" ar1ter-Dale €eater linebacklng. Corner of W•rner & SprlntdaS., Hunfl"tton Beach Linemen Jlnuny Barber. a 842-2050 6-1. 243-pound 25-year oldl'::iii:iii:iii:==;;:::~iiiii:i frestnnan, Craig F\shcr • &-1,ll - - ~r and David Gndl (M. 235) are the beat up rront while Rocky l.oyao 11-1, 11111 l<acb the -ry. Offemlvely, the Knlght.s are led l>Y Mldiatl Smllh. a IU. poond fmhm:in spttdsler. J{e's a I .I 100..yard dash man "'ho ran for 78 yard& and a touchdown 18.M ,..edc In a 17.g aetback to Rlvenide. Sen DI.ego abo h;is a talented quarterba c k In oophomor• "'"" \\'oUchlel who Wtst 111y1 has not reached hiA poi.ndal ... ytl. Wo!fchi<I opanied lor th< Kn6gtrlJ two 1taan ago. but btote • tl'MT'lb befort the seuon staned lut ye•r and had to sit It CRrt. 11.e·1 • 6-0, ta pound«. The Knight& 51\110 ha\'e 51.1f. fered 35.Q Jnd llJ.O M'lb11ckJ 10 1 San l>leco ~l~a a n ti Sout.m.·estem. n1nnln" lhc!lr winkdls at~nk to le games. The ia5l time lhc!y won wa1 inkt way ttircu~ the Jtn 9'alOll whtn thry dc'fettted s.r<aAna. 7-3. In th< nut lo lul game °'I the "89 c.ampalgn S.n °"f;o, u..i <lmlg• Coa>t. 7-7 . and thmt"s tht clo!wt tt'1 bern l.t1 \1dory In the 26 ic•ma I fO• THE IEST MOYE Cl' YOUR LIFE CALL 494-1025 0 OJ;;WV Drivers who dmit smoke may save as much as 25<¥0 with Farmers Non-Smoker Auto Policy. CHUCK SPE RRAZ ZO -HENR Y EKIZIAN NEAMOR JOS EPH 11918 Magno II•. Foutain Veller 962·2411 • ~S.140 1 or ll1tl 14 ..... '·'· UMAt 17tll ......... ,,. ••• ,..., f lJ.J411 ., , .... 1 .. 1 6411 ....... ,H.L HJ4h t • , DAILY PILOT T~, Oc-5, J..91 Jndustri-01 iM.!ll-M•ric•r4 • •4J'fff .... ,,. '1 •• 11: •• hi•-'· 11.-.,.,t .... -ff '44·1010 . '. • OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST • -.. , .... ,. ,. ,. ~"'· ' ~ ... .. •• '" ~. " .. ·~ "". ~ ···~ ::·\ . , ..... .. ••• ···~ ~· .. ~ ... ., ...• 1 .. ' • Thursday's Closing Prices COmplete New York Stock Exchange List Stocks Tumble ' On Wall Street NEW YORK (APJ-Stock market rrlces skidded sharply Thursday alter four stralgh lnconcltUlve session!. Declining Issues on the New York Stock Exchange had a wide lead over gaining st<x:ks. The Dow Jones average or SO industrials erased its early losses for a brief period at midsesslon, after President Nixon said in a news conference that Vietnam peace talks were in a sensitive stage. But ii fell back again in the afternoon. Saying there was "a real dicht<>my in the market" Robert Sl<>vall 0£ Ri!ynolds SecunU.s Inc. n¢ed that "the glamour sl<>cks sink by several dol· Jars a share while solid cyclical stocks hold firm or go_ up." SC IWl.Y PILOT 3J Briefs e Y eat Acr"• ST. LOUIS -Eight acres of land in Bai:e.nOeld, have been ()plioned by Anheuser-Busch, Inc .. as a site for a bakers yeast plant, the tompany has announred. SubJecl, to 1ucce•1 ful n e g 0 Ll atl on1 rtprdlng utllltits. transportation and ot~r necessary item!. Ul~ c:WTent timetable calls for the plant to be in production in early 1974. .. .I • TUMBLEWEEDS \ MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY . --....__--_.,..;:;__ Tlwrsd11, Oc:tobtr S, 1'172 ll 'I ' . . ' J . ! J ! J l ~ ••··ANO THIS WILL GET YQU ATTENTJoN! --~ I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER l PEANUTS ACROSS 1 Ot1 no~ .. _ 11 OppoMte of: P1ahl 14 "Only·--.. !S Pooui. homa ilClllafiufrl ftMl 16 CcwnHy ol EurOl)e; Abbt. 17 County of England 19 Common c.onuac1ion 20 Nic1<n11noe kit •1 J&e.klillY 43 Become .vodent AS lno&Q9d lot a ptttfo<milnct "6 Roof o4 the movth "''°" searchingly 49 Tyl)lli1e !iO Uneorw::oaled 52 Hl!Yt room '" 56 P!Keaf c°"linon'IO!lt: YntefUy'a Puul!I Sotttd; I !!A OSRTO W Rl l O '?RO LL ~OR'? SLl"LY f ll by Chesffl' Gould -11"-UYOUCM, IT WIU. M YOUR LAST. by Tom K. Ryan ~ v by Al Smith by Emie Bvslimiller • CAH«WRfAD • IT? HAV'E '<Ill fl6UREPIT M?llllATDGES rr 5111? ' DOOLEY'S WORLD SAU Y BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS 1111 . ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charles M. Schulz N 1thilA 21 SJ)HI~ 22 Women 24 Hltl/9$11 Shmg 51 Rc11 bu'lneu """ 60 BMl<lc11 setNQle 'tO Most deplofllb!'I'! 38 S1n11llpond 39 Hauf'fl'lf'e n~m JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux """ Z6 OperileG a -· 27 AIOl'\tt --30 Plant will! thlati.lil!• -~ 32 DNP QOtVO 33 u ···-: FOfm« UN S.cr.uirv· -· 34 ltltmfghW ........ ·-· 37 Dang91' lB Arnlef.,.;I ·~· J9 Mr,c--gll 40 Adi9CM w ... •I Nol-' r.1 A1u1mp1ed 6.! Cit•bon-"d bfoYCr!tf!e1J 63 S1'.1.11n15h 11r11rkl 64 Sowa 65 H.,d y w!>e1t Qf flit°"" DOWN 1 D•vtue1k :Z COITIJ)Ol.Jnd uMdin •lllilfll 3L~ • S11t·INl>ed hgur• 5M- whlclll, !or ..... 6 Aweogh 7 One'10¥fA ..,,ii ... • 51"00.....,: . ..... 9 Whll...ulled • 11 Garne ""ervfl 12 s1 .. 1u,,Qly tmu1u91 13 l ockola wom•,.,'• hnif 18 Sehool••""' 23 Coolin.g Orlnlt 25 Slir>1111ry- 2t DMaionof --27 Rell nia1e ""'' 29 F~mf'I' 211 Ut>culliw.ted ,_.. 30 Plut1! ol "11\/11'' 31 ~acllil.ie "°'-f111emlty 3S .. H11'1_.e • 1hin1t ·-·I" 3B Ntc: .... ty <11 0<6Cove<~ "2 Cuhovill.,O """ .... Wu1stltT5' "'""'U A!)81-err IJrOdu~I 46 t""9d by Vie '""" •1 l••Qoet-: Ro'tkel lauochlng ol "'" <18 Go.MN 50 Chff,.ol F•1ne1 5 1 tv'htnlC';l~ Sl Ne;il), lot Ofle 5'~au-~ ~ ····Ge<m1ny !HI Mine O•od\IQ !:>!! 81111101 bu•dt!n Nearly E veryone Listens lo Landers • • ~~~~~~...,-,.-M~-~RS~·.~80.,-.,.RG~S~O~N~?~H-A~S~'IO""'UR~J~U~S~T~A-.... HUS6AND RETURNED YET? MINUTE ... THIS IS LIEUTENANT l 'U. SEE ... HARGA1f.! MISS PEACH I j I l • l'ERKINS c . . . LOOK,~f HE'S NOT READILY AYAH.ABLE .. , GIVE HIM A ME55A6E! I 'M SORRY TO HAVE 80THEREO YOU! IT LOOKS AS THOUGH WE'VE FINALLY HAD A 8REAK IN THE 6EVERLY 6AR5TOW MUA.OER! by Mell by Gus Arriola by Roger Bolen . ~ SO MOOI 81Nl'Um ll()lO) 14A1' '1H511ve eor lltJ ~Me~"!& Oii FUoe - THE GIRLS I "Penoaally, I wbll wome1 would stay t 11l of poflttcs - goveramaat ll au we've got ltf& te Mame•• men." DENNIS THE MENACE . .. ' r, ·, .. ·' n ,, v ·' A " '" . ., .... ~ .. ~ I J \ ) ' j, I • 1].. •' •• , 1111a Beaeh Today's Final VOL 65, NO. 279, 3 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1972 TEN CENTS ' Chicano Leaders Angry Over Caspers Remark By JACK BROBACK Of .. Deltr P'lltlf Staff Orange Co u o t y Mexican-American leaden reacted with anger today after Board of Supervisors' Olairman Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach declared he wanted to move the County Seat to escape Chicano influence. "Caspers was angry because the county board last week approved a program to provide minority races more county jobs. A Mexican-American organization of county employes called Adelante sup- ported the plan. Caspers Wednesday called them, '' Adelanle Banditol.,. He clalmed county government h;ld been squeezed out d '200,000 for the minority b1ring program. Caspers, wealthy owner of a financial institution, makes his home on Lido Isle in Newport. He was ou the losing end of the 4 to I board vote approving the pr<> gram. Still fuming at the last board session, Caspers suggested that the County Seat ought to be moved away from Santa Ana to some location such aa Dana Point or Laguna Hills. These places would he within his own , una • • Awaits Funds Laguna to Seek Temporary Loan The Laguna Beach City Council agreed Wednesday night to borrow another $250,000 to finance city operations wtil tu monies are received in December. The acti-On was taken after the council autborUed finance director Robert Green Poli.ce Probing ChiCken Slayings ln Laguna Beach A leghorn named Lucy and a Ban-ed Rock hen named Carmelita, both deceas-- ed, were the objects toda)' of an in- vestigation by the Laguna Beach Police Department. Both hens, along with Pete, a rooster, and Rudolph, 1Vho lays blue eggs, . are trained and used in sculpture shows by owner Ardelles Cllirley Nell, 426 Canyon Acres Drive, Laguna Beach. It seems the educated poultry have been the victims of malicious mischief, according to the police report. Cannelita was found dead about a week ago and Lucy was reported "slaughtered" Wednesday, officers said. Officer Bruce Br.iggs said the liens were programmed to cackle in response tp Pete, who crOwed at the sound of a human voice," Rudolph was a stand·in (See CIUCKEN, Page Z) to take out the final $100,000 loan in a $500,000 borrowing program autnorized earlier when city reserves virtually disappeared. "Since our finances still are very tight, and we stand to gain under a rather favorallle interest ~ I aug· gest we make an addltiooal loan," said --lloJ Holm; .... -lo the chair In the aboellle qi ~ E:llllrltoa • Boyd. • Unde<4ts preoent borrowing and Ju. vestiptlng oetup, Bolin explained, the city gains 1.5 percent ln lntenst received over interest paid. "We cerCainly could use the money," said Green, noting that $100,000 in bills '1could be deferred, but should be paid." The $500,000 originally autborir.ed, he added, was the "absolute minimum" on which he figured the city could "l!Cfape through" pending receipt of the tu.es. The final 1100,000 tncr<ment of that pro- gram would he needed to cover the next piyroll, Green pointed out. Some cities with adequate reserves, Holm noted, make a policy of borrowing money and investing it to benefit from the interest differential "tbey go out and borrow IU million and make con- siderable money in a year," said Holm. COUncilman Carl Johnson said if a new loan were negotiated It should be &uf- ficient to cover the bills and Jtill leave something for investment. Tbe council a g r e e d on the $250,000 figure, whlch Green said could be available in about two weeks on com· pletion of paper work with the bank. Nix on Beli.eves LBJ Err ed in .Bombing Halt Fn>m Wire Servlctt WASHINGTON -President Nlxon to- day ruled out any halt to the bombing of North Vietnam Lefore the Nov. 7 elec- tion, saying former President JobMOll Exterminator's . Tent Hid Laguna Burglary Team ShiQlded by an e1tenninator'1 sealed tent. Laaum Beach burglars took nearly $20,000 worth of property from the home of welJ.mown dvlc leader Mn. Sllna Bercstrom WoU. Mn. WoU. president of the llWllazy d South CoUI Commamlty lloopttal, -told L1guna liNch police Wednndly of the crime which included the theft d I U. carat diamond rill& valued 11 •.Oii. The burl!iarY -r<nUy ·~ocau-~red"' overnJahl when ·u. home 1t lW Ttmple 111111 llriw .,., eavekiped In 1 litCO CJ· ttrmlna\Or'• ttnt aod wu l.mdetaolna fumlgaUoo, PoUce LL Frank DWon ..ia ~;,,, Hid detectl•ff hive not yet completed tnvallpUoo of the crtmo. It Is not known If tol'k aas wu pl"nmt ln IS.. BURGLARY, ..... I) made a "very. very ereat miltake'' when he did so just before the 1111 election. lfaon told a DeW9 con(ereoce in h1a Oval office the war could be 1tlUed befo,. Nov. 7 -U the rl&bt kind d oet· tlemellt could he made. • But he ldded that the balloting "will not In ..,. way lnllutnc:e what we do ot the negotiating !obit ... The J-ldmlnlltntlon, he aid, ~ wtll Jnteatlooed, "made • VfCJ 1 very srut m11tO<o 1n Mopplnc the bomJ>. mc w1tbout adequate _.1a 1rom the other Dde." He rele!Ted to J-·· Nov. I, tlll, IU1llOlln<elllOt d I bombinl hilt just days ht!.,. Nlmo dele1ted Hubert H. Humphtty !or tbt pmlcleocy. "We an DOI &olac lo llllke that ml!take now," Nlsan declared. On other lopicl lo the -rqlng newt conferenct: .-Nim> aid • "tbm will bt no prttldendal iu m:s r r ! " m 1m but aflUild dat "cqa Fiii '81 GYUipmd. Intl" m!PI·--......,. Nim>, In d*'~bll tu. pollcJ, Nici bt will nnlJ t tbt c111npo11Jl trail untll. ~ edjoumo --he _, ID -In Wlllhlac* to "llOI Iba btttle ·~_. ..... Jlt promlled I • of ftlo ....... .-.. -...,.. tlon lbtt n-bis bodpt 10111. He Hid he -.Id p oo nationwide !See llOMlllNO, P ... I) Fifth SUpervisortal Diltrlct. "Santa Ana isn't a good place because it doesn't-have ethnic balance," Caspers contended. "Tbe minorities have the ear Of too many supervisors." Some observers thought Caspers was just making a joke in bad taste. Bui then Caspers seriously asked Orange OMmty Counsel Adrian Kuyper if the County Seat could he legally shifted to another place. K~ said he'd have to study the issue. Meanwhile today, Adelante President Milton Reed called a press conference and declared, "We'll do something very strong about that ractal slur." Adelante has strongly SUJlPOrted the minority blrina plan as had LUI.AC, a Chicano poittlc81 actl-On group. The minority hlrlng program won a sup- porting recommendation from county Per1!0nnel Director William Hart . other county board members reacted with considerable caution today u con- troversy IUJTOUDded Caspers' remarb. Ralph Clark, the Fourth District supervisor from Anaheim said, "I don't think anything like that could he done without tremendous cost to the tax- • 1es poyen. I'm aattsfied ,.;th the facWty being •here it ll," Supervisor Robert Batun, whose First llblrtct Includes the coonty seat and more than half of. the Mexican-American population ol the county, was out cam- paigning today. Bui one of his aides said, "The boss just thought it was a bed joke. He (Caspers) has a peculiar sense of hWTlO< at times." Not so reticent was Diet Ruiz, long- time aide to SupervilOI' David Baker aDd one of those who assisted in the organiza- Uon of Adelante. MIKE KELLERMAN (TRUNKS) TELLS LIPEOUA RD CAPT. BRUCI BAIRD ABOUT DROWNING Body of Skindiving Victim Stove $mlth of BrH Lin Covored"'t Aliso Beech Drowning Cause of Death Coroner's Findi1igs Released on Diving Casualty Pre.liminary coroner'! findings point to drowning as the cause of death ror a 23-year~d Brea dJver pulled from the rocky shore of South Beach just off the TreaJure Itland community In South Laguna Wednetday. Coroner's investigators Indicated that water found ID the man'• breathing pa.ssaces Indicated Ii death by drowning. lnveotlgator Jolm Gill said more ei· tensive ltudy -id he done to detmnlne . U l1t11e gaabH ln the diver's forehead oc- cwred before or alter death. "If the lnjurl .. were ""talned prior to the dro'"1ing, tt may have bttn 1 precipitating factor," Gill said. 'n.e l"lver was klentlOed u Steve Smith of 1121 S. Pine st .. In B..a. Smith wn married and the new falhtr of a fOQl'oClay-old hlby girl at the time of blo death. OUJ said a search for the dead diver'• air tank would continue. D 1 • e r 1 IOIJ'Chlng for the scuba I"' hive boon hamper<d by murky water one! WY)' surf today. Air Noise Bit Lagu11.a Council Hears ComplaiJ&U • . ' • . . The tank WU 11Jlpped of! the rtrickon diver by hil diving buddy. MArk K•llmnan, .S.0 IS, u bt pulled the Bru man from the water. The two men bad been divine for -atoni the nd)' CJUlcro!ll>lnl, ... .,.. ~with to..I dlven, but m11k· ed W_,17 by rouafl cumnta. Realdonta of the rnobllo llome com- munity wol<hed •&host fn>m the~ dill· •Ide dwdlq. u olrlclala conducted the lnvOlllptton 1nd ,..,,.,.ed the body, llJll clodled In the bloct< ..-dlvtog 11111. °"' ... id<llt l'OCllled a put c1mrn1111 off tht 11me tplt d rock IOlf ilmtJIUd the latn:t traced)', "he WU ao )'Ollnl," lht uld. Friendly Fighting? CINCINNA Tl ( l/Pl) -111t I iamtll• CountJ poltco dflpoldw had 11111 -we w-., 1or cw m. ·'(lo to f'rimJJJ Tlvma. A ~ '' TERM PA.PERS 'HA.ZA.RDOUS1 I .. • ' He dlspakhed a letter to the board'• chairman wbicb read In part, "ethnic sl urs bring you no hooor. Jam fUJed with disgust and anger that you would make anli-~les:ican-Amerlcan statements in a public meeting." Ruiz continued , "It ii lncredible to me that any rational~ responsible public of- ficial could utter such lnttmperate remarks -remarks which can only serve but to inflame emotlons and foster unrest." Caspers, In his three years on the board has been 90mewhat famou1 fOr his off the cuff remarks. Councilmen Look Ag ain At Project The Laguna Beach City Coonctl voted unanimously Wednesday night t o reconskter purchase of a 1.2 acre pared of Boat Canyon land as right-of-way for a proposed extensioo of Campu1 Drive. The purcbase wu approved lD June by a 3-2 vote of the previou.5 council, wttb present Mayor Owtton Boyd end Vice Mayor Roy Holm dluootlni. but I court order blocked complttlon d the •le 1'ben Vllia&e 1-filed • lnmlt diarclnl the clty bad .... pied .. 11>- adequate envlnlamentll lmpoct --.- The land buy one! ~ -also ..... blallod by Cari J.-, then chainnan or lhe Planninf c.omml8Doo, now a city councilmln. With a court hearing on the Villi&• Laguna suit tcheduled Oct. 20, Cily A~ tomey Tully Seymour ougg .. ted Wed- nesday that if the new councll wllhed to reconsider lhe purclme It lhau1d ICt now. It could alao provide uourance that ti the project lhould pioceed, a -.... Viroomenlal lmpoct ltli......t would bt pr<pll'ed. "Thia -II pretty IUpe'-flctal ," 11td the lttorney ~errtnc to the ortcJnol ltltanmt, "one! k'• prob- ably not worth the lqlf 1-lo -I.he IUJI." Thi! statement wu questlonfd bfcluse · it considered only the lmpoct of purcbM ol the land, not of buildJntl tht rood.. Director ol Public Woru Al Tlleaf pointed that a comph~t.e Jlatement oo im- pact of the n>8d -.Id be dllllcult lo ~ complllh, since no d.,.lan has hem propattd for rhe artery. Purctwo of the Boat Canyon land ........ erty Of Pyne Eita1e1. w11 to hive been a joint chy<lOUnty project. wttb eocb put· ting up m,ooo In , .. tu funds lot the purehase, The Clmpwi Dr1ve extension «1cfntlly wu Int.ended u a fetdtt f'Old to it. oow- dofunct Wand f""'way . It has rtmllned on lbe county'• arterial rold plllt but n«d for the rood, at leUI lo thot Joco. tJon , hu -1---abtf>. donmonl of Ille ...... y-.. Counctlmon 'asrted w-, to uk the Plonnin& Commlalon lo rHYlft11i. the purdluo In the llcl>t of ~ - far the l"09dny, and to ate a n.com- -Uon lo the <OUnCU. 1 ,. I • Z DAILY PlLDl LI 200 Listen To Debate By L PETEii KRIEG ot .. o.f) ...... .,... Propos.ltltlll !,Ill -l~ l~t31 mJWll\t" -YO&.i .Jtl:'mJ~!\' LJbt-!\"J •·111 tbi tou.1 pubft..: p.iti' ;mJ ··~b~"t to St."\"1!"1"1ll raQI dt~u .. ~ ~c s1dei in :a dtbdbt on its aw-nt.s spu!IS'red b~· ~ \.lr-.tage Couuty (oost .\ 1 i o c 1 ~ t i a n W~DY U:lvi.Jt ~'UIJ ~r'-011.S Jl I ~ B...Llb.JJ SJ_y r tuo heart.I L.1gW1d St.·Jlil \l:oroe1 ¥1-1.lli:Un WtltillU!ll. J proi:W(letlt l'l)(l- servatloru:>t. suppurt !he '\ov~m~r t:alki' me~ because It wou.ld ··~t d1sll)- 1~nosted people tu review local dec1mcns. .,,, ith Ui.! i!.DJ re:su.11 lD !he tot.al pablJc ID- terest. •• But tbev ah;o ~ard Las .\ngeles At· tomey Alfred Hamtltoc df"Cf'Y !.ht measure ba-aU..~ 1t would give IOC3.1 coo- trol to .. anotbt!r levd or bureaucratic hierarchy." lf p<Wed by a ma)On~· of state voters. Proposition 20 \\vu.Id tSbbli.sh a state commission and siI. regional com- missions that would i.a\'e until 1976 to prepare a master plan for coastline development. During that period. those bodies \\'Quid have authoritative con trol on what gets built -and what doesn't get built - within what is unclcarly labeled the coastal zone. Hamilton said state control is un- necessary. He argued that "local rule does get around to doing the job." He cited changes in Los Angeles Cnun· ty the past fi\'e years and then cited Ne\\·port Harbor. '·Look around Newport Be a ch , ' ' f;<imilton said, "the water is blue. You can see the bottom, the water's not cruddy." \Vi\coxen stressed that California v.·as only one of two coastal states without coastline management legislation and noted that numerous state agencies, in· eluding one commiss ion appointed by Governor Reagan, have repeatedly urged state c:ontrols. Wilcoxen skirted a direct confrontaticn wit h one cf the major criticisms of the measure -that it, in effect , would pince a moratorium on development W1til the master plan i! done, without providing compellABtiOn to the land owner who con- tinues to pay taxes on his property. He said the four-year planning process jg necessary to allow "critical, close and effective contact at the local and regional level." He said it ls impossible for small towns on their own to "get enough data to understand the lmpact of what is going on araund them" because there ore ao many regional agencies even now. Hamilton countered the point by saying that two stale studies. one the Com· prehenslve Ocean Area Plan (COAP) and another by the California Parks and Recreation Commission both a r e available reference material for local governments. He also cited the recent California Supreme Court ruling that major private as well as public projects cannot be allowed until they have filed en- vironmental impact statements. "These lool5 provide. the essentials nece.ssary to make sure the coastline is property developed," Hamilton said. Hamilton also said the SS million price tag on the initiative would in no way cover both the. cost of preparing the new muttr plan or the cost of reviewing the thousands of permit applications. Crocheting Classes Scheduled in Laguna Registration Is open now for a class In advanced crocheting at the Laguna Beach Recreation Department offices, 17! N. Coast Highway. The advanced cl 1st will start Oct. 27. The fee i.!I $5 with the department sup- plying materials. The Instructor Is A.1 ignon Cotti ngton, who elhlbited In the Sawdust Festival. DAILY PILOT 1"9 °""'lie CMlt °"l\.Y 'II.OT, wf1fl ~ II _._. "'-H_,, ... It Ml...._. W 1119 On.-CM1t hblltlllolO CtimoenY ...... ,. .. .-ltllMl ••• DW!lthR. M«Uy tl'lf'DYtfl f'r1111..,. !er C.te Mn., Hl'Wl*1 lwdl, HWlll""'9rt leecll/l"-.tfl \t•ll..,, L•t\llM 9..at,, l"'IM/kdll~t •nd S111 0.-...i.t 6.tfl .llHlll 011ltt••110,. A ,1"91e ,...,"loMI .Olllool ,, ....... S..lllnl•~ •rid i ul'ldt .,.. TP!w lltiMl"'I llUllllltillll ,ian1 It et UO Wt.I a.y $!rid, C:.19 M•, CeLllWftle, ,,.»..· l•Mf't N. WeM .. , ......... Mli.Mr J•cli It. C11rlty Vk9 ......... .,.. °"*111 h\lnlfW TlrteM•• Kte¥ff ..... r,..,..,, A. M11PJhl11e -·-a.,. .. H. LHt Ric.Ii•"' '· Ntll Aulli.nt Mltll-ellW Edlioo, ..._ __ 222 ,., ... "'""*' Malll11 .U...11 P.O ...... ~ 91612 --c.19 .... , .... ..,. .... . hedll -" .............. ,., ~11Wt..,......_,. .. ---··~Jl!IM t .. '' 1 tn•• MJ..can a I ..... Moect ' I '42°N7I &..,.. ..... Al • ., •• sPftl Tel.. • ........ ... ____ 1lft. Or-.. C..I ~ ~ .... ·-,..,..._ H1vtn.11w&, ........................... """*" .......... MW lie r+µJoc1J w4fMl.tt ... 111 ,... ........ .,,,. ..,,.... -d .. s=: ...... C.11 Mete. ~ ... .., r-mw ., ... flW!lflltY, .. .., .. llWtfllYJ nilllfwr ............. ........,,, Wiekiup Set Student.s Slww S~lter Sire DAILY ,ILOT ,Mtl fW -'-' CM'"" STUDENTS OF THURSTON INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL WORK ON THEIR WICKl-UP PROJECT Te11mwork by Homeroom H Students Puts Dennis Linkletter 11t Top of The HHp From Page l BOMBING ... radio on Sa turday to explain his tax policy. -He also promised property tax relief during a second term and said top priori· ty would go to easing the tax burden of the nation's elderly citizens. -He brushed aside Sen. George S. McGovern's charges of corruption by b•s ndministration, and predicted it would "turn off" the voters. Standing behind his desk and apeaking in tones so low they were difficult to hear, Nixon took note of McGovern's cor- ruption charges and accusations that U.S. policy in Vietnam was ··~ worst crime since the Nazi extermination of the Jews." "Some cf my more partisan supporters have said I should respond ln kind," Nix- on said. "But I'm not going to dignify such comments with a reply!' -Insisting the U.S. has not been "scbnookered " Nixon sakl th a t McGovern'• ~arges of 8C8Dda1 in the sale of wheat to the Soviet Union were being lborooghiy lnvestlgatal. Nixon aJso said the sale was "a good deal" for America. Briggs', Subpoena Bid On Butz Unsuccessful SACRAMENTO (AP) -'Ille chairman of the California Assembly's Agricultural Committee tried to subpoena Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz today but was shoved aside after a brief scuffle with Butz aides. Assemblyman John Briggs of Fullerton wants Butz to appear Tuesday ln Los Angeles at an agriculture committee bearing on federal reimbursement for farmers whose chickens have been destroyed to help dleck the spread ol Newcastle disease. · Briggs tried to -hand Butz the subpoena after the Agriculture secretary finiJhed a press conference. A> be walked towanl the podium, two men quickly formed a shield around Butz and escorted him from lhe room. Briggo lalrled !he aubpoena documenl at Butz, but It fluttered to !he flocr and was trampled 11 Buti left. "I'd recommend you pick it up, fellows," Briggs said. Briggs, a Republican, said the men who sOOved him aside were Secret Service agents, but that could oot be ~ !Inned. ties last Mareh to contain an outbreak cf exotic Newtastle disease, which is harmless to humans but deadly to birds. 'Ibe quarantine -which blocked any shipment of birds in the area affected - has •Ince been llftod from all but parts of three counties -VenQra, San --and Rlvenlde. Federal authorities have reimbursed California pwltrymen on an appraised va1ue of their chickens. Butz announced at bis news conference that ilx months after destruction, flock appraisals will be reeva1uated and perbape adjusted upwanf to reflect the value of the birds as 11egg-laying macblnee." Butz said tbat could mean reim· bursement to poultrymen of as much as $3 or more per bird. Brlgp said farmers could ullve with" a reimbursement of $3.00 per bird but wanted 14 or $3. By JACK CllAPPEIL Ot Ille OtilY ..... , ... Society's conOlct! from women's Jib to economics get a thorough workout by students at Laguna Beach'• 1burtton Intennedtate School during Wlcktup, a week-long field exer<:ise lo government and history . During Wickiup, students from the school's home rooma Conn 10 tribes and without benefit er man-made materials must erect a Biter and devise im· plements needed for day4o-day living. Most important, the students must fonn a govenunent and selected leaders. The leaders then have lo deal with organizing the tribe memben into a working unit. Parents are invited to the Wlckl.up site on the bluUs just eaat of the. school today and Friday to see completed projectJ and displays. The projects are highly competitive and award point1 are given to both in- dividuals and groups. "It d"'elopo ii healthy compelltlon between the home rooms and a spirit of oooperaUon within the groups," said George NetUeman, Thurston history teacher. "This is learning' by doing. Tbey ex- perience first-hand the problems any society has for the realization of com- mon goals," he said. Nettleman, who along with teachers Ron Newman and Ron Rodecker, is run- ning lhe project said that through lhe project the real life problema of leadership, supply and demand, and law are brought home to the students. Leoaons experienced during lhe ex· ercise are used all )'ear in supporting history and government subjects the students would otherwise only read about. Wickiup gets its name Crom the struc- tures constructed by the setudents. Early- day Indians living in the Laguna area liv- ed in such dwellings. "It is important that kids when study- ing the concepts of law h a v e ex- perience to draw on," Nettleman said. He pointed out ane group of students and noted oot long ago a tribe member bad been accused of taking p r e c i o u s materials from another tribe. "They didn't know how to disprove it, so it brings in the problem of justice," he said. NetUeman said when choosing tribe leaders, the students normally turned to boys because of an e s tablished "woodsman'' role, a1though normally in the intermediate grades, g~l! bold school elected positiorl;. When a girl was mminated for a tribal office, there would be a good deal of laughing, and then someone would say, "Hey,, what about women'• Ub?" Net. Ueman said. The students elect a chief and a "My reply ls to have such allegations investigated," Ni.Ion said. "Now, if there was any Impropriety, if there was any ll· legality, we want to know It. The way to find out Is to put the best investigative agency In the world to work at ftnding out." -He said he would support a con- stitutional amendment against busing In the next Congress, but would prefer the legislative route. [f Congrus failed "to provide relief from excessive busing orders, then I in· tend to find amther way." "l think it was a little improper cf a Secret Service agent to block a California legislator from serving a subpoena," he said. Asked if be thought Butz would appear at his committee's bearing, Briggs aald , "That will be hb own decl!lon. You 'll have to ask hlm.'' Superb Luxury in Pure Wool Pile A otale-fedEl'll quarmlne wao Im- posed on elgbt Southern Calll<lrnla eow>- Changing I111age 'Animals'·-Eatery Becomes Temple byKarastan mediclDo lllOll, who acll II tho trlbll pollceman. One chlef WU electecl because "It was rumored oho wao part Indian," he erplalned. Each tribe al!o ha1 a ocr1be who kaepe track of the clay-l<><lay actlvtlleo and dif- ficulties the group experience!. The scribe's writings are kept and referred to during lessons for the rest of the year. "They unilerstand better and during the lhreo-week period following the Wicklup, their history classes come alive. "The kids are very ei:clted about th.is and put forth a tremendous amount of ef- fort. We are udted1 as teecbtn, for we ... how meaningful btstor>'. aovernment and law I! tD lhe students In Ille clua perloda which follow," the history teacher aaki. He explatned too, that oome stuclents who do not excel In a classroom, dld very well on lhe blulfa. He oald, too, the lllu- dents ourprlaed blln Vflth their lnnova1lv• solutloos to problema. "We feel thir will understand better the foll >w\lp readings alter experiencing the situations up here on the bluff," he concluded. From Pagel BURGLARY. • • U.e house when the burglary occurred be said. - "We investigate everything:," Lt. Dillon said. It is unknown if the burglars wore gas masks er other breathing devices to enter the house, he said. Police believe the thieves entered the home through the sealed tent opening and after walking beside lhe house, entered through a frmt window. Also taken in the crime were three television sets, an antique mirror, and other jewelry in addltioo tD the diamond ring. The auxiliary which Mn. Woll heads is a volunteer organization which does tund- raising, performs community relaUons: work and aids in holpltal duties. Fl'OlllP .. el CHICKEN ••. for Pete, Officer Briggs oald. A po5'lble auspect has been lden!Uled as a llllllll boy with a bl& black clog who lives in the area. The pollce report did not explabl Ille alleged incldence of the blue eQS pro- dae<d by Rudolph. ' I I I By BARBARA KREmlClf Ot """ o.u, , ... , 11111 l...o\'c Animals, Don't Eat Them, Laguna Beach's vegetarian eatery that made headlines when Its aperator was round guilty of allowing a camel on the premises, is changing ils image. radical as last tlrne. No one wanta to get 50.000 people here in cne day and blut the town. It was necessary to do something radical then to get the. town all interested in one tssue., elthtr pro or con, but what we want mw is a sort of continuing festival that will attract very highly evolved people. to Lagun1 Beach to settle here -artiat.I and craftsmen who will create a true village. atmosphere. It will take time." _..,....,.....,...s'*"""'"'·s.w111,.......,,.._.,.,... themagnlflcaotluxuryolitstlolclr,dHppu,.woolpllo.119-.. prlOt of iu•t $00.00 a •qua,. y.nl 11 clue to• MC11efltawlt1lnutik l11 woel techna&..,y. Karattan gives each fiber a special bulldilf tniofu...,t .. t:beJW• is*fotter," and mo,. ,..urent. A truly ,......_val-. From now on it will be a temple, not a restaurant, spokesma n Curt Reed an- nounced Wed'hesday, and tG accomp115h the switch. the establishment's health permit, business license and rwle lax permlt have bee n turned lnlG author itie s. M a temple, said Reed, the S o u t h Coast Highway estobllshment w 111 become ''a sort of forum, a clearing house for information." First 1tep ln lhis direction 1ppean to be the cireutatlon of handbills ur&lni vie· tim1 of the Laguna Beach Police Department's "reign of terror" to 1Ulp forward and 1upp\y inform at lo n rei;tardlng "unlnwful hara!l$mcnt" by nnrcolics officers. Aliked lf Love Animals migh t be follow- ing the path blazed by an earlier Lquna vegetarian re!ltaurant, Mlllabff's Trtnt.s, whkb eventually changed ltt name to lloldlng Togethtr and be<llme a head- quarters for the 1970 Christmas "hap- penill$l." Reed sa.id "definitely )'fl." The Leve Animals group, now call lnR itlelf "We Art All One," aa ld Reed, num- bers abou t 100 and ls a conUnuaUon or the attempt to es1ablllh ''• more respon.1lble world" 1thlth 1t1rted wtth Mystic Arlt World and Thln&s, two early Laguna (l5Ytbcdellc 1hops, and MUl1bee'1 't'rtats. The aroup pt'Omotal a tine-day Chrtatmaa "hlpptnln111 in L a I u n a Ctnyon In 1970, which drew an utlma1ed 20,000 younc people to the a r e. a •nd virtually paralyied ~city ov11r the holl· day. Alted U another "happentnf mlaht be anticipated. Reed 1aid , 'Yfl, but something much better and not 80 0 We want Laguna to have • SawdUlt Festival atmosphere, not 1 Chamber of Commer ct, Surf and Sand atmosphere," he added. A 1tatement announcing the change ln statu1 of Love Anlmala, cltN the court case In which cperator Jame11 Roberti was found guilty of violating the 1anlta· lion code and asserts, "Our entire case was based on oor belle.I that anJmals and humans are partl of one life •.. that It would be a contt1d.lcUon to our belhf that Wt An! AU One tD mtrict entry tD anothtr be.ing." Be<:iuse "our freedom to practice. our bfllefs ao i\Jaranteed by the Finl Amendment ... bu been dented," the sta tement continues. "we are going tt.> dls!IOlve all Ues with the structW'I that w\11 not allow UI our basic rl&ht.I ..• cur new procedure wru be to operate on donAllons only .•. in thit way v.·e will avoid conlrlbutln& to the tu and llcenJ. Ing structure. that la not for U.S." Reed said Love Anlmala will continue to serve veaetartan fooct, but not to ..U It. He also noted that the mtaurant had been ordered to complY with Health Dtpartment regulations or flCfl clolure: l..n 1evtn days. "They want us to wear hair nela" he .. Id. liowever, he felt that "' 1 "ttmplt " nnd having turned In 111 pennlt, the ~•tobllshment would not be 1ubJect to 8U<h rullng1, noting that the Krishna Consciousness group re.1ularly HrYtl "fensts" of vcgelarlan food In lti ttmp)a. • The 17 colors.,.. •PKIHUl•r t-. ......... ·.w; ..... ,.. .... ,.... •• . .. Y.ur feverit1 int1rlet Cl1si9n1r wlll b1 lleppy to 1t1T1t 'f9U· P~ONSSIOllAL Opon Mo•., INTIAIO~ OUllNEU Tll•n. l Frl. iv.,, ------------ 17 Saddlehaek Today's Fl•al EDITION VOL. 65, NO. 279, 3 SECTIONS, <40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1972 TEN CENTS Chicano Leaders Angry Over Caspers Remark By JACK BROBACK Of .. D&llY '11« lttff Orange C o u n t y MeiicaQ-American . leaders reacted with anger today after Board of Supervisors' ~'hainnan Ronafd W. Caspen of N<wport Beach declared he wanted to move the O:>unty Seat to escape Chicano influence. Caspers was angry because the county board last week approved a program to provide minority races more county jobs. A Mexican-American organization of county employes called Adelante aup-- ported the plan. Caspers Wednesday called them, Jetport Plan Draws Fire In Clemente By JOHN VALTERZA Gr ... DlltY """ Ii.fl One of the largest city council au- diences in recent San Clemente history listened patiently and politely Wednesday to controversial proposals by Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers to in- stall a jetport at Camp Pendleton. Then the Mme crowd of more than 300 persons cbeerc.J as city councilmen formally opposed the Idea and called for tests and deiponstratlori of jet noise emanating frorh the spots proposed for the major terminal. Tbe meeting, held in the comnwnJty clubhouse to accommodate the an- ticipated crowd of concerned residents, was a . part of a regular council session and Caspers arrived during regular pro- ceedings to read a prepared statement, i1'.sisting that the printed word would ward against mi!quotatlon. The supervisor pledged that be would never advocate "the moving of the noise pollut.ioD irobiem out of Newport Beach and over lnto another city in Orange County." But city councilm.cm -taking action after Caspers left to meet a Britl!b con- (S.e JETPORT, Page Z) Ex -Peace Corps Volunteer Named Recreation H ead A former Simi Valley recreation director recently returned from Peace Corps dutieS in Ver.ezuela has been nam- ed recreation coordinator for the city or lrvine. Michael F. Gayle, 27, of South Gate will fill the $9,200 a year post beginning Monday. He was selected from a field of 38 applicants. Gayle, who goes by the name Froome (pronounced Fro-me), is manied and his wife expects their first child in November. He comes to Irvine after completion of a two year hitch in the Peace Corps in Caracas, Venezuela, where be developed a total community recreation program for 16 city schools. Prior to entering the Peace Corps, Gayle waa recreation supervbor for the Simi Valley recreation and parts districts and wu aenlor recreation leader for the city of Fullerton. He earned his bachelor of science degree ln physical education and Cal State Fullerton and speaks nuent Spanish. Oraage Collst Wea liter A wann aod aunny WffUrtd II Jn store for Orange CooJI naldenll with temperatuns at the -expected to be around 7J Friday. Highs Inland around IO. Low1 U>- olghl 81. INSm E TOD~ l:' Eltot11 wear• ago .!4 penoni ol>ondon<d Ntw York, jUdgi1lg it UnHf• In the eomi• of a """ cltar toar. TMV come ClnWOn- 1tul• to a llMfh.c<ntral Callo fornJa commvJllt~. Wiant or• tMI/ "°"' See lfMV, Pagt 13. UL ...,., lf ... -. c ........... ._ .. ·-. a.-..... ti ........ ,.. ... ' ..... ,, t .. ,._. ' .... ............. It •z&HJI ... ~ ,, ----. --. -c... lt --__ .... =-..: -. __ ,,., --. ''Adel.ante Bandil.ol." He clalmod <OUDIY ~ bad been aqueer.ed out of PJ0,000 for the mlnarlty hiring proeram. Calpen, wultby o..,,... of a flnanclal lnslitutton, makes bia bome Oil Lido Ille in Newport. lie WU OU the loling end of tbe 4 to I board vote approving the pro- gram. StW lumJng at the laJI board 1e1Sion, Copen ~ that the Q>unty Seat OQgbt to be moved away from Santa Ana to 80ll)e location auch as Dana Point or Laguna Hills. Tbeoe places would be within his .... 'Divining Rod' Filth Supervtsorial lllltrlct. "Santa Ana isn't a good place because It doean't have etlmic balance," Caspers COlltended. "The mfuoritiea have the ear of too many super\tlaora." Some observers thought Copen was just makinC a joke Jn bad taste. But then caspers seriously asked Orange County Counsel Adrian Kuyper il the ~ty Seat could be legally shifted to another ,place. Kuyper Said he'd have to study the issue. Meanwhile today, Adelanto President Milton Reed called a press conference UPI T~ Artist's drawing shows bow electronic beams of . .\polio 17's lunar sounding system will probe the moon -down to three-quarters of a mile -to aid in developing subsurface geologiq-.. 'pinpo_i111jng-,, metal 'depooita IDd waler. ',·, • . 'States' Rights' Hamper Pollution Drive-Briton By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI or ... DeltY l'Wlt ltlff Britain's all-out war against pollution coold never be duplicated ID the UnJted States because of "a thing you call states' rights," accordiog to Peter Walker, Brit· ish secretary of state for the environment. Walker, In Costa Mesa Wednesday after· noon to tour British Expo '72, told news.- men that a federal effort to clean up the air and the rivers ii likely to be blocked by the states. But he added, "Perhaps you could de- velop In certain states what we have done nationwide." The British effort, which leads Walker Joaqum Board Agrees to Wait On Bond Litni ts San Joaqllln School District flUstees Wednesday nJght agreed to wait untll after Nov. 7 to see Lr an elecilon_ to hr crease the district'• bond sales capacity from five percent to .even percent allou1d be called. On the Nov. 7 _.i eledloo blllol 11 the Irvine Uollild 8obool Dlslrlcl's pro- pooed llO million bond -u San Joaquin .... voter lppn>Vll to sell up to 11eVtn ~t of ltJ lllEllfd valuation Jn bonda. thll higher pe«e1I coold then be 1pplled -the -unllled dlllri<IJ -Irvine and Saddleblct Valley -begin •llinC boadl. The hlgbor llDOWll would only 1pply to the-· elemenllrJ leYel -· San~-14~t Rldwd Wtl14 and lrvine Uollild bolrd chalnnan Olarles Boulanger reoom- mended ap1nlt callJnc the eleclloo- Bolll orpid thlt calliDI a tblnl bond- mated eted.lon would ...,,_ tho ..ten end mldlt --tho -ol Irvine's Ind ol Seddlebadt V11Joy'1 (about fl7 1111lllonf eMclloo Jn P'e!Jnwy. Bou'::. qJeed with San Jooquln (aod beck) tnllllle Joe - -Aid -callil& for ....... _, copadtf ",lulUo .... the -. *"'' pus 111111 belol "poolllw." Tnlllle -Smith asked tblt the .-bo ""' Oil Ula unllltd boollk 'lo dodde I/tor tho -of the New, I ll«lbian- 'll>e -~11 .... be .,. ""'* by • t-ol the -...,. clor lfClllotloo -1red by !Im. ll<Mls Carpolltu (11-llewpxt lleochl. to believe that Britain Is "ahead of the world in cleaning the air and water," involves ~ authoritarian approach. All the power is concentrated in the hands of Walker, 40, who with an annual budget of '9 billion and a staff of 78,000, believes the tide can be turned by the J.980s. His office has the authority to deny vlrtu&Uy any new project which would tend to hav e a detrl:mental effect on the environment, and to stop pollution from emtlng sources. "It's easy for a politician to concen- trate on preserVing the good environ- ment," be &aid. "But people who live in the bad areas are not so articulate and vocal." 1'he big push, therefore Is clirected toward those areas, such as the industrial citles of London and Birmingham, where air pollution Is being eradicated. Britain'• Clean Air Inspectorate has the authority to force industries to install air pollution equipment and to levy heavy fin .. ll they do not. lnt....ted Jn partic- ipating Jn the effort, moBt of them do, according to Walker. 1be automobUe ls not u big a aource In Britain because they are fewer In number and llecallle Brit.tin, unJl.lce the United Slatt>, hat Mly developed mua tnnsll fYllema. EWll ~ aro being eJPOnded with wlalarl<e lr<m Walker's department (See l'()LLtn'ION, Pqe I I Canada Foothills Proposal Studied By Airport Unit A pi._.s ""'° -to allow """ t1ruC1Jon o1.u.. c.oada roothll11 planntd COlllllllllllJ ID El ,._ Deir the Marine eor,.. Air S1a11M will be clltcuaed bf ~ County Airport Lllld u .. c.m- -tonl~t l :IO In the pjannJnc t1epar1.-& ....,, a1 4io avtc: Cm1er Dme Weot Slota Alla. !l'ba cauda ,_. -1 - _...a popoolalllll ol -•·• ,-pie. n bas bem r•rnd io, tho cOomlY pimlllls -to *"" ilad .. ~n f• •••••..-'*-•fl ill~tothoalrbolt. o.. · 'a•1ai.wmca.:-1CD1Do- --w1tb Gol6en 11..i ltrtllben lllcf'tn ldC)I rite -..... pMed. addlllcm .. -inn World In 1-IUUJ. r and declared, "We'll do something very strong about that racial slur." Adelante has strongly Bllpported the minority h~ plan as had LULAC, a Chicano poUtjcal action group. The minority blring program won a sup- porting recommendation from county Personnel Director Wllllam Hart. Other county board members reacted with conalderab1e caution today as con- troversy surrounded Caspers' remarks. Ralph Clark, the Fourth District supervisor from Anaheim said, "I don't think anything like that could be done without tremendous cost to the tu· pa.yen. I'm satisfied with the facility being where It ii." Supervloor Robert Battin, whose First District includes the county seat hnd more than half of the Mexican-American population of the county, was out cam- pejgnillg today. But one of hi! aides said, "The boss just thought it was a . bed joke. He (Caspers ) has a pecuUar sense of humor at times." Not so reticent was Dick Rulz, long· time aide to Supervl!lor Da vid Baker and one of those wno assisted ln the organiza.. tion of Adelante. He dlspatclied a Jetter to the board'• chairman which rud in part, "ethnic slurs br ing you no honor. I am filled with disgust and anger that you would make anti-Mez.Jcan-Americao llatementa In a public meeting.'' Ruiz continued, HJt la incredible to me that any rational. responsible public of- ficial could utter such intemperate remarb -remarks . wblcb can only serve but to inflame etnotions and biter unrest." Caspers, in his three )'ears on the board has been aomewhat famous for hit off the cuff remarks. Policy Debate Set Planners Consider Eco-impact Bid By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. o.llY Jllllt Sl.tf Irvine Planning Commissioners may be expected tonJght to debate a set of Ital! proposed environmental policies a new majority of the Irvine City Cooncil Tuesday night appeared to want weaken- ed. Planning Commission Chairman Wayne Clark said today be had not yet seen the staff . suggestions for a city en- vironmental impact statement policy that would meet or e'lceed recent state Supreme Court requirements. The guidelines enthusiastically en- dorsed Tuesday night by Mayor William Fischbach and Councilman Gabrielle Pryor were not adopted. Couocllmen Henry ·QuJgiey, Jobn Burton and E. Ray Quigjey Jr. teamed_to delay action on the guidelines until nert 'l\iesday's council meeting. ·~~he~~· Robert west -to ask to see the lengthy documt!i>I ao the cotnmllilon might make recommtlldallOal on the proposed policy, Jll"pared Jn ...,..,t monlhl by the plan- ning staff. The commls•lon meets at 7:30 in city ball, Gil Campwo Drive. While the debate rages, a de facto freeze on building in the new city con- tinues. Without approval of impact statements now Nquired of both public and private buildeJl:, the· city may not legally i!!Ue bulldJng permlts for 0 s.ignlflcant" or "non..trtvlal" projects. Cooncllmen Tuesday night heatedly debated the 1tafl proposal prior to allow· ing the city manager to determine that some "trivtal" pennlta might be okayed by the county building departmenJ. Councilman John B u r ton • 1 con. demnatiou of the propoeed policies u having been "jury riQed" for buty adoption by. the city, lp&rked I heated ezchange between himlelf aod !lty Manager WIWam Woollett Jr. Woollett pointed out that the city pfan- ning staff was directed by the plaMlng commiasion Jut June to begin developing guidelines for lm))'ct statementt that would be required of private developers as they have 1ince 1970 been required of public ageocie1 in the ttate'a en. vlronmentaJ protection law. "lt'1 tlmply not fair to 11)' that the city staff threw this propoul tosether ovemig.bt," WoolM!tt tokt Burton. Burton responded with a charJI• he 11w oo reuon to call councllmm at 10:30 Monday night to tell lhem to come Jn and pick up their copy of the t.nctby ........ ment. "If this Isn't jury rigged then toll me why It II filled with t)'Poil'1pblcal er· rora." Burton said. "I don't ett~ If developers have to wait 1 week for us to come up with tbooghtful cuJdelln<s," Burton ooncludod . Woollett noted that while the documont reprU011ted the o!fO<U of ptannJnc con- oullant Ed Haworth, lhe ctty 1ttomoy. deYelopen •od hhnlell, h WU not bllr!I prtt<llted U I po-polley but rather u "Interim l\lldellnel to Ii .. 111 _. bull lor meeting the ltal4 Supreme Court" mandala. M1yor Fllcbbach uked II ""1 major pennlll ...,, bt1J1C held up and Woollctt ll1d t.btte wert: acme pendq, but tome Jnvolvq reoent11 appr<IV<d tncl mal'" Jn the lndullrtal -pies were fll*l<d. "We lhould be vtry lelBIUve le the fact that we in holdlllC up denlopmmt U I -11 ol Iba IUll4 8'p<ma Court docltloa," the -llOl4d. lie ...... the -to-~ ol tlio Im-ped pldttlaa • a • moll« ol ""1 tJHt jirlorit1." Jle fu.nJwr noted lJle lltta& 11 wtlflhlr eallecl .... -ol """""' Ill' FTDflltl .. bhle nlDDll ... ,......,, larttl1 .......,._ Ula -.... joetlTtO • tlid • ~ polleJ --bf the...,....lo ,_ """ ...... --Ulal ...., ., Ute Allllt '11¢ ... ot •s1J1,!t1 be,.. -"' wrlilal to Ula -prior lo public --... bt --ll1j1111!bllo. Ceandlma 1-, QullltY Aid hi Wll ,._....... al tho dolall if u. ...... tO lit -ol ... 1 ...... prior to their getting city approval of a project. Among items Quigley cl~ wu the request for a "cost-bcn:!flt analysis" which he said "is a subject about which many book have been written and no two experts agree." "How do you place a cost ettlmate on (See PLANNING, Page ZI Bus:-Or Buss? Talk at Meet Takes Strange Route •"Ibis has got to be the aeliest meet.Ing I'vt ever attended," Robert Dameron, San Joaqllln Schoof Dlltrict bolrd chairman declared at ooe point W~ nesday night. It all began when one man, asked to use the mlcropbooe "' peogle collld hear, responded with, "tryil!l.to tallt tbrouCh • = 1>-liP."71ng to '~ a,llrl Pi'llli ~~It'':;"..-:~!~ ll0ml8lly -.Id Ila•• ·been an ~ -eedoul .pnreNIUan cm lbuaini problems by dlltiiCI ""'-"'tlm di r e c t o r Flormce Walp. But •hm -14 8Uperlnteodeot Richard Wel14 told her to "mp up to thl.I picket ,_ .. (the mllle) to (fve her report, she saJd "rve been that route." Mn. Walp then• told irulteel tblt a~ tempting to get If! butel to he oa time tJ "a UUle like eying to get prqnan1 - you keep hammering iway and hoping aometbing talw bold." The lau(fllng lnlstees and audience were informed on • IDOC'8 lerioul note that Jn addition to ...,. Jnelllclency of the bm c:ompany, a major problem It chUdml riding bu,.. wbo aren't aup- poled to be. Although they are within walking dilltallce, Mra. Walp laid, llllllY c1111dl'fll are imlnlcted by .their motben to board the bullet. l\lhen the cJo!1!irtn are lold Greentree Tract Fire 'Suspicious' Tueldly'1 fire In the Greentree flomts tract wu today deemed to hive hMrl "of JUplclOOI or1&Jn" but firo lnveollfllorl decltoed to 1pecul1te tlllt a torch "" nr. bomb wu Involved. County Ore lnYeatJcal.Of' W 1111 a m Crulklhankl aid today ~ tm't kMwn how •he fire which deltroyed two ilome> ur.der construction Ind damqed two OChut, WU ltarted. He 11ld fie bad "no ldCI" how a etntnl county oewtp1per wu ltd to ~ve an 11"1011ilt wu IUlpOCl<d Jn the bl-wblcto did '30,0llO dama&• 14 ~ pat1llfl1 ...... ptete, t"1HIOry -alone 11-dd Strett Jn Irvine. they can't, tbe mothers complain. Dameron asked what rta90lll the mothers give. Mrs. Walp said they don't want their children going up hills, lltOlllld cornen or being endangered by "nplsts Jn the oelpbol'Mod. "I keep gotni oul and -lookln& for tbem,'' she added. "and I ca.a't fb:>d them.'· .. Where are JOU looldn&?" Dlma 111 smiled inl<SJJOll". "From the lnlonnaUon I've recetved fn>m thea -1• (parents calllnc), tblt 11 the doggooedtst diltrlct l'v< ... r ""'1 u far as devtattJ," Mn. Walp added ln amazement. Dr. Welte attempted to steer the con- vcrsallon back on course and Mrs. W•lp commmted th.at mtttin.gs wtth the chatter bus company are on-goln1 and problems are being Ironed out. Dr. Welte ta.id t~ district la at 1 disadvantage because It can't neaoU•te a contract with another bu.I tatnp&QJ beca111e most want 1 mort than ~year contract. The district 1oes out ot uilteoce u ol July, 1973. More than e:.ooo ltudentt are bwted dl'- ly over: .a...100 square ro.1le SJU.. ~1'9 many streell art 10 DtW thq areal IL"ed on lhe map, ha a.id. -toe about 4,560 mOet a day. Not all of the problems of liter a..- or mlued routes a.re the bus compmny'1 fault, he <mph.ulzed. Some '"' Cl4lled by giowth Ind by the ntra unautborilod chlldren. Trul-"'lflOSted lucbm belp monitor but riders. A more complete report on busing It beJna .....,... by dlltriCI -..... ,.r RU Nevllon. I-lousing Fraud Eyed WASlllNGTON CUP)) The -mm<n•'• houllnfl ......... In the cmtral cttltt hu beea ''a failure and a OoP" and lnvest.111Uona are under way la at l•ut to cltln Into -Ible froud , HUD Secnlary Georii Romney aid Wed- Dt"lday. Romnrr u.MS lnvf:lllgatlonl were contlnu l114 Jn New Yon, Newart. Philadelphia. Deln>ll, O>tcaF. llolloll, WuhlnflOn, Columbia, 6.C., llallu, 11111 Los An&cles. Air Noise Hit Laguna Council Hears Cornplaints { • ---I f DAll Y Pll01 IS '""'*'· Qc-J, 1'72 No Bomb • atrNaw, • Says Nixon From Wlrt Servlccs WAStllNGTON -President Nixon to- day ruled out any halt to the bombing 01· North Vietnam Lefore the Nov. 7 elec- tion, saying fonner President JohMon made a ''very, very great mistake" when he did so just before the 1968 election. Ni1on told a news conference in his oval office the war could be settled 'before Nov. 7 -if the right kind of set- tlement could be made. But he added that the balloting "will not in any way influence what we do et the negotiating table." The Johnson administration. he said, though well intentioned, , "made a very, very great mistake in 81opplng the bomb- ing witlklut adequate agreements from the other side." He referred to Johnson's Nov. 1, 1968. announcement of a bombing halt just days before Nlxon defeated Hubert ll. Humphrey for the presidency. "We are not going to make that nlistake now," Nixon declared. On other topics in the wide-ranging ne.,.,·s conference: -Nixon said "there v.1ill be no presidential tax increase" in 1973 but argued that "congressional overspend- ing" might make one nlnssary. Nixon. in discussing his tax policy, said he will rarely \'isil lhe campaign trail until Congress adjourns because he v.'ants to remaln in \Yashlngtoo to "fight the battle against rising spending." He promised a succession ol veto messages aimed at last-minute legisla· lion that exceed his budget goals. He said he would go on nationwide radio on Saturday to explain his ta.x policy. He also promised property tax relief during a second term and said top priori· ty would go to easing the tax burd en of the nation's elderly citizens. -He brushed aside Sen. George S. fl.1cGovern 's charges of corruption by h1s administration, and predicted it would "tum off" the voters. standing behind hill desk and speaking in tones so low they were difficult to hear, Nixon took note of 1i-1cGovern's cor- ruption charges and accusations that U.S. policy in Vietnam was "the worst crime since the Nazi extermination of the Jews." "Some of my more partisan supporters have said I should respond in kind," Nix- on said. "But I'm not going to dignify such comments with a reply ." -ImlsUng the U.S. bas not been "schnooltered," Nixon said t bat McGovern's charges of scandal in the sale of wheat to the Soviet Union were being thoroughly investigated. Nixon also said the sale was "a good deal" for America. "My reply is to have such allegations Investigated," Nixon said. "Now, if there was any lmpropr1ety, if there was any il· legality, we want to know It. The way to find out is to put the best lnvesUgaUve agency In the world to work at finding out ." -· FromP•se 1 PLANNING. • • lhe loss of an endangered species," Hen· ry Quigley asked. Council man Ray Quigley agreed and emphasized that the lmpact statement requirement will make "a lot of environ- mental consultants rich men." Mrs. Pryor argued against whnt she seemed lo feel was an attempt by her fellow councilmen to "get around the court decision. I don't want to get around It," she said. "We are stewards of the earth. We're not here to de!troy it on a piecemeal basis. The more we put this off, the more we talk about fal fee!, the more rm con· vinced I'm not going to Jct you sit around and Jose sight of this whole thing ," ~1rs. Pryor Emphasit.ed. DAILY PILOT ,,.. Or-.. CN1t DtUL 'I' PILOT, W'lfttl ~ h ~ WM N-~&, h !Mii ..... bY ,._.Or-.. C..lt ,llbllallllll ~ .. .... .... .. It .... ,. pUOlllMll., Mende'( lltnlullJI Fr"'f• tw CM!• M-. Newport 9Mcfl, ~ hKl'lfll-.. 111 v~u..,. LollOUN a..dt. 1"!Ml$tdllfl•Mtl arid s.-11 C..._,,, t.11 Jvan C••IJtr•M. A •ll!IJi. "11_,.I N"lon .. tM*!llfllll S.hnfys ....., Sund•rL fl'19 pl'ln('"' ....,.lltllifll ~nl II •I DI W .. I •• , •tJMt. C.t• ,...., Cllll'°"" Dia. lelt•rt N. W1.d Prttlotelll •I'd PWh"*° J•&k JI. Curl•v Vkt PfftiMrol •nd ~II M-.. The1n•• K••"I ..... Tl!*"''' A. MIH',hln• M ........ ll.ltw ~ H. le" llc:hanil P. Nill .......... MIMtllll llifl"" -Qtt• .._. la WM! ..,. ....... N~ .. .,.1 rm M..,.,; le•I•...,. u.-MKt11 m ,_.... "'"""" ._,....,... leldl1 1"1t --"' ...... ut .. ~I • ~ IU (.a"*-.... , ....... rn41 6'z..tu1 C3' WW A4o•lf' I MW11 S. Cb , > A• PcJztz•r•: , ........ 4ta.441t ~ lfnt .~ COHI,,,,...... ~·· ............ l!twtn• ..... """'... -""" .,. ~...... ....... .... , .. ,..,,.... wl!Mvt ..... ,... ...,...,... ................ ----"·°"'·-~ ..., .... .._ fw C8ft'tW $2.M =:!r0-"''" ... ,, ......,,, fl!llll..., --lt,61 mtltlfllr. ~r-<>p.-2-'1 De.bate-- Attended by ·200 By L PETER KRIEG Of ,,.. D9111 .... ,, ... Proposition 20 -the coast.al Initiative -was alternately Jabe1ed "in the total public good" and "subject to aeveral fatal defects" by opposing sides 1n a debate on It> merit> spoosoi<d by Ille Orange C'.otmty Coast A s s o ~ I a t I o n \Vednesday. About 200 persons at the Balboa Bay Club heard Laguna Beach Attomey William Wilcoxen, a prominent con- servationist, support the November batlo' measure because it would "get disin- terested pepple to review local declsionl, with the end result ln the total pabllc in- terest." But they also beard Los Angeles At- torney Alfred Hamilton decry the measure because it would give local con. trol to "another level of bureaucratic hierarchy." If passed by a majority of state voten, Proposition 20 would establish a state conunission and six regional oom- missions that wouJd 'lave until 1976 to prepare a master plan for coastline development. During that period. those bodies would have authoritative control on what gets built -and what doesn't get built - within what is unclearly labeled the coastal zone. Hamilton said state control is un-- necessary. He argued that "local rule does get around to doing the job." He cited cbanges in Los Angeles Coun· ty the past five years and then cited Newport Hartxir. "Look around Newport Be a c n . ' ' 1;<imilton said, "the water is blue. You can see the bottom, the water 's not cruddy." Wilcoxen stressed that California was only one or two coastal states without coastline management legislation and noted that nwnerous state agencies, in- cluding one commission appointed by Governor Reagan, have repeatedly urged state controls. Wllcoxen skirted a direct confrontation with one of tbe major criticisms of the measure -that It, In effect, would place a moratorium oo development unUI the master plan la done, without providing compensalloo to tbe land owner who con- tinlle3 to pay t.ues on bis property. He said the four--year planning process is necessary to allow "critical, close and effective contact at the local and regional level" He said it la tmpossible for small towns on their ow to "get enough data to understand the impact of what Is going on around them" becaUR there :ire so many regional agencies even now. Hamll1411 countettd the poiJlt by saying that two atate studies, one lbe Com· prehen.slve Ocean Area Plan (COAP) and another by tbe California Parks and Recreatiop COmmissiori both a r e available reference material for local governments. Trial Delay Begins With No Ruling A five-day break in lhe "Taj Mahal" trial of financier Joseph Dulaney and five co-defendants began today in Orange County Superior Court with still no ruling on a defense motion that could, if granted, cripple the prosecution's case. Judge James Turner Indicated before calling the long recess late Wednesday that he may be able to rule Tuesday on two motions filed by five defense lawyers. DAILY ,ILOT $teff ,,... BLIND UCI GRADUATE PHYSICS STUDENT GETS AID Michael Hingson ind Fa ithful Gulde Dog "Squire" FromPGflel POLLUTION •.. Blind VCI $300Award '. ~ A bllnl! UC lmne l!'llcluote llludent has betn aW>rded a $!00 oc!lol8t1thlp. the !lrst annual grant of the UC! ilmuni As9oclatkin. Mlchoef lllnpoo of Palmdale 11 ron- tlnulng studles 111 physics. lie wu graduated tn June from UCI wtth "cum laude" status ""'°'"ltll\! his 3.1 grade point average. During Ille commencsntlll «remony in Campuo Park, l!lni!IOll'I guide dog, Squiro lllole lbe show -· <hancellor Daniel G. Aldrldl Jr. conferred a degree In letharlic gutdtnce to Ille nlne-1'0r old goldfll retriever. Aldrld1 commended !be dog's faftb!Ul, ll oomewhal unenergetlc, l!llldance ol Mike to clasl for four yean. lllnpon hu made ..... a1 C:OR- trlbutloDJ to Ille quality of Ille for bUnd students at UCI Including development of a tnllle computEr terminal and a map to guide olh<r blind llludents around tile campus. Shortly alter the graduallon glitrer, It was learned ~aon would have finan.. cial dllllcullieo contlnulng hi• lludles. "'!be alumni a-1allon bu beard of the good things you have acmmpllsbed," President Adreana Sooleles told ~n when llhe ~eel the l300 award. '!be grant supplement& a fellowoblp from the Community Cent« for the Blind and cootributlom from the Tustin Rotary Club and the COrona del. Mar Kiwania Club. A wllven!ty spokesman n o t e d , however, more flnencia] aaalstaDce W needed becau&e Hlngson's expenaes iftro elude not only academic ind uvq costs but also the preparation of malerlals lnlo braille. A scholanhlp !Und In Mll<e'• name hu betn eatabllsbod by Ille graduate divlJlon of UC!. Caspers Report Criticized Aft,er His Appearance Attorneys for Dulaney, 38 of 26.11 Via Ca.scadita, San Clemente, James E. Shipley, 38, of 16951 LoweU Circle, Hun- tington Beach, Danile Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird Drive, Huntington Beach, Wendell Warren Austin, 38, of Riverside and Robert Machan, 40, of Sen Bernardino want separate trials for their clients. fhrough geoerou.s government subventions which amount to 50 percent of the cost of new buses and 75 percent of the C06t of new trains. "to keep alive the downtown areas." Walker ls currently on a campaign to wipe out all slWN and to modernize ~ tween two to three million older bouaes within the next 10 years. Copter Rescues Sailor at Sea SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A sailboat crew member without water for three days was reported in good condition after being evacuated by bellcopter to a hospital, the Coast Guard said. llobert Summers wu sever<ly delzydrlted wllm airlifted from the diatressed 35-foot Charade, out of 5eattle, some 120 miles west southwest of Cape Meadoclno Wednesday night. a opokesman uld. Ironically, the man who holds all the cards ln the game which seeks a jetport at Camp Pendleton ls the person who y,·ould live closest to such a facUity - President Nixon. And one proposal presented Wednesday in San Clemente calls for landing strips no more than a mile from La Casa Pacifica, where the Nlxons will live pennanently when the President leaves office. Fifth District Supervisor Ron a 1 d Caspers quoted and referred to lhe President throughout his pr e p a re d statements Wednesday, u!ing quotations by the Chief Executive to reinforce points of urgency. "This proposal will require the ln- nuence and wisdom of the President of the United States," Caspen stressed. Although President Nixon apparently hes not been polled for hi! opinion of the plan, his neighbors Wednesday gave their own arguments. And some v.·ere somewhat scathing. Prominent San Clemente businessman Ray Campbell, winding up the brle.f serie!I of questions taken from the noor, drew an avalanche of applause after saying : .. We were ell too kind to thls man (Caspers, who by then had 1eft). "He said he won his election by a 4-l plurality in San Clemente, but I'll bet that lf he ran for election tomorrow he wouldn't win any plurality. "They can spend all the money they want in \Vashington and do all the tests they want, but the best test of all Is for all of us to go to Newport Beach and listen for ourselves and then ask Olll'$elves If that's what we want here. "We know the noise, tbe conge!llon and suffering and we have to oppose this wtth every for« we have." More importantly, they argue, they want what has been described as the "illegaUy obtained fruits" of a tape recording made in the District Attorney's Office barred from evidence at the up- coming trial. The first phase of that trial will be devoted lo allegations that the group defrauded the St. Bernardino Hospital in San Bernardino of $500,000. It la alleged that the Roman Catholic institution was persuaded to part with the loan through the offering of worthle!is collateral by the defendants. The second phase of the trial will be restricted to allegations stemming from the operations of the now-defunct World •Financial Trends organization of Laguna Hills and S.al Beach. It will bring Dulaney's wile Marlene, 32, to the courtroom for the first time to stand trlal -11 the motion for separate trials is denied -with her husband and Shlpley. All were arrested after investors in the stock trading empire administered by Dulaney from hls Laguna HlllJ "Taj Mahal" complex inundated the District Attorney's Office with allegations that led to the arrest of the Dulaneys and their vice president Shipley. Many of the complaints that led to a long investigation of the group were filed by residents of retirement communities Jn Laguna HlllJ and Seal Beach. District Attorne~ Investigator Ray M!Uer underwent a Jong grilling on the witness stand Wednesday and was carefully warned by defense attorney Darrell Johnlon to consJder the tm- mir.ence ot criminal action that might be taken against him l! he testified. Miller smill..ogly aeured Johnaon that he wu only too happy to discuss the details of a conversation between John!JOl'I, former d~ty district attorney Joe Dlckenon and Shlpley. * FromP.,el JETPORT . • • servation official -inslsttd that the jct· port "'OUld bring 11uch problem! to San Clemente. They moved lo oppose tho proposnl1 "until such tlmo that it can be proven thot a jctPort would have no detrlmental tffect on residents of the clt·y." Allied wltb that motion WU " demand thal the county offlclsls report back wllhln 45 days whether It 11 poulhle to bring jet lrallS'pOl'tl to the skies above Pendleton where they v.·ould perform a Bttles of live tests from teparlle loca· Uons '° thlt loc:a.1 ctUzens can he.Ir for tl>emselv<1 the nolle levels they mtaht face U the jetport be<mie 1 reality . While CUpen and County Av1"tlon Olrector Robert Bresnahan reiterated their poollloo that 1poclf~ Pendlelon sites could not yet be pinpointed, Bteanaban 1ugested that a pr1me loc•· tlon might be a canyon les1 thM a mile rrom San Clemente's llOOtherly city llmll1. Other spota hinted at ln Caspers' p r t • a n l a t I o n included llatlo.nd agricultural ruerves on the base about three mJles north of Oceanside. Ofllcllds In San Diego Coooty have 1pumed thlt suggestion . BecaU!e of prior commitments an- nounced by C8Jpen, the entire pr....,- tatlon and ensuing dllcuuloo luted le!IS than an hour. Councilman Thomas O'Keere took the bulk of the plaudits u ho hammered repeatedly at the need for the tea\I. "So often, when vast amowilt of fundl ore spent In ttudytns such propoo1l1, before the public bu • chance lo atop It lhc momentum .. Just too srut, •. he saJd. O'Keero ln!Itted that the live test• "'Ould be flltnt1al well be(ore any C01tly a:ovemment stPJdlel could be undertaken. Whether the actual ntohts can like pl1ce, however, ls debatable, Bresnahan sa id. ~auae. Pendleton ll a mllttary reservation, hip.level 1pprov1l• would be needed before tho private j<tl coold perfonn m1.r1eu•m to 1\mu11te ac::tuel airport USt. And !hut far, Brtsnahan 1atd, the Corpe has been completely a1atMt 11ony use o( Pendleton property for a clvlllan Jetport . 'rhe aviation .,Wctal added thot he doubted that the 1ame ofllcJala would give • bleulng lo the use of their Rlrspace ror the tem. But, Walker added, Britain shares with the United States the problem of the cities. "We have some advantages be- cause not all of our city centers have declined," he pointed out. Regional shopping centers, such as found in Orange County, are not practical in Britain and ere, in fact discouraged, Also involved in the l~year plan is to landscape land brulallzed by Ille lndU>- trial Revolution. \Yith regard to new development, guide- lines stressing environmental conserva- tion are being developed for every va· cant acre and the local plarmtng authority given absolute power of enforcement. Superb Luxury in Pure Wool Pile byKarastan Ko11nt1M...n.th11-Spoc1oculM.SewlllY""..._,_ _ _.,... th• magnlOiNnt luxury of Its thick,. dHp pvre WMI pUe. Ill _.111119 prlw of fust $00;00 •square y•nl 11 dff to• maferbr1aldln•1h l11weal technol91'Y. Kara1tan gl'lff eech fUMr• spKlal W• ... trwtliwtlf .. abeyamll"fatt•r,'" and more te1lllont. A truly,.. •• + •1 ; .... Th• 17 colon 1rs 11MCt•cul•r t ... LiMI• I ,_, 111 .. ,.. ... ,.. •• b'. Your f1vorlf 1 in+•rfor ile1l9n1t will b1 hippy to e11ist you. H.J.GARl\ETf fURNl1URE Op11t Mo1t., Thurs. l Fri. E:1••· !Ill HAOOA llVD.' . COSTA MESA. CAUF. "''·0171 . • I \ I 17 Huntington Beaeh Fountain V. alley ·-EDITIO..- -·~ -• Today's Flnal N. Y. Steekll- VOL. 65, NO. 279, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1972 TEN CENTS Nixon Rules Out ·Pre-election Bombing Halt F.rom Wire Services WASHINGTON -President Nixon to- day ruled out any halt to lhe bombing of North Vietnam Lefore the Nov. 7 elec- tion, saying fonner President JohnS<'ln made a "very, very great mistake" when he did so just before the 1968 election. Nixon told a news conference ·in his cval office the war could be setUed be!ore Nov. 7 -if the right kind cf set- tlement 'could be made. But be ,added that the balloting "will not in any way Influence what we do at the negotiating table." The Jolwon ldmlnl!tratlon, be said, though well intentfioned, ''made a very, very great mlltake ln stopping the bomb- ing without ldeq-agreements from the other side." H~ referred to Joiu-•s Nov. 1, 1968, ann<luncement of a ·bombing bait just days before Nixon defeated Hubert H. Humphrey for the pn!SldeqOy. "We are not going tO make that I'' mistake now," Nixon declared. On other topics in the wide-ranging news conference: -Nli:on said "there will be no presidential tax increase" in 1973 but argued that 11congreaional overspend- ing" might mate one necessary. Ni>on, In dlscusslng bis tax policy, BBid he will rarely visit the campaign trail unW ~ adjourns because be wants to remalD• In Washington to "fight the battle agalnst rising spending." ' He promised a succession of veto messages aimed at laat·rninute legisJa. lion that excoed bis budget goals. He said he would go oo nationwide radio on Saturday. to explain his tu policy. He also promised property tax ..,ue1 during a secopd term and sald top priori- ty woold go to easing the tax burden of the nation'& elderly citizens. -He bnWled aside Sen. George S. McGovem'a charges of corruption by h•• Mexican Leaders Angry DAILY PIUIT IMff ...... SHOOTS FROM THE LIP Phrne-m1ker C11per1 Fount.ain Valley Officers Attend Victim's Rites Twelve Fountain Valley po11ce officers, including Chief Charles MlcbaellB, served as pallbearers and bonorlt)" pallbearers in the Tuesday funeral of slain gas sta- tion proprietor Loois J. L<>vko. 'Mle 53-year-old Lovko, who had operated a Shell station at the J.n.. l<nectioo of Bushard Str<et and Talbert Avenue since 1968, held the coittract for work on Fountain Valley police cars until he was killed last 'Iburaday. Many of- flCel'S also bad L<>vko do work on their private cars. Police said today they still have no stroog le9.ds in their ~ for Lov.Jro's two suspected killers. They are still going Oft the -ry tbal be WU stabbed to death while resisting robliOry. · "He was definitely not tbe kind of guy to take a robbecy lying down.'' said one police officer who knew Lovko. •1Anybody who tried to take his mooey would get a fight." Rev. J. P. Jordon of St. Anne's Catboiic Church, Santa Alla, ccodU<:ted the service:! In the chapel of the Smith and Tuthill Mortuary In santa Aul. An estimated 100 penons attended. Lovko, 9176 El Tango C1rcle, is surviv- ed by bis wile, Jean; bis mother; two si!Un; a daugbtet, and t ft r e e grandchiJdnr1. • Oraal(e c. ••• Wea titer A warm end 11111111y wetlr.er1d la In sto.. for Orange Cooat l'Olidontl with teEQJ>erltures at tbe b:w:ba expectod to be around n Friday. HJgbs inland llniund 80. Lon to- n!aht 112. INSmE 'i'oDA Y E'Lt1>n rears aoo 34 Pf''°"' oban<lml<cl N.., York, lvd¢ttll it vnaaf• '" CM t.unt o/ a -.. cltar wor. Tltev oame carovc:ui· 1ture to a tt0f1h.ctntl"4l Calf.. fcrnf.a communltr. Whnt arc thew noto1 St• •torv. Poo-11. L.M..... " .......,. ..... = .J =..·= a: c...iu • or-.. c_, 11 (...._. . .... .. Caspers Cal'ls Group 'Banditos' By JACK BROBACK Of .... Deiltr ""' .... Orange C o u n t y Mexican-American leaders reacted with anger today after Board of Supervlson' Chalrman Ronald W. Cupers of Newport Beach declared be wanted to move the County Seat to ~pe Chicano influence. Caspers was angry becatl!e the county board last week approved a program to provide minority races more county jobs. A Mexican-American organi?.aUon cf county employes called Adelante sup- ported the plan. Police Charge Jailed Mesan With Slaying ... By ARTDVR R. VINSEL Of ... .,..., ........... Jailed already CIO a drug charge ln- c!dontal to a dooMc>4oor Investigation of an alley ambuab a1aylng beblnd his house, a COsta..Mesa man was ocmfrooted Jn bis jail cell Wednesday oliht and charged with the munler. Stclt and milerlhle with symptoms police said -. lim!lar to beroln withdrawal, Joeepb W. Buffalo, 32, bare- ly reacted to the poatbWty of going back to state prison for life. Dei.ctive Capt, Ed Gleagow said a formal complaint cbargina t h e unemployed landlcaper with the murder of ea..:OllYict -D. Perry would be 50Ugbt this -~ from the Orange County District Attorney. His arrest by Detective Norm Kutch came less than 48 hours after Perry, rT, was cut down Jn a hail of rifie bulleta: at 257 Esther SL, apparenUy as be left. Blasted three times -once in the back end frontally in the neck and abdomen - perry spun al'OUDd, a .31 caliber revolver blazing, and sprayed ftvo &bots into • house, fence and can. He mbaed bis Jdller and died in a pool of blood belldo a Kansu-reptered ased c>.r which had been loaned out by • Santa Ana dealer. A l"8m of alx dei.ctiv., wlgned to dili...,.t angles of the munler due! ap- parenUy developed infonnatloo Wed- nesday pointing to Birlfalo u the suapect. "He toot ft pretty OOOUy,'1 Capt. GI-Mid in -D'iog Ualo bad been cbqod. lnvestlp-Mid both Ylctlm and •uspect liave aervecl time in pn., in connecUoo with aanxtlca --°"" atroac _,. -tbo -bad been aohi>oolly ..., -dispute over (l!aa IUIPSCT, Pip II Sur.poe.a Scuffle Caspers Wednesday called them, "Adelante Banditos." He claimed county government bad been squeezed out of $200,000 for the minority hiring program. Caspers, wealthy owner of a financlal institution, makes bl! home on Lido Isle in Newport. He was ot. the losing end of the 4 to 1 board vote approving the pro- gram. Still fuming at the last board session, Caspers suggested that the County Seat ought to be moved away from Santa Ana to some location such as Dana Point or HELD IN SLAYING Suopect Buffalo School's Piano Sparks Party During Odyssey NEW YORK (AP) -A woman In the neighborhood aeld she wanted one, so a group of teenagers ilited a 300 • pound upright piano from the second-Door auditoriwn of a Harlem school early to- day. But three pollcemen foiled the delivery of the bulky gift wher. they saw the youths wbeeUng it across Lenox Avenue from the school on West 11'/th s1..,.1. 1'te thieves Oed ln all directions but ooe, a 15-year-old who hid under a stairwell In a nearby tenement, was nab- bed. Police said be bad five previous ar- .. s11. While officers waited for a police van to remove the piano from tbe strfft, a pusinc piuial P!llled up a wooden a-ate, at down and began playing "I Left My -in San Fnncllco""anil other tunu. 'Ibo muolc &ported u . impromptu par· 1J tbol attracted about llO nelghbon wbo cuuallJ claJloed, drank and BBng to the -lllllU the van urived and toot the (Bee PIANO, Pqo I ) Laguna Hill5. These places would be within bis own Filth Supervtsortal District. "Santa Ana isn't a good place because It doesn't have etlmlc balance," Caspers contended. "The minociUes have the ear of too many aupervison." Some observers thought Caspers was just making a joke in bad taste. But then Caspers aerlou.!ly asked Orange County Counsel Adrian Kuy.,.r if the County Se.at could be legally shffted to another place. (See ETHNIC, Page Z) Owner Se1zed On Cruelty ' ·ToAnimah BJ Mla!AEL GOODRICH Of •D* PIW ..... ~. donkey and eigbt dogs, all allegedly suffering frml malllutrttloo and Defll<ct, were taken into custody Wednclday by the Huntington Beach Humane Society and their owner charged with cnielty to enlmals. Huntington Beach Police armted James O. Chase. 47, cf 1703% Bolsa ai&ca Road after finding oome of the dop with bleeding ears, skin dtseesea and ribs 'bowing througb their skins. The dookey was also found to be suf· fering from a skin dl.9ease due to fly bites, police aald Humane Society officers bad been call- ed to Owe's home afteo receiving com- plaints from nelgbbcrs about the coo- diticn cf the dogs and the excessive oolle they ,..,,, making, police uld. When the olftcers, Ted Holllnan and Steve McNall, arr!wd, they found the animals ninnlng loose inside an aru Chase bad enclosed with a six-foot link fence . Owe rtfuaed to allcw them to enter and Irr.mediately began tying the animal& to trees, actording to Hollman. The humane c!flctrs cU.led police who arrived at the scene shortly before the owner of the property Jobn Whita of Huntington Beach arrived. - White granted pennluloo !or tho police and humane officer. te enter the prop- erty and the •nlnu.!1 were takeo into custody. a.... admitted to police that .... al the dop had ever ltt'l a vetertnarlan or received ral»N abotl. Oi.ue Jived In a trtUtr on tbe mcloled property wbich he ieuea from Whit&, .., cording to poltce. No Hs or Ands--:·-hut Butz al Bull, but li Ou-to tba lloar Ind -trampled u -left. "I'd IW!Oildnend JOU pick: It up, lallon," llrlllo Rid. BriaJ, • Republicoll, aid t.bo men """ -him -..... Seem Senb acenta. but that could not be ...,. llrmad. "I think It -I iitile impropor of a Secret --'to block• Califomta :t"tor ,,_ ....ire • 111bpoona," be barmlem lo -but _.,. lo ltlrda. ,,,. quniitlna --blaM 1111 lhipment of bird& in tho .... -- hu ..... -Un.cl ll'1ln all .. parta al tine .....U.. -Va.., Sao e.n.nilnolndRJMlida. Fedenl1utllortllotbaN~ C.llfornta pouiu,.... aa an 1ppraiMd value al lhltr-... --•tbla_...,_ that ttl -""" -· flod< appnlula will be ......ioatad and petl1ojla adjulted -rd to -tho -of tho -.. "tfl-laJ!al -· admln1stration, and predicted it would "tum off' the voters. standing behind hli desk and speaking in tones 90 low they were difficult to hear, Ni.Ion took note of McGovern's cor· rupUon· charges and accusauor.. that U.S. policy in Vietnam was "the worst crime since tM Naz.i extennination of the Jewa." "Some of my more partisan supporters have said I should respond in kind," Nix· oo said. "But I'm not going to dignify such comments wttb a reply ... -Insisting the U.S. bat not been "schnookered," Nixon said that McGovern's charges of scandal In the sale of wheat to the Soviet Union were being thoroughly investigated. Nixon :ii.so said the sale was "a good deal" for America. "My reply is to have auch allegations tnvesUgated,'' Nixon W d. "Now, if there was any Impropriety, if .there was any ll- (See BOMBING, Pqe Z) &IAILY l'IL.of ......... ·~ ...... SEWER PIPIS LINI lllOOICHURST SOUTH OF ELLIS Sanitation Proj~ Running a Yoor Ahood of Schedule Brookhurst Pipeline Set For November Completion A fiw-mlle ~ pipeline undtr -StnJet in loUtheast Hun-tinCtiJn. 8eodl and Fountalll V1iley la nearly complete, a full year abtad of the ortgtnaJ tlmelabie. OfllclaJa at tho Orln(e c.unty Joint Sanitation Districts said w~ that the tan sectlcns of si.1 and eight.foot pl~ wtil probably be laid In tw .,..u, wtth aJI cletJHJp wcrk complete a mooth 1fler that. Wort on the 16 millloo project was orlilnally .,pected to run through Swells October 1973. Local mrrc:bmltrtbld·C!CllD- pillned liliterly, 111lnc the lenctb1 proj- ect would d•m•a• their bullnea. OfOciala at the BSnitatfoo diatt1ct aid tho l'UIOll the -la .. !al' -of ICheduJe Is that the two -- the Kordidc and l\adoa cooslnlclioa onm· ))AnJes -are "txceptlonaUy competent.·· The pipeline will nm between tho sanitation dbtrld's tratment plant ln r ountaln Valley to tho plant at the mouth of the Saoll Ana ftjvu. •swell!') Storm Stirs Up Big Coastnl Surf By STEVE MJTCIEU. .. ........ ,.., .. Although t.irriClllt! -olfl<tally et.ded laat •e<k, 'l'l<lplcal Stoml Joanne. wbo oridalUy didn't ,.. tho -. la m~ 1111 btt ianp for 1 b<lcl marcll up the cmst of Blja. Calilomta. 'Iba >tonn, (m<rltlnf ~ wlnda at Ill cenier, 11 allo ~ lft:lJJ .. all -th f .... -•lo\>I the Orup Coast, .....-dlllc to fifquarda. Loa!Ud Ill mlleo --al Point San ~ -.......... -urnrd,wlth-......-•• • ......-Punta, San - "" to -foot -... pow1llc ill at llUH'l1NOTON 11&\Cll aewdlnc to Uf....,.i Marti --......r. "A latanl cunml ii moklna k dlf!kult lcr turlen k Ctt It tbe ....... aa.N' .... r lhS. "But with 11--1111::1!' ...... ... to oowded with -mt. _,,. iq." SURRNG Foll'72 down 1lben lho1 baar •bout tho .-II .... Ii," ht Aid. LAGUNA IEAQI la abowtDc -I raoc ..,. wtth aoell<llt abapa. - 5'rttt WIYft 8N boldilc QP lbaat I balf dor<n r!den lo • ..,.,.. Wiler. SAN a DCH'l'B t¥r4Adl-111o <-' I to I foot_. w1Ut l'""1 ....... Trafllpt si-.... San ClnaDle plot ha.. • ,,.. ~ oul. ,... ..... tenpent-thoro lo .. r..-.-who -~ tdl -or call In lkk ,.....,,, tbe pr .. teta lor flOOd'"" ... --.... --r. npacUd to ....... bJ _..,. ~ dlut !or P'rldo)' -... , .,..... ...... " =---.... ............ . ~ . . ........-. ... ,..,.... ..... Mired if ho tlloucht Buu """1d -r at hie -.nllt8'1 htuil\t. llr1QI uid, 0 'ntlt .W bt Ml owa deds'm You'll ho .. to .... 111111." -Alld that --- Nttf POil~ IBACll ~ Mf ID tho nloe to 11 fool .._, will pd "- and .. -ill tho ...... Capl. Bod Btloho..,. aboUI •-a.fen -oul tlDt: ··--............ ,, .... . .......... " ......... .. .... • .......... 4 .-.L-. ,, • , ) A --qumlllJne wu .... poaed .. etcM llouthlm Colilonda - Ilea lall -to -... Ollllnd., aotic "'" c .. d~ 1'bidl bl • ... _ to pJIJllmrAo al .. -.. ~ .. --..... bird. llrlels Mid -could "lm wtt11• • -a1 Sl.IO per tllri but -fl er II. atlldlsu.t.aod ... --llMt ....... .-.... . "l'ID -...., .... wlll ... _,,,,. ~ • Finl ... tlda at l:Jt ..... at u ...... & flnt -at .......... u IRI; lowatl:llp.a.,Ulal:-•as II: ti p.a. at U fell. .. . 2 DAILY PILOl H Th.....,, s.1tn . 'Comnaercialbna' 2 Child Graves • Trigger Dispute DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) -The father of a young mother \\'ho labored 100 hours making headstones for the graves or her two infant children believes ·:.pure Huntington 6tli In, Higli Income Per V.S. Family Huntington Beach has the sixth highest per--family income in the na tion for cities with more than 100,000 population, ac- cording to figures released by the U.S. Census Bureau. In listing the 50 richest cities among cities in the over-100,000 ran ge, the bureau rank ed Anaheim 12th, Garden Grove 13th, and Santa Ana .f&th. Huntington Beach's median family in· come was listed as $12,930 -topped by only five other major cities in the United States. CAiifornia put more cities on the list than any other state -14 in all. In listing the nation's so richest coun· lies with 50,000 or more popu.Jation, the bureau placed Orange Coun ty 32nd with a median family income of $12,245. Marin County iJ CAiifornia's richest with a family income of $13,935. Burke to Attend School Meetipg Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun- tington Beach) will be present at tonight's meeting ol the Fountain Valley School Board to dlscu.sa the district's latest uni fication proposal. Botp school officials and Burke's office confirmed that the West Orange County legislator will be present at 7:30 p.m. when district trustees hold a regular business meeililg. Fountain Valley trustees said last month they wanted to withdraw from the Huntington Beacb Union Hlgb School D~trict and forin -tWr own ll!lfiecl school district. '!lley wrote Burke uklng fo r his help. The meeting will be held at Fountain Valley School District offices. at the cor· ner of Newland Street.a and Talbert Avenue. Speakers Bureau Topics Listed Population growth , water pollution and the recycling of wastes are among the several topics being discussed by members of the Huntington Beach Environmental Councn·s Speaker s Bureau. Speakers !rom the bureau are usually available to any interested group for evening and daytime lalks. Some o[ lhe other environmental topics include air pollution, tht ocean en- vironment, conservat.icn cf cpen spaces. electrical po\\·er generation, populatkln growth. recreational growth and ecology in Ule home. Interested groups may request a speaker by contacting Dr. Jamea Mason · at 962-7974. Friendly Fighting? commercialism" ls Rsponslble for a dispute that threatens to leave the graves unmarked. City officials maintain that Glendale Cemetery here is a "showplace" and that handmade gravestones will detract fro m the overall appearance. However, George H. Griffin said Wednesday that his daughter, Cynthia Frederick, is the victim of "big business" monument companies. "They doo't want people building their own simple litUe stones," Griffm said. "That's it plain and simple. We're ..• cutting into their business, and they don't like iL" Mrs. Frederick, 21, and Griffin placed the markers on the graves of Benjamin James and Christa Ann Frederick, both of whom died bours after birth of Hya- line membrane disease. However, cemetery employes removed the markers because a city ordinance allows only granite or bronze headstones. The cemetery committee of the Des Moines Park Board refused Tuesday to grant an exception to its policy. Des Moines Mayor Richard Olson said he expects the matter to come before the City Cowicil Friday. He called for a "humanitarian approach" to the situa· ti on. From Pqe l ETHNIC •.. Kuyper said he'd have to study the issue. Meanwhile today, Adelante President 1t1ilton Reed called a press conference and declared, "We'll do something very strong about that racial slur." Adelante bas strongly supported the minority hiring plan as had LULAC, a Chicano political action group. 1be minority hiring program won a sup- porting recommendation from county Personnel Director William Hart. Other coonty board members roa<led with considerable cautkln today as coo- lroversy !WT'OUnded Caspers' mnarb. Ralph Clark, the Fourth lllstrict ~ flun.Anabelm oald, "ldoo~ thlnlc aJJ11hlni. Jlke lhat ""'1il be done without tremm1ou1i -to the tu- payera. I'm satisfied with the facillty being where It ii." SUpervtaoi: Robert Battin. -Finl Diatrlct lnclluclell the cowrty ... t and more than )\all of the M..ican.Amerlcan population of the county, wa11 out cam- paigning today. But one of his aides said, "The boss just thought it was a bad joke. He (Caspers) ha! a peculiar sense of humor at times." Not so reticent was Dick Ruiz, long- time aide to Supervisor David Baker and one or those who assisted in the organiJa· lion of Adelante. He diJpatclled a letter to the boanl's chairman whkh read in part, "ethnic slurs bring you no honor. I am filled wi th disgust and anger that you would make anti-Mexican-American statements ln a public meetlng." Ruiz continued, 1'It is tncredl.ble to me that any rational, ruponsible public of. Iida! could utter llUCh lnt.mperatll remarks -remarks wbk:h can only serve but to lnfiame emotlona aod loiter unrest." Caspers, in his three yean en the board bas be<n oomewhat famous for hls off the cuff remarka. CINCINNATI !UPI ) -The Hamilton County po\\ce dispatcher had thb message Wednesday for Ca r 479. "Go to Friendly Tavern. A right." OUJIH COAST fll DAILY PILOT 11w ~ CWlt DAIL 'f 'ILOT wilt! ""*" k ~ tlle H-~ Ill ~lw.d .-, t1M' Or-.. CM1I l'\lb!ltlltno ~. ietla- Ntt tdft .... ,, JM4ktlM. MOl'dly tht'OUOft ,,kl..,, .., C..11 M-, NtwPDrf 11<1~ Hvrlti.,.eton 8-lll l'oullt1ln V1!1ey, L••- ...... irvlM/lllMltMdl n l•n c;:......,w S.11 Jwn Ctrpltl,.,,._ A 1111111e ""'-I .. lltln it lll*lllMd ... ._....,. ............... l t.e fl"IM'"I ,ullllalll"' plerll It •I "' '#1111 11'1' II,.._ C.11 M-, (1lllilfnl1, nt». lt•Mrt N . W 1•cl l"r'•IHnl 11'1d Pvti>lt~ J.tli R. c.,,,,., V~e ,,,.....,_,, olllll a-fit MIMfll' lltol'l'llt IC11"il &.•lllr 111011111 A. M~hlflo --cwr .. H. L..01 Rk her4 P. N•Q ........ ~.,'*· T orrt C..1Uo Wiii ONfltO Ciullt't E'"°' ............... Otfke 17171 ........ .,,..,.,... M•m.t .......... , P.O. IP 7to, t2'41 --~&OKI!• tJI ..,..., A ...... C:.. .. M-1 ,_ w.:.:r l llW tf"""1 ... urn au N ~~ a.it ~l ...... II C-N lote 'T1l11a q (714, Ul.4121 Cl 1 'ftM .WuatW11 '414671 ,,... ,.... ..... c.-r "'"" ...... _, ... _...,,, ""--'"'" ........ ~. "' ......... lllvltrt ..... ......... ,,...., ., ...,.,.IMn'llftll Mftln ""' M ,., Jectf .,,...,, ~ •· ........, .. .,..., ....... . ..... t .............. c.tl~ DAILY PILOT Slatf P~ ; (. -.. -; Stnt.es Not SWpping Pollution? By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ot .. HtJ Pllet ''-" Britain's an-:out war against pollution could never be duplicated in the United Stales because of "a thing you call states' rights," accordiog to Peter Walter, Brit- ish secretary of~ for the en_vlrttpiµent. ' • • Walter, in Costa Mesa Wednesday after· noon ta tour British ExPo "12, told news- men that a federal effort to clean up the air and the rivers b likely to be blocked by the states. But he added, "Perhaps you could de- velop ln certain states what we have done nationwide." · ' The British effort, whlcll leads Walker · to believe that Britain is "ahead of the 1 world in cleaning the air and water.ff involves an autborila~ approach. · All the power is COllCl!lltrated In the hands of Walker, 40, who with an annual budget of 19 billion and a staff of 78,000. believes the tide can be turned by the 1980s. His office has the authority to d~y virtually any new project which wotild 1 tend to have a detrimental effect en the environment, and 'to stop pollution from existing sources. • .1 Susie Smith , an aide at the county Registrar of Voters office in Santa Ana, checks off some of 1.900 boxes of ballota being prepared for shipment to Orange County precincts on election day, Nov. 7. H you don't register to vote by midnight Sunday, your ballot won't be in one of these boxes. "It's easy for a politician to concen- trate on preserving the good environ- ment," he said. "But people who live in the bad areas are not so articulate and vocal." The big push, therefore is directed "1 toward ~ areas, such as the industrial cities of London and Birmingham, where · air polluUon b being eradicated. From Pagel FromPflflel SUSPECT •.. drugs that triggered violence. So far, Buffalo has refused to make any statement to police about the case. "We don't need one," capt. Glasgow remarked. A Spanish-made rifle, apparently cf 7 .62 millimeter bore tcssed aside at the scene Is being examined by the Sheriff's Crime Lab aloo.g with Perry'a .38 caliber revolver. The rifle had been fired four times and all four cartridge casi1J8s were recovered at the scene. · Perry emptied bis own gun in a futile effort to bit bis 12:20 a.m. attacUr as be sprawled beside the car, mortally wound· ed. One slug smashed into the house oc- cupied by Randell Glaese, who was away from home at the time. During Investigation In the aftermath of the gtm. duel, Officer steve Nub Helgren Enwrs Race for Board Roger W. Belgen, lcrmer campaign chairman for David laraelaky bas flied candidacy papers for the spedal election to ftll lhe vacancy on the Fountain Valley School Board created by lsraelsky's resignatic:n. Belgen, 42, a project coordinator for McDonnell Douglas in Htmtlngton Beach, is the third candldatll to Ille for the Dec. S election. 'Ille other two candidata are Merritt H. EWE;.,, an accountant, and John F. Rouman, wbo listl him9elf as a financial eommunications specialist. Friday ii the last day to file for the CQlllest. Be!gen, 11814 Santa Yoei SL, Fountain Valley, preoenlly ii a member of hhe 1cbool district's p......,..i Commlasloa. He heAded lsraeilky'• campaliJI for the board In a special election last April NIL T PK.OT ....... Mio knoCked at the unit ohattd by Buffalo and his wife Sherri, 28, to ask if they saw or heard anything. He clalmed he smelled marijuana smoke and saw a bag of the illicit weed lying ln plain sight but failed to lake ac- tion at that point. From Pqe l PIANO ... piano away. Pollce llllid 10 youths got lnlo Public School 149 alter ooe crawled through a trapdoor on the roof. '!lley said It took 10 policemen to lifi the piano IMo the van. Officers took the piano to the West li9tll Street station house wblre It ro- malned, pm!lJli clAllm by llChool authorlU ... The lleulenant oo duty said he did not play the piano. BOMBING ••. legality, we want to know it. The way to find out Ill to pit the best lnveatlgaUve agency in the world to wort at finding out." -He said he would support a con. stitutional amendment against busing in the next congress, but would prefer ~e legislative route. If congress faUed "to provide relief from excessive busing orders, then I in· tend to find another way." -At one point, Nlz:on became a bit philosophical about his role a s acknowledged front-runner in th e presidential campaign. Noting h~ large lead In piblic opinion polls, he said he has cautioned bis aides, "Don't rely on the polls."· The problem for a candldatll who 111 lar ahead In the straw votes, he noted, Ill to ~:~hls supPOrt<n ,to,.°' polls i~ el~ "What we need above all else," he said, "is a J1ig vote ... Superb Luxury in Pure Wool Pile byKarastan Britain's Clean Air Jnspectoratll bas the autborlty tq force Industries to ID8lall air pollutioo equipment and to levy heavy fine3 11 they do no1-Interested In partic- ipating In the effort, most of them do, according to Walker. 1be automcbile is not as big a source in Britain because they are fewer in number and because Britain, unlike the · United States, has lully developed lll838 · transit systems. Even these are being expanded with assistance from Walker's department · through generous government subventions which amount ta 50 percent of the cost of new buses and 75 percent of the coBt cf new trains. But, Walker added, Britain shares with tbe United Stales the problem of the : cities. "We have 10ID.e advantages t>e.. . cause not all of our city centers have declined," be pointed out. flegional sboPP.lni. centers, suc:b as found In Orance County, are nOt praCtlcal in Britain aM are, in fact disccuraged, "to keep 'alive the downtown areas." • K•wl•lllhlNo_,..Sp_Jar,s.wlll.,.......,.,.. _ _.hol the-nlfl<oftl luxury of Us thlcli, .r..p puro wool pllo. 111 omcnl .. plloo of Juat $00.00.,....,.yard11 duo lo a -IOfbrookthNUGh In ...i tedin1logy. K.,..,... gt.,..wh fiber• sped•I bulld .. ""hnvot .. .... ,.. .. ,,.,..,,Htfnd.,.,.ntlllent. A truly Rn.-' s•ftnlu.. TM 17 celen ire spectacular tee. H.J.GARRE[f fURNl11JRE PROllSSIONAL lllTUIOR DUl&NW 0,.. Mon. n.. ... a Fri. t. ... 2211 HAUOR ILVD( COSTA MESA. CALIF, (.Ii ............... unW Jl,Mi """""""'' W 1M1 a.11 .....,.,,., MHI..,., ....................... ARROWS INDICATE SITES PROPOSID POR NEW COUNTY SIAT Supmrvl1or Sugge1t1 Move to South for Couftty Admlnlttr1tion ( ' , I I I { I -. • . . . . . lllutsdl)', Oc:iobtr ~. 1972 H DAILY PILOT 3 Clemente Nixes Pendleton Airnort ' • ' . • .Five-day Break 1 Decision Waited In D~laney Case A five-day break in the ~j Mahal" trial or financier Joeepb DuiaDey and five co-defendants began today In Orange County Superior Court w:lth still no ruling on a defense motion · that could, if granted, Cl'ipple the prosecution's case. Judge James Turner indicated before calllni the long recea lale Wednesday that he may he able to rule Tuesday on two motions filed by five defense lawyers. Attorneys for Dulaney, 38 of 2631 Via Caacadita, San Clemente, James E. Shipley, 38, of 18951 Lowell Circle, Hun- tington Bea~, Donlle Hares. 4-0, of 1211 Snowbird 'Drive, Huntington Beach, Wendell Warren Austin/ 38, of Riverside and Robert Machan, 4-0, of San Bernardino want separate trials for their clients. ' More iJilportanUy, they argue, they want what has been described as the "illegally obtained fruits" of a tape recording made in the District Attorney's Office barred from evidence at the up- coming trial. The first phase of that trial will be devoted to allegations that the group defrauded the St. Bernardino Hospital in Pacific-Air Cal Merger Might Save $1 Million SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -An eStimated $1;5 million in operating ex· penses could be trimmed by the merger of Pacific Southwest Airlines and Air California, a savi11gs that could enable PSA to defer future fare increase re- quests, says a PSA official. Paul C. Barkley, vjce president o[ finance for the airline, told the Public Utilities Commission Wednesday that the public could save $2 mffiion if the 1c· qulsilion of Air california by PSA is ap- proved. ' PSA ia seeking approval of iia olfer to purchase Air Callloniia for IJ> promnately 126 mJUJoo. Barkley said the savings to his llpn would "add to PSA's overall~ finaoclil strength and ability to compke, as well as to _entble PSA to defer from future fare l:ncrepes. '' --. -- "If the atqwsltion ia appr<>Yed;" be"!"" tlnued, "PSA .vlll be able to lower fareti in some markets resulting m a $2 ril,illion savings for the flying PlbltC' of Callfonlla." San Bernardin<l of ~.ooo. II ia alleged that tbe Rmnan Cotbolic institution was persuaded to part with the loan through the Qlfering of worthless collateral by the defendants. The oec:ond pbue of tbe trial will be restricted to aDeg1Uons atemmlog from the operatlou i>1 the noW<lefunct World Financial Trendo organisation of Laguna Hills and Sell - It will ,bring DolaneJ.'1 wife 'Mar!enf, 32, to tbe<courtroom !iii@ flrll lime to stand tr!JI -U the inotJon for sepai'ale trials ia dented -with her _,., and Shipley. All were arrested after investon in the stock trading empire administered by Dulaney from his Laguna Hills "Taj Mabal"'complex in\lltdated the District Attorney's Office with allegatloQs that led to the arrest of the Dolaneyo and their vice president S!llpley. Many of the complaints that led to a long investigation of the group were filed by residents of retirement communities In Laguna Hills and Seal Beach. District Attorney's Investigator Ray- Mlller underwent a long grilling on the witness stand Wedneoday and was carefully warned by defeme attorney .Darrell Johmon to cooslder the Im· mir.ence of criminal action that might be taken against him if be testified. Miller smilingly llSS1ll'Od Johnoon that he was onJy too happy to discuss the details of a conversation between Johnson, former deputy district attorney Joe Dickerson and Shipley. Jol!D.900 insist,, that the meeting was ii· legally bugged by the ex·prosecutor. Miller repeated what trial prOM!CU\9r Stuart Grant had stressed the day before -that all the evidence used to indict the Diµaney group was in the hands of Orange County prosecuton long before Shipley, Johnson and Dickerson con· ferred at the county coo:rthouae on March 23, 1971. Johnson clalmi ttiat Dlclcerion sbut olt the recordings of Scottish bagpipe airs used for background mus! lh his office )ust long tllOOgh•to ·.....r.I wflat 11- to hl!ve tie.n .a blgbly inorimlnalfng oo_o- venatlon. Jollnson and Shlpjey both testlfled they · '1/ere r:econled by Dicl<enon clesptte being assured that the meeting WH off t6e record and -id not he uaed to p!OC· ess·oimlnal action oplnst·Sblpley. Johmm fUrtber ~ that the resulting Grand Jury lndJctment readl allM8t won! for word In tbe muJUple cbargea listed with the tranacr!pt1 of the tape rocordlng -by Die-. Judge Outlines ·Tria·l To V i,siting Student,s LOS ANG,ELES -Law gave way to education ln a federal ;:....t hero this week, when· 50 studelltl from an area junlor high school dropped In to watch U.. Laguna N!pel tiank burglary trial. U. S. Dlatrict Court Judge William Matt Byrne, usually lnitated when pro. ceedlnp are delayed, smiled broadly at the group and recessed court for 20 minutes so he could es:plain the trial to the students. Byrne found hlmsell on sometbinf akin to the wi~ stand, fielding a ICOl'e of q-from the seventh and eighth grade lludents of Audubon Juntor High School, Los Angel ... "Obs" and "•hs" came from the crowd when Byrne aold that between 13 mllllon and $5 million wa1 taken from United * CAllfornla'a Bank's -1.agunl N 11 u e I brlncb In Ille March. One student wanted to know why 1 United Alrflnts rej>relentatlve lelllfied about a!rplane tlckeU. Byrne expllliied that the prooecutlon claims that the three clefendlnts In the caoe came from Ohio to "cue" the bank, then new home and allegedly ,.turned In lsle Morch to com· mite the crime. Other studentl questioned Byrne on the masalve llllOUlll of e>hlblts lntrodueed by the government u evidence, IDCludlnc tools, on -Ion, --• .,..._. -. 8l<Wf9 and J!!ioqr1plio. t1lo judp npollnod JI la nonnoI In cr!mlnll ~ !or -to be admitted 11 1 ·.,...., of detmnlnlac the guilt or Innocence of the def- ' ' IT'S OLD AND RUN DOWN, BUT SHE'LL BUY IT F•ust• Vit11i;L19unan11 Afent, Sits Outside Colosseum Colosseu111 Deal Lagu1ian' s Off er Called Reasonable By ODE1TE MENGIN "Of course," Fausta Vitali said , "any sum would be ;.·idiculous. There is no price on tbe Colosseum." Alias Vitali, whose father, Dario, work· City Acts After Talk by Caspers By JOHN VALTERZA Of IM lMltY 'llet Sid One of the largest cily council BU· diences in recent San Clemente history listened patiently and politely Wednesday to controverital proposal! by Fif\h Di!trict Supervisor Ronald CaJJ>ers to in- stall a jetport at Camp Pendleton. Then the Sdme crowd or more tha.o 300 persons cheerej as city councilmen formally opposed the Idea and called for tests and demonstration of jd noise emanating from the spots proposed for the major terminal. 1'te meeting, held in the comiTiunity clubhouse to accommodate ·the an· tlcipated crowd of concerned resident.a, was a part of a regular council aession and Caspers arrived during regular pro- ceedings to read a prepared statement, il"'..sisti.ng that the prlnted word would ward against misquotation. 1be supervisor pledged that he would never advocate "the moving of the noise pollution problem out of Newport Beach and over into another city in Orange County." But city councilmen -taking action after Cupen left to meet a British con- servation official -111sisted that the jet· port would bring such problems to San Clemente. 'Ibey moved to oppose the proposal! "until aucb time that it can be proven that a jetport would have no detrimental effect on resklmts of the city." Allied with that motion was a demand that the county officials report back within 45 days whether it is possible to bring jet transports "to the skies above Pendleton where they would perfonn a series of live tests from separate loca· lions so !hat k>cal cithens can hear for themselves the noise levels they might face if the ~etport became a reaU!y. \\'hile Caspers and County Aviation • Director Robert Bresltlhan reiterated t their posiUon that specific Pendleton • sites could not yet be pinpointed . Bresnahan suggested that a prime Joca. • lion might be a canyon less than a mile • from San Clemente's southerly city limits. \ Other spot.. hinted at 1n Caspers' p r e s e n I a t i o n included flatland agricultural reserves on the base about three miles north of Oceanside. OCOcla111 in San Diego County have spurned this suggestion. Beeause of }X'ior commitmenl.I an- nounced by Cupers, the entire presen- tation and ensuing discussion lasted less than an hour. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe toot the bulk of the plaud.iu as he hammered repeatedly at the need for lhe test.a. "So often. wnen Va!t amounts oC funds •. are spent in studying such proposals. before the public has a chance to stop it the momentum ls just too gn:at," he said. o·Keefe insisted that the live tests u'Ould be esst:ntial well before any oostly government studies could be_ undertaken. Whether the actual nights can take place, however. is debatable, Bruna.ban said. Because Pendleton is a military reservation, high-level approvals would be needed before the' private JN could perfonn maneuvers to simu late actual : airport use. 4 And thus Car, Bresnahan said. the Corps has been c:ompletely against 1ny use of Pendleton property for a civilian jetport .. The aviation Jfflclal added that he doubted that the same oCClcial1 would give a blessing to the use of their airspace for the lests. * -tr -tr -tr -tt * Nixon Mentioned Often ROME (AP) -The daughter of Benito Mussolini's secretary, who is ln Rome trying to buy the Colosseum for a Laguna Eeach businessman, said Wednesday the $1 million purcba3e offer ia not a joke but a "very reasonable and feasible " prop- ed for the Italian dictator between 1918- and 1930, arrived with a '10,000 check· for I J t t D • • osttion . " ' •.· * * * Cdloseeum Offer Has tompetitlon . F.l'om 1.talian PESCARA, l\ily '!UPI) -11>omas Merrick bU"~ .cempetition. ltallan hotel p.wger AntOnio Zlmei wanta to buy the Oll-m, too. And he says his terms "J'.• betjer. "I( they 'ii~ his" olf91' seriously. why sbo<tldn' tliey consider mine'" Zlmei asked alter ~g his bill to the pttSL "After , all, rm · offering three tim' al much." Zlmel, U, ent~ the Colosseum race after Merrlc.k •• a Los Ana:eles industrial· lit, IJllJCJlln<ed he was willing to buy the cnWtbllnJ Rom111 ....,. for II million, restore It and ,_, It to the public for a fee. Mila Fausta Vllill. 1 real mate ogent from iAgunl Belcb, Ir• rived In Rome Wednesdoy to contact cfty olflcills In Menick's heball clesplt. the Italians' attitude U!at It was all a joke. Zlmel, """ llllde a rortw>< during 17 yem ol work In Clrocu, Aid he could not raise as much Cl5h u Merrick. All he could pay rJght awar, he said. was SI00,000, but be WIS ~ to lhrow his hot.I In ne1(by l\f'"1tel1tlvano Into the deal. And that, !"' wd, ts worth 12.ll8 million and COUid be uied as 1 9Chool or for poor ltidrell' ncotlonl. Like Merrlcft, Zimel aid he WU re1dy to npolr the 1;112-JOIM)d ....,., whlch wll ciolld to the pollflc for lour d1y1 lall -for lt1r of '"""bllng ,_, llld plllan. And he bealed the CllJ. fontlln on another point. • down .payment anc1 a con1rac1 •lreldy n e por lSCUSSWn •iln~ by Thq1111• l>J•rr~ Miss Vitali, a Rome-born ·real ' estate broker, shrugged at fears expressed by the Italian Pi:<sl that Merrick wool~ Jn. • I 11all • lliielllBl'dlilBondA1 ~ or souvenir shol>' In a Colosseum glowln1 with neon lights. "Mr. Merrick would not offend tt, or alter it," Miss Vitali taid. "He's only trying to buy the right to do what '°"* one should have d o n e years ago - restore the~ Colollewn and make the public pey an entrance fee . Had the Rome administrators done this 20 yean ago they would not be in this mess now." Rome's superintendent or anUquitles protes~ that Merrick's offer could not be taken into conslderaUon and tbal no fe:. would ever be charged for admlssim into the great amphitheater. The Colos.9eum waa cbled to visitors last week became of the danger of faU!r.g maJOnry ind officials said it might late years to make U ure. 11.territk hu said he would pct up another million for repairs on the Colosseum and aha.re 50-50 with Rome the proflta he hoped to make. He piano t:: let Rome direct the restoration of the 1,900-ye&Nlld arena. MW Vitali aald ~I e r r i c k is an ltnllan--American who has made 1 fc.rtune buying and selling propertv. Ironically. lhe man who holds all the e1nll In the 1•me wblc:h ...U 1 jetport at Clmp Peldleton Is tha pohon ~ would live cloeest to IUc:h a loclllty - President Nilon. And one proposal presented Wednesday in San Clemente caUs for landin1 strips no more than a mile from La Casa PAclfics, where the Niloos will lh•e pennanently-.men· the Presldont le>ves office. FKth District Superoflor R o a a Id Caspers quoled and referred to u-., President throughout bis p r e p a r e d lltatements Wednesday, uslng quotations by the Olief Exec:ullve to reinforce points of urgency. ''This propoa.I will require the iJl. nuence and wl.sdom of the Preaidtnt of the Untied Stat .. ," CUpen streaed. Although President Nixon eppuently ha1 not bttn polled for his opinion of the plan, his nelghbon Wedntld_, aave their own arguments. And aome were aomewhat tcathlng. Promtnmt San Clemente bualneslman Ray Campbell. windtnil up the brief series of-questions taken from the floor, drew an avalanche of applause after saying : "We were all 100 kind 10 1hi11 rnan (Caspen. who by lhen had left). "He said he won h1a eltct6on by 1 4·1 plur•lily In San Clemcni., but I'll bet ltuit If he ran ror eledlon tomorrow he wouldn't win any plurality. "They can spend all the money they want in Washington and do all the teats -· they want. but the btst tt:st of an ls for all of us to 80 to NtWPOrt Beach and • listen for ourselves and lhM ui . ourselves If that's what we want here. .. We know UM! nolJe, the eoo&eltkll and suffering and we have to oppo1e lhiJ with every force! "'' have." "The way we're being treated by this county makes me ~lleve lhat we should go to Snn ~o County and aak I.hat San Clt'!menle be anne.1ed to them," he 11kl. till comments drew whit may bin be<n the loudest applou.. of the ....ma. The oppo1IUon among the audSmct simmered. but never wellld up in 1111"' throogt...t the unp.....S..ted modlnC. Nonetheiesl. the """' hootlllty •• pro- pouls f0< noisy jet. Oyln1 ovtt San Cll':menle bi stttping. Early in the evenlna: one mldd""aced reskJtont patsed out bumper ltk:bn ht tutd printed at his ovm npentt. Thl'y read : "A jetpor1 1eqU1ls l doth fpiUI) ta:xn ·· Cab Driver Takes Stand A thick, lu1h carpet m1de wllh new, Im proved O•cton glv11 lot1 of body, bounce, and 11amina whh tMM 1mportnn1 performance ftature1: Resllienl undt:rfoot McauM ol lhe ; • • Tells of Nervous Rider-Sus-pect i~ Bank Heist cornp1ct. denae. construction and • new . permanent crimp In lhe fibet. The plied yarna are given a specW! condit1on11111 under hign tempenilur• al'IO preuure lor mu..mum 11x1ure r..-eotion. 1 Now . lmprovod Dacron It 1 highly I du11ble llbe< prOYlding uceti«lt BJ l!'REDERICX SCllOEMEllL .... °""' ~...., LOS ANGELES -J111t befon bla ar- -by nn qento 1n c:onnectloo with the U..,.. Niguel bank bw'glary, Cbariel Mulllg18 WU "v'ry nervous0 and "parinoid" u be took • ..Ud taxi ride from Loi Angeles Int--Airport to a Tultln bor, It wu lllled In federal court hett Wedneodly. Al ooe point durlftl the Jrill, taxi optrttor Paul DtSantiago tetll6ed, Mulllpn ordered him to pull the vebf<le ..... dirk Loi AnleJot llreel Ind wall enJ mlnUlel .. mab """' no olllor wer"t foiiowtnl them. " DtSan&flgo told u.. court he pl<ked up ullifln at t :ll p.m. June 2 al the nlled AlrllllOI tmninll Ind wu lint to .. to the 1nt...-io.. ol ollywood Ind Vinl. WhJlo on L,1 Clmtp BoUltnnl, the drlVU' asttrted a leCClind Clb bqan to tlJlcate. "I uked the -U ht thoucbt wo were belnc 'lolloftd. lle ,wu vory """""' and aid bla wife '1 boyfrlmcf WU followlnJ htm from Ollclgo.'' De5lntlago .. tee!. "lie 111d he'd paJ mo 111 t:Jlnl •tt U I dttdled the py. So I told blm rd dlld." ~lcltlfled.Afttt-U.C at blcb ~ hi the Well Loi ~lei ...... DtSaiitlqo lald. the olllor Clb -loll. At this llOilDt !llolllpo allepdly ordered the cob driver .. perk aJon& 1 '....identlal --Alltt ...... 1 nilnuleo. lloSlntlllO lllled, tbey oontfmled toward Hollywood. "lolr. M~lic .. -"m'f puanold the -trip. lie ""' ..... beet. but u ion( 11 the ...... ~. I don1 ....... Flnolly, Mutllpn told the drt•..-to fol1ll -HoUJwoo4 ll!4 Vinl IOd .. to Soutb Gale, then aid to i....., •bout South Gile sod 10 .. Tlmln. DeSlnilqo -ied. '11ltlmatel1, we arrived in 'l'Ultb"I at 1~111." tbl drtvtr toad the ~ ---Mr. Mulllpn told me to drop him oft It I ....... "Ila UUd me ~ I WMled I drtnt. I told blm I ~·t clrlok, willcll I don't, but for --I did tllat oil!lt," Do!llntllp otated, ..... -In the ,,_,_., lllllul lqo lolllfted thal llilfpn met • 1hort. ltod:1 mlddltqed man In the lier, Ind finallJ left anunrJ mldntahL It ,,_ llatlJ ...,.,. t am. Jlft J. -PB! ... ,,_ cau.,, that Mllll1flll and me Ee11 Ill,... of Tullln 1111 the ·-Room ..... ,_ Piii ~ "'"' bid ·-t II the bor dooecf In IOd - llulllpn. """' 11111' •r• 5,,._ ,_'di -,,,. .... told the ...n thal be bod -walUnl .. Ill-·· homo. 1- Paclllc AVL. pndl<afly all of J""" 2. I•••••• $13 5~=;;. . • • • 1438 SQ MAIN at Edinger· SANTA ANA· 547-8993 • I .. 4 DAILY PILOT Reds Missed .Chance? U.S. Urges 'Real Negotiations' at Paris PARIS (AP) -'!be Viet Qq dedand l<>daY that the wide gap bet....., aio- flicting posilloos at the Vidnam ptatt talks "makea the ldutian "' any substantial q!Jf.lliom impossible .. Mn. N"""' '1111 Bi>ll. d!id dekple o! the Viet Cong's pnwilioaa1 mW. tiooary government. told the !62nd session of the dead1ocked talks that U.S. peace proposals are ' ' u t t e r l y Wln!3!0rlable and growxlless." HER Sl'ATEMENT followed a declara· lion by the North Vietnamese chicr *" * * Villegers AUCU!ked Reds Hit Viet Civilians In Try to Cut Highway 4 SAIGON (UP!l -Cannwmist troops tzytng to cut lllglnray 4 near Salgoa woundod One cblldroo, on eldfrly man an:I an amputee Army \-eteraft today in an attack on a village that "' repdsed by South Vittname9e miliHamm and tanks, field -said. The r<paris said • band al Viet Ca>g firing B40 rocket.propelkd grenades and AK47 rifles invaded the village al Dong My Tay on Highway 4 !llnd '° miles ~thwest of Saigon. The highway t'On- nects the capital •11th rice-grosing regions of the Mekong Della. A •"MALL UNIT al national guanl!men fought off the Cmnmunim unlil militia units with about JO tanb reached the village and stopped the allact. '!be only reported casualties were those al the civilians in the Yilloge, Odd ._a raid. The attm lent further a edtnoe to allied intelligence prwtictQn tllat the Communists would try IO block tey·.-ls leading inlO Salgoa to ioobU> the city and its three million residents srior to at- tac:D timed to coincide with the U.S. presidential election Nov. 7. To blunt the thttatened Communist al- tack on the capital, U.S. spokesmen said today 8S2 bombers blasted targets near Saigon with nearly 1,000 tons of ex- p&osives in the second consecutive day of punishing air strikes in the area. COMMAND SPOKES!\1EN a I s o rt'ported the remnants of Typhoon Loma for the second day sharply limited U.S. bombing missions over North Vietnam despite the return to combat duly of all- wealher Fl 11 bombers. The command said the controversial swingwing jets returned to the air war Wednesday for the first time since an early morning strike Friday, a day alter one of the 'IS million planes c:rashed from "unknown" causes. Military spotmnen aald the five day lull in Flit missions was attributed to bad weather and a fear mort or the sophistica ted planes: might crash. r 'N eiv I nternarionalism' Promise~ by McGovern negotiator, Xuan Thuy, that "up to now the positions are far apart on poll.tic:al and military question!." Mrs. Blnb told lbe U.S. delegation : "OUr negotiating position is correct ll?ld just, while yours is unreasonable and un- JU.St It Is this antagonism vmJch bas created the wide gap which makes the solution to any substantial question im- possible." U.S. Amba&53dor William J, Porter sa id the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong have missed opportunities to make peace and urged that "real negotiations -not mere restatement of your demands" begin today. llE ADDED mAT if there had been a positive response to President Nixon's !\1ay 8 cea,se.fire offer, "the cease-fire, prisoner .return and complete American withdrawal cou1d have taken place by now." "Yet another opportunity for a peaceful setUement which you have spumed but which remains open to you,'' he went on. is the Saigon government's offer "to discuss political questions with you." Porter said the Viet Cong's Sept. 11 declaration on its plan for a tripartite regime in Saigvn is an "arbitrary, il- logical formula" and added "your side has been unable to explain or interpret I hese proposals." J\1RS. BINJI declared that the Vietnam sil ualion has two aspects: "The fact is this: the United States has waged a war of aggression against Vietnam, while the Vietnamese people are carrying out a patriotic resistance war to win back in· dependence <ind freedom." She said the second fact Js "There are l wo administrations -the provisional revolutionary government and the Saigon admin·istration, two annies -the people's liberation armed forces and the Saigon anny, aJWi other politicaJ forces in South Vietnam, "The U.S. side has tried its best to deny the aforesaid realities. It constantly resorted to fabricated allegations of an ·invasion by North Vietnam of South Vietnam' and denied the U.S. aggression in spite of its being admitted by the Pen- tagon papers. AT TilE END of the meeting, all delegates agreed that it had been fruitless and also agreed to meet again next Thursday. specio..ts in Q>il~ry dept.' fumou.~ top mo.11e· fef!~I; ~-~to;~q9 5-1& il ~5 lonq ~ ~ori;pol~eW/1 dac.rnns, pnnk. ~.WI~ 1 to <Ltt<l 115 HAUOR CENTER. COSTA MESA 13th ANNIVERSARY SALE C.Otne. MVO.~ bo.11 1:1nJ e~~e o.whole bl.lllCh ot mott4fd/ NEW YORK (AP) -Democrolic presidefllLal nominee George )lc(;oo.-ern said today ~ w ..... ·• f<reigD policy is one "-"uncoi•iool bob- tionism" and pledged if e\eded to SUI>" plant it v.itb what be called a new io- lernalionalism. fl Schmitz Claims U.S. Aids Hanoi NOW 12 9reat sto<es: DOWNEY, ORANGE, HUNTINIHON llEACH, COSTA MISA, H.UIOR CENTER ..i SO. COAST Pl.AZA, IUENA PARK, WHITTIER, MONTC ... IR, RIYIRSIDE, LOS CERRITOS. LONG llEACH, ._.UWOOD '!'be Sooth Dabta aenatcr said be would u presideot es:tmd diplomatic ( CAMPAIGN '72 ) recognition to '!'be People's Republic al China, a *JI N""ts:on bu aid is D S-. prospect in the foreteeable fulurt. d~ite his 0\\11 summit diplomacy in Peking. AS ALWAYS, M~"el'U ,.O'lfed to v;itbdraw immedialely lrom lbe Inf' in Indochina, but the &i-1> be prepanod for the Qty Cub ol. Qewlam:l was bis first delaiied llClOOlllll al bis Cardp pol- icy .,_ -lbe -a( the world. " ..• In many wa)'I.'' be said. .. the foreign policies al the -ad- ministration are bola.ting m. •• McGovern said the United Stales is isollllod Crom am.. llDd trading porlntn by "six gun diplomacy and failure to aJn. suit," and from the developing nalloos by attitudes that favor big businea tbett. "We a.re isolated from reality by tht fosisl<nCe that lOOgb Wt and big fm. tagm budgda Ire »Jitduw S)'J:lm)TdOUS Vi'ilh natblal manhood," McGovern said. •.. I llUGGEST lhal .. ,_ r<jon this WICUdClous -.. laYor " a Nn-lnternatimalism baed not mty upon our vital interests. but a.ho ·upm tbt kind al nation ,.. con llDd lhoold be," he aald. McGovern thus """"" to laU tho '""""' polk:y ""-• , ••• Sl Republlanl who bave clml"f lhal bis proposals for defmsie c:uu.. .-ithdrawal IN1111 lndochlna and U.S. u.op r<ducllans When I was fifty.nine ft was II \WY good )1881: •• • in Europe add up to a new isolatlooimt. He said "America's Ne.w lntcma· tjcm.liw in tbe mos•• must be supported by a strq natkloal deren.se, but one !tee of nate. But be rejected as "a naive delusion" the concept oC a balance ol power to inserve peace. "LET US HAVE the defense we need," ~1cGovem said. "But let us not pennll the insatiable appetite of our military to replace our good lle'Me, and undennlne the prospects for reduction in the balance of nuclear terror." He said under Nixon "we are becoming a i«Orld-rate na.lim In the terms that "-UJ really count in the 1970s," in in- ternational economics, and cooperative aid for the developing natkm. McGottm '-«! hi> 13-page !or<Jgn policy manifesto as he carnpalgntd tn New Ycrt Ind Qevelaod. Re began it•wtth an appearance before Democratic naUonalllies groups In New York aty, saying it is the De.mocrata, not Nixon « the Republlcam, who have hutotically ~ed o-In U.S. 1mmigrntion policies. NEW HAVEN Corm. (UPI) -Rep. John G. Schmitz, of Tustin, the American Party candidate for president, bas told Yale University students the Vietnam \var is 'mtmoral" because the United States is indirectly supplying weapons to lianoi. The California congressman said \Vednesday night the ''military-industrial complex or the Soviet Union is virtually completely dependent upon the United States or its allies for its technological support." The Soviet Union, he said, "furnishes 80 percent of the war.making potential for North Vietnam. "So what you have, in effect, is the United States and its NATO allies, via the Soviet Union, furnishing the lion's share or the warmaking potential of North Vietnam," Schmitz said. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of the Dally Pilot Is guaranteed Mondsy.FrJd1y1 II you llO llOf lllVS Wiit DlllN• bv !:)!) p,m., ''" Hod \'Ot.lr '°"Y w,11 be bl'O\l9hl to you. r•lla ltt !•~111 ...,,111 I:~ p,m. 511..-Ny eo.d Suncltr. tt JOU Clo 11111 rtc:el,,. Y'OIH (!19'1' Dy t • m. S.lu..O.v, O• I 11 m. &vroay, UU tl'lll t "°""' will tit brOUUhl If' "'"' Cttb -.... 111'1 Vl'ltll 10 • "" Telephones MOtt <ffll• COUl!t\I ArNt •• • •• , MJ-4)71 H0<tllW9tl Munllflotor tleeCl'I it"4 wtttmll'ltiet .. . ....... 1•1m "" c ............. c.tpkff'~ (let-(11, ..., JW!tt C.olstr-. 0.IM Polnr, '°""" l.tOVN ~ Pollg1191 • ttl_...H Cities Share Heat Lead Blytlie, McAllen" Texas, Slww 93 Degree Readings llotMO•----, ... ,. ... 1;~1.!a...,. ~ ..... ' .~ Coated Weat...,. Fllt tooMy. Utftt \lllf'lt.ie "'4tld\ " ""' .... l'llOl1llll(I "°""" '*"""' ... ~ ... 11 lif!Ott '" ..,.,.. -todly Mid f'Jidt\I, Hllfl Jo.ltr. '" .... (M\ltl ~1""91 ,.....,. ffClm 61 to t$. '~ """'"''""" ·-'"'"' SI fO I\ Wtlw l...,.,,...1tllr't 6', S11n, Moon, Tlcle• THUlttOAY *-l\IQll t ·J1 p,m. • t kcond kW . J:>s p,m, o.• llllllOAY "'"* Moh t :)l 1 m. & I f'l"I low , l :nt.tft. I.I ._.... lllth . .. .• lftll ........ u ~ ""' •·117 "·"' 11 51#1 Ill!"" t ·!.O • m. hit f ·)I pm N-oon 1111-JlO •l'll. kll Sl'111m. BOlmlD MITALICS Gii rt•d!' fir !hit •1UC17 'm!llL SlllC colon, "" Wille HC 11 NllL IS" •1111 111' HIJIJC, $299 YD. S•llC •C ,.i11tC 11 .. 11-crtot fir ... witter II••-· ""' tolltl, ....... .. .... 1111. 45" WICt, llollpw l•&l'L ~39~o. Tiit 11n11 fie.in nu. Ytlf cbl11 ti 1"'7 nltne ''""t •'•" .,,...,., ""'"' p1c ''"'"· .. Jtwoltf tr!•, Tiii 1111•111111•. fabrifie ABRIC CENTERS NOT ALL ITEMS AVAILABL E IN ALL STORES , .. ICES ~O THUllS .. OCT. Ith THRU TUES .. OCT. 10th STANTON 111'1 .......... a.-. "'' "'"'°'. IUOIA rAllll ............ v.,...,vw ll'hi Q6.1m ORAH•I rM "'· """"' .. c.1• Ph: A>-2'SJ AllORTID IUTTOlll Yllr .. 1111· If .... , 'IHlll l wttf. Two l •t lll!ltu "' tlnLYlll1111'1tca .... 5eOD. TRIPLE KNIT •RYS Al Hlll•llllC Ulto1111 ti hilt • •1111 -· Aroot 10-tllltl aC QlllL Dttlptr ln&*t 11 •llC nl1n, 1111111, ••,.i•'"·77e YD, ..... NOTIGI• ···-If lt• """' " -.... ,. ................ ... lllHI -nw II lltml It I ...... ti lllllttl·tUf, Yt1111•19c 11C-. IA. •.UDIN •ROVI ._. MllADA "'"~··---1n11 11:-.-" u • .,.. Ph: ~nN Plum"'* l'llL18TON HUNTINGT~ ICH ~·· ..... tMlretl ..... ltl .... Mlllt --,..., Of.12" rh1 ..,.,,,, PU.CINTIA NOW °"fs COSTA M SA tMtY ... ._.....IM,111 ... .. 1 •• 1 .... ..... 121-1271 VISTA CINTla "'I 6u.J'U2 • • • I 17 t -orange Coast T - Today's Fl•al EDITION N.V. Stocb • VOL, 65, NO. 279, 3 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1972 N TEN CENTS $4 Million Newport Park Loan Off er Restated By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of ... ~"' 9'tlet ll•ff The group that bad offered to leod New- port Beach up to M million or more to buy park sites today reinstated that offer before very many people knew they had withdrawn it. 1bis time they're putting all their cards on the table. ConfirmaUon of the original offer came three weeks ago from the city's Parks, Beache! and Recreation Director Calvin Stewart, who declined lo ldentlly the group, at its request, but called them "Newport Beach residenLI concerned about the plight of the clty since the · failu.ie of the part bond mue ... He mB<fe no mention of the fact that they were actually bualneslmen looking for a profit on the deal. Publicity surrounding the offer dlstrees- ed the businessmen. whose attorney, George Logan of Santa Ana, last week wrote City Manager Robert Wynn, say- ing: "Unfortunately, through no fault ol your own, the_ local presa has made it appear that a pubUc spirited group was valiantly coming to the aid of the city, whereas It was only intended to submit a mutually beneficial buain.., proJl0881. 0 1 am sure you will 'agree that a fonnal proposal submitted at this time lncor· poratlng a legitimate profit ·could en- Ethnic Talk Hit Chicanos Blast Caspers StfC)OT1 PROM THI LU• Ph........,.kor Caopors Planners Slate Zoning Action On Bal Island Newport Beach planning commission- ers tonight are expected to take action Oii a proposal lo put all of Balboa Island In a limited duplei: zone and on a request by the Irvine Company to rezone part of the Castaways property. The Balboa Island proposal has been 1 subject of a great deal or debate already before the commission, which held a 1pectal public hearing Sept. 18 to discuss lbat problem alone. 1be special hearing ended in a stale- mate and it was continued to tonight's session at City Hau. The proposal before the commission is to put all but a few sections of Balboa Island into a new R-1.5 zone which would limit the size or a second unit of a duplex. The proposal excludes conlmercial property on Marine Avenue, Agate Av- enue and South Bay Front and all lots on Cornn. Isle. Swells By JACK BROBACK Of .,. Dellr ........... Orange Co u n t y Mex.Jean-American leaders reacted with anger today after Board of Supervisors' Cbainnan Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach declared he wanted to move the County Seat to escape Chicano influence. Caspers was angry because the county board last week approved a program to provide minority races ~ county jobs. A Mexican-American organJiailoo of county employea called Adelante sup- •purted the plan. · Caspers Wednesday called them, "Ade1ante Banditos." He claimed COUDty government had been squee:zed out of !200,000 for the minority hiring program. Caspers, wealthy owner of a financial institution, makes his home on Lido Isle in NeWport. He was ou the losing end ·of the 4 to l board vote approving the pro- gram. Still fuming at the Jut board ......... Caspers suggested thll tho County Seat ought to be_..,_ ... Abo to some locaUcn such as Dana Point or 1.asuna Hilla. ,,.... pla"'9 wooid be "inthbt bis .... Fifth Supen1sor!al Dlltridt. "santa Ana tan~ a Pod place beca..,i, it doesn't have etbnic balance," Caspers contended. "The minorities have the ear of too many supervilors." Some observers thought Caspers was just making a joke In bod taate. But then Caapera Mrioullly aaked Orange County Counsel Adrlao Kuyper ff the County Seat could be Iqally shifted to another plaoe. Kuyper said he'd have lo atudy the Issue. Meanwhile today, AdeWrte Prealdent Milton Reed called a prea coalerence and declared, "We11 do llCDlelhlng very strong about that raelal slur." Adelaote baa stroogly supported the minority hiring plao as bad LULAC, a Chicano Political action group. 'Ille minority hiring program won a sup- porting reconunendaUon from county Personnel Director WUllam Hart. Other county board members reacted with considerable caution today as coo- troveny !WTOUDded CUpers' remarti. Ralph Clark, . the Fourth Dl!lrlct supervisor from Anaheim said, "I don't think anything llke that could be done without tremendous oost to the tax- payers. I'm saUsfied with. the facility being where it Ls." Supervisor Robert Battin, wboae First ·swell!') Storm Stirs Up Big Coast,al Suri By STEVE MJTCffELL Of .. Dlill'f ,. .... lleft SURRNG District includes the county seat and mort than half of the Mei::ican-American population of the county, was out cam· palgnlng today. But one of bis aides said, "The hos.! just thought it was a bad joke. He (Caspers) bas a peculiar sense of humor at tlmee." Not so reticent was Dick Ruiz, long· time aide to Supervisor David Baker and one of those who assisted in the organiza· lion of Adelante. He dispatched a Jetter to the board's (See ETHNIC, Page Zl Nixon Sees No Bomb Halt Before Race ,,..._.._ ..... WASHINGTON -President Nism 1 .. day niled oat any i.it to lbe bombing of North Vietnam Lelbre the Nov. 7 eleo- tioa, 111">c lormel' Prelldent Jobmon made a '"very, very great-mistake" when he.41d ao just before the 1968 election. Ni.Ion told a news conference in his oval office the war could be settled before Nov. 7 -it the right kind of set- Uement could be made. But be added that the balloting "wltl not in any way influence what we do at the negotiating table." 'Ille Johnton administration, he said, thofllb well intentioned, "made a very, Vf!r'/ great mJstale in stopping the bomJ>. Ing without adequate agreements from the other aide." He referred to Johnson '!! Nov. 1, 1968, anoouncement of a bombing halt just days ·before Nixon defeated Hubert ll. Humphrey for the presidency. "We are not going to make that mistake now," Nixon declared. On other topics in the wide-ranging news conference:~ -Nixon said "there will be no pttsldeatial tu lncreaae" In 1973 but argued that "congressional overspend- ing" might make one neceuary. Nino, ·In dlscuS!lng hi. tas Polley, said he will rarely visit the campaign trail untll O:tngress adjourns because he wants to remain in W aahlngton to "fight the battle against rtaing spending." He prombed a tuccessioo of veto messages aimed at last·mloute legisla- tion that uceed his budget goals. He aakt be would go on nationwide radio oo Saturday lo uplaln hi. tax Polley. lie alao promised property tu relief durtlll a IOCOOd tum and aald top prlvn- ty ....id go lo easing the tu burden ol tho natioa'• elderly dU..... -He brulbed ulde Sen. George · S. McGo.,.111'1 dwwes ol corruption by hlJ (!lee BOMBING, Pac• ll S•l1poetaa Sc11ffle gender an advttse public reaction," I.,o.. gan said. "For lh1I reasm, my clients have asked me to direct this letter to you withdraw- ing the proposa~" he said. The lniUal proposal bad been made privately to Stewart, who bad mentioned it, almost in passing. to PBR eommis- sioners last month. He had few details then, be said. The head of the syndkate laid them all out this mornlng, however. Roger McKinnon , a former Cost.a Mesa nurseryman and now a Newport Bea~ based open space designer and develoJ>- er, spelled the details out : "Our goala in makln1 lbe offer were to provide for a present need on the part of the city and to make a. minimal and legitlmate profit for the energies we u- pended. "The reason I asked Mr. Logan to tell the clty "'e were withdrawing tbe offer was because we were · afraki the publk would get the idea we wtre dolng 50me- thing Wlderhanded, which we weren 't." There are five point.I to the proposal. -"We were going to acquire the land as per the city's parU priorities lilt. -"We were golog to plan and design the parks facililles. -"We were-going to coosiruct the parks on a low-bid basis, using indepen- • dent contractors. -"We were going to arrange (or fin- (Ste OFFER, Page Z) DULY f'n.cn' .......... RESCUERS· HELP 1.AGUNAN FROM W ltlCK'EQ AUTO IN NIWPORT llEACH •.-.L111us11f 1 •i.19f~<W11tiJraoh':rJilo.;1'11._.Da:er Dme and 1'1h SlrMt , ..... ' Mesan Jailed on Dtug Rap Charged in Killing By ARTHUR R. VINSEL °' ................. Jailed alttady on a dfUI charge in- cidental to a door-to-door investigation of an alley ambush alaying behind hi. house, a Costa Mesa man was eoo!rooted In his jail cell Wednesday nlgbt and charged with the murder. Sick and miserable with symptoms police said were similar to heroin withdrawal, Ja..fph W. Buffalo, 32, bare- ly reacted to the posalbllity of golnJ back to state prl!on for life. Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow said a formal complaint charging t h e unemployed landscaper with the murder of ex-convict Marion D. Perry would be sought this momln., from the Orange County District Attorney. Hil arrest by Detective Norm Kutch came lesa than 48 houn after Perry, 2'1, was cut down ln a hall of rifle bullet.I at 257 F.ather St .• apparently aa be left. Bla1ted three times -once ln the back and frontally in the neck and abdomen - perry spun around. a .SI caliber revolver billing, and apray«i five lbota Into a house, fence and cars. He mllaed hi> allier and di.d In a pool of blood beltcfe 1 KlllJQof'lglatered uted c1.r which hid been loaned out by a Santa An• dealer. A team of II• detectlVet Ullgned lo different angles of the murder dUeJ tp- HELD IN SLAYING 1_. lluffalo porently developed lnfonnatlm Wed- neaday potnlinl to Bu'f•lo u tho -· "lie took It pr<ll)' ...U7," Capt. Clugow aid In announctna Bulfalo had been charged. lnvetUgat.on said both ncttm and .uapeet ba•e -time ta pr1-In connectloo with nanxtlel invol-t. One '"""'' _, from the -had been anbm1tt1 over IOml dilpotc °"' dntp that trlotred -So far . Bufrilo bu mu.! to malu! 1 ... fllJSPECT, P11e I) Three Injured In Auto Crash On Dover Drive Three Oran1e Coul Mtcfenll W•n! in- jurtd toda y when their cara collided ln a .spectacular crash on Dover Ortve In Newport Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Allan Blad. both a, of 347 Ledn>lt St., Laguna Beach and IJlllln McClellan, 14. of :io:J \I Westcllfl Drive, Newport Beach, ~re ftll taktn to Hoq Memorial Hospllll wilh undtlClol<d tn- jurie~. PoUce 11ld the crash ocrurred al t :ao 1.m. when the lwo can coUJdtd at the In· lel"NC'tion oC Dovt.r and l&th Street. Offioerl uld Black, who n1 north-' bound on Dover, Iott control ot hit car on Imped and ll jumptd the center dlvkicr, careenln& aqou the road bd'ore coming to rest qainlt a block wall. Mn. McOellan'a ar whkh bad bem tntveling eHtbound on 11111 sir.et prio< to the cruh, C8me &o rest In the north- bound lanes ol Dover. F'iremen •e:n called to lbe IM"9 bJ orfle<n to IUlial In ..,,,1ng tho Btaclta, wi.. a:implalned ol -ID)urin. ~ o( tho......_.., - bot.h can were: totally deltroyed, 1rw ltUI under lnveltJ&atloa, pofJco Aid. Although hurricane season officially er.ded last week, Tropical Storm Joanne, who evldeoUy didn't get the word, 15 fill- ing her lunp for a brief march up the coast of Baja, Calilomla. The !ltonn, generating 55-lcnots winds at IL! center, l5 alJo generating awelh on all IOUth facln1 heach<a along the Orange Coast, according to lifeguards. Fall '72 down when they hear tboul the IOllth swell ," be 11.ld. No Hs or Ands~-hut Butz ,. ....... A warm and llllft)' weft.end II In •!or< fer Oranc• Coolt mldonla with lemp<ntlUttl •t the --.. peeled to be .......i n f'rlday. Located llO milts IOUth IOUlbweat of Point San Eugenia, Joanne ii moving northward, with decreasing winds as she approache5 Punta, San Pueblo. Five to eeven foot wavea In! pcuiing iD at HUNTINGTON BEACH according to Weguard Mart Bodenbender. "A lotOral c:urttnt la making It dllllcult for ourfen k. get at the wave1," Bodenbender said. "But with U-c:ondltlons, the pier art• la crowded with board IUrfm lhll mon> Ina·" NEWPORT BEACH reports surf In the nine to 10 foot nlll', with pod llulpe and no wind ID tho momb1J. Cap!. Bud Bel.she 11y1 about a dozen surf en are out at 19th ~tmt, and more down toward the groin and river jetty. "I'm SUA: many more will be com~& • LAGUNA BEACH la llbowinc ...,,. I foot sell wtth ....,lltnl llbtpa. B...U Street WIVCS are boldfo& up tboUt • half clozeD rtden In • tloo-water. SAN CLEMENTE llfecuards a!IO report 4 lo I foot ....U. with pd lhtpe. Trafalpr -""" Sao a.-ta pier have a few IUlftn auL n. Wit.er temperllunt then IJ .. For -wllo -•t dHdl ldlool or coll In lfclt ,,,.., • tho ,. ........ for good lllrf this -... ollm. J-I• OjleCltd to dlalpate by Saturday ~ dlMt fill' P'llday ..... Illa this: First low Ude at 1:5' 1.m. at o.t f..t: first lllallat l :ot a.m. II U 1 .. 1; .......S low 11 i :• p.m .. tu fllt: -flJp at lO:ll_p.m. at u ll!l!t. --·~ SACRAMENTO (APJ -'Ille chttfrman ol the Calllomta -bly'1 Alrl<ultural COmmlttoe tried lo tubpoena AaricUJture Secretary Earl L. 8uU today but WU """'"" -after • br1d ICtdlle with Bull aids. ~John Bti(p ol Fullerton nntallutlto•--11DLat Anpleo ot arr apicutturo oonunlttH ~ oa ,fedtrl1 tt.lmlllnemmt for lannon ---been _..,.., lo btlp -Iii opned .. llewcutla d)-... Briw tried to -_ .. """'°""" alllr lbo t\Cli<llltura _, nnltlbttl a -...... :'.:i AA be wal toward the podlwn, two .... qulckl1 formtd • lhleld lln>Und - aod -him from rtfom. BrlW llurled the .. bpoe .. do<umtnt • • at Bui<. bot It fiultered to tho floor ml Wit trampled 11 8ut1 ltfL "l 'd ..commend you pick K up. felloW1." Brfdt aald. BrlW. • lte!>ubllcon. aid tho .... who shoved him uJde ....,.. Secrtt Service aaenta, but thal C011tcf not bo - finned. "I think It -I llW< Im-of a --qent lo -• Calllenlfa lt!clalator fn>m aervlnf.• aibpoena," be IOl4. • -'-II bo thoqbt lMJ -"I •-at \tis -OU..'1 ........ Brlfp aoltt, ''""'I ""1 be llll on dOdaloG; You'll "" .. lo ulr him .• A atote-J-sl qutnnltne wu Imo .-.. •Jehl 8outlwm Coflbnlt - llM l&ll March to-• an -of ~ "-" d~ wlllc:fl Is • Hlghl Inland artlUOll •· Lo., to. nlghl a. INSIDIE TODAY t i.... flfG" llQO J 4 -obo-N<ID Yor~. IWlgfag tt luMO/• hi IM t""7tt o/ a ,. .. dHt .,.. fJw-w °""'' caraon-11,i. .. 0 ..,,,_ .... ,,al Coll· fOfWlo ~Wflitr. WJt~f GA tUf ...,7 Su •l<>rV. Pooc II. UO. -N === -: 0¢ 0' • :.~·-"= lj ....: ·-.... . _. ....... ,. ..... us • ......__,, II ....,.... fl-. --: --. =-..:i =-=---- -~-...: ;;;;;-.;... . .. Stnt,es Not - -Stopping P ollution? By RVOI NIEDZIE!.SKJ 01 ftlt DtllY ttli.I IUll Britain's all-out \var against pollution ..-ould ne\'er be duplicated in the linited States because of "a thing you call stales' rights," according to Ptter Walker , Brit· ish secretary or state ror the environment. Walk er, in Costa ri1esa \Ve<lncsday after- noon to tou r British Expo '72, told news· inen that a federal effort to clean up the alr and the rivers is likely to be blocked by the st.ates. But he added, "Perhaps you could de- velop in certain states what \\'e have done nation\.l•idc." The British cHort. which leads \Valker lo believe that Britain is "ahead of the "'orld in cleaning the air and water." involves an authoritarian approach. All the power is concentrated in the bands o( \\'alker, 40, who with an annual budget or $9 billion and a staff of 78,000, believes the tide can be turned by the 1980s. His office bas the aulhority to deny virtually any new project which would tend to have a detrimental effect on the environment, and to stop pollution lrom existing sources. "It's easy for a politician to c<1ncen· trate on preserving the good environ- ment," he said. "But people who live in the bad areas are noJ so articulate and \'OCal." T. The big push. therefore is directed toward those areas, such as the industrial tilies of London and Binningham, where air pollution is being eradicated. Britain's Clean Air Inspectorate has the authority to force industries to install ;iir pollution equipment and to levy heavy fines if they do not. Interested in partic· lpating in the effort, most of them do, !ICCording to Walker. The automobile Is not as big a source ln Britain because they are fewer in number and because Britain, unlike the United States, has fully developed mass .ransit systems. Even these are being expanded with ~istan<:e from Walker 's department :hrough generous government subventions which amount to 50 percent of the cost of new buses and 75 pereent of the cost or oew trains. But, \Valker added, Britain shares with the United States the problem of the cities. "We have 90me advantages be- cause not all of our city centers have declined," he pointed out. Regional shopping ~nters, such as round in Orange County, are not practical in Britain and are, In fact discouraged, "to keep alive the downtown areas." Walker is currently on a campaign to ~ipe out all slums and to modern~e 00. tween two to three million older houses ¥ilhin the next 10 years. Also involved in the IQ.year plan is to landscape land brutalized by the lndus· irial Revolution. With regard to new development, guide· lines stressing environmental conserva· tion are being deVeloped for every va- ::ant acre and the local planning authority given absolute power of enforcement. Book Sale Set By Newport Lions The Mariners Lions Club of Newport Beach will hold a book sale Friday and Saturday at the Westc\iff shopping center. Proceeds from the sale. whic h will run from 9 a.m. lo 9 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, will be used to bu y audio-visual materials for the Child Guid.snce Center of Orange County. ' Anyone wishing to donale books for the sale may do so by dropping them off at any Newport Beach fi re ~talion , the Newport Beach main post office or in barrels at the shopping center. Book pickups can also be aranged by calling the Lions Club. OU.N•I COAST " DAILY PILOT ,.,,. Ol"tnfl C..t DAILY PILOT, wllh wt.kh h ~ "" ,, ..... '" .... "· 11 Pllblhhrd ,., 1'le °'"..,.,. a.it l"Wbl11lli.,. CemlNI")'. s.... r•tt uiui.. .,. pu1111tM11, ,,,_ • ., ttircw11 ,,idl~', kw (tl!I M-sa, M_,.rl llt<M:P>, H""'fll>Q!Ofl tffd'l/f°""taln \l•li.y, L'1!llfl• 8Rdl, lrvlrot/S.ddl•lltck ..._, S•n C.......,tf/ .111'1 JV'On C.1>11tr•.,. A 11,.ic r19!0IMll M1111!1 h .,.,.. s.111n11.,1 ...,... '-•v•. TP>t twlMi,i.I ""4llJlllW •111'11 11 11 )JO W ... l •• , SIAOtt, C.I• M-. c1n+or11i., '167'. Robtrt N. w.,cf ,, .. 14.,.. • ..., 1"11111~ J•ck It. Curl•'( vu ,,.!Hiii e!'d ~·· ~ Tlt•fl'l•t KH.,11 C•nw Tlio"''' A. M11 rplii11• M..,..1111 l•llOr l.. P1f11 Kritt H-.wt hKll ti!-, E.fltol' N....,_t a..dl C>Mci. )JJJ H1w,.n l11i1l1.,1rcf M•Ifi., ~,,..,,, r.o. ••ir I 17S, t2Ul 0.-0l"- c..--..1 -........ , ,., ... ~...01 m11 .... 1.-.-,.. ..... IMclll :.::::. ,..,._ ..,....,.. Ma ~: • •I CMnlN lt#I T ........ (7141 '42-4JJ1 Cl•YW MMc1'1h1 '41-''71 °""""'"t. 1na. °"""" ""' "*""""" ~. ... """" ....... 111\1111~~ ··~ mttflr ., .... .,... ••• ti ,,.,,,., .. ,....,. Wllti.ri •'*"I ,.. ......... "'~......,. 1M1M1 <'-......_. ..-ti c .. 1 ~ c;.11flrm'9. ...,....,... 1W ,...,.. UM ..... 11~1 tw IMh &I.It f'l'llfllfll'f'I ftlllllWP ._.,.._ SIM "*""ff'· DAILY PILOT ..... MN ARROWS IND ICATE SITES PROPOSE D FOR NEW COUNTY SEAT Supervisor Suggests Move to South for County Administration Blind UC Irvine - Sh1dent A warded Al umni Gra nt A blind UC Irvine graduate student has been awarded a $300 scholarship, the first annual grant of the UCI almuni Association. Michael Hingson of Palmdale Is con- tinuing studies in physics. He was graduated in Juoe from UCI with "cum laude" status recognizing hia 3.8 grade point average. During the commencement ceremony in Campus Park, Hingson's guide dog, Squire stOle the show when Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. conferred a degree in lethargic guidance to the nine-year old golden retriever. Aldrich commended the dog's faithful, if some"Nhat unenergelic. guidahCe of Mike to class for four yean. Hingson has made several con· tributioos to the quality of life for blind students at UCI including development or a braille compute.-terminal and a map to guide other blind students around the campus. Shortly after the graduation glitter, it was learned Hlll890ll would have finan- cial difficulties c<1ntinuing his studies./ F romPage J ETHNIC • • • chairman which read in part, "ethnic slllrs bring you no honor. I am filled with disgust and anger that you would make anti-Mexican-American statements in a public meeting." Ruiz continued, "It is incredible to me that any rational, responsible public of- ficial could utter such intemperate remarks -remarks which can only serve but to inflame emotions and foster unrest." Caspers, in his three years on the board has been somewhat famous for his off the cuff nmark:!I. FromPageJ BOMBING ••. administration, and predicted it would "tum off' the voters. Standing behind his desk and speaking in tones so low they were dlff1cult to hear, Nixon took note of McGovern's cor· ruption charges and accusations that U.S. policy in Vietnam was "the worst crime since tbt Nazi extennination of the Jews." "Some of my more partisan supporters have said I should respond in kind," Nix· on said. "But I'm not going to dignify such comments with a reply." -Insisting the U.S. has not been "schnookered." Nixon said th a t SUSPECT •.. .,,, •l•leme!U .. polille aboot the ..... _ .. w._ .... 1 --" Cfll!-Cl!llOW ...,...ked. A ,8poolllHnldo rtlle, lpl>ll<lltly ol UI mfll"¥"1et ban -.cl lllde at the ~ lll!elni ,_..., by the Shertcrs Crime Lab mil wltll l'lnY• J8 caUber revolver. The r!De bid boeo ftl'!d four times and all four cartridge caslnas were recovered at the scene. Perry emptied bis own gun in a futile effort to hlt hls 12:20 a.m: attacker as be spnwled beside the cat, mortally wOUIJll. ed. on. slug smashed titto the bou!e oc- cupied by Randolf Glaese, who was away from home at the time. During Investigation in the aftermath of the 111111 duel. Cllltoer Steve N.ash knocked at the unit &bored by BuUalo and biJI wtce Shem, 28, IO ask if they saw or beard ~ytbing. He claJmed he smelled marijuana smoke and saw a bag of the illicit weed lying In plain sight but failed to tab ac- tion at that point Narcotlcls Detectives Dick O.Fl'ancbro and Doo Casey returned to the Buffalo home and arrested the couple on suspi- cion Of pos6W!on of marijuana about 3 a.m . Tuesday. Buffalo was booked into city jail where he was re-arrested on the murder charge Wednesday illgbt, while hi.! wife Sherri is in Orange County . Jall, lacing only the possession of marijuana charge. Their lQ-ye&M)ld son was delivered to the custody of lrlends, but UDder the latest circumstances could conceivably be placed in care of the county's Albert SiUon home. Buff.alo's last arrest in Costa Mesa waa Aug. 2, when he was booted for failure to identify himself afler being stopped by police for questioning. He has dDoe Ume in prison. but a spokesman for the California Adult Authority's parole division in Santa Ana said today she is not certain when he was released. Their records show county cases in which Buffalo was ooavicted, while his alleged victim's county criminal record dates back 12 yeeni. The &eareh for family or friends of Perry, who went by the name Warner Allmen too, are still belng sougbt for death notification and possible in- formation on the nature of his alleged connection with Buffalo. Police say they underst<..ncl Perry's parents had moved to Oregon. Need A Few Laheh? Pro•, Co1ts Offered P rop. 20 Dehat~. . Attended b y 200 By L. PETER KRIEC Ot lfle Dlllr 'll•t lllH Proposition 20 -the coastal ln ltlat1ve -was altematcly labeled "in the tot al public good" and "subject to several fatal defects" by opposing sides ln a debate on Us merits sponsored . by the Orange County Coast A s s o c i a t I o n Wednesday. many l'!glonal agencies even now. Hamllton countered the point by saying that two state studies, one the Com· prehensive Ocean Arta Plan (OOAP) and another by lhe California Parks and Rtcreation Co"""'slon boJh a r e available rd'erence material for local governments. F....,..P .,eJ OF FER .•. About ZOO persons at the Balboa Bay Club beard Laguoo Beach Attorney William Wllcoxen, a prominent con- servatJonist, support the November ballo~ measure because Jt would "get disin- terested people to review local decisions, with the end result 1n the total public in-ancing of the parka, then Jeose them back terest." to the city for 20 to 30 years, then at the But they al!IQ beard Los Angeles A~ end of the period we would dedicate them tomey Alfred Hamilton decry the t the cl measure because tt would give local coo-0 ty · trol to "another level of bureaucratic -"We-Were also going to make a full hierarchy." disclosure of all costs and charges en- . If passed by a majority of state voters, tailed in the procedure." Proposition 20 would establish a state McKinnon said this morning he will go commission and six regional t.'llm· back to the city with the same offer. mlssiorui that would '."lave until 1976 to prepare a master plan tor coastline "I fully intend on behalf of my group developmenL to make full disclosure' of everything re- 1 During that period, those bodies would gardlng this proposal and to make the have authoritative control on what gets offer to the city again." built _ and what doesn't get built _ McKinnon said he. intends to take what wiUtin what is unclearly labeled the he tenned a "sample proposal" to the city, involving only Cliff Drive view park. coastal zone. n· that proves workable, be said, the Hamilton said state control is tm-group wou1d be willing to carry it over to necessary. He argued that "local rule whatever the city wants. does get aromid to doing the job." What the city wants, all told, Is about • He cited changes in Los Angeles Coun· $2.5 million worth of park Jand and de- ty the past five years and then cited velopment costs. Ne\\-port Harbor. The $2.5 milllon figure includes $1.2 "Look around Newport Be a c b ·~' ' million for development and $1.3 million J:i:<imilton saJd, "the water is blue. You to park acquisition. can see the bottom, the water's not The list of sites includes: cruddy·•• -CUH Drive View Part, $500,000 for Wilcoxen stressed that California was acquisition; $37,000 for development. only one of two coastal states without -Balboa b land c h u r c h property, coastline management legislation and $l8S,000 to buy it; $8.1,000 for develo~ noted that numerous state agencies, in-ment. eluding one commission appointed by -Marina park, $125,000 for acquisition; Governor Reagan, have repeatedly urged $450,000 for development. state controls. --Semenlat Slew (Newport Shores), Wilcoxen skirted a direct confrontation $100,000 and $60,000 for respective C081B. with one of the major critlclsms of the -Fifth Avenue (Corona del ¥ar> measure -that it, in effect, would plllce $50 000 d •100 ooo spectlvely ' ao ' ' ,re . a moratortwn on development until the -Promontory Point, $80,000 and $30.000. master plan is done , without providing -Corona mgblands playground, $50,000 compensation to the land owner who con· d •12 000 b an • , . tinues to pay taxes on is property. -Cliff Drive cburcb, $250,000 and He said the four-year planning process $76,000. AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) _ An EJ Paso, is necessary to allow "critical, close and The .remainder of the list coven parks Tex., firm must pay $2,680 plus al· effeCtive contact at the local and regional a~ owned by the city and reflects level." only· development ~. ' tomeys' fees for labels it ordered by .... ,,.,,n• mistake from the Monarch Marking Co. He said it is impossible for small towns Bayside Drive, $98,000; San JoaquJn The owners of Reed's Photo Mart, Inc. on their own to "get enough data to Hills Park, $102,000; Buffalo Hills tennis said he intended to 1order1-4.,000~ but, understand \be impa,ct of what is going courts, $28,000; existing Cliff Drive park, mistaken!Y onl.e'red'fodl' inilliOft. ~ ·' • on ' &round ~" because 'there 3l'e so $54,000 ; oee~t sidewalk,· flOO,tm. ,::::::::::::...=.:::::..::::::..:::::..:==:..~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~--'-~~~~~~~~- '· "The alumni association has heard or the good things you have accomplished," President Adreana Souleles told Hingson \.\'hen she presented the $300 award. McGovern's charges of scandal in the 11ucv:r.~·1 sale of wheat to the Soviet Union were Superb Luxury in Pure Wool Pile The grant supplements a fellowship rrom the Community Center for the Blind and contributions from the Tuatin Rotary Club and tbe Corona del Mar Kiwanis Club. A university spokesman n o t e d . however, more financial assistance is needed because Hing~n·s expenses in- clude oot only academic and Jiving costs but also the preparation of materials into braille. A scOOlarship fund in Mike's name has heen established by the graduate division or ve t. Woman Injured In Headon Crasl1 A Newport Beach woman i!I ll!tecl in .stable condition today at 11oag Memorial llospital after she was injured Wed· nc!lday night in a hcadon crash on Jam· boree Road. Charlene Edmond9on, 44, o( 300 E. C.oast llighwa.y was injured when her car collided v:ith the auto driven by John P. l>reher, 20, of Anaheim on a divided strrtch of road between Pacific C:Oast High~'llY and Rack Bny Road. Dreher Is listed in sallslactory con· dit ion today at the Newport Bct1ch ho:iplttil. Police said f'o1r!'i. Ed mondson was ap- parently traveling $0Ulh.bound In the northbound lanes when the cra1h oc-- C'ure<I. Officers are invest11attng the ac· cidcnt. Trojan Alumni Plan Big Ca rne Newport Ha-Trojan Alumni ·Club membtrs will attend the uruverslty ol Southern California's 1972 homecoming Oct. 21 for a pregamt picnic and football game agalnst Waahlnglon. Buses will leave at 9 •. m. rrom the Irvine. Coast Country Club. RouM-lrlp bus Ucketa are avtllable at $3 per person . Tickets to the game art atlU available al $6.SO . Alumni mU1l 11end checks by Oct. 6 to Conrad Schweitz.er, 2615 Alta Vbta Drive. Newport Beach. Make checks payable to the llowport llarbor Trojan Alumni Club. being thoroughly investigated. Nixon olso said the sale was "a good deal" for America. "My reply is to have such allegations investigated," N'mn said. "Now, if there was any Impropriety, ii there was any n. legality, we want to know it. The way to find out is to put the best investigative agency in the world to work at finding out." -He said he would support a con- stitutional amendment agalnat bu1ing in the next Congress, but would prefer the legislative route. rr Congress failed "IO provide relief from excea!ive busing orders, then I in· tend to rmd another way." -At one point, Nixon became a bll philosophical about his role 8 s acknowledged front-runner ln t b e presidential campaign. Noting his large lead in public opinion polls. h.e said he bis cautiooed his aldel, "Don't rtly on the polls." The problem for a candidate who is fa.r ahead in the straw votes, he noted, 11 to get his supporten to the polla on election day. "Wh.at we need above all else," he said, "la a blg vote." Youths Die When Truck Hi ts Cai· ~!RV (AP) -Six FUimore youth3 were killed when Ute station wagon ln which Ibey were rlcllnt ron a stop sli'> and was struck broadside by a tractor· trailer, officials say. Police aald two other paaef'litrs survtved the crash Wedoelday but we~ rtpotted In terious condlUon. \\ lnvestlgaton uid the 111Uon waaon was pushed about (00 lee\ by the trUCk aa 8CVtn youth!uJ pusengtrl wert thJ'oWn from the wreckage. Willie Holt, 14. biJI alsler Cecilla, 11, and Jerry Joaw , 171 were pronounced dead 1t the ..,... In 11>11 Venturo County Community. , · Donna Cummlnas, U. aod her brother Dickie, 13, were dead on 1rrlv1I al Ven- tura County General Hospital In Vtntun. James Cu mmtna•. 7. died at Santa Poula Community llOl)lllal . The C.lllomla llJihway Patrol uld B,..oda CWnmlJC! WU driving Ill< Ila· lion wagon. The CHP sold the children had been aent to PIN by their mother to pick up a I08f or bread. byKarastan 1Ca2111znllllletllll_,.1iitt1•1at.s.wm,_ .... ,.. .. _,,_. ·-lllllcOld-l)'ofllothldr,....,,...-.1p11o.1ta-.. .....of.luot•.oo•...-"'"'ilduoto•-lw""'""""" .... '"wool .J loclonof-.y.ICooOllon .i-. ...i.llliw•..,iar liullcloe-•wwwnt oo ... yona .. ......,,H Mel ...,.rttlnent. A truly r1 •mtzLltwlue. TIM 17 celen ire spectacular .... ' Pt. '"•I I"' •11·1· '•• Yeur ftvorife lrrlerier 4'11i9tt1r will .. • hap,., t• •••irt you. H.J.G ARRFff fURNffURE PROPISSIONAL lHTUIOR DESIGNIU Ult tlARIOl ILVO.' COSTA MESA. CAUf. • ' I I I l I • ' Sunday's DAILY PILOT ••• It's a Rather Special Package Some Of Its 'Only on Sunday' Features: SPECIALS From the front page-topping Sunday' Special, itself, to other ma- jor stories of and for the Orange Coast, the Sunday e d it ion abounds with special news and sports stories told as only DAILY PILOT staffers can tell them. OPINIONS Columns by Barry Goldwater end S. I. Hayakawa, editorial car- toon by Pulitzer Prize winner Jeff MecNelly, e weekly report on California's congressmen and on what's doing in Sacramento. That's just Page A7. Great commentary by greet journalists ap- pears throughout the Sunday paper. BUSINESS From Orange Coast reel estate to New York's Wall Street, the Sunday edition really means business.· The DAILY PILOT coven it all. "Day-ahead" market news includes analysis of the past week's ups and down•, volume , trends and new stocks on both the Ameri- can and New York exchanges. -PEOPLE The focus is on you and your neighbors -on all kinds of people -through several different kinds of "only on Sunday" features. People/Quotes, Good Deed People, At Your Service (the column that fights City Hell) end each week's variety of feature stories about people you know -or wish you did. THE ARTS From the irreverence of Rex Reed 's celebrity column to the com- prehensiveness of community theater and live entertainment re· -ports, the Sunday entertainment pages (plus other features scat- tered in other parts of the paper) present lively coverage of the lively arts. TRAVEL At least one page of every Sunday's paper is devoted to trevel, at home and abroad. Sten Delaplane's column can take you any· where in the world. Stories by local readers often take you along on a "fevorite vacation." Even the ads are fun to read. PLUS, OF COURSE, COLOR COMICS, BIG CLASSIFIED AD SECTION, TV WEEK AND FAMILY WEEKLY MAGAZINES • Su nda ys ltrc special -for rea<lers of tl1,e DAILY PILOT .. • ' ' . . . .. .. DAILY PILOT SC lllw>dft, Octow s, 1912 PllllLl.O N<m.CI! Industrial OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST . I • ~ li111\tMtrl11N • M•tl•t 1!.trt• 1 f1~1 •• hl1twl. "'""'*' ...... , 644.1010 • 17 • Orange Cqast EPIT I ON Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 65, NO. z7q , 3 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1972 c TEN CENTS Carpenter Seeks Trailer Park Relocation Aid • State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R- Newport Beach ) has assured tenants of Costa Mesa 's Four Seasons-traner park that he is looking into the possibility or securing rek>cation assi!tance for those who will be left behind when a Newport F~ay access road cuts through the park. "I have written to the distrkt engineer (of lbe state Division of Highways ) in Los Angeles requesting additional in- formation on lhe situation to see if there is any Possible way in wtllcb the tenants of the park may be able to receive assistance," be told resident.a in a letter. The problem at the pork, locatod off Newport Boulevard near the Wllaon Street Intersectlon, is that a freeway ac- cess road, will wipe out 3t spaces and leave 36 behind. Those persons having trailers within the path of the road are being pold relocation allocations . 1'be remainder are not and think they should be. Citing potmial adverse eUects on health from noise and air Pollution com- ing fnlm both ~Y and ace<ss road, the~ resi&nts p etlt foned Clarpenter (JI.Newport Beaoh) Io r similar financial aid. , The access road will also take the pork's pool, sbuffle board courts and laundry drytng area. State officials say they plan to relocate these facilities or to reduoe the reot. Today, Mrs. Jan Jacksoo, a foriner maoager at lhe park, sakl the tenanJ,s had never been told of those plans nor of constructkln of a brick wall to ahield residents from the acceu road. "'Ibis Is all news to us," said Mnl, Jctekson. "We never heard of the pool relocation before!' Part of the problem with the trailer park sw:rounds allegatlom made by residents .that they_ Were never notified of the freeway comlluclion taking the trailer park speces. -• Gorden ~tartln, owner of the park, claim,, they were. He said lhat nolke9 consisting of news clippings bad been posted on bulletin boards and the manager bu been adviled. "We were not notified until last November and all the notice, on the bulletin board never aakl anything about FoUr Se~." she insists. ID Fetru1ry of this year, Martin sup- posed]y told the tenants that the park "is not for sale and never will be for sale,'' according IO ~trs. Jacbon. "When be told us that, the trailer pork wu actually in escrow," lhe maintains. "And we were finally tokl of the l8le Aug. 31." Martin, however, said today that he doea not recollect making such a state. ment, "Nobody would ever mW a state- ment lite that ." "I would like to digest thst remark before I comment on it. I'm not gojri" (See CARPENTER, Poge Z) u .s . ; ec Ill-ur 'ltfove County Seat' Caspers' Remark Angers Chicanos By JACK BROBACK CM .. ~Ir"" llaft' Orange Co u n t y Mexican-American 1eaders reacted with anger today-after Board of Supervlson' Cbolrman Rooald W. Caspers of Newport Beioch declared he wanted to move the County Seat to escape Chicano influence. Caspers WU U1111 beca-the county boanJ.last week approved a -ti> .. -· ·~·minority ..... -·::r::t"; 'A ~•I _. county~ ..... .M'}PM __ ~ J>I;~ .... -. .. Adelante Bandit• ... . He · claimed """111 • IO'mmnenl bod been squeezed out of •.ooo f<r the minority hiring procraip. Caspers, wealthy owner of a financial Institution, makes bis lmle on Lido lale iJl Newport. He was 01; the losing end of the 4 to I board vole _,ivq the pro- gram. Still fuming al the laat boud -· Caspers l1lg(ated that the County Seal oosbt to be moved •WBY'.·fnlm Santa Ana to aome location llUCh ao Dana Point or Laguna Hills. SHOOTS FROM THE LIP Phr•se-m1ker Caspers These places -id be within bis own Filth Supenllorlal Distrlcl Cost.a Mesa, T hen and Now. •• "Santa Ana Isn't • good place - (See ETllNIC, Pip IJ Zoo for Mesa? Ani1nal Keeper Eyes Fairgrounds DAILY """ ... ...._ flOHTINO CITY HALL _ _..._,, ...... Costa Mesa may have ill very own children'• zoo, lf Mn. Sbela Marsh can keep the c:ouoty dot patrol from match- ing the tenants. She was oo the lootout Wednesday for the bright yellow truck, while In the backyard "Sheba" and 0 Bandlti'' her two rc.tcoons were acampering about, and "Henry" the coyote WU tatinc' I mooze In the ...... Mn. Manh'• problem Is that bet pell are conaldered '"wild" by a dt7 ordinance and thmlonl problblted. SO sbe wonts to atll'I I petthle soo It the CJrance County Fair_.-. UnUI then lt'o alllpinJ up to a n<e --Mn. -··!Urry -Ind the dot cotcblr. M....mile, ¥n. llanb wbo cumntl1 •!so 0-• poodle, ..... -two ral> blll and 1 1111ae1 plf, II -ptq to c permlolloo from the la1r llolrd for It ::i,., located In. tent to the -ol the lslrpoondl tlcbt olllce on 1 lllllall plot "' find oho could -!or '1lO monthb' . With -....., alrudy "lluhed away," ahe hopel to atqUft a J1va monkey, 1 ~n monkef, a U.ma, • baby ostrlcb, a IDIUll bobcat, a llopud, a calf, 101De '"minl-ponlel," a lamh, -buntlas do@_ and • kqln>o to ,_ cM .... ":'f:1"· A U.._ • ., ... ...,_ Ccaa --Allred Kltmaiam w11o U... ID OftlD O.- and ...... ¥11.-*" ,.-rill dty ball. lllo 11111, ........... -..... ao --bf die ci.-0.-atJ C«mdl. Tbe c..a -OlJ Olllldl .in .. ulllmettly ....... Mn. -·· ........ for I .. ., .. _ im.. Jut whelbw ltl jurtodJctian .... be complolely ... erclled ..... the lsbp-. -(IM ANDW.l, ... I J . • When Diana Petzel was two )'!ars old and lived at 3245 Indiana Ave., she played along a dirt parkway and treeless street. But that was in 1962 (above). Today Diana, 12, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Moon, still lives on Indiana Avenue but she's a student at Tewinkle Middle School and her street has mature ash trees like those below. City wants to uproot trees because they crack sidewalks. Police Find Man Alread y In Custody By ARTHUR I\. VINSEL Of .. Delfr ........... Jailed already on a drug charge ln- cidental to a door-to-door investlgaUon or an alley ambush slaying behind his house, a Costa Mesa man wu confronted in his jail cell Wednesday night and charged with the murder. Sick and mile.rable with symptoms police said were 1lmilar to beroln withdrawal, Joseph W. Buffalo, :a, bl~ ly ""cted to the l)OISlhillty of &<>Ina blclt to state priJaD for life. ~' !;apt. E4 GG11a111•1tzirir llld a ,..,... ..atpillnt ~· ~· f h. unen1111Qyed landsc:lper ,1'fth tllo - of -Maricm D. P"'7 "'1cl·be '"""" tbll ~ -... ()rap Colltt)' Dlltrlct ... _,, Hll amst by Detective Nonn Kutch came Im titan 41 boun after Perry, :17, wu cut down in a hall ol rt.fie bullet. at 2$7 Esther St., apparenliy u be lefl Blasted three timel -ooce In the back and frontally In the neck and 1bdornen - perry spun around, a .31 caliber revolver bluing, and opnyed Ove lhots Into a boule, fence and can. He missed bis dller and dled In • pool of blood beside a KansaHqbtered used ct.r which bad been kmoed out by a Santa (lloe SUSPECT, PltJe I ) Sc hool irt CdM Won't Divert Mesa Proposals Conltructloo ol the 11.5 mmloo Roy 0. Andersen School In Corona del Mar does not-mean a change in bulldin& plans for acboolJ In C.orta Mtu, d I I t r I c l Superintendent Jolto Nlooli said today. Bids are beJnc JOU&bt r ... the •"''""" tary llChool wbJch Is to be built In Harllor View Homts oubdlvlsloo In Newpor1 Belch foflowlnc app~ of the odtool pf1111 by district lrult«t Tlltodoy •l&J!t. The tchool, named for fonner Newport Beodl eclXIOI ouperintendent Roy 0 . AnderMI, la al1ted to ..,.., In the (all of 1111 with 511 llUdeni.. NlcoU said thst the mftodellnr pn> lf'lll for eclXIOIJ In COltl -will not be allected by the -ruction "' the IChoof In Corona dd Mar. "At the moment we hive under way _.ltlq pro)e<ta II Rae and DIYla middle -and ... .,. c:umntfy In the platlnc ..,.. for proje<ta •t -and COltl -hfC!t 1Cboo11," be said. NJoolJ aid that In addition to f'lmdl eannait.d for COltl lieu proJeN about I I.I million In noncommltted funds lo the -·· bulldlnc fund. Nlooli alto nottd thst the district Is cumatly colnc thrnuP • lite by alta enluatlon of to 0< tt unoocnpltd ICbool lfcbtl and Iba McHally Sdlool with tho potllbWty of ..Ulna -"' theOI aod putllni the ~ Into the bulldlai ftnl. Ile aald they an ID tho -ol pi. uni .. --" the llcNllly Iha at 11111 Stnol aod N<wpiif llliiilennl ID Ollta- Dow Jones Off 10 HELD IN SLAYING Sulfl9d Buffolo Nixon Sees No Bomb Halt BefQre Race m m Wire Strvkft WASHING TON -Pruldent Nixon ,,. day ruled out any halt to the bombing of North Vietnam Lefort the Nov. 7 elec- Uon, aaylng fonntr President Jomni made a "very, very ~t mistake-" when be d)d '° just before the JIU election. Nixon told • ~ conference ln hlJ . oval office the war could be aettled before Nov, 7 -if the right kind ol tel· Lement could be made. But be added that the bollotlng "will not in any way lnfJuence what we c» It the negotl1t1ng table." 1be Jolllllon odmlnlstrstlon. ho Nld, though well lntenUooed , "made a Ttf")', very great milt.alee ln stOllPinl 1hl bomb- In& without adequata -la fnlm !.he other aide." He refeMd to Johnton'a Nov. J, ltA. annowicement of 1 bombJna hilt just da)'I before Nlaao defested lltlbert ll Humplv.y for the presldmcy. "We -1ro not aoJna to mue thst mbtake now," Nim! declared. On other topics In the -ranitni l.twl conftrt'flC'e : -Nixon ukl .. there wUI be no pmldenUal tu Increase" In 1111 but argued that "COIJC"llfonll ovenpend-lna" ml&Jtt make one _,y. Nixon, ln diJa1ulna hll tai: polky. 11kt he will nttly Ylstt the a mpelga trsU wtUJ Coner-lltjourm becaut0 he nnll IO ttmaln In Walhlncton IO "ltollt the battle aplnlt oc:, IP"'dlnc." lie promlled • • ol \'rto -aimed at 1111-mlnute tql& tlon that .....,. bll budcet &ooh. lie said he would ao on notlonwlde radio Oil Sllltrday to aploln bis UIS polley. Or••ll• Wea liter A warm and lllM1 --la In store for Oranp Cout -., wtth te.mpentum • the t-i:W -ed to be aromd 7J l'riday. Hips lnllnd aNJllJ!d •· t.owo to- oJsht a. INSIDE TODAY i:i.... Jl«I" ""° Jf ,,.,...., ol>o.-.d Ne• YMt, jtodgfoo lt .,..,,,,, la ~ f'Oft1 of • "• emir 100r. TM, ccmlC emooa• 1t~lf' &o a •ortlloCftltrcal Co/J. '""'"' C019t'"1u11tw. WMrw ore 1hey ..,.7 Su "°"· ""'1t II. ._.._ N ._.... . --.... . Ce ll I • a --n ............ . .... ---" .... ,__....,.. II -. ......... l.f -... :=..':. ':-.,....., ,, -... ---·-. ---. -----. • Z UAJL~ PILOT c ~hur1d•Y. Om bt< S, 1'72 S111og ~ighters Ha1ostrungP POLLUTION FIGHTER Britain's Peter Walker Suspect Faces Co11rt Friday In Girl's Death Harbor Area resident Corliss K. Ankeny today faces a Friday morning ar· raignment in Superior Court aft er being indicted on charges of murdering his girl £riend by the Orange County Grand J ury. The wealthy, unemployed student teacher who showered his alleged victi m with gilts including a $12,000 sports car has been held in jail In lieu of $11Ki,OOO bail since he surrendered. Newport Beach Detecti ve Sgt. Ed Cib- barelli went before grand jurors Wednes- day morning see kin g th e indictmen t against Ankeny as a 1nethod of moving the case di rectly to Superior Court. Ankenr y. 33. is accused of shootin g Dittnt Singleton, 22, in the head durin~ a quarrel in his Towers Apartment suite, 321 \\'. Coast llighway, Newport Beach. No trace ha s ~n found of the weapon, a .357 magnum revolver. Ankeny -who own s two 1972 vehicles in addition to bUyinJi: Miss Singleton he r 11-fercedcs-Benz lx>aring !he pcrsonalizl.'d license plate BlZZAR -has refused to make a staterncot to police. Derense attorney Moses Berman said in arguing for hail reducti on last wee k before Judge ~Everett W. Dickey that Ankeny did in fa ct wound Miss Sin~lcton. but only by tragic accidtnl during a stru~gle. Deput y Distric t Attorney RoMrt Chnt- terton argued against bail reduction to the $5.000 sought by Berman. He claimed Ankeny is involved in ma. jor dealership or assorted drugs including cocalne and marijuana, saying every ef- fort should be made to keep him in custody. Miss Singleton. a former UCl student attending UCLA at the time of her dealh, was dropped off earl y Sept. 18 at Hoag Mrmori nl Hospital by ti man in a Cor· vette who promptly va nished. The car was found mof'f: than a v.•eek later parked at Hunti ngton Center in Hunt ington Beach. stripped of Its !eals. Ankeny 's attorney told police where it would be. found. Dete-clive Sgt . Cibbarell i said today Ankcny's mlssl ng white van has since been re('(lvered with everyth ing but its seats stripped from the interior. Stories of all sorl!'I surround Ank eny's apparent wealth, with the prosecutlnR deputy district attorney claiming In open court the suspect has made up to $500,000 in drug dealing. His paren.ts recentl y moved from Costa Mesa to Oregon, where Ankeny is a respected na me or 11 wealthy pi oneer fa mily for whom one major boulevard in Portland is nnmed. OIAN•I COAIT Oii DAILY PILOT .,,.. ~ c .. ,, DAlt.V 1"11,,or . ,.,1"' MMcft h tombf!Md ""' H-l"T'eu.. lt pWl!li-.. W -Ot•l'ICI• (o.111 Pll&lhfl"'O '°"'"""'· ,.,... !'"I~ edit-., ... Plftll"'"fd, M,,.,., 11'1~ l"td1,, '9r C..I• Mft•, H-1 llMCll, Muntlf'IQton llMtfl/F-11111 v11i..,, t.ao.,,.. ll••C.h, 1 ..... 1 ....... s.tldl~(I( -, ... c ........... , a,.., J"MI Cttltlf•.,.. ... tll'IQlt •t0'°"'9I t111111n ~ "1bllllll'd a..tun:11ya ..... hnll•'l'L lftl pr1Mi.e1 "1111Wllrlt '41"' I• 11 llD W~t Ill' $1rltf, a... ~. C:.llfomll, ,_,., lle\i1rt N. W1.J ru•11d•nt .,.. 11ve1......,. J 1c~ It Cutl•v 'YK• l"fMldent ind ~I M__,.,- Tho11111 K1•vil llll!W Thom11 A. M•rphi111 M ..... I,_. ... "" Ch11!11 H. Looi llicti•rJ r. N1 lt At •hlMI Mll'llO-(A1Nit1 c... ..... OM&o J JO Witt l1y S+r•1t M•ilitlf M•11111 P.O. lo• lf60, tl•J6 --"..,.,.. a..cto1 nu "'"'""' '-"""" l .,._ llKl'I: m ,_. A-M""91nrgtlfl -..Cft: 1n 11 9..C. Mv...,.nl llfl C19f1Mftft: as MlrWI •I C..l'IWll JtMI , .. .,.... (1t4• .. , ... "' Cl•"'-4 Mhwtlll I '4l.ff11 a.r-rltltf, lf7t. 0...,... CW.I ll'Ufllltl\11111 ~r. ,... -,..,.,..,, 11iv.1,.,....,., 9'JlorMI ""°"" It 1'111""1....,_._ Mrtlft ""' M ...,,..__, wltf!Wf t11«ill w • Mlltlln 01 ..-r11111 .,.., ~ t:ll" •1!1191 •W •I Cttll Mttt, c:.111or11I•. ~i.tbn .., urtlt• lt.U ftlO!ltJll'rl blr 11'1•11 U .11 ,_tlll,1 lfth1!11T •ttl11111Mt n . .s -'""'· I BI RllDl .NI Ell'ZIE13JU -°' .. 'Dfriltr ll'iltl ... ,,.. Brttalo'1 au-out war agalnlt pollution could .. ver be duplicaled In tbe Uniltd States became of 111 thina: you mll r.-"9' rig.hta1 11 according to Ptter Wallter, Brit· ish secretary of state for the cnvtronmtnt. \Vall<er, in Costa Mesa W~ay after- noon to tour British Expo '72, told news.. mt'n that a federal effort to clean up the air and the rivers is likely to be bl ocked by the states. But he added, "Perhaps you could de- velop in certain states what we have done nationwide." The British effort , which leads Walker to believe that Britain is "ahend of the world in clean ing the air and water," involves an authoritarian approach. All the power is concentrated 1n the bands or Walker, 40, wbo with an annual budget of $9 billion and a staff or 78,000, believes the tide can be turned by the lilMs. His ofli<:t! has the authority to deny virtu aliJ anir.-ptO~ wbicll woold tena to b1Ye a detrtmtr'ltat tltect an the tnvinlolntnl, and lo 1!op poilullno mxn exlsllna -·~1·1 Mil far fJ"lf"" tq """i"'" trale all ~ ilM pl environ- ment," he aatd. 1'BUt people who llve in the bad areas are not so articulate and vocal." The big push, llltrelore ii dir«ted toward ttde areas. sueh as the industrial cities of London and Birmingham, where air polli.ltion ls being eradicated. Brltaln'1 Clean Alr ln!pectorale has the authority to force industries to Inst.all air pollution equipment and to levy heavy fines if they do not. Interested in partlc- ipating in the effort, most of them do, according to Walker. The automobile is not as big a aou.rce in Britain because lbey are fewer in number and because Britain, u.nllke the United States, bas tully developed mass transit systems. Even these are being expanded with assistance from Walker's department Tropical Storm Heads North, Whips Vp Surf By STEVE MITCHELL ot "'-Dallf 1"1191 '"" Althoug h hurricane season officially cr.ded last week, Tropical Slonn Joanne, \1ho evidently didn"t get the wo rd. is fill· ing her lungs for a brief march up the coast of Baja, California. The storm, generating 55-knots winds at ils center, is also generating swells on all south facing beaches along the. Orange Coast. according lo lifeguards. Located 180 miles south southwest of From Page 1 ANIMALS ... belong to th e state. is a qu cstionmark . A former Oklahoman, Mrs. Marsh moved to her house at 614 \V. Bay St. about three months ago. She claims she never had any problems keeplng her animals in Oklahoma but hes run into nothing but trouble in California. "I want to make enough money to take care ot the animals and pay the rent," she says. "That 's all I'm interested in. There are kids in my daughter's school who have never even seen a hone. It would be nice if they cou1d see the animals." l\1rs . l\tarsh claims to have con- siderable esperlence with animals, hav - ing once worked as a trainer for a reptile village in Ericke, Okla. "I tamed them dovm so the people cou ld pet them without them laking their hands orr:· she explains. Mrs. Marsh plans to have her zoo open seven days a week. from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. "J don'! mind spending the time and even tr the people don't come, I'll always have my animals with me," she explains. "Kids like animals but here in Orange County they've outlawed them," 1he con- tinued . "You can't even have more than three pets, period." A frequent visitor to the Orange Coun- ty dog pound to ball out her coycte, Mrs. r.1 arsh this week collected some more pets -six kittens. ..Someone had dumped lhree kittens in the pound's trasb can overn ight ," she says . "And three of them were packed In a box that didn't even have any holes in ii. .. All are now being nuned back to health by Mrs. Marsh with the aS11istance of a miniature feeding bottle. SURFING Foll'72 Point San Eugenia, Joanne is moving northward, with decreasing winds as she approaches Punta, San Pueblo. Five to seven foot waves are pouring in at HUNTINGTON BEACH according to Lifeguard Mark Bodenbender. "A lateral current ls making it difficult for surfers to get at the waves," Boden bender said. "But with these conditions, the pler area is crowded with board surfers this morn- ing." NEWPORT BEACH reports surf in the nine to 10 foot range, with good shape and no wind in the morning. Capt. Bud Belshe says about a dozen surfers are out at 19th Street, and more down toward the groin and rlver jetty. "I'm sure many more will be coming down when they hear about the south swell," be said. LAGUNA BEACH b showing some 6 foot sets: wi th excellent shape. Brooks Street waves are holding up about a ball doien riders tn 88 degree water. For these who won't ditch acbool or call in sick Friday, the prospect& for good surf lhls weekend m slim. aoanne is upected lo dissipale by Salurday morning. The tide chart for Friday looks like lh~: First low tide at 2:59 a.m. at 0.8 teet; first high at 9:09 a.m. at 5.7 feet; "l!!l'Ond low at 3:35 p.m., 0.4 feet; second high at 10: 14 p.m. at 4.5 feet. Fl'OlllPqel CARPENTER. • • make any more comments right now because it would only increase the hostility," Martin said. Mrs. Jackson, challenging Martin's earlier remarks that the remaining tenants want to "get on the state's gravy train," sald today they are only in- terested ln equitable treatment. "We're not out to make a lump sum or money. All wt w~t is a fair shake. We feel like we're 1etttng a raw deal," she t.'\.mmented. From Pagel SUSPECT CHARGED . •• Ana dealer. A team of six detectives assigned to different angles of the murder duel ap- parenlly developed information Wed· nesday pointing to Bu!faio a1 the suspect. "He took it pretty coolly," Capt. Glasgow said In announcing Buffalo ha d bet!n charged. Investigators said both victim and i;uspect have served lime in prison 111 connection with ruu·coUcs lnvolvement. One strong theory from the outset had been animosity over some dispute over drugs that triggered violence. So far, Buffalo has refused to make 11ny statement to police about lhe case. "We don't nttd one," Capt. Olu&ew rema rked. A Spanish-made rinc, apparently of 7.61 millimeter bore tossed aside at the s<.'t'ne Is being ClUlmlned by the Sheriff'• Crime Lab alone with Perry's .!8 caliber revolver. The rifle bad been fired four tlmc1 and all four cartridge casings were tte0vered at I.ht scene. Perry etnptled hi.s ov,.-n gun tn 1 futile ef fort to hit bis 12:20 a.m. attacker N ht sprawled beside the car, mortally wound· td. One slug smashed into lhe boule oc-- cupied by Randolf Glaese, ~·ho was away from home at UM! time. During invelllg1Uoo in lhe aflermalh of the gun duel. Offlctr Steve Nash lr.nocked at the un it shared by Buffalo and hi.s wi fe Sherri, 28, to ask If they '"'w or heard anyt hing. lie clt~imed he 1mellcd marijuana smoke and $aw a bag or the Illici t y,.·ffd lylng ln plain sight bu1 failed to take ac- tion at that point. Narcotics OttccUvcs Dick DeFranol.sco :tnd Don Cnsey r<'t urned to the Buff alo home and arrested the couple on sup!· clon of possession of marijuana about 3 a.m. Tuesday. Bulfllo was booked inlo city jall where he wu ~steel on the murder charge Wed....ity nighl, while his wile Sherri i. in Or1nge County Jail, facln& only the _.ion of marljullll cbati•· Their tO-ytaMld oon was dellvmd lo lhe Cllllody of ~ltndl, bul undet' Ille lat.ett clrcumstancet could conceivably be pi1ced in care of lilt county'• Albert SI tton home. Bulfalo'1 lut arrat In Coola M,.. w11 Aug. 2, when he was booked for failure to ldenllfy hlllll<lf afleT belnJ olopped by Polloe f<lr queotlonlnc. He has done time In =n· but a SPok"mM 'for the cal 11 Adult Authorily'• porole 41vl1ion in Santa Alla said today abe Is not cettaln whe n he waa re luted. 1beJr recordl ahow oou.nty ca1e1 In which Bulf1io ,.., convicted, while his alltged vk:tlm's county criminal record dllos bock 12 yoon. 1be leU'Cb for family or friend.I or Perry, who went by the name Warner Allmen too, "" 1tili being oougbt for dellll notUIClllon and poalble ln- fonnaUon on the neture of blJ alleged connoctlon with Bulfllo. Police •1 they undenll.n<' r..,,,·, ponmi. hid moved lo ~ Need A Few Labels? AUSTIN, Te.i. !UPI) -An El PHO, Tex., firm must pay $2,680 plua at· torney1' ftts for labell lt ordtred by mistake from the Monarch Marking Co. The ownen of Retd's Photo 1'1art, Inc. said he inlended lo order 4,000 labtis bul mlslokenly ordered four mUllon. throuah 1enerono JO"""l"fDI subvenllons whlcll a!110U11rlo 10 Piffiiit of the coll of ... -and 71 pmtnl ol lhe coll of new tralal. Bui, Wilker lllded, llrilain shares wllb the Uni~ siat.. the problem of lilt cities. "We have aome advantaa:es be- cause not all of our city ctnttn have declined," be pointed out. Regional shopping centers, such as found In Orange County, are not practical Jn Britain and are, in Tact dlaoouraged. "to keep alive the downtown' area&.~ Walftr iJ currtnUy Oil a oarnpelpl lo wipe out all sl\llDI and to~modemile be- tween two to three million older houses within the next 10 years. Also lnvolved in the lG-year plan is to landJcape land bnrtalhed by the Inda. lriaJ Rovolulion. With regard to new development, guide- lines strea.ing environmental comerv• tion ar~ being developed for evt.rY va· cant acre and the local plann.inl: authority given ablolute power of enforcement. 2 Brothers, Shot In Mesa, Charged With Burglaries Criminal complainb c:bargin& ~ one but two separate )>urgisrles lo a pllt of Los Angeles brother.I iibotgunned at a Costa Mesa bar eafly Monday have been issued , but one suspect is in no shape to go to court. Steve Corona, 24, was scheduled for ar· raignment on the twin counts in Harbor Judicial District COurt today, pnllce Slid. His brother LWgl, 25, however, re- malnl in fair condillon at Oraoge COUnty Medical Center's jail ward whm be is recovering from ourgery oo a ahotiuit blast lllat ohredded hla groin and lower abdomen. ''They don't want to move him yet," noted DetecUve Sgt. Keilll Carpenler this morning. The Corona brothen are accused of burglarizing Snoopy's, ZOOO Newport Blvd., during predawn hours before being confronted down the street at Pier 11, 1976 Newport Blvd., by an irate vending machine operator. H"'ry 8 . Stegmann, M, lold Police his pool tables and ammement macbtnes have been victims of burglary ao often recently be began making the rounds nn hlJ own vigilante patrol. Stegmann said when It became obvkKm >Oll\e<>De was Inside Pier II be ordtred them out at abolgun point and opened fire whei! it a_,..i lo him Ille l!llP"CI was going for a gun. · ) DAILY ll'ILOT Ntw1 Ml' ARROWS INDICATE ,SITES PROPOSED FOR NEW COUNTY SEAT Supervisor Suggests Move to South for County Administration From Pagel CASPERS' REMARKS • • • chairman which read in part, "ethnic slurs bring you no honor. I am filled with disgust UICI IDi" lllal you would make anti·Mexiean-Amerlcan statements in a public meeUng." Ruiz conUnued, "It is incredible to me that any rational, responsible public of· ficial co~ utter such intemperate remarks -remarks which can only serve but to inflame emotions and foster unrest." Caspers, in his three years on !he board has been somewhat famous for his off the cuff remarks. it doesn't" have ethnic balance," Caspers CQntended. "The minorities have the ear of too many supervilors." Some oblerven thought Caspen was just making a job In bid laste. But then CUper1 seriously asked Orange County Counsel Adrian Kuyper if the County Seat could bt legally Shilled lo another place. . Kuyper .llld, he'~ , hlive \9 study the IJS\le. Superb Luxury in Pure Wool Pile byKarastan Meanwhile today, Adelante President Milton Reed called a press conference and declared, "We'll do something very strong about that racial slur." Adelante has strongly supported the minority hiring plan as had LULAC, a Chicano poli tical action group. The minority hiring program won a sup- parting recommendation from county Personnel Director William Hart. Other county board members reacted with considerable caution today as con- troversy surrounded Caspers' remarks. Ralph Clark, Ille Fourth District supervisor from Anaheim said, "I don't think anything like tbat could be done without tremendous cost to the tax- payers. I'm satisfied with the facility being where it Is." Supervisor Robert Battin, wOOse First District Includes the county seat and more than half of the Mexican-American po~ulation of the county, was cut cam- paigning today. • km ... u11~tftltanpetS111dclcalar. Sowlll yeuwhff you'" and fe1I the mc11nlflcent luxury of Its thlc:k, deep put'tl wool pile. Its amazing price of lust tbQ.OO a 1quaN yard 11 clue to a malor breakthrough In wool ,.mnelogy. Ka rattan glv•1 "'h flb.r Cl tpeclal bulk Ing treatment 10 the yam laufatter," and mo,. ,.tlllent. A truly remo.rkable'Yeth.11. Tht 17 colon ere .,.ctecular toe. ... !11111& _, w.,,.... ... ,....,,..,, yofll Ute,.,, ........... Your f1vorit1 t11+1rior ~••itn•r will be hippy to ••t11t you. H.J.GARl\ETf fURNl"fURE rkOFHSIONAL INTU!Ok DESllNUS Op•ft Mo"·· Thur,, • Fri. E"•'· 22 11 HARIOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. •