HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-16 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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Stake Through Hear( ...
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Puts His Mind at Best
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Dana Harbor Suffers Wild Weekend
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Newport Physician
Son's Hope Dims
For Lost Father ·
Authorities said today they will decide
tonight whether or not to continue the air
search for Newport Beach physician Dr.
George Peck, who has been missing in a
light plane since Oct. 3.
"Unless there is something new that
develops (oday, we'll probably suspend
the search as of tonight," a spokesman
for the Western Rescue Coordination
Center at Hamilton A.Jr Force Base in
San Rafael said this morning. ·
specialist, left Orange County Airport on
an e&rly evening fligh~was due back tt three hour.$. He fil flight plan and
authorities note this bad de the search
extremely difficult and t' consuming.
Swke in Heart
Allays Banker's
Fears on Burial
He said officials of the center, which
bas been paying tbE: cost of the two-week
search, will meet With the bead of the
California Civil Air Patrol this evening to
make the decisio""ft. 1 LONDON (UPI) -When llarold West
The chances of the CAP finding -~~died, his doctor drove a stake·through his
anything f1ew today are slim since tbet heart to make sure he was dead; when
have no planfiB in the air, a spokesman he was buried, they did not nail bis coffin --~·~-~ They sent 22 airplanes aloft over the west was no vampire. He was just a weekend scouring an area from San Francisco south to the Mexican border. cautious banker who feared being burie(!
The search stopped at the border, alive. however, because the CAP is nOt When be died last June at 90, West left
authorized to search Mexican territory. a will direcing that "my coffin shall not
"That's a problem we're trying to work be screwed down and that a surgeon be
out now, .. ' said Thomas Valenzuela. a instructed to pierce my heart with a steel
CAP olliclal who said be met with Mex· or other instrument to make certain death has occurred." lean officials over the past weekend to H' f 'I ph -• Ian Dr E I Ke is army ylSJc , . re rr, di~5!:on't help us with this search but said Sunday: "I did what Mr. West
maybe we can work something out with wanted, but it was the lint request 0£
tbetr Air Fon::e in the future," lie said. that sort I bad ever bad."
The pending decision. to suspend t h e Kerr said West, a Londort bank
search for Dr. Peck did not surprise his manager, wanted to be certain he wottld
son, Douglas Peck of Los Angeles, wbo be dead when be went to his grave, but if
spent the weekend at the CAP control by chance be was not, he wanted a
center at Brackett Field in Pomona. means of escape. "They've combed tbe entire area "Re was very meticulous In his habits
twice," the younger Peclt said, "and they as a bank manager,". tilt! doctor said.
haven't found a trace. -• "But this did not seem to be overdoing it.
"It's kinda frightening and I bkve lost Many people have fears of this sort."
faith a lltUe that they will find him alive. Maurice West, the banker's nephew
"There's still that glimmer of hope, who received the bulk of the $87,000 his
though," Peck said. uncle left, said: "It was an odd request
Or. Peck, a prominent a 11 e r g y blit if you can't have your own way at
that time of life -l mean death -when
can you?"
LOTS TO SEU?
LIST IT HERE
W1lm l'OU've got a lot to sell, l)at It all
where people sen a lot .• Jlke ~
GOl.b 4 pc. ~tloll&l, any 2
n1ake couch. Bed tn 1. any
pc. $50. 2 new Sold nnl. occ
chrs. Mlle. chests, tbll
J.ICIOW?' vac. Mlcroaco~.
typewrt.r ., chrome fire set il
8Ctttl'I ttu1 nauah. totebed It
chair. $50, xxx·xxxx.
"Wow! Fantastic!'' That's the way the
advcrtlaer described the response to that
ad. Tty It for l'OUrtel!, Dial the direct
line to DAILY PILOT classified edver-
llslng, 14W678.
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The banker left $1,250 to the Rev .
David Wright of ~t. Paul 's Anglican
Cl\ureh in Worthing, 90Ulh of London,
where West lived.
"He was a lonely old man, afraid of
many-things," said Mr. Wright's wife,
Allee ... But he had fa ith and was looking
fOl'Wlrd to gotu& to ~ven.
"We shall buy a car with the money,"
she said.
tire Ousts Governor • LAS VEGAS, Nov. (UPI) -Gov. Mike
O'Callaghan was forced to n~ 11 La11
Vegas "Strip" motel early 'Sunday when
a fire broke out, routing !!Cores of guesta.
No one wal injured In the blaze at the
Atglen Motel, adla<ent to the Thundcr.
bird !tot.I.
That Sinking Feeli._g
A car is almost submerged in water and mud near
a motel on Highway 1 in the Big Sur area after
heavy rains precipitated mud slides and caused a
half million do!Jars in damage in the area of the Big
Sur Village store.
Badly Beaten
Girl of 13 l(m.naped,
RapedinL,agunaBeach
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of ttot ~Ill' ~llet Stiff
A 13-year-0ld girl walking down a
Laguna Beach street was kidnaped,
raped, forced to t.mit to perverted sn
acts, and beaten two men who ab-
ducted her Sunda night.
She was released in the Hollywood
area. After bospitall7.ation for treatment
of a possible skull fracture and cuts, the
girl was returned to her mother today.
The girl had been visiting relnllvts
with her mother when the Incident oc·
curred.
Laguna Beach Det. Sitt. Nell Purtell
r ~•id the girl had been struck twice with
some kind of weapon.
Purcell said the victim wns forcibly
raped, forced to submit to unnaurnl acts
and robbed or personal jewelry by the
men who beat her.
" "She was in a somewhat dazed and
confused condition," Purcell said.
She called Hollywood relatives from a
telephone in a service station after being
released by the men.
A massive police search h a d been
undertaken In the Laguna Beach area
afler first reports ()f the kldnaping were
made. <
The caJUornla Highway Patrol had
ntabllshed a roadblock along Laguna
Canyon Road and heUcoptcrs from
neighboring police departments were
employed In searching rugged canyon
areas .
:J'he abduction began In a quiet Laguna
8'och side street.
Scrc11mlng hysterically. the ynunl( girl
was dragged Into her abductors' white
sednn whllt her young c<Jtlsln ran to a
(Ii« KIDNAP, Page li
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Gang Selected
Random Victims,
A11tl1ority Says
CHICAGO (AP) -Sheriff Richard J .
Elrod says eight members of a black ter·
rorist gang charged Jn lhe rreent
murders of nine persons were apparently
"roaming the countryside looking for
someone to kill."
Authorities said appnrtntly not all of
lh& eight men charg&d participated in alt
slayinp',s.
Elrod told newf'mcn Sunday the nine
white victims, Including the members of
two separ1He famil ies. apparently were
randomJy selected by a Chicago Slrtt!l
gang he said cillled It.sell "De Mau
1111;.u." ,
Asked Atx>ut po.'31ble racial motlv1Uon.
. Elrod said, "I can see no other apP.attnt
motiv1U.k:ln." •
Stx men \tre beine: held without bond ,
twC) C)lhers are m.ill beirig Jll()Ught.
The murders took place In the Jtllool!
communllie.s of BRrrinR:ton Hills. Monee,
!See ~fURDERS, Page!)
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Boater Cuts
In Line-
With Pistol
w . An up tight yachtsman who allegedly
used his pistol to defend his right to cut
in line at the Dana Harbor launching
ramp Sunday was still being sought by
authorities today.
The incident which occurred at the
lauoching ramp at about noon Sunday
typified a hectic weekend for harbor
patrolmen, who did most or their in-
veStigation on dry . land at the new°'
recreation facil ity.
!1leir fither cases involved :
-A customer at a posh restaurant fall-
ing from a second-floor balcony onto a
restaurant cmploye.
-AnOther patron of the same
establishment choking on a piece of pop-
corn.
-Four bowled-Over sailboats.
-Five power boats in distress 0t sea.
--One fisherman washed from the west
breakwater.
The gun incident took place in the
·afternoon hours Sunday as boaters-were
waiting their turn to use the busy
launching ramp.
Patrol_spd'kesmen said Robert French,
32, or Orange had been waiting his turn
for some time when an unidentified man
and his calrlh cruiser came in and took a
place· ahead of French's craft at the
waiting docks.
hn argument ensued and French untied
the bowline of the usupcr's craft . At that
point the irAte skipper emerged from the
cockpit with a pistol.
··rouch my boat again. and ru blow
your head orr:· he told his fellow
seaman.
F'rench then left to seek patrolmen.
When they returned, the boat and gllll-
man had fled.
Officers issued a general broadcast ror
the boat and car assertcdly owned by the
(See YACHT, Page%)
Orange Const
'"en Cher
Variable cloudiness on Tuesday,
but mostly sunny. with hlgbs at
the beaches around 74 rlsln1 to 71
inland. Lo~s tonlght_58-«2.
INSlllE TOUi\:V
Nari Ginnm111'1 Lu/ttDOffc had
J)ians for bombing mi.!tfOft.S Ol'l
U.S. rilits durlno tht war, oc-
cordiny to rtctnllt1 d!seot>trtd
paptr.!. See story on Pagt 4.
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-~AILY P_ll_D_l ____ > _____ ,·_:''_'0:_•.;.1_0'l"t11>' l t , 1 ~1 1.•
Team Sees 130 Coast Nuclear Plant·s
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• From Pagel
MURDERS ...
llld>land Part .ml C<lrbondale.
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SA.\""l'A ~I ON1('A (AP! -r1r1ure
t alllom1a "'1lh nuclt>ar power 1ilant:i
spaced only l!1ght mil es apart e1ong 1he
~tate's t'nt1 rc LOlO-m1\~ coa~t
The portta11 Is Dot \\ tumsical. a
r1~search learn <it R<1nd (".r!rp. rr1)j1rlt·d
today 1n a stlld)' ("()ffim~s1oncd by I.hi.!
Ll.•gisla tu re.
1'™' rest'UrC'hCrs snid c:lcn1<1nJs lti tht!
nation's most populou!S :-t..1tc are <K'·
celerntini:: ~o l'norrnously that unless
JXl"'-'Cr gro\vth 1s rt::<ft1t:l'<I, r n11r.1mians
\\'Ill need 131'1 huge nc\\' po11o•cr pl ants by
thr 21 ~t C1•n 1ury
In fa<-1. each plant would ha v~ to be 111
lilt• 1.200 mecawatt range. twice 1ht'
t;rpac1ty of the st.1tc's only sizeable
uuc lear pow er plant localed on the ~st
_Jl San Ooufre near lhe \Vestcm Whit~
ltoUM.
Although doubttnl( enough suitable
coastal sites could be rouod1 the
researcher11 exphun that ullUty corn·
punies look fot ocean locations because
they want cheap water for c.'OOling.
lf the new plauts were bullt along the
0<·enn. !he researchers sald . "then iii the
)'f'ar 2(X(I there would be 1.200-niegawatt
power plaut.s eve ry eight n1lles along Ole
co::ist."
1'he Rand t('a1n propo.,.es t h a t
C:ilifom ia sl ow hs <'l~ctrlcal use growth
instead, because so many plants would
Utrl•atcn a ''deteriorated enrivonment ''
Nixon Pro111ise
'Prisone rs Won't Be Abando1ied'
WASHINGTON (UPr ) -President Nix.on tnade an wtScbeduJed visit to a
convention of families or American POWs today and promised that 1'under no
circumstances" would lhc men be abandoned.
"We cannot leave their fate to lhe good "'ill of the enemy," Nixon said.
Nixon said that1 negotiations aimed al ending the war had been "very in·
~n.sive',' over the p'.ast year, but declined to give specifics for fear .this might
1eopard1ze success of the negotiations -and because "I would not want to raise false hope!!."
Henry A. Kiss inger, Nixon's chief negotiator on Vietnam, had been ex·
peeled to address the gn thering at the Statler Hilton HoteJ of the Nalional
League of Farpilics of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia.
Bui Nixon told the meeling he decided to p~mpt IUssinger because he
wanted the opportunity lo thank the organization for supporting his policies in
Southeast Asia.
Ballot Spot Sought
Supreme Court Denies
Schmitz' Party Suit
\VASHrNGTON (UPI) -The U.S.
Supreme Court refused today to allow the
A.merican Party to sue 17 states and the
District of O>lumbia directly in the high
court to get a place on the ballot in
November.
The court acted in a brier order
without corrunent.
. About 2.5 slates have granted ballot
\ position to the party, which is running
, conservative Rep. John G. Schmitz or
Tustin for president and Thomas J.
Anderson. a Tennesiee publisher, for
vice president.
Suits filed originally in the Supreme
Coort conce rn mainly disputes between
lhe states over boundaries of offshore
resources.
The American Party's suit said t"'
defendant states \'.'Cre violating Lhe First
Amendment's guarantee of free speech.
"'Phe first to vote freely for the can-
didate of one's choi~ Is the essence of a
democratic society," the complaint said,
"and any restrictions on that right strike
al the heart of representative govem-
men.''
The 1>tates the party wanted to sue are
Arkansas. Florida. Ceor11:ia, Hawaii,
Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Massachusells,
Missouri. Nebraska, Nevada. New York,
Rhode Island. South O::akOta. Texas, West
Virginia and Wyoming
rn other action. the high court in a 7-2
vote today rejected one more in a Jong
series.,sf legal c}'lallenges that 1he Vie~
nam war is uncotlstitutional.
Justices William 0. Douglas and
William J. Brennan Jr. dissented
vigorously, saying no declaration of war
had been made by Congress aod that the
question really was the constitutionality
of "a presidential war ."
The court aclcd in a cnse where three
Bod y of Girl Found
~I ATLANTA (UPI ) -The body or 1:1 16-
r-oJd girl who had been beaten was
nd in an undeveloped Area north of the
llachoochee nlver, police sold. The
fictim was identifieU as Georgette Ann
Smllh of Atlanta. a.,sludent .
Californians claimed Congress fllegally
delcl{ated its war declaration powers to
the President in 1961.
In other actions. the court :
-Refused to delay a lower court's
orde~ calling ror busing or about 14,000
pubhc school students in ;\1emphis next
Janu.ary, '.1nd also refused to speed up
cons1derat1on of a busing case Crom
Richmond, Va.
-Declined lo review lower court rul·
ings from Ohio which exempted the auto
insurance business from fecferal anlitrusl
laws on grounds the state exercises
regulatory powers in the field.
-Agreed to bear a Georgia case to
decide whether the 1965 Voting Rights A~t p~tecting politicaJ rights of racial
m1nor1t1es applies to state legislative
reappart!onments.
Parlor Closin.g
0 K' b)· Court
WASH GTON (AP) -'!'he U.S.
Supreme Co u r I today gave a
Virgin· city authority to close
-nt1ssa e parlors where women give
rubdo to men.
city . contended the parlors
we · nothing but "euphemistic
aliases" ror houses of prostitution,
and noted that one operator
"conceded that his girls massaged
'every part of the (male patron's}
body, and that includes every part
or the body: "
Robert Kisley, operator ()f two
massage parlors in Falls Church a
Washington suburb. argued thal a
cit.y ordinance prohibiting a woman
from giving a massage to a man
violated the equal-rights provblon
of the 14th Amendment and the
Civil Rights Act or 1964, which
makes discrimination based on se1
illegal .
and power soortage could be expected
anyway unless a careful coosructlon
timetable were met.
Suggesting commercial and residential
conservation tedullques rMging from
turning out the Ugbts ln an empty room
to using solar ~ergy for water heating,
!ht! researchers say cutting ruturu p~
J&:led electrical use by 60 percent ls "a
reasonable goat"
Thus, the projected 3.1.5 millkln Califor·
ni<tn$ of the 21st Century should use 300
billion kllowatl hourS a yrar instead or
the 848 billion kilowatt hours expected
at the current growth rate.
~ reduced figure would still be near·
ly triple the current poy,·er U!t by the
FromP419el
YACHT .. _.
1'ilale's ·20 milllon rtsldents.
The Rand team also suggests a "g~
xlow" Policy on new nuclear power
plants, now contemplated as the heart of
cauromia's future electrical system.
''Besides the rhk or nuclear accident,"
Rand st1kl, "the researc:Hers point to the
unsolved problem of dJsposlng of hlgh-
\ev~I radioactive wastes, v.·hicb rernaln
dangen1us for thousands of years."
Pl&nts 1.-ould harness alternative JlO"'er
\sources, the tesearchers said, such .as
goothennal energy -underground steanl
fhat can be converted into electricity.
"lf the geothennal resources believed
lo e:1ist in Imperial Valley in the
Southern California desert "·ere t111mes.s-
OO in a 13-t.o-t~ year program, no <Jlher
th pawu planUI could be roquJred etrr
1965," Rand stated, provided the state
c.'Ould hold to a trowth r11te or 3' percent
annually.
A second Rand study. commissioned
l!ke the other for tho state Assembly's
Committee. on Planning nnd Land Use,
said that even if growth-slowing pollcies
11o·ere succes.oJ!ul about 23 plants In the
l.20Q..megawajt range will be needed.
The secon~ report recommended a
state afency be estabHshtd to select
potenUa s.lJ:es and deal with expected
t'Ontroversies over plunking do11.•n such
fucl!ities around the sta te.
End 'Market Power'
suspect. So rar no arrC9tS have been ..
made. u: S. May ~eek
Among the more Uf\USUal cases:' was:
that or the falling customer.
That took place Saturday et the Jolly
Roger Restaurant.
Patrolmen said the patron, Carles
Henry or 26292 Via California, Capistrano
Beach, Jost his rooting and toppled onto
an unidentified male employe <Jf the
establishment.
Henry was unhurt; the employe was
knocked out foi a short time, but sought
no treatment~ he recovered con-
sciousness,
On the same day, of ricers answCred
another call at the Jolly Roger and found
a woman customer regaining her breath.
The woman, they said, had choked on a
piece of popcorn while having a cocktail
in the restaurant's lounge.
Kenne~y Women
Differ; Diamond
Dipped in S11ds
ROCKVILLE, Md. ( APl -Whore
Ethel Kennedy and Eun.ice Kennedy
Shriver were concerned. singer Neil Dia·
niond wasn't about to take sides. And he
ended up with his hair soaked in beer.
Rock star Diamond was one of the at·
tractions at a Democratic fund-raising
party Sunday on the lawn of Lhe home
rented by vice-presidential nominee
Sargent Shriver.
Mrs. Shriver introdured Diamond by
requesting "Sweet.llhroline.''
"I've asked him, tp sing the song first
of the woman he loved most," she told
the crowd.
But Mrs. Kennedy had other ideas. Sbe
wanted to hear "New York Boy." ·
"This is a terrible predicament," Dia-
mond moaned and decided to delay both
tunes. "I'm chicken is what I am," he
explained.
But after an interlude of several songs,
Diamond broke 1nto his top-selling
"Sweet Caroline."
Mrs. Kennedy, who had been pic-
nicking on the grass near the stage.
quietl y walked up behind him and
emptied a big pa~ carton of beer over
his long hair.
, Smil!og, she ambled offstage. Diamond
drietl his hair, and promptly the audience
recognized the strain5 of ''New York
Boy."
PRINCESS GOES
IN FOR SWIM
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PERTH, Australia {AP) -Princess
:P.1argarel of Britain and her husband
Lord Snowdon went for a ri\idnight swim
,after spending three hours at a barbecue
)n 106 • degree temperatures al an
· Australian ranch.
The dip Sunday night was the se("()ocf of
the day for the royal couple. They cooled
themselves at poolside earlier after a
dusty, 12-mUe ride from Filmly Crossing
to V.o Go Station, site of the barbecue.
-
Break~p of1 (BM
' NEW YORK (AP) -The federal !·le said the r govemment interjected
government said tod~y that if it wins its new iSf:'ues in lhe case by adding the
31h·ycar-old suit against International company's overseas busi~ss to the
Business Machines Corp .. it likely will domestic operations that were the target
Cot'seek the breatup of the huge company's of th~ original complaint.
co~puter operations into competing The company 1¥'_Yer contended the
uruts. .tll6.lernment could not prove its antitrust
The Justice Department stated its posi· ,-se if forced to go to trial now and said
tion in a court-Ordered paper in U.S. the government was pressuring IBM -
DistriCt CDurt here. listing "tentative" comparing the pressure to the \\.'i'ighl of
remedies: to "dissipate the enormous an .elephant.
market power or t~e current lB1'1 c~m-"We ·feel that weight. and we want to
puter manufacturmg and markeUng stop it," Barr said. "If he bumps you, he
structure." bumps you quite a Jong ways.''
The g~vemme~t, which had been ~sk~ The fifth biggest corporation in the
to sub mit a detailed proposal of action it country, and the world's biggest com-belie~ed should be taken ag~':15i I~M, puter make•, IBM had sales or $8.27
said It could not be more specific until a billion and earnings of $1.68 billion last
more precise analysis of IBM)s markets year.'
was made. IBM World Trade Corp. is responsible An attorney for ~M ch9ed that the for overseas operations. \Vh1te the
government was add1n~ new issues .~o the domestic ann of IBM has been slowing
case af!d could ~t wtn a court trial of down -with earnings growing at an arr
the antitrust achon. . . nua l rate of abot11 7 percent a year -~e New York Stock Exchange,, c1h~g \Vorld Trade revenue · t ed 16 an influx of orders, halted tr.ad1ng 1n . s regfis er a lBti-1 stock after the Justice Department percent gain last year and ~w1ted for
statemenls. IBM stock was down fl.75. ~ore than half the compan s total prof-
to $376.25, for the day before trading 1 • was halted. Some induSlry observers believe that
The Justice Department said that without the expansion of oversees opera.
although precise details of the proposed tions and the interest and dividend in-
divestiture could not be provided· at th.is come from the company's cash and
time, the brealatp of the multibillion-securities, IBM Y."Ould have been
dollar firm would be accomplished "by recording no year-to-year gains in profits
the formation of the total domestic aod in recent years.
international computer sySjlems faciliUes
of mM into several separate, in-
dependent and competitive balanced en-
tities capable of competing successfully
in domes:tlc and intemaUonat markets
with one another and With 'other domestic
and foreign competitors."
In a Sept. 12 order, U.S. District Court
Judge David N. Edelstein told the
department it wanted to k n o w
spec.itically what was southt in the way
of relief in one ol the biggest an-
Umonopoly actions ever brought by the
government.
'The suit against IBM was filed Jan. 17.
1969, the last business day of the Johnson
administration, and had not yet come to
trial
Atty. Thomas D. Barr, representing
IBM, said in court that "the case has ex·
ploded" with submission of the govern-
ment proposal.
Quake Stril1.es
South Ha 'YArea .,
REDONDO BEACH (AP) -An
earthquake caused n "bard joll" to-
day in the South Bay area, Redondo
Beach police said, but no damage
was reported.
Seismologists at Caltech i n
Pasadena said the quake. at 5:34
a.m., registered 3.0 on the Richter
sc:ile. The quake was centered near
Redondo Beach. ..
• Police reported telephone calls
from as far south as Wilmington.
Business as
usual at • • •
• -
Elrod. 111< Cook Counly sJl<r{f(, said the
De Mau f..tau orgruu:t.aUon a~paren1/y was
founded several years a,Ro hy V1etnam
veterans who had been dishonorably
discharged. ,...,-
0\arles G. Hd Jr., presldtnt o(
Malcolm X College In C'nicaao. said thrM
men eharged bod been students there,
but said they .had bttn dismissed, He
dtclined lo elaborate.
The most widely reported ol lhe
mutders was the killing or a retlMd In-'
surance executive und three rnembers Qf
his family Aug. 4 in the wealthy Chicago
subuFb of Barrlng1on HUis. ...
Paul Corbett, 67; hls wife, Marlon, 57,
and sister·in·law, Dorothy Derry, 60.•
were round shot through the backs or
J.hl:ir he.1ds. Corbclt's .strpdau8hler,'
lJarbara Boand. 22, was fouh<! dead a fe\v
fct>I away. She had been shot through the
heart. ~
A n1onrh later, three members: o( a
rural Monee family were found shot h>
death in their farmhouse. They were
S1ephen 0 . Jiawtree, 47; hij wife. Judy,
53; and son Thomas, 17.
Police managed to get a 'd'ath-bed
statement from another vlcUm. Army
Spec. 5 William E. Richter, 25, aj~ckt.'<1
while sleeping in a parked truci ·on the
Edens Expressway near the oortbern
Chica go suburb of Highland Parlt. He
told authorities he had been awakened by
three men and shot duritlg a. struggle
'vith them.
The earliest slaying linked to the
charges filed Sunday \1Hs that of Michael
Gerchenson, 19, a Southern Illinois
University student whose body was found
!\fay 3 some 40 miles from the Carbon·
dale campus in the southern part of the
state.
Charged in the Harrington Hills
murders \\"ere Reuben Taylor, 22; his
brother Donald. 21; Michael Clark, :n :
and ~athaniel Burse, 23: The Taylor
brothers, Clark and Burse af!: also
charged \'.'ilh the Monee slayingl
'Clark. Burse, Donald Taylor, Edward
J\1oran Jr., 23 , Robert Wilson, 18, and an
unidentified man still being sought are
charged with Richter's murder, while
anolher wiidentified fugitive was charged
~'ith the killing of Gerchenson.
Elrod said "the big bteak in lhis case
came lhis week on-information provjded
by a reliable informant."
FrornPagel
l(IDNAP ...
nearby residence and telephoned for
police.
The 14-ycar-old LaJ!una Beach youth
described tbe men as about 19 or 20
years of age and had medium length
brown hair. He said the man wbo gni:I>
ed the _girl. grabbed her left arm and
The witness said the car first pulled
pasj them as they. wal,ked along the fron·
lage road to Laguna Canyon Road. · ·
The car stopped,,. backed up aad the
p~nger opened hi5 door. Picking up a
large rock, t,be r(lan ·~f!port.edly threaten-
edt he girl, grabbed her left arm aod
forced.her into the vehicle.
She "'as positioned between the two
men and the car sped away. first turning
onlo Woodland Drive and then onto
La®na Canyon Road.
The kidnaping apparently OCC'\lrrcd
right in front of the trailer park sign by
the Lagun;i Beach Boys Club at about 8
p.m. according to the witness.
The teenagers were walking home
from a billiards parlor located in a near·
by shopping area. The viclim's mother
had reportedly been with the children
there but had left them and gone to a
Cany(ln Acres home earlier.
Laguna Beach officer Terry Temple
talked wilh the girl's mother, staying
with relatives in the Canyon Acres area.
'
o a.t.NG.E COAtt IT
DAILY PILOT Hired Diplomat?
Yes we are QPen for business despite the fire we
had at our store last Monday. We are pretty dusty
and qirty right now but that means we must try
harder than ever to offer you bigger and better
valµes . Our insurance company has allowed us
to repurchase all the crated merchandise and
som4 of the display samples at reduced cost. These '
refrigerators, washers, dryers, dishwashers and
TVs only suffered smoke damage arid their new
guarantees were n!it affected.T hese savings will
be ~ssed on,to you.
'Tftf ~ c-1 DAILY !lit.OT, wt!" W'lllcn
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!he Or•"ll• CM" PvDl"h"" C~rtr. s~
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edlllon )I ll\IOU11'ocd SM11rdny1 -~"""'~'·
I fi'le p>~1pll WDUIMr>Q P,llnl 1$ •t UI) Wttl
a.y :i!rkl, CO.It Mt1•, C.IUOrllJA. fl'tl'.
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' Ki:ssing er Sho·w1i as 'Gu11sli1iger'
S1\N FRAN CISCO (UPI ! -The aulhor
~of a new hook aOOut presidential t:iide
llenry Kl!!singer describes him as a sort
of ''g11nsl1ni.ier" type of profess ional
c:lipfornat that is n1.:w to An\Crlcan
poll tics.
"Kis.<1ingcr hired out to Ne Ison
Rockefeller in 1968 to gun down J~lch.nrd
Nixon for the presidential nomlna1ion."
author·attorney Charles A8hman said
Sund::iy.
"li e failed to !!lop Nixon. but then-join-
ed him as :i for·hire trouble-shooter.
"De Gaulle, the Berlin Wall, Red
China, Vietnam ..• Kl~Jngcr haadle!
them all . So he has moved up in the Nix·
on .admini.,tration LO become IM mosl
powerful No. 2 man in the history or the
United States.
"England, Frantc and some oth<'r
cooptrles have hid diplomats who were
proftsslonalJ and continued to rtpre!H!nt
!heir loontry. thrc:iulJ'l numerout changes
In government.
"But the brilliant llenry Kissinger i.s
the firsl of this 'gun81lngcr' so'rt the
United Slates: has i:ivcr had.''
Ashman aald he even considtred using:
the title. "!lave Brain. Will Travel," for
hls book on Ki.t11dnRer.
Instead. the book, has bffn published
h.v l,yJe. Stu art. Tnc., of Sc<:nUC'Uf. NJ., ;:15
"Ki.'ISinger. The Advcnlures of Super.
Kraut."
Ashman said in an Interview he was
astonished while writing and researching
his book thut so many people he talked to
had forgotten lh;:it KJssinger's job at fille
1968 Republican convention was to "stop
Nixon."
"Al one Jl(lint, an oPtimistic Kissinger
nclunlly t-0/d friends from 1-larvard that
he felt they had st0pped Nixon and
Hockefeller woukl get the nomin.1Uon, ''
AshmAn writes.
"Burled in the press re.ports of
Rockefeller's announcement on May 3,
1968, when he talked about the Vietnam
war 11nd domestic problem!, wes a sug·
J::estlon that the prtsident of the Uniled
Slates should visit Red Chinn," writes
Ashman.
"This Idea Md tome from Of1$, of :l\i
new foreign affairs adviser!! ... norie
other thnn lltnry Ki~lnger.''
Ashman usu: a light approach in hl!
stlJdy of Kls11tnger. dwelling on his Ille in
Germany before Immigrating to
America, his rise-to power within the
Nixon Administration nnd his well·
publicized dates with some of the world's
sexiest women.
"In fnci . he uses somewhat or a gun·
11tinger npproach in his dealings With
\\-Omen," Ashman stiys.
During·tfie weeks of remodeling we will continue
to bring you good values the same as we have
for the past 25 yea rs.
1815 NEWPORT BLVD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA
•
•
• T
e
k
0
r
•
• -
Science Site on Tap
Trustees to Weigh Dana Hills Proposal
PPOJIO~S for 1 unlquf! 18-acre coo·
servatioa and nature center to &erve
Stud"1ta: at O.na Hllls High School will
~me before tnustees of the Capistrano
Unified SChool Olstrict at toolgbt'•
meeting.
Proposed by two Dana lfllls science in·
structors, the center would be develOped
~th about $20.ooo in state grants on a
parcel of land \Vhlch has been olfered
free by.developer A. R. Coke, 'the builder
of Thunderbird home1.
The rugged, woody section of canyon
acreage adjacent to the new high school
campus would be developed to provide
several diverse educational functions for
art, science and humanities students.
It Is being proposed by science depart-
ment chalnnan Jame.s Klein and fellow
science instructor Marvin Sherrill, who
wir serve as pro}eet coordinator.
Trustets as yet have to formally ac-
cept the land and grant a formal en-
dorsement to the grant applieatlon..
[! the · project were to win sttae and
school board blessings, the 18 acres
would be preserved as a wildlife and
plant sanctuary and would be outfitted
Full Slate
Of Trustees
, ·To Assemble
TAKES BOARD SEAT
TruttH Smith
San Diego Zoo
Touts Reinlinrdt,
Roman.tic Rhino
For the rirst time since early last
Spring the Capistrano Unlfl<d School
District Board -of trustees will meet
tonight with a full complement o(
fuembers. ,
Recently elected trustee S t e p h e n
Smith will take the oath of offic.e at
tonight's 7:30 meeting and start serving
a tenn that expires next July.
Smith, a lawyer with practice in
~tissioii Viejo, w.ill fill the post represen-
ling Dana Point, a position left vacant
after the fiery resignation of Robert
Da,hlbert late last spring.
Smith won by.a 2·1 margin over fel1ow
Dana Point resident Robert Greco in
elections early this month.
The agenda the new trustee will face is
a large one, containing several major
Policy matters.
'Ibey include:
-A study session to cover the im·
plications of ballot propositions on school
districts. Of special interest to trustee~ ·
the session will be Proposition 14 and the
tax refonn controversy.
-COOSideration of adopting a set of
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Lion Country guidelines for citizen's advisory com·
Safari may have its sensuous lions, but mittees. The tedmique of appointing
the San Diego 1.oo . is touting a prolific citizen task forces to assist trustees is
beast of its 0\\'11, Reinhardt the romantic commonplace in tbe district. The
rhino. guidelines and policies set out a list of
The zoo announced that Reinhardt m~mbership q_ualifications and opera·
became a father when a baby weighing tional procedures for the groups.
about 135 pounds was born at ·the San --Consideration of the structure of 1
PUqual Wild Animal Park. The park, specific citizen's advisory committee
part of the zoo operation, has 1,800 acrtS whi~ will study the early childhood
for anlmals to roam. education program.
The zoo said Reinhardt's baby, the -The setting up of another committee,
third w
1
hite rhifno alever hlborn in_:~HU~i_!!. t.hL one to n!Vie w the district's mentally
~ rom a em er no nau~ Wl4:_ gifted minor program.
di. -Consider approvals of a proposed Officials also announced Reinhardt has at lel!l six other pregnant female rhinos elementary school site and a nearby site
to his credit. * for a junior high school in the Golf
al .-. Course Hill project proposed for tbe El It wasn't ways i.uat w31. Niguel Golf Course in Laguna Njrnu.J: For nine years, Reinhardt was housed &-~ at the San Diego Zoo with his mate, -Review of preliminary plans for the
Tombassan. For ~ years, they largely six new tennis courts proposed for Dana
ignored each other. Hills ·High School. 1be courts will be part
It's believed the traMfer to the free at-of about $118,00> ln expenses this fisbl
mosphe.re of the wild anlmal park re-year for coinmunity recreation projects
established the rhino's natural Lnclination at schools in the dlstrict. The courts to reproduce. would be installed for both student and
Reinhardt is one of our males who public use at the high school and would
keep company with 15 females, but the be completed at about the same time the
other three males are too young for campus opens to studentJ early next
romance. year. ;
"''' ......... Stretchy Se••lpture
Peter Voulkos' heroic •calo hronie sculpture, over 65 feet long and
w,lghlng thousands of pounds, ts on exhibit for the lirst time al the Sao Fnnclsco Museum of Art, which recently ~pened after almost
two years of recon~tructlon AJ'ld expansipn . •
with tr&lls, plantings or nallve plant
specimens and areas whel"f: students on
walking lectures could stop to examine
environmental and historical concepts.
In an application for a grant, Klein ex·
plained that the tv110 separate canyon
areas provide the last untouched wildlife
refuge in the Dana Point area.
Their use in education, he said, would
preserve and maintain the area in it!
natural state.
Programs using the' terrain VlOUld in-
clude natural history exhibits, displays
keyed to local Indians and their culture,
oth(r display areas and teaching stations
and specific environmental studies.
~ Aides al the Sherman Foundation in
Dana Point have pledged assistance as
well to help in plant studies in the can· ~
yons. ,,,..
The grant will ~ sought from the Stale
Department of Education's Helllth and
Safety unit.
The sum would also include $1,000 to
pay for school staff to keep trails main-
tained. Other funds would be used for a
small amount of office supplies and
services.
Students would do much of the planting
and plant maintenance themselves, a
part of class projects.
The donation of the land by Coke is not
the first such offering by the Dana Point
developer. ·
Recently Coke donated $10,000 to the
district to assist in the landscaping of the
grounds surrounding the high school.
which will open for classes this January.
?\-i uch of that landscaping will be done
by students themselves, enrolled in, the
school's horticulture programs~.
To assist that along, the school has ob-
tained the donation of more than $500
worth of railroad ties which will be used
in major landscaping projects.
Those materials were given by the
Santa Fe Rail Road recenUy and are.
SUJ'{>IUS ties from a recent renovation of
the railway roadbed in the Soutb Coast
area.
So\lth Coast Unit
Approves Pact
For Water Main
Directors of the South Coast County
Water District have accepted a bid of
$559,160 for construction of a 24-inch
water main to replace the existing 16-
inch pipellne from the south city limlts of
Laguna Beach to 11th Avenue in South
Laguna.
The low bid was submitted by Edmond
J. Vadnais of Etiwanda, one of 10 bidders
on the project. Plans call for installation
of 10,700 fee t of 24-inch asbestos cement
pipe to replace the badly deteriorated
concrete cylinder main installed in 1948.
The engineer's estimate on the job was
$568,551 .
Extra heavy pipe and a deep cut under
the stream bed at Aliso Creek will be re--
quired as protection against Oood and
Vadnais estimated the crossing alone will
cost $60,000.
Work on 'the project is expected to
start Nov. t, with.completion scheduled
by June, 1973.
The new main will connect with the
new 20-inch feeder line from the $4
million Laguna Canyon transmission line
installed last year, and is expected to ·
a~ure an adequate water supply to the
South County area for many years.
Islands · Putting
Out Sexy ¥oney
LONDON (AP) -A bank note from
Seychelles Islands is money w l l h a
message: Se:a:.
The word is clearly spelled out in the
waving fronds of a cluster of palm trees
depicted on the note alongside a portfttt
of Queen EliI.abeth It. It is evident wMn
the note ls turned on its side.
Authorities on the British crown colony
in the Indian Ocean seem so em·
barTassed by the discovery they are
trying to stop the notes from leaving the
islands' shores.
But some are being smuggled out.
Their scarcity vaJue in London is such
that the notes are fetching three times
their face value of just under four pounds
-about $10 -among coUectors.
Bachelor Party Joke
Sticks With Victhu
LEICESTER, England {UPI) -J'olice
reported they had to use a hammer and
chisel to free a man who staggered into a
police 1tation wearing a steel chtlstlty
bea.
1bfl man said friends clamped the hell
on hlm and locked it In a stag party the
night be.fore his wedding.
HE NEEDS 3
TIMES LOVE
RECIFE, Brull CUPll -Polk:e
threw Bras Lira de Moura ln Jail
ror bliamy despite tiia explanation
of why he had married three
women .
"I'm a farm worker 10 1 need
more love than most people," de
~1oura told authorities.
)
DAIL 'S Pll.GT 3
LagunaO~s
War Veteran
Joh ~iring
The Laguna Beach C;ty Council W If>"
proved partk:lpotlon in the Cederally
funded Veterans Demonstration Program
to provide the city with two fuil·tlme and
two part.time veteran employes for the:
coming year. at the nominal cost ol $980.
Under the program, City Manager
Lawrence Rose told the council, $25,000
has been aUocated to Laguna Beach to
pay the salaries of the veterans, with the
eity required only to p.ay the customary
employe insurance and health benefit-'.
The money will pay an account clerk'
for the Police Department. an assistant
planner for the Planning Department and
two half-time typist clerks for general ci·
.. ty ball WC1rk.
DAILY l'ILOT ll•tf PMtt>
Tempe1·atu1·es Rising?
' I
Sandy Ste.nman and Erwin Hiffman, San Clemente sign painter tvho ....
made 25 Jumbo thermometers for ·United Fund, display the finished
product. The thermometers will be placed in local businesses t o show
the progress of the campaign.
Saddlehack YMCA Plans
Programs for New Facility
The Saddleback Valley YMCA will hand .. ye coord;nation for p:e-,ler:.
move into its new building in El Toro in Cl~ begin Nov. Zl at 9:30 a .rri. for
No'"'.ember with programs ranging from cr.ildren three to five-years old. Every
cake decorating to the "l()().~lile Run for Tuesday and Thursday .for five weeks.
Your Life.'' . -Crafts for Kids: For children ages 9
The YMCA, currently housed 1n an of· to 12, ii begins Nov. 21 and runs every
fi~e building on El Toro Road, by Nov. 15 Tuesday for eight weeks at 4 p.m.
will move a few bl~ks up the street to -Tu m bl i n g -gymnastics: Every
23131 . Orange Avenu.e, where they'll have Wednesday al 4 p.m. for six wee);s begin-
mtetmg rooros available. .__... ning Nov. 22. For 9 to 12-year-olds.
YMCA director Wilson GilinSky said -Guitar Beginning: For ages 9 to 16,
that programs such as judo, sailing and every 1'11ursday for eight weeks begin-
others will be added wben instructors are ning Nov. 30. '
found and interested persons sign up. -Fitness Finders: For all ages, class
Registration deadline, for all fall pro-includes testiltg and exercise. Beginning
grams is Nov. 10. Classes are limited to Nov. 20, every Monday and Wednesday
an enrollment of to. for six weeks at 9:30 a.m. Babysitting
For information regarding cost and provided. . ·
enrollment, call 830-YMCl. They serves -Effective Parenthood: ~ix we_e k
residents or El Toro, Mission Viejo, C?UJ'Se every Wednesday evening bt!g1n-
Laguna Hills and Irvine. n1n~ Nov .. 29 to help .parents understand . . their role m the family.
Glhnsky announced that the .folloWlng -Yoga: Ten sessions beginning Nov. 22
programs hav~ ~n scheduled. . at I p.m. Babysitting available. -M~el building for boys and g1.rls -100 Mlle Run for Your Lile: For jog·
ages .nine ~o 12 rverr ~ionday at 4 p.m. gers between Nov . 15 and April 15. Run
f(lr e1~ht \l;eeks. Begins Nov. 20. at borne or the YMCA lot, while the Y
-K1ndergym : A program lo develop keeps I rack of everyone's mileage.
Story Hours Slated
Story hours for tots in the 2~ to $-year
age group are scheduled from 10 a.m. to
10:30 a.m. each Wednesday at the
Laguna Beach library, '1:f.Y1 N. Coast
Highway.
Library staff members will read to the
youngsters, who may be dropped off at
the library, hut s h o u I d be picked up
prompUy at 10 :30, says librarian CJifford
Cave.
Trophies will be given to thosl: wbo run
100 miles or more.
-Cake decorating: Every Friday
morning at 9 a.m. beginning Nov. 17 for
eig!!t weeks. Participants can eat their
own creations. Babysitting avallable.
-Crafts for Women : Seasions every
Tuesday and 'Mlursday at I p.m. for five
weeks beginning Nov. 21. Baby sitting Is
provided
-Holiday Day Camp: For children 5 to
ti years old from Dec. 26 to 29. It will
feature arts and craft!!, trips, movie& and
a party.
Cancii'1ates for-the positions are
screened by the Federal Department or
Human Resources, Rose said, but t h e
city is n o t obligated to accept the l'.M!r·
sons selected.
They must be Orange County residents
who have seen active duty with any of
the armed services since A\Jg. 5, 1964.
The federal program was set up to
assist unemployed or underemployed
veterans of the Vietnam period on a tern·
porary basis, Rose said, and includes
returning veterans who may be attending
school and need a chance to help
themselves financially.
Brito1is 'Fiddle'
While · Spouses
Pla y 'Lysistrata'
CHESHIRE, England (UPI) -Si x1
wives said toctaY they will not have sex
with their husbands until they &have orr
the beards they grew for an amateur
theater produclion.
The men grew their beards for a local
production of "Fiddler on the Roof" to
be staged in four weeks.
"The beard is horrible," said Rose
Ormerod, 37, of her husband Ken's
whiskers. "I can't go near him or even
kiss him. Until he shaves off his whisk·
ers, I am sleeping in a separate bed and
the kissing and cuddling is out."
Ken, 41, said: "We're sticking to our
guns. It's going to be tough but the
beards stay on until after the perform·
ance. False beards always look so fake.
\Ve wanted to he authentic so we all
agreed to grow our own."
Another wife, Dorothy Sterlor, 35, said: ·
"1 don't like whiskers on my blllband.
They're tickly. prickly and ancomlort-
able. lt makes me shudder to think about
kWing him."
'Brai1i' Lectures
Slated for VCI
The first in a series of free community
lectures. under the general topic, "How
the Brain Works" will be presented at'
UC Irvine, a p.m. Tuesday, in Sociaf'
Science Hall.
"Babies and Cocktail Parties: How the
Brain Responds," will be the topic of the
first lecture, by Dr. Norman Weinberger.
associate professor of psycOOblology at
UCL
Subsequent lect~ in the series.·
which is spon30red by the Friends of
UCI. will be Oct. 24, "The Making of
Memory," by Dr. James McGaugb; Oct.
31: "Brain Plasticity," by Dr. Gary
Lynch, and Nov. 14: "Boys and Girls~
Different: The Brain as a Ses. Object,"
by Dr. Richard E. Whalen. All of the lee·
turers are profes50rs in the UCl School
of Biological Sciences.
Thinki .ng Christmas
already???
sure, layaway time is now.
Balboa Bicycles will fill your
I
•
Gift Bag, be it a fine Professional Bicycle
order from Mendia, Windsor, Atala or Gitane -
or be it a moderately priced 10, 5, 3, or 1 speed
Gitane, Atala, or Azuki de_signed to fit
WI ounitT THI
COM,Lm CTCLlfT
your transportation needs. I
673-5051
· Oo.n Wed. thru Sun.
l 9:!lo to 5:300 cloHd
Mon., & Tutt.
Balboa
Bieyele~
41 HOUI
U1All IO.YICI
2120 West
Ocean Front
~ ... ~M""'Chrtt 1 Ilk, WMt of New"!' ,..,
' •
.j DAILY PILOT
'
' I ,
\
Red Gunners Hit Copter, Killing Pilot
whh
Tom
arphine
But It'll Help
Environment
SAIGON (UPI! -One American waa
killed and nve wounded today when Com-
munist fir• ripped through 1 U.S.
hl.'Ucoptt.r after it landed under attack at
a South Vietnamese ba5e in lhe Central
Highhulds, field reports sakl.
The lncklent occurred .at an artillery
base 20 miles south of Plelku ctty and
210 miles north of Salgon, l!Pl reporter
titatt Franjola said.
HE SAID THE helicopter landed at the
outpost on/Highway 14 to pick up a woun-
ded U.S. adviser who wa.s hit by mortar
fragments. 'Ille cbopper cam. und<r
heavy Communist recoilleu rifle and
mortar fire, killing the pilot and "°!In·
ding five crewmen.
Jn lhe alr war over North Vietnam, the
U.S. command said today Navy pilots
Sunday destroyed 1,500 barrels or fuel
and sent smoke billowing to 10,000 feet ln
heavy raids agati;i1_.3, petroleum depot
outside Vinh, lnt Country's second
largest city. The command also d.IJclosed
the 1055 of an Air Foree F4 Phaotom jet
fighter-bomber over the North last
Thut'lday and said lt was presumed shot
down by a Communist MIG fighter. The
1wo crewmen were reported missing.
Franjola said flghUng continued Into
1he late afternoon 90Ulh of Plelku Md
that tbe highway was cut south of tho ci·
ty, a province capital.
MILITARY SPOGsMEN said U.S.
fi~hler·bomben new 270 strikes against
the North in the 2f..hour period ending at
5 p.m. Sunday, a sharp drop from the
more than 350 missions flown the
previous day. The Saturday raids we.re
the second htavl~st slnoe Pres.klent Ni.t-
on ordered a resumpUon of the bombing
April 6.
In South Vietnam, U.S. 852 bombers
dropped 900 tons of explosives In a giant
arc aroWKt 5aigon today In what the U.S.
command said wa1 a drive to blunt a
Communist thrust that has cut vital
Highway l . Military spokesmen sald
fighting continued today along llighway
13 north of the capital .
IUghway 1 has been severed since Fri-
day when North~Vielnamese troops blew
out a culvert and set up grass and mud
roadblocks about 29 milu northeast of
8aigoo. A Saigon comma.nd spokesman ,
saJd all hamlets and villages seized In the
North Vietnamese drive launched 10 daya
ago north of the capital I/:'"' been reap.
tured but he warned 'more attacks"
may occur because C o m m u n J 1 t
casualties tn the fighting were rellUvety
light.
ORANGE COAST, Wll.Jl COAST, One
. of lhe ne,..·est gimmick.~ to hit the
governmental sctne 1n OfT region these
days is an Hem called The Environ-
mental Impact Statement. Everybody
nttds one. Almost.
l . Israeli Attacks
PRESIDENT NGUYEN Van Thieu met
today with Pham Dang Lam, his chief
negollalA>r at the Paris peace talks. Lo..
Due Tho, the North Vietnamese
negotiator in Paris, returned to Hanoi to.
day from Ptking when!: he conferred
with C'hinese Premier Chou En-lai.
Spok~.$'" said jet fighter-bomber
pltot. '1"'11.the C&Tier USS Kitty Hawk
virtually destroy!'d the Blnb Ling
petrolewn dump 10 miles south of Vlnh,
on the coast lll:J®t 137 mile;, north of the
lleoiilltarized ~. (DMZ) oeparattng
the two Vietnams. Jt used to be if public agencies were
going to do something, only they needed
them. Now, however, the requirement for
an Environmental Impact Statement has
been extended to the private sector. ·
This clme about up in Mono County,
where an outfit called the ·Friends of
Flol3am, or something like that, filed a
laW1Ult. The Friends said somebody else ·
was going to disturb the Flotsam and
they wanted the court to stop it by
demanding one of the EI statements.
IT DEVELOPED that the California
Supreme Court, in its infinite wisdom,
agr~ that it didn't make any difference
that this v.·as a private outfit doing what
the Friends of Flotsam didn't want them
to do. They too needed one of these EI
documents.
Well, ~ high court's dictum hit the
entire state like a bucketful of hogwash
11nd city attorneys and county counsels
were saying no more building permits
could be iS!ued until everybody got in an
Environmental Impact Statement.
IT THREW ME into a conaiderable
tizzy at that particular juncture because
I personalty had been planning a project,
I wanted to put in a new toilet at the old
homestead and now it appeared that my
best laid plans had gone down the drain.
Gathering my re;sources, however, l
decided maybe to try my hand at writing
TIY own Environmental Impact Study
limed at proving the need for a New
John. I titled this work, "Positive
Environmental Impact or New Pottie at
~furphine House." I carried on thus:
"Enmlnation·of old pottie : Old device
has proven badly worn. Flushing 90UndJ
tre loud aod coarse and mJght disturb
1elghbors through thin wall!. Internal
P.'orkings whistle while re-fllling, thus af...
tracting nearby birds which believe it is
nating call, thus they bang lnto
)athr'oom window in frenzied flight and
~ndangcr species.
"INTERNAL PLUMBING t r I ck I e s
9fter r~fill, thus overloading sewer flow
llld unneceasarily filling Pacific Ocean.
"Old seat is wooden and thus
)K>el.egradable when abandoned. Olina
IOI: can be later utilized as palm tree
llanter to enhance environment."
Then I came to lhe other part:
·: Anal~is of Replacement Pot : New
:Jevice will be silent, thus not attracting
>inh or neighbon. Non-leaking internal
>lumblng will save water resources and
ton-pollute Pacific. Device il&elf will be
lZUl'e blue in coloration, thus blending
Nilh erlerior sea and sky should
JOmebody be gazing at same out
>alhroom window while contemplating
, Device llself on lnterior.
"CONCLUSION' New Pol tie needed ID
?nhan.ce residential environment."
Well now, I want you to know I was
·ea! prol14 .of this Bnvlrorunental lmpacl
;tudy. l WU ctrtain with all that proof,
:be authorities would approve the \n-
rtallation. .
Alas, a friend deflated my ego by in-
:Onning me that such atatements aren't
leeded for "trtvlll projecto." He said
:hat's what my Pottie Plan wu -
:rtvial. He had t.hu... added insult to in-
ury.
I don 't care what he says, I'm saving
the statement.
After Propasltion 20 passes, 1 ·11 pro!>
1bly need lt and some carbon copies, . oo.
•
What, No Butler? UPIT• ..... •
For $1,400 a night, you too can sleep in this bed. It is in the master
suite of the six-room Pr~idential suite at the 1-loliday Inn .at Gaithers-
burg, Md. -the most e nsive suite at any hotel or motel in the
country. The bed is electric controlled and can be raised or low-
ered. Headboard contains ster sound and completely stocked bar.
Life's rough, ain't it. ~
White House Aide Linked
To Democratic 'Sabotage'
From Wirt Services
WASHINGTON -White llouse aid e
Dwight L. Chapin ha& been linked ID the
alleged political sab6tage of Democratic
presidential campaigns in a published
report attributed to Justice Department
files.
Tims P.tagazine said the files showed
that Chapin, Preslde.nt Nixon 's ap-
pointments secretary, paid Donald H.
Segrettl more than $35,000 "to subvert
and disrupt Oemocralic candidates' cam-paigns ...
'Ille Washlngtoo l'DSt reported that
Lawrence Young. a California lawyer,
DAILY PILOT
DELIVliRY SERVICE
Dttlvery of the Dally Piiot
I~ guaranteed
~,.,.,...,., ff -.. llOf ~ """' IWll)et by J ::IO p.m .. c•ll ~ vour corr, w111 ~ l)rOllQhl lo m. r~llt ••• laktn 11ntll 1;)1) D.rn.
-.tvnlly .,.. '"'"°'"1 " you do "" P'ltt!Yt .,._ "°"" ~ t 1.rn. S.n..ns.y, Ot • •.rn. 151,n1.ey, Ull .... I COPY wllT b9 ""°"'fht "'
"""' c..111 -.... 1111111 " 1.m.
Ttltphones
"'°" °""" c-"' "'-• .. . ... "2-4)fl Nortllwett HulltlrlOtW. 9Mdl
..... ....,.,,...... . . . .... ····· .... ,nt
"" C...._t9, Gtoilt,_ lllCl'I, ~" J1.111" C.11i.tr1no, Dena Pttlfif.
lovtfl L~ LAg\1111 ~IOl.itl ... , "2..nt
said in a sworn statement that Segrelti
told him: "Dwight Chapin was a person
I reported to in Washington."
Meanwhile today in Los Angeles, Sen.
George McGovern charged that the Nix·
on administration has hired SO people "to
sabotage and corrupt our political proc-
es,," but only 13 to develop peacetime
jobs. (
In a speech prepared for a meeting
discuMing how to convert defense. and
aerospace plants to peacetime pursuits,
the Democratic presidential nominee
said that only 13 of the 2. '1 million federal
employes are working on that problem.
BUT, COMPARING that ID published
reports alleging a widespread Republican
effort to sabotage Democratic can-
didates, he said, "They hired 50 people to
conduct some of the shabbiest un·
dercover operations in the history of
American politics."
Noting the story in Sunday's Post
declaring that Dwight Cbaptn received
information in that operation, McGovern
declared, "The RepubUcan team of
~boteurs bas a contact who is at Mr.
Nixon's elbow every single day; someone
who bas ·COMtant accesa to the Presi· dent."
The Post in a new report today quoted
l'IOUl't:fS involved in the investigation of
the Watergate break-in and bugging Case
lhat payments in the thousands of dollars
to Segretti were made or authorized by
Herbert \Y. Kalmbach, described as
President Nixon 's persooal attorney .
Chill Hits Eastern U.S.
Sno·w Greets Part of Midwest, Rain West, East
TUESDAY
Fi,., 111011 n." p "'· ,.,
Fl,,t IOW 1 OJ t m, '·'
!«ond hlOh 1lo4 t m. O.S
~e<otl<I low •·01 p.on. t.1
Syn IUMll ' St '·"'· ••It 6. 17 p.rn. Moon llllU 2.•2 p.m.
Coa•tal Went.her ,. n 11'11~ """""'""" ,.. lrlltl'I 5if ft 1'L WUff ...,,,....Ill,_ fS.
Moitly WIWI¥ IOdty. Utl'll .,.,ltblf
wllldt IOlt/ll ..w '"°"'',. •• .. COl'll... ~' .. _, • .. ,.
Mett 111 ~ fOd9y _. Tw ..
!Ny. H\oh IO!lty f11 t"9 1h.
co ... 1 .. 1'""""•tur•1 ...,,,. ,,,,,,. ~'
S111t, llloon, '.l'Nle• -· 11 .H 1,,,, 06
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-.
Hi.t By Britain
By Asaoclated Prtss
A top Israeli official said today five air
st{lkes 11gainst Arab guerrilla bases ln
Ubanp_n and Syria signaled a new policy
flf"no longer wailing for the guerrill8l to
hit first."
An Israeli spokesman said the targets
in Lebanon were at Sinilc, Daklfa and
Dier el Ashayer and a guerrilla naval
base at Ras el Naba south of lbe Lltani
River Delta. He said a guerrilla training
camp was hit in Syria. The raiden came
within 15 miles of Beirut and within 30
miles of Damascus.
'fhe Navy airmen estimated that 1,500
ban-els of fuel and large stacks of sup-
plies were wiped out in the raids. The
pUots said names shot 500 feet Into the
air with thick black smoke ri!:ing to
10,000 feet.
Air Force Phantom crews bombed the
Yen Bai airfield, '80 miles northwest of
Hanoi, and destroyed at least one MIG11
on the ground. spokesmen aald. Pllota:
said they abo cratered the baae runway
in two places.
But Brila:in, o n e of the nations in-
volved in the search for Middle East
peace, 8.'lsailed !he Israeli attacks. A
Foreign Ofnce spokesman In ~on
said: "'11ti! does not serve the cause of a
final settlement of tbe Arab-Israeli
dispute." Nazi Luftwaffe Planned
THE RA.IDS WERE the first against
the guerrilla,, since the Sept. tS.17 sweep
into Lebanon by lsrae1i anny units.
There ha! been relative quiet on the
borders since then, but Gen. Hairn
Herwg, the former intelligence chief,
said in a broadcast commentary: "From
now on lhe very presence of saboteurs"
in Syria and Lebanon "is ID be regarded
as a provocation." .
Bombing Raids on. U.S.
"This is the operative phase of our
pledge to hit the terrorists wherever they
are, and they are in Lebanon and Syria ,"
another high-ranking military source
said.
BERLIN (UPI) -Nazi military
strategists drew up detailed plans for
bombing American cit les as far Wand as
Indianapolis, according to documents
found in Nazi archives.
East German hlstorian Olaf Groehler
said in the latest Issue of "German
Democratic Report," an East German
newsletter published tn English, lhat the
plans probably would have been carried
out if the Nazi war machine bad not been Singer Cocker '°heavily eogaged on the Eastern rron1.
THOUGH r.ul.ITARY historians have Plead Gu ;lty Jong known that Nazi leaders discussed S ~ • bombing the .Uniled &ates, Groehler says
-........_ the memorandum he found in Nazi
ADELAIDE, Australia (UP'l·,J-1-+~.a .,reh.ives shows that serious studies were
British rock singer Joe Cocker and made of the possibilities. six~members of his entourage of 30 According to'Groehler, the bombing
pleaded guilty today to drug plans contemplated round trip . fllgbU
charges,. but sentencing was defer· from occupied France with · refueling
red unUI Tuesday -enabling them stops on the Al.ores Islands.
to play a concert tonight. Entitled ''Ta.sics for long-range plane!,"
Tbe musicians were arrested the plans were drafted by German
Saturday after police raided their Luftwaffe ~(air fo~) Col. Dietrich
Park: Royal Motel. Schwenke on ApMI rr, 1942, and sub-
mitted to Air Minister Herman Goering
on May 12, 1942, Groehl..-..id.
"NO RECORD ha.s yet been discovered
as to What decisions were taken, but the
plans .,. bomb the United States ob-
Viously were abamooed,'' Groehler said.
The ·plans called for eir rald! on
Brooklyn, N.Y., Detroit, Hartford, Coon.,
Cincinnati. Rochester, N.Y., Badln. N.C.,
lndJanapolis, Pawcatuck, Conn .. Beaver.
Pa., Natrona, Pa., Galdwell. N.J .•
Berwick. Pa., La Port., lad., Corning,
N.Y .. and Vancouver. Canada.
"Goering's Lullwaffe probably would
have attacked i! Its attention had not
~ powerfully diverted by the cr;itieal
and heavy figbUng on the Eastern front,"
Groehler said.
The Nazi memorandum. said :
"ON THE COAST of the U.S.A. there
are alumioom works, · ain:raft engine
work!, propeller "NOrks and arms fao. tones.
"These can only be readied by
Messer.cluniU Ms with 0~13 mofmr
carcytng 5.5 -of -l\nd staritng from Brest (in occupied France).'
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• Mo,,dotY O~tc;~, lb 1911 DAILY PTLOJ 5
Boy Sought
In Deatli
ELSINORE <UPI )
Authorities are looking for
a teen-age boy who shoved
a 90-year-old wmn an to the
sidewalk to snatch her
purse containing SL
After 4!l1Ua Doughty ,
died at Lakeview Ho1pital
here Saturday night, an
autopsy disclosed h e.r ·
death was closely related
to a broken arm . and
bruises she suffered In the
auack.
Extortion .
Arrests
Pending
,LOS ,\NGELES (UPI) -
Closed • mouthed detectives
have hiilted thol "more ar-
rests are possi ble" in an al-
leged extortion plot that
threatened the life . of televi-
sion talk show host Johnny
Carson. his wife and family.
' . ~-.
LA. CampaifP! Big Sur.Mud Laid to Fires
McGovern Plans
BIG SUR (AP) -R;esldents laminated and power and blamed this on tasl summer's \\'Jnf TBEm cover of trees
l
2 Million Jobs •
made homeless by mud~ldes telephone serv1f'~ cut. Damage intense fire~ that burned 4,700 and brush stripped by the fire,
here -and merchants wOOse has been rated at more than acres of trees and brush slopes in the area could not
••-ps lay buri'ed in u• to five $500,000. directly above the slide area. absorb this season's pound ing ·~ • N · · · led. Tl ' · h ra•ns w•"t"·ut ""me loo•'"" and o 1n1ur1ts were repor " lCfe s no question t e , 1ru ..... -"'6
feet of mud -contemplated 8 slides are an after~ffect of shdlng, Stewart said.
LOS ANGEL~S (UPI) -
George S. McGovern today
pledged that il elected presi·
dent he would create "io the
earliest days" of his ad-
miniltratioo two million new
jobs by pumping $t0 billion in-
to housing, transportaUon,
pollution cootrot end public
service jobs.
Tho Democl'lltlc presidential
candidate said he would act
eveo bd'<re beginnlog ,a pnr
posed ~year $.12 billion
cutback in military spending
which be predicted eventually
would provide 15 jobs for
every 10 phased oot.
Speaking to a convenion
conference of defense and
aerospace labor 1 ea d e r s ,
!i.1cGovern said, "For you, it is
a choice between the constant
fear or losing your job, or the
security or stable, secure
employment." In a prepared spe<ch, he ad-
ded "it is a choice between the
frustrations of building more
overkill, or the satisfaction of
work that improves life."
and derense {ndllltrl<s, that he
would not eliminate "a single
job" until another job was
available. CALIFORNIA lje said, "!Jespl~ all the
Republlcan fear tactics • you "---------' are eee.lng in thlll campaign,
the truth is that in America
today we can find more Jobs In
peace than 'in war."
He saicf tllat the first step
towards ahifting t o a
peacetime• economy wo uld
come with "an immediate $10
billion investment in new and
reh abilitat ed housing,
transportation, pollution con-
State Solon
Carrell Dies
In Hawaii
trol\ and public service jobs. KOfl,\LA, llawoii (API Tha would generate aboot 2 . . million new jobs without even Calilom1a State Sen. 'Mlomas
,...-------..;·.., C. Carrell, a Democratic•
(CAMPAIGN '7zl • ::g~~:~o:1r~ nearly 14 years, ~ } He was admitted' to the
massive cleanup tod ay after 0 ALmOUGll rain deluged the fire,'' Said Frank Stewart, The area hit was ap--
week or often torrential rain the entire Big Sur coast. only a fire prevention technician. proximately three miles long
finally eased of£. _.. a small area centering around "We have heavy raing every in the north-central sector of
.Late Sunday a r~el'noon _Coast Pfeiffer-Big Sur State Park year but we don't have mud . th~ scenic/Big Sur district.
11ighway . l, wh ich w 1 n d 5 was plagued by the mudslides. This year we have nothing but which star s about 25 miles
througll. Big Sur on the edge of u .S. For~t Service officials mud." 1 south of f\>tonterey.
·the pacific was reopened to all ,.=='=:;::=:-::===:;::=---'=-...:..--------=-:....._.:!-='.....----, tralfic after emer(Cency roadlr
crews cleared off tons of the
ooi:Jng mud.
Some 300 persons were
reported to have fled their
homes. The Monterey County
sherifrs offi~ said a dozen
houses were inundated in
mudslides pouring down rain-
battered mountainsides, and
13 others were abandoned
because water w a s con-
Man Dies After
7 Years in Coma
The P erfect Gift Re111e11i brunce!
(
\ SALE! •
A eopy of you,. i:nost trensu,.ed family
photog,.aph ls u memorable gift of
love!
2 Copies For Tl1e
Price of 1 ... 5.95
considering the appUcatk>n Ot Kohala hospital for treatment FREMONT (UPI) -A OOat
military savings to civilian or chest pains and died early repairman who had ~ in a
needs.'" Sunday. €arrell had a hiBtory coma for nearly seven years
He also promised the refonn of heart ,trou~le. following a traffic accident
Le t us duplicote thot 1amily heirloom portrait be-
fo re it fodes owoy or crocks beyond recogni ti on.
We'll make 2 professional 5x7 copiei; for OIJr regu-
lar pr ice of one. Your original will be r~ned un;'
harmed. W e'll re$tore -also at 9ale ~rices!
Satisfaction gua ranteed!
of pension systems, 60 no carrell. s younger broth~, died at his borne during the
workecs wooJd Jose retirement . Paul., said ~ ~ep:esentat1ve weekend. filll~ &111 llfu® !JDIBID~
Portrait Studio
Huntington BeJich-892-3331
Photo Studi~lsHe ... el
Three suspects -two men
and a woman -were in cus-
tody in connection with the ex-
tortion attempt and Ca~
and his famlly were reporte4
s till under police protection.
HE ASSURED the labor
leaders, concerned that a
M c G o v e r n administration
would create -wholesale
unemployment in aerospace
rights when mtclling jobs and ol the 22nd dis1r1ct m the east Paul S. Dodge, 30, suffered
"sufficient adjustme nt ~ F~ Valley .was here severe head injuries in
benefits" for those workers with his wife, Do)piua, to al· November, 1965. when his
who suffer through 8 transfer tend.a Chevrolet dealers' con-pickup truck hit a tree, and
from defen&e oriented in-,_:v~enfill~10)11n~. ~_:_ _____ ~hfilad:_been~~in'..:a'.:ooi~m~oa~e~ve~r~s)llince~-_I!::=============================='
dustry, "The investigation is fa r
from concluded at this time,"
Del. LL Charles Higby, in
charge of tlfe investigation,
told a weekend news confer-
ence. He added. however. that
he did not believe there "is
any serious threat to carson
at this time."
Carson, star of NBC-TV 's
"Tonight" show, notified po-
lice imml'!'diately, Higby said,
and the entertainer· and his
family were put under police
surveillance. Carson I iv es
alone with his bride of two ·
weeks. Joann11. His former
wife, Joanne, who also lives in
Los Angeles, also was believ-
ed to have rl!'tcivecl police pro-
tection.
There were unconfirmed re-
ports that Carson received a
call at the studio at 7: 15 p.m.
Friday to set up a money
drop.
About an hour later, a police
officer reportedly drove Car·
son's white Lincoln Continen-
tal to a well-lit parklng lot in
Van Nuys at the northwest
comer of Los Angeles Valley
College.
Race Study •
On Agenda
STAFFORD (AF) -Dr.
William Shockley, the Nobel
prize winner whose ideas on
genetics have been br8nded by
some as "racist,"· says he will
make a third 'try to have his
theories st.udied-by the-Na-
tional Academy of Sciences.
Shockley said Sunday he
will attend a privite meeting
i'n'Washington Thursday to ask
the academy to fund ~h
into his cohtention that heredi-
ty is four times as important
in determining 1ntelligence as
environment.
"'!be relaUoosliip ol genes,
environment and IQ iJ central
to national issues u cs..-1r1-. ,_,,
who :won the Nobel prir.e for
his , role in inventing the
transistor, said.
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF ORANGE COUNTY
PIOvtSION.l.U.Y ACCllOlllD IY nm' COMMITIU OP
1A1 IXAMIN!IS Of THI STA.11 IAI OF CAUfOIN1A.
Now Jic.c.epting men ancl women for
admtuion to th• Spring 1973.S•mestw.
• IF YOU HAW 60 acopt1bl. unit1,
• JN 2 Y!ARS of pert·time Int itudy (3 d.-pel
-~ 3 to '4 holini p..-dauJ, yov ten ••m your
B.S.l.,I dotgr-. en4
• IN "2 ADOITIONA( Y!ARS of p11rt.tirne llW IJtudy yoi.1
car• e•rn your J.O. ~ree; •rid bi.come
ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE
CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
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DAY, EVENING OR
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STUDINTS ILIOllll PGI flDIWlY 1NIUUD STIJOIN1' lO.lNJ
McGOVERN'S speech cal"M!
just before his campaign took
him to Texas -a state eYen
his most optimistic strategists
consider very dilficul.t for the
l)emocrata to carry -and
after the Derho cratic
presidential candidate was
jarred by lhe lalest Gallup
Poll which shows him unable
to significantly close the gap
against President Nixon.
..>'
Santa Cruz
Attraction:
Boat Stuck
SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -A
windliquall elglrt days ago has
given this Pacific :coast com-
m\Dllty one of Its biggest at-
tractions in years: a beached b<iat. ' •
M many as 0,000 people
crowded the beach and tile
bpardwaJk to watch t-h e
numerous and so far futile at-
tempts· to get the !~foot
scbooner Shamrock VJ back
tnto the water. And many or
the "sidewalk m a r i n e
engineers," as saJvage experts
call them, wait days at a time
to offer their suggestion.
'Ibe tale of Shamrock VI
began Oct. 7 when owner Dr.
Jeremiah Wollohan ol San
Rafael, was hosting a party
aboard the vessel. In the 23
years he'd owned he r ,
Shamrock VI had taken hlm to
South America, Alaska, and
Hawaii without incident.
He was awaiting a spare
.part for the engine when the
squall hit, driving the 100-ton
boat hard up on the sand,
THE COAST Guard tried to
rpull her off, and failed. A
tugboat from San Francisco,
fiO mili::s up the coast, had no
bett.cr luck. Neither did two
fishing b<iats pulling Jogether.
Tempers have gotten short.
'Ibe salvage ciew and
bystanders have already got
ihto two fistfights.'
Meantime, the boat that was
valued at $200,000 befO'!'e the
wtndsquall was sold to Rocco
Cardinale, en electric motor
repairman [tom n e a r b y
Salinas, for a sum variously
rumored to be between $5,000
and $20,000.
ll11yi1191
;111e''' ·car·1
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Tob a llCOlld to buck» up, lt IXlllld ta'f• o ltfeUm-.
II has come to our a llenlion that many of
you· thi nk our Vega is p riced hig her than 1t
really is. That comes as no surprise.
Af ter a ll, Vegct does ha ve the look and
the feel of a more expensive ca r.
Vega does have a n overhead-com en-
gine that's jusl plain peppier thcin mosl little
car engines, yet slill slingy with a gallon of
ga soline.
sion and lots of olher high.qualily lealures.
The lact lhal Vega was v ted "besl
economy sedan" in lhe world I e lasl lwo
years in a row by the readers f Car and
Driver magazine may also con bute to the
impre~ion that Vega's price isn't small.
But the happy truth is this: o's price
bears a slarllmg resemblance o those of
ordinary lillle cars. At $2060 , the Vega
Nolc hback is right in there with the least of And unlike leis of little cars, Vega
has a double-panel sleel roof. front
disc brakes, side -c;iuard door beams,
self-cleaning roekerpanels, thick loom
front bucke t seats, a Full Coil suspen·
'~_A them, give or lake a fe w bucks.
y~ Chevy's lillle Vega. / ..., · 11' s less money than you though! .a:illiir' and more car lhan you imaqined.
'Monufocturer'• NOQMtod ttta11 Pflot, lnaludincJdeo!.tt preparaUon oho.ro--°""1llGUon chol9N. optional 9q1Jlpm.n~ t!o.I• ond IC>f31 to.i. art oddmonoL
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6 J)AJLY .PILOT EDIJ'~RIAL l>AGE
A Sn a re and Delusion --·
J1ropos11ion 14. the lax ·inltiatiVe knoYon as Ule
\\'atson 1\1ncndn1enl on the Nov. 7 ballot, is a snare and
<i d,elusion, a ('rue! ho:ix.
l)ro1n1s1ng to tut everyone's taxes, it. \vouJd in fact
raise thom for aln1osl everyone. An1ong its effects:
-It \vou!d redui.:e property taxes state\vide by $2.9
b!ll1011, but only $664 nul!ion y,•ould apply to horneo,vn·
rrs. o·wners of large .industries. businesses, i.ncome·pro·
cl uc1ng property and vacant lots \vould benefit to the
tune of $2.3 billion.
-Underfunded by at lea st $1 biJlion. the \VaL~n
plan could boost Income taxes by 60 percent. F'ederal
inccn1e lax~. could also go up an estimated $32 million
due ta a shift {rom deductible ·to non·deductible taxes.
-T1otential tax increases for home o\vners and .
rentets and financial restrictions on local government
\rould tnean lo ss of home rule in the state. Voters \vould
lose their right to decide \oea~y on prope~ty tax le~e_ls.
And it \vould produce chaos 1n the funding of special
dis tricts.
-'rhe $155 million mass transit fund prudently
established by the Le gislature in 1971 \\lo.uld be wiped
011t. This \vould seriously~ handicap plans to reduce air
~ pollution ,vtiile providing badly-needed mass transpor·
tation for Southern California.
-Vital municipal services \vould be cJi,minated as
property tax rates are frozen into the state constitution.
Local government \VOUld be hard put to find replace-
rncnt revenues or get authority to raise such revenue,
no matter how great the need.
As State Controller Houston I. Flournoy has put
it. ''Of all the bugs in the \.Vatson plan, the most dan-
gerous are those relating to the financing of public
schools. In disregard of nearly all persons involved with
the education ·of young people, 1'.1r. Watson (Los An·
geles Assessor Philip E. \Vatson) has developed an en·
tirely ne\v plan for financing schools in this state -
and one that makes most of the existing Education Code
provisions on school finance obsolete."
At a time 'vhen the schools are starved .fo r funds
to n1aintain adequate educational prOgrams, the· Wat#
son plan would reduce school support by $110 OOlow
the present average per pupil.
In doing so, however, no benefit would accr ue to
home owners and renters. On the contrary, their total
tax bills \l.'Ould go up while major industries would have
theirs greatly reduced. .
Proposition t4 deserves the same resounding defeat
as the 2 to 1 turndO\Alfl of Watson's previous tax initia-
tive ln 1968.
Higl1 pistinction for UCI
Exc:iting evid.ence of the Wisdom of those who more
than a decade ago sought locati,an of a major University
of California camp in Orange County was further
realized wjtll announc ent of an unprecedented $1
million anonymous grant.
The money, given to Cl by a mystery woman with
an interest in classical studies, is the largest grant ever
made to this field of academe.
In an age whe n most scholastic philanthropy sup·
ports the sciences, it is refreshing to see a major grant
made for important work in the humanities.
The money, to be shepherded by UC Irvine Founda·
tion, \vill support a 1110nmental effort to catalog at least
the 18 million words of the 1,300-year classical period
of Greek literature and possibly all 90 million . words of
the ancient Greek language.
The gift commits UCl classics professor Dr. Theo-
dore F. Brunner to a lifetime task or compiling history's
first Thesaurus Llnguae Graecae, by means of computer
age techniques.
Establishment of this international research re-
source at UCI moves the center of the classical world
to Irvine and the Orange Coast for the philosophers,
linguists. historians and Greek scholars for whom the ''
t hesaurus will be ~vital new study tool.
. '
"Did I hit anything,,Frank?•
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Nationalism Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
Feeli ng Generally Shared by A (l Grou.ps.-E~cept Blacks
Per'verts
T he Oly111pics
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
More baloney has been s)iced and ser-
ved up to the unsuspecting pub_l\c _abo~t.
thc·Olympic Games than you will find ln
the world"s largest smokehouse. Most
of it has to do wilh "intemalional
brotherhood in sports."
\Vhcn the Olvn1p1c Games were started 2.7~8 years agO. supposedly to honor Lbe
go d s of (Jreecc.
they we re quickly
transformed f r o n1
confCsts between in-
dividual athletes to
rivalries betw1!en
contending states.
The Greek states
taking part in the
games were fiercely
nationalistic in spir·
it, and regarded a victory in the Oly1n.
piad as important as winning a battle.
THEIR ATHLETES -had to prom ise to
train faithfully,<>.nd regularly for a full 10
months preceding the game;.: Then, for
the 30 days immediately,,.-uefo re, they
\\'ere herded together at £\js, where the
games took place, \\'here local officials
made sure there \\'as no hanky-panky
going on·. 1 •
Over the centuries. the Olympics be-
came increasingly professionalized: until
(according to my reference, the Columbia
Encyclopedia), "in the Roman period
they provoked much cen'sure from
philosophers and physicians." Com-
petitors were subsidized and used by
their governments as symbols of state
strength and prowess.
f'INALL Y THEY were discontinued
altogether by Emperor Theodoslus o(
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Is the world ready for yet another
Demo presidential spouse nam_;.)f
Eleanor? /
-B.J.H .
This leatwrt rtllect1 reaaers• views. not
n.ecnsarlly lt>ou of Ille flt"'lPlfH!r. s.tnd
your pet petvt lo GlfOmy Gvs, Dally Pl!OI.
Rome at the end of the 4th Century A.O.,
not to be revived until nearly 15 cen-
turies later.
When the games began again, in Athens
in 1896, it was with the same high
original intentions and motives -to
celebrate and honor the fleetness and
deXterity of young people in various
physical contests.
But over the years. once more, the
proud and aggressive spirit of J!a·
tionalism intruded itself, transforming
the games (despite the best effort of its
sponsors) into propaganda vehicles lor
competing governments.
AS ONE FLAGM--NT example, few
people know that Olympic events are won
only by m·dividuals; countries do not
compete as a unit. The method of na-
tiona l-learn scoring for "points" ls wholly
unofficial and contrary to the spirit of
-the games. Yet national anthems :ire
played when a membe r of that team wins
a gold medal; "Russia" or "America" or
"France" is said to have won an event.
when actualJy a young man or woman
won it.
Because of this perversion, some coun·
Irie.$ have made thei r Olympic teams
almost an arm of the government, as a
powerful propaganda tool . "fnternational
brotherhood" may"be felt by the players;
it is scarcely exhibited by th e nations.
What happened in Munich is only the
final, tragic culmination of using sports
for political ends.
Y fJU'reP!:oba bly Old if ...
"Dear POQr "fan's PhilOffOpher :
··~1ow. can a person tell for sure
whether he has grown <lld?, Tl\crc seems .
to be a growing tendency in America to
1nake anyone over 30 feel like he is a
relic, bul J am twic;e
that age and don't
regard myscU as an
anti@e. Just when
is anyoac 're a lly
old?
"A t-fere 64."
Dear Mere 64:
As one who at 61
still finds him~cu
dismayed by the hn -
po3Aibllity of denying that he ml!st ht
getting middle-aged. r find the specter
r>f old age uncomfortable, too.
But there is no doubt thut most people
get old in time. and therf' are symptoms
th.at reveal when this has happened. •
vciu ARE PROBABLY old if -
People accuse you of being in your
lhlrd childhood.
You get more tellers from Uncle Sam
encloriiing checks than dunning you for
more tax money.
Somehow you ~re seeing m o r e
breakfast television shews than late
movies.
A g004 long nflp after lunch rtfrcshes
you more than a whole night's slt,'<lp -
\Vhlch. of course. you · no longer get
anyway, ·
Jf you' pal a young girl on I~ shoulder
In publk, JtnMlpt no longer 11ay, "Why, \'<'I qi~ enough t6 be her I other." They ..
..
( HAL BOYLE )
say, "\Vhy, she's young enough to be his
granddaug hter.'' But the thing they like
to say most or all ls "It's a plty Isn't It?
-The. older they get. the younger lhey
l!ke them ."
BUT YOU NO LONGER 1 .. 1 it
necessary to worry abou"t yotir rcpttt•·
tion . You· only wish that a tenth or what
the gossips suspoct abou t you would
come true,
You spend more time in funeral homes
than you do in X-rated movies. And when
you 'act'ompany a departed friend ell"lhe
way to the cemetery, sometimes you
wonder if it's worth all the trouble to
mnke the long trip back to town.
The arthritic pangs l,n your Joints
prt>dlct the weather more accurately
than th!! local government foreca!t.
Yo~ have trouble communicating with
people, because the young don 't listen
and your old frit-nds have become roo
deaf to heor.
BECAUSE FEW can save enough to
meet an the rafny days that come _wltb
;ige, you think Inflation is a worse dan&er
than sin.
lnsl('ad or hurrying across the street
to get out of the w"y of an automobile,
you :;top no'w nnd then and shake your
fist at the driver amt make· him come to
a complete halt,
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McGove-rn -Appro_ach Uns~ttles Many
WASH INGTON Defections by
Catholics, Jev.•s and ethnic groups frOm
their traditional Democratic moorings is
a widely noted phenomenon of the pre-
election period. Th e shift has been
measured in percentages and analyzed,
without revea ling many conclusions
which do not apply
equally as strongly
to those who have
of voters, for. all the reservations they
may have about President Nixon, ·show
no advance disposition to make a cliange.
no sense of separ-
ateness in their re-
ligious or et h n.i c
identity.
TO CONCLUDE from., this preV8'iling
mood that a new politlcal aliglµnept is
-taking form is a long' Slept' Jlito: lb& unknown .• If Edward M. Kennedy,. or
even Hubert II; Humphrey, had bien the
Democratic nominee, the circumstances
four weeks prior , to the election would
have been dlffe('e[lt. Labor would have
supported Humphrey without reserva-,
tioo. Catholics would be more disposed to
vote far Kennedy than for McGovern.
Each would have had hi.s organizationa1
support. They would not have been ro
susceptible to the ~ind of defection which
seems to afflict senator McGovern.
The 11U1jorJty view
as measured by nu-
merous surveys is
that Senator Mc-
Govern is not a preferable alternative
to PNSident Nixon. and for about the
same reasons evident to anyone who has
heard anything about the presidential
campaign.
'l'O BEGIN WITH, the events at the
Miami -Convention made a bad im-
pression. A great many people share the
view that McGovern was not the
representative choice of (he Democratic
party. The Eagleton affair added to the
doubt A month of campaigning did not
erase the impression that McGovern is a
doubtful quantity whose presidential
qualifications are not overwhelming.
In short, McGovern has not yet proved
lo be a strong candidate and the majorily
JN GROPING FOR the explicit reasoos
for this susceptibility, a contributing
editor to Sh'ma, a Jewish intellectual
Jlll blication, has articulated s o m e
thoughts which may carry weight in the
Jewish community but have a far wider,
nonsecular, nonreligi~s, .. ~onethnic ap-
peal,
The contributing editor, Seymour
Siegel, ccincludes that the set of value~
and standards of lifestyle associated ~th
Senator Mt'Govern jlre alien to .a ma·
jority of Americans. '-'MeGOvem's elec-
tion," says Siegel, "would certainly brtng
to pc>wer those whose mOrality and world
view would be very different than. those now held by the-ma"jority of Americans.
'
No implication should be drawn from
such contrasts rfnecting on Senator
McGovern's character, motivations,
family life or personal behavior. But this
does not change the fact that from the
beginning he undenook to reflect wbat is
new and modem and endowed by a dif·
"l'HAT IS NOT to say," he continues', ferent and more enlightened conception
'lthat Senatqr -McGovern hjmself favors of public morality and social and ethnical
looser sexual mo,iatitf,'mOre 'toler8nce .of 'values .. To m~y that seems to be t~e
. the detligraUon Of the wbt;k 'e;tble, · ~c. revelation which the young and their "'&t ,a.nYqrie .'who ttu·wa~ jbe-~ mentors ·have brought to America and
of the -palgn and obk""'• the. lo~ ~Y welcome It. ·
for ·whom Ibo. ~ earujidate' -., ·
• spe&k.s ca..Ot help buf come to lhe ;...,_ · · 11ur TO OTHERS it bears a suspect
clusion that·tbOse who fi,vor· an-fliibuaJ: ·f!latiopship to all they find offensive in
change ·in American lifestyle 1ind''f0rlfl Ole . p.irrent a t m o ~ p h e r e , the
view see him as-their champion. pemusslveness, eccentriCity of behavior
''Those who see life tn. different terms and .s~yle. lack of restraint, destructio_n. of
(and I ·am conviJJced that tradi.t~onal traditional . values, ~versa! ?f famil~ar
Jews are amoog these) will favor the and establ~d ~hey a\fecting foreign
more traditional approach of President and domestiC affairs.
Nixon." Not only the Archie Bunkers of
THIS "TRADmONAL approach!? is
one which PreS'ident Nixon bas eonsciou-
ly cultivated frotn the beginning of li(s
presidency. The vah1~ be ·has em-
phasized have been conventional and
traditional. His family life is exemplary
in this respect. The atrQ,ospbere be has
created in his official behavJor .and social
conduct in the White House and· abroad
bas been "presidential" in the dassic'.
form.
televisionland but t~ who cling to
tr.ditlonal st ructures which are so im·
portant in Catholic and Jewish life
.evidenUy are unsettled by the McGovern
approach, if the surveys are right.
The conclusion is indicated that the
unsettling element is nol special rehgious
Or ethnic groups, but is generally shared
in all groups with the exception of black
voters. This is what makes -senator
McGovern 's problem so difficult in the
remaining weeks of the campaign.
The Food Nut Is · a Tedious Fanatic
He was floating around Piccadilly the
last time. He is probably still there, one
of that army of slngular chaps who use
the streets or London to sell their own
.. particular view of God, or of anarchy, qr
' of the cruelty of •
or of the terrible people to animt$, ~
taste of eggs which ;;j""'
come from battery • ;.,_ .Aj' _
hens. · -
This fellow has a (ff dreamy and hunted
look. His thing is
passion. It is bis
view t h at this is
created hy excessive consumption of
protein. One of the boyJ. If you stop
to talk to him he will sell you a pamph-
let on the subject for fiVe n,ew pence.
The v.Titing warna you ominously that
lhe protein builds VP paMion. Only by
cutting down the protein, can you cut
down on the old passion. Tn this way, you
can lead a mote 'discjplined lite,
e~ially In the sack,
"The eig ht . passion proteins." the
pamphlet tells us. "are meat, fish, hird,
cheese, eggs. peas. beans and lentils,"
There Is no fanatic more tedious than
the food nut. The lad who tells you. with
great and condescending asrurance, that
"You are what '0\1 eat." Who a<ld! that you will not get th.rough the Pearly
G<'tes, no how , unle!s you m up to your
elbows in black-strap molasses, or the
By Geor9e ---.
Dear George:
I've been haV1ng an argument
with tt)Y brother -he says ycu
make up lhc letters in your column
and I say you don't In fact , I've
bet' him a fifth of Bourbon you
don't .•. and whether thl.s letter
nppears is proof. Who's right 7
TED LfNK
Dear Ted: ..
Your brolher Is right. I make up
these letters.
~rled dung or a yak, or Vitamin E , or
whatever the chic thing of. the.moment.
WHILE ~MA V be true thatlhere js
some truth to the view that your
capacities, an~ perhaps even _ your
character, are somehow dictated by your
diet, it is a good deal more true to say
thii. is. all malarky. '
This I learned when I was a young man
in Puerto Rico. 1be men who live there
are coffee fanners called jibaros. They
often go down to the coast to work the
sugar fields, one ol the back-breaking
jobs of the world,
The diet of the jibaro in those d{IYS was
a textbook exampl& of what not to eat;
yet nothlng, tncludlng large Infusions of
government funds and subsidized lioodics
·would &educe him from It. The diet con·
slsted of those two carbohydrate horrors,
rice and beans, often flavoredt!With lhe
head of a dried, salted rodfidl imJXlrled
from Newfoundland. This, with lots of
strong black coffeee, and some fruit , was
what the jibaro, his wife and family, ate
dally throughout their lives. I
J '~E SELDOM koown tougher rnen.
Even with tbe hookwonn and endemic
syphilis, they could do harder work, and
for longer hours, than the toughest
Swedish hardhat in New York. (In fact,
the sons of a lot of those jibaros are now
New York hardhats, and their diet hasn't
changed all that much.)
As for passion, the jibaro made up in
practice what lie lacked in protein. When
these bucks were kept away from their
woman, or women, they were in fact
quite dangerous. Ukely ,, to c u t
somebody's head off with a machete, "I
haven't had any love th.is week," h~
would explain to tbe police.
Yet the Yankees entrusted with their
government rtfuscd to accept the plain
evidence that the mountain man was an
extraordinarily effic ient male, Ile wasn't
The Wrong Millionai~es
'
CaHlonla Feature Service
Sen. George McGovern, the Don Qui-
xote or the PresldootiaJ campaign, has.
been dashing around tilting at 90 many
windmills he ha.s many of his originally
devout supportm sadly confused, U net
in despair.
Columnist Wlltlam F. Buck1ey Jr.
:rt'Ctntly commented on the Senatbr'I
obsession that. evtn though he hlmscU
earned more than $100,000 tn 1.171, wealth
is "inll<renUy wlcl<ed, and the more of It
you have, the mort wicked you arc."
Buckley cited McGovern's blast at
John Coonally and his Texas billionaire
friends and at the presidents of Dow
Chemical •nd the Ford Mpi.r Co.. the
latter having earned four tiii'tcs as mut:h
"
flS the Senator hlllt ytar.
AS BUCKLEY Ptrr IT, a few muiutcs
of Jistenlng to ·McGovem's tirade "and
· you find yourself not only resenting the
head of !\'•rd but convinced that the
system. Uiat pennits him to get $400,000
I~ somehow evil." Jf you are easily
swayed' by bombast. that ls, '
Buckley ehallengtd McGovern next
time he tries "to generate clau envy" to
offer Ul> tnsttad of businetS ex~tlvea
IOtne f>tber high eimers, IUCb as "the
Rolllflg Stones1 or the Grateful Dead, or
Elvis Presley or Elizabeth Taylbr" as ex-
amples of "unjustified reward."
As Buckley admits, that would n o t
please McGovern's dwindling cl11e. but it
would cert.a.inly be a tefreshlng chltnRe in
windmills. ,
·eating the right food, therefore he
couldn't be. He wasn't stuffing away the
old meat and potatoes. For the same
reason, more or less .. these sterling
Yankees thought he was uneducated
because he couldn't speak English.
ALL THIS PLANTED a wicked suspi·
cion in me : ThoSe that know best usually
know from nothing. ~ Any~y who
becomes so oonvtnce<I of something that
he must preach it to others has almost
certainly glommed onto a faulty doctrini;:.
His enthusiasm for the doctrine CXJmcs
~ause It aifl>eaJs to some sinister cran-
rty of his soul. Or because his daddy told
hi m so.
For all 1· know, protein DOES generate
sexual desire. This is logical, since it is a
fl(el . Nobody would JXlint this out,
however, if sexual desire was not
s?mething both sweet and frightening to
him, Some great art and some frightful
doctrinal nonsense have been born ot
thls sealipl fear/love. But. ·to worry
whet her an ettra chop will turn you in to a rapist ls, 1 suga:t?St, going a bit far.
Rice and beans Is eVery bit as dangeroUs.
Especially lhose beans. ·
QUNGI COAST ' .
DAILY PILOT
-Robert N. Weed, Publf.sher
Th01nM Keevil, Editor
A'lbtrt \V. Bates
Edilorio.l Page Editor
The r.dltorle..1 PllRC of the Dally
Pilot Retka t() lhh1rm and stlmu· late rtndcn by prcscnllni,: thlg
nt'Wtlllftpcr'1 oplnloiu and (.'Ottl·
mentary on to11ia "' lnttrt'Sl 11.nd elKnlflcancc. by pr<fvldln1t • (.Qrum t for thf> t!Xpre111ion ol our l"f'ndel'I' 1
of)lnlons. •mt by tJ'l'U"'llln~ thf'! dlvenie vlf\\'l)(»ntl of lnlorWtf'd oh-
Jervcrs alld 1[l0kt"9mr1t 011 tuvk• of the day. , '
Monday, October 16, 1972
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Mechanic·
Becomes
•
, •
Beautri~·
VISALIA (API -A pair of
denim ·r&rm ove ralls covering
his hulking frame, A. J . Bog-
gess roOed up hls sleev~ and
, -a>mbed his beard before
beginning another day_ at the
I ohop. Beauty shop, that is.
: Brought up among engines,
transmissions and g r e a s e ,
I rtloggess decided ft> quit the
auto mechanic's job he held
since a teen.ager ind -enter
Federico's Beauty College,
located in this San Joaquin
Valley commwllty ..
. Boggess, 33, said he bee.am•
·interested In hatrstyltng about
nine years ago after he at-
tended seveal hair shows with
his wife, who was then a •
beautician.
0 1 REAU. Y 1JKE ·hair
shows," Boggess said 1n an in-
terview. "I enjoy women."
But he'll have none of those
•• he'll ha--ol those jokes
about tnale hair.
dressers.
jokes about male~-
"Being a hairdresser is
slmply a good way to make a
Jiving. I'm at the shop four
days a week, then playing
around three days," Boggess
s;iid.
What do a 5-foot-II, 180-
pound, bearded hairdresser
and his client talk about dur-
ing a shampoo?
"ANYTHING BUT t h a t
there petty gos.!ip,'' Bouess
said. "A lot of women like to
fish or hunt. Or they talk
about their kids. I've got two
small daughters, too."
Boggess and his w i f e ,
Evelyn, worked together seven
years before she became a r realtor. Re s t 111 attends
halntyllng seminars and has
traveled to New York twice
for lessons for European
stylists.
Boggess said business ls
"real good" at AJ's COiffures,
where he employs four other
beauticians, all female. The
shop specialize• in hair cut-
ting.
"I ALSO DO men's lmlntyl·
Ing and have about 20 to 30
male customers who come in
once a month," he said.
However, some men are
uneasy inside a beauty parlor
with women. so they make
evening appointments, he said.
The only thing Boggess
doesrft do any more in tinker
with autos.
"I haven't worked on cars
for a long time. I've probably
forgotten what a car looks like
Wlder the hood."
Coed Honored
Janice Stout of Huntirtgton
llea<h has been narrt<d ro the
Dean's list of Cal St.ate
Fullerton for ea:fiung at least
a 3.4 gra~ average tiurlng the
spring 1972 semester.
CFly Our Legs)
AIA-
CAUFOANIA
~ ... ~c...ty
nnrntlons (714) ~-4550
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ANAHEIM " NEWPORT
444 N. EUCLID 171 4) IJS.lfJ:t 47 FASHION ISi.ANO. 17141 "44-1112
ORANGE. MALL OF .OlllAN9E
M&ndly, October 16, 1972
•
' ilee~y
·dreamers
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DAJLV PILOT 7
•
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r' .
hl!nson ·Kicker nick
designs in Du Pont
Antron'1l Ill nylon
You 'll have sweet dreams when you nestle
into this lovely sleepwear from the
"Natasha " collection of 100 °/0 Antron • Ill
brushed nylon. Each softly
trimmed with nylon fleece. Machine
washable, easy care: permanently
free of cling and static. In French
blue, mi\'* green, or pom pom pink.
long gown , S-M-l, 12.00. Short gown,
S-M-l, 9.00. Short matching coat,
S-M-L: 15.00. Pajamas with nylon
fleece pockets, 32-38, 14.00. Scuffs,
S-M-L, 4.50.
Fashion Sleepwear, 24
. HUNTINGTON IEACH
11n EDINGER. AVENU E (7141 ltJ.Jlll
CERAITOS 100 L.0$ CERRnos MALL C2111 t•0-0411 2JOO N. TUSTIN ST.R,EET. (1141 tt~llll
SATI.lllDAY 10 A.M. to • ,.M, SUt(OA't IJ HociN te s r ,M\ SHOP 10 Ji.M. lo 91JO ;,M, MONDAY Tf41110U&H FllllDAY. ' . ' I . . . . ,., -·-
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f Dl!LV PILOT
Dissol11tim1s
Of Marriage
P-IMAL OICltlf:S
E11tt•td SID'. tO
S11rld1trOl>'I. lh'•"'• P •M lteM<'l M. c"'"'"· Shella L. •"<I JAIT•U A Mu!ohv, Vl•Olnl1 Ann arid J1me1 F•tn· '" Jone•. £1e~nnr E M>d Joe ~ R. (lellavl•. Ann~!!t M. &net Joel St-arr E:al1n Je•nnint 1na John
Jt-1
Deal/1 i\'oli<'es
AlltTHUt: t··~•old 0 , A•th11r Aoe 11, ot •110 N~
•11~. NtWPO•' !'le.ten. 0111 01 dl'"th,
0.:•ot>er U, li1?. SurvlYe.1 by wll1, IClllV
"'ttltn; .,,,., Haf<'>ld 18\ICI) Anlll/r, of
R-.e<11: """ a1uoMe•1, Loul" Tenro, 8v•t>an~: Htle<! l tlllle•wood. VMI Nvvs;
Cl<OI Arm11r, Su 1 F-.ncl.co: f'loht
9r1r..:lt lllldrtn: !hrte "9rt1l·11•1r.d<:hlklrt'I,
Sr•vktl. Tuesd1v, 11 AM. !Jlii'lllc Vl-
(h•p,irl. lnttnnenl, Paciflc VI-MtfN)l'!l'i
Pork, P"ciflc VI-M~•l"&rv, OlrKTort.
LINDSAY Ru11~11 Llnd••v, J:!St N-PO"f Stvd.,
Soa~e I . C"Vt M..s•. OtllJ of dt1n.,
Oc•o~ 15, 1911. Surv!Vlld .,,, wife, l•m•
l . l l•>cbav; 1111...,Mer, Mn. Bonnie G•K•:
·~"" J•ci< 'lnd JTm Lln<l•a": b•O'"~''· Jimn """ !Or11nk Llnd...,y: 'l!ler. Mabt'I
/ 'Tnr~•, <ev~n ll'"""rhllrl•on. Sfrvice•
ponding "' Sml11>' Mnrh.1••Y·
Plfl"l."S E!'1•~1h K. PM!llS-Ave ·~. of "" H'!,bar ll!vd , ro"" M•~~ Dall cf d•MI>,
Q<:l()!M>r 13, 1972. St1rvl11e<1 bV '""· Cy'il F.
P~elo5, ~t Rlbld·'"'· C~!ll.; d•"9"'''· 8•'· tie K , Niisen, San FrandKO. Memotl•I
•••11lceo will t>e n•ld tonloht, Moncla.,,,,S·10
PM, St. Jo.cnlms Ca!tlollc Ch<irch.
Grave-side IM!•vlces. Tuetday, 11 AM, fClfeSI Lawn Hoilvwoad Hiii,.
TAMKSLl!Y
Jolin R•v Tanslc.tev Jr. AIJ9 36; r.-aldenl cf
Ht1nll...,!on 8'!~(11. 0 1lt of death, Ocl~btr
11. ltn. Survived by 1i•ltl', Mary
c-...1~. 01 HUflff,,.,,ton l!Je.11c1>. s~"'•leM,
Wed/'lfl<lay, 2 PM, Sm!lh1 Ch11pei.
'"'~"'en•, Wnlmlnntr ·Memort11 P•rk. Smfll'ts MOtlulrv, Olrect"'L
WADSWO•TH
"'~trick L. Wltd1WO<"th. A!M S1, of m
8owtinQ ()rHn Dr .. Cost• Meu. 01le of
dr .. m, 0c1oi;..r la. 19n. surv111eo hy •on•.
Rol>tl'I LH •l'ICI J•m•• S1epMn; .:lauvl>!tt. Cvn.:11 El•l.,. Wlt<l•wO<"!I>; I fl• ee
qr11n<1chlldren; lhreel sftlo" and two t>•oTn~•s. Servlc.,., W!.tlnel<l•v, 10·)0 AM,
\Ves!(\!ff Cll1pef. Wtslcllll C h • p •I
MorTu~rv. ~,1\!11, O<'"C lor•.
. '
• T1·a(le Voll111teers
'
Needecl lly Corp s
SANTA ANA -Volunteers
wit h trade skills v.•1\l be
rl.'C ruited Oct. 16-18 fo r
service In Peace C o r p s -
assisted countries <ind as
Voluntee rs in Service I o
America.
Four forn1er volunteers \1•11!
be availabl e to interview nnd
answer ciueB tions for ap-
plicants fr om 9 a.n1. to 6 p.n1.
Oct. 16-17 and from 9 a.n1 . to
9· p.m. Oct. 18 at the Sad-
dleback Inn fl1otel, 166ll First
St.
Fifty.seven nations h.!lve re
Trial Set
In Triple
Slayi11gs
quested volunteers ex-
per ienced in gas or diesel
n1echa nics, heavy equipment
operators and repairmen, in·
dustrial arts and vocational ORANGE COUNlY
education instructors, auto '--------,.,j~./
electricians, machinists, "'eld·
ers and civil engineers.
U.S. citizens over 18 years
or older nnd in good health are
eligi ble 10 apply for teaching
positions throughout the U.S.
and many parts of the world.
A college degree Is not re-
quired. Recruiters are looking
for volunteers experienced in
one of these trades and willing
Barbershop
Singing Set
At College
to train others lor one to two A show will be presented by
years. Orarige county members· of Peace C o r p s volunteers recei\'e two-year assignments the Sociely for the Preserva-
in Lat in America, Asia, /tfrica tion and Encouragement of
and the Pacific and are given Barbershop Quartet Singing in
free travel, medical care, America at 8 p.m. Nov. 4 at
housing and living allowances Orange Coast College.
and approximately $2;000 upon "Yesterday," this year's
completion of service: theme, will be remembered in
SANT A ANA -A man ac-VISTA v•lun•··rs serve !or
ed f k·11· h' tr ed i....: ballads and comedy music!ll cus 0 1 mg is es ang one year in low-income U.S. selections by the Golden City
wife and her male companion communit ies and receive liv· Chorus of the Santa Ana
in her Fountain Valley home ·i'ng allowances and ·~ per
and •· la · hi if ' · I .,,,., chapter, the Crown City Good tuco s ymg 5 w e s gir month, upon completion of the Time Music Company, the friend at her Westminster assi·gnmenl.
h •·· ~ ed Beach Nuts , the Sweet residence as ll';:t;n oiuer to VISTA and Peace Corps Ad I' h Sun hin S · I
r I n.. · Or e mes,t e s e pecta ace trla .ut:i.;. 4 m ange merged one year ago to form and many other Orange Coun-
County Superior Court. ACTION, a federal agency en-ty quartets. Judge William Murray set . 1 th e trial date for Amos Lewis compassmg vo unteer service Tickets are $3.50 for reserv-organizations. ed seats, $3 general admission
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F(ree Community ~ectures
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:~~! ~~=~ ::~~~~
munity lectures featuring Scienca. The ttriea, opening the speak.en.
outstanding UC Irvine Pl'<>' Tuelday, will be 1ponsored "Relevance of the Art~
r..Sors in several fields will by the l'l1alda 01 UCI. Today" will be the subject f9r A winter quarter series the spring seri~ given b~
bo pr<oented et UC lrvlne dur· presenlod 1>J UOI Town and faculty In tbe School ol Fi¥,
Ing the yeor under •poneorhip Gown wUI loe111 on the sul>-Art& Jn cooperation JYilh ~
of campus support organU.a· Jed, ''The Q\a11aige of Racial UCI Alumni Asoociatlon. ~
tions. and Ethntc DI ff tr enc e s The lectures will be held
"How the Brain Worka" will Around the World." Ftve pro. Tuesdays at 8 p.m. i.n ~
be the theme for the fall serf~ lessors from tbe School of Social Science Hall located )a.
of four lectures by faclllty tn Hutnanllles and the Program the Social Science Complet..
WE QUOTE .PRIC'ES
OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME
-CHECK THUi SUPll SA~ SPICIALS--.. R1t. , 011r RM. Ptke I
DI-GEL ANTACID TABLETS, #100 ···••••·•·•••• $2.10 $1.75
LISTERINE Anti1•ptic, 12 01, ••••• , ••••••••• , ••• , $2.49 $1.-t9
CUTEX POLI SH REMOVER, 4 Olo ••••• , ••••••• ,, ••• 5Sc 45c
CLAIROL "KINDNESS" et.Ch ic Condition Spr•y, 5 OL ff .75 $1.45 .
2700 L Coast Hil!hwav. at Fenileat Corona del Mar
$1.39
$1.19
35c
95c
• AMPLI PAlllNGo IN KU.I
Hours -9:JD • 6:00 Deity
CIGMd S.llffyt oH Helldoys
644-7575
WAD5WORTH ~•11rv Elaine W11<1Awor111. 1>.-oe s.i .. ol ?911
Bowling Gr~ Drl~e. Cost• Me~, 01le
01 11e~1h. Oclooer ta, i1n . Surv<11eo bV
"'"'' R-rt Lff-end J1-Sl~n; dau9111er, Cvndl Er11.1~ w11.:1.,..,,.-1111
"'Oilier, Mr•. ROber1 Klein; ;lf'ld lflrff
ll'•nacl>l!dren. :>rr11ke1 Wednesdli)I, IO:lCI
AM. Wtt!cllfl Cl't•llfl. WttlclU! Ches* Mortuary, ut..aat, Directors.
Ratcli(l, 50, of Anaheim and During the three days, the and $2 for students. Groups of
ordered the u n em PI 0 Ye d volunteers may be reached at 25 or more may get a 25 per~
aerospace worker ta return to 547-7605 for more information. cent di scount.
his courtroom Nov. 17 for a.---------------'-------~======== pretrial hearing.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
t27 E. 17tb SI., Costa Mesa
6464888 • BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona de! !\lar 673-MSO
Costa l\1esa 646-%4%4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa f\.1esa
LI 8-34.13 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH ~IORTUARY
1705 Laguna Caoyon Rd.
494--!MIS • PACIFIC VJEIV
~1EMORIAL PARK
Cemetery J\fortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific \'iew Drive
Newport Beach. CalUornla
644-%700 • PEEK FA~ULY
COL-ONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7301 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster 893-3525 • s~unts· MORTUARY
tti flfain St.
lluntininnn Beacb
530-6539
Ratcliff was arrested J uly 8
by Westmimter detectives im·
mediately after the sho:oting of
Mrs. Barbara L. Carew, 42, of
9360 McFadden Ave. in that
city. Officers said they found
Ratcliff writing a note of
apology to his children when
they found hlm sitting behind
the wheel of his car near the
Carew home.
Police claim Ratcliff told
them that the Carew shooti ng
followed the slaying of his
estranged wife, Betty, 41 , and
Craig P. Hirst. 52, Anaheim,
at Mrs. Ratcliff's home at·
10526 Morning Glory Ave.
Correspondent
Slates Talk .
John Scott, foreign coms-
pondent and assistant to the
publishe r of TIME magazine,
fairs Coun cil Of Orange County
at 7:30 p.n1. Oct. 18 at the
Nc"'Portcr Inn.
"The Crisis Areas of the
World Today" will be the topic
of his speech following the din-
ner meeling.
New Chainnan
FULLERTON -Norma J.
Fimbres has been . named
chainnan or the Chi·cano
Studies Department at Cal
State Fullerton.
A TOSTADO IS ••• ,l
••• a heap of'"refried beans .
••• a jungle ol shredded lettuce
••• a mountain of specially grated cheddar ·
cheese
••• a triumphant sli~ of fresh tomato -all
on a dellcious com torUUa
AT DEL TACO A TOSTADO IS ...
o~L.Y 30c
(
' NJWPORT BEACH
Brfihll IP1llNdes) At Campus
SANTA ANA
4th St. 1nd Newport Fwy.
TUSTIN
Red Hiii Near S•nta An• Fwy •
. . . -4 •ffMtr o.-...,_ C••.tty foe.,.._
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' I We could run s)lort of electrj~
Conservation is vital~
Remember that record-
breaking heat wave last year?
You wereii't the only one
sweating it out.
So were we. The demand for
electricity hit an all-time
peak on September 13, 1971.
It was 13'7'• higher than the
1970peak.
~
We met all demands,
but our system was severely
strained.
But what about the years
ahead? Eachyearthedemand
for electricity keeps right
on growing. New homes
keep going up. And schools.
Office buildings. Fact.cries.
All will require addi,tional '
electricity. So Will the
new equipment needed t.o
clean up the environment.
Unless Edison is permitted
to build additional power
plants and transmission lines,
it may become necessary to
blackout blocks of customers
on a rotational basis within
two or three years.
Yet permits necessary to
build any new major plants
have been delayed or blocked
for the past four years.
• •
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While a power shortage did nol become a reality
in 1971, the threat ol one did. Edison is working
wilh induslrial and business firm! to conserve
electricity in ollices and factories.
That's an immediate
problem. We're working hard
to resolve it.
The long-range problem
requires finding more ways,
t.o conserve energy and to
use our nation's total energy
resources wisely.
That involves all of us.
In Edison's fossil-fuel ed
plants, for example , we're
now able to produce 30'7'•
more electricity from a unit
of fuel than in 1948.
That helps~
And by using higher-voltage
transmission lines, we're
also able to deliver electricity
more efficiently.
Perhaps you can conserve
energy, too. Have you
considered ways to make
every kilowatt count at
home? We'll be happy to send
you a list of practical
suggestions.
. Write: Conservation, Edison,
P.O. Box 800,
Ro~emead; California 91770.
.sCE
Southern Callfornis l!dlson
An Equal Opportunity EmolO)'tf
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lb
f
by
A
ho
pa
Se
"'
be
WI
Wi
• s
•
th
pl
d
'W
m
M
y
,d ,t
al
"
•i
s
t •
b
x-beauty
Returns-
~ Crippled
"
• I
( PEOPLE )
in E~ria, Miss Light says
she is1. trying to ignore the
crippling disease and teach in
an elementary school.
"It was run and exciting
before, but I certatnly wasn't
very useful or procluctive,"
she commented.
* A .39-~Carson _man
known "'t~~ -~~~n
derprivileged children ha s
been accused of evading mot:e
than $65,000 in income taxes,
federal authorities say.
Thomas Reese was indicted
by a federal grand jury in Los
Angeles and arrested at his ·
borne, authorities added.
Reese. accused of failing to
pay taxes on an estimated in-
come of $183,555 for the years
1967 through 1970, was under
surveillance foc more than a
year by Internal Revenue
Service agents, authorities
said.
* A New York bank guard has
been arrested and charged
with bilking a blind customer
when he helped her make
wtthdrnwa!S. .
"Charlie was always so kind
and obliging," said J uliette
SRvers of Charles Harper, 32,
"though he acted kind of slow
and y,·01.dd sometimes say,
'Oh, I forgot to have you sign
the slip -sign it here,
please."
Miss Silvers, with h e r
seeing-eye dos, we~ to the
Bowery Savings Banlc and
Wscc.vered, on a day when
Harper was not at the bank ,
that her account had onl y
$169.65 instead of the $2,857
the guard told her was on
deposit.
Bank <1fficials said !hey
would make restitution.
* William Craig, leader of the
militant Protestant Vanguard
'Movement, was fined $84 and
banned from driving for a
year when he pleaded guilty to
,1drlving after drinking more
than the permitted level of
alC<lhol.
The charge arose from a
<C()Jlision at Tullymore, County
Down , last May.
* "Norma" is lea ving the
~11-ingers speechl!SS this season
: at the Paris Ope.a.
1 A r~ent presentation of
"Nonna" had to be in·
tcrrupled at the end of the se-
cond act because Spanish
singing star 1\.1 ontterrat
j:abaJle, in the title role, lost
'her voice because of a cold.
She had co ughed ln-
term.itteoUy during the two
act..
On Sept, 28, "Norma" Wlll
halted alt..-Ille third ac:I
because Barnabe M a r t I ,
playing Pollk>ne, klst. his voice.
Marti 11 the husband of
MontserTat ca~lle.
* 11\e 1'\Jtum J<'"armers or
America·~ Royal Queen Is
Lorelle ltan Sousa, 17.
The Buellton resident w11
crowned In Kansas City at the
K.fOOP 'S national convention.
•
l.JN-8/lOOK
# 1 SUPER PLUSH
''lor All Lawnsl''
• Beautiful basic stvff that gets
you th• greenest kJwn.
• Spread it on, water it, then
take it eosyl •.o;; "· $49$ SAVE
$5.95 $1 .oo
••-:ci· "· $895 SAVE
$10.95 $2.00
#3SUPER_3·WAY . "'Jt ·'
··'~ WEEDILIZER -. -
''for Dlchondra Onfyl''
Does 3 nice thin.gs for your lawn:
• Kills 32 stubborn weeds.
• Choses out bugs.
• Fertilizes.
'"
00
'•· ''· $995 SAVE REG. $ $12.95 3.00
. ,
. #6 PRE-EMERGE
-''for All Lawns Nowf''
'"iE~ .. "· $795 SAVE
$9.95 $2.00
• I st quality, preflnished
panels iii several gorgeous
woodtone1.
• Random planked & V·
grooved, full 1/• "
thick-4 ft. JC 7 ft.
e h's foll fix·up time--dre1s
"'tp·your home at this
giv•awoy price!
MADETO $199 SELL FOR
$4.95
Colorful
SHUTIERS
"A Very.Special 8uy-Hurry-
Whlle They Lo1tr'
I
e Colorful, 1nol ded plastic
shuHers ore eoty to install.
• Never need refinishing-
they'll look great forever. •
e Several sizes available--
sizes to fit homes & some
especially for mobile
estates.
MADE TO SELL
FOR $1.99
29~ ..
17 ft. Alumlnum
SPRING-TYPE
WEATHER STRIP
e Enough to weolher strip
o door or o window.
•
e Cut your
heating cos!_
by winter
t,l'.l~y·~ proofing
_.n·~~· If,!!~""-~I. & WID, ONlTI
Vlnyl Pla1tlc
WINDOW SHADES
e Easy car• wipe.clean vlnyt
plastic.
e Wiih roller up lo 36" wide
RIG. 99c
59'
WE CUT
WINDOW
SHADES
TO SIZE
F•EEI
'"'" . WIO. OHlTI
Mond;i1, October lb, t 972 DAILY PILOT 9
FOUNTAIN VALLEY ..... 'MOllTO••
17200 SO. BROOICHURST
l200 YAIDS IOUTif Of WAIHdl
PHONE 968-3311
9055 CENTRAL AVf.
(AClOSS llOM MOHfQAJI l'lilAJ
PHONE 6 4-
SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE TUES. & WED. ONL YI
·~.
SALESMEN'S DEMOS
11Factory Reconditioned-Fully Guaranteedl"
•Powerful % h.p . motor scoops 104 cu. ft. of d.ebris per minute .
• Include s 5 gal. steel drum, 6 ft .hose and standard attachments.
•Super-powe rful vacu,um for indoor or outdoor use.
• U.L approved for years of care-free servi ce.
. .
• We bought all we could get so we could sell them
at this low, low price.
•While.they la st only! First come, fir st served!
MADE TO SELL
FOR s29.95
LIMITED QUANITIESI TUES. & WED. ONLYI
SINK CUT-OUTS Huge Selection
•
e Formica·like tops on ~" 1hick
particle-board.
e Many sl1es, st~opes, designs.
e Gr9ot for POTTED PLANTS
table tops .
REG. $1.69
T\J(I. & WIO. OHlTI
6 ft, • 15 ft. Roll
BAMBOO FENCING
e Bamboo slats are firmly
woven with stainless steel.
• Gives a beoutif\11 tropical
look to potiot, gardens, yards,
RIG. $3.99
$2?!
"Plant Now for A Colorful
Winter & Springl"
e Choose from Mother Nature's finest,
brightest flowers.
e Instant color for your yard.
• Pan sies , violas, snapdragons-many, many more.
• Buy plenty at th is low price.
REG. 49c
TUii. &
WID. ONLY!
I
'·
-JO DAILY PILOT s Moodiy, Oc.tobtr lt., IC>72
Money's W orth
Sl1oppers: Start
'Unit Pricit1g'
By SYLVIA PORTER large supermarket chains in
In an era of record and ris-
ing food prices. unit pricing -
the dollars and cents cost per
pound pint, number or an~·
measure of a gi\'en product -
oould be the U.S. food shop-
per's biggest 1noney·saving
weapon.
big shopping areas, how Is It
In the small neighborhood food
stores, in the ghetto, in im-•
poverished rural areas -rYA
wher~ almost surely unit pric-
ing Ui still being resisted by
retailers~
WRY YOUR apathy over
Reason : 11 is \'lrtually your
sole mean.s of comparini;: the
true unit cost and what rou
buy in the supermarket.
~·hat could be so valuable a
money-s.1>\'ing tool ? What can -
be l'lone to help you use unit
pricin~ and use it more to
Al\'D B~AUSE of the
pressure ~·e, as consumers.
h&ve brought
on food re-
tailers, lcgis-.
lators, other
key sources.
unit pricing
has been
spreading ra·
pldly through
the countrv
in the past
couple of ,O•'Te•
years. ~1ore than 100 retail
food ch..ii..,s now use some kind
of unit oricing svstem.
In aln1oc;t every ..,ajor cit\'.
the pricing svstem h a s
become available . .An outc;tan·
ding example is New York
City, "'here, as of a few '~'eeks
ago. large supermarkets and
food stores are required not
only to post unit prices but
also to post them against a
conspicuous orange
background.
And increasing numbers of
states have laws requiring unit
pricing on a statewide basis.
Thrre is no doubt that federal
unit pricing laws will be ·placed
before the next Congress.
YF.T. STUDY after studv
discl""~ that vou are not U!!-
ing the "'eapon on the scale
you should , In the way you
should or even with the
awareness you shou!d !
You are ig noring unit prices.
You are reporting that un it
pricing hasn"t saved you any
money . And even \\'hen you
say you kn ow the prices are
there, you add you're not us-
ing the labels to switch from a
higher cost to a lo,ve'r cost
brand.
If this is the ~·ay i: is in the
your maxim~ benefit?
To begin With, here ls a run-
down of problems re\·ealed in
a recen' survey conducted by
the Office of Consumer Aff:iirs
in \Va!1hin~ton, hea ded by l\1rs.
Vir1.1inia Knauer:
•J\tany stores that do use
Ur'lit pricing are not making an
effort to promote or explain to
rou, the consumer, how to use
the pricing svsten1. In some
cases where explanatory
materi 1<I is available. it is not
displayed conveniently or
prominently.
•LABELS ARE frequently
b;?re!v legible -e i t h e r
hecause thev are smudged or
hecause the p r i n t is
microscopic or the ink Is
blurred or because there is no
color contrast "between label
and she!{ or between print and
label.
•in some instances. the
dollar value Is printed in
larger t) pe. the cents value in
small type -causing a
cll.!tomer to read, say "$1 per
pound" rather than "$1.29 per
pound.'
•Unit prices are avallable
in some product categories,
sparse !J_ others and entirely
•"i"sing in sttll others.
'In far too-many mstances,
l~bels on lower shelves ~·ere
virtually unreadable, or where
thex were bunched up on mid-
dle she!\·e~ 1,1.·ere unintelligible
as to \·rhat price belonged to
.... -hat product.
•IN l\IANY stores. it e.ms
aren't marked with unit priet.>s
but merely with stock in-
rormRtion labels,
~~1any ma jor chains are
using unit pricing pr imarily to
promote their own brands --Now ••.• Plastic Cream
Invention For Artificial Teeth
• Artificial Teelll -Fell SoNatlrllhlore
Now, r«thefint I ime.1eit:nctolfua a
plastic crum that holds denturts u
nevc.r before-fonns an el11llic rnern-
brane lb.at lttl/11 Ital' 1.V.. 10 IAl4!
fllJlvral liJfWlJ of :fON' MOWIAI:. lt'a a
unique dilcovery called F1XOOCN"f'9
lb.at bas revoluUonited dea&ure
warin1.
It lets J'OU bite harder, chew bet-ter, eat IDOrt natural!,. FIXODl!NT
luta ror how-. Resi1ll moisture.
OenturN that fit an e91ential to
health. See your Mitiat re(Ularly.
Get ea1y-W.t1sc: F1XOOEHT Dtntura
Adhesive Cream.
IN ITS 22nd YEAR
INVESTMENT COURSE
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
Ne Admlallon Chllrt•
An introduction to the basic fllndamentals of in-
vesting in corporate stocks, bonds, mutual funds,
government bonds, Building &: Loan Associations.
Intended to glve practical knowledge of invest-
ments and stock exchange operation. .
WM. L. O'BRYON, lnstnactor
llGINNING OCTOIER 17111
FOR 5 WIEKS-7:30 to 9:30 P.M.
TUESDAYS
EAST ILUFF SCHOOL
2627 VISTA DEL ORO, NEWPORT lfACH
Register •t the Lech.Ire
You're ln'Witecl to four
free lectures on
Rea/ ~fail!
!Jnve6lmenb
Oct. 18th
•'The tntimate Investment -Blue Chip Non·
managerial Property" .
Lecturers -Ro.S?er Slates and Gene Kadow
Oct. 2'5th
"J\1aximum Return on a Minimum Investment"
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Lecturer -Fred Becker
Nov. 1st
"Advantage or Real Estate Syndication for the
Small Investor"
Lecturers -Phil McNamee and 11Cap" Blackburn
Nov. 8th
"Capital Con~rvaUon Through Exchanging
Minimizln& Taxei"
Lecturer -Bruce Howey
"Tailoring Your ~73 Investment"
Lecturer -Randy McCardle
TICKETS AVAI LABLE AT THI DOOR
EACH SESSI ON MEETS 7:30 ·9'30 P.r.\
GOLDEN WEST COLLEG!
S.rl" CCMponsored By
0,...,.. Coht • Gold"') Wu l
DAIL\' PILOT • eon.,.
Hunll....., Beach · Fount1ln V1 lloy
lloard ol R,.llora
TOP CAMPER DEALER -Dick Wilson, Ge!t) Hun•
tington Beach Ford dealer, was recently named
~ the top El Dorado Camper deaJer in the nation.
With Wilson is Pete Vlahakis, \Vil son I.Ford truck
and RV manager.
.
l1a Hiflh G e a1•
Wilson Ford Leads U.S.
In El Dorado Unit Sales
CARL CA.RSTENSF;N Canada arxi si:i foreign coun-
ot IM ,,.,.., "II" s11tt tries who completed an in-
Honor built Corporation . tensive five· week course
makers of the El Dorado cove ring the most up-to-date
Camper announced last wet>k methodi. of operating a
that Dick Wilson. owner of modern and efficient retail
\Vilson Ford Sales in llun-automotive establishment.
tlngton Beach, leads lhe na~on Heading the Dealers' Sons
in unit sales of the El Dor do seminar faculty were John Z.
for the 1972 model year. •. _ OeLorean, 'Cbevrolel General
The recreation v eh i c \....e Manager and Robert D. Lund.
department is staffed with General Sales J\.1anager,' as
highly trained SP.f!Cialists and well as General Motors cor-
headed by Pete Vlahakis. one porate and Chevrolet Central
of Ornni;1;e County's most Office staff executives, GM
knowledgeable recreational ve-Institute instructors. leading dealers, and executives of or-
hJcle. Jtanizations a£filiated with
Wilson's !rutk and RV Chevrolet and Wayne State
department have wall~ fillt'd University in Detroit.
with honor~ and awards.
evirlenct-of the dealership's ~ * * * I sa les excellence. STEPHEN 1\.1. ·nRO\\'N has
* * * STEVE CONNELL of Con-
nell Chevrolet in Costa ~1esa
was among !ht! graduates
from the 17th session or the
Chevrolet Dealers' Sons School
-one or the auto industry's
most unusual educa tional pro·
grams.
The s"ession was held at the
Chevrolet School of l\lerchan-
dising and l\1anagerr.cnt in
Detruil.
Connell was one of 63 dealers'
sons or top executives from 53
U.S. Chevrolet dealerships and
C'reneral Motors ope rations in
Flour Maker
Gets P rice
Hike Okay
WASHINGTON (UPIJ -
Citing the recent Russian
wheat sale a.!I partial cause,
the Price Comml!Uion has
authorized General Mills to in-
creaae the price or its flour
sold In supermarkets.
The price increase is 6.55
per cent In the Western states
and 11.08 percent in the
ea!ltern states.
Oher Oour makers are ex·
oected to request similar price
hikes.
General Mills said its costs
had R'One up due to the hi,..her
wheat prices stemming from
the Soviet wheat deal and
becau~e of added costs ror
labor, mnnufacluring a n
freight.
The price increase.! will not
applv to salrs to bakeries or
other lnstltuUonal o ll t l e t s .
Prict Commission officials
said the hike should not eon-
tribute to higher commercial
prices.
been named project planning
manager for the Long Range
Planniug Department o f
Toyota J\.totor Sales, U.S.A .•
1 In. in Torrance.
Brovn1. who has been with1 Toyota since August 1971 , is
responsible £or the develop-
rr.ent and use vf computer
models ror long-range sales
forecasting and analysis.,A-fe
will also identify strategy
alternatives and coordinate a
corporate planning System.
A graduate of the
University of S o u t h e r n
California Graduate School ofl
Business, Brown resides in
Huntington Beach.
* * * OLDSMOBU.E DIVISION.
on the strength of 57 ,G42
deliveries during the last 10
days of September, captured
the coveted third place in in·
dustry sa les for the 1972 model
year.
The o·ecord September 21·30
total boosted the division's
model year figure to 749,081
units, mort. than 7,000 cars
ahead of its nearest com-
petitor.
"Finishing third in model
year sales was one of our
-paramount goab for 1972,"
said William J. Buxt on,
dlvisonal ge;ieral s a I e s
manager. I\
Buffn1n 's Up
The board of dJrectors of l Buffums' has voted a sharp
increase in the cash dividend
rate by declaring a quarterly
dividend. of 14 cents a share on
the common stock, paJilble
October 18. 1972 to
shareholders of r e c or d
October 4, 1972.
'The increase amounted to 40
percent over the previous rate
of 10 cents a share pa.id last
quarter.
Fast Freeze
U.S. Tax Book Onl y 75c
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WASHINGTON (AP) -The Internal Revenue. Ser·
vice has talkerl the Government Printing Office out of
boosting the price of the book "Your Federal Income
Tax." Officials said the increase. while proper, Wcx!Jd be
embarrasing to President Nixon's economic program.
mE BOOK, one Or the government's most pepular
publication, tells Americans how to till out federal Income-
tax returns. Printed by the · CPO, this year's version .sold
tor 75 cents.
. but w be n IRS commissioner Johnnie M. Walters
leamed a few week! ago that lhe GPO was ready to hike
the price of "Your Federal Income Tux" and a t.u guide
for ..,.u bu!ints•es lo ft each, he wrote Acting Public
Printer Herry J. Humphrey:
"While II might be perfectly proper· lo P8" on lhe
tncr.easta tn cost, the larger prh:e or $1 could be a aerloua
~mtiarraument to tht President's EconomJc Stabilization
Program. 1111s 18 particularly so because of the wtde dll-
trlbutlon or the two tax books." SU\~ REPLIED ihal added cost• lhould ""'
tu•llY mallt the prtc:e 11.llO a c:opy, but he agrted 10 ,..
verse hfr decision. 'Ille IRS is char .. d with oitforcin(
anu-1nn1Uon1ry controls. 0
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Wall ·Street • • •
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Fifteen out of every 100 Americans todciy own stock. -We couldn't prove it, of course, but it seems likely
that the percentage is even greater . ·here in the Or-
ange Coast area .. and it's growing every day.
"
That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago,
to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring
its readers "tod<;iy's f' a.I sto~ks today" via super high
speed wire s rvices.
delivered editi -an • • I
e're still doing it in every home-
the service gets better all the time.
Wall Street's com ~uters "talk to" compute rs in the
DAILY PILOT pladt every trading day . at the rate of
I
more than 1,900 words per minute. It takes only 12
minutes to move the entire New York ·and
Stock Exchange reports from the canyons
American
of Wall
Street to the typesetting machines of the DAILY PILOT
right here on the Orange Coast. •
And when technology find s a way to beat that speed
record, the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the
fir st to use it to bring readers "today's qction today."
When it comes to financial news, the one that means
business is ·the '
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1 ,. DAILY . PILOT
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Some Of Its :Qnly. 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. edition
abounds with special news and sports storie1 told as only DAILY
PILOT staffers can tell them.
OPINIONS
Columns by Barry Goldwater and S. I.· H11y11k11w11, editorial car-
toon by Pulitzer Prize winner Jeff MacNelly, 11 weekly report on
California's congressmen and on what's do i n g in S11cral!l-'nfo.
That's just Page A7. Great commentary by great journalists ap-
pears throughout the Sunday paper.
BUSINESS
From Orange Coast real estate to New York's Wall Street, the
Sunday edition really means business. The DAILY PILOT covers it
all. "Dey-ahead" market news includes analysis of the past week'•
ups and downs, volume', trends end new stocks on both the Ameri-
can and New York exchanges.
PEOPLE
The · focus is on you and your neighbors -on allhds of p:ople
-through several different kinds of "only on S~ay" features.
People/Quotes, Good Deed People, At Your Service I the column
that fights City Hall) and each week's variety of feature stories
about people-'f<>U know ,... or wish you did.
THE ARTS
F>rom the irreverence of Rex Reed's celebrity column to the com-
prehensiveness of community theater end . live entertainment re-
ports, the Sunday entertainment pages I plus other features scat-
tered in other part• of the paper) present lively coverage of tl.e
lively arts. \ ·
TRAVEL
At least one page of every Sunday's paper i• d ev oted to travel,
at home and abroad. Stan De laplene's column can take you any-
where in the world. Stories by local readers oft en take you along
on 11 "favorite vacation." Even the ads are fun to read . •
PLUS, OF COURSE, ,COLOR . C'OMICS, BIG CLASSIFIED AD
SECTION, TV WEEK AND FAMILY ~WEEKLY MAGA~INES
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for re<1ders of the
DAILY PILOT
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with 10,131 · squiggled-down prices.
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·' Five whole acres of savings in each one! Old-fashioned, sturdy savings,
wall to wall. Glory in them starting at 10 a.m. Wednesday. Read about
them tomorrow in our big 12-page Treasury section . Save in .every de-
partment. Every day. Fashions tor the entire family, fun and·leisur'e things,
accessories for the home, a vast selection of fi~ods . Save on every-
thing under the squiggly roof. Save and get firsr.quality, too. No seconds,
no irregulars. Save and enjoy the convenrence of your J.C. Penney charge
card. If you've never met a squiggled-down price, come in, get ac-
quainted, and save. UH your J .C. P•nney Cherge C1rd
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Now we Ort Elglll/Look tor lhtl Squlggly Root• ..
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GRANADA HIUS 18000 Chalswonij St. 1· ·TORRANCE Sepulveda and Haw1Mrn1
WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Viclory Blvd. LAKEWOOD Carson St. and Paramount Blvd.
RIVERSIDE 3520 Tyh!r SI _..-<' BUENA PARK Beach and Orangethorpe
SANTA ANA 3900 South Brlslol St. . ORANGE Garcs1n Grove Blvd. and Mancheattr
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Open woekdaya 1:30 IO t :30·
Bund1r110 to 7. ..
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BEA ANDERSON, Editor
~1w. OCtrM4r U. ltn riff n
Planning Preferred
Better ·
Remedies
Advised
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You, of all
people, could have done a lot better with
that answer to those teenagers rrom Ten-
nessee whG wanted to know if birth con-
trol pills are 100 percent effective. I
couldn't believe my eyes When I read
your reply :_ "Yes, if you hold the pill
between your knees at all times."
Those gi rls said they were 15 and 16
years of age, and this is certainly old
enough to be told the facts. I'm sure you
know the pill comes as close to being 100
percent foolproof as any birth control
device we know or. It is usually
harmless, but because it can produce
side effects \n some people it should be
pl'escribed b~ a physician.
Moreover, you missed a good Ofr
portunity to recommend Planned Parent-
hood. They do a terrific job of send-
ing information of this kind to anyone
who asks.
Remember that young high school girl,
Hep rietta Suooval. who testified before
the Senate Committee on Population?
She said most teenage pregnancie~ are
not due to irresponsibility, but ignorance.
That g~l spoke for thousands.
Usually your answers are excellent but
you certainly bombed out this time. I'm
disappointed. -MARY CALDERONE,
MD. Executive Director of SIECUS, New
York. 'i ~
DEA.It MAM: Of eoont you are right.
My answer was a bomb. I appreciate
your calling me on It. And thank 1ou for
•· suggesting Planned Parenthood.
'I1tis splendid organization bas been
perform.IJll a vital service long before ti
"'IS corutidered "safe" to talk about tuch
things. They' wUI be glacf to send birth
control information free of cltarge to
anyone who writes ror U. Look In Your
phone book for the address of your local
chapter.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a
faithful follower and have learned a Jot'
from your column. I have con£idence ia
your advice and I believe everything you
say.
Recently you told a reader, "Any man
can find~ woman who will go to bed with
him if he sets his standards low enough."
Well,. Ann , I have set my standards very
low and I stiH can't rind anybody. Will
you please tell me where to look? -
DESPERATE IN NEW HAVEN
DEAR YALEE: I can't tell you where
lo look, bot I'd like m tell you where lo
go. ti's pretty early in the "'ason for you
guys to be goofing off. Get back to the
books or 1'11 tell Klugman Brewster on
you.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I keep telling
myself I ca n handle it alone but now I
know I can't. Is there a way to stop ~
ple from asking, "What's the matter with
you?"
I've had arthoplastic surgery on both
legs and I use a walker to get around.
You can't imagine the number of people.
most of them strangers, who stop and
ask, "What happened to you?" Or,
"What is your trouble?"
Please don't tell me these people are
tgenuincly interested. They ~ just
lnosey. I try to be pleasant and control
'my temper but it's getting harder all the
~ime. The last woman who stopped me
_got a dirty look. I couldn't even be civil.
''Cal1 you give me a stock answer to let
~pie know · I don't Wlll'Jt to be ques--
~ned? I need to go out into the world
t I'm finding it hard.er and harder. -
!RD DEGREED
1 DEAR T.: There's no way to ))l'!:Vent
~pie from astto1 qoestions. Of coarse :\!! gross to ask a handicapped penon,
What's wrong with yoa?" bot they
ean no .harm. Tbey are Just Inquisitive.
Imply say, "I've had corrective surgery
nd I'm getting along fine, thank you," If
ey pres1 for detall1 say, "l really don't
ant to bore you," ·1ben changf: the 1ub-
t. .. ~ A~ drugs OK if you team how to con-
frOI them? Can they be of help? 'l'he
answers are in Ann Landers' new
booklet, "Straight Dope on Drugs," For
' eHch boOklct ordered send a dollar biU,
plus fl IOng, aelf·addreued, .stamped
envelope, (16 cenls postage) to Ano
Landers. Box 3346, Chicago, Ill. 60654 .
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M)ss Marie Primavera's
outfit is approprio.te
for either the
runway or the Bay
Club setting .of
NSA fashion show.
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Pour Orange Coast clubs are boprna: to
harvest bushels of funds during faU
benefits scheduled for SaLurday, Oct. 28.
1..aguria Beach Ebel! Club members
and guests will head for Coto de Ca1.a for
a Harvest •loedo'wn and chuckwagon din-
ner. Partygoers will board 6:30 p.n1 .
buses at Monarch Plaza for the trip to
Trabuco Canyon.
~1rs. James Townsend is chairman.
assisted by the htmes. Richard Bosv.'ell
?nd Hugh Blue .
The Mmes. Anthony 0 r I an de I! a .
Norman Dolby, \\'i!liam Wittman, Alfred
Kres s. Jun Chino, Richard Racieh.
Cordon Dah1quist and Joseph O'Sulli\'an
head the patron .. door 't>rlze, publicity.
reservation, invitation. transportation.
host and decoration committees.
Proceeds will be divided among the
group 's philanthropies: scholarships for
Laguna Beach High Schoo~seniors, fin'an·
cial support to YMCA, American Field
No 'coaching' is
necessary for the Mmes ...
Jun Chino, Jody Upham
and John' McKenney
(left to right) to
have a good ti me
at Harvest Hoedown.
Scarecrows are readied by the
Mmes. Ramon Boesch, Ronald
Barnett and Raymond McGraw
(left to right) for Alpha
Delta Pi benefit
while the .Mmes. Cy Petersen
and Don Elder check
piano for Golden Key sale.
Service, Friends of the Library, Sooth
C.oast Community Hospital. released-time
Christian education, LagW1a Greenbelt.
Moultoo Playhouse and student Joan
fund .
The Balboa Bay Club will be the set-
llng when Bahia Chapter of the National
Secretaries Association presents A l<~au
Festival of Fashions, starting at II a.m.
~tiss r.1aria Primavera of Costa Mesa
is in charge of arrangements for the noon
luncheon and sryles to be shown by pro-
fessional models and secretaries. Por·
lions of the S7 tickets arc ea rmarked fGr
the NSA llomc Trust Fund for the
association 's retirement. center in Albu-
querque.
Alpha Delta Pi al umnae have chosen
Scarecrov•s and Com Shucks as the
!heme for their fa shion show benefiting
Hope Haven Educational Center for
Retarded Children.
Decorations and centerpieces y,·ill pro-
vide an autumn atmosphere to Bullock's
Tea Room, Santa Ana for the 9:30 to 11
a.m. event.
Mrs. Ramon Boesch is general
chainnan assisted by the Mmes. Davi d
Bauer, tickets; Gl'Orge Briggeman, door
prizes; Gerome •IerLOg. decorations, and
Frederic Sylvia, publicity.
Old trunks and an antique piano will be
the most obvious items an1ong I.he rum·
mage collection Golden Key members in
lluntington Beach will have for sale at
the Market Basket parking lot from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m.
r..lrs. Don 1'.tder . ways and
means c h a i r m a n . is seeking dona·
tions of saleable items and will accept
articles on a consign1nent basis. Dona-
tions will be picked up or may be
delivered the day of the sale. Colltttors
items and some antiques have been
promised to the Key.
Golden Key projects benefit the Child
Guidahce Center of Orange County.
Sales at the vohmteer·staffed Thrift
Shop at 311 Fifth St., Huntington Beac~.
are augmented i;,y proceeds from the
rummage sale and the already reserved
performance o( "Wait" Until Dark" on
N"ov. 11 at the liuntington Beach
Playhouse.
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What and Why You Eat W ei9hed
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DIET CONTROL
Reta Farb
By ALLISON DEERR
Of 1M 0.U\' P'li.t ll•tf ' Want to IOite weight?
Don't want to gi\'e up your
f1vorite puddings, rice ,
Potatoes, spaghetti or ice
crwn?
Reta Farb nlay have the
answer for you through Diet
Control Centers Inc ..
OCC offers .:1 pr~ran1
designed to develop better
self-image. re-edll<.'1ltl' I he
dieter with nu tr 11 i on a 1
guidance and r1nn as you trim
\\'ith isometric exercises.
1be Villa Park resident
recently introduced the DCC
method to the W~t Coast. She
bad lost 52 pounds oo the diet
and kept it off. When the pro-
gram expanded and needed
teachers for new operators of
the program she got involved .
l,.ater, when she moved back
h> Orange Couv_IY) she brought
the program w1lh her.
COAST CENTERS
Two centers will open soon
in Costa Mesa but classes are
already under way in North
...,.,., ...... .,.---,----.,-~---·.. ,,.,.,...-: ,.;,w;; :~"'->: ··~''t'-""' .. ..__..,.~ ~,....,...~
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'Witch' Way to the Halloween Celebration?
Orange County.
Ciasse5 are given f\tonday s
at 7· 30 p.m. in the OHve
Heights ReceptioL Center,
Orange; 1\Jeedays at 9:30 a.m.
and 7:30 p.m. ln ihe Bueno
Park First Congregational
Church, and Tb.in;day morn-
ings and evenings in the
Anaheim First Congregational
Church.
Jn the program dieters at-
tend meetings once per week
for an hour. 'lbere is a small
membership fee and a
nominal weekly fee while you
lose weight. Ooce you reach
goal weight, Mrs. Farb ex-
plained. you attend meetings
to maintain your weight at no
charge.
"We teach how to eat, how
not to cheat," she sai.d. "And
an important fact is that you
can cook the same way for the
"''hole family rather than two
separate meals and stocking
two varieties ol food."
POSITIVE THINKING
Step one in the program is a
short course in positive think·
1ng "lo develop a be.Iler .seu.
imag,. You can't Iese until
you know why aod when you
OVerPat."
For example, she explained,
If you always get hungry at 3
o'clock in tile afternoon, in-
stead of denying yourself
anything end nlbbling later,
you eat a "free food" illte
asparagus or drink coffee.
For these times, she said , it
is best to stock a supply of
aUowed goodies and Jc:rep
then1 handy so you won ·1
cheat. She added that guilt
about cheating is one reason
people don 't stick with most
diets .
Another factor is expense,
she said. The dieter doesn 't
have to spend the time and
money to prepare special
meals.
One way DCC uses to teach
dieters about their eating
habitS is to write dov.'ll
everything they eat each
week. Along with this they
mijfil_ write down one good
thing that happened each day.
"It develops a positive at·
Hlude." she stud, "~ause 1f
you look I« something good
)'OU'll rind it."
EATING HABITS /
1be program MCOUrages
dieters to anal}"" why they
are running to the cookie jar
.and resolve the problem th.'lt
causes them to eat.
Classes are limited to 20 or
30 participants, she said,
because the program works
bes! when kept on a personal
ll'vel. so that each one 's prob-
lems can be dealt with.
Each meeting hx:ludes a
new recipe tested ror the pro-
gram by the center's stafr
nutritionist, Berta ?.iodell,
fonner dircc-tor of tbe New
York Institute or D~tilics.
Mrs. Farb does oot just
hand oot diet sheets. bul in-
stead offers nutritional
guidance. "\Ve tell how to eat
and why A>t just what," h1rs.
Farb added.
Conlrolled portions of foods
liKe rice, potatoes and lee
cream are allowed oc-
casionally. A plan that in·
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
cludt'! an aJcoho!ic bevtt"age ll
being devised.
EXERCISES
Exercises are isometric and
all done ln chairs at the
meetings. More exercises ate
suggested for home use. "It is
important 10 exercise as you
lose, because you tone and
firm as the weight goes " she
assert.d.
Weight loss of five to six
pounds the first week is
average, she said, and her
Orange Coubty classes ha\•e
reported 9 to 10 pounds the
first week.
Mrs. Farb trooghl the !"O-
gram to Orange County with
her new figure -"because I
knew my friends wouldn 't
believe the new me. I tried
dozens of diets but none of
them worked. I could lose 20
pounds and tHat was that, fd
gain it back." --
The plan has a basic 12·week
course to begin to re.educate
eating habits which is followed
by an eight·week stabilization
plan.
An introduction to the pro-
gram will be offered Wednes-
day, Oct. II, at 9:30 a.n1.
and 7: 30 p.m. In the Congrtge·
lional Church of Santa Ana,
2$55 N. Sanuago, Santa Ana .
Here are-samples of Diet
Control Center •ppr o v e d
recipes. , ·
CHOCOLATE BANANA
MTLKSHAK~
1 ~ banana
I package artificial sweet<.>n-
er
3 heaping teaspoon choa>-
late
skimmt'd milk
-4 ice C'Ubes
4 ounces water
Blend un!tl thick. This is a
likeness to the thick shakes at
yoor local hamburger shop.
RICE AND ClilCKEN
HAWAIIAN
-4 ounces cooked chicken
1 owice pannesan cheese
i.~ cup cooked rice
1 ': teaspoon lemon juice
1.4 cup pineapple chunks (no
sugar -packed in own
juice)
Put all ingredients into deep
casserole dish. Bake in ~
degree oven ror approximately
25 to 3{) minutes.
Capricorn: ·Stick to Budget .
•
TUESDAY
OCTOBER 17
Don't fool yourself about basic Dec. 21): f\'ew people come in·
chores, health, details neces-to your life via short journeys,
sary to complete big project. messages , social in·
By SYDNEY 0~1ARR View facts as they exist. troductions. Leo could be
Leo takes compliments and . Recognize need for change of featured. Accent new ideas.
criticisms to heart. These pace. Pi.sets person is in pie-Original approach has best
natives find it difficult to lure. Protect right to privacy. chance for success. Be in--·~elax, sec~ constantly to .be LIBRA (Sept. ~t. 22): dependent withou t being ar-
on stage. . When re~axahon Accent is on powerful emo--rogant. d~ occur, it us.uall~ 1nvol~es tional response. You cannot
A;1es and Sag1ttar1us,_ w~!J!.-.expect anything now to occur--~APRICORN lf?l'C. 22-Jan.
J.,1bra also ''ery much 1n pic-in lukewarm manner. Don't. 19): Money gained _ no\v tu~e. Leo natives cur:ently are-play 'games _ stakes are high through conservative ap..
going t~rough a period ot re-and for keeps. Love is proach. Y~u may have to ap--
evaluabon. By N?vemtit:r. dominant. t1ember of opposile ~ase family members. Obtain
many of these :latives will se:ic may have you slightly diz· hint r.rom Cancer messag~. Be
have bounced back from zy practical about possessions.
adversity. There will be · Check values. Don't stretch
greater emotional and finan--_s~ORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ): budget to breaking point.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20--Feb.
18 ): Contacts made now have
long·range effect. One who
laughs much may have serious
intentions. Know it a n d
prepare al'COrding!y. Make
long-range plam. Be willing to
laugh at your own foibles.
Sagittarian figures prorni-.
ncnt!y.
PISCES LFeb. I!J.March 20):
1\lystery is so1Ve<f"if you are
persistent. Take nothing for
granted. Check with represen-
tative of special gro up,
society. Be an in\·estigalive
reporter. Veriry information.
discount rumors. You are on
brink of valuable discovery. cial sccurily. Leo is the ,F1nrsh rather. than . star!.
natura l fifth sign or the zodiac, Rounr out pro1ert. Strive to'-======================; related to the sun and number reach more persons with mes·rr
I and associated Y.'ilh the back sage. Consult expert. Aries
and heart. could aid. Take chance wilh WEDDING Pl:IOTOGRAPHY
ARIES (l\-larch 21·April 19):
Family member becomes in·
extricably involved w h er c
your desires are concerned.
pioneering concept. Property
value should be considered.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·
THE VERY BEST AT LOW PRICES
549 -02a9
llome, basic security i st;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;'~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ featured. Income from pro-
fessional endeavors also is in
spotlight. Cancer person plays
key role.
Call For Information & Appo.intment
TAURUS (April 20--May 20):
Scouts Gloria Taylor (left) and Lindi Willhite learn
about some of the attractions at the fifth Fountain
Valley Halloween Celebration from Mrs. David Mai-
ville (disguised as a witch) and h er puppets. ~n
Saturday, Oct. 21, the-Chamber of Commerce will
sponsor a Holiday Fantasies parade from Slater to
Talbert avenues, costume contest, fqod and game
booths and entertainment in the Bo\vl Area. Scv·
enty·two organizations will participate in the event.
Flexible approach b r i n g s
desired results. Review am-
bitions. You may find that
what seemed necessary was
merely a passing fancy. Sagi~
tarian could play important
role. Check !ravel possibilities.
·-October Sale •
Wedding Bells Ringing
KOPF-PALMER
Janice Lyn Palmer became
the bride of H.obert Benson
Kopf during ceremonies con-
ducted by Lhe Rev. Edward
Allen in Estancia Park.
Parents of the bridegroom
are ~tr. and Mrs. Benjamin
Kopf Jr. of Atherton and his
wife 's parents are t-.1r. and
Mrs. F'cnton Palmer of
Newport Beach.
Lecture Series
~1iss JeaMie . Palmer was
the maid or honor, and
bridesmaids were the Misses
Laura Detloff. Laurie Douglas
and Gail Smith . Rory Veal
was the best man, and ushers
\\'ere Richard, Jamie and Ben-
jamin Kopf.
The bride is a graduate of
the University of California,
Santa Barbara and t h e
University or S o u t h e r n
Women Tap 'Worlds'
California Graduate School.
She affiliated with Pi Beta
Phi.
Her husband is a graduate
or UCSB and is a member of
Sigma Pi. They will reside in ~
I Iono!ulu. ~ · .• ,
LEWIS-RICE I ' Barbara Rice became the ·
bride or Danny R. LeWis dur·
ing ceremonies conducted I in .
Peek's FamUy Weddin g \
Chapel, Westminster. ~·
The bride is the daught er of .•.
Mr. and J.1rs. Chester A. Rice ~
of Fountain Valley and her
husband is the son of Mrs.
Jerry P. Martin of Hesperia.
The ceremony was perfonn-
ed by tbe bride'! ralher, an or-
MRS. KOPF
GEMINI ~May 21.June 20)'
You succeed in removing
some basic restrictions. There
will be, for you, greater free-
dom of thought, action. Keep
communication lines clear.
Write, advertise arid publish.
Catch i.w on correspondence.
Let o~c.rs know your views.
CAN ER (June 21-July 22):
You a ility to dig for in·
formation is emphasized. One
close to You asks money ques.
tion. You have answers. Be
direct. Avoid excess modesty.
Find expression for feelings.
News is received c9ncerning
investment.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Home, marriage, domestic
situation in general is
spotlighted. You learn lessons.
All may not be laughter, but
there is much wisdom. Listen,
observe and learn. Mate or
partner takes initiative. Be
ami{lb!e. "
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ):
Orange Coast E v e n i n g
College will present a four·
part lectttre series enlitled
Widening Worlds of Women.
Tbe series, which opens
Thuhday, Oct 19, will take
place from 9:3()..11 :30 a.m. in
IJlaOO Hoose, Fashion Island.
will be the subject or Donna
Sharkey, an associate pro--
lessor of art on the OCC staff,
on Nov. 2, and the final
session, Nov. 9, wUI be about
Woman in the World of
Recreation. L«turer will be
Dorothy Duddridge, 0 C C
physjcal edtJ<:ation instructor.
dained minister or the Chris--~jiiiiiiiiiijjjii .. iiiijjjii .. iiiiijiiilijiiiijjiiilijijjjjjiiijjjiiiiiijiijjiiiij tian Church.
Mrs. Craig Flowers was the
matron of honor; bridesmaids
were Mrs. Robert Bowman
and Miss Connie RJce; best
man was Bowman, and ushers
were William Lewis and Paul
La Blanc.
Mon ta Lee Harvey, OCC
counselor and instructor in
psychology will talk on
Woman in Human Services
during the-hrst :o.esslon , On
The series is free, and
registration may . be done nt
euch lecture.
The .1e wlyweds are
graduates of F'oontain Valley
High School. The bridegroom
attends Orange Coast College.
Oct.
26
Jan 1-lowell. occl~jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' cou.nselo.· and dlr~tor of stu-1 .
dent pbcemen1, will speok
about Woman in the World of
Work.
Woman In the World of Art
DTERY
"Ill tfl .. -lllill:HAtlDO -KWIL IOWAftDI
-GElll:llill:ICM -
itl' "'-Vl!tl' •· U.,, Klot
Olrl(t W .. f bY 06ntilll'I .... ,..llftlo Ooroa Jr.. C..1w11w.,... .., ·CMMND m 1.11tti It. c:...11 ... .....,,,.
Complete Selection
BALDWIN
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54MSJ7
-,
Frigidaire Flowing Heat Gas Dryer
BIG 18-LB. CAPACITY •
Doea a large load of klng..slze
sheets, yet It's only 27"wlde.
Easy to load and unload
through huge door opening..
Provides thorough, gentle .. open
air" drying. Cool-down period
and Cycle-end Signet help keep
laundry wrlnkles from setting.
Air bedding, fluff pillows on No
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automatic electrlc ignition.
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I
'
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
..-1-tfA-Vf!--WR-l-:'fft'""."."."N (A;--:,t.1HoAA-:-:::"1
Of VUf1e5 A.NP.rr '!l'Af-\IT5 tCl1-
Wi1H5TMVI' "' ~ AY. A MY I CAl-L ... , : c usi:
1U w
•
MUTT .AND JEFF
OF COURSE,
~~R . t'L~gE MR.BIGMO
W '>bUR ~ ;N
FIGMENTS
NANCY
oH, 0ov-
THERE's A
·HORROR SHOW
ON TV
ACROSS
1 Young
11nimal
5 E\etlnc~I
units: Abbr.
; 9 Goacts
14 To shelter
, 15 Move quickly
16 lover in
~ lamed play
17 R11bble-
.i rouser
19 Miss P~I
, 20 Being utilized
21 Veryclose
hiends
l 23 Violin part
• 25 City of
Germany
/ 26 Man in ttie
bible
, 28 Wielded blue
1 pencil
-32 Bune•
subs1ltutes:
Va1.
37 -----Arab•ll
\ 38 Professional
organiz11 ion:
Abbr.
33 furness or
Gr<tble
1 41 Bile
t !; ~~~:~~~~:ed
t form1
48 Electric ..
( 11pp\ience
50 Pottery I 51 Experience of
\ significance
54 Teased
58 French
heroine
62 Monte-----
63 Circuit
64 Everlasting
66 Miss Dunne 67 Superla1lve
· thing: Slang
68 Outer: Prefix
69 Loyal
70 lengthy
ly1lca1 poem•
71 One who
makes
prophecies
DOWN
1 Turkish
judges
2 Ending used
wi1h"1ed"
and "ins"
3 M&dagasca1
p11ma1e
4 Ragging
5 Fusi anct
bolher
6 "The Girts of
the •... ·•
7 01/eeJrult
8 P1oofre1der1'
words
9 Certain
college
s1uoents:
Informal
10 Republic of
Europe: V1t.
11 Leava ou1
I l'1 ' . ,
I "
I 11 II I , ... 2t
' • •
" • ·' ·~
' ...
\ " ,. • n
' " M ·~ ,
I u " .. ' ..
I " '"' '
" " ' .
• .. " .. • I .. • • • .. ,, ,,
' • ..
,.
•
rLL WEAR THESE
GLOVES SO I
WON'T BITE MY
12 T11ke out
13 Certain beens
18 Port of 1t111y
22 Make into:
Sulfix: Var.
24 Dress
27 Goes in haste
29 Melody
30 Miss Adams
31 Cock1a;1
party
milflures
32 Planet
33 Oriental
serv11n1
34 fro -·--
35 To the ---
degree
36 "---· itl: Be
qulet1
40 1776.or 1867,
e.g.
43 Timeofday
..
', ,,
n
,. ~J
~ "
lO .. ~
I " ' .. .
Ir I
NAILS
1TITIIl
44 One who
love•
something
46 A moment
47 Kick•b11ck1
49 Game otliclal:
II
Informal
52 All gone; B1i1.
slang
53 Course
55 Nigel or
Lenny ·····
56 Raise the
spirits of
57 Ang1.1ish
58 Plac• of
confinement
59 IC.Ing of Israel
60 Have ·--··in
one's bonnet
61 Canadian
Indian
65 Couplet:
Abbr.
I
" " ~
"
-rt t
AND t'U.~A 19! B~.
I MATT 'IOU,
JUNIOR!
by Chester Gould
WEU.,TIIEll!! GOES
OUR ONE-MAH
SKACK l!U.R.
b.Y Tom K. Ryan
11'5 AN OFf -Rl'S~VAnDN
l'ROJ)UCIJON.
by Al Smith
X "11-llNK
BIGMOU111
WILL SEE -n> IT
"T+!AT
YOU DON'T!
by Dale Hale
by Emie Bushmlller
. WOW-THAT SHO'r'I'
WAS A DU.LY
111\Til
DOOL'EY'S WORLD
M1W 1001'YA
DO A N.nt::wr ON
"rHli Atw'AAITA66S oF f'N'I" n+tl'-PAKIY
SY5r£M•.t
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
citt:~
~1.f 1/
I~ .
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
7"1!
7WO-ACRTY
$YSTIM WM' tNVlilflFD
7f> tN.SUllE PIAC£
/N fl(IS (iN6AT
,;,y
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schub:
MISS PEACH
' ' '1
j
t
I •
PERKINS
'
•
WDCl"D 'l'OU
h 'EI< C-IDER
TMAT!
by Mell
by John Miies
•
Monday , Octobtr 16, 1~72 DAILV'PILOT JS
•
1
·HNIK'1'B 7'11 ~
GNF A ~ 1}11 PllMOOMTS
ON1 Ollllt OWN """1'>'-'WA>'
OYM!l ON 711', OfHIJt S/111£ OI'
Jt>HW ••• TN6Jlll1Y .Al-tJ.'D/""6 A
""1' OF 111.AGK IWS; 8/i!'OICl.N ,UllNJ~~ ANO ~S J
81/JJJISIS I '
By Charles Barsotti .-------, ---~ ~ .1tqg~O.tr
~-
~~
Gus Arriola
by Roger BoDen
Oil $!COMO ~-:t
[l())T ~VE AllC/lHlile
PUSSIMS 11-116 IOEEIC ••
THE GIRLS
,,...,., y '.i •. • -• <'' I"-A' ·~· ,.,_,. -"
• ,i• • •
"Hello, you'\·t certainly proved the point I raJstd at my
club diAcusskin -that the poli ce are deserving of 1 ralte
ror \be alert way tMy opera Lt."
DENNIS THE Mr<NACE
• • •
DAILY PILOT
Not Ready to Panic Yet,
Sparky. Says After · 2-1 Loss
THE REDS' JOHNNY BENCH TAKES OUT DICK GREEN IN WORLD SERIES ACTION SUNDAY.
Have to Improve
Prothro Dissatisfied
Despite 34-3 Victory
PITTLADELPHIA CAP) -You'd think
a football coach whose team bad just
clobbered its opponent by 31 points, held
the roe to a measly f I e 1 d goal and
dominated the game both offensively and
defensively would be satisfied.
Not perfectionist Tommy Prothro.
The Rallis cnpitalized on Philadelphia
miscues SUnday to wallop lht! victorytess
Eagles 34-3, leading Prothro lo a pointed
remark.
"We will have to improve if we are to
stay alive In this league," he said.
The Rams, with a 3-1-1 record. stayed
a half-game up oo Atlanta in the National
Footbal Conference West. The Los
Packers, Lions
Collide Tonight
In Key Game
DETROIT (AP) -It has been a full
decade since the Detroit Lkms and Green
Bay Packers have played a football
game that really meant something to
both clubs.
They have met two times each year
since their last crucial meeting in 1962,
but tonlg)lt they 1quare off in the most
important game since that '62 clash.
The Packers and Lions are tied with a
3-1 record atop the Central Dlviskin of
tho Natiooal Football Coale,.~ goin&
lnto tbelr naUonally televised game.
The Packers fe.ature a swarm of new
On TV Tonight
Chon-I 7 ct 6
faces, led by lhe hard·nJMing duo Of Joo
Brockington and MacArthur Lane.
Angelu triumph was accompUsbed with
a ground attack. that netted a neat four·
yard per carry.
Still, even that didn't impress Prothro,
who wanted better from b1s club.
"We ran about the same percentage of
time as in the other games, but with less
success," said the Los Angeles coach .
The Rams scoi-ed three of their
touchdowns on ruMing plays. with Bobby
Thomas , Willie Ellison and Jim Bertelsen
cash scampering into the end :z:one.
Thomas, a second year man rrom
Arizona State, churned for 45 yards, Well
below the 144-yard average be compiled
in his two previous starts against New
Orleans in the opener and San Francisco
last week.
Buf If the Eagles were able to thwart a
continuation of Thomas' former heroics.
they were unable to cope with the ball
control offense eog!neored by Ram>
quarterback Roma11 Gabriel.
Eating up the clock oo each touchdown
drive, the t I-year veteran kept
Philadelphia off balance with a delicate
mixture or passing and IUMing plays.
Gabr1el. hampered earlier in the
sea80f1 with ttndionili.s of the elbow, com-
pleted II ol 21 pas,,es for 147 yards, in-
cluding a 19-yard touchdown strike to
wide receiver John Loe.
Arter the game. he attributed his suc-
cess to acupuncture, an oriental medical
practice in which needles are inserted in-
to a patlent's body to relieve pain.
"Without it, 1 wouldn't have been able
to play at all,'' SIUd Gabriel. "Today was
the tint day since I injured my arm that
I didn't feel any pain." a... ......... 11:-i 1 ~ tt' , -:M
""...... ...... 0 , • t-J u.-,0,11..,a
LA -l•IP\. I Ml Ill..., t lcli)
LA -T ........ ' "°" (11.•'I' t ilt) ~1.-,0.~u LA -,G, 11.ay M
LA -L.M, It "" f'rMI o.or. Ulay •l<tl LA -........... f flltl (h'I' ILl;l(tl All~ -U.l:ID.
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38-year-old
Morrall Sinks
San Diego
MIAMI (AP ) -"Let's keep it
together, let's keep it mo ving ,''
journeyman quarterback Earl Morrall
said be told the 1'o1laml Dolphins after
being ca11ed into act.ton in Sunday's 24-10
victory over San Diego when Bob Griese
was injured.
Morrall, 38, entered the American
Football Conference game with the score
0--0 in the first quarter. He proceeded to
throw two touchdown passes, one of tB
yards to Howard Twilley in the second
quarter, and one of 19 yards to Paul
\Varfield in the third quarter.
"All the good things that happened in
the ball game have been reduced by what
happened to Griese," said coach Don
Shula, explaining that Griese may be lost
for the year with a leg bone fracture and
dillocated ankle.
'"The marlc. of a good football team is
what it can do under adverse con-
ditions," Shula added. "and you can't get
more adverse than having a quarterback
out there lying on the field."
Shula said he discussed Griese's injury
in detail with the Dolphins at halftime
and "how we'd like to take the game Dall
to him in the hospital, which we will."
The Dolphin!, pro football's ooly
undefeated team, capitalized (In three
San Diego blunders for· most of their
points In takifm a 17.3 halftime lead .
Their first score came after Dennis
Partee' of the Chargers had a. punl slide
off his foot and travel ooly nine yards to
. the 50. Griese was injured three plays
later when hit by Deacon Jones afler
throwing a l>yard pa.ss to Jim Kiick
which was broken up on the five-yard
line by San Diego's Bob Howard.
The Dolphjns settled f()r a 37-yard field
goal by Garo Yepremian. "'' ..... l>tlllfllllt " ""'"
Fl.,,1 ~ \$ " ........ -l'tl"'• )6.113 P• ... ll'IO ve•<I• HO
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""'""1111 -"'*" D19vo, eaw1n1, •.Jot. Dlcvs
4-M, G1,,llff ).1111 Mitrnl. W'rlklcl 11', Twltlt Y 2·•1.
Isn't Over Yet
Cautions A's
Boss Willia1ns
OAKLAND (AP) -The Oakland A"s
•Nere home ·today with a 2.0 lead In the
1972l\Vorld Series with hopes of polishing
off the Cincinnati Reds wi"1 the S8IJ)e
combinatioo of pitching, power and
fielding expertitt! that won the fir.it two
games. ·
Gene Tenaee's slugging and Vida
Blue's golden arm in relief \\•on the
opener of the baseball classic 3-2 in Cin·
r innali Saturday. And the upstart A's
made ii two-slraight Sunday with a 2·1
triumph behind Jim Hunter's right-hand·
ed brilliance and a sparkling defense.
"I'm not ready to panic yet ,'' said Cin-
cinnati manager Sparky Anderson. whose
National League team was favored to
beat Lbe American League champs. "I'm
close. though."
Dick Williams, the Oakland manager,
was naturally happy about taking a com-
manding lead back to his cozy home
park, but he is an uneasy frontrunner in
the best-<>f·seven series.
''\Ve'd had some oUtstanding pitching.
sure," said Williams. ';But. heck, they've
hit some balls real hard and we've had
to come up with gqcxi fi elding plays to
stop the fu!ds. Bcli'evc me. this is not
over. This is gong to be some series.''
Cincy fans didn't have much to cheer
about. though. because the A's took an
early lead on Hunter's run-scoring single
in the sec6nd inning and Joe Rudi's
bases-empty .home nm in the third off
Cincinnati starter Ross Grimsley.
Hunter, the A's ace. protected that 2-0
lead until the ninth when the home team
gave its fans some action. Tony Perez
opened the final inning with a hard single
to left center, then Denis Menke
launched a tremendous drive that Rudi
collared while leaping and banging into
the left field wall.
Rud i clutched the baseball at the tip of
his glove, supported himself and fired a
bullet back into the infield. The relay
almost nailed Perez, who strayed far off
first.
It was plainly the play of the game.-
although the A's had an()lher gem for the
O&.kland falls to savor when Mike Hegan ,
defensive replacement at first .base,
kr.ocked down Cesar Geronimo's line
drive for the second out of the inning.
Of his great play, Rudi said : "The ball
\vas hit straight over my head. J started
to go back and flJp my glasses-but I
thought the ball was oul. Another four or
six inches up and I wouldn't have caught
it. I think I stretched about as fnr as r
could. really."
The game was still in doubt though.
because the Reds had a runner on second
base after Hegan's diving stop of
Geronimo's knee-high drive to his right.
Hal McRae hit the fourth straight shot
ofr Hunler , a single that drove home
Perez with the Cincinnati run. It brought
the whooping fans to their feet and alro
stirred \Vi\liams from the dugout . He
wanted Rollie Fingers to pitch to pinch·
hitter Julian Javier.
t
UPI T .......
JOE RUDI CHOKES OFF A CINCY THREAT WITH THIS GEM:
Blo9d, Blood Eve1·ywhere
-Catfisl1 Recalls Mishap
OAKLAND (AP) -Jim "Catfish"
Hunter remembers lying in a hoopital
bed and crying: "I'll never play baseball
again."
Hunter turned his memory back nine
years anc.t. recalled looking at his shat-
tered righl foot, the little toe gone, the
one next to it useless and the rest
broken.
It call came back to the 26-year-0ld
righthanded pitcher of the ~d
Athletics after be beat the ClnciMali
Reds 2-1 SUnday, giving the A's a 2--0
lead in baseball's World Series.
Hunter relived that day in 1963, when
he and bis older brother, Pele, went
hunting rabbit.! and ducks in the woods
near their Hertford, N.C., home. The two
walked side-by-side when Pete's gun aC·
cidentally discharged.
"Damn you came close to my root,"
liunter said he told his brother. "Then 1
looked down and saw holes in the foot
""' ,. .........
everywhere. There WM blood, blood. 1
said to Pe.te, 'Damn, damn, damn, you
shot me .' Then Pete fainted."
Hunier refused to quit the baseball
career he wanted even more than his
childhood dream of being a game
warden. He recovered from the shotgun
accident to pltch again. He led his high
school team to the North Carolina stale
championship, but pro baseball was
wary.
"Scouts were a litUe afraid of taking a
chance on my foot,'' Hunter said.
It was at that time that Charle! 0.
Finley also was hunting. He was looking
for young players for bis Athletics, then
based in Kan.sas City. Finley sent scout
Clyde Klutz to watch the strapping farm
boy in Bear Swamp, near Hertford. He
knew the youngster had lost ·the use of
two toes. "Find out if he can pitch,'' he
told Klutz.
The scout thought enough of Hunte!' tc.
send for Finley. Hwiler recalled Finley's
visit.
''He walked in and I took off my shoe,
showed him the foot and told the story (If
what happened. I remember he told me
to keep the boot with Uie boles in it, have
it broozed and put the pellets they out
from my toes on the outside."
~ Athletics signed Hunter for a
$75.~us and never bad to regret the
trtp to Bear Swamp, a community of
some 2.500.
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Lakers Hold
Off Cavaliers
CLEVELAND -The Cl ev eland
Cavaliers put on a greal scorin( drive in
the second half 11ga\~t the Los Angeles
Lakers Sunday nlg1rt, bl.It It was a case of
too little too late. The Lion$, meanwhile, have rebuilt
lhtlr traditionally paltry offense Into a
1roring machln~. only to see their once--
proud defense spring leaks, especially in
the rront wall .·
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"•••lf>t -s.tr> °'"° li~ll 11.11.1. 111 v••d•; M!IMI, Morrill 1-104, it. v•ntl, Cr'91t l·l~. ,. r•nn. . Alltt>d1111<1 -I0.1110 STAN SMITH RETURNS VOLLEY IN DAVIS CUP VICTORY.
"ff ""·e would have pla)'f'd two halve8
like we did in the second we could have
won thls game." said coach Biil Fitch
after his charges dropvcrd a 95-83
decision. . Green Bay, on the other hand, ha1
whipped up the """""1·be3t def...., In
the NFC.
It -Id be ...,...1y Ie.ied by the
Uons' running and t h r o.w i n g
quarterbaek, Oreg l.andry.
Londry ,.111 be aiming his t-
prtmarUy at wide receiver Ron Jeale
Ind dghl end Qaig COiton, while Steve
O.....V and AJUe Taytor~"Thund<r and
Uptnln( -spar!: the nmning game,
wbk:ll alto fe1turt1 Mt! F•rr.
Bui In 8n1Cldngton -a ....-ond>year
ma;n from ObJo State who rushed for
0\-W 1.000 yards in his rookie sea90n -
Ind Lene, the Lions' front four wCJI moet
lll lll'Oqt'OI WI of tho aeuon.
' fn Ibo laal key meeting between the
teams 10 1ears ago. Grttn nay ed;ed
Detroit t-7.
.
Smith May Forego Future Cup Play
BUCHAREST (AP) -Stan Smith Jed
Ibo United licatio to victory in the Davis
QJp for the Oflb .u.lgbt yea r and thoo
aald it mJaht be his last appeanmi In
the tennil tournament.
"I a """"""1ehned by my victory
hore," tho blJ atar 11ld Sunday after
bealln( Ion ?lr1ac H . 6-2, M . :H, Mand
podng tho Amori<ans to a 2·2 victory
over Romania lo the final.
"But u the format of the Davia o.i:p iJ
nol cbanrtd nett yur I just cannot ,..
myaeif dol!!l It apln.
"J figure the four U.S. players invol ved
In lhe DRv1s Cup for the American team
Ull• year have potentially lost $150.000 In
tournament money. That is blg monty."
Smith, however. 1ald It would be vei-y
1ad U bo 1 .. ..,, the U.S. team.
"I am an avid backer of the Davi" Cup.
It s.ives you a feellna those who hnve not
been In It callDOt underitand. It Is like
competifll In the OlymplC3, you art !he
belt In ~r spol'I. l hope the U.S.
Fedemtk>n can work out a suitable pro·
gram for. next yenr."
SmJth sald th1s rtferred only to llnan·
tial problems.
•·
Smith gaid he was surpri5ed by !ht
behavior of the Romanlnn players during
lbc three days of Davis Clip play. ltc nd-
dcd: '.'Tiriac-prcformtd thcatrtcally. I
respect him for his abil ity but not WI a
person -and t told him so at the 1nd of
the match."
The Amcrican.s have now 1von tht-
Dnvi!t cup 24 times, two mor~ than
Auslralla, the Smlth-Tlriac match wes
the cllmax of three days of disputed line
calls, disputes between the player11 and
the ofnclnl:'I and a wild crowd of 8,000 nt
the Proefresul Stadium breaklng Into an
uproor everyt imc an American pro-
tested.
"Winning here was a tremendous ptus
for the Amer ican tc8m.'' said Robert
Cohvc \1. president of the U.S. Lawn Ten·
nl!I Associo!lon. "\Ve certainly did not
pl11y in the best of conrtltion!I end we do
not plan to be complimentary to the
ltomanian$.
"The Smith·Tiriac match wa.s ex·
trcmtly unfalrty handled. There were as
ma ny partlal decislom u l have teen
permitted In any.match in my llfe.'1
...
The Cavallen hit on only 31 percent of
!heir ahots in the first half, ICOrinf only
12 points In the !Int quarter, and faUed
to lake advantage o( a e=ly lack!Uller performance by the
Los Angeles superstAr Wilt Cham4
berlal.n, who barely made tt to the Arena
In tlme for the opening ttp-o{f, scored on-
ly 1lx points while putllng In 15 rebounds.
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1110:>0n -u L• AllOfit. Cltvt!IMI
Brodie Out;
!Raiders Back
' t ~In 1st Place
San Francisco quarterback
aa1m Brodie was carried of!
Ille field In the laat minute o!
ploy In the l9ers' 23-17 loss to
•\Se .New York Giants and will
-probably Dll!s the 49ers' next
~Pme ~th New Orleans.
passes or five and 10 yards lo
Ught end Jim Mitchell and a
23-yard scoring toss to wide
receiver Ken Burrow.
Bmy's TD passes wiped out
an early 14-0 lead by the
luokless 8alnlll.
. Brodie suffered a severely
sprained left ankle and two R E D S ltlNS-OARDINALS
49ers offensive tackles were .'.... Washlngtoo's Redsklm tun-_
.also sidelined with lnjuriea. ed up for their NFL showdown
Cas Banaszek is out with a 59vere groin muscle pull ac~ with the &!per Bowl champion
d>mpanled by hemorrhaging. Dallas Cowboys with a.
And John Watson was shaken methodical 33-3 rout or host St.
up with a concussion as New Louis. ~~~~n. upset the Bay City Sonny Jurgensen a n d
Anotller quarterback inj~ placekicker Curt Knight were
in National Football League 1n !OP fo!11'1 against St. l.ouls.
action was Miami Dolphins Knight kicked four,field goals
star Bob Griese, who is ap-and Jurgensen completed 13 of
parenUy lost for the balance of 18 passes for 2Cl.1 yards and set the season . up late touchdowns that helped
san Diego's Deacon Jones tum the test into a romp.
put Griese on the sidelines The Redskin!! and Dallas,
with a fractured leg and both 4-J, meet Sunday,
dislocated ankle.
New York grabbed its upset
vi~tory with 1:31 to go w,ben
Charlie Evans scored from
four yards out to cap a seven
play drive covering 43 yards.
Brodie quickly moved lhe
49ers back into contention to
the Giants' 34 yard line with SS
seconds to go.
But on the next play Brodie
was injured when hit by Jack
G~ory and Henry Reed
' 'While trying to pass.
Reserve Steve S p u r r I e r
completed m quick passes to
Gene Washington to move the
49ers to the Giants' 25 with
ooe second to go. But a final ·
pass Intended for tight-end
Ted Kwalick Wai; picked off in
the end zone by Pete Athas.
BILLS·RAIDERS -
Oak1and's Raiders snapped
back from a 1&-7 deficit in the
fourth quarter to whip the
visiting Buffalo Bills, 28-16
with t'WO touchdowns sealing
the verdict in the final 2:66 of
the game.
The Bills' O. J. Simpson
. rolled for 144 yards, hut bl> In-
ability to make a foot at a
crucial point gave Qaldand
new life and the Raiders took
~ the initiative and went from
. there to score the go-ahead
touchdown.
The win puts the Raiders on
top of the NFL American
Conference Western Division
with a l-1·1 mark.
JETS-PATRIOTS -
! Quarterback Joe Namath took
a bollday o! sorts Sunday at
Foxboro, Mass., pasalng only
eight times whlle leading his
New York Jets teammates to
a 41-13 rout oC the New
Englaod Patriots.
Instead of passing l h e
Patriots silly, the Jets ran
them silly with backs John
Riggins and Emerson Boozer.
1 Riggins carried 31 times for
• 168 yards and a touchdown
, while Boozer , scored three
times, carrying 18 times for
;. 150 yards. The two surpassed
, New England's total offense.
FALC,ONS·SAINTS -
Despite tumbling five times,
; -the visiting AUanta FalcoM
held on to a 21·lf victory over
win1ess New Orleans.
, Quarterback Bob Berry of
~Atlanta threw touchdown
Posey 6th
At Laguna
BEARS-BROWNS -Some
big changes are apparently In
order at Cleveland following
the Browns' 17-0 loss to the
Chicago Bears.
The Bears defellSe limited
Cleveland to 37 yards rushing
and held Leroy Kelly to 14
yards in 10 carries and -Bo
Scott to minus three yards tn
seven tries.
It was Chicago's first win
under coach Abe Glbron.
Bears quarterback B ob b·y
Douglass rambled for 115
yards and acored on a f7·yard
bootleg nm. He also had a m
pass, a 41-yarder to Earl
Thomas.
VIKINGS-BRONCOS -Mln-
neacta's Vikings got untracked
in the final minute of play to
pull out a 23-20 triumph over
Denver.
Fran Tarkenton to s s e d a
31·yard pass to Gene
Washington with 17 &eC()nds
remaining for the winning
touchdown.
Denver had taken the lead
with··53 seconds to go on Floyd
LltUe's tw~yll'd l'!Jll.
COWBOYS • COLTS -The
Dallas Cowboys abndded the
onco·fabled Baltimore Colts'
:zone defense in a 21--0 NFL
victory before Baltimore fans
with Craig Morton hitting 22 of
30 P"" attempts.
Morton accounted for 279
yards and two touchdowns
with tnaflY . of hi! aerials to
backl CB!vln Hill and Walt
Garrl!011.
Hill scored twice and caught
seven passes.
0 I L E R s.sTEELERS -
Rookie Franco Harris rushed
for 115 yards in 19 tries Sun-
day to lead the host Plllllhurgh
Steelers to a 24-7 win over the
Houston Oilers.
Harris, a 8-31 230-pound No.
1 draft choice from Penn
State, netted seven yards
more then the entire Houston
offense.
BENGALs.cHIEFS
"We've been rinky-dinkJ for
five years." said Cincinnati
Bengals coach Paul Brown,
"but now we've come of age."
Brown's h o s t Clnclnnati
Bengals defeated the Kansas
City Chl~fs1 23-16, SUnday.
Ken AnQt!l'SOR pitched two
touchdown p. a a 1 e a and
defensive star Mike Reid
made four key tackles and
five tlmes dumped Kanw Ci-
ty quarterback Len Dawson
behind the line lot losses
totalling 25 yard1,
Reid sacked Dawson once,
then knocked down 1 Dawson
pasa on the Jut two plays of
tbe game lo keep the Chiefs
away.
'
•
DAILY PILOT Sltff ~
Tulane
Seeking
Forfeit
NEW ORLEANS I AP l -
Tulane officials annou~
Sunday ther have suggested
that Mlam mlcht want to
forfeit a 24-21 football victory
scored over Tulane Saturday
night on an obvious Illegal
!11th down play.
Dr. Herbert E. Longenocker.
Tulane president, said he had
been tn touch with Dr. Eugene
Cohen. Miami'• vice pr!!ident,
-.nd other school officials.
"l received their as.surance
that the matter 11 under
review at the present tlme,"
said Longenecker.
He pointed out that since
Tulane and Miami are in·
dependent teams, there is no
authority to whlch~lhe matter
can be appealed. "except to the
autliorlty of good
sportsmanship and Institution:
al :nteJtrlty. •
"Had Tulane won a game
under these conditions -a
probable error or fact as
· di~tinct from a jud~ment
situation -the alleged victory
would ba:ve been rescinded by
our own actions and the
ganre's outcome would have
been reversed with the score
reverting to that existing at
the time of the Wegal play,"
Longenecker added.
Here's the way the winning
touchdown unfolded :
SAN CLEMENTE DEFENS!VE STAR LONNIE HUTTS.
Miami recovered a fumble
Pt its 40 and drove to a rirst
down at the Tulane 18, from
where the illegal series began.
Running back Chuck Foreman
ran for two yards on first
down. Tritons' Ar~ansas Slant
Paying Off Big in 1972·
Quarterback Ed C a r n e y
threw an incomplete pass on
second down, Carney passed
11· yards to Foreman on third
down but the play was
nullifi~ and ~1iami penalized
five yards for illegal pro-
cedure. By HANK WESCH
The San Clemente football
team bu taken a new slant on
defen.se thls season, and It bas
made the TrUons one of the
stingiest defensive t ea m s
around.
Under new coach Allie
Schaff, San Clemente has
switched to the "Arkansas
Slant" defense, and it's paid
off with three victories.
In their opening games.
against Bolsa Grande and
Alemany, the Trltons held op.
ponenta to under 150 yards per
game total offense. Foothill
did only a llUle better, in a
14-12 victory picking up 179
yards agairult the S a n
Clemente defenders.
The Trltons also have held
their opponent! to just 35
points in four games, Foothill
capitallied on a pair 0£ first
hall breaks lo be the only
team to score more than once
on the Trltons in a game.
Schaff says that while the
Triton's present alignment
im't that much difietent from
paat years aa primarily a 6-J,
"Oklahoma" defensive team,
he admits there has been a
basic change In philooophy.
"Jn the past San Clemente's
defense was basically a
reading type defense," Schaff
says. "They looked to see
where the play was going and
then reacted against the
man."
"This year, we're more of a
pressure defense, we hit· first
and then read where the ball
is going ."
Any defense. of course, is
only as good as the personnel
it is composed of. and one of
the key men for san Clemente
has been senior Lonnie Hutts.
"We have three or four peer
ple capable of playing
linebacker, ~aQd by moving
Lonnie to end it makes us thnt
much stronger."
Injured QB
Calls Tackle
Cheap Shot
Hutts, a 6-0, 180 pounder has
played many positions as a SE AT TL E (APl
two-year starter for t h e Quarterback SOnny Sixkiller is
Tritons, and has been used at definitely out of this week 'S
both linebacker and end on crucial football game with defense and guard <lR offense this season. Southern C&lifomia and prob-
Wherever he has played, he ably wUI miss t h e follbwing
has played well. · , game, a spokesman for the
"Lonnie is one of only about ~ University of Wa$1ngton said
three players we have who Sw1di.y.
played much last ~eason, so "The doctor is positive Son-
we count on him a loL He ny stretched the tendons in his
isn't exceptionally big, but he knee," the spokesman said
is strong, and likes to hit." "but there's no indication of ~
"He had a little trouble tear."
adjusting to the new defense, Sixkiller was hurt i n
he was still reading first at Saturday's U-0 shellacking by
linebacker, but we moved him Stanford. He suffered an ankle
to defensive end, and he has injury when be was drapped
helped us out," Schaff states. hard in the first quarter, then
hurt the knee in the second
It was third down again, this
time from the Tulane 21. and
Carney lost 11 yards trying to
pass. On a fourth-and·24 sltua·
lion at the Tulane 32, carney
passed lncomplete. ·
At this point, the Miami
defensive team trotted onto
the field and the Tulane of-
fense went oflto the field.
However, officials waved
them out and gave Miami
another play. This .time
Camey threw a 32-yard
touchdown pass with 5 4
seconds left ln the game.
Tulane coach B e n n i e
Ellender said he was aware
that Miami was getting an ex-
tra down and tried to get the
attention of referee, James
Harper. However, Ellender
saJd Harper "shook us off with
his head."
Harper, as referee, had
pverall re!POmibillty for con-
duct of the game. Richard
Allen, w~ was acting as
linesman, w a s &peclficall y
responsible for keeping up
with the number of downs.
Evert Wins;
King AiJing
Pro Cage, Hockey
period When hit wlth another
lruislng tack1e.
"! thought he (the tackler)
could have gone for my upper
body," Sixkiller said. "But he
went for the knee • • , then
twisted it."
BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP ) -
Teen·aae Chris Evert
overcame a 5-2 deficit in the
first set to defeat Kerry
Melville of Australia 7-6, M
and win the 1100.000 Virginia
Slirna tennis champl<>nshlp
SUnday.
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Only 01"'9 Khld\lltel TINMIY'I Otfnff
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Slxkillet, who said he didn't
see who the tack!er WM, call·
ed the action a "cheap shot."
Colts Axe
The fourth aeeded MIN
Evert, an amateur who will
not turn professional until her
18th birthday Dec. 2t, could
not accept the $2$,000 first
prize and the money was
M C ff returned to t h e tournament g:w~ Wtl
1 ~ ~ 1::, ,., c a ert)' p~=:ne. Billie Jean King,
f,:,"1.~e<0io ~ ~ :: 1:z BALTIMORE (APl _ Don a star on the women's tennis tour. may have contracted a
C1rolln1
Mtw York
Kentl.ll:kY Memph!i
Vlrgl~la
1 1 -500 ,~.
1 l .500 ll'J
0 2 .000 2'11
0 ~ .000 2\IJ
D•ll•• 'Vlldt'f'• ~··•~ ~ .ooo ' McCafterty, who directed the case of mononucleosis whleh
S•n 0190~ 10., 0•11•1 '°" Baltimore Colts to a Super could sideline her tor several
0n1y o•me Klled1.lltd Bowl title as a rookie head T.,..y, O•"'" ch I 97 fired od mon~h11. ~ No eamw ~'*1vll'd coa n 1 0, was t ay Mrs. King, the world's No. 1
,,..,. v~:i1:_-. by the National FootbaJl woman tennis pltyer, was
v1ro1n11 '' &•n OtlO<I League team. . beaten M , 6-2 ln 90 d_,_ Only o-• lt'l*lllMd The announcement came ·•· -.. ,.. Hecktv heat Saturday by Mlu Evert.
HML one .day after the Col.ts drof>'o-----'-'-----11
MONTEREY, caur. -In a
preamuigM gesture, Mark
Donohue •lowed down his
Penske Porsche oo the Jut lap.
to concede first place in the
ea.1ro1 G<and Prix can.Am
!(ace by one oecood lo team·
mate George . Follmer of
,1 l!ewton. Pa.
H Sam Posey ol. C.pim'ano ' !leach was 6111 and won $4,l(IO.
,, Donohue led on 89 of the 90
laP. ln the »-car field st
Pro Grid Standings
1•':. L T """ 0,. OA ped their fourth straight a:ame
l'.'!.7!!.. ! I ' l ~ I . In five ....... mrts. the WOn!t &~l.10 1 1• losing stttak stnce Ul6Z. ~'.°'R,._,. 1 J ' i l' McCafferl y, 51 , took over as ~=r.• •, 2 ! j ! head coach In 1970 aft er Don
,,,Laguna Seca Raceway Sun-
. day. By COncOOil'C t h e
, ¢\eckered flag, he clinched
,.1f'ollmer's hold on the tl
· m l lllon Conadia~A.mt:rican
• Challenge Cup champ1"nshlp.
:,Follmer won $18,200 wh!.le
Donohue earned IU,000.
I
·Fullerton Annihi)ated
HONOLULU -Two
touchd o wn pauea by
quftrlerback Roy Olong and
two scoring sprints by tailback
Albert Holmes pt\ced the
Universi ty of ltawali to a 49·15 wtn over Cal St.ate (Fullerton)
.. hert S.turday ntD!t.
The HnwaU Ra1nbows got a
'' scare early In the game as
Tita n quarterback i o m
Madlgan connected on s 116-
ynrd Pll" to split end Stan
ChapmAn to open the game'a
scoring.
But Hawall tame back
qui c kly a corJng two
touclldowns In each of the first
three quarters and another Jn
the final quarter b e f o r e
Fu!lorton'a Robin Dtnlon eot
acrou from the two-yard tine
Just before the game ended.
111 SI 101 •• 1'! 103 '1 10'1 -·~
M.Y. i. •ftdlr• w"' 2 ' Shula left to bec:ome head
~n't;:;:0h ~ ~ g : 1' 1! ('()ach of the ~tiami Dolphins.
Phll80.ll)lll1 1 2 1 3 11 16 McCa ffcrtv prt viou!lly had Mln!'IH(IT• 111ll014 ·,'
s1. lo<lli 1 ' 1 l n ,. been :i Baltimore assistant t~1:n.l.~1t1., \ l g J i~ ~ roach for 11 years .
c111rotn1• Sllfld1,·1 11'.wn1 ' 10 •~ Defen~ive I~ C'QaCh John
t~·~o!K ~'!',::, ',, MltlnffOti , Sandusky, who Uke McCaf· ~~\', ~·~~t! , ferty has been with the Colts wit». ~l.Cir.i.!. 1 since 1969, was named head ..~ ~'::'11 1 coach tor the rema.lnder of the
T • .,.. 0.-No lf!NI Kllicllll ...
DiJ CY PIU>T 17
P_ilot Pigskin
PICKEROO
Co-Sponsored this week by
• And The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FO.R PROFIT
Top Weekly Prize irr
Merc;llandise Certificates
•
For Weekiy Second
Place Winner
Each for Third, FOurth
and Fifth Place Winnen
Plus BONUS PRIZE
A ,_.,. af tick ... ta thra ... ,... af the .,.... fUSC w. NatN
Dental t• Heh .-•s wh11Mr. CotlrteSy of tM DAILY PILOf.
,
Be e pigskin prophet far profit. Play th• Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO 9am• for weekly prizes. Tap winn•r each
we•k teceiv•s $25 gift certificet• fram th• sponsoring
shapping center. Secand plac• winner 9et1 $10 cer·
tific•+• and third, fourth and fifth pl•c• winn•N: ••ch
get $5 c•rtific•te. E•ch certificate is •p•ndable, just
like money, at any store in the spon1arin9 1hoppln9
c•nter.
' Spon1arship rotefes wifh a different center 1ponsot·
ing each we•k's contest. Participating c•nfers are:
Westcliff Pla1a, 17th end Irvine, N•wport Beech;
Harboi View Cent1r, S.n Ja•quin Hills Road end
MacArthur Boulevard, N•wport Beach: Eastbluff
Village Center, Eestbluff Ori~•. Newport Beach ; Bay·
side Center, Beyside Driye and Jamboree Road, New-
port Beach: and University Park Shopping Center,
Culver and Michelson, Irvine.
Watch for this player's form each week in the DAILY
Pl:..OT Sports Section. Circle the t••m you think will
win In each pairing in the li1t of 30 g•m•s and send in
the player'i farm antr1 blank or a reasonable facsimile.
Th•n watch the DAILY PILOT sports p19•1 for each
w•ek's list of fiv• winners.
RULES
1, SWll'lll flMI tl!tl'y 1H1ftll .. lfW "' I ,..._,.._ fllCtlmf .. ., " tt wt1'll'
tfle C9fllftl, "ll-111• f-.Ctl,..119"' h ttfJMt " _.. .. nkt ft!lllufll.'" l11tr1et 1'11111 IN 1o1t1U1r111 111 .iuo lllf lll•M h f1tllll1N .... , ... lMi9 •kh lll!'t '*'lftfM Wiii .. 1111._.,IM ....
2. Stfllll It '91 '"ll.OT l'l•SklN "iCt<llOO CONTI IT, S,., °"*""*'" l".0, .. k 1Mt. Cltlt MIM, CA. n'24.
" ()Illy '"' """' "' ....-tkfl ....
'-IR!rtft lflftf .. ,..lmlrblll !let llltl' 1!1M "'9t'Wley fl' .,..,_, Ill' Ille"""'
9111 It""' DAILY l"ILOT l'ffke llV '•·'"· T!wrMley,
I, l'lrtlctll"t ftllf'dllllll IOllll OA!l.Y l"ll.OT _ .. .,_. lftlll lflelr lfl'llf*
tlllt IMIUlll Mf elftlW. M ... llr,
.. Tll lltlAltll aLANlt MUST al l'ILLllO IN O• IHTIY IS VOID.
•••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY BLANK • • Cl,.._ ..... .,.. tlllllk wtll wh ftllt ...t's ..... • • ft...-fMWlhtte-'•nlftMd) • • Cincinnati vs Rams e
• San Dleqo vs Detroit • • • • Danas vs Washington • • Buffalo vs Miami • • Atlanta vs Grffn Bay • • Baltlmore vs NY Jets • • W ashlngton vs USC • • • • UCLA VI Cal • • Alabama vs Tenn-• • Oklahoma YS Colorado • • Georgia Tech VI A11b11m • • Arkansas VI Texas • • • • Rarida -Ys Mississippi • • Syracuse YS Penn State • • Northwestem YI Purdue • • Rice Ys SMU • • Scrdclleback · VI Sollttlwestem • • • • Orange C-t VI Mt. SAC • • LA Sollttlwest VI Golden West • • St. Paul vs Mater Del • • Cotta Mesa vs Mag11olia • • Mission Viejo YS Villa Park • • • • Dana Hills YS Sonora • • SA Valley YI Corana del Mar • • Marina YS Westminster • • Valencia YS University • • • • Los Alamitos VI Fountain Valley • • Son Clemente n Katella • • Hunrington Beach VI Estancia • • Edison VI Estancia • • • • Tll lt•AICI• -MT ..-. • ""' llfl•I ""'"'9f ef ....... ._.. • e '" ..... -11'111111 I .... lrl • ··-• • • • A414*l • • • • Clly 11, • " • . ,._ .. • ••••••••••••••••••••
•
P!lBUC NOTICE Pl'BUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
•
• .i.c.ui. •9dl-Pl\qlt
Pre ident
Vows End
To Criine
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Nil<Oll has pledged
more money, more manpower
• and tough new laws ·~to maln-
tain our momentum In the war
against drugs and crime.1'
"We have fought the
frightening trtnd of crime and
anarchy to a stAndstlll," Nlxon
said Sunday in a pa.id polltical
broadcast, but "the job is far
from flnisbed."
In the second of a series of
national r a d I o broadcasts,
Nixon said be would ask the
next Congre5$ "to require stiff
mandatory sentences f o r
heroin traffickers, and to
amend other federal statutes
QUEENIE Phil lnlerlandl
•
so as to.keep these peddlers of 0 ~-..-.......;·.;:-mi·.
death off our streets after t;:::::~~'.!::::!~~l~O~·l!;lo::;"~""':;-:::-:-:,.~~-= .. ~. __ J their arrest." e Oil Spill "We don't ha)'C an opening right now, ~ut let's go to I
PIUTE FARMS, Utah (AP) lunch -I 'hate.to fire anybody on an em_pty stomach." I
LOCAL YACHTS fN CLOSE COMPETITION IN HARBOR SERI ES
Robon (7000) First to Finish, Orum~at Handic1p Winner
-Full scale operations were
to begin today to clean up the thousands of gallons or oil ,_..., __________________ \
s·pilled into the San Jua\i River
Warlock Captures
Challenge Trophy
Roy Cundiff's \Varlock was
!he winner of the Al Adams
and Son Challenge Trophy in a
sudden death race sailed at
Ncwixirt Harbor Yacht Club
Saturday.
There were five entries in
the race. Runner·up was Carl
Robinette's Robin, Sant a
Barbara YC; third was .o\llen
Puckett's Blackbird,
Talks Set
Ort Mast,
Spinnaker
Tu·o additional features will
supplement the nightly lecture
series by sailing experts at the
Long Beach Sailboat Show
Oct. 26-29 at the Long Beach
Arena.
Experts will demonstrate
how tq rig a mast and how to
handle a spinnaker during the
J(klay show. Refinements and
a variety of techniques will be
demonstrated.
California YC: fourth was Don
Ayres' Drun1beat. NHYC. and
fifth was Tom Yoder's Andale
Long Beach YC.
NH YC sponsored two other
yachting events over the
weekend. Peter Parker won
the W. D. &hock Trophy in
the Lehman-12 Class with the
lowest score ever recorded in
a seven-race series for the
class.
Jay 'ri.ferrll won the McCul·
tough Trophy in a special re-
gatta for the Sabot Class.
Summary:
LEHMAN 12 (Sc ho ck
Troj:lhy) -(l) Sanka, Peter
Parker, l\'HYC 13Vl pts.: (2)
Irvine Jim Tyler. BYC, 43;
(3) No name, Argyle Campbell.
BYC, 49; (4) Silver Bullet, Bill
Symes. NHYC; (5) No name,
Buz Tipman, NHYC.
SABOT ( ~lcCullough
Trophy) -(1) Smoltin', Jay
1i1errill, ABYC: 12) Far Out ,
Ty Beach. BYC: (3J No nan1e ,
1'1. Butler, SDYC; (4) Racing
Machine, ~1ark G au d i o ,
NHYC: (5) Stamper, E .
Billsborough. BYC.
U~C T eam
Rolls Up
Top Score
The USC sailing team has
one more obstacle t o
overcome in its bid tn defend
its own title to the Douglas
Cup, intercollegiate match
racing series at Long Beach.
The Trojans. led by Peter
\Yilson, posted a perfect scare
Sunday in an eliminations
series against 10 other schools
sailed of£ Newport Harbor.
Crewing for Wilson were Doug
Rastello, Dave Aiiller and Cliff
Wilson.
Runner-up in the serieS was
Orange Coast College with
Dennis Durgan at the helm. In
the crew were Gordo Johnson,
Tad Spurgeon, and Bruce
Delesque.
Third place went to UC!
with skipper Jeff f\.1cDennaid
and crewmen Scott Truesdell.
Jeff Matzdorff and Tom
Wilson.
USC must now meet the
winner of an elimination series
in northern California. The
winner of that match will
represent the Pacific Coast
lnter~giat.e. Yacht Racing
Association in the Douglas
Cup.
in southern Utah and threaten-
ing placid Lake Powell on the
D ----L l Utah-Arizona border. 1-w1wea A spokesman for Teras-New
Mexjco Pipeline Co. said Sun-Wins 2nd day night a huge dispasal site
H b R (IN SHORT ... ) ar or a ce _ _
Drumbeat. An Ericson·46
skippcted by Don Ayres Jr. of
Newport •!arbor Yacht Club
was the overall and Class A
winner in Los Angeles Yacht
Club's 2 O -m i I e Marineland
race Sunday. It was the sec·
ond of the Harbor Series.
Bob Grant's C&C-61 was
first to finish the course but
failed to save her handicap
time. Final results:
OVERALL -Drumbeat;
£2) Blackbird (E-46) Allen
Puckett, CYC; (31 Rag Doll
(Columbia-43) John Hall and
Stan Williams, NHYC.
CLASS A -(1 ) Drumbeat:
(2) Blackbird; (3) Rag Doll.
CLASS B -(I) Lare. Bob
Finch, KHYC: (2) Ghost. John
Reynolds. LAYC ; (3l Cheetah,
Dick Pennir.gton. KYC.
S hip of Oz
Takes Dana
Fall R egatta
Ship of Oz. skippered by
Gordon Sutorius of Dana Point
Yacht Club was the Pacific
Handicap Class A wiMer in
DPYC's Fall Regatta Sunday.
The Class B winner was
Walt Claus' Sea Fox, and third
was Hugh Curran's Vulgar
Boatman, both of BPYC.
Trophy winners:
SENIOR SABOT-(I) Jack
Mayer. CBYC.
JR. SABOT A -(ll Steve
Shumaker. DPYC ; t2) Tim
Fuller, DPYC.
JR. SABOT B -(1) Jaocie
Thompson, 0 PY C : (2)
Elizebeth Kamberg, DPYC.
PHRF·A -(II Ship of
Oz, Gordon Sutorius, DPYC;
(2) Lush Life II , Jack Day, Sl
BYC; (3) Big Kahuna , Mark
Townsend. DPYC.
PHRF·B -(!) Sea Fox,
Walt Claus, DPYC; (2l Av)ca,
Tim Fuller. DPYC ; ( 3 )
Kairos, Bill Breuer, DPYC.
P•IRF-C -( t) Vulgar Boat-
man, Hugh Curran, DPYC:
(2) Second Alibi, Jerry
Anderson, DPYC; (3) Frances
M, Ray Culver, DPVC.
Smog Arr ives
CAPE TOWN, South Africa
(AP) -Weather forecasters
a re using the word "smog'' to
describe local weather for the
first time. The mixture of fog
and smoke previously was
unknown In South Alrica.
would be gouged above the
high·\vater mark of the lake
and oil and debris siphoned
from the water placed into it.
Equipment, including a
dragline, would be in place
sometime today with cleanpup
operatiO'ns to b e g i n im-
mediately.
e Bomber Blast
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Eight persons scrambled out a
side door of a converted B34
bomber Sunday seconds be.fore
it burst in flames on a runway
at Philadelphia International
Airport.
The two crewmen and six
passengers, all from the Min-
neapolis, Minn., area, escaped
injury.
The l\.1'<>:-engine plane. own-
ed by thi Wilson Leaming
Corp. or ~1inneapolis. skidded
on the runway several hun-
dred feet and spun to a stop.
e NoBomhs
LONDON (AP)
"Absolutely nothing" has been
turned up ,in the seareh for
bombs aboard 29 freighters
owned by t h e Cunard· Line
after an extortion threat wss
made, ':t company sixikesman
said.
An unidenti£ied extortionist
demanded $lV4 million Thurs-
day in exchange ·ror in-
formation on which of the
company·s freighters a bomb
allegedly had been planted.
e Pnir Stnhhed
ATLAr..'TA (UPI) -Police
charged lwo teenagers today
with the murders of a scout·
master and another young
man found brutally stabbed in
a borne in north Atlanta Sun-
day.
The suspects were identified
as Richard Allen Ford and
Alfred Eugene Yarbrough,
both 18 and both of Atlanta .
Sirigle R ace
To Tlierpay
Therapy, a Rhodes-33 sloop.
skippered by Gayle Post of
Balboa Yacht Club was the
overall winner Saturday of
BVC's inaugural single-handed
race.
The race was sailed in the
ocean orr Newport. Beach in
light winds.
CLASS A -(I) Sanderling.
Bob Poole. BCYC: <2) Laissez
Faire. Rod Schapell. BCYC:
(3) Queen Anne, Dean Durgan,
BCYC.
Folly II, Carl SChumacher,
BYC.
CLASSB-(l) Therapy; (21
No name, Bob Law, BYC; (3)
L. M. Boyd
Crocodile Birds
Fly Backwards
In Holland, that tasty little repast between buns which
looks so much like a hot dog, isn't. It's eel. Called broodge
pallings. Never felt called upon to learn bow to pronounce thal •
YOU'VE heard of longhorn cattle. But were you aware
there's no.such thing as a longhorn bull? Correct, slr. On1y
longhorn steers.
ARMY regulations in Finland require each enlisted
man to take one sauna bath a week.
OBSERVED Arthur Rubinstein:
"The two things most pectiliar to
women -love of a ntan and tender
feeling for a child -Have no echo for
them in music, oddly. I know of no
significant ·JOve duet or cradle song
comixised by a woman."
BmD -Am asked it any bird,
besides the hummiogbird, can fly
backwards. Certainly. the crocodile
bird can do that. G o o d thing, too. The crocodile bird
perches in the open mouths of snoozing crocs lo pick
morsels rrom the teeth therein. It is sometime called upon
to Oy backwards at an exceedingly rapid rate.
AVER.AGE fellow falls in love five times, average girl
twice. Our Love and War man reported that, quoting the
famous observer Basta as saying, "Man loves little and
often, women much and rarely." A feminine client objectl.
Contends she: "A woman can fall in love many times.
With many men. But a man can only fall in Jove once.
With himself."
QUERIF.S -Q. "Physicians make bad pilots, right?''
A. All l know is £our times as many doclor fliers die
in air crashes as pilots in general.
Q. "HOW did the custom of carrying the bride acro6S
the threshold originate?"
A. Nothing complicated about that . Sometimes in by·
gone ages it ·was the only way to get the reluctant old girl
into the shanty.
Q. "HOW old is that actress Vera Miles?"
A. Better not say. Just applied for honorary member-
ship in the Society of Southern GenUemen and don 't want
to get blackballed. Can report however, she was Miss .Kan-
sas in J!H8.
ARE YOU acquainted w i l h any ladies who smoke
pipes? Claim is there are about 150,000 of same. Quite a
picture of domesticity, that. Refer lo the after-dinner 6'Cene
·wherein a man and his wife push back their plates to light
up their corncobs.
HOW MANY houses have you owned. sir? Average
fellow hereabouts b u y s three. Llves in No. 1 for eight
years, No. 2 for seven years, No. 3 until his death. Each
rs successively snazzier. Or so report the mortgage re-
searchers. _.
Address mail to L. !if. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1815, NetV·
port Beach., Calif. 92660.
Matlack Wins Regatta
MISSION BAY -Bruce Napa YC. 1214; (5) Jay
MaUack of Voyagers Yacht Glasei:, NBDRA, 14; Steve,
Club, woo the first national Lirakis, Ida Lewis YC, R.l. 14 :
championship regatta of the (7) carter Ford, N•IYC 18: (fl)
Windsurfer Class Sunday. tie between Greg Halla I MYC,
The event drew 47 entries in and Sean HoUand, MYC. 20.
j di · · Jt!NIORS (1) Brian the senior and unior ·vIBwns. Tulley, Lake Oroville SC, 5~~; The Winds.urfer is a sailing board with univel'$8l joint (2) Matt Schweitzer, MYC.
mast step and a wishbone rig 7o/'; (3) Mike Waltze , NHYC,
that is steered by t h e 73M; ( 4) Dick Monroe, NHYC.
helmsman standing up and 7%: (5) Peter Pierce, Nin-
steering by adjusting the sail. neshka YC, Wichita, Kansas.
The cla§ has grown rapidly in. _1_1_· ---------' _•
To Puerto Vallarta the last two years among
sailors of c o n v e n t i o n a I rnT-;;;,~;i:-,~. -;,~:-;
• dinghies .
F'inal results:
Record Field Set fo r Rac.e SENIORS (!)
Mtitlack, VYC, 7'ii:
•loyle Schweitzer. ~1.olibu
YC; 10%: (3) Seymour Beek,
Bue water racers In record
numbers have already made
applications to Del Rey Yacht
Club for lnvl~tloiu t o
participate in the sccond. bien-
nial international race from
Merlna de! Rty to Puerto
VoUarta. •
With ll<!arly thrte week.'i left
unUJ the Oct. 31 deadline. 49
applications had been received
and more were expec!lecl.
Long dl.Wnff 1'8""' of llll•
magnitude usually build s!owly
over the years, but the at-
tractlveneu of n Wl!'Ck·long
downhill wlnlerllme race to
tropical Puerto Vallarta \\'as
on Instant succe!l.1. The in-
augural roce In 1971 lured 26
veteran offMore race&, and
the prospect• f(}r the second
race nexl
or tnore .
mlles.
Pebruary are for 40
The race Is t,125
Puerto Vallarta is a colorful
resor1 nestled between tower-
ing green moontsins a'nd the
white beaches of La C-0$ta
Al~ on the Bay of Ba~
deros.
DRYC raoe official! said 14
of the yachts starting in the
Los Angeles to Mautlan raee
Nov. 4 havo •lso opptled. for
Jnvl1e1tion.-, for Ute PV race.
All of the 1971 entries are
among the crop of oppllcants.
Among lhcm are the overall
wlMer Aquarius, owned nud
sklfl!'ered by John Holiday,
LBYC: Bill Wilson's' St-foot
yawl R11sc111. Santa Barbara
YC, Bob Lynch's 83-foot cut-
Nl~YC, 12 : (4) Skip Harri.son,
lcr Sirius 11, Newport flarbor i'-'---"'========:;11
YC; Jim Feuerstein's Colum-1
bla·SO Querida 11. ORYC ;
A~ur Bichl's :16-foot \Vitch·
craft Rlchamond YC.
Other applicants l~lude Bob
Grant's Robon, NHYC; two S E R V I ( I N G Colu mb ia·57s, Bob
Beauchamp's Dorothy O .
NHYC, and Irving Loobc's
Conc<rto, R;chmOlld YC; Doh
O'Brien's Sp i r It ; Dick
\VllJl.ams' Columhin-52
Ob!t!Sh>n;· John C•lley'o new
51).foot !loop Outr&Re anrl
J~agtlme, the syndicate owned
sloop from LBYC.
BllJ \VeinberR'& Pioneer, a
7G-foot offshore cruiser, hwJ
been selected &.'J the rnce com-
mittee boat and will s11pervl11e
a Ootilla of other escort vts-
5Cl5 .
e TACHT CLIANING e MAID SIRYICI e HULLS CLIANID e MINOI MAINTENANCE e llGUL.Al SIRWICI
OA AS NllDI D
lllALa•·s IHVIT(O-
Nll 111111$TIMATI CALL
548-4505
STONE'S
YACHT SERVICE
404 WU1~1NSTIR • l•IN 2
MIWPOIT IUCH
CFly Our Legs)
AIA-
CALl FORNIA
!tom °"111• C:OO.t1
rutmtlont (714) 540·4550
•
•
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHI.IGHTS
A.BC 0 6:30 -Monday Night Football. The Green
Bay Packtl'll meet the Detroit Uons ln an NFL contest.
KC.ET £L) 8:00 -fo~irst Edition : Tell It All. This doc-
umentary film follow$ the rock group Kenny ff:odgera
and lh! First Edition on tour.
NBC 0 9:00 -"Cool ~1 illion.'' The pilot fil m for a
rail series fea tures James r~arentino as a high-priced
investigator wttose tab is a million bucks a caper. Also
reatured are John Ver11on and Barbara Souchet.
CBS IJ 10:00 -Cnuntry Ptfwic Awards. Glen Cami>-~
hell hosts the sixth annual ceremonies honoring outstand-
ing achievement3 in the country and v.·estern music 1n·
dustry.
KHJ 0 ll:OO -"Destiny of a Spy."
look time out fron1 "Bonanza" to make I' hrill<r in 1969 ~ith Harry Andrews.
Lome Greene
this sUspense r.
TV ~ DAILY LOG
\ '
' \ Monday
Evening
OCTOBER lfl
death ot one ol the wor1a·s rid"st
men and !he seanh for his hen. a
dao ;h!er s~id (o ha~e ~amshed and
died ye~rs a-o.
G-Forun Ba1ln1
'&'The AJttntu·et
&OD 8 0 10l r.;) @n '4ews 0 ''fJ (:!)The Rookies '1ime I\
the Fire" Lt. Ryker ta~es mo.re than
a prolessional interest 1n 1 kidnap
cne when t.e learns lht g•!1 kill·
napped was born ·on the same da~
and date as his daughter whom ha
had plat~d in adoption.
g Pondero?a ~Tilt lonely Hcuse"
0 (fl (6) ct} t.\enday Ni2hl Pro
FoatbaU Green Bay Packeis ~s. De
lrc1t Lions.
(:) Wikl Wild West
l m Tht fl!nhtonts , m '°me' Pyle USMC fD P11y Telcfun
\ ~ Carr1s.ctltnd11
et) Ml Dulce fn1111md1
J fD Hodgepodft lodge
) 9 MtybeflJ RfD
ED Un Verano P1r1 RtCOJd1r
I rn (iJ) I SPECIAl I Boboquiw1ri Last
of the T1001>adciurs Ramblin' Jack
El!lot guests.
'
ai) la Se11111d1 tspos1 W Tllm Stoo1ttS
~ Tiit Vir&inian
a;> Dnm1
1:30 CJ) CBS New1
9:30 8 ®Doris Dar Shaw Pele1 Law-
lord rtt11rns, 1n his role ~s Dr. Pttef
Uwfeoce, to infuria1t Doris into lg-
no1ing what she hts preached In a
widely-discuutd m1gaz!rte article.
(j) John Wapt The1trt
OtDNews
I ~ Mer1 Grillln Sllow m AIMtJ Griffith
( m 'ilU11n'1 l1l1nd
(JJ)CAC: Us'.nt Tests lnh:ll11entty
ED Makh11 nr:n1s '"" m Solnn• C1non
~Green Au u
fHl What Shlfl Wt Dt for Thurl·
d1y's Child? ffi T~irty Ui1111tes Witll .. _ • (J:) Pttrmn Policl;ll
(9 Dot 42 PH m Utti. a.1e11i 9:45 ED Su Comedia FnDritl
j 10:00 >oooom•... OGLEN CAMPBELL hosts , O MoM: (CJ (ZllrJ .. City Bene•th * Country Musk Awar~s ~ tile Su" (sci·ll) '71-Robert W11· LIVE-LY fr'om Nashville!
I Mr, Stuart Wllilm1n. I (J)Wildlitt Thtltrt "Dell• of tflt i)(i)!sP1 CrAll Si•I• Annu1
\ Orinoa:r" Countf) Muiit Assod1tioii Aw11ds
I Glenn Campbell hosts the ceremo-0 WMl's My lint? nits honoring outslandl111 achievt·
I m I LON llltf ment In the country musl' ind~trr. \ m 1 Drtanr of klnni1
( @ Ballet '72 @ Or11net
\ @) F11y Di1blillt E ~:r\:nt s "Dead Men Di1
fD WhHls, kiln' and Cllf lwiet!" A ma n dies and lhrtt ye1rs
fl) D Amor Tient Clfl Ot Mujer l~ttr his unlollunate double Is n1u1· 9 Mowit: "lht Wron1 Min" dered.
•. el Rn. Ray Plwno 0 Crimi Fit111tn Jact Rourkt f. Ef) Spttd R11:tr hosts.
"Jt30 fJ Johnny M1nn'1 Stand Up and (E] True Advtntltt
1 Cllttr Toti! fields guests. -@ M1sttrpiet1 Thtltrt
" O The New hke Is Rliht ~ l'fllitiul Meuare
( 00 Tht Partnt G~mt €IJ Lucia Somb11
f D Million $ M~t: (CJ C2hr) ''The CJ:) V1riedad
\ otlter Mi n" (dll) '70-Roy Thlnnes, GJ S;tartl Ch1lltni!
Joan Hackett. ffi IC111idom ol tht Se1
I ~Wild Kill(dom "Philmont Trail" IQ:lOfI)Firi11i Uot • m H11111's Hmd 10:30 @ AU L'le .•• "Welt1r1 Dirt't!Of"
{ Gl Ol'aptl 0 Talk B1dl
Ill) In tht. ~1ht (6) winltd D!ld or Aliw ED Chtsp1ritt m Pe~t Jundioll • ED Ta'l Chi Ch'111n rn Movie: "The Bit tloU"
I m TM Adventum GJ 42 Plus
• CE) Migutlito Y1kltz Show El) Outdoor sporu111n
I Ef.) Addams f1milJ ll:OO 0 0 0 aJ ei;, ffi Ntws
,00 O CIJ Cuns~oke Matt Dillon rides (31 @@)News
Into 1 "robbers' wost" outlaw $Jnc· O One Strip Berond ~ tuaiy 1nd meets an old name, Sarah (_iJ M1rshal Dilkrn
[lkins (Anne Francis). Sarlh pre· O MOii ie: (C) "DtstillJ of I Sn"
sent. Mitt as her husband, a want· (sus) '69 -Hariy Andrews, Lo1nt
ed outlaw, in an eflort to protect Gr1111ne.
• 'Ligl1t Up t l1.e Sl~y' •
•
Technical Gremlins
Plague Irvine Show
By GEORG£ LEIOAI. '"LIGHT UP THI SKY"
01 11\t O.lty Plr.I Slit! A (Omedy OV MMI 11,,r!, dlr"'led by
U''tl l .lid Unl'ss Communily Torn 1 !!~>. wvr><I •nd llQMl"'I Oy CP>u(~ fltnton , .e! d~lon by Pim Pro~11,
h t 1 · h S!•'K' man"Ot'< Joyct Connolly. t eater n rv1ne gets I e sup-11rell!nled by 111t ln•lne Commun!!~
port it deserves, productions r,..,.,.,. Friday• •nd S•r11•d•r• •t 1.:io t~rou<;rn i'!Ov. '11 rneH11 m •n 1 TI •• such as the one on the Hall Plart.ouY on 11\e. uc 1r~1nt
t•ml)!J•. R~seni.-IT&nt 6.16-----3111. flumanities Hall boards at UC THE cAsT
Irvine will continue to reach Sld""Y aiact ·. ',.'',", ;•,,~ 1r-Llvl"')S!Cln • v• for lhe sky and fall disap-s1e11a Liv1nq11on Fr•tteH McC.•"" Fr•ntH 81Kk .• . Ann Ltl>P pointingly short. P.ier Slo.n . Wiiiiam Cullen
A u d i e n c e s a t tendin" C••leton Fllzger•kl • O•nlel Ford b 0...e<O Turner .Enklne Morden Friday's opening of "Light Up Min Loweu . ~ui1nne P1rk
the Sky" could not have known ~t~!"~~~11t9~r · J~!.,1~::.:
the underlying reason for the "\a~ cnuc.11 ae<iton Pollcffrl&n Georo• Spelvln seeming fall-apa rt-at-the-------------
seams structure of Irvine
Con1munity Theater's latest
offering.
fi.tembers of the albeit
uneven cast of this Moss Hart
were seeing the stage for the
first time in four days, due to
schedullng problems attendant
to creating a theater in a lec-
ture hall.
The cast last sa1v the stage
on Monday prior to opening,
and that four-day hiatus took
its toll on the production as a
whole.
Daniel Ford 1vhose "he cries
at card tricks" portrayal of _
the effete directorial snob
Carleton Fitzgerald \\'8S truly
vivid evidence of his un-
familiarity \vith the set in act
one. On his entrance, Ford
could not close the door . It re-
mained open revealing
disconcerting glimpses or Ann
Lapp who awaited her en-
trance as Frances filack .
LATER AS the tawdry -it
n1ight have been more cush~·
-Boston hote l room filled
\\'il h \\'ell wishers fo r the open-
ing of theater's first hit
allegory, a vase full of p!~stic
flowers crashed to the floor.
The incident shattered the im-
portant mon1ents in Yt'hich
Beth Tilus established the
character she n1ost nican-
.ingfully carries off during !he
rest of the ICT evening.
A more experienced ca st
.
Liza's 'Little Sister'
Makes Sliowbiz l)eb1,Jt
By FREDERICK WINSHIP repctoire n1ore contemporary.
NEW YORK !UPI} -Lorna Lorna Luft has her 01vn
Luft, the late J udy GarlantJ"s special talent and enough
"other daughter ·· has niac!e poise. althoug h she said she
hr N Y k , .1 _ \Ya3" :.!lerririe d .'' pro-
e ew or supper cub fessionalism and scnsitivit to
debut singing songs that lean-develop it independently ofythe
ed heavily on nostalgia and past.
her mother's memory.
Ths pert. 19-year-old sister
of established star, Lisa Min-
nelli, has a throaty voice,
fuzzy at the edges and without
much quality. \Vhen she really
concentrates on a big emr>--
tional effect, she makes an
impact that might deepen with
time M1d experience. Except
for fleeting moments she
neither looks nor sounds like
J udy .
I-lowcve r Lorna. like Liza in
the early days of her career.
cashes In on being Judy's
daughter. Her choice of
"Mama Rainbow" an un-
mistakable tribute to her
mother, and her concluding
rendition of J udy's favorite
'·Let Me Sing A Happy Song"
was a little too ~obvious for
comfort. or for inducing a
lump in the throat or the
hearer.
Saddlehack
To Stage
'Mc Thing'
ti1ary Chase's CQmedy-fan·
tasy "Mrs. McThing" "'ill lead
off the drama season for Sad-
dleback College, running Nov.
2-4.
Judie Pieper, Lindsay Karg
and Carol Gustafson head the
collegiate cast under the
direction of drama instructor
Bonnie Cogbill, with Kim
Bates playing th1; title role.
Others in the Saddlcback
production will be Jill Tepper,
1-larie Armstrong, Herb Blair,
Verna Carey, Renee
CuMouchel, Colette Buddrus,
Richard Cordery, Pa u I
Barber, Andy Pugni, Rick
Hoover. Bob Betit, Linda
Belmonte. Dick Misenersand
Parker Bell.
..
might have worked the clean
up task into the other bits of
business assigned them by
director Tom Titus. But, the
shards of pottery remained
upstage, making several im-
portant crosses difficult for all
the actors, but most disturbing
for the slipPer~lad leading
lady.
As if the broken •ase were
not enough storm clouds in the
"Sky"' production. a large
plastic potted plant beaded
toward !he deck to the em-
barrassment of Alan Levy-as
Sidney Black.
Lights that would not once
be tinlCd to the actors' flips of
the switch and a gremlin-
plagued tape recording of "' .. ,., 4
"There's No Business Like DAILY PILOT s1•11 P-.
Show Business" rounded out STAGE STRUCK -Paul Steele as a vi siting Shriner tells Ann Lapp (left) and
the di fficulties so {requently Frances McCann of his love for the theater in this scene from the Irvine Co m-
a!fSociatcd with community munity Theater comedy ''Light Up th e Sky."
theater. ---~-----------------------------
Tli\-1 E. At 0 S T LY in
rehearsal but often 1 n
performances, most often
1=urcs these bugs.
On the \vhole, this pro--
duction of "Light Up the Sky''
cou ld be an entertaining even-
ing. _
Levy's reading of the greedy
producer is right on. His
dialect sparkles with diamond-
likc reali ty and his humor
shines si1nilarly thanks to na .... •less timing. Only one line
of his inexplica bly was not up-
dated as we re many others in
the p I a y. The reference to
"Coolidge 1vith a head culd "
comes too close to a CQm·
parison to···Racque!l Welch to
be believa ble. •
William Cullen as playwright
Peter Sloan yields a credible
reading, but Cullen needs
more stage b u sin e ss
assig.nmcnts-to enhance belief
in the nervous author on his
first ni~t out. Rolling on the
balls of his feet and wringing
of hands were fine crutches
except they went tOO far.
PAUL S TE E LE . the
stagestru ck Shriner. ought to
realize the importance of this
• ch,a ractcr role to the plot. He
also ought to decide wheth_er
Elkhart -the character's
home town -is really in In-
diana or Pennsylvania. He
said ii was both.
Country Music Awa1~ds Set
NASHV ILLE, Tenn. (AP) -
Country music will honor its
best tonig ht in a televised
presentation of the annua l
Country Music Association
awards from the sta ge of the
fabled Grand Ole Opry House
in Nashville.
Glen Campbell, the Delight,
Ark., guitar picker and singer,
will host the show which will
be televised li ve on CBS begin-
teacher and a relat ive new-
comer to l'OUOtry music.
The awards are part of a
"'ee k-long celebration mark-
ing the birthday of the Grand
Ole Opry-~ .... ·hich has been
originating fro.m • the o I d
Ryman Auditorium since l92ft.
$do
111,_, HAOI-"' .. _
M loN!ew IW. tolo -O!t • ._.,,.
ning at 10 p.m. EDT. .loll ~-• h
Loretta Lynn, nominateOfor ALFllED HITCHCOCK'S
awards in fi ve categories, is (G) • • FR EN z y • •
the firs t woman to be in the
running for the Entertainer of Ag_~NT IASTWO~: 1
the Year award -considered • J'PLAY MISTY
the top prize in the 10 w ... *' Fri. FOR ME" ca tegories. . T•ra .._w• at 7:15.-tr
Also nominated for the topl~~c~-~·~'"'~·~·~·~-~-~"~-~·~~-·~-~~~C~·~·~·-~·~·~-~·~""~·~>~•~-·~-~~ entertainer award are Merle
Haggard, Freddie llart, Coun-
try Charlie Pride and Jerry
Reed. Haggard and Pride,
CQUntry music's first na-
tionally recognized b I a c k
artist. are former winners of
the award.
Pride is in the running in
four categories es is Donna
Fargo, a former s c h o o I
---CtNEDOME 2D It, ..... =-=~ --· CtNIDDMI 21 ·. ..... ="Y.::r---=
llN ··~LAT IT AGAIN, SAM"
E...:191 ..... •~t H-H• • ...,.... S..tt
WIMtr If ' Acfftrtt"f Aw•,.,_ "'FIDDL•a ON TN• ltOOP"
Mir..., •r•IMll 8'I
"THE OODfl"ATNlll" flt) • Erskine ~1orden re turning
from a nine-year leave of
theMrical ac ti vily, gives a Eg~lI-Role richly rewarding performance --" -._I .. C 1 STADIUM 2 '.
"TH• WILD aUMCH" !al
IHI (Hby ... aobtrl Culp, "MICKEY & aooosN CPOI • .. ~l ""J":Sl ·:--:.. "IU!!Tll!llM orr SAll.t.TA" !POI
as Owen Turner, the veteran HOLLYWOOD (UPI)_ Ed-
playwrighl. His ta lents lend ·a die Egan, the former New
stability to the otherwise York cop whose story was !old L11a MIMm
shaky performance. in "The French Conneclion," "CAeA1tET" c~o1 ---:;~· SIAD/UM •3 ', ~latching !he quality of 1.11 play a gu st 1 · "LAST su~s1t" 11 1 .. •tr:::.J~ cha racterization by Morden. w e roe tn an "'=======--:~
f ord and Levy, certainly was episode of television's "Man-'= "THE HEw cENTu1t 01r1s .. 11t1 nix." 1.111 11 c. sutt ti1iss Titus' reading of the------------I • "Z
lovely leadjng lady, aspi ring i,--;;::;:~::::~;;:::;:::-,il--~~:'::'::'::'::'::':~'.:::"':'-'::Y:M:':':TY::':••::•:•:"::':"::~~ grande dame of the thea-tuh. Ill ~.tto ... 1 0. .... 1 n..m.
Miss Titus moves well I'·"'"'----------~ onstage, projects amiably the
trite qualities a u d i e n c es
associate with such a role and
in sum. gives a performance
the remainder of the cast is
WKO.t.YS tr.45
S.t.f.&SUN.12:45
Comfortably Air Conditioned
Indeed, the whole evening
under the direction or Judy's
favorite conductor, Gen£'
Palumbo. seen1cd dated for a
teen-ager. A big segment "'as
devoted to a medley of 1950's
songs such as "Rock Around
The Clock." and there were
musical allusions to the 4.0"s_
30's and 20's. Lorna would be
\vell advised to make her
Curtain time will be 8 hard put to equal.
o'clock for the Saddleback 1p;;;;;;_,_,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_,_,_,_,I JI-Eltl J-
" sho"'' in the college theater.
Building R, on the Mission
Viejo campus.
"THE MAN" CPGI
''THE SAWURG
CONNECTION" INI
him. m Truth or Consequences I lllfllliilfmJ:\i;jl!fiaJ!j 0 @) m Ltugh·ln In • parade m Movie: "ICAnus Padfic" (wes) I~ !!:! Garden
UA
South '
Con•
Clntm1
1111 CtRy
a-.i Culp
"HICKaY
.. 10005"
•. st,.iu1111 w. Mlrlll••
"H.LLO
DOLLY"
of cameo 1uests. Jack Benny comes 'SJ-Sterling H1yden, Eve Miiier.
inlo 1h• studio by mistake. Ja~es Ill) H1th1yog1
Farenlino comes in as 1 hMp1!1I tE Gamer Ted Armstn1n1
patltnt. Michele Lee as his wife, im· EID All About TY
P'11ent and Pele1 Marshall IS • 11:15 al Roller '•mes
comic. 11:30 El (j) CBS Late Movie: {t) "Tlrt ID That Girt Crim1t~ f'irat1" (adv) '52 -Burt
ffi Pttty Mison Lancaster, Nick Cra~al
El) lkrmanos Col'aj1 · tti Redhnt' ffi t1]) I J~ICi..k I nnt Edition: Ttll (J) MO'tie: "Julie e
It All Perlormance docume nlU'Y ol (com) '63 -PllSCalt Petit. roe~ lf(IUP llenny Rodge11 1nd Tht 0 (ig €D JohnnJ Clrson Joey
rirst Edition toll0W1 lhem on 10111. BishcP is subslttute host
_ ._., " G 1 O Rober1 K. Do_rrr•n Shll'll' ,
l:IOI m..; 11 @ Morie: "f1llt11 An1tr" (dr1) 45
CE) lllOl¥4dabla -Dani And1ews, Atlee F1ye. ffi Movlt; (2hl) "Am1rln1 01. Clit-O Morie: (C) "Thunder In tht
tertlolfll" (dra) '38 -[dward G.
Robinson, Humphrey Boa111. ;·~01;,~\,.;;~;;;;11s~•n Hiyward,
1:30 ID Mtr1 Grillln Show IJ) Dick Cltett Show
r
;l!ll fJ (j) Htft'I lucy Lucille C11ter 12:00 m Movie: (C) "A!)lrtmtnl for Ptl·
1ets 1 ticket fo1 "rtc~less dfivln2" rf° (com} '48 -WU1l1m Holden,
in ~er whee\t~ai1. 12:!0 9 tH1hw•J P~tol CJ @1 u;, MSC Monday Movl@: 1EJ Counl!J M~src I (C)(2hr) "Cool Mllhon'' {d11) '71 t ·OOQ @ l'lm I -J1m11 r1renhno, .lohn Vernon.
I 811'b111 Bouc:~el Greece ind l!a lyl 1:15 0 Nm
I StNt 15 1 b•ckd!CP !or 1his mys 1:30 €1 Movie: "Thi Broltn S11r" (wc1)
t•TJ dr1m1 1nwrlvln1 1he slranae '56-Howard Dull, Utt Baron.
Tuesday
DAYTIME MCVIES
,:00 m (t) "M1iitfil Mo11llnpt1r"
(dr1) '57 -Gent Kelly, f(11.tllt
Wood.
.t:lO O (C) "'f"11111tln" (dr•) '!i&-Oln1
, w,nttr, Mtl ftirtr.
to:Ol'.I (]) "Mr. 1etvtd1re Cots to eon11•"
' (c.om) '4!1-Clllton Webb, SllirltJ
Tamplt. u "lv(~tbt!lp 11·M'' ~ild-11) '51-
llO)'d Brldlts. Ost M1uen. ~:00 O ''Tht Mon111r 111d 1111 Clrl"
(llM) '41-lllen Ortw, Rod C1mt· ....
J:OO m {C) "1i1111s ol tfl4I Ti mbtrtlnd"
(dr•) '60--IJan Ladd, .11!1Mt C11ln.
' 1:30 O "Mn . WiQS ef the C.bblrt
C-ldr" (com) '3• -W, C. Field!;,
Z.ru Plt!1, .O "Tiit Uttlt focttiw" (dr•) 'Sl
-Rk;hie AtldrulCO.
:t:OO I}) "AIOMlc City" (dn) '52-Cent
81n'<y, Lydia Clar\1.
lOl "Enillfl P11¥tf" (com) 'M -
Robel! Walk¥, Burl Im, Waltu
Matthau.
•:lio 0 (CJ "!lot """" ,_,.. (com) '!i6-Bob ~t. (~a M111t
$1lnt. P11rl s.ney.
4:30 !lJ Saint u lOAM UP1111
>
LQ.l('yn
RAQUR WELCH,
KANWCITY I RICHARD IURTON Of the
Finzi·Conti"is (~ BOMBER I IPG! MCTROCOLOR ....... c w1rrw1 auttv 1 l"•r• Dvll-•r
"IONNlt AND CLYDt" \
MICH-1 !. "1A CI~ ~•"IJ'I 11.~~'JYI
"SllUIHllll\OUSI fill" ....._____..,
"MAltOID I MAUDI" . ". . ... : ... •Owa."n• "' :
' :
...... o ... ''!•"• ~··~:· ... :"
. '
I "BLUEBEARD" 7:00 c111d 10:2S
-AlS0-
JACK LEMMON
IARIARA HARRIS
JASON ROIARDS
''The War Between ~11~ <!> t.1or llylllfr£IJI ·A ,.IANrlOUllTWW. 'R'
1. O I><•\""' --11 _..., . .........
..... ···~ .. ~·: .· ""'
'It ............. (-•· .. . .. .......... .. . •... . . ..
t ACAdllllY IWAIU Wllllllll ......,~-c-....~ .. ,, ____ ·--~
1• Nichol•••••
Alex•ndr•
•
BOB HOPE · !VA MARIE SAlllT
-' RALPH BEUAMY· RIRRESTTUCKER
"'GET TO
KNOW YOUR
RABBIT"'
10001 .. l•IU
.., ...... 0\1 ••11111wr1111
'
,.., __ U"TI•
lr.OWAtrtO a
HARD0Rf::01 .. _ ........... .. ......... ..... ..
R=:. ,. --·-··· Also -Held Over
BILI. kflllt:KT l'itsHY -CIJl.P
t!!Jj1'tTt. l!!l!i!>i1 ....._._ ...
"t .. u•••Tr ~---..... '
•
.... . ...,._
'Id! P1i.nt:1
(Alt ... rMMft
"CHATO'S .... , ..
8Mll 11'1 Ct lffl
. ~-Ylll arv-t Dew."•-Kerr "TH• KINO
AHO I"
'''"
e. Sltttlallll -W. M1llll ..
elM C""' • llt1Mrt Cul11 "KICICIY & aOOOS"
JKll ~' .. ""' ''CHATO'S LAND''
"M•LLO OOLL Y" <•lff 101 ::;:: y. ,,.,_ • o. I(.... -:~
"TMI ICINt A111D I''
I
•
•
• •
0 DAILY PILOT
•
Everyone Has
Sometbin9 That
Someon e Else Wants
DAILY PILOT . CLASSIFIED ADS
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
I~ I _,.... l~ I _,.... I~ I ,_, .....
)~;;;m;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~)iiliiiiiiliiil--~I -..... ]~I _, ....
------------------1
' 1~1-... -
•
You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Want Ad
l~ I _, ... I~
)1G~·;";·~·~a·liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim~.·.·········iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim)"i,.~"~·~·;·;·~~~~~~l ;G;;;•";0;';';1;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;G;e;";';'';1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 :G~·:"~·~·:·~1 :-::--:~:--~~1·G--'-on-·~·;a;1;;-;--;:-;;:;-~ CG~·~"~·~·~·1~~~~~~
I
l
I
I MACNAB
IRVINE
$24,950 • \V~ll L~~L~tru~~~Kl11l<'; l)v11't lei !y~! t~@~ kOO\\'
3 BED' RM • 'n~1vly decorat~I. Nr N'pt. &.00ut this jewel of a hon-.e Hghts, Only $2'1,.'lOO. before you have a chance 10
Who's the Luck
One? . I
Owner h11s rnnved to Alaska
& n1ust sell ihls sharp 3
bdrin & fan1Uy rm near So.
Coos! Plaza. The best blLY
in norlh Costa .r.tl"sa. Full
price SZl.500.
L
ON THE BLUFF IN DOVER SHORES
C:xcellent oppot·tunity on a beautifully ap·
pomtea 3 bedroom· plus den Dover Shores
vie\V property. Single story fio·or plan \1;ilh
massive covered patio and terraced view
of the entire Upper Newport Bay. Trans-
ferred executive .,x,•ants comments on his
$84,950 price! This is a property without n
fa1nily. Ifs lonel y, but friendly!
PHONE UNIQUE HOMES. NEWPORT IEACH, 645·6!i00
U~l()U~ ti()M~S
REAL ESTATE
General General
NATURE WHISPERS ..... .
.. , ...... WITH THIS VIEW
Just remodeled 3 bedroo1n. 2 bath, dining
room (or family room J, fireplace, cheerful
built-in kitchen v.rith inviting SUNDECK for
your entertaining pleasure, overlooking the
canyon & vie\V of the ocean. One-of-a-kind
in CAMEO HIGHLANDS $67,950
LOOK WHAT WE HAVE.
. , ..•. , VACANT LOTS
Attention builders -1'wo R-4 lots. 60'
frontage in rapidly appreciating area, and
an ocean \·iew too! Jn Costa ~fesa .. $32,250
"l'i46t<M-S#tld
~ ANDASSOCIATIS
REALTORS
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR.CALIF.
644·7270
UPPER BAY I
NEW LISTING I
Beautiful ·I BK. paneled FR.
fh·epi<1.('t' in :\1 BR. VlC'\\' of
bi\). Qlll•·l slrtY•1. hou~~ ,\,;
i:f'OU1x!<i exu>trnr!y ~l~'lrp
$~1,.'ilO
COSTA MESA
ORANGE ORCHARD ~rgeous ;f RR, F'R honte.
Cus!om drpi;, shag cpt,
EIC"Clronic oven. H o b by
l'{)()1n. 6Sx154 lot, ('XqUll!ttl'iy
lnndscapt'd \11/orange trees
in ba<'kyarrL Ve(' Stinson,
&12-SZl'i .
EASTBLUFF
LUSK BUILT
SANTA ANA
HEIGHTS
Clf'an family home v,•froom
fui· boat Ot' trailer. 3 Bdnn
-"·/har.cl'.fOOd noors in upper
Bay al't'a.-Possession
<rvailablc J an. 1973. FUJI
prlce
S25,750
Now port
at
Fairview
646-1811
(anytime!
I ~------------------Call Eric eves &. Sundays.
General General ~16-4140.
SPYGLASS PLAN 74 I
3600 plus sq ft in this 5 bdrn1 ,
ll!ijt!ij~~~tltl"'~l 4 ba, plus lxlnu!i l'ln ,hornc on a V.1.P. loc;1!ion. Central
"' • 4111 ,, .. ., air cond .. in1ercom & buiJt-
OWNER HATES TO LEAVE
This lovely 4 Br. 3 Ba., f~m. r~. home. in
\Ve stc lilf urea. They'll miss their pools1ze
yard, too. Out of state 1nove for.qes saJe.
Call Bud Austin ~
ln record playcl'. No·\\'ax
vinyl, shag carpeting, wal-
nut cab1ners in kitchen. pool·
sized lot & b~ath-taklng
vie11 of oce;:in & coas!line.
Yo1· can ccl{'brii.te the holi ·
days in your n{'1V It-Onie. Ca!J
OO">V $150.000 including land.
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
Just listed. 3 Bdrn1. & family rm. home. Lo-
cated on corner lot .wilh some 'ocean vie\v.
Good floor plan \vith family eating area in
the kitchen. Property vacant for quick occu-
pancy. Price 1s very realistic at .... $62,900
BALBOA PENINSULA
Popular location -bandy to beaches &
shops. ~ Udrn1. ho1ne, priced for quick sale
at .·.. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. $62,500.
* * * * * TAYLOR CO
MESA VERDE~J7,50D
'Ve invite you to see this truly delightful 3
bdrm home in a quiet neighbo rhood. Family
rm, lanai & 2 bat.bs; Palos Yer.des stone {ire-
placc, lge ro~ms, built-ins in kitchell. NicP.ly
landscaped yd. You 'll love it!!
''Our 27th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B, 644-4910
General General
oflnJa !Jjfe
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
51 Linda Isle Drive
Custom 4 BR., 3 1h ba. home on Lagoon. Mstr.
BR. has sittin g area & frplc. Waterfront
family rm. \V/conversation pit around the
lrpl.; lovely garden , lge. slip .... SIB9,500.
For Compfete Information
On All Homes & Lots, Please Cell :·
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Or., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161
2 BATH BROAD ,.,. "· BeaoOifulty '''"· qulet street. 3 bedrooms. NO DOWN Beaullrul Broadv"ay St. >.1nt lurg.:r In n1 i I y rooni.
P stablished neighborhood. Eastside. Call now for KP.
I TERMS Lge. patio W/brick BBQ tor po!ntn1ent & y,•e'll whisper
. outdoor living. 3 Bdrms., mar<' QI thf' interesting Ov.·n<'~ extrt'm('ly anxious at· faini!y rn1, & Irplc. plus Jc.>1111ls. Offered at only
}f::p1uve ~n1e. i;: I (' &11a .n t alley acctss. Only s:ll ,500. $3.J.000.
'" '" "'"'""" "'"• NEW LISTING 646-3928, Eves. s•• ••16 roon1 btult·io drean1 kit-...,..:rt
chen.' New covered patio. Near N'pt 1-lght s. 3 Bcirn1., 2
IY!dt" (_'OTlf"J'C'lf' Jrive11•ay. ba., frpl. phlll .sep. pltiyroon1
Near all sclJOOls ,l',r; shopplng. \1'/(rpl., BBQ. All !his on un
Brk. lo~reshly painted ex-R-2 lot. Only $34,500. Lachenmyer
ll'rior. 5-W-1120. CALL G> 646·l414 ==::::::======= A,M'41 DESIGNED ,
Realtor
7Q,\'. ;;:""-FOR THE
Near Newport Post ortlc• DISCERNING
TARBELL
295.'i Harbor, Costa ?tfesa
QNE -IN ·A·
MILLION
FOR PEOPLE
WHO ENJOY
FINE THINGS 4 bedroo1ns. 2 baths, huge
This Corona del Mar home addl.'d !amlly roon1 \1'ith
fcutUJ'E'll a panorarnic view beoan1ed ceilings & largP
(Jf t.he OC{'an and R..1~·· ~rick fireplace. T \V 0
Sp.1ctcJUs 4 bcdroom hon1e in sepurate do u bl c car
n1ove--in condition 11• it h garage11. All this in Costa
Outstanding 3 lwdroon1, 2
bath home \\'ith Jnrgc
scret.•ncd in patio room pltls
COVf'red p..itlo. This home is
10<-'ated in choice Huntington
BMch area i:;un'Ql.1nded by
homes price<) up to $40,000.
You can nave this Oll(> for
only $19,000. Call 847-6010.
oldcl' charm. Sparkling pool., or VA terms available. 4 .n..a. a..n..w
Call 540-1151 Open Eves.
..,_(,. HERITAGE
... REALTORS
-COLLEGE PARK-
Quit•t Safr Stro..>i>I. J\1~
1'1odel with 4 Bedrooms, l~ Baths. U11ed.Bric.k
Flrepla<'e. Pleasiu1 Patlo.
New Exterior J1Jnt. $16ai
Initial InvMtment. $32,500. cau 646-Cr555.
IWIUI
~l..lb~IDIARY O' IH( COlWllL CO.
Baycrest
At ltS Best
ni.,dern eonveniel'IC'l't> and Mesa for only $32,500. 1'~1-IA ®.......,. R"' R •
lt>t! land. $125,{XXl. Ap-\\!on't last a \'ll'ek -Call us ESTATERS
JIOl1lln1enL only. ca 11 quick for fu.11 details. ~~~~;OPE~N~T~>L~9~PM~~I Be~t buy in Baycrest. $64,500 G7.1-S.}5{). Ca!J 54fr5880 !Open eVt's.) buys 4 b&irooln. family rm. formal dtning ro:.n. Gt'ftnt
•
THE REAL The Whole Thing 1""""°" '" rlools & """" ping. EST"'T&RS has been redecorated, ne1v PETE j!ARRErf l .;;:;;;:;;;~OPE~N~T~<~9~PM:;;~1,:;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;~ I carpets, paint, !andscaptni;, · -etc .. in this lovely 3 Jx.dnn. -REALTQR-
COLLEGE PARK FAMILY l•mily nn. •11 b"'"'"' pl"' !<l°'l'U" l!llilillJilW SfLASH IN fireplace, b\OC'k waH fencing, ~
One man's Joss could be heavy .shake roof, dream Ch • T
YOUR GA.'N. Wru< ..... PRESTIGE HOME palio. spo·inkers froni .. eap1e ee-pee
buyt'J" d1dn t qualify. Now · , · R $19 950 available. 3 bedroom, 2 A temric _6ome fur a gt'O\,:. rear. eluctant 01vner mo~t 1
bath, popij,lar MESA CAM-L~ . fa:nil¥· 5 ~droon1i., niove north. Assume large The total pr!ee o( this honie
BRIDGE. Vucant. VA an. la1.nilr .size kit.ehen, VA loan. Alking$34,500. · t , ·~-2 ,.. bu lt la . is conw. ,, U<:\11.,.,.,.s. praisal in & all ready to go. 1 -ms. fg(' eat111i; area. Call ~0-1151 Open Eves. baths, double car garngt'
QUICK POSSESSION. Full Upgraded throog~t. plwo and n1ueh rnore. Call now.
price & appraisal $30,500. 18 x 311 1-l/F pool with au!o SU-2.)3.). s11·ecptt. $44,950. Ca 11 ....,,_ _______ ,,
COATS" S<HOto. ~THE RB:AL~
& ~THE ':SSJ:A'l'liJCi . WALLACE . ' :SSJ:A~ w ANTED OP<N .,._ .... -S~~4~~RS OPEN 'r< '"" A LARGE FAMILY Guaranloed
(0 Eve ' ) HOMEABILIT-v-. ror this super fRmilY home. l!Oi\1E SALE PLAN ptn n1ngs ,, Four bcdroontS, 2 Of tlleSt> AU Ovf'r Orange County
SOLVED arc approx. 14 x 20 each. 3 675-7225 586-0222
OCEAN VIEW Spaciou.">J&>droomJ-lom<'ln fl.Ubaths l"bah 1· ·
Huntington Beach. 2 Baths, ~m. f a~ 1i y ~~~ning ~ ii HOME REDUCED F•mily Room. Plcnly o1 lruge!" Walk in clooets and Ii~ ·h Roon1 to st:Orf" a BooL Close J I · $10,500 00 Schools and Shopping. Of-AfJ 8!rth~t ;:,thonl~~~ ~.;~},· '. ;
Gorgi"OUS ocean view in fered • for S34,9'j(l. Call \\ith VA and fllA terms. -~-· _:
Corona del 1\lar w it h 6-Mi-05ffi. Qiil ~znj. ~oft~•O•All' o, 1H1 cOLWru. co. :;-;;:~~,, ,.'" k f~Y. • ,';~ 1a~ l'1 ii H5'. THE REAL "SELL IT" !r,~~0:tl_~~t~'.~~ ,~··· ~EScJ~r~!S '&~~~~1~~~·4~:!~
Vil"\\'. You own the land and -·--·· ., HO S rin .. lge. pool. 3 car gar. hrivl.' aCC(.>SS to priv-.i.te suv.~11>1A~' 01 n•c <01.wr1.1 co. R ES, Phone for details.
~~-c~1 6~~-0"'' MINI· RANCH HORSES !
nm REAL .. $12,500 !
Built like a brick ranch EQ'OPEl~TERS house'! Mini-ranch 1ri1h is LARGE & LOVELY N TIL 9PM FRUIT TREES! Q u i e I .
Two 3 Bdrm hon1cs on full 1 ~ acre. Sharp, custom· built,
3 Bdrm & den home + a
3 brlrm rental, 10~ down.
Only Mad tr r ed ! t LARGE -3 BR. den, !iv. NEW~~ 2 BEOR~M Pill~l'<l ~1ico~ntry~Co~y $51,000 rm/frpl & kitch. 3~l l"llr
JUST LISTED
Lusk popular Burlingame w/6 bdrms., 4
baths; sharp house with walnut paneling;
prof. landscaping. Choice buy J itn Muller
e reel hill ;:;;;;;Gono=rel ==Gt=neral==
EUREKA. Conic cl1sctlver cabin kitchen REFRfGER-CALt 642·17i1 gar. Added attrnC'lion, in.
your lJNIQUE HO!\'rE, 3 ATOR, RANG.E AND OVE~ ron1e from new, priv. 1 BR ~~~ ~"·,·,eai' f H ;:_f?_,e1 INCLUDED! Concrctf' drive-0ntul1'" ~,~'~,. 1&;,~~t7i~lly lndscpd,
'"""'!""ms. or."''..., v,•ay . ALL BRICK f!OME! '-"·" n .n.>, ""·
family. Oie_erlul Kitchen, lnvesror'sdream. cau fast. -rimTI"21 BALBOA BAY PROP.
honus ctibmets. Easy 645-0303 * 642·7491 *
A REAL VOTE WINNERI
Magnificent University Pk. townhouse: 2·
sty. 3 BR., fam. rm., 21i2 ba. Near tennis,
pools, schools -choice ... for details call
''Chuck" Lewis.
BIG CANYON-"BEST BUY'"
Compare! Choose this home now! Com·
pletely lndscpd. & decorated. Poolsize yard.
2 Frplcs., wet bar. 4 BR. $115,E<JO. Fee. Call
Paul Quick
LARGE FAMILY HOME
.. Jmmac. S BR. President home. Lge. family
rm. w/frplc. Formal dining rm. Beautifully
decorated. Fee land. $92,500. Eileen 11udson
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Spotl ess 4 BR., 2 bath home. Sunken liv.
rm .. fam. rm., din. rm. Cov'd. patio w/
firepit. Bar. f\.lany extras. $61,900. lfoward
Wells
SO. LAGUNA R,J LOTS
Loe. on So. Coast ll wy. 'fcrrific ocean view.'
Steps to fine beach. One 'vhole block. De-
velop homes or condos. $286,500. George
. Gru pe
LOT IN BIG CANYON
Thinkjng of building Choice view site over~
looks greens & fairways. Priced to sell
now! Bob Yorke
YOUR CHOICE ON LIDO ISLE
1. lm1nac. & charn·1. 4 BTL, den $8.1.000
2. 70' SI. lo SL. lot & 3 BR. D.R. $9J.5QO
3. Neat 4 BR. nr club & lennls $76,500
Charlene Whyte
120' YACHT SLIP AVAILABLE
For your boat & !or you. a sup erbly de-
signed 5 BR. home. "!•Ir. BR. suite. mag-
nificent din. rm.: many more features make
this property thc "Champagne or Calif.
tlomes." Bill Bent~
833--0700 ....--
Coldwell.Banker
~ 644-2430
SSO NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.8.
-
REALTY
Univ, Park Center, Ir.,.ine
Call Anytin1{'. 833·:1820
Office hours 8 AM lo 6 P~l
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
AbsoluiX'ly Tnunaculutc
4 bedroon1 home
Beautifully lan!Scapcd
An1or1Ji lots of ll'ees
in fashi<lnable
Camt'O Hil'hiands
Ta.o;tefully deooraled
Sunny breakfast area
1\ home !hat sparkles
& 1s an exceptional
Value at $69,500
HARBOR
C .OMPANV
RF:ALTORS
SJNCF: 19'1'1
673-4400
TARBELL
2955 J-larbor, Cl'l$!a Mcsn·
SOUTHERN
ST-YLE
Sll ,500
llome 10 d1•llgh1 Any v:on111n·!li
heart. Expcruilv{' n t' w
d~ romplrm1•nt u~ her .
qnoi!ic C'tlrpt't. L.rHJ(r t'lt'l~·d
pol\o lookll 0111 (lr tht' lofJJU1l
dining ll~lt . Lovt'ly ATQulid~
ooar fl't'('v.'n~ fl('f'('U but
~i\1d~d IHWI qu irt In ~1f!Ml
drt ~1n1·. Thn?f' !M'llrool'n!li.
$ 3 I ' ~' (\ 0 I Ill !I'\,. 11 1 l:l I ('
po~,.._·~don (;r1'111 l1•1-n1~
CaJJ ~JG-2313.
for Action
liillTHERBAL ..• Call 642-5678 -.~~p~s
BAYFRONT -NEW LISTING -BAYFRONT
\/ia Lido Soud, with nice beach. 3 Bdrm. low-
er plus 2 bdrm. upper plus guest room. Just
c.ompletely remodeled. New carpet. Mission
tile roof. Immaculate condition! Owner will
include furnishings in the do\vnstairs plus
guest room in the sale price! $197,500 . Owner
v.1ill consider trade or condominium.
SALISBURY REALTY
673-6900
JIS MARINE AVE., BALBOA ISLAND
General
FOURPLEX
Assume FHA S4 6,7()0
Payments $446.09 PIT r.
Inr-01ne S(".,?,O/m\J Ov.·Tl('r
will lake SlOCO (J0\1·n, {'lHTY
Ra.Lance on 2nlt 111 ~'~";,
P1i rr S:i7.500 or 1naKt' cash
ofr<'1'
General
Owner Desperate
i\1u11t J'('!um to Ch icago .
NC'cds fa'I! sa!r. 5 Bdrms,
fan11ly rm. 3 bath, 2' story
11 1frr sh f1ain! in ond riu1
i\!11st .~ell . A.'fking s::1.f1~
C11U 5-to-lli>I Opt·n F:ve~.
~ . ._. HERITAGE
REALTORS
6 I ~l"J I NUM&f f?fD l ~ll["l !tl
, lt1[5f SO\JAQE S
'1 Ci UNS(l!AMBIE ABOVt ltll(RS
10 GtT ANSWC'
maintenance play ya r rl . ·
Darkroom in douhle garage. Well-established R e a I
s132;, Initial Investment. Estate firm needs one ~~~· • •• HURRY! Immediate salesperson to work di-
~ Possession rectly with sales man.
••1 ii ager to learn & earn. , Ii~~ l l Don"t to"ch a •bing • Move Will train. Call eves: I j 20'xlO' rii;:ht in. Sparkling 4 bdnn s::i:?1 ' ~ai~~~l :i·u::1;~it~~~/~s\~~4 ,~s::-=Nu~IT~5~~.~E~X~C~E~L~L~E~N=T •. _ ... , .. , BONUS ROOM nc1v vinyl floor. Clos<' to
su1s101A11Yot1Hr<DlwlLLCo. sitting on top of thii lovely schools & all major i;hop. RENTAL HISTORY
JUST LISTED
MESA VERDE
3 Bdrm, 2 bath homf'. Other ping. $30,7"..iO. For details. All roomy 2 bedrooms. Good
features include srcp·down Call 540-1151. Open Eves. kitchens wul don'I nrerl
living rm. heavy shake roof, much to. keep them in good
2 fireplaces, block \Vall n>ntable shape. A good buv
fence & nice cul-de-sac lo-at $56,500. Red earp.;1
eation. Priced only $35.T:JCI. Renlton:;, 546-8640.
Tnily a ··0on House" Call 546-5880 <Open evt'S.) ";~~~~~~~~~I Barn-oStyle Home
3 Bdrn1s .. 2 baths. I-ltd. & • Earth lover's klnd of livin'!
nrrl. s"·imming pool. l\lovl'-NEWPORT ISLAND \Varm frpk·.. kid11 rms ..
in condition! A real buy al " $66,500 f;ir1n kilch. UJ.900. Da\1•g
$41.000 • ftURRY! frit'rul!v'. CornC"r income property; R~ S CORBIN• Jtreat potential. Bring voui· cAL E TATE -~~-builder & decorutor. O~vnct' TREASURES
MARTIN --HOME BY --\\'ill considt>r lrade for J.~31 \.VcstclHf, NB. 64.~70 \\'atcrfl"ont. -~ ~ CHRISTMAS c,u, 673-3663 613-8086 ""· Close To Evorythin9 Gooi ~choo!s. good shopping.
and expnndable. Lots of
• r
•
A11ume 5'1•%
FHA Loan
Lf\l'~ ~ Bdrm. 2'-' ha1)1 •'!)11·
do1ulnlum. Doubli; ~i1rn~e
1v/~ara51'f' door or r n !' r ,
Jovrly private pt1!10 .~ pnol
Only SZ'J.300. CINNY MQRRP,nN •"**• -REfll~TORS-
*W!l. • 1500 Mesa • •Verde Or. Eut,
•111 -.* a.ta MeM ••• 507~ll0
C{)pen Ew>ntn~
LOVELY POOL
HOME
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
2025 W ll'olboo 67J-l,6J
ruo1n insldc and ouL,idc.
$30,500 in Coll{'ge Pnrk tor a
good 3 bedroom house on a
cul-rll'-i;ac? Sure. We'll show
}"OU. Red Carpet ReaJl'ora.
546-8&1-0.
2 BLKS lo St. Joachim's
Cath Srh!. 5 br, 3 ba, fam
rm. frp!c,. form din rm,
brkfst rm. play rm. elec-
tror}lr OV{'n. Cov Jiatio
• :i 1:3Drti\1 neat ocean w/~late pool !bl. Elect gar
S26.900. · Opt'llf'r. Sprinklers. Owner.
• I M ;\l AC nJr.f'Onrl ~ $39,500. Aft 5pm, 64&-52+1 R!Hl~1. ,'l"(ltUTnr $2'.'.() l'!TJ -MOVETN-QUIC.Kf
!\11)(."(ion \11ej{• ..... $?.S,900 \lut11111, i;t•C'7 CINI! loold&-
• 4 TIDR \1' !Wflr 0('<'111'1 . l\fl1!JjC in f!nr rc!!idcnt{af S~i4.00ll l flrt'I\. 1 IK"d1\'Xml1> and hi
Ji3:1 \\'<.'.~tsl1f! Or . 1'.B ! k1 !l'h1·u for eusy living.
64::i· 7:l21 S~l,!l:l(l fnr th)" i;harri lh~ * Sexy Spanish * /l:~;;·io::'" ,,~. c • • •"
Comf' nnd Hl'.'c thiA ·i11mrp .1 SUPER SHARP tlN:lroom, 2 hath IXlm<' 11n'1 ~1p YoUr trqul\11. In till' !«)ft MESA VERDE
v.·urn1 gJO\\' tmn1 n b•'nut lf11l Atrium. fnmlly roon1. dinint::
SpuJil,..h llre1Ha(.'('. Prk't' <ll'I-mom, llnd 4 lxtdroon~. J..otii
l.v $32,!rJO CaJJ no 1v l"lr l<ivt'ly v,·t-11-kepl houM> on F"i~ 3 be~t'OQm, 3 holh hOml' 84Z.-2535. I (.'l.il-dt'·SllC' kit. Lt1 Ul'I show
ln perft>c-t contlilinn in a Y"\I !hi~ hea1ny. 142,950.
gro1 Jocallo!1. Prlctr1 right! ~THE REA.L _Eel"JX"t ~nlton., ~-
Ctttl 67'-m.. 10lESTATBRS 1 EASTSlDEI POOQ ~ 1 OPfN ~Tl 9PM IC:ro.'at n1't'11 ::n\d a duimil
J ~ 1 J ~~., __ ___ ~ hoU '<' th.'11'' f11n to ll\t> in I l J CLEAN ANO SHARP ! Ciin vnu 1mnclnc $35,4."il lo ' 1 ; i1.I. Gvod 11111irtl·r horn,. li]:nOd IL ll"'JI home. v.·l1h 1 r 11· I lt ~~lll'l\Hblfl loo n, 'an 11r1 '"'riroorti'i' Grol\I )l(')uq f() •
•---" r1t'IJrhhnrhor1<I, llnnl 10 tx•ft l 1•n!rrtaln1n:.: R1-d •
\Ul \101fltw r.1 1~1 co1wu 1 t prwr of S'l~.<l!l(l '"r tlii., :1 Rt !ll!ont. ~11;..sr~w. ~
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700 '"' '"""' ""' l"" o•m"l '"''Mm "'"'· """ c,,,,~, -----------------------------call BW1')' -64 ' H<'Ah~ ~lfi.-AA.10 .
•
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... DAILY PILOT
I~ I -·-I~ [ _.... l~ [ _,,... I~ I -·-I~[ -·-u. I~ I _..... I~ CT!:~'~" :....~~/ ---
General Coron• dtl Mar Fountain VaRn Hvntlncton 8e1ch Newpo,.t 8••Cf'I Newport S.•ch Newport Beach Income Pro.,.rtt 1t£Ak;:·~c;TO;;R~1~ .. :.~.-;y~,..::;-~w:i~n:I =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;; 16'
from ownrr cuatn\ IC'Olf· * INCOME * cou~ vic11o• hon\e, 3 BR -t South of lfwy. Lo\'~ly 3
MllJdy, 3-car ~u. 2400 1Lf. bdrm .. 2 balh horn<? + 1ix l-
0f"lt'n daily 10-6: S~.900. BR. fttrn. unit1 + r;win\-
23841 Pinafore, Lag u 11 a ml"i pool • lg<!. lot.
Niguel. 830-~. Sl.95,00).
BALBOA Covea. N. B . ·-·-·-·-· waterfront. Private ramp & * CHOICE *
float. Moden1 3 br. $77,51X). Pt>nthouee Triplex $85,000
Call owner, 675-0750 tor OPEN SUNDAY 1-5
app 't. Principals only. 436 SEAWARD RD.
NEW DUPCEX ...••. $48,900 ORANGE COAST
1·2BR & 1-3BR apt. 151 E. Real Estate Bay, C.Osta Mesa. &12-.4837.
B IL-.. 2600 F:. Coast H\t.')'.
• -Island Corona de! l\1ar 6-H-4818
SUPER DUPLEX
PriC(' reduced to $79.9:;0 by
a.n anxious owner who will
consider a Je~ption to
purchase. Versatile Door
plans. 5 Bedroom, 4 B8th -4
Kitchen areas. • 4 outside
f'ntrances. Bkr. fi'F.>.7225.
Balbo• Peninsula
DUPLEX. 3 BR. up, 2 dn.
$55,000. Next to beach. I
AGENT· 675-0144
Corona del Mar
1,000 WHITE SAILS
Bt•aulirul view from lie. ror·
ner Int; 3 lxirn1., fan1\Jy 1m.
hon1e. 1'tove·1n condition:
qulck possess. $69,500,
MARK SPITZ
GREW UP WITH
A POOL
. anti 110 c-an your chil-
ihi"n. ~ thll' !!uper '1 Ml·
roon\ .. ·ith fwnily ii)(>m and
1..:>v1•ffll patio Soi Vista fo1·
only $44, 750.
BE A WINNER
El~unr 4 bt-droom 2 Liarh
with fa.ntily roo1n, {'OV~·r('d
:Ind l'tll'IO~t·d p.:1tio, lu~h 1,_.;,ir.
petR and dra1x·~. 111•11· ~1>arkl-
1ng pDnL Nl'ar t'v('rylhlni.:
Only $46.f.OO,
WIOE OPEN SPACES
I.DIS of gl11....s \\'alls, L:iilhedral
C{'i!Jngs, ;'!UflflY kiteht~ll.
Sl:"l'eened-in lanai, 3 lx.hm.
2·uath. Ail lhis and u <.'Orn<'r
IOI (llr (inly $36,900.
CAU. a4a·IH58
ELEGANT
MANSION
L.ars:tJ' '1 bt·drno111 1111 l'Orn• r
lo\ Com11lrt('!y blf"l('I\ v.all·
C'd, pro!cll.5ione.l Jand.IK'RP-
ing, P lt'nly 111 bia-tn:"'ii.
oovt'rcd 3lial I I 11 g s t o n l'
11t1tlo wit~ bu\lt·1 n bar-b-qUt'.
Over11iwd tlouble Rflril!(C'.
elei;::ant enlry, s e 11 n t' r1 t l'
formal dlnln.I!: 1oon1, lr1rJ.:l'
kitchen "'tlh catitl;! :.ttl•:i.
l'ie<'lr1c bullt·in ran>;l! \1 \th
1louhle •1vf'n, ·li~11,,u~ht·1·
larrilly rou111 1·11r11b11, l1v1n~
nl!nn 1111.,ts l!r-..,r tu t't'1hn1:
fiff'!)Jat't' \'t'l'y p Up U I /l I'
llofn· plan. &~a11!1ful l't'nter
!!\8S1Cr SUlf(' \Vllh plf'nty or
11•aNln:ibt's. Jo.: x <' r 11 e n 1
neiihborhood. Pril'f'd undl'r
1narket at $37,500. h must to """.
1llage Real Estate
WINTER ~JNDS "NEED SPACE 01· even railing sno\v \VOuld tt't ·FOR BOAT & holhf'r you 111 !his l'tlly t~)I·
OPEN HOUSE
DAILY
TR~LER'' rage _ Carpets softer l/1an
1 MORGAN SPECIALS vrlvi•t. \1·1u·n1 lights. n gloll'·
This big ro bedroom on 111g fir;•plat'l', thto> aronia of
Ulvely 4 Bcdi'OOm Big Cati·
yon home in a greet loca-
1 io.u. aJ Royal St. George •
Bkr. 675-7225.
2 BR., 2 baths. Remodeled.
Top Cond. G,H. Robertson
Realtor call: 673-3850
I SHARP 2 Bdrrn. IHline on ,~1 f-•I fo-ti · I hllKl' cuMll'r !o1 t111s 1nom ._.... ......,. .,n1 us (;oun ry R-2 lot. Frp\c., carp.. ror all these things plus 3 ki!r hen & a lovf'ly fan1 lly
dra!J('s & stove incl. Prlcet! bnlhA and a beautiful :Hon<! t'Oulrl 1nn!le this !it!le paln1·£·
lo sell -$40,(0). fireplace. H's vncanl ,t a drcarn con1e h·uc. ;~ 1ron1s * * * * * * for lh<' 1·h1/d1·1·n and ~1 CllARMING 2 bdnn. hnn1e. l't'IUIY. Dl'l'ani UJ? your _O\l'n n111ster bedroo1n ror you.
h terms and 11ubm1t, but hur-D"d'' '""on·ic de" & a ,,.,. R-2 lot. Beam cell's.. uga 1 $29 450 " -" " brick trplc., bit-ins, lots of ry. ' · inl:" room loo. Truly onc-0f· d~~gs~· Cl~~~Y dc:~~a1J. · l*flijllll~llll a-kind. Call 893-SS.".3
Pre-Grand 0penlng Sale!
·~· $48,995
E~t .. leflt
C~Yt<'lllon•I
Jl'Ln"":lftt
CONDOMINIUMS
LO!ly ltv1ng awA1!s youl
Ac1 sw1t1ly
I·> select you1 ow·1
Ncv1P<1f! Beach concomin uni.
V1s1I !he temporary of11ces nl !he
Newporl CfCS! Jnfo rrna11on Ccntr1,
conven1en1ly located at
2400 West Coast High'A-dY
Su11e 8. Newport Bear.n
Open D.aily 10 am IC i;un'..l'l.
17 14 1 045.6141
TerrUic loc. Bel!~r hurry on R<'altors 545-0465 •. • -~-=·~~=·=-=~~ this one!' O Ev =fS
673-4642 675-6459 A•~• ~"''°"· h• The . ·---
WEST CUFF
AREA $f10,950
LARGE
RUMPUS ROOM·
POOL
Jus! 11,•:;111.; 111 h •ll lhl' slOry
nl)'JUI lh1i; Nr1vfl')rl !1r11ch
• 4-plrll. nr. So. Coast Plua..
IJt.l~e .:: Br (J1A'r~r·1 will
likr :io-zs21. ---------Lots for 5•1e
NEWPORT
BEACH
R-3
170
ho111e. An •·xc1tl11~ pooli.Jdl' ~·111111t~!11• l11.ul1l111.: Nie lor 21
111n1osph1'l't' 111;.11 f I o\\' s 11n11i.1, [{-:! p1\1perty with
th1'0Ui,:h 1111• !;1ri.:1• ru111ptll'! l"'~~lhh• ti~·,._111 \Ill'\\' from a
1\JOtl1 \\ ilh frr1·p\ac1· and i'-t""'nd ~h•l"). Till!> 1~ lr1t•utcd
.'il€!1)-d0\'<n !urge .,..•('t b.1r. 111 •ilH' "' 111•· l:iJ>t d1>velo!ltf11'
'J't11· .. ,• lk•dJiJt.1111s. f~l&-7171. ;1n ·.1 .; id :...1·,1·1~u1 B1·a1:h -
®THE REAL
ESTATERS
OPEN 'T1l 9PM
l11U pr1<" urllv $'\7.'~.(I. t"or
11101·1· 111fu1 u1;11lon • 9 1 J
~,.lf~-l•ill'I
l.\Vl :.')J:\IE:'l.'J JJl\'lSJON
THKR:e:AL A MANSION ........... """"*""' "Bi~ Bdrm.;, 'l b:i , rlt'n, ~ • ..,, .. ~a;;;ri
lorrnal 1t1n. rn1 Rltn<i. ':::::::=-:-'Ol't''=N~':r~::':""'::::'.1 !-ihak•• "-'Of Lil..•· n r \.\ -
1hrunu1. 1 Start Your -GEM Investment Program!
Alll'tlf' II llcrt' \'lf'W lots 1610 "'\V .Coa!\I lh1y., NR
REALTORS 642-1623 \V/C'1tv \\';itrr. \1·i!h1n I mllf'
()f 1nultl-n1Hlioo !!hopp'g
T HI-: BLlfffS -f>l.USll ::! Br L"\'Ul••r. J..'Ulr f"t"iur!IC & .~pl il lf'\'l.•I rlt"nr Comna t!C'I fn•••\iay. 5,i)(J JJo11 11, S5!1 pc.·r·
:\tar !1 1-$31.:00. Ask fnr ,J:u·k l 't·i·k Ai.;l, ;,fr-O'lli:i 1110. F'u!I pr11·1· S4~. Sr-llers
------11ee1! lax brealc, 1vill lrade "N~e~w~po'-"•~t..:.H~•~ig~h~t~•---I fur local income proper!}.
NEAR NEW. IN C.M . McNASH REAL TY
:: BR. 2 ba.. 2 frplc. + ___ 642-8_7400=-~--,
f1Jrn1n l di n, nn. + +-'.!flx:.10 J.OTS OF LlwE. 1h.1t is.
fani, 1'1'). S!l.100 S1!ky TcrTiC'r femnlf' pups.
Call [or App't. Ad n !" ;, b It'. ~hf'dlC'~S.
LI DO REAL TY odor!~. All 1100ts. llsebrlm.
ll '~ .•. ~.:oo·' c:'='°"""=::':c· _____ _ :~:177 Via Lido, N. . 1 •••• , 'I: I--=~=',.,.,,---BEAUTIFUi. \"Vo' IOI 1n Erner·
BY OWNER Rld Bay s;io.roo. :1 B<Jr., 2 Baths. Beautiful Call 675.20:1()
ki!Chl"1, large 111 a..s I t' r ----------
!.Pd rot) 111 11· Pr 1 · Mountain Desert ·MORGAN REAL TY NEE"'D" M'O'· RE I . ' """:'::'-''"::: ....
NEW LISTING ROOM? I , cH~u-n~ti-ng-t-on~Bc-•-•-cch---~L:•g:u::n::a::B;;:•'.'.•=<~h ---
DA I Ly Old<>' duplox with • txmu<' Theo,... Thi• "'""'ky '''""" Villa by the Sea
ha!l1/dre1'~1ni::-nr1.:;_i · 01r111·r R 1 ' ' 174 1110!1\atccl. Terms A\' n •
1
__ ._..,_, ______ .._
1 .~~s .. ·.oo. 67.'\-lr\lX <Jr f..J,'yoii6.~I. LOT in fnmous L..1kc Jl11 vasu,
Santa Ana home of !he \1·orlri famous
area for . rn-la1vs n_ r :;, Oedroom, _2~ ba~h .homf'.
1
Stroll to the heaf'h from this lt-'er~l'S. Shll ncecls .a h.1-} n ·'Shly painted 1n.c;1dl." ,v., ..,:ll'J!t'OUS 3 bcclroom hon11• $23.500
\Jt' l!x1ng up but lhf> Pl'llt' is out. Exrelll'nl neighborhood. det'Orf\lt•d in thf' mood of 3 bedroon1. 2 °btl!h. large
realistic. Call 615-7275. \Vilhin walking distance to Old !i.1l'xico, c omb in in .i:-60xl00' fenced· lot. <'ll"'<'trlf'
PI LOT ~~ Nubl.., G'"de &hoot & cu.<lom wrought Im" .< built-I" ""ge & o""· · E~~' {.: ~ ~~~~ta~.i'&.ley }ligh. Pric-~£~~1 ~~~JP/~P ~~:~ ;~=·sr:~~~~~~~go~~~~~ ~~.!.~, I' separate fonn!\! cl 1111 n .i:-\\.'/\\" shag carpels &
.,. • roo1n. Call 968-44:i6. clrapes, t~. A. heur, p.a!i"
ORANGE ~ugs101ART 0' l!•f <Ot.W!tl co. 531·5111 ( =J 531•5800 • ' 1vith brick Bar -B . Q u f'.
HIDEAWAY'S , • ov<'rSi7.<.'<! ftoubll' ~arap:c.
On s1ve-c1 Begonia OWNER Sacrifice the raN' Payments less t~a11 rent.
Nf'af 2 BR. homC', 1-BR. uni!. gift of privacy in !he park Sl,175 down.
COAST'S
leading
AU on ground Door. li1<e 80x120 rt. grounds · I'
$56.!'>00 landscaped . to pi(' t u r (' ZONED FOR University Realty l><'i-fecl perfection. King siz· Bl OJ
11lage Re al Estate
, ~, 2 I I " h '62-4471 ( :"~:.) 546· 3001 £. Coast llv.•y .• Ccl:'il 1'" .,._~,rooins, OVC' Y "31 s, ENTERTAINING · 6734510 family-room wi!h inspiring
1 !lreplact>. Built-in dream
• DUPLEX • e:otcel loc & kitchen. Palk> parties, built·
oond. 2 Br • I bH ea. C01'.t-in BBQ for those cook outs!
P6,RE. Owner. 675-193'1. \\'alk to schools, shopping
Coste Men churches fron1 this al·
tractive homC'. Brk, $32,000.
SPACE 002-1373.
TI.oomy & ready. huge 4
bedroom, 21; batfi. Freshly
painled. in move-in ron-
dition. Loads of upgrading
thruout. Ovel'!lized cul-de·
~a.c lof, ~ fl"nct'rl. Just
hste<I at $~9.900.
CALL s.l'..'-14HI
WALKE•
Flickering Firelight
Projects a warm g I o \V
1hruo(Jt this much sour::ht
alter, tastefully decoratl"(I 3
bedroom ID\\•11home. N n
n1aintenancc means timl'
fur a S\vim in the pool or a
walk hy lhf" (IC('art. Live tux·
uriousty for· h·ss. Call
FAMILY DREAM •~"do" R'ldgc. Locot"1 . :; 1:r.. 1 ~. ha. Pncl. f}.'\!10 No . \\'ill conic !rue when you set' fiowu Sl85 nio. S"li.~. 12.1·1 close to all schools & c1!y.
this charmin~ 3 bdrn1 .• 'l s Shaw11t'{', 9'-J1-1410. S9000 or \\'Ill tr.lde fc..r Costa
bath /l0n1e ; tx .. dmed t-c!11111::s · t.Iesa or NC!\\1l0rt Beach ln-
in every room. P1:1vate pa.rill 1•(Jme prnp. 64+-4687.
afC'a in buck, n1a,gnifict'nl I .J ... , "·---I~ LARGE \\'a1ertront Lot boat ~iew of occnn. Call Crick_ett MODI! """1,_ fillil dock. G,\NYON LAKE. 2.!i6
raul, for furthf'r dE·t111ls. Ae. \1'1t>\\' Lo!. La k r-
$68.500. • Riwrside. Sell or cxrha.ngr
Mob.I Ho · fr'ir l..nkc 'Tahoc. SPARLING
0 la.·~ •e mes 125 INVES'fi\IENT rutr. e.i , ~ _' F_o_,_s_a_I•--..,..~=-fU.1-3.l-M. &1&-8.120
REAL ESTATE Contempo-Lagune Hills * BRIAN ll1•ad Ski l{esort •
11!!0 Glrrmeyre St. Only g SJ><lC('fi left! Adulf Mountain ·~ot in 1Jlah. Close ~9-1-(\.17:! 54!Hl:i16 Ji::irk. udj~c(•nt 10 Li·l~u"· to chn1r hft. !\lus~ sell. mov-
FA."°'IL V ESTA-TE-\l l'J1'hl, 23.101 R11!gc Route lng. 64&-iqoo nft ·'pm.
4000 I I Ch · A"-1 nr, 1nff ~1ot1lron Pkl\·v.f, Real Estate Wanted 184 . sq. 1. o ris 1ft"
<l:signed hon1c ovrrlookin1: l~'li;una H11!s. T.14/830.3fl00, * 9 .-k C h *
1hl' c11y G BR, 4 1 ~ bos. * OCEAN VU & PVT BCll, UIC GS
XJnt ronrt. Lots of extras El fil orro ~1obile Hom!' Pk .. \\'Ill buy your property. All here~ Good neighborhood, La!.'UIHl J~ach. 2 4 ·:.: 6 O · cash 111th1n 12 hr.t;, Call
C'lose to school!. $97.500. Berkshirr, 3 BR, 2 BA.
• 4.99-2SOO • Pilon<' for appt. •19~-1136. ~-~~~· !971 Viking-Rf'{'l!\.\'(lO(f. P\•i ~"'cit Ply. Upgraded. In San Juan
Capistrano. F inest adull M k t I I iORIE"TED? a,r e p ace Td~~ ~~: ~0~l ~.~
3 Bedrooms and 2 Baths
downstairs and a huge
(2'1x24) Family room up.
f)\\'Nt::R i\1usl US!\'(', Dc:'SL1!;rt·
L'<i (ot' active fanuly en-
tertaining! 2 baths. large
family room enhanced by
charming fireplace. wife·
saver buill·in kitchen,
dishwasher. Lovely covered
patio. 3 >'f'. nev.', 5
bedrooms, expensive thick
padded carpeting, custom
rlrapes. Exquisite terraced
front yard. Bkr • .$39,750.
•
PATTI •
•UI. IJf.111'1
11171 Bcacfl B!v1\.. 11.B.
-~=tN$ ....Er~49.'1,..il-l-Ul.
21i.f,0 \\'1·~lt•rnrr, Ilk<' TI<'\I' 1
Br., den, \l"CI bar, air cond.
Acrosc; lil. r1'0nl b ch.
:iJG.-4876 or 642-7.lZl.
""""'"'· -;;E~M:;;;E;;;;RA'""L"'D--..BA.-Y=-•• BROKERS INC.
[ ]
Many new Items throughout ~--1~ ,• __ '"'_"_'_ov_'''_'"_""_""'_' ped--.. . .._......., .. _':!! 111.11:.1\. ~arrl a nd p11.1Jo. 646·71n .
~THKREAL I ...a..,.,.,.., II~ I ~ESoJ~rns
Clanifi<•ti•n 100.124 VETS SPECIAL
I NobileHomes ][tc•jl i\love into this lovely 3 . . 1 hc<lroon1, family roon1 home
J fDr only $100 Iota!. Near
c1.,1ification 12s.14q t'\'C'l')'lhing & in" exeellf'nt
Real E1l•I•, General
l'('~idenliu.l arf'a. 0 n I y
I ~I $32.000. Call ror clc1a1ls.
. 812-1418
...,c-1.-.-,~;,-1o-.-r-,.-.-, s"'o. 84 1 • ~:J::11 •
I l~ ..........
f"INl'ICiM 171n Beach Blvd., !l.B.
~---...J "TWO LITILE
I Oaiiification 200-2b0 ! _,,. • .,. I~ I ·clatsific•tion 300.JiiS
l -·.,-1~
I Cl•1sification lb0-370
~·""_"" __,,I~
Cletsification 400--tb5 --· ]~ Cla1iification 500-510
I ... ! _c_,.-.--•• -1.-::-~-:.-.-5_,J(~I
.__! ... _ .... _, ..... __,,~
Cla1sification 550 .fi 55
I -~ I~
Cle11ification 575°580 I se.-'oM·-I~
la1,ifica t1on 600-6qq
I _,... [ff) I c1.,,ificaticn 700-71 o
I [...,,_-,.."""'°"""-'~'~ I Cl•11ific•ticn 800-83b
[ ........ -. J~
c1.,tific•tion 850-158
HOMES"
on a hillside C'lcan & frc111h as
a dai111y. Good Ei!.stsid('
area. Live in one and rent
the other. A rare llnd at
$31,500. All terms.
Reallors
Open Eves.
LJ)VELY LRG Z sty 4BR,
ho111C', 2'3 ba, trplc, blt!n
i:i;as kltch dsh/\vsh. Furn.
HUb'(' yard. S prinkler s
$43,000, Ov.·ner, 976 Denver
Dr .. C.M. 540-2+12.
1101'1E &·JN('QME -Sparkl-
ini;:: new duplex $48,950.
Reaut1ful 3 bdrn1 owners
unit + 2 lxlrm rcnlal unit.
Xlnt locatlon. 1~,1 E. 13.Ay
St .. C.M. &t~8.T1.
POOL Home, price reduced
for quick MIC' by o....·rK.'r.
-IBR, hdwd floors, nc\v shllfC
crpt, frcih paint. lo mR.lnt.
N-Costa Mesa $3 2,900 .
540-3374.
DY Owner . BeautJ(ul 2 BR.
t 1,~ B A . Condo.mln!un1
.located In qolel E-slde
adults only com mun 11 y
'21.900. Conven!IOTio\ finunt '·
Ing avallablP. 00.~·2187.
ASSU~fE 6'i~ 10011 on sharp
Eiu1rsidf" 3 BR, 1\4 llA . Ii;:. 1
hid. pool. AEI\. 11·/\1• l'rf/IS,
rlr11s. $:14,250. By 011·nf'r
~1:"·3030.
H\' OIVl)('r. 4 br, 2 hn. l;)50 !'II
fl. Cozy frplc, dct>p p;h/l~.
~hlike roof. J)-.,.,·shr. S29.!l~I()
S. C'lnsl f'la1~'l a r f! n
~,1~1""'4062
• REPOSsES.i;:toN •
Sharp-V11:cant-undf'r ~1 -~
hr-tieaul shag, for inlo call
Rkr 546-7739.
I -""'. ... ... JI~ )ST '°'"'A~R=TE~RC,HCio~m""•"l"""'-"ifm<-.-•"'t, Int Equlpmtnt 3 en. f'rplc. lin-R4 k>t.
$26,500 t~rms. 6no-7412
Oaitific•tion 9QQ.tl2 R\' owner 3 br. 2 ha, frriie, 2
[ ,.,.,.,..,.u°" 11•1 '" '",;I~~ •
. _ Ea1t Bluff --------Cl11•ification 'I 15-9'4't * TirE BLUFFS *
962-5566.
O\VNER anxious. 3 spacious
bedrooms, 2 baths, family
t'OOm "'ith el£'gant brick
fireplace convenient lo !he
huiltin kitchen. Plush rloud
soft carpeting, drapes. Ne,v·
ly pa.in!ed Inside & out.
Prime k>Cation near
C'Vl'rything. No do\\'11 GI
lerms -low-low down non-
\"tls. Rrk. $30. TJO. 842-4;691.
RY 0\\Tier: Choice 4 br. +
fam rJ1* + 2 ba + frplc. Nr
l\filc Sq. Park. tt~ 'l'rs. old.
S3000 down. T OP VA 1281
PTTI. 833-ll03.
Huntington Beach
BAYSHORE
TOWNHOUSE
SINGLE STORY
1 BEDROOM
Oldl'r person for 1 llf'dr~10n1
condo in adurt arc•n. \Vall\ to
hig shopping tenlPr. Pncl'
of only $15.900 inc!udl'.\
\Vasher. dryer, range &
refrigerator.
531-5800 I I' 531 -5800 (::::)
1i1J ge Real Estate
O\VNER de s p eratl', 3
Closeouts
Low Price
Only
$19,990
Th h I I .. spaeious bedrooms, 2 halhs, cse ncv.• omcs are oca cu f')egant fircplaee Jends nd·
10 n1inutrs fron1 th<' "itch ded chnrm In gril<"iou~ liv·
& r·loS(~ to. n\ajor shopping in,i: roon1. Buill in dream kll·
& schools. Your C'hOiec of ehcn, even a dishwasher, ;1
l"arpcling also i11clu1lini;: yrs fX'w! Vacant • mDvl-'
c!l.sh1va..~hcr & builtins. 5"ii right in! $26.950 Br k ,
Dov.·n \V/J»!ymenls lrss than 1 _>_16--0601_~~· ~~==~--
$200 nm. Th1.s is a must sC(> LIKE NEW!! I
for U1o!lt" wanrin.i:-101~ of Don't n1is!I s('('1ng rh1~ 4 Brl·
luxury for a moderale pricC'. rn1, :! bath. J,,.1 CUl'Sla .. F.I
Call for information. Ca.ton It'.~ a year y<iun~
537-5642 \~·1th Jots or f'\lrfls 1--'n(~·cl
ro St'll a1 $4~.900 \\ ;•; 11· Or Slop By The S.1.lC's Otfi('(' n:uu .. ·1n~ avn1lahlt'. Coil! 11s
LoC'aled on N('W\and, B£-. 11011· rur cl('laill'I.~
hinrl Slater & Taltx-rt. * FULLER REALTY
COLLINS & \VATIS, INC. :'46.0Xl'I Anytime * C & W * O\VNER transf!'r ed , 3 Aeparate b!\th.,, 3 oversized
PARK THE BOAT ht'fll'oon1s, clesi:ant llrepla<.oe
in bonus room, tliump1lone r ight bei!idc this lmmncu]ale fireplace and m I r r o r e d
2 !ltory 3 tx_>clroom, 2~ bath walls. Deluxt' builtln
bC'au!y. \Valk lo bcac·h and chC'n, dlshwa.l'lhcr. f'l y
park. Full price only S3.~.9'"J(). patio OVC'rlooks hcRutiful NEW LA QUESTA brick plnnters, exquhllt!'
SAN MIGUEL land.qeaping. Prime loca-
c I .._. Hon, Brk, $J4.90ll. !J\2-886:1. · ·on1cr lol, POSS\ JI(' uuot f\C· -ce~.~. 4 brtnn, 3 haui. 3 i·:ir * JUST LISTED *
g11rt1i;:l', sharn. ~·lt'{l n und 3 BR , 2 ha., family rm .. In
UPl\racled lhrui•ut (Jnly
1
Shnr"C'rt't"Sl Wt'~I . Con1plf'lt'· 113 ~ . llUHHY' Jyv.•nllt"d,shadedre11rynrd.
·"""': · • • As11urne 61~ ~~ 101\11. Slfl.500. c ALL !W;,-Ol:i.~ George Wllli1mson
•• Realtor 541-6570
REPOSSESSIONS
F'or 1nform"Oon and ioc'RhOll
nf thrse F11A ft VA hutnt>J,
CQfltact -OWNJo:;R s:ayJ:. ''SE LL '',
spark.Jjng clean 4 BDRM on
huge lot. $28.~. at ap.
pl'l'l\MI. Pl\ITI WAlli"ER
REALTY 842~1418.
KASABIAN
RHI Est••• 9'2-4644
N'"'O,.-..,OOWN==--,lc-=B"'R-. 2 BA
PRF.STIGF. 2700 $q rt 4 wlfrplc., rr1 patio, pool
BDRM, 2 BA. FMtnslir. lrnn\JI rourtl'I OR Ea~y
$.19,900. PATTI \\'ALKEJ{ ll'nnJI wtth down payment.
REALTY, 842-1418. Total price Sll.000. 9'1!>-.1984.
lli-BLKS T~0~B~E~A~C=H~l'1 BF.AUT 11mf dm.1rated HR
119 ~ ~ 1 LUHr !IOI!•" hanle. 4 BR, 1114 bn .• o~ •'""'· ._.if' "'"' ~umnhl<' f,111,'TI'JO VA 1·~ Xlnt nelghbnrhood. 1 SCO'J'1' RJo::ALTY, 5J6..753J Mn. No COIL! to buyf'r. Coll ~ve•. ~l71G. I ~ ~ , By OWTI<'r. l a,, I 'I U.. MtM for ,w. r-::i_ lo m•lnl a~R. $.'13,900
911p r~10--016R * 6<l(Hl2'27 11ft 2:30 Llk.-to Tmde? Our Tr1ulrr'1 ._ ______ ..J Pnradl!M' t'Olumn is for You! Nl!':\Y 3 br horof', w11lklnf:
11i~anct' ocenn. $37,000. Cla1sificatton 9SQ.9tO Cl"~~lllNI Al't.~ fM2-~"'7~ \ 'i llnr8, 5 d11,y11 for ~ buck ... • 968--0407 *' \
..
Antique Buffs
l\·lust /ICC to believe thi s lovc-
lv niarhl<' firenl ace in a
heaulifully customi1,ed roun-
1ry estatl' v.·irh 3 bedrooms
& 2 baths. 20x30' family
rncnn has 2n(! fireplace?
Gara~c door opc;"ner, v.•ater
soflenl'r. too n1any t•xlra.~ to
mt'nt1on here. Call 968-4456.
•
l'ATTI WALKlR
-•ft.All
17171 Reach Bl\"d ..
0 \VNEI{ Must &>II, prin1ed
for itnn1<'rlialf' AAIC~ 4
hedl'0(1fl1s, :~ baths, fireolacr
in l<Cf'!udecl rear lhing
1YJ0111. all Plectri<' "A1\·11rd"
Uuill·ln kilch~n. di.~h1va111lf'r.
Lmuls of (!('('king--beaut iful
pallo. lush low maintl.'n11nC1•
lanrlNCaping and a gorgc"1uo;
~\\"lm pool? Brk. $311.901).
K42-Z-i61.
Irvine
AWARD WINNING!
Plttn 4, Turtle Rock Broad·
n\oor hon1a, just ti.sled~ it
Bil.. 2t'I Has . fomil.v rm ..
atrium. Decorator touche~
lhn1ouf. Com1plf'tf'ly
sprinklered. Easy 1vn.lk\n~
di11tanrf' tn ponl & tennis
('\II, COME SEE IT TO·
!)A Y! TT \VON'T L,\ST
LONG!!
"SINCJo: I.
1st WcMrrn R<u1k Rlrhz
Un1veM1!ty Park. l tvlrl('
Days 551-7000 Night•
MASH YOUR TRASH
In this unuaual 3 bdrm. homr
.. ·Ith formn.J 1llnlng. po..vrl <'r
room, "'-'lf-clcanlna ovf'n,
trMh masher and meny
tJ01tr f'xtra.o;. The price o!
$79,500 lncluclrii i\ \•i1·w.
962.U51 FINEST LOT
VIEW · $55,000
TED HUBERT• ~ACRI~ICE Li~ Bay \'k~'. Uri .In S;=°!PrefL'I" 20
and Associates Dbl. \Vtcle S7.99a. A1so 2 81 .. tinlts nr n1orc, stqres or of. C-~~ffi~~~:.-.1 :~$~2.~995~.~S~•~u~d~"~·~673~-~381~7·~;I [11••· blclgs. Cosla Mesa . :.;\j] Via Li(!fl, NU N\'W]X)fl Bc-nch. Jl.B. Rte&.'!
'675-8500
1
i.8] · 11~!'r~~rr,.d. 1\ !nvt'stn1ents,
Laguna Hills Rf.!'!::1.. . .,....-.u,
Walk to Beach NEW DUPLEXES
1 Sty A·rn1n1f'. 3 nn .. I·\ BljJlJ)fo:fl s~:LLI/\(; :'l,C)\\"
hli, Bea1n-., tllln.~. Tt•nnls. $45,950
pnol.( nf'11rhy. $;:2,900 Jo'1rm. 5'i11th nf Aclnn1<1 o" Jf11nlin1:•
CAYWOOD REALTY tfJn ,')lfl't't. 11 H * ·54B-1290 * Su.8l88
no
I
•
DAIL~ PJLOT
I~ :-I -_._ ... -~J~~1 ~1 _-_ ... _-;;:;1~~ie 11 ... ~---1~ 1-............. J~I -··· .. -1 ~1 ,..~ ..... ·-1~1 .----1~ C -1...-
Mone l to Loan ,.,, HovMs Unfum. 305 Houtel Unfum. 305 A"t1. Furn. ua Apt. Untum. :M.l Apt. Untum. 365 Apt. Unlurn. 365 jlpt. Unfum, J6S R-.>t
1 t JD L Costa Me-u Newport Beach s oan$ -.-N-'!:EDS-,--Lo-,-,-,-,-Br-.·l \\1ATEHt""'RONT :! BR . l~e
6~ % INTEREST I t"ncioscd g&r., k1ds/pel:1 Ok. PllllO, do(_'k av<1il, sun dl'clc,
2 d TD L $135 RID"· Imm&(', $300. 615-:?IU n oa 'IS ALA Rentals • 64S.3'00 WALK ..... ,h. 2 BR, ~
l.Dw!:at niles Oni.nJ;:e \n_
"WE BUY TD'S''
S1ttl•r Mtg. Co.
642-2171 545-0611
Srl"Ving llarhor nre 21 yn:.
e (X;F_.\N View! 3 BR, h~ bl~"i,;l~ doo'ttm I rrn<'t'd yard for kldt/pet1. yr )' . 536-•
.,'lnl:. l:lnlver1lty Park ~--1-"-"'-'-'--"-'--"-"-~-ALA Rentals • 645-3900 PRIVATE HOUSE
Costa M.s• Gen.r.11 01ta Ml•• Ne'#port e.tch
Casa del Oro 2 BR.. 11> BA. studio 1ype. ADULTS ONLY-
EL CORDOVA APTS. l'l>olo Udl pct Sm! pet Dk. PET OK ALL UTIUTlES PAID Adults. $155/mo. 641-2149 DELUXE 2 BR. S18$.
Cumpare be-~ you r1·nt From $145 afl 4. L.ARCE 1 BR..$)£§.
Cmtom dcslj:Ded, Jeaturlng: J & 2 Bedroonu BRAND nt>w 2 br apt. Cpt, D-Wlhl', ttpie., l"im pool
• Spacklua kitcbi:n with in· Dishwasher • Shag Carpeting • \Yalk·in Clos-drpa, bltin&. Ooee I n 20342 Santa Ana A...e.
d~t Uahtlng ets, Forced Air Heat -Extra Large Rooms • f.arages. ~ 968-0tO'i'; alt SEACLIFF MlDor A.pl.I. 2
• Se-parate dln'g <1rea Beautiful Game Room • tleated Pool • BBQ's-· -Br ttu Pool ~-d~•
• llome-likt· 11torage Enclosed Garages. Quiet surroundings and ~~~°f'* blbt.:....,.Jm.' di;;l' jSi
• )>rivate patio~ closo to sho'ISing. (Nr Harbor & Hamilton St) SEE MANAGEti Pla.centla Ave!. Ask aboul e Closed garage \11/storage It LI • N p t dlscount stS-2682
* Prlvato Room
!«
Ambulato:y Lady or Man •
Good, nutritious .Food. _ ~
Nlt.-e, chccrt\.11 atmosphere..
•Call54M™* f ~ * 1'.fONEY to loan on ~al
cslate. ReRJo!Onfibl~ rates, or
1~'ill buy )ICIUr T.0 .
3 Ur. •'pl, drps, gar .. Hug" UN1VERSJTY PARK AREA
fnl'd yd. Close to srhts & 2 hdnn, 2 baths plWI c'l\ln or
shopg. Quil'I n•s1<1'\ 5trf'\'I. library. EnclOtied yard and
$21.5 mo. M0-1151; 1-726-WOO covt•rt-'d putio. All latt~t
lt:atW't'1. Adult.a prefe!Te'd.
e ?11arble pullman ' u ving • 0 • 1• LIG•IT, cheery 3 St-, 21,i be.. our ·
• Klng-az Bdrms 2on Charle St., Co1ta Mei• 642-4470 Lge cloaels, atorage, patio. BAVFRONT Walle to Beach. ntE Guest HtXlll& • lat "
• Pool -Barbequ~ • sur· HACIENDA HARBOR U». M&-3563 aft 5 p:m. f..r'a 3 BR, ~BA. partly tum. eteont livlne. Ambulal'OrJ'_, J * BROh"ER ~ 7491 *
\\'E il!Tan•:e ls! & 2nd RE
IORns. Al..n r11r.·hn!lc Tl>,I.
Bkr. 492-.'G.12. ~9i{ltl<J.
BEAUT. new 3 BR, in LraM', $.110 IX'l' month. Call
lrlplex, pr1v yard, patio, ~ or 546-3688.
gar. Good location. 675-1849.
rounded with pJUSh land· East Bluff or unfum. Util_?ni· .~Id, rlderly_};'rt~ .. ~ NoW " From $150 =· dock avcui. -ts. 0 ! :)t4-Vl:.O TUstin
Hunti.,a•on Beach Condominiums scaping. DELUXE l & 2 BEDROOMS . l BDRM deluxe apt Best /mo. Yearly. 6'15--W4. I "*"Prio;:;v"a"',.'-"',..=,m.:.::;f:,:or=.;•;;::., >
Unfurn. 320 Adulf hving at its best Furnished & Unfurnished location. Po o I tacllltiea. NEW chaMeltronl • View . t.arg, I BR $180. H t d p I G rl h tl Adull•. $18.5. &W-2307. apL • BR., 3 Ba. .. 3 Br. ladr "' llo'd guest home. • VACANT-3 BR. 2 ba. SCh:tOO' Costa Mes• N p ts ea e oo -arai:;es -S ag Carpe ng h d Side tie all $4Z ~C;:al==-6'&-"-'33!1=1'=. ~---=
fenced & landscaped lat.1----------36.5 \V. \Vil;n e 642-197l Dishwasher -All Utilities Paid. Huntington Beach :,~ y~!r1y. Own!~67>-407'!· A:ent•l1 to Shire
Ovl'rsize<I double '"'"'' NF.II' f 3 B ·" I Adults Only No Pets ~ •-w/roo1n for boat. Elcc blln . un.. r, couuo, pno' WEEKLY-MONTHLY -* ~tOVE IN TODAY * 1·,~·~~~""'"==~=o'-"7"7. love to Share ,, f ra~e & ovl'n, n\.'\\' w/w ~'.Yc;';!~~~1~i.t~~~'Tii6~it Executive Suttes ~41 Avocado St., Costa Mesa 646-1204 $139 A ~O. SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba, 1 blk And there's plenty to ' I~ s!!t~ 1'arpels & drap<•s. 6. 2080 Newport Blvd. VILLA MARSEILLES Spac. _3, & 3ailBR A!Lin 4-plex. tyo bayl ' ~~Uc/ '° ""'8 kan. around! In the fonn of 111'1
$"""fn10. C S C Seve..... av .' FJC-ear y. -mo. r . adorable Silky Terrier 1 ' Village Real Estate Huntington Beach osta Mesa PA IOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. TRAS. Pool, rec bldg. Kids 675-49U. lype pupp,y. All shots . I
962-44n .J.., 642-2611 Furnl1hed & Unfurnished \veleome. From $139. Seel;:-;"'-C--':-:-:--:'-::7"___ hotaebroken. PH333. : Houses Furnish~ 300
Laguna Be.Jch 19041 Pauline -3 BR. 2 ba, CRPTS, drps, pool. R/0, STUDIOS & 1 BR'S Adult Living Mgr. 1'1371 Keel.son . "B". l NIWPort Heigbtl g{AlfE niy home w!T ~
$225/mo. iihrdryr, reli,:, i:lbhsc, 3 Br • r~REE Linens Dishwasher color coordinated appliances • bU.: w. ot Beach Blvd. oft QUIET 2 Br / sundeck. p('r!IOll, laundry included. •
t125 · lITIL Pd. Bach nr.
belch. Full cooking. Pnllo.
$150 · Ulil Pd. NiCl'ly furn. 1
Br. across lrom beach.
8306 Magic Circle -3 BR, -2 1 ~1~"'°~· _<_B~'-1225_·_54_s-_i4-00._· ~ • FREE Utili~s Plush shag carpet . mirrored wardrobe doors-Slater. 96S-?5lO or 847-4260. Crpt mi>S ~·gar adlts Near beach. Co,ita. l\!ed' l
ba. $239fm_o. 2 ba 3 BR eondo, fireplace, pool, • Full Kltchen indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar -N~ °kanfront. ~ 2 a c h no •pets, , $170. &0-soo1: $11>. 641HK51. 1
$175 -OC"eanfront. Util pd.
lrg studio. Beaut IOt"!
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673-·!030 or 49·1-3248
19022 Bikiru -J BR. . dbl i;tarage. Walk to reach, a Heated Pool 'buge trivate fenced patio _ plush landscar, • c . Newer Br.. 548-4922
$239/mo. $250/n10. 536-3777. • Laundry P"acilities bltns. crpll, drps, lndry, 2 °"'"""'-·-~-.,,.---.-Villagt' Real Estate Laguna Niguel • TV & maid serv avail ing -rick Bar·be-Ques -large heated poo s carports, nr. shops & pier. 1 BR beamed ceiling, patio,
962-4471 e Phone service &. lanai. Air conditioning. $170 yr. round. Adlts. Baby garage. lOc ocean view.
ALONE on lot. $135, Also 3 BR, 2% BA in Sea Terrace, 3101 So. Bristol St •• Santa Ana 5574200 ok. 536-2131. U1U. pd. $175. ~ 4-9 ROOMMATE lo shr 2
v.'a.tk to v.1:r, 2 sty, 4 Br, oeean view, cpts/drps. * $30 WEEK &. UP * COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. t BR, 5 unit bldg. Nr. ocean l.CP""'"-·.-.,--~-;-:---hse. in Costa Mesa.
sngls or ram Lease $400 mo. Inc. Assn •Studio & 1 BR Apts MANAGING AGENT &: park. Beaut. ~ndscpd. Nu San Juan Capistrano i-;M;>oiin°'. =""'i<'6='pm"i" • .,064&-==."o:"'::·..,.,:I '
Rent-A-House 979-8430 dues. 213: 322-5585. Eve. •TV & t.1aid Service Avail s~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~~~~!ij~~~'=!!!l!~~l~cl~.-p~l~,~f~b~ltnil~';·~-~d="P~ll.~~,..~n=g~, ' . j ;;Olf;;l;co;;R;•;;•;';•;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;j I
Newport Beach
DE BR 2 ba 213: 322-2202. e Phone Service-Hid Pool n ry ac • u • m BR, d-wshr, refriK, ltJa& *r.lo\l!;'..Y~\.~~. V ~cant: • Children &: Pet section A __ P_l._U_n_lu_r_n_. ____ 36_5 I Apt. Unturn. 365 Adults. 536-~ • w/w, cust drps, pvt pe.lio. 2 t
$315/mo. Lease only. Bier _o_u_p_le_x_•_•_F_u_rn_. ___ 34_5 2376 Nev.'J)Clrt Blvd, 01 WALK TO BEACH car_gar. Conven to Dana Pl.
842-1418 "A""""'" -~~"........, Balboa Island Costa Mes. New 1 & 2 BR, -·1~ Sl95 mo. 962-819'1 NEW OFFICE SPACE° I Corona del Mar ......,....,, .... '" '""""""""' ......... "" A ' 1·
Ullil"@ : ·I Sl!E •. J-5. 0 •• WATEl)fjll~NT •HOUS
2 , 2 ba. frplc, rondo. 19142 ---------This Ad \\'orth $5 on Rent .. BR ·-""" A ·1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil d.,swshr, =7· 316 16th. 536-746.5 or ptL, .. . ANAHEIM . ' ~-
" ntcy. $185 mo. 833-1103 ROOMY 2 Bedroom, 2 .bath, " : ~~~· vai · now. -..,"" · ,Fum. or Unfurn. 370 #. El Pu rto Mes Sgle. gar. $115 Month. REEN B FF ys. 5'1&-97;,.i l'.'VflS. ground floor. $350 pr. month e a Salisb!l1'Y Realty 673-6~ HARBOR G s EACHBLU Apts. B 11..--I I Wells Fargo B•nk Bldg . ' J BR, 2 BA. ,1·alk to b<>iich. plus spacious 1 bedroom 1 BR's -$130 UP 2 & 3 BR. Pool. patio fl -I and
S·7~p;,; month
7141673-1328 ..
$25 nio. least' \1•/opcion. ~1?;~~i:s$~it~r i':i~~~!~ ~:~ Furnished Apts. Balboa Peninsula Furni1hed & 8d~~h~95~7. 8231 E 11 is' 3 Br., 2 ba, all bltns. 498 So. Harbor Blvd .> 1,
$l2a -Utll pd. Baeh. A\lnil. Nov. 15· 536-847o. units TK'Xt to park & tennis, All Utilities Paid • 2 BR St ps t & _,, · S..100/ · $375/
yards oecan. Dt:-ek. 3 BR, nirc, privacy, sh11~ call BailC?y 673-S550 Aot. Poot & Recreation bay. Fii>lc, e dshish~~rove Unfurnished 'Iii BLOCK TO OCEAN yrly. moi)ay~~tefi3t~;· Contact 1"' $16.'i -OCl'anfront lrg. 1 BR. 1 1· I •225 ~ & f · $~/ y I 2 BR Apl Crp'8 d-full f .,, Cl Id ok t'P, app iances, poo. "' . D I 350 1959 Maple Ave., C.!'t1. re rig. "'u mo. eRr y. From $1-lo $215 mo . . . 65.,,.,. wknds, 714J67s.-6685. GRUBB & ELLIS CO. I Y u. . u · 1t1:~. up exes Unfurn. Townhouse Fantas\ic View. ~ Newly decorated. $1 /mo. C dol Mo $~ 3 BR 2 ea f I do Also garages for rent. ~.,~ """" o-• r I ~•J -· • · rp c., U· I · e OCEANFRONT 3 BR, fam . 846-:4955 or ~. • ... _ • ble i;:ar. Oceanfront. rvine Corona ~81 Mar Huntington Beach 3 ,,....,! • 4 B y 1 B1chelors e 1 Bdrms 557-7900 1
NU-VIEW RENTALS ";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1 ;;;;_:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~;;;.l jnn~.~"~•~'~'·~~a.:...:_="=r~y. EXTRA lge 2 ~r. utila pd. 2 Br, trplc, patio, sort wtl', 2 • 2 l S75Clln10. 673-6087. 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrms Cpts, drps, patio, no pets. bib to heh. Adlb. .--.. I 673--to30 or 49-1-3248 YES. i~:e have rentals . fl.lay BR (l small. ref., stove, ~ ''!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!... I we be or servi<.'e to YOU in cpts, drps, patio, No pets. laQUJNTA HERMOSA YEARLY. 2 BR. stove, 11;2 or 2 Full Baths Kkls OK. $165. 53&-0121 673-8184; 673--7387 I: . Bach $125; Studio bayfront. $200 Mo. &10-1400. Spanish Countcy Estate Liv· rehig. Gara..i::e, adults, near 2 , 1 t .u._ llf"..SK ~par"' ;ivrtla b1t-t
$155; · Dream Cottage fncd your housing rn>eds? library 673-624-4, 6.73-8224. M a1ze ~ / BR, .. sty, 4-p ex, crpts, os • m.I• mo. WW prov1dP furnif'm-,
2 Br, sngls t fam ok. ~~ ~~ ~~ ~': Corona del Mar ruS:~er be-am ceilinp. 'iar~t-drps; fncd, gar. Child ok. -al SS mo. AnsWP< •Ilg &eT'\1'" I
Rent-A-House 979-843a f Ap~.rtme11t1fotRent 1 r~1 BBQ. Unbelievable Living -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio li ving room w/gas or $125. 828-5417. * available 17875 Bearh Blytt.1 * 2 BR furn house, on L: _ .... Only wood burning flrepl.ace. SPACIOUS 3 br $189 Avail * * * * * Huntington Bel'lrh 642· 4311 be h J 1 CQl!venlent laundry area now. All xtras. Kids
"' •
10
""' st 1 BR. FURN. $175 ~-n.tt kltoh•n. Enclo"d pa· w~oorn•. "'1-75iO, 8'1-4260. LA COSTA APJS DESK spaoe avallabl• $li!. s:i..oo/mo. 646-929! or 540-Apts. Furn. 360 2 BR. FURN. $210 Q. t1os. 2 S\vimmJng pools. l un• Seach _ • mo. Will Pf'O'Vlde fuml 2846· ALL UTILITIES PAID .sauna, recreation taciJ\. ag al $5 mo. Answering servit'I!'
Houses Unfurn, "SINCE 1946" Balboa Island Adu.Its No ..... ., Iles. Security guard. No OCEAN VIEW 1 & 2 .Bedroom available. 222 Fottst Aw. l 305 lst \\'csteMi Bank Bldg. l'"""' ON TEN ACRES pets. GAZEBO • Built-inl ea. ..... carpets Laguna Beach, 494-9466 General Univcrsily Park. Irvinl' NEARLY ne"' 3 BR, 2 BA, Apts, tum./unfum. Le!.se • Or e w";i°k6t cl ,
Days. 552-7000 Nights i.."Ompl. fu1~. All elect kitdl,.. 14 blks S. oJ San Diego Fn\'Y Fireplaces / priv. patios. Models Open 'til 8 pm 3 BR, den, 2 J:>aths. SlRte en; e Swipes · n oset.s BAY VIEW OFFICEt • f 1 t BBQ 1 !II on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt • try, sunken hv. rm., tpl. H1 mmmg Pool Deluxe, Air-conditioned .•,' rp c. fMi '°· · .e. <.' to 162ll Parkside Lane.) Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. 2700 Peterson Way CM pc'llked ceil., cmen beams, • Bar-b-Ques • R-" ~ Lido Srpt.-Junc. 6.18·8-170/539-88.11. 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644·26ll • glan gables. Bltn kitchen. e I.'nclosed Garag ~-uecorat"'. area ~ •
NR. New apt, 1 Lo:: Master .. ..,..,•,,n,,4,,1 ,. .. ,.1,.-5441..,..,..,,. ~1acArthur nr Coast H\vyJ nr Harbor Blvd & ~ p~re winner al $55.000. All UtifrtieS Paid Realonomics, Bkr. 675-6700'
BH, Util pc!., .sundck & s145 _ $lS5 "!!!J!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I Adams M1s.sion Realty 49Hl731 2 AdjOinlng offices, busy in-
ivshrooni. 1 car gar sp, Yr· Bachelor & 1 BR, n."tios, :2 •-• h 1 . \'EARLY, part tum., lower tersection C.M. $90. Ulil's ly $200 mo 67"9'59 ,.... ...... -urooms eac . B tins, 546 0370 d 1 . tU pd Mature adults, no pets 1 8 ed h•11 · · ..,-. · frple's, pri\I. garagcos -Fireplace, carpet 5 & • up ex, ocean view, u . . \Vlliking distance 10 nc., (\djolning 1 BR tum . . r I BAYFRONT l Bti. lrplc.. Dividt!d bath & lols of drapes, choice I 0 ca Ii 0 n . $250 mo. 1194-2742. shoppin~ ceriter. apt avail. ~.
patio, parking. \Vlnte r or closets. Rec 11all, pool & ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!'l!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j!':!~~!..J:i!!I~··-!!!_'.,----\ "' A 50. C M. 0 I · 400 s b ha'L-Lease $200 pr month. Call aguna 1-~ voe o ro, • FFICE..$TORE yr y. inq. . , Bayfront, pool la Jes, sauna u"'. 641-970I ' T~~~~1~1~YJ~~N~~1\: ·
0
'. REALTY ::j~a Penlnsu1a ~lsoJ~rLn~((~~ ~~} A~~ ~Tz: 2 Br, cpts, AP~:~~~Ts LAGAU~rtm~GtUs EL ~g,tt.~tl\~rt~ff
3 BR. 2 ba1hs .... , ••. , $.12~1
2 AR. 2 bath.~ .. , ..... , $300
4 BR. 2 baths ......... $;:50
* I Univ. Park Ccntl'r. Irvine , ______ Beach, 1 blk N. or Slater). .i ....... frpl 1 00-A'· C ~ • 3 ._..__ .. _ ~ ""' oJ Bay SI:. 646-1252. C II A .A· D~'> ""'~' -"-'I">• c., enc pa • gar, .. ond. ~-~ .. le s. <>l'l'IUI" 1 Br .• l "·.·. tt-. 2 Br., I LA ..... CllA n """" · FAr:. Out! &1chelor 8 nl13dme. "'"~"v FURN JS HE D "·'boa 842 7848 r..;.. N " "'""" °"' .,..,.,. 11l1'.1~ B · ~ ,,,
.,..,., • D<U -re,.'fi., range. 0 pe ·......,.. ming Pools . Health Spa . Ba·. 1-• 2 Br., 2 "-.·, s-~ N•w ~.-, uru·•-us1n•s1 ·'•nt•I ..u. pad, nenr beach. Avatl Nov.•. Office hours 8 AM lo 6 Pl\.f Rayfront, privatf' bench. Lagun• 8e1'.ch n10. Inquire 4.38 Acacia Ave. Tennis Curt G and """'" Dll Re 't<LIAJ ~ ... I * 'O!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! $1i0/mo. lil July 1st 673-1306. o s • ame $235 ~DOW~ con-'·THE FAcToRY" ..
Sll:i · UNREAL! 2 Br .. priv. Laguna Beach S22'.l/nio year' round . LIVE in lm:ury from $45 wk 2 BR. 2 Ba., upstairs, down. Billiard Room. lncld Gas, TV Cable & Wtr 1 , n 'Ymi of 1 lristing of 32 unique bout
patio. Child/pct. Vacant. Ma 1ure, quiet single or cou· nr $160 mo. Singles or s!.airs. Attract. apt. Sv.·edish 1 BR. From $160 Fully crptd ~ drnd· Rec mo 1 tree re~. , • 1.~R shops, has 2 openings In tl\11 * $150 • Util Pd. Vjctoria 1 "•o0''='""'"'f'C'd". 673-=,· -'1"983".'--o--suites, hratcd pool, maid frplc. 644-4610 days; 1 BR. & Den From $185 facil. Htd Pool. BBQ area. ~~n·sik B~:si!. B:ncl mall ranging from sso mq.
S1'15 . \VHF:RE it's at! 2 Br., Beach Bach. Full kit, i:;ar, e s25 Wk & Up On Ocean. service. laundromat. Village 673-4607 aft. 6 p.n1. MEDITERRANEAN 29041 Aloma Ave. gar, ll'Wim'i pool. saQ·s. Card. tobacxo & yardage
l'l'p!s, drps, fnC'd yard for il~w: OCEANFRONT Util Lovely Bach-1 Br-Rooms Inn. 494--9436. * GREAT VIEW, • 2 BR. * VILLAGE 4.<)9-2'l17 or 49~5274 646-M33 m Soott ·Pl., CM shops esp. wanted. 425 30tti
kids. * pd. Lrg studio. Beau!. loca· Maid ::Cal~ 61~~.W~til pd $140 mo. up. $45 wk. Color Frplc., bllns, sunclecks, pool. Mes• Verde LARGE • 1 br. apt. $125. St., rl#!"''J>Ort Be a c i. .•
tion! TV nr beach. 1435 N. Coast. $210 up. 6446344, 675-35.\'i. 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Furn, $135. Laund., gar., 673-9606 or ~· ... / I S148 -gEA~ s ottagtc! 1 Br. $225 • LRG . 2 Br. No. end. 2 BR. 1 1~ BA, patio, balcony, Apts open to see, 5:311 to 9 2 BR, crpVdrps, stv & 1714) 5.57.so:aJ DELUXE 2 & 3 BR., 2 Ba. quiet., ttr Illlm:. Mature
A ut · P'11 *. acan · Ne w crpts, bllns, deck. 3!5 F.. Bay, $250 mo. on yrly p.m. refrig. Patio. $235. Call RENTAi. OFF1CE f:'ncl. gar. $155 up. Rental adlts. 1922-B W a 11 a c e .
BR $225 • MISSION Viejo, ne\v 3 lsc.~TI~t Apt C 6i3-152l 1 Br. North end. Ocean viev.•. 67&-£369. OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM Ofc lJ95 ~1ace Ave 1~~54HS1~~8~-~~~~~~'.I .~. ~~m~ ~~;~~.,.~!~~·ii~. peti $~;~ .~~· o~2il~~'n o~-.c. ;r ~EA~. I BR apt, nr Close to heh & shopping. No 2 BR:!_ hvail ~°( 1st, ~~ "P"'a"H<=---'L'l"ke""'"'S"u-r-round--,,l,-ng-ll'.7546-_i_OM--:. --;:-.,.,----,--" IWtail/Comm. spa.ce avail.-.
MISSION VIEJO
* .$275 -2 BR, frplc, yard, uttl. 675-000. 2 BR. Util. pd. $250 mo.1 blk J, 2 &:: 3 BR APTs. Ren* ""' GRUBB & ~IS CO. ' singlr~. wffrplc. patio. Beaut Vu! shopping, $150 per mo. Incl chldn, no pets. 494-7079. ~14n ~~ ~3\8.' .,..,.,. QUIET DELUXE .'llewport Beach ; I~ Contact
$1-9:.. rRUIT Trt'('S! 3 Br .. 2 patio, nice~ Child/pet ok. • 2 BR near tx-ach & bay. beach. Ah 3:30, '1!l4-57M. 2 BR shag, drps, ref range ALSO FURN BACHELOR $250 Mo. Yearly l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii!!! SS1·17W
& .. hl1g1· \<1 rd for kirls/pet. $.125 -3 BR. 2 Ba, bltns, 2 Cnrixn·t. lnrlry. $215/n)o. Ber. 9 & aft '1 :30, 675-0146. Sjti yr-lse no pets/child. Pvt. Patios * Hid. Pools Lrg 2 &Inn., 2 BA, nu crpts.I ~ i"/~~~~~'l"l!!!!!!!!I•~
LANDLORDS! ~rplcs. Gar, yardE. deck. S Yearly. 673-4526. NewPOrt Beach 4 1,2 Iris; Nov. 1· 644-43<IO Nr Shop'g *Adu.Its Only drape!j, panl1, bca1n t•cil. Room1 400 2 BR. Duplex. Idea! for co ~~REE RE:\'TAL SERVICE NU-VIEW R NTAL Corona del Mar Costa Me1a Martinique Apts. Dnve -'194-0615/b°?f>.1972. ROOMS SIS wk up w/klt. ~r;~ Av!~~68 11 f·~
BEACON RENTALS 673-40.'l,() or 494-3248 \Ve have \Vinter Rentals ----..,.-----Im Santa Ana A CM z br, 11it ba. trplc, patw 1 SJO .... , up Ap•· , _ .. 0·-~
* 645-0111 * 1•~1 C Bd 2 bath FURNISHED A Sl" I \V'll Tak Students BEAUTIFUL spacious 3 Br, w., · · blk lo ~an. e<>cn mo. Aft 6 " ,_ ~ * BUSrNESS suite, Camni111. , ••u• A · 3 rm. · pt -. .., uti · 1 e 1 !,ii ~. new shag crpt brick M U3 646-5542 ""~ ......., m thl I 2376 Newport D M "-r HUNTlNGTO:"\ Brot:h nrea. patios. Great vie\v! Nr. paid. 1~ bU.: to ocean. No Also occanJrontS"avai]. snack bar, lge balcony, gr. Apt. pm, 675-3906 Bl~~. &; S:.9755. r. at ncArthur, N.B. ~ i ~ :: hc-droom Dutch town. ST:>-4367 or 494-2508 pets. 2500 Seaview. CdM. 4 BR. 2 BA ........ $325/350 walking distance lo shop-New duplexes NEWPORT Island 1 B<lnn l;-;,;c-;·,c_;~;=,;:,:c:~,,-,= prox 400 r;q. ft. 540-4752. .. ~
lfa\'t.'n homl'. Nev.· shag aft 5. Costa Mesa 3 BR. 2 BA ••• ·• .. ••·• .$285 ping C<'ntcr. 9Chool bus e 2 BR • adults • $195. garage apt. Yearly $145. LRG. Bach, 2 bllcs trom HB. Industrial Rental 451 :
<'a"""ls \1llh ma I c hin g l BR., 1 BA· ........... $175 st~ at door. Childnn e 3 BR • t child • $295. GT::r-1304. pier. Student prefd, no pell, '· .,.. I HOUSE 2BR. ,,._,.,. !um, Sal S!IARE '20 3 BR ho $275 JUST COMPLETED • drape~. Sparkling c ean. mo. 356 Canyon Acres Dr. k U ilan apt. "' 110 S30 . me · •. .. ••.•••. we come. Onl,y 1st mo. rent. Beaut., new, spacious apts f\lewport BeeCh Jst & last ,mo's rent req'd. •
P.ent ts ~230 p<'r month. ** 497_1400 * * 11· . t , phone, PoO incl. 2 BR. 1 Ba. Penin •••.•. S250 351 Victoria. v.·/fncd yards, patios & qu iet $55. (util pd.) 536-0066. 1600 to 3300 Sq. Ft. " ~ bedronn1, 2 bath Costa ll1l'n or \\'Omen. 2 3 7 6 CALL: 673·3663 ts * $180 * * privacy. No pets.151 E. Bay PARK NEWPORT NR <>a:, Pri ha, prl e~ IN SANTA ANA _ .\1e11:1 rui:a. Dooble garalt('. Laguna Niguel Ne\vport Blvd., C . 1\1. St. (at FuUerton St.). C.M. tranee Student or workin New tilt••p bldg wl•h•-• ('()Vered p~!J(), ne1v paint. 64~967. 3 r., 1\-2 Ba., newly painted. PHONE: 642-4837 APARTMENTS person. bef llam, 557-m.9 g ---... ·-... rene'l!'d ) 11rrl. For rent or op-SPAC. 4 BR, $70,000 ho1ne, Bltns, apt/drps, encl patio. crptd, paneled office" ·& ~
lion ril t !:O f)f'r month. Call Nr. beach. Rent $450 mo. * SHADY ELl\1S -POOL * Nr schls & shop'g. Children • SJ-IADY ELMS· POOL * h ba GENTLEMAN t storage m'e z z an int • .,.,.. e Adults Pool&ide $140 up ok No pets 880 Center St e Adults Poolside $140 up On t 9 Y .__,. tr1g' TVm a s ehr overhead loading doors, UO-Re~p. party. • •:1.:u-fr;:,88. • C . Cal . .. • Ch'ld 'bl k u..-uroom, re ' , Beac """3 h • Children neXI block. M. l·afl 3 pm. wkdays. I ren nex oc Luxury apart:menl living OY· & Pac. Coast Hwy. 536-&SlB. UAJ' l' ase ~· '
YRLY lease. New 2 br., 2 ha. Free Furnitute Plan OCEANFRONT corner 4 br, • All day Wknds. 642-8340. Free Furniture Plan erlooklng the water. ~ Have !IO"""thing .,...., want to HUNSAKER DEV. CO.
On goU ~urse. $285 mo. lTI E. 22nd St., Ci\t 642<~&15 2 ha, bltn kit. upper dp1x. NEWLY I!iECORATED 177 E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 $750,COJ health spa, 7 swim· sell! Q;uified~-;._d, do it 546-5460
Call 6T:r 30· * $25 PER WEEK * Crpt/drps. \\'inter S3i5 mo. 2 Br w/gar fJ.1cd yrd SPAC 2 & 3 Br apt $140 up. ming pools, 7 light~ ten-W!'ll . can NOW 642-5678. Sell Idle items ... 642·5&18
Rcal1ors ~5-!M91
Oprn E,·es. ~L~A7cNDLORDS! lido Isle & Up. Pool & maid service. 5011 Se1lshore. (7141 &12-ro-79 \V/palio. \Vlr pd, Call btwn Pool. cptftlrp, bltns, kids nls courts, plwa miles 0 1l'iili;iiiiiii;;i;ii;;;ii;;i;li;ittii;iiii;;iiii;ii;i;;;ii;;i,jiijjfj (213 £98.-fiOll. 1 & S. 63&-4120. ok b' 1 -"-~-sbul I' \Ye Spttiallrl' in Nl'v.'J)Orf 4 Br. 2 Ba, ffTllr, crpts, rlrps, Kitchens ava'I. ll--totel Tahiti * Balboa p . 3 BR 2 BA 2192-0 Placentia Ave. $1.'\.'i · 1cyc t' u -4llll, pu .... 'b. • * * * •
F'um. nvailablc. A\lail to rorne.r itarbor & Victoria. enin. · · 22'24'A PloC<':nlia Avr. "'14.'i 2206 College No. 5 • •• &12-1035 Deboard, crOquet Junior l's * * * ; '3each •Corona del !\.tar • J unt• Isl. 673·915.<J. O\'er garage, On b a Y 5-fg..c Bernard S,35 1.qg(j Maple No. 1 ..•• 6'12-3813 from $174.50 monthly; also 1 , ,
" Llutu1u1. Our Rental Ser------~----I BACHELOR, I & 2 Br. npts. 11'/hench. Util paid. S350t n10. I d ~·-•-•·-· and ~-----------------.... .! Y1ce ls F"REE to You! Try Newport Beach Encl. earports, hid pool. 213: 620-1233 collect. 3 BR, 2 ba tr i -p I ex. 2 BDRM apt, b tn."I, crpts & an ucw.uum p ..... .., 1 Nu-View! Acllts/no peL'>. $120 & up. Crpt/drps. quiet, adults. no drps, rec. hall, swim pool. Z·story fO\vn houses, Elec·
NU-VIEW RENTALS The Bluffs 853 Center St. 6'1~:i--8965. , Br, 2 1311. nu crpts, n1onth· pels. "$200 mo. 2281 Ford· Older c:ouple. No pets or trlc kitchens, private patios
F.ASTSlDE attrac. compl l . 202~M 4 2 nd St. ham. Days 646-1689, Eves children. $150.,mo. $35. clng. or baJconles, carpeting, dra·
673-4030 or f94.324lt 1 2 BR 1,. ha 1 S Imo. P'~ blk bch. 6'16-4939. rlep, ~266 perles. Subternnean .. a..a.~ urn. · ·~ "poo · nr 642-1671. ,_.,. * \VHY RENT! We ha\'(! Leases ...chis., shopping & froeways, ""'-=7-=..,--=--,,-,.-UPPER. LARGE" 2 Br. encl REAL Value? Crpts, drps, lng with elevators. OpUonaJ tmu&es av&il. for nothing no peta. 645-4220. NlCE 2 BR furn apt. Ocean gar. Nr. OCC & shop'g. dshwshr, pool. QUIEi' 2 Br. maid service. J ust north of
down to Vets & 5% down to Furn. Bach. & 1 Br. Ex-\1i<'W, Water pd. $225. per Adults, oo pets. 2984 Royal fl35. Mature adults, no pets, Fa.shkm Island at Jamboret'
anyon.!. Call an Y t l mt!, FAMILY HOME mo. 5012 Seashore, Apt B. Palm Dr. $152fmo, 645-3515 2295 Pacitic Ave .. 54S-Q78. and San Joaquin flllll Road. SCOTT' nEALrr. 536-15.13. ceptionally nicel 2110 642-4590 or 557-3372. NEW hag crptg 2 BR
Coron• del Mar • 4F~~h'ly 2~i~. 1~1~n~ Newport Blvd., C.M . 2 BR !um apt avail Nov. 1 to * * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. bltns, a relrii;:., child OK: T:p:~~ (~~:.:
school•. pool, market. Va· •NEAT t BR. A p 1. July 1. 1~ blk to ocean. Util Contemporary Garden Apt. $135. 571 Joann St. 646-1671 --~=·==_,.-,,.---
3 Br •• den, 2 BA. FIA ht.. cant & avall. at $425 mo. $130tmo. Wtr pd. Bachelor pd. $215. No children or Patios, lrplc.. pool. $155-or 646-2039. A SENSIBLE
lmm•o. 13:<1~1 • 2" ONE STORY prefd. Ro•, 54S-S605, v . .. ... 6r,.,.;o sna Call 546-5163. •TROPICAL POOIA PROPOSAL FOR
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
-• I
Ht.Uotropc. 0 r Doyle 518-1168 sz,o, 1'--URN, 2 BR. 2 RR 1 d bll 2 Br Studio, 1%! Ba, frpl, sprl SINGLE LADIES 67"~2087 3 BR 2 1 1 0 . 1,,,,;;=__,,=,,..--.,;:-.,-,-_ , crp s, rps, n11, nr.
• •• >&. end un t. eon. OCEAN VIEW . Bacllf'lor, 3704 SEASJ-IORE DRIVE. r~airvlew & Baker. Adults muise. $195fmo. Gas & Ocean view, ii hour houllCl'..._-:::---::-"".':--"'"'.~~--,------.JE
1 BR. cpts. drps, stove, ~~i-n:8"cant & really RI $145 2 BR. $2~). 2 blks to ==,.,.o*c..;.'7H5"'-'"1~8,.*~~-~'-'",,'Y~--N~o~pe~"-· _54>-~1_882_. __ , lw~r 2~ 145 E. 18th ~~1168. security, "P n rt m en 1,1 Ora:an Yamaha =·io'::~·~ $~. PLAZA AREA Big Corona. Adults only, no YEARLY lse. 2 doon lrom 2 BR .. bltnll, refrig., carp, R w/!urn nvat. lltd designed wllh a Masters w/rflythm agrt Like nl'i ~:·!es, A~~ :~~wn Ca
0
ndllf 1
Pf'lll. 645-1264. heh. 2 BR, part. furn. Crpts, dmpe". Patio. Adults, no pool. Sl30 &: up. Adults. 853 touch, exclusive club ~th Coe:I Sl.600. Wilt trade Jo· lllke $200() value. 1'rad 1Costa Me111 3 J~R., 21~ ba. l'nd unit Lgc. •TROPICAL POOLe drp.s. $250/mo. M2-lli1. IK'l s. $160 Mo. 646-2'114 Agt. Center St, 645-8965. unique Aqua.bar, fountains good car for car or? ! 1 pri\I patio. fmmed. O<'l'U· 1 Br. F'urn 114.'i. Gas &: Wtr NEW 3 BR, 2 BA. d.shwhr, STUDIO :I B :I Ba clft'; and fonnal gardens. All ·64t>4$32 (7l 4l 835.m
? n~'::Ui. CJ'l)~. ~m~l'i panL")' S.100 mo, Pel. 14.) E. 18th ~1168. trple. Winter. 42nd streel .• tlrp!', bltru1. ';:ir. ocC. En:i 1 ~~"~~. c~r;:prioo~: W!~t (l! ;~r l~~hn ?.:~~''P"R"1""ME""•"'"""·"b"ld;:•:.· -:AAA-:-:-;N"•..,.I. llAVE u deluxe apt. 11011
chlldrr:rt, no prts. 20n -:t 1 Br. $1.1) & S140, Adu.Its only. 675o-7154. putio. $16.'ifmo. 546-<H69. 324 E. 20th St., 645-4761. munlly, T n.aot, 20 yr t~. S.1'.1.00J In N'pt, Bcitcti. \\'ant G
Wallatt, Apt G. Cllf . ·~~n.., S/Pool. Ideal tor Bachelon 01-:LUX 2 BR. furn, or un-* 2 BR. $135/mo. * LGE. 1 Br .. pool, nr shofl"· 1 bedroom/~tud!M fr om N.N.N. Inc. Trurlc ll2S.Ol'Xl Bank• SO ft, boat or alm-
6«Hi92!J. \ c: -~~t n 1 . .8' l993 ChUtth St. 548--96.1.1. fum, 1i blk ocean/bay. 981 VRlcncia, 642·74.11 Adlta, no pets. Utile pd. 1884 $195. t"Jl:Y tor lge apts, or com-llar, up 10 65 ft, Irwin Co.,
$ML. =n 2 ~· ri~: utSf t ) Q__Ujj 1 ~C"LE=A~N~2~Br~.-0~,.,.--,0-,~ho-pa-. 675-4600 or 645-0123 3 BR, 2 BA, shAg crpt, drps, Monrovia. 548--0336. i>e~'b!i~ :~rel~ Bkr. 547-8469, • 'll.ealtors. 644.flll.
w/w ng,PlpatiO of pri .-lly Aclulta only, no pel11. Inquire FURN 3 BR, :l b&., steps to carport nr. OCC. Up11t11ln. CHEERFUL. airy, nu 2BR, 1 Models open 9 A.M to 6 p M $63 ~ exes, Cos,Jl! Mesa. S' .000 cqty In $500,
fenced yard, en_ty_ 1roo~ "' f ~~ rcR 179~ Rochnter, Cl\f. beach Ocean Vu, 675-4600 $169/mo. 552-9736. ba apt. Adults, no pets. VERSAILLE. S · · •Oran Equity. ehan,ge ~r Portland, Ore. AAA tot prdmlirw. $15.1. sl • ~ or 645-0123 1 .._ 2 BR. Adu(.,;;'" ~·-. 548--0804 up, gc County, NtLtional Tenant. on N.N.N , l.ul, plla ~t. &G-2"30. 2414 Vista dcl Oro I BR Tl"tr. $11-0. 2 Br, lrlr ,-,=-,-,=-:----=:::-=:-= • ._,, "" .o.L-BLU S FORTIN Reeltor 642-0«XXI l> yr~. Want prime ahO Nt'W'pol1 Beach Sll>. UIH lncl. No pctll or 3 BR. 2 BA. wftplc, tum dtx BAY MEADO 3 BR. 2 BA-PATIO. on ,,,. FF tn1;c' WtM:cllfI, N.B. cntr or !? Bkr 547.~ I ~ 4 Br .. /~~ 644.1111 ANYTIME children. 646-18'9, &43-3375. dupleic. Oct&n.. WUI rent to 387 \V. Bay Sl. CM 64&-0073 $170 1afesa del Mar. &lS-1208 et NEWPQRT EXOlANGE horn Pal CANYON 1-ke lot, IOI!
dawn. ~ ~-3 2~ 5 o o . =a"L"u'°F"'rs""'-"""v"'1o"'w'-'-'4°"a"'n.=--=2~ FURN 2 Br, apt. In ~ ttudents. $290. ~2964. l Bdrm., unturn. a ft t EN~ED Yd. 2 Br, cpt11, From !Newport Blvd .. turn at Sprg11. Choic'e S. !nd 1:. view nr Jake und u
$4&-7tMS; M&-1691. hooku Ba. Twnhee, tam lfU'ea. ;.ia~a~~r si.,~~9~' I~. 4: 2th~ oju1::~chj (1~~ ~;;':.m~61~~9-~19~r ~. ~~· ~. Cout ~~t~cl~J.~1 H~~ ~~i:·~ba2 ~o~:m! ~ ~~·~~ = ·~a, 2 =·~~yard. :· ~Custom. S 9 S' BF.A.UT. >'URN. 2 BR. $115 up 645--0'l45 ot SIT~Bob. SPAC. be.chi apt. nr schl1 I E-SIDE 2 BR. $150 ~ldo ~to =~~WJJOrt at'(! or CM. Ownr: 557.no§. Bric, 547-6469. , • ~O'fl!. $18S/mo to mo. 0C A V1 EW Ulll. J>Qld. Htd. Pool. Infant OCF...ANFRONT bach apt. snorplf'll. No_peta. S13ft mo. Bllns( w/w, diapoga). Poot Be a c I\, ca . g 2 6 6 0. Like 10 tra~T OUr Trndcr'" SUDMIT all tradel tor S~ &ti-6961 or 646-1246. E N ok. No pets7"642-9520. SIOO. Utll. Paid. Yearly ~~ Utl pd. C111l 979-0134. Adu ts, M pr.ta;, 642-9520. Telephone: Cn4J 645-0060. PtnidlM! rolumn t, for you! eqt.y on 950 ao-tt nr.
3 BR. 2 ba, pool $350/mo, 3 BR. 2 ba. Cllfthllvt>n. $79.SO, Small turn trall~r 111/ 161. Call ~1241 -~ 5 llMi dapn. B&I. $4GO,OOO. Int. Yearly S37S/mo. Reallor. 3 BR $2'JO 1ffo, iiach Sl:l5 Mo. '\'tcancleii cost money! Rent NICE 2 hr, 1 b8. pvt pttlo, PROFL'Y. Decorated CC)lft)o. 5 d 1 7% ~~ ;¥.·~13~ ~Jr Bobbe _ .... _._Tll_O_._~--~-ci.bana. UIJI~ pd, Adl!s, no AlllO ~"'~ av1tlh1ble your houM, apt., &i(')!"e ~1'"_1/drps?~tns. No . pets. Frpl. ~ Ohl g"r , dE1«W' tor 5 :z:k1. r~;li valit.')'S~n~a:k~~ew1< .... _••'-. _su-_3_539.;__. _____ l •BBEY "'A ... Y 6, .. .,o~ bldg., etc. thru a OaJly P'llol ......,, 557-JUOll', opener • ........,+ usoc. un .
Dm'I giVl'I up the lhlp! l'~('d. V~ant 2 Br. Jl'2:1 -" .-...~ '1 ,,.-~ Cla111Ult'd Ad. Se/I Idle items 645-2346 or 645-4ll0. * * * * •tlhf" II ln classUied, Shlp Rtdcc. Crpt11. Drpt. GIU'. A JOOd mnt ad 1~ " good ll\o N~ 11 ''Pad'"? PlAt't' "n ad! now? Call &t2-5618 Now! llOUSE ltuntlng'? Watch the *
"td g...,,,, Rault.JI 50-h. Rent-A-House 9794430 vmment. Call 642-MTS. ---------OPEN llOUSE CQJumn. \\1t1nl ad n!!!Ults . . &U-S678 •••••••••••••••••••
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DAILY PILOT ,ZS
~-~·~_-____,!~I. IMmd-)[SJ I s---1~ .__I -' ;I ._ .... ~Jlll][.___ ...... _ ..... __,J[Il] l....__"-_1__.llll] l.___ ....... _-__.J[Il] l...____""'*'_1 __,J[jJ] I !I ii
ll""'a'i""'1-'"tr..;.l•;;;l""R"-'"='•;;;l_...;4lO:; Lott
~EW conatructlon 1«io 1q ft 1[tm 1q tt, Jdtal CM klc,
0Wcet w/lu.l, hol water
b'f'1 m J phatf' 1iwr, O/h ,.,, AJC ThDnw Ellt.
.GJolflT
.-,ti1f1 Wanttd
l1a .. L1•M Optlon
~tOUtlve tnu\lferred from
\,EUt Cout d~lrea 4-S Br A
(tarn rm or study. Dec. 1 .. 1
tin NwpVCdM area. Call Mr.
iPatrlek, 2131!152-ZllO days; ~592-2336 eve&.
]~
~nouncem1nt1 · 500
i· LOVE 4 SALE ~ she'• pethe,,she'g darlin.11: & I IMttuctkMll I ~
'l'IAs big hro11'fl t>yes. She's ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimm~-~~:
1
'a_$i1ky Terrier pup. AU shot£ HANDYMAN -All kinds or
A housebroken, too. What work, small jobs a more could you v.·ant? Schoo.ls & specialty. 956-9374: 546-9723.
D-8333. instructions 575 Hauling
REAL
ESTATE * Real Estate Career Night *
Tu ... , 17th Oct., 72, 7,30 P.M.
Open to the Public
Como 11s you nre •.• Bring 11 fri•nd
Real opportunity in R•al Estate sales
in the Newport Coe stal area
SCRAM-LETS
'ANSWERS
Sponge -Pious -Choke -
Outlaw -A'SLEEP •
AJlmony: _Paying alimony
Bookkeeper
DIRECTOR OF
FINANCIAL
PLANNING
Nt..,\'PQt1 Beal'h financial
1nslitutlof1 h&1' lnun~dlate
open111g !fir dlrL'(tQr of
estate A b~•ne!i!I plan11.
t.1ust have la'"' di>grec &:
h(•11vy 1•xper. in tax &: estate
1truJysis service. Previous
l n11uran ce & CLU
background pref'd.
Salary 1vill be in accordance
w/exper. .t, qualifications.
Submit resume wfsalary
requirement in confldl'n<·•·
to: Clau1(1ed ad no. 527 1·/11
DA.ily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. 9'l6S..
Equal Opppr. En1ployer
DONUT Shop, all nite shift
A~e 25-45. No exper nee.
Apply in person. r.tr. Donut, 135 E. 17th St., C.l>.1.
DRAPERY Workroom. Pd
vac. & holidays. Exper. or
trainee cutter. Be a ch
Drapery, 900 \V. 1'i\S CM.
E-]~
Pir1onal1
PIANO or voice, my home or
youn. 20 Yrs. exp. Master
in mtWc. 833-23W. ,_ .... _,~
Is like ll'R.ving your TV going YARD, garage cleanups. after you've rallcn ASLEt::P_ Remove trees, dlrt, Ivy.
D · din "·'7 ~"" CHEF, high caliber, fully
TREE Wont Garage & yd
clnup. Move & haul. Ask for
M&T, 642-1403.
\rr. n£.'ed ont' automotive
Bookket'J>er. Send photo &
resume to Box 501, c/o
Daily Pilot, 330 West Bay
Street, Costa 11esa, C;dir.
92626.
Bookkc.-eper
We need one Au1omotivl'
Bookkerper with OMV ex-
perience, St>nd photo &
resu1ne to Box 501 , c /o
Daily Pilot. 330 West Bay
Street, Costa f.lesa. Calif.
92626.
ORILL PRESS
Precision exper. tor top
1rvin(' ro. Top $$$. P.P.S.
Pacific. Personnel Sl'rviccs,
112 No. Tov.·er, Union Bonk
Squar(', Orange. 547-6446.
Ai;k for Rachel J\1ay.
nvewy11, gra i . O"I --. all •--d · <'Xp in p,.......,s, estres
YARD & Garage Cleanup. change. Employed a t
530 [)RUG clerk for retail drug
i.tore, retail drug exp.
desired. 548-75..'>1. 11LHINDU SPIRITUAUST *
Let. this ad cha~ your
Wli>le outlook on life for !he
lbc~r Professional advice .oil Ille. Lie. Readtngi dally.
]O AAl-11) PM. 492-91316.
492-9034, 312 No El Camioo
Rfal, San Oemente.
Free est. 7 days. Call sophisticated country club.
anytime, 54&-5031. Avail Nov 1, Resume on
Babysitting · GEN-. Hauling. Tree/shrub req. Paul Martin, 742-3603
trim. Gar &: yd cleanup. Est Escondido.
DRUG Clerk -ExperiellC('d.
Costa Mesa. Call
CHILD care near Sonora & ...,,,.. 557-&904 Presidio Schools Ages 18 mo 839-~. · * Exp male book.keeper Bookkeeper ~134 "'~" """'~ SKIPWADER & dump truck wan~ pt time work, with We nl"f.'d ooe Auromotive
&12-4500 Dally
EARLY Christma~ Shoppers
-Need extra money! Good
extra income avail working
from yoor own home a few
hours per week. 968-3'7&t.
up. "'i>"'V ' ~. work. Concrete, asphalt, '1CCOil-ntanL 536-8680. Bookket>pcr with machine
GO. Care in a happy home ;,.,.. b -••-8'"7110 I~~=--~~-~= ••pe·o·eno•. 0 -od photo &
PALM & CARD READINGS
, Put, pcesent &: future.
Advice & help In many mat-
1en. 213:' 694-1350. Fully He.
LI Habra. Call !or a pi)t.
PROBLEM Pregnan<"y. Con-
fident, sympathetic
pregnancy co11nselin2. Abor-
-&. adoptions re'f. AP· CARE. &1241.16.
littl N sawu'6• re ........ 05. ._ -• Job Want-.1, Female 702 ..... • ... ~ for your e one. wpt [ ;;;c;;;~;,,;;;;;;;-;:-----1::::::..:::;:::::::::_.::::::::.;:..:: resume to Box sen . c/o
Heights. Re.,s. 548-7649. Housec.;luning GOOD TYPIST Daily Pilot. 330 \Vest Bay
Carpenter 'Rainbow Window \ Will do your typing at Street, Costa fo.·lcsa, Cahf. Exec Sec/Dental Recpt
lnt<>lligent, creative individ· ual \\"anted for managerial
position v.·ith fast growing
dt'ntal office in L a g u n a
Beach. Future limited only
hy initiative & ability to ru;sume responsibility. Sal·
ary open. 640-133.1 .
lndus/Comm'l/Resid Maintenance h'r home, WUI rickup 926~USBOY/MAN
All types work. Remodel, Co6~~~~;~~~~al and deliver loca H.B., ,.,lust be cll."8.1l & neat. Over
alteration, finish, frame, ~ F,V.,_West, 75c per pg. '-18. Apply in person, Surf&.
panel, etc. 962-1961. Dedicated Cleaning or wtll work by hour Sirloin, 5930 \V. Coast I-!'11.·y,
CARPENTRY, Addition.s & • WE DO EVERYTHING * call 947.3095, NB.
repair. 20 years Ha.tbor Refs. Free est. 646-283'"J [ ;ioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
.. 0 2115~• CORNELL BA Eng Ii sh, area. ow-1u•~· • * Alberto hu the Piaht •-e. through hswfg. Exec & BUYER FIRE & Casualty, gen'! olc
work, exper. P/time. CdM
location. 54S-jll65.
----~===~ * EUROPEAN PSYCHIC *
$25. Carpet Service maid juat 1or you. \\rtns BG all media, also
Call 83&-()648. tlcx!ble ex~. sec. Av. office Appts. av11.il. !hru Ort. & Nov.
... (7141 523-4156
JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery
Dri·Sh11.mpoo 1 r e e Scotth-
guard {SQfl Retardant$).
Degreasers & all color
brl.s::-htenmi & JO minute
bleach for white
<·a.rpet!I. Save your money by
saving n1e extra trips. Will
clenn living rm., dining rm.
& hall $15. Any nn. $7.50,
couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs.
exp. is what counts, not
n1t"lhod. I do work myself.
Prof. Carpet Cleaning skills, quick mind, gracious
Al90 windows & noor care. or on strong. Prefer SC-Lag·
Newport Beach financial in-
stitution ha s immediate
opening for a professional
w/strong cxpenence. Yau
¥.'ill purchase olfice sup-
plies, auto Deets & office
equipment.
Fee Paid
~ j;rl<ct 11nrl ~ronc
Mar1en ~folC'. Insured S2.COO.
&tale !TIU~I .<,ell J.C. (714)
841-7977.
Call Dutch 537-1508, 8am-6pm Lag N. 492-7999. . Adhesive Sales Rep SIIK
A/P-Construelion $600
-------ALCOll<l!.Tr1' At1011ymous. ~nt> :>~2-7117 ITT" 1o,Tite
P:O. Box 1223. Costa r.tcsa. SOCia1 Clubs -sis
LADY wtll ·clean ~t NEED help at home? \Ve
apts. Exper. By thC' unit have Aides, Nurses,
Eves 646-15.51. Ho u sekprs, Companions.
WOMAN wishes day work . liomemakers Up j ohn.
Good and reliable. Refer-547-6681..
We will consider only ap-
plicantJ w/a proven record
of the highest integrity &
honesty-& who easily gain a
contidencc & admiration of
management & vendors.
Payron·-~nstr S650
Genrra l Ledger Acct $700
F/C Bkkpr/Sl'c'y $700
Sec'y-Laguna Sa50
Medical to $600
e!'IC(!. Phone 541-8029. EXPER. secretary d~ircs Exec. Sec'y to pres to $700
General Office $4."J(I Janitorl•I part time position. pref. Secretaries $650
FIND Y<JllP~":F.LF'
,. IN ~'l'H.'1'<1·'. ELSt:. Good ref. 531--0IOL Jeff's Cleaning Service
Residential -Commercial A'I'TN. Rug Shampooers. * 64&-6384 * Dl ~COVER Equip. used once. Holt 18",
DISCOVERY 1 hp !ihampooer &: brush. Landscaping .1.
41
,...=-.... q:-
1 2131387_3393 S370. Nobles W!'t vacuum, 1 -"---''-.:..--N-G-~
11 ~ $250. Ex-$50. -LANDSc,t.PI ~ .;•, artw 6 or wknds. For unique &: penonalli:ed
C ·1· style in JandlOl.ping" call II j[S) 81 l"tl . Jan1es C. Elmer -
I-Lott Ind f9ll'ld ••-•-•SPARKLING WHITE l.anClscaphtc: & ™'tenance l;~j;;;;;;;;;;~~; • Co. "Re-"-lawm. A New acaustical ceiling•, ·-··-n@CCSS!ty at this time." Any time, 644-7183 Reas. Free est. 64&-'7229 aft S.
Ii®. , nd (free ads) 550 c t Cone-~ emen , '••• P•inting & ~D-:. p 1· cs c r i Pt ion CUSTOM CEMENT WORK P•perh•nging ~asses, .fenkE"I Davidson W" vo ·•--
b d '
Drlves, ~ pa\.Q'I, 6use of Vision ran , v c. pool d£.'cks. Don. 642--8514 -CUSFOM Painting, Int/Ext
af · MArll'IC Ave. &-Park, spedali&t. No job too lrg or lJalbo."l I!lnttd. 673-2577. PATIOS.PLANTERS too small. Free color con-
iND: l-tal r-1.!rnwn n1ale lab-All Concrete work. Brlclr.. suiting & est. Uc'd, bonded, ~ ca1 . Aff1..-•1innate. Vic slump1tone wk. 894-3533-ins. Won't be underbid.
· fesa OP! Mar tract C.M. PATIOS. walks, drives. Silw, 642-1i005, 53&-3217.
i46--0l!lll. break, remove & r@J>lace PAINTING &: PAPERING,
.JUND ~··tl!'ll/: f1nl Still concrete. MS-8668 tor est. 19 yrs. in Harbor area. Lie
'oint Si:u"r'lf! Turtlerock Child CaN & bonded. Rd's furn. errace. Jrvul('. tl'U-1956. 1.;;;.;.;..;;...;.. _______ l.~642-=..~2356::::·:,.,,-~----
JY Pnotli1· . recent mother C'OSTA MESA P~OOL. INT ,l EXT painting, paper
1vir V.'il~n. C.M. 646-2732. Uth &: Monrovia. NEW banging natw-al w o o d L-t 55_5 HOURS 6'30 lllri,30 pm. flnWtlnS 5'18-7905. z:v• _ Music, stories. art. ReM. ~::"'"-"~· =i'77'="'°=~ •r Rates. Lic'd. 60-4050. Eves. 30 Day Special. Inter/~e~. ~EASE retum blanket mt 838-5237 painting. Local refs, Lied
. 4lh &: Orchid, Anny · ins. Chuck. 645--0809 . D w/name tag, Blanket Contractor ~lonp to my dog Linus 1---------No Wasti~ ~ v..-on't sleep without iL JACK Taulane -Repair * WALLPAPER * ,!:! rd 673-7050 remod., 'addlt. 20 yn. exp. When )'OU call "Mac" ~ wa ' R. D Lle'd. J.ty Way Co. 547-oo36. 548-1444 646-1711
• REW A Additions * Remodeling PAINTING -Honest, clean, Sm. ,vhllc poodle. blue collar Gerwi.c.k &: Son, Lic'd guaranteed work. Licensed ~amily pet. Vic. Dana KllOYI· 673-6041 * 56-2170 & insured. 6'JS-.6740.
Jes 10/12 493-2567. Gardening PROF. painter, honest work, i'lil 'REW ARD for return or reas. Uc/ins. Int/ext. free J\elP . Jn findlng leather EXPERT Japanes e est.· Refs. 54S-2759.
b_tifBe, jacket &: wallet lost gardener. knowhow, upkeep, FOR clean & neat painlin!I'.
!017 at Jaadores. P.O. Box plant.· J>CJf, trim, cle8Jlup. Interior, reaa. rates. Call
'34fl1Balboa Island. 979-7941. 963-3486. Dick, 96S-406S.
LOST: Col lie/Spaniel, EXPERT Jap~se PROF. PalnHnr, a1'o roofs.,
blonde "Rocky." VI c . Gardener . -lete accous. Ceil. I nter fexter.
W'arner & Magnolia, H.B. Gardening Service. NB Cr.f Lie/Ins. Free est, 645-5191.
SlilReward for information area 546-l&S4.
or return. (7141 821-7578. 1..:::,G::ARD:,=:c:,ENIN""''°c=-s=rn=vi=CE=-EXTER. Complete 2 coats, 1
r#that Item under $50, try Reuonable -Reliable story $260, 2 story $320. * 64&-6852 * Neat \\'Ork. Roy, 894·5058.
the Penny Pincher. ""°',...-,-~~~----f HOUSE pa1ntlng, intfcxt.
Spttbols & Schools & aecous, cellif'IRS., reas. Free f Instruction.• 575 JnstructiOns S75 est. 714153&-5857.
' ' " '
VETERANS
COMMERCIAL
PILOTS
Earn $25,000
A YEAR
If you want to utiliz e the GI
Bill you are required to have
a private pil ots license first.
, I'll teach you for hundreds of
r;:-dollars less. Give you a money
, ; back guarantee that you will
~' pass. You have nothing to
_' lose.
THE llangman, WC St'll loo one stop price & pauern, for
home appt. 547-5846.
Pl•,ttr, P•tch, Repair
* PATCH PLASTERING
All 1,ypes. F'rff C!ltlmates Call..,._
Plumblnv
L. R. OTIS PI.:UMBING
Remodel1J &. Repalra. Water
heaters, dl11>0Ml1, tumact'!I,
·•dshwshl'll. ~3730 MIC & -St A. All Dally Pilot area-s.
Oniln1 unclogged -$7.50
Sewer line to 100· -S15
• 549-2502 •
PLUMBING repaln and in·
~tallAdo!ll, pAlnUni· __ f'.ree
Est. Call A save. 839-0372.
COLE PLUMBING
24 hr. R rvice. 645-UGI
PLUMBING REPAIR
No job too mWl
• ~n2S *
Sewing/Alter•tt?ns
SEWING-DESIGNING
afternoons Mon. thru FrL
Call Janet ~filler, 49'1-7049.
H~lo Wanted, f.\ & F 710 Send resume & 'Salary
history in confidence to:
ClassUicd ad no. 528, clo Accounting Clerical po Bo 1560 Fee Paid Daily Pilot, . . x ,
Al~ Fee PO!iitions
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
833 Dover Dr., N.8.
642·3870 ~ ) r..NI Costa Mesa, Calif. ~. Gcn'l Ofc (.,., w.p.m. ......., ""~ual Oppor. Employer
NP (Constructiotl) $600 1 ,,!!~'!!!!!!"''!!!!!!"'!0!!!0!!!0!!~· f FRY Cook. neat & clean, Ap-Bookkeeper "f'fC SEiOO 1' pl y In Person, H. Salt fuh
Receptionist $415 CENTER.LESS g r I n d e r & Chips. 2TJO Harbor Blvd., opera tor with infeed &: CM Typist $400 -0'0'·~~~~~~~~ thrufeed exp. Permanent = PBX Operator $.557 employment with 17 yr old rnY Cook. Over 18. Neat.
Bookkeeper (TB) $500 company offering variety of No long hairs. J imbo!!
Sec'y (no shorthand) $500 b f · Restaurant. m.I E. Coast Inslrut'tor Trainee $525 compaey paid enc It s. 1-i"'"• Cdl\1
545--0401 =··'="'="'""~~~-~ Sec'y (dictaphone) S.160 COCKTAIL HOSTESS FURNITURE refinishcrs & BookkeeperfSecl'i'lary $475-warehousemen needed. Full 6f:ih~~dav :: LooJ.Obkil~g afo~e! t~lt;{r N~~:. time. 6i3-422Z.
Le.al ~•',,..., ('h !JO) $390 '1h..'Ce!!Sll""'. we !roi.n. Apply CENER.AL OFFlCE: Local
Sec'y C~°h.._.80) $500 in pend~ at 2930 \Vest Coast okl estab. firm needs con-
Receptionist $476 I·lw. Newport Beach, any genial gal for this variety
Free & Fee Posilions day atlernoon or rve. spot. Start $450. Call Nancy
RUTH RYAN AGENCY May, >!0-0055. Coastal CT.>1-'Jo"EE Shop Manager
179n Beach, H.B. 847-9617 w/several yrs of exper. as ~ncy, 2790 Harbor Blvd,
1793 Newport, C.M. 64&-4854 waitress &-hostt'SS for Bistro Restaurant. Cull M a x , GENERAL office, full time
Newporter Inn. N. B. opening in Seal Beach of.
Advertising Secretary 6#-1700. fice. 1 person off Ice.
Great oppor. for ambitious, 0 Diversified duties. Must be CONSTRUCTI N Secretary, capable of dealing with
highly skilled girl. Brains, experienced. publo·c & •~. "·" :m.
Initiative & sh required. 979-Snl be~ 9 & 5 , 598-5556 Tei;;;om~ • An
8~16~0 COOK. mature individual equal opportunity employt>r.
previous experience i n G I Of $450 ASSEMBLERS health field pre f e rr e1I. enera C ~d Small, acute care hospit;U. Good '!)'ping l sl & "'" shin In electronics Write, classiricd ad No. 4M. Call Lorraine
firm. No Exper. required. D ·1 Pll t P 0 Bo 1560 W}:STCLIFF Apply In person, 9 thru 3. ai Y 0 • · , x ' rsf:innet .
Pottcr &: Brumfield Div. Costa t!esa, Ca. 92626· zoJ;e we~~~{iff ~.~B
AMF Incorporated Cook-Pantry Man 64~2770
26181 Areopuerto Both W/iJ'eat exper In lrg. GENERAL Ollice, !I 0 m ('
San Juan Capistrano food operation. Call Chef bookkcepina ......... Tyning. An """'Ual .nnnnr empt M/F ~-1 (TI1) "•A 1700 "'6 -~.. "'
.... v .. ~ r ''°"' U'...-• lntelll1<:ent lady w/growing
ATTRACTIVE Slim girls -COOK, part time. Tues. & co. 673-6663.
Women, to demonstrate l'l('W \Ved. 6an1 'til Zpm . Hun-1 ----~~~----
food product in markets. tin~on Beach 8-17-3,1141 GIRLS
Own transp. P/timc. $50 U 1 J -• k ,,.,.., ,,__., COUNTRY CL B Easy, un job. mm .. -u. o~n-
per w · '"'..........,.,· COOK ings. Full, part Ume, day
Automotive or nii;i:ht . Apply in pereon AG GRESSfVE, ambitflus All around Cook, 5 days R at 2930 West Coast Highway.
new car salesperson fOI' one "'eek. Apply at SantR Ann N('wport Beach, any day
or the largelft F o rd CounTry Club. 2 O 3 8 2 aflernoon or eve. ~•e-hl-m· O •an"" Ncwporl Blvd., S , A ,
Cou..,..... "' .... ~.,. ' "' ~ lietwcen 2 & 4 pn1. No phone HOTEL. Exp front d<'sk
nty. • •v,, ... .-ive .pay o·11Jls please. <irrk/cashier. 1'1ttn kno\v
plan. insurance, t'tc. Ex· NCR 4200. Apply in peMK>n. perienct pt'E'ferred. See CUSTODIAN for cleaning & Airport.er Inn Hotel, Irvine. 1Jon Crevi<'r. vacuuming. Early morn . THEODORE ROBINS I hrs. 5am-9am. Call 675"-0100 1-IOUSEKEEPER-Cook. l'xp .• FORD for appt & Interview. full time, {possibly live In!.
a:iro Harbor Blvd.. DELIVERY for 1'11.'SSenger for elderly genUeman in
Costa Mt?Sa Serv!Ct". own transp, !>.lust Balboa. Mu~t havl' driven;
AVON CHRISTMAS EARN· dkoowl >t C"'•" Nr.1esa'... Corona ~~n-~ :i·:j,p~~64~~'. INGS cun help make tht' e i ar, L'Wpci., areas. tlOUSEKEEPER, Uve-in,
holidays happll'r for your ~54~2~·~ll~'4"'°. ,,.--,..--,,.."'""'~" La'.guna Beach s e 11 s I d e
entire family! It's ea.c;y sell-DEl..IVERY of DA t LY home. 5% days. English not
Ing, fine Avon producls lor PILOT. SUNDAY ONLY, to 'd •~ ~1 ,_ tlbl Chri K_, req O ............... • our u·•'!Sis e stmas newspaper cw • oeMI. Re-I'°"""'°'=""'=',_-~--Calalogue. Call Now 540-71)41 quires !he UllC or n Station llOUSEKEEPER for con.
BABYSITTER ; hOusekerp-\Vn&:on or Van, Con!act Mr. valescenl hospital. 1 4 4 5 er. 3 to 7 pm. Student 01<. Harry Seeley, 330 Wesl Bay ~u)lf'rior, Nt>wport Bl'neh.
640-011i6 eves; 673-976~ St ., Costa, Mesa. llooi;('kNJPf!I', pt!ln1«'.
kd Park LlOO Conv. Cenlf'r. w y!'I. DENTAL Assistnnt. Chair &IZ..A<H'1
BABYSITIF.R, Pc-nn I s . side. F.xp. only. Pn-\rcnllvi•
11n•a, y<ior hOme. 4 & 6 yr prncllct' F / t i m,., Nn llf>USE\V IVF:S ih nt'('d o"I!
old i D:llly·5 day v.·kJ. Salurda.Yl'. S."ilO. B e n c h wurdrobi'. xtra lllOn('y. No 675-R.l/{t':'I, nre11.. 962-21136. , r<1;111"r. No i n v c <1 I m" n I . -~-----I JlN>linc Fashkln!I. ( 2 1 :~ I
llAllYSITI"f:R ' 3 cMl<Wo, Des·1gner/ •»--· ~ -11 may live-In. Contact P.1r. · ·"-'Jo) or oo.,... ... , ,
Cn!eman. 547-4359 aft 8 pm. Engineer ~~
Beauty operators
wanted.
MIJJlf. hAve cllentele. Paid vacation &. health &
holpitalliatiOn. Lldn tllllr
Fa11tl.ions. Call E ' I e I I e ,
673-1970. -
Wanted IQ llll perm, J'l"ll'ltion
In M"tSrinf'('rlnr dept. Expt'r.
In desiill &: mlrng flbc?"R l.'11
die~I pow<!T'ed yacht,; req'd.
AdvanCf'T'f\ent oppor. + xln'I
ro bent"rltt. Send "'5Umc to
R.E.J. Pool~
Columbt• Yachts
~~
SfRYICES•AGENCY
F'rte & Ftt PoslUonl'i
S•lesmen to $l1K
' Call dcif or night 7 days a week MenfWomen. Rns. Raitea [ '"~~~~~..,~~~~ [ JIO min. C.11 Ml!--1450 A l)lv or WhHRkM' Cnrp,
•BEAUTIClAN \V/NEAT 275 MrC'ormtrk AV't',
Recent l!'X]lel'. wlhot m<'lt
A({helliVC'S,
F~ lt1an.'\ttr .•.. 10 fl200
o!'
•
Bruce Reynolds
(714) 522-6320
.
Alter•llono--642-514$
Nrat, accuratt". 3'.I )"el.l'S (!X'P,
AP PEARA NCE, F'Olt C:o•lt1 P.1riwa. C•IH. 9262G
RUSY SHOP. 548--9919. f'.q1111I Op110r. Employl·r MI F
Tllo BILLING r.le:rk for
drug store. retail
desire'!. 51$-T5Zl.
n!t{l\l fiTSJf\VA~~IElt$ane fllr d"f
exp. ghlft: (Int' fM' nl«hl ~h\fl.
Owr 111. No IO"tl: ha1rll Jiin-
009 Jte,;launnt, 30Ci0 E.
CUfl1'1 Hwy, Cd~f.
C£RAMTC tile nl!W &
~model. T'rw tit. SmnU
;!<>bl! Mlcome. S36-2C26. Vacancies OO!lt money! Re.nt ~====~"--=~-·I your l~d(!, ap1., 100..,~
A~ want ad I~ A good In-l;lrti .• t'fC. l.hru a Dslly Ptlot
ve1tment. Clauiflcd Ad.
•
.
\
.
E"rc. Sct~tary ...... to 56¥1
Grn.-rnJ Q(fl(•r •• ' ••• I() s.r;s
Sr Ac<'lnR Clrk ·-··-· $550 j;~ul"l' Clerk , .. ,, •••. $400+
St> .. ')l/Piclt1phonfo .... ID $5r.i
Clrrk 1)'pisl ......... '" $475
1ar.1 composer opr .... $.1 hr
llecept11'wlat S550
488 E. 17th fll Irvine.I C.M."
642.1470
I
-
IRVINE PERSONNEi.
SERYICES•PaNCY
t"ree A: l',M! Pol!1hon11
Gradu•I• All'y $12K
1 '\'t'fil' Work Exprrlent-e
Salesman to $11K
NEW FACTORY
EXPANSION
$458 -$640 Per Mo.
AJ Ptr Written
Agreement
SERVtC£ saatian m •"
w/a.per. tor eve. ahlft, •
no factor. Cood pay A
rom1n. Apply Chevron m·
!Ion, 004 So. Cowit Jlwy.,
Uia. Bch.
SERVICE St:i. Altt.'lldant,
graveyd ablft. Mut be f!X·
per &: neat. Apply, 3llO
Harbor, O.i . Exp. w/hot rnf'lt adht1ive Full Time
Sl'cret11rk>s• lfl SG5': Young men'"_: mechanical $.U.440. wk, PT, &>rvicen»en
Secretary, no sh !u 157!1 apllt\ide helpful bul not &: students OK. Blwn 2:30 I
Cltrk Typ\.l'lt 10 ~T.> U't'tl lli 51 1 be 19 4::11 pn1, 492-442'l for appe.
Rt.'Ct·pt/Ty1>is1 $450 ~ . u. or SEYllNG nlBC'hine ton Sr, Act'lnK Cll·1·k ~ O\'\'r Able to IJtart \\Wk 1m-opera ·
JBr.I Con1posl'r Opr $.1 hr mediately, If llCcepted. For =f.'~ &-overtock.
l>'il{UI'-' Clk/Can.'<·r or $·100 Joh !r1formalion. TOP DRAWER
t88 E. 17th ffll Jrvlnr1 c.r.1 Call Tuesday SWIM WEAR
642·1470 10 a.m,. 4 p.m. 1l'liO Ounpus Drive
~ 776-8551 ,1't'\lo'pol1 Beach ~
INTERIOR Dl'f"igncr&, ExJl. Silk scl'ffner. Will 1n1n..
1'Urn. CrptJI. drape~. Willi NURSES aide u .7 shift. f'UU. TIME
paper. shutters, ~ Mesa Verde ConvaJ Hosp., Contact Mr. l.akr-,"646-2614
JANITOR JAL -Pennanent 661 ~(_enter St., C. f.1 , TEACHERSretir!'d. unem-
Part Time eve:nlng work in 548-5583. ..i---'. hou.Sf'wift'/leeche-rs. Orange County. 4 lo 6 houri. O ~v,_
5 riays a week. For men & perators Innovative publisher of e<f.
A ~1 t 409 N uca!ional programs needs women. p.,.y a . "1c ar<> gro¥.'1ng! And looking aas.lst&nts In marlteting new
Harbor, Santa Ana. fOI" U'P. INDUS'l'RIAL SGL products to public 1ehools.
JOBS NEEDLE OPERATORS to Pur1 or F/time. 83CM715.
URGENTLY NEEDED W'Ork on custom surf trunks. f=°"='°-""°'=='0-':='--"-"'"~I
•Secretaries If you qualify call KAf..'VAS TELEPH9NE Sales.: Sell
• Keypunch Opemtors BY KATIN, 213·'128-6230 or Southern Orange County'• e Industrial 714,:521-4880. Favorite Newspape'r trom
• Biiling Clerk Typist .l .. PART-Time Sixt'y. Real your home. Make u much
Irvine 54~50 cs~te ofr:., N'Pt Beach a& you need. Generous rom·
NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO call R. J\11"ycr 6Th-?n8 misskln on each ule. Call
Temtxi Temporary lil'lp 5.17-fil39.
JUNIOR Salesrnen: 10.15. PainterwCarpenter 1-'----------1
Earn $21).$40 per Wl'('k g<'t· Temporary, 40 hrs, 8-5 TELLER ting nl'\\' cu11tomeni: for thl' Porter
DAILY PILOT. This ill oot a Penn. 20 hrs, 6-10 am
nE"wspaper route and does InlPrview hrs 2-4 pm
not include oollectin~ or Pennnnel Office
delivering. Transportation ls THE BROADWAY Attractive opening for win-
do""' teller. Savinas &. Joan
expcrit'nce s:n"-ferrcd provided. Wt> work four hours after tiChOol and il on irTl Edinger, Hunt. Bch.
Saturday. \"1e have openings Equal Oppor. Employer
for Fountain Valley & South[~~"'l~"""""'l'!"'"""""[ 1-Iuntington Seach areas on-PBX Operator. r.1 at u r e IMPERIAL SAVINGS
ly. You must be out of person, willing to learn. & LOAN ASSN.
school by 3 Pf\.t t o Able 1 Answering Service. J3(j6 Vla L~do
p._'U'tici~t('. Elcperi<'nceJ Please apply, 535 Center St. Ne\.\•port Beach 673-31)) l:f given pr 1 o r It y. CM. Equal Opportunity EmployPr
9641. Real Estate Sales Truck dri\'Pr &. warehow;e
KEYPUNCH FREE ,,.,.,.,o, 16-21. $2 h T . OPERATOR Fttlme. Cha.net> tor arl·
wncemt:'nt. Apply Tripp
Immed. Qpenlng ror IBI\1 129 License Training Eleclric, 2940 Randolplt.
?Pr. Good !'illlary ~ benefits Limited Time Only ~CM~·---~----
1n our H.B. location. Only famous license course now TWO expericnc:M real estate
exp, 129 oprs nttd apply. available thru Tarbell t:om· sa.lcsmen. La r g C!r com··
Call 842-7751 for appt. pe.ny Applicants ful.ly r& mission split. bonus plan.
UNICUARD INS. GROUP lmb~ upon quallt1catton. Call Ginny, 557-4130:
LVN's, relt~f. Part-Tlmo New or exper1enced sales TI'PIST: .Large lo e e. I Nurses Aid~s & Laundry manufacturing linn, IdeaJ
1-lelp. Bayview Conv. H01Sp. people. Opertlnaa available. location near tr ee ways.
54().:5690. Complete-trafni:n$ ·program. Salry + bonus. Greif
J.1AINTENANCE Mechanic Future management Oppcl't"> chance to 11dv11:nct'. Ftt
for rental yrd. s 0 me tunlties. Call Mr Sloan at paid. Also fee Jobs. Call
delivt'l"y work. Applications 842-558L Jean Brown, 540-60 55.
acceptcd 9 am-12 noon. Sat TARBELL ~~J:'l; Bl:r. !;.(· 2790 10/14. At 1-fartley & Nixon .,...,.,
Rental Inc 2862 Barranca WAITRESS, EXPER. Rd, lrvint•. 540-5185. REAL TORS Must be ovl'r 21. No Phone
~1ALE Clerk, retail sales. REAL ESTATE Calls. Apply in person, Surf rttime or moPns. PhonE! &t Sirloin, 5930 W. Oaast
642--W3 ask lo' Phil. PROFESSIONAL Hwt .. N""'J>Ort Bch
r>.1AN wantcd to bu I Id Salesmen • troken• The op. WAITRESS. Cottage Cotttt
nursery boxes. Apply 9:30 to ...-. ... 1ty ,. be , ·y Shop, 562 W. 19th, CM. Good 4 pm, 17552 Gothard; H~ ............ , ao re. OU att tips. Exper. necesaary, All
tington Beach. · needed hnmediately for our1-'sh~l~lt=•~· -~~---=--
MANAGER, 3) units, C.M. rapidly ~ Re a I \Vaitreu. E"per. Days
Reliable, exp, non drinker. Estate dlvunon, Positive op. Dick Churches Rest
Ref.& rcq'd. 644-1060 for pppt portunJty tor ~nt. 2698 Newport Blvd., C~I
Sat & Wed. Plione. WAITRES>Frod &. cocktail
MANAGER ta exp. Blue Beet.
E"P· not necesssry. Join -673-9904 aftt'~
growing chain of successful .,, \VATER & Cleanup -• <'ar washes. Must have iilimmwaMi I ~-mechanicnl aptitude abili-¥¥¥£3~ for nursery. Call for appl.
ty to supervise h~lp 0
& han-~-=~'"=1~· =~====-di!' customers. Willing to R.E , Trainee. Brkr & WllO WANTS T0.\\1)RK?
work Jong hoots. Salary dew:loper will train & DRIVE A CAB!
$185. to S~. per week to spon_,.. for lie. Call between CHOOSE your hoW'l!. u'Ork start de p c n d l n g on J0am-3pm. ~1124. for younelf, be your own
background. R a p i d ad-boss Men or v.umen. Can be
vancement, fringe benefits. RECEPTIONIST 5lighUy handicapped. Vts,
Xlnt future. \Vrite for npet. . ful retired. Age 71 to 70, !SUP-ClauUicd Ad No. 40S, Daily Day or night, I or part plement YoUf' Income. Driw:
Pilot, P.O. B<.x 1560, Costa time, no exp. _necessary, we a cab 6 hrs or more a day.
Mesa 92626 train. no typing, no short-Apply In pcnnn Yellow Cab
MA1NTENANCE ~f~;tcW~Plv~t~ ~eU~ E. 1sdi St .• Costa
COUPLE Nt"WJ>Ort Beach, afternoon \VIOOWER ~
Large' apartment complex, or eves. (Sat il SUn. olc). \Vishet 111:abie yn! at:~~
m~t be thoroughly ex-\.\'Oman to help malnta.ln mil
pcnenced. Havo own too~. RED CARPET home. Rm • board. May
WUe lo •"'* part time lo AT THE BEACH'. """' """""' job. 54&-5638. <l Utce. $500f1no + 2 BR apt.
Call 546-0371. Sell homes . priced trom[••••••••••I
MATH MAJORS
NEWPORT BEACH
FiMncial institution has Im·
1nedlate opening fOr
management trainee.
$35,COO to $60,000. R('d ~
Carpet now ha.'1 200 officel! I j ~
ln 3 Weoitem atAtes. Regular Mlrchardte "'V
massive TV' nev.·!llpaper & 1.;;· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiill radio advt:'rti.-.em<'nts.11
Relt>rrals from 0 r (' g on , Antiques IOO
Arizona & N. Calif. ca11 1;.;;;;.;;.=:..;;_------'
962-55ll Ask for Vicky or vtCJ'ORIAN l0Vt1ent $150.
George. Vl&rian cha1Jc klunge,
SALES Clerk-plumbing-or orig. honiohalr 11Uk, $200. l\1INIMU~1 hardware exp. Earls Plumb-Needlepoint rocker $ 6 0 .
QUALIFICATIONS Ing Inc. 1526 NC'Wpor1 1~494-~Zl~4_2_. ------* College Degree Blvd., C.M. WANTED. Largt> ch In a * Math Major Saw Sharpener cablllel. n ea o on a b l ~. * 11., Yn. Work Exper. 644-4687.
Exp'd, knowledgl' of c11rhidPI---------~ Only those-with these tool!'. lkda.'I l>.lachlne Tool Appliances 802
qualificatiom fi.eed apply, S<-rvice. 548-6227. w As I-IE Rs , Dry t' r s,
Submit ~me w/snlary re-SECRET ARY Di~hwJUhen r't"COndltloned. qu_iremPnt In ronlldcnce to · g u A. r n. De 11 v ere d
Cluoilfied ad no. 532 r/() Newport Beach. The lrv1ne 546-5211/83S-7620,
Dnily Pilot, P.O. Box 1500, Compttny Sreks shopping RECOND 1 d I ~ M ,...K """'""' eent('r .......,motional ~ · r a e · n •I> "'~ai Q;p;;· E;Yt'r tary w /;;;~. 2 yrs. ~lated pllances &: TV~. Dunlap'1.
!'l'l!~~!""~!!!!!!"!"~'""~[ exPer. Some l',!>ilefC(' or bu•· 1815 Newport Blvd., C.M..
l>.tEDICAL Receptionlllt, 3 ine11~ !IChool P"'fert'('(J, Typ-~w7780.
v.•k.<1 only. Start Oct 23rd. 1 ln,i: 70 w.p.m, SH 90 w.p.m. ~R~-1-w~~h--/~D---
Elnployl'e ofc. 1r11. forms. & lite bookk~pln1t. Pleuant en as trs ryers
lfadlt•y 1)'9fem. L t t (I pent0naJUy & Ability 10 deal $2.. \Vk. Full main!.
bkkpn.11:: Reply to da1111:ified w/buslnesamen A mu.st. * 639-1202 *
ad no. 5.'lO c/o Daily PUot, Ab 111 t fi Io a cc e fit MAYTAG repairman hfl8
P.O. Box 1560, O>St.a Mc11t., t1'11ponalb llty &: work n-wuhers m. to SIOO. C&n
Ca m26, dependently. Xlnt u>0rklng dl'HV'('r w/l yr, guarn.
• MOTEL MAIDS. \VlLL condllions & co. bl-neflts. R39-1778.
CONSIDl::R LIVE IN. Apply Call 644-3389 -w~.--~~~~.~-~
22tY.i lf11rbor Blvd ., C.)t Between 9 em & 12 noon '"SiOO ~r ... b:;t offer
~tOTll Elt dt'1>JM:n1te nl>t'<IS ~or &'B-1753
,olt\CI', CilM :Jtt:t fur kin· SECRF:I'ARY: ~ r o V.' in IC 'Cold5po0t R.ftrt;erator
de!'Rartencr. 673-7S07 or nrchltecturaJ hrrn nN"tl!i Ru111 $2S.
R.'l8-lnl. !ihllrp Rppcaring gal wlnfc-• ;~73 &tt. ~·PM. ........................... 1 P'"'"°"'"lty. Some ex"'' lo ---
NCR OPERATOR bookk•'Cplog • ploo. No ob MAYTAG 14 lb ""'""' l
Niwport BNch
ncedeod on Udi"I one. Only malch1f!K t'lct ~. U..ed l
¥.'OT'k i houn. Sla,rt S580 Cnll yr, ~. 83S-177!. -
Nancy Mlly, 5 40 -611;;~ 40'' ell'Ct ilotpolnt stove.
NM:t t"YnM'ienced NCR Coaltal Af,tcncy, 2 7 9 0 1 yr old. Awctdo, 'OVtn&. ..,-who:· u. Harbor Blvd .. CM. .SO. 545-3'lll9 operator can 1;ype ""' .......--___ ___ ___ ___ '"""" •
w.p.m. & Ull! 10 key addi"f ~~;$6001_F_u_r_n_1t_u_,_• _____ 1_1_
1 "_11lclilne or cileul&tor. Poll-A/Payable sim ~lOVINGf Mu#l Sell! Fuml·
IJOO involVM h<!evy machine F /C Bootclcttprrs $650 ture. appllal1Cf1 houwhol:d
hookkttpln1 & Po• t I n II tOO(}(i FH Pflid By Company !tl"n111 R.ruonable pricf!s,
.)ourMI entry 10 the gtr>era.l Liz Rtlnder'• Ag~ 1,C:,;•::•:.• '-'fll%=='C:t3So=. =--=-..,--..,.-!
lf'd1t>r. 4500 Campm Dr. GRANDFATHER Ooctc di,..
f'onn11I Moct1.t1on tn AC-54&-2118 Newport Bc>Arh jl1K tnhll" .t., chairs, eotie!e •
tounling ~Ired. txctllent ~ trw:I tabl~•. &a rly Amer. all
oo. btof'll'flt1 SECRETARY -RN't'Ptkln\111. :.:lnl ronct. m-8481.
llnta-Bcb. X.lnt 1ypi.t_ To 01.;Dnoor.1 •.1J...~mplete.
Cell $600. I n t er v It'\.\' 1 In xtm UJNU.
M4.JJ19 • l.akr.wood (213) SJ1-TC20. • MH1878 '*
Betwn 8 fl m & 12 noon The t••et1t d'nlw ln the W~t. *••Sotn. • m&lrl'llhl lo\'f' Onty 1 , • _. DILILY Pllo1 OutllSed 1r111, 1111!\'l'r 11*"<1, Both SlaG.
M . f>U.¥1S. f)rlv.1111• ntN 7'11n ----·
' . '
•
..
,
'
OAllY PllOI
[ l!§J I -ll§l I ... dwc f I I[§] I
Pl•not/°'Von• 826
-bRGAN HOBBY
For •n •d ·In Wom•n'• World
Call M•rv Beth '42-5678, ext 3:::0
Young, New, Slim! Snow Queen Set
Cats 152
PERSJAN & J.UmaJayan kit-
tens, many colors. $50 & up. * 892-2970 *
9264
SIZES 34-48 I.., 11f ,.,;_ 11f,..-r' ...
New. youne. 111 mm Ing
from ti-. lidMwept neck to
the pleat·blftzed hcrnllne!
Bask in the glow ol a.II the
compliments you'll ~el.
Printed Pattern 9264 : New
Women'11 Slze1 34. 36, 38, 40,
42, 44, 46, 48. Sl7.C 36 lbu11t
40) take• 3 yards 45-lnch.
SEVENTl'·t1VJo: ('1-:r:'iT~
for each pattern -odd 25 Cl'Dtl tot e-ach pattern ror
Atr Mail and Special llandl·
lngi --~tbuwlM! thitd.clMll dehwry MU take three'
.,,'ffkl or more. Send to
Marian Mart.In. the DAILY
Pn.crr. 442:, P•ttem Dept .,
232 Weit 18th St., N"'
Yort. N.Y. ttml. Print
NA.MS. -"DDR.F,&5 with ZIP, l!ldll Md wrYUJ
NlJMBER.
SEE MORE Qultk
Fuhlonl and chcloee ont
pattern me from nur SPlinr-Summer C11-.q;. An
.i...1 Only !!Oc.
IN~ANT SF.\VING BOOK
_. today, wear tomorrow.
IL INST>J<T F~SlllON
BOOK -Jluridred1 o t tu111onracr.. n.
Like to T'raMf OUT' Trni1M"'11
Paradlle oohrmn ts fnr you!
S Jinn, S day1 for $ buckJ.
--------.
'
Dogs as•
NE\Y store to l!ervc your
English & \Yestern riding
needs: Horse \Vorld, Town
& Country Square, lB!!E.?
Bea.ch Blvd., H.B. 963-3990.
MORSE BOARDING. &ck Bay area. Rcaoone.ble. * 557-.6342 *
..,las Wanted
I
l§J ( 1§1 I ___ .. ]§J I
...
I 970 Aut0>, Used 990 Auk>" u .... _ _.;.._;,.~;;.._..;.;..;.I;.;;;=-=::.:....--.;.;.;, CHEVROLET • I
MG CADILLAC
•
'67 Chry.11. NC\Yllt XI cond. , •
Air! power bk & steerUJ
$995. &33--0763,· 545-3031.
CHRYSLER New Yorker, 168
Xlnl cond. •·
675--0310; 548-1197 , ''
CONTINENTAL
'63 F-<15, Good, dependable
transp. While w/f'<'d Int.
""' !Inn. Call 642-3582 all 1 pm.
PINTO
•
San Cleme:pte
C pjstr~no
* * VOL 65, NO. 290, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
'
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORll!IA
Today's Final
N. Y. St.oeks
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1972 TEN CENTS
Boater Pulls Gun at Dana Harbor
An up tight yacht.anan who allegeclly
wed his pistol to defend his rlgbl to cut
In Uoe al the Dana Harbor Iauncltlng
ramp SUnday wu still being aought by
auibortu .. today. 'rile Incident whk:h ocwned at the
launching ramp al about nooo SUnday
, typified a becllc weekend fa< harbor
patrolmen, who did most of their ln-
vestlgatloo on dry land at the new
,...,,..atlon faclllly ••
· Their other cues involved:
-A customer at a po&b restaurant fall.
•
Ing from a second-floor balcony onto a
restaurant employe.
-Another · patron or the 1 a m e
establlshment choking on a piece of pop-•
corn. -Four bowlakver aallboata.
-Five poWer boeta ln dlstresa at sea.
~ fisherman washed from the west
breakwater. The gun incident took-pla<e In the
afternoon hours Sunday u boaters were
waiUog their -to µae the bwiy Iauncltlng ramp.
Patrol spokesmen said Robert Frtnch,
32, of orange had been waiting hi> tum
for some tlmt when an unidentified man
aod hist,!~~ cruiser came In and took a place of Fr<och's craft at the
waiting docia.
1.11 II'gllllleot ensu<d and French ontled
the bowUoe of the usuper's craft. Al that
point the Irate skipper emerged from the
cockpit with a pistol.
.. Touch my boal again, aod I'll blow
yoor bead off," be told bis fellow
seaman.
French then ltft to seek patrolmen.
When they returned, the boat and gun·
man bad Oed.
Officers Issued a geoeraJ broadcast for
the boat and car userteclly owned by the
suspect, So far no arrests have been
made.
Among the nxre wi'usual cases was
that of the falling customer.
Thal took p!aoe Saturday at the Jolly
Roger Restaurant.
Patrolmen said the patron. Carles
•
Henry of 26292 Via CaUfornie, Capistrano
Beach, lost bis footing and toppled onto
an unidentified male employe of the
establi!hmenl
Henry was unhurt ; the employe was
knocked out for a short time, but sought
no treatment after he recovered COO·
sciousness.
On the same day, officers answered
another call a~ the Jolly Roger and found
a wo~n customer regaining he.Oobreath.
The \Yoman, they said, had choked Oil a
Ir ' ' Ill
•
Clemenw
Collision
'
Kills Trio
·,California lUghway P a t r o 1 in·
* ~ators today continued their probe
17 Into the call!eS of a grinding bead<>n col·
· Jlsioo Saturday ·1n San Clemente which
claimed the lives of a well-tnown Coma
I
Mesa electronio engineer, his wife and a
)"DUDI Covina man.
The crub, Whk:b took place OD a
~ of ftteway which will have
--...teMtrlp protectloo Installed early thl>
-t. killed all threo ....--h!tCa••Jy.
'!be 'rietims wm F'red.L. w~ It an dectroolcs eqi-for Pftilco-Fvnl aenmeotrvnlc for the pal 11 yeara;
bis wile, Mary E1a1no W'""-lh. '!1
and Rodney Jooepb Toml8ll<d, 20, •
The Wadsworlbs lived at 1911 Bowling
Green Drtve, Costa Mesa.
Patrolmen said several witnesses to
the collision said they noticed Toma.s-
saccl~• northbound car benla driven
•ratlcally shortly belore the collision.
Thal auto auddenly left hte lanes and sirerved into a paved, but yet-unJ{U&l"ded.
ctnter strip at the Avenl.da J>allzada
overcrossing. After hiltloi a depressed foundation,
the luto vsu!U!d into ...,.hl••md lanes
aod sma!!Jled beadoo. into the new station
.. goo be"'8 driven by Mrs. Wadsworth.
San Clemente firemen, several Navy
.,..,,..... passing by In a Marine Corps
ambulance and _.ther rescuen boUled
-jSee FATAUI, Pase Z)
For~r Passes
$5 00 in Cheeks
[n San O emente
,t.n alleged forger who already bas left a long trail of bad checia in other parts
of the Orange Coast has pasaed almost
$500 in worthleu ones at San Clemente
bualneBses, II was learned today.
The suspeot, named In a llC,000 war·
rao~ passed four aeparale cbecia with a 6nllz\ce company name Oil them at small
bt•stnesses ID the city late last wee.t.
Tbe bad checks were made out-in
denomlnations ·of 11114 and 167. Pacific
Finan<e Company· ls lnicribed at the top
ol the worth! ... paper.
Tbe warrant names John Neal Marler,
C5.
lt is alleged that 'othQr ...... he .uses
Include Robert 0. Laraen and John
Henry Marlin.
Local police sal:d lbe same man is
wanted for questioning In a large series
of alleged forgeries in the Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa and Huntington
Beach sreas.
LOTS TO SELL?
LIST IT HERE
When you've IOI a lot to aell1_ l!sl 11 all
where people aelJ a lo! .•. Die 11111: •
COLO 4 pc. teettonal, &JW 2
make couch. Bed tn l, any
pc. $50. 2 new gold aml occ
chrL Mite. cMltJ, tbll
HOOWT vac. Ml~.
typtwrtr., chrome fl1'I 1111 A
tcrttn tan naua:h. 10febed A
chair. SM. xxx-xxxx.
"Wow! Fantastic!" That'• the 'W&f tho
ad•ertl>er described the respooaa to that ad. Try 11 for .!'IJUrtelf. Dial the direct
bl!e to DAILY PILOT clanlfled lldver-
tlsing, 114W678. ·
• •
'WaU to Wall'
California Power
Demands to Soar
SANTA MOfilCA (AP) -Picture
caw:ornia with nuclear power plaats
spaced only elg)Jt milu •P¥1 along the
state's entire l,Ollknile coast.
'I1le portrait is not whimsical, a
research team al Rand Corp. reported
today In a study commlMiooed by the
Legislature.
Sfake ilJ. .. lf eqJ1
i flays Banker's
.
Fears on B urial
LONDON (UPI) -When Harold West
died, l'i.s doctor drove a stake through his
heart to make sure he was dead ; when
he was buried, Ibey did not nail bis coffin
shut in case be was not.
West was no vampire. Ha was just a
cautious hanker who feared being buried
alive. ~
When he died last June at 90, West left
a will dlrecing that .. my c:ilffln shall not
be screwed down and that a surgeon be
in5lructed to pierce my heart with a steel
0< other lnslnunent to make certain
death has occurred."
His family plty>ldan, Dr. Eric Kerr,
saJd &mday: "I did what Mr. West
wanted, but it was the fll'St request of
that sort I had ever had."
Ken-said West, a London bank
manager, wanted to be certain he would
be dead when be went to hls grave, but if
by cbanoe be was not, he wanted a
means of escape.
"He was very meticulous in his habit!
as a bank manager," the doctor said.
"But this did not seem to be overdoing it.
Many people have fears of this sort."
Maurice West, the banker's nephew
who received the bullt of the $87,000 bis
uncle left, said: "It was an odd request
but if you can't have your own way at
that time of life -I mean death -when can you?"
The hanler left 11,250 ID the Rev.
• David Wright of St. Paul's Angllcao
Olurcb In Worthing, aouth of London,
where West lived.
"He was a looely old m~ afraid of
many tbinga,'' said Mr. Wrlgbt'a wHe.
Alice ... Bui he bad faith and WU looking
forward to going to beiven.
"We shall buy a car with the money,,.
ahe aald.
The researchers said demands in the
nation's most populous state are ac-
celerating -so enonnously that unless
power growth is reduced, Californians
will need 130 huge new power plants by
the Zlst Century.
In fact, each .plant W<Wid have to be In
the 1,2:00 megawatt range, twice the
capacity of the state's only sizeable
nuclear power plant lo<;ated qn the coas'
al San <mire near the Western While -coestal -Jilea ,-be-found, the · Althoogb douti5. ~ enougb .Wlable
-. that ulllity cmn-
paol .. lodt for ocean loealions because
they want cheap water for cooling.
H the new plants were built along the .
ocean, the researchers said, "then in the
year 2000 there would be 1,200-megawatt
power plants every eijht miles along the
coast."
The Rand team proposes t h a t
California slow its electrical use growth
instead, because so many plants would
threaten a "deteriorated enrivonment"
aod power aborlage could he espeoted
anyway unless a careful consructlon
timetable were mel
SuggesUog commercial and resldeoHal
conservation techniques ranging from
turning out the lights in an empty room
to usillg solar energy for water beating,
!See Cll1filS, Page I)
Bogus Bill . Left
l\t Liquor Store
Fast~ange artists plied their trade in
a San Clemente liquor store Sunday
artemoon and left the clerk stuck with a
counterfeit $10 bill.
The appeerance of the phony cash was
the fourth in less than a week in local
businesses. Early last week hank
employes discovered three counterieit
Pl hills In bwilne!s deposits.
Police said Sunday's incident occurred
at Dad's Liquor>, 2421 s. El Camino
ReaL
Employe> told police a group of men
came in and began asking ror ~
gressively larger amounts of change,
then left.
They succeeded In taking $10 In good
money aod leaving the phony 011< behind.
officers" said.
'Gunslinger Type'
l>All Y PILOT Slaff Pllfle
BALLOT PROPOSITIONS WILL BE AIREO IN SAN CLEMENTE
Marilyn O'flrien, Sue Hinman Bone Up for AAU W Program
University Women Slate
Seminar on Propositions
Members of the San Clemente chapter
of the American Association <lf Universf..
ty Women and a 1>3nel of several experts
will present a seminar 'nlur8day evening
to examine major propositions appearing
on the November ballot.
The 8 o'clock event is open to the public
Electric Company auditorium.
Kissi~ger Role Described
Members of the panel who will explain
the pro and con arguments of each major
ballot Item will be former San Diego
County Supervisor Miles Kratha who now
Is a publicist for a taxpayer's group; en-
vironmental consultant Eric Nordhausen;
representatives from the American Civil
Liberties Unin (ACLU); members of the
League or Women Voters: Richard
Milner, an aide to Asse mblyman Kenneth
Cory, and San Juan Capistrano Mayor
James Thorpe, who Is a candidate for the
Assembly.
The prime propositions which will be
examined wtll lnclude Propositions 11, 14,
18.and 20.
SAN FRANCIBCO (UPI) -The authO<
of a ..,. book about -1cfenUal aide
Henry Kissinger delcribes him u a oorl
of "gonsllnger" type ol pro!eulonal
diplomat that II ncw lo American polllicl. .
"Kissinger hired out to N e I 1 o n
Rociefelier In 1161 to gun clown Richan!
Nixon for the prealdenUal nomination,"
authoNttorney Charlca Aabman said
Sunday.
.. He !ailed to atop N!JA>n. but then join-
ed htm as 8 for-hire b'OUb!Hbooler.
"De Gaulle, the Berlin wan, Red
Ollna, Vietnam • • • KIDlll1ffr handleo
them 11!. So he hao moved up In the Nls·
on ldmlnlslratlob to beconle the most
J)OWttful'No. 2 man In the history of the
United Stales.
•
"England. France and i;ome other
COWJtr.iea have bad diplomata who were
profellionab and conUnued to repruent
their counby through numerous changea
In government
"Bui tha brllllanl Henry Klsalngcr is
the fi.nt of this 'gunslinger' IOrt the
United States bas ever bad."
Ashman said he rlen considered using
the UUe, "Have Brain, Wlll Travel," for
his book on Klsslflaer.
Instead, tile boolt ha1 been pubii.hed
by Lyle Stuart, lnc., of Secaucus, N.J., as
.. KIMlnger. The Adventure• of Super-
Kraut." _
Ashman aakt 1:8 an lntorvlew he waa
astonlahed while wrlUng and researching
his book that 10 many people he talked to
. had forgotten that Klsalnger'1 job at the
1968 Republican convention was to "stop
Nixon."
"Al ona point, an opthnistlc Klsalnger
octualiy told frlenda from Harvard that
he felt they bad stopped Nixon and
Rockefeller would a:et the nom1naUon,"
Ashman writes.
"Burled In the pms reports of
Rockefeller'• announctment on May 3,
11168, when ha t.ll<ed about the Vietnam
war and domeatlc problems, wu a aig-.
gestlon that the president of the Uoltod
Sl.Jtee should visit Red Olina ," writes
Ashman.
"Thll Idea bad come from one of hla
neW foreign affairs advlstra:· . • . none
other than Henry Kissinger."
'
Ashman uses a light approach In hlo
18e• ~NGEI\, Pare Zl
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A questlofl.answer peMod will follow
the dJSCIJS8ion.
Prisoners Unaware
FLORENCE. Aril. !AP) -Arizona
State Prison ofnctals say four prisoners
who carried a 1ymnast5ca 1kle bol'lt' in
which convicted triple al1yer Charles
Schmiel concealed himself In an escape
effort, were unaware he was lnslde the
equipment. SChmld. once known as the
"Pied Piper of 'nlclon/ • was dllcovtttd
biding In a welding shop locker Thurad;y
afternoon five hourt after he wu
discovered mtasln1.
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piece of popcorn while having a cocktlU
in the i'estaurant 's lounge.
Mrs. Helen Lu.sch, 60, or Corona del
!\tar. did not 1 equire medical treatment.
On t)le same day, an incident on the
harbor's west jetty caused some concern ,
but turned out lo be a minor accident.
Patrolmen said a heavy wave slam.-
ming into the rocks sent William
Robinson, 42, of Perris, fallin& into t¥
channel behind the breakwater.
Robinson surrered scrapes and bruises,
but declined medical treatment.
una
Pais IGdnap_
Tee n, Leave
Her in LA
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of !fie D•llr l"llff S!IMI
A 13-year~ld girl walking down a
Laguna Beach street was ltidnaped,
raped, forced lo subr:til lo perverted Rx
acts, and beaten by two men who ab-
ducted her Sunday night.
She was released in the Hollywood
area. After hospitalization (or treatment
of a possible skull fracture and cuts, tbe
girl was returned to her mother today.
The girl had been visiting relatives
with her mother when the Incident ®-
curred.
Laguna Beach Det. Sgt. NeU Purcell
!aid the girl bad been struck twice with
some kind of weap()n.
Purcell said the victim was forcibly
raped, forced to submit to unnaural acts
and robbed cf personal jewelry by the
men who beat her.
"She was In a somewhat dazed and
confused condition," Purcell said.
She called Hollywood relatives (rom a
telephone in a service 1tetion after being
released by the men.
A massive police search h a d been
undertaken in the Laguna Beach area
after first reports cf the kidnlping were
made.
The California Highway Patrol bad
established a roadblock along Laguna
Canyon Road and helicopters from
neighboring police departments were
employed in searching rugged C8ll)'OD
areas.
The abduction began ln a quiet Lagona
Beach side street.
Screaming hysterically, the 1"'1118 f!frl
was dragged into her abductors' Wtiite
sedan while her young cousin ran to a
nearby residence and telephoned for
police. ·
The 14-yeaNlld Laguna Beach youth
described the men as about 19 or 20
years of age and had medium length
brown hair. He said the man who grab-
ed the girl, grabbed her left arm and
The witness said the car first flUlled
past them as they walked along the fron-
tage road to Laguna Canyon Road.
The car stopped, hacked up and the
passenger opened hi.s door. Picktng up a
large rock, the man reportedly threateo-
edt be girl, grabbed her left arm and
forced her into the vehicle.
She was positioned between the two
men and the car aped away, fint turn1ng
onto Woodlm:I Drtve and then onto
Laguna Canyon Road.
The ltidnaping apparonUy oc:<urred
right jn front of the trailer part slin by
the Laguna Beach Boys Club at about a p.m. according to lhe witness.
The teenagers were walking home
!See KIDNAP, Page ZI
Oranl(e C:Oast
Wea titer
Variable cloudlnea on Tuesday,
but moetly aunny. with hflha al
the beaci><t ammd 7' rlJlni lo II
Inland. I.owl loofgbt IMI.
I NSIDE TOD.\ \I
Non GmMTIV'• Lv(lvlaffe had
plom f or bombing ml.r1'0n.I on
U.S. citlt1 during tM wr, OC·
cording io ~nuw di.cowred
papers. Set •torv on Page 4.
~ ....... " .. .._ " _. .. .. -" (aHfW!Mt • .. __ • ........ ---• ._., • .. __ • ·-.. -..... -·-, . --.... ....... i.. ,_ • ·-~ l•ftfl•lll-t " -·-, .... :::":. ...... , .. ~ '"-ltM I.ION • --" --.
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, .Prisoner's
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Camp Gets
Law Probe
A spec.tal study of the conlroversial but
now-closed Don Lugo prison camp,
demanded by an Orange County Superior
Court judge, asserts it was virtually a
country club for poorly-contro11ed
criminals who came and went at will,
authorities indicated today.
Judge Wiiiiam f\.1urray ardercd the
probe af the wark furlough facility main·
lained by the California lnstitutloo for
Men at Oiino after presiding over the
tria.1 of two inmates 'lli'ho robbed and
murdered a 25-year-old schoolteacher at
his home in Orange.
The results released by Sen. H. L.
Richardson (R·Arcadia) Involved t.000
hours of investigation and left lawmen
shaking their heads in disbelief.
Opened in April, 1'71, the facility neat
Chino had 80 Inmates on a work furlough
program at its highest capacity.
The probe conducted by the state At-
torney General's Office for the Depart-
ment of llealth and Welfare declares •
criminal activity among the convicts -
all who were due for parole in. five
months or less -abounded.
This is what happened at the camp
closed in March, according to the report :
-Drug use and drinking v.•ere ram-
pant. I
-Guns and other weapons were
possessed.
-Staff funds were embezzled by con-
victs.
-The 72-bour pass deadlines were ig-
nored.
-At:lministrators covered up for of·
fenders .
-Mess hall food was openly purloined
and sold for profit.
-Escapes went unreported for t w o
_days afterward.
-Authorities changed unauthorized
absentees'·records so they were listed as
being on pass or paroled, when in fact
some had escaped.
-The entire operation was severely
mismanagl'd.
And, the state>study concludes. the
operation of the bon Lugo prison work-
furlough camp is typical or such pro-
grams at other facilities throughout
Callfomia.
Disciplnary action was taken against
certain individuaJs following the Don
Lugo probe and the temporary leave and
work furlough programs at otbe-r state
facilities were modified, according to of-
ficials.
"A series of serious crimes by work
furloughees caused us to lnvestlgate the
operation and determine it w a s
mismanaged/' t'Ollflrmtd PbUllp D.
Guthrie, chief of community servie6 for
the Califomia Dtpartment of Cor·
rectlons.
He said in one specific instance of
embezzlement it was Incredible that the
camp's staff could have allowed such a
loose operation.
He said that one inmate due for parole
-a man with a history of five conVicllons
for forgery -was placed in a position of
authority with acceu to thousanc:b of
dollwrs.
" Front Page l
KIDNAP ...
from a billiard! parlor located in a near-
by shopping area. The victim's mother
had reportedly been with the children
there but had left them and gone to a
Canyon Acre! home earlier.
Lagun11 Beach officer Terry Temple
talked with the girl's mother, staying
with relatives in the Canyon Acres area.
Weary-eyed Laguna Beach detectives
who had worked the night-long case said
today the investigation will continue.
Purcell and Det. Gene Brooks \{ere
called by the girl'! relaUves in Hollywood
who had received the first phone call
from the young rape victim,
1be girl was met in a Hollywood loca-
tion by Laguna Beach detectives and
hospitaJ,ized. In addition to other injuries,
she hid a cut across the bridge of her
nose, Purcell said. The girl was visiting Lacuna from the Covina area.
DAILY PILOT
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s..t Ju1n C•J1Ftlr1..., A 111'0.. '"'-'
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••r srr.-t, C•tl• M111, c1111orni., t l11•.
Reltert N. W1td
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l~om•1 l(,,.,a
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Stock Fraud Trial •
' N.un Testifies
Against Dulaney,,
By TOM BARLEY
0t I~• l>olJI, ,.,,,, Slllf
A Roman Catholic nun today identified
Laguna HJJ\s stockbroker J113eph Dulaney
as the man who &!Sured her and other
official! at a San Bernardino hospital In
late 1968 that they coold double the in·
come they received from llivested
rt?Serve funds.
Sister Margaret Afary. lhe first pl'tlS·
ecution witness in the Orange Cowity
Superior Court tria l of Dulaney and three
codefcndants. testified that she, St.
Bernardine Hospital controller Robert
Afachan and two other nuns visited
Dulaney's "Taj Mahal " building about a
month later.
She testified that she bad been ap-
proach on lhe topic earlier by Machan,
50, San 'Bernardino, who suggested that
I ht funds currently held in reserve by the
hospitRI could generate more income in
the hands of Du\aney 's World Financial
Trends organization.
.. , and th..! visi t to Laguna HUis led to th&
granting of n $500,000 loan to the D4la11ey,
group.
She tesunoo. over repeated objt?Ct lon.¥.
th~t Dulaney provided hospital represe~
tat1ves with a statement indicating ~
Strong financial JXlSitiOI of hi!I frOUp. r
She said Dulaney. 38. of 2831 Via
Cascadita, San Ciemente. told hospit<fi
representatives he intended to invest the'.
$500,000 in the for1n o( $250,000 shares a(
Azalea f!IOCk.
It is aUeged lhat the stock w.la
\\1orlhless and that the '600,000 subsO..
quenUy received by Dulaney from the SL
Bernardine Hospital wa!I divided among
I-he codefendants. ~: ·
Sister Margaret Mary said flhe wrui ad-
ministrator at the hospital and a member
of its board of directors at the time the
loan was approved .
A car is almost su bmerged in water and mud near
a motel on Highway 1 in the Big Sur area after
heavy rains precipitated mud slides and caused a
UP'I Ttlotoflofo
' hali million dollars in damage in the area of the Big
Sur Village store.
The soft -spoken nun, who was demoted
by her order in mid-1970 at the height of
the Dulaney Investigation and transfer-
red lo Tulsa, Okla. said the conversation
The nun also idenHfied'l'ames '.shipiey,
38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Hunltngto11
Beacl\. as Dulaney's reprcsentatfve at
, the hospital negqUatiohs. She saJd
Shipley, vice president of World lh!nds.
took them on a tour of the TllJ )rfahal
building when the hospital. officials
visited Laguna HiUs.
From Page J .
CRISIS ...
lhe re.searchel'3 say cutting future pro-
jected electrical use by 60 percent is "a
reasonable' goal."
Thus, the projected 33.5 million Califor·
nians of the 21st Century should use XKI
billion kilowatt hours a year instead af
the MB billion kilowatt hours expected
at the current growth rate.
The reduced figure would still be near·
Jy triple the current power use by the
state's 20 ntillion residents.
The Rand team also suggest! a "go-
slow" policy on new nuclear power
plants, now contemplated a!I the heart of
California's f'Oture electrical system.
"Besides the risk of nuclear accident,"
Rand said, "the researeben point to the
UMOl.ved problem of disposing of higb-
Ievel radioactive wastes, which remain
dangerous for thousand! of years."
Plants could harness alternative power
sources, the. ~·esearcbers said, such as
geotht!rinal energy -underground steam
that can be converted into electricity.
"If II/" lf""thermal resources believed
to exist · 1n Imperial Valley fn the
Southern California desert were harness-
ed in a 13-to-15 ,year program, no other
new pawer plants could be required ater
1985," Rand stated, provided the state
could hold to a growth rate of 3 percent
annually.
A second Rand study, commissioned
like the other for the state Assembly '!
Committee on Planning 'and Land Use,
said that even il growth-slowing policie!I
were suceessful about 23 plants in the
1,20().megawatt range will be needed.
The second report recommended a
state agency be established to select
potential sites and deal wltb expected
controversies over plunking down such
facilities around the state.
Gang Selected
Random Victims,
Authority Says
CHICAGO (AP) -Sheriff Richard J.
Elrod says eight members of a black ter--
rorist gang charged in the recent
murders of nine persons were apparently
''roaming the countryside looking for
someone to kill."
Authoritle!I said apparently not all of
the eight men charged participated in all
s\ayings.
Elrod told newsmen Sunday the nioe
white vlclirns, including the members of
two separate families,. apparently were
randomly selected by a Chicago street
ga ng he said called ltseU "De 1-tau
~fau ."
Asked about possible racial motivation,
Elrod .said, "I can see no other apparent
motivalion."
Six men are being held without bond,.
two other.i are still being sought.
The murders took place in the Illinois
.communities of Barrington HUis, Monee,
Highland Park and Carbondale.
Elrod, the Cook County sheriff, said the
De Mau Mau organiJ.aUon apparently wa11
founded several years ago by Vietnam
veterans who had been dishonorably
discharged .
Charles G. Hunt Jr., ~!dent of
~fatcolm X College in Chicago, aald three
men charged had been students there.
but said U'lf:y had been dl!rnWed. He
declined to elaborate.
FromP .. e l
KISSINGER. ••
study of KJsslnger, dwe:lllng on hl1 life fn
r.mnany before lmmlgr11llng Io
America, his rise to power within the
Nixon adminlatration And hla well·
publicir.ed d1tr.1 with some of !he world'•
1exlt.at women.
.''fn fact, he U.'!el someWint of a gun·
ihnger approach Jn hll deaJ1ng1 with
women," Ashman aay!I . ...
Supreme Court Denies
Schmitz' Party Suit
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S.
Supreme C.ourt refused today to aJtow the
American Party to sue 17 states and the
District of Columbia direc'1y in the high
court to get a place on the ballot in
November.
The court acted in a brief order
without comment.
About ~ states have granted ballot
position to the party, which is running
conservative Rep. John G. ,Schmitz of
Tustin for president and Thomas J.
Anderson, a Tennessee publisher, for
vice president.
Suits filed originally in the supreme
Court concern mainly disputes between
the states over boundaries of offshore
resources. ~
January, and also refused to speed up
consideration of a busing case from
Richmond. \1a.
-Declined to review lower court rul-~ngs from Ohio which exempted the auto
insurance business from federal antitrust
laws on grounds the state exercises
regulatory po"'·ers in the field.
-Agreed to hear a Georgia case to
decide whether the 1965 Voting Rights
Act protecting political rights of racial
minorities applies to state legislative
reappartionments.
Episcopals Won't
Ordain Women The American Party's suit said the
defendant states were~ Jbe li.'ir.st
Amendment's guarantee of free speech.
"The first to vote freely for the can-SACRAMENTO (~~ -!iorthem
dldate of one's choice fs ttie eJSence of 8 Ca!Jfornia Episcopalians haVe ~ecfed a
democratic society," the complaint said, pro~~al to allow v.·omep to be l)rdained
"and any restrictions on that right .strike as priests.
at the heart of representative govern-The 6lnd annual conventio~ of lhe
men." Northern California Diocese of I h e
The states the party wanted to sue are Episcopal Church then adopted a com·
Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii peLing resolution that declared "firm
Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Massachusetts: adherence to the fatherly concept of the
Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, priesthood · · · vested only in members
Rhode Island, South Dakota, Teias, West of the male sex."
Virginla and Wyoming. That propasal, adopted 138JI2, wa!I
In other action, the high court in a 7-2 supported by the Rt. Rev. Clarence
vote today. rejected one more tn a long Haden, bishop of the diocese, whJcb in-
serles of legal challenges that the Viet-eludes: an estimated 25,00C parWles and
nam war is unconsUtutionaJ. missions.
Justices William 0. Douglas and The resoluijon wiU be forwarded to the
William J. Brennan Jr. dissented general convention of the EplSCOpa.1
vigorously, saying no declaration of war Church of the Uniled States at Loui!lville,
From Pagel
FATALS ...
more than an hour to rree the trapped
victims.
The accident was a carbon copy of
another three-fatality collision which took
place in the same general area of the
freeway late last month.
That collision, too, took ·place In a
stretch destined for concrete barriers
along the center divider strip.
Funeral services for 11r. and Mrs.
\Vadsworth will be held Wednesday
morning 11t 10 :30 o'clock irl WestcUU
Chapel, Newport Beach.
The \Vadsworths leave three children,
Rebert Lee Wadsworth. James Stephen
Wadsworth and Cindy Elaine Wadsworth.
all of Costa J\.fesa, and t h r e e
grandchildren.
Mrs. Wadsw:>rth also lea\'6 her
mother. Ptirs. Robert Klein of Costa
J\.1esa ; Mr. Wad.!lwortb leaves three
sisters and a brother.
The couple had been residents of Costa Afesa fur the past 13 years.
It is alleged that Machan. who is lb
receive a separate trial on multiple
charges that led to a grand jury in-
dictment of seven persons, was given
$15,000 shortly after the group cashed the
hospital check.
The prosecutJon alleges that a further
$19,000 payment was made by the group
to a financial advisor who was named in
the Grand Jury indictment.
currently facing trial wtth Dulaney
and Shipley on charges stemming from
the $500,00 loan ar·e DanJeJ Hayes, 40, of
8'll! Snowbird Drive, Huntington Beach
and Wendell Warren Austin , 3 8 ,
Riverside.
The second p!-1se of the trial will bring
Dulaney's wife, -Marlene 32, to the
courtroom 'to· face with the other defen-
dants allegations stemming fl'tlm ln-
ve!ltlgation of World Financial Trends
operations.
Grand theft, fraud and conspiracy
charges were filed against the group
after an Investigation that began with the
filing of numerous complaints by in-
vestors i.n the World Financial Trends
Organization.
Nixo ·n Pro111 ise.
.,,I ; 'I . ·r-
'Prisoners Won't Be Abandoned' ..
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon made an unscheduled vi!it to a
convention of familie!I of American POWs today and promised that "under no
circumstances" would the men be abandoned.
"We cannot leave their fate to the good wilJ of the enemy," Nixon aaJd.
Nixon said that negotiations aimed at ending the war had been "very in-
~ensive" over the past year, but declined tD give specifi~ for fear thi!I might
Jeopardize success of the negotiations -and because "I would oot want to
raise false hope!."
Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon's chief negotiator on Vietnam, had btoen ei-
pected to address the gathering at the Statler Hilton Hotel of the National
League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia.
But NI.ton told the meeting he decided to pr~mpt Kissinger because he
wanted the opportwlity to thank the organizatian for supporting bis pollctes in
Southeast Asia.
had been made' by Congress and that the Ky., next year.
question really was the Cilnstltutionality ·!--'--'-----'-------------'============================::!
of "a presidential war."
The court acted in a case where three
Callfonllans claimed Congress illegally
delegated its war declaration powers lo
the President in 1961.
In other actions, the court:
-Refused to delay a lower court's
orde~ calling for busing of about 14,000
public school students in Memphis next
Chavez Appears
To Oppose 22
Cesar Chavez. founder and director of
the United Farm Workers, will make
three appareances loc&.lly Wednesday
and 1'1ursday to speak agalmt Propolli·
lion 22, the initiative which would place
controls on farm labor practices.
On Wednesday be will speak at Cal
State Long Beach at 12: 10 p.m. at the
outdoor speaker's platform in front of the
campus bookstore.
On Thunday, Chavez will addreS9
students al Cal State Fullerton an<I will
speak at a Chicano rally in Sanln Ana .
I-le is expected to appear at 12:30 p.m.
in the Fullerton campus quad. The Santa
Ana rally will be held at 7 p.m. at El
Salvador Perk. It is jointly sponsored by
Chicanos for McGovern and the Orange
Counly Chapter of t h c United Farm
\Vor kerii.
Quake Strikes
Soutli Bay Area
REDONDO BEACH (APl -An
•arthquak• 04used • "hard jolt" to-
dey In the South Bay area, Redondo
Beach poUce said, but no damage
was reportfld.
Selsmologl1t1 at Caltech In
PasAdena said the quake, at &:st
a.m., registered 3.0 on the Rlchtr:r
scnle. Tho quake wa.• centered ne11r
Redondo Beach.
PotJce reported telephone calla
from u far IOttth u WilmJngton.
Business as
usual at • • •
• Yes we a~e open for business despite the fi,re we
had at-our store lost Monday. We ore pretty du~fy
and dirty right now but thot means we must try
harder thon ever to offer you bigger ond better
values. Our insurance company hos allowed us
to repurchase oil the crated _merchandise and
some of the display samples at reduced cost. These
r~frigerators, washers, dryers, dishwashers and
TVs only suffered smoke damage and their new
guarantees were not affected. These savings will
be passed on to you.
During the weeks of remodeling we will continue
to bring you good val1.1es the same as we have
for the past 25 years.
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• 1815NEWPORT BLVD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA'
I
A 0 DAil y PILOT SC
Jtlonev'• Wort~
Shoppers: Stm.1
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'Unit Pricing'
By SYLVIA PORTER
In an f.ra or record and ris-
ing food prices, unit pricing -
the dollan and cenla cost per
pound pint, number or any
measure of a glvm product -
could be the U.S. food shop-
per'• biggest money-saving
weapon.~
Re.non : It is vU:tually your
sole meana ot comparing tbe
true unit can and what you
buy in the superm&rket.
AND BEC&USE of the
pressure we, as consurntn.
hive ~rought .
00 food -
tailers, legis-
lators, other
key-.
wilt pricing
has been
spreading ra-
pidly through
the country
tn the past
c ouple of ~T••
years ... ~1ore than 100 retail
food chains now use some kind
of unit pricing system.
In al n1ost every major ci ty,
tbe pricing system h a s
become available. An outstan-
.cfing example is New York
City, where, as of a few weeks
ago, large supermarkets and
food stores are required not
only to post unit prices but
also to post them against a
conspicuo us orange
background.
And increasing numbers of
states have laws requiring unit
pricing on a statewide baals.
There Is no doubt that federal
unit pricing laws will be placed
before the next Congress.
YET, STUDY after study
discloses that yo\J are not _us-
ing the weapon on the scale
you should, in the way you
should or even witli the
awareness you shou:d !
You are ignoring unit prices.
You are reporting thal unit
pricing haSn 't saved you any
money. And even when you
say you know the prie6 are
there, you add you're not us-
ing the labels to switch from a
higher cost to a lower cost
brand.
If this is the way i! is in the
large oupumarket chllns ID
big shoppblg lrtU, how II tt
In the '111•11 nel!!hborhood food ·
storu, "1 the g)letto, In lm-
povertahed rural arua -
wtie:re almost surtly unit pric-
ing IJ ltlll being resisted by
retallers'?
WRY YOUR apathy over
what could be so valuable a
money·saving tool? ~t can
be done to help you...ae unit
priclni and use It more to
your mulmum benefit?
To begin with, here 11 a run-t
down bf probltms niveaJed In
a recen• survey conducted by '
tlieOl!loe of'Conslimer Attain
"1 Washln<ton. beaded by Mrs.
Vir•inia Kn.&uer:
·Many ltoteo ,that do ...
unit prtclng are not making an
effort t9 promote or ezplaln to ·
you, the coMUmet, how to use
the pricing svstem. In some
c a s e s where explanatary
material is available, it ls not
displayed convenientlY or
prominently.
•LABELS ARE frequently
barely legible -e I t p e r
because they are smudged or
because the . p r I n t ls
microscopic or the ink is
blurred_ or ~use there is, no
color rontrast between label
and shelf or between print and
label.
•m some .ill!tances, the
dollar value is printed ID
larger type, ~-cents value ln
small lJ1>t -ca1131J1g a
customor to read, say "It per
pound"...nther than "lt.29 per
pound .'
•urut prices are avallabJe
in Some product categories,
sparse lL others and entirely
J'T'i.ssing in still other11.
•tn far too many instances,
labels on lower shelve! were
virtually unreadable, or where
they were bunched up on mid-
dle shelv~ were unintelligible
as to what price belonged to ·
what product.
•IN MANY stores, items
aren't marked with unit prices
but merel y with stock in-
fommtion labels.
•Many major chains are
using unit pricing primarily to
promote their _ own brands ..............
Now ••.• Plastic Cream
Invention For Artificial Teeth
th•t b•• revolutionised deotur• wearin1. ·
It lets you bite harder, dlew" bet·
tcr, eat IDOft naturallJ'. f'1i:oo&NT lull for houn. RClisb moir.turf!.
Dentuns that fit att m1ential to
health. See your dentlK ttttdarlJ'. Get euy-to-Ule FtxOOBHT Demtur.
Adhaiv• CraDl.
IN ITS 22nd YEAR
INVUTMENT co,iRSE
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE • No Admlulen <Mrt•
·An Introduction to the bas!~ fundamentals of In-
vesting in corporate stocks, bonds, mutual funds,
government bonds, Building & Loan Associations.
Intended to give practical knowledge of Invest-
ments and stock exchange operation.
WM. L. O'BRYON,l.lnstructor
BEGINNING OCTOlll 17tlo
FOR 5 WUKS-7:.JO to f:lO 'P.M.
TUESDAYS
EAST ILUFF SCHOOL
2627 VISTA DIL ORO. NIWPORT HACH
l .. bNr ot tho LMtvre
You're Invited to foar
free lectures on
lea/ &ta~,
, Jn11e6lmenk
Oct. 1$th
"The Ultimate Investment :... Blue Chip Non-
man·agerial Property"
Lecturers -Ro~er Slates and Gene Kadow
Oct. 25th
Hlifaximum Return on a Minimum Investment"
Lecturer -Fred Becker
Nov. 1st
"Advantage of Real Estate Syndication for the
SmaU Investor'' Lecturers -Pbll McNamee and "Cap" Blackburn
Nov. 8111 .
"Capital ConservaUon Through Exchanging
Mlnunlzing Taxes" U<:turer ,... Bruce Howey
''Tailoring Vour '73 Investment"
Lecturer -Ra.ndy McCardle
TICKETS AVAILAllLI AT THI DOOR
iACH SESSION MEETS 7:30 -11130 P.M.
GOLDEN WEST COLLEOI
S..ln C:O..pon......t BJ..' ~ilr = . ~.: .. ~
Aunt""'°" lloo<h • PoU11taln Valley
lloard of RMllWI
•
TOP t;AMPER DIALER -Dick WUson, (left) Hun-
tington Beach rord dealer, was recently n•ll\ed
the top El Dorado Camper dealer ln the nati6n:
With WU.on is Pete Vlahalls, Wilson Ford truck
and RV manager.
* * * STEvE CONNELL of Con-
nell Chevrolet in Costa lt1esa
was among the grad uates
from , the .77th session of the
Chi;!Vrolet Dealers' Sons School
-one of the auto industry's
most unusual edlicationa.1 pro-
grams:_ .
The ,seSsi:_oq was held at the
Qievrolet ·School of MercbaJ>.
dising and Management in
Detruit.
Connell was one of 83 dealers'
sons or top executives from al
U.S. Chevrolet dealerships and
General Motors operations Jn
Flour Maker
Gets Price
Hike Okay
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Citing the recent Russian
wheat sale as partial cause ,
the Price Comml~sion has
~ c.ueraJ Mills to in-
creue tbe price of its flour
sold In suue'"Tharkets.
The price increase is S.55
per cent in the Western states
and 11.08 percent ln the
ea.tern states.
Oher flour makers are ex·
Dttted to reguest similar price
hikes: '
Geileral Mills said lts costs
had J:!One up due to the hi11:her
wheat prices stemmlt'l,R from
the . Soviet wheat deal and
because of added costs for
labor, manufacturing a n
lrei~Mt.
The price increase,s wHl not
a1)n1v to salfl's ta bakerle.11 or
~ tnstlfut.tanal o u t I e t s .
Prl~ Commission officials
saSd the hike should not con-
tribute to higher commercial
prices.
Buffum's Up
Fast Freeze
' U.S. Tax Book Only 75c
t:OMPLETE NEW .YORK STOCK UST
.t:i ...... -
x-beauty
"" . ~Returns-.. • ~ Crippl~d •
11, From Wire Service•
' When Linda Ligh t visited
r,¥iami. Beach IO years ago, \the was a 19-year-old ?i.1iss
!Kansas who strolled down the
rldiss Universe run\l.'ay "ith
itameras focused on her slen-
ller form and the 1hundcr of
a;p'plause in her ears.
~ Miss Light is back in ~tiami
1'efore the cameras once more
e.... in a wheelchair as the
tiple Sclerosis Society's
girl.
It was a tremendous
jlsychologlcal blow when they
told me I had multiple
sclerosis," Miss Light said. "l
was 21 and an alrl'ine
stewardess, and all I really
wanted to do \\'8.S get married
and raise a family."
N~· a 29-year-old junior aJ
Kan.sas State Teachers CoUege
( PEOPLE J
in Emporia, ?i.fiss Light says
she Is trying to ignore the
crippling di.seese and teach in
an elementary 9Chool.
"It was fun and exciting
before, but I certainly 'Wasn't
very usefuJ or productive,"
she aimowted.
* A 39-year-old Carson man
)tn)wn for work with~ un-
derprivileged children has
been OC'CUSed of evading more
than $65,000 in income taxes,
federal authorities say.
Thomas Reese was indicted
by a federal grarxt jury in Los
~eles arxl al'l"tsted at his
home, autloitie_, added.
Reese, accused of failing to
pay taxes on an estimated in-
come of $183,555 for the yean
1967 through 1970, was under
5Ul"Veillance for more than a
year by Internal Revenue
Service agents, authorities
D * A New York bank guard has
been arrested arxl charged
.with bilking a blind cumomer
when he helped her make
Withdrawals.
"Charlie was always so kind ~ obliging." said Joliette
~Rven of Charles Harper, 32,
'though he acted kind of slow
i1nd would sometimes say, r'Oh. I forgot to have you sign
the slip -sign it here,
please."
1 Miss Silvers, '!•:ith her
~-eye dog, went to the
!Bowery Savings Bank and 1discovered. ·on a day when
Harper was not at the bank,
!that her account had only
[$169.65 instead of the $2,857 ljhe guard told her ~·as on
l~il. t Bank officials said they twould make ~tution.
r Wllllam Craig, leader of the
Ulant Protestanl Vanguard
ovement, wu fined $84 and
ned from driving for a
ear when he pleaded gullly lO
. ;trtvtng after drinking more
the pennlUed level of
coho I.
1be charge arose from A
llslon al Tul\ymore, C.ounty
, last ~fay.
I * "Norma" is leaving the
tnaen speechless this season
.i t the Paris Opea.
A recent presentation of
.. 'Norma" had lo be ln-
rrupted at the end of the se-
Cond act because Spanish \ircuc atar Mont1 e rrat
pibllle, in the Utle role, lost ·
~ voice because of a cold.
,gi. had coughed In·
t<rmlllently during the lwo
..,it.
On Sept. 28, "Norma" was
halted alter the lhlnl •ct
beaiute Barnabe M I r t I '
'l'laylng PolHone, k>lt his voice.
Marti Is the husband of
ontwrat cabell<.
I * '1be P'uture farmers of 1Americ•'• Royal Queen ia ~ Jea• Sou1a1 17.
The Buelltol\ resident w••
crowned In ICanul City al the
sroup's national convention .•
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AllAHDM
2144 W. llNCOlN AVL
ClOO TAUS WT Of~
PHONf 77 300 ·
FOUlllAll YAWY
17200 SO. BIOOIOIUllST
ClOO TllM ICMJT1I Of WAllG)
PHONE 968-3311
• • t
Moncl.ly, l)(:tObtr I&, 1972 DAILY PILOT 9
J.IN·IROOK
"1 SUPER PLUSH
''For Alf lawns!''
• Beautiful bo1ic stvff thot gets
you the greenest lawn.
• Spreed ii on, water it, then
toke it easy!
·~~ '" $495 SAVE
$5.95 $r.oo
'0-:J~· " $895 SAVI
$10195 $2 -00
#3 SUPER3-WAY
WEEDILIZER
''For Dlchondro Onlyl''
Does 3 nice things for your lown1
• Kills 32 Stubborn weeds.
• Choses out bugs.
• Fertilizes.
2"
00
Sq. ''· $995 SAVE REG. $ $12.95 3.oo 3 ,
. . ' '
# 6 PRE-EMERGE
1'for All Lawns Nowl'' ..
• Wipes out winier bluegro11 and
crabgrass before they
get started.
• lavishes rich ferti\iier for
the greenest of green lawns.
>.>oo "'· "· $795 SAVE REG.
$9.95 $2.00 ,
• 1st quality, prefinished
panels in several gorgeous
woodtone\,
• Random planked & V•
grooved, full '/,"
thick--4 ft, x 7 ft.
• h's fall iix-up time--dre11
up your home at this
. give-away price!
MADETO $199 SELL FOR
$4.95
Colorful
SHUTIERS
"A Very Special 8uy-urry-
Wltlle They losll"
• Colorful, 1no1ded pla1tic
shutters ore easy to install.
• Never need refini1hing-
1hey'l1 look great forever.
• Several sites 9vollobl.-.
sizes to fit homes & some'
especially for mobile
e1tote1.
MADE TO SELL
FOR $1.99
29~ ..
• .
17 ~. Alumlnum
SPRING-TYPE
WEATHER STRIP
Vlnyl Plastk ..
WINDOW SHADES
• Eoty core w1~1ean vinyt
plottic.
• Wrth roller up ta 36'' wide
RIG. 99c '
59'
WECVT
WINDOW
SHADES
TO SIZE
FfEEI
ML ' WID. OfU'l'I
•
SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE rurs. & WED. ONL YI
•
SALESMEN1S DEMOS
"lactor-y Reconditioned-Fully Guat'anteedl"
• Powerful 34 h.p . motor scoops 104 cu. ft . of debris per minute.
• Includes 5 gal. stee l drum, 6 ft .hose and stand ard attachments.
• Super-powerful vacuum for indoor or outdoor use.
• U.l. approved for years of care-free serv ice.
•We bought all we could-get so we could sell them
at th is low, low price. ~l. While they last only! First come, first served!
MADE TO SELL
FOR s29.95
LIMITED QUANITIESI TUES. & WED. ONL Tl
SINK CUT ·OUTS
• Formica-like tops on *" thick
particle.board.
•Many si:r:es, shapes, designs,
• Greol for
table tops.
REG. $1 .69
6 ft. x 15 ft. Roll
BAMBOO FENCING
• Bamboo slott ore flrmly
woven with 1talnl91s steel.
• G(ve1 o b.auttM tropical
look to po1io1, gardens, yords.
REG. $3.99
$2!?
Huge Selection
POTTED PLANTS
"Plant Now For A Colorful
Winter & Spring!"
•Choose from Mother Nature's finest,
brightest flowers.
•Instant color for your yard.
• Pansies, violas, snapdragons-many, many more.
e. Buy plenty at th is low price.
REG. 49c
TUii. &
WED. ONLY!
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SC DAILY PILOf J l
• nday'~osjpg .. P.rices Complete New York Stock Exchan ge List . ,
::Wall Street Posts . . ' . , -' '
;4t h/Lo ss.· ·in Row
;. -
"' "" 2.r,.
1.1<& ....
';ll 1i di . "" W• S ~ ttl ~I. •,\;;11 ' , ... " .. N "t l.lS N 11 .ti N Ga ,60 HottlGf 1.17 NUG.wir I.to N~'P'.S 1'2 N 2 • .0 so of I.~
=1"''" l:« N I.a~ ~ 11• £
N r<i ... ~ NW i1 .•S
Nw 'l?J '" N~' ;s N ~ N I pl' 5 • 1:.1 ,,20 NW nPfC S ·~ l'" N SI .16 Nor CO l VI Nor\lkn .ts NrtSI of 1.60
N\KM COt l> NVf),,C.0 20I
0-.~ .16 g::~"'"'.J: Occ .., ' Occ fpf l.HI occ ~.1 6 OW<' It .'O
Ovd"1 pf 1.17
Oh:<f.E.d 1.Sl
Ott pf ''° ~· ot ··"' """"' "'' Oii; """' ..IO Oltl~Ci 1.2'1 g~"-'.il: OM L .10 Or I 1.20 O!IJ•f: C. 1 OU!VdM 1.N
O..tlil!CO "'1 o ..... Trn .U Ow..CP: .II
o_,ip './: 8~fno .tO
'•
µ)NG DEACI! -Specially
Restaurants Corp. c1;pect.5 to
rcix>r1 a one·lhi.rd gain rn hrst
qunrtcr ~arnlngs over the
same period a year :igo. s.iy1
president David C. TnlHchet.
'J'hl' L o n g Beach·based
rMtaurant operation earnl!d
$487 . .JOO or 32 cents a share in
the I hree months ended Sept.
30, 1971 •
Co1nplete Closing Prices-A '11erican Stock Exchange List
S1ln NII
lfliil1.1 """ LlfW C10i1 en,.
•
"illfl
tlld•.I •• H11~ Ltw CIOW Cflt..
A<"rn•pnrr
WASlll~GTON Th t
At'rosp.act indu.~lril~ J\~YIC'lt>
lion sa vs in a srrni-nnnual
sun.-ey th.al a sharp lhrtt-}'ear
decli~ In t'mpl<>y1nrn1 In the
:ierosp:ice industry appartntly
h8.~ le v('ltd off y,·ith sliithtly
more lhan 900.000 new
emnlnycd.
The survey fOftt'asts 1
dtellne in aero~ct employ·
mrnt betwf'('n Junt 1972 and
June 1973 from 923.000 to
914.000 ur aboul I pttO'.!nt.
e 'l 'rlStnr
ATL ANTA, Gn. -llcll,1 Air
l.Jm·' hti.~ obtttinrd S8S million
In 1().yenr finrincin~ from a
Bri tish banking syndicate to
huy Rolls·Royce jel tr.11lnct
for 24 TrtStar 1fr bu sts
orr1rrf'd fNlm L o c k h r: t 4
Aircraft Corp.
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JI DAILY PILOT PlolONiay, October 10, 1•7.a
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with 10,131 squiggled-down prices.
-'• -· --
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Prove it yourself ·
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4 Huge New Famlly St6res with supermarkets Open Vled.,Oct. 18
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Five whole acres of savings in each one! --Old-fashioned, sturdy savings,
wall to wall. Glory in them starting at 10 a.m.' Wednesday. Read about
them tomorrow in ou"( big 12-page Treasury section. Save in every de-
, partment. Every day. Fashions for the entir~ family, fun and leisure things,
accessories for the home, a vast selection of fine foods. Save on every-
thing under the squiggly roof. Save and get first quality, too. No seconds,
no irregulars. Save and enjoy the convenience of your J.C. Penney charge
card. If you've nev~r met a squiggled-down price, come in, get ac-
. quainted, and save. U11 your J.C. Penney Ch1rg• Card
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Now we 1r1 Eight/Look for lh• Squiggly Roal"
GRANADA HILLS 18000 Chllawon• St,
WOODl.AND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd.
RIVERSIDE 352D Tyler SI
SANT A ANA 3900 Soulh Brlalol SI . I TORRANCE Sepuiveda and Hawthorne
LAKEWOOD Carson St. arld P1r1mount Blvd.
BUENA PARK Beach and Orangethorpe
ORANGE Gardtn Grove Blvd. 1nd Mancht1ltr
Opon -kclart t :IO to t ::IO
lund•rt 10 10 r.
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Lag1111a Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stooks
VOL 65, NO. 290, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBE R 16, 1972 TEN CENTS
Boater Pulls Gun at Dana Harbor .
An uptight yatohsman who lllegedly
used his pistol to defend his right to cut
in Une at the Dana Harbor launching
ramp Sunday was still being sought by
authqrities today.
The inci~ent which occurred at I.he
launching ramp at about noon Sunday
typified. a hectic weekend for harbor
patrolmen1 woo did most of their in-vestigation on dry land at the new
recreation facility.
Their other cases Involved:
-A customer at a posh restaurant ran.
'
ing from a second·Ooor balcony onto a
restaurant employe.
-Another patron of the s a m e
establishment choking on a piece of pop..
com.
-Fow-bowled..over sailboats.
-Five power boats in distress at sea.
-On'l fisherman washed from the west
breakwai.er.
The gun incident took place in the
afternoon hours Sunday as boaters were
wailing their turn tO use the busy
launching ramp.
'
Stock Fraud Trial
Nun Testifies
Agai,nst Dulaney
By TOM BARLEY
Of t11e O.itr l"llet Sttlf
A Roman Catholic nun today identified
Laguna Hills stockbroker Joseph Dulaney
as the man who assured her and other
officials at a San Bernardino hospital in
late 1968 that they cou1d double the in-
.come they received ffom invested
reserve funds.
Sister ..Margaret Mary, .'the first pros-
ecution witnes.s in the Orange County SuRCfior Court trial of Dulaney and three
codefeiidants, testlfled that sbe, St ..
liernardine Hospital cOOtrollt!I' Robert
Machan and. two other nuns visited
Dulaney's "Taj Mahal" building about a
month later.
She testified that she had been ap-
proach on the topic earlier by Machan,
50, San Bernardino, who suggested that
tbt: funds currently held in reserve by the
hospital could generate more income in
the bands of Dulaney's World Financial
Trends organitation.
1'le soft-spoken nun. who was demoted
by her order in mid-1970 at the height of
the Dulaney investigation and transfer·
Sunlight Starts
Fire in Store
Sunlight shining through a storefront
window was blamed for a fire at
Blackmar's FumJture, 264 Forest Ave.,
Laguna Beach, Saturday.
Investigators said · a glass decoration in
the shape of a snail focused the sunlight
onto a fabric-covered bench which ig-
nited.
Firemen broke a window to enter the
store, carried the burning furniture piece
from the building and extinguished it.
Smoke ejectors and deodorant were used
tu clear the store of smoke odor.
Arson Suspec ted
In Scout Blaze
An arson attempt at the Girl Scout
house, 190 High Drive, was reported
Stlturday to Laguna Beach police.
red to Tulsa, Okla. said the conversation
and the visit to Laguna IW.ls Jed to the
granting of a $500,000 loan fo the Dulaney
group.
She testified, over repeated objections,
that Dulaney provided hospital represen-
tatives with a statement indicating the
strong financial positiot: of his group.
She said Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via
Cascad.ita, San Clemente, told hospital
representatives he intended to invest the
$500,000 in the fonn Of $250,000 shares of
Azal.ea stock. . ! ~
It Is •lleg!d that the lit<>ck was
worthless and that tho $500,000 subse-
QU<!lllly received by Dulaney lrnn tbe St.
Bemudine llosptta1 W8J divided among
the codefendants.
Sister Margaret Mary said she was acJ..
miniS'h"ator at the hospital and a member
of its board of directors at the time tlie
loan was approved.
The nun also identified James Shipley,
38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Huntington
Beach, as ni!aney's representative at
the hospital negotiations. She said
Shipley, vice president of World Trends,
took them on a tour of the Taj Mahal
building when the hospital officials
visited Laguna Hills.
It is alleged that Machan, who is to
receive a separate trial on multiple
charges that led to a grand jury in-
dictment of seven persons, was given
$15,000 shortly after the group cashed the
hospital check.
The prosecution alleges that a further
$19,000 payment was made by the group to a financial ad visor who was named in
(See DULANEY, Page !)
Parents' Program
Pl anned at Thurston
' Dorothy Briggs, child psychologist and
author, will tell parents how to "Help
Your Child To Be A Winner," In a pro-
gram at Thurston Intermediate School
Thursday evening.
The Palos Verd!:! writer, author of
"Your Child's Esteem," Is presented by
the Laguna Beach Unified School
Distrit!t. In the afternoon, she will meet
with teachers· in a similar program as
one of the functions of the learning
center classes. The 7:30 presentation Is open to the
public and will include a question and
answer period,
Patrol spokesmen said Robert French,
32, of <>range bad been waiting bis tum
for S:Ome lime wben an unidentified man
and bis ca bin cruiser came in and took a
place ahead of French's craft at the
waiting docks.
/ n argument ensued and French untied
the bowline of the usuper's craft..At that
point the irate skipper emerged from the
cockpit with a. pistol.
"Touch my boat again, and I'll blow
, your head off," be told his feUO\V
seaman.
•
French then left to seek patrolmen.
~they returned, the boat and gun-
man had fled.
Officers issued a general broadcast for
the boat and car wertedly owned by the
suspect. So far no arrests have been
made.
Among the more unusual cases was
that of the falling customer. --
That took pla~ sBturday at· the Jolly
Roger Restaurant.
Patrolmen said the patron, Carles
• Ill
That Sinking Feeling
Henry ot 26292 Via California, Capistrano
Beach, lost bis footing and toppled onto
ari unidentified male employe of the
establishment.
Henry was· unhurt : the employe was
knocked out for a short time, but sought
no treatment after he recovered con-
sciousness.
On the same day, officers answered
another call a: the Jolly Roger and found
a ~·oman customer regaining her breat h.
The woman. they said, had choked on a
A car is almost submerged in water and mud near
a motel on Highway 1 in the Big Sur area afte r
heavy rains precipitated mud slides and caused a
hall million dollars in damage in the area of the Big
Sur Village store, (See story. Page 5)
Laguna Trustees Studying
Stand Agai11st Prop. 14
A resolution opposing Proposition 14,
the property tax limitation initiative, ap-
pears beaded for adoption by trustees of
the Laguna Beach Unified School
District.
The 'board will consider the resolution
at its regular meeting Tuesday at 7:30 in
the Education Center, 550 Blumont St.
According to figures prepared by the
Orange CoWlty Department of Education.
the Laguna Beach Unified School District
will lose $16 million in state support. dur4
ing the 1973-74 school year, if the in-
itiative is approved by voters Nov. 7.
During the next fiscal year, said
business· mana·ger Charles Hess, Laguna
is estimated to be paying $1 .353 per
pupil. Under provisions of the initiative
measure, the state would collect property
tax, then hand out a minimum of $875
per pupil to the school district -$528 per
student less than the district is expected
to spend.
Multiply the anticipated loss by 3,000
students and the district will wind up $1.6
million short, Hess exolained.
Jn another matter slated for t h e
meeting, trustees will: -
-Receive a budget report from Hess
on C'Urrent revenues and expenses. The
report, Heu said, must be present~ to
trustees every three months under pro-
visions of a recently approved state law.
Pr opositiort 20
T o B e Debat;e d
In Laguna B eacli
Proposition 20, t h e controversial
California Coastal Initiative, will be the
subject of a debate at the Laguna Beach
Chamber of Comm.Jrce breakfaat at 7 ~30
a.m. Wednesday in the Hotel Laguna .
When a proposal that the Chamber
board of directors go on record as op-
posing the initiative met with some op-
position at a recent board meeting, it
was decided to air OOth sides of the issue
in a public debate.
Speaking against Proposition 20 will be
11ttomey James M. Parker of Newport
Beach, who bolds a degree in Political
science from Loyola University and a
law degree fr om Southwestern Law·
School.
Police Investigation indicated paper
debris had been piled along one comer of
the-house in the back yard and set off
with kitchen matches. Only minor
damage was done.
Police suspect children may have-been
re!ponsible u an unsuccesstul attempt
had apparently been made to enter the
structure through a low window which
bad been broken.
'Gunslinger· Type'
He has !ervcd as attorney for the
American Hawaiian Land Company,
developers of Westlake Village and Oc-
cidental Petroleum Land ~ Development
Company, developers of Lake Forest, ap-
pearing before many government bodies
in behalf of the developers.
LOTS TO SELL?
LIST IT HE RE
When you've got a Jot to sell, list it all
where people sell a lot. .. like this :
GOlD 4 pc. sectional, al\Y 2
make oouch. Bed ln l, MY
pc. $50. 2 new rold sml occ
cbrs. Misc. cheats, this
Jfoover vac. MlCl"OICOPt,
t,yptwrtr.. chrom~ tire aet a:
9Cl"eCO tan nauah. 80!ebf:d A
chair. $5). lOOl'.•XXXlt.
~·wow! Fantastic!" That's tbe way the
edvertller deterlbed tho respome to that
ad, Try tt lor youraell. Diii tho direct
line to DAILY PILOT classllled adveJ'o
tisln1. MH878.
-
Kissinger Role Described
SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) -The author .
of a new book about presidential aide
He11ry Kiuinger describes him as a llOrt
of "gunslinger" type of professional
diplomat that ls ncw to American
poll tics, •
"KJsslnger hJred out to N e l so n
Rockefeller tn 1188 to cun down Rlchord
Niion for the presldcmtlal nomlnatlon,"
author-attorney Charita AJhman said
Sonday.
"H• !ailed to atop Nl10n, but then Join-
ed him as a for-hire troublwhooter.~
'-De Gaulle, the Berlin Wall, Red
China, Vietnam • • • Kl38inaer handles
them all. So he hu movtd Op In the Nix·
00 -tr•tlcn to becom• the moat
powerf\11 No, 2 man tn the hlsror:v of the
Vn!ted Slala-
•
' •
"England, France and some other •
countries have had diplomats who Were
profesalonals and continued to represent
their country through numerous changes
in govtrirment.
•11But 'the brilliant Henry Ki~slnger ts
the first ot th1J '&Un.11inger' sort the
UnJtcd States bas evtt hild."
Ashman said be ev.en considered using
the tlUe, "Have Brain, Will Travel," for
his book on Kissinger.
lnsleid, the book bu been pubtlahed
by Lyle Stuart, Inc,, of Seeaucu•, N,J,, as
"KlaslOiet. Tbe Adventum ol SUpor-
Kraut" .
Ashman said la an lnWv!ew he wo
astonished while «Tillng and rt ... rd>lng
his book that ao m0ny people he talked to
had lorgotten U..t Kllslnger'a Job aL the
1968 Republican convention was to "stop
Nixon."
"At one point, an optbnlstic Kissinger
.actually told fri'ends from Jlarvard that
be felt thoy had stopped Nixon and
Roc.kelellcr would get the nom1nation, ''
Ashman "'Ito!,
"Burled in the press n>por15 ol
Rockefe.11.er's announotmenl on May 3,
1968, whtn he talked about the Vietnam
war and domestic problems, was a sug-
gl!ltlon that the president ol the United
Slat" should visit Red Ollrui," write•
Aalunan. ~
''Thla ,ldea had come lrom one ol hl•
new IOrtllJI allalrs advlserl •• , none
other than lleary K~sinit!I':' .
Aahm>n -• light approach In his
(See ICJ!SINGER, Pit• I)
Speaking in support of the initiative
will be \Vesley Marx of Irvine, author
and lecturer In the environmental Oeld
and member of the city of Irvine Plan-
ning Commission.
Marx, who works closely with UC
!See PROP, !O, Plge %)
Planners to Study
Expansion of Road
Thf! proposed extension of Alta Laguna
Boulev•rd from Top of the World to Arch
Beach Heights will be the subject ol
rurther discussion at 8 Laguna Beach
l'lannlng Commission study ln city hali
councll chambers tonight
Also on the agenda for the 7:30-stss.Son
an> the TOPICS traffic clrciilaUoo report
and propootd tnnsfer ol permil aprovai.
to the Board ol 1.ontng Adju31ment.
' •
piece of popcorn while having a cocktail
In the testaurant's lounge.
Mrs. llelen Luscb, 60, of Corona del
~tar, did not •equire medical treatment.
On the same day , an incKtdit on the
harbor's west jetty caused some concern,
but tumed out to be a minor accident.
Patrolmen said a heavy "'ave slam·
ming into the rocks sent William
Robinson, 42. of Perris, falling into the
channel behind the brea kwater.
Robinson suffert!d scrapes and bruises,
but declined medical treatment.
Pair IGdnap
Teen, Leave
Her i11 LA
By JACK Ct!APPELL
Of lfll Dt!ly Pll•f Slfff
A !3-year-old girl walking down a
Laguna Beach street was kidnaped, .,
raped, forced to subr:lit to perverted sex
acts, and beaten by t1vo men who al>
ducted her ·Sunday night.
She was released in the Hollywood
area. After hospitalization for treatment
of a possible skull fracture and cuts, the
girl was returned to her mother today.
The girl had been visiting relatives
with her mother when· the tncldent oc-
curred.
Laguna Beach Det. Sgt. Neil Purcell
said the .girl had been struck twice with
some kind of weapon.
Purcell said the victim was forc ibly
raped. forced to submit to unnaural acts
and robbed of personal jewelry .by &he
men who beat her.
"She was in a somewha t dazed and
confused condition," Purcell said.
·She called Hollywood relatives from a
telephone in a service station after being
released by the men.
A massive police search h a d been
undertaken in the Laguna Beach . area
after first reports of the kidnaping were
made.
The California Highway Patrol had
established a roadblock along Laguna
Canyon Road and helicopters from
neighboring police departments were
employed in searching rugged canyon
areas.
The abduction began in a qu iet Laguna
Beach side street.
Screaming hysterically. the you ng girl
was dragged into her abductors' white
.sedan while her young cousin ran to a
nearby residence and telephoned for
police.
The 14-year-old Laguna Beach youth
descriOed the men as about 19 or 20
years of age and had medium length
brown hair. He said the man who grab-
ed the girl, grabbed her left arm and
The witness said the car first pulled
past them as they walked along the fron-
lage road lo Laguna Canyon Road.
The car stopped, backed up and the
passenger opened his door. Picking up a
large rock, the man reportedly threaten-
""'t he girl , grabbed her left arm and
forced her into the vehicle.
She was positioned between the two
men and the car sped away, first turning
onto Woodland Drive and then onto
Laguna Canyon Road.
The kidnaping apparently occurred
right in front of the trailer park sign by
the Laguna Beach Boys Club at about 8
p.m. according to the wltnes.11.
The teenagers were walking home
15«: KIDNAP, Page ZI
,
Orange Coast
Weathe r
Variable cloudiness on Tuesday,
but mostly sunny, with highs at
the beach~ around 74 rising to 71
Inland. LA>ws topight 58-62.
INSIDE TODi\'Y
Nazi Germany's Lufttoaffe had
pWns for bombing m&ssion.i on
U.S. cities durl~1g the war, ac-
cording to rtcenlly df.tcOVffed
paper1. See story on Pagt 4.
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I
~L.\' PIL.01 LI
Treatme11t
Plant Lose s
One Bacl\:e1·
tn an effort to s~vc t.1xpayrrJ'; $1 9
million, director! or lh<' F.I Tti ro \Vat.:r
District have votl'd to abandon p3rticipa-
. tlon in the proposrd rnul l1-n11lhon AliS-O
Wnter ~tanagl'1nen1 Agency treatment
pla nt e3'.pansion program.
Oirf><'tors took the action Friday after
learning presenl wa-.te t re:. t 1n f' n t
f:iC'ilities. o" 1tcd by the Rossn1oor S..'Htif::i·
lion Company. \\'ould be adl'QU<UC for '11
least rive. and possibly 10 years.
It ~·ould be financiall y un"''ise to build
a new $1.9 million plant in El Toro. as
called·for in the A\'n.fA projtt"t rePort.
when existing fa cilities can handle
sewage treatment, said director John
Toups.
In a related move Friday. directors of
the district voted to appro\·c issuance of
$2.25 million in tax·anticipated "''arrants
lo fund the district's share of the A'V~1A
outfa1\s off Aliso Canyon <u1d Doheny
Beach.
This action will inrrease the di~trict's
$1.22 tax rate per SIOO assessed land
valuation to ahout $2.22.
Directors took the two· actions based on
a report from an ad hoc board com-
mittee and advice from counsel from the
law firm of Rutan and Turker.
Attorney Fritz Stradling contended the
eight member agencies of A'\1'1A may
be faced \.Vilt: difficulties in raisi ng iI1·
dividua l shares of the $27.5 milho.n
A \\1~1A project.
Tbe program calls fo r expansion of a
number oI inland treatment plants. ~·ith
highly treated effluent used .for ir-
rigation. Excess waste \vater would be
di sposed in an outfall off Ahso Cree k Can-
yon .
f'rona Page 1
KIDNAP ... •
from a billiards parlor located in a near·
by shopping area. The victim's mother
had reportedly been ~'ith the children
there but had lcfl them and gone to a
Canyon Acres home earlier.
Laguna Beach officer Terry Temple
talked with the girl's molher. staying
with relatives in the canyon Acres area.
\\·eary~yed Laguna Beac~ detectives
who had worked the night-long case said
today the in\·estigation will continue.
Purctll and Det. Gene Brooks were
called by the girl·s relatives in Hollywood
who had received the first phone call
from the young rape ·1ictim.
The girl was met in a Hollywood loca-
tion by Laguna Beach detectives and
hospitalized. Jn additk>ll to other injuries.
she had a cut acn:iss the ·bridge of her
nose, Purcell said. The girl was visiting
Laguna from the Covina area.
From Pagel
KISSINGER. • •
study of Kissinger. dwelling on his life in
Germany before immigrating to
Amerka. his rise to power within the
Nixon administraUon and his weU-
publicized dates with some of the world's
sexiest women.
"In fact , he uses somewhat of a gun·
slinger approach in his dealings with
women ." Ashman says.
Anthony Russo Sets
Talk at UCI Tuesday
Pentagon rapers CCH:lefendant Anthony
Russo will speak at nooo Tuesday in
'Campus Park at UC Irvine.
Russo and fonner Rand Company
employe Daniel Ellsberg ore charged by
federal officials wit h theft of the so-call-
....,.ed Pentagon Papers which were publish-eJ by the New York Times an~ revealed
1Jhe history of key government policy
,pecisions in the Vietnam War. Russo·:i;
1 pppearance at UC! is sponsored by the
1 p\ssociate .Students and V i e t n a m
1 ~eterans Aga inst the War. •. r-~~~~~~~~~~
, .,
• • I • • • • ' • • • ' • I • i
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' DAILY PILOT
n.t Onlnoci Cotti °"'!LY PILOf, wllh Wl'i~
h combined IM Htwt-~eu. It put>!IJMC by
~ Oraniie Co.11.i P\lblltllll!Q Conipeny. :S~
...,,. tdll~ ••• publltMd, Monday ltltowit
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Mlltllln I• pubUi.1!9d 11.1tunt1n 1nd $un111.,...
T-. prlroclpt1I putlllthll!O 1)11nt 11 11 U1 Wtil
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ll.oli1•t N. W11d
Ptnldltlt •l'ICI P\lb!ltller
Jo¢• R. Curl1v V1ce ...... ldtnl tnd Gene!"tl Mtn•gtr
Thoin11 k11¥ll
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Parlor Closing
OK'd b'r Court
WASl!INGTON (API -'l'ho U.S.
Su~me C o u r I today 81Yll! a
Virginia city authority to clooe
-nussage parlors wbe:1': women Pt
rubdowN to men.
The city contended the parlm
Wf'te nothing hut uarpMmlstic
atlases" for houses or prostltcnion,
and noted that one operator
"t'(lnceded that his girls massaged
'every part of the (male patron's)
body. and that includes every part
o! the bod\' · "
Robert k islt>y, operator of two
ma~age parlors in Fall~ Church. a
\\'.'.l!l;lungton suburb, argul'<I I-hat a
city ordinance prohibiting a won1an
from giving a msssage to n man
\·iolated the equal-rights provision
of the 14th Amendment and the
Civil Rights Act nf 1964, which
mnkes discnmination based on sex
illegal.
Fron• Page J
PROP. 20 ...
Ir vine. is a leading expo!l('nt of en-
vironmental impact statenlents and ::in
c;ponent of de\·elopment in flood plain
zones and earthquake 2one1. He is the
author or "The Frail Ocean " and is
writing a new book entitled ''The Pacific
Shore."
Proposition 20 received the unanimous
support of the Laguna Btoach Cily Coun-
cil. but councilman Peter Ostrander later
withdrew his support. The initiative calls
for statewide control of coastal de\'elop-
ment through six regiooal commissions.
Building and development along the coast
"'·ould require special permits from the
commissions pending completion of a
total coast development plan in 1975.
In on:ler to allow ample time for the
speakers. the chamber breakfast will
start earlier tlitan usual, and. because of
the large attend"'ance a n t i c i pa t e d ,
reservations must be made by calling the
chamber, 494-1018.
Kennedy Women
Differ; ·Diamond
Dipped in Suds
ROCKVILLE. Md. (API -Wbe"I.
Ethel Kennedy and Eunice Kennedy
Shriver .were concerned , singer Neil Dia-
mond wasn't about to take sides. And be
ended up with his hair soaked in beer.
Rock star Diamond was ooe of the at-
tractions: at a Democratic fund-raising
party Sunday on the lawn of the borne
rented by vice-presidential nominee
Sargent Shriver.
Mrs. Shriver introduced Diamond by
requesting "Sweet Caroline."
"I've asked him to sing lhe song rU'st
of the woman be loved most," she told
the ~rowd.
But Mrs. Kennedy had other ideas. She
wanted to hear "New York Boy."
"This is a terrible predicament," Dia-
mond moaned and decided to delay both
hmes. "I'm chicken is what I am," he
explained.
But after an interlude of several songs.
Diamond broke Into his top-selling
"Sweet Caroline."
~1rs. Kennedy, ll'ho had been pie·
nicking on the grass near the stage,
quietly walked up behind him and
emptied a bic: paper carton of beer over
his long hair.
SmiEng. she ambled offstage. Diamond
drifff his hair, and promptly the audience
recogniz.ed the strains· of "New York
Boy."
Chavez Appears
To Op1>ose 22
Cesar Chavez, founde r and director of
the United Fann Workers, will make
three appareances locally Wednesday
a.nd Thursday to speak against Proposi-
tion 22, the initiative which would place
controls on farm labor practices.
On Wednesday he will 1peak at Cal
State Long Beach .11t 12:10 p.m. at the
outdoor speaker's platform in front or U1e
campus bookstore.
On Thursday, Chavez will add.res.'!
students at Cal State Fullerton And will
speak at a Chicano rally in Santa Ana.
l~e is expected to appear at 12:30 p.m .
in the Fullerton campus quad. The Santa
Ana rally will be held at 7 p.m. at El
Sa~vador Park. It is jointly sponsored by
Ch1canos for McGovern and the Orange
County Chapter of th c United Fann
\Vorkers.
EJliscopals W 011't
Ordain W 01ncn
SACRAMENTO (API -Northern
C::ilifomia Episeopallans have rt>jected l\
proposnl to allow women to be ord~ined
ns priests.
The 62nd annual convenlion of the
r.;'o~hem Catlfomla DIOC'cse of I he
F:pi.S<Xlpal Church thf>n adopted a com-
peting resolution that declared ''flm
adherence to the f3ther\y con~pt of the
priesthood ... vested only In membt=rs
of the male sex."
Th.at proposal. adopled 138-111, WAS
supported by the Rt. Rev. Clarence
Haden, bishop of the diocese, which· ln-
rlutics an e1timated 25,lXK. parl1hes and
missiona.
Tl'M: resoh1tion will be forwarded to the
ger,e_rnl conventlo11 of the Epl&eo~I
Church of the United State19 at Lou\svl!Jc
Ky., next year. '
V.S. Hints
Breakup
Of IBM
NEW YORK (AP) -The federal
sovemment said today that if It wins Its
3\.2·yeaN>ld auit against Intcn1atlonal
Business Machines Corp., it likely will
seek I.he bttakup or the huge company's
computer opcrallons into competinc:
units.
The Justice Department stated its posi-
tion in a court--0rdered paper in U.S.
District Court here. listing .. tentative"
remedies to "dissipate the enormous
market power of the current mM com·
puter manufacturing and marketing
structure."
The government, V.'hich had been asked
to submit a detailed proposal ol action it
believed should be taken against IBM,
said it could not be more specifie until a
more precise analysis of mM's markets
~·as made.
An attorney for m~ charged that the
government was adding new issues to the
case and could not win a court trial of
the antitrust action.
The New York Stock Exchange, clling
an influx of orders, halted trading in
IB~I stock after the Justice Department
statements. IBM stock was down $2.'1'5.
to $376.25. for the day before tradlnJt
was halted. Trading resumed t h r e e
hours later.
The Justice Department said that
although precise details of the proposed
divestiture could not be provided at this
time. the breakup of the mulUbillion-
dollar firm woold be accomplished "by
the ronnation of the t.otaJ domestic and
international computer systems facilities
or IBM into severaJ separate, ~
dependent and competitive balanced en-
tities capable of competing suecessfully
in domestic and international markets
with one another and With other domestic
and foreign competitors." ·
In a Sept. 12 order, U.S. District Court
Judge David N. Edelstein told the
department it wanted to t no w
spec.Uically what was soutbt in the way
or relief in one of the biggest an-
timonopoly actions ever brought by the
government.
The suit against mM was filed Jan. 11
1969, the last business day of the .Jo!tnoOO
administration, and had not yet come to
trial
. Atty. Thomas D. Barr, "'lftsenling
IBM, said in court that "the case bas ex-
ploded" with submission of the govern-
ment proposal.
He said the government Interjected
""" Wues in the =e by adding the
company's overseas ho•'""' to the
-CJ!l0f8tloos 1hat ...... !ho tari-t ol the original complatnL
Cruelty Trial
For Beach Man
Slated NQV. 21
Trial date for Orville James Chase
charged with alleged cruelty to his ~
~nd eight dogs. bas been set for Nov. 21
1n West Orange County Municipal c.ourt.
The part-time maintenance man and
artist has pleaded irurOCent to all charges
wh.icb include:
-Neglecting to license a dog over four
months old.
-Allowing dogs off his premises.
-Keeping animals in an unclean
premises.
-Keeping a dog .kennel less than 1,000
feet from a dwelling.
-Cruelty lO: animals.
-Keeping animals wit.bout properly
treating them.
Chase was arrested Oct. 4 at his trailer
re sidence on a six-acre Held near the in-
tersection of Warner Avenue and Boll8
Chica Road in Huntington Beach .
His animals were taken to the Hun-
tington Beach Humane Society "9Jld be
was placed in jail until later freed oo a
$250 bail bftnd .
Huntington Beach police and Humane
Society <)fficers claim some of the dop
were suffering from malnutrition and
neglect ""'hen they arrested Chase .
The burro had several fly bites on hil
legs, according to Humane Society Of-
ficers .
Robert Sharkey, owner of the anlmat
shelter, said today that one of Chase'•
dogs had been released to him after be
got the necessary rabies shots and
license for the animlll.
Sharkey said the dogs have been well
fed ~·hile at the hu mane society and are
now in good condttlon.
'etuisc had expressed f,.ar thnt his dogs
\\'ill be destror.ed, but Sharkr.y said
everything wou d be done to pince the
cllninea in a good home.
Sharkey also said Chase could set hll
donkey back if he could prove that he
had sufncient facilities to care for the
animBI.
PRINCESS GOES
IN FOR SWIM .
PERTlt, Australia (AP) -Pr\ncen
Mllrgsret or Brittin and Mr husband
Lord Snowdon went for 1 mldntght 1wtm
after spending three hours at a bJrbecUe
In 108 • degree temperatUrtl at an
AU!'ltraUan ranch.
The dip Sunday night was lhe ltOOt1d or
lhe day for Ille royal couple. They cooled
themselves at poolatde eerller after a
dusty, 12-mll• ride trom Fltircy cn,,.lng
to Vo Oo Station, 1lte of the b8rbecue .
Quake Strikes
Sou,th Ba)' Area
REDONDO BEACH CAP) -An
earthquake e1uted a "bard jolt" b
day lo Ille SOUtb Bay ..... -Bffclt poUce iald, but no damnge
was reported.
s.Jamoloelsts at Caltech I n
Pasadena said the quake, at 5:S4
a.m., reglst.r<d S.O oo Ille lll!'hter
sco.le. 'I'he quake was centered near
RE'dondo Beach. ,
Police reported telephone calls
from as far south u Wilrnlngton.
Gang Selected
Random Victims,
Authority Says
ClflCAGO CAP) -Sherif! Richard J.
Elrod says eight members of a black ter-
rorist gang charged in the recent
murders of nine penons were apparently
"roaming the countryside looking for
someone to kilt."
Authorities said apparently not all or
the eight men charged participated in all
sWyings.
Elrod told newsmen Sunday the nine
white victims, Including the membe.rs of
two separate famllit3, apparently were
randomly selected by a Chicago street
gang be said called itself "De ).!au
Mau."
Asked about possible racial motivation.
Elrod saJd, "I can see DO other apparent
motivation."
Sil': men are being held without bond.
two others are still being sought.
FrontP .. el
DULANEY •••
the Grand Jury indictment.
Currently lacing trial with Dulaney
and Shipley on charges stemming from
the $500,00 loan are Daniel Hayes, 40, or
8211 Snowbird Drive, Huntlngton Beach
and Wendell Warren Austin, 3 8 ,
Riverside.
'!'be ""'°nd plwe of the trtal will bring
Dulaney's wife, Marlene 32, to the
courtroom to face with the other defen-
dants allegations stetlllllilli from in-
vestigation of World Financial Trends
operation,.,.
Grand theft, f(Sud and conspiracy
charges were filed agalnst the group
afta-an lnvestlgation that began with the
filing of num....,., complaints by in-
vestors in the World Flnanclal Trends
Clrianlution.
Many Hit Beach;
I Few Try Water
Sunny skies lured an estimated 10,000
people to Lagwia Beach's shores on
Saturday, and a B1mi1ar nwnber on Sun·
day, but most' were more interested in
sunbathing than sampUne the &I-degree
water, lifeguards niporl
Air temperature at the beach reached
only 70 degrees for a few hours during
the middle of the day, otherwise re-.
maintng in the low eos.
Surf was running f o u r to six feet
Satunlay, but dropped to abftut three lo
four feet Sunday. No rescues were
reported.
Business as
-~lf all to lf nll'
California Power
•
Demands to Soar
SANTA MONICA (AP) -Pictuno
California with nuclear pawer plants
spaced only e.ljht miles apart along the
lta.le's entire 11010.m.lle coe.st.
The portrait la not whimsical, a
research te1m ot Rand Corp. reported
today in a study commissioned by the
Leglslalure.
The researchers sakl demands ln the
nation's most populous state are ac-
celerating so enormously that unless
power growth Is Muced, Californians
will need 130 huge ne'llf power plants by
the 21st Centucy.
In fact, each plant would have to be jn
the 1,200 megawatt ftlnge, twice' the
"'apaclty of the state's only sizeable
nuclear power plant located on the coast
at San Onofre near the West.em While
House.
Although doubting enough suitable
coastal sites co uld be found the
researchers explain ·that utility ' com-
panies look for ocean locations because
they want cheap water for cooling.
If the new plants were built along the ocean. the researchers .said, "then in the
year 2000 there would be 1,200-megawatt
Stake in Heart
Allays Banker's
Fears on Burial
LONDON (UPI) -When Harold West
died, ~:~ doctor drove a stake through his
heart to make sure he was dead; when
he was buried, they did not nail his co(fin
shut in case he was noL
West was DO vampire. He was just a
cautious banker who feared being buried
alive.
.When he died last June at90, West left
a will direcing that "my coffin shall oot
be screwed down and that a surgeon be
instructed to pierce my heart with a steel
or other instrument to make certain
death has occurred."
His family physician, Dr. Eric Kerr,
said Sunday: "I did what Mr. West
wanted, but it was tbe first request of
that sort t had ever bad."
Kerr said West, a London bank
manager, wanted to be certain he would
be dead when be went to his grave, but if
by chance be was not, he wanted a
means of escape.
"He wu v~ meticulous In hil habits
as a bank manager,'' the doctor said.
"But tbiJ did not seem to be overdoing it.
Many peoplt=.have fears of this sort."
Maurice West, the banker's nephew
•who received the bulk of the $8'7 ,000 his
uncle left. said: "It was an odd request
but If you can't have your own way at
that time of life -I mean death -when
can you?"
The banker left 11,250 In the Rev .
David Wright of St. Paul's Anglican
Cllun:h in Worthing, south of London,
where West lived.
"He Will! a lonely old man, afraid of
many things:," said Mr. Wright's wife,
Alice. "But he had faith and was looking
forward to going to heaven.
"We shall buy a car with the money,"
she said.
power plants every eight miles along the
coast."
The Rand team proposes l h a t
C81Uomia alow its electrlcal use growth
instead, because so many plants would
threaten a "deteriorated enrlvonme:1t"
and power shortage could be expected
anyway unless a careful cons.ruction
timetable were met.
Sugge.stinf commercial and residential
conservation techniques ranging from
turning out the lights In an empty rOOJn
to using solar energy for water heating,
~ researcher• say cutting future pro-
jected electrical use by 60 percent Is "a
l"CftSO!libk ggaj."
Thus, the projected 33.5 million Cali£or·
nians of the 21st Century sbould use 300
billion kilowatt hours a year instead of
the 843 billion kilowatt hours expected
at the current growth rate.
The reduced figure would still be near·
Jy triple the curre.nt power use-by the
state's 20 million residents.
The Rand team also suggests • 0 go-
slow" policy on new nucleaf Power
plants, now contemplated as U.S' h~art of
California's future electrical system.
··Besides the risk of nuclear accident "
Rand said, ···the researchers point to the
unsolved problem of disposing of high-
level radioactive wastes, which remain
dangerous for thousands of years."
Plants could harness alternative power
sources, the .-esearchers said, such as
geothermal energy -underground steam
that can be converted into electricity.
"If the geothermal resources believed
to exist in Imperial Valley in the
Southern California desert were harness~
ed in a 13-t~lS year program, no other
new power ptants could be required ater
1985," Rand stated, provided the state'
could hold to a growth rate of 3 percenl
annually.
A second Rand •ludy, Cnmmbsloned
-Uke-the other for the state Assembly's
C.Omm.ittee on Planning and Land Use.
said that even if.growth-slowing policies
u·ere suceessful about 23 plants in lhc
1,200-megawatt range will be needed.
The secwd report recommended a
state agency be established to select
potenUal sites and deal with expected
controversies over plunking down such
facilities around the state.
Students to Get
Aptitude Tests
A special series of voeational interest
and aptitude tests will be offered to
Laguna Beach High School seniors
\Vednesday by 'the Capistrano-Laguna
Reflional Occupational Program. "We bope parents will encourage
students to take these tests, whlch pro-
vide a basis for both vocational and col·
lege guidance," an ROP spokesman said.
'I'tle California Occupational
Preference survey, a vocational interest
test. will be administered from 3:15 a.m.
to 8:45 a.m. in the h i g h school
auditorium.
The Armed Services V u c a t I o n a I
ApUtude Battery, a vocational aptiiude
test. will be given from 9 a.m. to noon.
-usual at ••.
'
r
Yes we ore open for business despite the fire we
hod at our uore lost Monday. We ore pretty dusty
and dirty right now but that means we must try
harder than ever-to offer you bigger and better
values. Our insurance ~ompony has allqwed us
to repurchase all the crat~d merchandise and
some of the display samples at reduced cost. These
refrigerElltors, washers, dryers, tjishwashers and
TVs only suffered smoke damage and their new
guarantees were not affected. These savings will
be passed on to you .
During the weeks of remodeling we will continue
to bring you good values' tile some as we have
for the post 25 yea rs. •
•
•
1815 NEWPORT BLVD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA •
•
•
17
I
Saddlehaek · ,
Tod.-y's Finni
EDITION N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 65, NO*O, 2 SECTI0~4 PAGES *ORANGE TEN CENTS
'
Nu~ Testifies Against Duliiney. in Stock Case
By TOM BARLEY Machan and two other nuns visited
ot IM DlllY l"IMt '"" Dulaney's "Taj Mahal" building about a
J._ Roman Catbolic nun today identified month later.
Laguna Hills stockbroker Joseph Dulaney She testified that she had been ap-
as the man who assured her and other proacb on the top'tc earlier by Machan,
.officials at .a San Bernardino· hospital in so, San BemaPdino, who suggested that
late 1968-that they could double the in-tht.. funds currently held in reserve by the
oome they recei~ from invested hospital could generate more income in
reserve ·funds. the hands of.-Dulaney's World Financial
·' Sist.er Margaret Mary, the first pros-Trends organization.
ecution Witness in the Orange County The soft-spoken nun, wM was demoted "
codefB'ndants, testlfle t she, St. the Dulaney invettigation and transfer-
and the visit to Laguna Hills led to t.he
granting of a $500,000 loan to the Dulaney
group.
She testified, over repeated objections,
that Dulaney rrovided hospital represen-
tatives with a statement indicating ~he
strong financialpositio1 of his group.
Sbe said Dulaney, 381 of 2631 Vla
Cascadita, San Clemente, told hospi~al
representatives he intended to invest the
$500,000 in the form of $250,000 shares of
Azalea stock. •
It is alleged that th~ stock was
worthless and that the 1500,000 subse-
SUperii;r Coun trial of ~Y and three by her order in mid-1970 at the height of
Befnardine Hospital c oller Robert red to Tulsa, Okla. said.the conversation ,:::.::=-:=-:-C.C.:.:.CC:...-'...>,,...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
quently received by Dulaney from the St.
Bernardine Hospital was divided among
the codefendants.
Sister Margaret Mary said she was ad-
ministrator at the hospital and a member
of its board of directors at the tirrle the
loan was approved.
The nun also identified James Shipley,
38, of 16951 Lowell Circle, Huntington
Beach, as Dulaney's rePresentat~ve •t
the hospital negotiations. She said
Shipley, vice president of World Trends,
took them on a tour of the Taj Mahal
~~La;1:.° 1111~ JIQ•pital officials
It is alleged that Machan, who is to
receive ·a separate trial on multiple
charges that led lo a grand jury in·
dictment of seven persons, was given
$15,000 shortly after the group cashed the
hospital-check.
The -prosecution alleges that a further
$19,000 payment was made by the group
to a financial ad 'iSot who was named in
the Grand Jury indict"*nt
Currently facing trial with OuJaney
and Shipley on charges stemming from
the $500,00 loan are Daniel Hayes, 40, of
8211 Snowbird Drive, Huntington Beach
and \\fendell Warren Austin, 3 a. I
Riverside.
The second 1-' .. <! oi the trial will bring '
Dulaney's wife. Marlene 32, to the ,
courtroom to race with the other defen-
dants allegation!! stemming from in-
vesiigation of World Financial Trends
operations.
Grand theft , fraud and conspiracy
charges were filed again'st the group
after an investigation that began with the
filing of numerous complaints by in·
vestors in the World Financial Trends
Organization.
Vote Considered
' Saddleback Views .Election on Bonds
That Sinking Feeling
· A car is almost submeri:;ed in water and mud near
a motel oo Highway 1 in the Big Sur area after
. heavy rains precipitated mud slides and caused a
bali million dollars in damage in the area of the Big
Sur Village store. (See story, Page 5)
Mushroomi1ig
Of Power Plants
Seen for State
SANTA MONICA (AP) -Picture
Calilomia with nuclear power plants
spaced only eight miles apart along the
state's entire 1,010-mlle coast.
The portrait fs not whimsical, a
research team at Rand Corp. reported_
today in a study commissioned by the
Legislature.
';l'he researchers said demands in the
nation's most populous state are ac--
celeraling so enonnously that unless
power growth is reduced; Calitornians
wW .need 130 huge new power plants by
the 21st Century.
Jn fact, each plant would have to be in
the 1,200 megawatt range, twice the
capacity of the state's only sizeable
nuclear power plant located on the C'last
at San Onofre near the We~tem White
House.
Girl l{idnaped in Laguna;
Raped, Beaten, Set Free
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of ftte DlllY 'Utt St•ff
A 13--year-old gir1 walking down a
Laguna Beach street was kidnaped,
raped. forced to submit to perverted sex
acts, and beaten by two men who aJ>..
ducted her SUnday night.
She was released in the Hollywood
area. Aftef hospitalization for tteatment
of a possible skull fracture and cuts, the
girl was returned to her mother today.
The girl had been visiting relatives
with her motfier -wtien ttie tncldent OC·
curred.
Laguna Beach Det Sgt. Neil Purcell
said the girl had been struck twice With
some kind of weapon. .
areas.
The abduction began in a quiet Laguna
Beach side street.
Screaming hystericaJly, the young girl
was dragged into her abductors' white
sedan while her young cousin ran to a
nearby residence and telephoned for
po.lice.
The 14-year-old Laguna Beach youth
described the men as about 19 or 20
years of age and had medium length
brown h~ir. He said the-man who~gra~
ed-the gir l, grabbed her left arm and
The witness said the car first pulled
past them as they walked along the fron-
tage road· to Laguna Canyon Road.
The car stopped, backed up and the
passenger opened his door. Picking up a
(See KIDNAP, Page Z)
Saddleback Valley Unified School
District trustees tonight will consider
setting a February election date to seek
voter approval qf $28 million in bonds for
school construction. The board meets at
7:30· ln La Paz Intermediate School.
Mission Viejo.
Superintendent William Zogg sair' to-
daf growth for the next five years wilf
require $« million worth of new schools.
The $28 million bond measure will be
enough to qualify the district for state
schoolbuilding fund aid.
School districts in C3Jlfornla do not
qualify for state building aid unless the
local taxpayers authorize a bonds ex-
ceeding the amount the district may
spend in one year. That limit for unified
districts is 10 percent of the total assess-
ed valuation.
Tile Saddieback llistrlct. whifh begins
operations July 1, will "inherit" some of Ille . bolided' lndtlltedness Of th.
predecessor districts -San Joaquin
elementary IDlfTUstip Union lllgb School
0~ •. zru 1' ~ed IAl Oll)llaln
~ !Jl10U![ta of .the total bonds to be
sought could actually be spent on a year-
t&-year baslt.
Should tr1151ees set the bond Issue at
the $28,milllon ,figure and voters approve
tl)e measure in February, the district is
expected to be able to meet pupil popula-
tion increases at least for the next five
years.
1.ogg predicts the district will need a
total of nine schools Jn that time as well as district administration, bus
transportation and maintenance facili·
tin.
The bonds would finance seven elemen.
tary, two lntennedlate and two hltih
schools, Zogg said, based on present
grade separation policies of the new
district.
The bond meuure would provide for a
maximum seven pereent lnterest rate,
although Zogg noted current Issues sell
for a little more than five percent.
The proP'.Qsed Saddleback V a l l e y
district bond measure compares with a
$51) million bond issue whJch the Irvine
Unified Schon! District is asking voters to
approve Nov. 7.
Both of the new unified districts were
created in June in a voter.approved
reorganization of"the-'l\lsttn Union High
School District and its component
elementary districts.
In recent years, those old districts
have been unable to keep up with the fast
growth pact of the Irvine and Mission
Viejo areas the two new distrlcb serve.
, Although doubting enough suitable
'coastal sites could be found, lhe
researchers explain that utility com·
pailies look for ocean locations because
'they want cheap water for cooling.
Purcell said the victim was forcibly
raped, forced to Blibmit to unnaural acts
and robbed of personal jewel_ry by the
men wfjjj beat her.
"She VfaS In a somewhat dazed and
confused condition." Pur.cell said. YachtSman With Gan
U the new plants were built along the
ocean, the researchers 'said, "then Jn the
year 2000 there would be 1,200-megawatt
(See CRISIS, Page rt
)
Chavez Appears
To Oppose 22
Cesar Chavez, founder and dlrector of
the United Farm Workers, will make
rthree appareaooes loc&lly Wednesday
and Tliurtday to speak against Proposi-
tion 22, the initiative which would place
ooritrola on farm labor practlcts.
on Wednesday he -will speak at Cal
m.te Long Beach at 12:10 p.m. at tbe
outdoor speaker's p\;ltform in front of the
~campus boolu)tore.
On Thursday, Chavez will 11ddress
students at Cal State Fullerton and will
speak at a Chicano rally ln Santa Ana:
He Is el:pected to•ppear at 12:30 p.m.
tn the Fullerton campus quad. The Santa
Ana rally .will be held at 7 p.m. al El
Salvador Park. It is jointly spo...Ored by
Chicanos for McGovern and the ()range
County Chapter of t h e United Fann
Wotkers.
•
She called HoilywdOd relatives from a
telephone in a service staUon after. being
released by the men.
A massive police search . h a d been
undertaken in the Laguna Beach area
after first reports of the kldnaping were
made.
The Calliomla Highway Patrol had
est(lblisbed a roadblock along Laguna
Canyon Road and helicopters from
neighboring police departments were·
employed in searching rugged canyon
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Chn. M.ltc. chelll. ibll
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typewrtr., chrome lire tef A
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•
Authorities Probing
Dana Harbor Hijinks
An uptlaht .Yatcttsman who allegedly
used his plstol'lo defend his right to cut
In line at the Dana Harbor launching
ramp Sunday .. was still being souaht by
authorities today.
The Incident which occurred at tbe
launching nmp at about noon Sunday
typified a hectic weekend for harbor
patrolmen,· who did moat of their in.
vestlptton on dry land at the new
recreation 1Acllity.
Their othe'r cases involved :
-.A customer at a posh restaurant fan.
Ing from a second-floor balC01'Y onto 1
mtauront employe.
-Another patron of the s a m e
estabil1lwnent choking on • pltce of pop. com.
• -FOID" bowled-sallboats.
. -Five J10W<r boats In distms at .. a.
-OM fiaherrnan wuhed from the wat
breakwater.
The 111" incident toot place In tbe
afternoon ho4n: Sunday as boaters w~
-•
waiting their tum to use the busy
Jaunchlng ramp. -
Patrol spokesmen aald Robert French,
32, of Orange had been waiting his tum
for tome Um• vlhen an untdenUfled man
and hb1 cabin cruiser came in and took a
place ahead or French's craft al the
waiting doci<I.
/ n argument ensued and French untlflll
the bowline of the uauper'• cr1ft. At that
point the Irate •kipper emerged from the
ooctplt with • pistol.
"Touch my boat apln. and I'll blow
your head off," he told his fellow
.. IJNI •. French then left to ,.., patrolm ...
• When lheY returned, the boat and gun-
man had fled. ·
Offlcen l11ued a general broadcast ror
the boat and car usertodly owned by the
IUJl)OCI, So far DO arrests havo bt<n
made. Amona: UM more unusual cues w11
(Boo YAarr, hp t)
Zogg noted that the 13,000 to 14,000
pupils the Saddleback Valley district will
serve next year are enough to require
provision of another high school. Two
new intermediate schools in the district
will be at capacity on opening day. he ad-
ded.
Further, the new district presently has
no maintenance or administration head-
quarters or even a warehouse. 11X>Se
facilities serving the old districts were
located in portions of the districts not in-
cluded in the Saddleback Valley boun·
daries.
Mind at Ease
Banker Orders Stake iii Heart
LONDON (UPI) -When Harold West
died, t-'J «foctor drove a stake through his
heart to make sure he was dead; when
he was buried, they did not nail. his coffin
shut in case he was not.
West was,no v.ampire. He was just a
cautious banker who feared being buried
alive.
When be dled last June at 90, ·west left
a will direclng that "my coffin abaU not
be -.!Id down an4 that ' surgeon be
instructed to pierce my heart with a steel
or other ln!trument to make certain
death bas occurred."
His fatnlly physician, Dr. Eric Kerr,
said Sunday: Ht did what Mr. West
wanted, but it was the first request of
that sort I had ever had."
Kerr said West, a London bank
manager, wanted to be certain he would .
be dead when he went to his grave, but if
by chance he was not. be wanted a
means of esca!)e.
"He was very meticulous in his habits
as a bank manager," the doctor said.
"But this did not seem to be overdoing it.
Many people have fears of thi1 sort." :
Maurice West, the banker's nephew
•1ho received the bulk of the $87,000 his
uncle left, said : "lt was an odd· request
but if you can't have your own way at
that time of life -I mean death -when
can you?"
The banter lert 11,250 to the Rev.
David Wright of St Paul's Anglican
Church in Worthing, south of London,
where West lived.
"He wds a lonely old m8n, afraid of
many things," said Mr. Wright's wife,
Alice. "But he had faith and was looking
forward to going to hedven.
"We shall buy a car with the money,"
she said.
Council to Discuss Goals
For Irvine Town Center
Development goals for Irvine Town
Center and plans for Chino Hills Airport
will be reviewed by Irvlne councilmen
Tuesday night.
The Town Center objectives to be
discussed are a package of general
statements revised by the Irvine Plan-
ning Commission. The initial draft of the
goals were presented by the Irvine Com-
pany two months-ago. _
The goals package updates tbe land
development firm's t.blnking about the
mixed-bag residential, commercial and
civic center to be located adjacent to UC
Irvine, University Regional Park and
University Park, east of the San Diego
Creek Cha.'lnel.
More than JO years ago, archltect
William Pereira pinpointed the area for
such a development that would al8o
.relate to the nearby Irvine Industrial
Com pl el:.
However. the Irvine Company's 1971
Gilneral Plan for a city of 4.W,000 people
on 5.1,000 acres, appeared to abandon the
Town Center site, shifting at least the
governmental land uses northward , a
number of miles.
Since they took office, they said, Coun-
cilman Henry Quigley and Planning
Comml>sion Chairman Wayne Clark
have actively urged the lrvlne Company
to rec:onsider the Town Center plans.
Neverthele91, planning comml.Sllonen
emphasized the propoood development
ought to nlate to the unlv..-.lty and the
Anthony Russo Sets
Talk at UCI Tuesday
Pentagon rapen c:o-c1erenctant Anthony
Russo wlll speak at noon Tuesd.Jy ln
Campus Park at UC Irvine.
RuSIO and tanner Rand O:lmpany
employe Daniel Ellsberg ar. charged by
federal ofrlctals with theft of the SO<:all·
ed Pentagon Papen which ,,.,. publ!Jh-
ed by the New York Ti .... and nvtaled
the history of key govemment policy
decisions in the Vtetnam War-. Runo'J
appeanm<e ot UCI II ll"""Ored by the
A-wte Sludents liild VI et a • m
Vetenns Againllt tho War. 1
. '
community to a greater extent that It
should orient to the industria1 complex.
Further, commlsslonen asked the
Irvine Company architects to weigh the
desirability of including the governmen--
tal buildings in Town C e n t e r .
Presumably, that question will remain
open until the selection of an architect is
final following a competition for planning
contracts set by the Irvine Company.
tr councilmen &gree with the planning
commission, the developer will be put on
notice the city hopes to see a highly
urban development that restricts access
to the interior of Town Center to
pedestrians and cyclists.
The city considered goals would also
require a shtll In a<hool planning by the
new Irvine Un1!ied School District since
the proposed objective! call f o r
something oibtr than the typical sprawl·
ing, suburban school. ,
The Chino Hills Airport presentation
comes as a re!l\llt of the council'• in-
(See REVIEW, Page %)
Orange
Weal her
Variable cloudiness on Tuesday,
but moally sunny, with bight at
the beaches around 71 rlslna to 78
Inland. Lows tonight 158-61.
INSIDE TOlli\ V
Ntul Ge,,,,...u'• L•/twalf• """ plam for bombing milrion.I cm
U.S. citlet during the war, ac-
cordino to f'tctntlu d.ircovttrd
paf)ffrt. See storv on Paoe f. ......... .. ... .-" -.. -" Callfitnllla • _ ...... ,..... • ,_, .. .. "
_,_
• -" 11MI,.._ • -.. -,..,
-~-• --••n ........ _ • -" -·-.. -" ·-.... ·-. hr .. ·--• .....,, ..... M -M --•
,
•
•
DAILY PILOT
·Hired. Diplomat?
Kissinger Sliou;n as 'GunsU11ger!
SAN FRANCISCO (U)'I) -The a'thor
of a new book about prealdentlal alde
Heery Kissinger describes hlm as a M>rt
of "guMllnger" type of 1>rofes.'!ional
diplomat that is n.,w to American
politics.
"Kissinger hired oul to Ne Ison
~ockefeller in 1968 to gun down R irhurd
~ixon for the presidentitil non1ination,"
e.uthor·attorney Charles Ashmnn .suid
S..nday.
"He failed lo stop Nixon. but then join-
ed him as a for-hire trouble-shooter.
"De Gaulle. the Berlin 'Vall. Red
China. Vietnam ... Ki:;sincer handles
them all. So he has moved up in the Nix-
on administration to become the most
powerful No. 2 man in the history of the
United States.
"England, France and some olher
countries have had dip\Omils y.·ho were
professionals and continued to represent
their country through numerous change!
jn government.
"But the brilliant Henry Kissinger is
the _first or this 'gunslinger' sort the
United States has !!Ver had.''
Ashman said he even considerC"d using
tlte title, "llave Brain, 'Vil! Travel,'' for
his book on Kissinger.
lnstead, the book has been published
by Lyle Stuart, Inc .. of Sccaucui:, N.J., as
"Kiulngor. Tile Ad..,,turu of SIJper-
Kraut."
Ashrnan uld ln tn lntttvlew he was
astonlshtd while writing and ......,.cblng
hi& book that "' many people he talkod :o
had rorgotten that Kissinger's ]ob at the
1968 R.epubUcan coriventlon wns to "stop
Nixon."
"At one point, an opllmistk Kissinger
actually told (riends fron1 Harvard that
be feJt they had stop1>Cd Nixon and
Rockefeller would gtt the nomination,"
Ashman writes.
"Buried in the press repor1.,5 or
Rockefeller's announcement on May 3.
1968, \\'hen he talked about the Vietnam
war and domestic problems, was a sug·
gestion that the president of the United
States should visi t Red Oiina," Y.'rites
Ashman.
"This idea had come from one of his
new fareign affairs advisers _ . . none
olher than Henry Kissinger.''..
Ashman uses a light approach in his
study of Kissinger, dwellin~ on his life in
Germany before immigrating to
America, his rise to power within the
Nixon administration and his well-
publicized dates with some or the world's
sexiest wonten.
"In fact. he uses somewhat of a gun-
slinger approach in his dealings "'ilh
women," Ashman says.
' El Toro Board Abando11s
Aliso Expa11sio11 Prog1·a111
In an effort to save taxpayers $1.9
million, directors of the El Toro Water
DistriC"t have voted to abandon participa-
tion in the proposed multi-million Aliso
Water Management Agency treatment
plant expansion program.
·Directors took the action Friday after
learning present waste t re at men l
facilities, owned by the Rossmoor Sanita-
tion Company, "'outd be apequaie for at
least five. and possibly 10 years.
It would be financially unwise to build
a new $1.9 million plant in El Toro, as
From Pagel
CRISIS ...
power plants every eight miles along the
coast.''
The Rand team propose'S t b a t
California slow its electrical use growth
instead, because ao m1ny plants would
threaten a "deteriorated enr\vonment"
and power shortage could be expected
anyway unless a eareM consruction
timetable were met.
Suggesting commercial and residential
conservati on techniques ranging from
turning out the lights in an empty room
to using solar energy for water heating,
~h~ researchers say cutting future pro-
jected electrical use by 60 percent is "a
rea80nable goal."
Thus. the projected 33.S million Califor·
nlans of the 21st Century should use 300
billion kilowatt hours a year instead of
the 848 billion kilo.,..·att hours expected
at the current growth rate.
The reduced figure would still be near·
ly triple the current power use by the
_state's 20 million residents.
The Rand team also suggests a •·go-
s\nw" policy on new nuclear power
plants, no w contemplated as the heart of
California's future electrical system.
"Besides the risk of nuclear accident."
Rand said, "the researchers point to the
unsolved problem of disposing of high-
Jevel radioactive wastes, which remain
dangerous (or thousands or years."
PlaDta could harness alternative power
sources, the .-csearchers said, such as
,geothennal energy -widerground steam
that can be converted Into electricity.
"ll the geothermal resources believed '9 exist in Imperial Valiey in the
i:Southern California desert were hamess-
1~ In a 1~1&15 year program, no other
. •6ew power plants could be required ater '1985," Rand stated, provided the slate
)~uld hold to a growth rate of 3 percent
• l
1
1 •
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In c.._... A• D•11•••~ ,_ 4n.44:rt
,
called for in the A wri.1A project report,
when existing facilities can handle
sewage treatment, said director John
Toups.
In a related move Friday, directors of
the district voted to approve issuance or
$2 .25 million in tax-anticipated warrants
to fund the district's sha re of the A WMA
outfa lls off Aliso Canyon and Doheny
Beach.
This i ction \Vilt increase the district's
$1.22 tax rate per SIOO assessed land
\'a/uation to about $2.22.
Directors took the two actions based on
a repor~from an ad hoc board com-
mittee and advice from counsel from the
law firm of Rutan and Tucker.
Attorney Fritz Stradling contended the
eight member agencies of A'VMA may
be racro with difficulties in raising in-
df\!idual shares of the $27.S million
A WMA prnj<ct.
The program cans for expansion or a
number of inland treatment plants, with
highly treated efnuent used for ir·
rigation. Excess waste water would be
disposed in an outfalJ off Aliso Creek Cnn-
yoo.
From Pagel
KIDNAP ...
large rock, the man reportedly threaten-
edt he girl. grabbed her IC'ft arm nnd
forced her into fhe vehicle .
She was positioned het\veen the tv:o
men and the car sped away, first turning
onto Woodland Drive and then onto
Laguna Canyon Road.
The kidnaping apparently occurrc<l
right in front of the trailer park sign by
the Laguna Beach Boys Club at about 8
p.m. according to the witness.
The teenagers were walking home
from a billiards parlor located in a near-
by shopping area. The victim's mother
ha d reportedly been with the children
there but had left them and gone to a
Canyon Acres home earlier.
Lagunn Beach officer Terry Temple
talked with the girl's mothe r. staying
with relatives in the Canyon Acres area.
Weary-eyed Laguna Beach detectives
'"'ho had worked the nighl-long case said
today the investigation wlll continue .
Purcell and Det. Gene Brooks \Vere
called by the girl's re!1:1tives in Hollywood
'"'ho had received the first phone call
from the young rape 1ictim.
The girl was met in a Hollywood loca-
tion by Laguna Beach detectives and
hospitalized. In addition to other injuries,
she had a cut across the bridge of her
nose. Purctll said. The girl was visiting
taguna from the Covina area .
'
From Pagel
YACHT ...
thnt of the falling custome r.
That took place Saturday at the Jolly
Roger Restaurant.
Patrolmen said !he patron, Carles
Henry of 26292 VW California , Capistrano
Beach, lost hls fooling and toppled onto
an unidentified male employe or the
C'stabllshment.
Henry was unhurt : the @_mpll'ly@_ was
kOOC"ked oul for a ~horl !Im('. but sought
no t.reatmcnt after be rec<1vcred ton·
sclousness.
On the same day, officer1 ansv.-e.rtd
another call a: the .lolly Roger and found
a woman customer regaining her brealh.
The woman . they said, had choked on a
pieC'e of popcorn while havillg a cocktail
in the 1'ettaurant'1 lounge.
Mra. Helen Lu!Ch, 80. of Cerone del
Mar, did nol ,'tQulre medical trtetment.
On the aame day. an Incident on the:
harbor's weat jelly caused oome concern,
but turned out to be n minor accident.
Patrolmen said a bf:avy wave 1lam·
ming Into Ute rocts sent William
Robinson, 42, or Perris, falllng ln to th&
chnMC"I bchlnd the breakwater.
Rob.inson suffer .. '11 scrapes and bruises,
but declined medical treatment.
UPI T•IMDl1
1\'01 Khl Sl11rf
This youngster seems more in-
terested in getting something
to eat than listening to Demo-
cratic vice presidential nom-
inee Sargent Shriver during
Shriver's fund-raising picnic at
his Rockville, Md ., home.
rr..Pqel
REVIEW ...
decillon on a -lutloo opposing the
north Orange Coonty C!>fl\merclal Je1pon . ·
Reg Wood , chalrmall of !be non-profit corporttlon _,. opproval ol tlje
!adllty dtsllnecl to handle U mlllkib
pwengm hy the wly t~. asked to
lddreu the council pr1or to Irvine's
r<solvfnl to oppote the a~port.
Som& weeks ago, councilmen endorsed
a proposal for a major jetport at Camp
l'endleton sought by Fifth District
Supervlsor Ronald Caspers and opposed
development of a commerciaJ jetport at
El Toro Marine COrps Air Station..
Council man Henry Quigley observed
that development of a facility at Chino
liills might well interfere with any plans
to create joint passenger plane uses at El
Toro MCAS and limit the usefulness of
Orange County Airport. It. is possible,
Quigley noted , flights from Orange Coun-
ty or El Toro would con!Hct wlth air traf-
fic at Chino Hills were the latter to be
built.
Joaquin Schools
On Short End
Of Fund Windfall
Of more than $10 million oI the state
school building fund appropriated since
June when voters put $100 million back
into the fund, only $288,000 went to aid
the San Joaquin Elementary District.
According to State Sen. James E.
\Vhetmore (R-Fullerton), school districts
in Fresno. Los Angeles, San Bernardino
and San Luis Obispo were the primary
recipients of state building aid allocated
to date.
The State Allocation Board bu ap-
proved a total of $10,646,000 of which
$10,358,000 went to lhe districb in other
counties to pay for earthquake safety
reconstruction programs.
Officials of the new Irvine Unified and
Saddleback VaU.y 'Jalfied d\stricla are
relying heavily on the state achool
building fund to help them meet demand&
for new schools which locally approved
bond funds can only partly meet
'Etad 'ltlarket Powe,.,_
lJ. S. May Se _ek
~reakup of IBM ·
NEW YORK (AP\ -The fed.,al
government said today thnt ir it wins its
31fl-year-<1ld suit agalnst Internationa l
Business Machines Corp., it Ukely will
seek the breakup of the huge company's
computer operations into coinpeling
units.
The Justice Department stated its posi-
tion in a court-ordered paper in U.S.
District Court here, listing "tentative"
remedies to "dissipate the enormous
market power of the current IBM com-
puter manufacturing and marketing
structure.''
The government, which had been asked
to submit a detailed proposal of action it
believed should be taken against ffiM ,
said it could not be more speeilic until a
more precise analysis of ·IBM's markets
was made.
An attorney for IBM charged that the
government was ndding new issues to the
case and could not wln a court trial of
the antitrust action.
The New York Stock Exchange, citing
an Influx of orders, nalted trading in
IB,_i stock after the Justice Department
statements. mM stock was down $2. 75, .
ID $376.25, for the day before trading
was halted. Tradlng resumed t hr ee
hours later.
The Justice Department said that
although precl_.. details of the proposed
divestiture could not be provided at this
time, the breakup of the muJUbillion-
dollar firm woold he accomplished "hy
the formation of the total domestic and
intemaUonal computer systems faeilltles
or IBM into several separate, m.
dependent and competitive balanced en-
tities capable of competing auccessfully.
in domestic and internaUonal market..
wtth one another and with other domestic
and foreign competitors."
domestic arm of IBM has been $lowing
down -with earnings growing at an an-
nual rate or abOut 7 percent a year -
World Trade revenues registerOO o 16
percent gain last year and 1:1C(!ll)Unted for
1nore than llalf the company':i tctal prof-
;1
Some induslry observers believe that
without tire expansion of overseas opera-
tions and the interest and dividend in-
corne from the company's ca.sh and
securities. 1B~1 would have been
recording no year-to-year gains in profits
in recent years.
Murder Pwt
Suspect Gets·
Year .in Jail
from Wire Services
RIVERSIDE - A man from 'Elsinore
who paid a young enlisted man from El
Toro Marine Corps Air Staik>n SI.500 to
murder bis wife and mother-in-law will
have a year to think over what he got for
the alleged harglln beginning Tuesday.
Louis Wolsbin. 62, must begin serving
one year in jail and three yean' pro-
bation afterward, after bis aenten~g
Friday in Riverside C o u n t 1 Superior
Court.
Judge Francis Estudillo Imposed the
tenn following Wohhln's convictkin July
21 on the basis of testimony by 22-year--
old Pvt. Timothy Boudelte.
The defendant posted 115,000 bail
following his arrest for soliciting to com·
mit murder after Pvt. Boudette flew to
Miami, Fla., at Wolshin's expense on a
missiop of a murder be never intended to
commit
Authorities to Decide
In a Sept. 12 order, U.S. District Court
Judge David N. Edelstein told the
department it wanted to k n o w
specifically what was southt in the way
of relief in one of the biggest an·
limonopoly actions ever brought by the
Given the oiler when picked up as a
hitchhiker, Pvt . BoudC!tle Tisited Mrs .
Olga Wolshln, wbo had filed fDr divorce
after 23 years of marriage that produced
six children.
On Search for Doctor
government. '
The suit against IBM was filed Jan. 17,
1969, the last business day of the Jobnsoh
administration, and had not yet come to
He was also hired tD kill her mother,
Mrs. Vera S. Ale xander, who lives in
Miami too, but went to pollt;e instead.
The bounty on Wolshin's mother.In-law w.. only $500, Pvt. Boudett< testified,
while he Wa.! paid Sl.000 to take care of
Mrs. Wolsbin in add.Ulan to the round-trip
plane ticket.
Authorities said today they will decide
tonight whether or not to conUnue the air .sear~h for Newport Beach physician Dr.
George Peck. who b!s been missing tn a
light plane since Oct. 3.
"Unless there is something new that
develops today, we'll probably ~d
the search as of tonigh t," a spokesman
for the Western Rescue Coordlnatton
Center at Hamilton Air Force Base in
San Rafael said th is morning. ~le said officials of the center. which
has been paying the cost of the two-week
search, will meet with the head of the
California Civil Air Patrol this evening to
rr:ake the decision.
The chances of the CAP finding
anything new today are slim since they
have no planes in the air, a spokesman
said.
They sent 22 airplanes aloft over the
y.·eekend scouring an area from san
Francisco south to the Mexican border.
The search stopped at the border.
ho.,.ever, because the CAP ls not
autl.orized to search Mexican territory.
"That's a problem we're trying to work
Gang Selected
Random Victims,
Autl1ority Says
CHICAGO CAP) -Sherill Richard J.
Elrod says eight members o! a black ter·
rorist gang charged in the recent
1nurders of nine persons were apparently
"roaming the countryside looking for
someone to kill.''
Authorities ~aid a;>parently not all of
the eight men charged participated in all
sl:iyings.
Elrod told newsmen Sunday the nine
while victims, including the members of
two separate families, apparently we.re
randomly selected by cCthicago street
g:.1ng he said called itself "De Mau
i\1au."
Asked aboul possible racial motivation,
Elrod snid, "l can see no other e,pparent
tnnlivation."
Six rnl·n arc being held without bond,
\l\O olhers are still being sough t
The n1urders took place in the 1111nols
rommun illcs or Barrington Hills, Monet,
llighland Park and Carbondale.
Elrod, the Cook C.Ounty sheriff, said the
De Mau Mau organization appattntly w•S
fou nded several years ago by Vietnam
veterans who had been dl.shonorably
discharged.
Charles G. l{unt Jr., president of
Malcolm X College ln Ch!caao. uld three
:i~n ~~d,rf~y ~d ~ ·~~~~~~e
dcellned to elaborate.
The most iRlde1y rej'IOrte(I of .. the
murders was the killing of a retlred i~
surance extculive and three mem.t>er• of
his fan1ily Aug. 4 in the wcaltby Olle.aao
suburb of Barrington llllla. ·
Paul Corbett, 67 ; hl1 wife, Marlon, $7,
and BISter•\n-law, Doroth)' Derry, IO,
were found shot through the backs of
their heeds. Corbftt'1 1tepd•uihle:r,
Barbaril Boand 22, waJ found df:ed t1 few
fret away . She ha11 been shot through the
heart. -,
~ • trial.
out now," said Thomas Valenzaela, a Atty. Thomas D. Barr, representing
CAP oUlcial who said be. met with Mex-IBM, said in court that "the case bas ex-
ican officials ,over tbe past weekeg,d to ploded" with submission of tbe govem-d~ ment p(,'Oposal. "It ·..;.;.~ hOJp Uf with tJ,is 1.eard, but He 8'ld \!le. (Oll&!ll!Mnl Interjected
maybe we can work somethina out with new Wues In -the case by adding the
their AJr Force ln the future.1"" be II.Ml. company's overseas business to the
·"'!'he '-••·g llecisi<in 't6 ""',...;"• 1 he domeotlc operations t'hat wer. the target
_........ 0 o,u>t""'"" or the original complaint.
&Catch for Dr. Peck did not~ his The company lawyer contended lhe
sort, Dougla!i Peck or Lo!! Angeles , who government could not prove its antitrust
spent the weekend at the CAP' cOntrol case if forced to go to trial now and said
cent't!r at Brackett Field ln Pomona. the government was pressuring IBM -
During the trial, Mrs . Wolshln i.atlflod
she .. believed lier h11Sb&ld was Innocent
because, she.knew he loved her. -
PRINCESS GOES
IN FOR SWIM
'"lbey've combed the entire area comparing the pressure to the weight or
twice," the younger Peck seid, "and they an elephant. PERTII, Au stralia (AP) -Princess
haven't found a trace. "\Ve feel that weight, and we want to Margaret of Britain and her husband
"It's kinda frightening and I have lost stop it." Barr said. "If he bumps you, he Lord Soowdon went for a midnight swim
faith a little that they will find him alive. bumps you quite a long ways." alter spending three hours at a barbecue
"There's still that glimmer of bope, The flftb bJaaest corporation in the in 106 -degree temperalu.rel at an
though," Peck said. 06 Australian ranch. Dr. Peck, a promm· ent allergy country, and the world's biggest com-Th di Su~··· . th nd •· k IBM h d --' f 18 27 e P .,._,-night was e teCO or specialist, left Orange County Airport on pu"'r ma er• a ::.a.1es 0 · the day for the royal couple. 1bey cooled an e&rly evening flight and was due back billion and earnings or $1.08 billion last he 1 1 Id 1 af t mse ve.s al poo s e ear ier ter a
i;1 three bou.rs. He flied no flight plan and year. dusty, 12-mile ride !rom Fitzroy Cros.sing
authorltie1 note this had made the search IBM World Trade Corp. is responsiHle to Vo Go Statton, site of the barbecue.
extremely difficult and time consuming. ___ 1o_r_o_v_er_s_ea_s __ ope:__r_at_io:._n_s_. _wn_il_e_t_h_e _______________ _
Business as
usual at ...
"" DtUt(clP ''·' ., ..
APi'I .ANLI LO
•' I H! \li f {)!' I 1' '" ., ...
Yes we are open for business despite the fire we
had at our store last Monday. We are pretty dusty
and dirty right now but that means we must try
harder than ever to offer you bigger and better
values. Our insurance company has allowed us
to repurchase all the crated merchandise and
some of the display samples at reduced cost. These
refrigerators, washers, dryers, dishwashers and
TVs only suffered smoke damage and their new
guarantees were not affected. These savings will
be passed on to you.
During the weeks of remodeling we will continue
• to bring you good values the same as we hava
for the past 25 years. ..
j,.. .r .. •
1815 NEWPORT BLVD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA
'
7
Do11ti11gto11 Dea~h
~ Fo1111tmin Valley
----...
'\
Tod v's Finni ~
N.Y. Stocks ~ .
VOL 65, NO. 290, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1972 TEN CENTS
~
Stµdy Foresees 130 Coa·stal Nuclear Plants
SANTA MONICA (AP) -Picture
Callfomla with nuclear power plants
spaced only eight miles apart along the
state's entire 1,010.mlle coast.
The portrait is not whlmslcal, a
researdt team al Rand Corp. reported
today In a study cocnmlssioned by-the
L<glslalure.
The res.earthen said demands In the
nation's most populous state art ac-
celerating so enormous!¥. that unless
power groWtb ts ieduced. Californians
will need 130 huge new power plants by
the 111t Century.
•
In fact, each plant would have to be in
the 11200 megawatt range, twice the
capacity of the alate's on1y sizeable
nuclear power Plant located on the C'\ast
at san Onofre near the Western Wh1te
House.
Although doubting enough suitable
coa11tal sites could be found, the
researchers ezplaln that utility com·
panies ~ Jor.ocean ·locations because
they want cheap water for cooling.
If the .new plants were built along the
ocean, the researchers said, 0 tben in the
year 2000 there would be '200-megawatt
power plants every elght miles along the
coast."
The Rand ream proposes Iha l
Callfomla slow its electrical use growth
instead, 'bel!ause !IO many plants would
threaten a 0 deteriorated enrlvonment"
and power shortage CQU)d be ezpec:led
anyway unleM a careful consruct1on
timetable were met.
Suggesting commmlal .and residential
conaerva.Uon tedmlques r'Ylglnr from
turning out the lights in an empty room
to using solar energy for water heating,
t~ researcbers say ciitting future pro-
jected electrical use by 60 percent is "a 11Be!:ldes the rtsk of nuclear accident,"
teaJOnable goal." Rand said, "the researchers point to the
Thus, the projected S3.5 million califor· unsolved problem of disposing of hlgh-
nians of the 21st Century should use 300 level radioactive wastes, which remain
billion kilowatt hours a ye,f instead of dangerous for thousands of yean."
tbe 1111 billion kilowatt houri ezpected Plants could harness alternative power
at the current growth nit. sourcea. the .~ said, IUcb as
The niduced liaure would atill be near-' geotbennal energy -underground steam
ly triple the curmil power use by the that can be converted into electrl<lty.
stare'• :IO mlllJon reaklenll. "ll the geolbennal resources believed
1be Band t.eam also suggests a "g~ to eUst in Imperial VaHey in the
.slow" policy on new nuclear power Southern California desert were hantess-
plant!, oow contemplated as the heart i>f ed in a 13-to-15 year program, no other
California'• future electrical system. new power plants could be required ater
IB!'f Split
1985,·1 Rand staled . pro\'1ded the st.ate
could hold to .i grvwth rate of 3 percent
annually.
A second Rand study, commissioned
like the other for !he state Assembly's
C.Ommittee on Planning and Land Use,
said lhat even if growth-slowing policies
were successful about 13 plants in \he
l.~megawatt range will be needed. nie second report recommended a
state agency be established to select
potential sites and deal with expected
controversies over plunking down ,.such
facilities around the state.
Seen?
U.S. Envisions 'Competing Units'
NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe !ederaf
government said today that .ti It wins !ta
31>-year-oid suit against lnlemaUonal
Bll5iness Machines Corp., II Ubly will
seek the breakup of the huge company's
computer operatidns into competing
units. .
Tbe Justice Oepartment stated lb posi-
tion in a court~rdered paper in U.S.
The government, whlch had been asked
to submit a detailed prop:iW of action it
believed should be taken ~l IBM,
said It could not be more specific unW a
more precise analysis of IBM 's markets
was made.
to $376.25, for the day before trading
was halted. Trading resumed t h r e e
hours later.
-District-Court here, listing "tentative"
remedies to "dissipate the eoonnous
market power of the current IBM com-
puter manufacturing and marketing
structure."
An attorney afor IBM charged that the
government was adding new issues to the
case and could not win a court trial of
the antitrust action.
~ New York Stock Exchange, cit~g
an 1nfiux of orders, nalted trading in
IBM stock after the Justice Department
statements. IBM stock was down $2.75,
The Justice Department said that
although precise detail s of the proposed
divestiture cou ld not be provided at this
time, the breo.kup of the multibllllon-
dollar firm would be accompl~bed "by
the formation of the total domestic and
international computer systems facilities
of IBM into several separate, in-
"dependent and competitive ba.1anced en-
tities capable of competing successfully
!Set IBM SUIT, Page %)
. . D,t.ILT Pll,OT Stiff PM•
Anyone-for Bridge?
' The cast of characters for this photo all ·uve within
a blocj of each o~u otfter in Hunijngton Beach's
Pacific Sands area. They share anotlier COllllllOll
bond made of p1aster of paris. John White, 10; Jim
Buck, 13; Jeff Hyder, 12, and Steve Bowman, 13
• BUaCk :!!Yder .1 he "cm · sn0wb!M'•nt1ve. Bowman"
lives on Catamaran Lane. Their-injuries were caused
~.111\.evetytbing from football to trying to puff a pil-
low at bedtime, missing and bitting the wall with
a fist instead.
· (from left) have broken wrists or forearms. White,
Three ChiUlren,
Among 7 Persons
Killed in County
Seven persons, including three children
died over the weekend in Orange Cowity
traffic accidents, the county cororier's of·
Dee reported.
The dead are:
Rodney J. Tomassacci, 20, of West
Covina.
Frederick Wadsworth, 59, and his wife,
· Elaine, 58, of 296 Bowling Green Drive,
Costa Mesa.
Tomassa.cl, whose car swerved across
the San Diego Freeway in San Clemente
aod crashed into the Cost.a Mesa couple's
vehicle Saturday night, was previously
unidentified.
Mrs. Elma Peck, 60 of 817 S. Maxine
Ave., Sant.a Ana was killed Stmday when
11truck by a car oo Euclid /rvenue near
Wisteria Slreet. 11te driver of the car,
Richard K. McCoy, ti, of Anaheim, was
not cited.
Two +.year-old children and a boy, 10,
died in other inland county accidents.
Gary Wilson, 10, of 40t E. Palmyra St.,
Orange, was killed when struck by a car
while riding a bicycle at Chapman
Avenue and Feldner Street Saturday.
'l1le driver was not cited, ·
Trial Scl1eduled Nov. 21
For Cruelty Case Suspect
Trial date for Orville James Chase,
charged with alleged cruelly IO his burro
and eight dogs, has been set for Nov. 21
in West Orange County Municipal Court.
The part-time maintenarice man and
artist has pleaded innocent to all charges
which include:
-Neglecting to license a dog over four
months old.
-Allowing dogs off his premises.
-Keeping animals in an unclean
premises. ,
-Keeping a dog kennel less than 1,000
feet from a dweUing.
-Cruelty to animals.
-Keeping animals without properly
heating them.
aiase was arrested OCt . 4 at hi!: trailer
residence on a six-acre field near Ute in-
tersection of Warner Avenue and Bolsa
Chica Road in Huntington Beach.
His animal! were taken to the Hun-
tington Beach Humane Society and he
was placed in jail until later freed on a
$250 bail bond.
HuntinJl,on Beach police and Humane
Society officers clalm some ot the dogs
were suffering from malnutrition. and
neglect when they arrested Chase.
The burro had severa~ fly bites on his
legs, according to Humane SOClety Of.
ficers.
Robert Shark~y, owner of the anlmal
sbeJter, said today that one of Chase's
dogs had been released to him after he
got the necessary rabies shots and
license for the animal.
Sharkey said the dogs have been well
fed While at the humane society and are
now in good condition.
Chase had expressed fear that his dogs
will be destroyed, but Sharkey said
everything would be done to place the
canines in a good home-.
Sharkey also said Chase could get his
donkey back if be could prove that he
had sufficient facilities to care for the
arurnal.
Valley Meet Canceled
Because of the annual League of Cities
Convention in Anaheim this week, Foun-
tain VaUey city cooocilmen will mt meet
· Tuesday· nlght. 'll>e meeting ha! been
rescheduled for Oct. Z4 In the Community
Services Building.
Nun Relates
Stock Deal
Wiili .D1ilaney
By TOM llARL£Y
Of ... Di1lr ..... '""'
A Roman Catholic mm today identified
Laguna Hills stockbroker Joseph Dulaney
as the man who aSIW'ed her and other
officials at a San Bernardino hospital In
late 1963 that tbey could double tbe in-
come they received from invested
reserve funds .
Sisler Margaret Mary, the first pros-
ecution witness in the Orange County
superior Court trial of Dulaney and three
codelendanta, te.ltlied that abe, SI.
Bernanltoe Hospital controller Robert
Machan and> two other mms visited
Dulaney'• "Taj Malla!" building about a
mont~ later.
She· t..ii!led that ohe had been ap-
proach on the topic earlier by Machan,
50, San Bernardino, who suggested that
tho funds curmiUy held in reservo by the
hospital could generate more Income in
the bands of Dulaney'• World Financial
Trends organization.
The son-spoken nun, who was demoted
by bef order bi mld·1970 at the height of
the Dulaney investigation and transfer·
red to Tulsa, Okla. said the convenatton
and the visit to Laguna llilll led to the
granting of a !500.000 loan to the Dulaney
group.
Sbe teatllied, ov.r repealed objecttons,
that Dulaney provided borptlai repr...,,.
taUvea with a .iaremenl Indicating the
stroog llnanclal..Pos!t!OI of bis l"'llP· She said lliilaney, !8, of :!QI Via
~dlta, San Clemente, told hospital
repttSentattvea he intended to iDvesl the
l500,000 in the lonn of $150,000 shares of
Azalea atocl:.
It b alleged that the at4c(I WU
worthless and that the SS00.000 ouboo-
quentiy received by Dulaney from the SI.
(See DVLANEY, Pqe I) Joleoe Whitmore, 4, of 2809 W. Willits
St., Santa Ana, received fatal injuries
Saturday when struck by a car driven by
John K. Weidenbenner, 23, of Santa Ana
en Fairview Street.
Gregory Labord, 4, of 2134 E. Underhill
Ave., Anaheim, died Saturday of injurie3
received when hit by a car last Tuesday.
Assembly Hopefuls Clash
Jn the later two cases the drivers were
not cited.
LOTS TO SELL?
LIST IT HEJIB
When )'OU've got a lot to sell, ll!1t It all
W'bere people sell a lot. .. like this:
GOLD • pc. aectlonal, any· 2
make couch. Bed In 1, any
pc. $&). 2 new &Old .mil. occ
chn. M.iac. chests, tbls
lloover vac. Mlm>acope.
typewrtr., Chrome fin! •t .r.:
acl'ffn Ian n&Ulh. 90febed '
chair. $50, XXX·XDX.
1rwowt F111t.a1tlc!" That'• the way the
advertiser ~rtbl!!d the rt1ponlfl to that
, nd. Try It for yourself. Dini the direct
1 line to DAILY PILOT clasrlfiM adver-
: Using, 842-5678.
..
' Moslienko, Burke Exchange Charges in, Valley Debat.e
AISO!llbly con<lldates Terry Moshenko
and Robert Burke clashed in what was
billed as their lint and only debllte of the
campaign Sunday night In Fowttain
Valley.
Challenger Moabento1 a Los AlamJtos
Democrat, charged !bat Burke, "lhe In· cumbent Republican from Hudl!ngton Beacbi ls the "most negative man" In
tbe 1.<gt1l11un!. He a!Jo claimed Burke is
a "rillltt wing extremist."
Burke, a 1i1-year veteran of the
AJcmbly from West Orange County's
?Qth District, lpored M o s h en k o ' s
tenninom, aayil\I :
"I consf'der m.yR1f on the defensive .u
a member of the mlnOrlty J>ArtY in the
Assembly. I think I am poslllvtly
rcp.-...nting thll district even though I
cast a number of 'oo' votu."
~ confrontaUon toot place during a
Huntington Beach l<aJ!Ue of Women
Voters banquet 11 lhe Mile Square Goll
Coune clubhouoe.
At one point, Moahenko asserted that
Burke does not support Pmident Nixon.
"I'm proud 'to be a Republican and I'm ~ to support the Prtsk1ent'1· rHl~
Uon,' Burke ttpllfld.
"But you wore a John A!hb~lt button
during the primary," Moshenko shot
back. Ashbrook, a COORrvaUve Ohio o.
gresam1111. cballeniiecl Nixon's bid for
renomlnaU.on by tbe Republican Party:
. Wben asked If he oupported George
M<.'Govem, Mosbenko 11ld1 "I don't IUPo
port McGovern, Nixon or ( J o b n )
Schmitt. I 'm rununing this as 1 race for
the Assembly."
The 70th Assembly Dist rlct covers Seal
Beach, Fountain Valley. llunllngton
Beach and portillns of t.oo "'1•rnltos,
I
'
Costa Mesa. Westmlnster, Carden Grove
and Santi Ana.
Moehenb rud a II.at of 11no" fOtel cast
by Btute 00 Rich lbJnp .. , -unllleallon, ........ d!Mue educltion,
deletion of I he Pacific 0out Freeway,
Ji.qan'1 1971 wnmnn bill, mlntmum
wages for women. and cblldren, and other
Item&.
"Of Ml votes taken on the Door of tbe
1911 le1l1l1ttve MSSklo, lhe
ASlcmblyman wt S2 'yes' votes -about
11J perttDl of the tot.i -and lboul 1$
per<ent of bll 'no' ....,. pul him in the
.. 1,.,.. rlglit "In.I of his ow n
ltepubl!can porty," Moshenko declared. 8urte did not reply directly lo
MOlbenko'a lilt, except on the coall·
r........,, in which he uplalned hls bill
wbJch p,.._.i 1 nve-year moratorium
IS.. DEllATI:, Pa .. I)
Daylight Robbery
Armed Thug Nets $225
".Jn Gas Station Holdup
A bandit, complaining that he was
"having a bad day", Swlday afternoon
robbed a Huntjngton Beach service sta-
tion of about $225.
Police said the suspect, a Mexican-
American in his mid-30s, walked into the
Hartwell Shell Station, 6502 Bolsa Ave.,
around 5:40 p.m. and indicated he was
interested In buying some tires.
The station attendant Jerry Duane
Yoong, of Westminster. told police he
was looking up the prices of the tires
when \be bandit thrust a .3Z caliber
automatic pistol in his back.
"Thls is a holdup. I want you to walk
slowly out to the boxes and get t h e mooey," the robber told Young.
They both walked to the north gas
pump .and Young gave him the · money
from the cash box there. As they were
wa lking to the other pump Island cash
box the bandit warned Young "Don't do
anything foolish. I've had a bad day," ac-
cording to police.
After gathering the money from the
second box . the robber forced Young Into
the back room and grabbed the money
from another cash box.
He then ned telling Young not to come
out of the room for three minutes or the
attendant would be shot, police said. Of-
ficers reported that two witnesses near
the crime saw the man get into a car
driven by another man and speed off.
Hired Diplo111atil
Kissinger Shown as 'Gunslinger'
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The author
of a new book about presidential aide
Henry Klsslnger describes him as a .art
of "gunslinger" type of professional
diplomat that is tk;W to American
polltlct.
11KJS1inger hired out to Ne I s o n
Rockefeller in 1968 to gun down Richard
Nixon for the presidential nomination,"
author-attorney Charles Ashman said
SUnday.
0 He felled to stop Nixon, but then jo~
ed .him as a for-hire trouble-shooter.
"De Gaulle, the Berlin Wall, Red
Oilna, Vietnam . • . Kiulnaer haodle.s
them all. So he has moved up in the Nix·
on administration to become the mo1t
powerful No. 2 man in the history of the
United States.
"England, France and some other
countries have had diplomata who were
profeaion8b and continued to represent
their country through numtroua changes
In government.
"But the brlllla!\l Henry Kissinger ii
the flnl or this !gunslinger' 10rl the
Unitod S11l<a has ever had."
Alhmln Mid be even t'OOlktered using
UMt title, "Have Bratn, WUl Travel," for
bll book on Kissinger.
Illllead. the book hu been published
by Lyle Stuart, lnc., of Secaucut. N.J., as
"KJuinger. The Advtnturu or Super-
Xr1ut."
Ashm&n l8id In an tnt.ervlew he wa1
astonished while writlna and ttM:arching
hil book that ID many people he talked o
had forgotttn that Kllllnger'1 job at the
11'8 RepubUcan coaventlon na to "stop
Nixon."
"At ono poin~ an optlmllli< Klui"IJor
actually told tr1ends from RaMard that
he felt they had slopped Nixon and
Rockefftller would get I.he nomlnaUon,"
Aa:hman writes. 1
''Burled ln the prtsa rtporll of
Rockefeller'• announcement on May 3,
1968, when he talked about the Vietnam
war and domestic problems, was a sug·
gesUon that the president of the United
St.a.tu should visit Red China," writes
Ashman.
"This idea had come from one of hil
new foreign alfalra advisers . , , none
other Ulan Henry Kissinger."
Ashman uses a light approach in hla
study of Klsalnger, dwellin~ on hia life ln
Germany before immigrating t o
America, his ri.9e to power withln the
Nixon administration and his well·
publicized dates with some or the world's
sexiest wo11en.
"ln fact , he uses somewhat of a gun-
slinger approach, in his dealings with
womtn," Ashman s.ays .
Orange Coast
Weatller
Variable cloudiness on Tuelday,
bill mostly SUMy, with h!gbs 11
the beaches llOODd 74 rllin& to 'II
Inland. Lows tonight SMZ.
INSIDE TODAY
Na:I Ge,.,,....y'1 Lu/l1Doff< hod
plant for bombtno missions on
U.S. cUtt1 during the war~ ac-
cording to r1cntl11 dbcowred paptrs. See •torv on Poqe. 4.
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--------
• •
•
•
DAJLY PILOT
From P•ge J
DEBATE •..
(11'1 the freeway and 4 study of CO:l!ilal
transportation need!>.
Burke s a id simple dclct1on of Uic
frttway dots not anJ'A'tr..the needs of lhe
area.
During n questlan and ans1vC'r session.
~ach man outlined his views on thr~
propositions on the Nove1n~r bJ1llot
Both oppose Proposition 14. 1he \Vatson
amendment, \vhich 1vould se t <.i lin1it on
property taxes.
They split , however . on Proposition 20
(coastline preser\'alion) and Proposition
19 (the marijuana 1nif1ati\'e), with Burke
opposed to both and t\.toshcnko supporting
I hem.
''This initiative savs the roastlinc i.s :t
unique resourcl' so 'rcsponsibihty for 11
should be in state hands.'' Burke said.
"That could also be ex.tended to the
forests. the rivers, your lot. my lot."
"Confisc,lt1on through zoning is not th e
answer. We must acquire the coastline."
the Assemblyman explained. "The in-
itiative loses. local re,sponsiveness."
';It seems indeferuible to me to say the
interest in the coastline stops when Seal
Beach becomes Long Beach." lo.1oshenko
declared. "If Long Beach wants to build
a power plant that affects Seal Beach.
then Seal Beach should have some say.''
On his opposition lo the nu1rijuana In·
itiative. Burke said, "I just can't reel
eliminating the penalty fof' personal ust·
will solve any problen1. It's just sweeping
it under the rug a11d saying it doesn't eK-
ist."
ttloshenko said. "You have the question
of whether n1arijuana is harmful on the
one hand. and on the other. 11.·hat happens
by putting a youth in jail. \Vith the
criminal element? Compare the harms."
"I don't support the use of it. but I
don't support putting children m jail for
possession of a piece of grass. \\'e can
find a betk!r way of controlling mar1·
juana."
Fr0tn Page J
IBM SUIT ...
in domestic and international markets
with one another and with other domestic
and foreign competitors."
Jn a Sept. 12 order, U.S. District Court
Judge David N. Edelstein · told the
department it wanted to k n o w
specifically what was southt in the way
of relief in one of the biggest an-
timonopoly actions ever brought by the
government .
The suit against IBM was filed Jan. 17,
1969, the last business day of the Johnson
administration_ and had not yet come to
trial.
Atty. Thomas D. Barr, representing
IBM, said in court that "the case has ex-
ploded" with submission of the govern-
ment proposal.
He said the govermnent interjected
new is.c:ues in the case by adding the
company's overseas business to the
domestic operations that were the target
eif the original complaint.
The c9mpany lawyer contended the
government could not proYe its antitrust
case if forced to go to trie.1 now and said
the government was pressuring IBM -
comparing the pressure to the weight of
an elephant
"We feel that weight, and we want to
stop it," Barr said. "If he bumps you, he
bumps you quite a Jang ways."
The fifth biggest corpc;ralion in the
country, aod the world's biggest com-
puter maker. IBM had sales of $8.27
billion and earnings of $1.08 billion last
year.
lBt\.1 \Vorld Trade Corp. is responsible
Jor overseas operations. While • the
domestic ann of ffiM ha! been slowing
down -with earnings growing at an an-
nual rate of about 7 percent a year -
World Trade re vepues registered a 16
percent gain last year and accounted for
more than half the company's total prof·
il.
llarrah Wed Again
ZEPlfYR COVE, Nev. IUPI) -Casino
OY.'Tler William F. llarrah, 61. was mar-
ried Sunday to Roxanna Carlson. 32. a
fcirmer model. The marriage was the
fourth for Harrah. who was formerly
married to singer Bobbie Gentry. and
the second for Mrs. Carlson, a native of
Yerington, Nev.
OIAHGol COAST Ha
DAILY PILOT
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r
Sloppy ~lataa.ge11aent? I .. ..
Bresnahan· Le_ase
Action Def e~ded '.
Oirectar of Aviation Robert Bresnahan
today defended himself against charges
of allowing "irregular" leases at Orange
County Airport by S'1ying he wa$ pushing
for a profit.·maldng operation.
Charges agaln:st the county's aviatio11
director surfaced over the weekend. One
supervisor's aide alleged, ''The airport
has been guilty of sloppy management."
Officials of the eounty's Real Pr~perty
Services Department, which handles bid
and leue fW'ICtions, said th&t Bresnahan
has been handing out trial options to
finns operating at the airport without
following proper proceQures.
Bresnahan today indicated there may
have been some ''irregular l y
established" eoncesslons and revenue.
producing 1eases but the aviation chief
insists there are good reasqns for them.
I
I
this ordinance was written before lhct
airport became a self.supporting acl
livity," Bresnahan said. "What the com{
mission is trying lo work out )n a new,
ordinance is a trial and trror period fort
new enterprises."' :
lie argues that tx>cause of the cost tq
the airport for Real Properties and otheri
county services. it is better financially irf
many instances to sign the ope:ator on ~
simplified contract and then see if he ca'\
make money or not. l'
"If the operation brings in little revJ
enue to the rounty why spend severa(,
thousand do~lars on a bid-lease , pr~·
cedure and be stuck with a long term
lease and then find out you do not ap-
prove o! ·the particular .seer.ice," thh •
TIM BANKS, 12, DISPLAYS MODELS HE MADE DURING STUDY OF EVOLUTION
Pithecanthropus U•ft) 01t•5 Back 500,000 Years, Austr1lopithlcu1 (right) 2.3 Miiiion Years
He explained that the airport (lperates
on a so.ealled enterprise fund basis,
meaning that it is selC-supporting. To
keep it that way, Bresnahan does noi
want to sign long term leases with sup.
posedly revenue -producing concessions
and serviees which may turn out to be
money losers.
aviation director asked. • ~ "
Some C<Junty officials do not agree.
"'The reason for bidding is ti) protect
the countx against patronage and
Students 'See' Evolution The airport Gperat..ioa, being a separate
fwxled function, must pay other county
departments for any services rendered,
be ooted. ·
favoritism, ' t~ey point· out.' ~--
,. "' Parlor Closin.g i
Hunti11 gto n B cacli Kids Use Selves as Laboratories In· the case of a concession -coin
Ope!'Sted television vtewing chairs -and
a service -an airplane washing device
-,-Bresnahan thought it would be better
to allow them a trial period before going
through the expensive ie-bid pro-
cedure reqpjred by the county.
.. ':v:"' 1 ~·
OK'd b)· Court ~
Bv JO!N ZALLER cit !IHI OiilY ~Ill! Sllll
If tomomHV morning everyone in the
\\'Orld discovered thal their Jitlle toes had
fallen off. there is a class of Huntingto;.1
Beach seventh graders that "·ouldn't be
in the least surprised.
"There mav be a time \vhen 1~·c have
no toes at all,;, says Gisler School's lo.1ary
r-.1atlhews. '·Rlght n0\1', our little toes
don't really serve any prupose ."
"They'll get smaller and smaller and
in 10.000 years, maybe they'll disap-
pear.• conti.Dygs anot~ s~venth grader.
"Jus~ like tails disappeared,"
"Or like hair is disappearing," adds a
third student. stroking his ov.n oow-thick
scalp with apparent concern. "Baldness
might be all right if we don't need our
heads protected anymore."
To 'ii:itb-year teacber Ian Collins, these
answers spell success.
Using their own bodies as laboratories
from which to make observations, they
are demonstrating Ill] understanding of
evolution and the descent of man which
he says many college students don't
have.
"Kids at this age can easily become
Dorea with-scboot .. he says. "To attraet
their interest in something as removed
Authorities to 'Decide
On Search for Doctor
Authorities said today they will decide
tonight whether or not to continue the air
search for Newport Beach physician Dr.
George Peck,, who has been missing in a
Jight plane since Oct. 3.
"Unless there is something new that
develops today, we'll probably suspend
the search as of tonight," a spokesman
for the Western Rescue Coordination
Center at Hamilton Air Force Base in
San Rafael said this morning.
He said officials of the center, which
has been paying the cost of the twe>-week
search, '11.'ill meet with the head of the
California Civil Air Patrol this evening to
rr;.ake the decision.
Gang Selected
•
Random Victims,
Autl1ority Says
CHICAGO (AP) -Sheriff Richard J_
Elrod says-eight members of a black ter-
rorist gang cha rged in the recent
murders of nine _persons were apparently
"roaming the countryside looking for
som('(lne to kill."
Authorities said apparently not all of
the eight men charged participated in all
slayings.
Elrod told ne11.•smen Sunday the nine
white victims, including the members o{
t11.·o separate families, apparently were
randomly selec ted by a Chicago street
gang he said called itself ''De Mau
r.1au. ·•
Asked about possible racial motivation.
Elrod said, "I can see no other apparent
motivation."
Six men are being held without bond,
t11.·o others are still being sought.
The murders took pl ace In .the Illinois
communitie:> of Rarrin~lon Hills, lo.1onee,
Highland Park and Ca rbondale.
Elrod, the Cook County sheriff. said the
De Mau tt-tau organization apparently was
founded several years ar:to by Vietnam
veterans who had ~n dishonorably
discharged.
Charles G. Hurst Jr., president cf
1'.lalcolm X College in Chicago, said tlu'te
men charged had bttn students lhere,
but .said they had been dismissed. lie
declined to elaborate.
The chances of the CAP finding
anything new today are slim since they
have no planes in the air, a spcikesman
Aid. I ,
They sent 22 airplanes aJoft over the
weekend scouring an area from San
.P'rancisco south to the Mexican border.
The search stopped at the border,
however, because the CAP is not
autJ,orized to search Mexican territory.
"That's a problem we're trying to work
out now," said Thomas Valenzuela, a
CAP official who said be met with Mex·
ican officials over the past weekend to
discuss.
"It won't help us with this search but
maybe we can work something out with
their Air Force in the future," he said.
The pending decision to suspend t h e
search for Dr. Peck did not surprise his
son, Douglas Peck cf Los Angele.4, who
spent the weekend at the CAP control
center at Brackett Field in Pomona.
"They've combed the entire area
twice," the younger Pede. said, "and they
haven't found a trace.
"lt's kinda frightening and I have lost
faith a little that tbey will find him alive.
"There's still that glimmer cf hope,
though," Peck said.
Dr. Peck, a prominent a 11 erg y
specialist, left Orange County A4'J>ort on
an e&rly evening flight and was due back
i.1 three hours. He filed no flight plan and
authorities note this had made the search
ex tremely difficult and time consuming.
Kennedy Women
Differ; Diamond
Dipped in Suds
ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) -Where
Ethel Kennedy and Eunice Kennedy
Shriver were concerned. singer Neil Dia-
mond wasn't alxiut to take sides. And he
ended up with his hair soaked in beer.
Rock star Diamond was one of the at-.
fractions 11t a Democratic rund-r nisi ng
P<irty Sunday on the lawn of the home
rented by vice.presidential nominee
Sargent Shriver.
r-.1rs. Shriver introduced Diamond by
requc$ting "Sweet Garoline.''
"T've asked him to sing the song flrrt
of the woman he loved most," ahe told
the .:rowd.
But Mn. Kennedy bad other Id<.,. She
wanted to bear ''New York Boy." The most widely rejlOrted of the
murders was the k!l\lng of e retired ln-
!i\J rancc cx.~ullve and lhrtt memhen of
his family Aug. 4 in the wealthy Chicago
suburb of Ban\ngton HiTis. -·
"Thll ~ a t.errlble predicament,'' Dia-
mond moaned and decided to delay both
tunes. "I'm chicken ls what I am," ht
explsined.
Paul Corbett, 67; his "1t'ife, Marion, 57.
and sister·in°1<1w, Dorothy Derry, 60,
were found shot through the b8'Cks ot
their heads. Corbett's gtepd.11ughter,
Barbsra &and, 22, was fou nd dead a few
feet away. She had been shot through the!
heart.
A month later. three members or fl
rural Mooee family wert:! found ahot to
death In thtir farmhou~. They were
Stephen 0. llawtree, 47; his wire, Judy,
53: and son 'l'homas, 17
I
But after an interlude of teveral songa,
Diamond brol<e lntc bia top.eellina
"Sweet Caroline." ,..
Mrs. Kennedy, who had been pk>
nicking on the grau near the ltage,
quietly walked up beblnd him and
emptied a big paper cart.on of beer over
his long hair.
Smll!ng, she ambled off1taae. Diamond
drlC'i his hair, and promptly the audience
recognized the strains of "New 'York
Doy."
from every-day life as "The Pre-History
of Man," you've got to give them
something really concrete lo work with."
Their own bodies, of course, qualify
very well in this respect. But even better,
especially for boys, are skulls.
Zingantbropu.s man, Cro Magnom man,
Neanderthal man -each has a
distinctive type of skull and face. And lly
showing how one skull evolved · into the
next, all leading toward modem man,
Collins has made It much easier for his
students not only to learn all those Latin
names, but to attach aome meaning to
them.
"It may sound wierd," .Collins says,
"but kids are · interested in their an·
cestors, ln the dlfferent sizes of jawbones
and brain cavities, and ~hey're willing to
learn about them."
One boy, as a class project, even
re-created heads of two ancient human
ancestors, and Collins says his wort Js
amazingly realistic.
The whole subject of evolution, Collins
admits, was completely taboo in public
schools a few years ago. But he says be
has had no setjous problems.
"I'm &·Christian tundamentalist/1 he
says, "and I don't see any ,conflict. There
are just too many facts to d~ ~t
there · wu SOOl• .Jclnd of evo!Utlon.' But
you can only (O back so fat {lhd thtn you
have to realize· theic Was a creation."
Collins, who is a kind of amateur
history buff, is now preparing for bis unit
on the ancient Egyptians. That lesson
will begin with an exposition co how the
Egyptians embalmed their dead, in·
eluding that technique by which the
dead man's brain was sucked out
through his nostrils.
"It really gets up interelit," Collins
says. "The kids right away want to find
out about the people whc did that kind of
thing."
And with obvious pr ide, he adds, "it
sure creates a lot more inten!st than the
state texts. They're so dull it's em·
barruSing."
"Wby pay up to $3.500 !or a bid and
award procedure when a trial period will
determine that the operation or service
will bring in only about $35 or $40 a
month revenue to the airport ,''
Bresnahan argues.
The principal charge a g a i n s t
Bresnahan ·centers on his alleged failure
to inform the Board of Supervisors of
suclj trial ..operations. _
Real Properties officials also com-
plained that Bresnahan is allowing repair
and flight school operations at the north
tie-down area of the airport without re-
quiring bids or lease procedures.
Bresnahan replied that all parties have
been fully informed of all such opera-
tions.
''The C4Jllnty airport commissioners
have wrestled with and held hearings on
the problem of fixed base operations
versus off-airport services for more than
two years," he pointed out.
The JlftMll-governing the
airport prohibits such operations without
a specific lease wilh the county. '4Bu.t
PRINCESS GOES
IN FOR SWIM
PERTH, Australia (AP) -Princess\
Margaret of Britain and her husband
Lord Snowdon went for a midnight swim
after spending three hours et a barbecue
in 106 -degree temperatures at an
Australian ranch.
The dip Sunday night was the second of
the day for the royal couple. They cooled
themselves at poclslde earlier after a
dusty, 12-ml1e rjde from Fitzroy Crossing
to Vo Go Station, site o! the barbecue .
Business as
usual at • • •
WJISHINGTON (AP ) -The U.S.
Supreme c 0 u rt today gave a
Virginia city authority to clox
-nassage parlors where women give
rubdowm to men. _
The city contended the parlors
were oothing but ''euphemistiC
aliases'' for houses of prostitution,
and noted that one operator
.. conceded that his girls massaged
•every part al the (male patron's)
body, and that Includes every part.
o! the body.' "
Robert Klsley, ope<ator .~ two
massage parlors tn.Falls.Cburcb, a
Washington suburb, argued that a
city ordinance problbltlng a "WOman
from giving a massage to a man
violated the equal-right! provision
or the 14th Amendment am the
Civil Rights Act of 1954, which
makes discrimination based en sei
illegal.
FromPqeJ
D UI.~ANEY .••
Bemaidlne .uospiW was divided .among
the codefendants.
'Sister Margaret Mary said she was ad-
ministrator at the hospital and a member
or it9 board ()f directors at the time the
lo11n was approved. ·
The nun also identified James Shipley,
38, of 16951 l.A:lwell Circle, Huntington
Beach, as Dulaney's representative at
the hospital negotiations. She said
Shipley, vice president or World Trends,
took them on a tour of the Taj Mahal
building when the hOspltal officials
visited Laguna Hills. •
It i~ alleged that Machan, who la to
receive a separate trial on multiple
chargea that led to a grand jury in-
dictrr.ent of seven persons, Wu given
S!S,000 shortly alter the group ..,bed U..
hospital check.
..
Yes we are open for business despite the fire we
had at our store last Monday. We are pretty dusty
and dirty right now but that means we must try
harder than ever to offer you bigger and better
values. Our insurance company has allowed us
to repurchase all the crated merchandise and.
some of the display samples at reduced cost. These
refrigerators, washers, dryers, dishwashers and
TVs only suffered smoke damage and their new
guarantees were not affected. These savings will
be passed on to you.
.,
·I .,
' ..
. .. ..
I• During the weeks of remodeling we will continue
to bring you good values the same as we have
for the past 25 years.
, •
" TI
" •
..
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. ..
I DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA
•
•
•
Monday, Oetobtf-16, 1q12 H DAILY PILOT 3
Court Nixes Schmitz Bid
' Nixon Pro mise
'Prison~~s Won't Be Aba.ndoned'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -ProsidenL Nixon made an wischeduled vi.It to a
convtntlon of families of Amerkan POWs . JOday and promised that "Wlder no
circumstances" would the mtn be abandontd.
"We cannot leave their fate to the good will of the enemy," Nixon sald.
Nison aald that negotiations aimed at ending the war had been ''very ln·
tensive" over the past year, but declined to give specifics for fear this might
jeopardize , success of the negotiations -and because "I would not want to
raise lalse hopes."
.Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon's chief negotiator on Vietnam, had been ex·
peeled to address the gathering at the Slatter Hilton Hold of the National l.eaKUe of Famlltes of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia.
But Nixon told the meetin& be decided to pre-empt KJssinger because he
wanted the ORJXlrlunily to thank the organlullo• for oupporling his pollcles in
'5outheast 'Asia.
• _Vfle•tsm an Wit• Gon
Authorities 'Probing
' ' ' ' Dana Ha rbo r Hijinks
., \
·, An up tlght yachtsman who allegedly
'uaed bfa pistol to aerend bis right to cut
1Jn line at the Dana Harbor Jauncbl.ng
ramp Sunday was still being sooght by
"autl\oritles today.
'1be lncldenl which occurred at the
launclllng ramp at about noon Sunday
,typl!letl a· beetle weekend !or harbor
palraimen, wbo did niost or their in-
Stake in Heiirt
Allays Banker's
:fears on Burial
LONDON (UP!) -When Harold West
died, ~~ doctor drove a stake through his
heart· to make sure he was d,ead; when
he was buried, they dld not nail his coffin
slmt in case be was not. ·
-'West was no vampire. He was just a
cautious banker who !wed being buried
alive.
When be died' last ~UJI" '\1_90.,We&Je!t
a wt1I dlreclng that ''my «>!!In •hall not
be"'lm!wed down and lJ!.ai a surgeon be ~to pierce lny heart with a steel
or .other instrument to make certain death~ occurred."
His family physician, Dr. Eric Kerr,
pJd Sunday: "I did what Mr. West
wanted, but it was the flrst request of
that ~ I had ever had."
l,<ett said. West, a London bank
manager, wanted to be certain be would
be dea<I when he went to his grave, but II
by dlance be was not, he wanted a means of ·escape.
Uffe WU Vf!ry meticulous in his habit!
as a bank manager," the doctor said.
"But th!! dld not seem to be overdolng It. Many peopi. have !ears of this __ ..
· Mill!b West, the banker's nephew
who rectlved the bulk or the $87,000 his
uncle left, aakt: HJt was an odd request
t;iat l( )'OU can't have your own way at
that ttmo of life -1 mean death -when
can you?"
The banker left fl,250 ·to the Rev.
Davia Wright of St Paul••-Angllcao
Church in Worthlng, ""'th of London,
where West lived.
"He w.u a· lo~ old man, afraid of
many: thing•," 81\d <Mr: Wright'• Tllle,
Allee. "But be hadJalth and.wa& Joollng
fCll'Wird to going to heaven.
"We.shall buy a tar with the money,"
she said.
vestigation on dry land at the new
recreation facillty. ·
Their other cases Involved:
-A cwitomer at a posh restaurant fall·
ing from a second-Door balcony onto a
• reJtaunint employe.
-Another patron of the s am e
establishment choking on a piece or pop-
corn.
-Four bowled-over sailboats.
-Five power boats in dJstress at sea.
~ fisherman washed from the west
breakwater.
The gun incident took place in the
afternoon hours Sunday as boaters were
waitin' their tum to use the busy
launching ramp.
Patrol spokesmen said Robert French,
32, of Orange had been walting his tum
for some time v1ben an unidentified man
and hi:i cabin cruiser came in and took a
place ahead of French's craft at the
waiting docks.
:.n argument ensued and French unti~
the bowline of the usuper's craft. At that
point the irate skipper emerged from the
cockpit With a pistol.
"Touch ·my boat again, and I'll blow
your head off," he told his fellow
seaman.
Fn'1cb .then left to aeek patrolmen.
When they returned, the boat and gun-
man had fleet
·Officers Issued a general broadcast for
the boat and car assertedly owned by the
suspect. So far no arrests have been
made.
Among the more unusual cases was
that of the falling customer.
That -took place Saturday al the Jolly
Roger Restaurant.
Patrolmen aaid the patron, Carles
Henry of~ Via C8liliirnia, C.pistrano
Beach, loll his footing and toppled ooto ·
an unidentilied male employe of the
eslabllshment.
Anthony Russo Sets
Talk at UC I Tuesday
Pentagon tapers co-defendant Anthony
Russo Will speak at noon Tuesday in
Campus.Park aLUC Irvine. •
Russo and fonner Rand COmpanY,
employe Daniel Ellsberg are charged by
federal offlclab with theft of the so-<:all-
ed Pentagan Pa~rs which were pubJlsh-.
ed by the New York Times and revealed
the history ~ of key government policy
decisions 'lo the Vietnam War.+ ~usso 's
appearance al UCI is sponsored by the
Associate Students and Vi e t n a m
Veterans Against the War.
Girl, 13,
KUlm;iped,
-Molested
By 3ACK CHAPPEIL
Of IN DlllY Pllet Ii.fl
A J3'ye&,c!d girl walking down a "
Laguna Beach street was kidnaped,
raped, forced to submit to perverted sex
acts •. and beaten J>y .two men who ab-.
ducted her Sunday night.
She was . i:eleased In the Hollywood
area ... After hospitalization for treatment .
of a possible skull fracture and cuts, the
girl was returned to her mother today. -
The girl had been visiUng re1MiYes
with her mother when the lncldtnt ~+
curred.
Laguna Beach Det. Sgt. Neil · PurCf:l!
said the girl had been struck twice with
some kind of weapon.
Pur,ell said the victim was forcibly
raped,\(orced to submit to unnaural acts
and robbed of personal jewelry by the
men who beat her.
"She was in a somewhat dazed and
confused condition ," Purcell saJd.
She called Hollywood relatives from a '"
telephone in a service station' after being
. released by the men.
A massive police search h a d been
undertakeo fa the Laguna Beach area
after f1rs.t reports of the kidnaping were
made.
The -California. Highway Patrol had
established a roadblock along Laguna
Canyon Road and helicopters from
neighboring police depa"rtments were
employed in searching rugged canyon
areas.
The abduction began in a quiet Laguna
Beach side street..
Screaming hysterically, the young girl
was dragged Into her abductors' white
sedan while her young eousin ran to a
nearby residence and telephoned for
JXlllce.
The 14-year-old Laguna Beach youth
described the men as about 19 or 20
years of age and had medium length
brown hair. He said the man who grab-
ed the girl, grabbed her left arm and
The witness said the car first pulled
past them as. they walked along the (ron-
tage road to Laguna canyon Road.
The' car slapped, backed up and the
passenger opened bis door. Picking up a
large rocl<, the man reportedly threaton-
edl be girl, firobbed ~er left arm and
forced her into the velµcle.
She was positioned between the two
men and the car sped away, first turning
onto Woodland Drive and then onto
Laguna Canyon Road. '
The kidnaping apparenUy occurred
right in front of the trailer park sign by
the Laguna Beach Boys CluQ at about 8
p.m. according to the witness.
The teenagers were ' walking home
from a billiards parlor locat.ed in a near-
by shopping area. 1be victim's mother
had reportedly been with the children
there but had left them and gone to a
Canyon Acres home earlier.
Lagunn Beach officer Terry Temple
talked with the girl's mother, staying
with relatives in the Canyon Acres area.
Weary-eyed Laguna Beach detectives
who had worked the night.long case said
today the investigation will continue.
Purcell and Det. Gene Broo]ls were
called by the girl 's rel<i.tives in Hollywood
who had received the flral phone call
from the young rape ·1ictim.
The girl was met In a Hollywood Joca+
lion by Laguna Beach detectives and
hOspitalized. In addition to 61.her injuries,
she" had a cut across the bridge of her
nose, Purcell said. The girl was vWting
Laguna from the Covina arta.
Authorities 'Dumbfounded'
Prison Camp Called Country Club for Criminals
A sped~ study of the controversial but now-clesed Don Lugo prison camp,
demanded by an Orange County Superior
Court judge, asserts it was virtually a
coantry club f o r poorly-controlled
~inalt who came and went at will,
authortlles Indicated today.
Judge Wl111am Murray ordered the
PrObe' of the work furlough facllJty main·
lalnell by the Calllornla lnslltulioo !or
Men ~t Chino after pre8idlng over the
trial of two inmates who robl:led and
lllDrderec!'a 25-yelll'Old lchoOlttacher at 6& home in Oraoge. 'i:be resulla roleaaed by Sen. H. L.
Rithaldoon (R-Areodla) lnvclved 1,000
holln or tnvestlpllon and !ell lawmen lhaklllc their heads in disbelief.
Op<ined Jn April, 1971, the facllll)I near
Cblito had'to.lruna!M on a work furlough l>iolram at 111 hlghul capacity. -'l1ie probt conducted by the llato At-
tomeJ Oeoeral'• Office for the Depart-
ment •o1 Roalth and Welfare cleCbres
mmlnal activity among the convlell -an who were due for parole in five
l!ljJlltht or leu -abounded.
· Thll la wbal bippened II the camp
t!oaect ID March, acoordlnC to the rtport:
-Ont& uae ond drinking were nm·
pant. --Guns and other weapoos wtre --· -Stall lunda ..... tmbezzled by <on-
v5cts. •
'-Tl\e '12·hotlr pw deid!JJits were lg-
•
•
nored,
-Administrators cove~ up for of·
fenders .
-Mess ball food was openly purloined
and sold for profit. -Eaca~ went unreported for t w o
days afterward.
-Authorities changed unauthorized
absentees' records so they were listed as
being on pass or paroled, when in fact
aomehad-ped.
-Tbe entire operation was severely ,
mismWKed. \
And, die llate study concludts, the
operation of the Don Lugo prison work-
fllrlough camp la typical of such P""
croma at other 1ac11111es throughout
. ca1trom11. -
Dllclplnary action was taken against
oet1ain btdlvlduab following the Don
Lugo probe and the wnporary leave and
work furlough procratn1 at other Nit
!aclllll•• were mod!flcd, according to of·
!idols.
"A aeries of serious crlmes by work
fur!ouahees .caused us to investigate the op:niloo and det.ennlne it w a 1
mismanaged," a>nflrmed Philllp D.
Gulhrtt, dlkf of commtmlty oervlia lot
the Calliomla Department of 0o ...
rtelkm.
841 said Jn ... specific instanee or
embezlle.,..,I II was !l!Cftdlble that the
camp'• 11111 could have allowed auch a
-Ol!ll"'tlon. ' He Hid lhat mio btmate duo for· parol•
'
-a man with a history of five convictions
ror forgery -wai p1aced in a position of
authority wilh access to thousands of
doth.rs.
Tbe money into which he apparently
freely dipped incllldcd both llllte funds
and prisoners' personal accaunts.,
"lnmates1abo brought liquor, narcotics
fond weapons Into camp without detec-
tion," Guthrie declared.
InVtJtlgatora aakJ et the stage when
the Don Lugo lnvestJilatlon ended on M•Y
8 that allegatlml JllOV'll thm appeared
equally applicable to the U 1lmllar
camps _.led In the &ate.
'lbete· lldllties .,. alao operated oe
the pbilo9opliy that the least control.over
an inmate la the best and that I.Uri
within them are rarely admitted and
oft<'ll ccrvered up.
A pair of former prlinnen assigned to
Don Luao have since been convicted 11nd
re-sentenced to maximum security
faclllUet !or the holdup slaylf18! of the
young schoOI teacher In Orange. '
Otte of them -aobb1nJ1 on the witness
mod aod maintalttiiig the lboolln& was
aetldenla! ond ln!:identa! to the robbery
-on the vtctlm'1 doorstep -rec:eived a IQ.
year tenn.
He II ,.rvlnc ii at the Nie'• prison
niedlcal !a¢!1ty at VocavWe where be
can b&.J,.iveb.poyclllatrlc e1re. while his •c:com w &'I ~ to Ille In
pr1soll !or \hi m•.udet.
-.
(
Stre tchy Sculptur e
Peter Voulkos' heroic scale bronze sculpture, over 65 feet long and
weighing thousands oj_prum.ds, i.s.Jln.. IDUiibit for the first time at the
San Francisco Museum of Art, which recently reopened after almost
t\VO years of reconstruction .and expansion.
Hu sband Gets Year Term
In Mur der-£ or-Pay Plot
From Wire Services
RIVERSIDE -A man from Elsinore
who paid a young enlisted man from El
Chavez A-ppears
To Oppose 22
Cmar Chavez, founder and director of
the United Farm Workers, will make
three appareances loc&lly Wednesday
and Thursday to speak against Proposi-
tion 22, the initiative which would place
controls on farm labor practices.
On Wedneaday be will speak at Cal
State Long Beach at 12:10 p.m. at the
outdoor speaker's platform in front of the
campus' boOkstore.
On Thui1Clay, Chavez will addr2ss
students at Cal State Fullerton and will
speak at a·Cliicano rally in Santa Ana.
Hejs expected to appear at 1.2:30 p.m.
in t» FuUerton campus qu~d. The Santa
Ana rally will be held at 7 p.m. at El
Salvador Park. It is jointly sponsored by
Chicanos for McGovl?m and the Orange
County Chapter of. t h e United Farm
Workers.
Toro Marine Corps Air Station $1,500 to
murder his wife and mother~in-law will
hi1ve a year to think over what he got for
the alleged bargJin beginning Tuesday.
Louis Wolshin, 62, must begin serving
one year in jail and three years' pro-
bation afterward, after his sentencing
Friday in Riverside C o u n t y Superior
Court.
Judge Francis Estudillo imposed the
tenn followin g Wolshin's conviction Jul)'
21 on the basis of testimony by 22-year·
old Pvt. Timothy Boudette.
The defendant posted $15,000 bail
following his arrest for soliciting to com-
mit murder after Pvt. Boudette flew to
Mieml, Fla ., at Wolshln's expense on a
mission of a murder he never int.ended to
commit
Given the offer when picked up as a
hitchhiker, Pvt. Boudette visited Mrs.
Olga Wol shin, who had filed for divorce
after 23 years of marriage that produCf:d
six children.
He was also hired to kill her mother.
Mrs. Vera s. Alexander, who lives in
Miami too, bul went to police instead.
The bounty on Wolsbin's mother·in·law
was only $500, Pvt. Boudette testified ,
while he was paid $1,000 to take care of
Mrs. Wolshin in addition to the round-trip
plane ticket.
Party Can't
File Suits
Over Ballot
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -The U.S.
Supreme Court refused today to aDow the
American Party to sue 17 states and the
Obitrict of Columbia directly in the high
court to get a place on the ballot in
November.
1)le court acted in a brief order
without comment.
About 25 states have granted ballot:
position to the party, which is running
conservative Rep. John G. Schmitz of
Tustin for president and Thomas J.
Anderson . ii Tennessee publisher, for
vice president.
Suits filed originally In the Supreme
Court concern mainly disputes between
the states over boundaries of offshore
resources.
The American Party's suit said the
defendant states were violating the First
Amendment's guarantee of free speech.
"The first to vote freely for the can~
didate of one's choice is the essence of a
democratic society," the complaint said,
"and any restrictions on that right strike
at the heart of representative govern·
men."
The states the party wanted to sue are
Arkansas, TIOrida, Georgia , Hawaii,
Illinois, Indiana. Maine, MassaChusetts,
Missouri. Nebraska, Nevada , New York ,
Rhode Island, South Dakota, Texas, West ·
Virginia and \Vyoming.
In other action, the high court in a 7·2
vote today rejected one ~ore in a long
series of legal challenges that the Viet+
nam war is unconst itutional.
Justices William 0 . Douglas and
William J. Brennan Jr. dissented
vigorously, saying no declaration of war·
· had been made by Congress and that the.
question really was the constitutionality
of "a presidential war."
The court acted in a case where three
Californians claimed Congress illegally
delegated its war declaration JXlWers to
the President in 1961.
In other actions, the court:
-Refused to delay a lower court's
order calling for busing of about 14.000
public school students in Memphis next
January, and also refused to epeed up .
consideration of a busing case from
Richmond, Va
'Brairi' Lectures
Slated for [ICI
The first in a seriet of free community
lectures under the general topic, "How
the Brain Works'' will be presented at
UC lrvine, 8 p.m. Tuesday, in Social
Science Hall.
"Babies and Cocktail.Parties: How the
Brain Responds," will be the topic of the .
first lecture, by Dr. Norman Weinberger.
associate professor of psycMbiology at
UCI.
Subsequent lectures In the series.,
which is sponsored by the Friends of
UCI, will be Oct. 24 : "The Making of ~
Memory," by Dr. James McGaugh ; Oct.'
31 : "Brain Plasticity," by Dr. Gary ·
Lynch. and Nov. 14: "Boys and Girls are
Different : The Brain as a Sex Object.''
by Dr. Richard E. Whalen. All of the lee·
turers are professors in the UCI School
of Biological SCiences.
Thinking Christmas
already???
-1s now. sure, la yaway time
Balboa Bicycles will fill your
Gift Bag, be it a fine Professional Bicycle
order from Me ndia, Windsor, Atala or Gitane -
o r be it a moderately priced 10, 5, 3, or l speed
Gitane, Atala, or Azuki designed to fit
• your transportation needs. • WI OVTJIT THI Balboa COMPUfl CYCUST
673-5051 41 llOUl
llPAll UIYICI
2120 ·west ~ Wad. thrv Sun. 9 to 5:30, c!OMd Ocean Front Motl., IT-.
,...,_, .............. a...
Bieyeles
1 Blk. Wnt of Newport P1<w
"
" •
( ,
•
'
•
t.j DAil Y PILOT Mondly, Ot:to~ l b, l'lJl •
Jos' ~ Coasting,~~ J Red Gunners Hit COpter, Killing Pilot
-" ~ . ' '\"-:
wiih
Tom
nrpbioe
But It'll _ Help
Environment
ORANGE COAST, WILD COAST' One
of the newest gimmicks to hit the
governmental scene in our region these
days is an Item called The En\1ron-
mental Impact Statement. E\'erybody
needs one. Almost.
It used to be if public agencies were
going to do something, only they needed
them. Now, however, the requlrement for
an Environmental Impact Statement has
been extended to the private sector.
Th is came about up in f\tono County,
\~·here an outfit called the Friends of
Flotsam, or something like that. fi led a
lawsuit. The Friends said somebody else
\11as going to disturb the Flotsam and
!hey <n'anled the court to stop it by
demanding"tme..,or the EI statements.
rr DEVELOPED that the California
Supreme Court, in its lnfinite wisdom,
agreed that it didn't make any difference
that this was a private outfit doing what
!he Friends of Flotsam didn't want them
lo do. They too needed one of these El
documents.
Well, the high court's dictum hit the
entire state like a bucketful of hogwash
and city attorneys and county counsels
wt're saying no more building permits
could be issu ed until evt'rybod:y got in an
Enviroruncntal Impact StatemeAt.
IT THRE\\' r.fE into a considerable
tizzy al that particular juncture because
J personally had been plaMing a project.
1 wanted to put in a new toilet at the old
homestead and now it appeared that my
best laid plans had gone down the drain.
Gathering my resources. however, I
decided maybe to try my hand at writing
my own Environmental Impact Study
9.imed at proving the need for a New
lohn. I titled lhis work, "Positive
Environmental Impact of New Pottle at
T\tUfllhtne House." I carried. on thus:
"Examination of old pottie: Old device
has proven badly worn. Flushing &O\mds
tre loud and coarse and might disturb
1eighbors through thin walls, Inle.mal
1vorkings whistle while re-filling. thUB at.
lracting nearby birds Y1hich believe it is
nating call. thus they bang into
bathroom window in frenzied flight and
endanger species.
"L\'TER.NAL PLUrtIBING trickles
slter re-fill, thus overloading sewer flow
and unnecessarily filling Pacific Ocean.
''Old seat is wooden and thus
~iodegradable when abandoned. China
)()t can be later utilized as palm tree
>l.anter to enhance environment."
· Then I came to the other part:
"Analysis of Replacement Pot: New
:le.vice will be silent. thus not attracting
lirds or neighbors. Non-leaking internal
Jhnnbi'ng wlll save water re.sources and
Joo-pollute Pacific. Device itself will be
1zure blue in coloraUon, thus blending
with exterior sea and sky should
90mebody be gazing at same out
>athroom window while contemplating
Device itself on interior.
0 CONCLUSION: New Pattie needed to
~nhance residential environment."
Well now, I want you to know I was
real proud of this Environmenlal Impact
Study. I was certain with all that proof,
:he authorities would approve the in-
ltllllation.
Alas, a fri end deflated my ego by in·
!orm.lng me that such statement:i aren 't
iteeded for "trlvtal projects." He said
<hat's what my Pottle Plan was -
bivial. He had thus added insult to in-
jury.
l don't care what he says, I'm saving
the statement.
After Proposilion 20 pa.sse.'!, I 'II prob-
tbly need it a n d some carbon copies,
IOO.
SAIGON (UPI ) -One American Wa3
killed and nve wounded loduy when Com·
muni.st fire ripped through a U.S.
helicopter after It landed Wlder attack at
a South Vietnamese base in the Central
llighlaods, field ttports said.
The inctdent ocrurred at an artillery
base 20 miles south of Plelku City and
211) miles north of Saigon, UPI ttporter
11att Franjola said.
HE SAID THE heLioopler landed at the
outpost on Highway 14 to pick up a woun-
ded U.S. adviser who was hit by mortar
What, No Butler'!
fragments. The chopprr came under
heavy Comn1unlst recoilless rifle and
morUr fire, killing the pUot and WOUD·
ding fl ve crewmen.
In the alr war over North Vietnam, the
U.S. command said today Navy pilots
SUnday destroyed 1,500 harreb of fuel
and sent smoke billowing to 10,000 feet ln
heavy raids against a petroleum depot
outside Vinh. the country's l'JeCOod
largest city. The command al9o dllclosed
the loss of an Air Force F4 Phantom jet
righter-bomber over the North last
Thursday and said it was presumed shot
UPI T .....
For $1 .400 a night, you too can sleep in this bed. It is in the master
suite of the six-roo m Presidential suite at the Holiday Inn at Gaithers·
burg, h1d. -the most expensive suite at any hotel or motel in the
country. The bed is electrically controlled and can be raised or lo\v-
ered. Headboard contains sU!reo sound and compleU!ly stocked bar.
Llfe's rough, ain't it.
White House Aide Linked
To Democratic 'Sabotage'
From Wire Servket
WASHINGTON -White House aide
Dwight L. Chapin has been linked lo the
alleged political sabotage of Democratic
presidential campaigns in a published
report attributed to Justice Department
files.
Time Magazine said the files showed
that Chapin, President Nixon's ap-
pointments secretary, paid Dooald II.
Segretti more than $35,000 "to subvert
and disrupt Democratic candidates' cam·
paigns."
The Washington Post reported thal La~TeOce Young, a California lawyer,
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery of tht DillJ Pilot
Is guaranteed
~-frld•n " you GO "°' ri.wt 'l'Olll' p.1per by JI :» p,m., un 1nd -OllP'I' wlll
M breuOl'll ~ YIMI· r1111 1r1 111<1n until 1:JO , .. m.
S1lurc1Ay l'fld luncJ1y1 rt VOU 00 l'ICll l'ICllYI
\IDlll' toPY by I I rn, $1h1rd1y, OI' I I "'-klnOly, e1rt tnd 1 t($Y' wm IM lilf"OuOl'lt to
'l'OU. Clllt trl .......... ttl 10 1 m.
Telephones
""°'' Of'1rqe t:.ounr,o """• •• • ••• "2-4ftl
H"""""-1 Mlll'lllf>Otof, a..c11
•nd wntmiltllff ............... un "°" Ci.me..te, ~trlnt kid. San JUln C1p1ttr1no. °'"" ,.lrtl. 5outtl Ll9\ll'WI u.oi-H ..... I ••• , ftl.i.at
.said in a sworn statement that Segretti
told him : "Dwight Chapin was a persop
I reported to in Washington."
Meanwhile today in Los Ange1e.s, Sen.
George McGovern charged that the Nix·
on administration has hired 50 people Hto
sabotage and corrupt our political proc-
ess" but onJy 13 to develop peacetime
jobs.
In a speech prepared for a meeting
discu.sstng how to convert defense and
aerospace plants to peacetime pursuits,
the Democratic presidential DOmioee
said that only 13 of the 2.7 nilllioo federal
employes are working on that problem.
BUT, CO~IPARING that lo published
reports alleging a wide.opread RepubLican
ef(ort to sabotage Democratic can·
didates, be said, "They blred 50 people to
conduct some of the shabbiest un·
dercover operatioos in the bi.story of
American politics."
Noting the story in Sunday's Post
declaring that Dwigbt Qiapin re<>!IVed
information in that operalim, McGovern
declared, "The Republican team of
saboteurs has a contact who ls at Mr.
Nixon's elbow every single day: someone
who has constant acceu to the Presi-
dent."
The Post in a new report today quoted
sources invo!Yed in the investigation of
the Watergate break-in and bugging case
that payments in the thousands of dollars
to Segretti were made or authorized by
Herbert W. Kalmbach, described a
President Nixon's personal attorney.
Chill Hits ~astern U.S.
'
Snow Greets Part of Midwes.t, Rcii1i • in West, East
•
1-n n ... u.'-tlt
~' ·~· ""'""."".'°'°'""'.
Coastal Weather
Mlltty """"" IPdl•'t'· l ltl'll Vtrliblt ' '<114• 1119"* Mid mornl/'IO l!Our' t11-c:om1,.. _.._, to w"I t to It
b11tt I" '"""'°°"' ..,.,.., Ind Tiit .. dillY· Hiii\ .....,, .. ti. 1'a.
(°"Ill __.,.llur" ,...., ll'!lfl'I J1
to n •'11.nd ...._,,"""" ,...., '""""
~S to rt. We~ """""'""" t6.
Su10, Jtloon, Tides
MOtfOA't
S«oncl ~ • lt:ll --•.•
!>«.ond itJW • M' 11 '" • •
TU!SDAY
J'!•1l l'tt;,. 11·2' p..... 2.•
f-lr•I low . 1 03 t .'91. ~.4
Se<llfld ~l'I . . 12:66 1.m. O.S
54(oM low . . 6 CIJ p ..... "' ~.I
"'" Ill-6!ff 1.11'1. I.ti 6:11 P·"'-MOO<'I •1-2:111 ._"'-
Temperatures
-~-
h
"' ~ .
I
down by a communist MIG fighter. 'nle
two mwmen wue rtported missing.
Fnmjola &aid !lihtlna continued Into
the late afternoon aoutb of Pleiku and
that the highway was cut south of the' ci·
ty, a province capital.
MILITARY SPOKESMEN said U.S.
fighter-bombers new 270 strikes apmst
the North in the 24-hour period ending at
5 p.m. Sunday. a sharp drop from the
mor& than 350 missions flown the
previou.s day. The Saturday raJds were
the second heaviest alnce Prtskitnt Nlx-
on ordertd a J'elU!Dpllon of lhe bombing
April 8.
Jn South Vietnam, U.S. Bil bombers
dropped 900 tons of erp!Osives in a glant
arc an>Wld Saigon today in whal the U.S.
command sak1 was a drive to blunt a
Communist thrust tlult lw cut vital
Highway 1. Mllltary spokesmen said
fight""' continu.d today aloog Hlghway
13 north of the capital.
Jllghway t tw been severed since Fri·
day when North Vietnamese troops blew
Israeli Attacks
.Hit By Britain
By Associated Press
A top Israeli official said today five air
strikes against Arab guerrilla bases in
Lebanon and Syria sigrialed a new policy
or "no longer waiting for the guerrillas to
hit first ."
An Israeli spokesman said the targets
in Lebanon were at Slnlk, Dakifa and
Dier el Ashayer and a guerrilla naval
base at Ras el Nabe south of the Litani
River Delta. He said a guerrilla training
camp was hit ln Syria. The raiders came
within 15 miles o! Beirut and within 30
miles of Damascus.
out a culvert Md set up grau and mud
roadblocb abotlt 29 rnllos nortllea>t of
Saigon. A Saigon command .spokesman
said all hamlets and villages seized in the
North Vietnamese drive launched 10 day3
ago north of the capital have been 11!C8p-
tured but he warned 11more attacks"
may occur because C o mm u n i a L
casualties in the fijj:hting were relatively
light.
PR&m>ENT NGUYEN Van Thieu met
today with Pham Dang Lam, his chlef-
negotiator at the Paris peace talks. Le
Due Tho, the North Vietnamese
.. negotiator in Paris. returned to Hanoi to-
day from Peking where he conferred
wilh Chinese Premier Chou En-lai.
Spokesmen said jet fighlet:·bombir
pilots from the C81'rier USS Kiity Hawk
virtually destroyed the Dinh Lang
petroleum dump 10 miles south of Vlnh,
on the cOast about 137 miles north of the
Demilitarized oZne (DMZ) separating
the two Vietnams.
The Navy airmen estimalcd that 1,500
bamls ~ file! and large staoka 9f sup-
plies ..,,.. wiped out In the raids. The
pilots said Dames shot 500 reet into the
air with thick black smoke rising to
10,000 feet. •
Air Force Phantom crews bombed the
Yen Blli airfield, &O miles northwest or
Hanoi, and destroyed at least one1MIG21
on the ground, spokesmen said. 'Pilots
said they also cratered the base runway
in two places.
But Britain, o n e of the nations in·
volved in the search for MiddJe East
peace, assailed the Israeli attacks. A
Foreign Office .spokesman in London
said: "This does not serve the cause of a
final .settlement of the Ara~IsraeH
dis)lllle ... Nazi Luftwaffe Planned
THE RAIDS WERE the !int against
the guerrillas since the Sept. IS.17 sweep
inlo Lebanon by Israeli J"llY units.
There bas been relative 4\liet on the
borders since then, but Gen. Halm
Hei-zog, the fonner intelligence chief,
said in a broadcast commentary: "From
now on the very presence of saboteurs"
in Syria and Lebanon "is to be regarded
as a provocation."
·Bombing RaUls on U.S.
"This ls the operative phase of our
pledge to hit the temnistl'I wherever they
are;-and-lbey aro.ln Lebanon.and Syria,"
another high-ranking military source
said.
•
Singer Cocker
Pleads Guilty
ADELAIDE, Auslnllia (UPI) -
British rock singer Joe Oxker and
six members of his entourage of 30
pleaded guUty today lo drug
charges, but sentencing was defer·
l<d tmlil Tuesday -enabling them
to play a concert tonight.
'Ibe musicians were amsted
Saturday after police raided their
Part Royal Motel .
•
BERLIN ·(UPI) -Nazi military,
strategist> drew up delailed plans fol'
bombing American cities as far ln1and as
lndianapoLis, a~ to documents
fouu:S in Nazi archives.
East German historian Olaf Groehler
said·-in-tbe--late5t-i6Sll&~n
Democratic Report.~· an East German
newslett.r pubLislled in En!ilish, that the
plans probably would have beer! carried
out U the Nazi war machine had not been
so heavily engaged on the Eastern front.
' THOUGH llllLITARY historians have
l~ known that Nazi leaden discussed
bombing the United Stales, Groehler says
the memorandum he found in Nazi
archives show3 that serioos studies were
made of the possibilities.
According to Groehler, the bombing
plans Cl)lllemplaled round l<ip flights
from occupied France with refueling
stops on the A20res Islands.
Entitled "Tasks for long-range planes,"
the plans ...,.. druted by German
Luftwaffe (air force) Col. Dietrich
Schwenke on April ?l, 1942, and sub-
mitted lo Air Minister Herman Goering
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on May 12, 1942, Groehler said.
''NO RECORD bas yet been disoovertd
as to what decision.s were taken, but the
plans lo bomb the United Stales ob-
viously were abandooed," Oroehltr said.
Xhe plallS.-called . ..Jor...air_raids~"'~
BrookJyn, N.Y., Detroit, Hartford, Conn.,
Cincinnali, Rochester, N.Y., Badin, N.C.,
Indianapolis, Pawcatuck, Coon .. Beaver,
Pa., Natrona, Pa., Caldwell, N.J.,
Berwick, Pa., La Porte, Ind., C<imlng,
N.Y., and Vancxiuver, Canada.
"Goering's Luftwaf(e proliobly would
have attacked if its attenilon had not
been powerfully diverted by the critieel
and heavy fighting on the Eastern front,"
Groehler aid. '
The Nazi memorandum said:
"ON THE COAST of the U.S.A. there
are alumioom works, eircraft e:Ogtne
works, propeller \li'Orks Md arma fac..
tortes. '
''Tbe6e can only be reached by
M.......,.,hmilt 6's with DB<ll3 -
carrying 5.5 tom of bombs and starling
from Brest (in ocoupled France).
t't 8 Ftl' H DUl ~ll
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RE&. PllCE 69.95
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7
. '
Orange Coast Today's Final
'
V~L. 65, NO. 290, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1972 ' -N TEN CENTS
Study. Foresees 130 Coa·stal Nuclear Plants
• • •
SANTA MONICA (AP) -Pict~
California with nu.clear power plants
spi<:ed on)JI eight mlles apart along the
atate'a entire f,OIO:mile coast
The pGrtrait is QOt whimsical, a
reeearcb tetOn at Ran{! Corp. reported
~ in a study commissioned by the
Lefls]ature.
1'be ~searchers said demands in the
natloD's · most populous state are ac4
ce1eratlng so enonnousJy that linless
~r growth is reduced, Californians
wm need-130 huge new power plants by '
th( Zl!I' Century.
-Whose Balloon?
In fad, ea<h-plapt would have le be In
the 1,200 megawatt range, twl'ce the
capacity· of the slate's pnly akeable
nuclear-power plant located on the coast
at San~ near the ·West.em White
House.
Alll>o doubting enougb suilable
coastal sites could be found, -I.he
researclws uplain tbat utility com.
panies look for ~ locations because they want cheap water for cooling.
If the flew plants were built along the
ocean, the ~· aaJd, "then 1n the year 2000 there would be 1,200-megawatt
-Did someone loose a giant balloon over our lagoon Saturday after-
noon? Or was that, as one source suggested, a film crew looking for
:• new angle from which to shoot a TV pilot for Bob Hope Enter-
prises? A spokesman for Hope's outfit says no. Harbor Department
spokesmen say· they noticed the balloon over China Cove, but didn't
check it out because the air space over Newport· Hlrbor does' not
fall within thE!ir jurisdiction .. Can anyone solve this mystery!
€hicago Pofice Say Gang
Killed Victims at Random .. ' ' J>-• -
£H!CAGO JAP)'-$herlfl Richard J.
Elrod says eight mem)>ers of a black.\er-.
rortst gang charged. in the recent
mtg11ers o,t.nine persons were apparently
"ii>aming the countryside looking for
IQJiieone Lo kill."
Authorlties said apparently not all of
the .eight men charged participated in all
ala~gs.
~ told newsmen Sunday the nine
wbi1e victims, including the members of
two separate families, apparently were
r&Ql;lomly seleded by a Chicago street
gang he said called itself "De Mau
Mau."
Asked about possible racial motivation,
Elrod said, "I can see no other apparent
motivation."
veterans who had been dishonorably
discharged.
• tbarles G. Hurst Jr., president of
Malcolm X College in"Chicago, said three
men charged had been students there,
but said they had been dismissed. He
declined to daborate.
The most· widely re1>0rted of the
murders was the kllllng of a retired in.
surance executive and three members of
his family Aug, 4 In the wealthy Chicago
suburb of Barrington ma..
a~8~is<'t:~~~i ·~"t:;· =~· ~'.
were found ·shot thiougb the backs of
their heed~. ·C9rbett's stepdaughter,
Barbara Boand, 22, was found dead a few
feet away. She had been shot through the
heart.
' pow;er planta every eight mil"es along the
coast."
The Rand team proposes t b a t
CalifQrnia slow lta: electrical use growth
instead, because so many plants would
threaten a "deteriorated enrivonment"
and power sbortege could be expected
anyway unless a careful consructioo
timetable were met.
SuggestiQg commercla1 and residential
conservaUon techniques ranging from
turning out the lights in an empty room
to using solar energy for water beating,
th!: researchers say cutting future pro-
jected electrical use by go percent is ua
reasonable goal."
"lbwl, the projected 33.5 million camor-
n1ans of the 21st Century should u.se 300
billlon kilowatt hours a year instead of
the MS billion kilowatt boura upected
at the current growth rate. The reduced figure would still be near· IY triple the current power U&e by the
slate's 1D million residenta.
The Rand team also suggests: a "go-
slow" policy on new nuclear power
plants, now contemplated as the heart of
California'• future electrical system.
"Be&ide! the risk of nuclear accident,"
Rand said, "the researchers point to the
UMO)Ved problem of disposing of high-
leveJ radioactive wastes, which remain
dangerous for thousands of years."
Plants could harness alternative ·power
sources, the ~·esearchers said, such as
geothennal energy -underground steam
that can be converted into electricity.
"li the geothennal resources believed
to eDst In Imperial Valley In the
Southern California desert were harness-.
ed in a 13-to-15 year program, no other
new power plants could be required ater
1985.'' Rand stated, provided the state
could hold to a growth rate of 3 percent
annually.
A second Rand study, commissioned
like the other for the state Assembly's
Committee on Planning and Land Use.
said ll')at even ii growth.slowing policies
were successful about 23 plants in the
1,200-megaYlatt range will be needed •.
The second report r~mended a
state agency be established to select
potentia1 sites and deal with expected
controversies over plunking down such
facilities around the state.
State Holds On to Land
Newport Trying to Buy Back Freeway Property
By L. PETER KERIG
Of tfl• O.lly Pilat ft ...
The state of California may oot be in
any hurry to sell off its excess ·rreeway
right-of·way properties, despite pressure
to get the valuable chunks of real estate
back oo the tar. rolls.
Newport Bea~h City Manager Robert
L. Wynn said today be bas learned that
the State Public Works Department will
ask the California Highway · Commission
"to move slowly" as it discusses selling
the $35 million worth of land it bought for
Authorities
May Cancel
Doctor Hunt
AutboriUe1 sakl today they will decide
tQOigbt whetheror not In conUnqe tbe alt
search.for Newport Beach physician Dr.
George Peek, Who has been missing in a
light plane since Oct. 3. ...
"Unless there is something new that
develops today, we'll probably suspend
the search as of tonight," a spokesman
for the Western Rescue Coordination
Center at Hamilton Air Force Base in
San Rafael said this morning.
He said officiaJs of tbe center, which
has been paying \he cost of ·the two-week
search, will meet with the bead of the
California Civil Air Patrol this evening to
make the decision.
The chances of the CAP finding
anything new today are slim since they
have no planes in the air, a spokesman
said.
They sent 22 airplanes aloft over the
weekend scouring an area from San
l"rancisco south to the Mexican border.
The search stopped at the border.
however, because the CAP is not
autl.orized to search Mexican territory.
"That's a problem we're trying to work
out now," said Thomas Va1enzuela, a
CAP official who said he met with Mei·
ican officials over the past weekend to
discuss.
"!t won't help us with this search lbut
maybe we can work something out with
their A1r Force in the future," he said.
The pending decision to suspend t h e
search for Dr. Peck did not surprise his
S0!1, Douglas Peck of l.A>s :Angeles, who
spent the weekend at Ule CAP control
center at Brackett Field in Pomena.
"Tbey've combed the entire area
twice," the younger Peck said, "and they
haven't found a trace.
"It's kinda frightening and I have lost
faith a little that they will find him allve.
"There's still that glimmer of hope,
though," Peck said.
the now-defunct Pacific Coast Freeway.
Some $16 million of that property is in
Newport Beach and ~ t;ity ls {!'ying to
buy four major parcel8 for park and (lpeD
space use.
Tbere bas also been pr"""1'e lrom "°"
servationist groups and even the state's
own Commission on State Government
and Economy -the Litile Hoover Com-
mission -to set the state to dispose of
excess freew&)' Jfropertles.
The Highw8.y C.Ommission will meet
Wednesday in Sacramento to discussions
Quake Strikes
South Ba:r Area
REDONDO BEACH (AP) -An
earthquake caused a "hard jolt" to-
day In tbe Soul!! Bay area, R..sondo
Bead> police ·said, l>ut no damage
..... repcirted . . _ .Sr•..i.ts at Caltech i n
. -the quake, at l:H a.m., feglstered s.o on the Richter
scble. ne quake was centered near
R..sondo Beach.
PolJcti report.a lelepbone calls
from as far south as Wilmington.
procedures and methods of dis~ing of
the Division of Highways properties, but
Wynn said their·-staf; will make a strong
pitch for them to take their time.
"The Public Worb Department staff
feels that just because there isn't going
to be a freeway that doesn't mean lbey
still don't need a transportation cor-
ridor," Wynn said.
"They feel they may need lhe land for
a monorail system or just to add lanes to
existing hig:tways," be said.
Justice Dept. Suit
He said the staff may recommend that
the state lease some of their ,properties
Lo municipalities for parks purpore!._
If the properties are to be sold, the
staff will then insist that they be sold at
their full market value.
"They are opposed to selling them for
anything less than their true market
value," Wynn said, "they were bought
with gas tax money for a specific
purpose and the staff says it would be ii·
lega1 to sell th~m for I~ than their true
(See PARKS, Page%)
)
IBM Computer Structure
Facing Possible Breakup
)no YORK (AP) -The federal
government said today that if it wins Its
3lh·year-old suit against Intematiopal
Business Machines Corp., it likely will
seek the breakup of the huge company's
computer ope rations lt1!0 compf!Ung
units.
Bresnahan Def ends
The Justice Department slated Its posl·
ti on in a court-ordered paper in U.S.
District Court here , listing "tentative"
remedies to ''dissipate t~ 1!normous
market power of the current IBM com·
puter manufacturing and marketing
structure . "
The government, which had been asked
to submit a detailed proposal of action it
believed should be taken against IBM,
said it could not be more specific until a
more precise analysis of IBM's markets
was made. Airport Lease Action
Director of Aviation Robert Bresnaba1'1
today defended himself agal1151 charg,.
of allowing "irregular" leases at Orange
County Airport by aaylng he was pushing
for a profit-making operation.
Charges against the county's aviation
dir«tor surfaced over the weekend. One
supervisor's aide alleged, "'The airport
has been guilty of sloppy management.''
Officials of the county's Real Property
St!-rvices Department, which band1es bid
and lease functiom, said that Bresnahan
has been banding out trial options to
firms ope<ating at the airport without ·
following proper procedures.
Bresnahan today Indicated there may
have been some ''irregularly
established" concessions and revenue..
producing leases but the aviation chief
insists there are good rea800! for them.
He explained that the airport operates
on a so-called ent.erprise fund basis,
meaning that it ls ~-f~pportlng. To
keep it that way, Bresnahan does not
want to sign long term' teases with sup-
•
posed.If revenue • producing concessions
and services which may turn out to be
money losers.
The airport operation, being a separate
funded function, must pay other county
departments for any services rendered,
he noted.
Jn the case of a concession -coin
operated television viewing chair!' -and
a service -an airplane washing device
-Bresnahan thought it would be better
to a1low them a trial period before going
through the er-pensive ~bid ~
cedure required by the oounty.
"Why pay up to $3,500 for a bid and
award procedure when a trial period will
determine that the operation or service
will bring in only about S35 or $40 a
month revenue to the a i r p o r t , ' '
Bresnahan argues.
The principal charge a g a I n s t
Bresnahan centers on his alleged failure
to Inform the Board of Supervisors of
such triaJ operaUona.
An attorney for IBM charged that the
government was adding new issues to the
case and could not win a court tria1 of
the antitrust action.
The New York Stock EJ:change, citing
an influx of orders, halted trading in
IBM stock alter the Ju.sli ce Department
statements. IBM stock was down $2.73,
to $376.15, for the day before trading
was halted. Trading resumed l b r t e
houn later.
'The Justice Department said that
although precise details of the proposed
divestiture could not be provided at this
time, the breakup of the multibillion-
dollar firm 'l{Ould be accomplished "by
the formation of the total domestic and
internationa1 computer systems facilities
of IBM into several separate. in·
dependent and competitive balanced er..
titles capable of competing successfully
in domestic and international market.I
with one another and wtlh other domestic
and foreign competitors."
She men are being held without bond ,
two others are still being sought.
fte murders took ~lace in the IDinois
ooriimunlUes of Barrington Hills, Monee,
Jllizhland Parlt and Carbondale.
£trod, the Cook County sheriff, said the
De ~au Mau organization apparenUy was
founded several years ago by Vietnam
·Bayside Drive Now Open
Real Properties officia1s also com·
plained that Bresnahan is allowing repali"
and Olgbt IChool operatlOOJ at the north
tie-down area of the airport without re-
quiring bids or lease procedures.
Bresnahan replied that all partlel have
been fully Informed of all &UCh opera·
Uons.
•'The f'!OW\ty airport commbslonen
have wrestled with and held bearings on
the problem of fu:ed base open~
versus off.airport services for more than
two years." he pointed out.
Jn a Sept. 12 order. U.S. District Court
Judge 0.vl~ N. Edelstein told the
department it wanted to k n o w
specifically what was southt in the way
of re1iel in one of the biggest an-
timonopoly aclions ever brought by the
government.
LOTS TO SELL?
LIST IT HERE
When you've got a Jot to sell, list It all
wbtre people sell a Jot , Jin this:
GOU> 4 pc. sectional. aey 2
make couch. Bed in 1. any
pc. $50. 2 new gold •ml, ooc
chn. Mite. ch"'t•, tbls
HOO\fer vac. MJcroscope,
typewrtr., chrome fl.rt 8flf: A
-'"-ICl'ffft tan naugti. 10febed A
ch&lr, $$0. XXlt•OXX.
"Wow.f Faotastlol" That's the way the
advtrtlser delcrlbed the 'l"J)C>llte to that
Id. ·Try tt for )'Ou...U •. DfiJ the dJrect
line to DAILY-PILOT dwllltd -tl1lng, 641-6678.
I
New Four-lane Road . Bisects Promonwry Point
Reallgned Bayside Drive, which bi· ~ts the Irvine Company's Promontory
roint and Bay developments in Newport
Beach, has been opened to traffic.
The new four-Jane r o 11 d skirta the
north . shore of the develor>menl'• man--
made yacht bas:tn and r!pfaces old Bay·
side Ort•e. The old stttei has been tllm-
ed into a cul-de-sac and reoalned ffa.J'o
bor Island Drive.
The ~ipment ..., necenary JJo.
came the blaln '• entry channel f r o m
N•wport Harbor will cut oil the rvad.
"All we have left ls the final coating
on tbe rvad ond It wJ\1 -I..-eompleUy
done," s a Id lnotne COmpany project
manager Dave Kuhn. "I think we 're
put ball woy on the project now.'"
Kuhn said the channel to the 00y won't
be cut thrvush until after the first of
the year. ·
Until then, he said. a great deal more
bulkhesdlng and underground utility said . ~
work hu to be done in the area. The development may also be held
The basin itself is dotted with pool11 of by the recent requirement of the S
ground water that have been oozing in Supreme Court t h a t any development
during the excavation. which could have a "slgnifle1int" impact
Up lDltil a month ago, the brackish oti the environment murt file an envfron..
water behind the bulkheads became a mental Impact stattrnent.
breedinJ: fJ'OWld' far mosquitoes. · Newport Beach bu adopted a c I t y
"We fiad a number of eomplaint11 from policy for preparatJon of such statements
people in the area when we hnd t h a t and Kuhn uld one ls already in the
first big outbreal< during the summer," worb for Promootory Point ond Bay.
said Orange County Mo.'tquito Abatement "The ltltement ls being prt'pared and
District ofrJcer Jack H. Kimball . we are obtaining an our permits," Kuhn
"We ca~ down and sprayed and the uld. "That 11 an I can ay at this
lrVlne CoTllpany backfilled behind th s point."
bulkheodo.'' ho said. "Tha• 1<emo to Kuhn said that the new l!llyalde Drive.
have controOed the problem." even though it hasn't gotten Its nnal cap
Klmbtlll said the pools In the middle or oophalt. can handle the trafnc burden
or the basin are apparently 181ty enough adcQuately now.
and eXJ)C)Std to Meugh wtnd that t h e "llarbor Ialand Drive attn need& e lol
mosqulfoes won't breed in them. of work." Kuhn ukl. "But that should
"But we're keeping an eye on II." he be ready ralrly IOOD, too."
,•
The present ordiMnce governing the
alrport prohibits such operation& without
a specific lellse with f.he county. "But
this ordinance was writk"n before the
airport became a lttlf-supportlng ac--
tiv1ty," Bresnahan said. "What the com-
(See LEASES, Page II
'I Love You'-Leaps
SAN FRANCISCO (API -Her
,....!heart's Jaet words btfott jumpllll!
to hll death fl ere "l love you," &be &lrl
friend of the latest peraon to !tap from
th<! Golden Gate Bridge has told police.
The Coa5t Ou11rd said Sonday tt
r«aV<red the body of J;;d Shall<owsld. 36,
of Stockton, the *0th known vlctim to die
in a plunsi:e trom the bridge lnto San
Frunclaco Bay .
•
Orange Coasc
Weatber
Variable cloudl.ne!a on T\lesday,
but momly sunny, with highs at
the beaches around 74. rJstng to 78
Inland. Lows tonight 58-a.
INSIDE TODA 'Y
Nazi Germuny'1 L•/lvlo/I• had
ploru for bombing mltriom on
U.S. dtits during tM 1DCr, llC·
cording to recentlu c:Uscoverf'd
popcr1. Sec •tort/ on Paq• 4.
L,M. ...,., U ...... . ·-. ci...in.i ..,..
(-In · If
·-u .,.. .. ~ .. ........ , ,... . ,....,. ........ , lt ,,_, ,..11
ll9r .. .... • .... *-tt
•
Not K id Stuff
This youngster seems more in·
terested in getting something
to eat than listening to Demo-
cratic vice presidential nom-
inee Sargent Shriver during
Shriver's fund-raising picnic at
his Rockville, Md., home.
Corona del Mar
Ha s Big 800111-
/11 Sand Ca stles
The structures buill on Corona del
~lar's main beach Saturday would never
pass a city building inspection but they
were nonetheless artistic.
The baslc building material was wet
beach sand and the tools were creali\'e
hands. buckets, shovels and carving im·
plements.
Nearly 2,000 persons watched as IS
contestants in the annual Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce sand cas..
tle cootest piled , packed, patted, dripped
and carved their entries.
Finishing touches ranged from cookies
and lollipops to a miniature American
flag .
Prius were awarded in 10 categories
plus an honorable mention .'
Winners included :
-~o.st Modernistic Castle, T o d d
Vander Pluym of Manhattan Beach. -Mom Artistic Castle, Paul Johnson
of Garden Grove.
-Best Contemporary Pagoda, Cindy
Ford of Irvine and the SMUT ecology
group.
-Best Lease-OO!d Cast.le, the Henry
Vorgang family of BaJboa.
-Least Likely Castle, Toby Marshall
of Tustin, represent ing cal State
Fullerton.
-Most Avant Garde Castle, the
Newport Harbor Jaycet11.
-Best ·Non-conforming Castle, the
Corona del Mar High School Sea Kings.
-Best Drip Castle , the Beacon Bay
Homeowners Association.
'-Special Award for a Junior Group to
the Harbor View Hills Girls.
-Most OiJCOmbooberated Castle, the
Mesa Verde Workshop of Costa Mesa.
-~foet Honorable Mention, the Sand.
dlggtn of Corona del ?.far.
OIAN61 COAST N
DAILY PILOT
Thi °"'lft C-t °"IL V PILOT, wlltl wPlodl
i. ~ ftMI "-•Pr.u, II pi.IOI..,._, bY
tlw or..,.. Olillt Pt!Mk.lllroa ~-~
,. .... "_ -pt,lbl ...... """""'•¥ tllf9llQll ,,...,., fw Coll• Mne, N_,. tMdl.,
folllflllnO'M 8Mcll/FQUrl!lin \llllf'I, i.a""'9
8..cll,. l~S1dd/H>ittll Ind San C'-"-tf/
$111 Juen C..Pblr-A lll'ICll• no;iloMI
MlllM M pllbllllMd S.tl\lrGl'f'\ •""' Sundt\'l.
flM llf"ltM:lpll IMAtlllMl'ICI pMont 1, ., llJ Wtt•l
l l't '''"'• COtl• Mew, C.l/fon\lti, ~
loN rt N. W1.4
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tt11sa • c1141 '42 ... an
c-.11114 .W.uott .. MJ.1671
~ mt. Or ... 0-t ........ °""""'"· Mo -lllrln. Jll..trlttlni, ........ "'°""' ., ..,_.,~ ...,.. wwy M ~ Wlt!lwt "*"" ,.... ,,...... of U,Wlfl'll """*'·
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Nun Relates
Dulaney
Stock Deal
By TO)f BARLEY
Of tr.. 01!11' Piiot tllH
A Rom:in CnthoJlc nun today idf'ntlfied
Laguna Hl!J s stociibroker Joseph Dulaney
as the man v.·ho assu red her and other
officials at a San Bernardino hospital in
late 1968 that IQ('Y could double the in·
rome they rcce1\ed from invested
reserve funds.
Sister ,,_fargaret 11fary, the first pros·
eculion witnes.s in the Orange c.ounty
Superior Court trial of Du1aney and three
codefendants, testified that she, St.
. Bernardine llospital controller Robert
r.L1chan and tv.•o other nuns visited
Dulaney's "Taj hlahaJ '' building about a
month later.
She testified that she had been ap-
proach <Jn the topic earlier by Machan,
50, San Bernardino, Ylbo suggested that
tht funds currently held in reserve by the
hospital could generate m-0re Income ln
the hands of Dulaney's World Financial
Trends organization.
The soft-spoken nun, \1•ho \11as demoted
by her order in mid-1970 at the height or
the Dul aney invesligHtion and transfer·
red to Tulsa, Okla. said the conversation
and the visit to Laguna Hills Jed to the
granting <Jf a $500 ,000 loan to the Dulaney
group.
She testified. over repeated objections,
that Dulaney provided hospital represen·
latives with a statement indicating the
strong financial positio1 or his gr<Jup.
She said Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via
Cascadlta, San Clemente, told hospital
representatives he intended to invest the
$500.000 in the form of $250,000 shares of
Azalea stocl-:.
It is alleged that the stock was
\•:orthless ·and 1hat the ssoo:ooo sn~
QUently received by Dulaney from the St.
Bernardine Hospital was divided among
the codefendants.
Sister Margaret Mary said she was ad·
ministrator at the hospital and a member
of its board of di rectors at the time the
loan l\'as approved.
The nun also Identified James Shipley,
38. of 16951 Lowell Circle. Huntington
Beach. as Dulaney's representative at
the hospital negotiations. She said
Shipley, vice president of World Trends,
took them on a tour of the Taj Mahal
building when the hospital officials
visited Laguna Hills.
It is alleged that ?i.fachan, who is to
receive a separate trial <Jn multi ple
charges that led to a grand jury in·
dictment of seven persons, was given
$15,000 shortly after the gr<Jup cashed the
hospital check.
The prosecution alleges tha t 11 further
$19 ,000 payment wa!I ma~ by the group
to a financial 3d.-iso1 "'ho was named in
the Grand Jury indictment.
Currently facing trial with Dulaney
and Shipley on charges stemming frOm
the $500,00 loan are Daniel Hayes, 4{), of
821 i Snowbird Drive, Jfuntlngton Beach
and Wendell Warren Austin, 3 8 ,
Riverside.
The second pl::ise of the trial will bring
Dulaney's wife. Marlene 32, to the
courtroom to face with the other clefen·
dants Qllegations stemming from in·
vestigation of \Vorld Financial Trends
operations.
Grand theft, fraud and conspiracy
charges were filed against the group
after an investigation that began with the
filing <Jf numerous complainl!I by in·
vestors in the \Vorld Financial Trends
Organization.
Miller Ass umes
Post as Ne,vport
Cl1amber Aide
Larry Miller, a former marina marr
ager, has joined the staff of the New·
port Harbor Chamber of Commerce as
assistant to General Manager Jack Bar·
nett.
Miller. 41. of 1512 Sylvia Lane. Newport
~a.c~. has been active ip the Marine
D1\'lS1on of the chamber since 1966. serv·
ing es president in 1968 and 1971. He
has also served on the chamber's board
of directors.
Along vr'ilh other duties. Miller will be
assigned to Y.'ork on the marine activities
of lhe chamber.
Barnett. Ylho said today he ha!! no irr
tcntion of retiring from his post in the
n('ar future. said ,,_liller is well~ualilied
for the tasks he will be himdling.
Miller is a UCLA g!'ll<luate and fonncr·
ly se n·ed as general manager of New·
port Beach's fl.farina Dunell, general
manager of King Harbor f.1arina in Re·
dondo Beach and fluntington Harbour
Marine C.enter.
The new assistant director, who is
married with four tlfl.ldttn, ha1 also been
active In Boy Scouting for 28 yean and
is currently serving on committees of a
Newport Beach troop.
Winifred Smith
Service Tues day
Funeral servicc1 will t.eke place Tues-
day in Newport Benell for Winifred S.
Smith. a resident of Ora.nae County for 22
year!, who died Friday at the age of 75.
ti.trtt Smith, rormerly <Jf Emenld Bay
in Laguna Beach, rtstdtd at 2320-0 Via
Puerta, l..agun11 ltilJ1. She was 11 member
of the Church of Religious Science tn
t.ainna C,nyon.
Serv1ces wlU ~ at 3 p.m. at Pacific
View Memorial P•rk In Newport Beach.
Burial ~111 f<Jll ow et Pacific View. Mrs .
Smllh ii; survived by her husbo nd, Roy C.
Smith of the home addreM.
•
. ··"
f'ro91 Pllfle J
PARKS ..•
market value.1'
U that's what bapptDS, the expen1e of
Newj>olt. llMdl'• ambitlGul park ac-1 -ulsltion Jll'Oll'&lll would fk7rocket.
One of the prime pieces or stal.&<lwne~
land eyed by Newport Beacb It the ol
Pacific ~lectrlc rlgltt-of.way along We
Coast Highway in West Newport. 1
The cUy had expected It Cf>U\d buy thl!
eight-acre parcel for '600,000 and thcq
spind another · f215,boo to build ~
playground, tennis courts and basketbal
courts and handball court! a n
bathrooms and .9S parking spacet. j
The $600,000 rtpresent! about 50 percen •
of the marktt value, Wynn said. 1
He and other city offlclalJ hid eve11
held !Ome hope that the Highway Com1
mission might. endorse proposed stat•
legislati<ln to allow the properties to bit
sold for Jess than so percent or market
value. I
''There had been some talk of a la\111'
that Would have allowed them to sell it tq
I.Li for parks f<Jt a dollar," Wynn said. J
The PE rigl.t-0f.way is only one of foia .
or the state parcels that Newport Beac~
wants.
There's another eight to 10 acre parcel
rigbt· acnm Coa¢ lllgbway JUIUliog ._.
from Superior 'Avtnue to ·the Hoa&
Memorial Hospital parklog IOI. -
Fart of the prope~ runs up the bluffs
•adjacent to the Veriailles apartmenl.s
"" and Wynn said 'woold make an 'e](eellent
view park .
There is al90 a two-acre parctl of prop· That Sinking Feeling erty adjacent to the Corona del Mar Community Youth Cent.er east of
A ' · I b ed ti.fargoerite Avenue.. car lS a most su merg in water and mud near half million dollars in damage in the area of the Big While thert ls no price attached to the
a motel on Highway 1 in the Big Sur area after Sur Village store. {See story1 Page 5) Versailles parcel, the Parks, Beaches
heavy rains precipitated mud slides and caused a and Recreation Commiasion h a s
------------------------------------) estimated it will fate '50,000 fo buy °"
G.W. Duke Dies;
Printer Helped
Cl11rrch. Children ,
George W. Dute never made a fortune
in hie career a!I a printer, linotype oper·
ator and onetime · fry cook, bu t he in·
vested earnings and time in his church
and a "home for unwanted cbi.ldrtn.
Funeral serviees were scheduled today
for Mr. Duke. 68, a Sl·year Santa Ana
resident wbo died last week, 10 months
after retirement as an Orange Coast
OAJL Y PILOT employe.
Rites for Mr. Duke were set at 1 p.m .
in Brown Colonial ~tortuary, Santa Ana.
with interment to follow in Westminster
Memorial Park.
A native of Chattanooga, Tenn., he had
worked 20 years for the Santa Ana Reg-
ister where be waa hired in 1921 and in
t959 joioed the DAILY PILOT after being
associated in his own printing finn.
He was a member of the Northslde
Church of Christ in Santa An.a. also Rrv·
ing aS an elder, 3nd was a trustee 8.nd
board member of the Hillview Acres
Children's Home, 36800 Chln,o Ave.,
Chino.
Survivors suggest memorial contribu·
tions to the home in bis name, in lieu
of floral arrangements.
Survivors include his wife Katherine,
of the home at 1218 N. Unwood Ave.,
Santa Ana : daughters Smanne Rabalais,
Corona de! Mar, Mrs. Dianne Starkey.
Van Nuys: tw<J grandchildren ; a brother,
Louis Duke, Santa Ana, and a sisler,
Mrs. Fred Germany, of Chino.
A lifetime member of tile Cantando
Club, he also belonged to the Santa Ana
Lions aub and al one time played in the
Santa Ana municipal softb.a.IJ league.
Funeral sennons were to be delivered
by the Rev. Robert E. Scott. of Mr.
Duke's church and also by James H.
Sewell. chairman of the board of the
Chino children's home he had served.
Tliree Children
Among 7 Perso1is
Killed in Count y
Seven persons, including three children
died over the weekend in Orange County
traffic accidents, the county coroner's of.
flee reported.
The dead are:
Rodney J. Tomassacci, 20, of West
Covina.
Frederick Wadsworth. 59, and his wife,
Elaine. 58, of 298 Bowling Green Drive ,
c.osta Mesa.
Tomassaci, whose car swerved acroSt
the San Diego Freeway in San Clemente
and crashed tnto the Costa Mesa couple'11
vehicle Saturday nlght1 was previously
unidentified.
~1rs. Elma Peck, 80 of 817 S. Maxine
Ave., Santa Ana was killed Sund ay v"hen
!ltruck by a car on Euclid Avenue near
Wisteria Street. The driver of the car,
Richard K. McCoy, 4:9, of Anaheim , was
not cited.
Two 4·year-0ld children and a boy, 10,
d!ed in other inland county accidents.
Gary Wilson, 10, of 404 E. Palmyra St.,
Orange, was killed when struck by a car
while riding a bicycle at Chapman
Avenue and Feldner Street Saturday .
The driver was not cited.
Jolc.nc \\'hitmore, 4, of 2809 W. \Villits
St., Sanla Ana, received fatal injuries
Saturday when struck by a car driven by
John K. Weldenbenner, 23, of Santa Ana
,. on Fairview Strfft.
Gregory Labord, 4. of 2134 E. Underhill
Ave., Anahelm, dieil saturd•Y of injuries
received when bit by 1 car laat Tuesday.
In the later two C8.9el the drivers were
not cited.
Civic Lea gue to Meet
The Wllmf'n'11 Civic Lf!ague l)f Newport
1larbor will meet Tuesday at 9:30 a.m.
at Marlnert I.lbrary to hear a discus·
11ic:m nf the 22 propositions on the Noyem·
ber ballot.
The metting is open to the public .
•
-· .. ,, __
Candle Power-
Mesan Plans 3,000-lb. Ni~o_1i Gift
A young Costa Mesa man claimed to-
day that he has located a donor !or 3,000
pounds of wax for a Christmas candle he
is planning to send to President Nixon.
From Page l
LEASES ...
mission is trying W work out in a new
ordinance is a trial and error period. for
new enterprises. n
He argues that because of the cost to
the airport for Real Properties and other
county services, It is better financially in
many instances to sign the operator on a
simplified contract and then see if he can
make money or not.
"II the operatl<I> brings .in. litUe rev-
enue to the county why spend several
thousand dollars on a bid·le.3se pro.
cedure and be stuck with a long term
Jesse and then find out yoo do not ap-
prove of the particular senice," the
aviation director asked.
Some county officials do not agree.
"The reason for bidding is to protect
the county against patronage and
favoritism," they point out.
Ashbrook Has Fire
JOHNSTON, Ohio (UPI) -Fire
destroyed the top Door of the tbree-6tory
frame home of Rep. John M. Ashbrook
(R-OtUo,) in this central Ohio community
during the weekend. No one was in the
house When names broke out Saturday
Digit!.
"I talked to an oil company today and
they said they would send the 3,000
pounds of paraffin to me within two day11.
That means we can start bu.IJding It this
week," .JJl.id. Jeff Overstreet,_~. Of 1605
Coriander st.
The candle, according to Overstreet,
will have an American Flag on each side
and will be fueled eternally by propane
gas.
Not only a patriotic gesture, the candle
is envi.!iooed by Overstreet as a project
involving local youth. He said he ~s to
establish a local youth center aAct make
tbe candle Its ftrSt project.
"I talked with the WNte House this
morning and Lucy Ferguson, the woman
who baodles the gilts to f!1e Prtoideot,
thought lhe idea wu great. She wants us
to. send tile caridle earlier thin
Chrlstmaa, but l .doni think this will he
possible," Overstreet said.
Meanwhile, a rough draft of the candle
is being developed by a local artist, ac-
cording to Overstreet. He claims to have
IS to 20 volunteers who are willing to
~'Ork on the project.
It will carry the inscription, "Peace,
Freedom, UDlty and Equality !or all
Mankind." A similar candle-building proj-
ect by Overstreet a few years ago failed
when the candle broke prior to shipment
to Washington.
That caodle weighed 4,900 pourxis and
consisted <Jf three hands carrying a
globe, aceotding to Overstreet. "It never
made It to Washington because it fell off
.i forklift," be said.
Business as
usual at • • •
Corona del Mar pare<! and $)00,000 \ti
develop it. • :1
That acquisition cost may at leut do11c
hie, however, if the city Ls forced to pay
the full price for IL .1
ni. same tbJog may happen to tho
fourth parctl. That's the property OD
Cliff J)rjve where the Baptirt Onrrch I.!
located.
IniUally, the PBR Commlsaion ~
estimated it coold buy the prop<rty for
$250,000 aod speod about l'/S,000 to
develop it.
That accjuisiilon ""81 coo111, eully dCJlt-
ble, ·1oo.
Three or the ·lllili parcw;-alf bul tho
one helow Vmallles, are Included In ii
'°rt or "shopplog llsl" or park sites thal
city councilmen compiled to find out ii
they can buy and develop with hmdl
raised through a non.profit corporation. :
Voters In June turned down an $8.t
million bond l.!lsue for a massive ao-
quisition and develppment rrogram, but
the bonds got a favorable vote -about
60 percent "yes" -but that WI! llil1
short or the needed tW<>lbinl> majority;
Since that election, coruncDmen am.
Wyno ,bave been worlclng on alfero~
meam of ~ B:t leut.' part of
progtllm tuil W1M last week ..U fold
...... wtfh the city '• botid coomei to
detennlne• ii a no .. prol!t corporation:
could he 11"'1 by the cHy IOT parb
purposes. .
Wynn said be "will meet·wilh that fa•
finn, O'Melveny and Myera, Tuesda'
afternoon and hopes he'll have an answet
to the legal question then. -,
Harrah Wed Again '
ZEPHYR COVE, Nev. (UPI) -Culno
owner Willlam F. Harrah, 61, wu ~
ried Sunday to Roxanna Carlson, S2, a
fonner model. The marriage was UHi
fourth for · Harrah, woo was formerly
marded to singer Bobbie Gentry, ana
the second ror Mn. Carlton, a n.u .. '1
Yerington, Nev.
'
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Yes we ore open for business despite the fire we
hod ct our store lost Monday. We ore pretty dusty
end dirty right now but thot meons we must try
herder then ever to offer you 151gger and better
values. Our insurance company l10s allowed us
to repurchase ell the c ~oted merchandise end
some of the display samples ct reduced cost. These
refrigerators, washers, dryers, dishwashers and
TVs only suffered smoke ddmoge and their new
guorontees were not affected. These savings will
be passed on to you .
..
0
n •
During the weeks of remodeling wf! will continue
to bring yo.u good values the some cs we hove
for the post 25 years .
1815 NEWPORT BLVD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA
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Orange ~ast
EDITION
Today' Flnal
N.Y. Stooks
VOL 65, NO. 29"0, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1972 c
'
Council to ~Tac/ale Ba.ccoons~ Coyote -They, may have been successful in run-
ning Angela the bear out of town. but
Coste. Mesa city councilmen may find the
going a bit rougher tonight w1}en they
tack1e the racoons atKt a coyote.
The animals are part of a little
tx.ckyard me;iagerie owned by Mrs.
Shelba M~sh, 614 W. Bay St. Like
Angela they are unwelcome guests in the
city under an ordinance 'vhich prohibits
the keeping of wild animaJs .
Tonight at 6:30 Mrs. Marsh will at-
tempt to get around the law by asking
the council for pennission tO put them in
a petting zoo at the Orange County
Fairgrounds.
Henry the Coyute, and raccoons Sheba
and Band.it, will join a lion cub, a
kangaroo, a , goat, some monkeys and
possibly some ostriches in the zoo if Mrs.
Marsh gets her way.
She plans to oun the zoo on a non-profit
basis, with all tbe receipts applled to the
fairgi'ounds rental· and food for the
anima1s.
Indications are, however, that Mrs.
Marsh will have to back her request for a
business license with some insurance
coverage. She claims that all her animals
will be tame, but city ball admini_strators
are wary about small children being bit-
ten or scratched.
Earlier this year, COUl!cJlmen invoked
the wild animal ordinance against Ralph
"Al" Lutge, 2000 Harbor Blvd., a pro-
fessional iµiimal trainer wbo kept a fully
gtc~vn sunbe:r .. s his pet.
Subject of petitions both pro and con.
"A::0 .. 1a'' was declared persona non
grata in Costa P..tt!Sa by the council and
ordered out oI town. She is now being
tracted for Costa Mesa through tbe coun-
Mn. ?1-larsh's refusal to give up her
<>.r.iJnals has br.:>:.ight her trouble with the
Orange County r 1g c.:tchcr. Hi has taken
her coyote into custody on several OC·
casions.
Henry is current ly out on bail because
he is ailing a.1d being nursed back to
health by Mrs. Marsh.
Also on tap for tonight's city council
meeting is another animal-related item.
the hiring of a new dog catcher. Animal
kept by Lutge in Norco.
control services are now being con-
ty. The agrce1nent expires Dec. 28.
Two weeks ago. councilmen decided to
establish their owr. animal cootrol
department by hiring three-men and hit.
ing the dog license fees from $S to $6 per
year.
Responding to dog catche r ada placed
by City Manager Fred Sorsabal torught
will be the California Animal Control Co.
"'hich presently services the City of
tifanhattan Beach.
Costa Mesa Fiesta Called Big Success
Attendance,
Proceeds Up
For Event
The thtte-<lay Fiesta de Costa Mesa .
waa pronounced an unqualified success
today by Cbamber of Commerce
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. Manager Nick .Ziener, chief organizer of
--the annual evenf.
Nll.Y P T•ltliil,no•
SHE ~LL REIGN AS MISS COSTA MESA ' 1972
Asp1rin9 Actreu Marguerite ManaU~',..20
Marguerite Marsaudon
Chosen Miss Costa Mesa
Who is the fairest in the land today?
It's statuesque Marguerite Marsaudon ,
the Orange Coast College student who
bested a field of 20 challengers to become
Miss Costa Mesa 1972.
Miss Marsaudon , 20, was crowned Sun-
day afternoon at Costa Mesa City Park,
the same place she was selected Miss
Fish Fry 1972 earlier this summer.
Runner-up was 22-year-old Faye Marie
La Belle, 2245 Santa Ana Ave., and sec·
ond runner-up was 17-year-old MI sty
I ee; 1845 Anaheim St.
An aspiring actress, Miss Marsaudon is
the daughter of Mrs. Carol Amacher,
2210 Canyon Drive. She is enrolled in
drama and experimental theater COW'ses
at OCC. -
Orange (;east •
\feather
Variable cloudiness on Tuesday,
but mosUy sunny, with highs at
the beaches arowid 74 rising to 78
Inland. Lows tooight SMI.
INSIDE TODAY
Nazi Gt""""Y'• LuflWaff• had
plan& for bombing mi.tlicnu on
U.S. citieJ during ehe war, ac-
cording to recentl11 dilcovered
papers. See storu on Poge 4.
1..M. leyC ,. Allll ........,.. II
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C .. I.....,• t H•lliOMI ""' 4 C .. Alf'IHI ft.i4 Of"tftlot C-IY I "9ftlkt II Srf'¥11 ,..,,.. 11
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... ..,.."'_' 1• TllMttn ,,
flllllftQ 1•11 WMl!llr '
.. ., "" .... • ·~· ""' 1).14 .---·· .. ...... ...... .
•
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She received her crown and a $300 gift
certifcate from fonner Miss Costa
Mesa, Marianne Bergeron, during the
~econd annual Fiesta de Costa Mesa.
The brown-haired, brown-eyed double
beauty qveen has lived in Costa Mesa
since she was S years old end is a L970
graduate of Estancia High School.
Currently employed as a waitress, she
is pl_anning to become a pho to model \ to
finance further studies in theater arts.
Her hobbies are swimming and singing.
At Orange Coast College, she performs
regularly with the OCC student chorale
and the Chamber Singers ..
When she was a junior at Estancia,
Miss Marsaudon's musical talent won
her a trip to Europe (or a series of sum-
mer engagements.
Whisked away by helicopter for a short
trip down the South Coast after Sunday
afternoon's pageant, she was busily
pursuing her studies ·at OCC again this
morning .
Po1·ts to Open
To Soviet Ships
WASffiNG'roN (AP) Several
California ports and Honolulu are among
1he 4-0 U.S. ports which will be opened to
SOviet •euels tmde"r the maritime agree-
ment sllllt'd oveT the weekend.
' 'Mle t&r~year pact opens fO ports ln
each natton to easier aC(.'(lSS by the
other's merchant ships.
Jn addition to Honolulu, ports opened to
the SOvleta are at Eureka; Long Beach;
1"' Angelea, Including .San Pedro, Wll·
mington and Tenntnal Island; Sacramen·
to; and &ln Francisco, I n c I u d 1 n g
Alameda, Oakland, Berkeley and Rlch-
mon<:I.
Both in terms of attendance and in the
number of Mexican dinners sold, the
Fiesta exceeded the totals established
last year.
"The park was jammed every day and
it was crowded from beginning to end.
We must have had 10,000 people theft' on
Sunday alone/' Ziener said.
Profit figures from the Fiesta wet e not
available as of this morning. But the
Costa Mesa High Scbool Foot b a, I I
S-. GIUb -led ·lbe sale ol 1.900
Mexican dinners. Last year a total of
1,200 dinnen were sold.
1be Fiesta de Costa Mesa follows tl!e
pattern established by I~ annual Lloos
Club Fish Fry which is also held over a
three-day period at Costa Mesa City What's Going lfp?
Park.
OAILY Pti.OT Jlaff .....
Also a charity event, it orfers local
clu bs and organizations the opportunity
of promoting funds through the operation
of booths.
It's one of Costa Mesa's biggest houses, it'll cost
more than a million dollars and it's rapidly near·
i{l_g completion. And it's gone up so fast few Mesan s
know where it is or \Vhat it is. If you don't eilher,
see Page 2 for details and a broader view.
A lS-ride carnival and the giveaw(ly of
free ride tickets, Ziener believes helped
the Fiesta attain good attendance.
Cliamber Chiefs
"
Slate Meeting
With Banquet .
Directors of the Costa Mesa Chamber
of Commerce have canceled their
meeting scheduled for Thursday noon to
combine it with the annuaJ installation
banquet Thursday night.
That event gets under way with a &
p.m. social hour and dinner to follow at
the Costa Mesa Golf and C-Olllltry Club,
1701 Golf Course Drive.
Keynote speaker is t e I e v i s i o n
personality Dick Lane who will address
Chamber of Commerce members at 8
p.m. The subject of his talk is "I Count
My Blessing1 -I've Had a Ball."
Tickets may be reserved until noon
Tuesday by contacting the Chamber of
Commerce, 583 West 19th St. All reserva·
lions must be accompanied by a check
for $6.50.
Ruckelshaus iI1 A11al1eim,
Raps Uncontrolled Growtl1
William D. Ruckelshaus, administrator
of the En vironmental ProtecUon Agency,
told California city officials today that
"the idea t h a t unlimited, uncontrolled
growth is good is .no longer an unques-
tioned dogma. Indeed qWte the con-trary . .,
Rt1ckelshaus. addressing the 74th an-
nual conference of t h e League of Cali-
fornia CiUes, mentioned the state · Su-
preme Court's recent ruling on an en-
vironmental impact study. some cities
have interpreted the ruling as req uiring
impact studies on all construction proj-
ects.
Ruchelsha us said the ruling was one
which "follows the explicit intent of the
National Environmental Policy Act" and
made "instant hash of California build·
ing permit practices."
He said the batlle for decent environs
will be won or lost in Cilifomla.
"'this state is in many ways an arehe-
type of post·industrial society," he said.
Another speaker, Wilson Riles, state
superintendent of public instruction, said
schools alone cannot raise educational
standards. He said they need the cooper-
ation or government -local. state and
national. ~
He also called the Watson Amendment
on the Nov. 7 ballot -Prop. 14 -the
"No. I tax concern facillg us."
"I am proud to join with the governor
and the League of California Cities in
expressing unreserved opposition to this
tax hoax." he said.
About 6,000 delegates from more than
400 cities are attending the conference
at the Anaheim Convention Center.
They will consider resolutions on pro-
tection, local taxation and other prob-
lems faced by western cities.
Bomb Threat Probed
Candle Power
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Author1tles to-
day are investigating a telephoned bomb
threat that forced a 747 passenger jet to
make an unscheduled landing here while
en route from Dallas to Honolulu. The
Branlrf International jetliMr carrying
286 passengers was diverted Sunday after
a caller told the Braniff office in DaJlas
that explosives were aboard the craft .
.
Mesan Puuis 3,000-lb. Nixon Gift
A young Costa Mesa man claimed to-
day that be has located a donor for 3,000
pounds of wax for a Christmas candle he
is planning to send to President Nixon.
"I talked to an oil oompany today and
Ibey aaid they would send the 3,000
~nda of paraffin to me within two days.
n.at tnearui we can start building It this
week," said Jeff Overstreet, 2&, of 1805
Coriander St.
The candle, according to Overstreet,
will have an American Ftag on each side
and will be f\leled eterr.ally by propane
gas.
Not only a patriotic gesture , the candle
ia envbklned by Overstreet j,s a project
i.ivolving local youth. Ht sal~ he hopes to
establish a local youth center and make
the candle 111 flnt project .
"t talked with the White House Ulis
momlng Md Lucy Ferguson. the wvman
'
who handles the gifts to the President,
thought the idea was great. She wants us
to send · the candle earlier than
auistmas. but I don' think tbls will be
possible," Overstreet aaid .
)1'.eanwhile, a rough draft-Of the cl!ndle
Is being devek>ped by a local artist, ac.-
cording to Overstreet. He claims to have
15 to 20 volunteers who are willlng lo
'9ork on ·the project.
It ,wJli carry the lnetriptlon, "Peace,
Freedom. Unity and · EquaUty for all
Man1tind.'' A simllar candle-bu.Udlng prot-
ect by Overstreet a few years ago failed
when the candle broke prh>r to thlpment
to Washington. That candle weightd 4,900 pounds and
consisted of thrtf. hands carrying a
g\obe, according to Overstreet. ••tt never
macte It to Washin:ron be<!ause It fell oU
, for.kJut," he sal .
LOTS TO SELL? , .
LIST IT HERE
\Yhert you've got a lot to sell , list it all
where people sell a tot. . .like this:
GOLD 4 pc. sectional, any 2
makfl couch. Bed· Jn 1. tiny
pc, $50. 2 l'ICW ROid tml. Ol'C
chn. Misc. ch@~ll, tb\1
Hoover VflC. ~flcro11«1pe.
t)1lt?o'11r., chrome nre ~t &
ICl"Cl('n t11n nauah. 11>fe~ I
ch11ir. S50. ·:iuoc·JOOOt.
"Wow! Fantastic!" That's the way the
advtrtlser described the response to that
•d. Try II for you .... u. Dial tha dlre<:t
line to DAILY PILOT claselfled adver-
tising, 642-5678. ·
Fairview Road
Completion Due
Within 2 Weeks
< Construction of the stonn drain along
Costa Mesa's Fairview Road Is expected
to be finished within two wooks, allowing
full use of all four lanes again.
The project. conducted by the Ormige
C-OWltY Flood Cpntrol-District, was
originally scheduled for completion
before Orange Coast College and Costa
Mesa High School students returned to
classes.
Construction delays caused major
lieups of traftic between Warehouse
Roa d and Arlington Drive . Fairview had
to be reduced to two lanes to allow in-
stallation of the pipes.
For Orange Coast College students
traveling south on Fairview after getting
off the San Diego Freeway, the project
proved a major obstacle in reaching the
parking lots.
County ofCicials say the stonn drain
will prevent the buildup of a miniature
Jake on Fairview during the rainy seaaon.
Next year, a second project calls for the
extension of the storm drain from
Arlington Avenue south to Wilson Street
'Spoon River'
By E. L. Masters
Set at Estancia
Estancia High School's drama claa
will be producing the "Spoon RJver
Anthology" nm month but It won't be .by
Walt Whltman u announced Friday In
the Dolly Pilot.
1be ,....,,, la that Walt Whltm1n didn't
write It. Edgar Lee Misters did. !Ms dll-
flcult to explain how we mtxed up Wblt-
man and Mastm. Jn the newspeper
business, you call tblt a mlstlke.
We apologlzt to Barbara Van Holt and
her dr•ma clan.
We •Pologite to F.dgar I.ee Masters.
We apologize to Walt Whltml.l'I.
W• apologlu to you. _
Don't miu Estancl3 lf.gh 5':bool'1 ~
dudlon o( "Spoon Rivet' Antllololl)"' Not.
15, 18 and 18 •t the 1<hool audllarium.
By Edgar Lee Masters, for sure.
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MOt'ldly, Octobtr l'-1!72 ----
UPI T1'""'81t
That Sinkitag Feelitag
A car is almost submerged in water and mud near
a motel on Highway 1 in the Big Sur area after
heavy rains precipitated mud slides and caused a
half million dollars in damage in the area of the Big
Sur Village store. (See story, Page 5)
MESA
CALENDAR
TONIGHT
211.d Mudslide
Hits Big Sur
BIG SUR (AP) -Another mudslide
pounced on Big Sur today as new rains
hit hills alttady saturated by a week or
downpotll'8.
The slide forced a new shutdown or
Bresnahan
Defends All·
Lease Actions
CITY COUNCIL MEETING -City
Hall council chambers, 77 Fair Drive,
II--_6~30_p.m~
Coast Highway 1. (Earlier story, Page 5) . , · nA .. A B aha Rain prevented a cJeanup of the mud· ~ector of Av1~t1on n.vt.1er:t resn n
stricken area, where residents have been today defended hu:nself agamst charges
atlVen ffom tfieir homes and merchants of a!Jowing "irregurar" leases at Orange
DANCE LESSONS -Departments or
Leisure Services offers round dance
lessons at Wilson school, 801 W. Wilson,
7:30-10:30 p.m. 11-1ondays. $1.25 per
session.
'IUESDAY,OCTOBER 17
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD -
Regular m,.tlng, 7:l') p.m.
BACK TO SCHOOL NIGHT -
California, College Park, Harper, Monte
Vista, Newport Heights, Paularino,
Prince of Peace ond Sonora ochoob.
"INVESTMENTS" -OCC Lecture
Series presents William L. O'Bryon in
rivepart series beginning Oct. 17.
Eastbluff Elementary Schoo~ Newport
Beach, '1:30-9 :00 p.m. No tuition.
SQUARE DANCING -Community
Recreation Center. Fairgrounds. 8-10
p.m. Tuesdays. $1.25 per lesson.
Government Eyes
Breakup of IBM
Computer Setup
NEW YORK (AP) -The federal
government said today that if it wins its
3i,,..year-0Jd suit against International
Business Machines Corp ., it 1ikely will
seek the breakup of the huge company's
computer operations into competing
units.
The Justice Department stated its posi·
ti on in a court-Ordered paper in U.S.
District Court here, llstlng "tentative"
remedles to "diS!!llpate the enormous
market power of the current I.BM com·
puter manufacturtng and marketing
structure." ~
The government, which had been asked
, to submit a detailed proposal of acUon it
1 believed should be taken against IB~t.
1 said it could not be more specific until a
1 more precise analysia of m~t's markets
t was made.
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"
surveyed shops steeped In many feet of County Airport by saying he was pushing
brown ooze. · for a profit-making opeiatioil.
Search for Lost
Newport Doctor
May Be Canceled
Authoritie3 said today they will decide
tonight wJether or not to continue tbe air
search for Newport Beach physician Dr.
George Peck, who has been missing in a
light plane since Oct. 3.
"Unless there is something new that
develops today, we'll probably suspend
the search as of tonigl:lt," a spokesman
for the Western Rescue Coordination
Center at Hamilton Air Force Base in
San Rafael said this morning.
He said officials or the center. which
has been paying lhe cost of the two-week
search. will meet with the head of tht.
California Civil Air Patrol this evening t8
rr.ake the decision.
The chances of the CAP finding
anything new today are slim since they
have no planes in the air, a spokesman
said.
They sent 22 airplanes aloft over the
weekend scouring an area from San
Prancisc.o south to the Mexican border.
'The search stopped at the border.
ho\:.·ever. because the CAP is not
auU.orized to search h1exican territory.
"That's a problem we're trying to work
out now," said Thomas Valenzuela. a
CAP official who said be met with Mex·
ican officials over the past weekend to
discuss.
"It won't help us with this search but
maybe we can work something out with
their Air Force in the future," he said.
The pending decision to suspend t h e
search for Dr. Pttk did not surprise his
SO!l, Douglas Peck of Los Angeles , who
spent the weekend at the CAP control
center at Brackett Field in Pomona.
Charges against the county's aviation
director surfaced over the weekend. One
supervisar's aide alleged, 0 'Ibe airport
has been guilty of sloppy management."
Officials or the county's Real Property
Sd'"Vices Department, which handles bid
and lease functiomi, said that Bresnahan
has been handing out trial options to
firms operating at the airport without
following proper ~-·
BresnabAn today Indicated there may
have been some ''irregularly
established'' concessloM and revenue--
producing leases but the aviation chief
insists there are good reasons for them.
He explained that the airport operates
on a so-called enterprise _ fund basis,
meaning lhat it is • self·sup))Orting. To
.keep it that way, Bresnahan does not
want to sign Jong term leases with sup-
posedly revenue • producing concessions
and services which maY tum out to be
money l~s.
The airport operation, being a separate
funded functlop , mu st pay other county
departments for any services rendered,
he noted.
Ecology Impact
Report Sla.ted
Newport Beach City Attorney DeMis
O'Neil will interpret the state Supreme
Court'! "environmental impact" ruling
for the Citizens Harbor Area Research
Team (CHART) at 7:30 a.m. Thursday in
Costa hfesa.
The breakfast session 1s scheduled for
the Mesa Verde Country Club.
Under the court ruling, bolh public and
private c::onstruction projects must be
studied for their impact on the en-
vironment. ln the Harbor Area, the court
decision has bad the effect of retarding
several major construction projeots.
Hired Diplo111at?
Kissinger Slioivn as 'Gu nsli1iger'
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) -The author
of a new book about presidential aide
Henry Kissinger describes him as a sort
of "gunslinger" type of professional
diplomat that is new to American
politics.
"Kissinger hired out to Ne 1 son
Rookefeller in 1988 to gun down Richa rd
Nixon for the presidential nomination."
author-attorney Charles A.shmnn said
Sunday.
"He failed to stop Nixon, but I.hen join-
ed him as a for-hire trouble-shooter.
"De Gaulle, the Berlin Wall. Red
China, Vietnam ... Kissinger handlcs
them all. So he has moved up In thjl r\lx·
on administration to become the most
powerful No. 2 man In the history of the
Unll<d States .
. "England, France and 10me other
countries have hM dlplomat.s who were
professi.onall Ind continued to represent
1helr country through numerous changes
in government.
"But the brllll•nt lfenry Kissinger is
the first of thii 'gun!lllnger' sort the
United States has ~ver had,''
A11hman Hid he even considered uslnl(
the title. "Have Br11ln, Will Travel," for
his book on Kissinger.
Instead. the book h111 betn published
b~ tyle Stuart. Inc., of Secaucu~. N .I.. as
"KissiJlger. The Adventures of Super·
Kraut .''
Ashman said i11 an interview he was
<istonlshed while writing and researching
his book that so many pe<iple he talked :.o
had forgotten that Kissinger's job at the
l!l68 Republican convention was to "stop
Nixon."
"Al one point. an optimistlc Kissinger
artually told friends from Harvard that
he felt they had stopped Nixon and
Hockefeller would get the nomination ,"
Ashman writes.
"Buried in the press reports of
Rockefeller's announcement on ~1ay 3,
1968. when he talked about the Vietnam
war and domeatlc problems, was a sug·
gtsHon that tht PffS\dent of the Unlltld
Stat" sboold mlt Red China," wrlte3
Ashman.
"This Idea had oome [rom one of his
new foreign affairs advtsers . , , none
other than llen.ry Kissinger."
Aghman uses a light approach in hla
study of Kissinger, dwellln~ on his life tn
t.ermany before Immigrating to
America. his . rise to power within the
Nixon administration and hla well·
publlclzed dates with 11ome of the world '11
11exie111 women .
"In fact. ht uses somewhat of a gun-
slinger 11pproach in his dealings l''ith
"'omen." Ashman says.
I
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• DAIL 't llllOT 11.tt ,,.._
NEW HOLIDAY INN GOING UP ON BRISTOL STRE,ET NEAR FREEWAY
It's Risen So Fast Not Many Menns Know Where or Whit the Project I$
Chicago Terror
8 Charged in J(illings
'Looking for Victi~'
cmcAGO (AP) -Sheriff Richard J.
Elrod says eight members of a black ter·
ro rist gang charged in the recent
murders of nme persons were apparently
Tliree Children
Among 7 Persons
Killed i11 County
Seven persons, including three children
died Over the weekend in Orange County
traffic acci dents , the county coroner's of-
fice reported.
The dead are :
Rodney J. Tomassacci, 20, of West
Covina.
Frederick. Wadsworth. 59, and his v.ife,
Elaine, 58, of 298 Bowling Green Drive,
Costa Mesa.
Tomassaci, whose car swerved across
the San Diego Freeway in San Clemente
and crashed into the Costa Mesa couple's
vehicle Saturday night, was previously
unidentilied.
Mr:1. Elma /""1<, 80 of 817 S. Maxine
Ave., Santa Ma was killed Sunday when
struck by a car on Euclid Avenue near
Wisteria Street. The driver of the car,
Richard K. McCoy, 49, of Ansbeim, was
not cited.
Two 4-year-old children and a boy, 10.
died in other inland county accidents .
Gaty Wilson, Ht, of 4ot E. Palmyra St.,
Orange, was killed when struck by a car
while riding a bicycle at Chapman
Avenue and Feldner Street Saturday.
The driver was not cited.
Jolene Whilmore, 4, of 2809 W. Willits
St., Santa Ana, received fatal injuries
Saturday whe:n struck by a car driven by
John K. Weidenbenner, 13, of Santa Ana
on Fairview StreeL
Gregory Labord. 4, of 2134 E. Underhill
Ave., Anaheim, died Saturday of injuries
received when hit by a car last Tuesday.
"roaming the countryside looking for
someone to kill."
Authorities said apparently not all of
the eight men charged participated in all
slayings.
Elrod told newsmen Sunday the nine
white victims, including the members of
two separate familie.!, apparently were
randomly selected by a Chicago street
gang he aaid called , itself "De Mau
Mau."
Asked about possible racial motivation,
Elrod said, "I can see no other apparent
motivation.~
Six men are being held without bond,
two others are still being sought.
The murders took place ln the Illinois
communities of Barrington Hills, Aionee ,
Highland Park and Carbondale.
Elrod, the Cook County sheriH, said the
De Mau Mau organization apparently was
founded several years ago by Vietnam
veteram who had been dishonorably
discharged.
Owles G. Hurst Jr., president of
Malcolm X College In Chi.cago, said three
men cjJarged had beeD students there,
but said they had been dismissed, He
declined to elf'bocate.
The IDQSt widely re;>ortec! of the
murders wa1 the killing of a reUred ~
surahCe executive and three members of
bis family Alig. 4 In the wealthy Chicago
suburb of Barrington Hills.
Paul C.Orbett, 67; his wife, Marion, 57,
and sister-l~law, Dorothy Derry, 60,
were found abot through the backs or
their ht.ads. C.Orbett'a stepdaughter,
Barbara Boand, 22, was found dead a few
feet away. She had been shot through the
heart.
A month later, three members of a
rural Monee fi.mUy were found shot to
death in their farmhouse. Tbey were
Stephen D. Hawtree, 47; hls wife, 'Judy,
53: and son Thomas, 17.
Business as
usual at •••
. ~i ...
'
1'1 esa Officials . ' . . ·-"'
Hint November
Opelling of Inn
Costa ~tesa's biggest hostelry; a $1.:!i
million Holiday Jrtn, J1hou1d be in opera-
tion in tare November or early
Dectmber, according to city building o(·
flcials .
The I~room iM is located at 3131
Bristol Street, just south of the S;an Diego
Freeway. '
The five-story , cement block structure.
will also contain a ISG--seat restaurant, a
75-seat oocktail IOWlg..: and 6eVttal
meeting rooms for busi.nesl and social
groups. It occupies a three-acre site
south or South Coast Plaza. .
Topeka IM Management, developer.
had hoJ)ed to open the IM before
Thanksgiv!nJ, bu~ city officials uld that
appear!d· ·. optimiStic ·and pegged it
"before Chrtlltmas."
Comtructton _was begun In late April
Jl!ter . .s•xeril <IAAa!IU'ill'J~!~a.tlon of
a $30,000 fire sprlnlder system. Topeka
Inn Management argued that the system
was :dot~~-in a cement·~
but Mesa ·city councilmen overruled the
plei 5-0.
Skinny-dipper
Seized in Mesa
'
'
A Costa ·Me$3 man, apparently 80
eager to go _for a swim Jn the boating·
lagoon at the vi.ts de! Lago a~G
at I un. Sunday that be failed to tbfu):
about dresSDig lor tbe occasion, "M>Wld
up In jail. · · l
The 18-year-0ld suspect was amsted
on suspicion of indecent expowre by a
security guard who, claimed he chased
the nude man into an apartment where a
gala party was in progress.
Security man Stephen R. Leitch, 22,
claimed other participanta didn't belieW!
the suspect'• punishment -being pbced
under arrest -fit his aUe.ged· crime and
created a loud scene when be wu taken
into custody.
Once dressed, the swimmer was
escorted out to a quieter section of tH
apartqi.ent comple1: and turned over to
Officer Rol:tert L. Crogan for fonnal
boolcing on the misdemeanor charge.
Yes we are open for business despite the fire we
had at our store last Monday. We are pretty dusty
and dirty right now but that means we must try
harder than ever to _offer you bigger and better
values. Our insurance company has allowed us
to repurchase all the crated merchandise and
some of the display so mples at reduced cost. These
refrigerators, washers, dryers, dishwashers and
TVs only suffered smoke damage and their new
guarantees were not affected. These · savings will
be passed on to you .
During the weeks of remodeling we will continue
to bring you good values the same as we hove
for the post 25 years·.
1815 NEWPORT BLVD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA
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