HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-10-17 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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Irvine Co1npany~s Barbara MeNair
Arrested • ID Subsidiary Seeks Cl uh
Marina Ki~kbaeks
-an es ee I
I ·0 -
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 17, 1972
VOL. U, fltO. ttl, I $~10tt5, J6 ~AOaS
Deroin Foun:d ..
Si1iger1 McNair Says Innocent
NEWARK, N. J. (UPI) -Singer-actress Barbara McNair was arrested for
possession of nearly a hajf ounce of heroin at the Playboy Club in McAfee. it
was disclosed today.
Mtss McNair and her husband , Rick Manzie, were arraigned on charges
In federal court here. Each was ordered to post a $10,000 bond. They pleaded
iMooent.
A spolqlsman for the Playboy Club said Miss McNair, 37, appeared three
times this week in the swank Perithouse of the club-botel in private perform-
ances for a group of conventioneers. She was arrested Monday night in her
dressing room.
Her husband acts as her business agent.
U.S. Ojsfrlct Court Judge Lawrence A. \Vhipple set no travel restrictions
on the couple. The Playboy C1ub said the singer had scbeduled engagements
in Chicago Wednesday and again in McAfee Thursday.
A Port of New York Authority spokesman said a package was traced from
Newark Airport to Miss Mc~air, who signed (or it at the Playboy Club.
Operators Protest
Irvine Company Seeks
Boaiyard 'Surcharge'.
By L. PETER KRIEG California Recreati~ Company, the Of ·"'' oarry "'"' s!"" . ~ . Iryine subsidiary running its maritime
Irvine Company officials an~unced -.iterp_rises.
Monday the company wants a kickback Don New, owner of Basin Marine.
from alJ ~tyard ~ators a n.d wt)jch is .locate:<L.within,one of the chosen
freelance-repairmen working on boats 1n marinas, Balboa YciCht Basin , said it was
three company-owned marinas. done to keep the freelancers from using '!lte. boiltyard operators say they want the docks,
a lawyer. "~y work out of the back of a truck,
In a letter sent to boatyard owners use the docks for their repairs, get them
Monday, co~pany officers. said they had dirty," he said, "'and they splash paint
contracttd ~1th Dasln ~anne, Inc., to do and even dump it into the bay.
all the repair and mt1mtenance work , lo "I've even seen them change the oil on
boats docked at Balboa Yacht Basm , 11 bo~t and pour it on the flowers " New
Villa Mi.Irina and Bayside Marina. said. '
Anybody else doing work woul~ have to He said he's all for the surcharge but
pay the company 2.5 percent of the gross be denied he has any contract with Irvine
bill. as part of the deal.
"This is pr!marily to ~Ip us offst;! "I l\aven't signed anything but a c~ts of security and poUut1on ~~trol, lease," New said, "and there's nothing in
stud Robert Inman, an ofl1c1al of the lease about me being an exclusive
agent."
Male Operator
Gets ,Diriy ·Cali
TWIN FALl.S, Tdeho (UPI) -Sieve
Poindexter, a ma le telephone operator.
says a woman made an ob9ctne phone
call to him .
"l just had 10 string her along,'' i;ald
Poindexter, 19. "I was really em-
barruscd.''
Poindexter said Monday he applied for
hit job on a dare six weeks ago.
"Women a.11k me for dates about once
a cfay on the average," the young bach·
elor said. "l ha'ven't accepted yet -but
you never know."
Inman said that's not true and New '"is
confused."
He said, "We have a preliininary sign·
ed agreement now and it will all be in the
new lease we're about to sign. It's just a Afof.1MIU:)'I' _..., ...-.
'rhe p1'<J!IO'(!d kickback Is to be p81d
upon payment of btU. by the e3ttmated
400 boats in the three marinas Involved
and. tho Irvtne Company has .sent
agreerrienta to the varloull boatyard
operators and f::'eelancers asking thtm to
sign if and ~d it back by return mail .
Lee Hlrlfuan, who owns 8 o a t
SpeciGHstJ on Mariners Mlle, snld he 'll
one of tl'Ml boatyard operators who 'll
going to talk to hill lawyer before he
sJgn1 the propostd contract .
'1'hcre. is a quest.loo of legality as rnr
.• IS.. KICKBACK, Pago ! I ,
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Banks Prepare for '20 '
Coastal Loans Denied
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
01 tilt 01.Jly ~lltl $11ff
The California ti-1ort.g3ge Bankers
Association Mooday voted not to grant
loans of any kiod.in the coastal zone where
building could be restricted by~ the pass·
age of Proposition 20.
The association is a v o I u n t a r y
organiiation made up primarily of in·
dependent mortgage ban\ttrs. The vote is
advisory and will be followed at the in-
dividual members' discretion.
Reaction to the vote in Orange coast
lending institutions and among local
realtors was guarded. Most said they had
not had an . opportunity to study lh'1o,
recommendation in full.
Association pl'98ident Robert E .
Mt)rgan said in Los Angeles Monday
"Passage of Prop. 20 on the Nov. 7 ballot
would have a drastic effect on the people
of California.
"The cost to taxpayers, property
owners and the general public would be
disastrous. Prop. 20 would establish a
virtual moratoriwn on all building of any
kind within its ill-defined permit area for
a five-year period. The moratorium ap-
plies tG public projects as well as private. ~, · ·'
"This moratorium,. if coupled with the
building shutdown now taking place
throughout Cali!orhia as a result of the
recent state Supreme Court decision In
the Mammoth Mountain case -whiab
states that local government must file
environmental impact reports on proj·
ccts requested by private parties -
would therefore halt all work by local
go.vernments. contractors, developers
Buenos -Aires
Hotel Bombecl
BUENOS AIRES (AP) -A bomb
In a 22nd-noor room ol the new
Sheraton Ho\el killed a ~
wOinan Mon'daY nfllll' and l!i'>~~lt '
wounded her hUBband end a
Mauachusett1 woman. Supporters
ol e1.<f1cta(or Juan D. Peron were
blamed..,
Nearly 700 guelU ned Into the
atrteta, but the fire "'al quickly
brought under control and dld not
1prcad.
A chRin of bomblng1 burst acros!I
Argentina Monday as Peroftist
guertlllas marked their l<!:ader's
~ancy to power 'l1 years ago.
' J
and private lending institutions."
Many of the loan officers contacted at
Orange coast banks said they had not
received any official policy statements
from their superiors relating to coastal
zone loans.
Bill Wofforrl of the Union Banlt pointed
out that with the election three weeks
away and the effect of the environmental
impact decision, "it's almost a moot
point."
He said that unofficially his bank bas
warned their loan officers to "be
careful" when granting loans for the
coastal ione. "It depends on a number of
Laguna, Viejo
variables, but at the moment we don 't
have that problem, because we don't
have any applications for that area.'' he
sald.
A spokesman for Avco Financial
Services said they would not take the
association's vote into consideration
because Avco lends only to individual
homeowners, not developers.
Larry Smith, speaking f o r another
mortgage firm, The Alison Company in
Newport Beach said they have adopted a
·wait and see attitude. "With the election
only three weeks away, there has not
(See LOANS, Pago %f
Youth: Drug, Burglary
Ring Broken by Police
• • '\ \ • ".1..\ ,.... • , ' A Mission VieJo-Laguna tseaCh teenage
burglary ring which stole to finance dope
ptlrchase and distribution operations has
been broken by detectives of the Lag11na
Beach Police Department and Qlc
Orange County SherUt'!rt Department.
l\rrests of two lft.year-old Laguna
youths and two Mission Viejo juveniles
hS'\le cleared 20 Laguna Beach burglaries
and at least twice that many county
crime!. Del. Sgt. Neil Purcell said toda}·.
The youngsters are in custody pend!n~
hearings today on the police accusations.
More arrests may be made. •
Purcell said the ring specialized in
burglaries of residents with louverrd
windows, and that some clues came fron1
e.vidence of blood found by th<> broken
ti ass.
De(.. Alex Jimenez of t h e Lagunl\
..Be1.1ctt dep&rtmtnt was responsible for
local '-Sligall&i •111''f!Hi <Hhli!I', Puroeli '
said.
The Laguna youths were students RI
Laguna Beach Hlgh 'School and were ar·
rerted at their home! over the wetkeod.
"They .. wen from good homes. There
was no need for them lo steal, It's not a
ease. or them !teallng ror a need. just
th eir own personal gnln," Purcell said ,
Purcell said the youths were M!lllng the
stolen property and making money to
"buy do~ which th-~y would distribult."
"We clas.11ifted It as a juvtnile ring,
they went around resldcntinl ~net eom·
i
mlr"Chtr . are, •• ~'Wtth il;. "ltie tntent of
burglarizing." he said.
Aside from residences, the youths hit
doctors' offices, burglarize<\ the Spor1s
World store, and the Funk F'actory in
Laguna Beach.
A motorcycle stolen in the Saddleback
area was traced to Laguna Beach in con-
nt.'Ction With the ring's operation, Purcell
said.
He said thal the ring's breakup ac-
('()Unts for about $2,000 in local thefts.
and much more in the count y area Some
thefts had not been reported.
"A lot of people were pretty "'orri~
tibout all the11e burglaries." Purcell 11nid,
noting that the ring specialized in unoc·
cupied houses.
POP STAR FINED
ON'tmrrc :ClfARGE
ADELAJDE. Australla (AP) -Englbh
pop star Joe Cod.er and sl1 of hl!l en-
tourage were tined a total of S2,880 lodily
on drug charge1.
Cocker and five othe:l"ll were nned $.160
each for possen}ng Indian hemp. while
the seventh defendant, Felix VenAncio
Falcon. 27. of Miami. was fined '720 for
possessing heroin and the equipment to
use it.
)
Conditions
Hinclern1g
Operations
ANCl!ORAGE. Alaska (AP ) -A small l
armada of private planes Assembled in 1 poor weather today to search Alaska's
rugged southern coast for a light plane
carrying House Majority Leader Hale
Boggs and three others.
The plane was long O\'crdue and
presumed down on a campaign flight for
the state's only House member.
A heavy cloud cover and rain prevailed
in the search area as some 30 planes .
pi·epared to join an electronically equip-
ped Air Force HC 130 on the rescue
rr.ission. The Air Force plane has flown
an Anchorage-to-Juneau pattern through
the night in search or the mi ssing plane.
Y:hich failed to show up late r..1onday on a
560-mile fl ight from Juneau.
A spokesman for t he Air F'orce·s
Rescue Coordination Center said the
fore<:-asl for today was for strong wind .
an overcast and "very 1narginal flying
y,·eathcr "
The \Vhile House said President Nixon
has been receiving reports on the search ,
efforl s. ,
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler sa id
Nixon , through his military aide, offered
all possible assistance and provided for j
transportation ror the Boggs family to go '
IS.. BOGGS, Pago %1 I
Coasl
\feac•er
The \\'eatherlady says It ·s going
to be cloudy on Wednesday. It
rnight. even rain. Temperatures at
the beache!! will be in the low ros
rising to 75 in land. l..ows tonight
58-62.
INSIDE TODA V
Bnmbo movi~• -th~ Philip-
, pinr.! vtrtion of. tht porno flick
....... have be,.n bannttl from the
nt10 t1otlely of President F'trdfu.
nnd £. Marco$. See 1tory on
Pnoe 12
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! DAILY PILDI s
Ota Day 0 11
Trooper--Slain
Serving Warrant
LANCASTER. Pa. (Ul1l) -state
trooper llobert Lapp, who volunteered to
serve a fugitive warrant on his day orr,
was shot to death by an escaped
murderer fron1 n New Jersey pri.o;on The
sus pect \\as kllled in a gun battle "'lth
police.
Lapp. 30, father of three young sons,
v.•a9 shot Monday while attempting to
serve the warrant on Alfred RaveneU, 33,
"'ho escaped June 13 from a correction
('enter in Yardville, N.J.
Lapp and three other troppers burst in·
to the first noor ap.irtment where the
suspect was believed to be hiding , State
Police Commissioner Rocco P. Urella
said .
Ravern:ll came out of a bathroom firin g
frorn a sa~-off shotgun and .38 caliber
pis1ol, fatally wounding the officer:
The troopers returned fire as they drag·
gcd Lapp's body out the front door and
radioed for additional help.
Another trooper, Joseph Westcott, 18,
\vas treated for a minor gunshot wound
but returned an hour later as some 75 of-
ficen stormed the building after firing
!COl'CS o( bullets nnd tear gas canisters
at the apartment.
Several tenants, including a 2-year-old
c;hild. hid on the second floor and base-
rnent of th · buildins during tht assault.
All escaped unharmed.
After Ravenell failed to return flre for
about an hour, police entered the building
and round the suspect lying In a pool of
blood. He was shot in the head and chest.
Lapp, a six-year police veteran,
volunteered tr> serve the warrani on his
day off. The shooting occurred about two
blocks from hi s home.
Ravenell , serving a life term for a 1962
murder conviction, was one of five
prisoners indicted by a state grand jury
on charges stemming from a 1971 prison
disturbanC1!: at Yardville. He had been
tramftrred to Yardville following last
Thanksgiving Day's uprising at Rahway
State Prison.
New Jersey authorities said Ravenell
also was wanted for wounding detective
Anthony Sperra in Newark Thursday.
Sperra was hit in the shoulder when he
went to a woman's apartment,. to question
her about the suspect's whereabouts.
Camp Pendleton's Brig
Wins Praise in Study
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The once-notorious
brig -at Camp Pendleton and others at
Camp Lejeune, N.C., and San Diego have
been described as outstanding alter a
some verv innovative leadership ideas,"
Dr. Phili(> R. ~larris said in releasing
the study.
Harris is president of Management-
Organization Development. Inc., and
l\Y<ryear Study . headed 8 team O( psychologist!, penaJ
Tough a-nd often brutal conditions have specialists and special workers. Their
f'....,.Pagel
BOGGS • • •
to Alaak1.
!louse Speaker Carl Albert said the
pilol of lht missing plaoe Is rtput<d lo i,,
ont of the but bush pi\ota In Alaska and
would know every possible landing spot
between Anchorage and Juneau.
"J cannot personally give up hope,"
Albert ,.1d.
Aboard the twln-engtne Cessna 310
were Boggs, 58; Rep. Nick Begich, a 40-
year-old Democrat; Beg I ch· 1 ad·
miuistrative assistant, Russell Brown,
37; and the pilot, 38-year-okl Don E.
·Joni.
Bogg~· administrative ass~tant, Gary
}lymel, ·said in Wa!lhington that the last
radio contact with the plane came 11
minutes after takt0ff Monday, when Joni
filed a flight plan. There was no sign of
trouble.
Bogg'S, who left Washington on Sunday
and had been due to return this morning,
had gone to Alaska to campaign for
Beglch, a native of Eveleth, Minn., who is
seeking re-election to a second term.
Boggs' wife, Lindy, was the only
member of the family at home in-
Bethescla, Md., Monday night.
As the word spread to Boggs' home
state of Uiuisiana, there was an un-
mistakable ring of affection for the con-
gressman.
Edward Cocke atood solemnly on the
sidewalk outside a New Orleans bar and
said that Boggs Is "our kind of people."
Boggs WB!'! on the last leg of the lightn-
ing.quick fund-raising trip for Begich
when lht plaoe left Anchorage. It was
scheduled to arrive at 1:30 p.m. EDT. A
spokesman for the Federal Aviation
Administration said the plane had enough
fuel to last until around $ p.m.
Jonz., president of P a n -A I a s k a n
Airways, a small air taxi serviCf: which
operates tilt plane, charted a course
from A:nchorage in the south-central sec-
tion of the state that~would have taken the
plane across Prince William Sound, then
southeastward along the glacier-covered
mountainous coastline to Juneau in
AJaska'!I panhandle.
The plane had a search locater beacon,
designed kl activate during a crash.
'>~4... •: ~
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ALLEGED SUMMIT HEADQUARTERS OF ORGANIZED ·CRIME EXAMINED BY NY OFFICIALS
4().by 15·foot Unit in Brooklyn Junkyard Watched Durin]~'.....:.Y.:••.:r_'•:_Pc_ro'-be--------
NY Bugging ·Shows ~100
Mob-controlled Firms
Rape Victim
Could Hear
Police Radio
NEW YORK (AP) -Bugging of or-
ganlztd crime's_ "summit headquarters"
In a dirty gray and blue trailer In an auto
junkyard bas revealed that at least 100
()nee-legitimate business finns were con-
trolled by the underworld, Brook1yn Dist.
Atty. Eugene Gold said today.
An electronic bug, telephone wireklps
[ncluded in the evidence. Gold said,
were 1.6 million feet of taJ>!i! produced The rSpe of a 13-year-old girl took
through eavesdropping. devices, 36,000 place in a isolated hi!\ area between El
feet of color . moUon picture film and Toro~ and Woodland Drive, a~
54.000 still pictures_ cording to the memories of the blol)de
The breakthro_ygh was announced -after victim. , ,
a task force of 1,200 wlicemen fanned out "Sbe saw the police. h e 11 ~ o P t e r
across the five counties of New York City overhead and at one time police were
been _replaced by ''a mo!:.~ h_:iman_ .!P: _ 19~~[e___ru>Qrt wen_tto_the. Qffic.e.o! NavaL
proach" which civilian prisons should Research. . Newport Harbor
Chamber Opposes
Proposition 20
-and-photo-survefilance of tire ti aller-stnce
Jut April led Monday to the issuance of
more than 600 subpoenas to organized
crime figues. Gold called it the biggest
plus--!uburb.en-Nessau,-W-eet.eh;est.er--and--close enough that she could _hear the
Rockland counties to deliver the 617 police radio," detective sgt. Neil Purcell
copy a San Diego psychologist said Mon-The Navy ~rdered the study 1n 1970 ' after congressional Investigators blamed
day. . . overcrowding, a lack of trained guards
"They have s·.111tchcd from the authori-and brutality fo r rioting at the Camp
tarian-stress approach in confined hand!-Pendleton brig.
1ng to a n1ore human approach under After prisoners barricaded themselves
From Pagel
l(ICKBACK. • •
as I'm concerned,'' he said.
There's one other boatyard operalor
who figures he·s got a way around the
surcharge.
•·This is one or 20 feeble attempts
they've made to extract money," said
Arsene ••s1ackie" Gadarlan, proprietor
of Blackie's Boatyard on Newport
Boulevard.
"But I.his one's a meany." he said.
"The way I see it, I've been given two
alternatives, I can add 2.5 percent to my
bills for boats in their marinas and if the.
people are dumb enough to pay it, I'll
give lf\•ine the money.
··0r better still, I will charge Irvine a
five percent handJing cttarge for col-
lecting their money. That way they'll on-
ly owe me 2.5 percent for the work I do
on their property," Gadarian said.
He also suggested he might charge
them anolher fivt percent "for penn.H-
ting my customers to park In their
slips."
Besides Gadartan and Hinman, other
boatyards were equally upset over the
aooounCf:ment, which also affects yacht
brokers trying to sell boats in the
h1arinas.
The Irvine Company order also gives
exclusive yacht brokerage rights to
Bayside Marine SaJes.
Harold Ayres, owner of Lido Shipyard .
indicated skepticism, saying, "I haven't
gone over it all, but I haven't signed it
yet."
Irvine Company officials did not
discuss the legal B.l!pect, other than to
say if they didn't think it was legal. lhey
wouldn 't have done it.
Sf
DAILY PILOT
inside the tin-roofed comp<>und. finally
surrendering, an inquiry described it as
the "most repeteadly investigated facility
in the 1'-1arine Corps."
Turner Arrives
In Style, But
Late to Court
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP ) -Orlando
promoter Glenn W. Turner circled a fog-
ged-in airpourt in his personal Lear jet
for more than an hour today, earning a
scolding by t h e judge conducting his
securities violation trial.
The seventh day of the self·proclaimed
millionaire's trial was scheduled to start
at 9 a.m., bul Turner didn'l enter the
courtroom until 9:55.
With his usual flair, Turner wa1ked into
the courtroom waving at spectatont,
smiling broadly and wearing a snow-
white suit and blue polka-dot tie.
Judge Robert Williams: convened the
court, called Turner'• attorneys to the
bench, and told them:
"Please advise your client he is to ar·
range his business ao that this probltm
does not arise again."
Turner's jet WB!'! returning from Or·
Jan do.
The state called its 36th witness. a
Clearwater man who told the now-
repetitious story of buying a motivational
eourse from Turner's Dare To Be Great
Inc. and acquiring the right to sell other
courses to others.
films -and were taught self-motivation.
courses, whic~ range up to $5,000 in cost,
are securities.
The defense has sought to show in
crosttx.aminalion that buyers received
property -tape recorders, cassette! and
films -and wert taught self-mUvation.
Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce directors Monday reaffirmed their
opposition to Proposition 20 -the
California Coastal lnitiaUve -and
ouUined a concerted campaign to try to
defeat it.
The Cblimbe.r originally tOOk a stand
opposing the measure more than a month
ago when It appointed an ad-hoc com-
mittee to study means of educating the
public on the Nov. 7 ballot measure.
"We now have· e' pW>lic speaking
bureau that groups are using. We've
hired a writer to send out releases and
we've sent . malling5 to c b amber
members," said Richard Stevens, Balboa
Bay Club president and chairman of the
Chamber committee. ,
Dr. Nolan Frizzelle, a ~hainnan of
the panel, told directors that the Newport
Harbor Chamber may be un11SUal in its
sland on the proposition.
"Not all Ola.milers art committed and
many jw:t don't know what the thing
would mean," he aa.id.
Frlzzelle said his flTOUP Is mating a
basic, practical pitch to the p.1blic.
"We are just telling them to read It,"
he said. ''There Is a lot of propaganda
and emotional content ln It but not much
good reasoning . .,
Proposition 20 would create a coastal,
zone five miles wide and would form one
atate .board and six regional board!!
which would hold the power of veto over
any development within that strip.
Opponents say such a measure will rob
local government of control over develop-
ment and would create another complex
segment of government ne«llng ta1
money for support.
"This thing is fraught with regressive
legislation," Frizzelle said. "It i5 echelon
upon echelon of endleS!I pennit pro-
cedures." '
Frluelle said proponents say it would
not slop development, just slow it down.
"But With all the new procedures It wUI
take five years anyway," he aald. 1
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'
Bonn to Build City Eros Ce1iter
BONN (UPI) -"ll I• nol Ille clly coun-
cil's buslnesa to build a wann neJt for
pl"O!ltitutlon.'' snid Ulm city councllwo-
man Fellcitaa Hamer at the council'•
J.11S'l and mmt spectacular meeting.
Ulm city fathers thought they wen rid
or prostitutes once and for all when they
ordered police to block off the atrttt Jeld·
1ng to the town's ICHe "prostltuteti donnJ-
tory."
But the-women .' about 50 of them. alm-
ply too)( to the street.!! and began hanging
out on the banka of lhe Danube where
respectable cltlzena like to take their
evening strolls.
It wa.s decided to build an "Eroe Cen-
ter," 1 eupbemilm for 1 house of Ill re-
pot<.
T,.llfytng at a councll JMOtlng 11111
weekend, Pollce Chief Wilmer Bremner
pointed out th1t thert were 450,000 Tell·
dents in Ulm, 25,000 of tMm foreign work·
era end 10,000 of them soldiers In the city,
located 65 mJJe1 wfft ol Munich ,
''That maket room tor ne&ative mktdl•
man tuncUooa," Bremner aald .
Mrt. Hauser aald a bordello was not
lhe answer.
"That w!IJ jusl rl't'I the prostlltdrs Into
'
town and Increase the street trade, too,••
she said.
"BuJlding 1 bordello wlll only i:nake
the dirty busineu of prostitution and e1·
ploftat1on respectable," uid Dr. Sieg·
fried Enut, a nationally • known 8ntl·
pornography batller.
But Uhn Mayor Han1 Loreneer said
there wu nothing else to be done .
'"!'Ile C(JllttmJlng complalntl on lht part
of our cltlz.ena force Ill to do 10me~."
he said. ·
Prostitution Is legal In West Gemumy
Md 11 one C'Ol.DXUmlll pointed out,
"Tbere just an ctrtaln dllldvontageo IO
a fret, democn.Uc ltttt."
An oppo11ltlon polltlclao -tho batll• for
and •Pinsl the bordello divided •Ions po-
Ullcof U... -cr1tlclaed tbe ""'l'W for ln-
diacrbnlnate UM of the two tel'ma 11bor-
dello" Ind "ff!l!.ltu"8 domtlt<ir)'.11
"Now don l you tblnk lba oome llllng
,.,. on In a prootltulee donnllory u In
a bordello?" the may« uld. _
Cooncjtman Rans Repperle took lht
mayor Under hla wing.
"lfe ls u fll' rt.moved from these tenns
a!I II oni, appropriate and seem!y for 1
mayor,0 Heppetle 1ald.
underworld probe In history. . .
Tht eavesdropping evidence 1nd1c.11tes
that some businesses were taken over by
!!rang-arm method!! and threats, and
others to settle loaoshark debts, officials
said.
Gold disclosed that three telephones had
been bugged and an eavesdropping device
installed last April in the 4~ by 15-foot
trailer ln Brooklyn which ia surrounded by
barbed wire, guarded at Dighl by dog•
and often frequented by Cadlllacs.
Tbe district attorney said court orders
had been obtained for the telephone wire-
taps and for the electronic listening eqt.dp-
ment.
Conversations recorded the past seven
months alld a gallery of still and moving
pictures fevealed "the coming!! and go-
ings of ,prominent members of the five
organized crime families of New York
City and other people." Gold said.
Included in the range of crimes said to
have been discussed in the trailer were
narcotics, counterfeiting, labor racketeer-
ing, auto theft. insurance fraud, prostitu-
tion, gambling, loansharking, burglary
and arson.
"All the top member!! of organized
crime had been in the trailer" Gold said.
An estimated 100 policemen were also
understood to bave been lssuedi subpoenas.
Reputed underworld leaders also r e-
portedly subpotnaed were: Carmine
Tramunti, reputed head of one of the
city's Dve widerworld families ; Pa u I
Vario, a counselor to the Tramlllltl group
and Natale Evola, alleged bead of a sec-
ood family.
"We have pierced the vein of organized
crime," declared Gold, who Wld newsmen
that hUI invesUsation had been more pr<r
ductlve than the exposure of the 1957
Apalachin crime convention.
subpoenas. said. . .'
Gold said that up to 1,000 witnesses She was st ruck on the head with a rock
\vould be called before a rackets grand to keep her quiet, he !laid.
jury in Brooklyn which is investigating or-The young girl was abducted Sunday
ganized crime. from a frontage roa:I alongside Laguna
Canyon Road i.ly two young men as she
From Page 1 .
LOANS ...
been any specific policy statement from
our main office," he reported.
Representatives of the local boards of
realt;prs See.ple<I a litUe sur1Jrife4 •t the
association's vote.
Glen Martin of the Newport Harbor-
Costa Mesa board said ··'It's very possible
that the association is panicking. I'm not
quite certain what their thinking was in
deciding that Prop. 20 would do somethng
that the environmental impact has not
already done .
"Why halt construction retroactively
by withdrawing funds already granted,"
he asked. "If their thinking was to
withhold funds not yet granted and save
themselves the time and effort of proc-
essing Joans a n d then have the prop-
06ition passed, I can understand that,''
he added.
E. L. Ri!!ley, president of the South
Orange County board noted hia board like
the others In the area has gone on record
opposing Prop. 20. "This new decision
will definitely affect our business," he
said, although he did acknowledge that
business had already been affected by
the stale Supreme Court's decis ion.
Evelyn Wilcox, executive secretary of
the J.luntington Beach-Fountain Valley
board of realtors, sald she did not want
to comment on the vote.
\\alked with a younger cousin.
While a massive search by police agen-
cies was under way. the girl was raped,
forced to submit to perverted acts.
beaten, robbed of personal heirloom
jewelry and driven to a Hollywood area
where she was released.
"We spent three and a half hours In the
back area yesterday and found some
areas that may have been the scene.
\Ve'll be out looking again today.
"The poor thing, she's very confustd
and her face was down on the noor
board," PurC1!:ll said.
The detective said the I3-year--0ld \\.'as
told by her abductors that she would be
killed if she talked to police or attracted
any attention.
Police described the kidnap vehicle as
an off-white 1964 1',ord Falcon in poor
shape and with t ~e headliner ripped out.
The kidnap-rapists were described as
about 5 feel, 10 inches tall, weighing
about 150 pounds. Their agt w a s
estimated to. be between 16 and 20. They
were said to have dirty blond shoulder-
length hair. O'.ie suspect had his parted
in the middle, while the other wore his
behind the ea .. s.
Minuteman Launched
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE
(AP) -A Minuteman 111 intercontinen-
tal ballistic missile was launched do1•;n
the western test range over the Pacific
Ocean here fl.fonday , the Air For~ an-
nounced. The launch at 3 p.m. was one of
a series of operational ~esls by the
Strategic Air Command.
Roll Out Tl1e Red Carpet!
(
•
Three years ago we had a request from a local high school
for a red runner for homecoming ceremonies. A remnant
cut into two nice runners.
W ithout advertising. the word got around, and our
business got so good that we had to make another runner.
This year we wiH have the pleasure of loaning the three
runners to high schools all around the Southern California
area, inel•ding all the local <ehools. Ono weekend, lpst
year, we furn ished T~REE homecomings. Also, sever•I
t imes again this year we wUI furnish weddings and grand
openings.
If YOU have need for a red runner for an occasion, stop
and see us ... no charge. The only requirement is prompt
return after the occasion.
At Alden's you 1ll always got the red carpet treatment!
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DnA PIES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thrv Thurt., 9 to 5:30 -FRI., 9 to 9 -SAT .. 9:30 lo 5
1
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fuefday, October 17, 1972
'Theory-Not Fact'
.
Evolutio,n ·in Texts Reviewed -
By llAllBARA Kl\F.IBICU
Of .. ~" ""' '""
The latest Callfomhr State Board of
Education flap over textbook selection
really isn't &ij)'thlng new, Sooth Laguna
memt>;er Clay ?..1itchel: said Monday.
The board sought lhe oplnlon of Its at-
torney, Thomas Griffin, after board
membe~ John Ford of San Diego said ~alifornta school children were n<lt get-Im~ a balan•:ed view or how man and the
universe were created.
Ford said he was not advocating that
science textbooks teach the biblical ac-
count .of creation, but that the theory of
evolution should be taught as a theory,
Two Agencies
Oppose Capo
Annex Plans
The list of opponents to the proposed
annexation by San Juan Capistrano of
about 300 acres in Dana Paint and
Capistrano Beach has grown to include
two water and sanitation agencies serv-
ing the territory.
Hearings on the proposed annexation of
the "Pryor Honestead" acreage will
resume next week before the Local Agen-
cy Formation Commiss!Gn (LAFCO).
Both the Capistrano Beach CoWlty
Water District and the Dana Point
Sanitary District Boards recently resolv-
ed to fight the merger of the undeveloped
acreage ·into the city of San Juan
Capistrano.
Those two agencies oppose the an-
ne:utlon prlmarily because of the loss of
valuable tax-base revenue contained in
the 298 acres ln the San Juan creek area.
lf lbe annexatioon were to take place
the revenue would be shifted to Co~ty
Waterworks District Number Four which
serves the city.
The remainder of the strong oppositiion
claims that the annexation of the land
would rob t}\e communities or potential
tax bases it new incorporations were to
take place in Dana Point and Capistrano
Beach.
The boundaries of the proposed an-
nexation are the San Juan city limits to
the east. the Santa Fe tracks to the
south, Del ObUpo Road to the north ruid
A line inland of the Dana Point Sanitary
District plant to the west
The merger, if approved, wouJd bring
San Juan's llmit5 nearly to the sea Md
almost completely separate tbe two
county communities.
Lined up against the anneution are
the Dana Point Citizens for Action, the
capisrano Beach community asaoclatlon
and the Capi.straoo Beach Chamber of
Commerce.
Br itish Medium
Sets Laguna Talk
A well known British medium will give
a demonstration of her psycllic abilities
in Laguna Beach Saturday evening tmder
the auspices or Spiritual Research
Associates of South Laguna.
Brenda Roland Crenshaw, who has
worked with physicians and psychiatrists
in psychic research and appeared in
television and radio presentations, will be
featured in the 8 p.m. program in the
Women's Club, 286 St. Ann's l>rive.
Later in the evening, at 10 o'clock, she
will be seen on television in the Regis
Philbin Show, "The Unknown," on
television Channel 9.
Her local program is open to the public
by dona~ion.
NOW Organizational
•Meetin g Announced
An organizational meeting of the
Laguna Beach branch of the National
Organization for Women (NOW) will be
held at 7 p.rn. Wednesday ln the Laguna
Federal Building, Laguna Beach.
Speaker will be Ramona Rlpston, ex-
• eculive director of the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) for Southern
California. 1be meeting is open to all
interested Orange County residents and
charter memberships in the new chapter
will be accepted.
not u unchallenged fact.
GrUfill advised th< board It hu the
right to Qgest textbook& for review by
the curriculum commission and to adopt
them, after a public hearing, even
without the commission's recomendaUon,
as well as to rtject books recommended
by the corrunl&!!on.
Ford'a wnarks, Mitchell said, were
m..lsinterpreted 1n IOIDt quarter!, where
It was suggested he 1dvo<:ated Including
the biblical theory of creation in te.s:t-
books.
''It's not a question of blblical ap-
proach, Just ... or giving equal tree~
ment to the 'accident' tersus the
·design' theory," sald Mitchell.
Runs Help Une
Edward F. Hastings, a ma~
riage counselor, will conduct a
Help L i n e training -session
Thursday at 8 o'clock in thi:
Mount of 01 iv es Lutheran
Church in Mission Viejo. Vol-
unteers will complete an eight·
week course bet.ore being as-
signed a four-hour telephone
sh ift each month.
Schmitz Foresees
Rafferty as Good.
HEW Secretary
Former Califomla Superintendent of
Schools Mas: Rafferty JVOu1d make a good
secretary or HeaMfi, Education and
Welfare, American Party presidential
candidate John Schmitz said Monday.
Schmitt, lame duck Orange County
congressman, suggested Rafferty in
response to questions by television in·
·terviewers in Sacramento.
Rafferty was defeated for a lhird term
as school superinteQdent Jn 1971 by
Wilson Riles and then moved to Ala~a
lo become dean at Troy State UnJVersl.ty.
Schmitz, defeated tn the June primary
for the Republican congresalonal DQJDlna-
tion, also said that Dan Smoot, a con-
servati~e commentator and bJa national
campaign chairman, would be an ex-
cellent secret.aiy of state.
Jf he is elected president, Sclunitz said
while campaigning In Sacramento, HEW
'would really take a housecleaning."
He again said that Presklent Nixon and '
Sen. George McGovern represent "two
wings of socialism" and said he would
end all federal sup~rt of education and
welfare, turning them over to states.
Under questioning, Schmitz said a
retired Marine general, BiU Lemley of
Sau Dil!go, "says he wants to be
secretary of defense for 20 minutes so he
can fire Zumwalt," referring to the ad-
miral who has attempted to modernize
the Navy.
Schmitz saJd Lemley would be the type
of person he would pick to head the
defense department.
And he said Congressman H. R. Gross
of Iowa .would make a good secretary or
trea.!ury, SchrnJti o:plained he WB..! only
mentioning likely candidates and bad not
discussed the posts with the men.
Blaek111ail Plot
lrivindale Mayor Relate s Druggi1ig
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Chloroform.
drug-laced enchiladu and spiked drinks
were used in an unsuccessful blackmail
plot to gain approval of legallzed card
pa.rlon tn suburb&n Irwindale, the mayor
or that city h•s teotUled.
Mayor RlchArd Dlu. 116. tesUfied Mon-
day .,atnst three of five persons ordered
to stand trial on blackmall chargeti In the , .... He said the enchiladas were se.rved to
hlm on Sept. 21. 1971 by a woman he met
earlier that month . Becauae the food
ta11ted "UMlsh -llke an old can'' he
clecllned to ent more than a few bites,
Din .aid.
The pro&eCUtlon charges that the woman
and four others want~ to put the mayor
under the Influence of a hypnotic drug
in t~e enchiladas to try to pel'lllade him
to support legaliud gambling. ~le also told of bcing chloroformed In
the woman's apartment on Oct. II.
"We went to bed ... &0metlme later,
1 remember waking up to a horrible, tlck-
enlng smell. I tried to move but I couldn't
because tOmeone waa boldini my erTna:,"
he uld. "As I opened my eyes, I could
see thlt white rag and IOmeont boldina
It over my face ."
Deputy Dist. Atty. Thomas Elden sald
photof!fopho were made of Dlu with the
woman ln the nude after the mayor had
been chloroforml'd.
On Frlday, D1u satd another woman he
met In • bar poured a dru& In drinks she
gave to him ln btr motel rodm.
Diai tatlrted ill the trial of Irwindale
City Councilman Rlchord Breceda, 42,
and two San Gabriel Valley rul estate
men, J,..ph TlntarJ, 51, and ht• brother,
Perice, ti. Two othtt penom are eched~
uled for trlJl separately. ,
•lMoet of the science tt1tboo•1 have
man coming from a bit of allme that
formed ill a speck or life by the evolu-
tionary proceat.
least since 1968, to give equ..1 time In the
textbooks ·t.o t1!$ two idea:s, In broad
terms.
"That is whet we expect the curricu·
lum cornmi.&sion to follow when they re-
view books. There's always a chance for
the pubUsher to add something to bal·
ance the book, if it is otherwise a good
book, and pcesent the two theories."
.
'
. '
"Now the other theory ti that ~ ~
somt de&lgn btbtnd all thl.t, that ~t was
not aJJ Just an ac:eldent. Ford ii not talk-
lnl about Christianity, or God or Moh.am·
med, or whatever; just th:! ldea, in broad
terms, that ~here wu some sort of
design or plan to all this.
"The Indians had their Great Splrit.
Ford noted that the California attorney
general rul~ in 1956 that the theory of
evolution cauld be taught in public
cla~rooms provided there was no In-
doctrination of the idea. "When only one
idea is taught," he said, ''How can we
avoid indoctrination?"
..
Most peoples have hid a feeling or bel1ef
in some greater plan for the universe,
something more than just chance.
"lt hu been ihe policy of the board, l\l
Park Land Bid
State to l(ee p Fr eeway
Right-of-way Excess?
By L. PETER KRIEG
Ot tM DatlY Pllt l Sltff
The state of California may not be in
any hurry to sell off its excess freeway
right-of-way properties, despite pressure
to get the valuable chunks of real estate
back on the tax rolls .
Newport Beach City Manager RQbert
L. Wynn said today he has learned that
the State Public Works Department will
ask the California Highway C.Ommission
"to move slowly" as it discusses selling
the $35 million worth of land it bought for
the now-defunct Pacific Coast Freeway. Some_ $)6 million of that property is 1n
Newport Beach and the city is trylng to
buy four major parcels for park and open
space use.
There also has been pressure from con-
servaUoniat groups and even the state's
own-Cornmissien---on State Sowemment
and Economy -the Little Hoover Com-
mlsslon -to get the state to dispose of
excess freeway propertles.
The •Ughway Commission wil l meet
Wednesday in Sacramento to discuss
procedures and methods of disposing of
the Division of Highways properties, but
Wynn said their staff will make a strong
pitch for them to take their time.
a monorail system or just to add lanes to
existing highways," he said.
He said the staff may recommend that
the state lease some of'o their properties
to municipalities for parks purposes.
tf the properties are to be sold, the
staff will then insist that they be sold at
their full market value.
'"I'hey are opposed to selling them for
anythi: ..., less than their true market
value," Wynn said, "they were bought
\.rith gas tax money for a specific
purpose and the ~ta!f says it would be ii-
, legal. to sell them ror less than their true
market value."
If that's what happens, ibe e~nse of
Nt:wport Beach's ambitious Park ac-
quisition program would skyrocket.
One of the prime pieces of state-owned
land eyed by Newport Beach is the old
Eacific.Electt:ic right-of-way along West
Coast Highway In West Newport.
The city bad expected it could buy the
elght·acre parcel for $600,000 and then
spend another $215,000 to build a
playground, tennis courts and basketball
court§r and handball courts and
bathrliOms and 95 parking spaces.
The $600,000 represents about 50 per-
cent of the market value, Wynn said.
U"I Tiii""""' Heating Things llp
Sylvia Miles, leading lady of Andy Warhol's latest movie , "Heat,"
steps from her 1929 touring auto with a Russian wolfhound at her
side to attend a screening of the movie. The film contrasts the old
and new Hollywoods, and Miss Miles attended in the style of the
screen star she plays.
Ruckelshaus Says Growtl1
No Longer Unqu es tioned
preme Court's recent ruling on an en-
vironmental impact study. Some cities
have interpreted the ruling as requlrin~
impact studies on all construction pro]·
ects.
''
• • '
"The Public Works Department staff
feels that just because the.re isn't going
to be a freeway that doesn't mean they
still don't need a transportation cor-
ridor," Wynn said.
He said other city officials had even
held some hope that the Highway Com-
mission might endorse proposed state
legislation to allow the properties to be
sold for less than 50 percent of market
value.
William D. Ruckelshaus. administrator
of the Environmental Protection· Agency,
told California city officials today that
"the idea th a I unlimited, uncontrolled
growth is good is no longer an unques-
tioned dogma. Indeed quite the con-
trary."
Ruckelshaus, addressing the 74th an-
nual conference of t h e League of Cali-
fornia Cities, • mentioned the s~ate Su-
Ruchelshaus said the rulina was one
which "follows the explicit inlent or the ·'" National Envirorunental Policy Act'' and ..
made "instant hash of California build-
"They feel they mllJl .. o<ed the land for ing permit practices."
•
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I
J, DAIL V PILOT
. '\~
with
Tom
urphine
They AJI Want
•
The Unde.eideds
fll C9'1. Y TICKY l>()UTIX: Ah, there is
g•XKI nc11s tonight. folks, for the loyal
:;upporters of Senator George ~1cGovern.
the chap "'ho hopes to force President
i\'ixo11 10 call a moving van to the 'Vhitc
Housl'.
The ney.·s 1s that in all the latest
politial polls. Mr. Nixon is 1\•inn1ng.
\\'ail. you say. llow can that be good
11cv.s for good old George? Indeed, this
j!ets tricky. It depends on how·you read
1\hat the pollsters are saying.
If you are a MoGovern fan, you do not
sin1ply read the percentage of lead that
the poll people give to ~1r. Nixon. Or
even the percentage by y,·hich they list
Senator McGovern as trailing.
Instead, you read the other column
which for Your Man is far more im·
portant. This partit'Ular listing goes dov.n
as either "nthcr"' or "undecided'' and
sometimes it's just sort of glopped
together into a general label of ''O& U."
This is the {igure the tilcGovcm folks
like to read.
FOR EXA!\1PlE. you takr today when
;i chap named ~lervin D. Field kicked
loose \\·ith his lastest analysis or how I.he
voting will go here in our c:olden Stale.
according lo his California Poll.
Field says as or this month, Nixon has
50 percent or the vote while McGovern
has captured only 36 percent. But th e
1IcGovern loya lists ahvays read those
last figures for "Others and Undec ided."
11ere. Field has 14 percent of the voters
listed.
SO THE !\1CGOVERN people figure it
thii; \1<1y : 1(those 1oters hav<' gone along •
for four year.~ 11'ith :.tr. Nixon in th e
\Vh1t<· Mouse cind can"t 1nakc up their
n1inds. surf'l.v they 11·ill all swing to
Senator titer.overn 11hen ,the canvas nap
elosrs behind thc>m at the votinf? booth .
So they take ~fcGovem's 36 percent
and add the 14 percent for the 0 & U's
and they come out 1vith 50 percent for
McGovern. A dead-even horse race in
California, they declare.
You can even look at McGovern's own
privale poll whi ch showed Nixon, 45:
11cGovern 42 and Undecideds. 13 percent.
Put the UD's \\'ilh good old George and
_he has 55 percent for clear victory ;n j California.
• • • RACK I~ SEPTEl\IBER, the Corey ~ Poll ~·enl out into the grassroots and 53\V
: the November race with Nixon. 43;
~-1\tcGovcrn. 37.2 and those sa me
• Undecideds at an even higher level o[ • ~ J9.B percent. a So by adding the UD's to their man's
.. total. the !\-1cGove rn forces come up with
: ;.i \Yhopping 57 percent victory in
• California. t Trouble is. of course, that Nixon llead·
i quarters across to"'n is probably doing
: the same thing with the figures . They are
1 taking those uodccideds and adding them
2 to the President 's total , thus giving Mr.
J Nixon victories of 64 percent by the
,_California Poll. 58 percent b Y
« McGovern's own guesstimators; and 62.8
percent by the Corey 1'-1ethod.
J CLEARLY, EVERYBODY \VOUld like !. to have the Undecideds. The Undecideds
~ are the most popular people in town
.., about this time of year.
Ifs the season \1'hen not having made t up your mind is really good for your
.., popularity. i. Everybody is trying to read your mind
J and there's really noth ing there. The
! ~tcGoverns hope you really don 't like Mr.
f Nl xoo and that's why you're a UD. The
• N i~ons feel you're really with them but
• were re ally in the bathtub when the
• pollster called and you put him off.
: i\1EANW11lLE. TllE pollsters say our
) other Orange County pres~den.tial c~n
l-didate, Cong. John G. Schmitz. l!J puJhng
a scant one percent in the popular vote.
~ Wtll. don 't you feel bad, John. ~ You're wlnning in letters to the editor,
Ul"IT ..... 19
LATEST HARVARD LAMPOON DOES TAKE OFF ON COSMOPOLITAN-INCLUDING CENTERFOLD
Presidenti1l Adviaer Henry Kiuinger Loung•s Provocatively In Spoof Edition
De inure Adviser
Kissinger's Cur-ves in Ma .gazirie
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) -The
Cosmopolitan Man 's pearly teeth glitter
above a freckled pot belly. Spindly, hairy
legs reach demurely for the right side
of the centerfold. Is that really Henry
Kissinger, presidential adviser supreme?
One member of the llarvard Lampoon
staff says it is, because Kissinger "\!.'as
the only person to call us up and vol-
unteer for the centerfold ."
SO~fEBODY ElsE says it's only Kiss·
inger's face "on the body of a cab driv-
er we met near Central Park."
For the past 98 years, the Lampoon
has been poking fun at varjous pub\ica·
lions, printing absurdly funny articles
and pictures in an exaggeration of the
style and format the publications use.
The last parody was of Time magazine
in t969.
IN THE PRESENT issue. the center-
fol d subject brandishes a cigar in the
right hand, covers its privates with the
left arm and leans back. grinning, on
the skin of a giant panda.
'Death Train' \
Crewmen Set
For Sente11cc
PIEDRAS NEGRAS, A1exico {AP) -A
federal judge has found five train
crewmen guilty of homicide in the rail
disaster Oct. 5 \\'hich killed more than
200 persons.
The cre\l.·men. \\'ho \\'ere accused of
drinking and having women aboard the
engine. were not charged with these ac-
cusations. But Judge Jose Becerra San-
. ' . , ...
Surprise lflove.
Martial Law · Set
In South Korea
SEOUL (UPI ) -President Park
Chung Hee today put South Korea under
martial law and said the people must a~
prove h1s plans for political reform if the
talks with North Korea . on national
unification are to continue.
Park's SUCJ>ri:se announcement was
made to the nation at 6:~ p.m. (2:45
a.m. PDT) and martial law went into ef·
feet 15 minutes later. Park dissolved
Parliament. suspended the constitution
he helped draft in 1963, and banned all
political activity.
THE FORMER ARMY general, who
came to power in 1961, said amendments
lo the constitution would be announced
by Oct. 27 and submitted to a vote of the
people.
Park said that if the amendments are
turned down by the referendum, be will
interpret it as an expression or the will of
the people again.st the dialogu~ between
North and South Korea. -
"And then I will seek a new approach
lo the task of national unificatloo," Park
added.
Park's move came onJy one week
before the third round ()f talks between the North and South Korean Red Cross
organizations on' the question of reuniting
divided Korean families. The talks are
scheduled to resume Oct. 24 in the North
Korean capital of Pyongyang.
WHETHER THE unpredictable North
Koreans would seize on Park's latest
move as an excuse for delaying the
negotiations remained to be-lib. There
was no immediate comment troni North
Korean news outlets.
F o 11 ow i n g the martial-law proc-
lamattoo, soldiers In armored vthlcles
took up positions arowxi majOr public
buildings in the heart of Seoul.
Park named Army Chief-of-Staff.
General Roh-Jae H)lon to execute the
martial law edict.
Park said he was forced to take "this
extraordinary action to safeguard Korea
from unfavorable changes in and outside
the country.
"THERE 1$ NOW tt:1k.ing place •
significant change in the balance or
power among the big powers around the
Kore.an Peninsula," the :;&-year-old pre.si·
dent said. ''I think this change .may
seriously affect our security.
"These changes mighl result in
transforming the existing order in As.ia
as a whole. and also threaten to affect
adversely lhc security systems which
have so far served as the effective
backbone for maintaining peace in this
region."
The declaration followed by less than .a
year Park's proclamation of a state of
national emergency last Dec. 7. And iL
came nearly three weeks after Phili~
pines President Ferdinand E. Marcos
placed the Philippines under martial law
because of a CommWlist threat of
subversion.
PARK SAID llE had opened talks with
North Korea with the uJtimate goal of
national uniflcatioo. but that his political
opponents in South Korea had tried to ex-
ploi.t the talks for their own ends.
The Harvard Lampoon has struck
again, after a three--year silence. Mon-
day, the Lampoon released advance
copies of its latest parody -Cosmopoli-
tan magazine, which recently published
a centerfold picture of actor Burt Reyn-
olds. ·
''The American public \Vanted Henry
Ki ssinger," said James J)owney. a Lam-
poonster. ''.Yie were thinking along the
lines of Ralph Nader."
The president said that a major relonn
liago on:lered their ' ' f o r m a l im· is necessary not only tQ push lhe Nortb-
"Disorder and inefficiency are still
rampant around us .. , Park said. "lbe
political cln:les in our C<luntry are
obsessed by factional strife. They
already losl their sense of misslon, and
Hem·y Kissi11ger
Back in Paris
For More Talks
PARIS (UPI) -White House adviser
Henry A. Kissinger in a surprise move
returned to Paris with a Southeast Asia
expert as a new member of his retinue
and met \l.'ith North Vietnamese
negotiators today .
The 2oth secret conference at an un-
disclosed hidea\\·ay marked the shortest
time Kissinger has stayed away from
Paris in his four ye ars of private talks
with Hanoi diplomats. on a solution to the
Vietnam war.
IN ANOTHER unexpected twist, Kiss-
inger met with Xuan Thuy , head of the
North Vietnamese de.legation to the
semipublic week1y Paris peace talks.
whom the presidential adviser once
spurned.
Kissinger once told how in 1971 he
broke off the secret talks because
Hanoi's peaee negotiator, Le Due 'lllo.
returned home and insisted Kissinger
meet only with Thuy.
Tho w11is believed to be in Hanoi today
after consultations in Peking Monday and
Moscow during the weekend. The North
Vietnamese delegation said It had no
comment as to when he would return.
For the first lime Kissinger's retinue
of aides included deputy assistant
Secretary of Sate William Sullivan,
former U.S. ambassador to Laos and an
expert on Southeast Asia, and four
members of the National Security Coun-
cil staff. Kissinger was accompanied to
his 19th conference last week by his
deputy, Gen. Alexander llaig.
KISSINGER LEFT Paris Thursday
afle.r a record-breaking four days of
negotiations with Tho and Thuy . lie
briefed President Nixon immediately on
the progress of the negotiation,,. The
While House announced Kissinger flew
back: to Paris Monday night for hi! 2Sth
day ol secret talks.
The cover promises such articles as
"10 Ways to Decorate your Uterine
\Vall," "How to Tell if Your ~fan is
Dead." "For a Good Time Call Lola,
555-5493." That turned out to be a non-
\\"Orking number.
LArtfPOON PRESIDENT Eric llay·
n1an said the choices of Kissinger and
Cosmopolitan were ideas "whose time
had come." President Nixon had been
in the running, he said.
The parOOy calls Kissinger a "bewitch·
ing Berliner" who "cuts a dashing politi-
cal figure that would make Talleyrand
tum in his codpiece."
The While 1touse said ft makes no
comment on such matters. One source
said, however, that "iferuy doesn 't
smoke cigars."
Prostitute Beaten
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -A 22-year
old Texas woman has testified in federal
court that a Las Vegas man beat her in
an apartment here two yeas ago after
she didn't make enough money for him
from _prostitution. Memory Ros e
Robertson Lovett of Fort Worth gave the
testimony ~fonday during the opening
day of the trial of three Las Vegas
residents on interstate p r o c u r i n g
charges.
Tliey're Suirtg
For 'Peanuts'·
NEW YORK (UPI)· -URiled
Features Syndicate, which owns lhe
copyright for the Peanuts comic
strip, has charged that a toy com-
pany infringed on the copyright by
selling stuffed dogs resembling
Snoopy, the button-nosed beagle ()f
the st rip.
"This is one of several suits \\le
will be fighting against infringers
of the Charli~ Brown and Pean~ts
gang," said Sil Ravenscroft. vice
president for licensing ol United
Features.
The suit was filed In federal
district court against the Fable Toy
Co. of New York.
prisonmenl" on chai:_ges of attacks on the South Dialogue positively, but to cope
general means of communications, m:--"'.1th-·changes in the international situa· hon.
( . IN SHORT ... ) Watergate Affair
the representative institution.
"National Assembly -was-made-the--
scapegoat of political slruggle.
juries and property damage as well as
homicide, all due to ''serious
negligence.·•
Under Mexican law a judge reviews
evidence in a case and either drops
charges or declares the formal im-
prisonment of the accused. The next step
is sentencing.
McGovernites Say GOP
e Barriers Slral11 •
PIUTE FARMS, Utah (UPI) -Rain·
washed debris has added extra &train to
barriers holding an 186,000-gallon oil
slick from spreading into Lake Powell.
The usually welcome shc>wers have
turned the Southwest into a sea of mud
as men from the Bureau of Reclamation
prepared to secure a fourth barrier
across the mouth of the San Juaa River.
Rich Lathrup, Enviroomental Protec·
tion Agency spokesman. said the rains
have caused a considerable ri se in the
river and additional debris is being swept
into• the San Juan.
e l\'l.ron Supporl
\VASHTNGTON (UPI) -The largest
organization of families of American
prisoners of war has clQSCd ranks behind
President Nixon and refused to pass any
resolution even implying a criticism of
government policy.
The National League or Families of
American Prisoners and Missing in
Southeast Asia took the stance Monday
after President Nixon, in a surprise a~
pearance before 750 delegates, received
loud cheers when he promised that
"under M cireumstances" would he
abandon the prisoners and missiilg. He
also spoke out against amnesty for men
who refused to serve in the war.
The league ~as generally been pro.ad·
minisftation. Most of the prisone rs are
career officers and their families feel
strong ties to the armed services anil to
the tradition of a political military.
e Chilean Slrlke
,
'Panicky' Over Charges
From Wire Senrlces
SAN ANTONIO. Ter. -George
McGovern today charged President Nix-
on's reelection campaign wttb ''aabotage
and subversion... McGovern's t op
political aide said the Republicans were
panicking three weeks before the elec-
tion .
Sweeping through Texas -frOm the
state house to the Alamo -McGovern
intensified his attacks on Ni.Ion, charging
that his campaign bas hired 50 saboteurs
to steal files, wiretap private con-
versaUons and disrupt t h e Democratic
presidenlial campaign.
"THESE AMIBmous men will a~
parently !fop at not.bing to preserve their
own power," M~vem said in a state-
ment issued before ht left for his last
Texas stop tod4y, F()rt. Worth.
"They would undermine the republic to
save their White House parking spaces,"
he said. "Wben voters are denied the op-
portunity to mate an lnlormed choice
because the Wonnation is poisoned by
sabotage and subversion, they are denied
'\
N. Viets Seize
Allied Hamlets;
One Recaptured
SAIGON (AP) -1.1llltary spokesmen
reported today that Communist forces
seized halr a dozen government hamlets
in the central highlands, but said govern-
ment forces retook one of them by dusk.
the most basic freedom or all -the
freedom to choose leaders who will best
serve their interests."
FRANK MANKIEWICZ, n a t i o n a I
direcctor for McGovern's campaign. said
that· the refusal of Clark MacGregor,
( CAMPAIGN '72 J
~on's . campaign manager, to answer
questions at a news conference Monday.
was "astonishing" and added It "shows
either fear or panic, and probably botli."
President Nixon'• press aecretary and
campaign . director denounced assertions
that administration aides were involved
in political spying and sabotage against
the Democrats.
But neither man Dally denied them .
"I will not dignify wlth comment
stories based on hearsay, character
assassination, and guilt by association.''
said White House Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler. •
CLARK rtlACGREGOR. c a m p a 1 g n
director or the committee for the Re-
election ()f the President. said "all the
dirt is being thrown" by the opposition to
Nixon.
"The mud-slinging, the name-calling
the unsubstantiated charges, the in:
nuendos, the guilt by association the
character assassination, the second:hand
hearsay are all tactics exclusively.
employed by the McGovernltes and their
apologists," MacGregor said in a state--
ment Monday.
He did not discuss the specific charge!
of admlnistratlon-llnked s a b o t a g e
published by The Washington Post and Time magazine.
r •
Air Mass • Ill Plains'
SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI ) -Physicians,
merchant marine captains and bank
employes joined a snowballing na-
tionwide strike today in support or 400
jailed truck drivers. Their action
threatened to escalate into a general
strike.
Doctors in Santiago Md Valparaiso
said they would treat only emer:r;1~cy
cases for 48 ·hours startlng st ml · ht
\Ycdnesday. Sea captains said they would
!!lay in port. Bank employes said they
would remain home.
He said the wave of attacks on villages
had been ord.ered by a new Communist
"Resolution XtO" calllng for poUtlcril
c4dre to plant the Viet Cong nag in as
many villages and hamlets as possible.
"This Is a fonn of political struggle,"
said one South Vietnamese officer.
• Montagnard tribesmen lived in five Of
the hamlets and Vietnamese In the sixth.
All were poorly defended by goverrunent
militia troops w h,.o withdrew under
. TNSTEAi:-, RE refused to answer ques.-
hons, saying that his position was
justified by the unusual developments of
recent days. He rushed from the room
after reading before newsmen and
television cameras a staterrient a~lllng
The Washington Post.
t
! •
Wi,rids to Cool New · England.Area; Warmer in South
. :\
_..,_ Ml D
~~::: __ ·_·_-__
rlll••IM ~SNOw """ ...... 1".:.1'"°"""'' llOW
Verl .... dwfi-t•Y• Utl'll Ylf• 11bl• ........ fli.ttt ltld _ ...... hout'
tlful'nl"' Mlllf!IWMI 19 "'11 I to H
-1111'11 In '""'*""' toc11V l'ld Wldflt1-My. Hloll tolW(, f4.
(M•l•I '"""""''"'" ''"" from S7 ,. n. tftl•nd .....,.,..,11n1~ ,..,.. trom
SJ to 1J. W11'r "°""°*r1tllo'f U.
Sun, ltfoon, Tide•
TVl.JO"Y Ste.,. lllfl'I IJ1~ .,,.., 4J
lfCelllll lew • 6.01 •. rn. 0.5 WIPltllOAV
kCll 11."1. • •
1·111.m. I 7 lt1' 1·1'.11rn.. hlli l 1l1 p..m.
The dedsioos by orglnli•tlons
representing the three professions coin-
cided with the lirst day or violen<:e in lbe
~ix-day series of strikes that has
hampered lhe nation's business and com·
mercial life.
DAILY ·PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dell¥tl'J of the 01rly Piiot ·
IS Qllll'tntttd
Ttltphonts
lolMt °"'"" Ctwtry .v... .~ . ...,...,.,
Noirftl-1 H11110ngtor. ~
.,., "'"'"""'"' ...... "" .... ,Ut
"'" CIMMntti, ~ 1Mc11, S... J\lfft c.tPlll,,_, DIM '"°'"'• Jevttl ~. 1.141.N ........ ..,....
pressure, field report& said. ~
Some clvllians were able lo nee with
the militia, but the Communists took cOn-
trol or the others. 1bere were no
available _populatkln figures ()n tht
hamlets, but most were reported to bf:
:mioll.
Five Dre 10 miles southwest of Kontum
and 15 to 25 mlles south ()f Pleiku. The
sixth Is in Phu Bon province southeast of
Pleiku.
Reinfc>rce.menls were trying ..to re41ch
some of I.he hamlets, but In at least one
c11e they were mttllng stiff reslltanct.
ln tht O)'le hamlet that was retaken,
five clvlllanl and six militiamen were
• reported killed and 13 elvlUans and four
mWttamen wounded, preliminary reports
Aki. Twelve entmy were reported killed.
No othtr cUualty !lgures were
available.
On the northern coast, more than 100
ertt.my troopa invaded a poorly defended
refugee camp five miles from Quang
Ngaf, killed 11 refugct.1 ind six
mlllltamtn and wounded 32 refugees and
tight militiamen.
South VJetnamese regulars came to the
1\d of the .camp and seautd II,
spokesmen Mid.
< •
Wicks
~
'lt'S called an election. kid
it ·s whelfl the Nrthlings
choose SOf1160fHI to blame
fOr the mess they ,,,. in. '
I
I
• . ' -
Ecology
Ruling
Assailed
Mud Still Flows;
More Rain Feared
SF Y ou ths
Charged
In T er,.or
SACJIA'°WNTO (Al'J
Hundreds of lhousanc!t
Callfomlana may be thrown
BIG SUR (UPI) -I( new
-ca1eade of mud aod debtl• or from • swuner rort1t i1rt
oozed Jnto this Paclrlc Coe.it
rt!IOrt vlll11e Monday, while
ofllclala leor<d tb8 WWII WU
yet to come because ol more
poundl!li rains.
out of work as a retUlt of a
California Supreme Court rul-
ing lut l!!Ooth, lll't LI. Gov.
Ed Reinecke, who has called a
special meeting of labor
leaders and construction of.
ficials to dtscuss the matter.
Heavy shower• fell
•Poradlcally during the day
and night over the stricken
1rea, whi l e weather
rorecaaten said no letup WM
In sight.
An eatlmeted 80,00> tons of
mud and debri.11 was poised
above the vlllalt and ol!icial!
said another heavy ra!Mlorm
could bring It crashing ,town .
Reinecke aald th& meeting
here Wednesday would be to
discuss the high court ruling
and to '"help us more precisely
assess the potential adverse
Impact the decision could have DISTRICT ranger Dick Hiii'·
He re.II of the U.S. Forest Service
said an esttmat.ed 12,000 tons
on the state's economy."
spoke _Monday.
of dellrls bad washed lplo BJ1 SI.Ir and' over tbl( O)ljt hlgbwoy, which WU· ~-9AKLAND (UPI I -A lwo-,
In · the f-··J• da"' I )'tar reign of terror agalnJt ~IJ~ll~. VUl ur 'J 0 Chinese In thia San Francisco
Tho debris from IJ1t'" ol Lail S.y cily has ended wllh the
IUmmet 's worst ror.t fires ~ of five you.the aged 15
whlch IOOrcbed 4,400 ~· lJ)-. tQ, 20 on extortk>n charges,
eluded silt, bra.nCf\Uf tree police said. "
stu~ and lfh.arred boukiets. Inspectors said Monday the
Aboot 400 · reBidents of Big youths were me mbers of l •
Sur and surrounding area re-ga~ called Suty S I n g ,
mained in their bomei . credited wit h extortion,
Rangers said there wet'! no
lmmedlale plans for evacua~ ( )
lion. Residents W'ert bar-. BRIEFS tlead lng their tio1no'o: and • ·•. cabins. ~!.. ' "· ••. ;... ______ ....,.
·:!>.. .Wa:ults, destruction of prop-
THE ARMY and• Navy erty and other crimes against
'transported fresh water in big businessmen in {he city'a
tanks for the townapeople. Chinatown and Chinese-Ameri-
The rain-soaked earth slid can families elsewhere in th&
down steep moUntalns toward area.
the sea in an area stripped of
undergrowth a'nd many trees
by the forest fire last August.
e l'rofe••or H e ld
Tlit~, Oct.obtr 11, 197.2 OAU-V Pll.OT §
Jet Cra•h T esti numy
Takeoff 'Too Ste,ep'
PERSONAL
IDENTIFICATION
1'
ROLZZ:
Tired of Di,scipline,
Boy Sees 'Big W orJ,d'
Washing along boulders and
redwood tree stumps, the mud
piled up around the inside
buildings. It bloclled roads and
sent autos skidding from ~elr
. parking places.
VEN ICE (AP ) -A Cal
S t a t e Northrldge as$istant
profes.sor of political science
has been arrested and booked
for investigation of possessing
narrotjc:s for sale after poI¥:e
said ile received. a package In Vourt
CANADY, a spectator at the
air show, said be logged t ,609
hours of Oying time in similar
planes between 1952 and 1957
and tha t he knew from the
start of the F86's run doYm the
runway that the plane ~·as in
PAOFICA (APJ-Ten·year-0Jd Eric Damron ran away
from home because he was tired of discipline, his father
says. But the boy ma y be in for a dose of what he was
trying to avoid.
''We're going to Lalk it out and let him know what he
did wrong," said William Damron when his son returned
h?tne hfonday from a three day odyssey in the San Fran-
cLSCO area.
11Then he'll be disciplined -he 'll have his ~ar tanned
gage.
and he'll lose !Orne of his privileges."
Eric disappeared after school last
Frlday, hikin g over the San Bruno
mountatns to San Francbco lntema-
tiooal Airport Where he made some
pocket money carrying baggage.
--__ He..slept at ttie _airport before mov-
ing on lo South San FraneQ<o Sal·
urday. Re later caught a bus into San
Francisco and , after sleeping over-
night in the bus terminal, spent the
next day touring the city. ··~
Eric ran away because he was tired of d o i n g his
chores around the house," the elder Damron said.
'He bas aome p t t pinea pigs and he was tired of
cleaning their cages." Damron added. "' ·
Tbe object of an int.cnsive search by police. Eric was
found around midnight Sunday at San Francisco's East
Bay bus terminal where he sought shelter from the harsh
. weekend weather. ~ . : •
Police brought Eric homo and he slept througft..:molt
of the day Monday.
"It's an awfully big world out there," the tired boy
told his parenb before turning in.
Bankers Hit
Prop. 20
' from Pakistan.
Walter A. 1.elman, 28, wa s
aJ'l"eSted Monday 81 be left his
apartment in Venice. Officers,
tipped by cu.storns Inspectors.
said they seized fou r ounces of
hashish sent air mail-special
deli very to Zelman's office in
Northridge.
Singer Patti Page ap-
peared in a Santa Mon-
ica courtroom Monday
to confer on visitation
rights for her ex-hus·
band Charles .O'Curran
to see their children,
now in her custody.
trouble.
He said that the engine
sounded all right to him and
that there y.•as no other sign
of mec hanical failure which he t
could detect from the specla·
Corona Defense Studies
Prosecution Documents
•
Wom by needs of State, leaders of
industry, and gl"'l!lat sportsmen .. Rolmc is
identified as t he world's badge of
success. We feel it's all the identification
you'll need. Tni9 is·the Rolox Datejust.
a 3().jewef, self-winding chranometw
guarantoOd pr6ssure-pro6! to a depth of
165' when case. crown, and a)'Stal are
Tri!8Cr.Sti inl<>srsiee1-anct14-karatgold
Oyst er case with matching bnrceloL $400.
Do Something Beautiful.~•
-/,' ~ ·~ •
2300 HARBOR BLVD. <HARBOR CENTER) COSTA MESA Phone 545-1440 DAILY 9,30 .4 P.M.
. MON. -THUR. • FRI, TILL 9 P.M.
PRE CHRISTMAS MONEY SAVING EVENT
GIRL'S BOY'S
I GOWNS P.RICE
SHIRTS $ 49
and . and '
PAJAMAS 2 T-SHIRTS
LI MITED QUANTITY VALUES TO $6.
. BOY'S
GIRL'S JEANS ASSORTED 88 99
FLARES and
l FLARES
l
I VALUES TO $7. VALUES TO $7.
' ' GIRL'S .,
GIRL'S .
~ 1 DRESSES %PRICE COATS PRICE
l1Mltt4 Q 11•11t!ty
and INF~NTS
2 JACKETS
l'f TRIM FfT $ 49 STRETCH =.. SUITS LIMIT!D QUANTlfY
• BANKAMERICARD • MASTER CHARGE IF PIRFICT '4 TO $6.
-· ' ' .
-
•
'
•
• •
I
•
•
•
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Jets to
Jct engines arc ble:i~cd for lhe speed lhey give to
1nodcrn air travel. And they're <:urscd for their noise
1>ollutlon.
Now 1t appears they'll be blessed for far more than
their aeronautical contribut1011. And there'll be no eurs-
ing over noise pollution.
Advancing ll11.:h11ology in Jet eng1oe manufacture
and in the ··r0n1b1ncd cy<"le" 1nethod of power ge11er·
ation will make it possible for the Southern California
Edison CV. tu meet the con:-;tantJy increasing J)()"'cr
needs in the company's 15·county service area.
Objections fro1n the Orange l '.ounty .i\ir Pollut1on
r·onlrol Di~tr1tt i.\l'CDl to F.dison's expansion of-it'
oil· and gas-burning generator at lluntington Beach
brought warning!' of future blat·kouts and bro\\•nouts
in the hour.~ •Jf peak load if those objections prevailed.
As an alternative. Edison pushed for construction
of a plant in an uninhabited area of the Mojave Desert
:\Onte 25 miles southeast of Barstow. 1'hat plan brought
the san1e anguished tries fr1Jm environ1nentalists as had
the Jluntinglon Beach plan.
But no\v , \\'llh enclo-:;cd . .sounct,>roor jel en~ines
capable of replacing oil and gas in the operati<Jn, Edison
ran both expand its flunt ington Beach plant and build
the new $400 n1iUion plant on the high desert.
The APCD concedes· that the two plants together
\\"OU!d produce less pollution than either would have
earlier. So the 1\.PCD has reversed its earlier rulin ~
against the Huntington Bea~ch expan~ion .
Environmental in1pact studies likely will be made
of both projects but Edison executives· have expressed
confidence the two plants, using the ne\v jet technology,
\viii be able to pass the impact test.
These figures indicate the importance of the ne\11
development: Edison's generating system now has a 12.5
million kilo\vatt capacity. Edison says it \Viii need at
least 5 million additional kilowatts-of generating capacity
by 1983. and some of that by 1976 . if blackouts and
the Rescue
brownouts are t«> be avoJded. PopuJation will Increase
by a million persons in EdiJOn's 15-c.-Ounly Larea in the
nexL decade. and present customers wlll demand more
electricity, according to projettions.
Nuclear power plants '"'ill eventually solve the
shortage problem. But they requlre so many years of
lead tl1ne that conventional plants mnsl be expanded if
the elcctririty shortage form of pollution is to be
avoided.
It's fortunate that the fossil-fueled plants were
blocked, and still more fortunate that a low-poUuting
substitute has been found. It would be an ~ greater
boon if there \Vere no pollution whatever. l!Ut a balance
has to be struck between some air poUution and the
need for pov.•er -at least until non-pa\luting nuclear
plants are fully available.
Sacramento Birdwatchers
They call themselves Legis1ative Birdwatchers, but
lo many a legislator in Sacramento they're un\velcome
gadllies.
1'hey're a group of wo1nen \Vho, three years ago.
started attending legislative committee nicetings and
n1onitoring senators and assemblyn1en on their votes
on c11vironmental issues.
Welcome or unwelcome, the ladies have been ef·
fcctive to a degree. Through sheer persistence, they
\Vere finally able to help push both legislati\'e branches
into adopting rules whereby votes in conunittee were
recorded. And they have put a publ.icity spotlight on the
records of individual legislators on major environmental
bills.
The Birdwatchers have given both lawmakers and
lobbyists fits at times. but they're doing a pecking joh
that needs doing-and not just on environmental bills .
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. ' . . ·..:.iii \
/t'lc6ove1•1i's Pla•• to E1id Wur
Hanoi Must Have Doubts
McGovern Has
Falsified His
\VASHINGTON -F'or ;:ii! its suscep-
t1hilily to charges of ··white flag sur·
render." the ~1cGovern plan lo end lhl'
w:ir n1ust arou<:c ~ubstant1al doubt s 111
IJilnOI
(RICHARD WILSO~ JN CONTRAST, a brave mem ber of the
llanoi Politburo might argue that a set-
1lement with Nixon ""·ould provide the
opening and the stable conditions fo r the
slow de11elopment of Communist control
in Saig011 leading toward ultimate
unification under Hanoi's direclion .
PaS C-R.ecor"il
(ROBERT S.ALLENJ 'l,lK' doubt s wnul<I locus on the plan ·s
practicality It does not nccc~sarily
guarantee to llano1
the result it desires
and may more near·
.. Jy gel from the Nix-
on admin1strallon .
As Senator ~lt•Gov
Prn first exph1ine<1
the plan and then
elaborated on i1 . net
political settle1ncnt
is outlined-. If the
go11emmenl of South Vit•tnan1 could ,Jo
so, it would still fight on Y.'ith such nlcan s
as it had after McC:ovcrn withdrew ;;\l
support. and brought back all U.S.
planes, guns and equipment which ... ,.t•re
sa lvageable. Just ho\.11 the planes, guns
and tanks are to be wrested from the
South Vietnarnese was not explained.
THE IMPLICATION lie~ that Sou!h
Vie tnam. whether under President Thieu
or some other leader, would go inlo
military collapse. The Communists wou ld
move in and take over.
But this is alt conditional. U. S. planes
would remain in Thailand. aircraft car-
riers would st11nd ready to strike from
the South China Sea while Sargcnl
Shriver went to Hanoi to Aegotiate the
release of prisoners of war. Shri1y·er
""-ould be compel led to rely on persuasion
rather than strength.
The unreality of the schen1e lies 1n its
r•n1ponderables. Saigon forces mighl in-
deed continue to fight. Hanoi would nol
ha\'C its desired political seuJemcnt. It
could easily conclude P.1eGovern too ir-
resolute 10 resume the air strikes. Sul
President McGovern would ha11e lost the
hold President Nixon had on the Saigon
government. The bird Hanoi held in its
hand might fly away because_ the United
States had lost its power to enforce a set·
l ll'n1ent.
HANOI COULD SENSIBLY conclude
that it had a better cha nce in the tong
run t.o control South Vietnam through ;i
cutlli tion govern ment wh.ich had the sane·
lion of a resolute American president
st11ndlng behind an internationally ad-
ministered cease-fire.
Otherwise. the men in I lanoi might find
!hc1nselves forced to subdue 17 n1ilhon
South Vietnamese who have a million
nl('n under arms, considerable modern
equipment and no disposition to welcome
a Communist government.
Hanoi will ha11e aroused an~\Y the fears
o( communism in the vast areas from
Tokyo lo Jakarta. which would see in the
surrender of the Americans the
departure of their hopes for continued
stability. Southeast Asia might be found
unmanageable, as the French and
Japanese ultimately discovered. Instead
of celebrating an easy victory Hanol
might find itself at the center or chaos.
·So ii does not go v.·ithoul saying that
Hanoi"s leaders would receive the
McGo11ern plan with unlimited rejoicing
whatever may be said publicly. They
could rightfully be suspK:ious of it on
practical grounds. They could also right·
ly question McGo11ern's ability to carry it
out , and they might justifiably have
reservations on McGovern's constancy.
McGovern's plan remains what it has
been from the beginning. a highly
speculative scheme for a complete
American pull-out lea11ing Saigon with no
fur ther Americ;in help, and advanced in
lhe contex l of winning votes for the
presidency.
BUT AT LEAST, S() far as the
presidential campaign is concerned, the
issue has been clarified beyond doubt.
l\1cGovern would withdraw totally from
all of Southeast Asia. Laos and C11mbodia
included. He would willlully cripple the
allied governments thereby taking away
from them all the usable American equip-
ment he could carry away, and give
them no more. \\'hile the Russians and
Chinese continued to supply Hanoi. He
would depend on Hanoi's goodwill in
releasing the prisoners, and lea11e the
weakened and crippled governments of
South Vietnam. Cambodia, L..aos and
Thailand to make whatever deal they
rould with the invaders from the North.
Prop. 20 Is Confiscatory
Ry ROBERT E. BAOllAi\1
Assemblyman. 71st District
In my last column 1 pointed out some
of the fallacies of lhe l'Ont roversial
California Coast Line Initiative -
Proposition 20 -which will be up for a
11ote of the people November 7. In my
closing paragraph. I said the lrlitiative
was so ambiguoosly drafted that the itrea
to be included in the coast.al zone masttr
plan "WOUid undoubtedly have tn bt
determined by the cou rt s.
After writing the column, two property
owners in Sacramento have asked for ,.
restraining order in the Superior Court to
keep r~ropositirn1 20 off the ballot. charg-
ing the initiatlvc has been
ni isrepresented.
Ttllt Pl.AINTfFPS contend 1 he
measure would n1tl only affect lhe
Oll:ANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N . Wttd, Putili.tllf'f
Thom(l.f Ktevd, F.d11 or
Alb~rl W. Ratrs
f,d1lor1<1/ l'afle f.:d1tur
Th(' t'Clll61'i•I 1•i:e flf !hr I ~II)
Pilot tt!elU to lrtf(•rm •nd rt1n1u·
l•te .rct1dcra by 1m'lt111Lni: th"
IK"WSl.lllflt't'lt oplnluru ~nd" eoo'·
mcn1ary on to1'.ll<w of 1nter••JC I "nrl
sl5(nlt1cane., by JtrQlfldlnll'. 1J f•)ru111
for tht' •·X'fln!'Mlon cf rn1r H'ftd~r1t0
oplnio11J1. •nd Uy f""""'lltlnsc th1•
dlwnt' ''lf>"' 110lhJt of fnforml'd oh·
11,rvt>rl •nd 111,ukesmco on to11k~
ur thet (\I)'.
Tuesday. October 17. 1972
-
California coastline but :ilso govern
development wtthin 1,000 yards or any
river affe<:ted by the tidal action. Both
n-.en own pr<>J>t!rty oo the Sacramento
and American rivers.
So. presumably , all land running from
the shores of "coasts" of the two ship
canals (Sacramento has one -Stockton
the other\ and rillCf'!I y,·oo\d seem to be
the "coast" if the IAnd arc.a js included.
This means, or course, that all counties
in California W{luld be affected by the
coastline initiative.
AT A TIME WJIEN we're attempting
to cut bureaucr8cy -both in the rederal
and state levels -I.hi!> measure adds
step-upoti·step of new bureaucracy. For
ex\l mnlc:
It create~ a t:oastnl Zone Conservntlon
Commis.'!lon aod i;ix re:gion11I cum·
mi11sions in the 14 coastal counties only.
F'our of these region:i.I commission!! con-
tain l2 rnembers . one 14 1nr.n1beN and
one 16 members. The 1d11tr commission
would have a membcrMlip of 12. 1'hls
add!! up to 84 new bt1rcauL'talA. None of
these Yo'01.1ld be elected .. all a.re appointed
Half of the regional cornmlssloners are
picked by local officials: the other half.
so-called public members. are appointed
by tht Governor. the Se-nate Rules Com·
mitlcc and the Speaker or the Auembly.
Then. each regiooal commission appoinl!I
one of 11s member.! lo Mlrvt on the state
con1mission . accounting for six metn·
bcrs. The other six ar~ appointed. as I in-
dlca1ecl.
WlflLi-: Tift-: <1uallllcations for the
publle members call for "cx:pcrtlse In
conservation. recreation. ecoloRic&I and
physical sciences. plannlng and educa-
tlon," it scen1s none must be qualified in
the fteld5 of economics, taxatlon or
employment problems. In addition. there
is no provision for rtpresent8tion for
labor, buslne~. 111trlcullurt or home
l
owners.
The proponents of Proposition 20 deny
lt. but it does establish a moratop.um on
building within the •·permit afea." In
fact, the measure has been booby-trap-
ped with interlocking pro11ision.s that
result in a virtually co m p I e I e
moratorium. This does not apply to hous-
ing alone. It applies to all development,
including placement or erection of any
~lid material M structure or alleration
of the size of any house or larger
huilding.
Jl\tAGINE, FOR t:XAJ\1PLE, any city
ln the "permit area" would have to go
hat-in-hand to the regional commission
and seek appro11al to repair a sewer line.
Harbor in1provements and redevelop-
ment projects would be subjected to long
delays.
I say. if yoo believe in conservation,
fair play, and meaningful local partici~
tion in decision making -but are op·
posed to conflscation -you will want to
vote "No'' on Propcsltion 20
Dear
Gtooruy
G u ~ •
With McGovern;! recent statement
about tne press I wonder lr he is
get.Ung ready to say. 'They won"l
ha11e poor old George lo kick
around anymore."
-P.O.
Thlt le••llt• rtfltd1 ~9*t$' •I•-. !IOI
llt( .. 1.tlly ,,,... ., .... ~"'· t..11• ·-,., ,.. ... " °"'°"'' °'"' o.u, Piii!.
WASHINGTON -Senator h-fcG<lvem.
trying to counter the widespr~ad image
of him as an ineffectual leader, a leftist
political opportunist and an inveterate
waffler who is on all sides of every issue,
is resorting to more of the same lli
defending himself.
Addressing a group of editors the
other day, the South Dakota radical
sell-righteously declared. "T have held
to a steady course
on what is easily the
transcendent issue
'Of the last 10 years-
the issue of the war
in Vietnam ."
In 'Keeping with his
r«"Ord of Mid dis-
tortions of fact and
half truths. that as-
sertion is phony. The
reccrd cooclusively proves it is \vithout
substance.
FOLLOWING IS lhe unchallengeable
evidence:
In 1964, when !ht famous Tonk.in Gulf
Resolution was before the Senate. lhere
were only two votes against it -AND
McGOVERN WAS NOT ONE OF THEM.
The lone dissenters were former Sens.
\!Jayne Morse. 0.-0re., and Erne st
Gruening, O.·Alas:ka, both subsequen!ly
defeated for reelection.
Jn each of the next four years. every
member of the Senate again had nn op-
portunity. to vote against the Vietnam
conflict. Every year the Senate voted on
a supplemental appropriation to finance
!hat war. Each time, Morse and Gruen-
ing. sticking by their guns. voled :igainst
such funds.
In 1967. they were joined by another
Senator -NOT McGovern. The third o~
jector was Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D.·Wi'i.
!\.tcGOVERN, WHO now fa I s e I y
parades himself as having held "lo a
steady course" in opposing the \\"ar.
11oted for hundreds of millions of dollars
in supplcme'ntal appropriations to con·
tinue that war.
In 1968, Gruening sponsored a proposal
to prohibit the sending of draftees to
Southeast Asia. It was overwhelmiogly
defeated -with only Morse and Nelson
siding with him.
ln all these years. t\-1cGovem did talk
against the war. But on the important
show.downs. the South Dakota leftist "did
not put his money where his mouth is.''
lie piously talked one line and voted ex·
aclly the opposite.
TJIAT"S WlfY TiIE poll~ are recording
n:i.tionwldc distrust and disbelief in his
1nu~hmouthiog credibillty,
~lc(to\lem ls oow blaming that on the
prc!I~. But it wasn't newsmen who made
his record. It was lht South O:JkoUt waf-
flrr and wobbler. It was he who last
!ipring loudly avowtd he would withdraw
alt U.S. fortes from South Vietnam
wilhin 90 days after Inauguration. Later.
1vhcn that drew tK!avy fire on the 11tround
such 8 precipita te pull-out woul{i abandon
U.S. prisoners of war. P-tcGovern hasUly
shifted his stance.
lie changed It to. -·~v.·ithin 90 d:1 rs
after t become President. c very
Americ&n prl900er and every soldier will
be brought home. '1
It's the wne sort of weaseling he
pullod on Sen. Tom Eagleton -whom he
unctuously backed "1,000 per cent," and ii
ftw day!I IRler unceremoniously ki~kcd
of! .hi! ticket. · ...
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' I } L
Blocking Back
...,.'1· i\'.r .. \;• ''t~1'·· ··.1. '.\.,/:·
Driver Tests Not •
To.ugh -Enough
\Vhen one reflects oh the widelv·knoWn
f:.c1 that more A1neric;ins ha11e ~n kill-
ed by automobiles in this ceotury than in
all the wars we ha11e fought s111C1! 1776.
our casual attitude toward the privilege
of dri11ing a car is more sl.artling and
puzzling than ever.
I thought of this re-
cently , when I had
to take a driver's ex·
emlnation to renew ·
my license. l have beeO drlvin( for , 35
years, and this is the
first time I have ev-
er had to take a test
-and it didn't in-
.. .•
clude my actual abilities oo the road, ~y
a written exam and eyesight lest .
MY STATE. Illinois, didn't require
driver's licenses until 1938; at that time,
all a motoris t.had to do was sign aQ af·
fida\lit that he had driven more than
50,000 miles or so. had no incapacitaling
ph}'1lical defects. and was able to read
traffic signs. No road test was ever given
to hundreds of thousands of drivers. then
or now, to check these oul.
Lord knows how many tens' of
thousands were rrozen...jnto the system
with rotten ey~, deff!Ct!Ve nervous ap-
paratus. illiteracy. insanity, or senility.
And how many hundreds of thousands
more have degenerated oVer the laJl 30
years.1with no check on their diminisbl.ng
faculties . I could have been half-blind by
now, and no alitliority would know il.
MUL TIPl. Y THIS shocking example by
dozens of other states equally negligent ,
SYDNEY J.HARRIS
:ind you have some explanation for
our annual motor vehicle death rate v.·c!l
in excess of 50,000 lives
Yet politicians 11re most reluctant lo
tighten up these Jaws. which cry out for
revision, ~ause Americans are 1nore
Jealous of their driving prlvilC'ges than of
b!tnost anything else in their lives. There
is less outrage ~'hen a job is lost, a mate
seduced. or a mortgage foreclosed than
when a driving license Is revoked.
!'iO OOURT. MUCll of the legislation
for increased aulo safety is long 011erduc.
and lhc manufacturers should have paid
more attention to sa:ety ractors and lt.'ss
to styling: but much of it is also :1
··displacemenl ·· of our subconscious
sense of guilt at being too Jax \\'ilh
oursel11es, at permitting our heartlessly
high rale or fatalit ies without taking self-
co1Tecti11e measures to redu~ .it.
\YE NEED TO BE far tougher on
ourselvtS, as· driftr1, than we are.
Tougher· In issuing tleenseir, tougher in
renewing tbeJb.. <ind tougher ln penalizing
those -Who · flagr1ntTy \ iolate safety.
courtesy an(f common sense. But we
"'on't be. for no votes are gained that
\11ay. and or1ly enemies-arc made by turn-
ing the scretv on traffic offenders. In the
final analysisJ '.l'C will slop killing more
Americans on-the road than 1n wars only
when v.·e stop confusing liberty \\'\th our
licenses.
Crackdown on 'Fences'
\VASl·llNGTON -Sen . Alan Bible, D·
Ne\/., is drafting suhpoE!nas for some of
America's most elusive citizens, the
coast-to-coast "fences" who help sell $16
billion in stolen goods each year.
As ehairi'nan of the Senate S111all
Business Committee, the stern former
Nev ad a attorney
general plans lo
summon the crimin-
al middlen1cn lo
three days of hellr·
ings beginning nexl
1''ebruary.
Although he CX·
perts a litany of
Fiflh Amendments
rrorn the "fr.net's,"
hls starters think they have enough data
to expose a nationwide criminal 8rgani·
ution th at peddles C\lcrything from single
canopeners to million-dollar hijack car-
goo.
BIBLE HAS ALSO tumed up names of
we ll·known departmtnt stores which are
knowinJ;cly buying stolen goods and resell-
ing them to unwitting housewives.
The battle plan for the hearings is laid
out in a confidential 4f>.pagc report
prepared by the committee slaff.
In It. the titaffers rtport that ~·stolen
goods c11enlually· re:leh a lc11titimntc.
m11rketp lace . There is a strong fctl·
Ing among lo\\· enforcement people that
lcgitimote businessmen too ·frequently
purchnse stolen good~. knowinaly, rron1
fenctt for resale through their whole~ale
or retail outlets :'
TJIE STOLEN GOODS of c.hoict are
CRllle, cars. solumi, TV and radio sets,
watchea, cameras. wlg.!l, whiskey,
cigarettes and clothing. The sources are
hijnckJng, 1partment burg'larl~. shopllfl·
Jngs and otl'Mlr thcfls of all kinds.
The Bible report 1races the goods froin
the thief to the '"fence" "'ho ('radicatPS
the identifications from the stolen crates
and packages The ''fence" then sells the
items to a JObber. who passes the hfll
merchandise 10 :i ""'hoh.;,salcr \Yho . \n
tum . unloads it at cut-rate prk'I!.$ to a
retailer.
1'0 BREAK Tl llS ch<11n of cri111e. Bihlc
is proposing a bill that would let the vie·
tlm of the theft file n treble damAge civil
suit against anyone he catches with his
goods. Then lhe possessor of the goods
would hRve lo prove he cume by the
goods honestly. The bill v.·ould also ll!l the
Justice Dl!ptlrtmcnt step in with R civil
injunclion to close do .... 'n nierchandisers
who consistently deal ~n stolen goods.
By George ---
Dear George:
I read article after tirliclc aboul
ho1v dominated American husbands
are hy their wlll("S and how the
female is tak1ng over thr male's
role In society You're the only col-
urnnist who stands up for rnen's
rights like 11 m1trt1 !low de you get
awoy with it''
ADMIRING
Df>ar Admiring :
I ptll 111y foot clown ·I told my
wire if she d\dn't let me stnnd up
tor men's rights I wol.lldn't do the
d\11.he!I anymore ond only half lhe
Ironing. .
•
•
with ~ '
Winston's finer flavor •
Winston's real, rich, satisfying taste makes any occasion
a little more pleasurable.
Because Winston always tastes good, like a cigarette should.
. .
~ .
..
e lttl 11.l ,llC1'110l.el 10MCCO Cit.
Warning , Tli~ Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Oangerous to Your Health. SUPER KING. KING : 21 mg. "tal", 1.4 mg. nicotine. av. per cigeretta. FTC Report AUG. '72.
\
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(
. -
DAILY PILOT
I'll .. letiMmMr S .SC~•f, C•rolVn J, •nd Wllll•m Crtlg 1"1rrrr1111on, Prtderl(t All>ef"I , Jr, 11\d
Ell11blth ElllN ~"en.on. Jack W, 11111 1(1t1>er!n1 L
1.i11, Pelll•ll• It-M>d eryen T1>oM11
Mulchl11, Rlcll<lrd Lyl'll'I •ncl Suwn Allee
G1ttn1v, MerlOtll LOUIM eno llobert ,_
1"11111 ,.,,,..,... •
Cuwcll -JOhn ,.,.,..,d encl Klren Ann
Nltmenn. Opel It. •nd W111.., w
Lciv•!O'I'• Loul• SI~ end Ketri.rl"" M1rv
E........,, e4'tty J. Ind WUllem E.
k l'lmll1, Otlln!• JOhn •nd h1btol Rtvn Jor......,,, E111 R-•11 •nd Linc!• Merit
1-iohcllw, Edlln K1y Ind Jimmie LH
9 ullff, eurlon Ev1nt Ind lloa.t"ll LH
H1111>1nd, S•nll nl C. Incl lleymonci J
Corn.ti...,,, N•ncy di Paolo 11\d R-rl
'" l ink, Osc•r M Ind J UlllNll N.
Gr1nc1u1kv, Albtrl I.. Ind Je<-'lllt A.
aMw.tl, J11111 L . •rid Wiiiiam M
fl1tc111+or, SnlrlotV P. •NJ Ar.-.1 e
Kon1r1kl, Leori1rd ~·end J1nlc1 N.
Lt-..lque. Atm.ancl R011nd 1 n d
COM!lll(I ldl
Edwtrds. Gill lllrglnl1 1nd lltn...., AnderllOl'I
Morg111, Cor• M. Ind J1rrv J .
llHS. J11ann1 M11 •r.d JOl\Nl!t Oon1!d
Ot1eg1, lwl:WI E. Incl Pllllomenro
Birnell, J~n F. I ncl J1mn w.
P1rrne1t<, J,.,._, Lt Roy 10\CI L• 111111
,• Gwenclolyn
an11rltd OC:IOMr t
M1en1nll, MerllYll L. eno JOiin F. Bl/xi, Oorotlw H. lfld Leonerd R
Arlndruo, Shlrlry Rav Hurlup
Monli, Martir 0 . 1nd llon11d Paul
M1ver, Oavton Lte ind C1role Ann B•l~~~· Rk:hlrd HlrPld 1na Oorloon
Sm1rl, Arll>ur J. 1na lrtnr M.
Serkl)kl•, JOiin B. Ind Ja.n K, , $on, An111 I(. Incl Bvu111 Kl • Slluo.c;h, Gill Ruth Ind Mlcl\11'1 Al1n
S1ndh1m, Jlnl,,. V. •nd RICl\lrd W Wll"°"' M ld\111 A. end M..-v H. . Peril«, Rull\ W, M>d Donlld L.
8urn&, Robft"I RaMll 1nd Tn..-r ..
Marie
Ntldl\all, HtfU'Y S. Ind Kethl>rlne E. Or!On, llobft"I M. Ind V(T1lnla 1..
Brllht, D1¥kl J. and Nor..,. J. w.ae. P1me.. Jtln ,..., Jaw .... , ......
• R1mlrel. Anni Ind Roll«! L. Howard, ,.,,,.. L. Ind Jotin O.
lon1, Fr1nlt A. and B•rbfir1 J T 1fo¥a, Roll«! J. and Ol1n• L.
F111,, llldr. L. and Ktll¥ B. Towler, ROJ1ann1 G. Ind Jim 'Olom11 Ho.Ire. Lind• Ind LOUii J. ~pr!llQ'lllad, K11ri.rine J IM 1nd
T"-'llJ Mlch11I \/Dlont, Ellnn Ctrol 1no Robed ("''"" Clifford, MH•n .ind D•vkl Geore• Wldr9. Barblr• M. lf>CI LH A McCall, 0 1.... Lff (Dl•m""") Incl w11111m H. WOiie, AllHn And Jtck L.
PrOPSll!f". C"••le• H. Ind H""ltt11 8radltf11M-r1, Mtr•IH R. tll<I Oon•ld ,,
C1nllrberrv, Robefll J . Ind 0"1nl• L
W•tlli, JIJ<lv Kev end Rotwrt Albet!
Vollmer, M1rvln J. 111<1 81rt11r1 A.
Pulol, Cr.trNl!Te M. and JOiin Entu·e<ll (kl, '
t
A'W~'r~'· •r m• E. E. lfld JO'W Jt5YI
ArtYI. Ida M. t t>d Anl"°"V l. IC01nill.1. Frt'drlck Owen 1nd Lindt J''" Be•n, l>Otdon Altn tt>d LOii Ml'
GYVMI. Amtll• A, '"" Ltnce
D ea t h Notices
T'vo. Viejh
Pain
Over
Sue
Ftmct!'·
Viejo couplM 'flllo o 1111 Ir SANTA AN!,~,.,,., y~
neighbors °""" •\1 · 1
malice whet\ \MY I ·
that imparjfld-6 -
two home.s ~ ~ · oQ
an easement ~V!.. ~ t1*
fence buil~~or 1,111!.
The Oranr Ill rlor
Court acli011 Id ~tR ~;\\! ~m R. and Patrklla • · t,
26241 Avenff\I 00
Andrew J _ w ~11!1. e.
26251 Aven~a oalKl: allO
caUs for remaval of the Of·
fending stnx:turt.
Both COOpll'J ntme ll<liff
and Sheila ~mllnut, e Avenida ~ 1
dants and claim t"-t ~he ~
bruns have rtl'uted to
recognize eae•t r t 1 h t 1
dating bac~ t~ lhe !Im• that
the Mission Vl•Jo Oom1>1nY
built the tract.
Coast Patr
Selected
For Awards
•r 0. c. H\JITlNlll
ti .... ltr lltltl •tttt
Nl~M ~i\01 111 o &i,' I Oeor1• ll!>nm•Y, 10Qtt of
thou. 1. P.',!!~lmfll\ !'" \\1u~' w\\\'10 t'" . .:
1'11! y ·~ lunC eon m• Inc •I 1 Or•111• Qluntr e.r ,1,1ooc11 .
'lit. \tine~ ~ 1Cl!edulod ror
ll:IO p.m. II lhe NewpoJier inn In NtWporl s .. c11.
* * * qllANlll COUNT~ labor ;, ~= .... Lr:
,,(! =· -~=will head lhe °"~ Clo\\ y li<!I'
Commlli" f o r ~~ Shriver IOl!lllC!e 1<00 •
•I th• 'l\o•l!llll't\:I • n ~.o~.1~.~~ .t~~
Clo, Ari .-1,nd of ll>t
Clerlia 11t<l Chorll•
o ~I I~ oounlr corpel\\eri ~I.-• _
'
""""'"1llon ' 1111 All I>
UNlTtb 'P~RM \Ill'~~ leo~er Outr ~Y.. w~ ~'-I •:ulll Wt
r.;rol'<l'! y al ~I ~~ ~,~1\ed for ll:iO A DlllllVUIDN of all lhe
p.m. In ~~~~Uad 11 Ill"" EVel~!lo1 J~, N l ~111~~~:..!llJt•I oltar~ ~·~:s1..n.~~=Q nl:~~~ ~Y ~~l~IJ<I ii~' ~lbol, 11iiP'"s1
1erro '\raw, Ptll~ ..tnlli' and M ~. a Irvine.
llltk.lll\o 111\ldenl or1 -llan. , 1'lte mifl~f •• '!L Ille Irvin• * fr -I )) f!ill\lllr 11 open
n !1 • mr LAll~!',1 •. li!I AVll
•IJd :"'0111f:il llll~"l:W.~~il~'r~~ ~ rau~I hr hfl<l •I fiil. ~ :1 1111.;!I] . ~· J:~~1 •1•rlt~~~J U:n111o.if11i lhMdl •· "
b.Y M~ Huey, ~~ of ihe The I P:m· ~rt\' will be al
llnlli.4 Jl'al'l!I Wort"" of Qu111bln~a h •Ill•~ 11111 Orar«• County. l\fea<low rl Prive, 1Un•
Btlob. ~1111111 of \' ~r .,i * !. pe-1 or Pl per ooup e will
JUr1\'.in. or \h':mat:ral be 10111hl. :i.U. ~~~m'"(.\t otymptc H6ro lo tall!! f\llld1 fllr ~ · . 1"" theater party "'' 11 n..-.. ~ t · '"'"ti:. \he touih Clla•I lllf!frlrqy vw"u • 0 · l l'I.-. ·
Theater. 111'1 No~rt lily~.. ~~ Quit' ~e111. Tht llY ti uThe Jesse Owen11 the quadrupt~
Tornbeorert," rtaln lime gold medal winner at the ll:te
l~n till; ~;~lll,J!llR'fh:"::~ 01yn1pl01 In Btrlln, will apoai w~l ht held In \'h~ lobby Nov. 1 'it 111' A!l>pcrlet Inn f ll In. 1111 ~ l>tfli,.. auei11 at 1111 Menial • ~r u~ket F.i:l'~· ~ll' lla41th Aaacictauon 111 0ran1•
tact Black fl>!' ClO!!ICrt!• hl1111-~nty.
QYlll\11!. 11111 N1wpor\ .Ji\vd.. '\'ha lllnn•r 111eellng I• °""n
Coeta Mesa, or phone 841411 i'a. to the public and reservations * * * are required.
SEAL BEACH Republicans The association office can be
will play host Thursday to contacted at 547-71>$9.
Here's the
Exciting New
rExperience
FEATUtUNG
Cooper&
Tanner
live Music Nightly far Dtncinc & Entw111nm1111
I hive b11n receiving • monthly b1n1f1t from Illy de-
ce1s1d hu1bond's Soci1I Security 11rnln91. I 1111 going
lo merry • men who 1110 11 roc1ivin9 Soclel ·Stcurity. win oech of us continue to receive benoilh?
•Y EU6ENI O. URGERON
...... ~ ....... ,.. ....... ,..,,,.. Whfdv.ltr.
-1N ltw ..,. re.DH ...i l"'fl...wd ~ Hie
:=..": ::::: .. .,_., ...... =.~ 9" 61 n. Y•• rt""'"Y, ttrr. emo•lllt ye11r "" t-........... ; ... ... lo , •• 'litll ....... ........., ef '" t.Nowt.t .......
1, o...t..H •I tN ml'"'911t ~ tf pru deuelM ..... """'""°'
J. A wlt.'1 betleflt hM4 ·~ ... lllril41191 ef Y•ttr P'"l'fftlw knit.ltd. :.= .... -:11• ~':'~~ .. ~=le .. , ..... · ..... ., ..... w ....... , ... Mt ...
Balt::-Berge1•ota fi'tataeral H0tne
COSTA MESA • CO N" d·'
... '2"" 2 LOCATIONS 10 ~ n MAI ~ •~ 673-MSO
Auto Lease Bids Take /Jip
OMNI£ DOllHn
•
Ev6nt 81itt6d
Special1 34
l<odacofor 35mm film.
20 exposures. CX135-20.
Special 144
KX 13!;-20, Kodaeolor film.
20expooures.
ever!
ings!
Olymput 3S ECR camera OIJl!ft.
Hai the E. Zuiko 1:26 f-42mni lens.
A truly outstanding camera value tor
1he Photographer keeping close tab9
011 his budget
Special 124sa ,
Mamiya/Sekor 500 TL c amera with
2 sep•r•t• meter systems. Behind-
the-lens spot meter,
co~rect exposure indi cator •nd micro-
(ii aprism rangefinder g ive you increased
¥isual control. lens is SOmm f2.0.
Min imum focus distance, 18 in,
Case e>i:tra, 12.88
Processing special
thru Monday only!
Save $1 a roll I
Silk linish studio prin ts .•• from your
Kodacolor,, film ••• no borders, more
picture. $1 off any roll!
..
We k~£E~~~!~ng for.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following stores:
FASHION ISLAND, Nowport Beach 1714) 64.._,2313 .
HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hun tington Booch {71 4) 892 -7711 . •
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SANTA ANA
SOUTH
COAST
PLAZA ,, ' ,' 'lil----· / .,; 1 tf. Baker Street I 1
.; 1
1
i ORANGE I / q ·~ COAST \ / ~: ~ COLLEGE, (
:i:: ~ I Fair Drive ,,~ 1 !_... .. ,~., 1
-;; Victoria Street , ~ '-'~ .\
IRV!Ne .~
.... Drive ':
~ ~ ~e '3?\
... !l 19th Street '-,,.,."' ~ \
e1~\'-l -----CD
\)(\\-.& ,,.,,,... ~ -" '-..-:" "
COSTA ''°'~ i
--UCI o
MESA ~ .~ ~
I t$/
,?>. ~I t ~ .r. <:i~ oi'~e ~.... '· e~\e\\\\ ~ ill CENTER
,~~.._. I~ --.1 Joaqu,;j;;~
1 ri//laRo
/ CORONA act
/ DEL MAR
• ~ a:
Cf ~I .,1
01
«I I §1
LAGUNA :i°I
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Tla1 1' 1..-.au111 a1aa
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Tuesdaly. October 10, 1~72
' • • • •
·Bl
Bus Line
That's us, the Orange County Transit District, also known as
The .Two-Bit Bus Line. We're called that because a one-way
fare on any of our buses costs only a quarter. To you it means
comfortable, convenient and economical se!'Vice .
It means you can go shopping in downtown Santa Ana or
Laguna Beach for only 25¢ .. It means you can go to any of
the 3 major colleges on our route for only 25¢. It means you
can go to South Coast Plaza or Fashion Island for only 25~. It
means you can go to Newport Beach or Balboa Pier for only
25¢. It means you can go anywhere on our map for only 25¢,
All of our· coaches are air conditioned for your comfort and
the bus stops are carefully located for your convenience. .
If you're beginning to see that O.C.T.D has you in mind, you're
getting the message.
For Information or route maps and schedules call The Two-Bit
Bus Line at (714)·547-6004 or write us at 1126 E. Washington
Ave., Santa Ana, CaUf.
LINE 53 ---------SANTA ANA·BALBOA
VIA COSTA MESA
LINE 57
SANTA ANA-LAGUNA BEACH
VIA COST A MESA
LINE 65
SOUTH COAST PLAZA-BALBOA
VIA,IS'llN!;;, --· .-
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OflllA.1-DOUNT"f'..,..,,....., .. , .. ,
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DAILY PILOT
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0 OAILV PILOT s
Cease-fii·e See11
011 Ga soli11 e Wru·
LOS ANGEi.ES IAI'I
Gasoline price w11rs which
hav~ rag~ 1n Sou t h e! r n
California since thl' m~d·1950s
are ru11f)lng out of luel. !!"Y
lwo industr'' extcuth e.s.
John A 'l'ouhe\'. vu::e presi·
dent of th e lniernahonal
Ser\'iCP Station Of' ale r ~
Assoc1at1011, and llu~h 1.acy.
senirr virl' rn• .. ulent of l l ril'h
Oli Co Clf '\'h1111er ~Alli lh<\!
demand hR~ rinl'::ht up 11·1th.
and is p;i<:.~11 ·.:i tt ~ • ll I n 1·
reser ves ~1r 11· :t• >U' t h "
United Stal('\
FINANCE
THIS 1\1 f.I\\~ tn;".t)O r
pe troleum cqn1p:i1~1~·, :i•·c cul·
ting off I~ rJow uf SUrj)IUS
fuels to unaffi\1alcd Aas
operators like Urich -which
supplies 100 l n d C! p u n d {' n t
service stations from Oregon
la the !\1exican border -LaC)'
explained .
"The only thing th.:il has
held down gas pri r,cs for the
last 50 years. retailw1sc. Is 1hl'
independent," he added
"The fact that the t'Tid r•f
!!lupplies is 1n sight has caaS<''I
a convulsion in thl' 1na 1or 0;1
companies. \V hy should 1h,ey
carry on pric(' .,..:irs l\'l th u~
when they're rull1ng ti~ off?
That's "'-'hl !he ~;i:. 1\·a r~ are
over all of :i .'urlcll•ri nncl the
majors h;nl' ~···lurcq the
market pri<'l' ..
full
Touhey. 111,,,.,. '! r o u p
represents :in u! !}111 major
brand and irirlr.,cn den t
gasoline ret:i ilt"'·" in Southern
Californi :l. ~ni1l !lir prire Yl'Jr
c_ease-fire d:it1·~ from Sept. I
and that :ill thr m:ijor oil com-
panies havr 11·1thdrawn lhl'ir
price supports 111 gas station
operators n:i !innwide.
Insurance
Firm Grows
"ALL o~· A sudden , there's
no competili(ln," he said.
Price support<:; h:ivc existed
in the Los Angeles area "250
days a year r1crv \'e;Jr since
1955" to help rl•tadrr~ 1hrough
periods ol h<it 1·1 1· .,,.,!11lon -
gas wars -1•·• sair
Lacy ~:lid h . .;; firn1 _ ___:
(
FLOOD
and
TIDAL-WATER
COVERAGE
for Homes -Furniture -
Apartment Housel -• Bu1ine$1 Stock/Equipment BOB PALEY
BOB PALEY ASS~~~ATIS
INSURANCE
17th St., Costa Mesa 474 E.
642-6500 546-3205
You're Invited to four
free lectures on
leaf ~tale
Jnve~lmenl6
Oc:t. 18th
Blue Chip Non· "The Ultimate Investment
managerial Property"
Lecturers -Ro.Iler Slates and Gene Kadow
Oc:t. 25th
"Ptfaximum Retur n on a Minimum Investment"
Lecturer -Fred Becker
Nov. 1st
Real Estate Syndication for th~ 11Advantage of
Small Investor"
Lecturers -Phil rt1 cNamec and 11Cap" Black.bum
' Nov. 8th
Through ucapttal Conservati on
MlnlmlzJ ng Taxes"
Exchanging
Lecturer -Bruce Howey
"Tailoring Your '73 lnvesll1len("
Leclurer -Handy McCardle '
TICKETS AVAILABL6 AT THE DOOR
EACH SESSION MEETS 7:30 -9:30 P.M.
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE
Serles Co·1ponsof'e<I By
Or•nve C011t • Golden Weit
DAILY PILOT Collogo
Huntlftfloh S-h • Fount1ln V1ll1y
Board of ltdltwr
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OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK . STO~ Ll_ST
NASO Lr.tings for Mondey, October 16, 1972
!es
abl
in
the
\\'er
als
('jd
Ue
ves
"' •¥-Exr•!nn
"" Pl"k•
•
Monday's Oosing ~rices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Wall St1·eet Posts •
4th Lo ss in Row
NEW YORK (APHlock pnces plowed relent~
lessly dO\vnward 1ttonday and fnushcd WJth a s1z·
able loss -the fou1 th losing sesslou for the market
1n a row
\Vorr1es abQut Inflation. r1s1ng interest rates
rhc elect1on 1 and lack of a V1etnan1 settlement all
\Vere cited by analysts as underlying the doldrums
But the m<trkcl's do'hnu1ard 1n,omentum \\SS
olsp feeding on 1lscl!
"Anyone interested in buying stocks has de-
rided JUSt to wait aort see if he can get them a lit·
tle cheaper " said \V1ll1am Nelson of Moody's In·
vcstor Service
..... ....~~~~~~~~~~~~~.
Gift.I "11111 l.fW C... Ole-Dow lone•
l'J72 5 DAILY PllO f JI -----
e Eatery Protlt•
LONG BEACH -Specialty
Restaurants Corp expects to
report a one third gain in f1r:st
quarter e11rn1ng:s over the
same period a year ago says
president J)av1d C Ta lhc het
The L o n g Beach based
restaurant operation earned
$487 400 or 32 cents a share ID.
the three months ended Stpl
30, 1971
Complete Closing Prices-A·nerican Stock Exchange List
S..1'" Net
(Ml I Hltll l.tw Ci.s. Cit .. '" M]f~ l•W C: ..... Cl\g
WAS!11NGTON Th c
Aerospace Jndusttles Alsocia·
tll")n l'!avs In a seml"'3MUBl
<0:urvev that 11 sharp thrfle'-ye11r
df'Chnt. in employment ln the
ael"Ollpace lndu:rtry npparently
ha" lev,.led off with slightly
more than 900 000 n e" emnloyed
The survey forecast.! a
decline In aenllplCe emplo} •
ment Mtween June Jt7t and
June 1'73 from 923 000 to
914,000 ... r about 1 peretnt
e TrlStar
ATLANTA, Ga -DeU1 Alt
Lines bas obtalntd $85 mlll lon
In 10-year financing from a
Br1U1h banking l)'ndlc1le to
buy Roll•Roycc '" ~ .. for 14 Tri.star alrbu1e11
ordertd fnlm L o e k h e e 4
Aln:ralt Corp
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DAIL V PILOT luKday, OctObtP 17 1972
QUEENIE Coeds Put Boin has Bite Dust Fa it, T'1oro1.19h, Guoro"tpcJ
Re•I Estate LOSE WEIGHT
oles and 0 1 Oroll~r licrnic Priority
w
Marcos Barts Philippine Sex Films . TRAINING
I Ph one for F1ee folder ··
THIS WEEK
Odr!Mx can btlp yvu -.... Ult b'lllt
&1!111 pwaon yw want ta W. Odl1ntll ~
1 unr llw.t llld ""'° ....tlowld. C'.oft. t1ln1 no d1"1tr11US dru1L No •tartlna.
No spec:IM 1mcl11. Gtt 11d of l.llCtu
lit Ind '1¥1 loftctr. OdllMJr tw belll
used succmluHy O, lr.outl/lds aH over
the coun11r lot J4 rws. 041lnu Plan
tOSll ,3,25 Mlf the MtSt tc'OnoflD' itz,.
$5,25. You must ION u11Y fat or your
mDnl'1 will bt refuAded W1!)1H dru11fst.
No que1t.loni eskH. Atetpt no 1u~
1tltt1IOS. Sold With this IUll'lnlH lrft
"Even after a full meal, you still look good enough to
eat.''
L. Jtl. Boyd
Water No Bother
For Bloodhounds
The sports equipment boys expect to sell 10 times as
many snowshoes this winter as they sold IO years ago ...
WAS IT reported the mother cockroach throws an average
or 37 young per litter? ... LIBRA girls. claim the Zodiac
devotees. tend to be the most beautiful in the world ...
AM ASKED the oldest Jette r of any alphabet. That's 0 .
Was the first Jetter of the r i r s t alphabet 2,000 years
B.C ....
ACTIVE medical doctors outnumber active airline
stewardesses by 12 to one, must men--
lion.
JUST elactly how an accomplished
lip reader can figure out what a talk-
er says, that's puzzling. Only 48 per-
:ent of the sounds in spoken English
:1re visible on the lips. Lot of others
look alike. Take "baby" and "bye
bye." And some words are just flat
)Ut invisible. Like ··hair" and •·egg."
QUER IES -Q. "Ask you r Ulve
and War man to name the four most significant develop.
ments_ of this cen tury ."'
011 Love
SAN DI EGO I Al' 1 -About
'.\1AN ILA ! AP i -Bomba
1novlcs. the siulln~ sex fnrc o(
tht> Philippines fihn industry,
have been banned rrozn the
new soc•tet.y o( Presidenl
2/3 or the coeds qucrit>d in Ferdinand E. ~1arcos.
San J)icgo say they believe The death b I 0 w , ad·
love or deep emotional iu-ministered by the Motion Pic-
volvcment is needed before ture Censor Board, came in a
they engage Jn sex. a directive that prohibits all
films "v.'hich serve no other researcher reports. purpose but to satisfy the
Prof. Stephen J. Bender of market for sex or violence." •
San Diego Stale University Guillermo c. de Vega.
said he surveyed 582 health chairman of the board, said
science students. including 302
young YIOmen.
THE n E p 0 RT v.•as
prepared for the 1972 con-
vention of the American
School Health Association.
It indicates that students on
the modern campus ma y not
be any IMre sexual l y
responsible than their parents
were, Bender said in an in-
terview ...
Bender said 84 percent of
the wo1nen said I hey n1ight
engage in premarital sex and
all of them believe in use of
contraceptive devices.
BUT, llE SAID, 64 percent
say love or a deep en1otional
feeling is necessary before
they would engage in sex
while 72 percent said they
wanted their first sexual ex-
perience to be spontaneous
and extemporary in nature.
"The irresponsibility of
such an attitude is ex-
emplifified by the fact that of
80 percent o( the females who
have had premarital sex, 85
percent or 68 percent of the
tota l females surveyed, have
either been or at some time
thought they were pregnant,"'
Dr. Bender said.
Among males, he said, only
23 percen t feel love or deep
'emotional commitment i s
necessary before intercourse.
"The remainder feel Jove is
nice but not really necessary, ..
he said.
-~--------
Top a c I re • • e s
1vere paid S3,ooo·
or ·1nore to bare
their bodies be·
fore the ca11tera.
the ban also would apply to
foreign fi lms. '
BOMBA. WHICll , means
bomb in Tagalog and Spanish.
mean t sex on celluoi.d in the
Philippines . Imagination was
not required in viewing a bom·
ba film.
Bomba movies '"ere cheap
to produce -about 100,000
pesos. under $15.000, a film.
Top stars such as Rossana
Ortiz and Alona Alegre were
paid $3.000 or more to bare
their bodies before the
camera.
The movies. always filmed
in black and white , were shot
in hotel or motel rooms. beach
cottages, or even a director's
home.
The plot, if it could be called
that, was sim ple. There were
always good guys and bad
guys -and girls. a diSC<lthque
scene with a bevy of bare-
bosomecl dancers, and several
fights with guns and karate
chops flying between the pro-
tagonists.
THE 1'10VIES v.·ere ' com·
pleted in a week two at the
most. The script, if one were
Eeono1nie ~lost
Beautiful Looks
"'ritten for the film . "'as were packed fro1n the time
a bare guideline, with the ac· their doors opent..'<i at 8 a.nl.
tors improving their Uncs as until midnight.
the film progressed. Dialogue ~1iss Townsend said she
\Y&S not what bombas were made her first bomba after
•about. being discovered in a beauty
a ANTHONY SCH~LS
HA.1101 CINTEI
UM M•Pv.r C11\l!I C01t11 M"'°', C•lli.nolt
"· f714) t7f-235J
1111 I. ·-!WAI ''· 4llahlllm, c:11, ~
..... 17141 776-510~
Bomba movies, although ex-ru;rlor by a producer of bomba ~=:. wrr:~: wlt'h:t t.!!1~ ~didn't have a job at the -
critics, particularly the clergy time," she explaine<I, "and it
in this predom.lnantly Roman was an easy way to make
Catholic nation. money."
"Bomba movies actually lfiiOiO.;;;;;;;_,;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~i:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiiiiiiii were made for the provinces."
said preUy SllWl Townsend,
herself r veteran oC 20 bomba
films. · Anyhow, most of the
censors were in fl.tanila."
t-.1iss Towsend. wh o se
THRIFTY """'· 0.0 lll\' Oll~f '>ll)H£~
HAMS
" . So Good 1t Win
parents live in San Franci,.., Haunt You . 'Til It's Gone" made her debut two years
ago. e Ready to s .... with Honey 'o Spice Glue
THE FIRST bomba ~vie e Ideal For Boothu1-No Preparation
appeared in 1968, largely in Ai-
response to the importation o e lmPQfr·ed Cheeses ctnd Wines
sex filns, particularly from • DeliCatesseft with Soncfwiches To Go
Europe. In the beginning, • All Types of Caterl1t9
bomba movies featured torrid J700"£. Comt Hlttlwoy, c0,.,.. u M• -671.,000
kissing scenes. then moved fo 1 1lodl wnt • 1 crew111 •nt•111r .. 1t
bare breast displays and 12!2 s. lroolhurst, Arialith" 6JJ.2461
u ltimat e\y the sex act itself. I~,.,... ... """""""""""""""""""""~·-'"-'"-"""-•-"'-"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~~"""""""""""""""~ "It's what the public wanted
and what they paid three
pesos (45 centsl to see," M.iss
Townsend explained.
There was no doubt about .
the bomba's popularity .
Houses showing such films
WE
F.EATURE
51.W
Del Monte
Glorletta
Hu1ts
Stouffers
Sqra Lee
Almaderi
Mannfn91 -Beef
COAST SUPER
MARKET
HOME DELIVERY
CALL
673-3510
33_.7 E.COAST HWY.
Heading north? Then head
for PSA BnO l ong Beach
Airport It's not alf th_at '
far. J!'s easy to get ......,
CN:lm'.-...Sttwyag llsqt.11
Into and out of. P1enly of
parking. And the crowds
& haven't found it yet. Your.
travel agent knows the way.
A. ln war, No. I is nuclear weapons. certainly. No. 2.
aircraft. In love, No. l is The Pill. No. 2, tha t remarkable
spontaneous innovation of 50 yt?ars ago, dating.
Q. "I'VE bee.rd the most embarrassing time in the
Miss America contest was when a man in disguise WQn
a nmnerup spot ... "
Mean Everything ~
A. Never happened. Most embarrassing time was four
years ago when a girl named Ford, whose dad worked for
Chrysler. was crowned queen on the TV show sponsored
by Oldsmobile.
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -
Looking good is an economic
necessity jn today's business
world. says a Ca I i rorn ia
plastic surgeon who tells
women to try a lace lift if they
need it to get a job.
Pike said food makes the
v.·oman; health spa owner
Deborah Szekeley 1'UShed for
stringen t exercise, and actress
Polly Bergen came out in
favor of fl awless makeup. ., J.
Aronsohn drew the most
--
WITH 52 percent of the vote, the ladies in a unanimous
block could elect anybody. Mere theory, my friend. Ladles
are. never unanimous in opinions On candidates, cats or
comfritters. They vote individually for individuality. Tt's
widely known they're far less likely than men to. ballot
the straight tickel
"You can have as many face
lifts as you want," safs Dr.
Richard Aronsohn. "You just
~have to be in good physical
shape and you have to be able
to afford it."
comments wi th his opinions on ~· .. r:(~~--
why a WC.man should remake
her face .
HOUNDS -Hard to believe this claim by an owner of
bloodhounds. The notion that criminals can wade through
water to escape the dogs is false. be contends. Says his
houncb actually can track better through water which holds
the scent. Remarkable, if true.
He was one qf four beauty
experts who told fashion
designers and writers here
about fashion 's backbone -
the beautiful v.·oman.
"Beauty colors our thinking
when we meet people." he
said : "It gels us jobs. It CCI·
tainly elects our officals.
"In this country there's
pervasive e mployment
discriminafion against ugly
women. the real losers ... No
employers will admit it.
Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New-
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
•
Hop in your
car and come
as you are!
The Imperial
folk s are
waiting for you!
h1>efia1Bn
Co•taMeaa
Harbor Blvd. et Fair Drive
(714) 979·1000 •
Nutritioni s t Arnold
.lite toor tn pt•ce or vodka. You'll ltnd tgor easier to d!tnk.
It mnes 5on!wtll1ven. Bloody Mam. And you·tt find Igor extremely conaentel.
tonJcdrtnb better lhen om: T In mixed company (with orange fulc<,
In l•ct. IOot does everything vodk• can tomato Juice or tonic>. Igor ts delJOhltul.
do. An!! does It better. Meet Igor tile-Jnvtslbl• todnr In your
Bocaute Igor 15 lnvtslblc. local llQUOr store or bar. $~49
Jou'll ttnd Igor smoother. 11tls Is whet he looks !Ike. Allh
The secret nllWsplrll YoU use lnsteado!wdk& . ' IOOft THC IHVISIBLC• BM.TlllORt. MO.• ~1 Of U.SA •60~• UOUCUR
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In the OnU9 Cc! ut'a primary
adwrtlllrig medium DAILY PILOT
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Birthday · Sparkles
For a Real Jewel
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This person I
am writing about will never receive any
citations or awards. No one will give her
a testimonial dinner. She'll never get her
picture in the paper, even when she dies,
because she'll.not important or famou5.
But she is truly one or the greatest
human beings who ever lived. October 17
is her birthday and I would like to "im-
mortalize" her In a special way. She
reads your column every day.
This woman lost her parents w~n 'she
was very young. She was raised by
relative.s who worked her like a slave.
She had learned to cook lo• do:om of
boarders by the time she was 16. She
married.at 20 and reared 15 children.
They had no store-bought luxuries, but
tons of homemade bread and fresh
vegetables from her own garden. This
woman had a marvelous sense of humor.
She knew how to administer discJpllne
and give people faith ln themselves
becaub'll she had faith tn herself.
She knew how to live with amall-pox,
whooping cough, measles, TB, broken
bones, cancer, heart failure a n d
alcoholiam. She survived miscarriages,
business failures and had three sons in
the war in Vietnam.
She Is not a nervous wrec{, has never
taken a sleeping pill or tranquUizer in
her life and refuses to spend five minutes
feellng sorry for herself. In case you
haven't guessed it already, this woman is
my mother -and she is my candidate
for The Mother ol Any Year. -PROUD
OF HER
DllAR M01'11ER: Happy BlrtWay le
yOG, d ar. Your·ttp nnaeill over.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have a 21).
year-<>ld daUihter woo la In conege. The other day, ou1 of a.clear 1ky, oho aald, "I
want to tell you tomethlng ao )'t'lll won't
be aurprioed wholl II happena. I am nol
going to live very long."
Then Iha polnled lo lhe IKellne on the
' palm of htr hand and aal~; "'lllore ll is
-plain u ean be. My llfcline ls croued
by another line about one fourth the way
across the palm, which means a very
silott Ille."
I tried W persuade her thal palm
reading Is bllnlc, lhat lhett la no
slgnlficance to tt whatever, but she b un-
convinced. Can you give me oome facla
that will ease my mind? If YOU said I~
she migbl believe it. Please, Ann. -
MOTHER IN DISl'RESS
DEAR MOTHER: Everybody knowa
somebodf who went to a fortune teller, a
tea leaf reader, 1 • palmist, a crystal-
gazer or an astrologlsl, and was told
something that came true. It wu a c::om.-
blnaUon of gueuworlc, colnckleac::t,
happenstance, ex a a: I er a:t I ea, lm-
aglnatloo, adding facll, deledag facll -
and II b wlllloal valldlty.
There la .., ldealUle bub for Jlllm
readlllg or klodred fleldt IUt prodJct Ille
future. Tell your daagbler to ase ber
bead.
U thole GYPIJ' fortune teUen eoald
predld tbe ~ Uaey'd be oat at a
racetrack or tbe La1 Vegas 1amt111
tables lDlteod of llWD& ID Uiose bot teats
reading palms for a dollar a pop. M .. y
an oclogeaarlaa llu -llarled w1.-a Mort utellae, accordlag &o a relative of
mlnewlloba"'-tl-.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm 16 and lbe
original girl who can't say ·"no:'' They
call me "Rosie Roundheell" and make
1 joke of ii, bul !l's nol funny. My
rtpulaUon is bad and l 'm Ql'ed lo death
my lolka will get wind of Jt.
Every time I go out with a dlfferent
guy I ut to myselt, "'Jbb Ume l'm
gotng to be a lady." Bul ooe kiss and
I'm a goner. Don't tell me to get pro-
fessional help. Give me aome practical
advice. -WANT TO BE GOOD
DEAR WANT TOt I -If oo sbort.cwb or euy IOl:ltlo• to a )11'9Wem
lllal pea -•• ,.... It wtll -• tot ol flard .......... rid ., llllo _.... ••
,... -bol ...... ,.. do ,.... iv. colJld .......... Start llWaf -,_. Kl!9ol ......... ud &ood lllCL
Even u drlnfdnC la lbe "In" thlll( In
youi crowd; It needn't crowd you out.
Leam the feels fn>m AM L8ndera'
booklet, "Booze and You -For
Teenagen Only.11 Send 35 cent.I In coin
and a long, .. ir.Rdd"""'1, stamped
envelope to the DAILY PILOT with ywr
request.
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Winning Style Costly:
Galonos trademarks of
hand detail and
luxurious fabrics
show in this bugle
beaded silk-satin
evening gown and
beige wool fleece
pantsuit with ·topper.
Minorify Gets His Vote1 l By MARIAN t1Dt1STY di3regard lhe advice. Women 1re1
basically insecure. Most are only too
happy to ape each other." NEW YORK -Tbe world's
mUlionalresses gladly go to any length for
James Galnnos.
Long trips and huge prices aren't a
barrier to those in the financial position
to invest $1,000 in a "littlHlOth.ing" dress
or up lo $4,000 for a spectacular evening
gown .
It's oot unusual for women lo spend
$2S,OOO.plus for a seasonal buying spree
in the 30 stores coast.to-coast that
feature GaJanos .
About his diminutive world of
privileged women like Rosalind Russell
and Mr.i. Alfred Bloomingdale and the
luxury clothes which get them on the
best-dressed list:
"My fashiOlllJ are for affluent women
past SO who are rich, sophisticated, have
impeccable taste, don't want to be fad·
dl.st.s and flip for expensive details 1ike
handmade buttonholes and stikhed C<>i·
Jars.
"SMbby? Of course. Soobbtsm la part
of the Galanos aura and mysUque. Even
thclse who can't afford the clothes are
very curious about them."
T h e 48-year-old Philadelphia-born
Greek·American inched to hlS present
apex and , like it or not , is confident
enough to tell overly tWinionated ladies
exac\]y what he thinb.
"Most women are indecisive about
clothes," he says. "They re.ally don't
have the foggiest notion about how they
should look. If Y<>U tell them, many
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
T.....,, ~ 11, 1'11 P9" 1J
• In Dallas re(:entJy, he wu working]
with a tall woman with a big frame wlx»
·was in the market for an evening gown.'
She wasn 't fat -just large. ,
Galanos. impressed by the aristocratkb
carriage of the oU·rich buyer, suggeste&
a black chiffon, semi-fitted chemiW
fonnal with white satin collar and cuffs.;
The silhouette concealed het'flgure faulte
µi. a kind or subdued chic. ~
Instantly a whement a r g u m e n t
between designer and client erupted .
The lady pooh-poohed the black ~
idea with the comeback she preferred it
"m,ore appropriate" print chiffon with in-
teresting decoUetage and a swishy skirt. ·' . { Galanos, aware the fashion she was re.~
questing, would be all wrong, simply.
cooldn't contain his Mediterranean..
anger:
"Madame," he chided, "I'm .spendin(
time and effort with you . Don't defe8'_
yoursell by wearing something so ob-
viously self-destructive ."
Later. when calm was reinstated, the
lady returned and bought that dress -
and more. "Sometimes l get a little tn.-
sulting," Galanos says honestly. "But 1
just can't tolerate stupidity. There are-
experts in every field. I am a fashion ex-
pert."
When he was 10, Galanos started doinlt
serious fashion sketching and eventually
found he could make patterns out o£
discarded newspapers. An appreciatlv&
teacher entered a sketch in a New Jersey
school contest and Galano.s easily won
$50.
"The minute 1 touched fabric I ime,,:-
instinctively how to drape," he says:
"When I ' went to Traphagen and the.
teachers there tried tf'I sh"W me things [
had--alriady ac~pl1shed myself -I
simply dropped out."
He quit school but not fashion.
Galanos went to Paris where he learn-
ed the intricacies or fashion in the
backrooms of then.famous French
designers in whose shadow he worked.
Eventually, v.'hcn he returned to Lc$
Angeles, a sympalhetlc friend of means
backed Galanos in his own business and
finally in the mid-'SOs, he became Olli~
those "overnight sensations ."
Galanos has since given his backer a~
"piece" of his business as a thank-yott
gift. He rtpakl the original loan yean
ago. "When I needed the suppo rt, he
gave it to me."
Brown: Bagging Suede
Dreams do come truf. Th~ new hand nr machine
wuhable suede featured by Sears can be Ironed with
brown paper and a regular Iron set at "rayon." The
fabrl c Is used In coordinated weslern pantii, jacket,
vest and skirt that lake dozens of washings without
'
losing color or original suppleness. Hang-lags on the
garmenl.3 give explicit ins!ructlons for maintain ing
the specially processed suede. The outfil Is avalf·
able through the catalog and In some relail stores.
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Political Res .ults: .The Closer the Better
-,
Bv CA ROL f\100R~
OI 111"9 DtllY l"lltf ,,.,.
"People 1nay think the
Presi'.ient ls T•f~~ 01/ln to vote
for. But I've dt'c1dt.·d that's a
long 1.1:ny a\\·ay fron1 1ny
personal inrhit>nct. where I
can work for the quallty of
life," said Mrs. Betty Inman .
1\s an officer in teachers'
organii.aUons and a volunteer
for the ChUdren's Lobby. she
contends "politics m e a n s
whatever you have to say to
somebody, some\\•herc about
some decision.
"When Orange Co u n t y
popul ation grows 300 percent
Your Horoscope
In 10 years it's h a rd to
remi>mbt.·r that :rou have n say
and evt'n harder to hnd 1he
pruper place to say it "
But she W"ged parlicipants
in Orang<' Coast College's
\\'1dcnu1g \Yorlds of Y.'ornen
~rles to be<'on1e involved in
city and school board e!e<:lions
since these offices are often
springboards to h I £ h c r
politics.
YOUR CHOICE
ti.lrs. lnn1an suggested
recruiting a friend to run for
office and following through
with financial or ser\'ice t'OO·
trlbutions which she categor1z·
ed 111!1 jX'rsonal. organ1zat1on.
hcudqui\rlers. ('lerH:aJ a n d
ptrsu.as1ve.
•·At lbe entry l{'veJ you c::in
buy fund-raiser tickets, host
coffee hours , dt'Corate head·
quarters, prepare mailings or
register voters,'' she said.
"At the more committed
level. jobs include selling fund ·
raiser tickets, o rg anizing
"'orkshopt;, providing cam-
paign photography, designing
flyers, researching Issues and
writing background papers.''
Her audience offered some
debate:
··Coffees aren't that ef-
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fectlve. Those who come.
already support the candidate
"-'hilt others stay away, fear·
Ing contamination by associa·
tion or unwilling to discuss the
issues.''
STARTING POINT
"Newcomers St:e I o c a I
polltlcs as a self·propelled
machine with no way to catch
on to the huge thing."
"You can get you r foot ln :1
little ways by attending PTA
and school board meetings to
find p':'Oplc of your persuasion.
Then '.''Ork together to get
something acromplished."
"Bond issues arc people's
Gemini:
Look for
Be Cautious,
Loopholes
WEDNESDAY
OCTOBER 18
By SYDNEY 0~1ARR
: When selecting a prOOuct,
·Aries seeks durability. The
·p.!lllve of this zodiacal sign
Wires simplicity. The Aries
'.person is "-'illing to pinneer. to
'strive for the new and to
discard the outmoded. Aries is
the inventor, independent and
original. This is the natural
first sign of the zcxliac,
associated with th e head,
reh1ted to number 9 and to the
ph1net Mars. Aries harmonizes
M'ith Gemini, Leo and Sagit·
tarius. is drawn to Libra and
.enjoys arranging m o n e y
transactions with Taur u s.
:Atl~--shoulct-cxercise caution
in dealing with Cancer and
tapricorn.
: , ARIES (ti.1arch 21·April 19 ):
Not easy to keep secrets. Ye t.
fl. certain amount of discretion
JlOW is necessary for your
general "'elfa re. Saglttariao
~xpresses curinsity. Be frank.
but keep something in reserve.
Clandstine meeting may be
9'I agenda.
TAURUS /April 20-May 20):
Check apparent minor mat·
lers. Dir.: for information. Ob-
tain hint from Ariel message.
Friend may complain about
oihnent. Be in terested. but
don 't fall (('Ir typical sob story.
Aid those willing to help
them.~e lves.
. GEr.1lNl (May 21 -June 20 ):
Sense of perception i s
~~ightened. You find e~ers.
Vour ability to investigate
comes to fore. Virgo is in-
volved. There can be con-
structive changes. Contract,
agreement has loophole. You'll
discover it!
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Home, family affairs occupy
important position. But your
thoughts are ··a t a distance ."
You strive to gel SCJlid footing
for leap into future. Status quo
no longer satisfies. Ynu ll.'ili
make the change.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221: \rou
are oot seeing too clearly.
Emphasis is on romantic n1>-
tions. Positive thinking is fine
-but direct action actually
gels results. Pisces individual
may be whispering sweel
nohings. Don't be 11 eve
ever)!thing.
VIRGO (A"g. 23-Sept. 22 1;
Study Leo message. You may
be telling too much. Key also
is to ga ther information. Be
especially wary "'·here con·
tracts are concerned. Don 'I be
in a hurry to commit yourself
to one course. Look around.
Patience is your ally.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22):
Finish what you s t a r t .
Overcome temptation to sklp
essentials. Ne ighbors seem
filled with misinf'ormation. Be
a pleasant listener but sift for
truth. Some are convinced
they can .take advantage of
you. Protect self.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Stress confidence, origi nality.
Imprint your own style .
Creative endeavors a re
favored . Don't lend money.
Deception could exist in finan-
cial area. Young person is
Shopper Overboard!
persuasive. Be fair but hold
line on budget.
SAGITTARIUS (l'Oov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): Aura of glamor ex·
ists. Take special care with
apparel. Avoid the obvious in
both dress and actions. Hunch j/ • • .. ., pays off -you penetrate -
mystery. Those who were in-
dilferent are apt now lo si t up
and take notice.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19!: You change rouline.
Messages arc dispatched and
answered. Ideas a re
evaluated. You are more ac·
tive than usual. Check direc-
tions. reservationB. Saglttarlan
can aid. Don't let pride stand
in way of-progress.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb.
18): 1'ear down if necessary.
Be willing lo remodel. to
rebuild. Money and promises
don't blend. Be realistic.
Protect assets. T ake in-
\•ent.ory . Find out what's com-
ing in, what is being dispers·
ed. Avoid loss through
carelessness.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Merch 20):
Be independent, confident.
One in authority is uncertain.
You get what you want
through series or judicious
calls. inquiries. Doq't wait to
be told . Instead, be a se\f.
starter. Gemini and Virgo
could be involved.
Olsco~r vour love 1nd mon.ev m8h!sl
Send blrlhdlll Bnd 15 t8n!s to Om8rr
Asiroloav ~ecrets, Tiit DAILY PILOT,
60• J1..0, Grend (en1r1t Sl8ll""• N-
Vork, N. v. 10011. vw·n llnd 1n1we'1
In SY<IMY Omarr'1 boOli;lel, .. Secr.i
Hlnh for Mfln end women.''
• only c.hance to say 'no' lo ris-. sometimes harassed by data
ing tnxes. It 's too bad that 111pu1.
schools have to depend on our
mos.t, vulnerable taxation ;roc--OPINION TOLD
css. She urged more contact at
" 'Dirty politics' doesn't this level because !'Maybe the
have to be. If more people group won't decide an Issue
would participate there would my way but I ha vti had my
be more awareness and less say and have not de(aulted my
chance for wrongdoing." . ~ibillty."
"Once you get involved, it's As an example of how
like eating popcorn. You can't special inlerest. group s
stop." coalesce for Impact, she n1en·
Mrs. Inman reminded her tioned the Children's Lobby ef-
listeners about the profusion f~rts. in Sac;z-amento on leglsla.·
of lay committees and com· t1~ mvolving teeth, day care,
missions v.•hich vote in good child abusti and foster care.
fai th although they are A board of ~ director• and
a paid lobbyist champion the
rights or children. • ' l h e
voic,less majority," a rt e r
liaison work with pediatri-
cians, educators, health of·
flcials, partnts and the youths
themselves,
Her experience in t h e
capital has given confidence
that the system does work.
"There really are competent
people working in government.
111e cream rises to the top and
there's outstanding knowledge
and willingness to serve.
"Some legislators told me
they read all their con-
stituents' mail personally;
they get '° li\Ue. Bui !hey ..,.
tua.Jty want to hear OUT ra·
tionale.
"OCten concerned cliliens
don 't real lie the op~rtunlly
they hive to write bllJJ, It's
Uk'ir ideas that th6 COW'IJel
puts In . legal fonn for the
ltsislator to cerry.
"Politics is not all mMey.
There's the s>ower of mass and
knowledge. too. Each [IOlltlcal
body has a legal, effective and
popular leader. These may all
be the same person but
sometimes the capability ill
split so be sure you deal with
tbe effective leader."
Traveling Tops
Club Functions
Trojan Alumni
Harbor Area Trojan Alumni
are planning to return to the
SC campus Saturday, Oct. 21,
for the homecoming game
with Washington.
Buses will depart from
Irvine Coast C.Ountry Club at 9
a.m. for a pregame picnic on
the campus where a special
table and tent have · been
reserved.
SC Juniors
During National Education
Week, Oct. 22·28, South Coast
Juniors or Fountain Valley will
sponsor an essay contest for
students at Fountain Valley
High School. Two $25 savings
bonds will be awarded to the
winners.
LB Junion
A bus lrlp to the television
show, "Let's Make a Deal" is
being planned !or Tuesday.
Oct. 24, by Laguna Beach
Juniors. Buses will leave Boat
Canyon at 4:30 p.m. and l he
nuting will include dinner and
the show.
Nursery School
Dr. Stan Walters w i 11
discuss the parents' role in
guiding the preschool child
after a potluck dinner at 7: 30
p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26 , in the
South Huntington Beach Com·
munity Nursery School.
AARP
Sisterhood Pros and cons or the prop-
A-sewtng·demoMhamrt-will-oSti.Q..q_on_Lh L Nove~be_r_
hlghlight the next meeting of ballot will be presented by the
Temple Hillel Sisterhood at League of Women Voters for
7:30 p.m. Mood~y, Oct. 23, In thp Newport Beach Chapter,
th: ~ercury ~vmgs and Loan American Association o t
bu1ldmg, Huntington Beach. Retired Persons.
OES
Prior to installation of new
officers on Nov. 14. Harbor
Star, Order of t h ·e Eastern
Star will have a farewell night
at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 24, in
the Masonic Temple, Newport
Beach .
First Nighters
First Nighters or the Laguna
Moulton Communit y
Playhouse will have a cocktail
party and dinner in Victor
Hugo's prior to attending the
npening nf Tennessee
Williams' "Summer and
Smoke" Tuesday, Oct. 21 .
Mn. Alice .OOmas and Mrs.
Harriet McCOMell are takin g
reservations.
The group will meet st I
p.m. Thursday. Oct. 26, in the
Newport Harbor L u t h e r a n
Church.
Art League
Cnsta Mesa Art League will
have its semi-annual art show
and sale at South Coast Plaza
Thursday-Saturday, Oct. 26-28.
Proceeds will be given in
scholarships to art students.
District
San Clemente Women's Club
will host a salad luncheon and
meeting of Orange District .
C.alifornia Federation· or
Women's Clubs Thursday, Oct
26.
Menu Goes Off Course Fall Fashions Take to the Sea
ny ERMA BOMBECK
read some pretty in·
·Hble things in the
1\',raper, bul the story I
c:in'I get over is the one about
thr woma n from Michigan
who grocery shops for staples
unce a yea r.
She makes up a grocery list
!'.! pages long. fills up 14 shop-
ping carts. transfers it to 56
paper bags. coughs up $571.88
to pay for it, loads: it in two
can and shouts gaily over her
shoulder. "See you next year."
I once bought eight boxes o(
cake mix on sale, four for a
dollar, and by the end of the
week we had a cake every day
and two oo Sunday. I can't
save a thing around the house.
\Vhen my husband taught
5ehool we used to get paid the
l!'th of every month . On the
16th. we ate like a Weight
Wa tcher who had just fallen
into a vat of baked potatoes
and sou r cream. For 15 da ys,
we had three meats at every
meal, five vegetables and a
cbolct of rour desserlll:.
1be first of the month, we
btgan to panic. By the time
tht last week rolled a.round, t
was dyeing the rtce brown
trying to palm It off as ground
beef and sue~ on dental
flos.'i. One night (the 13th Qf so me
WOMht'I WllA•
""' ... JI .,, •. °"" "-'• ..._ ... _ ,,._
The 1to11 with l1b1!1
of cl!1ti111li111,
Yo11t c.h•'1• 1C1(e.i111 w1lc11111.
\._. ... ,_ ... Odll.W 11tr1 r
I
AT
WIT 'S
END
month). my husband picked at
a mound of cocktail onions and
Spam and said, ''If you can't
manage the food any better
than this throughout t h e
month, why don't you· plan
your menus ahead and I'll
hide the stuff so you won't use
It all up the first couple of
weeks."
As I contemplated our
dessert !or the evening (Kool
Aid over crushed ice) I had lo
agree it might work.
The first night he came
through the door. I grabbed
him by the shirt and said,
"Where are they?"
"Where are what?"' he ask·
ed.
"The bananas. I've been
looking all day for the
bananas ."
"They'·re scheduled for
salad tomorrow night."
"I don't want to wait until
tomorrow n!ght. •· 1 said test!·
ly. "I'D KILL FOR BANANAS.
AND YOU KNOW IT!"
Our domestic bliss didn't
tnd with bananas . I tore the
~ FRANCIS-
\.ORR ..!
nNE STATIONERY
1t1l CAL!.NOAltl
P,lil'Ell WEIGHTS
MAONl!TIC l'IC1u llr FltAMeS
1111 I tlllf ltSIWll 111·1111
tllllA flt aAI • CP \'lllllf •Attlll
attic up one day looking for
the canned Boston brown
bread to go with the creamed
cheese. And to ration a
woman's cof(ee is dehumaniz.
ing.
I got to thinking about that
doggone woman in Michig an .
Could a person really stock up
once a year or did she get
home, unload her 56 shopping
bags and tell her youngest,
"There's nothing for lunch.
Pedal down and get some
lunch meat and potato chips.·•
Anyway, J decided to try il.
1 went to the S1pennarket,
made a grocery list 18 pages
long, filled up 20 shopping
cari>, translem!d 58 paper
bags, C<JUg!>ed up !Ml.19 to
pay roe It and then loaded It
Into two cars end sbo\lted over
my shoulder, "Ste you next
year."
A:s I drove by I heard a
smart-mouth carry-out boy
say, "You said that la!lt week.
lady."
NEW ...
thi' doubl' bl'l'uted
sailor c08t by F'leld.~ton
ll'tt111 2 l 0 7 -""""-""" .
ltr.• •••I lllcll•lul"l1t ••••••f '"""""~·· ...... "' ... ·-·~1 ... .i JJuntlnitton H1rbour
(714 ) 8'Hli6
Town & Country
Orange
(ill) S58-t5tS
\
Little
Marcy
NOV. 4th
HUNTINGTON
CENTER
Aw1rd winnin9 child r1o;ord i119
•rll•t M•tCf Tltn•r •IMll pupptl
'Little M1rcy' wlH •PP••' 111
] livt thowt on 111r m•ll 1t
11 •·"'" I & 2 p.m., •'"' wlll
•11to9r1ph 1lb11m•, H•r 1how
It 1po11•or1d by
Tht F.111;1y l oolr Sto11
111d •lbw"'' .,, 011 1111,
Hvnti119ton C111l11, l11ch
•I Edln911 I
S111 D+190 Frw,. H.t . 191-0556
Fashion Fantasea is the nauti·
cal theme for the annual fash ·
ion show brunch sponsored by
Tiara de-Ninos Auxiliary, Chll·
dren's Home Society, at 10 a.m.
Saturday, Oct. 21, in the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club. Mrs.
Alger Cl?rk Oefll and Mrs.
Gordon Vanderslice n1odel two
or the fashions which will be
presented by La Galleria or
Newport Beach.
Boxed
Christmas Cards
Imprinted
FREE
""' 'fo avoid disappolntmenl, prospect!\'<'
brides are reminded to have their \\'cdd1nr
stories with black and white £Joss .... p11oto-
graphs to the DAILY PIL01 1Vomr1"' I '•·
partment one week before the wedrling
Pictures received after that time \\'11 1 1101
be uaed.
For engagement announcenu!nt:-11 If.
imperative that the story, also ~t·('o1nn . 111ed
by a black and white glossy p1rtu :-e lit> sub·
mitted six weeks or more before thP \redd1n o
date. If deadline is not anet, onlv a Slflr\· \\•iii
be used.
To help fill requirement!) on both \Vt!d·
ding and engagement stories, 1or1ns a re
available in all of the lJAILY Pl LO'f offices.
Further guestions will be answered by
Women's SeeUon stat! members at 642-4321.
FOR HIM
GOLDEN NEEDLE • • invites JOIL to a
, 1 lino on
c~r(I, 11<'11
tcldl!IOn1I
llM 11.
( ltl'!VltlOIN' ..
1xlral ....
txplr1t
Nev, 11
FaEE DEMONSTRATION
o(,_;,,,,. <;if,rdl1?~
Thi ,,tlh l<k<o ~~ . ' •
AIM look tvtt lllr t•Plnd.cl ~<OllP
.. Cfllrltlm.t C1r1f 1•ffr ""'' ( .. r,,.,
M ll'tl l"',r'lnl 911 lllt,tl .
sall°ma's
CAllDI e OIFTS e CANDLl!'t
pllll 1Mv....,••1t •RIP ltwt!r'(
to.f'/ AT LANTA
ti M11gnoU1, H1tntl1\9!on lltet lo
on sewing men's wear
Thursday, ~ctober 19, 1972
11:00 a.m., 2:00 p.m. and 7::10 p.m,
Come and get your
RlEE "Sewing Menswear" booklet
OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAYS
I C•fdl! C1ro1 e Courtt1y W•8P """ ~''-~~--~-~~~~~~~~---~------~-----~J
·~· ' -
' 1 , .
~
[
1
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
•
•
•
•
•
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
..• AND 'ttXJR
EA.RS ARE A~
L\IPORTANT Fl\RT OF
HfARlljQ &CALJ5E -THEY c.m:Jj 60..l'ID
WAVES LIKE
~B\l..l ..
61..0VE'5 !
NANCY
LA
QUICK·-AN ARMORE:D
BANK TRUCK IS BEING
HELD UP
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I
ACROSS 49 Grant
1 lelephone 1empo11ry
5 Containers USI Of
10 Fenc• part SO N1u11'1
14 M1xlur1 n11ion: Abbr.
15 The Forum, 51 .. ____
for on11 Ointmore":
16 Preposition Martha Finley
17 Kind ol flying title
mammal 53 Savcir fair•
19 Pack 56 Macaw
20 Man's name 56 Contest of
21 Thorough-uncertain
l11a: Abbr. ou1com1
22 In cornpari· 61 Putmoneyin
son wi1h the pot
23 As a result 62 Self-restr1ln1,
25 Noted of 11 sort
American 64 Smell
writer 65 Singer-····
26 Make muddy Fisher
30 Owed 66 Tex
31 "-····· 67 Asi1n
Inferno" weights
34 ···-68 Mu1ical 1ign1
sanctum 69 The Sultan of
36 Deals out ----; B1be
38 High Ruth
mountain
39 Capable of DOWN
being 1 Bav :-ientifled eceived 2 Winglike
irds 3 Por1r1v
44 Mal --·--:. 4 ~un e11ily
Sports 5 Tran1portld
announc1r 6 E)l.ltt
45 Become 7 Organs
established 1ecret!ng oily
and dev1lop m1Her:2
47 Ji-nportari, words
economic 8 Craftvmen
1t1ti1tic: Abbr, 9 G11titv
Y1tslerd11v's Puzzle Sollfed·
10 Auto part
l 1 Postponed
for consid1r1-
ti on
12 Portico
13 Community
18 Sor1 of:
Suffix
24 Push against
gen Uy
25 Forn1er
Turkish title
of honor
2fl Vimy -----:
WW-1 bettle
~Ill
27 V11gelab1e
28 Acedemic
11nk
29 Allow
31 ---Moint1s
32 Scott heroin•
33 Put out
35 ptrictneu of
action
37 Claims on
property
40 Tanni1court
illl'l'l
'11 --Amerle1n
46 Race hor111:
Slang
48 Faela very
sorry for
51 Wast1 eway
52 Time period
53 Art colony of
New Me)l.ico
54 lndlan of
P•ru
55 Maple genus
57 Adjusts
58 Ice cryst1f1
59 USC'a
tradi1lon1I
rival
60 Skin i
83 SmattOld
World bird
. '
•
"·ir ......... _.
A ~rm.i: "rr of IM'RYTHING;
EH?
PEANUTS
...
IN
JUDGE PARKER
..
MISS PEACH
I
J
I
I
FU 'I'll 1tE"
1R(1Ne
'?11.oTS
of ~CA ~ -.. , ... . C::::::=ic=::i
PERKINS
• ••
by Chester Gould
MO USE, MOOHMAIO.
ME WOUL.D Nar
Ml!EO M CALL.
I (
by Tom K. Ryan
M0R1'. r:llANCES
fOR A 1lJNY.
by Al Smith
IN
JAIL.!
' by Dale Hale
by Emie Bushmiller
•••• ••
c
< ' ' .
DOOLEY'S WORLD
nr.--
ntlfr I MIND
WINOl>/6 tt:lt/
llP ~ll(lf
WHIU', NORMAi/-.
SALLY BANANAS
®
11 II ii •
ANIMAL CRACKERS
ll'G Nar OFTEN I/CV
CAN 6ET GIX alMfWlall'5 11'1 ONE flA<f
,.
by Mell
by John Miles
C' • c
-----
Jl
11 ~'!
Tu~sday, October 17, 197? DAILY PltOT JS
by Ro9er Bradfield
1
1
l ;
by Ferd Johnson
VE~E1.A8LE JUICE? ,.-!hi ._
/<.FINE Ex.AMPlE"
)O<J'l>E SSTTING •.•
WHAT IF OUI<
CUSTOMEJ<S
SAW YOU
IN HEl<E?
10 -17
by R09er BoDen
' &., I
10<1111\
"Now lhis -l"Tlnkle cream is SID a Jar -for Maven'•
saR, react!
DENNIS THE MENACE
•
' •
I
I
I
• '
,,.,_
FIRST HANO LOOK -Getting their first look at fielder Pete Rose, infielder Tony perei and pitcher
the rain-sodden Oakland Coliseum are Cincinnati Clay Carroll \Vorkers in background use squeegees
Reds (from left) n1anager Sparky Anderson, out-to clear \Yater from tarpaulin covering the infield. ; --------'-----"----'--"-------'----------_:_--"-----'---'---""''--""--'-_:__c__
;
'\Colts' Cm·ry . l Rap s Ouster
~ j Of McCaff ertv
• •
f
'BALTIMORE (AP) -Center Bill Cur·
ry sharply criticized today the firing of
'•Don McCafferty, contending the head
~ ~ch of the Baltimore Colts had been
~ improperly blamed fGr the team's IGSing
' ~ record.
~ "Mac is a decent man and a talented
~ coach," Curry sa id. "and the way be bas
~ been treated is a real injustice."
~ Curry also rapped Joe Thomas,
~ Baltimore's new general manager, wbo
~ fired McCafferty Monday, replaced. him
~ with defensive line coach John Sandusky.
~ and said the Colts would "sort of start a
~ new regime with young players." ! Noting Thomas had announced that the
2 dismissal of McCafferty was made "for
I the good of the team," Curry ·said:
f "That's the same general manager who ' . j hasn't bothered to go around and meet
: all the guys and learn their names." f Thomas said the youth movement for
{ the Colts, 1-4 for the season, would even
$ affect Johnny Unitas, the 39-year--0ld
~ quarterback now in his 17th National
~ Football League campaign.
~ ··11,1arty Domres will play a lot more
t from now on." Thomas said, "and he
could even start."
Curry made his personal views known
prior to a scheduled meeting of the entire
Colts' squad, following today's practice • seSsion, at which a fonnal learn state.
nt~t was to be drafted.
·After a closed door meeting Monday
night, attended by 28 of tbe Colts, Curry
sfid it was decided to delay a team
t statement until all 47 players could
J. gilther at one lime. That was impossible
j te accomplish at the hastily called night
' session. 1 "I know I'm sticking my neck out, and
1·might be gone after this," Curry said,
''but this is the way I feel. Don McCaf-
ffrty is the finest gentleman 1 have
played for in pro football."
,Curry ooted that McCafferty had
directed the Colts to the Super Bowl title
as a rookie head coach in 1970, following
t
11 years as an assistant Baltimore coach,
apd that his 21-&-l prior to this season
was the best among active NFL coaches.
"Now that we've lost four games. he's I ~ made the scapegoat, and that's
Lio11 s Fall, 2 4 -2 3
Pack ls B ack: Rumors
No Longt}r ~eculntion
DETROIT (AP) -Those rumors that
''The Pack is Back" may not be prema-
ture speculation after all.
If the Green Bay Packers aren't back
as a c6nler'lding team in the National
Football League then why do they own a
4-1 record to stand atop the National
Conference Central Division?
Wasn't Minnesota supposed to be there,
with Detroit second. and maybe the Pack-
ers third, ahead or Chicago?
Monday night they had a chance to
show their stuff before a national tele-
vision audience, and they used the op-
portunity to help crack the pessimistic
swamis' crystal baJls
Quarterback Scott Hunter fired a 15-
yard touchdo\vn stri ke to rookie \\'idc
receiver Lellllld Glass with just l: 54 left
on the clock, and rookie Chester Marco!
kicked the extra point, to give the Pack-
ers a 24-23 victory.
Green Bay had trailed nearly 'the en·
tire game before h-tarcol's closing mo-
ments' ronversion. and the Lions never
recovered from tile shock.
"To come from behind in a game like
this really raises our coofidence," Pack·
ers coo.ch Dan Devine snid rather quietly
afterwards. "But l'm not saying we didn't
have confidence in ourselves before this
g!UJle. We knew we had a good team. and
this reirlforres that."
The teams entered the game tied for
first with :J..l records, with Minnesol.3. third
at 2-3 and Chicago last with a 1-3-1 mark .
"\Ve always thought we could win it
.•. " Devine said of the title. "Now we
know we can win it."
The Packers trailed 17·7 al halfti1nl'.
Then Errol Mann of the Lions and Mar-
col traded field goals of 45 and 34 yards
respectively before Packers comerback
Ken Ellis turned the game around by rac·
ing 80 yards with a punt return fur a
touchdown.
"We're in front now and nobody's going
to catch us," said Ellis, a third-year man
from Sou them University, who seemed
the happiest person in the winnen'·dress-
lng ""'"'-Nobody was smiling in the Josera' dress--
Ing room at Tiger Stadium.
"We're not out of it by any means."
insisted Lions coach Joe Schmidt. "Now
we have to bounce back against San Diego
and they have a fine team."
Detroit hosts the Chargers Sunday,
\\.'hile Green Bay entertains Atlanta at
Milwaukee.
"I don't think Green Bay is a betttr
team than us. but they're a soi.ind team."
offered Detroit quarterback Greg Landry.
who had two passes intercepted by safety
Jim Hill. "One point doesn't make them
a better team,"
Detroit capitalize({. on two Packers m.is--
lakes to score it.a two first half touch-
downs. Landry ran around right end
rrom two ya rds out for a first quarter
TD and -Altie Taylor plunged off right
tackle in the second period for the other.
The Landry score came eight plays and
30 yards after comerback Lein Barney
picked off a Hunter pnss, breaking the
quarterback's siring of 80 passes without
an interception. The string dated back to
lsst season.
$CIA lly Q111r11rs
Green SIV P•cktr• 0 1 10 1 -14
Delt"gll Lloo• 1 10 J 3 -lJ o -Lal'ldry, 2 ""' (Minn klckl D -FG, Mann 12
D -Tavior, I rvn CM111o11 kldtl GB -Hun1cr, 1 run (M1rcol kkk)
O -FG, Mann 45
GS -FG. Marco! Joi
GS -Ellil, 10 pUnl rltfllr" IMarcot kick)
0 -FG Mll'n !l
GB -Gf1 .. , I! p.111 I~ Hun!..-(Marco! kl(k}
Al11!'ndar>C• -.\..l,•11,
First o-n• Ru•""" -yards Patsi~ V•rGS
Rt111rn varos
PIS$e$
Punts
Fum?l1eo. -lo!.I Penanln -y1rd1
'°1ck1,.. LIOlls
16 II
lS-125 36-1..i ,., ll
101 l'O
11-11-1 •-lt-2
).2' 1 . ..i
l-1 1-0
4-26 2·1!
i "'.""'·" Curry said.
! Is Houston Next n1 Line
f For Thomas' Servifes?
l ' j -.SAN DIEGO (AP) -'111e pbone rang
J wbi1e Harland Svare, coach of the San
Djtgo Chargers, wa.'t addrtJs1n& 1 # llj>Ortn'."llB•' luncheon. Som<one 1Ug-
A fe,lted Lt might be Duane Thoma.a.
:, •111f nobody answers, it't hlm," Svare
• said.
A reporter askod the coach Monday If
I he had II.kt he WU "through'' with
'lllomu. U..-unpr<dlclable ruMlni back Wllo wu traded from Oailal LO San Citgo.
...,.,. lhe l<aDl but -·t played I
nablto for Ille OilrprL
"I don1 tbJm I Aid lhal," uMI the
; -a.... ""° Ihm p!l>COfdod to • <lONlrm -i. .... Jlh'"' up \r7inf LO ; "' -Info."" Dileo '"''"'""· I A*N If ht Lboqllt TbomN -1d ever
: plaJ for the ~ Lhe coach aald, "l
• ~ &hfnk: not.' Alted about 1 trade,
i 5nrt aid, "I ha•• tali..d to peoplt."
l ,l'lle people he hu talked to ln<:lud• the
: -Oller1. whoM! coach.1 Bill ~ l'fl<t'SOll, 11ld Moncby he ....,gilt
' rliomu. U willing LO play, toold ba ready
said. "l would th.ink. though, if we did
something like that, we'd want to taJk to
him first."
The trade that brought the talented
but -troubled Thoma! to San Diego for
Mike Montgomery and Billy Parlui wa11
heralded as the de1I that WQU)d finally
made the OW-gers a tiUe contender. It
was thought that 'nlomu would feel
...... ,, home In Lhe hangloose al-
DlOIPl:Mr'~ of the Charger camp than
a m o n & the oose-to-th&-grlndstone
Cowboys.
But the player and tM team haven't
been •ble to get togtlher on • new co~
tract. ' •
1be dispute 1tarted out over money. M
he did unsucceMfully with OalJos lllst
year. ThomN demanded that the
Char~ers tear up his three-year contract,
now in ill final year, ""d pay him n1ore
money.
'
Surprising A's Seek
To Make It 3 Straight
~ ' OAKLAND (AP) -The Oakland A's
have staggered the Cincinnati Reds with
two quick jabs and now hope lo deliver
another solid punch in the titled game of
the World Series tonight.
The Reds will get to see another one of
the Oakland ace11 tonight -John "Blue
Moon" Odom. The light-hander, who
notched t'A--o victories in the American
League playoffs against Detroit last week .
was 15-6 during the regular season.
Jack 'Uillingham, a rigbthander who
had a 12-12 record and led the Cincinnati
staff in strikeouts with 1!7 this year, has
been nominated to pitch for the Reds.
"I think we have them on the ropes,"
said Oakland pitcher Vkla Blue. "But
you can't count the Reds out yet. You
can't let up."
1be surprising American League
champions were sitting pretty with a 2-0
lead in the 1972 baseball classic as a
result of a 3-2 and 2-1 victories in Cin·
cinoati over the weekend.
hasn't gotten untracked yet in the Series,
coolly reflected bis manafer's optimism.
"If you think that the As are going to
beat us, you're wrong ," said More:an.
1be chances of a team winrung a
seven-game series after losing the first
0.. TV Toni ght
CIMntnel 4 at 5:15
tv.·o aren't very good, though. It's only
happened five times since the affair
began in 1903.
Rooe doesn't pay atlaltloo LO odds.
"All I'm Jooltlng for Is some way to get
oot rDomentum going," said the fiery
Rose , the Reds' acknowledged leader.
"Somewhere along the line, we IGSt ~our
momentum."
1be Cincinnati momentum ~tarts with
the first three hitters in the lineup -
Rose, Morgan and Tolan. They've been
bullied so tar, hOwever. by the A's
strcog-arm pltcltlng staff.
"'Mley say we're not swinging the
bats," said Anderson, "But that'•
because the Oakland pitchers are 50
good. They're as good •• the reporu. we
thought tbey were ove?'-r&led, but not
from what we'vr seen so far."
Odom is member of en eight-man staff
that fashioned a gaudy 1.58 earned run
average this season and did even better
in the post.season games. Oakland
pikhers have allowed only 11 earned
runs in the five play-offs and two World
Series games.
In the Series, Ken Holtzman, Rollie
Fingers and Vida Blue combined to pitch
the fjrst-game victory. Jim "Catfish"
Hunter Md Fingers did a job on lhe Reds
in game No. 2.
Gene Tenace, an unlikely borne run hit-
ter, drilled two Saturday and Joe Rudi
hit a homer and made a sparkling catch
to help the A's In Sunday's game.
Added to this margin, the A's also had
the theoretical advantage of the home
field in ilie next three games of this best·
of·seven showdown for the world's cham·
piooship.
Disgruntled Winners
After playing on Riverfroot Stadium's
unfamiliar artificial surface, the A's
returned home to their field of natural
grass at the Oakland ~
Oakland Riddled
Cincinnati manager Sparky Anderson
wasn't too happy about this condition,
either -the field was soggy from rain
and craggy from use by the Oakland
Raiders' football team Sunday. With DissensiQn
"l thought {Oakland owner) Charles
Finely had more class than this," said
Anderson, whose team's running game
obviously would be hurt by the slow con-
ditions.
OAKLAND (AP] -Ir the gaudy, shag-
gy Oakland Atltletics should go oo to
beat the Cincinnati" Reds for the World
Series baseball champklnsbip, it -woold be
In addition, the possibility of stonny
weather threatened to further muddle the
situation at the C.Oliseum, where a seUout •
crowd· of 50,000 will watch the-struggle. ' a staggering blow to the old t~ry that
The National Weather Bureau forecast a success is built on hannony and good
~sr.rcent chanC!_ of showers for ~ ~ --~!!!: ---------
The situation has got the A's brimful of The sports world P:'rhaps has never ex·
confidence. . perlenced a more dlSgruntled, edgy and
"We're handling the Reds easier than unhappy team of winners.
we did the Texas Rangers," said Blue, Everybody's got a sore toe -from the
referring to one of the patsy American madcap owner, Charles O. Finley, and
League teams. the chess-board Di i Willia Oakland manager Dick Williams was . manager, c . ~·
naturally optimistic about fmis hing off to ~ star p1khers and tbe gr1p1ng
the National Leaguers in his cozy cot~r1e of. uns~ second basemen.
Coliseum. He said that when his team D1ssens1on is rampant on the ~akla~d
first went to Cincinnati for the opener team, yet the1890 throwbacks with their
last Saturday, be would have settled for h:1ndlebar m~aches ~nd muttonchop
a split of the two galJleS. side~ contmue to ~· .
"But not after the first game," sald Its~ of the ~~es great mystenes.
Williams. "Then we sure weren't willing ~ mternal fncti<>!l ~to a stewey
to settle for a split." broil on _the AUtletics" Wild ovtrntght
Jf the A's have any · inhospitable "'"'charter fl1gbt home after t~ team had
thoughts about the visitors,-they ought tG gone 2~ a!Jead of the~-w1.tb a ~weep
check Cincinnati's record on the road. ot t~e f.U'st two games ln C~1nnah.
The Reds play better away from home , Mike Epstein, the teams burlr .first
history shows. b~sem~n, . confronted ma~ager WilllaJlls
"'We're a good road club," said Cin· wit~ his displeasure at_ beu~g ranked for
cinnati left fielder Pete Rose. "We a p1~cb-runner in the mth lillllfli of Sun·
played .700 ball oo the road this year." days game.
The Reds also have ano1her thing going ~ shouting match e,ns:u_ed. .
for them -confidence. Top to bGttom, It ~~you don t hke my kind of
they're still a swaggering bunch despite b~~u. 1lliams ~-. the odds against them . I ~ust feel you_ don t appreciate th1~
"We have to win four of five games way I_ve been ~~1ng m_y back ~or you.
now and that SOWlds ike an impossible Epstem .re~~e<l . I don t want it to hap-
~~sk,''_ ~id ~nter ~elder ~bhy Tolan . pe~iTt~:;:s paled.
But 1t s n?t _1mP;';'ss1ble -if we can get "Ju.st get your can out 10 the ball park
our guys hitting. d be d t I •·JI " th And ho reef cted correctly that an rea Y 0 Pay "" • e m~nager . ersoo, w P 1 . barked. and walked away.
1t would .take the Reds five games to win Another bitter incident occurred upon l~e National. . League_ p~ayoffs over the the team's arrival at the airport t.o be P1t~sbur~ Pu ates, IDSISted ~. World greeted by an enthusiastic welcoming
Series will_ go .the .. seven ga~e ~11. Ask· crowd . Some ot the weary playen sought
ed why, be said, -~·qse tt ~. gomg to be immediate refuge in the team bus.
tough for us to wm it~ six. This irked Finley, who later chewed
Joe Morgan, a star m the playoffs who out the offenders.
""' .,......,,.
"If there are any players on that bus
who didn't have enough guts to get on the
stand and show their appreciation, l
don't want them ," he sa·id.
• Flareups have erupted frequently in
the team's march to the American
League West.em Division title, a playoff
victory over Detroit and through the first
twG games Gf the World Series. l
Vida Blue, the team's ace Z4-game win-
ner in 1971 season who got embroiled in a
contract dispute prior to the current
campaign, engaged in a word battle with
Blue Moon Odom after Blue had saved
Nothing New,
Bruins Potent
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The way it
figures, John Wooden will be able to
retire from cooching the UCLA basket-
ball team about the same ti me he wins
his 13lh national collegiate charilpionship.
Two days after hls 62nd birthday Mon:-
day, Wooden blew the whistle to official·
ly a...,.ble this 1972-73 hoop squad which
very closely resembles the team of a
year ago "hlch captured the NCAA
crown.
That title was UCLA's eighth in the
last nine years. The Wooden Era or col-
Ieritate basketball won't .be over for a few
rMre years. either.
"I'll de.finitely coach for another twG
yean and possibly five If my health re-
mains ., good as II i.s now," seid the
veteran coach, who heginJ his :tlth Y•ar
at UCLA In nve weeks.
Fruit punch ttnd eake were strVed to
cefebrate Wooden 'a first quarter century
at UCLA, an era which has seen the
Bruin• win 536 g1mes a~ lost on1y 140.
the final playoff game for Odom in
Detroit.
The argwnent took place in the A's
dressing room in front of teammates and
a number of newsmen .
"It started out as friendly kidding,"
Blue explained later. "I apologized to
Odom and he apologized to me."
'lbe whole team is edgy over Williams'
practice of moving players in and out of
the game the way Bobby Fischer bandied
his knights and queens on the chess
board. Particularly involved are the
pitchers and second basemen, who say
they aren't given a chance lo gain con·
fidence or a feeling of security.
Ken Holtzman complained near the end
of the season when he was yanked while
going ror his 20th victory. ln SWxtay's
game at Cincinnati, Catfish Hunter, ·who
had pitched superbly, didn't Uke it whej
he was pulled in the last "inning fcx-ROiiie
Fingers.
';1 could have gone on," he said.
Laver's Return
Sidetracked
•
By Egyptian
VANCOUVER. B.C. -Rod Laver's
return to world champion.ship tennis was
given a severe jolt here Monday when
Egypt's Ismael El Shafei defeated the
Corona dcl Mar resident. :Hi, 6-t, 6-0 on
the second day of the $50,000 tntemn-
tional tennis tournament.
Laver has had an off year and just
returned to the tour after a layoff with a
bad back. He has accumulated six points
toward the championship.
New Zealand's Brian Fairlie upset
third seed.eel Clift Drysdale, 7-6, &-3 in
another g1ant·toppler. Other reliUlts In-
cluded Phil Dent over Don McCormick, 6-
1, 6-3; Allan Stone over 11th seeded
Charl es Pasarell, +6, 6-2 , 7-6: to~seeded
John Newcombe over Frank Froehling 6-
3, 6-7, 6-2 ; and Fred Stolle over Tony
Bardsley, 7·5, 7-6. ,,.
EDMONTON, Alta. -Defensive end
Dick Suderman of the Edmonton
Eskimos, died Monday or a cerebral
herr.orrhage wh.ich doctors said a~
parently bad nothing to do with football.
1lle 31-year-old veteran 0£ seven years
in the ~adian Football League, died in
a hospital about 26 hours after being
stricken while lunching at a restaurant.
A hospital spokesman said the hemor-
rhage was apparently the result of an
::ir.e~rysm in a blood vessel wtthin the
brain -a weak part of the vessel which
burst under pressure. It was something
Suderman could have had for many
years. be said.
tie played in the Eskimos' 22-16 loss to
the Britistr-Columbia Lions Saturday at
Vancouver but did not appear to have
been injured in the game. lie flew home
with the club early Sunday, ,,.
LOS ANGELES -The Les Angeles
Rams have begun mailing their se;mn
ticket holders option forms for tickets to
the Super Bowl game.
The game between the winners of the
Nallona l and American confe rence$ of
the National Football League · w111 be
played in Afemorial Coliseum on Jan. 14
1973. •
The 11nnounctment came only four
days after NFL comrnls3ioncr Pete
~zeUe announced that the 1ame wooJd
be shown on local television ln the l..o6
Angeles 1rta 1£ JO diyf before the game •
lt -was a aeUout. . ,,.
OAK\.ANO -Rick Barry tipped in his
own miSsed shot ns the buzzer sounded,
glvlng the Golden State Warrlon a 97-96
National Basketball Anoolation vlctmy
over the BAltin!C'.re BullcUJ Monday nfght.
f\ to help HOUiton, "tn about a week." i 1•J thlt* t1e•11 grtat player.'' Pf.tenon
lie wu to make $20.000 this season and
is reported lo want $100,000. At the mo-
mtnt, however. hr 111 making nothing and
i~ reportedly almosl broke . DETROIT'S GREG LANDRY THROWS OVER LINEMAN ALDEN ROCHE.
Back to defend the natkmal cro'Ntl,
which was won with eaNe a year ago, ls
towering redhead Biii Walton, the S..foot-
11 player of the year In college last
!!Cason. ffe'll be nanked at forw3rd by 6-5
Lflrry Fanner, a senior, and M Keilh
Wllke1, '8 Junior. At guard is junior Greg
Lee. 6-4. All 1tarted rtgulnrly lasl yeur.
Barry took an Inbounds pASll with four
seconds to pla y. rnissed a short Jump
shot but grabbed the rebound nnd tapped
it bAr.k in,
..... .. ·~· ... i ' -. -.
•
'
•'
' ' ' ' . ' ' '
•
• ,
Grid Poll
Has Lions
In Third
Wargo _Typical _ St. Paul Gridder
SANTA FE SPRINGS -
Wlnnllli football his been a
tradition tor lbt._ pU1 decade
&t st. Paul High School and
Weiiminster Hlgh 's Lions pe-rhaps one of the keys to the
have aaswned sO!e possession Swordsmen 's success Ls the contlnuaJ inllux of outstanding
of third pla9e in the latest CIF gridders from one ?amity.
AAAA foolball r a r. king s Fullback Bill Wargo is a
following their $-8 pasling of fourth gridder ror the same
Saota Ana Friday night . family to toil undtr coach
Western is ranked No. 2 Mar1jon Ancicb and he and his
while Irvine League con· St. PauJ teammates will be on
tenders Edison and Estancia display Thursday night at San·
are 11th and tSth. ta Ana Stadium when the
Twice-beaten Pasadena sttll Swordsman go after Mater Dei
picking up 14 points. B~hop
. ' in the Angelua IA.allllO opener.
Wargo i1 a $-10, t•pounder
with excellent qulckneu and
speed for a bock hll slz•. He's
averpged over !JO yards per
game for the Swordsmen u
they've mowed down four
stral1ht opponenta and hold
the No. 1 ranking In the ClF
AAAA. He's scored nine TOs.
Thrtt brothers have
preceded him at St. Paul and
each has gone on to a major
university for further glory.
on to the Air F...orce-Ac.ademy.
Then came Dave, th e
Swonb:men quarterback In 1963
and 19fi4. He went on to play
at California and Is now work-
ing on the St. Paul coaching narr on the sophomore level.
And John wa:i an All·Clf<"'
guard in 1966 and '17, who
later atteOOed UCLA.
"Bill's been a real surprise
for us," says Anclch. "lle's
been a linebacker for two
years, but he's adjusted to
fullback very well." The rirst was Paul, an All-
ClF choice in 1961 who wenl "But he still needs to im-
..,..,_. __ o::.tt
proy._oil hi& q"'Wkneu. fie
bench preases about 3 S 0
pounds and he's really a
dedicated boy. lie 's a co1n-
pelilor jU>l Ukt bis broth .... ,"
:says Anclch.
Backing up Wargo in the St.
Paul backfield is s e n Io r
quarterback Pat Degnan, a 6-
2, 175-pounder .
Degnan'• balihandling and
faking has been instrumental
In the st. Paul ground game.
"lle'1 just beginning to
thrC>W, because our running
game has been so good," says
Ancich. . ,
"Bui Mater 0.1 hH lhe &lia
on us and J don't expect lo
hor5e around too inuch with
OW' runn ing game •&ainst
Mater Dei.
''We'll definitely have to
open up oor attack 1g1lnst
1'-tater Del. We've looked pret-
ty good in our first four
games, but we haven't played
teal'N: like Mater Del.
"We don't have anyone over
195 pounds. They list Iha! high
in our game progrem, but
tbat 's with unifonns on,"
quip! Ancich.
Players oi Week St. Paul
managed to stay In the top 10, 1-.
Azm;t (3-1) Is the only other Off
team to make the list In AAAA en..., •• ve clrclea wlthoul an unblemish-~
ed record. .,.
ltey games this week in-
volving ranked elevens include
the St. Paul-Mater Del clash
at Santa Ana Stadium Thurs.
~ay night
Friday night il'n be No. 4
Arcadia at No. 10 Pasadena
and Edison and Estal'tela meet
at Orange Coast College.
No . 2 Western m e e t s
surprising Loara at La Palma
Stadium Friday while No. 6
Anaheim tackles Santa Ana at
Santa Ana Stadium at the
same time.
.... '~ AU.A ...... ': ~1rr fjtJ \ri l. W.. M\.,-(U ) I~ tli' ':!· I. II,,_ ""'-1 ().IJ S '· -1••k, n 111. • t·t 14 '~•: !!.~. n G«oenJ!i. £111 ..... ~ '11!.,~';'"c.;~· ton,''r.1'M·-~~:: All\am~e. Ve lev. Plin X,
Lekewood, '"' u 't..
SKIP LAUDERBAUGH
Corona del Ma r
DENNIS DELANY
Cost• Men
FRED HERNANDEZ
Edison
,MIKE MAGNER
Estancia
Gains Nod
For Title .
It won·1 take long to find out
whether the DAILY PILQT's
annual predictions on the out·
come of the Angelus League is
correct.
Thursday it all begins and
St. Paul and Mater Del may
well decide the L!sue before
the rest of the circuit even
gets under way.
ilere's how the
PILOT rates the
League:
DAILY
Angelus
I. st. Paul {4-4) -Coach
1. St11lt MfrlJI (..0) IS' '· UDle!'ld {4-41l !SS _, l i~~~1l~n • l~ ~ \~
1'1arijon Ancich's Swordsmen
are ranked No. l in the CIF
AAAA. The Swordsmen are
un~ten and .. lt.ave d~ne. il.
with a dominating ground at·
tack, which is the usual
weapon of Ancich.
:: b: .. ~·~~'1~.I) " 1. Ptc1nc1 {4"0) 70 t. t°' Alltll 12;e.u •5 '· '-'-t (4-fl 31 10. olUna H 111. {31·) H
Ot'-1.: Anlt OM V1Ut~. °'"'I' EdatWood, 9ttln-, South H i. kt~, ~ '~/( t,"ovo, 11· f~t'Qi.i~ I ' I ' DmOl'l<I, It
,, I-'E~l" 17' }: ~~-Mm. I \4.11 ~~ ~ 11J s. "' , .. , ,•j '-1111,... ,, .. ,
t s.:1~ :~= ltfl ~l •. 11,., l•il ti, 100.~°':''1 t!;.'lnos. 11.-., San Ol,..11. No<lllvMw. Cl\arh'• O~k, N~
Vl111. V1lf'f!Cl1. S1nt1 Cl1r1. 11"""91
01~. YIK•lo.. El Dor~_ !)vlrtt Hiii, P110 Ven!e, S111 !ltn'llrvrno.
Big Three
Still Tops
/'
In County
Orange C o u n.t y ' s Blg
Three-Western, Westminster
and Mater Dei-<:ontinue to
dominate the offlclal top 10
p r e p football ranklng9 as
,.lecled by the DAILY PILOT.
Each ·rOlled to a fourth-
9tralght conquest Friday night
with little trouble.
There was some movement
below the Blg 'lbree'1 level,
however, with Edison Hlgh's
Chargers miking lhe most
algniflcant galn.
'M'le Chargers have been
elevated to fourth alter a pair
of impressive Irvine League
victories, while this week's
rlvaJ, Estancia, fell to sixth
despite winning its fourth
straight.
Estancia and Edison clash
Friday night at Orange Coast
College.
La Habra made big strides,
gaining a No. 7 berth following
tts 47.g laugher over Sunny
Hills. It was the first points
scored on the La Habra
eleven.
ORANGE CQUST:Y TOP 10
Pos. Team Points
t. Western (4--0) SS
2. Westminster (4-0 ) 53
S. Mater Dei (4-0) 52
DOUG WOLFORO
Fount1in V1lley
' .
MARK STANBRA
Mlt9r O.i
CHUCK CADY
Huntington Be1ch
JEFF CHURCHILL
Mission Viejo
Outdoor
Show Opens
JEFF WINSHIP
Laguna Be1ch
MIKE THOMPSON
Newport Harbor
ANDRE LOPEZ
Marina
JIM BOYER
San Clemente
Midgets Set
To Wrestle
Leading the Swordsmen are
quarterback Pat Degnan {&-2,
175) and fullback Bill Wargo
(5·10, 185 sr.).
Included in the St. Paul list
of victims is Pasadena, an-
nually rated among the Top
10.
!. Mater Otl 14..01 -The
i\1onarehs h a v e completed
their fourth straight year of
u n ti c a t e n non-league com·
petition. But in each of the
preceding years coach Bob
Woods' Monarchs have been
unable lo defeat the St. Paul-
Bishop Amat combo.
But this could be the year
the Monarchs return to
_su premacy with a f i n e
quarterback {junior Ste v e
Martindale) and a corps of ex·
cellent n1nners {Jim Gardea,
Dave Najera. Mark Stanbral.
3. Bishop Amat (l-1) -Last
•year's CIF AAAA champions
Jost their first practice game
in four yellrS against Arcadia
(13-0), but ahowed capabilities
in whipping Pasadena, lf.7,
the same score St. Pa ul
managed against Pasadena.
Leading the Lancers are
quarterback Mike Garcia 11nd
runners Chris Griffin and 1 Da ve Amador. The defen st'1
has Chris Johnson and Larrv 1
Lewcnthal among the U
1
returning lettennen.
4. Servile IS.I} -Coach
Chuck Gallo appears to have I
an outstanding contender in
his fint year at the helm ancj
the Friars c<luld .be the
surprise team of the circuit
behind quarterbacks ~iark
Featuring a wide variety of A midget tag team match Herms and Turk Schonert.
1973 model water craft and and three more tag team Cai;los Solorzano has soorf'd
recreational vehicles, the first. matches all take place on three times and run for %2.1
annual Great Westeril OutdOor this evenlng·s wrestling card yards in 44 carries. at the Falrgroundll in Costa Other ins t r u me n ta 1 in
Show opens a lo.day run Fri-Mesa. with action getting Servite's attack are Rick Gar·
day at Great Western &ddblt under w&y at 8 p.m. ret.wn lfour TD catches ). Center. · Every kind of moto"r -The mlghlly midgets return lineba~ker Steve Kenlon (195f ,
powered boat will be seen: ski. by popular demand as 101-guard Peter Pohl ( 190) and
fishing, family and pleasure pound Buddy Allan and 9-tackles Mike Gouldlnl( (2101
.. ~tt* Pot.Ind Bobo Johnson batUe and Tim Brundage (190).
boats, plus dragstets, Siw..ut, ,100.pound Cowboy Lang and 5. Plus X 1:..1-11 -The War· canoes. The rec. vehicle lineup
4· Edison (3-0-l) 38 TED CREGO 5. Anaheim (4--0) 37
too will be impreM!ve _ ti-pound Little Tojo of Japan rk>n have a good QB in John
campers. van coaversions. DAN ACCOMANDO In one of the four tag team Hopkins. but not en o u II'. h
6. Estancia (4--0) ss ____ U_n_iv_•_•_•_ity-'-----mobile and motor hotnes _all ____ w_e_n_m_in_•_I_••___ matches. firej>ower to be a serious con·
make'!, sizes and ~· All This will be the first Cc:ma tender. 7. La Habra (4--0) 27
8. Pacifica (4--0) JS
9. Orange (3-0-1) 13
10. Los Alamitos (3-0-1 ) 9 Pickeroo
sorts of outdoor eq}lipment ' Me.!18 appear(l.nce ever for all I. si .Anthony (1-3) -More
and ae<essorles wlll be on Frosh Football four of the mldgeta. of the ,.me for 1he Saints -di splay; motor c y c 1 es, Meanwhile. Ruben Juarez of whldl mean! the basement .
bicycles, backpack!. tackle Foothrn 7 1 0 •-ii Ptfexlco and black muscleman LeadinR the Saints i s
Dirk Zirbel or fluntington baskets, camping 1 to v es,· un1 ...... r"' 0 0 0 '-"", Earl (Mr. Universe) Maynard quarterback Ken Knoner, a
tents, fishing tackle, etc. VnlWrlltv To: Mlk• Efllfl. square ofr against K in j I rlghthander. Ills run n i n g
Beach easily won the fourth Hours are 4-l l p.m. on open· unlw-11\' 16 0 6 1-:io Shibuya of Japan and the male! Include Riehle l..Qpez.
week Pigskin Pickeroo contut 1 da •• 1 10 ,_ 11 aree o o o u.-11 talJl:atlve Ripper Collins In c1aa, Jim Strausse arKI Al na y; -" w ~m.; u---,. • i'' • .• .. h Ml ponaored by the DAILY a.-•"·7 ddall .......... , t "'1-• .. " • ot1 ano •. uer "'i team mate le> er. 3 gun., l:V" p.m. an y, on. Dr•"' Art H•ltt. PAT1: ftn n nlRh t. ·;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
PILOT. Zirbel picked 28 cor-to Fri., 4to11 p.m. 'To!·•rn!OOI o o,. t~ Maynard helped Juarez tort
reel wiMers in 30 contests, Admission to the Great Utitvw.itv o o o 1-o defeat ShJ~ya in 8 singles SEIKO
the only entry to do so. Western outdoor expo1iUOn b =k ~ : t t•: match last week at the t2 for adults: SI for u111...,11tv T01 1<t111 Adel'\, 1ton
Runners-up, each with 27 young!ters 12 to 11 and for;:;;°"';;;:";;';;"•;;";;';;';;~;;°';;;:'"='N="';;· ;;;:;;;:;;;:F;;a;;lrgro:::;;u;;nds:::.:::::::::::::::;:,11 correct selecUons, were Russ kids under 11 accompanied byr1
Pume:U of Corona de) Mar, a parent, free :
Mark ~shling of Laguna!;=========
Beach, Rull> Slydinger of
Coata Mesa •nd Randy Lee of
Costa Mesa. Their gueues as
to the nwnber of points scored
by all teams detennlntd the
order of finish. --SERVICING
GRAND PRll -
e YACKT CLIAHIN• e MAID lllYICI e HUWCWMID e MINOI MAINTINANCI e IMIL.lllftVICI
,,c.l\)\{/>. s />.\.\: , rz. c.; />. ,_ • u.un
' 5113~?. ....._. MO.
DAVI aou PONTIAC
1411......, ...... ,. Dr .. c.. ....
W.H DIHcT -PACTOIT AUT-llU DIALft
MlllAr\. .. 1» II 14• • W. 6 ........ 91 ,.,,.,
nn DOU"-MWtff"
--01 Al NRDID
DS.t.LS•I INV"10
POI Pill hTIMATI CALL
541-450.S
·STONl1 1
TAC:Ni' IR¥1c:t
>4t4 WllTMllllTU • -J tlrtrl'Olf' IOCH-
I '
. Kam·.cha(ka .JJonda
JEWELEJIS
S1"-'t'• 1114 Vein C.•t41
H1111fl111le11 l111h
. '
I l1efthw11t A Atil•••
Diltflllwl.4 "'Thi Atl1H Hin eo"'".., . .0 •tfff . 100• Of~~ H1111"1 ltlrilt '----.. ·-·-· .. •• .. ·.·---·
'
Pilot Pigskin::.
>.:· PICKEROO -
Co-Sponsored this week by
fiEastbluff Village Cenrei:i~
East~utt Or1w . Newpor1 BeO
'
And The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT
Top Weekly Pri1e in
Merchondise Certlflcotes
For Weekly Second
• • Ploce Winner
Each for Third, Fourth
and Fi~h Place Winners
Plus BONUS PRIZE
A pal, ef tldlen te ttMt "game ef tlle ,_. IUSC "· Nette ..,
0.-1 te _..cJI -'i's ..-lftur. Cetlftftf et tt. DAILY PiLOT.
Bt a pig skin prophet for profit .. Play the Pi!ot Pigskin'.:
-·pfCKEROO game for weekly pr11es. Top wtnner e~ch-·
week receives $25 gift certificate from the sponsoring
shopping ce"nter. Second place winner gets $I 0 cer~ ••
tificate and third, fourth and fifth place winnars aech:·
get $5 certifi cate. Each certificate is spendable, just
like money, at any store in the sponsoring shoppin9
center. ----
Sponsorrhip rotates with a different center sponsor·
in g each week's contest. Participating centers a re:
Westcliff Plat.a , 17th and Irvine, Newport Beach ~
Ha rbor View Center, San Joaquin Hills Road and _
MacArthur Boulev•rd, Newport Beach; Eastbluff
Village Center, Eaitbluff Drive, Newport Beach; Bay-
iide Center, Ba yside Orive and Jamboree Road, New-
port Beach; a nd Univeriity Parle Shopping Center,
Culver and Michelson. Irvine.
W <1 tch for this player's form each week in the•OAIL Y
Pl:..OT Sports Section. C ircle the team you think wi11
win in each p•irinq in the list of 30 game• end send in
the player's form •ntry blank or a r•asonable facsirnil•· ..
The n wetch the DAILY PILOT sports pages for eec.11
week's list of five winners.
RIJLES
1. suomu 1t11 1ntry M•nll IM...., or 1 •••..,n•tllt uc11mU1 fl If It lftltr
"'' ""'"·· "lll1111n•••• l•e1lmH1" 11 d111 .. 111 I I In "11.ct tltltlll••I .. "'· lii~trl11 1r111•t .. IH!lfwm In 1111 Ind ll'll" ti l1cllll1t1 llHltllllf. TllMt wftldl °""'' ctftferm wlll te d!MH!llled.
t. StM It tit1 PILOT PIOSIUJf PICKEROO CONTIST, S .. rt l>t,_rtlMlll,
P.O. 8 1• ISU. Cnl1 Mn&, CA. ''HU ,
J. Only -Ntry ll'lf" INI'.., .-11 ......
~. l'nlrlH "''"' k ""'"""'" ,,.. l•lit• than Tht1~1y 1r "'"" M ffll¥tr· 111 11 tfll, DAILY PILOT tffk• ~' p,m. Tl•to ... IJ,
J. ••rtlc!pltl ... lfttfC1'1~11 '"" DAIL\' PILOT '"''"'""' ..... lltllr Imme-
""'' f1mlW11 ntt 1lltlttlt !'I ntlr.
.. lll 8 lllACl!lll I LANC MUST 81ii PILLIED •N 011 l'NTIY IS \#010.
•• •
.................• ,
ENTRY BLANK • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Cltcle ..... f'" tt.IM: wltl ..-kl tlllft "'"''• t•mn
, ......... h ...... "''"'
Cincinnati vs Rams
San Die90 vs Detroit
Dallas vs Washington
Buffalo vs Miami
Atlanta vs Green Bay
Baltimore vs NY Jets
Washington vs USC
UCLA· "s Cal
Alabama vs Tenness••
Oklahoma vs Colorado
Georgia Tech vs Aubum
Arkansos vs Tex as
Florida vs Mississippi
Syracuse vs Penn Stat•
Northwestern vs Purdue
Rice vs SMU
Saddleback vs Southwestern
Orange' Coast vs Mt. SAC
LA Southwest VS Golden w .. t
St. Paul vs Mater Dei
Costa Meso vs Magnolia
Mission Viejo vs VIiia Park
Dana Hills vs Sonora
SA Valley vs Corona del Mar
Marina vs Wfttmlnster
Valencia vs University
Los Alamitos vs Fountai• Volley
San Clemente vs Katella
Huntington Beach vs Newport
Edison vs Estancia
• • •· •• • . •• ·-•, • •· •• • ... • •· • •· • •
! • • Ii • • • •• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • Tit 8111AKI• -MJ """' "' ,_ i.t1t _.,,.. 11 '91Mt ,_,... • . . ..... ""' ,...... ...,.,. " •N-• ·-• e Clly
•
• • •• •: • .: •• . ,._ ... •• ••••••••••••••••••••
' I
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DAILY PILOT
TONIGHT 'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS
'
NBC 0 5:00 -World Series Baseball. The Oak-(
land .i\thletics. carrying a 2-0 edge over Cincinnati,
host the !teds in th e third gan1e of the series. The
movie ··Goodbye Charlie" follo\\'S.
.\BC 0 8:30 -"Goodnighl, My Love." Richard
(''!let• Ran1sev") Boone and Bar~ra (Mission ln1-
n1ancc bet\veen a lonely glrl and a young n1an \Vh1
has b<'en l·alled in a t':tr crash. Herschel Bernardi.
J.:in-~t1C'hael \i'i ncent. Bonnie Bedelia, Gary Crosby.
KC'E'[' Ell) 8:30 -\1ietnam Diary. Eight veterans
of the "'ar in \1'1etJ1am sha re their memories and
photographs in this special documentary.
l'BS 0 9:30 -"Sand Castles." l\ ghostly ro-
mantic con1edy from 1948 features Tony hlartin
and ''vonnc DeCarlo.
KTIV m 12:00 -··casbah·· 'rhis romantic
comedy from 1948 features Tony ~lartin an d
\'vonne Decarlo.
' .-..
TV DAILY LOG
Tuesday
Evening
OCTOBER 17
1!172 Wt>RLD SERIES BASEIALL
C..er1tt ol Ille ]rd lllllt Mcit11 111
lilC it 5'M to n11dus-. Pr111r1111·
•illl Ir• 1119reii1111tely I to i lPM
is i11MfiRill 11 pttU tiJM, II tfM Mt·
Wll'l do1sn 't leed 11rular1y xhtduled
prDfJ1ml. Un tim1 will bl lilied ~
1 1110Yit ind lotal p101rammln1.
1:00 1) !' O mGJNtws O Pondtro11 "TMt Sm1lu"
(ii lit! Smut ..,
0 Wiid Wlld West m Th• Fllnbtonts
Q) Go111tr Pyle USMC
(jj) Cln1KOltnd1s
£2) Ml Du!u [n1moracl1
EI:J Koc1111*1re Llld11
Q;i Ma)'tMrry RfD rm> LI Slcul\41 Espost m lllrtt Stooru
1;30 @ Hoi111'1 KttMs .
0 Morit: (C) (!IO) "Rap" (d11)
'66---Gltnn Ford, Stelll Slemu. A
1uill·nddtn pllysici1n. htlf bfnt
upan sell·des!ruchon while st1rint
l'I 1n isohltd c:onstrvttkl!I crmp in
rtbid doc.
!l;QIJ ®) HoltJWOod Squares
@ Play Ttltf1111 m Ut Ytr1no Pin ltlf.Old1t
ED @ .lebind \lit Lian ...,,
jf9, TN Yira:inil11 IE Df11111
•
(fJ CIS Ntw1 W1!ltr Cronkitt ID Atdy Criftiltl
@ li~H111'1 1111"4
(f,,; Sd!ool1 Wltllollt f1ilu r1 ED .l.'ltrOt11omy I
En Jolnne C1no11 Show
~liret11 Acrn
(S CHll Club
GJ Dot 4Z PM
':30 0 (!)CBS Tu15dty Mwit: (C)
t'(I) "SlnduUlq" {SUS) '72--Kel·
schel Btrnardi, Jan-M1cl11el Yi11etnl,
Bonnie Bt.dthl. Gal)' Crosby. A
1hos11y rom111e1 1bou1 1 lonely 11irt
who !alls in love with 1 yoon11 man
wl'lo has been killed in a cir c11~. O Pepper Rodcers Slltw
Ef) Llttlt Rlab
7:00 8 1]) ....
O lowtlll& tor Dollen 00 T rvui er CIMett11111cn
Cl) Sll1ri lo MwtitUfl
0 Wllat'1 MJ U111? m I Lim Lucy
fJaJ Ntws
@} Mwit: (Cl "M•Jbt l'H Co!we
Ko1111 in t1lt Sprinr" (d11) '70 -
Sal!y Fit.Ids, J1di;i1 Cooptr,
EID Qj) Black Joumal ) EE 1t1Yista MusK11
10:00 o m NtwS
m r Ort1111 of 1un11it
IJj) Biiiet '7Z 0 rn (j) m Mlf'Wl Wtlby, M.D.
St1"u1g Quartet Hit
B)' TOM BARI.EV
OI Ille D•llY .. lltlt 3.l•lt
It took 100 pc.rforrn11ntt of
JU~l one work Saturd11y night
;;it L10 Irvine tq convince thil
crilic thal all th<'! splendid
tribult!s paid 1n rN:ent n1onths
lo the Guarneri String Quartet
are richlv deserved .
na wless readings but it w1s,
from our seat. In the Ravel
that we heard the Guarneri
give full play to their in-
credibly rich resources .
Peak
'Mlere was not quite the •us· tal~ O\'&llon for the Roger
Ses&on.s Quartet No. 2 and
that comment will need no
amplification for t h e s e
chamber devot~ who share
the critJc't; vl~w ot the work.
IT FOLLOWED hard on the
heels or Mowrt's delightful
Quartet in E nat and it did a
great de:1l 10 quickly'itl issipatc
lhc nfte.rglow left by the ENTERTAINMENT 1'he1r i-endition of r>.faurlce
Ra\•el 's Quar\t'I in F majo r -
long enstlrined in tlus writer 's
notebook as the Frenchrnan 's
n1ost metnorable contnbutlon
10 chamber n1usic -y,·as by
far the best offering on a
demanding program.
RAVEL'S F major is almost
loo much ror the emotions In
the hands or these Guan1eri
crottsrnen wh o repeatedly
brought to the fore lhe sh1m·
1nering ron1aticism so elo·
quently stated in the fir:iit of
these four magnificent
rnovements.
Guarneri'! SlJperb delivery of .._ _________ .,
that. happy work.
This LS not to demean the
New York ensemble's artistry
1n the r>.1ozart Quartet in E flat
and the Roger Sessions
Quartet No. 2; both enjoyed
ENDS TONIG-H1'
"Tara, Tara, Tara"
a\10
This quality is, of course.
the heartbeat of Ravel ; it n1<1y
not always please the rigid
purists or our chamber world
but it very obviously delighted
a capacity audience in tbe UC!
concert hall .
A word. before WI! pass on.
for the supe rb cello work of
David Seyer in the Ravel
work. He was quite magnifi·
cent in a quartet that makes
unusual demands -not
always met, alas -on that in·
strument.
Let. jt be said, in fairness 10
these music lovers who lustily
applauded the Sessions work.
that we have learned to live
with this composer. But then.
ii should be added . ~·e have
learned IC> live ~·ith ladies in
blue jeans, tea without sugar
and fem.ale n e w spa per
reporters.
Ladies and gentlemen, the
very dislinguished Guarneri
String Quartet: cellist Seyer,
violins John Dallty and Arnold
Steinhardt and Michael Tree,
viola. Four gentlemen who
gave us a splendid start to
I l\~i~'f ..:·, im:;:;•so,:"
Hyskind Sets
Chap1na11 Talk
~1orrie Ryskind. no led
creator of more than half the
f.1arx Brothers lihns, will
make a special appearance
Saturday at 8 p.m., in the
Chapman College auditorium,
333 No. Glassell St., Orange.
His appearance wtll be in
conjunction with Chapman's
Great Films Guild presen-
tation of tWQ Marx Brotf)ers'
films, "Monkey Bu.siness" and
"Room Service." ·
"Von Richthofen
and Brown"
I "" .... ""' •• ,, ~~ ~ COlllONA OliL MA~ ~j-
1 ·~ .. Garden .,._ ~ I ·-I RAQUEL WELCH ,
1 of the KAMwa1r Finzi·Contil~isl [ffi 82!!El!.,0 7:00 •ltd 10:25
-ALSO-
l11m-en
"Bluebeard"
Joell Lem-111
''The War Between
Men and Wamen"
1 WEEK ONLY -WED . OCT. 18 thru OCT. 24
HE ULTIMATE EXPERIENC
I
_. -• __ or;
SIAD/UM ·J :1.
.. ~~=.-;::""'.:"~
~ '" . . _ ......... ' ....
••• • •• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • CO AST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD . •
NE WPORT BEACH • 644·0760
"IUTTEllll'LIES Allll F11£E" !'°GI
Goldie H1wn & litw1rf Al"rl
iillSG ""LAY IT AGAIN, SAM"
E~t1U1lv1 1.~t
H-NI lllHNfll Sllh
Whvwr If J Acl,.my Aw1tc11
"l'IODl.Eill OH TH• 11001'"
M111"1 ar1-11
"'THE OODl'ATHl!ll" (lllJ • ''THE WILD •UNCH .. (Ill
I HI Cotby · 111-.t Cllll
"HICKEY & aoGGl" !PG! • "RETURN 01' ~ASA.TA" !PG)
Lh1 M•1UI
"CAllAllET" (P'Gl • "LAST SUMMElt,. (II )
''THE NEW CENTUlllONS" 11111
w\flt Gtor,. C. kill ,,_
"PLAY MISTY FOii Mli" 11111
EC) LI P1rejl SI• Ptr ffi Tiit f11ndil CNI ' "He Could Sell lcllioits to Elki· 1------------------------
EE El -'-T11111 Cira dt Mujn I
~ Movit; (C) °'llgtf filll Lift" 1
(ID T11tr1 ill i\ir• I li)Spctd IKM"
];JO f) l'VI '-f: I s.att tidl liftll
·~··· I 0 MCNit; (C) "City ..,,.,,. the
Sci• (:sci-Ii) '71--Robtrt W111ne1,
S!u1rt Wh1t1111n.
(!) Tt Tta IM Trvtll oc f11ftllr Cl111ia
IOO'l" J1cl Halt.1 Sr. 1uesh It 111
11in11 saltsm1n who is 11¥en 1 newr
cMllW:e II til e 11, Dr. Wt!by follow·
inf 1 stroke. 0 loris btlotf htseftb Thriller ID Tru1 Adwnturt
tDJ flrifl& U11t
ED Pl..,.,,.UM New fort "Mcdtl'"
d) Laci• Sombt•
a!) Fntivtf Mnkl111
W Kln(do111 ti tilt St•
0 NitllOll $ Mtirit: (Zh1) "l.Nt 10:30 0 T11k l td.
fli11llf' (dr1) '69 -llovd Brid1ts. ID httk.olt Jul\ctlon
Anne F11nc11. q!j Nf'lit: "C10t1t lt1rt StMf' m Mot:tn's Ktf9l1 Ef) OvtdOOf Spomm111 m CI! Dr-aMt m LI Mtd1.1 OchN 11:00 a o o mm m """
ED Cttywltchtn A visit to the LA. rn 00 lf9l ""'
County-USC Mtdiul C.nt11. 0 OM SU,•leyond
ail Prtp11t. UiiM (!) IUnt11I ~111'1
c:i) 11 h Writt.a 0 Mowle: (C) "le~n Affair" (drt)
Efl Addl111s f111ilr '7~rttn McGavln, Frill: WNYff. m Tnrtll If CMtlClutllm
1;00 0 ([) Ni• M1udt ii """ • ID Cn11blit1 ttllt1• Fott;tl
iPtedinl hCktl bJ In llllf )'0Un11 fE CltMI' ltd AnntfM&
1111lic COfl ""° Insists sMt WIS do-1 fll) Adtf"J CMkl (R)
1n1 34 mrles 111r llov1 in 1 lO milu
Pf' hout lOM In plt~OrnHnf his IJ:15 m etnt.1 34
~~~ tit t:ds tllt 1rrument of M Jl:JO El (I) CIS 1.11.t Mowlr. '1111 1.,
0 (lJ fl) CE T1111per1t111n ~sl•cj TlwJ RoblltM Ult hn); If E•11W"
"The Acc1dtn! Coft " Dr. Noland 1,; {mn) '6()..........AI Ray, Pt\11 O'Toolt.
conVll'ICtd lh•l '" ICtldtfll 'titt1m.J 0 og.m '"~"' CttlOll )Ol7
who tlt111'1$ ht 11 partlJZtd. Is ft~-l 81&Jtoo 11 subst1tlllt host. • o mrn mM -· k f'l'qJ NftllJ Jonis ~It Is I Kflldllltd 1u•st. m n.t IHI m T• Tiii tllt Trutti
ID """ M111t1 12:00 B Mowll: (C) .. ltlhlboW hl1nf' fl.I Htn1111M ~ (mus) '44-0orothy Llmour. elD !DJ f1•ltJ Gt .. "CIOltt~ Ste m Mo¥1t: "tltblh" (ram) '4&-
Sun .. 3f'M lls!ln1,. fOf!Y M1r1in, Vwinne DeC1rlo.
Ciil) LI IMMdlbll 12:30 m CMtllJ Nulle · IE Aiu toll P1,.,-r1 I
EB M.wtt: (tllf) "l.tltb or 1.1.
lob .. (dr1) '36-[dw•rf c 1!0!)1n· 1:00 CD 0 0 00 Htwt
SOit, I l:JO 0 Mt'rir. "[lopl1111flf' (t11m) ':ii
i:M llD CJ) H1W1i Flft-0 Ctu Culiiu -thtton Webb, Ann• f r•""'·
JltYJ 1 d1nni ~ICll\1411* WllO c11-l 1:oa I) MM: Hlouplhod" fdra\ '49
tNnds I mllllOll doll111 In dllmondl1 R®tfl Steil+nt, Gloril G111'1111'1t. •
W ednesday l:«I m 'Tiii l lpllhf'" (dr•I 'Sl -
Join ront1111t, ldmond 0'8rt.n.
l:JO 0 "Sc:taaH ?M lnf'dll" (""')
OAYTIM[ MOVIES 'SZ.-C..111' Romero. Loi• Muwtll, CJ "f•ttt Stnt" (dra) '40 -Don
... "'liMJ u.r (CM) ''3 -Tom Amlc:llt, Allfl Cllftil.
CcMif1tMJ, Jillie ChtlUlt. CIJ 6l t:Jll Q (C) .,.,,., Siff" {IOltl) '6' ...... J:DO "A llilll"I SllccM" (COlll) ' -.ll1n Cl1ude Brltlr Hilty Mflls, l1n McStit111, o~, c. 41 -· IO:Ol (}J"A 6a1-Atrt" (dta) 'St-'\(!' UIM" (dtt)·" ...... ....,.11'11 ····--~~11re1. Robert T17t01. lt:ll Pla.u1, An~• P•trson O "Sttttd It Ge1tll" '"''11 '47-4:00 B (C) "Dt'li41 •"' l.ttlhllebt"
' 8ttt l 1.110M. Joyt.t Compton. (d11) ·~2 --OlllOfY Ptcl.. sui1n
ll:DO 0 "T11f Tu111" fwts) '53-Llo)'dil Mt1'1ftrd.
lridps. M1rll Wlnaot. 4:JO Cl) It .. 11 lGAM 11111111
Comfortably Air Conditioned
UA
south ·
COa~t
Cin•ma ....
go•••l IIM>1·11in~
deJ breahfast
the drive-thru "non-stop" breakfast for 1he early birdson-
lhe·go. Now being seived at all Del Taco locations-a
complete, deluxe continental breakfast •• coffee,orange
juice and a piping hot Danish •• all on a non·spi.I
tray •• just 69cand IT ONLYl'A.KES A MINUTE!
NOW SERVING 7-11 AM
NEW PORT BEACH
i11t1 C•~Y • lthrt Cul,
"HICKl't' I •aoGS"
Jtck 1"11111<•
"CH•TD'S LA.HO"
I , Slrtltanll • W. M•tt!N~
''Hill.LO OOLLY"
<•lllr (01
Y , ll/"flln•r · 0 . Kerf ''TNa KING AND I"
lrisfWI C P'•llsedesl 9t C.111p111.
SANTA AN A TUSTl.N
•hh St. and N•wport Fwy. RM Hill ""' Sonto Ano fwy.
' ' •
\
/>ll("l/Al t. ! .... C l~ V~ll,.1 1)~•11'1 f
"SlJUilllEIKOUSl llil. ......____....,
"MAIOlO & MAUOI "
r··.,. IDWAl't0" ,. •• •·
,..• '1'4t,4Tft •,., ... ti •• J•ot ., NO·-· O! .. ""-,'"~ 10!" ... !
11\;m ..-'"'
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""' ..,.:;:~'"''""' ........ .........
,((!.(tjl:""
................ ................... ~ ... .... . •..... ····· .
i11'h11lrtt ~11 fl
CEOllGE C. SCOTT
STACY KEACH
"TRENEW ·-.....
CENTUlllOJlll" c:
~i. ........................ ,_. .,., ( .
.• .n ..... 'c't' .111'tl'l'1
u1 l "IW'1ur •2
• -·::::.:..1:::--· . ... . .. t &CADftrn' AW•lltWllllllU
..... --'""'-0.... ·--··-··---i"'Nlcholn ...
Alox•ndr • ,. ~ . .. .....
"IATI0,0"/
••• arHI •"'-' Otaftl• Co11My le&att.n
808 HOPE · EVA MARl£SAIHT
• ' RA1l'H BEUAMY • FOllRES 1 TUCK!R
cAICB.Mf RIEllllV.\nol
Plus This Hit
"GET TO
KNOW YOUR
RA8111T"
n••-•111u
(~!Mlt-1 JOI\ 01\0llWIUI\
'" •••• -~!"'''
eow11•0•
HARflOf\,J.;:.1 __ ., ........... .
·~·" .... i .. ..,, .... ...... , ..... ,. ·-
fUi•-··--
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~1•1 1a-u1· . .. ' ..
•
Big Movies Top
Early TV Ratings
r
By JERRY BUCK "Night Gallel')I'' to !51!f"'and
HOLLYWOOD (AP) "The New Dick Van Dyke
Blockbuster movies are draw· Show'' to 67th agalnsl "Leve
tng huge ratings in the early Story.'' Only the "McCloud"
weeks of the television season, segnient of the "NBC Sunday
leaving some new series f\1ystery Movie," in 36th place,
managed to survive with Its virtually unseen and sending hide. old favorites to the bottom. The cornpetJtion a g a i o st
"Love Story," on ABC 's "Cactus Flower" fared little
Strnday night movie, r~ived better~ wllh ABC's ''Streets of
San Francisco" and "The a 42.3 rating aod a 62 percent Sixth Sense" taking the brunt. sh.are o! the audience, making CBS' "Mission : Impossible"
it the most y,•atched movie was tied for ~rd place.
ever on television. The Obviously, the supply of
previous-record was set by movie blockbusters can't last
"The Birds" on NBC in 1968 much longer, but ABC sUll has
with a rating of 38.9. to air "True Grit, "Patton,''
"Love Story" placed first in "Lawrence of Arbia," ''Plaza
the Nielsen ratings for the Suite," "Paint Your Wagon."
week of Sept. 25--0cL l, the and ' • The Adventurers,·•
third report of tbe season, and among others.
~BC's movie ''Cactus Flower ", __ _::._ _______ _
\'f8S fourth.
Such TV regulars as "Man· I HotklNI hMnl n...,.. I
nix,'' ln tbe top 10 last year,
plu1nmeted to 601.h place,
ENDS TON IGHT
Al,,_. HltclllC.ocl'i
"FRENZY" ...
c 11 .. 1e1twood
"PLAY MISTY
FOR ME"
WKOAYS 6:(5
SAT. & SUN. 12:45
J•mw E•rl Jone1
" "THI MAN" IPGI
"THE SAWU"CJ
CONNECTION" (~I
W1rnn Sfffty \
l'•r• Dun1w1r
STARTS WEDNESDAY
w ..... -..
(~
"IONHIE AND C\.YDE" \
"BONNIE .
AND CLYDE"
oho
5,..,. Mc~• ··auwn··
Ice
.skating
grand
• opening
oct. 16-19
Daily Public Skating Schedule
DAYTIME
EVENINGS
•
Mon. !hru fri. 11 AM . .5 PM
Sol.& Sun. 12N.5 PM
Mon. thru Sun. 8 PM. l 0 :30 PM
Moonlight session
Sot. only 11 PM . I AM
Ice
nights surprise
7 . 8 PM every nlghl
during our Grand Opening
S!JECIAL SKATING
EXHIBITIONS
FREE Pll lZES
AND FUN
MESA VERDE SHOPPING CE HT ER
270 I Harbor Blvd. ot Adams
Cosio Mes• 92626
Telephone 979-8880
•
• •• ol Eel
l~fMI
M.in S ... _
,,,,..It ··-·-...
51•19 ''" ., 21!
c-~ "'" '" All ... ·-UPHOL
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PUBLIC NOTICE
' •
1>ueuc NOTICE
f'ICTl'OOUS aus1N•t•
NAMa S1'ATaMINT
PUBLIC NOT( E l~ tfl!IDWl"lf ptlrMll'I 11 okolnt bvsl ... ta t: l'ICTITIOUI au11Nlll •••
;,1.1~~,.1
---=='-""'"'=.-.===~-[ NAMI ITATaM&NT J.C. tNlEltlOll;S, VU AUi V!1te Dr., ~ NOTICS OLS aut.IC TlANtf'll 'Tiit IOllOwtllt 1>erMll'l1 &11 dlllntl Nt-t e .. <11. C11llor,.le '1..0. ry~
Ike•"" • "" u.c .C.) Duil ... 11 ··~ J11U1 A. Cellbitrll, m1 All• Vlt11 OI., ~' NO!IU 11 l'llftOV °'""' to IM C..idlltlfl, C .. F, :IOflO .. ~II ........ Go&ll N--1 -..Ch, C1Hfer,.!1 '°""'· o• lif*llrlKllll T. ll«11ltcll. • wloow, Me111 '262' Tl\11 bl.ltlntM It bitlne COllCklc1'111 by Ml
lrl'!llf.,., wtloN bot"-ldWtit 11 f\S .. AUL FltECH, 1144 Ml..-irl SI,, lf'ldlvkt\111.
M-111 l..._t, Hl.lllnnwtM &Mell, Counly ot Co.II MtMi '2411 Ju4l1 A. ClllbitfH
PUBLIC NOTICE
P\JBIJC NOTICE
Or ....... Stitt ot Clll!«N, Ille! I bulk .JOHN f'A.IJI. CJt.AWFOltD, \441 IE. U Tiiis llelmmt nt9CI wl!ll ftlt Coutl!J lrtl'lllwi' I• Mlout ta bit mllCI• to tlllcNrd J, .. ..im.11, ANMI ... neor Clt1'11 of Dr""9f Counly "'l Ortobt'I' ,,
P1~tlne, • INlrrled trier!. Trtt11ltrM, Tllll 'Owl-It bitlna COl\Oucied by I tm, WILLIAM !. Sl JOtlN, COUHl'Y
w"°'' bvt!Mta eddiftl II tW L1r\ Clr· p.rtner1lllp. CLERK, by lk ... rly J. Meddo•, °'1111tY·
cle. Foullfloltl Vollty, C-1'\' of Or...... Pell! Frech f"·!Moll
SI•,. of C1H•t1l1, Tiii• "''"""" fllod ""'''" tll9 c-" l>Wll1"" Ortr19t Coe1! Delly f'llot, TM pr"*1Y to bit tr...,11wtc1 It lot•ltd ci..rt of °''"'" CWtll'\' .,,. $tpl. 2s. 1tn OctObtr 3, 'lo. 11, 2~. "" it.)<1-n
11 2U .Y.9111 St .... I, Hl.lflllflllll'I lka<h, WILLIAM E. 51 JOHN. COUNl'Y CLEltK, -------------1 County of Or••· Stitt of C1Ufornl1. by h.,.rly J, Mlddolil, DIOVTY
$114 or"'4'Jl'I' II .S.t.e:rlbitd In o-N•tl 11·2MH
11: AH 1locll. '" tr.ot. lb111r11, eQUljll'Mfll Plltlllal'lld Orlt\G't Coe1I Deity Pllo1,J-------------I
1nd OOod wl11 of 11\el 9\)hal'"'Y lwslnu1 Se~t"'1btr 26, ind October J, IC. 11. HOTICI TO caaOITOllll
11.no-•s •&RNARCt CUSTOM MAOE 197.Z 1S74-1'l IUf'lltlOlt COUllll o .. THe
v PHOLSTEltY eM k<ll-cl 11 2U Mel"[-------------[ STATa Of" CALlf"OltNIA f"Gtt
str"'' H""111fllllon eeocll, Count, of Or· PUBLIC NOTICE 'THI COUllllT'I' 0" OltANGI. ,_, 51111 o1 C11!toml1. NO. A•1:ttlt
'TM bu!.\( t.1t1tl1r Wiii bl COl'\ummetllCI[-------------[ E1!1I• ol MAlllA ALZHElt 51:El(LEA ,
Of! or ''"' tM·lOltl d•Y"' DclObl•, 1912, l'ICTITIOUS aus1N•s1 DK11Mll . .t aenk of Am«lce Nl&-SA, UI W, ltltl HAM9 ITAYIMEl4Y NOTICE IS HEltEllY GIVEN lo 1111 ~t., (Olll Mell, Count'f' o4 Dr.,.., l.1llt Tiit lollO'Wl"ll ~rtON we doing creclllor1 Cll Ille lbove ntmod dei:ed"'I Clf C•lll«nll. bu1IMH IS: !Mt Ill ptlra.\I l'llvlroo d•lnH •••Intl ""
So fir •• k.-11 lo n.. Tr1n1l1rt1, 111 lHE WALllUS. •27 A.l"'Ol\e Avl Mid de<:tcl..,I er1 reqvlrN to IU1 ltltm, -
bullM .. ne""• W lodfr-111tc1 by LtQllfll 8ttd•. •• wl111 !ti. t1ec1111ry vouclMr1, 111 11'11 ottla
Tr1n1ttl"OI' tot, .... '"'" ....... •••I "''· h Ste1111n e llO'f'M '" A.lmoM Av• ol,..,. Cllr'lt ol ""lbOve tnilt\111 tour\, (If dlll..,.tnl from n. oiiow, ert: N-. L•oun• eeKn ' ·• to pr111n1 tlllm wl!ll Ill• ne<nury
D
"'
_,..,, \l ,,-, · I voucht1'1 to "" llft<l«ll9""11 11 lfll ottloe 1 : .,..... , ,., G11y 0 Gire, 1241 Ct If Drl.,., L•Q'l.HY of ffwlr el'!Or-· OlledMAN AHO
111(.llerd J, P1~llno, e11c11. •••• ·-•• lr•n•'"'" • Tiii• bll1lnost I• 11i11,,. ('OllOU<;ted toy I ' Altomt'ys II ....... looot Slt1t1 PUtlltmld Ort!IOI COISI ClllY Piiot, ftrMFll pirl!'er!>hh,. MllnlC.I SIYd., LH A1191ln, C11ll'Onlle
0c1ooer 11, 1•11 2IOl·71 ,1 0 R IOOU. ~" h 1111 Oltc• of ~-ot tven • °""' tho ....,llVnllCI 1 .. 111 1'111"-" Pt1'feln1"9 G1ry D'Gtr• lo Ille tstlte ot .. kl 61cldlnt, within tour
'This s111e~1 llled ... 1t11 1111 Coonty l'l'l(lro!T'I• ,,,..,. TM fl rit put111..-11.,,., of th!
NOTICI! 01' aUlll: lltANll'll: Cltrlo. of Or1ngo C°""Ty o.-: Ocl. 6. \tr.I. llO!lc::.. 1
(IKt. 61tl4HJ U.C.C.I a v lltverly J, Meddo.l, 0tpul1 County Cited 5epltml:ler VJ, lt17
•
Ul"I T•s.tlelt Nollet 11 .._.y t lYln to 11'11 (~ton Clerk. SECUA.tT'I' l"ACIF1C
"' Al"dlll:leld M. MIM. Jr ..... lwbll 1'"'41 NATIONAi. &A.NI(
JO . M-. hulbeNI •rid w111, lr1n.. PVbllsl'led Or•~ Co1st Deny Pllo!, Encvtor II"" win
hlrOO., ~ '°"""'"' llkl...U 11 6fl Oclototr 10, 17, 24, 31, IJ)2 1Jlt.7i ol IN MKN9 "'mtd dtc:fdttll
LORETT A LYNN CLUTCHES HER TROPHY
First Woman Country Entertainer of Year
w. 19'11 STT ..... '°611 Mew, C°""IY of MOSSMAN •111111 aAIUt
O•f'lll· s1111 of c1111or1111. '"" • 011tt PUBLIC NOTICE Att-n '' ~ 111Mttr i.· 1bOU1 to 1:11 mooe to Nor-t-S..•1 Mllllu .......
W. &.td11ldlr ll!d All~ flA. a1kllllder. lM ,......... Clllltnle ""'
hlltband Md Wiit, Tr1n1 ........ ..,.,_. l'ICTITIOUI 8USINl'SS Tot: llU) SIMI»
l:l\IMnft.I ......... b Mtft ~ Strftl, NI.Ml. STATl'Mhn' Att-n lw l:•Klflw 511'1• A""" c-ty ol Or ..... iltl• Qf lht fol'-1119 pe..-It Oolnt bllslMH .. 111111""'4 Of'lf!Oe CO.•! Dll1'1' PHol,
C1lltoml1. II' Slptemlllr 21, IM Dckltllr J, 10, 11 tr...·~ to Ill tr-lefecl 11 l«llecl . IYllON ICE HT CHAM8Ell.LAIN 1tl'2 25n.72 at"' w. \fm Strllf, Colte ...... ,,, (aunty GENERAL INSUllAHCE co_ ms Well
of °'"'°" Stet. tlf C1llfernl•. coe11 H(9hwey, Newport euc11,. C1. PUBLIC ·NOTICE
S1ld 11'-ly II dtlt rll:lld In ...,.,al nulJ, .1----,===~===---H : All ttock In tnds, fh(llH'ft. fCIVlpmenl Byran K.ilt Clleml:ler11ln, ~tt •l<TITIOU• OU•IN•••
1nd lood wUI ol llwt donut~ l:lull,.ll Flowt'I' Slr•tt. COit• Miii. Cl. NAMli SYATIMaNT
k-e1 THE DONUT MANN •nd lo--Tiiis M inna 11 bitlntl conduc:!td by 1n l'nt ldJowlnt1 Pll'IOl't It c1o11!11 builnni
Loretta Lynn Na1ne<l
Top Country Singer
PUBLIC NOTICE
cited 11 6" W. ltlll 51,...1, Cotti M .... , lnO!vlclt.NI. ti' '°""''' el Of1nt11. Sltll ol Ctlltorn!1. e,ron Kll\t Cllemtoerl1ln COMPACT CD FF!!£ SEllVICE, 261 Tiii bl.Ilk troruter wm bit c.,,.,.....,,,..ted Tiil• 1tet.meril Ill.cl wltll 1111 Collfltv Wei.wt St .. Co.ti MeM, •ID1
on or '"'' Ille hi d1~ ol Nov1m1>1•. 1tn, C1t1'11. ot Ori~ County on Sept. 23, itn T..,.,, eeri-Sttpl\ln, HI w11nut SI,.
•I tM 1111~ OI AITll'rke Nl•SA.-541 W. toy lltvlrly J • .v...dltmc, OetwlY County COlll Miii, C1lll<>r,.lt t26l7 •
lttll SlrMI, Cotti Ml"' Co.Inly of Clt1'•. Tllll bu1.lntta lt btl119 condvtttd b'f 111
Or11'1ff. Sit!• of C•lltomle. f"·2M61 lndlvklvll,
So tir '' k!IOWn to !tie Tr1t11l1ren. •" l"Ulllhlled Ori~ Co~1! Dallv Piiot. Terr,· ••rlow S!tpl'llfl bu1lnfft n1fl'ltt tnd edd'l'ftll• VS,-bV October ), 10 17, 2". ltn 2"1·n Tiiis 1t1lemtn1 1111<1 wl!ll 1111 Counfy
Tr•nsleror• lor ti.. m'" 'f'e•rs 11•1 p111, Cterlt pt Dr1noe Cou~ty ""' Qelflber 2
It dltt.rlnl Iron\ 11'11 MIOve, ert : None. -PUBLIC NOTICE · \tit. WIU.IAM E. 51 JDtiN. COUNTY C1ttd: Ocloott l2. ~tl'2 ---CLEllK, toy 8eVt1'1Y J , MectOOx, Dloputy.
Mormon W, ••knellttr .,.11t151 lr.,,~M f"ICTITIOUS aus1•1.s1 l>Wlllhed o ....... (p111 Dilly PllPI,
AllC. M. a.11:htlctt1' llllAM .. ITATIMIHT October,, 10, 17, U, H1'2 Uli-12
Tron1,.,... 'TN foll-1119 pt'I'-•re dOl119J.:.:..C-'--"c":,::..C"'-cc==--=::.::J
Pub!lv.ed Or1!'191 Coetr Delly Pilot, tMnlM11 is: PUBLIC NOTICE Oct-• 11, lt n '9(ll}n HAMILTON.JONES COMPAN'I'. 16l«l-----. Scotch f'lnt S1'TM1, Feuflltln 11•11...... -------PUBLIC N<:rnCE c1111or .. 11 '™' •1t1'1T1ou1 aus1H1.ss
• .. J trMI ·-·' Kvlllll., 100'2 Cr1lltt 1111""4• ITATaMaHT -i<t OO DISIOl.UTIOtt Dflv1, Hunllntton 8ffcll, C11lf(>l'"l1 TM fdlowln0 ""''°" 11 dolflO t1111ines1 ,...., Oevld Allon ftry(.•J-1, I~ S<OICll II:
-....... 01" f'A•TNll:.SHIP t w c f'lne SITHf, Fwft .. I .. V•lltY. c1ni.-n11 LAllllD O' MUSIC, 2m)7 111'1' v 1-
PvlltlC nollc• II tw"' ''"'" "" . • This 11!11111111 b bitlflCI (Of\dU(t«I oy I ......... s.tlfl AnA Httlgl'll1. 911111 HAYWAllD, •• Gtfllflol f'arl,,..., -tl\s lfllt'l'll ... rlnll'1ftltl. NO€l Ol!AN LAND, 20332 81, Yl-Ll"'l!td P1rtM~ ........ olClrl dolllCI JI""'" JI . Kllblll. ,..,.
bonlntu unOtr Thf f\<1111-tlr"' fltrM Tiits '''""""'' !Hed wlrlt -'°"""' AVll .. Slflll ... ,.. Hlol9hl1o '2701 end 1!ylt of JUNE LAICE DEVEi.Of'· Clerk ot Ort"9t C-IY' an· Ocl ,, 191), lhll bullfllJI II bitlt19 candueltd by '"
MEWl , 11 11tlt ~ L.,.., City O lo _,,. J Mlddoa. ..:~...; COl.Hll'I' lndlvidu.11 Stnll Ant, c-.ry ol Or••· s111e of ... v~.. • """>"''T NOii o..n Lend CaUtOrnll . C11d Ofl ll'lf tlh div ol F-\lllY• Cllll'k. Thl1 lllttfl'lln! fHllCI wllll TM CO<ltlty
1t10 by mutllel '°"""'' dbsotw tM 11lcl "*" Clift. ol Oranet C01111ty °" 5l'Jlt. 1s, 111'2 !Ulr~rllllll' 1na term!~,. 111tlr rtllll-..._Pl.111411"1': 1~ro;::e31C~;~ Dilly l:,:1~ WILl.IA.M I!. SI JOHN. CDUNl'I' CLEAi(,
11 "'"_.. tntrllfl. .....1.0.... ' 'r • ' oy ._,.Y J. ~x. Olputy,
0AlE0 Al NniPOrt ·~ Qll!'Wn~ ---"""' tlllt lrd d1f II Oclebu, "?t· ,.. ._ "' PUBlJC NOTICE Putilftll.ed Dr•noe Co.II Dilly Plkl, -1'~.,.io: D. Sll1te1, Ii& Slottfl1llt'l'.._26. l<MI Qe!Obtr l, 10. 11.
•AJINas. KKAO. JOMMSDH l'ICTITIOUS 8USINISS lt1'2 ' urs.n
& ti.INNED'!' N.t.Ma STATliMl!NT Atllll'MY& •I Uw •UV! Me<Art!IW aMlfVlrl 'The tollowlflO ,.._ " clol~ bvslntU
l".O. act• 17" 11: He....,,wl .. ICfl, Cllll. t1"1 HOPCO ACOUSTICS, 1113S J( Sj(y1M1rk "ICTITIOUI aUSIHl!SI
PUlll!Wd Ol'lolllll CHil 010'1' .. 11o1. Clrct.. lrvl,,,.. Ct\lf, t2P01 HAM• STATaMll4f.
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (UPI)
Singer Loretta L y n n
becaml! the first woman ever
to win country music's en-
tertainer of the yea r award
Monday. night and chided her
husband for skipping the event
to go hunting.
"The only thing I'm sad
about is that my husband has
gone huntin' and couldn't
make it tonight," Miss Lynn
told a national television au-
dience.
Miss Lynn, a coal miner's
daughter who staged a benefit
performance last year for the
widows and children of a Ken-
tucky mine disa:;ter, also was
named female vocalist of the
vear and shared the vocal' duo Or the year award with
Con\\·ay Twitty.
Charley. Pride, the on ly
black singer to re&eh prom·
inence In c o u n t r y music,
was ·named male vocalist of
the year for the second year in _1_, n , ltn 11"·n Robert C1r1 Hooftlr, Ul1' Ml. HI"'· TM lollowi119 "'ion 11 OOl"I tou1ln111
.,., tiut. F-1.111 v,,...,.,, C1111. tlXll ''' a row.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE l,,h 11!111,,.• b llillflO con0uc:1tc1 by en v1LUGe suNFLOWElt. ~" 30th s1.. Fonn•r' ·ui'si'••a Gov. Ji'm-___ :..::;::;:;;~;;~:.::---; lncllwldvel. N~I 8..ell, Celll, '-'-"" ""''
•Alt 41» Aobl'rt c. "°°"'"' L-11• M. BKtrr•, 1no1 Mc:L1rer1 my Davis, best known for the
140llC• ro Cl!IDITOltl Tiii• 1111-1 flied wltn "" COl.IMY l ..... Hvnllngton 8MCl'I. Cell!. ol' aUt.11: TltANll'l!I: c1..,a of Orlll9tl ~ an: ()c:l1)bitr '· lhh iw.IMu Is belt'l!I cotldllcilll bV 1n song "You Are My SWlshine,"
15'<1. Utl~llJ u.C.C.) IJn. WILl.IAM Ii. ST JOHH, COUNTY lndl<AOU>ll. was inducted into the Q)untry Notlcl 11 .......... ,i...n to Crldllon ol CLERK, bY 8"""1Y J , MlllclCIJ:, Dtputy. Lorett1 M. lloc:trr1
OSBORNE'S HAlteOR PAll<I' CENTER F*'5 Tiit• "'"'"""' flltd wnti 1111 COlll'lly PUBUC NOTICE lnlendlld lr1,.1leror. """-!Mn!,,... .0. Pllbll1htd Orlfl9tl Coest Diiiy PUii!. Cllf'k ol Or1noe Cou111y, Ol'I: Ocl. '· 1•n .. [ ___ _:.c:,::==...::.-:..:.:..:;::.._ __ dr~ II "'. 32"d Str11t. Nt-1 eeecll, Dctoblr 10, u, 24, JI. Im 2111-Ji 11'1' ltv.My J, MeddlL Depvty C-ty hit 41'1
C1llloml1. The! I l:lufk tr1111lt1' of pr~ • ---Clvt.. SUf'l!Jl lOlt COUllT 01' THE
••Y ,,_ 1oe1ttd 11 411 • ltnd SITKI. PUBLIC NOTICE "*" STAT .. Of" CALll'OltHIA l'Olt
NtwpOfl lltKI\, C1lltornl1, Ind OIHrlbitd Pllbllltltd 0r8ft0t Coest C.Uy Plto!. THli COUllllTY 01' Ol:AHG£
I" qenfflol 11; ~'"'""" IUPPllH.. l'ICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS Dctotllr 10, 11. , .. lt, 1'11 tnt.n Ha. A•JUrJ ...... c11ondlH>. eqv!omtnt, Ind llTW!llory OI llllAMI! IYATl!M814T HOTICI! Of" Hll!All:ING 01111 f'FTlllON
11111 r11a11 p.1ln1 Miii blltln1u kno-11 'Tiii lolklwinl! ,.,_,1 ir• Wino PUBLIC NOO'ICE 1'011 l"ltOa.t.YI! Cf' WILL AND 1'011 Os&or .... l HI,_ P1lt1! Cen11r -llltllnftl '" t.ITTlltl TIEtTAMENTAltY. 1~:.,~ c:u:::,.j,~~= ~1 ,J~,:,.:s~·Ht,;;NE~~:~AMPite~ "~I!:'~ot~A:~~~::s ~g~~Eol ~EL~Jl~~~AC~iv~''~;
to H1rtoor P1Jn1 C9!'111f', Inc., I C11ilornl1 SI.lilt 201, N"""'*1 klcl\. Ce!ltor,.11 Tiit followlnQ Pt1'1ml 1,1 dol T1JLE IN$UltAM~E AND TRUST COM·
torPOf'lliclrl lnlfl\dH l•tnlfefff, -t2'4oQ bullMu I I' flt f'ANY his filed lllrllll I llf'ttll°" tor
bVllneu e<ld•e1s 11 c/o 111:_..taon, H<IW'Hr UNITED AMERICA GENE 11. At. ltAllEWOOD DESIGNS, tilt Htrtlor prollell ol Will el'ld lor .1u111nc:1 of Llf·
& G•l'IMld· ""° C1mfll,IS 0.IVI, H9WJICl"I AGENCY, IN(. All IO'WI Ccwpor1Tlon. aJW., COlll Mlle. t26M '-'" ltlll"""ltry to pthtt-. rm ... nce
llttd\. (ellfor,.!1. Ind !tie! llld trensl1r 2110 Gr1r.d Avtnvt, Oft Mo!MI. IOWI, THOMAS ,\, SPANGLER, lSIS lttfll• lo wl'llell I' ~ lor lllrtlllr 1N1rtlclll1rs,
will 111 COMUJnfT'llltd an « tf11f' Octobll' 50311 le Rd. Lqune ae11:h, Clllf«ll.ti 1...:l Nt -""" end OIK• ol 11t1rl"'l1 13, 1tn. 11 I~ offkt ol R-rtllOl'I, H.D .• ., INC,, A Clllfomll Corpor1· JACK D Mlt.LEll, !kl !il~lll A.d .. 1111 1111'11 Ills biten llt !or Oct-31 ,
MO'Wllf' L Gtrllnd. 1tl«'M\'l tor tlon, lM Huntlfl!ltofl Ori.,., Svite .(IO, L....,,.. 8MC!'I. C1IUorNI lJJ2. 1t t :OO 1.m.. In 1111 CO!lf'lroom of
trtMltrM, 4JolO compus D•l••· N1WPOl't So p,,.......,, Ctlllor"I' '103ll T,,,, tMlllne11 II bitlnQ <Gnducttd b'f' I DePMll'l'll"' No. , Df Milcl (0\14'1, ,, 700
luch. Calltornl1. lhl1 bU1111111 11 bll\M con611cild b'f' • ......,11 !Nlrtflt'l"lhlp Civic c.,,1., Dr!vt Wttl, In l"t Clly ol
So ,.,. 11 11 ~nown 10 ••Id lnttndtd 1>1rlner11ilp Thom11 A s11enoi.r 5,,.,, A111, c111tor .. 11.
l•l!'ISferM Mild l11tendtcl lrt,.lft<OI uwd WUll1"' F. H1rper JeclC D. Ml11ttr Detfd Qel(lbtr U, 101'1 ~ lollowlntl lddl11onll bllll"ell n1m1\ Prlll!!enl llll1 llllemlll'lt lllld wlfll lM Covnl'f' Wlt.t.IAM E St JQtlN,
ind edo!rtun w11111 .. 1111 mrM vurs le•t H, o. 8., Inc:. CMrt Cl! Orl"ll' County on Stpt u, 11n Counl¥ Cltrk pe~I: lllll 1l1temen1 !UHi wl!h '"• Ceun!y WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, COUNTY CLeRK, •Al:NES, ICHAO,
R-.1 o. Oll>Ornt. dOlno M ints• 11 Cler~ o1 Or11199 Caunly ""' Sept, 25, ltfi by kv•rf'f J, MeddO•, Deputy JONMSOl4 & ICl!HMl!DY
Deco G1rd1n Prodll<I•, 412 • l'Jnd Strttt. WILLIAM St JOMH, COUNTY CLER!( .. ....,. 1ar1 llll41!1T J, SCMAG. JA. I
H•WPOrt 8t1Cll, C:1Ulornl•. 11'1' ., ....... J. M1ckklx, Daputy Pul>ll11'1ed Or•nvt1 Co.ti Dll!ly Piiot 4nl MKArtltvr a1...i.
CllllCI ()ctobl• 10. \9n. 1'414:W S1Pltmbitr ... Ind OC'looer l 10 u' f'.O •••• 17N
HAA.80111: f'AINT CENTER, INC. PUbl!IMd Otonge Cots! D•11Y Piiot. 1tn ' :i.S.o..n Mtwporl •••<1'1. C•lll. t'IU)
1 Calllnrnl1 C0t11M~llon Sept.Imber 26, Ind Ocloiltr l , 10, 17, PUBLIC NOTICE T91 : (1'1 CJ f7t·9"1 s/J,t.,MES TALLAl(SCN, Prnle1ent ltn ,1514-72 Ant,,,.,., tv: .-.i1t1-
t /G, J, OliLANE'I'. Vic• l"'mlOtnl PUblllhl'd °'~"" Cotti OtilY Pl!M ,
tnlellGfel l •1n1,.rH PUBLIC NOTICE ,1ct1T.otts •us11rtass Octcbw ''' 11• "' 1tn 2110•·71
R08lltTIOM. HOWll!lll & OAl:l.AHD, MAMIE ITAT'EMINT
IMO c•""'" onv1, 7C).OC Tlrl IClllowlnl;I WMll'I Ii 6ol"111 blltlnni PUBLIC NOTICE ·
"...,.., .. Kil. Clollfern!• "w SUPll:IDI: COUllT o" TMI •1: 1 --------~cc-=o---I Tel: 1114) '*J* . SYA1'l 01' CALll'OltlllllA FOii GOLDEN WEST COMSTA.UCTIOM SU,El:IOI: COUll:T Of" THIE
Publl'l'led Or•"91 Cw11 Deny ... lot. lltl COUN1'T 0" O•ANOI. CLEAN·U ... m E. 1111\, '°'" ......... STATI Of" CALU'DllHIA 1'011
()(.toOtl' 11, l'rl 21(1).n Na. A•mM C1lltor11l1 92611, TH• COUNTY D" OltANOI
NOTICa Of" HlAlllMa .. l!TITION f"Olt G1ry E. Gr1y, •711 SNll'lo!'t, N"""""'1 .... A·F'l._ OltOlJI 01111.CTINO CCfllYl.YAMCI 1-Mch. C1lllorl'l!1 "'61. MOTICI Oil' KEAlllNG 0 .. AMIHOl.O Of" t:aAt. Pl:Oftll:TY Thl1 ""'4nH1 !1 llillF'll concluc1td bV 1n l"ITITIO. 1'011 PltO•ATI Of" WILi.
HO'TICI! DI" aULJ( TltAHS,.1111 Et111t of L'l'HNE CHAii.LESTON, tllO ltldtvl.SU.I. AHO t.1.TTllll llfSTAMEllllTAllY
NOTIC£ IS HEltEa'I' GIVEN YD 'THE ~ 1t MRS. MILTON CHARLESTON, G•ry E. Gr1V E.t1ft of E:STEl.LA MAE SU.HLDN.
l"ldllOrl ol ltlchlrd F1nlhT>t" .... ••se k-•• t.YNHE Mc:CLEAN lllh '"'-'" n1111 Wllh "" COUl'l'IY ~CHlecl. C lrtcll JI.,. t<.,,11m1,., Tr1<11flr0t, CHAltt.ESlON, olM k_,, 11 LYNN Mc· Cieri!. Of Ort .... Counly Of'' Ddober 2. HDltCE IS HEAEllY GIVEN 1~61
'"" bull Tr1n11' 11 HOii! to tie rn.o. Ct.EAN CHAll.Lf'STDN •bo "'"°""" •• tm Wlt.L-...... !. ST JOHN, COUNTY JDHH PAUL JONES 1111 flied ~ ..... ""'I lt1' ~ bull"'"' lddm• MltS l.'l'NH CHAltt.EsTcN Oect•lft C.L!A~. lw ...... 1, J. Ml<kloll. Dlpul'f', ·~ plll!IOl'I tor .. ~ .. ol Wiii '""' tiy lr1"s or, Cit · • • f'-"'41 !or Lt"en T•tt-11ry, •et•••"<• t<' I• 16111 Hlrbor lllwl., In !I'll V HOTICE IS HEllE8'1' GIVEN tl'lfl f'llblllllld 0rlf'9'1 Coest Dilly Piiot, wllktl II M11C1t !or Nrlher per1lcul1rt, 1fld
"' Founl1ln Vl lllY. cau .. ly o! 0•""9•· GRAYCE M, SMITH hit flied l!t1'41n I Ocll»tr ,, 10. u. r~. "" JIS:l·rl '"'' the 11.-1Nl pit<• of M11lnq IM si.te: o1 citlfomlt, 1fld 111 o1 -ofl'M!I ~Ulon tor order cllre<:ll>IO '""""''nee 01 wm1 1111 ""'""' tor Dct....., l1, !fr.I, 11
toilll""' nimes '"" Mldr1s111 ulld wlllll" llHI Pr-ty rlltl't"l:e lo Wl'l1ch I• mo<I• PUBLIC NOTJCE t ·OO 1 m 111 !I'll cou•l•<IOfl'I ol D-r•m-n!
lhrot ve1r1 las I !NI•'· M l•r 11 ,,,_ '° tor furl,,... O&•lkul1,.., '"" 1~1 "" tt~ Ho J 'o1' .. 1d cau•l tt JOO C\vlt Cenlt• lr1n1fl•M ... It t c HARD . 5 ...,.\. .. efld pl1ce ol Ml•lna me ........ 1'111 \!lttl .. ICTITIOUt •UllWISS Ori·~ Weil. I .. tM' Cl•y OI $1 .. 11 A"'·
MARK, 16111 Htrl>Or Blvd .. F_,11111 VI· to! tor OclOb« 77. ltn, 11 J:OO a.m .. In NA.Ma llATaMINT Ctlllonilt
11,, Ct111orl'lli, 10 A.Miid e. McPl'llnon !I'll courl•Oltft at De9iflfl'll"' No. 3 ot TN fDllO'Wlll!I --11 dol119 tivll"''' D•lllCI cicl1)bitr 13, 1'17
el'ld tt•I"' S. McPtw"°"' Tr1111f-. wld C(lllrl, 11 JOO CMc c ... ttr Drlvt 11: WILLIAM IE St JOHN, ~ ~II-llOdrftl It 11111 Htrbol' Witt, I~ ll'lf Cll"f' of Stnt• Afll, C1Utornl•, GALILEE DESIGNS, 2'tt 22nd' SI., County <1t rk
81,,d., In 1M City ol Founltln V1Hr,<. 011tcl ()(Tol:llf t , ltT.I ~t .. ICfl. Ctlllorfll• t'N60 J014N .. AUL ,.0NaS
(.Ollf!IY of 0r11191, Sl•tt ol C1lltor11I•, ol WILl.IAM E, '' JOl>IH. J, NHI• e-. Utt t2fld St .. HtWMl't Ulf\'i '"'''"· IM tot .... nt OtKTlllld ,..._,., IM'OPWIY Covnly Owtl lt«h. C1lltornl1 '2'60 11111• AN, <111,_,.ll t11'J
of lr1Mfffll' to wll: DOWAl.D '· ITaRlil, Tl'llt ~IMM Lt btlt'll condu(lld by .,, 1.n-y WI ""'"'""' jli,M 1locl. 111 ,,..., n111t,1rM. IC!'Jltl'Mfll 1• Mlfllli VI .. ''""· 1ndlvldi1•1. Putollthld 0r-. COlllSI 01lly Pllel,
Ind toc4 win of 1 ce1leL" C•rd 111d Giii S111t1 1111•,,_, 1112 J . He•ll •utM ~ Dclotllr 11. 11. 2(, 1'72 tta..n
bl.l.rt11.a 11.flOW!I IJ ltlCHAllD'I HALL· Molf\FWMlf, C1Uhnlll tMU llllt •111..,,..,! !!ltd with IM (OIJ"ly ---_
M"l:I( end ioutld 11 11111 Her-l1h 1n11 ~·Uff Cll'l'll. el Dr1nM Coonly on Oct. II. 1•71. PUBUC NOTICE
Ill d '111 flit City of FOUfllllfl VeHey, A~ lw1 hfl""'"" WILLIAM t!. ST JOHN, COUNTY a.all:!(.,-------------! c.':,.;!, 11 °"'""' stet. o1 Ctlllor,.11. Pvbll11'1ed °''""" l::oe.t 0111, "lle't. e v knrl'I' J. MIOOo.lf. Df9uty. 1-•NI -· fllt ~ llltllll. "'"'"' w\11 OCfoblr 10. 11, "· 1t1t t 70·71 ,...,, P1CTITIOUI auu11111st tit ClonWfl'll'lllltct 1111 ot lfltt' Mll'ldl'I' me Publl.ritd D11119t C..11 D1llY ,.llot, MAME ITAYIMINT
nrd uy o1 cctot>er. 1f11. tflTOllOl'I e... PUBLIC NOTICE De•-· 11, ''· ll 11>11 H!>Vtl"l>i.t '· '"' loltowlnll person 1~ dOlnl bullflf»
Mu sic Hall of Fame.
Donna Fargo, a fonner
Ca.llfornia school teacher and
a relative newcomer to coun-
try music, was honored for
her single of the year, ''The
Happiest Girl in the Whole
USA."
The song of the year was
Freddie Hart's "Easy Lov-
ing."
Charlie McCoy, who brought
the harmonica back to country
music, was n a med in-
strumentalist of the year.
The Statler Brothers, whose
big record was "Class of '57.'1
were named the vocal group
of the year.
For the fourth straight yea r,
Danny Davis and his Nashville
Brass were n a m e d in·
strumental group of the year.'
Merle Haggard was
honored for hts album of the
yea r. "~t Me Tell You About
a Song."
CBS Chief
Defends
Ads on TV
JACKSON. Tenn. (AP\ -
"F.llmination of commercials
would have a devastating im-
P'!cl on the quali ty -aild
even the quantity -c{
children's programing.'' savs
ROOert 0 . Wood . head o! the
CBS television network.
In a speech to the Tennessee
Association of Broadcasters.
Wood credited income from
commercl!l advertising with
providing the money to insure
up~raded and educational pre>-
grams for youngsters.
Wood said a proposal to the
'F' e de r a I CoJT1municati-0ns
Commission \vould ban all
commercials during children 's
programs.
"l nnd it inlereslimt that the
proposal before the FCC Is to
ban commercials rather than
to better them." he said.
The CBS official said the
National AS30Ciation of Broad-
casters. meantime, is volun-
tarily cu I ting nonprogram
time during children's pro-
graming from 16 to 12 min1.1tes
per hour.
Wood said I h e com·
petit.iveness 0 r advertiserl
who want to attract an au·
dience to their commerclab is
what helps provide an impews
for better showll.
11 Vou cannot ,propose to ban
a substantial ainount of
111dvertislng without at the
same time denying rc80urcts
10 ~rograming." he said.
(>CIW NI. t2t-W.. ,, Ille IK•OW deH•I· "" lffl·'12 ··= PA(f:MAllC S'YSlEMS, 1i111 , LOQl n
me..t of ll'>t ltffCl'I A ldtntt'I' 8••ncll ot .,.11 .... 1 PUBLIC NOTICI! s1., c-11 Mffl, C1lltor,.11 t1t?I --~-----------
Stt11tlly ... ctfk Htllontl' Blfllr. 11 nn SUPllllOI COUJIT 0' THI: llodol"' D....W Ftrr11rl, UlJ LD"O"lftw Edln .. r, In IN City-' HllMl"9tofl ee11:ll, 111G Cov,.ty If Or'lnll· Sllll el C1lllOll'll1. ITAll Oft CAU•Ottl41A 1'011:: a MQe SI .. C_._, Cllllonol• t ·
D1tld oc~ 11. ,..,, THI: COUNTY °' OltAtlOI UIPll:IOlll' COUl:T Of' YMI l llll bu .. Mll ;, t!llnt (Otld\IC'flld ey ...
Mt41Hlt S. MCl"htnll'I 14o. A·J~ ffATI 0 .. CAt.111'01: .. IA f'Oll lndlYldl/ll.
lftMlftll ~~· ~:QeMj~~ltlM:, Of'Wl~~IT~~: TMI COUN1''1' O• Olt..UOli Thlt ~~· ::;r~ JM Ceunty :,:'~ MCPMr"IOll CODICIL AND llCHt LITT I It I NOTtcl 01' H":..:i~':'of' f'aYnlON C:llr-al D•-C-ty Ofl Ocl. 1), !"1,
f'\ll:llttl'lfd Or ..... ,.,.., c.nv Plf<ll, TISTAMUITAltT tM>HO WAIYIOI f'Oa ... O.AT• 01' WI\.\. ANO ll'O• Wit.LIAM 1. ST JOHN. CDUllllTY CLlltK,
NO AUDIENCE
FOR JERR Y
Cleveland
Mayo1· Has
Hot Time
F'rom Wire Strvk:'e!I
Cleveland Mayo r Ralph
J. Perk said he saw the sparks
nying and felt his head geltlng
warm , But Ile didn't · realize
that hi.'> hair was on Ure.
Perk was using an acetylene
torch to cut ri rlbhon and
met&! bar in ceremonies open·
ing the American Society of
Metals convention.
Sparks new frotn the torch
and ignited tbe ITUIYor 's ha lr.
[......__PE_O_PLE___.J
burning some before a con·
ventlon official slapped the
flames out. -
* The architect of mcxtem
Israel, D a v I d Ben-Ourion.
spent his 861h birthday alone
in Israel in a little woodfn cot-
ta ge with his dream of making
the desert bloom.
"The main problem facing
Isreal today is to bring more
Jews to build the country ...
This is a deser1, but it can be
changed .... We ne«I at least
five or six. million Jews
more," Ben-Gurion said at hls
home in the pioneer fanning
outpost.
His lion-like face beneath
the twin tufts of white hair
shriveled but still lively. the
Israeli patriarch pays scant
attenion to world issues he
once helped influence or to
Arab threats of war against
the Jewish state.
* Despite the paralysis in his
legs, Gov. George C. Wallace
is able to "brace walk"
between parallel bars, his doc ·
tor said.
And significantly, said Or.
H. H. Hutchinson, the stricken
Alabama governor has Jeam-
cd to joke about his disability
and the attempted assasslna·
lion which has left him for
five m>nlh.! -and perhpas
forever -without the use of
his legs.
Laughing at himself, the
doctor explained, he I p s
Wallace fight oil despondency.
And it reOe<:ls a stubboru
determination to overcome his
handicap. * ·-. "I'd give up the million
dollars to be able to get up
and do things," says Pat
Burke of Minneapolis.
Paralyzed from the neck
down since his spinal column
was crusbed in a railroad ac-
cident last fall , the 21-year-old
Burke made the comment af-
ter being awarded $1 million
from the Milwaukee Road in a
settlement reached in U.S.
District Court.
Attorneys Mid the SI million
is one of the largest awards
ever against a railroad.
Burke told newsmen he
doeSn't even know "how much
$1 mUllon is" and hasn't given
any thought t~ how he will use
it.
* Jane Fonda derended her
broadcasts on Radio Hanoi
during a summer trip to North
Vietnam before a Southern
Illinois University audience in
Carbondale.
During the broadcastl!I, Miss
Fonda sPo ke to U . S .
servicemen.
"I didn't ask them to
desert," she said. "I just
described what I saw. I tried
to give Vietnam a face ."
She said labeling her actk>M
q treason "is assuming that
· lhe Vietnamese people are our
enemies. That is not true."
* Gen. Creighton W. A.bram11.
became the Army's 26th chie f
of staff and was Immediately
ordered back to Vlttnam for a
new assessment of the war.
lie was sworn in aa the
Army's top-ranking solcUer by
Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Larld during ceremonle11 on
the Pentagon's parade ground .
Abrams took his oath of of-
fice st.andlng before a bewig-
ged color guard dressed like
aoldiers of the O>nUnental
Army .
With his wife standing 111 his
side •.. the $&.year-old ofrlcer
rostcd his hand on a sm;:i11
famil y Bible i:ind swore to
"support And deftnd the
United Stnte:s 111galnst 311
enemies, both forclsn and
domestic".
* Oci-17, tm h11·" l1t1lt llf WILLA 0. HAGGAll:O, Ml LllTTIU TttAMINTA•T. ay lfVt'l'IY J. M.OOOit. o.cwtv .• M)4
PUBUC N011CE ~7t:'LA :ate.":/~ H~~~~~·o::.:. o!•::::,;.-' CHESlElt L. aAltOWSt.L. ltvllllll'ltl:I °'""" Ct11.i Ololtv .,llot. JOHANNESBURG. s 0 u I b ---~:;;;;;,;;;;;;-;~;;;T,"---i NOTICE lS HEllltY Gl'l'IH "'•'It. t.. NC1'tCC IS Hll!.lil'I' GtvlH IMI Odlbt1' It. 21.. J1 Ind ~7'-1, AfMca (AP) -When Jerry ............ * "'" .,.,..n • ""'" ... fer l!lHl!L l'AAHKil! .... '"" .. ~,,., • i•n n I •wls .... 1•-··•h h1's -
0.,,. Henna•, n, walked up
and down outside \he Linn
County (Iowa) Courtht.>ust
wearing onl.v long undtrwear
and a barnl
l'ICTITIOUI IUllNlll lll'Oblfl llf wlll Ind COtkH ....ii tor ll'IHll'" for .. ,GIN,. of Wiii ":'M to1 "" " IUVU1> ..,.,,.,.
NAM• •TATIMIMT bwl""'. 1t1111M1 oi Lett.A tlCtamtflt•rv 10 Pttl· 11-~ 11 Letltt'• T.,1..,...1..., ta 111e PUBLIC NOTI. CE edy routine \n Swa:.i~ nett
TM feli-1"1 Wtoft It 11111111!1 UOf\t• laond Wtl\l'td! r1ttf't1'1(1 to W!ll(tl ~io:er· rettr11>ne• 11 Wfllch !• """'"'le• ---------'-~---[ k he 't h •• ••· ,. ,,.. CGF*lltt119 ,,. 11 ~ w fllrJMf PWtkltl•rs. Ind mo1 ,..rtk1111r1o •• 1Ni1 111111,,.... lfMI • ~tCT1T1ou1 au11H1ss wee won avt w worry
D.A.Jl .I , .,.., I C1llioinl• TM ., ..... •net !!I.Ct of ,,.,,1n9 "" writ. ~~ 9'I llee•lflO 1111 -· hi• ""'" Ml HA.Ml llATIMINT about repeating his lines.
;"""11 It .. Ht.,... 8•1Ul. 111s """ .. , tor Ortotoer 31, 1tn. 11 t ;to 1vr or;1.,... 11. 1•n. 11 t !DI '·"'·' lt'I 1111 r111 1onow1,,. ,..,_ 11 clelno 11U1!M11 No one showed up fOT his
H.f,O, A !14 t."'enl• SI NewftOl'I • "'·· I~ "" (-lfoorn tr! Deoerlmtflt ""'· «11111•_., Ill DtH•lmtnl NCI. l ti , ...... -Ttcl "c.1~~~1. 9?"60 " , et w ld c~rt, et JOO (Pyle '""''' Q11w COi.ii'!, II JOO Clvk (Mllt'I' Drlw W11t, In ' llH/C E MET ALI. p 0 $Ill M 011'1 ~how here Sa turday. ;~.c~ll"9ll 11 1:141"0 (Onolutll<I llY ... W<.11, In ~ (llY·Cll Slflll An•. (1!1~1'111. IN Clly ol s ..... 1.111. C11ltoor~1.. S11tortt'I l-). Hl/tlll""'"" .ti(,,, I •wl' hnd ~,n '· <h edul•d '" ' 1 I O•!ed OCIOl:ltf 10, 1t1l. D•ltcl Octotitr I), ltl1 C•llf~•nl• 916,., "' ·~ i.: ln<11¥1d";9d " A(lt WILLIAM E. 5• J()f4N, WILLIAM •• II JOMH. l•u<.• 1(1111 .... 117tl SMlorl~ L•n•. per foMll before a b!Sck AU•
T,,11 .J'•t-'t11t t!l•d whfl 1111 cw,.1y c-rv Cl-tlk Coonty Clvt. H1.1111tntt1111 •~. C•t11or .. 11 ,,._. di I J h bu ("lork Cl'l'llM (M/l'll'f' Oii OU. Tl, 1t 11..\SCHOOl.INO ,. ... SCHOOLlllllO, Wtt.1.IAM 1. MOOI:• Th!I WI'""' I• bell'lf COl'lct\l(llf toJ If\ enct n 0 nnncsburg. t
WILLIAM •· s"f JO!tN CDUNf'I' C.Llltl(, ,..,, (II,..._ """"' llllt .... Al•Mltll .,... /f'l<)lwlfull. after wa,lllng on stage kYr an
• • ....... ,., ·J. M.tcNIO~ ~.... Mll'frll1111t11 .....,., Cf.llfll'll• "JU LM .t.11.i1 ... C•U ..... I• "'. •f'llC• ICtnttt ....... hour lor -m--to ··-·· up y ' ... _,.IT•' Cll)I MIOI Tiii f'1n ttl<f1ft ~ .., ""''"" <1\1" ,.~tolltNIO O•lf'l9f ''''"1 0111~ Ptln '""'"'"' ..,, f'ttlt1111t1r Al'llt'fllV ,_, Pott!._, f'llt!llu..cl Or•~ Coad c1nv "!101. he t ba k I hi •-11 onoiwr ,, ,. ll -"'°"""'""'' 1 ,.uo111111<1 °'"'°' ce~n CM11v ,.Hot. ,llOll•"" °'"'" c1111 0.1,,. PllOl.!Dctol:l>tr 17, )t, 11 11'111 N~ 7. _ __:__w_•cn __ c __ •c__•_•N_•_· __ i.n · 11 :i ,, " 11. ''· 11. 1117 n i1.n OC.tot11t 11, 11. 2•, 1t11 r~1.n itn n••n .
• '
'
Ht was doing tha1. llerman
~Id, to ptotest a Judae'a order
tht he pay 164 por month lo
I~ woman from whom he was
divorced.
Herman said ~ wa.s visiting
Ecuador aJ a tourist II
months aao and hid bttn
dn1&1ed i nd lorc.d IA> marry
her.
I
Famll11 Cir .. 11•
.r-~ -II , If (~'~ i, 1 ....._. . \ .~ '
DA.IL V PILOT
b!I Bii K.,.,..,
.. Watch how good I con korote rhi.s. pc5-0hctti.."'
'All Politics'
2 Blacl{s Assail
Slaugl1ter Claims
CHICAGO tAP J Two
black leaders have charac·
terized as political charges by
authorities Uuit Negro ter-
orist gangs were out to
slaughter whites. They also
criticized officials for the way
they handled arrests in nine
Illinois slayings.
Six young. black men are in
custody, ch a r g e d with
murder'ing nine white persons
and PC(:U$ed or belonging to a
gang motivated by racial
hatred and committed to
violence. Two other black men
charged in the slayings were
being sooghl.
The arrests and charges
were announced at a news
conference Sunday by Sheriff
Richard J. Elrod and State's
Alty. Edward V. J~anrahan of
Cook County (Chicago).
ELROD ACCUSED tooS<
charged of roaming the coun-
tryside and randomly seeking
out white pel'300S to kill. He
said the men were members
of the "De Mau Mau·• gang.
characterized as being made
up primarily of Vietnam
veterans.
Both Charles 0. Hurst Jr ..
president of Malcolm X Col·
lege in Chicago, and Barry
Wright , national commander
· of the Concerned Veterans of
Vietnam, contended that the
way in which the arrests were
handled was politically in-
spired.
1-lanrahan is see.king re-elec-
tion in the Nov. 7 election and
is on trial in Circuit Court,
charged with ooveri~ up facts
in the police slaying of two
Black Panther party leaders
almost tlv'ee years ago.
"It's obvious," Hurst said at
a 11eW5 conference ~iondav.
"that 1'.1r. Hanrahan needs
something set'L.$3tlonal at this
point to spur the campaign .''
FOUR, AND possibly rive of
the suspects are f o r m e. r
students et Malcolm X, a
predominantly black twe>-year
college and an active force in
the black community.
"We ma y have some ter-
ribly distraught young men."
Hurst said, "but to the best of
my knowledge there is no
organization in Chicago corn-
milted to violence toward
other people.''
J-lurst said he was aware or
the existence: of the Mau Mau.
but said he believes it to be a
"very. very loose end very.
very small'' organization.
Wright. who · said h i !
veterans' organization h a s
some 175,000 members na -
tionally, also cri t i c i ted
Hanrahan and Elrod for what
he said were polit ic ;:il
overtones to the arrests.
HURST AND Wright cited
these reasons for charging
politics :
I. The arrests were mad e
Frid&y but were kept secret
until the Hamahan-Elrod nev.·s
conference Snnday.
2. The in terjection of the
Mau ~tau and the Malcolm X
aspects, v.1lich lturst said
creates in the minds of some
whites the pictul't! of "blacks
swooping down oot or the ghet·
to and shooting eve.-ybody."
3. Holding the suspects for a
prolonged period w i l h o u l
benefit of coonse\. which,
Hurst said. even if not in
vio\atM>n of the men 's civil
rights, was not in harm011 y
with the moral responsibility
of Hanrahan and Elrod.
Tool Unit
Bei1ig Sol.d
By Hug-hes
HOUSTON (AP)
Billionaire l~oward I~ughes is
selling the oil tool division of
his Houston-based H 1.1 g h e s
Tool Co .• a spokesman said
here.
Hughes Tool has filed a
registration statement with
the Securities and Exchange
Q>nuni.ssion covering the prc:r
posed offering or five million
shares of common stock d a
new corp:1ratlon which will ac·
quire the assets and business
of the oil tool division.
THE NEW finns will be
known as the Hughes Tool Co ..
a name which presently com·
passes a much larger -0pcrit-
tion.
1-Iughes will retain the resl
or the present Hughes Tool
Co., under a different -yet
unspecified -name. l~ughes
is the sole stockholder of that
finn.
llUGllES \ L own no in-
tertst in I hl' uew company
arter the prnposed offering is
made. the spokesman said
Drug Fund
LNITED NATIONS. 1'll. Y.
(AP ) -The United St!ltS hM
m11de e new donation ot $1
million to the U.N. Fund for
Drug Abuse Con~rol. bringing
the lotal U.S. contrlblJUon to
$.1 million since the funj:I wa.'
established in 1971.
. r·'
·A Sad Day!!
Hot Dog Curbs Lifted
..,. DETROIT f UPI ~ -liot dop. saus.ge and lunch meiat l
• ron la lning animal byproducts such as snouts, \tddtrs, eytt "
and other organs may go on sale ln MlchJgan next month
for the nm time ln 20 yea.rs.
The state law bannin~ such ingrtdl,nl.s was strue:k
down by the 0th U.S. Circuit C',ourt or Appeal!! becouse It
eonfllctcd w\lh more lenient fedeMll !Aw!.
"It's a sad doy for the consumtr." sa id B. D11h! Ball,
&Late 1grlcuhUrt! director,
An appe1I to lhtt U .. li. Supreme Court i§, planhed. ht.
.. 1d
1 The Michigan law set mlnJmum protein requJrtnwmll I .. d allowtd onl,J U.letal meau Car the food It•""· •
'
I I
.
8 OAtl Y ,.LOT
Everyone He1
Something Thet
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Tracfel+-
With a Want Ad'
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
General • ner•I General
J=;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;I
GtMr•I
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
Clean as a whistle -vacant -ready for
quick occupancy. 3 BR. & family rm. home
located on corner lot \V /some ocean view.
Xlnl floor plan -good value al $62,llOO.
Convenient parking -easy to be
a "DROP-IN" at Bay & 8P8C':h Realty
NATURE WHISPERS •.••.••
.••.•••. , Wl~H THIS VIEW
Just remodeled ,3 bedroom, 2 bath, dining
room (or family room), fireplace, cheerful
buill-in kitchen with inviting °SUNDECK for
your entei'taining pleasure, overlooking the
canyon & view of the ocean. One-of-a-kind
in CAMEO HIGHLANDS . . . . . . . . $67,950
LOOK WHAT WE HAVE •.•..•
•••••.• VACANT LOTS
Attention builders -Two R-4 lots. 60'
frontage in raj>idly appreciating area, and
an ocean view too! In Costa Mesa .. $32,250
~1#-SMi"'
~ AllDASSOCIATtS
REALTORS
2828 EAST COllST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF.
644·7270
THE SENSATION OF SANDALWOOD DRIVE
ln Baycrest-Warm tones of autunµi e1na-
nate throughout this Unique three bedroom
home on San~wood Drive. The mood cen-
ters around floor to ceiling rock fireplaces,
scrumptious brown shag carpeting and the
immaculate pride of ownership condition.
~roudly presented at $76 ,900.
PHONI UNl9UI HOMU. NIWPOIT llACH, Ml-'IOG
U!11111()Ui: li()Mf:S
REAL ESTATE
Gener at ~; ~neral
LUSK 5 BEDROOM • BEAUTIFUL EASTILUFF
Privacy is a feature ol this large home. R.ear
yard large enough for 2 pools. Near lo New-
port's finest shopping; in CdM lUgh School
Uisl OUered at $61,900.
CORBIN -MARTIN
Baycrnt
At Its Best
Best buy l.n Ba.ycre1t. $64.500
buy• 4 bedrocWn, family_rm, rorrna.I dining room. Grut
Jocation for 8cbooU 4 amp..
ping.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTOR-
64W290
2 Close Your Eyfl '"!"""R""EA~L'"T"'O"'.R"'S"""'""''"!"....,...., .. 644....,· .. 7,.6"'6....,. I and pk1..,., • •riaht and 1 :: cheerf'UI 4 bedroom, 2 beth
General General home with fonnal dlnlna I;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;. j room, fam.lly roorn, S¥.1m· ming pool Md 1J1weh. ,much
rnort' tor only $.18,500. Call PREFERRED LIDO LUCA TION
836 VIA LIDO NORD
PIER . AND SLIP .
new.· 812-2:135.
THE Ra'&.L
ESIATBRB OPEN 'TL 9PM.
I PRICE REDUCED!
Owner Jeav~ area &: mu.st
sell. 3 BR., l'i9 bllths; con·
BAYFRONT -NEW LISTING -BAYFRONT l ~G~-~·a~t ==~G~,.,.~,·~1 ===!;;========= * * * * * * ofinJa . !J&fe
3 & DEN & GARDEN ROOM
$295,000
\•en.lent loc. Needs aome
cleaning, but Y.OU can gt>I
a ~noo this nice home! ,::U"-1' RE!}~, Via Lido Soud, with nice beach. 3 Bdrm. low-
er plus 2 bdrm. upper plus guest room. Just
c.ompletely remodeled. New carpet. Jvlission
tile cool. Immaculate condition! Owner \Vill
include furnishings in the downstairs plus
guest rqom in the sale price! $197,500. Owner
will considet trade or condominium.
SALISBURY REALTY
673-6900
315 MARINE AVE ., BALBOA ISLAND
I DAVIDSON REALTY
TAYLOR Co PRE STIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT , 3116 Newport Blvd., N. B. I
5801 W. CoHI Hwy., N.B, 646-7767
673-9060
MESA VERDE-$37,500
We invite you to see this truly delightful 3
bdrm home in a quiet neighborhood. Family
rm, lanai & 2 baths. Palos Verdes stone lire--.
place, lge rooms, .bullt·ins j,n kitchen. Nicely
landscaped yd. Ytxr!rlovflr.~------·---
101 Linda IJle Drive
Lovely 5 BR., 4 ba. home with downstairs
ffaterfront instr. suite & lge. game rm. ur
study, Mexican tile floors, beam ceilings,
quality conslrucLion, slip. $155,000
3----For Complete 1nfonm11tfon
General G.Mral --'-------LITTLE GEM
Well built •tarter home:
newly decorated. Nr N'pt.
lights. OnJy $22,SOO.
BROAD
HiCJh On A
Hilltop
SUPl!R SHAii!'
MESA VERDE
Atrium, family room, ~fling
room, and 4 ~ Lola
ot lovely \\·ell-kept holl&e on
cuJ-de-sac lot. Let us $how
you ttili beauty. $U,950. Red
Carpet R>alton, ;i&.H.
EASTSIDEI POOL!
'-" neral ''Our 27th YNr"
GET OUT OF THE j.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.j WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
On All Homes & lots, Please Call: Beautiful Broadway st. Xlnt
e stabU!hed neighborh:>od.
Lge. patio wlbriclc BBQ for
outdoor living. 3 B<lnns.,
family nn. a: frplc. plus
alley access. Only $31,500.
With excellent ocean view,
this 2 story custom deaigned
4 bedroom horn(' 11.t only
$56,000 i! today'• top value.
Many extris !UCh 11.S all
electric built·in kilchen,
seU-clea.ning ovPn, built·in
S(('N'O, O\'W' z;i:ted lot. Room
Great area and a dlanni.ng
house. that'• fun to_ live in.
Cln ~ imagine $35.450 tm'
a pool home with 4
bedrooms'! Gttat house for
rntertainlng. Red Carpet
Realtors. 5-16--8>40.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Immediate 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road
RENT RUT Possession NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
341 Bayside Or., Suite 1, N.B. 67~161
for boat or trailfr. Sepe.rare REALTOR Jost. You win
iami!y roon1. See this to· fro1n O\Vner custm golf· uy this mor1crn hon1c as G 1 G l G'.Jnaral
1
General easy as renting and much Don't touch a 1hing -r.tove .anera I ;;;;•n;•;;•;;a;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.[' _________ ---------
more rewarding. Living right in. Spa.rklinG' 4 hdrm \ 1 $24 950 day. 673·8550. roti~e vie'v home. :'{ BR +
Near N'pt 1-lghls. 3 Bdrm., 2 . study, 3-car gar, 2400 1.f.
ba., frpl. plus sep. playroom .THB RE.Al. Open dally 101: S59.900.
NEW LISTING
room, dining room; mod· & f~mlly rm. 10x18 ~closed SPYGLASS PLAN 74 VACANT ltii"iiOiiO ...... iliiiiif
em kitchen, 3 bedroom•, pallo. f:ll bullt·ln kitchen w/ 36!XI plus l!Q ft in Utls 5 bdrm J MACNAB \v/frpl., BBQ. All thls on an m,•.11...,...W!!H:I! 23341 Pinafore, Laguna
134 baths plus a 14 x 15 sep-nl!'vJ vu1yl floor. C1o8e lo · ' & READY J BEDRM • arate f•rnl\y room. $27.950. school• & all major shop. 4 ba, plus bonus rm home IR NE
C.U 847...,10. ping. $30.Jl;O. ''" dolail•. o~ a V.l.P. location. Ceotral $25 500 2 BATH VI
~2 lot. Only $34,!iOO. .a..11 ...,...., ~ Niguel. 830-5660. OPEN T~ OPM CAL9L 0 '''·1Cl4 NEW DUPLEX •··"·$48.950
~nm REAL~ Call 540-llSt. Open Eves. ~r =~d 1";f~~ ~!~~ SUPER SHA~P & CLEAN NO DOWN CAMEO HIGHLANDS
ucz · t h .. 3 bf!droom home near Brill· St k" I be ·1 I 3 BR 3 . -.ai..,L~T&RS, ..... a vmy , s ag carpeung, wal· tot le Baker in Costa M.,.. TERMS r1 ing .Y a utl u . . ~__:f!: .._ _ nut cabinets in kitchen, pool· NE bath home. 30· Mai;!er 1;ui1c
"""'· ~I & "/ath·taldng . W PAINT inside & oul. OY.-ner cxtremeJy an.."<;ious al· \v/fln?plaCC', floor safe, mir·
.... ~----HIBR!:__l-.!BR •>!-,.1¥_E. ........ Bay, umla M&M. vv-t0.17.
N••r N~:P~~1L:.',1 orrlc:• DUPLEX ON PENINSULA .vaoanct .. =t money! Rent HOMEABILlTY your ,..,..., apt.. •-
f NEW SHAG CARPETS, lractive home. EI e g ant rot:ed-i;lrdsiogrooth.,.Roman
!!!!!!!!!!!!!O!!!O!!!O!!!O!!!O!!!O..,.j vte\11 ° ocean COll.stiine. NEW DRAPES, & LOVELY flteplace in gracious livina ha.th. Gcrgeous pool • ja·
A good wtt.nt 1t.d 1s a good In. V01· can celebrate-The holi· LANDSCAPING! VA. FRA room bullt·in dream ki~ Nzzi. Ocean viei''· Elaine
SOLVED Immaculate iarger urni of bldg., etc. thru a DailJ' Pilot
Spacious 3 Bedroom Home in th.la duplex perfect for own· C1adified Ad.
Huntington Beach. 2 Bt:t..bs. er or top rental + great ---------I
Family Room. Plenty 01 bachelor unit. Can see ocean vestment. Clas~illed Ads . . 642-5678 da,v1 m your new home. Call or 5r:, dovon & ~l's yoors for c~n.' Nc\v covered patio. Svedeen 642-8235. (J23J
General ~ ·ner al now Sl!"il,000 including land. $25,SOO. Wide concrete driveway. BEHIND THE GATE Rot>m lo ...... Boat. Clo.. & p""'e"T. e"''·s""A· RnETT [N---~· ]
I I
OWNER HATES TO LEAVE
Thia lovely 4 Br. 3 Ba., lam. rm. home in
Westcliff area. They'll miss their poolsize
yard, too. Out ol state move forces sale.
Call Bud Auslin
JUST LISTED
Lusk popular Burlingame w/6 bdrms., 4
baths; sharp house with walnut paneling;
prof. landscaping. Choice buy Jim Muller
A REAL VOTE WINNER!
Magnificent University Pk. townhouse ; 2·
sty. 3 BR., lam. rm., 21> ba. Near tennis,
oools, schools -choice ... for details call 1'Chuck" Lewis.
BIG CANYON-"BEST BUY"
Compare! Choose this home now! Com-
pletely lndscpd. & decorated. Poollize yard.
2 Frplcs., wet bar. 4 BR. $115,000. Fee. CaU
Paul Quick
LARGE FAMILY HOME
!mmac. 5 BR. President home. Lge. family rm. w/frplc. Formal dining rm. Beautlfully
decorated. Fee land. $92,500. Eileen Hudson
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Spotless 4 BR., 2 balh home. Sunken l!v.
rm., fam. rm .. din. rm. Cov'd. patio w/
fireplt. Bar. Many extras. $61,llOO. Howard
Wells
SO. LAGUNA R· I LOTS
Loe. on So. Cout Hwy. Terrific ocean view.
Step• to flne beach . One whole block. De-
velop homes or condos. $286,500. George
Grupe
LOT IN BIO CANYON
Thtnking of building? Choice vflew site over·
lookll greens & fairways. Priced lo sell
no.w! Bob Yo;ke,
YOUR CHOICE ON LIDO ISL E
I . lmmac. & charm. 4 BR., den ... $85,000
2. 70' St. to St. lol & 3 BR. D.R ... $91 ,500
3. Neat 4 BR. nr club & tennis . . . .. '76,500
Charlene Wbyte
120' YACHT SLIP AVAILABLE •
For your boat & for you, a superbly d•
1i1ned 5 BR. home. M•tr. BR. sullAI, mag.
nllicent din. rm.; many more featurea mate
thlJ property the "Champagne of Calli.
Homes." BW Senti
--Coldwell, Banker 644-2430 ~
5JO NIWl'ORT CINTIR Oil, N.I.
ired hill JCa,.. COATS
'O//////(Yi! WAL~ACI!
Near all schools & 1;hopping. You'll find thl' privacy or
Brk. Freshly painted ex· an e>nt1·y courtyard pr••pn.r·
terior. 540-1720. ini;: for you for the 1varrnth
to School• and SJ"pping. Of· l\ Ad,;if;"1nglNQEX ~-'°' 134•950· c,n -REALTOR-· .
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Cali l\nytlme, 833-<mJ
Office houn 8 AM to 6 PM
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
Absolutely lmmaculaU!
4 bedroom horn(!
Beautifully landscaped
Among kJtB of tree:a
in tuhk>nab~
Cameo Hi2:hland#
Tastefully decorated
S\lnny breakfast area
A home that sparkles
& is an exceplionaJ
\·'·c at · ",.:00
REALTORS
--1514146>--4>--4141-
IOpon Evonl"111)
TARBELL
2!m Harbor, Costa. ~tesa
YESTERDAY'S ONE -IN • A •
p CE MILLION RI 4 bedroom< 2 b ""-h
Located on a quiC!l Mesa del added fa~ilf/~ ~~
t-.tar cul·de·sac slrttt. beam.ea ceihngt; & J~
Shows like a model wlth brick f1replaoc. T \Vo
decoratur _wallpapers and aepP-ate d o u b I e car
lullh deep P!le C!ll'Pf'IS. Com· garages. All this Jn Costa ~lete bullt-1 n kilchtn. P1t.rk .Mesa for only $32,500. FHA
like fenced rear yard. or . VA terms available.
Heavy shake rool, flreplace. , Won't last a. ~ • Call us
Three 11?8-cious bedrooms quick tor full details.
pita: fa.nuly room. Best of Call~ (Open eves.) -J ·:t $34,950. Suddenly
I '::: ~-<0. ,-• , HERITAGE
. • REALTORS ~. F. Colesworthy
& Company
640·0020 I! r :o HOME WITH
SINCE 1"'4 A~SUME S'I> 20 TREES
673 A400 Owner mav c•...-u n 2nd Deed IN CDM?
-. ol Trustto -'"""' tho """ !!!!!!!O!!!O!!!O!!!O!!!!!!!!O!!!O!!P I buyer to keep this excellent Right!! Shoreclifls Charm-LARGE Interest rate. \Yell r..1aintaln· ing 3 bl'droom, '2 balh with
COVERED PATIO 1 ed area of Huntington lot! oI used brick y,·ood and
• B<ach. !. Bedroom,, ll< warmth, oo • "'"" !lood $29,500 ! 1'6ths._ } ireplace. Move-In street In CdM's finest area. Omdltion 133.750. Ca 11 Beautifully remodeled in
3 bedroonw, de.luxe bullt·in 646-<li6S. 1972. Key to private bench.
appliances inc I u din I Only Si9,900 nnd yuu 01\-n
diahwasher. dea., fireplace the land. Call NOW 673-8550.
& charn1 of thl~ nearly Of'\\'
4 BR, 2'1. bath home. Al·
tracttvely landSCBped. Con-
vrnient to South Coast
Plaza. n excellent value
$42, 700. Charles Arnold
642·823 . (J24l.
HAR R VIEW HILLS
UST SELLI
ner has bought another
and must sell this 1111.nd·
aornely appointed 4 BR. 2
bath,_ J:e.a.r eara,ge home.
Self.cleaning oven. Bar, FR.
cu~tom cpts & drps. :\fake
offer! Dona Chichester
642·8235. (J15)
HARBOR ISLAND
SOUTH SIDE
Prime Bay[ront Location ln
Newport Harbor. RC'CE"nUy
remodeled'. Slip for at least
65' yacht Huge LR &: mas·
!er suite w I fireplace-. 4
BRs, 5 baths + maid's
quarters.. Sandy beach.
Room to rxpanrl or for pool.
Tom Turner 642-8235. (J14)
'
641-5200
Ii] 'lL\I ~I -... Solo JI.e l '";~;ffJ BalbOa Peninsula Classification 100.124
.,._, .. .,., Each 2 bdnns., !Uml!h~L 6 I 1~
SUM1b1Alf Of llH (Olwt\L co. Garages. l.oc. on 2 lots; ..... Hornet Jiii
heated poo l. steps to ocean. '·-------'· 20'x30' Xlnt aumn1cr/wintcr rent· Cl111iflc1tion 12S.149 all!. S186,IXXI.
BONUS ROOM Cati' 673-366'.l 6'7·225.1 Ev ... I ~ ~ ltt .. E1!1t•, sitllnJ Of! top of this lovely Gwflenl
3-ikfrm, 2 bath home. Other
features Include step.down Cla,sification 150-184
hving nn . heavy '"•I« roof. I II• I 2 (ireplace!, block wall flnMc:~
fence &: nice cul-dHac lo· I '""""""'~~~~""'""''I l __ .:._,::=:___J
cation. Priced only S35,750. OWNER Classific•tion 200.2'" Cali :146-5880 {Open eves. I uu
t Mu!t sell VA'CANT 3 Bdrm ,..------~~
2 baths, crpts. dtps, n~I. ~ fwAMt l. -. Like new coodlUon. Priced _ t"ICJ
Al appraisal $30,SOO. All Cl111iflc1tion 30~3'-5 t!'l'ms. Close to South C.oast "" ..
. ·.f.· HERITAGE
· aEALTORS
Plaia. Xlnt buy. [ l l 9 ) New Ustlng coLLINs 5:1-~r's. INc. ..... ...... ,,._ * SPANISH . * c & w * ClanilicaHon 360.)70
DREAM * Gu•r•nlffd [ JI &J You must itee thii fanta!lic 3 JIOME SALE PLAN Rftak ,.
•-room 2 bath home •·•"lh All Over Orange County ;~te' mal!lter bedroom, 675-7225 586.0222 Classlficatton 400 ... 65
lfflds added charm to
Mfaclous livin& room .
Handtomc breakfast, bar
l..arJ(e roveted petio, boat
door thru rear of garagf!,
You can 11.811\lme VA loan
with low down payment and
hlOflthly ln!ltallments ~ at. than rent! Brk ~Jn).
huge llvln& room with wa.11 ~ [ I~ to wall !!replace, family I ( 1111 • -•It -
room with wet bar, and -~ h . . •. BAHAMA =:~ =:°'1~~:~~ m;~ .· .~ c 1a11ification soo..s10
BEAUTY , .. , yard. Prko only -·-· _, I _J[i) •~··•·R •-. B!ALS. Exciting new li8tlng in fl.1ESA $43.500. · Call now 80-2535. tuumtAliY or nn: «KWIU cc. Ptrson.••· ~
.AD .....,., ...,... VF:H.DE -3 bedmom, 2%! 4 UNITS NT • .'1
OPEN 'Tll. RPNI bath luxury home located ®THE REAL · EXCELLE Classific•f 525 53 · S11UtOIAl'l'O.tMfCOlWIUCa.1 C:::::::::::':=:::;:=::=::::'.I Qn a quiet..,..ul-de·1oc street. ICSTATERS RENTAL HISTOR-Y: ion • 0
LEASE/OPTION A pool.site y11 rd wllh a large 1 ,~~;;::;~:·~·r~OL~9:;;:,1All roomy 2 bedrooms. Good I Lost 8ftd i::~--lLSJ <.'Ovct-ed patio &. sprinklers kitchens and don't need __,
W Mesl!I Verde front & bal'k J>'lrp;I roc~n much to keep them Jn good ~,-------' ANTED 4 Bdnn. form~\ dinin6. fam-\l t:h S51.500 can 01\n !hi.~ IAYCREST rentab]e.she.pc, A &ood buy Classifit•tion sso .riss A LARGE FAMIL y ily room. Availnhll' i\oven1· homC'. ll ~.500. Red Carpet r------TARBELL ""' lit at $400 •mo. BARGAIN Realton, 546-8640. I .,., __ Ion 11~1 For ihlt super f&mill' home. GINNY M Qrt!!JSON ._.__ won.• 2955 Harbor, Cblta Mesa. Four bc.-drooma, 2 Or these '*** REALTOR$. ·-JNrt Over 2,000 11<1 It of luxury in Bar~Style Home
FOR THE FAMILY are approx. 14 )( 20 each . .1 •*W!l•. -1505 Mesa ., n; ~m, 2~n~:· ~~: F,arth lover'• kind ot llvln'! Classification 57S..580 tuU baths+ l'n bath, dining • •Verde I>r. Ea,..t Bo f rid! & Warm frple., kidt rm1 .•
1
~ ..,...H A LOT OF room, tam I t Y room -'* • ,. _ _._ Moaa"" Fairview nu• o a 11pe ng pool fa~ kltcho $3),900. Dawg -.,. ·-J ftll huat!I! Walk In cto.eta and fr***• ~55~7 ~~-law maintenance 75'xll0' tricndJy! " , UVING TO DO a !up lot ..tth boot "'"· ~ 64Ulll yarn. All >he U!Ual Ba.Ycr"T REAL ESTATE . All of thla tor only $42,000 /Open Evclllna51 reawre1. Full price 564,950 TREASURES O•sslfic•+1on 600.-699 Two 110fl', 4 bedroom I w1th VA and FHA terms. --~-~~~--! (anytime) a_id an a~umable loan or r-------.-rowtly~room . ! llRth l>Omo. c.u 51&-l31l. DO IT NOW c·~~lssol't,ooi. o 1831 w .. 1e11u. NB. ~ I "'-'",.. l~i~J lACnt"'"' ntar the belch. C Call BUI O'Strlke rt!I .nor a pen Ev<'s Close To Everythinn pnrki, golf coune and shOJ>-~ ornrr house "'Ith bu1dnc5! at 545-8922 eves. .,
ping centtr. Priced at ® &.n.o R L & JtviJ\g East11ldr Costa j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l l Good schools, g\'.JO(I shopping, Cl111lflcat·o 700..710 $4.1.fJOO. All lermi. Call JESTATICRS Mesa. Call nQ\V lo i;ce: lhl.8 and expandable. Lots of
1
"
S4'7-6010. ~:::==OPE=•=·':''::':PM:::::J $37,500 beauty, . THE BIG 4~ room. 111,ide lllld outsidi!, I llo•'-• 11~· I 646-39211, Evti. $138.0068 $30,500 In Coll~gc Park for a -
(9THB
R -a·~ • Quiet CuJ-de·~ Location i "•"'"'""'""'""'""'"'"_. lfDOd l bedroom house on a ~ • North Oleta l\.ltu. • .......-.. cul-de·llC'! Sure. We'll •hoW Ct ·1· t• ao• • vc:T~NRS * B~l ""•~ -... _.1t UV\,.1vR'S PRESCRIPTION you. Red C•-t Re<on. ass1 •c• ion V*Wlb ~ ,.;.'f'.' 1'"~""'' • nx 1 SAfOO rnEE 1-ruNT· MA .......... [ • 9Ppl tf'M *Lu 1rop ·al' Landscap· JNGTON DEACll . 54frOV"oO, J~I
FO''RPLEX Ing SEACOAST 8 U t L T 4 I BLKS to SI. Joachim'• .... _. .._ ,.., U * Hu,qt-COlmlry Kitchen BEDROOM, y AM IL y Cath Sehl. 5 br , 3 bG, fnm • * 4 BIA' Bed.i1oom1 ROOM. MODERN KIT· rm, frpJc, form din rm, Cl•11iflc.•tlon ISQ.858
BALBOA Cove.s, N . 8 .
Wl'terfront. Private ramp .l
UM to lradef Our Tradrtr'1 lloat. Moc:IC!m l br. $77,500.
Paradlee column 11 Jor )'OU! Call owncir, 6~ for
5 ~ & dip for 5 bucb. ·-''-'°"'-"';;.· ::.l'rl=nd:cpac:;:l•~nnly::;;;..· -
·r 111ll'\1:·1:-01\o~
P l' A l Y1'J·R ~
,,. $37,000 .._....... 1.... ·--c OIEN, rou.v UPGRAD· unllll\ rm. P-.r nn, ·-~ [ ~ •,-lea.me all tor Appoint· ED. WILL s£l.t.. ON VA Ironic crvtn,• Cov pado ._.._, l•Ji
mml 5*Zl13 TERMS" OJl 5~~ DOWN. wftlabt-Po01 tbl, E1«t pr ...._~iirl1lilllll IC.-
ONLY 6 Y!'.AR..~ OLD. opener. SprinkleNI. Owner. Cl I s m~~R9 larwln realty Int. ~_.:._ S38,St». Alt Spm, &l&-5Ut ' •s•i ication 900.912
~ "' LARGE & LOVEL y MOVI! llt QUICK! I -OPEN 'T fHllM LARGE _ 3 BR. den, llv, V11C1t11t, see? Good looking : TrtnlC*t•tklin .A. llQl.I~ h1 nne rtliide.ntlel · _ ml CLEAN AND SHARP! nn/lrpl A kltch. JI! car '"''· 4 bedrooms •n<I hWlf Cia,.;llutlo• 911·949
Good 1rarttr home. j!'OO'f a•r. AMJ!od a.ttracOonj In-kitchfn tor t11.1Y Uvlf'18.
aMumablc • IOlln, goo fl oomt fl'Olll new, prtv. BR S29,950 for thi1 1hl.rp th~
nelstiborhOOd. li•nt 10 beat ~ Bettut\fully lndscpd. .)'tar old.,,,~R!!1 .... c; a r p e 1
prl<-e nf S2J.990 for tht_. 3 BAL~(,~·~y PROP. cllt=at"'1oc.rs."-'..........,o.:::..=o.· ---bc!droom "ut\e, Red Cal'J>fll u -"""''""· ~· * 642·74fl * St'\I lt11t ltrms .. 642·567ll
I --.. l§l
Oa11iflc•tion 950·990 .,
6
N
I
'
SUf'ER DUPLEX
Prial MIUC<d to fi!l,950 by
an amdouJ ownrr who wt1l
consider a leue-option to
pun:ba11. Vtnatile t1oot pt.,,..~Be<lroom,4Balh-4
Kltcbep arcu. -4 outatde
en~ Bkr. f15..72'A
MARK SPITZ
GREW UP WITH
P ARK THE BOAT nabt bellde thl.a 1nun.aculate.
2 story 3 bedroom, 2~ bath
beauty, Walk to beach 11.nd
park, Full prlcc onty $.19,950.
Pre-Grand Opening Sale I _J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; im ln tamou1 Lake llavuu. FURN. 10x40 tn.l~r A,·
hOme ot the world f&mOUI cabtna. Adult• only. No. ts
A POOL STOP PAYING RENT!!! Rolling Hon\eJ, 1 9 T l
London Brldgt. Located Newport Blvd. $12:;/md.
doee to all school• A ctty. 675--0U6. . • and IO can yoUr chil-
dren. Set: lhit auper 4 bed·
room \11\th lamJly room-and
covered patlo Soi Vista for
only $44,750.
N E W LA QUESTA Take Advantage of Our
$91'.P> or will trade flA' Colta•l-'"-'=-..,,-...,-----ll
.,..., or Newport Beach tn-Lagun• 8e.ch
Caplalr•no llffch
SAN MIGUEL
CGrtler lot, pos1lble boat ac-
cess, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 3 Cftl'
garage, sharp, clelln and
upgraded lhruoot. ()oly
l43,900 ... HURRY!
,com--~•-'pro:C-Cp'-._6'<-4687 ___ • ___ 1siz -UTU.. Pd. Bach nr. 1
Real E1t1te be.:i.eh. f'uU cooklJ1f.. Patloi
3 BEDROOM-CUSTOM
BE A WINNER
Elea;ant 4 bedroom 2 bath
with family roo1n, cove.red
and enclotied patio, lush c&r·
pets and drapes, new sparkl-
ing pool. Near everything.
"NO CLOSING COSTS"
SPECIAL
Exchi .-112 Sl!(l -Utll P..t. Nice y tum. _;:;.;;=:;"o:;o-;_ __ _;.:;;; Br. acros1 from beach.
CW;klm home (ealUttS eflCll'-
mou11 Jlvlna room l5x22°, A
masU!r bedroom approx 18'
wide. Nearty-new shag thru·
out, front pa!io. Priced at
$3:1,900 with down pa)"ll'lent
as low as $1 ,59.5. Call
83'1-9400-
Start Your $115 · Oceanfront. Utll pd.
I · 1 p I lrg stud)o, Beaut ioc!
CALL 54&-0458 nvestm1n rG?ram NU-VIEW RENTALS
Attrac. ~ acre view \ots 673-4030 4!M--3l48
Only 146.500. • ••• WIDE OPEN SPACES
Loll o! glau walls, cath@dral
ceilings, sunny kitchen, I""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! KATELLA REAL TY
Coron• d•I Mar
GRACIOUS
screened-In lanai, 3 bdrm,
2 bath. All tbia and a comer
lot for only $36,900.
CALL 54.>-0458
HOME ~ •.
Lovely 4 ~· one story ~ home tn our most prestig.
ioua area. Controlled en· -===; tra.rice for tafety and J Ii
lov•l,y view of b.,.uti/ul "'" ST A TEL Y
roundlngs. Call 67>-'1225. TREE·UNED
STREET
ELEGANT
MANSION
·-$41,tfS
CONDOMINIUMS
•
Lofty living awaits you!
Act swiftly
to select your own
Newport Beach condominium.
Visit the temporary oflices o1 lhe
Newport Crest Information Center,
conveniently located at
2400 West Coast Highway
Suite 8, Newport Beach.
Open Dally 10 a.m. to sunset.
17 14 1
EXPIRES OCT. 31st
• Mlnimum $950 Moves You In.
• No Closing Costs.
• Immediate Possession.
IN ADDITION, you get 2 & ~ooms, 114 &
2 baths, built-in range, oven, hood, dish-
washer, disposal, individual laundry area, en·
closed private garage, private entrances,
choJce of carpet color, cable TV, swimming
pool, gas B-B-Q & park-like recreational
area.
w/clty "'·att.r, within l n1ile or
of mulU-million sbopp'g Newport Beach
center, golf ~ &
Lreevoay, $SOQ Down, S50 per
n)O. 1'~ull Prict> $4995. Sellers
need tax bttall, will trade
for local l.ncome property.
Mc NASH REAL TY
642-'400
1,000 WHITE SAILS
Beautliul view from 'ijie. cor·
ner lot; 3 bdrm., family rm.
home. Move-In condition;
qUick ,,..,..., $69,500,
Exquisitely panelled family
& living room \\'Ith brick
tireplaCE". All thl s and 4
bedrooms & 1 % baths.
$33,960.
Large 4 bedroom on corner
lot. Completely block wall·
ed, professional landacap-
ing. Plenty of big tree11.
covered 20x20 flag 1 tone
patio with built-In bar-b-que.
Oversized double garage,
elegant entry, separate
formal dining room, large
kitchen with eating area,
electric built-in ranee with
double oven, dlshwashei,
family room combo, living
room hc>Sts Door to ceiling
fire~ce:. Very p op u I a r
floor plan. Beauti1ul center
master suite with plenty of
I' wardrobes. Excel l ent
"neighborhood, Prloed under
531•5111 ( :J Ul-5111 :O"'.'"'t at $37,500. A must lo
All this for as little as $207 per month, in-
cludes everything, on our least expensive
unit.
PRICED FROM
$18,950 TO $23,450
furn house, on
lo June 11t
646-9291 or 5-40;
OWNER Sa.crllice the rare
girt of privacy in the park
like 80xl20 ft, grounds • :::::::=
landscaped ·to pl ct u re -=========zl __ _:__:__:__:__:_ ___ _:::::::::==:;::::_ __ _ perfect perfection. King siz-Iii
od bodrnom•, 2 lovely batru;, WINTER WINDS Huntington lle1ch L1gun1 Hiils
Santa Ana Fwy. to Culver, right about 14 mµe
to Walnut (1st road on left), left 1 mile to
"Walnut Square"; or _San Diego Fwy. to
Culver, left about 3 miles to Walnut, right to
"Walnut Square" or call 714/832-9670. • family room with Inspiring !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;
fireplace. Built-in dream o::o=~f~~~ ;' ::;~ CONOO .. New World, 3 Br., kitchen. Patio parties, built· tt $950-2 Ba., air cond., cpts, drps, Houses Unfurn.
in BBQ for those cook outs! taie. ts so er than com pool. Ground ma.in· I I~ Walk to schools, shopping yelve,1t. w1arm tthights:. a glow,· ~~~e;ir ~~sina.f'~~~~l~fy~: tained. View. $ 2 6, 9 5 0 . Income Property 166 . Fnand.t • Gen eral
305
churches from this at-~'!i ~ a~m fu1~=~ ~. 2'battt, 1 years new.
1·~0wne~~'!::·J83!'!7!;-'1652~·~·----l'r-------~ c. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·~~j * DELUXE * tractive home. Brk. $32,000. kitchen & a lovely family Electric built-In range & Mabileffanm j ~ INCOME UNITS 'Buslnesa landra~::J!ners Ranch slyle 2 BR., on val· 962-1373. could make this little palace oven, w/w carpets&: drapes, L ido Isle 2 houses, 1Ai acre $51 ,000
uable R·2 lot; xlnt cond.; OWNER Must Leave. Design· a dream come true. 3 rooms 'fireplace. Priced below mar· * REDUCED * 3 BR duplex $38,000 Op rt ity: 200 We will refer tenant.s to YoU.
)ots of shutters, newer carp. ed for active family en· for the children and a ket at l 27,<nl. Pa,yments Duplex & be.ch unit $41,500 po un · FREE of charge · ' · Many
& drnpea. Tastefully dee· tertalnlng! 2 bathS,. 1arge master bedroom tor you. less than rent. Walk to ma-Spacious 4 BR. 4 baths; fam· Mobile tlomts 3 houses & duplex $67.500 AVAILABLE NOW defi;i~able lcno.nts on our
orated. Buy now & build 'family room enhanced by Dad's lavorile den A a din-joio shopping center. ily rm. with wet bar, Frplc. For S•I• 125 CALL 642-1771 Large Corporation desi~ A.vlAtirl~~~:ars e 64S.3900
later. charming fireplace, wife-ing room too. Truly one-of· 1, in master suite. I-~;;_;;.::,;;:_ ___ _;;;;; Ontu pt'rmanent resident to dis-
MORGAN REAL TY saver built-in kitche n , a-kind. NOW $89,500 Contempo-laguna Hills -rrlllll'Tf"2l tribu!e Tenco (a Division of 673-.6642 675-6459 dishwasher. Lovely covered Call 893-8533 Only 8 spaces left! Adult T 1-1 E COCA·COLA CO.l
patio. 3 yrs. new. 5 •. •. 962-4471 ( :_) 544-1103 boaJrala& 1aweon JA. park, adjacent to Leisure Coffee Products. Can start HIDEAWAY'S bedrooms, E'Xl>ensive thick ~Coll World, 23301 Ridge Route run time or part t ime ~5-10
On sweet Begonia padded carpeting, custom 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 Dr., (otf Moulton Pkwy.). hI"S. per "''k.I. Company C'S·
Neat 2 BR. homl', l·BR. unit. drapes. ardExquis8~~ tern$39 ~ Antique Buffs * CHOICE * ~ Laguna !fills. TI4/83Q.3900. tablishes business for dis· e Otrr on your own'r Spac;.
-,
All on ground Ooor. front Y • ..... , ·'""'· trtbutors. Furn Ba.ch. Al l util incl $84. $56.500 962-5566. FOR Must see Jo believe this love-Nord Corner Lot 1m Viking Brelt\\'OOd. Pvt 8 Deluxe Units NO SELLING
University Realty OWNER anxWJus. 3 spacious ZONED ly marble fireplace in a 5 Bdrms., l'h baths plus din pty._ Upgraded .. In San !uan 2 Bdrms each. All on ground Limited opportunity. Cash re-• BEAD-I Bums? Lrg Bach.
ENTERTAINING beautifully customized coon-rm. pl"••-. -·-•-k. Capistrano. Finest adult n I & 1~ 12 4911 \V ·•• · I d Si rr· Ut'I I I $100 3001 E. Co11.st Hwy., CdM bedrooms, 2 bath!, family .th 3 bedroo ....., ...," .. w~ oor w pvt yards gar-qu , .. .,,. , . riu: inc u · o-.·r. re 1q. l nc .
6-"10 ·th I 1 brick try eiitate wt ms $85,<nl park. 493-4448. ,.es. Ch oice location. ing phone number 1~ room wi e ep.n Roomy It ready, huge 4 & 2 baths. '.lbc30' family LIDO REAL TY 24x00 Westernef, like new. 2 REDI-BRE\\I • PRIVACY As.o;ured' 1 Br.
JOIN THE CLUB . =l~~t~~!titocl.:. ~=-·~Mi =e,_~~ ~~ 1d5oor ~n:,ei:ie~ 3377 Via Udo, N'pt. Beach Br .. den, v•et bar, air cond. ~~:-~32~er~n, Ii· CORPORATION Nr 11t~. util inC'I S125.
BEFORE !OH carpeting, drapes. New-dltion. Loads of upgrading 90ftener, too many extras to ---"*'-'6C.7.:.3-c.7300.:.:.:_,,*'---I ~ ;·642-'75n. b ch· Roy McCardle Realtor lOOl HOY.>ard Ave. • nxER-Upper! 2 Br. encl
THE DUES GO UP ly painted inside &: out. thruout. Ovenized cul-de-mention here. Call 968-4456. LIDO MANSION 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. San Matt'O. Ca. 94401 gar, lrirl!!:lpets ok. $135.
We have 3 ~al lots? Prime location near sac Jot, privacy fenced. Just 12xfiO EXPANOO, liv rm .. 2 548-7729 Liquor store · $33M/mo gross
T $45,{lOO everything. No down Gl listed at $49,900. ••• 4 BR. Exec. home. Boatli~B;r~.,~l~l>=Ba~.~A~d=ul~t=park~~· :nr;1 :=;;;~;~;.;=i 1 Beer Bar -Tenµg •NICER! 2 B:. Fncd yrd 129·u500 • 'tyo R It terms . low-low dawn non· CALL 842-14.18 S.~. Playroom. l..arl(e ocean. $5800. 536-«m. Card & Gift Shop Encl ,gar. Chtldren welc.
n1ver11 •• Y Bek ~ ~ 81" ~1 patio. Prope..+.· hcautuully · NEW OU LEXE Toba•co Shop -Growing 1140.". ------30(11 E. Cst. H11.y. 673-6510 vets. • ..,....,,....,. -" · Mm • maintained. $79.soo. p S "' -OPEN HOUSE Huntington llNch • ~!~ --GEM I ........... l ~ HOLLAND Bus. s.1 ... OLDER! J Br. E/C.M. BYOK Genlrll BUILDER SELLING NOW. 1716 Ornngl'. C.11-t. 645-4170 ~I~. fncd }'llni. Kids/pets; D&ILY BAYSHORE mn Beact> s:vd., 11.s. ~~16~t0~w~. c~..,.=·t~H~wy'.}.,~NB~!j~;;;;;;;;;;~· ~~ j .,5 950 G UN "' TOWNHOUSE liiii""'iiii""'iiii;;i;;;iiii"" I · REALTORS 642-4623 .., • ORY CLEANIN & LA -Lov.ly • B·'-m a ;, Can-Bring your own kids -This ,,_ .. , f Ad If ti ORY AGENCY. !"U L L e AT the Beach! 2 Br. Stov.~ n""" Closeouts V"ll b th s seller needed 5 bedrooms, ~·uul o am!I On Ull ng· rclrl C I d N yon .!lOmC' in a 1treat JQ('a· I G Y e eG we sold him one and he's Mission Vielo Apartments ton Street. H.B. PRICE $500. v;. rp s. rps. l
tion. 20 Rnya] St. George · Low Price Stroll to the beach from lhls anxious to move. An extra· 4 "-"room-Sh•rp ,_;..F.c•::•...:cS•::l::•:__ ___ ;..15::2 !!!!!!!!!!!!!5!!36-8!!!!!!1!!88!!!!!!!!..,!! * 646-5912 * vu. 5200· ~ Bkr. 6T:>-7225. Only gorgeous 3 bedroom home nice 4 bedroom, 2 bath. ()n. ~ 1' SARBER-Style Shop. NB \VE HAVE LOTS ~fORE e DUPLF.X . excel Joe & $19,990 decorated in the mood of ly steps to 9Chool. At ap-Newly listed home la only 6 NEW 5 U AT BEACH locaUon. $3.50 ha i r cu I . AU. PRICES & SIZES! P'~~ ~~. ~~g~M· '7oesemin™;e!'°::~ ~eio:!~ ~~exicxl~hT b fi:nl n f f;~~· HUITY. Call JyOll~~ld, ~ttures~~'. 8362 Atlanta, HB. 5.19-6779 Waterfront Duplex --=-'1346=-'':.:"".::'"'-'633-=-=-''°'=·--u )'OU n('ed help call todel_
cheerful knee-deep shag. 842-1418 Large family.style kitchen. Commtrclal PIER & SLIP 240 ALA Rentel1 e 645-2 BR., 2 Ba, frpl. Remodel· & close to major shopping Play in the family room & TERRIFIC VIEW FROM Property 151 2 bdrm with iunroom and Money to Loan 1648 N I Blvd
ed. R-2 Int. G.H. Robertson A: l!Choola. Your choice of .... __ ... ..-.. in y 0 u r ht "'e terrace ~u11 1 bdrm •wpor '
_:.;=:;:;=c==-"=--"=--1 carpeting also including separate formal d l n I n g WM¥R ly $35~0. Call 837-MOQ. FOR Sale or lease ~~. 4 units, & view deck $ ,950 -WUI • • "-alt .... Call: 673-3850. """' •" 6""'0"' • "'"1 • REAR.,.YARD. Priced at o~ -.. C M
dishwasher &: builtins. 5% room, Call 968-4456. ----KA~LA REAL TY 1.00> sq. ft. ·each. 1865-71 Exchange -Bkr Daily Pilot NEED CASH? Sl.OCJO, Or up l----=-"'-~--'IJ
Cos tf M••• Down w/payments less than 1 d Park Ave., C.M. Do not _Bo='c.c'"'°=·------to S3.€XXI, Sl0,000 and more.
CIAL UX> mo. Thill ill a must see ··-, 17171 Beach B v ., ll.B. N B h disturb occupants. Phclne FOURPLEXES See Avco Thrift for a Real VETS SPE (or those wanting lots of 21/J BLKS TO BEACH I ewport eac OONner, SJ0..7651. Courtesy to Costa lrles.a. Under con-Estate Loan. Upon approval. M~~~~'.~A~~I~ ~~~! ~o!°r~te pri~. ~·.;f~i~~r~~ House. Walk to Beach B~~r. Beautiful 2 BR, ~:n.o nSU::rec.!!:,'<n~ ~~~.th~1:0'% ho;t!ivuer ~~
for onlv $100 total. Near 537-5642 SCOTT REALTY, 536-T'all l-Sty. A·Fra:ine. 3 BR., 1.. 1¥.i BA. Located in quiet E-Easy tenn!l. Act quick. unsec"ured personal Joans.
ever.,.1hi ng & in excellent LARGE AND Irvine ha. Beams, bltns. Tenn.ls, side adulta only community $71,500. AVCO THRIFT. fia1 Ne~'JX)rt "1111.3'
l't'!li<konti·1I area. 0 n I y Or Stop By Tbe Sales OUice LIVABLE pools nearby. $32,900 Finn. $21,900. Conventional !inane· Phil SuJllvgn, Realtor Ctr. Dr .. Suite lOl . N.,..port
$32.000. C,,I! for details. Located on Newland, Be-Ing available 963-2187 548-6761 842-1_.18 hind stater&: Talbert. BETTER THAN NEW CAYWOOD REAL TY · · Beach, Ph. R33·3440. Tiu•sc Are Jus1 A F'l'W
COLLINS & WATTS, INC. ~:~nG!~~~~~t~';,!b Elegantlydecoraled.3 bdnn.. * 548-1290 * Duplexe1/Unft1 Beach Duplexes !!!!i!!!!l!!!J!!!!!!!!!J!!!~ll!!!!!!!~ Our MANY RENTALS ..
• ,JN:,. • * C & W * 3 bedroom, split level model fam ily-room home. Lush -'><::=:::-.;::::u;:;::::--11.-!H~lo!_ ____ _!l~62 New deluxe 4 br, 2 ba, & 3 *
tw.UtAn features: a pool-table size landscaping surrounds the Owner S•crtflclng NEW DUPLEXES br, 2 ba ('8Ch . $73,500. Call 1st TD Loans $11~. MINI Home. 1 BR. E },aml!y Room and a Dining large patio. Over-sized Jot Large, near new Duplex. Don Thompson 646-7414 or side. Tot ok. Vacant
17171 Br11ch Blvd., H.B. Fl.c:k ring F•1rel• ht Room. Apple pie condition. on cul-de-sac street. Re· Must sell. $76,000. OPEN BUILDER SELLING NOW. 640-0532. 6" % INTER * COI JNTRV CLUB VTLLA I 8 ICJ At $34,500 . call now. duccd 10 $37,350. HOUSE. ll'6 45th St., N.B. $45,950 Fare! W•lker, Realtor "1' EST $135 . ('1\N'T Beat! l B s:~kl~ngt'~l:~;~:u~:r~~ ~~ this ~h !ol~ht 646-TITI . 8 red h1·11 BLu:n~ ::s~ :;., 21Ai Cor Huntl=;~ams, H.B. Lots for S•l• 170 2nd TD Loans ::ngalow. Pa !lo. Kids/
V~e Country Club. Elec. alter, tastefully decorated 3 (9-R"' • ·~ Ba. T--•·· tam ·-. ;;;.;.;.:;..;.:.;...;=;...--..;.;."-I *
d 'tcr -noR"r ._ ......... m '""-horn•. No & ~ ....,.... .. , .. ._.. "'"" 66 LOTS OF LOVE that I• Lnweal rates 0~""11 Co, J!:ll r oor, w ""' '"' • ""'"''"" ........ ~ Pool. curt. By Owner Income Properly I · · "WE BUY·-~TD'S" $150 • OOLUtOUSF. 2 B W/D all l'ICC kit., crptt, maintenance fneans time S:S,..L.:A:Tilr,.....9,..., REALTY •AA,950 .... -. Silky Ten-ler female pups. Gar. Bltns. Fncd for kid
drps: "blut! c h IP.' in-for a swim in the pool or a , ~ . Univ. Pari< Center. Irvine ,~"-'--~--·"-----1 INVESTORS! Brand new Aodord ol ra bAllf• ... •Hhe~~· Sattler Mt..... Co. * vestment at , "over the walk by lht" CN:!ean. Live hoc· CaJI An,yti 833.()820 ntE BLUFTS _ PLtJSH 2 Br duplex, fully rented. $48,950, esi1. s ts. se........ •w GUN 8 rountcr" price. 0 w n er urlowly for less. Call SINGLE STORY me, split level ncC\r Corona del $10,000 down, 7.5% Joan. .830-="833:"'"·------642·2171 545-0611 $l6S · IN LA ' A! 1
"'"-~~ NO AGENTS 968-4456. Office hours 8 AM to 6 PAI M H' "' 500 •-• fo Good --Qu'ckB oE UT •--•-g Harbor are .. 2l .,.... F'um. Cottagr . Gar. ~tatu .....,.. .. J.MJ. • ar .,...,...., . AM\ r ,..,....... 1 BP-A IFUL·vw lot in Erner· .;w:1vu1 .,.-adults.
home. 2\~ ba, trplc, blttn Older .--... lot 1 bedroom L•gun• 8eecJI Harbor Vu MONACO 2 + C.M. 642-48.Tl. Call 675-2030 estate. Reasonable rates, or sm . FAl\.tlLY OT" Slngleii!
LOVELY LRG 2 sty .fBR, ·~· 1 BEDROOM Jack Peck Agt, 545-0465. pn.'Clation. 151 E. Bay St., 11ld Bay S50,t'.m. * MONEY to loan on real *
kit h d•h/wsh Furn ...-·-·· I--"'--------den. ~n d"11" l ·S. 2024 CORONA del Mar 4-Plex. ·11 buy To B 2 Ba F I .~ G•~ gas c . . condo In adult area. Walk to UNOBSTRUCTED Port p;;,,ence PL 6#6249 Below Hwy. (2) 3 BR, (1), 2 Mountoln , ft-Hrt, w1 Your . . r, . no: J•.... -~ Huge yard. S p rink I er s .,,!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I big shopplng center. PMce Owner l-5 pm. BR Ii (l ) 1 BR, 811 ..-* BROKER 642-7491 * Pet nk. $43.000. OWn<'r. 976 Denver OWNER PYWlSt Sell, """"-ed ol only $15,900 includes Ocean view a.cross living & ,_, Pr!. Resort 174 LANDLORDSI
C 'I ·•~2"" ''"" .. --" d g '-I ~•-HARBOR VIEW HOME w/ .. Jl'C1... nc. only . -==.:....----..;.;..c WE armnge lsl .i 2nd RE FREE ••-NT•' SERVI Or., ·" . .,.,.,. ~. Jor l~te --'el 4 ... ...,.,er, ryer. ran e • fami y rooms. , '""' 4 bdrm., • ..ani:: 000 °'" ··~ •v•• or G tro Lot boa ·~ ~ --~--horn ofl P640-0008Blenno,. 4 BR, fanllly nn. ~-~· . · ~.. LAR E Wa l<'r nt . t loans. Also purchase TDs. BEACON RENTALS
CHARMING & MODERN 4 bcdroonis, 3 baths, fireplace '~·~en,,..,.. 2 bath e era privacy .. .. __ k CA NYON LAKE 2 °'
bedroom home ln t"XCC lent n sec ...,,. rear ·~ " • ..... "'"'' """"' INVESTORS 7% OOWN Ac. Vie-.,· Lot, La k <' --I I lud., U·"-1' & •harm • ·--··'uded ,....., · · ·'O'll Bkr. 4!12-8.132. 492-042(. * ,.. "lll
·-a. All buillinl!, sll.11ken room, all electric "Award" brick patio for lots of sum-• 1 H a · ,_. .. _11 ba -· built In kitchen d'-.. ...__ mertlme fun. Call Earl .N;;•:.;W;.,l!!';;.rt'-"H:.;•;;.lllh:;.;;lo,1 __ Brand new " p ex, tg Bch. IV<'nhut'. ~ or exc ng<' FOR ACTION. • HUNTINGTON lkach arc living roor11. c orner · , •••.nWIUnci. 53\ 5111 ( -1 531 5111 .. Bltiml, cpl, closed in gar. for Lake Tahoe. SPARLING bedroom Du fireplace, and prin1e cond. Load!! of decking • beautiful • -'"' Waterbury. $52,500. Wes:t of Btacl1 Blvd. Just INV ES TM E NT Rltr. • Sharp 3 1
Price S3l000. Client will ex· patio, lush lo"'. maintenance -=========I ..AG . NEAR NEW • IN C.M. $64,950. 96H4a7. 83.l-J544. 646-33~ CALL 642·56 78 Haven hnme. New s
Chan"" «tUlty fol' triplex or land!ICBp~ and a gorgeous ii o/.a.n, 3 BR, 2 ba., 2 frplc. + _;;:=:=:========:::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::====: C'Brl)CIS with m a I C h I n •· Cati llWI poo I -k tt• 900 M sl 0 Hill to--' din, nn. + + .__,,.., drapes. Sparldlng clea fourplc,, C.M. ...... m ~ ' -· . an on n a REAL ESTATE "'~ ~~ "''" ;, S2JO .... month. • j 54f>-84.24, SOUTlt OOAST _81_>-_M~·----~-Preitigt lMrtg ts yours ln -ll"\I fam. rm. $41,900. C./IQ "O Ji\'-. ' /) 'C ~Q. 9 3 bedroom, 2 bath a.t.c
REALTORS. OWNER tr an Sf ere d, 3 thi1' 3,000 eq ft 4-level hGme 11!.:I Glehne~ St. Call fOT App't. \:)~ J.""t.I ~~ ~ '!J )..J(/• \:) Mesa an!a. Double ~
!HOME & lNCOME -Spark1· teparate ba.thl, 3 oversbed high on a hill. 4 bedrooms,·3 494-9473 549-0316 LIDO REAL>TY oovti red Jlfltlo, new ~
Ing .. w duplox $48.960. """"""""· .1...,,t """'"" baths, formal dining A 2 CUTE AS A 33'77 Via Lido, N.B. 973-7300 Tire Punle witlr tire lluilt-ln Chuckle fencod ynrd. >'or""' ... Beautiful 3 bdrm owners ln bonus room, Alum(>ltone huge family rooms. Patio BY ~NER _ tlon at S:t:lt per month. ,,
unit + 2 bdrm rental unit. fireplace and mirrored parties &ft! a natural wlth BUG'S EAR """ O R.af1'mOll t.tfws of tM ~
Xlnt location. 151 E. Bay walls. Deluxe builtin kit· the custom landAcaplrl,I le On lge. fenced IOt; room for 3 Bdr.. 2 Baths. Beautiful flM' 1CJOrnbled wonb b.. !
St.. c .rit. 542-1837. chen, dl11hwMher. Lovely utmost privacy. 111!! final pool. 3 BR, 2 bM. Jlv &: (!In. kite~ large mast" r low to form four lltnplti word1. ,,
P.OOL Jlome, price reduced pafW> overlooka beautiful 11ep up. Call 9611--4456. rm11 w/beam ce.U. If f_rp\c. b e droom w I pr I , I H 0 8 C 0 R Realton 54.5-o9t9l
for ttu lck W e. by owner. bifck planters, exquisite •• ·Cheery kltch. w/brkfst. bethfdtt~lt'llt area . OwfM':r • Open EVH.
4BR. hdwd floo~ new ithag landscaping. Prime loca· area; A KOOdic At $4.1,500. moti'9.ted. Temts Av a . r I r I I LANDLO DS! ~ crp!, fresh paint . lo m11lnt. tlon, Brk, $34,000. 962-8965. · • 4!19-2800 * $.18.500. Gn-1658 or 6&-86M. _ . _ • .
N-CO.la M•'" I 32 . 900 . *JUST LISTED * ttlltl'.:l'lbm«> J . "' SpectBll" In N...,..oj
S<0-337<. ' BR, I ba., family nn .. In 1.,,..,. ... ..,....,.,,...,, ... ~ ,___,......._I ·S_•_n_t•_A_n,,•-----1 ~ R y T I 0 I • "'""' • =n• del Mil' •
ShArp-Vscant""\lnder 25M -3 ly walled, atwided ~ar yard. apacloul hedrooms, 2 baths, =-~= down $185 mO. Q . 1234 I I r I v1C$ a FREE to Your * REPOSSESSION '* Shatterelt WM.~ptete-OWNER. de aper a le, 3 _ ~.,.il" 3 BR. llA··ba. ~liftio ~o )J \.::::::~~ ~~~~~~) &: l.qwa. Our Rental Seh
br--beaut ahag, for info call ~11 SY.% loan. $38.!0'J. r.leaant fireplace Jend1 ad· ...,. ... ._..a-· Nu.V\ew!
B1<r 546-7739. George Wllllon1aon ded c:hlnn to ,...c1oua tlv---=~~~~-JiiS.i Shaii"""'iiiiii'i9911ii·liiioil. •ilJ NU-VIEW RENTALS·
STARTER Home 1 ..... trt1'n~ RHllor S4Mml Ing""'"'· Bulltln drum kit-EMERALD BA y I B E L 0 H I e . -v --or -· ch<n ewn a dl-.i..r 5 ~ 'tho _,.,. In ~· ogao ··~ 3 BR, frt>lc, 1 .. R-4 lot, OWNER..,., "s ELL". ' ' FINEST LOT I I ,... • WHV RENT? we hAii $26.500 tenna. m--7412 sparkl~ clean 4 BDRM on ~t ne~\ VP,~~ -B~ VIEW . .' $55,000 ............ ~ i I j I I t:. stopped 0 kxfy nmnlng up hOwles avail. for nothlnt
By Owner 3 hr. 2 bl, lrplc, 2 ... -lot. $211,!IOO. i( •P-·~ -. TED HUBERT --I ~ and down ptJttl~ dhn., In •--v • .~. do lo -900 ~·-· PA-w•• ~ -r------,-.,,....:-~parkfrv1 meten. She told.-, "1 uvwu to et•• .,.., wn car pr* .• ,,.,-;;;.. * .,~_..1418. ~ REPOSSESSIONS •nd Assocloto1 , ~ • ..,,,...,.. Call • n Y t I m •,
........ PREST1GE~2'100 ...-ft~ r•rlnfnmattonllnd IO<:atl<m =;r~ NB Mt,,~·s~ 12.1 I rT u, BIN OrTI lio1~i!-;;-r.:~1'!;..i ~=.":.'":·.-= TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-567B
BDRM, 2 BA. Fantastic. of the$e nlA I VA ltbmea, . . you j!._!/~'i,! ~P '"~ ~. $49,900. PATTI WALKER contac1 _ OCEAN VIEW TRAILER lwne A cabll..na. ....._.... 3 Br., den, 2 Bii, FIA ht..
REALTY, 14:1-IUS. KASABIAN GAZEBO "Trad< Wind VIII"!!•·" PRINT NUMBE"D lElTU.S Im"''" $31il/mo. 4 2 NEW 3 br hame. walkina 3 BR, den, 2 baths. Stale en· ~t• Mes.. E. J. Smalley, ll'I THESE SQl)Alt~S HeUnlrope. ~t or d~ ~an. S3'1.00J. Re•I !rtate t6i..66M try, sunken !Iv. mr.. tpl. 111 1 _,Sp!'...:~:..-==;:·--~~i m-m.
• 9S8--0407 • NO DOWN 3 BR ""fliA peaked ceiL, ori: beams. Vttcande'I cott mone)'I Rent lj UNSCl:AMSlE LfTTflS 10 I' I I I I 'I Coste Met a .....
Vacanch?I cost money! Rent w/tmlc pr1 patio l'llml 1lau gablrt. B In k1tchen. your houlltt, apt., ltonl GET ANSWEI . • . • • • ~r houae, apt •.. •tore tennla ''couru on.' EMY MlA ~lzenwi •• n1""'1y •t ~~1· bid& .. •tc. thru. DI.Uy Pllot CLF.AN 2 er. duplex, end
bldl·· etc. tbnt. Dally Pilot terms with down J>AYM'!nt. MJOn ' W'rVlol OaMttied Ad. Stll Idle Items SCRAM LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700 r•nr, & yt1rd. Somt crpUt
a .. llled Ad. Tot1I pnce $21.000. !rlt-3984. NMd 1 "P•d"! Pl>ce an adt nowt Call G<H611 tlowl • lt'1! ""· -· •
' \
•
•
'
305 Apts. Furn. l60 Apt. Untum. 365 Apt. Unl·urn. 365 Apt. Unturn. 3'S Apt•., _Offl_c. __ R_..,,_•_1 ___ 440_ Person.all Houses Un.furn. 30:5 Houses Unfum. 1---c;.;.:c;_:.;,;....;.;_ __ -'-510
Fum. or Unfum. 370 --
Coat• ~u Newport Beach C'.fJsl8 MeS-a ;G;•;n~o~r;;•~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~G;i'';i"i;•~·~·~'jiiiiiiiiiiiii!Miiiii l:H~u~n~t;in~o~t~or~.~8~•~•~c~h~-;-I~~~~!:====: I OFFICE.STORE 1.:.;:..:.;,;;_;,..::;:..:.;, ____ ;,.c:;;,;.:;,,;,c....c;=----l·---------1 Costa Mes• 525 ~·ft. Util ~Id. Ott 11 .
2 BR l!OOW, CflllS. 1tJils, i:ar., \'VATI:R.PRONT 3 lUl., l~r SH,\HE :111 apt $'-'O to $30 * MOVE lN TODAY * pat·k g, 2062 Ntw()Ort, cor.
$145/mmi!h. ? !rn a ll pnlio, <b:k avail, sun iteC"k, \\k. Utll, ptione, 11001 Intl. El CORDOVA A PTS. $1 39 A MO. of Bay st. OOi--1252.
* JIINOU SPmrrtJALlST •
Ll>t thla ild cha~ your
wholf' outlook on llfe for thl'
better Profealouu.I l'ldvie1.•
on life. Lie. Readina• dally.
10 AM-10 PM. 492-9136.
49>9034, 312 No EJ C&ntloo
Re11.I, San Ctemente.
childttn, m pr1 s. 2077 ~. lnunac. s:JJO, 67:>--2124 ?>lrn or "'-'On1f'n. 2376 From $l-4S Spac. 2 ac 3 8R in 4--plC)(.
WaJlact', A"! 6, CM . W LK be h. , g o f \ "" ........ Bl·~ C •I :kvt'r..il avail. ALL 1-:X· * * * * * * &~ '' A tn .11e .. ''"' rp • 1•1'"'',..,, • vu.. · · · 1 & 2 Bedrooms TRAS. Pool. rec bids. KlcU
Bu1in•s1 rtentel
•11
1"';...'.'1"'87·" ~:!;, S'Jrnai""' &l:N'67. Dishwasher -Shag Carpeting · Walk-in Clps-w•lcomc. From 11311. ~ u-COSTA APTS Contemporary gML. clran 2 BR, hc>u9f:, yr "1 '-'· ~ · * :-:Jl,\!lY ~.:Li\1S . POOL 111 n--Mgr. 11371 Keeh1on "B". l ,
wfw crpling, patio," prl u--;;iversity Park • Adults Poolsule $140 Up ets, Forced Air lieat. Extra Large ,:wums -blk w. of Beach Blvd. off Spanish
f,•nccd yan:I. P1Mlt:V or roo m • ('hllth'<'n 11l.,1 block. Beautiful Game Room -Heated Pool • BBQ's-Slater. 968-7510 or IM7--42SO. 1 & 2 Bedroom Commercial
for gatdt'nlac.. $151. lSt &: PRIVATE HOUSE Free Furniture Plan Enclosed Garages. Quiet s urroundir:fts and NR. Oceantront, b c 8 c b • Bullt-lns • Sbag carpets
l/4!1. plus deposit s.:r~ba ~~11JU:Ap.I~ :::i~ 117 f:. 7.Znd SL, Cl\1 642·1645 close to shopping. (Nr llarbor & Ham' ton St) sundttk. Newer dlx 2 Br., • Dnl.pes •Walk In cloael.<1 Property
EASY DIVORCE
Mod1•rn d!vol't'e h1w11 art
11impJc. Slt p-by·s!cp, l'.'M·
fkft.nlial i11$tn.ictlon, 11111.ke
ll possible for you 10 handle
your own divorce \vithout a
lawyi.'r. $24.95. 544-2~.
PALM & CARD READINGS
LE.A.~:/~~n. 4 Br.,1 .. ~nnfl libn:i"". F..nclosed yard and 2 BR. UTIL PO $175 Adult Living· No Pet5. bltns, crpta:, drJls. lndry, 2 • Swtmmlng Pool This is a free standing 2Z40
hOmr. ~ me. w #AAIU • ~ "077 Ch I St C I M "2 ''70 c"-H•, nr. shops & plP.l'. • Bar-b-Qu., f bu'\d' 11 .. • Pt·-s 3 2 5 0 O -~ pal"". All latt'sl ,,,,.,., ... f""". Jtrc\ "'"'!. Aalts ' ar e ., os a esa 11;1'9 -"'"'""""' squB.rf' oo t 1 1n<> wt 1 <"'"". , ..... , · '"""'"'"-u "' • .. u•" ,~, n70,j'.i': round. A<llts. Baby e Enclosed Garag th 1 . ...,. kl S~'n>r.i: 546-1698. features. Adults pttferred . .Ku rtt·t~. i1nfan1 okl HACIENDA HARBOR ok ~,. All Util"t" p "d moi;__,_ iUl ampt-par nf{ ""'*'· Sll<) .,.r moou .. Call &12·%~1 . ·-· I 1es 31 on -or Sired In Coola 3 Br · 2 Ba · .tnm. nn. blfns, ~or 546-~. * $2S PER WEEK * From $150 WALK TO BEACH Mf'.a. Owner will lease
rt'frli. lm r, shag, pr., C d . DELUXE l & 2 BEDR001'tS New 1 & 2 BR, cpt/drps buildlnr as is, for beaut,y ht.le., patio, pool. $2-il. on om1nlumt & Up. l>ool &: maid ~rv1ce. dswshr. 316 lGth. 53&-TE or Mature adults, no _pets salon or will negotiate leue Pa!lt, present & future.
AdvlCC' & help in many mat·
ten. 213: 694-1350. Fully Uc.
La Habra. Call for appt.
Y68-:1647. Unfum. 320 Kitchens ava'l. 1'lotl'I Tahili Furnished & Unfurnished 847-3957. Wal~~ lo for olhm-tyJ)t' busineu. Call
3 BR. 2 ba. pool SlSO/mo, com <'r llarhor & Victoria. lleated Pool -Garages -Shag Carpeting !'PACJOUS 3 hr $l89 Ava.ii JS4 :o:~~ sntec M 546-1600. lNVESTJ\.lENT
avail Ull. Ask for Bobbe 1.c_ .. _,_•_Mo __ s_• _____ Cl !AltJ\.llNG 1 BR. !urn. Dishwasher -All Utilities Paid. now. All xtras. K 1 d s VO:..~.;;~·· ' · DIVISION.
5'1&-4141 Ol" 839-9398 NEW unr. 3 Br. rondo, pool, diip!Px, r.E''A' l'rpts, drps & Adults Only · No Pets ~";;""~oo~m!o,~968-~'15~1-;0~, ~84~7~-4~""?,'··I!!!!!!'!~~~~~!!!'!!!!'!~
1
~--R"' • "ij Social Clubs 535
S!ngla/Cpls, vacant 2 Br. play groonti, cpts/drps. Nr. Jmint. Lovl'ly garden sur-241 Avocado St., Costa Mesa 646-1204 NE\V, 1BR,1145. 2 BR, $175. ~,J.~....,.IL~•PM-s RS~~~~--So.Coas1Plaza.544-S116aft roundings. $13;;. l\tatur~ 4 Blocks from o cea n . LA.MANCHA ~ ... an ... ,,_...__ 7,,.__ 6. adults only. :>18-69'.!0. VILLA MARSEILLES 536-7678. Brand New Deluxe Uni~
F1ND YOURSELF
IN SOMEONE El.SE .
Huntington S..ch Huntington &e•ch BACHELOR, 1 & 2 Br. npts. SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. L • l!each Rent now lor your con·
En('!. carports, htd pool. Furnished & Unfurnished •gun struction allowance of 1 '' T 11 E FACJ'ORY", con.
slsttng of 32 unique boutique
shops, has 2 openings 1n the
mall ranging lrom S80 mo.
DISCOVER
DISCOVERY
VACANT-3 BR, 2 ba. 60xl00'
lenoed & laOOscapcd lot.
()ve.rsized double garn~
111/room for boat. Elec bltn
nv;ge & ~n. new w /VI
shag carpets & drapes.
$225/mo. Vtli&ge ~I Estate
!16H471
19041 Pauline -3 BR, 2 ba,
SZ!S/mo.
8306 Magic Circle -Z BR, 2
ba. $239/mo.
1\"l022 Bikini -3 BR , 2 ha.
$239/mo.
VillagC" Rtoal Estate
9'2-1471
•I Blks from OcC'an 2 Br, has
everyttiin~. Kids/prts ok.
Rent-A-House 979-8430
* J Br CONDO. CTT>l.'S, drp!I.
pc.ol, 1vash£'r /dm 't', RIO,
fl'.'f.ng, $170. 5-1<\-1405.
3 BR. 2 BA. \\'al k to beach.
$.'..N)/1110. Lea.~ w/option.
Avail Nnv. 15. !i-16-8470.
1 BR condo nr Beach & Adlts/no pets, Sl20 & up. Adult Living OCEAN VIEW mo's tree rent. 1 BR, l BR
· dbl 853 Center St. 645'-8965· Dishwasher color coordinated appliances GAZEBO & den. 2 BR's & 3 BR's. Allant11., trplc, re big, EASTSI08 attrac. comp! 3 BR d"" 2 baths Slate en· From ~155. Dshwshr • encl · gar w/e~t door CJllCner. Plush shag carpet· mirrored wardrobe doors-, .... , · . gar, ~im'g pool. BBQ's,
$1 70. 962-7265. furn. 2 BR, l ¥.i ba .. pool, nr indirect Ughting in kitchen -breakfast bar -try, sunken llv. rm., lpl. Hi 646-84.13 778 Scott Pl CM
I I schls., shopping & frcewa..vs, f d . I h I d peaked cell., open beams, ·· Laguna N gue no pets. &1H2'l0. huge private ence patio -P us an scars glass gable8. Bltn kitchen. Newport S.ach
3 BR. 211.s BA in Sea Terrac:e, \;H:u:n:l:in;;g;;'•:n::B:•:•:c:h;:;;;;;. ing -brick Bar-be-Ques • large heated poo s A prize winner at $55,t:m.
714/~ .213/J.TI-3393
Card, loba.cco & yardage
shops esp. wanted. 425 30th
St.1 1~ewport B ca ch,
........ _
673-9600 or 642-8520.
.iiii.iMiii1ii.ss'"1"'o"'N"'v"'1"'E"J"o""i1 Found (frH ads)
!al
sso ocean v 1 e w. cpts/drps. & lanai. Air conditioning. Mission Realty 4~731 L•
d ...,~ ._, =.oc ..,...~ COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. FND; Grey & \\'hilt' semi-Lease $400 mo. tnc. Assn LaQUINTA HERMOSA 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 557~00 Laguna Niguel 1ve
,.!"'3s·~.,.;_ ~.......,. .a:.Yl:. Spanish Countey Estate Llv· MANAGING AGENT LAGUNA NIGUEL Retail/Comm. spa.ct-avail. grown male cat. Very af. ~~ : -..~. Ing & Spacious Apts. Ter-"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!l'\ AP.rt entl .b.lg Contact fectionate. \V/rt'd flea rol· Duplexes Unfum. 350 raced pool; sunken gas I!! 1 Br.,1 Ba.: $185 Br., l GRUBB & El.US co. ~~eoV~"hore~~~l.Rd.,
BBQ. Unbelievable. Living -Apt. Unturn. 365 1 Apt. Unfurn. 36~ Bar;. $"2'15. e 2 Br.. Ba.; 557-7900
Corona dttl Mar Only -'--------1 1235 ~~~~""~!"'""'"""I FOUND set of Ke)'! 10/15
ROOM" 3 n -•-m, 2 bath. 1 BR. FURN. $175 Corona del Mar Costa Mesa Incld Gas. TV Cab & \Vtr SMAIL Office&. Shop space, vicinity Trafalgar & Ola
' ~~.... 2 BR FURN $210 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil I Sa Vista, San CI em en t e · gmund floor. $350 pr. month • • Fully crptd .l rpd. Ree nr. l.1.ission. n n Juan 496-7022.
plus spacious 1 bedroom ALL UTILITIES PAID facil. l-Itd BBQ area. . h.Om $140 Capl!ilrano. $75 per mo & -""-'="-------1
upstairs ,vilh private en· Adult.9 No pets .._~... HARBOR GREENS 29041 Aloma Ave. 111 up. 493-1154. SMALL black puppy vie.
trance. $2'l5 pr month. Both .. 4.~22TI or 495-5274 2 BR. Duplex. Ideal for cont· Bac:k Bay Rd.
units next lo park & tcnn\s, (4 blks S. of San Diego Frwy Oakwood Is $1 mllllon In mt'rciaJ Sl.50/mo 1 7 4 6 ----'-644-""'\1'0=---
call Railey 673-8550 ~t. on Beach, 1 blk w. on Holl Furnished & • VIEW • recreation. Swimming Orange Ave. 5-18-1168 FOUND, 1arge black Lab.
2 BR (I small), re.r .. stove, to 16211 Parkside Lane.) ON TEN ACRES Unfurnished OCEANFRONT 1 H Ith 1 b Industrial Rent.11 450 female, vie Springdale &
cpts, drps. patio. No pets, <U4) 847-5441 Apts. turn./wllum. Leue F $l30 t $llS 2 BR, 2 BA. Lea-re. Marutt poo s. ea C U s. Wamcr, H.B. 84&-0955.
$200 l\To. 6,1~1400. ..,..,..,..,..,..,!!!!"""""[Fireplaces / priv. paUos. rom o mo Adults, no pets. Eleva_1or Saunas. Tennis courts. JUST COMPLETED BLONDE female' puppy, El
$145 • $165 Pools Tennis Contnt'l BkfsL to beach. Pool. &-cur1ty. Biiiiards. Indoor golf driv-Toro area.
o "-· Cd ., •• """'~ Bachelors • 1 Bdrm1 S350 UP. ing range.Sand Volleyball. 1600 to 3300 Sq. Ft. 837-5161 Bachelor & 1 Bn., pauun, 900 Sea Lane, M ll'ff'"'llll 31T:fi Coast Hwy, s . Laguna
frplc's, priv. garages -1 MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) 2 Bdrms • 3 Bdrms 4gg..2835 Whirlpool Baths. And lots IN SANTA ANA GRAY & white femaltt cat
Divided beth & lots ot \11!![!!!\!!!!!!!!![!!!l!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1Vz or 2 Full Baths 1,..,,.--..,,.--,..-----1 more. A resident tennis N~td,tilt:'nei~dg 0~~~ wearing flea \collar. Vic.
closets. Rec hall, pool & Mesa Verd9 pro and activities director st 0 l'.b g e m c z z. an 1 n e A:.:':.:"""'°==· ;::Cd::M::::... 6'15=>-3998-==c· =I
2 Br, 2 ta. !rplc, condo. 19742 1 ~ 11 ~
1
Covrntr>. $185 mo. 833-11(}3 -"'«tmenU for fl~ _.
tl:iys. ::;.ir~9T.°l4 f"Vt"!. .:.ii.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii·m;~~
Irvine
YES, 've h.:ivr rrnta ls • May
1\·e bf' of .!l'rviee to YOU in
ynur housinl; needs?
-].ob~i:~vllil. .•
pool tables, sauna baths. AVAIL. Oct. 21. 2 Br, cpts, Master ·•--•-•---1 w/ " I i ti .......,. uo:u.lvu.i•• who plans free Sunday overhead Joe.di"" doors, UO. Lost $SS Seo for yourself! 17301 drps, trp c ..• enc pa o, gar, hi h be lllngs, l••ge DELUXE 2 "-3 BR 2 Ba '06 I · N t 1200 g aJn ce "'" "' '' · brunches and barbec"•s. 220-3 phase pwr KC!clson Ln. (1 blk W. of re rig., range. o pe s. Uvina room w/gu or encl. gar. $155 up. Rental "" S ·
Beach. 1 ~k:'i84~f Slaler). 6'it7~~i.re 438 Acacia Ave. wood _burning fireplace. Ofc., 3()135 ?i-tace Ave., Starling as loW as $140. HUN A~~EV. CO. S.\'J RE\''ARD tor return of
Convenient laundry area 546-1034. Sing le s, one a nd two-female cat. Gray coal flttk.
off kitchen. Enclosed pa· b d s f n· h d d NEW constnJctio n ID50 .,,. ft et! with orange. m1mber tat-tios. 2 swimming pools. Newport Beech e room ' u r 15 e an • 1276 sq ft, Ideal CM ~loc. tooed in ear. l\1ii;stng from
sauna, reoreatlon taclll-u nfurni shed. Sorry no ofiiC!'s w/hea.t, hot water my home in San Juan
ties. Security guard. No PARK NEWPORT children or pets. Models htr, 220 ;i phase Jl\1.T, O/h CapisTrano since io111m.
pets. APARTMENTS open dally 10 to 7. ~-14[7'c Thomas Ent. ~~~-JUI at 49'H583 or
NEARLY new 3 BR, 2 BA,
k L •-h 2 bedrooms each. Bltln."!, car-compl. furn. All ell'.?Ct itch., agune ue'~ frp\e. nutio. BBQ. Lease _.;,..________ pet5 & drapc>s, choic(' loca-
~ LIVE ,., ,,, __ from ••:: wk tion. Lease $200 ...,. month. Scpt.-Jun£'. 638-847015.19-8831. --~·~ ....., ,... or $160 mo. Singles or Call 673-8550 RLTR.
Balboa Peninsula suites, heated pool, maid 2 BR. 2 Ba., upstairs, do1\.'n·
service, laundromat. Village stairs. Attract. apt. s .... ·edish
Apts. Furn.
Balboa Island
360
Models Open 'Ill 8 pm. on the bay Oakwood Rentals Wanted 460 NEUTERED mal• col. Short
2700 Peterson Wey, CM L•nn""' apartment Jiving ov· Garden Apartments hair, '""'hlte paws, chest & ~~J Lease-lease Option stomach. Black, gn!Y &
e $25 \\'k & Up On Ocean. Inn. 494-9436. frplc. 644-4610 days;
":""',·-cE 1946.. l.Dvrly Bach·l Br1-Roo0~1 •pd BACH. nr beach. $J..35.S15..'i. 6734607 aft. 6 p.m. ~u~ !\laid Service · Poo • ti Col 'IV 1435 N ~ ••• ts! Western Bank Bide;. e can 675-8740• · · · "'""'t. * GREAT VIEW. • 2 BR. *
--..:; 1\.enhor
'--==""'-~=~-o-n eves. 6 7 5 -'1 3 6 7 ; Frpl bl--su0 •ec"· pool Universitv Pnrk, J1v 1nr hal ,,... c., ""'· , ,., ...,, · O N' h 2 Bf-t, 1 1/~ BA, patio, cony, _,494-"-'2508=,_. :::•:;11-'4'-. ----$210 up. 644-6344, 675-3535.
nr Harbor Blvd & erlooking the water. Enjoy Newport Beach ExecutiV1? transferred from brown striped. Los! in CdM
Ado1m1 $750,000 health spa, 7 swim· lrv!ne and 16th East Coast dE>slres 4-5 Br & area around Oct 11 • Days 552-700 19 ts 315 E. Bay, $250 mo. on yrly 1 Br, North encl. Ocean view.
lse. lnq. at Apt C 673-1521 Costa Mesa min& pools, 7 lighted ten· &45-0550• 642-8170 lam rm or stud~ Dec. ls! .;:c640',,--_,1c::O'l:.:4c.· '--;.,==:,_ ____ I
nia courts, plm mUes of in Nwp VCdM arelt.. Call Mr. MIXED black Lab, female.
bicycle trails, putting, shuf· Patrick, 1131552-ano day•: AllS'IY'e1'll to • • T 1 k e • · .
BEAUTIFUL spacious 3 Br, neboard croquet. Junior l 's I ~ Zl31592·2336 eveK. R.E\llARD. Any information l~i Ba, new shag crpt, brick !!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!I from $17-t.50 monthly; also l 11f:tnt111 ,_ .. , ~ 4 BR, 1 sty hse. nr Adams or will be a Ppr e c i ate d.
i;nack bar, lge balcony, DELUXE and 2-bedroom plant and . . l\fesa Verde sch!, 1 child, _4~94--06~~27~."-------r \\'B.lking distance to &hop.. APARTMENTS c U ~· ""1850
Pill:' center", school bus 2·story town houses. Ele<:· ~~·~~·w~' ~~~~~· ~~~
1
LOS T : Co 11 i e/Spanlc1, stops at door. Children Air Cond • Frplc's • 3 Swim· tric kitchens, private patios Rooms 400 blondr "Rocky," VI c.
I ~· lst -0 "' ming Poo'· Heallh Spa hal--• ting dra \Varner ..\ Magnolia, H.B.
Close to heh & sOOpping. No
or 54.~mi. 494-1079 ----------• 2 BR near beach & bay. chldn, no ~. ·
Carport, lndry. $215/mo. 2 BR. Util. pd. $250 mo. l blk
Ye:irly. 673-4526. beac:h. Aft 3:30, 494-5704.
Coron• del Mar Ber. 9 & art 4:30, 675--0146.
NewPOn S.ach
OCF.AN View. 2 Blks lo big
Corona, 2 Br. $ZlJ utll. pd. \Ve have Winter Rentals
:1 BR. 2 baths ......... S325
2 BP •. 2 baths ......... $300
1 BR. 2 b<lths . , ....... $350
546-0370
\\"l' come. v1uy .. ...,. re.. . "" · · or '""""'"• carpe • • ROO'IS $ 8 wk /kl [ I~ I R • f f 351 Victoria. Tennis Courts • Game and peries. SUblerTanean park· .. 1 . up w t. ~ ~ 10 MY:ir,. or in orm111tion * * $180 * * Billiard Room. lng·with elevators. Optional $30. wk up Apts. Lo\v ~------~;·~· or rch1rn. <7141 821·7578.
-Yearly. Adults, no pets. \Viii Take S!udentll RF.ALTY
8redhill
3 Br., 11,ii Ba., newly painted. 1 BR, From $100 maid service. Just north of monthly rates 237~ Newport LOST. Untrimmed M in i
Bltns, crpt/drps, encl patio. 1 BR. & Den From $185 Fashion Island at Jamboree Blvd., CM 548-9755. Schnauzer. Vic: Jrd &
64~1624. Also oceanfronts avail.
2 Blks to Big Corona. Bach. 4 BR. 2 BA •. · ••• ,. $325/350
$150 util. pd. Yearly. l 3 BR. 2 BA ............ $285
Univ. Park Cl'ntcr . Irvine
Call Anytime, 833-0..'f.?O
Office hours 8 AM 10 6 PJ\1 -'A"d"""":..· !:"°'-""'"ls::;._,64=;...:1621=."--ll BR., 1 BA ............ $175
Costa Mes.1 3 BR. home • , .......... $275
Nr schls & shop'g. Children MEDITERRANEAN and San Joaquin Hills Road. LRG. Bach, 2 blks from HB. Announcements 500 Marguerite, CdM. Loved
ok. NUi'ts. 880 Center St., f d -----------very n1uc h. R t' W'8 rd .
CM I alt 3 wk.·-VILLAGE Telephone m4> 644-1900 pier. Student pre · . no petli. LOVE 4 SALE 673-ol ·="""""-'-o""""'=='°c.· _'-_;::__ Lagun1 Beach
$150 • Ut1l Pd. Victoria
Beach Bach. Full kit, gar,
virw!
$175 -OCEANFRONT Util
p<l. Lri: l:>tudlo. Beaut. loca·
t\on?
$715 · LRG. 2 Br. No. end.
New crpts, bltns, deck.
S22:'l -l\11SSION Viejo, nc'v 3
Br. condo. Child/pc:o t ok.
$2'.:iO • 3 BR or 2 + den house.
w/lrplc. pat io. ~aut Vu!
$27l · 2 BR. trplc, yard,
patio, nice! Childfpet ok.
$325 · ~ RR. 2 Ba . bltns, 2
trp\cs. Gnr, yard. deck.
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673-4 030 or 49-1-3248
f!OUSE 2BR, part. f11.rn . $250
mo. 356 Ca nyon Acr('s Dr. ** 4!17-1400 ** ----Laguna H ills
$26:1 . l..o\·cly 3 BR. 2 Ba
duplr':\: 1\.'/r'll'(', h\tns &
a1r/rooil. New crpl'fit &
clrpii. t\ttractivr• refl\\lfK)(I
fen('('fl patin. C8JI {'\'f'S (ZJJJ
393--7070 nr Sat. ( 7 1 1 I
$-~Ii.
Laguna Nigue1
SPAC. 4 BR, $70,IJOO home,
Nr. beach. Rent $450 010.
P..Nlp. party. • 8.11 --0.~.
VRLY lease. New 2 hr., 2 h:i..
On golf course. ~ rno.
Call 675-~.
Newport Beach
~ The Bluffs
Leases
FAMILY HOME
4 BR., 21h ba.. like D('W
Ftnhly pe inted. c~ hy
IK'h0ol11, pool. m~rkt'i. Va·
cant le 11.vail. at ~ mo.
9NE STORY
3 SR., 2 bn. end uniL Clclln,
fresh. ~·acant & rr111ly ;1t
$385 mo
PLAZA AREA
3 BR., 21-' ba. end uni!, 4;.:c•.
prlv. patio. lmm1?d. 1X"t'11•
pl\ncy Sl50 mo,
.~~ &<st ~;· .12Jut(' 10 ~~
2•14 Vlat:i. d~l Oro
N~'NJX)IC1 Betlch
644-1133 ANYTit.1E
WiUk ocean or hay 2 Br, ulll
pd. 2 Q.A, tncd. V4('0.DI
Br:tllfl ldd~/PffJI,
Ront-A-tiouso '79-1430
BLUFFS -V1ow 4 BR. 21! a.. Twnbee, tam An!&.
Pool. CltrOom. $ l9 5 . -·
Casa del Oro
All UTILITIES PAID
Compare before you rent
Custom designed, featuring:
• Spacious kitchen with in ..
2 BR. 1 Ba. Pen in •.•.•• $250
CALL' 673-3663
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
1025 W Balboa 67l-l66]
· pm. ....,v. for rental Information 1st & last mo's rent req'd. 7:
All day Wknds. &12-834.0. 2400 H ho m pd ·~ "'66 ~. ·• d YOUNG Dalmation p u p . ar f' Blvd., C.M. A SENSIBLE ........ (util .l .J.J<Ml • .,,,c.'11 petite, ,,.,e's arling & Hunt. Continental
NEWLY DECORATED (714) 557-8020 PROPOSAL FOR GENTLEMAN.. mast el' ha., big bro.,.,•n eyes. She's Townhouses . 1' .. anilly 2 Br wfgax tncd yrd RENTA! OFFICE bedroo fr 'IV Be h a Silky Terrier pup. AU shots
w/patto. Wtr pd, CaU btwn OPEN 10 Mt to 6 PM SINGLE LADIES & Pac.~! :f~. ~iB. &-housebroken, too. What heartbroken. 962-1894.
direct liC:hling
• Se parate din'g nrca
• l-£ome.Jike storage
e Private patios
JJ.J· =~ Ave. $135 'P"'a-r'k'°'·L"i"'k_o_,,Su~r-r~ou"""nd~lng-10:!ri;,ew8. :4a ~~:':,Guest Hom• 415 ~~~·~re~~·cou~~ld~>~•~u~~w~an~I~? ~I & c:;h)t~,~~~g !::1~
2224-A Placentia Ave. $145 QUIET DELUXE designed with . a Master's I•---------L05J 10-13, vie Mesa OCEANFRONT corner 4 br, 54S.C Bernard $135 1. 2 & 3 BR APTS. touch, exclusive club wtth ~ Woods. 979-9879.
2 ba, bltn kit, upper dplx. 3 BR, 2 ba tr i. p I ex. ALSO !< .. URN BACHELOR mrlque Aquabar, fountains * Private Room * '-'ONll I BL!( lab 'Irish sellPr, 9 'i(.1ai
Crpt/drps. Winter $375 mo. Crpt/drps, quiet. adults, no Pvt Patios* Htd Pools and formal gardens. All for Vic: 18th & Newport. Sl5 5011 Seashore. cn-t> 642-907'9 pets. $200 mo. 2281 Ford· . , ' part of the South Coast's Re 'var d . 6 4 2 . 1 O 8 4 I •Closed garage · w/storage
• J\.farble pullman
• King·sz Bdrms
• Pool . Barbeque$ . sur-.
rounded with plush land·
scaping.
Adult livin&: at it11 best
Large 1 BR $180.
No Pets
JS.I} W. \Vilson 642-1971
WEE KL Y-MONTHL Y
Executive Suites
2080 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mes•
642-2611
STUDIOS & 1 BR'S
e FREE Linens
e FREE Utilities
• Full Kitchen
• Heated Pool
• Laundry Facilltle~
• TV & ms.Id serv avl'lll
• Phone Service * $30 WEEK & UP * e Studio & 1 BR Apts
• TV & Maid Service Avail
• PhQne Service-I-ltd Pool
• Chil dren & Pet IM!Ctlon
2376 Newport Blvd, CM
548-9755 or ~3967
This Ad \Vorth $5 on Re.nt
El Puerto M•sa
1 BR's. $130 UP
Furnished Apts.
All Utilities Peld
Pr1ol & Rcc1'1!allo11
l!l:il \lnpte (l.vr .. ('.l\t
Ah"' 1-:nrns.i:('s for rent3 F1.1rn. Bach. & I Br. E x-
ceptionally nice! 2110
Newport Blvd., C.M .
• ~F:AT 1 Bn. A pf .
$130/rno. \\'tr pd. Rachclor
prrf'd. llon. !14R-!"ll".0'.i, 't'.
Dolyl1• :)Ill I !till '--~--•THflPIC',\L POOt.e
1 Rr. Jo"u rn Sl~'.i. Ga11 &r Wtr
Prt 1 r1 E. l"th 5111-1 1~.
1 ~r $1.".0 .1 Sl Ill. A'1u11~ only
Sf Pool. ldC'11.l for Bachelors
l!l!l3 Cl111n·h S t, MR--96,\1.
Cl..EAN 2 Br. close tD shoP!I.
Adult~ onl)·, oo ~I~. tnqulf°"
17!)1., Rorh1·~1er, l"\1
l BR Trlt, $110. 2 Dr, trlr
StlJO, Ulil inol. N., I"''" 01
l"hllrln>n. flot&..1!!09, 64~3.1n.
FURN". Z Or. apt ln g00!1
a l'l"ll. Watt'r & itU pd $1jQ.
542-.3379 or ~!1919.
l BR. $1Xi month. 0 1drr <'OU·
pie pr!fC<:rNd. £.16-2700.
'
f .. Zl3'=''°6'\8-<l0'°'-~l2~.,....,,..,""°""""" I ham. 0 ,....., 646-l6B9, Eves Nr Shop I * Adults Only fines! a Part men t com· Ambulatory Lady or J\1an 7l3-596-1Zl2. -~· M • • A Good, nutritious Food. l -0-"""'"="~~~~--I * Balboa Penin. 3 BR, 2 BA 64&-4939. • art1n1que pts. munity. . Nice, cheerlul atmosphere. Personals 530 e MALE Golden Retriever,
over garage. On b a Y UPPER, LARGE 2 Br. encl 17Tr Santa Ana Ave., C.M. 111~room/studios f l'O m * Call 548-475.1 • 5 yr:s. old. Needs medlca·
w/beach. Util pe.ld, S35()/mo. gar. Nl'. OCC & shop'g. Mgr. Apt. ll3 646-5542 2 Bedroom from $295. PROBLD.t Pregnancy. Con-tinn. Vic Calif. l{ome«, 213~ 620-7233 collect. Adull.3, ro pets. 2984 Royal we ~luxe 3 •-•-m fident, S Y m P a11 t h eAthol c hvlne. REW ARD! 544-6354. Palm Dr U52/ 645-3515 81i JI ........, ui;:wuv d pregnancy counse ng. r.
2 J~~ n a~a::~~~: i~ _,or::...:55:o7:,,-::;33"i2=·=c:mo,-, . ..,..,..,= i B u 21 ModelVEiSAiLi.ES P.M. *iafl~tell~ gu':-t e~~ tion & adoptions ref. AP-~~ ::~We~ee:'~~i~~
pd. $n5. No children or ** BEAUTIF1JL 1 & 2 BR. 2 Bedroom, 2 bath •·••· S205 Cal 64&-3391. *c~0~36f.SYonc .• tion. Vic. NB. 979-9158.
petS. 6~ Contemporary Garden Apt. 3 =room, 2 bath ·•·•· $25.5 on the BLUFFS Rento1ls to Sho1re 430 LOST Siamese male <fixed),
$2)(1, F1JRN, 2 BR, ~~~Cali~IJ'.3°1· $155-i Bed!:~. ·~i·~;rt·:: :f~ at NEWPORT L I Sh Appts. avail.~~ Oct. & Nov. 2 Yff., Vic: Harbor & Vlc-3704 SEASHORE DRIVE. 1-'""::..0:""-=c:;:;:;;,=~-Beautiful De\V apts. w/pvt From Newport Blvd., turn at OV~ o are toria, 645-0852. c==~*~6:C~"-'=18'7*--,,,--I •TROPICAL POOL• patios, garage, pool, spa. Hospital .~d (1 block And the, res plenty to go <714l 52.'.H.156 LOS'T, 4 mo old tan &. white
YEARLY tse. 2 doors from 2 Br Studio, l~ Ba, fli>l, sprl Lush garden setting Ac;lults above Pacific Coast Hwy. at around. In the form of an BOB . Call "Larry" of 3 speniel w/brown coll ar. Re·
heh. 2 BR, part. furn. CrJlts, ~pd: 14~'i8th ~11J. no pet;, 151 E. 2!8t C.M'. ~,.~~!o ~~· adorable Silky .Jie1: cir! Stoog('~. Imoortanl. ward. 842-6356.
drps. $250/Tno. 642-3443.. 646-8666 ' ......_,,.,,. ' ewpor1. type puppy. ts I: * 642-47Rt * FEM. Black dog, i.; trl..-h, 4
BRANO new 2 br apt. Cpt, . B e a c h , C a . 9 2 6 6 0 . housebroken. 83G-8333. ALCOHO JCS A NEW J BR. 2 BA, dshwhr, * Sl-IADY EL~S ·POOL * Telephone: (714) 645-0060, SHARE my home w(l L nonymous. Lab. 10/12 Vic. Ph1cf'nfia & trplc. Winter. 42nd street. drPll, bltins. Close i n • Adults Poolside $140 up Phone 542-7717 Ol' write Brookhurst "Cleo" &12-@i8.
675-7354. ~~...:..:!185. ~: alt e Children nexl block N~I H20BAG 211baOSPITblAL. ""'°"N ,bealaundryh Costalnc\Muded. P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. Classified Ads 64=2 8 6• ~. • Free Furniture Plan ...,., uxc r.. ·• tns, car c · esa. • · · -'ll·:;itiHI 3 BR, 2 BA, w/tplc, fUJ11 dlx *2 br, $l35 mo.* lTI E 22nd St CM fi42.364S dshMhr., crptL, d rps, $00. 64&-0451.
duplex. Ocean. Will rent to 3)4g Wallace' Ave. · ·• Mature adults. $175/mo. Rtxi~-m-m-,~1-,~Re~lorral-~Se~rv-io-,-I *
students. $290. 645-2964. SEE MANAGER SPAC 2 & 3 Br apt $140 up. 642-438T. 6 7 5-7 513 or Find The Ideal Roommate
4 BR, 2 BA on Beach. Ava\l Pool, cpt/drp, bltns, kids 642-lm. Sc-...ned Clnt• 1714) 533 "~
h J 19 7 3
LIGHT, cheery 3 Br, 2'~ ba. ·~'" 'U.>V~
l"IO\V t ru UN!, • ti ok. SE"CLlFF Maror Ap•·. • 2 .,..,.,.,. ALE to s•·-h"", lo 5-0245 !147-9726-Bob Lge closets, storage, pa o. '""' ..,, r r..1Y1 1uu..:-""' 64 or · · $200. 546--3563 aft 5 p.m. 2206 College No. 5 • • .&U-7035 Br. $164, Pool, Crpts, drps, C.M. w/studenl. own rm.
* * * * *
OCEANFRONT bach apt. 1 &: 2 BR w/turn avail, Htd 1996 Maple No. 1 ...• 642-3813 bltns. garb. diapl. 1525 $80 _ utl. Immed. 518-1907.
$100. Ulll. Paid. Yearly ttr>-pool. 1130 & up. AduJts. 853 2 BDRM apt, bltrui, crpts &: Placentia Ave. Ask about t'\U:ce Rental 440
ta!. C&l.l 673-1241 drps, rec. hall, mm pool. our discount. 54S-:l682 ..,..., ~" h II"' M Center St, 645-8965. ·~~~~::,;;;;:;::::,;;::::;~1:;:;;:;::::;:;;:;::::::,11 Trader's Paradise
3 BR s~.,,,, Mo. Bae L.,"l o. Ol~er couple. No -~ts or iiAYFRONT Wallc to Beach.
Al90 yearly avt-llAble I & 2 BR. Garden Aptt. Pool. children. $150 mo. $35. clng. Lrg 3 BR, 2 BA, partly furn.
ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 Dshwshr. Utpl tkJ160 up. dep. 8~ or unfurn. Util pd. Crptd, NEW OFFICE SPACE
1 BR. furn. apL No children 324 E . 20th St., 761· 1 & 2 Br. apU. $125. $1M.50. dra_p:ed, doek avail. Adults.
nor pets, 2405'n E. 16th St. LGE. 1 8: .. pool, nr shops. Freshly painted. Cpl.I, drps, $365/mo. Yearly. 675-5934.
NB. 646-4664. Adlts, ro pets~ Utlls pd. 1884. bltnii, cv'd car port . 2 Lrg BR Ntll Rm frpl c
Sen Clemente Monrovia. ~. Children & small pet~ OK. dsh/wsh,' shAg, '111.indck'. Wells Fer90 Bank Bldg
ANAHEIM
1 BR. apt., Incl. llnem, walk
to bch., ~2 Vlctortt\. $.C.
By Owner. 493-3835.
Apt. Unfurn. 365
QIEERFUL, airy, nu 2BR, 1 R.lO Center St., 54&-4014 patio, 1 min, to heh. $285. ..98 S H b Bl d
ba apt. Adults, ro pets. REAL Value! Crpts, drps, Mr. Dietzel 832·3580 e J.S "' 0 • •r or v
548--0fl04 dshwahr, pool . QutEJ' 2 Br. pm. Cont ct
3 BR. 2 BA-PATIO. $1 3.'i. Mature adults. no peU, SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba, 1 blk a
.S170 Mesa de! Mnr. 645-1208 22j5 Padtlc Aw ., 543-6878. to bay, 1 blk to ocean. GRUBB & ELLIS CO. Organ Yamaha.
ENCbOSED Yd. 2 Br, cdts, NEW shait . crptg, 2 BR, Yearly. $2Xl/mo. Bk r . \.1"/rh,ylhm agto, Like new. Balbo.1 Peninsula drps, bltn8, 'lnr S. Coast bltn1, rcfna.. child OK. 6'r.H911 557.7900 Coat $1.600. Will trade for
Pl ""~'69 fl-'5. 511 Joann St. S..26271~=~-·---~~~ • OCEANFRONT T o \\'Tl · aza.. $1 85. ""'""" · or 646-2039. t Block to ocean • 2 en. 2 good car.
hou1t1, f"nt11td k view. 3 BR. E -SIOE 2 BR. $150 Dan• Point ba., brand nc.w SZ15/mo .. [~~~~!!!!!!!'!"'.'~""!~[===°"64M&l=.,.""'2"-~~ fnm rn1 . 3 frplcl!'. 4 Bll . BllnJJ, .,.,•/w, dlspoSlll Pool. yrly lras~ 847~1 &.g4:!nt l)f'~~K sp&<."I! aviulabl~ S50 PRIME ind. blifa. AAA Na.I.
2400 ~· rt ST"JOlmo, Yrly. Adulls, no pets. 642·9520. OCEAN view. Spacious 2 So1n Juo1n C•plitrano moft WIU pnw~-furn~~rt Trnai:n. 20 yr lse. Sl0.000
1';13..6Q.'11. 2 fri br., 2 ba., 'din, area. blbli,. al..., mo. A,ngwe, ... ,, ee...-1<'! N.N.N. Inc. Trade $125.000
YEARLY. 2 BR, 1110~. 11:!~~. bl~~~·lo.re A!iiiis~~ new cpts &: drps. &loony. 2 BR, d-wihr, refr1& ld\aa: available. J7175 Beach Blvd. (!Qty for lge apts, or com-l'f.'frlit:. Garaftt', adults, nellr •190. 837·-·, 837-5118. w/w, cust d .... •, ..... patio. 2 Huntl .... -....n Beach. 64Mm mercl11.I. Bkt. 547-6469, ...... ...... pet~. $160 ~10. 646-2414 A~. ~ R<il .,.... ,,.. 'IA'"
llhrll ry li73-GU1, oi .• -......... STUDIO 2 Br, 2 BA , crpts, Huntington e.acm car JC&r. COnYen to Dana Pt. DESK 1pue available $!O 2 Foprplvcn, O:tsta Me~
:orona del Mo1r .. bl-N OCC E I $195 mo. 962-S197 WIU Id !Uml .. ·-$63,000 . Equity. F;,cchanre urpl, .,,s. r. . nc A mo. prov e ....... up Orange Cou nty
2 BR, CTllt/drps, stv -& potlQ. SJ G5/mo. M6--0169. 1" BLOCK TO OCEAN pts., at '5 mo. Answertng 99rvloe i'8RTIN Realtor ·642.-5000
M"frig. PaUo. $235. C•ll 3 BR, 2 BA, aha2 crpt, drp11, ·2 BR. Apt. Crpti, drps.. Fum, or Unfurn. 370 11.vallable. 222 Forest /\ve, iru:C WestcilU N.B.
G7H 30,!9:..· -----~ rnJ'dj,rt nr. OCC. Ur>!laini. Ne~corated. Jl.G5/mo. Q,.lbo.1 lilan4' La$rUnA Dea.ch, 494-9400 EXCltANGE, home Pa.Im
2 BR apt avail Nov 1st, walk Sl . /mo. S.~2-!mli. or ~-BAY VIEW OFPICES Sprp. Choice S. tnd Joe:,
to brnch, adu\111, $3)5. 1 I 2 BR. Adulht, no TW'l&. BEACHBLUFF Apts. 3 8 2 ba all L• DelDK~ Alr-eond\Uoned val $35,000 2 & den + iiep M•t•7J o• •~ "31 BAY t..t E/\DOWS APTS. " • 3 BR Pool pa\lo r., · uilM. R-' • ed Udo bng\ow l bn, For hme Bt)' :.~c=-'-''"-"-'O~"-'="'· ---1 '" "' ' ' $.100/mo. wtnttt• $375/mo. oouecorat · ~a arc or CM. Ownr 557-1100. 1 HR aha11, drps, rrf mns:;r 3S7 w. Bay St. CM 646-007'3 O.whl"'. 8231 Ellla. &42..fl93. yrly, Ca.ya, ri3J898-6736: Re11.lonon1lca, 'BkT. ti75-6700 ' ol
$185 yr-lac! oo pets/ehnd. SPAC. hachl 11pt. nr achl!t & EXTRA IJ:e 2,br, ullls pd. wknd& 714/675--86.~. !RADE 5 acru; corner" J\'\~ lrl•l Nov. I. 644-4340 1100ppin11. No (>Pl ". SI:\() mo. Cpta drps p.tlto nb Ptlll 2 Adjolnlrlfl' oUIOel, bugy In-section. Hoad on 3 sldt11,
Charmifl-'l ~ bf dupltx~ cU"l:;Ucip<I= . .::C::all"='""-"'-'0"\."'34'-. ~-I Kid 'OK ii6S ~121 . Costa Maia trr..ccOon CM, f90. Ut11'1 t1Car Vlt.1.orviUe tor Oranac
N' \y d-· 1'10 mo 2 BR 1'" Ba opts d....., I , . h I'.,. lnc., edjoir'1ng l BR. tunt. County ~rty, w ..... '" ' • .._ • ' ',~. 2 BR. l sty, 4-plex, r rpts, l.J\RGE 1 r apt. !,M,1. apt avaU. &42-6560. • rM-42S4 • Call al!r r 5. ~10 rerrta. encl. P311o, 11ara.ge, drps fncd CU' O lld ok Furn. S135. Launcl., pr.,I:::"'===--::--==
• C"'orol\do 2 Br , 14'. Ba. No pets. SlJO, 642-2931. s.m' m.fi417 ' · quiet, nr mkts. P.1ature BUSINF.SS suite, Campus *
Pool. 2 c&r prk'sr. SZIO, llOUSE lluntlnx? Wi.tch the · . adlt.. 1922-B W BI I ace . Or. at MacAl1hlffr·H.O. Ap-
lWi -""1-t f)r 67J..J71J. OPEN HOUSE column. Wanl ad rDsul\s ..• &12·5678 548-QlS. prox, 400 IQ. ft 5«)-4752. * *
I
' r
lines
times
dollars
21~ Atr~s No. Calif.
rreea, close to town and
Lal(t $2000 vnlul'. Trade
ror Clll' or ? ? ?
fil4)
HAVE 12 delux apt. unit•
ln N'pt, Beach. Ml Grand
0Anka :.0 ft. boat or .tim-
llnr, up to 65 ft, Irwin Co ..
Rmi.ltor1. 644-6111,
UXl,000 eqty ln ~.000
bid• Portland, Oro. AAA
N11.tionl.I Tf!nant, on N.N.N.
J:l yr lse. Want prime ~Pi
'1tr or ?? Bia 547-5469
CANYON lake lot, golf cnre
view, nr lake, und. utll.
$10,000 frte &: <"lelr. Ttatle
for Income J)l'Ol)erty or ?? Brk, 547-6469. .
SUBMlT •U trades for S~l\f
eqty on 951'> ncret nr. Yu· ,,.... ear !400.000. bl\.
only i~, 1 anti.tic view~.
hills, Vallef!', Bier 547-6469.
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Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, M I F 710 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Holp Wanled, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 .. ,
G.,denlng School1 &
instructions 575 EXPERT Japa nr!se
PIANO or vok."e, IT\)' borne or &ardener, knOwhOw. u.pkcep. r.:::: ~ y ••--plant, peal. 1rln1, cleMup • 61\J rs. exp ........ ter 3486 u.<ic. 833-m>. 963-. ======---Gen.r•I Ser-Vice• ~21 REAL
ESTATE
CHAUFFEUR w/rel1 need· f'RY Cook, l/lirTI(' $2.~ ~r
e(! for full time 11tVr1t. Wiii hr. lo s1urt. Chau(."€" tor ad-~ to drive from 51)-2()(1 Vl&llCC'n1enl . CottaJ(e Cofft:c mt daily. So.I Optn. MU6t Shop. 562 \V, 19th St., ('?.f.
llvf' nr Npt &.'h aren. FURNITURE -relin!Ahen &
615-362'1. WILtthoU!it.'m~'ll f'lt:(>(led, F\IU
1;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;,;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;; "'OMEN for Cafetttt.a ll!f'V·
J\1EDICAL RJo:Cl::PTIONISf· SECRETARY in II:, t' IT Im e on l Y IW I •hi h IC! t I I Ulam-2Pm daily. All w'and r ~ IH a:a 10 OCI. Wf! 8r(' !~'ll:U)I; a penK>nll.b~· It hollda off. 0~
dt>ctor. &t ufi afpoi.Jitm~nl.i .l 1~1n"l'"ia.l 1.nrtiv1du1tl "hO County A~ area. C:a.11
& keep th!• )00 .ii ttr!llKhl CllJOYI public <'Ontl!.L't to 83:Hi666 aft 2pm.
Sulttry $350 + D O.E. Call JW"rfontt 11 v;irh"ty ur dotlesl~~O'C=-'==~--~~1
Linda Ray, r, •I 0 • 6 OS 5, inc-ludlr12 O!J('nmg ~ llt· YOUNG man lo . as a I• I 1---1 ~ IN my home. Invtltlble
Rewe11vln1-Sewlna .i: Alteration~. 548-G51)5, CM.
Hauling * Real Estate Career Night *
Tues., 17th Ocl., 7l, 7:30 PM.
Open to the Public
CHURCH Custodian -f/tlmC' 1.,;'='mo,•'=·=6c.c1H222'-"""'·-~~~J I
Jan1torial/110me re p a I r , GENERAL offi N', full time
1'::Xp. JI. Uch. 8'12-1461, opening In !)(>al Reach ol· 846-3717. flee. 1 person o I! I c {'.
J)iversifl('d dutil"11. Must he
(:tJl1t:l<JI AJi\•ncy, 2 7 9 O f•ount~. i:ustonit>r l"Ol'ltact by garrlel'll'r in .Mlssll)n Vlejn
1-tarbor Blvd ., C.r..1. tult•phn"" & tukin.c dl<:taOon area. Pti,rl lt mf' ln morn-'*' MOLDMAKEJts * a1 !'«I'd by brllJlCh ofilcen . lng11. Call 831-2258 be'twten
Plasfle ,t dlr. cruit. ·rop 1nen 1-2 yr:t ('ll{JCr. & xln't sh & 'i Si &iiGilpimii. iiiiiiiiiiiiil
only-rt:Is. Ai r tvfl(I, \Vl'll !ypirJ¥ rt1f d. PletIBrult V1!01'k-11 Bobyslttlng
DAY Nunery, bable& to 3
yrs. $18 per wk. 646-5788 <lr
&l!'H302.
GD. Care In a happy home
lor your little one. Nwpt
Heights. Reali. 548-1649.
I will babys:lt l<lr )'DU In my
home. Ask for Reioc,
~1768.
Carpenter
Indus/ Comm'I/ Res id
All l)'lX'll IY<lrk. Remodel.
l\lteralio11, finish, frame,
pe.nel, t'IC 962-1961.
CARPENTRY, Additions &
I repair. 20 yea.rs Harbor
area. 646-ZllS/675-6294.
Carpet Service
1'rtEE W<ltk. G~ II: )'d
clnup. Move A haul .iUk for Come t11 you tre ..• Brln9 • friend
J1;1&T, 642-140:l Real opportunity In Real Estate s.le5
YARD, garage cleanups. In the Newport Coattal area Remove trees. dirt, ivy.
Drivewys, gradin&. 847-2666. Lhnlted sealing -Cal l for reservations
COLLEGE Students will do 1733 We1tcliff Dr., Newport Beach 645-7221
Hauling, Garage & Yard I ~ '
Clean-up. 968--1169. I___..._ H•lp Wanted, M & F 710
Cleric Typist
Sale.. Ord£'r Dept. Accunte
typist 60 v.·.p.ni. electric
typrv.Ti.t1·r. E:xper. In bill·
Ing or salrs dept. h1•lpfu.I.
(•uu t-·or Appl
Jndlalriul Rcla!ions
(7141 494-9401 YARD & Garage Cleanup. rLl ~ydm:~t;...kt"'· Call , ........,.,,.._. ,~ AUTO TELONIC
GEN. 1-Iauling. Tree/shnih LOT MAN INDUSTRIES trim. Gar .\ yd cleanup. Est li~ht mochanlcal "-'Ork, O\\ n
8.19-230.1, 507~ Painting &. lools. good opportunity. Ar>-Lagune Beach
SKIPLOADER & dump truck Paperhanging ply lifter 9 AM.
work. Concrete, asphalt, ..U--·..-.a ~ l ~Eq~u~at~O~p~po~r~·~E~m~p~lo~yer~~
sa\vlng, breaking. 846-nJO. J-IOUSE painting, Int/ext. ,~
Housec.l•aning accou!I. ceilin~a. reas. Frtt 465 E. 17th, Costa Mesa COFFEE Shop l\1 an ager "'"58.17 w/several yn of exper. as est. 7141~ · AVON CHRISTMAS EARN-waitress & h<lsleM for Bistro
Rainbow Window THE Haniman, we sell too INGS r.an help make the Restaurant. CaU Max , JOHN'S ,...,_ ho! on!.'! st<lp price & pattern, tor holidays happier f<lr your N wporter Inn N B
........ ¥"' & Up stecy M aintenance honlt> appt. 547-5846. Pntire family! It's ea.~ ~ll-64~1100. ' • '
Dri-Shllmpoo l rec Scotch-Conln\ercial-Residential lng, f1nc Avon products for
gt.lard (Soll Retardants). 675-0429 tor ei>timate Plas.ler, Petch, Rapalr our irresistible Christmas CONSTRUCTION Secretary, De~reasers & all color -~ Cl • Co!aloguc. Call Now 540-7041 expt'rlenced. brightel'K"rs & 10 minute Dedicat-een1ng 919-41200 between 9 & 5 b 1 each for white * WE 00 EVERYTHING * * PATCJ-{ PLASTERING BABYSITTER, mature,
Sa b Refs. ~-"'· 646-2839 All types. Free estimates resp. ,voman to care for 2 COO~. mature . individual carpets. vc y<lur money Y r •= call 54(H)825 bo 1 , 9 M th Fr" previous experience , In
saving me extra trlpg. Will HOUSE OF CLEAN ys, "" on. Ml 1-""-alth field preferred . clean living rm., dining rm. Pl bl 1:30-5 pm. Shorecrest tract. s'"mall, acut" care "-·p1·•·•.
h"I I'" A $7 ~ Floors, windows. erpt, "''alls, um ng Must have own transp $40 < •~ ~ & .., w. ny nn. ·""'· 6 · "" ~, ' Write, classified ad No. 494, couch SlO. Chair $5. 15 yrs. yrs. in area. ~ · L. R. OTIS PLUMBING wk. Call 540-6055 before 5
exp. is what counts, not ** Alberto has the right Remodels & Repairs. Water "°pn~'~·~963--0127"-'-""-'oJ~t~6~.---~~ ~~~. ~.O~~ 1560•
method. I do work myself. maid just for you. heaters, dlaoosals, fumaces, BABYSITrER / housekeep-C k p M
Good ref. 531~01. call 83&-0648. dshwshrs. 97'r3730 MIC & er, 3 lo 7 pm. Student OK. 00 -antry an
ATTN . Rug Shampooers. l-lOUSECLEAN ING BIA. All Daily Pilot areas. 640-0166 eves; 67 3 -976 5 J3oth \\'/great exper In lrg.
Equip. used once. Holt 18"'. 8 hours a week. Own trans. Drains unclogged _ fl.SO wkdr-.. food operation. Call Chef
1 hp shampooer & brush. * 613-2918 * Sewer line to 100' -$15 BABYSl'JTER, Penn Is . ,,:,Fn'<l:=c~·~'~71~'~'-'644"0'~1c.c700"=· ---,
$370. N<lbles \\'et vacuum, I "P~ro"l~.-C~o~r~""t'°"C~l~o-o-n~in-9-* 549-2502 • area, your home. 4 & 6 ~· COOK, part time. Tues. &
· $250. Extra.'<. S50. Ms..6994 .--COLE PLUMBING old IDaily-5 day \vkl. Wed. 6am 'til lpm. Hun-alter 6 or \\'knds. Also windows & fioor care. 675-8809 tington Beach 847 3941 Call Dutch 537-1508, 8am-6pm 24, hr. service. 645-1161 · -Ceilings BABYSITI'ER. my home. CUS'TODIAN for cleaning & LADY will clean vacant PLUMBING REPAIR · Ea I 11 days. 2 pre-school age! vacuuming. oar1y nwrn.
apta. Exper. By the uni1 No job too sma children. 540-9251 eves. hrs. Sam-9am. Call 675-0100
•SPARKLING WHITE Eves 646-1557. * 642--3128 * f<lr appt &. interview.
New acoustical ceilings, MAN .A,_ d rk S • /Alt ·11 BABYSITTER. my home, Anytime, 6#-TI83 Reas. WO Wl,,nes ay wo . ew1ng 1ra "Jnl Corona de! l\far. Mon-Fri. DELJVERY f<lr Messenger Good and re\Jable. Refer· ll 30-S 30 R f 640-036.5 Service. Own transp. I.tust
Cement, Concrete ence. Ph<lne 541-8029. SEWING·DESIGNING : : · es. · know Costa Mesa, Corona
Janitorial MenfWomen. Reas. Rates BABYSITTER: 3 children, del Mar, & Newport areas. CUSTOM CEMENT WORK $10 min. • Call 846-7450 n1ay live-in. Contact l\lr. 5'12--1164.
Drives, WALKS, patios, Jeff's Cleani~Sel'vlce Alteret1ons-64?.S845 Coleman. 547-4359 aft 8 pm. DELIVERY <lf DA IL Y pool decks. Don. 642-8514 Re·'• u··· m---'-' 0 ·-atd -~ uuen .., -m ~ Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. ocuu• • '"' ~n .. nee, PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to
PATIOS-PLANTERS * ~ * Queen Bee, age 21-35 newspaper carriers. Re-
lighted dupllcat<lr shop 1n in~ conns & xln'\ ben<"flls.
Org Co. 541N030. <"1lll t.tr. N1·"'·land I -.... 11~ J 1-~or Appo1ntm1•nt • . V
NCR OPERATOR ,,..""' J~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-~I
capable of dealing with
publie & tyf)(", Call 21J..
5!)8..5556 'J'el!C'Pton1pter • An
f'<!Ual opportunity employer.
GENERAl. OFJo'JCE: Local
old estab. firm needs con· genial gal for tilis varit.>ty Newport Beach Antiques
spol. Slllrl $450. Call Nancy 500 NC'wp<lrt Center l>r.
BANK OF AMERICA
May, 540-f,055, Co fl s I a I Ne~ experienci:'d NCR N~'flOr1 l~aM'I WANTED. l..arRf! chin•
Agency, 2700 llarbar Blvd., ope1:11.lor \\'ho can type 50 F..qua.I Oppor. E.r·n~p=k>~Y~'='=L<'al>~-~;..,~1~. __ n_"_'_'_o_n_•::.=b~t~•-1· C r-.t \\·.p.m. & use 10 key adding I~ &4-4-16S7.
GENERAL OFFICE m"h;,,., °" calcut•t<>r. ""''· SECRETARY Appliances I02 Lite bkkpng, p!easanl phone tion involves heavy machine voi~-e . r time. Apply Thurs. bookket-pinJt' &. p o s t I n g Newport Beach. The lrv.ine WA S H E R S , D rye r 1 ,
2·5 prn, Carpeteria, 1714 journal entry to th" general Company See~s shopping Dish\\'1L'ihers ttoonditioned,
Newport Blvd .. cr-.t !ed.J(er. rrntt·r pr:o1not10nal sttre-g u a r 0 • De 11 v c red
HO'I'F.L. Exp front '"'-.sk 1'0rmal education ln ac-lacy "'·/nun. 2 yrs. related 54&-5218/839-7620. uo.· . . l'l(pcr. Soml" College or bus-derk/cashier. Must kno\V counting ~u1red. Excellent inl'ss school preferred. l)'p-RECOND. trade· In •Po
NCR <tax>. Apply in perl'IOn. CQ. benefits. In~ 70 w.p.m. SH 90 v.:.p.m. pllance!I & TVs. Dunlap'•,
Alrporter Inn Hotel, Irvine. Sr 1\!e bookkeeping. Pleas:tnt 1815 Newport Blvd., C.M.
llOUSEKEEPER f<lr con· Call pt>rsonality & ability to deal 548-7180.
valescent hospital. 1 4 4 5 644-3,389 w/busincssn1rn • a mu.st. ~-~~~-~---
Supe1·i<lr, NewPort Beach. Betwn 8 am & 12 Ability to accept Rent Washers/Dryers
1-IOUSEWIVES in need ot noon res()()nsibility & work in-$2. \\'k. Full n1alnl.
wardrobe, xtra money. No Only dependently. Xlnt w<lrking * 639-1202 •
ex per. No investmen t . I ·----------1 conditi<lns & co, b(>nefits. MA Y1'AG repairman ha1
Beeline Fashions. C 213) Cell 644-3389 washer& $35. to $100. Can
430--3953 or 893-2317. Operators Between 9 am & 12 noon deliver v.·/J yr. guarn.
IMMEDIATE openillgS avail. We are growing! And looking ~'"""=~m='~· -,----,------1 in Lldo Isles most f<lr F.XP. fND USTRIAL SGL SECRETARY: C r o 'v Ing OVER WO washers, dr)ers,
tashi<lnable ladies dress NEEDLE OPERATORS to manulacturing co. needs gal refrigerat<ln f1'0tn $39.95.
shop. Exper. pref'd. No v.·<lrk on custom surf trunks. for marketing dept. Not just ;,43--0780.
n!tes. 5 Day wk. Call Collect If you qualify call KANVAS a secretarial position buttl-'"0'="'-~~~-,---,----1
Carl Jones, 213/795-5821. BY KATIN 213-728-6230 or right hand to several men. 40" t'!cct llotpoint2 stove.
* INSPECTOR * 114-521-4880.' Salary to $700. Call Jan 1 yr Gld. A"1Cado3109• ovel'llll.
Page, 544Hi055, C o a s t a I $250. 545-E:tper. w/machine parls & PBX O~rator. l\f a I u r e A••ncy, 2700 Harbor Blvd., NEAR new Frigkiaire frost-[ r person, \villing to learn.
p as ics. Able 1 Answering Scrvice,li~C~.,~!~,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiOmil fre<!" 2 dr. refrigerator. Apply in person Pri/Pty. Call Sr.17--02.82. Edlf'r Industries, Inc. Plea.J:;C apply, 535 Center 'st,
2101 Dov• SI Cl!. Security Fu,nlturo 110
Nev.·port Beach PERSON CNer 21, p/timc BEAUTIFUL g• M d I t f 0 C A. . ·1 e . !Across ron1 . . 1rportl eves. & f/t1me ava1. Apply O·ff1"cers I f .~ '' N Ed Ve vet so a, never u...,.,.. INTERIOR Designers, Exp. in person, e 8 Pizza Sl80. Loveseat $95. Cocktail
F'urn, Crpts, draperies, Wall Parlour, 410 E. 17th St., tbls $50 ca. Lamps.
paper, shu!ters. 645--(,686 C.M. Part time & Full t\mt> n4-3600.
PUMP Island Sa I es nl an , Average $100 per week toe ~~RAN.:,::~D=F~A~TH=rn=-~~~.-.~.~1
Cdl\1. area. 5 Days. SO hrs. star!. paid vacation. ,._.........,. In·
Nile shift. T<lp wages. hospital to Jile insurance. Ing table & chain, coffee &
Phone ~8 f()r appt. Opp1>rtunlty to advance to end table1, Early Amer. all ~EPERSONNa
SERYICES.,AGENCY
Free & F~ Positions
Graduate Att'y $12K
deh .. oetive. Contact Security xlnt cone!. 839-3187. Real Estate Sal11 Agent. \Vhlte Front Sl<lre, LTKE new. Early American fff([ 2272 So. Harbor, Anaheim, &0fa w/matching chair. sa;
Thursday, Oct. 19th, 9 AM· 1750 Whittier Ave. Sp. 17,
LI .,. , • U noon . Costa Mesa, 66-Mn.
•1
-
All Concrete work. Brick, Landscaping Tll• • 646·9935 • quire!! the use of a Stati<ln
stumpstone y,;k. "894-3533. CERAMIC tile new & Wagon or Van. C.ontact Mr.
PATIOS, walk1, drives. Saw, LANDSCAPING remodel. Free est. Small Beau~a:~ator1 Harry Seeley, 330 W.est Bay
break. remove & replace For uniqU(' & penCNlalized jobs welcome. s;J&.2426. ~ St.. Co~ta 1'1e!l8..
1 Year Work Experience ·
Sele1man to $11 K
Exp. w/hol melt adhesive
Secretaries to $650
Secret11ry, no sh to $575
c1n1e ra1n1ng . . 1• SOFA, be.lee, $35.
Limited Time Only SERVICE Station in Org. Co. 3130 Seaview, ~·
Famous license course now net"ds dependable propk~. Corona det Mar '
available thru Tartx>!l Com-Att endanlR. driveway ·. .•
pany. Applicant~ fully re-salrsman & me ch an i es \VANTED: Good ulK'd Jr si21e :; .;
hnbursed upon qualification. w/Class A licenses. Cd. <lp-CQntemporaf)' d1nette 1eL y
Nf!W or E'xperienced sales pty f<lr right p e 0 p 1 e . No \\TOUght iron. 644-2110. -
people. Openings available. Daytime operation only. DINETTE set, gd cond, $25. O:·
Complete training pf'ORT8.IT1. i n.ii 830-1750 hetv.11 8 & 7. Black i\ngus oven & broiler,
conerete. 548-8668 f<lr est. style in landscaping ·call P..1ust have clientele. Paid DENTAL laOOratory trainee.
Ch'ld C James C. Elmer -vacation & ht'alth & Cd. oppty for housewife In 1 are Landscaping & Maintenance I II i I J hospitalization, Lido Hair denta1 lab, Santa Ana area.
Contractor Co. "Renovating lawns. A (J14'1o)n.t f' Fashions. Call Est e 11 e. No exp. nee. Call 558-7362
necessity at this time." I ~· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiii~::ii~ ·1 ~6~13~.t~970~.;;;!~~"":~~"l":: h~'°i'~·~·~·~'·i:r:;--se;;re;u;;:;:r;ii>t: Free est. 646-7229 art 5. JACK Taulane -Repair *BEAUTICIAN \\'/NEAT DENTAL Secretary-Np!.
remod., addlt. 20 yrs. exp. Remodel & Repair Job Wented, Mal• 700 orthodontic ofc. Age 25-4.J.
Oerk' Typist to S475
Recept/Typist $450
Sr. Accblg Clerk S550
IBM Composer Opr $3 hr
Figure Clk /Career op $400
i88 E. 17th fat Irvine J C.P..1.
642-1470
Lic'd. l\1y Way Co. 547-oo36. App EAR AN CE• FOR Dental exp. pref. "42-2040.
Additklns * Remodeling PLU?.f. Elt'<'t. Masonry, SCRAU LEJS 1-'B"'U;SY"";SH;,:;;O;P:_, ;;5'8-9919~::::;;·= JOBS
Gerwick & So11. Uc.'d.... -~~a.1~tch~~~oc1et, • ~ . B.OAJ Q..EPAIR MEN Desi9ner / • 1:e':.e~~Y NEEDED
673-6041 * 549-2170 l\tust have exp er i e 11 c e Engineer e Keypunch Operators
Gardening Painting & ANSWERS waterfront boet repair yard. e Industrial Paperhanging l·lau.louts. huU & mechanical \Vanted t<l fill ~· position e Bllling Clerk Typist
AMERICAN gardener. Ttm:t 1-.:...::!::;;:;;;;"°';;.;:'----repalrs. Good jObs for top in engineering dept. Exper. Irvine s«H450
n! "Crns!I cutlers" doing CUSTOM Painting, lntfExl Br6och -Dirty -Noble -men. Blackie's Boat Yard. in design & m.frng tlbergls NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO
half a job'r For estiniate 11pecialist. No job too lrg or Button -OUTIX>OR 2414 Newp1>rt Blvd .. N.B. diesel powered yachts req·d. Tempo Temporary J(elp
call Custoni Garrlener, J<lhn too small. Free color con-The police in Las Vegas * 673-6834 * Advancement oppor. + xln'I
fl.torasco, 645-2658. suiting & est. Uc'd, OOnded, stopped a lady rund'.11ng ~P Bookkec>per co benefits. Send resume to JUNIOR Sa.lesmen: 10-15. --- -~~.,--« l•s Won't be und•rb·id and "°"" putting 1mes in R.E.J. Poole. Earn SZ0.$40 per week gct· E.-XP. ll:iv.·ailon Gardener. "·' ~.,,,_3217 · .... , .•• meters. She said, ··1 \\'e need one autom<ltive Columb1'a Yachls
C I I
&12-WOS. """' . ..... • .., Bookk Se d ph Ung new customers for the
on1p !'!r ~arc Pn !I e r v · just l<lVC this OUTDOOR eeper. n Ot<l & A Div of Whitaker Corp. DAILY PILOT. This is not a
K a in 1t I a n i . 6 4 s-.1616, PAINTING & PAPERING, ganibllng.'' resume to Box 501, c/o 275 McConnlck Ave. new1paper route and does
Future management oppor-Ask for F'Tank or Charlie. like new, $10. 548-1168.
tunities. CaU fo.1r. Sloan at SERVICE Station man ruu. SIZE BOX-SPRING 832·T"'40A. RBELL 11•/exper. for eve. shift .Age AND MA'ITRESS. Slit. no factor. Good pay & e &12--0238 e
REALTORS
REAL ESTATE
C?mm. Apply Chevron sta-***Sofa & matchini love
lion, 604 So. Coast Hwy., seat never used Both $150
Lag. Bch. Pri~ate. 968-7910: .
$33.-$40. wk, PT, Servicemen
&: students OK. Btwn 2:30 & Garage Sale 112
1"°'·=·30~p~m~·~'~'~'...,,:;:::~'~'''..-'!'~··~·~·-1----------·I >
Salesmen &: broken! The op-SEWING macfline operators * GARAGE SALE *
portunttY Is here! You are S~le needle & overlock 629 PlummE"r SI.
, PROFESSIONAL
needed Immediately f()I' Clur Ex?l"rienced. Cru;ta Mesa 64~2
rapidly eXJ?andtng Rea I TSOWPIMDRWAEWAER Jewelry 815
Estate dlvlst<ln. Po1ltlve op-R
rtu lty f d I 3760 Campus Drive po n or a vancemen . Newport Beach ~ WEDDING rings-man &
Phone. . . womans r.et, 14 c a r n 1 -•
Silk ~tJILrTI~. train. diamond. Pd~. sell $125. :
6 l:!·J:·~1. 19 yn;. in Harbor area. Lie '!!~~!:..,.,--=-~,..,,-Datty Pilot 330 We" Boy Costa Me••, Calif. ,~ t Incl d ll"~ --& OOnded. Ref's fum. CHEF. high caliber, fully ' -. .<u.w no u e co =.:ung or E.'XP. Japanr~ Gardener. &t2-2J56. •e'XP in all phases, desires Street. Costa Mesa, Calif. Equal Oppor. Employer M/F delivering. Transportation is
Co11111h•1t• \' :i r rl Ma in-I cc=~=~~-,---,.-~~ cbanit". Employed at ~'="="::o.· -.,,.,.,.,.,------provided. We work four
tcnant·r. shn.ihbery, trees. rNT/Exter. Neat. clean, fast sophisticated country club. Bookkeeper DIRECTOR OF hours after school and 8 on Contact Mr. Lake, 646-2624 5-48-138.l
Fl'l''' !:st i;t5-0..lli . CQurtcous serv. Refs on f'C!q. Avail Nov I. Resume on \\'e need one Automotive FINANCIAL Saturday. We have <lpenil'l&'a
BOB 'S (i,\ltnENtN'G Llc'd, free est. Estab. since req. Paul P.1'artin. 742-3603 Bookkeeper with OMV ex-PLANNING for F<luntaln Valley & South
_..... TEACHERS-retlred, unem-MisceUaneout 811 --~ ployed, housewUe/teachers.1----------,( 1,,\1\'l)"f'hPJNG 1955. 847-4128. Esc<lndido. I perience. Send photo & J{untington Beach areas on-
(,_ • Ex-· 1· ly. You must be out of Irvine Industrial ... "' •1 paining, paper * Exp male bookkee?l"r resume to Box 501, c/o Newport Beach financial school by 3 Pl\1 to
Innoval:1ve publisher of ed.-DineUe set with 6 gr e c n RE~ ESTATE -TWD ex-ucational programs needs velvet chairs $20 DO
Cnn1plcl(rs. hanging, natural w 0 Cl d wants pt time \VOt'k, 'vith Daily Pilot, 330 West Bay institution has Immediate participate. ExpcrienceJ :.~.7-12'l'l Rr!C'r Spm. finishing. 548-7005. accountant. 53&-8680. S1rocl, Costa l\1esa, Calif. opening for director ol boys given prior 11 y.
~~~ Aale~n needed1.1. ~tants in markb11-eting new Chest (3 drawer1l $5°,00 .-.t1"'' comm1won ~P 1. p~.,..ucts to pu uc r;chools. C?lest {S drawers I SI0.00
OOnus plan. Call Cmny, Part or Fftime. 830-8715. 2 Book.cases (ea) $5.00 557~130. TELEPHONE Sales: Sell Dbl matftss & box * LANDSCAPING * 30 Day Special. Inter/Exter. Job W•nted, Female 702 92626. estate & buslnes.s plans. ~9&41.
N"1v l'IY.''1'. S or i n k J er s, painting. Local refs. Lic'd Bookkeeper LVN's, relief. Part-'Nme
derks. cl!:'IUlllP. Stale llc'd. Ins. Chuck. 645'-ilBOO. GOOD TYPIST We need one Automotive l\fust have law degree & Nurse!! Aides & Laundry
:i::S-!''7·. No Wasting Wiil do your typing at Bookkeeper with machine heavy expel'. In tax&: estate Help. Bayview Conv. Hosp.
R.E. Trainee. Brier & Southem Orange County'• springs $30.00
developer will train & Favorite Newl)>aper trom Bedroom al!'! of 1 Bookcase. 1
sponsor for lie. Call between your borne. M&n as much desk. l (6 drawer) chl'll
3ctam-3pm. 545-1124. as ycu need. Getierou1 com-with mirror $95.00 (;-;-\p· • ·;1;.;:1~ l!eavy or 1!1e * WALLPAPER * hom Wiii . k experience. Send photo & analysis service. Prevklus 540-5690. ha,;'·.,, r~r-.~in~. clean up, When you call "Mac" h•r e, r1c up rt>sume to Box 501, c/o i n s urance & CLU ~1AN wanted to bu i Id mlS!!k>n 00 each Ale. Call AU In GOOD CONDITION at
557-6139. a good pri~ :'ltn ~r1111r) ,.)36-2394 548--1444 646-1n1 and deliver Joc:a H.B., Daily Pilot. 330 West Bay background pre:f'd. nurseryboxes.Apply9:30 t<l RED CARPET
any·1r:1r. PAINTING _ Honest, clean. F.V., West, 75c per pg. Strert. Costa Mesa, Calif. Salary will be in accordance 4 pm, 17552 Gotlw'd, J~un-
A"L'S J.nri<tll"izylng. Tree guaranteed work. Llcensed or will work by hour ~':;26::;26~· ===-=~~ w/exper. & qualificatiom.1 .,.;t=ln:.gtc::oc;n,cBc='a=ch'C.~~-~~ 1 AT THE BEACH! n~I''"''· 1 Vtu remodeling. & Insured. 675-5740. c a ll 847·3095. BOOKKEEPER -Xln·t Op-Submit reswne w/salary f1.1ANAGER. 20 units. c.~1 . Sell homes priced from TELLER STEREO 1972 Garr a rd Trash h·1ulini::. lot cleanup. PROF. painter, bonest work, t bo , W portunity. Call A n n e, requirement In conflden« Reliable, exp, non drinker. ~'c 000 1 ... 000 Red model, gy1temi:red full auto
R"'l'•ir ··,.,rinklers, 673-1166. -as. llc/•'ns. Int/~. ,...,..,._ NEED he P at m~. e 531-oo44 after 6:30 pm. to: Cla.ulfied ad no. 527 c/o rAA 060 .,..,.., 0 """' • chlltlge_r, AM/Ji'J\.f !'ltereo '"' "'"' u~ ha\'e Aides, Nu rs cs, ..::::...:;;.;..;;;.:;,:..;:;;;,.:;.:~-Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Refs req'd . .,..,...-1 for nppt Carpet now ha.~ 260 offices EXP t: RT Japan ea e est. Refs, 548-2759. H 0 u sekprs, Companions. BUSBOY/ MAN Co!lta Mesa, Calif. 926~. Sat & Wed. in 3 Wf"Stern states. Regular radk>, RCA tape deck plua !~ u r 1' '' n "r . Complete FOR clean & neat painlin~, Homemakers up j 0 h n , Must be clean & neal. Qvf'r Equal Oppor. Employer MAID 'NOrk Jn exchange for massive TV, newspaper & Attractive opening for win-tn type jacks. A I r G~rr'P'"n~ :-;e1virC'. NB, Cftf interi<lr, reas, rates. Call 5471681. 18. Apply in person. Surf & I """""""""""!!!""""!!!~ niotcl Apt. 2376 Ne\\'port r ad i o adv ertisernenl<i. flow teller. Savings & loan iruspension speakers. Sun
:1rr"• '.l1fi· 1~1. Dick. 968-4()6.;. Sirl<lin. 5930 \\'. Coast f.!11.·y, DONUT Shop. all nilc shift. Blvd., C.M. 543-9755. Referral!! lrom 0 reg on , experience prefel'T('d. new in box I guar. \l.'Rs lef1 I
,f ,\ r AN ESE Ex?l"rlenct'd PROF. Painting, also roofs, Help Wanted, M & F 710 1 ;iN~B~ .... iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiim I Age 25-45. No exptr nee. MMD wanted, only exp'd. Arl7.ona & N. Cal if. CaJl unclaimed. Now f75. f'11rh
c; •nl<'n1'r J\1riln tenitnce ,t,. nccous. Cell. i nter/exter. l' Apply in Pl"J'SOn. Mr. Donut, nl'ed apply. Harbor Inn 962--5511 Ask f<lr Vicky or or paymentir. Lay1tiiny l _ii<·11~up \Vork. 842~1. Lie/Ins. Free est. 645-5191. A Better TempQrary ~illon BUYER 135 E. 17th St., C.M. MOtel, 1800 W. Balboa Blvd. George. IMPERIAL SAVINGS 1-D.,op~•-· .,11,.,',,'"=3-050==1.=~~· i
t;.IRDENtNG SERVICE EXl'ER. Complete 2 coo~. 1 UNJently Needed DRAPERY Workroom. P<I MAINTENANCE R.N. Su""""°' for 'malt & LOAN ASSN, * AUCTION *
Bcusonah!C' -Reliable story $260, 2 story $321). Unskilled Newport Beach financial in-vac. k holidays. Exprr. or COUPLE nursing home. beach area. 3366 Via Lido Fine Fumltur.
• 64~ * Neat work . Roy. SM-5058. e Clerks 11titutlon has immediate traint'(! cutter. Be a ch Call 494-SOT:'i for appt. NP"·po11 Beach 673-3130
I!'s a b~ze ... sell Your INT. Apt. painting carpel opening f<lr a professional Dr apery, 900 W. 17th, CM. 1!'!~ ~~~~pl:~: SALES F.qual Opportunity Employf'r &: Appliances
tlt>nu v.'llh ease, use Daily shampooing. SUnswept Bldg. • Assemblers w/strong exPl"rlence. You DRIVER perlenced. Have own iools. Established 1rnitory with a Typlsl/Secrt>taries Aucbons, Friday, ?:'30 p.m. ~lot Classified. 642-5678. 1 Maint., 842-1996. Wlll Train 11.·ill purchase oUicc sup-Mon thni Fri, 9--4 \Vife lo "-'Ork part time in 56 year old rompany. Sill-No Fe(.s. Immed. openings Windy s Auction Barn
Schools & I Schools & :-Jpver A .Ftt ~~TPm~~tt~ fieets & office Call 675---0215 aft 5 pin ofnce. $500fmo + 2 BR ap!. ary, c<>n1ml~si<ln + many for !lhort & long tenn 207!I~ Newport, 0 1 6*-8686
instr uction• 575 lnitructlons 575 Interim DRUG Clerk _ Experienced. Call 546--0.171. otht'r ~ncflt~. Expf'r1PnN' usslgnmcnts or rx't'manen1 Behind Tony'• Bids Mat'l Costa Mesa. Call •lAJNTEN NCE M In M>rv1ce!I dl?:'l1n-d, but Ml placements. Call Uf. now'
Pe-onnel Serv'ice I wp1',.,,w11ntsl .~1"', tpdro"veonnl!.,_!lrd~ 642-4500 Dally " A echanic requ1rrd. For appt. cn.ll P.P.S. Pacific Penonnel KNrrnNG mac:hlne $25.
VETERANS
COMMERCIAL
PILOTS
Earn $25,000
A YEAR
If you want to utilixe the GI
Bill you are required to have
a private pilots license first.
I'll teach you for hundreds of
dollars less. Give you a money
back guarantee that you will
pass. You have nothing to
lose ,
Call day or night 7 days a week
Bruce Reynolds
(714) 522-6320
•
•
• ~ .. ''"'"" for rental yard. Some 642-1960 J\1r. Mt•"·ers. Servln-s, 112 No. TO\\'t'r Lawn mowPr $-1. Sleeping n& W. 20th C.M. or the highest in!egrtty & EARLY Christmas Shoppers delivecy v.mk. Application.<i SALES· Radio & TV Union Bank Square. Ora.nge, bags $3 e1ch. P<lprorn J>Ot> ,
642.7573 • 546.2592 booefidgty .i: W.1!° ed'"1'yttogat<> •, -Need extra monel y'!' Gocid a,,ccetlpled d&•llYN.7 am-5Repmatol C-"to"vc p-r ' o -w/ad·. Ca. !'>47-6446. Ask For Jl('r S4 t.feto.J d'tector $10. -con ence "" a m ra n o extra Income avai \l.'Orking ar cy uon nt , "'"' " " Ra •·t M Stldc proj-lor 15 Su~-~ Interviewing 9-11 & 1·4 m•"'"""'ment &. vendors. I 2862 B; vertising cxper. Opportunity Cuc ay. '"'" · ••UUfll~ ..._v from your ov.·n home a frw nc., arranca Rd.. for edvanr.ement S 1ar 1 WAITRESS EXPER SIS. B!<"ycle $1~ Saturday hou~ per week. 961h'\7G4. Irvine. S40-5l85. 1 · , • and Sunday 2814 ¥1 W.
Advertising Secretary Send resume & s a I a r y
Gn.:n't oppor. for nmb!fious. hWory in confidence to: hh~hly !!killed ~h'I. Brains, Classified ad no. 528, c/o
Ex.< Sec/Dental Recpt $6SOI!· _ Call lie l'n 1-layeir, f.1u.~i h<> 01·f'r 21. No Phone f r't'llnf.ront u AM to 9PM .
MATH MAJORS 54l}-6055, Coostal Ascency, Calli!. Apply in pel'5Cln, Surf --..-.-..,,~-7.-'.;.;~'I
ln!C'lligent, creative ind tvid-7700 Harhor Blvd ., C.M. & Si rloin. 59".,0 \V. c0 11111 Baby FurnlhJr•
tnltlattve & lih rl'quJn>d. 08.ily Pilot, P ,O. Box 1560,
83•)670 COAtJl Mesa, Calif. 92626.
ual wnn!rd for managerial SALESMAN .• F.:"Jl· nlfh_·e 1111.')", NeWport Sch. Play~n •..•.......... $10.00 ~~~·~~nor?i'~~ ~B8i, a~~n~ 11upply for r!'tahlillh<'d AC· \VAITRESS, t'xpcr. ovtr 21. Drt'ssmg tablf' ....... , 15.00 ~ Equal Oppor. Employer , 11 1 1 1 counts In Newport lll·h. Apptv In penon. l.O\>e's Crib & mall~....... ~.00
Bf'ac·h. F 11ture m le< on Y NE\VPORT BEAOI tl1t"ll. Call Barry Wt'st • 71•1 • ntJQ', Brookhurst & Adam!!, lllgh . chnlr • • • • • . •• • • . a.00
ASSEMBLERS Cnpontu hy lnltlntlve & nbll!ty to Financial institution has Im-::-7 9212 f Bassinl't 1()00 assunu' rc~p:>n1lblllty. Sal· .i;i -or appt. H.B. . · ·· ........... ·
0,.1333 nu!dlate open I n g for Sa Sh 2 Ctu' i;c.•a1 11 •••••• (('a.J 5.00 ary opl'n. ~ · rnft.Mgcment trainee. W arpener \VAITRESS, CottllJl<' Corft'Q M0-8308
E 'd k t .• r ti I Shop. 562 W, 19th. CM. Gooct
1111 & 2nd shift ln elec:tronlcs Marlnt Mech•n:lc
flnn. No Exper, required. Marine El•ctrlclan Apply in peNIOn, 9 u1n1 t _,A_......i Poner & Bnimlleld Div. Mual be expen~u•-~ to work Fee Paid
Al\fF" locorpot11t td on new dicscl powered boo~ Con~!r 1'upervllKll'
261111 Arropurno Pacifica by Kipper Adhesive sales Rep
$.'\II ,JuAn C11pi11tr11no 1626 Placentia , CM A/J>.Construct.ion
An e:qual opoor empl l\f/}' • 845-5510 • P11oymll Clk-Constr
ASSEMBLERS CAPTAlN wanted f o r General U.dJ.,oer Acct Sailboat wtth medlanleal r C Bkkpr/Sfc"y Solderlna . Wire "''rop cllart 1 Sr-c'y-1.--iguna 6 mo'a expPr-Top US experience, for er n •·l-•;c•I E Lo ,.-T Panama. Salary & share "~,, xtra ng enn ..-fJts. Box 191J, Npt Bch, Ex~ Sec'y to pttl Trvtne M0-4450 .,.... CeocnU Office
• $1500
SllK
S600 16!~
$100
$700
155tl
Anaheim Sl3-2322 ~Cat"'"~·--------I Secr<'tarlt"11 NEVER A FEE AT TtMPO CLEANING woman for AlllO ftt Posltlon!I
Temp1> Temporary Help Newpo11 Center oUictt bld1t. NEWPORT
lo S600
to $i'OO
1450
16511
J\.fINtMU~I "I> • llO\V ,.,,,,Rf' <I ('l\r J {I' tlp.'I. Expcr. IK'CeSAAry. All \VASHER. xlnt cond. cop-
. QUALIFICATIONS IOOI!'. Bcdas J\ftirhin" Tt)nl Ahlf~. Pl'rtone. $40. Stow. \l.'hillt. * CoiJe~c· Def:tte Sc•rvlc<!. MR-622'7 \\I . F: D (:Till. rotiAM'rif'. broiler, fa '* :0.1 alh f'l1aj(>r SEAMSTRESS, f,11rn1!"nt I''· ni trcs.'I, .x ~r. i1y,11 D-w1hr, G.E., ltd cond. $40.. * l ',\i Yrs. \\'ork t:):pcr. Jl('r, Female. Call 53&-311j6 Dick Churches Rest ~. for appo!nlrrtt'nt. 269!! Nl'wP"!t1 Blvd .. c r.1 'A~UTU=~~~fN'7-~H7•-.. --,.10-,,.-~rur-I
Only thO.&e "'hh the 11 e ~ WAfmESS-!-'ood & cocktaH coat. -Condition' eicoellenL
qualltlcation!'l need OJ'lply. Stctttarlea S·l50-$6.i0 exp. Blue Bf'<>t. $35-3909.
A/Pay11ble sr.on 67J-990t 11.flf"r 4 pm • c~P~R~rv=A~TE="te-nn~lo-,cl~u~b~ll~OO~I
Sllbfnlt rc11ume "'/Mlary rto. f'/C BookkHJ)("N: S0.10 \\'ATER & CleAnUp penon ~mbenhtp let' A onl.Y $10
qulrement In ronfidence to: 1oor;. Ff'f' P11.l.d By r.ompany ror nursery. Call Jor •PPt. 6'r.H;TIJ
Oaaglfi<'d ad m. 532 c/o Lb:: IUinder•t t\J:('ncy ,&J6-~~1~44~1~. ==-=""'==~ ~r mo. ·
Dally Pilot. p ,Q, Box 1;,oo. .t500 CamP\lll f)r -Wl-IO WANTS TO WORK! CARPET FOR SALE
ChttA l\lcsa. Ca. D)2£, 546-2118 Nf!W?Ort Bench ORIVE A CAB! b)' Cftllld l..a)-er. Call l ..;"""~"';,,;Op;:;po;;•;,· ,,;Em;:;';'""';;;',.. I·~~~'=""~~~~~ I • . ~ ·1·· • ~ OtOO~E ~ur hours. •'tlt'k ~ w 540-XM
MEDICAL Rttotpt\ofll!lt, :i S1cr1tary/ Bookkee"'-r ft)r yminK'lr. be your own GUN cue "'&!nut 6 Cub
Automollve Niie work, bondabte. pd. PersonMI An•ncy
AG Gll.ESSIVE, amblti01.11 \.lacatlOn & ins, 40 Hrs. wk. •'l'I 0 D • N.B new car A&le1peraon f()I' 0~ 644-0814. -.ii ovt1r r ., • •
of thf! l~!lt P' o rd Cl-:::NTERLESS i r t n d e r 641-.3170
Dee.lenhlpe m 0 ran a e <lperalor with lnleed It I ~!!!!!!!!!!'""~'""!"!!"!""~""': I Counqi. Proa-res1lve PlY thniff!f!d exp. Pt.rrAAntnl Ji'ILING clerk. Hl'h achoo!
phtn, ln11Ura~. etc. Ex· employrnnnt with 17 yr old l(t1,1dunte. CuU ~ 11 e e: n,
perh:ni.'fJ pttfe~. St> e ro1npnny oflerinl( variety of G40-0J4() het\\<een 8:30 &
Don Crevier. compa.11)' paid b c n e t\ Ill . ·';:,''7,30;c· :-c-"'=,...,.-::;:=-;-
11'4EODORE ROBINS 545-().101 Fnv Cook. nl!at" clean. Ap-
f:ORD Jt'I 11 hreete, acll your it'ms I ply Jn Pe~n. Jt Sall fiAh
ml Harbor Jllvd., with eaae, Ute Oatty Pilot .\ ChlJ>.<'I, 275(1 lforbor Blvd ..
Co!!ta Mesa Claulfled. &IWJ678. -="'"''-' -------
l
. ,..--Ima Men or v."Om('n. Can be ""·'-' I~-\\i<ll ooly. Start Oct 23rd, t U'.lcAI. No !>;h llhghtly hAndicippM, Vt!I. f'utuJI \l.'fl'fl~tl Im-IK'ata. Em~ ofc. Ins. forms. Call l.orTAln•: r\'•llred, A1tt 21 !Cl 70, .up. Misc cftmeru, ~le. 557--00.W .
1-Iadlty tty1fem. L I t r p WF..51'CL1 A!Ff 1itl'n1l'nt ynur 1nrnnie. Ortve stitWINN extrcycle SM.
bkkpnK. Rt-ply to elnniflOO er..onnt j{f'nCy n cAb 6 hn or more 1t dA.Y-Slingrl)' bike p). l:'ri I'll), 5.10 b'o OA ily 111.lnl, 20t'l Wl'llll(1Ull Dr., NB i\11ply In pt'rrt>n, Yf'llow rnb &-14--6421
P.O. Box 158), Costa. ~ft-51), fM::r-2770 ro .. 1116 E. 16th St., Costn * NEW G
Ca 92626. SEC.1tt::TAlt V . Rf"f"f'llllonlitl Mt'AA. MA S *
The faste!lt drnw In tht" \\1r11. Hnti Bch. Xlnl typls1. Tn 4 US. M1t11. '1 1.UKJJ, Lup.I
, ·" D!llly Pilot OaulfJeid $600. I n I e r v I 1• ""' !I In /\ {tood want ad IS ll irood In-CtlJlll Si'O M4-7tilJ. Allk for Ad . &t2-5678. Lakf'WOO<l (Z13l !13 1 .. illl vr11tm,nl. !Juli.
~---------
\
•.
..
.24 DAIL~ PILOI
1[§]:~1 ""_." ...
Mlscttl11neoua Ill Pianos/Org•ns 1--------DISTINCTlVE. '"' w a I *PIANOS*ORGANS* cocktall labl<' $80. ::, Pc din C.oht~ Out for Ouainess
rm *!I $70. R' Sola $90. i2\ tk!il QU31Jty -pnC<'s ·!let'\.
Lot.tnge eh" $75. Con!IOI~ Ji;a11·a!·S:te1n11111y·Bnld1vin, clc
TV $35. Cnnl<:mp 5 l'e Bil Pl.uyt·r 1"'!<1nos &: Rolls
~11\'n.l Rt-~ Ash and Bntilllan
(X"p(JC!r l n'<'!J ~ Ol'K' f'i.\('h .
Sall' frou1 <'hc'lppin~ block.
~2279 ttfl 5.
BFAUTl Fl"L S.tlC'flh'·nl
&o.11, Slipo/Doeks 910 Trallirl;'tJllllty
SLJP gpace avail.
Sallboal.
• 67l<8J6 •
B .. ts, Speed & Ski
~26' • ITTJLlT\' Traltl'r 2 \Vhf-fol
Steel Bed 1~ Ton J).u. Size ,
$125. 97'4f>7S .
911 Auto Servlc•, P11rt1 Mt
-. ... -]§]( _ .....
,
l§J I All!o..... l§l I ~ .........
CHRYSLER. New Yorker, 'SS
Xlnt oond.
67;.-0310: !148-TI97
~pttan wd ILl°Of'1'd!l I I w R •-11 ·" S {('n!!I s • •. . . . . • • e uy·.;)lt , new C'Onu tni.:er D 1, I",, S J2." mach $10. Con.'IOle st('roo ai...v ':' , un .i
AM/FM. Misc snt Hi·nui. FIELDS PIANOS 557~. Costa ~te.;;a f71 4) 645-3250
l)ob(·r1naJ1 n11'( puppl•'"· 6
fc•ma!1\ 5 n1ak. llELP
536.-17')3
~ Ft .~a R«y 200 !leries. 1
year l'K'""'· 435 Cl Oldsmobile
LOVABLE 7 n11)t1. old fPn111l1· puck-a-jet engine. Equipped for filihing & wa ter sk'Un~.
*NEW MAGS*
.J U ~-Mn.gs, 4 L~s. I.up,
Caps. $70. M4-761.1. Ask fof
Boh.
CONTINENTAL
'71 CONTINENTAL
Scxt8n. Vlny! top, ll'aU1er In·
tf'rlor. ruu power, fllctory
tiir tond\Tlon!n.K. rlJt ifl>er-
lng 1vhet!I, AM·FM iilerco
multiplex, cruise \'Ontrol.
Vt1ry }Ow rnUl"age l 1880EOJ)
GAS Stove $25. Dinette Rel
w ith 5 chah'!I $75. 1513
Orange Ave.., C.M. 6'12-5666.
tabby, S™\)'\'fi. ~hots. OOx Fully l'flUipped t a n do m
5 P l:iyPr Piano!!, rt'huilt & 11·n1 n1•1I. &~·01~9 aft 6 p10. trflilt'r. This outtlt Is !!kc
t't'finishcd. $875-$1175. Ne1\' pm. tit!\.\'. Original L'{)SI $9200.
& Used 1'0lls. DUPrt'<' Player s,,crJfice $50)0. p h 0 11 e
AlL parts for '6t Austin All IClr Sales Mllnqft
Hf'aly Sprite. Plu!I 4 1121lHun•~onch a~~.· ** 19'n Ponche 9ll·T. Im· •7" "~d·11la· C Sc1n[)f'rlt 1in>s mounl!"d ,on .._. ~ mac. cond. ~ 'wQ
P l1H1011. 545-4650. r'46-Slns. ---~l[B~85ll [R31>-W2T"-'. otion
llA~{!'olONl> 01,:::an mOOel ;\I· I Ill. \Vi\!nu1. M<U'ie pT'('S('t & "'-'•Md Supplin
~II. $800. Eves 673-5122. ·
820
Miscellaneous
Wanted
~"%00"""'· a•o -0614 / '"·""' KI ..mi m.3184 Cpe De Ville 1 1~~~~~~~~ I \VE buy all mw• ol cl•011.1 ___ T_O_Y_O_T_A ___ I Full power, Air Oond .. Vinyl
l[i] used &p6rts can. pOI )Dr Roof, Dual ContfOT1 Seats. m I I I ~ I ~ ""!:~= -lo !qr SAYINGS Beautiful Fl .. nmt Fini•h,
$4999
NABERS CADILLAC
2000 llarbor Blv<t.,
Cosl11 Mesa 540-9100 ttWANTED **
Frlf'ndly, lnv1 n.i;: 1,.1m1· for
ntiorah1<' !'ilky Tl'rr1el' l<'·
mnle puppy J\11 shot!!. Ilse·
bkn.
OIINA t•abine-t tir hutch. an-
tique or ne w. Lar g e .
Reasonnhle. 644--4687.
\VANT ED U!veseat size 90fa
Used Organs Needed
Jlighei;t SS Paid in Cash Pets, Gene ral
Ca ll Collect 213: 874-6762
1'1MBAU.. Consolette
Lovely rondiUon $400.
*~eve~-*
PRIVATE P1\RTY \\'ANTS
TO BUY PIANO FOR
CASI!. s:u-ms.
GERMAN Shep./CoJtlc pups
S!O {'a 3 fish tank.;; I fi~h &
all access). sso. 962-fi035 aft '· Cats 852
hide-11.•bed. 644-4687. -{;ULBRANSEN p'8.no-Ot'gan
Musical Instruments 822 pacemaker . Like-n"' '"' sacrifice. $1 ,095. 673-9?...46.
PERSIA:-.1 & Jl1n111.lf1~an kit-
teons, n\;ui;.o l'O[ors. $50 & up. * m-zrro •
Dogs 854
VOX Amp. 220 watt!!, 2 12"
j!;pkrs., \l.'hecls. $1 4 0 .
645-507'3.
TV, Radio, HIFi,
Stereo 836
Office Furniture/ Equip. 124 1--------
1--"-"-------!P,ACKARD Bell rombo color
GF.RJ\1AN Shrpherd, 3 mos.
Silver. & black. g r e R t
\V/kid!!. IIas puppy shots.
Job transfer unnhle lo take
rlQg. $<10. nay:o; S'.\j-/l1S3 (':'<:!.
1224 a:o;k for Bruce: aft 6.
979-2149. EXEC S\VVI chr $15 . 23 ~c/·
chr SS . 18 desks files stls
"67 \'I 19th CM G42-3408.
Pianos/Organs 826
ORGAN HOBBY
Don't buy a ny 011::111 until you
can pl:iy~ Non-r lay('rs 11·eoJ-
con1t· to altr>nd free \\"Ork
,shops. For information
Conlacl : Tom Dieter u:-h
641-2851
Coast Music Service
Newport Blvd. at Harlxtr
Costa Mesa
PIANOS • ORGANS
Hammond, \\'urlitzcr, mRny
others. Pn>-scason special!!,
model close-outs. Piano &
Organ rentals. Money sav-
ing bargains arc her(' ri.i;h1
now at:
TV . sl<'I't!O, pecan. 2·1''
scrern. Garrard record
ehang('r . $300. 846-8185 SILKY Terrier pups. AKC,
champ lines. 1 mllle, 3
fem11lr~. 9 \Vks .
Ir s TI4/538-2m. -.-'.-"""'\\~'A'CN'Orr°'E~D~,-~,7·,.-,,-.,~dly
-lovinb homl' lr>r rlarlim;
Ff'M to YO\I
3 L inet, 2 Times, $2.00 f,~n\111<' Silky T1•1Til'I' f1upg,
llousehrnkl'n. ;\Jl i; h u I ~ .
:\lus1 sell irnlnNI. ~?.O.iti:::t.
FF.MALF: Shephf'rd. 5 moc:: LABRADOR PUPS
old, loves children. Aft 4 ~= El """ 2056 6 \\'ks, AKC, Ch .. Yi'llfl\\' & pm. ~ den, U'ttT"" • hlrk. 1st shot 114:....Si°'\2 art 5.
2 Philco automatic washers. 1st come, 1st s er.,. e d ! GER?-.1. Shep. !\1. A K.C .. 10 mo11s. old. S.ihlr. Top
534-1620. bloodlines, xlnt temp. $75 or
FREE PUPPIES '· 842-234<.
Call 645-3119 SCHNAUZER , pups, stud
FREE PUPPIES service, grooming, terms, 89J..~3 or 531)..84.rr.! <TI4l 522-8366.
FREE KITTENS AB Dick Electro Static S47-3002 Copier. Sacrifice. l\lake of-___ ..:.;:..::=--~-I fer. 1 mo. old. 675-4238.
TH 0 R 0 UGHBRED Lab LHASA Apso fema le pup·
Retriever, female, give to a pirs, sho\v quality, 1'1 1vks.
good home. 835-7695. 548·737!1 <if1. 6 or \1'k. r>nds.
J."El\1 . Collie, spayed, lovcs Horses 856
f('('n1'!;('rs & adlts. Does not I ----------
. Alltosfor5* ... ...., . &.way 5eats. stereo lapt' ~ ('Olltrol
Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Antiques/Classfcs 953 NEWPORT
IMPORTS
A• Never a.fore $176 Qn All RemalnJng '12 •
FACTORY DIRECT ;..:;;=.,."'8"'1'"00"',00=,,"'r'-Sed-,...:... TOYOTlS . 36 .:r o'TI" '"'
Fully furn cabovl'r ean1~rs, Complete. $250,
no do-.\•n, S31. PE'r mo. Camp. 2710 Orange, C.M. 548-4553 noo W. Coast Rwy.. f\ l o
<'r shells. (';n do\1'11. 642-8471. Dune Buggies 956 Newport Beach -Wl lW14 -,~CABOVER CAMPj:R 64%-MGS TOYOTA J.7l:"i'i5s DUNE buggy w/trailor Be•t AutOI, lmpo...... 970
ol!or. • 646--0388 • AUSTIN H. EALEY m; Harbor. C.M. 646-9303 ·~i;~mc!~~. v:i~(. ~e~: Sports, Race, Rods 959 ----------ITOYOTA Corona '69 w/1970
.. :~::c"·c:"'°::...."'=i.~9'8=-0=72:o·c...--1 1966 Austin Healy Mark ·nJ, fettures. 4 dr. auto. Ex--B '46 International 1L T PU. 383 "000 ffCll ceptionally Clean. 17,100 ml. Cycles, ikes, 111 ..., • .,.,.,.,. 1••~ ~-•= •m P lym. cng. Jo'ull racing cam, 642-8872 after 5 pm.. .....,.., ..., • .,. owner . .,........, ·
Sc®ters t25 lieaders, auto trans. Plym _ _:;:;..:::;::,=:::,~='-·I '66 ToYQla Corona
rear end. Fast. Less than BMW DehL'c. Good .cond. $400.
1967 Motorcycle, has com-1000 ml, on cng. $275. l--:;;::;;-::::-:::::=::;--\ ____ !61S-~TI~29!._ __
pie>!(' frame ,v,,_ goo<l tires. 536-8628. Villt o bom 1
but no engine for $25. 1970-'57 Pontiac. with '57 Chevy ure·Dt!W e. TRIUMPH
65ce llarley Davidson, has front end. 4 spd hydro. Runs new rear tire & tube $175. 4 d M -i= '63 TR-4, new tires oft trans & ·1 'I T I t ·1 has g . any spare s. "''· t at ,. o orcyc e rai er, 536-8628 extru. Best offer over $500.
adjustable tow-bar & axle, · 968-8150· 9QHl148
has lights, ramps & hitch Trucks 962 ' ·
!or $200. 712 Victoria, Wost --------ROY CARVER, Inc. CUS"l'OMIZED '00 Triumph
of Pon1ona St. 548--0900. 234 E. l'Ttb SL ~~~ cond. $525.
71YAMAHA125 MX '6l Ford 314 Ton Costa ·tteaa 5t6-«44
Pr>rf. <'Ond . .S<GO or OC>st oner
'68 TR6
Gtl-5S6G Sun. or after 6 V-8, Air Cond, Radio, I feater, llca\'y DtHv f\\132710 ).
pn1 '<k. d:iys. $ll95
'70 HONDA TRAIL 90
1195. • 837-108!! ............
'TI YAMAHA 360 Enduro,
street & dirt, immac., call
mornings, 646-3573.
'TI axl2. Air, Mic~lans, FM 39,000 mi. lmmac cond.
slen?O. S3850. 557-5770 ext -""""""""'· ='=''""::.· _,645-mc=..=:.l _ 460 wkdys. * '59 TR 3, retond. * DATSUN $550 or ,,, .. , oller altef' 6 prn. 673·1533
'69 Datsun Pickup
(XCA22S)
Immediate Delivery
LEASING
ALL MODELS
AND MAKES
'7.l's
Southern CalHornia
1st National
Bank Leasing
2)(11 Michelson Drive
(Corner of MacArthur)
Irvine. Calif. 92664 n41~ 2131627--0367
YOUR ONLY
FAcrbRY.
AUTHORIZED
CADILLAC
DEALER
Largfft selection of Cadll·
la at in On.n1e County.
SalH•l..eUini.
~Nabers
U Cadillac
1969 Suzuki T.S. 250. Street
legal, good cond. $375.
546-6728 or 546-2994. '63 lnt'I travel-all panel. 6
cyl stk. Side doors. New 6
ply tires. Clean. S560. 21881,S
Harl:>or , CM 5 4 8-0320 ,
6~3799.
$195
2600 HARBOR Bl.,
COSI'A MESA
'58 VII Bug 540-9100 O~n Sundl,Y
HONDA SL 350, 1969
7000 miles, clean, S350 * 963-5512 *
2, 10-speed bikes: ladles'
8rh1vinn Supe~port SlOO
n1a n's Gitcand $150. 4.CH-8917.
~ .... IQKG913l '72 ELDORAD0-
$2'5 Vinyl top, leather interior,
lll!IA,rt•> -......... A tilt St{'Ct'ing wheE'l, AM·FM ~....... ~ stereo multlplt!.'<. full pw.'('r,
fncloey ail' cond\Uonlng, ~·1-
l ~t l!(>hlinef, very }Q\V 1nile-
agc. Spotless. !400794 J.
COUGAR
'67 ('()UGAR, vinyt roof,
aulo tnrns, pv.•r stl! •ring.
Vt!ry good cond. Sl,600.
496-7459
'67 Cougar 390 GT. New eng,
Auto !rans. P disc brks.
Olhcr 1Clras. $1100. 557-4605.
DODGE
'69 OO~E ~· 'ftUIO,
air, radt0, xlnt cotid. $1600. 49'1·~1. •
'69 Dodge Camper. Air.
raised roof, fully equlp'd.
Xlnl cond. $2950. 6'1S-005.
FORD
'71 COUNTRY SQUIRE
Station ~·agon, V8, au\o
trans, factory air, power
\Vindows, power steering,
po'l\'et brakes. white wall
tires. (732CAK). $3395 dlr. can 836~.
• • 1970 LTD • •
CounlTY ...,,. 8 --Wa.5:'0n. Fact. Air. New
tires, low mflta&t". Many
extra!! S3195. 838-1157.
'6'! GALAXIE 500 lully equlp.
Xlnt cond. Orig owner.
Leav\ng countfy. Asking
S1475. 64&-4219 aft 8 pm,
'10 Ford Wagon
V·8, AT, Fllctory Air Cond.
Powt-r Steering, radio,. heal·
er. 1vhitC\Wlll ttres, tinted
r,J!ISS, ( •218992) $2595 dlr.
Call 836-65.16. i W allichs Music City
South Co11st Plaza ~0-ZSJO
CABLE-NELSON PLA VER
PIANO ('nllrctor item. Mint
roncl. 646-3497 • after 4 pm.
LIKE l'lf'\V !lipinf't, Fruitwood
finish . $450. Call 644-8068.
like sml children. 64-0-0365.
'Tl HONDA CB 450 K-4
Xlnt shape! 642-4343 NE\'1 ston-to scn 'C' your Ask for Bob
Eni;?:lish & \Vcstern riding , -~~.cc::::..::::.=::...~~
needs: Horse \Vorlrl, To"'" NF.AR new Schwinn 2 spd
& Country Square, lll582 Tandem. good condition .
$8222
CamP" Pop ·Top NABl!RS CADILLAC DESfo~RTED! NeNI n <' 1v / I rf I rond N tl home. Boss got ne'v mode l. I 7 Honda pe · ec " e\v res. 2000 lllll'bor Blvd .,
'69 Ford van, V-8. Low
mif<'agr . Good CTlndition.
1>13-52111 eve!!.
.1 Beautiful Kittens * to good homes * • 644-1497 • BM.eh Blvd., F-t.B. 96.1-1COO. $75, * 646-a324
HORSF: BOARDING. Back '72 Honda. 350CB, Roll bar,
Bay area. Rea90nable. sissy bar. under wlllT8ll, ~···················
I
* 5.".7-6342 * 4.000 mi. S625 • 646--6167.
12 Yr. old f.1Rn'. ~rn!I<'. 11·~~ * '70 Triumph 650 *
""On ribbons In Gymcana. $850 * * 548-3173
S22S Tack. 962-1025. SUZUKI TS 90 w/Kit. many
.A..&:
A CONVENl£NT St«>f'PING AND
SEWING GUIDE FOR TH£
CAL ON THE GO.
For an ad in Woman's World
Call Mary Beth 642-5678, ext 330
For A.M. or P.M. Great Gifts!
•
THOROUGHBRED, 6 yr. extras. S295. can Dave,
gelding. All .!!hots. $350. 830-5188.
536-8531
-. ... ---
Boats/Marine
Equip.
I~
904
JO~fNSON 75 JrP 0 18, cll'C
start. In good running cond.
Asking; $450. 545-3610.
Boats, Power 906
"1971 SEA RAY"
455 Olds, Pack-a-jct, 20', 20J
Series, Equipped for Water
Slriin~ & fishing, tandem
trailer. Call after 12:00
noon. ITI4l 830-6482. MUST
SELL!
14' Boston Y.,,,aler, 'TI. 40 HP
Evinrude elcc start. New
trlr &: gear. Xlnt cond.
R3<Hl2'l2.
28' MONTEREY Cold timer),
6 cyl., Chrysler Ace Engine,
runs good, good cond. $3000.
Call 847-3033 or 847-ltTI.
SKIPJACK 1970, 24', Fly
Rrldl'.{e. Pvt. pty. Call
963-1045 or 525--0262.
Boats, Rent/Ch art'r 908
Motor Homes
Sale/Rent
Motor Home Rentals
SALES & LEASING
fu!I service faclllty
Danmar Motor Homes
531-6800 EXP'D Charter Sk Ip per ,
C.G. Uc. 5 yr!!. In Kon.'\.
lla,vail. \Vant 10 lease 40 to R ent A Motor Home
50 ft. Sportfisher. Wrlte for your _Vacation
P.O. Rox. l:i&t, Kailu". * 13M3Q1, * Kona, Hawnil or call 808-
322-2474 for more In· * '72 PACE ARROW, 2'1',
.f:::O:.:rm.::a:::tc::lo:::•:..· ------I air. ~n. $20/day & Sc/ml.
Boats. Sall 909 F'ree insur. 6#-42l9.
Motor home for rent.
14' Aqua Cat. racing Mils
trier. 1 hp outboard,
Girls love scarf.and-cap ~l or 213-592-3m art
set! -they're ideal gifts! 6 pm.
'72 WINNEBAGO. 2T.
Sl~p!I 6. &40-0482
Traile rs. fravel 945
INSTANT CROCHET gifts * 13' LONE STAR * ** 13' Shasta Travel
-cozy. casual, fashionable. F ibcr.i::;lass !"loop and trailer, Trailer. Sletps .t. $500.
Use ombre yarn for color $395. 192-7964.0 ·oc"""'-"'""-'54'=8-11154-"""'·~--louch in granny lqU8l"efl. -"=~-~----~ I ~
P l 7176 2 2 111tSTLE, 2 irels of !lffils, 17' Aljo. 1969. Fully selr con-
A.1\1. or l'.~I , a ny t1n11• is
the right tin1c f<ir thl~ !lallt'I"
ing shape>. SE'c /)('I"' dhlKOnal
line create!! pan.:'led look .
::i • : scarves. caps, k •-" $ 9 50 one size and a~ta to all splnna er, ull.ller. . tainNI. Like ne1v, $1,700.
head size!!. &12-3496. ~5-6338.
Printed Pnttern 0020: NEW
Ha!J Sb.cs 121;,, l41,1t, 161\i,
18%:, 20~. 22~ii. Sl1.e 141,
(bust 37 • t:ikf'i> 21, yards 4j.
Inch. Transfer.
8F.VF.NTV·FIVE CENTS
lor ••ach pattern -add 25
cent'!' for each pattern for
Air Mnll and Special lt11ndl-
in1t; otherwise thlrrl.cl::a!l!'J
d1•\lvrry \vill take three
\Vf'<'k.s or more. Srnd to
8f:\'t;N1'l "·t"l\"t : <'t~T!'! ,\l\cro Brook!I. the DAILY
tor t'ach J)flllcrn -add 25 J>Tl..()1', 105. NeedlcM11ft
cent. for each pattern. for Oc-pt .. Box 11).1, Olrf ChrlM>n
Al.r MAIJ and Special Jlandl-Station, Ntw York. N.Y. to«; otherwise third.class 10011. Print Nflme. Addre11!1.
delivtt)' will take three Zip, J"aHf"m Nnmtw-l'. ~ or more. Send to NEED L ECRAF'T '12~
Marian Mftt'tln. lhe DAIL\" ~hPI. knit, etc. Frtt
Pn.OT, 442. Pattun Dept., dlrt't'tlomi. !lOe. m Wtst 18UI SI., New ln•tanl J\IM!l'ame Book.
York, N.Y. 10011. Print Bn~c. foncy· knot~. pnt·
NAME. ADDRESS wlth tem!I. ft.00.
ZIP, Sl'L£ and [;TYi.i;· l mtant Crocbet Boot -
NUMBER-1.t'A.rn by plciW'l!t! ?Jlt.
SEE MORE Q u I ck tmis. $1.00.
Fashions and chOoM one O>mplde bMtant Olft Rool'
ttC!'Ml tree from our -more t~n 100 sctttl -
-Summer C.laJog. Al.I St.00.
Qnly 50c. -Cnmph~te "'"""" Bonk -lNSl'ANf SEWING BOOK n.oo.
JeW toitay, wcn.r tomotf'OW. II Jiffy Rll• Book!I • OOc.
$1. Bftoll 6f 11 Prf7Jfi Afthart!I. •
INSTANT FASH I 0 N !\Oc. BOOK -1-lundmd• o f Qum Book 1 -16 pntternl!.
tuhlon faclJI. St . !"itfc.
M'll!lf'!llm Q!lJH ~-! -
Ulm fO Trade' Our Tndm"• Pandtle mlumn la for you!
5 IU-5 d.,. for 5. btlcks.
'°'· Quiff• '°' ~··· t J\l'fnr -U' btllt1dftd J)ll.tlCm1. Mc.
~ ---------- -
'
many xtras. 29.500 mi. Pti c t L\I ~ '" 9100 1957 1'2 T. P.U. S•l50. I t~~Q! pty, $3000. 557_52fll ~s a '· csa .HU·.
645-l£9L $ l9TI SUPER BUG, 1011· nu. 69 Con_vertlble
·r.r, Ford LTD. 2 Dr. Xlnt
roricl . PB. PS, Auto. $750. * 548-1281 * '34 FORD Pickup truck, xlnt ---*'..-.: Sunroof. Custom paint & AU lu."\ury options Gold, ,,·ht
cond. 19912 Ranger Lane. lllMlllJlll many extras. $1700 or best top. Real clean. $3300. Dave, 'f\.1 Ford Falcon-Xlnt ooM.
Rebuilt tram. valVC1 &
generator. ~1383. Jluntlngton Beach. off"'r. 557_5156. 494-0615, 675--1972. 465 E 17th, Costa Mesa ~ '36 Studebaker Sed, ' 64.s-<1466 TRANSFERRED out 0 f 1~70 Cadillac El Dorarfo, cus-Complete. $250. town. Good buy, have 10 tom color, pert. cond., loorl-'62 Mcmiry. · Xlnt rnech.
cond. ~ firm. 2210 Orange, C.M 5-18-4553 aelJ• •ss vw auto "1!'71:. ed . Below book. must sell.
DIESEL POWERED .71 Honda car. ~4. ' ' ~"· 1714) 644-7475. *** 4M-123S ***
% Ton Chevy. 827-2248 GREAT! $1l00. PARTS drlYCr wanted. Apply ·~Sedan De Ville. Full pwr,
'70 DODGE "PICKUP, *675-0453* in peraon 1 Harbor arr,xl.Dtcood.$595orbe!lt
'63 FALCON CONVERT
$100. 642.7365
CABOVER. 6 cylinder, auto, JAGUAR _ Volkswagon, im:t Beach ofler. 84.2-oo95.
$1775. 837-1088. Bl..i .. H.B. '42-443.5. CHEVROLET MAVERICK
'59 Chevy Truck % Ton E.'<· '71 Jaguar V12, XKE 2+2 '68 VW, nu tires & paint,'~---------1970, 28,QXI miles. 1 owner.
eel cond . .$650/Besf offer. Red. PS, PB, auto trans., AM/FM radlo, 4 & 8 track 1-R/H, good tires. Exl'el
• 646--0388 • air. 17,llXl mi. Like new. stereo, really c I ea n . rond. $1250 or Best offer.
1968 Chevy eany.nJJ. Good $6700 or take over lease. 64!Hl559. 53&-7725. 0'"3841 '63 Chevy Nov• ~=-~-----' cond. Sl,200. ~ · '00 VW Sqbk. Cn!a.m. int. '70 Mawriek 2 dr, dclux •••~ GU XKE 51 000 I $500 f' 4 Dr. Auto Trans, 6 cyl, Real O"f<1'"VUU.1 '10 JA AR coupe , m . trm. 1 IFB trim, auto, radio, $935 e
/
_ .. _ .. _,_ .1..--.....i * .ttu .,..,..... * c ean, V11 0l, ""'".....,., 1961 FORD Pickup V-8, 91 w wu..:-w._.., ~ .... ~..... ...,......._.~ $195 ~~=='~;c·=------1
bod wAumbe• rack. Runa ~~&!~ eond. '68 VW SEDAN MERCURY
good. 54>-3497. GOOD CONDITION ...... .
'52 Jnternational % ton, 6 cyl. * Jaguar 1971, red, V12 eng. ONE OWNER S.'1324 •70 Good cond. $435. 642-3165 an ~~air cond, auto '69 Camper/bus Red Reblt 46.5 E. 1~~ia Mesa Mercury
5:30 pm. eng., new gen., brakes, Top Monl<'tl'Y 2 Dr HT, V-R, Aut
Autos Wanted 968 KARMANN GHIA cond. Sl950. • 552--7484. Tr~s. power stc_erlng ,
'65 VW Bug, am/hn. 1970 Che\'. Cbncoun Estate. R..'ldto, l-lea1er. white wall!".
REWARD
WILL PAY OVER
KeRy Blue Book
For l•t• model, clean,
low mu.... c1om ....
tics, Imports, trvckt or
campers.
Call and ask for Buyer
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 546-8017
\\'E PAY TOP DOu.AR
FOR TOP t !SF.I> CARS
U your car Is extra clean,
&Ce U1 flnt.
BAUER BUICK
29Z Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa !J79..2SOO
IMPORTS WANTED
Orana:e Countiem
TOP$ BUYER
BW.. MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blvd.
ff. Bell.Ch. Pl\, 847-8555
Fnr that item under SSO, try
~ the Penny Pincher.
'61 Ghia, runs good, needs Xlnt cond. $.585. 8 Pa•• ~-W.... ft..-1\•hc<'l rovers. A very ni<'f' Call 645-R721 °"°'• ~..... .,... rw.-. C'.1r (7J6CJ'Ol $1995 dlr. Call some body woric. $250 •1~~=':::::::...::.=-:=---Steert~ & brakes, AM-FM 1!36-6;',36,
675-7916. '70 VW Bug. Xlnt cone!. Stereo radio, tilt £!!!er. wh1. o ,,~,---,,,.-,~~~-~
MAZDA
MAZDA
LEASE SPECIAL
New '72 RXl
$57.56
Loaded. ROTARY powered.
36 mo. + T & L. For resp.
p!y. Trs1<ft'~ cons. • '72 ROTARY'S
"Demo Sale"
AM/FM radkl. Radial tires. FRclory Air, lu~age oaek, '67 Mrtt! Sta Wgn. Air cond.,
Sl.250 or best olfer. 548-0242. new tire!! le brakes. Panel-PS. PB, boat hltch1 Days.
'70 '"" w hal' !°)-18-0671 ext 39-1; eves. "" estphaha camper. ing, Asking $2725. 5.57-4861. s--· $2300 or best ofier. , ..... __....
Fine 0000 49H94l '67 396 SS 4 Spd .. PS, Fact MUSTANG ~·70 VW ~ tires, Air, Bucket $eats, BeRutlful I----------,~ cornluOO. nei'1so o. :'~67~ issx:"~ ~
640-0439 Bench. ·Royal Plum. 'verY
40 HP VW eng. $150 low miles. (UUG893l. WE
1500 VW eng. $225 HAVE LOST ·OUR LEASE
• 646--0388 • 2014 Har bor Blvd., 645-6644.
'70 VW bug. Gri!at shape. '69 C SS
New ""'· AM-FM "''°· amaro $1100. 497-2795 V-8, Auto Trans, po\ver st<'l'T·
1970 VW Bug, clean. $1295. inJ?, rarlio. hr>ater. 1vhite sirlc
319 Driftwood Road O>rona 11'iills. 1vhc>el covers c924-
del Mar. 673-4238 Aft 6. EYY l S1 5.ci5 dlr. Call 1!36-6536
'67 Mustang. 390 GT. 4 spd,
PS. Must Sell, $995 e '67
Cougar 4 Spd., 289 Engine,
Low Miles, $1095 • 'GS
Mustang, 289 3 spd, Immac
rnnd., must sell. 645-6644.
'66 Must. 289, ·4 spd. vlhra
sonic-. Nr. new tire11. Gd
holfy .!: Int. Runs grent $49;!. 536-8400. .
OLDSMOBll.F -
'69 OLDS 98' 10 TO CHOOSE * '69 VW $1075 * 1964 CHEVROLET V Rn . ''BIGGEST SAVINGS'' or best otter 540-9542 J\1otnt' recen~ly rebuilt -
"Service is the difference" 3.000 miles mnce overhaul.
HUNTINGTON BEACH N~• :!e~= worlc =!I ~t. a;ii, ~i Jlnrrltop COUPf. Vinyl 100
full flO\'Fet, factory Wr r'f'in'.
dltlonlng, tilt whet'!, l)O\Vf'r
door locks, AAi-F"M stcrPO
radio. Fully equipped. (831-0>X).
I
MAZDA Body good, $475. 833--0922. 557-4305 aeytimo:
lT.l31 Beach WYtl. Bug-M-11..-SACRIFICE
_842-6686===Le=-==--M="'=·=Mr=. =""=' l--=~·!'.nr..:J·~No~de:!'n'... .. __ [1970 CHEV. EL CAMINO _ $..'ViO • 642-1256 $1800. Re BLT ENC &: VOLVO TRANS. Ru N s XLN'T. $2222
NABERS CADILLAC
3)60 llarbor Blvd.
COftta Ml"U 540-9100
---------I CALL STEVE AFT 5: m.3828. SAVINGS
At Never S.fore
On A.II Remaining '72
VOLVOS
~w.lf.Uli& ' W YOLYO
'68 MALIBU. 327 eni:, air
cond., pis. Eng & body in
exctl cond. $1,400 or best
off~r. ·
Call 675-6436 after 3 pm
1965 BEL Air StaHon Wgn. doocl mechanical co n d .
Needs body work. $2'75.
645-8000 clays, 6'12--0452 eve.
'62 Ch<'vy Impala Sta. Wag.
XJnt cond. Rehl! eng. brks,
baU. Call Tony. &16-4202.
11,900~_,1,,t•e."bo~r,_, !:c'"·'~"-'°646-~9~303 '64 Vctlll :127, 365 hp. 4 ~pd.
PINTO
19TI PINTO, Btick, 16cc eng.,
w1de OVfll tires, R&H, lo
ml., mint cond. 493-4328.
'71 Pinto RUMbout $1495.
34,(KK) mi's. 20Xke. Aft 5
wkdy!I, 837--88.19.
PLYMOUTH
1970 Plymouth R4ad Runner.
Ex<'r?lll'nl rondition. Make
Orfl'r. Und 990 Reblt eng. & hi?Rrll", Nf'1v i;_;;.;;.;.;:....;;.;.;;;;_ __ _;.;..: ha.ti . brk.-, AM IF M 548-3t22
IUICK s1S951nfre1' 5411-m11. ---=-""'""'=---·ss CHEVY PICKUP PONTIAC
'7'2 Mercodes SL 6 cyl, 3 :i1peNt p.r,o. l')r 1r11<ie. -----------1
Leather. 2 tops, 7700 m:ilOI. 1 '72 ELECTRA 225 * 54.1-3691 * '6t Tempnt Custom S
F8ctOry new. Day a, CUJtom. V~I top, vinyl In· '68 fMPALA 2 door b.t .. full Vlnyl lop{ vinyl 1nle.Mor. Vlt, 213/~; aft 3 pm, tetior. full f(J'\VrT, factory pcwer, l!r, ,37,000 mi. Orig nutomal C, power stffrlna:,
213/3424ill. ' lllir rond!UontnQ', tllt whee'!. oWIY'r $1795. 6'l3-403S. rncUo, heater, WSW lire&
MG AM.FM stettO ridlo, white Less lhfln 24,000 original
side wall u,,,., otc. Very CHRYSLER mtl<t. ('33Al.Ml. ------'"--I low mtl<ag<. lmma<Ulal< $1999 '69 MGB GT bl -· ooodltlon. 164\DZZI. 1--------• ad<,""""' $5222 '61 CHRYSLER NABERS CADI' LAC radio. chrome wire wbcti., ,. 1 lie cleft Pvt New Yorker 4 Door Ta pes-2060 J.111.rbor Blvd.,
<1W m ""'' n. par-NABERS CADILLAC 1ry !nt6 1or. run po~cr, f(l f'· Coste MeM St().9100
_,1yo:.·.:l2l;:;;;::OO;,. T.lllHO'l3.;' ;;;;;:...:--1 2000 n.-m..i. tocy alr c:onditionin& Dtl>h '69 ""-bl d
"69 M(i ~UDGP.:T. Costa Metift M0-9100 butlon rartlo. tilt whl"f'\. leii8 ~ F 61:1°~isJl~. "TO Buick Custom Skylark lh"n 25.000 mllt'll, One Y{'f)' V-8', Alllo 1'ren11, Air Cond, ----'-'='""'""-.;;.. __ ,! Wht, Blk vinyl '1:tf>. P.S. ('artful oWner. fXEW931J. ~wer 11tf"1t'b1j(, r1111!0, hcnl·
OPEL p B R•ll U $1999 "• whit• w•1J1, vtnyl roof, . , · ., ffll"I, nlr. ndcr thtte(I g1u!I, ivhf'C'I C'Over.-30~f. S•l25 under book , NABERS CADILLAC (\'DN954) $lll!l5. dlr. Call
'71 0 I GT 646-1252, 64'-2228. 2060 """'" Blvd ' 896·65.'6. pe Put a llftle ''lnot " tn YoLll' CCl!lla l!fC'U 540-9100 'G! Ponll~c GTO. 4 l!pd,
<I ltpci, raii1o, htlll('r, mtlrs Ll'vi~ll U101C baublf'1 for '61 Chrys. N1•wpl XI t'Oflrl J·osltral't1on. t1lt1K1t. ·100 1•11
ttal right l'90CXX) SS "buck1". Call ClaMltled ~ .pc!'WfT bk & 1tl~rinii If\. mot<lT', Top oond. Best
dlr. CaU ~. 60o681I. J!l!r.). ~~ ~1;..~~I . Qffrr f'n'f'r S!IOO ! 16-02r.'l
f •
I
San Cle1nente
C~pistraito
---
VOL. i.s: NO. 291, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
. . ~ '
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's Fl••I
•
N.Y. Stoeks
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1972 TEN CENTS
Grand Jury Probes Capistrano Land Dispute
By JOHN VAL'!'ERZA
ot JM 0.llY Pl• lhlfl'
A large group of Capistrano Beach
"homeowners have succeeded in winning a
Grand Jury invesUgatlon into the cloudy
title of dozens of acres or prime ocean-
view land once set aside for parks
purposes, but now deslined for ex)>ensive
private development.
And of prime concecn to\ the same
group of residents are plan,, by a
Newport Beach developer to build more
than 100 condominiums on 16 acres of
that-wneim>perty-set aside as a park in
a map filed with the county before the
turn of the century.
The condominiums planned by the
Balboa Pacific Company of Newport
Beach come befQre county supervisors
next week, along with a compromise of-
fer by the developer of a small road and
view park.
lo exchange, Balboa PacUic would win
county abandonment of a dedicated
DAIL 'f' PILOT Sl.tf ......
STUMPS REPLACE TREES IN IRVINE, DESPITE CITY BAN
Irvine Comp.ny Cufs 22,582 Or1nge and Euc1lyptus With City Permission
Appro~al to Cut Trees
Granted Despite Ban
By GEORGE LEIDA!.
Of ttl• Oallf Plitt Sl•ff
Since the city of Irvine passed its law
banning the cutting of trees last
December, the Irvine Q:>mpany has
sought and been given eight permits to
· cut down 22,582 orange and eucalyptus
trees.
ln Januaf')'. Irvine Company
agricultural vice president Bill Wi1Ua1;11s
asked city councilmen to allow the city
Saddlehack SetS
Building Meet
On Bid 'Mixup'
Saddleback College trustees will hold n
special meeting at 4 p.m. Wednesday to
resolve a mixup over bids on the col-
lege's new math-science building.
The trustees are expected to accept the
second low bid on lhe project and seek to
recover the sum or $117,998 from the
origin8l low bied.er's bonding company.
On Oct. 2. C. V. Holder, general con-
tractor of Gardena, asked trustees to
release him rrom his low bid of
$3,tlM ,006, beca~ of a $122,600 clerical
error In computing the bld .
Ne1t lowest' of nine bkb:, from J. B.
Allen & Company of AnllM"tm, was
$117,998 higher than the Holder bid.
Ont lbt advlct of trustee Hans Vog~I.
UM-board voted to accept the low bid,
though sympathlzl118 with Ho I d e r ' s
predicament.
Jf Holder then refused 1o sign the ~
troct , VOfel explalntd, the board then
would be entltJed to accept the oext low
bid and !Ue for recovery of tJ'C .doll at dJf.
ference.
ln taking · this• route. tllrltees told
11older, wh,o rr.canwhlle has refuacd to
sign, they would be fulfulllng their
obligation to i·take cnre or the tixpayers'
money."
n.anager to issue ':blanket" tree-cutting
permits for some 250 acres of orange
groves the company planned to convert
to other agricultural uses -row crops.
The request was the first excepUon
granted to the city law enacted. Dec. 31,
1971. The law makes It a misdemeanor to
cut a tree larger than 3.5 inches unless a
permit has been granted. Without a
permit. violators are subject to a $500
fine and/or six months in jail for each
tre-cut.
When Williams sought the permit he
said many of the central Irvine orange
groves were subject to a root disease
·known as "quick decline." Since oranges
have beCXlme less profitable to grow due
to competition from Florida and other
states, Williams then told councilmen, It
is not possible to replant the old groves
with new trees.
Thus, tbe Irvine Company's tree losses,
a company spokesman noted, become
assets ror Irvine homeowners who have
fireplaces.
"The agriculture division of the com-
pnny is now in the firewood business,"
according to Dean BuctUnger, manager
of the orchard division.
Orange and eucalyptus tree wood is
IS.. TREES, Paae !)
Trustees
Proposab for :he convenion or 18
acres in two rugg(.l(i caeyons near Dana
Hills Ingh SChool Into an lnoov1Uve
nature prtttrve cama elmer to reality
Monday when Bchool trustees 1pproved
appllcal)on for lllU.000 stole. &rant.
Tbe board or the C.plstrano Unlned
Schoo~ Distrtct voted unanlmoua.ly to ap-
prove the grant appllcatloa which would
prodooe enough ,Jundt to• complete the
davelopm(!flt ()( the acrage b81ng offered
free to the district by Thunderbird
•tomes. lnc.
•
public street that is on the maps but
never was built.
'Ibe land In question lies at the upcoast
point of the Palisades, overlooking Dana
Harbor.
The group, armed with petitions signed
by more than 1,100 residents of the coun-
ty colony, vowed in a· meeting Monday
afternoon to accept no compromise of·
fers .
Frank Rainey, a surveyor who first
disclosed what the group alleges were ii·
legal land exchanges taking place dozens
of years ago, told his neighbors , "This is
our last cha~ to fight for this land
before it becometi lost forever ."
The compromise offer was made by
~hone this morning to members of the
unofficial group by spokesmen for the
development firm.
But the proposal for the small park and
new road connecting with Pacific Coast
Highway was turned dOWTI by Chambe.r
of Commerce President Hank ~1cCarthy,
speaking for the residents.
The chamber official insisted that
beeause the land is being probed by the
Grand Jury. no compromises should be
made.
Rainey and other! insist that in 1887 a
map was fl.led for the property then
known as "San Juan By the Sea," and
that same document remains in county
files .
The document shows several parcels -
inc luding the !&.acre condominium site -
as parklaod5.
After the turn of the cent ury, the
Doheny interests too k over the develop-
ment and retained the same park lands
in the ir proposals, Rainey insists.
But in the nearly 1940s. the Doheny ln--
terests transferred owntt!lllllp In a
quitclaim deed to other intereal8, and that
is when the property suddenly became
the object of allegedly irregular dealings.
IS« INQUIRY. Page !)
Air 'Armada' Searching
For Missing Hale Boggs
Bankers Vote
To End Coast
' Zone Loans
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tM o.llY "llllt Sia.ff
The ' California Mortgage Bankers
Association Monday voted not to grant
loans of any kind in,tbe eo&tal zone where
buikling could be restricted by the pass·
age of Propositioo 20.
The association Ii a v o lu ht 1 ry
organ~tiflo l!"de ~p-pf'im>r!ly ol hr •
deJ>:tndent mortgage bankers. The vote is
advisory and will be followed at the !JI.
d.Jvidual members' discretion.
Reaction to the vote in Orange coast
lending instltutklns and among local
realtors was guarded. Most said they1lad
not had an opportunity to study the
recommendation in full .
Association president Robert E .
M"rgan said in Los Angeles Monday
"Passage or Prop1 2t'I on the Nov. 7 ballot
would have a drastic effect on the people
of California.
"The cost to taxpayers. property
owners and the general public would be
disastrous. Prop. 20 would establish a
virtual moratorium on all building of any
kind within ils ill-defmed--permit area fo r
a five-year period. The moratorium ap-
plies to public projects as well as
private.
"Thi.!I moratorium, if coupled with the
building shutdown now laking place
throughout California as a result of the
recent state supreme Court decision in
the Mammoth Mountain , case -which
states that local government must file
environmental hnpact. reports on proj-
ects requested by private parties -
would therefore halt all work by local
governments, contractors, developers
and private lending instituUoos."
Many of the loan officers conlacted at
Orange coast .banis said they bad not
received any official policy statements
from their superiors relating to coastal
zone loans.
Bill Woffor;' of the Union Bank pointed
out that wilh the election three weeks
away and the efiect of tbe environmental
impact decision, .. it's almost a moot
point."
He said that unofficially hi! bank has
warned their loan officers to .. be
careful" when granting loans for the
coastal zone. "It depends on a number o(
variables, but at the moment we don't
have that problem, because we don't
have any applications for that area," he
said.
A spokesman for Avco Financial
Services said they would not take the
association's V<lte Into consideration
because Avco lend.J ' only to individual
homeowners, not developers.
Larry Smith, speaking for another
mortgage flrm. 1be Alison Company in
(See LOANS, Page 21
Deroin Foun·d
Singer McNair Says 11111.ocent
NEWARK, N, J. (UPI) -Singer-~ctress Barbara McNair was arrested for
PoSsession of nearly a ball ounce of heroin at the Playboy Club in McAfee, it
was disclosed today.
Miss McNair and her husband, Rick Manzie, were arraigned on charges
in federal court here. Each was ordered to post a $10,000 bond. They pleaded
innocent.
A spokesman for the Playboy Club said Miss McNair, 37, appeared three
times this week in the swank Penthouse of the club-hotel In private perform-
ances for a group of conventioneers. She was arrested Monday night in her
dressing room.
Her husband acts as her business agent
-·~.s, D!llt!ct. Court . .Jlldp ~-A. Whipple set no lravd ratrlc\IDDI ~· The Pla11!o1 ~lilb 80id the singer hid scheduled engagements .'•· _,)dlf'ltlaln ID Mc:Afee 'lbllrsdly.
· A PM ot New York Aatbor:lty s:pokmnan said a pack.age was traced from
Newark Airport to Miss McNalr, who signed for It at the Playboy Club.
Laguna Rape Victim Saw
)
Police Copter From Car
nte rape of a 13-yea:r-old girl took
place ln a isolated bill area between El
Toro Road a n d Woodland Drive, ac-
cording to the memories of the blonde
victim. •
"She saw the police h e I t c: o p t e r
overhead and at one time police were
close enough that She could hear the
police radio," detective sgt. Neil Purcell
said.
She was struck on the bead with a rock
to keep her qulet, he said.
The young girl was abducted Sunday
from a frontage roa::i alongside Laguna
Canyon Road uy two young men as she
y,alked with a younger cousin.
While a massive search by police agen·
cies was under way, the girl was raped,
forced to submlt to perverted acts,
beaten, robbed of personal heirloom
jewelry and driven to a Hollywood area
where she was released.
"We spent three and a half hours in the
back area yesterday and .found some
areas that may ha ve been the scene.
We'll be out kloking again today.
"The poor thiog, she'• very confused
and her face was down on the floor
board," Purcell said.
The detective said the 13-year-old wns
told by her abductors that she would be
killed If she talked to police or attracted
any attention.
Police described the kidnap 1-(ehicle as
an olf-whJte 1964 Ford Falcorr' In poor
•shape and with th l headliner ripped out.
The k1dnap-:raplsts were described. as
about S feet, 10 lnche! tall, weighing
about 150 pounds. Their age was
estimated to be between 16 and 20 .. They
Were tak1 to have dirty blond shouldtr·
length hair. ();1e suspect had his parted ,
in the middle, while the other wore his
behind the ea•s. •
The girl was first struck across the
bridge of the nose with a rock. as .she was
dragged into the kidnap vehicle as her 11·
year-old cousin witnessed the abducUon.
The children had been walking home
along the frontage road from a billiards
parlor nearby.
The girl and her mother were visiting
relatives in the Canyon Acres area. The
gi rl is from Covin.a.
Witnesses sahd she s c r e a me d
hysterically as the· passenger of the car
pulled her into the vehicle and positioned
her bet.ween the driver and himself. The
car sped off and the young cousin ran to
a nearby residence to call police.
A massive search for the victim was
undertaken and police units in Irvine as
well as the C8lifomia Highway Patrol
were alerted.
Vandals Sought
In School Caper
Orange County Sherifrs officers are on
the lookout for vandals who removed
flagpole ropes and a loud speaker and
smashed roof tiles Monday at a san Juan
Capistrano school.
Deputies Slld four flagpole ropes and a
loud speaker system valued It $195 were
taken from the Marco Forste-r Junior
lligh School, 25601 Camino Del Avion
be lore classes started Monday .
They said the same Intruders smuhed
a number of ettaml~ tiles on the roor ol
the building before making their escape.
OK Nature Preserve Bid
The proposal ls tbe brain child of Pana
HUii Asslllaot Pt1ncipal PhU Grignon
and aclence f1culty member1 et I.he new
high ocbool. 'l!ley aeek to develop a
praem wbeN students from several
departmenll could conduct siudlcs pn the
errvironmtnt, humanities and even oc-
cupational t.ratnlng in envlronmeotal
fields.
Trustees' action Monday 11lmply agreed
tu the appUcalion for the fUnd! rrom the
state Department of Education.
They !till have 10 complete details for
the acqullition of the donated land.
Ir the district accepts the parcel which
contains lush natural growth or oak and
l)'C8more trees, tM deve!o~r would be
able to romply with count1 riqutmnento
ror dedicated gr<enbelt -apace.
"'11lc offer of the iand Orsi went to the
county, but the county peciple didn't k1101¥
what \hoy could do wi!L it, ao the nut of·
fer w11 to tbe athool district/' Grignon
explalned. ·
The grant fund• would pay for" all the
ptrmal'N!nt Installations In the cany0n9.
Including trails and te8chlng stations as
wel1 as a malnten:mce bulldln1 and
fences .
Students would do most of the work un
the mte, which wlll nol experience heavy
modification.
Dana Hills Principal Waller Spencer
oxplalntd that the aer.,11• would be--
preaerved In 1t11 nat~ral atare.
"We don't plan to build a part there,"
he aald.
U.S. House
Leader Lost
Off Alasl{a
ANCHORAGE . Alaska (AP ) -A small
annada of private planes assembled in
poor weather today to search Alask.a'.s
rugged soutnern coast for a light plane
carrying House Majority Leader Hal~
Boggs and three others.
The plane was long overdue and
presumed down on a campaign flight for
the state's only House member.
A heavy cloud cover and rain prevailed
in the search a~a as some 30 plaoes
p1·epared to join an electronically equip-
ped AiJ;" Force HC 130 on the rescue
1nission. The Air Force plane has flown
an Anchorage-tc>-Juneau pattern through
the night in search of the missing plane,
which failed to show up late Monday on a
560-mile flight from Juneau. ~ ·
A spokesman for t h e Air Force'•
Rescue Coordination Center said t he
forecast for today was for strong wind.
an overcast and "very marginal nying
weather."
The White House said President Nixon
has been receiving reports on the tearch
efforts.
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
Nixon, through his military aide, oUered
all pouible ass.ma.nee and provided fOf'
transportation for the Boggs family to go
to Alaska.
House Speaker Carl Albert said the
pilot of the missing plane is reputed to be
one of the best bush pilots in Alaska and
would know every pouible landing spot
be.tween Anchorage and Juneau.
';I cannot personally give up hope,"
Albert said .
Aboard the twin-engine Cessna 310
Y.·ere Boggs. 58; Rep. Nick Begich, a 4()...
year-0Jd Democrat; Beg i ch 's ad-
ministrative assistant. Russell Brown,
37; and the pilot. .SS.year-old Don E.
Jonz. ·
Boggs' administrative assistant, Gary
~lymel, said in WMhington that the Jut
radio contact with the plane c.ame 12
minutes sfter takeoU Monday, wMn Jom:
filed a night plan. There was no sign oC
trouble.
Boggs, who left Wa!hington on Sundat
and had been due to return lb.ts mornl.nl.
(See BOGGS, Page !I
Orange
,
The weatherlady says it's going
to be cloudy on Wednesday. II
might tven nJn. Ttmparaturtt al
the beaches . will be in the low fOs
rising to 75 inland. Lllw1 tonight
58-Gl.
INSIDE TODA\'
Bombo movlu -irie PhUip-
ph1t1 Vtrlfon Of the pomo flick
-have btcn banned from the
nt1D •~t~ of Prerldnt Ftn.U"·
and E. Marcoa. Srt •'°'11 on
Page 11. -
•
•
r
DAILY PJLO,
Nun Tells
'Taj Mahal'
Case Loan
Hy TO:\t DAHtJ.;V
Ot !flt' o .. r., ~1ie1 Si•tt
\\'orld Financial Trends Viet! Pr!?sidenl
James Shipley w11s identified tod<\Y In
Orange County Superior Court testimony
in the "Ta j Mahal" trial na the man who
apparently stood to gain most from a
$500,000 hospital loan that remains un.
paid tod<:iy
Sister ~tary Clarissa. the se«ind Roman
Catholic nun to teslify in the trial of
~lpley, Laguna Hiiis financier Joseph
Dulaney and '"'0 codefendants, pirked
out Shipley as the man to v.·hom the loan
was made nearly four years ago.
The former member of the Board of
Directors at St. Bernardine Hospital. San
Bemardlno, testified before Judge James
Turner that Dulaney, 38. of 2631 Via
Cascadita. San Clemente. assured her
::ind fellow directors that he would
personally guarantee the loan. .
Sister Mary Clarissa backed the earher
testimony of hospital administrator
Sister Mary Margaret that hospital Con-
troller Robert Machan first suggested en-
trusting $500.000 in reserve funds to
Dulaney's Laguna Hills enterprise.
Both nuns testified that Dulaney and
Shipley promised them a 10 percent
return on funds that v.•ere currently earn-
ing 5 percent. 4
They said that the $500.000 they turned
over to Dulaney was in\'es ted in 250,000
shares of Azalea Mobile Homes stock at
$2 a share.
Thr Azalea stock is condemned by the
prOSt'Cl!tion as "worth.less and not worth
the paper it is printed on ."
Sister Mary Clarissa said they "'ere
assured by Shipley. 33, of 16951 Lowell
Circ le, Huntington Beach. and Dulaney
"'hen the hospital group met the defen·
dants at the Taj Mahal that Dulaney was
y.·orth $3 million.
It is alleged that Dulaney was in debt
at the time he received the hospital
funds.
The nun said she later learned that the
slack rec<immended to the hospital group
was worth nothing when the loan went in-
lo default and the hospital's allegations
sparked criminal action against seven
defendants.
r.tachan: SO. of San Bernardino is to get
a separate trial on identical charges of
grand theft, fraud and conspiracy.
On trial with Dulaney and Shipley are
Daniel Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird Drive,
Huntington Beach and Wendell Warren
Austin, 38, of Riverside.
Both sister h1ary Clartssa and Sister
Mary Margaret were demoted by their
order following t h e opening of in-
vestigation into the World Plnanclal
Trends operation headed by Dulaney.
The hospital adm..inh1trator w a s
transferred to a Tulsa, Oklahoma, facili-
ty Operated by the same mother house
but in a lesser business capacity.
Sister Mary Clarissa, a pharmacist. re-
mained at St. Bernardine HOSpltal but Is
no longer the corporation secretary of
that institution.
Dana Point Man
Held in Assault
A mother and son fracas in a Dana
Point home ended Monday night with
Orange County Sheriff's officers moving
in to book the man into county jail on
assault and battery and drug charges.
Deputies jailed Stephen Lee Hatfield.
21, of 25241 Mainsail Drive , after he had
allegedly chased his mother Mrs. Edith
Hatfield, 50. from the residence.
Officers said Hatfield struck his
mot.her on the heed and face. pulled her
hair and inflicted numerous cuts and
bruise3 on the victim.
They added charges of possession of
marijuana to the charge sheet when they
allegedly found a quantity of the drug
and 9everal marijuana cigarettes on Hat-
field's person.
I
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_Ex-Marine Backs
De Mau
From the \\'Ire St:rvitt•
A black Vietnam veteran, v.•ho once
~rved a five-month stint at Camp
Pendleton, says De Mau Mau, a g~p
Ct}icago polict charge is u black terrorist
gang that killed nine people in Dllnols, Is
organized internationally among U.S.
scr\'icemen.
But Jimmie \Vill iams. 32, now
en1ployed as a job counselor at .the
Illinois State Employment service,
emphasized that the group does not
espouse violence.
He described the group as the "Black
Panther Party of the military" and said ·
v.·hen he served in an intelligence unit at
Camp Pendleton from Decmber 1970 to
~1ay 1971, there were at least 10,000 De
Mau Maus at the base.
He dkl not join the group, he said,
because of his intelligence work.
A spokesman at camp Pendleton said
that the 10,000 figure was "quite er-
ror.eous." Out of 28,000 men on the base
in April, 1971, he said maybe 11to14 per·
cent were blacks.
The Marine spokesman said he was
unaware of any link with such a group
among men involved In racial strife on
SCAG Chie f
Hits Agency
Ove r Outfa l l
A !-luntington Be,ich city councilman
charged Monday night that the Aliso
Wat~ Management Agency'• plans for a
g(nt regional sewer .outlall to serve
eight South County areas are an example
of "taxpayers su bsidizing developers."
The Cilmment was made by Jack
Green, who also is president of the
Southern California Association of
Governments (SCAG ) during a council
debate on Proposition 20, the Coastline
Protection Initiative.
He cited the A m1A project as an ex-
ample of \llhy stricter coastline controls
are needed. The Huntington Beach coun-
cil voted 4-3 to support Proposition 20.
Maus
on I.he bast during the months mentlontd
by Williams.
Williams said the group of blacks,
Puerto Ricans and American tnd.lans was
first formed to combat racial ptnecu-
Uon.
Sil youug men who police allege ire
members of the group are charged 1n
connection with the slayings of nine
!A'hites, includlng the slaughter of two
families. Two others charged in the
slayings are being sought.
Not all eight men charged participated
in the slaylngs \\'bich apparenUy were
racially-motivated, polict said.
Meanwblle cries of "political hoax"
rose from students who said they knew
three funner Malcolm X College students
held in lhe murders.
"They were damn good students," said
Elbert Johnson, 23. "Tbey didn't raise
any hell and dldn't show any kind of
racial behavior. Personally, I think this
is just another political hoax dreamed up
by Hanrahan (State's Atty. Edward V.
Hanrahan)."
Williams emphasized that De Mau Mau
is not a terrorist group but admitted that
a few members became increasingly
violent in their actions and extreme in
their views as the Vietnam war con·
tinued as well as after they returned to
civilian life.
"These guys in Chicago the murder
suspects are hurting De ~tau hlaus and
making it hard for the boys on the
bases," he said.
Authorities said an of those arrested
were Vietnam veterans who .were
dishonorably discharged. Three of them,
Edward Moran Jr., 23, Reuben Taylor,
22, and Michael Clarke, 21, attended
Malcolm X last year.
Johnson, a health major at the school,
said he knew all three well. He said they
headed a veterans• committee designed
to help other veterans adjust to college
life.
Williams said De Mau Mau had its
roots in the Marine Corps and classified
whites Into three divisions.
"The biggest and the meanest group
were the swine. These were out·and-oot
racists as well as the very, very rich
Anglo-Saxon type of individual in a posi-
tion of power," he said. "The second
group were the middle clEW whites who
'vere trying tJ do the right thing bul
were hung up with their middle class
hangups. Tbe thin! group were the OK
guys. The OK guys were the smallest
group of all." ~
LOST IN STORM
Rep. Hole Boggi
F romPageJ
BOGGS ...
had gone to Alaska to campaign for
Begicb, a native of Eveleth, MiM., who is
see.king re-election to a second tenn.
Boggs' wife, Lindy, was the only
member of the family at home ln·
Bethesda, Md., Monday nighl
As the wort;l_ spread to Boggs' h o m t:
state of Louisiana, there was an un-
mistakable ring of affection for the con-
gressman.
Edward Cocke 11tood solemnly oo the
sidewalk outside a New Orleam bar and
said that Boggs is "our kind of people."
Boggi was on the last leg of the lightn·
iog-quick fund-raising-trip for Begich
when the plane left Anchorage. It was
scheduled to arrive at 2:30 p.m. EDT. A
spokesinan for the Federal Aviation
Administration said the plane had enough
fuel to last until around 5 p.m.
Jonz, president of Pa n · Alaskan
Airways, a small aii' taxi service which
operates the plane, charted a course
from Anchorage in the south-central sec-
tion of the state that would have taken the
plane across Prince William Sound, then
southeastward along the glacier-covered
mountaiooW: coasutne to Juneau In
Alaska's panhandle.
The plane had a search locater beacon,
designed to activate during a crash.
"So far, we haven't heard a squawk out
of It," said William Moore, a spokesman
for the National Transportation Safety
Board in Anchorage.
Ul"I Tt.._..•
ALASKA CONGR ESSMAN
Rep. Nkk Beglch
Baby Girl Falls
Into S\vin1ming
P ool in Ne ,vpor t
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OI llM O.ll't' '°llot Stiff
A baby girl described as tremendously
strong for her age and able to run about
all by herself at only 15 months was cling-
ing to life t o d a y, revivl'd after she
!odd.led into a swimming pool at her
grandparents' Newport Beach home.
Dana'Faith Burggren was fished from
the 12-foot~eep water at S: 15 p.m., by
her young uncle, about one half-hour
after she was last seen inside the house..
Her father Eugene Burggren, of 413
30th St., began aMng the baby moutb-to-
mouth resuscitation before Newport
Beach Fire Department personnel ar-
rived at 1730 Antigua Way and toot over.
The Infant, whose ~·oung parents were
babysitting with Mrs. B u r g g r e n ' s
brotheD and sisters, wu taken to Co!ta
Mesa Memorial Hospital following fint
aid including closed heart massage and
oxygen.
Once emergency room Dr. Clare
Wiedemeire determined the baby's
breathing w1:1.s as near nonnal as possible
and recorded a slight improvement in
her critical condition she was transfer·
red.
Nursing personnel at the Orange Coun·
ty Medical Center!-s cardiac care--unit.
said this morning the Burggren baby still
remaim in critical and unchanged con-
dition since being admitted.
Capi.strano
Trustees-
No on14
Claiming that the district could JoSf:
$2.7 million in needed rtvenue next flscsl
year ii Proposition 14 were to pas:s at HIE
polls in Novemt>cr1 trustees of the
Capistrano Unified ~hool District Mon·
day urged a no vote on the controversial
''tax-rerorm" measure.
The action came at the end of a stud:f
session examining the specifics in the
ballot item whi ch would set a limit on the
amount of money a district could spend
for each pupil.
But because lhe present amount spent
by the district ts well above the proposed
limi t. the local district would lose thu
large amount of money, trustees agrctd.
The action came after debate amon~ ,.
trustees over whet.her they, as a school
board, should issue value judginenls on
ballot items.
Six of the seven members agreed to
·1ake the stand. San Clemente T.rustee ~
William Enqulst abstained.
Supt. Truman Benedict insisted thal
the publil" "looks toward the board of
trustees for its interpretation of such'
and suggested that a resolution by the
board was warranted.
"This proposition makes no school
districts," he added.
Trustees agreed and added that if the ,
proposal were to pass all the permissive
overrides which finance several key
projects In the district would be wiped
out.
"The way this reads,'' said Trustee
George White, "we would Jose the com-
munity services revenue, !be Regional
Ooo.ipational Program and others that
are so valuable to citizens in the
district."
Trustee Gordon Peterson tenned the
amendment "disastrous to the district."
From Page l
LOANS ...
Newport Beach said they have adopted 1t
wait antl see attitude. ••wtth the election
only three weeks away 1 there has nol
been any specific pollcy statement from
our main office, .. he reported.
Representatives of the IOcal boards of
realtors seemed a little surprised at the
association's vote.
Green said the AWMA application for
the $27 .S million sewage treatment and
water reclamation project, which must
be reviewed by SCAG, shows that with
the proposed outfall, land could be devel·
oped to a potential population of 368,000
people which , he said, is 168,000 above
any current projections for the area.
Camp Pendleton's Brig FromPagf!J
IN QUIRY ..•
Glen Martin of the Newport Harbor·
Costa Mesa board said "it's very possible
tbaCthe Wociation i.. P'Jltcklng. I'm no«
quite certain what their thinking was tn
deciding that Prop. 20 would do someUmg
that the environmental impact hu not·
already done.
"'Why batt construction retroactively
by withdrawing fund!: already granted,"
he uked. Ulf their tblnklng WU f4
~thhold funds not yet granted and aave
themselves the tbne and effort of proc·
es,,tng loans a n d then have the pro~
osiUon passed, I can understand that,"
he added. Similar figures have been cited by
South County environmentalists who
criticize tbe AWMA project as "develo~
ment-oriented."
Wins Praise in Study "Deeds were exchanged between cor·
porations to establish a chain of title to
the park lends, then the land was sold for
private development," Rainey explained. E. L. Risley, president of the SOuth
Orange County board noted his board like
the others in the' area has iOoe on record
opposing Prop. 20. "This new decision
will definitely affect our business," he
said, although be did acknowledge that
business bad already been affected by
the state Supreme Court's decision.
In AWMA fact-finding clinics, Carl
Kymla, chairman of the agency's board
of directors, has explained that the size
of the outfall is mandated by the state
Water Quality Control Board, which in-
sists it must be large enough to provkle
fail-safe protection in the event
participating sewage treatment districts
are unable to sen their reclaimed water.
Kymla has said the WQCB proposed
that the outfall. which would be the onJy
one in the Irvine to Laguna Niguel
region, have a capadty of 64 million
gallons a day. A WMA, according to
Kymla, has proposed a capacity of S5
million gallons.
While the outfaU must be built to max·
!mum foreseeable capacity, Kymla has
JX>inted out that the A WMA plan does not
look more than five years ahead in pro-
viding for sewage treatment.
Any expansion of treatment facilities
beyond that point, he states, would re-
quire a separate environmental Impact
slatement.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The once-notorious
brig at Camp Pendleton and others at
Camp Lejeune, N.C., and San Diego have
been described as ootstanding after a
tw~year study.
Tough and often brutal conditions have
been rtplaced by "a more human ap-
proach" which civilian prl.9ons should
copy, a San Dk!go psychologist said Mon-
day.
"They have switched from the authori-
tarian-stress approach in confined handl-
ing to a more human approach under
some very innovative leadership tde.as/'
Dr. Philip R. Harrill 1aid ln releasing
the study.
Hanis ls president of Management-
Organllation Development, Inc., and
beaded a team of psychologlsta, penal
speclallst.s and special worken. Their
195-page report went to the office of Naval
Research.
No W ar111 Nest?
Borin to Build City Eros Cente r
BONN (UPI) -"It ~not the city c<>un·
cil's business to build a warm nest for
prostitution," said Ulm ci ty councilwo-
man Felicitas Hauser Ill the council's
last and most spectacular meeting.
Ulm city fathers thought they were rid
of prostitutes once and for all when they
orde red police to block off the street lead·
Ing to the town's sole "pro.'IUtutes dormi·
tory.''
But the women, about 50 of them, sim-
ply took to the 11tree13 and began hanging
out on the banks of lhe Danube where
resPS?Ctable clllzcns like to take their
evening strolls.
ll was dC<"tded to build an "Eros Cen-
ter," a euphemism for a houlft of ill re-
pute.
Testifying at a council meeting last
weekend, Police Chief Werner Brcumer
pointed out that thtre were 450,000 resi-
dents in Ulm. 25.000 of them foreign work-
ers and 10,000 of them soldii;>rt In the city,
located 65 milts weat ot Munich.
"That makes room for negative mkidle--
man functions," Bressmer said.
Mn. Hauser said a bordf!llo was not
the answer.
"That wlll just reel the praotltuttJI Into
town and lncreMe the street trade, too,"
she said .
"Building a bor'dl!llo will only make
the dirty bi.tSIMa of prostttuUon and ex·
ploitatlon resped.ablt,'' Mid Dr. Sieg·
fried Ernsl, a nnllonally • known antl-
pornol(raphy hauler
' '•
But Ulm Mayor Hans Lorenser aald
there was nothing else to be done.
"The continuing complainll on the part
of our citizens force us to do something,"
he said.
Prostitution ls legal in West Gennany
and u one councilman pointed out,
"There Juat are certain disadvantages to
a free, democratic state."
An oppoaltlon polltlcilln -the batUe for
and against tbe bordello divided along po-
Utlcal lines -criticized the mayor for In·
dlscrlmlnate use of the two terms "bor·
dello" and "prostitutes donnltory. ~1
''Now don't you think the 11ame thing
goes on in a prostitutes donnHory as in
a bordello?" the mayor said.
Councilman Hans Hepperie took the
mayor under hi.I wing.
"lie LI u far removed from these terms
u Is only appropriate and seemly for a
m1yor," Hepperle sald.
FromP .. e l
TREES ..•
being aold on weekends at the comi>a:nY
yard at Myfonl Rood and Irvine
Boulevard, near Tustin. BOUJ'I It ls open
are from 9 a.m, to 6 p.m. Firewood Is to
be sold ln quantities up to cord lots.
In late October a _.d yard will be
opened at Sand Canyon Road And the
SAnto Ana Freeway.
Tbe Navy ordered the study in 1970
after congressional investigators blamed
overcrowding, a lack of trained guards
and brutality for rioting at the Camp
Pendleton brig.
After prlaonen banicaded themselves
Inside tbe tin-roofed compound, finally
surrendering, an inquiry described It as
the "most r<peteadly Investigated facility
in the Marine Corps."
Minuteman Launched
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE
(AP) -A Minuteman 111 lntett0ntlnen-
tal ballistic missile was launched down
the western test range over the Pacific
Ocean here Monday, the Air Force an-
nounced. The lawteh at 3 p.m. was one of
a series of operational ~ts by the
Strategic Air Command.
Because the chain of title had been set
Rainey said, title companies reported
nothing irregular ln the dealings.
What we're insisting is that dedication
of the land for parks was implied,"
Rainey said.
Unfortunately, many of the parcels
falling under the same cloud of title
already have been developed with
houses.
Others have been earmarked for
development, but the same old map has
successfully stalled progress of con-
struction.
Besides obtaining the Grand Jury probe,
the homeowners h a v e successfully
convinced the County Counsel's office to
start legal action to stop development of
a viewpoint along Palisades Drive where
a gazebo once used by the public was
partially removed by persons claiming
o~·nership of the land .
Evelyn Wilcox, executive secretary of
the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley
board of realtors. said she did not want
to comment on the vote.
Ship Being Drained
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A sludge
barge and pumping ... -qulpment were put
to work draining 2,000 gallons of oil from
the beached Panamanian cargo ship
Liberty Manufacturer. 'l11e ship has been
stuck off San Pedro since it strock
submerged rocks a week ago.
Roll Out The Red Carpet!
•
'·
Three years ago we had a request from a local high school
for a red ~unner for homecoming ceremonies. A remnant
cut into two nice runners.
Without advertising, the word got a r o Un d, and our
business got so good that we had to make another runner.
This year we will have the pleasure of loaning the three
runners to hig h schools all around the Sout hern California
area1 including all the local schools. O ne weekend, last
year. we furnished THREE homecomings. Also, MVeral
times egein this year we will furnish weddings and grand
openings.
If Y-~U have need for a rod runner for an occasion, stop
end see us ... no charge. The only requirement is prompt
return after tho occasion.
At Alden"s you'D alway• qot tho rod carpet treatment!
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Plac•ntia Av•.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS1 Mon. Thrv Thur"I., 9 to 5:30 -FRI., 9 to 9 -SAT .. 9'30 to S
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Cease-fiI·e Seen
On Gasoline War
LOS ANGELES CAP l -
Gaanline prict wara which
have raged In Southern
CalffOTT1la since the mld·1950s
are running out of fuel, soy
two Industry exe<:utl\ es.
John A. Tquhey, vice prclli-
dent of 1he International
Service SLaUon D.e.a.I ~ 11.5
AS$0Ciation, and l·~cy,
senior vice president of Urich
OU Co. of Whittier gaid that
demand has caught up with,
and is passing, gasoline
reserves ihroughout t h e
United States.
TBt.S MEANS in a j or
petroleum companies are cut·
ting off the flow of surplus
flli!ls to unaffiliated g a s
operators like Urich -which
supplies 100 in dependent
service statloM from Oregon
to the 1'1exican border -Lacy
e.1pl11ined.
"The only thing that has
held down gas prices for the
last 50 yea rs, retailwise. is the
independent," he added.
"The fact that the end of
supplies is in sight has caused
a convulsl-0n in the rqaj-0r oil
companies. Why should they
carry on price wars with us
when they're cutting us -0f!?
That's why the gas wars are
over all of a sudden and lhe
majors have restored the run
market price."
TOJhey, whose g r o up
represents about 900 major
brand and in dependent
gas&ne retailers in Southern
CaJllirnia, said the price war
cease-fire dates from Sept. l
and that air the major oil com-
panJes have withdrawn their
prJce supports to gas station
operators nationwide.
FLOOD
and
TIDAL-WATER
COVERAGE
• fo r Homes -Furniture -
Apartment Houns -
Businesi Stock/Equipmtint
FINANCE
• BOB PALEY
BOB PALEY ASS~~TES
INSURANCE
474 E. 17tti St., Costa Mesa
642-6500 546-3205
You're Invited to four
free lectures on
leaf ~/ale
JnveJlmenk
Oct. 18th
Blue Chip Non· 11Titc Ultimate Investment
managerial Property"
Lecturers -Roger Slates and Gene Kadow
Oct. 25th
Return on n Minimum Investment"
l.,ecturcr -Fred Becker
Nov. 1st
Real Estate Syndication foLth.L "Advantage o[
Smalt-Investor"
Lecturers -Phil McNamee and "C~p" Blackbum
Nov . 8th
Througb "Capital Conservation
Minimizing Taxes" Lecturer -Btuco Howey
"Tailoring Your '73 lnvestmenl"
Lecturer -Randy McCardle
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR
EACH SE SSION ME ETS 7:30 • 9:30 P.M.
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE
Sttr-in Co-spon19red By
Or1nge C0111t • Golden Weit
DAILY PI LOT Coll111•
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OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW .YORK STOCK LIST
NASO Lllli"9' for Mond1y, Ocfokr 16, 1971
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-· 3rd Street ,,
~ I SANTA ANA .., _,, \ e I
ID I
_ Edinger Ave I~
~ ·~ "' •. en . c
.~
MacArthur I Blvd, ----Ill!--· I \
I \
SO\flli
COAST
PLAZA
~~~~-.-~·..... \
sun!lowerAve. ,,.)
'I I
.,; 1 J .. B.ak•e•r ·s1•,.• • .11 ; ,/
~: ~ ORANGE I / .Jl I ·~ COAST \ /
:; I ~ COLLEGE, (
:c Fair Drive ) ... ~ \ <~-... .6 ,.,..., I
"' VictoriaStreet ,_~ ',~ .\
§· ,_ ~fj 1?\ ~ 19th Street ,_'.,-tl" ~ \
COSTA ., 'cf'~~ l
MESA ., .;! ::;
<St
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,?., ,.~' ~ ui t:P 1 1:>•'~9 ~.... t ~~\C'l,11
~ CENTER
IRVINE
. " Drive
;(1!\\:1 -----Qi \)1'~~....... " ~
--UCI <..>
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'lb a' 111 R Isa aaaa
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Tue~, October 10, 1~12
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Bus Line
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That's us, the Orange County Transit District, also known as
The .Two·Bit Bus Line. We're called that because a one-way
fare on any of our buses costs only a ciuarter. To you it means
comfortable, cqnvenient and economical service.
It means you can go shopping in downtown Santa Ana or
Laguna Beach for only 25¢. It means you can go to any of
the 3 major colleges on our route for only 25¢. It means you
can go to South Coast Plaza or Fashion Island for only 25¢. It
means you can go to Newport Beach or Balboa P.ier for only
25¢. It means you can go anywhere on our map for only 25¢.
All of our·coaches are air conditioned for your comfort and
the bus stops are carefully located for your convenience.
If yo11're beginning to see that O.C.T.D has you in mind, you're
getting the message.
For information or route maps 21nd schedules call The Two-Bit
Bus Line at (714) 547-6004 or write us at 1126 E.'Washington
Ave., Santa Ana, Calif.
LINE 53 ---------SANTA ANA·BALBOA
VIA COSTA MESA
LINE 57
SANTAANA·LAGUNA BEACH
VIA COSTA MESA
LINE 65
SOUTH COAST PLAZA·BALBOA
VIA IRVINE
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SC DAJLV PILOT JJ
Tuesday's Closing Prices-Co1nplete New York Stock Exchange List
'
Marl{et Rebounds,
,.
Gains Five' Points
NEW YORK (!U') -After starting out at a
lethargic pace, the stock market quickened and ad
van eed Tuesday. snapping a streak oC four straight
losmg sessions
A Whlte House announcement tbal presidential
advISer Henry A Kissinger would fly to Saigon to
talk with South Vietnamese Prcsulent Nguyen Van
Thieu about p r ogre ss al t!!e Paris peace talks
touched oft ne\v hope amonR Investors for a poss1•
ble early settlement of the Vietnam war (See story,
Page 4)
Nlalom.t11 1f
NtpJu,,. ·~ N11VPw llll NEnoe1 1 61 NE:qTT 236 N....m.11 :lO Nwmnt l 04
N"fmnPI •V. NYNon !Sci NYSfG 2 Oil NV:1?5 ... ·1· 0 1 l.i " "' Nl1Mltt ~ U
Nl1Mllf $U Sift$ IOM Nl lodUSI I "TS~ .., "';lrr,cw'~ ~orrl' I Ool NA Coe.I ill
NA Mt 1 f"' N NTI Phi 1 NoA Ak I.Ml N~lt of 4>,I, ~ ~ l lS H~nlG1 :f No Cen Rill NolllGa 1.!2 N ll(l,or l 'IO N LnPS 1 32 NON!Gs 2 M
NoHGgof 5 IG NoMP>lt in N~Pot WI Norlt4alt E
/\lar1tln>p(: I N lll'!ll>I I 4S ,.._lAJrl tS NwOoM l\11
H.,,..t Ind '5
Nwal Ind ""
... WSl In of 5 "IWlll~I • 20 "lwltllll>IC ~ NwMu 1.41d ·-·~Tl u. "'°'' 0 .~. "lo<ISm 2S Nr1SI pl I 60 "IUCot" torP. "IVF CQ 2W
T ''f; Travel
Next best\ung to taking a
trip ls readmg about one \n
the travel columns of the
Swiday DAILY PILOT
Complete Closing Prices-A "llerican Stoel\. Exchange List
Sir.. Ntl
(hdl I M)flt &.n CltM Chg
Stitt Ht!
\hd• J M Ith LAW t i.w °"'
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DAllV PILOT TUHdty, OctOber 17 1972
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlondi
I D-17
"Even after a full meal, you still look good enough to
eat.''
.. . . , . . . . . ' . ' ;-. . ....... ~ ..
Coeds Pitt Bo111has Bite Dus t Fo,t, 111orou9h Guaranteed
Re •I Estate LOSE WEIGH.T
Solr~ and ot l!lroAi rr LilC'nlr Priority
On Love
Mllrcos Ban.s Pliilippi1ie Sex Films TRAINING
Phon•• for Ftt.•(' Folder
THIS WEES(:
Odtint• Clll !Mlp ,,., .... lM lif•
aim ,...,,. JOI.I Wlllt 14 be. O*lMI II
• U.,, tabltt 1M "sly twdowM. CO..
1t1n1 no dana..w1 dtu,,_ No sftMlt,.
NO IPttllf UlfCIH. litl rid of UttU
l•t and 11¥1 '°'11•· Od1ln11 nu Nin
uffd 1UCC111fully !Jr lhoustnd1 IDO'IN'
1111 countsy lor 14 JUl'L Odrlnu: rlln
costs S3.Z5 tnd thi llrJ•ICOIKlllW alit
$5.15. You must lost ucfy ftl or YoUr
mon.y )VIII bt rlhlndld byyDW" drua1ist.
No c~ntlons ••l:ed, Actept no sut>-
stlbittt. So4d with this 111111n1" iifr
SAN DIEGO t APl -About
MANiu iAPI -Bomba
movies. the &iuling sex rare of
the PhUippines film industry,
have been banned from the
new society of President 2 '3 or the coeds queried tn Ferdinand E. Marcos.
San Diego say they believe The death b \ 0 w , ;id·
love or deep en1011onal Ill· ministered by the r.1otion Pi~
voh·ement is needed before ture Censor Board, came in n
they engage ln sex, a dir~tive that probibits -all
filnlS "which serve no other researcher reports. purpose but to satis!y the
Pro£. Stepl1en J. Bender of market ror sex or violence."
San Diego St.ate University Guillermo C. de Vega ,
said he surveyed 582 health chairman of the board, said
science students, including 302
young women.
TllE REP 0 RT was
prepared ·ror the 1972 con-
vantion of the American
School Health Association.
It indicates that students on
the modern campus may not
be any more sexu·elly
respomible than their parents
were , Bender said in an in-
terview.
Top art res• e •
mer e paid S:J,000
o r 111o re to bar e
their bodies be ·
fore t he cn111ern.
the ban also would apply to
foreign films.
"·ritten ror the film. \\'aJ were packed from the time
a bare guldcllnt, wR.h the ac-their dOors opened at 8 a.m.
tors improving their lines as until midnight.
the film progressed. Dialogue Miss Townsend said she
"'AS oot what bom.bas ll'ere made her first bomba after
about. being discovered In a beauty
Bomba n1ovles. although. ex-parlor by n producer of bomba
trrunely JX>PUlar with the film.s.
masses. were not without their "I didn't have a job at the
critics, particularly the clergy time," sl"\e explained, "and i1
in this predominantly Roman was an easy way to make
I AN1HONI 5CH09U
HA1101 e 1m1
tM "'""" C'llller C:..i. ,._ ... C•lll""Wo P\.. 11,41 t Jf.lJIJ
1'11 •• lrwl!llW'I JI ~.Ctl, .....
"'· (7141 776-11 00
~-~·
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN Catholic naUon. money."
"Bomba movies actually:1,;;;-~--------~iiiiiiiiiiii were made for the provinces."
THRIFTY '""" ... 01.,rou.,., <oTORr.,
said pretty Susan Townsend, HAMS herself a vele!'an rX 20 bomba
films. "Anyhow, most of the
censors were in Manila.''
Miss Towsend. w h os e " • • So Good It Will
::;:~ts ~;e ~t!':" 't'w~= Haunt You 'Til It's Gone''
ago. e ReGcly to Sern wllfl Honey '• Spice Gklle
THE F!Rsr bomba movie • Ideal For loatl-No l'reporatlon
appeared in 1968, largely in AIM
response to the importation of • lmPorted .ClteeMS oncl Win ..
sex fiins, particularly from • Dellcateun with Sanclwlches To Go
Europe. In the beginning. • AA Types· of Caterliit
bomba moYies· featured-lon'id n oo 1. coe11t Hlthny, cw... ct.I Mar -an-tooo
kissing scenes, then moved to 1 •IKll lltett ., 1 c,..... 1t•ta11rHt
L. M. Boyd
Bender sajd 84 percent of
the V.'Omen said they n1ight
engage in premarital sex and
all of them believe in use of
ront.raceptive devices.
BOMBA, WHICH means
bomb in Ta gal og and Spanish,
meant sex on celluoid in the
Philippines. Imagination was
not requited in viewing a bom-
ba film .
bare breast displays and 1122 s. lrootdtMnt, ARaMIM 131·2411
ultimately the sex act itself. II_~-"'~~""""""""""""..;.;,~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~~~~~~~""""""~~~~'!!:~ "It's what the public wanteal·
W ate1· No Bother
'
For Bloodhounas
The sports equipment boys expect to sell IO times as
many snowshoes this "'inter as they sold 10 years ago ...
\\'AS IT reported the mother cockroach throws an average
of 37 young per litter? ... LIBRA girls, claim the Zodiac
devotees. tend to be the most beautiful in the v.·orld ..
Ar.1 ASKED the oldest letter of any alphabet. That's 0.
Was the first Jett.er of the f i r s t alphabet 2.000 years
B.C ....
ACTIVE med ical doctors outnumber active airline
stewardesses by 12 to one, must men-
tion.
JUST exactly how an accomplished
lip reader can figure out what a talk-
er says, that's puzzling. Only 48 per·
:ent of the sounds in spoken English
:ire visible on tile lips. Lot of others
look ali ke. Take "baby " and ''bye
bye.'' And some u·ords are just fiat
)\Jt invisible. Like "hair" and "egg."
QU'ERIES -Q. ·'Ask yotir Love
and \Var man to name the four most significant develop-
ments of this century.·•
BUT, HE SAID, 6.J pe rcent
say love or a deep emotional
feeling is necessary before
they would engage · in sex
while 72 percent said they
wanted their first sexual ex-
perience to be spontaneous
and extemporary in nature .
"The irresponsibility or
such an attitude is ex-
emplifified by the fact that of
80 pereent of the female s y;·ho
have had premarital se:it, 85
percent or 68 percent of the
total females surveyed, have
either been or at some time
thought they were pregnant,"
Dr. Bender said.
Among males. he said. only
23 percent feel love or deep
emotional commitment i s
necessary before intercourse.
"The remainder feel Jove is
nice but not really necessary,"
he said.
Bomba movies were cheap
ro produce -about 100.000
pesos. under $15.000, a film .
Top stars such as Rossana
Ortiz and Alona Alegre were
paid $3 .000 or more to bare
their bodies before t he
camera .
The movies. aly;·ays filmed
in black and white, were shot
in hotel or motel rooms. beach
cottages. or even a director's
home.
The plot. if it could be called
that. Yi'aS simple. There were
always good guys and bad
guys -and girls, a discothque
scene with a be.vy of bare-
boso1ned dancers, and several
fights with guns and karate
chops flying between the pro-
tagonists.
TH£ MOV IES were com·
pleted in a v.'eek t"·o al the
most. The script, if one were
E eono111i c M u st
Beautiful Looks
and what they paid thr~
pesos (45 cents) to see," Miss
Town.send. explained.
There was no doubt about
the bomba's popularity.
Houses showing such films
WE
f'EATURE
S&W
Del Mi:tnt•
Gkwletta
Hu11h
Stowffers
Sara Lee
Almaden
Mannln9s Beef
COAST SUPER
MARKET
HOME DELIVERY
CAlL
"673-3510
3347 E.COAST HWY.
CORONA. DEL MA A. In war, No. I is nuclear weapons, certainly. No. 2.
aircraft. In love. No. l is The Pill. No. 2, that remark.able
spontaneous innovation of 50 years ago, dating.
Q. "I'VE .beard the most embarrassing time in the
Miss America contest was when a man in disguise won
a runnerup spot ... "
Mean Everything ~
A. Never happened. Most embarrassing time was four
years ago when a girl named Ford. whose dad worked for
Chrysler, was crowned queen on the TV show sponsored
by Oldsmobile.
WITH 52 percent of the vote, the ladies in. a unanimous
block could elect anybody. Mere theory, m>'t*iend. Ladies
are never unanimous in opinions on candidates, cats or
comfritters. They vote individually for individuality. It's
widely known they're far less likely than men to ballot
the straight ticket.
HOUNDS -Hard to believe lhis claim by an owner of
bloodhounds. The notion that criminals can wade through
water to escape the dogs is false, he contends. Says bis
hounds actually can track better through water which holds
the scent. Remarkable, if true.
Address mail to L. ~f. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New·
port Beach., Cali f. 92660.
Hop in your
car and come
as you are!
The Imperial
folks are
waiting for you!
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Pike said food makes the
Looking good is an economic
necessity in today 's business
\vorld, says a Ca l i r or n i a
plastic surgeon who tells
women to try a face lift if they
need it to get a job.
"You can have as n1any face
lifts as you went." says Dr.
Richard Aronsohn. "You just
have to be in good physical
shape and you have to be able
lo afford it." •
He was one of four beauty
experts who to!~ fashion
designers and writers hen!
about fashion's backbone -
the beautiful woman.
Nutritionist Arnold
v.•oman ; health spa owner
Deborah Szekeley pushed for
stringent exercise, and actress
Polly Bergen came out in
favor of flaw less makeup.
Aronsohn drew the most
comments with his opinions on
why a woman should remake
her face .
"Beauty rolors our thinking
when v.·e meet people," he
said: "It gets us jobs. It ccr·
tainly elects our officals.
"In this country there's
pervasive employment
discrimination against ugly
v.·omen, the real losers ... No
employers will admit it.
'
Use toortn place of vodka. You·u !ln<Uoor easter to drink.
ln1)el'ial Berk
Colla Meta
Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive
(714)979-1000
... '
It maka -· Bloody Marys. And JOU'll ltnd Igor extremely conoental.
tonic dr1llkl bell er than ever. tn mll!lld company lwtth oranae 1utce.
In !act. IOor does every\hlng vodka can tomato Julee or tonic). toor ts dell(lhtlul.
do. And does tt bolter. Meet toor tile 1nvlstble lodaJ tn your
Beca1110 loor Is tn11tlble. local ltQtJor store or bar. $~49
You'll ttnd loor smoother. This IS what he looks Uke. Ml1
111e socrnt new S!Jlrll )'OU use Instr.ad ol wclka.
IOOft THE lfMSIBll • 8AL TtMOM, MO. • PAOOUCl Of U.S.A.• llO PROOF• UQU[UR
•
-' .
\
Pm... . . County.
Peel $7.10 Off r
ro:: .
IAll'f •••ch-'Soln 'l-~•-..itncta.
Dllec&_..ncetDSM "'.''"!' N,$2llndllilnlta.
Heading nonh? Then head lnlo and out of. Pfenty of
for PSA and long Beach parking. And the crowds
Airport. It's not all t~at ' haven't found it yet. Your
far. It's easy to get ~ travel agent knows the way.
•
otlw'~ .... ,... • .,.. ••• PSA. ... ,.. ...
'
•
II whit .. ldv.;Ud1'j
In W.. 0.1ng1 Cat u~ P••ay
..... medium ."
'
'
.·
' '
I 1
•
I
-• ..
Lag1111a Beaeh
EDITION ..
Today's Fbtal
N. Y. St.oek8
VOL 65, NO. 29 1, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1972 TEN CENTS
'
Laguna Rape Victi~ Could See Police Copter
'Ibe rape o[ a 13-year-old girl took
place in a Isolated hill area between El
Toro Road a n d Woodland Drive, ac·
cording to the memories of the blonde
victim.
"She saw the police helicopter
overhead and at one lime police were
close enough that she could hear the
police radio,'' detective sgt. Neil Purcell
said.
She was struck on the head with a rock
to keep her quiet, be said.
The young girl was abducted Sunday
from a lronblge roa~ alongside Laguna
Canyon Rdad uy two young men as she
~alked with a ya1mger cousin.
While a massive search by police agen·
cies was under way, the girl was raped ,
forced to submit to perverted acts, ,
beaten, robbed or personal heirloom
jewelry and driven to a Hollywood area
where she was1 released.
"We spent tt>ree and a baU l'loors in the
back area yesterday and found some
areas that may have been the scene.
We'll be out looking again today.
"The poor thing, she's very confused
and her face was down on the floor
OOard ," Purcell said.
The detective said the 13-year-old 'o\'as
told by her abductors that she would be
killed if she talked to police or attracted
any attention.
'
Police described the kidnap \'ehicle as
an ofr-white 1964 Ford Falcon in poor
shape and with tr~ headliner ripped out.
The kidnap-rapists 'vere described as
about 5 feel, 10 inches tall, y,·eighing
about 150 pounds. Their age w a s
estimated to be between 16 and 7n. They
were said to have dirty blond shoulder-
length hair. o.1e suspect had his parted
in the middle , w~ile the other v.'(lre his
behind the ea.·s.
• ·ID
The girl was first !11\lck BC'ross the
bridge of the nose with a rock as she was
d1oggcd into the kidnap vehicle as her II·
yea r-old rousin wilnessed lhe abduction.
The children had been walking home
along the frontage road from a billiards
parlor nearby. •
The girl and her mother were visiting
relatives in the Utnyon Acres area. The
girl is from Co•1ina.
Alta Laguna 'Blasted'
Foes Rap Extension at City Planners Meet
-
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of flit ~HY "llot ll~ff
If the proposed Alta Laguna extension
has any friends, they weren't around
Monday night as the roadway was
blasted from Arch Beach Heights to Top
of the World during a Laguna Beach
Planning Commission study session.
•·1 don't think that road running this
way will help anyone but real ~tale
salesmen," commented one Top of the
World resident.
The road would connect the ~ hill
communiUes now isolated from each
other. The rood ha.! been held to be
desirable to improve fire and pollct reac-
tion time and to improve school bus
senice to Areh Beach Heights.
Nun Identifies
'Taj Mahal' Case
Loan Recipient
By TOM BARLEY
Of ... Dllh' "'-' Iliff
World Financial Trends Vice President
James Shipley was identified today in
Orange County Superior Court testimony
in the "Taj Mahal" trial as the man wbo
apparently stood to gain most from a
$500,IXlO hospital loan that n!mains ~
pak! today.
Sister Mary Clarissa, the second Roman
Catholic nun to testify in the trial .er
Stllpley, Laguna Rills financier Josepb
Dulaney and two codefendants, picked
out Shipley as the man to whom the loan
was made nearly four years ago.
The former member of the Board of
Directors at St. Bernardine Hospital, San
Bernardino, testified before Judge James
Turner that Dulaney, 88, of 2631 Via
Cascadita, San Clemente, assured her
and fell9w directors that he would
personally guarantee the loan . .
Sister Mary Clarissa backed the earlier
testimony (If hospital administrator
Sister Mary Margaret that hospital Con-
troller Robert M<1chan first suggested en·
trusting $500,000 in reserve funds to
(See DULANEY, Page I)
Mortgage Group
Declines Loans
D11e to· Prop. 20
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
ot llM Dall'I' Pll9f Sl1tt
The CaUfomla ?.tort.gage Bankers
AssociaUon Monday voted not to grant
oans of any kind in the coutal zone where
bulldlng coujd be restricted by the pass-
age of Proposltlon 20.
The usoclitlon ·is a v o,I u n t a r y
orgAlllzatlon made up primarily of lJ>.
dependent mortgage bankers. The vote is
adv!Jory Ind wlll be followed at the in·
divlduaJ members' cillcretton.
Reaction to the vote In Orange coa.t
lending Institutions and among local ·
rea1ton: was guarded. Most said they had
not bad on opportunity to study the
recommendation lo full .
ASl<>Clallon prglilent Robert E .
Morgan said In Los Angtlet Moncl4Y
"P•ssaec of Prop. 20 on the Nov. 7 batlOt
would have a drastic effect on the people or C.!Ugrnla.
•11bo coa:t to ta.ipayer1, property •
owners and the genera) public would be
disastrous. Prop. 20 Wllllld .. labJilh I
\llrtual moratorium on all building of eny
kind within 11.l l!l.<fellned permit .,.. for
(See LOANS, Page I)
., •
The route of the proposed extension
would generally follow the city-county
boundary and would be cut-and-filled the
entire length.
Opponents of the roadway hold it would
open up the vast vacant lands adjacent to
the two communities to development.
'"l'hat is prime buildable land, if you
give them access," said Merritt Trease,
a Bluebird Canyon Drive resident.
"This being county land, we know ex-
actly what will happen. The county agen-
cies are dcvelo~-oriented and the
developers are getting away with murder
in Orange County.
"Buildilig a road there '° 1be lire
department can cross Jt to fight fires on
Moulton land is mt a fair proposilion. for
the city ot Laguna Beach." Trease ex-
claimed.
He said with the road in, a fXl percent
increase could be expected in sightseeing
traffic. Another resident noted that it
rould make a convenient bypass for
north and south bound motorists stalled
by heavy summer t r a f l i c on Coast
Highway.
Resolutions opposing the extension
from the Top of the World Neighborhood
Associatioh, the Civic League, and
Village Laguna were presented to the
commission.
In addition. the traffic and circulation
committee o_f the P~ Commission
vidlng services to ~ , area apd ~ ,,.
(See EXTENSJ!lN, Page II
* * * * * * Roads to Laguna Areas
Termed 'Not Adequate'
A grim picture of transportation needs
for the neighborhoods of Top of the
World and Arch Beach Heights is painted
by a just-.released. U:guna Beach traffic
count and projected growth pattern.
Roads leading to the two areas are
classed either "totally inadequate" or
"not adequate" for elisting traffic by the
Laguna. city Engineering Department.
t;rowth projections place additional
traffic varying from tW<I to five times
heavier than present if the areas are
developed as presently allowed by zon-
ing , Wayne Moody, Laguna Beach plan-
ning director, told a study session of the
• Wiener-roasti11 g
Boys Responsible
For Laguna Blaze
1'tree smaJI boys having a wiener roast
were respon!ible for a fire that destroyed
half an acre of hillside brush in the Arch
Beach Heights area Monday afternoon,
Laguna Beach ftremen report.
Battalion Chief Charles Kuhn said the
youngsters, aged 7 and 8, apparently
dropped a match in the dr') brush while
preparing their feut. Their parents have
been (.'()ntacted by county fire ofncials,
Kuhn said.
Thj blaze, in county territory about 200
yards behind Balboa Avenue, was con·
tained by Laguna Beach firefighters , who
remained on the scene for an hour.
Kuhn noted it took the Top of the World
fire unit 20 minutes to reach the lire by
its up-and-downhill route, convnenting
"It could have been there in Lwo minutes
if we'd had even an accel6 road from the
end of Alla Lertm•."
Stop Sign Installed
At" Gleoneyre Street
The Laguna Beach Public Works
Department baa announced that a fOUJ'-
way stop tign will be imtalled Thuraday
al 1he lntersectlon of Olenneyrt Slrtet
and Bluebird Canyon Drive for a BO-day
evaluatlon period.
II the 1t1I period shows an lm-
provtmm In the traffic altuatlon ot the
lnteratclion, the 1n·stalla.Uon will become
permanent. At preeent t.hert.11 a tW&-way
ea.t•west stop sign en Bluebird Canyon
Drive.
I
planning rommission ~1onday night.
Moody said that Arch Beach Heights
now has about 298 units and its projected
growth could be 9'lO units. Based on an
estimated 10 vehicle trips per day for
each unit, the following projected loads
woold be placed on roads:
-Nyes Place: now, 166 trips; then, 900
trips. .
-Atta Vista : now. 368 trips; then, 1,800
trips.
-Smnmlt Drive: now, 1,300 trips;
then, 6,62i trips.
Temple HUis: now, 1,300 trips; then,
2,760.
STUMPS REPLACE TREES IN IRVINE, DESPITE CITY BAN
Irvine Company Cuts 22,582 'Or1nge ind Eucalyptus With City Parml11lon
-Park Ave : same as Temple Hills.
Moody said the elttension of Alta
Laguna would not help these traffic loads
since it had no new connection to a major
access. He said it would only relieve a
small number or back-and-forth trips
between the two communities.
Alta Laguna was once planned to be a
feeder road to the inland Coast Free-
way, now dead. It was also once
thought the boulevard could be extended
north to Laguna Canyon Road for a new
access to the hjlls, but rigor mortis has
set into that plan too.
Approval to Cut Trees
Granted Despite Ban
The commission was urged to hold off
extending public services to the un-
dev~ area by Jarr:es Dilley of the
Laguna Greenbelt, Inc.
"We need not to mate up our minWI
toward accommodatiri'g increasing traffic
flows . To diminish traffic Oows we must
establish a valid substitute " Di'uey said.
"Personalfy, I see no hoPe at ell for the
automobile," he said.
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of """ Da1tl .. ,.,.. swr
Since lhe city of Irvine passed its law
banning the cutting of trees last
~ber, the Irvine Company has
sought and beeo given eight permits to
cut down 2:2,582 orange and eucalyptus
t ......
In .January, Irvine Company
agricultural vice president Bill WiUiams
asked city councilmen to allow the city
n.anager to issue "blanket" tree-cutting
Deroin Fo11nd
Singer McNair Says lnnocent-
NEw ARK. N. J. (UPI) -Singer«lress Barbara M•Nalr w .. arrested for
possession of nearly a half ounce of beraln at the Playboy Club in McAfee, it
WIUI dlscloaed today.
Mias McNair and her husband, llkk Mantle, were· arralped on charges
In federal courl bere. Each was ordered lo post a 110,0llO bond. They pleaded
'lmlocenl
A lpOkeaman for the Playboy Club uld Miss McNab", 37, appeared three
Umes this week ln the swank Penthoute or the club-hotel In private perform-
anctl for a groap of conventioneer1. She was arrested Monday night in her
dressing room.
Her husband acts as her busbiess agent.
U.S. District. court Judge Lawrence A. Whipple aet no trovcl restrictions
on the couple. The Playboy Club &8ld the alngcr had llCh<duled Cllill(lemenls
In Chi°'° Wednesday Md agiln In McAfee Th,ursday.
A Port of New York Authority !PQkesman slid a packaae w11 traced from
Newark Airport ,to Miu McNalr, who algned(~ k·•t the Playboy Club,
,.
permits fdr some 250 acres of orange
groves the company planned to convert
to other agrit"Jltural uses -row crops.
The request was lhe fint e1oepUon
granted to the city law enacted Dec. 31,
!971. 1be law makes it a mbdemeanor to
cut a tree larger than 3.5 inches unless a
pennit has been granted. Without a
permit , violators are subject to a S500
fine and/or slx months ln jail for each
lrt . cut. '
When WUllams sought the pennit he
said m{\ny or the ccrttral Irvine orange
groves were subject lo a root disease
known as "quick decline." Since oranges
have become less profitable to grow due
to competition from Florida and other
states, Williams ther told councilmen, it
i,, not possible to replant the aid groves
with new trees.
Thu.•. the Irvine Company'a tree loues.
a company spokmnan noted, become
::is,,el.!I for Irvine homecnmtrs who have
fireplaces .
"The agriculture dlvtdoo of the com-
pt.ny is now In the firewood business,.,
acconling lo Dean BuchlnJer, manager
of the orchard divbkln.
Orange and eucalyph11 tree wood Is
being sold on w~kends at the company
ya rd at ~tylord Ro3d and Jrvtne
Boulevard, near Tustin. Houri It 11 open
are from 9 a.m. to II p.m. Fire'NOOd it to
be 90kf ln quantltkl! up to oord lots.
Jn late October a leCOOd yard will be Oll'!ll'd al Sand Cinyon Road Ind tbe
Santa Ana )freeway .
8uch!ngcr , .. ...,. thtlt stlllnti Ille
treu for firewood Is a boon to the
ttology.
' . )
\\'itnesses sahd she s c r e a m e d
hysterically as the passenger of lhe car
pulled her into the vehicle and positioned
her belY.'een the dr iver and himself. 11'le
car sped off and the young cousin ran to
u nearby residence to call police.
A massive search for the victim wa1 .
widertaken and police units in lrvine as
well as the California Highway Patrol
were alerted .
Police Nab
4 Laguna,
Viejo Boys
• A Mission Viejo.Laguna Beach teenage
burglary ring which stole to finance dope
purchase and distribution operations has
been broken by detectives of !he Laguna
Beach Police DeI>artmen~ and the
Orange County Sherifrii Department.
Arrests of two 15-year-old Laguna
youths and two ~lission Viejo juvenile!
have cleared 20 Laguna Beach burglaries
and al least l\li'iC'e that many county
<'rimes, Oet. Sgt. Neil Purcell said today.
The youngsters are in custody pending
hearings today on the police accusations.
More arrests may be made .
Purcell said the ring specialized In
burglatics of resk:lents with louvered
windows, and that some clues came from
evidence of blood found by the broken
glass.
Det. Alex Jimenez of the Laguna
Beach department was responsible for
local investigation of the crimes, Purcell
said.
The Laguna youths were students at
Laguna Beach High School and were ar-
rested at their homes over the weekend.
"They were from good homes. There
was no need for them to steal, It's nol a
case of them stealing for a need, just
their own persona] gain," Purcell said.
PUJ'Ctll said the youths were selling the
stolen property and making money to
''buy dope which th-!y would dL\tribute."
"We classified it as a juvenile ring :
they went around residential and com-
mercial areas with the intent or
burglarizlng. '' he said.
Aside from residences, tbe youU. htL
docton' offices, burglarized the Sports
World start, and the Funk Factory in 1
Laguna Beach.
A motorcycle stolen in the Saddleback
area was traced to Laguna Beach in con-
nection with the ring's operation, Purcell
said.
He said that the ring·s breakup ac-
counts for about $2,00'.I In local thefts.
and muC'h mor"e in the county area. Some
thefts had not been reportl'd.
"A lot of people were pret~y worried
about all these burglaries.·· Purcell said,
noting that the ring 11peC'i,alized in unoc-
cupied houses.
Bu g Case Disclaimed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tl>p Nixon
Administration off1clals had no prior
knowledge of the Watergate bugging In·
cident, says Presidential adviser Robert
H. Finch.
Ornnge
Weatller
· The wcalherlady says It's going
to be cloody on Wedne3day. It
m1ght even raJn. Temperatures at
• the beaches wlll be In the low 70s
r~lng to 75 Inland. Low. tonight
SM%.
INSIDE TOD.4Y
Bomba movies -tht Philip-
• pines vcrdon of the porno /Ude
-'"'"" be.,. btm .. d from th• ntw socitt~ of Prn"1tnt Ferdin~
and E. Marcos. Stt story on
Page 12.
L..M. ..,,. 11 .... •
"' ..... " • ....... ....... lf ,..,..,.., .. ,. ... ,... ..... 4
·CM!IU 1• ~~ • ,......,.. 11 ...,. ,..., OM$--. '"'* ......... tt.11 •.....W.l f'Mt • ,........... '' ·~ , .. ,,. .,..._.. II f'~ 1 .. 11 WM1'19' f ....... .._. . . ........ -... "'" .... llSltl 14 ..,_ lltM t
""" L.--. ,,
~-----_____ _,
' . ·-.
Jt DAILY PILDI LB
Armada Seeks Boggs
Airplanes Fight Weather in Alaskan Search
ANCJ~ORAGE, Alaska (AP) -A ~mall
armada or private planes assembled in"
poor "'ealher today to search Alciska's
rugged southern coast fur a light-plane
carrying "House ~1ajori\Y Leader J1alt
noggs and th~ others.
111c plane was long overdue and
presumed down on a campaign night for
the state's only llouse me1nbE>.r.
A heavy cloud cover and rein prevailed
in the search area as some 30 planes
p1·eparcd to join an elcctroaically equip-
ped Air F'orce HC 130 on the rescue
mis:-ion. The Air Force plane has flown
c111 Anchorage-to-Juneau pattern through
the night in search of the missing plane.
\\ hich failed to show up late ~1onday on :i
560-mile £light from Juneau.
A SPokesman for t he Air f orce's
Rescue Coordination Center said t h e
for!X'ast for today was f-0r strong v.·ind.
:1n overC'ast and "very marginal Oying
weather."
The White House said President Ni:<on
l1ns been re«ivin& reports -0n the search
efforts.
Press secretary Ronald L Ziegler said
J\ixon, through his military aide. offered
nil pcissible assistance and provided for
transportation for the Boggs family to go
tu Alas ka .
House Speaker Carl Albert said the
pilot of the missi ng plane is reputed to be
one of the best bush pilots in Alaska and
would know every possible landing spot
between Anchor.:ige and Juneau.
"I cannot personally give up hope,"
Albert said .
Aboard the twin.engine Cessna 310
v.·ere Boggs. 58; Rep. Nick Begich, a 4G-
year-0ld Democrat; Beg i ch' s ad·
n1inis1rative assistant. l~ussell Bro\\'n,
37; and the pilot. 38-year-0ld Don E.
Jonz.
Nature Preserve
For Dana Hills
Given Backing
Proposals for '.he conversion of 18
acres in two rugged canyons near~ Dana
Hills High School into an innova tive
nature preserve came closer to reality
Monday when school trustees approved
application for a $21,000 state grant.
The board o( the Capist rano Unified
School District voted unanimously to ap--
prove the grant application "·hich would
produce enough funds to complete the
development of the acrage being offered
free to the district by Thunderbird
Homes. Inc.
The proposal is the brain child of nana
Hills Assistant Principal Phil Grignon
and science faculty members at tbo new
high school. They seek to de.velop a
preserve where students from several
departments could conduct studies on the
environment, humanities and even oc·
cupational training in environmental
fields.
Trustees' action Monday simply agreed
!11 the application for tbe funds from the
state Department of Education.
They still have to complete det ails for
the acquisition or the donated land.
If the district accepts the parcel which
contains lush natural gro\\'th of oak and
sycamore trees, the developer would be
able to comply with county requirements
ror dedicated greenbelt open space.
"The offer of the :anJ flrst went to the
county, but lhe county people didn't know
Y.·hat they cou ld do witt, it, so the next or.
fer was to the school district," Grignon
explained .
The grant funds would pay for all the
permanent installations in the canyons,
including trails and teaching stations as
"'eli as a maintenance building and
fen~s-
Students would do most of the work vn
the site, which will not experience heavy
modification.
Dana Hills Principal Walter Spencer
ex plained that the acreage would be
preserved in its natural state.
"\\1e don't plan to build a park there,''
he said.
OU.Neil COAST LI
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•tlrltt»M UM mDnlt11Y.
Boggs' admJnistrative wlstant, Cary
f[yrnel, said ln Washlhgton that the laat
radio contact with the plane came 12
minutes after takeoff ttlooday, whtn Joni:
filed .& flight plan. ~re was no sign of
trouble.
Boggs. who left \Vashing1on on SUnday
and had been due to return Utl.! mon1ing.
fllld · gone lo Alaska to campaign for
Begich, a· native of Eveleth. MIM .. v.·bo Is
seeking re-election to a second tem1 .
Boggs' wife. Lindy. was the only
1nember of the family at home In-
Bethesda. l\1d .. t-.londfly night.
As the word spread to Boggs· ho m e
state of Louisiana. there v.·as an un-
n1istaknble ring of arfcc-lion for the cou.
gressn1an.
Ed"•11rd Cocke stood solemnly on the
sidewalk outside a New Orleans bar and
said that Boggs is ·'our kind Of people."
From Pagel
LOANS ...
a five-year pericx!. The moratorium ap.
plies to public projects as well as
private.
"This moratorium. if coupled with the
building sh4tdown now taking pl8ce
throughout California as a result of the
recent slate Supreme Court decision In
the Mammoth l\fountajn case -which
states that local government must file
f'nvironmental impact reports on proj·
eels reques ted by private parties -
would therefore halt all work by local
governments, contractors, developers
and private lending institutions."
Many or the loan officers contacted at
Orange coast banks said they had not
received any official policy statements
from their superiors relating to coastal
zone loans.
Bill Woffor~ of the Union Bank Pointed
out that with the election three weeks
av•ay and the effect of the envlronmental
impact decision, "it's almost a riloot
point."
He said that unofficially his bank has
~·arned their loan Officers to "be
careful" when granting loans for the
coastal zone. ''It depends on a number of
va riables. but at the moment we don't
have that problem, because we don't
have any applications for that area " he
said. '
A spokesman for Avco Financial
Services said they would not take the
association's vote into consideration
because Avco lends only to individual
homeowners, not developers.
Larry Smith, speaking for another
mortgage firm, TI}e Alison Company in
Newport Beach said they have adopted a
wait all('I see attitude. "With the election
only three weeks away. there has not
been any specific policy statement from
our main office," he reported.
Representatives of the local boards of
realtors seemed a Uttt! surprised at the
association's vote.
Glen Martin of the Newport Harbor·
Costa Mesa board said "it's very possible
th~t the a~iation is panicking. I'm not
quite certain what their thinking was in
deciding that Prop. 20 would do somethng
that the environmental impact has not
already done.
"Why bait construction retroactively
by withdrawing funds already granted,"
he asked. "U their thinking was to
withhold funds not yet granted and save
themselves the time and effort Of proc-
es:>i.ng loans a n d then have the prop-
os1t1on passed, I can understand that,"
he added.
E. L. Risley, president of the South
Orange County board noted his board like
the others in the area has gone on record
opposing Prop. 20. "This new decision
will definitely affect our busines! " he
said, although he did acknowledg~ that
business had already been affected by
the state Supreme Court 's decision .
Evelyn Wilcox, executive secrelary of
the Huntington Beach·Fountain Valley
board of realtors. said she did not want
to co1nment on the vote.
Laguna to Hold
Driving Course
A two-day course In defensive driving
.,.,.HJ be held tn Laguna Beach Thursday
and Friday under the sponsorship of the
C..1.\iforn la Retired Te&chers Association .
The official classes are ope n to eny
atea members of the National Retired
Teachers Msociation ttr the American
Association of Rctir('d Persons.
~1embers or the ellgible groups pay a
ftc of $1 for lhe CQurse. whlle other
retired persons v.·ho wish the instruction
01ay attend for a $4 fee. Classes w\11 be
held Jn the Ne1b'11borhood Congregational
Church. 34-0 St. Ann's Drive.
Reservalion!i may be made with Paul
Colburn , coordinator. at 278C Avt .
Carmel, Laguna Hills. phone 937-3169.
British Kill 4
In Be]f ast War
DELPMT (UPI\ -The British Anny
killed four perl'Ons during the night. two
of thrm Protc..'lta.nts run down by anny
vehicles. ·
A mUllant Protestant group declared a
virtual state or war againllt the army and
against Britain.
Two men were run over and ldlled by
army vehicles during Protestant rtot.irig
In eJl!t Belfast e91'1y today, and aoldlers
shot and killed two men at a roadblock at
Coa.gh. so.ithwest of Belfa!it, brlnglng the
death toll in lhree years of sec:taMan
violence to 600.
Bow wu on the tut leg ol the llgbtn-
infl.qUlck fund.ralling lrlp !Dr Bealclt
when the plane left Anchorage. tt was
schtdu..led to arrivt at 2:30 p.m. EDT. A
spokesman for the Federal Aviation
Administration said the plane had enough
fuel to last until around !:i p.m.
Jonz, presldtnt of Pan -Ala ska n
AirWays, a small air taxi eervlce whJch
operates the plane, charted a coune
from Anchorage in the south-central sec.
Uon of the state that would have taken the
plane acl'OS.! Prince William Sound, then
southeastward along the glacier-covered
mountainous coastline to Juneau ln
Alaska's panhandle.
The plane had a search locater beacon,
designed to activate during a crash.
"So far, we haven't heard a squawk. out
of it," said William Moore, a spokesman
for the National Transportation Safety
Board in Anchorage.
SCAG Chief
Hits Agency
Over Outfall .
A Huntington Beach city counc ilman
charged ~1on<lay night that the Aliso
\Yater l\tanagement Agency's plans !or a
giant regional sewe r outfall to serve
eight South County areas are an example
of "taxpayers subsidizing developer!."
The comment was made by Jack
Green, who also Is president of the
Southern California Association o f
Governments (SCAG) during a council
debate on Proposition 20, the Coastline
Protection Initiative.
He cited the AWMA project as an ex·
ample of why stricter coastline controls
are needed. The Huntington Beach coun--
cil voted 4.:J to support Proposition 20.
Green sa!d the A WMA application for
the $27.S million sewage treatment and
water reclamation project, which must
be reviewed by SCAG, shows that with
the proposed outfall, land could be devel·
oped to a potentia1 population of 368,000
peop le whlch, he said, is 168,000 above
any current projections for the area.
Similar figures have been cited by
South C.OUnty environmentalists who
criticize the AWMA project as "develop-
ment~riented."
In A WMA fact-finding clinics, Carl
Kymla, chairman of the agency's board
of directon, has explained that the size
of the ouU81l is mandated by the state
Water Quality Control Board, whJch In·
sists it must be large enough to provide
fail-safe protection in the e v e n t
participating sewage treatment districts
are unable to sell their reclaimed water.
Kymla bas said the WQCB proposed
that the ouUall, wblcb would be the only
one in the Irvin\ to Laguna Niguel
region, have a capacity of 64. mlllion
gallons a day. AWMA, according to
Kymla, bas proposed a capacity of 55
million gallons.
While the ouUall must be built to max·
imum foreseeable capacity, Kym.la has
pointed out that the A WMA plan does not
look more than five years ahead ln pro-
viding for sewage treatment.
Any expansion of treatment facilllies
beyorxl thal point, be states, would re-
quire a separate environmental impact
statement.
Saddleback Sets
Building Meet
On .Bid 'Mixup'
Saddleback College trustees will hold a
special meeting at '4 p.m. Wednesday to
resolve a mixup over bids on the col·
lege's new math--science building.
The trustees are expected to accept the
second low bid on the project and seek to
recover the sum of $117,998 from the
original low bic!~er's bonding company .
On Oct. 2, c. V. Holder, general con-
tractor of Gardena, asked trusttes to
release him from his low bld of
$3 ,904 ,006, because of a $122,600 clerical
error in computing the bid ,
Next lowest Of nine bid,,, from J. B.
Allen & Company of Anaheim, was
$117,998 higher than the Holder bid.
Ont the advice of trustee Hans Vog~.
tht> board voted to accept the low bid,
though sympathlzjng with H o 1 d e r ' s
predicament .
Ir Holder then refused to sign the con-
tract, Vogel explained, the board then
V.'OUld ht entitled lo 11ccept tht nelt low
b:d and suo for recovery of the doll•r dlf·
rerence.
Jn taking this route, turstees told
llolder, who rr.eanwhlle has refuted to
sign, they would be fulfulllns tbelr
obligation to "take cm of. the taxpayen'
money."
From Pflge J
EXTENSION • • •
Besi<d Po"'lble anne< of the adjacent
county Jandl to lnsure· proper develop-
montal con1n>l1, U the !'O!'dWIY should
bf: constructed.
Tho committee recognlml that 1 road
was nced<d to tmpnm emerioncy
response lime, but recommended that
the present alignment of t h e
thoroughfare be abandoned.
-
........... by Phil lnlorl1ndl
I
Chapel Fate ·
Presented
To Council
The queslion of abatement or St.
Mt.ry's Chapel , 428 Park Ave., Laguna
Beach as a dangerous building and a
public nuisance will once more come up
for discussion : . .!fore the City Council
Wedne>day ntsh1.
Following a city order to remove or
rehabilitate the quaint structure the
Laguaa Beach Community Historical
Society launched a drive to preserve the
Chapel as a local landmark.
The church ve!try and interested
citizens have been Investigating the cost
or rehabilitation of l!1'" building and last
weekend a concert to ralse funds for the
project was presented in Irvine Bowl. '
''Who Says R.ealtor1 Don't Have Saul?" But building official James Winter has
issued another abatement notice, ex·
pla lnlng in a memo to the council, "It Is •
n'"' the stafrs intention to single out tb:i!I f
bullding and ~e understand the dellca~
situation involved. Prop. 14' No Vote Urged ''However, we would be shirking our
responsibility were we to continue to ~
lay en forcement proceedings. This mat·
ter is relatively complex . due to the his-
toric nature and aesthetic desireabWty
of the structure." 6y Capistrano District The memo notes that engineers
e~timate cost of demolition a n d
reconstruction of the chapel "·ould be ap-
proximately equal to the cost of
rehabilitation.
Claiming that the district could Jose
$2.7 million in needed revenue next fiscal
year if Proposition 14 were to pass at the
polls in November, trustees of the
Capistrano Unified School District Mon-
day urged a no vote on the controversial
''tax-reform'' measure.
The action came at the end of a study
session examining the specifics in the
ballot item which would set a limit on the
amount of money a district could spend
for each pupil.
But because the present amount spent
by the district is well above the proposed
lhnit, the local district would lose the
large amount of money, trustees agreed.
The action came after debate among
trustees over whether they, as a school
board, should issue value judgments on
ballot iterru.
Six of the seven memben agreed to
take the stand. San Clemente Trustee
William Enquist abstained. ,
Supt. Truman Benedict insisted. that
the public "looks toward the board of
trustees for its interpretation of such
and suggested that a resolution by the
board was warranted.
"This proposition makes no school
districts," he added.
Trustees agreed and added that If the
proposal were to pass all tbe pennissive
overridea wh.ich finance several key
projecb Jn the district would be wiped
out.
"The way this reads," aaid Trustee
George White, "we would lose the com-
munity services revenue, the Regional
Occupational Program and others that
Sandy Wetherby
Rites Wednesday
Funeral services will be beld Wednes-
day at 3 p.m. in McConnick Laguna
Beach Chapel foi' Alexander D. "Sandy''
Wetherby, 145 Chiquita St., Laguna
Beach, who died last week at the age or
78.
Mr. Wetherby, a Laguna Beach resJ.
dent for 3S years, was a retired
wholesale grocery salesman. He is
survived by a brother, Dr. Macknider
Wetherby o{ Minneapolis.
Tbe Rev. · Pbllip Heppenstall of St.
George's Episcopal Church, Laguna
Hills, will officiatt: at the service, with
private burial following.
are so valuabl~ to citizens in the
district."
Trustee Gordon Peterson termed the
amendment "disastrous to the district."
From Page I
DULANEY ...
Dulaney's Laguna Hills enterprise.
Both nuns testified that Dulaney and
Shipley promised them a to percent
return on funds that were currently earn-
ing 5 percent.
They said that the $500,000 they turned
over to Dulaney was Invested in 250,000
shares of Azalea Mobile Homes stock at
$2 a share.
The Azalea stock is condemned by the
prosecution as "worthless and not worth
Lhe paper it is printed on."
Sister Mary Clarissa said thef were
assured by Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell
Circle, Huntington Beach, and Dulaney
when the hospital group met the defen-
danls at the Taj Mahal that Dulaney was
worth $.1 million.
It is alleged that Dulaney was in debt
at the time he rectived the hospital
funds.
'the nun SS.id she later learned that the
stock recommended to the hospital group
was worth nothing when the Joan went in-
to default and the hospital's allegations
sparked criminal action against seven
defendants.
Machan, 50, of San Bernardino is to get
a separate trial on identical charges of
grand theft, fraud and conspiracy.
On trial with Dulaney and Shipley are
Daniel Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird Drive,
Huntington Beach and Wendell Warren
Austin, 38, of Riverside.
Both sister Mary Clarissa and Sister
Mary Margaret were demoted by their
order following t h e opening of in·
vestigation into the World Financial
Trends operation headed by Dulaney.
The hospital administrator w a s
transferred to a Tulsa , Oklahoma, faclll·
ty operated by the same mother house
but in a les.!er business capacity.
Sister Mary Clarissa, a phannacist, re--
mained at St. Bernardine Hospital but is
no longer the corporation secretary of
that institution.
Sister Mary Margaret frankly admitted
before she le.ft the witnes,, stand this
morning that she was fully responsible
for the $500,000 loan to the Dulaney gr~up. .
St. ~1ary's Senior \Varden Jean Bede:ll
said Tuesda y he will respond to the city's
request to show cause why the dem<>lition
should not proceed.
"We have had a number of en~rs
and geologists look at lt ," said Bedell.
"The next m<>ve wlll be to sink a hole to
see If we can find bedrock. There seems
to be more evidence of slippage on the
hillside than that confined to our chapel."
The City ~il will have the option of
declaring the building a public nuisance
and requiring Its demolition; declaring
that does not constitute a p u b I i c
nuisance ; or postponing the matter ror
further consideration.
A representative of the Historical
Society also is expected to speak. in
bfl.halt of preserving the chapel.
75-year-old Man
Held in Murder
NEW YORK (UPI) -Homicide detec-
tives have arrested a 75--year-old man
and chargP.d him with murder in the
death of bis wife, whose body was un--
cnvered earlier in the day buried beneath
the cement floor of the couple.) Queens
home, police reparted.
Police said Louis DiPadova was booked
Moilday night on homici~.! charges.
Detectives said DIPadova reported to
polic eon Oct. 6 that his wife, Berta, 65,
v.'as missing and police had been asked to
search tbe house by relatives of the dead
v.-oman.
Principal at Laguna
Receives Doctorate
Laguna Beach High School principal
Donald Haught last week received his
doctorate In education from the Universi-
ty. of Southern Califomi.& for a disserta·
tion on "PersoMel Policies Relating to
Probationary Teachers in Southern
California."
Haught received his B.S. and master's
degree from Oldahoma State University.
He came to Laguna Beach as assistant
principal at the high school in 1968, after
serving five years as assistant high
school principal in Barstow.
He has been principal of Laguna Hl,Bh
since 1970.
R9ll Out The Red Carpet!
I
Three years ago wo had a requed from a local high •chool
for a red runner for-homecoming ceremonies. A remnant
cut into two nice runners. ,.,_
Without advertising, the word got a r o u n d, and our
business got sa good that we had to make another runner.
This year we win have the pleasure of loaning the three
runners to high school• all around .tho Southern C.lifomia
oreo, including all the local •chool5. Ono waekend, 1..t
yeor, we furni•hed THREE homecoming•. Also, several
times again this year we will furnish weddings and grand
openings.
If YOU have need for a red runner for an occasion, stop
end see us ..• no charge, The onty requirement is prompt
retun1 Ofter the ocusion.
Al Ald..n's you'll always get tho rod carpet traalmontl
ALDEN7S
CARPETS. e DRAPES
1663 l'lacentla Ave.
COSTA, MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thrv Thu,.., 9 to 5:30-FRI, 9 to 9-SAT .• 9:30 lo S
...... . .
I I
I I
v
a
a
n
I
I
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,
' Saddlehaek Today's Final
EDITION N.Y. Stocks-
VOL. 65, 1'10. 291, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1972 TEN CENTS
22,582 Irvine Trees Felled · After Ban I·ssued
By GFAlRGE LEIDAL
Of 1M Dtl1f l"LliM Sl•ff
Since the city o! Irvine pcwed it.5 law
banning the cutting of trees last
December, the Irvine Company has
sought and been given eight permits to
cut down 22,582 orange and eucalyptus
trees.
In January, • Jrvine Company
agricultural vice president Bill Williams
asked city councilmen to allow the city
n.anager to issue "blanket" tree-cutting
pennits for some 150 acres of drange
groves lhe company planned to convert
to other agriciJllural uses -row crops.
The request was the first exception
granted to the city law enacted Dec. 31,
1971. The law makes it a misdemeanor to
cut a tree larger than 3.5 inches unless a
permit bas been granted. Without a
permit, violators are sub)ect to a $500
fine and/or six months in jail for each
trc. cut. ·
When Williams sought the pennit he
said many of the central Irvine orange
groves were subject to a root disease
known as "quick decline." Since oranges
have become less profitable to grow due
to competition from Flcrida and ether
states, Williams ther." tcld ccuncilmen, it
is net possible tc replant the old groves
with new trees.
Thus, the lrYine Company's t~ losses,
a company spokesman noted , become
assets for Irvine homeowners who have
fireplaces.
"The agriculture division of the com·
p&ny is now in the firewood business,''
.according to Dean Buchinger, manager
of the orchard division.
Orange and eucalyptus tree wood is
being sold on weekends at the company
yard at Myford Road and Irvine
Boulevard, near Tustin. Hours it is open
are from 9 a.m:--to 6 p.m. Firewood is to
be sold in quantities up to cord lots.
ln late October a second yard will be
opened at Sand Canyon Road and the
Santa Ana Freeway.
Bucbinger reasons that selling the
trees for firewood is a boon to the
ecology.
"The firewood comes from dead trees
which must be removed for estbctic and
safety reasons and, even adhering to
burning regulations, disposal of the trees
by incineration would add to air pollu·
tion." he said.
"So, the dectsicn has been made to let
!See TREES, Page ll
Teen Theft Ring Broken
Viejo-Laguna Operation Allegedly Bought Drugs
A Mission Viejo-Laguna Beach teenage
burglary ring which stole to finance dope
purchase and distribution operations has
been broken by detectives of the Laguna
~ch . Police Departmen~ and the
Orange County Sherifri. Departn;ient
Arrests of two 15-year-old Laguna
youths and two A1ission Viejo juveniles
have cleared 20 Laguna Beach burglaries
and at least twice that many county
crimes, Det. Sgt . Neil Purcell said today.
The youngsters are in custody pending
hearings today on the police accusations.
* * * Viejo Burglary
Prevention Plan
On in October •
October has been designated as
Burglary Prevention Month in Mission
Viejo by tbe Orange County Sheriff's
Department.
Mission Viejo ts just one target area in
a $250,000 federal funded pilot program
in Orange County aimed at stopping the
rising incidents of burglaries.
Jt is funded through the California
Council on Criminal Justice with 40 per·
cent matching funds from the county.
Much of money is being used in
southern Orange County communities, in·
cltJ<iirnt Irvine and Mission Viejo, where
several factors contribute to increased
burglaries.
About 70 of burglaries are committed
by juveniles, Sgt. Les Osman of tbe
sherifrs burglary prevention detail said.
Family-oriented communities and the
student high school population contribute
to tlm.
Sliding doors and windows and. of~n
unlocked doors in Southern California
homes also add to burglary opportun!Ues.
And in new communities, neighbors
often aren'.t close enough to know if
strangers lurking around other homes
are suspect.
Mi§ion Viejo residents are urged by
the sheriff's department to call the office
at 834-3400 for o. free security inspection.
Sgt. Osman and 10 other members or
the prevention squad will concentrate on
Mission Viejo during October. They are
• available to talk to local groups about
security.
Residents of all Orange County com·
munities are also welcome to call the
sberlU's o'ffice for burglary checks or
tall:.; until April, 1973, wt.en the program
ebds, Sgt. Osman added.
Similar programs are being conducted
by police and sheriff's departments in
~Angeles,~ Francisco a1l40aklaod.
Explorers Post
Meeting Slated
More arrests may be made.
Purcell said the ring specialized in
burglaries of residents with louvered
w.indows, and that some clues came from
evidence of blood found by the broken
glass.
Det. Alex Jimenez of t h e Laguna
Beach department was responsible for
local investigation of the crimes, Purcell
sajd .
The Laguna youths were students al
Laguna Beach High School and were ar·
rested at their homes over the weekend.
''They were from good homes. There
was no need for them to steal, it's not a
case of them stealing for a need, just
their own personal gain," Purcell said.
Purcell said the youths were selling the
stolen property and making money to
"buy dope which ~y would distribute."
"We classified it as a .juvenile ring ;
they went around residential and com·
mereial areas with the intent of
burglarizing," he said. .. -
Aside from resideoces, the youths hit
doctors' offices, burglarized the Sports
Deroin ·Found
~inge,r McNair Says lnT nt .
NEWAR!<,-.J(, ·J. (!IP!)-Slnpr-actress Barbara M<Nalr ilaii•mreolidlill'
~ o!J>early a ha~ oonoe Ii. heroin at tlJe Playboy Club ·tn McA!ee, it
,,.. disclooed today,
Miss McNaJr and her husband, Rick Manzie, were arraigned on charges
in federal court here. Each was ordered to post a SJ0,000 bond. They pleaded
innocent.
A spokesman for the Playboy Club said ~fiss McNair, 37, appeared three
times this week in the swank Penthouse of the club-hotel in pdvate perform-
ances for a group of conventloneers. She was arrested Monday night in her
dressing room.
Her husband acts as her business agent.
U.S. District Court Judge Lawrence A. Whipple set no travel restrictions
on the couple. The Playboy Club said the singer had scheduled engagements
in Chicago Wednesday and again in McAfee Thursday.
A Port of New York Authority spokesman said a package was traced from
Newark Airport to Miss McNair, who signed·for it. at the Playboy Cub.
Bankers Deny Coastal .
Loans Due to Prop. 20
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of JM DalfY ...... '"'"
The California Mortgage Bankers
Association Monday voted not to grant
cans of any kind in the coastal zone where
building could be restricted by the pass--
age of Proposition 20.
The association is a v o 1 u n t a r y
organization made up primarily of in·
dependent mortgage bankers. The vote is
advisory and will be followed at the in·
dividual members' discretion.
ReacUon to the vote ln Orange coast
lending institutions and among local
realtors wu guarded. Most said they had
not bad an opportunity to study the
recomm~ndation in full.
Association president Robert E •
M'>rgan said .in Los Angeles Monday
"Passage of Prop. 20 on the Nov . 7 ballot
would have a drastic effec\ op the people
of California.
"The cost to taxpayers. property
owners and the general public would be
disastrous. Prop. 20 would Htablish a ~
virtual moratoriwn on all building of any
kind within Its Ill-defined permit area for
a five-year period. The moratorium ap.
plies to public projects as well as
private.
"This moratorium, if coupled with the
building shutdown now taking place
throughout California as a result of the
recent state Supreme C.ourt decision in
the Mammoth Mountain case -which
states that local government must file
environmental impact reports on proj-
ects requested by priva~e parties -
would therefore halt all work by local
(See LOANS, Page ll
World store, and the Funk Factory in
Laguna Beach.
A motorcycle stolen in the Saddlebaclt
area was traced ·to Laguna Beach in con-
nection with the ring's operation, Purcell
said.
He said that the ring's breakup ac·
counts for about $2,000 in local thefts,
and much more in the county area. Some
thefts had not bee.J1 reported.
"A lot of people were pretty worried
about all these burglaries," Purcell said,
noting that the ring specialized in unoc·
cupied houses.
Saddleback Sets
Bond Voting Date
For February 6
Saddlebact Valley Unflled School
District trustees Monday night set Feb. 6
as the date for a combined $28 million
bond election and $18 mlllion state a~
portionment election.
Tbe $4& million total. D i s t r i c t
Superintendent William Zogg said today,
is needed for construction of schools over
the next five years.
1be $28 million bond m~ will be
enough to qualify the school·poor district
for state school building ald.
The apportionment election sets the
borrowing capacity for that state aid or
the loan from the state at $13 million.
The action by the trustees of the newl y
unified district was unanimous.
The February date was selected in·
stead of po~ible earlier time in
December or January to avoid the rush.
ed holiday season and better "get the
message to the people." 7.ogg said.
Another newlr. unified district, Irvine.
has set a $50 million bond election in con-
junction with the Nov. 7 General Elec-
tion.
Irvine, Saddleback Valley and 'I\Jstin
unified school districts were formed in a
successful unification election last June
from the Tustin Elementary, Tustin
Union High and San J~quln Elementary
districts.
The new districts will become officially
operational as of July 1, 1973.
The Saddleback District is expected to
have a student enrollment of 13,000 to
14.000 when it opens. Estimates call for
that to rise to at least 18,000 in 1971·78.
The 14,000 pupils are enolJgh to require
at least another high school and two new
intermediate schools already planned will
be at capacity when they open, Zogg
said.
School districts must be at full bonding
capacity before they qualify for state aid.
Local taxpayers must authorize bond
sales exceeding the spending amount.
which is 10 percent of the a.uessed valua·
lion. mlfius bonded indebtedness.
Zogg is predicting the need for nine
(See BOND, Page ti
, .. -.. ,,,.~,,,.,.
NII. T .. ILCIT Stsff .....
5T1JMPS REPLACE TREES IN IRVINE, DESPITE CITY BAN
Irvine Comp.ny-CUtt·a,512.0ranee-•nd Euc1lyptus With City Permission
Citizens' Threats Prompt
Renewed Airport Debate?
Threats of a citizen launched referen--
dum to deny the Rinker rewning may
have prompted renewed debate on the
controversial El Toro airport area 0'Wning
by Irvine councilmen.
Discussion of the Rinker zoning and
another central Irvine parcel for wbich
the Larwin Company is seeking a rC?.on·
ing, have been adde<I to tonight's City
Council meeting .agenda. Councilmen
meet at 7:30 o'clock in city hall, 4201
Campus Drive.
Both the Larwin and Rinker 7.()llings
have been set for .council ad.ion· Nov. 14.
AFS Qub Sets
Dinner in Viejo
The American Field Service (AFS l
Club of Mission Viejo High School will
spomor a third annual get acquainted
dinner Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. in the
high school multi.purpose room .
AFS Is active in bringing foreign
students to this country and httping
American students go 11broad.
Participating in the fund-ral1lng dinner
will be this year's foreign exchange stu ·
dent, Lis Rosendahl of Denmark and two
students from Missioo Viejo High who
spent the summer in foreign countries:
Steve Ramirez and Barbara Ambrose.
Steve went to Colombta and Barbara to
A!ghaolstan. Ticket.a are $1 .$0 for adults
and Sl for cbJJdren.
The Harker-Rinker Development Com~
pany expects a second reading of the
residential rezoning !!Ought for the 10.
acre parcel near El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station since January.
Larwin officiaJs. too. are awaiting a
second reading-final approval-of 1.00-
ing of a 34-acre parcel to accommodate
1.87 residences. That matter has been
~Id up by city government pending plan4
n1ng commission consideration of a cen4
tral Irvine land use policy plan.
Councilmen, .lOtably Henry Quigley,
have repeatedly put the city staff on
notice that at least a preliminary draft of
that policy plan be ready for the council
to use in judging the two zonings destined
f<.r that Nov . 14 meeting.
Mayor William Fischbach said today.
however, that although he will continue
to oppose the Rinker rerontng. he is
aware citizens of Irvine are becoming
aroused over the Wut:.
A press conference has been called for
9 a.m. Thursday in the press room of the
old courthouse in Santa Ana. ·
Charles Huegy 0£ 18112 Mann SI..
.University Park, declined today to reveal
!he nature of the press meet other than
to say it would deal with plans for a
citizen referendum to reverse the ell·
pected council approval of the Rinker
zoning bid.
Mayor Fischbach said today it is his
(See 1HREATS. Page %1
Or Ange Co Ast
A general meeting for the organization
of a Saddleback Valley division or the
Orange County SherUrs law enforcement
Explorera Post will take place Wedoes.
day at 7:3D p.m. at Mission Viejo IIigh
School.
Burgl~rs Steal
New Appliances
In Viejo Break-in
Burglars carried off brand new elec-
trical appUar>Ce$ valued at nearly $500
and Inflicted damage that has not yet
been nsseSBed by the builders in a raid
Monday night on a medical offiO! build·
in& under construction in Mission Viejo.
Nun Recalls Shipley Loan \t'enlber
The weatherlady says lt's going
10 be cloudy on \Vednesday. It
i;nlghl even rain. Temperatures •t
lhe beaches •·ill be in the low .105
rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight
50-Q.
Males and females between 15 and 21·
years· old lntert:!sted in la'! enforcement
are invited to the meeting in room 222.
The Saddlcbac\: division wlll be a un it
-· o( Explorer Post 44D which bas ~ in
operation by I.he Sheriff's Department in
santa Ana O)nce May, 191111.
Members receive tralnlng sJrnllar to
that police get and work with pollcem~
or women on rouUne assignment.a or dur4
Ing eIMrr slluallons.
"Bug Case Disclaimed
I.OS ANGELES (API -Top Nixon
Administration officials had , no prior
\nowlOdge of the Waterg•I• bugging In-
cident, says PrestdtnUal advtaer Robert
II. Finch.
'
)
Deputies said the appliances were
taken from thelr crates at 17852 Puerta
Real The Andenon and Howard Electric
Company tnc. of Newport Beach' valued
the equlpmeot at $486.
Officers said the lntrudm ripped
hardware trorn the doors and maliciously
dlmaged several doorways btfore they
carried tlJeir loot fronl..lhe building.
Sherlfrt deputies are""ilso lnvestlgatll"l(J
the theft or a brand new disbwastfer from
fl nearby home' under construction.
They &aid burglars took the appliance
from its crate at 26941 Via Zaragosa
shortly after construction crews had left
the area. Mission Vle)o Company or-
rlcials valued the appll&nce at $120.75
'
l
;·
"
Siste r Mary Clarissa Testifies in Fraud Case
By TOM BARLEY
Clf .. Dell'!' "'"' ., ...
World Financlal Trends Vice Pres\dent
Ja.... Sblpley wu Identified today tn
Orange County Sllfl"rlor Court teaUmony
In the "Taj Mahal" "lal as the man who
apparently stood IO gain most from a
$SOO,OOO hospttal loll! that .. matns """
paid IOday.
Slaw Ma{)' ClaO... Ille second Roman
CalllOllc mm fo tdllf)' In the trial of
Shipley, Lagwu. Will ftn.ncler J09<ph
Dulaney and t..to codtfendants, picked
out Shipley 11 flit man to whom tht loan
wns made neirl)' ~ur yeen ago.
,,,,. former tnetnber of the Bnard of
Directon al St, Btrnardioe Hospital, san
Bernardino, ,..tilled before Judie Jlunes
Turner that Dulaney, 31, ol. 2&31 Via
Cascadlta, San Clemente, assured her
and felloW directors that be would
personally guarantee the loan.
Sister Mary CJari.sla backed the earlier
i..tlmony of• ho<pltat admtnlstrator
Sister Mary M111aret that boopjtal Con-
troller Robert Machan first suggested en·
trusting $500.000 In rt.terVe tund1 to
O)l.laney'1 Laguna Hilla enterpri1e.
Both nuns testified th.nt Dulanc1 and
Shipley promiRd them • 10 ,,.,...t
' return on funds that '\-ere currenUy eam-
lng 5 percent.
'
They '8id that the $500.GOO they turned
over to Dulaney wu Invested In 250.000
shares of Atalea ~lobile Jfome1 stock at
S2 a sbart.
Thf> Au.lea stock I!: condemned by the
prosecution as "worthless and not worth
the paper it Is prlntfd on."
Sist~r Mary Clarissa said they were
as.o;urcd by Shipley, 38, of 189S1 Lowell
Circle, HunUn~ton Beach, and Du11ney
when the ho!'lp1tol group met the defen-
danL, at the Taj Mahal that D.tl111ney wu
worth $3 million. '
It ,, •ll<ted that D.llaney WU In debt
at the lirnt • hf: rtetlved the hospital
!See DULANEY, Pago It
' '
INSIDE TODA\'
Bomba movits -tht Philip-
pines verrion of the norno flick
-have been banned 'frOm the
ntw 1oci1i11 of Prcaitltnt Fnditt·
ond E. MC1'cos. Ste 1~ on
Poae 12.
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'
2 DllLY PILOl IS
From l'qe I
LOANS ...
tJvenuntnts. oontratt.on. developers
aod private lending 1Mtlh1llans."
Many of the loan olDctrs eontacted at
Orange co.st lnlnks said they had not
received Ill)' oUlclal policy 11atements
lrom their IUperion relatlag lo COU1aJ
zone-loans.
Bill Worfor.~ of the Union Bank pointed
out that with the eltcllon three WL>eks
B\fl.lY and the effect or the environmental
impact decision, "'it's almost a moot
point."
Ile said that unofficially his bank has
v.·arned their loan ofriccrs to "be
careful" \/.'hen granting loans for the
co:istal zone. "It depends on a number or
V;'lriables. but al the moment we don't
have that problem. because we don 't
have any applications for that area," he
s.:ud.
A spokesman for Avco Financial
Services said they would not take the"'
<1ssociation 's vole into consideration
because Avco lends only lo individual
homeowners. not developers.
Larry Smith. speaking for another
mortgage firm. The Alison Com pany 1n
Newport Beach said they have adopted a
wait ancl see attitude. "With the election
only three weeks away, there has not
been any specUic policy statement from
our main office," he reported.
Representatives ·or the local boards of
realtors seemed a little surprised at the
association's vote.
Glen Martin of the Newport Harbor-
Costa Mesa board said "it's·\'ery possible
that the association is panicking. I'm not
quite certain what their thinking was in
deciding that Prop. 20 would do so methng
that the environmental impact has not
already done.
"Why halt construction retroactively
by "'ithdrawing fund s already granted."
he asked. "If their thinking was to
v.ithhold funds not yet granted and save
themselves the lime and effort of proc-
essing loans and then have the prop-
osition passed, I can understand that,"
he added.
E. L. Risley, president of the South
Orange County board noted his board like
the olhers in the area has gone on record
opposing Prop . 20. "This new decision
\\•ill definitely affe<:t our business," he
said, although he did acknowledge that
business had already been affected by
the state Supreme Court's decision.
Evelyn \Vilcox, executive secretary of
the lluntington Beach-Fountain Valley
board or realtors, said she did not want
to comment on the vote .
Frona l'age I
DULANEY ...
funds .
The nun said she later learned that the
stock recommended to the hospital group
was worth nothing when the loan went in-
to default and the hoopital 's allegations
sparked criminal actlon against seven
defendants.
Machan , 50. of San Bernardino is to get
a separate trial on identical charges of
grand theft. fraud and COilfPiracy.
On trial with Dulan ey a1lt Shipley are
Daniel Hayes, 40. of 8211 Snowbird Drive,
Jluntington Beach and \.\.'endcll Warren
Austin, 38. of Riverside.
Both sister Mary Clarissa and Sister
~tary Margaret were demoted by their
order following t h e opening of in-
vestigation Into the Worlci Financial
Trends operation headed by Dulaney.
The hospital admi nistrator w a s
tra.nsferred to a Tulsa, Oklahoma, facili-
ty operated by the same mother house
but in a lesser business capacity.
Sis ter Mary Clarissa. a pharmacist. re-
mained at St. Bernardine Hospital but is
no longer the corporation secretary of
that institution.
Sister Mary Margaret frankly admitted
before she left the witness stand this
morning that she was fully responsible
for the $500,000 loan to the Dulaney
group.
She'll l\1iss Movie
PARIS (AP) -Mrs. Georges Pom-
pid~. wife of the French president. has
decided not to attend the opening of the
film "The Godfather."
The decision, announced J\1onday by
Elysee Palace without explanation, was
apparently made becau se some Italians
were upset with her plans to do so.
t
OUMGI COAST 1s
DAILY PILOT
t"9 ~ C-t DA.IL Y PILOT, wltll wti~
Is (91ftb1Md ~ """'""'"" 11 Pll&llotle<I b'JI "'-0••-(0<111 1"11t1tiltilng C;.,_ny, ~'°"""
nit ..illtlons ••e M•wi.i. Mond•v tll•QUOh
Frldlr, lor COSI• Mew, Nwwp&rt 15.,,11,
Hunllng!WI '51ilC!l/~oun11111 V1t!ltv. l1.o~
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Sin J11<1n C.olttr1no. I. 1f111111 rMJlonet
Miiion k pUl)lllhtd Sitvnl"V1 ind S"""~V1.
,,.. prlnclCNI pubh1flfng Jllanl h If "' WHI
l •J' ~t,.n, COi.it Nina. C•lltotni., 916U.
Ro~1rt N. W11d
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Vk:e Prttict.n• Ind O.n.r11 'Mrw~r
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A.11"""' Mllll'91rto ECll!on
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I
•
•
,, ·1:1'
LOST IN STORM
Rep. Ha le Boggi
F r om Page l
TREES • • •
th · public enjoy tilt! wood this winter
during the fireplace season," he con-
clued. '
Prices for the firewood will be com-
petitive. a com;Jany spokesman noted.
Mean\vhile, city hall officials note there
have been other cutt ing permits issued
since the council enacted what was
believed to hiive been one of the toughest
tree protection ordinances in California.
Only t"·o other cities in the state -
Carmel aod Sacramento -had si milar
tree cutting laws, "''hen the hours~ld city
government in Irvine passed its first city
ordinanti! to safeguard trees.
Others receiving city permits to
remove trees have been :
-The Hoeptner Ran ch, 35 trees subject
to quick decline.
-Pacific Telephone Company, three
eucalyptus trees along .Moulton Parkway
which were replaced with eight-foot
duplicates following excavation for
telephone service lines to new switching
center Cear the Ranch.
-The Irvine Company, two trees at the
intersection of Culver Drive a n d
J\lichelson Avenue in University Park.
Botli were dead, human enhancement
director Paul Brady noted.
Brady said all of the 22.582 trees
covered by the city permits were on land
included in lhe original 250 acres reviev.;-
ed by the council in January. The
removals involved only 180 of the total
acreage subject to the "blanket"
permits.
An Irvine Company spokesman said the
acreage will be replanted in row crops
and is not deslined for immediate
development.
Councilmen in December \\'e re con·
cemed lhat developers would bulldoze
trees to make room for new housing. By
passing the la\\", one hope of the council
was lo put developers on notice that
trees \vould be requi red to be preserved
within new tracts.
Moscone Speaks
At UC I Forum
State Sen. George Moscone (0-San
Francisco) was featured speaker during
a two-ho1.1r forum on the health sciences
ballot measure -Proposition 2 -held at
UC Irvine today.
Senate majority leader Moscone }oined
with_ Chancell!J' Daniel G. Aldrich Jr.,
medical school dean Warren L. Bostick
and UCI planner ~liflon Miller in the
lorwn set by the Student Aliairs Conr
tnittee for Lectures.
The ooon session Jn 1-lumanities ~!all in-
cluded questions from students and
f<icu!ty members on higher education and
the ltgislature.
Se ries on B rai1t
Begins T o1til.(l1t
"Babies and Cocktail Parties" ts the ti·
Ile of !he first of a five·p11rt lecture
series on the brain which opens tonight
at UC Irvine.
The series is open to the public. It i$
sponsored hy the Friends of UCL
The opening lecture v.·i!\ be given at 8
p,n1 . in the Social Science Lecture Hall
hy Professor Norman Wi enhcrge1 of the
UCI staff. 1-fe will detnil the 'ntest find-
ings of how the brain responds to
!:!Cl<'Cled sllmuli.
fJnc ex<1mple of s('!rctcd rcsponsr, he
says. is the :ihility or a n1otht>r who is
hos11ng a cocktail p;irly in her living
r(l(lm to hear her b:ihy crying in the next
room .
British l(ilJ 4,
In BeJfast War
HELF'AST IUPT) -The British Army
killed four persons durintf the night, two
of them Protestants run dOY.'n by anny vehicles.
A militant Protc~tflnt group declared a
virtual state ot war B(l&lhSt lhc nrmy and
aRainst Britain.
Two m~n w,.rc run ove.r ::ind killed by
army v('hlcle! durln~ Protestant rioting
in ea!it OeUa5t early today, and soldiers
i:.hol nnd k!JlcU two mrn nt a roadblock at
C:Oaii:h. so.uhwcst of Belf11!!f. bringing tht
de::th toll in three years or sectarian
\'IOl('nce lo 60!l.
. . ' • • • • • • •
lll'I T.........,
ALASKA CONGRESSMAN
Rep. Nick Begich
Fisc hbach Says
C11tting of Trees
Done Within La,v
Icvine J\fayor William Fischbach ~id
l oday, "So far as I know all cutting of
trees done by the Irvine Company was
accomplished "''ithin the term s of the ...
'Paw."
"Although at first il seems to be a
staggering number or trees invoJ\·ed. all
\\'ere removed following approval by the
city manager of the required permits,"'
the mayor said.
Fischbach noted the Irvine Company
o""·ns approximately one million orange
trees within the new city.
The number of trees being removed for
reasons of disease "are less than t\\'O
percent of the· total," Fischba c h
observed.
l~e recalled that authority to grant
tree-cutting permits was given by the
counci: to the city manager. Although
there may be little reason to question the
tUige scale permission granted to the
Irvine Company for removal of ·22.582
trees, Mayor Fischbach said, "I hope the
city staff is mindful of oi.Jr policy lo
preserve trees whenever and where\•er it
is possible.
"The living green things of Irvine must
be preserved for the enjoyment of future
generations insofar as it is possible to
save them," the mayor coocluded.
Obvious exceptions noted by coun-
cilmen and city staff are those trees
which are dead or dying.
When city councilmeD granted tbe
permit authority at the behest of Bill
\Villiams, Irvine Company vice president
for agriculture, the understanding was
only trees that were diseased would be
cut while healthy trees would be spared.
However. with 22,582 trees being cut
from 180 acres, the exercise or the city
permits means an average of 125 trees
per acre are being removed.
Last Jan. 5, Williams told councilmen
the trees expected to be removed from
"1,000 to 1.200" :.cres of Irvine Company
ranchlands, bad been planted by the
'"thrifty Scot -James Irvine" at the
rate of 40 trees per acre.
Air Conditioner
Taken From Store
Thieves who enter-ed by the back door
while the owner was busy in the front of
the premises carried off a portable air
conditioner from a Laguna Hills store
Monday, Orange Count/ Sheriff's officers
said.
Store owner George LE'onard Dunham
of the General Appliance Company, 27662
F~bes Road, said the intruders took the
air conditioner from the garage area of
the sto re while he was serving customers
at the front.
Dunham valued the appliance at $81.25. '
Caspers to Discuss
Reaction to Airport
County response to the Camp Pendle-
ton airport study requested by Filth Dis-
trict Supervisor Ronald Caspers will be
discussed at the Wednesday evening
1neeting of the Saddleback Area Coordi-
naUng Council.
Guest speaker will be Robert
Bresnahan, director o! aviation for
Orange County. The 7:30 meeting ln the
Royal Savings Building, El Toro , is open
to the public.
Irvine Signups Set
The city of Irvine Youth Employment
Service (YES) will sign up interested
~ludent!' from 9:30 a.m. to l p.m. Thurs-
day at Unive rsity High School.
Irv ine youths age 14 or more who want
10 fill pnrt time jobs available through
YES can register for the voluntary
employment service at tables to be set
up In the mall area of Uni High.
Adults interested In vohml.C!crlng to
man the YES desk ln city ball from 1 to S
p.m. weekdays are urged to call Rose
Palmer at 833-3840.
Minuteman Launched
VANDENBERG Affi FORCE BASE
(AP) -A Minuteman 111 Intercontinen-
tal baHistic miMlle was launched down
tho weatem teat range over the Paclrtc
Ocean here Monday, the AJr Force an-
nounccxt . ~launch at 3 p.m. was one of
a 5eriet ot operaUonal '.ests by lha
Strategic Air Command.
I ,
' Planes Seel{ing Boggs
Armada Hunt.s So lo 1i's Craft Off Alaska
...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska CAP) -A fl.et or 1nllltary and private planes new out of
here at dawn loday to search Alaska's
mountainous southern coast for a long.
missing lJght plane carrying llouse
Dcrnocratic ~ader llal~ Boggs and three
other penons on a campaign trip.
The 15 planes planned to fly criss-cross
patterns along the 566-mile Ancborage-to-
Juneau run on which the plane ap-
p.1rentl y went down J\fonday.
Inclu ded in the search group were elec4
Ironically equipped HCI30s. An Air Force
11Cl30 searched unsuccessfully through
the night ror the plane carrying Boggs,
Alaska's lone llouse member, a con-
gressional aide and the pilot.
Additional search planes were schedul-
ed to ta ke to lhe air later in the day.
The Air Force said the forecast was for
strong wind, an overcas t and "very
n1arglnal flying weather."
In Juneau, meanwhile, the state's
Rescue Coordination Center said It was
checking reports from an unidentified
hanl radio operator in California that he
heard a distress call from the missing
plane on a citizens radio band.
Spokesmen would -not give any details on
lhe matter.
A spokesman said ham radio operators
In the area had been asked to tune to the
OOnd -Channel 9 -early today in hopes
of picking up a signal.
He said no voice contact bad been
made, but in response to queries such as
"Tap your microphone if you hear us,"
several clicks were heard. T h e
spokesman said, however, that the clicks
did not indicate a signal [rom the downed
plane. saying they could easily be caused
by the fli ckering of nearby house lights
or the starting of a car engine.
The \Vhite House said President Nixon
has been receiving reports on the search
efforts.
Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
Nixon, through his military aide, offered
all possible assistance and provided for
transportation for the Boggs family to go
to Alaska. -
House Speaker Carl Albert said the
pilot of the missing plane is reputed to be
one of the best bush pilots in Alaska and
would kll<lw every possible landing spot
betv,.een Anchorage and Juneau.
"! ca"nnot personaUy . give up hope."
Albert said .
Aboard the twin-engine Cessna 310
were Boggs, 58: Rep. Nick Begich. a 41}.
year-<1ld Democrat; Beg i ch 's ad-
ministrative assistant, Russell Brown.
37; and the pilot, 38-year-old Don E.
Jonz.
Boggs' administrative assistant, Gary
Hymel, said in Washington that the last
radio contact with the plane came 12
minu tes after takeoff Monday .. when Jonz
Watson Opposed
By Saddleback
Saddleback Valley Unified -School
District trustees Monday joined the
growing school board opposition to the
\Vatson Amendment, Proposition 14, on
!he Nov. 7 general electio11 ballot.
Proposition 14, drafted by Los Angeles
County a~r Philip Wat!on. would
reduce property taxes and set a limit on
I he amount such taxes could be used to
fund schools.
Another new unified board -Irvine -
recently passed a resolution against the
measure.
Saddleback Valley trustees listed three
reasons for opposition: the $770 million
loss in school revenue in the state if it
pa sses: that tax relief provided by the
measure would apply more to large
business and industry than to in-
dividuals and that tax levies now allowed
for special education programs would be
cut out.
filed a fiigh1 plan. There \li'as no 'Sign ol
lroobl~.
Boggs , who left Washlni;ton oa Sunday
and had been due to return this morning,
had gone lo Alaska to campaign for
Bcglch, a native of Eveleth, Minn., \\'ho is
seeking rHl{'elion lo a second term.
Boggs' wife. Lindy, was the only
member of lhe family nt home ln--
Helhesda, Md., Monday night.
113 the word spread to Boggs' ho m e
state of Louisiana, there was an un-
mistakable ring of affecllon for the con-
gressman.
Edward Cocke stood solemnly on 'the
sldcwalk outside a New Orleans bar and
Saddleback Se ts
Building Mee t
On Bid 'Mixup'
Saddleback College trustee{ Will hold a
special meeting at 4 p.m. Wednesday ta
resolve :i n1ixup over bids on the col·
lcge's new math·science t'lui\dlng.
The lrustces arc expected to accept the
second low bid on the project and seek to
recover the sum ot $117,998 from the
original low biC-1er's bonding company.
On Oct. 2, C. V. Holder, genhal con-
tractor of Gardena, asked trustees to
release him fron1 his low bid of
$3.904.006. because or a $12%,600 clerical
error in computing the bid.
_Ne.xi lowest of nine bids, from J. B.
Allen & Company of Anaheim. was
$117,998 higher ti.an the Holder bid. •
Ont the advice of trustee Ha ns Vogcl,
tht• board ~led to accept the low bid,
though sympathizing with Ho Ider 's
predicament.
If Holder then refused to sign the con-
tract, Vogel explained, the board then
v1ould be entitled to acc~t the next low
h:d and sue for recovery of the dollar dif-
ference.
ln ta king this route, turstees told
Holder. who rr.eanwhile has refused to
sign, they would be fulfulling their
obligation to ·•take care of the taxpayers'
money."
Viejo Ki,vanians
Elect Officers
Robert Figeira was installed as presi-
dent of the Mission Viejo Kiwanis Club at
the club's annual :nstallation dinner at
the Beach House in Laguna Beach.
other officers installed were Chester
Briner, president-elect; Robert Freiberg,
vice president ; Paul Raber, secretary;
and Lou Rico, b'easurer.
Selected to serve on the board of direc-
tors were Pran k Difa bbio. Al Farnocchia,
Jack Fuller, Chuck Kinde,i:. Jack Krystoff,
Keith Sims and Don Trimble.
The service group, which is involved •. .,
with sponsoring youth activities and com-
munity betterment programs. meets at
the Mission Viejo Inn at 7: 15 a.m. on
Tuesdays. Persons interested i n
membership may contact Figeira at 837-
6100.
Viej o Elks Planning
Halloween Soh·ee
The Mission Viejo Elks Lodge 2444 will
sponsor a llal\owccn Costume Ball for
members Oct. 'Z1 at the Marine Corps
Lighter Than Air facil ity in Santa Ana
beginning with dinner at 7 p.m.
P-rizes will be given fo r best costumes.
A limited number of tickets will be sold.
All Elks are urged to ~et their reserva-
tions in early.
said that Boggs ls ''our kind of people."
Boggs was on the laat leg of the lightn-
ing-quick fund·ralslng trip for Begich
when the plane left Anchorage. It was
scheduled to arrivf' at 2:SO p.m. ElYI'. f\
spokesman for the Federal Aviation
Ad1ninistratlon said the plane had' enough
fuel to last until around 5 p.m.
Jon:r;, president of Pa n -~I ask a.11
Airways, a small air taxi service whlcll
operates the plane, charted a course
from Anchorage in the south-central sec.
ilon of the state thoit would have taken the
plane across Prlnce Wllllam Sound, then
southeastward along the glacier-covered
mountainous coastllne to Juneau in
Alaska's panhandle. ~
Th.e plane had a search locater beacon.
designed to acUvate during a crash.
"So far, we haven't beard a squawk cut
of it," said William Moore, a spokesman
for •the National Transportation Safety
Board in Anchorage.
FroM Pqe l
THREATS ...
understanding the referendum petition
drive may not be in until the council
takes final action on the zoning by voting
to approve the :.econd reading.
He praised the potential referendum
effort saying it indicates the "people of
Irvine are sufficienUy vigorous, aroused
and inU:rested in their city government
to undertake lhe labor and expense of
seeking a referendum.
"The city councilmen, by virtue of
their being relected, are not infallible,"
Fischbach said, noting the issue becomes
somewhat of a ;>aradox fo r him.
On the one hand he said he enjoys the
prospect of living in a city where people
care enough to take action.
On the other hand, should the council
take action to approve the Rinker zon-
ing, as mayor, he said he feels obligated
to support that council deci sion "unless
and unW a court or law or a vote of the
pe<iple reverses that council pos!Uon."
From Pagel
BOND ...
schools in five yea rs in addilion to ad·
ministrative offices, busing and main-
tenance facilities.
The bonds are earmarked to· go for
seven elementary schools. two In-
termediate and two hig h schools.
Trustees also recognized and thanked
new volunteer members of a bond elec.-
tion committee, which met for the first
time with ZQgg last week.
The members Include Saddlebact
residents James Ca rlin, ~trs. Richard
Charnitski, Mrs. Shirl Hirrel, Mrs. James
Leavitt, Robert Minier, Mrs. Jeanne Rat-
tray, Mrs. Robert Reeves, Mrs . Emi;net
Rixford, Mrs. Richard Sass. Mrs.
Richard Scalettar, Harry Wandling and
Mrs. Loa Young.
Angela Davis
Backs Defendant
r:J'EW YORK (AP} -Black militant
Angela Davis put in an appearance at
Manhattan Supreme Court's press room
to expres3 her "profounJ solidarity" with
militan t Puerto Rican nationalist Carlos
Feliciano, belng tried on charges of at-
tempting to bomb the General Electric
building &re in 1970.
At a brief uews conference, Monday,
Miss Davis embraced Feliciano, who was
accompanied by b I a lawyer, William
Kunstler.
Then M1ss Davis, saying she had an
engagement to keep elsewhere, departed
bPfore the oourt session began.
Roll Out The Red Carpet!
I.
'
Three yeor< ago we hod a requ est from a local high school
for a red runner for homecoming ceremonies. A remnant
c ut into two nice runn ers.
Witho ut advertising, the word got a r o u n d, and our
busi ness got so good that we had to make another runner.
This year we will have the pleasure of loaning the three
runners to hig h schools all around the Southern C..r.fomla
e ree, including a ll the local schools. One weekend, la st
year, we furnished THREE homecd'mings. Also, several
times egain this year we will furnish weddings and grand
openings.
If YOU hove need for a red runner for an occasion, stop
and see us ••• no charge. The only requirementtis J>rompt
return a#er the occasion.
At Alden's you;ll alwa ys get the red carpet trHtmentl
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DIAPES
1663 Placentia A••·
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thu•~. 9 lo 5:30 -FRI., 9 lo 9 -SAT., 9:30 lo 5
I
• I
I
'
Huntington llea~h
Fou11tain Valley
'•
•
Tod.a,y's F laa l
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 65, NO. 29 1, 3 SECTIONS, 3' PAG~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORr<llA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, _1_97_2 __________ T:..:E;;.;N_C;;.;E;;_NT_:.S
Banks Advising 'No Loans' on Coastal Zone
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
ot ... °""' ...... ,,..,
The California ?.tortgage Bankers
Association Monday • voted not to grant
loans of any klrld in the coastal r.one
where builcli.ng could be restricted by the
pcwage of Propo!iltion 20.
The BSIOCi~tlon is a v o I u n t a r y
organiz.ation made up primarily of in-
dependent mortgage bankers. The tote is
advisory and will be followed at the in-
dividual members' discretion.
* * * Huntington
Supports
P ro p.20
HUl)tington Beach councilmen Mmday
night reaffirmed their support of
Proposition 20, the coastline initiative, on
a 4 to 3 aplit vote. ·
Councilmen had prtviousty supported
the issue 5 to 2 but Ted Barlett withdrew
his support.
Jack Green cast the deciding vote in
favo r, commenting, "If we don't get this
squared away on the local and state
level, the federal government will do it.''
"President Nixon already has pro-
posals for national land use control,"
Green told his fellow councilmen.
Opponenta of Proposition 20, especially
memben of the Chamber of Commerc<,
had hoped Gh!eD would almain, leaving
a 3 to 3 deadlock and no action.
G"""' dashed the Chamber effort then
said, "I received two letters from the
Chamber, one was an insult to my in-
telligence. They want us to be in
harmony with them but the Chamber and
Cooncll haven't been in harmony in
years."
-blglrldlool coeds.--.-1rom Marina l!ilh In the city, the other fftlm
Con>na del Mar High, also urged the
COUDcll to support the coastline measure.
At one point, Mayor Al Coen stopped
the COrona de! Mar girl's speech and told
her: "You don't have penrtissloo to inake
inferences and innuendos about coun.
cilmen."
Coen , with Jerry Matney and Bartlett,
oppc>S<S 20. 'Ille girl had thanked "!!Orne"
of the councilmen for their concern.
Bartlett asked Gr ... the official.position
of the Soothem Calllornt. Asoociation of
Government. (SCAG).
"It bas taken no official position,"
Green, who ii pre.tldenl of SCAG, replied .
Green pointed out, however, that direc·
tors of the Callfomia League of Cities
have supported it, 11 to 8.
Green, doing most of the apeaklng on
the issue, said there are many
misaloceptjool ·-the ooastal Issue. "It will not set up a moratorium," he
declared. "And it cau have local control,
H the 1ovemor'a appointments to the
regional oornnllsskm swing it that way."
* * * Newport Harbor
Chamber Opposes
Proposition 20
Newport llartlnr Chamber of Com-
..,.,,. directors Monday reaffirmed their
oP,10Sltion to Proposition 20 -the
Calllonilil Coutal Initiative -and
outlined ·a concerted campaign to try to ·
de.feat it.
The Chamber originally toot a stand
opposing the m~ more than a month
ago when it appoipted an ad-boc com·
rrUttee to study meant of educating the
public on the Nov. 7 ballot meaaure.
"We now have a . pu))\k: speaking
bureau that groups are using. We've
hired a •writer to send out release& and
we've sent mailings to c b amber
members," said Richard stevens, Balboa
Bay Club president and cbalrman or the
Chamber committee.
Dr. Nolan ·Frizzelle, a co-cbainnan of
the panel, told director< that the Newport
Harbor Chamber may be unusual ln Its
stand on the proposition.
"Nol all Cbamben are committed and
many Jtmt don~ know •bat the thlni
would mean." he uid. ·
Frlzzelle said hll ....,P .I• matJna •
ba.llc, practical pitch to the pllblk.
"We are jult telUD( them to rad I~"
be said. ''There ii a lot of pro-nda
and emoUonttl COfltent ln tt but not much
good reasoning ." ·
PropoajtJon 20 would create a coastal
10ne live miles wide and would form one
ollta board and 1ix rqlonal board•
tvhicll would hold the power of veto over
any development within that ltrlp.
Opponent& say auch a meuure wll1 rob
local government of control over de.veloJ>-
ment and would creat& anothc-comp1n:
segment of govemrMnt needlnf t••
money for support . •
\
.ReactioD to tbt vote In Orange coast
lending IDIUtuOons and among local
realtors wu guarded. Moot said they had
not bad an opportunity to study the
r~mmendatioo lo full .
As,,ociation president Robert . E .
"l•rgon sal<I ilLJ..oL.Angel" Mondliy
"Passage or Prop. 20 on the Nov. 7 baUot
would have a drastic effect on the people
of Californla.
"The cost to tupa1er1, eroperty
ownen and ~ geDeral Public woUJa be
diUstrous. Prop. 20 would establish a
virtual moratorium on au building of any
kind within itl iU-deftned permit area for
a five-year period. The moratorium ap-
plies to public projects as well as
private.
-~..lllDl'at.orJum, ii coupled with the building shutdown now taking place
throughout canrornla as a result of the
recent state &Jpreme Coort decision in
the Mammoth Mountain case ~ which
·states that local government must file
environmental impact reports oo proj-
ects requested by private parties -
would therefore hall all work by local
governments, contractors, developers
and private lending institutions."
J4anJ of the loan officers contacted at
Orange coast banks said they had not
received any official policy statements
from their superiors relating to coastal
zone loans.
Bill Woffor~ of the Union Bank pointed
out that with the election three weeks
away and the effect of the environmental
impact decision. "it's almost a moot
point."
lie said that unofficiall y his bank has
warned their loan officers to "be
careful" when granting klan.s for the
coastal zone. ··1t depends on a number of
variables. but at the moment we don't
ha ve that problem, because we don 't
have any applications for that area," he
said.
A spokesman for Avco Financial
Edison Hits
Services said they would not late the
association 's vote into considerltbt
-Decause Avco lends only to individual
homeoYt'ners. not developus.
Larry Smith, speaking r 0 r anOther
mortgage rlrm, The Alison Company in
Newport Beach said they have &dopted a
wait anct see attitude. "With the election
only three weeks away, there bas not
been any specific policy statement from
(Stt LOANS, Page %\
Snag
E x pansion Impact Study Rejected
DAIL...Y P:ILOT Stefl 1't1tM
Southern Califonia Edison Company 's
$250 million proposal to expand its Hun-
tington Beach generating station hit a
snag Monday when city officials rejected
the firm's environmental impact state-
ment as ''wholly inadequate."
Acting on an opinion by Acting City At·
tomey Willis Mavis, city officials in·
formed Edison that a "greatly ex·
panded" environmental impact state·
ment would be necessary before the city
could act on a request for a building
permit.
Edison officials this morning e.'<pressed
Council Seeks
'Qualified'
J\}JCI) ()fficial
!"'f' ..
Hunttngton Beach Councilmen Monclity
ni,ht called for a cbange in the
leadership of the ooutt:y•s Air Pollution
Control District.
THIS IS ONE OF ASH TREES COUNCILMEN ORDERED SAVED
uaureaucr•t, Spare That Tree," Say Huntington City Fathers
CoWlcilman Jack Green suggested the
county install an APCD director with
some qualifications in the field of air
pollution problems.
Huntington: s Ash. Trees
Get Transpant to Park
"We're the only cowity in Southern
California without a qualified director,"
Green complained. "(William) Fitchen
was picked because no one else wanted
the job. He's really the director of
agriculture."
Green also complained about the Jack
of smog monitors
The cowity owns only ~. he claim·
ed. and the fact oone are used along the
coast. By JOHN ZALLER
Of .... '*" 'IJllt .,..,
More thaq %,500 tall uh tnies which
luie tlie streets-ol ll01Jt!ngton Beach will
be remoled and tr&n!planted to the cen-
tral park and other· park sites.
Councilmen Mooday Dlght blocked a
proposal by \he P'UbUc Works Depart·
ment to destroy the trees, but did airee
to allow their removal and transfer of
them. nae council authori1.ed the expenditure
of $100,000 for the fll"St phase or what is
estimated to be a $1.4 million program
covering eight to 10 years.
City Administrator David Rowlands
told the council that the large roots of the
old ash trees are cracking curbs and gut·
ters and1 could threaten sewage line3 and
drainage .,..,...
MOii ol tho ash ~ we.rt planted
eight to IO'yean ago 'ht What. RoWlandl,
who was no:t bere,.aays.was "a mistake."
'Ille ash trees are lo •be repla~ with
such varletJes as evergreen . pine, bot-
Freak Accident
Impales Sitter's
'
Hand in N e\vport
A te<nl!led ljwi\lngton Beach bob)llit·
ter ls rec..'Overtng hom an agonlilng
-sulfered Monday nlght•lp Newi>ort
Beach when a bench collapoed, Impaling
I largo nali tb!'ougb ber band.
Newport Stach Fire Departmenl
rttcUe_squac\ members aald the el'1>t-
penny Dill WU IUU In tht hand of Karen
Vincent'. t•, cruclfixJOl}>style wMD tbey
arr.iv ed. The) held an Ice cube to Miss Vlncent"1
hand -a llrf• chunk of fumltUIJ wood
1UD held In place -unlll It be<alne
numb, tben pulled out the Impaled nail.
MlBI Vin<eflt, of 1901 Hell Ave .. "u
b@Y1lttlng for frtendl at 11121 ""'1
Barmouth Place wheu she tried to move
the padded bench Ind It broke. firemen
aald. st>e WI\' to receive furthl!r treatment
incfudinl a ttl'anus 1hot at a hospital
emergency room .
tlebrush, Canary Island pine and carrot
v.•ood.
• ,,,. ash trees stand 30 ·1o 40 ,feet tall
Public Work.a officiais said the. r.eplace-
ment trees will be about five to six feet
tall when first planted. They ·feature
deeper roots wtdcb are not expected to
hamn the sidewalks.
C.Ouncilmen offerea several suggestions
ror preservation of the trees and methods
to avoid a storm of controversy with
homeowners when the big trees are
removed.
"Doo 't go into a tract and wipe out
every tree," warned Councilman Henry
Duke. "You might try taking out every
U.ird or fourth tree"
"Given an unlimited amount or money,
We can do anything," said Public Works
Director Jim Wheeler.
"For heaven sake don't even consider
demolition of the trees," added Coun-
cilman Norma Gibbs.
"I think we'd be shocked if we had a
monitor and we knew how much pollution
we ha Ye in Hwftingtoo Beach," be said.
Cowtcilmeo passed a resolution urging
supervisors to iestructure the APCD.
Cowity supervisors, who also serve as
the APCD board, have scheduled a public
hearing Oct~ 25 on the matter. It has
been propo:. .d that APCD functions be
turned over to the county Health Depart-
ment.
Ship Clash Deta iled
HONOLULU (UPI ) -The racial clash
aboard the USS Kitty Hawk began as a
fight in the ship 's mess deck and
escalated into d series of roving brawls
that lasfed until the next morning , the
NE.vy said Monday. More than 100
per.K>Os were involved and 46 were in-
jured, a spokesman said.
Capsule Council Ac~ion
Here in capsule form are the major aclions taken Monday night by the
Hwit.in'gton Beach City Council :
COAST: Reaffirmed the city's support for Proposition 20, the coastline
Initiative, on a 4 to 3 vote. The previous vote had been 5 to 2, but Councilman
1'ed Bartlett ~thdrcw his support . •
TAX£Ci : Unanimously opposOO Proposition 14. the Watson amendment,
which sets a low limit on pr.operty taxes.
SMOG: Urged Orange County !R.lpervlsors to change the leadership or the
Air Pollution Control District so it has 11 director with proper qualit~Uons.
TREES: Approved the expendJture of ft00.000 to start a St.4 million pr~
gram to take out and replace the old ash tza whJcb line some cit y atreeta.
Tbe staff was told kl moYe lbe ash trees to city parks, not destroy lbem.
ARCllEoLOGY: Approved planned development Z011ing for 29 acrea on the
blaff1 at Ellll Avenue. It i9 hoped the lOflinf will pretuVe an a~Jogy site
and 1 stand ct eucalyptus trees.
BUS LINE: Agreed to help the Orange O>urny Tran11it Dl!trlct tttabllsb
two bus routes tn the city.
• ~tORATORlUM: Decided to let the moratorium on planned developments
expire Friday, but posstbly rt~w It In early November.
STREET LIGlltS, Abolished the Vicio<lan lamp post. In front or the new
• clvfc tenter. but ordered them preaerved for use somewhere el~.
) ' ..
both surpri se and concern at the city's
action.
"Any unreasonable delays by the city
ir. granting a buildin& pennit would
compound Southern California's already
critical power crisis," according to
Edison District Manager Pa u I
Richardson.
Richardson explained that the length of
the delay would depend on how much
new information the city required.
"We can't just pull this stuff out of a
hat." he said. "These reports are very
detailed and take time to prepare."
.-----------~--
Prior to the city"s new ruling, Edison
had filed only a preliminary en-
vironmental impact statement with the
city. The company said it was preparing
more detailed ones for presentation . to
other regulatory agencie,, this spring.
These included the state Regklnal Water
Quality Control Board and the Public
Utilitie6 Commission.
A complete environmental impact
statement cannot be prepared much
before . April 1, Richardson s a i d .
Meanwhile, a condilional building permit
(Sff EDISON, Page %)
Deroin Found
Singer McNair Says ln~ocent
~NEWARK, N. J. (UPI) -Singer-actress Barbara McNair was arrested for
~ •f nearly a llalf OWJCO of heroin at the Playboy Club In McAfee, tt
WU i!J'i'elooed today.
Mis1 McNair and her husband, Rick Manz.ie, were arraigned on charges
In federal cow1 here. F.llcb ~ Ol"df"ed to poat a 110,000 bond. They pleaded
Innocent.
A spokesman for the Playboy Club said Miss McNair, YT, appeared lhree
times thl!I week in the swank Penthouse of the clutHlotel in private perform·
ances for a group of conventJoneers. She was attested Monday night in her
dressing room.
Her husband acts as her business agent.
U.S. District Court J udge Lawrence A. Whipple set no travel restrictions
on the couple. The Playboy Club said tbe singer bad scheduled engagemmtl
in Chicago Wednesday and again in McAlee Thursday.
A Port of New York Authority spokesman said a package was traced from
Newark Airport to Miss McNair, who signed for it at the Playboy Club.
Weather Hindrance
Searchers Scour Alaskan
Coast for Boggs Airplane
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (API -A fleet
of milltary and private planes new out of
here at dawn today to search Alaska's
mft(.lntainous southern coast for a long·
missing light plane carrying House
~mocratic Leader Hale Boggs aod three
clkr persons on a campaign trip.
Tile JS planes planned to fly cri!..'H!l'OSs
patterns a~ng the 560-mile Anchorage-t~
Juneau run on whlch the plane ap-
parently went down Monday .
Included In the se:arc.h group were elec-
tronically equipped. HC130s. An Air Force
HC130 lle8l"ched W>IUCC6JfU!ly through
the Dlght fer the plane carrying Bogg!,
Alaska's Jone House member, a oon-
gresslonal aide and the plk>t.
Additional aearch planes were schedul·
ed to take to the aJr later 1n the day.
The Air Force said the forteast was for
strong wind. an overcast and "very
marginal flying weather."
In Juneau. meanwhile. the state ·~
Rescue Coordination Ce.nter said It was
checking reports from an unidentified
ham radio operator In CalUomla that he
htard a distre$s call from the missing
plane on a cltlzt:ns radk> band.
Spokes men would not give any details on.
the matter.
A spokesman sakl ham radio operaton
ln the ana had bttfl askfd to tune to the
band -Olannel 9 -tarly today in hopes
or picking up a signal.
He pikf no voice eontact bad been
made, but tn re~ IO queries sud! as
"T•p your mk'topbone ii you hear u1."'
ttvera l clicks wert heard. The
spokesman Nld, OOwever, that the cllcb
did not Indicate a lilgntd from the downed
pli ne. aaylng they could easily be caueed
by the nickllrlng of nearby house lights
or the starting of a car engine.
The White Hou~ 1ald President Ni,;on
has been receiving repona on the search
efforts.
Pl'eA 8eC?'f.tary Ronald L. Ziegler Mid
Nixon , through his military aide, offered
;.II poMlble au lsta!'lee and prov1ded for
transportation for the Boggs family to go
to Alaska.
House ~ker Carl Albert said the-
pilot ol the mlsslng plane is reputed to be
one of th"best bush pilots In Alaska and
would know every possible landing spot
between Anchorage and Juneau.
"I cannot personally give up hope,"
Albert said.
Aboard the twin-engine Cessna 310
were Boggs, 58; Rep. Nick Begich. a 4Q.
yeaMld Democrat; ·B e g I c h ' s ad--
ministratlve assistant, Russell Brown,
37: and the pilot, 3&-)'<ar-old Don E.
Jom.
Boggs' admln!Jtratlve assistant, Gary
Hymel, said In Washington that the lut
(See BOGGS, Pqe 11
Cea st
\t'eatber
The weatherlady SIY" It's going
to be cloudy on Wednelday. Ii
nUght even rain . 'hmperatwa at ._
the btaclie> will be tn tllo low 'IOs
rl!ing to 7S Inland. Lows tonight
58-42.
INSIPE TOP~ Y
Bomba !llOtllc1 -tM P~!Up
pines version a/ the Pomo fli ck
-have been banned frOm tht
new 1ociet11 af Prttfdnt Ferd.In·
and E. /.larco1 . S~t storv on
Poot 12. '
'~
~I TeftlifW ..
LOST IN STORM
Rep. Hole Boggs
From Pagel
BOGGS ...
radio contact with the plane came 12
minutes after takeoff Monday. when Jonz
filed a Oight plan. There ~·as oo sign of
trouble.
Boggs. ~·ho !{'ft \\'ashington on Sunday
and had bee~ due to return this morning,
had gone tn Alaska to campaign for
Begich, a native of Eveleth. 1'1inn., "'ho is
seeking re-election to a second tenn.
Boggs' \\'ife. Lindy, was the only
member of the family at home in·
Bethesda. ?\old .. Monday night.
As the "·ord spread to Boggs' b om e
state of I .oui siana, there was an un-
mistakable ring of affeclion for the con-
gressman.
From Pagel
EDIS ON ...
"'as rcriuested.
1\ city 1ask for ct> working
under rity Environmental Resources
Coordinator Tom Sevcms, is now work·
ing to develop by Friday the exact l'E"-
quiremenls for Edison's expanded en·
vi:-oom£<ntal impact statement.
In ruling !hat such ar. expanded report
was necessary, Mavis said that ·'an en·
vironmental impact statement should be
subn1itted and heard prior to issuance of
the building pennit, and the permit
should not be issued conditionally. The
effect would be to circumver.t the
public.''
Th.e city Planning Conun.iS$icJ11 bad
been scheduledJ lo rulo tonif11 on
Edison's request for a bllD Ing Permit,
with review by the city council next
Tut>!!day.
Now, however, Edison will go before
the planning co mmission nex t week, one
week later than scheduled, and without a
request for action .
"We'll just teU them what we want to
do," Richardson said. "I seriously doubt
we'll be able to put together the ad-
ditional environmental information by
that time."
Richardson further ronceded that city
action is unlik.:ly to come before the Nov.
7 elections.
The reason for that deadline. he et:·
pallned. was the possibility that prop-
osition 20, the Coastline In itiative, might
pass.
''It will create another level of review,
and we had hoped that, if 1,1.·e had our
city approval before the initia1ive passed.
we might be in a stronger position in ar·
gui.ng before them." ,.
Richardson said he believes the further
environmental impact statements re-
quested by the city might be "redun-
dunt."
"We'll be going before agencies
specilieally empowered to protect the
water and the air, and we'll have to
make very detailed reports to them . In
our report to the city. we said that if we
don't meet all existing environmental
standards, we won't be allowed to build.
\Vhat more is there to say?"
'
OUNSI COAST Ha
DAILY PILOT
n t Clnntt c.M1.! DAIL 't P'ILOT ..tit. .-t!ldt
It CIMIMlled ll'lt H._Preu. .. publllfltd bY
fllt 0r-.t C-.•t PublWllnt c.mcitn1. 5tpa.
, ... """"" ••• JIUblllhlld, Mond.t)' tl>routh Fr~, fOr Co.It Mna, N'-1 llt!9Cl'I,
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anr;l'I, lNfntfS.ddltOldl Ind Sfn Chimttlllt/
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Roll•rt N. w,,d
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Viet P'""ldlnt •nd GtMtll Me,..qer
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•
·-
School Site
May Become
Ho me Tr act
The proposed site or a FountaJn Valley
elementary school may he turned into a
69·home planned developrnent ir school
officials can not gain state approval to
purchase the land.
Founlaln Valley School D i s t r I c t
Superintendent Mike Brick said loday
thnt the district will ask city councilmen
10 delay on Oct. 24 hearing on the' prop-
erty bounded by Starfish. La Alameda
El Portal and La Tierra Street.s.
Brick said the delay would give the
dist[icl time to submit a hardship plea to
the state allocations board for permission
to buy the land.
"Our biggest problem is that the state
has no understanding of local problems,"
Brick said.
The state Allocation Board is making it
difficult to purchase school sites because
it wants to slow down school construction
in the state, according to Bric k.
Under the cohort survival system
adopted by the state, a school district
must have a certain ratio of students per
square foot of schools before it may
qualify to buy a site. Valley does not
qualify at this point.
f ountain Valley Mayor Al Hollinden
said today that because of the state's
delay, the city council believes it should
hear the application for the planned
development by Classic Development.
Cit y schools indicated the property
o~·aers have turned away at least three
separate offers to develop the property
because of the school plans.
The developers of the 15.6-acre site
have said they will donate 1.24 acres or
the land to La Capilla Park which is
situated adjacent to the property.
If tbe school is built, facilities or the
campus and the park would be combined
under the city's park-school concept.
Brick said that if the school district
received permission to purchase the land
after the development was finished, the
cost would run up to $1 million.
He estimated the present cost of the
land at about $350,000.
The school distric t would also be forced
to bus youngsters in the area to school::i
farther away than the planned site.
Students in tbe general area are now
bused to Fulton School which is about
two miles from the site.
Baby Girl Falls
Into Swimmin g
Pool in Ne,vport
. B~ ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 111t o.nr rr1e1 ,,..,
A baby girl described as tremendously
strong for her age and able to run about
alJ by berseU at only 15 months was cling-
ing to life today, revived after she
toddled into a swimming pool at her
grandparents' 1~ewport Beach borne.
Dana Faith Burggren was fbhed from
the 12-toot..deep water at 5: 15 p.m., by
her young uncle, about one half-hour
after she_ was last seen inside the house.
Her father Eugene Burggren, of 413.
30th St., began giving the baby mouth-to-
moutb resuscitation before Newport
Beach Fire Department personnel ar-
rived at 1730 Antigua Way and took over.
The infant, wtme. ;·oung parents were
baby!iUing with Mrs. B u r g g r e n ' s
brothers and sisters. was taken to Costa
Mesa l\temorial Hospital following first
aid including closed heart massage and
oxygen.
emergency room Dr. Clare
W melre determined the baby's
red.
ing was as near normal as possible
ecorded a slight improvement in
itical condition she was transfer-
Nursing personnel at the Orange Coun·
ty Medical Center's cardiac care unit
said this morning the Burggren baby still.
remains in critical and unchanged con-
dition since being admitted.
Newport Beach Police Q!flcer Gary
Black was dispatched to the home of l'r.
and Mrs. John Stoneman about 5:15 p.m ..
after tragedy shattered the dinner shared
by the young couple and three Stoneman
children.
Investigators said Burggren and the
cbJldren were sitting at the dining table
and Mrs. Lynne Burggren was cooking
when she suddenly slopped.
''Where's the baby?" she asked.
Family members fanned out through
the Westcl!ff dbrtrict home to hunt the
robust little girl who had been playing in
the living room earlier.
•
R11stlita' llp Spirit DAILY PILOT Slt ff PIM'-
These Golden West College yell leaders are inspir-
ing Rustier rooters this fall. In the front (from left)
a re Gretchen Fry, Deana Haray and Maria Buchan·
an. In the rear {from left) are R ob i n Robinson ,
Dawn Anderson and Michelle Henson. The squad ~on a tro{>bY for its "superior" performance dur-
ing a National Cheerleaders Association camp in
Santa Barbara during the s ummer.
Trooper Killed
Serving Warrant
On His Da y Off
LANCASTER. Pa. (UPI) -State
trooper Robert Lapp, who volunteered to
serve a fugitive warrant on his day off,
was shot to death by an escaped
murderer from a New Jersey prison. The
suspect was killed in a gun battle with
police.
Lapp, 30, father of three young sons,
"'as shot Monday while attempting to
serve the warrant on Alfred Ravenell, 33,
who escaped June 13 from a correction
center in YardvOle, N.J.
Lapp and three other trappers burst in-
to the first noor apartment where the
suspect was believed to be hiding, State
Police Commissioner Rocco P. Urella
said.
Ravenell came out of a bathroom firing
from a sawed-off shotgun and .38 caliber
pistol, fatally wounding the officer.
The troopers returned fire as they drag-
ged Lapp's body out the front door and
radioed for additional help.
.4.nother trooper, Joseph Westcott, 28.
was treated for a minor gunshot wound
but returned an hour later as some 75 of·
ficers stormed the building after firing
scores of bullets and tear gas canisters
at the apartment.
Beach Council ·
Votes to Replace
Street Lights
The old Victorian street lamps on !\fain
Street, Huntington Beach, are down and
out. ...........
City councilmen agreed Mo0alr)l..,rright
that the old, decorative lights Which
marked the median for several blocks,
must make way for modem, blgti In-
tensity lights.
They did warn staff mem b ers,
however, that the old lamp posts should
be saved for possible use somewhere
else. There are about seven left, city of·
flcials said.
Search. for Physicinn
From Newport Canceled
The Western Rescue Coo~clination
Center today called off the search for
Newport Beach physician George Peck,
'"ho has been missing in the single
engine C.Cssna since he took off from
Orange County Airport two weeks ago to-
day.
Officially the search has been suspend·
ed, said Sgt. Robert Ruff a controller at
the center at llamilton Air Force Base.
"The mission bas been suspended but it
has not been closed," Sgt. Ruff said.
He explained the search would begin
immediately if any new information
develops.
The decision was telephoned to Dr.
Peck's family late Monday afternoon.
Dr. Peck's son, Douglas, a Los Angeles
businessman, said he is clinging to the
hope that his father is still alive.
"But realistically as every day goes by
so do the chances," he said.
"It'a so incredible that someone just
disappeared," Peck said.
It is not !hat unusual, said Sgt. Rufr.
"People think of California as nQJhing
Se ri-es on Brain,
Begins Tonight
"Babies and Cockt.aiJ Parties" is the ti-
tle or the first or a fi ve-part lecture
series on the brain which opens tonight
at UC Irvine.
The series is open to the public. It is
sponsored by the Friends of UCI.
The opening lecture will be given at 8
p.m. in the Social Science Lecture Hall
by Professor Nonnan Wienberge.i of the
UCI staff. He will detail the latest find-
ings of how the brain responds to
selected stimuli.
One example of selected response, he
says. is the ability of a mother who is
hosting a cocktail party In her Hving
room to hear her baby crying in the next
room.
but sunny beaches, but 75 percent of it is
darn rugged country.
"It's easy for a lllane to crash under
the tree tops in some dark remote area,"
Sgt. Ruff said.
He said another· plane from Northern
California missing for three months was
just discovered this week by 1 hiker.
Sgt. Ruff said the plane no doubt will
be found , "but it's just a question of
time."
The search conducted primarily by the
California Civil Alr Patrol, began when
Dr. Peck, a prominent allergy specialist
did not return from a three-hour fllghi
from Orange County Airport.
Search planes spent a total of seven
days in the air scouring most of
California from San Francisco south to
tht Mexican border and parts ol. Nevada.
The Cessna 172 had a 3.5 hour range
lhat authorities said could have taken Or.
Peck as far as 400 miles.
From Pagel
LOANS .•.
our main office," he reported.
Representatives of the local boards or
realtors seemed a little surprised at the
association's vote.
Glen Martin of the Newport Harbor-
Costa Mesa board said "it's very possible
that the asroclatlon is panicking. I'm not
quite certain what their thinking was in
deciding that Prop. 2() would do somethng
that the environmental impact has not
already done.
"Why halt construction retroactively
by withdrawing funds already granted,"
he asked. "If their thinking was to
withhold funds not yet granted and save
themselves the time and effort of proc-
essing loans a n d then have the prop-
osition passed, I can understand that,''
he added.
Nun T ells
'Ta j Mahal'
Cas e, Lo an
By TOM BARLEY
0. tlM Oaitr ,l._t SllH
World Financial Trends Vice Presid(lnt
James Shipley was identified today 111
Orange Cowity Superior c-Ourt testimony
in the "Taj Mahe.I" trial as the man who
apparently s!Ood to gaJn most from a
$500,000 hospital loan th!il remaios un·
paid today.
Sister.Mary Clarissa, the second Ronu1n
catholic nun lo testify in the trial or
Shipley, Laguna Hills financier .Joseph
Dulaney and two codefendants. picked
out Shipley as the man to whom the loan
was made nearly four years ago.
The former member of the Board of
Directors at St. Bernardine llospital, San
Bernardino, testified before Judge James
Turner that Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via
, Cascadlta, San Clemente, assured her
and fellow directors that be would
personally guarantee the loan.
Sister Mary Clarissa backed the earlier
testimony of lmpltal admlnistrator
Sister Mary Margaret that hospital Con·
!roller Robert Machan first suggested en-
trusting $500,000 in reserve funds lo
Dulaney's Laguna Hills enterprise.
Both nuns testified that Dulaney and
Shipley promised them a 10 percent
return on funds that were currently earn-
ing 5 percent.
They said that the $500,000 they turned
over to Dulaney was invested in 250,000
shares of Azalea Mobile Homes stock at
$2 a share.
The Azalea stock is condemned by the
prosecution as "worthless and not worth
lhe paper it is printed on."
Sister Mary Clarissa said they were
assured by Shipley, 38, of 16951 Lowell
Circle, Huntington Beach, and Dulaney
when the hospital group met the defen-
dants at the Taj Mahal that Dulaney was
worth $3 million.
It is alleged that Dulaney wa.s in debt
at the time he received the hospital
ftmds.
The nun said she later learned that the
stock recommended to the hospital group
was worth oothing when the loan went in-
to default and the hospital 's allegations
sparked criminal action against seven
defendants.
Machan, 50, of San Bernardino is to get
a separate trial on Identical charges of
grand theft, fraud and conspiracy.
On trial wi th Dulaney and Shipley are
Daniel Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbird Drive, '
Huntington Beach and Wendell Warren
Austin, 38, of Riverside.
Both sister Mary Claris!a and Sister
Mary Marga~! were demoted by their
order following t h e opening of in-
vestigaUon lnto the Wort'd "'Financial
Trends operation headed by Dulaney.
Matney Finally
Scores 01te
A frustrated Jerry Matney. on
the short end of several votes Mon-
day nlght. decided to test his Hun-
tington Beach City CooncU mates
one more time.
"Since I've lost everything else,
I'd like the council to oppose
Proposition 14, the Wat.son amend-
ment," Matney said.
The Watson amendment imposes
a limit on property taxes. which
Matney claimed would eliminate
all fwids for community colleges.
and cut a good share of the money
for other schools.
On this Issue, alt seven coun-
cilmen agreed and the vote was 7.0
opposing the Watson amendment on
the November ballot.
The Victorian lamps on Main Street,
south of 17th Street. will remain un-
touched and will be rewired for brighter
lights.
The oouncil decision followed an opin-
ion by the civic center lighting engineer
that the older lamps could not serve as
safe street lights in the civic center
block.
Roll Out The Red Carpet!
The traffic south of 17th Street L! ei:·
peeled to be Jlghter than in the civic
center area. The lamp posts were
already down before councilmen met
Monday night, which even surprised City
Administrator David Rowlands.
Mrs. Norma Gibbs warned the public
works department to "not hit the posts sO
hard that they are destroyed.''
"We're handling them with tender lov-
ing care," replied Public Works Director
Jim Wheeler.
Three yeaN ago we had a request from a local high school
for a red runner for homecoming ce remOnies. A remnant
cut into two nice runnel'$.
•
Camp Pendleton's Brig
Wins Praise in Study
Without advertisi ng, the worcl got a r o u n d, and our
·b uJinoss got so good that we heel to make anothe r runner.
This year we will have the pleasure of loaning the three
run ners lo high schools all arou.d tlie Southern C.lifomia
orea, including all the local schools. O no weekend , la st
year, we f urnished THREE homecomings. Also, several
times again t his y ear we wiU furnish weddings and g ra nd
o pening'-.
If YOU have need for o red Mner for en occasion, sto p
end see us ••• no charge. The onfy require men+ ;, p rompt
return a~or the occasion.
At Aldon's you'll always got tho .rod carpet lff1tmentl
SAN DIEGO CAP) -The onoe-no<orloUJ
brtg at Camp Pendleton and othera at
Camp Lejeune, N.C., and San Diego have
been described N outstanding after a
two--ytar study.
Tough and often brutal condltiont have
been replaced by "a more human ap-
proach" whlch clvillan prisons should
eopy, a Sin Diego peychologi11t said Mon-
day.
"They have switched from the author!·
tariM-strtu approach In confined handl·
ing llJ a more tn.zman approlH:h under
some very innov11.Uve leadenhip Jdeas ,"
Dr. Philip R. Harri! said In releu1ng
the study.
ftanis l! ~dent of Management-
OriranizaUon Developmt'nt, Inc., and
headed 11 team of psychologbts, penAl
speclallab and special workers. Th@lr
195-page T!l)Ort went to the office of Naval
Restarch.
The Navy ordered the study in 1970
after congressional lnvestlgatof'I hla med
O\'ercrowding, a la<'k of tralntd Jtuarda
and brutality for Moling at the Camp
Pendleton brig.
After prlsoneni barricaded themselves
ln!lde tbe tin-roofed compound. finally
11urrenderlng, an inquiry dtteribed tt u
the i<most, rcpeteadly investi1ated facility
In the Marine Corps."
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lacentla A'te,
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thrv Th uN., 9 to 5:30 -FRI., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to S
J
p
s
t
t
w • b
Bugging Yiel~s H
Criminal Secrets • J
I
• •
Girl Tl{lls
Of Laguna
Abduction
Moh Rules I 00 '
The rape or 11 IJ.year-old girl took
place in a isolated hill area between El
Toro Road and \Voodland Drive, ac.
cording to the memories of the blonde
victim.
"She saw the police h e I i c o p I e r
overhead and at one time police were
close enough that she could hear the
police radio," detective sgt. Neil Purcell
said.
She was slruck on the head with a rock
to keep her quiet, be said.
The young girl was abducted Sunday
from a frontage roa:t alongside Laguna
Canyon Road uy two young men as she
'11.alk.ed with a younger cousin.
While a massive search by poljce agen-
cies was under way, the glrl was raped,
forcm to submit to perverted acts,
beaten. robbed of personal heirloom
jewelry and driven to a Hollywood area
where she was released.
"We spent three and a half hours in the
back area yesterday and found some
areas that may have been the scene.
We'll be out looking again today.
"The poor thing, sbe's very confused
and her face was down on the floor
board," PurceU said.
The detective said the 13-year-old was
told by her abductors that she would be
killed if she talked to police or attracted
any attention.
Police described the kidnap vehicle as
an off-white 1964 Ford Falcon in poor
shape and with l"' .! headliner ripped out.
The kidnap-rapists were described as
about 5 feet, JO inches tall. weighing
about 150 pounds. Their age \Vas
estimated to be between 16 and 2Q.
5 ~lures Set
In R eal Estate
Invest Series
Five topiC!I \\'ill be dealt with by seven
dil!erent speakers in the 1972 lecture
series on real estate lnvestnients opening
Wednesdl\Y night at Golden West <Allege
under combined sponsorship of the col·
lege, the DAILY PILOT and the Hun-
ttr.gton Beach-Fountain VaUey Board of
Realtors.
The program , now sn annual tradition,
ls aimed at the "average person" in-
vestor -the man and wife with a
modest sum to invest in rental property
or a small commercial development. for
instance.
ft offers lectures by professionals
from specialized fiel ds of real estate
investment. The e n t i r e series is
presented as part of the evening college
program of the Coast Community College
District.
Lecture site! altemste from year to
year from the Golden West to the Orange
Coast campuses.
The entire program ii free of charge.
No advance registration ls necessary;
ticket!: are available at the door.
Fint program ill scheduled for 7:30
p.m. at the college Center, Golden West
College, and will cover the topic, "The
UlUmate Investment -Blue Chip Non-
managerial Property."
Opening night lecturers will be Roger
Slates (R. D. Slates Reallon) of Hun-
tington Beach and Gene Kadow (Foun-
tain Valley Land Co.) of Fountain Valley.
Subsequent lectures In the series will
l-•-presented on Wedneade y nights, Oct.
25, Nov. 1 end Nov. 8. at the same place
and time.
•
,,......,-._
UP'ITel ..... ALLEGED SUMMIT HEADQUARTERS OF ORGANIZED CRIME EXAMINED BY NY OFFICIALS
.. 40-by 15-foot Unit in Brooklyn Junkyard Watched Du ring Year's Probe
-Called Nonviolent
IW ar Veteran Def ends
Accused De Mau Maus
From the Wire Services
A black Vietnam veteran. who once
served a five-month stint at Camp
Pendleton, says De Mau Mau, a group
Chicago police charge is a black terrorist
gang that killed nine people in Illinois, is
organized internationally among U.S.
servicemen. (Related story, Page 19).
But Jimmie Williams, 32, n o w
employed as a job counselor at the
Illinois State Employment Service.
emphasized that the group does not
espouse violence.
He described the group as the "Black
Panther Party of the military" and said
\vhen he served in an intelligence unit at
Camp Pendleton from Decmber 1970 to
May 1971 , there were at least 10,000 De
Mau Maus at the base.
He did not join the group, he said,
because of his intelligence work.
A spokesman nt Camp Pendleton said
that the 10,000 figure was "quJte er-
roDeous." Out of 28,000 men on tbe base
in April, 1971, he said maybe 11 to 14 per-
cent were blacks.
raci;J] behavior. Personally, I think this
r.i just another political hoax dreamed up
by Hanrahan (State's Atty. Edward V.
Hanrahan)."
Williams·emphasized that De Mau Mau
is not a terrorist group bul admitted that
a few members became increasingly
violent in their actions and extreme in
their views as the Vietnam \\.'ar con-
tinued a.s well as after they returned to
civilian life.
Turner Arrives
lit Style, But
Late to Court
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) -Orlaodo
promoter Glenn W. Turner circled P fog-
ged-in airpourt in his personal Lear jet
for more than an hour today, earning a
scold ing by th c judge conducting his
securities violation trial.
The seventh day of the self-proclaimed
millionaire's trial was scheduled to start
at 9 a.m.. but Turner didn't enter the
courtroom until 9: 55.
With his usual nair, Turner walked into
the courtroom waving at spectators,
smiling broadly and wearing a snow-
white suit and blue polka-dot tie.
/"
NY Businesses
NIN YORK (AP) -Bugging of or-
pnized <rime's ''summit ll<adquarters"
in a dirty gray and blue trailer in an auto
junt;Jard bas revealed that at lea.st 100
~e bus.iness flrma were con.
trolle'a by the under-.orld, Brooklyn Dis1.
Atty. Eocene Gold said today.
An electronic bug, telephone wirttape
and photo surveillance of the trailer sin('e
last April led Monday lo !ht issuance of
more than 600 subpoenas to ofganized
crimf: fi~. Gold c.11.lled it the biggest
underworld Jm>be in history.
The eavesdropping evidence indicates
that some businesses were taken over by
strong-arm methods and threats, and
others to settle loanshark debts, officials
!!laid.
Gold disclosed that three telephones had
been bugged and an eavesdropping device
installed last April in the 40--by 15-foot
trailer in Brooklyn which is su rrounded by
barbed wire, guarded at night by dogs
and often frequented by Cadillacs.
The district attorney said court orders
had been obtained for the telephone wire-
taps and for the electronic listening equi~
ment.
Conversatioas recorded the past_ seven
InQ(JIJ!> and a gallery of still and moving
pictures revealed "the amings and go-
ings of prorni.nmt memben or the five
organized crime families of New York
City and other people," Gold said.
Included in the range of crimes said to
have been di.9cuS!!led in the trailer were
narcotics.. counterfeiting, labor racketeer-
ing, auto theft, insurance fraud, prostitu-
tion, gambling, loamharking, burglary
and """"· "AU the top members of organized
crime had been in the trailer" Gold said.
An estimated 100 policemen were also
understood to have been issued subpoenas.
Reputed underworld leaders also re--
portedly subpoenaed w e r e: Carmine
1'ramunti, reputed head of one of the
city's live underworld families; Pa u 1
Vario, a oounsdor to the Trannmti group
and Natale Evola , alleged head of a sec-
ond family.
"We have pierced the vein of organized
crime," declared Gold, who told newsmen
that bis inveatigatioo had been more pro-
•
•
ductive than th< opooure <ii Ibo IIS7
Apalachln crime convention.
Included In th< evldenct, Gold lllid, ·
wen U mJllion foet of tape prodllCfld
thni<lgll ·~g device<. 31,0lt l
feet of coior motim picture film and •
54,0IJO still pictures.
The brea-ouib -aJlllOWICOd ll1er • a wt force ol l;J#J pollcenen famed out
across the five counties of Now Yori: City
plus suburban Nassau, Westchester and
Rockland countles lo deliver the m
subpoenas.
Gold said tblt up to J ,000 .un-.
would tie called befOh • ract.W grWld
jury In Broo~yn w!ttch ii lnnoti&1U., or-
ganiled crime.
Misty the Pony
Dies-Heroine
Of Book, Movie
CHINCOTEAGUE, Va. !AP) -Milty
of Chincoteague, the pony that inspired a
book and movie which thrilled thousands
ol -· died liloodoJ'.
The brown and ---21 yean old.
It WB.! "Misty," a boN by ~
Henry, that brought <Ji!-"""'° --' a Waod in the 0-petie Bay -mud! ol
its fame for the onnua1 roandup <ii pollles
from A>sateogue lsUJod by Ch-,.0
firemen.
Owner Ralph Beebe said the po111 died
"mostly of old age" but had remained tn
good health until three days ago, when
she developed fever and chilla.
Misty stayed In the Midwest !or 11
}Un With the author, but WU returned
'to Ollncoteague aftor the boot -In
which Misty .... the ''heroine" -....
writt<n. Misty IUJo WU the IUbjecl of I
movie.
There .,.. many lloriel lllout the
origin of the famoUI Ch-..,...
ponies. One bolds tbot they "'" -a-. lrmn • wr«bd Spon!M pllee
and survived on marsh gru.. Um their
stunted a~.
•
The Marine spokesman said he was
unaware of any link with such a group
among men involved in racial strife on
on the base during the months mentioned
by Williams.
Williams said the group of blacks,
Puerto Ricans and American Indians was
first Conned to combat racial persecu-
tion.
\ STATION WAGONS
Six young men who police allege are
members or the group are charged in
connection with the slaying.s of nine
whites, including the slaughter of two
families. Two others charged in the
slayings are being sought.
Not all eight men charged participated
in the slayings which apparently were
racially-motivated, police said.
Meanwhile cries of "political hoax"
rose from students who said they tnew
three former Malcolm X College studen ts
held in the murders.
"They were damn good students," said
Elbert Johnson. 23. "They didn't raise
any hell and didn't show any ,kind ot
e Montego MX VIiiager
Evolution Theory Ge~
Review by State Board
'
By BARBARA KRF.IBICH
Of 1'"' 0.HY P'l191 Sl1"
The latest Cal ifornia State Board or
Education nap over textbook selection
really isn 't anything new, South Laguna
member Clay Mitchel: said Mond ay.
The board sought the opinion of its at ..
tomey, Thomas Griffin, after board
member John Ford of San Diego said
California school children were not get-
ting a balan•.!ed view of how man and the
universe_ were created.
Ford Aid he was not advocating that
acience textbooks teach the biblical ac·
count of creation, but that the theory of
evolution ahould 00 taught a1 a theory,
oot u unchallenged fact .
Griffin advised the board It ha.9 the
right to wggest textbooks for review by
the curriculum commission and to .. oopt
thetn , after a public hearing, even
wllbout the commission's recomeDdatlon,
as well as to reject books recommended
by the e<rnmwlon.
Ford'• remarka, Mitchell said, were
rnlalnterpteted in some quarters, Where
It was sug5ested he advoca ted Including
the biblical theory of creation in text·
boob.
"lt'a not a question 0£ blbllcal ap-
proach, just one of 5Jvin5 equal treatr
ment to the •accident' versus the
'design' theory," said Mitchell.
I
"Most of the science textbooks have
man coming from a bit of slime that
formed in a speck of life by the evolu-
tionary process.
"Now the other theory is that there is
some de.sign behind all thlll, that It was
not all just an accident. Ford ls not talk-
ing about Chri!tianlty, or God or Moham-
med. or whatever; just the idea, in broad
tenns, that !here was some sort of
design or plan to all thi!:.
"The Indlans bad their Grot Spirit.
MOdt peoples have bad a feeling or bt&r
in some greater plan for the universe,
something more than just chance.
"II ha.9 bttn lhe policy of the boanl . .i
leaat since 1989. to give equal tlme tn the
t .. tboob to ihe IWO ldc8!, In bn>ad
terms.
'"!'hat Is.. what we expect the currlcu·
tum commission to follow when thty re-
view book!. 'nlere's 11lwa13 11 ctiance for
the publisher to add somethtng to bill· ance the book. if it is otherwt.sre a food
book, and present the two theories.' ,
Ford noted that the cauromla attorney
general roleil In 1956 thal the theory ol
cvoluUon cauJd be taught In public
classrooms provlded there was no In-
doctrination ot the ide•. "When only one
Idea is taught," he sald, "How c11n we
avold indoctrination?"
e MarqnJs ~olony Park e Monterey Station Wagon
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•
ij DAil Y PILOT Tliddly, Octobff 17, lt 72
Surprise Jtlove
'\'\H~l"'I
with
Tom
urphine
Tl1ey All Want
The Undecideds
Ul"'IT .......
RIC"Ji.\' TICK\' POt..TTrx: Ah . there is
1-:uo<l 11e1\"S IUnight. rolks, for the loyal
:o.ll(lfWlrters of Senator George ~t cC".ovem,
\hi' l'h<ip 11·ho hopes Ill force Presidenl
i\1'1'.on 10 call a moving van to the \Vh ite
l hw.l~l' Th(• n1•""s 1s that in all .the latest
pol1t1c:i! polls, fi[r . Nixon is wirming.
\\:iit, you say. How can that be good
nt·11·s for good old George? Indeed, th.is
J::('!S lr1cky. It depends on how you read
11 h<it the pollsters are saying.
LATEST HARVARD LAMPOON DOES TAKE OFF ON COSMOPOLITAN-INCLUDING CENTERFOLD
Presidential Adviur Henry Kissinger Lounges Provocatively In Spoof Edition
De111nre Adviser If }OU are a 1.1cGnvem fan, you do not
:;nnply read the percentage of lead that
the J"l(lll people give to l\1r. Nixon. Or
e\'f'n the percentage by \vhich they list
S1'11111or ~lcGo\•cm as trailing. Kissinger's Curves iii Magazine
lnsirad. vou read the other column
'1h1ch for Your J\1an is far more im· CM.1BRIDGE, l\taM. (UPll -1be p1.>r!~nt. Th.is par~~lar .~isling .goe~.down Cosmopolitan Man's pearly teeth glitter
as cu_her ·~t~er . ar undecided and above a fr~ed pot belly. Spindly, hairy ~01net1mes 11 s Just sort of .. glopped ~-f'eS'Cli demurely for the right side to1H·1.he~ into a _general label of O&. W---Qf"'the centerfold. ls that really Henry
This is the figure the ~icGovem folks Kissinger, presidential adviser supreme?
like lo read. One member of the Harvard Lampoon
FOR EXA:\1Pl .E. you lake today \\'hen
:i chap named r-.!erv in D. Field kicked
loose 11'ith his lastest anal~is or ho\\' the
1·oong vnll go here in our Golden State,
accurding to his California Poll .
Field says as of this month. Nixon has-
50 !)('rcent of the vote v•hile ~lcGovem
has raptured only 36 perceot. But lhe
t-.\cGovcrn loyalists al\\•ays read those
last flg ur('S for ''Others and Undecided."
llc-re. Field has I~ percent of the voters
listed.
SO .THE r.1CGOVERN peQple figure it
1hie: 11·ay; if those voters have gone along
for four ye~rs '.l'ith ~1r. Nixon in the
\\'hi te House and can't make up their
1ninds, surely they will all swing to
Senato r P .. lcGovcrn when the canvas fiap
closes behind them at the voting booth.
So they take McGovern's 36 percent
and add the 14 percent for the 0 & U's
and they come out with 50 peruot for
l\fcGovem. A dead-even horse race in
California , they declare.
You can even look at McGovern's own
private poll which showed Nixon, 4.5;
McGovern 4.2 and Undecideds, 13 percent.
Put the UD's with good old George and
he has 5."i percent for clear victory in
Californi a.
RACK N SEPTEMBER. the C.Orey
Pol I u·ent out into the grassroots and saw
the November race with Nixon, 43:
!'lilcGovem. 37.2 and those same
Undecideds at an even higher level o(
19.8 percent.
So by adding the UD's to thelr man's
total. the l\tcGovem forces come op with
a \Vhopping 57 percent victory in
California.
Trouble is, of course. that Nixon Head·
quarters across town is probably doing
the same thing u·ith the figures. They are
taking those undecideds and adding them
to the. President's total, thus giving l\1r.
Nixon victor ies of 64 percent by the
California Poll. 58 percent b y
~tcGovern's own guesstimatars; and 62.8
percent by the Corey Method.
CLEARLY. EVERYBODY would like
to have the Undecideds. The Undecideds
are the most popular people in town
about this time of year.
Ifs the season u·hen not having made
up your mind is really good for your
popularity.
Everybody ls trying to read your mind
and there's really nothing there. The
1.1cGovcms hope you really don't like Mr.
Nixon and that's why you're a UD. The
Nlxoos feel you're rc111\y with them but
were really in the bathtub when the
pallster called and you put him off.
!\1EANWIDLE. TJJE pollsters say our
other Orange County prcsidenlial can-
didate , C.Ong. John G. Schmitz, is pulling
a scant one percent in the popular \'ote.
Well , don 't you feel had, John.
You're winning in letters to the editor,
anyu·ay. ••
st.afl" ·says it iS, because KisSinger "was
the only person to call us up and vol·
unteer for the centerfold."
SOMEBODY ~E says it's only Kiss·
inger's fact "on the body of a cab driv-
er we met near Central Park."
The .Harvard Lampoon has struck
again, after a three-year silence. 111on-
day, the Lampoon released advance
copies of its latest parody -Co.smopoli-
tan magazine, which recently published
a centerfold picture of actor Burt Reyn·
olds.
Hem·y Kissinger
Back in Paris
For More Talks
PARIS (UPI) -., White House adviser
Henry A, Kissinger In a surprise move
returned to Paris with a southeast Asia
expert as a new member of his retinue
and met with North Vietname s e
n<gotilltors today .
The 20th secret conference at an un·
disclosed hideaway marked the shortest
time Kissinger hAs stayed away from
Paris in his four years of prtvale talks
with Hanoi diplomats on a solution to the
Vietnam war.
IN ANOTHER unexpec\ed twist, Kiss·
inger met with Xuan Thuy, head of the
North Vietnamese delegation to the
semipublic weekly Paris peace talks,
whom the JreSidential adviser ance
spurned.
Kissinger once told how in 1971 he
broke off the secret talks because
Hanoi'• peace negotiator, Le Due Tho,
returned home and insisted Kissinger
meet only with Thuy.
Tho was believed to be in Hanoi today
after coo!Ullations tn Peking Monday and
Moscow during the weekend. 'Ille North
Vietnamese delegation said It had DO
comment as to when he would return.
For the first time Kissinger's retinUe
of aides included d e p u t y assistant
Secretary of Sate William Sullivan,
former U.S. ambassador to Laos and an
expert on Southea11t Asia, and four
members of the National Security Coun·
cil staff. Kissing~r was accompanied to
his 19th conference last Weik by his
deputy, Gen . Alexander Haig.
KISSINGER LEFT Paris Thursday
after a record·breaking four days of
negotiations with Tho and Thuy. He
briefed President Nixon immediately on
the progress of the negotiatiom. Tbe
Whlte House announced Kissinger flew
bade to Paris Monday nigh! for bis 25th
day ol secret talks.
F'or the past 98 years, the Lampoon
has been paking fun at various publica-
tions, printing absurdly funny articles
and pictures in an exaggeration af the
style and format the publications use.
The last parody was af Time magazine
in 1959.
lN THE PRESENT issue, the cent er·
fold subject brandishes a cigar in the
right hand, covers its privates wit.h the
left arm and Jeans back, grinning, on
the skin of a giant panda.
"The American public wanted Henry
Kissinger," said James Downey, a Lam·
poonster. "We v.·ere thinking along the
Jines of Ralph Nader."
The cover promises such articles as
"10 \\'ays to Decorate your Uterine
Wall." ''How to Tell if Your Man is
Dead." "For a Good Time Call Lola,
555-5~93." That turned out to be a non·
\YOrking number.
LAMPOON PRESIDENT Eric Ray-
man said the choices of Kissinger an(I
Cosmopolitan were ideas "who.se time
had come." President Nixon had been
in the running, he said.
The parody calls Kissinger a ''bewitch·
ing Berliner'' who "cuts a dashing politi·
cal figure that would make Talleyrand
tum in his codpiece."
The White House said it makes no
comment on such matters. One 50\lrce
said. however, that "Henry doesn't
smoke cigars."
Prostitute Beaten
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -A 22-year
old Teias woman has testified in federal
court that a Las Vegas man beat her in
an apartm~t here .. .two yeas ago after
she didn't make enough money for him
from prostitution. Memory R o s e
Robertson Lovett of Fort Worth gave the
testimony Monday during the opening
day of the trial of three Las Vegas
residents on interstate p r o c u r i n g
charges.
They're Suing
For 'Peanuts'
NEW YORK (UPI) -United
Feature! Syndicate, which owni the
copyright for the Peanuts comic
strip, has charged that a toy com·
pany Infringed on the copyright by
selling stuffed dogs resembling
Snoopy, the button-nosed beagle of
the strip.
"This is one of several suits we
\\'ill be fighting against infringers
of the Charlie Brown and Peanuts
gang," said Bil Ravenscroft, vice
president for licensing of United
Features.
TM suit was liled In federal
district court against the Fable Toy
Co. of. New York.
Air Mass • Ill Plains
'Death Train'
Crewmen Set
For Sentence
PIEDRAS NEGRAS . Mexico (AP) - A
federal judge has found five train
crev.men guil~y of homicide in the rail
disaster Oct. 5 whJch killed more than
200 persons.
The crewmen, u·ho \\'ere accused of
drinking and having women aboard the
engine, u·ere not charged with these ac-
cusations. But Judge JoSe Beeerra San.
tiago ordered their • ' f o r m a 1 im·
prisonment '' on charges of attacks on the
general means of communications, in·
( IN SHORT ... )
juries and property damage as u·elJ as
homicide, all due to ' ' s er i o u s
negligence."
Under Mexican law a judge reviev.'S
evidence in a case and either drops
charges or declares the formal im·
prisonment of the accused. Tbe ne1t step
is sentencing.
e Barriers Strain
PIUTE FARMS, Utah (UPI) -Rain-
washed debris bas added extra strain to
barriers holding an 186,QOO.gaUon oil
slick from opreading Into Lake Powell.
'I1le usually welcome showers have
turned the Southwest tnt.o a sea of mud
as men from the Bureau of Reclamation
prepared to secure a fourth barrier
across the mouth of the san Juan River.
Rich Lathrup, Environmental Protec-
tion Agency spokesman, said the rains
have caused a considerable rise in the
river and additional debris is being swept
into the San Juan.
e J\'b:on Support
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The largest
organization of families of American
prisoners of war ha! closed ranks behind
President Nixon and refused to pass any
resolution even implying a criUcism of
government policy.
The National League of Families of
American Prisoners and Missing in
Southeast Asia took the stance Monday
after President Nixon, in a surprise ap-
pearance before 750 delegates, received
loud cheers when he promlsed that
"under no circumstances" would he
abandon the pri9oners and missing. He
also spoke out against amnesty for men
who refused to serve in the war.
The league has generally been pro-ad·
ministration. Most of the prisoners are
career officers and their families feel
strong ties to the armed services an.d to
the lradltlon ol a political military.
e Cltile-Strike
SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -PhY>k:lans,
merehant marine captains and bank
employu joined a snowballing ,,..
tioowtde sttike today In support of 400
jailed truck drivers. Their actlon
threatened to escalate into a general
slrike.
Martial Law Set
-In South Korea
SEOUL (UPI) -Prosldent Pork
Chung Hee today pllt South Korea under
martial law ond laid the people must ap-
pron his plans for political rtlorm H the
t.&lka with North Ko~a on national
unification are to continue.
Part's surprise anoouncement was
made to Ille nation at 1:41 p.m. (2:45
a.m. POT) and martlll law ,...t Into ef-
fect I~ mlnut.o later. Park dluolved
Parliament, 8U9pended the coruJtltutlon
be helped draft In 1963, and banned all
pollUcll activity.
11IE FORMER ARMY general, who
came to power in 1961," said amendments
to the constitution would be announced
by Oct. 27 and submitted to a vote of the
people.
Park aaid that ii the amendments are
turned down by the relerendwn, he wilt
Jnterpret It as: an expression of the will of
the people against the dialogue between
North and South Korea. -
"And then I will seek a new approach
to the task of national unification," Park
added.
Park's move came only one ~eek
before the third round ol talks between
the North and South Korean Red Cross
organizations on the question of reuniting
divided Korean families. 'lbe talks are
scheduled to resume Oct. 24 in the North
Korean capital of Pyongyang.
WBETBER THE unpredictable North
Koreans would seize on Park's latest
move as an ezcuse for delaying the
negotiations remained to be seen. There
was no Immediate comment troni. North
Korean news outlets.
The president said that a major reform
is necessary not only to push the North-
~th Dialogue positively, but to cope
with changes in the internationaJ situa·
tion.
Watergate Affair
' F o 11 ow I n g the martial-law pn»
lamaUon, soldiers in annored vehicles
took up positions around major public
buildings in the heart of Seoul.
Park named Army t'hief-Of.Starf.
C'.eneral Rob-Jae Hyon to execu te the
martial law edict.
Park said be was forced to take "lhi'
extraordinary action to safeguard Korea
from unfavorable changes in and outside
the country.
"THERE JS NOW taking place a
significant change in the balance of
power among the big powers around the
Korean Peninsula." the SS-year.old presi·
dent said. "I think this change may
seriously affect our security.
"These changes might result in
transforming the existing order in Asia
as a whole, and also threaten to affect
adversely the security systems which
have so far se rved as the effective
backbone for maintaining peace in this
region."
The declaration f9llowed by less than a
year Park's proclamation of a state of
national emergency last Dec. 1. And it
came nearly three wee.ks after Philip-
pines President Ferdinand E. Marcos
placed the Philippines under martial law
because or a Communist threat af
subversion.
PARK SAID HE had opened talks with
North Korea with the ultimate goal of
natioo.al unification, but that his political
opponents in South Korea had tried to fX·
ploit the talks for their own ends.
"Disorder and inefficiency are still
rampant around ~" Park said. "'Ibe
political circles in our country are
obsessed by factional strife. They
already lost their sense of mts.sion, and
the representative Institution.
"National As!embty was made the
scapegoat of poHtical struggle.
McGove1·nites Say GOP
'Panicky' Over Charges
• From Wire Services
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. -George
McGovern today charged President Nix·
on's reelection campaign with "sabotage
and )Ubversion." McGovern's top
political aide said the Republicans were
panicking thn!e weeks before the elec·
lion.
eeplng throµgh Texas -from the
house to the Alamo -McGovern
enslfied his attacks on Nixon, charging
li1' campaign hM bind 50 sat,oteurs
to ateaJ files, wiretap private con-
versattorui and disrupt t h e Democratic
presidential calllpalgn.
.. THESE AMIBMOUS men will aJ>-
parently stop at nothing to preserve their
ovm power," McGovern sald in a state=
ment issued before be left for his last
Texas sloP today, Fort Worth.
"They would undennine the republic to
save thelr White House. parking spaces."
he said. "Wben voten are denied tbe oi:r
portunlty to make an informed choice
becauae the infonnallon is poisoned by
sabotage and subvenion. they are'"denied
N. Viets Seize
Allied Hamlets;
One Recaptured
SAIGON (AP) -Military spokesmen
reported today that Communist forces
se.lzed half a dozen government hamlets
in the central highlands, but said govern·
ment forces retook one of them by dusk.
He said the wave of attacks on vlllages
had been ordered by a new Communist
"Resolution XlO" calling for political
cadre to plant the Viet CUl.g flag in as
many villages and hamlets a.s ~lble.-
"Thls Is a fonn of political struggle,"
said one South Vietnamese officer.
the most basic rreedom of all -the
freedom to choose leaders who will best
serve their interests."
FRANK MANKIEWICZ, n a t ton a I
direcctor for McGovern 's campaign, said
that the refusal of Clark MacGregor,
( CAMPAIGN '72 )
Nixon's campaign manqer, to answer
questions a~ a news conference Monday,
was "astorushing" and added It "shows
either fear or panic, and probably both."
President Nixon's press secretary and
campaign director denounced assertions
that adminil!tralion aides were involved
in political spying and sabotage against
the Democrats.
But neither man flatly deaied them,
"I will not dif;ll.ify with comment
stories based on hearsay, character
assassination, and guilt by association,"
said White. House Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler.
CLARK ~tACGREGOR., c a mp a 1 g n
director of the committee for the Re-
election of the President. said "an the
dirt is being thrown" by the opposition to
Nixon.
"The mud-slinging, the nam&-calling.
the u.nsuMtanliated charges, the in·
nuendos. the guilt by association, the
character assassination, the second-hand
hearsay are all tactics exclusively
employed by the McGovemites and their
apologists," l\t.acGregor said in a state·
ment ~fonday.
He did not di9cuss the speciOc charges
of administraUon--ltnked s a b o t a g e
published by Tbe Washinglan Post and
Time magazine.
. INSTEAD, HE refused to answer qu~
lions. saylng that his position was
justified by the unusual developments af
recent days. He rushed from the fO(lfl\
after reading before newsmen and
television cameras a statement assailing
•
Wi1ids to Cool New England Area; Warmer i11 Soutli
Doctors· in Santiago and Valparaiso
said they would treat only emergencr
cases for 48 houn starting at midnight
Wednesd&y. Sea e&ptalns said they would
stay 1n port. Bank employes 88id they
would remain home.
Mont.agnard tribesmen Jived in five of
the hamlets and Vietnamese In the sixth.
All were poorly defended by government
mllttla troops w h .o withdrew Wider
pressure, field reporta: said.
The Washington Post. l I
•
' •
The decisions by organizations
representing the three professions coin-
cided with the lint day of violence in the
six-day series of slrikts that has
hampered the nation's business and com·
mcrclal We.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Otll"'7 of Ille Oal~ Piiot
b ....... Utd
MenUyoflrlNyt ti "" .. fllOI MW """ .._. ll'J 11• t.m.. UI ... YW' ~ wlll " ""°""" "' "'°"' .... " -.... Ul'llll
1111:1 "'"'"
~., ..... ll#ldl'.t't " ,.. .. Ml rtnl'tt ~r toll\' IW f II.ft\. S..tvriNy, W I 1.m.
llll'lllf'r, e11H w • ~ wm ti. ..,..,..,. •
YW.. Call& ..,.. .....,. 1111114 IO """
'
Some civilians were able to nee with
the militia, but the Communists took con-
trol of the othen. There were no
available populaUon figures on the
hamlets, but most were reported to be
small
Five arc IO miles southwMt of Kontum
and a to ~ mu., oouth or Ptellru. The sixth la In Phu Boo province southeast ol
Pl<iku.
Reinforcement.I were trying t.o rtach
10me of the hamleta, but in at lea.st one
cue they were meeting stlff ruiltance.
In the one hamlet that wu retaken,
five ctvtllana and s1z mJUtiamen were ·
reported kllled and 13 cMllano and lour
mlUUamtn wounded, prellmtnary reports
said, helve enemy were rtported killed.
No olher casualty figures were
available.
On the northern cooat, more than 100
"1UtlY troops Invaded a poorly defended
refugee e1mp Ove mlln from Quang
NgaJ, kllled 11 refugees and sii
mlllUamen and wOW'lded 32 refugees and
eight militiamen.
South Vielnamtae regotars came to the
aid or the camp and secured ii.
spokesmen said .
Wieks
~b
'It's called 811 8/ection. And
it'S where the earthlings.
choose someone to blllme
for . the mess they are in.'
•
•
Orange Coast Today's Fl al
N .. Y. Stoeks
VOL 65, NO. 291 , J SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1972 N TEN CENTS
Banks Advising 'No Loan·s' on Coastal Zone
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
01 tlte 01ol1r Piie! St11f
The California Mortgage Bankers
Assoc iation Monday voted not to granl
loans of any kind in the coastal zon e
where building could be restricted by lhe
passage of Proposition 20.
The association is a v o 1 u n t a r y
organization made up primarily of in-
dependent mortgage bankers. The vote is
advisory and wiU be followed at the in·
di vidual members' discretion.·
Reaction to the vote ln Orange coast
lending institutions and among local
realtors was guarded. Most said they bad
not had an opportunity to study the
recommendation in full .
Association president Robert E .
f.1rirgan said in Los Angeles Monday
·•Passage of Prop. 20 on the Nov. 7 ballot
would have a drastic effect on the people or California.
"The cost to tu:payers, property
owners and the general publk would be
di!astrowi. Prop. 20 V.1>ll!d establish. a
virtual moratorium on all building of any
kind within Its ill-defined permit area for
a five-year period . The moratorium ap-
plies to public projects as well as
P.rivate.
"This moratorium, if coupled with the
building shuldo\\'n now taking place
throughout California as a result of the
recent state Supreme Court decision in
the Mammoth Mountain case -which
states that local government must file
envtronmental impact reports on proj·
ects requested by priv!l.te parties -
would therefore halt all work by local
governments. contractors. developers
and private lending institutior.s."
Man y of the loan officers C'<lntaoted at
Orange coast banks said they had not
received any official pol icy statements
from their superiors relating to coastal
zone loans.
Bill Woffor~ of the Union Bank pointed
out that with the election lhree weeks
away and the effect of the environmenta l
impact decision, "it's almost a n1oot
point.,.
He said that unofficially his ba11k has
warned their loan officers to "be
careful" when granting loans for the
coastal zone. "It depends on a number or
va riables, but at the moment we don't
have that problem. because \\·e don't
have any applications for that area," he
said.
A spokesman for Avco Financial
Services said they would not take the
assoc1alion's vote into consideration
Uecause Avt'O le nds only to indi vidua l
homeo" ner:>. not deve lopers.
Larry Smith. speaking f or another
mortgage fi rm. The Al ison Company n1
Ne wport Beach said they have adopt ed a
\\'Oil anc' see attitude. "\Vith the election
only three weeks away. I.here has not
been any specifi c policy statement from
IS.. LOANS, Page ?I
Boatmen Protest
Irvine Co. Asks Boat Repair Fees
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of tlle OlllY Piiiot Sllft
Irvine Company of£ieials announced
Monday the company wants a kickback ·
from all boatyard operators ~ n d
freelance repairmen \\'Orking on boats in
three company-owned marinas.
The boatyard operators say they want
a lawyer.
In a letter sent to boatyard ow,ners
Monday , company officers said they had
C'<lntracted with Basin Marine . Inc., to do
al! the repair and maintenance work to
Deroin
boats docked at Balboa Yacht Basin,
Villa Marina and Bayside Marina.
Anybody else doing work would have to
pay the company 2.5 percent of the gross
bill.
"This is primarily to help us offset
costs of &ecurity and pollution Control,"
said Robert Inman, an official of
California Recreation Company. the
Irvine subsidiary running its maritime
enterprises.
Don New, owner of Basin ~tarine,
\\'hich is located within one of the cho6en ----------
Found
Si11ger McNair Says Innocent
NEWARK, N. J. (UPI) -Singer-actress Barbara McNair was arrested (or
possession of nearly a half oUDce of heroin at the Playboy Club in McA!et, it
was dlsck>sed today.
Mlss McNair and her husband, Rick Mamie, Were arraJgned QD charges
in federal court here. Each was ordered lo post a $111,ooo bood. 'Ibey pleaded
innocent. •
A spokesman for the Playboy Club aaid Miss McNatr. ':rl, appearecf three
times this week in the swank Penthouse of the club-hotel in private perform.
ances for a group of conventioneers. She was arrested Monday night in her
dressing room. .
Her husband acts as her business agent.
U.S. District Court Judge Lawrence A. Whipple set no travel restrictions
on the couple. The Playboy Club said the singer had ICbeduled engagements
in Chicago Wednesday and again in McAfee Thursday.
A Port of New York Authority spokesman said a package was traced.from
Newark Airport to Miss McNair, who signed for it at the Playboy Club.
'
W eatlaer Hindra1ace
Searchers Scour Alaskan
Coast for Boggs Airplane
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -A ne;t
or military and pri vate planes flew out of
here at dawn today to search Alaska's
mountainous southern coast for a long·
missing light plane carrying House
Democratic Leader Hale Boggs and three
other persons on a campaign trip.
The 15 planes planned to fly criss-eross
patterns along the 560-mile Ancborage-to-
Juneau run on which the plane ap-
parently went down Monday.
Included in the search group were elec-
tronically equipped HCL30s. An Air Force
HC130 searched unsuccessfully through
the night for the plane carrying Boggs,
Alaska's lone House member, a con-
gressional aide and the pilot.
Orange (;on st
\'l'enther
The weatherlady says U 's going
-to be cloudy on Wednesday. lt
might even rain. Temperatures at
the beaches will be in the low 70s
rl<;ing to 75 inland . Lows tonight
58-62.
' I
INSIDE TODJ\Y
Bomba movie.a -the Phfltp-
pi1ies version of &ht porno flick
-have been banned from the
nttv socie tu of Preiiden£ FerdJn-
a11d E. J\farcos. Set •tOTJI on
Page J 2.
L .M ... YC 1)
C1t1t1n111 • J Ci.ui"-" Jt.N c-k• 1s
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DMTll ... llC:H I
ECHorlfll P... •
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·--M9trttt , .. " T.......... )f TM1twt 11
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Additional search planes wt!re schedul-
ed to take to the air later in the day.
The Air Force said)he for~ast was for
strong wind, an overcast and "very
marginal flying weather."
In Juneau, meanwhile, the state's
Rescue Coordination Center said it was
checlting reports from an unidentified
ham radio operator ln California that he
heard a distress c&ll from tile missing
plane on a citizens radio band.
Spokesmen would not give any detai.b on
the matter.
A spokesman sakl ham radio operators
in the aria had been Wed to tune to the
band -Channel 9 -early today in hopes
of picking up a signal.
He said no voice contact had been
made, but In response to queries such as
"Tap .your mJcropbone if you hear us,"
several clicks were heard. T h e
spokeaman said, however, that the clicks
did not indicate a signal from the do\vned
plane, saying they could easily be caused
by the flickering of nearby house lights
or the starting of a car engine.
The White House said President Nixon
has been receiving reporta on lhe search
efforts.
Prts• ...,,..1ary Ronald L. Ziegler said
Nixon, Uuoogb his mllltary aid<. offered
all possible ..,.llta...:e and provided for
tcanoportaUon for tile Boggs family to go
to Alaalra.
Hou,. Speolcer Carl Albert said the
pllol of tbe mlasing plane Is reputed to be
one of the bat bush pilots ln Alaska and
would know every posslblt landing spol
between Anchorage and Juneau.
"I cannot penonally give up hope,''
Albert uld.
Aboard lhe twl ... nglne Ceslna 110
""" ll<>llJI, 51: Rep. Nick BeiJch, a 40-
year-old Democrat; Beg I c b' 1 ld--
m!nlstraUve assistant, RusstU Brown,
31: and the pilot, 31-year-old Don E.
Jom .
Bogp' administr1l1Ve ISSlstan\. Gary
Hymel, oald in Washington that the last
IS.. llOOOS. Plge 11
•
I
marinas, Balboa Yacht Basin, said it was
dOl'le to keep the freeJancers from using
tile docks.
"They work out ot the back of a truck,
use the docks for their repairs, get them
dirty," he said, "and they splash paint
and even dumv it into the bay.
"I've even seen them change the oil on
· boat and pour it on the nowers." New
said.
He said he 's all for the surcharge but
he denied he has any contract with Irvine
(See KICKBACK, Page !J
Trailer Park
Crackdown Not
Under \f.ay . •·
The building department s1ill baa not
begun the crackdown on nm-down trailers
and trailer parks in Newport Beach that
was ordered by councilmen a week ago~
it was )earned today.
They say they don't have anybody to
do the cracking down.
"It's impossible for us to do anything
so far as overall inspections,'' Bobby
Fowler, city building of!icer. said this
morning.
"We can respond to complaints but we
need more help to carry ·out any sweeping
correcl.ions," he said.
City Manager Robert L. Wynn said he
has received. a request from the Com·
munity Development Department to hire
temporary persoonel and will take il to
tile city councilqlen ne%I Tuesday.
Councilmen have an lknont!Hlid hiring
freeze still in effect and must approve any
increase in persormel.
If they wait to get more people before
starting inspectioos of the trailer courts,
i~ may take as long as a month to get
started on what councilmen demanded
should be an "hnmediate" crackdown.
Councilmen last Tuesday ordered in-
spections of all 12 trailer courts in the
city with instructions that ·an serioos vio-
lations be corrected within ro days.
The arder came after tbey learned of
alleged illegal and hazardous conditions
at .six trailer courts in Newport Beach.
Wynn said one order to repair has gone
out -to tbe State o( California, owner of
Sandy's Deluxe Trailer Park, 2912 W.
Coast Highway.
Wynn said that order -to correct some
H building and health and safety code
vk>laUons within 60 days, or cm down -
was able to be made because city in-
spectors had already toured that trailer
park.
They went out there two weeks ago
after a resident of the park appeared at a
city council meeting complaining llbout
j Stt TRAIL£RS, Page % )
Parking
Early Whale Watcher
Pamela Ferguson of Fountain Valley plans to be
ready when International Whale Watching Week
starts Oct. 21 . Actually, that date may be a bit early
for Orange Coast watchers, says the American
Cetacean Association. which watches more whales
than anyone. An association spokesman said the an-
nual California gray \Vhale migration from Alaska's
Bering Sea to Baja California breeding grounds is
under way. llowever, the earliest migrants so far
have moved only as far south as the Oregon Coast.
Search for Physician
' From Newport Canceled
11\e Western Rescue Coordination
Center today called oft the search for
Newport Beach physician George Peck,
who has been missing . in tbe single
engine Cessna since he took oU from
Orange County Airport two weeks ago to-
day.
Officially the search has been suspend-
ed, said Sgt. Robert Ruff a controller at
the center at llamillon Air Force Base.
"The mission bas been suspended but it
has not been closed," Sgt . Ruff said.
He explained the search would begin
immediately if any new information
develops.
The decision was telephoned to Dr.
Peck's family late Monday afternoon.
Dr. Peck's son. Douglas, a Los Angeles
businessman. said he is clinging to the
hope that his rather is still alive.
"But realistically as every day goes by
so do the chances," he said.
"It's so incredible that someone just
disappear~." Peck said.
lt is not that unusual , said Sgt. Ruff.
"People think of C8llfomia as nothing
but sunny beacties, but 75 percent of It is
dam rugged country.
"It's easy for a iitane to crash under
Facility
the tree topa: tn son:ie dark remote area,"
Sgt. Rufr said.
He said another plane from Northern
California missing for three months was
just discovered this week by i. hiker.
Sgt. Ruff said the plane no doubt will
be found. "but ifs just a question of
lime."
The search conducted primarily by the
C&lifornia Civil Air Patrol. began ~·hen
Dr. Peck, a prominent allergy specialist.
did not return from a three-hour fl ight
from Orange County Airport.
Search planes spent a total of seven
days in the air scouring most o(
California from San Francisco south to
tht Mexican border and parts of Nev::ida .
Tbc Cessna 172 had a 3.5 hour ran ge
that autborities said could have taken Or
Peck as far as 400 miles.
•
Bug Case Disclaimed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Top Nixon
Administration of(icials had no prior
knowledge of the Watergate bugging in·
eldent. says Pre!lidential adviser Robert
H. Floch.
Sought
Baby Girl Falls
Into Slvimming
Pool in Ne,vport
By ARTHUR R. VL~SEL
DI 1M OllllY Piiiot ltlfl
A baby girl described all tremendously
strong for her age and able to run about
1.111 by herself at only IS-months was cling·
ing to life tod ay. revived after shr
toddled into a S\9imming pool at ht>r
grandpa rents' L'-lewport Beach home.
Dana Faith Burggren was fi shed from
the 12-foot-deep \\•atc r at 5: IS p.m .. by
ht>r young u11clE'. <1boul one half-hour
after she wns last seen inside the house
fl er father Eugene Burggren. of 413
30th St.. began giving the baby mouth-to·
moulh resuscitati on bcforr Ne"·port
~at·h Fire [)(>purtm cnt personnel ar·
rived at 1730 Antigua Way and too k over.
The infant. whose ;·oung parents were
Oa bysitl ing with Afrs. B u r g g r e n 's
brolhers and sisters. was taken to Costa
Mf'sa P.femorial Hospital following first
aid inelucUng closed heart massage and
oxygen.
Once emergency room Or. Clare
\Viedf'meirf" determ ined the baby's
breathi.ng "'as as near normal as possible
:ind recorded a slight improvement in
hf'r critital coodltl on she was transrer-
'"° 1~urJ1ing personne l at thl' Orange COt.Jn.
ty "ll'dica l Ct>nter'! c3rdiac care tmit
said this rnor :1lng thf Burggren baby stlll
remains in rrifical and unchanged co n.
d1 11on sintc btinJ.! adm itted.
Newport Developer Plans Five-level Structure
Nr\\'J)(lrt Beach Police Officer Gttrv
Rinck was dispatched to the hotne of l 'r.
and ~!rs. John Slo~man about 5: 15 p.m .
after tra.i;:edy shnt1ered thr dinner shared
by the young cou ple and three Slonemnn
childrl'n,1 Investigators ggid Burggrcn alld lhe
childrt'n were si tting at the dining table
and t.1rs . Lynne Burggrtn \\'aa cookinR:
when she suddenly stopped. A Newport Beach developer wants to
build a five.level parking structure at the
first 1tep Jn a $3 million master pl.on to
redevelop the entire Lido Shops area
along Vla Oporto, a block lrom City Hall.
'l'he Don Koll Company plan call• ror
convtnlon of the l(.trl lnto a "Ghir&rdelli
Square Sou\h'" patterned after San Fran.
ctsoo11 famed b«yfronl shopping area,
accordlni to arcblt.ct George Bissell,
-llrm la designing the projtc! ror
Koll. . ..
"We are going to ask for a specific
plan for the whole area between
Berk&hire11 Restaurant and JmpeMal
Bank," 81,..ll oald. "Thia will be• total
f't'development effort "
A use permit rot the iz,ooo.squaro-root
parking bulldlng ls expcct@d to be con·
tinued 1t Thursday night's plaMlng com ·
mission meeting. but planners will ~t1r
the proposal du:rlng their afternoon study
session.
In add1Uon to parking. the structure
will contain 30,IXX> square feet of shops
and professional offices. Bissell said .
"There will be about 367 parking
spaces which is not the moll efficient,
but the belt w& can do with Utt fldd.
triangular lot shape," he said.
Current plans for the building c1ll for
IL to be. SS feet tall , which mean~ it will
require 1 uae ~It under the new
hel&ht Umitordlnanc<.
81ssf.11 l8id p(&n.1 for-lbt rtdeVP:lop-
,i
ment have been in the \\'Orks for about a
year and a half.
"We are trying to oome up with
something !hot ,viii benefit the public and
the busineMmen." he said.
The 11rea acrOM from the parking
building on the bay 11ide of Vla Opor1o l11
now prlmarlly apartmenls and a !ew of.
fices. Bl&seU said.
"lt ~ hard to get through and Wlllk
along the bayfront :• he said. "Our plans
call fc>r a change in that wtth lots of open
Attl:S and bay views."
Bissell said the Koll comt>MY alJO has
been wotlc:ing \\'Ith the a.ity to repave the
street In the arH. wttb cobblestones.
Koll either owos or has a long-tt.rm
!Stt STRUCTURE. Pq e II ..
"Where's the baby?" she asked.
Fsmily members ranned out through
the Westclilf district hom1 to hunt thc-
robust little girl who had bttn playinR in
tht living room earlier .
Sc hool Board Meelio .
Members of thi Newport-Mesa Unlfitd
Sc~ Board wiU rtvlc.w pla ns for ex-
pansion of portkna or Ertancl• ttlgh
School at their meeting ton ight.
The •rchitectural nrm of Poner·
JtJ\9e'f1 will mak~ tht pre~ntatlon during
the meeting ,ifhich sts rl! 11 7:Xt In I.ht
Costa Mffil lllgh School Lyc•um
•
I D>.ILY PlLDl • ---
Edison Plans Snagged
Expansion l1ripact Statement Turned Down
Southern California Edison Company'r
$250 million proposal to expand its llun·
tington Beach gener:1ting $talion hit a
snag Monday whC'n city officials rejt._-cted
the firm 's environmental hnpacl state-
ment as ''y,·holly Inadequate."
Aeling on nn <>pinion by Acting Clty Al4
tomey \Villi~ J\1nv1s, l'ity officinls in·
formed ~'.dison that it ··gr~atly ex-
Union Hank Roof
pandtd" envlrorun•olal impact slat .. coml>Qlllld Southern Calllomla's already m~nt would be nectSU.ry ~tore the cliy crftlcal po'IW't:t ats1s." ottardinl to
could act oo a request for a building Edison District Manactr Pa u l
pennit . Richard~.
BdisOn officials this morning expreMf:d Richard~ f'..xplai~ tl'"1t the ltn«th oC
both surprise and 1..'0nctn1 at the city's the delay y,·oold de-pend on how much
aC't1on. new information the city rrqulred.
"Any unreasonable delays by the C'lt y ''\\'c can't just pull this stuf( out o( a
11 1,ranting a building permit voould h3l ,'' he said. "Tht$e reports are \'ery
de1ailed and take time to p"'pare."
Prior to the ('ity's ne~· ruling, Edison
had m..i Ollly a pr•llmlnary •n·
\•iron~ntal impact stat,me-nt "'Ith the
Newport Chooses High
city. The rompa.ny said it was preparing
more detailed ones for prest'ntallon to
olhcr regulatory agencit'S this spring.
Thf;>.se included the state Regional Wattr
Quality Control Board and tht Public
Spot for Its Antenna
By WILLI A~t SCHREIBER
Of !Mo 01lfY '11tt Sttff
Ne~·port Beach officials finally have
found the best spo t in the city for its ne\.\'
high-frequency police radio antenna.
The site they've chosen couldn't be
much higher -its the top of the Union
Bank building in· Newport Center, the
tallest building in the city.
But apparently the space needed for
the Jong, slender pole is in great demand
because the Irvine CompLny, which holds
From Pagel
KICKBACK ...
as part of the deal.
"l haven't signed anything but a
lease." New said, "anQ then:!'s nothing in
the lease about me being an exclusive
agent."
Inman said that's not true and New "is
confused." '
He said, "We have a preliminary sign-
ed agreement now and it will all be in the
new lease we're about to sign. It's just a
formality."
The proposed kickback is to be paid
upon payment of bills by the estimated
400 boats in the three marinas involved
and the trvine Company has sent
agreements to the various boatyard
operators and f!'eelancers asking them to
sign it and send it back by return mail.
Lee Hinman, who owns B o a t
Specialists on Mariners Mile, said he's
one of the boatyard operators who's
going to talk to bis lawyer before he
signs the proposed contract.
"There ls a question of legality as (ar
as t'm concerned," he said.
There's one other boatyard operator
who figures he's got a v.·ay around the
surcharge.
"This is one or 20 feeble attempt9
they've made to extract money," said
Arsene "'Blackie" Gadarian, proprietor
or Blackie's Boatyard on Newport
.Boulevard.
"But this one's a meany," he said.
"The way I see it, I've been given two
alternatives, I can add 2.5 percent to my
bills for boats in their marinas and if the
people are dumb enough to pay It, I 'II
give Irvine the money.
"Or better stiU, I will charge Irvine a
five percent handling charge for col·
lecting their money . That way they'll on-
ly o..,.,·e me 2.5 percent for the work 1 do
on their property," Gadarian said.
He also suggested he might charge
them another five percent "for pennit-
ting my customers to park in their
slips."
Besides Gadarian and Hinman. other
boatyards were equally upset over the
announcement, which also affects yacht
broker! trying to sell boats in the
Marinas.
The Irvine Company order also gives
exclusive yacht brokerage rights to
Bayside Marine Sales.
Harold Ayres. owner of Lido Shipya rd.
indicated skepticism. saying, "I haven't
gone over it all , but I haven't signed It
yet."
Irvine Company officials did not
discuss the legal aspect, other than to
say if they didn't think it was legal, they
wouldn't have done It.
OIANGI COAST •
DAILY PILOT
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'
the lease on the building. "'ants to charge
the city $1~ per month for it.
"\\'e'd certainly hire to talk to them a
little further about this,"' said City
t-.lanager Robert \\'ynn.
'"\\le were kind of hoping the Irvine
Company would want to let us use it as
kind of a gesture in the public interest at
a C'OSt of $1 a year or some thing like
that ," he said .
The new tower is needed . Wynn said.
because Ne\\'J)Ort Beach has joined a
countywide {l(llice nety,·ork that <1l!O\\'S ror
near-instant contact y,·ith any police unit
anyv;·here in the county.
"We no~· have our low-frequency
antenna at the police department here in
city hall," Wynn said. "But "'e found tha t
using high frequencies like in the radio
net. we would have some dead areas."
Motorola Corp., which is contracting
with the county to supply equipment for
the new net. ran tests in the ci ty and
found the Union Bank roof to be the only
point that can reach all areaS or the city.
"Some areas are 'veaker than others -
such as the Back Bay, Big Canyon and
Corona del Mar-but we can get through
to a!\ of them," Wynn said.
The Newport Beach conversion to th e
new radio net will cost about $200,000 of
which $120.000 has been provided under
the Law Enforcement Assistance Act.
The entire cost of outfitting police in
the county 's 26 cities will be about $3
millioo.
An Irvine C.Ompany spokes man said to-
dav that negoUatioru. are still under way
with the city.
"We are still talking about it, and we
think .it sounds like a good idea," the
spokesman said.
,"Our proposed agreement was for a
$150 per month rental but we can still
study this," he added.
Wynn said $150 is a Jot hi gher than the
city can afford for such a small space on
the roof of a t.uilding.
"This is just a pole sticking out of the
roof," he said and you probably can't
even see it from the ground.
"What else can they use the roof ror
besides keeping the rain and sun off the
backs of top floor secretaries," he added.
From Pagel
TRAILERS • • •
living conditions.
Councilmen ordered a staff lnvestiga·
tion of that trailer park, and all others in
the city, and were told In that report last
week that virtually every park in Neu•-
port Beach assertedly has building code
and health and safety code violations.
lt1ayor Donald A. Mcinnis called for the
crackdown, personally, as he declared.
''give them 60 days to abate the nuisanc·
es. bring them up to code or move out."
FO\li'ler said thi.s morning that he is still
awaiting formal instructions to do any-
thing.
He said Community Development Di-
rector Richard V. Hogan had told him he
was go ing to meet with Wynn to find out
exac tly "the level of inspeclions" and
"try to find some way to get some help
to do them.
"I heard they wanted inspections to
find any 'immediate life hazards'," Fow-
ler said, "but I've been told to sit tight
and wait ror instructions."
Fowler said the tremendous increase in
workload brought on by the new lintita·
lion ordinance, now in effect, and the fe11r
of passage of Proposition 20, the coostal
initiative, has made it impossible for his
department to keep up.
He noted that the department is \\"ell
aware of the conditions at the pa rks and
pointed out that Is why he had proposed
turning over code enforcement authority
lo the state.
It u•,ris thnt proposa l thAt tri ggered the
council manic outcry about the conditions
and which led to the order of the full
scale probe as they felt 11 is ihc clty's
responsibility,
'
Series on Brain
Begi1is Tonig11i
"Babies and Cocktai1 Parties" ls the ti·
lie of tht first of R five-part lttture
series on the braln which opens tonight
at UC Irvine.
The series is optn to the public. It Is
l!JlO""'ffil by tilt Friend> of UCI.
The opening lecture will be given at 8
p.m . in the Social Science 1.ecture ltall
by Professor Norman WlenberRel or the
UCI starr. He wUJ detail the late.lit find·
ln!s of bow the brain responds to
st ectf!d atlmull.
On<! example of tteltettd rtsponse, he
says. Is the ability of o mot.her who Is
hosting a cocktail party In her living
room to hear her baby crying tn the next room.
I
lit1\itie-s Commission,
A complete en\•ironmental impact
statement cannot be prepared much
before April t, Richardson s a id .
ti.feanwbile. a conditional building permit
was requested.
A city task force working
under cjty Environmental Resources
C.OOrtllnalor Tom Severns, is now Vr'Ork-
ing to develop by Friday the exact re-
quirement.s for Edison's expanded en-
vironmental impact statement.
In ruling that such an expanded report
was necessary, Mavis said that "an en -
\•ironmentaJ impact statement should be
submitted and heard prior to issuance: of
the building permit, and the pennit
should not be issued conditionally. The
effect would be to circumvent the
public.•·
The city Planning Commission had
~n scheduled to rule tonight on
Edison's request for a building pennit.
with review by the city council oext
Tuesday.
Now, however, F.dison will go before
the planrung commission next week, one
week later than scheduled, and without a
request for actK>n.
''We'll just tell them what we want to
do ," Richardson said "I seriously doubt
v.·e'll be able to put together the ad·
ditional environmental information by
that lime."
Richardson further concecle<i that city
action is unlik~ly to come before the Nov.
7 elections.
The reason for that deadline. he ex·
palined. was the possibility that prop-
osition 20, the Coastline Jn.itiative, might
pass.
"It will create another level of review,
and we had hoped that, if we had our
city approval before the initiative passed,
we might be in a stronger position in ar-
guing before them."
Richardson said he believes the further
environmental impact statements re-
quested by the city might be "reclun-
dunt. ''
"We'll be going before agencies
specifically empowered to protect the
water and the air, and we'll have to
make very detailed reports to them. ln
our report to the city, we said that if we
don't meet all existing environmental
standards, we won't be allowed to build.
What more is there to say?"
Nun Identifies
'Taj Mahal' Case
Loan, Recipient
By TOM BARLEY
Of 111o 0111¥ Plllf Sl1ft
\\'orld Financial Trends Vice President
James Shipley was identifjed today in
Orange County Superior Court testimony
in the "Taj Mahal" trial as the man who
apparently s~ood to gain most from a
$500,000 hospital loan that remains un-
paid today.
Sister Alary Clarissa, the second Roman
Catholic nun l-0 testify in the trial of
Shipley, Laguna Hills fmancier Joseph
Dulaney and two codefendants, picked
out Shipley as the man to whom the loan
\l.'as made nearly four years ago.
The former member of the Board of
Directors at St. Bernardine Hospital, San
Bernardino, testified before Judge James
Turner that Dulaney, 38. of 2631 Via
Cascadita, San Clemente, assured her
and fellow directors that he would
pcrsonBUy guarantee the loan.
Sister ~tary Clarissa backed the earlier
testimony of hospital admlrrlstrator
Sister Mary Margaret that hospital Con-
troller Robert Machan first suggested e.n-
1 rusting $500,000 in reserve funds to
Dulaney's Laguna Hills enterprise.
Both nuns testified that Dulaney and
Shipley promised them a 10 percent
return on funds that were currently earn·
ing 5 percent.
They said that the $500,000 they turned
over to Dulaney was invested in 250,000
shares of Azalea Mobile llomes stock at
$2 o share. ·
Tilt Azalea stOck is condemned by thei
prosec:ution as "worthless and not worth
the pape r it is printed on."
SiJter Mary C.1arissa said they were ""ured by ShlJ!ley, 38. ol 169Sl Lowell
Circle, Huntington Beach, and Dulaney
\l.•hen the hospital group met the defen-
dants at the Taj Mahal that Dulaney was
worth $3 million ,
It Is alle!Jed that Du!iney was In debt
at the time he received the hospital
funds.
The nun said she later learned that the
stock recommended to the hospital group,
was worth nothing whtn the loan went In-
to default and thi!' hospital's alleiatlons
sparked criminal action against IC!Ven
defendant!.
Machan, 50, of San Bernardino 11 to get
a aeparate trial on Jdentlcal charges of
grand theft, fraud and con1plracy .
On trial whh Dulaney and Shipley are
Daniel Hayes, 40, of 8211 Snowbtrd Orlvl!,
Huntington Beach and Wendell Warren
Au11tln, 38. of Riverside.
...
U•t T ..... N LOST IN STORM
Rop. Holo Boee•
FrOtltPagel
BOGGS ...
radio con tact with the plane came 12
minutes after takeoff Monday. when Jonz
filed a flight plan. There was no sign of
trouble.
Boggs, who left Washington O!i Sunday
and had been due to return this morning,
had gone to Alaska to campaign for
Begich, a native of Eveleth , Minn., who is
seeking re-election to a second tenn.
Boggs' wife, Lindy, was the only
member of the family at home in-
Bethesda, 1\-ld., l\1onday night,
As the word spread to Bogp' h o m e
state of Louisiana, there was an un-
mistakable ring of .affection for the con-
gressman.
Edward Cocke stood solemnly on the
sidewalk outside a New Orleans bar and
said that Boggs Is "our kind of people."
Balloon Mystery
Punctured-Used
For Pilot Film
The mysterious balloon that hovered
over Newport Harbor for about two hours
Saturday is no longer so mystericus.
The hot air bag is owned by balloonist
George Stokes of Fountain Valley. It was
originally built to use in promotion1 for
London Bridge which was moved from
England to Lake Havasu City, Ariz., but
in thi9 case it was used in the production
of a pilot film sequence.
"A guy who works for Bob Hope
Enterprises wanted to use a blllloon to
film a. sequence on his own," said Stokes.
"l don't know if he was going to give the
film idea to Bob Hope Enterprise:i or
not."
Stokes said the film idea, entiUed "Just
Passin3 Through" is the story of a black
boy and a white boy who travel around
the world seeking adventure.
"The balloon filming was sort of an ad-
vance effort to gel the feel of what the
balloon could do on film," said Stokes,
wt.o piloted the craft over the Harbor.
Stokes said the balloon, which wa:i
painted with a gigantic British Dag was
tied to a yacht owned by retired com-
puter executive Dick Franks of Balboa.
"We were about 75 feet up, the yacht
1l·Wed us around the harbor and then to
China Cove where we did some filming -
both from the ground and the air," he
said.
Stokes' balloon was inflated on the 10th
Street beach and then towed from there,
f'Nt1tP .. el
LOANS DECLINE •.•
our maln of flee," he reported.
RepresentaUva: of the klcal boards of
realton seemed a llWe surprised at I.be
UIOClltlOll'I vote.. ·
Glm Martlo ol lbe N""l*t Harbor·
c..ta MW board .. Id "It's very possible
* * * Huntington
Council OKs
'20' Support
liunlington Beach councllmen Monday
night reaffinned their support of
Proposition 20, the coastline ln1tlatlve, on
a 4 lo 3 spilt vote.
Councilmen had t>flf.iously supported
the issue 5 to 2 but Ted'1arlett withdrew
his support.
Jack Green cast the deciding vote In
favor, commenting, "lf we doo't_get th1J
squared away on the local and atate
level, the federal government will do it."
"President Nixon already has prc>-
posals for naticinal land use control,''
Green told his fellow councilmen.
Opponents o( Proposition 20, especially
members of the Chamber of Commerce,
had hoped Green would abstain, leaving
a 3 to 3 deadlock and no action.
Green dashed the Clamber effort then
said, "I received two letters from the
Chamber, one was an insult to my in-
telligence. They want us to be in
harmony ~·ith them but the Chamber and
Council haven 't been in hannony in
years."
Two high school coeds, one from
Marina High in the city, the other from
Corona del Mar High, also urged the
co\Jncil to support the coastline measure.
At one point, Mayor Al Coen stopped
th< Coron• del Mar girl's speecli and told
her: "You don't have permission to rriake
inferences a n d innuendos about coun-
cilmen."
Coen, with Jerry Matney and Bartlett,
opposes 20. The girl had thanked "some"
or the councilmen for their concern.
Bartlett asked Green the official position
of the Southern California Associatioo of
Governments (SCAG).
''It has taken no official position,"
Green, who is president of SCAG, replied,
Green pointed out, OOwever, that dlrec-
tors of the California League of Cities
have supported it, 11 to 8.
Green, doing most ol the speaking on
the issue, said there are many
misconceptior.s abou~ the coastal Lssue.
"It will not set up a moratorium," be
declared. ••And it can have local coo.trot,
if the governor's appointments to the
regional commissions swing it that way."
Freak Accident
Impales Sitter's
Hand in Ne1vport
A teenage<! Huntington Beach babytl~
ter is rtrovering from an agonlzlnjr
wuund suffered Monday night in Newporl
Beach when a bench collapsed, impaling:
a large nail through her band.
Newport Beach Fire Department
rescue squad members sakf the eight..
penny nail was still in the hand of l(alln
Vincent, 14, crucifixion-style when they
arrived.
The) held an ice cube to Miss Vincent's
hand -a large chunk of furniture wood
still held in place -until It became
nun1b, then pulled uut the impaled nail.
Miss Vincent. of 490l Heil Ave., was
babysitting for friends at 1824 Port
Barmouth Place: whe1. she tried to move
the padded bench and it broke, ~
said.
She was to receive further treatment
Including a tetanus shot at a hospital
emergency room.
1hal the: usoci.ation ls panickln1. I'm not
quite cttU.ln what thell' thinking was ln
deciding that Prop. lO would do 10melnng
lhll the "'''"'""""ta! lmpa<t bu not alttady done.
"\\'by bait construdlon retroacUvelY
by withdrawing f\1ndJ already gran1ed.",
he asked. "U their thJnklng w:is to J
withhold funds not yet granted and save
themselves the tum and effort of proc-
eaing loans a n d then ha ve the prop.
osltion pa.Med, I can understand that ,"
he added. '
E. L, Risley. president of the South
Orange County board noted his board like
the others in the area has gone on record
opposing Prop. 2{t. "Thl.s new decision
will definitely affect our business ," he
said, although he did Rcknowledge that
busine.u had already been affected by
the state Supreme Court's decision.
Evelyn W,llcox, executive secretary or
the Huntington Beach·Fountain Valley
board of realtors, said she did not want
lo comment on the vote.
* * * Newport Harbor
Chamber Opposes
Proposition 20
Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce directors Monday reaflinned their
opposition to Proposition 20 -the
California Coastal Jnitialive -and
outlined a concerted campaign to try to
de.feat it.
The Chamber originally took a stand
opposing the measure more than a month
a.go when It appointed an ad-hoc com-
mittee to study means of educating the
public on the Nov. 7 ballot measure.
"We now have a public speaking
bureau that groups are using. We'\'e
hired a writer to seod out releases and
we've sent mailings to ch amber
members," saJd Richard Stevens, Balboa
Bay Club president and chairman of the
Chamber committee.
Dr. Nolan Frizzelle, a co-chainnan ot
th• panel. told directors that the Newport
Harbor Chamber may be unusual in its
stand on the proposition.
"Not all Chambers are committed and
many just don't know what the thing
would mean," he said.
Frlzzelle said his group i9 making a
basic, practical pitch to the public.
"We are just telling them to read it ,"
he said. "There is a lot of propaganda
and emotional content in It but oot much
good reasoning."
Propo9ition 20 would create a coastal .
z.one five miles wide and Vr'OUld form one ·
state board and six regional boards
which would hold the power of veto over
any development within that &trip.
Opponents say such a measure wUJ rob
local government of control over ~velop.
ment and wouJd create another complex
segment of government needing tax
money for support.
l'rom PGRe l
STRUCTURE • • •
lease 00 all °" property being ""'" tldered for redevelopment, Bissell l!ldded.
City officials said today they will have
to wait and see what the overall plan Is
before making a judgment on it.
"~ting zoning and height, I think
it would be extremely Interesting to
detennine the viability of such a struc-
ture," said City Manager Robert Wynn.
"This woold b8 n desirous thing to find
out without any risk to the city or the
public," he added.
Senior Planner William Laycock: said
the matter would be continued Thursday
because the city wants to see how the en-
tire area will develop.
"It may be premature to have a struc-
ture there so we have to know all the
plans," be said.
Roll Out The Red Carpet!
I.
Three yean •go we lwid a request from • local high school
for a red runner for homec.omi1t9 ceremonies. A remMnt
cut in to two nic• runnen.
Without advertisin91 the word got a r o u n d, and our •
business got so good th1t we had to make another runner.
This ye•r we wil !wive the pleasure of loaning the three
runners lo high schools an around the Southern Califomi•
., .. , including en the local schools. One weekend, last
year, we furnished THREE homecomings. Also, sever•I
times again this year we wiU furnish weddings end grand
openin90
If YOU h•v• need lo< • red runner for an occuion, stop
•nd 1ee us .•. no chorge. The only· requiNm<tnt is prompt
rehJm after the occ..sion.
At Alden's yoo'I alwrfs gel the red c•rpet treatment!
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lacentla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thni Thun., 9 to 5'30-FRI., 'to 9-SAT., 9'30 to S
-
)
l '
-
Orange Coast
EDITION
Today's Fln al
N.Y. Stoeks
' VOL. 65, NO. 291, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY. OCTOBER 17, 1972 c TEN CENTS
Raccoons, Coyote, Bobcat Lose Mesa Vote
Fearing legal problems from a. "pet·
ting zoo" containing a lion, an ocelot and
other exotic anlmals, Costa Mesa coun·
cilmtu Mooday night denied a woman's
-Ucense appllcallon for • a children's adlmal compound at the
Orange County Fairgrounds.
Acting on the advice of City Manager
Fred Sorsabal, the council turned down
Mrs. Shelba Marsh's request until she
forwards a more delailed proposal cover-
ing questions about liability insurance,'
e 'D'UTCMMAltol
types of animab ln ~ zoo, and how they
will be cared for .
Mrs. March. 814 w .. Bay St., already
owns two raccoons , a coyote, and some
other animals she wants to put in the
200.
'l'bey are being kept by her in what city
officials claim i.9 a vkllation of a city
ordinance prohibiting the keeping or wild
animals as ~ts.
"f find ~ dllficult to believe that these
animals which are tame when small, will
Gtfff of Alallra
Ul'I*-"'
PLANE CARRYING DEMOCRATIC HOUSE MAJORITY LEADER LOST
Hale Boggs Mi1Si"jf In Rainstorm on Anchor1ge..June1u Flight
Planes Search Aluska
C0ast For Boggs Craft
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -A fleet
of military and private planes flew out cf
here at dawn today to search Alaska's
mountainous southern coast for a long-
missing light plane carrying House
Democratic Leader Hale Boggs and thrte
other persons on a campaign trip.
The 15 planes planned, to ny criss-cross
patterns along the 560-mile Anchorage-t~
Juneau run on which the plane a~
parently went down Monday.
Included in the search group were elec-
tronically equipped HC130s. An Air Force
HC130 searched unsuccessfully through
the night for the plane carrying Boggs,
Alaska's lone House member, a ~
gressional aide and the pilot.
Additional search planes were schedul-
ed to take to the air later in the day.
The Air Force said the forecast was for
strong wind, an overcast and "very
marginal flying weather."
In Juneau. meanwhile, the state's
Rescue Coordination Center said it was
checking reports from .an 'unidentified
ham radio operator in Califomia that he
heard a distress call frOm the missing
plane on a ci tizens radto band.
Spokesmen would not give any details on
the matter.
A spokesman said ham radio operators
in the area had been asked to tune to the
band -Channel 9 -early today in hopes
of picking up a signal.
He said no voice mntact had · been
made, but in response to queries such as
"Tap your microphone lf you bear us,"
several clicks were heard. T h e
spokesman said, however, that the cllclts
did not indicate a signal from the downed
plane, s~ying. they could l!!asily be caused
by the nickering of nearby hou se lights
or the Starting of a car engine.
The White House said President Nixon
has been receiving reports on the search
erforls.•
. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
Nixon, through his military aide, offered
all possible assistance and provided for
transportation for the Boggs famil y to go
to Alaska.
~louse Speuker Gari Albert said the
.
LOST IN STORM
Rep. Helo Boggs
pilot of the missing plane is reputed to be
one of the bl!!st bush pilots in Alaska and
would know every posslble landing spot
between Anchorage and Juneau.
"I cannot pen0nally give up hope,"
Albert said.
Aboard the twin-engine Cessna 310
we.re Boggs, 58; Rep. Nick Begich, a 40-
year-old ~mocr&t; B e g I c h ' s ad-
ministrative assistant, RusseU Brown,
31: and the pilot, 38-year-old Don E.
Joni. '
Boggs' administrative assistant, Gary
Hymel, said in Washington that the last
radio contact with th& plane came 12
minutes after takeoff Monday, when Jonz
filed a Wght plan. There was no sign of
trouble.
be tame when they grow up," com·
mented Councilman Willard Jordan.
He implied Mrs . Marsh was asking for
trouble by allOwing children to pet them.
''They're tame, I can take you to my
house and prove it to you," offered P..frs.
P.1arsh, who once trained animals for a
reptile zoo in Oklahoma.
"Oh, oo, I won't," laughed Jordan,
pointing out to Mrs. h1arsh that the city
would be held liable if it approved a
business license for a zoo in which
children could be scratched or bitten.
Assistant City Attorney Robert
Humphreys, meanwhile, has been asked
to research the legal impli cations. Dur·
ing a study session held earlier Monday
night. he estimated that the liabilily in·
surance for the zoo should be ··about $10
1nil\ion."
Mrs. Marsh, who expects delivery on a
bobcat this afternoon, said today that the
councilmanic li ability concerns have
prompted her lo revise some of her
plans.
"l"m going to separate the animals.
\Ve'll have some which the children can
pet and others which they won't be allew-
ed to touch .' 'she explained. "I'm work-
ing on the insurance and l'.m going to
hand deliver a detailed proposal to city
haJI as soon as I can."
One of lhe tentative zoo inmates is
"Pancho," a JOO.pound lion cwned by
Costa Mesa restaurateur A I f r e d
Klinzmann. Pancho was the official
mascot of the Lions Club Fish Pry this
summer.
Kept by lus o"·ner in a large cage in
Garden Grove . the lion recently was
se rvM. an eviction notice by the city of
Carden Grove ~·hlch also ha~ a wild
animal ordinance.
Although the deadline for removing thf'
lion was up in August , Klinzmann says no
one has yet dared trying to cart Pancho
olf in a dogcatcher's truck
Mesa Tree Flap Rages
City Planters Labeled 'Boxes With Pimples'
By RJlDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of ll'lf o.llY Pli.t Slt lf
Costa .Mesa's controversial street tree
ordinance passed its first City Council
reading Mooday night aft.er verbal com-
bat between council members, a con-
servationist and a proponent of the
statute.
The ordinance establishes standards
for trees which may be planted in
Trio Arrested
On Costa Mesa
Opium Chru·ges
A trio of suspects under surveillance
·by IUU'COlics de~~ who ,Jlle~y
negotiated a deal for-IWl.SD tablets and'
two ounces. of raw apium was a:uested
Monday night in a raid on a Costa Mesa
apartment.
Narcotics agents, wbc booked the two
men and a woman in addition to con-
fiscating assorted pills and suspected
opium, said the 19-year-old female ls an
Orange Coast College student-cashier.
John M_".El.ag" Flanigan, 30, nicknam·
ed for a U.S. Flag tattoo on his shoulder,
was taken into custody at his '20 Victoria
St., apartment about 8 p.m. after alleged
consummation of the deal.
He was booked on suspicion of
transportation and sale of dangerous
drugs, along with Norman D. Martin, 22,
of Fullerton, who faces identical charges.
Pamela J. Thornburg, 19, of the Vic-
toria Street address. was arrested and
booked on suspicion of possession of
dangerous drugs for sale.
CA>sta Mesa narcotics detectives Don
Casey and Jim Blaylock said they moved
in after a Buena Park polioo dl!!tectlve
who acrompanied Martin to the apart·
ment gave a pre-arranged signal.
The Buena Park lawman said ·Miss
Thornburg was arrested after she was
given permission to smoke and he claim-
ed be spotted a vtal or pills in her purse
when she opened it.
Samples of the alleged 100 LSD tablets
ancl opium supposedly available for $425
are being analyzed by the state's Bureau
of Narcotics Enlorcement.
A GOOD DAY
FOR A DRIVE
A pretty blonde driving an orange
sports car is a bright sight to cheer a
gloomy man on a gloomy day and Costa
Mesa auto salesman Merle Ferguson
would Jove to spot one today .
1'he Bill Jones Sport Cars en1ploye
loaned a sleek 1972 Fiat 128 coupe to the
equally shapely prospective buyer to take
a test ".!rive Monday morning. Neither
she nor the $1800 import car have been
seen since, Ferguson complained to
Costa Mesa Police.
'
parkways end givfs the Leisure Services
Department the exclusive right to main-
tain them and to remcve trees en-
dangering public workS' with their roots.
A section stricken from -!he ordinance,
however. allows homeowners to "spray.
trim and fertilize" the trees.
"This should really be called a street
tree elimination ordinance," rumed V. E.
Marth, a frequent critic of the council's
'"Save
environmental policies.
Marth described the statute as
"mindless" and reprimanded the Leisure
Services effort to remove sidewalk
destroying trees on Indiana Avenue and
Illinois Street.
'"The argument that trees buckle the
roots of your sidewalks reflects on the in-
capacity of your people 10 maintain the
streets," charged Marth.
Trees"'
Cr y Go es Up on Orange Coast
While Costa Mesa city councilmen debated the issue of whether or not to
uproot street trees, movements toward "saving Ute trees" were developing
Monday night elsewhere along the Orange Coast.
IN HUNTINGTON BEACH, a city Public Works Department efiort to rip
,.ll!f,_-,~ 2,5001 ..., ~ wbidl yt 10 years old an<\ JO to 40 leet \all
... onll!ied 't!ol>ped llY' thO Oliy Counctl< -'
.Huntln&IOD'll public works people wanted to uproot tho old 1reea becow;e
tbe roots threate.oed to dcimage sidewalks.
The City Council, however, blocked the tree 'dl!!struction and ordered $100.-
000 be spent to transfer the old ash trees to neW sites.
Altogether, Huntington 's tree program will allocate $1.4 million over the
next 10 years.
"DON'T GO INTO a tract and v.'ipe out every tree," warned Councilman
Jienry Duke. Councilman Nonna Gibbs added, "For heaven's sake, don 't even
consider demolition of the trees."
IRVINE CITY OFFICIALS, meanwhile, pondered the fact that since the
City Council adopted a law banning the cutting of trees, the [rvine Company
bas removed Z2,582 orange aod eucalyptus trees under eight city permits.
involved were 250 acres of Irvine Ccmpany land. The wood from the tree!
Is now being sold by the company.
Mayor William Fischbach said today that as far as he knew, all the tree
choP,ping was done "within terms or the city law ."
Burglar Who Ha s Passio11
For Palms Loose in Mesa
Someone with an apparent passion for
palms is perpetrating a one-man Costa
Mesa crime wave which has so fat netted
more than a dozen mini t.ture sego palm
trees. 40 Venus nytrap plants and orie
klne pine.
Costa Mesa police disclosed the serLes
of grand thefts and burg\aries-thfee
reported to date..-today in the wake-of a
disastrous weekend for nurserymen and
landscaping fanciers.
The footpad on the prowl for sego
palms uprooted six of the ornamental
rarities worth $360 at the Flgnet Marking
Device Company, 270 Briggs Ave., in the
dark of night.
Company spokesman Beverly G. Davis
told Of£1cer Ed Sutton the six plallts
worth $60 !!Piece had been planted six
years ago.
Patrolman James Ketchum. new to the
force, began his crimefighting career
probing a burglary of six mere sego
palms from Greenhnvcn Nursery. 2123
Newport Blvd.. which was discovered
Mondby.
Ruth ~1. Stuvey, spokesman for the
burg)~ plant plunt , said their loss was
only $JS, lncludlog a pine tree and the 40
carnivorous insect-eating Venus Oytraps.
case, Officer Ketchum noted a burglar
with an identical method of operation
raided the Paul Brecht Orchid Company.
1989 Harbor Blvd ., last week and made
off with a haul of sego palms.
Other ornamental hothouse greenery
was ignored.
'S quatte r' Given
Police Eviction
A sojourner from Saratoga, Calif., who
set up housekeeping on a <:o&ta A1esa
street in an Explorer Motor Home with a
self-contained power system was given
his eviction notice by pollct Monday
night.
. Otficer John C. White said he contacted
Lyman .Johnson. 64, aL 343 Cabrillo St ..
"'hich wa~ evidently serving as a tem-
porary address.
Marth charged that the replacements"
for the tom out trees amount to nothing
more than "boxlike things with pimples
on top.•·
The council, however, found some
backing from Paul S. Wright, a retired
LoS Angeles municipal engineer, who
lives at 3241 Indiana Ave.
Wright said he was in favor of the
(See PLANTE RS. Page Zl
Request Filed
"I
On Costa Mesa
Freeway Plea
A formal request is being filed by the
Costa Mesa City Councll to ehange the
name or the Newport Freeway to "Costa
Mesa Freeway.''
Councilmen said Monday . night said
!hey will press for the name change
through legi slarive action by
Assemblyman Robert 1-1. Burke IR·Hun-
tington Beach).
, The renaming, sparked by Newporl
Beach's antl-fret>way stance, is being re--
quested beeause Route 55 is planned to
end in Costa Mesa. not Ne\~:port Beach.
Plans to extend the freeway through
~ewport Beach were abandoned earlier •
this year when the proposed Pacific Coast
freeway was del<ted through legislative
action sponscred by Newport Beach.
With the Pacific Coast Freeway red
penciled, Newport Beach councilmen
made it plain that they did not want the
Newport Freeway to end in their city.
"Since Newport Beach does not want
any part of any freeway in their city, they
should DOt be burdened with the name,"
said Councilman Alvin Pinkley who in•
ltiated the motion to rename the roi.1tt>.
The measure was passed with a 4 to 0
vote. Councilman llobert fl.I. Wilsoo did
not vote because he was absent from
Monday night 's session.
Meanwhile, councilmen are alsc pursu·
A study made this summer by the Cost~
Mesa on both the San Diego and Newport
Fretways .
A study made this summr by the Cost<i
Mesa Chamber of Commerce shows lh11l
1111 local cities, ~·Ith the exception of
Costa Meaa, have adequate on and off.
ramp signs.
Presently there are only two Costa
Mesa signs, one on each freeway, The
remedy, councilmen said, will be soughL
through Div. 7 of the state Highways
Department.
Ornn;ie
"'e ntller
New Copter Authorized narkening back to a previoos patrol
POP ST AR Fl .'IVED
ON DR UG CHARGE
"The subject was advised to seek other
means of residence," Offlctr White
wrote, adding a footnote that the camper
unit's el~trlcal power system generator
wu too noisy ror John1100'1 new
neighbors.
Laivyer Declares
What's Fair's Fair
The wcnthtrlady saf! it '11 going
to be cloudy on Wednesday. It
might l!\'en raln. Ttmperature.s •t
the beaches will be ln lhe low '10s
r.islng to 7S Inland. Low• tonight
5&-02.
INSIUE TODAY
Bomba ~. -thl Philip-
pines vtTsi~ of tlle porno fli ck
-hovt 6f'tn banned from the new 1odet11 of Preaident Ftrdin·
and E. Martos . Ste storu on
Page 12.
Immediate replacement of the crash-
dnmaged Costa Mesa polloe Ke.licopter
with a new $34,000 Hughes unit was
authorized unanimously ~by tbe City
Council Mond&y night.
The new chapter will take the place or
Eagle t which crashed Oct. 2 In a vacant
ncld with Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow at
the controls.
City Manager Fred Son&bal told coun-
cilmen that It was .tmpraCtlcal to rep1at'e
the damaged hellcoptt!!r which has a
repJJir estimate of approximately $25,000.
Eagle rs replacement ls &ctually
,
• "
'"8htly used bul lw ooly 00 hours on the
engine. Parts rrom the damaaed
heliOopter may be kept as sparet or 10ld
as salvage.
Both the Del' belioopter aod a -d
unit In operation f.or the put IJ\l'ee yws
wiD .,be tnsu""', Sotaabal assured the
council. E~g~ I waa not.
Mayor J&Ck Hammett indicated that
inaurance for both blrdl·was not possible,
Since the premium rain dropped from l7
percent of the hclJcopter's v&lue to 11
perCIDl per year, .
Previously, insurance had been con·
sldered uneconomical becau!te the chop-
pers are amortized over a flve·yeor
period. •
Meanwhile, the Federal A v I a t I o n
Admlnlllration is otra Investigating the
cauoe of the er.ah landinJ. Experts •rt
lf71nJ to detemllne whe111<r the cauae
wu mechanical failu~ or pilot error.
Neither Capt. Glasgow nor h I 1
paMenger, Detective Lt. Harold Fl~he.r,
were lll)ur<d In the crash. The mishap
occurred during an auto -rotation
maneuver which tilmulates a deld engJ~
lnndlng.
•
Al!Et.A!OE, Au.!tralio IAP) r Enaltsh pop ltlr Joe Cocker 11[1d aix of hl:s en-
toor1ge wero fined a total of $2,81111 today
on aru11 chargel. .
BOLOGNA. Italy (UPI) -t..wy.,.. for
a man charged with living on the Im·
moral earnings of his wile c•me up "'Ith
a novel defens.r: here.
t..w~~r £Mo FuHlO said ~loJ!day th<
man shOuld go free on a lfftmlcallty -
bec:'ause the law dots not mvtr C8M'5 In
which women Uve on the lmmoral eam·
Inga of men. Ttrua. he Jald. the law Is not
cqlltll for all citizens.
C.C1ter and r.vt othel'f 'were flned J:ISI>
each for possessing lodlan hemp. while
tht seventh defendant, Felix Venancio
f)loon, 17, of Miami, was flned '720 for
jl:iue¥l~ heroin and the equipment to
i.11. "r" Um"' Ute oun, no PoOClhtlllY can _____________ be niltd out,'' Fu•ro Aid.
'I j
L.M........ I) ......... .
Clft.ll,._. •M C:tMks II
(--IJ '*"' ........ . •-.ri.1 ..... ••
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,, •
On Coastal
Zo11e Loans
JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tfl4I D .. lr l'!llfl l ltff
alifomla Mortgnge Bankers
Association ?-.1onday voted not to grant
Joans of any kind in the coastal zone
~'hert building could be restri cted by the
passage of Proposition 20.
The association Is a v o I u n tar y
organization made up primarily of in-
dependt'nt mortgag e bankers. The vote is
ad\'isory and will be followed at the in-
di \'idual members' discretion.
Reaction to the vote in Orange coast
lending instilul1ons and among local
realtors was guarded. ~fost said they had
not had an opportunity to study the
recommendation in full.
Association president Robert E .
li-1,,rgan said In Los Angeles Monday
"Passage of Prop . 20 on the Nov. 7 ballot
would have a drastic effect on the people
of California.
"The CQSt to taxpayers. property
owners and the general public wou1d be
disastrous. Prop. 20 would establish a
virtual moratoriwn on all building of any
kind \li'ithin Its ill-denned pennit area for
a five-year period. The moratorium a~
plies to public projects as well as
private.
"This moratorium , if coupled with the
building shutdo wn now taking place
throughout California as a result of the
recent state Supreme Court decision in
the Mammoth ~iountaln case -which
states that loca l government must file
environmental impact reports on proj·
ects requested by private parties -
would therefore halt all work by local
governments, contractors. developers
and private lending institutioru."
MESA
CALENDAR
TONIGHT
NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL BOARD -
Regular meeting. Costa hiesa High
School Lyceum Theater, 7:30 p.m.
BACK TO SCHOOL NIGIIT
California. 1 p.m.; College Park, 7:30
p.m.; Harper, 7:30 p.m.; Monte Vista, 7
p.m.: Newport Heights, 7 p . m . :
Paularino; 7 p.m.; Prince o: Peace, 7:30
p.m.; Sonora, 7:30 p.m.
"INVESl'MENTS" -0CC Lttture
Series presents William L. O'Bryon ln
five-part series beginnillr Oct. 17,
Eastbluff Elementary School, Newport
Beach, 7:3G-9 :30 p.1.1. No tuition.
SQUARE DANCING -Community
Recreation Center, Fairgrounds. 8--10
p.m. Tuesdays. $1.25 per lesson.
ALAN ZASLOVE EXHIBIT -DCC Art
Gallery, now through Oct. 27, Monday·
Friday, 9 a.m. - 2 p.m.
ERIC ORR EXHIBIT -UC! Fine Arts
Gallery, now through Ocl. 29. Tuesday·
Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 11
PENTAGON PAPERS -Anthony J.
Russo, one of key figures in Pentagon
Papers incident will speak at the OCC
Auditorium, 11 a.m. ·
BACK TO SCHOOL NIGIIT -Preslruo
School, 7:30 p.m.
ORANGE COUNTY F Affi BOARD -
Regular meeting, 88 Fair Drive. 8 p.m.
COAST COMMUNITY C a L L E G E
DISTRICT BOARD -Regular meeting,
1370 Adams, 8 p.m.
PREPARATION FOR PARENTI!OOD
-OCC Evening College Lecture Serles,
Lecturer; Marjorie Pyle, R.N. Oct. 4 -
Nov. 8. Estancia HS Forum, 7:30-9 :30
p.m.
"THE RESISTABLE RISE 0 F
ARTURO UI" -OCC theatrical prcr
duction, Oct. 18-21, OCC Auditorium , 8:30
p.m. AdmiMlon free.
ORGAN CONCERT P e t e r
Planyavsky of St. Stephan Cathedral,
Vienna. Fine Arts Village Concert Hall,
UCT, 8 p.m. Admi.!sion SL
DAILY PILOT
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Deroin Found
Siriger Mc!-Vair Says I11:nocent
NEWARK, N, J, (UP I) -Slllger-actrw Barbara McNalr WU mated for pos...,.., " nearly 1 hair ounce " ben>ln 11 !he Playbt>y Club IA McAlee, H
WU dlscio<ed todoy, •
Miss MeNalr and her husband, Rick M&n1le, were arraigned oa charges
in federal coun here. Bach was ordered tG post., a $10,000 bond . They pleaded
iMocenJ..
A spokesman for the Playboy Cl ub said Miss ~fcNair, 37, appeared three
Umes this week in the swank Penthouse of lhe club-hotel in prlvale perform.
ances for a group of conventioneers. She was arrested Mon.day night in her
drtssing room.
Her husband acls as her business agent.
U.S. District Court Judge Lawrencr A. Whipple set no travel rntrictions
on Q1e couple. The Playboy Club said the singer had scheduled engagements
In Chi'cago Wednesday and again in ~1cAfee Thursday.
A Port of New York Authority spokesman said a package was traced from
Ne y,·ark Airport to Miss tilcNair , who signed for it al the Playboy Club .
--------
Santa A11a11 Held in Mesa
For Officer Interference
A young man who pollce allege got his
Irish dander up and assertedly made
-things generally di fficult for officers
routinely investigaling a Cost'\ Mesa
traffic accide nt wound up behind bars
early today.
Patrick J. McNulty. 20. c! 2107 S.
Cypress SI.. Santa Ana , wa s booked on
charges of interfering with a police of·
ficer .
Patrolman John C. White -assigned
to photograph the aftermath of a I : 10
a.m. one-car crash -claimed McNulty
got in the way despite prior warnings.
The officer contends that McNulty, in
fact:
-Tried to prevent him I r o m
photographing a car license plate
sheared off in the ~·shap. -Jeered and hec led him when the
flashbulb fa iled to fl sh.
-Forbade a tow ck driver to haul
the disabled vehicl away.
-Finally tried t make oft with the
license plate in question .
Officer Whi te and Patrolman Jim
Farley claimed 1.fcNulty didn't want
anyone taking pict ures of the scene until
an attorney arrived.
In vestigators said f\.1cNulty wasn't even
behind the wheel of the vehicle, owned by
Scott E. Brashier, 20, of 1021 S. F1ower
St .. Santa Ana, when it went ou t or con-
trol.
Motorist Claims
B1:akes Failed
A Costa Mesa female motorist and her
companion were injured Monday night
when, she told police, the brakes failed
on her car so she tried to slow it down by
making a sharp left turn.
Mercedes Dominguez, 17, did manage
to stop the juggernaut, Investigating of-
ficers said, but only because it overturn-
ed, landing On its right side.
Miss Dominguez, of 2622 Santa Ana
Ave., was treated at Costa 1t1esa
Memorial Hospital for abrasions and
pain in the legs and head, lhen released.
Her passenger, Lloyd E. Austin, also of
2622 Santa Ana Ave., complained of pain
following the rollover accident at Orange
Avenue and Fairway Drive but said he
~·ould go to his own doctor.
Brown Endorses '20'
SACRAMENTO (AP ) - Fonner Gov.
Edmund G. Brown endorsed Prop. 20
Monday, calling it a necessary first. sttp
toward serious, comprehensive planning
!or the future cf our beautiful coastline."
Brown. a Democrat defeated by Gov.
Roriald Reagan in his bid for a third
term in 1966, is a Beverly Hills attorney.
Brashier said he was northbound on
Newport Boulevard approaching a red
traffic signal and claimed the brakes
grabbed as he started to slow down.
The vehicle veered to the right and
skidded in an arc from the boulevard on-
to 23rd Street, mowing down a No Left
Tum sign before it careened to a stop.
Officer White said he arrested suspect
McNulty when the latter finally grabbed
the li<:i!nse plate he had placed on the
hood of the car to photograph and started
to make off with it.
FrotnPagel
PLANTERS. • •
city's intent to remove the 12-year-old
silken ash trees in his neighborhood
because they are destroying gutters and
sidewalks.
"When the gutters are buckled by ash
tree roots it causes the gutters to act as
dams. My dri veway is always filled with
two to five inches of water and it's nasty
and slimy," he said.
People frequen Uy fall down on his
sidewalk and fall into his driveway pud-
dle. causing him to become concerned
about the legal implications,\ Wright told
the council.
1be tree removal program has the
backing of several other Indiana Avenue
reside11ts but is being opposed by other
homeowners oo Illinois Street.
Caught in the middle is Keith Van Holt,
the city's dlrector of Leisure Services,
who claims he has been threatened by
legal action from both sides.
Van Holt explained earlier that the city
has a policy of removing trees and plant-
ing them at local city parks. Not all
trees can be replanted, however, because
some trees are considered too large to
move.
The JX>SSibility of cutting back the of-
fending roots with a special machine has
been under discussion by Leisure
Services, but as of right now, the depart-
ment does not own one.
Wright argued that root cutUng would
only increase the city's liability. He said
that the trees would lose their lateral
support and that Santa Ana wind con-
diUons "would bring them right down in·
to -ihe driveway and onto the garages."
"Yoo don't see Washington O.C. going
around tearing out those ~year old elm
trees," Marth snapped back, just before
being gaveled down by Mayor Jack Ham-
mett.
1 The conservatimist's allegation earller
in the meeting that crews "ripped out"
trees planted by . students on Gisler
Avenue was dismissed as "nonsense" by
Fr.ti Sorsabal.
"They came along and planted the
,vrong trees, so we took them out and
replanted them in the Gisler School yard.
And then we planted the proper trees in
the parkway," he said.
Mesa Council Action
Here, in capsule form, are the major actions taken by the Costa Mesa City
Council f\1onday night :
NEWPORT FllEEW AV -Called on Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R.
Huntington Beach) to initiate legislation renaming Route SS to Costa Mesa
Freeway.
7.00 -Denied a request by Mrs. Shelba Atarsh for a petting zoo at the
Orange County Fairgrounds until she forwards a more detailed proposal .
~
STREET TREES -Approved first readlng of an ordinance which gives the
city e1clusive domain over parkway trees with the ezceptlon of spraying, fer·
tillzing and trimming.
SIGN LAW -Allowed a hardship exception for Lucky Stores to construct
signs at Harbor Boulevard nnd Victoria Street de31>ite a current sign J1rohlbi·
lion.
HELICOPTER -Approved replacement or the crashed police whirlybird
with a new uni( costing $34.000. ·
PR.£.SCOOOL-Revoked a zoning variance for the private Carden-4 school
on 2:50 w. Wll10D St. after nearby residents complained about loud children.
HOUSE rtfOVER -Delaye!d actk>n on a request by Earl Claytori, of Or-
ange, to move a house Into the Afesa lllghlandJ nelJ!:hborhood. Col.mttlmen will
reconsider the ~~t In two weeks , giving a divided homeowners group time
to investigate the proposal .
BLOCKED VIEWS -Requested to ttt envlronmental Impact 1t1temen1s
for any new homes built In the Marina HIJthland s area. Homeowners Jn the
Sant• Ana Blnffs area told the councn they were worried shout two-story
houses cutting off their views. •
ANIMAL COf'lfROL -Tabled • requert by CallfomlR Animal Control lo
ornvlde dog cll1chlng services In Colla Mesa . City M"anager Fred SOr18bal has ,
bten asked to Investigate the merllJ of contr11ctlng out the fob v,. hirlng R cltf
animal control statr. • ·
l I
•
Mesa Denies
Two-story
Home Ban
Ownen of view homes along Costa
11lesa·s river bluffs were unsuccessful
f\.1onday night in persuading the City
Council to ban construction of two-story
houses in the ir neighborhood.
The ban was was requuted by the
Mesa Highlands and the M a r I n a
Hl'ghlands homeowners as90Cialions on
the grounds that tall houses would block
their view of the Santa Ana Riverbed,
site of the proposed Keys Marina.
Mayor Jack Hammett told the groups
that two-story buildings wtre lawful in
the city of Costa Mtsa and that the coun-
cil could not enter the field of deed
restriction.
l~ad the covenants of the tract
.specified only one story houses, anything
higher than that wookl. be prohibited, ac-
cording to Councilman Willard T. Jordan.
"But lt Isn't. Had you wanted. to pnr
tect your view you should have purdlas-
ed the view property, .. be said.
Councilmen , asked to invoke the new
state-mandated envirorunental impact
rule to stop two-story houses from going
up, said they could not apply the court
ruling until it has been clarified.
Members of the council, however.
promised they would personally review
all environmental impact statements
which must be filed with new construc-
tion requests in the area.
Assistant City Attorney R o b e r t
Humphreys told the homeowners that
they might. investigate the possibility of
fonuina nPtw covenants to prevent con-
""-ruction of anything ot'her than one-story
dwellings.
"It is legally possible," be said.
Rites Scheduled
For Costa Mesa
Traffic Victims
Funeral services are scheduled for
10:30 a.m. Wednesday for Frederick L.
Wadsworth, 57, and his i;i.•ife, Mary
Elaine Wadsworth, 56, of Costa Mesa
wtt.> were kl.lied Saturday afternoon in a
head-on collision on the San Diego
Freeway in San Clemente.
Residents of Costa Mesa since 1956, the
Wadsworths lived at 298 Bowling Green
Drive.
Mi-. Wadsworth was an electronic
engineer at Philro Ford, a member of
the U.S. Power Squadron, Optical Society
and the South Shore Sailillg Club.
Mrs. Wadsworth was a past president
or botb_,the C.OSta Mesa Women's C1ub
and the Cosla Mesa Ancborettes Club.
She was also a Gold -Star Mother and ac-
tive in Parent Teacher Association activ-
ities in the Harbor Area.
1bey are survived by two sons, Robert
Lee, a student at orange Coast College,
aod James Stephen, who now serves in
the U.S. Coast Guard; a daughter, Cyndi
Elaine, hn DCC sludeol. Robert and Cyn-
di are of the family home, and all three
attended Costa M,.. High School.
Mrs. Wadsworth leaves her mother,
Mn. Robert Klein of Costa 1.iesa. ltir.
Wadsworth leaves thn!e sisters and two
brotbers.
Services will be held at Westcliff
Chapel, Dr. Vincent Gottuso, pastor of
the Church of the Crossroads, officiating.
Intennent will follow immediateJy at
Fairhaven Pwiemorial Park in Sa.,ta Ana.
Westcliff Mortuary will be open for
visitation unttl 9 o'clock tonight.
Poll Shows 14% Gap
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -President
Nixon has opened a l~point lead over
George McGovern in the independent
California Poll as they battle for the
state's critical 45 electoral votes.
DAILY PILOT Sl•tt ~
Neav News1nan
Rudi Niedzielski O e ft), the DAILY P!LOT's Costa Mesa reporter,
presents Mayor Jack Hammett with plaque designating hlm as an
honorary member of the Fourth Estate. Presentation was made dur-
ing Monday's city council meeting in observance of National News-
paper \Veek.
Hou se-moving Plans Spur
Mesa N eighborl1ood Split
A man trying to move a house from
Orange into an established Costa Mesa
neighborhood is causing a rift among the
1.fesa llighlands Homeowners Association
membership.
Residents on both !Ides of the issue
jammed Costa Mesa City C.Ouncil
chambers ~ionday night to alternately
applaud and to rail at Earl Clayton's
moving plans.
Half of the homeowners suggested that
1he house would detrimentally affect
their neighborhood.
The other half argued that it would im-
prove a vacant corner lot where trash is
pil ing up.
Councilmen, sensing the controversial
nature or the proposal, dee.lined to take
action on Clayton's building moving
pennlt until the homeowners group
reached agreement.
actually 1,400 square feet.
Clayton, who insist! that the &ame
house could be built on the site according
to existing regulatiom, promised to put
on a shake roof" and to put in compatible
landscaping.
But some of the homeowners continued
their resistance because Clayton intends
to rent the house. They sa id they were
worried about the condition of its in-
terior.
Gleneagles resident 11tlchael Skinner,
however argued that -Clayton's house
\li'ould improve th.e neighborhood .
"The lot sat tht!i-e for a long time. For
100 square reet we're making an awfully
big no;ise," said Skinner, doubting
whether anything better would rome
along to fill the vacant lot.
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The item v.•ill appear on the agenda
again in two weeks.
ln\1olved in the dispute are residents of
G\eneagles Terrace . which is part of a
housing development on the city's weft
side, near the Santti Ana River Bluffs.
1.iayor Jack Hammett, meanwhile,
suggested that Clayton meet with the
dissident home-o"11ers to reso lve the
problem.
"This is an ideal thing to cement ;
together a homeowners group," Ham4
mett noted.
Some of the controversy centered on
the size of Clayton's house . It was: alleg-
ed to be substandard in size by several
homeowners who claimed Clayton told
them it was 1,500 feet square, when it is
Buenos Aires
Hotel Bombed
BUE NOS AIRES (AP) -A bomb
in a 22nd-floor room of the new
Sheraton Hotel killed a Canadian
woman Monday night and gravely
wOWlded her husband and a
Massachusetts woman. Supporters
of e1-0ictator Juan D. Peron were
blamed.
Nearly. 700 guests fled into the
streets, but the fire was quickly
brought under control and dld not
spread.
A chain of bombings burst across
Argentlna Monday as Peronlst
guerrillas marked their leader's
ascendancy tp power 27 Years ago.
Trooper Killed
Serving Warrant
On His Day Off
LANCASTER, Pa. (UPI ) -State
lroQper Robert Lapp, who volunteered to
serve a fugitive warrant on his day off,
was shot to death by an e.scaped
murderer from a New Jersey prison. The
suspect was killed in a gun battle with
police.
Lapp, 30, father of three young sons,
was shot Monday while attempting to
serve the warrant on Alfred Ravenell, 33,
who escaped June 13 from a correction
center in Yardville, N.J.
Lapp and three other troppers burst in-
to the first floor apartment where the
suspect was believed to be hiding, state
Police Comm.ls.stoner Rocco P. Urella
said.
Ravenell came out of a bathroom firing
from a sawed-off shotgun and .38 caliber
pistol, fatally woundlng the officer.
Roll Out The Red Carpet!
Three years ago we had • request from ~ local high school
for a red runner for homecoming ceremonies. A remnant
cut into two nice runners.
Without advertising, the word got a r o u n d, and our
business got so good that we had to make another runner.
This year we will have the pleasure of loaning the thr~o
runners to high schools all around the Southern California
area, including all the local schools. One weelend lad ' .
year, we furnished THREE homecomings. Also, several
times il!lgain this yeil!lr we will furnish weddings and grand
openings.
If YOU have need for a red runner for an occasion, stop
and see us ... no charge. The only requirement is prompt
return after the occasion.
' Al Alden's you'll al~ays got the red carpet treatment!
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -FRI., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to 5
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